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Guide to Jobs: Where
find How to Get
'C'ENEY-meeney-miney-mo i s a
■*“' amusing child’s game, but
hardly the way to choose your
work.
Deciding what field to careful enter, ' hat
to go after, deserves
tion. Make a list of all the things
like to do, those you dislike.
your weakness? What do you do best?
That’s how to narrow the field down to
few choices.
• * •
Dozens of fields are analyzed in
booklet No. 201, including
chances for success, etc. Send 25
in coin for “Guide to Jobs: How
Where to Get Them” to Weekly
paper Service, 243 West 17th St., New
York 11, N. Y. Print name, address
zone, booklet title and No. 201.
Dogs Ive Known.
LdZyb0n&S Nothing seems to stir
him to life. What can his master ex¬
pect If the dog isn’t fed right? Gro
Pup Ribbon would give him every
vitamin and mineral dogs are known
to need. It’s a money-saver, too! Each
box supplies as much food by dry
weight as five 1-lb. cans of dog food!
Gto-Pup also comes In Meal and in
Pel-Etts. For variety, feed all three.
Dsgs&Btt
GRQ-PUP
Mad* by
BattM Crack and Omaha
Chafing Eczema
Dry
W&Wof Sunburn
Ivy Poison
Simple
Rash
RESIM0L°""“" T
NE W S that makes fo!ks
sleep all night!
ation,
'ndition Foley
urs. Since Had
t you
Hours or JDOUBL1S YOUR MONEY BACK.
Make 24-hour test. Get Foley Pills from drug
cist. Full satisfaction or DOUBLE YOUR
MONEY BACK.
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GIGANTIC
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Special Discount to Dealers
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No C. O. D.'s
HOFFMAN’S TIRE SERVICE
727-33 SPRING GARDEN ST.
Phila., P». Phone Market 7-871.1
Xker
FICTION Cornet
‘WHAT’S the matter with you,
’ » Jeff? You never acted like
his before. Show some interest.
Snap out of it!”
Good old faithful Jerry, thought
Jeff. Always worried . . . nerves
littery. During the endless training
lays and the torturous moments be
’ore the bell, fluttering about Jeff
ike a hen mothering a lone chick.
Eight years he and Jerry had been
:ogether. Eight years, during which
hey had often faced hunger and of
ate a few of the good things of life.
Maybe Jerry was right . . . may
)e there was something the matter
vith him. The old fire, the zest for
lattle, the impatience for action,
he exhilaration of the blood racing
hrough his veins. The doubts . . .
res, and that little stab of fear in a
:orner of his heart. Looking back
low, as he sat on the little stool in
be ring corner, Jeff realized he
lad felt none of them.
Jeff roused from his reverie. He
'lanced abound the ringside. Big
:rowd. Announcer Ballard busy at
:he hanging microphone. A few
nore minutes to go to broadcast
:ime.
Jeff relaxed on his stool . . . his
nind blotted out the chaotic scene
‘ This
! Week's
‘ Best
‘
I Fiction
lad been a driving purpose then . .
i goal to attain . . . riches! Fame
ladn’t meant much in the early
/ears, but it came and in the last
'ew years the money came, too.
Champion! The thought of that year
is champion brought a glow to his
soul. And then he met Helene For¬
sythe.
It was at a charity bazaar on
Long Island, one of the “appear
mces” Jeff, as champion, was fre¬
quently called upon to make.
Again, as he sat on his stool,
:ompletely oblivious to everything
iut his memories, Jeff felt his heart
sink as it had that afternoon. She
vas rich, society—and he a nobody,
\ prizefighter. They talked for a
vhile and then others had taken
lim away. He didn’t get to see her’
tgain that afternoon, but did sev¬
eral weeks later. That was the be¬
ginning. They saw more and more
if each other and soon they were
leeply in love. Jeff had realized the
lopelessness of it all . . . to him she
vas unattainable . . . but Helene
saw no hopelessness in the situa
ion at all.
Jeff shivered on his stool as he
ived again that memorable night
-je had called upon her father. He’d
lever been so scared in his life, ex¬
cept maybe that night when he en¬
tered the ring for his first fight, his
oeily empty and his spindly legs
rubbery . . . but there had been
l“ cnosswonn Puzm: H
Borizontal
1 To invite
4 Heroic tale
8 Fog
12 Poem
13 Author of the
Rubaiyat
14 Scent
15 Mass of
untidy hair
16 Excessive
frugality
18 Rapture
20 Musical sound
21 101
22 Lair
23 Temporarily
hright star
27 Likely
29 To exclude
30 To scatter
31 Artificial
language
32 To mend
33 Pronoun
34 Symbol for
iridium
35 To lift up the
spirits of
37 Numeral
38 Some
39 Prefix: half
40 Founder of
the Society
of Friend*
41 Printer’s
measure
42 Fore part of
a ship
44 To noise
abroad
47 Characterized
by moderation
51 Card game
52 Egg-shaped
53 Quickened
jog
54 Female sheep
55 To apportion
56 Girls name
57 Colloquial:
small child
Vertical
1 Explosive
projectile
2 Image
3 To portray
4 Steeps in a
liquid
5 Chalice
6 Strap to hold
up a stocking
him . . . filled
with memories
again. Eight years
. . . eight years of
hard work, of sac¬
rifice, of punish¬
ment, of patience
and the giving up
of many of the
things that youth
loves. But there
Solution In Next Issue.
> 2 3 r 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 li
12 13 14
15 16 17
18 1.9 n n 20
21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30
31 n 32 n I 33 n it 34
35 36 37 38
39 40 n 41
42 43 44 45 46
47 48 49 50 51
52 53 54
55 56 57
7 Malicious
burning
8 Instants
9 Artificial
language
10 Offspring
11 Attempt
17 Preposition
19 Spanish
for “yes”
22 Simpleton
24 Conjunction
25 Layer of a
mineral
26 Crooked
27 God of war
28 Northern
European
29 Industrious
insect
30 Wickedness
32 To paint with
short brush
strokes
33 To bewitch
(local)
36 Part of
“to be”
37 Approaching
Jeff’s eyes found Helene’s and to him the world was young and
warm
absolute necessity then . . . that had
buoyed his lagging courage. But this
night the stake was bigger.
“Hello, Mr. Stoddard.” Mr. For¬
sythe’s words were stamped indel¬
ibly in Jeff’s mind. “Helene’s told
me of you. I don’t like the business
you’re in, but my daughter and you
are in love, she says, so the busi¬
ness doesn’t matter. But what does
matter is, what sort of a life can
you offer her?”
Jeff felt the warm blood rise to
his face and ears as it had done
that night at his blurted, idiotic,
“She won’t starve.” Mr. Forsythe
had answered, “I’ll see to that.
That will always be my responsi¬
bility. She’s my daughter.”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Forsythe,” Jeff
had managed, and then the words
had started to flow . . . senseless,
jumbled, one into the other ... “a
few more fights ... a $250,000 trust
fund ... I love her . . .”
Heartsick, feeling his cause had
been irretrievably lost, he had
stumbled from the room and out of
the house. It was midnight before
he got enough courage to call her.
He told her it was hopeless . . .
They would have to wait a bit . . .
he’d make more money, plenty of
money . . . Helene had interrupted
. . . “Dad didn’t say no, did he?”
. . . “No,” “Oh, you ...” a sob and
the click of the phone.
His frantic phone calls were fruit¬
less . . . and then “Miss Forsythe
has gone abroad.” That was a year
ago. He toured the country . . .
theatres . . . exhibitions . . . “ap¬
pearances” . . . the money piled up
but Jeff has lost interest. Then a
match for the championship and his
title gone, because one man ... the
referee . . . raised another man’s
hand.
And then this . . . Sam Abrams
had sought him out . . . Sam had a
young chap, up and coming, but he
“needed a win over a name” before
he could challenge for the title.
“There’ll be maybe ten grand in it
for you,” Sam had said. “And,
maybe . . .” Sam paused meahing-
No. 26
38 Ornament
worn as a
charm
40 One’s strong
point
41 Comparative
ending
43 Note of scale
44 Greek letter
Answer to Puzsle Number 25
I R A N I R i s p E P
li A L i G N I T Y E if A
P H A s E 1 1 r E N K | A N T
s u N r 0 o E H
X RJ s 0 » 0 V A K
R 0 * Ha i R - 1 | HI u R L
A T 0 i I E 0 E E
s A u 0 A ? L 0 D | D 0
B I T * gflp 0 E
p \A 1 L 0 R E 1 F L 0 A T
X M W 0 H I T Y T A L E
S E A A B N E G A T E S
A N D L E A S E s E T
Series H-47
CLEVELAND COURIER
45 “Hawkeye”
State
46 Driven
obliquely,
as a nail
47 Male cat
48 First woman
49 Article placed
under a dish
50 Weight
NEEDLEWORK PATTERNS
Crochet Roses for Towels
Gayly Embroidered Tea
Irish Rose Design
A LOVELY rose design set on a
snowy and lacy background
crocheted of white thread deco¬
rates these trousseau pillowcases.
This lovely inset can be two-tone
or all white, whichever you prefer.
* * *
To obtain complete crocheting instruc¬
tions for the Irish Rose Inset Design (Pat¬
tern No. 5406) actual size sketch of design
motifs, send 20 cents in coin, your name,
address and pattern number.
Season vegetables such as green
beans, corn, or spinach with bacon
ar sausage drippings to give them
unusual flavor.
—•—
When melting paraffin for can
nihg do not allow the paraffin to
become steaming or smoking hot.
Just reduce it to a liquid.
—•—
For quick drying of sheets, bed
spreads and tablecloths, hang
evenly and not quite double on the
line.
— • —
If you have a bottle of perfume
that you hesitate to use because of
its heavy odor, try adding a few
drops to your bath water. You
will find it pleasant.
—•—.
Junior’s new puppy won’t pro¬
duce lonesome wails at night if an
alarm clock is put to bed with
him. The tick-tock sound will be
a lullaby for the lonely pup and
keep him quiet.
—•—
When placing articles in the re¬
frigerator remove them from the
paper bags and place in refriger¬
ator bowls. This increases cold
air circulation and looks neater.
—•—
Be sure to save your cancelled
checks and receipts after a bill is
paid. If a dispute arises over the
payment of a bill, you then have
the evidence.
—•—
When crystal vases and bottles
need cleaning, break several egg
shells into the bottle or vase, add
a little water, and shake until all
film and dust disappears from the
glass.
—•—
Use all your linens so they will
all be laundered occasionally.
This way they’ll stay white. ,
ly . . . “more if we can do business.
You’re through, Jeff, you know. A
has-been.” Jeff still wondered why
he hadn’t chased Sam then. “No
business,” he’d said.
And here he was, sitting in a ring
corner as he had sat in other ring
corners a hundred or more times
. .^. a has-been ... at twenty-eight!
. . . and in this corner, the for¬
mer world, middleweight champion of the
Jeff Stoddard!”
Jeff roused . . dreams faded
. . . .
he rose and bowed, Jerry fluttered
about him. They walked to ring cen¬
ter for instructions. Jeff sized up
his opponent. A likely looking
youngster, husky and obviously
well-trained. He shook hands and
turned back to his own comer. The
bell. Jeff slid cautiously to ring cen¬
ter. Yancey came forward to meet
him, left hand extended slightly,
chin buried behind a bulging shoul¬
der. Jeff tried a long left and land¬
ed, lightly. They came together and
Jeff felt a jar on his chin, another
and yet another. Stinging blows
they were, delivered with amazing
speed and with deception. The boy
had something. They exchanged
blows and again that short, jolting
left found Jeff’s face. He’d have to
do something about that. Jeff
turned to his corner at the bell. A
trickle of blood flowed from the cor¬
ner of his mouth and over his chin.
“You gotta do something about
that left, Jeff,” whispered Jerry.
“He’ll claw you to ribbons.”
Jeff stepped forward briskly at
the bell for round two. He boxed,
he slugged, but that tearing left
kept reaching his face. Something
warm streamed down his cheek.
Jeff realized his eye was cut. He
brushed the eye with his right glove
and gave ground lowly, drawing
Yancey toward him. Jeff’s right
dropped into position at his chest,
he feinted with his left and there
was the opening he sought. His
right fist shot out, the weight of his
powerful shoulders driving it home.
It landed and at the impact Jeff
felt a searing pain shoot up his arm
to the shoulder. For a fraction of a
second he felt dizzy and then a nau¬
seous feeling hit the middle of his
stomach. His eyes cleared and he
saw Yancey getting off the floor.
The punch must have landed high,
thought Jeff. His only hope now was
a quick left hook. He stepped for¬
ward, ignoring the pain in his right
hand, feinted for an opening, saw it
and punched. He missed. His last
chance gone. The bell. He sank
heavily on the stool.
“Did you bust it?” Jerry whis¬
pered.
“I don’t know," Jeff answered.
“But don’t touch it, others might
see.”
“Yeah, but you can’t go on with
a busted right,” argued Jerry.
“Keep quiet,” said Jeff, and as
the bell rang for round three he
rose to meet Yancey.
* * *
Earlier that evening, at the For¬
sythe home, Helene faced her fa¬
ther across the dinner table.
“Dad,” she said, “take me to the
Arena tonight, please. Jeff is . .
“Still in love with that boy?”
“I’ve never stopped loving him,
Dad. But . .
Now, a short distance from ring¬
side, they sat. The girl, white-faced,
tense, as she watched the stark
drama unfolding in that brilliantly
white square ahead.
It seemed hours to the girl—tor¬
tuous hours—that they had been sit¬
ting there, when her father leaned
toward her.
“I’m sold. Helene,” he said
tersely. “And I thought that boy
lacked courage. Let’s get out.”
* * *
Later, in the dressing room, Jeff
sat hunched on the rubbing table.
Jerry, striving mightily to hold
back the tears, was gently remov¬
ing the tape and bandages from
Jeff’s swollen right hand. The room
was empty, but through the walls
came the rumble of voices and
laughter. “Nobody has time for a
loser,” thought Jeff.
Mr. Forsythe walked into the
room.
“Hello Jeff,” he said. He laid his
hand on Jeff’s shoulder. “That was
a magnificent stand you made out
there. Mighty few men have that
courage — and, more important,
Helene says you’re the only man
her and who I to _
for am . Forsythe .
Jeff glanced past Mr.
and his eyes found Helene’s. She
nodded and smiled . . . and to him
the world was young and warm
again.”
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• * *
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