90999 % 0999948084489 404640444444# 4444446 00“000“0000“’: Val D‘Or Editor Goes up in the Air times seldcn he got ba about it i is the stc maque NC break. I van at hours 0 d‘or hi overz2on Mr. LA gives hi curselve bu hours 1f c‘Oor. 0 particul we were wWays, v THURSDAY, JUNE 17TH, 1937 ‘omes Down to Earth Again to Give Desceription of His Sensations 6 *Ar Algoma Cqkeâ€"Welsh Anthraciteâ€"Pennsylvania Blue Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" wheatâ€"Nutâ€"Slack and Steagn Coal. mE Y AI He USE THEIR BANK IN MANY WAYS uses for their bank. Men ans or principal income is from salary or wages conâ€" stitute the large majority of the Bank of Montreal. They use a wide Bank‘s services as, for exam Personal chequing accoui personal loans; banking by valuables such as bonds, stock certificates, deeds, insurance policies and jewell supply funds as needed wh orders and travellers cheques BANK OF MONTREAL MODERN, EXPERIENCE mployees, as well as employer MORE HEAT FOR YOUR FUEL DOLLAR *#444â€" 444164484444 44444 4 % 4 @4 444 09 000080 66 ¢%s | intert ed af C immins Branch: D our variety of coal funds as needed whe COAL AND WOonrvARD» AND oFEICH 64 Spruce St. South T 1X and 1. Domit 111 1A Y ALL ‘WALKS QF LIPFE women whose sole VHITE, Manager in ivelling; money ters of credit to stomers of the variety of the keeping of accounts, Timmins 1l In out the neatest y north country n addition Mr. that he buckles it‘ he clitcks off the St. Hubert CLP. station at o Val d@‘Or and on at Rouyn. and we see the ome where the 1 d‘Or News is uttering tO t,net it Rouynâ€" Good | n spite of the o hold us back »ff two miles a ninutes and we on the detailed cnsiderate pilot ng. In addition map serves the t every fifteenI t exactly where »mnhone call or a rument board. s doing things used his feet _hands on the adio and his i the course. ined days of r of the startâ€" o cruises down shild Harbor. head into aA As briskly we RE A L V IC F im. Another at 2000 feot, rdeaux prisâ€" £ the switch ering to the Our next observation occurs whe we see the railroad and the highwa _end at Mont Laurier and in anothe ten minutes we reach the south shore < Bascatong Lake, which is impounded b the Mercier Dam where it meéts th Gatineau. Logs are spilled all over th huge body of water and in betwee radio calls and routine flying Pik Young describes it as "a bathtub fille with two or three boxes of matches Tugs were puffing along like toy shij towing bundles of matches, heading f« the ever hungry paper mills yong th Gatineau and at Hull At better than the half way mat now we spot Bark Lake where anoth !wat,ershed is held under control by a | insignificant dam that is called C: | bonga. It looks so small due to the fa:« that our ship has been hoisted up ! | 4000 feet, with the cloud layer just hundred or so feet higher. The odd ral squall is penetrated without incider and Mr. Young gets a message throug from Senneterre to report the weath around Grand Lake Victoria, whic ‘we are to sight in about five minute | We do so from about 30 miles away ar Frank‘s report to Senneterre is an OKay. By the time we reach that particular spot, the plane from Senneterre takes cff and we see them landing just as we pass the spot 20 minutes later. Such"is the advantage of radio. Alâ€" mest like dialing in on an automatic phone. Lamay Lake slides by as wE start the long drop to Lake Dubuisson Val d‘Or and Bourlamague sprawl in active disarrangement at our feet and two hours and forty minutes have passed for the entire trip when we tic up at the Skyways dock at Sullivan. Refreshed, enthused, but with the knowledge that another issue of The News must be produced I shake hands with my genial friend and pilot and leave the pathless highways of the sky, to flounder in the throes of another edition. More should be printed about such a trip and we‘ll do that next week. We could tell you a lot of things about this interesting and pioneering service that Skyways is doing but Benâ€" ny "Skyways Folks" Simmons is capâ€" able of looking after such details as traffic booster and solicitor for Dominâ€" icn Skyways in this section. Powder in its present refinements an delicate colourings, is a product of med ern science. But histories of socig customs of the ancients describe the us of powder made from grain and ap plied thickly on the face. The ancient. it seems, dreaded a shine on the nos even as much as we do today. From history we also learn how mu? famous Beauties depended upon thei Powder. Anne Boleyn, illâ€"fated wife C Henry VIII of England, used a formul of three parts of starch and one part C orris rcot. She depended upon this t such an extent thatâ€"the story goێsâ€" on the day before her death, she r© marked to her ladies in waiting: is high time that the headsman did h. work. for I have not a grain of powde left, and the king would doubtiess cart his cruelty to the extent of not allow in me any more." So miuch for interes! lights that history revea ter all, concerned with t plays in the pictorial S ol us moderns. Just what do you r fase powder. What do go for you. Requisites of a Good Powd When you select your powC take for granted that above : you make certain that it hart as closely as possible with your skin tone. If you cannot buy readyâ€"prepared in the proper sh vour colouring, then have the Stayner Sun:â€"A liberalâ€"minded man | p1 one who thinks the way you do. to "select your By ELSIE PIERCE rFAM GUS BEAUTY EPE A t BEAUTIEUL . your face powder with infinite care," advises ELEANOR POWELL, "and be sure to pat it onâ€"don‘t rub it in." tical Hints About Your Choice of Powder neme Powder We AIT Armo pow( 11 Arai the 1aSt, box makeâ€"up PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMINS, ONTARIO Private Air Services Set Example for Government Orillia Newsâ€"Lettsr:â€"In New York Dominick Roba complained to police that when two men entered his candy store and held him up, his police dog promptly bit him, enabling the bandits to escape. ut there will be a lot of these private ervices shuttling in every direction cross Canada, right up to the Northâ€" n land frontier on the Arctic ocean. "It is a complete puzzle to us why the Jepartment of Transport nas not folâ€" swoed much the same method, and got he inception of transâ€"Canada flights roing Ilong before this. From whatever mall â€"start was made, on exactly the ame as the private companies rave started, they could have steadily mproved the flights, getting them onâ€" o more or less regular schedules while he public‘s needs were met. "Who will be to blame if the official ransâ€"Canada service has to whistle for usiness when it finally takes the air, vhile private aviation rivals hold what hey have built up?" TY ese fie n and therefore approval inspection. They are ‘cushy" conditions made they did there would ‘be et in Canada. They are business, and they are atronage fast, ‘both in freightage. They are vice the latest msdels of capable of carrying as e passengers with two Bd g launched but all ind therefo 937 SK remer U ATrC 11 Ti¢ ole length of the ay there will be 100 e kind and another, ie course will always miles of a landing f 8.000 feet it is calâ€" y time an aviator in ige a landing at the 1V 11 pot 11 he wellâ€"writ hern Tribunt BC a powder may should be still building re and there; When they be equipped ys, telephone equipment or s. and a reâ€" 0| he de it prepara ervices Ver 1LF n heC o your Officials at Burwa. good prisoner and a Syndiâ€"‘ made a "trustie." A licatt conâ€" ligh! mll on he ht Man Sentenced Here Escapes at Burwash John Robert Foster Given Term for Stealing Part of Cash Register at Conâ€" naught, Leaves Prison Farm rested. mistake theft 0 t1 acill 6,300,000 Life Insurance policies . and each policy represents a wise decision on the part of some individual to ‘"Save and Be Safe with Life Insurance‘‘. CANADIANS today own more than YOU are probably one of these thrifty, {arâ€"sighted Canadians. If so, your savings have helped to build up a combined Life Insurance estate of more than Six Billion Dollarsâ€"a great bulwark of financial proâ€" tection against the uncertainties of the future. il 6,300,000 WIsE DECISIONS art CaSh ry angd lack of ort of cash reg k the wrong p ompartment in iscovered his *"r Burwash found Foster a and as a result he was ie." At the time of his also on the part Of[ r he hud ieft behind piece he had thrown ht he might as well e he explained everyâ€" ce. When he came to eaded guilty, and "his i him get a~ lenient s felt, however, , that rrious enough that he i lengthy enough term imself and others. ind destroy it it and used i he culprit. A 1 the mistake h regist ind *‘ on ‘revious store s,"* che er on it the He was out with a number of other prisoners on Monday morning engaged in hauling wocd. When the other prisoners were brought in the guards noticed that Foster was missing and an immediate search was made for him. The officials belijeve that Foster tojk the notion to escape just because two other fellowsâ€"Eilton McKay and Leo Mayer had taken ieave Oof the farm. Foster was that sort of fellow. Apparently there was no harm in him. but always rcom for somebody to get some harm into him. The three prisonâ€" ersâ€"Foster, McKay, and Mayerâ€"escapâ€" ed within 48 hours. McKay and Mayer went togzeéther. They also were trusâ€" ties and were working in the garage reâ€" pairing a truck. They took a guard‘s car and escaped in it. Later the car was found near Coniston. . The pair took the markers (possibly with the idea of stealing another car and using the markers on it.) Indian Magician Proved to be Very Well Knifed (CAITCULLA S»L@ALCSMALIL) Eighteen complete penknives as well as; parts of other penknives were exâ€" tracted from the stomach of an Indian "magician" when he was operated upon in St. George‘s hospital at Bombay. Passage Booked to any part of the World Call, phone or write for travel information to all parts of the world, Free passport service. We arrange hotel reservations and every detail of your trip. Cruises organized. 20 Pine North Timmins Phone 1135 Steamship Agent Real Estate Insurance il GUARDIAN OF CANADIAN STEAMSHIP AG ENT ta Statesman) walk in life entrust their little savings to Life Insurance. Each day, men and women from every walk in life receive Five Hunâ€" dred Thousand Dollars from Life Insurance savings. Thus Life Insurance provides countless families with food, clothing, shelter and other necessitiesâ€"gives children a better start in lifeâ€"and assures men and women financial security in their old age. for all routes One of his favourite methods of enâ€" tertaining illustrious audiences was to swallow penknives. There was no doubt of his swallowing them, and he had his own method of getting rid of them. About four months ago, however, this method failed on one ccecasion and he gave a second performance before ‘he had got over the effects of nis first misâ€" hap. The result was that a dozen penâ€" knives were leff in his stomach. When the "magician‘" was taken to the operating theatre and the surgeon cpened his stomach one knife after anâ€" other was recovered until 18 complete knives lay on the cperating table beside the patient. This consignment of knives accountâ€" c for all that the magician has missed during the past four months, but the surgeon kept on exploring the man‘s and removed the steel sides of two other knives, five flat steel plates, which appeared to be knife centres, three naked knife blades, two steel door keys, four steel hooks, such as are fitted cn more elaborate knives, two steel loops i(fitted on some knives to attach them to belts) and a number of serves credit 1or 1] better policy. Th thankf{ful for in counties, in the gr tions so well here hospitals to take car victims. It is now gen that "T.B." can be bea plorable when sufferer it to relatives in the their dwellings. The mA St. Catharines Standard:â€"The Onâ€" rio Government is rushing work on spitals to take care of tuberculosis ctims. It is now generally recognized at "TB." can be beaten, but it is deâ€" orable when sufferers have to spread to relatives in the close confines of eir dwellings. The government deâ€" rves credit for initiation of a new and is much to be Lincolin and Delland ‘eat "San" which funcâ€" HOMES