Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 25 May 1939, 2, p. 3

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rot, to give to his fiancee, JANE BRADâ€" SHAW. The bird, bought from a dealâ€" er whom Kom knows and trusts, is, according Lc "the dealer, a very exâ€" ceptional pdn'ot and is about seventy years of > ageâ€"no great age for a parâ€" rot. uon aiualizalia ate aieate abeateateate ies ats ie ate abeataats at s abuate abe abe ate ate abuate abe obe abe afe abe abe abe abe ate afe o * obe aleaSnale abe afe abe sbe abe abe abe Sn obe PRINCIPAL â€" CHARACTERS Indian. I think the male parent prc-'no appeal to the lust of the Latins. TOM AYLMER : At the time the story‘dommatcd. Benny possessed enormous Spain, with gunpowder to support her opens is living in Peru, managing | energy, great physical courage, and inâ€"‘ and the lore of war at her fingers‘ ends, silver mines belonging to his father.| domitable willâ€"powerâ€"qualitiecs you may 'swimy laid Peru battered and bleeding FELICE PARDO: A Peruvian who, alâ€" ‘ seek in vain among the aborigines of | under her heel, for in a few years‘ time though young, has been fifteen years Peru. Indecd, T always say that when I the Jesuits were governing South in the service of the Aylmer minâ€" | one meets a particularly dull, apathetic | America precisely on the same old lines ing enterprise. He is the most trustâ€"} and fcoble soul, the betting is that he |of superstition and force that the Incas ed native employee. ’ has the old blood in him." were used to employ. , MRS. MERCY AYLMER: Tom‘s mothâ€" Young Mainc protestcd. "Yet," concluded the old man, er; egotistical and exacting. "That‘s a hard sayn2!" he cried. "I | little company ol our ancient Indian JANE BRALDSHAW: Tom Aylmer‘s fiâ€"| have studied the natives in my small|people remaining, still cherish their ancee. At the time the story opens,| way, because I reverence their story,| memories and reverence the sorrows of Synopsis of Previous Chapters ‘TOM AYLMER and ANGUS MAINE are enjoying a Foliday on the hills of Peru when FELICE PARDO rides out to them»with a cabled message anâ€" nouncing the death of Tom‘s father. ‘Tom knows that his father has beâ€" queathed to him the Peruvian silver mines of»â€"which he (Tom) is the manâ€" ager. On lmcx the bird engages the attention of _ JACOB FERNANDEZ, a rich inan, or Lima, who is bound for Panama and whose life hobby is the study of birds. JANE BRADSHAW: Tom Aylmer‘s fiâ€"| have studiecd the natives in my small : ancee. At the time the story opens,| way, because I reverence their story, the expectation, is that these two will | and I have found them often wiser than marry on Toms‘ next leave in Engâ€"| â€"well, wiser than those we call their land. bettors." ANGUS MAINE: A young Scot on Aylâ€"| "Good!" said Jacob. "I like young mer‘s staff, and close companion of | pecple to be interested in anthropology JACOB FERNANDEZ: A rich, elderly south American whose hobby is the study of bird life, He is a bachelor and is engaged upon a monumental literaryâ€"Mm«rtk on the subject of bird life. HMHe decides ‘to sail for Engzland at once and to take Angus for company. Before leaving Lima, Tom buys parâ€" To Feérnandez, the parrot talks, but the only words he can detect, in a string of sounds are ‘"Benny Boss." Fernandcez says he know a man of thatl name, and proceeds to tell Tom and Angus what he knows. C (I:I(_)w Read . On) CHAPTER II (Continued) Signor Ferandez ordered refroeshâ€" ment and proceeded to the subject of the byzone adventurer who had brought them together; but the tale of Benny was destined to be again delayed, for Bignor Fernandez touched on A side issue, and, finding it of deep interest to his secondâ€"hearer, discoursed a little upon it. "The origin of Benny is hidden in the past. He was ignorant of it himâ€" self, and had not the faintest notion as to whom his parents may bave been; but he felt sure that his father was a white man and believed his mother an in inalindinalin lig its sls ie ataate +3 oBe on o} afe abs MWM%NWN%W%%WW PUBLISHED BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT COPYRIGHT } J. J. McKAY on First Mortgages Available in TIMMINS SCHUMACHER SOUTH PORCUPINE Paid Back Monthly over 3 to 5 Years. APPLY TO REAL ESTATE INSU P STEAMSHIP OFFICE 20 Pine North Ph:i Timmins 1135 THURBDAY. MAY 25TH. 1939 The favor of Purity Oats is fintr, the color 1« whiter, and the "body" is fuller. It is the breakfast food of thousands of husky boys and girls. Five minutes from panatry shelf to the steaming. (]1".1\ LOHLJ® dish. l'ry fhifl grand (Cre.fl tt»â€" morrow morning. Get it with or without fine chinaware premium . S % Â¥ *% \. 4 p MADE BY TYE MILLERS QOP PURITY FLOUR T ABLE INSURANCE Phones 1135 1580 Eden Phillpotts "Good!" said Jacob. "I like young pecple to be interested in anthropology â€"Oor indeed in any ‘ology‘ that will heip to develop their wits. Are you attractâ€" ed by our ancient history, Angus?" "He lives for it, sir," explained Tom. "HMe loves the Incas better than anyâ€" thing, and says it was one of the greai tragedies of history that a lower civilizâ€" ation conquered a nobler one, when Spain swallowed up Peru." "A great tragedy often repeated," said the old man, "and nothing gives me more pleasure than to reflect that Peru succeeded in regaining her liberty. If I have a hero, it is Bolivar." He turncd to Maince. . "The history of Inca civilization rcâ€" mains still to be written, thouzh rich material awaits the historian. If you are an enthusiast you may know as much about it as Iâ€"do, however." thunder were their gods. The pCople were relizious and paid their toll to their deities. They gave willingly all that was most precious to them. With gold and silver and precious stones they adorned their noble temples and brought thither the fruits and harvest of the carth, together with the proâ€" ductions of their own industry â€" the finest achievements of their craftsmen and husbandmen. And that, surely, is about the most rational form of idolaâ€" try it is possible to imagine. Beneficent and allâ€"sufficing nature, was their real deity. and they took their convictions far afield, for where the Incas conâ€" quered and extended their domain, all native blood rites and religious torâ€" tures {nd massacres woere suppressed, and the native peoples taught a higher ideal of humanity. "Now touching in Incas and those defects of character that I attributed to them, perhaps too harshly, we have got to remember fundamental facts, my friends, for out of them arises their history. To begin with, they never shed innozent blood save in the rarest instances. Their altars were not polâ€" luted, and they display the spirit of Abel rather than Cain. They claimed a heavenly origin, and, for their time, behaved in a manncr quite worthy of it. The sun, the moon, the evening star. and the spirit that spoke in the thunder were their gods. The people were relizious and paid their toll to "We will leave. Benny Boss waiting for a moment, then," he said. " And that will not trouble him, for he was used to waiting, and knew the time to strike. Patience, combined with his cther serpentine: qualities, served his purpose well enough. "Please go on!" said Angus. "I‘m lcarning Spanishâ€"old Spanishâ€"to read the fine books about it. Signor Fernandez loved to talk, and found his prosent audience quite to his tlaste. "We must graut that the Governâ€" ment was despotic and created for the nation a sort of supcrior slavery. Thus superstition and force governed the country and created a supine, phlezâ€" matic spirit destined to make it an casy prey. "Those who had set the slogan ‘Love one anothecr‘ upon their banners swiftly went down before the battle cry of Spain, and their dream of good comâ€" radeship and universal humanity made by the Jesuits were governing South America precisely on the same old lines of superstition and force that the Incas were used to employ. ‘"Yet," concluded the old man "Utht little company of our ancient Indian people remaining, still cherish their "HMe was an unconscious artist. In youth he had followed the sea and spent muzch time also at various Pacific islands in guano‘s palmy, days. The fact had created a keen interest in birds, and I will say for Benny that a soundecr naturalist never came to my knowledge. "The man was in his primt wWNCD we first met,." began Jacob, "and a« nothing pleased him better than talking about himself I heard a good deal of his history. One could not, however, reâ€" gard him as a very truthful narrator. He was always the hero of his own story, and, to listen, one had thought that no more honest plainâ€"dealer ever fouzht fate and circumstance; but an clement of romance never lacked from the narrative. memories and reverence the sorrows of the past. They still mourn the imperial Incas, and their vanished glories and bitter woes are handed down by fathe; to son, by mother to daughter, through the avenues of the years." "I should judge there was no quesâ€" tion about it, Maine," replied the other. "The fact is established on massive grounds. Sanguine historians judge there may well be treasures to the value of fifty millions hidden in Titicaca; and they are likely for the most part to remain there, for her waters are in places cight hundred feet decep. One may â€" compute. where the . treasure arrived from Cuzco; but the lake was full of heavy craft in those days and no man can say where these precious things have been submerged. _ Some, however, were undoubtedly recovered) and that fact brings me back to Betiny Boss, whom we have kept waiting long enough." "Well, Beuny, tiring of the sea, found eccngenial work inland at. Puno and presently combined varied interestsâ€"by opcrating on the lake in the steamers trading between Bolivia and Peru. 1 met him upon an excursion in one Of these little paddleâ€"boats, and we struck up a friendship over birds. He agreed to serve me and, for a time, worked solely in my employment on the waters and shores of Lake Titicaca. In the capture of birds he was industrious and most ingenious. I look back at Benny as one of the founders of my unique collection. "I paid Mr. Boss very well," conâ€" tinued the old man, "and we ncver quarrelled; but presently he appcared to lose interest in the birds and I folt they had ceased to be his first thought. He never let me into his secrets, howâ€" ever, and I was not concerned to learn them.. He lived at Puno then, and was married with several children. . Iâ€"reâ€" meber that, towards the end of our collaboration, he told me that his eldest daughter was goinz fo marry a man called Pardo, and I gave him a wedding present for her. ve # _e~ _ ! i : uced "That may be regarded as the first act of Benny‘s stery, so far as I know it,: but I only saw the man again once. Physically, by the way, he was underâ€" sizcd, but fincly put together â€"â€" imâ€" mensely strong for a little ‘un and As tough as tcak. A broad, solid fellow with a big nose and yellowish, pale eyesâ€"rather like your blue parrot‘s. No mind ever moved quicker, and he knew sometimesâ€"in a mystcrious way â€"what you were going to tell him beâ€" fore you opened your mouth." Mr. Fernandes laughed at his thoughts. * "Well, a year or two passed," ho proâ€" eceded, "and I hcard nothing of Benny. Then he called upon me at Lima and invited me to buyâ€"not a bird, but jowel. I have small interest in jeowels and know nothing about them, but he showrd me a remarkable, bloodâ€"red stone of great lustre set in gold. was cbviously ancient, but as to its quality and market yalue I could form no opinion. I supposrd the stone to b¢ a ecarbuncle, for it looked to be much larger than any ruby I had ever seen, but Benny Swore that it was a true ruby and worth five thousand pounds at the least. He maintained an air of grctat mystery and declined to give me any particulars. I advised him to take the jewel to an expert, but this he declinâ€" mystery and declined to give me any particulars. I advised him to take the jewel to an expert, but this he decliinâ€" ed to "It struck me. knowing my Benny, that the red stone was probably stolen from some trusting native. and when he finally offered to let me have it for five hundred pcunds instead of the sum he had claimed it to be worth, I felt more CHAPTUER III THE £50,000 RUBY his prime when m POG.OUPIN! AD'A.RC! THiCiH® ONTABIO The following is from the daily columns of Thomas Richard Honry, writing in The Toronto Tclegram:~â€"â€" Prospecting Swedish scientists say they can toll if there are minerals in the ground by cxamination of tree leaves. This beats the magnetic need}¢ surâ€" vying that used to get a big play. It even beats the "diving rod" mcethod of finding water. Prospecting, Truth, Brokers and Yoâ€"Ho Also a Word About Inspecâ€" tor Creasy, and Other Matters. s The theory is that if mincrals exist, traces will be found in water solutions that are absorbed through thte roots of shrubs and trecs, As a matter of fact, it "beats cveryâ€" thing,‘" what scientists say they can do these days. "Thus, for instance, trees growing near a gold vein reveal certain gold contents in their leaf." We always wondcred where leaf" came from. Said the book agentâ€"Have you the "Life of â€"â€"â€"‘‘ in this home? ~ True Story A book seller called at the home of a Cobourg citizen. Said the citizecnâ€""No, I haven‘t the life of a dog." We have always maintained that the time to advertise is when business is slcwâ€"and you get most attention when you are not crowding in with all your competitors. Bcefore the Great War it was only the men who diecd horribly on fields of battle, with jagged sbccl tcarinff out their entralls. Women and children wept at home. But military genius has made rapid strides. Brokers and Sheep Brokers generally have always been something like. a bunch Of sheep. (We said sheepâ€"not lambs). There have been a faithful few who have bravely advertised through the seven lean years, but It is so long since the rank and file of brokers have adâ€" vertised that most of us have forgotten our theorics. Bombing plants can now penetrate behind the battle lines and subject the women and the children to the same terrible death that menâ€" must face in battle. Military genius ‘has even> cffeoted more than that. . The wonders of military science not only makes it possible for dittle girls and little boys to be killed ‘outright. It makes it possible for them to be pitiably starved. When business is good they fall over themselves, and each other, advertising for more business. They all want to crowd their ads on the same page on the same day. We notice, however, that Haig, Rennic and Co. are the first to come out of their trance. They are out looking for business with a big ad. They deserve to get it. The Civilized Touch The Japs say that they will stop the Red Cross from supplying foods to reâ€" fugees in citiecs under attack. This simply emphasizes the rapid adâ€" vances that have taken place in miliâ€" tary thinking. â€"Little children hurt ~and â€" hungry; women starved and bombed; men disâ€" integrated by the marvels of a machinct azgzeâ€" War is something at which one may woell marvel. Recognition A passengser on the . British liner Strathaird stands accused of throwing overboard two violins, one contra bass, one banjo, one saxophone and all the drums, the property of a swing band. We think that this man should reâ€" ccive some recognition for relieving snort of the highest achievement. We wish to cite him for meritorious actionâ€"and at the same time draw atâ€" tention to his failure to crown his work with perfection. He started out well butâ€"he failed to throw the swing band overboard after thceir instruments of torture. U.S. Business wWhen the US. business man tells you there must be a Hades because that‘s where business has gone, he isn‘t exactly fooling. than ever suspicious. I had no mind to play fence for Mr, Boss and perhaps iend myself in posession of sgomebody else‘s property. So I told him there was nothing doing under such vague cireumstances. "He left me after our conversation. and said the he was going to stop with friends at Lima for a few daays and then return to his home beside Lake Titicaca. I never saw him again, but after a couple of years were passed, heard a further instalment of his story. Benny now achieved notoriety, and was wantâ€" ed by the authorities. Doubtless anticiâ€" pating this demand, however, he evaded the chalienge by making himself scarce. For a consid¢rable while no news of his activitics was forthcoming, and ncither the members of his family nor anybody else could guess where he might be. "Meantime, his story and the charges levelled against him saw the light. Two brothersâ€"Emilio and Juan Garciaâ€"â€"had entered a socret parltnership with Benny. It apprared that they found the money for this enterprise, while Mr. Boss supplied the brains and needâ€" ful exertion. The gamble had betn undertaken at Benny‘s inspiration, and he had fired the Garcia brothers with his own enthusiasm.. As I have told you, it is historicaly certain that on the approach of the Spaniards, and beâ€" fore the capital city of the Incas fell to them. immense quantities of their treasures were removed from Cuzco, conveyed south, and buried in the watâ€" ers of Leke Titicaca, (‘To be tÂ¥ Business is sort of tough down in the States. #: + | For example, if the country is dividâ€" ed up into 147 trading areas, there isn‘t single one that doesiv‘t show busiâ€" ness below normal, and the percentage below normal extends from two down to 38. Maybe the morality squads ha\c got on the job. The Black Prince of Creasey Plorric Cullure calls our attention to the fact that Inspector Prank Creasey will accompany the quints to Toronto. One year ago, Austin Texas, Houston, Texas, and Mobile, Alabama, reported business two or three per cent. above normal, but even these have slipped beâ€" low the normal line. Florric knows the family. She says the inspector is the son of Sir Edward Creasey, at one time governor of Ceyâ€" lon. When the inspector makes his sally into Toronto, he should remember that it isn‘t only the Mounted Police who always get their man. Naturally The other day we commented on the fact that illuminated Vancouver citizen (we mean illuminated and not enlightâ€" ened) might see the German fleet slipâ€" ping through the mists of Puget Sound. A‘ mamn from Vancouver wants to know how a Vancouver citizen, illuâ€" minated or: otherwise, could see any= thing on Puget Sound, because Puget sound is off â€"Seattle. The answer is perfectly simple. The Vancouverâ€"~citizen could be atâ€" tending ‘a convention at Seattle and that is whv he would be illuminated. Yoâ€" Yo Ycaterday an exâ€"broker we used to know called to see us. And listen, girls! She says he is very handsome. He first brought in a chap named. Al Gallo, whom he said was champion of Montreal, and later, Joe Young, whom he introduced as world‘s champion. We don‘t know how a world‘s chamâ€" pion yoâ€"yo player is decided, but. these boys put on quite a show, and can really make the flittle wooden spinners do tricks for them. As ncarly as we could make out, he was managing a string of yoâ€"yo Cxâ€" petrts. The accuracy with which they kept the yoâ€"yo spinning around their heads made us wonder why they didn‘t stick a safety razor blade on one of them and use it for a fast shave. McLaughlin BUIUKK @ 1v‘s cxciting to fall in love with Buick. For here is a car unmatched for good looksâ€"unrivalled for life and action. No wonder it is winning so many hearts. If you have an eyce for beauty, you will instantly pick MecLaughlinâ€"Buick out of the passing parade. No other car so definitely reflects the style trends of tomorrow. If you want power to speed your going. take the wheel of this great new Dynaflash Straight Eight Buick. See how smoothly you wing down the straightâ€" away, cruise around the curves, swoop up the hiil. If it‘s comfort you crave, just relax in the roomy, luxurious interior of a new Buick. Watch how steel coilâ€"springing on all four wheels levels the rough roads â€"how Knceâ€"Action even banks the turns. MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE LTD. If you want the car of the yearâ€"the value of the year â€"choose MeLaughlinâ€" Buick. It‘s easy to own on the General Motors Instalment Plan. So why wait longer? Youngâ€"Davidson to Pay Dividend in August This Year Toronto, May 24.â€"â€"In littls more than three months, about the end of Auâ€" gust, sharcholders of Youngâ€"Davidson Gold Mines can expect an initial diviâ€" dend, probably of 3 cents a share, Preâ€" sident Weldon C. Young intimated at annual. meeting in Toronto on Friday That was but one of the optimistic announcements made at the meeting. Advances Shown in Producâ€" tion, Tonnage, Average Recovery and Operating Profit. The year 1938 was one of complete success, he stated, ore reserves at the end of the year being as great as on any property in Canada, at between 3,500,000 and 4,000,000 tons above the 650 level.> Development of the second level has béen completed and work ot blocking out and stoping the ore has started on the third level. Mine is beâ€" ing developed systematically â€" under Hollinger‘s supervision, and work is not being rushed. After third level is deâ€" veloped,; prospecting and development will be done between the 650 and 850 horizons. Pit work will be finished in two or three months. Up till a short time ago, at least 70 per cent of the ore milled was coming from the pit. That posiâ€" tion is now reversed, onlyâ€"about 25 per cent coming from pit and balance from underground. Winze will go down to the 1,050 horizon, with the view in mind Oof establishing the jJaw crusher below the 850 level, which would effect a big saving in costs. Plant is capable of operating to 1,500 feet. April â€"production was $110,781 from milling of 31,441 tons of ore for averâ€" age recovery of per ton, while operating expenses were $78,891, leavâ€" ing operating profit of $31,890. Proâ€" duction for the first four months of the year amounted. to $470,879 from 125,279 tons for average of $3.75. Total expenditures were $310,654, leaving an opcrating profit of $160,225. Mr. Young stated that on May 3, bullion poured brought production for the year to date to $500,000. _ As with the first four months of 1988, tons milled increaset Showrooms, 7 Third Ave. ITS THE BEAUTY! T‘ S THE BUY! * OYNAFLASH YALYEJIN.HEAD STRAIGHTâ€"8 ENGINE *« HANDâ€" SHIFT TRANSMISSION «x TIPTOE HYORAULIC BRAKES «x SELF.â€" BANKING KNEEâ€"ACTION FRONWT SPRINGING _# "CATWALK.â€"COOLâ€" ING" * TORQUEâ€"FREE REARâ€".COIL SFRINGING «* CROVWHN SPRING CLUTCH # ROOMIER UNISTEEL BODY BY FISHER «+ DIAECTION SIGNAL 4 GREATER YÂ¥I51BJLITY x TORGQG V E.T UV BE DRIYE 9,263, average recovery per ton was up 44 cents, production was $86,263 Higher, expenses were up only $30,5093, so that operating profit increased $35,610, or more than 53 per cent. Average.daily tonnage for the 120 days was 77 tons higher, s From time mill started in September, 1934, to end of April, 1939, mill as handled 1,404,899 tons, from whith has been produced $4.596,322 for a average of $3.27 a ton. Total expenses, were $3,189,269 for that period, and Opcrat.- ing profit $1,407,053. The directorate was with the addition of W. T. Davidson. Phone 646â€"J 63 Birch street North TIMMINS BOTTLING WORKS The drink everybody knows _ Timmins Timmins

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