meneugre= BE e is c y x +s iz â€'i P 3y M PWP BRAL * 1 * * A large nu Girl May Be Next Marble Champion TRAFFIC PROBLEMS .. , A polite but firm traflic warning is given by an Egyptian officer to a Sudanese merchant enroute to Cairo for trespassing and "rubberâ€"necking" aboard his camel over the newly excavyated area in front ofâ€" the 5000 â€"wear old Sohinx at GiÂ¥a, Egypt. lore 190,080 Egyvrlisns worked 20° yorr the ~Splhinx excavated : adre than bAd â€"Pyrarmw o ts. > io ts «o uit s i i en d im / # ites nX# * % xA .»1:’.“.;'.‘.......«'.#‘1{@ wb en c on c en ut m 6D css 4 i y ns s id m > «> m ® 4A UNLIMITED [ ..... P ï¬,’?’ g" ® F 5p meqouce mose THan [z or canarma‘ls pRODuCES NERRLY MBR OF 4500 000 rons :3?« «i WORLDS NEWSâ€" TIMMINS ROTTLING_WORKS Algonguin Blvd: E.. Phone 13 h Woartime Taxes and Orders isiirance on ""“" “J‘\"w;-,.v * * K 8 MA Lithis week rews tequal). â€" â€" Jean Ans ic fow . more(equal); Arlene T has . underâ€" Grade J vere‘|yet to . I'nst Class Ilono * ~HonouTS_ â€"»mas "***" jiw.. NEARLY 600 TyPFES of PAPER ARF MADE IN CANADA ANNUAL YALUE OF PAPERâ€" MAKING TO ONTARO is ncariy $80,000,000. /y r®~ AvQart Many Successful Pupils In Exams of Conservatory The following is a list of successful candidates in examinations held reâ€" cently by the ROYAL CONSERVAâ€" TORY OF MUSIC OF TORONTO in Timmins.. The names ate attanged in otder of merit. Pass ~~ Marjorie Fisher, Mary E Hadley (Cequal). Grade VII Pilano 4 Honours â€"â€" Anne Wolife; Janet L. Malkin. Maureen Macpherson. Pass °â€" Inga Viitanen: Margaret Pass McNet] Grade VIL Piano IHonours â€"â€" Wendy.Cross; Donald Hindson: Bill Reid; Shirley Connor: Sheilla Brooks, Ian Purdieâ€" (cqualb Kathtyn Fell Grade X Piano Pass â€" Fila Antila CGrtade VII Piano Honours â€" Joyce Dupont, Dolores Fiske Cequal). Honours â€" Shirley Hudson:; Naney da Rosner (equal) Hutchison.â€" Marlyn Chapman, Helen GREY SISTE K. Gosnell, Marion Woodward (Cequal) : Grade â€" Vilma Kemp:; James MceCallum. Pass â€" Elsie Le Honours â€" Carole MeMurray: Mar. garet "Corcoran, Joseph MacNab (eqâ€" ual»; Dorothy Anderson, Elaine And. rews (equal). 4 Pass â€" Donald Reid; Caroline Camley. Grade IV Piano Honoursâ€" Josephine Ellacott, Betty Ann Hansen (equal) ;Jacqueline Huot; Jane Macpherson; â€" John Stephens; Marjoric Ostrom, Basil Reid (equal). Grade IIL Piano First Class <"Honours Patricia Jesup. Pass â€" Jean Anderson, Norma Reig: (equal)»; Arlene Truant. . Grade IL Pigy*". *opare eqtial):;: Doris Salmen; Lind2 Hocking: Patricia McClinto. Welsh. Grade II Piano Grade I Piano Honours â€" Miro Matymich; Betty «~Honours â€" Joy Armstrong; Nida Drew:; Renny Peppone: Carl Markerth Péllizzari; Tony Ceccanese; Ann Milâ€" Graide I Piano ler; Mary Andrews. First Class Honours â€" Ann Lewis; Pass â€" Joyce Rennault. Mary Ann Amadio SINGING Honours â€" Maureen Banning Grade IV Singing Grade IIL Violin Pass â€" Adele Gaouette Honours â€" Paul Hallonen The Boy Who Made A Dream Come Truc Some years ago there lived in Tom‘s River, NJ., a boy who "did‘t seem to ind himself." Didn‘t seem. to have any ambition at all, the ne‘ghbours said. His name was Simon Lake. His father was a mechanic and had a small foundry buxiness of his own. \_One day the boy picked up a copy of a book entitled "Twenty Thousand Iéagues Under the Sea.‘"‘ He was thriled;. h‘s imagination was set cn fire, He himself wanted to oruise under the sea bent upon strange adventures. When he told the neighbours he was going to build a boat that would sail underwater they thought he was just plam nuts. But that is not a bad sign: having people think what you want to do can‘t be done. The boy started Now he was no longer lazy; instead, he was fired with ambition:; loafing was forgotlen; the days were far to short. There was no cue with experience in his line to tell him what not to do. He was a pioneer; a Balboa looiun«r mot upon new ocean but up n a new upon new ocean but a hnew sea bed. - One day the people saw a monstrous machine in the river and came rowing out to inspect it; they pulled out from under it a boy, pulled him from under that queer machine and saved his life. Or so they thought. But the boy gave them a bitter glance, for they had pulléd him away from his experiment. ~He kept on working and experimentâ€" ing, and finally, at Atlantic Highlands, I think also ‘of Abraham> Lincoln who fished out a law book from a barrel in New Salem Village, Elinois, and started to study law from the inspiration he received friom it. This study of law launched him on his career; he became an office holder; later,president of the United States. It is quite possible that if he had not read that book he might never have become president. The power of a book is tremendous! One day the people saw a monstrous machine in the river and came rowing out to inspect it; they pulled out from under it a boy, pulled him from under that queer machine and saved his life. Or so they thought., But the boy gave them a bitter glance, for they had pulleéd him away from his experiment. CGrade V Piano First Class Honours â€" Sheila Sloâ€" wAld9oz dd â€"â€" JOogun Crant. Aspinall nours'r:...-‘“ugh G,. Beacock, Anita Honours arL equal): Doris Salmen:; Linda Hocking: Daire > Carntoere THE PORCUPTINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO AOo The paper Conadiaons make keeps the world reading, wrapping parâ€" cels, writing letters, printing books, newspapers, magoazines. As a supâ€" plier of the main product upon which all permanent knowledge is recorded, the papermaker is exâ€" panding the importance of Canada Unlimited . BREWING COMPANY LIMITED N.J., he ‘{amunched his first submarine. Yes, actually a submarine. It was proâ€" pelled by hand crank, but it worked. actuality. Three years later he built a submarine with an engine; this would carry a crew of five. Nct culy this, but he telephoned from under the water to boats saiing around on top of the water. Then he made a thousand mile cru‘se. CONVEXT Grade VIHL Pianse Pas â€"â€" Jeanne d‘Are Fottier; Dorâ€" even Essaa; Margare!t lafontaine; Mary Rarkwell. ‘"How to Win Friends ang Inffueance Peovla" Honours â€" Madeleine Briand: Patâ€" ricia Mayrand. Se Pasgs. â€"~Guy Belanger Grade IIIL Piano IHonours â€"â€" Jacqueline Fortietr. Grade I1 Piane First Class Honours â€"â€" Lorraine Nanning: Carmen Lehoux. Grade VIH Piano First Class Honours â€" Mary Burke Honours â€" Lucien Pargé; Nancy Fleming. ; Pass â€"â€" Cathring Haystead. One day he received a cablesram. Opening it, he got a tremendous thrill: It was frem the man who had written that bocok which had so stirred his imag.nation years ago. The sender of the cablegram, and the author of the hook said: "You have turned my dream into reality." Simon Lake kept on with his experâ€" ments, not only in this country but abroad. He indecd became the father of thesubmarine. He died in June, 1845, in Connecticut. He always said that a book changed his life and that he owed it to this inspiration to try to acâ€" complish something. It changed not on. ly Simon Lake‘s life, but the lives Lf thousands of others. . .mcholskl Pass â€" Catherine Higson Grade IHV Piano First Class Honours â€" Grade 1 Pianso Honours â€" Sheila Finkelman, Hinâ€" Pass â€"â€" Cathrine Haystead. Grade V Piano First Class Honours â€" Isabel Rose. Grade IV Piano First â€" Class Honours â€" BarXaraq GREY SISTER‘s CONVENT Grade X Piano Pass â€" Elsie Leskew Grade VIII Piano Honours â€" John Parfitt Pass â€" Barbara Raymer Nora Irving; Barbara wave Bar ara ry Burke Nancy bel Rose, . Baruara e:â€" Olga Kathleen Barbara ch: Betty Whirlaway has been tlected the new favorite race horse to succeed the dec#ased Man 0o‘ War, ia poll condiuw@‘"ed by the Lexington, K),'; ,.Hï¬xald Leader. Runners â€" up War Admiral, Count Flect, Alâ€" sab, Bull Lea and Armed. The famous horse won 32 of his 64 races, was secâ€" ond 24 times, and out of the money only four times. He has won all the big stake races, and set a new money record of $561,161 at the time of his retirement. The Atlanta Crackers have purchased Bill Kennedy from the Lookouts, ownâ€" by the Washington Senators. Kenâ€" nedy was the only Southern Associaâ€" tion hurler to win 20 games last scaâ€" son. He is a southpaw. Chester : Lil~ * An Olympic athlete at 151 _ That is the proud achievement of Karol Kenâ€" nedy of Seattle, Wash. She and her brother, Peter, 20, are members of the US. figure skating team. . They will compete in the winter Olympics at St. Moritz, Switzerland, in February. Anotker â€" youthful s t ar, Barbara Ann Scott, of Ottawa, Canadhk, who won the world‘s championship in figâ€" @ (eq. ute skating last year, when 18, will also be at St. Moritz. Bill Veeck, president of the Cleveâ€" land Indians, says the club‘s new motâ€" io is "trade anyone at anytime for the good of the team." He is sorry, he says, that other major league clubs are reluctant to trade established players at this time. WON‘T GQO HOME Two hundred German prisoners of war at Derby Eng., aave applied to stay on Derbeyshire farms. HAIR BAROMETER Blonde hair reacts to humidity conâ€" tracting and expanding, but dark or red bair reaction is barely nOt: ‘ceable. One champion who hasn‘t been deâ€" feated in eight years, even in a single game, is Dave Freeman, U.S. badmingâ€" ton champion. . Badmington, that reâ€" fined variety of tennis played with a light racquet and a feathered ball, is a remarkably â€"fast game. Davis used to play tennis, and was national junior champion in 1938. He says he gets more completely exhausted at bads mington than tennis. Jack Adams is now in his 21st con«â€" secutive year as coach and general manager of the Detroit Red Wings, pro hockey club. During his term the Red Wings have won the Stanâ€" ley Cup three times, and figured in the playoils seven times. NWNS Sports Writer By ELLIOTT PINE OVER A MILLION CANADIANS WILL RECEIVE AN AVERAGE OF . . Yes, the average cheque to 1,329,139 Canadians for 1,‘)42 Compulsory Savings Refunds will amount to 45 dollars. If you have a refund coming to you, it can mean extra spending money right now or it can provide extra savings for the future. But the very fact that you have done without it, makes this the easiest tyixc of money to save. Why not put your refund cheque away in a savings account at the B of M? There it will keep on gathering interest. It will be something you will be glad to have to meet tomorrow‘s opporâ€" tunities or needs. o t ol $A . or MonTrRrEaAL working with Canadians mm every walk of life since Tunmins Branch: Pine St. Second Ave. The Hyvdraoâ€"Electric Power Commission of Ontario e PORTABLE ELECTRIC STEAM RADIATORS e PORTABLE ELECTRIC HEATERS e ELECTRIC GRATES @0 Savc all the electricity ~yo=â€"can_ to help maintain peak production in Ontario‘s facâ€" tories and farms. Your allâ€"out coâ€"operation is needed. Electric heaters place a heavy strain on your Hydro system. As an example: a 1 320â€"watt portable air heater requires as much electrical energy in one hour as would be requued to light twentyâ€"two 60â€"watt lamps for the same time. Greater voluntary savings must be made by all consumers. Please do your part. ‘ 1942 Compulsory Savings Refund cheques will be mailed out in midâ€"March and dated Marcth 31s1, But the B of M and all other chartered banks in Canada have been authorized 10 cash refund cheques any time from the date of receipt CAMPBELL, Manager Pn io. it tigs 1 PÂ¥ PM P 4* w «uhy J A @51 [A#AD 4#§ ‘Panmins 34 2 ! ! W#