CVLINDERSREBORED M is MOTORS REBUILT W "No. The shrubs have thinned out now through lack of being properly tendsd, â€" but at that time they were Lhz marquis ascended steps leading from the garden up to the first terrace, that led right and left to the laurel walk, and was dotted here and there with antique urns standing on their timeâ€"worn pedestals overgrown with moss. He turned left to reach the steep paths anq steps that wound in and out of the ruins. Raoul stopped him. "Is this the exact spot where you and Elisabeth Hornain stopped that day?" Tho marquis nodded. "Show me exactly." "Here, just where I stand now.‘" "Could they see you from the chaâ€" tealu Elisabeth Hornain on that day fifte:n years ago. Antonine followed close beâ€" hird him, while Raoul and Gorgeret Drought up the rear. By far the calmest Of them all was Raoul. He liked to watch the charming girl who walked in front of him, and noticed certain daetails that distinâ€" guished her from Clara. Antonine‘s carriage was less supple and less graceful, but more natural and unâ€" studied. What it lacked in sinuous grace it gained in general harmony. And what he noticed in her bearing he knew he would also find in her whole manner and even in her features seen close to. Twice, when the path was impeded by undergrowth, Raoul caught up with Antonine for a moment and they walked abreast, but they did not speak,. Th> marauis ascended _the steps carrTiag®> WA graceful, but studied. Wh grace it gai: And what he knew hC Jean d‘E same grou Elisabeth 1 years ago. hird him, Drought uy By far t Raoul. He girl who w noticed ce guished h carriago w was set. him afte tried to : have to hoped fo would m Antor trusting fect fal d‘Erlem with h As fo tracted the my: spent s( I‘ve suf to aven be goin death ?2" convincin up the 1 well: :.; good e Jean comply to hcs! my ov any dc did it‘ sparklir 1M JUNE 3RD, 1035 71 Third Ave. ME New Ontario Machine Works Cor. Spruce First, Timmins NVAS Raou Smith Elston YNO ____ e Maurice hob All Plumbing Fixtures and Furnaces nis IAaAce Was conâ€" a mask of hatred. His mouth is was a bitter moment for all the years he had vainly Ive the mystery, and now to ow to the rival!l He both ind dreaded the success that n his own humiliation. rlemont once again trod the nd he had traverseq with {fornain on that day fifte:n Antonine followed close beâ€" while Raoul and Gorgeret SLIGHT DIFFERENCE IN COST Take Advantage See Our Showrooms cended the steps on 11 not being able . Can we really ruth about her 1ere was never murdered. Who imed her pe She squeez to imbue hi mean ? nmitted WOLiil the ruins. nmediatel 16 ups eyes were you turnegd laurel walk asked the‘! "It is." uld. eemed Raoul Timmins | the dole exâ€" 9 "You seem very positive." "That‘s because I‘m sure of what I sayâ€"anyway, it‘s easy enough to verify my words." The marquis hesitated for a moment. He had grown very pale. Then he stood on tiptoe, and stretching up, thrust "Not necessarily. NOt if she had hidâ€" den them somewhere where they were invisible." "But where?" "In this old urn, for instance, which was just beside her, and filled with growing plants. She had only to stand on tiptoe, stretch up and let the jewels fall inside on the earth at the bottom. A very normal thing to aoâ€"the urn furnished a temporary cache for the jewelsâ€"one that only fate and human stupidity rendered so final." "What do you mean by final?" "Why, the plants that grew in the urn have withered away, their leaves ro0tted until a layer of vegetable mould has covered up the secret, rendering it the safest possible hiding place." BOth d‘Erlemont ang Antonine reâ€" mained silent, much impressed by his calm assurance. Then the marquis spoke: "But when she was killed, when we all rushed to her, surely we shoulg have found them?" "Yes, intending to _ retrieve them when she came down from the ruins after singing." "But who would be passing? You know perfectly well, just as she knew, that everyone was gathered outside the chateau to hear her sing." "So you think she might have hidden the jewels somewhere?" "Impossible! No one would hide valuâ€" able jewels like that out of doors, where anyone passing might take them." ; ‘"‘The very elementary one you have obliged me to ask myself: Since Elisaâ€" beth Hornain preferred to sing withâ€" cut her jewels, diq she not hide them somewhere?" "And it never by any chance occurred to you that the jewels might not have been stolen?" "Never‘!" "And it never occcurred to Gorgeret or the police either! Funny how people never will ask themselves the right question!*" "NO, for I knew they nad been stolen. I was trying to find some clue that might help to lead me to the murderâ€" er." marquis, Racoul laughed softly to himself. "Why are you laughing?" demanded the marquis. And Antonine leaned forâ€" ward, tense with anxiety. "I‘m laughing because the more comâ€" plicated a prodjlem is, the more comâ€" plicated everyone imagines its soluâ€" tion must be. We never 100k for a simple explanation, but always pursue the wild anq extraordinary. When you came here on your periodical visits, what were you looking for? ‘The did can see thing." NAx)d _ CAM YOU 81 "Certainly. ] she stood the against this c WeLl ‘ar out Of the avenue,." "Angq did you see her?" "NOt immediately, but very soon." "But normally you ought to have en her at once? She ought to have me out of the avenue by then?" "Why, yes, I suppose‘ so," said the i impenetrable.* So this is the exact spot where Enu h Hornain stood watching vou wher not swear to it?" I can still picture her as here that day, leaning old pedestal, the curtain falling all around her. I hed softly to himself. you laughing?" demanded And Antonine leaned forâ€" round at the end of to 100k back at her? returned t urn round I ha wh forgotten noâ€" he garden, â€" second h a statement saying that his organizaâ€" tion will not accept A. R. Wood as canâ€" didate. A. R. Wood was nominated recently by the "West Algoma Liberal Association convention," but Mr. Walton says that this convention was not offiâ€" "There are a few people in every community who have the wrong slant on the mission of a newspaper. They do not realize that it a business proâ€" position, just the same as any other inâ€" dustry in a community, even though its stock in trade is publicity. For instance, the Chronicle has housed unâ€" der its roof a plant that cost approxiâ€" mately twenty thousand dollars, and the staff that operate it are paigq wages that will compare favourably with those of any other manufacturing industry. There are three strings to cur bow, and no one or two of them would be adeâ€" quate to keep the business a going conâ€" cernâ€"it takes the combined earnings of all three branchesâ€"subscriptions, adâ€" vertising and job printing. The most expensive end of the business is that? which is operated to produce the newsâ€". paperâ€"or in other words to produce publicity. No other business gives so !much gratis to its community as thel press. It supports the town council in making effective byâ€"laws that are passâ€" ed to regulate civic lifeâ€"it promotes every effort to make a town attractive to live in and to make the citizens comfortable ang happyâ€"it loyally supâ€"| ports all philanthropies, those who are doing something for the underprivileg-l ed in life, such as the Lions ‘Club,} Women‘s Institute, Daughters of the| Empire, the Hospital and its Auxiliaryl the Churches, the Legion and its Auxâ€" lliary, the various lodge fraternal so-l cieties, the Public Library, the Hortiâ€" cultural Society, the Retail Merchants‘ AssociatiOn, our industries, in fact every organization whose mission is to keep our town progressive and upâ€"toâ€" date. Not only does the paper give| generously of its space free of charge in a general way, but the staff lend finâ€" ancial support als0. Yet there are some who apparently think the columns of the paper should be open to free space in boosting specific events Or attracâ€" tions. The hard anq fast rule of a,lll newspapers is that publicity for attracâ€" tions out of which money is to be made,l directly or indirectly, by an admission | charge or collection, must ‘be paid for Committees might just as well walk into a factOry, a grocery store, a dry goods store, or a gents‘ furnishing store, and ask for two or three dollars worth of goods off the shelvesâ€"as ask a news-‘ paper for free publicity that costs severâ€" al hundred dollars each week to proâ€" duce. We would remind the public that besides the wage l>ill, there entersl into the cost of production of even an humble weekly newspaper, the cost of the plant, light, heat, power, telephons, telegraph, governmental and civic taxes, repairs, maintenance, oflice expense, and a hundred others. Perhaps this angle hasn‘t been considered by those who sometimes look almost astonished when the editor who with his staff pay their obligations the same as other citiâ€" zens, ask payment for what he has inâ€" vested so much money in to be in posi-l tion to sell." | cilally called and that the association of which he is president is the only official body. If the Liberals quarrel in the Sault there will be a chance for other men. LIBERALS AT THE SAULT NOT AGREED ON CANDIDATT F. F. Walton, president of the West Algoma Liberal Association, has issued In a recent issue Statesman had the reference:~â€"â€" search. une by one he necklaces,. There were Despite the dirt that « the red of the rublies, ; alds and blue of sapphirt while gold settings flash noon light, (TO BE CONTT Newspaper Space Chief Source of the Revenue at the b« mured in the necklaces . . . On, think that she once wore th His emotion was so gre was scarcely able to go o Vivien Leigh, beauteous British actress, shown with her yearâ€"oldâ€" daughter, finds time from Her maternal duties to devote to her stage careéer. Married at 17, she has attained both her family and suctess on the London stage at 19. 1l1d t 1€ Marriage and Career Do Mix The Bowmanvill following editoria : five of them clung to them, green of emerâ€" res shone forth, drew only 26 years from date of original disâ€" covery, what will the position be in anâ€" ‘other 25 years when the old originals will have passed on and with the camp I still living? The early days of a fiftyâ€" yearâ€"old Hollinger, McIntyre or Dome ‘ will be wrapped in the mists of anâ€" tiquity and there will be more of roâ€" ;mance than accuracy in the reporting ‘of the original finds. "When it comes to the point of deâ€" ciding who grubâ€"staked the prospector or financed the early stage operations cf the big mines the real field of conâ€" 'trO\/ersy is opened. Even in present days, with the axe marks still fresh 'cn the claim stakes, arguments have developed on this score. As to deciding lWhO really put up the grubstake for | Benny Hollinger, George Bannerman | or Jack Wilson, it seems impossible to get at the facts or to publish concluâ€" sions without starting a court action. IIn fact, court actions have already i been fought to decide these points and [ although decisions were handeg down ‘the issue is still in dispute. Much of | the early history of Cobalt is involved in a fog of court decisions, some Of which were bitterly disputed. "It strikes the seeker after informaâ€" | tion an the early days of the famous ‘camps as peculiar that in interviewing those directly concerned in the staking or the financing of the laig mines, each i principal is apparently quite sincere lin his conflicting contentions. Whatâ€" ADVANCE, ONXTARTO "The early history of Porcupine fbrisâ€" tles with argument. Last year The Northern Miner, in an effort to reach the rockâ€"bottom story of the first Porâ€" cupine days, gathered a mass of eviâ€" dence from the original prospectors of that camp, only to find that there were contestants for the honour of first finder. The argument will probably never be settled, although it is possible to form a private opinion. If it is difâ€" ficult now to reach a decision, after The confusion that arises from conâ€" flicting stories given currency in one way or another is well expressed by an article in that clever column, "Grab Samples," in The Northern Miner. The article is worthy of reproduction in full, like most of the "Grab Samples" arâ€" ticles. ‘"Grab Samples" says:â€" "The discovery of a great mine is such an important event, such a specâ€" tacular act, that one would expect there would not be any difficulty in deciding upon and permanently recordâ€" ing the name of the fortunate man eccncerned in it Yet it :; common knowledge that the right to claim oriâ€" ginal discovery is disputed in nine cases out of ten. nots and part Claim Stakers Not Alwavys Truly Known er may have been the original set ven as Recent Discoveries as Those in Porcupine and Cobalt Open to Dispute. "If one runs over the roster of the famous Canadian mines and attempt: to name their discoverers he will quickâ€" ly find himself involveqd in dispute There are always men who will come forward to say that the accepted verâ€" sion is false. If one casually says that ‘ the Tough brothers found the Toughâ€" Oakes, Harry Oakes the Lake Shore "Probably the real or secret history of the discovery of our famous mines will never be printed. It would involve too much controversy, too much idol breaking, create a vast volume of ill feeling and perhaps generate lawsuits. It is perhaps just as well to let history lie where it lies. "Gilbert A. LaBine, discoverer of the radiumâ€"silver deposits of Great Bear Lake, was one of the recipients of Juâ€" bilee medals, "for mineral discoveries in the Northwest Territorics." The mining fraternity will welcome this award which was made on an outstandâ€" "Much of the uncertainty has been created by the failure of the principals involved to operate under written agreements. In the early days of Onâ€" tario mining many of the prospectors were young and rather inexperienced in business affairs, Agreements were often verbal and not infrequently made in hotel rooms, On trains or in private residences, where all present were full Of trust and confidence in each other. Sometimes there were no witnesses other than the contracting parties and sometimes the contracting parties were not in very good condition to remember the exact details, They did not consider written agreements necessary. Such arâ€" arrangements worked out well occasionâ€" ally; at other times, when success blessed the project, there was a tenâ€" dency to attempt repudiation or to conveniently forget basic facts, Some very load deals resulted. Bill Wright the Wrightâ€"Hargreaves, Preston the Dome Mine, Ben Hollinger the Hollinger, Sandy McIintyre the McIntyre Porcupine, J. W. Trethewey the Trethewey Cobalt, Tom Jchnson the Little Long Lac, he will be the recipient of protests from those who claim to have the lowdown, who allege that they can reach back into the past and produce evidence that history lies, Some of these tales are circumstantial and are apt to be somewhat convincing. They only serve to shake the faith of the historian and serve no useful purâ€" pose in most cases. of facts, the passage of time and th« reiteration of argument have obviously fixed in the minds of disputants conâ€" victions which must, in the nature of things, giverge from the truth in some particulars. The writer has heard men of excellent reputation, men whose word could be readily accepted in any ordinary matter, present totally difforâ€" ent versions of the same incident in which each was directly concerned. Oddtellows Cooking School Come and see Practical Demonstration of Electric Cookery and Food Preservation Home Economist of Canadian General Electric Co. Limited Northern Ontario Power Y ou are invited to attend the Prizes and Cook Books Given Free June 4th to 7th inclusive from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Remember the Dates Ladies ... ing performance in prospecting. The discovery Of radiumâ€"bearing Oores in this remote location was one of the jighlights in mineral research in reâ€" cent years. It had a particular signifiâ€" cance in view of the therapeutic qualiâ€" ties of the element, which is constantly coming into greater use." perfection. Besides the flowers of nuâ€" merous varieties which are flourishing. a great deal of time has been devoted to rockâ€"gardening and sowing flower seeds in such manner as to make it appear that these special varieties of flowers were indigenous to the soll in this particular garden. Then it is inâ€" teresting to follow Mr. Byam as he gli>â€" ly says: "Alyssum yellow, this is Arabis white, and this is viola (several shade), Iris, Phlox, Sasifrage, etc., etc., ad inâ€" finitum. Of course, we do not pretend to say that we have spelled the names of these flowers correctly, but Mr. Byam is perhaps the only one wha would be likely to psoint out this fact, and he is too generous to do this. Mr. Byam puts in an immense amount 6of work in his garaen, but to him it is worth while for he enjoys his "summer in a garden", as many Oother citizens do. Such an enthusiast, for instance, is Mr. Roy Walton, for this citizen, "Oof credit and renown" is following closely in Mr. B‘s footsteps, and we can well imagine him saying: "If you get there before I do, look out for me, for I am coming, too." The fish pool is alive with pretty goldfish. They seem to Company, Limited "Although at the time ol our visit several days had yet to pass ere we could expect to see "June flowers," yet President Byam‘s garden, with scores of varities of flowers blooming, and wild birds flitting about from spruce to spruce, was something of a paraâ€" diseâ€"a delightful place to spend an hour. During the past two years Mtr. Byam has doubled the size of his garâ€" den, taking in the pretty row of spruce trees which was the western border of the garden formerly, and now the garden is extended on the west side, and a large number of new flowers. planted last year, are coming on to of varities of 1 wild birds flittin to spruce, was s Horticultural President‘s Garden at New Liskeard at under the auspices of being conducted by rde1 Cha many beautiful gardens in ipecially in the larger cenâ€" mmins, Liskeard, Halleyâ€" s Falls, Cochrane and Kaâ€" In some of the smaller _ are gardens worthy of garden at Porcuâ€" of these specially worthy Last woek The New Lisâ€" er made reference to anâ€" i famed in the North~â€" s. A. Byam, president ot skeard Horticultural Soâ€" in the ike ) Jp 4) 4J (} i) mm i 5j anmmnm (j () }j i ( 34 oo 34 Mb }) i) cnmmmes 4) /) sailed on the of Australia for Southampton. They will be met at Southampton .by their grandmother with whom the y â€"will spend a holiday visit. Noticed on: the train during the journey through iithe North the youngâ€" sters expresesd | themselves as very pleased with the trip, and if they were travelling "alon(s," it was equally true that they were : receiving the kindest attention and in Lerest from every memâ€" ber of the trair crew. Last weelk two youngsters Richard Flannigan, ag ed 7, and his s)ster Cecile, aged 6, left Kapuskasing ‘alone fOr a long trip. ‘They left by C.N.R. for Scuthampto.1, England. "The crews of CNR. traiis looked ‘atfer them as far as where they were met by a represeiritative 0 f the Travellers‘ Ald who look afte! â€" them until they Kitchener Re sord :â€"If Premier Benn(t will r ness. R. B. muist stand â€" bone." Tickets go od in Coaches only. No Biriggage checked. Children 5 and under 12. {flalf Fare. Tickets to Biffalo and Detroit sold subject to |jassengers meeting the Immigration , Requirements of U.8.A. FOR INFPOR AMMATION AND TICKE,'TS Apply Agents T. N. 0. Ry. N.C. Ry. LONG JOURNEY FOR SMALl: CHLLD REN OF KAPUSKR aAsING know Mr. Byam and will nibble at his fingers as ly> talks to them. Sson the pretty pond lily will be blooming in this pool." ; Hamilton, Smithville, Dunnâ€" ville, Welland, Buffalo, Galt, Woodstoct:, London, Kitchâ€" ener, Guéelph, C h atha m, Windsor and Detroit. G 0O l N w4 Thursday, June 6th Sunday, June 9th Canadian Pacific T O K 0 N T 0o 20OrIC0U‘:â€"If at gall possible, nn<c4t will remain in harâ€" miist stand for "real back~â€" up to Also To conms /) i| () i If *