Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 6 Jun 1935, 2, p. 3

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€°€ U?fa@.uzx:??v?xzxgafu.@%lffffxxuzu.a.;fv*...u...v.....w. - se a*2 2% 2t 2%, 28, .0, .0 %, v'."’....‘OOOOOOOzO000‘”"000000000080000.000008.000000.?.0“' "Exactly, and therefore it was a chance occurrence. Such Occurrences are unlimited and can happen in the most extraordmary and exceptional ‘"‘Then her death was accidental?" interrupted the marquis. thrown. Therefore it was my ‘busiâ€" ness to lock outside the realm of purely human c®uses of deathâ€"that is, death brcught about by the will of man." "How did the tragedy happen? Now, to discover that, monsieur, I took exâ€" actly the Opposite direction from that which I made you follow. Since I had concluded that there had been no theft committed, I likewise imagined from the very first that there might also have ‘Geen no murder. Anqd my reason for supposing that was that the cirâ€" cumstances were such that it would have been impossible for the murderer to have gone unseen. It would be im possible to kill someone in front of 40 people, in broad daylight, without these 40 people seeing one commit the murâ€" der. A revolver shot would have been heard. A blow would have been seen. They would have.noticed if a storie had | He saw she was calmer, and. as the marquis plied him â€" withâ€" questions, Raoul continued. so long as I‘ve still something to reâ€" veal, something that Gorgeret‘s dying to hear. YOu surely don‘t want me to leave before I‘ve finished?" COAL AND WOOD YARD AND OFFICE Phone 32 64 Spruce St. South Timmins ‘"You can‘t think how happy you make me! But there‘s nothing to fear "I‘m so glad for godfather‘s sake. Thank you so much. But I‘m afraidâ€"" ‘"You! Afraid?" _ _ "Yes . . . of Gorgeret . . . You ought to get away quickly!" | . He answered gently: as Antonine, close ibeside Raoul, whisâ€" pered : They had reached the upper terrace, and the spot where Elisabeth Hornain had met her qgeath. From here they could see the whole of the chateau, the park and the entrance tower. He flung questions at Raoul as though he alone possessed the truth whout all things, as though Raoul at a word could change night into day. "Go on," he said. "Tell meâ€"what happened? How was she killed? Who killed her? I‘ve never got over her horâ€" rible.death . . . never got over my grief. I‘d give anything to lmow the truth! Tell me ail!" Guiltless Antonine supposed notfllng. She was helping the marquis to clean the jewels and wrap them up in a couple of silk handkerchisfs. This done, the marquis led Raoul to the ruins. And Raoul nodded back with a imeaning look, as who should say : "Right in one! That‘s just what I did. But what can you expect.? One must live!" "He took the pearls . . . He‘s playing the conjurer for our benefit, while really he‘s searched that urn previousâ€" ly and taken his share of the spoils." strange, isn‘t it? Surely it can‘t have been stolen before she hid these in the urn?" . o He did not seem to attach much imâ€" portance to the cuestion, so impossible of solution did the problem appear to ANY SIZE WITH OUR VARIETY OF Algoma Coke, Welsh Anthâ€" racite, Pennsylvania Blue Briquettes, Alberta, Pocaâ€" hontas, Buckwheat Nut Slack and Steam Coal Get in Your Winter Supply Now 2..0, .0. ,0, _0 0. .0,.0,,0_ .o .e 0. .0. .e ;woooooooooooooooooo ‘a "0000003000000000?“000 00000000?00003"‘“00000000030900. "I‘ve not the slightest doubt that the police saw this projectile: when they first searched the place, but that none of them ‘noticed it, because they were all looking for a bullet or some Other Raoul held up a small round object the size of a walnut, with a jagged surâ€" face pitteqg with holes which had been made by the combustion that had covâ€" ered the surface with what looked pke brilliant black enamel. Raoul went on : ‘"For the past four days, a trusty man of mine has been coming over this wall at night, and searching the ruins until dawn, all round here. I myself searched here toâ€"day and yesâ€" terday in the early hours." Without giving the marduis time to express either dOubt or objection, Raoul continued : "But I‘m not joking," affirmed Raoul seriously. speaking with proper knowledge of my subject, basing my conclusions on facts, not theories. Every day sees millions of these stonesâ€"fireâ€" lJalls, agrolites, meteorites, fragments of dispersed planetsâ€"traverse space at a tremendous rate, ignite on their course, and fall to earth. They‘ve been picked up by the million in every shape and size. Every day there are tons and tons of them flying about. If one of them should, through terrible misfortune, but perfectly possible, strike down a human being, it causes death, pointâ€" less and often incomprehensible." Raoul paused, and then continued: ‘‘*Now, theses @projectiles fall all through the year, but more frequently at certain definite periods, and the period ‘best known for frequency is that which falls in August between the ninth ‘and fourteenth exactly, and which seems to have originated from the constellation Perseus. Hence my little joke when I say Perseus was the criminal.‘" 3 | ‘"And did you find anything?" ‘"Please don‘t joke," implored the marquis, "I‘ve already told you, monsieurâ€" Perseus." "A stone from heaven?" exclaimed the marquis ironically. "Why not?" "What nonsense! Who could possibly have sent it?" whose passengers had thrown it overâ€" board the preceding night, and fate had so decreed that the rope had falien exactly in the position necessary for the man to climo up his tower safely. A miracle, certainly, but there are milâ€" lions of such miracles happening on the earth hourly." "Then you mean to say thatâ€"â€"" "Elisabeth Hornain‘s death was caused by a natural phenomenon which is extremely frequent, but which rarely has fatal consequences. This explanaâ€" tion occurred to me when Valthex acâ€" cused the shepherd of having shot a stone from his sling. It seemed to me impossible for that shepherd to have been there without being detected, but quite ‘possible that Elisabeth Hornain might have been struck by a stone, and that it was, in fact, the only plausâ€" ible explanation of her death." "Groaning under the burder} of three parallel transcontinental railway lines wihich have brought Canada almost to "But strange things come to pass in politics, and who can tell but what the contractors have soid the idea in a big way, both at Ottawa and Toronto. There is a grave suspicion in the North that that is the crux of the matter. "It is less than six months ago that Hon. Wesley Gordon, speaking for the DominiOn government, referred to the north shore of Lake Superior as a ‘conâ€" tractors‘ paradise.‘ And he referred to it as such in no uncertain terms, with the added remark that not a dollar Of Canada‘s money ‘would be wasted on the transâ€"Canada project around the north shore of Lake Superior. "Hon. Peter Heenar. in trying to exâ€" plain where the route wili finally iand, doesn‘t know whether it will be souiln of the C.P.R. or north of the C.P.R. At Blind River, on May 16, speaking at a public meeting, when asked about the transâ€"Canada, Hon. Peter said "he did not know any more about the transâ€" Canada than a truck driver ...‘ which is probably correct. | ‘‘And now it is proposed to parallel the C.P.R. with a motor highway through this same Godforsaken counâ€" try, as though we did not have the history. the example and the experiâ€" ences of the C.P.R. to guide us in this colossal blunder to project a transâ€"Canâ€" ada motor highway through the same territory. i "It is announced that the Ottawa and Toronto governments are in agreeâ€" ment on the proposal to proceed at once with that portion of the transâ€" | Canada highway between Schreiber and White River, a distance of 125 miles along the rocky shore of Lake Suâ€" perior. To anyone who has travelled this route and,has an open mind onj the subject, the announcement is inâ€" conceivable. The location has many times been dubbed the graveyard of the C.P.R., and well it might be, for, outside of the Rocky Mountains it was the most expensive to construct, and still more expensive to operate than any other section of the great transâ€" continental railway system. It is 50 years since the C.P.R. lalasted its way through this territory, and in that 501 years, according to the last census of, Canada, only 2,000 souls, men, women { and children, now inhabit that 125 miles of territory, including the railway centres of Schreiber and White River. | Last week The Advance made ediâ€" torial reference to the suggestion that the transâ€"Canada highway had been approved from Schreiber to White River. The Advance questioned the economy and practicability of this strip of rock. Last Saturday The Sudbury Star spoke editorially in no uncertain way on the matter. The following is the editorial in The Star:â€" | Proposed New Route from Schreiber to White River Roundly Condemned for Transâ€"Canada Road. Suggests Another Contractors‘ Scheme and flesh, torn from a living human being, fragments that were scorched at contact with the burning projectile, and stuck to it so closely that they have been there ever since. Those fragments at the latoratory, and will form part of a more or less official report which will se handed to yvou, Monsieur d‘Erlemont, as well as to your friend Gorgeret, if it interests him." | ence of this projectile is absolute proof of the truth. But I have other proofs as well. First, the date of the tragedy: August the thirteenth, which is one of the days when the earth passes under the shower of shooting stars from Perâ€" seus,. I may mention that the date was one of the first rays of light on the problem for me! , ‘"‘Then I have another irrefutable proof, which is not merely the outcome of logic and reasoning, but is also a scientific fact. I took this stone yesterâ€" day to a research laboratory . . . They discovered fragments of carbonized human skin adhering to the outer glaze ... yes, minute fragments of skin human contrivance. For me?the presâ€" Washington Post:â€"The best thing to do for spring fever is nothing. Kirline, chief of the nursing staff who leaves within a few days for the United States, to be comnected with a larxe newspaper syndicate. t NEW NURSE APPOINTED FOR THE DIONNE QUINTUPLETS Dr. A. R. Dafoe, physician to the Dionne quintuplets, has announced that Miss Cecile Lamoureux, Montreal, has been appointed to the nursing staff of the Dafoe hospital, ang has taken up Cream cheese with chopped nuts and strawberry or pineapple preserves. Maple sugar, powdered fine, mixed with butter and chopped nuts. Boiled egg and sardines mashed toâ€" gether. Raisins and nuts ground together and mixeq with mayonnaise. ‘ Hard cooked egg mashed with 1â€"8 teaspoon each salt, pepper, mustard, vinegar angq sugar and 1 tablespoon and mayonnaise. _/ _ Tuna fish, hard boiled egg, pickle and mayonnaise. Peanut butter, chopped dates and mayonnaise. Grated carrot and chopped raisins mixed with mayonnaise. Baked beans mashed with catsup and chopped pickle. Deviled meat mixed with hard cookâ€" ed egg ang mayonnaise. If you lack imagination in the matter of school lunch sandwiches try some of these. Some Recipes for Making Fillers for Sandwiches "But maybe, after all, it is well to remember that the dear old Welland Canal is completed, that you couldn‘t sell the idea of building another mile of railway in Canada for love nor money, that the contractors and the politicians have to rig up some new stunt to keep the ball rolling. And they have picked the one spot in ail Canada for a contractors‘ and politiâ€" cians‘ paradise." Cottage cheese and crushed pineapple. the past 30 years. A transâ€"Canada highway from Blind River to Oba and continuing west from Oba would traâ€" verse the great preâ€"Cambrian Shield, with unquestioned possibilities of more mining centres, because it would be on the "main break" of mineralization which has made history for Canada in the past quarter century. But such a transâ€"Canada would not be a "caonâ€" tractors‘ paradise." And. perhaps therein is the rub. a motor highway, at a cost of more millions, through a country that in fifty years has scarcely produced a dolâ€" lar in natural wealth. If the developâ€" ment of Canada and the opening up of Northern Ontario haq been given, any consideration in this matter, there is the example of the T. N. O. Railâ€" way and the Ferguson highway from North Bay to Cochrane, which have given to Canada and to Ontario Coâ€" balt, Kirkland Lake and Timmins in the brink of bankruptcy, it is now proâ€" posed‘to parallel one of these lines with Full information from your own travel agent, or _ a W "‘Canadian Pacific Express Travellers‘ Cheques . . . Good the World Over‘‘ CANADIAN PAciFic . Y. DANIAUD, District Passenger 4 Agent, C.P.R. North Bay, Ont. T d c 1 O ts Frequent sailings from Montreal and Quebec to British and Conâ€" tinental Ports. corned beef, pickles, celery Empress of Australia, Duchesses and Mont ships are at your service. First, Cabin, Tourist and Third Class, at rates that are surâ€" prising low. ©1,000 miles of sailing down the picturesque St. Lawrence Seaway. Sounds like a cruise, yet it is the regular short Canadian Pacific route to Europe . . . with only 3 or 4 days on the open sea. Choose your accommodaâ€" tion from a whole fleetâ€" the Empress of Britain, 1935â€"King Geoerge V Silver Anniversary July 17â€"Naval Review at Spithead. Arrangements have hbeen made to give passengers sailing on the Empress of Britain, July 12, a view of the British Fleet assembled Spithead for review by His> Mnâ€" jesty King George V. AIL "Lesser honours which do not carry the title, Sir, have been conferred upon Col. J. H. Woods, managing director of the Calgary Herald; Mr. H. S. Southâ€" am, Chairman of the Natisonal Gallery at Ottitwa; Hon. Geo. H. Sedgewick, Chairman of the Federal Tariff Board; based upon his own personal services as a Canadian historian and archivist. It is also a tribute to the Federal Civil Bervice. "Sir John McLennan‘s knighthood is traceable to his eminent achievements to science. He is one of the outstandâ€" ing pHMysicists in the world. He perâ€" formed immense services to Canada and the Empire during the war and since then in peaceâ€"time. While he is l at present controller of England‘s chief cancer research laboratory, he is stil) professer emeritus and visiting proâ€" fessor of physics at the University of Toronto. Literature is honoured in the knighthood accorded to Sir J. A. T. Chapais of Quebec, who already holds honours from Government of France and Rome. There will be genâ€" eral approval that the list of Canadian knights includes Sir Ernest MacMillan, Canada‘s distinguished musician. Sir Charles Roberts is known everywhere throughout the Dominion and abroad @s a Canadian poet, author and hisâ€" torian. Sir James MacBrien has a splendid ~military record behind him, and is at present Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The Canadian world of art is fittinggy honâ€" onred .in. the. knighthcod.awarded to , | Sir Edmond Wyly Grier. bert Marler, Canada‘s Ambassador to Japan, to which post he was appointed by the Mackenzie King Government, has been made a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. George because of his faithful labsurs in that field and in recognition of Canâ€" ada‘s Foreign Service. In like manner Sir Arthur Doughty‘s knighthood is 1 â€" "Bir Thomas White‘s promotion to a higher order of knighthood than that which he previously held is due to the heavy and gratuitous labours which he has performed in the public interest since he retired from active politics. Sir Edward Beatty has become a Knight of the Order of the British Empire because of his constant and long continued efforts on behalf of eduâ€" cation, and the Boy Scout Movement and in Community Service. Sir Herâ€" that the present honour list lnclixaé;t no recognition of mere wealth or poliâ€" tical endeavour. vice of the Canadian Prime Minister would mark the twentyâ€"fifth anniverâ€" sary of his accession to the throne by bestowing special favours upon Canaâ€" dians who have served the public in a notable manner. It will be noteworthy "The King‘s Birthday Honour List released last night, has been awanited with considerable public interest. It was fe)t that His Majesty on the adâ€" well covered, with the possibie excepâ€" tion that Dr. Dafoe, the medical man in charge of the Dionne quintuplets, is not mentioned. Dr. Dafoe was given an O.B.E. The following is the ediâ€" torial article from The Mail and Emâ€" About the List of Honours for the King‘s Birthday l C In the following editorial from ‘The romto Mail and Empire the King‘s That is because the J mproved Carnation Milk is so smooth. Its double quantity of butterâ€"fat is HE richest, smoothest cream soups you ever set lips to are made with economical Carnation Milk at a real saving over the cost of cream. Milk. In fact, use Carnation Milk se the Improved . in all cooking calling for milk. ; so smooth. Its Undiluted, Carnation is perfect of butterâ€"fat is _ for creaming coffee, cereals, fruit. The Improved Carnation Milk is fine in flavour, creamyâ€"light in colour, smooth in consistency and irraâ€" diated for "sunshine" Vitamin D. Ideal for babies. Beneâ€" fits adults, too. No increase in price. The famous Dionne quintuplets are being raised on Irradiated Carnation Milk. They have been fed Carnation Milk since Novemâ€" ber, 1934. Letter in London Observer:â€"In your of April 7 youw printed a letter from me stating that a robin had built a nest on the mantelshelf in my bedâ€" room. It may intérest your readers to know that later she laid five eggs in the nest, and now the young ones are hatched out, and both parents are very busy feeding them. The room has been cccupied as usual all the time.â€"Mrs.°E. L. Fisher, Yao Croft, Bushgy Heath, Herts. | North Bay Nugget:â€"A seer is one who is wise enough not to bélieve all he sees. ""‘There will be universal agreement that His Majesty has been well adâ€" vised in his selection of Canadians for inclusion in the Jubilee Honour List. Ever since the King, on the advice of the present Trime Minister, renewed the exercise of his prerogative, that prerogative has been used in a truly adâ€" mirable manner. It has been employed in the proper recognition of Canadians who have done great public servicesâ€" services whicth could not be rewarded in any monetary or other material sense." W. C. Clark, Depuly Minister of Finâ€" ance, Ottawa. Such recognition of eminent civil servants will carry genâ€" eral approval, as will also the honour conferred upon that great Canadian. Mr. Edward Johnson, who has recently been appointed director of the Metroâ€" politan Opera in New York City. Mrs. H. D. Warren, of Toronto, has become a C.B.E. because of her notable public services, and among others who have obtained this honour are Mr. William Lash Miller of Toronto, and Col. H. C. Osborne of Ottawa. Rev. Charles William Gordon, who is known to the book reading public as Ralph Cannor; Mr. G. S. H. Barton, Deputy Minister of Agriculture at Otâ€" tawa; Dr. Charles Camsell, Deputy Minister of Mines, Ottawa; and Mr. Wed: June 12 â€" To C.N.R. Stations in the Maritime Provinces, Tickets on salelby all Agents of CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS, also TEMIS. KAMING NORTHERN ONTARIO Railway and NIPISSING CENTRAL Railway; Fri. June 14 « To Pembroke Jct., Ottawa, Montreal. FrizJane 14 = To Quebec City; Ste.Anne de Beaupre. Router CANADIAN NATIONAL Railways from North Bay _ Prov. of Quebec, New Brunswick; Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia Enguire for poster and full information from Agents of T. * N.0. Rly. or .A GREAT ENERGY FOOD CORN SYRUP blended right into every drop. You feel the richness. You taste the richness. Always make cream soups and sauces with Carnation The opening took place before a dis« tinguished gathering of astronomers and scholars, Mrs. Dunlap fomdly cpening the institution. Mrs. Jessie Donalda Dunlap, wideow of David Dunlap, one of the founders of the Hollinger Ming, erected the obâ€" servatory in memory of her hw e One of the important evyenis of last week was the formal opening of the Dunlap observatory at Richmond M near Toronto. It was formally opened with a golden key. It is the second larg« est observatory in the world. > Dunlap Observatory at ; Richmond Hill Opened â€"ideal for use in lining dinner pails, keeping sandwiches fresh, ‘protecting the crispness of celcry, lettuce, and wrapping "‘leftâ€"overs."‘ +; a

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