Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 6 Oct 1938, 2, p. 3

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in 11 at. t) week hib not ‘ THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6TB. 1938 er a time both In York millla own subject alts. If it fc have chose tremely go‘ boasted to prove him: Hall's a lonely. wit much time sham: rides. I on pla flcatiox from C in his near h‘ possible to pity mm w or in her jealousy :1 say so. “She‘d not be able to understand if I told her the truth about my present feelingsâ€"what woman could? I be- lieve it would be really better if she went right awayâ€"until afterwards: I'm sum she'd be happier." In the end. it was Chrissie herself who resolved to take action driven on by a kind of desperation. “Now's [5 feeling 11k could CV8 thmght, .fc ”99000009099060 W”0WNW”“”MOMOOOO” ll BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION H Daily Ch rm K Hamilton, Buffalo. Kitchener. Smithville. (Ixalt, Guelph. Dunnville. Woodstock. Chatham, Welland, London, Windsor, Detroit. Tic 'H‘h (u l'..-’. Destinations sold subject to Passengers meeting Immigra- tion Rmuirrmrnts of USA. GOING and Canadaâ€"RETURNING. 'ripkpn mlid fnr trawl Train No. ‘3. from Timmins Thursdav. 00!- 13f“ Tirkrts valid for trawl Train rolmm‘ting at North Bay with (‘1‘. Train N0. 38. All tickets \- Train No. 27 fleeting with Tickets good Children Home! 11‘ T1 (’IIRISSIE ACTS mints. who know evex'ychir found much food for 3055 mm” bungalow during the 'l‘omislxaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company .U :s' bungalow w Ayah reported ime when St: 1. it was Chri to take actior desperation. time to do it this. as thou matter agaix amly. “I don lat THURSDAY. OCT. 13, 1938 5 years of age. and under 12. when accompanied by guardian HALF FARE I‘OR I‘ARES. DEPARTURE TIRIES AND FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO LOCAL AGENT lC a! issie Stmâ€"uan, trying to lard-headed. :0 left Chrissie very r husband spending so he flying ground. m slid to return so as to leave Toronto not later than 11.05 p.111. Sunday, Oct. lfith. arriving North Dan and T. - N. 0. No. l. 12.45 pm. Mondav, Octbber 17th. mrs of incessant, Lou culations and speci- am his bngalow and .h the bitter whisper he wasn't fit to be zr-colors from a New answ who had selected his 10gue gra. Delhi and Benâ€" Ch ot the job he would her 1 ast it meant an exâ€" Late? 2 for the pictures, he . the z Tickets on in coaches only mimsc h und » put )l‘ [-11 0: By' VIOLET M. METHLEY \‘ia North Bav and Canadian Pacific - do it. while I though nothi again." Chri: don't believe an S lcould cry now. even if I wanted to; I everything haven’t any tears.“ i for gossip It was during the mid-day siesta that luring these she made up her mindâ€"and acted. She :l: “Memsa- got up bathed. dressed. ordered the .ruan Sahib pony cart and finally set off alone, n and bear- ‘ hardly conscious of the breathless heat Q swear all which pressed down upon all thei there." And countryside, as she drove through it or less true. towards the flying ground. still re- Wilson Hall peating over and over again to herself commission what she would say. what Ranny would from a New answer. althoumh that part of the duo- selected his logue was vague and formless. ii and Benâ€" Chrissie felt fairly sure of finding )b he would her husband in his office at this time. eant an ex- Lately he had spent the whole day at pictures, he the aerodrome. taking only some sand- n, trying to wiches for lunch. but during the hotâ€" ., test hours no active work would be irissie very going on and probably most of the spending so native staff would be asleep. round. Certainly there was no sign of life _ i about the place when she reached the 1m. love and i flying ground at last. It was like a were sirong- { modernized mechanized version of the lPalace of the Sleeping Beauty in the Wood. A pi-deg lay stretched. eyes closed. tongue lolling out. in a patch of remorse and'shade near the entrance; even the long. lonely i watchman at the gate slumbered head ricessant toll on knees. Roused with difficulty he ._ and speci- said. r-csentlully. that Struan Sahib was )ngalow and not there: He had been called away Hm. “,munMIon the telephone very urgently an ; more im v feeling of she couldn't Sale from Regular Stations ONLY while I'm 1 nothing ' Chrisic TORONTO (:.'P.'"i"r5i}i S'd. 857. and at Sudbury with '1‘ U not there: I on the tel hour before. "Oh. dear!" Poor Chrissie looked round miserably. The false strength which had urged her on suddenly col- lapsed: She felt that she must rest. that, she could 9.0 no further. J‘I'll sit down in the office." she said and set off towards the buildings. stumbling blindly. half dazed by the sun. while the watchman again relaps- ed into sleep. no need to trouble. when Struan Sahib was safely out, of the way and no punishment need be feared. “PUT IT DOWN" In the empty office. Chrissie sank down thankfully upon a hard chair Her head throbbed. she longed for a down thankfully upqn a hard chair Her head throbbed. she longed for a cup of hot tea and. after a few min- utes, recovered enough to remembex that Ranny kept a spirit-stove and kel- tle somewhere on the premises. Where would they be? Chrissie sat up and looked xound vaguely. Per- haps in that, cupboard~â€"but it, needed a terrible effort to get up and see. al- most more than tea was worth. She would do it soon though. when she had rest-ed a little while longer, al- though one could hardly call it rest- ing in this chair. A sound caught Chrissie ring. Licking sound. almost tle boiling, but, of course absurd. It seemed to com cupboard. though, whene s A sound caught Chrissie’s ear. pur- ring. ticking sound. almost like a ket- tle boiling, but of cow'se that was absurd. It seemed to come from the cupboard. though. where she had ex- pect-ed to find the tea-making appara- tus; should she go and look? Drowsily. dully, Chrissie debated the question. It was really too much both- er and it would probably only turn out to be some new and horrible reptile or insectâ€"a rattlesnake. perhaps. No. of course. there weren't rattlesnakes in India. How idiotic she was! Better rouse herself and see what it was, be- fore she dozed off again. Chrissie hoisted herself up. clinging on the edge of the. desk. She walked unsteadily acress to the cupboard and opened it. The kettle and spirit-stove were there. on the upper shelf, but the buzzing sound did not come from them. It was louder and clearer though. like a muffled alarm clock; it must be somewhere among the piles of papers at the bottom of the cupboard. what- No Baggage Checked (‘Oll ever Chrissie knelt down t.) investigate. moved a roll of blue printsâ€"then sank back on her heels With a startled in- drawing of the breath. rubbed the back of one hand across her eyes and star- ed again. ed again. She felt ; acting in a like those 5 sort before except in imagination and magazine pictures. It was ridiculouc to suppose that, such an object couT-Ll be there in Ranny’s office cupboard. the companion of his spirit-stove and kettle and yet-â€" It seemed to Chrissie though her brain clear and suddenly. showing h fying certainty tit ‘.1. true. and that. 31;? must about. it at g. c: withou other :cgmd. For all :‘j might, not be even But what could up. the girl 10c Through the own see the flying shimmering in the dwarlntg the low their height. werc hangars. beyond. help there. not a all the mccanics ‘ watchman. some“ Chrissie other rax‘ bringing hope. It. their height. were the row of airplane hangars. beyond. the workshops. No help there. not a sign of life: Probably all the mccanics were sleeping. like the watchman. somewhere out of sight. Chrissie turned her eyes left. An- other range of sheds. then something bringing a flash of remembrance and hope. It was no more than a single sparsely leaved branch projecting from behind a roof. but it recalled a pic- ture of the trees which grew there. a few low. straggling acacias, the only trees. for miles round. so Ranny had told her when she visited the flying field first. And the reason for their tively flourishing growth wa reason for the presence of drome at this particular plane it was on the site of a now villacc of mud huts. There was water. a. ' a constant supply to M flying ground. And Chrissie also knew wha Moving faster than thought possible half she had reached the stooped and picked up Holding it firm in l stooped and picked up the box. Holding it firm in both hands. she crossed the veranda, sped down the three steps and began to run. with a nightmarish feeling of loos-e sand drag- ging at her fet. of limbs that seemed leaden. knees that threatened to give way beneath her before ever she could reach her goal. The faintly waving tree branches looked miles away as Chrissie ran stumbling towards them; the air was filled with that monotonous grinding whir. so like the maddening hot- weather sound of cicadas. German drive to Berlin is enemy a and picked up the 2 it firm in both flying ground. yellow-dusty. g in the heat. To the right. the low office bungalow by reason for their compara BOY MEETS (. )kcc to the colony at an And knowing this what she must. do. than she would havc lalf an hour before the cupboard again CC Copyrighted fill well which gave 10 colony at the knowing: this m of that 11 something it from which aftet'wards a: :1 completely '1' with horri- 5 thing was do something . wasting a1;- 0 knew then: nd to spare. 3? Springin: cund wildly now-vani. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMIFS ONTARIO h also thl .e aero built. a 31R 1C l y o 0 ‘ ; She Was a Victim of Headaches IfiruSchon ( to something like helplessness. She tried tablets. She tried pills. All without avail. Only Kruschen could help her. "I used to get very bad headaches." she writes “No tablets or pills of any kind could relieve them. One mom- ing. casually. I tried Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water. I continued tak- ing it. but I have not had one of those awful headaches since. Kruschen suits me better than anything else. I find it very good."~lMl°s.l L. A. w. Headaches can nearly always be traced to sluggishness of the kidneys. liver and intestines. and to the unsus- pected retention in the system of stag- nating waste material which poisonr. the blood. The numerous salts in Kruschen stimulate the internal organs: to healthy. regular action so that no clogging waste is allowed to collect. Your inside is kept clean and serene. And that is just how Kruschen Salts brings quick and lasting relief from headaches. 11101 in “Put i Lie fool! Chriss A few 11 would b Article on Sinking 01' Internal Shaft at home Sinkit at Dom down \z. This rippln ls dc Kems cuttin wide August low the: the end iod sev: ximatel comp bins necessitated the 300.000 cubic feet of 1' are 50 feet by 35 feet. ed from each other b The ore bin has 21 ca h a gre-enstone 1 medium hardm the collar The skips in the new shaft are of five-ion capacity. nickel-steel construc- tion. and weight 7000 pounds each. The cage weighs 12.000 pounds. has an al- lowable load of 40 men, or five tons of material. and is also of iiickel-s‘teel construction. The cage hoist, when as- sembled weighs 96 tons. and the skip 1r material. an: construction. argxnblcd weig hoist 114 ton The sinkin captain, and of at. th. very 11 Then. I! WithOl ,9. pant :1!) 11 mb but: To 11111 m Ill w XC ion 1( UC 18 m me an cm it I] u 1101? work pape h main and 11K "I lde is kept clean and .s , is just how Kruschen 110k and lasting relief ru n nir n ti 11H)! 1101 ablc m't b h W a, d m wix‘ Minc caily king, crev 1nd undq ll 0U ugh the buzz 1m xt {other ngrily th 'n! Put you 11 1rd. but the No. 6 internal shaft nes. Limited. which goes ly a distance of 2000 feet :teen'th level of the mine in a paper by Charles 9 campany's mec anical it. and A. 1). Robinson. wearing in the September 16 Bulletin. Canadian In- ning and Metallurgy. tim drop 1L- macâ€"him be Cont I) xlmaml shaft. . 1.400 {e 2 cross CD 11111 int at the (‘ )f WE oada a. capacity '- bin 400 ton skip and ca. 11 m footstc 9x1. the tl' ntinucd) in: low mud para 1 once thereâ€" without pausin answer. )und of the new 1y 4.500 fe( .100 feet of readfmme. hoist and on: and waste r removal of some rock. Hoist rooms steps. it down, you him project. y becam id headaches." or pills of any 1. One mom- Jschen Salts in continued tak- ud one of those Kruschen suits ck. Hoist rooms and are separat- a 30-foot pillar. acity of 600 tons lc d cage sheaves. 1 156 feet above of me! did umt 1ft it 11' L nt rig in he voice call accompani If TE not obey in I‘ecL east, of cross- [51‘ ing to )f a mix hift, b0 Very fe Very f1 shaftm but in .3 skill I) y plan raphs. {I [ISO of H IE ,Leps haft mint n Income is a yearly £8 The patriarchs had ‘ as these were necessary Chivalry is the attituc ward a strange woman papacy. “Coup dc They g8 funeral. 1* beer. Proper Diet More Vital Than Housing So Says Noted Medical Man in Interesting Health Ad- dress. Ambiguity ‘ Wing at. the A teetotallc ee drinking. In raising the ; health. diet was than housing, Sir eminent British 1 Ottawa pathering “It would be hard to find worse hdus- in;r conditions than on this island. There were no windows and no chim- neys. Smoke escaped through the only door. Cows. pigs and chickens all lived in the same room with the family. But the babies were breast-fed and the chil- dren and adults all ate natural foods, from the cow. the hen. and fish from the sea.“ he said. "When an investi- gation was made in 1906. there was no tooth, decay among the children and all had straight legs. When our investi- gator went back last. year. he found things had gone badly indeed. When people lived near a shay) where an so-called ‘civilized' high-energy-bearing foods were easy to obtain. their general nutrition was poorer. When they lived far away. and had to depend on natural are samples or What. the on examination papa .f Arc was the dauzhte le grace" Is a lawn mower. gave Wellington a glorious It took six.men‘1.o carry the Jig the general standard of let was far more important using, Sir Edward Mellzmby. British nutritionist. told an athering last week. Nightixrale became a nurs own risk attended soldier: a horn blow and was stmc A lady was evidently try BANK WHERE SMALL ACCOUNTS ARE WELCOME" is a lawn mower BANK OF MONTREAL FARMER AND HIS BANK”-â€"Ask for/moHet By the time Enwlish children were old enough to go to school. they were olten "damaged goods." he observed. or 1.200 children attending London county council schools. 70 per cent. were found to have badly decayed tceth. Others had bad tonsils. anaemia. and tuberculous glands. . “This is damage that can never be remedied. You can tinker about with ‘them later but. you can never quite get them back to normal.“ he warned. The, wealthy also had their own dis- cases. said Sir Edward. “If it is any iccmfcrt to the poor. the well-to-do- have a. higher death rate from diabetes and appendicitis." he added. “It bal- ances out." Imnnins Branch: T. W’. TOD. Manageâ€".1; foods. their health us [may Of all protective foods. milk was by far the most important. declared Sir ,Edward. Races whose diet was rich {in milk had greater stature. strength. ‘physique and mental development. Among African tribes. consumption of milk meant the difference between a istalwart race of warriors, such as the Dinkas and the Masai. and “stunted. : lackadaisical runts." poore 9.11m: the I ! Tests in an English private school sowed int addition of one pint of milk daily to the basic diet increased the lurength and weight of the pupils. gTheir height increased in one year by; - one inch more than! those not obtaining ; the milk. while the gain in weight was . almost double. The pupils played 2strenuously as ever but they had fewer limctured bones. Incidence of rheu- matism also decreased. the survey !showed. ' “When children get adequate milk. they have fewer colds and their mental processes are brighter." he said. The first vitamin to be discovered. Vitamin B-1. came to light when pris- oners and hens on the Island of Java. both of which were being fed on po- lished rice. deveIOped the same disease. disclosed Sir Edward. Since the Great dd 0 0.00 O 0.0..O.OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOIOO O. 000.. fl.%.‘.z.z".:.:.z.‘.z .t.:.:.z.:.:.:.:.:.‘.:. z.:.‘.:~..z.. 0.0 .5..:.:.:.. 9.3.9.0.... 00:00 0.0 0.. 001' THOUGIITFUL CARE AND DIGNITY CHARACTERIZE OUR SERVICE ESTABLISHED 1817 Funeral Director TELEPHONE 509 81 'THIRD AVENUE T. WA LKE R OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 1m- TIMMINS War. all the other discoveries regard- ing the hmlth-protcctivc featurcs'of natural foods had been made. It was not learned that rickets was due to ack of the sunshine vitamin. Vitamin D, unti after. Sir Edward Mellanby summed up the findings of nutritionists in the last 20 years with the message that all the foods required for complete health could be obtained by building the diet around dairy products such as milk. cheese and butter. fresh and cooked vegetables. fresh fruit. eggs. fish. liver and kidneys. and meat. Preparing Public Concert, and Lantern Lecture ’The. members of the Y.P.S. of the Timmnis Finnish United Church are very busy these days completing final touches on their first public concert and lantern lecture. This is also the first public appearance of the Y.P..S ornchestia which was organized recent- ly. The COll(€lL “ill be held in the 'I‘immins Finnish United Church Fri- clay. Oct. 7. at 8 pm. The program will include instrumental selections by the Y.P.S. orchestra. headings. recitations. vocal music and a lantern lecture .on “Church Work Among the Finns of Canada 25 Years Ago." which will be given by Rev. A. I. Heinoncn. The slides to be shown were taken by Mr. Heinonen in several provinces is that. only members of the. Y.P.S. will de- liver the progrfun that night. Admis- sion is true. and everybody will be made welcome. The Advance Want Advertisements 00000000000000.0000. 00005000000 0 000 000 000 00 0 000 00 0 00 0 000 00 0 0.0000000000000000. “3* O. O. 0 O O. O O O Q C Q . .00....” O. O O O.

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