Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 13 Oct 1938, 2, p. 3

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~‘It was, thouzch, cr a ‘bomb or somyâ€" something. I‘m absoclutely certain," Chrissie persisted. "My dear child, yoau must have been reading spy literature!" Lronie laughed with mocking indulgence. "An infernal machine . sounds most melodramatic, but imprchable, to say the least of it!" "Yes; whatever it was, it‘s still at the bottom "of the wellâ€"like tiruth," Leoâ€" nie laughed agAÂ¥in. â€" "And don‘> you think it had better stay there?, If you drag it outâ€"well, it might not be very pleasant for Ranny, you know. Especâ€" lally if you‘re right, if it was really something which ought not to been in his offics. It might be said that he had not taken sufficient preâ€" "Iâ€"Iâ€"â€"" Chrissie began .to cry feebly. "I found it in Ranny‘s â€"in the cupboard. It was ticking. If it had exploded all the hangars, all the reroplanes would have been destroyed â€"burntâ€"everybody killed. Ranny, too, if he‘d been here." "But he wasn‘t!" ‘"No, butâ€"he might have been. Oh, Leonie, who could have put that awlul thing there?. Do you supgose it was one ‘of those Terrorist peope?" ‘"Well, have it your own way," Leoâ€" nie shrugged her «shoulders. "Only don‘t expect me to believe in it." ‘"It‘s easy enough to The thing is still in the well." "HE DISLIKES ME" Chrissie reached the well, Leaning over, she loosened . her hold of the box. From the water far below came a buddy resounding splash, and at the sound all strength seemed to leave her body and she sank limply down upon the mud parapet, scarcely conscious even of surâ€" prise when she recognized the newâ€" . "You!" she stammered. "You!" "Yes." Leonie‘s voice and eyes were like ice. "What on earth are you doâ€" mg?n * | _ â€" .@ Here‘s a moneyâ€"saving plan that works! It gives you a retirement income about three times as large as your gayments. And right from the day you take the policy it provides proâ€" tection for your family on the basis of $905 in case of your death, fellowed by an income of $25 monthly for 10 years. Woeuldn‘t this be a perfect savings and insurance plan for you? Get details from any North American Life man. cautions to protect the aeroplanes in his chargeâ€"they might ask wher» he was this afternoon; inquiries would be made." "Are you sure?" Chrissie‘s voice was almost piteously eager. "@uite sure." Th:y walked together towards the entrance, Chrissie asking rather timid questicns about Leonie‘s life in the Palace. "Do you like being there?" she ended. "Well enough. I‘m fond of children and Krishn is an attractive little felâ€" low." "Shall you stay there long?" "That‘s impossible to say. It 4eâ€" pends on so many things. Well, gcoodâ€" Chrissie, and ‘hold ycour own!" "No, I suppose not. "It‘s awfully difâ€" ficult to know what to do," Chrissic shook her head. "And I wonder where Ranny is; I made sure I‘d find him here.," j "Little fool!" she thought. ‘"Bui the sort of fool one can‘t help liking, even when she‘s spoilt all on‘e plans, temâ€" porarily at any rate. I‘ve failed to start the blaze through Chrissie‘s inâ€" terference;. and after all the troublea J tock to decoy Ranny away from his post with a bogus telephone message. But I rode her off; she won‘t tell Ranâ€" ny and the truth is safeâ€"at the bottom of the well!" And when Chrissis met Ranny again at dinner,. stern and unresponsive, her heart falled once Towards th« end of the meal he spoke abruptly. "I‘m sure it wculd be better not Don‘t you see, he would be bound to take action if you did; he couldn‘t hush it up." "So did I; that‘s why I came " Leoâ€" nie spoke care‘sssly,. "To see him?" ‘"Well, naturally. : What other busiâ€" ness could I have at the flying ground" Her eyes wsre watchfull, intent on the other girl‘s flushed face. "I don‘t know," Chrissie said, then took csurage suddenly, clenchng her fists and speaking rapidly, "Leonie, do you and Ranny cars for each other?" For a moment there was silence; then Leon‘» spoke in changed tones. Lsonie watched the pony cart jingle away befcre mounting herself, and her look was grim. "I seeâ€"yes. Perhaps you‘re right,." Chrissie looked troubled. "But I must tell Ranny about it." "You poor child,â€"so that‘s what you thought? â€" But you‘re wrong, Chrissgie. If anything, he dislikes me." The swift darkness fell: in her pale primrose dress she was a faintly lJumâ€" inous figure in the shadows. Through the open windows came the nigh?t scents of the garden. Suddenly a step sounded on the verâ€" anda and Chrissie, recognizing it, paused in midâ€"chord. Ranny! Withâ€" out turning her head, she was consâ€" cious of her husband standing‘ just inâ€" side the nearest window, sawâ€"him sink down upon a low divan. He was hardly visible there, beside the dark obloaong of the shadow, through which black trees showed against the dim night sky. EVENING LOVE SONG She remained with hands just restâ€" ing on the keys, head bent, pulses throbbing wildly to the words which she had just been singing. Was it chance that he had come just then . . . or opportunity? With no time to plan. inspiration seized upon and shook her, forced her to act, and to act without further hesitation, without putting any questions to that dark figurm He was there, he was listening . . . he shculd hegr ... And against that background of quict sound, her voice rose, clear, as one who repeats and answers a question. How do I love thee . .. ? Let me count the ways . .. Something like a sharply indrawn breath came from the shadows, bu*t the sing:r did not pause, dared not pause. Her voice rose, sweet and steadfasi, carrying up the sustained phrase on the wings of a lovely rising rhythm. "I‘m boring you frightfully, I expact," she broke off, waited for the muttered "Noâ€"don‘t mind me," which gave so little >ncouragement. _"And, dear Gcod, please let him unâ€" derstand . . . " Chrisie prayed, as he: fingers began to move, paying very softly, very tenderly, a rippling preâ€" lude which fell like silver drops througn the silence. During the forlorn days which folâ€" lowed, music became more and more her only comfort and means of: exâ€" pression. She sat for hours at the plano, playing scraps of Mozart or Beethoven for herself, or trying to speak to Ranny, wherever he might be, through Chopin or the Liebestraum," or the music she composed herself, spun from her very heartsrings, as she felt sometimes. Once or twi_e, hre actually sat down, seemed to be listening, and Chrissic played on for a while until selfâ€"consâ€" clouness had her pause and speak. A pause, chord, then, very softiy and tenderiy, dwelling on the syllables as though in remeimbrance of past moments, calling up homely, peacefu! pictures: / "I love thee to the level of every day‘s Most quiet need, by sun and by For it Ranny didn‘t want her, if he‘d rather she went away what was the use of holding on? Once she said, with abrupt shyness. "shall I go on piaying?" to which Struâ€" an answered: "Oh, please dont bo:her on my account!" so that she sat for long minutes, silent, motionless, tears burning her eyes. There came an evening, about a week after that adventiure at the aerodrcme which she tried for Ranny‘s sake, to wipe out of memory, when Chrissie was absorbed in her latest composition, playing it over softly, singing under her breath. And, slight and uncertain though the bond might be, Chrissie felt sometim(s as though music still made a tie beâ€" tween herself and her husband. She ared not strain anything so frail, a touch might break it, but now and then, it seemed there, a gossamer thread floating in air, rather than joinmg them. She would hear his step en the verâ€" anda when she was playing, feel that he listenedâ€"feel it through every nerve in her body, cease playing, mosgy likely, for fear h: mizht be waiting impatiently to siy something. candlelight." Chrissie‘s voice broke on an indrawn breath that was almost a sob. Wbhin her she felt a strange sense of powe! gatherinz to gether, rising towards a climax that was hal!f joy half pain, a kind‘ of white flame of love. But nowâ€"now . . . could she put ii all that glowing, rising passion of Jove into the music which had seemed to come from her very soul through to her fingersâ€"could she make him feel it too? Would her voice be steady enough? Suddenly she found herseif I love thee with the breath, Smiles, tears of all my life!â€"and, i: ~ _~_ God choose, I shall but lowv» thee better after death‘ . The last words rang through the dim room, died into the silence. And stil. Chrissie sat there motioniless, her hands pressed <down lupon the keys almost convulsively, her body strung, tense as a drawn bow. There was a stir, a movement, stumâ€" bling. awkward. and Struan was beside er name again. "You really love me stillâ€"like that . .. in spite of aliâ€" everything?" "I love you . . . like that; as I shall always love youâ€"â€"as I‘ve always wanted to tell you that I love ycuâ€"only someâ€" how I couldn‘t." "And I‘ve wanted to tell you, too . . . only I didn‘t feel fit, I was ashamed, after what had happened . . after wlhiat might have happened," Struan correctâ€" ed himself, went on low and gently: "Because . .. it‘s always beenâ€"you‘ve always been thene really, though perâ€" haps youll find it hard to believeâ€"â€" you‘ve always been at the very botâ€" tom of my heart. The other . . . it was a kind of obsession, a fascination too strong for me. I seemed to forâ€" get everything." i "It‘s over now," Chrissie whispered. "Yes. It is over now . . . But I‘ve gotl to honest, Chrissie; I don‘t deserve any credit for that." "Yes, yesâ€"oh, darlingâ€"darling, don‘i mistake me! It‘s only ... they were‘nt my words, Ranny. I could never have said anything so . . . so beautiful myâ€" self, They were ... . just given to me. when I needed them, by . . . by the woman who wrote themâ€"Elizabeth Barâ€" rett Browning ... . I only made the musicâ€"because they were allâ€"everyâ€" thing that I‘ve always wanted to tell you." ‘"Nor are teen age ycungsters the only ones who are guilty of foot indisâ€" cretions. While college girls and boys show sense about shoes as a rule, graduates who enter business leave foot fitness behind them. Men as well as wom>n suffer all too needlessly from hammertoes, calluses, corns, bunions, and ingrowing toenails due to ill fitting shoes. It is difficult to understand why a woman is willing to ruin her posture her gait, ther facial expression and her outlsok on life by wearing uncomfortâ€" able shoes. Many an impatient gestrure, many harsh word spoken, many lined and wrinkled face, may be traced to the owner‘s feet." mean it â€"all thatâ€"all that you saidâ€"â€" all that you sang?" One hand was at her throat, where speech seemed strugglinz, suffocating, but she answered him, without a secâ€" ond‘s paws. * "I mean it, every single wordâ€"aonly a thousand. a million times more!" "Chriscie . . . Chrissie," he whispered In writing on the subject ‘Fitting the Feet for Life,‘ Beulah France, in Hyâ€" geia, states: A "I sse . . . Struan stood up; he sat down beside Chrissie on the music stool, darew her closely into his arms. kissed her hair, gently, lingeringly. Fitting Feet For Life One of the helpful things that was learred ~during the examination of reâ€" cHuits for cverseas service was the imâ€" portance of having normal feetâ€"fme from pain, and discomfort. One may have brains and ambition, but to be unable to be about among others beâ€" cause of painful feet not only interâ€" feres with business and social progress but the constant nagginz of the nerves affects the general health and happlâ€" ness of the individual. As most of these were young men who ‘were presenting themselves for service, it can be seen that their foot crfects were not due to any heavy work that was being placed upon them but because as little children and later as growing boys in their teens, proper footwzear was not provided by their loving cr thoughtless parents; the narrow ‘trim‘ shoe for growing boys and girls did not:â€" allow the proper width for the growing feet. If you have any fcot defects, comâ€" mon sense should take you to an orthâ€" cpedic physician who can give you safe and scientific advice. For some time they sat in silence, whilst the velvet darkness of nizsht closed in on them from without, invadâ€" ing the shadowed room. | Walk correctly. Do not toe either out or in, but straight ahead. If you canâ€" not do this, your doctor will tell you whethzr he advises a leather lift on one side of your shoe‘s heels, or wheâ€" ther he would suggest some other form of correction. "Ranny . . ."/ The words seemed to have come as a reminder to Chrissie. "There‘s something that I deserve no credit for .. . all that Iâ€"~said just now â€"about loving . . . " "Chrissie, you don‘t withdraw what you said? You mean it . .. ?2" If you have no foot defects or disâ€" comforts, conditions that way by wearing shoses wide and long enough for your feet, keep soles and heels from running over by soling and heelâ€" ing rearirs before they become lutely necessary. Health Booklets Available Eight helpful booklets by Dr. Barton are now available for readers of The Advance. They are: Eating Your Way to Health; Why Worry About Your Heart; Neurosis; The Common Cold Overweight and Underweight; Food Allergy or Being Sensitive to Foods and Other Substances; Scourge (gonorâ€" and syphilis); and How Is Your Blood Pressure? These booklets may be obtained by sending Ten Cents, to cover cost of service and handling, for sach cre desired, to The Belil Library, 247 West 43r4 St.. New Yorw, N.Y.. mentioning The Advance, Timmins. (Re:istered in accordance with the Copyright Act). (by James W. Barton, M.D.) (By D. 8. R. in Toronto Telegram} Whether or not Editor Curran of the Boo Star is to prove that the ancient Norse weapons and armor found by a brakeman near Beardmore, Ont.. were left by the Vikings supposed to have entered Canada via James Bay, the subject is of great interest. It scems increéedible that the Normen established for centuries in Greenland did not cross the comparatively narrow seas to the mainland of America. Nevertheless there is, as yet, no authentic matarial evidence of the Vikings having reached this continent. Did Vikings Come to â€" North via James Bay Writer Thinks it Very Proâ€" bable. And Why! In recent years Danish scientific exâ€" peditions have dug among these truins and found many relics of the inhabiâ€" tants. Bits of animal bones, charcoal, and soapston» dishes, weapons, stone cattle and sheep pens. From one church cemetery by the sea shore woo‘iâ€" en coffins were recovered, containing the skeletons cof men and women, and medieval clothing of wool and skin whose design establishes thrir date. The royal museum in Copenhacgcen conâ€" tainsâ€"a quantity â€"ofâ€"theseâ€"pathetic souâ€" venirs of a race that was wiped out. Leif Erikson Did It? The sagas "dealing with these foll: relate that Norsemen sailing west from Gresn‘and discovered a country which can ~have been nothing elss than America. â€" These Saga of Erik the Red tells how theâ€"former‘s son, Leif Erikson, in the year 1000 A.D., sailed from Cape Farewell westward with a party of coiâ€" onists and reached a country called Winelandâ€"which may have been Nova Scotia. After wintering there they returned to Greenland with a load af timberâ€"there being nothing but low bushes in the latter coun‘sy. The sagas go on to tell how an Is‘ander, Karsfeni, and 160 colonists, in the year 1003, â€"wintered in Wineland, but left because of the hostility of natives (Inâ€" dians). Altogether five Norse sailings toâ€"Wineland are recorded in the sagas â€"the last in 1347. One wonders why the Norsemen did not settle permanentâ€" ly in Winsland, which mlust have been a far better country than Greenland. History records the fact that Erik the Red, a Viking chief from Island, which itself had not long been settled from Scandinavia, arrived in southein Greenland in 986 AD. and established the first Norse colonies. These colonâ€" les ultimately contained eight churches and about 100 farmsteads. Christianity was generally adopted by the Greenâ€" land settlers in the eleventh century, and they numbered at one time about 9,000 people. Navigation of those icy seas was a perilous task for the primitive ships of the middle ages and sometimes ships did not reach the settlers for years at a timeâ€"which was a bad business for folk dependent upon staples fro.n Europe. Finally some time about the end of the fourteenth century political dissensions between Norway ‘and Denâ€" mark stopbed the sailing altogether. Left to their fate, the Norse settlers died off or were killed by the Eskimos. When, in 1721, a belatocd expedition from Denmark crossed to see if: there were any survivors, and to establish the present regime of Denmark in Greenland, not a trace of the Norsemen could be foundâ€"only the halfâ€"buried ruins of their stone churches and farm houses. Diligent search for Norse relics on the American mainland ~has ~so far pielded nothing of unquestionable auâ€" Norse Settlers Died Even southernâ€" Greenland was then. as it is toâ€"day, too cold a climate to grow grain. The Norse settlers hunted fished and raised cattle, sheep, hors>s and goats. They depended upon Norâ€" way for grain, iron and lumber {for which they sent back dried fish, furs, feathers and oil. Canada Num I'mr cmafinn. Lim NORBTHERN ONTARIO rowu COMPANY, LIMITED P QUEBEC POWER ‘COMPANY, LIMITED ELEGTRIC W | To‘ RADIO || K P Mew World of ENTERTAINMENT thenticity. The Dighton Rock of Masâ€" sachusetts was proved to bear Indian sign writing, and not the supposed Norse inscription, on its surface. That Minnesota Stone The soâ€"called Kensington Stone Minnesota today reposes in a glass case at the Chamber of Commerce at Alexâ€" andria, Minnesota, where visitors come to gaze upon it. This stone is said io have been dug up in 1898 from beneath the roots of a 70â€"yearâ€"old poplar tree near the village of Kensington in that state, by a local farmer named Olaf Ohman. It bears inscriptions in anâ€" cient runic characters interspersed with a few Latin letters. However, some of the critics who arose to argue that the stone had been "planted" claimed ‘hat the inscriptions had been bade in reâ€" cent years. Briefly they state: "8 Goths and 22 Norwegians on a journey of discovery through the West. We had camp for two skerries one day from this stone. After we came home we found 10 men red with blood and dead A.V.M. (Ave: Virgo Maria) deliver us from evil." On another portion of the stone are the words "We have 10 of our men by the sea to look after our ships, 14 days journey from this islandâ€"Year 1362." Via James Bay Discovery of the stone caused a great sensation, but some scholars of note raised violent, presumptions against its authenticity. Disgusted, Mr. Ohman who had been exhibiting the stone in a bank window, threw it in front of h.s granary for a footstepâ€"whence it has been Prof. H. J. Holland of the University of ‘Winconsin, however. published, in 1932, a book in which he maintains, that the stone is genuine. And during his researches, lasting for many years, he was the recipient of reputed Norse relics found in Minneâ€" sota and Wisconsin. These were three typical Scandinavian battle axes of the Middle Acrps, a Norwegian hatchet, a spear point and a fire steel. In support of the stone‘s genuinencss Mr. Gathorneâ€"Hardy, an English auâ€" tority on Scandinavian lore, points out that in the year 1355 King Magnus of Norway sent Paul Knutson and a mixâ€" cd expedition of Norwegians and Swedes to Greenland to see to the reâ€" ligious welfare of the Greenlanclers, many of whom were reporbed apostate. He submits that the expedition, whith did not return to Europe until 1363â€"%, might have gone into Hudson Bay and south via the Nelson River, Lake Winâ€" nipeg and the Red River to the site of Kensington. It would appear that Scandinavians as a whole have long since settled the question of who was the first white man in America. They are willing to acco~d to Leif Erikson the honor of having landed on this continent nearly 500 63 yba x5 with a ~ \Wi GENERAL ELECTRIC R AD | O 13a Pine Street North Timmins You‘ll thrill to the tone of this radio, you‘ll admire the sparkling beauty of its fine walnut finish and you‘ll get years of pleasure and happiness from the world of entertainment it brings you. Oceans and continents are spanned with a turn of the dial â€" music, drama, news, sportâ€" ing events all come to you in comfort of your living room. See and hear this modern radio â€" you‘ll be surprised at its low price. Easy terms are available. AND REAL ESTATE IN ALL BRANCHES INSURANCE SIMMS, HOOKER DREW HOUSES AND LOTS FOR SALE CONVENIENT TERMS One Dead. 3 Hurt In Motor Accident years before Columbus‘ time. And who can gainâ€"say them ? Tragedy Near Cochrane on Thursday Last. Cochrane, Oct. 12%.â€"An accident on the Clute road, some five miles from Cochrane, resulted in the death of one and the injury of three others at an early hour on Thursday morning. .A car in which the four were travellhg collided with a trluck. Arthur Stickman, age 20, driver of the taxi car and son of the owner died a couple of hours after the accident from the terrible injuries received. Arâ€" thur St. Jean, oneof the occupants of the car, received a fractured skull and a laceration on the face, Roland Laâ€" roche, another passenger, suffered a fractured nose, factured skull and upâ€" per jaw, and minor cuts. Th car was completely wrecked and extensive damaze sustained by the truck, which was driven by YÂ¥ves Bertrand, who, with a cousin, Willie Bertrand, escaped practically unaurt. The driver has bzen placed in custody by the Provincial Police on a charge of manslaughter. It is reported that the taxi and truck met headâ€"on. The truck is the property of the Cochrans Sash and Door Factory. Miss Lorette St. Amour suffered a fractured lez, a suspected fractur» of a chest bone and cuts. All three in adâ€" dition are suffering from shock. Every FRIDAY .__ _PRODUCTS OF CANADA LIMITED AND. YOUR GENERAL MOTORS DIEALIR Presented , b Transatiantic broadcast from London, Eng., by "From the Heart of Empire" Canada‘s Most Popular 15â€" Minute Program Beverley Baxter 10 .m s« CKGB Phoneâ€"Offlice 112 Residence 135 PAG€ THARER CGMR

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