Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 13 Apr 1939, 3, p. 3

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He looked nettled; but her tone was amply convincing as she said: "Oh,. no! No, nct for a moment! It fund of knowledge of criminal psychâ€" ology! Put together with threse years of unreéemitting labour. . Ready for the typist in another few months new, and after "HAt‘ for publication:;: and after that am#@ng â€"psychâ€" clogists throughout the world. Which means, of course, Christabel, that very few people will ever hsar of itâ€"â€"â€"!" He ended, with a laugh. "Three years!" said Christabel, and such at puUZZ ng awWay. "L is a lon tim "Are you s it? He laid his hand of manuscript. Christabel came went on explainin: attEemipted to hide him, of what he w pointing to t] all the data I t took a practic And hereâ€"als years to ‘be pj based on the p But he had already don> so, and ths flames were licking upwards. Christabel moved about the room locking at the prints on the walls; het movements were restless and her manâ€" ner constrained. He was a little constrained, too, but when she came to his writing table he fcund something to talk about. He showed her a large pile of oddâ€" sized papers, roughly bound, and a smaller, neater stack of manuscript. "Here is the work of years," he said. [b D 61 hC ha LIQUID© PASTE! C( THURSDAY. APrRLM 13TH 1939 HC6 Tickets valid for travel Train No. 2 from Timmins, Thursday, April 13th, connerting at North Bay with C. P. R. Train No. 85%, and at Sudbury with C. P. K. Train No, 28 Hamilton, â€" Buffalo, Kitchener, Smithville, Galt, (Guelph, Dunnville, Woodstock, Chatham, Welland, London, Windsor, Detroit. via North Bay and Canadian Pacific Tickets to T. I)ostuntmm sold subject to Passengers meeting Immigraâ€" tion Requnrcmvnts of GOING and Canadaâ€"RETURNING. For Fares, Departure Time and Further Information Appl to Local Agent Children 5 vears of age, and under 12%, when accompani¢ed by Guardian HUALE FARE Al tickets valid to return so as to Leave Toronto not later than C. P. R. Train No. 2%, 11.10 p.m. sSunday, April 16th, arriving North Bay and conâ€" necting with T. N. 0. Train 1, 1245 p.m., Monday, April 17%th Tickets Good in Coaches ONLY On ristabel came nearer to look. He on explainin:g, with a smile which ipted to hide the importance, to o6f what he was telling her: is is my own contribution to the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company PEARL BELllLAIRs â€" sk _ years!" said Christabel, an at him with a faint smile, an extraordinary lock that he wa 1€ CHAPTER XXI HEWITSON‘S "HARD TICKETS ON SALE FROM REC thg ia@arg®r pmile. "Noteéesâ€" I have ecilected since I firs tical interest in psychology ilso the work of years, thre preciseâ€"is the theory TIT‘v > practical investigation." ‘ said Christabel, half turnâ€" Don‘t vou think three vears arml li Thursday. April 13th, 1939 3. Sshe ‘smid ‘"The And the room, for a tremely pleasant!" room‘! ~Men as a rule ting it wasn‘t worth gh it it 1e f s hat rnoon 1A 1 that." m so, and t T OR () NT 0 m udying thd d white 11 his man as thty Ch TO ecVQeIr w "You‘re paler than usual, and you‘ve changed. You‘re more as you used to lock!" He knitted his brows and asked abruptly: "How‘s the memory?" "Coming back," said Christabel. "I rememberâ€"more now!" She leaned back in her chair and looked up at him for he had risen to light a cigarette, and was standin:} over her. snce, the alocofness about he kept him at a greater distance meant to keep, said: ‘‘You don‘t look yoursel{, 1 you feeling?" "Fairly well," said Christabe ively, feeling tracked down and being trapped, by the searchin eves. ‘The manservant cams to take the tea table. When he had Hewitson, conscious of Christabe "IL was once invited to go to the races with a party," he said. T execrate horse racing, but for scme reason I said I would go. And I did. But I faithfully arove to Epsom instead of to Goodwood. You can imagine my relief when I found I had arrived at a race course where thers was ngither a race meetâ€" ing nor a party. However, I shouldn‘t laugh at it; it‘s the most acute form of escapism there is to forget what on: wants to forget." suppose ‘you wl have t try to remember where the church is before the ;ime comes." He always affected an keaep anything which did him in his "She and Sanders are going to be married next week, At some church in Cheisea; Molly told me the name of it, but I can‘t rememiber it. Sanders wanted me to be best man, but thank heaven I‘ve got out of that, because it seems that I have to give Molly away." Christabel saw him glance at her, and knew that he was wondering whether she recollected what had happened about Sanders. She deliberately lookâ€" ed as vague as she could, and merely remarked, with mock seriousness: taKenâ€" off th:ir nanas!‘‘ Christabel smiled, and turned away is the manservant brought in the tea. She sat by the fire and poured it out Hewitson became quiet, chastsned, alâ€" most domesticated; <she fely his eyes on her, her movement. The light in the room was dimmed by the clouds over the sky, and the fire threw a glow on their faces. HOW‘s THE MEMORY Hewitson talked about his sist pausing to ask first: "You rememiber Molly?" "Yes." He looked a trifle surprised, and tolc her: child cf my than rubies about the f: out of a hu taken off t the manusceript there like that?" "Safe?‘* "Well, something might happen to it â€"suppose someone stole it?" "What?" Hewitson laughed. "Who on earth would want to steal a treatise on psychology?" "Perhapsâ€"perhaps somecody who has less to show for three years labour!" "Three years do you mean?" he said, with a quickness of perception that startled her. "I can‘t imagins a Jurglar being attracted by itâ€"except to light fires with. No, it may be the child cf my intellect and dearer to me than rubies, but I‘m under no illusion about the fact that ninetyâ€"nine persons out of a hundred would pay to have it he said, with that startled Jurglar being light fires v must be a friumph for you to have finâ€" ished itâ€"I‘m sure you feel it is!" "I feel I have at last done soemethin: that I realy wanted to do," said How itson. He moved away from the table and she said: "Do you think it‘s quite safe to feave STATION® ONLY No Baggage Checked xXpEeC id Christabel, eva omeone inability not inter race. course race meetâ€" I shouldn‘t acute form t what on:>: her whiz ce than h ike away How his T ed ed agailn, as thoughn g: tic movement by the wi ecmotionsâ€"for there w sort of meltin‘z grief, a sthle joy which checks and resentment for ar But the sense of w had brocded over for her prison torment sur; powered everything els Her breast rose convulsively as sh drew a dsep breath. And then the sharp whirrâ€"whirrâ€" whirr of the telephone ringing in th hall smotse suddesnly on their silence. ‘"Dash!" said Hewitson. He rose from the arm of her chait tap ent bel‘s heart too; the calm of an emction too deep for tears, too desp even to be undertsood. And then, while the room was still so quiet, whils Hewitson sat without moving or speaking, gazing down at her pale, enizmatic face, with its two glimâ€" mering Gdark eyes, the calm within Christatel brcke. With a heave, like the rising wave in her consciousness, and then another, the pent up tions of three years burst in her soul, shaking her with grief, wildly demandâ€" Christabel, ard you‘re going to marry me!lC t He rose from th ind stood with his i little pale, half pra hor and â€" IndignaltlOn â€"rose i against his attempt to im "You feel very sleepy, do veoics, conversational at fi dropped to its hypnotic tor She fcund "Don‘t hyp notised!" But his fac ners, and he "Just things!" He did not : He put one h: chair, leaning away his nowl said : itel!" Hewitson walked ou rvant followed him, The moment she was prang up from her cl She obeyed. She celaxed, but in reali 1er body was rigid. y A¢ i . â€" AlBas adache exp knew wha Ok at the fire!" | ) fcund breath tc in‘t hypnotise me pa on | LCW nard Trapy O surged up and oveyr rything else. She was pos ho emotions she had in itterly, a helpless automat on the destruction of th the manlseript on to the , it slithered off the grate, _ the hearth, even as she the main part would take burn. Crouching in the graspec e Ooniy saiid, almos e fire!t" , ask her what they were hand on the back of her ig over her; then threw wly lisghted cigarette, and grief, a giimpss of posâ€" checked the old hatred for an instant. back to the hearth, smiling. His man and entered diffidâ€" cnhnalr. he dootr . loose sheets fallâ€" and fluttering beâ€" an instan 100Ked as UtThC y every muscl of r>sentn ) you rememaoer? softeér than sh he told her. o say faintl â€"â€"I won‘t D: door. then turnâ€" aded into franâ€" a conflict of her murmur C Another m man t anC sin bel evasively _ of foreheac heavily which she ong duringz vÂ¥An the manâ€" g the dcor Chrisiabsel ttcok a under con‘fli nearer ovet a whisper: @fterno »sentment resistance > his will. 1€ paon ImC thougl iinutt > hin 1cug?t rs 0o t OoI 3 m h TH® PORCUPMNE ADVANCER, TTUMMIN3, ONTaRITO Beating out the last flames, she threw down the blackened sheets on to the unburned remainder of the manuscript where it lay wrenched to pieces en the floor beside her. No much was burnâ€" ed; the rest could be put in order again. She rose slowly to her feet, sick with reaction, with weak knees, and stood trembling. Her burned finzers throbâ€" bed and stung, but she hardly noticed the pain. She accepted her cwn weakâ€" ness in not being able to take that particular revenge. The mistake was in having started to do it., nct in stcpâ€" Ingâ€"â€"! She heard the click of the receiver going down, a step outsidé, and Hewitâ€" son came in. She ~tried to strengthen herself This stuff she was burning was all concerned with the alleviation of sulf>râ€" ing, the curing of sick minds. It had value to other people besides Hewitson. Despair overwhelmed herâ€"her purpose broke. hearth she snatched up the thickest bulk of paper and divided it, wrenchâ€" ing it apart from the clips which held it, and applied a smaller bundl»e, corâ€" ner down, to catch the flames. Edges blackened, words curled away, vanished in smoke:; flames roared up the chimâ€" ney, glared in her eyes. On one of the writhing sheets Hewitâ€" son‘s writing seemed to start towards her in the moment 06f extinction. "Case No. 10. Mrs. D., a charwoman. awzed fortyâ€"five, suffering from a minor epilepsy . ..‘ The rest of the sentence vanished in flame. The sight of that sentence pulled Christabel tegether, brought her with a sudden shock to the full realization 6{ what she was doing. She snatched the papers out the fire, beat out; the flaming 2dges in the hearth. Twoâ€"thirds of them were badâ€" ly scorched, but still decipherable, only a dozen sheets completely destroyed. a car. Many a time I have stopped to talk to them and cften in answer to a question have I been told that this or that fellow graduated from> mining school at Queen‘s, Toronto, or Mz2>Gill. As to the staffs, they present a fair crossâ€"section Oof the great mining schocis of Canadg3, with a sprinkling the dance if need be, or the mcvie. It‘s only those of us who knew other ways and other times who can apâ€" preciate the change. ‘ Athletics Are Featured Athletics are ncot overlooked by any means, as rach big mine helps to supâ€" port hockey, baschball, badminton, tenâ€" nis and football teams, and there are some pretty good ones in Porcupine. The skating rink at Schumacher, a gift of McIntyre Porcupine Mines, is oaone of the finest in Canada; in fact, as good as the Maple Leaf Gardens, on a smaliâ€" er scale. It seats 1,700 comifortalsly and will hold 2,500 at a pinch. During the past sgason, the first since tfthe rink was completed, the facilities of the building have been strained at many games, where one sees hockey as good as professionals can dish up. Under the rink roof is a splendid community meeting hall, fitted with stage, with several conference rooms for smaller gatherings. A charming young ladvy teaches the young how to skate and one can see more than one coming Sonâ€" ja Heine whirling around. An innovaâ€" tion for the, boys .at McIntyrs is an ultra violetâ€"ray ‘bath, through which, a‘fter donning goggles, they travel by moving sidewalk in fiftyâ€"three seconds and thereby gain what is said to be equal to two and oneâ€"half hours of sunshing.. Their luntch buckets, too, move along a conveyor belt from the dry room to the dressing room. Of course there is no suspicion of highâ€" grading, but if there were, the custodian of the buckets at the receiving end would have something to say abcout it. A Young Man‘s Camp Mining is a young man‘s occupation and Porcupine a young man‘s camp. You‘d be surprised at the number of fine looking young fellows you meet in the bowels of the earth handling a muck stick, running a drill or loading The following is the fourth in the series of articles on "Hirhiignts of th> Porcupine Camp." by Sidney Norman, mining editor of The Glicbe and Mail: Sanitation and Comfort Stressed No record of the Porcupine camp would be eccmpletse without more or less extenced reference to the efforts mads oy all operating companies to rendor life for the miners and staffs as satisâ€" fying and comfortable as possije. The advances made in the years since this ousted writer first took up pick and shovel for a living have beon great inâ€" deed. Back over forty years ago, at an elevation of 7,500 above sea level in the selkirk Mountains of British Colunmi>ia, we thought thregâ€"tier bunks made of rough lumber were fairly swanky and upâ€"toâ€"date. Mattresses were cull:d from the fir trees and one always rolleod his own blankets. I can now and then detect a faint whifif of the bunkhasu.: odor even now. Today, in the Porecuâ€" pine and cther camps of the country, sterilizationâ€"sanitation is the order of Sanitation a nd Comfort Stressed. Feaâ€" tured. Highlights of the Porcupine Camp (To be continued) get her breath are about 1,000 unemployve: trict, but I imagine a good! number are of a class that absorbed by the mines. An: of the Porcupine situation percentage of British or employzses. At the three k proportion is around 70 p here and there of graduates from the other side of the lineâ€"Houghton, Rolâ€" la, South Dakota, Boston Trck, Cslumâ€" bia, Washington or California. Thers is no finer, cleaner, more competent bunch of young fellows anywhere, and the future of the mining industry of Canada < will be quite safe in their hands. I should like to take this opporâ€" tunity of thanking those who helped me through the intricacies of the mines I visited on a recent trip and extend to each an invitation to look me up when in Toronto. Life is indeed full for youth in Porcupine. Labour Turnover Light The labor turnover in Porcupine is light and becoming less and less each year.> That may be partially do to the searcity of jobs in a general way, but in my opinion more to the treatment of employees and provisions for their comâ€" fort and future. There is always . a long .waiting list at each of the producâ€" ing mines in the area, particularly those that are near towns and have instiâ€" tuted pension,. health and other service plans.. My understanding is that there The town of Bateman,. Sask., will share the fortune of its Dr. H. A. Woodside. He won $50.000 in the Irish â€" sweepstakes and forthwith cancelled the biggest part of debts owed by his patients. Doctor Cancels Debts Low monthly payments on the General Motors Instalment Plan. positive control of the springing. 3. Kneeâ€"Action Front Wheels synchronized, frictionless coil springs at all four corners. 2. Fourâ€"Way Stabilization for which absorb road shocks 1. Quadriâ€"Coil Springingâ€"big graduates from the ineâ€"Houghton, Rolâ€" Bcston Teck, Cslumâ€" r California. Thers er, more competent llows anywhere, and mining industry of quits csafe in ° their Phone 229 There is always . a each of the producâ€" a, particularly those as have instiâ€" h and other service nding is that there nployed in the disâ€" i~gcoodly part of that ss that could not be iree big mines 0 take this opporâ€" hose who helped acies of the mines rip and extend to look me up when indéced : full for ?atur larg alize Gore Bay Recorderâ€"Few people realâ€" ize» the «actual coveragse of even the most modest weekly paper. Not long ago an advertising expert stated that careful research had ascertained that city newspapers are read. on an avorâ€" age, for the space of twenty minutes, while the average home town weekly and> semiâ€"weekly newspaper has a éd no care aiter | allowed to die. TT was frozen as soli« clues in the matte the. people are m efiforts to solve the those responsible is thought that th Showrooms, 7 Third Ave. ‘reading life‘ of three hours to its cre dit. â€"It is kept around the house for : week.. That is something for both sub scriber and advertiser to think about. A grcoup of children playing abou farm at Hanmer near Sudbury som days ago were horrified to to find th body cfi a dead baby in a handkag. Th children had noticed the handsag scm days ksofore dbuy did ngt then investi gate it. The matter was at once turn so far as can be obsorved any agita tion among laborites is largely confine: to Timmins itself., and is not encourag ed to any extent by present mine an ployees. Details concerning plamns in stituted by Dome Mines for its em ployees will be presentod in the fina Find Frozen Body of Baby in Handbag Near Sudbury tasting, more nourishing hullâ€"free qualities of porridge made with Quick Cooking Purity Oats. Get Purity Oats for your husbandâ€"and give him a breakfast that wil! sta): by him till lunch time. He‘l appreciate the better quality. Tell your grocer you want Purity Oats. They come in premium and nonâ€"premium pdckngcs. ‘\\ en \\‘ “\ ) w * E) RITY OATS PU MA D Eâ€"RB YÂ¥ THE MTELLERS e IG. â€" XiftY over to tt w seeking e Raby an YOUR HUSBAND WiLL APPRECIATE IT Standâ€"out buy of the ‘39 low price field is Oldsmobile‘s big, low priced "Select Six". It‘s the new Style Leader that thousands who previously drove smaller cars are turning to â€"for Olds beauty, Olds performance and Olds high quality at a price they can easily afford. Like its companion carsâ€"the Oldsmobile "Seventy Series‘"‘ Six and the "Eighty Series‘‘ Straight Eight â€"it gives you the advanced new Rhythmic Ride and the Handiâ€"Shift steering column gear control. It has everything for comfort, everything for safety, everything for extra years of satisfying, prideful motoring. See this grand new 95â€"horsepower Oldsmobile ‘‘Belect Six" today ... and convince yourself that * You ought to own an Olds!‘‘ 0«+H OULPSMORBR/ILE "SsELECT 51!X¢" indbag wh ith or mal e,. of Sudbury w born infant { Sudbury. says the baby orn infant that had reseivâ€" after birth, but had been ie. The body when found is solidâ€"as a rock. While matter are naturally few, are making very earnest ve the mystery and bring isible to punishment. It hat the body of the baby ) may have been lying in where it was throewn for mavJe ‘ovincial p; learn the lon * on ice who a identity or perso OuUun "SEVENT Y " Husbands everywhere in Canada think a lot of wives who have discovered the finer made TIMMINS BOTTLING WORKS Phone 646â€"J 63 Birch street North Timmins Toro Thirst asl\s\\ nothine more Timmins CC _ PU RITY ‘"F LO UR proo " EIGH T y " * rlas been

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