‘"‘"As regards what 1 Gdidâ€"AS L 10Qi at it now, I suppose I was instrumental in getting you your conviction. I reâ€" member the case very woll. I found a few notes on it that I still have, and I looked them up in the early hours of this morning. Really, you were conâ€" victed on the strength of the letter you wrote to Goring asking for forty pounds with which to pay that bill; you were found guilty because the interpretation that I put on that letter, and on your wretched _ since taken the best Christabelâ€"I de: one do? ‘The m having writâ€"â€" written very dee young, beautiful spite of it. Bu you aren‘t the prison three ye: stupid of me to how sorry I a: and his cigarett with his sharp looked down at work basket en finally, "But yc might be able to IRVIN ROSNER, R.O. ng Nnis fully aA ibeen atr broodin some time t think havin regarc as me sha of Christalsel and said no made throb did the par 1rk< Li belhiir Ohri t B ked *) 1€ EYESIGHT SPECIALIST For Appointment Phone 1877 BUCOVETSKY BLDG. 3 Third Ave. Timmins To Wit: By virtue of a warrant issued by the Mayor of the Town of Timmins bearing date the ninth day of March, 19839, sale of lands in arrears of taxes in the Town of Timmins will be held in the Council Chamber, Municipal Building, Timmins, at the hour of two o‘clock in the afternoon on the sixth day of July, 1939, unless the taxes and costs are sooner paid. Notice is hereby given that the list of lands for sale for arrears of taxes is being pubâ€" lished in the Ontario Gazette on the first day of April, 1939, on the sixth day of May, 1939, and on the third day of June 1939, and that copies of the said list may be had at my office. PEARL BELLAIRS â€"drew an unearsy breath, and i as though she did not want to him. The mere sight of him so to her, there in her own room, her nerves quiver and her heart Hewitson, . meanwhile,. was ly aware of the faint perfume ninity in the rcom; despite himâ€" is eyes followed the lovely lines "figure, closely wrapped in the red EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED ilbelâ€"I deserve it. But what can ? ‘The moving finger writes, and writtâ€"â€"â€"!* In this case : its very deeply. You may still bs beautiful, perfectly healthy, in f it. But as you say yourself. en‘t the person who went to three years ago. It would ba of me to offer econdolences, say rry I amâ€"â€"!" he broke off, 5s cigarette glowed and sparkled is sharp intake of breath. He ST RONGGL MAXNX PLEADS Treasurer‘s Sale of Land for Taxes 2AITl ? brow Treasurer‘s Office, this 18th day of March 19 nothing. ards wha with Scientifico Accuracy by O1ll ipIC rer dlittle satinâ€"lined the table, and said must know â€" you maginge how I feel!" at his suffering face I didâ€"as T look _was instrumental conviction. I reâ€" y woll. I found a I still have, and I conclusions had 00 much painful 1g vning, contract his words care TOWN OF TIMMINS District of Cochrane la y Bejin m before the door head, h a cigar him room pretty Y ou‘ve coule. n h You But ‘"Repent!" he said to cut my throat Because that‘s the can think of that the case!" Christabel paled and said nothing. She believed now. that she had really made him feel. But he seemed to be gathering himself for an attack, his eyes narrowed, he threw his cigarette end into her hearth with a fine careâ€" lessness as to whether it was the place for cigarette ends, and came to stand nearer to her. ‘*YOU ARE IN LOVE WITH ME!" "All this," he said, "doesn‘t explain to me why you blame me so much more than Tolmer, who gave you a heavier sentence than he need have done out of sheer stupidity and ill nature." "I‘ve told you," said Christabel. "Oh, no!" He shook his head. "You don‘t think that hate, do you, could last in such an active state for three vears?" Christabel stared at him with an exâ€" pectancy of something so incredible that the mere possibility of his sugâ€" gesting it turned her cold. "When I touch you " He put his hand on one of the arms with which she was clasping herself to tightly. "Whien I touch you the cutaneous blood vessels of your face dilate and so do the pupils of your eyesâ€"or, shall I say, vyou blush and vour eves shine!" So rigid was she that with his one hand on her arm he could shake he: gslightly to and fro. Her face had cerâ€" tainly colored, thse evyes that stared at him with a kind of ‘fascinated inâ€" credulity were shiningâ€"but with what? â€" Hewitson set his teeth and went on, rather as a man might plunge ahead say the working of the legal code sometimes at fault; I say that whole social attitude towards crime : criminals is sheer baledrdash; Yo arguing to convince me of someth I am more than convinced of already Christabel was silenced: It seemed he was too clever for her. But she said bitterly at last: ‘"You think you d4don‘t need to repent about what you did to me ‘because you‘ve repented of the whole thinge?" "No; it was infamous fence is that I‘ve give law, when it would t much to my advantage cutor. "Btu "1 was. He was something cof of mine," Hewitson admitted i ily, but his frown grew more ac face paler and more drawn. "1 extent I was influenced by that "Oh, but was I to be ruined to go to prisonâ€"just for the that?" Christabel cried. and Ditter as it is | that it was true. time. However, the clever in persuading you three years, verdict of guilty, b aren‘t usually sway jury is! Tolmer w harsh sentencesâ€"y you blame me so him?" The last question was shot at her suddenly, with an abrupt change af tone; in a manner that reminded her so much of his aptitude as a crossâ€" examiner, that a moment horrors of the trial were ringing fresh in her ears. "Becauseâ€"because he was enly doing what he thought was his duty!" she said. that you we of Ross Bart cnaracler generalil ing to the jury th put forward by R have bheen trusâ€"y I also had a L. SHAW, Treasurer He wa he fact that I was too ag the jury, didn‘t get They brought in a but judges, you know ayved by counsel as a was notorious ‘for his â€"why, T wonder, did s0 much more than U "Do you want me in front of you? only repentance I would really meet m 111 mitted it stead more acute, hi said nothing. she had really seemed to be in attack, his iegal CoOde is say that the ards crime and rdash; â€"You‘re of something up practicin?g ie been very yone told m et the bette My only d To some wWas prose iL in a t! on It seemed to her to be the last, the final stupendcus insult. He looked at her narrowly. "Now my cursed passion for candour has ruined everything! If I had grovelâ€" ledand pleaded with you not to hate me, when all the time I knew that you didn‘t, really, T should certainly have got around you!" "Will you please go?" "It‘s a pity," he said, "that you didn‘t really burn that manuscript of mine. "I know serve," he loss of my to what I Survey Transâ€"Canada Road from Hearst to Long Lac Addressing the Chamber of Comâ€" merce at Fort William last week, Earle Smith, district engineer of the Departâ€" ment of Highways, said that the indiâ€" cations are that the northern route of the Transâ€"Canada highway from Long Lac to Hearst will be completed before the Lake Superior road to Sault Ste. Marie. really You‘d There were 25 miles of road under contract from Hearst west, Mr. Smith said, and surveys had been conducted from Long Lac east. The distance from Long Lac to Hearst is 135 miles over comparatively level country. Department engineers estimated that the 235â€"mile road from Schreiber to the Montreal river via White River, which was begun several years ago, is only 40 per cent complete and would require $18,000,000 to complete, Mr. Smith said. Cost of the northern route was estiâ€" mated at $4,500,000. For answer, Christabel smacked his. He stood back, with one cheek red. "In love with you!" She shook visibly with fury. "What conceit. You must be mad! How dare youâ€"how dare you come here and talk this nonsense to me? You force yourself into my room. what do you think the landlady is thinking? I‘m engaged to another man, I‘m going to marry Arthur Cavâ€" anaghâ€"â€"! After all you‘ve done! And the end O6of it is that you say that to me!" In love with himâ€"with him for three years! He, who had ruined her and sent her to prison! She cried and cried, and could do nothing else, until she was so exhausted that she had to drag herseif to the bed and lie there for half an hour. (To be Continued) into the thick of a thunderstorm with every expectation of being struck by lightning: ‘"When I‘m in the room you never look at anyone or anything else. After your accident, when you‘d forgotâ€" ten things, and I came down to Kent, you more or less assumed that there had been something between usâ€"that is to say, you hoped that there had been. _ You‘re one of . those people, Christaibel, who are irresistibly attractâ€" ed to the thing that hurts them. You‘ve been in love with me ever since I ripâ€" ped you to pieces for the benefit of the jury three years ago in court! If I were to smack your face now. you‘d love me still ~moreâ€"â€"!" Globe and Mail: Franco May Make Formal Request for Gibraltarâ€"Teleâ€" gram Headline. Well, he‘d better ask very, very politely, 02 Go! feel very differently now cried Christabel. "V Will you THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO A proud father was walking down Pine street on Saturday with his young son, and at every shop window the youngster would stop to enquire "Daddy what‘s that?" .. . and each time the father would explain. PFinally, the pair reached a furrier‘s window, and, at the sight of a lovely red fox jacket, sonny again put forth his question. The father, somewhat puzzled and probably a little bit tired of answering questions, loudly proclaimed, . "Oh, that‘s your mother‘s hair before it was dyed!" Directions to=~dogâ€"owners! â€" Teach your pet not to run around in circles. A local resident was quite embarrassed a few days ago in this way. She emerged from the post office building with her tiny pet leading the wayâ€"on a leash. Only a few steps further down the street the canine pet deâ€" cided that the warm spot on the cement paving, with the sun sending its rays over the spring world, was just the place for a cosy sleep. His misâ€" tress had other ideas, however, and tried to pursuade her little pal to run along beside her. Suddenly the dog, apparently somewhat angry at not beâ€" ing able to "take a nap," leaped up and raced around its mistress in circles. The leash tied the young lady in a beautiful "mixâ€"up." that was a humâ€" orous ~sight for interested spectators. Thesact of disentangling was a feat in itself, and should be a lesson to other "mistresses" and "masters." Toronto Telegram : Ho, hum! If there was only a way to put a check on xub- ber cheques, t i A â€" mircale! No longer local gentlemen say that they have to wait for the young lady to prepare for an "evening out." Not if that young lady is like the one who visited the mocâ€" casin dance on Thursday evening. At 10.25 pm. this young lady was calmly reposing in a comfortable chair at home, with dreams of a quiet evening at home, and "curlers" perched preâ€" cariously in her hair. At 10.30 this same young lady was seated in an automobile, on her way to the aforeâ€" mentioned dance, and looking just as pleasing as if she had prepared for those "hours‘"‘ that friends are always talking about! The bride and by Mr. and Mrs tawa. Mr. and Mrs. ‘"Moose" Porter retur ed to town on Tuesday following th marriage in Ottawa on Friday last. Mr. and Mrs. Por Kirkland Lake, whe known, ‘"Macse" playi Lake Shore hockey te: nected with hockey ing here four or five Mr. and Mrs. ‘"Moo. (From Northern News) A quiet wedding was solemnized on Friday, April 14, in Christ‘s Church Cathedral, Ottawa, when Miss Tva Mary Boland, of Kirkland Lake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Boland, of Killaloe, became the bride of Simeon Patrick (‘‘Moose") Porter, of Kirkland Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Porter of Iroquois Falls. Most Rev. J. C. Roper, Archbishop of Ottawa, conducted the ceremony. The bride was becomingly attired in hA suit of light oxford gray with blouse of pale yellow and shoulder bouquet of Talisman roses. A smart hat in lilac shade and gray accessories the ensemble. "Moose" Porter Wedded At Ottawa on April 14th Il ind cream, wheat and others. 3.â€" Increased: alkalinity of the blood. These individuals often work so hard they starve themselves and often do not eat enough meat and fish. 4. ‘Spasm in the blood vessels in the brain. In the opinion of Dr. Riley this spasm Oof the arteries of the brain which of course prevents a proper supply of blood from reaching the brain and removing wastes, is responsible for many other symptoms besides the headaches, such as temporary loss of MIGRAINE Migraineâ€"one sided headacheâ€" is one of the commonest results of food allergy. Other ailments due to overâ€" senstiveness to certain foods are desâ€" cribed and diet suggestions to overâ€" come these ailments are given in Dr. Barton‘s helpful booklet (No. 106). enâ€" Cents to cover cost of service and maillâ€" St..New York, N. °Y., mentioning The Advance, Timmins. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act) Trenton Courierâ€"Advocate: A restau. rant cwner in Havelock must have bit of Scotch in his bloocd, Hanging in a conspicuous place in his restaurant is a sign: ‘"When you put sugar in your tea, stir like the dickens, as we don‘t mind the noise." 2. Being senstive to certainâ€" foodsâ€" egges., fat rich foods.milk. cream, iceâ€" These individuals who have this tenâ€" dency to migraine should learn then that it is tenseness that cause the spasm of the bloodvessels, and thus the misraine, ing to The Rell sight and speech, and also dizziness (by James W. Barton, M.D.) thrart Showrooms, 7 Third Ave. y, 247 West 43rd mentioninsg Th of Pours EChat Bobp honoured guest Oof t FPellow Karl Eyre, of who had made the lon, ney at the request of in attendance at this Pollowing a warm we by all, Mr. Eyre gave ing and enlightening progress and welfare 0 the Loyal Order of Karl Eyre Addresses Ansonville Moose Iroquois Palls, April 21â€"(f The Advance}â€"The largest ship gathering of the Loyal the Moose, Ansonville Lodge ever recorded was on hand a nual installation of officers, h Ansonville town hall on Thur ning, to witness this impro memorable cccasion. Vnd Office Trusteés â€" J. Kulgauchuk, J. C Rourke and FP. Astroski. Inner Guardâ€"B. Paccico. Outer Guardâ€"D. DeJulio. On completion of the lodge the evenin‘g, a most pleasing and gra fying surprise was released by the se retary, P.D. J. H. Smith, who had ma arrangements, unknown to the me: bers. <This was the introduction of honoured guest Of the evening. P. ri¢t, â€" IfiCli€Cs, W uniforms with colorfu ed to the impressiven the evening. Moose Lodge Elects Offic ers Ansonville Lodge. the assisting Moose Drill Officers duly installed â€" Past Dictatorâ€"P. D. C Dictatorâ€"P. D. Wm. P Viceâ€"Dictatorâ€"Fellow I Prelateâ€"P. D. Graham Secretaryâ€"P. D. Fellow Treasurerâ€"Llovd Dowe ilu PROTECTION DURING SPRING 1939 Northern Divisions â€"â€" Department of Highways J6 osngre puB [NJMERI â€"un quaaaid 0p pojsonbat ApsowIBd SI pue yon1q; wo; uoreaadoâ€"o;y ‘papuadsns aq oste Arw sjtumta j ‘y30(q 4o ‘quawuuostiduwut 10 ‘aoul st dutpreopâ€"42oaA0 JoJjp 9@ [[IM poads pur JO aU,J, ‘so.ty jo your 19d ‘sqt qaez ‘uo3 auo A110 â€"edea sojotyoa umraip ‘noy 4od 92 yo poods pur spro[ J[2Y 03 pojytwut[ ode syon.d} [[V JBEA woi; adeurp 03 qso((qus pue 1J08s 498 03 spoq peo.t sosnto A{tpy pue judy ut uof}98 NORTHERN ONTARIO 11 1 yre, of limmn the lonsg hazarc uest of the lo« it this meetin arm welceomini iSstARIIEd were! P, D. Claude Sout . Wm. Roach., Fellow P. Ramon« Graham FPolevy. a most inte address on f the great L: the Mosse. t ROADS 1J 11 31 memnmo GOrder Northern Division, Dept apl)l inter lav JC Eyvt h1 11 1‘ sion, Dept. of Highways, ITAMER, Division Engineer O many me} ‘ vascation to Flor«â€" f a‘t the Hw?".\. he he and had source of informaâ€" ‘rs of the Lodge, i detail. clear hat no doubt reâ€" ds of any of the commendable proâ€" ts of this HMHaven. y appreciated reâ€" ved by the ladies, nd square dancing Timmins neaker) Moose Hayv ir about id been tor exâ€" seconds who ind