EFach day of held on Tuesda: is being held to Harmony hall, a piece of electr foods which Mr: are drawn for. the lucky winne streamâ€"lined H (Contin to be the Tir tested recipt Hundreds Daily at Cooking School Yes, a big 4 page flyer will be delivered to you! home toâ€"dayâ€"watch it for it is literally crammed with outstanding food savings, only a few of which we have been able to list hereâ€"Just the kind of foocds you want and want NOW. Actionâ€" impelling prices, that fairly shout for attention. In additicn to these outstanding prices, there is CALIF. GOOD SIZE ORANGES _ 2 45c SLICED BREAKFAST BACON ~ 23¢ CHOICE SAVOURY VEAL ROLLS _ _ 13c IDEAL TENDER NO.4 SIEVE PEAS 3: 25¢ Eaton‘s FAMILY BROKEN PEKOE TEA 37c ONTARIO NEW MILD CHEESE â€" 13¢ MONARCH FINE PASTRY FLOUR *# 64c Eaton‘s Rich Strawherry Jam _ "==~ 29¢ a extraordinary offer to you as a cusâ€" tomer,. Be sure to see it in the circular, or better still, make a point of asking about it at your local Eaton Groceteria,â€"the store of great food sales! SPECIALS for the Week BLUE BRAND BEEF ib HKoast .......... Thick Rib Roast Blade Roast ... Shoulder Roast . Chuck Roast ... PEAMEALED Cottage Rolls ... Picnic sStyle Shankless Pork Shoulder ... Ib, Freshly Made Small Link Sausage ... lh, §Kl.\'LESS Smoked Weiners ... lb SLIFCED Cooked Ham ... Ibh, Bologna ........ 2 lbs, Macaroni Cheese Loaf ........ Ib. Chicken Roll ... Ih, English »tvle PRIME Bread and RButter Dinner Plates Tea Plates Coupe soup Cups and Saucers Fruit Nappic Covered Vegetable Gravy Boat and stand SAVE AT EATON GROCETERIA One Picce of this Set may be Purchased With One Dollar Orderâ€"Start your Set Toâ€"day. MORE TIMPORTANT MEAT . Barre n m Page One) school, which was i Wednesday, and (Thursday) in the x is held in which ‘quipment and the rrett has prepared Puesday afternoon, the dialâ€"toâ€"fabric, nt â€" Electric iron, lb, Ib, EATON‘S each each each each each 1b.18¢ 20c 18e 17¢ 14¢ 14¢ *)*) ole 270 1c 0e 4e 14¢ Pincapple Cakeâ€"B. Strachan Patricia Blvd., Timmins. was Mrs. Don Brown, of North Road,! Coffee Cakeâ€"Mr». James Cowden Timnunins. Each winner is allowed to 46 First Ave., Timmins. reâ€"enter her card for the final award| Cookiecsâ€"Mrs, S. M. Pritchard, 3% of a Generalâ€"Electric mixâ€"master. | Eighth Ave., Timmins. Other prizes on Tuesday were won as i The following are the recipes used by follows: Dinner, Mrs. Napoleon Desjarâ€"‘ Mrs. Barrett on Tuesday afternoor dins, 108 Mountjoy St., Timmins. (each of these recipes is contained ir Salmon Loaf, Mrs,. Jas. G. Sheridan, ‘the General Electric Cook book): 76 Montgomery Ave., Timmins. ! Pork Chops Supreme Poreupine. Jellyâ€"Miss J. H. Petchin, 5 Eim St. N., Timimins. Cookiesâ€"Mrs. E. S. Somerville. South Porcupine. Sweet Mixed PICKLES, QUALITY BRAND e MORE BIG SAVINGS FROM THIS SALE Ready Cut BULK 2 * Libby‘s TOMATO JUICE, 21 oz. tins.......... Libby‘s Cooked SPAGHETTI, 16 oz. tins.. Libby‘s PORK BEANS, 16 oz. tins....... Libby‘‘s TOMATO KETCHUP, 12 oz. btl. Heinz Table VINEGAR, 16 oz. btl.............. Heinz Rich CHILI SAUCE, 12 oz,. btl. ....... ASPARAGUS CUTTINGS, 12 oz. tins BEEHIVE # CLOVERLEAF Kraft MIRACLE WHIP,........ Kraft VELVEETA CHEESE EATON‘S FRESH Cream Jug Cavered Suga Platter THIRDMD‘ AVE. THIMMIN®S non Loaf, Mrs. Jas. G. Sheridan, ntgomery Ave., Timmins. ge Cake, Mrs. P. Richards, South AF 96â€"PIECE SET OPEN STOCK Canadian Made Just a};Few ofâ€" each 360 Large Platter each 60c Fruit Bow!l 30¢ â€" Oatmeal Bowl Deiivery Without Extra Chargeâ€"Phone 901 rd| Cookiesâ€"Mrs, S. M. Pritchard, 37 !Eight.h Ave., Timmins. as’ The followingz are the recipes used by Mrs. Barrett on Tuesday afternoon 'mach of these recipes is contained in It.he General Electric Cook book): ‘ Pork Chops Supreme ! _6 medium loin pork chops. _6 large uncooked and pitted Prunes. | _6 slices canned pineapple. 6 medium carrots. Lh t. h Half cup water. Season chops with salt and pepper, 32 ‘and dust them with them with flour. Brown well on both sides in skillet. Large Platter, 12 inch 7% oz. tin ~~2. Ib. tin ....... per Ib. ......... 3 for 25¢ 28 oz. jar 25¢ ......... 5 for 29¢ .. : m for 25¢ smm 217C ly:: 2z 2 27¢ ........ 2 for 209¢ .................... 24c ..8 oz. jJar 21¢ ¥» lb. pkg. 16¢ 2 lbs. each 7be 30¢ 14¢ Upon each chop place a ring of canâ€" ned pineapple with a pitted prune in the centre, Between chops place carâ€" rots, left whole, or cut lengthwise. Add water, cover closely and cook very slowâ€" ly for one and a half hours, Remove to hot platter. Make gravy from mixâ€" ture in pan, and pour over chops. Garâ€" nish with parsley. Serves six. ' Salmon Loaf 1 cup toasted bread crumbs. 2 tablespoons salad Oil. 2 cups (1 lb.) canned salmon, flaked. 2 beaten eggs. 1 cup milk. 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Half teaspoon salt. Dash of pepper. 2 teaspoons finely choapped onion. 1 tablespoon salad oil. Blend crumbs and 2 tablespoons salâ€" | ad oil. Combine salmon, eggs, milk., lemon juice, seasonings, onion, narsâ€" ley and salad oil. Fill gxeased loat | pan or fluted mold; bake in moderate oven (35G degrees FP.) 45 minutes or until firm. Garnish with sliced egg,) cucumbers and radishes. ‘ German Coffee Cake Two and oneâ€"half pastry flour. [ Oneâ€"third cup sugar. Oneâ€"half teaspoon salt. } Four teaspoons baking powder. Twoâ€"thirds cup shortening. { Twoâ€"thirds cup raisins. | One egg. } One cup milk. Blend shortening into sifted ingrediâ€" ents, add raisins, beaten egg and milk. | Spread in well greased pan and sprinâ€"| kle with crumbs made of two tableâ€"| spoons butter, four tablespoons browni sugar. | Oone tablespoon flour. ; Bake at 400 aegrees for 20 to 30 minâ€"| utes Six egg whites. Oneâ€"quarter teaspoon salt. Threeâ€"quarter cup sugar. Six egg yolks. Threeâ€"quarters cup sugar. One tablespoon lemon Julce. Oneâ€"half cup unsweetened pineapple juice. One and oneâ€"half cups cake flour. One teaspcon baking powder. Whipped cream frosting. Maraschino cherries. Beat egg whites with salt to form mgzlossy peaks. Gradually beat in threeâ€"quarter cup sugar. Beat °C888 yolks and threeâ€"quarters cup sugar unâ€" til thick: add lemon and pineapple juices; beat until sugar dissolves. Add flour sifted with baking powder. Fold in egg whites. Bake in 10â€"inch unâ€" greased, angelâ€"cake pan in moderate oven (350 de:rees P.) one hour. Inâ€" vert to cool. One cup canned pineapple, diced. Four teaspoons gelatine. Oneâ€"half cup cold water. Juice of one lemon. One and oneâ€"half cups fruit juices. Drain the canned fruits, reserving the the juice. ‘Soak gelatine in the cold water five minutes, then melt thoroughly over hot water, stirring to hasten the process. ~Add to the lemon juice and fruit juices rinse Oout a mold in cold water and in it place the cherries and pineapple, measured after draining. (Pour gelatine mixture over the fruit and chill. serve on le Six servings. Fruit Drop Ccokics Oneâ€"half cup shortening. One cup brown sugar. One egg, beaten. Three tablespoon orange juice. Two cups pastry flour. Oneâ€"half teaspoon soda. Oone and oneâ€"half cream tartar. Oneâ€"half teasoon salt. One cup chOpped nuts. Oneâ€"half cup seedless raisins. Oneâ€"half cup chopped dates. One tablespoon grated orange rind. Bake 400 degrees F. for 12 minutés Cherry Salad One cup canned black cherries, pitâ€" 11L Bordens â€" _ â€" â€" _ its GOT to Le Good‘] ineapple Fluff Cake Itce W1 Lo mayonnal Dalton Returns "Small Cheques" to Bankers "All things considered, your "reward" is so triflinzx in comparison with the services rendered, services which not only secured the recovery of most of the loot but also made it known that this community is alive with intelliâ€" gent peopleâ€"people who do not hestâ€" tate to assist the police no matter what the risks may be. "I have taken it on myself to give J. J. O‘Sullivan my personal cheque for $150.00, and H. B. Honsberger $100.00 and, further, rewarded Legare for his part in the situation. ard that enters into your deliberations in matters of this kind. It is the furâ€" ther fact that places of trust for peopâ€" les‘ money m... be protected by every citizen fo: tze p.._o are not always able to lLe s:anding i..,. by when the crime is committed . . . â€"37 obyvious reasons. Therefore it falls u; :2 the average citizen to come to the 1Ic._.lU" where possible. But few men Can be blamed for taking action with personal risk involved when they must know that the reward is entirély incons®â€" quential. "In other words, gentlemen, in this north country do not apparently measure things with the same stand â€" _"At least this is the way the matter up nhere." â€" Yours very truly, Jonn Dalton. On December 18, ten days after Donnevan was captured, Mr. Dailton wrote to the Bankers‘ Association outâ€" lining the part played by his employâ€" ees in the capture. His letter pointed out that news of the rotbery was broadcast about fifteen minutes after it occurred at noon On December 7. Mr. Dalton immediately telephoned the Chief of Police and offzared the use of his extensive taxi business to assist in gathering informâ€" ation as to Donnevan‘s whereabouts. He then went to Mr. Tod, manager of the branch of the Bank of Montreal which was robbed, and suggested to him that the offer of the standing reâ€" ward of $5,000 be broadcast and made public. u* U Â¥ep e ie Nothing more was Nneard Ol ULIC iliGV" ter until about 7 pm. on the same day when Mr. OSullivan came to Mr. Dalton and said that he thought he had a clue on the robbery. Mr. Dalâ€" ton immediately telephoned the Chief of Police who went over to Dalton‘s. 4 Mr. O‘Sullivan told the Chief that one of the drivers, Andy Legare, came into the office and asked him to change a $10 billâ€"a Bank of Montreal bill. He immediately asked the driver if he thcught he had the bank ribber in his car, said Mr. O‘Sullivan, but Legare thought that his fare was not Donneâ€" VAln. cognized Donnevan as the man who | {ha-:i been in Legare‘s car and recalled that he had driven the same man across the river that afternoon. ' Convinced that his fgre had been the bank rcbhber, Legare took police to the ‘Empire Holel where he knew Donneâ€" ! van had a roOm. They found monty in the room but no Donnevan. l Ssuspecting that Donnevan and Lhe| igirl he had picked up that afternoon across the river might be in the Palace ‘Th-eatre', Legare took police there. He walked up and down the aisles until |he spotted Donnevan and the zgirl and he then pointed them out to police| He suspected that it might D6 DOLâ€" nevan, said Mr. O‘Sullivan, because Leâ€" gare told him that his fare had given him the $10 bill as a tip and because it was a Bank of Montreal ©ill. Still strong in his belief that Leâ€" gare‘s fare was Donnevan, Mr. O‘Sulliâ€" van notified police that if they would find Car No. 6, which had been across the river or beyond the graveyard, they would very likely find the man they were searching for in it. Unable to find the car, police waited at the taxi stand. When Legare Came in they showed him a picture of Donâ€" nevan but the driver could not say that it was the man he had been drivâ€" ing. Another driver, Bud Honsberger, re F\ it might be Don view At about five o‘clock on the same afternoon he came to the taxi stand in Timmins and ordered a car. The driver did not return for two hours. At about eight o‘cleck Donnevan went to Remitis‘ jowellery store, right next door to the bank he had robbed, and bought a aiamond ring and a ladies‘ toilet set, worth about $140. The Canadian Bankers‘ Association replied to the effect that the association "has made no offer of a reward of $5,000.‘" It pointed out that the aâ€" mounts paid in rewards were at the disâ€" cretion of the association. Claims for rewards would be investiâ€" gated after a month had elapsed. The Association, said the letter, would conâ€" sider Mr. Dalton‘s letter as an aAppliâ€" cation for reward on behalf of Messrs. OSulliyvan, Honsberger and Legare. Nothmg more was heard until last Saturday when the two cheques were forwarded. Mr. Dalton‘s reply, given albove, was sent on Monday. Goldfields Theatre Announces New Summer Policy A postâ€"script to Mr. Dalton‘s letter was the remark: "If you wan. know when the next bank robbery is going to be pulled off just call us up." With the letter Mr. Dalton enclosed a sketch and his version of Donnevan‘s movermnents after the bank robbery, He robbed the bank about noon and came down Fourth Avenue to the Courteâ€" manch Block. From there he took a taxi to Schumacher. who arrested them as they were le ing the theatre. The Goldfields theatre this week anâ€" nounces new summer policy with special low rates of admission. The new rates go into effect on Saturday of this week, June 10th, and will hold good until further notice. For instance the charge for adults will be 25 cents and 15 cents for the children for the matinees. For evenings adult tickets will be 30 cents and children 20 cents. The Goldfields is showing only first run pictures so the new low admission rates are in the popular favour. Reduced Admission Prices Begin on Saturday This Week. .. s# Thrilling Feature Film at the Cartier Theatre In the advertisement for the Cartier Theatre as published in the second secâ€" tion of The Advance this week, the feaâ€" ture for this (Thursday) evening is given as "Saturday‘s Heroes." After the section was printed there was a change in the feature picture. For this (Thursday) evening only, the feaâ€" ture picture will be "Titans of the Deep," with Dr. Wm. Beebe and Otis Barton, and with the story and narraâ€" tion by Lowell Thomas. The picture is described as "Amazing! Exciting! Never before such Thrills! Terrors of the Ocean Depths!" Some of the highlights in the picture include:â€" a girl in a knifeâ€"fizrht with a devilâ€" fish; diver fighting a manâ€"eating shark with a spear; battle between a boa constructor and marine crocodile; girl scientist trapped in bathyâ€"sphere, resâ€" cued by diver; and Oother gripyrling Alexander Woolleott, oldest child actor on the American stage, potters fretfully around North Bay these days and will continue to potter fretâ€" fully for a week. He wants to get back to his island retreat on a Verâ€" mont lake, but can‘t go until he has finished a moving picture starring himself and Canada‘s five famous child actresses, the Dionne quintuâ€" plets. He is proud of his title as the oldest child actor in the world, and explains it as follows: "I went on the stage at the age of 45 and I am still a child actor. I only play a limited number of weeks and T insist on my rights and only pay half dues to equity. That makes me a child actor, and a child actor I will remain. I know where I stand." Dr. A. R. Dafoe, LEFT, guardian and friend to the quints, is shown with the actor, 1f [£‘s Bordadens i{s5 GOT to Le Gooa' 4 DR. DAFOE MEETS struggles with underseas monsters This picture, "Titans of the Deep," is a thrilling special that few will wish to ‘ miss, this (Thursday) evening at the !Cartier Theatre, Timmins. Six People Injured in Acerdent Near Harleybury Haileybury, June 8â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"Caused apparently when a southbound car crashed into the rear of a local truck engaged in removing stuff from a show company which had been playing Haileybury for a week, an accident on the main road sent six of the seven persons involved to Miseriâ€" cordia hospital for treatment, three of them being detained for further care. The injured were; Anne Cameron, Latchford telephone operator, broken leg, cuts and bruises; Ross Sowerby, broken arm; Leo Doucet of the Bank of Nova Scotia staff at Haileybury, severe cuts on the face and bruises; Mrs. Harry Johnson, bad cuts and bruises; Harry Jones, show employee, arm broken in two places; H. Maguire, truck owner, three ribs broken. Mystery as to How the Accident Occurred. Harry Johnson, owner of the car, esâ€" caped injury. Police are investigating the case further, and it was stated there was some mystery how the accident occurred, Mrs. Johnson, Doucet and Miss Cameron were still in hospital several days after the accident, which happened about 3.30 a.m. Sunday and Maguire and Jones had been dischargâ€" ed within about 48 hours of the crash. Provincial Constable Art Soulier and Chief of Police Wallace McGirr are investigating. It was stated that the car, proceeding to Latchford and driven by Doucet, piled into the rear platform of the Maguire truck, which had been on the left handâ€"side of the road ‘close to the show ground and apparently about to back into the ground _ Maâ€" guire and Jones were standing ‘on the platform, which was badly damaged by the impact, while the front of the automobile was reported as stovc :. The other five persons were in the Johnson car. Just before the show closed its playâ€" ing period, the ground was the scene of an alleged fracas, which put another member of the company in hospital temporarily. He was Harry Shore, game operator, who is said to have been cut on the bridge of his nose when struck by an unknown assailant who wore a heavy ring. This man‘s identity remained a mystery, according to proâ€" vincial constable W. H. Beaton, who investigated and who said he had disâ€" appeared in the crowd when complaint was made about him. The ring aid the damage. Shore was not detained long in hospital. Detroit Free Press: An oldâ€"timer is the one who can recall when a business was said to be suffering from growing pains. Democracy (?) in Canada on Tuesday, June 6th, 1939 THE TOWN CRIER Washago Farmer: "Hiâ€"ya, King! His Majesty King George VI; fine. How are you?" I‘m