Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 19 Oct 1939, 2, p. 3

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88 coming in; Lady Cowle still taiking . More: footsteps outside, more people music as if nothing but music existed; a origin } ) qprobeloly. ecould not no orders, not, he mwere stiff them and betraying him. The taking seats; the door touching campany wvere had hard work to keep his sleeve from rustled At the first touch; indeed, he was closed. The masterâ€"mind â€" and there was no question who of all these ie m id $E ) ie utam ~ . KA _ RAilrMUE n the reason of the gathering. Music, for the time being, was forgotten. . "You‘ll al have seen the papers, no doubt," she said, in her shrill, hard voice, "and therefore there‘s no need to tell you what they‘re claiming. Now I may as well say at once that I don‘t believe a word of it; for this reason, that if the muleâ€"headed police had one scrap of information they claim for them, the last thing they‘d do would be to give it to the papers to hand on to us. That‘s simple. What really puzzles me is the true reason for the revelation. danger. ‘On the cther hand, it would be greater folly still to take no notice of it at all, and carry on our plans unâ€" altered. So I want to know at onge, and without waste of time . . . you‘ve all been arguing all the evening . . . most illâ€"advised, when even servants are not ‘"‘Now it would be folly to beiieve what they say, and let ourselves be evitable that a pinch should come soonâ€" er or later. One is human, and makes a slip in the end. We made one, and cleared it up satisfactorily, as you reâ€" mmfi%% we shall do as much for this one. ° You See, they make no claim to know the,.exact day. You may argue that is‘ g reason they should know it, but.isn‘s that a point to us? If they km? e day, and have some idea of the platceâ€"â€"as, in spite of your opinion, Madame, I believe they have, for they‘re k mx *Â¥ > And since energy c o m es from food, the smart thing to do is to feed them things with a high energy content. Timmins 'I')alry Milk is such a food . .. and it not only m:plies energy, but also a lot of energy! goiy by PETER BENEDICT Mere Colfri. ‘"Why is it inevitably the women who have the brains, as well as the courage? ‘Well, Jeanâ€"Plerre, is that what you want?" j "Parfaitement, Madame." "And you, Leslie? Are your feet too oold to carry you to another place?" "‘Iry being in my shoes," said the have much warmth left in them." "I‘ve safeguarded you for 18 months, and shall go on safeguarding you. You know that. However, if you don‘t like the hint of danger, Corrie shall go, and one of the boys will drive." The boys made sounds indicative of indifferent approval; they were still invisible, but their nerves seemed admirable. The curtain parted by the merest chink, and allcowed Peter a momentary @limpse of the Frenchman, small, dapper, with pointed, dark beard, and intensely alive agree the run must go through. We want the stuff here, and your people, Monsieur Chacquard, want it away. Bo far so good; everyone is satisfied. Well, and what place? Location 1 is too near to London; location 2 is already negaâ€" tived as coming in the suspect region of some ‘clumsy fools who tried their own hands at our profession; locations 8 is accurate. "I‘ll go," said ‘Graham. "I haven‘t suggested resigning yet." ; est to Je,-an-‘Pierre or his principals. They don‘t care where they land it. The thoice is ours. Well, what have you to cpen to us; 4, of course, is out; the restâ€"I see no bjection to any of them. This is a question which is of no ipte_r- They had much to say; even the boys had their theories, it seemed, and all were different, and all had objections to the rest. Only Monsieur Chacquard held his peace, and smoked peacefully at a cigarette, and listened to their chorus with patient interest. "All very well," said Mere Colibri at last, her strident voice striking theirs into silence at once, ‘"but you seem to have missed, all of you, the oneâ€" place which has an immeasurable advantage over the ot.hers All of them, except this one, have the arawhack ftha.t they may be known and expected.. I say may! I‘m no great ‘believer in the omnicience of the police, but I ‘have brought you where I have brought you by taking no chances, and I‘ll take none now. There is just one place where noonemvilldreamooun'dmmg.to strike; and that is Abbott‘s Ferry mpgor â€"the old arena." ' "A silente greeted this announcement, and after the silence a storm of protest. which she overâ€"rode as easily as if she had threatened them with guns. s «®or this reason; we have already, and recently, had such a narrow escapé there that the logical thing will be for us to avoid it like the plague from this time forth. The police have lozical minds, as well as we; They cannot be expected to miss this simple implicaâ€" tion. So that is the one place on earth they will not dream of looking al *A s t â€" Viike J â€"â€" NV ALA® . PCME M s PeCE m e e n for us, now or in the future. ‘And that is the one place where we Can operate in safety and at leisure. After what has happened it must be obvious even to you." â€" Cfi < Tok n tm ns "I believe you‘re right," Ssaid LCOIMIG, and turned on her lover. “Gray, it‘s true! ’I‘here can be no other place 0 safe for you." "It is eminently logical to see and avoid the logical," said the Frenchman, with a smile, "Very well, I agree." _ There were no dissentients, The plan, upth examination, appeared to be : to them all. And Peter, Ms back solidly against the [panemng round the windowâ€"frame to ease his cramp, was bound to admit to immseutxmtshemdmwonmeme D _ _0 0 #4 mA‘M mf !M“ k c tom in A it it place in which he, for one, would not nave dreamed of looking for the new e dp No + "Very well, Monsieur Chacquard, No. 4, if his calculations were A ROOM OF SECRETS , "and see if yours it. _ Very well, we tion your figures?" “meymnaeeoptwhsteverllmlude in my code orders,. Madame, as if they heard it from your lips. The run will be made punctually at one o‘clock; there will be no moon that night. 1 will go at once ‘and. write up‘ my orders, if everyone Here is satisfied. ‘ My firm has a large shipment of perfumery «waiting for this orderâ€"all} for Sabeel‘s, of course. The code has always run perâ€" fectlyâ€"perhaps because of <its very simâ€" plicity. Seven cases of "La â€" Minuit‘" inâ€" stead of ‘That is the onLv correcâ€" tion, I think?" . "That is the only correct.lon," said Mere Colibri. "Then, if you will now excuse meâ€"" "I will come down with you,". said ‘Corrie. "Mere has letters t.o twrlte, and is irritable when she writes them. What matters is that the thing is settled # ‘The door was opened, and there were words of casual leaveâ€"taking. â€" Peter could not see who went out, or how many remained, but there was silence. Then the old woman‘s voice demanded challengingly : "Well, are you still not satdsfled? If you are afraid, say so, and go. You are not indispensable." : "I‘m satisfied for myself, ~yes." It was still Graham who talked â€"with her, and by the quiet which surrounded them they were alone. It was harder to. be convincingly still now that the little room was so silent between the volces. "I am not afraid, and never have been. You are very sarcastic about the tem- perature of my feet. .well it‘s easy enouzh for you. : You‘re old.. What does it matter to you if~you do die in gaol? I rather think you‘d: enjoy it as a new sensation. â€" â€"«But: Corrie‘s: Still Corrie is still well provided for. . Come down and amuse her while 1. on with my arrangements. It‘s no part :of. my plans that she shall pay for my advenâ€" tures.‘" And now they, top, were makâ€" ing for the door, and Peter‘s heart was leaping with excitement for. the chance to escape with his limitless information. But it leaped too soon; for they were barely through the door when the old woman ordered peremptorily:.| . . young and you‘re not playzlng- tair by her." "Have you heard â€" her complam?” asked the old woman. she thrives on umertainty' But I want more for her than she wants for herself. There‘llâ€" be:â€"no more suggestions like: that one about ner doing my oollectionâ€"-or else!" f "It‘s one sure way. ol keepmg yYOu to heel," said Lady Cowle eomplacent- ly. "Don‘t worry.. all goes wrong, it! There is nothing. of, value, but I always keep it locked:. : My head is not so good as it used to be, but what I find locked, I lock ag#in. Andlfever I have papers to hideâ€"â€"whlch is not oftenâ€"they are in this mom” : . ~‘and the door closed~ behind:; : them, and Peter in his eyric: heard : the key ‘This is the big week in Boy Scout Circles, getting ready for our annual event, Scout Apple Day which is Sa.t- urday next, October 3ist. It is part of every Scout‘s job to give a hand on this occasion, for we try to accomplish something to help somebody else. No doubt your Soout Master: has given you the necessary instmctlom regarding the way we intend to work this time, but just in case of a slip up here is an outline of it. Central Sthool is to be the Apple Depot whcremkots will be packed and salesmen sent to their ibeats. Three Scouts from eanb .trooparereqmmda-to.l)l)a.m Ayaa Oneâ€"Legiged Black Again Visits (To be :Continued) m $ss als Years ago a professor ofâ€" sungery told class, ~of mwhich I was member, that the mote he saw ofâ€"cancer the more he: believpd 4t was due to some germ on: onganlsnn ‘The professor of, mediâ€" cine and. also the professor of pathqQcgy (diseased conditionâ€"of ‘the bociy) were Some Facts and Fallacies About Cancer canoai' was due to the fact that some tissues:of the body .were not cieveloped Oor: ha.d not attained their growth, whe» the incividual, was born, and that at the age. of 40 :orâ€" over â€" (usually) someâ€" m‘itatedo these surface > tissites. which â€"made the. undeveloped : tissues ‘begin to :3row to rea.ch theirâ€" full devel- much . research: work â€" done on cancer. throughout the world that a number of facts about cancen have been. founa and a great number of fallacies (misâ€" takes) also. > In‘an effort ‘to make known to everâ€" body these facts and. fallacies, the Amercian Scciety for the Conitrol of Cancer has issued a Jleaflet containâ€" opmept as they mwere forty‘ years beâ€" hind time. â€"It was the rapid "disorderâ€" iy" growth of tissue that weâ€"call cancer. . Now, although ‘the. cause of cancer ic still â€"â€"unlnown. there has been :o Cancer is a disorderly growth of pells within the patients body; it is a meful purpose. ‘Cancer is at first just a local crow dl lfl,hé any other growth, but it ~4;)1'439.(38 to obher organs if not removed or desâ€" workers on cancer. _ Facts about cancer: ‘Gencet is curable when adequate‘ or x ly treated! in its early stages. \ t is always left unâ€" > Sm ol . death rate in cancer can be reâ€" ‘Mbyw mfioparcemu the public and lans make us of the alrea:iy hmn-m ‘Cene .hnowsmoesafmly treated by oaem'mam of the fiolbwing surgery, ' s and abmxt ‘canceér: Cancer is not Ee oo o EPC M(b)mfimmagm (c). blood disease, (d) caused, by i 1â€" moral of unsocid.lpmotibea,(e)direcu ly â€"tramsinitted from parent to child, ,mm(mmexmphce)byam utensils, electrical refrigâ€" _,\fvb.x", means a tremendous increase to the burdens ‘and responsibilities réesting on the King and Queen, but.one of the tasks they perform most cheérfully is the constant round of inspection visits to defence units and shown chatting with officers quring A troops in training. Here they are . ] visit to formations in training at a camp in. southern England. of the findings of research Chat 4Bodp Pours by prolonged your name and address, and mention The Advance, . Timmins, to The Bell Library, 47. West 48rd. St., New York (%R\} istered in . acccrd:ance with the Copyright Aot) k: 2 n g Excess Profits Tax Under . Review by Government â€" Globe and Mail) Rumours that the Goverrment‘ had come to. definite declsion with referâ€" ence to r.omoval of discrimination against new enterprise as expressed in the recently announced excess profits tax schedule, which . ga.ined ground on the street on Saturday. as the results of efforts directed by George C.‘ Bateâ€" man, secretary of{ Ontario Mining Asâ€" socigtion, at Ottawa,â€" are â€" according to. information recelved from Mr. Bateman by this depax‘tment of The Globe and Mail. x It may be. said, â€"however, that the Government is degirous. ‘of meeting the situation ‘ with ‘ fairness to neéw minng enterprise, but finds many difficulties oonfronting it in arriving. at .a : decision that would be fair to. all and a‘t the same time bring in the needed revenue from mines and other. prcspects able to meet the present: scale. e On: the other hand, the . representaâ€" tives of the mining mdusfiry insist there is no deSire ‘on the part of© the industry Four types of mining companies must be considered. First, those that during the past four years have rapidly exâ€" panded production and> profits,â€" such as Bralorne, Kirkland Lakeâ€"Gold: and Cariboo Gold Quartz. Second, those facing material expansion in nearâ€"by years, such as San Antonio and others. Third, properties. that have been in production over: a year, but areâ€" now materially increasing prodyction, such as Kerrâ€"Addison ‘and Bast Maleartic, and fourth, properties not yet in proâ€" duction, such as Broulan, Aunor and others, but which may ‘be expected unâ€" to seekspecial treatment, being merely one ofâ€" desire to preserve activity not. only .in mining, but in all other types of new enterprise for the broad benefit of the country. war purposes and it is expected that some decision will shortly be arrived at that will give the proper incentive to continued expansion of the mining inâ€" der more favorable financial impetus to ‘swell the national production. Ways are now being sought by which all various typesâ€" of properties can be treated fairly and still support the main purpose of raising revenue for a o c 4 dustry, which has contributed so maâ€" terially to prosperity in. recent years, and the value of which the Governâ€" ment fully appreciates. Says Germany Can‘t Win This War, but Russia Using German Need for Its Own Ends, Says Speaker at North Bay. North Bay, Oct. 18.â€""Germany could be deféated in a year or two if real was to take place," declared Wilson Woodside, of Toronto, noted Canadian writer and traveller, who addressed the Women‘s Canadian Club last week. can‘t ‘win it," he said. The war, he added, would be won by blockade, breaking down of Nazi spirit and by military defeat of Germany. : Hitler wanted a little war and preâ€" pared for this. He. has worked all summer, and now Britain and France are strong, the speaker said. Germany‘s "Germany does not want this war, she has done everything to avgid it and because she does not want it, she men are now at the front, they are growing weaker every day while: Briâ€" tain is becoming stronger. The colonies of the British Empire are now sending their contributions to the war and are thus making Britain‘s forces stronger. The speaker also stated that Gerâ€" many‘s historic opportunity is dasâ€" troyed. It‘s, Stalin‘s opportunity and he is making use of it. He is workin:; to dominate the Black Sea and is pushing out his own defences.. Mr. Woodside explained that you can‘t think of Stalin working for Germany nor can you think of Stalin on Britain‘s side. The Russian is jJust as distrustful of Germany as on our side. Hitler has entered into the pact with Russia only forâ€"one reason, trying to shock Britain and France but the speaker hoped that Britain and France would not call off their ‘agreement with Germany can‘t win the war, it can‘t be won elseâ€" .where ibut on the Western F'ront They 1have ‘to expect a fight and a real fight it must be. If we have real fighting it can be won in a year or two. - ~As far as Germany‘s needs for war materials.â€"wereâ€"concerned;â€"the speaker pointed out they were oil and iron. The Russian surplus of oil is eight per cent and iron one per cent, a small fraction of what Germany needs. Because of the present conditions it would take a year or two for the transportation of these needs to Germany. â€" Gemarny should have prepared for this before the war began, he stated. Mr. Woodâ€" side was greatly concerned with a lastâ€" inx peace after the war. We must carefully consider the German characâ€" ter and allow the west and south tu develc.p commercially. ‘ _Mr,; Woodside also talked of his visit to other countries threatened by Gerâ€" many. He stated that the Poles were whathe termed the Irish of Europe. They were imiginative, but charming, while Czechoâ€"Slovakians were a sober type of people, exceilent business men, engineers, democratic, reliable and called the Scotch of Europe The Bulâ€" garilans â€"are a poor class of people but honest, making the best of what they have and very polite Another charming race of people were the Swiss. These people are clean, honest, good demoâ€" cratic citizens and were preparing for war, the same as France and Britain were. These countries showed a differ«â€" ent change than when he vmt.ed them year or two ago. * As water rushed along the gutters curbâ€"high and five feet wide after a downpour in Minneapolis, a trolly stopâ€" ped for three young things in high heels marooneéd on the sidewalk. At last two of them took the leap, going into water over their ankles. The third edged this way and that and locked desperate. Just then a closed car rolled up in front of her and the driver invitingly opened both his back doors. Daintily the ycoung lady*"stepped into the car, out again onto the trolley, and Sir Walter Raletth of the machine Aage closed his doors and rolled on,. (From Christian Science: fionit.or) Right Through Lye regularly . . . and you‘ll eep sink drains clean and runâ€" ning freely. It will not harm enamelor plumbing. Barishes unpleasant odors as it cleans. ;!usr use Gillett‘s Pure Flake Gillett‘s Lye makes light work of dozens of hard cleaning tasks . . . saves you hours of drudgery. Keep a tin always on hand!| *Never dissolve lye in hot water. The action of the lye itself heats the water. FREE BOOKLET â€" The Gillett‘s Lye Booklet tells how this powerful cleanser ‘ clears clogged drains . . . keeps outâ€" houses clean and odorless by destroying *the contents of the closct . . . how it performs dozens of tasks. Send for a free copy to Standard Brands. Ltd., Fraser Ave. ~and Liberty Street, ‘Toronto, Ont. CLOGGING DIRT RALEIGH UP TO DATE CUTS

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