Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 3 Jun 1940, 1, p. 3

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shouldn‘t be here. . ." he saw her face, and was silent. "He‘ll be coming in at ‘the end of this next lap," he said. "Is there something wrong?" "No Got to fill up with petrol, that‘s "He‘s Wobbling." At that speed the drivers drove blindâ€" ly. Without such signals they could not tell even what lap they were on. "Broken two records so far, you have," jerked Reddy as he laboured gwiftly. is > 4 Franik saw Dorothy. He frowned. "Â¥You shouldn‘t be here, you know. Spectators,â€"â€"â€"‘ "I asked the young lady to come in said : Reddy. "Then you cught to have known betâ€" ter," snagriped Frank. "You‘re aware Of the rules, or should be." "Sorry," sir." Reddy ran a critical eye over ‘theâ€"car. "Filled up now, sir. These tyres$ locok worn. Hadn‘t you better use this stcp to change?" "No time," jerked Frank, *‘Let her Reddy waved the flag as the cars shot past, and Frank lifted his gloved hand a fraction to show that he had received the signal. | : The mechanic turned and saw Doroâ€" The cars tore round again. The blue leader shot off the track and bumped fearfully into the pits. It had hardly come to rest before Frank had leaped out of his seat. thy He himself into the bucket seat. The blue car roared back to the track. Dorch.»»was biting her lip. "Don‘t take any notice of him, miss!" said Reddy cheerfully. *He‘s all keyed up, like: I don‘t mind him. He apoloâ€" gizes when it‘s all over." From the pits, Dorothy got a new and more thrilling glimpse of ‘the race. As the cars passed towards the end of the ninth lap Reddy leaned forward frowning. ‘Then he seized one of the flags. "Won‘t be alle to stop him until the eleventh!" he muttered. "I hope they hold out." § "What is it, Reddy?" asked Dorothy. "Tvres, said Reddy brieffly. "Y ou heard me warn him. He‘s wobbling, going heavy. Tyres are giving up the wghost." At the end of the next lap Reddy steyped forward and waved the flag. Frank seemed to see but gave no sign. He was engrossed in ‘a due} with Manâ€" cini, who had crept up and slightly lessened ‘the British‘s car lead. "He‘l} come in next lap," said Recdkly. "I warned him what was wrong." The cars swept for the eleventh time into the straight leading to the grandâ€" stand, and passing the pits. . Reddy wheeled cut spares from a pile at the back of a shed. But the cars shot pastâ€"and the blue car stayved with them. Even Dorothy could see now what Reddy had seen two laps beforeâ€"the wobble on the blue car and its distinct "heaviness." The Italian had crept up to the British car‘s rear. Dorothy went white. "The utter fool!" muttered Reddy. He tcoo, was paler, and breathing through his noseâ€"a sure sign of worry. "What â€" might happen, Reddy?" acked Dorothy from between clenched teeth. Redidy â€" shnugged. "Oh, nothing much!" he said bitterly. "Just a skid "Fill her up, Reddy! ‘She‘s going like a bind MONDA YÂ¥,. JUNE 3RD, 1940 Here,â€" miss!".â€" he protested.. . ‘"You Bargain coach excursion tickets will be valid on Train 46, Thursday, June 13. ~Passengers arrange their own transfer to North Bay C. P. Depot and take C. P. Train No. 8, leaving 12.55 a.m., Friday, June 14 Tickets Good in Ceaches Qnly. No Baggage Checked. Children 5 years of age and under 12%, when accompanied by guardian HALEF FARE For Further Particulars Apply Local Agent Tickets are valid to return leaving destination point not later than C Train No. 7, from Montreal 8.15 pam. Sunday. June 16, to connect North Bay with our Train No. 47, Monday, June 17, 1940. embroke, Renfrew, Arnprior, Ottawa, Ontarioâ€" Montreal, Quebec, Trois Rivieres, Quebec Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company TICKETS WILL NOT BE HONORED ON TRAINS 49 and 50â€" *‘THE NORTHLAND" T. N. 0. and N. C. R. Regular Stations From and over odd, that He sow "I was only joking. MHe‘ll come in, all right, when he finds he‘s losing speed. It‘l!l be all right." They seemed about to pass. And then, at the last moment, the blue car awerved off the track and bumped over the rough road into the pits. â€" Frank leaped Cut. "Sorry, â€" Reddy, Youâ€" were right. Change ‘em and change ‘em fast. No time to talk." The cars shot into the straight again. The British and the Italian cars were racing neck and neck. Dorothy held her breath. ‘The two men worked like Wheels were dismantled, hurtled aside, changed. The tail end of the procession of cars was flashing past. It seemed an age. Actually it was fiftyâ€"five seconds. Frank leaped back into the seat. "Okay naw!" The blue car roared off in a ‘cloud of smoke. Reddy grinned through the sweat and oil that besmeared his face. "Don‘t worry. They won‘t come off!" The cars roared into another lap. Dorothy counted anxiously. Mancini was in front. Close behind him came Hoffman. Then the other cars. She lbit her lip. The stop had cost Carter dear. He had daropped from first to seventhâ€"and ‘there were only three more laps to go. The tyres of the car were deoewn to the canvas. Dorothy said: "You changed them very quickly. It (was incredible. Are you sure they were done properly. 1 mean, at that speedâ€"the terrific strain _ She had to talk about something in the© agonizing intervals when they could not see the cars, could cnly hear the roaring lbeat of the engines, "Do you remember that day in Engâ€" landâ€"when you and Frank had the crash?" she asked. "When we were carried into your house like a ccuple of sacks of coal?" asked Reddy. He chuckled. His eyes never left the track, and a was eripped in his hand. "That was a day! I woke up and thought I was in hospiâ€" tal." The cars roared round again. Reddy stepped forward. He waved the flagâ€" and then whooped. "He‘s coming up! Good old guyâ€"nor." Carter had advanced from seventh place to third coming up in terrific bursts of speed. Reddy reverted to their conversation. "‘The guv‘nor thought he was in heaven," he remarked, ' "Why?" "He said he woke up to find an angel bending over him." "Oh!‘‘ said Dorothy. A tender look came into her eyes. The staccato roar of the engines swelled up again. "Tvo more laps to go,." said Reddy. "Oh, gosh, I hope he can make it!" He danced in agony. The cars shot past. "He‘ll DO it!" Reddy screamed the words. Once again, the British and Ttalian cars were racing neck and neck, with Hoffman at their heels, But this time the blue car was not wobbling. It seemed to be gaining speed at every Dorothy Ellington, who had told Frank Carter that he was catering for thrillâ€"mad crowds who did not know Copyright Published by Special Arrangement o the Winning Post s All!" her face ankd stopped abruptâ€" the bank at a hundred and at any better, found herself praying . . . Long, agonizing seconds passed. ‘Then a shout went up from the crowd, rippling nearer and nearer. The cars were coming down : into the straight, in the last iap. "Come on!" shouted Reddy. HMHand in hand, like children, they raced out of the pits, climbed a grassy knoll, and looked panting down on the long straight finish. The cars were coming fastâ€"and the blue car was in the lead. The Italian had shot his bolt. He segan to slide back. Hoffman had disappearedâ€"put; out as they afterâ€" wards learned by cylinder trouble half way round the last lap, so that he had to "walk home." It was a desisive victory for the British ‘car. Carter roared down the straight toâ€" wards the finishing line, with no chance of anyone passing him. Then Tragedy Dorothy and Reddy found themselves dancing wildly tozether on top of their crassy knoll. Then, over his shoulder, Redidy saw something. He released the girl and stepped back. His eyes glared. As if it could have been heard in time, or at that distance, above the roaring enâ€" gines of the car, he sereamed: "Guvnor! Lock out!" Dorothy looked. As Carter shot towards the finishing line, a child who had somehow escaped his parents wandered to the very edge of the track. A policeman saw him, shcouted, and leapedâ€"and missed. The tot wandered on to the road . . . For an instant the blue racing car was roaring deown on the child, standâ€" ing there frozen with sudden terror and bswilderment. There was no time to brake, to slow down. The biz blue car swung at right angles, skidded violently, and shot off the road on to the rough ground at the side of the track. It leaped like a live thing, with a shrilf#scream of tortured metal. _ It cunded, rebcunded and somersaulted A figure shot threugh the air. Then flames were leaping high in the air. and thick pungent smoke was pouring up against the hot blue sky. Dorothy found herselt running. She raced macross @rassy, uneven ground, fought desperately with people who got in her way. The ilblue car was a blazing mass of wreckage. What had been one of the proudest creaticns of man, an intricate pieve of gleaming machinery, was torâ€" tured and twisted metal. A cordon of police had been formed, and they were trying tco keep. the arciwds back. Oone of them barred Dorothy‘s way. "Sorry, miss," he began. She ducked under his arm and ran on. The heat of the car came out in a wave and almost blinded her. She skirted it and put one hand across her eyes and made for the spot where she had seen that fying figure fall. Frank lay on the groeund. His arms were cutstretched. Blood from a cut in his forehead had trickled down past his goggles. His eyes seemed to be closed. They were all running in the same direction, hundreds of them. Dorothy threw herself on her knees beside him. She seized his shoulders. "Frank!" she shouted. "Frank!" A sob was torn from her throat. "Oh, darling, you mustn‘t die. I love But the lovely girl had spoken coldly. She had been aloof and detached. The only interest she had seemed to take in him was a scientific one. She had observed him as coldâ€"bloodedily as a student observes a frog. you! Love Acts Strangely Six weeks before, Frank Carter had wakened vup after a crash, to find a lovely girl bending over him. He' h._ad reflected that, if this were heaven., he liked it. * Now he woke up again. to find the same girl bending cover him. But she was the same only in her loveliness. Tears streamed down her cheeks., "Darling!" murmured FPrank. He found he had just sufficient strength to raise himself and kiss her on the mouth. Then he sank back, and the mists of unconsciousness closed over him once again. "Doctor!" Dorothy turned swiftly to him. Througch her tears, she was «milâ€" ing happily over that caress. "Is he all right? Is he badly hurt? Will heâ€"â€"â€"" ‘The medical man shot her a keen glance. And a cry lingered divinely in his ealrs. A man, carrying a black bag, broke through the crowd. "Piance?" he murmured. "Ah, yes, of course!" Dorothy did not contradict him. She looked at him with amute appeal. The doctor was rminning his hands THEP PORCUPTNE ADVANCE, TTMMITN®, ONTARIO be any bones hoken." Unsc he echoed Professcr Ellington of six weeks ago. ‘"Liacky you! "HMe straightened up. "I d you have anything to worry al Je slight concussion. Tll swe no more. Ab‘! here‘s the aw "Ds»tor!" Dorcthy rose swil you have anyt ye slight conc no more. Ah "Duâ€"tor!" Ds I go with him "Certainly !" ‘"That Wwill pr thing." The doztor ; tician. Frank No bones we® no â€" concussid visiting him it he give up t the expedition Two days e tably have a3: of the ex kably have agreed. He would nave been glad of the excuse to get out of a situâ€" ation that had become intolerable. Now he shook his head emphatically. "Not at all, sir. T‘M be as right as rain. I wouldn‘t miss it for anything. When does the ship leave for DutGan?" "The Enfield," the professor told him;, "sails on Saturday of this week." "Then Ill be scardâ€"if your offer still holds?" + "Certainly, my boy," said Ellington, "Only too glad to have you." That moment when he had recoverâ€" ed conscicusness to find Dorothy hbendâ€" ing cver him had given Frank fresh hope. Things were far from clear in his mind. But he was sure now that that she loved him. The mask was off at last, her defences were down, and the warm human girl who, he had always suspected, hid behind the arâ€" mour was there for him to make his ciwn, if he dared. And Frank felt in the mood for daring anyvthing. Only one thing worried him. Dorothy, since she had assured herself that he was not seriously hurt, had not been to see him. That also he was aeterâ€" mined to put right. PEL BB | Dorothy, also, was a happier girl than she had been before the race and" its sensational climax. She could have no doubt now that she loved him. Her defences were indeed down; the inmost defences of all, the ‘barriers she had erected against her true self. The last pose was shattered like a distorting mirror, and she would never be alble to deceive herself again. She had laughed at love and sceerned romanCce. They had had their revenge. She acknowledged her defeatâ€"and was glad of it. One Kiss Told All Still more important, she knew that he loved her. That kiss while he lay in hber arms had told her more than a hundred conversations and a thousand volumes could tell. ® The reason why she had not visited him was very simple, She was still enâ€" gazed to Rupert Featherstone. That situation was An impossible one, and she had no tremors about ending it. She was finished with pretence in her life, of all sorts. To continue the enâ€" gagement would not only be impossible: it would shield Rupert from no hurt. For, just as she knew now that she had never really loved him, she knew that he had never loved her. Thev had ibeen déceiving themselves. They had ibeen deCeIVIME + Love on the high plane that they had envicaged it, with no more to it than intellectual appreciation was a thin and unsubstantial and unreal thing. It was true that Rupert had strangely altered in the last few days. He, t00, had abandoned a pose grown weariâ€" some. He was more human and thereâ€" fore more likeable. But she had 2A shrewd suspicion that the breaking off cf their engagement would not hurt him unduly. Just as Frank had awakâ€" ened her heart, so she suspected that another girl had awakened Rupert‘s. But in the meantime, So long as she was technically engaged to him, she would not go to Frank‘s side. When Frank was well would lbe time enough for them to tackle their problem toâ€" gether. e sA mA n P 6‘; # Frank was good as his word. Released from hospital, he said goodâ€"bye to his racing friends and his "fans," received the congratulations that awaited him, attended the customary courtesy banâ€" quet which nad been delayed by his accident, and joined the Enfield, bound for Durban. + He found little opportunity the ship for that long talk had planned to have with There were few passengers, professor‘s little party wWas kept together. '\\«JU uts col â€" * ie es «* i He was content to wait; for porothy‘s eyes, when he came on board, had told him most of what he wanted to know. At Durban they disembarked. Before going inland, Ellington insisted that they visit the Valley of a Thousand Hills the lovely reserve set aside for the Zulus of Natal. A pleasant mornâ€" ing was spent wandering round the colâ€" ourful Indian market and the many curio shops. The professor bought @ leopard skin bag for Christine and a fearfully carved native drum for his own collection. "Marvellous!" breathed Christine, and the others were equally amazed. It was like casually rounding a bend and finding oneself walking Oul of civilization, into another age. These hills which sleped away into the blue distance, unspoilt by any road, might hnave been those which Alan Quarterâ€" main was the first white man to see. They were in Rider Haggard countty, and the scene sharply revived memorâ€" ies of the everâ€"green romances. The tumbled hills rimmed A great bowlâ€"shaped alley. On emerald green grass cattle peacefuly grazed, and smoke rose lazily into the blue heavens from kraals of beehiveâ€"shaped hnuts dotted about the hillâ€"sides. Their path was a rough one, and the c ces t In the afternoon they drove to the Valey Of A Thcusand Hills Some miles from the town they turned off the main road inteo a rough side road, ard after a few yards they rounded a bend. ‘s wexe cussion him in uo th the idea <« on to the C s earlier, C: agreed. He excuse to g had become hnook his ht pFC he ul v hopsital d had broken Profe en and there was ofessor â€" Ellington, ;t.al. Suggested ()\3‘} . of accompanying Drakensberg. Carter would proâ€" e would have been , get out of a situâ€" ne intolerable. professor told him Ellington‘s remark wky young devil!" p. "I don‘t think worry ahout. May T‘ll swear there‘s ; the ambulante." rose swifltly. "May nodded be the nt. she knew that iss while he lay in her more than a is and a thousand shrewd diagnosâ€" lucky escape mity on board talk which he with Dorothy. zers, and the was â€" perforce heartily very bes Christine s t i Montreal, June 1â€"Enjoying everâ€" increasing pujslic confidence, life inâ€" | surance, with four million Canadian prlicyholders in its ranks, continuges to te a vital factor in the economic stabilâ€" ‘ity cf the Dominion. Reports substantiating its strength, in war as in peace, will be submitted at the 47th annual meeting of the Canaâ€" dian Life Insurance Officers Associaâ€" tion, to be held in the Mount Royal Hotel here cn June 6 and 7. Accomâ€" plishments of the Association during the year will be reviewed by Arthur P. Farle, the president. Representative of Canadian, British and United States insurance companies operating in Canada, the Association will be accorded a civic welecme by Mayor Camillien Houde. Other speakâ€" ers inolude Leonard W. Brockington, K.C., recorder of Canada‘s war effort; Dr. J. B. Collip, professor of bioâ€" chemistry, McGill University; Ray D. Murphy, FAS., PC.AS., president of the Actuarial Society of America, and Leishton Foster, KC., counsel of the ssozsiation. of the Life Agency Officers Section of the Association will hold their second annual meeting on June 4, 5 and 6. while the Life Insurance Adversiters Section holds its first anâ€" nual meeting on June 5 and 6. When we read about how refined all cur food is now being madeâ€"all the rough parts taken outâ€"and then read further that this roughness is necessary to stimulate the bowel so as to move wastes aownward and out of the body, we may decide that we will eat more of the rough foods. This action of the muscles of. the intestine is called perisâ€" taltic action. FOODs THAT PREVENT CONsTIPATION AND DIARRHOEA Thon we read that this rough food can so stimulate the bowel action that it causes a severe diarrhoea (colitis) and also so overstimulate the muscles of the bowel that spasms occur resultâ€" ing in spastic constination. The truth of the matter is that. any focd, rough or soft, will stimulate muscular action in any part of ‘ the digestive tract from the throat ‘right aown to the lower bowel from which the wastes leave the body. If a rubber ball or any object is pushed dewn into the stemach, the stomach muscles will start moving in an effort to remove the object and push it onward into the small and large intestines. Therefore there are many individuals who give no thought to food, eating perhaps only soft foods, who nevertheâ€" less digest all food pernfectly and wastes move downward naturally. Hcowever the majority ‘of individuals would seem to need some roughage, seme little stimulation of the bowel aside from the weight of the food in order that the large intestine will push wastes onward and downward, If this rough food is not eaten, constipation results. It is of interest to all of us therefore to know the foods that strongly stimuâ€" late the bowel and those that only weakly stimulate it. Foods causing strong peristaltic acâ€" tion may contain something of a "laxative" natureâ€"figs, prunes, rough filbrous parts like seeds and skins, green acids and sugarsâ€"raisins, apples, rhubarb, raspberries, _ strawberrics, oranges; fatsâ€"butter, fat meatsâ€"lubriâ€" cants. Fovds that cause weak peristaltic aztion are meat, eggs, fish, cheese; white flour productsâ€"soda . crackers, mashed potatoes. As moét of us eat some of the foods that cause strong peristaltic action and also some that cause weak action, there They were espied, and excited figures ran from hut to hut, summoning the darkâ€"skinned people of the valley, (‘To ‘be Continued) cars went gingerly. They had lelt white South Africa far behind them. Vital Factor in Stability Bv fames W . Barton, Sold by Reliable Dealers Everywhere of Poutr $ TEbhat Boup Alleged Theft of Large Number of Items from House Stewart Hurley Arrested by‘ Police Following Ax]leged! Breakâ€"In. Stewart Hurley, 27 years arrested on Thursday night of breaking and entering to commit theft. He will } in police court on Tue: Magzistrate Atkinson. Hurley was alleged to have entered the premises of Alex Potrosky, 156 Cedar‘ Street, south, rear, while the owner was at work. The approximately $55 worth of gocds he is alleged to have taken, included a radio, a portable gramophone, a cigarette case, a garden rake, a shovel, a toilet set and two axes. The funeral of one of the popular oldâ€"timers of the camp in the person of Steve Lynn took place on Thursday last, from the Legion hall to the Legion plot in the Timmins cemetery. Rev. F. J. Baine, conducted the short service in the hall and at the graveside. The minister spoke very feelingly of the circumistances surrounding the death of Mr. Lynn, and offered special prayâ€" ers for the widow who was very sick in the hospital. Steve Lynn Buried _ While on Leave With E“li Honours 0£) Friends Extend Best Wishes Canadlan Legl()n _ to Member of Royal Canaâ€" dian Engineers. on smm c c omm tm mm m mm Pipers Head Funeral Cor-; Bcb Aionn, . of the Roval tege on Wdy to Cemetely Canadian Engineers, was guest of honâ€" m o h o Pipers McLellan and W. Cowan headâ€" ed: the ecrtege and at the graveside played the "Lament," "Last Post" and "Reveille" were scunded as the coffin was laid to rest. The funeral was conâ€" ducted with full Legion honourgy Pallâ€" bearers were all close friends of the deâ€" ceased, these being Comrades A. Jenâ€" kins, J. G. Harris, W. A. Devine, W. RBcmbadier, A. Jatkson and W. Orr. "When his little sister fell into Lake Temiskaming neag the Haileybury market building on Monday, young Raymond Souliere, five and a half year old son of Provincial Constable Arthur Souliere and Mrs. Souliere, promptly went to the rescue and successfully pulled her to shore, although the water was deep enough to place both children in rather grave danger of drowing. The little girl, Patsy, who is only two and a half years old, was playing on a raft at ‘the shore when she fell into the water. Raymend was on the shore at the time, but he plunged into the water and brought out his sister, neiâ€" ther suffering any ill effects, and the young lad‘s only regret, expressed after The following interesting paragraph is from the last issue of The New Lisâ€" keard Spseaker:â€" he had effected the rescue, was that he had got "my good pants all wet." should be no diarrhoe or constipation. If either condition exists we should eat the fords necessary to correct it. Eating Your Way to Health Send toâ€"day for this special bookâ€" let (NO. 101) by Dr. Barton, dealing with vitamins, minerals, calories, and what and how much to eat. Enclose ten cents to cover service and handling and Ibe sure to give your name and full address. Send your request to The Bell Library, in care of The Advance, Timâ€" mins, 247 West 43rd St., New York, N.Y. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act) Fiveâ€"Yearâ€"old Lad Saves Y ounger Sister‘s Life £ 7"* Brantford Roofs For Sale by @71 5 | In an inspiring editorial last week | n House The Haileyburian urges the holding of a proper perspective of the progress ey Al'l' st | ’ of the war. and concludes with these y Aarres e( b) words:â€" owing Alleg‘ed "Civilization has been threatened on lmany occasions in the past. The pages lof history are flled with stories of 27 years of age, was| heroism in the cause of truth and lay night on a cllarge‘ justice, and through it all the British entering with intent Empire has stcod strong for the right. He will be arraigned| She is not going to lose this time, but m â€" Tuesday before it is going to take all that is in us to on. c bring the fight to. a successful concluâ€" ged to have enteredfsmn' Let us keep our Chins up, in Alex Potrosky, 5g4 | swite of the reverses that are bound ith, rear, while pe | to come and as Canadians and British«= . ‘The apapmximatelyl ers carry on the fight and live up to mm e es * traditions." = ....... ht Co ols . sA t OW M 0 P T TAAA Nes old C OeR s i > w L C because Brantford Roofing materials provide extra fire protection. In addition to shielding the home against wind and rain, you add beauty amd value to your property, You may choose fromra many attractive colour combinations, Rememberâ€"35 years‘ Canadian experience in producing roofing materials to meet the tests of our own climatic conditions guarantees dollar for dollar value. Just specify "Brantford Roofing" and be sure. Brantford Roofing Company, Limited BRANTFORD, ONTARIO BR3 SEE US and SEE BETTER Have your eyes examined perin‘s wheore you can be reliable advice and the Halperin‘s Optical Dept. Denmuisâ€"Registored | Opltomeirisi Pine street North Phone 213 Sapper Morin Guest \of Honour at Party {cur on Tuesday evening at a farewell |party held by his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. Gaston Morin, at their home |71 Main Avenue. Sapper Morin was ‘home on leave, and left on the North= !land. Wednesday, to rejoin his unit. ‘ The guests were boys and girls witli whom the guestâ€"ofâ€"honour had attendâ€" local schools, and during the evenâ€" ‘ing. games and dancing were enjoyed. ‘\afre Mnrin hostess. served a deRgious Urges to Carry on the Fight and Live up to Traditions Ferms at low Mrs. Morin, hostess, served a de‘iou.q lunch, and ‘was assisted in serving by Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Osbhorne. Saroer Morin received the best wishes of his many friends. | Among those present Anita Morin, Elaine Bowie, Irene Moorâ€" ing, Marguerite (Morin, YÂ¥veotte Pilon, Helen Knott, Babe James, May Jeffries, Helen Landers, Betty Morin, and Messtrs. Noble McCoy, Geoffrey Morris, Ronnie Morin, Stanley Dolahan, Leo Blanchard, the â€" guest â€" of â€" honour, Ssapper Bob Morin, Myrs. Morris and Mrs. Oskorne, and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. G. Morin. As a contribution to Canada‘s war effort, J. Haroijd Crang, prominent Toronto broker, has placed his 38â€"foot motor yacht, ‘"Haldo," at the disposal of the Royal Canadian Air Force to be used for rescue work, for which her speed and design are specially suited. Honourable C. D. Howe, Minister of Munitions and Supply, accepted the offer on behalf of the government, Toronto Broker Presents Motor Yacht to R.CA.E. advice and â€" the if vou need them. A certain amount of doubt exists around the origin of the term "bachelor" on a sheepskin or marriage licenâ€" se. But there is not the slightest doubt about the meaning of "Bachelor" on a cigar band! There it guarâ€" antees 100% Havana filler and, like a flag, indicates a long and proud tradition of excellence, Yet the price is only 10c. O rigin of «BACHELOR®" kA 3 81 a Woeek PAGE THR sure. of 1

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