Page 15, Tuesday, November 24, 1992 Those records are locked away Northern in the vault of Noe Dame du | Winter travel |||AT YOUR SERVICE/A VOTRE SERVICE Portage Roman Catholic Church in Kenora, with very kit checklist e @ : , INSIGHtS "TEES sosss, | Fore ovine tashed in dusty card. | Winter storm kit in the trunk ie borer e ke Deo of your car. Even for city snpliend SON Pears : driving you should have Bethesda Evangelical Lutheran | some of these items with their duties, seemingly Church in Kenora, switch from unm ou: pe Swedish to English in the first |" shovel Historical discoveries are é re a decade of this century, coincid- Sand (or kitty litter, which like that. Most people greet . F Sy ae ke , Sts with a tray ing with assimilation of the | js lighter than sand or salt ; : : local Scandinavians? and doesn't freeze) ° ; oe Is it exciting that: No. None of this mattis 42 Gea Gilles Pouliot, MPP Lake Nipigon hi holds itement fi 5 ethe archives of the OLY RONSON Flashlight Helping You is My Job! z : . you. Warning light or road 'cm ae = old saat ing... But to me, history is much | flares CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-268-7192 b 8 ffice in K _. like news reporting--some- Extra winter clothing and ----e Fs a -- thing I did professionally for | footwear ' oa es ao '0 14 years for CBC Radio. ~ Emergency food and jf} Gilles Pouliot, Depute provincial, Lac Nipigon' of first pe! ee eo a. ag pack _ Mon Travail, C'est De Vous Aider ciumunities and whiesahad@ s2tetiesae ae oe oe nile TELEPHONEZ SANS FRAIS: 1-800-268-7192 sionaries? --_ _-- = --o -- saan pa Du Lundi au Vendredi durant ering truths ees | les heures regulieres de travail eyears of personal as well as always exciting to discover Pk ire oesanseess +e cultural loss are chronicled in something--particularly in the opieasalge the records of two closed dusty records of this enigma Matches in a waterproof FAX # 4 16-327-0968 Indian residential schools? called Canada. omens BOYD. Mr. John Cecil Boyd, 80 years, of Nepean, Ontario, | formerly of Nipigon, | # Z¢ Ontario passed away Monday, | November 16, 1992 in the Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario. Mr. Boyd ran Cloverleaf Service and was employed at Multiply Plywoods until he retired in 1977. He was a member of the Masonic Order, of Superior Lodge AF & Am #672, of Connaught Lodge #511, Thunder Bay, of Shuniah Chapter R.A.M. #82, of Rhodes Preceptory #23 and of the Shrine Khartum Temple. He used to be an avid hunter, enjoyed his family and work and was a sports enthusiast. Predeceased by his parents - Cecil and Emma Boyd, by his wife Lottie (nee Batson) in 1983, by one sister Quida Scott of Canora, Saskatchewan and by Bpotecive mvintic Every bottle of Bacardi Amber rum still begins two daughters - Lenore (Mrs. e - Dean) Jones of Nepean, Ontario the way it did over 130 years ago. and Arlene Toykkala of Thunder Bay, Ontario, by four grandchildren - Bruce and Brian Jones, and Suzanne and Tommy Toykkala, by one sister (Beth) Gertrude (Mrs. Ed) Winchell of New Westminister, British Columbia. Numerous other relatives also survive. Funeral services were held on Thursday, November 19, 1992 at 10:30 A.M. at Grace United Church, Nipigon with the Rev. E. Prinselaar officiating. Interment was in Cliffside Cemetery, Nipigon. Pallbearers were: Don Doiron, Cam Todesco, Ray Lankinen, Ted Nyman, Gerry Rhodes, Roy Cross. Honourary Pallbearers were: Urbain Luce, Bill Locker, Bob Parker, John Harding, Ollie Ziegler, Clarence Saunders. Superior Lodge AF & AM #672 held a memorial service at the Elliott Funeral Home Ltd., Nipigon on Wednesday evening at 8 P.M. Down where palm trees sway and sugar cane is still cut by hand, every drop of Bacardi amber rum has its beginnings. Just as it was in 1862, molasses made from pure sugar cane is first fermented and distilled. Then it is aged in oak barrels, and expertly blended to attain that smooth, full flavour that could only be Bacardi amber rum. BACARDI AMBER RUM Enjoy the taste of an original BACARDI AND THE BAT DEVICE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF BACARDI & COMPANY LIMITED.