* We believe that A. Londry‘s pen of Wyandotte chickens which won the special at Porcupine Fair for the best pen in the show are to be sent to New Liskeard Fair. The judge commentâ€" ing very favomrably on these. In the vegetable cl we must congratulate Mr..I, P. Wilson, of Porcupine on winnâ€" ing the cup the third year in succesâ€" sion for the best display of vegetables. In the flowers there were not nearly as many as last year but those that were there, were of excellent quality. A table decoration by Mrs. Stark, of South Porcupine, and an arrangement of hanging plants and tuberousâ€"rooted begonias in a wicker basket shown by Mrs, Burrows, Porcupine, both excited Mr. and Mrs. C. Malotte and Mr. and Mrs. Pigeon, of Timmins, who have reâ€" cently returned from Montreal were the guests of Mrs. J. Huot this week. The ‘"Explorers," a boy‘s club for the lads from nine to twelve is also being organized on Tuesday evening. There was a reâ€"organization meeting of the Trail Rangers‘ club on Monday evening at the manse. The following officers were elected:â€"Mentor, Rev. E C. Moddle; chief ranger, Roland Mod dle; subâ€"chief, Wallace Wagg; secreâ€" tary, Gordon Roy; treasurer, Harold McInnis. There was a good turnout of the boys. The next meeting will be held on Monday evening, September 25th, at seven in the evening at the manse. On Monday evening, Mr. and Mrs. G. wW, Rayner, Mr. H. Miller, Mrs. A Ewing, Mrs. G. Train, Misses Ruby Miller and Marguerite Train atteended the meeting of the Rebekah lodge at Iroquois Falls. This was a special meeting and banquet in honour of the President‘s visit. Mrs. Kehoe and two children have joined Mr. Kehce, the new manager for the Imperial Ban, and are now cosily domiciled in F. LaForest‘s house cn Connaught hill recently occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Somerville. On their reâ€" turn from an extended holiday in the Ssouth, Dr. and Mrs. Somerville took up residence in Mr. P. Michaud‘s house on Connaught Hill. Mr. and Mrs. G. Dagg Sr.., Mr. and Mrs. T. Dagg, also Miss Dagg, of Porâ€" tage du Fort, Quebec, are on a visit to Mr. and Mrs. G. Dagg‘s daughter, Mrs. F. McJanet, of Bloor Avenue. They motored up and are enjoying their stay in a mining camp. Miss Minnie Levinson, of South Porâ€" cupine, also leaves this week for North Bay Normal School. A farewell party was given in the Porcupine public school for Miss Eveâ€" liyn Young on Friday evening. It was in the form of surprise party. Miss Young is leaving to enter North Bay Normal this week. Trail Rangers Club, South Porcupine, is Reâ€"organized Sepcial to The Advance. South Porâ€" cupine, Sept. 17th., 1928. Messrs. Osbone, Ivan and Gordon Davis, of Pottsville, are holidaying in Southern Ontario. Comment on the Prize Winners at the Porcupine Fair of Last Week. Visitors to and From South Porcupine. Other South Porcupine News from The Advance Corâ€" respondent at South Porcupine. CIAN south Porcupine, Ont. Office Hours: 11â€"12 a.m. 2â€"3 p.m. 7â€"8 p.m. sunday by Appointmentâ€"Phone 126 36â€"49 DOMINION TIRE DEPOT The Timmins Garage Co. Ltd. AN underâ€"inflated tire soon gets into real trouble â€" broken side walls, a punctured inner tube â€" often a blowout. Underâ€"inflation is one of the chief causes of premature tire failure. Tests have proven that every 10% drop from the corâ€" rect inflation causes a 20% drop in mileâ€" age. Call at a Dominion Tire Depot and have your tires examined. Here‘s how you pay for neglect â€" You are never far away from a Timmins. Ontario. a nephew of Messrs James and Domâ€" inico Cattarello of South Porcupine. The Girl Guides cleared forty dollars at their refreshment booth on the grounds. Master Charlie Cushing, of Timmins, again very ably showed the public the method of lighting a fire by friction and without matches. Northâ€" land Motor Sales of Timmins had a large exhibit of cars on the ground and a tent in which was illustrated the method of getting a camp meal. The Imperial Bank tent on the ground for the cashing of prize cheques was a great convenience to the public. The judges at this fair are all sent in by the Provincial Government. For fifty years I‘ve bucked these hillsâ€"â€" __And T glad ‘twas soâ€" I‘ve lived with them in summer‘s heat, And winter‘s cold and snow. "Twas The Lure‘s hail that mapped that trail, More than the love of gold; But The Lure will no more call to me, For nowâ€"I‘m old. And so I would lie by a mountain sideâ€" Away from the world‘s stirâ€" Beside a cheery, playing brook, Beneath a Douglas fir. With birds that flit on happy wing and glady sing; With cliffs against the sky Where the sentinel Big Horn stands aloneâ€" Here, would I lie. Here, would I make my last long camp, When shadows creep down the trail, Where the Northern Lights dance overâ€" head To the coyote‘s quavering wail. With gaunt grey peaks, where the Northwind shrieksâ€" . No manâ€"made spires for meâ€" But the Tonquin Hills to guard my spotâ€" ‘ All through Eternity. ' â€"John Richmond, in OQutdoor Recxea- tion Magainze. + much comment, We must congratuâ€" late Mrs. Pullin, of the Dome Extenâ€" sion, on her win of ten prizes in the domestic science class. Mrs. A. Ewing, of South Porcupine was also one of the heavy prizeâ€"tikers in this class. In the Girl Guides‘ exhibits the Oak Patâ€" rol won the most points. Miss Stella Smith is the Patrol leader. In the painting and drawings, Miss Frances Wright and Mr. Cattarello were the exhibitors. Miss Wright‘s ~talented work in oils, water colours and pastels, has always been admired here but the type of work of J. Cattarello was new to many of the public. His etchings done with stumping chalk created very favourable comment as did also some of his portrait studies, but the number that called forth the most praise was that of a "Window of the Forum of Merchants in Bologna, Italy." This was wonderfully good in shading effects as well as in architectural detail. It belongs to the style of art taken up in Italy under the class "ton architetâ€" tonico," at the Professional School of Art in Turin, at which school that young lad has been a student for som:s time. However these exhibits were not done in the school but since he came out to Canada two months ago. He is THE PROSPECTOR The defence of a man charged with illegally having liquor in a public place at Cobalt was to the effect that while walking on the street a friend gave him the bottle to hold.and just at that minute the police came along in a car ind arrested him. He was puzzled, however, to explain why he tried to hide the bottle behind his back when he saw the police. The case was adâ€" journed as the police could not swear as to the contents of the bottle which had been sent to Toronto for analysis. heard it. You can apply it. "Another scripture says: ‘He that is glad at calamity shall not go unpunâ€" ished,‘ so to escape punishment I must not be glad~at your calamity and I confess it is not easy to be glad, for I feel like taking you over my knees and giving you a good oldâ€"fashioned slipper spanking when I read that fool Weed Act you got passed this year. There are thousands of farms that it is an absolute impossibility to cut all the weeds on. One effect will be to drive people off the land. Evidently the Lord sees with me and has spanked you." ‘xJ010 aje310p al1â€"issaumpig94;) 0j ay; puy 0j ;de sou st peaye 30 JY qimo.xm 2338 OUMA UBIU T In a letter to the Minister, Mr. Capel B. St. George states that while the scripture requires him to be subject to every ordinance of man, yet he canâ€" not obey "this fool law" and therefore intends to sell his farm as soon as posâ€" sible. "I have heard," he writes, "that you have had some bones broken. In the summer of 1923 I spent some time at Southern, near London, where there is a church of ‘the peculiar people.‘ They refuse medical help in sickness and rely wholly on the Lord to cure in answer to prayer. They told me that in over 50 years, only one of their people had a bone broken, and he was a man who had ceased to live a rightâ€" eous life. "I tell you the story as I heard it. You can apply it. ‘ The letter referred to says that the motor accident in which Hon. Mr. Martin had his ribs broken was in reality a chastisement by Providence on account of the Noxious Weeds Act sponsored by Hon. Mr. Martin. Hon.: John S. Martin, Minister of: Agâ€" riculture, enjoys a joke even at his own expense, and it is possible that he may have a relapse from the recent injuries to his ribs in an automobile accident , such relapse to be caused by chuckling too deeply at a letter from a Sprucedale man who has written from the Parry Sound district to the Minisâ€" ter in regard to the results and supâ€" posed causes of the recent accident. MINISTER MAY CRACK HIS RIBS AGAIN LAUGHING NOW Mr. and Mrs. Payeur, the settlers whose home was destroyed by fire on Thursday morning, were prosperous and highly esteemed residents of the community in which they lived. In the loss of their six children the sinâ€" cerest sympathy of all goes out to them at this time. A particularly pathetic feature of the deaths of the six children was the fact that one of them was Irene Payeur, who was evidently making good progress to recovery from handicaps which the child had suffered since infancy Irene was only eleven years old, and had been unable to walk at all until last Spring. At that time she attended a clinic for crippled children at Sault Ste. Marie. On the advice of the docâ€" tors there she was sent to a Toronto hospital, a Sault Ste.‘ Marie service club looking after the financing of the trip. Within the space of a few months the youngster had undergone no less than five operations. She was greatly benefitted by the hospital treatment and seemed to be making rapid progress to health. She was able to go about the farm on crutches and the doctors believed that the good air and the good care being given her would eventually result in the child‘s complete â€" cure. After all, howâ€" ever, another fate was in store for the youngster, death coming to her in the fire that destroyed the home. At a farm house about twenty miles south of Hearst last week six children met death as the result of a fire at the home of their parents who were settlers in the district. The fire is understood to have resulted from an explosion that followed the use of gasoline to kindle the kitchen fire in the early morning hours. Marie Payeur, aged 20 years, the first of the family to rise, had started to get the breakfast ready. She was terribly burned by the fiames. The explosion threw burning oil all over the kitchen and in an incredibly short time the whole house was enâ€" veloped in fiames. The fire spread with the greatest ferocity and only the parents and two girlsâ€"one a babe in arms, and the other about thirteen years oldâ€"were able to escape from the burning home. The other six childâ€" ren were apparently overcome by the dense and stifling smoke. Ail efforts to rescue them were unavailing and so rapidly did the fire gain headway that in a few minutes absolutely nothâ€" ing could be done either to attempt to rescue the children or to curb in any way the progress of the fire. The bodies of two of the children were reâ€" covered the next day from the charred ruins of the house, but it was some days later before the other four little bodies were found in the destroyed home. olX GAiLOREN BUANED 1O DFATH REAR HEARGT THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Pathetic Case of Little Cripped Gin Who Was Recovering Health When Death by Fire Ensued Corner Kirby Avenue and Pine Street South Factory Representative: Porcupine Feed and Transfer Phone 88 CGilson Mig. C€o., Limited â€" 160 ~York St., Gueliph, Ont. Famous GHULSON Furnaces J. T. Heffernan YOUR OLD RECORDS ARE WORTH MONEY. ASK YOUR BRUNSWICK DEALER. The Brunswick Panatrope, in performance and appearance, is without rival as an instrument for the home. Models priced from $115. 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