‘. face and shoulders. He was removed to the hospital. as was Mrs. B. E. Gil- bért, St. John, NB, passenger in the other car, who received a cut over the eye and ‘to one knee and 9 severe shak- ing up. Bothman escaped with a brubed leg. John Patterson Wilson, age 26. of Toronto. who was a' passenger in the Bothmn car, was the most seriously injured, suffering a dislocated hip and numerous cuts and bruises about the W. E. tot"I ,Toronto. was sent- enced to 1) in jail Thursday after- noon by gagistramgomineau for driv- ing a can while ' "xica‘ted following an accident two miles east of Sturgeon Falls on the North Bay-Sturgeon Falls highway (in Wednesday evening, of last week, when three persons were injured Provincial Constable S. Berard. who prosecuted, took the prisoner to the district jail at North Bay Thursday evening. ' A local item in The Northern Tribune of humming. last week says: -â€" "Messrs H. L. Grant and A. E. Marley saved a. young 'I‘immins lady from drowning 9t. Rem! Lake last Sunday; She was a lair swimmer, but. was selz-g edwimcrampsmdhadgmedown crzes whllé passing near by in a. boat. 3". and get her'o'ul; or the water just in time." stilts-wry .. 3 . W8 YOUNG LADY SAVED FROM BROWNING IN REM] LAKE twice whga, M were attracted by her cr1es wh11; Easing- near by in a boat. , NEW LOW i RATES Sullivgn...1!9wton Established 1912 21 Pine gt- N. Timmins Jhnne 104 Insurance of Every Description AUTO ~ INSURANCE" â€Arman!" ..... . o . . n . o . u u . I u . CIOICI SPRING alIOUIJDEI LAMB. per lb.. I CIIOICB LEO OI' LAMB. per lb. .................................. SMOKED PICNIC HAM, per r.lb ‘ _ MOON. by the piece. per lb. ............................................ 8M8 BOLOGNA. per lb. ..................................... SLICK!) 8W8 PREMIUM COOKED IIAM. per lb. mom; 8303MB. 3 lb. [All u... ................. ‘ .... SNOWFLAKE SHOR‘i'ENING 5 lb. pail WEEK-END SPECIALS pom. Hil- m Service MEATS NEW ACT Fort CONTROL Lot; BARBEBS OF rmvmon .The appointment has beeh ï¬fth6unc-‘ ed at 10 Ontario barbers ma hah'dress- ' era to administer the act. 1128prth barbers and hairdressers M at the last session of the thario Legislature The following pex‘sgn's will comprise the provisional council authorized $13 the act: D. J. 0111195,.Tqr0nth“ J Q. Hah- k1rk,Wlngham;W.A. puhm buhd'aé; J. J. Hogah,8udhu1'y'; a J. cgurmoht, Windsor: Mrs. Maude mm Ballevï¬le. Miss Agnes Meander. Owe‘n' Sound; J. ‘ N. Day, Toronto; M. c: s‘cmiy. Ottawa: Miss Me wood. Peterbdrough : 5 V. 7 By the passing (if- the 910'}. we on". tario Master Bunbers’ and Write“- ers' Association autbma‘tt'cally names the Registered Wis and Bar- bers of Ontario and all m the pmmée are given unti1-.Dec -31,1933.-tereglater â€After this date an exammstlgn' win he act, which is wideln its'sebpe, m den signed to elevate the W bf the profession .and safeguard the iii-tenets of the public. It carried the en‘dorsa- tgon of the whisker of Health. Third Open-Air Band Concert of season several reasons to definitely anhmmce last week that a band concert would be given at the bendstand at the park on Sunday evening there was a large crowd out for the event wh was may held after the church So last Sunday evening. The crowd was enthmhstlc. over the excellent music provided and. expressed their appreciation in the usa- al ways. The band enseinbie' wa's' goOd and Bandmaster F. J. Wolno is oent'ain- ly bringing the band back to its old:- tdme standing in publie estimation. While the playing of the band generally on Sunday evening, left little roam for criticism, it is only fair to make special mention of the solo work by Wen A.W11ford, on the euphonium. and Bandsman Carl Johns, on‘ the cor-net. Both these musicians did their 9010 work in very effective way and won well-merited praise. There were also favourable comments made in regard to the ï¬ne appearance of the bandstand in its new coat of padnt. The town supplied, the paint to; this good work. and the painting has been exceptionally well done. by the unemployed members ot- the band. The pmzramme by the band on Sun- day waning, July 9th, was'as follows:â€" 0 Canada. . March, “Old Bill," (J. 0rde Hume) Fantasia, “Mmstrel 89:133. " " . Potpanrrl, “Musical Memories. "' Waltz. “Queen of Pearls. '-’ - Selection, "Recollections of Verdi March, “Sans of the Soil. †GOd‘Bavefm Kingh ., _ ï¬'f: ;.. , "a . 17¢ lle m. fleney Notes Remarkable e ‘Changes in France Since [9| 8 1 ' “Kjt Amiens there are many? plaées- Where they offer tours of the battle- ï¬elds, but this ‘is Just what we didn’t Want. We had decided to make Amiens Our HHQ ., and hire a. private car to take us Where the points or our particular 11mm lay. ‘We soon found a driver Whiz“ spbke 'Engllsh'hnd knew the coun- try :so a deal was promptly made that he should do the tour at a franc and a hat a kilometre. How he collected double this amount is entirely another story and lectures a knowledge of local conditions to appreciate. We com- i‘nenoed in the early morning, leaving Amiens in the direction of Peronne, -The Dover to Calais incident passed with the ‘usual queer sensations one gets at sea and we landed at the same moment as a big black cloud' full of Splashy _d_rOps. One always carries thin-560513 or unlbrella so we made the -61',5118fe‘1' from boat to the Amiem ‘t-rain With' only 0111' feet becoming nice and yhioh was the Canadian heaquarters pafore March rétreat, 1918. As our car Mt the outakirts 6f Amiens I knew that within twenty minutes I would be on funnier territory. We sped along andlreaiized that we mustnowbeon ground which should be familiar. Not a_. sign of war presented itself. The road was recently re-surraced and wan ubv w- â€" â€"'_ -â€" ._ In 'thé acids the crops of agricultural France were growingâ€"- women were hoeing; men were at work driving carts drawn by a single horseâ€" if the low were heavy an additional horse was attached in front and in sonic, cases a team abreast in trout of the single horse. As there are few (shoes cattle were picketed-out in plots of 61W and grass. Several kilometres â€more and still no sign of trenches or barbed-wire. Our driver gave the our position on the map and I ask him Which of the villages we see is "Ros!eres." He points it out and I re- cognize the church steeple restored to normal. I also recollect standing with other troops watching it being born- self." This all seemed strange to us but it was heard so frequently in Eng- land that it was eventually accepted as being a poaibility. My point in re- cording this is to show that whereas we still list Germany as an enemy in Can- ada there is practically no feeling of animosity by the average Englishman on the street toward the German on the street or on the beer garden lawn: but, curiously enough “the French peo- pie receive a little dig occasionally. This feeling is possibly due to inter~ national relationships rather than multiple personal contacts. The day arrives and we find ourselves in the boat train sliding along at the usual mile per minute from Victoria Station to Dover. Many oi! the troops recall this trip, but I must add that they would never «recognize the route tram. the train. Imagine, if you can, running. through Soundling, Shome- cliffs, Folkstone. and on to Dover, with- out seeing a soldier or a hut or any- thing to remind you of the old land marks. At the boat there is no bellow- ing or orders, no relaying of same down the line to us of the lowest caste. I even had offers of help with our lug- gage and may I be forgiven for hoping that those who helped were former sflWtemajors of times past. - Ohhniiei it might be well for us to h‘ve e' clear understanding of relati .na Ween the United Kingdom and their neighbours in Europe. Members of His Majesty's fox-ea will remember bonditiOna as they were and will have dimculty in revising their thinking so thet they can receive kindly, the sug- gestion that “You will ï¬nd everyone in Germany very polite and willing to help you but in France look out for your- tum without much experience, to m around on the continent even without a working knowledge of French hflb VHtor in England Remarks on Attitude of Bri- M People to and Germany Respectiveiy. A hr of the Bettiedeide. Cemeteries Beautifully Kept. France has Recovered from the Ranges of the War and Look: Unfamiliar to tile Returned Soldier. mbuny‘ ' Reports of the general (upturn in business are very general’ from the United States but there is one industry that is not sharing in the general re- covery. but is actually worse off than before. That is the gold mining indus- try. Despatchm from Washington this week deal with the question in extend- ed way and show the peculiar dimcul- ties faced by the gold mining industry. Its cost of production, it is pointed out. mounts as general prices go up, while the price at which it must sell its pro- duct is fixed, frozen, set. In fact. there is not g saleable in the world "that equals 11 its price stability American gold. Unlike the governments of all other gold producing counltries that are off the gold standard, the American government makes no concessions to the gold miner to compensate him for the depreciation of its currency. The effect of the new gold laws and regula- tions on him is this: He may sell his gold fresh fromthe of the battalion and e verse if one has been sent by friends. This cemetery was near no busy village but was in peaceful country surrounded by e U. S. Gold Producers Ask Boost in Price that I couldn't Stand in the square. close my eyes and walk into the YM. CA. I enquired at the War Graves' Oomnussicn ofï¬ce which fronts on the square and was told that if I would come back at two o'clock the man then on duty would probably be able to tell me‘ Just where the YMCA. had. wheat ï¬eld and among the wheat grew many poppies smhe of which we pluck- ed and pressed together with some roseb'uds and pansta from the graves. Our next stop was Arms. Surely no soklier could stand up and say that he didn‘t know Arms. Well. that's Just what I had to do. It seemed incredible (This letter by Dr. Honey will be concluded in the next issue of The Ad- vance). Gold Mining the One Industry in the United States that has Been In- jured by the Increase in Price. New Deal is Asked. mmummmotmem mmwwmm. .1. mm. mm a! tn. www.mum WOW: nmmmummm We: of maintaining aquatic gold a. 1M ll common outslde of Amer!- cuhndmomplosupplyoigold. mi Annex-lean supply would protect luau without an embryo. He also pointed out that n curtail- ment of gold mm: at home would increase unommoyment. strata thet high prices reduce gold pro- diiction and low prices increase them. Mr. Callbreath held that. with gold at a. ï¬xed price of $20.67 an ounce, “and with the anticipated wage level and operating cost increases. the gold in- dustry will be practically driven out of existence" unless there is relief. Despatches in the Ottawa and other dailies note that Dan A. Jones. formerly publisher and editor of The Pembwke Observer. and well known in the East as a capable newspaperman. has taken over a newspaper at Rouyn, Que. The despatches do not indicate whether it is one of the papers already established for Rouyn or a new one to be founded.- In any case a good newspaper will be the one published by D. A. Jones. Be- fore leaving Pembroke Mr. Jones was given a send-off and presentation by' the K. of c. of that town. Mr. Jones, has been prominent for many years in the K. of C., holding ofï¬ces in the or- der. and in that capacity visiting the North, both in Ontario and Quebec. Mr. Jones also was mayor of Pembroke I some years ago and held other promin- ent ofllces in the community. The next regular meeting of the Tim- mins town council is scheduled for Monday afternoon. July 24th, com- mencing at 4 pm. PEMBROKE EDITOR TAKES OVER PAPER AT ROUYN. QUE. “mummy-on W'mmm moved.meysresssdnowtobehm1- in; around the {sum and summer homes and making themselves thor- Northbutmbyoor'edemeeeermeo tremor-ether)“. Otoorme.Ahome with its wolves tâ€"het ere mm to sum-ring more then my other piece Recently hem were mppoeed to be dancing around themtemrteotamm Stella-to. Instweekthoeebeerewere reported to have moved to Korch m- ship in the Sum. area. The hem took 28-30 Market Street Ontario Products Co. Limited PHONEâ€"Fruit Marketâ€"Elï¬n 8426. 8427. 8428. 8' NIGHTSâ€"Ho 5904 Write for Shipping Stamp and Pad Mann-rum References: Any Bank or Commercial Agency. BLUEBERRIES Highest Market Prices Ship Your For Best Results and COMMISSION MERCHANT to m The Adana. Wm: mammal" A‘l‘ LAKE WATABEAG JUL! momma»: OJIcOom'I‘th M «as.mm.mm Toronto 3429 38-32