‘ THE CURTIS OPTICAL CO. Schumacher Garls Lose in Second Game Softball Championship Still Tie up Schumacher Young Man Married at Kirkland Lake. Other Items of schumacher News. Schumacher, Aug. 30th, 1933. Speci to The Advance. Mr. Doug. Briden, of Kirkland Lak was a visitor to town last week. igame scheduled for Monday was postâ€" Schumacher, Aug. 30th, 1933. . Specia! | poned until Tuesday owing to the heavy to The Advance. | rain. The home girls did not fare Mr. Doug. Briden, of Kirkland L@ke,| nearly so well as they did at Kirkland was a visitor to town last week. Mr. and Mrs. D. Lang, spent a twol week‘s vacation motoring in Eastern Ontario. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Wylie returned Lake on Saturday, where their score. was 9â€"6. On Tuesday their play was. slow and each player seemed uncertain as to their next play. Owing to their. first base girl, Mrs. A. Fiendel, being on Sunday after having spent the sumâ€" | indisposed, the girls had their positions mer in Guelph and Brantford. Sister Leonard and Sister Geraldinc of the Pembroke Convent were the guests of Miss M. Byrnes last week. Mr. and Mrs. P. Hunter and family | spent the weekâ€"end visiting friends in | Boston Creek. ?up a good game. |\ in the field changed which accounted ‘for their opponents getting such a score. At the end of the fourth the McIntyre were leading by two runs but from there on the game was the Kirkâ€" land Lake girls, and they certainly put The score:â€"7â€"3. Mrs. J. MacMaster and daughter.irrhe line up was:â€"Bessie Bugera, p; Shirley, returned on Sunday from holiday in Kirkland Lake. Mrs. A. Rioux left on Tuesday for a vacation in Toronto. Miss Marguerite Smith entertained a number of young friends on Wednesâ€" day. The evening was spent in bridge and dancing. At the close the youn§ hostess and her mother served a deâ€" lightful lunch. Mr. H. Fosten left last week for Montreal where he will meet Mrs. Fosâ€" ten on her return from England. Mrs. S. Folkins and son left last week to join her husband at the Beattie Mines in Quebec. The Misses Dorothy and Edith Armâ€" strong are visiting relatives and friends in Kirkland Lake. Mrs. Den. Greer, who was a patient at St. Mary‘s hospital, is able to bei i Francis Mrs. G. Robértson, c; Hazel Gilbert, 1st b; Mrs. H. MacLaughlin, 2nd b; Mary Laham, ss; Jessie Malasoni, 3rad b; Bobinsky, _ rf; Alexandra Bugera, cf; Hazel Dainton and Sybil Loughren, lf; subs., Marie Malasoni and Mrs. Fiendel. The final playâ€"off of this series will be played by Kirkâ€" land Lake and the McIntyre on neutral grounds, (Ansonville), on Friday evenâ€" ‘ing at five o‘clock, the champions goâ€" iing then to Sudbury to play the Cance Club for the Howard Ferguson trophy. Miss Coyne, of North Bay, was the guest of Miss M. Byrnes last week. Marriedâ€"At the United . Church manse, Kirkland Lake, Saturday, Auâ€" gust the nineteenth, Frances M., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Joy, of Englehart, to Charles Edward (Bud) only son of Mr. and Mrs. George Couâ€" sineau, of town. Mr. and Mrs. Cousiâ€" home again and her arm is improvID8: | peay will take up residence in Kirkland Den. is yet in the hospital where he 18 | pape progressing nicely and expects to be | home in a short time. Mr. George Shippam left on Saturâ€" day by motor for a trip to Southern Ontario. Miss Violet Baldovin and brother, Kapuskasing‘s horticultural show on August 25th and 26th was a big success, even better than last year, and the atâ€" tendance was also very large despite the rain that fell on the first night. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Wylie returned on Sunday after having spent the sum mer in Guelph and Brantford. Sister Leonard and Sister Geraldin of the Pembroke Convent were th guests of Miss M. Byrnes last week. Mr and Mrs P Hunter and famil Mrs. J. MacMaster Shirley, returned on holiday in Kirkland Mrs. A. Rioux left on Tuesday for a vacation in Toronto. Miss Marguerite Smith entertained a number of young friends on Wednesâ€" day. The evening was spent in bridgeC and dancing. At the close the youn£ hostess and her mother served a deâ€" lightful lunch. Mr. H. Fosten left last week for Montreal where he will meet Mrs. Fosâ€" ten on her return from England. Remember how you used to call the kids who wore them "fourâ€"eyes? and now, they‘re probably not wearing any, and you are. Their par ents did the right thing, corrected oad vision early, and your children The George Taylor Hardware Ltd. Have your children‘s eves cxamined before school starts We have a full line of Westinghouse Dualâ€"Automatic Electric Refrigerators Let us demonstrate one in your home Electric Telephone 300 Timmins \ n Ts Sn ts it ts atn in ce ite in + 3e ateain sn a Faats Â¥ °C ~°¥ Â¥ ~® *# and â€" Sunday from i Lake. on Tuesday for : Open Evenings Quanto, are spending a holiday in ronto. Mrs. D. Fraser entertained the memâ€" bers of the Ladies‘ Auxiliary to a corn roast at her home on Lakeside Drive on Thursday evening. The return game of softball between Kirkland Lake and the McIntyre was played here on Tuesday evening. The Dualâ€"Automatic. Builtin Watchâ€" man. 7â€"Speed Tempâ€" eutun Selector. Buffet topâ€"flat â€"â€"usable. B r o o m â€" high legs. H er m e t ically sealed unit. Quiet tion. Fanâ€"cooled me chanism. Permanent lubâ€" rication. "Safety Zone" food _ compartâ€" ment. M ore â€" usable shelf space. 33 i b on type Porcelain _ enâ€" amelled autoâ€" matic froster. shelves Chromiumâ€"plat. ed hardware. Beautiful _ lac quered cabinets. No radio inter ference. Saves $50 to 8150 per year. Special â€" freerer focr desserts. T r o u b leâ€"free pcrformmce. Guaranteed â€" by Westinghouse. i holiday in To Popular nafuatnateate | «*s ).. l b # A #4 *# _# 2 s‘ s ce ce L LAE LEAAA ETY # 64 4 68 ¢#4 44 48 44 #4 *4 “.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“. e u. s 1. 1t oh. it .t L 44 #4 .“.“ .“.“ .“.“ e Harry Chevrier and Miss Asselin Wedâ€" ded at South End. Marriage at Timmins of Miss Kathleen | Murray and Wm. James Albert Burns, of south End, (her south Porcupine News. South Porcupine, Aug. 29th, 1933. Special to The Advance. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Parnell, of Red Lake, are visiting friends here and in Timmins. Mrs. Wakefield returned to her home in Burlington, Vermont, after a visit with her sister, Mrs. Ireland. Bornâ€"At the Porcupine Presbyterian hospital, on Friday, August 1l1th, to Mr. and Mrs. J. Ostromâ€"a son (James Henry). Mrs. Walter Honer and son left on Monday for a visit to Toronto and Flesherton. They were accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Jamieson, who was roturning to her home at Flesherton. Mr. and Mrs Stringer and daughter, Jean, and Mr. and Mrs. Heximer and baby, Shirley, returned on Saturday from a motor trip to Niagara Falls. Mrs. Barger left for her home .n Oregon, on Monday, after spending the summer with her sister, Mrs. W. H. Johns, at the Dome Mines. Bornâ€"In South Porcupine on Thursâ€" day, August 10th to Mr. and Myrs. Oliver Proulxâ€"a daughter (Janet Ann) Mr. and Mrs. Percy Andrew an@ son, Billie, have returned from a holiday spent at Temagami and Toronto. A bridge and euchre under the ausâ€" pices of St. Joachim‘s Roman Catholic Church will be held in the High School hall, South Porcupine, on the evenâ€" ing of September 12th. Mrs. Dewar, of Truro, Nova Scotla, arrived on Friday evening last to visit her daughter, Mrs. Proulx, and get acquainted with ‘her first grandchild, little Miss Janet Ann. An epidemic of wedding bells has struck South Forcupine to which some of cur hockey players seem to be parâ€" ticularly susceptible. We have two in our reports this week who ‘have fallen victims to Cupid‘s darts and :ï¬ rumour is true we‘ll have several more within the next few weeks. Harry Chevrier for the last four years has been particularly adapt at stavingâ€" off pucks hurled at him from every angle but he could not dodge the little loveâ€"god‘s darts. On Friday, August 25th, he was united in marriage to Lauretta Catharine, youngest dAughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Asselin, of Fort Coulogne, Quebec. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Father Gelinas in St. Joachim‘s church. The groom is the fourth son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Chevrier of Quyon, Quebec. The bride was attended by Miss Corine Gannon. while Edmund Curley, nephew of the groom, acted as his best man. The young bride was becomingly gowned in a blue tailcred suit with hat and shoes to match and wore a corsage of roses and lilyâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. The bridesmaid was gowned in beige crepe with matchâ€" ing accessories. The wedding breakfast and reception was held at the home of the groom‘s brother, Mr. Arthur Chevâ€" rier. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Martineau, of Quyon, sister and brotherâ€"inâ€"law of the groom were outâ€"ofâ€"town guests for pular South End Residents Married THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS The following from The Sudbury Star * 6 .}; is timely and well worthy special conâ€" tÂ¥ | sideration at this moment when too many seem to be worrying over yarns ‘about prison hardships while the vicâ€" tims of the criminals are too often forgotten : "A couple of hundred duped investors stood in a New York cscourtroom and cheered when a man they had trusted was jailed on a fraud charge. Hardâ€" working house servants, charwomen, | storekeepers and others of small means | were victims. ## k hh‘ *# # *+*,**,0*,4*, # S ““.“ *# *#* * °* #* "*o | everything elseâ€"it pays, and pays well, if looked after‘ properly. If neglected it is almost worthless. The successful business men lock after their advertisâ€" ing like they look after their buying +s and displaying of goods. (From The Simece Reformer) The man who says business is too poor to ju.stify a small advertising exâ€" penditure is in the same boat with the man who says he is too sick to take medicine. We have heard men say it doesn ‘t pay to advertise but as we look at the advertisements of merchants we know are successful we prefer their ‘opinion on the matter, says the Alâ€" lxnont.e Gazette. Advertising is like everything elseâ€"it pays, and pays well, WW‘?‘Z“Z“?‘Z“. «* the ceremony. Ths young couple will reside on Strachan avenue and their many friends here wish them bon voyage through life. Another defence man of past hockey teams found out he couldn‘t fend off cupid‘s thrusts and was married this (Tuesday) morning, Aug. 29th, in T:mâ€" mins when Kathleen Margaret, second daughter of Mrs. Murray, of Timmins, and the late James Murray, became the bride of William James Albert, second son of Mrs. Sarah Burns, and the late James Burns, of South Porcupine. Rev. Fr. O‘Gorman tied the nuptial knot. The young couple were unattended. Owing to illness in the bride‘s family the wedding was a very quiet ons. The bride was gowned in a brown ensemble with matching hat and shoos and wore roses and lilyâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. A buffet lunch was served afterward at the bome of the bride‘s mother. Mr. and Mrs. Burns will reside in Mr. A. Ewâ€" ing‘s house at 67 Bruce avenue and are being showered with best wishes by their friends here. Mrs. Burns is a graduate nurse of Timmins hospital and Mr. Burns is on the electrical staff of the Dome. Playing spectacular football, Dome football team won in Kirkland Lake on Saturday last over their soccer eleven in a 2â€"0 score. It was the first game for the Byrnes Charity Cup. There was no score in the first half. In the last half Willie White tallied first, then Chambers, then Rodgers. The return game will be played at the Dome on Saturday, September 9th, as Hamilton District play at Kirkland this coming Saturday. They also play McIntyre in an exhibition game and it is just possâ€" ible, if time permits, that a game may be arranged with Dome football team. Mrs. Ray, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. M. Turner and Mr. MacKenzie are leaving this week for Toronto in the latter‘s car. Mr. Jack McCaffrey and son, Kenâ€" neth, left by motor on Monday morning to visit friends at Ottawa. Mr. Jimmie Winning is holidaying in Toronto. Hardships of Honest Folk Forgotten by the Public "However,. after the agent has been released from prison he can have a fine time writing long articles telling about the terrors of punishment in jail and how prison wardens make the inâ€" mates toe the line can spin quite a yarn against harsh treatment of prisoners. "Of course, he need never ment.on the hardships endured by all the people he duped. Nor need he say that if he had been honest as his victims he would never have been jailed. PRESCRIBES ADVERTISING FOR ANY SICK BUSINESS spectacular football, Dome am won in Kirkland Lake on last over their soccer eleven score. It was the first game Fans saw pienty of action last Monâ€" day night in the bouts staged at the skating rink. They wanted more, howâ€" ever, and excitement rose to a high pitch when the referee, Cliff Caesar, a recent arrival in town, stopped the mal.n bout in the fourth round. The crowd, unable to control themselves, jumped into the ring. The referee and fighters were mildly mobbed, before the police were able to restore order. The ring was broken down, but no serious damage done. The police had no trouble in getting everything under Fights or Monday Develop into Sort of General Melee, when the Raferee Awards Decision in Bout Beâ€" tween â€" Hamilton and Dempsey. Boxing Bouts Here End in Hectic Time damage done. ine poiic?e Nad nV trouble in getting everything under control. Roy Hamilton was given the Northâ€" ern Ontario lightwe‘ght championship when the referee stopped the Hamiltonâ€" Dempsey fight in the fourth round. Both fighters opened fast and kept the fast pace for the whole fight. It was evident that neither of them could have kept that killing pace had the fight lasted ten rounds. Dempsey surâ€" prised everyone by unleashing a burst of speed in the second and third rounds that took Hamilton by surprise. He had Hamilton shaky two or three times and any man who can do that must be fast. However Roy was doing someâ€" thing too and also had Dempsey in bad shape a few times. Roy had a slight edge in the early part of the fight because his footwork was perfect and he was able to leave a oneâ€"two punch and dance out again fast. Dempsey was warned a few times about breakâ€" ing clean. In the fourth Dempsey still refused to break clean so the referee warned him again. This time Dempsey started to tap the referee and tried to push him out of the way. The referee then disqualified him and Dempsey rushed at him. Hamilton jumped at Dempsey then and all three were rollâ€" ing around on the mat. The crowd, unable to stay back, all crowded into the ring and in the rush the ring was torn down. Hamilton and Dempsey were like two tigers trying to break loose and finish it. The police, howâ€" ever, cleared everybody off and started to get a little order. Most of the people there were of the opinion that the fight was stopped too soon and that the referee should have passed off those taps and let the fight continue. From the beginning the referes was not in favour with a large portion of the crowd. Roy seemâ€" ed none the worse after the fight and Dempsey said he was just getting warm when it was stopped. Dempsey says that with another referee he‘ll beat Hamilton any time. That‘s a hard thing to tell because on Monday neither fighter showed any very special superiâ€" ority. The one noticable thing was the decided improvement in Dempsey. He‘s real fast now. The semiâ€"final on this fine card was an 8â€"round fight between Farmer Neable and Porky Tomick, two fast middleâ€" weights. Tomick, the favourite, resortâ€" ed to clinching too often and lost a lot of points this way. Porky was not in the best of condition and tired very easily. Neable was never in trouble although he was groggy twice, but Tomick was groggy too. Neable had no trouble getting the decision. Neable is fast gaining favour with the fight fans as a firstâ€"class fighting man. Jerry McNulty gained a technical knockâ€"out over Ed. Godin in a 6â€"round battle. Referee Arron‘s decision in stopping this fight was disapproved by the crowd although he said he was following the best ring practice in stopâ€" ping the fight to save a dazed man unâ€" necessary punishment. The public here, though, wants action and when the referee stops it when the action starts the fight fans do not like it. The opening bout was a fight beâ€" tween two local boys, instead of the advertised fight between Young Dubeau and~ Sonny Casey. Paul Lemay was seen in action again, this time against Basil McDonald. His usual good brand of boxing earned him the decision. He and McDonald put up a good fight, beâ€" ing very evenly matched. The Toronto Mail and 2# Scotia gave the Liberals their caanc» to see the writing on the wall, and the Conservatives a chance to say that the result of the elections had only local significance. Probably when the election in Ontario takes place Lberals and Conservatives will exchange their philâ€" csophies. South Porcupine, Ont., Aug. 30th, 1933. Special to The Advance. Messrs Sam Petcoff and Peter Dimiâ€" troff are sailing Sunday by the "Westâ€" ernland" for Bulgaria. Mrs. A. Bridsosn ar{i children are holiday:.ng in the South. Mr. Robert Sneddon, brother of Mrs. John Fell, is here from Tcoronto to reâ€" cuperate from a recent illness. Mr..and Mrs. King, of Toronto, are also guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fell, at the Dome Mines. Mr. Jack Pecore and son, Jack, Jr., also Mr. B. Stringer, have returned from a motor trip to Ottawa. Mrs. James Gibson and son, Donald, have returned from Toronto where Mrs. Gibson spent some time in the Lockâ€" wood Clinic and also with her sister, Mrs. Robert Menary, of Freelton. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Costello and Planes Draw Notice at South Porcuipne Mr. and Mrs. Jack Costello and children have returned from Kilaloe. Messrs Michael Cybulski, Ben Tomâ€" chick, and Tommy Ryan, are away on a motcr trip to Ottawa, Montreal ant points east. Big Visiting Plane Along with LocAl Planes. Schoolboy Feotball, and , Other Sports. Other South Porcupine and Dome News. /‘ Rev. L. and Mrs. Hussey have reâ€" turned from their vacation and Mr. Hussey will occupy his pulp‘:t next Sunday evening at the United Church. Sunday School will be resumed at the Dome Mines at two co‘cleck on next Sunday afternocn. Mrs. G. Forster and daughter Gladys, are leaving this week to take up residâ€" encte in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Art Ewing and family are taking up residâ€" ence in the home on Bruce avenue forâ€" merly occupied by Mrs. Forster. The large Superâ€"Universal Fokker zeroplane of the Pigeon River Lumber Company of Port Arthur, arrived at the air base here on Porcupine Lake on Sunday. Its pilot is L. Cheeseman and it carried Messrs Finlayson and Jchnson as passengers. Mr. Finlayson is a son of the Ontario Cabinet Minisâ€" ter of that name. Ed. Ahr‘s two planes have been very busy of late taking men and materials out to various prospects to do exploraâ€" ticn work. This morning as the three planes rode at anchor on the lake at the foot of Golden‘avenue they made a pretty sight. s'\\\\\\'\\\\\\\\s\\\s\\xmxsxxxmxxsxsssssssxm' b t %% ; In Juvenile football on Wednesday night last week Dome and South Porâ€" cupine schoolboy teams played a scoreâ€" less draw. The teams lined up with H. Richmond referee and he made them play real football, checking them up closely on their infringements of any rules. Domeâ€"goal, Honer; backs, W#ff?ï¬lflffl/ï¬llIlff.'ï¬%@wï¬â€™.ï¬ï¬ï¬%â€ï¬ï¬ï¬l?’ï¬Iflï¬% invit WI pla; Phone 26 The Porcupine Advance rcore and son, Jack, Jr., Stringer, have returned trip to Ottawa. W Scene from ‘"Mary and Her Redâ€"Headed Beau‘‘ 1J ~C H ty of d the the Marionette Review H 11 nd old, who has the magic gift of makeâ€"believe i: Chautauqua on the fourth afternoon and take a trip istings Marionettes. numbers they have planned in addition to the Thre« Beanstalk"! Fourth Ave. Baker and Shumilak; halfâ€"backs, Pro«=â€" copic, Bigley, Lillihoog; forwards, rroâ€" copio, J. Murphy, W. Murphy, Red Doran, Uren; spares, Arthur Moyle (goal), R. Moyle, Lightbody, Mike Bakâ€" er, B. Doran. South Porcupineâ€"goal, Teddy Speuth; backs, Robertson, B. Barbas; halfâ€"backs, Brown, Andrews, J. Barbas; forwards, Dysart, Capyk, Cummings, McCann, Manners; spares, Eyre, Spitz. Dome had a decl.ded edge on the field play, Speuth, South End‘s alert little netâ€"minder, having much more to do than Honer but with clever style of his own Teddy stopped them all. Robertson and/Barbas did good work as his rearguard but the town forwards were very lethargic. On the chances they had they should have bagged at least three counts. Schuâ€" milak and Baker gave Honer fine proâ€" tection. McCann made a good start for the net but Lillihoog, the platinum blonde young dynamo, upset him and a free kick was given, off which Baker made a dandy check. Bigley and Jimâ€" mie Procopio fielded some good comâ€" bination but it ended in : "hands" against Baker. Doran dallied too long with Tony Procopio‘s pass to convert it. Lightbody robbed Andrews and centred the leather but to no avail. Capyk made soma good plays for town but they were lone efforts and fruitless. Manners was off colour from his last game. Brown was one of their best. Murphy brothers did not show their usual snappiness for the Dome and Uren‘s work lagged at times. "Midget" Baker was a small bundle of real energy. The Dome and Dome Extension played on Friday night, Dome Extenâ€" s‘on winning in the 1â€"0 score. Richâ€" ardson made the winning tally in the second half. Dome team lined up much the same as Wednesday except that Moyle was in goal and Honer inâ€" side â€" right. Dome â€" Extensionâ€"goal, Burke: backs, Pirie, Millions; halfâ€" backs, B. Chevrier, C. Chevrier, B. Curâ€" tiss; forwards, McGinn, Mitchell, S. McGinn, B. Richardson, 8. Chevrier; spares, Thomas, Richmond, Libby. The big brick building at North Coâ€" balt erected originally as a boys‘ college, but untused for many years past, is likeâ€" ly to be cne of the buildings that will be sold at the tax sale to be held by the township of Bucke this fall. The taxes in arrears on the building is said to reach the ‘sum of about $1,900.00. There was an offer made at a recent meeting of the Bucke township council to purchase the building for $1,000.00. There was also an offer for the building by a Toronto wrecking firm. On the advice of the solicitor of the township, it is understood that both offers were turned down and that the property will go on sale with the other tax sale proâ€" perties. T immins UST 318T,. 1933