count1 Fire and the Home Improvement Plan Ssome Startling Regard to Way to Help. * 217 Bay Street (ELgin 3471) Toronto but the man to see is your local agern t pool, Glasgow Conductor, Mr. A. Stewart Veysey From ST.JOHKN, N.B. Dec. 11â€" toâ€" Belfast Liverpool, Glasgow Conductor, Mr. A. Ntewart Veysey From NEW YORK Dec., 8 Dec Nov,. 25â€" to Belfast, Liverâ€" pool, Glasgow gersol, "Je‘licoe, 1 Listowel, London. Napanee Newmar Palmorston, Paris Mope, Prescott, St Tashota. Tionaga * Reardmore, Belleville, Bracebridge, Bowmanville., Buffailo, Brantâ€" tord, Prighton, Brockville, Capreal, Chatham, Cobourg, Collingwood Cornâ€" wall, Detroit, Foleyet, Gananogue *Geraldton, Glencose, Gogama, Goderich Gravenhurst, Guelph, Hamilton, Harriston, Hornepayne, Huntsville, Inâ€" gersol, *Jcllicoe, Kincardine, Kingston, Kitchener, Linds#y (via Toronto) Listowel, London. *Longlac, Meaford, Midland, ®Morrisburg, Nakina, Napanee Newmarket, Niagara Falils, Oba, Orillia, Gshawa, Owen Sound. Paris, Penetang, Peterboro (via Toronto), Port Arthur. Port Hope, Prescolt, St. Catharines, Sarnia, Southampton, Stratford, Sudbury, Tashota. Tionaga,. Trenton Jct., Whitby, Wiarton, Windsor, Woodstock. The following steamers have been scheduled for your convenience to enable you to spend a happy Christmas among your loved ones in the Homeland. From MONTREAL y. 25â€" AURANIA®" _ to Plymouth Havre, London Conductor, Mr. J. Norman Catton nmnan Domini BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION bâ€""CARINTHIA®" toâ€" Glasgow Belfast, Liverpool Conductor, Mr. J. Mason 11â€" "ANDANIA® to Plymouth to Beifast, Liver Nip lnclined Dir Agents for particulars of Canada‘s Maple Leoaf Contestâ€"Seven Cash Prizesâ€"You may win $100.00!" T429A ll‘l S Imas CANADIAN N Al 11 From HALIFAX ALAUNIA®® to Plymouth London to Cherbourg Sout hampton SCYTHIA®" to Galway, Cobh Liverpool QUEEN MARY‘" to Plyâ€" mouth, Cherbourg, Southâ€" aimpton wC London NOL "rom T. N. O. and N. C. R. Stations Via North Bay and C. N. Railways ALDLSO FROM NORTH BAY PUDILCIT rom 192 imits, ticke Central Rlyv LOW OCEAN RATES 4 ALL CLASSES l1amSDL Gold F ipply to figures, but y« just what bea rigures in ires.â€" One L0 tThe â€"repor! mmissioner. the $21,549.484. Thi: E the ten years of $1.95 for evâ€" in ) 1936 C $333.,462 Al nd information from agents of T. N. 0. d Canadian National Rlvy. Askfor handbill Capi and to Toronto Saturday Night:â€"By the passing of the Dog Act in Denmark, on May 18, which comes into force on January 1 next, all owners of dogs are compelled to take out a public liability insurance policy. The insurance reâ€" quired to be carried is kr. 10,000 ($2210) on each dog against property damage,. and kr. 30,000 ($6630) against personal injuries and death, with a maximum of kr. 100,000 ($22,100) in any cne casutlay. Last year Canada had 4. What caused them? The Dom Commissioner publishes a ver ing list of reported causes. F largest number in any single were reported as being °C "smokers‘ carelessness". Thi: sponsible for 11.1797 fires costi ing they have on the Dominion Govern ment Home Improvement Plan. Tha is just the point to be dealt with in thi done. You can‘t make your own . safe from fire without also giving nearby neighbour some protection member, when a fire once starts tbody can tell where it will stop. prove contr and not g missicner sidering. Nobody us realize selves . {1r ri@gre they are: I Stoves. furnaces, boilers and pipes, 4,138 fires, property loss, $2,767,208; deâ€" fective chimneys and flues,©4,562, proâ€" perty loss, $2,363,079; electrical wiring and appliances, 3,901, property loss, $1.â€"| 285,1763; sparks from chimneys on roofs. 2,119, property loss, $937.671. This is a total of 15,320 fires involving a property loss of$7,353,721. In addition there were 342 fires costing $167,132 caused by lightning striking buildings which were minus lightning rods. There is an old proverb which reads "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure". It is just here that the Home Improyement Plan comes in. You can‘t put out a fire with the Home Imâ€" provement Plan but you can repair and modernize your home in such a way that the fire hazard will be cut down to the minimum. Have you ever thoaought about danger of fire in your home? What about your furnace, your boiler, your pipes? Is there any danger of you being among next year‘s 4.700 people who have fires from this cause? Are your chimneys and flues in perfect condiâ€" tion? What about your electric wiring? Have you a roof fireâ€"proofed where sparks are likely to fall? Pigures and facts about the disastrous fires from such sauses are given in the Fire Comâ€" missicner‘s report. They are worth conâ€" 934. Bi JJ4. Blit lE neXt have to do with de apparatus containec T‘l 11 ‘anada had 42.644 fire hem? The Dominion Fir publishes a very interest orted causes. By far th 97 fires costing $2,7172,â€" xt four categories all defective buildings or hought about your home? What your boiler, your| langer of you being 4.1700 people who| s cause? Are your| ngle groupin ; ~caused b This was re vyour Reâ€" noâ€" light up the Good Queen‘s face. Anyâ€" way this would be funr in a bedroom with a Victorian feeling. With this you might use one of those old piano stools with a square top that used to go with square pianos, cover the top with the been able to a front of a dre:s pink bombazin tiny crystal bu gold picture fr and a pair of c WE ing those pesky back se heose and seeing that y showing. Under the short mirrors place a glass shell On this you may keep y and alluring perfumes in ard bottles, Add a fringec pier glasses 0 of your rcoom one come to end about This mirr will make To day we‘re not going to have a word to say about tables with pewter beakers or lace doilies. We‘re talking about the table a lady sets for herself for her primping momeints. For though a lady may do her dressing in front of the pier glass in her closet door, she‘ll reserve for beâ€"skirted dressing table those glamourous moments when she pats her locks into sculptured elegance. dabs just the right amount of shadow around her eyes (for that soulful look) and quickly does her lips. A corning dressing tableâ€"Hank two pier glasses on the walls at the corner shadts of the hobble skirt! But it docs make a dainty dressing tame of cheerost lace curtain net over a taffeta petticeat. Note the litt‘le brackets with their Dresden figurines above the mirrorâ€"a pretty design for the dressing table wall. yasy Ruffled organdy for curtains and dress patterned in nosegay medallions. and in the centre front of the dressing Pirk Bombazine ed ree ons down me mirror ‘stalâ€"prisir modern effe oarâ€"base. th t up from t 18 VOU her CosI xpress N‘1IY THE PORCUPTIN® ADVANCE. TTMMINS ONTARTIO ba ha PLEASANT HoMES 11 Bedspread into . stores feature sale bedspreads to mat herself reflec framed mirro his Em unhapp her cur nose in a heav 111 :i;;k bombazine nd use crysta by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin nC sephine Empres ng table skirt is sheer and preity in a room with deep blue paper ttl})tl repetition of the nosegay design across the top of the window able. 1A 1 ul crystal fringe ry department and 11 ont of With a VAAY wvalls. op. Sh ted in migiit "not ha ae‘d been able W I paint 1l i Gre dom omm ever FRIDAY, FRIDAY MIDNIGHT and ns w mscc t iess is sn mm THURSDBDAYX FRIDAY, OCT. 21â€"22 SATUKRDAY, OCTOBER 22â€"23 Constance Bennett and Gary Grant in George O‘Brien in *» 56 4 i 99 Topper Windjammer '\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\S‘\S\S\S\\\S\SS\\\\‘\SS\\S\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ Noticeâ€"On double feature programmes coming to our theatres, we request our patrons to attend the theatre not later than 8.00 p.m. for the Second Show if they desire to see the full show. .\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ P \\'\'\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ *A *AAA 8A SAAA AASA tA SA tAAA A A *A A J s A * * 3 ; 84431848 * * * * * 4 kept in mind. F buy a lengtlh of the measurement two sides, plus t which will not (Dressing tables tion for t tS D * 4 5 * 34 SUNDAY MIDNIGHT, MONDA Y and TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17â€"18â€"19 Madeleine Carroll Francis Lederer in "It‘s All Yours" WEDNES. and THURS. QOCT. 20â€"21 Double Feature Programme Barbara Stanwyck and Joel McCrea in "Banjo On My Knee" also Nan Grey and Kent Taylor in FRIDAY, FRIDAY MIDNIGHT and SATUKRDAY, OCT. 15â€"16 Edmund Lowe and Madge Evans in MIDNIGHT SHOWS EVERY FRIDAY AND SUNDA Y "Love In A Bungalow" Special Matinee Every Saturday at 11.15 a.m Timmins Theatres MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 p.m. E Special Matinee at Palace Theatre Eve ADMISSIONâ€"AIll Children 10c he top of the skirt. Whale Palace " Espionage " Car and Passengers Thrown Into River Temagami, Oct. 14. (Special to The Advance.)â€"Allegedly forced against the side of the bridge at the Net Lake narrows at Goward, four miles north a little more full than the front and back. This gives that delightful flouncy look that you want. Even when you have a glass top to your table it is a fine idea to have a covering of the same or contrasting material under the glass. Cover the top of the table first with a thin piece or cotton batting, then (Copyright 1937, by Elizabeth MacRae Boykin.) drawer, have your husband attach a strip of wood to the top of the drawerâ€" front so that it comes close to the top of the table but be certain that the fit is not too close. This piece of wood should be the length of the entire front of the table and to this you will attach your skirt. In the middle of the front of the skirt, which will be the middle of the drawer tog, you can have a decorâ€" ative knob in crystal perhaps or decorâ€" ated with a tailored bow or a bouquet of artificial flowers. This arrangement, simple and yet attractive, eliminates all wory of sagging overâ€"laps since every time you open your drawer you "open" the front skirt. For a full shirred skirt in lighter materials, buy a length of material twice the length around the front, sides and back of your table, and in shirring., always make the sides stretch tightly and evenly a covering of the material, having cut it to the table top‘s pattern, leaving a halfâ€" inch of material for tacking the coverâ€" ing to the sides of the table. of here, by an unknown southâ€"bound motorist travelling at a high rate of speed, three Haileybury residents and one woman from New Liskeard reâ€" ceived an involuntary ducking when their car dropped into the water on Sunday afternoon as the railing gave Accident Near Temagami on Sundayâ€"Afternoon. 98048098 ¢%0 08000 ¢0 00040000 00 o a @4 0090004008 9000800008 0009000009 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o o Children between the ages of Six Months and Six Years should be Inoculated to prevent Diphtheria. INOCULATION IS SAFE, HARMLESS AND LASTING. Children of preâ€"school age may receive free inocuâ€" lation against diphtheria at the Clinic on Monday and Tuesday afternoons, between 3.00 and 4.00 o‘clock, October 18th and 19th, 1937. Inoculaton is given in Three Doses; Three Weeks botween Each Dosc Diphtheria is a Dangerous, Deadly Discase of Childhood. DIPHTH E RI A THURSDAY FRIDAY, OCT. 14â€"15 Olivia De Haviland and Ian Hunter in SATURDAY, SUNDAY MIDNIGHT, MONDAY, OCTOBER, 16â€"17â€"18 Dick Foranâ€"the singing Cowboy in TUES. and WEDNES., OCT,; 1920 Double Feature Programme Bruce Cabot and Margaret Churchill in MIDNIGHT SHOW Every Sunday at 12.01 (midnig EVENING 7.00 and 8.50 p.m. Every Saturday at 11.15 a.imn. Goldfield s "On Again Off Again also Wheeler and Woosley in "Without Children ‘Cherokee Strip" " Call It a Dav" Members of the party were Farlane, retired principal « bury public school; his da law, Mrs. Frank McFarls Marjorie Tullis, most recen ment to the public schoo Haileybury, and Mrs. Peteor New Liskeard. They were all from a visit to southern !the accident occurred. Identity of the other motorist was not established, although he is said to have returned to the scene of the misâ€" hap, but to have disappeared before Provincial Constable Bert Braney, sumâ€" moned from here by telephone, could arrive at Goward. His number was not obtained, it was stated. The car in which the northern party was travelâ€" ling was later taken from the lake and towed to Haileybury, little damaged except that its upholstery was soaked. The automobile dropped into six feet of water, remaining upright in the lake with about eight inches of its structure showing. Miss Tullis swam ashore and Mr. McFarlane to the bridge, the others being taken off in boats which put out to the rescue. All four were taken to a cottage owned by the Temagami Timber Co. and made comfortable, later being motored home by Douglas Briden, manager of the Goodfish mine. Blairmore Enterprise:â€"In Alberta no one can be forced to see the impossible., Eullest Measure: J. A. MecINNIS, M.D ML.0)1.H . Pleasure Péteér Garvin, of ere all returning rn Ontario when lane; Mis nt appoint MC _ Hailey L. n e., All ed by made homse