Vol. XXIV. No. 80 Published at Timmins. Bvery MONDAY and uts macher, formerly of South Porcwine, wm conduct the services. On Monday eveninz, Oct. 23rd, there will be the usual anniversary supper at the church from 5 to 7. ‘This is always very happy feature of the anniversary observance. on the occasion of the 25th 28th Anniversary of the United Church of South Porcupine Anniversary Sunday, October 22nd. Rev. Gilmour Smith, B.A a RevFJ Baine M.A., B.D., to Conduct Serâ€" vices. Ariniversary Supper on Mnnday, October 23rd. Clubs and Societies Hold Meetings at Schumacher Fourth of Leadership Trainâ€" Schumacher, Oct. 18. â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"The Consumers‘ Coâ€" operative held a very successful whist drive in the Daffodil Community hall last Friday evening. Whist was played and the prize winners wereâ€"ladies, 1st, men, lst, Mr. C. Preneveau; 2nd, Mr. Von Krughnett; consolation prize, Mrs. C. Brown. After the cards a nice lunch was served and the rest of the eveniniz was spent in dancing, Miss Muriel Harris accompaning at ‘the ‘The 5¢0 Card Club met at the home of Mrs. C Brown, Second Ave. Five hundred was played, and the prize winâ€" ners wereâ€"ist, Mrs. Tario; 2nd, Mrs. Forsythe; 3rd, Mrs. Soucie; door prize, Mrs. G. Robertson. After the cards the Penitentiary Term for Robbing Man in Local Beverage Parlour The stone walls of Kingston peniâ€" tentiary will be the home of Jerry Mcâ€" Nulty for the next two years, as the Timmins man was convicted or robbing. William Vichoff of a purse containing $148 in a local beverage rcom on Sept. Oth dast. f Conducting his own defence in a clever manner, McNulty won an RAcâ€" quittal on a charge of robbing Frank Laface of $50 followinz an alleged fight in the early hours of Oct. 4th and was successful in having a charge of car theft laid by Laface reduced to one of joy riding. He was given six months on the latter count. ‘The sentences in the Timmins court bring to a total of sixâ€"andâ€"aâ€"half years the time which has been handed to McNulty during the past week. . .He received two years at South Porcupine on Tuesday for breaking and entering the Marshallâ€"Bociestone . Hardware Store there and two years at Sturgeon Falls last week for breaking and enâ€" Jerry McNulty Acquitted on Another Charge of Robbing F. Laface of $50. Convicted at South Porcupine of Enâ€" tering Hardware Store There. ' His companions on the Bouth Eind theft, Romeo Mayer, and Paul Daigâ€" neault reoem 15 months and 182 soon drew the larger proportion of the MiXton 8. Lovermg, Rev. J. C. Cochrane( later superintendent of missions), Rev. 6. Revy. M. Bumford, Rev. H. Lyons, Rev. was very ‘interesting and instructive hostess served a nice lunch and a pleasâ€" Wagze Scale Charge Settled and Case is Withdrawn Lyttle' (the present minister). The Young Pecple‘s Societies of the United Churches met on Monday night in Trinity United Church, This meetâ€" ing was fourth in a series of Leaderâ€" ant evening was enjoyed. . 2 A charge under ‘the Industrial Standards Act laid against Alex Feldâ€" man was withGrawn in Timmins police court yesterday when the complainant, J. A. Larocque, inspector of the Proâ€" vincial Department of Welfare, reâ€" ported to Magistrate Atkinson that the matter had been settled by payment in "My memory is ‘excellent," . said Smith, "but there are three things I never remember: I can‘t remember names, I can‘t remember faces and 1 can‘t rememberâ€"I forget what the third thing was." Naybob Results Now the Best in History of Mine (From Yesterday‘s Globe and Mail) ‘ President R. J. Naylor of Naybob Gold Mines, Porcupine district, who is now in Timmins, advised us by longâ€" distance phone yesterday that recent milling results and developments have been the best and most important in the history of the company. milled, heads averaging $8.54 and reâ€" covery $8.017, for total ‘of $33,064.78, with costs, including development, at $20,328.76, leaving an operating profit of $12,736.02. Mining costs were $3.19 per ton and development costs $1.73, making total of $4.92 per ton. Development on the 500 level during the last month has been most gratifyâ€" ing, drift showinz 165 feet of continuâ€" ous ore, with maximum width .of 20 feet, along the upward continuation of No. 2 orebody exposed on the 700 level and there proved by diamondâ€"drilling and boxâ€"holing, with widths up to 35 Now, What Was It? â€â€˜*h~ ‘-.‘- Gunman and Sweetheart Receive Jail Terms | in Timmins Court evening at a whist drive in the Legion hall, when seventeen tables of whist were played. Mrs, Ann Harvey and Mrs. W. Wilkinson acted as M.C.‘s durâ€" ing the and a «eticious lunch was served by Mrs. Jean Smith and the kitchen commitiee. Winners at whist were as followsâ€" Ladies, 1st, Mrs. E. Montigny; 2nd, Mrs. F. Greve; 3rd, Mrs. Huyton:; gentleâ€" menâ€"iIst, Mrs. Whittam; I2nd, Myrs. playing as gentlemen). j On Tuesday evening of next week, the ladies will again entertain at whist, and on Monday, Tuesday and Wedâ€" nesday, of each week, the members are asked to remember the work meetings in aid of the Red Cross.â€" Work Meetings Next Week for the Red Cross. lection â€"ofâ€"toilet. sets..smoking. sundries and sox Which had been found in her Exchange:â€"You shouldn‘t wise answer to a fcol question Man Given a Year for Carrying Concealed Revolver and Two Terms of Six Months for Receiving Stolen Goods. He Pleaded Guilty. He was Given Another Term of a Year for Breaking and Entering at South Porcupine. Paul Daignault and his blonde sweetheart, Betty Leblanc, were both sentenced to jail terms by Magistrate Atkinson in Timmins police court yesâ€" terday. Daignault received a year for carrying a concealed revolver and six months each on two counts of receivâ€" ing stolen goods after he had pleaded guilty to all three charges.. Miss Leâ€" blanc was given ‘three months when she pleaded guilty to receiving stolen Another charge of receiving against: Miss: Leblanc . was: withdrawn by the Crown when Daig'nault accepted responsibility for a miscellaneous colâ€" (Golf, lennls. Eishing, Riding, Yachting ~"i~ntnria Snorts During Winter Months f1olf, temmis, lawn bowling, riding, hunting and fishing may be unusual winter sports for most of Canada but not for Vicâ€" toria, beautiful Island capital of British Columbia, where snow is a novelty, flowers bloom throughout the year, and overcoats are TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19TH, 1989 . o oi n 0 Single Copy Five Centy Raynsford Jockey Don Meade was kidnapped by two men who threatened his baby‘s life, but he rode five horses, including one winner, before helping police capture ohe of the alleged exâ€" tortionistsâ€"all in 20 hours. He was chanzed with receiving the revolver knowing it ‘to be stolen. It belong to D.. W. Bent of 102 Mountjoy street north. Daignault was taken into custody after a struggle with Provincial Conâ€" stakle Worrall and Constable Atkinson who found a loaded .25 calibre autoâ€" matic hidden inside his clothes when they searched him after bringing him in to the police station. Daignault was convicted of breaking. and entering the Marshall-EacIesbone] Hardware store @ait South Porcupine and] was sentenced to one year in the reâ€" formatery on TDuesday at South "Por= Another Pleads Guilty to Charge of Being "Found in" cupine. : As a further sequel to recent police gam!bling raids, Frank Kurt pleaded guilty and was fined $20 and costs or 30 days in Timmins court yesterday on a charge of beiriz "found in." and Big and Little Qualicum. Best known of the winter atâ€" tractions is the Midâ€"Winter Golf Tournament which will be held this year on the Royal Colwood ‘of which the most mmum u the trophy presented Sir Edward Beatty, make the by Sir tourney one of the most popular pounds is found in eastâ€"slope rivers such as the Oyster, Cowâ€" ichan, Englishman‘s, Nanaimo, Has Busy Day Riding, hiking, lawn bowling, boating are but a few more sports that are as popular in Victoria in winter as in summer. are arranged from time <to time, named afiter flowers then in bloom. Probably the most pictuâ€" resque celebration is the â€"Christâ€" mas festival in Old English style, complete with boar‘s head, yule logs, wassail bowl and carols. Victoria and the Empress Hotel tact that foreign cxmzo under war pressure makes a Canadian doliar worth oonaldorlbly more in Canads than in the Unitedâ€"States. â€" But so great was his antipathy toâ€" 'w'ards the public limelight that he observed the anniversary in just about ;the same way as he worked through his long journalistic career â€" he reâ€". mained behind the scenes while newsâ€" papers throughout Canada paid tribute gto him. He did accept an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from: MoGill University, and ‘he considered â€" that more than sufficient to mark the halfâ€" century milestone in his. ca.reeg % A ‘kindly, quiet man, he: seldom wp‘- peared in public, and probably wrote as many words anonymously as any newspaperman in Oanada § son of a Met.hod'ist, minister, ‘ | Carman . joined the staff of the old ‘Toronto Globe as a cub reporter in 1887. That was the start of a varied jJournalistic life that eventually brought |him to The Monteral Star, under the late Lord Atholstan, in 1891. â€" Wedding at Notre Dame des Lourdes Church Yesterday The Notre Dame des Lourdes Roman Catholic Church was the scene of a charming weddinz on Wednesday morning at 8 o‘clock, when the Rev. Fr. Roberge united in marriage Anna, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andre SBpencâ€" er, and Mr. Rodoliphe St. Dennis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alerandre St. Dennis. ‘The bride, who was becomingly atâ€" tired for the occasion, was given in marriage by her father, while the groom was attended by his father. Mis§s Anna Spencer and Mr. Rodolphe St. Dennis Marâ€" Red Cross Home Nursing Course at Schumacher All the ladies in Schumacher who are interested in taking the Home Nursâ€" ing Course for the Red Cross under Miss Wing are asked to hand in their names to ‘Mrs. Sinclair MacMillan, phone McIntyre 26 before the end of this week. All persons interested are requested to register as soon as pos- silble. . Montreal, Oct. 17.â€"Death has ended more than a halfâ€"century‘s newspaper work for Albert Rictiardson Carman, whose writings were known far more widely than was his name. â€" Mr. Carman, editorâ€"inâ€"chief. of The Montreal Daily Star, died at his home last night after a briefâ€"illness. He was 74 years old, and two years ago "celeâ€" brated‘" the golden jubilee of his entry in the journalistic field. Noted Editor Passes Affer Over Fifty Years‘ Work. ried and Mrs. St. Dennis will reside : Bchumacher, Oct. 186.â€"(Special to The: Advance) â€" The Schumacher Branch of the Red Cross held a comâ€" munity night at the Mcintyre Arena on Monday night. The president, Mr. P. Boyce, was chairman. The meeting opened with the singing of "O, Canada." Mr. John Beattie, of the Delnite Mr. P. A. Boyce, President of the Society, Outlined Aims . of Organization and Urged All to Assist. Address by gil; txini.ctJ . Ennis. Other News from Schumacher and Mine read the minutes of the previous Schumacher Branch of Red Cross Holds Very Interesting Meeting Mr. Boyce in a very interesting adâ€" dress outlined the work that had been accomplished in the past by the Red Gross Society and he felt sure that if everyone would come out voluntarily and wholeâ€"heartedly,"‘ still greater work could be done. It was up to everyone to do their bit in this great cause. Mr. Boyce thanked the MciIntyre FP.C. Ladâ€" ies‘ Auxiliary for their donatton to the Ret Cross Society. ~ Mrs. Armitage saniz several selections, Mr. Boyce called on Mr. R. J. Ennis to say a few words. Mr. Ennis said it was a pleasure to be there but he would like to see a better attendance, so he thought he would form an attendance committee and he would be chainman. He asked everyone present to bring 10 new members to the next meeting. He said the bigger the crowd the more interesting it would be. # The McIntyre Band under the direcâ€" tion of Mr. Baden played several selecâ€" tions during the evening and was much appreciated. ~â€"The singing of the National Anthem brought a very pleasant evening to ‘The play put on by the Junior Red Cross was much enjoyed. The Croatian Onchestra played severâ€" al selections and won much applause. ‘The hit of the evening was the singâ€" accompanied at the â€"plano by <Mrs «â€"‘The McIntyre F®.C. Ladies‘ Auxiliary metatthehomeoers Alex Mair on" Tuesday evening. Whist Wfa§ playâ€" ed and the winners of the nice prizes wereâ€"Ilst, Mrs. Victor Phillips; 2nd, Mrs. Alex Mair; 3rd, Mrs. James Stirâ€" rat. After the cards an event of speâ€" clat interest took place. Mrs. James Dawson, president of the club, on beâ€" half of the memibers, presented a lovely cot to Baby Urquhart, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Urguhart in honâ€" our of being the first baby born since the club started, almost two years ago. Mr. Urquhart replied, and on behalf of his wife and younla daughter thankâ€" ed the ladies for their lovely gift. The hostess served a delicious lunch and a very pleasant evening was enjoyed by all who attended. Home Nursing Classes 'Miss L. Wing, convener of the Home Nursing Classes for the Schumacher branch of the Red Cross, announces that the classes will commence shortly. Any ladies wishing to take this course should get in touch with Mrs. Sinclair MacMillan, phone MolIntyre 26. Classes will be arranged and graduate nurses will be in charge. This Home Nursing Class will be beneficial to all women and should be taken advantage of. Everyone is asked to rezister as soon as possible. â€" Entertained MciIntyre F.C. Auxiliary _ moved ism:.o town Tuesday and have taken up residence at 120 First Ave. Mr. Stan Biske, principal of the Mrs. T. Rendall, Elm street south, Timmins, entertained the members of the McIntyre F.C. Ladies‘ Auxiliary to social evening at her home last Friâ€" day evening. During the evening the hostess served a delicious lunch. _ Miss Catherine MacKenzie who has spent the summer in Toronto, is visitâ€" ing for a few days at the home of het aeunt, Mrs. Dave Bennett, Fifth Ave., before returning to her home in Alâ€" berta. Miss MacKenzie is a graduate of Alberta University. Miss A. Bugera, Second Ave., returnâ€" ed home Sunday after visiting for the past two weeks at the home of her sistâ€" er and brotherâ€"inâ€"law, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson, Belle Terre Mincs. Miss Bugera attended the opening of the MciIntyre‘s new club house there last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. T. MacKenzie returnâ€" ed on Sunday from their honeymoon, and have taken up residence in the Korson Block, First Ave. Mr. Bill Dillon attended the opening o the MciIntyre new club house at Mud Lake last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bennett returned on Saturday from their honeymoon and have taken up residence on Fifth Ave. Mr. C. McDonald, First Ave., attendâ€" ed the openiriza of the new club house at Mud Lake last weekâ€"end. . 8. McIntyre F.C. Ladies‘ Auxiliary AnnMarie Millere and Hilda ‘ The report on Germany‘s public [health service, prepared by the Division spending a holiday in Southern Onâ€"« Report Published on Public Health in German Reich Mr. August Bettiol was in Mud Lake, for the weekâ€"end, attending the openâ€" ing of the McIntyre new club house. Figures Sent Out Before the War Commenced. of Public Hygiene of the Reich‘s Deâ€" partment of the Interior, appeared in Berlin in August. As the information was sent out by the Berlin correspondâ€" ent of the Journal of the American Medical Association before the War commenced, the figures quoted are beâ€" lieved to be correct. They are of inâ€" beresttoanasbea«rlngonmtmal conditions in Germany. The number of marriages in 1038, 644,363 is given as an increase from 9.1 to 9.4 per thousand (Canada‘s rate is 7.9) and births 1,346,911 an increase from 18.8 to 19.7 per thousand (Canaâ€" da‘s rate is 2065). Families with two and three children appear to be on the increase.. The general mortality in Germany has remained unchanged. ‘The mortality rate for tuberculosis decreased from 69 to 63 per hundred thousand persons as compared with Canada‘s rate, 54.6. Deaths from influâ€" enza receded but more deaths occurred from pneumonia. Poliomyelitis greatly dincreased and there was further inâ€" crease in diphtheria and mealses morâ€" tality. ‘ ‘The report on conditions of the naâ€" tion‘s youth criticizes briefly immodâ€" erate cigarette smoking and prema.turo Silicosis Was Known and . Studied 250 Years Ago The most unfavouraible sections in the report on adults concern farmers‘ wives. Hard manual labour and birth frequency are assigned as the reasons. Sanitation is not what it should be in many regions, partly because married women are engaged in outside work, partly because of the large size of the families. However, some of this is due to a certain scarcity of water. Lack of beds and bedding has disâ€" appeared. In spite of energetic steps, including the jailing of large numbers of physicians, midwives and persons in ordinary walks of life, the number of abortions is everywhere deplorably (By J. W. 8. McCullough, MD., D.PH.) Silicosis and other occupational haszâ€" ards ‘to which modern science gives much attention not only existed cenâ€" turies ago, but they were also recog'niz- ed then, Neither is compensation laws for in- dustrial diseases a new idea. _ They were proposed as far back as 1690 when a Venetian doctor, Bernardino Ramazâ€" zini wrote a work on Diseases of Tradesmen (‘‘De Morbis Artificlun") found in the University of Pennsylâ€" vania library and its translation brings out facts that are most interesting in view of the period in which it was written. Ramazzini, it appears .made a pracâ€" tice of leaving the sick bed and going to where the patient worked, to study materials and hylzienic conditions as a clue to the iliness. In that way he obtained information, which he careâ€" fully recorded, on certain occupational diseases known today. He knew about sMicosisâ€"the disabling lung diseaseâ€" which he saw afflicting the dustâ€" breathing workers in the pottery and glassâ€"making industriecs. Ramazini anticipated modern sanitation methods by suggesting that materials be mwetted to keep dust down and that arrangeâ€" ments be made for adequate ventilaâ€" tion. Speaking of the occupational hazâ€" ards of the white collar workers of two and a half centuries ago, he said of scholars, that the sedentary posture and intense concentration were bad for digestion. He even discussed writer‘s cramp. His prescription for these llls was "Get more of the outdoors into your life." .