Christmas Section Langdon Langdon Dean Kester, K.C. BARRISTER sSOLICITOR NOTARYX 13 Third Ave. _ Timmins ~14â€"26 BARRISTERS and SOLICITORS 2 â€"Third Avenue JAMES R. MacBRIEN FRANK H. BAILEY, LLB 10 Balsam St. North, Timmins, Ont. Accounting Auditing P. H. LAPORTE, C. G. A. Systems Installed Income Tax Returos Filed . Phonts 270â€"228â€"286 P.O. Box 147 ATS.C., AL.C.M.) TEACHER OF SINGING,, PIANO, HARMONY, COMPOSITION 72 Maple istreet 8. 14 Third Avenue MacBrien Bailey ARCHITECT 7 Reed Block Timmins Registered Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Etc. 23 Fourth Ave, Phone 362 CHAS. V. GALLAGHER Arch:Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.8. Ontario Land Surveyor Townsites Mining Claims Contracts Municipal Building, South Porcupine ESwiss Watchmaker Graduate of the Famous Horologicai Institute of Switzerland Phone 1365 % Credit Reports Collections Accounting and Auditing 10 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228â€"286 .0. Box 147 2 ind Phone 46 P.O. Box 312 Third Avenue SPECYALIST Eyo, Ear, Nose and Throat Empire Block _ Timmins 14â€"28 J. E. Lacaurciere Co. PORCUPINE CREDIT Corporation Ltd. 73 Bank St., Ottawa, Can. 0. E. Kristensen Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. Barrister, Solicitor, Etce. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENTUE Phone 640 Bank of Commerce Bullding PHONE 807 Registored Patent Solicitors Full Information FREE on Request D. R. Frankiin BARRISTERSâ€"ATâ€"LAW AVOCATS ETâ€"NOTAILES S. A, Caldbick Barristers, Solicitors, Ete MASSEY BLOCK TIMMINS, ONT. and South Porcupine Drâ€" Herb Metcalfe Physician and Surgeon F. BAUMAN $., W. WOODS, O.L.S. Over Pierce Hardware 19 Wilson Ave. NEUROCALOMETER (Bachelor of Music) Over Marvey‘s Drug Phone 933 CHIROPRACTOR Timmins, Ont. | Emplire Block Timmins â€"14â€"20 ~14â€"20 they‘re made of white ostrich feathers or else of ermine tails. At their friendâ€" liest, they‘re still evergreens trimmed in the old way. In between there are many bright variationsâ€"stylized trees of thin clear plastic painted with deliâ€" cate white foliage are eerie and delightâ€" ful. Gold lagce paper doilies made into small prim trees are festive too, as are trees of plastic spangled with sequins. Aluminum foil trees in either gold or silver nish are effective as are trees made of gilded pine cones strung toâ€" gether on a central pole. A treeâ€"shaped frame of chicken wire is used as a base for a tree and covered with red and FPor a little day, the town is hung with holly and touched with a mystic glamor. On frosty lawns the outdoor trees turn a prosaic world into a fantastic fairyâ€" land. While within door â€" but then Christmas always has its heart beside homely hearths. So, indoors, every family is aglow with the final flurries of preparations. And decorating the house with Christmas cheer is an important part of the season‘s gayety. In the Old Gay Way Christmas trees have gone themselves one better this year. At their maddest, SANIT \T Y NO WAITING SAT.SF..CTION CUARANTEED Those who â€"are United C@rar Stors, 20 Third Ave. BAILIFFS, COLLECTORS and AUCTIONEERS Rooem 6, 3 Pine Street North Timmins, Ont. Room L, 3la Government Rd. W. Kirkland Lake, Ont. E. C. Brewer Ltd. Silver leaf swags made of aluminium, foil, silver stars .and. pnmr‘[:hgels with silver wings trim this stylized. Chrlstma.s Tree;" "ty $ "Seotty" Andrews DECORATIONS FOR FASHIONABLE FESTIVITIES gone themselves t their maddest, ostrich feathers At their friendâ€" xXpr PLEAsANT HoMES Garlands of Greens Garlands to match or in the same feeling as your wreaths achieve an efâ€" fective ensemble, And for all the fancy and unusual Christmas decorations to be found. garilands of evergreens tonâ€" cones. You can â€"also get garlands in Christmas balls or gilded nuts or pine too can be entwined with fruit or silver or gold foil leaves or of smartly sophisticated plastics. from the usual holly wreath tied with a red bow are concocting all sorts of | other novel ideas. <An evergreen wreath entwined with gilded acorns and pine : cones is charming. A big wreath of , California huckleberry leaves entwined | with small bright lemons and miniature | tangerine oranges is gay and different. A Della Robbia wreath made of an assortment of fruit and laurel leaves has a classic beauty. A Regency wreath made of austere branches of laurel and tied with a stiff gold satin bow is smart when there is an open space at the top: of the wreath. A rather full evergreen’ shiny silver ribbon and accented with silvered walnuts has a formal charm. A stylized wreath with leaves of gold paper is lovely for certain rooms. So are wreaths of clear plastics with scinâ€" tilating white fernâ€"like leaves painted on them. vreath bound round and.round with by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin This tree is trimmed with the new flat cutâ€"out type of ornament made of aluminium fSil painted like the old time glass balls. These ornaâ€" ments don‘t break, can be packed flat and can be used on outdoor trees as well as inside, THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO | The vagaries of the weather in the 9past few weeks has prevented good ice at the Kapuskasing arena, but it is hoped to open the arena on Dec. 28th with a skating carnival and mocassin ; dance, | â€" Berlin, Dec. 20.â€"Germany‘s moneyâ€" | like her airplanesâ€"is being made as far | as possible from domestic products such ‘as aluminum and paper. Ssed pods, burs, cones, acorns,: walâ€" nuts, small ears of popcorn, blades of wheat, mili maize heads, laurel and huckleberry leaves are all effective for Christmas when they‘re gilded; then they‘re used for wreaths or garlands or to heap on trays or in low * baskets. Charm strings, made of, theseithings Qqr of evergreens, like strings of gourds, are effective to hang on the‘ door and in the windows instead ‘of wreaths for those who like a _change;. A "bouquet" of toys, such as little trumpets, garden rakes, and striped‘ stick] candy canes, tied with a big red bow,/is appropriate in~certain places. _ ; Mystic Angels Worldly angels are popular fanâ€" tasies for Christmas decorations but we personally prefer the/more sedate and mystic angels ‘and madonans. The creche is becoming an increasingly imâ€" portant part of ‘the American Christâ€" mas, and most families with children makea point to have one in order that the children will ‘have dramatized for them the real meaning of Christmas in our : civilization.‘ Centerpieces around the town this Christmastide arevversatile and amusâ€" ing. â€" Thes three â€" tier arrangement (achieved ‘by the use of an; antique epergne if you‘re luck enough:to have one or else by three ‘wooden chopping bowls of graduated size â€" fastened to a pole run through theirâ€"centers) sugâ€" gests many‘ bright decorations.,. Or. the idea can be carried out by ‘three round pieces of plyboard with a pole run through the center. These layers can be decorated with bright glass Christâ€" mas balls and scintilating silver rain, or with fragrant evergreens, or they can be painted white or green or red to hold heaps of small gifts. Another popâ€" ular type of centerpiece is a low natural basket filled with evergreens and glass Christmas balls. In shortâ€"to judge by the way the old town is decking itself out for the holidays, it would seem that this wili be a very mery Christmas for everybody and so we hope it is with all our German planes are being made from 98 per cent. German materials. ' KAPUSKASING ARENA TO BE FORMALLY REâ€"OPENED DEC. 28 The Reichsbank announced today it soon would begin issuing aluminum 50â€" pfenning coins (20 cents) to replace the present nickel coin. Paper one, two and fiveâ€"mark notes were circulated some time ago to reâ€" place coins of nickel. Germany Said to Plan to Abandon Nickel Coins and heart Released by Consolfiated News Features, Intc.) Haileybury, Dec. 21.â€"(Special: to \The Advance)â€"Haileybury town counâ€" Icil is requesting the Ontario Governâ€" ment to include in the proposed legislaâ€" tion providing for changing the method | of holding municipal elections, some lprovision for an appeal to the citizens jif a council should be disqualified for cause and following an investigation ;made by the provincial authorities. ;Discussing the subject at the December meeting of council, a motion sponsored Iby Councillors L. McLaughlan and H. ‘E. Cawley was carried, and asking the _government to include in the legislation | to be brought down a clause empowerâ€" ‘ing the Minister of Municipal Affairs 'to investigate complaints made by petiâ€" ‘tion from the citizens and, if these are found to be justified after enquiry to dissolve the council on the grounds set forth and provide means for the holdâ€" ‘ing of another election promptly. It | was set forth in the motion that "it is considered advisable in the interest of \the ratepayers to demand that their | municipal affairs shall be administered in the best interests of the majority at all times." All members of the present Haileybury council are prepared to run again, it is announced, the number inâ€" cluding Councillor John A. McKinnon, who was first elected to office 30 years | ago and is now completing his eighâ€" ‘teenth term. He hopes to make it an even twenty, he said. Another Method of Relieving Asthmatic Attacks Asthma is now considered a group of symptoms due to various causes. The effect of these causes is to tighten (or | | make smalier) the little air tubes that. carry the air from the tiny airâ€"sacs back to the large bronchial tubes and thence out of the body. Naturally any little portion of mucous that is in these tiny tubes has a hard time getting out. and so hard coughing is necessary to remove it. While search by skin and other tests is being made to find why the little tubes are being made smaller or tightâ€" er, or anything else that may be interâ€" fering with the inward and outward flow of air, something must be done to. prevent or shorten the attacks. I have spoken before of the suggesâ€" tion of the Asthma Research Council of Great Britain. The patient kneels on a chair, puts his hands on the floor with his head between them and then coughs vigorously for one or two minâ€" utes. This "upsideâ€"down" position toâ€" gether with the hard coughing is usualâ€" ly sufficient to remove the plug of mucous from the tiny airâ€"sac or tube and so give relief. For years the use of three or four drops of amyl nitrite inhaled from a handkerchief, atropine, nitroglycerin, morphine, epinephrine (adrenalin), and cther drugs have been used with sucâ€" cess during attacks. The injection of 15 drops of adrenalin often stops an attack instantly as it opens up the tiny little air tubes and also the large bronâ€" chial tubes so that the patient is enâ€" abled to breathe naturally. The Common Cold Are you bothered with colds three or four times a year? Have you ever stopâ€" ped to consider the consequences? Send for Dr. Barton‘s illuminating booklet THE COMMON COLD, the ailment that receives so little attention yet may be as dangerous as being attacked by a hungry lion. Ask for booklet No 104, enclosing Ten Cents to cover cost of service and handling. Be sure to give your name and full address, and address your request to The Bell Libâ€" rary, in care of The Advance, Timmins, 247 West 43rd St., New York City. The point then is that the search for the cause of asthmaâ€"pollen, dust, fur, feathers, obstructions in nose and throatâ€"should always go on, but in the meantime it is very satisfactory to know that one more effective method of releiving attacks has been discovâ€" ered. "In a comparatively short time this methodâ€"inhaling a 1â€"100 solution of ad4renalinâ€"has become of universal usâ€" age, and may be regarded as the greatâ€" est single advance in the treatment and prevention of asthmotic attacks withâ€" in recent years." Toronto Telegramâ€"Simile: As Unâ€" comfortable as earâ€"mufils are to a gossip. Instead of using the adrenalin by inâ€" jection, physicians in Denmark, Great Britain, and the United States have had success in inhaling a solution of adrenalin 1 to 100, instead of the soluâ€" tion of 1 to 1000 as used when injected. Drs. Graeser and Rowe, in American Journal of Diseases of Children state that, Haileybury Council Asks Protection of KRatepayers (by James W. Barton, M.D.) . Snelgrove, A. E. Wadge, M. Horinessâ€"General Agentsâ€"Timmins. J. B. Kelly, Division Manager, North Bay. of PBours Chbat (| / sIRTING _ Bobp | THE NEWS Crown Lifs Progress reflects Public Approval M%\M\MW-M‘QIH% and energies to that taskâ€"and 4 sales News correspondents were "temporâ€" arily withdrawn" from the wes‘!‘n front recently but not before Kenneth T. Downs, of International News Serâ€" vice, managed with a companion, to spend three days and two nights at an outpost held by Moroccans in the Vosges foothills near Wissembourg. His account was a notible piece of reporting. Exerpts from it give some idea of life at the front: "Looking as tough as saddle leather | Cleveland, Heifetz first performed it. and about the same colour from 20| Critics acclaimed it, and its performâ€" years in the Moroccan sun and winds,| anee established Walton, who at the the adjutant smiled, barked an Ord°T | present time is driving an ambulance in Arabic and in less than a minute W€ | somewhere in England, more firmly were swinging off through the wo0ds | tnan ever as a composer of, greatness single file. Six riflemen were ahead | walton grieved that he was not able and six behind. . i to hear it but Heifetz promised that he We followed the fores? across sAYâ€" | would make him a recording and send age, rocky plateau full of heather down ! it to him. ‘"We followed the foresi across a sayvâ€" age, rocky plateau full of heather down into a long crooked valley. ‘"Finally we came upon another. ofâ€" ficer in a clearing with 30â€"odd Moors. Though we had gone only two miles it had taken us half an hour because of the ankleâ€"deep mud in the valleys and the spongy ground in the hills." And again; "Immediately after dark this entire area becomes a sort of No Man‘s Land. with patrols on both sides operating through the valleys. The Germans never fail to send patrols nightly. They operate in groups of 40, preceded by highly trained dogs which come to a silent ‘point‘ when they scent other men. "The German patrols are armed with grenades, pistols and knives. Their object is information. They want prisoners if possible (to learn about French troop dispositions, reblaceâ€" ments). "They also want to tempt us to fire with automatic arms in order to get cur position. ‘"‘They haven‘t succeeded in taking a single prisoner. Surely it is an amazing piece of knowledge that Premier Chamberlain has not been having his afternoon tea. It is news that does not bode well for Germany. When the solid, conservaâ€" tive type of Britisher like Chamberlain passes up such an important necessity as a "spot of tea" in the afternoon, for war work it means that he has really settled down to fight in earnest and that he is going to concentrate all his abiliâ€" "At 6 pm. artillery opened up. From far back in France big shells roared through the sky making the sound of thunder which accompanies sheet lightning. Each shell took 68 seconds to reach its destination in Germany after a flight of some nine miles. The angry pang, pang, pang of French 75s joined in the chorus. Their shells folâ€" lowed a short trajectory and made a sharp, hissing sound above us." One of the most momentous pieces of news that has come from the Westâ€" ern Front was in the form of a remark by Prime Minister Chamberlain when he ‘was making a sightâ€"seeing tour around the front: "I have had no time for tea and seem to have lost the habit." Yard Schumacher Phone 725 Order Your Coal NOW from Fogg‘s John W. Fogg Limited WESTERN CANADA COALâ€"ALEXO AND CANMORE BRIQUETTES WELSH AND AMERICAN ANTHRACITE NEW RIVER SMOKELESSâ€"NEWCASTLE RED JACKETâ€"Egg Size COKE STOKER COA L Lumber, Cement, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies. By Hugh Murphy Head Office and Yard Timmins Phone 117 Thursday, December 21st, 1989 when he does he can be very dangerous and especially can he be tenacious. William Waliton, critics agree, is the one top ranking composer England has produced recently. His work has had a great influence on his contemporarâ€" ies. He started out doing light, satiri«â€" cal fAuff and was not taken notice of until 19831 when he came out with the oratorio, "Belshazzar‘s Feast." _ Since then he has produced several things that have met with approval. . Three years ago violinist Jascha Heifetz asked composer Waliton to wrote violin concerto for him. Last spring Walton delivered the completed manuâ€" script to Heifetz, and recently, in Cleveland, Heifetz first performed it. Critics acclaimed it, and its performâ€" Gay Paree to Celebrate Christmas and New Year‘s Paris, Dec. 20.â€"The lid will be lifted for traditional Parisian gaiety during Christmas and New Year‘s. The prefecture of police announced tceday the 7 pm. curfrew would be resâ€" cinded on Christmas Eve and night and New Year‘s Eve, permitting Paris to celebrate until 2 a.m. Dance halls, cafes, restaurants and motion picture houses will be permitâ€" ted to operate until that hour. Plumbing and Heating Contractors 71 Third Ave. Timmins Phone 327 Smith Elston Rutomatic Coal Firing IRON AREMAN Iron Fireman gives clean, steady, healthful heat all day; keeps floors warm, too. Install in your present furâ€" nace. Easy monthly payâ€" ments. VISIT OUR sHOWROOM No Coal Handling Coal Fiow model takes coal direct from bin. Branch Office Kirkland LA4ke Phone 393