ECZEMA Phone 2505 574 Thirg_Ave. Timmins Food parcéls were brought to the meeting to be sent to Depthford Misâ€" sion in London, England. Donations tc finance the leagus may be sent to Mrs. D. Reynolds, 171 Cedar street north, to the *chairman. Dr. Mustard, or to the secretary, Mr. Gower Markle. A nominating committee, comâ€" prised of Mrs. G. Ireland, Mrs, A. Jackson and Mrs. P. i1. Carson, was appointed to draw up a slate of offiâ€" cers for the coming year. Mrs. Horning read a letter in which Dr. W. Mustard commended the vol‘ unteer members for their efforts and outlined the work that remains to be done before December 12 D. H. Wigston R. 0., PHONE 324 TEIMMIN» DR. CHASE‘S Antiseptic OINTMENT Our Daily ~Specials are tops in heal@inpll in cost. nAu:wAY STREET Ansonville RAS "!s To Cor. Spruce 8St. and Third Ave. vv v‘v'vvvvvâ€"v We also sell automoblle, Plate Glass, Sickness and Accident and other lines of Insurance Real Estate, Mortgages, National Housing Act Cleag Rooms [’ BY Day or Week will continue to occur. Are you fully _ protected? Let us quote you. To helip bring swift soothing relief from the awful itching and irritation of Eczema and other Skin Rashes, try Dr. Chase‘s Medicated, Antiseptic intment. A safe home treatment for over 50 years. 36 Very Reasonable Rates _ Quilet Atmosphare (Est. 1912) 21 Pme Street. North. Tlmmms, Ontario ‘Phone 104 â€" Eyes Examined » e _ FIRES AT THE er Gnll â€" netrist ward ue Soviet Government Unwilling Host The Scviet govermment is ~acting like an unwilling host. Within three weeks it has demanded the formal recall of Yugoslavia‘s two top diploâ€" mats in Moscow. Last month a Moscow note told Premier Tito‘s government that Amâ€" bassarior Karl Mrazovik was conâ€" ducting subversive activities. Last week another note said the same thing about Yugoslavy charge d‘afâ€" faires Lazec Latinovic, acting head of the Embassy staff. Their presence in Moscow was ‘"impossible." _ The notes didn‘t mean a break in formal diplomatic relations between the two Communist countries. Neither did it mean any travelling for the two men named. Both were back hcme in Â¥ugoslavia when the notes were delivered. Out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Trohubiak of Val d‘Or and Miss Yvonne Lamoreux of Windsor. â€" The ccuple are residing in Timâ€" At the weekly meeting of Chapâ€" ter 1 of the Triâ€"Y Club, it was anâ€" nounced by Jcia Newel!l, President, that the Club made enough money at their recent Candy Sale to enable them to apply for their Charter and Membership Cards in . the Interâ€" natiort:i Hiâ€"Y fellowship. YÂ¥vonnz Lawrie took charge of devotions and Denis Fergusen took the roll cal} and presented the minutes. Yvonne Lawrie also discussed the possibility of a Club orchestra. This was left over until yiiter the Christmas axâ€" aminations. The speaker at this meeting was G. Markle, General Secreary of the YMCA, who outlined the purpose and objectives of the internaticnal Hiâ€"Y and related this to the program and proâ€" jects of this Club. Miss G. McKenâ€" na, the Club Advisor, assisted the girls with the meeting. The bridesmaids, Miss Pearl Suâ€" zak, Miss Helen Carrick, Miss Georâ€" nette were gowned .,.in blue with girr! Kepka and Miss Doreen Bruâ€" white floral hats, white gloves and (ill carzied horsesnos bouquets of pink roses,. F The flower girl, ‘Patrina Shelton, wore a grown of blue satin and net, a blue ::in Aat, and carried a basâ€" ket of ye‘low roses. Decorated with a profusion of firwers. fern and candlelight, the Church of the Nativity was the scene of the wedding on afterâ€" noon of Susie Boychuk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Boychuk, 159 Maple street north, and Rene Pouâ€" lin, â€"son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Pouâ€" lin, 22 Bannerman avenue. Fathor Shawel officiated 1¢ the ceremony. George Hancu was the groom:man while John Boychuk,â€"Fern Pitre, Ray Poulin and John Bobbie ushered. The page boy was Gerry Boychuk. Following the ceremony a reception was held at St. Hall, 100 Eighth avenue. â€" Mrs. George Hancu was matron of honor and wore ;/ blue crepe gown, a hat of blue feathers and carried a horseshoe bouquet of pink roses. Susie Boychuk Weds R. Poulin at Church Of the Nativity Given in marriage by her unclé, John Boychuk, the bride chose for her wedding day a gown of whit: satin styled with a bustle and trimâ€" med with pearls. A bead encrusts#1 coronet held ‘her full length veil embroidered the bridal bouâ€" quet was a cascade of red roses and baby‘s breath. as our Teacher." The meeting was conducted by Mrs. R. Milnec, who reminded the members of the Fireside tea on December 3rd Hostesses for the social perisd which followed the adjournment of the meeting were Mrs. R. Dundas ani members of her group. Mrs. R. Dundas led the worshin service, taking as the theme, "Jesus concern women and children in home and foreign mission fields. length of the shade, follow this han _guideline with Four scissors, and t ‘unwanted port snips off in a minu Soâ€"called "closet dramas" are those designed to be read, but not actéd. . ol h c snn on ick Canadign Fact *"__-"’ / MB« m 2 cA ; .blâ€" Plaster of . was origipally manâ€" u actured near mg':wu The pee le Qf North America prodâ€" uce métt ive better, and pr;m six timgs as many gocds as the average and hold a number of dishes. a real step s:ver. Hf you need extra setving space whin guests .come, drape your portâ€" able ironing board with a piéze of cret.ax;ne ar <ther mte ln Lst '.he When ycou nmake your baby‘s overâ€" alls. put snaps in the insid2 lez seams insteard of sewing them up. Diapers can be changcd in a mijrite by. unâ€" snapping the l:gs. COpen overalls are Bolore wnrollinz a papcr: shade easy to iron too. fully measure the width desired. Then press a thumotack firmly into the shade at ths:point. When you unroli the shale, you will ‘ind that the tack has madeo. a series of hole, tfo ut If you stand your broom or dust mop against a wall or do:ir, try fitâ€" ting the handleâ€"end with a rubber tip such a that u cd on a crutch. This will keep the handle from sliding and .alling., Also its marring the woodwork. the spout. that needs to ze cut narrowor, careâ€" Mr. and Mrs. Jack â€"Scott tyive reâ€" turned after visiting relatives and friends in Windsor. Mr. W. Rowe has returned to his home after spending the last week in North RBay. Mr. Charles McBurney who has beer in the North Bay district huntâ€" ing, has returned to his home. Helï¬ful Hints _ For Housewives Mrs. Jen Lang Cameron spent the weekâ€"end with relatives and friends in Kirkland Lake. Gordon Eyre is spending a few days in Toronto. f Percy Youllten has returned from a business trip to Montreal and Torâ€" onto. Mrs. Russel Netherton was a woeekâ€" end guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. Netherton, Englehart. Rolly Whissel who was on a huntâ€" iny trip to Temagami has returned home. Mrs. C. Lauder, of North Bay, is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Biggs. John O‘Donnell has returned from a hunting trip to Temagami. The piccolo is the highest pitched of Personals Mass migration of the Ciccone family frvin Italy. to Canada seems to be well under. way,. With some already here, families of Amelio, Verdi, David and George Ciccone oflAqqlla. Itaily, shown, arrived in Toronto, recently, They were all guests at party. OEA apart down t,h'* entire Mass Migration of Italian Family to Canada Takes Place is han:iy nd the It‘s scious of himaelt and of the preâ€"ent, he "looks behind and before." Heo surveys the world about him with a sense cf besuty and wonder. He jlooks up at the starry firmarnent and hi; mind penetrates beyond it into infln- ity. _ He looks into himself, mmmes his own t.houshts and emotlom wit.h ited câ€"pacity for adiptation and inâ€" vention. But there is a :till greater diffc: e“ce in the spiritual consciousâ€" ness c‘ mankind. Man is only conâ€" Despite the physical similarity there is a tremendous fnental gap between the hizhest type of monkey and the lowest type of man. Congreove was impre sed by the humanâ€"like actions of the monkey, but those were only natural. since the forms are simâ€" ilar. The beaver, which is far reâ€" moved in physical jorm from that cf man, is far more intelligent than the ape. . While watching.some beavâ€" ers in a zo> recently, I was impres ed rot only with their mechanical and archit tural ability, but also with their actions, one toward ariother, which struck me as very human. The lifferener. between the intelligâ€" ence of men and the !swer animals is the. un cricgabie. gulf . between . a limâ€" itea 1ini4 fixed ifnstingt asd an unlimâ€" themiselves are puzzled as to how the in initely complex meâ€" chsn:sm.of the human brain and the human hand could be developed by physical proce:s. T confes:; ijreely to you, I could neâ€" ver look on a monkey without very moRtifying â€" reflectios. That was writtern 354 years ago by William Congreve the poet, 1s a letâ€" ter to a friend. Someone has said that tl;@ monkey is_a caricature of man, and that it is evidence that the Creator had a sence of humor. Congreve however, didn‘t see the j3â€" ke, for he wa‘ mortified at the reâ€" semblance in and actions beâ€" ween himself and themaney Darwin, on the other hnand, was not in the least mortified at the likeness; he regarded it as evidence of man‘s simian ancestry in the evolution of : pecies. Whether he evoived from some loâ€" wer animal or appeared suddenly in full stature, as the seripture tells us man was frim the beginning a new creation, ~distinct and separate from the rest of ‘the animal kingdom. sSzsientists have gone to a lot of £rouble to that theory. They have duz up skulls and jawâ€" bones which they jbelieve belonged t semiâ€"human crestures‘" ‘that exâ€" isted a million or more years ago. The monkey, howeve~, from which we are suppoed to have evolved, is still in existance and flourithing as widely as ceÂ¥er and produces nothing sut monkeys. The question of the crigin or emâ€" cogence 6. man in this planet is still a profound mystery, despite all the theorie: and resgearches of biologists. ‘They trace the ancestry of the, hoâ€" rse back: to a threeâ€"toed little animal the hippcredent, a fo sil of which is in the Museum o. Natural History in New York. But theâ€"workness of the theory, so far as the horse is concerned,is in the fact that the horseâ€"rat has not survived its supposed offspring. Are We Merely Clever Monkeys By Lewis Milligan In Canada the average re‘ail pr.ce is 9.8 cents per pound, refined ance was increased by $1,791,034. pared with $969,113 in 1948. After payment of dividends at the rate of $1.20 per share, profit and loss balâ€" ance was increased by $275,255 to Above all, men from his very beginâ€" ning on this planet had a consciousâ€" ness of an intelligence and power higher and greater than his own, to which he owed reverence and obedâ€" ience. He realized that he was but a sojourner in this region 0o° time and that his little life was rounded with eternity, This consciousness of his divine relationship and immortal desâ€" tiny has been and developement. And wherever men or nations have cast aâ€" side or become indifferent to religion they have cut themselves off from the very source of all real intelligence and power. | They have for a time improved themâ€" selves physically and socially, but in gaining the world they lose their souls, They become entirely animal and a clever type of monkey. It may well be that God made the monkey in order to rouse us to "mortifyirg reftâ€" lections." Prrfits, After prov{(ding for staff $1..5,971. pension fund and contingency reâ€" serves, total $2,110,075 as compared with $1,836,579 in 1948. . Provision for é@epreciation is up .to $315,820 {rom $279,466 and prgvision for taxes is up to $679,000 from , Leaves net profit of $1, Assets of the bank total $519,040,â€" 570, an increase of $47,100,000 over 194C. Deposits total $476,270,032 of which deposits by the public account for $417,854,154 and represent an inâ€" crease cf $35,700,000 over the preâ€" vious year. Provincial government deposits are up $8,000,000: to .$38,â€" 941,z13 and Dominion government deâ€" posits are up $2,3860,000 at $19,474,665. Immediately realizable assets, inâ€" clucing coin, notes of, cr deposits with, the Bank of Canada and amounts due from, or notes of, other banks, total $82.716,406, as compared with $70,042,801 in 19«3. Investments in Dominicn government and other securities are up to $228,012,231 from $201,242,427. Chief change in securâ€" ity holdings is an increase of $33,â€" 200,000 in _ Dominion government securities maturing after two years whic hare carried at $150,153,182. Hollings of Dominion . government securities maturing within two years are shown at $47,087,515. C eE P C P Eky : oo s 1. P CC P sugar is the chca ‘cods terms cf ca‘orie p-inqwéuudi:?r With deposits at a new high and total assets in excess of half a bilâ€" lion dollars, Imperial Bank of Canâ€" ada reports net profit® of $1,115,255, cr $1.59 per share, for the year ended Oct. 31, 1949. This compares with earnings of $1.38 per share in the previous year. Loans outstanding total $193,157,â€" 64C, of which $179,767,921 is in curâ€" rent loans and $6,070,784 is in call loans. loans show an inâ€" crease of $6,460,000 for the year while call loans are slight‘y lower. Loans to municipalities are up to $,7,123,785 from $3,298,141 and provincial govâ€" ernment loans are shghtly hxghgr at Imperial Bank‘s Earnings Higher Assets Stronger Abranams; Ruby Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Patrone, Lefty *Walker, Rita Mcrandin, Ross Church, Anne Linder, Jack O‘Sullivan, Beth Gardner, Cecil Sinclair, Dolores Joly, Ted Kemball, Joyce Rogers, Ray Desâ€" jardins, Sylvia Hendsby, Earl Meeâ€" han, Rosemary Sloman, Dr. and Mrs. J. Scholes, Frances Smith,, Sonney Burke, Harold Morin, Ter/sa Raciâ€" Nelson Clifford, Annette Raciâ€" cot, Betty Aiken, Gordon Hammer, Marg Book, Gunner Kallunki, Helen Kow‘ri, Martin Clarke, Diamond Regimbald, Doris Fenner, Mr. angd Mrs. Logan Kerr, Mr. and Mrs. Harâ€" old Skitch, Ray Chomko, Biernice Kaye, Evelyn Sear, Herbie Schroeder, Dogpatch representatives in all their Dogoatch finery and scores of local residents gathered at (Dogâ€" patch Hollow) Riverside Pavilion on Friday evening to attend the Sadie Hawkins Kigmy dance sponscred by the Kinsmen TClub. Hcairy Kelnecsk and his Kigmy orchestra provided the musical backâ€" groun and an all round jolly evening was spent by those attending. Among those present were George Somerville, June Harriscn, ~â€" Doug Brown, Hazel McGee, â€"Mr. and Mrs. Rene Belanger, Roger Paquette, Liz Romiscon, â€"George Pente, Shu‘ley' Remus, Mr. and Mrs. William Oliver. Mr. and Mrs. Len McKerrow, Eric Arnott, Marcella lQwe‘sy, Mr. and Mrs. Keeley Cummings, Mr. and Mrs.. Jerry Doolan, Mr. and Mrs. Jt Tallon, John Angus, «Shirley Ramâ€" berg. Gcrdon Godfroy, Mary. Morin, } Jim Silver, Gladys Dodge, Tom Neil, Mary Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Walâ€", 1 tace, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Gridlly, Linky Mangotich, Joan Remus, Cecil. Sparrow, Lila Hoff, Mr. and Mrs.. Dave Wylie, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Hayâ€" stead, Mr. and Mrs. Len McNeill, Frank Hill, Hilda Stephenson, Mr. ind Mrs. Bill Alexander Gerry Gould, 1 Doreen Routliffe. Ad Derasp, Joyce Hefferman, Mr. and Mrs. Lcuis Vacchino, Bob Wheeler, Lena Vacchino, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Coctrane, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Zinkie, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Goss, Blaine Gaouette, Anne Gomiero, .Bert Piks. Bob O‘Donnel Mr. and Mrs. sim Lawrie, Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Les Gallagher, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dewns, Mr. and Mrs. Lou Currie, Emil Klisanich, Anne Barilko, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Minthorn, Mr. artd Mrs. Bob McTaggart, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lappan, Mr. and Mrs. Bim Eturgeon, Mr. and Mrs. H. Wisman, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. George Avram, R. D. Paquette, Leana Princc, Mr. and Mrs. Cully Abrams, Mr. and Mrs. Manny Abrams, Peteor Abranams; Ruby Johnson. Kinamen Dance Proves to Be © A Jolly and tertaining Affair ! The Stanley Cup, today‘s emblem Of NQHOL Champ- j lonship, was first won in 1894 by the Montreat AAA team ; ; ; and for 17 years, was a purely * * _ The rules of the rink * have changed greatly since hockey‘s first organized game . . . 74 years ago. It was a March day in 1875. The indoor ice of Montreal‘s Victoria Skating Rink was a swirl of uniformed figures. Specâ€" tators who lined the rails were watching theâ€"first attempt to organize the increasâ€" ingly popular game of hockey. The teams had been reduced to nine men a side . . . each with a definite position to cover. Instead of the familiar rubber bail, a fiat, round block of wood was being used. And for the first time, the goals were protected by goaltenders. Regulation hockey had been born. Hockey holds a proud tradition of sportsâ€" manchip for Canadians. And Canadign teamwork has made us world leaders in the game.; Together, sportsmanship and teamwork are working for you . .. . by keeping your opportunities for work and play in Canada . .. unlimited. * _ The total life insurance in force at the be mnning of 1948 was apptoximâ€" #cely $1,007 for coery man, woman and child in Can:da.â€" Quick Canadian geted to rzise £26 million com $Gccesâ€" sion duties thi> vear,. twice the cunt :iaited by this form of tax in 1942. qQuick Canadian Pacts The FRedccal gcvernment hazlbudâ€" Mr. and Mrs. Dick Moxon,. Gravelle and Lucillse LaMarchs fron, vitamin H;, calcinin, eurich blood, improve agemo and digestion so gives you more nf and nourishment: put i on bare bones, Don‘t fear gpetting too fat. Stop whan you‘ve gained the 5, 10, 18 or 20 Ibs. you need for norma! weight. Coats little. New "get acquainted*" size only aove. Try famous Ostrex ‘Tonic ‘Tablets for new vigor and added pounds, this very day. At all druggists. L1 Lk 200 L000 4 0P s P P HI up‘J fll up; neck no longer scrawny: bodv loses halfâ€" astarved, sickly "beanâ€"po!¢" look. ‘Thousands of girls, women, men, who never could gain before, are now proud of shapely, healthyâ€"looking bodies. They thank the special vigorâ€"buikting, feshâ€"building touic, Ostréex. Its tonics, stimulant=, invigorators, fron, vitamin B.a. cal¢inin, eurich blood, improve m mmaélia What a umm Bon)' limbs fill out; ugly hollows up: neck no longer scrawny: bodv loses halt. Skin=y men, women gain 5, 10, 15 lhs. ‘KVERYTIIING IN MUSIC" PIANOS Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor Mason Risch RECORDS 66 Third Ave. PHONE 3525 Of All Types