Sold by leading merchants STEELE, B%L?TCEE SEED CO. "Canada‘s Greatest Seed House" TORONTO, XAM|LTON, WINNIPEG, REGCINA EDMONTON Voilee, Piano, Organ, Musical Theory Harmony GEO. E. HALE (Teacher) Graduate Chicago University Visit Schumacher Tuesdays sSouth Poreupine Saturdays 110 Balsam st., N. P.0. Timmins Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Eitc Old P.O. Bldg., Timmins â€" Phone 362 Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.8. D. Paquette, proprietor THREE BARBERS IN ATTENDANCE Basement Reed Block, Timmins Service Satisfaction Sanitation Oredit Reports Collections Accounting and Auditing 6 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228 P.O. Box 1747 39â€"2 Specialized Business Training Classes 7 o‘clock Monday, Wednesâ€" day and Friday nights. 6 Balsam St. N., Timmins, Ont. Phone 228 Box 677 41â€"53 § 0. E. Kristenson CUITIBROAPPR A W P P i o AP e â€" P P P P P P >AAA â€"AP ~AP P §3 CONsULTING AUDITOR Trustee under The Bankruptcy Act Third Avenue Swiss Watchmaker Graduate of the Famous Horological Institute of Switzerland W. D. Cuthbertson, I.P.A. V ol o LN (0O Chiropractor and Electro Therapist CONsULTATION FREE Diseases Peculiar to Women Phone 1565 Gordon Block Tim PORCUPINE CREDIT Corporation Ltd. _ Reasonable Rates 39 Kirby Ave. Pho r...“oo T â€"IP AP P P â€"AP AP: P Empire Block _ Timmins g The Pioncer Paper _ of the Porcupine Established 1912 mooooooo «h P P PP ts Graduate Nurses in Attendance ST. JUDE Private Hospital Erie Timesâ€"R« Porcupine School of Commerce Y : L. C REENIDGE CHIROPRACTOR Xâ€"RAY NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Buiiding 607 BPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Phone 1365 WwAE Timmins. Ont. â€"~17â€"43p Empire Block M Phone 751â€"w KR 14â€"286 sened his interest, as was shown by his comment on the contrast between the splendor of the Queen Mary and the squalor of the Glasgow slums. King Edward will not overstep the bounds of constitutional decorum but it is evident that his influence, a very potent one, will e directed toward enâ€" couraging a getermined effort to tackle the problem of unemployment and othâ€" er similar problems. to have against the company was that the company‘s office had been moved to Noranda and the town of Rouyn thus lost $400 p:sr year in taxes, according to one alderman. Mr. Thompson replied that if two exchanges had to be mainâ€" itained it would need a 10â€"cent toll for ’ccnversatxon between the two and this | woulgd scarcely be of advantage to Rouyn. He reminded the council that out of 17 employees of the company 14 had their homes in Rouyn. After some crossâ€"firing, Mr. Thompson said that Noranda had used the company fairly and it would be necessary now to proâ€" ceed with the change to the new system at Noranda, and if Rouyn wished to reâ€" 1 on t calle Mini him discuss the que of Commerce a: Association and bodies. It was council meet a decisiog on th King Reg malin ( should ’Valuable Prizes for the Kiwanis Carnival July 8 serving the Rouyn camp. The Northern Telephone Co. applied to both Noranda and Rouyn for a Inister m for ; unem} The Ki During the evening, the draw for 30 offered will be made. First prize winner gets a Ford Vâ€"8 Deluxe Fordor sedan. Second prize is a Westinghouse Dual Automatic refrigerator. Thirq is |$100 in cash; fourth, $50; fifth, $40:; sixth, $30; seventh, $20; eighth, ninth and tenth, $10 each; ten prizes of $5.00 and ten prizes of $2.00. The entire proceeds of the carnival will go to further the work of the Kiâ€" wanis Club: the keeping up of a health camp, imilk fund, T.B. preventive work. aid to crippled children and all |the other benefits to underprivileged | children. Ov CCG. Rouyn Northern Telephone Franâ€" chise is Approved by Norâ€" anda but Rouyn Council Holds it up. New Franchise is Delayed by Rouyn provided; dancing on the street, and in general an evening of fun has been planned for the town. The Timmins Kiwanis Club‘s big drive for funds with which to carry on community work this year takes the form of a street carnival, to be held on July 8th. All sorts of games will bG: ed 10mIiCc d his Thirty Notable Prizes to be Given. First Prize is a Ford Vâ€"8 DeLuxe Fordor Sedan. Second Prize a Westingâ€" house Refrigerator. Other Prizes Worth While. Proâ€" ceeds for Community Work of Club. O njm»oymen King‘s dee (Sault Ste in London fact that ] into econsul a had used | would be nec th the th the nda, i the notifv Talks with arding Un ion t inte council yn, however, the attitude of council was not so agreeable. cil was not prepareq to deal matter at the meeting, though ipson was present and pointed he had made several trips to ) question ‘ce and the i and learn wWas a@lso s e chang and if ] â€"magne vÂ¥ the c Jnsult: Labot to again Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Every MONDAY and THUERSDAT eeép lem ) th An i the matte 1€ in Rouyn. Thompson d the com;} iecessary n nge to the : f Rouyn wi even at eto sy compa 1€ ntually with t} e Retail i the vi suggest this w th Minister nemploy me aAre Ed w iry now to ] the new sys ‘n wished to ystem the t any to that ly decided the Chamtb all Merchan views of the sted that t week to gi com ard nest alk he . mentl recen Broyv some that fairly proâ€" toOw t ef nt NT Huntlingdon guy handed in hi said, "Please see ; swers." The boy whose bicycle was stolen last fall hagq taken the number of the frame and was able to identify it positive‘yv that way. The lad who owned the frame identi~ fied it and thought the rear wheel was his property too. The magistrate gave instructions that only the front whneel of the "bike" should be retained by the accused. A 13â€"yearâ€"old lad was put on proâ€" bation for three months to A. G. Carâ€" son, superintendent of the Cochrane Children‘s Aid Society in juvenile court on Tuesday. Charged with having "reâ€" tained in his possession a bicycle known by him to be stolen," the youngster maintained his innocence, claiming that the wheels were his antl he had "found" the frame in a laneway last year. Tom Glaister, chairman of the sports committee, reporteqg on the comâ€" pleting of arrangements for the spring bridge tournament of the club. Visitors at the club meeting on Monâ€" day were Len Hill and W. Leckley of New Liskeard, and G. F. McKenzie of Toronto. Lad Who Had Other Boy‘s Wheel Placed on Probation Rev. Bruce Millar introduced the speaker and Dr. S. L. Honey tendered the thanks of the club to their guest. benefits of life should be cultivé.ted by all, he said in conclusion. Voicing a plea for the "open mind." Rev, Murray Tait of Trinity United Church, Schumacher, brought an Easâ€" ter message to the Timmins Kiwanis Club on Monday. The whole picture of Easter, as paintsd by the words of the lGospel. brought forcibly to the whole world the same message, he said. "Faâ€" ther forgive them, for they know not what they do," were Christ‘s words when he spoke to those who had closed minds, the people who crucified him. An open mind is a necessity in all walks of life, Rev. Mr. Tait went on: in medicine, in law, and in business, those who would not !je left behind must take the good from new developâ€" ments. He stressed also the desirability of longâ€"sightedness in life, looking ahsad to see where actions in life are leading. "Don‘t go down the blind street," he said. "Take the through street." Easter, he tolq the Kiwanians, is a pagan word, but the symbol of the holy season to the world of toâ€"day is the op°n grave, from which ‘Christ rose again to life. A sense of the spiritual Voicing a ; Rev. Murray Church, Schi ter message Rev. M. Tait Makes Plea for ‘Open Mind‘ Address to Kiwanis Club on â€"Monday M uch Appreâ€" ciated. _ Gleaner:â€"The laziest n his exam., on which he see Smith‘s paper for anâ€" TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 16TH, 193 the spiritual The meeting of the high school boatrd for April was postponsd from Monday night of this week to April 20th, on acâ€" count of the Ontario Educational Asâ€" sociation convention in Toronto. Toâ€"morrow night in the Schumacher high school the second annual at home of the students will be held. Many have planned to attend the event, which promises to be one of ithe best of the spring season. Dancing to Andy Cangiano‘s orchesâ€" tra will begin at 9.30. The floor 0‘ the combined gymnasium and auditorium has been put in excellent condition for the affair. Carq tables will be proâ€" vided in the upper corridors for those who prefer that sort of entertainment. Meeting of High School Board to be Held April 20 At Home Toâ€"morrow at Schumacher H.S. <vent on Friday Evening of This Week Expected to be Outstanding Occeasion. Oshawa Daily Times:â€"It has been said that many people eat their way to the grave. Ontario patrons of the beer parlors apparently can go one better than that according to the five months‘ return of liquor sales reported. A noble and valiant effort is being made to drink the Government out of debt. The mobs then marched on the cemetery and rushed the gates. Polics drove them off with their truncheons. Many were carried off to firstâ€"aid dressing stations. William Gallacher, Communist Scot and member of parliament for West Fife, narrowly escaped serious injury in a hail of stones. At the general post office, headquarâ€" ters of the insurgents in 1916, the paâ€" rade was broken up completely. Police charged in and threw a cordon about the paraders. dead! The crowd first attacked as the proâ€" cession starteg from the centre of the city. . Demonstrators, attempting _ to snatch the red ri‘zsbons worn by the Communists, shouted: The paraders were observing the 20th anniversary of the famous "Easter reoâ€" bellion." They were en route to the graves of the rebel leaders in Glasnevin when throngs fell upon themâ€" with stones, sticks and lengths of rubber hose. Upwards of 100 were injured. Police charged repeatedly, laying about them with their batons. Many women and children were trodden upon. According to despatches from Dubâ€" lin, Ireland, this week about one hunâ€" dred people were injured in handâ€"toâ€" hand fighting when crowds repeatedly attacked a procession of Communists and delegates of the Irish Republican Army on the march to Glasnevin ceme~â€" tervy. The road to the clubhouse is not yet open but as soon as that is in good shape and the clubhouse itself ready, the annual will be called. few weeks. Last year was one of the best in the history of the local club, with improveâ€" ments not only on the links lsut to the clubhouse where accommodation â€" was greatly improved. Hundred Injured During Parade in Dublin, Ireland Timmins Golfers to Hold Annual Shortly No Definite Date Set Yet but Expected Within Few Weeks. Mrs. Lempi Laine Pays $100 and Costs for Second Time in Few Weeks. Reckless Drivers Fined at Tuesday‘s Court. Magistrate Seeks to Settle Family Quarrel. Woman Again Fined for Illegally Having Liquor the worst of the snow has from the links, Timmins re locking forwarq to a new £ the old Scottish game. No been set yet for the annual of the club, though it is exâ€" will be held within the next not wiant Red homage to our court record. On March 28th he hac been cutting in on Third avenue while traffic was heavy. In one other reckless driving case : fine of $10 and costs was paid, while a dari A 1lOI fence: di 111 T‘ll hay make i been « has m He wil appear time 1 over, toIr said feénc supplied liquo: son, was also the request 0o Caldbick. Vic charged with t so remanded. Mr. Caldbick been examine« has moved fro He will have t appear next T time he askec Six young m police to have will appear nex will be altered on the street," ance in a publi "I asked for a doctor and didn‘t gCL! one," put in the accused at this point. "He wouldn‘t have known a doctor if he had seen one," contendeg Deputy Chief Salley, who also swore that the accused was staggering badly, smelled strongly of liquor and couldn‘t Lalkl properly. I "You have to send for one just the same, you know," said his worship, and to the accused: "You can go. Disâ€" missed." "He was very drunk," Con O‘Gorman contradictsd in the w box. "We had a complaint from son avenue on April 10th that a was upstairs drunk." was i public part of a rooming hou which the accuseq did not live constable said. "One hundred dollars and costs of three months," said his worship at the conclusion of the case, "liquor seized." Asked for Doctorâ€"Dismisseqd "I wasn‘t drunk, I was sick," a beardâ€" ed local man said in answer to a drunk charge, Publisabhed at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Maki himself gidn‘t know much about the liquor, and didn‘t remember. where hbhe had got it. On Myrs. Laine, on the witness stand, swore she didn‘t know anything about the liquor. She had just come home and found Maki and his partner sitting there drinking: She finally f»roke into fairly intelligible English and blamed the whole affair on her roomer. wWhiisk®y in a reservoir. In a dishpan were some glasses, over which Mrs. Laine hagd hurriedly poured hot water when the police entered. "The contents of the dishpan smelled just like this bottle," said the officer, producing the whiskey and the granite kitchen utenâ€" sil. The place had been declared pubâ€" lic for one year a short time ago by Magistrate Atkinson, the constable said, when Mrs. Laine was fined $100 and costs for having liquor not obtained on her own individual permit. She had told police that the bottle had been in the house for three weeks, before the last offence. She didn‘t know the botâ€" tle was in the reservoir, she said. "Got Awful Dumb‘ Constable Desroches said that when they entereq the place, Maki, the "one in the middle" had had a glass in his hand, but threw it under the sofa. Recovered from there, it had still smellâ€" ed strongly of liquor. *"Maki got awful dumb when we spoke to him. He claimâ€" ed he was qrinking water," said the officer. | W When Lempi Laine 1 answer a charge of "havi place not in accordance w Control Act" on Tuesd three psople appeared at of them men, one a wom COU The ecde; de have for fi1 of l¢ ad 1to Reckless e traffic licen stabie Desroches said that when ntereg the place, Maki, the "one middle" had had a glass in his but threw it under the sofa.| rred from there, it had still smellâ€" ngly of liquor. *"Maki got awful | when we spoke to him. He claimâ€" was qrinking water," said the! Jels a public Waiter Munro who is liquor also re SsAlCl ) let eren ual ‘all subpoena Kester,‘ )th Munr off the ned } from e the 18 bein r is Remanded ‘o, local fisevera s charged wit) * to an intoxic remanded for a _Crown Attorn tor Aho. the ma 16 op sda tha A)1 Drivers ff{enders xpl week, when from one of o "creating pl doc lav y drunk," Constable idictsd in the witness complaint from 6 Wilâ€" a hi 1I Dr who are alleged by ited a disturbance, ‘k, when the charge miIins tor‘s young man. _one?" queried his to have the whole Deverage ed with h intoxicated d for a we Attorney . the man w Dxicated, w; 16 5 to K subpoe in the 0A 1F14 16 ing liqu vith the was in house A V N1 1 $10 day | eson Kin: "fighting i disturbâ€" 10 had n who igston. aed to mean â€" uor in a e Liquor ternoon, bar. two cdla SS€ W C aving perâ€" A} Aln â€" laid el 150 n n the the at m not trying to dictat worship. "I just don‘t like : bers of a family in court dence against one another a bitter feeling." The case was left for a y the meantime the family is settle the matter out of cou < |Langdon Langdon molher ; port fro ried boy a mont! $5 while marriag another 6(1 Wrap all Garbage in paper | Keep your Garbage Can covered \ Use plenty of Chloride of Lime which \can be procured at the Town Hall free, Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. All Outside Toilets must be made fiyâ€" proof. By Order of | THE BOARD OF HEALTH to st and three Il}<ga *X JÂ¥ hnat CGWn ing Ou1 Presidentâ€"Austin Neame Secretaryâ€"Treasurerâ€"W. D. Forrester P.0O. Box 1059, Timmins Ont. Monthly general meetings of the above branch will be held in the Legion Hall, Cedar St., S. on the following dates:â€" For Romeo for 1s your rest broken at night? If your kidneys need attention take Gin Pills. They will strengthen your kidâ€" neys and if you sleep better you will feel better and look better. 244 Are You Tiredâ€"Listless? I‘m mon ther Reed Block ; Pine street south J. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT. stop Timmins al from bovs Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MAKSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BUILDING costs for were fi 1 parking me 91 Ask Your Local Dealer for Pric send your order direct to performin old ab. We Manufacture and Carry in Stock DEAN KESTER, K.C. CHARLES H. KERR Air Fam magistrate t family disc ‘ asked $40 a Barristers, Solicitors, EKtec. Money Advanced on First Class Security. SUNDAY, APRIL 19TH, 1936 FLAGS HAVERSACKS SNOWSHOES DOG SLEIGHS TOBOGGANS TARPAULINS TENTS ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS ald the ; whiile men als Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. Barristers, Solicitors, Eto A, E. MOYSEY BLOCK, TIMMINS®, ONT. and south Porcupine the 8. A. CALDBICK were One 30 days her illd whi we the $2.00 stop for 0 of Agents Everywhere paid $10 fined ons t h oth > lives keeyp I th: four son. willing | marrieq Family te trie 0 + streets obstruct ho A WNINGS willing Omes. indecen da SCHI $1.00 mont} and / Aff PACK â€" BAGS EIDERDOW N ROBES SKIIS DOG HARNESS HORSE ny na Sts â€"| LWO g t BLANK ETS CX JY yald iffic 11 Whni Timmins 14â€"2¢ AWG} DJ meIlti and Ontario 14â€"26 11 leave *T illing $1.00 and 5 â€" for PpuD Up 141â€"%6 14â€"2¢ 1] 16