"Why now, gentlemen, and where might you be bound for?" "Oy!" roafed a jovial voice, "it‘s our own little orphan, come back from thie storm! Howdy, Giles!" Fruity Flinâ€" toff, the fat inspector with a penchant Calthrop pulled up. Getting. out they saw a huge depression barricaded by hastily interlocked larch poles. A special constable, looking important, strode forwardâ€"an impressive effort. "Hey! Pull up there," came one raucous shout. "You‘re running slap into a bomb crater!" There was an odd power in his perâ€" sonality which© Calthrop found most difficult to analyseâ€"a power which, could resolve discordant complexities into strangly simple forms of harmâ€" A light waved through a, billow of smoke. Men clustgred the road, waving and shouting. â€" This fellow Moreton was revealing himself anew at every turn. Here he had shown a mysticism, a lyricism, proâ€" foundly at variance from the hardened and supercilious casement he exhibited to ordinary observation. Captain Calthrop drove, soberly, into the crimson hlast of Lowood. Fused telephone wires sprang about his wheels and jangled. Golden blizzards of burning heath sped overhead. He ignored them for his thoughts. CAPTAIN CALTHROP: Intelligence Officer on Hardisty‘s staff, specially interested in security questions. HECTOR FLANAGAN: Works superâ€" intendent. Hostile to Moreton. ' "RATTY" HELME: ..Progress clerk, who toadies to Flanagan. ‘ MAJOR â€" GENERAL â€" SIR â€"ALBERT HARDISTY: Generalâ€"Officer â€"Comâ€" manding the district in which the Loâ€" wood works are situated. PBRBINCIPAL CHARACTERSâ€" . GILES â€" MORETON: â€" Twenty»fi handsome but temperamental. Reputed to be a former R.A.F. pilot, invalided out. Nowworksasanmspectorinthe Lowood tank plant. CAROL GILROY: Daughter of local solicitor, who has taken up â€"war work as a viewer in the Lowood plant. Bhe isl interested in Moreton, who mystifies, 3 Days ofâ€" Nazi Brutality the world will never forgive. "ARE THESE_ OUR HOLLYWOOD STARS HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN TODAY * AND The picture that will never be topped. Now Playing THE â€" RAINBOW Author of * 2 FEATURE HITS! by Vincent *"‘Cut it out, ~â€"mister! Don‘t â€"you inâ€" terfére wi‘ me in the execution of mi dooty. Iâ€"sawâ€"that ‘bloke tek a swipe atâ€" Mr. Flanagan,â€"and I‘m running him ‘for it. Don‘t know who you imâ€" agine y‘self to beâ€"â€"but come on, out 0o‘ my‘ road, will‘ : you?" The smecial constable, whose overâ€" weening importance had so amused Fruity Flintoff, put out rough hands to yank Banni to his feet. Moreton flashed him a grateful look "Good man," he applauded. "So the spurs are going to sprout at last, eh? I‘ve been waiting for yourâ€"asserâ€" tion." . After . which sryptic utterance he interposted himself between Banni and the constable Calthrop, rememâ€" bering something, rushed back to the The mention of that one word "priâ€" son" was allâ€"sufficient. Ludwig Banni crossed his arms over his chest, shrinâ€" king. â€" His burst and stringy fingers pluckd _ atâ€" his â€" mouth and chin. His wild, burnt eyes. looked up, with manâ€" acal lights in them at Moreton. He trembled coarsely, and was silent. "No you don‘t!" Calthrop snapped out. > "This poor fellow,‘‘ Moreton rapidly told the polic¢eman, ‘"cannot be held in any way x‘esfponsible for his actions. he‘s halfmad, deliriousâ€"if you like that better, with pain.: Heâ€"" Fruity : Flintoff had taken off his inspector‘s white. linen coat. An inâ€" agonized feet and slowly lifted an iron barâ€"to crush in the unsuspecting "Banni! Banni!‘" he railed the torâ€" mented Czech, in his own spattering language, _ "pull . ~yourself . together. Leave things ‘to me! Iâ€" think I know why you. attempted this. crime. If you are sensible I can keep you freeâ€"free, Banni!‘ Can you hear meâ€"free! You don‘t want to see the inside of anothâ€" er prison, do you now?" "Now then, what’s all this here toâ€" do?" Banni carried off his balance by the stroke, collapsed upon it as it clanged and splashed fire from the road metal. His blackened hands beat impotently on the ground andâ€"he mouthed hoarsâ€" ed gibberish which Cathrop recognized as Czech but could not understand. But Gilee Moreton undertood. He bent over â€"the man, urgently. > DEATH CLAIMS ONE As he saw the iron bar raised above Flanagan’s head, Morton was paraâ€" lysed for @a â€" second,â€" in a frightful clamp of facination. Ludwig Banni meant murder. s That iron bar had only to describe its arc, and the problem of the reneâ€" gade Flanagan would be solved..Conâ€" vincied of the superintendent‘s comâ€" plicity in the sabotage work which had already taken place. Moreton was strangely inclined. to the evil of comâ€" pounding <«with this fearful thing. Of all the sing, he had so recently said to Calthrop, he held treachery to be the most abominable Then let this traâ€" iter die. . K9 . Everything became confused. Men became ‘ aware and shouted. Hector Flanagan cowered away. The bar plunged down and struck the earth almost at his All this flashed through Moreton‘s mind with increédible swiftness. Then, fascination: <fled. I-Ie yelled #. waning and leapt forward. t h e . machine«â€"shop _ superintendent, Moreton recognibed; a Jewish refugee, a Czech called Banniâ€"who rocked on Fruity‘a / glant hpumours. : Heâ€" looked beyond himâ€"at the narraw and vicious {ace. of. Ww nf 4 3 o S . beyond ‘ * shambling, ‘h%lf-nik and redlyâ€"blisâ€" tered shape; whic came out of the smoke‘ and ‘drew, ingly‘near, to maer'; glveh us. off ratlons!" _ t Moreton was not Anterested in !!ruity'a glant hpgwnrs He looked horribly singed rabbits, an exceedingly bald grouse, and a tailâ€"less pheasant. "Whatâ€"ho, m‘ ‘bornny Boy! Look what %L..u | ~Dying? Moreton flinched. For Ludâ€" wig Banni to die would be a calamity for his investigations. Moreton ° was convinced that Banni knew a tremenâ€" dous lot about the mysterious saboâ€" teurs...He had been waiting, deadly in his patience, for the little fellow‘s confidences Cultivating Banni was one of the reasons for his association with ~the Czechs and Austrians who operated the barâ€"lathes.â€" conduct which â€" had aroused so many susplc- ions........ The blustering "special‘"‘ had found another opportunity for the exercise of his talents. A motor cycle and aâ€" nother car were approching. He yeliâ€" ed, valiantly.... The motor cyclist was a dispatch rider. He stalked straight over. to Captain Calthrop, ignoring the powâ€" erâ€"flushed "special." There arose a queerly plaintive wail from Ludwig Banni; the «disordered cadences of a lament half as old as timeâ€"a mourning movement of sweet minor chords, which Babylon might have heard from the captived by her waters. Somehow held in the sound, was the whole longâ€"patient travail of an infinite race. "Then," Moreton, said in English, "They lied to you. Isâ€"is that why you haven‘t talked to me, as you might have done." "That is why," answered the Jew. Calthrop bent over him. In German almost as gcod as that of Moreton‘s he assured Banni that he, personally, as a British officer, could vouch for Moreton‘s integrity... He vehemently denied that his friend was called "Eiâ€" denhausen." "Hello, Baxter, what brings you out here * Baxter saluted and passed over messiage. Calthrop read it, wrote rap- idly in an acknowledgment and beâ€" for the constable could have his ofâ€" ficial say the rider had wheeled © his machine and was on his way back to Hellersfield. But Banni seemed unimpretsed. He fell back weakly, and moaned. Moreâ€" ton added his whispered protestations and explanations to Calthrop‘s assurâ€" ancesâ€"still Banni lay without exâ€" pressing interest in either of them,.> From the car stepped Sergeant Pilâ€" beam and Superintendent Millwell of the Lowood police. The “special†stlf- fened and soon disappeared. . 64 «â€" "Lay off," one of them growled at the constable, "Y¥‘ oughter be fair aâ€" shamed o‘ yoursel! Badgering a pore bloke what‘s very likely dying at yer feet." "Eidenhausen," he said, quite clearâ€" ly, "soviel ich weissâ€"" Banni‘s gaze caught the gleam of the syringe. He struggled upright and wildness went out of his face. He actâ€" ually smilled. But he waved the needle away. "Butâ€"but he‘s not thatâ€"" "I‘m sorry, old man. He cannot last too far gone.‘" He sighed, "A shot of this will make itâ€"easier." Banni‘s gaze caught the gleam of the syringe. He struggled upright and wildness went out of his face. He acâ€" tually smiled. But he waved the needle away. "It is all," Calthrop said solemnly, in answer to Moreton‘s stunned look of inquiry, "I can do for him, Didn’t you knowâ€"I‘m a doctor." He looked wry. "The Intelligence Corps‘> back< room." 1 "Butâ€"but he‘s not thatâ€"" | "I‘m sorry, old man. He cannot last; too far gone.""‘ He sighed. "A shot of this will make itâ€"easier." By now Calthrop had returned. He carried a box of, firstâ€"aid appliances taken from the car. To Moreton‘s asâ€" tonishment he noticed Calthrop was busiy with a hypodermic syringe. It was then that Giles Moreton found testimony to the ascendancy he had obtained among his workmates, One after another, five of the maâ€" chineâ€"shop _ personnel, tired men, smelling of smoke and charredâ€" cloth‘ ranged quite grimly ween Banni and the constable. i« .;â€"_ ; ; . _ | Mme â€"avuly SUuaye unuer FIniolls linen| â€" t» 7 small attendance . Moreton noticed Flintoff‘s horror'u’mt. "Ohn," he gasped, as he . -lowlw;at mf"mmï¬m m.them he saw Banni‘s bare back. The flesh saluted, "Iâ€"I didn,t know. Whoâ€"is it'gom-d Trade twenty years ago, and ‘ was corrugated by long purple marks, ‘"Meréely," said Moreton, in a hard, more than once during the evening t "Gestapo rubber ‘truncheons did throat working, "another Jew Who tnc merchents and others interosted that, long ago," Moreton made a bitâ€" has died upon a hill." : show so little Interest in the meetings i ter aside. "He was once in a consenâ€"|. CHAPTER XII * of the Board â€"6f Trade, and especialy tration camp." Then Moreton turned WITH A GENERAL FOR the annual meeting?" No one had again to the illâ€"cast special constable| â€"~~ _ ° ESCORT the *amer to that che. T. ®. "Before," he gritted, ‘"I‘d allow you to! For reason best known to his Maâ€" presi s + attempt to imitate their method#>%â€"= â€"chigvellian self, it pleased General Sir \., ;mmq:::‘x; wm eofch:ti\re. I‘d fell you! So bite on that!" _Aibert Hardisty to go out of his WAY poarg ~presented his report for the It was then that Giles Moreton in cultivating Carol Gilroy‘s aquaint year. The total membership for the faiund tactimmnmnmn«t t+ta tha acscanndanrnm ha aman as bitik «nanld conle mneoamks Le A _ td as_ @esnwad Moreton noticed Flintoff‘s horror as‘ coat. "Oh," He gasped, as he . slowly he saw Banni‘s bare back. The flesh saluted, "Iâ€"I didn,t know. Whoâ€"is i was corrugated by long purple marks, â€" "Merely," said Moreton, in a hard, livid folds, timeâ€"healed. .__ ‘ cracked voice, his eyes closed and his cov- litle Jew and bemnto «ance. Sso soon as the raid was over he cbn trived. by some deft method, to Jfle his wife to her own occasionsâ€"â€" hqe he g‘allantly escorted the girl to '; "her: ‘bome, in the Cathedral Close. | / The thin smoke, from the moors‘ {burning, was not unpleasant here. { Indeed, it had an aromatic and heady ‘in_ its moanlit veils. Those ghostly, goldén vapours moved with a breathâ€"taking beauty above the fretâ€" tings ‘and traceries of the great cathâ€" edral. A lean cat Crossed a lawn beneath a huge cedar. The fiveâ€"fold west winâ€" dow of the fane reflected jewelled gleams, â€"and a rain of most delicate white ash sifted from the gentle winds like the fall of midnight manâ€" ‘na«-on roses and clematis and cold yews ; 3 l “Young woman," sighed the Genâ€": ‘eral, "IL wouldn‘t have missed this little .walk for words' Thisâ€"is peace." Carol . snuggled into her coat and looked at him How. very, boyish were his eyes,.. 1u§t now. _ _.The,. admirp.ble Hannah had unâ€" §cuttled ber cat. and had put aside «her parashutis‘t-chopper As though it were the most. usual thing for a disâ€" tinguished. and highly decorated Genâ€" â€" eral. to arrive at the house at one in , the mommg, escorting its daughter she . primly. showed them into old John Gilroy‘s . study. â€" Everything was just as Carol had said it would beâ€" there was the coddled Irish setter, and the book on Horatian discourses, { opened on the table. Hardisty laughed, and explained The men had met before, in their official capacitieseâ€"for Gilroy, as senâ€" ior â€" city Alderman and deputy Lord ; Mayor, had never missed any hospitâ€" able function concerning the troops under Hardisty‘s command. Now they approved one another and setted down to the solid effort of making. casual contact into real friendship. year was 68, he sdd d. _‘ i hy is t “Should be many was published in The Advance twenty times that number," was the comment Years ago. The report wat given by "The . average attendanoe at meetings was 12," the. repqrt continued. That 'seemed beyond attempt at comxmant President King referred to the meetâ€" Oscar ‘Robertson, then the local supâ€" r.ntendent. Cochrane District Childâ€" ren‘s Aid was organized in May, 1924. Previously the work in the Porcupine ing cf the Northern Ontario Assdcia~! Camp and North had been under the ted Boards of Trade. to be held in Febâ€" | :Mkamins Sciety. In May, 1924, ruary at Timmins and urged that every effort be made to make the occasion a notable one. He said that smaller places like Ccchrane, Englehart, Cobalt and â€"other centres in the North had presented notable meetings of the Asâ€" scciated Boards and he hcped that Timmins would do as well the next . Max Ryan mentioned the new rate on ties on the T. N. O. Railway This new freight rate added about 15 cents per tie to the cost of shipping : to North Bay and he thought it would practically put the industry out of business in this part of the. country. This brought on a general discussion of T. N. O. freight rates and it was eventually decided to take the matter up again with the T. N.: O.F. King was nominated for president for 1925, but would not stand, ‘saying that he‘ had held the office for. two successive years and felt that scmeone else should take it. up for 1925. G. A. Macdonald, H. G. Laidlaw and F. M. Wallingford were then nominated for president, the two first named withdrawing in . fayour of F. M. Wallingford who was elected by acclamation as pregident for 1925. Mr. Laidlaw was elected viceâ€"préesident by acclamation and the . rest .of the | officers were left for ancther meeting to select. The Advance twenty years ago menâ€" tioned that Mr. Chas. Pierce had reâ€" turned from a visit to his pine limits in Sisk tcwnship, some fifty miles from North Bay. Mir.:Pierce expressed himself as delighted with the limits and the pine thereon. He thought the pine the flnest._ in phe_ _Nox;t;h.» There ‘ cwever, the Cochrane Society was organized, with â€"headquarters at Timâ€" mins. Officers were: Chas, V. Galâ€" lagher, South Porcupine, president; Alâ€" bert Taylor, Cochrane, first viceâ€"presâ€" ident;â€"F. K. Ebbitt, Iroquois Falls, secâ€" ond viceâ€"president; D. Johnson, Meathâ€" eson, third viceâ€"president; D. Sutherâ€" land, Timmins, treasurer; O. Robertson, secretary. During the time covered by the report seven applications were reâ€" received from the Juvenile Court; 13 ceived for children:; 24 children were were made wards; six were sent to Industrial schools. It will ‘be noted how largely the work has extended in the twenty years, more being handâ€" led in the ordinary month now than were dealt with in eight months in 1924. Members elected to the Separate School Board for 1925 . in . Timmins were:â€"D. Laprairie, J. E. Newton and F, Kehoe. There was a very great amout of interest in the. election, very large percentage of the possible vote being polled. Among the local and personal notes in The Advance ten years ago, there were the following:â€""Miss Millie Leâ€" hman, of Matheson, is reported ill with ptomaine poisoning, thought to be due to eat.ng some canned fruit." "W. Mcâ€" Knight was reâ€"elected mayor of New Liskeard for 1925 by acclamation." "At a children‘s party in town the other day a little boy was attempting to twist a little girl‘s arm. The little girl, a vigorcus and determined young. person, managed to struggle free, and as she did so, hurled at her tormentor, ~‘"Yes," the puzszled solicitor replied, “tthuaviewwosstbemwthe in ‘cultivating ‘Carol Gilroy‘s aquaintâ€" ~ance. So sbon as the raid wak over he cbntrfved, by some deft method, to . lqang is wife to her own occasionsâ€" Whne he gallantly escorted the girl to .*ner héme; in the Cathedral Close. was sqmewhat alarmed. Her experiences with .the General, up to ‘this. point, had taught her that he rarely wasted a word of action. And what she new of her father‘; legal gift for seeing as far through a brick wall as possible, made her wonder,. brilliant Secret Service ofï¬cers In-' "And, Genera.l, can .you glve me a ecldently; he is my nephew. Germany|reason?".. . _ knows him as ‘Karl Eisenhausen." "They know too much The solicitor slowly removedâ€" his! (To be contlnued.) pipe. "The devil, you say!" He paused The characters in this story are enâ€" and : asked, “Is Carol aware Oof all tirely imaginary. No reference is inâ€" this?" She comforted her mind with recolâ€" lections of Gnes’s assurance that the General . had known him since, his childhood. â€" > Yes, she had many reasons for her other offices having put their materials bewilderment. But, being a sensible in the vault for the night. The inâ€" and diplomatit,,young woman, sqe tense cold made _ fireâ€"fighting. very soon took herself and her speculations difficult, but the fire ade. did exâ€" to bed. cellent wrok. It will be about "t V:llhen :{x:mhaddrreitired.dJolztglm %ilroy weeks before the necessary repairs can made ce adroit and 5 cant be completed." moves. He placed a rotund sycamore ‘The Advance noted tweniy years ago log on the fire, settled the tobacco jJAr, that J. A. Legris had been elected and the whisky within easy reach, mayor of Halleybury for 1925 by. a then â€" â€"meditatively filled his DIg majority of 25 over Mr. Poppleton. cherrywood pipe. One icf‘the big feaures of this week e LiA O seain ooo _fhe the Sparhslons! s $Md Night" at the . T 1 aledonian obviously a judge of the 18th century, society. The programme, entertainâ€" g’;l'l;f; ;’: %ol?:r@ty I‘{)?:;];n Ti’::e ment, arrangements and everything. s ran trug to â€"elimin@â€" eyen to the refreshments, were in tion «of that big brown periwig would charge of bachelor membrs© of the result. in an .astounding. likeness 10 goocjety though the bachelors are said this pmviaer:ous_,--'i@li?i.wr sitting by l:he! to have kidnapfed Andy Roberts for hearthâ€"side,. waiting....the sif;meb‘ ‘"~ the evening and passed him Ooff as a mqr‘ousksqu@;ge face, sparkling I;ci)wn bachelor. ‘However, the‘ evening took eves, the same investment of PatIENt ‘norture of two valued members of the dignity,. . it Accideda ‘he com d.occasion to refer: to the ‘expected deâ€" Sir. Alpert decided, he cou! | Society, Mr. and Mrs: Hill who were confide. 1.:9?4:â€", e the to Scotland. ‘Mr, and Mrs. 5 I 4 e::tt; ng tde tosoJ ;r Hill were made life members of the :m";’;p AY : _.-.m‘_if ï¬aénc;én?i?:ï¬e i1 c:rerj Society and wished the best of good sliroy s . ApprovIng .. S NC CH L _| fertune and happiness whereever they fully, looked intpo his pipeâ€"bow!l. S°|migh't' be o4 L mora ban winls sorncscm Acracee _ ue $ * »r confide in.this man. . C "I like cutting cackle " the soldier vabruptly stated, and warmed to John Gilroy‘s. approving smile as he careâ€" fully, looked intp his pipeâ€"bowl. "So TI‘ll have to risk your daughter‘s evenâ€" tual displeasure by asking youâ€"do you know yourâ€"ahâ€"future sonâ€"inâ€" law very well? There was a distinct in this midnight . visit It was also a purpose recievant to. hez. own intimate â€"affairs, and those of thp ,still mysterious Giles Moreton ...Orâ€" Pomonby-Moreton ....OP Karl Eidenhauson. mm i The lawyer slowly expanded into a series of rich chucklings He rubbed at his ironâ€"grey thatch, then gusted low, dry laughter. , A lean cat crossed a lawn beneath a huge cedar. The fiveâ€"fold west winâ€" dow of the fane reflected jewelled gleams, â€"and a rain of most delicate white ash sifted from the gentle winds like the fall of midnight manâ€" naâ€"on roses and clematis and cold yews. s "No, she isn‘t," Sir Albert Hardisty got to his feet and moved to the winâ€" jows, motioning Gilroy to follow him. "Does this; look out on to the Close?" -'v'v'-' uo t P y +t e * 4 'eksence ‘in its moonltt veils Those ghostly, goldén vapours moved with a breathâ€"taking beauty above the fretâ€" tings ‘and traceries of the great cathâ€" edral. â€" 40 "Q( «be mï¬ll ‘of youx iaack- j i*:;:flm the General gingerâ€" rd, but hailted when he saw shape under Flintoff®‘s linen tended to any living person or to any public or private company. A report of the work of the Cochrane District ‘Children‘s Aid Scciety for the The Advance noted tweniy years ago that J. A. Legris had been elected mayor of Halleybury for 1925 by a John Gilroy looked down into the moonâ€"lit quadrangle. A grim shape in full battleâ€"order, a gleaming bayonet protruding from his sloped rifle, quarded the tall Georgian house. "Fire did much damage at. the Dome Mine offices about 3 o‘clock on Sunday morning, Jan. 6th," saidâ€"The Advance twenty years‘ ago, "The blaze started in one of the offices, the cause .of the fire not being known. Before the fire was ‘brought: under. control the. lower part of the building was gutted and considerable.damage done ta the upper portion of the structure. The office of the geologist was the worst sufferer, but the generalâ€" manager‘s. office and that of the general â€"superintendent were also injured by the flames. No maps cr other.records were spoiled except in the geclogist‘s ‘cffice, the other offices having put their materials in the~vault for the night. The inâ€" tense cold made 3 ï¬re-ï¬ghting very difficult, but the fireshrig did cellent wrok. It will be about t weeks before the necessary repairs can be completed." The Advance noted tweniy years ago _eration to remedy the trouble." ; W. J. Post is the new reeve of Bucke son, I am not your wife." "Some days ago some party unknown threw a brick through the window of the house of the constable at Elk Lake, narrowly missing th constable‘s head." ‘"Provinâ€" cial Officer Fenwick, of Porquois Juncâ€" tion leaves this week for Toronto to undergo an Ooperation for a peculilar condit.on of the jaw. Some months ago while making a search of a farm house in the C:onnaught area, he was struck over the neck and jaw by a broom wielded by the lady of the house. Since then he has been unable to remâ€" edy the injury. It is thought the blows from the ibroom must have injured a nerve. In any event he has been deâ€" prived of the proper use of his jaw, and the doctors have ordered an opâ€" "Mr township." ‘"There are 292 students .enrolled this year at North Bay Norâ€" ‘mal school." "Daily newspapers have ly pulled the curtainings aside., "But I want you to peep out here." in Sisk tcwnship, some fifty miles day a little boy was attempting to from North Bay. expressed twist a little girl‘s arm. The little himself as delighted ‘with the limits Eirl, a vigorcus and determined young and the pine thereon. He thought person, managed to struggle free, and the pine the finest in the North.. There as she did so, hurled at her tormentor, were 26 square miles in the limits. \ the ind:gnant protest, "Herbert Johnâ€" "Fire did much damage at the Dome son, I am not your wife." "Some days Mine offices about 3 o‘clock on Sunday ago some party unknown threw a brick morning, Jan 6th," saidâ€"The Advance through the window of the house of twenty vears ago, "The blaze started the censtable at Elk Lake, narrowly s o ty Lo ie it pricy ies is t e ty 54 20 ow .. from . R. Franklin Among the local and pérsonal notes in The Advance ten years ago, there were the following:â€""Miss Millie Leâ€" hman, of Matheson, is reported ill with ptomaine poisoning, thought to be due to eat.ng some canned fruit." â€" ‘"W. â€"Mcâ€" Knight was reâ€"elected mayor of New Liskeard for 1925 by acclamation." "At a children‘s party in town the other day a little boy was attempting to twist a little girl‘s arm. The little bert Taylor, Cochrane, first viceâ€"presâ€" K. Ebbitt, Iroquois Falls, secâ€" ond viceâ€"president; D. Johnson, Meathâ€" eson, third viceâ€"president; D. Sutherâ€" land, Timmins, treasurer; O. Robertson, secretary. During the time covered by the report seven applications were reâ€" received from the Juvenile Court; 13 ceived for children:; 24 children were were made wards; six were sent to Industrial schools. It will ‘be noted how largely the work has extended in the twenty years, more being handâ€". led in the ordinary month now than were dealt with in eight months in 1924. ° Members elected to the. Separate School Board for 1925 . in . Timmins were:â€"D. Laprairie, J. E. Newton and F. Kehoe. There was a very great amout of interest in the. election, a very large percentage of the possible vote being polled. 3X % ‘MacBrien Bailey: #2% Third Avenue R. MacBRIEN BARRISTERS and SOLICITORA RIVBR S1I DE PA'VILI""w Music at the "PAV" by | _ GENE CROCCO and His ORCHESTRA ~ Gentsâ€"T5e _ . ‘ Ladiésâ€"â€"26 o_ â€" ce _1 e Simmsâ€"Hooker Pickering ~~â€"â€"INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES â€"â€" REAL ESTATE _ , Call and see us regarding New Low Rates on all Automobile llinu‘anee 20 PINE STREET NORTH â€" 18 BRUCE Avnmm f McInnis Block . Phone 30 . Phone 112 Timmins South Porcuplne Ont. BEFORE Barrister, Solicitor, Ete. Bank of Commerce Buildi NOTABRY SOLI PUBLIC S. A. Caldbick Barristers, Solicitors, Ete. MASSEY BLOCK Enjoy Dancing to the Finest Music on the mu Floor in the North. Dancing Saturday Evening Fire Threatens, Let Us Help You Check Your Fire Insurance. _ and south Porcupine --;«m, w been pubnshlns picmres "Ot a new mutorwthutlnmdtqhoablew climb a set of stairs. Wohdérful im= provements have been made and are being made in automobiles. Ina few years it is possible that there may be a motor car that will be able to travel. on North Country roads even in the spring and fall." ; FRIDAYâ€"Public Skating 2 p.m. Juvenile: Hockey 7.80â€" p.m. Sea Cadets vs Lions 4 9: p.m. United Mov;xs vs. Canadiens. : During the war there have been many â€" references in The Advance to the wonderful work done by the Red Cross for prisonerâ€"ofâ€"war.. Rarly in the war, Mr. Frank McDowell, of Timmins, who was a prisonerâ€"ofâ€"war in the last war, told of the fact that he felt that he owed his very life to the Red Cross, as he would have been starved to death as‘a prisonerâ€"ofâ€"war. if it had not been for"the parcels sent by. the Red Cross then. Since that time . similar expressions have come from prisonersâ€"ofâ€"war in the present war.. A Cochrane soldier, Sergeant Lloyd McCauley, puts the matter in â€"way‘ that is a~comfort to those at home, ‘as well as a word of praise for the Red Cross. He says in a reoent' letter home from a German prison camp that his neck and. shouldet. wounds are now healed and that he\ is able to play ball. He adds that he is both comfortable and contented, and has plenty of food, for which he gives>> great praise to the Oanadian Red Cross. Prisonerâ€"ofâ€"War Gives. Thanks to the Red Cros Try the Advance Want Advertisements ty n i e o P â€"f + ol t Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.S. 238 Foeurth Ave. PO. Bos 1591 Swiss Watchmaker Graduaté of the Famous Horologial Institute of Switzerland THURSDAYâ€"Public Skating 8.30 MCNDAYâ€"Senior Hockey 8. 15 ; ‘Bchumacher vs Tkm!uns TUESDAYâ€"Skating Club all day WEDNESDAYâ€"Public Skatlng 2 | ! 1 _p.m. and 8.30 p.m. â€" | SATURDAYâ€"Public CHARTERED Accomm 6 ThIRD AVENUT F. BAUMAN Ontario Land Surveyer 8.30