es V i * .t : t 4 vï¬â€% this moe Best Transfer in Northern Ontario Prompt Service. Good Attention Prices Right y Cor. Ball Grounds, opp. Phone 88 Knight Bros McKinnon A. PCOLEY, WM. FIFELD, Pikie‘s Transfer P 0 9 Maple Street, Timmins. P.O. Box 75. Phone 211. ALSO SELLING PIANOS 0. SEGUIN Freight, Express Ceneral Transfer Sewing Machines Moeets every first and fourth Monâ€" day in the Oddfellows‘ Hall at 8 m.m. Visiting brethren always * p.Im. welcome ACCOUNTANT and AUDITOR xperience Ofce Reed Blk. nergy Timmins, Ont. juipment Telephone 66 Business Systems Installed and Improved. Opposite the Goldfields TIM MINS I. A. HOWSE 35 Fourth Ave., Timmins Wholesale Tobaccos and Confectionery Agent for Singer §M M S HOOKER REA L ESTATE INS URA NCE (Agent3 for Confederation Life Assoc‘ation). Meets every Tuesday evening in the Oddfellows Hall, Third â€"Avenue. Visiting# brethren requested to sttend. GReo. 8. Drew W. G. Smith TENDERS WANTED FOR WOOD. L0DSE, 1.0.0.f, No. 30 in« beltin: in before the 25th of November, 1920, addressed to the Secretary of the School Board Mattagami Heights Post (Oflice. 45â€"46., Big Tenders wanted for 50 cords of 2 foot dry Jackpine, Tamarack and Birch Wood for the School Board of Mattagami Heights. Tenders must be on n SAWING OUTFIT FOR SALE Graduate McGill Medical Coll. Reed Block, Timmins. Has resumed practise after 3 years service overseas. Phones: Office 202A. Res. 202B or Sale snap. Appiy augit Station 64 Rsidence PHON®E 118 4Gâ€"47 ‘immins has enough of them to ansâ€" wer any need. And no matter whai ue season, Timmins is right there in e line of sports worth while. Base bail, Football, Tennis, Golf, Lacrosse, â€"these were sports suceessfuly carriâ€" d along here during past summers. ‘ity visitors here last summer were stonished at the unusual brand of aseball between Timmins and Iroâ€" uois Falls. ‘‘Never saw better in bis eague games,‘‘ was an expression ased by more than one Toronto man last summer. And this coming seaâ€" son Timmins will have skating, hockey snowshoeing and other winter sports Timmins has one of the largest and fin est rinks in the Province. And a proâ€" posal is now under way to start a curl ing rink. In the hockey line this seaâ€" son the Porcupine has a hockey lineâ€" up that will let Toronto understand this is no ‘bush league district. If The Gloke knew the North (Land that aper would not be so weepingly asâ€" tonished at the hockey experts leaving the city to come North where they gain much worth while and lose little worth writing home about. Two large modern, wellâ€"equipped schools of the best type show that this town does not neglect the more serious things of life There are also three churchs here, with an occasional salvation army. The town has upâ€"toâ€"date and well equi ped a set of stores and business places as could be asked for. Timmins, furâ€" ther, has a fine town ‘band,â€"a eredit to this, or any other town of the size. Good roads, sidewalks, electric lightâ€" ing, an excellent water system,â€"these are some more of the advantages of Timmins. in addition, a sewerage sysâ€" tem and a new incinerator are in course of completion. Reores of other things might be mentioned, but enough has surely been said to show that Timmins is not dull, dead, back woods town where the lively lads from the city might die of loneliness when the day‘s work is done. Timmins has its ‘*movies‘‘ and its ‘*bright lights‘"‘ beyond the comprehension, perhaps, of the staid Toronto Globe. Timmins is a lively town worth living in and if the editor of The Globe will come and spend a few months here he will likeâ€" ly loosen up enough when he is startâ€" ing south again to say :â€"**1‘ll tell the world that furnis i5A dances are just as good as mt\ orchesâ€" tras,â€"indeed they are city orchestras that ecame here, perhaps because they were too good for the cities. Poolâ€" rooms, billiard halls, bowling alleys,â€" In an editori Toronto, The people going ti of seeuring em Toronto Newspapers Plcase Note That This is a Town Of Golden Days And ‘‘Bright Lights.‘‘ wants 1500 men. Some mines have had to curtailoperations materially be ‘ause of a lack of unskilled workers. The world needs paper, lumber, gold and silver and most other products of the forest and mine. (Men who want work should keep away from Toronto unless they are fairly sure of â€"obtainâ€" ing employment at accustomed occupa tions. The North beckons. _ There may ‘be a lack of ‘‘*movies‘‘ and of the ‘‘bright lights‘‘ of the city streets but in compensation there will be no line."‘ It would be impossible for any outâ€" side newspaper to refer to the Nort! Land without making some sort of error. In this case, however, The (GHobe‘s erorr is not so serious as usual. The North Land is not, as The (GHlobe seems to imagine, a forest land devoid of amusements and helpful reâ€" creations. A man may not only enjo} ‘"‘"golden days‘‘ in Timmins, for ins tance, ‘but he can assuredly spend ‘"bright nights‘‘ and find ‘‘bright lights‘‘ in this far north camp. There re ‘‘movies‘‘ here, tooâ€"three new ind good programmes a weekâ€"jus like they have them in the cities. And the moving picture theatre here, fo: appearance, for comfort, for equipâ€" ment and for every other desired a tribute will stand comparison wit! any city show place. It will sea{ about 800, and often it is filled t capacity. A glance at the weekly issue ‘of The Advance will indicate the large number of dances and other social events held here. There are no less than four regular dances held ecach week, with specials that would un the average week so that people ere could ‘be danceing five nights a ook if they wisaed. And the orclhe: TiMMiNG B8 SUPPLY OFf AMUSEMENTS le going to the €it} ‘euring employment Globe says:â€"‘*The n the forests and h. A single lum week, w the avera could he litorial on unemployment The Globe advises agair ng to the «ity in the hbop zx employment. Continuiu _says*â€"‘*There is work forests and mines of t sinzle â€" lumberâ€" compa um k T mad ds â€" S * 4A ht €4 h" compan i(Â¥ '~M~mw eV