~ i FRANK BYCK 408800066 , @49 994000%0000 860084b 64660 0606604090600 4600000644464 000864 2000000000 0 m Geils Herman Next to Dalton‘s â€" Third Ave. LOTHES the skill. of the highest. tailoring art if we make them. .\Izm\' of the wellâ€"dressed _ women of this city owe their prestige, of fashion to us. Why not avaiil: yourself of our. services, likewise? |For qualâ€" ity, authority of style and distincâ€" tive creations, we have no superâ€" Tors as tailors. Corner Third Avenuci Phone 24 Corner Third Ave. and Birch St. PHONE 24 Sullivan Newton, Insurance and Real Estate, have moved their offices to the new Marshallâ€"Rcclestone Block. BANK OF MONTREAL For years the Bank of Montreal has coâ€"operated with its customers, assisting in various ways in matters of finance and business. 3 MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BLOCK. (Upstairs) REMOVAL NOTICE SMALL ACCOUNTS WILLINGLY HANDLED SULLIVAN NEWTO I'l' is the aim of the Bank of Montreal to serve willingly in little things as well as largeâ€"to be generally helpful to its cusâ€" tomers regardless of the size and extent of their dealings with the Bank. Insurance and Real Estate Frank Byck Established 1817 If you require information or any other banking service, you have merely to write or call. Timmins Branch W. C. MITCHELL, MANAGER 46608 6008 0660666666 666666866664 astrol L191 1 When toâ€" tiul in'.lsn Buil d irony Hal: rrated people fire 1: pathe and after must ) d 4+ ul events the rebuilding of Haileybury will be W difficult task. The more reâ€" maining to bear a share of the burden, the easier the load for each to carry. The generous neighbors who did so much for Haileybury in its disastrous days last October should not sporl this kindly interest ‘by any methods that will add to the present difficulâ€" ties of the County Town. This is the neighborly attitude taken by The New Llskeard Speaker last year. It wonld be well for the people of Liskeard in this case to follow the lead of their newspaper. Any town or people that profits by Haileybury‘s disaster, or makes the disaster an opportunity for advancement at the expense of Haileybury will lose esteem in this North Land. Brave _ Haileybury should have a generous deal from all in the North. It may well be hoped that the clever, hidden irony of the letter ~writer may «eventually prove uncalled for. But in the meantime, the letter stands as one of the cleverâ€" est parables published in a North Land newspaper this many a day. When ‘‘Iwaki‘‘ is translated as ‘‘New Liskeard,‘\ and the reference to tie **Imperial Government buildâ€" ings"‘ <is changed to the ‘*County Buildings,"‘ the cleverly â€"concealed irony in the letter is made anparent. Haileybhury has snown itself most for the aszistance riven its people at the time of the disastrous fire last October, and for the symâ€" pathetic interest shown in the revival and reâ€"establishment of the town after the fire. At the same time it must be evident to the good people of Haileybury that all â€" interest shown has not been altogether disinâ€" terested. The more people ‘who reâ€" built in Haileybury theâ€" greater the town‘s chancees for reâ€"establishment. If only a few stayed to reâ€"establish the town, the ‘burden of taxation on that few â€" would. prove unbearable. Haileybury needed every house, every industry, every institution that it had previously. ‘With all â€" remaining to bear the burden of taxation and to add to the town‘s business, the optimâ€" ism and courage of the people might well ‘be expected to ‘carry the day,â€" just as it is doing.â€" But every citizen and every institution enticed. away made the burden so much the harder on those remaining. In the ‘best of Just take your time friemi‘! Things are not always what they seem. For exampr‘e read this letter published in the last issue of The Hailevyburian :â€" Haileybury, Sept. 10, 1923. the remarkable g But apart from t see why Haryveb ticularly concerne But réead ‘ it‘ HMaileybury‘‘ ; 4 ‘‘fire of October‘ astrous earthquak light will begin CAN YOU SEE THE CLEVER IRONY IN THIS LETTER® to the Imperial Government building material they will ly give them lots to build will enable them to escane 72118 O buriding material They will practcalâ€" ly give them lots to buil4] on, which will enable them to escape the high taxes wh.ivh of course will hbe imnposed on those foolish people who remain in‘ Fokio.. The\ city. is‘ aliso ‘taking steps to accommodate the Parliament of Japan during the erisis, and ‘have requested the Government to take adâ€" vantage of some of the vaeant land they have on which to build manent Government buildin, This will save those who desire to stay in Tokio the I supporting _ government which is exempt from taxa tae â€"extent O nejetbors, but that whyv Ourst rvourite new 1¢€ +J A ow 44X 3 *A W is j o s I 6 % i 9 » week. from Timmins to attend ‘ 5 Al“"a}'s at )’Our SerVICe Cameronâ€" MeMil}lan y w!'i:!z:. xi h Erifinan m ‘ ‘ : Â¥ Â¥ * *# % t 3 12 ~W x ,)!.'10'\::.'*. tizens VOUuU YVOuU _ mMmayVy Y M ir{lCUuEar Hnt Haleyhury. 1 mavy perh y of Tokio was almost obâ€" by the earthquake, leaving of thousands of citizens x government exempt from tax suppose, there w who will not t ~of the charit\ it to yM the iper any reference I generosity of Iwak this, vou may fail t ied in such a letbter again, â€" substituting for . _ ant ‘‘* in place of *‘ dis ke of last week‘‘ an iave seen is correc waki have generous! mes to the refugee vith food aund shelt their distress. The V O to o _ for yYou is translated â€" as and the reference jfovernment buildâ€" iU| n enticed. away much the harder In the ‘best of should in such 11 who fooli ie burden of ition enerousix refugees, id shelter ss. They 0o _ rliameat [1 and ‘iave dl\ 2 ‘l(l ey Huve y appeal fm somC the tL the bc NT‘ C th [5a i 1 1t Work ‘has been completed on the boring of the first deep well on the contract undertaken by the Layneâ€" Bowler Water Development Co. of New York guaranteeing a deep well water supply of not less than 600 galâ€" lons per minute for the town of Cochâ€" rane. The first well is 138 feet beâ€" low ground devel and 220 feet below town level, and work is now proceed:â€" ing on the boring of a second wel! which, it is expected, will ‘be in the neighborhood of 250 ‘feet below ground level. social good tlime willt ré dance this (Wednesday the Mcelntyre Recreation the auspices of the Schu nis Club. A special 0o furnish the best of music This marks completion of one of the first steps in the campaign launcbâ€" ad by Cochrane to ensure a pure waâ€" ter supply, in order to obviate any further possibility of a typhoid epiâ€" gArCL epide expel further possibility of a typhoid epiâ€" demic such as the one which swept Cochrane in the spring of this year. The two deep wells are about 100 yards apart and situated in the neighâ€" borhood of the Spring Lake springs. It is expected that they will give the required 600 gallons per minute unâ€" der the eontract but if the supply falls short of this the company will be obliged to bore another well. Under ordinary cireumstances The Advance might be tempted, while congtatulatinge _ and commendinz Cochrane on its present enterprise in make such M COCHKRANE PROVIDED WITH EXCELLENT WATER SUPPLY in Timmins nil empt the reply :(]ll mM L uring . a. sale. . h dly suggest that i ter if this good : n provided prev niceâ€" rather than OV 6 6404080 O 00040600094 006 ¢% 000000000 0 46 )t rTe@conmnt L <€ Four Stores in the North The George Taylor Hardware Limited e w ind oVE s jpresent enterprise ife water supply, that it would have be zood water supply | previous to the e ‘ Lake springs that they will give the allons per minute unâ€" ict but if the supply n id l ireumstances Th tempted,* whil d commendin chumache hit orchestra w would evenln The Geo. Taylor Hardware rha ph 111 )+ *JA (44 OOM 86 Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Bldg., Timmins All Diseases Successfully Treated by This Method in tne qistance near the peak is a snowâ€"white precipice, which they tell us is two miles wide and a mile high. It is all excellence and loveliness until one travels twenty miles farther. Then it gleams like the {angs of a wolf. It is the rockâ€"face of Turtle Mountain, cleft from top to bottom in 1905 to the destruction of the mining town of Frank. i Toâ€"day the whole valley, two miles wide, is a tempestuous chaos of white stone blocks, some of them as big as a house, all with jagged edges and sharp corners. They are piled from fifty to one hundred feet high above the original valley level. The railway line climbs over the debris. Beneath it lies the broken city. On either side of the avalanche stand a few deserted houses, windows out, glaring like skulls upon the newer town. The whole valley spells terror and tragedy. Even yet people talk of Pompeii and Herculaneum, but they are like to forget the more terrible fate of Frank when rock by millions of tons fell a mile out of the sky. Rolling up to the Crow tree upon themâ€"natur: Here are seen occasional ou height show all the charact Rockies, with crag and pre With a bag of salt one could have a toy range which any rcoom with advantage to her Hat know too little about t glorious engineering of Nat Consider the Crow‘s N schedule of railwayâ€"rautes: to Dr. C. E. Hawley at A Chain of Service " Chiropractic Specialist ‘ROC The Fireproof Wallboard in d ool E. mpressions. d more above oks from the e. Leading u Limited In the Crow‘s Nest ‘Better "walls and ceilings Gyproc walls and ceilings can be painted, tinted or papered the same as any plastered wall. It is absolutely fireproof and a wonderful insulator against heat or cold. § Peftects can be obtainâ€" ed through the use of Gyproc Wallboard. Because of its unshrinkable and nonâ€"warping qualities, ‘"Gyproc" can be used on the walls and ceilings of the most costly. homes. Unlike ordinâ€" ary wallboard, Gyproc stays put regardless of temperature to which it is subjected, formâ€" ing a beautiful, perfectly flat surface without a wrinkle or roll. Write for a sample of Gyproc and Booklet. EAUTIFUL PANEL ow‘s Nest Pass are olive green foothills without a ural cattle runs clothed with succulent short grass. outcrops of rock, which in their four or five feet of acteristics of a mountain range; miniatures of the recipice and col reproduced on the smallest scale. uld lay on glaciers, touch the peaks with white and ny Eastern schoolteacherâ€"could set up in her classâ€" herself and her pupils. Canadians east of Medicine t lay on giaciers, touch the p« ~Eastern schoolteacher could self and her pupils. Canadia he construction of this Conti jle for many m e a fuzzy, rou iveâ€"green billo 1ame brings b of coal mines St 1s a mount 24] | ny mil . roun Cobalt Cochrane New Liskeard Timmins before some of us a s_2T hose are derivâ€" tain rising to 9,000 tC he rockâ€" pedl\ as crovu ‘sâ€"nest on the fading into a soft, minilatures of the the smallest scale. aks with white and set up in her classâ€" ibout the