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Figâ€" Lax Laboratories, Ltd., Woodâ€" stock. Ont. Thursday, Oct. 14th, 1926 Goldfield‘s Block Timmins, Ont. When leaving town and selling off your household effects, why trouble with the secondâ€"hand man? He gives you just as little as you‘ll takeâ€"and no more. Bring your furniture, ctc., to the Auction Mart where it will be promptly sold off at good pricesâ€"and immediate settlement follows the sale. 93 t.f. WHY CONSIDER THE SECONDâ€" HAND MAN? Phone 567M Excavations for Cellars, Sewers, Etc. Contracts of all kinds taken EMPIRE BUILDING 00000000(00000000000000000000000000000000000 + ... vOQO.OOOOQ.QOO’QO’O0000000000000000000’000000000000000000000000,00.0’00.00.000000000000000000000.00000:0'00000.00:00%000000000000"00000’000. 25 and 50 Cents At Druggists The Tonic and Vegcetable Laxative Sure Relief for ALSO Public School McIntyre Hall Public School South Porcupingé (one day) #, 4+ *# w #4 # 4# ve #@ # #4 * #* © * _ _# “'“. #4 *.,* 0"» #. .@ 0“0 CORRECT VIOLIN ACADEMY Studio: St. Onge Block, Timmins, Ont. Fire Insurance at Reduced Rates Insurance of every description and Real Estate MORTGAGES ARRANGED LEO MASCIOL tra During Fall and Winter Months TABLES HELD ON REQUEST s #. _# . * “.“.“.Q‘ Schumacher (one day) ~Last week fire broke out in the jail at Elk Lake, and the building was burned down. â€" As there was an elecâ€" trieal storm in progress in the early morning hours when the fire comâ€" menced, it is thought that lightningt' may have caused the blaze. There was no one in the jail at the time. 1t would be well for Timmins to conâ€" sider what might h®Bpen here if a fire started in the jail building, with several prisoners locked up, and no officer left in charge of the jail, as often happens. e e e e e l o L L L L LAE + -303000000000000000000000000000ooooooooooooozoooooooooooovooo Day Phoneâ€"No. 104 237 Night Phoneâ€"No. 151 Phone No. 321 Dome Mines {one day) i. ‘t,. ;%, ;t :%. :t :t :t t “.“.00 .N.“.“.“.“.“ + THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONT Young Man Given Year for /\ Negligence in Charge of Auto TAane 1ASt â€"WCEK, â€" Willl O Â¥LL. JiuUsLI0CC Wright presiding, there were a numâ€" ber of cases that were of special inâ€" terest to Timmins and district. The one that perhaps held the chief interest here was the charge of manâ€" slaughter against â€" Allen (Jeckell, a mining engineering student from the University of Toronto who has been at the Hollinger for some time past. The case arose from the automobile accident last May at the corner of Fourth avenue and Cedar street. Jeckell and Mrs. Ida Beaudreault were in a motor car, and in turning the corner the car ran up on the sideâ€" walk. Mr. and Mrs. J. Wainio, who were walking on the sidewalk, were crushed up against the cement wall. Mr. Wainio had his leg and hip badâ€" Teckell‘s Term to be a Warning to Other Motorists Says Judge. Mrs. Beaudreault, Out on Own Bail. Lepine Given Four Years and Twenty Lashes for Attempted Rape. Timmins Woman Secures Property Decision. QOther Supreme Court Cases. ick v the Supremt last week, t presiding, : that 1 Court vith M it wOolâ€" JusticeC a numâ€" and Mrs. Vietor Wenaliemen were close: behind the injuredâ€" couple. Mr. Wenaliemen was certain that Jeckell was at the wheel and that he stepped out of that side of the car. _ Pat White, mechanic, told of being sent to look after the ecar after the aceiâ€" dent.. His light way of giving eviâ€" dence drew rebuke from the Judge. Misses Robertson, Rose Ayotts and Anunie MceGowan, first witnesses for the defence, gave evidence suggesting that .Mrs. Beaudreault was driving the car along Fourth avenue. â€" Mr. A. W. Pickering had spoken to Mrs. Beaudreault just after the accident, but his evidence was ruled out by the Judge. â€"Col. S. B Scobell, of Timâ€" mins, proved a clear and helpful witness. He desceribed the position of the silent policeman, and said that the corner was a very difficult one at any time and at any speed. Edward Neald was not able to remember the evidence given by him at the inquest and so was not so satisfactory a witâ€" ness. _ Miss Quinn, High School teacher at Timmins, doscrlhod the car as travelling at a moderate speed when she saw it from a window. She did not see whoâ€" was driving. E. Shinehoft, a truck driver, was sure a woman was driving the ear. He said she wore a white coat with black spots. Dr. Joyal, who examined Mrs. Wainio the day after the accident, said she was making good progress and the patient‘s leg was in apparâ€" ently â€" satisfactory condition. _ He thought she would have had a better chanee for recovery had she remained in Timmins. The germs he thought had likely entered the wound at the time of the accident, he told: Mr. O‘â€" Flynn. Mrs. Beaudreault was called, and her counsel, Mr. Frank Kehoe, asked for the protection of the court as aâ€" gainst herself, and â€" this protection was granted. She said she had driven a car a little before. On the afternoon of the accident she had driven the car from South Poreupine. At the corner of Fourth avenue and Cedar she had difficulty in turning round the silent policeman. She had become excited and remembered little else of what happened. She said that she had been persuaded to go for a drive with Jeckell, while her sister had gone in another car with Eric Bredenberg. At South Poreupine, at Jeckell‘s suggestion, she said, she had taken the driver‘s seat. At Schuâ€" macher she wanted to change back as she was nervous about driving in Timmins, but Jeckell had told her ‘‘she was doing fine.‘‘ She had not found the brakes and steering wheel working well and had told Jeckell so. Asked in regard to the difference beâ€" tween her present evidence and that at the inquest, Mrs. Beaudreault said that Jeckell had suggested the eviâ€" dence for the inquest and told her he would take the blame. _ At this stage the Judge called both lawyer to his room for consultation, When court resumed, the jury was dismissed, and Mr. Gordon, on behalf of his client, entered a plea of guilty of criminal negligence. ‘The Crown prosecution agreed to this, and to the withdrawal of the manslaughâ€" ter charge. Mr. Gordon made an eloquent plea for lenieny for his client ipointing out that Jeckell had played a manly part throughout and that he was a young man of fine charâ€" acter and â€" disposition. _ Character evidence submitted showed the high esteem in which Jeckell was held by his employers, associates and friends in Timmins, at Toronto University, in the Yukon and in other places. Mr. (¢. Black, M.P. for the Yukon, wired. a recommendation as to the good. character of Jeckell. Mr. E. L. Longmore, â€" superintendent of the: Hollinger mill; F. A. Reid, secretary of the Toronto University Athletic Association and others added their words of approval. Four Timmins men of standing gave further eviâ€" dence of the appreciation in which Jeckell is sheld. Mr. Gordon urged that suspended sentence would serve all the purposes of justice. He said Jeckell was a credit to himself, to his family and to the country, and that when he had made a mistake he had shown a fine type of manhood all the way through. Mr. O‘Flynn said that Jeckell had aeted a manly part and had made what amends he could. He also mentioned that the prerogative of the crown was to, exâ€" tend merey. At the same time both the crown prosecutor and the Judge mentioned the fact that must be bormne in mindâ€"the consideration of the safety of the public. The people must learn, Mr. O‘Flynn said, that reckless driving of automohiles can not be tolerated. Sentence was withâ€" held until the end of the court. Jeckell was then sentenced to one year. The Judge made it plain he did not‘think him a eriminal by any means. At the same time he suggestâ€" ed there was a possibility that the sentence might be much shorter than the term imposed. ""It is an exâ€" tremely painful duty for me to imâ€" pose any sentence,""‘ said the Judge, ‘‘but I do so solely as a warning to other drivers of automobiles."‘ Another case that originated in Another case that originated in Timmins was that of, E. Lepine, charged with attempted rape on a thirteenâ€"yearâ€"old girl in the vicinity of Miller Lake. The Judge referred to the ecase as showing brutality, cowardice and. evil, and sentenced the aceused to four years hard labour and twenty lashes, ten in a month an:d ten a month before release. The girl was in company with some smalâ€" levr children in the neighborhood of Dalton‘s farm.. Lepine, according to the evidence was trying to get one of the smaller children to go with him when the older girl interfered. Leâ€" pine picked her up and carried her a distance and then attempted to asâ€" sault hber. The sereams of the children attracted attention and the man fled. He was grrested later in the day at a hotel he entered. John â€" Flabrick, of Kapuskasing, was sentenced to eight years impriâ€" sonment for wounding his wife, and three years for attempted sumerde. the terms to run concurrently. _ He pleaded guilty. The case is said to have originated from echarges of inâ€" fidelity he made against his wife, and a dispute regarding some property. Flabrick said that he ‘‘cut her on one cheek ind then on the other,â€"one for each husband.‘"‘ Leaving chis wife setiously injured in bed, he went out «nd attempted to kill himself. ‘ A civil case from Timmins was that of Mrs. Courtemanche ve. A. Courteâ€" manche and E. Laflamme. The case acainst the latter "was dismissed. The suit was over four lots in the Mattagami distriect bought in 1916 from Mr. Laflamme for $500.00. Mrs. Courtemanche said that it was. her money that had paid for the lots, the money being paid, she said, from selling eggs and boarding prisoners.. Mrs. Courtemanche said that advanâ€" tage was taken of her lack of knowâ€" ledge of the niceties of the English language to have her husbhand‘s name placed in the deedâ€"as owner. _ Mr. Justice Wright upheld the claim of Mrs. ©Courtemanche, although comâ€" menting that she had looked after her own interests pretty elosely. _ The defence was that the lots had besen bought by money from the couple, not from one, and that in view of the other property now in the wife‘s name, the division had been more than fair to her. In the case of Roy: Camley, of South Poreupine, charged with manâ€" slaughter in connection with the death of a bicycle rider hit by the bus driven by Camley on the Dome Road last spring, the Grand Jury returnâ€" ed ‘‘No Bill,"‘ and the young man was freed. oo mm tm se n en en snn ate en te Boy femember this: A diplomat is a man who remembers a woman‘s birthâ€" day, but forgets her age. Improper Punctuationâ€"Don‘ dare kiss me again‘ Proper â€" Punctuationâ€"Don‘ dare! Kiss me again. JOHN L. HUNT, Build Dollar by Dollar FUNERAL DIRECTOR ON‘T neglect to open a savingsaccount because you may have no large amount of money to deposit The Dominion Bank will accept deposits of $1.00 and upwards. Open an account now and add small amounts regularly. You will be surprised to see how rapidly your savings will grow. Toelephones 608â€"J and 608â€"W. + x y o O V C + 2 262 282282222242 4*, * #,. .%, #, .@ f -ooouoso‘0‘000000000000000“00000"000000000000:ooooooooï¬ooooz\ 03000?0‘0%0‘". TIMMINS BRANCH, yUu All the world is pleasant please. Have. you noticed tha; the big things are never done by fussy men? Keep your shirt on. in uie O€C GoOCllâ€" rane are required on.or before the 10th day of November 1926, to send by post prepaid or to deliver to Bob Rubric, Schumacher, Ontario, the Ad ministrator of the said deceased, their christian names and surnames, addresses and descriptions, the full particulars in writing of their claims, a statement of their accounts and the nature of the security if any held by them. And take notice that after such last mentioned date the said Administraâ€" tor will proceed to distribute the asâ€" sets of the said deeeased among the parties entitled thereto, having reâ€" gardâ€"only to the claims of which he shall then have notice, and that the said Administrator will not be liable for the said assets or any part thereâ€" of to any person or persons of whose claim notice shall not have been reâ€" ceived by him at the time of such disâ€" tribution. Dated at Timmins, Ontario the 30th day of September, 1926. Marshallâ€"BEeclestone‘ Building, f Timmins, Ontario. Solicitor for Bob Rubric the said Adâ€" ministrator. 40â€"42. Mclntyre Recreation Hall SCHUMACHER DEAN KESTER, Acting Manager. against the Rubric who ‘nd ~day ‘of ettlement of ¢t of Cochâ€" before the