The library i please cne and very well. The n rived this week shelves are vari are such that 0: opportunity to m Amony the n The Face of HMHarold Clunnâ€" the most beautif the cSsuntry aro This will have a ple who have s also be very in Bourinat‘s Ru G. ity on parliamt TwOo | and Cor cus ©00 things, Another Big Addition to the Library Shelves practice in Cani What‘s New i Winnifred Falesâ€" teresting book 1f home improvemi The Cruise of t Mulhauserâ€"An azcount of the | man. Briti study viewpo Across 1Cl manâ€"A sym people and a country. The Fascist: His State and Mind E. B. Ashtonâ€"An abstract, careful ai authoritative study of Fascism. Sir Martin Frobisherâ€"W Feeâ€"Wherein are blended t of the historian and the i writer. Lord Bothwellâ€"Robert GC â€"The story of the man w such great importance at t Mary, Queen of Scots. Contactâ€"Charles _ Codma dull page from beginning tC The Atlantic BRook of Charles Swain Thoma revised edition. The Complete Poem Pickthall â€" Marjorie F poems of a Canadian noted for rer true an trayal of Canadian sc i â€"Euccess With Houst Leslie Kift and Karin B. Heden! Especially interesting to the hou who wants to make a pretty home Adventures in Peruâ€"C. H. Prodgersâ€" An interesting book, discursive and written in a style that one is apt to think perished with Capt. Cook and Mungo Parks. Honest George Monck fith Daviesâ€"A simple tune who became one 0 captains of his age. Fiction and Nonâ€"Fiction Volumes Added to Timmins Pubâ€" lic Library. Variety of New Bocks Shows the Public Library‘s Desire to Please all Tastes in Reading. I Leap Before I Lookâ€"David Hai Thomasâ€"Life, the author seems to iÂ¥ such a zestful business that on simply must tell people about it. Zulu Warâ€"Clements. The set of twentyâ€"four volumes of th Encyclopaedia Britannica, this bein the newest edition. Ssome New Fiction The fiction bosks are so numerous and all so very interesting that there is no way of being able to pass them by. The Case of the Dangerous Dowager â€"Frlie Stanley Gardnerâ€"Mason meets his client‘s granddaughter on a gamâ€" Lling ship outside the owner‘s office, tells her to get out, and opens the door to find a corpse. THURSDAY, JUNE 10TH, 1937 18 Second Avenue is one of the best engiâ€" neered cars you can buwy. That U"400° engine is a *Asweetheart. Those A 11L IC¢ h * FOR AS LITTLE AS $3 or $4 A MONTH EXTRA you can get out ofthe " All Three" class. The Nosh LafFayetteâ€"©400" 4â€"Doot: Sedon with trunk DELIVERS for just a FEW doliars mose than the similarly equipped it £éLHn A 3 1€ Hom Clb J¢ AIMM ems Picktha and n poetess ind â€" t Goreâ€"BrC in who wa at the tim Murt Plantsâ€"Jant . Hedenbergâ€" the housewif« ldier of succeedin Mar) brakes will save me man a dented fender. That b roomy body is a jovy! 1 proud of my new Nask . . it‘s a grand antomobile! L A RGER hy dra ul nE Gri H 1l 1M t€ turbulen The Marqu study â€" New AnC The Heel . Grantâ€" heim ho! the A Â¥ d r U 11 C Ive me many ler. That big s a tjov! I‘ m e \d‘-h * * % a u1 tam ahile! ASKH Trouble T1 â€"A de Salavit gland thi The Blac} E. BRUNETTE The BC {f{ and 1€ cors. In many places, the SLIGHT diference in price amounts to fjus; $3 or $4 a month 4â€"door sedans of the "All Three" small extra on your time poyments Interes authot Win Torth A daran of W tale 11 Jan htful Angel 11 intry by 11 riel try D nd Like Wind Do Blowâ€"B. M and a puzzle of Wes Dorn L T win Norman >~ "Boun ual photograph of Nask LaFayetteâ€"400" 2â€"Door Sedan with trunk fraAaud, nd rea Mik sureiy jJOVEe Sbo. Duhamelâ€"On : fto be publish TA 1€ 1¢ Martha Ostenso best sellers. I‘1 nyg ter Ethel M. Dell ryv by Phi dehouse ‘‘ ~G. W Bundy indâ€"The ad and his mart irin2 Dunl yâ€"John and brill aining n . Buc} picturs apt. Geor hentic stc ve story 1| x irjorie Hil adesire â€"aund Or. y Teck Township Bans romanc| _ All Slot Machines riï¬.,"u(‘*â€"{lv- | o o A trit he n Nordâ€" Telling three no at ory of el 91 Roche and Ethel Callingham and disappear five Tempting â€" Offers 1 Down by Kirkland Council. Walpol The Orch wick Deepit Marriage special licet The fee is Even at the there are 4q in town . I Teck To Lake even cine questi any. ‘IThe agealt with as $3CCO m fees for sSsic $ and up. . . . NASH 1 810 ETTEâ€""400" $810 e NASH AMBASSADOR SIX and ub: NASH A M BASS EIGE T $1170 and dian list anmd subje iICKkâ€"â€"C Callin Valcurâ€"By Warwick Deeping. Ask No Mercyâ€"Perowne. The Black Automaticâ€"Mowery. Spies and Intriguesâ€"Oppenhe‘im l1€ Country Houseâ€"Galswor r1ardsâ€"Warwick Deeping. Return of the Petticoat tre o iam‘s Girl I Ethel FP. m and why five minu i she hearc £hirtsâ€"ArC d â€" McA quite lot by â€" Conquest macaine Phone 1401 machine provpiem was Timmins by placing a ee on all slot machines. for each slot machine. mparatively high figure a few of the machines expected tnat as much be collected in license ifchines. This â€" is, â€"6f PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANCGE WITHOUT NOTICE BA SS 4A DOR All prices Canaâ€" change without ouncil at Kirkland ttled the slot maâ€" ciding not to have ‘hine problem was t seller Arthur [For Sale By : Galsworthy Turned ] IJak(? Warwick course, dependant on the fact that the provincial police do not step in and stop the machines. In Kirkland Lake another view was taken of the slot machines, it being decided to ban them altogether. The council definitely deâ€" cided against the slot machines at a council meeting last week. At a previous meeting of the council, three bids were received for the slot machine priviâ€" leges. One Toronto man asked for the concession, as did also a Kirkland Lake man. In addition there was a bid from a company which guaranteed a deposit of $1500 as security for licenses. As the matter stands it is figured out by the authorities that slot machines are ilâ€" legal in Kirkland Lake and district. Atmosphere, Ardor, Amusement at Ascot Femininity, Fashions, Friâ€" volity Feature Famous Fete At nine pm. we had companyâ€"a a working manâ€"and he did the when the wicket opened. Thinking hc knew the ropes I f#oined him, but he was told the same thing and an arâ€" gument ensued for a time, and the man behind the bars asked us to kindâ€" ly move so the other people could get their tickets. Then there was an outâ€" burst which cannot be put in print but what he said about the tofts anc A local gentleman who attended the Ascot races more than once has writâ€" ten the following for The Advance:â€" Next week will be the big week at the Ascot, and the fashion creators will gei 2 kick out of it as far as fashion: Sitting on a station platform from 7 a.m. until 12.30 noon waiting for a train to take us to Staines, the last stop but one before Ascot, was a sore job in more ways than one when you knew a train passed Staines every 15 minutes. RPut what could one do? They were all through trains carrying raceâ€"goers. One would think it was a fashion parâ€" ade instead of horse race they were off to: Sitting on a.m. until 12 to take us but one bef dollar friend harm wish. wish. We finally got on the train. Six p« ple were fashion plates, and before t train pulled out three costers got | They were going to sell flowers at | race track and one of them in trying put a box of them on the rack tipy it up and one of the tofts caught the water in her lap. She got the r: before it rained. ~â€" The heavens had let loose bef:{ reached cur destination and ab che rail After t we reathed cur des a hundred people t twoâ€"byâ€"four station. Blairmore Enterprise angler, who had been W1l frco in sâ€"mething for the past six nours, was sitting gloomily at his task when a mother and her small son came along. "Oh!‘‘ cried the youngster, "do let me see you catch a fish!" Addressing the angler, the mother said, severely, "Now don‘t you cattch a fish for him until he says ‘Please‘!" rain. And egeâ€"*Now Now wha or the res vas there AC Bein rhts, and sights we saw.,. D â€"guinea gowns, men‘s coats, ve irts all hanging cver the s e busses, and everybedy their half undressed state. F cod for two solid hours trying ross the road, for it was CI ith buses coming from the Asc om the cther direction they w After ter tea main road / must na moke had tha all that . isn‘t this t do you t of the 1 must be clothin his a beautifui gown. u think of this suit, 1e morning. My retor Je a couple of millio ing around us. M I don‘t wish them an "1t rains." He got hi F TIMMINS ONTARIO in London, I would everybo ed state ours try could h beautiful e was an oulâ€" put in print, ; the tofts and urnt their ears. ired there were NORTHERN TIRE VULCANIZING CO. T9 i fashion pat they were ol B1 n â€"@aAmateur ng to hnocok cat it opened ime reply, ng to § cramme ests and sides of happy Here we 1 abou! nto the AaI ng to ipped that and any his tht on the Y bTS Sunday had Highest Temperature in May 1 | | | | The following is the official report 6. the weather for May, 1937:â€" High Temperatures The highest temperature recorded during the past month was 89 degrees on Sunday the 30th, and a record high temperature for May. The lowest maxiâ€" mum temperature was on the 13th when the thermometer did not register above 33 degrees and with a minimum of 28 degrees. This was the coldest day of the month. 4 /; in dinary The highest minimum temperature during the month was on the night of the 30th, when the thermometer did not go below 66 degrees. This was the warmest evening during the month and was followed by a thunderstorm durâ€" ing the early hours of the morning of the 3ist. oth The u light whole mont ‘Tctal prC V.OuU In addition May. on record which May of the dry 1035 wi cipitati ITiE Sunshine during the past month averaged about 5% hours per day, lowâ€" er than is usual, and this is accounted for by about 10 days during the month being overcast by heavy clouds. Sunâ€" and consistently warm. At the end of the month, several brilâ€" liant displays of the aurora were obâ€" served and as the skies were generally clear. the displays were particularly leading of 89 Degrees on May 30th, Lowest Temperâ€" ature, 28 Degrees, on the 13th. Snow nly., t] clegar, t brilliant 1€ ; May, 1e mot e day Raint AV YUTL ches and although not extraorâ€" . was quite a heavy snowfall for ime of the year, especially the th a snowfall of 2%" on one Gay sual snowfalls in May occur as intermittent showers and it is ten we get more than 1" on any 10 Pine Street South 1undetr m Precipitation on 3 days of the month h, 9th and 13th, a total of and although not extraorâ€" quite a heavy snowfall for f the year, especially the snowfall of 2%" on one day. snowfalls in May occur as Chn€ itio0n,. Oover mounted | m on the rave us .2 1¢€ s i ( in one Gay. Preâ€" 11 on 10 days only 7" conly, over the onally light : month, whe ver the month., d to practically rather on the amounting tC nches. h, when rarly morl 7 and 0 > i0ther .26 until On June l1st the sun rises at 4.10 a.m. and sets at about 8.00 p.m. in Timâ€" mins giving us a total of practically 15 hours full daylight each day on clear days. Lighting up time for vehicles during the next week or so will be at 8.30 to 9.00 pm. depending upon the state of visibility, but not 9.00 p.m. shine total 175 hours. The moon was full on the 25th of the month., A new moon is due on June 8th which will be at the full on the 23rd. Curing the Child Who Stutters "The cther day I stood for five or teéen minutes cutside the door listening to David as he played in a sandâ€"box. He made roads and tunnéls and pushed wcooden blocks, representing automoâ€" biles and trains, up and down and in and out, expressing his thoughbts aloud without the least difficulty in speech. As soon as I made a noise, he became silent:; and when I entered the room, he began to stutter and continued to do I believe this single paragraph from ‘"‘The Child Who Stutters," written by Dr. Frederick W.~Brown in â€" Hygeia magazine tells the whole story as to the cause of stuttering. As long as the child was thinking cnly of his play, nothing else on his mind for the time being, no one else mear him, he spoke clearly, distinctly without the slightest trace of stutterâ€" ing; this shows that there was nothing wrong with his tongue, his lips, his vocal cords or other parts that help to form words. It proves completely that it is nervousness or self consciousâ€" ness that causes the hesitation in speaking. "The child who stutters, is, by naâ€" ture, like every other child. At home, at school, at play, he acts and thinks and feels exactly as other children do. Physically and mentally the stutterer is frequently above the average. Emoâ€" tionally he is very sensitive; he is capable of enjoying a high degree of the finer experiences of life. Yet when he starts to talk the flow of words and thoughts is interrupted." In his own home, with those whom he loves and is loved by or with those whom he knows well and who know As lOong â€" as cnly of his pl mind for the so even when he was talking to him seli." ;\\\\\\\.\\.\.\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ S*****%* * * \\\\\\\%\’. KS *L 5 4444 Jas. W. Barton, M.D., Toronto Excursion travel will be handled on Train 46, conn with C. N. Train No. 2. On the return journey for travel on C. N. Train 1 from Montreal 7.55 p.m and Monday, June 28th, 1937. Tickets will be valid to leave destination point Wednesday, June 30th, Bargain Tickets not Valid on THE NORTHLAND, Trains 49 and 50 Points in the MARITIMES via North Bay and Canadian National BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company PEMBROKE JCT., OTTAWA, MONTREAL and QUEBEC Via North Bay and Canadian National Sydaney C. Wheeler, Weather Observer THURSDAY, JUNE 24TH, 1937 FPor FPurther Particulars Apply to Local Agent DISTRICT SERVICES LTD.~ FRIDAY, JUNE 25TH, 1937 of PBours Tbhat Boup later than Will Operate TO TCO him well, there is no trace of stutterâ€" ing. But in the presence of othersâ€"at school, at a party, speak to "girl," anâ€" swer the telephoneâ€"he cannot express his thoughts in words without stutterâ€" ing. f It is believed that stuttering. begins (1) under conditions of physical weakâ€" ness or illness; (2) at a time of sudden or intensive emotional experience, usuâ€" ally of a type producing fear, anger, or anxiety; (3) in a situation in which a child imitates another stutterer, delibâ€" erately at first, and then finds that he is unable to control his own speech; (4) conflicts in the child‘s mind. The treatment is evident. The child must be taught to mix with others more, use the telephone, read ‘aloud in the presence of others or if possible attend one of the recognized sthools for stammerers. Are you susceptible worry about your hea weight or underweigh agree with you? Do y vour calories, fats, S No Aches or Pains No Stiff Joints .. . since I started using Curtis Rheuâ€" matism and Arthritis Liniment. It‘s astounding how quickly and effecâ€" tively it gives relief," said one old rentlemzn who had rheumatic ltrouâ€" ble for years. It can do the same for you. â€"Don‘t suffer from rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, gout or lumbago. Try this harmless, yet . powerful treatment now. Get a boittle at Curâ€" tis Drug Store, 14 Ping Street North, Timmins. Just 50¢ a bottle and if you are not entirely satisfied your money will be refunded. Don‘t deâ€" lay. Call in toâ€"day. Advt. Cleans.Dirty Hands VI ind North Ba be vali June 2711