.;thelu‘g ot,hpï¬dmmflhw ‘The service has been the dream of- « an Austraian Presbyterian minister in Cloncurry. He is known as ‘"Flynn of ds†and at the moment he is moderator Of the Presbyterian church in Australia. He must be a proud man 4s WoCon- x e o es Plan Might be W e .3'3.‘ â€" e S “'-‘- and private donations, lAustrallan Aerial Medical Service â€" The flying doctor service last year beâ€" came the Australian Aerlal. Medical Service. Thanks to the flying doctor and his plane, much of the loneliness and terror has gone from Australia‘s outback. They are covering the open more than 25,000 pounds a year and of this sum the commonwealth and state governments contribute nine thousand goorlie, Wyndam and Alice Springs. The calls come from the 600 wireless stations scattered over this large area and last year 376564 called for medical help. Dr. Alberry of the Cloncurry base, who was reported missing last week, has himself circled the earth six times in mileage in his fnghts to aid people in remote areas. : Risk . Lives for Patientsâ€"To land where there is no landing ground; to risk his life to reach a patient; to go where no white man has gone. before are part of ‘the ‘flying doctor‘s job. There have been times when the wing otï¬lephmehasbeent.heroofofhis surgery; when, forced down in unâ€" known terxitowy, one or other had‘to uaeallhisskmwsavehisownuteorl to have lived to see ‘his dream come saga of the flying doctors is taken for graflted At the present. time more than a million: square ‘miles ofâ€" terâ€" ritory and upwarnds of 3000 people are served ‘by six doctors whose â€" wings carry. them on a 400â€"mile‘ radius from There are instances in Canada where a.doctor has flown to visit a patient in a remote part of the country and has on occasion brought the sick person to a centre of hospitalization, but Canada has no established service of the kind, such as, for example, is found in Australla, where in Queensland, the than a million: square ‘miles ofâ€" terâ€" ritory and upwarnds of 3000 people are served ‘by six doctors whose â€" wings carry them on a 400â€"mile: radius from Hedley, Cloncurry, Broken Hill, Kalâ€" goorlie, Wyndam and Alice Springs. than consideration. The Health League of Canada gives the following interestâ€" The facts in not only of general interest but they may suggest something along the same line© for the North, In any event the matter appears to be worthy ofâ€" some thought, though the present is not an Australls, the North is a land: of imâ€" The cost of the six bases alone is Third Avenue Bonho 29%. _ _ . t _ mc 8 _ _ oo c cA t _ a s On Presenting to the Timmins Public the Lovely Personality of Accomplished Vocalist and Violinist ¢ ~ . ~Office Over Woolworth‘s BML ESTATE and GENERAL INSURANCE Congratulations .. for . more ‘ Pare‘s evidence about the speed of Lhis car was corroborated by that of John Dalton IJr., who said that the governor on the car was in perfect working order when he examined it following the the accident and that the auto could not be driven at a speed greater than $wen‘tyeight qmes "an hour. This Lad‘s Regular Bear â€" _ at Shooting of Big Bears spaces of the island with a mantle of medical safety. How much better will be the future reputation of <‘"Flynn of the Island" than that of the dictators of Europe who apparently live only to kill. It is gratifying to know that Dr. Alberry and his plane were "found" after a search of several days somewhere 1n the spinifex desert. 200 lbs., two of them were 500 lbs. ar the fourth tipped the scaléesa t 600 lbs. VAL DOR, September 18.â€"Omer Beaulieu undoubtedly holds a record in the matter â€"of hunting bears in this district, as he has shot four within the Driver ‘of the car, Gerald Pare, said the automobile couldâ€" not go faster than twentyâ€"eight miles an hour as it was equipped with a governor restrictâ€" ing it to that speed. Asked why he waited for about seven hours before reporting the accident to police, Pare said that he was nervous and distraught and that he forgot. : George Warner, an eyewitness to the accident, said that he saw a man standâ€" ing at the rear of a parked bus at the scene of the accident. Suddenly the man waved at someone and then withâ€" out looklng right or left, ran across the road. A crgr came along at a speed of about thirty miles an hour and struck Radocevich. It bounced him up in the air and threw him to one side. Quesâ€" tioned, Warner said that he did not see how the driver could have avoided the accident. j Charge Followed Accident in Which Man Had Leg Broken and Arm, Ankle InJ uries. Gera)d Pa.re. driver for Dalton and Dwyer Taxi Company, was freed of A charge â€"of reckless driving following a court hearing yesterday morning before Magistrate Atkinson. The charge arose out of an accident which occurred at South Porcupine reâ€" cently in which John Radocevich was struck by a car dGriven by Pare vich was struck by a car driven by Pare. Radocevich received a broken leg and a dislocated shoulder and ankle. Charge Yesterday in iron dykes cut with quarts Over Woolworth‘s While inâ€" hospital in England, he said, he was among soldiers brought back from Dunkirk. Many of them were terribly injured. The Germans had dropped. flaming liquid on them and their faces were burned beyond recognition. es He enlisted December 15 at Ottawa, went overseas May 15 and left Engâ€" land 18 days ago. It took eight days on the sea and four days from the coast: to reach home. Both his ocean trips were uneventful as far as subâ€" amarines and : air raiders were conâ€" . But. aboag;q, ship on the. returning boat there were a number of children "You couldn‘t sit down but what they would be right on top of you," he galid.."They are very loving and want to be loved." One day in England when his unit was on a route march Jerry came over with a load of bombs and mistook He saw several dog fights along the coast and was full of praise for the air force men. Britain will win the war, he is certain. Their training in England was very rigorous, They had to dig miles of trenches. What is more they had to live and sleep in them. On one ocâ€" gas masks for 24 hours continuously. casion they worked and slept in their A boy got a humble job in a bank. Upon returning home after his first day his mother asked him, "Well, Johnnie, how do you like banking?" "I don‘t like it at all," said the boy. "I‘m sorry I learned it."â€"Banking, New their camp for an airport nearby. That is, his bombs" came nearer the camp than the airport. One landed on the canteen and killed a girl, also a truck driver who was just unloading Another bomb struck the home of an old, deaf woman who was down in : ~ cellar getting some preserves. When she came up her home was in ruins but the shock had brought back her rearing. A‘ man was milking a cow nearby in a field. A shell piece ri t KC:re cow in half but missed him entirely. (From Northern News) A casualty of the army, a}though not of actual warfare, Gunner Harry Letâ€" by, of the Hastings and Prince Edâ€" Lake after reaching an overseas enâ€" campment. and witnessing German air raids.: He is now employed at the Producers‘ Dairy and is living in the apartment over the dairy. His injury was suffered during training in England when they were moving up big guns. Somehow a part of a gun fell and hit him on the back of the head. He was in hospital for some time and then was sent back to Canada arriving here Saturday. Two : police officers testified that the accused man was under the inâ€" fluence of liquor. He said himself that he had been gassed that day at the mine. He had had three glasses of beer and three only. That evidence was corâ€" roborated by that of the man who was First Kirkland Man to be Invalided Saw Return of Men from Dunkirk and Nazi Air Raids. Home from Overseas , is back in Kirkland So now, when State calls clearly to its goes further to indicate that so long as aluminum is in urgent demand for airplanes and other war needs, its use is not likely to be permitted long for motor cars, for the making of highâ€" voltage transmission lines, such as that which brings power from the Gatineau Power Company to Toronto, and for many peacetime constrrction purposes. Wherewith to gird its valiant men at Or, as Winston Churchill puts it: ‘"‘Every man and woman will, therefore, prepare himself to do his duty, whatâ€" ever it may be, with special pride gand Undoubtedly aluminum will be in tremendous demand in the United States for its airplane programme, and: no more proof is needed than that the Aluminum Company of America has a huge expansion programme of. almost sso millions under way. Various makâ€" ers of aluminum cooking utensils, howâ€" ever, state.that they can get supplies from the United States if the duty is removed and they will not trench thereâ€" fore on present Canadian supplies. If that is true, the only important conâ€" siderations wh.ich\ should make the Dominion ‘Government hesitate, are: (From CGlobe and Mail) | On Bay Street there is a Canadian Hamlet so soaked in Shakespeare that, when he reflected yesterday on the paramount duty of Canadians to buy War Loan bonds to ensure their own safety and to back their own warirors, his thoughts broke through the shell of Ontario English and emerged as ‘blank verse entitled: "To Buy or Notâ€"to Buy?" â€" Whereas Denmark‘s Hamlet lived in a mental region bounded on all sides by uncertainty and doubt, the Canadian Hamlet entertgins no doubts at all that a life of freedom is a life worth while, a life worth fighting for, and paying taxes for, and buying war bonds for. Here are his reasons: To buy or not to buy? There shoud be His duty dare.not shirk, to fight with Go? An article elsewhere on this page reportsâ€"that Ottawa is not likely to permit the import of aluminum sheets from the United States as a means of alternative supply for the manufacturâ€" ers of aluminum cooking utensils. It the State Encompassed be by tyrant threat To curb its liberty, men of free birth Must rouse themselves to action, and ~Bby their â€"girding _ . â€" Strike in its defenoe, with weapons wrought According to each. strength. The soldier goes .. . To combat full arrayed, his very life QOn freedom‘s altar laid. â€"The riper To fight? No!. Nought but make a Who can unheeding be to war‘s held Thursday evening Sept. 12th at Trinity United Church Manse when Miss Muriel Edith Gertrude Gray, of Timmins, becamethebrldedwnnam Allen Wilson, South Porcupine. The Rev. F. J. Baine officiated. The bride was attended by Miss Olive Goodyer, and Mr. Laurance Haszard was groomsâ€" no question, For ‘tis not noble in the mind to pause While perils thick surround us. When Toronto Financier Uses Verse to Urge Buying War Bonds Must Aluminum Cooking Utensils if you put up a. notice saying ‘"«YWet Paint,‘" he has to go and dob it to see i# it‘s true. ‘The importunate traveller had been ejected at last with a flnely placed kick. Traveller (turning on assailant)â€" And who are you to kick me out? Guelph Mercury: It‘s a inost amazâ€" ing thing, but if you tell a man that there are 326,244,518,214,327,216 stars in the sky, he will accept it as a fact, but nephew of Prime Minister King, has brought the battieâ€"scared destroyer Assailantâ€"The chief‘s right foot.â€" Nee :. . . CANADA [ L.S. J t the. Brxtxsh Domlmons beyond the Seas KING Defender of the Falth. Emperor of India. To Aurr:â€"To WrHom these Presents shall come or whom the same may in anywise concern, f GREETING: A New Office , Anp WrHEREAS pursuant to and in accordance with the said Regulaâ€" tions, it has been decided to call out for military training, as aforesaid, every male British Subject who is or â€"has been at any time subsequent to the first day of September, 1939, ordinarily resident in Canada and who, on the first day of July, 1940, had reached the age of twentyâ€"one years but had not yet reached the age on that date of twentyâ€"two years or had reached the age of twentyâ€"two years but had not yet reached theâ€"age on that date of twentyâ€"three years, or who had reached the age of twentyâ€"three years but had not yet reached the age on that date of twentyâ€"four years, or who had reached the age of twentyâ€"four years, but had not yet reached the age on that date of twentyâ€"five years and who was on the fifteenth day of July, 1940, unmarried or a widower without child or children; Or aur or wuicH Our Loving Subjects and all others whom these Presents may concern, are hereby required to take notice. In Trstimony We have caused these Our Letters to be made Patent, and the Great Seal of Canada to be hereunto affized. Wirngss: Our Dear Uncle, Our Right Trusty and Right Well Beloved Cousin and Counsellor, Aurexanper Aucustus FREDERICK GHBORGE, Karl of Athlone, Knight of Our Most Noble Order of the Garter, Member of Our Most Honourable Privy Council, Knight Grand Cross of: Our Most Honourable Order of the Bath, Grand Master of Our Most Disâ€" / ° tinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Knight Grand Cross of Our Royal Victorian Order, Companion of Our Distinguished â€" Service Order, Colonel in Our Army (retired), having the honorary rank of Majorâ€"General, One of Our Personal Aidesâ€"deâ€"Camp, Goverâ€" nor General and Commander in Chief of Our Dominion of Canada. At Our Government House, in Our City of Ottawa, this eleventh day of September, mtheyearofOurLordmthmdmhund;edand forty, and in the fourth year of Our Reign. â€"â€" ... Now THrErgErore Know Yr that pursuant to The National Resources Mobilization Act, 1940, and the War Measures Act, and pursuant to and in accordance with the National War Services Regulations, 1940, promulâ€" gated under the provisions: of the said Acts, we do hereby call out the aforesaidâ€"classes of men to submit themselves for medical examination and to undergo military training for a period of thirty days within Canada or theâ€"<territorial waters thereof, and to report at such places.and times and in such manner and to such guthorities or persons as may be notified to themâ€" respectively by a Divisional Registrar of an Administrative Diviâ€" sion appointed by the Governor in Council pursuant to the above menâ€" tioned regulations. â€" Anp. WieErREaAs pursuant to the powers therein contained, and the proâ€" visions of The War Measures Act, our Governor in Council did on the 27th day of August, 1940, make regulations to provide a system for calling out men for military training within Canada and the territorial waters thereof, such regulatxons being known as the National War Services Reguâ€" lations, 1940; ; Acting Deputy Minister Resources Mobilization Act, 1940, that the of Justice, Canada Governor in Council may make from time to time such orders and regulations requiring persons to place themselves, their services and their property at the disposal of His Majesty in the right of Canada for the use within Canada or the territorial waters thereof, as may be deemed necessary or expedient for securing the public safety, the defence of Canada the maintenance of public order. or the efficient prosecution c¢f the war, or for maintaining supphes or‘ services essential to the life of the community; E. MIALL, } T HEREAS it is provided by The National Calling out men of certain age classes for medical examination, and if fit, to undergo military trainâ€" ing for a period of 30 days within Canada, or the territorial waters thereol. By Command, E..H. COLEMAN, Underâ€"Becretary of State. Willâ€"Just think of it! Brown has | 3t married Miss Grimiey Philâ€"I thought he was only mrflnc with her. Willâ€"So did he.â€"iGlobe and Mail. Good Light Saves Sight | Effective Sunday, September 29, 1940 Full Information from Agents â€"Canadian Pacific TABLE CHANGES I';M § co. _ ALIMITED ssmA 3 4