Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 17 Jul 1941, 1, p. 5

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Macs are Out to Even the Count in the Second Half. Game Postponed Yesterday Jupe Pluvius was the winner yesterâ€" day in the battle with the northern section of the Temiskaming Baseball league and the game scheduled for yesterday afternoon between the Holâ€" linger and McIntyre teams had to be postponed till this afternoon. The game is scheduled to get under way this afternoon at the McIntyre Park at five o‘clock. Yesterday‘s steady drizzle left the MciIntyre Park thoroughly drencened and in no condition for playing ball. This is the second time this year that a postponement of a game has occcurâ€" red because of rain. . McIntyre will still be fighting with their backs to the wall in the game this afternoon. They are in the unfortunâ€" ate position of having to .win all of their remaining games with the Holâ€" linger to win the second half. Holâ€" linger got off to a fast start by taking the first two scheduled games in the half and since then have had time to experiment. In the last game with the Macs, the Hollinger brains tried out Reg Dorey on the mound and lost the game. In today‘s struggle they are expected to revert back to using their regular pitching staff in an effort to cinch a place in the: playâ€"offs. Probable starters in today‘s game are Mike Cheérevaty for the Bombers and Les Edwards for the Macs. Edâ€" wards is the tough luck pitcher for the Macs, not having won a game yet. In each game that he has worked he has pitched good ball but seems to have taken over the tough luck that George McShane carried last year. Edwards is certainly due and should win the game today. The McIntyre started a winning streak the last time they ran into the Bombers and they continued that winâ€" ning streak on their trip to the southâ€" ern section last weekâ€"end when they trimmed the Wrightâ€"Hargreaves outfit by a close 3â€"2 score. If their winning streak continues they will pull up on even terms with Barton‘s Bombers toâ€" day. Saturday of this week the Macmen will journey to Kirkland Lake to take on the leagueâ€"leading Toburn Beavers, while the Holinger will be hosts of the luckless. Wrightâ€"Hargreaves team. Dath af these fixtures are. Fnnis Cup games. After the Toburn game the Macs journey to the Quebec side to play two exhibition games with Norâ€" anda and Beattie Mines on Sunday. Wrightâ€"Hargreaves has been unablé to win a game in the Ennis Cup series as yet, having lost games to the Hollinger and MclIutyre by close margins. Len Wadsworth to Defend Championship This Month ILen Wadsworth of Timmins, fighting under the colours of Hamilton, will put his Canadian middleweight championâ€" ship at stake in a bout with Doug Marsh, of Montrecal, on July 22nd. The fight will take place in Montreal and will be on the same card as a bout for"the welterwsight crown beâ€" tween I)aye Castilloux and Maxie Berger. °_ t +] A PURE WHITE page . Burnrdtd CIGARETTE PAPERS ENJOY DANCING to the Finest Music and on the Best Floor in the North MeINTYRE ARENA Skating Roller Friday Afternoon â€" 8.00 to 10.00 p.m. ADMISSIONâ€"30¢ EFri. and Sat. ADMISSIONâ€"25¢ JANCING ue to 4 p.m Jim Donald, Toburn Infielder Leads the Southern Hitters Teronto Telegram: Hush, little aluâ€" minum pan don‘t you cry; you‘ll be in an aeroplane bye and bye. Again last season they took the spotâ€" light in Nova Scotia as key forwards with Sydney Millionaires who lost a sixâ€"game Allan Cup final to Preddie Metcalfe‘s young Regina Rangers last May 1. Instead of returning to British Columbia they moved into Northern Ontario where as of Kirkâ€" land Lake Blue Devils, McCreedy and Kowcinak played a big part in taking the Allan Cup to that mining centre in 1940. Orval Privett, Former Leadâ€" er, Drops to Third Place by Going Hitless for Three The 1938â€"39 season saw the two Winnipeggers flashing rubber past European goalkeepers as Trail won the world‘s amateur crown in Switzerland with eight straight wins in addition to 45 triumphs in 47 European exhibiâ€" tion games. McCreedy said he signed a twoâ€"year contract with the Leafs two weeks ago when he stopped off in Toronto en route home from Nova Scotia. He is due to report October 1 at the N.H. L. club‘s training Ccamp. Both boys trained with the Leafs last fall. Ousted Copper Cliff McCreedy and Kowcinak first crashâ€" ed the hockey headlines in 1937 when their club, Winnipeg Monarchs, won the Memorial Cup in the national junior final against Copper Cliff. The next season, McCreedy, a slim youth standing five feet eight inches, and Kowcinak, his left wing mate, went to Trail where as members of the Smoke Eaters they rolled to the Doâ€" minion senior championship by defeatâ€" ing Cornwall Flyers. The ©28â€"yeur old MoOrcedyâ€"reveailed this week he is under contract to the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National League, thus serving notice of dissoluâ€" tion of a partnership with Kowcinak which started during the shinnyâ€"playâ€" ing days of the principals and reached a climax when they played together on major amateur championship clubs for four successive years. A pro contract has cracked what up to the present had withstood the test of yearsâ€"the playing partnership of Johnny McCreedy and Dick Kowsinak, Only last spring ‘the two schoolâ€"day buddies missed out on a fifth title when as members of Sydney Millionâ€" aires they went down before Regina in the Allan Cup finals. McCreedy Breaks up Long Partnership With Dick Koweinak Toburn‘s hardâ€"hitting second baseâ€" man, Jimmy Donald, forged into the lead of Southern Section, Temiskamâ€" ing Baseball League, hitters this week when he collected four hits to pass Qrval â€" Privett, Wright â€" Hargreaves‘ catcher, who has gone without a hit in his last three games. Donald is now leading the league by a wide marâ€" gin, his .447 putting him well ahead of Macassa‘s Schonny Schonfeldt, who has advanced to second place in the standing with his .371. Privett, who was hitting .444 to lead the league, has dropped down to .353. Donald, Toburn .. Schonfeldt, Macassa Privett, Pr.â€"Harg. Price, Wr.â€"Harg. Hillman, Toburn ... Rice, Toburn .. Douherty, Toburn ... Here is how the leading hitters in the Southern Section of the TB stand today: Both Boys Played Together on Four Major Amateur Championship Clubs. Just Missed Last Year. Games. HENRY KELNXECK and his ORCHESTEA 38 39 H Pct. 7 A47 3 â€" EM 326 Toburn Lengthen Their Lead in the Southern Section Toronto Telegram: A man must first get a grip on himself before he stops begging for handâ€"outs. Canada‘s official drive to cut civilâ€" ian use of gasoline and oil depends for its success upon veluntary efforts. Deâ€" finite scheme of rationing is not likely to be Gelayed longer than a few months, officials say. Beat Wrightâ€"Hargreaves 8â€" 4 on Monday Afternoon tol Register Fifth Straight Defeat Against Duncanâ€". ites. | A report from Ottawa this morning says an announcement wil be made shortly of the sale by Canada to the United States of possibly 70,000 tons of lead, more than one third of the preâ€" war Canadian production. The sale will be handled directly between the Canadian vendor, Consolidated Smeltâ€" ers, and the official United States government purchasing agencies. The price will be approximately the same as the present domestic price. The great monument to Rahere in the latter church has been protected the famous knightâ€"crusader‘s black so that it may not share the fate of marble effigies in the Temple Church. ‘The best of Mrs. Pepys has been taken down from the wall of St. Olave‘s, Hart street, and precious monuments, pulâ€" pits, lecterns, chandeliers and fonts have been removed from other churches. Scarcity of funds however, hampers these efforts. Canada to Sell Large Quantity of Lead to U.S. Many bells, including happily the when the church was burnt, and those famous Bow Bells which were in safety of St. Bartholomew the Great at Smithfield, the only complete set of mediaval bells in London, have been taken down. Toburn â€" Beavers their; lead in the Southern Section Oof the | Temiskaming Baseball League in Kirkâ€"| land on Monday afternoon when they registered their fifth straight win over Wrightâ€"Hargreaves. The Dace-set»ters! dropped the Duncanites with an 8â€"4 verdict, after getting off to a good start with five runs in the first inâ€"| ning. Trying to Safeguard the Church Bells of England (Manchester Guardian) â€"â€"The loss of many famous city church bells in the wanton German raids has led to the appointment of a small church committee which is conâ€" sidering and aking measures for the safeguarding of church treasures. Neil Anderson, starting Wrightâ€" Hargreaves hurler, had trowble with his control in that cpening stanza as he issued four walks and gave up two hits for the Beavers to score their five runs. DiMaggi0 is Away Past Former Record For Consecutive Hits Former Record if Fortyâ€" four Games is Past by DiMaggio More Than T‘wo Weeks Ago. After getting by that expensive openâ€" ing, the Hargreaves crew outscored the leagueâ€"leaders, but the damage was done and couldn‘t be repaired. In winning, Rolly Bussire chalked up his fifth win in six starts for the Toburnites, and was assisted by a strongly fielding team. The loss cost Wrightâ€"Hargreaves its hold on second place. The idle Lake Shore team climbed into the second rung when the Duncanites absorbed their fifth setback of the yearâ€"all adâ€" ministered by Toburn. Wrightâ€"Harg. ........ 000 301 000â€"4 8 2 ‘Toburn ................ 0600 ~ 300 O0xâ€"8 10 1 Keeler‘s top mark was 432, in 1897, only six points below Hughie Jennings‘ allâ€"time .438 record. Joe‘s best averâ€" age was .381 in 1939. He has a fiveâ€" year lifetime average of .343 as against Keeler‘s cighteenâ€"year average of .346. Keeler was with Baltimore Orioles. He died January 1, 1923, when DiMagâ€" gio was only nine years old. Keeler‘s string was stopped by a leftie, Prank Killen of Pittsburgh . . . Wee Willie‘s record was made in the days of the dead ball, but he had the noâ€"foul rule to help him. Fouls were not counted as strikes against the batter. About all they have in common is their ability to hit. Keeler, known as Wee Willie, was smaller than the Yank‘s current scooter, Phil Rizzuto. Keeler stood 5 feet 4% inches and weighed 138 pounds. DiMaggio stands 6 â€"feet 2â€"and weighs 200. Keeler explained his success by sayâ€" ing: "I hit ‘em where they ain‘t." He hit few extra base blows and fewer than thirty homers during his career. He was a leftâ€"handed choke hitter. iMaggio is a rightâ€"handed full swingâ€" er who has led the league in homers. There‘s quite a contrast between Joe DiMaggio and Willie Keeler, who set a fortyâ€"game major league consecutive game hitting streak in 1897, which reâ€" cord DiMaggio has broken, In case you didn‘t hear Ed Morrow on Columbia‘s European Roundâ€"Up the other night, we‘d Jlike to repeat his story about the little English girl who came in late for school with this note: "Please excuse May for being late. We were blitzed last night and she wasn‘t dug out until 3 o‘clock this | morning."â€"Nugget. T‘wo Junior Baseball Games For This Week Toronto Telegram: A deadâ€"beat usâ€" ually makes things quite lively. Two Junior Raseball Games are scheduled for this week in the Porcuâ€" pine. The first game is at the MolInâ€" tyre Park tomorrow afternoon when the Hollinger and MciIntyre teenâ€"age playvers will tanglse. On the weekâ€"end there is a game scheduled for South Porcupinge when the Hollinger and Porâ€" cupine teams meet at South Porcupine. Both these games should produce some gon ball and shouldn‘t be missed. British Navy Has Odd Names for Many Things (By Bill Vandivert, American Cameraâ€" ‘man in the London Listener) I‘ve been interested in Cockney slang for a fong while,â€"but found out the Navy brand when a couple of months ago I was on the bridge of one of His Majesty‘s corvettes. Suddenly from the â€"deck below came a cry of «*Bubbly! Bubbly! Bubbly!" The crew perked up and so did I. I had to ask the leadâ€" ing signalman what it was all about. He laughed and explained. know blood, Nelson‘s blood. Rum. We get it every morning at eleven." Kirkland Lake juniors have been asking for a game with the junior clubs here but it is unlikely that any games will materialize. With the rationing of gasoline it is unlikely that the teams would be able to travel to Kirkland Lake for â€"a game. It is equally hard for the Kirkland Lake teams to travel here. . The R.AF. continued their devastatâ€" ing raids on the Germanâ€"held coast of France and the Netherlands again last night. Objectives deep into Gerâ€" many were also hard hit last night by the RAF. One report from London claims that the RAF. yesterday sank or damaged 22 ships totalling 140,000 or 145,000 tons on a raid in Roetterdam. The RAF. also hamglered at Hamâ€" burg, Germany‘s greatest port, and various other Oobjectives in northâ€" western Germany. Again, I was asking one petty officer about leave and wht amusement there were. He startect explaining, «*Well, when the troops ‘get into the nearest pub . . . "I stopped him to find out what the "troops‘"‘ were and found that seamen are called «@matloes‘" (after the French matelots), @"the troops‘"‘ and ‘sandscratchers‘ and . dabtoes‘, fAatfeet‘ and <webfeet‘ from washing and holystoning the decks barefooted. Signalmen are ‘buntingtossers‘ or just <bunts,‘ from the signal flags, of course. stokers are ‘<dustmen‘ and cooks are ‘sloshes‘, <meatâ€"spoilers‘ or in a kind moment I was delighted to find that the best Navy slang has to do wih food â€" or (grub‘ or ‘mungey‘ (from the Maltese). Lots of food is ‘big eats‘. A snack is a (wedge‘. Roast beef and potatoes are Prince Konoye To Form New Cabinet a ‘straight rush‘ (you peel the potatoes the night before and just shove them and the beef into the galley oven while you‘re®busy on something else). But I like even better the other name for its ‘donkey and pebbles.. Meat and gravy like a meat pie with no pastry is an <oosh‘, .. stew is ‘spot mess.‘ A slarg hangover from the last war is ‘Zeppelins in a cloud‘ for sausages and mashed potatoes. And Lancashire hot pot is muts and bolts‘. Rice pudding is <Chinese‘ wedding cake.‘ State Department officials in Washâ€" ington received the news about Japan‘s cabinet resigning with great interest but there was no comment forthcomâ€" ing chiefly because of the lack of deâ€" tails. The general belief was that the business group had forced out the army controlled group. If this were so, offiâ€" cials stated, it could be a matter of utâ€" most importance to the United States. President Roosevelt has hoped for some time that the conservative busiâ€" ness group might gain enough strength to oust the military group and for that reason has avoided any serious break with Japan in recent weeks. The busiâ€" ness group is inclined to be more friendly with the Americas and is opâ€" posed to the economically hurtful Chinese war being continued and it is also inclined to be less coâ€"operative with the Axis powers. Another Moscow report says that the Russian Air Force was most acâ€" tive during the night in attacking German motorized and mechanized columns and blasting at German airâ€" craft positions close to the front. Travellers from the Balgan countries reported at Istanbul, Turkey, that the Red Air Force has destroyed the Ruâ€" manian Black Sea port of Constanza. They also added that great damage has been done to the Rumanian oil fields although a number of them are still able to operate. subsideaduring t change in position (Continued from Page One) the night with little A large number of athletic events are scheduled for the day with the first event starting at 9 a.m. There will be foot races, bicycle races, children‘s races, water sports, a tugâ€"ofâ€"war and castmg competitions. Clowns will enâ€" | liven the proceeding all day long and a giant midway will be on the grounds. There will also be rifie shooting comâ€" petitions. Eighth Annual Field Day at the Mcintyre Soon The dGdrive should reach the New Augarita property in a few weeks and it therefore should not be long before some indications will be obtained. Sense and Nonsense: Many a motorâ€" ist has skidded from the highway into an undertaking establishment. The McIntyre Athletie Association will hold their eighth annual Field Day at the Mcintyre Athletice Grounds on Monday, August 4th, the Civic Holiâ€" day. A fine programme has been arâ€" ranged starting with a band pmrade in Schumacher at 10.00 o‘clock. The Mcâ€" Intyre Concert Band will parade in schumacher and will then parade in Timmins to start off the day. Biggest event of the day will be the Safety Award Draw for the McIntyre miners at threeâ€"thirty in the afterâ€" noon. A number of free attractions will be presented throughout the day and they include an acrobatic act, a juggling act, four dancing girls, an accordian player and "the Human Horse." Encountering the prophyry in a drill hole put out from the crosscut about 150 feet from the New Augarita bounâ€" dary lends added interest to the anâ€" ticipation of officials, as it is fully exâ€" pected the prophyry will carry on into New Augarita and give the company something worthwhile to work on. Big Programme of Sports Planned F o r Monday, August 4th (Civice Holiâ€" day) at the MceIntyvre Park Crosscut being driven towards the property of New Augarita Porcupine Mines on the 1,050â€"foot level at Presâ€" ton East Dome Mines has been resumâ€" ed and officials and shareholders of New Augarita are confidently awaiting the time in the near future when the drive will \have crossed the boundary and begin to explore the ore possibiliâ€" ties on the New Augarxta side of the line. Free tea and coffee will be distributâ€" ed between 12.00 and 1.30 p.m. so any who attend should bring along a basâ€" ket of funch. Team athletic events include a footâ€" ball game at 1045 a.m. and a baseâ€" ball game at 4 pm. between the Holâ€" linger and the McIntyre teams. The baseball game is an Ennis Cup game. The day will close with a big dance in the McIintyre Gymnasium with the music being supplied by the Mac Amâ€" bassadors. Dancing will start at nine o‘clock and a floor show will be preâ€" sented. New Augarita Watching Work from Preston Side Charged With M a k in g Statements Prejudicial to the Safety of the State. A small admission is being charged to the grounds with the McIntyre emâ€" ployees being admitted free. Timmins Man Faces A Charge Under D. of C. Regulations Gordon Gifford, an eighteenâ€"yearâ€" old lad from 169 Hemlock street, was charged yesterday morning with careâ€" less G@riving. Gifford was driving a truck, owned by the Lvnch Electrical Appliance company and was involved in a minor accident at the corner of Spruce street and Kirby â€"avenue about eleven â€"o‘clock yesterday morning. Police say that Gifford was travelling east on Kirby avenue with the truck and drove through the stop street at the corner of Spruce and Kirby. At the time he drove through the stop street another truck belonging to the Star Transfer was travelling across the intersection on Spruce street and the Lynch truck collided with the Star Transfer truck. The damage was slight but preferred the charges against ford after investigating the acc Lakanen was arrested last night as the result of a call from the Maple Leaf Hotel. The charge against him is that he did make statements, inâ€" tended or likely, to be prejudical to the safety of the state, or the efficient prosecution of the war. The charge was laid under section 39 of the Deâ€" fence of Canada Regulations and beâ€" fore the local police can proceed with the case against Lakanen permission must be received from the attorneyâ€" eneral. Lakanen, who is a miner and 42 years old, is Finnish, and was released on $1,000 property bail this morp»‘ng after spending the night in the cells of the Timmins police station. Kustaa 8. 83 Lakeshore road, was taken into custody by a Timmins police asbout sevenâ€"thirty last night and will face a serious charge in police court as soon as the authority to proceed is received from the attorâ€" neyâ€"general‘s department. police \All of Rome‘s Radio Now â€" Fully Under Nazi Control ! OQOttawa Prepared l Ottawa, July 155â€"Department of Labâ€" our spokesmen said today differences between twelve Kirkland Lake Gistrict gold mines and the United Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers‘ Union have not reached a stage where any work stopâ€" is threatened and so far neither |side has asked for any Government ! action. _ have been in touch with both isides and one of our conciliation men ‘has been in Kirkland Lake,‘" one Labour Department source said,. ‘"*Neiâ€" | ther side has asked us to take any ! action yet and I don‘t know what proâ€" 'cvdu.rc would be followed if it came to The Columbia Broadcasting System vesterday announced that its decision on Saturday to suspend broadcasts from Rome was due to "increasingly rigid" censorship by Italian authoriâ€" ties. CBC said it had been advised by its correspondent, Charles M. Barbe, that German restrictions on Italian news releases had been tightened, and that Berlin was sending to Rome Radio speâ€" cial daily instructions covering forbidâ€" den and permitted items. (David Anderson, National Broadâ€" casting Company representative in Rome, was informed yvesterday by the Ministry of Culture that the {facilities of Italian radio stations no longer were at the disposal of Ameriâ€" longer were at U can broadcasters.) Andy Clarke Pleases the North With His Broadcasts There are many in the North who have been in the habit of listeningâ€"in every Sunday morning while Andy Clarke, former newspaperman and now a permanent member of the C.B.C. staff, broadcasts his odd and interestâ€" ing. selection of items from the comâ€" munity newspapers of Ontario. This feature, ‘Neighbourly News,"* as he calls it â€"has been popular with large and growing groups of radio fans. Usually it is broadcast from Toronto, but on last Sunday Mr. Clarke spoke from the local radio station at Kirkâ€" land Lake, being on a brief trip north. While in the North he also addressed Kiwanis Club meetings at New Lisâ€" keard and Kirkland Lake. It is hopâ€" ed to have him visit Timmins and this part of the North at a later date. "If the operators and the union can‘t get around the table it may ultiâ€" mately be that we will be asked to set Miners Union at Kirkland Submits List of Demands action cedugse that. We are helping in whatever unofâ€" ficial way we can at present. At the moment there is no serious difficulty and there is no immediate threat of a work stoppage. recognition of Union, Holiâ€" days With Pay, Among the Items. Kirkland Lake, July 15â€"Alex Harris, spokesman for the operators of twelve Kirkland Lake district gold mines, made public today a list of demands received from the United Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers‘ Union, which has requested the operators negotiate with the union. The union demands, Harris said, are for: Union recognition, holidays with pay, wage and hour adjustments, reéâ€" cognition . of seniority, grievance proâ€" cedure, provision to open any agreeâ€" ment made to make wage adjustments supplementary agreements for each mine, guarantees of jobs for mine workers entering military service and medical and hospital plan adjustments. The twelve mines gre: Teckâ€"Hughes, Lake Shore, Wrightâ€"Hargreaves, East Malartic, Omega, Golden Gate, Toburn, Sylvanite, Kirkland Lake, Chestervilleâ€" Larder Lake, Upper Canada and Kerr Addison. up a conciliation board or deal with the matter in some other way." 71 Thira Avenue Terms As Low As $11 per Month Take advantage of these extraordinary low terms now! â€" Your savings in fuel will pay for a new stoker. Smith Elston PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS Eight More Men* Left This Week For the Army Some of the Men Left For Camp Shilo. Many More Needed in First Battalion of Algonquin Regiment. Fight Timmins men have left to join the Canadian Active Army this week and a number more will be leaving toâ€" morrow night. One man, Garth Porâ€" ter, left for Military District No. 2 headquarters in Toronto on Monday night, while five more left Tuesday night. . Last night two more men left for Camp Shilo, Manitoba, where they will be attached to the first bnttaliop of the Algonquin Regiment. Fight more men passed their medical board yesterday and they will probably leave tomorrow night. Don‘t Give the Burgling Fraternity Any Information Wilfred Chalifoux, Paul Gaudreau, William Howie, Martin Pavelko, and H. R,. Stoneman were the five men who left on Tuesday night while R. A. Jonâ€" cas and R. Colville, were the two men who left last night for Camp Shilo. All of the men were from Timmins. Regular medical boards are held at the Timmins Armouries every Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings at tenâ€"thirty. The Armouries in Timmins are still conducting a drive for recruits and all ableâ€"bodie men who want to jJoin the army are asked to put in their applications. There is a G@rive on at the present time for recruits for the First Battalion of the Algonquin Regiment, saying that they were one of the smartest and best drilled units in Western Canada. New Editor in Charge of Kirkiand Lake Newspaper The Algonquin Regiment is the onl truly northern regiment in the Canaâ€" dian Army, all the men being recruited from around Huntsville, North Bay, Sudbury, Haileybury, Kirkland Lake and Timmins. The territory of the Algonquin Regiment covers almost a]é of Northern Ontario and the recruit are all drawn from that territory. It has been pointed out by the reâ€" cruiting officers in the north that thg chances for promotion are better for any person from Northern Ontario in the Algonquin Regiment than they would ‘be in any other regiment. It is also pointed out that a large number of men will shortly be called up for compulsory military training and after they are called up they will have to go where they are needed but if they join voluntarily now they can choose the unit that they want to join. The Kirkland Lake chief of police gives a good tip to people about to leave for holidays. It is that they shouldn‘t follow a somewhat common practice of putting up notices around the house to the effect that the family is away. This may be of information to friends and business people, but it is also free information for the burgling fraternity. Recently a Kirkland Lake family left such a notice on their home and along came some burglars who took their time in picking out articles from the home after they enâ€" tered it. The Kirkland Lake chief says that it is a far better plan to notify the police if the house is to be vacant for a week or two. In such a case the police keep an eye on it and make a point of watching to see that it is not disturbed. After successfully acting as editor of The Northern News for over six years past, Mr. Dan Worden, left the Lake Shore town last week for other fields of activity. During his stay in Kirkland Lake he made friends for himself and for The Northérn News and turned out a very creditable newspaper. The new editor is Mr. George J. McNair whose initial issue promises to mainâ€" tain Northern News standards.

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