_ oï¬ .. ~_ CABALLEROS" > | /. "FOG ISLAND" .0. _t, .0 _0 .0 M iHvan, well known local lawyer, fell from the stern of the steamer Mirga and â€"was drowned before he was able to rewch shore. Mr. O‘Sullivan came tp Tlxï¬mins in 1917, not long after he ‘ ‘been in â€"town representing the with which he had been assoâ€" cwcad in Toronto â€" Slaght and Slaght. He â€" was highly thought of here, not bnly as a fine lawyer but also in many unity activities. How the ascâ€" cident happened was never discovered. He had been sitting on a chair on the ‘stern deck when the little steamer *â€" A tragedy that shocked the whole chance for recovery at the Cairns hosâ€" of Timmins occurred in 1925, just 20 pital almost a month after all hope years ago this week, when D. W. O‘â€"â€"had been given up. He had bled a Fumed to go down to Sandy Falls. A ew seconds later his< friends saw him "~.â€" TODAY ONLY "THE THREE Twen ty YearsAgo the: Porcupine Advance i yles Friday and Saturday D cat the "PAV"‘ by > _ _ GENE caocco and m,, ORCHESTR i iâ€"75¢ Laiiss ..... 16 18 © 140 150 .. 110 120 .. 12 14 ... 8 10 13 15 15 9 11 Duvay Eastwad Electra Highrdg Hoyle . Goldora In September of 1925, the Sisters of ~Providenceâ€" were preparing for the ‘opening of the new hospital. The mâ€" proved ‘Cairns hospital was located on the corner of Spruce and Fifth Ave. Mrs. Moffat, who operated the place previous to the Sisters taking it over, moved to a building on Balsam Street. Miss Olive Orr, daughter of Mr. 'I‘homas Orr of South Rorcupine, was married on Sept. 12th. 1925 to Mr. Frank Firdlay, only son of Mrs. M. Findlay of New Liskeard. They were to live in New Liskeard. ‘Miss A..Sullivan of South Porcuping, made a record at theâ€" Timmins Bus!â€" ness College, in 1925, when she comâ€" pleted with honours course in bookâ€" keeping and summary of commercial law in two and oneâ€"half months. ‘In 1925 ten Timmins bakers were charged with selling bread not up to the standard weight. Only one baâ€" kery in Timmins escaped, that of John Work was begun in the fall of 1923 on macadamising the road from the Dome to South Porcupine. The Dome Ex. road was used then as a detour. Provircial police seized a shipment of 40 gallons of alcohol coming into Timmins twenty years ago this wesk. It arrived by frgight car just about the same time as Constable FPingear investigated a tip. The person to whom â€" the shipmlnt was addressed failed to appear at ‘police court, so the liquor was promptly shipped to polic° headquarters at Toronto. : C. McGrath of Iroquois Falls, was drowned while duck shooting at Fredâ€" rickhouse lake in September, 1925. According to a story published in The Advance, the hunter had_stood up in a canoe to.take a shot at a flock of ducks.. The recoil threw him clear of the boat, and his Heavy clothing, parâ€" ticularly the hip rubber boots dragged him to bottom. He had been emâ€" ployed at the Abitibi mill in the pape: great deal both inwardly outâ€" wardly, following the entrance a bullet near the shoulder and its lodzâ€" ing near the kidneys. "He had lost enough blood to mean the death of an ordinary man" said a story in the Adâ€" vance. A specialist, brought up from Toronto. and a local physician, perâ€" formed an operation on the man to stop the internal bleeding and the paâ€" tient‘s extraordinary vitality pulled him through. in the water swimming for shore. Just a few yards from safety he sank. A Nellie Lake man, shot by a woâ€" man in an early morning affray durâ€" ing August of 1925, was given a fair chance for recovery at the Cairns hosâ€" pital ‘almost a month after all hope 95 100 138 143 .. 10 12 .. 47 50 . 25 28 13 14 170 115 19 21 13 15 8 10 §1 54 9 11 10 13 19 22 16 18 18 20 o On Sunday, Sept. 1l6th., Branch 88 was well and worthily represented at the meeting of zone 21â€"held on the premises of Branch 70 at Iroquois Falls by a delegation consisting of Comrades hlter Greaves, Les Nicholson, and ‘your ~correspondent, J. H Knell, this delegation being headed by Comrade Austin â€" Neame, â€" Zone Commander. There was a good representation of delegatés from Smooth Rock Palls, S. Porcupine, Matheson, and Iroquois â€" Games were played and a social hour was enjoyed and refreshments served. Mrs. B. Cran thanked the speaker on behalf of the members. The next meeting will be held on Monday, October 15th. Montrealâ€"H. â€"C. Smith, knitted goods admiiristrator for the ‘_pr.c2s board, said yesterday there is no posâ€" sibility of nylon stockings becoming available for sale $s year. Mrs. R. See lead in a short service of worship after which Rev. Mr. Musâ€" tard spoke on the challenge to women in the immediate post war years. During the past seven months, the CBC‘s International Service has been beaming shortwave broadcasts to Gerâ€" many. Many of these progams werse made with the help of German prisonâ€" ersâ€"ofâ€"war in Canada, some of whom recorded talks which were broadcaSu to Germany. â€" Mrs. ‘BPâ€"Harper, convener of war services, reported that fortyâ€"five artâ€" icles of knitting were completed during the summer. The ladies of the, Fireside Club of First United Church held their first meeting of the fall season on Monday, Sept. 17th, in the church hall. Nineteen members were present and Mrs Frank Huckerby, the president, was in the chair. , Plans were made for a rummage sale to be held on October 6th. Miss F. Evans reported that the sixth bulletin was ready for mailing. Prompt action of the Department of Public Works at Ottawa followed comâ€" ; plaints in Timmins in 1925 that th2, Mattagami river was being blocked by i logs entirely too much of the time, an inspector was sent up and conditions investigated. ~The river wculd ba clear in the future, he promised. | Fireside Club Held First Fall Meeting mond, son : of Daniel LDrummord ‘of|Of ‘Veterans would be better served if . re ) all were in one organizationâ€"and all the United Church Schumcher, on| working: together to common end. Beptember 7th. 1925. â€" There is no one thing; in my opinion, A young man employed by Joyes than that would be of greater benefit United Amusements, a show that was to all those who have served, than that playing in Timmins in the fall of 1925, an veteran bodies should become one felt betwren two of the company‘s {vast Canadian Legion of the British freight cars enroute from New Lisâ€" | Empire Service League". keard to Timmirs, He was rushed to| "The young men and women â€"re» the New Liskeard hospital, where it turning from the present war are comâ€" was found necessary to amputate a lmg into the Legion in large numbers, foot. | when their membership is sought by an SURRY, NO NYLONS Suntag Sheldn Parbec . Pascals . Peg Tu . Pelangi Pinnacle Privatr . Raytib Rajrl THE LEGION COLUMN 15 20 stricted subsequent immigration into Palestine to a modest quota which has now been used up. Britain now faces ‘the potential hostility of Arabs not only in Palestne but throughout the Middle East to further extensive inâ€" 'mcration "of Jews into their partly created homeland, much more so to the proposed . Palesunlan state under Jewish rontrol, g And President 'rruman, in recently ¢f < American â€" favour towards reâ€" Jemsh knmigration into m- n m m. he said, would like w see as many Jews as Palestine could Problem of Homeless Jews In Europe . _ The critical predicament â€" of the homeless Jews of Europe,scoupled with the. end of the war, has revived with fresh urgency the efforts of Zionist and other Jewish ‘bodies the world over to reâ€"open. Palestine to Jewish immigration, and generally to forward their yearsâ€"long campaign to make Palestine an independent Jewish state and homeland. Against this zeal to implement the dream of Jewry the‘ world over stands the hesitancy of Britain and other major powers to make precipitate commitments on a tangled and explosive question, nearly. every facet of which is surrounded by emotional controversy and internationâ€" al political complications. Britain still gives no sign, despite the change of government, of moving to abrogate the 1939 policy which reâ€" to their credit away from the firing Tines. "The young men and women reâ€" turning from the present war are comâ€" ing into the Legion in large numbers, when their membership is sought by an active membership committee. â€" These !lads and girls have had an opportunity on every serving front of personally 'qltnesslng the exemplification of the Legion‘s watchwordâ€"SERVICEâ€" and they realize above: all others, the deâ€" termined conscientious efforts of the Branches and Commands to fulfil their Legion Obligation. ‘ Men of the Navy and the Air Force, we earnestly ask you to ‘become ‘strong body within the Legion, as your tcontrlbution toward unity. The Legion needs you â€" you need the Legion. Let our guiding thought in veterans organâ€" dzations be â€" ‘"United we stand, dividâ€" ed we fall", and thus prove to Canada that just as we fought togetherâ€"the Army, the Navy and the Air Force in times of warâ€"so we will continue to fight together, shoulder to shoulder, each in fullest support of the other, in times of peace‘. Under the system at present in exâ€" istence a man who gave his life ‘for his country early in the war is enâ€" titled to a smaller gratuity than one who was on active service and was never in action. This latter resolution is designed to correct this injustice. Both resolutions will be presented to the Provincial Meetirg to ‘be held at Toronto, Sunday September 23rd., by your Zone Commander, Comrade Auâ€" stin Neame. "We rejoice in that the government departments. show a distinct inclinaâ€" tion to accept the advice and recomâ€" mendations of the Legion, and the proof of that statement lies in the legislation favourable to exâ€"servicemen, sponsored by the Legion, that has beâ€" come part of the laws and regulations of the Dominion of Canada â€" The Legion serves firm notice here and now upon all governments, Dominion, Provincial, and Municipal, that it is the defenders of the rights of serving men and women and proposes to reâ€" main true to that cause without serious thought or fear of the consequences‘". Two resol,utions, both sponsored by Branch 88, were adopted by the Zone meeting. The first was, in effect, that in view of the number of new Legion Halls that will be erected in the near future, Dominion Command was askâ€" ed for copies of plans of already exâ€" isting Legion Halls to avoid duplicaâ€" tion of effort and expense. The seâ€" cond resolution asked . that gratuities earned by men on active serviceâ€"who lost teir lives while still on active serâ€" viceâ€"be paid into their estate in full, as from the time they were killed unâ€" til the cessation of hostilities,. It was pointed out that men were killed in action with less service to their credit than men who had much more service "With a full measure of confidence, I ask of you, my comrades, that you, when you return to your branches, will be inspired by the future of the Legion which you can readily visualizeâ€"and that you will arouse all your comrades to the importance and necessity of making the Legion one of such great strength and natonal importance that no government body will have the temerity to refuse, such reasonable and rightful demands as we may make on behalf of those suffering from the consequences of their service." ‘Let those in high places take heed that the Canadian Legion will never cease its fght for those who sacrificed their personal and material ambitions in Canada, and who put on the King‘s uniform in defence of Canada‘s liberty and honourâ€" as against those who preferred to stay at home . .. B There is no one thing; in my opinion, than that would be of greater benefit to all those who have served, than that all veteran bodies should become one vast Canadian Legion of the British Empire Service League". J. H. Knell The visitors made their runs in the sixth inning, on errors by W. Kosick and Kennedy. The Kirkland Lake baseball team defeated the Porcuupine Combines 2â€" 0, to take a oneâ€"game lead in the T. B. L. series. Sunday afternoon saw the action as a record crowd filled Hotâ€" linger Park. The pitching was good, with a total of four players being walked.â€" Kirkland ~â€"0 0 0 0 0 20 0. 0 â€"2 Combines â€" 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Oâ€"O Kirkland: S. Mason,cf; Stoyand, If; Hillman, p; Melong, c; C..Cooper, 3b; James, 2b; Baird, 1b; E. Mason, rf; Goodfellow, ss. : Combines: Scarlett, cf; W. Kosick, rf; Donlevy, c; Neddow, 2b; Romuldi, ss; Wilson 1b; McDonnele, If; Kennedy 3b; A. Cooper, p. Runs â€" Hillman, Mclong. On Monday afternoon the Kirkland Lake team . defeated the Porcupine Combines by a score pf 6 to 5 to take a two game lead in the second in the best of five series of the Temiskaming Baseball League.. The situation is not without some hopeful prospéects of ultimate adjustâ€" ment, possibly with the tolerence if not to the full satisfaction of the Arabs. But achievement of a solution at preâ€" sent promises to be a delicate and difâ€" ficult process. Et is a question that calls for as great a degree of sympaâ€" thetic understanding of all factors inâ€" volved as that which has been elicited by the dilemn of the Jews in Europe. And the particular problems of Palâ€" estine must be viewed as part of the still broader problem of finding havens. for all the dispossessed and destitute, whether in Palestine or in other counâ€" tries with space to spare and resources yet to be fully developed. The two teams made a good fighting start, but by the fifth inning, they were able to stop the scoring. â€" In the eighth inning, the Kirkland team made Kirkland Wins Second Game In T B L Series To this wider question the countries of the new world, including Canada, and those with territorial possessions under their control, must sooner or later find an answer that will meet the challenge of conscience. Kirkland Lake Takes Lead In T B L Series second, : that [Britishâ€"Arab agreement could be reathed in regard to a Jewish state; and nmdly. that itâ€"~was clearly understood that the United States has no intention of sending any strong milâ€" itary force to help keep the peéace in Insurance Company Alead Office â€"London.Canada Fortunately, it is possible to provide with absolute certainty the money needed to carry out your plans for the future. Simply secure all the insurance you need (including Total Disability Income) while your health permits you to get it. Threeâ€"quarters of a million Canadians have selected this Company because of the high quality of its represeptatives, its strong financial position and its outstanding record for low cost insurance. Races aren‘t always won by the favorites. For instance, many people with real ability fail to reach their financial goals because they either do not live long enough or become dlsabled through sickâ€" ness or accident. n Tuesday evening The Ladies Guild of he Schumacher Anglican Mission held their meeting in the church hall. Combines: Rumoldi, A. Kosick, Scarâ€" lett, Hann, Wilson. â€" Harvest Tea to be Held by Anglican Guild in Schumacher Combines: Scarlett, cf; Hann, ss; W. Kosick, rf; Donlevy, c; Quimet, 3b; Rumoldi, 2b; Wilson, 1b; McDonnell, If; Bussiere, p; A. Kosick, p. . ‘Runs Kirkland Lake: Melong, Hillman, E. Mason, Cooper 2 James. Schumacher, Sept. 19th. Special to The Advance. The President, Mrs. A. Wilford was on holiday, so the chair was taken by Mrs. Joe Percival, Vice President. Plars were made for the Harvest Kirkland Lake: S. Mason, cf; Hillâ€" man, ss; Melong, c; Cboper, p; Baird, 1b; James, 2b; Soyand, If; E. Mason, rf; Murelich, 3b. Both pitchers were replaced during the game. Art Hillman replaced Coopâ€" er on the Kirkland Lake mound in the second, and Bussiere was relieved by Kosick in the fourth inning for the Combines. | Game called in the eighth inning due to darkness. Kirkland Lake 2 1 1 0 0 0 0O 2â€"6 Combines 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 Oâ€"S5 two runs, which the Combines did not regain. II Phone 112 ‘Timmins South Porcuplne 3 Ont. I’ MW“QQW“WMW BEFORE INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES â€" REAL ESTATE N and see us regarding New Low Rates on all Automobile Insnranco 20° PINE STREET NORTH se 78 BRUCE AVENUE Fire Threatens, Let Us Help You Check Your Fire Insurance.® Simmsâ€"Hooker Pickering t oi tw us e urs 1°¢ pue A ESTA B LIS H E6E D 1 8 74 Innis Block Thanksgiving service which will be 1_1_elq in the Church Sunday September Monday afternoon from 3 till 6 P.M. there will be a sale ofâ€" vegetables, fruit Home bakea bread and buns. Try The Advance Want Advertisements SATURDAY’ Roller Skating For â€" Children 10¢ â€" 2.00 p.m. WEDNESDAY Roller Skatingâ€"2.00 p.m. Roller Skatingâ€"8.30 p.m. Roller Skatmgâ€"S 30 p.m. Dance in Gymâ€"10.30 p.m. Phone 30