Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 4 Apr 1923, 1, p. 6

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@©990000000000800008002#00000000806008006 #$§#0000600000000000600000000000000000000000000008 006000 ©0@0000%46¢04%¢® 00 The Great Canadian sweetmeat provides pleasant action for your teceth, also penetratizng the crevices and cleansing them. Then, too, it aids digestion. Use WRIGLEY‘S after every meal â€"see how much better you will Specialty of putting up Miners‘| Lunches Firstâ€"class Meals. Best of Service. Everything clean and neat Homeâ€"made pastry made to order Call, Phone or Write. Prompt attention to all Phone 54B orders Office and Warehouse, Mattagami Road, Timmins Lumber, Stulls and Lagging Hay, Oats, Flour and Feed (Opposite the Goldfields) Under the management of Miss Alice Gratton H. G. Holmes Wholesale and Retail Carlots a Specialty Dealer in Very pleasing progress is being made ‘by the Timmins Male Chorus, and from recent indications this orâ€" ganization hbids fair to become an imâ€" portant factor in the musical life of the community. The Male Chorus now has a membership of over 60. Regular practices are held each week, the averâ€" age attendance at practices being betâ€" ween twenty and thirty, Under the capable ‘direction of Mr. Johnston of the Theatre Orchestra, who is a muâ€" sician of talent and wide experience, great progress is being made. A conâ€" cert is now ‘being planned for the end of May or the beginning of June, and Promises to be Notsworthy Musical Feature. Over 60 Members. Regâ€" ular Practices Held. Concert Planned for May or June. TIMMINS MALE CHORUS is musical event mwill be looked forâ€" Announcement was made last week of the appointment of Jean Baptiste Thomas Caron, of Ottawa, to he Judge of the District Court in the new Provincial Judicial District of Cochrane and local judge of the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Ontario. An appointment to this position has been expected for many months, and recently those interested in the matter in the district have been urging that the new judicial district might thus be placed in position to carry on. Several legal men in the District of Temiskaming have been mentioned in past months as possible or desira‘ale appointees, the names of Cochrane and. Haileybury barristers being among those mentioned. The announcement of the appointment of Mr. Caron puts an end to the disceusâ€" sion. Judge Caron for some years past has been a lawyer in high standâ€" ing in the east and may ‘be expected to ‘bring »bhoth ability and wide‘ exâ€" perience to his new position. â€" The District of Cochrane is the new Judiâ€" cial District ereated to ‘better provide for the legal needs of the northern part of the former District of Temisâ€" kaming, With the rapid growth and development of this northern part of Temiskaming, it has been felt for some years that there has been disâ€" tinct hardship entailed by the fact that all in this area had to travel long distances â€" for court business, Haileybury being the only judicial seat available. With the creation of the Judicial District of Cochrane to look after this northérn section, and with the appointment of a Judge for this district to make its work effective the people of the northern section of Temiskaming will now find the use of the courts much more convenient and economical than under the former plan where one court had to serve for an unwieldy area of country. ‘Timâ€" mins, of course, will be in the new J. P. T. CARON APPOINTED JUDGE COCHRANE DISTRICT For some weeks past the Timmins Male Chorus has been holding regular practices with marked success. Pracâ€" tices are held every Thursday from 6.30 to 8 p.m. in King‘s Hall, and every Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m., in the Public School. The Timmins Male Chorus is still open for.additional voices, baritone in particular. Cochrane District, and people from here now finding it necessary to deal with the courts will be required only to go as far as Cochrane, instead of to Hailevibury as in past times. ward to with the greatest interest by all lovérs of good music. It will unâ€" doubted!y be a musical event of speâ€" cial inportance. You don‘t have to know anythin ahout grammar to tell the truth. hen is the ‘only creature on eartu that can sit still and produce a dividend. * in past times THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE A dividend of one per cent. upon the outstanding eapital stock of the Company has heen declared payahle on the 23rd. day of April, 1923, to shareholders of record of April 5th. This is dividend No. 109. The motion picture, ‘‘Douglas Fairâ€" banks in Robin Hood,""‘ that has made such a hit in the big cities and towns in the south is to be shown at the New Empire Theatre on Friday and Saturâ€" day of next week, April 13th and 14th. This is one of the spectacular producâ€" tions released by the United Artists Corporation, and made under the dirâ€" ection of Allan Dwan. It is the type of play that has made Douglas Fairâ€" banks famous, combining the highnly spectacular with the romantice and athletic in a peculiar combination. No expense has been spared in staging the event and the cast is a particularly strong one. The play,.gives a very reâ€" alistic picture of life, high and dlowly, in the twelfth century. There are paâ€" laces and hovels and simple homes. Some of the seemes are laid in a Norâ€" man Castle, with deep moat, drawâ€" bridge, and everything. The reproducâ€" tion has been carried to such a poirt of realism that there is not only water in the moat, but also lilies and honestâ€" toâ€"goodness bullfrogs <all alive and swimming. Soldiers, knights, peasants, friars, etc., all have their part in the play. The story of the play is a comâ€" bination of history, fable, romance and imagination, with a touch of Douglas Fairbanks in addition. In the play the Earl of Huntingdon returns from the Crusades to find Prince John has burned his eastle, stolen his sweetâ€" heart and attempted to depose the HOLLINGER DIVIDEND 109 PAYABLE ON APRIL 23rd. king. The Earl takes the name of Robin Hood and gathers ahout him a band of loyal and staunch supporters as a rohber band. They rob the rich to help the poor. Douglas Fairbanks is in his glory and the audience also has a good time, thank you.. After perilous Fairbhanks adventures, the play goes thrillingly through many exâ€" citing scenes to a final happy ending. None who like romance or spectacular plays or good acting or interesting pictures should miss **Douglas Fairâ€" Ssmith. Foâ€"m before all the Sailorâ€"‘*0 Thev‘d k South Porcupine and by all Druggists in Northern Ont. Schumacher ‘"*DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS IN ROBIN HOOD,‘‘ NEXT WEEK metures suould miss **PDouglas P airâ€" banks in Robin Hood,‘‘ at the New Empire here on April 13th and 14th "I was reading the other day about Neurasthenia, about the large number of people who were troubled with this disease. It is just what my wife had. She felt miserable all the time and was conâ€" stintly depressed. She would Sold by | THE TODD DRUG CO., LIMITED | waken in the morning and tell me that something dreadful was going to happen that day. Life was nothing short of misery for hner. She was so depressed that I exâ€" poected she would lose her mind and have to go to a sanitarium and 1 kept wondering how I would get the money to pay for her. She could not eat and had no appetite for food.; She was irâ€" ritible and cranky most of the time.‘ If she was crossed in any way, she would immediately work herself up into a violent temper. This worried me because she had always had a kind and gentle disâ€" position and nothing which was said or done seemed to irritate her. I spoke to our family doctor about her and he said that her trouble was imagination and that if she would try and forget about her dopression and look on the bright side of life she would be all richt. ©Of course I didn‘t dare her this because I knew she would get into one of her tempers. Vhen she pot over these fits of compor, she was always weak and ili sand more depressed than ever. The doctor said a tonic might her snd me a prescripâ€" tion but this did not do her any wgood _ She tried all kinds of other ‘onics with the same result. Carâ€" nol was recommended to me and I wish to state that it is the leader of all torics. Since taking it my wile has changed completely. Now she is alwavys rezdy for her meals and work is no burden. It is a pleasure for me to recommend Carnol to anyone who is in need of a tonic or a body builder. Exeuse me for writing this letter but I want you to accept my thanks for that wonderful tonic known as Carnol." â€" Mr. J. M., knoy Torc 'J‘O'.(:nt()o ' Carnol is sold by your druggist, and if you can conrscientiously say, aofter you kave tried it, that it hasn‘t done you any good, return the empty bottle to him and he will refund your money,. 7â€"622 Officer (to m from d w OX , e crew at } ilor who 1i € O 1%1011 mas resceued Thank you, thank vou Timmins | it O t 900090000000000000000000800000AA08 90

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