Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 9 Jan 1924, 1, p. 7

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£143 [Â¥ {" t 1 s y n n oys s oi l2 c t td c ty es Advertise in The Advance ooo ooo o io mm River Road Rakes of Kildare Green Mountain Reel Planagan â€"Brothers, Accorâ€" dion, Banjo, HMHarpâ€"Guitar Dear Old Pai of Mine I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls Sum Moore and Leroy sSsmeok Colin O‘ Popular Coral Sands of My Hawaili Why should I Give My Love To You The Harp That Once Colleen Aroon Kiss Me With Your Eyes Lewis James I‘m Drifting, Back to Dreamliland Lewis James andâ€" Flliott Sha w 1 4 Mea.ma Toves Papaâ€"Foxâ€"Trot I‘ve Got a Song for Saleâ€"Foxâ€" Trot 1 Banta and Hess, Piano Caprichoâ€"Tango Cielito Mioâ€"Tango Coleman and his Club Trocaâ€" dera Orchestra Perhapsâ€"Poxâ€"Trot Marcellonieâ€"Foxâ€"Trot Rojoâ€"Foxâ€"Trot Cielito Lindoâ€"â€"Waltz Covcâ€"red Wagon Daysâ€"Foxâ€"Trot Shake Your Feetâ€"â€"FPoxâ€"Trot 14707 Sleepâ€"Waltz The West, a Nest and Youâ€"â€" Waltz HE New Year will bring you increased interest in your phonograph if you select Vocalion Records. Under the Vocalion system of recording, not only are finer musiâ€" cal tones obtainable, but you have a selection of the great artists of Great Britain and Europe as well as of this Continent. "or New Y ear Dances Gray‘s Drug Store The Kentucky Colonels JANUARY TD ll"llll ULOOUN P U uL U Lo UOUuuli j ::* $ yâ€"og> +9 ;;;;; New Year will bring you increased rest in your phonograph if you select alion Records. Under the Vocalion L rornrdino nnt anliv areo finer musi. Selvin‘s Orchestra The Ambassadors OCriterion Quartet SCY1‘HES VOCALION CO., LIMITED, TORONTO, O Irving Kautman The Castillians QOpposite Hollinger Townsite 14704 14698 14703 1469 14697 14706 14695 T b¢ 75c 10â€"in. 10â€"in. Der Erlkonig (The Erlking) % Feldeinsamkeit (Recorded in Engâ€"! land) John Charles Thomas Peer Gynt Suite No. Song""; Nos. 4 ~and Dance" and "In the Mountain King." Still as the Night teaping Poer Gynt Suite No. 1, "Morning No. 2. ‘"Death of Ase‘" â€"the eminent Baritoneâ€"Actorâ€"is a Vocalion artist exclusively. Hear h1m sing ty VC Love‘s Old Sweet Song A Memory O Star of Eve A AAKX .Â¥AAJRRILAL11S, AAXx11lll : i 10â€"in. Norah Scott (Contralto) ) $1.25 Reverie (D‘Ambrosio, arr. Tertis) y Râ€"6111 Elena Gerhardt Prelude No. 3, Op. 104 Banjo Song The Morning Tand Romance Band of K.M. 1st Life Guards Margaret Balfour (Contralto) ) $1$65 Jeanne Marie Darre (Piano) Wérwnck Evans ( YÂ¥ Y SA fay A Cello) English Records Lionel Tertis (Viola) j Last week the following interesting letter was received from Mr. J. P. MdLaughlin, formerly a business man of Timmins and for a couple of years Mayor of this town:â€"â€" Hollywood, Cal,., Dee. 2(th. To the Porcupine Advance :â€" Dear Sirs:â€"Kindly have my copny of The Advance sent to the address given for the next four months or until ~further advised. â€" One or two back numbers will be much appreciâ€" ated as I have not had any news of Timmins since leaving Toronto on Dec. 3rd. I have had the pleasure of meeting three former residents of Timmins here, viz., Charhe See, Gordon Wilâ€" nere, vÂ¥1Z., Char son and Wilkie appear to be pt of sunshine. I am enclosing a clipping from the front pagze of The Los Angeles Times which may interest old friends of Chas. SNee. A dividend of 1% on the outstandâ€" ing capital stock of the Company has been declared payable on the 28th day of January 1924, on which date cheques will be mailed to shareholders of record at the close of business on the 10th day of January 1924. Dated the 3rd day of January, 1924 D. .A DUNLAP, [ presume the elections are over and I am anxious to hear that no one got seriously hurt. Wishing the staff of The Advance, as well as all the people of Timmins, a very happy and prosperous New Year, I am, MR. J. P. McLAUGHLIN WRITES FROM HOLLYWOOD, CALIT. Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines, TLimited. (Goring ThOI‘llS) ] Râ€"68062 (Wagner) 1 (Mendelssohn) !| Xâ€"9178 (Schuman ) 10â€"in. (No Personal Liability _ "*SHolveig‘s 6,~ ‘‘*Anitra‘s Hall of the ilkie Evans, all of whom be prospering in this land he next fTour months of r advised. â€" ‘One or two ‘rs will be much appreciâ€" avÂ¥e not had any news of Yours trulyv, 10â€"in. $1.65 n â€"6092 0506 1 1 2â€"in. [ 2â€"in. $1.85 60015 10â€"in. $1.75 053060 Treasurer. the mining paper and the readers (Globe or T favourable : of th the present the readers last week of either The (ilobe or The Mail Empire a very favourable impression must have been siven of the possibilities as well as the present progress of the North Land. The GHlobe ‘had a number of illuminating articles on the North Land and its affairs, including interâ€" esting contributions by Mr. A. F. Brigham, genera.l manager of the Hollinger, by Mr. Balmer Neilly, Seâ€" cretary of the ‘Ontario Mining Assoâ€" ciation, and hy others high up in the business and industrial world of the North. The Mail Empire had ilâ€" luminating articles that spread facts albout the North Land and the North Land‘s â€" resources. The â€" Advance would venture the opinion that either one of these two financial and indusâ€" trial editions gave the North Land more real publicity of value than all the other outside *‘*special editions"‘ issued at the direct expense of the people of the North Land in the past, with the one exception recently of the EFinancial iPost, of Toronto, which was unquestionably a good issue. The Mail Empire and The Globe issued their special editions for their readers. _ These two Toronto newsâ€" papers followed the proper method of confining paid advertising to their adâ€" vertising columns. . They had Jlots of paid advertising all right. But their readers were not deceived. They did not have to guess as to what was paid There are exceptions to this rule, andâ€" it is worth noting that it is the real newspapers that constitute the exceptions. For instance, last week two Toronto newspapersâ€"The Mail Empire and The â€" GHobeâ€"issued special financial and industrial ediâ€" tions. ‘These editions paid particular attention to the North Land and to the mining industry and to the pulp, paper and lumbering To the readers last week of either The (ilobe or The Mail Empire a very favourable impression must have been papers tha cerned. T1 will deriveé perbhaps. There was much disceussion in an English city recently as to whether the public houses should be allowed to remain open until eleven o‘clock instead of halfâ€"past ten. One of the town eduncillors emphzi'tica,ll.v opposâ€" ed the change. *‘ Wot 1 says is,"‘‘ he the North are bludgeoned into paying for ‘‘advertising‘‘, for extra copies, or anything else, so long as they pay. If they will not pay they are threatened with being unrepreâ€" sented in the edition that professes to fully review the North Land. the threat is actively carâ€" ried out. In one case a special ediâ€" tion pretending to review the mines of the Poreupine did not even menâ€" tion the Big Dome. It had big spreads of other mining properties that are doubtful propositions, to put the matter very kindly. In any event no review of the Poreupine is posâ€" sible without extensive reference to such mines as the Dome, the Meinâ€" tvre and the Hollinger. ‘These three At various times in the past North Land newspapers have been moved to protest at the methods employed by southern newspapers on the occastions when the latter pretend to be deterâ€" mined to ‘‘boost the North.‘* The usual game is for the Southern newsâ€" paper to issue a **special‘‘ edition. Before this edition issues the municiâ€" palities, the industries, the business men and the people generally of the North are ‘bludgeoned | into TORONTO NEWSPAPERS ASSIST THE NORTH LAND. big mines have been more than ‘genâ€" erous in assisting the paying for puoâ€" licity for the Camp and for the North Land generally, ‘but there is always a limit to generosity. The ‘*special editions‘‘ pretending to depiect the North Land are usually based on a wrong idea. It would appear that they do not care a rap for the North. All they want is the money. _ They secure this money on the pretense that they are going to *‘ write up the North,.*‘ The sort of writeâ€"ups they usually give are a fraud upon their readers as well as a theft from those who contributed. ‘that ten n the â€" council man ain‘t drunk ain‘t trving."‘ of the NC d a number on the N including in D V M 1. x\. ager of ner Neilly Mining . higsh up u1 chamber pulp, sys ‘The very been 0000000090090 6 $40000600000060000$0000009000000000000000 6 i FIRST ANNUAL SHOW ; 9008000948080 e 0e Anyone desiring to enter Poultry, Dogs or other Pet Stock, write to W. T. Montgomery, Secretary, Timmins, for prize lists,, entry forms, etc. Porcupine Poultry Pet Stock Association New Empire Theatre Basement, Timmins Wednesdayâ€"Thursday, Jan. 16thâ€"17th

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