Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 20 Feb 1924, 1, p. 2

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Big Bargains These Days at.P. Antaing‘s 39 FOURTH AVENUE CPPOSITE FIRE HALL For the best in Fruits, Confectionery, etc., and for Ice Cream, come here. In Toys, Fancy Goods, Jewelry, etc., as we are going out of these lines. Pleasure Ice Cream Parlour ©#000000090000800000600900000000000400040666004006 08804 446 FRANK * A 1 s t tw ',I.‘ W â€"z L e *T <<t [ 0 _ s C606 6 4 66 6 © 4 0000860000000 08040000 B. C. PIR White Pine The Silver Stocks Double Diamond Lumover Co., Limited MATTAGAMIL HEIGHTS HE Silver Stocks are attraCQing public attention resulting in an active marketfor these shares. offer money making possibilities. Arthur E. Moysey Co. D 1904 TIMMINS PHONES 100 400 _ ONTARIO .~82E3Z.2 " Anprew Wirson o m â€" 437248 â€" orner Third Ave. and Birch St. PHONE 24 KEELEY CASTLE CAPITOL MINING CORP. LORRAIN CONS Wisox‘s SPRUCE AND JACXK PINE. Rough and Dressed Lumbsr o° ali Kinds. Still the Most for the Money Square Timbers Flooring V .â€"Joint. Bevel Sid ug Pays highest prives for secondâ€"hand furniture. Sells new and secondâ€"hand Furniture at cheap prices. BUYS AND SELLS FURNITURE " The National Smoke" 3, 2x10 dressod. MONETA P.O. Box 3, Timmins. Mculding. TEMISKAMING DISTRICT‘S HIGH STANCARD Of CROFPS Writer Urgoes Necessity for Governâ€" ment Grain Blevator for the North Land. acre} rork vounlty ;. bus. per acre. Oatsâ€"47.8 bus. per 2nd, with 43.0 bus. p by the Departme we find that the acre of many gra Bay 2nd, with 20 bus. per ac Ryeâ€"27 bus. per acre; Bay 2nd, with 20 bus. per ac Barleyâ€"38.0 bus. per_ ac Seaten by Oxford Countv w Speaker achieved He says bus. pet Tarni nus, per acre. Mixed Grainsâ€"Temiskamin from the top. Potatoesâ€"Temiskaming, w en proud oT. nmuiuskamin Turning then to be pointed from t ures, the writer s But, of this 1,014,75005 bushels of grain produced _ in Temiskaming, what effort is there â€"made to find a market for same? What we need is a (Government operated grain elevator, where wheat, oats, peas, barley. and rye may ‘be taken and properly cleanâ€" ed and graded and made ready to compete in the markets with any grains grown in Canada. The, farmâ€" ers today here in Temiskaming have an excellent market right in the lumâ€" ber and mining camps for all the oats they can grow, if â€" some provisions were made for the handling of samse, 1 emiskaming it the top in Spring W were made for the handling of sams, and the elevator is the only solution to this problem. An expenditure of $25,000 should be provided from the Northern,Development Fund for this Northern development of agriculture. In connection with the elevator there should also be provided cold storage for meats, eg@s, butter, etc., as the farmers of Temiskaming must be proâ€" vided with facilitiee for marketing their â€" produce, andâ€" procrastination only means a great monetary loss to the farming community and the disâ€" trict in gensral. )us. per acre The above A‘letter like the one referred to alhove certainly leaves room for thought and consideration, and the editor of The Speaker does not allow it to pass without fitting comment. The Speaker says :â€" The editor of The Speaker has to The editor of The Speaker has to thank ‘"W.J. M.‘‘ for reminding him of the high marks obtained by Teâ€" miskaming as stated awbhove. We have heretofore given similar reports from the ~Government reports. Temiskâ€" aming took â€" the marks in wheat, oats, peas and rye, and came within aâ€"point of winning in barley. We took more than the average in poâ€" tatoes and turnips. As a matter ~of fact, the Rainy River valley grows the largest yields of potatoes. As for roots, growing large yields per acre depends upon the amount and quality of the fertilizers used. In Temiskaming ‘no one uses fertilizers because for ‘commercial purposes, it would not pay to do so.. Our soil is new and rich, and we grow paying crops. In Old Ontario ground for roots receives an immense amount of attention, while the growers, draw from adjacent towns and cities the manures which keep the soil rich, and hence the big yvields for those growâ€" armetr 101 uUre In makin 10(:. wiritet [ many grains is product aming. Temiskaming s top in the following: nz Wheat, with 26 bus \ork €ountv 2nd, with dcre intens] seed ot se J 1 and Temiskaming, with As oth. 11 bus. per Decem is a record which th emiskaming should h when everyone on T rms turns their atter out the <kamin 7th. sSa V‘ s tnese e â€" New mA v N1 per acre r acre; that moral that ma of Agricul chest yield is produce 19 r¢ts 1J re Thunds Thunde )C Oxtor stant( S3110 lture 11 })l‘u jeat As _ In a recent issue The ‘I'luile.\'hnx'inn: refers to a new variety of bird seen. recently around Haileybury. Profiâ€" ;ahly this bird has also been noted at _ other points in the North. If so, note should be made of the matter, as an iinteresting,item in natural history. | The Haileyburian says:â€"‘‘*A new i\‘zu'iet_\' of birds is reported as having been observed in town during last week. They are about the size of robins, dark in color, with a slight | tinge of red. Several people saw a i(,-nnsiderable flock of them and all deâ€" | clare that they never saw the species ‘in this part of the country before. i'l‘he only bird answering closely to the desceription is the Pine Grosbeak, which, books on natural history state, inhabits the far north and sometimes migrates south to the fringe of civilâ€" ization. It is just possible that the extreme cold of last month induced these birds to travel a bit farther south than usual and they may be the species described in the natural hisâ€" |tory books. If any reader, who has observed these unusual visitors, can |identify them we would be very glad |to hear from him." ers who specialize in roots. If it were left to grow turnips from virgin soil Temiskaming would be an easy winner. Mr. R. D. Chester grew common Swede turnips on new land which had never been plowed, harâ€" rowed or fertilized, weighing from 13 Ib. to 18 Ib. each. We know this to be a fact. Three of these turmps were kept by us for some time to prove out what we said in The Speaker. Equaiâ€" lyâ€" large, turnips are grown for Southern Ontario fairs but not on soil which has never been fertilized. However. we wish to say that Temiskâ€" * labelled **shirts."‘ Perhaps, if they had been marked *‘*‘Night Caps"‘ they migcht have gotten through. The cases were addressed to a North Bay merchant who denied all knowledge of them. ‘The liquor was confiscated by court drder, as was also, 103 ‘botâ€" tles of assorted liquor and 15 gallons of high wines seized jby Provincial Officers in the past few weeks. At Englehart last week Inspector Blackwal)} seized 37 gallons of highâ€" wines hidden in several suiteases. state. It is up the soil rich and 1i9 QUART BOTTLES DEWAR‘S SPECIAL SEIZED AT BAY At North Bay last week TLicense Inspector Gagne seized two largo packing ‘eases containing 119 quarti bottles of. ‘‘Dewar‘s _ Special,‘‘ stamped with the seal of the Quebec Government Liquor Commtssion. The cases weighed 1,400 pounds and were NEW VARIETY OF BIRD NOTED IN HAILEYBURY 11 Luck may live with you for years or it may desert you today. Don‘t count on it. onl cause i up to iperit od From 1904 until 1923 the Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited, manuâ€" factured 450000 Ford cars and trucks of which 91% are still in use. More convincing proofoif theirinbuiltworth could hardly be given. Selected materials, simple design, and accurate workmanship are factors in this long lite. They explain the high utility and operating economy of the Ford when new. And they also give it the ruggedness to withstand the wear and tear of daily driving year after year. iPmet y that lemiskâ€" to Old Ontario its virgit s to kee, CARS + TRUCKS . TRACTORS Prescribed by Physicians for Colds, Sour Stomach, Bloating Gas, Sickâ€" Headaches and Tired, Nervous, Runâ€"Down Condition. YOU DON‘T HAVE TO PAY FOR DR. THACHER‘S SYRUP UNLESS YOU CET SATISFYING RELIEF! ‘*The majority of people who come into this store for medicines of varâ€" ious sorts are really suffering because of a sluggish liver,"" declared"a leadâ€" ing druggist the other day. **What they really need is Dr. Thacher‘s Liver Blood Syrup to cleanse and tone the liver and build up the sysâ€" tem so that they feel their best again. It gives quick relief; this is why we can afford to sell it with the underâ€" standing that it will give complete satisfaction; otherwise the purchase price will be returned. See Any Authorized Ford Deal :0“00“0\00006000“000““0““““““’““0“0“00: W 00000900000000000000000000000000000000048000000000006¢ It is easy to tell when your liver ’Zldgy Ford Predonei sandy falls Radionhone Bruadcastmg ===â€"â€"â€" IGMINIE Scores of unsolicited reports of perfect reception from all over Canada and the U. S. Ask to see them. A â€" GHILD CAN â€"OPERATE IT ARoply to M. J. CAVENEY, Timmins Price Completeâ€"$375â€"°° GIVES QUICK RELIEF tion, sustaineda vaiuUuc, odlisidk i0A performance from your Ford whil you continue to drive it, and a meas urable resale value when you wis to dispose of it. It means that‘the Ford gives you unâ€" usual value per dollar invested, not only this year but for a long term of years to follow â€"means that when you select the Ford you obtain approved security for the dollars you invest. ® MISs lon z life means slow deprecia tained valuce, satisfactory ace from vour Ford while and depressed Tleeling? LL s0, ldh just a spoonful of Dr. Thacher‘ Liver Blood Syrup after the nex few meals and notice the quick differ ence in the way you look, eat, slee; and feel. Get a bottle of Dr. Thacher‘s front R. M. Burke‘s Drug Store in Timâ€" mins; B. L. Pilsworth in South Porâ€" cupine. And unless you really apâ€" preciate what it has done for yout come back and your money will be returned without a single questionm. This is how much confidence we have in this splendid â€" corrective, healthâ€" Guilding preparation. rea t ies

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