Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 21 Apr 1927, 2, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

DROPPED DEAD AFTER DRINKING CUP OF COFFEE A â€" correspondent â€" writing _ from KRouyn, Que., to The Mail and Empire says:â€"The. Marriott Mines, Ltd., is the name of a new mining company which 4s to engaige in the mining indusâ€" try of Northern Ontario and Northâ€" western â€" Quebece. . The new â€" comâ€" pany, headed by an Ottawa firm, was successful in securing the big discovâ€" ery group of claims which has attractâ€" ed attention toward the continuation of the copperâ€"gold field of Rouyn into the Province of Ontario. Samples taken from the Marriott deposit appear to be most important brought to light on surface in this field since the discovery of Noranda and Waiteâ€"Montgomery. Large bulk samples show massive chalcopyrite, and with the analysis showing over 26 per eent. copper. Detailed samplâ€" ing has not yet been done, but samples taken from test pits across a width of 15 feet and over a length of 150 feet are indicative of a very important deâ€" posit, Assays also show values of close to $5 per ton in gold and silver, which fact suggests a valuable byâ€"proâ€" duet. Two minutes after drinking a cup of coffee in the Globe Cafe at Sudâ€" hbury on Monday morning, Ernest Duâ€" chane, aged 39, fell dead upon the floor. Duchane had been released a few hours previously from Burwash in what the jail farm surgeon considâ€" ered to be first class health. An inâ€" quiry was commenced into the death. BIG COPPERâ€"GOLD DEPOSIT AT MARRIOTT MINES, LTD. “’i the Most â€" %2%»,.@311’ Lorcreonttay Special programme at the band concert in the Goldfields theatre after the church services on Sunday, April 24th The Marriott Mines lie in Marriott Township in Ontario, immediately adâ€" jacent to the baundary of Quebec. Arrangements are being made at once to send in a diamond drill for the purâ€" pose of tapping the downward extenâ€" sion of the deposit as preliminary work to installation of a mining,plant. is All Canada Impartial Experts Say l! ORANGE " fi; iÂ¥ ;‘ You see it everywhere â€"the pearly gray enaimseled ware that spells long service and real, oidâ€"fashioned satisfaction. This splendid kitchen ware, SMP Pearl Enameled Ware, éefies wear and tear and its surface, like all SMP Enameled Ware, is so chinaâ€"smooth and clean it harbors no taints or impuritics. You need no steel wool or special cleansers to keep SMP Pearl Ware sparkiing clean. Soap and hot water do the trick in a jiffy. Made in every new handy shape and size by an old established Canadian inâ€" . 8. 4M 1. $4 \ ) ns C W +) * ustry, N : Sueset Metar Propucts Co. C MONMNTREAL TONONTO YINN!*â€"ZG LOMOMNMTON YANCOUYVER â€" CALGARY Best for You and Baby too. too. . is the finest ‘Orange Pekoe‘ sold. OF CANADA, LIMITED PRODUCTION REPORT OF THE VIPOND FOR MARCH The monthly report of the Vipond Consolidated Mines, limited, as. isâ€" sued last week shows that for the month of March there were 7,781 tons of ore milled. Bullion to the value of $63,200.00 was shipped during the YOUNG BOYS SAID TO HAVE STOLEN DYNAMITE STICKS month An unusual story comes from Coâ€" balt last week. â€" According to the tale some Cobalt lads, aged about twelve or thirteen, secured 5() sticks of, dynaâ€" mite which they cached in crevises in the rock about a mile and a half beâ€" hind the Hudson property.. The lads say they found the explosive. The othel side of the story is to the effect that the dvnamite was taken from a warehouse. Among the thing the boys are said to have done with the dynamite is the placing of one stick of the explosive in a short piece of iron pipe, after which they attached a fuse and lit the same, but the fuse failed to work. The cache was found through information given by one of the lads concerned, it is said. _ The boys need to have it impressed upon their consciousness that lads should not fool around with explosives. In this mining country where explosives are in general use, it is the duty of every parent to make children hold dyvnamite in the very sincerest respect. PRIZES FOR ESSAYS ON . _ HIGHWAY SAFETY PLANS ‘‘What My School is Doing for Highway Safety‘‘ is to be the subâ€" ject of a provincial wide essay conâ€" test which has been launched under the joint auspices of the Ontario Moâ€" tor League and the Ontario Safety League. The prizes which will be aâ€" warded on June 5, 1927, will have a value of six hundred dollars and the contest is divided into two sections, one for children under 12 years of age and the other for students between 13 and 16 years of age. The contest will be elosed on May 20 and the prizes awarded three weeks later. The rules governing the contest are : (1) any school child in Ontario may compete, (2) the composition must be written in English prose and must not consist of more than 200 words, (3) the composition must be the sole work of the pupil submitting it, and in the pupil‘s own handwriting, (4) the composition must be written on ruled paper, with a margin on the left side, written in ink, on one side of the paper only, and confined to one sheet if possible, (5) neatness, spelling and general composition will be taken inâ€" to consideration in awarding the prizes, (6) the full name, age, name of, sechool, and street address of the pupil must be written at the bottom of the paper, (7) in rural schools the name of the prineipal, post office adâ€" dress and number of rural delivery route must be given, (8) to the one subject chosen, a description of what your school is doing to promote safeâ€" ty, or what you think it could do and should do, is valued more highly than a general discussion, (9) the contest will elose on May 20, 1927, (10) the decision of the judges will be final. Pupils desiring to participate in the contest are asked to hand their essays in to their teacher who will give them to the principal to forward to the Onâ€" tario Safety League headquarters in Toronto. Mr. Rose is presiding as examiner at the Timmins High School for the Stationary Engineers‘ examinations being held today (Thursday). SwWEL TE NED NESTLES MILEK ((;ngpniégd {J ‘ o _ Loh n n on . Va SW axm{ richne FORWARD LINE OF ThE SCOTTISH FOOTBALL TFAM Relative to the Scottish Football team, scheduled to play at Timmins on July 1st on their tour this summer ‘‘Tvanhoe‘‘ Writes Second Article on THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO a ‘‘*Will o‘ the Wisp,"‘ the despair of halfâ€"backs and backs, who marvel where he gets his energy. A volume could be written about the wonderful goals he has scored after working a devious way through an entire defenâ€" sive phalanx. Tall, flaxenâ€"haired Andrew Cunâ€" ningham, of the iron limbs, provides a striking contrast. No Scottish team is complete without him. _ England fears no man more. He has beautiâ€" ful action when working the ball. Aâ€" part from the object of serving his partner, or throwing a pass through the middle for the centre to score, C@unningham‘s main purpose is to get position for a left foot shot. With a short jabâ€"like swing he can strike a tremendous blow, and if the ball goes true, as it generally does, the safest thing the goalâ€"keeper to do is to get right out of the wayâ€"it will save him trouble even if he loses a goal. "Between Gallagher and Cunningâ€" ham there should be plenty of scope for McGrory to repeat his goalâ€"scorâ€" ing harvest of the past season. He likes the low straight pass sent along in front of him so that he can go racâ€" ing though to shoot as he goes. But he is as deadly with his head, for in meeting a ball thuswise with the im petus of the dash through behind him, he will put as much foree into the impact as the majority of players can impart with the feet. % CC% tÂ¥ ‘These are some of the chief perâ€" sonalities in the Scottish eighteen. It is certain that the Scottish game will be displayed in all its intricate charm, and with that blend of vigor and dash which has made Scotland the supreme football power of the world in recent yvears. "The officials who will travel with the party are Mr. Robert Campbell, viceâ€"president of the Scottish Footâ€" ball Association, whoâ€" will ‘be in charge, Mr. Thos. N. Colquhoan (Clyâ€" debank), Mr. Wm. Melntosh (Dunâ€" dee}, and Mr. James Philip (Aberâ€" deen}, members of Council. E. Meâ€" Garvey, of Celtic, has been selected 18 During the twenty months that Red Lake has been in the prospecting limeâ€" ligcht there have been 6,200 elaims staked in that district. In one third of that time there have been 4,000 claims recorded in the Kamiskotia area. Too much publicity of a kinda not too intelligent injured Red Lake quite â€" seriously _ while . Kamiskotia has escaped this undesirable overâ€" hbooming. Team to Play at Timmins on July l1st, 1927. trainer.‘‘ Mss enada by the Makers of N Safe Speedy Relief T e Reacataia PA IN ~ Neuralgia Stop Your Rheumatism Send 10¢c for generous trie! to Templetons, Toronto. 50c end $1 boxes at your drugf: ist‘e. dy TEMPLETON RasumAryc CAPSVLE®* WHERE THEY MARE ALL THE HIGHâ€"PRESSURE SALESMEN Regular Schools to Teach the Gentle Art of Separating People from Their Money. More than onece recently some disâ€" zruntled good citizen has asked the question:â€"‘‘Where is sin do all the highâ€"pressure salesmen come frnim? There are certainly enough of these sentlemen on the warpath and Timâ€" mins gets more than its share of these ~entry. _ The whole North, indeed is a promised land to the highâ€"pressure fellows. Often, the number of them does give rise to real wonder as to where they all come from. This quesâ€" tion is<«answered in the last issue of The Northern Miner. Now, The Miner would add help to information if it would tell a troubled world how to get rid of the brutes. In the meanâ€" time this is the way The Northern News explains their presence:â€"â€" In the larger cities of Canada and the United States, including Toronto and Montreal, are schools for the embryo salesmen of shares of all kinds. These are fitted up like classâ€" rooms, with school desks, blackboards and chalk, maps, teacher‘s desk, and all the equipment of a schoolroom. Young men and young women are taught the arts of approach argument and closing by past masters in the business of highâ€"pressure. Many of the pupils go no further in applying their education than to sell stock to their relations and friends. Some deâ€" velop ability in selling stocks to strangers and become valuable to themselves and their employers. 1t is not uncommon for a good salesman to make $200 to $300 a week the year round. a legitimate proposition and the pedâ€" dler selling something that was only "‘"made to be sold.‘"‘ But by their raz ye shall know them. There is something about the slick salesman that gives him away to the person of acute perception. The rural routes in public imaginâ€" ation, are held to be the best place for these salesmen to operate but acâ€" tually thy get their easiest business in the icities. _ To the person unacâ€" quainted with stocks and bonds and their vendors it is not easy to distinâ€" vcuish between the salesman offering A man who attended one of the proâ€" motional schools for the purpose of learning their methods writes : ©Stock promoters go to school just as you and I did. It has been my doubtful privilege to sit in the classâ€" room of one of these stock jobbing training schools. The curriculum of the modern stock promoting training school comprises bucket shops, plhone rooms, blind pools, mergers, stockâ€" holders‘ committees, fractlonal share scheme, reloading, oneâ€"call system, telephone razz, tap system, tipster sheets, puts and calls. "I have sat in these classrooms under the guise of being a youthful advocate of the stock promoter‘s axiom ‘get the money.‘ True, we were not permitted to realize that this was the ultimate objective. We had been gathered there ostensibly for the purpose of receiving a training in the zentle art of selling securities, about which we knew nothing, to a gullible public who knew less. The entire process was clothed in the garb of metriculous respectability. We were impressed with the fact that we were in reality embryonic philanthropist, passing on to our freinds the opporâ€" tunitvy of a lifetime."‘ OVER TEN THOUSAND BIRDS AT OTTAWA THIS SUMMER The World‘s Poultry Congress of 1927 to be held in Ottawa from July 27th to August 4th will be the greatâ€" est of all Congresses held thus far. There will be over ten thousand live birds on exhibition, some six thousâ€" and delegates will be in attendance, and all of the buildings at Landsâ€" downe Park, Ottawa, where Central Canada Exhibition is annually held, will be filled with exhibits. The Doâ€" minion Government, all of the nine provinces of Canada, the United States, â€" Holland, â€" Poland, â€" Russia, Great Britain and many other counâ€" tries besides a host of manufacturers of poultry industry accessories such as incubators and breeders, will have displays. _ Sessions of Congress will be held at the Auditorium from 9.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m., daily and Congress Exhibition will be open from 1 p.m., till 10 pm., daily. To hbe "As Good as _ McLaughlinâ€"Buick a car would need to have WHEN BE TTE R AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT. MSLAUGHLINâ€"BUICK WILL BRUILD TH EM Marshall â€" Ecclestone, Limited A Sixâ€"Cylinder Valveâ€"inâ€"Head Engine; A Vibratiorless Engineâ€"with all mountings of resilient silencing rubber; A Tripieâ€"Sealed Engine; A Vacuumâ€"Cleaned Crankease; Automatic Heat Control; Thermostatic Control of water circulation ; Sealed Chassis; Torqueâ€"} ube Drive; Automatic Lubrication of engine, universal joint and fan hub; One picce, Iâ€"beam Front Axle; Cantilever Rear Springs; Fisher Body with V.V. Windshield; Duco Finish; Tenâ€"Plate Multiple Disc Clutch; Controllableâ€"Beam Headlights; Mechanical 4â€"Wheel Brakes; Balanced Wheels. Dealer for McLaughlin and Pontiac PRoODUCT OF (:BNERAI Mnmno oP CANADA Timmins, Ont. Thursday, April 21st, 1927 After Every Meal ,fi tA Flavored with the juice of fresh mint leaves MFâ€" 2016 f w+

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy