Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 28 Jul 1927, 1, p. 6

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i5900 9 93 95 90 40409090000 e 00900 e 90 40 00414040 440 000 40 40 40 940 4515 150900040 4C 45 15 15 45 45 1545 6 4 4 WATCH LOSTâ€"On Flynn‘s farm on Sunday, a lady‘s watch. _ Finder please return to The Advance Office. $5.00 reward for return. _ Watch valued as keepsake. â€"30p. LOSTâ€"On â€" Thursday morning tween Schumacher and (Golden a side rack of Ford ton t Finder please return to E. M. house, 12 Cedar St. North, Tlm and receive reward. LOSTâ€"On street in Timmins on Saturday, July 23rd, a gold bar pin with amethyst in centre and small pearl on each side. Finder please communicate with P.O. Box 170, South Poreupine. â€"30 Notice is hereby given that the first semiâ€"annual meeting of the Workers‘ Coâ€"Operative of New Ontario, Limited to be held as a semiâ€"annual meeting, will be held at the hall of the Finnish Society, 50 Fourth Avenue, Timmins, on the l4th day of August, 1927, at 7 o‘clock in the ev ening. Following subjects will be considerâ€" ed at this meeting, namely :â€" Financial statement of Trading and Profit and Loss for period from Nov. 3rd, 1926 to June 30th, 1927 ; Board of Directors will present full Mr. . N. accounâ€" tant, will submit a full report on audit ; Manager‘s report. Any ordinary business of interest to the Coâ€"Operative will be considered By Order, (signed) N. D. THACHUK, Secretary. BOARDIXG HOUSE FOR SALEâ€" WORKERS‘ COâ€"OPERATIVE OF NEW ONTARIO, LIMITED Board report ; HOUSE FOR SALEâ€"6 rooms. Apâ€" ply to 108 Maple street, south Dated at Timmins this 29th d SJuly: 1927 . K OR SALEâ€"Eightâ€"roomed house in business section of town. _ House is 20 by 30 feet, with all conveniâ€" ences and ‘furnace. _ Hardwood floors upstairs and down, large celâ€" lar. Lot 30 by 128 feet. Will sell for cash or easy terms. Apply to 3 Elm St. South. 22â€"26p. 14 rooms, furnished complete, in uptown district. Reasonable terms to responsible party. Apply to P. 0. Box 1704, Timmins, Ont. _ 29t.f. Ne Great Pier Dedicated to Empire Service ton truck. . M. Stenâ€" , Timmins â€"30p. se« ( C y of 30â€"32 beâ€" ity, NS at Schumacher, is the repreâ€" sentative from this part of the North at the Dominion Fire Chiefs‘ Associaâ€" tion meeting which is in session at Hull this week. Reports from Ottaâ€" wa indicate that the discussions at the meeting are of great interest and |value. I Mr. Chas. Jucksch, chief of the fire | se Clyde Leavitt, chief fire inspector of the Board of Railway Commussionâ€" ers, in his paper on the Forest Fire Hazard, vividly described the ‘‘menâ€" ace of the north,""‘ and told of measâ€" ures to combat forest fires. The greatest factor of hazard, he said, arises from general conflagrations having an origin outside populated COLD STORAGE FOR CARS. Apâ€" GRADUATE NURSE, experienced ; speaking hoth French and English; capable of taking any case. Apply to 105 Elm street south or phone PRACTHICAL MATERNITY NURSE (GIBBONSâ€"In loving memory of our dear son, Douglas CJlaude, who was drowned July 29th, 1924, at Sturgâ€" eon Point, Ont. Just a th(mght of you, dear Douglas, Just a memory fond and true, Just a token of our affection, That our hearts still ache for you. 30p. Dad and Gladys. DOMINION CHIEFS HEAR OF NORTH‘S FIRE M INX LOVING MEMORY OF MAXRâ€" iERY NEWINGTON, who died July 16th, 1924. Treasured memories of one so dear, Are oft recalled with a silent tear; Three years have passed and none can IN LOVING MEMORY of our dear mother, Mrs. Michael Carr, who deâ€" parted ths life on July 28th, 1925. ‘*May her soul rest in peace."‘ â€"Mrs, L, S. Newton, Mrs. E. Rogâ€" ers, Mrs. J. D. MacLean, â€"30p. tell The loss of one‘we loved so well. â€"30p â€"â€"â€"Mother, Sister and Brothers ply to B. F. Lennan, No. 60, corner of Elm and Broadway 46 now on sale by Jos. Longpres, North half lot 1, concession 4, Mountjoy. Good crop of raspâ€" berries. â€"30p Is opeff for engagements. Well exâ€" perienced. _ Phone 766â€"J or apply to 73 Second Ave., Schumacher, (Ont. â€"30; te¢ â€"30p centres and covering large areas of | forest. To a large extent, towns and villages are surrounded by agriculturâ€" al lands from which the forest growth must be cleared before cultivation is possible, and in this process fire must be used to clear the‘ debris, and exâ€" perience has given rise to laws which protect life and property. For towns and villages where complete cultivaâ€" tion of the surroundings is not feasâ€" ible, experience has again shown the| effectiveness of cleared, fireâ€"guards, maintained free of debris. The Onâ€" tario Government has aided this to the amount of $10,000 in 1921 and 1922; $100,000 in 1923; $35,000 in | 1924 and $50,000 in 1925â€"6â€"7. | Great occasions do i e heroes or cowards; they veil them to the eyes of men. Sik â€"ly and imâ€" perceptibly, as we wake or sleep, we grow strong or weak, and at last some crisis shows us what we have become. â€"Canon Westcott. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Last week members of the staff of the Northern Development Departâ€" ment were busy trying to reseue the car that went through the bad spot of road about thirty miles north of North Bay on the new North Land higshway. So far as can be learned their efforts did not meet with sueâ€" cess. They were able to get a grip on the top of the car but when they attempted to raise it from the mire or quicksand or whatever is where the road gave way, all they were able to bring to the surface were some pieces of the top.. The car was held. Some people feared that the accident would turn tourists from the use of the highway but this does not seem to be the as the tourists apâ€" paranetly are taking the sensible and proper view that the accident to the road at the one particular spot was simply a sort of freak of nature and that. it did not suggest anything against the safety of the road in general. This is quite evidently the fact, and with the detour built at the spot where the car went ‘‘out of sight,"‘‘ the tourist traffice on the highway is particularly heavy.. As a matter of fact it has never really slackened un from first rust when i CAR STILL SUNK IN BAD SPOT OF NEW HIGHWAY. Between two bhurning firesâ€" [ awa, Canada.â€"Canada is the I guess all else will have to w (ut most imortant export market of the For the car sure needs tires. United States, taking 15 per cent of â€"â€"â€"It]xolnzmg'(.'l!lmt country ; and the United States, o i in turn, is the largest market for Canâ€" There was a family called Slightham | adian goods, taking 38 per cent of the Who were afraid that disease germs| total exports of Canada. Great Bri< would bite ‘em. tain is second only to the United They ate an apple a day States in imports from and exports to To keep the doctor away, Canada. â€" Duringe the last twelve But Doc came zm(’l brougl > £wins )“‘ months, Canadian imports from Great to spite ‘er e Britain had a value of $164,000,000 I’JX(‘llim.‘-flw and exports amounted to $447,000,000. ple ‘‘The house needs paint, the wife needs â€"clothes, The children all need shoes, Among these needs you may suppose. It‘s very hard to choose. No man could be in a worse strait, Between two bhurning firesâ€" I guess all else will have to wait For the car sure needs tires."‘ slackened up from fir was officially opened. ition ‘I‘m smoking a terribl ars lately."" ‘You certainly are if that 000 P Nn 2k s a w . 1 Diamond Jubilee of Conâ€" by Louis D. Taylor, Mavor which bears the following "Piers B and C. Formally _ Dedicated to the Canâ€" e Empire Service during meouver‘s Celebration of terrible lot of xchan bC SAIM â€" toâ€"day \Mrs. John Hamilton @and have returned from a visit fornia and other points south taking up residence with her in Timminsj\ A real foreman prides himself on his ability to take a dub and make him an exipert. Of Pittshurg Pirates, is t the leaders this season. 1 in batting averages, has most hits this season, and most doubles and triples tional League. A first . for a voungster. Ottawa, ~Canada.â€"Immigration to Canada in the month of May this year totalled 23,941, according to a stateâ€" ment issued toâ€"day by the Departâ€" ment of Immigration and. Colonizaâ€" tion. This is an increase of 29 per cent. over May, 1926, when the total immigration to Canada was 18,620; and 79 per cent. over May, 1925, when the total immigration to Canada for that month was 13.338. Last May there were 8,408 British came to Canada, 2,503 from the Unitâ€" ed States and 13,030 from other counâ€" tries, as compared with 7,086 British, 2,063 from the United States and 8,â€" 571 from other countries in May, 1926. Immigration for April and May of this year totalled 59,382 or almost 1,â€" 000 persons per day for the two months. Ti XPORT AND IMPORT MARKETS In May of this year 5,561 Canadians who had gone to the Lmte«l States intending to remain there permanentâ€" ly, returned to Canada declaring their intention of staying in the I)mmmun These are not m(lude(l in the immiâ€" eration figures. In May who had intending Smith‘s Pure Orange Marmalade, 4s. tin. Huron Toilet Rolls 5 roils for .....:*.:. Clark‘s Boiled Dinner Is. UA :A . inss s s oi By dealing at the "New Idea" you may know the vyour foodstuffs. Where almost everything may New Idea Cash Delivery PAUL WV ANER Pirates, is right up fvith anglefoot, Flit, Flit Hand Sprayers, Fly Tox, I â€" Sapho Powders, Fly Swatters, etc., e _ He is second zes, has scored the son, and slugged the l triples in the Naâ€" A\ first class record New Ideaâ€""The Home of the Best" f May this year ding to a stateâ€" by the Departâ€" OW IS INSECT KILLING Ottawa, Ontario.â€"Canadian employâ€" ment conditions at the beginning of June showed a more favourable asâ€" pect than in any other month since 1920. Approximately 43,896 â€" more workers were employed on June 1st than on May lst. Statements were tabulated by the Dominion Bureau of Statistiecs from 6,150 firms employing 876,768 workers at the beginning of the month, as compared with 832,872 on May 1st. This increase of 43,896 workers, or 5.3 per cent., brought the index number to 105.9, as against 105.2 on October l1st, 1926, the preâ€" vious high level in the last seven years. In the month of May last the index stood at 100.6. Protection against fire is the most important single forest problem. Its solution rests in an enlightened pubâ€" lie sentiment. Acecording to Lincoln, ‘*Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment nothing can fail; without it, nothing can succeed. Consequently, he who molds public sentiment goes deeper than he who enacts statutes or pronounces decisâ€" ions. He makes statutes and decisâ€" ions possible or impossible to be exeâ€" cuted."‘ Hang to your illusions like a bull pupâ€"-the ‘ll keep you young and hapâ€" PYâ€" If you have the ability to save, you will succeed, if not, you will fail. â€"Bxchange Never lose your temper, you may waste too much time finding it again. â€"â€"Bxchange Y ou will find that those not think. For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column .A ¢$+ ,* _2 #4 * 4 #4 + /A 4+ #4 +. Ad ++ ‘e e /% + t 1 i i i n is ie in in sn snn b% 44 44 44 446. 44 #4 “.“.“.“.“.“.“.“. *#* * #% + #4 *.,.* «* *s * “‘“. + *#* * .“.“. * *# “. #4 # #% sls * .“.“ # #% #+* # 4 #4 * .“.“. * * .“.“. #4 VAAA LAAA .“.“.“.“.“.“.“.‘l 41IMC. "Where Quality Counts" 2 Smith‘s Pure Tomato 2 I Catsup, per bot::........... } Heinz Cream of Tomateo 2 2 tins Beeki arr who fail, do st Honey (fresh ival) 24/4s. tin... Exchange Exchangse Exchange TiME be found 103% Pine Street South 95 Sixth Avenue Best of all Fly Killersâ€"10c¢c and 20¢ per packet at all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores. Thursday, July 28th, 1927 Tox Pump joy oi segiee for vour t: 43¢

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