Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 29 Mar 1928, 2, p. 2

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C 197 day last). iHAon. William Finlayson, Minister of© Lands â€" and Forests, had> <the of > Lands =and© Forests, had ~the hearts of his Legislature audience ""pitâ€"aâ€"patting‘‘ yesterday afternoon. He had been talking about Northern Ontarioâ€"its wonders and its possiâ€" bilitiesâ€"and had expressed the belief that every person should ‘‘go â€"up and (From The Toronto Globe on Satur for himself‘‘ before. criticizing Ghoice of a USEDCAR Timmins Garage Co. Lmuted Timmins, Ont. 1927 NASH COACH 1926 FORD COACKH Ovorhanled) and l\m 2.800 miles. Just like new painted ......... 1926 STAR TOURING 1926 BUICK 8. In Perfect Condition $400 Overhauled and newly painted ,.. * painted ....... T will pay you to selectâ€"the Used Car you purâ€" L chase with the same care and judgment as you would show in buying a new car. Buy from a dealer who has a reputation for honesty and fairness . . . a dealer who is successfully selling a wellâ€"known and respected line of cars. We can offer you better Used Car values because of our volume of Chevroâ€" let business and because we are building for the future. And we want you to buy your used car careâ€" fully, because a satisfied customer means more to ug than the profit on the sale. Come in and inspect some of our special values before you decide on your car. â€" ; ‘ with regard to development of this part of the Province. â€" _ There were no ‘‘Hoorahs,‘‘‘ for House rules and regulahona won‘t permit them, but from one sectwn of the Opposition benches an enthusiâ€" astic ‘‘see everything that‘s posslble member piped a faint: ‘*I sin¢erely trust,‘‘ said he, ‘‘that some way will be found this sammer to take the Legislature onâ€"a trip up ‘*Attaboy, Bill!"‘‘ 1926 BUICK SEDAN for backâ€"filling, stole rides in the bucâ€" ket and generally had a good time, though a dangerous one. The. pracâ€" tice waw apparently stopped by the stern attitude taken by parents after one boy had sustained injuries from a fall or jump from the bucket which happened to stop leaving the lad imâ€" prisoned up m the air. Evidentiy they have boys in Cobalt as well as in Timmins. Indeed, boys will be boys wherever they may be. The Cobalt lads did not have a sand bucket, but like the dmggxst of old they had ‘‘something just as good.‘‘ The boys discovered a new use for the Forestry tower at Diabese Mountain. The Govâ€" ernment built this tower for obserâ€" vation purposes, but the Cobalt Jlads found the apparatus providéd a very jolly natural slide. They would climb about 60 feet up the brace arms and then slide down the guy wires to the ground. It was an interesting and thrilling game. Provided none of those unexpected little slips or acâ€" cidents occurred, the game is all right for the boys. It tests the strength and skill and so makes especial appeal to the boyish boy who is hundred perx cent. bay. But all know how slips will occur. and how accidents will hapâ€" pen even among boys. Indeed, the wonder is that the boys escape as often as they do from serious conseâ€" quences from some of their tricks. The sliding down the guy wires acâ€" cordingly may be set down as a very serious and foolish chance for boys to take. Older boys have very properâ€" ly been warning others against it and the authorities are now being asked to so protect the guy wires so that it will not be possible for the lads to take such foolish risk with their limbs and lives. It is to be hoped that the game will be discontinued before some lad is seriously injured or other sad accident occurs. Some days ago about twenty young people were thrown into the water at Mill |Creek, North Cobalt, when the ice suddenly gave way under them. They had been enjoying a little late season skating and were quite obliviâ€" ous of the :danger until the ice sudâ€" denly collapsed under them. As the shore was quite close by, they were all able to escape, but not without first having a cold plunge into sbout eight feet of icy water. â€"Some time ago The Advande calléed attention to the dangerous practice induigedâ€"in by some boys of this town who travelled out to the sand plains near town and there climbing the framework cof the equipment for transporting sand to the Hollinger 715.00 | THis mmmmn IN TIMMIN3 NOT ABERDEEN Practically every newspaper in the North Land has‘had something to say in praise of the fine work in the South of the South Poreupine hockey team. There has also been a general unaniâ€" mity of opinion in objecting to the unfair treatment accorded the lads from the North in regard to what The Advance termed ‘‘a sort of relay race in which South Porcupine had to make the full course Aagainst a succession of relieving teams.‘‘>~It remained, howâ€" ever, for The Newâ€"Liskeayd Speaker to bring out one point that is specialâ€" ly worthy of notice: The Speaker puts the matter up to the N.O.A.A., believing that the latter body should take action to have the injustice righted. In passing it may be asked if this is duty of the N.O.H.A. as The Speaker suggests. It will be recalled that the same sort of unfairâ€" ness prevailed in regard to the North in the footbll finals. And who led the big kick that resulted in a change ? It was the N.O.F.A. and the North Land representatives on the Ontario Football governing board. It does look like a useful service for the N.O. H.A. The paragraph from The New Liskeard Speaker referring to the matter is as follows:â€" _ _| . *A warm spell had ‘commenged to soften the iey snow on the sidewalks and a suggestion of the coming spring was in the air. _ Passing along Pine street I encountered a man in front of a wellâ€"known men‘s outfitter‘s, who was labouring excitedly and with great earnestness and speed. Great beads of perspiration rolled from his forehead as he hacked and picked and shovelled at the winter‘s covering of the sidewalk. What a typification of industrious toil! Indeed so much was I impressed that I entered the store to make.some apposite enquiries. A; Scot in Timmins very kindly passes along the tollowmg or:gmal little sketch : â€"**Hullo, Dayton, old top, you seem determined to clear off your sidewalk. In these days of the independent proletariet and all that bally rot, you know, it is extraordinary to have a man. work that way. You must have given him a good contract.‘‘ â€" *‘Nothing doing!‘‘ was the unexâ€" pected reply. ‘‘I‘m not paying him ‘Five games during the week was the handicap the South Poreupine N.O.H.A. champions ran into when they ‘undertook to win the senior. hockey championship of Ontario. First the N.O.H.A. champions had to fight it out with the Intermediate O.H.A. champions, for the right to play the Senior OQ.H.A. champions. _ This meant three hard games, the Porcuâ€" pine boys coming out on top. They were immediately pitted against the strong Kitchener team, games being called for Friday evening and the following Saturday afternoon. in the first game the Kitchener team won by the narrow margin of 3â€"2; but this was nothing to daunt the fighting spirit of the boys from the North. However, although the spirit was wilâ€" ling the job of playing five strenuous games in the week was too much for the Northerners and they had to subâ€" mit to a defeat and the loss of a championship which was almost theirs. The South Porcupiine boys made a name for themselves and incidentally put South Porcupine on the map by their games in Toronto. . Although defeated the fans of the North take off their hats to the gallant team. The Poreupine boys are not the first N.OH.A. team to be trimmed by the unfair ruling concerning final games between the O.H.A. N.O.H.A. teams. Both Sudbury and the Soo teams have been kept out of the championship. because they had to take on the handicap experienced by the Porcupine team last week. What‘s the matter with the N.O.H.A. officials that they allow this unfair method to continue? The continuaâ€" tion of this unfair arrangement has done more to kill senior hockey in the North then any other feature conâ€" nected with the game.‘‘ § pected reply. ‘"‘I‘m not paying him one red cent.. As a matter of fact he‘s a Seotty who some time before Christmas dropped nickel on the sidewalk.‘‘ : 8 ASK THE N.O.H.A. TO LOOK AFTBR INTBRES'BS oF NQRTH One woman gained 15 pounds in gix McCoy takes all the riskâ€"Read this ironclad guarantee. If after taking 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tablets or 2 one dollar bores any thin, underweight man or woman doesn‘t gain at least pounds and feel completely satisfied with the marked ianprovemont in healthâ€"your druggist is authorized to return the purchase price. Ask Moisley Ball, F. M. Burke, Sauve‘s Pharmacy or any good drugâ€" McCoy‘s Puts Weight On Weak Skinny Men Hollows in cheeksâ€"hollows in the sides of neck,â€"flatness in chestâ€" why don‘t you. do something to make yourself look like a real man? McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tablets puts on weight where weight is needâ€" edâ€"not only that but they build up your general health and you grow stronger e plenty of amhtlon. A Cobalt man is said to be one of the 200 heirs to a property of conâ€" siderable value in Montreal. The estate is said to be that of a man who came to Canada about 1600 or around that time. If the Cobalt man gets some money from this estate, he will be in luck, but if he spends some money to have plans carried through for the paying over of the legacy, he is liable to be out of pocket. . So many of these big estate affairs dating back hundred years or more appear to prove far from profitable in the end to the heirs. f Darkâ€"skinned nativesâ€"glowing sunlightâ€"cool b.... h t BE se Cmy mountain topsâ€"great ships ploughing through tropic seasâ€"these things all come to mind when a cup of "SALADA" is steaming 6 bdon e you. Such -vâ€" flavourâ€"such fragrance. * _W. J. WALLACE, *Manager Timmins Brancn HELP YOU»mYOUR INCOME TAX RETURN "Actually the Most Value" E. M. ALLWORTH GOoLDFIELDS BLOCK, PINE STREET, TIMMINS STORE 308 â€"â€"â€" PHONES â€"â€"â€" RESIDENCE 248 RANK OF MONTREAL New Models â€" New Prices Automatice 011. HEATING HOLDENâ€" MORGCGAN Thubookletoonwmthefixlltextofthzlawutt‘ now appears in the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1927. All the changes to date are i It also gives clear interpretations and mmplu.. INCOME TAX ACT "O assist the income tax payers of this commuâ€" 4â€" nity in preparing their returns for the year . 1927, due on April 30th next, the Bank of iMontreal has issued a new edition of its booklet on application to our nearest branch You are invited to take advantage of the special 2 year extended payment plan that Fess permits those who order their installation made before May 1. You are invited, also, to enter upon an era in home conffort such as you J era in home conffort such as you have never known. To relegate the coal shovel and the ash can to the past order of things. To devote to more profitable pursuits the time you have devoted to drudgery. * *4 fi For the Fess, today, extends an invita tion in the truest sense. New models, reduced prices and the extended payment plan combine in offering the modern home the heating comfort it deserves. * Asscts "in excess of $830,.000,000° 2 years to pay Daily Chronicle, London, Eng.:â€" A Streathan citizen, who recently obâ€" tained a copy of his son‘s birth cerâ€" tificate, made the astonishing discoâ€" very that ‘‘Archibald George‘‘ was registered as girl. A letter pointâ€" ing out the error was sent to the reâ€" sponsible authorities, who replied that the matter would be rectified on payâ€" ment of 7s 6d, As neither father nor son is prepared to: pay this amount, the young man seems likely to retain his female status in the offiâ€" cial records. Une cannot help wonâ€" dering, however, whether complicaâ€" tions may not ensue in cextain cireumâ€" stances. «SALADA®" wl

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