Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 1 May 1930, 2, p. 5

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

® ‘1 # * 0‘“ # ® @ .0 ## + # #* *4 *.,* 0.‘0 #4 # # #4 .0 *__* _ * 0.“.".“. .0 # # 4 ## *# # #_ _ ® “.“ > ~ + *4 *# ® #* * # #4 *./ * 00..0 #..9, 19. ,*,. * ’”.00‘ .00. ## + La #* *# # *4 @ L4 #4 # 4 ## *# # ## # # «44 *# v~#4 d . firiw,?..,fiiilzfif’flfi%’%’«lyfifl?%fl7@8@11’!’%’!”?Ia.fi?fiflfi **% * 4 * f #+¢ t PP P AP P LA ~AP L "4‘ it ts in dn in in ds tintin tindindindinin dn P d P D DP DA PAAA D DLAAA ~AAAL LA OAAA OA SA P DP eP P l lt P PP P Saturday, May 2 # ~18â€"19 â€" £ 3 s s s s s s o i i n o i in n i id i id o i ie i ie e i ie ie io it ie ap i5 5 05 9510 05 1045 4545 45 45 15 45 35 56 4 ;WMWMWOWWO“OQM * @O000000 09 00 0 00000009000 0000000000040 Automobile Owners If ymi own an automobile i will be pleased to supp}y Rebates allowed on all coverage except fire and theft if auto is stored during Winter months. On cars listed from On cars listed from Public Liability While P That we have moved to our new premises â€"4â€"0â€"-â€"6__'__ Announcmg 103‘ Pine 8. Timminsâ€"Phone 112 mt T DP P DP C PP B P P BPA â€" ePA i «t t lt 1035 SIMMS HCOOKER DR E. W VANITY FAIR BEAUTY SHOP With Latest Equ-ipmen't. Most Modern Facilities for Permanent Waving, Etc. CUSTOMâ€"TAILORED CLOTHES MADE TO MEASURE PRESSING REPAIRING re and Theft-lnsurancc to the value of for an additional $7.00 Opening Thursday, May 8th . Varley Opening in New Premises Vanity Fair Beauty Shop soUTH in Handsome New Premises in the SOLE IN THE NORTH FOR MAX FACTOR‘S FAMOUS COSMETICS COMPARE THESE RATES WITH OTHERS ind Property Damage ($10,000 limits) on private cars listed under $1,000 costs only INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE now in the Reed Block Basement 0040000000006000000‘ y 44 46 +4 ¢4 #4* #* *4 .“ .“ '0 @ .)“ .“.“ ‘00 .“ ‘“ .“ .“ .0. 00 *# .“ * # #@ *, #4 *# * “. Â¥ 18044 P “.M.“‘“.“’“.QQ.“.“.O0.00.“.“.- $1,001 to $1,501 to $23.00 per year Pine St. S., Timmins prevailing rates FOR EXAMPLE ht Ti # 0000000.000.00.00’0000 #4 e #6 .'0’0"..0..:0...’."‘.000..0..0‘..‘.0‘0:.0."00000'0.:.0..’00 + »llllllinii *# * °*# $1,500 $2.500 it should be insured and we the protection at lowest The sityation caused the comment of the magistrate that there should be some way whereby a prospective tenant would learn that the place had been in trouble and ban on liquor placed on it. The suggestion has causâ€" ed considerable comment end it has been suggested that the ban should be placed on the person rather than on the house. In reply to this it is arguâ€" ed that some landlords rent their places to boctloggers and receive a part of the ptroceeds of the business in adâ€" Cition to the rental and that the presâ€" ent law is intended to place a check n such actions. Some measure of protection for prosâ€" pective tenants of a house that has been declared a public place, under the Ontario Liquor Control Act, is being urged by Magistrate D. M. Brodie of Windsor. In a case which came beâ€" fore him a man was charged with perâ€" mitting drunkenness and illegal possesâ€" sion. It was shown by testimony that he was not at home when the drinkâ€" ing took place and further that he did not know that because of actions Of a previous tenant the rilace had been declared a public place. The first charge was dismissed and the second withdrawn by the crown. CHANGES IN LW sUGGESTED â€" BY FORMER SUDBURY P.M. Mr. Lawrence Twa, of Shillington ent Easter at Timmins. $23.00 $29.00 Ssouth Porcupinecâ€"Phone 30 and $11.00 respectively and $18.00 respectively the car may be added Judge Refuses Relief in Potterâ€"Doal Action Admission by Paul E. Doal, the apâ€" plicant, that sworn affidavits relating to work done on the propi}rty in disâ€" pute gave incorrect and excessive times for some of the eight men employed, brought to an abrupt conclusion a case which opened before Mr. Justice Godâ€" son in mining court here on Thursday. The action was that brought by R. S. Poiter and P. E. Doal for relief from forfeiture of four claims in Catherine township,, which had been restaked by Percy snd Wellington < Gawléy, two brcthers living at Mindoka, and who had been working for some time last summer for Potter and Doal. In announcing that he would refuss rslief, as sought, Mr. Justice Godson suggested to W. A. Gordon, K.C., who anppeared for the applicants, and R. D. Cumming, representing the Gawley brothers, that they should reach some agreement under whigh the claims would revert to the Mindoka Mining Co., with compensation for the respionâ€" dents. His Lordship said a~ ceriain amount of money had been spent by the applicants, but there had been carclessness (he added that this was "a mild word" in the cireumstances) in reporting the work done. "I can‘t forâ€" give Mr. Doal for fyling these reports," said his lordship. Doal was the cnly witness called during the hour and 20 minutes the hearing occupied. A despatch on Saturday from Cobait sayy:;â€" the aApplic carclessnes mild word reporting t give Mr. D said his lc The witness was closely examined by Mr. Cumming regarding the time cerâ€" tain men engaged in the work were said to have put in on the claims, but he claimed that he could not give more detailed information because he did not have his time bocks with him. He did have the payrolls, and Mr. Cumâ€" ming compared these with the affiâ€" davits which had been sworn to, and which witness admitted did not corresâ€" pond. It as alleged that, between Junse 20 and August 1 last year, 172 days of work had been done on claim 22989, and that even allowing for the fact that a new survey showed that some of the work had been performed inadâ€" vertently on ancther part of the proâ€" perty, there still remained sufficient to kesp the claims in good Acceccording to Doal, the Mindoka Minâ€" ing COo. in which he is heavily interesiâ€" ed, had acquired the four claims in question, and also a home stead from the father of the respondents. Doal had been in charge of the assessment work last summer, and this had been done, he told Mr. Gordon all on one claim. But it developed that, through a misunderstanding, the boundary line between the homestead and the claims was found to be farther north than Doal supposed, with the result that some ‘ocf the work had been done on the former by mistake, and had been inâ€" cluded in some of the time allotted against the assessment work on ithe claim 22969. In 1923 ang the company had spent between $35,000 and $40,000 in the district, Doal said, but whoen the reports were not fyled, through @another oversight, by Seriiemâ€" ber 16, as required, the Gawley brothers had restaked the four claims. Doal claimed he thought the date was October 16, but that when he found his error, had gone to the mining reâ€" corder to fyle the reports on Septemâ€" ber 20, only to find the Gawleys had been there three days before. In the course of applicant‘s evidence, it was brought out that the brothers had worked for the Mindcka Mining CO., and at present are living on the comâ€" pany‘s property. According to the 2ipâ€" plicant, the Gawleys "fell down" on their work, and "I simply had a difâ€" ference of opinion with them and let them go." Mr. Cumming argued that his clients knew that the required asâ€" sessment work had not been and that was the reason why they had restaked the claims. Under crossâ€"exâ€" aminaticn, Doal admitted to Mr. Cumâ€" ming that the figures in the affidavits, and relating to the hours spent in asâ€" sessment work, were not correct. WORKED PARTICULARLY FOR SETTLERS OF NORTH (From The Simcoe Reformer) One of the noblemen of the North Country passed away this month in the persen of Otto Thorning, editor of the Northland Post of Cochrane. Of Gerâ€" man birth and Norwegian descent, he came to America as a young man and made his mark in the city of Montreal, first in the Austrian and German Conâ€" sular Agencies, and later with a big grain firm. He felt the call of the North in 1910 and for the past twenty years he had been one of the most conâ€" structive minds and active builders in the land of his adoption. A trenchant, fearless writer, he constantly urged through the columns of his paper greater recognition of the claims of Northern Ontario; and as secretary of the Cochrane Board of Trade he workâ€" ed tirelessly for the community, and particularly for the settlers with whose cause he had the keenest sympathy. The writer had the privilege of an interview with him while in Cochrane in the fall of 1928 and listened with interest to his expositicn of the country‘s future. He was at that time presistently advoâ€" cating the extension of the T. and N. O. Railway to James Bay. There is more than a touch cf pathos in his death at this time when his is absout to be realized. New Address: 20% First Avenue NEXT TO BANNINO‘S DRUG STORE THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS3, ONTARIO nA some claims Mining restionâ€" at Some of the "First" of the Marmon Automobiles The distinction of pionecring ithe straightâ€"eight in the low price range is by no means the only engingering priâ€" ority achieved by Marmon since the company entered into the automobile manufacturing field in 1902. A carefully preserved record of Marâ€" mon "firsts‘"‘ which is among the interesting documents at the Marmon factory reveals the origin of many of the basic principles of design now in standard use throughout the industry. Most redently, this record shows tnat Marmon in 1929 was the first manufacâ€" turer to introduce a straightâ€"eight in the $1,500 field, and this year the first company to make eights in all imporâ€" tant price fields. In the early days of the automotive irdustry, Marmon poneered the Vâ€" type, eightâ€"cylinder motor, only to disâ€" card it later in favour of the inâ€"lin> engine, now available in the point of its highest efficiency in the present day straightâ€"eight. Nearly nineteen years ago a Marmon car was the first to win the annual 500â€"mile race in Indianaâ€" polis which since has become the leadâ€" inz mautomobile classic of ths Unitec Other engineering "firsts" credited to Marmon include the development of circulating oil pressure feed, steel runâ€" ning boards, threeâ€"point engine susâ€" pemsicn, side entrance tonneau, multiâ€" ple dise clutch. Contributing to the development of tha presentâ€"day straightâ€"eight Marmon picnsered the durfexâ€"downâ€"draft maniâ€" fold by incorporating it on the first Marmon eight in 1926, and thereby sliminating the problem of "starved" end cylinders. This year, the double dome combustion chamber, developed by Marmeon engineers, is the first pracâ€" tical adaption of the principle of proâ€" gressive explosions in an autcmobile engine. A power‘ increase of 10 per cent. is claimed in the 1930 Marmon cars in which this feaiture is he 1930 line of Marmon straightâ€" eightsâ€"four models in allâ€"is a culminâ€" aticn of Marmon engineering progress over a period of more than four years with straightâ€"eights alone and over a period of nearly thirty years with all types of motor cars. The lowest priced sight in the line is the Marmonâ€"Rooâ€" sevelt, a new edition of ithe first straightâ€"eight ever produced in the $1,â€" 500 field. Other models are the Eightâ€" 693 in the medium priced field, the Eightâ€"79 in the $3,000 field and the Marmon Big Eight in the fine car class. SCHUMACHER ENTERTAINERS TO GIVE PLEASING EVENT The card party and dance to be givâ€" en by the Schumacher Enteriainers cn Wednesday evening, May 7th, in the McIntyre Recreation hall, Schuâ€" macher, promises to be one of the outâ€" standing social events of the yeail There will be bridge, five hunidred and whist, with good prizes for the cards. One of the features will be valuable doo» prize, a handsome wickâ€" er set to be given away free. Cards begin at 8 p.m., with dancing after the cards. The classy Club Royal orchesâ€" tra will supply the music for the ocâ€" casion and that means the best of music and lots of it. Sunday, May 11th, will be Mother‘s Day. Schumacher Curtis Optical Co. (Successor to Dr. E. M. Honey) TYLES of lenses and frames have undergone decided changes in the last year, but we have kept pace with the new modes. _ Rely on our judgement in helping vou select the correct styles. Timmins Opposite Goldfields Hotel Block They Fit Eyes and Personality ! Ontario Ontario â€"17â€"29p Bornâ€"In Timmins, on Thursday, April 24th, to Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Williams, 58 Vimy Road,â€"a daughter. Miss Winnifred McKelvie, of the Timmins public school staff, spent the holidays at her home in New Liskeard. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Freelands and children, of Winnipeg, were visitors to Timmins last week. The next regular meeting of the Timmins town council will be held in the town hall on Monday afternoon, May 12th, commencing at 4 p.m. Dr. W. E. George, District Medical Health Officer, was recently elected as president of the North Bay Rotary Club. Miss Ina Dempsey, of Cobalt, returnâ€" ed to her home on Monday after spendâ€" ing the Easter holidays with Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Lee, 12} Pine St. South. Milton E. Storms, for four years with the G. A. Bagshaw Co. at Hailleybury, has opened a new brokerage house in Haileybury and will deal in stocks and bonds and especially in mining issues. Mr. 8. H. Pirig returned from Toronâ€" to on Sunday night. Mrs. Pirie will return later on after a visit to relatives in North Cobalt and Silver Centre. Mr. Ernie McAllister, of Ottawa, has returned to the city after spending a week with his sister, Mrs. A. M. Steâ€" wart, of Timmins. ; The Latchford correspondent of The New Liskeard Speaker says:â€""Master Ernie Pelkie who is attending high school in Timmins is home for the hnolidays." The Ladies‘® Al are holding a@ . sale at the ho Maple St. South from 3 to 6 p.m The Advance is always pleased to receive any personal notes in regard to visitors here or people from here visiting elsewhere. Send in any items along this line. You like to read about others; others like to read about you. J. E. Grassett, formerly manager of the local branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce here, but now in Toronto with the Arthur E. Moysey Co., Limited, was a business visitor to Timâ€" mins this week The Shillington correspondent of The New Liskeard Speaker says:â€""Mrs. Alâ€" fred Court and children Edna, Stanley and Lucy of Timmins are visiting at the homs of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Court, As will be noted from the advertiseâ€" ment elsewhere in this issue W. Ellies Son are opening a store on Pine St. south, carrying a full line of ladies‘ readyâ€"toâ€"wear, boots, shoes, millinery, ctc. or," Readers of The Advance are askea to send in the names of any visitors they may have or tell of visits made elsewhere by themselves. You like to read about octhers; others like to read about you! The Matheson correspondent of The Nugget last week says:â€"Comtracts for river driving 15,000 coras of pulp to the Abitibi River on Pike River and Black River, have been given Messrs Dooley and Gervais by T. S. Woolings Co., of Englehart. The Woemen of Moosecheart Legion are giving a grand dance on FPriday evening of this week, May 2nd, in the McIntyre Recreation hall. Music by the Club Royal orchestra, and the other features up to the same high standards. Mrs. E. M. Condie, matron at the District of Cochrane Children‘s Aid Soâ€" ciety Shelter, left on Saturday for a wellâ€"earned holiday visit to the south. Mrs. Condie will visit in Toronto, New York and other centres, returning here this month to resume her duties. The meeting of the Lancashire Soâ€" cial Club this (Thursday) evening, May 1st, will take the form of an open dance with a nominal charge for admission. The event will commence at 8.30 p.m. There will be good music ‘and refreshâ€" ments will be served during the evenâ€" Last week a sppcial window display in the store of A. J. Shragge Limited drew widespread attention and many favourable comments. The special window was designed by Miss Helen Monette, and was an advertisement for bridal gowns, the whole display being laid out in a specially artistic manner. The service clubs in Cobalt, Haileyâ€" bury and New Liskeard are planning to ask the councils in their towns to consider adopting daylightâ€"saving time from May 15th to September 15th. Why monkey with the clocks when daylight may be saved just as well by adopting an earlier hour for starting work? It‘s a great life, if you don‘t weaken. The board of trade of the city of North Bay has arranged for a series of radio broadcasts to advertise the beauâ€" ties, wonders and interests of the "Gateway City." There will be five weekâ€" ly talks setting forth the advantages that North Bay has for tourisfts, sportsâ€" men, manufacturers and distributors. One extra talk might be devoted to telling tourists and others not to beâ€" lieve anyone in North Bay who says there are forest fires this summer north of North Bay. ‘ Aid of the United Chursh a tea and homeâ€"cocking home of Mrs. Howse, 14 ith, on Saturday, May 3rd, a | ©@0@0000000000000000%46 4440004004 ANCE (Auspices of the Women of the Mooseheart Legion) \Q9 @090 0004 060400 000044004600 60690480406 @09460000908040800000000000480 0900000000090 For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad. Column CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED CANADIAN EXPELOSIVES DIVISION : > â€" HALIFAX _ MONTREAL OTTAWA TORONTO SsUDBURY COBALT KJRKLAND LAKE TIMMINS _ WINNIPEG _ EDMONTON â€" CALGARY NELSON vaNnNncouvEr vIiCcTtoR|a Tickets : $1.50 including tax EVERYBODYX COME! Maximum Power in Every Shot ANNOUNCEMENT CLEAN, powerful shots are the reâ€" sult of using POLAR FORCITE. It ensures maximum strength with every blast, and the almost total abâ€" sence of fumes makes it exceptionally safe underground. Due to its low freezing point, POLAR â€" FORCITE works equally well, summer or winâ€" ter. In hundreds of mines it is the standard explosive for drifting. â€" Magazines and branch offices are maintained near all mining centres throughout Canada. Consult the near est office for full information on any blasting problem. | Hamilton Block, Corner Third Avenue and Cedar Street In the Mcintyre Hall, Schumacher Friday Evening, May 2nd ELLIES BROS. of The Royal Tailors, Toronto, Ont. WILL BE AT OUR STORE ON High Class Gents‘ Furnishings Friday and Saturday May 2nd and 3rd CLUB ROYAL ORCHESTRA HEAD MONTREAL Timmins, Ontario With the latest range of styles and patterns in Men‘s Suits for Spring and Summer You are invited to come in and inspect these samples a n d styles. Thursday, May 1st, 1930 No obligation. Extra Lady 50¢ BD#*

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy