Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 12 Oct 1933, 2, p. 1

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Wrap all Garbage in papet . Keep your Garbage Can cover>d Use plenty orf Chloride of whick can be procured at the Town Hall free Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. All Outside Toillets must be made a#3 weol. Hy Order of TUE BOARD OF ZHXALTQ Ask Your 1 60 THIRD AVENUE P.O. Box 1591 Timmi Phone 625â€"J 21 Fourth Avenu»e Accountant Accounting and OM sSHELL PRODUC‘T mechanics, efficient and courteous Eveready Service Station Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Etce. Old P.0. Bidg., Timmins Phone 362 and repairs serviced for perfect FLAGS HAVERAACKS DOoG sSLEOGH TOBOG(T a XS TARPAULAONXS TENTS PACK BACGS EIDERDOWN ROBI KKIIS DC HARNES HOoRKSE BI A NK E) Arch.Gillies,B.A.8c.,0.L.S. Our attendants are the finest We Manuf acture and Carry in Stock Timmins Vol. XVIII J. Turner Sons, Ltd. Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Crown Attorney District of Coch:t Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. Langdon Langdon Pine Street Eouth ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc, A~E~MOYSEY BLOCK, TIMMIN®S, ONT,. Schumacher and South Porcupine 14â€"2 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT APPROVED AUTOMOTIVH SERYVICE BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC 4 Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Building Prevent Accidents south Porcupine Phone 15 Second Section S. G. FOWLER Barristers, Solicitors, Ete, Reed Block Schumacher Phone 95 G. N. ROSS STATION®S® A W N I N( Phone 640 by having vyour CK r, Solicitor, Etc. >y District of Cochrane NO performance Timmins, Ont O 14.26 BLILANKETS Auditor Supervision Timmins bâ€"17 Timmins 14â€"2€ Ontario 14â€"26 Provincial Constable Houldcroft, of Englehart, has been making very exâ€" tended enquiries with the hope of havâ€" ing identification made of the skeleton found in the woods near Englehart several weeks ago, but so far he has not been successful. It was thought that the body might be that of Michael Devine who left Englehart in 1923, with a railway ticket for Windsor. Since then Devine has disappeared from view. He was traced as far as London, Ont,., but apparently his ticket was not used after that station was passed. He was going to Windsor to take treatment for his eyes, at the time being threatâ€" ened with blindness. It was thought by some that he may have returned to Cunglehart unknown to his friends and m»t death in the woods. There were som» grounds for this belief but in genâ€" eral friends of Devine were inclined to douut the probability of the return of Devins. Kowever, Constable Houldâ€" croft macdie every effort to check up on Sudbury Star:â€"One of these days a husband, given up errongously for dead, may return and find his wife has not remarried. Howe proved. ° Wi: i homeâ€"mad f peculiar s "Our Department of Agriculture is devoting much attention to the study of the best systems to adopt to produce wealth from the growing of grain and vegetable crops, and with splendid reâ€" sults. And on the wfmole, perhaps, the Department of Crown Lands has been JjJudiciously managed, although in the earlier days it would appear that the affidavit made by the applicant for Crown Lands has not always been adâ€" hered to, the land thus located nct beâ€" ing "chiefly valuable" for agricultural purposes. We recommend stricter adherence to the affidavit which has to be taken. Indeed, it might be well for the department to have an expert inâ€" spctor‘s report on every lot applied for ere selling such land. If this course were to be followed it is probable that the spruce and poplar saplings now growing on Crown Lands would be spared until sufficiently large as to beâ€" come merchantable when it would "be of inestimable wealth to Ontario." J SKELETON AT ENGLEHART HAS NOT BEEN TIDENTIEFIED "Of course, the owner of timbered land should carefully weed out crookâ€" ed saplings and thus give the wellâ€" formed trees a chance to grow without having to divide the ground‘s nourisnâ€" ment with trees which will not become valuable. "Our remarks were suggested beâ€" cause of the large quantities of small poplar one sees cut and piled along the roadsides ready for use as fuel during the coming winter. Indeed, it looks as though in the course of a short time poplar will be a leading fuel timber, whereas it should not be cut for several years, and until it is at least eight inches in diameter. ‘The farmer who can hold his growing timber, no matter of what variety, for a few years to come, will be well rewarded. Spruce in idenfficacion. wWwhen these cles were shown to relatives of Deâ€" > they were ceriain that he had not m the owner. The identification of body recently found near Englehart sequently still remains unsolved. vever, Constable Houldcroft is still king on the matter and if the puzâ€" can be solved at all lhe likely will »muplish it. made an appeal for the saving of gree timber in the North. This is vital i In these days with large immediate problems on hand there may be a tenâ€" dency to overlook the questions that have vital value for the future. This should not be. The New Liskeard Speaker is to be commended for callâ€" sti0uid _not be. The New Liskeard Speaker is to be commended for callâ€" ing special attention to one of these problems that may be termed long disâ€" tance ones. The Speaker last week the Suggests Stricter Adherence to the| walk AfMfidavit Taken in the Matter of after Timber Sold from Crown mile: Lands. tion Appeal to North to Save Green Timber thxa show ery effort to check up on d now it seems to be disâ€" the skeleton was found pipe, a pair of spectacles ape and other rather unâ€" that seemed to promise rere suggested beâ€" quantities of small and piled along the use as fuel during Indeed, it looks irse of a short time ading fuel timber, Ontario Intelligencer, Belleville:â€"Hoâ€" boes, in convention assembled have deâ€" cided to coâ€"operate in the recovery across the line by asking for more rods on railway cars. ‘Spare the rod and spoil the hobo. grew at his summer home at Wilson‘s| Farm, Golden City, or that were grown' this year elsewhere on the Wilson | Farm.â€"One of the potatoes from Prank | Rodger‘s garden noted in The Advance! weighed nearly two pounds while anâ€"| other was four ounces over the two! pounds. Those weighing over a pgundi were quite common. | Crawford suggests part of the Nort] pear to be a re According to this plant three or fou cently mentioned Wm. Crawford, of t} site, claims a record fc North this season an he would have no co line in which he ex He planted about thre toes this year, he say. he secured a crop of and an 1l1â€"quart top. Can anvone hb Claims Record Crop of Potatoes for the North Toronto, another 334 miles of travel. Word was sent to Toronto to forward it to North Bay and there it was taken in charge by Inspector Swan and duly returned to its owner. In the meanâ€" time the walking cane had apparently become a travelling stick, having enâ€" joyed a trip or series of trips of over 1,400 miles. had left his cat was report Inspector . Mounties man, but t ness not of also his car The cane | miles away to have it Robt. Swan, special investigator for the T. N. O., recently returned a walking stick owned by Judge Hayward after the cane had travelled some 1,400 miles and been traced by the investigaâ€" ‘ tion department and finally located in the unclaimed baggage department at Toronto. While travelling from Hailâ€" eybury to Englehart, Judge Hayward left his cane on the train. The matter' was reported to the T. N. O. and Inspector Swan started after it. The Mounties boast about getting their JUDGE HAYWARDS CANE BACK AFTER JOURNEY OF 1400 MILES Clearly, it is not right that you should be required to promote the sale of a progGuct in the territory served by this newspape», without reâ€" ceiving from the manutacturer the same kind and degree of sales assisâ€" tance which he is giving retailers resident in cities where he :s spendâ€" ing a lot of money on local advertising N.B.â€"Cut out this advertisement, and show it to the representative of firms whose products yow are asked to stock and push) Now, if you are stocking a nationâ€" allyâ€"advertised productâ€"advertised in bigâ€"city dailies and in nationallyâ€" cireulated magazines, you have a right to see this product also being locally advertisedâ€"in this newspaper. Your total annual sales of the maâ€" ker‘s product joined to those of its other local distributors (if there are others), entitle you to demand that the product he locally advertised in this newspaper. arted sou to Mon MA 1€ ford, of the Goldale town i record for potatoes in th season and it looks as i ave no competitors in th ch he excelled this year about three pounds of pota ir, he says, and from thi You know that a manufacturer includes in the selling price of his product a percentage for press advertisingâ€"a percentage rangâ€" ing from 3 to 5 per centâ€"sometimes, even moreâ€"when consumerâ€" resistance is great or when the gross profit margin is very large. so. when a manufacturer spends $50,000 a year on press adverâ€" tising, it can be assumed that the total annual sales of his product amount to from $1,000,000 to $1,500.000. T _ ADout ‘, C :Nâ€"O {f getting he loses traced to urned ith LOCAL RETAILERS You Have Rights ! il TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12TH, 1933 :s it on their line. to Cochrane, 112 ord could be sent to Haileybury it iin. ‘Next it was 600 miles away, ‘m to proceed to makes a busi their man bu t on their line rear one, but understood it had been ,picked up by a man on a grader. He ! had made no effort to recover it, and Provincial Constable H. Allsopp, the traffic officer, had been unable to locate | the finder. Grenier had bought new !plates after being summoned to court, i it was stated but this did not persuade | Magistrate Atkinson to let him go free fand the fine was imposed." The Haileyburian last week says:â€" "A fine of $10 and costs, $24.75 in all, was assessed against F. Greniecr of Belie Valley, in Cobalt police court on Friday last, when he was convicted on a charge of using a 1931 marker on his car when driving to the market in the silver town the previous week. The old plate had been painted over to reâ€" semble the current issue and the deâ€" fendant stated that he had lost the rear one, but understood it had been FINED FOR PAINTING OVER 1931 MARKER TO USE IN 1933 after a snow flurry was reported in Toronto, a South Porcupine housewife was picking ripe, luscious strawberries in her garden. Degrees of latitude mean nothing in temperatures. It is still summer in the North Land when Southern Ontario is dropping its earâ€" laps:" sUMMER IN THE NORTH AND WINTER REIGNS IN sSOUTH The llowin Sudbury pire Mobante You‘ve got a firstâ€"class case to put before the manufacturers who want you to stock and push the sales of their product, then why not present it, either direct, or through the maâ€" ker‘s representative when he calls? You have your business to build uip, and to the extent that you help manufacturers to obtain and retain sales in this territory, to that extent you should rece‘ve local advertising assistance. Quite too often manufacturers don‘t want to advertise in local weekâ€" ly newspapers, saying that it costs too much. . They forget, however, that their sales in towns served by weekly newspapers provide an advertising fund which should be spent locally. Why should the contributions from locai sales to the maker‘s advertising fund be spent outside the local sales territory?*? Brantford Expositor:â€"Fred W. A. Conrad, of Annapolis, Md., suggests that $100,000,000 of the new U.S. navy grant be spent on the construcâ€" tion of a passenger carrying rocket for a trip to the moon. To which is may be added that the scramble which is now going on for larger navies contains just about the same amount of sense. But if, to repeat the modern slang phrase, "they know their onions," it is also apparent that the caulifliowers are not far behind. This is what The Speaker says about it:â€""We have heard about big potatods and real pumpkins, but the ten pound (less one ounce) solid head of cauliflower by the grower,, â€"Mr. oH. <~R.â€" Treadaway,> or Thornloe, is in a class by itself, so far as cauliflowers are concerned. The specimen was on exhibit at the Kiwanis luncheon on Monday and proved quite an attraction. We can‘t remember ever having seen a larger head of this variety of vegetable, where the growth was just about perfect." _ There are two items in The New Lisâ€" keard Speaker last week in regard to big onions and cauliflowers. Apparâ€" ently they "know their onions" in the Scotty Springs district. Anyway, Tha Speaker says:â€""On Tuesday we reâ€" ceived four onions from the North which are very fine specimens, and for a few days they will be on exhibit in our window. Mr. George Latimer, of Scotty Springs, sent us the onions, and Mr. Latimer says: "These were grown from Dutch Sets, in my garden, 75 miles north of New Liskeard on the main line of the T. N.~O." ‘There have been some fine specimens of onions in this district this year, but the samples sent down by Mr. Latimer compare favourably with any we have seen." | The North Land Knows Its Onionsâ€"and Cauliflowers ANOTHER ILLUSTRATION OF WHAT MAY OR MAY NOT BE NEWSs Kirkland Lake High School rugby team recently ‘suffered defeat at New Liskeard, when the Farmer Town High Schoo! grid squad won the match with the score 22 to 0. it was a yo taught ther Many who the middle Timmins w voice was n sawin voung the ing the ‘"That‘s one of the man had the gin‘k was easy to see he had never lost the youth of his heart. He watched the laboured sawing for a minute or two. then he said to one of the young men, "Let me get on one end of that crossâ€" cut saw for a minute or two and I may show you something." The saw was given to the gentleman in the blue suit and the hard hat. He did show them a thing or two about sawing wood with a crosscut saw. "You should lift up the saw a little at the end of the pullâ€" ing stroke," he said. "Like this," he explained, showing them how the trick was done. He gave them other tricks that made the use of the crosscut saw easier and more effective.. And it wasâ€" n‘t all talk with this gentleman:; he showed just how it was actually done. He more than held his own at that crossâ€"cut for halfa dozen cuts Half a dozen young men were cutting wood in front of the town hall at Coâ€" balt last week when a gentleman stoppâ€" ed to watch them. He wasn‘t so young in years for his hair was gray, but it was easy to see he had never lost the the injured man to the Deschenes house. Later Rainville was taken to the hospital at South Porcupine. the Shumilack car being used for this pose. Provincial Officer Craik told of investigating the accident. He found a spot of blood on the road. He also had made measurements with regard to the length of clear vision a car would have in approaching the scene of the accident as the Shumilack car had done. He said that he nad found thers was clear vision for about three hunâ€" dred feet around the curve, but this was for the daytime. The accident had occurred at night and experiments had not beon made as to thet situation thein. C. V. Gallagher, land surveyor of South Porcupine, gave evidence as to measureâ€" ments made and the plan made of the scene of the accident, this plan being exhibited to the court as part of the evidence. The witnesses for the deâ€" fence all were agreed that they did not see Rainville standing beside his car before the accident happened. They claimed that the headlights of the Rainville car were blinding and that they did not see the parked car until they were almost upon it. This was due to the curve in the road. Dean Kester, of Timmins, conducted the deâ€" fence in very able way, and his address to the jury was a very effective one. The crown was represented by Mr. Sheard, of Toronto, who also was efâ€" fective in his presentation of his side of the case. In accepting the jury‘s verdict of not guilty, His Lordship Judge Barrow, said that he considered | the finding a proper one in view of thel evidence and the cirecumstances. n o e e Ee mm en im Uncle Jack Shows Them How to Use Crosscut Saw balt ns a snort distance stopped. The three men in the Shumilack car reâ€" turned and assisted him in carrying the injured man to the Deschenes house. Later Rainville was taken to the hospital at South Porcupine. the Shumilack car being used for this pose. Provincial Officer Craik told of 1¢IL 168, A broken jaw, bruises and cuts of less serious sort. Death was due to shock, the nmedical testimony said. A young man named Lafontaine, who was with Rainville in the car just before the accident, said that they had been at a dance at Bay â€" side Beach and leaving there had stopâ€" ped at Deschene‘s house on the Timâ€" minsâ€"Porquis Junction highway. Rainâ€" ville told the court that he got out of the car, passed in front and noticed that the headlights were on full. When he was several feet past the road he looked back and saw the Shumilack car coming from the direction of Porâ€" quis Junction. . The approaching car struck the Rainville car and after goâ€" ing a short distance stopped. The three men in the Shumilack car reâ€" testimony said. Lafontaine, wh the car just be of his car when th According to the given by Dr. McL Rainville sustained left leg, a broken bruises and cuts 0 At the Supreme Court at Cochrane last week the jury brought in a verdict after about a half an hour‘s deliberaâ€" tion, acquitting Alexander Schumilack on the charge of manslaughter in the matter of the death of Frank Rainville, of TIroquois Falls, who was fatally inâ€" Jured at Barber‘s Bay on July 29th. Shumilack, who is an employee of the Domae Mines, was driving from Porquis Junction when he struck the Rainville car which was standing on the road near a turn at Barber‘s Bay. Rainâ€" ville was standing behind the open door Acquit Dome Man on Manslaughter Count nC at Cochrane in Connection with the Death of Frank Rainville at Barber‘s Bay on July 29. nk ild be s1 ung lad oung metr issed alor Dr. McLaren sustained a | _ broken jaw d cuts of le A dozen cuts.. isier and better tTpI collision medical testim r? crosscut saw And it wasâ€" entleman; he actually done. DeLler,‘ said r the gentleâ€" Wonder who i. _ AISO h regard to car would ene of the car had LDast Week tured ! 604 Wilson Ave. Timmins ‘ 040000809000 ¢0% 00000 0 6006 04# o » 4000489 % 98 0000908060 % 09 6 0 11 BRUCE AVENTUE sout» Porcupine We Make all kinds of Ladics‘ a Men‘s _ Tailoredâ€"toâ€"M« sure Clothes The Botanical Laboratory DARIUS HOGAN VETERINARY SURGEON All domestic animals scientifically treated. Tuberculine Testing Special attention to Cats and Dogs TERMS MODERATE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Electrical Treatments for Medical and Surgical Cases Venereal and Skin Diseases Treated by Modern Methods. 66 Third Ave. Tel. 203 TIMMINS ONT. ) Fourth Ave Meeting Held in Oddfellows‘ Hall, Timmins WATCH ADVANCE FOR D@TES 14.20 l l se AL Number TIMMINS LODGE NO Meets every 2nd : Thursday of each m Moose Hall at 8 o VISITING BRETHREN w LOYAL ORDER of MOOSE Meets every First and Third Friday of the month in the Oddfellows hall, Timmins Mrs. H. Deane Meets on the 2nd and 4th Friday of every month in the Oddfellows‘ Hall. R. G. Stoneman, W. M. J. T. Andrews, Rec. Sec,. Box 1415, Timmins, Oddfellows‘ Hall, Spruce Street, North, Meets every Tuesday evening in the Visiting hrethren requested to attend. 8, LA WLEY H,. M. MOORE, Noble Grand â€" Box 1311 Kiec. Sea TIMMINS LODCE 1.0.0.F. NO 459 The Ideal Tonic "Take Nature‘s Way tn Health Gold Star L.O.B.A. Also Cleaning and Pressing done, PARSONS W. D. FORRESTER President Bbecretary~Treans. J. A. Pirness Dr. J. Mindess PRICE FIVE CE] for Arrangements Phone 499 Announcement Herhs Phone 118 Second Section NS LODGE NO. 11358 ery 2nd and 4th of each month at Hall at 8 o‘clock BRETHREN WELCOME Mrs., M. Parnell Timminsg n Inlthn ~»13«+236 ~18Bt.f Reco. Ssea 14â€"2€ nc NTS 14 12

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