Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 14 Dec 1933, 3, p. 4

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Re 1ts iT e avec2e ie Cl *o° + .0 ’.I“l £ Mon., Tues. and Wed., Dec. 18â€"19â€"20 2. C: Bennett, G. Roland Anita Louise : AT THE . Tun nins Theatres Matmeo Dmlv at 2: ‘30 n.m. T a . ts l y e eSenSantenbe William Smith, Timm‘ins, Ont.; Howâ€" to this place with her husband, and. had resided here ever since. She was a member of the Ladies‘ Aid Society of the United Church here, and was well liked by a host of friends. Swvivâ€" ing and left to m‘iirn h>r passing are three sons, Charles Smith, Cobalt; eE Thurs., Fri. Sat., Dgg:."21-â€"22fâ€"23 . Maureen O‘Sullivan Chas. Laughton Thurs., Fri. and Sat., Dec. 14â€"15 Kay Francis and George Brent Matinee Daily at 2 30'p m. o . Evenmg-â€"-7 00 p.m.(Continuous Performance) Special Matmee Every Saturday â€"atâ€"the Goldfields Theatre at 12.15 p.m. + _0 0," nds MIDNIGHT SHOW EVERY TUESDBAY AND FRIDAY ATâ€"11.30.P.M. Goldfields 00 * oo s s t s o ts " Payment Deferred " "DAMAGED HV ES’" "INTERNATIONAL HOUSE" A Cleaner Kitchen " The Keyhole " "Our Betters" 000000 .0. ,0, 0. ,0, .0. .0. .0,,0, .0.,0.,0,,0,,0,,0,,0,.0,,0, .0. .0. .0, .o -ooooooooo930303ooo030303030303030303030300003oooooooooooooooooootoooooooooofooonoooooooooooool! oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo0303030303080300.00303030oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooouoooooooo"oooooooon‘floo“oo“oouoouobnoonoouoouoouoouoonoonA A Silent Glow Burner installed in your present Heater gives a steady even heat which you can qmckly adjust or reg'ulate by the turn of a valve. A Silent Glow Range Burner installed in your present range is positivelyâ€"clean, silent and free from Smoke, Soot and Odors. 100,0 00 WOMEN for safe. economical troubleâ€"free operation. Burns less oil per unit of Heat generated than any other â€"Oil Burner dn cBe iGe cbaate aie ale ate ate at have chosen the mod:ern ‘ l;‘ New Empire Fnday and Saturday, December 15â€"16 Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Wednes. Thursday, December 13â€"14 Helen Twelvetrees Approved by the National Board of Fire Underwriters Wednesday Thursday, Dec. 20â€" . Chester Morrisl';md Mae Clarke s Gabrlel over the Whlte House " Fn’Ha‘?‘“énd Saturday, Dec. 22â€"23 **‘Walter Huston Monday and Tuesday, Dec. 18â€"19 Randolph Scott MIDNIGHT SHOW EVERY SUNDAY AT 12.01 MIDNIGHT " The ‘Narrow Corner " " To the Last Man " Breach of Promise" " Disgraced " ies A * 22e®, toefectocte .oof’uw'nooooo}ooooooooooooooooouofooo. b / @. .0 Sudbury Star:â€"Albert Gargiulo, of New York, likes quiet when he‘s listenâ€" ing to music, so when two strangers began talking while an orchestra was playing in his favourite restaurant, he shot and killed one and wounded the other. Montrealâ€"New record for number of coastal craft arriving from Maritimes and Newfoundland established by port of Montreal this season. Kitchener, Ont.â€"The Reliable Manuâ€" facturing Company, of Toronto, which moved to this city, has started operâ€" ations with 50 hands employed. / New (Westminster, B.C.â€"Deep sea shipping from this port has expanded to 368 ships sailing in first 11 months of this year, 56 more than in same period last year. Torontoâ€"Studebaker Corporation of Canada Limited, reports November sales exceeded those of any previous November. in .22 years, "a definite indiâ€" cation of business improvement.‘" : Gananogue, Ont.â€"A factory will be opened here by Cow and Gates, British food manufacturers, providing the town gives assurance of a fixed assessment. Vancouver.â€"Bertram Paper Products Company has opened! a plant here for the manufacture of paper bags. Milton, Ont .â€"The! Milton Pants Comâ€" pany a. new â€" industry, is installing machines «and expebt to be going on orders by the end of December,â€" Saint ‘ N.B.â€"About 47,000,000 feet of lumber was shipped through this port in first 10 ‘months ‘of this year, heaviest volume in several years. Sault Ste. Ma.rie, Ont â€"Algoma. Steel Corporation railâ€" mill will open Monday ‘and 1,500 men will be employed on an a factory at Cap de la Madeleine in January with 50 men employed at: the start. order for‘ 30,000: ‘tons ‘of ‘rails‘ for the Algoma Central Railway. Threeâ€" Rivers, Que. â€"Venus Cigar and Cigarette Company, Limibed, will: open Nowadays One Specifies "Get my broker, Miss Jones." ‘"Yes, sir, stock or pawn?" . for Vancouver East, who caused one of the recent sensations in British Columbia politics by capturing the seat for the C.CF..party. Exchansge | better chance to get back to health and ,mm One lad told the mazistrate they would like the term reduced so should pay their fines a The lads froze their feet on the trip, the tempérgture being 35 below. Then they were taken off the train at North Bay and charged with stealing rides. The penalty usually given is‘ a nominal fine or seven days, but in view of the berth. The Sinal result condition â€"of the lads the magistrate thought 30 days would give them a Two lads from Toronto who went to Sudbury to look for work and then deâ€" cided to return home for Christmas, struck hard luck last week. They took the wrong train in the first place and used the wrong method of trainâ€"riding in the second place. They "hopped" a freight but it was bound for North Bay instead of Toronto. In addition they used the railway tender for their BOYS FREEZE FEET AND MAY NOT GET HOME FOR CHRISTMAS Stay was granted until Saturday to permit counsel to lo}k further into the matter and yesterday it was stated further time would be allowed. Mosher has changed counsel since the police court hearing, where he was representâ€" ed by Mr. Robinson and by George Mitchell, KC. At the appeal, Mr. . Roâ€" binson had as colleague W. C. Inch. The case is the sequel to a North Road crash near New Liskeard in October. â€" ]if possible, of bringing it before his Honour, William Mosher, Lake Shore mine employee at Kirkland Lake, apâ€" pealing a sentence of ten days imposed ‘on him by Magistrate Atkinson on conviction ¢of having been drunk in charge of a car, remains at liberty while ‘his status is under consideration. Mosher was convicted on November 3 at New Liskeard, and an appeal from the magistrate was fyled . on November 24. It was to have come up at the conclusion of the Temiskaming Sessions of the Peace at Haileybury on Friday, but Crown Attorney argued successfully then that notice had not been given ‘within the required time and that Provinc:al Constable Allsopp, as respondent, had not been served yet. He maintained the court had no jurisdiction and although J. B. Robinson, for Mosher, termed the obâ€" jection technical and said Constable Allsopp had been on holiday, His Honâ€" our held the appeal was irregular. With Judge Hartman ruling at Hailâ€" eybury ‘that the case is ~not properly ‘before his court, and with defenite counsel seeking to find another method, The only other case was that of George Graham, charged with attemptâ€" ed murder. His case is referred to elseâ€" where in this issue. In juvenile court, the young man who had attempted to defraud the blinc man, E. St. Pierre, by passing on him $1.00 bill and receiving change for a $2.00 ‘bill. The magistrate gave this young man severe lecture, pointing out that the offence was a particularly mean one and should not be repeated on any occasion. The young fellow was instructed to make restitution and reâ€" port regularly. Fmdmg Some Trouble in Appealing Sentence A drunk charge against a Messines avenue resident was withdrawn. _/A Mountjoy man and a man from Balsam streetâ€"were each charged with common ‘drunkenness and each fined $10.00 and costs. Both of them are likely to take the alternative of thirty days. Two other local men were each fined $50.00 and costs for commion drunkenness it being the second offence in each case. A vagrancy charge was remanded until called A charge of fraud against a young man of the town was withdrawn. A charge of housebreaking was disâ€" missed, the accused claiming that ho had simply gone to visit at the house as he had done on several previous occasions by acclamatiin. The two cases against the Kingston hotel were dismissed, the evidence of the accused being to the effect that the liquor seized had been duly secured on his permit in August last. A Highway Traffic Act was remanded for a week. ? gallons of alcohol as this illicit liquor for Iilicit Liquor Northern Blizzard Rages Seventyâ€"one men had been placed under a@rrest by this time. The priâ€" soners were marshalled into line and the trek back to town began, police leading and bringing up the rear of the procession. â€" A northern blizzard flayed the forlorn procession as it marched back to Rouyn and several cases of frostâ€"bite were reported atter its @rrival at Rouyn. ; with the riot were brought to the comâ€" bined town hall, police headquarters The allotted 30 minutes had elapsed. Police charged. Before the onslaught of tear gas, a : e section of strikers fled to the w . Others turned .on the â€"police, but batons were brought into play ‘and the <recalcitrants were subdued. â€" Police immediately proceedâ€" ed to make arrests. Some of those who had fied were brought back from the bush and first aid was given the inâ€" When â€"a sergeant and three conâ€" stables investigated early Monday they found 125 on picket duty and reportâ€" ed bushmen who have been cutting cordwood in the vicinity were being held up. The staff sergeant, Chief of Police Lapointe, of Rouyn, Chief Perâ€" rault, of Noranda, nine constables of theâ€"Quebec. provincial police force and Justice of the Peace J. 0. Tardiff then proceeded to the picket area and adâ€"~ dressed the strlkers The staff sergeant warned them that. unless they dispersed at once the Riot Act would ‘be read. Derisive cheers from one section of the crowd greeted the announcement and Mr. Tardiff proceeded :to read the Riot Act. | He. added the police would ‘be compelled to use force if they did not disperse. "Talk to cur committee," section ofâ€" the crowd replied to Mr. Tardiff amid. renewed protestations and shouting. .. . T‘wice warned against the practice by police, the strikers who left Clerâ€" ion district lumber camps more than a week ago continued on Monday to picket the Rouynâ€"Clerion road and isâ€" sue passes to all travellers using the highway. _ It is an unusual story that come from Rouyn, Quebec, this week in the Canâ€" ad:.an Press despatches. The story is summarized as follows:â€" . More than 80 striking lumberworkers were under arrest at Rouyn Monday night following a clash with police on the outskirts of this Northern Quebec mining town. Tear gas wast used and police batons were wielded, some of the strikers suffering minor injuries. ‘The jail cells at Rouyn are filled to capacity and a number of the prisoners are beâ€" ing guarded by a detachment of police in the council chambers of the town Among the men arrested are Albert Police in the meantime continued Men Persist, in Interference with Travel â€"After Being Warned. Tried to Restrict Traffic to Those Carrying Passes Issued by Strikers. Tear Gas and Batons Used by Police After Riot Act Read Near Rouyn. B Eighty Men Under Arrest at Rouyn After Clash with Law Thursday Evening Strikers On Picket Duty Birthday party for Miss Caroline Collette: \No. 4. â€" See them cM and eat the birthds)" calte while in motiva. elected with nearly double the vote obtained by his opponent. The followâ€" ing were elected for council:â€"Messrs Foran, Penny, Owens, Jameson, Laâ€" coste and Rochon. "Why did you commit this crime?" "Well, you see, judge, my friend is a lawyer, and he was out of work." The CC.F. introduced party politics into municipal matters in the recent election contest at Cochrane but it did not work well for the CC.F. The peoâ€" ple of Cochrane apparently resented Ithe attempt to use party politics i municipal matters and the result was the signal defeat of all the C.C.F. canâ€" didates. There was a very large vote polled, the second largest in the history of the town, so the result may be taken as a direct opinion from the majority of the people of Cochrane. In the contest for the mayoralty R. M. Smith was C. C. F. Candidates Do Not Fare Well in Cochrane ~ _ It is estimated that about 800 men have come to Rouyn and Noranda since the first flare of trouble two weeks ago. Police at Rouyn believe that the ringâ€" leaders of the trouble are now in cusâ€" tody and that unless new agitators are sent in there will be no further trouble. Arrival at Rouyn on Tuesday of about 30 men from various lumber camps in various sections of Northwestern Queâ€" bec was taken as evidence of the spreading of unrest and further action was being planned to take further ringleaders in charge and so nip in the bud the schemes for more widespread trouble and expense and disorder. a district magistrate will be sent this week from Quebec to preside at the preliminary‘ hearing of the accused men, The charge will likely be the serious one of failing to disperse after the reading of the Riot Act, and those not at the scene of the riot will be charged with abetting the strikers to becoeme members of an unlawful asâ€" _sembly Huard, Gaspe, Que., and Alex Sanders, both believed by police to have. stirred up trouble at the Clerion camps. Sanâ€" ders is said by police to be wellâ€"known as an agitator in Ontario bush camps. Four of the men appointed by the strikers to act as méembers of the strike committee were also arrested. ‘They are: J. Beragon, president of the Bush Workers‘ Federation of Temiskaming and Abitibi; Philemon Lefebvre, secreâ€" tary; and O. Lalonde and Stephen Leâ€" mire, members of the executive. Frequent Speaker Arrest of a man named Ellicuck was also reported by police. Ellicuck is said to have been one of the frequent speakers at meetings of strikers since their arrival at Rouyn. _ The men arrested were to be arraignâ€" ed on Tuesday and a date then set for prel.minary hearing. It is likely that Night) be?, Ol!ll Club Royil Orchestra. ~A night fun of â€"Exchange 2Â¥ 2L

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