Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 7 Mar 1935, 1, p. 8

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Funeral Friday of Mrs. J. G. Lefebyvre daugnt Albert A. Paquett morning, March 1 the home of h street, south, ant large number of : held at St. Anthor the ceme! bearers we Les Berger Poisson, . Smith. Amon|{ followin Paquettt Emith. Robin Hood FlIOour makes lovely The fun aughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Paquette Laid to Rest Last Week. Many Beautiful Tributes. white them will ; WE SAVE YOU MONEY EVERY DAY Pure Cod Liver Oil 10 ‘O0z: :. .X . it s 4 National Seidlitz . Powders ieg. 25¢c. spec. 2 for 2 Beecham‘s Pills 23c 45c Bayer Aspirin 25c 45¢c $1.15 Pinkham‘s Comp. 98c Mentholatum 25c 55¢ Vick‘s Vapor Rub 45c Noxzema Cream 89c size 59¢ Italian Balm 29c 54c Listerine 25c 49c 89¢ OQOvaltine 38c 58c 98c 16 oz probabl The fac O ()Z Family Drug Sale rieral of Mrs. J. G. Lefebyre, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ?aquette, was held on Friday March l1st, at 9 o‘clock, from of her parents, 164 Birch th, and was attended by a ber of friends. Service was Anthony‘s Church, with Rev. ult officiating, and thence to ery at Timmins. The palilâ€" ‘ye:â€"Messrs. Albert Gagnon, on, Victor Lalonde, Emery XAliboert Myrand. Aklhemard A romatic Cascara neo Epsom Salts 1OrAl and wn; MytI Castor Oil tributes were the Mrs. +Albert A. ‘. and Mrs. Romeo and Mrs. J. Bienâ€" king over a plig ( rangers. The intte off the feed while he deer had shed Oh De necessary Phone 835 20¢ 25¢ 30¢ € )e e (. Curtis Drug Co. Plans are under way to build a new synagogue at Kirklandg Lake where the number of Jewish people is said to be 250. The new synagogue will be built closer to the central part of the town than the present one and will be larger and better. It is hoped to have it ready for the opening of the Jewish New Year in September. Spiritual â€" offerings:â€"Mrs. Alphonss Desjardines," Ottawa, (aunt); Dallair« family, Hull; Mr.and Mrs. H. Desjarâ€" dines; Rev. Sister St. Ri:sula (aunt) Hull; Mr. and Mrs. Adelard Barretls and family, Field, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs Victor Lalcnde, Timmins; Mrs. Estellé Lupin. verue, a wreath; Mr. M. J. Tinkess, a wreath; (C:l. S. B. Scobell, a wreath; Mr. and Mrs. Mervin MacElivee, a wreath; Mrs. Zach Hart and family, of Golden City, a wreath; special memorâ€" iam offering, Mr. Emile Brunette; Mr. Cesare Ginunzio and Tony Colvenzenâ€" cio, wreaths. PLANNING TO BUILD NEW °_ sYNAGOGUE AT KIRKLAND onal Tark, Montana, showing two f hay which has been provided for rested spectators in the bckground the two pugnacious deer fight over their horns the previous fall made Oh Deer‘ Tooth Paste OZ. o OZ. 16 oz. Hydrogen Peroxide Heavy Russian Oi ‘amphorated Oil Boracic Acid 16 Pine St. North 19c 20¢ 509¢ 80e O0¢ Man Badly Beaten Late Tuesday Night anrd is naving q@uebec houst Ihne City cf Montreal has applied to the Quebec legislature for a private bill, through the action of which they would be able to tax al ‘telephone and telsâ€" phone bills two per cent. of their totals. The prop:sal is a new one in Canada anrd is having a rcugh passage in the COKRSICANX BANDIT TO DIE BY GUILLOTINE FOR CRIME Alleged Assailant Arrested but Later Released on $1000 Bail. Charge of Carrying Weapons. A fight Tuesday at midnight at 4 Floral Park, Mountjoy township, reâ€" sulted in the arrest of R. J. Thomas by Provincial Police and the laying of a charge against him of carrying Ofâ€" fensive weapons other than firearms. _It is alleged that Thomas tried to get into the home of Albert Desorâ€" meau and that when he was refused admittance, the fight took place. Deâ€" sormeau was rather badly beaten up, particularly about the face and police expect that he will lay a charge against Thomas of assault. The Greek rebellion assumed more sgricus prcrortions last night despite assurance from Athens that it was beâ€" inrg quclled. Reports during the night indicate that a Grecian general has beâ€" gun an attack on the rebel army in rorthern Greece but that a rebel desâ€" troyer got in close to Salonika, fired some shc‘ls and was swallowed up in a against Thomas of assault. A pair of steel knuckles were found in Thomas‘ possession when taken to the police station and it is these that led to the police charge. He was reâ€" leased on posting $1,000 bail and will appear at Tuesday‘s police court. Provincial Folice Constable J.. W. F. Pretorius and Constable Culhane of the Timmins force investigated when they were summoned on Tuesdaly night. Linceed Meal, reg. 2 15 Glycerine, 4 0z. ........ } MONTREAL WANTS TO TAX ALL TELEPHONE ACCOUNT S TROUBLE IN GREECE STILL REPORTED ASs MENACING 1j12enCcC OZ. 04. Tincture of TIodine O Z. Glycerine and Roseâ€" W ater 16 ruled hand : IOrmST O red by police Mustard Pure Olive Oil mer bandit, Andre Spada, y police on the isle of Corsica diterranean, is to die by the it was announced yesterday. a part of the island with an for many vears. cf Montreal has applied to legislature for a private bill, action of which they would ax al (telephone and teleâ€" WE SAVE Y0U MONEY EVERY DAY 15¢ 25¢ THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO «e #"o «‘4 ® * #‘s o_ e °e A total of 18 inches of snow fell durâ€" ing the storm at the beginning of the week. Beginning at 10 o‘clock Monday morning, it continued until 9 o‘clock Tuesday morning. The total of that 23 hours was 13 inches or well} over half an inch per hour as the average. The storm set in again at four o‘clock Tuesday afternoon and continued until midniight when five inches of snow fell. The temperature sank last night to 21 degress below zero and was one of the coldest of recent weeks. This mornâ€" ing it has risen to 15 below by eight o‘clock and was continuing to rise throughout the morning. Here are the higshs and lows since A fund being raised in New York city for the defence of Bruno Hauptmann in the coming appeal may be investigated by state authorities, it was said there last night. It has been reported that the fund had already reached huge proâ€" portions. Monday _ Tuesday . Wednesday Thursday Photographs from Toronto show the sidewalks clear of snow and grass beâ€" ginning to sprout. Skiing and snowâ€" shoeing are sports of the past there now unless King Winter returns South. Even the silver standard is about to fall, if reports can be considered correc are being made by the public to establish an credit arrangement wher rency would be stabilized c below the United States | British pound. Here are Monday : â€" Ira Josephs was sentenced to jail in Oakland, California, two months ago, when he was apparently in the best of health. Yesterday the prison physician ordered him to avoid high life and rich foods, as he is said to be suffering from gout. While Northern Ontario was being buried under an 18â€"inch blankst of snow early this week, Southern Ontario hbhad mild weather with heavy rainfall. Even at North Bay it was raining while the snowstorm was raging here. Eighteen Inches is Total in Snowstorm CHINESE sSILVER STANDARD TO BE DROPPED IN FUTURE ADVISED TO AVOID RICH FOQOODs wWIHILE IN PRISON RAIN IN s0OUTH WHILE sNOW BLANKETS NORTHERN ONTARIO According to despsastches toâ€"day, the government of China has not decided with which of the two great powers it would be better to link the currency. RAISE FUND FOR DEFENCE OF HAUPTMANN AT APPEAl Last Night‘s Temperature 21. below zero but rising in Warm Sunshine. The deaths of these two R.A.F. fiiers in an aeroplane.crash near Messina, Sicily, is thought to have been the cause of the suicide of Elizabeth and Jane du Bois, daughters of Coert du Bois, American consul at Naples. who threw themselves from an Engâ€" lish channel aeroplane which they had chartered. The girls were reâ€" ported to have been engaged to the fliers. Top is PFlight Lieutenant IL L. Beatty, halfâ€"brother of Beatty, and below is Flying Officer John Forkes. Du Bois Fiances? 1 abnove 9 above axIm ibove for currency ; from China ‘t. Attempts Chinese Reâ€" international eby the curâ€" ither slightly dollar or the Minima i below 2 above 3 below 1 below Trenton Courierâ€"Advocate:â€"If the Ontario Department of Game and Fishâ€" eries keep on changing the laws, we may have to go up the Peace River to have a hut in peace and quietness and without having to write a detailed acâ€" count of it for Ontario departmental heads to read. Word from Cochrane is to the effect that Matthew Upton, a lineman for the Abitibi Power Paper Co., living at Hunta, north of Cochrane, met death last week from a bullet from his own rifle. The man had been ill for some time and recently had been quite desâ€" pondent. It is said that he was sufferâ€" ing from tuberculosis, the dissase hayâ€" ing reached an advgqnced stage with him. Last summer he underwent au operation and a Cochrane physician reâ€" cently was trying to make arrangeâ€" ments to send Upton to Toronto for further treatment. While he had been kept to his bed for several weeks prior to his death, Upton is reported to have shown considerable activity just before his death. He persuaded his wife to go for a walk and during her absence he met his death. The bullet entered Upâ€" ton‘s boedy just above the heart. On the wife‘s return she found her husband dead. Coroner E. R. Tucker, of Cochâ€" rane, made full enquiry into the case, as did also the provincial police, and the coroner decided the facts were plain enough to make an inquest unnecessary. Upton was forty years of age and leaves his widow and one child. Several people will lose most of their personal belongings as the result of yesterday‘s fire that gutted the St. Onge building. As far as can be learned this morning at least three tenants of the place carried no insurance. George Laporte, W. C. Armstrong and Mrs. Olive Thompson, who had apartments in the building and whose clothing, furniture and personal effects are damaged by smoke, fire and water so that they are almost total losses and will have to start all over again making a home. The Advance understands that in the case of Mrs. Thompson, the loss will be particularly hard to bear. The owner of the building, Mrs. Julia Whissell, carried $3,000 insurance on the place. Timmins Wholesale carâ€" ried only $2,000 insurance on their large stock of cigarettes and candy, accordâ€" ing to information given The Advance this morning. Police kept watch over the building all last night and toâ€"day to prevent looting. The names of seyvâ€" eral boys were taken when they were fOund in the gutted structure, The contents of Cyrus Hodgins‘ apartment were insured but of the others, except those mentioned above, no definite inâ€" formation is available toâ€"day. A full account of the fire appears in another column of toâ€"day‘s Advance. A chimney fire last night at 6 Comâ€" mercial avenue was the only other call recorded at the fire hall since Monday. sidents of the Gauthier and Bartleman subdivisions pay a slightly higher rate. Sseparate school supporters in place of paying the 19.52 mils levy, pay 35 mills. Uszg Nearly 15,000 Gallons Each Every year, for every person in Timâ€" mins 14,960 gallons of water flow through the mains and in the average hcuse 80,127 gallons of water are used in some manner or Other each year. During 1934 a now high for the numâ€" ber of sewer connections installed was reached when 2311 householders or busiâ€" mness people ordered the work done. The total number of connections in the town has now reached 1,492, "A conâ€" siderable number of these are connecticns," said Mayor Richardson, so there are approximately 2,000 proâ€" perties connected to the sewers." Where your tax money go? That question was answered very clearly by the mayor when he gave a detailed analysis of the division of taxes. Except for the years 1925 and 1930, the tax rate showed a steady rise from the year 1912 when 20.5 mills was the rate levied, up to 1932 when the rate was 60.74 mills. In 1925 it was 67.6 and in 1930, 63.1 mills, Since 1932 it has been very steady, varying only fractionally from 60 mills, The above all apply to public school supporters. For those who pay separate school taxes the rate has been from 12 to 16 mills higher in the past three years. Division of Taxes Shown Of the 60 mills paid, 26.04 last year went to pay the general costs of runâ€" ning the town, paying salaries, upkeep of police and fire departments, serâ€" vices of various kinds rendered by the municipality and sundries; 19,52 mills went to keep the public schools going and 11.57 for the high school; 2.68 mills went to pay for local improvements; and .87 mills to the public library. Reâ€" At the conclusion of the address, the Kiwanians moved a hearty vote of thanks to the mayor for the well arâ€" ranged information he had supplied. Heavy Losses Here in Fire. Yesterday Power Lineman Killed by Use of His Own Rifle Timmins Collected 69 Per Cent of Taxes "ow Carried Insurance in Disastrous Blaze. Police Guard Gutted Building all Night. (Continued from Page One) 1,600,000 galions a year and the seven schools 5,760,000 gallons a light loaves of tastier bread from them were not available. Mr, Marceau will occupy the seat in the Ontario Logislative Assembly left vacant by the death several weeks ago of Theodore Legault, another Liberal member. Mr. Legault suffered a stroke during a conference at Queen‘s Park. The C.C.F. forces gained an early lead in the city of North Bay, where final figures showed Lawrence polled 2,797 to Marceau‘s 2,504. As returns came in from rural secâ€" tions of the riding, and the towns of Sturgeon Falls and Mattawa, the Lawâ€" rence lead was swiftly cut down and gave way to a Liberal majority. . _ Majorities in the outlying were not as great as those given the late Mr. Legault when he was returned in the June general election. Dangerous weather was believed responsible for a markedly smaller vote. With the election of Marceau toâ€"night the new party standing in the legislaâ€" ture will be: Liberals, 67: Liberalâ€"Proâ€" gressives, 3; Conservatives, 17; Coâ€"sperâ€" ative Commonwealth Federation, 1 Uniteq Farmers of Ontario, 1; and Inâ€" dependent, 1. The vote in the last Nipissing provinâ€" clal election was as follows:â€"Theodore Legault, Lib. 12,149; C. R. Harrison, Cons., 6,088. Liberal majority was 6,111. Second reading was given in the legisâ€" lature toâ€"day of a bill sponsored by Attorneyâ€"General Arthur Roebuck, transferring the direction of all police in the province to a director to be named by the attorneyâ€"general‘s deâ€" partment. St. Thomas â€" Timesâ€"Journal:â€"Hepâ€" burn repeats advertising of liquor will not be permitted in Ontario. That statement should be amended to read "No paid advertising of liquor." Free advertising will be as welcome as ever by the department. MOVE TO PLACE ALL POLICE UNDEKR PROVINCIAL CONTROL . * . .“‘ .“.0 ... ...... a *"a *n "% "a ~e ~s n ‘s"~s" ~s l\eep the Hume l< ires Burning . Harry Marceau Given Big Majority in Nipissing Sardines 4 AInsg:â€".... Pork and Beans per ‘tin=:.;.::....:. EGGS Rolled Oats, pkg. Clarke‘s Jumbo Size Haven Crosse Blackwell‘s Catsup 2 bottles Fry‘s Peas 2 Ibs. Butter per Ib. Large Heads i for Cocoa 1â€" 2 Ib. tin HMHand Picked Robinhood Dried White Brookfield Freshâ€"Grade "A" Medium California Iceberg T. h it JA JA 46. 5h. /n 000.00'0.00000.00.0..’0.0... :”:0’. * *# %° ~® e h «i. o6 / L6 h. oh. JA oh. oh. oh. oh. 366. se oh. J J # # . ,*® #, in sn 14 4s 16 Jt _A # ,oOpooroo»oonoopoopoooooooo-00.‘.000000000000000000000000’.000”00.‘ooozfoovoflofooo:o‘ozozozo *,**, COAL AND wWOOnD YARD AND OFFKICHR 64 Spruce St. South 20° 22° 10° 19° 29 20° WITH OUR YARIETYV OF Algoma Coke, Welsh Anthâ€" racite, â€" Pennsylvania â€" Blus Briquettes, Alberta, Pocaâ€" hontas, â€" Buckwheat, Nut Slack and Steam Coal. Colorado paper:â€"‘"Harry Parks reâ€" turned to Denver recently after a visit to his fiancee. He is receiving treatâ€" ment for one of his eyes." Smoked Picnic ZOC Trimmed c Pork Shoulder 19 Shoulder c Roast Beef “».14 Rib and Brisket Stew, per Ib. ... Fresh Fillets € We Have a Full Stock of Fesh and Salt Fish Holland Milcher Herring S 1â€"2 D. tin ...;........ 40c Large Juicy per dozen . Uueese 8 to 10 libs. Shankless California Sunkist THURSDAY, MARCH TTH FPOR LENT Timmins ANYC PRICH 29c¢ 19¢

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