Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 10 Jun 1935, 1, p. 5

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and porselain take on new lustre after a treatment by it. A single sheet s3on put the golf outfit in ship shape for the next game. Quickly restores to the car the car its showroom finish. Put up in packets of twentyâ€"five sheo;s that are so handy to carry while travellingâ€" ta wipe road dust from bags, trunks, shoes, etc. Wonder Paper is bouund to prove itself useful for a dozen and one everyday jobs that present themselves in a busy family‘s activities. Of very particular interest in Timâ€" ; The Northerpn N;:; last week says:â€" mins and district is anything relieving | "The death cecur at Warren, Onâ€" the serious problems that arise from [tario, of Mr. T. E. Chenette, of Kirk the dust evil. With windows and doors| land Lake, in his 78th year. Mr. Chenâ€" cpen as a necessity for health and comâ€"|ette died suddenly while on a visit to fort Jt is impossible to keep out ’thelhis sister there. The remains were dust, and every housewife here knows‘bl‘ought to Kirkland Lake for burial, what a trouble and damage can be|iand the funeral was held from the resiâ€" caused here by duss getting in the|dence of his son, Mr. T. W. Chenette, home. What housewife does not roaâ€"| 75 First Street, on Saturday, June 1st, lize the injury caused to furniture and|to the Church of the Assumption and equipment from the dust. Accordingly irterment made in the R.C. cemetery. homeâ€"makers will be interested in an| Mr. Chennette is survived by his widâ€" inexpensive dustingâ€"polishing material Ow, formerly Miss Wilhelmina Denâ€" callec@ Wonder Paperâ€"a Canadian proâ€" ; neault of Pembroke, who lives with her duct made of sof{ paper pulp and cloth| Sson en First street; two sons, T. W. of fabric plus a highâ€"grade furniture pol-il{irkland Lake and Leslie of Maniwaki, ish. Here‘s an efficient ally that dusts, Quebec; two daughters, Mrs. Geo. cleans and polishes in one simple operâ€" Charron of Iroquois Falls and Mrs. E ation. But its uses are not confined to| Romaine of OAttawa; three brothers, Alâ€" furniture polishing. Leather, metal and porselain take on new lustre after| Warren and Adelard of Rouyn; three a treatment by it. A single sheet s3on sisters, Mrs. Gaudette and Mrs. Marion !phcnse of Kirkland Lake, Regwell of put the golf outfit in ship shape for the of Warren and Mrs. Pleau of Sudbury. next game. Quickly restores to the car"l‘hose atending the funeral from out the car its showroom finish. Put town were his daughters, Mrs. Geo. in packets of twentyâ€"five sheoss that Charron of Iroquois Falls and Mrs. E. are so handy to carry while travellingâ€"â€"| Romaine of Ottawa, his son,. Lesley. of t> wipe road dust from bags, tmnks.’ManiWkL @ue., and his brother, Adeâ€" shnes Wonder Paner is bound to|lard Chennette of Rouyn, Que." l 1 I o o6 ue ht sn e s Sncct mE CE EC E. \â€"4 Pm TWE everyday job: that present mé;lgeNeS‘ North Bay Nugget:â€"A Scotsman‘s in a busy family‘s activities. idea of being one up at golf is when he finshes the ganie with one more ball Try The Advance Want Advertisements than he started with. against the late David Douglas Craig, who died on or about the 6th day of April, 1935, at Timmins, Ontario, inâ€" testate, are required to send, post preâ€" paid, or to deliver to the undersigned, solicitor herein for Dorothy May Craig, Administratrix for the Estate Of the said David Douglas Craig, their names, addresses and full particulars in writâ€" ing, of their claims and statements of their accounts and the nature of the securities held by them, if any. And take notice that after the 28th day of June, A.D. 1935, the said Doroâ€" thy May Craig will proceegd to distriâ€" bute the assets of the estate among the persons entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which she shall then have had notice, and that the said Dorothy May Craig will not be liable for the said assets or part thereof to any person whose claim she shall not then have received notice. Dated at Timmins, Ontario, this 4th day of June, A.D. 1933. WILLIAM O. LANGDON, Solicitor for the said Dorothy May Craig, Adâ€" ministratrix. 43 â€"44â€"45 Helps Relieve the Serious Dust Problem Existing Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Hotels Act, Ontario Statutes (1929) Chapter 75 section 28, that Jerry Rcobiâ€" taille, proprietOr of the Kingston Hotel, Timmins, Ontario, by his auctioneer, E. C. Brewer, will sell by public aucâ€" tion at the Kingston Hotel, Timmins, Onfario, on Wednesday, the 19th day of ‘June, 1935. at 2 p.m., a trunk and contents thereof, the property of â€" Harry Flynn, and will apply the proceeds thereof in payment Of board and lodging account amounting to $21.50 and costs. Dated at Timmins, Ontario, this 10th day of ‘June, A.D. 1935. (Signed) Jerry Robitaille, â€"~44, Timmins,, Ontario. Notice is hereby given that all perâ€" sons having any claims or demands 1LOSTâ€"One tan suitcase, off runningâ€" board of car, on highway between Haileybury and Swastika. Reward to finder. Write Box 2772%, Timmins. In the matter of the Estate of David Douglas Craig, l2ate of the Township of Tisdale, in the District of Cochâ€" ramne, miner, deceased. WANTED TO RENTâ€"Three or fourâ€" roomed, furnished apartment. Write to Box R.S., The Advance, Timmins. ~44â€"40p ROOM AND BOARDâ€"Miners preâ€" ferred. All conveniences. Apply at 16 Wilson Avenue, or Box 195, Timmins. ~43p POR RENTâ€"For months of July and August â€" fourâ€"rcomed apartment, with all conveniences, including elecâ€" tric â€" refrigerator, electric stove, Phone 1243â€"W. 441 POR RENTâ€"14â€"16 Cedar Street, North. Apply to B. Lennan, 10 Eim Street, North, Timmins. % «»42tf GRASS TO RENTâ€"All fenced: sufhâ€" cient to pasture 1000 cattle. Apply to John Dalton, Timmins. â€"3Q01f board; in newlyâ€"furnisheq private home; reasonaole weekly rate; or meal tickets for board only. Apply Mrs. Lawlor, 3 Elm South, Timmins. ~43tf threeâ€"piece bath; hot and cold water. Apply at 112 Mount}joy Street, Timâ€" mins. ~44p WANTED TO RENT. ween: Paraguayâ€"~and Bolivia, is believed o be settled now, since representatives | of the two nations have come to a peace accord. L The dispute over the Chaco area beâ€" t A false alarm, rung in at Box 46 on Friday evening just after seven o‘clock, was the only call received by the fire department from Thursday until this afternoon. It is believed that children were responsible for the alarm, as only one ‘"round" came in, indicating that the lever had just been touched. DEATH OF T. E. CHENETTE, OF °* KIRKLAND LAKE, AGED 78 FOR SALEâ€"Sheds, planks, mas trestles, lumber, cheap. Apply L Jordan, Schumacher High School Recreation Hotel. CHACO DISPUTE ENDED AS NATIONS® REACH ACCORD A full page advertisement in this issue announces the "Value Event" now in progress at A. Shaheen‘s. By liberâ€" al quotation 6f values and description of the goods the announcement pnroves that it is actually a "Value Event." There are other values too numerous to include in the announcement, so a visit to the store seems indicated. Memorial service for Viscount Byng of Vimy was held at the Legion hall yesterday afternoon when a large numâ€" ber of the members of Branch 88 gatherâ€" ed to pay respect t> the former leader, who won his title in the Great War. False Fire Alarm the Only Call in Last Few Days FPOR SALEâ€"1 large Electric Westingâ€" house stove, 1 kitchen sink, 1 Cosy Crib and mattress, 2 bed springs; 1 curtain stretcher. All in good condiâ€" ticn. Apply to Windsor Hotel, Cedar Stregt. â€"~ â€"44tf PLANTS FOR SALEâ€"Cabbage,; cauliâ€" flower, tomatoes, phlox, carnations, petunias, snapdragons, asters, verâ€" bena, etc. Free with each $1.00 purâ€" MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR VISCOUNT BNYNG HELD HERE FOR SALEâ€"One vacuum cleaner, with all attachments, in perfect condition. Will sell at very reasonable price. Apply to 10 Fiim Street, South, or phone 794â€"J. â€"~48tf Rev. Father O‘Gorman, chaplain of the branch, conducted the service. VALUE EVENT SALE NOW UNDER WAY AT SHAHEEN‘S FPOR SALEâ€"Buick Sedan in gosd conâ€" dition; real bargain. Apply at 31 Fourth Avenue, Cor. Cedar Street. FOR SALEâ€"200 gallon steel tank, comâ€" plete for oil burnér. Apply at 31 Fourth Avenue, Cor. Cedar Street. ~ â€"44p FOR SALEâ€"One finished in ivory cheap. Apply at sSouth, Timmins. FOR SALEâ€"Chevrolet Sedan; in firstâ€" class condition; good motor,."tires, top. A real snap at $75.00 cash. 173 Spruce Street, South. ~44p chase mile Rivetr With the issue of The Advance semiâ€"weekly, the rates for want advts have been simplified. _ Want advts now are 1¢c per word with a minimum of 25¢ (35¢ if charged). for speed 1 doz. French marigolds. across Mattagami Bridge Frcnt. Fhone 81â€" 44 a)¢ In bulk; gosd price Apply phone 82â€"J mall â€" refrigerator. nd green; will sell 166 Spruce Street, mason s â€"43â€"44p Street. â€"44p â€"~45p tainly are â€" result. J. P board. was the drill. Fire drill at the Timmins High and | Vocational School was carried through on Thursday last in very effective and pleasing way. There were 670 pupils at | the school at the time, including one ; crippled girl who was assisted by a! friend. The school was emptied in just 57 seconds, which would appear a recâ€" ord. Fire Captam J. Morton gave thc. "alarm," and says that the pupils cerâ€" | High School Fire Drill Shows Great Efficiency $10,000 Addition to Empire Hotel Here Work was begun toâ€"day on the conâ€" struction of an additional two storeys over the beverage room sectiin of the Empire hotel. A total of 18 additional rooms will be provided by the new part and the cost will be approximately $10,000, Leo Mascioli told The Advance. A despattch from Haileybury last week says:â€""Deciding that Alfred Quellette, Kirkland Lake carpenter, had spoken malicious defamation of Fortuna Gosselin, carpenter, also~ of Kirkland Lake, in various beverage rooms of the gold camp where he is alleged to have called Gosselin "a crook and a thief" a jury at district court here yesterday awarded Gosselin $250 of a $500 claim for damages. A counâ€" terâ€"claim by Quellette charging Gosâ€" selin with the same offence was not alâ€" I>owed when it was held by the panel that Gosselin had spoken without malice. Mel G. Hunt was the succossâ€" ful solicitor in the action appearing for Gosselin. ~Albert Serre pressed Ouelâ€" lette‘s case. Gosselin‘s statement of claim listing the places where he was "called" by Quellette, read like a social re#ister naming as it did three of the betterâ€"known suds shops of the Hub of the North, the beverage rooms at the Windsor and the Queen‘s Hotel and the Swastika Social and Athletic Club." A ‘boat, bloodâ€"stained, a hat floating on the lake, both belonging to Jack Hemming, of Long Lake, who disapâ€" peared Saturday night, have led to an investigation at Sudbury. Mike Saha is jeing held on nominal charges of vagâ€" rancy. T‘wo Storeys Being Added to The Beverage Room Secâ€" tion of the Big Hotel at Timmins. The need for more accommodation at the Empire has made the addition necessary and to keep up with the growth of Timmins, the proprietors decided it should be done immediately. When the twoâ€"storey addition to give room for the beverage room was made last year, it was designed to carry the additional storeys being put on. sSUSPECT FOUL PLAY IN sSUDBURY DISAPPEARANCE KIRKLAND LAKE CITIZEN ASSESSED LIBEL DAMAGES CHILDREN FOR ADOPTIONâ€"Good hoemes desired fur children, boys and girls, Catholic and Protestant, ages 4 to 14 years. Any home desiring to adopt a youngster should have their clergyman write A. G. Carson, Supt. Children‘s Aid, Timmins, Ont. 44tf EXPERIENCED YOUNG FINNISH woman would like daily or weekly work of any kind. Phone 138, 69 Golâ€" den Avenue, South Porcupine. â€"44p POSITION WANTEDâ€"A young woâ€" man desires immediate work in the Nzorth Country. Write to Mrs. Eileen Ashe, 606 Yonge Street, Toronto. â€"44ip WANTED TO â€" BORROWâ€"Eighteen hundred (1800) dollars at reasonable interest on first mortgage on proâ€" perty in Schumacher. Phone 1063â€"W or write Box 602, Schumacher. â€"44p FPOR SALEâ€"Fiveâ€"roomed house with good lot, inside toilet, water. Apply at 29 Railroad Street, South Porcuâ€" pine. â€"43â€"44p Fourteen â€" Bedrooms; doing good business: all modern conveniences; no reasonable offer refused PROPERTY FOR SALEâ€"Cor. Fifth Avenue and Maple Street, Apply in evenings at 262 Elm Street, North, Timmins., § ~43â€"44p HOUSE FOR SALEâ€"At 56 Hemlock Street; four rooms. Apply on premâ€" ises. j »45=47p 2 Wilson Ave., Timmins Telephone 275â€"W Licensed Hotel are well drilled, to judge by the J. P. Burke, of the High School an interested spectator at Apply at THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, [TIMMINS, ONTARIO Miss Belle Tomilinson is expecteq to arrive in Timmins early this week to join her brother, E. Tomlinson, Birch street. She arrived at Montreal this weekâ€"end via the Letitia. Last Wednesday a wellâ€"known Timâ€" mins family returned here after a twoâ€" andâ€"aâ€"half year stay in Bannia, Proâ€" vince Udini, Italy. Mrs. Ernesto Morâ€" rello and five children joined Mr. Morâ€" rello, who returned from Italy about six months ago. The total cost of ‘old age pensions in Canada last year was $16,566,000, Minâ€" ister of Labour Gordon announced last night in the House of Commons. The Dominion contribution was $12,313,â€" 000. The number of pensioners was 86,873, divided by provinces as follows: Alberta, 6,286; British Columbia, 8,095; Manitoba, 9,236; Ontario, 46,281; Nova Scotia, 6,509; Prince Edward Island, 1,258 and Saskatchewan, 9,203. COsST OF QOLD AGE PENSION®S LAST YEAR WAS _ $16,566,000 Winter relief schedule is to be reâ€" sumed in Sudbury immediately, it is reported toâ€"day. A delegation repreâ€" senting â€"nearly 150 unemployed interâ€" viewed the council, Her many friends in the town and district will regret that Mrs. H. R. Channen is ill at present in St. Mary‘s hospital, and all will wish her a speedy recovery. Peter White, noted Toronto lawyer, who was at the Cochrane Supreme Court session last week was in Timmins for a few hours Friday. Mrs. H. W. Hooker and daughter, Margaret, left last. week for a holiday in Dundas, Galt and other Southern owns. Mrs. Arthur Colbourne, who left Timâ€" mins last week on a threeâ€"month visit to her former home in Newfoundland, sailled on Thursday from Montreal. Mrs. R. Brooks and daughter, Miss B. Brooks, sailed on the Aurania from Montreal to take up residence in Tavisâ€" tock, Devon. Harolq Wallingford, of Cobalt, istant manager of Woolworth‘s in Silver Town, was in Timmins over weekâ€"end visiting his parents. Bornâ€"at St. Mary‘s hospital on June 5th, to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Ellacott, 33 Main avenueâ€"a daughter. Mrs. J. I. Arscott, who has bsen ill in the hospital for the past week, is reâ€" â€"rted ths morning as improving. Brnmnâ€"to Mr. and Mrs. Feter Colton, L Balsam street south, on June 6th Atlttendant bother is reâ€" duced to a minimum too. Just phone 26 and one of us will be over right away to fill your needs, give sugâ€" gestions if desired, submit samples and let you know costâ€"all without any obliâ€" gation, of course. ooner or later thenâ€"we‘ll be seeâ€" ing vou. the the News was received in Timmins on Friday of the death of Mrs. James Ormston, Sr., who was on the way to Englang for a visit. Although not in good health since suffering a stroke while in England four years ago, Mrs. Ormston seemed well enough to travel and had planned spending a prolonged vacation in England. She left here about two weeks ago and sailed from Montreal. No other details have been learned yet. c ‘NMrs. â€"Ormston was 58 years of age and had been a resident oi Timmins for more than 10 years. Woodstock Sentinelâ€"Review:â€"Britain is to have smaller bathâ€"tubs, to conâ€" serve the water supply. This is a modâ€" ern variation on "rule the waves." William Innes, 129 Fourth avenue, Schumacher, dropped dead of heart failure at his home, 129 Fourth avenue, Schuniacher, last night. The seizure occurred at about 9.45, and Mr. Innes had previously been in apparently good health. Mrs. Jas. Ormston, Sr., Dies on Trip to Old Country No funeral arrangements have been made yet. Wm. Innes Drops Dead at Schumacher Last Night Two men, said to have confessed to the kidnapping of little George Weyerâ€" bacuser, of Tacoma, were arrested in Salt Lake City, Utah, last night. Fedâ€" eral agents and state police trailed Harmon M. Waley, his wife Margaret and William Mahan through ransom bills. CONFESsED KIDNAPPERS ARRESTED AT SALT LAKE The Life Underwriters® Association cf Timmins is holding a oneâ€"day sales congress here at the Empire hotei on Monday, June 17th. Congress Here of Life Underwriters Noted Insurance Men to be Here Next Week at Speâ€" cial Convention at Empire Hotel. :’:'-*w'%/ © We have many local business men on our books and would welâ€" come the inclusion of your name on the list. the added advantage of prompt deliveries on day promised and prices that compare favourably with Toronto and other Southern Ontario points. This office is exceptionally well equipped for the handling of this class of work. Our staff is thoroughly competent in all departâ€" ments and care is taken throughout the various operations. This ensures delivery of cleancut, effective printed matter with Why not give us a trial order? The Porcupine Advance Phone 26 The attendance record at the Riverâ€" side pavilion was broken on Saturday night when the management placed the number of people present at nearly Attendance Record at Dance at Pavilion on Saturday ©® No matter what your business, printing of some sort or another is a prime necessity in its econoâ€" mic conduct. Letterheads, envelâ€" opes, statements are essentials, with many other specials forms for the requirements of each and every line of business activity. When the barbaric sounds of the zoo assume a softer cadenee and the penned denizens (released at latst from their winter quarters) start to stretch, strut, sniff and paw each other, in a gentler manner, then you‘ll know that spring is here. «BELOW is shown a touching "necking" scene as Mr. and Mrs. Giraffe show their affection. At TOP aire two elephants completely loveâ€"struck. One pachyderm is veritably so "dizzy" from love that he can hardly stand straight. Trunks are entwined, and soft eleâ€" phantine gleam glows softly in their eyes. Ah, springtime! PRINTERS and PUBLISH Ah! Beautiful Spring‘! Fourth Ave., Timmins Guests of the Northern Telephone Company, numbering about one hunâ€" dred and twent,y, helped to swell the crowd. nine hundred. The previous record was made about a year and a half ago when George Wade and his Corn Husâ€" kers were in Timmins. PAGE FINE #

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