Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 Sep 1935, 2, p. 8

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PAGE EIGHT PDelay no longer! Head in for your new fall Suit right now, today! We have just received this Fall and Winter range of Windsor Clothes and at the price thgy can‘t be beat. Larger than usual it includes many new and different materials and patterns. Styles are new too, the one illustrated has been a particular favourite. Workmanship is guaranteed, every sackâ€" coat has hand finished collar. Fit guarantced too. Let us measure you toâ€"day! BUCOVETSKY‘S MEN‘S DEPT .. MAIN FLOOR TAILOREDâ€"TOâ€"MEASURE New Fall Colours in New Fall Materials SAM _ BUCOVETSKY LTD. Reottâ€"Knit Swingâ€"back Windbreaker style brushâ€" cad wool Sport Sweatlteors in the five newest shades for Fall, El@stic ribâ€"knit collar, cuffls and waistâ€" band. Two pockets. Butten front. Sizes 36 to 44 BUCOVETSKY‘S MEN‘S DEPT. Sport Sweaters Men‘s Brushed W ool Swing Back Style EXTRA TROUSERS $5.75 , Friday is Felt Hat Day! Lightning slide fastener neck Cadet style brushed wool Pullovers that are the newest in wool wear for Fall. New shades trimmed with wide conâ€" trasting oand 2round chest and s‘ceves. Scott Krnit. Sizes 36 to 44. CadetPullovers For a low pri H win your appririat There‘s a jaunty air cf nonchalence in the new fall Kensingtons, Choose with confidence here. Finc quality marches in step with the fine style of the new Stetsons. All styles and sizes. Kensington $3.50 in the store â€"â€" Ladies‘ Department â€" at 8.30 p.m. sharp will be held TOâ€"NIGHTâ€"Thursday Sept. 19 t DO the New Styles really look like® You‘ve read about them, thought about them, talked about them ... and you want to KNOW! All this talk of draping . . . will that mean bulges in the wrong places? And the new silhouette . . . jJust what is it, anyway? Bucovetsky‘s know . . . and we‘re showing these new styles to you every day in the store and in the windows,. They are AUTHENTIC styles . . . the same models that are being shown in the world‘s fashion centres! Keep Fourself posted on the new style trends ... at Bucovetsky‘s . . . this season and every season! Men! Get the Autumn Spirit! Wear a New Felt Hat! No other article of apparel is so imporkant to your appearance, so expressive of your personality, Men‘s Brushed W ool New As Tomorrow Fashion Parade BUCOVHTITSKY‘S MEN‘S DEPT LIVING MANNEQUINS will model all garments in this Parade of Smart Fashions which will include All Complemented with the Season‘s Latest Accessories ashion Silvertones $1.95 Ladies Only Admitted ese Fashion Silvertoncs, in blug, grey, brown and black will certainly To see them is to auy one. All sizes. BUCOVETSKY‘S MEN‘S DEPT. MAIN FLOOR AND HATS EVENING GOWNS AFTERNOON DRESSES FUR TRIMMED CLOTH COATS SPORTSWEAR HOLT, RENFREW FUR COATS Silvertones included in this range of amazingly rugged new Fall McGregors, Complete sizes, styles and colours. With pride, we parade for your approval the new Brocks, Intriguingly smart in style and richly mellow in quality. Full range of styles and sizes. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS OoNTARIC McGregor $2.95 "No," the Italian refused, "I can‘t lend you the money." "Why?" pressed the friend. "Well," said Tony, after some conâ€" Political meetings have started and with them the usual flow of stories calâ€" culated to put the speaker‘s audience at ease. At a political rally the other night Jim Cooper told of a friend who attempted to borrow some money from an industrious Italian, who operated a peanut stang on a busy street corner. The following little story is timely., whether it is new or not. It is from The Sudbury Star last week:â€" Made an Agreement with the Bank Regarding Loans #040000000404000Câ€"400000000000000000000600000 000080000 ¢ PO)OOOOOOO’O00000000000:’%0‘0%‘0‘00:‘” $I.69 Black side Oxfords with composit sole and rubber heels that have a sm appearance ard will wear w Sizes 5‘% to 11. Bucovetsky‘s Baseme wmre com e m um on us ce w mm _BOYS‘ SCHOOL OXFORDS #$4000000000000000000000000000000000 00e Suede, patent and kid leathers in new Fall styles. Brown and black in high cuban and low heels. Sizes 3 to 8. Sturdy school Oxfords. Black side with solid leather soles and rubber heels. Sizes 1 to 5. Bucovetsky‘s Basement Growing Girls‘ and Women‘s â€" Weekâ€"End Special â€" New Fall Shoes Comfortable lOw heel strap Slippers for about the house. Black only. Sizes 3 to 8 \HO\(« ) Re “‘ es gxht? ) ag S° (sS_* . FUR REPAIRS and REMODELLING The Holt, Renfrew repreâ€" sentative will be pleased to advise you with regard to the renovating or remodelâ€" ling of your old fur coat. Do not fail to visit our store during this display., The Molt, Renfrew representaâ€" tive will be pleased to give you his personal attention. "The Workingman‘s Store" WHERE YOUR MONEY BUYS MORE This exhibit, which is under the personal supervision of the Holt, Renfrew representative, brings to you every new style idea in Furs gathered by MHolt, Renfrew styâ€" lists in style centres of Europe and America, Buy Your Footwear Needs at Weekâ€"End Special Weekâ€"End Special Budbury Star:â€"Hon. Peter Heenan| sociated with Count de Lesseps in the is not in agreement with his leader, latter‘s early aerial experiments in Premier Hepburn. The minister of lands| France. Poullion held the fourth pilot‘s says he does not think the people of license to be issued in France and the Old Ontario think of the North as a| second in Canada. He did considerable sinkâ€"hole in which to spend monty.|air service both in Canada and the "Northern Ontario is not a liability on | United States but retired some years Old Ontario," is Mr. Heenan‘s opinion.‘ ago from aviation, sideration, "do you see the bank on the corner?" "Yes," nodded the friend. "Well, when I started on this corner I made an with that bank, that so long as I cccupled this corner, I wouldn‘t lend any money, if they wouldn‘t sell any peanuts." l f AlM w g#TH. 19338 Pioneer in Flying _ Drowns near Rouyn Poullion was a native of Switzerland, though he hag spent many years in Canada, as well as having an advenâ€" turous life in other parts of the globe, In addition to being an exp@rt maâ€" chinist he had a notable flying record anu might well be considered as a pioneer of the flying game. He was asâ€" »wIu vildt OiIC O1I UNe supports of the cance broke on account of the weight of the two men, Poullion alone weighing around 250 lbs. Both men were thrown into the water. Brunk clung to the cande and was eventually rescued. Poulâ€" lion tried to swim to shore, but went down before reaching safety. When the accident occurred the two men were headed for an island about 506 yards from shore and they had to fight a heavy wind. *# | _ Average peat, according to the reâ€" [ port, contains about 21.9 per cent. water, ‘2.7 per cent. carbon, 4 per cent. ‘hydrogen, 274 per cent. oxygen, 1.6 per cent. nitrogen and 2.4 per cent. ash. Samples taken from this district of North Ontario (Drinkwater, Cochrane !and Nellie Lake) show from 63 to 65.5 fper cent. volatile matter, 27 to 29 per cent. fixed carbon, and from 5 to 10 Ip:*,r' cent. ash. Samples analysed were | absolutely dry peat, The calorific value, B.T.U.‘s per pound, varied from 7500 to 8220 per pound. In the bogs tested by the committee, it was estimateq there | were nearly 200,000,000 tons, though the | potential fuel resources of Canadian bogs, from the information availâ€" able, was placed at 35,000,000,000 tons, or second in the world only to Russia. Gustave Poullion, a machinist at the Noranda Mine, but better known on account of his notable flying record was drowned in Lake Dosserat, neatr Rouyn, on Saturday of last week. Poul â€" lion, who was 51 years of age, had been out quck hunting with a friend, J Brunk, also of Noranda. It is underâ€" stood that one of the supports of the Exhaustive Government Report The Government of Canada has n noglected peat. In 1925 an exhausti report was handed down by the pe: committee, appointed and support \ jointly by the governments of the Ix | minion of Canada and the Province Ontario. Their researches, entirely cessful at the time, laid the basis fc a presentâ€"day rather widespread opert ing up of peat bogs in many parts ¢( the province. "Peat has a very low thermal conâ€" ductivity. According to Dr. Purst, a heap of ice covered with peat was made at the Bockelholm bog in 1888â€"9, and, without replenishing the store, was taken out in an unthawed condition in the summer of 1891." . "to tind, if posstble, a practical working method, capable of commercial operaâ€" tion on a large scaie, whereby our exâ€" tensive peat deposits might be made available as an auxiliary source of fuel supply, especially in the central proâ€" vinces of Ontario and Quebec, where shortage of domestic supplies of fuel was most keenly felt." The Great War started the interest in peat. Now two other factors are carrying it onâ€"the vanishing supply of wood as fuel and the high cost of imported coal. "Bogs occur in shallow depressions having usually a clay bottom . . . Glaâ€" cial action has been an important facâ€" tor in the origin and distribution of most of the peat bogs in United States and Canada. The great ice sheets which covered the country left irregular qgeâ€" posits of clay, gravel and boulders, which in many places so blocked the stream valleys as to form lakes." Extracts from the 300â€"page book comâ€" piled by the committee may be of inâ€" terest in the present case: Formeg From Plants "Peat is a combustible substance produced by incomplete decomposition of vegetable matter either in or in the préesence of water under such condiâ€" tions that atmospheric oxygen is exâ€" cluded. The character of the peat deâ€" pends on the conditions under which it has been formed ang on the nature of the vegetation which has contributed to its formation. . . . Prominent among peatâ€"forming plants are mosses . . . marsh plants . . . heath plants . . . grasses ... marine plants ... and someâ€" times trunks, roots and leaves of trees, "Peat in the natural state ranges in colour from yellowish brown through various shades of brown to jet black." rustave Poulli; The 1925 report, handed down after eight years of hard work by qualified men, was prepared by Arthur A. Colc, Robert A. Ross, Rolang C. Harris and B. F. Haanel, all of whom are authoriâ€" ties on the subject. Their objective was The Northern Miner of August 29 carried an item about the successf development of a bog near Stratfor in Ellice township, where there is 1300â€"acre tract producing comparativ ly large quantities, The owner has n been aole to keep pace with orders f the fuel. (Continued from Page Oone in the new fuel is that it is proper processed. Where farmers used to jv out the top, only partiallyâ€"develop material, the peat company takes ; the various densities from the grass the very heavy black substance a ff: inches from the clay bottom, mix them and obtains an average over t whole depth, properly "digested" a: cured. Timmins Has Fuel Close at hand for Use da, Loses Life in Dasser Lake. day of last week. Poul years of age, had beet ig with a friend, J Noranda. It is under of Noran

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