Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 29 Oct 1936, 1, p. 5

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ity to dodgs the snarts which nosody worries ab "Sudbury has in its tim of raffles and lotteries. T tinent observation ~mads matter has been that th many of them. People were concerned in the legal or de plum made :pt dian leg solely by name to ity to d which nc vem,;er i. °n is being taken attorneyâ€"gener ronto, which by reputable c the Sault ths were being "In the mea: despatchses, 53 in the Irish Fr stakes, and st: prizes on the which is to be Mari An 6 Mond Laughing at the Sault‘s Sudden Moral Qualms No wonder Mrs. Whithershaw, Port Arthur, Ont., says Buckley‘s Mixture (triple acting) is the best cough medicine she ever used. Sho writes: "Just this week my husâ€" band caught a very severe cold. 1 gave him two doses of Buckley‘s and in the morning he was so greatly improved that he was up and about his work as usual." It is this quick, sure relief that makes BUCKLEY‘S MIXTURE so reliable. Often the most stubborn racking cough quickly vields to its powerful influence. And you save money when you buy BUCKLEYV‘S (triple acting). You can get it everywhere. Clear B.C. Fir Vâ€"Joint ; Gyproc; Hardwood Floorâ€" ing; Vâ€"Joint and Shiplap; White Pine Featherâ€" edge:; Clear Fir and Pine Doors in Stock Sizes; Sash in Stock Sizes. Lumber, Cement, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies Yard sSchumacher Why I bought a Pension Bond from OC Phone 125 John W. Fogg Limited Confederation Life Association Pension Bonds with total disability benefits, They will Eind them most attractive. "The haunting fears that I had of what was going to happen to me, when couldn‘t go on working, are ended for ever. 1 know the Confederation Life will take care of me, and that *Peace of Mind® is, I think, my greatest comfort of all." Business women are invited to write for particulars of has iss fles.. 10 Branch Office: Reed Block, Timmins, R. C. MORTSON, Manager Rough and Dressed Lumber t ‘e the noiders an opporiunâ€" e the snarts of the law dy worries about. has in its time had plenty rpetrated. irtime, accord . Canadians . ree State Hos Confederation Life vcanadlans drew norse ‘ee State Hospital swee ind a chance of winnin; Cambridgeshire â€" rac: run at Newmarket, Eng 28. But, the despatchs cket numbers. and nom. 1e lucky Canadians wer ued t 6 id ccount of â€"TI rbhidding lott identificatior number or h n ® 1¢€ p. it s announced istructions from th« department at Toâ€" received complaint s and merchants o ese unlawful acts TI ‘ were not so mucnhn al or moral aspect 7 of Sault arning that id other ga rding s drew The only perâ€" ) awsout the acre were too dbury Sta Complete stock of trOn. 1sS maAde or fictitious lotteric her game nd by No an income guaranteed for life. "My Confederation Life Bond has many valuable features, but the Monthly Income Total Disability Beneâ€" fit particularly appealed to me. If 1 become totally disabled through an accident or sickness, then, six months after such disability, the Confederation Life will waive my premiums and pay me a monthly income. S a business woman, I realized that,. no matter how efficient | am now, there will come a time when | must stop working. So,. while I am now earning a good salary, l have bought a Pension Bond from the ( onh-dvratmn Life Association. Then, when I must give up work, I know that I shall have Head Office and Yard Timmirs Phone 117 aAana out Aalt tThe Ottawa ‘Con Mr. Bennett‘s direction, note his acknowledgomen dation has been laid sot Windsor count Elibank takes view of the trade atr out at the Ottawa conc<rned dation has been laid soundly. We asâ€" sume he believes steps may be taken to ircn out the wrinkles and place the agrements on a more mutually satisâ€" factory basis. All the complaints heard from time to time serve to brove that to ircn oul thg wrIt agrements on a m factory basis. All th from time to time tron. ‘The main thi vidual should be pi extent against beti! assed by canvasse the public more t any qualms over thing. But the thr for little provides s ture of compensati T‘l KeLSs AalI within mne country hat makin Oocal lotteri: eek hat 1€ A K kit at umption, _ citizens C g tcuchy 0 t they are h 1 C V1 e undertakings, but they were beâ€" ig peeved over the countless reâ€" s to "buy a ticket on a car.‘" There hing at hand on which to base the mnption, ‘but it is presum:d that itizens Oof the Sault may be getâ€" cuchy on the same point, and not they are so terribly shocked over iolation of the law. In the case e Dublin sweepstakes, the public is estered; in most cases the buyer the seller, attracted by the long ~2 of big winnings. (The writer man in the right place Al after Canada‘s interests was Prime Minister was la w mil im D en beetr muct lC ‘:â€"We are sorry Visâ€" akes this rather gloomy e arrangements worked awa ‘Conference under direction, but glad to means : ‘and * _ ftor every purpose eans of gambling, all and various sweepâ€" ons cf dollars out of e of it returning. So ch ado about a few ears. like discriminaâ€" is that the indiâ€" protected to a certain ?ing continually harâ€" sers. That grates on Branch Office Kirkland Lake 5. grates on an the holding of he legality of the 1 of winning much mething in the naâ€" s0o, having weeps tickets said, it is human ad it seems that g to prevent that t does many othâ€" rac‘s, stock marâ€" tha founâ€" LrOpoils Of Crade. Urf eration have lived them worldâ€"known Time does scmething to take the sting out of all wounds, but thank God it does not destroy old memories. And anyone who does not recognize their sacrifice and is unwilling to commemâ€" orate it is not worthy to bear the stanâ€" dard of this or any Empire. The Empire of home! The Empire of love! Th Empire of God! How often have these empires bkeen lost by failure to regard the small out significant things of life? Time does socmethin sting out of all wounds it does not destroy old anvone who does not sight of differences of sects, and there was spread abroad a dseper sense of the spirit of sacrifice, They hoped for a nobler self. The thougnt of death brought men nearer to God. We vowed that we would be better men if God would, bring us through. God has kept His part of the bargain. Have we kept ours? Hopes of a better world, a nobler naticn, a more Christâ€"like church, a finer selfâ€"such were the thoughts that men to sacrifice. Sometimes I think that we are letâ€" ting the dead downâ€"that we are beâ€" traying their trust. My comrades who made the supreme sacrifice hoped for a new world. Theirs was to be a war to end war. Armies and armameont: were to be destroyed for ever, and the Prince of Peace would come, and th: Reign of Peace would dawn. They hoped for a new land. Men answered the call so nobly, so well. giving their all, that you vowed their claims to a better standard of living must be faced and met. The years since the war have en years of disappointment. Old fears and suspicions are stalking the sheepfold and the world toâ€"day, inflaming and embittering the thoughts of men. and probably the position of the world is worse today than at any time since the war ended.. And you yourselves may do much if you think in terms of peace, and not in terms of conflict. "As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he," and no modern philosophy has ever disproved the fact so pithily and truly stated in the proverb. They hoped for a new church. The war brought men together. They lost our lives toâ€"day. We must not talk as though all sacrifice was in vain, nor to forget that in the mystery of God‘s working, the world progresses, however slowly, through sacrifice. Calvary is the supreme illustration of this, and it runs through life in every part and throughout the ages. Time passes, memories fade, a new generation grows up, and with that new generation comfrs the awful pcril that a tragedy which we older people thought had passed should return again to the world. Inspiring Address at Cenotaph at Woodstock Comrade W. R. Jackson, Chaplain of Princeton Branch Canadian Legion, Delivers Impressive Address at Visit of Ladies‘ Auxiliary Delegates to Woodstock Cenotaph. Published by Special Request THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO World peace will be assured, interâ€" national harmony will be realized dream, prosperity will be universal, inâ€" dividual happiness will exist everywhere when we learn the sanctity of treaties and the holiness of agreements, and There is no call to die toâ€"day, but there is a call to liveâ€"to live lives clean, pure, nobleâ€"lives that will play their part in bearing the burden of our counâ€" try and Empireâ€"lives that ~will see that right is done and wrongs made right. The men who bore the brunt of the battle, the women who waited at home, hoped for a new land, yet 50 psr cent. of the present generation have neither a tnought nor a care what may happen. Is our apathy, our indiffersnce, letting our country down? Sometimes I seem to know more dead friends than live ones. What is wrong with the world toâ€"day? It is this: Men who would toâ€"day be assuming leaderâ€" ship in our Senates, our universities, our parliaments, sleep in France. Have you ever stood on a lovely Eastern night, lit by the light of Heaven. Peace seemed to be in the air, and straining your eyes and ears lest someone should attack you unâ€" awares. All seemed quiet and peaceful, and yet not far away in a piece of sacred ground lay some of the finest men and comrad*s one has been priviâ€" leged to know. We buried them ourâ€" selvesâ€"the brightest, bravest and best. As we looked in the direction of the graves we cursed all war and the horâ€" rors of war, and with hands outâ€" stretched toward Heaven, with humanâ€" ity‘s prayer on our lips:â€""Oh, God, show us a better way out than this!" lous, cruel, scattering the treasures of the years to the four winds. They beâ€" trayed the past and their civilization crashed about their heads, bringing war, death, plunder, chaos and conâ€" fusion. io ioi Tievee and Vloney 1937 MOTOR VERICLE PERMITS AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 2nd Do you desire peace to come upon the earth? Our work cannot do it for us, because many of us toil in huge corporations where we are known by numbers and not by names. Our govâ€" ernments cannot do it for us, for inâ€" ’creasmgly we are cogs in a party maâ€" ‘ chine. Our civic life cannot do it for us, for we are moving steadily into ‘great ant hills, where we live and die, unwept, unhonoured and unsung. But the God whom I serve, and covet for . you, is not a God who counts us by | numbers but a God who keeps back of us and calls us by our names. God has ’brought us to this memorial toâ€"day o a higher level of life, to breathe a | purer air, and to a wider outlook. Here we have paused for a few moâ€" + ments to think of those far away. "But alone our spirits will be here. You will ‘not see us! Our Master, Lord and Capâ€" ‘tain has guided us here. One will dediâ€" ‘cate a wreath. All of you will salute us. â€" And we give thanks for now we know we are not forgotten, for our loved ones remember, and are ever Those of you who saw the film "Cavâ€" alcade," beheld the dignity of the beâ€" ginning of the century and the madâ€" | ness of the close of the first 20 years. 'You saw in that picture,. sitting on a piano in a night club, one of the charâ€" | acteristic modern products, a painted and much wornâ€"out female singing | "Twentieth Century Blues":â€"‘"They are getting me down! Nothing to live for! Nothing to die for!" Would to God there was something to live for! Is there no duty worth living for? No cause worth dying for? No faith in friendship? No task that matters? Nothing in the day, nothing in the night? Nothing to love, nothing to hate, no destiny to shape our ends? Stanley Baldwin said: If our war dead could come back toâ€"day, thers would be no more war. They would never let the younger generation tackle what they did. You all tasted the bitt‘r cup of war but they drank to the dregs. And if Europe and the nations of the world can find no other way of settling disputes than by war, when, even now in France we are finding and burying bodies who fell 20 years ago, then the world deserves to perish. when we face up to the challenge of these words: "Seek ye first the Kingâ€" dom of God and all these things will be added unto vou." They save the purchaser of a used car or truck the fee for transferring the 1936 registration can be procured without transfer fee). 1937 Permits available November 2nd save the purâ€" chaser of a new car or truck the expense of 1936 registration. This advance sale of 1937 Motor Vehicle Permits and Operators‘ Licenses is for your convenience. _ Take advanâ€" tage of it. There are one hundred conveniently located issuing offices throughout the Province. You will receive quick, efficient service at the one nearest you. L/A UE to the advance in the new car purchasing season and the fact that increasingly large numbers of used cars and trucks are now purchased at this time of year, 1937 Motor Vehicle Permits and Operators‘ Licenses are being made available November 2nd. 1937 registration plates commemorate Coronation Year with crowns and white figures on red backâ€" ground. Each plate carries only one series letter. At any rate know that if you surâ€" render and let the world have its way with you, there will come a time when you will say with all bitterness, "It were better had I ngver been born." You go from here, fail, some to triumph, gle in the battle where to your dutic o0f..:ours is . j place, a wicl corrupted by corrupted by a race of men who are selfish and sinful. It is a world of opâ€" portunity and a world of romance. If you resist it in God‘s name it may despitefully use you. It may take away your security. It may deprive you of your livelihood. It may hang you upon a cross to dig. mindful of the sacrifice we made. In our graves we shall rest peaceful for now we know that to live in the hearts of those we love is not to die." You, my sister comrades, are to leave this msmorial place, to return to your duties in the world. This world of ours is a big place. a beautiful place, a place. Its loveliness is PHONE 104 NIGHT 237 MINISTER OF HIGHWAYS PROYINCE â€"OF ONTAREIG LIVAN NEWTON AT NEW LOW RATES If you are not insured or fully protected call and see us. some of you to but all to strugâ€" men and women (Established 1912) my sisters, let us look to the hills where the sure things dwell, where things do not changs with the years. But above all to that hill of God where hangs upon a cross one whom a dying world rejects, and in whose hand is a broken reed, an emblem of our failure. and His Kingship, and in whose hands lies the destiny of nations and manâ€" kind. Carry on! Carry on! Fight the good fight and true! Believe in your misston! Greet life with a cheer! There‘s big work to do, And that‘s why you‘re here! Carry on! Carry on! Let the world be the better for you! And at last when you die, Let this be your cry, Carry on, my soul, carry on! are proved, and upon who pend Heaven and Hell. TIry The Advance Want Advertisements SERVICE 21 PINE STREET NORTH TIMMINS, QONTARIO emblem of our failure. p, and in whose hands of nations and manâ€" issues de

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