Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 24 Jun 1937, 1, p. 4

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FOR SALEâ€"Used double deck bunks, wood burner camp ranges, and heatâ€" ers. Apply Crawley McCracken Company, Limited, Sudbury, Ontario. â€"45â€"46â€"54p FOR SALEâ€"4â€"foot jackpine wood; counter scales, coffee mill, meat slicer, sausage stuffer, meat chopper, "Jack Frost" ice machine; one tracâ€" tor, 2 chicken coops, store counters, etc. All deals cash. Apply Nick Blaâ€" hey, Third Avenue. 42â€"43t1f FOR RENTâ€"Fourâ€"roomed unfurnished apartment. Threeâ€"piece bath. All newly decorated. At 9 Bannerman Avenue. Apply 30 Fifth Avenue, upâ€" stairs, R. Paul. â€"40 COMPRESSOR â€"GASOLINE PORTâ€" ABLE SULLIVANâ€"â€"Like new. 310 feet cubic, latest model with Gardner Denver drill, also steam boiler with hoist, sacrifice for quick sale. Box 455, or phone 1218, Timmins." â€"49p WRITE FOR PRICES OF FPARMS FOR SALEâ€"Suited for choice fruit and early garden land, in the Niaâ€" gara Peninsula, the garden of Canâ€" ada. Wellington Gilmare, Realtor, Welland, Ont. ~48â€"49p Fiveâ€"Yearâ€"Old Girl Unafraid of Snakes ASnakes, bloodâ€"suckers and frogs hold no terrors for little Florence Baillie, fnveâ€"yearâ€"old of J. L. Baillie, who spent the last three weeks in the vicinity of Chaplesau gathering species of birds. She showed genuine regret Sunday morning, at having to leave a collection of frogs behind when the party was packing up to move on to Biscotasing. Naturalist‘s Daughter Imâ€" presses People of Chapâ€" leau. HMHas Slept in Open Florence has spent part of every year during her short life in the open. Before she was a year old, on an exâ€" pedition with her father along Lake Erie, she slept in the open with the sky for a canopy. â€" In ‘her summer travels about the province, she has been to Bruce Peninsula, Parry Sound, as well as in Northern Ontario. She takes the same active interest in things that other children her age do, and while reluctant to have her picture taken, jumped up with alacâ€" rity and posed when promised a great big candy "sucker." With a collection of nearly 90 speâ€" cies of birds shipped to the Royal Onâ€" tario Museum of Zoology, J.â€"L. Baillie and C. E. Hope left Chapleau Sunday for Biscotasing.. Mrs. Baillie and Florâ€" ence Baillie accompanied them. . On Friday afternoon a special lecture with ecoloured slides of the birds caught in this district was given by Mr. Baillie in the auditorium of the Memorial Hall. *# This is not just another Washer. It is an entirely new principle of washing clothes and it positively is superior. Westinghouse engineers developed an agitator that rolls the clothes over 34 times each minute and drives 107 currents of water through them at the same time. The clothes are not touched by the agitater.. All the harsh wrenching aciion which has kept your mending basket full is entirely eliminated. Clothes cannot tangle, the sheerest silks and fabrics may be washed indefinitely without the slightest harm and because they are always free and fluffed. Westinghouse new cushion action washers wash faster and cleaner. The mechanism is designed entirely on the opposed metal principle, without a single bushing used. The machine is built to Westinghouse precision, is absolutely silent 3 and so vibrationless. a nickle can be balanced on the lid while under full load. Equipped with the world‘s best automatic wringer, finicthed in a variety of harâ€" manizing colours, Westinghouse is a thing of glistening, lasting, beauty. Your motor is protected by the exâ€" clusive Westinghouse Sentiuel Breaker. There are no places to oil Westinghouse Washers. They are finished in DuLuxe, guaranteed for life again=t rust and over 200 satisfied delighted ladies in this area gladly testify and enthuse over this great machine. See one in operation. Examine the different models, priced from $79.50 with terms on our budget plan as low as $5.00 per month. Quality considered, Westinghouse Cushion Action Washers are the cheapest machine in the world, We will take your old machine as down payment and we ask you please see Westinghouse before purchasing any washer. 39 Third Ave., Timmins Lynch Electrical Appliance Co. All colours, all models on display at the Hame of Westinghouse The Schumacher Hardware and Furniture Co., Schumacher The Porcupine Hardware Co., South Porcupine Sold and on Display at our Associates‘ FOR SALEâ€"Sevenâ€"roomed house; newâ€" ly remodelled; large furnace; all conâ€" veniences. And twoâ€"roomed shack at rear. Cash or terms. Apply 5 Kirby Avenue, phone 2098â€"W. 47â€"48â€"49p FOR SALEâ€"Fourâ€"roomed house at 123 Hollinger ILane. Cheap for cash. Apply J. Daly, 125 Hollinger Lane. â€"~26t1 FIVEâ€"ROOMED HOUSE AND NEW GARAGEâ€"Very cheap, must be sold this week. Price so low you couldn‘t build for that. Apply 159 Birch Street North. Cash or payments. â€"~49â€"50p CALENDAR SALESMAN WANTEDâ€" Energetic representative, preferably experienced. Wellâ€"known, exclusive Canadian line. Write Box S. P., The Porcupine Advance. â€"48â€"409 HELP WANTEDâ€"Firstâ€"class plumbers wanted. Apply Smith and Elston, 71 Third Avenue, Timmins. â€"409 All Citizens of Timmins are asked to decorate their homes and business places, and use every endeavour to reâ€" frain from parking their cars on town streets during Old Home Week. J. P. BARTLEMAN, Communists Find British Citizenship Very Useful 40 The last report showed that they had seen over 90 varieties, including a blackâ€"billed cuckoo, a redâ€"wing and a pine siskin. Of these 34 were breeding. Added to the collection were a blue bird, a hermit thrush and cedar waxâ€" wing besides a number of other varieâ€" ties. (From Sudbury Star) Once again it has been shown that British citizenship is something greatly to be cherished. One Bert Levy, vt Windsor, recently returned from fighting on the side Of the Spanish Socialists. Incidentally, at a mass meeting in Windsor last week he influenced his hearers to cough up the sum of $48.45 which of course will be immediately converted into a money crder, payable in Madrid, Valencia, Barcelona, or wherever the Leftists happen to be hanging out on that hapâ€" py day. The main point in the story, however, is that Levy, a communist who doesn‘t have much to say complimentary to Pritish institutions, can thank Britain that he has a whole skin toâ€"day. When he and a group of playmates were capâ€" tured by Franco‘s forces they were Aat first taken for Russians. The firing squad,. therefore, was indicated. But when the insurgents learned their prisâ€" oners were ‘"English," they went through the motions of a court marâ€" tial, then quietly dumped the boys over thne French border. And so Levy arrived home safe and sound. Special badges will be distributed on Monday, June 28th, to all men and woâ€" men who were in the district twenty years ago or who have lived here for twenty years. The badges are of gilded metal and with a transparent celluloid section in the middle for the insertion of the wearer‘s name, so it will be posâ€" sible to recognize all the oldâ€"timers. The special badges will be distributed from a registration tent on the Central public school grounds, corner of Pine and Fourth. The badges are free and all oldâ€"timers are asked to call for them. SPECIAL BADGES FOR THE PIONEERS OF THE PORCUPINE Buy a Cushioned Action Washing Machine, made entirely in Hamilton, Ontario, by the Canadian Westinghouse and you will have placed in your home the finest washer ever built. Folks PROCLAMATION Open Evenings Mayor MAID WANTEDâ€"At once. Apply J. Martin‘s Store, 52 Third Avenue, Timmins. â€"49 Please take notice that the Court of Revision of the Township of Tisdale will sit in the Council Chambers, South Porcupine, at the hour of ten o‘clock in the Forenoon of Monday, the 5th aay of July, 1937, to hear and determine the appeals in the matter of the Asâ€" sessment Rolls for the Municipality of the Township of Tisdale for the Year 193"7. Dated at South Porcupine, this 23rd day of June, 1937. FRANK C. EVANS, Clerk of the Corporation of the 40 Township of Tisdale Annual Report of the Dentonia Gold Mines Annual report of Dentonia Mines, which ‘controls Durango Gold Mines, operating the Howard Mine, Porcupine Creek, West Kootenay district, B.C., reveals current assets as at March 31, 1937, of $272,032, consisting of $5,258 cash and supplies, investments of $101,â€" 774 and shares of Durango Gold Mines at cost of $165,000. Current liabilities amount to $3,159, with $94,778 owing in respect of purchase of 947,775 shares of Durango. Loss on operations for the year was $48,291, which reduced earned surplus to $64,771. Dentonia‘s main interest now is conâ€" trol of Durango, which is being preâ€" pared for production, mill equipment from the Dentonia property being inâ€" stalled. Durango has agreed to pay back $130,000 to Dentonia out of profits from operations in such amounts and at such times as the directors deterâ€" mine, and after payment of 15 per cent. of smelter returns to the vendor of the Durango properties in liquidation of property payments of $56,313. Young Lady Had Argument in Answer to the Referee Meeting of Nationalities Called for Tomorrow Night We remember hearing several of the hockey enthusiasts last winter moaning about the lack of knowledge of the sport displayed by many of the girls they squired to the games. The baseâ€" ball season brings them out too, say the boys. At the game between Sudâ€" bury and Frood Mine the other night, a Frood player was hit by the ball thrown by the second baseman to first, as he was being chased back to first base on an aitempted steal. One fair Sudbury rooter booâ€"ed the umpire when he callâ€" ed the runner safe, and on being "shushed" by her male companion, she replied . . . "Well, we used to put them cut like that at school and we played good baseball." The following is from ‘"Mainly for Women," in The Sudbury Star:â€" Toâ€"morrow night representatives of each national organization in Timmins and the Porcupine are asked to meet at the radio studio at eight o‘clock in order to complete plans for Internaâ€" tional Day, Monday, in the celebration of Timmins Silver Jubilee and Porcuâ€" pine Old Home Week. in the costumes of their native lands. At the dball park in the evening, 8 number of national music groups are expected to contribute to the festivities. _ Plans for International Day include the appearance of as many as possible NOTICE OF COURT OF REVISION Township of Tisdale Phone 1870 THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMINS, ONTARIO Mrs. Babineau left toâ€"day for a holi day to Fredericton New Brunswick. Mr. and Mrs. George F. Bradle} Toronto, were the guests of friend Timmins this week. Mrs. Dan Douglas will spenc holiday in Prince Edward Island left toâ€"day. Mr. and Mrs. W. Morris and Mis Jean, Morris, of Kirkland Lake, wert recent visitors to Timmins. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bouille, of Mon treal, were guests of Timmins friend this week. Mrs. T. Roynon has returnt to Kirkland Lake after visiting inins. Bornâ€"on June 21, to Mr. and Mtrs. George Bryson of 281 Eim street north â€"â€"A SOIl. Mrs. A. Kincaid, of Kirkland Lake, formerly of South Porcupine and Timâ€" mins, visited friends in town this week. Mrs. Josenh Wojciechowski and daughter, Louise, left for a brief vacaâ€" tion to Winnipeg. They were accomâ€" tanied by Mrs. J. Budzik. on Bornâ€"on June 20, to Mr. and M1I Anthorny Mancuson, of 74 Wende ay nueâ€"a son. on Bornâ€"on June 19, to Mr. and M wW. L. Potter, of 65 Seventh avenue Bomâ€"Oon June 21, to Mr. and Mi Henri Dixon of 212 Elm street south a daughter, Bornâ€"on June 22, to Mr. and M: Otto Korkela of 27 Holinger avenueâ€" Bornâ€"on June 15, to Mr. and M Joseph Briere, of 24 Tisdale avenue a daughter. Look for advt. on this page. Noted rupture expert will be at the Windsor Hotel, Thursday, Priday and Saturday, July 1st, 2nd, 3rd. Mrs. Rutherford, of Larder Lake, who has been here on a brief visit to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Delahunt, of 7 Tamarack street, returned to her home on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Feldman and their young son, Ronald, motored to Rochester, N.Y., where they are spendâ€" ing a few days visiting Mr. and Mrs. Sam Heicklen. Mrs. Heicklen is Mr. Feldman‘s sister. Mr. Rudoiph Leeman and Mr. Arthut Haapaniemi, of New York, are visiting Miss Esther Leeman and Mr. David Leeman in town. Rudoliph Leeman is the brother, and Mr. Haapaniemi is the cousin of the host and hostess. They will leave on Friday to return to New York~City. Mayor W. Weeks, of Englehart, was a visitor to town yesterday and was welcomed here by the many friends he has made in the town during his long residence in the North. He is always enthusiastic about the North and its development, and, of course, particuâ€" larly loyal to his own town of Engleâ€" hart which he has done so much to build and improve. Mr. and Mrs. David Larcher and chilâ€" dren and Miss Lucy Larcher returned this week from a trip to Ottawa where little Grace Larcher was given treatâ€" ment by an eye specialist. The specialâ€" ist gave the opinion that with rest and Haileybury Chief Did Not Hold His Prisoners a little attenticn the trouble with Grace‘s eyes would soon right itself. As part of the treatment Mrs. Larcher inâ€" tends to take Grace for a camping trip for the summer months. Haileybury, June 24.â€"(Special t9 The Advance)â€"When Chief of Police MacGirr on Tuesday tried out an emergency lockup to suit extraordinary circumstances his plan suffered the legendary fate of best laid schemes when two inebriated gentlemen whom the chief had locked temporarily in a box car thwarted his subsequent inâ€" tentions by cutting their way to freeâ€" dom and disappearing before the offiâ€" cer could return. Chief Mac‘rr, hemeward bound at 2.30 a.m., says ho saw a couple of drunks near the T. N. O. station and when they hid in a handy freight car he simply bolted the door from the outside and went his way, meaning to come for his prisoners later, as the court house cells already accommodated five guests. But, when the chief came back, the pair had gone, and investigation showed they had whittled an opening in the car door near encugh to the bolt to permit a hand to be extended from the inside and draw the fastening. When I wrote about Sir Rober Horne‘s new title I asked whethner i would be Lord Horne or Lord Siaman nan. It seems that he has decided t« have it both ways and the decision i sensible. The retention of his own nam: saves him from the fate of many political who hasâ€"so far as the publi is concernedâ€"lost his identity throug! the adoption of a purely territoria title. And "Lord Horne of Slamannan still pays a nice little compliment t his native place.â€"Glasgow Bulletin. Los Angeles Times:â€""Life‘s harde ups and downs are keeping up appea ances and keeping down expenses." HIS NEW â€" TIVTLE returned home visiting in Timâ€" spend ht Marriage at Iroquois Falls on Thursday Last Mayor Left Yesterday and Session of Council Short Wedding music was played by Miss Marquis and during the signing of the register Miss Johnston sang "O Promise IN CAPSULE FORM TAKEN INTERNALLY Yesterday‘s session of the town counâ€" i1 got through the usual amount of usiness and yet was not long drawn ut., No time was wasted. There were wo main reasons for the prompt atâ€" ention given to business. Councillor Vren did not waste council‘s time for avertising purposes, and the mayor ranted to catch the 5.20 train for Torâ€" Iroquois Falls, June 28.â€"With snapâ€" ragons, stock and baby‘s ‘breath iorning St. Anne‘s Church, Rev. Fr. elletier officiated at a pretty summer edding Thursday, June 17, when Dora, aughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Regimâ€" al, became the bride of Paul Gignac n of the late George Gignac and Mrs. at ide NO OINTMENTS REQUIRED We are all ready to supâ€" ply you with everything to make the celebration a bhg event. Baok of Timmins souvenirs that you will want to keep as remindâ€" ers of the good old town. All suitably inscribedâ€" Post Cards, China pieces and useful leather goods. The official Jubilee pubâ€" lication with scores of photos of the districtâ€" beth old and new, and the complete history of the â€" Porcupine _ Camp. A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT en in marriage by her father, the wore a gown of white satin in »ss style with a mohair picture The bridal bouquet was of roses iles of the valley. er the ceremony, a reception was it the home of the bride‘s parents ‘ the bride‘s mother received in n of blue georgette, redingote style, vyore a corgage of roses and lilies OLD HOME WEEK wWoOre _â€"On Registration No. 17531 SPECIALS Comic Hats Noisgemakers Confetti Streamers "HEMâ€"Oâ€"RITE" C pIRECTI oNSs: One Capsule Every TwoHours, PILE REMEDY om‘s mother chose black lace a bouquet of roses. 1@ ‘bride and groom left for Montreal. For travelling the ‘‘a grey suit with blue accesâ€" their return they will live at .Price.$1_-99“ for w ies sns m on +# mm mss * z * w04 . zns i \ x 4 _ . C cce w i i t t n Exâ€"Lax â€" 15¢35¢ Sponges â€" â€" 25¢ Kolynos Tooth Paste â€" 28¢ Klenzo Tooth Brushes Briten Tooth Paste Poaowder Puffs â€" â€" Marvelous Makeâ€"up Kit $1.25 value. Special ....... 65¢ Special Pad and Envelopes Both _ 0st 209¢ Elkay‘s Moth Crystals. Reg. T5e. Special 39¢ Woodbury‘s Facial Soap 10¢ ssmAAA css 25¢ We will loan you a camera for 2 days with the purchase of 3 rolls of film. â€" Take advantage, of this unusual offer over weekâ€"ends and holidays. ‘AMERAS â€" PHOTOS KODAKSâ€"$5 tp $15 Mimzy, Rhumba, Teza, Lotus D‘Or, Tweed and Miracle gress $I the very bor Relations Act cally intended, a title, "to diminish disputes." Senat« frankly expressed Bond Church,, Toronto, is quitting the pulpit to manage a 57â€"acreâ€"farm in the Grimsby fruit district, valued at $75,000 Oh, well, if it‘s that kind of farm. there‘ll be some hired help to exhort.â€" Woodstock Sentinelâ€"Review. c up; Coloured 75¢ up @river UNIVERSAL ENLARGEMENTS 50¢ â€" $1.50 dram ich foCc 1Y Lentheric Cologne Exclusive Agent for QUITTING THE FOMENTING STRIKES French Imported ntro apidly has been ies of spectacuâ€" production inâ€" ime, the whole »ther so hastily itself lacks efâ€" succession O hich have folâ€" he CILO., and ations of power AY BLLIC Modess _ Listerime Antiseptic â€" Alkaâ€"Seltzer on of the| Th Cameras $14.95 Projectors $2 Now you can have moving pi tures that cost you less tha snapshots with a Univex, Developing Call in. see this equipment and ask for demonstration and full particulars, Film, 30 ft. roll (Kingston Whigâ€"Standard) The people who are hardest hit today are the middle class people. The rich even after paying very high taxes, still have enough left to enable them to live comfortably and often luxuriously. The very poor are better looked after today than they ever were. It is the man on the moderate income who is trying to buy his little home, educate | his family, keep up his insurance savâ€" ings, and try to put by a little for the inevitable "rainy day" who finds the going hardest. MOVING PICTURES Fresh Strawberry Sundae â€" â€" with whipped cream Middle Class Hardest »Hit by Conditions Today the two countric dial. burger sandwich is beir from the United States Britain. Just when rela a most persistenl Of letting folks k1 his insistent bra;: The busy little Bulls bellow and c( The watch dogs common sense 0 Yet every time s cackles forth the The mule, the mos hen is common gqua £ peacoCck quawks, p d even setr LOOK® LIKE NMMSTAKEF HANDY SIZE ind â€" > i $0€ 2‘)( 2 for 53¢ â€" * 6 for 25¢ s J¢, re ac 2 for 39¢ 49c, 19¢ 33¢, 69¢ 10c ht ;:~â€"The hamâ€" ing introduced 3 y mio Great ations between become so corâ€" nhave much ODC¢ a n hiss and ha ha he

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