222 Ks ht at o Ni <thl +A hane stt d 4 AA A _ A te modemng has been completed now. < mm 40 +# + esn 7. wk " 64 * k ' se s w .,â€" . l n 30 d h t 2 Ti £ w# # # â€" ho 39 $ P o it ie o 0 3. C i C ol s # $ â€"tel. Since then business has. stea.dily increased and more extended accomâ€" _ modation was found necessary. This mpgeg the proprietor, George Bacon, toâ€"completely remodel the building and also to add to its size. All} ‘this reâ€" The Three Star Hotel recently re- *ï¬ho North It is located at No. 9 Maple street north, and provides that section of the town with excellent hotel service throughout.. The Threeâ€" Star Hotelyhas all â€"the modern conveniences and agpointments There is a complete ‘ } ’shings and equipment ‘The Three Star Hotel was. tg@ opmed in May ‘of 1936, and was the Three Star Hotel One of Best Equipped in North Alterations and Enlargement Now Completed. Twentyâ€" . Ewo Unusually Well Equipped Rooms. Service and %guipm’ent Upâ€"toâ€"date and Comfgrï¬able. Credit to the own. . _ :. it € â€" GEORGE BACON CONTRACTOR 79 Slxth Avenue - TlMMINS P. QO. BOX 1200 .AT MODEST OR WEEK HOT COLD RUNNING "WATER Three Star Hotel NTIRELY FIREPROOF _ AND _ a very creditable small hoâ€" . Remodelling: Roofing Paper Concretée Work â€" Lumber Building Materials THREE STAR HOTEL _ MAPLE ST. N. â€"The extensive remodelling and renovating contract at the Three Star Hotel, is now completed, and as a result The § Three Sta;" Hotel, is one of Timmins finest and one of the _ . North‘s most modern hotels. eut with the very latest furnishings n)aking it ideal for the co:nplete comfort of guests. Convenlent fire escapes have been installed for exit from every ... room and new sanitary, modern and upâ€"toâ€"dat2 plumbing fixtures have been lnstalled throughout. For perfect comfort during the winter months a new boiler installation has been completed for the heating and air-conditioning of the hotel. Three telephones conveniently located around the Three Star Hotel add to the many minute services offered guests occupying the harâ€" ,lnonions living room and bed room suites. l.nvitlng lounge room for guests, private ladies‘ room on main floor, restaurant serving meals every day and a la carte menus until midâ€" night every night add to the pleasure of residing at the Three Star. The 22 rooms with baths have been completely furnished throughâ€" §§in high. quality..Patrons of. the hoâ€" éemark: on the quietness maintained tet remark on the quietness maintained and the comfort and convenience of greater part of his life in Canada, is proving an excellent host. Mr. Bacon has been a resident of Timmins since 1912. When he first arrived here he seâ€" cured work at the Hollinger Mine and the day or week. all the other equipment and convenâ€" lence to make a first class hotel. The bedrooms are worthy of special note. Not only are they handsomely decorâ€" ated, but the furniture and equipment are the latest in style and comfort. High quality mattresses and Hudson Bay ‘blankets are special features in the furnishings of all bedrooms, while other‘ items of: equipment are of the There are 22 bedrooms now, as well as Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon are the YOU‘RE . WELCOME AT THE THREE STAR / Floor Scraping Sash and Doors Insul Board Northernâ€" News:â€"Thanksgiving Day comes shortly after the election, and the question is just who will be ‘celeâ€" bratingâ€"Hepburn or Rowe? [host and hostess of the. Three Star Hotel and carry througH their duties in‘ very able way. Nothing is forgotten to add to the comfort of guests and the: :pleasing of patrons is the first conâ€" ,sideration. Mr. Bacon, who was born in Roumania, but who has spent the: he continued there for some 23 years. He is well known not only in the town but throughout the whole North. Mr. Bacon first opened the Three Star Hoâ€" tel in May of last year, the building having been erected particularly for hotel purposes. When first built it was thought that it would be amply large enough for some time to. come, but the increasing patronage soon â€"taxed its facilities With commendable promptâ€" ness, Mr. Bacon decided to improve and enlarge the hotel to meet the needs of the increased patronage. This ‘good. work has just been completed and all. who have patronized the hotel, or even j paid it an occasional visit of inspection, areâ€" agreed »that theâ€"Threeâ€"Starâ€" Hotel is one of the finest and bestâ€"equipped hotels for a municipality no larger than | this, t sls hss A little. more than five years ago, the air conditicning industry had attained the velocity of a light summer breeze; toâ€"day, from a business standpoint, it has reéeached whirlwind proportions and econmnists maintain that it will conâ€" tribute â€"to the national wealth in a deâ€" gree comparable to the development of the automobile and the radio. These â€"same economists estimate that approxiâ€" mately $200,000, 000 ¢will be the sum toâ€" tal of air conditioning equipment inâ€" staned in; Canada and the United I_'Stateduring 1937. ~‘Past the experimetal â€"stage, the new andvexciting industry has been grovwâ€" ing by and bounds. Installations have been made in office buildings, theatres, department stores, hotels, hospitals, manufacturing plants, the great ocean liners, the crack transâ€" and . its corhforts are: being brought within the. reach of all, Air conditionâ€" ing will definitely be a factor in the future, we are assured by forwardâ€"looking people. (By R. A. McStay in "C.LL. Oval") Mark Twain was wrong! The most wldely-circulated observation of this American humorist was to the effect t.hat people talk a lot about the weaâ€" ther but never do much about it; what the public did last year, on this conâ€" tinent alone, was to spend something like ~$60,000,000 on air conditioning equipment which would ensure inside comfort on the hottest day ‘featured in 'the headlines! ; People are talking about t,he weather but the aspects of this converâ€" sational topic are taking, on a cheerier note.. ‘Distinctively a product of the 20th cehtury," manufactured weather Now They‘re Making: Weather to Order Air Conditioning is Aided by Discovery of New Refriâ€" gerant. * MR. AND MRS. GEORGE BACON host and hostess at the Three Star Hotel, 9 Maple Street North The hotel has recently been enlarged and improved and is now one of the most attractive in this part of the North. - l | Beautifully > WHERE EVERY GUEST > IS AN HONORED ONE Furnished i a 3. v.’.0000000000000.00000’000000’0000’0600’0 z* 1B ‘TESs AT THREE 9T Standardization :of equipment will ultimately, as in other manufacturing fields, further. lower the cost of air eonditiomng in the dwelling of toâ€"morâ€" row. Just as refriguration is toâ€"day a household necessity,â€"so air conditioning will be a requisite of the home of the future, brlnm as it does fair weather indoors each day of the year. Thus, engineering â€" and chemistry, hand in hand, have mastered the maâ€" jor problems and the present boom in air conditioning has been an outcome. Manufactured weather in the home is now expected to be the next general development; toâ€"day, yearâ€"round â€" air conditicning is being brought within the reach of the homeaowner of â€"modâ€" erate income. â€" Chemistry contributed to the refrigâ€" eration industry a neyv refrigerant particularly suited to air conditioning, and sold under, the trademark "Freon." The chemist casually refers to this new refrigerant as diâ€"chloroâ€"diâ€"fluoroâ€"meâ€" thane. As wel} as being an efficient reâ€" frigerant, "Freon"â€"to use its simpler labelâ€"has the additional attributes of being nonâ€"flammable and nonâ€"explosâ€" ive., When mixed with air it is odourâ€" less and does not irritate the eyes, nose, throat or lungs. Truly,, this major contribution of the chemist was an important steppingâ€"stone to the presentâ€"day success of air conditioning. A survey shows that a large majority of the manufacturers of refrigerators and airâ€"conditioning equipment are toâ€" day using "Freon." .In the case of refrigerants, these gases absorb heat and remove it. from a compartment, which may be either the food container or a refrigerator or. the interior of an entire building. Since it is not desirable to have exâ€" tremes of cold and heat, the manufgcâ€" tured weather inside is accurately conâ€" trolled by thermostatic arrangements which stop and start the air condiâ€" tioning equipment to insure uniform comfort in all seasons of the year. Apart from the gffect on the sensiâ€" bilities, the average person still lacks an accurate conception of just what air conditioning is. In nonâ€"technical terms, the aim is to produce air of preâ€" determined temperature and moisture content and to kep it so despite exâ€" ternal influences. This applies to yearâ€" round weather conditions. In summer, air conditioning equipment» circulates cool and dried air; in winter, it circuâ€" lates warm and moistened air. Modern air conditioning equipment also proâ€" vides for the filtering of dust and germs which, of course, are even more dangerous indcors than out, from the. health standpoint. Paradoxically to the layman, the principle of refrigeration and air conditicning is that heat makes cold. The illustration of the wet bathing suit is a case in point. The warm breeze of summer often becomes un pleasantly cool once the swimmer has emerged from the water. The explanaâ€" tion is that evaporation is taking place, the water on the suit is returning to its vapour state, this requires heat, which is supplied by the body of the bathing suit wearer In rural: parts of Canada. there still are found in use the speciallyâ€"conâ€" structed storehouses for the preservaâ€" tion of food and dairy products. Someâ€" times these are built across a stream Or set into a shaded hillside. The strucâ€" ture .above a well often houses milk and other perishable products. But it was the development of refrigerants and the control of heat. and cold by chemical and mechanical means that was really the forerunner of what toâ€" day is termed air conditioning. © Earlier than this, of course, was the problem of protecting food . supplies from deteriorating. «To this houseâ€" wifely gim may be Attributed the reâ€" sults obtained in refrigeration and moâ€" dern air conditioning. _ It is interesting to note that the Criginal â€" industrial problem solved by modern air conditioning was encounâ€" tered in the: printig trade when it was found that paper was distorted by atâ€" mospheric humidity It was later disâ€" covered that this could be offset by the use 6f an atomizedâ€"spray of cold water which dehumidified the warm air in the ‘vicinity, of © the printing-proce machinery.. . Air conditioning is now playing a viâ€" tal part in many industries. While the possibilities originally lay in the field of human comfort, this new brainâ€" child of the 20th Century scientists and engineers has brought manifold beneâ€" fits to scores of manufacturing and finishing plants, > pa.rticularly in the food and textile‘ fields. It ‘has resulted in speedier and cheaper: production operations; the lowéred cost of these commodities has been passed on to the consumer. â€" ‘ continental railway fliers, the mansion and the modest home. s and ability. The Northern Tribune, of Kapuskasing, adds another chapter to the story of Mr. Noble‘s forward march, in the following little article:â€" Director of Spruce Falls Co. "Congratulations are due to our leadâ€" ing townsman, Mayor E. S. Noble, genâ€" eral manager of the Spruce Falls Power and Paper Co., upon his promoâ€" tion to the position of a director of the company. This action took place at a directors‘ .meeting in New York last week, which was attended by the general manager. / The many friends of E. S. Noble, for several years manager of the Northern Canada‘ Power Co, at Timmins, and during thatâ€"time serving several terms as town councillor,> will be interested and pleased to learn of his continued progress in life due to his own merit Former Timmins Man Now _~Director of Pulp Company We Extend Congratulations and Wishes of Success e ~Ny, _TO THE THREE STAR HOTEL The chairs and tables, furnishings and the inlaid cemented linoleum in the Three Star Hotel were supplied by the | Ideal Hardware Co., Ltd. 62 Third Ave. v Phone 182 J. E. H. Chateauvert, Mgr. LIBERAL TRADEâ€"IN ALLOWANCE ON YOUR > OLD STOVE. Inspect OQur Display of New Beach Stoves and Ranges. BEST WISHES Ideal Hardware AND HEARTY COMPANY LIMITED Canada Lumberman: â€"Few people ever travel the road to success without an occaslonal puncture. suggest that neither Chinese nor Japâ€" anese are to be trusted with airplanes and bombs. b. q "He has been mayor of Kapuskasing for ten years, being opposed for that office only once, when ‘he won by a considerable margin." / "Mr. Noble came here in 1926 to asâ€" sume the position of assistant general manager of the Spruce Falls Co., leayâ€" ing an executive post in Timmins with the Northern Canada Power Co. He was a town councillor in Timmins, Serving under the general managerâ€" ship of the late J. HM. Black, he was promotedâ€"to the latter‘s position when Mr. Black resigned to take charge of the Dominion Construction Co. Phone 391 Globe and Mail:â€"Shamighai incidents «J wX T $3 2Â¥ .