Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 15 Dec 1938, 2, p. 1

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[ Inomad i P TT T D -..-'â€"-Mâ€"“â€"‘ [(%oob td WBPA DRAAA A 4A A .â€"‘.â€" | M Architect Onlario Land Surveyor Building Plans Sstimales, Elc. Old P.0O. Blidg., Timmins â€" Phone 362 Langdon Langdon Timmins Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.S8. ARCHITECT 7 Reed Block Timmins 273 Bank St., Ottaw 14 Third Avenue Benson, Sayer Davidson Ontario Land Surveyor Townsites Mining Claims Contracts Municipal Building, Ssouth Poreupine J. E. Taylor, LL.B. Phone 46 Swiss Walchmaker Graduate of the Famous llorlogical Institute of Switzerland DE â€"LUXE BARBER sSHOP D. Pagquetle, proprietor THREE BARBERS IN ATTENDANCE Basement Reed Block, Timmins Service Saltisfaction sanitation Timmins Third Avenue Tired Nerves The RAMSAY COMPANY Tired nerves make you restless, nervous, irritable and sleepless, Most women, and men too, depend on Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food for new nerve force, For new pep and energy use Dr. Chase‘s N E R V E F O 0O D s h P PP L AL L h > P t M i As s ch im E. C. Brewer Ltd. BAILIFPFS, COLLECTORS and AUCTIONEERS Room 6, 3 Pine street North Timmins, Ont. Room 5, 3l1a Government Rd,. W. Kirkland Lake, Ont. DEAN KESTER, K.C. CHARLES H. KERR Barrister CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 701â€"707 Confederation Life Bldg., Toronto. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BUILDING Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. L. 0. L. No. 2552 Timmins,, Ont. Barrister, Solicitior, Etce. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. Ma jor Registcred Patent Solicitors Full Information FREE on Request D. R. FranklIin BARRISTERSâ€"ATâ€"LAW AVOCATS ETâ€"NOTAIRES Barristers, Solicitors, Ele MASSEY BLOCK TIMMIX®, ONT. and South Porcupine S$. A, CALDBICK Visiting Over Pierce Uardware Second Section McINNIS BLOCK . OOnt. PJ} Money to Loan 1101 L it Phone 1365 and Fourth Mondays in | i the Oddfellows Hall. | Brethren Welcome | UH. Cornthwaite W.M. 93q | Solicitor P.0. Box 312 12â€"8â€"38 No. 97 Empire Block Phone 1580 U a, Cian. Notary _ The Qorrnpine Aopanee Timmins Onlario ~14â€"26 14 â€"20 ‘Town Affairs Quickly Disposed of on Monday | mor | lish« _ _The Secretary of the High and Vocaâ€" | tional School Bcard wrcie to inform the iCouncil that the retiring members of the Board this year were Dr. J. B. Mcâ€" Clinton and A. R. Harkness. As it is the custom to have the incoming Council make such appoiriments, the letter was referred to the first mecting the 1939 Town Fathers. _ _The salary of Miss Jean Carie, a Iclcrk in ‘the Relief Department, was ‘raised to $60 a month. A resolvtion ‘ordered payment of $625 to the Volunâ€" | teer Firemen. That amount is the last quarter of the town‘s grars to the fireâ€" men. | OpiMions. _ P n nh n n ies \ The Mayor also wished ¢to remind |mercharsts that there was a town byâ€" law which entitled them to keep their stores open in the evenings for six days ‘before Christmas if they wished to do th cil. OuU Oc "We don‘t sympa said Councillor Wren milk should be past we ignore it." The that. Monda of.; In Su Mayor Bartiecman announced that several telcphone calls had been reâ€" ceived from citizens who wished to know if Tuesday, December 27, would be a holiday. The Council was agreoâ€" able to the idea of making a holiday of this day, said the Mayor, bws; it wished to know the desire of the merâ€" chants. The Council could not do anyâ€" thinz until the morchants voiced their Want Brantfora Boy Home for Christmas The usual grant of $1,200 was orderâ€" ed paid the Mayor. Councillor Wren, who wrote the resolution at the Mayor‘s request, said that he did not know if the amount should e called an honorarium so, in his resolution, he described it as "the annual fes," paid the Mayor. 80 Missing Youth Thought to be in the North. 1jTC quosed sayinmnyg:â€" HC S home. His mother‘s nearl want him here. If he ha hbhe can write for it and We‘re praying that he will Christmas." ‘ouncil Not in Sympathy with Natural Milk Organization, Would Know if Merchants Want Holiday on l)cceml)e 2420 "Annual Fee" Awarded to Mavor. anization know: roducers and C ut that a> Proj urization. The letter included a resolution to be ssed by the C:uncil protesting against e law. It was iznored by the Counâ€" 1) Every MONDAY and THURSDA YÂ¥ ‘ Small amount Oi that demanded the ‘ouncil at it regula ay allernoon was qt n less than an hou J3 On SoI had not hat mill nNri MUGGS_ AND SK CETER id the letter, me farmers. ot been cdefini / COomME onl ! Enlisd UP ~go .. YA gGoT FRAANKEuRTEA®sSs Fef? oesseR@t! "TLIEA! YA KiA GOQ OUT N‘G@T ME A oLLaR So‘sS we Kin eV‘ FUun !! _ YA KAINT BEAT EyA tr) } ti® yCaALr m‘lh pastcurized. I suggest The Council did just )1 11 ved from an orâ€" The Natural Milk mers. It pointed al law passed in makes it compulâ€" pasteurized. The n January, 1989. : letter, worked a rmers. Furthorâ€" Ont.. Canada )i DuSiâ€" he attercion ol lar meeting on quickly disposed ur the imceting c w‘h them," We believe that 11 has asked assist the The boy is een windâ€" en he left ir as Sudâ€" t ho sought agency in done. We no moncy 1 send it e back for y estab for pas Says First Aid Handbook Should Go With Every C; If automobile manufacturers would supply an illustrated first aid handâ€" book with every car, it would heip to cut down the "dire and far too freâ€" quently disastrous results following automobile accidents." The proposal of a first aid handâ€" book with every automible was made by Dr. Charles S. Venable, of San Antonio, Tex., at the meeting of the Southern Medical Association, Science Service reports. The folding jack handle in every car makes a good arm or leg splint Dr. Venables said, but unfortunately Mr. John Q. Public does not know this. Neither, Dr. Venable pointed out, does Mr. Public know that a piecce of fence or a small limb from a tree can b2 used for a splint, Instead of using such handy vbjects, he jacknifes a person with leg or back broken in an auto accident into the back seat of a car. As a result a simple broken leg bone may result in lifelong disability.. Or the patient â€"with the broken back, doubled up into the rear seat instead of being left flat on the ground until an ambulance comes, arrives at the hospital with his spinal cord crushed and may be paralyzed or dic. If the patient with broken back or neck is kept in a flat, horizontal position, Dr. Venable explained} he has a good chance to recover without disability. Temptation Nets Earl Fine or Thirty Days Three cardinal principles of first aid which should be universally known, Dr. Venable claims, are the recognition and proper treatment of shock, the conâ€" trol of hemorrhage, and the fixation by splints of joints both above and beâ€" low a broken bone and the danger of bending the body or neck of a person who complains of pain in these regions. ‘"He struck his nose up a listle too close and I couldn‘ resist the temptaâ€" tion to let him have it," Earl Ritchie told the court on Tuesday afternoon, when he was convicted on a charge of assaulling Peter Boychuk. "Well I can‘t resist the temptation to let you have ‘," promptly retaliat2d Magistra‘le Atkinson, imposing a fine of $20 and costs with the altrrnative of thirty days in jail. Boychuk told che court that he orâ€" dered Ritch‘s out of his studio when he found him going through a pile of his music. Ritchic struck him and threw him to the ground. There was blocd all over his face and hsad. Ritchic pummelled him until another man pulled him off. "Stuck His Nose a Little Too Close," Says Earl Ritchic. "Can‘t Resist Temptation to Let You Have It," Says Magistrate. Mrs. Roy Committed to Institution. Boychuk was of battlec. ~*X ds po up th» floo handful Bovchu} thr sno im Tll 11 TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15TH, 19383 was mlll bearing the scars A dark s‘iain under ons cyoe the severity of the assaiult. said Boychuk i@iwice hat and ccat out into the brouzht them back in both > second <ime Boychuk beâ€" it<at him. like the idea of his hollerâ€" en the same penalty on a charge of disorderly conducs. Two drunk charges against a pair of old offenders rach drew fines of $50 and costs or thirty days. Convicted of illegal consumption of winc,. three men were each given the alternative of $25 and costs or Shiny days in jall. For having liquor in his posscssion without the necessary perâ€" mit, Peter Robillard was fined $200 and costs.. Thomas Lepine was convictod of boezging. Officers said he d‘d ncthing cls» and would not work. He was sentâ€"toâ€"jail for thirty days. Gilbert Roy was charged with nonâ€" support last. weck. At ¢‘.rat time he promised ;¢o work if given suitable clothing. Mr. Martin, Relief Inspector, told the ccurt last Tuesday Roy hnad been given all the clothingzg he asked for. He worked for two and a half days out of seven and then stopâ€" ped. (From New York Worldâ€"Telegram) The most valuable single adjunct to liberty yet won by humanity in all its thousands of years of struggle is free speech and free press. Depotism canâ€" not thrive where these exist. So long as men speak and print the truth no Hitler or Stalin can drive them like cattle in directions they do not wish to go. "Give light and the people will find their own way." Kincardine Neéews: Were C living today he would write, â€" the land, to hastening ills where "debt" accumulates and cay." "I don‘t suppose they could s you with enough. You apparently don‘t like work," sad the Magis "‘T‘wo months hard labour." Commiltled to Institution Magistrate Atkinson read a letter from the Department of Jusiice to the effect that Mrs. Maria Roy, who was charzed with att:â€"mpted murder, had been cxamined and was found to be mentaly ill. The letser said that the woman would be commilted *to an Onâ€" Halifax Chronicle: Conscripting the rich in a campaign for increasing the turnover of tax blanks and treasury notes obviously cannot possibly solve the problem of putting men to work and of increasing the standard of living among our working classes. "They didn sald Roy. Deen and WaSs iC mentaly il. The sai woman would be commilted tario Menlal Hospital. % * % . % ® ® ¢ PREE SPEEECH 4 # 4 4 F.4 uppose they could upply enough tiaiery could You apparenlly just Were Golasmith Ill fares a‘ prey: men deâ€" loth Outlines V.O.N. Work to Kiwanis Club Here "pull her chestnuts out of the fire." That fiction has been spread sedutlousâ€" ly by antiâ€"British propagandists in the United States and Canada. There was never any> warrant for it Winston Churchill, in a wild moment, degraded his country by a futile and undignified appeal, but Winston Churchill speaks neither for the government nor for the people. No responsible Rritish leader has ever suggested that America should do anything which she does not feel impelled to do in her own interest That it is for her own interest to stand with the democracies if a strugâ€" gle should come, many peopleâ€"many of her own leadersâ€"believe, but the majority of the people must be conâ€" vinced of that before they will take action. It is for their leaders to conâ€" vince them and for the people themâ€" selves to dcecide. If they do decide to take part once more in the critical affairs of the world, they will be welâ€" comed by the other democracies, but till they decide neither the British government nor its spokesmen will waste words by trying to lead them. Mr. Eden, who has come to this side by invitation and with the approval of his government, is not here, as he says, o lecture, but to lcarn. Hhorman Grieco, fortyâ€"sevenâ€"yeatrâ€" old cobbler, of Memphis, Tenn., faces the task of spending $30,000 in 90 days. His mother died in Italy, leaving him an estate valued at about $30,000 but Italian officials have advised him he could take none of it froin Italy, They indicated it would be all right for him to go to Italy, but Grieco, a naturalized Amecrican, doesn‘t want to live there and has been able to obâ€" tain only a 90â€"day passport. "MH they won‘t let me bring. the money back Tll show them how an American can spend monecy," he promâ€" ises. Anthony Eden Makes Plain Attitude of Great Britain Managed to Get Into a Lot of Trouble in One Day (RNouynâ€"Noranda Pross) Thomas Chess, 32, who came to Rouyn from Ville Marice with a truck, was taken back to Ville Maric the other day under police escort. He had a litlle trouble in Rouyn. First of all he a taxi with his truck. Then he drove on and did ncy report the acelâ€" dent as ho should have done under the law. Wlhen police caught up with hun, they found hes had no cshauffTeur‘s licoense and on top of all that, he was drunk. â€" Charged under the Criminal Code with driving while intoxicated, hs was sent <{o jail for seven days, wherm ho is cxpected to ponder his misb:â€" ho is hnavior More Than 800 Calls a Month Made in Timmins by Two Victorian Order Nurses. Are Often Thirtyâ€"Ssix Hours Without Sleep. Number Calls Increasing. romises to Spend at the Rate of $333.33 per Day Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Miss Prict, ( nurses, was a manager of th Bamk of Mont New Leader‘s Address Impresses North Delegates (From Sudbury Statr) Sudbury delegates returni last week‘s Conservative co were pariicularly impressed atsention devoted to Northern in the speech of the new lea Gcorge Drew. In a forceful banging his fist on the {able, the convention that his electi mean an end to the solving of t lems of the north through theo know nothing of practical ap "I am prepared to take ady The Victorian Order . Miss Ferguson, is fomy has ninety branches, a year and a half, twelve been opened. The cent Ottawa, from where th sonnel is controlled by 1; cost to she organization The V.O.N. gives bedâ€" Miss Ferguson int Kinkel, who referred being done in Live:r where it is sponsor« Club. cost to she organization. The V.O.N. gives bedâ€"side set homes where the patient cannot hospital treatment. The work stantly undor the supervision of years ago, contlinued MiIiSS P and the number of calls is ir annually. Over 1,000 were 1937. Where the V.O.N. servic tainable, in towns such as the Metropolitan Life: Insuran pany tuys the service. tor and no second visit is home unless a medical m consulted in the interim. Along with nursing serv tion is given the members ilyâ€"instruction in the care All who are visited are pay, although the matier 0 tion is not one of prime Timmins has a particularly in this respect. Over fifty practical m blem conce: will seek a north." that offered chance of b the patients trc pay. A hcartenin platform was 1 in Ontario. While it i promotion in a stage wherdt firms we and min thousand to forestall tbremendclus the provin( tIVC jority Mini: This distric cal men," he concerning t e@(fuU nds ol GOllatrs on 10CaUORNn alon qually <{rue that meathods taks »stall these promoters worked dojus hardship on prospectors . ovinc=>. . Worthwhile propertic ffered at leas a good gamblit : of becoming a mine, went be; )r financing through this restri gislation. ‘ice, one of the local Victorian as visitor and also Mr. Tod, of the Timmins branch of the n the province had reachs re irresponsible, flyâ€"byâ€"nigt able to take moose pastut tlm public of hundreds C d continued â€" M )lutlon from imble. publi dollar at 1J plank "pled Itiwani i1¢ ()] fift her rue that nmunlt ince had reach he n uUp service, ers of the famâ€" care of the sick. ire expecied to er of remunraâ€" ime importance. arly good record ifty per cent. of ore are able to mont!t h1 1s mAQt man has _ ApJ adyv Whio _ with the rn Ontario eader.â€"Col. ffic her party ild minin sS1ng pe°tâ€" ple at no )1 Timn 1CrCE mad 11 Kiwanl! n ) Up in :t By WALLY BISHOP ce In iT ord proD from ntion iab on 106 bee 111 At ob 2£n id €) 1 Presidentâ€"Walter Greaves Secretaryâ€"Treasurerâ€"W. D. Forrester P.O. Box 250, Timmins, Ont, Visiting members of the Legion and exâ€"servicemen are welcomed at the Legion Hall, Cedar St. South,. The next meeting of the branch will be held on MONDAY, DECEMBER 13 Election of Officers they know, too, that on more than equalizes fC ones. The major‘‘sy 0o huyers know how to pr( from the highâ€"powered of unscrupulous promot However, the effect : ments to the security J duce prospecting in On 60 per cent. Recent 8i recorded showed that. the figure in 1938 droj cent. of the staking in | ‘The Conservative pif Bulffalo Express: ‘Th tistry shows the larg increase at the Unive: Thar‘s gold in them t mental Empire Block Credit Reports Collections Accounting and Auditing 10 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228â€"286 P.C),., Box 147 â€"39â€"2 P.0O. Box 1591 J. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. P. H. LAPORTE, C. G. A. Systems Installed Income Tax Returns Filed Phones 270â€"228â€"286 P.O. Box 147 "Musical Art Studio" 72 Maple Street South Timmins HIGHLY â€" QUALIFIED AND EXPERIENCED TEACHER Commended by Eminent British, Canadian and American Musicians 10 Balsam St. North, Timmins, Ont. Accounting Auditing PORCUPINE CREDTT Corporation Ltd. one that v . the north Branch 88 Canadian Legion 0. E. Kristenson DR. E. L. ROBERTS SPECIALIST Eye, Kar, Nose and Throat CMARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENUE Phone 640 We Manufacture and Carry in Stock A WWNIN CS Timmins Ask Your Local Dealer for Prices or send your order direct to WMJ 6. m' CHIROPRACTOR Y NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 607 Pmo\wmo t P P P PA * FLAGS HAVERSACK S SNOWSHOES DOG SLEIGHS TOBROGGANS TARPAULINS TENTS PACK â€" BAGS EIDERDOW N ROBES BKIIS DOG HARNESS HORSE BLANKETS TE Single Copy Five Conts PETERBOROUGH, ONT. Agents Everywhere The Pioneer Paper of the Porcupine. Established 1912. â€"Onsery d ulations to theit r the deve the industr; at will be w PHONE 1112.J Mus, Bac Timmins, Ont pp 136 and Timmins 11 1937 im Ol Ciaimsg 7| proj method hrouzhâ€" stration Buffalo. 14â€"26 repeal detriâ€" JC 11) JC W (

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