Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 3 Jan 1947, 1, p. 8

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uble Feature At | Cartler Mml. Tue: Dana‘ Andreéws, Brian Donlevy,. E Hayward and Patricla Roc tMB] ddeuble talents is Hoagy mnichd whose almost Buster Keaton perfgrn ances and whoseo singing of nig:own ons have won him an everâ€"inergasâ€" ing audience. _ These, together: with the always welcomed appearancea of Ward Bond and Andy Devine, furnish the piece with some firstâ€"rate acting. CRIMINAL COUKT â€" An exciting plot combined ‘with good‘ portrayal by Tom Conway, as a clever lawyetr, and Martha O‘Driscoll in a pleasing this an entertainingâ€"melodrama. There are many courtâ€"room scenes which are suspenseful. A. * @ k Lo ug® oo Tom Conway is running for the: ofâ€" flce of District Attorney. â€" He plans to rid the town of a group of racketeers, when they are apprehended, conway 8 election is assured. Martho O‘Driscoll in a pleasing manner presents | several currently popular musical ballads. June Clayâ€" worth, Addison Richards "andâ€" Pat Gleason are in supporting roles, Mar- tin Mooney produced this mteresting melodrama from screenplay by Law-s rence Kimble. , . "Roaring Rangers" â€" Sat.to Wed. At.Car trer ‘ ;;ncl;le:: :;:snm:; ns Dot *«Rmog me ' FrL Sat’ f o 4 *tetteo‘ Dravis‘ illâ€"fated C Tl, C Dd to § k ie fi’ette‘ mvis ill-fated screen assocâ€" e b ROARING RANGERS â€" Columbia‘s mgv:ngefnm;nfiz siidmiu%zem'rn?: "Durango Kid" series differs : from who succumb$ to a bullet from a Davâ€" other Westerns in that it requires igfired re%o}verin Warne? Bros.‘ "Deâ€" certain amount of mental agility to i on, 1 n] th Br Aa follow Charles Starrett‘s lightningâ€" ggl;tinfir de(:‘l m’t y at the Broadway. zes from the char actel and cos : . char.3 cahkis" Aestmuctive | Davis . influenice ALMA L. 4 5 _ cA A NS AR® : to dh t Wt . C CE 0 0 0 C 0 o 8 uin C W C t tume of Seve Randall, the honest ranger, to that of Durango, the Robin Hood ol the west. In Colbert Clark‘s current production, even more alertâ€" ness is required, for the outlaws, to make the going tough, ring in A false Durango of their own. Thls false Duranrro naturally, makes trouble for eveyone until hesends, up with a bullet in his back, and Starrett; rides tritimphantly into the: sunset, For the rest, the story is the one about the . big, bad . villian, . who, : by fair nieans or foul, atempts to wrest their landholdings the ranchers. â€" ar W i on t snn utm uesc n * Emiley Bm nette, as Starrett‘s friend pictmte with pistol shot that Killed and follower, contributes some slapâ€" a man:. It> was manslaughter when stick comedy and several amusing. she â€"ran aver ‘Aaâ€"child in â€"an>auto ‘acciâ€" song. numbers. Adelle Robcxts is the dent in~"In~ 'l’liis ~Our Life." Davis sirl in the case. y evflâ€"eye in “Bmdertown”‘ Ed-uardo There‘s a strong cast PAGE BIGHT CHARLES STARRETT SATURDAY MORNING . 1045 DOORS OPEN 10 a.m. _ _ FAMOUS â€" PLAYERS MOVIE CLUB ;; For Boys and Glrls "TARZAN and _ _ The AMAZONS”f Color Cartoons: ° â€" Stage Show . Prizes â€" Fun For All Today and Saturday. |[J Monday and Tuesday Shows â€" 1, 3, 7 and 8.50 ROARING RANGERS Hawk No. 7' COMEDY ‘~â€" NEWS The VW MUAAL VJ P ,J 14 h, ring in a win. turally, makes 1 hevends, up . and Starrett ) â€"the: sunset, the one about who, : by fair to wrest their ranchers. arrett‘s friend ic same slapâ€" Fxom then . on the star has continâ€" ued with notable fLequency to bedevil the lives of those who share the screen wih her.: Her veryâ€" presénce in he .,househqld Charles Boyer to slay his . wife . and commit. smcide in "All ‘Bhis and Heaven ‘Too.". Miss . Davis heckled Leslie Howard and Humphrey Bogart throughout "The Petrified Forâ€" est." In "The Letter" she opened the picture with a pistol shot that killed a man:.~ * was manslaughtex when BURNETTE ,- % ‘,‘ ‘Last Time Today _ “Darlmg Clementine" \This destructive _ Davis influence dates back ten years to "Dangerous" when Bette won the Academy Award for 1uming ‘the xespectablc life of Fr am‘:hot Tone ‘Deception . _ f\t Broadway Sat. to Wed. Imckless Victims Dbt Bette Davis‘ ~Road t%0 Film li‘ame : etf;e‘ mfis ill-fated screen assocâ€" hesn increéssed by one. The such a nice girl â€" really." Ciantnelli in "Marked Woman‘"; Henry Fonda (among others). in: "Jezebel"; and, of course, Miss Davis as Elizabeth the Queen steered the rise andâ€"fall of â€" â€"Errol Flynn as Essex in "The Privats Lives of Elizabeth and Essex." So it goes. â€" And Betty Davis‘ only comment on the she prepared to do away with Claude <Rains was; ‘"And I‘m is MA t k t oi i t t o . t Th io *n t ‘seas, to specd medical atnppfi(}s:flandg equipment, and since the end of the war has developed into a full scale . commercial route making. one flight a *daily in cach direction. IN TECBNICOLOR STARRING e‘ nm Andrewsy Brian Donlevy, Smn lhrwal‘d Patricia Roc, noa;y Carmlchael Declaring war on rheumatic diseasâ€" es, National Health authorities urge constant liaison with the family physâ€" ican to aetect signs of trouble. Early symptoms must be. treated seriously if the child is to be given A fighting chance before the gisease attacks cripâ€" ples or kills. What many people shrug off as just. "growing pains‘" in . their young cnes may, in fact, be the velty || signs for which the physician must : |~â€" Many cases of, rheumatic distase exâ€" B ist in Canada and medical people knOw * | that fever wards of children‘s hospita}s "~\| are filled with them. Rheamatic T4s a problem which must be. tacklied gurously, if lives are to be saved. _ Besides Bette. Davis and Rains the drama also stars Paul Henreid. For families with schoolâ€"age chilâ€" ; gren, the Child and Maternal Health â€" Division of the Department of iNaâ€" . tional Health and Welfare (Ottawa), has dxawn up the following "Safety . Rules" which, it says, should become the “order of the day‘" in evely house~ hold ; (1) Adequate rest; plus a properiy balâ€" â€" anced diet, will set up safeguards against the hazards of illâ€"health. (2) ~Never allow a child to go to school â€" ~~ _ without breakfast. ~ This invites trouble. ; : (2) ~Allow sufficient time in the niornâ€" ings for proper toilet habits, dressâ€" ing, eating (not just stufing)â€" and â€"caution the . child against traffice hezards on the way to school. (4) Make sure‘that your child receives _ _ the "booster" dose of Diphtheria toxoid.. Diphtheria still kills â€" Canada‘s children. (5) Protect your child with vaccinaâ€" _ tion. Smallpox is almost a thing .. Of the past here, but it can return f if all children are not veccinated. ‘6) Teach your child to drink at least * three glasses of water daily. This aids in eliminaticn of waste and poisonous products by washing the $ body tissues. : (7). Dirty handkerchiefs spread disâ€" ease: ‘Teach your child the safe wayâ€"use of sanitary tissues. (8) Clean hands and clean teeth disâ€" courage discase. Ensure this sevâ€" eral times daily, plus a tub bath The greatest scourge . of schoolâ€"ag¢ children is Rheumatic Fever. As an end result, it causges five times as many deaths as whooping cough, meningit:s, measles, diphtheria, scarlet fever and infantile paralysis ccmbmed' SCHOOQLâ€" â€"â€" CHILDâ€" CARE at least weekly. RHEUMATICâ€"FEVER for an 417 and They used to sing comic song in the music halls of England many years ago, the refrain of which ran as follows: § Yes, it‘s money, Oh, aint it funny, How it drives away our sorrow and ~our â€"care! If you want honey, You must. have money; k It‘s money, money, money evei'y- where! That song should have a populm appeal ‘today, when there is so much talk about money, and when money is more than ever regarded as the soverâ€" eign cure for alil cur sorrows and cares. Everybody seems to be clamoring for more and more money, and the funny thing about it is that there never was a time: ‘when pecple generally had so much money to. spend as they have in these days.> And yet: our personal, do.â€" mestic,. saciel. and industrial sorrows and cares are not driven away, but in many respects are multiplied:. > Purchasing pow er, wage-x ates, prices, profits, â€" subsidies,. bonuses,â€" taxes : and economic security â€"â€" these â€" are the chief topics of social and political disâ€" cussion at the ipresent time. It is an age of economic problems, of solutions of problems, and no sooner have â€"we solved one problern than several others popâ€"up in their place. l "There are numerous legislative "soluâ€" tions‘ ‘of the labor ;problem ~on oUr federal and provincial statute books, and each cne of them has given birth to a litter of new problems : whith labor‘ ‘boards, committees, commisâ€" sions, economic éXxperts and everâ€"growâ€" ing staffs of civil servants are striving in vain to solve â€"â€" and they are mostly ‘problems that have to do with distriâ€" bution or collection of money. "The love of money is the root of all evil,".says the good Book. If we could get down to the roots of modern wars we might find that the struggle | for world power had its origin in 1 envy and greed, both _ social. and. national .. Hitler ‘began as a labor leader, stirring up discontent and reâ€" bellion among the workers. He first talked about the "Haves and the Havenots" in Germany, and he finished up by inciting the German nation to war against the "Heves" of the world And it would seem that envy, jJealousy and greed are theâ€"chief causes of "disâ€" agreement and bitter wrangling at the Peace Conference in Paris today. â€" _ The truth is that all the evils and strifes® of this world begin with envy in the which first infects the community and the nation, and finally spreads like a contagious diâ€" sease among the nations. According to secred history, it began with Cain. ‘gpolomon, who was famed for his w @12# wisdom, even eliminated ent,h ely as to humanity. | EYES FOR STUDY Poor grades at school do not necesâ€": sarily indicate inferior intellect. All. sorts of handicaps may interfere with ‘the normal training Oof a child, and among the most common is eye afflicâ€" tion. In this modetn age teachers agre taught to recognize the child with deâ€" fective vision and to make allowances In dealing with a child‘s eyes, mediâ€" cal men give due consideration to harmful effects cf unsatisfactory «diet. Vision . of "children during. convalesc ‘ence from Hiness also calls for special P ies Lpa*~ â€" care. And, at all times, children should be mfittfieixnpm'tance of eonsery~ "For This A Man Is Envied Of: His Neighbour" attention ‘to material preâ€" it began with Cain. o was famed for his ‘Again, I considered to provide him BY LEWIS MILLIGAN The Ontario Department of Agriâ€" culture, â€" at Matheson, ‘has just anâ€" nounceéed the prize winners for the "Porquois: Junction Boys Potato Club. This is the second year for this Club. . It was . sponsored by the Porquis Junction Agricultural Society, which. paid oneâ€"third of the prize money, and theâ€"other twoâ€"thirds beingâ€"supplied by the Dominion and Provincial Departâ€" mdmf.s of Agricuiture on a fiftyâ€"fifty basis. The names and prize money won are as follows: "Stanley Clark, Monteith, Ontario, â€"â€" $5 00; ~Harry Brightwell, Shillington, ;Ontario â€" Ma\n‘ide Lund, â€" Mcâ€" Cart, Ontario, $3.00; Lioyd Montgomâ€" ery, Goldlands, Ontario â€"â€" $3.00; Carl Hansen, Anthony, Ontario .â€" $3.00; James McCall, Shillington, Ontario â€"â€" $3.00; : Alyin McQuoid, Nellie Lake, Ontario $2.00; Harold McGrath, Shiiâ€" lington, Ontario $2.00. North Loses Glamor As Husky Vanishes The husky dog, for many years the only sure method of transporation in Canada‘s far_ north, is in danger of extinction today, according to a Finâ€" ancial Post stcry from Winnipeg. Manitoba‘s department of mines and natural resources badly needs dog teams for its game guardians and fishâ€" ery officers, and can‘t get them. all travail, and every right work, that for this a man is invied of his neigh.â€" bor. This is also vanity and vexaâ€" tion of spriit. Better is an handful with quietness, than both the hands full with travail and vexation of spirit." But just as evil and strife begin with envy in the individual, so must rightâ€" eousness and peace begin with goodâ€" will among individuals, ©â€" With goodâ€" will between the leaders of labor and industry there would be no strikes, for each would see the others point of view and realize that their interests are mutual; that one cannot be hurt without injuring the other, and subseâ€" quently the whole community. If goodâ€"will were to prevail among the delegates at the Peace Conference it would cast out envy, coveteousness, jealousy‘ and suspicion, which are the evil spfrits that keep them at loggerâ€" heads. If we cannot have good-will and peace between the representatives of labor and industry at home, whose interests â€" are identi¢al, how can. we expect to have. it among the repreâ€" sentatives of a> diversity of natxon_s? ; 1 Stressin decay an health al mend dee lupgs anc They ady : several. t! servation. Forty years ago huskies were bred ‘And it‘s the same in printing. â€" to detmls makes all the dlfi' erence. smarten up" yur erson tees or office forms, xflu qi The CCF provincial government of Sasntchewan, since it came into powâ€" ér in 1944, has been woking sealously to vindicate the promises it made in preâ€"election promises.â€" At the end of 1946 and the beginning of 1947 it anâ€" nounces <the following acoompllsh- ments: Free diagnosis and treatment of canâ€" cer. Free dental, surgical, medical. and hospital cm'e to all old age and: blind pensioners, ®all â€"recipients . of â€" mothers allowances and their. dependents; and to all the mentally ill. Effective January 1, 1947, there will be free hospitalization tor every peraén in the province. For the farmers it has provided thé farm security act sprotecting the ownâ€" ership of the home qnarter section of land. For.labour it has provided_the trade union act that guarantees full union security and collective bargaining; exâ€" tension of workmen‘s cotmpensation to 75 per cent of wages; collective barâ€" geining agreements with its civil Serâ€" vice employees, - commercially, chiefly along northern shores of Lake Winnipeg and sold to employees of the Hudson‘s Bay Co., trappers, fur traders, and the Royal Northwest Mounted ‘Police (now R. C.M.P:) There was good demand and gocd supply. But for the last 15 years there has been‘ no commercial breedâ€" ing of huskies. What there is, is for the most part done by Indians, but without any thought of parentage selection. Need for the addition of small quanâ€" tities of iodized salt in food for peobw in those parts of Canada where there is not sufficient natural salt in soil or water supplies, is stressed in a bul- letin from National Health and Welâ€" fare. It is suggested that doctors be consulted, and, if necessary, salt to be taken to prevent simple goitre. Pointing out that not even. Milk ig a perfect, selfâ€"sufficient Food, nuttiâ€" tionists urge inclusion of all the nuâ€" tritional factors in diet, by combining such edibles as milk, fruit, vegetables, cereals, bread, meat or fish, a meal will provide all the essentials to maintenance of health. Stressing the fact that disuse means decay and stagnation : breeds disease, health authorit.ies at »Ottawa Trecomâ€" mend deep breathing to. sweep out the lungs and air passages with fresh air They advise. deep: 'blemfixmg exercises several times a day for health conâ€" FOO» COMBINATIONS DEEP BREATHNG IODIZED SALT Contest," the Michess of: Windsor looks on a§ Francis plants aukissyn the cheek of his tour-yea@ldg,' Victe?ia, chosen queen of The event is sponsored allunily by the Boy$‘ Club Ne Â¥ork. iAz Intro sheer nmon eachs clu it us several years ago.and by tAns outsold all ather varictios heme and commercial growers .'e\'e\’}’ paf_t of Canada; Cusâ€" i¢dly tell us "Rarlicstand Dest". than» wo . claim., Prodatcas i#(ul; solid, perfect shipping ierâ€"than any. other vari¢hy. type wiuhout core, and mast with" tinest Llavour. . d ds, cracked; wrinkled, unevi t. andâ€"o{ten ten fruits.| zing yicldar. (PBt: 18¢) fo®‘ # R BTG T947 SEED AN BOOK â€"‘Leads Aga 4 “0ҤEv R m ST and: ST"

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