Porcupine Advance, 1 Aug 1929, 2, p. 3

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MOTOR CLUB ORGANIZED FOR TOWN OF KAPUS Kapuskasing has started a live motor club and hopes to secure at least A hundred members. The new club is a branch of the Ontario Motor League and is starting out with the finest of Py °V promise Mr, L. B Brubache Saville, John Gr6 Star Sa "Dea! Wasluk wash T: shelter and u1 um ou aught 3e fou tE a had been going to this «week Ssudbury 1 which ‘orced Huntin report C which co lady is I e found ewspape he â€" has a ind who it Yn. Tasluk anada it finc Wo any lure for him. Northern Ontari A 2 hs in his opinion, the greatest lanc o e e all lands. He went into it a Stra and he has been learning it ever S vâ€"e compI show window ing EMPIRLE elaborate 14â€" gralnl dA nc cou ken and wate FOURTH WRIGLEY MARATHON SWIM and â€" navVal â€" pPrCMLILALIULIA AZ1L 4XA ALLA LA Muster®‘, every evening by hundreds o performers on the world‘s largest stage supreme display of horsemanship by th argest annual ex curaiaL Fr Races : viewing the new iny . of the C during t 1st anniversary remic¢cr Sept RIEND OR RELATIVE AT LONELY MAN‘S P Hu1 1C 11 n Gleant ns Mrs. M 28 years old daughter wh turn has Ha iY rts headed by spectacle, the day contint PM treatime HOMAS BRADSHA\W KAPUSKASING nd sition the FUNERAI rv clime T there MC erm nazIing pa rat id stOUX LOOKOUT HAS MANY (MEDICAL PROFESSION HAS ul TRAâ€"MODERN TOUEKES . FINE RECORD 0F SERVICE Mayor of Northern Town Tells Toronto | Why of the Advantages of His Municiâ€" pality. Sea Fleas, Radio, Planes, Cars, Etc. hnaving upâ€"toâ€"date lines . Although only a tion, it had the airplanes of any the continent. and other of t loocked fidence the N: 810 In the report of an intervie the mayor of Sioux Lookout. T ronto Mail and Empire points 0 "Sea Fleas, Radio, Planes, Ca: this Frontier Town Modern Air Mail and Empire says that Siou out, with 2,000 population, boast est number of airplanes on nopulation. Continuing, The M | _ d NP nc Aicd ts h uit that Walter Cain my old friend the deputy minister of lands, was ill and in hospital in Sioux Lookout. I" went ;straight to his bed and talked to him, and I came home with him yesterday." ‘_ Sioux Lookout boasts the greatest number of airplanes for its population. ‘ _The NAME. alone has A hangar |that hold eight planes, and the town is a base for airplane supplies and be the spo! would grow Sioux LOOKOUUT SULA4IlIUS db UILLC tion of the Canadian National transâ€" continental line and the branch line from Port Arthur and Fort William. "We don‘t envy the cities," he said. "We have all the comforts we need right now, and more are coming. We hope that hydro will be in before long and we are trying to get water and sewage now. When the hydro arrives we‘l1! oet the last two because pumping mpirke We llL LUIiQ@ idot CWU M O 00 e c 00 > Ne will be cheap. "Everybody has a motor boat. Everyâ€" body has a radio. I was 125 miles from Sioux Lookout when I heard by radio that Walter Cain my old friend the deputy minister of lands, was ill and in hospital in Sioux Lookout. 1" went straight to his bed and talked to him. and I came home with him yesterday." th century equipment. Speaking of recalled a stotr Lookout some 16 sts strong, capableâ€"loc s knees as he talks. No other part of the iy lure for him. his opinion, the gr "We may be away t we are going ahead, the frontier town. eat deal of activity © but we expect to b re long." Mayor Farlinger sit me da; t down 1J of his town were reai for the many remark had and the better ed forward to with fail nce. Pioneers in othel North will be able tc tly the attitude of t ix Lookout, having b same stage themselves na If )â€"date lines of modern civilization. ugh only a town of 2,000 populaâ€" it had the greatest number of anes of any town its size on the continent. Radios. cars, planes other of the ultraâ€"modern signs ogress. The mayor of Sioux Lookâ€" roved that instead of being pitied their lack of advantages the peoâ€" N‘ his town were really to be enâ€" T jum} der agans ri fleas; s. vet ea peaking of automobiles illed a story emanating kout some months ago king through the tow! | keeping residents a wal That‘s because they ca town." laughed the m bou ahe 18 nt of fel _ whe HC rlinger sits oT it. He doesn‘t , â€" S10ux® certain ‘aill wayv man ind aAlr} ad of el of the t New Bri U1l ha ugh the town esidents awake. ause they can‘t ; ighed the mayoCr th isured in many y from electric 1 1i bathrooms to ne day stand: Hi ril at the I ramped a pretty good town day. I was right." tands at the junctâ€" ian National transâ€" id the branch line and Fort William. the cities," he said. comforts we need re are coming. We il1l be in before long â€"o+m oet water and really to be enâ€" markable benefits etter things they th faith and conâ€" other sections of )le to understand of the mayor of ng been through id sn t hroj kC There vou w go ab Roy K111 11 basis of| It is hard to adequately suggest, in Mail and |a sketchy article of this nature, the \vast scope of a modern medical curâ€" ny manâ€"| riculum. _ The neophyte must learn ric lightsiphysics, chemistry, biology, physiology, ; to airâ€" pharmacology, anatomy, histology (inâ€" he twenâ€"| volving an understanding of the micâ€" iroscopic structure of the body.) considers| From these basic studies, all of Y The Toâ€" out that The rom " Th Look creat ib NVE i. _ It bush Mail Sioux cars th HC h The following to The Advanc General Secre Social Hygiene been a visitor than ons o2ca friends here w interest in this medical profess Who is a doctor? How is it that the governments and people of every civilized nation in the world single out one group of menâ€" and nowadays, of women tooâ€"and say to them: "You are doctors, and in your hands we place our social and individâ€" ual health. You, and you alone may use the hallowed title, "Doctor of Medâ€" icine " and by virtue of that title, heal use the hallowed title, "Doctor of Medâ€" icine," and by virtue of that title, heal the sick and preserve the well." Perluhiaps the best answer to that question, is this: imagine, if you can, the condition that would exist if the medical profession were not so recognâ€" ized. Suppose that any man who had the laudable ambition to heal his felâ€" lowâ€"men of their ills could without any supervision call himself ‘Doctor‘ and begin cutting people up and dosing them with potations of his own conâ€" coction. What an epedemic of horrible deaths there would be! How quickly the public‘s present profound respect for tho title ‘Doctor.‘ would be changed the publiic‘s present profoundad reSspeci for tho title ‘Doctor,‘ would be changed to the deepest distrust! What then, is the medical profession, and how does it maintain the high standard that this great public confiâ€" dence demands? Let us consider what the Province of Ontario expects of a man .who would practise rmedicine Its requirements are typical of those of the rest of Canada. To become a medical student, one must first pass his honor matriculation. That takes five yvears After that, he must spend another six years at a reâ€" cognized medical school. cumuia be doc And wl nim yeal that through will be el11 obviously the greatest gainer, only the more intelligent, reliable ents succeed in passing). He has spent an absolute mir of $1.000 a year for six years, inc y Doctors Have Special Standing in the Community and the Special Service They Give to Win it He has spent an absolute minimum of $1.000 a year for six years, including $150 for tuition, $100 for books and equipment, which leaves very little for room. board, clothing and incidentals, to say nothing of amusements. But in passing through those years of test and trial and hard work, he has become legitimate heir to all the tested medical knowledge that mankind has ev$r acquired and saved. The wisdom of" longâ€"dead leeches has been poured into him. and he has become greater than any of themâ€"greater by virtue of his greater knowledge, a scientist, able to work by degrees from the known to the unknown. k And for the privileges that society accords the physician it expects, and is almost invariably accorded, a tenâ€"fold return. There is no other division of mankind, with the possible exception of clergymen, that gives away, gratis, more of its time, energy and knowledge than do the doctors. A doctor does an enormous amount of WwWOrK w Common humat answer any serio And WAY LAIS 15 UlijUOL.. A*Q iA the keeper of a grocery store | way his goods, even though t be people starving for lack of a doctor is expected to do J and in most cases he does. In making this concessio den dady furthest we can drive out of town 1sS about 2 miles. There aren‘t any roads. Cars are brought in by railroad. Yet we have a lot of them. I haven‘t one myself and have never had one." 111 hon of sickne patholog and im llowing article davance by Dr Ssecrekary of ygiene Council. visitor to Tin where T leal mere arte th r2DO pend his ill harder > the va e great we 1OUuU 0 J2CaAsIOT who in ItS GIi11 ological chemistry imunology, medi ill their branches, JT ki article is contributed by Dr. Goodon Bates, y of the Canadian »uncil. Dr. Bates has o Timmins on more on and has many ) will be particularly tatement of what the n signifies in general On THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Pneé in ninete OCctOI befo: oming OvErâ€" extraordinary the general i0 st historical backâ€" ‘alth and richness of f the tremendous acâ€" mA v by INAne norm o patholo stud ich a k hough there lack of thenr ‘annot pay No one ex imber he human i0rmal, the OL AY bactetr 1pot aracquire iDblic stud o the pa n1 eC PANDORA GOLD LIMITED REPORTS GOOD NEW FEIND shAyS.â€"â€" "The Secretary of the Pandora Gold Limited says that word has been reâ€" ceived from the mine of a new find, reports stating the contact vein has been located north of the porphyry rock being heavily mineralized, with free gold. The secretary states that Mr C. B. Stenvenson, one of the direcâ€" tors,. under whose direction the present work is being done, left Monday to examine the new find." race generally, the doctor becomes the greatest giver of charity in the comâ€" munity. ‘Noblesse oblige‘ is to him no idle, elegant phrase and it is indisputâ€" able that the profession bears, collecâ€" tively, a great burden of healing the indigent, which belongs rightly to the state, just as the feeding of the staryâ€" ing is becoming recognized as a state responsibility. And so, within the limitations of this short article, I have endeavoured tC establish the following facts: that every doctor belongs to a profession whose object above all other things is to heal the sick and to prevent sickâ€" ness; a profession that is constantl1 imnroving itself, a profession that has MneSS} 4 improving itself, a profession that ha produced men like Koch, Jenner, an Pasteur, whose discoveries have save« the lives of hundreds of thousands and will save unborn hundreds of mil lian«s a nrofession whose pride is in ef ficiency, and wh service that has b unselfish than th The New Liskeard Speaker last week arllin prof been to a larger degreec 12@ f any other mun See New and Used Cars at Showroom opposite Post Office, Schumacher or at 86 Third Avenue, Timmins, or phone 960 for a Demonstration WE CARRY COMPLETE LINXE GENUINE FORD PARTS ritions of this leavoured to facts: that a profession her things is prevent sickâ€" is constantly shatterproof glass wind. shield on all Ford cars is one of many important safety features that contribute to the pleasure and comâ€" {fort of all Ford Model "A" owners. The peace of mind and feeling of security made possible by this factor of safety is further eahanced by the clear vision roof pillars, sixâ€"brake system, 3% irreversible steering, one piece gas tank and allâ€"steel body. Protection with Clear V ision The Ford car shatterproof glass windshield does not splinter under the impetus of a direct blow. In case of a collision there is no flying class to endanger driver or The vision is clear and unobstructed with the Ford shatterproof glass windshield. At the same time the driver realizes that this windshield is a protection and a factor in creaiing driving confidence and owner passengers. enthusiasm. FORD CAR SHATTERPROOF OLDâ€"TIMER OF HAILEYBURY COLLAPSES AND PASSES ON The death was reported last week of another of the oldâ€"timers of the Haileybury district, in the person of William Murdock who for over twenty years had resided in the area. ‘The late Wm. Murdock had been ill and consulted a doctor. He was sitting with a friend on the verandah of the nouse where he roomed, when he sudâ€" denly collapsed. A doctor was hastily summoned but before the arrival of the medical man, Mr. Murdock had passed on. The deceased had lived in the north for about 20 years. He was a bricklayer by trade and had worked on the construction of a numâ€" ber of buildings here. He also had been employed at the Mining Corporation of Canada in Cobalt. Interested in mining, Mr. Murdock had done some prospecting in the district. He was over 70 years of age. The body was sent to Smith‘s Falls on the evening train on Monday of last week, the ifuneral being held on Wednesday last A. W. Harrington,. town clerk of Cobalt 'a sonâ€"inâ€"law of the late Mr. Murdock | accompanied the remains to the east. to be raging at intervais Lookout to Kenora and that there is more {ires than at any time i the district. timelyv, for McDowell Motors cArrange for your demonstration ride with the nearest Ford dealer fore y of last weeKk, 1d on Wednesday last i. town clerk of Cobalt the late Mr. Murdock > remains to the east. Authorized Ford Dealers for Porcupine Area strict. He was The body was on the evening last week. the SCHUMACHER turned orte Siou 1 [ + /./ II{“â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"‘â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" % ¢ # # Local Distributorsâ€"National Grocers Co., Ltd., Timmuns TIMMINS BRANCH, sOUTH PORCUPINE BRANCH ave Money Unequalled for fla vou(and zest Make it a Point to Say Made by O‘Kecfe‘s Beverages Toronto ASS WINDSHIELD It is not always easy to save but those who do save prosper. As a little money is accumulated it should be placed in a Savings Bank account where interest will be paid and the principal sum be secure. There is a Savings Bank Department at every branch of this Bank. s% Ford Car "eatures OF CANADA Drive it Y oursel{fâ€" there is no Better Test colours Thursday, Aug. 1st, 1929 D. SUTHERLAND, Manager. â€"_â€"_â€" 2. A. KEHOE, Manages Limited,

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