Porcupine Advance, 13 Sep 1934, 2, p. 8

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Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts have the power of dissolving uric acid crystals, which are responsible for rheumatic agony. QOther ingredients of these salts assist Nature to expel these dissolved crystals through the natural channel. At ‘one time she thought she would lose the use of her right hand. But "a blessing"â€"in the form of Kruschen Saltsâ€"put her right again. "I was sure in a bad state," she writes. "In fact, I could not do my housework, I was so bad with rheuâ€" Her Hands Were Helpless with Rheumatism ‘"We had a real invasion last Monâ€" dayâ€"an armed invasion, a foreign inâ€" vas‘on from Kirkland They came in motor cars, not tanks, but they had the tanks with them, and they mads frequent use of them too. As soon as they arrived in town they began firing at almost everything. If there had been any dugouts in town they would have been filled because there was no safe place for man or beast while these licensed gunners were here. Yes, one of our residents asked one of the shootâ€" ets if they had licenses and he said yes, a license to shoot ducks, but they coul not produce themâ€"and this bunch of "sports" tried to shoot anyâ€" thing from a chipmunk to a humming bird. What should we do with them * Last wook the Goldthorpe corresâ€" pondent of The New Liskeard Speaker had the following comment to make in régard to a group of shooting men from Kirkland Lake:â€" ## # # ## ## # # ## ## # .0 #® .0 #* w# ## #* *# # t# * . ,*® 4 € Shooters from Kirkland too Free at Goldthorpe FRUITATIVES With every large 50¢ box, i'one 25¢ box free, all for.....39¢ TT C e mesnees «te«* wal. .N:oo “N“““nnn nn un““o-onoon..o‘oo“.oouoc‘“nu““..o“o‘:oo“““u“““uuoo aleale ““““ ......... Analeatacts “““"‘““““““““““““ “““““ ““““““ j DRUG SALE Frlday and Saturday Look over the list . and save money by buying your drug wants at # w uis 2t s 28. 28. 281. 28. .6 0. .# .. .# s ts a® w s 2t 2t 2® . 2® *# .0 “ .“ .“.” .00.“.“ .“.“ .“.0... * ‘“ .“..’... .“ .“ .“ .“ .“ .0 « large $1.50 bot for MALT AND COD LIVER OTIL With every 50c purchase and a box of Fish Food 2 (Goldfish and bowl free. r the Hands and After Shaving we will give one 25¢ bottle free. FREE SATURDA Y With every 25¢ bottle of « #* # L #4 *#+ #4 ## *# ## #* * # #* # #* #«# ## #4 Â¥_C. _+% * * #* w # #+ *# # # # ##* w # w # *#* 4 ## #* #* # # *## *# *# #* # # *4 #* # # #* *# # #* w *# #* # La #+* # # ## + Niagara Falls Review:â€"As well as being against the law, it is dangerous to use trucks to ‘convey children or adults to picniecs or other gatherings. The other day ‘five little girls were seriously injured when part of the side of a truck gave way. Trucks are not built for such work and carrying pasâ€" sengers in vehicles not adapted for that purpose is a dangerous practice. New development, new industries and new homes, and the circulation of new wealth will continue to accrue from the widespread activities that are now takâ€" ing place in the realm of mining, and in the frenzied search now proceeding for additiong@t mineral deposits, no one knows just where the nucleus may be established for another happy, prosâ€" perous community. ate a¢s4ts In a surprisingly brief space of time, a mineral area that has the earmarks of becoming an important producing district has come into being in the Litâ€" tle Long Lac region, where the mine of that name will scon be added to the long list of gold producers in the North Land, and where one or two new comâ€" munities, with facilities for commerce, secular and religious education and soâ€" cial life, @are destined to supply further romance to the glamorous history of mining develbpment in the North. History repeats itself and probably will do so for many years to come, with the steadily increasing actxvity being manifested in gold areas as a result of the demand for the precious yellow metal and the high premiums now being won by the producers. (From Sudbury Star) \ «It is rather c a far cryâ€"a matter ox} threée decadesâ€"from the time the specâ€" tacular.discoveries gave birth to the town of Cobalt to be followed later by, the establishment of other prosperous communities at Timmins, South Porâ€" cupine, Schumacher and Kirkland | Lake, as the result of gold mining de-} velopment.: Si e'_’ the days when the| tales of GCobalf thrilled ‘the country, however, many gnother mineral area has blossomed forth to give lucrative employment to thousands of men andl origin to thriving settlements. | Romance of Building of Mining Towns in N 008C 16 oz. bottle 32 oz. bottle Half Gallon With every 35¢ bottle a 3be bottle of Dreskinâ€"Free staps a cough before others Start : to act::.:...;:.....%.5;..... 000 Special : ;NEVER DIE TONIC The greatth tonic known ... s o ies Sn 108 NOXâ€"Aâ€"COLD now Col. MacLaren Right in Asking _ Chance for T. N. 0. Extension #4 *4 + #* #* * # #* \ # *#* #* #* #* VC # #* #* * + #* + #4 #4* **.* 4*#*4, C + #* \ # #4 « it over, a nice camp called Cobalt was discovered right on the rightâ€"ofâ€"way tco. Well that started T. N. O. Ry. earning immense sums of money. Then it was decided to extend it north to tap the Grand Trunk Pacific Ry. another Grit Ry. by Sir Wilfred Laurâ€" ier, and I say right here it was a mighty lucky thing for Tory Toronto and the rest of Old Ontario that this Grand Trunk Pacific was being built because if it had not been I honestly believe the T. N. O. Ry. would never have been run farther than New Liskeard. When it was started farther north there more real ones. Now as to the T. N. O. Ry. given a chance even at a loss, I think it is O.K., because all the rest of T. N. O. Ry. has been given the same chance. It was started by the Ross Government during 1902 and was to be built to New Liskeard. Before the government took it over, a nice camp called Cobalt was discovered right on the rightâ€"ofâ€"wav The following letter by Harry Presâ€" ton, oldâ€"timer of the North, deserves special consideration at this time when there are so many apparently doubtâ€" ful about the wealth of the North in the district north of Cochrane:â€" South Porcupine, Ont., Sept. 10th, 1934 To the Editor of The Advance, Timmins. Dear Sir:â€"Colonel MacLaren says ‘"Give T. N. O. Ry. James Bay Exâ€" tension a chanceâ€"even at a loss." RIGHT you are, Colonel! and I do agree with what you say. My ideas are the same as yours and I think I have a right to voice my opinion and state my ideas because it was the same ideas that discovered the first real gold mine in Ontario, and had I been given a chance I am sure I would have disâ€" covered another pne. But I was not given a chance so I gave my ideas to others and they too found a couple more real ones. Now as to the T. N. O. Ry. given Oldâ€"Timer of Narth Points Out that the T. N. 0. has Opened a Wonderful Country of Wealth to Ontario, and the Extension, if Given a Chance will Add Still Further to the Resources of the Province. $1.25 C It grows hair and gives a sparkling effect full of life and health. Stops falling hair, proâ€" motes new growth and destroys dandruff. A most pleasant preparation for the hair. DANDEE is a clear natuâ€" ral vegetable product, anâ€" tiseptic, does not disâ€" colour the hair. DANDEE HAIR TONIG and DANDRUFF REMOVER THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMITUINS, ONTARIO have been double the unemployed in the older parts. Besides, if it were not for the North there would not be so many tourists crossing the border. Yes, and our Southern friends ought Now, let‘s figure this! Cobalt was found right on the railway tracks. Elk Lake is twentyâ€"eight miles west of the track. Gowganda is sixty miles west. Matachewan is about thirty west. Porâ€" cupine is over thirty miles west. Kirkâ€" land Lake is seven miles east, and Rouyn fiftyâ€"eight east. Beattyâ€"Munâ€" ro area is twelve east. Lightning area‘s about thirty miles east. How does this sound to you? Well, is it not possible the same occurs from Cochrane north on either side of T. N. O. James Bay extension. Are there no chances of great mineral fields likely on the whole length of the rest of T. N. O.? Yes, there certainly are, and all it needs is a chance, as Col. MacLaren suggests. One thing I have noticed is the James Bay extension as well as all the rest has not been advertised nearly as much as it should have been. Advertising pays; you must remémber that. Look at our other two big railways how they advertise! When Cobalt and Porcuâ€" pine were found and T. N. O. Ry. was being constructed our present Preâ€" _ mier Hepburn was just a little boy goâ€" _ing to school. Now he is running the North and why the North put him in power is because the North expectea he would make it boom better than ever. â€" Little idea did they have that he would start to destroy what his party brought into existence when he was a schoolboy. Let him shove this up his sleeve:â€"The more he and his followers pull down the North and stop its proâ€" gress the more he does the same with his own home county and all the rest of Southern Ontario. All trades down there will suffer. Now let me ask Southern Ontario knockers of the North, what reason have they to comâ€" plain about roads and money being spent ‘in this North. It‘s no loss to them whatever. They don‘t have to pay. It‘s the North‘s own money that will pay for all she gets and no doubt the money, or a lot of it, came from the North in the first place to build the T. N. 0. And ever since it was built, the country through which it passes has poured hundreds of million»s of dollars to Older Ontario and has also cut the late depression in half, for without Northern Ontario there would was nothing but a black, dense forest through which it penetrated and from the time it was started till finished at Grand Trunk Pacific there were only two little villages on the whole length, and they were Englehart and MciDouâ€" gall Chutes (now called Matheson), anda I was at the latter place before the steel was laid there and I watched it laid to the end, and there a little village named Cochrane sprang up and there I was also at the time. Then when the T. N. O. was finished and taken off the hands of the contractors, what happened? Well, there were far more people going back South again than there were coming North. They were the labourers and others. The whole country was still a black mass of forest right close to the tracks the whole distance and there were not twelve settlers in the area from Maineâ€" son to Cochrane. It looked pretty dark and the railway was run at a loss. In less than cne year things changed beâ€" cause it sure had a chance. A good thirtyâ€"five miles west of it a little lake called Porcupine only known by a hunâ€" dred people in the whole world there were seven men named Bannerman, Preston, Wilson, Geddes, Burns, Campâ€" bell and Rhault, all by themselves for over one hundred days prospecting for gold, and they made two wonderful discoveries, one being the greatest free gold ever found on surface. Preston predicted the T. N. O. would be comâ€" ing. Bannerman goes cout with some gold. Then the old T. N. O. again tcok on new life and built the branch also. Today that section of the Railâ€" way from Liskeard to Cochrane is the bestâ€"paying part of it, and always has been since it left New Liskeard. The mines brought more settlers until there were thousands. New towns began to appear. Paper mills also, and just look at the country today! e e e e e e e e e ces guaranteed MILK OF MAGNESIA Weekâ€"end special ............... HOT WATER BOTTLES Reg. $1.25, guaranteed one year ;) c )nl e tss 2. SEIDLITZ POWDERS National, " 2 for .................:. CONSTIPATION Take Bedtime Pills nnnnnn NOXALL PILL REMEDY Huntingdon â€" Gleaner:â€"Mrs. John Thompson, of Topeka, Kansas, was in a dilemma. She could not get to her own home, so she telephoned to the police station. ‘"‘Please," she said, "can you help me get into my house? My husband has the keys, and he is not at home." Five minutes later a policeâ€" man arrived and opened the door. Then he gave a bunch of keys to Mrs. Thompson. The keys belonged to Mtr. Thompson, who had been arrested earlier and charged with being drunk,. Says The Sudbury Star last week:â€" "These Corbeil quintuplets! Mention of them bobs up in the most unexpectâ€" ed places. For instance, in the C.P.R. despatcher‘s office here, a daily mesâ€" sage comes throughâ€""the babies got their milk at 9.33 this morning." The explanation of the railway‘s interest in the quintuplets‘ breakfast is that the Montreal train has made a daily stop at Corbeil since July 18 to deliver speâ€" cial shipments of mother‘s milk from Montreal and the report on the exact time of the stop is part of the routine. There aren‘t many babies, perhaps, for whom an express train plays milk wagon." The latest report from Toronto is to the effect that Hon. Mitchell Hepburn is to succeed Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King as leader of the Dominion Liberal party as soon as a session of the Onâ€" tario Legislature has been completed. The story is to the effect that Preâ€" mier Hepburn intends to implement all his promises made during the elec» tion and then will take over Hon. Mr. King‘s duties. There are some things that Hon. Mr. Hepburn has promised that cannot be done until the Legisâ€" lature meets, and so the story runs he will preside over the Legislature for the one session and then drop from provincial politics, going into the Fedâ€" eral arena. Hon. Mr. King is said to be in illâ€"health. It would not be wondâ€" ered if he felt badly if it were really true that he would be succeeded by Hon. Mr. Hepburn. Of course, the story is denied at Ottawa, and it may easily be that Toâ€" ronto is telling what it hopes rather than what it believes. Toronto would be glad to get rid of the present preâ€" mier at any cost, even to having him at Ottawa. It is pointed out that all the time he was at Ottawa no one really knew whether he was there or not. TRAIN STOPS DAILY FOR THE CORBEIL QUINTUPLETS Report that Hepburn Will Succeed King as Leader to know that our cousins to the South have come over to Northern Ontario and done a tremendous lot to place us in second place for gold. They grubâ€" staked the first party into Porcupine who staked the first great mine. Kirkâ€" land is another place they have large interests. Sudbury also. So with Uncle Sam to the south of.Old Ontario doing what he is and Northern Ontario pouring out hundreds of millions of dollars and keeping herself as well as giving work to tens of thousands in Southern Ontario, what reasons have Old Ontario people to complain abouy the North? Let them kick as much as they like about the Transâ€"Canada highway going up the rocky shore from sSault Ste. Marie because that would involve a tremendous expenditure with only one benefit and purpose to it. But the James Bay extension has a hundred more chances of being a proâ€" fitable undertaking. Some of it is alâ€" ready showing signs of improving. But it must be given chance. The prosâ€" pectors should also be given a chnanc» to get to the east and west of it like on the rest of T. N. O. where far inland all the big discoveries were made. â€" One more thing I will mention before I let up is this: If Premier Hepâ€" burn has no faith in a railway to Mooâ€" sonee, then I say tear up the rails spend a little more and turn it into part of Ferguson highway lixke from North Bay to Cochrane and then if the Transâ€"Canada highway is routed west of Cochrane he will see Moosonce start to grow fast and the hotel will mighty soon be earning money. A | continuation of the Ferguson highway surely will start the business coming. The country, however, has great chances, and a nice programme of adâ€" vertising it will do wonders. Give it a chance. We can‘t expect young geese to lay golden eggs within a month of their birth. Yours truly H. A. Preston Oe d d e se sn ain die oo sn s t sn o+ 0 n en a dn s t dn bn se a in at un Ees tw o ates ate ies oo tz atp T‘ry The Advanc Algoma East: M Bay, Ont. Algoma West: C Sault Ste. Maric. Cochrane: Fred Arthur J. C been appointe Dominion Fran of Temiskamin ¢f appointnen day night by Thompsen, Frt Others anpoint Registrars Named for the Districts in the North ~bel continue to the summer plans. Preparati to commence cot week or so, pendin patent on property Gascon stated last Thus there will ) petiticon for the b in the Little Lon hctels being built and . Hard Rock, Hard Rock statio shore of Little Li« To Build $18,000 Hotel in Little Long Lac A despatch the proposed â€" in the Little I erected: at aâ€" cording to M sor of the pro ating in Hard flux of prospc contain 27 rco aPI Nipi 11 1t +A TFCOMS, CC Preparations poin 10 V W. Aubt from Sudbury sSays that new hotel at Hard Rock, ong Lac district, is to be total cost of $18,000, acâ€" Want Advertisements activit ns. be m busing n Maud , Oof Englehart, has registrar under the se Act for the riding according to the list made public Thursâ€" olonel® Johnr «T. C. chise â€" Commissioner. nclude: irvin Bowman, Gore 19 hC both thred th more or less comâ€" mess of travellers Lac region, with at Geraldton ree miles apart. is on the north â€" Lake, and Mrs. settlement will vity especially in a Gascon, sponâ€" o has been operâ€" ince the first inâ€" The hostelry will ording to present iction within e chtaining of Hard Rock, M W. Goodwin rth Bay. Armstrong Ivy, Coch present ? mds Area For Rheumatism, Neuritis and Stomach Disorders shouting Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"It is all very well for Mr. Hepburn to permit prohibitionists to shout when he knews the impossibility of stopping them from In an instant he took in the situa tion and the, frightful tragedy tha might ensure. He rushed after th car, caught up with it, leaped in an put on the brake, but not before th car had gone careening upon the sid walk. Medais have been awarded fc less, but in this case a policeman rush ed up and the hero had great difficult escaping arrest for reckless driving. And when the distracted mother ar rived, her only comment was: will you put the car back where yo got it from as quickly as possible? I the children‘s father discovers it‘s gons he will be simply furious." (From The Brandon Sun) Heroes are born, not made. Ther was one of them on a street at Balti more, Md., the other day. no. wa dawdling on the sidewalk when he san some children in a parked motor ca release the ‘brake and the car stat rolling down a hill, while their mothe stood distractedly on the sidewalk. HERO DIDN‘T RECEIVE MUCH THANKS FOR STOPPING CAR 59¢ 89c $1,.2 +) Mineral Water Crystals At Leading Drug Stores h 30. k 8. 11 30. 0. s1 3i .t .K »a e ha t a t o h at aale e3 the situaâ€" gedy â€" that after the ed in and Jefore the n the side yoOou T

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