Porcupine Advance, 13 Dec 1934, 2, p. 6

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many to pave the way mination meetng and another candidate. 0. Commission will pr cate the Dominm.on ele in the riding of South It is helg by many thi ment will mean that Co be a candidate in the c the gen‘lal Mac Lang hi no announcement to t] Lang was nominated se asy the Liberal candid Temiskaming. The run convention was Jos. Lef bury.. Mr. Legris, who i: successful barrister and â€" ed there were irregular convention and he eve legal proceedings in th acceptance of the chair T. N. O. by Col. ~Lan: Accordir keard, the colm Lang EXPECT NEW CANDIDATE FOR SOUTH TEMISKAMING CIGARET TE PAPLBRB 65 FLAT OR AUTOMATLC BOOKLETâ€" ONLY Moisley Ball 34 Third Ave. Ph. that look «»a smoke Tike Teuilorâ€"mades P n Gbobe OR IGARETTES ppointm â€"chairm. Mr. W . A. All the Newest Models on Display at 7 ng himself to this e VICTOR probabl m € itt Swift of Vancouver writes of his ippoint Haile t south r the wit h a Ait Malâ€" impliâ€" ration mIjlin and iimâ€" the IOout The the 16 Cther Ccor dius of t learn in Christmas Greetings from Canada in Many Tongu A 1 reeting m 1¢ ‘Ing ay cda Ch anadiar mplete e bu:ir L1GnNn 1din pla mal jaz that v He arrans BBj ings 4th t A1I ‘am hey D# proxima istmas â€" Anoth will b Quintuplet Styles |Â¥1 ; ‘ans + ind 111 11 ViIC sent leliv 11 1k met ird 6th h pa from hat fill utst Jmit h 11 N’i”l M ACHEINE CoOM P A NYÂ¥ 31 nUlU Schumacher Hardware Furniture Co. 31 First Ave. Schumacher im TIEN YEARS AGO IN TIMMINS Ot nothe Curlit 80 member ship was i; fit bangquet ‘ch. Am W. A. Swift, Vancouver From data in the Poreapine Advance Fylea M firr Come in and See Them at Th me nd 1 (COnnaugnhn , Revy. Mr. Sa en, Miss Kat direct from nd C) h ‘â€"1D), Franci treasu l WInnIin night,. 8: pre [ 1C6 ther th ers w 11 cha hi BA mIm munity re at octthe ed by stance s ago r the . > . viceâ€" i Word from Iroquois Falls ten years ago suggested that the Falls haq sufâ€" fered from too much eagerness to seâ€" cure the Allan cup. However thy exâ€" pected to have a firstâ€"class senior hocâ€" key team and lots of good hockey. The Advance ten years ago gave a review of the expansion programme of <he mines of the North planned for 1935 It was estimated that over seven milâ€" lion dollars woulg be spent for enlargeâ€" E. ments of plants in 1925. Of this the at the| MciIntyre was expected to spend $2,â€" being | 000,000 for a new mill and the Holâ€" t. The+linger $3,000,000 fjor enlargement of everalmilling capacity. eo. .. j ments of t the| Mcintyre being | 000,000 for A . SW IEHFT ent Bo PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONT il X P A_ LELEI M I TE D pleasure it Hvers ur dail igh you ccurac aate aete d setectects motion of. Councilo Wallingford went on fect. The Porcupine tion was asked to pré andgd proposals in the ind all the pleasure I could expect of ave 1 have enjoyed tuning in on ig at my radio Monday night, ted on the race of the flyers from winner for, after dialing for only il @4 the Ccounc ccommodation mplovees of t which I purcha yÂ¥ evenings are e new nigh schoo ssed by council. Word from Iroqu C suggested that irn Dr 11 ‘nt blocks for bu The byâ€"law for ures to complete mew high school rop( 11 years ago Drs. Harrison and appeared before thg town counâ€" ress the needs for further hospiâ€" ommodation for Timmins. They e council that while there was modation â€" for the needs of the ees of the mine something furâ€" nmnaAn 1¢ n on request _Â¥ Aaneoyvy October © Urerâ€"] H. Hall e Lodge AF. U.â€"â€"W. Bro. E. H. Johns; J.V chaplainâ€"Bro urerâ€"Bro. E. for ed e of your very d from Forst‘s alwavys looked the town and people i1 gave sympathet.c se so ably presented building in fire limit r the $15,000.00 deâ€" o1 n January the financing of building was duly ng wert 1 pleast becial t Vaughan nd F. M; r spe etting 1 I6, Mason. Harrison and 19 officers elect . A.M. te 1¢ ; Llile of curling f the new "v 1925 Ing . thank ancis, B1 Mason Bro. A reports emark â€" 1€ ‘ans rmudli $ CC The hely irler othâ€" club ine but Peterborough Examiner:â€"The action of Ontario‘s Securitiee Commissioner J. M. Godfrey, in cancelling the regâ€" Istration Oof a Toronto brokerage firm for doubtftil practices, should have a decidedly healthy effect. It is a warnâ€" Ing that the investing public in this province is to be protected. "Mrs. P. T. Moisley is visiting friends| and relatives in the South for the| Christmas holidays." "The adjourned tax sale of lands in the township of| Whitney will be proceeded with on Thursday morning, Déec. 18th at 10 o‘clock." â€" ‘"Mrs. E. L. Sm.th has reâ€" turned to her home in Aurora, Ont., after a visit to her son, W. G. Smith." "Last week several were heard wishing, for a gooqg fall of snow to make sleighâ€" ing. Now, they are kicking because| there is too much of itâ€"in spots. Is itl unreasonable to expect that when they are handed the snow they asked for| they might spread it themselves." “Iti is said that since the recent plebiscitei the accommodation at Burwash prison is being taxed to its capacity. The bootâ€" leggers are finding it more economical to spend six months at the farm than to pay the heavy fines." "An order was’ Eissued last week from Ottawa for the release of the 84â€"yearâ€"old IngramI township man, Alex Nelson, convicted of a breach of the Inland Revenue Act. Nelson was sentenced in September. He claimed that the still found on his‘ farm was left there by two men who[ | threatened him with bodily harm if he did not allow them the use of his place for operating the still." "A very atâ€" tractive and interesting booklet is being issued by the Byrnes Church Bazaat book committee. The booklet contains an interesting review of the town of| Timmins, a history of the church, and also greetings and announcements from near and far." ~"L. Chenier, of Cochâ€" rane, was a Timmins visitor last week. "All are delighted to see Jack Macâ€" Lean, assistant town engineer, able to' be out and aroung again after his reâ€" cent illness." ‘Five cases of typhoid fever are reported at Cobalt, with a! sixth person under medical observaâ€" tion for the same disease." "Mrs. Johni W. Fogg was a Haileybury visitor for a| few days last week." "The first 19255 calendar to reach The Advance offite! tlhris season is a particularly attractive angd artistic one from A. H. Cedarberg, architect, Timmins." " B. V. Harrison,| of Cobalt, of the head office of the Nor-! thern Ontario Light Power Co., and Porcupine Telephone Lines, was a Timâ€"| mins visitor last week." "John Matâ€" Gregcr, who has been a resident 6f| Timmins for some months past, and who has made many friends here durâ€" .ng that time, left last week for his old home in Scotland. He will likely return to Canada next year." Ten years ago at New Liskeard a presentation was made to Capt. Tom Magladery as a mark of appreciation for his services to the North. Capt. Magladery was presented with two handsome platters, E. M. Goodâ€" man was chairman of the gathering and Homer Sutcliffe made the presenâ€" tation. Hon. Chas. McCrea, Minister of Mines was one of the speakers at the event. Among the local ang personal items in The Advance ten years ago were the following:â€""Eight cars of freight on the T. N. O. were derailed last week. Traffic was tied up for several hours as a consequence and the Continental L.mited was delayved about three hours" There were about 350 people at the commencement exercises of the new Continuation School at South Porcuâ€" pine ten years ago. A programme of unusual merit was presented and greatâ€" ly enjoyed by all. In the same desâ€" patch from South Forcupine note is made of the fact that the Porcupine Goldfields Band, under Bandmaster James Boissoneault, played at the Dome to the great pleasure of all there F. W. Schumacher, of Columbus, Olmr.o, ten years ago played the role of Santa Claus to the school children of Schumacher town, as he had done for several years previously, and every year since. Every child of school age received a Christmas gift and none of them were cheap or common either. The A. S. D. Club held a very pleaâ€" sant and successful At Home ten years ago. The event was held in the 1.0.0.F. hall and was in charge of a committee consisting of Miss Mary Gray, C. G. F.rie and Harry Austin. Miss Bella Goâ€" wan ard Geo. Carson were the winners of the prizes for cards. Refreshments were serveq during the evening, this part of the programme being in charge of Miss Rhoda Macleod. After the cards a short dance whs enjoyed. Miss Rita Sims providing the music. The club also ‘held a dance in the Masonic hall the same week, w.th over 200 preâ€" sent. Robt. Hoggarth was director of ceremonies. The orchestra was under the direction of Ted Whaley. The Ku Klux Klan was reported as having started a branch in Haileybury ten years ago. Ten ye theatres â€" nearby, $40,000.00 Timmins ten years ago decided to have both Sem.or and Junior hockey. The officers elected for the Porcupine Hockey Club were:â€"D. Briden, presiâ€" dent; J. M. Hackett, viceâ€"president; J. N. Levine. secretary: A. B. Wilson, treaâ€" ta} betd 10uUs othe Pacific w Winnipeg Palls. Tir ten igainst e event. The leading ed‘torial in The Advance n years ago was 10uki} be Sonmeone to Speak for the ttlers." The Advance urged the varâ€" us boards of trade, the Associated ards of Trade, the service clubs and her bodes, to study the needs of wthe ttiers and help them in their battles ainst odds. fic was planning a short line to nipeg, to pass through TIroquois s, Timmins and other centres, and the gold fields of Ontario and Que. the effec ars ago fire destroyed the two at Cobalt and other buildings the total ioss being around PuUIn Air can be liquefied. It looks like water but is very very cold. Liquid air can be boiled merely by exposing it to ordinary air. The various gases that make up our air "boil" at various temâ€" peratures. Control the temperature The history of low temperature work, which is being done in a large number of countries (the University of Toronto has a famous low temperâ€" ature laboratory), is one that has shown us a number of cheaper and easier ways of doing things. "Dry ice" is now a rather common thing. In the summer ice Cream is shipped inside comparatively thin brown canvas bags, inside of which are found a few pieces of the queer "dry ic¢e". Put in water, is seems to make the water boil. Held on the hand for any length of time, it will "burn." It is a very handy commodity but a few years ago it was a curiosity,. We would never have had this substance had not scientists determinedly carried on their researches in a world that is so cold we can barely conceive of it. Dry ice That low level is just what science has for many years been searching. A Dutch experimenter, Professor W. J. de Haas, has succeeded in recording A temperature with nine oneâ€"hundreths of that point which has been just myth so far. That 459 degrees below zero is what is known in the physics classroom as "absolute zero," so called because if there were a gas that would remain a gas at such a low temperaâ€" atureâ€"it just wouldn‘t be there. theoretically. In other words all gases must become either liquids or solids before they reach that low point. ("BY SHAKES") When in Timmins the temperature goes to 30 or 40 below zero, we begin to think it‘s cold. What would you think of a temperature 459 degrses ‘below Zzero. 459 Degrees Below Zero Has Its Uses Saves Your Purse! ANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO., I © HOT BURNING. CLEAN. All Coal, no waste. © FINEST CANADIAN COAL © PURE ASH. NO WASTE. © EASY TO FIRE, Less attentic PROVEN DOWN TO 50 BELOW. © NO MECHAMICAL EQUIPMENT. ¢ Order Western Gem Coal TODAY|! VA AKE your Christâ€" mas tree brighter, more colorful. Have your windows and doorway glow with feative light. And choose EDISON MAZDA Lamps â€" they are decorative and dependable, NQ MELMAAMILAL EQGUVIPMEMNMT. Canada‘s answer to the demand for a modern fuel which does not need expensive equipment., ALL COAL NO W DISON MAZDA W WM 1 50 BELOW« Keeps Western homes warm year after year through steady subâ€"zero weather. | ABLISHED MIME., Years of satisfactory heat ing has given Wessern Gem a name for reliability vou sur COAL Continuous radiant heat. Less attention in cold or mild we volatility. B Phone 32 tioned. All the gases mentioned can dified or liquefied now. Nati e | liquid or a solid they ars mt p | east‘y trasported than as a cor x |gas. One important result w | temperature work is that oxy: soon be transported in small I bottles rathsr than the heaj a | cylinders now in common tise. But what of the future? T possibility of the use of low t tures is that it may solve a a | that has for years confronted cal enginegrs. Every year mill 3 horse power are lost through t tanc> of long transmission lint d' current. Ti ts almost within t of practicability to replace tho: with pipes, in which an obscurf .g cal compound will be kept at § tremely low temperature by fic | quid air. It is"said that at these low t tures, certain salts have no‘re to the electric current, Who ca them? im c 1 6 Frank Byck A sarcastic newspaper editor once said that if a dog bites a man that is not news, but if a man bites a dog that is news. Well, surely if a dog shoots a man that would be news. Anyway, at I West Frankfort, Illinois, there was this case:â€"Harry ageq 35 years, 'laid his gun on the ground while he was out hunting. His dog stepped on lthe trigger of the gun, and the gun went off and the charge struck Choisâ€" ser in the left leg. Now, he‘s liable to have his right leg left. Anyhow, Alec Dewar, formerly of Iroquois Falls, who knows news when he sees it, w.ll say that this is news all right but that it also carries a moral:â€"Never take a dog along when you are going hunting. But on this young contingnt no one has a chance at anvthing when zc0omâ€" has a chance at anything when pared to Europe and other older 1 From Budapest comes a stranger still. And surely it is news., A h man was shot near Kecel when a he had fastened to his Helt revived denly angd kicking out struck the ger of the gun, costing the hunt his life. Here‘s a Couple of Items that Look Like Real News and you stparate th air. It‘s an easy way of obtaining th « Fro:n the deep mine firm s No bone, no clinker T inmins + In ind right but tha â€"Never take a zoing hunting contingnt no ather irns i ar imnil rough t] ion ithin t ace tho lit pi at an by flowin low tem}j Al} Id idil h in om nd: )1 m

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