Porcupine Advance, 13 Jan 1938, 2, p. 1

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China,. b; l0o, Chin Christian by Dr. ] Bir Robert F music in Ccha: general Cc would do fully sn« cluded brief mess from Northern Of From Westt well, Cadil Wednesday evening. was nmno usual activitic mins Finnish United â€" every one an opportur the broadcass at 8.30 the Eaton Auditortum, conceri of the Universi from Helsink} Finland guage schnoo at South P give every of to the Unite becretaryâ€"Treasurerâ€"W. D. Forrester P.O. Box 1059, Timmins, Ont. Monthly general meetings of the above branch will be held in the Legion Hall. Cedar Street, South. | Presidentâ€"Walter Greaves I Broadcast of Noted Male Chorus from Helsinki TOLI Credit Reports Collections Accounting and Auditing 6 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228 P.O. Box 1747 â€"~3909â€"2 is is mc 6 i. Specialized Business Training Classes 7 o‘clock Monday, Wednesâ€" day and Friday nights. 6 Balsam St. N., Timmins, Ont. Phcoae 228 Box 677 â€"~41~â€"53 P.0O,. Box 1591 Trustee under The Bankruptcy Act Room 2 Marshall Block Telephone 611 Timmins, Ont. W. D. Cuthbertson, LP.A. Dr. Ray Hughes Dental Surgeon DHR, MOORE‘Ss BUILDING Corner of Pine Phone 2030 and Fourth Timmins Office Hours: 2â€"5 p.in. and by Appointment. PORCUPINE CREDIT Corporation Ltd. Phone 1615 Phone 1565 Gordon Block Tim Chiropractor and Electro Therapist CONsULTATION FREE Diseases Peculiar to Women Timmins Branch 88 Canadian Empire Block _ Timmins 14â€"26 Dr. p CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT Monday Legion Porcupine School of Commerce Dr. W. Gordon W att DISEASES OF CHILDREN 7 GORDON BLOCK Timmins The Pioneer Paper of the Porcupine. Established 1912. 0. E. Kristenson CHIROPRACTOR Xâ€"_RAY NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 8607 CONsSULTING AUDTTOR Cl SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 60 THIRD AVENUE Phone 640 4 Gordon Block 8.30 January 24th, 1938 stoppexi now., The s to wnat a bull "hina shop has been Ha Telephones : Office 2025 Residence 2025B i1 yÂ¥ Male Timmins, Ont Timmins, Ont. ~17â€"43p Mr. Kirwan lake, Ont. Timmins It l1 .T stern| see, â€" The| lvzed IC 11 "So sorry, dear," replied Mrs, Higâ€" gins, "but we never go anywhere. You see, my husband is partially paraâ€" "Delighted to have met you. Mrs Higgins," gushed the new resident. "Do come over and see us one night over the Christmas season." in the evening‘s entertainment, ‘the pianist being W. A. Devine. A delicious lunch was served, after which W. Greaves, with ticket No. 18, won the lovely cushion which had been donatâ€" ed by Mrs. G. Nippers, and brought to close an evening of fun and merriâ€" BOTH THEIR HUSBANDs HAD THE <AME sORT OF TROUBLE An enjoyable programme was preâ€" sented, the first number of which was a piano solo by W. A. Devine, playing the beautiful "Hungarian Dance No. 57 followed by the popular selection, "Blazin‘ the Trail." A. Bellamy then sang, with deep understanding, "Little Pal," and as an encore he gave "The Voice in the Ol4d ! Village Choir." _ All the members next joined in singâ€" ing the Legion theme song, which was lead by the new president, W. Greaves. Every member put ‘"everything they had" into singing the song, so that scon, even all the ladies had joined i them in it. "Oh, don‘t let that worry you. My iusband is that way more than half A particularly interesting item on prcgramme was a presentation _made to the past preseident, Austin Neame. W. Greaves, president, preâ€" sented Mr. Neame with a gift as token of the esteem and regard of his comâ€" rades. He mentioned the good work Mr. Neame had done for the branch, and added that he knew the pastâ€" president would always be willing to coâ€"operate with them and to assist the Legion. Mr. Neame responded, thanking his comrades for their kind thought, and stated that he was willâ€" ing to help them at all times. In closâ€" ing, he wished the branch all success in the coming year, adding that he knew they would go on and on to greater heights. Four members of the Schubert Chorâ€". al Society, Mrs. P. Carson, Mrs. Gay,. Percy Harris, and Charlie Roberts, acâ€" companied by their director, Mr. Geo.: Hale, sang beautifully "FMlow Gently.f Sweet Afton" and the song that will! never die. "Drink to Me Only WLth| Thine Eyes." | "Captain Mac" sung by Percy Harris.l found instant approval and brought: loud applause demanding an encore number, ‘"Shipmates 0o‘ Mine" which proved equally popular. Miss Peggy Bellamy, accompanied by Myrs. Bellamy, sang ‘"Viennese Refrain," | followed by ‘"Barcarolli." A. Jenkins, dedicating his songs to the pastâ€"president, Mr. Neame, sang "Friend 0‘ Mine" and "My Prayer" in a very pleasing manner, winning loud I l | | \ Dancit Dancing comprised a delightful pa \ the evening‘s entertainment, U ianist being W. A. Devine. A delicio inch was served, after which After a special meeting in the Legion hall on Monday evening, the members of the Canadian Legion local branch held a very pleasant social evening, to which all members and their ladies were invited. Presentation Made to Mr. Austin Neame Happy Social Evening at Timmins Branch of the Legion Branch of Ukrainian Exâ€"Service Men Organize Society Here, Following Visit of Organizer to Town. Society Has Twenty Branches in Canada. Will Have Formal Reception of Charter Soon Branch Organized Here by Ukrainian Veterans Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Ohe Muante with deep and as an in the O time the he didn bottile o1 admitted sible for PTrank U by Dean The fact that a "spotter" employed by police to secure an L.C.A. conviction could not be produced in court and that the evidence offered a number of posâ€" sibilities that might absolve the accusâ€" ed, a charge of having liquor in an illegal place against Joseph Trottier, of Carriere‘s Taxi, was dismissed. Angus St. Cyr was named as the "speâ€" cial police." Police claimed that St. Cyr had gone to the office of the taxi company and proceeded in one of their cars to 75 Middleton avenue,. the address of the accused. Proceeding from this point, police trailed the taxi to Hollinger Lane where the driver was stopped. When the car was searched a bottle of liquor was found on the back seat. Sgt. DesRoches claimed that when Trottier was questioned at the poiic¢e office he admitted that he owned the bottle of liquor, explaining that he was taking it up to St. Cyr‘s residence but that he Unable to raist costs and forced t ary alternative o district bastille, 4 publicized as hay Muchâ€"Headiined Man is Treated as Plain Drunk hall on Mond Man W ho Claimed to Have Killed a Man in Sacramento to Serve Thirty Days in Lieu of $10 Fine. Police Operator Again Fails to Appear in Cases. Number of Remands Granted at Police Court Tuesday. The Ladies‘ Auxiliary are holding a five hundred card party in the Legion The Ladies Auxiliary of the Canaâ€" dian Legion held a pantry shower and bingo party in benefit of an unfortunâ€" ate member in the Legion hall on Tuesâ€" day afternoon. The afternon was spent playing bingo, for which there were four lovely prizes, the lucky winners beingâ€"1st, Mrs. Roberts: 2nd, Mrs. K. Johnson; 3rd, Mrs. Price Jr.; 4th, Mrs. Bound. A delicious luncin was served to those who attended, after which the presentation of foodstufis was made. Benefit Shower and Bingo by the Ladies‘ Auxilhiary O plalnling CyI‘s q chargin vine, un DatKk seat. bgt. Devine it would have been posâ€" â€"yr to have tossed the d on Page FKigbti TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13TH, 1938 : that he was taking it residence but that he ig. him for 1t. Sgt. ider cross examination K.C., said that at the _ stopped Trottier said anything about the ick seat. Sgt. Devine ous was served ittended, after which _ of foodstuffis was evenin (Rouynâ€"Noranda Press) George McLaren, wellâ€"known Rouyn Noranda aviator, is cn his way to the Uchi area, west of Red Lake, in his homeâ€"made aeroplane. He took off from Osisko lake yvesterday on the longest flight he has yet attempted in the ship, expecting to make it in a series of short hops. He has been emâ€" ployed recently at Uchi Gold Mines, Jack Hammell‘s promising new mine in the Woman Lake area,. Patricia disâ€" trict, ard wanted to have his plane with him. He has used the machine for many shorter flights around the nortwestern Quebec area, particularly from Rouyn to Bousquet township, where he was formerly employed. Last night he spent at South Porcupine ind expected to continue toâ€"day. Mrs, Pommier will sail from New York next Saturday on the Ile de France for Plymouth, and after a short stay in London will proceed to Antwerp and Brussels and then on, to Paris and Marseilles, and finallyâ€"+0 Rome, Venice, and Naples, to sail from the latter port on February 22nd on the homeward voyage. A brother of Mr. Pommier will probably accompany them from Cornâ€" wall, Ont., and, besides the pleasures the trip promises, they will buy novelâ€" ties supplies for some thirteen stores owned by members of the Pommier familyv." From Rouyn to Uchi Lake in Homeâ€"Made Aeroplane An item last week on the local personal page of The Rouynâ€"Nor Press says:â€""A. T. Pommiler, known (Rouyn and Noranda jew whose stores in both towns re progressive merchandising ideas are credit to the north, will here on Saturday on â€"a buying which is to take him, with Mrs. J mier, to many leading centres oi British Isles and Eurtope. Mr. "ormer Timmins People On Trip to Old Countries ind l1â€"known Rouyn his way to the d Lake, in his He took off erday on the t attempted in Dcal and well. weller reflec and leave trip Poim â€" da symphony Orchestra 1 Here Makes Progress 1i1€ ODJECT OI Uhe Oorchestra is toj PrOVIintlal Cons promote greater interest in music of| investigated the this type in the Porcupine, and with| Bergeron told hi this in mind competent musicians are| that he thought invited to join the organization in orâ€"| jJump on the sid der to complete the present objectiveâ€"| what he saw. an orchestra of 40 pieces. ‘The orchesâ€"|_ Claude Desauln tra doées not consist of a, group of| ceaseda boy and pupils, but is open to all interested in| told the jury of ; such â€"a movement. The present need{ him by the young is for a string bass section and a few' before he died i more horns. The violin section that as he was wa rapidly reaching completion but a few the ‘back wheels . more players would be welcome. Beâ€"| to the left in loose ginners are not urged to attend Lhe'could jump clear . practices as the orchestra hopes tolthe wheels which swing into action in the near future,] told his uncle th and with the practices limited to one| Bergeron knew t} each week, individual instruction can| him. hardly be offered. t ~ The jury, with February may see the first annearâ€" | foreman. were ou!t limmins and the Porcupine will soon have a good symphony orchestra if the present progress of a group of mlusicians under the direction of H. F. Schroeder continues. For some weeks past, regular practices have been held at Harmony hall, Fourth avenue, each Sunday afternon at 3.00 o‘clock. Very little publicity has been given the proâ€" ject so far, but with the orchestra rounding into shape it is felt that the public should now be given details reâ€" Regular Practices Are Being Held. Will Have Forty Members When Completâ€" council has deleted grandamothers | the list of relatives whose fun qualify employees for the day off pay. Budding business men will | to think up new reasons for being sent on cutstanding sport 0CCasiot Etraiford Beaconâ€"Heraid:â€"We anâ€" ticipate.an uprising on the part of ofâ€" fice boys. It has long been the inâ€" alienable right of the Canadian or American office boy to have his grandâ€" mother die when the baseball season opens at home, and in the Old Counâ€" try when a crucial fosctball game is Yet They Claim Business Methods Are Improving *DWebbal Inquest Held Here Monda\ Night Into Death of Floyd Desâ€" aulniers, Who Died in HObpltdl Here November 20th. Uncle Relates Statement of Dead Boy Who Absolved Truck Driver. rUso.5.4ut T uncil dele onnaught Boy‘s Death Found to be Accidental plans. bject of the ater intere OW game is London Borough randmothers from whose â€" funerals * the day off with ss men will have inyVy Drogramme ort occasions g abâ€" Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Exchange:â€"Marriage vows are i often followed by marriage rows Nine times out of ten the sad story| of a rail smash is that the wooden‘ coaches telescoped. The French disâ€" aster of June this year at Villeneuve S. Georges revealed that 27 out of the 28 passengers killed were in the wooden coaches. The first comment | of M. Chautemps, the French Premier, on visiting the wreckage was "Naturalâ€" lyâ€"once more wooden coach." As! for the argument that says the swcli coaches jam their doors under impact and you cannot get at the passengers to release them, the answer is: "Would you rather be jammed alive in a steel coach or mangled to death in a wooden one?" "What‘s the matter with you?" asked his wife. "I‘ve been running this maâ€" chine for ten vears." "Oh," replied her husband, "I was merely trying to help you, just as you try to help me drive the car!" ‘Don‘t you think it‘s running too fast? Look out, you‘ll sew the wrong seam! Slow down or you‘ll stick that needle into your finger!" (From Ottawa Journal) The husband drew up a chai: his wife‘s sewing machine ai marked :â€" SAUCE FOR THE GANDER Is SPINACH FOR THE some other way. Apart from noting that the purchase of new is being carried on by the T. N. O. with due moderation, about the only answer needed to the gentleman‘s raâ€" ther outâ€"ofâ€"date complaint is the folâ€" lowing paragraph from The London. England, Express. Of course, there are practically no railway wrecks in this North Land. Indeed, nobody encourâ€" ages them here. But the same is true of the Old Land. The T. N. O. repuâ€" tation for never killing or injuring any of its passengers will be kept good by the purchase from time to time of good new equipmert. The London newspaper referred to says:â€" Nine times out of ten the sad story One day this week a local gentleman suggested that the gradual replaceâ€" ment of coathes on the ‘I. N. O. Railway with more modern type might be all right from one standpoint, but that the money involved might be used The jury, with William R. Rinn, as foreman, were out only a few minutes reaching a verdict. Other members of the jury were, J. Faithful, J. A. Tremâ€" blay, P. H. Carson, J. R. Walker, Guiseppi Guistini, Elvin Urquhart. Deaths More Frequent in Case of Wooden Coaches told his uncle that he did not think Bergeron knew that he had run over him. Claude Desaulniers, uncle of the deâ€" ceased boy and a voluntary witness, told the jury of a statement made to him by the young victim a short time before he died in which he claimed that as he was walking along the road, the ‘back wheels of the truck skidded to the left in loose gravel and before he could jump clear he was pinned under the wheels which passed over him. He Provincial Constable H. S. Gaul, who investigated the fatality swore that Bergeron told him after the accident that he thought Desaulniers tried to jump on the side of the truck from what he saw. Ovide Tremblay, a fellow worker of Davidson‘s, gave similar evidence. Arâ€" thur Bergeron, father of the boy drivâ€" ing the truck, also testified brieflv. Jack Davidson, who was working on a skidway near the road at Feldman‘s Camp in the Township of German. where the accident took place, said that his attention had been drawn to the boy lying in the road just after a truck had passed. At this time the truck was about 100 feet away and proceeded on without stopping. The boy, who was picked up by Davidson and another man, semed to be injured internally according to Davidson but didn‘t say anything about who had run, over him. Joseph Bergeron, of Barber‘s Bay. driver of the truck, claimed that he had seen young Desaulniers walking along the side of the road to the left of the truck. He denied that he told Provinâ€" cial Constable Gaul that Desaulniers tried to jump on the truck, which he stated was travelling about fifteen miles an hour. He swore that he had no idea how the accident happened and didn‘t know of it until he came back to Connaught on his return trip that day. Dr. R. E. Anderson, who attended the| deceased boy, who was eleven years old.| told the inquiry that he had died from shock caused by fractures of the pelvis. Returning a verdict of accidenta death, a coroner‘s jury here Monda: night found that Floyd Desaulniers. o Comnmaught, died in St. Mary‘s hospita in Timmins on November 20 last of in Juries received when he attempted t« board a truck driven by Arthur Berâ€" geron on the road between Connaugh and Barber‘s Bay. at Timmins, Ont., Canada AnL Sudbury Star:â€"Sa longer worrying abou of her fans. Now sI accident policy that c The "Flying Scot" i train in the world, a: the world‘s longâ€"dist many years, but is t Britain to have an all ant and a modern hal and 20 minutes, in the north are train is never a | The Flying Scotsman Is the World‘s Bestâ€"Known Train es 0) memmmomess }) iJ ( ce( i) § cce § j me The name With a record of 50 years as a most satisâ€" factory treatment for piles or hemorrhoids, you can positively depend on it Dr. Chases Ointment J. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. Room 6. Gordon Block. Pumone 2015 Timmins .-'Iâ€"Ilâ€"lllâ€"liuâ€"fll ces }| (| ji (i || ) amemue. Basement Reed Block, Timmins Service Satisfaction Sanitation Dr. J. A. Kinnear sSPECIALIST Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Discases of Women) Member of the Staff of the University of Toronto Member of the Staff of the Toronto General Hospital Associated With Dr. Minthorn No. 12 3rd Avenue, Timmins Phone No. 2 Swiss Watchmaker Graduate of the Famous Horological Institute of Switzerland Third Avenue Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Etc. Old P.O. Bidg., Timmins â€" Phone 362 ARCHITECT 7 Reed Block Timmins Timmins Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0. L.S, Langdon Langdon sjjcedued Up), e nrame "Flying S« Y a London cabbi¢ ar among hanson the public tcok ; , the train was offi Toâ€"day the journe: Ask Your Dealer for Prices or send your order direct to RENTS COLLECTED AND PROPERTIES MANAGED We Manufacture and Carry in Stock FLAGS HAVERSACKS SNOWSHOES DOG SLEIGHS TOBOGGANS TARPAULINS TENTS PACK EIDE £ DOoG H HORSEF BL Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. DEAN KESTER, K.C. CHARLES H. KERR Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BUILDING PETERBOROUGH, ONT. Agents Everywhere Barrister, Solicitor, Etce. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. E. C. Brewer D. R. Franklin D. Paquette, proprietor THREE BARBERS IN ATTENDANCE Barristers, Solicitors, Ete. MASSEYXY BLOCK TIMMINX®, ONT. and Ssouth Porcupine Phone 1365 DE LUXE WNIN GS In the Special I Novembet Architect Second Section ndon, ars, bu 16 SKIIS DOG HARNESS PACK BAGS EIDERDOWN ROBES 18 Empire Block BLANKETS Rand â€" is FW € gITa restâ€"knowrn , only held resord for y train in ¢ restaurâ€" ing saloon, lan," conâ€" on b â€" drivers, Acy to Iit. y christenâ€" es 7 hours the passes ed up. the has pulled at 10 a.m. t it would learn that thirdâ€" ginning it ‘â€"Hour Exâ€" 85 0; One a $100,000 verything. ces }) (i }| ii § nd the Ontario ~14â€"206 â€"14, 110

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