Porcupine Advance, 28 Aug 1941, 2, p. 5

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CIHI€ CAXCIIL QOl TIiC 31 organâ€" ization. In the annual report just isâ€" sued by the secretaryâ€"treasurer, Mrs. R. Lilly, the figures presented suggest the ‘helpfuiness of the Ladies of Charâ€" ity and the great importance and exâ€" tent of the work being carried on. The Ladies of Charity have 130 members on their roll call, 104 of whom have paid the annual membership fee of 50 cents. Lhe PFmpire hn Mascioli and a was remodclliec with apartmers Twenty years charitable the Ladies of C Church. ‘This o ful work in reli of various kind issue of Aucgust lowing to say i: of ‘Charity approval the go« so much «effici¢ the Ladics of C so interesied have no ‘the extent of the wor ization. In the annua sued by the secretary at Budbury conferred with the linger, the owners of the Gol ho‘el here. It was hoped ther arrangements would be made f erection of a fin> new hotel at mins, the plans were not C through as expected. The Gol hotel was taken over by H. Mori conducted as a holel for a time. The Advar front pazge :; ability of a being built 'm"“ooo 4 es THURSDAY. AUC T wenty Years Ago) John W From the Po-rcuplnc Advance f;lcs RD sSCHUMACHER PHONE T25 . P â€" P P PA L AL oo P AP PP The slower you drive, the more you save [ KEMrEAMBER : Lumber, Mine and Mill Supplies Coal and Coke Lumber Cement, Building Material, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies mmins. Interests in 1e Nicke) Range hotel «P PA eP AP PA P P ACâ€"AC P N. of St. Anthony‘ tion dia wonder t and assistanc + Advance in it 821. had the fol ng of ‘the prob $100.000.00 hot‘e the Groid} ped then made for The Goldfield H. Morin anmn a time. Whs . Fogg, Limited Give yoursol{ and your service station man a break,. Let him check up your car and put it in shape to save gasoline. It gives him needed work and helps you keep your 50/50 Pledge. Every gallon counts: seo that not a drop is wasted: our Fighting Forces need all the gasoline they can get. IEAD OFFICE YARD BRANXCH â€"OFFICE TIMMIN® KIRKLAND LAKE PHMONE 117 PHONE 393 he activ own wa he fol Ladies the irliz T‘im ceeds from stands, eic.., the Lmdies of Cherity have realized $2.358 81. Manâ€" | bership fees paid amourted to $52:00. Total receipts were thus, $241081. ®For work the Ladies of Charity exponded $92838; qonated ts the new Church ~Building Fund, $600.00; exâ€" pended for the erection of stands, etc., total expenditures being $1,.â€" 86336; leaving a balance in the bank oA $54745.. The Ladios of Charity have sent 12 orphans to different homes. Four patients were sent to Haileybury ‘hopsital, 2 to Ottawa hospital, 33 ‘to t. Mary‘s Hospital. One insane man was sent to an institution. A deaf and‘ dumb girl was provided for in a Monâ€"| ‘real institution. The Ladies of Charâ€" iiy have made 250 sick calls, and supâ€" plied clothing for 150 poor children andl destitute or needy woman and men. The officers and members of the Ladâ€" ‘KCED in the runmr to the golf in progre ago The Advance in i twenty y semiâ€"fina taken in vear. In met 10n pa hopsital t. Matr urpris? ime th d s( howir the con the play but it w Timit 1J IM ila , it was felt at the same took the best kind of golf he running. In referring in progress twenty years mirs Golf Ch ago V. H. Emg¢ There was cvri cont > 1901 only i 1921 cen great interest all along that e were several issue of Aug irs ago pubâ€" the Dominâ€" preliminary us. Returns _ given, each ver t‘he 1911 s also showâ€" réce impilonship ry won the at interest 101 s pracilâ€" when its COm â€" â€",] 17th, 4921, â€"said :â€"*"Mr. V. H. Emery won f| the semiâ€"finals on Saturday arternoon., _ | Mr. J. W. Fogg beat Mr. C. G. Williams and Mr. Emery beat Mr. H. C. Garner. In the playâ€"off Mr. Emery beat Mr. s Fegg on the eighteenth hole. The winâ€" : ner played good consistent golf all through the tournament, but it was a surprise to most to see Mr. Fogg los> ‘\ as his usual game is hard to beat. It | was, however, not his day apparently, | and he lost by the narrow margin of | one, though playing a good game. ‘The | feature for next Saturday, Aug. 20 h, at the golf links here is the Medal Handiâ€" ; E cap at 2 p.m. The course is now very l‘ good, the new grass being up. Next _ year the course will be better still, as | | there will be fully one hundred square | | feet of grass." ! Twoenty years ago Timmins and Cochrane qlayed baschall at Cochrane| and though Timmins won the matchi 8 to 3, the Cochrane lads had the lo-i cal team wondering a little in the early stages. Thacker,. the pitcher for Cochâ€" | rane proved a good one and he got fins support from his team. Farr and Mcâ€" . Intyre were the battery for Timmins} and they played great baseball. Sheeâ€" i han was another star for the Timmins lsteam. Those playing for Timmins inâ€" | cluded:â€"MeCurry, Pierce, Sheehan, Sspring, Lake, Scully, Farr, MclLean,| Armand Perron, 47 Montgomery avenue, was stopped by the police on Friday night when he was driving along Gillies avenue and his car was searched. Police found a bottle of beer in the car and a charge of hayâ€" ing beer in other than his private reâ€" sidence was laid against the man. On Tuesday he appeared before Magistrate Atkinson and pleaded guilty. The fine imposed was $10 and costs. Try The Advange Want Advertisements Joe Guiseppe paid a fine of twenty dollars and costs on a charge of disâ€" orderly conduct. Bill Hamuth paid a fine of ten dollars and costs on the same charge. Both men pleaded guilly before Magistrate Atkinson andq both were charged at the same time. Harry Lindberg, also facing a charge of disâ€" orderly conduct asked for and receivegq a week‘s remand. On a charge of speeding . James Wyatt pleaded guilty and paid a fine of ten dollars and costs. Wyatt was charged with speeding last Priday. Robert Brandon, 110 Mountjoy street south, was charged by the Timmins police, with indecent exposure on Aug. 24th about a quarter after one in the morning. He pleaded guilty to the charge on Tuesday and paid a fine of ten dollars and costs. Cyril Crawford was facing the same charge and he also pleaded guilty and paid the same fine. The charge against Crawford was laid last weekâ€"end. A charge of having defective brakes on his car was laid against Gordon Tassie some time ago but it was not until this week that the police were slole to serve the man with a sumâ€" mons. He appeared before Magistrate Atkinson on Tuesday and asked for a week‘s remand. His request was granted. Guilty Pleas Are Entered in Most Cases on Tuesday Woman Pays Ten Dollars and Costs for Allowing Unlicansed Driver to Drive Her Car. charge of Griving a motor vehicle without the proper license. William Bezanson paid a dollar and costs for making unngcessary noise with his car. He was accused of tootâ€" ing his horn unnegessarily and he pleaded guilty to the charge. A local lady paid a dollar and costs for parkâ€" ing her car in a prohibited area. Mrs, Alex Peters paid a fine of ten dollars and costs in police court on Tuesday of this week when she pleadâ€" ed guilty to a charge of allowing an unlicensed person to drive her motor vehicle. Ambrose Pulchinsk also paid Spring, Lake, Scully, FParr, Mclean, Cochran:‘s lineâ€"up included : D. Campbell, McKinnon, Belleveux, <G. Campbell, Thacker, E. St. Jean, Hann, Casey, Dempsey, A. St. Jean. Timmins had four errors and Cochrane> had seven. fine A Chinese ancestor scroll makes a colourful and interesting overâ€"mantle piece in the living room of of d person to Ambrose Pul __tem dollars f driving he proper li and m allowing _her m« k also ; costs 0o §;.30n * vehicl THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO The Lepage car made a left turn, evidentally toâ€" park beside Albert‘s Hotel, when it was struck by the other car. Damage in the accident was very liitle, the Lepage car receiving very slight damage and the other car reâ€" ceiving damage to the right front fendâ€" er. Mrs. Lepage was driving a Terraplane convertible coupe and Mr. Allen was driving a Ford sedan. Police say that the Lepage car was travelling west on Second avenue and the «other car being Gdriven by Jack Allen, of 52 Middleston avenue, was travelling east on Commercial and was just going on to Second avenue when the impact took place. Police say that the two cars crashed about forty ‘or fifty feet from the intersection. T‘wo Cars Collide on Second Ave. Near Albert‘s Hotel. One Driver Charged. Careless Driving Charge Results from Accident Saturday A traffic accident late Saturday afternoon of last week resulted in «one of the drivers involved being chargzed with careless driving after the Timâ€" mins police had investigated the crash. Mrs. Yvonne «Lepage, of 12 Balsam street north, was charged with the offence. Distributors are ordered not to supâ€" ply fuel to a dealer who is not being supplied by him at the «date of the order, August 23. The order does not apply to «dealers supplying motor fuel to «consumers only by means of tank wagon or ‘to the supply of fuel in any quantities for use in tractors. Gas stations which are operated by or on behalf of a distributor are subâ€" ject to the provisions of the order and The order directs deaiers not to disâ€" criminate unfairly beiween consumers but to "restrict the supply ‘of motor fuel to all consumers rateably." It sets out that distributors "shall give preference and priority in the supply of motor fuel to consumers‘" for polics, health, public utility, qpublic transportation, commercial, industrial and governmental purposes. it also provides that there shall be no discrimination by distributors as beâ€" tween dealers. The paragraphs of the order dealing with reduction «of deliveries read: "During the period commencing the 25th‘ day of August, 1941, and ending the 3lst day of August, 1841, every disâ€" triDuior is hereby prohibited from supâ€" plying, either directly or indirectly, to any dealer mors than twenty (20) per centum of the [aggregate quantity of motor fuel supplied to such gealer durâ€" ing the month of July, 1941. "During the months of September and October, 1941, respectively, every distribujor is hereby prohibited from supplyving either directly or indirectly, ‘0o any dealer more than seventyâ€"five (75) per centum of the aggregate quanâ€" tity of motor fvel supplied to such dealer quring the month of July, 1941." situation More Serious He again askeq molorists to cut down consump.ion, saying the situation now is more serious than it was five weoks ago when the appeal was launched. for voluntary conservation. Rather, it was being made in support of the apâ€" peal. Tt was a known fact, however, that all cilizens had not heeded the appeal and it was hoped the curtailâ€" ment «Of delivéeries would "bring them into line." Mr. Oo.trelle said the order, which applies throughout Canada, should not be considereq as replacing the appeal Torcnto, Aug. 27â€"Gasoline and oil deliveries to retailers were sharply reduced in an order adssued this week by Controller G. R. Cot.relle. Deliverâ€" ies during the week August 25â€"31 inâ€" clusive will be 20 per cent of total geâ€" liveries in the month of July and durâ€" ing both September and October they will be 75 per cent of July deliveries. Gasolinmne.Delivery Greatly Reduced Deliveries This Week to be Oneâ€"Fifth of July Total. MJ3 and Mrs. Shelby Davis If fashion is your favourite dish of tea, collect costume prints of different Safe choices for aecorative pictures include simple prints of birds or flowâ€" ers or Truitâ€"these may be bright, splashy, and wonderfully ornamental, ‘or they can be precise and effective only when grouped together. If you have a hOobby, there‘s no more interâ€" esting way to express it than in your picturesâ€"colleéct transportation prints of airplanes, old automobiles, bicycles, boats or trains . . . collect lengths of interesting chintz or wallpaper, perâ€" haps according to certain design themes . . cellect maps or menus or daguereotypes or family photographs or ‘old sheet music covers or newspaper Tront pages or fans or valentines . whatever your hobby, express it in the pictures for the walls of at least one room in your houss. If furniture or interior decorating is your hcbby, get pints of famous paintings of interiors in different countries and eras. . ._. till you‘ve outgrown them or learnâ€" ed ibetter or have tired of them. Then get seme others. (We‘re not talking wbout old masters . .. we mean the kind of pictures most of us can have.) Good prints are available at reasonable xost and nice, simple frames don‘t cost a fortune. You could even keep the grames and change the pictures from time to time. After a while you‘ll find your taste and discernment deâ€" veloping, and eventually you will be able ‘to trust your judzament for a really important picture investment. Till You Are Sure There‘s no solution in falling back m something noncommittal like etchings, just because they‘re safe. We‘d almost venture to say that you‘d better be wrong than timid about your pictures. Select them because you like them and because they seem to belong to the room you plan them for. Keep them as long as you really enjoy them Pictures in a home are personal . .. as personal as clothes or cosmetics or jewelry. And probably even more reâ€" vealing. That‘s why decorators hesiâ€" tate to prescribe pictures for a room, even when they‘ve advised about its furnishings. And. yet many a homeâ€" maker gets panicky at the prospect of buying pictures because she‘s even less sure of herself here than in the matâ€" ter of furniture. A pleasing arrangement of classical pictures is shown here above the sofa with one large painting flanked by smaller ones on cither side. This photoâ€" Your Pictures are Revealing So Select Them Thoughtfullyâ€" Frame Them Appropriatelyâ€"Hang Them Interestingly. PLEASANT HoMES great paintings published recentlyâ€" choose from these collections if you don‘t know where else to look. Then the picture gepartments of the stores have, from time to «time, presented folios of prints of modern paintings from which selections can be made. When your eye is trained, you can venâ€" ture to pick .up the original paintings of unknown artistsâ€"there is no more fascinating speculation in the world than to see if you can pick a winner. If ‘you do, you stand to make money as you would on the stock market or the race track. As for framing and hanging pictures, that‘s an interesting study worth emâ€" barking on, too. Tf you agon‘t have a mint of money to spend, you‘ll find pretty good plain molding frames in the popular stores. Add interesting mats of wall paper or lace paper on brocade or on chintz, and you‘ll find that you can achieve some «harming effects at little expense. If you can afford more elaborate frames, you‘ll fing@ stunning ones in modernized traâ€" ditional scroll designs, some antiqued white, some bleached, some tipped with gold. Dramatic slabs of plate glass, bigger than the actual picture can be serewed over it to the wall. Mirror and bamboo frames are different and distinctive. Broad wood frames covâ€". ered in velvet or brocade have charm. Feather and plastic frames are Hang important pictures walls that set them off tCc storekeeping or doctoing or lawgiving is the family occupation, why not look for old prints about that? ®E®ven etchâ€" ings are all right if they mean anyâ€" thing to you personally. Now thenâ€"how can you say you don‘t know what king of pictures to look for? When every family has some forte! Tried and True As for the choice of invportant big picturesâ€"good coptes ‘of ‘the tried and true masters continue to be pretty satisfying, for these have a universal appeal. There have been two good volumes of illustrations of the world‘s periods. If the family are sports fans, collect prints, old and new, of the speâ€" cial sports you follow. If agriculture or stock raising or manufacturing or nd new 71 Third Avenue by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin Terms As Low As $11 per Month now! Smith Elston advantage of these extraordinary low terms Your savings in fuel will pay for a new stoker. PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS ctures alone on off to best adâ€" graph was taken in the living room of Henry Hagen and Reginald Styers "How much do I owe?" he snapped. "I‘m sure I gon‘t know," she re‘orted coldly. "But your bill here is one and ninepence."â€"Gliobe and Mail. Pompous in manner and difficult to please, the customer had given the waitress a lot of needless trouble. At last, however, he finished his meal and beckoned her to the table. Howard presented the play for eight years in this country and abroad and retired to Cambridge with a fortune. Mrs. Macdonald continued the role of Little Eva for those eight years, and retireq from the stage when her family settled in Cambridge. She married Edmund J. Macdonald who conducted a bookbinding busi- ness, He gied in 1887. Original "Little Eva" Dies at Cambridge, Mass Her father, George C. Howard, was a native of Halifax, NS. With Mis. Macdonald‘s mother, Caroline Pox Howard, he played here in the original version of the famous play, and their daughter made her debut in the role of "Little Eva‘" at theâ€"age of four, Poston, Aug. 27â€"Mrs. Cordelia Hoâ€" ward Macdonald, the original "Little Eva" who thrilled thousands of theatreâ€" goers Jby her of Harrigt Beecher Stowe‘s immorial character from "Uncle Tom‘s Cabin," is dead at Cambridge. She was 94. $ vantage . . . they can be flanked by‘ a pair of wall brackets holding plants or figurines or occasionally by smaller pi¢â€" tures. Incidental pictures should be hung in groupsâ€"in two‘s, three‘s, or by the dozen . . . som@times groupigd around one larger picture, sometimps in symmetrical balance. Be sure thit the frames either match or harmonige Sometimes it‘s amusing to hang thef in tiers on a broad velvet ribbon with a bow at the top. Sometimes you can hang a group of small pictures on an interesting length of fabricâ€"or frame them, with proper mat, in one la:z'e frame. § (Released by Consolidated News F?i tures, Inc.) Phone 327

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