Boarding AMouse Schumacher â€" « Ont. In connection with the‘O‘Connor House. W. P. OLTON‘S COOD MEALS 3. C00D SERVICE $3.00 PER WEEK NEW PERFECTION "Clean Heat and Plenty of it For Everything You Cook cook and bake anything perfectly, from boiled potatoes to the most delicate cake. It‘s the stove you read about in the magazinés. ‘Three million now in use. Come in and see it work. Telephone 292. â€"and it won‘t blacken your pots and pans." That‘s what any number of h8usewivesâ€"good cooksâ€"who use New Perfections say. And they point at the quickâ€"lighting Long Blue Chimney Burner because it‘s the big secret of this stove‘s clean, steady, deâ€" pendable heat. It means cooler, cleaner kitchens and happier cooks. O;il Cook S1loves and Ovens 2. HARDW ARE 2 Our Motto:â€"‘*‘*Service, Confidence, Fair Dealing:"‘ 35 Fourth Ave., Timmins J. A. HOWSE Wholesale Tobaccos and GConfectionery RREN & FINLAY Phone 154 Haileybury‘s New Association Hears Interesting Review of the Growth Of TIroquois Falls. ABOUT TOWN PLANNING Of THE NORTHLAND 24 Third Ave. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE ‘*‘Mr. R. A. Mclnnis stated that it was a good business proposition, and a splendid commercial enterprise to have a beautiful town. He remarkâ€" ed that big firms and business organâ€" izations were insuring the health of their employees by giving them arâ€" tractive homes to live in, with gardens and by dressing up the town in~which they resided.. Regarding the future of the district of Temiskaming he wasâ€" most optimistie and held out bright hopes. He gave figures to show the wealth that had already gone out of Temiskaming during the past year. ‘*We are going to have threeâ€"cities in Temiskaming in a few years to come‘‘ said Mr. Mcinnis, and one of these he intimated would be Haileybury, if the future were takén in hand and pro‘ perly looked after now. He described Haileybury ‘as being. the: ‘‘home town‘‘ for the district, the same as Three Rivers, Que. was the home town of the district down there. His reaâ€" sons for Haileybury one dfiy becomâ€" ing aâ€"city were cenfered around the fact that the Cobalt silver mines were only five miles away, and.one of the richest agricultural districts3 surroundâ€" ed the town of Haileybury. He thought that Haileybury was ‘just there‘‘ and had not gone over the hill, one way or the other, and that the future was now in the hands of the citizens of the town. He bélieved that the turning point in. the town‘s future was hear at’,hnd. "*Your ob: ject is to build Haileyibury so attracâ€" tivefor people that the¢ will naturalâ€" ly come here to live‘"‘ said (Mr.. Mc Innis. He said that the floating poâ€" pulation of the district of Temiskaâ€" ming was terrible, and that was one reason why the people of Haileybury should endeavor to make Haileyhbury a kind of ""Home town‘‘ wheTe all could come. *His line of thought exâ€" tendéd to having Haileybury a con. vention town, a vacation fown, and fets is t s in fact whaking it a centTe to which everybody would flock for : business reasons as well as pleasure.. Closing his speech he remarked that the fuâ€" tail about the difficulties that had to be surmounted yet, before the work can be called perfect. He gave briefly the history‘ of the Falis. How two students had come north from New York with the intention of staking some mining claims at Cobalt, and finding that everything had been stakâ€" e(f, proceeded on up north, eventually arriving at what is now Iroquois Falls, When they returfed to New York they had nothing to show for their trip, other than empty pockets and a bunch of photographs of the north. These pictures were shown to Mr. F. H. Anson, who is now Presidâ€" ent of the Abitibi Co., and he realizâ€" ing the. possibilities â€"that awaited some one in the‘ ‘‘far north" formed a company, which in time became known as the Abitibi Power & Paper Company. ‘*Mr. Anson‘s hobby is Iroâ€" quois Falls,""‘ said Mr. Heard, and knowing that the men working for Company. ‘*Mr. Anson‘s hobby is Iroâ€" quois Falls,"" said Mr. Heard, and knowing that the men working for him had to have something better to look mt than just square«town blocks and the like, decided to dress up his town. A landscape gardener was seâ€" cured, and now every effort is being put forth to make the *Falls a model town. / Mr.. Heard#stated that Haileyâ€" bury was a town.that possessed a won derful natural situation, but it lacked one thing, ‘‘it was not dressed up."‘ He compared it with towns in Engâ€" land, where sometimes the honks were not as atW#ractive as those in Haileyâ€" biry, but nevertheless possessed a tranquility and charm simply because they . were attractively surmlm(‘ikd with trees and shrubs and flowers. He emphasized the fact that trees and shruwbs will grow up here in the north. Mr. Heard also .remarked that he was glad to hear that the citizens of Haiâ€" leybury had formed a Towh Planners Association. As regards tree planting in Haileybury he advised uniformity of ~selection and Fnutiuned leaving plenty of space for a big flower gar. den. In closing an <extended »and> very wellâ€"written report of the, Town Planâ€" netrs‘ event, The Haileyburian says that the chairman for the evening, Mr. D. L. Jemmett, urged the closest %%ow y l&""‘h"‘/yâ€@‘;llllllllll'lllllxllllll‘lr m :lrlllllrllllll!!rllllllllllll llllllllll.â€".Afâ€" FOR SALEâ€"Secondâ€"hand Ford Truck, cheap. ~Apply W. R. Lowery, Seeâ€" ond Avenue, Timmins. â€"16 of coâ€"operation on the part of all the citizers in order that the Town Planâ€" ners Association may achieve with suceess the aims they have set before them to make Haileybury a town of homes, healthy, prosperous and beaunâ€" tiful. ; 009000094 009800000808 0000800000000000000000000090006004 0000008000008 9090090009009 000000000000 9000006000009 96004 014 n-{:gflg \ï¬:’;‘g