Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 14 Jan 1925, 1, p. 3

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GHOLDEN ENCAMPMENT NO. 107 1.0.0.¢. sOUTH PORCUPINE, â€" Mecets every second and fourth Wednesday in each month, in 1.0.0.F. Hall. Visiting patriarchs welcome. D. Hughes, C.P. 44.â€"5 J. R. Newman, R.S. 36 Wilson Ave.., cor. Preston St. Phone 610â€"J. Satisfaction assured you here, whether you Buy or Sell. Give us a Trial. Goods Delivered Free. Gordon H. Gauthier Experienced Workmanship Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Mr. Gauthier will be at Timmins Best Prices on all Goods Purchased. Lowest Prices on all Goods Sold. Opp. Woolworth‘s, 12 Third Ave. New and Secondâ€" Hand Store All Kinds of Furniture, Bought, Sold or Exchanged. Gordon Building, Lambkin and Roberts, P.O. Box 839 49 5th Ave. 41â€"54 p Phone 77 OFFICES REED BLOCK, TEIMMINS sSOUTH PORCUPINE. Antique Restoring Upholstering Shop Fitting Interior Decorating Repairing Musical Instruments. By Electrical Contractor DENTIST Phone 201 Specialist in Plate Work and Crown and Bridge ork. There‘s but one IF stgndâ€" ing between you and complete heat for your home. If you ask us to figure on the installation ou have taken the first step towards perfect heatâ€" ing satisfaction. A. BRAZEAU SON 4 Ced®r St., Timmins Jas. Cowan, iimmins Gold Nugget Rebekah Lodge, No 173 Marie Carlyle, Meets every Thursday in the month in the Oddfellows‘ Hall, Third Ave. Visiting Brothers and Sisters always TIMMINS LODGE, 1.0.0.F. No. 453 Visiting Br welceome. Meets every Tuesday evening in th« Oddfellows Hall, Third _ Avenue. Visiting brethren requested to attend. After using the first bottle i noticed a marked improvement. My appetite improved and after the seâ€" cond bottle I could eat like a horse, even raw potatoes and onions would be as welcome as apples. I slept like a log and after a refreshing steep, I was able to take up the strenuous work of the hustling inâ€" surance This work calls for considerable nervous energy in closâ€" ing business and I can say, with Carnol has no superior in the medicine line. I would sugâ€" gest that your company give this letter a most conspicuous place, so t‘iat everyone may know what a great medicine is before the public as a restorative tonic and flesh builder. I say, with all confidence, Following a railway acciâ€" dent, after other medccines failed, he got relief from two bottles of Caraol. The following letter needs no comment from us. We leave M\Mtr. Sinclair to tell you about his exâ€" perience in his own words,â€""I was very much run down and nervous following a railway accident some years ago. Medicines failed to give me any real help, so I decided to try Carnol. I did not have any faith in patent medicines, but a friend of mine said Carnol was far superior to any other of the soâ€"called patent medicines. ‘Give it a trial," he said. ‘and let me know the results.! I aim glad to say this wonderful medicine has done for me what no othecr medicine has done, and it therefore gives me great pleasure to give this evidence in favor of Carnol. | would advise all business men who feel, after the strenuous life of the world, that they need a building up tonic, to take Carnol. It is omy by giving it a fair tridl that they will know its splendid qualities. + [ owe my life to Carnol. Nothing equals ‘this medicine."â€"Gordon M Sinclair, Chatham, N.B. 1â€"2 "Owe my life to Carnol!," says Rir. Sinclair Our Sewing Machine Repair Charges aro Reasonable. Singer Sewing Machines Pianos and Phonographs Reed Bldg. Timmins, Ont , â€" Phone 114 J. M. Belanger, Manager Sold for Cash or on Terms by Wholesale Steam and Anthracite Coal 69 MAPLE ST. SOUTH, Cars Always in Transit Rnby McCarthy, C Hee. see W. G. Smith, Mills in the Falls goal was kept busy all night and played a fine game, stopping the rain of shots sent in on him during the second and third periâ€" ods in a manner worthy of a proâ€" fessional. Little and Zealand on the defence were not as good as . their opponents. _ Melntyre and Morreau on the forward line checked hard, Me Intyre in particular being very danâ€" gerous. Duffy in centre was perhaps the most effective man on the Fa‘ls team, constantly worrying his opponâ€" ents, and breaking through to the Minerns‘ defence, only to be beaten by Downey. _ Trottier and Howard played well. D. Briden, of Schumâ€" acher, was referee and handled the game very nicely. The game was clean, only three penalties being hand ed out. _ The following are the teams Porcupine Iroquois Falls | Downey goal Mills Proulx defence Laittle Whistle Zealand Sterlingo centre Dutfv and West contain many. sections whene the newcomer of little means,. but with pluck and industry, may win success and comfort in a few years. One such instance is noted in the exâ€" cellent Christmas number of the Queâ€" bee Telegraph. The **dauntless woâ€" man pioneer‘‘ of whom this story was written went to Abitibi nine years ago, a widow. Her husband‘s death had left her destitute of everyâ€" thing except hope and eight children. The eldest was scarcely fifteen. From friends she bormwed €50 and enterâ€" ed the wilderness. Lawrence Mclinty Charlebois Morre: Monaghan subs Trotti Boyd Howa Refereeâ€"1D. ~Briden, Schumache **What was left from the journes was invested in virgin lands, and she and her boys and girls set to work, says The Globe, All summer ther toiled to clear the land, working bare headed and barefooted in sunâ€" and rain.. They cut down trees and cold It seems more or less natural and proper that it should take two or three newspapers to tell the story of a real pioneer woman settler of the North Land. However, between The Northern News, The Quebee Telsâ€" graph and The Toronto Globe, the story has been set forth with fitting comment. The story as outlined in the last issue of The Northern News, of Cobalt, in an editorial article, is as follows ‘â€" ‘*The age of pioneering in Canada is far from ended, though it has be: come a less trying experience than that of our ancestors. The North rMin. Lagv ut d4C the wood for pulp neizshbours they h BRAVE PIONEER WOMAN WON THROUGH TO SUCCESS. Playing the kind of hockey that can have only one result, and thatâ€" victory,â€"the Poreupine _ Juniors. in the opening game of the Junion N.0. H.A. matches at the Timmins Rink, on Friday night, defeated their opâ€" ponents from Iroquois Falls to the tune of 6â€"3.. There was a large crowd out to help cheer the young Miners on to vietory, and the brand of hockâ€" ey displayed deserved the backing of every hockey fan in the Camp. Downey in the Poreupine nets did not have so much to do as his Eskimo opâ€" ponent, ‘but what he had to do he did well. iProulx and Whistle on the deâ€" fence are an unbeatable combination. Both are dangerous checkers, and can skate like the wind. Sterling in cenâ€" tre played a nice game, checking hard, and several times getting in for a shot on the Falls nets, to be beaten by the Eskimo goalie. Lawrence and Charlebois, on the wings played well. combining well together and with the ecentre. Lawrence in a persistent backchecker, and constantly worries his opponents. Monaghan and Boyd, the two subs, play a good game. Boyd checks nicely, and with no apâ€" parent effort. 10rs not om‘y trimmed the Falis lads to the tune of 6 to 3, but they showad such snap and speed and promist that there is a general belief that the Juniors are going to develop into a specially effective team this year The team, the coach and the hockey officials are all coming in for comâ€" mendation for the .showing made by the Juniors as well as the Seniors To the hockey fans it looks as if there was going to be good hockey here this season. Hockey promises to more than reâ€" deem its popularity in Timmins. Just as the opening Senior N.O.H.A. game delighted the fans, so did the openâ€" ing match on Friday evening in the Junior Series. The Poreupine Junâ€" iors not only trimmed the Falls lads to the tune of 6 to 3. but they show>»d Juniors Scored Six Goals to Half as Many by the Falls Juniors. _ Show Speed, Class and Promise. Fans Again Well Pleased with Match on Friday evening last. Porcupine Junior Team Wins Opening Game in the N.O.H.A. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO centre forwards built a rude home N th the ]xi t ”0 Zealand Duiffy Mcelntyre Morreau Trottier Howard openâ€" in the > Junâ€" s lad: â€" Considerable interest is being rousâ€" ed by the various trips around town y |and out in the district of the new inâ€" y | vention, the autosleigh, a motorâ€"drivâ€" j,; en vehicle for winter use now being @v | demonstrated in Timmins. _ People y.|stop to watch the autosleigh as it q | passes along, and every time the inâ€" 1q |genious invention stops, it is the sign of|for the gathering of an interested of|erowd to inspect it. girls busy in the dairy, and the poulâ€" tny flock produces an annual revenue of no small size. When they go to Amos they do not walk barefooted, but speed along the road in a comfort able automobile, and their goods are transported to the manrkets and the railway station in a motor truck. "‘It was a struggle from whi« many might flinch but it was wor making. The Northland may appe: rigorous to the outsider, but it h; its prizes for those who fight i battle and win them."" ‘‘Toâ€"day the gallant little Frenchâ€" Canadian woman has won hen fight. Her childrenâ€"now nearing manhood and womanhoodâ€"work in fields that are hers and theirs, and their fields ane worth $35,000. The hboys plow and reap with modern farming machâ€" inery. _A fine herd of cows keeps the gcirls husy in the dairy, and the poulâ€" CrouIlx was beaten hy Mills again, but with four minutes to go, during a lull in the game he sent in the puck, Mil!s never seeing it until it owas pas him. The Falls came back hard, hut the Porcupine youngsters were working hard, and playing their position in a manner to do credit to morme experiâ€" enced hockeyists, and the final gong rang with the locals on the long end of a six to three score. The third opened with Sterling goâ€" ing through the Eskimo defence and shooting, Lawrence taking the reâ€" bound and Mills clearing nicely. The play nemained at the Falls end. Zeaâ€" land went to the box. when he tripped Whistle. Proulx came down, fooled the Falls defence, but failed to beat Mills. The husky defence man tried it again and this time, with period ten â€" minutes old, Poreupine‘s fifth goal went in past Mills. _ Lawrenee was hurt and had to be helped off the ice. The Falls were making desperâ€" ate efforts to score, ‘but rarely got thorough the Poreupine â€" defence. Proulx was ‘beaten hy Mills again, but land Whs the T Mills it® ag ten logs. Among the stumps they turned the soil and scattered grain. _ That year they grew enough to keep them from starvation in the winter and to purchase a cow. The next year they cleared more land and sowed more grain and hay. Ever the battle went on. Now we see the courageous famâ€" ily established. ond for the Falls. Midâ€"ice checking was the feature until the close of period. Fallls 2. Poreupine 0. The second period opened with the Miners on the offensive, every man displaying a whirtwind of speed which was not displayed during the first period. ‘Mills came in fon a regâ€" ular bombardment and for the first five minutes of the game the puck was constantly _ in â€" Eskimo territory. Whistle and Lawrence were drawing the plaudits of the crowd for their work during this stage. The next four minutes are red letter ones in the history of junior hockey in the Porcupine. _ The period was thirteen minutes old when Boyd took Proulx‘s pass and sent in the first Porecupine counter. One minute later Monaghan unassisted sent in the second goal for the locals, half a minute after, dupliâ€" cating ‘his effort. Thirty seconds hadâ€" n‘t ticked off Levine‘s watch when Lawrence sent in the fourth for the Miners from a melee in front of the Falls net. The Eskimos came back strong, but could not get through. Mclntyre came down but was skated into the cornen â€" Howard got the puck, and in the serimmage in front of the Poreupine net sent in the final Falls goal. Two minutes later with the Poreupine Juniors on the offenâ€" sive the gong rang. Falls 3. Porâ€" cupine 4. pme Mill neing in imidâ€"ce. dJJowney was ke busy, and those watching the gan and who had seen the young miners practice realized that they were t playing their best. Duffy got throu twelve minutes from the start for t Mills. Four minutes later Duffy Mcelntyre‘s pass and sent in the teams «( ilties Timeke counte im e t11 epers cking close. most of the snel!] pet of the Downey opened with €"amC could not be 1@ T C =(+f 1011 iot 1 V it it i ad adradradlnad nd 2e . * esd en es % #* 64 °44 64 446 14 64 44 44 44 #4 *A 000000000000000000000_0_0_00_0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 *A % 4*"% *4 #.% * ® %.% #.% #4 04 44 #4 *# % *4 *%. 0 Â¥4, 86 . * #4 44 #.% #.% #*4 44 * % #4 ¢4 * * #4 #4 4. % *4 * #4 04 $4 464 #4 #.® #4 #%.% *4 #%.0 #4* #%.% *4 * . % * % #4 #4 “’0. 4 # * @ #,. ,%, ®, 2222242 * n 28. ,*, ,*, * 5 * 2 a*2 282282082 2t 22® . a*. 1*® sns 2 * 2 a* 2 at2 a* 2 28. 28. 18, 1*,. .* ouz?flo?\ocoou:%oVontooooooo:oooooooooooooooooooooooouoooooo ate ote o.“:n * # 50 **6"*s # 4 ecfoctes * 6 € *3 *4 @ % 2 nA ““... * 4 #4 Ond # 4 #4 # # *4 w + 6 estest ## # © #* 4 *4 # 4 #4 * 4 #+* * L3 #4 *# € “ on atactacte ate The cold weather is not far off! What could be more comâ€" fortable than a cozy furnished home on a cold winter‘s evening. Why not let us buy some of your old furniture which is beginning: to look shabby.â€"We buy anything in the line of furniture, and will allow you liberal credit on the purchase of new goods...Our line of furniture and household furnishings is very complete.â€"You are welcome to call and examine our assortment of livingâ€"roor1, diningâ€" room,‘ bedroom and kitchen furniture at any time, without obligaâ€" tion to buy. We have some very special bargains in bedsteads, springs and mattresses in. all sizes; as well as in floor coverings,â€"â€" carpets, linoleums and Congoleum squares. Call at our Storeâ€"17 Pine Street (The only Furniture Store in the, P. M. Bardesoni Block), and compare prices. If You Buyâ€"We Sell If You Sellâ€"We Buy BIRRELL â€"â€" BELL Violinist Northern Furniture Exchange TIMMINS SOUTH PORCUPINTE St. Onge Bldg. Public School LATE OF SYDNEY CONSERVATORIUM OF MUSIC, AUSTRALIA â€"â€" OPEN TO ALL _â€" BEST ALLEY IN THE NORTH Bowling, Billiards, Cigars, Etc. v 4 P ® T F F IF E T E T F o m e .4 4 d d ® PA T 4 F T - C w Ese ie sys m es en e o n e en id e Mcintyre M. J. Brovender, Proprietor wetes! # # #, * #* Cand # # * *s # .. # # w4 *# # #4, #* # # #* OX .. # and| Teacher | + * *s #4 * 4 #4 * + *4 * # **,**, *. 2*, # “.“ * aa*, # #4 *# + ## w 6 *4 * 4 “. #* * + .“.“.“ o . â€"* *4 * + ## * # * * # #4 # 4 #4 *# # #4 # 4 #4 * . 2*, #° "® eatect \ Recreation Hall * SCHUMACHER Public School 17 Pine Street

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