Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Oct 1926, 2, p. 6

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Wrap all Garbage in paper. Keep your Garbage can covered. Use plenty of Chloride of Lime which can be procured at the Town Hall, free. Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. All outside toilets must be made fiy proof. Now open for business Firstâ€"class Rooms and Steam Heated All Upâ€"toâ€"date Conveniences Reading and Sitting Rooms Sample Room for Travellers Best Dining Room in Townâ€"Meals at all Hours. Let us repair and waterproof that leaky roof before the rainy season. PFarabestos Roofing Paint, and Kantleek Roofing Cement For §ale Cor. Kirby Ave. and Mountjoy St. P. 0. BOX 974 â€" TIMMINS, ONT. Toner A. MacDonald Barrister, Solicitor, Etce. GOLDFIELDS THEATRE BLDG W. H. SEVERT Chartered Accountant P.O. Box 1591 Phone 640 Phone 34 I came to Timmins seven years ago poor. And toâ€"day I am walkâ€" ing with a cans because I am cripâ€" pled up after having a paralytic stroke, which laft me with a weak leg, but I am still in the Singer Sewing Machines and Willis Pianos business, and ready to treat all courteously as usual, under the same name. Call 11 for information regardâ€" ing â€" our ~*‘Driveâ€"yourâ€"ownâ€"car System. It will afford us great pleasure to talk over any trip you. have in mind. Cars for hire by hour, day, or trip. Specâ€" ial rates for long distance. > HQNE 8 11â€" 36 Wilson Ave.., cor. Preston St Phone 610â€"J. Satisfaction assured you here whether you Buy orâ€"Bell. Give us a Trial. Goods Delivered Free. Don‘t Buy or Sell Before You See Mece. ATTENTION ~â€" HOUSEHOLDERS Best Prices on all Goods Purchased. Lowest Prices on all Goods Sold. New and Secondâ€" Hand Store Officeâ€"Room 10, Reed Block For your convenience and economy â€" â€"says Taxi Tad. Thursday, Oct. 21st, 1926 Kinds of Furniture, Bought, old or Exchanged. N. GREENBERG 0. SEGUIN, 3 Cedar Street, North Phone 380â€"A By Order of THE BOARD OF HEALTH IROQUOIS FALLS, Timmins, Ont. Timmins The progress of railroaa . to Rouyn is recorded, with the fact that the first locomotive engine whistle was heard in Rouyn on Sept. 20th. ‘‘It is now possible,"‘ The Era says ‘‘to travel by way of Osiko Lake, Dufault Lake and thence by train to O‘Brien or Taschereau. A boat will leave Ferguson‘s wharf in future at noon each day. Passengers will be carried to the Dufault pertage and goes out of his w little housefly. + fly,"‘ he says. There are many interesting items in this little paper of the new gold and copper camp. â€" One article is headed, **‘The Curse of Drinkingâ€" Water.‘‘ It counsels all to avoid the use of well water, unless the water is first boiled. *‘‘Ir you must drink,""‘ the article concludes, ‘‘drink the bestâ€"water.‘‘ The writer also goes out of his way to swat the popor little housefly. **Death to the houseâ€" Mrs. Moffat, formerly of Timmins, but now at Rouyn, has been kind enough to send The Advance a copy of The Copperâ€"Gold Era, the new little newspaper published at Rouyn. It is an eightâ€"page pamphlet, each page being about fifteen inches by nine inches, including the margins, and the margins are generous ones. The ‘*+printing‘‘ is done by using a typeâ€" writer first and then a mimeographing machine. One of the churches in Timmins issues a little paper on the same plan. * INTERESTING ITEMS FROM ROUYN‘S NEW NEWSPAPER Growth of the Camp... Over 500 Employed at Smelter. Game in Rouyn District Pine St. N. BARRISTER, ETC. 12 A switch on the electric cord for turning the f * power off and on. : 13 Selectivity that enables you to run around dial * like a clock bringing in stations only a few degrees apart. 14, Purest and sweetest tone you ever heard in a radio. The Rogers must be seen and keard to be appreciated. Let us give you a demonstration. Easy terms arranged. â€" THERE are fourteen distinctive points in the 1927 Rogers Batteryless Radios, many of which can be found in a few highâ€"priced radios, a few of which can be found in many radios, but all of whichkh can be found in no other radio in the world. 10. of Commerce Bldg. New Office % No batteries of any kind. No chemicals or "charger." No aerial (except in some locations). Straight line frequency condensers that are preâ€" cisionâ€"matched and tested for each set. Single dial smooth acting Vernier tuning control with absolutely no back lash. ~ Volume control that regulates volume from a whisper to maxitmum on all five tubes. Oscililation control that enables you to maintain maximum volume and quality without the slightâ€" est oscillation. Metal shielding across the panel and around the detector and two audio tubes. Power Tube in second stage of amplification that greatly increases the volume and eliminates conâ€" siderable disturbance. Genuine walnut cabinet with a figured buttâ€" venceer dial panel. A wave length indicator showing the meters as well as the degrees enabling you to locate any station at will. Timmins Marshallâ€"Ecclestone, Ltd. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO. There is a lengthy article on the Townsite of Noranda, reading in part as follows :â€" ‘"*In the past two years 430 acres of timbered land have been cleared, as a fireâ€"protection measure and to proâ€" vide fuel for the mining plant. Since more clearing will be carried on in the future it looks as if Rouyn will stand a good chance of avoiding the fiéery fate which has overtaken so many Northern mining camps. The clearing work was done by contract, most of it being accomplished last winter, the high average of 33 cords per acre testifying to the thickness of the growth of the tuimber and makâ€" ing more difficult the stumping and final clearing which followed on the melting of the . snow. Systematic surface draining made the »clearing a great deal easier and will facilitate matters when the lots are put on the market and building is begun. \ vast improvement in the dryness an‘d The Copperâ€"Gold Era has the folâ€" lowing article under the heading, ‘‘Game in the Rouyn District‘‘:â€" ‘‘Although two moose were seen last week on the shores of Edward Lake, a quarter of a mile from town and in sight of several houses, game is searce in the Rouyn district; naturâ€" ally so when one considers the aâ€" mount of blasting which goes on daily and the number of prospectors and others who continually pass along the bush trails and although moose tracks are frequently seen, they are most of them made by wanderers who pass through in the night. Duprat townâ€" ship was the home of a small herd of caribo last winter and wolves eould often be heard though never seen Bear are very searce and although there are some foxes, both red and black, it is doubtful if tranping would prove a paying proposition.‘‘ Speaking of the smelter at Rouyn The Copperâ€"Gold Era says that the employees now exceed 500, the maâ€" jority of whom are engaged at work on the foundations. A year should see the plant ready for operation. Work is to be continued at construcâ€" tion through the winter. ecpnvey them to the end of the steel. he through fare from Rouyn to O Brien is $5.40. The date of the comâ€" pletion of the line to Rouyn will bhe determined almost entirely by the weather conditions which may be enâ€" countered.‘‘ will be met at the other enf of the portage by another cratt which wili Schumacher irmness of the soil is already apparâ€" ent, as compared with the swampy condition of the earlier part of the summer. After clearing and draining, which, together with all the engineerâ€" ing work has been carried out by Mr. E. W. Neel and, of New Liskeard, and his assistants, Alex Hogg and Ted Atkinson, the townsite was contoured and 100 acres of land, with the most favourable _ situation _ overâ€"looking Osiako Lake were subâ€"divided into lots. The width of the main avenues and streets will be 80 feet and of the lesser ways ()O and 70 feet. Work is in progress at the present time on the surface of the streets, the roadbeds being composed of rock from the mine (lunnp. With the installation of the ecrushing plant surfacing will be finished with graded materlal Speâ€" cial lots have been set aside for Eduâ€" cational and Municipal buildings. Sewage disposal and general sanitary arrangements are being laid out on the most modern plan (md pure drinkâ€" ing water is to be assured by the chlorination and filtration system.‘‘ The annual meeting of the Cornish Oneâ€"andâ€"All Football Team will be held in the town hall on Friday evenâ€" ing, Oct. 29th. All interested should make a point of attending. CORNISH FOOTBALL TEAM ANNUAL MEETING, OCT. 29. Goldfields Theatre Building Timmins, Ont. Phone 428M DR. C. SULLIVAN Open Evenings EC BE TT .N BE FRienn 1 SE BY THE PAPERS 1i WC owers, in The following meeting, Nov. 12th, will be Ladies‘ Night, and the Nov. 26th, meeting will be "*St. Andrew‘s Night,‘‘ with special musical and literary programme, including a paper on the Patron Saint of Scotland. The regular meeting of the Caleâ€" donian Society of Timmins on Friâ€" day evening of this week in the Holâ€" llnger Hall will be a big Hallowe‘en Party. »It will be especially for the youngsters, but the older ones will have lots of fun also. It is to be a masquerade affair, and there will be prizes for costumes, ete. _ Refreshâ€" ments will be served as usual, and there will be a good time for all. **Deukin for alpples,” anl other Oldâ€" Land games and fun will be on the programme. The Ladies‘ Committee is looking after the arrangements so an enjoyable evening is assured. The event is for Caledonians only and their friends. WORLD‘S POULTRY CONGRESS AT OTTAWA NEXT SUMMER. Many of the details of the World‘s Poultry _ Congress programme â€" are completed, and delegates to the Conâ€" gress will enjoy an intellectual treat. When‘ they assemble at Ottawa, July 27th, 1927, they will find many of the world‘s famousgscientists ready to present papers (mbfileir work, and to give their knowledge and findings for the benefit of those engaged in any and all phases of the poultry industry. Experts from Great Britain will outâ€" line the needs of the world‘s greatest importer of poultry products. Geneâ€" tiecists, pathologists, and chemists from the laboratories of Europe will explain and‘discuss their experiments. Men engaged in similar work in Canâ€" ada and the United States will also take part, together with representaâ€" tives of many of the smaller nations. HALLOWE‘EN EVENT AT CALEDONIANS ON FRIDAY. * Evening Journal A Hallowe‘en Masquerade Dance will ‘be the grand opening night for the season of the Cornish Football Club, to be held in the Hollinger Hall on Saturday, Oct. 30th. The A.8S.D. orchestra will furâ€" nish the best of music for the occasâ€" ion. â€" Refreshments will be served duringâ€" the evening. Good prizes will be offered for costumes, ete. It will be a very pleasant evening,‘ as all who have enjoyed other Cornish Football Club events will know for sure. A welcome is extended to all to attend, and the tickets are being sold at the rate of $1.00 per couple, with extra lady, 25c. HALLOWE‘EN MASQUERADE BY CORNISH FOOTBALL CLUB _ C. W. Petersen, publisher of 'l'lw Farm and Ranch Review, of Calgars Alberta, in reference to culnm/mmn. Mr. Petersen emphasizes the fact that practically all of Canada‘s problems hinge on, the subject of the right type of cnlnmmtwn, and that the first thing necessary is to secure public recognition of this fact together with the corresponding general interest that such knowledge actively recognized should arouse. Recently, Mr. Peterâ€" sen addressed the Empire Club at Toronto, on his favourite topic. In reference to this address The Mail and Empire editorially says :â€" ‘*The public speaker wno is most worth hearing has not always the bigâ€" gest audience. Members of the Emâ€" pire Club who were not at the lunchâ€" con meeting yesferday missed one of the best addresses that have been deâ€" livered before that body. To say this is not to disparage other addresses heard at the meetings of the Club. Interesting subjects have been gener:© ally well handled by guests of honâ€"« or there, but seldom mdeed has there been presented in so instructive a manner facts and reasonings pertainâ€" ing to one of the most important questions that pertain to our own country. _ The Club might well take a hint from the fine reception of the address delivered yesterday by Mr. C. W. Petersen, publisher and editor of the **Farm and Ranch Review," of Calgary. Of Empire topies surely there is none that should be more inâ€" teresting to members of the Club than those of direct vital import to Canaâ€" da. Mr. Petersen dealt with facts, and in. so far as those facts mean disappointment to Canada he had no apblogy to make for any political party or for â€" <any interest whatever. We are losing people by emigration at a rate not less than the rate of the natural inâ€" crease of our populdtion. In the ten months from July, 1925, to May, 1926, the exodus from Canada was 83,903. The Canadians who thys helped to enâ€" large the jpopulation of the United States in that ten months made up more than a half of the total number of immigrants into the United States from all parts of the world in the same period. At the present time, said Mr. Petersen, there is a waiting list in «the United States Consulate for Alberta alone of 2,200 persons born in the United Kingdom. â€" This is over and above the number of Canaâ€" dianâ€"born going from Alberta to the United States free from the quota restrictions. Mr. Petersen believes that we must look to other sources of overseas emigration in addition to Britain and Northern Europe. He is convinced that we can get the materiâ€" al for the very best new Canadians from Eastern Europe. The matter of imnmigration needs to bhe handled in a far more statesmanlike manner, in a far human manner, than in . the past. Petersen puts the ~matter in a_ nutshell when he says the problem is one, not simply of immigration, but of coloâ€" nization. The country must assist in making itself the happy home of the neweomers."‘ LOLONLZATIOM MEANG MORE THAN IMMIGRATION One of the Big Problems FPacing Caâ€" nada Toâ€"day,. Right Kind of |\ Population Needed ()n many recent oceasions The Adâ€" vance has published dletters from Mr. Only nine weeks to Christmas! ‘mno is most ays the bigâ€" of the Emâ€"

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