Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 2 Dec 1926, 2, p. 3

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For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column TIMMINS BRANCH, = sSOUTH PORCUPINE BRANCH, IMPERIAL â€"BANK Save Money Happy Thought Hapfiy T hought TIMMINS, ONT. Schumacher Hardware Feed.Co., Schumacher. (=~â€"..... MADEâ€"AT BRANTFORD : CANADA : BY __..._._â€"= Gas Range 18 bcaut:}ul, economical, efficient . _ FOUNDRY RANGESâ€"FURNACES THE CANADA STARCH CO., LIMITED, MONTREAL c # "r«, 2, wC W 41 » ym dnc Yes" â€" am. * e Happy Thought Also with osen. Burns any fuel gives great heai. Ha fig I houg} € 4 ¢al¢r It is not always easy to save but those who do save prosper. As a little money is accumulated it should be placed in a Savings Bank account where interest will be paid and the principal sum be secure. There is a Savings Bank Department at every branch of this Bank. <a Dis. Manager A. W. PICKERING Gen. Agent Timmins SIMMS. HOOKER DREW Local Agents Timmins Better baking with less fuel OF CANAD It is not remarkable that more than 300,000 Canadian women praise the Happy Thought for its exceptional ability to heat, cook and bake. Thefirebox is adequate to the size of the oven and the scientifically constructed flue carâ€" ries a steady, uniform heat to all parts of the oven and cooking surâ€" face. Through a perfected system of drafts regulated at will, this heat is always under your control. Naturally with a Happy Thought, good cooking and bakmg is inevitable. Additional worthwhile features you will appreciate are the *"" Duplex" grates, broilâ€" ing and toasting front, ample reservoir and ventilated oven. Happy Thought Pipe, Pipeless and Comâ€" bination Warm Air and Hot Water Furâ€" naces serve every type of home, Cochrane D. SUTHERLAND, Manager. J. PAUL MICHAUD, Manager. mmins wWEAD 0O F eC «O 0 B 8 ‘*Next week will see the suspension of publication of the Englehart Times. To set these words is like putting a knife into us, but it had to he done. We could write columns about it, but what‘s the use. Suffice it is to say that the merchants with possibly three exceptions have failed to give it any support, and the strain thrown upon usâ€"both mental and physicalâ€"has become Mr. A. T. Weldon, whose appointâ€" ment as Viceâ€"President in Charge of Traffic and Express, Canadian Naâ€" tional Railways, to succeed Mr. J. E. Dalrymple, is announced. ENGLEHART TIMES HAS TO STOP PUBLICATION Apparently Englehart is to be withâ€" out a newspaper again, but Englehart can console itself with the thought that few towns in the south can supâ€" port a newspaper without a much larger population to draw upon. Durâ€" ing its existence The Englehart Times madean earnest effort to boost the town, but it was proven in this case, as it has been proven recently in scores of other cases throughout the country, that a newspaper must have support to be able to live to boost anything. In the past few years the business of conducting a newspaper has changed considerably from the old days. It requires considerable capital to run the right sort of a newspaper and no one can afford to invest that capital without adequate return. The While most people in the North will regret the discontinuance of the newspaper at Englehart, those with an inside knowledge of the business look upon it as inevitable. In announcing the suspension of â€" publication last week, The Englehart Times says: â€" 5 se ‘‘These assays values are subâ€" stantiated by Mr. Scott and although there is a wide range in values the results are eminently satisfactory to mining mmen in the district."" whole tendency of modern times is to crowd out the smaller newspapers, and those withoutâ€" a real definite justification for existence. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO The outside newspapers are devotâ€" ing considerable attenion to the new ooppor-"nld field believed to be found in the Kamiskotia area. The Toronto Mail and Empire has had several articles in its columns on the nexw field. One of these in an issue last wook follows :â€" ‘‘That the copper finds at Kamisâ€" kotia Lake are of possible importance is the opinion of Mr. . B. Seott, geoâ€" logist with the Hollinger Gold Mines, Limited. Mr,. Seott was on the sceene of the original discovery before the rush commenced and states that the mass of sulphites are the same formaâ€" tion as the Flin Flon and Horne but in his opinion the prospects are actu-l ally better. ‘**At the present time the: discoveries are not worth 30 cts. buti it may bo worth anything up to $30,â€" 000 OOO said the geologist in an inâ€" ter\ iew to day. **Immediately the results of the assays were known I realized that the discovery was of creat importance to the distl'i(;t.”‘ Mr, Seott said that every future disâ€" covery of sulphites in the district will prove interesting and believes that inâ€" vestigations into the possibilitiese of the district will proceed before the winter is out. | Discovery May Prove of Very Great Importance to the District, Says ~_â€" Geologist. BELIEVES NEW COPPER HELO WORTH CONSIDERING worth 30 cts. but ything up to $30,â€" geologist in an inâ€" **Immediately the (On Wednesday evening a reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C,. Saunders, Spruce street, in honour of the newlyâ€"wedded couple. (A numâ€" ber of friends gathered for the reâ€" ception~and a very pleasant evening was enjoyed hy all, Mr. and Mrs. Saunders proving ideal hosts, and all present finding the evening a most enjoyable ~one. Mr. and Mrs. Magor have taken up residence at Cedar street, south given very hearty weleome here, hosts of friends extending sincere good wishes. Mr, Cecil Magor, one of the most popular and highly esteemed of the young Cornishmen of the town, was married at Montreal on Monday, Nov. 22nd, the bride being Miss Winnifred (Hiles, of St. Denis, Cornwall, Engâ€" land. The young couple arrived in Timimins on Wednesday andâ€" were MR. CECIL MAGOR MARRIED AT MONTREAL LAST WEEK A piece of wood ran into his leg, causing a nasty wound that required fifteen stitches to close. To make the accident more serious, there being no doctor in Matheson the boy had to be taken all the way to Iroquois Falls for treatment. At the Iroquois Falls hospital he was given veryâ€"competent and skilled attention, and apart from the fact that he has endured considâ€" erable pain, he will suffer no permaâ€" nent injury from the accident. l While sleigh riding several days ago, Harold Stack, of Matheson, aged 8 years; met with a painful accident. MATHESON BOY HURT WHILE SLEIGH RIDING ON HILL Arrangements are being proceeded with to have reppresentatives of the various organized municipalities meet ministers from the Provincial Govâ€" ernment in North Bay, probably some times this month, when the whole question of indigents will be discussâ€" ed. Cobalt which has the matter in hand, ‘has been notified by eleven différent towns and towships that they are ready to coâ€"operate in the matter, and further representations will be made to the Government after election day. Parish hall on Friday (tomorrow), Dec. 3rd, at 8 p.m. the special feature of the programme will be a lecture by Rev. ‘Father Dumont, Dominican Missionary, on the situation existing in Mexico. There will also be a few numbers under the direction of Mr. J. B,. Pare. Light refreshments will be served during the evening. REV. FR. DUMONT TO SPEAK ON MEXICAN SITUATION A social. evening for members of the K. of C%., their wives and lady friends, is to be held at St. Anthony‘s A case heard at Haileybury last week by Judge Hayward is of more "than passing interest to municipaliâ€" ties in Ontario, and, perhaps, especialâ€" ly to . municipalities in this North.| The North Land municipalities in the past seem to have suffered especially in this matter of the cost entailed through indigents, there being so large a transient population in this country, and accordingly more or less difficulty in defining and deciding upâ€" on residence ‘of patients. In many cases men who drift into Northern tows when they are ill bheeome natiâ€" wrom= unsm | Decision Reserved in Case of Special Interest to Municipalities GOBALT N TNDIGENT CiSF and the mail coach was dynamited. The explosion set the mail coach on fire, the mail clerk being burned to death. The three brothers accordingâ€" ly may well expect that they will have a serious reckoning if they are capâ€" tured. â€" According to The North Bay Nugget the three wantéd men â€" are lumberjacks and have been employed in some of the lumber camps of Norâ€" therr Ontario. BROTHERS WANTED FOR MURDER MAY BE IN NORTH Jusiness ol the_ _ head othee of the company. The transfer will take place as soon as suitable quarters are secured. ‘Mr. B. V. Harrison, who was in Timmins last week, said that the company might put up a building of its own in New Liskeard, but this was not decided upon. Mr. C :: seymour, who has been accountant with the company, has been appointed assistant secretaryâ€"treasurer of the varions companies which are controllâ€" ed from the central headquarters in Montreal. It has been decided by the Power Company to move the headquarters of the company from Cobalt to Haileyâ€" bury, as a more central point for the business> of the head office of the TO MOVE HEAD OFFICE FROM COBALT TO HAILEYBURY JOHN L. HUNT, Miners and Mine Owners DOMNON BANK â€" UR S2avings Department is at the disâ€" posal oi minersâ€"to mineâ€"owners we offer efficient and prompt service in all departments of banking. Transfers of funds by telegraph and cable promptly executed with the absolute secrecy that is the inviolable rule of this Bank. Our local manager welcomes consultation. TIMMINS BRANCH, Assistance is rendered by the Govâ€" ernment in the way of cutting trails, cleaning streams and building roads, in order to afford access to mining claims or areas, and where a district proves its ore deposits to be of suffiâ€" cient value and extent to warrant the expenditure, it is provided with railâ€" way The Temiskaâ€" ming Testing Laboratories at Cobalt are equipped to sample ores, and proâ€" vision has been made for the purchase of gold ore. Ontario is now one of the leading sources of gold, being outranked only by the Transvaal and United States. In 1925 the production was valued at $30,207,545 over 83 per cent. of the entire output of Canada. The nickel mines of Sudbury produce 90 per cent. of the world‘s requirements of that metal. ‘The silver output in 1925 had a value of $7,084,864. Dividends and bonuses paid by gold and silver minâ€" ing> companies to the end of 1924 amounted to $140,289,729. For lists of publications, geological maps and reports, copies of the minâ€" ing laws, and other information apply to An attractive field is offered to the prospector in â€" Northern _ Ontario. Seventy per cent. of the entire northâ€" land is underlain with preâ€"Cambrian rocks, in which occur the nickel mines of Sudbury, the silver deposits of Cobalt, South Lorrain and Gowganda, the gold of Porcupine and Kirkland Lake, copper on the north shore of Lake Huron, and iron in Michipicoten and other areas. THOS. W GIBSON, Deputy Minister of Mines HONOURABLE CHAS. McCREA,« Minister of Mines Toronto Ontario. Thursday, Dec. 2nd, 1926 ONTARIO‘sS MINING LA Acting Manager.

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