Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 15 Mar 1928, 2, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Te P P > 0 0 CnaPandrae rnal, C PA edPs nernar 007 0%%% oooozoooooooooco oooooonoouol‘oooooooflooooooooooouoofioooooooootuooo’oooooooooooooooooooooooouoontuooo "’ % (d * h aa«® M o nga xt 10 PyCI DOMINION BANK BUILDING Opposite Goldfields Hotel : L . e is e SIMMS, HOOKER DREW TRTCTTD A mnw LAST TIME TOâ€"NIGHT Lewis Stone "Don J uan’: 3 Nights" The fight of a . FRIDAY and SATURDAY John Gilbert * TWELVE MLLES OUT " NEXT WEEKâ€"MON. TUES. â€" Dolores Costello *ROLLED STOCKINGS" Goldfields wWEDNESDAY THURSDAY A daughter for sale to the highest bidder COMEDY AND SCENIC Rumâ€"runners * A MILLION BID " INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES (Agents for Confederation Life Association). REAL ESTATE FOX COMEDY AND NEWS in her greatest achievement of a mother and her daughter for the same man. NEWS AND COMEDY Houses and Lots for Sale on and romance, direct from Summary of Last Sittings Here of Royal Cotnmission ‘vommpapar vaar o Some of the Last Witnesses to be Heard Included A. E.i O‘Callaghan, Arthur Mortimer, Mine Officials, Mine AInspector and Others. . _ PHONE 112 Residence PHONE 135 *~ WEDNES. THURS.â€"21â€"22 Richard Talmadge In a fast and furious farce of love and gasoline FRIDAY SATURDAYâ€"16â€"17 Youth ! . Speed ! Love ! _ Supported by Gorgeous Barbara Worth and an excellent cast. _ ‘‘Ben Turpin‘ ’.__Comedy. Pathe News Review MONDAY TUESDAYâ€"19â€"20 Fred Humes The Sultan of Speed in a gripping, throbbing «_ _ sgtory of action. ' ‘*Buster Brown‘‘ Comedy Gaumont News *THE BETTER MAN‘ * FAST and FURIOUS" " LAZY LIGHINING " yay ‘‘House Without a Key‘‘â€"OChap. 3 Reginald Denny tm e iBz is h v tCE LÂ¥ for the commission, the general manâ€" ager of the Hollinger had said that if any man in the Hollinger organizaâ€" tion imagined he would be penalized for giving evidence, ‘he ‘could assure that man and every man , thinking that way that he (Mr." Brigham) would protect him and he would not prejudice his position in any way by telling the truth.. Mr.C. G. Williams, general superintendent, also said that the Hollinger wonuld not deal unfairâ€" ly with anyone, and that it would certainly unfair to discriminate against any who testified at the enâ€" quiry. E. A. O‘Callaghan, formerly on the Hollinger engineering staff, but now consulting engineer for the Quartz Lake Mine, gave evidencée that he had seen powder hduse waste in different stopes, and that in one case some four or five years ago he had called the attention of Capt. Young to the conâ€" dition of the thaw house refuse in one of the stopes. Either he or Capt. Young had then .called Mr. Emery ‘s attention to it. Capt. Young . had thought there was a danger ofâ€" fire from the condition and the witness had agreed. There had been orders at once to cover the rubbish with waste rock and to have no more rubâ€" bish dumped in the stopes then exâ€" amined. | Recalledâ€"to the stand Mr. J. Knox, assistant general managey of the Holâ€" linger, denied having received a letâ€" ter from the I.W.W. gs stated by D. Mackenzie. W. L. Hogarth, secreâ€" tary, also said the letter was not on fyle as it would be if recéived. He had no recollection of ever seeing it or hearing about it till the enquiry. The Dept. of Mines also informed the commission that it had no letter on fyle from the L. W.W., as would be the case were one received. Mr. Knox, in reply to Mr. White, said he would not hold Mr.â€"Emery responsible for orders not carried out by those under him. ‘Pressed as to . who should shoulder the responsibility in such a case he thought the foremen, Messrs Pond, Curtis, Belahunt and Sleigman should be able to explain. * THE PORCUPINE ADV John Sleigman said that Mr. Emexy had never spoken to him regarding his duties when he was appointed transportation â€"â€"boss, nor had Mr. O‘Brien told him anything about the powder house waste. J Dr.â€" Hague differed from Dr. E ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO 1 structed in the use O Drs. Byers and Hague both thought the inhalator. useful. Dr. Hague said the Hollinger had adequate equipment for the ordinary emergeney. Dr. Geo. D. Nasmith, Toronto; suggested a ‘‘powerful stench‘‘ hbeing sent through the mine as a warning in time of danger. He favoured controlled ven tilation by means of a seriecs of fire emergency â€" doors. ~Dr. Nasmith thought gas masks would be useful to keep on hand at the mine. * A Mr. Thos. F.â€" Sutherland, chief mining inspector for Ontario, conâ€" sidered that the only principle that works well is to make the bosses unâ€" derground responsible for their men, as is done in South Africa by legislaâ€" tion. He urged the purchasing by the mines in the different camps of apâ€" paratus which would be interchangeâ€" able in times of emergency. Moore‘s evidence in suggesting that straight oxygen was not as satisfacâ€" tory as a mixture of oxygen and dioxide for treating gas poisoning. Arthur Mortimer, the man whose name was meant in the anonymous letter sent to Mr. White a week preâ€" viously, gave evidence. He said that he had four reasons for not reporting to his superiors the conditions che noted in regard to rubbish in the old stopes. On one oceasion he had callâ€" ed attention to conditions in one of the stopes‘and had been told to mind Dr. Robson thought the doctors should take up the matter of the reâ€" sucitation of asphixiated persons and the best apparatus available, while the men should be specially trained in the use of such equipment. Dr. Byers thought the men should be inâ€" structed in the use of inhalators. Chocolate Covered Nuts Chocolate Covered Fruits Chocolate Ginger Bon Bons Nougats Caramels Creams Pecan Rolls Pecan Dates All the same price 75¢c. per pound Reed Block : (STRONG) Should be in Every Home. A positive relief for Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe, Bronchitis, etc. Contains no â€" Narcotics Absolutely Safe for Children (Pilsworth‘s Old Stand) South Porcupine Ont. ALWAYS FRESH MODERN PARLOURS South End | Buckley‘s Mixture ~Druggist For Sale by ic Funeral Director and Embalmer _ 12% Pine St. S. Phone 51 his own bineas and get on with his trackâ€"laying. He was track boss at the mine for five years and had built the trestle for the cars to the stope. The purpose was for dumping backâ€" filling and sand. It was built in With a light anybody could see the refuse, he said. He had seen so much refuse dumped, and knowing that everybody else could see it, he bad paid little attention to it. The fourth reason for his not taking up the matter was in reference to a comâ€" plaint hbe had made about loose ground. The captain in charge at that time, now in Rouyn the witness thought, had seemed to show a retaliâ€" atory spirit. Witness told of comâ€" plaining to Capt. Young about pieces of timber going into central pass, and the practice being stopped. Mr. A. W. Young, assistant mine superintendent, told the court that he had investigated conditions complai ed of by Mortimer, taking . up the matter with the mine superintendent, Mr. Emery, and J. W. Doughtery, production superintendent., _ It was decided that the captains were to signl reports certifying when the stopes were safe for trackâ€"laying.. Mortiâ€" mer had been advised of this arrangeâ€" ment. Capt. Young, when asked if Mortimer ‘might not be right, and the captains wrong in reégard to the safety of stopes on occasion, said that he could not personally go and see everything and he had to accept the judgment of the captains. Witness said that if Mortimer were not satisâ€" fied that conditions were safe through falling rock, then ‘Mortimer should have come to him (Young) in the matter. Recalled to the stand, Mortimer produced a report from Capt. Pond saying the stope concerned was safe. The slip was dated March 6th. Morâ€" timer said he had found some powder at the foot of the wall. He ‘had not been satisfied, he said, with the reâ€" port, but had personally investigated to guard the safety of his men. Before concluding the sittings of the court of enquiry here, the comâ€" missioner, Judge Godson, took ocâ€" casion to express the deep sympathy of the commission with those berâ€" eaved by the disaster. KIWANIS IN THE LEAD IN THE FRATERNAL LEAGUE A. 8. D. Sprang a Bad One on the I. 0. 0. F. by Taking All Three Games â€"In the Fraternal Bowling League the standing is as follows:â€"Kiwanis, 8; L.0.0M., 6; 1.0.0.F., 5; Y.P.L., The Kiwanis by taking 7 points from the A. S. D. and Y.P. L. .. jumped into the lead of the Fraternal League. The A.S.D: sprang a bad one on the 1.0.0.F. by taking all three games from them. Not one of the Oddfelâ€" lows managed to get 600. A.S.D. The commission will study the eviâ€" dence, and also, probably, secure data in the matter of precautions and safeâ€" ty measures that may be taken to make the mines more safe for the men. It is not likely that the comâ€" mission will have its report ready for some weeks yet. Honour rollâ€"Dearden, 687â€"677; Tomkinson, 672; Jackson, 644; Langâ€" don, 636;, Platus, 616. _ Cooper .. Jacobs .. ‘Windgrove Walsh . Belanger Brough .. Campbell .. Farnum .. .. Davis.. .. .. KIWANIS Lake.. .. .. ..‘160 210 Handicap .. . Totals Handicap .. .. Totals .. .. .. AS.D. wins 4. MOTOR EQUIPMENT E4y 113 101 T72 154 949 176 151 180 162 827 207 115 182 160 192 147 9905 905 2601 2785 343 ..._J. B. Thiboutot: ~BEAUTY PARLOUR , 46/, Third Avenue Private Entrance for ladies right next to Blahey‘s Walker .. .. Dearden, . .. Tomkinson .. Langdon.. .. Young .. T. Feldman .. .. Shinechoft .. F. Abrams .. .. .. Platus .. Cohen .. Walker. . Lake.. .. Jackson .. . Dearden .. . Tomkinson . The Haileyburian last week says: "Jos. Sarsfield has gone to South Porcupine, where his is relieving the mining recorder.‘‘ Every Night Is _ Ladies‘ Night King‘s Amusement Parlours Handicap ... Totals .. .. Toner A. MacDonald Barrister, Solicitor, Etce. Handicap C. L. HUBBERT Chiropractor Goldfieckds Theatre Bldg. Hours 10 to 12 a.m. 2 to 5 p.m. 7 to 9 p.m. Room 2, Homer L. Gitkson Bldg. Phone 34 Timmins Totals .. .. 1130 Kiwanis wins 3. Handicap Total . Handicap. . Totals.. ... .1031 1025 Kiwanis wins 4. More women are bowlâ€" ing toâ€"day than ever. Some bowl for the thrill, some for health, and others for reducing exercise. Bowling ansâ€" wers the purposes of all PHONE 607 KIWANIS .. 163 2 . ~ 104 1 . 1052 1093 1009 3154 1071 947 1052 3070 Y,P.L. . 210 _ 200 S . _ 209 127 188 144 163 186 147 154 244 523 585 475 616 1070 132 245 242 981 1022 917 2020 71 71 92 234 938. 932 93° 93 32 878 1013 39 69 39 220 172 168 790 850 152 225 201 146 877 2737 60 180 103 163 829 07 2923 672 636 538

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy