Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 31 May 1928, 2, p. 1

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7| THIRD AVE. _ TIMMINS ONT. * As specialists in all branches of plumbing we can suggest many imâ€" proven ts in your present bathâ€" room « juiupment. â€" Repairs, too, are withix our provinceâ€"and _ our thoroughly experienced plumbers never forget their tools! Whatâ€" ever your plumbing need, you‘ll ind our service and prices RIGHT. § (1 § t C t i) i Satisfaction assured you here whether you Buy or Sell. Give us a Trial. Goods Delivered Free. Don‘t Buy or Sell Before You See Me. 36 Wilson Ave.., cor. Preston St Phone 610â€"J. Best Prices on all Goods Purchased. Lowest Prices on all Gosods Sold. All Kinds of Furniture, Bought, Sold or Exchanged. New and Secondâ€" Hand Store PACK BAGS FLAGS EIDERDOWN HAVERSACKS ROB SNOWSHOES SKIIS DoG SLEIGHS DOG HARNESS TOBOEGANS HORSE TARPAULINS BLANKETS Ask your Local Dealer for Prices, or send your order direct to J. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT. Agents Everywhere Vol. XIllL. No. 22 BARRISTER, SCLICITOR, ETC Room 2, Homer L. Gibson Bldg MODERNIZE YOUR BATHâ€" ROOM (formerly office of Platus Lewis Plumbing, Heating Sheet Metal Contractors W. D. Cuthbertson, L.A. CONsSULTING AUDITOR Office Systems Installed Income Tax Adjuster Room 2, Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Block P.0. Box 833 Timmins, Oni. Barrister,. Solicitor, Notary Public 5b REED BLOCK, TIMMINS We Manufacture and carry in stock AWNINGS Frank J. Kehoe MR.C.S., Eng. SURGEON Consultation by Appointment Office: 6 Marshall Block, Dr. L. Gagnon Veterinary Office Dentistry a Specialty ) ) §# U f} WB [ $ i1 iL i1 i) i6 a mmmem $) () smm ij i emmem The high water on the Mattagami river is steadily going down, dropâ€" ping several inches a day. The water is fast going down to normal. Mrs. C. M. Amer arrived here last week from Miami Beach, Florida, to join Mr. Auer at Timmins where they will spend the next two or three months. Mr. Auer was one of the early residents of the Poreupine camp and is being welcomed back by hosts of friends and acquaintances. There will be a consolation prize for those who fail to qualify. This match will be 36 holes. The Northern Ontario Golf Assocâ€" iation amet last week at Haileybury, Mr. J. W. Fogg, being the represenâ€" tative from Timmins present at the meeting. The chief business of the meeting was to arrange for the anâ€" nual Northern Ontario GoIf Tournaâ€" ment which will be held this year at North Bay. The dates chosen for the event were Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Aug. 2nd, 3rd, and 4th. The same rules and régulations as last year will obtain for this year‘s event. GOLF TOURNAMENT AT NORTH BAY, AUG, 2 TO 4 Tarantelle. Highland Fling, by advanced pupils. This promises to be â€"one of the very best programmes yet presented by the pupils of, Mrs. Simms, and that is saving much., DANGING AEGITAL A GAILDREN‘S DRFSS BAll Programme for Noteworthy Event by Pupils of Mrs. R. B. Simms on Friday and Saturday This Week riower dance, Spanish dance.. Minuet, by tots, sceotch reel. The â€"Glow Worm dance. Intermission. Waltz. Highland Fling, by Second Class Solo Court Minuet. Hungarian Top Boot dance. Nareissus Toe dance, advanced. Dutch dance. Skirt dance. Irish Jig, by advanced pupils. Fan dance. Minuet, by advanced pupils. Sailor‘s Hornpipe. Grand march and walt Highland Fling, by tot Sword dance. Butterfly dance. Shean Trews. Insgh Jig. by tots. nnocenedt ¢ Phone 499â€"500 Mining ince, byv tot waltz sad.‘" t up for playground purposes, and fence it. It will. make a fine place for the youngsters to play, being cenâ€" trally located. . The propenty will also no doubt be much appreciated by adults as well, The property will be 135 feet wide and 240 feet long, and is located in the block between Seâ€" cond _ and Third _ avenues _ and Balsam and Birch streets, near the skating rink, The other matter of special interâ€" est was the question of the enforceâ€" ment of ithe dog byâ€"law. Councillor Dougall brought the matter to the atâ€" tention of the council, saying that he had received a large number of comâ€" plaints about the nuisances caused by so many dogs running at large in the town. â€" The dogs destroyed shrubbery and flowers, upset garbage cans, and did other damage. They frightened women and children on oceasion and sometimes even bit people or injured general interest. One of these was the announcement by the mayor that the Hollinger had given the lots adâ€" joining Broadway in the vicinity of the rink to the town for a children‘s playground and park. The town owns the land formerly occupied by the rightâ€"ofâ€"way â€" knownâ€" as Broadway. The Jlots so kindly donated by the Hollinger will mean that, including Broadway, a block of seven lots can be used for playgrounds purposes. When the mayor announced the offer made by Mr. Brigham in the matter, more than one councillor said, Well, that‘s very nice."" The council‘s inâ€" The regular meeting of the town council was held on Monday afterâ€" noon, with Mayor E. L. Longmore in the chair and Councillors A. G. Carâ€" son, CGeo.. 5. Drew, P. Dougall, K. Richardson and C. P. Ramsay present. There were two matters before the council that should be of outstanding general interest. One of these was Centrallyâ€"located Lots Donated by Hollinger for Playâ€" ground Purposes. To be Fenced in by Town and Fixed up. Dog Byâ€"law and Dogs Doggedly Discussed at Council Meeting. Other Town Council Business. Hollinger Gives Land for _X [BOWUNG AEMCE UF Children‘s Playground Herd. 6 PWOMME t TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY SISTi 1928 ns . d P at 5s Vvery nice.‘ ntion is to clear up up for playgroun Through our engineers, and staffs in all important mining centersâ€"â€"we render a reliable mining service in addition to our brokerage service ** Why does the bride always dress in white, Mummie?" ** You wear white, dear, for happiness and joy, and black when you are > t. Lb wil he youngste y located.. T Oh, so that is why the bridegroom wears black. P »4ar tw n * 4 by the mayor that given the lots adâ€" in the vicinity of n for a children‘s k. The town owns occupied by the e prope purpos a; fine ] aiy, being erty will pine Qobante #* 2 g SEC $ SEC 2 . *% * * * + il‘s inâ€" rty, fix s. and would sooner get tid of ther dogs than chain them up. â€" Some dogs were a nuusance all right, and some might be dangerous. That was the reason there was a byâ€"law. Any offending dog could be dealt with under the byâ€" law, while harmless dogs were not disâ€" turbed. The trouble with any plan of dog catching, except that adopted in the cities, was that the vicious and objectionable dags were not captured, but people lost a lot of their pets, beâ€" cause the latter dogs were friendly and kind and so easy to capture. The effect of the city plan was to do away with most people keeping dogs. **Are (Continued on Back Page of this section). hooks and shouldâ€" be enforeed, he thought. _ Mayor Longmore said i was a case of absolutely enforeing it or leaving matters as they were. The council had attemipted to enforee the byâ€"law strictly on a previous occasion some years ago, but had to recede from the position. The trouble was that a dog catcher would pieck up the harmless: dogs, while the offending € AI} V attend to gall said want to neighbou books â€" an their clot Mr. I)()ugi large had and the should be lor Carso VePr HMHOMER L. (GIBONXN Co. complaint the police nd to that said that ind r_clothing. ‘The general opinion, Dougal thought, was that dogs at e had become a nuisance in town the byâ€"law in regard to dogs ild be strictly enforeed. Councilâ€" Carson admitted that some dogs ‘ a nuisance but others were all t. Hhe thought that in case of 67 YONKNGE STREET ways seemed ITO get a" ly the would prefer to | stroy a lttle shrubbery ; it howl all day and night was tied up. _He did not TJM MINS BELLEVILLE COBALT KIRKLAND LAKE 81 DJ NORTH BAY . COCHRAN E Private Wires to all Brapnchs alnt against any particular olice would very promptly that dog. ‘Councillor Douâ€" that many people did not lay charges against their .. ‘T‘he byâ€"law was on the â€"London Opinion that mo ind some migh was the reasoi Anyvy offendin thei BRANCH EFS voun@!l!â€" some dogs s were all in case of qA wayVy to have 1 L111 COBALT ROUYN #I DBUCRY ‘‘The Garden of Allah‘‘ is a Moâ€" hammedan‘s poetic way of referring to the Sahara Desert as he kneels with his head in the sand facing Meeâ€" ca five times a day at prayerâ€"time. This beautiful Rex Ingram producâ€" tion for Maetroâ€"Goldwyn, at the Goldâ€" fields theatre on Friday and Saturâ€" day of this week, is also the name of an actual estate in Biskra, Algeria, on the fringe of the endless desert. Twenty years ago every feature of the garden was as described in Robert Hichens‘ novel. _ Today, however, it has fallen a little from its former splendor, though still beautiful. Alice Terry and Ivan Petrovich have the leading roles in the film, which has been produced on a lavish and spectacular seale. In his bright column in The Ottawa Journal, headed ‘‘*Parliament,""‘ Mr. Charles Lynceh on Monday last writes : ‘*‘Few men continue their schooling after reaching the age of 30 but Joseph A Bradette, Liberal member for North Temiskaming, spends his spare time studing for the Ontario matriculation examinations under the tutelage of Aurelien Belanger, M.L.A. ** Mr. Bradette hopes to receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts. After he has succeeded in this hbe will study law. member for North Temisâ€" kaming is 42, very ambitious, and inâ€" cidentally, somewhat lonesome for the North countryv."‘ TORONTO,,ONT. ‘"GARDEN OF ALLAH,‘*‘ POETIC NAME FOR THE SAHARA L. A. Cohen, Timmins ... C. Arnott, Schumacher M. Starr, Schumacher .. W. MeDougall, Timmins . 8. MeceMillan, Schumacher (¢. Heggert, Schumacher .. ». Studor, Timmins ...... M. Anoelo, Timming ... .. : M. MeMillian, Schumache W. Roberts, Timmins ... . A. Sauve, Timmins ...... E. Dickson, Timmins .... E. Angrignon, Schumacher A. Tomkinson, Timmins J. MeDonald, Schumacher Reid,. Timmins .:; ;. iiyre, linmins ... Langdon, Timmins Skelly, Timmins . MEMEBEER POR THIS RIDING PLANS TO BE A LAWYER HIPC averages and records ;â€" Records on the Timmins alleys ar« as follows :â€" High single game, Heggert, 326 high three game, MceDougall, 859 ; higl single game, 13‘32. hl“‘h three game, Timmins, 3326. Records on the Schumacher thred amet gcalnt wWICN nNayving Dowieq in 2o out of ithe 36 games in the scheduie. He also beat Starr out by 16 pins or 69 in the averages by getting 728 in ns last league match.. There were Cohen Leads Averages with 2 Chas. Arnott Made Fine Record with 223 1UC€ Higch sin@le \lthuuu‘h Cohen leads the averages th W Chas. Arnott is the real wuler mt’h 223, having bowled in 23 h single game, Starr, 379; game, Starr, $74; high ; _ Sehumacher, 1231; high Schumacher, 3420. are the official for the Poreupine Bowling Mrs sing LV O@) hic] 210 207 2()2 199 108 196 196 195 ]()’) 190 184 180 Meets every Second and Fourth Satm day night at 7.30 in the Hall, South Poreupine. Members adâ€" mitted by ecard. Nonâ€"members 47 cents and 3e¢. war tax total 50c¢., adâ€" mission including refreshments Everybody Weleome All outside toilets must be made «y proof. Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. 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. Services :â€" Sunday 11 a.m., Sunday School 10 a.m. Wednesday Meeting........ 7.30 p.m. Testimonies of Healing through Christian Science. Christian Science Meetings ODDFELLOWS‘ HALL Subject : "GOD THE PRESERVER OF MAN" GOLDEN GLOW, L.O.B.A No. 742, Schumacher Meets every 2nd and 4th Monday of each month in Schumacher Orange President S. R. Harrison, Esq., M.R.S.C. L.R.C.P Viceâ€"Presidents : Austin E. Neame, Esq. Dr, A. 8. Porter, M.C. Meets second Friday in each month in the Town Hall at 8 p.m. All returned men gladly welcomed Hall, Visiting members welcome. L. \Y_I,I:I:IAMS E. TOWNSEND, No. 677, Timmins, Ont. Meets every 1st and 3rd Monday of each month in the basement of nglican Church. ALL VISITI G MEMBERS WELCOME M. GORDON JEAN LANGMAN, ww v w ar | Meets every Friday evemnw in the | Oddfellows* Hall, Spruce St., North | _Â¥ V mtmg methlen wjueated to atten({ Open to nativeâ€"born Scots and Scotswomen and those of Scottish descent. Meetings every second and fourth Friday in the month in the Hollinger Recreation HalLl » P. LARMER, President The Caledonian Society of Timmins We do Electrical Work of every description, contract or otherwise. Why not let us solve your Radio troubles. Meets in the Hollinger Recreation Hall, first and second Saturdays of each month Invitation may be obtained from Secretary or President upon application, or from members of the Committee. T. H. RICHARDS, President MRS. T. RICHARDS, Sec.â€"Treas., Box 1037, Timmins, Ont. The George Taylor Hardware Limited J. \ l()\\ NSEND Schumacher L.O.L. No. 2975 Meets on the Second and Fourth Thursday of each month at the Schuâ€" macher Orange Hall. All visiting members welcome Meets on the 2nd and 4th Monday of every month, in the Basement of Anglican Church ALL VISITING MEMBERS WELCOME A,. G. LUXTON, 3. G. ARCHER, Â¥v CORNISH SOCIAL CLUB Meetings held in Hollinger Recreation Hall, third Saturday of each month. Open to all of Cornish birth or Cor« 8. T. WALKER â€" _ W. G. SMITH [IMMINS LODGE, 1.0.0.f. No. 453 GOLD STAR, L.O.B.A. CANADIAN LEGION TIMMINS BRANCH Allâ€"Britain Social Club LANCASHIRE CLUB THE CORNISH WELCOME CLUB ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS nish Associate. ALFRED W. SNOW, President HARRIS, Sec.â€"Treas., Schumacher. Ont N.( THE BOARD OF HEALTH D. CUTHELL, Secretary PRICE FIVE CENTS 84 *4 By Order of sSECOND SECTION 10 Third Ave.

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