Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 31 May 1928, 2, p. 6

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I met a travelleet who recommended ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘, I procured some. You would not know me for the same person. I am in perfect health, always energetic. I am happy to congratulate you on your medicine. I recommend it on every occasion.‘ â€"â€"Mr. Emery Lemay. "Fruitâ€"aâ€" txves” overcome constipation in nature‘s surest way. The intensified juices of ripe, fresh fruit, combined with healthâ€"building tonics, gently and surely restore natural intestinal action. Be well with "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives". Try a boxâ€"25c and 50c at all druggists. Montreal, Que.â€"‘"I was always constiâ€" pated, bilious and weary until one day Constipated ? Tired O Eating YEASTâ€"today a Health Custom For 5000 years known to aid digestion and to promote health; in the past four years, Yeast has beâ€" come the daily diet of multitudes who seek better vitality the natural way. W hy not eat Fleischâ€" mann‘s Yeast daily for the good it will bring you? f ® » Let 100 ts wn Â¥ HHH' FLEISCHMANN‘ S SNZS TrFood torteatth â€" Thursday, May 31st, 1928 " Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" gives perfect health wrapped packs of Ey or 0) Tell your grocer to add your name to his list for regular delivery; three cakes for each day, for every member of your family. Give Yeast a fair trial and you will benefit greatly. ied Out ? No Energy ? ) T743 o r;-é?[ iess L‘Z\E ‘_@g'@ The THRICEâ€"Aâ€"DAY Health Custom ist eamp at Bass Lake, three and a half miles from Cobalt. â€" W. J. Yorkeâ€"Hardy, representing the Kiwaâ€" nis Club, â€"brought the matter before the council,; and a letter was read from H. E. MceKee, of the same orâ€" ganization, in which it was stated the location was not as close to town as might be desired, but that it was the nearest site available. _ Mr. Yorkeâ€" Hardy outlined what ‘had been done already and told of the intentions of Coleman township, but further conâ€" sideration of the matter was postponâ€" ed until the next regular meeting. _ In the interval, members may arrange to visit the site.. The mayor, who raised the question of the position of the nonâ€"carâ€"owners, was told that a bus service was under consideration if it apeared the scheme would go through. An Aberdeen tailor is ‘*‘Suits without pockets."‘ Despatches last week from Cobait say that the question of cheap transâ€" portation for citizens who are not automobile owners eropped up when at a special meeting of the Cobalt town council there was a request for the consideration of the council in reâ€" gard to making a eontribution in cash to the cost of clearing the ground at the proposed bathing beach and tourâ€" COBALT PLANNING FOR TOURIST CAMP AND BEACH 110 £mmer cigar ana’ no Einer weeé end /Dacéage, No Limer cr Write for booklet ‘"Regaining Health‘‘ which describes many interesting ways of eating Yeast. The Fleischmann Co., Dept. 3625 1449 St. Alexander Street, Montreal, Quebec. â€"Exchange advertising end of the line. In a day or so serâ€" vice was resumed between New Lisâ€" keard and the pulp mill, but there could be no service from the pulp mill to Haileybury on account of the damâ€" age done to the tracks. It will take some days to remedy the damage done by the windâ€"driven water, but it is expected this week to have everything back to normal again. ‘ The floods driven by the high w'nd did considerble damage to the Nipisâ€" sing Central property. _ There was also damage to boat houses and other structures along the shore. South Poreupine and other places suffered seriously from the floods this spring much damage being done during the weeks the floods continued. At Hailâ€" eybury in the course of a few hours, wind and water did equally serious harm and caused considerabhle loss. The Nipissing Central railway tracks were â€" washed from â€" Florence street to the crossing at Moore‘s Cove and traffice on the line had to be susâ€" pended. There was not a car on the north end of the line at the time the storm did the damage and to give a partial resumption ofâ€" service cars had to be sent around by way of the T. N. 0. to get them on the north end of the line. In a day or so serâ€" we are.""‘ _ ‘*Garage for three cars with builtâ€" in livinge room.""‘ Water and wind did much damage at Haileybury last week. The floods had kept the water high, but it was thought that the worst was over. Some parts of the town, as well as some portions of New Liskeard, had been flooded, but the damage was not serious, until a high wind started in the early part of the week. The wind drove the water and floating debris against the portecting wall at the Haileybury pumphouse and the wall was partly swept away, the water flooding into the pumphouse and putâ€" ting the plant out of commuission. To secure a water supply for Haileyâ€" bury in the meantime, a large elecâ€" tricallyâ€"driven pump was borrowed from Cobalt, being taken to Haileyâ€" bury on a huge lumber truck. _ As the reservoir was wellâ€"filled before the trouble started, the situation was not so bad as it might have been and Haileybury was able to get along for water supply. Haileybury thad also tapped in on some springs the previâ€" ous week when the floods were bad and were interfering with the pumpâ€" house. Accordingly, no serious shortâ€" age of water is anticipated. _ Furâ€" ther, as the waters in the lake are now abating, it is believed that the worst is well over. WINC AND WATER 60 MUCK DAMAGE AT HAMLEYBUBY Pumping Station Flooded and Put Out of Commission. Nipissing Central Tracks Washed Out TIIE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO tiesâ€"a magnet that draws tourists in their tens of thousands each year. Its neglect of trafiic control has been inexeusable. _ Hamiltonâ€" can learn nothing of traffic rezulation from the Queen City, but Toronto, we think, van learn much from Hamilton. ‘*The results of careless or ignorant planting on streets and private proâ€" perties are often seen. Many wellâ€" meaning people seem to fail to realize that a tree is a living organism almost as wonderful as animal life. _ You may take an axe to the bush and hack from thence a fence post or a picket and pound it down where you want it quite satisfactorily. You can follow the same method with a prospective shade tree and it MAY grow. But the odds are against it !"‘ ‘*The trouble about such a method of tree planting where the campaign depends upon popular enthusiastu is the lack of the spectacular at the outâ€" set. â€" When set in their final position the trees are still only isignificant little ‘‘gads"‘ or "*switches.""‘ Some protective staking must be given them if only to indicate their whereabouts. But years before the older, larger trees of the wild growth, if they lived at all would have recovered from the shock of removal and adapted themâ€" selves to changed conditions, the nursâ€" ery grown trees would be in vigorous, health\ growth and of ideal formaâ€" tion for a street tree. as already outlined, if they survive at all, would seem to do so in defiance of all the laws of life. ‘‘The alternative demands a conâ€" siderable amount of forethought and patience but the results will more than justify the expenditure of these. Seed of the desired species can be cgheaply and easily obtaimed. A nurâ€" sery seedbed a few feet square will grow enough seedlings to plan up a good sized town. Set out in rows at a year old and cultivated like garden truck for another season the little transplants would have developed a compact mass of roots and could be dug, transported and planted withâ€" out damage and with practica‘ly 1no check to their growth _ Moreover, they would have grown up in sunâ€" light and in soil more nearly like their Ainal location. ‘*‘Another and great objection is the physical impossibility of lifting a tree from the stony situation without great damage to its root system; and t‘he older the tree the more roots it must have to survive the operation. To have to use pick and grubhoe to lift a ten year old maple tree of sprout origin from among boulders is butchery, with but one result. ‘*We are speaking of course of transplanting in quantity such as.â€"in a street planting campaign. _ Isolated specimens or a few trees, well chosen and handled with great care, may be satisfactory, but in general, wild stock obtained undel the usual conditions ‘*Then too, the maples, being able to grow in ‘heavy shade, are likelyv to be found in thickets and under taller trees of other species. Such when separated, are tall and whipâ€"like and when planted out areâ€" immediately subjected to the heat and glare of open spaces. ‘*The following suggestions are ofâ€" fered with regard to the provision of trees for street shadeâ€"tree planting. ‘*A comparison drawn between the two possible sources of supplyâ€"wild stock and nursery grownâ€"will clearâ€" ly show the advantages of using the latter. In the case of wild stock, very rarely can it be found in an ideal state tor transplanting, as regards age, size, soil and the posnlnllt\ ot pmvunng sufficient of the root sysâ€" tem to reâ€"establish the tree. To take, for instance the popular choice of shadeâ€"tree planters: the soft and hard maples. In Temiskaming #these speâ€" cies in their natural location are found only on the warmest, lightest and dryest soils, rocky and stoney hillsides and ridges. _ The ultimate destination of trees transplanted from such situations is likely to be the heavy, cold and, sometimes, wet clay soils of town streets, a disadvantageâ€" ous @hange to begin with. _ Again, where maples of a possible size for transplanting ocecur such growth is invariably the result of the passing of forest fires in previous years, and the _ specimens found . are _ the sprout growth from roots and stumps of trees destroyed in those fires; conâ€" sequently single treee and saplings are seldom met with, and the root systems of all are usually unsatisfacâ€" tory from a transplanting standpoint. adME SUGGESTIONG OX T8E PLANTING DF TRESS Nursery Stock to be Preferred Usualâ€" ly to Wild Stock, Says Writer on the Subject beauty â€" of ° surroundings generally, there will be more than passing interâ€" est in the article by Mr. E. Newton White as published in last week‘s isâ€" sue of The New Liskeard Speaker. Mr. W ohite sayvs :â€" This is treeâ€"planting time, and the time when people generally are seekâ€" ing to improve the appearance of homes and towns and to add to the H strum the lyre; man who whistles while ng in a tire. Charleston, 8.C., Couriet their rum t liltir I1¢ SOnu‘ s In â€" other the most nunicipaliâ€" Know the Joy of Cool Electric Cooking bave time, save money, save foodâ€" values, with a Westinghouse Elecâ€" tric Range. With it, your kitchen is always cool and comfortable even on sweltering summer days,. Mealâ€" time is a pleasure when you cook this modern way. Get your rangeâ€" and FREE clock â€" today, on the wonderful terms of this big sale. Porcupine Timmins and South Porcupine nature craves a light refreshment Get this W onderful Clockâ€" At such times eat Quaker Puffed Rice. It satisfies, and yet is light and easily digested. The flavour is altogether differentâ€"an intriguing, nutmeat flavour that never fails to please. Quaker Puffed Rice is the rice grain, puffed eight times normal size and exâ€" ploded . . . thoroughly cooked and ovenâ€" crisped. Serve direct from the package, or warm if you wish. FTEN you crave light food that is easily digested . . . perhaps a hurâ€" ried luncheon downtown . . . maybe to satisfy a hungry feeling at night or between meals. Quaker PUFFED RICE Whole wheat grains, also puffed to eight times normal size, and exploded. Toasted, flaroury morsels, light and appetizing. Quaker Puffed W heat, too Power Telephone Co. Ltd. To every range purchaser during this sale will be given this splendid mahogany Tambour clock, 22" wide by 10" high, with Cathedral ong striking the hours and halflâ€"hours. Get DOWN IS ALL YOU NEED TO 625

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