Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Feb 1929, 1, p. 5

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Due to pressure of business we have not had time to prepare a list of gpecials for this week‘s paper. We will however have a number of Extra pecials in our different stores. Every Store will have Specials of their own for this weekâ€"end and suggest that you call and look them over. Phone either of the above stores for any of these specials and they will be delivered to your home without any delivery charge We buy the very best quality obtainable. _ All meat handled is government inspected and we buy quality regardless of price. If you would like to have a real tender, tasty Roast of Beef for Sunday dinner we can supply you. Fresh, Frozen and Smoked Fish always on hand also Shrimps and Oysters . THIRD AVE., TIMMINS We are receiving fresh stocks every dayâ€"Our Specials for this weekâ€"end will interest you and also save you money. NEW CABBAGE . 190 oo . 250-350 2 Abs. fOr. .:.... TOWNSITE, TIMMINS each ... We have just received a car of Fruit and Vegetables, excellent quality and reasonably priced. Chuck Roast . 20¢ FOR SURE RESULTS OUR DELIVERY SERVICE IS AT YOUR DISPOSAL We invite you to apply for a Charge Account Insert One Next Week Phone 701â€"702 One Insertion costing you 50 cents in advance will bring you what you require YOU SHOULD TRY e FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Legs of Pork 2 Sour Mixed Pickles large bottle ...... FIRST AVE., SCHUMACHER LADIES‘ BOWLING LEAGUE sCORES FOR FEBRUARY 14 ISNnOL;..:«%..... Wilson ... Gerovac .. CoWwper ...... McCaskill TOtals ...;. Handicap The following are the scores for th Ladies‘ Bowling League for Feb. 14th se Wilson Gerovac ... Cowper ...........s.. McCaskill Totals Handicap T.B.C. 128........ 128.;...;;. 143.;...... 39 181.......111«....,. 37 AKEDaAis«... 99........ . 90:1,...+. 31 61...... 128........140.......: 33 "...... A39........04 556G........077....:..0G81...... L 7O . 100. 39 Darling Lang . Smith _ Wallace Dye . Porter D. ....... King M. :i:.:.... McCracken B Urquhart B. . Totals ......... Handicap Roy R. Percival I. . Harttey B. Pecore C. ... Brisson J. Tothls .:.. Handicap Scott Porter Roach ....... Pierce Miller Totals :..::. Handicap BYCK L 154. D. Harrison ....125. Mrs. Harrison 92. 9D :.... Desaulnier ... 96 562 Handicap ....110 Slotnick S Totals Totals 692 : T403 T422 TBC. 3 points; Kiwanees 1 point A. S.DO Totals Handicap Totals Totals 840 817 37. 2s ASD. 1 point; Ramblers 3 points Pioneers OLE y . e 98;;:.;:.. 121:}.,; C 6G~..:::;}15...;..:. 131;.......© B0XAz 2 107;;;;:;: 4 Totals Totals Fhone 133 o. 1 4¢ Pork Hocks Phone 72â€"A 'iCkl(.é§3 5 c Kiwanees 107:;..:...139 . 98 AB3D.:;...., 115 106 112..:. ;s 111 542. 1050..;..... 150 Ramblers 195.... 147.... 111 197 134..... Bs ~:00;:;. :2140 110 116 .200 190 161 110 140 558 628 659 569 672 ...... THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE 709 128 577 132 130 120 138 611 681 759 669 155. 165. 115. 203. 109. 797. 110 907 132:...:...120 110 143 139 631 132 763 105 127 163 572 150 154 124 167 147 T11 781 166 187 208 681 679 121 131 107 589 1?2°3%; 207. 119. 115. 138. NOT 110 817 138 .. 349 | 1764 396 351 .. 266 367 386 1667 450 . 342 .353 .. 39»® 425 1880 210 506 .. 328 .276 .584 .. 032 2226 168 .. 392 .. 327 .. 312 . 437 .. 359 1827 @240 375 310 . 497 .. 326 . 463 .. 343 2060 ..330 404 Feldman S Abrams C. . Slotnick L. Totals ... Handicap McDonald C.. McDonald M McDonald F. James B. Smith M. Totals Handicap Montreal Gazette: "Leon Trotsky, on hs way to Turkey, where he is permitâ€" ted to be an exile under surveillance, must have bitter thoughts of this Rusâ€" sian fellows, who are glad to be rid of him. It s not long since he was preâ€" sident of the Petrograde Soviet «and leader of the Bolshevist Revolutionary Committee whose coupe d‘etat led to Kerensky‘s downfall, after which, with renin, he seized the reins of governâ€" ment and established the Council of the People‘s Commissioners. Today he is a wanderer seeking refuge in a foreign land. Trotsky had no mercy for the people he ousted and now the Russians he led have none for hm. His opinion on Soviet Russia today might be interâ€" esting if anyone cared enough about him to listen." Cincinné@ti Engquirer Husbandâ€"shooting and wifeâ€"shooting are becoming so common, and so selâ€" dom punished, that we might as well in clude them as just another form of divorce. Toronto Globe Canada is now producing nearly twice as much newsprint as the United States The tendency is everywhere to follow the Ford motto: Manufacture at the source of raw material. Totals Totals 800 878 786 â€" 2 N.BBC. 2 points; Y.P.L. 2 points In 1921 the Canadian Pacific paid out $2,000,000 from freight revenue in loss and damase claims. In 1927 it paid $700,000, a decrease of $1,300,000, although in the same eriod the gross [reig ht revenue had increased by $15,000,000. _ Better freight handling did it The stonework and most of the artioning of the Royal York Hotel ave Leen completed, and there appears every likelyhood that the great building will be open to the travelling public by June 1. ; This hotel is the largest and tallest in the British Empire Some idea of the worldâ€"wide area over which the Canadian Pacific operates may kbe gathered from the fact that in making out its monthly balance it is necessary to turn fiftyâ€" nine different fereign currencies into dollars in order to get an accurate result in Canadian money. Wireless is now being used to aid in the protection of forests against fire. The Ontario Provincial governâ€" ment planes are equipped with the latest apparatus with a ractus of 400 miles, so that the headquarters may be readily communricated with and immediate steps ta.® :n upon the discovery of an outbreak. "The principle of rapid freezing has such qualifications that there to be little room for doubt that it is going to revolutionize the fishing industry,‘‘. stated W. A. Found, deputy minister of fisheries. "We intend to make thee xperimentâ€" al station at Halifax of the utmost yvalue to the whole industry." W. J. C. Madden of Calgary, is making arrangements with the Canadian Pacific Express Compan for the transportation of whitefis% caught in Great Slave Lake from Edmonton to Chicago. It is inâ€" tended that the distance from the fishing ground to rail head will be cov ered in winter by fiveâ€"ton trucks operating upon the thick ice of the Slave and Athabaska Rivers, traâ€" versing country that would otherâ€" wise be difficult to cross. A new and strange form of wildâ€" fowl is being imported into Alberta by the Calgary Fish and Game Assoâ€" ciation, which has arranged to seâ€" cure 2,000 Mongolian and Chinesae ringâ€"necked pheasants. ‘The birds are to be literated this summer throughout the southern part of thg Association‘s plan for reâ€"stockin Alberta‘s game bird supply. Wit all these Oriental birds loose the ancient Yellow Peril seems more imminent Ciipping as much as an hour and a hali off her schedule eastoound, and half an hour westround, the Trans Canada Limited, crack fyer of the Canszd.an Pacific Railway running between Montreal, Toronâ€" to, and Vancouver, will be further remarkable this summer by reason of a ‘‘solarium‘‘ car, containing baths and a special sunâ€"room, that will tbe included in her luxurious eqauipment. ‘I‘he Mountaineer, anâ€" other s; eedy summer train, running vetween Vancouver and Chicago will aiso have "solarium" cars, and run on faster time. ¢ The Trans Canada mekes its ftst run on N ay 12. and ‘Ike Mountaineer an June 10. The tormer train makes 140 trips durn:s: the summer season cover ns a distance equal to about Liteen and a kaulf times around the OWP â€"“ T »rovince, where 1800 were placed ast season as part of the Game AT THE SOURCE THEIR STATUS TURN ABOUT 713 132 126 153 148 262 821 ‘TIMMINS, ONTARIO 059590 00195 90595 90 95 90 35 3090 9035 0525 90 90 35 3590 35 20 2035 10 30 905 20 905 30 105 305 35 30 305 35 35 25 ts t 35 05 3 + % 4 % % b***%4%%% v//?//?///lllllll/////////////gflllffitm;l?lll?fivfil%%fi%%%%rfgu ¢"> tttttttttttttt The United tates government is perâ€" fectly within its rights in raising A tariff wall against any Canadian proâ€" ducts. The proper business of the Uniâ€" ted States government is to look after the interest of the United States. When it does that Canada can have no comâ€" plaint, as longas the Canadian governâ€" ment similarly occupies itself excluâ€" sively wwith the business of protecting the interests ofg Canadians. Mail appeared on the last day of Janâ€" uary as the first newspaper to be pubâ€" lished daily at The Pas, and is to be congratulated on its creditable appearâ€" ance. «With becoming modesty, it alâ€" ludes to itself as ‘the infant in Canaâ€" da‘s family of daily newspapers.‘ It begins with the advantage of being born into a good family. As the Norâ€" hhRAAA Winnipeg Free Press CANADAD‘S PROTECTION (From the Mail Empire) The Northern thern Mail says editorially, it took courage to found a new paper in country just on the verge of developâ€" ment. Only by takng such courage did most of th great newspapers in Canada start on careers which, though often difficult and hazardous, have achieved success, and retained the confnidence widely and generously imposed in them." # m a 2 B 2 2 18 6 2 2 a 2 GOLDFIELDS THEATRE IRRELL BELL _/ sumpgy ~a CONCERT PARTY 24 CHILDREN ADMITTED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED BY ADULTS 68 Bruce Ave., Thursday, Feb. 21st, 1929 Hardy Trees, Shrubs, Perennials Vines and Fruit Bushes Mrs. F. J. Hamilton P.O. Box 123 ruce Ave., South Porcupine ~8â€"21

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