Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 Feb 1929, 2, p. 7

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Toronta Mail and Empire:â€"The Windâ€" sor board of education disapproves of corporal punishment and has instructâ€" ed teachers that when pupils are to be strapped the punishment must not take place on the same day as the offence. Whipping in cold blood is less defenâ€" sible than whipping when tempers are humanly warm as the result of imperâ€" tinence or disobedience. Rich in those healing herbs Indians used People so crippled by Rheumatism 't;hey couldn‘t walk have taken Gallagher‘s Kidney Remedy and got well. It is wonderfully healing and cleansimng to kidneys. Comes right from the heart of Nature. Throbbing backachcs, dizzy spells, wheuâ€" matic pains and nagging bladder ills are usually caused by inflamed kidneys. Gallagher‘s herbs soon ends these ills. It is one of James Gallagher‘s famous 50â€"yearâ€"old Herbal Household Reme(hes Sold now by F. M. Burke Linuited 11 Pine Street North 174 Wilson Ave. 9 Third Ave. Timmins, Ont. and at Connaught Station, Ont. A Safe old Eczbal Remedy for Sick Kidneys Royal Securities Corporation Montreal Toronio Halifax Saint John Quebec Oitaws Winnipeg V ancouver Charlottectown Three Rivers Hamilion Regina Edmonton Calgary V ictoria St. John‘ s, N fid. New Y ork , Eng Limited 330 Bay Street, Toronto 2 Adelaide 7105 Address N ame B’OND yields, on the average, are higher than they were a year ago. The pendulum «of t?xe money market has taken one «of its periodical upward While this temporary condition exists, invwestors have a rare opportunity to obtain fixedâ€"interest securities at atâ€" tractive prices. "Invwestment Recommendations‘‘ desâ€" ctibes more than a score of selected offerings. Copy, free on request. Teleâ€" phone or send us your name and address below. A despatch from Cobalt last week says:â€"*"The case of Harry Haines, Imâ€" perial veteran who was in Toronto General Hospital for five months and was then sent back to Cobalt without | undergoing an o6peration said to be necessary, may be taken to Premier G. Howard Ferguson and Hon. Dr. Forbes Godfrey, Ontario Minister of Health. The Cobalt Town Council and the local | post of the Canadian Legion may joinf; in a protest, but the matter is held up pending a report from the Police and | Relief Committee, whose chairman is | to confer with the M.O.H., Dr. G. A.} Schmidt, and report to the Town Counâ€" | cil. Haines, according to Council‘s in-‘ formation, should have an operation to remove part of one lung, and it is said a Toronto doctor is prepared to operate without charge. The exâ€"solâ€" dier lay in Toronto General Hospital from about midsummer until the end of last year, having been sent from the hogpital at Cobalt for ‘treatment, and Councillor Wainwright is authority for the statement that Rev. H. F. Cocks, an officer of the Legion, considers the delay in his case a subject of protest to the provincial authorities." Daily Mirror (London, Eng.) :â€"While communal kitchens in towns are stil in their experimental stages, the vilâ€" lage "bake oven" has long been an established fact. In a small Oxfordâ€" shire village this cooking is done for a penny or two the dish, and on Sundays, especially, folk of all ages return from the bakery bearing joints and pies under clean white cloths. Added refinements in design and apâ€" pointments have enhanced the appearâ€" ance of the Refined Oldsmobiles. These include slightly larger headlamps supâ€" ported on chromium plated standards; a new heraldic crest on the radiator with the name plate removed to an artisztic crossâ€"bar connecting the headâ€" lamps; a new cadet type of visor; the use of sheet metal roof shaulders inâ€" stead of fabric finish and an advanced design of radiator shutters. An even finer grade of mohair upholstery, adâ€" justable front seats and like refineâ€" ments have increased the beauty and comfort of the interiors of the Fisher built closed bodies. New and distincâ€" tive colour combinatons have been selected. * Coincident with the announcement of the new added features in Oldsmoâ€" bile, a price reduction has been made. The new low prices are in keeping with Oldsmobile policy of giving the motorâ€" ing public the advantage of increased production and further modernized factory facilities. These additional features have reâ€" sulted in new beauty, particularly to the headâ€"on appearance of the Oldsâ€" mobile. The headlamp supports and the crossâ€"bar bearing the Oldsmobile name plate are chromium plated, givâ€" ing an added touch of brightness. A touch of colour is given the chromium plated radiator shell by the new jewelâ€" like medallion which typifies the charâ€" acteristics inherent in Oldsmobiles. The new cadet visor is designed to harmonize with the distinctive curves of the hood and cowl. Manufacturing refinements and a few mechanical improvements have reâ€" sulted in greater horsepower. The high compression engine now develops 62 horsepower and this added power has brought a corresponding increase in performance. One of the major mechanical adâ€" vancements incorporated in the 1929 Oldsmiobile is found in the fully maâ€" chined, rifle drilled conrffecting rods. This drilling permits luberating oil to be sent under pressure direct to the piston pins, giving the Oldsmobile full pressure lubrication. This feature hereâ€" tofore has been a characteristic of high priced automobiles. Other mechanical improvements inâ€" clude an adjustable fan pulley and a new improved gear which provides easiâ€" er handling in traffic and parking. NEED RECORDING OFFICE AT SIOUX LOOKOUT OR HUDSON The Mail and Empire says:â€"With widespread activity in the Red Lake district, the question which has now come up is that in connection with establishing a recording office near the railway, either at Sioux Lookout or Hudson. Prospectors staking in areas which do not call for travelling by way of Goldpines complain that many deâ€" lays in recordng result. Such delays occur at all times of the year, but are particularly noticeable in the spring and fall. For instance, during the freezeâ€"up in the fall or breakâ€"up in the spring, communication with the recordâ€" ing office at Goldpines is practically impossible for several weeks. Not only this, but those coming out of a section such as Shoniah lake, wishing to seâ€" cure papers for recording immediately, are forced to travel in a roundabout way which results in added expense and much loss of time. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO the leader men. Characteristics of Some Sleigh Dogs Described Some interesting information on the subject of sled dogs is found in a letâ€" ter written to the New York Times by John Stuart Thomson of Je szey City. Mr. Thomson writes: "The Times states that Byrd‘s lead dog Chinook is said to be a grandson o% the lead dog used by Peary. Peary usâ€" ed many sled dogs of various breeds. Chinook is a great dog, but is not desâ€" cended from Peary‘s lead dog on the gsreat polar occasion. I own the desâ€" »endant of that dog, the famous Pameâ€" ‘us, descended from Peary‘s Polaris. lappula used a similar lead dog, Fox, _n the Nome exploit. Balto was not "Chinook is a cross between an Eskiâ€" mo dog and a mastiff. Balto was a cross between an Eskimo, police and Newfoundland. An Eskimo dog with a mixture of wolf blood is called a husky, a rangy but savage dog. None of these dogs are beautiful. "Now come the gorgeous white dogs, Polaris, Pamelus, etc. In Bayne‘s book ‘Polaris‘ it will be noted that they are all white Samoyedeâ€"Eskimos, getting weight from the latter and supreme dog beauty from the former. "In other words, they are the Rusâ€" sian sled dogs of the explorers Nansen, Amundsen, Abruzzi and others, from whom Peary got them, the kind of sled dogs the vikings brought ages ago to Greenland; small tight ears, doubleâ€" plumed tail carried over the back; inâ€" telligent enough to understand langâ€" uage; loving and obedienit even ‘to death; huge mane, lambent eyes like a doe‘s. "Byrd‘s and Walden‘s justified deâ€" votion to Chinook is no greater than the European polar explorers‘ devotion to their great and supremely beautiful Samoyvede sled dogs." "Though lighter than Eskimos, T‘ll match them, with their spirit and brains, against any Northern dog in sled work. "The Times a year ago had a picture of Mayor Walker petting Sappala‘s head dog, Foxâ€"a white Samoyedeâ€" Eskimo. The Samoyede is a Russian tribe that a thousand years ago moved into Sibera. The soâ€"called Siberian dogs that Mrs. Riker and Sappala now drive in dog derbies are East Siberia dogs, shortâ€"legged and shortâ€"haired, like a shortâ€"legged police dog, or hound. JAIL TERM FOR THEFT FOR MAN FROM KAPUSKASING According to the evidence given in the trial before Magistrate E. R. Tuckâ€" er, the fox pelt was owned by Ab. Shammels, Kapuskasing fur buyer, who had bought it from an Indian in the country beyond Smoky Falls. Shammeis, because of illness, entrustâ€" ed his business temporarily to Sam Cote, and the allegation was that Arâ€" chambault had taken the pelt from Cote‘s packsack at Smoky Falls, while Cote was on a trip into the bush. Rene Archambault, prospector of the Kapuskasing district, is in the district jail at Haileybury under senténce of two months, following his eunviction on a charge of theft, involving the disâ€" appearnance of a figzher fox pelt, valued Archambault claimed the pelt was his, that he had trapped the fox himâ€" self. The skin was found wrapped up in his hunting coat and two Indians, a woman and a girl, identified it as the property of Shammeis. Word of the alleged theft was sent down to Kapuskasing, and when Archambault arrived there, he was picked up by the provincial officers. at $60. Archambault was fined $25 and costs, with the jail alternative. He was brought to Haileybury by Provinâ€" cial Constable Franks, of Kapuskasing. London Times:â€""Speaking at the annual conference of the Communist party of Great Britain at Bermondâ€" sey town hall, Mr. J. P. Bell gave a detailed report of the sixth World Congress of the Communist Internaâ€" tional. In his address Mr. Bell said that it would soon be almost imposâ€" sible for the Communist party to carâ€" ry on normal legal activities, and he indicated that, they must prepare for a period of illegal activity. With reâ€" gard to activity inside the army, he remarked tMWat they were not giving anything to the press when they spoke of their determination, in the event of war, to do ail they could to win the soldiers over to the side of the revoluâ€" tionary struggle for power." I know all these dogs and Fortune Promised the Inventor of a New Dance The desirability of a new type of dance and the reward likely for the inventor of such a novelty is stressed by The Toronto Saturday Night. The Baturday Night says:â€" For the man or woman who can deâ€" vise a new dance there is fortune waitâ€" ingâ€"money and world fame. . It need not even be a measure to supersede the foxtrot, which many dancers think outworn. It can be just another pleasâ€" ant addition to the dance programme preferable to, and taking the place of, oneâ€"step, or tango. We have not had a dance inventor since W. F. Hurndall, who died the other day. Mr. Hurndall told me once that he made over $15,000 out of his "society tango," devised to catch the tango boom of before the war. There were no standard tango steps at that time, and he was shewd enough to supâ€" ply a demand. He made nearer $100,000 out of the two dances he invented in the war years and popularized. This was just before the first jazz dancing swept like wildfire out of the Southern States on the tide of the new negroid tomâ€" tom music. The coming of jazz made the danceâ€" inventor‘s task infinitely more difficult. Toâ€"day sequence dancing is out of fashion. Nothing but straightforward progressive steps are possible in the ballroom which contains the forxtrot and the new waltz. Even the tango has to be pruned to four simple and progressive steps, which can be fitted into a space two feet by eight, in order to adapt it to the exigencies of latterâ€" day ballrooms. But although the new Parisian tango is the vogue now, it has not really aroused enthusiasm. It is a Latin dance, whose music does not stir our Anglo Saxon fibres. Its lilt and caâ€" dance, its loud monotonous timbre, which thrill a Latin, leave the Angloâ€" Saxon cold. It is new and amusing and so far, for the moment, we dance it. The oneâ€"step similarly could easily be locked out by a sufficiently attracâ€" tive dance. It is danced very little now. It has, after all, had a long life. Originally it was the turkeyâ€"trot born in San Francisco. Hundreds of dances are invented every year, and never succeed. Even the prize winning efforts of wellâ€"known professional dancers demonstrated beâ€" fore a board of expert judges, at their various annual dance congresses, never seem to get a footing on the dance programmes. All lack somethingâ€"generally a new musical rhythm. For new dances are born out of music. The foxtrot came like thatâ€"born on the rhythm of new syncopated music. The Vernon Castles, who figured the first gsimple walking steps to the new music, must have made around $500,â€" 000, out of their exhibitions and chain schools. What the Vernon Castles did is open to anybody else to doâ€"if they can find the magical secret of a new dance. South Bend (Indiana) Tribune:â€" Now it is charged that a woman has been giving orders to the Goevernor of Oklahoma. That puts him in the same position as the Governors of California, New Jersey, Kentucky, Minnesota, and others to numerous to mention. American Lumberman (Chicago) :â€" Every thousandth person in Chicago was arrested in a recent roundâ€"up. Being called "one man in a thousand" in Chicago isn‘t the compliment it usâ€" ed to be. T hey know how important s roughage is. In safeguarding their families from constipation they are responsible for their own happier homes. Constipation is the bane of thousands. It attacks health. Ruins youth. Saps energy. Too often it brings serious disease. And yet it is easy to prevent. Kellogg‘s ALLâ€"BRAN is guaranteed. Bulk or roughage relieves constipation naturally. ALLâ€"BRAN furnishes bulk in generâ€" ous quantity because it is 100% bran. This bulk absorbs moisture and distributes it through the digestive system. Gently distending the intestinesâ€"exercising themâ€" MANY a man owes his daily fitness, his success, to the wife who sees that "he takes good care of himself." She watches that he gets enough sleep, takes enough time to eat. She acts as family physician with every meal she serves. And often as not, Kellogg‘s ALLâ€"BRAN is her trusted ally. For this healthful cereal has been adopted by countâ€" less women as the surest, easiest way to insure plenty of daily roughage, lacking in so many foods. W hy ALLâ€"BRAN is so effective After all, most husbands are like children The North Bay Nugget last week says:â€""According to word received this week, it is highiy probable that their Excellencies Lord and Lady Willingdon will attend the morning service in St. John‘s Anglican Church on Good Friâ€" day. Their visit will not be of an offiâ€" clal nature. Their Excellencies will merely avail themselves of an opporâ€" tunity of attending the Good Friday service while making a brief stopâ€"over TO ATTEND CHURCH SERVICES AT NORTH BAY GOOD FRIDAY in the city." McLAUGHLIN â€"BUICK Jeading the New "Irend .. in power and getaway ~in Style, Luxury and Beauty hon Better Automobil‘es Arce F Marshallâ€"Eeclestone, Ltd. WITH MASTERPIECE BODIES BY FISHER LD motor car standards are changingâ€"old styles and old abilitics giving way to new â€"and as everyont knows, the creator of the new trend is this new M cLaughlnn-Bunck New body lines and contoursâ€"radiant new colorsâ€"new adjustable front seat, fullâ€"width rear seat and countless other cefinements in Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher. New and improved carburetionâ€"new com stantâ€"pressure gas pumpâ€"increased bore and stroke â€" greater piston displacement â€" and other advancements in the famous McLaughâ€" lin~Buick sealed chassis and tripleâ€"sealed engine. And a thrilling new order of performanceâ€" an entirely new kind and degree of car operaâ€" tionâ€"with elements of virility, getaway, swiftâ€" ness, smoothness and stamina undreamedâ€"of a few months ago ! The new McLaughlinâ€"Buick leads the new trend . . . in power and getawayâ€"in style, luxury and beauty ! ALLâ€"BRAN works as nature works. How much better than habitâ€"forming drugs ' -’\ whose dose must be conâ€" stantly increased â€" and which sometimes injure the system. Kellogg‘s ALLâ€"BRAN is an inviting cereal to eat with milk or cream. Delicious with fruits or honey added. Sprinkle it into soups too. Use it in cookingâ€"recipes on package. Mix it with other cereals. Eat two tableâ€" spoonfuls dailyâ€"chronic cases, with every meal. If you will serve it in some form reguâ€" larly, you will surely protect your family from dread constipation. ALLâ€"BRAN is sold by all grocers. Served at hotels, cafeterias. On diners. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. Timmins. Ont. sweeping out wastes and poisons. In a partâ€"bran prodâ€" uct the amount of bulk is selâ€" dom sufficient to completely perform this work. That is why doctors recommend ALLâ€"BRAN. Because they know that it is 100% bran and 100% effective. Diff erent from unnatural pills Children Like Itâ€" So Will You ~At the frst sign of a t Cold buy Buckle) l The 7. yon Thursday, Feb. 28th, Kellogg‘s ALL â€" BRAN is sold with this defiâ€" nite guarantee: Eat it according to directions. If it does not relieve constipation safely, we will refund the purâ€" chase price. % Cold, buy "Buckley‘s". The first dose does two thingsâ€" relieves the cough instantly and delights the taste. Different from all other remedies for Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis. Prevents "Flu", Pneumonia and all Throat and Lung troubles. Sold everywhere under moneyâ€"refunded guarantee. W. K. Buckley, Limited, 142 Mutual St., Toronto 2 Guaranteed! s1ie Acis like a fiash-â€" a single sip proves it Mâ€"23â€"2â€"29C

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