Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 13 Jun 1929, 3, p. 6

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Te Your Summer Home Can Look T wice as Attractive Simply cover the walls and ceilings with smooth, tightâ€"fitting sheets of Gyproc Fireproof Wallboardâ€"then decorate. Gyproc will also make it cooler on hot daysâ€"warmer on cold nights. _ _ LWsmm‘cs. for T P /ymow‘é has the stamp of â€" Cb;ys/er Quality â€" _ notr the look of ! | to put on. OU can be proud to own a Plymouth, the Chrysler Motors car in the lowestâ€" priced field: â€"proud, because Plymouth is a fullâ€"size car, not a miniatureâ€"a comfortable car in which you and your family and friends can relax to the fullest, instead of feeling crowded and cramped; â€"proud, because Plymouth has a distinctively Chryslerâ€"like style and manner, a richness and dignity not to be found in other lowâ€"priced cars; Get the facts and save your money Bumlocdmuhoim aP ced i s s o s Ves season and one that will linger in the ‘memories of most of those present. The music by Tommy Stephens and his orchestra was excellent in quality and generous in quantity. Similar praise might well be given the refreshments served during the evening, The prize winners for the occasion were Miss Cybele Anderson ‘ and . Mr. Norval 7 iJ _ @ “““'\ C H R Y S L ERâ€" M O T OR S PR 0 D U C T ©820 and upwards J. o. b. Windsor | Northland Motor Sales In addition to its,f#//â€"size body, its fullâ€"size chassis, its fullâ€"size modern engine, its Jullâ€"size axlesâ€"Plymouth gives you the easy control of Chrysler â€" size weatherproof â€"internalâ€" â€"proud, because Plymouth O is so typically Chrysler in arg; [ performanceâ€"so swift in ndsor ) traffic, so eager on hills, so competent in maintaining top speeds, hour upon hour, smoothly, quietly and without effort. Plymouth is ful/â€"size and full-qual- ity in every single particular. 217 last week, June 5th, and proved a notâ€" able success from all standpoints, There was a large crowd and each and" all present agreed that the evening was a happy one. The hall was deâ€" corated in appropriate way for the ocâ€" lutweek.mnebth.mdprovedanot- able success from all standpoints. There was a large crowd and each and all present agreed that the evening was a happy one. The hall was deâ€" corated in appropriate way for the ocâ€" casion and all the various features Banks. casion and all the various features were up to the best standards. It was in fact a very pleasing windâ€"up for the ZALEK VERTLIEB WRITES ABOUT THE WEATHER HERE Probably the best comment ever made in regard to the weather was made by Mark Twain. He complained that everybody was always talking about the weather but not one ever did anyâ€" thing about it. Last week Zalek Vertâ€" lieb wrote in The New Liskeard Speakâ€" er about this North Land‘s recent weather. Zalek said:â€" "The weather man is sure having lot of fun with us poor humans. Last week he made it so liot, you could have cooked cabbage in the ice box. Oh boy it sure was warm, and I kept thinking of the nice day last winter when I froze my toe, and then it turned right around and got so cold that it gave every one the shivers and the weather man nearly burst laughâ€" mg.” St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journel â€"‘"It is high time that something was done to check the mad rush of autoists to the scene of fire. Speed laws are broken by many of these, who feel that it is their imperative duty to get to the blaze in the shortest possible time. They are impelled by nothing but idle curiosity. They‘know before they ever start that their assistance will not be needed; in fact, the ‘desire to be of service is the last thing that they think about. Like a lot of yokels, they rush pellâ€"mell to the burning building mereâ€" ly to see what they can see." Low Price~ CX PLYMOUTH CANADA‘S _ LOWEST.â€"PRICE D FULLâ€"S§S1ZE CA R Coupe, $820; Readster (with rumbie seat), $850; 2â€"Door Sedan, $860;, Touring, §870; De Luxe Coupe (with rumble seat), $870, 4â€"Dcer Sedan, $890. All prices f. e. b. Windsor, Ontaric, including standard factory equipment (freight and taxes extra). a s 2 Yet for all its size, Plymouth is so perfectly balanced and so skillfully engineered that unsurpassed economy of operation and upkeep is assured. expanding fourâ€" wheel hydraulic brakesâ€"the safest ever devised. For reasons of both pride and purse, the Plymouth is today‘s finest investment in the lowestâ€"priced fieldâ€" the one car of that field that reflects fine quality without even the sugâ€" gestion of low price. Tiz I of Chry craftsgm: named t and stre 14E Plymouth â€" product of Chrysler engineering and craftsmanship â€" has been so in .. named because its endurance ik and strength, ruggedness and freedom from limitations eo accurately typify that band of British people who braved the Atlantic three hundredâ€"years ago in pursuit of new high ideals. The following is the report for May of the Schumacher public school:â€" Names â€"are arranged in order of merit: Room Iâ€"J. A. Bush, principalâ€"Senâ€" ior Fourth Classâ€"Robert Moore, Douâ€" glas Sullivan, David Sky, Jack McCrea, Mary Donylchuk, Jimmie Heath, Jerry Russel; Kenneth Adamson and Violet Innes, equal; Dennis Duxfield; Kathâ€" leen Barron and Fred Gilbert, equal; Clifford Jucksch, Edward Shiculski, Jean St. Clairâ€"Pike, Elsie Wardley, Claire Furlong, Marguerite Smith, Madeline McKinnon, Bertha Bonnell, Stella Dennison, Mary Mira, Thomas Leck, Willie Shields. Report for Month of May for Schumacher Public School Standing of the Pupils in the Various Classes at the Schuâ€" macher Public School for the Month of May. Names in the Various Lists are Arranged in Order of Merit. Junior Fourth Classâ€"Gertrude Furâ€" long, Russell Sullivan, Daisy Miller, Wanda Smith, Alex Gregulski, George Leck, Signe Taipale, Helen Tario, Ellâ€" wood Phillips, Louise Ansara, Antoinâ€" ette Augustine. Room IIâ€"Florence E. Hubble, teachâ€" erâ€"Junior IVâ€"Rigoletta Pianosi, Elia Zuliani, Bill Phillips, Margaret Miller, Francis Bobinski; Dorris Lochrie and Walter Barron, equal. Senior IIIâ€"Lester Besley, Jean Monâ€" tigny, Fred Sheculski, Agnes Robertâ€" son, Sam Finkelman, Hazel Gilbert, Wilfrid Prest, Rosa Wong, Robert Sulâ€" livan, Muriel Hill, Elmer Mikula, Woodâ€" row Brady. Hughie Aide. . Room IIIâ€"M. Laura MacDonald, teacherâ€"Sr. III Classâ€"Caroline Balâ€" dovin; Cecil Robinson and Walter Craig, equal; Eva Prest, Toivo Frantsi, Reggie MacDonald, Edith Armstrong. Jr. III Classâ€"Sadi Newlands, Janet Dye; Zelda Sky and Viola Maki, equal; Gertrude Hawkins; Sybil Laughren and Mike Holgovich, equal; Walter McCrea, Ronald Phillips, Mike Ostovich, Leonâ€" ard Staples, Allan Tario, Albert Keelan, May. Holgovich, Helen Luchen, Mike Popovich, Edna Cousineau, Annie Puâ€" bick; Robbin Caldwell, Gertrude Smith, equal; Hazel Dainton,. Room IVâ€"Eileen Ohliman, teacherâ€" Jr. IIIâ€"Joy Wookey, Madeleine Ruâ€" beck, Sarah Finkelman, Mildred Denâ€" nison, Marianne Cooper, Ada Miller, Bessie Armstrong, Eugene Montigny, Jack Hartling; Gaenovaffia Malisane and George Percival, equal; Elva Rautio. Sr. IIâ€"Anita Shewan, Mary Emma Skavlem, Minnic Bobinski, George Mcâ€" Garry, Ernest Webber, John Keeleg._‘ Room Vâ€"Senior Secondâ€"A. V. Mitâ€" chell, teacherâ€"Jennie Smith, Bill Gilâ€" bert, John Asselstine, Harry Harris, Steve Ostovich, Garnet McFarlane, Auâ€" brey Robinson, Jean Heath; Ethel Mcâ€" Kinnon, Eino Nikula, equal; John Davidson, Francesco Iannarelli, Clifâ€" Hornby, Frank Skelly, Wallace Sinclair, Room VIâ€"Irene Murphy, teacherâ€" 11 Classâ€"Donald Barron, Ida Duxfield, Willie Monk, Natalie Gregulski, Berâ€" nard Weber, Jean MacDonald, John Todhunter, Kezia Taylor, Earl Lampâ€" kin, Robert Fournier, Harvey Brady, Jean Chatson, Leslie Harris, Rhodri Neame, Tom Holgovich, Ernie McKinâ€" non; John Neame and Ioline Price, equal; Lila Norris. Sr. Iâ€"(B) pathâ€"Blance Davidson; Otto Sinclair and Mabel McRae, equal; Frank Lawler, Anita Cousineau, Budâ€" dy Pike. Jr. Iâ€"Ivy Calverly, Daisy Hunter, Dorothy McKinnon, Laura Wardley, Jessie Bell, Elmer Turcott, Helen Newâ€" Despatches last week from Cobalt say that Ernest Hawes, the young man who was seriously injured in a gasoline explosion at a lumber camp in the Temagami Reserve some weeks Ago, has recovered sufficiently from: his wounds to be discharged from the Mines Hospital at Cobalt, where he has been a patient since the accident. Hawes left for his home in North Bay but he will go to Toronto shortly to undergo a skin grafting operation on his face. No infection developed in the wounds he sustained, Dr. G. E. Case said. Hawes lost one eye in the exploâ€" sion, and his face suffered severe inâ€" juries. He will require medical care Room VIIâ€"J. Belanger, teacherâ€"Sr. I (A) partâ€"Kathleen Christopher, Gwen Bown, Marion Lawson; Gordon Macâ€" Donald and Ralph Prest, equal; Walter Zadorozny, Jessie Wong. Room VIIIâ€"Helen Porter, teacherâ€" Junior Firstâ€"‘Mirian Laine, Ted Mol!â€" ler, equal; Meta Moore, Eric Arnott; Maisie Eldridge and Jean Lochrie, equal; Rosy Popovich, Katie Shawalla George Martin, Billy Cripps, Filis Gre- gulski, Blanche Staples, Frank Oovas, Ian MacDonald, Walter Augustine. Senior Primerâ€"Stanley Bratby, Lawâ€" rence Feltmate, Edmund Luchen, Stella Walko, Walter McQuarrie, Doâ€" reen Warner, Florence Harris. Room IXâ€"Madie Dewar, teacherâ€" Senior Primerâ€"Corrie Miller, Margarâ€" et Krancevic, Mikeal Grentz; Robert Heath and Lily Luchen, equal; Nelly Haras, Fred McNaughton; Jean Bugera and Guelda Farr, equal. Junior Primerâ€"Margaret Wong, Aldo Narduzzo, Violet Harris, Violet O‘Hara, Jenny Wallace, Sophie Vidmar, Floâ€" rence Keene, Leslie Lampkin. Room Xâ€"â€"V. V. Smith, teacherâ€" Junior Primerâ€"Betty MacMillan, Alasâ€" tair McNaughton, John MacDonald, Nicolo Popovich; Mildred Norris and Nancy Hepplewhite, equal; Buster Todâ€" hunter and Lorraine Cousineau, equal; Iverna Fisher, Mary Zadorozna, Allan Keeley, Annie Jacksic Dorothy Leck, Katie Philliben, Douglas McLeod, Marâ€" garet Ovas, Emmestâ€" Taylor, Walter Milâ€" ler, Muriel Pulton. of converging at a depth of two or three hundred feet. A number in Toronto are interested in this syndicate." tha roughly parallel, have a good chance ‘The Northern Miner saysâ€" "The sinking of a main shaft has been started on the property of the Foxâ€"Munro Syndicate in Munro townâ€" ship adjoining the Croesus Mine. This company has been doing development work on its property of 288 acres for a Injured Man Able to Leave Cobalt Hospital for year now. jtisstatedthat 17 veins varying from four to five teet_ in w_igth SHAFTâ€"SINKING STARTED ON FOxXâ€"MUNRO SYNDICATE some time yet. shafts have been put down. $ S uin Canadians vent\md otnn alrphnan at an early stage in the modern developâ€" ment of amtion They have been acâ€" corded membership in an association of pioneer airmen of North â€" America, which held its first meeing in Chicago last December. Mr. Baldwin is desâ€" cribed in the announcement of his elecâ€" tion as "fourth man in the United States to fly an airplane, the ‘Red Wing,‘ of Dr. Bell‘s Aerial Experiment association, March 12, 1908." Mr. Mcâ€" Curdy is described as the "seventh in the United States to fly an airplane, in the Aerial association‘s, ‘White Wing,‘ May 23, 1908." "The late Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, whose name is mentioned in connection with that of the Aerial Experimental associâ€" ation, devoted some time to the study of the laws of fliight. He made exâ€" periments, both in the vicinity of his home in Cape Breton and in the Unitâ€" ed States, with tetrahedral kites and with airplanes. He was greatly interâ€" ested in the question of the possibilities of aviation and, several years before the outbhreak of the great war, he preâ€" dicted with a good deal of accuracy, in an interview with a representative of this newspaper, the military uses to aircrafit would be put. Messrs Baldwin and McCurdy were associates with Dr. Bell in his experiments in aeronautics. The Wright brothers beâ€" gan their experiments with gliding machines in 1900 and in 1905 they reâ€" ported to the Aero Club of America ‘that they had made in a biplane, equipâ€" ped with a motor, five flights, ranging in distance from 11.125 to 24,2 miles and in duration from 18 minutes, 9 seconds to 38 minutes, 13 seconds. Earâ€" ly in the year in which Messrs Baldwin and McCurdy made the airplane flights mentioned in the annoucement of the Early Birds, Wilbur Wright took an airâ€" plane to France and there demonâ€" strated its powers. His brother, Orâ€" ville Wright, remaining in the United States, directed his efforts towards satisfying the tests imposed by the govâ€" ernment of the republic when it invited tenders for a heavierâ€"thanâ€"air machine. "Descriptions of the airplanes that Messrs Baldwin and McCurdy piloted in 1908 and of the engines that drove those machines are not contained in the announcement made by the officers of the Early Birds‘ association. One of the Wright brothers‘ biplanes in 1908 had a 25â€"horsepower motor and anâ€" other had a 30.35â€"horsepower. When one compares ‘the size, type of conâ€" struction and engine power of the airâ€" craft of that period with the size, type of construction and engine power of the aircraft of the present time, he realizes that great strides have been made in the development of such machines One is filled,â€"too, with admiration of the courage of the adventurous pioneers in aviation who piloted the early types of airplanes." Mr. Gossip in The Daily Sketchâ€"A reader sends the following story, which was told to him by Louisa Lady Ponâ€" sonbyâ€"Fane, who, at the time, was ladyâ€"inâ€"waiting at Osbhorne with Lady Elizabeth Biddulph of Ledbury, noted for her blunt speeches. Lady Elizabeth asked Queen Victoria, "Why, madam, do you dislike Mr. Gladstone so much?" "Because," answered the equally downâ€" right queen, "if you ask Mr.. Gladstone one question, you are pulling the string of a showerâ€"bath." No, the Victorians were not "dull" by any means. 6 uaer anteed GENERAL@ELECTRIC THE General Electric Refrigerator, designed and built after fifteen years of painstaking development by the Research Laboratories, is an electrical achievement the outstanding electric refrigerator. More than a quarter of a million General Electric Refrigerators are in use today and not one of them has cost the owner a dollar for service or repairs. ‘This refrigerator never needs to be oiled and is so quiet you hardly know when the motor is running. See the new allâ€"steel models at our show room and examine the easily accessible temperature control which governs the speed of freezing ice cubes or frozen desserts. ERâ€"1429X% Basy Terms Arranged CANADA NXORTHERN POWERE CORPORATION Refrigerator by CANADIAN GENBRAL ELECTRIC CO., Limited Controlling and Operating Northern Ontario Power Company Limited Northern Quebec Power Company Limited Nothing relieves tension so effectively as Wrigley‘s. The act of chewing, as motorists have discoveâ€" '}w'hev let;'alth“fifx;l e‘fileaning iztigti i b;f # es the mouth an nxu the nerves. F. M. BURKE LIMITED _\ No. 4341 "PEACE OF MIND" "I Kiss Your Hand Madame" Comedian with Orchestra Dick Robertson Waltz by Copley Plaza Orchestra with Vocal Chorus "Building a Nest for Mary" Foxzx Trot by The Captivalors with V ocal Chorus 66 "A Garden in the Rain" Waltz and Fox Trot by Dave Rubino# and His Orchestra with V ocal Chorus On Sale Toâ€"day JOYAL PHARMACY Goldfields Theatre Block No. 4324 I GET THE BLUES WHEN IT RAINS" "Wake Up! Chill‘un, Wake Up!" Vocal Duet with guitar and vielin by Cotton and Morpheus No. 4321 "PAGAN LOVE SONG" 2 Good Selections on every Brunswick Record New Release every Thursday No. 4344 "_BLUE HAWAII" Corner of Pine and Third a gentle soothing effect. hful e cleansing action of First Avenue NEW

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