Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 14 Nov 1929, 2, p. 4

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%. H. Kearney was a visitor to Hailâ€" eybury fcr the holidays. Thursday, Nov. 14th, 1929 To Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool ~Nov. 1D Duchess of Richmond NOV: BE :snl n e ds n y s Duchess of York Kov. 26 en Mn e s .. ... .. MAHDnecdost Dec TDec. Jan. 31....::.. Metagama Full Information from any Agent or Jointâ€"FEase *Does not call at Belfast To Cherbourg, Southampton, Antwerp Dec.. 12 sns ...... Montcalm To Cherbourg, London Dec *Jan. 24 S ABOUT x{ NA "Some say that [Â¥ it knocks out lumâ€" i bago overnight â€" others that for chest colds and sore throat it has no equal, while many inâ€" sist that there is nothing they ever tried that is so efficient for neuralgia, neuritis and even head colds and vile nasal catarrh." Answering the above letter, we, the makers of Jointâ€"Ease, know that what this thriving Ottawa druggist says is true, but we still maintain that Jointâ€" Ease is prepared for stiff, inflamed, painful, swollen joints, whether in ankle, knee, hip, elbow, shoulder, finâ€" gers or spine. You‘ll like to use stainless Jointâ€" Ease, for with just one minute‘s rubbâ€" ing, it soaks in through the flesh direct to the ailing bones, joints and ligaâ€" mentsâ€"thr#‘s why it succeeds â€" for when Jointâ€"Ease gets in joint agony gets outâ€"and without sny waste of time all swelling and cougection disâ€" appears. Made in Canadaâ€"costs only 60c a tube. All druggists sell lots of it. C. H. White DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT C. P. S$.~North Bay WINTER SAILINGS FROM sSAINT JOHN, N.B. To Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool 6 . h *Duchess of Atholl 14 "Jan 10 Duchess of Richmond _Duchess of York 4 es e sA in c : .. Montrose o s e e s e o o e on ons c ie s aea . Melita Says Druggist FROM MONTREAL Our Finest Cars Timeâ€"Proved Four Speed Performance "Joint â€" Ease" is selling like hot cakes in my store, because it is A wonderful a n d speedy remedy for all joint troubles. "But why not impress on tens f thousands of suffering people some of the things that dozens of my customers tell me aimost daily. â€"â€" A4nt 35 First Avenue Mr. George Humphrys left on Monâ€" |day to take a position at the Wrightâ€" Hargreaves mine in Kirkland Lake. On Saturday evening number of the younsz psople of the town gathered at the home of Mrs. James Alexander and zsave him a happy surprise party as farewell and a tuken of wellâ€"wishing in his new abode. Santa Claus to Broadcast to South Porcupine Sunday The annual Armistice Gdance given under the auspices of the Order of the Eastern Star was brilliant affair in the High School hall on Monday evenâ€" ing. The hall was beautifully decoratâ€" ed with variâ€"coloured alloons. The music was good, Tommy Stephens‘ orâ€" chestra vouching for that. The lunch was exceptionally tempting. Thers were a large number of guests from Timmins and sister tcwns. Mr. Len Smith won the door prize and in the lucky number spot dance Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rayner were the prizc winners. Everyone voted it one of the best dances of the season. South Porcupine, Nov. 12th, 1929 Special to The Advance. Miss Valerie Rapsey was home from New Liskeard, where she is attending schcool, to spend Thanksgiving with het parents. Miss L. Johnston, of the public school staff, was called home last Saturday owing to an accident in which some oIf her relatives were injured. Mr. Norman ("Red") Cross left this week for a fortnight‘s holiday at his home in Port Arthur. Mr. Angelo Pellarino is sailing from Montreal this week for a visit to his hsms in Italy. Mr. Irvin Haley has taken a positicn at Kirkland Lake and leaves for there this week. Many friends and the hockey fans in town will regret to learn that Mr. Stan Burgoyne will not be the coach of Porâ€" ciping Hockey Club during the next ssason. However, the club intends to carry on and some real games of hoâ€"â€" key may be counted on by the fans once the season starts. There is exâ€" ceptional hockey material in the camp. Messrs Andrew Harty and Jim Cahill left this week for Kirkland Lake and Rouyn. Mrs. Cecil Kavanagh and children spent Thanksgiving with her sister at Cochrane. Miscs Lacey, of the public school staff, spent Thanksgiving at her home in Cobalt. Bornâ€"On Sunday, November 10th to Mr. and Mrs. James Feraâ€"a son. Mr. Keit Soiland is sailing this week for his home in Norway. Mr. DePencier, gsneral manager cof the Dome Mines, has returned to the property, we believe. oreupine Goldfields Band Will Again Broadcast From South Porcupine General Electric Station Sunday Afâ€" ternoon. Excellent Band Concert at South Porcupine Last Sunday Evening. O.E.S. Armistice Dance a Big Success. Other South Porcupine News. Mr. J. H. Stovell was on a business Through long and successful exâ€" perience with four speed motor cars, Grahamâ€"Paige engineers not only have refined and perfected the four speed transmission itself (two quiet high speeds and standard gear shift)... but have developed every detail of motor and chassis construction to bring out the fullest possibilities of brilliant, dependabie . four speed performâ€" ance. In our 1930 line,you now find this timeâ€"proved feature in â€" corporated in the finest sixes and eights we have ever offered Timmins Sazoph 1J Frak 17?0/1 Ma«m/ ahau, /Efa Miss Helen Michaelson, of the Dome, has been transferred from the Imperiâ€" al Bank in Timmins to a position in Toronto. trip to Toronto last week Mrs. P. Richards and daughter, Molâ€" ly, are in Haileybury, this week owing to the illness of Mrs. Richards‘ father there. Word has come tos_ town that Mr. William Tremelling formerly of the Dome Mines, but latterely of Kirkland Lake, was married at the latter place last week. Their many friends sympathize with Mr. and Mrs. Blair, of the Dome Mines. Mr. Blair is in the Dome hospital sufâ€" fering with pneumonia and last week it was necessary for Mrs. Blair to be taken to the Porcupine hospital for appendicitis Friends are caring for their two small children.. Their speedy recovery is hoped for. Messrs Joe and Douglas Webster, of the Dome Extension, are leaving on Wednesday of this week for a vacation in Sceotland. The Porcupine Goldfields band gave another of their enjoyable concerts in ; the Majestic theatre on Sunday evening ! after the church services. The followâ€"| ing programme was given:â€"march, by the band, "Vimy Ridge"; overture, "A Day in the Trenches"; sopranc solo Mrs. E. Stanlake, (nee Thirza Allen); Mr. Waliter Frisby, of the Dome, left last week for Ottawa. Mr. R. E. Gillam is leaving this week for Toronto. VVE HAVE IT; The NEW PAFZCO . Balancedâ€"Unit Radio | Revolutiona j i ? tone, distance,:oy- lectivity, the reâ€" sult of Balanced Units. Very handsome. Call or phone us and arrange for Free DexonstRATION in your home. Be sure to hear the new Philco before buying any radio. Othermodel23133.00 to $319.15 Jackson Bros. This Superb SCREEN GRID LOWBOY only Neutrodyneâ€"Plus THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO $169.00 (1872â€"4) OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CAâ€" TARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. In England scientists for a long time past have recognized that catarrh is a constitutional disease and necessarily requires constitutional treatment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middle ear which frequently mean total deafness, or else the disease may be driven down the air passages towards the lungs which is equally as dangerâ€" ous. The following formula which is used extensively in the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favourable climate conditions. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double strength). Take this home and add to it i pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. â€" Take one tablespoon four times a day. This will often bring cuick relief from distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and hearing imâ€" prove as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Parmint used in this way acts directly upon the bood and mucous surfaces of the sysâ€" tem and has a tonic action that helps to obtain the desired results. The preâ€" paraticn is easy to make, costs little and is pleasant to take. Every person who has catarrh or head noises or is hard of hearing should give this treatment a trial. novelette, by band, "Fairy Phantoms"; tenor solo, Mr. Robertson, of Schumaâ€" cher; "Caprice," by band, "Cupid‘s Serâ€" enade"; bass solo, "Roll on, Thou Deep Blue Sea," by Mr. Alf. Snow, of Timâ€" mins; martch, by the band, "Memories of France"; tenor solo, by Mr. Jago, of Schumacher; "Goed Save the King," by the band. As an encore Mrs. Stanlake gave the catchy "Broadway Melody" in her pleasing voice and brought down the house. The visiting soloists from chumacher and Timmins were much appreciated, the quality of their voices being a delight to the audience. The one discordant feature was the lack of order on the part of a few of the younger generation and it was not all confined to the front rows where the children sat who complied more promptly to the chairman‘s request for crdaer than did a group of older girls farther back, whose continual chatterâ€" ing and giggling spoiled the concert for the majority of those for several seats around. Most people who go to a band concert expect to listen to the music and those who drown it by a constant babble of smart talk and giggles are selfish in the extreme and create a most disturbing element for any soloist. ;Young ladies who enjoy that kind of thing at a concert should endeavour to zo where they can have seat all to themselves and not create such a disâ€" turbing element in the very centre of a theatre full of people. Mr. F. Laâ€" forest made a very efficient chairman. Next Sunday the Porcupine Goldâ€" fields Band purpo‘se broadcasting a concert by radio from thrseâ€"thirty in the afternoon until fourâ€"thirty. Beâ€" fore that we believe that Santa Claus is to broadcast from the North Pole at two o‘clock or thereabouts and give talk to the children of Porcupine esp2â€" clally. General Sir Arthur Currie, commanâ€" der of the Canadian Corps in Franceée, Armistice Message by Gen. Sir Arthur Currie on Sunday issued the following Armisâ€" tice Day message:â€" § "The Armistice became effective at the 11th hour of the 1l1ith day of the 1!ith month of the year 11 years ago. This is the first occasion on which the anniversary falls on the same day of the week, Monday. It is a day of coincidencesâ€"full of happy auguries I believe. Just as armistice brought to a close the most awful war in which mankind has ever participated, so Armistice day this year brings to a close a period during which the nations were slowly and painfully finding their way back to satisfactory peaceful relaâ€" tions. "In an armistice message last year, I said: ‘The nations are thinking at last, as they never thought before, in terms of peace.‘ That is even more true toâ€"day. The Allied armies no longer occupy German territory, the Kelloggâ€"Briand pact is regarded as aA real basis of international relations, and not as a mere gesture of good will; the Angloâ€"Saxon nations of the world have drawn closer together, and acute causes of friction between them have been removed; a disarmament conâ€" ference will soon meet, and the vision of a world for ever at peace, an ideal for which Canadians shed their blcod in generous profusion, is nearer realâ€" ity toâ€"day than ever before. If this is true, we have the so:ace and the comâ€" fort that the cruel war, brought to a close 11 years ago, was not fought in vain. "As the vears go by we cherish and revere moreâ€"desply the memory of those whose sacrifice was so great. And on this anniversary, we pledge ourselves again to ensure that those sacrifices, with all their splendour and inspiration to our country‘s life, shall not leave a legacy of unnecessary suffering.. The task of all of us is to see, not only that such sacrifices shall never again be called for, but that our country keep the faith with the men and women who gave so much, by adequately caring for the broken who came home, and for !the dependents of the fallen whose | memory we treasure in our minds and hearts." [. N. 0. RAILWAY MAKES PAYMENT OF $1,000,000 In an editorial article this week dealâ€" ing with the Temiskaming and Northâ€" ern Ontario Railway, more generally known as the T. N. O., The Toronta Mail and Empire says:â€" "Premier Ferguson has announced. that the Temiskaming and Northern On‘lario Railway Commissicn has paid $1,100,000 on account of interest on adâ€" vances of capital that it has received from time‘ to time from the Governâ€" ment of the province. Two years ago Mr. Ferguson was able to state that in the fiscal year ended October 31, 1927, the provincial railway, for the first time in its history, had earned the whole of its interest charges. The commission in charge of the operation of the road had been able to meet the interest on indebtedness incurred in the exercice of the authority to finance its own exâ€" penditures, conferred upon it by the Legislative Assembly in 1925. In addiâ€" tion, the commission had paid to the Government $1,300,000 to defray interâ€" est on $30,207,000 advanced by the Govâ€" ernment prior to 1925, to cover conâ€" struction and equipment costs of the railway. This showing the commission was able to surpass in the fiscal year ended October 31, 1928. The publiclyâ€" cwned Temiskaming and Northern Onâ€" tario Railway and its subsidiary, the Nipissing Central Railway, had had "one cof the best years in their history" in so far as net earn‘nss were concetrnâ€" ed. The commissicn, therefore, was able to meet the interest on the obligations that it had incurred directâ€" ly and, as well to send $1,500,000 to the provinzial treasurer. In the fiscal year that has just closed, the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario and Nipissing Contral railways have nnot done so wel! as they did last year. In common with other railways in Canada, they have suffered a decline of gross earnings and have had also to bear increased mainâ€" tenance costs, due. partly to weather conditions. "In the circumstances, the railway commission has not been able to maks as large a payment to the Government this year as it did in 1927 and again in 1928.«. In that connection, it may be recalled that the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway was not constructed for the purpose, primarily of earning money for the Government of the province. The road was built mainly, to open up large tract of terâ€" ritory in the northern portion of the province for settlement and developâ€" meont. The line afforded access early in its existence to the silverâ€"bearing region in and around Cobalt, from which millions of dollars worth of silâ€" ver have been shipped. The read has facilitated the exploitation of other reâ€" sources of the northland. Branch lines of railway have been constructed into the goldfields which have yielded a large quantity of the precious metal, is l i l. m «l L P L ~ILâ€"L~â€"L DP O L LAAA P OO â€"AP P #® _ ® # czz 3 z % z i ficgggggm _ N. 0. Has Held Its Owen With Other Railways During the Past. Stil Recognized as Colonizaâ€" tion Railroad. *J % MINING COURT TURNSs Dbown ‘Deaf Hear Again BARRYâ€"HOLLINGER REQUEST: Mhe encb se | T ns We an Pitinas Un An application made by the Barryâ€"| Earpiece No Bigger Than Dime Wins Hollinger mines for an order permitting | E“thgiiésgfeel“%llflf%%erTen- them to dispose of tailings from the Y § mill at the property by depositing them ; After twentyâ€"five years devoted exâ€" in a creek nearby was turned down by| clusively to the manufacture of scienâ€" Mr. Justice in mining court at tific hearingâ€"aids, the Canadian Acousâ€" Haileybury on Thursday last, and meiticon'Ltd., Dept No. 463, 45 Richmond company was told to submit an alterâ€"| ;:c t‘e':les:' :g?“;:’;dgmxc?::ugg m; native plan of handling, the répresents the greatest advahce yet within ten days. Evidence given 7| made in the reâ€"creation of hearing for court told how the company had used tye deaf. This latest Acousticon is the cresek for this purpose for four and fealured by a tiny earpiece no bigger a half years, despite protests by Ophitus than a dime. _ Through this device, Olsen, Pacaud township pioneser settler, | sounds are clearly and distinctly transâ€" who asked damages for the pollution of| mitted to subnormal ears with wonâ€" theâ€"stream, which he contended was| :fi:‘?l fizefx::mh:;':rinm;: mfifi:fi;’ essential to his four farm lots for wateor| free trial for 10 days to any one person supply. | who may be interested, and a letter The question of compensation was will bring one of these remarkable aids left over meantime, his lordship stating ! to your home for a thorough and conâ€" he would reserve judgment on th‘s ) yjincing test. Send them your name point. James Houston, manager of the! s on ioi e y o o d o o im is io Sn w t on s eR oc and address to-doy! The question of compensation was left over meantime, his lordship stating he would reserve judgment on th‘s point. James Houston, manager of the Barryâ€"Hollinger, told the court that al‘â€" ternative schemes suggested were exâ€" pensive, and gave a brief sketch of the mine‘s position. It was stated during the hearing by W. A. Gordon, K.C., for Olson, that he understood this wias a test case and that other settlers were watching it. worth an immense sum cf money, and have made Ontario one of the princiâ€" pal goldâ€"producing terrilories in the world. In addition, the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway system has been extended to places where pulp and paper mills have been established and where waterâ€"powers have been utilized for the generation of electriciâ€" ty and to areas suitable for agriculturâ€" al settlement. The railway, thus, has afforded transpsortaticn service to minâ€" ing companies, to pulp and paper comâ€" panies and other industries, and to the people of settlements that have been etaplished around these varicus inâ€" lustries, or towns that are distributng centres of agricultural areas. The railway, indeed, has been a powerf{ul factor in the development that has takâ€" en place in Northern Ontario and has been beneficial to the province as a whole." Iroquois Falls ABITIBI POWER AND PAPER COMPANY LMITED 300 PULPWOOD CUTTERS Piece Work, in Good Timber EXPERIENCED MEN ONLY REQUIRED Will Speak 11 a.m.â€"*"The Best Stocks For a Believer‘s Investment" 7 p.m.â€""Desolation In Its Abomiâ€" Pastor Morley R. Hall Baptist Church Sunday, Nov. 17th nation." Through New Aid Ontario 46 â€"4"7

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