Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Nov 1929, 2, p. 2

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We would say the alarm cleck going off at 6 a.m. itchener Record:â€"A noise abateâ€" ment committee will have a selection made froam 26 noises as to which is the The Halleyburlan last week says:â€" ‘"Timinins hockey fans and citizens generally are mourning the death of Lioyd (Filltonardo which took place very suddenly this week. This youngâ€" ster had taken a leading part in juniâ€" or athletic activities in Timmins for some seasons, being a hockey playsr of real wortth, a baseball plavyecr who captained the Timmins teram in taei quest for Ontarioa Junior honours, and a football goalie. The sympathy of all will go out to his sorrowing parents." sYMPATHY TO PARENTS O0F LLOYD GIALLONARDO Thursday, Nov. 21st, 1929 All the bodyâ€"building elements of the whole wheat, nothing added, nothing taken away. So easy to serve and so deliciousâ€" ly nourishing. Gives new vigor and life to tired tissues. Serve with hot or cold milk or fruits. 1 ies B4 RlQe *4 ® | â€" 4*®% With all the bran af tha arhinla armthnant READY IN TWO MINUTES! A HOT NOURISHING BREAKFAST This is No. 9 of a series of talks on scientific researchandmodern industry,. T HA B With all the bran of the whole wheat (Chesley Enterprise) SBeveral mothers in Kincardine hosâ€" pital were unable to poll their votes on Wednesday. There are advance polls for rallwaymen, mariiners, and comâ€" mercial travellers and a witty member of the male sex suggested to us â€"that the election act should be amended to allow prospective mothers to be allowâ€" ed to vote at advance polls tso. Eganville Leader:â€"Nova Scotia has registered, iby plebisciteâ€"granted by the Conservative Governmentâ€"its verâ€" dict on the liquor question. It now steps into line with all other Canadian Provinces, except Prince Edward Isâ€" land. In the immedilate future it will be possible legally to purchase liquor anywhere from Halifax to Vancouver. Dominion Ammunition Division Canadian Sait Division Pyralin Division AMMUNITION bVCO, PAINXTs FABRIKOID PYRALINX #at would be the amazeâ€" ment and delight of the Fathers of Chemistry could they but see the wellâ€"equipped laboratories which modern inâ€" dustry places at the disposal of its chemical engineers? All the massive machinery, all the vast productions of presentâ€" day industry, are based on the sure foundation of scientific research. Canadian Industries Limited _ o is staffed with skilâ€" Q ful scientists, all HEAD OFFICE: MONTREAL â€" Last week Francois Gervais, 19 years of age, employed as a bushman in the Goward section of Temagami, was drowned while about fifteen yards from shore and in only about five feet of water. He was thrown cut of a cance in a bay at the south end of Rib Lake about 25 miles from Cobalt. The canoe tipped as it was being turned. Gervais could not swim. He had been in the North only about three weeks. Two of his brothers who were in anâ€" other canoe witnessed his death but could not give him any assistance. According to the authorities who inâ€" vestigated the case, Gervais and ‘Apâ€" polinaire Richard, employees of Tessier and Trudel, jobbers for ‘the Temagami Timber Co., Goward, were in a cance on the bay. Three other men, two of them ar older and a younger brother, respactively, of the victim, were in second craft, and they were about 30 feet away when theâ€"accident cecurred. Gervais was clad in heavy clothing and long rubbsr boots, which hamperéed his movements and weighed him down. The water was quite cold. While the brothers and their companion made frantic efforts with paddles to csave Gervais, Richard swam ashore, about 40 feset away, and went to a camp for help. This was spsedily forthcoming, but although the body was socon reâ€" covered, life was extinct. The men in ths other canoe were brought north cn Mconday and they explained the cirâ€" cumstances to Dr. Arnold an| the police, but owing to a misunderstandâ€" ing, Richard was left behind at the camp. New York Life:â€""Tell it to Sweeney‘" has been replaced by the one used "broadcast." This is an economical ageâ€"in some ways. YOUNG MAN DROWNED IN SIGHT OF TWO BROTHERS Canadian Explosives Division Flint Paint Varnish Division Canadian Ammonia Division Grasselli Chemical Division Triangle Chemical Division Fabrikoid Division THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO INDySy=». '-_%h Canadian Industries Limited serves its customers by selling products at the lowest prices commensurate with the mainâ€" tenance of high quality and service, believâ€" Ey ing in so doing it > serves its own best interests. contributing their share to the progress of civilization. This knowledge is applied in the manufacture of every article bearing the oval tradeâ€"mark shown below. | Toronto Globs:â€"It is a hopeful sign that stocks have moved off the front page to the financial department, where they properly belong. "A large piece of native copper weighing 35 pounds brought back by the southern party of the Canadian Arctic Expedltion in 1918 was obtained from an Eskimo. This piece was found by Mupfa west of the Coppermine when he was a small boy, at a locality "ons sleep" southwestward from Blcody Fall, on the Coppermine River (two short days‘ travel, or about 20 miles). It was found west of the trees, at the bottom of the valley, immediately below and south of the place called Hatunglat, in an undulating country. Mupfa said that the piece of copper originally was about two and half feet in diameter, and that ever since it was found the Eskimos had been cutting pieces from it to make spears, knives, iceâ€"picks, etc. Also, Mupfa stated, many pieces of copper occur nearby, too heavy to pack. Some are so heavy that it is just posâ€" sible to roll them over, but not to lift them. By signs he showed that the larger pieces were about threse feot high. Many small pieces, it was said. stick out of the ground, but the large ones are mostly buried, and require to be dug out. As near as could be judgâ€" ed from the description of several men, and from the location they indepenâ€" dently showed on the map, the location of this deposit is in Lat. 67° 30‘ north, and Long. 116° 30‘ west. Mr. Chinman states that the Eskimos who in 1916 accompanied his party from the mouth of the Coppermine toward Great Bear Lake left the party about this place to go west to search for copper." ESKIMOS TELL ABOUT BIG FINDS OF COPPER IN NORTH The following is from the last issue of The Northern Miner:â€" HEAVY CHMEMICALE |â€" Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"All Canâ€" ada is delighted to hear that the Macâ€" ’ Alpine party is safe at Crambridge Bay, \far in the Arctic. But, in view of the | temperature, many will be inclined to | think of the story of the maiden aunt who was saying gcodâ€"bye to her neâ€" phew on leave from the front. â€"She \ bade him to be sure to write and tell iher when he was safely back in the trenches. | â€" None spoke at any length. Sergeant Spackman made a good point when in re‘erring to the Armistice day poppy | collection he said $5,009,000 was aimed at. "We were willirz to spend $30,000,â€" 30) daily on th: war." he said, "so surely we can find of this on ‘one day of the ye>r." Lieut.â€"Col. *Pe-a.rkes raised a © mjpathetic cheer iwhen he observed theâ€"t the ga‘ning cof ia Victoria Crcess u:~~%li‘: msant that 'seve'ral of one‘s ns paid the price with their lives. (Fergus Daily Rccord) It has been claimed th»* some young people will not ta‘» part in strenuous sports. A Fergus bov who was pitching horseshoes last v.oek went and got a chair so that he could sit down to take his exercise. Responses were made on bshalf of the army, the navy, the air force and the overseas V.C.‘s respectively by Sergeant C. E. Spackman, Lisut.â€"Comâ€" mander H. Austin, Lieut.â€"Col. W. A. Bishop and Lieut.â€"Col. G. R. Pearkes, the two latter beingz Canadians. ‘"You know, too, how a go>d man‘s nerves may crack past recovery under the terrible strain so that those men must live on, externally scund maybe, but with the mind and spirit crippled for their natural lives. They too, might have been with us. Let us reâ€" member them all." "A last thought. You, our guests, have known of men who, but for the absence of any witness except the dead or by the accident of wounds that hurry man into hospital where he lies lost to the records for months, would be of our select company toâ€"night. "And if any man thinks that ‘valor‘ is only called forth in fighting cur enemies on the actual field of battle, he must, I think, have a very distorted and mean view of lifs. "Glad as I am to be with you to have the privilege of proposing this toast, there is one thought that must be in our minds, namely that many of our contemporaries who might have been with us lost their lives in the very act of valor which won them the Vicâ€" toria Cross or have died since. May I, on behalf of all of us express this mesâ€" sage to the friends of these menâ€"that we remember then and honor their memory. "Gentlemen, you are recipients of an honer which can only bse worn in time of war and there is no wiss man toâ€" day who, having learned what war mean‘s, does not pray it may never come again in his lifetime. But thar fact only enhancss the value of the Victoria Cross for it is a certificate, a symbol of the pessession of those qualiâ€" ties which, though war calls them forth, are really the foundations of peace, the qualities of a cool head and an unâ€" drauncted heart, a fearless disregard of selfâ€"and these qualities summed up in the brief legend engraved on the cross itself. "It is democratic because it takes not the least heed of social rank or status, exclusive because it is the simple inâ€" signia of all the honur which a grateâ€" ful country can bestow and gives the right of entry to what is generally conâ€" sidered the most select corps in the world. It is recruited from that very limited circle of men who see what is needed and do it at once at their own peril and, having done it, shut up like an oyster. This is a wise provision of nature, for if the men who did things talked half as much as the men who know things ought to be dons, life would not be worth living. "I suggest this because every V.C. I have ever talked to always likes to dish u»p some explanation of this sort to acâ€" count for his peculiar conduct, whether by land or sea, by air or underground. "There are those of use on whom the Sovereign has conferred the Most Honâ€" orable Order of the Bath, the Most Exâ€" alted Order of the Star of India, the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George or the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire. But toâ€"night I speak, if I nmay call it so, of the Most Enviable Order of the Vicvcria Crcks, the mioilt democatic and at the same time the most excluâ€" sive order of chivalry. The prince said:â€" "I feel probably as uncomfortable as you do, because it is not our national custom to invite men to dinner in order to tell them how brave they arg. But I will assume, that whatever ‘small deed of arms,‘ as the knights of old used to call it, stands to the credit of each one of you, you perpetrated it from motives of selfâ€" preservation or because you happened to notice that someone on the staff was watching and admiring you. Several readers of The Advance have referred to the address given by His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales at the banquet to the Victoria Cross holdâ€" ers at London, England, recently, as a genuine gem. In a few brief minutes it carries a message of interest and imâ€" portance and is relieved by glints of wit and humour. It is well worth readâ€" ing and reâ€"reading and might well be taken as an example in afterâ€"dinner speaking :â€" Honour and Shrewd Philosophy Comâ€" bined in Gifted Speech of,. Prince of Wales at Dinner to Vicioria Cross Holders, RIGHT ROYAL EXAMPLE OF ADDRESS THAT IS GLASSIG Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"Mining in Manitoba, for a winter sport, has backed wheat off the map. It is good for Manitoba to have two trees to climb. Detroit Free Préss:â€"*"Almost ns in eacsh thousand of the men, women and children of the land are viciently deâ€" prived of life every year. Which is something that might very well get the attention of a few cof the pacifist group. It is one of their main conâ€" Sentions that life is very sacred and must not be wasted. If instead of devoting their time to trying to break down a natural defence system desigâ€" nated to preseéerve life in safety and happiness by keeping this country out of war, they would turn their attenâ€" timn to an attempt to reduce the slauzhter from accidents, they would be embracing an opportunity to perâ€" form really practical work for humaniâ€" ty." j "Timminsâ€"This miring town of the North with its 13,000 inhabitants or thereabout provides an unusual stucty in human organization and the capaâ€" city of a heterogzeneous group of men and women itc bring order, municipal organizaticn, the conveniences of moâ€" aern life, educational facilities and a degree of social service to a communiâ€" ty which a few years ago was untrodâ€" den save by the pathfinders of survey gangs or the prospecting fraternity. Considerable study has been given to this town and its area by our Directcr of Surveys during the past three years. His relationships with the Town Counâ€" cil and officials have brought an int:â€" In the cnrrent issue of "Social Serâ€" vice," the bulletin issued by the Social Service Council of Ontario, the followâ€" ing paragrarh is given under the headâ€" ng, "Recent Activities of the Counâ€" cll; Some Paragraphs on Places, Policy and Progress‘":â€" mate knowledge of their problems and activities. As this Bulletin is being prepared, Miss Jackson is in the midst of a survey of the family relief proâ€" blems of the town. This is being made on the invitation of the Mayor and Council." sURVEY OF TTMMINS BY THE SOCIAL SERVICE COUXNXCIL Smoother, Creamier Sauces Because of its uniformity, dependaâ€" bility, convenience and real economy, you will prefer it for all cooking. Won‘t ou send for the Carnation Cook Book? t is free. Address Carnation Milk Products Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont. Being evaporated to double richness, it makes the creamiest of sauces, withâ€" out the extravagant use of butter. Being ‘"homogenized"â€"which means that the double cream content is broken up into minutest particlesâ€"it gives a wonderfully fine, smooth texture. And this same rich creaminess and velvetyâ€" smooth texture are found in every dish n which Carnation Milk is used. Unless the milk used in a white sauce is pure and sweet and rich in cream, you‘ll get an indifferent result. But if you have creamy whole milk of the ighest quality, pure and sweet, you can count on a delicious sauce. And that is exactly what you have in Carâ€" nation Milk. It is simply the best of whole milk from selected herds, with nothing added and nothing taken out except part of the water. 1 have given my recipe for white sauce to many women. They always tell me it‘s the best sauce they have ever tastâ€" ed, so I don‘t feel that I am boastins unduly when I praise it to you. 1 claim no credit myself for its deliciousâ€" ness. I know quite well that its smooth, rich creaminess is due largely to the milk used. Jrom Contented Cows on the label means This sauce deserves its fame EVAPORATED MILK of highest quality Even the best of bottled milk cannot equal Carnaâ€" tion Milk in cooking reâ€" sults. Velvety smoothâ€" ness, rich creaminess, fraâ€" gile texture, delicacyâ€" these are some of the qualâ€" ities which Carnation Milk gives to foods. Try it! (See recipes above) Add 1 chopped hard cooked egg, 1 thsp. chopped parsley, and 14 tsp. celery salt to 1 cup Carnation éream Sauce. Serve hot. Carnation Spinach au Gratin 3 tbsp. butter, 3 tbhsp. flour, 4 tsp. salt, 14 tsp. pepper, 14 cup Carnation Milk, 1 can spinach (No. 2), 344 cup spinach liquid, 14 cup grated cheese, 14 cup dried bread crumbs stirred in 2 tbsp. melted butter. Melt the 3 thsp. butter, add flour and seasonings and mix thoroughly; add Carnation and liquid drained from can of spinach. Stir constantly until smooth and thick. Add grated cheese; when melted add spinach. Put mixture into casserole, cover with buttered bread crumbs:; brown in oven 10 minutes. Serves 5. The North msay last weok says:â€""Harry Linnsy, widely known for his efforts to popularize Northern Onâ€" tario as a vacationists‘ paradise, spent the weekâ€"end in North Bay and left for the north this morning. Mr. Linnsy stated that he has addressed clubs, soâ€" cieties and churches in Buffalo, Deâ€" troit and other Southern cities, dwel!â€" ng on Northern Ontarto‘s many atâ€" tractions. Mr. Linnsy added that he had exhibited pictures of holiday scenes in Muskoka, the French River and Temagami, giving Southern Ontaâ€" rio residents an idea of the wonderful northern country. Mr. Linney stated that he considered that the tourist inâ€" dustry is one of the utmost importance to Northern Onario. "It is up to the North Bay Board of Trads and City American Printer, New York:â€"Printâ€" ing is a highly desirable industry from a community point of view. The comâ€" munity without a printing plant is a very poor, povertyâ€"strickenâ€"mentaily, spiritually and sociallyâ€"community at best. Printing has an enlightening and civilizing influence and is a real Aasset to any community. The printing inâ€" dustry is real producer., an industry in which the arts and crafts makse a happy union, and ithe results must needs have an elevating influence on the community. Carnation Cream Sauce (for vegetables) 114 tbsp. butter, 14 tbsp. flour, 14 tsp. salt, few grains pepper, 14 cur Carnation Milk, 4 cup water. Melt butter in top portion of double boiler:; add flour and seasonings; mix thorâ€" oughly., _ Add Carnation diluted with water; stir constantly until smooth and thick; place over hot water and con:â€" tinue cooking 10 minutes, stirring oc casionally. _ Carnation Cheese Sauce (for vegetables or fish) Add 14 cup grated cheese to 1 cup Carnation Cream Sauce and stir until melted. Serve hot. Carnation Eggo Sauce _ (for vegetables or fish). Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"All mail for inmates of the great Sing Sing prison in New York goes throuzh the business offices of the institution, and manyv prisoners conceal their misfortunes by having their mail addressed to 354 Hunter St., Ossining, N.Y. It reaches them because that was the address of the business office. The office has now been moved a few hundred fset and to a new street, but the authorities have decided to make no change in the adâ€" dress on the letterheads and envelopes which are supplied, thus saving many from the embarassment of admitting they are confined to jail. Council to endeavour to make known to persons all over the Dominion and the United States the wonderful holiâ€" day grounds that Northern Ontario offers," Mr. Linney doclared." BOOSTING THE NORTH LAND IN SOUTHERN sECTION®

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