Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 22 May 1930, 2, p. 2

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Thursday, May 22nd, 1930 t 2P G uara n teed Safeguard Your Children‘s Health Give them the proftection of a General Electric Refrigerator OOD health is the most preâ€" cious ssset of your children . . . and you can safeguard it by keeping their food always fresh and wholesome in a General Electric Refrigerator. For a few cents a day a General Electric Refrigerator preserves milk and other perishable foods safely below the 50â€"degree danger point. It removes the health menace of slightlyâ€"spoiled eatâ€" ables. And it makes possible an ALLâ€"STEEL REFRIGER A TO BR Business men appreciate the competent service with which business accounts are handled by The Dominion Bank. Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited John L. Hunt, Manager TIMMINS BRANCH by CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO.. Limited Controlling and Operating xORTHERX ONTARIO POWER COMPANY, LIMITED GREAT NORTHERN POWER COFPOERATION, LLMITED NORTHERXN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY, LIMITED THE BUSH OPERATIONS IK THE NORTH UP TO THE AVERAGE Little Trouble With Labour, Men Being Plentiful. MHealth Conditions Not the Best in Some Sections. Other Notes About Bush Industriecs. A recent survey of woods cperations was made in the northern part of Onâ€" tario, and the conclusion made from this survey was that bush operations in Northern Ontario generally were upr to the average year. In this respect it Easy Terms infinite variety of frozen deliâ€" cacies that both you and the children will enjoy. The General Electric Refrigerator is so troubleâ€"free in operation that it never even requires oiling . . . so simplified that there are no fans, belts or stuffing boxes to get out of order. All the mechanism is Sealed in Steel . . . proof forâ€" ever against the destructive effects of air, dirt and moisture. It is a significant fact that the General Electric Refrigerator is today the fastestâ€"selling of all automatic refrigerators. Let us show you the reasons for this great public preference. _ er.â€"mo.c Arranged 229 may be said that the season in this imâ€" mediate district did not appear to be as long as in some other years, the snow being late in coming fall and the weather this spring not being ideal for bush work. The story of the survey of bush operations in the North is told as follows in The Canada Lumberman in its current issue. The Canada Lumâ€" berman says:â€" "A recent survey of wood opcrations in Ontario, which itook your pondent as far west as the Manitola boundary over the Transâ€"continental Railway, returning over the Canadian Pacific Railway, with a side trip up on the southern line of the Canadian Naâ€" tional Railway as far west as Fort Frances, showed that the past winter‘s operations have been fairly satisfactory to all. With the great secarcity of work in all other than woods operations, laâ€" bour was plentiful and, with theexcepâ€" tion of the annual labour trouble which filared up at Port Arthur nothing else of the kind was encountered elsewhere. "Owing to the early snow in the fall, ice conditions were poor, quite a few teams being drowned. The early thaw in February caused considerable anâ€" xiety to those who had part of their winter‘s logs and pulpwood still in the bush, but the heavy fall of snow which came later gave everyone planty of time to get their cuts to the rivers, lakes and railâ€"heads. Fears that there will be a great scarcity of water this spring are being expressed by those who depend upon the transportation of their logs and pulpwood by the river routes. j "HMHealth conditions have been very good in the camps in the western end of the provincee, but rather unsatisâ€" factory in the Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay and Cochrane districts, where many cases of typhoid fever and smallâ€" prox of a bad type were reported. Fortunately, no deaths occurred from any of these dangerous diseases. Creâ€" dit for this is due to the operators and their contracting physicians who, in every case, gave the provincial governâ€" ment‘s sanitary inspectors every assisâ€" tance in their successful efforts to stamp out the different outbreaks, the source of which, in every case, could be traced to the towns from where the first victims of the diseases had come. The importance of firstâ€"aid treatâ€" No General Electric Refrigerator Owner has ever spent a Cent for Service THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO "The George Farlinger Company is the only sawmill operating between| Hearst and Sicux Lookout, the Allanâ€" water and the McDougall Mills which have, in pust years, employed hundreds ‘cf men, now standing idle. A new docâ€" tor, J. J. O‘Gorman, who is doing conâ€"| siderable camp work, has opened up a| | practice in Sicux Lokout. Dr. O‘Gorâ€" man is known in the district as the "Flying Medico"‘. He has been in the; | service of the Ontario Forestry Dpivisâ€"| \ion in the past four summers, being cbssrver in one of the forestry planes' ‘during his university vacations. He, rendered great service to many injured | miners and prospectors while fireâ€"paâ€" | troling over the Sioux Lookout and the | Patricia areas and, since graduating in | lmecl'ic'me and hanging out his shingle| in the town of Sioux Lookout, his pa.st! pepularity is standing him in good | stead. . l % During a halfâ€"day‘s stortâ€"Off at Hu-:i-i ! ‘ | ‘son, yvour correspcondent spent some} time at the Keewatin Lumber Comâ€" | pany‘s mill there, in company with the district woods superintendent, Mr. ‘Stover. and the mill superintendent,| i Mr. Ryan. A new planing mill has | | been erected, in addition to the | sawâ€"mill now being cperated by this| iccm'pany. which augurs well for the '; prosperity of Hudson for some time to | | come. | ment of even the smallest break in the skin was again exemplified at one of the biggest pulpwood operations in the Cochrane district in the past winter. A teamster had his leg so silghtly bruised that he did not think it worth while reporting to the camp‘s firstâ€"a}d man. Gangrene had set in before he did report, and the leg had to be amâ€" putated, in an unsuccessful effont to save the unfortunate man‘s life. He left a widow and dependents who have already been awarded over seven thcusand dollars compensation for the loss of their breadwinner. "C. W. Cox, of Port Arthur, is also making prepnrrations to erect a sawâ€"mill at Hudson. Mr. Cox has been cutting tie logs cn the Federal Indian Lands for the past few years and seemingly has future prospscis of continuing to ‘"‘The timber on the water shed C Lse Seul, which will be ficoded cut when full advantage is taken of Lac Seul‘s water pewers, is not to be cut until conditions improve on the timber market. The power development at present cn the Lac Seul has not raised the waters high enough to destroy the timber. "At White, on the Manitoba boundâ€" ary, the ten‘t camps which had housed the employees of Winslew Bros. of Winnipeg were seen being taken down. This which carries on a genâ€" eral contracting business in Winnipeg, had contract from the Keewatin Lumber Company, taking out pulpâ€" wood. This is their first operation in Ontario. In psist years, their operaâ€" tions have bsen in tieâ€"cutting in Norâ€" thern Manitoba. swinging back down cover the Can-| adian Pacific Railway, a stop was madus | at Kenora, where the Keewatin Lumber Company were busy paying off the twelive bhundred men they have been emplcying all winter on their Lake of the Woods opervations. This comptin usually take out a big timber cut for their Keewatin mill, but this winter ninety per cent. cf their cperations were pulpwood cutting. "At Dryden, a very good summer waS expected. Since the building of the new paperâ€"bag factory, which is operâ€" ated in ecnjunction with the paper mill, Dryden has expsrienced ous times. "At Fort Frances, the Shevlinâ€"Clarke| Company was reported as having a| successful winter, the cut figured on | having been taken cout. | "At the Headâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"Lakes, rather quiet times were reported in the pulpâ€" wood and paper business, most of the paper mills, with the exception of thel Provincial and the Great Lakes operâ€" ating on only planiâ€"time. With tthei stabitization of the paper market, busiâ€" ness conditions are certain to pick up. Reports that two of the biggest mills in Port Arthur and Fort William will begin operations on limits north of C. P.R. east of Port Arthur in the coming season, both of them proposing to run a railroad through the centre of their limits, seem well founded. | C a‘% "At Chapleau, the firms of Austin Nicholson were reported as having taken out an average cut of logs, which will employ their summer Crews in their sawâ€"mills until next fall." PROSPECTORS SEARCHING FOR GOLD IN PATRICIA AREA Mines," The Toronto Mail and Empire last week says:â€""A few of the more prominent mining companies are still unrder the impression that some porâ€" tions of the Albany River in the Paâ€" tricia district are worthy of their atâ€" tention and as a result extensive gold prospectinz will be undertaken there during the present season. The sucâ€" cess attending the development of ths Central Patricia Gold Mines at Pickleâ€" Crow leads others to prepare for anâ€" other season‘s activity in this vast reâ€" gion. The Brettâ€"Trethewey Mines are holding a plane in readiness to hop off east of the Fort Hope area, where it is reported that their prospectors made a gold discovery last fall. The Cyril T. Knight Prospecting Company will also have men in that area. Farther north of Fort Hope another company is exâ€" pected to look up a copper fird made last summer by Gardiner, formerly a N.A.M.E, prospector. The new gold find is supposed to be sbout 76 miles east of Fort Hope in the vicinity of Martin Falls, where outâ€"croppings of woellâ€"fractured greenstones may be enâ€" counterde." Quinte Sun:â€"A man sAYS his wife claims he is like a fiying machine,â€"of no earthly use. In its column, "Comments on the When all the world was rising to break the tryant‘s rule, Many a Canadian maiden, left needle, thread and spool; But in a little village up in the far way north, There lived three little sisters, the war cry took them forth. Their hearts no more were longing, for pleasure and for dance, Their hearts were with their brothers in the fighting lines in France. ‘Their mother spoke: "My daughters, it‘s hard for us to part, But join the Red Cross colours, with the blessings of my heart." And proud they wore their colours, in honocur it must be said, In honour to their mother and every Red Cross maid. Their noble deeds will never die, and never fad away, As long there is a living soul, from the south to Hudson Bay. When shells and bullsts_havoc played, in front lines or the rear, Those® northern maids were always there, without delay or fear. And many words of dying men to mcother, sweetheart, wife, Were left in care of our maids, in case they might survive. But only one was spared to tell (‘the dead men‘s tale"), just one, And too she left for the better lands, when her mossage work was done. Oone lost her life in Flanders‘ zone, when the town was shot ablaze, The other near St. Julien, where a cross now marks the place. The thirda one reached her mother‘s home, in care of the ambulance, With the messages of her sisters and the men who fell in France. And then she kissed her mother‘s lips and said: "My dear, don‘t cry. T‘l. soon meet you my motherheart, in the lands beyond the sky." sad was indeed her funeral day, for her mother‘s heart brocke, too, When the bugler of the old brigade, the last post trembling blew. And the mother, too, was laid away, ‘ with fags all set halfâ€"mast, While the echoes of a firing squad and the last post sounded last. Four noble daughters of the North, hnave gone, and passed away. But their heroic deeds will ever live from south to Hudson Bay. NTIPISSING JUNCTION COWS HAYE THE HABIT OF "TWINS" Robert Halton, a farmer at Nipissing Juncticn, near North Bay, seems to have double right to be proud of a ccuple of cows that he owns. Each of theose cows this year gave birth to twin calves. Three of the calves thus born to the two cows this year were males and the other is a lady cow. This is the third consecutive year that one of these cows has given birth to twins. These cows are apparently develoning the twins habit. (A song; words and music by George Straatman, Timmins. Ont.) The Three Red Cross Sisters that equals the expensive If you stili think that price is the only measure of quality in motor cars you should see the Nash"400". No matter how high you go in price you cannot buy better engineering. Study the car closely and you‘ll see that Nash has the same outstanding mechanical features that costly cars emphasize. All the materials that go into Nash cars are selected from the best that can be bought. The finish of Nash cars, the fitâ€" tings, the fabrics and the appointâ€" ments are luxurious in quality and 1% PINE STREET SOUTH April 18th, 1930 NORTHLAND MOTOR SALES For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column uality Praise from NORW ATY .. The call for Gin Pills comes even from far off Norway. Mr. Olaf Berg of Stenkjaer, Norway, suffered from kidney trouble and was given Gin Pills by a friend from America . .. "after taking them 1 felt Mr. Berg writes, "and want you to send me a box directly." Give your kidneys a chance. They work hard and need assistance. Get a 50¢ box_ of National Drug Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto, »L1LM Pills from your druggist. of perfect tasteâ€"vyou can‘t find better anywhere. Be sure to see the Nash ©400". Centralized chassis lubrication, builtâ€"in, automatic radiator shutters, andtthe world‘s easiest steering in every model. Adjustable front seats. Steel spring covers with lifeâ€" time spring lubrication, in the Twinâ€"Igniâ€" tion Eight and Twinâ€"Ignition Six lines. The priceless protection at no extra cost of Duplate, nonâ€"shatterable plate glass in all doors, windows, and windshields thruout the Twinâ€"Ignition Eight line. This glass is also available at slight extra cost in all other Nash cars. Read These Nash "400" Features * _ tread of toughest rubber, Firestone Tires have the strongâ€" est, most durable cord construcâ€" tion ever known. Layer, upon layer of cords are scientifically twisted for greatest strength and elasticity~â€" then dipped in pure rubber which protects every fibre against internal heat and friction. Gumâ€"Dipping doubles flexing life and adds thousands of extra miles of dependable, troubleâ€"free service. Only Firestone Tires are Gumâ€"Dippedâ€"No other tire has its advantages. Because of this extra process, Firestone tires hold all world records for mileage and endurance. See your nearest Firestone Dealer TMMINXS, ONTARIO EIGHTS and SIXES

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