Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 2 Oct 1930, 2, p. 7

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The stomach, liver and bowels will be cleansed of poison, painful and dangerous indigestion disappears and the system enjoys a tonic effect, Don‘t delay Ask your druggist for a 25¢ . of Carter‘s Little Liver Pills. Take Carter‘s Little Liver Pills after meals and neutralize the gases. Sweeten the sour and acid stomach, reâ€" lieve the gas and encourage digestion. Do you suffer after meals with a beiching, from sour and acid stomach ? Many believe they have heart trouble and tremble with fear, expecting any minute to drop dead. This condition can be prevented, likewise relieved. . DON‘T SUFFER WITH DANGEROUS INDIGESTION sLOVELY RLOVELYS) Busy handsâ€"at hard tasks day in and day out. Persian Balm keeps the skin soft and pliable. Removes redness and relieves irritation. At your Druggist QUICK SSusicn QUAKER OATS NESBITT, THOMSON COMPANY Britisn Columbia Power Corp. Ltd.. .5 Canada Northern Power Corp. Ltd. . 5% *Foreign Power Securities Ltd. ... ... 6% Montreal Island Power Company ... 54% Northwestern Utilities Limited . . .. . y // *Power Corporation of Canada Ltd.. . 4%$% INDUSTRIAL 1960 1953 1949 1957 1938 1959 102.00 95.50 101.00 100.50 104.00 92%.50 Dryden Paper Company Limited *Eastern Dairies Limited ... ... .. "Inter City Western Bakeries Ltd.. *McCollâ€"Frontenac Oil Co. Ltd.. J. R. Moodie Company Limited Queen‘s Hotel Limited .. ... ... COOKS IN 2 MINUTES AFTER THE WATER BOILS Province of Ontario Guaranteeing Hydroâ€"Electric Power Commission.4i% 1970 1028.175 Eastern Dairies Limited. ... ... Foreign Power Securities Corp. McCollâ€"Frontenac Oil Co. Ltd. *Convertible into Common Stock. Particulars on Request. ®*Carrying bonus $ share common with each $100 bond.. Royal Bank Building, TORONTO, 2 Montreal Quebec Ottswa Hamilton London, Ont. Winnipeg Saskatoon Victoria Vancouves relid QUR OCTOBER RECOMMENDATIONS PREFERRED STOCKS GOVERNMENT he has troubles enough. The other day he dropped into one of the city ofâ€" fices looking for work. Did he have wife to support? No, he had no wife to support. Too bad. No wifee, no workee. The future looked black for Tony with a long hard winter in the offing and no money in the"jeans. He thought things over despondentlyâ€"but chesred up suddenly as a brilliant idea struck him. He‘d put over a fast one that would land him a job sure. So up he went to City Clerk Ross‘ office and took out a marriage license. Returnâ€" ing he waved it triumphantly before the dispenser of jobs. Now would they give him a job. He would soon have a wife and family to support and needâ€" ed work bad. But Tony‘s fast one was returned even faster. No job until he produced either a wife or a marriage certificate showing he had one. Deâ€" spondency returned. He didn‘t minc taking out a license to marry but he drew the line at the altar. Again he climbed the stairs to the cleriâ€" cal sanctum, but this time all his vanity had vanished. He had bought a marriage license, he wanted his money backâ€"he requested his money backâ€"he demanded his money back. Try and get it, Tony!" The Sudbury Star last week saysâ€" "Tony wants a job rtretty badâ€"but not bad enough to get married. He thlpks TONY FINDS THE MARRIAGE BUSINESS SERIOUS AFFAIR 64°% 7%% Preferred 101.00 6% ts 88,.00 6% *4 88,.00 Maturity â€" Price 1949 1949 1950 1949 1948 1947 97.25 102%.00 100.00 100.00 100.00 971.50 5.37% 5.35 % 5.90% 5.45 6.35% 5,00¢% 6.%5% 5.83% 6,50% 6,00% 6,00% 6.%5% Yield Even in the summerâ€"like weather of last week the thoughts of hockey fans turned to the great winter sport and articles in a couple of outside newsâ€" papers started discussion of the possiâ€" bilities for the coming season in hockey. In Timmins there is a very general deâ€" sire among the hockey fans for good , hockey here. It is generally recognized !that the Junior hockey is good stuff, but at the same time the hockey fans | keep repeating: "Why can‘t Timmins |have a good Senior hockey here like it ;had years ago?" Everyone who has been in this part of the North for any !number of years knows the answer to this question, though they may not care to admit it. The people after all will not support one kind of Senior bockey and that is the kind that is liable to drift into existence under the conditions that arise. Regular highâ€" grade professional hockey is too expenâ€" sive to be supported and the halfâ€"andâ€" |ha.lf variety does not give satisfaction. | The district has shown itself ready and | able and even anxious to support gco. ; amateur sport, but the other kind natâ€" urally dies of its cwn weight. In Timâ€" mins last year the Junior hockey was well supported while the camp in genâ€" eral also gave good support to the Porâ€" cupine Senior Hockey Club. It is likeâ€" |1y that these will receive even better | support during the coming season. In discussing the general hockey outâ€" look for the coming season the Cobalt correspondent of The Sudbury Star last week said:â€" Junior HMHockey Likely to be Featured with Some Intermediate Hockey Probable. . Timmins Hockey Fans Anxious for Good Hockey Here. "Although three months must elapse yet before the clang of blades uyon ice will be heard in this district, preâ€"seaâ€" son indications are that intermediate and junior hockey will bulk largely in the programme of the Northern Onâ€" tario Hockey Association during the coming winter. The outlook for senior sport is regarded as somewhat clouded at present, but it is believed there is ample material in the district. ‘for teams. of intermediate and junior caliâ€" bre, and brisk contests for the honours in these groups are anticipated. "Junior teams are regarded as cerâ€" tain in Cobalt, Haileybury and New Liskeard, which will again form the central group: im Sault Ste. Marie, Sudâ€" bury and Chaplieau, for the southern group, and in Iroquois Palls, Timmins and at the Northern Academy, Monâ€" teith, for the northern group. These wre the centres which engaged in scheâ€" duled contests last winter, and to their ranks will be added Kapuskasing and North Bay, with possibly Cochrane and Kirkland Lake. The two firstâ€"named participated a year ago, getting byes into the semiâ€"finals. STARTING TO TALK ROGKEY FOR NORTH THIS WINTER "Little is known in this section reâ€" zarding the outlook in the southern towns, but it is reported that Sudbury and Chapleau will makn it a most in â€" teresting group battle with the Greyâ€" hound pups for the honours at that end of the district. In the central group, the Cobalt champions have lost six of their players, including Roberts and Bennett, their best men, but a local team will again operate, drawing on new talent to carry on. â€" Haileybury and New Liskeard will have a majority of last year‘s teams to rely on, and promising youngsters will reinforce the old brigade. ~New Liskeard is still rinkâ€" less and "home‘" games probably will be transferred, as before, to Haileybury. "Northward, a merry struggle is looked for. The young Papermakers, who brought group honours to Iroquois Falls last winter, are said to be strongâ€" er than in the previous season, and they are out for winter fame, if all reâ€" ports are correct. Timmins and Monâ€" teith will be in the race, it is indicated, and Kapuskasing, with a new rink and a better opportunity to practice, will have a formidable lineâ€"up to present, it is reported. The indications of Kirkâ€" land Lake are doubtful at present, but the Miners may come in. North Bay, it is assumed will again operate a city league, and pick an allâ€"star team to opijose the winners of the southern group in the playâ€"offs. * IC _ Ottawa Journalâ€"The man "who sayâ€" ed the party" is much in evidence these days. â€" He is so much in evidence that | ministers cf the new government cannot ‘ get into or out of their offices without |falling over him. Ottawa, in fact, is | being overrun by a type that is among the penalties of democracy; by men | whose only idea of politics and governâ€" \ ment arhears to be that when one | ministry gives way to another the time has come for them to cash in on their soâ€"called party loyalty. This sort of precious person, an affiiction of all 1 parties, is one of the tribulations O | democracy. Also a millstone about the necks of those who, laboring under difâ€" ficulties, are trying to do their best for the country. "There is some talk in the north of distinct revival in intermediate hockey. Cobalt and Haileybury are understood to bt? considering entering teams of this nature, and they, with New Liskeard, would form a compact group. In the north, it is considered likely that a mines league will be formed in Porcuâ€" pine, with another group of similar rank in Kirkland Lake, and the winners of those organizations would take part later in intermediate playâ€"offs. Iroâ€" quois Falls also would be represented in this series, and possibly Kapuskaâ€" sing, with the probability that some of the southern centres likewise might participate. Some developments in the series are looked for at an early date and prior to the annual meeting of the NOH.A. which will be held in North Bay about November 8." THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMIN®S, ONTARIO (From The Northern Tribune) To keep in the public eye the lignite depnsits of the North, in which the proâ€" vincial government has actively interâ€" ested itself, we print this week two very interesting extracts taken from the Manitoba Free Press showing worldâ€"wide interest in new processes for making this "young" coal serviceable to modern industry at reasonable cost. _ One of these items refers to a project at Estâ€" evan, Sask. (where the lignite is quite similar in character to the Onakawana measure) for using giant shovel to strip a 32â€"foot overburden of soil from a lignite bed, after which an economâ€" ical method of "open‘"‘" mining can be utilized. The other clipping deals with new processes of low temperature carâ€" bonization, duplicating nature‘s process that takes many thousands of years, to make lignite tractable to industrial uses. This latter is another scientific contribution to the list of syntheticaliy produced edibles and usables, an anaâ€" logous illustration of which is the chemical tanning of leather in weeks instead of months as formerly. The two articles we rerivoduce on this subâ€" ject should heighten interest in the Northern beds of lignite, estimates of the extent of which are constantly beâ€" ing revised upward. Taken with other known that have come to notice, they suggest almost inexhaustâ€" ible commercial uses for this once deâ€" spised immature coal, and a factor that cannot but attract many important inâ€" dustries to the North. Just consider, for instance, the possibilities in the way of oil derivatives from lignite. If large American cities can bear the heavy distribution costs of supplying urban customers with crude fuel oil made by more expensive processes, and put it in tanks of city householders who use oil furnaces at a gross cost of six cents per zallon, isn‘t there a practical ho.\: that crude oil could be furnished to Northâ€" Great Possibilities in Lignite Fields of North srn homes and industries from Onakaâ€" wana lignite at a low cost that woulc recommend its use? In the chill days and nights of spring and fall, these furnaces can be put into action by striking a match; and heating premises thoroughly in half an hour, they can frequently be turned off for the balance of the day without dropping of the temperature to dissomfort. This oi: can be pumped very cheaply through pipe lines by the millions of gallons to distributing centres. We are no more than ‘broaching the subject here, to stimulate interest in one of our great heritages of natural resources. The work of the Ontario Research Foundaâ€" tion inâ€"~qutting into harness the disâ€" coveries of the Northern lignite will be followed with the closest interest. It may be robbing coal from its cradle, but we can‘t wait for it to grow up!" Wilfred Ryan, Sudbury taxi driver, sentenced to one year determinate and one year indeterminate in Burwash Inâ€" dustrial Farm by Judge Edmond Prouix, for highway robbéry, had his sentenced increased to five years in the penitenâ€" tiary by the second divisional court at Osgoode Hall, Toronto, last week. sSUDBURY TAXIT DRIVER HAS SENTENCE MUCH INCREASED The appeal was taken by the crown on the ground that the original senâ€" tence was too lenient, considering the seriousness of the offénce. At the trial Ryan pleaded guilty to stealing more than $82 from Mrs. Mina Pergholm while she and her fourâ€"yearâ€"old child were passengers in his car late at night. Edward Bayly, K.C,, deputy attorney general, said the accused had threatâ€" ened to shost the woman if she did not hand over her purse. "I think I should have given him ten years," said Mr. Justice Riddell. ‘"The sentence he got was perfectly preposterous." A story coming from Noranda has a host of points of interest. In the first place i ttells of a peculiar form of robâ€" beryâ€"the kind that might be classed as "wife" theft. The thief got his winâ€" nings by going through the pants pocâ€" kets of the men asleep in a rooming house. There were eight men, all of foreign extraction, who were victimized and they were sleeping four in a bed, which may also be classed an item of interest. The theft was committed4 early on a Sunday morning and about. $25.00 in cash was secured as well as some safety razors and some other small articles. The theif went through all the pants in the room and cleaned them all better than a dryâ€"cleaner would do, so far as any marks of cash were concerned. The work was done while the foreigners slept peacefullyâ€" four in a bed. The foreigners hereafter will likely revert to the former fashion .of sleeping with their pants on. Anâ€" other item of interest to Timmins peoâ€" ple will be the fact that the robbery was reported to the Noranda Chief of Police, who is Wilfred Perreault, for some years on the police force here. The chief already has discovered that the eight men robbed had been doing a little celebrating before retiring to sleep four in a bed. Chief Perreault will no doubt continue his investigations until he finds the fellow who acted like a wife to those eight foreigners and went through their pants pockets while they were asleepâ€"four in a bed. "WIFE" BURGLAR AT WORK IN NORANDA ROOMING HOUSE Simcoe Reformerâ€"How many peop‘e know that apples, plums and peachesâ€" we have them all in Ontarioâ€"are good for the teeth and have a beneficial effect on the liver? The use of these Canadian fruits means beauty, for when the liver is in good condition the eyes will sparkle. Therefore eat plentâ€" eously of these three Canadian fruits if you would enjoy health. Some weeks ago The Advance made reference to a sensational occurrence at the Greek Catholic Church in Sudâ€" bury where a woman created much exâ€" citement by suggesting impropriety on the rt of the priest â€"of the church. It is @nly fair now to publish the reâ€" traction made by the woman and her statement that her former claims were false and that she greatly regrets hayâ€" ing made them. The retraction, of course, is not as sensational as the original charges, but should be given equal publicity in justice to the man whom the woman in question now adâ€" mits she accused wrongfully. It is not likely, however, that anything like the same amount of publicity will be receivâ€" ed by the denial that was given to the original statement. There are so many people who are ready to believe the worst that sensational charges are conâ€" sidered by many newspari‘rs as espeâ€" clally attractive news.â€" The Advance believes, however, that the majority of its readers will be equally interested in learning that the first sensation was based on imagination or hysterial and that the man occupying the high posiâ€" tion was worthy of the place and was unjustly accused. WOMAN WHO MADE GHARGE EXONERATES PRIEST NOW The latest despatches in the matter say that the climax of the sensation caused at Sudbury when Sophie Linkoâ€" vitch, beautiful Ukrainian girl, matchâ€" sd to the front of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, on Beech strest, durâ€" ing mass on Sunday morning, June 27, and deposited her seven months old child on the altar, accusing the pries:, Rev. N. J. Bartman, of being its father, was reached last week when Miss Linâ€" kovitch‘s attcrney gave the press a voluntary retraction, signed by Miss Linkovitch before two witnesses in which she denied the child was Father Bartman‘s and expressed regret at the false accusation she had made. Ukrainian Girl Who Created Scene at Church Some Months Ago Exâ€" precses Regret for Her Action. Accompanying Miss Linkovitch‘s statement, was one from Emile Laska, to whom she was married on Septemâ€" ber 14, admitting paternity of the child. The girl‘s statement was written and signed by her on September 10, and Mr. Laska‘s on September 12, and both sent to the heads of the Greek Catholic Church in Canada, in order to clear Father Bartman before the ecclesiastiâ€" cal authorities, on the understanding that the retraction would not be given to the press for publication. The moâ€" ther of the child declined to do more than frame an apology for disturbing a religious service, the offence for which she was convicted on August 6, and reâ€" leased on suspended sentence. It was not until last week that they would ccnsent to publication of their statements. The statement, signed by Sonohic Linkovitch reads as follows: "Sudbury, Sept. 10.â€"â€""I the underâ€" signed, Sophie Linkovitch, do hereby voluntarily declare that Rev. N. J. Bartâ€" man, the parish priest of the Ukrainian Catholic Church at Sudbury, is not the father of my child, born on December 7, in Toronto, Ont., and that each ancd all statements which I have previously made at any time or place to the conâ€" trary are absolutely false and untrue, and I am extremely sorry for having made them. (Signed) Sophie Linkoâ€" vitch." The statement signed by her husband reads: "Sudbury, Sept. 12, 1930.â€"‘"I, Emile Laska,, of Sudbury, Ont., do herewith declare that I am the father of Sophie Linkovitch‘s child, born to her in Toâ€" ronto, Ont., on December 7, 1929. Furâ€" thermore, I am making this statement voluntarily and only because there were certain â€" rumours to the. contrary. (Signed) Emile Laska." With conditions in the mining indusâ€" try in practically all fields inclined to be quiet and even dull it is pleasing to hear of rich strikes at pisesent. Desâ€" patches last week from Noranda say that crossâ€"cutting at 355 feet level in ore body, near Waiteâ€"Montgomery, Amulet cut $20 gold, and six per cent. copper. Drilling from this point will be commenced at once. Government engineers and Engineer Mutch have conceded richer ore at depth. RICH STRIKE REPORTED AS MADE AT THE AMULET MINES Toronto Mail and Empire â€" Some public attention is being given to the case of a Methodist minister in Michâ€" igan who has a family of nine children and "manages, somehow, to support them on an income of $2,450, out of which he gives a tithe of 280." It is a hard task, no doubt, but he surely has a rebate coming on that tithe. ; Border Cities Starâ€"Aimes has sent a hundred dollars worth of flowers to "Ma." but the latter is not placated. She says her evangelistic daughter will have to pay for nasal opsrations made necessary by the altercation between the two, even if she has to sue. Apâ€" parently Ma isn‘t able to smell Aimee‘s flowers in the oldâ€"fashioned way Hillâ€"Clarkâ€"Francis, Limited The Geo. Taylor Hardware, Aamited â€"â€" â€"> > Timmins, Ont Marshallâ€"Ecclestone, Limited, Timmins, Ont For Sale By Thursday, October 2nd, 1930 â€" ALEX ANDER M REBD ROSE x ORARGE PEKOE TtR M ade by Murcr:ray immins, Ont

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