Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 2 Oct 1930, 1, p. 3

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J. R. Newman, Assoc. LRE, Phone 562â€"W 6 Sixth Ave. DR. CARL‘S DISCOVERY STOPS GAS, CONSTIPATION In his private practice, Dr. Carl Weschcke first periacted the simple mixture now known as Adlerika. Unâ€" like most remedies, Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and reâ€" moves old poisons you would never beâ€" lieve were in your system. Stops GAS bloating in 10 minutes! Relieves chronic constipation in 2 hours! Let Adlerika give your stomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel! It will surprise you!â€" On sale at The Goldfield Drug Co. Clear up your Sore Throat, Cough, Bronchitis, â€" Tonsilitis, Colds and Tonsil troubles with Sybilla Spahr‘s Remedy. Good results or money back at your druggist. It‘s good, try it, Sold by Timmins, Schumacher and South Porcupine druggists. Berini Motor Sales anâ€" nounce a reduction in price on all new and used cars. All used cars in good condition. Lower ‘then the fielders suffer / Let us test your tubes. Perhaps we can save you much money. It‘s the same with your radio. When one tube gets weak, the other four or five are overtaxed, and their life is shortened badly. SEPMANIMWLL _ SERVICE STATION Motor Sales TIMMINS, ONT. Package has 2 separate bags. One pint quantity in each bag. No waste. Prices! EXPERT SERVICE CN ALL MAKES RADIO APPARATUS BUILT TO ORDER Timmins "From the account of the meeting, the people of that section believe that the great factor in the fixing of the route is the tourist traffic. It was stated that out of 125,000 which crossed the Straits of Mackinac in a year, oneâ€" sixth crossed into Canada at Sauk Ste. Marie. It was claimed that the people who favour the Superior route for the highway outnumber those who are boosting the Cochrane two to one, and that there is no comparison whatever between the two from a scenic point of view. "It appears as though the Algoma people consider that there is no other consideration on the matter. They evidently scout the idea that the buildâ€" ing of a road around Lake Superior is more expensive than one through less rock country would be. They even argued, according to the News‘ report, that it would be shorter and more economical to route the <highway through their section of the country than it would be via Cochrane. It was claimed that only 285 miles of new road was required to be built to connect up existing roads and many other arguâ€" ments were advanced and will be placâ€" ed before the government." *‘Conducting a personal survey Oof both provincial and federal members from Northern Ontario, Mr. Lyons has the majority of them favour the Lake Superior road over the Cochraneâ€"Ferâ€" guson highway route. Out of ten proâ€" vincial members, six are for the Superiâ€" or route strong, two are opposed, the Hon. Chas. McCrea and the Hon. Dr. Robb neutral on the question, due to their cabinet connections. In the fedâ€" eral ranks fully seventyâ€"five per cent. of the members back the Superior route." Simcoe Reformerâ€"Spsaking of buyâ€" ing at home, an article in the C. N. K. magazine states that the Canadian National Railways system spends anâ€" nually the sum of $100,000,000 with Canadian firms and that â€"ninetyâ€"one per cent. of "its needs arg filled within the Dominion. This example could well be emulated by smaller concerns and by individual citizens. "With regards to political influence in connection with the locating of the highway, the cities and towns furtherâ€" ing the Lake Superior road have not anything to worry about," stated the Hon. James Lyons, local provincial member, who addressed the gathering. "The following extract from an acâ€" ccunt of the meeting, taken from the Sault Ste. Marie News, which claims on its front page to be "Algoma District‘s Leading Weekly," gives an idea of how the people of that section of the North look on the project: A front page article in Tha Haileyâ€" burian last week has the following to say in regard to the Transâ€"Canada highway :â€" "Evidently politics is to play an imâ€" portant part in the location of the route cof the proposect transâ€"Canada highway, judging by reports of a meetâ€" ing of towns and cities in the neighâ€" bcurhood of the Great Lakes, which was held on Thursday night last at Ssault Ste. Marie. There were over 700 pecple present at the meeting, repreâ€" senting some dozen or more cities, towns and communities and the report states that ‘"an association must be formed to combat the organization efâ€" fected by the cities and towns north of North Bay in favour of the Cochrane route." SAYS POLITIGS MAY HAVE EFFEGT ON ROUTE QF ROAD Interview Quotes Hon. J, Lyons as Sayâ€" ing That Parliamentarians Favour Route Along North Shore of Lake Supericr. More Talk About "Scenic‘ Feaâ€" tures of Route. «B E SURE m Y OU S AY G E N U i N BE DO NOT ACCEPT SUBSTITUTES Look for Westinghouse etched on top of the bulb and avoid inferior imitations. 10 B Our home comforts depot is open every evening including Sunday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at St. Mary‘s hospital. Need for First Aid and Home Nursing in the Home. An old proverb and one well known to nearly all isâ€""A stitch in time saves nine." In the majority of cases everyâ€" thing is done for the comfort, welfare and safety of our families, but few, however, have any idea of the immense value of intelligence, physical, mental and moral training, on the character of which it is not too much to say that the future generation mainly depends. Don‘t forget our dance at Schumachâ€" er on Wednesday, Oct. 15th. We are going to make this one a real snappy dance and one that will be rememberâ€" ed. Many mothers having purchased the most comfortable perambulator, a sweet little cot, fire guard ‘and other safety devices for the protection of their children, are content that they have done everything possible. We would also like to form a class of ladies for home nursing. After reading the above article, I think you will agree that it is very useful to know. Will the ladies who are interested please give in their names to Mrs. Shragge, of Third avenue, who will give them all the information about the class. Many fathers in addition to providâ€" ing the Family Castle and its upkeep, take great care in sesing his children well educated, properly clothed and enâ€" en'courages membership various sports clubs, are also content that the2y have well provided for all foreseen danâ€" gers, but what about the unforeseen dangers? Adults may easily miss a stair and fall from top to bottom, accidentally catch their clothes alight, slip on a mat on polished floor, a ceiling may fall on them, become ill in tne bath, upset a kettle of hot water over their feet and meny other small and larger acciâ€" dents to cause them bodily harm. Thse bodies of human beings aro frail compared with other worldly things and dsease has a dangerous power over them. This is more so in the case of children owing to the closer union beâ€" tween the parts, diseases spread more rapidly from one to another. A trivial symptom may be the precursor of a serious disease just as an apparent In the home it is impossible for parâ€" ents to be always by the side of their children, and in a very short space of time much can happen. Children carn easily fall from their cot or trin themâ€" selves into the fire, climb on a chair and put their hand through the winâ€" dow or fall in such a way as to causs themselves much bodily harm. In the presence of a parent a child can easily upset the hot contents of a cup or other vessel over itself. In these days of spsed, accidents canâ€" not always be avoided even in the best regulated families. Space only permits us to deal very briefly with a few. The brigade hold a weekly practice in the skating rink on Wednesday evenâ€" ings at 6.30 pm. We would like to enâ€" roll some new members. Come to the rink and see us work. Get yourself inâ€" terested in first aid« work; join our class, and become a firstâ€"aider yourself. Remeber the slogan:â€""First Aid Saves Lives and Limbs.‘" With these we propose to deal, and with the provisions which may be made to meet them. Bruises:â€"A blow anywhere on the surface of the body may cause extenâ€" cive hemmorhage beneath the skin, without breaking it. A "black eye‘" ;s an instance. The injury is accompaniâ€" ed by discolouration and swelling. The treatment is to apply a piece of lint soaked in spirit and water, or ice, or cold water dressings. Bloxd issuing from the mouth may come form the tongue, the gums, the socket of a tooth after extraction, or the throat. The treatment for this hemorrhage is as follows:â€"Give ice to suck, or cold water to hold in the mouth. If this is not successful, give water as hot as can be borne to held in the mouth. If bleeding from the front part of the tongue is excessive, comâ€" press the part by a clean piece of lint held betwesen the finger and thumb. If the bleeding is from the socket of a tooth pilug the socket with a piece of clean lint or cotton wool; over this place a small cork or other substance of suitable size and instruct the patient to bite on it. ‘ _ Blood issuing from the ear channel, which generally indicates a fracture of the base of the skull must be wiped away as it issues; no attempt is to be made to plug the ear. nen ant TMMINS DIVISION OF ST. JOHN AMBULANGE BRIGADF Hemorrhage from the noseâ€"Place the patient in a sitting position in a current of air before an opin window, with the head thrown slightly back and the hands raised above the head. Undo all tight clothing around the neck and chest. Appliy ccold (ice, a cold sponge or a bunch of keys) over the nose and also the spine at the level of the collar; place the feet in hot water. Cause the patient to keep the mouthn open and so avoid breathing through the nose. Treatment for Bleeding from the Nose Mouth and Ear. The Need for First Aid and Home Nursing in the Home. This is the second of the series of wesekly articles by the Timmins Divisâ€" ion of the St. John Ambulance Brigade. This week we will take for our lesâ€" son bleeding from the nose, mouth and ear, and finish up with the treatment for bruises. and boin Ci oth alth, 1Le.., clean THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO nt how ma It is well known that the next best thing to absence of body in any acciâ€" dent is presence of mind. Failure cof presence of mind at a critical moment may be followed by disastrous conseâ€" quences. Knowledge to be powerful must be maintained, and having gained a knowâ€" ledge of First Aid and Home Nursing, the next best thing to do is to retain that knowledge and by joining the ranks of the St. John Ambulance Brigade which provides continuous practice. For these reasons all citizens of our great Empire will be able to put into practice the old adage that "A stitch in time saves nine.‘"â€"First Aid. There are many people who bless the days during which they gained their knowledge of First Aid and . Home Nursing, because it has not only be>n possible to render aid to others, but has served them ~well. oa«many occasions when those most dear to them have needed immediate aid. Knowledge, however, is a great source of presence of mind, and here, distinctâ€" ly, knowledge is power. At the recent tour of the North Land by fifty representatives of the Ontaric Dept. of Agriculture, W.â€"C. Nixon, for many years representative for the deâ€" partment at New Liskeard, presented each member of the party with an i;â€" lustrated souvenir booklet of the North, containing excellent pictures of many of the farm and forest scenes to be met with in the North alcong the route of the tour. The boocklet contained many interesting facts and figures on Northâ€" ern Ontario resources and agricultural potentialities. Taking as his theme sSAYS NORTH LAND NEEDS NO ALIBI FOR EXISTENCE What Mr. Nixon says is all right in some ways, ana has been proven out in the experience of the years to some extent, yet it is impossible to let the remarks go by without adding the comâ€" ment that unless the settlers are given roads their lot will be a hard one and settlemeont will be much retarded, ali fine talk about heroic pioneers and the gospe!l of selfâ€"help to the contrary. "Opprtunities in Agriculture in Northâ€" ern Ontario," Mr. Nixon discussed the difficulties and advantages of soil, seaâ€" son and climate that await the settler of the vast virgin lands of the great claybelt of the North. cial assistance. This is the principle I believe that helpmpd cur forefathers achieve success and I think it is stin sound. It is true that settlers have come and gone and will continue to dao so but it is not expecting too much to believe that we have within the borders of this great Dominion and of the Emâ€" "The North Country," he said, "needs no alibi for its existence and as a firm believer in its possibilities, I predict wonderful things for it in the future. I believe very much in the principle of making it possible for people to help themselves rather than in direct finanâ€" The St. John Ambulance Association are running classes all the year for men and women, and the Secretary at St. John‘s Gate, would, we know, be glad to forward particulars of classes held from time to time. Itft is therefore the moral duty of every adult member of the household to possess a knowledge of First Aid and Home Nursing, there being no excuse for a lack of this knowledge as it can be obtained by all persons in all stages of lifée by study and payment of a small sum. vial accident may, if neglected, lead to lifeâ€"long deformity,. What percentage of the population of cur great Empire would know what to do in case of accident or sudden illness in the home? Many may state that they would immediately fetch a doctor. This, of course, is the right and proper thing to do; but doctors are not always waiting behind their front doors. Some are able to obtain medical aid at oncs but in cthers the doctor may be visitâ€" ing his patients and therefore time is likely to elapse before medical aid is obtained. Is the unfortunate victim of disaster, man, woman or child to be alâ€" lowed to suffer owing to the lack or knowledge on the part of those present? The two cups awarded by Beatty Bros. Limited for competition in their annual "All Canada‘" Summer Sale, and won this year for the first time in Beatty Bros. history by one store. The Timmins branch under manager Delmar Chapple won this outstanding honour this year. men a homes ies, and having something can actually call their own eople this land and bring it ; Domin 1@ woms themselves a heir hich that A KX J AdiikkAkk U CA _ AUL _ NUEALAL JFNV UE VEXIEELE _ AAK _ UK £Ls S i _ K LA this year for the first time in Beatty Bros. ranch under manager Delmar Chapple won rave not access to roads. It is vastly different in other sections of the North. The people who live in and near New _â€" | Liskeard may not realize this, but those to fEven if it were true that the settlers| Who use their senses around Timmins would eventually worry though withâ€" s n e ts dn e en uiss 4 s along the Canadian National and T. out the building of roads for them, n. 0. railways are forced to sse that roads be built for seittlers. Why should en s l the settlers be handicappscd and harâ€"| tl?emseh.es they'should sul"ely P P passed unnecessarily in the gallant! vided with the vital necessity of roads struggles they are making? It is no ! for settlers. 46 Third Avenue Radios, Phonographs and Records J. T. Heffernan Opposite Goldfields Theatre (without tubes) MADE IN CANADA Brunswick Redio with Panatrope Model 32 (lifustrated) $3 5.00 Sold by Timmins Out of the airâ€"just as it is given by the artistâ€"Brunswick Radio brings you music true as a Stradivarius. And to make Brunswick‘s home entertainment complete, you hear your favourite classics and moderns reproduced as only Brunswick Records and Brunswick Panatrope can do it. This is perfect home entertainmentâ€"Brunswick‘s True Performance maintained in the new superb Radio with Panatrope. The graceful cabinet of specially seasoned and selected butt Walnut was created in Canada by Brunswickâ€"outstending craftsmen in the woodâ€" working art for 85 years. Equipped with completely armoured chassis; the exclusive Uniâ€"Selector that rings all operating needs under the control of one hand; and Tone Conâ€" trol which gives you the exact tone to please your ear for every type of program. It is very easy for you to judge True Performance for yourself: visit a Brunsâ€" wick dealer todayâ€"hear Brunswick Records reproduced on Radio with Panatrope â€" then only can you fully appreciate how wonderful is Brunswick‘s True Performance. * The wolves roam round the settlers nomss, the black flies and mosquitoes are as ferocious, the isolation is as deâ€" pressing, the work as hard and the returns as spare for the average setâ€" tler in the North toâ€"day as in the preâ€" vious century. There has been adâ€" vance in all other lines. Why should the settler alone of all the prople of toâ€"day (apart from Russia) be expected to endure all the suggestions about grandfather‘s days and the work and worry then. Roads are essential for the progress of settlement. That much of help to the settler seems to be one thing that should be â€"given for the benefit of the country, as well as for the help of the settler. In the New Liskeard district, according to the boas: cften made, there are no farms that ALL THE LATEST MODELS ONX DITSPLAY Phone 423 cor. 3rd Ave. and Pine Burke‘s Corner Drug Store BRU In Timmins at UNSWICK RADIG OF CANADA, LIMITED Subsidiary of Warner Bros yâ€" o ko es ie on â€" ce n Lm.fiv@fifi»wfi,.._.?%z?fiir.,flww.... f Acid stomachs are dangerous beâ€" cause too much acid irritates the deliâ€" cate lining of the stomach, often leadâ€" ing to gastritis accompanied by serious stomach ulcers. Pood ferments and sours, creating the distressing gas whicl: distends the stomach and hampers the normal functions of the vital internal organs, often affecting the heart. Gas in the stomach accompanied by full, bloated feeling after eating are almost certain evidence of the presence of excessive hydrochloric acid in the stomach, creating soâ€"called "acid inâ€" digestion." It is the worst of folly to neglect such serious condition or to treat with ordinary digestive aids which have no neutralizing effect on the stomacii acids. Instead get from any druggist a little Bisurated Magnesia and take a teaspoonful or four tablets in water right after eating. This will drive the gas, wind and bloat right out of the body, sweeten the stomach, neutralize the excess acid and prevent its formaâ€" tion and there is no sourness, gas or pain. Bisurated Magnesia (in powder or tablet formâ€"never in liquid or milk» is harmless to the stomach, inexpensive to take and the best form of magnesia for stomach purposes. It is used by thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of indigestion. Thursday, October 2nd. 1930 Recommends Daily Use of Bisurated Magnesia to Qvercome Trouble Caused by Acid Indigestion. Gas in the Stomach Is Dangerous ictures Phone 729 The Porcupine Advance a Problems to Us Exclusive Brunswick Dealer in Schumacher k1 ENT Are Now on Display in Schumacher 2t Brim? Your ~I Wilson‘s Drug Store Timmins, Ontario First Ave.

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