Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 9 Oct 1930, 2, p. 5

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‘There have been several recent comâ€" plaints about large dogs allowed to run at large in the northâ€"eastern section of the town. These dogs upset garbage pails and still worse they are destroying gardens. At this time of year the garâ€" dens are even more prized than at other times of the year, so the depreâ€" dations of the dogs are especially anâ€" noying in this particular. One lady referred to the fact that The Advance has mentioned the meanness of people poisoning dogs, but points out that this is not much more objectionabkle than to allow dogs to run at large and do damage and cause great annoyance. A vyear or so ago there was so much nuisâ€" ance caused by dogs running at large that the authoritiees moved and enfo:câ€" ed the law in regard to dogs running at large with the result that there was a great improvement in conditions in this respect. Dog owners in 1928 by their selfish attitude to the public rousâ€" ed so much resentment that strict reâ€" strictions were enforced against the dogs. Unless dog owners want a reâ€" petition of the campaign against dogs they will have to play the game and see that their dogs are not a nuisance to other people. The Advance has alâ€" ways fought against undue restrictions on dogs, considering the dog a friend of man and a particular friend of the boy. This paper has little sympathy with the idea that there is no room in a town for a few good dogs. At the same time it must be admitted that no dog owner is justified in allowing his dozg to be a nuisance to the people in general, No one has a right to allow his dog to destroy gardens or flower beds on which people have spent time and money and in which they take just pride. No dog owner has the right to | aliow his dog to run at large and upâ€"| set garbage cans and cause similar| annoyvance. The practice of allowing «4ogs to hunt their own feed is wrong. ; A man who cannot keep a dog should not expect the neighbours to do.}so, especially in such an annoying way as by allowing the animal to forage the garbage cans. The turning loose of dogs at night is also to be condemned from every standpoint. Unless these practices are stopped, there is no doubt but that there will be another war against the dog in town. Dog owners again have the matter in their own hands and if they do not play the game fairly, with proper consideration for the rights of others, they will have no true’ grievance if another attempt is made to restrict the dog under serious handiâ€" caps and regulations. Barrie Examinerâ€" Premier Bennett has a real job on his hands to satisfy all the north country concerning the route of the transâ€"Canada highway. «31 if, Sh hsn thihth in hn h Un Sn in Lo Lo L L4 L s LE LC LR LA LE LTLELELELR LR LE LCE Dogs Running at Large Again Become Nuisance ¢1 Owing to the unprecedented demand following their previous visit we have secured a second presentation at our store on Fascinating Fall Frocks â€" â€"â€"in every smart style, colour and fabric of the new Fall Mode â€" â€" â€" unquestionably the greatest values to be found in such advance autumn fashions. Dresses for every occasion â€" â€" â€" street, business, afternoon and evening wear â€" â€" â€" models for women and misses. 29 Third Avenue Also on Monday and Tuesday the Last Word in Furs > that pJrench AAmerican Dress a coat that is smart â€" â€" â€" a coat that is definitely the 1931 mode â€" â€" â€" see this features only coats that are high in fashion and in value. The excellent terial and the careful way these coats are tailored and lined prove that they are real values at the prices offered. depicting the authentic new Autumn Modes Friday and Saturday October 10th and l1ith " In Style and Value the Store That Sets the Pace" "The directors hope and expect to be in a position at an early date to supply radium at a price considerably lower than now prevails and thus reâ€" move a restriction on its use and the present dependence for supply on foreign producers, who, it is thought, are deriving unreasonable profits on the sale of a product, the more exâ€" tensive use of which promises great benefit to suffering humanity." â€"_The directors of the Ontario Radium Corporation, Limited, are: Dr. G. W. Ross, president, Dr. G. E. Richards, E. U. Nisbet and J. A. McAndrew, K.C., secretaryâ€"treasurer, all of Toronto, and W. M. Richardson of Wilberforce, Ont. Dr. Ross, the president, is a son of Sir CGGeorge Ross, former premier of Onâ€" tario. Dr. Richards is head of the Xâ€"ray and Radiology department of the Toronto General hospital. Mr. Richâ€" ardson is a practical prospector and discoverer of the claims. In a statement issued last week the directors announce that they have mainly in view "the provision of an adequate supply® of radium for theraâ€" peutic purposes, more especially . for Ontario and other provinces of the Dominion." "Results obtained from examination and investigations by the province of Ontario and Dominion of Canada deâ€" partments of mines, the Ontaric Reâ€" search Foundation, the Imperial Inâ€" stitute of London, England ,the Uniâ€" versity of Toronto and others," the statement continues, "justify the diâ€" rectors in their confidence that the company‘s deposit of uranitite will prove to be an important source of supâ€" ply of radium and other valuable minâ€" erals. The directors not only expect to be producing radium sufficient for Ontario needs in less than a year, but hope, they state, to reduce greatly the cost and thus remove the present restriction on its use. Despatches from Toronto last week say that immediate development of radium deposits in Haliburton is planâ€" ned by the Ontario Radium Corporaâ€" tion headed by prominent Toronto docâ€" tors. It was stated that the company would proceed at once to block out the ore body which is believed to be the richest in radium content yet uncoverâ€" ed in the world. It was intimated that the Ontario Government would take no steps to act on legislation passed some time ago providing for expropriation of any radium mine in the province. RADIUM FROM HALIBURTON TQ SUPPLY ONTARIO‘S NEEDS Company Formed to Produce Radium from Haliburton Find. Hope to Cut Cost. Government Not Likely to Expropriate. of the The British dirigible Râ€"101, largest aircraft ever built, plunged its silvery nose into a hillside at the end of a French field early Sunday morning and 47 of its passengers and crew, includâ€" ing a Cabinet Minister, were killed. There was doubt as to the exact cause of the disaster. A broken rudâ€" der fin, ripped off by strong winds, presumably caused the giant ship to lurch earthward. Beaten by rain, it could not rise, There was a terrific explosion of hydrogen gas. Other blasts followed and the ship caught fire. The victims were asphyxiated and charred beyond recognition. Eight men escaped. Heroes themâ€" selves, in that they tried repeatedly, although suffering from burns, to save their less fortunate companions, they ascribed heroism to others. They had high praise for the ship‘s captain, Flight Lieutenant H. C. Irwin, who reâ€" mained at his post to the end, attemptâ€" The people of the whole civilizeo world were shocked at the tragedy that occurred on Sunday when the British airship Râ€"101 crashed in France with a loss of 47 lives out of a crew and passengers totalling 55. The following are some of the highlights of the traâ€" gecdy :â€" Dirigible Râ€"101 Meets Disaste Caught in Storm. Crashe Fields of Allonne, France, Sunday of This Week. FORTYâ€"SEVEN BURNED TO DFATH IN AIRSHIP CGRASH The Apple Orchard of the Y CRT + s it Timmins THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Disaster When Crashes into France, on Frer en 1 The ma ofâ€" t] Pas: many ci C h C I 1nt to a cirigible is graph messages at De BC 5555555555555%5% Lo3 Dr. Mackintosh Bell on Conservation in Canada In an editorial article this week The Toronto Mail and Empire says:â€" "Now that Canada‘s new and enerâ€" getic managing ~director has taken over the business, and begun to "make things move," it were well to survey the material resources upon which we base our hopes. Dr. J. Mackintosh Boll, the wellâ€"known consulting minâ€" ing engineer and geologist, calls upon Canadians to take account of their naâ€" tural riches and to see that these are no longer frittered away as they have been in the past.. Were we "as poor as Lazarus," but still possessed cur naturâ€" al wealth unimpaired, we should still be "as rich as Dives," potentially. The ltz as kep here describes the flight: At 6.30 p.m. the Râ€"101 messaged Le Bourget of her departure from Cardâ€" inston, which cccurred at 6.30. At 8.20 Greenwich time the Râ€"101 messaged that she was making satisâ€" factory progress. At 10.25 the ship reported passage over the region of Hastings, the mesâ€" sage adding that it was raining hard with a southwest wind of a velocity of cver 54 knots per hour. At 10.40 her position was given as two miles north of Hastings. At 11.30 the dirigible messaged a point had been reached over the French coast near Cape Saint Quentin. gears had enjoyed an excellent dinner and smoked many cigars and were getâ€" ting ready to go to bed. At 2.08 a.m. guardian of the Beauvais Airdrome perceived a great illumination in the sky over the forest of Beauvais. It was the dirigible, which had just crazhed." Meanwhile, the British Air Council has proposed public inquiry, pursuâ€" ant to arrangements being made with French Government. The tragic story of the sudden endâ€" ing of the flight of the Great British Cirigible Râ€"101 from England to India is graphically told in the log of radio messages kept at France‘s great airport at De Boursget, France. Passengers on the Râ€"101 smoked many cigars after an enjoyable meal befcore going to bed. Soon after the airship was in ruins, smitten by a sudden storm over the forest of Beauâ€" At midnight, G.M.T. a messhge gave her position as. 15 miles southwest of Abbeville. The log continues: "The last posiâ€" tion received at 1.50 Sunday morning was that she was about half a mile south of Beauvais. The radio indiâ€" cated at this moment that the passenâ€" Sir Dennistoun Burney, promoter of the Empire dirigible route, declared in London he could not yet form an opinâ€" ion as to the cause of the crash. At all events, he said, the disaster is apt to have a retarding effect on the use of hydrogen. Rear Admiral W. A. Moffett, chief of the United States Navy Bureau of Aeronautics, said in Washington that he would ask Congress to repeal the present law which forbids the exportaâ€" tion of America‘s exclusive store of helium. Meanwhile, he added, the catastrophe should not deter the Unitâ€" ed States in its ambitious dirigible programme. Chief among these expressions was the declaration that future airships must be gassed with helium instead of hydrogen, a view put forward by aviaâ€" tion leaders of three nations. Dr. Hugo Eckener, master of the Graf Zeppelin, and perhaps the foreâ€" most dirigible expert, said in Germany that he was at a loss to account for the driving to earth of the Râ€"101 and said that the tragedy had emphasized the necessity for using helium gas in lighterâ€"thanâ€"air craft. "He urges us to cease the persistent annual cropping which prevails over large tracts of the country, without adequate measures to maintain the fertility of the land. It is fortunate that the production of artificial forâ€" Messages of condolence poured in from all parts of the world; sorrow was particularly intense in the Empire points that were to be~linked by the Râ€"101, but there likewise came comments, inâ€" dicating a critical attitude toward presentâ€"day dirigible operation. ing to save the lives of his men. Sunday night, with the bodies of the dead reposing in such crude caskets as the little French village of Altonne could muster, it could be seen that the Râ€"101, seventh dirigible to be destroyâ€" ed in ten years, was destined to become the focal point of much aeronautical controversy. jyire mes har "In thousands of lakes, varying in size from mere ponds to fresh water seas, Canada holds a pasturage for teeming fish life, providing immense stores of food. On both seacoasts we have fisheries which are among the richest in the world. Every support should be given to those departments of the Government which are seeking to conserve these sources of food and wealth. "Canada is only the third in imâ€" portance of all British nations in the annual value of its mineral output Exceeded by Great Britain and South "Turning to the country‘s wealth in yild and furâ€"bearing animals, the writâ€" â€"r rejoices that the buffalo has been saved from extinction, but he fears that the great herds of caribou, which roam the barren lands, may disappear unless something radical is done for their protection. When a band of norâ€" thern Indidns encounters herd of these animals the slaughter does not cease until the ammunition is exhaustâ€" ed. Dr. Bell wonders, too, how long the beaver and other furâ€"bearing aniâ€" mals will escape the fate of the wild pigeon. "Ever since the pioneer days there has been a wanton destruction of our forests. Therse was some excuse for the settlers of Old Ontario, who had to clear the land before they could grow food, but it is a crime that toâ€"day great trees, with stumps three feet in diaâ€" meter, are still being felled for fireâ€" wood. The yearly destruction of exâ€" tensive areas of pulpwood and timber oy forest fires in most of the provinces calls for more drastic action on the »art of the Governments and timber limit owners. Marshallâ€" Ecclestone Ltd. ous water power sites, found north of the prairie country, are admirably acâ€" apted for the production of nitrate in great volume. fi, RADIOCRAFT Other models from $229 upâ€"Also combination radioâ€"phonograph ‘and motor car and motor boat radio. / De Luxe Console with sliding doors. Nine tubes, 5 screenâ€"grid. 12" electroâ€"dynamic speaker and all other features listed above. De Luxe Refinements of 1930 Tuning Meter Station Selector Local Distance Switch Tone Selector UTOMATIC For sale in Timmins at â€"pos:tlvely |mportant Controls in the New Lineâ€"oâ€"Lite Dial V olume Control Speaker Mute Electroâ€"Dynamic Speaker ON { "All across the country exist water powers which must be conserved as sources of energy for existing and fuâ€" ture industries. If Canada possesses a plethora of riches, that fact furnishes only a final reason why we should not be improvident in their use or wasteâ€" ful in their handling. Those who wish to read Dr. Bell‘s article will find it in the summer number of Queen‘s Quarâ€" terly." areas, but they are not inexhaustible. The Government will be justified in taking every necessary step to ensure the manufacture of the ores into finâ€" ished articles of commerce within the confines of our own country. tilizer is now being undertaken on a large scale. What is more, the numerâ€" Africa, it has, in recent years, made greater relative progress than any other country. The annual return from our mines and quarries is so great that the industry threatens the precedence of agriculture. Every year brings fresh extensions of our known mineralized Day or Night Phone 5l REAL THOUGCHTFULNESS TORCNTO TIMMIN®S® FUNERAL SERVICE Thoughtfulness of every wish of every member of the family; Helpfulness when your need is greatest; Care and Watchfulâ€" ness in the little usually overlooked matters, Such is the service rendered by 4 . L. LEES, MANAGER Sudbury Star:â€"A contemporary conâ€" fides that the new Belgian prince is in direct line of succession to the throne, because "his older sister is a girl." Barrie Examiner:â€"A Paris woman refused to marry a man who has a twin brother, on the ground that she wantâ€" ed a more exclusive model. Thursday, October 9th, 1930 Timmins Auto Top Shop 89 MATIN AVE All Tops, Side Curtains, Sedans, Coaches, Coupe Decks, repaired or new put on. Glass Installed, Dome lights repaired, Hardware and all door moulding done. Retrimming, Cushions repaired, also slip covers, Furniture upholstered and repaired. see me for samples and prices. Open Evenings. The visual tuning meter, electrically operated and autoâ€" matic, aids selectivity and fidelity of tone,. The Volume Control in the new Bosch Radioâ€"just as autoâ€" maticâ€"equalizes the volume of local and Automatic as the modern elevator, that at the touch of a button, goes to any desired floor and stops for you, such are marâ€" vellous new controls in Bosch Radio. distant broadcastingâ€" it tones down that of nearâ€"by stations, amplifies weak signals amf reduces static. Other features which distinguish the new models are indicated below. 12% Pine Street Timmins, Ont.

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