Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 2 Jul 1931, 1, p. 7

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5551 P p}] 9904 ‘4 ujop * * 4 4 4 t t 4. t ts t t ts ts ds h Nh. nds ns h h n ol 2ooo 2 44 Notice is hereby given to holders of mining claims, wheresoever situate, upon which the work specified in the Mining Act has been prohibited or restricted to a stated period by the Minister of Lands and Forests under the euthority of the Mining Act, or where permission to do the work has been given under conditions and limitations designed to protect the timber, THAT under the Forest Fires Prevention Act, 1930, they are required to apply to the District FPorester in the District in which the land is situate for a permit to perform such work, and that failure to apply for such permit, or upon issue of the same.failure to perform and record the work prescribed by the Mining Act, will subject their claim to cancellation. The time for performing and recording the said work is extended by Orderâ€"inâ€"Council to and including the 15th day of November, 1931. If the work is so done and recorded, the time for computing the date before which further work upon the claim is required, will be computed as from the said 15th day of November, 1931. The name and address of the District Forester to whom application for such permit should be made, may be obtained from the Recorder of the Mining Diviâ€" sion in which the claim is s‘tuate. A miner‘s license in the name of the appliâ€" cant, or due renewal of th» same, must accompany the application and the number or numbers of the irining claim or claims must be clearly stated. T. F. SUTHERLAND, NO TIC BE To Holders of Mining Claims in Ontario Not Yet Patented s % or Leased. % â€" Goldfields Hotel Block Timmins, Ontarie é 23 Pine Street N. Phone 104 Our Want Ad. Column Brings Sure Results momeont is Toronto, December 9th, 1930 Head OfMce and Yard TIMMINS, ONT. Phone 111 CLEAR B.C. FIR sHEET ROQ ING â€" sSPRUCE FLOORING Â¥â€"JOINT PINE FEATHEREDGE CLEAR FIT Red and Green Slate Shingles and Rolls. A ings. Spruce Bu See us before placing your business. Are you familiar with the Financial Responsibility Law ? INSURANCE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION SECURITY SERVICE SULLIVAN NEWTON A COMPLETE STOCK or The Towing Car is at Your Service Complete set of 4 Weed Snubbers, supplied and installed on any make of car for $15.00 44 BRUCE AVENUE SOUTH PORCUPINE We will estimate a complete motor overhaul, painting and body repairs. Our prices are right and all work guaranteed. (Most Upâ€"toâ€"date Garage in the North) General Auto Repairs Body Work and Painting South Porcupine Lumber, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies. Day or Night Phone 51 REAL THOUGHTIFULNESS Thoughtfulness of every wish of every member of the family; Helpfuiness when your need is greatest; Care and Watchfulâ€" ness in the little usually overlooked matters. Such is the service rendered by AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE RATES sTOCK SIZES "A) ASH TN holls. Asphalt Roofing and Sheathâ€" Spruce Building Paper. â€" Celotex i wiliecl the iand is situate for a permit to perform such 0 apply for such permit, or upon issue of the same,failure he work prescribed by the Mining Act, will subject their 'I‘he time for performing and recording the said work is ouncil to apd‘ ix}pludmg the 15th day of November, 1931. PPE‘ ue us REDUCED FOR 19 2 DEPARTMENT OF MINES 8. L, LEES, MANAGER 3 aFA Branch Office sSCHUMACHER KIRKLANZD LAKE Phone 7125 o Phone 393 ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER Surfaced Roofing in Strip Yard ROCK HARDWOOD FLOORâ€" NT AND SHIPLAP _ WHITE FIR AND PINE DOORS IN N sSTOCK SIZES. Acting Deputy Minister of Mines 12% Pine Street Timmins, Ont. Phone 15 Sucbury S:ar:â€"The Toronto Teleâ€" gram presumes that Algoma cigar stores have replaced wood>n Indians with timber welves. "The main factors in this soap shortâ€" age seem to be the lack of animal fats (a resul:; of the wholesale destruction of cattle during the winter 1929â€"30), and the vale of a certain amount of Soviet seap on foreign marke‘s." "Peasants in northern region which I visited more recently, were cooking ashes in order to extract some sort of preparation which served as a soap subâ€" stitute, "The shortage of soap is universal in Russia. In a provincial town on the Lower Voliga which I visited last sumâ€" mer, the filth of the hotel rooms was accentuated by the fact that the shsets, as the manager told me, had not been washed with scap for months, having been merely dipped in blueing as a subâ€" stitute. ‘"Soap is sold on the private market at eight rubles (nominally four dollars) a cake; but apart from the very hxgh price, much of this soayp is made out of dubious substances, and soeme cases of eczema and other skin diseases are reâ€" ported by pesople who have experimentâ€" ed with it. "Durinzg one recent month no soap was sold on some of the ration bookâ€" lets; and during the last month the raâ€" tion, at least for nonâ€"manual workers, was fixed a‘t half a cake per person. "This is sufficient for personal cleanâ€" liness, to say nothing of the difficulties of washing clothing. However grandiose the fiveâ€"year plan may be, it seems to have failed to proâ€" vide soap for everyâ€"day use in Moscow, writes a Russian correspondent of the London Observer. He describes the reâ€" sults of this deprivation : THINGS CAN‘T BE CLEANED UP IN RUSSIA FOR A WHILE YET Miss Laronde is wellâ€"known in town and district, being a sister of Mrs. Lawâ€" lor, Timmins, and a visitor here occasâ€" ionally. | _A despatch last week from Sudbury !says:â€"“At a rieliminary hearing this morning in police court before Magisâ€" trate J. S. McKessack, John Szwed was commilted for trial on a(cha.rge of furiâ€" ous driving on April 18. Evidence givâ€" en teday was that the accused was drivâ€" ing an automobile on Beech street when it struck and seriously injured Misses Marie Bertrand and Annie Laronde. Miss Laronde, the more seriously inâ€" jured, is yet unable to appear in court :o give testimony and only recently was discharged from the hospital. E. C. Facer, acting Crown Attorney, conâ€" dutted the prosecution, while G. M. Mililer is appearing for the accused. Trial will bhe held within the near fuâ€" ture before Judge E. Proulx." | _ _Another astonishingly fine course is that of the Ibaraki Country Club, a few miles to the norih of Osaka. I fell in love with Ibaraki without the lsast sense of infidelity to either Tokyo or Hcdcgaya, and I vowed that Ibaraki, after ‘all, should be my dream fosterâ€" clubâ€"had I not been presented with a club belt, in maroon and blue stripes?â€" but then I had not yet seen Takarazuâ€" ka. sUDBURY MAN COMMITTED ON CHARGE OF FURIOUS DRIVING But, after all, the real distraction of Hoeodogaya is that from any poin‘ of the first few fairways are to be had exâ€" quisite views of Fuji whensever the reâ€" gally capricious mountain is preening erself. What can one say of the Hcdagaya Country Club‘s course just outside Yoâ€" kchama? First, that it paled thg exâ€" cellencies cf the Tokyo links. Wha: Hcodcogaya will be like in cherryâ€"blosâ€" som or wisteria time one can only faintâ€" ly imagine; it was gorgeco"s enough in March (on a felicitous shoreâ€"leave day), when here and there plumâ€"blossom beâ€" spangled the coppices. ting. In playing the eighteenth hole one drives down a noble fairway, which first dips, and then rises to approach the green, flanked for 200 yards by two fragant woods of pine trees whose myâ€" scterious cloistered recesses seem ‘to breathe a benison on the game nsw nearly ended. viiar QOl UTUNIS SOrL at the :’momem is the fervour with which she ‘;13 taken up golf., It began with a Zame played between ithe Prince of \ Wales and her present Emperor (then Frince Regent), on a private course laid t >ut in the Imperial grounds, during the Prince‘s visit to Japan in 1922. Since then her wealthier classes have laid down the most amazing courses, applying thmselves to mastering the 'game with immense thoroughness. |Subscripions to the new clubs are so ’hxgh that few foreigners can afford ’membership. and they have to remain content with their clder, more modeatl links, has been my privilege recently to [liay on several of these new courses, and a great deal of it was golf de luxe [ n more senses than one. The Tokyo course, some five or six miles out of the city, presents few difficulties to a pracâ€" tised player, but I would defy the most fastidious player to play there and come away without an abiding senseo cof satâ€" isfaction from the great variety of the holes and the sheer beauty of the setâ€" They are Playing Golf in Japan Now (From The Manchester Guardian.) Japan has given the lie in many di to the old tag about "the un ianging East," and her most specta ilar achievement of this sort at th ‘oment is the fervour with which sh opularity of the Game Keeps on Exâ€" tending from Year to Year, Courses Now in Japan. Goif May be International Lingo, THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"A memâ€" ber of The Mail and Empire staff was waiting for a street car at Sunnyside and reading a magazine when a young lady selling rosss approached. She glanced at the magazine and said: "Ah, the Atlantic. Have you been across?" "I believe that English men and woâ€" men will understand and work with each other much more readily than they ever can with a foreigner. "There is a profound truth in the old saying ‘charity begins at home.‘ It is all bunkum to talk about the brotherâ€" hood of man in general terms until we have realized the brotherhood of man in England." (London Times.) Mr. Baldwin said recently: "I know there is such a thing as the cant of patriotism, but what is much more dangerous is the cant of antiâ€"patriotâ€" ism. We are told by internationallyâ€" minded people that what matters to a man is not being: an Englishman or a Frenckhman, but being boilermaker or a riveter. I have not noticed the Amerâ€" ican boilermakers show any great enâ€" thusiasm for reducing their duties to help our beilermakers. »râ€"gold camp, where they come up | against a wall of solid bush. It is plain to see that if the road were pushed through from La Reine to Cochrane, it would be no time before we would have, all through this section .cf the North, a highâ€"class frequent motor bus service. An enterprising Smooth Rock Falls man has this spring pui on a bus service to Kapuskasing and Cochrane on alternate days, doing side trips to Opasatika and Remi Lake. The inâ€" stant popularity of this service again croves that we need good roads, and that they will pay for themselves. So keep this in mind: the transâ€"Canada highway when completed will serve not cnly the tourist and the wellâ€"toâ€"dGo motor car owner. Just as in the Unitâ€" ed States, there will be the luxe transâ€" continental motor buses traversing the national highway on precise schedules summer and winter, in which the man of moderate means may travel on busiâ€" ness or pleasure bent. Where the soil is productive and natural resourc2s} abcund on every hand, isn‘t it inevitâ€" able that the North should expand, handsomely repaying the cost of the highway." CANT OF ANTIâ€"PATRIOTISM WORST OF FORMS OF CANT The Noerthern Tribune, of Kapuskasâ€" ing., last week says:â€""Our North>=rn highways have progressed another stage, marking the metamorphosis of the country. First, in the aboriginal days, I we nad only canvoe pathways and blazed forest trails, over which backâ€"burdens were toilsomely carried. Then, as these I packsack trails became worn, they were widened to permit the passage of a horse dragging a makeshift contrapâ€" tion carrying a light load. A further widening permitted the passage during the winter of a settler‘s sleigh carrying ‘cgs or pulptvcodâ€"first for a single horse, then for a team. After this the ‘govemment was asked to cut a rcad through; and from the most primitive type cf road which was frequently all | but impassable, the advent of mc:or | cars wrought improvement up to the stage we are familiar with. But that is by no the ultimate. Increased traffic, highâ€"speed vehicles and heavyâ€" Iciuty trucks call for the roads to â€"be widened and ‘ker! constantly mainâ€" | tained and improved, for use in wsy weather as well as dry. The demand is still for better communications, and it | must be met. And now we have buses, to prove that all these progressive steps have been justified and to argue for the construction of a national highway. Down at Rouyn they have three brand new buses of the latest type, each seatâ€" ing twenty people for a comfortable fast ride. One of them will ply to Macamic and La Reine from the copâ€" Manyâ€"Sided Values to Highway in the North Collingwood Enterprise:â€"The police magistrate of Pentang is unique in at least one respect. Last week, in his court, a man was convicted of having liquor in an illegal place and fined $100. The victim had no money and rather than send him to jail Police Magistrate Copeland pulled $100 out of his own pocket and paid the fine. London Free Press:â€"The taxation on magazines has been criticized on the ground that it will bar our English magazines. The tax applies only to magazines under the general tariff. British magazines are not touched. Under the heading, "This Story was Duly Sworn to as Gospel," The North Bay Nugget last week says:â€"*"The absentâ€"minded professor takes a back seat at last. A North Bay resident watering the lawn and appiirently thinking of business depresson or the big~ speckled beauties that swim the waters of Algonquin Park, started into the house and by way of disposing of what hg had in his hand put the hose nozzle into his trouser pocket. Needâ€" less to say it did not take as long for him to get back to the realities of life as it did for him to change his clothes." "The acticn of the President is not altogether altruistic. He says that the difficulties in which many foreign counâ€" tries find themselves have reduced their buying power and in a measure are the cause of continued unempleyment in the United States and continued lower prices to the American farmers. If in a year his plan revives prosprrity in that country he may see his way clear to a prolongation of it or some modification of the foreign indebtedness in the hope of making that prosperity of longer duration. At any rate we are quite sure that President Hoover speaks for the American people when he says that they have no desire to attemr!; to exâ€" tract any sum beyond the capacity of any debtor to pay." NORTH BAY MAN TAKES THE CAKE FOR ABSENTMINDEDNZESS "‘The President‘s reason is to give time to debtor governments to recover their national prosperity. We in Canâ€" adsa know by a recent experience the benefit undsr the present conditions of pestrining the payment of obligations. War and Victory bonds to the amount of $250000,000 were coming due very soon. It was an awkard time to meet them and Premier Bennett‘s plan of conversion into longâ€"term obligations was greaily overâ€"subscribed. The naâ€" tions debtor â€"to the United States will feel grateful for this measure of relief. None of them expected complete canâ€" cellation. But a substantial and ultiâ€" mate revision or reduction would be welcome. ’ "Subject to confirmation by Congress the American Government will postâ€" pone all ruyments upon the debts of foreign governments to the American Governmen}t payable during the fiscal year beginning July 1 next, conditiconal on like postponement for one year of all payments on interâ€"governmental debts owing to the important creditor powers. As the leading members of Congress have given their support to the pian it will no doubt be adcopted at Washington. The following editorial appeared in The Mail and Empire on Monday of this week:â€""President Hoover‘s plan to relieve "the world depression does not go as far as it might well have gone. He propl»ses the poestponement for one year of all payments on interâ€"governâ€" mental debts, reparations and relief deb‘s, both principal and interest, not including cbligations of governments held by private parties. To Suspend War Debts for Period of One Year 6 subjectsâ€"Jane Armstrong, Edna Bannerman, Mary McIntosh. 5 subjectsâ€"Rene Gervais, Margaret Smith, Sulo Luhta. | _ _4 subjectsâ€"Bazel Doran, Alice Eyre. 2 subjectsâ€"George Starr. Below 50 per cent.â€"Marghall Hamilâ€" ton, Robert Wilson. ney Hughes, Ross MacPhail, Maizie Yeoman. | 6 subjectsâ€"Arnold Hardie, Ernest Pelkie, Feter Robertson, Ada Wilson I 5 subjectsâ€"John Christie I 4 subjectsâ€"Victor Haneberry. 3 subjectsâ€"Melville Murphy. 2 subjectsâ€"TLillian Brown. Pupils successful in 9 subjectsâ€"Micâ€" hael O‘Shea, Rosalind Cantor, Mary Cartonick, Mary Gallagher, Irja Kuuâ€" sela, Mary Myronyk, Jenny Stefanski, ‘_8 subjectsâ€"Be:ty Martin I 7 subjectsâ€"Charles Armstrong, Sidâ€" ney Hughes, Ross MacPhail, Maizie Form II Where the numeral I follows the name it indicates the pupil obtained pass standing in one subject carried over from Form I each of the nine subjects of the course Names in alphabetical orderâ€" Form I Pupile successful in Nine subjectsâ€" Stella Bezplalko, Bruno Cecconi, Irean Kaufman, Laura Luhta, Kathleen Reyâ€" nolds, Christie Schmelze, Marie St. Paul, Harry Verner, Tiberius Wright. 8 subjectsâ€"Billie Cartonick, Reggie Clark, Sydney Thomas, Isabel Wilson. . 7 subjectsâ€"Hazel Mahon, Harry Mcâ€" Continuation School at South Porcupine Annual Report of the South Porcupine Continuation School. List of sSuccessful Pupils for June 1931. We also have a modern planing plant and can supply you with any kind of dressed lumber in Sprirce and Jack Pine. Inquire for our prices before you buy elsewhere It will pay you. Contractors in heavy teaming work WE ALSO SELL AND DELIVER APPROVED CEMENT GRAVEL FELDMAN TIMBER C0., LIMITED Head Officeâ€"Schumacher, Ont. JACK PINE AND SPRUCE LUMBER MINING TIMBER TIES CEDAR POSTS SQUARE TIMBER MATTAGAMI HEIGHTS, ONTARIO Telephonesâ€"Head Office 708, Mill 709 MANUFACTURERS OF Mills at Thursday, July 2nd, 193

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