Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 16 Jul 1931, 1, p. 7

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24 7. The said Debentures may contain any clause providing for registration thereof authorized by any Statute reâ€" lating to Municipal debentures in force at the time of the issue thereof. Passed this 27th day of June, A.D 1931. 6. The said sum of $70,000.00 so borâ€" rowed and interest thereon and the said debentures shall be and the same : hereby made a charge upon the schoolâ€" house property and premises and on the real and personal property vested in the said Board of Trustees of the Roman Catholic Separate Schools for the Town of Timmins, and upton all the Separate School rates of the said Board to be hereinafter imposed until the said Debentures and each and every of them together with all.interest thereon shall have been fully paid and satisfied. 8. During the Thirty years, the curâ€" rency of the Debentures, the sum of $4,297.41 shall be levied and collected annually by a special rate sufficient therefor, over and above all other rates in the same manner, and from the like persons and prtroperty, by, from, upon or out of which cther Separate School rates are levied, raised and collected for the said Thirty years. 4. The Chairman and Secretary of the said Board shall sign and issue the said Debentures, and the Debentures shall be sealed with the corpfbrate Seal of the said Board. The interest coupons attached to the debentures shall be signed by the said Chairman and Secretary and their signatures to them may be written, stamped, lithographed or engraved. 3. The Debentures as to both prinâ€" cipal and interest may be expressed in Czanadian Currency and may be payâ€" able at the Canadian Bank of Comâ€" merce in the Town of Timmins and at the Head Office of the said Bank in the City of Toronto. 1. That for the purpose aforesalM there shall be borrowed the sum of $70,â€" 000.00 and debentures snall be issued therefor in sums of not less than $100 each, bearing interest at the rate of Four and oneâ€"half per cent. per annum and having coupons attached thereto for the payment of interest. 2. The Debentures shall all bear the same date and shall be issued within one year from the date on which this Byâ€"Law is passed and may bear any date within such year and shall be payâ€" able in thirty annual instalments durâ€" ing the Thirty years next after the time when the same are issued and the reâ€" spective amounts of principal and inâ€" terest payable in each of the said years shall be as set forth in Schedule "A" which is hereby declared to be and form a part of this Byâ€"Law. A Byâ€"Law of the Board of Trustees of the Roman Catholic Separate Schools for the Town of Timmins in the Disâ€" of Cochrane to raise by way of loan the sum of $70,0008 for the purposes hercin mentioned. cipal and interest as they becom AND WHEREAS the amount « whole rateable pmroperty rateab Separate School purposes in th Town of Timmins according to tt revised assessment roll is $2,281, AND WHEREAS the amount : existing debenture debt of the Bo Trustees of the Roman Catholicâ€"© ate Schools for the Town of Timm $191,962.01 and no part of the pri or interest is in arrears. NOW THEREFORE The Board of Trustees of the Roman Catholic Separâ€" ate Schools for the Town of TIMMINS ENACTS AS FOLLOWS:â€" may be to the amount principal and interest other years. AND WHEREAS it w to raise annually the sum during the pertod of Thn pay for the said yearly su cipal and interest as they WHEREAS the Board of Trustees of the Roman Catholic Separate Schools for the Town of Timmins in the Disâ€" trict of Cochrane require to borrow the sum of $70,000.00 to raise funds for the purpose of building and equipping a new eightâ€"room School Buildimg in the said Town of Timmins and for such purpose to issue debentures therefor bearing interest at the rate of Four and oneâ€"half (41) per cent. per annum which is the amount of the debt inâ€" tended to be created by this Byâ€"Law. AND WHEREAS it is exped make the principal of the said C payable in yearly sums during t od of Thirty years, of such a respectively that the : payable for the pmrincipal and â€" in any year shall be equal as nt A. DEPATIE, Chairman. J. A. WALSH, Secretary Principal Interest Total 1,147 .41 1,199.04 1,253.90 1,309.38 1 368.31 1,429.88 1,494.22 1561 .42 1,631.73 1,7085.16 1,781.89 1,862.08 1,945.87 2,033 .43 2,124.94 2,220,56 2,320.48 2,424.91 2,034.03 2,648.06 2,167.22 2,891.74 3,021.88 3,157.86 3,299.96 3,448.46 3,.603.64 3,765.81 3,935.28 4,112.35 U 3,098.37 3,044.41 2,988.03 2,929.10 2,867.53 2,803.19 2,135.99 2,665.68 2,092.25 2,015.52 2,435.33 2,301.54 2,263,98 2,172.47 2,076.85 1,076.93 1,872.50 1,163.38 1,649.35 1,530.19 1,405.67 1,275.53 1,139.55 .. 997.45 848.95 .. 693.77 .. 531.60 . 362.13 . 185.06 2A 297 .41 4,297.41 4,297.41 4,297.41 4,297.41 4,297 .41 4,297.41 4,297 .41 4,297.41 4,297.41 4.297.41 4,297 .41 4,297 41 4,297 41 4,297 41 4,297 41 4,29"7 .41 4,297 .41 4,297 .41 4,297 .41 4,297 41 4,297 41 4,297 Al 4,297 41 4,297 .41 4,297 Al 4,297 .41 4 297 .41 n ; "These trains were known as Numbers 17 and 18 and the new arrangement which becomes effective July 19th, proâ€" vides for No. 17 to run from North Bay to Cochrane Mondays, Wédnesaays and Fridaysâ€"returning on Tuesdays, Thursâ€" days and Saturdays. Branch line serâ€" vice connectiong these trains will also be rearranged at the same time. "Resultant changes in the railway ‘ mail system will tend to improve serâ€" vice to all points along the ling, J. C. Ross, Superintendent of Postal Service, at North Bay, stated this morning. He explained that the mail car service on trains Nos. 17 and 18 would be transâ€" ferred to trains No. 1 and 2 with reguâ€" ‘lar mailing at the larger centres and Icatching po:ts at smaller places. "It ' may mean that one or two smaller cenâ€" ‘tres will be inconvenienced little until the catching ptosts are installed, but when the new system is properly estabâ€" lished it will mean better service to all points," â€"Mr. Ross stated." In the report of the high school enâ€" trance examination resulits last week the name of A. Keelan did not appear in the list of those pissing from the Schumacher centre. The Advance is informed that this was an error, anâ€" other and somewhat similar name apâ€" pearing, whereas the name should have been A. Keelan. Although the list was printed exactly as received, The Adâ€" vance makes the correction to add the name of A. Keelan, Schumacher. Woodstock â€" Sentinelâ€"Review:â€"After a lifetime spent in the work of capturâ€" ng and convicting criminals, a Philaâ€" delphia detective says:â€""I have never yet met a criminal worthy of the roâ€" mance and the glamour attached to the presentâ€"day gangsters The thicf, big or little, is a coward. When corâ€" nered, they all squeal unromantically. The accident occurred when the men were travelling from Oba to Hearst. They were going at rate of about thirty miles er hour when they saw the moose ahead of them. They jamâ€" med on the brake; but could not stop in time to avoid an accident. They struck the animal with considerable force and the moose was thrown over the speeder by the force of the impact. The aniâ€" mal hit the back of the speeder and threw it off the rails The two men were bruised and=~shaken up but were not seriously hurt. Neither was the moose. Indeed, the animal was away from the scene before the two men were. The moose picked itself up and made off into the bush, while the two men after trying to get their speeder righted again had to secure help to do so. Then they proceeded along their way again with their weather eye out for any further animals on the track. The most serious damage done was another moose story for The Sault Ste. Marie Star to claim as an argument for running the Transâ€"Canada highway on the rocky road to Dublin. As a matter of fact, it will be recalled that Oba was the place first mentioned as the point at which the Transâ€"Canada highway from Hearst should connect up with the soâ€"called compromise route. A, KEELAN‘S NAME SHOULD HAVE APPEARED ON LIST A rather unusual accident is reportâ€" ed this week from Hearst. Jack Louis, chief of the forestry department at Hearst, and George Banks, railway carâ€" man on the Algoma Central, had a narâ€" row escape from death when their gasoâ€" line speeder ran into a moose on the line. Ran Into Moose and T‘wo Are Injured Near Hearst Trains 17 and 18 to Run Alternate Days Change Made in T. N. 0. Timetable on July 19th, *"‘Montreal" Train to Run Only Three Times a Week. ours have been current recently | effect that rather drastic reducâ€" 1 vere to be made in the T. N. O. service. Indeed, the reports inâ€" i that the two trains looked upâ€" specially T. N. O. trains, Nos. 18, were to run only three days : inctrad of daily excepting Sunâ€" At first many were inclined to beâ€" «t the stories were nol well 4, and even if thoey were, that | juction in service would be onlyi hort time. Neither of these two | seem to be anything like sure. s annrar that thz2 reporis as to the effect of daisturbing a h has beon established for the commission was very ke any reduction, but have led finally by the pressure ‘ondtions to make arrangeâ€" n the local train orferated th Bay and Cochrane three k instead of six, as Ba ef serious losses in pasâ€" ies which are being exâ€" he T. N. O. Railway in all other railways, the as found it necessary to :urtailment in passenger o mest conditions as they he causes for this conâ€" 11 known and the use of itomobile has contributed npresent situation. inouncement as @y Nugges on r that th?2 repJrs S CQ ; of scervice is quite corâ€" is no suggestion that the 1 temporary. Of course, doubt but that the full resumed as soon as conâ€" but the day when busiâ€" ilroads will double itsel: place. The Following { the case on In a skirmish in the days of the Riel Rebellion, when the loss of human life was regarded as inevitable, a casualty list of 112 would have aroused the popuâ€" lation to heights of sorrow. When William Lyon Mackenzie marched down Yonge street the loss of 112 of his men LOSSs OF LIFE NOT TAKEN SERIOUSLY ENXOUTCGH TOâ€"DAY . iFrom The Barrie Examiner) During the week of Dominion Day 112 fatalities are reported as having ocâ€" curred throughout Ontario. When this news was given to the public, a few solemnly wagged their heads and deplored the loss of life. FPor a brief moment the fact that 112 human lives had beon snuffed out held the stage, and then thought turned to the for:hcoming championship fight and other items of popular interest. And yet 112 human beings 24 hours previâ€" ously were living and loving, eating and drinking and building their castles in the air. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Timmins THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE To Get Your Message Across to the People of Porcupine Camp There is Only One Certain Betâ€"â€"â€"an ad in T he Advance MEMBER â€"â€"â€"â€" AN ADVERTISEMENT 1§ AN INVITATION TO BUY Since the war, however, the loss of human life has become so common that it causes little more than passing comâ€" ment. Never a week passes but has its toll of accidents. Every day one reads of an ever mounting gang toll in Chiâ€" cago. Evidently humanity has become hardened and inured. Life is no longâ€" er regarded with sacredness of former years. The joints of human reasoning have been reâ€"threaded and in this rush of modern existance have become a lig tle loosened. History rephats itself. Many years ago a similar wave of callousness swept over the world. Then came the staid Victorian Age. Then the Great War and its natural reaction. When will the present cycle end? would have been headliimed as "A Ctreat Victory. Heavy Losses by Reâ€" bels." »Just phone 26 and a representative will be right round with a list of snappy upâ€"toâ€"theâ€"minute illustrations for your ad, catchy copy suggestions, and a desire to give you the best of service in making up your advertisement. WITH a circulation of over 3000 going into the homes and the offices of the Camp each week, an advertâ€" isement in The Advance brings your message to those for whom it is directly intended â€"â€"â€" it is a certain guarantee of direct results PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS Phone 26 Long Trip to Far North I to Establisn Hospital Word was received this week of a JOng | s;; journey to be undertaken into the far‘g, North for the purpose of establishing an hospital The journey, moreover, N is to be undertaken by two ladies. They' will go north by rail to the end of steel on the T. N. O. north of Cochrane | and thence by canoe route to Moose" Factory. From Moose Factory the ) L journey will be to Cariton Island and en after that a month‘s voyage to Pantnirâ€" ! ga tung on Bafliin Island by the Steamer | m: Ungava. The two ladies undertakingibe- this long and arduous trip are Mrs.ida Carol Saucier, of Ottawa, and Miss|pr Prudence Hocken, of Winnipeg. Miss|pe Hocken is a trained nurse. [ 80. They will orfi>n a tal at Pangnirtung ciler will act a sma who will be its m ready in the distric fi>n a new Aunglican hospiâ€" irtung, of which Mrs. Sauâ€" a smatron. The physician its medical director is alâ€" district. PV CL, tncy| New Ore Found at the steel . Lake Shore Property a 4%. company hnas very prosp»cts oJ record production figures for this year From official information it is gatherec that ore dimensions and values have improved below the 1,400â€"foot level. In addition to the three paralle ment. between daily., provement. Tailing I been reduced, with the company has very go Mrs, Saucier has been matron of the Indian residential school at Moose Facâ€" tory for the past three years. She was formerly assistant matron at an inâ€" stitution at Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., for five vears. atch this week from Kirkland s that Lake Shore Mines has in interesting position with reâ€" production and mine developâ€" 100 imnil abr and mill is 200 ton: hnave sh hown imâ€" have also t that the Canada said that fellows, | North B when h veins, which constitute the main workâ€" ings at Lake Shore, and will be developâ€" ed vigorously on the five new levels from 2,325 to 2,825 feet during the next few months, a large ore body which has been indicated by diamond drilling in the western section of the property will be tapped by a winze. The new body is said to run to high values in gold, and has an indicated width of over 100 feet. The relation of the new ore zone to the main ore body has yet to be determined, but is expected to be a prominent feature of the comâ€" pany‘s development this year. salid@ that poiili¢s makes st fellows, but so does heat North Bay police officer when he went to shoo s thought, "bums" off the West End residence. They to be the residents of the Thursday, July 16th, 1931 makes officer . discovered ) shoo some, as he off the lawn of ‘hey happened the house. . â€" _ has been trange bedâ€" waves, as

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