Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Apr 1932, 2, p. 3

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manna. Ou- Want Ad. Column Favour your family with CiHCk‘ en Shortcakeâ€"made with Magic as Miss Moir directs. Note it.» deli- cate-flavour, its feather lig' mess! Free Cook Bookâ€"Wh .1 you bake at home, the new Mac .‘. Cook Book will give you dozens , recipes for delicious baked fix .-" . Write to Standard Brands I ,‘., Fraser Ave. and Liberty St.,T( . onto, Ont. the highest degree. Besxdes, {t al- ways gives dependable results.” In whole-hearted agreement with Miss Moir, the majority of Canadian dietitians and cooker); teachers use Magic exclun'vel y. And % “I always use and recommend Magic Baking ' Powder," says i” ._ .. Miss Alice Moir. ;" Dietitian of one of Montreal's finest apartment- hotel restaurants “Magic com- bines efficnency and economy to 3 out of 4 Canadian houséwives use Magic because it gives con- sistftntly better baking results. No \Qonder R‘Iagicuoutsclls all other baking powders combined! Chicken Shortcake T13, Miss Alice [Hair ’3 light, flaky Sift dry ingredients; add shorten- ing and mix in thoroughly with a steel fork; add beaten egg and suf- ficient water to make soft dough. Roll or pat out with hands on floured board. Cut out with large floured biscuit cutter, or half fill greased muffin rings which have been placed on greased baking pan. Bake in hat oven at 475° F. about 12 minutes. Split and butter while hot, and fill with hot creamed chicken. Makes 6 shortcakes. (or 1% cups of bread flour) 3 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder 54 teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons shortening 1 egg % cup water 2 cups pastry flour CHICKEN SHORTCAKE Mr. Murphyzâ€"I ispeal: Subject to correction. and I have not in my pos- session the legal Opinion in respect to this. matter, but as I understand it. the islands in James Bay and Hudson Bay proper are under the jurisdiction of the dominion parliament; that is, they belong to the crown in the right of the dominion. When I spoke about an island in Hudson Bay being under the jurisdiction of the province of On- tario, I had reference to an island which is situated in the mouth of one of the rivers. An island so situated comes under the jurisdiction of the province if the share line on either side of the mouth of the river would. if extended. include that island in the province. I do not wish the hon. mem- ber to understand that in illustrating my point a moment ago by mentioning this particular island. I was saying that all islands in Hudson Bay were'under the jurisdiction 0! the provinces. My understanding is exactly the opposite. Any Bland which issituated within the bay prover, either James or Hudson Bagwould belong to the crown in the fighter the m. As I say. I. Mr. Bradettezâ€"I would infer from the reply of the minister that any islands '1‘. the Hudson Bay inland sea come under the jurisdiction of Ontario. This will naturally imply that all the is- lands in James belong to the provinces of Quebec and Ontario. I have in mind at the present time the Belcher ’slands, part of which, some people from Quebec contend, belong to that province. Naturally we in Ontario contend that the whole of them belong to our province. I bring up {this ques- tion to emphasize the importance of knowing definitely as soon as possible under whose jurisdiction these islands come. so that there may be no delay in any improvement or work, whether mineral development or otherwise, that may be done there. The federal gov- ernment and the authorities of the pro- vinces interested, that is, Manitoba, On- rio and Quebec, should get Itogether in the near future so as to decide the question of jurisdiction. Since the be- ginning of the session I have received several letters of application for cer- tain rights, whether mining or other- wise. in some of the islands in James Bay, and so far I have not been able to get any satisfactory reply from the provincial authorities. I believe at one time the minister was good enough «to grant me a personal interview in which he told me the applications came un- der his jurisdiction. If, according to what he said a few moments ago, the islands in Hudson Bay are really un- der the jurisdiction of the province of Ontario, I believe in my section of the country and even in Toronto they are unacquainted with that fact, and the government owes it to the country to make a definite statement in the mat- ter. Their natural resources have all been given to the western provinces. and I maintain that all those islands. in that great inland sea should be giv- en to the three provinces I have men- tioned. I am making this plea very earnestly on account of certain con- flicts over mining and colonization laws and so forth, because if we have com- plication of jurisdiction. it is bound to hurt the development of that section of the country. - l l F123 the moment I recall no communi- cation being received by the depart- ment in regard to the general question of jurisdiction and administration of those islands in James Bay. Mr. Murphy:-â€"â€"If my memory serves me correctly, I have had only one com- munication in regard to the jurisdic- tion under which these islands would come, and that is concerning one situ- ated in Hudson Bay, not in James Bay. Inquiries were instituted and tit was awexitained that that particular island came under the jurisdiction of Ontario rather than that of the dominion. But diction of the Department of the In- terior. I refer 'to the islands in James Bay. The peeple in my section of the country do not seem to understand that these islands belong to the federal gov-v crnment, and‘I ask the Minister if he has received any requests from the Ontario government to have these is- lands come under provincial jurisdic- tion. Only two years ago the natural resources were returned to the western orovinces and the people in my section of the country are firmly convinced that any lands within the boundaries of James Bay should come within the jurisdiction of either the government of Ontario or of Quebec. Has the minister received any correspondence. or has anything been done by the pro- vincial governments or the federal gov- ernment in the matter of giving these islands to Quebec and Ontario? Lest week brief reference was made to the ovation of the jurisdiction un- der which islands in James Bay and Hudson Bay may come. The matter 'VZLS brought up in the House of Com- mons on Tuesday, April 5th, and so that readers may fully underptand the qeestion and also that they may note ‘hat J A. Bradette the member {or 11.5 riding is constantly leoking aftex matters that are of interest to his rid- ing and its people. The Advance here- Mth gives the full report as published I)» Hansard. the official repzrt of pro- eeedings in the House of Commons at 0‘. tewa. Hansardfs report is as fol- Control of Islands in James Bay Area A. Bradette. Member for North emits-min; Brings Question of Jurisdiction to the Attention of Home. Matter to be Con- sidcred, Says Minister. as the way out of the present difficul- ties for many people. Spending relief money on putting some of the unem- ployed on farms would be an incident of that improvement. Manitoba Free Press:â€"Hon. W. A. Gordon, Minister of Immigration and Labour, states that 44,000 peOple from the cities have been pit back on the land in the last 18 months, not through state-aided colonization, but through the co~operation of the organizations of the two railways and the depart- ment of labour. These included 6 040 families and 12,682 single men. The time certainly has come to reverse the trek to the cities. The 'back-to-the- land movement should be encouraged titled to inherit his estate; The people of Quebec never were feminists. Mr. Mm'phyzâ€"I .s-hall be very glad to give consideration to the representa- tions made by the hon. member; Torc-nto Mail and Empirezâ€"A Mon- treal judge has decided that, woman who murdered her husband is not en- of the provinces, while islands in the Hudson and James Bays are under the jurisdiction of the federal government. B the reason that. people contemplat- ing development work are afraid to go ahead with it, being in a state of un- certainty as to the matter of jurisdic- tion. In making this plea I have the support of the Minister of Labour, who comes frOm my section of the country and is familiar with the situation. I ask the government very earnestly to hand over at the earliest possible moment to «the jurisdiction of the pro- vincial governments interested, namely. Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba, all is- lands within Hudson and James Bays. As I have pointed before as regards Belcher Islands alone, some peeple maintain that part of them should 'be- long to Quebec and part to Ontario, while naturally, as a Northern Ontario man, I maintain that the whole of them should belong to Ontario. I ,want to impress upon the committee that there are complications of this nature, and as it was an easy matter for the federal government to return the natural resources to the three west- ern provinces, it should lbe easy for them to give to the provinces I have mentioned, these islands within cer- Itain degrees of latitude within Iiuzl- I Eson and James Bays. This would help gwonderfully in the development cf the! mineral and other natural res: mess that require capital for deveIOpment; I shall not include agriculture at the present time. This question should be settled satisfactorily so that the people may know exactly where to file their applications. When there are legal complications between the provincial and the federal authorities people na- turally are not willing to spend their money. The mining laws of the do- minion differ in some respects from those of Ontario, and on that score alone I would urge upon the minister the necessity of calling such a conference. I know the government, in the near future will receive communications from people interested in the deveIOpment of Nor- thern Ontario, strongly urging that this matter be settled at an early date. PRIZE WINNER N OWâ€"once despaired of that in the near future a conference b: held between the provinces interestec and the federal government to decide the matter. I know from actual fee that thousands, yes, hundreds of theus« ands of dollars Would be invested ts. day in some of those James Bay island: if the exact jurisdiction were known The fact. as the minister has mention- ed. that islands in the estuaries of some of the rivers are under the jurisdtczfox: Mr. Bradettezâ€"I am Indeed thank- ful to the minister for the useful m~ formation he has given. but again I ask «malt sutuect- to (WHO!) FREE! Wonderful Baby Booklet! “Yesterday,” writes Mrs. J. A. Jarrett of Scarborough Bluffs, Ont, “my fifteen months old son won second prize over more than two hundred other boy babies of the same age in the Canadian National Exhibi- tion Baby Show. When he was five weeks old Eagle Brand saved his life. He was half starved and nearly drove me crazy with his crying.” If you are unable to nurse your baby, send for Baby Welfare literature, using the coupon below. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS up in all lines of activity your com- pany was able to actually increace the number at men employed without a decrease in wages: to disburse for employment. some $2,400,000 for freight 8900 000, and in general ex- pansion $1,750,000; to pay approximate- ly 31200000 out in dividends and to in- crease its surplus by over 31200000 and more man double its ore memes, should convince the sharehzlders of this company um may have a very valuable asset with great pofermtmtles when normal condiflons return I Employed More Men “When it is realized that the per- centage of decrease in value of Cana- dian cop “er production lact year was twelve times the percentage decline in quantity, the value of the precious metal production of your company chound be more readily recognized. It is the flexibility of operation wh‘ch has enabled your company to make the sp‘endld showing which ls noted in the annual report recently forwarded to Von. Realization of "he fact that in a year of general declining product‘on. declining prices and general tightening Copper-Gold Mine “The fact that the value received from gold production is greater than the value of the copper production has led some people to claim that the Home is a gold rather than a cOpper mine. I would say that it is both, it is a great comer-gold mine. I would like to point out that the cause of the value of the copper production (being below that of the gold is the present low price of copper and that the ores are asso- ciated and we cannot produce one with- out the other. It is, of course, moo: fortunate that the Home mine contains such valuable deposits of gold and that the nature of the deposits permits flex- ible Operation and enables the man- agement to increase the production of (gold while at the same time curtailing the production of copper. Do not for- get that the one metal cannot be pro- duoed at the Home mine without the other. “Coming to the statement of opera- tions the revenue from metal recover- ies of $10 506,233.38 is divided as fol- !ows: From copper, $5,000,566.42; from gold, $5,337,757.57; from Silver, $167,- 909.39. At the recent annual meeting of the shareholderMe *Noranda Mines, the president, J. Y. Murdock, pointed out that the Noranda is both a copper and a gold mine. At the Home mine, he said, the one metal cannot be produced without the other. It will be noted that in the revenue for the year, that from gold actually exceeds the revenue from cepper, while there is also a re- venue of some impontance from silver. Mr. Murdock said: “As compared with 1930, the copper produced by your company in 1931 shows a decline in the quantity in 16.7 per cent., and in value a decline of 46.5 per cent; silver in quantity, a decline of 20 per cent., and in value a decline of 32.4 per cent; and gold in quantity an increase of 113 per cent., with a corresponding percentage increase in value. ‘ Gold Production at the N oranda Mine President Point; Out that. Noranda is a Dual Mine, with Large Produc- tion of Gold, as well as Copper. Kivi is a m: age, with 3 WM ing in Finland Klvi had been nervous and had told them he would “fix" them, according to Nenonen. Mr. Justice Lagie, .in dis- charging the prisoner, said he could not disagree with the verdict, but warn- ed accused to avoid trouble in future. “as another jury might not be so Ieni- ent." Nenonen denied that either he or Aho had a knife and he alleged they had been paying a friendly call. The drinking was admitted and John Lah- ti, another member of the party, who arrived in time to hear the shot fired. told the court his memory had been a blank from Saturday until Sunday afternoon, because of liquor, although his own camp had been burned down on Sunday prior to the shooting. Miss Impi Rissu, a young woman in .he house at the time. had heard no marrel. but had heard Kivi tell the two men he would shoot if they made another move forward. NenC-nen. he said, had a knife in his hand. and Kivi retreated into an in- ner room before their advance. He procured his rifle and although ‘he had no intention of killing Aho, his own life was in question, he said, and A110 dropped to the floor when ‘the gun was discharged. ' According to a despatch from Haile: bury on Wednesday of this week. if plca that he had acted in self deft‘tlc 'vlten Oscar Aha was fatally shot in camp in E'by township, near Swe 3: was accepted by a jury in the 3: ~ :- at Haileybury on Tuesday and. " < result. Oscar Kivl. another residc ( that section. "was found not guilty ".1 charge of manslaughter, arising ('1: c the death of Aim. The tragedy :37 place on January 31. last. Aho (Evin of his wounds in the Kirkland Lak hospital, less than three days lat: r. Kivi claimed that A110 and Yrc Nenonen, both of them drunk. had in vaded his camp building on that Sun day afternoon and were abusive an: threatening. Finlauder from Near Kenogaml Acqnlt- ted on Maniaughter Chat-go at Haneybury on Tuesday of This Week. Oscar Kivi Freed by Jury at Haileybury married man, 34 years of wife and two children liv- week I de: shot Swe “No matter where a Saturday after- noon stroll may take us outside the town limits. these birds, returning from their winter homes, will be seen build- l Bird-lovers will find a specially in- fteresting editorial in the last issue of gThe Conservator, of Brampton, On- tario. This article is headed “The FHabitat of Birds,” and while it refers {particularly to the Brampton district . it has a general interest. i The Brampton Conservator says:â€" .“Most of us know the crow and the ro- bin, the harbingers of spring. Towns- fclk seldom see the shy feathered crea- tures that prefer the open country or hide in the cedars and the swamps. Watching their return from the south is a fascinating pastime and can de- velop into a hobby that is as interesting as any for one's leisure time. “The habitats of the different spe- cies is as xinteresting as migration. Where can we look for the songsters? In pines and evergreens the Chikadeesn Waxwings, Grosbeaks and Grackles will: be found. In gardens and orchards} Thrushes, Wrens, Warblers and Orioles} make their homes. Woodpeckers. Nut-5 hatches and Creeping Warblers like thel trunks of trees. Sparrows, Meadow-. larks, Bobolinks, Bluebirds and Cow- birds prefer the open fields. On the fences and at the roadside we will see Flycatchers, Goldfinches and Thrashersl In marshy places and around the ponds! the untidy Kingfisher will be on friend- ly terms with Red-winged Blackbirds, Pewees and Water Thrushes. THE HABITAT OF BIRDS IN THE BRAMPTON SECTION tion In their rate of wages. and approximately 93 per cent. of tha penditm-e for operatmg. supplies mohinery last. year was expend: Canada. ploying between 1.560 and 1.600 men continuously and without any reduc- ONTARIO FOR TRIM PAINTING If you are interested in 50% to 100% greater durability, better color and color retention for trim painting, you will investigate C-I-L Trim and Trellis Finishesâ€"a modern miracle of chemical research developed in C-I-L laboratories. ONG after ordinary paints have failed, C-I-L New Process Paint retains its color and gloss. For new Process Paint is a different paint‘ . . . a pre~tested paint, made by a new process, to meet the new painting requirements of to-day. Why not consult a man who thoroughly understands paint . . . a master painter? He can specify the C-I-L paint and varnish products which are most satisfactory for the c work you have in mind. Development PAINT to This year . . here that Nomads and ‘ In; their nests. Right now Bluebirds mnpsny are now em- Robins. Song Sparrows, Red winged 1 1,560 and 1.600 men Blackbmls, ngnshers. Fuckers and (1 without any reduc- Purple F‘mches are amvtng. The Cow- cte of wages. and that bird, Meadowiark. Phoebe and Vesper 3 per cent. of the ex- Sparrow will come in a week or two. peratlng. supplies and The roadside-s. woods and swamps are year was expended in.waktng once more 'to the chit chat of MARSHALL - ECCLESTON E LIMITED TIMMIN S, ONTARIO selves in the “We who have the privilege of living close to the open country. where iden- tification is easy with the help of a pocket bird book. are missing a great waking once more ‘to the nest. builders. 0 0mm OATS “Baby’s Own Tablets have indeed been a friend to me," writes Mrs. Mason. “When the children are over-tired and restless I give them their do‘se of Baby‘s Own Tablets at night, and in the morn- ing I can see that a wonderful change has taken placeâ€"they are happy, con- tented and soothed children, and a pleasure to cope with." Mrs. F. Kathleen Sager, 152 Dynevor Mrs. M. Mason. Halifax. praises BABY'S OWN TABLETS. Cranky and Fretful TODA Yâ€" Happy and Contented ortuni YES TERDA Y NEW DESIGN SOLD BY Malta and Keep ChildrepflWellâ€"At Mothers K6; if we fall to interest our ese feathered creatures." DR. WILLIAMS' AVOID Painting CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED Paint and Vamixb Divixion Road. Toronto. says: “I have found it wise to give Baby‘s Own Tablets when- ever ‘Sonny’ has a slight cold or when‘ ever he is inclined to be cross." Give your child BABY'S OWN TABLETS for tcething troubles, colds, simple fevers, colic, upset stomach, con- stipation. sleeplessness, and whenever he is cross, restless and fretful. Chil- dren take them eagerlyâ€"like candy. And they are absolutely SAFEâ€"see the certificate in each ZS-cent package. Over 1,250,000 packages sold in 1931. Manufactured by TABLE, 3 ntlc. eflective tonic to boil: liver and gmls. Dr. Carter's Little Liver Pills are without equal for con recting Constipation. Acidity. Head~ aches, Poor Complexion and Indiges‘ tion. 250. 8: 75c. red P .. everywhere. Ask for Carter's by RA; IR. Gratefully, Mrs. C. writes: “The first dose of your wonderful Carter's Little Liver Pulls gave me t relief after every medium: 1 Mia failed." Because they are PURELY VEGE- Bilious For Days At Time Until She Took Vegetable Pills Thursday, APIT“_218§L1932 NP” 22!

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