Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 5 Jan 1933, 2, p. 8

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Canada Profiting Through Gold Mines The plan of t ancient to step ‘. I. W“ thrnmcnt Madc- Wis-r I.” III Amnfln; for Purchase of Cum Gold at Ottawa. Illa llekl Canadian Dollar. PM}! EIGHT We want to thank you for making our Christmas business the best we ever had. This in spite of all the talk of a depression. This was only made possible by you. It only goes to prove you appreciate an up- to-date store with a high-class assorted stock. We took very great pains in choosing a stock that we thought would please you. We were not disappointed, we were cleaned right out. We have nothing to carry over. so that our stock next year again will be entirely new. Again we Thank You. . If you want the best in Drugs we have it. All Prescriptions are compounded by Chemists with WldC o The Greatest Kidney and Bladder Medicine known. a , It flushes the kidneys and bladder, the urine be- owar S I ney onlc comes a natural colour, the poisons and acids are driven out. Then away goes the dull heavy pain in the hack, your eyes become clear, no more specks to be seen. Your skin becomes healthy, the cold and then hot feeling leaves you, your headaches go. We tell you if you are troubled with any of these symptoms Howard’s Kidney Tonic will remove them all, you will feel one hundred per cent better, then this being the case why don’t you get a bottle at once. Sold only at The (loldtield Drug Store. There is nothing much worse than a bad stomach. With weak di- gestive powers, you feel nauseated, you are bloated with gas, your omac r0“ 0 food won’t digest, just simply lies there and rots, forming a gas. That is most uncomfortable to say the least. With a pain in your chest just like a hard lump, well we tell you relief is sure if you will take Howard's Stomach Medicine. Why do you suffer when right at your reach is a medicine that will remove it all and taken for a short time it stimulates your digestive powers, and you can eat what you fancy and there is no depressed feel- lng'. Howard’s Stomach Medlcme is sold only at The Goldfield Drug Store. If you are run down, tired, no ambition, losing weight, no appet are intended to work, you are nervous, can’t sleep, no pep. We t Timmins alone have been benefitted and to-day can’t say too n Never Die. You can have all your old time pep restored and N only in Timmins at The Goldfield Drug store. After the Flu, this At the Ooldlield Drug Store is where you buy the medicine that really does you good. We sell only the purest of Drugs. For instance you take our Pure ' ° 0 0 You can’t buy, any purer Oil, you can buy a cheaper grade orweglan 0 Iver l of oil but you pay the same price as you do for our Purest . tested and retested oil from Norway. You should give Cod Liver Oil toyour children. It will make bone and pep them up and will guard against colds. Miners should take 1t contlnually, especially if you are working undergrouml, it guards against Silicosis. It is full of vitamines. Expecting mothers should take it and take lots of it. You will be well repaid. Buy the best and when you buy from The Goldfield Drug Store you get the best. Our special price for this pure Oil for anuart Bottle ...................................................................................... 89c Triple Oils - A most }_)leasant medicine for children or F01“ Coughs and 108 Nox a Cold grown ups. It stops the cough and heals " " before other cough medicines have started COldS take Don’t allow a cough to continue. It to act. may end seriously. Get a bottle of Noxâ€"a-Cold and kill the cough. If you have the grippe or a cold that makes you feel hot and cold, your skin dry with fever, take along with Nox-a-Cold Cough Medicine 21 box of Howard’s Grlppe and Cold Tablets and we will refund your money if it doesn’t break up your cold in 24 hours. The combination will only cost $1.00. Electric Bed Warmers, from... We are sole agents for Barbara Gould’s Toilet Preparations--P0wders, Lip Sticks, Creams and Rouge Rubber Goods Tablets. No matter what the pain is or what causes the pain we guarantee Nox- NOX-a-Paln a-Pain Tablets to stop it at once. Headache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatic ‘ pains, they all run away if you take Nox-a-Pain. They reduce fever. Ladies who suffer will find them a boon for Monthly Pains. No house should be without a tube of these wonderful lifitle Nox-a-Pain Tablets. Where there is a cold with a fever, take them. See how quickly it goes. T iey are so much superior to any other pain tablets. Price 25c. '7 #M Constipation Russian Oil Goldfish, Free Hot Water Bottles, 53c i Third Ave. THE GREAT |ND|AN HERB TONIC “ NEVER DIE ’fl’ sian Oil and Olive Oil. This is a very fine combination. Cod Liver Oil is a tonic and builder, Russian Oil for constipation, Olive Oil for the stomach and . You. couldn’t take a" better combination, perfectly blended and all of the finest grade. It etter and the taste of Cod Liver Oil is covered by the others. A large quart bottle 89c M 0‘] Here is a good one. We combine 3 Oils in one, equal parts Cod Liver Oil, Rus- ‘ I S i 'a Bowl, Seagrass and Pebbles. 1d larger bowls. If Scobell Ointment Nox Eczema is a marvellous salve for zema, Itch or any other disease of the skin. It stops irri trouble. A large jar price One Dollar. from I He me atmhndmmmhhmm for cmmwuepuuwun dollar from W at the kind mummmmmes. It When you buy a lubricating oil you must get the heavy oil. There are many grades of Petroleum 011s, many are useless. We offer you the genuine heavy Russian Oil. The very finest and heaviestu’e can buy for 89c quart. ”DIGEWDIWWIF 11 yUL‘. but DIUUUICU VVIUIL LULLULleuuLVL; yum-.u u-..” ___.____ _ betlme you W111 use 111 the morning With a new feeling, They are purely vegetable. No drug, they do not gripe or cause pain. Price 25c. If you are trogblec} with gonstipatipn take BEDTIME PILLS. One taken at - L‘AA]: iam mknxr (‘1‘!) 1\11Y‘O]‘7 of all descriptions. Hot Water Bottles, Syringes, Belts, Suspensories. Lini- ments, Plasters, Trusses. Everything that is found in a first class drug store, we have it. The There is nothing much worse t gestive powers, you feel nause food won’t digest, just simply That is most uncomfortable to Saturday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday with a purchase of 50c or over of any Rexall preparation or any remedy in this ad- vertisement and 21 15c package of Fish Food you will receive free 'ebbles. If you wish to buy additional fish you can do so, also experience. Two quarts. Guaranteed for two years Special fi‘afifiéfib“ “$515? no appetite, your bowels are not movingas they p. We tell you that Two Thousand people in ay too much for this wonderful Herb Tonic 3d and Never Die Tonic will do it for you. Sold Flu, this is the Tonic for you. ,__.____â€"â€"â€" Store us salve for all skin eruptions, such as Ec- It stops 1rr1tat10n at once and removes the Ed! 3;. you good. We sell only the THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. W8. ONTARIO Mdmmmmmrxueen joyod the bandits mvedundermem sent plan by the 00mm Govern ment. Phone 648 . $2.85 up Regular $1.00 E! FEE! HE! ,Congress that a glass of beer has the [equivalent ‘kick" of a cup of coffee. HE He must be in the pay of Brazil. %. Ottawa Joumalzâ€"A scientist told i “It might have been possible for Ot- tawa to have helped out Calgary in this instance but it would have done so tol the disadvantage of any other com-l I munity required to remit funds to New! 3 York: It is more equitable for Ottawa to sell gold at opportune misments in .New. York, to keep the Canadian dol- [ lar at about; 15 per cent. discount, than ito favour any given community. At :the time when Calgary debt was con- ‘tracted no thought :was given to the; ‘possibilities of a depreciated dollar. ’Many similar debts were contracted ,freely, without consulting Ottawa or: iany other point. Now that the pay-! fiments have come due there is a lot of; fprotest over a situation that nobcdyi [can change, not even the earnestly: ;striving Mr. Bennett. | debt in New York. discovered that an Oddiflolul $300.0“) in Cant-dim funds V.” malted to settle in terms of New You: dollars. The city applied to Ot- tawa. for gold and was informed by Hon. E. H. Rhodes that “It will be quite impossible for the Dominion Govern- ment to furnish gold at par. All our 8016 is purchased at a. premium." ac« 00111108 to the reporting of the incident in the Ottawa Citizen. “The Citizen goes on to talk about gold and exchange and reveals a sur- prising attitude. “The government is 9931118 the nice set by New York for gold produced in Canada Canadian wage earners in the gold mines are paid at Canadian rates with Canadian currency. Any taxes on the gold in- dustry are paid into the public treasury similarly with Canadian money." says the Ottawa Citizen. which then goes on to remark that: “The government at Ottawa is allowing the Dominion treasury to be mulcted for the benefit of private interests. by paying a heavy premium in addition to the Canadian par value of the gold produced in Can- ada." Which sirhply is not so. The Canadian gold mines are receiving from Ottawa the world price for gold, no more, no less. The Ottawa Govern- ment has insisted that the gold mines sell their output to Ottawa otherwise the mines would ship it abroad and get paid for it in New York or other cur- rency. to their considerable gain, it is suspected. ! “Had the city of Calgary done its ; financing in London, payable in pounds ls sterling, instead of having done so in gNew York, where it was payable in jgold dollars, the city Council would i have been able to buy its pounds today | at greatly depreciated prices with more valuable Canadian do -:.1ars In such an ‘event would Calgary have turned in to :Ottawa the difference? Certainly not. {Therefore it is just as equitable for ithe city to take its loss on this ex- change transaction. Many cities and lI:I.\11.)¢.u':a.tuons that financed in London :are taking advantage of the situation. 1 It is part of the price that Great Bri- |tain has had to pay for going off the ‘gc-ld standard. To twist this situation {as the Ottawa paper does, into a re- i flection on the gold mines, seems some- i what absuied to us. “Ottawa has, in fact, cleverly used its gold, obtained from the mines. More- over, the advantages which the gov- ernment has enjoyed in this respect have helped out the whole country, by keeping the discount on the Canadian dollar at a reasonable rate. It is diff.- cult to understand what the Ottawa Citizen is driving at, unless it hopes to create in the minds of uninformed peo- ple an impression that the Bennett Government is playing into the hands of private interests. This would be political partizanship of a most ob- jectionable type, particularly at this time when there is such uncertainty about fiscal affairs everywhere. “We assume that even the Ottawa Citizen will admit that London, in its capacity as world financial centre, probably did the only possible thing when it paid its debt installment in gold in New York on December 15th. Gold was the only thing that, in Lon- don’s judgment. would meet the situa- tion. Gold is the only commodity that is acceptable at this time for the pay- ment, of international debts. Canada has wisely assumed control of export and instead of complaining abcut this situation and publishing innuendocs as to the benefits the mines are securing from the arrangement the Canadian newspapers might be better occupied in acknowledging the service which our gold production is rendering to the country at this juncture." ARTHUR HUNTON. PIONEER KIRKLAND CAMP. PASSES The death occurred in the Hailey- bury Hospital on Friday Dec. 23rd. of Arthur Hunton. of North cobalt, The late Mr. Huntcn. who was a single man 49 years of age, had been in poor health for some years, being a suflerer from a valvular disease of the heart. He was taken to the hospital on Thursday and died the following day. He was one o! the pioneer stakers of the Kirkland Lake gold camp, having along with his brother Jack staked what is now known as the Hunton Kirkland. and was heavily interested in that property. For the past year he has conducted a filling station op- posite the Catholic church in North Cobalt. The vfuneral took place on! Sunday afternoon from hls late resi- dence to Halleybury cemetery, Rev. Canon Hincks omciatlng. He is sur- d by his brother. Jack, Halleybury and Lortie, defence; Auger, Arundell. Walsh, forwards; Laflamme, McKin- non, Richer, Lamoureaux, Tremblay, Burns, Irvine and Chambers. Refereeâ€"R. Wilson. Timmin-s took the offensive at. the fa cc-ofl’. Walsh passed twice to Arun- dell; the latter failed to find the net. Walsh tried a backhander which Gin- ‘gras turned aside. ’ Hexlmer and Massecar made a rush; i the former passed the puck on'reach- ‘ing the defence and skated ahead of I the puck. It looked as if. Referee Wil- scn should have called the play back, but instead he allowed it to go on. Massecar shot the puck and Hexlmer batted in in after Orfrankus failed to ‘ clear. ! Timminszâ€"Orfrankus. goal; Porter I vOOOooocOOOOOOOOOOOOO '0’:O:0:9:oo0.0o.00090000006000.:Izozozozozo‘ozoz Lortie tried a lone rush, but was checked at the defence. Porter 'broke iup a Dome attack, and tried a lone rush but was tripped by Meier the latter got a jail term. Burns followed him for the same thing. Tremblay gct right in. but Gingras was too good for him Murphy got penalized for elbowing, followed by Massecar. Tim- mins had a fine chance now with a two-man handicap, but played indivi- l dual play, instead of combination while the Dome shot the puck down the ice to waste time. Murphy came on and was soon chased again for roughing it. Dome 2. Timmins 0. Dome Wins Secoxd. the A. F. .Kenni 2‘ The Dome hockey club chalked up another victory in the Kenning Cup series by defeating Timmins 011 the latters ice 2-1 Friday night There were only about six hund1ed present at the start of the game which was somewhat ragged due to the new f:11wa1d pass which both teams t11ed cut. The pass is designed to make the game faster and less ringing of the bell for ofisides, but on Friday last it was much the opposite, owing to the players passing the puck at the wrong place or gztting ahead of the puck in enemy‘s b ue line. ' Dome: â€"Gingras, goal; Murphy and Massecal, defence; Cook, Hexlmer and W. Smith, forwards; subs, Michaelson, Doran, G. Smith, Meier, Proulx and Murray. Massecar drew the first penalty for boarding Walsh, the latter having to be helped off the ice. Timmins put on the favourite kid line amid cheers, Gingras was tested by a great shot from Laflamme and another close one from McKinnon. Laflamme was chas- ed for tripping Cattarello. Timmins sent out their second string of forwards. The Dome pressed. Cat- tarelio missed the net after getting right in on Orfrankus. ‘MiChaelson got the rubber and shot from the boards; the puck went into the twine tllrsugh Orfrankus’ pads. ._.. m- sâ€" i 'lame at Timmins 0n 1‘ ridav La. W J by the Dme Hoc- key Team hv Score of 2 to - ter Keen entest. “Forward Pass” Seen in A ion Here. Balnce of Games for Kenning ( up to béPla (1 Later. The Dome started on the offensive! at the face-off in the second half. and‘ Porter saw the referee’s finger point to the little box for him to take a rest fCr tripping Doran. Arundell went the full length of the ice and i; looked like a sure score. only he didn't count because Massecar gave him the knee and accompanied Porter. Burns fol- lowed for a trip. Meier was chased. With all these in the ccoler hockey W38 out of the question. Massecar came on, skated across the ice, got the puck and slammed it down the ice, and drew a three-minute penalty. The Dome were being hard pressed now and Gingras was pulling off sensa- tional saves. Arundell and Walsh O. O. I. O. 00 .0 O. O. O. n,___AL (1-- Soft Coals at our yards umacher and We have the following highvj; es of Harthnd Timmin SOFT CO Saundeis Cleek Acorn lu p ram All?“t New River, 6 x 2, lump, 1' eat V11 gml Smokelm 31k Horn Lump and Stoker {on Little Cum Domestic C HARD CO Welsh and America mhmcite Lyken’ s ValleV', Red 4‘ Isizes Newcastle, White A sizes THOUGIITFUL CARE- AND DI CHARACTERIZE SERV ~ s. 'l‘. WALKEIeâ€"é TELEPHONE 509 .2 n2u2u2 .2 2.2.5.... ...n..“2.$cu..uv..‘..\.u.\s . o o c o o o a 0 O O ‘ 5...»;go...o.u.u.~.“,“,“:“}4m¢:cow.u:uxn:n:¢ OPEN DAY TIMM Funeralc [lead (nflce and YR .__,_ Branch Gee ’I‘IMMINS, NT. KIRKLAND ARE Phone 1% ; Phone 3! | 7126 fig fault with 'I‘ W hdividual plays. - | 'lhmlns boys have a. lo 0 learn e forward pass. a new will take a. lot. of p tising :r‘a‘nl‘l" In mnn‘n ‘A ‘nnun ‘ was too Anya hie not. get th pack by the gem. Amn- _ g right in agai but was ;Murphy. The Mcr was f ing his knees inhe check. -feet away waaenf off. 1'. after him. Ijaemblay - the jail. Mwljy came re he could get tihis posi- tion Wiclin chased him if again Jus'jt bet the gong Hexim' missed anfaipen a1. Dome 2, Tim-ins O. e D ' pressed at the art of the pc . Orfrankus can out to an 1 mi | the empty goal. I‘remblay an B combined with 1e result th 1 B scored with a fin-erossâ€"shot o Tre lay’s pass. Lort tried a rus His shot hlt thepost and G ms leared from a scramble. and another sczmble took Lb Glngms cleared. .-I_e saved rom Aru-ndell and 'filsh and mblnatlons. Munj' and : VMu‘ y came down buljghe shot (1 t1; net. Murray trili: to beat " 3111: but the goalie ups:,; I ',he 1d shoot. Burns 9' t; in the ' shot hich just missed“ 185311811 «bore: Dame, 2; ' j Comments fgphe e worked the to lbut. forgot; to s meniayh enemys’ blue linef Warn 1 wants to learn ‘ eep his mes elbows down and 11 stay 0; the its more. x Tdn'ggg, Erie; 'bome goalie} ve one of the fleet. exhibitions of keeping sine Wbters’ time. ' 'I'lhe inst play on Timmin ide was when be original first, 1, was at; W, 18., Laflamme, 11 and "2hr kus wants to learn,’ eep l.tc that if he intends to!) ( 3' 99 id line showed up a ‘K utes they were on. " 9 file feature of the h Dome shooting the This kind of play keeps the gate rec in Meat money. play '- IT’S OLDES’I‘ mas“); :PASSED AWAY Lu!- '. - oldest resident. of Co“ tnpassed 1 early on Monday of week in __ arson of Miss Jane Murray. who ‘- her 95th year, followan a slight . of the “flu.“ :_ . late Miss Murray was born in .owvme. Truro County, Nova Sco- '..’ nd was one 01 eight, children of ' tMurray and Marion McKenzie _ --; the sole suran: member, of family and, since coming to Go- ' 1918. made her home with her ,. w. Alex D. Murray. 66Jamleson " .. . She was a member of the Unit- !hurch. She is survivm by three ws; Alex, or 03132111 Dan of Klrector g” THIRD AVENUE its ND NIGHT the Advance Want. Advfimcnts ~ 0 33:": ...........XA..?.1X..... bury, and James, of Puyn Match in Cup Stries r. :mwm. m: oncouoouoono hoou’n‘Moou:u OOHOONQOMQ .X “:23???“ aux???” uront 1c game ck down 115 hocâ€" ts down. ey! NT P “(EEK th

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