Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 18 May 1933, 1, p. 6

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seeking Fair Play For The Newsboys : Don‘t Let Any of the Lads Lose Any thing Through Your Carelessâ€" ness or Indifference, Have Their Money Ready for Them Each Week. pay the but they paying a: vance fe past : people PAGE 81X Trains Nos. 17 Pacific Railway Trains Nos. 46 vice dailly betwe rane, carrying tween Toronto ; and Rouyn, and Cochrane. Park operating â€" betwe Swastika. These National Railway Train No. 17â€" Monday, Wed ‘Through Sleepi Timmins. ‘Train NO. 1 Service Cochrane to Fraserdale and intermediate points, Train No. 101â€" Tuesday and Thursday, leave Cochrane £.45 am. arrive Fraserdale 12.45 p.m. Train No. 102â€"Fraserdale to Cochâ€" rane, Tuesday and Thursday, leave Fraserdale 1.20 pm., arrive Cochrane 5.15 p.m. Train No. 103â€"Leave Cochrane 8.45 a.m., Saturday, arrive Moosonee 4.45 p.m. Connections at Porquis Jcet. Troquois Falls. Connections at Porquis Jet.. Connaught, South Porcupine macher and Timmins. Train No. 104â€"Leave Moosonee 6.00 a.m., Monday, arrive Cochrane 1.15 p.m. Trains Nos. 101, 102, 103 and 104 operate Restaurant Car. see current time table or apply to any T. N. O. Railway Agent for full particulars. 8848 SS 4* »+: M Feneral Freight and Passenger Agent »nplaine _ ' ' § y‘» ‘ csmmsn ) ) l 3y i; es i i i l ememee: o. 5 ic o4 i ce is i i i) ) ) (, ) mm i) i o i5 i; mmmeme aae ans i) / ammmo. 3. emaparee i3 i mm d ) i â€"mlâ€"r‘~\‘""-"‘-N-.‘.â€"._"‘...â€"“-..â€"“_“-.'. " ‘ 4 4 4* Beve pet ONTARIO RAILWAY TRAIN SERVICE he tb nder 16 4 1 No. 18â€"Cochratr sday, Thursday a Sleeping Car sem nto and Timmins, and between Mon Parlor Cafe similar cond their attenti ind to the se At is Better to Build Than Pay Rent N OPCTMA dnesda 16 TAKE ADVANTACE OF PREVAIL! LINCG LOW BUILDING GOSTS Simms, Hooker Drew REASONABLE PRIGCES 16 the finest residential lots in Timmins Toke St.â€"â€"Patricia Boulevardâ€"â€"Cherry St. Eighth and Ninth Avenues Rochester Heights Subâ€"Division 6 ne to North ind Saturday. vice Timmins or at office of Gauthier Platus, Reed Block, Timmins ROCHESTER HEIGHTS LIMITED We will be glad to show you over lirected to s hardship Canadian daily for GOCnrane The ‘\ity | Friday. Ottawaâ€" he \the boy, however, the amount due, small though it may be, is very vital. ‘He has to collect it or he suffers. If the newsboy presses you to pay up, !don’t get huffy Remember the boy in the first place has been good enough to accommodate and trust you. Don‘t let him see that his confidence has been misplaced. If you owe the newsâ€" boy a week or two weeks or a month or lwhatever it may be, don‘t let the little lad down. Pay up like a good fellow. Remember the boy needs the money. \ Play the game fairly with the little felâ€" ‘lows and you will find that they will play it with you. The Advance believes that all that will be necessary wiil be to call attenâ€" ltion to the matter, and the readers of ’The Advance who buy the paper from newsboys will see that the lads are promptly paid what may be due them, and the pay kept up. Few people will ask the boys to "carry‘" them when they understand the situation. It is the boy that losses and if he misses many colâ€" lections he is in serious way. If you owe any of the newsboys anything won‘t | you plase pay up the boys at once. The |boys believe that you will. One boy last week asked The Advance to say something in the paper about the matâ€" ter. ‘"‘Last year I had several custoâ€" mers behind in their bay," he said., "but Sevet papet | newsboys ar from having case the bo all will ag: he doesn‘t fellows. T accommod: way they not afford iIt: | 10n amou show . t is on the news hat there will be hould be noted â€" ewsbovs buvy the 1 ny psop w just h the oth the man s omer dep« mon nd l1¢ Th WE cIgars, or othe ind think nothing an, but to cart who p man Engquire uld 1A} t uld other A ( ich AJl oOf It. °l amount suffers. If to pay up, _ the boy in ood enough OITL money an too bad i ys are goo J ready t spend the | MRS. E. R. FILDES PASSES boy for a | AWAY AT COBALT HOSPITAL In p1 ad: int LIBERAL TERMS famil sed t f thes Sullivan Newton litt ew! llin juit @0006 0 800 e eR o again. > The best way, of course, is to have the nickel ready each week for the newsboy. If a week happens to be missed for any reason, lack of change, absence when the boy calls, or for any other reason, then the amount owing should be ready for the boy next week. Don‘t forget that it means a lot to the newsboy. Use him well; he deserves good usage. You will not miss the money, and you will feel a whole lot better for paying up and keeping paid A despatch on Monday from Cobalt says that Mrs. Ethel Richards Fildes, wife of J. J. Fildes, a resident of Cobalt camyp for the past 20 years, died in the municipal hospital at Cbalt early Satâ€" urday mcecrning from the effects of a stroke suffered three days before. Mrs. Fildes had not been in very good health for socme time past, and last Wednesâ€" day her husband, returning from a trip cswn tcwn, found her unconscious on the floor. She was rushed to hospitat, but failed to rally. Her elder daughter died less than six months ago. Bcrn in Cornwall, England, Mrs. Fildes was in her 43rd year. The family came to Canada 20 years ago and Mrs. Fildes had lived in the Cobalt district since. She was actively identiâ€" fied with the Rebekahs, and was a member of Silver Lodge at Cobalt. The funeral was held on Monday afternoon, under Rebekah auspices, from St. James‘ Anglican church to Haileybury cemetery. Rev. Charles Glover, the rector, conducted the serâ€" vices. Mrs. Fildes is survived by her husband; two sons, Jeffrey and James, and one daughter, Roma, also by her mother; one brother and four sisters. Bill Hogarth returned home last week from Queen‘s University to spend the summer holidays with his parents. {fter The Advance had a piece in about . they all paid up. I wish they would Glasses were first ustd to improve defective sight. Today we know that many who have better than average eyesight should wear glasses. You may have perfect vision and still suffer from eyestrain. Correct glasses effect the only posiâ€" tive cure. Glasses Relieve Evestrain HAVE YOUR EÂ¥ES EXAMINED Reg., Optometrist Phone 212 HMalperin‘s Jewellery Store An order was issued by the magisâ€" trate to have a car, allegedly purchasâ€" cd by the accused with part of the stolen money, and which had been placâ€" °d in the hands of the Crown, turned over to the complainant, Petroski. Crown Attcrney T. E. McKee stated that the only question to be decided upâ€" \ on iwas one of restitution, and that he had heard nothing (of any being made. If restitution were not made, he asked that the court pass sentence and that the car be turned over to ‘the plaintiff. Defence Counsel, J. H. McDonald, \ mentioned that the accused woman inâ€" 'sisted then, as at her trial, that the vehicle had been purchased with money ! she had saved over a pericd of 11 years. J. E. Bedard acted as private prosecuâ€" tor, on behalf of the complainant, Petroski, in the case. 2 Cb ons ces .. m : mm MXWN\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\W Inen Increased Taxes on | Stock Transactions Par â€" cent: volve Ontario schedule Now Conforms with that of Dominion. Province Adopts Same Rate of Tax as Dominion for Stock Transactions. volved in the transaction. The Dominion governme fcllows: On shares sellin 1â€"10 of 1 per cent. of mark shares selling from $1 to share; on shares selling 1c per share; on shares $25 to $50, 2c per share; or ing from $50 to $75, 3c p hand ng from $50 shares selling share; on sh per share. Under the j ule, the tax Shore, selling $1 par value, Temiskaming Woman Given Six Months‘ Imprisonment In the next price class, $5 to $25, the tax on International Nickel, with no par value, will be $1 plus $1, against $l plus 48 cents; on Hollinger, $5 par, $1 plus $1 against $1 plus 15 cents; on Picneer of B.C., $1 par, $1 plus $1, against $1 plus 3 cents. On lowerâ€" priced stocks, the change involves an increase of cnly a few cents per hunâ€" ared shares. A¢ Sentence of six months imprisonment in the Ontario Reformatory was metod cut Saturday mcrning by District Maâ€" guilty of the thei plea for trial by court ruling that the arguments weé to send the case 1 jury. The woman had been taken into custody at Temiskaming by Chief of Police Light, of Mattawa, some time after the date of the theft. Petroski claimed the money was taken from a ccoat in his room, and at the time it disappeared ‘he was taking a wash. The accused woman was stated to have been the only person, beside FetrOski in his room, at the time the money was taken. She was reported to have left shortly after for Toronto in a taxi, and to have returned to Mattawa in a new car. Evidence in the case was taken at a hearing in Mattawa. "Observer," writing in his column of "Sportology‘"‘ in The North Bay Nugâ€" get says:â€""While the annual meeting of the N.O.W.S.A. here Saturday didn‘t draw a big congregation of delegates interest of a live character was evinced in other ways. Plans were made for the operation of groups in ‘the Porcuâ€" pine, Kirkland Lake, Cobalt, North Bay, turgeon Falls and Sudbury regions and with good prospects of keen battlâ€" ing for the association title and the Hon. G. Howard Ferguson trophy when the playdowns roll around. One ¢f the most pleasing happenings at the conâ€" clave was the reâ€"election of Miss Marâ€" garet Stevenson, Sudbury, as president. An intimation from the Nickel City cast up a fear that Miss Stevenson would thrown down the directing reins, and all because of a rumpus over the deâ€" claring of association winners last seaâ€" son. This difficulty has nothing to do with the NOWSA. in the first inâ€" stance, but a deadlock in Nickel Belt League circles made it necessary for the to make a pronouncement in crder that the playdowns would be carried to a conclusion. It‘s ancient history of a regrettable nature nowâ€"â€" and there is absolutely no justification for soreness against the NO The girls‘ game will only thrive by beâ€" ing directed by a countryâ€"wide organâ€" ization. If it is dismembered and alâ€" lowed to worry through on the activiâ€" ties of local leagues here and there, its demise can be counted in months." sOME COMMENTS ABOUT WOMEN‘sS SOFTBALL AsSsSOC A Y irk 1t rlu 1« l on shares selling from $5 to $25, share; on shares selling from $50, 2¢ per share; on shares sellâ€" m $50 to $75, 3¢c per share; on selling from $75 to $150, 4c per on shares selling over $150, 5¢ Ontarilo tax ha $100 of the am t, as all evidence ere in, it was too up before a judge 11 11 elling unde market valut OHM11 _ Dominion hare, based k changing )ck with ns imount stock under CIrcuial effective Dominior it Queen‘s redul incia 1 Timmins Man Bereaved by the Death of His Father The Ottawa Journal on this week says:â€"*"Frank Chapel street, for many 1 known railroader of East died at a local hospital M lowing a period of ill hea death was not expected, it a shock to his family an friends gained during long Ottawa. He retired only a on superannuation from t} Pacific Railway, with whi he had been employed sir to Canada from Germany had held the nosition of on his retirement. Mr. Bs esteemed member of St. P: an Church. Predeceased some years ago, he leaves t passing his motherâ€"inâ€"la Brunke, Ottawa; six dau J. E. Leichnitz and Myrs. both of Ottawa ; and the M mina, Martha, an home; three sons, Richar Ont.; James and George, stepâ€"daughter, â€" Gertrude stepâ€"son, Oscar Tregin, C sister, Mrs. Hugh Richm Falls; and 16 grandchildre: eral will be held on Wedn ncon from his late residen pel street, at two o‘clock 1 Lutheran Church, where be conducted at 230 o‘c ment will be made in Beeci tery. BA., was largely att evening was enjoyed b A social evening the Oddfellows ha under the auspices More Value for Less Money YOU GET more value for More power. More speed, "I‘m glad I bought this c New Ford YÂ¥ © S1IZEâ€"The New Ford Vâ€"8 is the largâ€" est, roomiest lowâ€"priced car. The wheelâ€" base is a full 112 inches, That means 100% riding comfort. ©@ â€" PERFORMANCE â€"Again Ford leads. There‘s nothing like its 75 horsepeower and 80 miles an hour speed in the lowâ€" price field. ©@ â€" SMOOTHNESS â€"The New Ford Vâ€"8 is the only lowâ€"priced car that gives you the smoothness of a Vâ€"type, eightâ€"cylinder engineâ€"that satisfying feel of a big car. ©® ALUMINUM CYLINDER HEADâ€"â€" Another outstanding Ford feature. An example of the high quality built into the car. An important factor in its speed, smoothness and economy. OTHER EXCLUSIVE FEATURESâ€"Here are other features exclusive to Ford in the lowâ€"price fhield: (1) Threeâ€"quarter floating rear axle, with straddleâ€"mounted driving pinion. Ordinarily this is used only in cars selling for $2000 and over, (2) Torqueâ€"tube and radiusâ€"rod drive. Another feaâ€" ture found only in cars selling over $1500. (3) Continuous channel Xâ€"member frame, with transverse spring suspension. An important factor in security and riding comfort. (4) Safety Glass. Only Ford gives you this added wprotection without extra cost in the windshield and all windowsâ€"of de 4duxoâ€"closed bodies.â€"(5) OUneâ€"piece welded steelâ€"spoke wheels. Unusually strong and safe. (6) Automatic doubleâ€"acting shock absorbers. The type usually used only for highâ€" priced cars. (7) Largest brake area per pound of weight,. You drive with greater safety when you drive the New Ford Yâ€"8. See the New Ford Vâ€"8 at the demonstration. Check up on in the New Ford Fourâ€"anot 30â€"horsepower motor is comp L OWE $ 138 4okE sâ€" HIG H EST â€"QUA LITY NEW FORD FOGU BR McBDowell Motors da 8 at the showrooms of the nearest dealer and arrange for a k up on priceâ€"on what you get for what you pay. Also ride ivrâ€"another great value at a still lower price. Its improved is completely cushioned in rubber, for quiet and smoothness. â€"8 the s« money when you buy the New Ford Vâ€"8., More room. More beauty. More of everything that makes you say â€" . ¢*9 " Here are just a few of the features that make the . the greatest value in automobile history. Authorized Ford Dealers (F.0.B. East sor, Ontario. Bumpâ€" ers, spare tire and taxes extra. ®mall d own pay men t. Convenient terms.} "THE CANADIAN CAR ©@ â€" BEAUTYâ€"The New Ford Vâ€"8 is one of the bestâ€"looking cars on the road toâ€" day â€"regardless of price. It is the style leader for 1933. ©@ â€" ECONOMYâ€"This new 1933 Ford Vâ€"8 is economical on gasoline and oil. Letâ€" ters from owners tell of exceptionally low operating cost. A recent detter reâ€" ported better than 23 miles per gallon. ©@ â€" BODIES â€" Oneâ€"piece STEEL closed bodies. Built for beauty, strength and quiet. ®© â€" PRICEâ€"Prices of are remarkably low. you get more when roomy, powerful car. 8 Balsam Street THURSDAY MAY 18TH, 1933 the New Ford Vâ€"8 You pay less and you buy this big, Timmins, Ont.

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