Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 25 May 1933, 1, p. 3

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U Increased demanc neys and lantern times had been fe doubling of workin Smith, Arkansas g huge increases in ducts have been s "horse and buggy e An officer of one said the oil lamps a ate than electric or asserted the "back t ment had contribut the industry. Believe it or ; pression to brin on its feet and Timmins One Industry Revived by the Present Depression of youthful charm neat appearance. ; Tablets helo yvou 1 F. M. Burke Ltd. THREE WEEKS TREATMENT 81.50 THURSDAY, MAY 2sTH 1933 SMOKE PICNIC SHOULDER, per Ib....... SMOKE SIDE BACON, Pieces, per lh... MONTRE A L SHOULDER PORK, Ib. ROUND STEAK per h. t .:. RIB STEW AND BRISKE‘E, per Ib. .......... ( ()NSl MO PORK SAUSAGE, 2 Ibs ......:.::.. 1 tin 2 size TOMATOES 1 tin 2s CORN :tin 2s PEAS B U tte Kf Gunn‘s or Glengrove The Quintessence In various colours and newest deâ€" signs at prices to suit all. SCO) LD ONLY or. Birch St. Fourth Ave. PRICE RANGE $59.00, $68.00, $76.00, $85.00, $92.00 and up Druggist Announce the Sale of a Carload COMBINATION DEALTL Perfection Brand. Standard Quality health erms can be arranged ONJUMEKS COâ€"OPERATIVE SIen(d ‘rices Kroehler Suites have ever been ){ npir t| ch the companies eaper to operâ€" ights. He alsb e farm" moveâ€" ) prosperity in i siim, trim lor Reducing weight in a ‘nonkE 2 34 SOCIETY, LIMITED * MJ #4 #* * #* ** # #* *# # #* *# + #* * # #* *# # ierce Furniture Co. inonene2neneneont in the North Country pro« the tinual whispering, as well as stamping, clapping and the hurling of irrelevant remarks at the councillors. If "the reeve cannot, cr will not, insist on the order which is required at such a meetâ€" ing and give those sitting at the counâ€" _cll board a proper chance to do the present business of the council without being subjected to the insolence of listeners, it is high time for provincial authorities to step in and see that the meetings are conducted according to municipal discipline. A council meetâ€" ing is not an occasion for noisy approvâ€" al or of what anyone sitâ€" ting at the board does. It is not a political meeting but a business meeting of those who were elected to use their cwn jJudgment in the government of tewnship affairs, and no sane member of the council is going to be a jackâ€"inâ€" theâ€"box ready to jump according to the way some member of any certain eleâ€" ment may wish to pull the strings. The councillors are not there to be made the subject of dictation from nz and clil boart present being s listeners the DrC Tisdale Mondayv Disturbing Meeting of Tisdale Council Regular Business of Tisdale Council Interfered with by Disorder in Hall. Schumacher Ratepayers Ask for Alternate Meetings of Council. Anip ntli ‘uth Porcupine, Ont., May 23rd, Special to The Advance. sdale township council met on day night with the reeve and all councillors present. The disorder ailing was a disgrace to the townâ€" No ccuncil can confer intelliâ€" ly on council matters with a conâ€" cel Ue2KUeH Telephone 101, South Porcupine Jutland SARDINES, " ting .. ... : 2 2C Robinhood Jutland mobinhood ROLLED OATS, pke. BAKING POWDER Mojaba, 16 oz. tin..... Bovril Kraft Old Fashion l SALAD DRESSING, far ... C Try The Advanrce Want Advertisements | to all in attracted minion: < On conte contest in Cigar Rhymes wa mins. He won a | for his skill. Th Councillor Kerr was accus $8 per meeting for an when he should be there and general disorder pre while. A man from the tension asked for sidewalk: IAN LUXTON WINS WATCH IN RHYME COMPETITION chance to them. â€" He Hawkins 0 while sittin Counciller from. ancth poig asked iC township cle interpretation there anyone to ctcuncil?" s to ‘be allotted nected with i ing three sala:) also accus2d > because part been covered and part of it Mrs. Farrell between Bruce ported by th will be made. Again a lac was evinced v police chief‘s an honout contest. nt1 ail 1€ nity by tI made ind LLY 11 in h aind H do inad TL of th ‘or t nl 29¢ H med the reeve‘f that wan 11 11 n‘ {l1r ikir 21¢ 14c prevalle the Mot walks, 11 {U â€"~SIdewailks in Tntc wn. Mrs. R. Diaâ€" »signaticn of the rge â€" Henderson‘s ) be th nudâ€"th n i Hi 1{ np h the recent .: .on, of Timâ€" Hruen watch ‘(UF 11 e â€" reduced. 1 of getting our‘s woOork four hours riled for a ve staunchly| Word came to town on Sunday of the but it was|death at Haileybury Sanitarium of as the new| Glenna Strain, granddaughter of Mr. former emâ€"; and Mrs. T. A. Strain, and daughter of ent of Mr.] the late Bert Strain and Mrs. Strain, hese resolyu.| hnow of Matheson. She was only in her ‘hile he aq.| seventeenth year. She was born in nning of his| South Porcupine and spent her childâ€" is back on | here until the death of her father. the| The hail storm of last Friday afterâ€" marks as if| hnoon hit with particular fury around ily to them | South Porcupine and the Dome. Many problem was | Wwindows were broken and roofs torn to pieces besides the damage done to carâ€" gcround in | tops. It is said that over 500 windows re was re.| were smashed by the hail at the Dome. nvestigation ! In the half hour after the storm abated 200 panes of glass were issued at the nz methods]| warehouse and twenty crates of glass n which tne| were ordered that night for repair work edistributed| the next day. Mr,. R. Hansen, careâ€" counts conâ€"| taker of the dry, was badly injured eted as beâ€"| when he fell while trying to adjust a n clerk was| window there during the storm and wo salaries the glass fell on top of him. It was salary has| hnecessary to take him to the hospital. ks account| At the Paymaster Consolidated the headframe at the old Heinz shaft on e repairing| the West Dome section of the property Ir. Catare]â€"| Was blown over. This is the headframe alks in the| at the shaft where so many lost their Irs. R. Dia,i lives in the fire of 1911, when the timâ€" ion of the| bers of the shaft took fire. It was Tenderson‘s| erected shortly after that tragedy. words "Are| Roofs, windows and equipment were ed to speak]| damaged badly on the Paymaster porâ€" it was his| tion of the property. During the worst irowing at| part of the storm the transformer Councillor| house on the west end of Bloor avenue own Then when ned â€" iIt,. ‘he are itor the 11 Ue T1 D>â€" able uch g 116 was THE PORCUPTNE ADVANCE, TTMMITXN3 oNTaRtO w San Diego Union:â€"If this country recognizes Russia, it should also take steps to recognize the difficulty of getâ€" ting along with Russia. "Oh, novels and books." ‘"*And are those the only reasons?" ‘"Yes, those; and the fact that he‘s getting ‘bushed‘." The magistrate dismissed the case and advised the two to try and get along. They walked from the court rcom, the accused telling the complainâ€" ant, "you are the crazy one." The complainant was almost ready to adâ€" mit it. cheap literature." 6 "What do you mean by cheap literaâ€" "Haven‘t you any other reason for laying this charge?" asked the magisâ€" trate. "Well," said the complainant night he gets up and starts to solitaire." The two live in a shack on the skirts of the town. ‘"Why do you think he is crazy?" askâ€" ed Magistrate Atkinson, of Haileybury, who covers more territory in a year than most magistrates do in a lifetime. T‘wo oldâ€"timers, wellâ€"known in and around Kirkland Lake where they have partnered and prospected for years, beâ€" came, in the language of the North, "bush crazy." Anyway, one laid a charge against his partner of being inâ€" sane. and dangerous to be at large. |lowed the hailstorm helped to quell the blaze. At W. D. Pearce‘s store and in some of the warehouses in town conâ€" siderable damage was done by the overâ€" flow of water into the buildings. The wires of the Ontario Light and Power Company around town are hanging in ravels, their insulation ‘being stripped off by the storm. South Porcupine was without either lights or water from Friday afternoon until Saturday night. Lamps were hunted out, coal oil cans ‘and water buckets were requisitioned while with characteristic adaptability the residents smiled and joked about their dilemma. a man does some odd thing like getting up in the middle of the night to play solitaire, it does not necessarily mean that he has bugs in his attic. Desâ€" patches last week from KirWWand Lake tell the story. Kirkland Lake has recently been exâ€" ercised over the question as to when a man is crazy. Eventually the police magistrate had to be appealed to. His decision will be regarded as final, and many not only in Kirkland Lake but elsewhere will have a sigh of relief to be told that after all they are not as crazy as some other people may sugâ€" gest. What the magittrate held at Kirkland Lake was that just because Suggests Solitaire May be a Sign of Craziness tion of the property. During the worst part of the storm the transfcrmer house on the west end of Bloor avenue in South Porcupine took fire and all pewer in town was cut off. Fortunateâ€" ly the wind was blowing away from adâ€" joining residences and the fire did not spread. The torrentilal rain that folâ€" summer in town here, was among thos successfully passing S.F.S. examination in Toronto. Mr. G. Crookston, another who ha spent his summers here, was also suc cessful in getting his electrical engiâ€" neer‘s degree. Mrs. C. Heath motored up from Kirk. land Lake on Friday and took Miss B M.C, Shaw back with her for the weekâ€" end. I Damage by Storm at south End and Dome 100 Windows Smashed at Dome. Paw er OH at Ssouth Poreupine. Much Damage Done by Hail Storm Friday, Other South Porâ€" cupine News Mr. Earle Hamilton arrived Tuesday ening from Victoria College, Toronto, r the summer. Mr. Ted Gallagher, nephew of Messrs _ V. and J. Gallagher, who spent last mmer in town here, was among those ccessfully passing S.F.S. examinations for outh Porcupine, May to The Advance. he 1.0.0F. lodge of . ) marched to the Ary Sunday evening last on Wo rlate ; was the reply. "He reads NLUmeL ithout ine in ite ; crutches breaking ment fi preached M his recent g by fallâ€" 1 Casion . da To the Editor of The Advance, Timmins. Dear Sir:â€"I was reading in the paper about me being under a misapprehenâ€" sion. Please allow me to say that if you think that, then you yourself are labouring under a multitude of disarâ€" ranged ideas. You see I belong to a family that does not go into anything with their eyes shut, so when I applied for land naturally I found out what there was to it. There are lots besides me that know, that if the government give a thing away you have to work for it. And another thing when they do a thingâ€" there is mostly.something in it. I mean, would they give four hundred dollars away if it was impossiblel? No, sir! They know and what‘s more I know that it can be a success. It‘s alt very well for men to say that it cannot be done, especially some of them, for I know for a fact that some of them have been on farms for ten years and they cannot farm yet. Here is something:â€" I am willing to bet the. shirt off my back that if the town will ‘supply me l on a homestead under the. Governâ€" ment‘s backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"land plan. In reâ€" porting the council meeting The Adâ€" vance said the gentleman seemed to be under a misapprehension as to how the plan worked, as he appeared to think he would have $600.00 cash to work with. In reference to this, The Adâ€" vance has received the following letâ€" ter:â€" Last week there was reference in The Advance to a gentleman appearing beâ€" fore the town council to seek the muniâ€" cipality‘s coâ€"operation in getting him Correspondent Sure he Ccould Make a Success of Plan. Thinks Council Would Save Money by Giving Him a Chance. Thinks Backâ€"toâ€"Land May be Successful and the town. The man who insists on sharing the business that comes to town, but refuses to advertise his own is not a valuable addition to any town. The life of a town depends on the live, wideâ€"awake and liberal advertising business men." columns. This does not mean you should have a whole, half or even a quarter page ad, in each issue of the paper, but your name and business should be mentioned, if you do not use more than a 2â€"line space. A stranger picking up a newspaper should be able to tell what business is represented in town by looking at the paper. This is the best possible town advertiser. The man who does not advertise his business does an injustice to himself Bankers Advise Use of the Weekly Newspapers Timmins, Ont., May 23rd, 1933 Phone 20 Gallon ........ Half Gallon Quarts .. Cilux Enamel . . Floor Porch and Dado Enam« Muraltone Wall Finishes Town and Country Paints Eyxtropuctory OrFrE®R MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE, LIMITED aint $2.35 $1.20 65¢ with what I want with their part I can go out and stay out if I go. I am willâ€" ing to bet that in six years I could come to Timmins and buy a car. That sounds like a fool. Well, my greaf granddad use to say, "You never know which is the fool till one of you dies." I myself have ~seen that proved. As for this farming, well, a lot think they: know something about it but they know noâ€" thing. That is the reason they went back. Now, me, I am Gifferent, I KNOW what has to be done. My eyes are not shut, you see. There is a lot more to farming than watching a crop grow. ‘ I could point out mistakes they make every day. I saw a farmer the other.day come in to town. If I had asked him if he was making _money and he had said "yes," I would have called him a fool, for I know that he does not make any. He had no less than rour mistakes in his wagon. That is not l | A M EKE L 8 gqts qis. qls. qtls Sigze 1869â€"A PURELY MUTUAL COMPANYâ€"1933 MESSRS, SULLIVAN NEWTON, CLU District Managers P. A. Macaulay, F. 8. McGuire, Gough P. Lynd, representatives, TIMMINS ON‘PABR TEA Cice ie 530050 ue 2 5 o0 Eo CILUX gives amazing extra durability because it dries to a hard, smooth, glossy surface, resistant to oil, soap, or mild cleaning fluidsâ€"yet retains its unâ€" usual flexibility over long periods of aging. CILUX is available in 16 attractive colours. Take advantage of this Special Offer and try CILUX for yourself. The following proofs of the confidence and satisfaction of Mutual Life policyholders are particularly impressive in these strenuous days when values are being tested in the light of hard experience. ERE is an excellent opport unity for you to try CILUX â€"a prodâ€" uct with 50 to 100 per cent greater durability for inside or outside enamelling when compared to products ordinarily used for this purpose. CILUX gives amazing extra durability Head Office: Waterloo, Ont SATISFIED POLICYHOLDER®S I Oneâ€"third of the total NUMBER OF POLICIES issued this year has been on the lives of existing policyholders. Almost oneâ€"half of the total VOLâ€" UME OF BUSINESS this year has been on the lives of existing policyâ€" holders. T‘rim and Trellis Finishes Interior Gloss Spar Varnish Quick Drying Floor \’arnn.h The Mutual Life has the lowestlapse ratio for all Canada according to available reports. First position is held in six provinces, and in one only it ranks lower than second. 5 8 U F iA M C e is noted for its ONTARIO Pint Can The service, solid strength and integrity behind every policy are responsible for this expression of confidence, which is fully justified by the unique record of the Mutual Life covering a period of over 60 years, Town and Country Paints in all Standard Colours for Inside and Outside Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald:â€"When we try to do a little rhyming the only word we can get to go with tax is ax, and after watching the performance for a while we feel the two don‘t go together very well. I wonder how many men there are in this town would like to see me surâ€" prise the town council? I am willing to bet I can do it, even if the wager is two years‘ work at a dollar a day. A chap ought to have a chance to prove himself, if he knows as much as L. Your‘s truly, â€"A¢ REAL FARMER. farming. Look at this! He has a crop worth 1,000 dollars; he goes to town and spends it through his mistakes. One thing any farmer must remember is that the little things count the most, in other words, "look after the pennies and the dollars can watch themselves." Timmins, Ont. o in pa n y Age N am e Address ‘"Mutual Kc"hi;\;et;xue‘nt;.‘;r:l.so information regarding a Policy for myself. Please send me the booklet Size $1.30 $1,20 $1.45 $1.45

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