Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 15 Jun 1933, 2, p. 7

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ANOTHER REFERENCE NMADE | â€" rommnmmm necessitating a shutâ€"down for several days. As the paper mill at Kapuskasn. Wieflmiumrimwfiym it also was {foreed to close. $ LIGHTNING BOLT STRIikES . POWER HOUSE AT suoh 9 a I w L < % 4 Â¥% $st d t o e Nt ce ue h t n d dn Wl ioA c e e M e d s 1 S t C ie n e e t o5 mt in t e ces o e e s s o i e t e e m w e o o i s e ns e t d (From the Border Cities Star) i *# Object: of Curiesity ; ~"On the island there are about 350 ‘Indhm and about fiftyâ€"eight white . _‘ The Efudson‘s Bay Trading Company has been here for over 260 years, and the Moosonee Church is seventy years old. The Indians could not maikte me out. ‘They looked me all over, wondering whether I was a policeâ€" "I met the Rev. Mr. Blacidourn, who ‘work, your comiittee adheres to the view expressed st the last annual genâ€" }er,a.lmeetmguttbamon,mthfl public works should not be undertaken unless they are economically justifiable and that for those who cannot be given ‘employment on #uceh works or be placed on the land, the only practicable system under the circumstances is that of careâ€" fully controlled and administered AILEYBUKRY â€"MAN CATCHES MONSTER LAKE TROUT NOW The committee emphasized the view ‘that while such reduction of hours as a means of helping to relieve unemâ€" ployment was desirable and sound, it would not be wise by compulsory legisâ€" lation to lay down any rigid rule. After reviewing government policy on the unemployment situation, the comâ€" ‘mittee commended two new developâ€" ments in connection with the carrying out of the policy of direct rellef. ‘The ‘first was the scheme to establish fami{iâ€" lies on the land, who would otherwise ‘be in receipt of direct relief. Under this scheme, 1,463 had â€"alreadyâ€" beett‘ placed. ‘(The second. was the establishâ€" ment of eamps for single homeless per- sons. The number cared for under this plan had risen from 12,244 for Ma.y, 1932, to $2,116 for February, 1933é as 1,895,961 and the cost of â€"sueh r as 38,2300(!) for the month, the repcfl: "I left Cochrane aâ€"few weeks agp (writes the Lieutenant, in a further letter), and went to the little town of, Smooth Rock Falls. I was a stranger to the pilace, but soon way around, and got a place to sleep and. eat. Next day I soid "War Crtys"~and: visited, and left that night ‘for Kapus+â€". kasing, where I spent the rest of the: week selling "War COrys," etc.â€" Both these places are pulp and paper mai At Kapuskasing.â€"tite paper for the "New York Times" is manufactured. : There is g pophilation of abuut3,000 construction. ~At one time there were €,000 men there, but many fewer now: From there I journeyed â€"to EIsland FPalls, where there is ‘anodther big power house, Following the tmeeting there, I left for: _ "At the conclusion of this interesting meeting 1 was guided back to the path by an o Indian, and then commencâ€" ed to trail my way back to the statioen. The Northern Lights were playing on the sky, and it ‘was. about forty below meeting with these Indilans at Moose cent: moniths~if <a man: went into the ordinery restaurant arnid told the proâ€" prietor frankly that he was hungry | he would be pretty sure to get someâ€" | thing to eat. The â€"generssity of the ~cafe owners, however, had to be stopâ€" ‘ped because of the meanness of so many ; wheo took advanitage of it. It is worse lthm senseless to expect a cafe to feed man whorefuses work, for instance. could not: afford to give away their ‘own living. It was worse business for them to give a meal than :for anyone else, because they were upsetting their own businessâ€"the only way they are ‘able to have anything to give anybody ‘It is a‘ fact,hwwever that the. restaurants‘ and cafes here have been very kind: and generous to those in need, and Tor‘this very reason any plan ‘to defraud them is particuâ€" larly mean and in keeping with the general ideas of the foreign agitators. Fome weeks ago there appgared to be a scheme onâ€"here to secure meals withâ€" the police knowing of it can only be guessed at. It is likely.that some have"\ "gotten away" with it. . It has been done in Timmins. . As matter of fact. cafe proprietors areâ€"not: "hardâ€"boijed." Indsed, it would surprise most people if they knew ‘just how â€"many meals are given awasy in the restagurants in one or another...In Timmins in reâ€" London Free Press:â€"Following the Napoleonic Wars there came a period of great demJcratic progress and then an era of reaction. Apparently history is repceating itself / with half Eulope under dictatorship: were some: kind of ma.rtyrs, but the magistrate described their procedure as "Just common cheating and on your own admission.‘" # â€" used by the alien agitators gathered and cheered the prisoners and jeered at the police, In the evening there was one of the meetings called by the alien agitators and one of the speakers did considerable howling ‘because, as he phrased it, "four of our comrades have beenâ€"sent to jail.‘" . This.speaker pretended to think that the four men Magistrate ‘Atkinson fined each cf the fourâ€" men before â€"him $10.00 and costs, or thirty days in jail for each of them. They did not pay the fines and costs and so were taken to jail. When the four men were> taken from the township jail for transportation to Haileybury a crowd of, the dupes â€" 8 n t f 2 H h § 8* 5; ttl 'égfifé id : @ F *3} 5 5 $ g% 5§ i § §§§§§‘§§§ lt §E§=Ԥ},5 ipriffic; ritifie 9 . _ In the case at Kirkland Lake the four men charged with ring meals fer which they did not intend to pay gave the names of Frank Nurmi, Waino Biivonen, Waino Saari and Swan Johnâ€" of their meal they got up and tried to walk out without paying for the fosd. The proprietor of another cafe told cf four men giving orders, one for pork: chops, another for a small steak and two for ham and eggs. One of the men was Swan Johnson. The men had no, money to. pay for. the‘ food,, they said when the meals were eaten. It would be ‘"interesting to learn "if any, ard how many, other restaurants and cafes have been similarly defrauded in Kirkland Lake during the past few J. M. Forbes, general manager, . re- perts good ore conditions on the bot» tom levels. The western ore zone has been definitely intersected on the 975 foot horizon, and drifting is proceedthg to: open up body.: A.nnouncement. also was made from Montreal yesterday that â€" the management ‘isâ€" calllng for Gold. production by Siscoe Gold Mines in the month of May totalled $99,908 from 8,914 tons or average réâ€" covery of $11.16 per ton, an increase of $28,938 over the total of $70,970 rep ed for April. The gain for the mon wos due both to larger tonnage: mmed and to higher millheads. In April the company treated 6,792 tons of ore with average recovery of $10.45â€"per ton. Siscoe is now treating> approximately 280 tons of ore vber day against 160 tons in the first quarter of the year, hnd with the higher operating rate heads have dropped. Recovery in May at $11.16 per ton compares with $15.34 in January,‘$16.36 in February,. and $19.93 in March. The new mill addition startâ€" ed in April andâ€" recovery fell to $1046 per ton. Production for â€"the five months ending with May . botaned ma 947. BULLION PRODUCTION AT " SISCOE INCREASED LN â€" MY PE S â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"‘- MADE IN CANADA + BY CANADIAN§S + OF CANADIAN WHEAT tenders for the sinking of an threeâ€" jcompartment shaft to a depth of 350 feét on theâ€"Dubuisson Lake . mainland mny ' Yoar pctroncge Solicited. The ideat place for the businessman‘s lunch., ____ SPECIAL . SUNDAY DINNER WARM COMFORTABLE: ROOMS Restaurant and Boarding House 29 Fourth Avenue Timmins â€"

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