Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Sep 1933, 2, p. 3

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More Roads Needed | to Connectâ€"up North: To the Editor of The Advance, Timmir Dear Sir:â€"Yes, the road from Kirkâ€" land to Rouyn is now finished, which means Rouyn has three outlets: one to Kirkland Lake, one south to Liskeard, and one north to th¢t C.NR. Railway. And Rouyn is only ten years old! Right here in gocd old Porcupine camp we have only one cutlet and that to Porquis Junction, and we are twenty years cld. Porcupine was Ontario‘s first gold camn, and will yet be double what any other one will be. By this I mean taking in all ecast to Night Hawk and south fur a few miles, and west and northwest to Carscallen. A trip to the tower at Vipond mine on a clear day will show all this area. Are we not entitled to the road to Matachewan to open up this great belt, and yes, a road west from Kirkland to Matachewan will make it better still, because we will then be well connected with all the other camps and when Sudbury is addâ€" ed we will have no more complaints tC make. Arother Letter Urging the Government to Build Connecting Road Betw#en Porcupine and Sudbury Mining Areas. The following letter frim an oldâ€"timer of the Porcupine area speaks for itself and makes effective advocazcy of the plan of connecting up the communities of the North and increasing the attracâ€" tion of the country to tourists through the buillding of the connecting road between Forcupine and Sudbury mining areas : â€" Now I wish to ask: Is it fair that Porâ€" cupine should be neglected as it is, and has been when it is the Mother of Gold Mining Camps of Ontario? Just think, only one way to get :n and out and then to have a lot of traffic taken from it by routing the transâ€"Canada highway up the rocks of Lake Superior, instead of by Cochrane and Hearst and westward when it will help the mines and settlers and everything owned by the people, ON‘T deny yourself a day longer, all the advantages of this creamy, doubleâ€"rich, pure milk. Use it for creaming coffee, fruits, cereals â€"and for whipping. Use it for cooking and baking. It adds new flavour and gives finer texture to foods. There‘s real economy, too, in using Carnation at today‘s low prices. Children‘s §upper f You couldn‘t give them anything they‘ll like better than Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes with milk or cream and fruit, So good for children too. Rich in energy. Easy to digest. The kind of food that invites restful sleep. You like with for ( ba Carnation Milk Oven ig. â€" M The World‘s Largestâ€"Selling Brand of Evaporated Milk fresh in sealed inside waAXxTITE: ide by Kellogs in London. Ont the road from Kirkâ€" now finished, which three outlets: one to south to Liskeard, th¢ CNR. Railway. ily ten years old! old Porcupine camp cutlet and that to and we are twenty )ine was Ontario‘s d will yet be double e will be. By this I cast to Night Hawk ‘ miles, and west and allen. A trip to the nine on a clear day ~area. Are we not d to Matachewan to belt, and yes, a road 1 to Matachewan will ill. because we will Is it fair that Porâ€" lected as it is, and he Mother of Gold tario? Just think, Serve for the tember 19th, 1933 9 , ‘that has grown from seven men to twenty thousand of a population? | Supposing someone discovers anothe:'| \ thing that will employ thousands ant| give the Government a fortune, will it i get the treatment Porcupine is getting, ! in the way of roads? Just one way | in and same way out. We won‘t forge ahead much until we get Porcupine | and Sudbury connected and also a short ! connection west of Kirkland Lake tol Matachewan and then we will sure have, a regular spider‘s web of mining indusâ€" try, connected and each camp reached in the shortest time, instead of having ; ‘to go thirty extra miles east to get to a place thirty miles south. Here‘s wishâ€" ing good luck to Carscallen claim ownâ€" ers and it‘s hoped thsre will be three| | or four Domes. Also good luck to Maâ€"| ‘tachewan and all the country south of | l Porcupine. ] 1 I am sure if I live long enough I‘ll |see a big changs and the surest and quickest way to bring it about is get the road to Matachewan. It‘s got to i come, that‘s sure, or else our Hydro Abitibi ‘Canyon power will lose conâ€" siderable business. Wake up Mr. Finâ€" layson or Mitch Hepburn will put it I over you. | such as the T. N. O. Railway, CN.R. Railway, James Bay extension and Abiâ€" tibi Power line. I notice where Mr. Finlayson says, "Return to work.‘" Well I for one will tell Mr. Finlayson that nothing in Nerthern Ontario will proâ€" vide more work than the opening of the country from Forcupine to Sudbury and the highway routed north, because there sure will be lots of new mines and already lcots‘ of them along this route. I wish to ask him to show me anything else that will do more good and provide more employment. Did Mr. Finlayson ever discover anything Barric Examiner:â€"A radio broadcast from Washington the other night made the statement that the new national recovery programme is costing the taxâ€" payers ithree and a half million dollars a day. It would need to bring a lot cf prosperity to take care of a load like that. T wo valuable booklets free â€" "100 Glorifed Recipes" and "Contented Babies". Address Carnation Co., Limited, T oronto, Ontario. "From Contented Cows" Yours Sincerely ay extension and Abiâ€" I notice where Mr. Return to work." Well l1 Mr. Pinlayson that NW FLAKES c:“ ‘fl + CWENâ€"FRESH â€" FLAVOR PERFECT A. Preston | as yet on the supplying of power to the | Swayze field, but it is possible that a | decision is only a few days away. The survey party which went in to do the ground work connected with supplying Central Patricia Gold Miness and the Picklecrow property with power from | the Albany river is expected back in a week. Upon its report a conclusion will be promptly reached. The Ontario Government‘s Hydro Commission judgâ€" ‘ ing from this in quick survey of its newest movements, is determined to hock up with the gold mining industry | in all parts of the province. | _ â€""The Hydro Electric Power Commisâ€" sion contract with Hollinger Consoliâ€" | dated for the supply of energy to the I Youngâ€"Davidson operation in Matacheâ€" | wan may be signed within a week or ten days, so The Northern News hears. Hydro cfficials, The Northern News can say, are working on the proposition of | building a line from Iroquois Falls to Kirkland Lake. It would service Bidâ€" good, Queen Lobel, Lakeland and other mining properties, as well as supply i Mathescn, Monteith and other agriculâ€" tural communities nearby. A high tenâ€" sion line would be brought down as far as Kirkland Lake, and 2,200 volt lines put on from a subâ€"station there Hydro is also investigating the supplyâ€" ing of power to McMillan Gold Mines 60 miles south west of Sudbury. The power may come from Espanola, but | there are two or three ways of furnishâ€" | ing it. No conclusion has beegn reached Sunflower Twelve Feet High at Kirkland Lake (From The Northern News) W. B. Smart, a painter living in the Federal Townsite, Kirkland Lake, is the owner of several giant sunflower plants which will outmatch anything yet produced in the North, he believes. Mr. Smart measured some of them the other day and found that two of the biggest towered 12 feet into the air, while a number of others revealed a height of more than 10 feet, six inches. One of the Brobdignagian plants contains a total of 23 buds, and several of the biooms are in full blosâ€" som. The plants are growing in new land, freshly "cropped" this summer. "I see where some fellow in New Lisâ€" keard thinks he has a big sunflower plant," says Mr. Smart. "He‘d better see mine before he talks about his." The Federal Townsite citizen is growing four beautiful samples of the Nicotna (flowering tobacco) plant this year, each with blooms of a different colour. The filowers have attracted a great deal of interest from passersby because of their beauty and colorings. erterprises scattered over the Dominâ€" ion that are contrclled by people in the United States. These include lumber, pulp and pavber industries, mining comâ€" panies, factories of all kinds and other ventures. Of course, these are apart from the thousands of others which United States peotrle are interested finâ€" ancially in greater or in lesser degree. How is the sort of Ssviet state suggestâ€" ed by C.C.F. to obtain possession of these properties, valued at billions of dollars? It goes without saying that Canada has nothing to use as mCney wherew.lth to purchase these interests. From Mr. Moore‘s book there is sure to arise theâ€"question:â€"WwWill not foreign wars be added to domestic revolution W. H. Mcore, M.P., has written a book touching on some of the fallacies of socialism of certain types and of comâ€" munism in particular. He estimates that there are at least 1200 business Reports have been numerous in the last week or two to the effect that the Hydro intends to run a line into the Kirkland Lake camp from its Abitibi power line, with the purpose of giving service to a number of the mining proâ€" perties of the Kirkland Lake camp. Last week there were references to this in despatches appearing in the daily papers. More definite reference was made in The Northern News of Kirkâ€" land Lake, in its last issue. The Norâ€" thern News said:â€" sUGGESTS 2C.F. PROGRAMME WOULD MEAN LOTS OF WAR if attempt were made by a group of politicians to "take over‘" these bus:â€" nesses. The people of the United States would not call it "taking over." They would use the right word, "theft." There are pecule who refer to war as "legalized murder"; will these same follgs refer to their proposed confiscaâ€" tion as "legalized theft." Noranda and Rouyn, perhaps because they are off the main lines of travel, and, perhaps, because they are not so well known in the world as some other mining camps, aAre reported now as being in the fortunate position of havâ€" ing few unemployed. Only 28 are said to be registered at the Employment Bureau for work. Timmins and Kirkâ€" land Lake, each with hundreds of men out of.work, envy Rouyn and Noranda their fortunate position with only 28 unemployed. It is expected that with the approeach of winter more men will drift into Noranda and Rouyn from the lumber camps and other places where labour is employed seasonally. Even, so, the Twin Cities are very likely to escape the full force of unemployment so, the Twin Cities are very likely to escape the full force of unemployment through transients going there. Timâ€" mins, Kirkland Lake, Cochrane and other towns on the Ontario side have suffered much from transients coming in to add to the number of unemployed. Bornâ€"â€"On September 6th, 1933, at 20 Borden avenue, to Mr. and Mrs. Ike Huntâ€"a son. Both doing well, Hydro May Run Line into Kirkland Camp NORANDA AND ROUYN HAVE VERY FEW UNEMPLOYED MEN Plans Said to be Under Way for Ser vicing Bidgcod, Queen and Other Mines in the Kirkland Lake Camp. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO El Paso World News:â€"The rising generation retire about the time the retiring generation rises. considered in this North. ‘There was! way of gold ore in the big Teom: a good illustration cof the trouble with| area. He considered the territor cows on the road right in this North| big enough and broad enough to Land not long ago, and the motorist] possibilities of a lot of different n encountering the trouble found it both| al finds. Recent gold finds it dangerous and expensive. The Temagami area have created more may be gleaned from the following| passing interest. Despatches last paragraph in The Haileyburian:â€" from North Bay suggest that the "A cow belonging to E. J. Lyttle was|visions of the Temagami region so badly injured that it had to be killâ€"| soming into a gold mining can ed and a â€"new motor car owned by W.] much promise. There have been Baxter, of Haileybury, was damaged to| visions before but there is reason the extent of about $100 in a highway| for the present excitement in th (From The Powassan News) The new clerk was in ~doubt as to the use of a certain phrase so he said to the stenographer:â€""Do you "retire a loan?" And the wistful eyed one inâ€" terrupted rather sleepily: FEW ABLE TO "RETIRE A LOAN " IN THESE HARD OLD TIMES Car Badly Damaged When Cow Hit on the Highway Most motorists hate to see cows on the road, and, of course, there is good reason for this dislike of these aniâ€" mals. One motorist who was telling recently of his troubles with a group of cows on the road while on a trip down south remarked that cows are like some pedestrians in that they do not recognize any rights.of the motorist on the road. This motorist said he would just as gladly meet ~almost any other kind of an animal on the road, even a road hog, rather than have to pass a few cows. He concluded by a sort of prayer of thanksgiving because there were comparatively few cows on the rord in the North Land. It may be that motorists here have less trouble with cows than met with in the South. but nevertheless the cow has to be considered in this North. There was No, I sleep with mamma Jhanle . Mlother, but | won‘t need a coat with this ventilation‘ ET your new McLaughlinâ€"Buick now and you can say goodâ€"bye to drafty, chilly, "stuffy" rides! Because Fisher Ventilation permits perfect ventilation of the car interior, yet puts an end to the treacherous drafts that cause chills, stiff necks and colds. Prevents steaming of windshield and windows# on stormy davs, too! Doctors say that no car without this ventilation is truly modern. And stylâ€" ists agree that MeLaughlinâ€"Buick is far ahead with Windâ€"Stream styvling. h in the south. cow has to be th. ‘There was he trouble with MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE, LIMITED MeLAUGSHLINâ€"BUICK STRAIGHT EIGHTS give more and better miles Timmins | Mining Cerporation has Crew at Work \ on One Group of Claims. Prosâ€" pectors Interested in the District. claim owners are mentioned as cartryâ€" irg out work in Temagami. There was also a report that International Nickel CC. of Canada was working on some claims near Arsenic Lake, Temagami area. The International Nickel â€" Co. officials say that this is not the case. An engineer was despatched by them some time ago to reâ€"sample the claims, but at the present time mo work is beâ€" ing done by the company. In reference to mention of work on the soâ€"called Watkins property it is announced that this work is being done by the prospecâ€" tor on his own individual respons.bility. Mining Corporation is understood to have field representatives investigating what is termed a rich gold strike on a peninsula between the Northeast Arm and Shiningwood Bay. Lake Temaâ€" gami. This find was made by Charles Moore, Jr.., of Cobalt. to Temagami Finds Give Much Interest â€" net wetr JoOssi1Die in t vas inclined he remarkal he; 1€ The Lake Temagam 1€ howe mad 1pin in the b 11 Notice the new fender "valances", for example,. If every car were designed like this, mudâ€"splashing would be reâ€" duced so much that the need for freâ€" quent car washing would be eliminated. Why not take a trial ride in the new McLaughlinâ€"Buick ? Find out for yourself the reasons why eight out of ten owners buy MeLaughlinâ€"Buicks again and again . .. why this car has a twentyâ€"flive year reputation for givâ€" Ing more and hellter miles, 1G10OW d4@â€" livered prices and easy GM AC terms. agami more 5 the ries VC trict and there finds,. Mining and indvidual old property In refi magan mt HITA 16 T‘C blo. ha th Ontario i] if T the Ts would and n better approxiIt station. Moore cl industries tive busing the better line in w feared. Canad mines that can Milverton Sun:â€"The Crediton corâ€" respondent of The Exeter Timesâ€"Advoâ€" cate reports the presence in all village of a "pure White black squirrel."‘ Reâ€" minds us of the Irishman who saic blackberries were ‘"red when they‘re green." Cincinnatti Enquirer:â€"It seems aAas though this year the usual unusual weaâ€" ther has been more unusual than usual. Je gengl aid abot ill prove rt ula A Quality Which Is Incomparable ArC Poin ne very pIrst > part: of tI pleased tha: nining diffe "les in that The ‘laims instan exl)lql 1 be ; Moore propk almost dire: for the ccun hich no anada can st hopes tha he Temag: Sun:â€"The Crediton corâ€" ( The Exeter Timesâ€"Advoâ€" the presence in all village Thite black squirrel."‘ Reâ€" â€"the Irishman who said The distance 15 miles from @11 pleased lat it 186 The mort Te uin t imnD at thing for Ontario no is established in a. The whole North ised at such a result, is country would be i the Porecupine area. ‘rs from most other itâ€"is not a competiâ€" more gold produced ccuntry. This is one ) â€" overâ€"production is in stand all the gold going. So there will that the best words gold finds will ootl vein nas ind $30 a ton Fresh from the Gardens" It surrounding the be staked and in claimants have from This chart shows MeLaughlinâ€"Buick‘s leadership in sales in its price class over all other eights, Five times as many MeLaughlinâ€"Buicks are sold as any other eight in this field. SECOND CAR boat is pen Custorner Research Dopt., General Motors Products of Canada, LA*d. Oshawas, Ontario WHAT 20,000 MCGTORISTS TOLD US The "Automobile Buyer‘s CGuide" tells about 0 recent survey among Canadian molorists a provides information which you will find val able in choosing your next car, Send coup for free copy: group is said to have opened up surface showings with values from vein running $20 per ton in gold. Powell group has been explored on face and had some diamond dr with favourable results.. Mineraliz on both groups is well defined an fic.als pian to make a thorough t the ground in the early future. Central Matachewan Mining ation plans large programim face exploration preliminary mand drilling its preperty i and Baden townships in the ] ENTRAL MATACHEWAN IS TO DO sURFACE EXPLORATION Work done PAGE THREE 11

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