Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 27 Sep 1934, 2, p. 2

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"A review of the history of this railâ€" way line should serve to remove wrong impressions cneated by the current in_ vestigation and newspaper treatment thereof. In the dyving days of the Ross government the line was projected north from North Bay purely as a colâ€" cnization railway, designed to open the Clay Belt of Northern Ontario. When it had gone 100 miles and was just entering the potential farming region rich silver ore was struck at Cobalt. This immediately created a tremenâ€" wous rush of prospectors and miners, gave the new line a huge volume of freight from the first and in addition provided a market for the products of the newly opened farming area. Souâ€" thern farms, as well as factories, beneâ€" fitted very greatly from this developâ€" ment. ‘"*‘The rC tually the pine weq; Kirkland ther or n ‘There is a deep ment in the North manner in which and Northern Onta: ig made a political f« ment which the sou! given to the govern tion on the line seer to stress too heavily $00,000 has been inyv The suggestion cont: this newspaper comi money has been los return. As a matter . readers might | of the North or N. OQ. Railwa of that railroad, publishing edito other North La ference to the g is a front nag Northern News week : â€"â€" Making the Railway a Political Football Note Taken of the Resentment Felt in the North at Attitude of Some. T. N. 0. a Colomization Railroad. TWO Struck down by an aut talking with a friend in own house, Felix Levesq: resident of Silver Cent Misericordia hospital at MADE IN °CANADA OF CANADIAN WH EAT *# P 1)' 1’\ ‘l‘l t a critical condition, and Lorrain Valley, allegedly omobile while front of his Ie, 74â€"yearâ€"old re, is in the Haileybury in JOlhn Ruttarn, the driver ol the car, is on bail facing a charge 01 criminal negligence. COLGATE‘S JA eJ VA1 A. 7 kinds o teeth. C all = seven sparkling HREDDED WHEAT is the answer to the housewife‘s prayer . . . a nourishing, delicious, economical meal, readyâ€"cooked, readyâ€"toâ€"serve! Nature‘s most vitalizing elements are there to strengthen and refresh the system, with the necessary measure of bran for easy digestion. Tiy Shredded Wheat every day for ten days . . . and see! Two of the goldenâ€"brown, ovenâ€"crisp biscuits with milk or cream, will keep you in step with buoyant youth. Special THE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY, LTD. C 1s a deep feeling Oof resentâ€" the North Country over the in which the Temiskaming hern Ontario Railway is beâ€" i political football. The treatâ€" th the southern papers have the governmental investigaâ€" he line seems to Northerners 00 heavily the fact that $30,â€" is been invested in the line. estion contained in much of paper comment is that this s been lost without hope of Ribbon Dental Cream id d was pushed north, evenâ€" rich gold mines of Porcuâ€" discovered and opened; ake quickly followed. Wheâ€" , the line would ever have neated by the nd newspaper he dving days white scuits in every box nd 2 for 39c discolour removes s them Niegoara Falis, Canada treatment of the Ross projected ly as a colâ€" to open the rio. When was just ind so that eneral view ‘r of the T. nt criticism ce has been rticles from pers in reâ€" ie following from The € ist "Criticism has centred on this 300â€" mile provinciallyâ€"owned line because it is a separate entity, easily isolated. If any paper wishes to criticise railway administration it can attack any given section Of the CP.R. and CN.R. and find plenty to cavil about. The losses of the T. N. 0. have been failure to pay the full interest return on investâ€" ment. Each year it has turned in proâ€" fits; it has not lost its principal, as other lines have done. "Speaking of the Canadian National it will be recalled that, with the conâ€" struction of the Long Lac cutoff which connects the main line of the C.N.R. with the Transcontinental, a long stretch of line from Long Lac to Port Arthur was practically abandoned and have found. employment and have made homes in the area. All this canâ€" not be disregarded in this talk of nonâ€" payment of complete bond interest on a $30,000,000 investment. . Ontario is the province that has benefitted by the ploughing in of this substantial sum. "Apart from the fact that the T. N. O. is outstanding in its earnings position, as compared with any other railway in the country, some consider_ ation should be given to the fact that in its effort to fully develop the reâ€" sources of the country in lumber, pulp and paper and power, to provide emâ€" ployment for a rapidly growing popuâ€" lation, and to fulfil its task as a colonâ€" ization road, some extensions have been made which have not so far been profitable. Notably the James Bay line has been projected ahead of the development of that area. Yet withâ€" out it the Abitibi Canyon development could not have been. undertaken. Later the power from this sourceâ€"will be reâ€" quired. Further, when the pulp and paper business is restored this region, north of Cochrane will be a source of freight revenue. Similarly, )j branches were built in the south which did not justify the hopes of the builders. The Silver Centre line is an instance. In zcontrast and indicating the possibiliâ€" ties of a branch line to a mining area, the Elk Lake branch which for years was unprofitable is now crowded with freight and passengers with the revival of the Matachewan camp. ‘"‘The policy: of construction has not always been at fault. The lines to Timmins and to Iroquois Falls have been highly profitable. The branch in to Rouyn has diverted much of the business of this growing mining area to Ontario, whereas without it Quebec would have had all of returns to herself. succeeded as a purely colonization proâ€" Hect is an open question. To the deâ€" !gree that it had been successful _ing has been in the opinion of many qualified observers, its salvation. Cerâ€" tainly the development of the mines, which has been made possible by the railway, has created a vast volume of business and prosperity. "From 1903 to 1931, the Cobalt camp produced $260,000,000 in silver. Porâ€" cupine camp, opened by this railway, produced $340,000,000 between 1910 and 1933. Kirkland Lake production beâ€" tween and 1933 totalled $155,000,â€" 000. Total production of gold and silâ€" ver, in the section of the north, openâ€" ed and served by the T. N. O. Railâ€" way, has amounted to $756,152,337 and dividends of $266,060.482 have been paid. The balance has gone out in wages, supplies, taxes, and provided a steady stream of purchases in southâ€" ern Ontario. The rallway also openâ€" ed for settlement 16,000,000 acres of good clay land. Over 70,000 people have found employvyment and have Ppoof uoipouo7 si1y) S2A135 a;imâ€"asnoy 2Y} the recognition of a committee to disâ€" cuss matters of mutual interest with the warden. The next thing they will insist on may be a closed shop. Instructions to this effect are to be issued at once to relief Oofficers and are to be enforced regidly. "Our reâ€" gulations must be lived up," declared Mr. Croll. "Nobody will be paid a cent of cash relief who won‘t work at the prevailing rate of wage laid down by the municipality to which he belongs." Toronto and Empire: â€"New Westminster convicts want pay and the recognition of a committee to disâ€" cuss matters of mutual interest with 1 small hot, red pepper 3 tablespoons salt 1â€"2 cup sugar 2 1â€"2 cups vinegar 1 tablespoon white mustard seed 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon allspice Combine the vegetables, salt and sugar, and cook until the. mixture beâ€" gins to thicken, then add the vinegar and spices, and cook until the mixture becomes a thick sauce. Pour into hot jars and seal immediately. A despatch from Toronto last week says that Hon. David A. Croll, Minâ€" ister of Public Welfare, definitely anâ€" nounced the distinct rule that in muniâ€" cipalities where cash relief is paid, all recipients of relief, if ableâ€"bodied, must work for that relief or "go without." Instructions to this effect are to be issued at once to relief Oofficers and are to be enforced regidly. "Our reâ€" iInstructions to this eIlect are to De issued at once to relief Oofficers and are to be enforced regidly. "Our reâ€" gulations must be lived up," declared Mr. Croll. "Nobody will be paid a cent of cash relief who won‘t work at the prevailing rate of wage laid down by the municipality to which he belongs." friends of Moscow and led into further trouble. The Lumber Workers‘ Union is a purely communistic organization which has no interest in the worker except to prevent him from working in order to cripple industry. If the lumberjacks of this district fall into the Moscow trap a second time little sympathy will be felt with them and they need look for no help in these parts." CO. in the vicinity of Ansonville, Kaâ€" puskasing and Cochrane, fresh labour trcubles have broken out and many camps have been closed down. The striking busnworkers are congregating in the three centres and the experiâ€" ences of last winter are being repeated. The threat is made that a strike among the workers employed in this district by the International Paper Co. and its jobbers will follow later. We have no doubt that the company is taking every possible precaution against allowing agitators to reach its camps, but these men, trained in their work, manage to get in despite the most careful vigilâ€" ance, and if at all possible the threat we have no doubt, will be carried out. It is, however, difficult to believe, aftet last December‘s fiasco, that these troubleâ€"makers, whose‘ only purpose is to cripple the pulp industry, can again succeed in leading the men out of the lumber camps. Surely any Of the bushworkers familiar with the dismal consequences of last year‘s walkâ€"out, which landed about 70 of the lumberâ€" bushworkers familiar with the dismal consequences of last year‘s walkâ€"out, which landed about 70 of the lumberâ€" jacks in jail and deprived them of a winter‘s work, will give short shrift to any communistic agitators coming into the camps this year. With improved wages and improved general conditions, and little or no other work available, they will surely not again permit themselves to be lured away from their work by false promises from lying, scheming foreigners and herded in Rouyn to be fed and sheltered by the they need look for no help in these| Wash, peel, quarter and core apples. parts." Boil together equal amounts of cider and apples for about two hours, stirrâ€" RELIEF RECIPIENTS MUST ing to prevent burning. Add sugar and WORK. SAYS HON. D. CROLL | spices to taste and boil until thick and | perfectly smooth. Seal in clean, hot week regarding an alttempt of communistic activities in t was timely is evident from th across the provincial bounda camps of the Abitibi Pulp : poses ol heed the Workers in the lumber camps who are inclined to tion to the alien agitators make tools of them to ser smoKke and the services rendered to be forgotten OfI poll Northern the corre province must k1 and should not for Workers Should Heed the Experiences of the Past follo inda there was talk of pulling up the rails. When the prospectors got busy in the area and opened up a dozen properties near long Lac and then carried on to "‘The T. N. O. K ributed mightily to t Intario and of Toront outhern and eastern ht ich exist, bu noke and duw Phat w long AT son tC “’ eng€ men which this railway the province shouk mag them to serve the purâ€" Soviet should note anc 1 to be learned from the rial in The Rouynâ€"Norâ€" Know the orget them created up has no ol ibuses t feel i1l . LAe ‘ P ittempted he pr that in th litical fracs ae Press last pted revival i these parts the fact that dary, in the ) and Paper onville, Kaâ€" fresh labour and many ly bright for| The following are some interesting has workeq| recipes for readers of The Advance as vill continue] written by Barbara B. Brooks:â€" How good they smellâ€"spicy apple, ay has conâ€"| butter, peach jam, mustard pickle, chiD rosperity of| sauce. Children are {following their ‘eople in the| noses straight to the kitchen when ions of the they come in from play; father asks basic facts what smells so good when he comes in the heat! home from work and everyone wants a )roar. _ The, taste despite the cook‘s assurance that bjections to| Such things should ripen in the jars i the line, if, before they are ready for the table. ilway ha hould no 11ll eking to the purâ€" and 1xed ig with ng and n transâ€" week | Jjars pul @itten mC Lightning struck the Children‘s Aid Shelter at Sudbury on Friday evening last, the chimney being damaged and some of the plaster knocked off the building inside through the force of the stroke. The damage done was not serious and the youngsters were in no danger from the incident as it occurâ€" red.. The storm that struck the Shelter at Sudbury also damaged other homes andâ€"other structures in the same city. There were also some transformers burned out, and other damage done. The loss, however, was all a property loss, there being no injury to any huâ€" man being, though the slectrical storm seems to have been an unusually severe one. Even the property damage was not great and while Sudbury did not escape the force of the electrical storm the city did appear to be fortunate enough to escape any serious loss of any kind. sILVER CENTRE MANX HIT BY AUTOMOBILE LAST WEEK 1â€"2 cup water. 1 quart tomatoes. 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar. Heat olive oil and pepper until oil smokes. Add jpnion and cook until soft, being careful not to brown. Mix tomato paste with water and add to the oil in three installments, letting it cook each time until it looks dry. Add tomatoes, bay leaf and salt iand cook until oneâ€"third of the sauce has evaporated. Add the sugar and cook ten minutes longer. | savoury Creamed Fish ! 1 cup cooked fish pickel from bones l and flaked. 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 1â€"2 teaspoon salt t 1â€"2 cups milk * 1â€"8 teaspoon paprika I 1 teaspoon catsup 3 tablespoons chopped sweet pickle 1 tablespoon minced parsley 1â€"2 cup corn flake crumbs Make a white sauce by melting butâ€" ter and blending it with flour and salt. Add milk gradually and cook until smooth and thickened. Add paprika, catsup, pickle and parsley. Pour over fish in a casserole. Top with crumbs and brown in a hot oven (425 deg. F.) PEACH BUTTER Peel and stone peaches. Cook in as small amount of water as possible unâ€" til they are reduced to a pulp. Add l 1â€"2 as much sugar as peach pulp and cook until thick and clear, stirring to sUDBULRY CHILDREN‘S SHELTER STRUCK BY LIGHTNING BOLT 1â€"2 as much sugar as peach pulp and cook until thick and clear, stirring to prevent burning. Pack into clean, hot jars and seal at once. Cider Apple Butter Purchase boiled cider or boil cider down oneâ€"half. Whle it is no longer necessary to do home canning because of the long list of commercially packed goods carried by every grocery store, nearly every homemaker puts up at least one favorâ€" ite in the fall which she may save for very special occasions or send as a gift to special friends. Many women can their own tomato juice and season it just the way they like it so that it is only necessary to chill before serving. It is convenient to have tomato sauce canned and ready to heat for spaghetti, veal chops, croquettes or casserole dishes. Here is a tomato sauce recipe which will be its own reward trouble of canning it. It is gi1\ in a family size quantity, but multiplied as many times as for canning in quantity. Joy for the Winter from This Fall Work some Recipes for Making Now and Enjoyving Later on. Tomatu sauce, Chil} Sauce, Peach Butter. Chili Sauce 4 quarts chopped and peeled tomaâ€" cups chopped onions cup chopped sweet red pepper cup chopped green pepper canning in quantity. Tomato Sauce tablespoons, olive o.l 2 teaspoon black pepper. small onion (chopped). tablespoons tomato paste its own reward for the It is given here can be desired an honorary capacity on a C consider and report upot suitable type of propelling for the ship. The exacting service on the North Atlantic for which Number 534 is inâ€" tended involved some years of investiâ€" gations and experiments being carried out to determins the design, form and propelling machinery of the vessel. In the course of these investigaâ€" tions a number of leading British marâ€" ine engineers were invited to serve in The contract for the construction 0 the vessel was placed with the builders Messrs John Brown Company Limit: ed, on December l1st, 1930; work wa: suspended on December 10th, 1931, anc resumed again on April 3rd, 1934. The ship will probably be completec early in 1936 when she will be placec in commissicn cn the Southampton Cherbourg, New York service. In direct line of succession from th first Cunard steamer, the Clydeâ€"buil paddle steamer "Britannia‘" which or July 4th, 1840 made transatlantic hisâ€" tory by inaugurating the first regulal North Atlantic mail and passenge steamer service, Number 534 represent: the supreme triumph of naval archiâ€" tecture and marine engineering in the development of which Cunard ships throughout the 94 years of the comâ€" pany‘s existence, have played a noteâ€" worthy part. Not only did this rer mark the first occasion 1 vessel to be launched i: of Their Majesties the K but it will also mark the on which a Queen of En formed the naming cere Another feature was t] was heard by millions over the world. For ceremonies were not onl cast to listeners in the but also relayed to all British Empire, the Uni{ throughout Europe. Elsewhere in picture of : Star liner, Nu terday (Wedn yards of ‘the Brown Co., I Scotland. The one without p; the British M Hundred Thcusand People See Remark able Event Yesterday. New Liner Notable in Many Wavys. Cunard White Star‘s New Liner Launched Delicious Qualit y if the Niumb »dnesdc ALTY thi XOrK SerVvIce. service on the } B e Kin TL Da T1 Brit] Inet o serve 1 mnmittee t the mos machiner uUn hb 11M AC pupil District Health Officer Would have Been Heloful Di rict Medical Hf6 joiniked because ett 1MA "" C A, OR THL 1 PEACHELE VORDsS Di n the medical proâ€" that even if a Disâ€" th Officer were apâ€" > was useful to ont the partial lower continued in way 1] t GUMMED INX THIS CASE 11 did pace s has be lth of t h Office a po. yould â€" Advan Gorm h11 1i SiGents @Accorc plains that w contagious, lik Full information now in hands of agent. ilting each time i: sample instan( ealth Officer shou ivestigation to disc iuse of the malady dents accordingly Effective Sunday, September 30th a bili miting CANADIAN PACIFIC urred l Fresh from the Gardens TIME TABLE CHANGES V Claiming _ Jeopardy utbreaks Un ho Hé (O1 dir tance whe hould mak ch Di nCo T Phere have been the kind within ha r1dv reâ€"there are isolated disâ€" Ith supervisâ€" 1@ might well strict health e settlement eak of that fantum, has tle life, with a District i thorough underlying ise the reâ€" illane exâ€" . violently t â€"<or _‘ er of conâ€" Cholera terized by rrhea and dlid nade to ition of npecially D nd reâ€" This aong the in 11 T h

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