Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 22 Nov 1934, 2, p. 6

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t snould diamond dr out gold Mr. McChe: the hardwar with it wht there psfore fit Fifth.â€"â€"Dow brick yard n ecSvered befor Nizshthawk atr also pro sides the its entire gold can ing to b Railway moreâ€"Hislop ahead there vice between camp. And almost certa should be ma fr¢m Connau €d and put i Ontario. Third.â€" double ; house cn Wants Election to Go Right in Tisdale the T. N But the tr the gold m by leaps a election is Oldâ€"timer has a Lot of Things to say About a Lt cf Good Things. Warts a Gold Brick Yard. y ES Kitech ugnt~â€"] Ccuping Mis tion : read: econd of th Safe ... se â€"__ | “re f' eB > . . Te S'TE:;‘J:;JZED \%¢ sn tw s e t es 4 ',g")p.c.-.\‘,_ a i h £4% constant milk supplyâ€" always freshâ€"always ready for use. That is the assurance you get with "Dorothy" Evaporated Milk â€"a pure doublivâ€"rich Milk â€"a pure doublyâ€"rich milk that will add zest to your favorite recipesâ€" enrich all cooking and beverages. Use "Dorothy" for every milk purpose. No purer, safer soap than uld Hisloy there etwee NEW YORK, CHICACGO, BOSTON, Li)ONDON, ENCGLAND NEWFOUNDLAND JAMAICA, CUBA, TY REZUBLIC Canada GUARANTEE ON EVERY PACKAGE PRINGESS (> FLAKES ° hn Trcupin wyhich i ik iD k 11 The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA Try The Advance Want Advertisements 111 NC pect shaft. neighbourh row but t] rOoOwW In add ecntint seveEeral Recent howe makl 1Iug knowledge that sound credit is the lifeâ€"blood of trade has been a basic guiding principle of those charged with the direction of this Diamond Drilling on the Hislop Gold Properts Bank throughout its existence of over a hundred years... since 1832 ht SDows:d (GraXH ... rlized 1C T1 > Holli makin + Holl mil ZON ne ied a OVER A CENXTURY OF BANKING SERVICE AlX 1832 2(01 *Berk Worldâ€"wide facilities in every department of banking found 1. ‘Th int he o dGeepenit Surface s 15¢ haft e HislOop are diamond dril n 11 5V nl summe mall pros gs in th were nar [ Min aaft arga attral propet his mitr ‘s norl blishir i1ated in e has e has matic s has whe mak alons fi® WA in Secondâ€""HOow many people could be induced to take an excursion to Jame: Bay to see the wCnderful displays of Northsern Lights?" In reference to this idea it may be said that it would ‘be wOorth anyone‘s while to come to Timmins to see the Northern Lights. The Northern Lights is showirg here eclipse anything that san be sesn in the South in this line. Firstâ€""Could nct the T. N. O. Railway, with a proper "Main street" headquarters in Torontsc, become the showâ€"window Of the North as well as its main traffic artery?2" In reference to this it may be said that whi‘ls the T. N. O. Railway was criginally designed as a colonization railrcad and from time to time has carried on the advertising that would naturally be associated with a colonizaâ€" tion railroad, it has never carried this advertising to the extent followed by cther railroads. The colcnization daeâ€" partments of the CP.R. and CNR. have ctmpletely overshadowed the T. N. 0. On the other hand any efâ€" fort along this line On the part of the T. N. O. has been by critiâ€" cism of caustic sort. It will be recalled that in the recent soâ€"called enquiry inâ€" o T. N. O. affairs special censure was centred around every effort that had been made in the way of popularizâ€" rg the railway and the ccuntry. It is to be hoped that under the present ‘"new dea‘l," there will be a fairer chance given the new management in presenting the "show window" to the outside world. nme CI InNe most popuilar governmen!t| appointments affecting Northern Onâ€" tario was when Charles V. Gallagher, wel‘lâ€"known Porcupine surveyor and mining man, and reeve of Tisdale township, was appcinted viceâ€"chairman of the T. N. O. Railway Commission. As Premier Hepburn is chairman, Mr | Gallagher to all intents and purposes becomes head of the Commission. Malâ€" colm Lang, exâ€"M.P., is another northâ€" ern man cn the Commission. In the past appointments to this Commission have been made from Old Ontario men, and Northern people believe that the railway scon will become a far greater | factor than ever before in the develop-’ ment of mining and the tourist traude.i Mr. Gallagher is a thorough believer‘ in the possibilities of giving the North greater publicity through the medium of the railway." | Here are five suggesticns madeby the | magazinge, "Gold":â€" Firstâ€""Could nct the T. N. O.| "One Cf the appointments tario was wh wel‘â€"known mining man township, wa: of the T. I some Suggestions to 1. N. 0. Ralway Adveocates Excursions to Mooso Northern Lights at James Bay Advancing Rather than Curâ€" tailing of Service Desired e the most; popul lintments affecting ) was when Charles â€"~known Porcupine ing man, and ree iship, was appcinted o 2 uggestions TOor the 1. N. Q, , issue. The suggestions are i while for the consideraticn N. 0O, Commission. Judzgâ€" November issue of "Gold," izine is friendly disposed to ast of the new Commissioners N. 0. It is pleased to see C. V. Gallagher and Mac he Commission, and for the son,â€"that they know â€"th: the maga iggestions â€"CIMImi8siOn, and for â€"that they know e worked for the adyv North for many ye es a picture of Mac Ls though Mac Lang hel proper *"Main street‘ Toront:, become the the North as well as the North T. N. O he advan Moosonee the forn uld be | the railw James | chances ays of | the resul South teacene remain: that what is chicfly neede fair play from those in authority that the public may have example which to base fair play from the pe. in general. The silly spirit of political critic for politics‘ sake alone should be ab doned, and the siill sillicr idea of part of th®= system ceing "given bac the Indians" should be equally avoi ! warranted y the tourist Dbusiness to p Jjattracted? (Provision already is madg on bridges fOor a highway section)." No thoughtful person in the Norti will be ready to agrese that the continu ation of the railway to James Bay i impractical. It has been shown tha |there is mineral wealth awaitinzg de |velopment in the coun‘ry north o Cochrane and that the building of th extension will eventually justify itself ljust, as Other secticns of the road hav been justified despite the harsh criti cism following their construction in eact cass. As for the roadway ncorth o Cochrans that is something that wil be needed ‘bef¢re many years go by. Fourthâ€""Is it not advisable to ad | vance rather than to curtail the useful |ness and service ¢f the railway in th belisf that its revenues and uilit may be increased than dimin ished?" The answer to sugzestion No. 4 i very decidedly in the affirmative. Pifthâ€""Again, how many excursion into the North have ever been conduct ed by the T. N. O. ocm its own initiâ€" ative? And how many will be in fu tuxe?" EXCHANGE OF TEACHERS ANNOUNCED BY DEPARTMENT During the last ten years th been 291 exchanges between teachers and teachers in cther the British Empire, of which been in the elementary school in the secondary, according to issued by Neil McDougall, of partment of education. About threeâ€"quarters of the e have ‘been with overseas part Kirkland Lake now has eleven policeâ€" men on its force, an increase of twyo being necessary lately, partly on acâ€" count of the increased business comins along through the beer parlours. Empire Ireland Elementary schoolsâ€" niburgh, Kirkland Lake M. Thomas, Worcester, Playlair, Haileybury, wit head, Manchester, Engl: cher, North Bay, with Iv London, England. that the tendency moves on the part men‘t in the same T. â€"â€"N. QO. had its own the form and for the ; the railway felt would bes chances for traffic for th the result would no doubt In all this, however, the should be given a fairer has received. Lt shculd latitude in expendi building Oof new trade is unfortunate that recer tical aspect has been e much that criticism ap; solelv for political effect. Interprovincial ¢6 Alma Ward, Kirk] country and for : again, however, th ment has suffered 1 unfair criticism. T that cther departm ment at various tim wisely had partiecs out the seerr B eache All who have given the question any thought will agree that the more excurâ€" sions to the North the bester for this country and for all Ontario. HerCc again, however, the former manageâ€" sky Of the c:lher wint occurrence. Thirdâ€"*‘I railway to . would the c The on can not Lights r her side. Whateve Having acquired an upâ€"toâ€" date equipment to make your old or discoloured floors look like new. We solicit your patronage and engquiries tA +C riinst the N. O ; Floors Sanded and Refinished fal NC l€ Day or Night Service No Job To not beâ€"‘s ts may be winter th Africa, a rs in other st of this Lennard Leon 29 Fourth Avenue 1¢€ Aived. It shcould be itude in expenditures Oof new trade and tr unate that recently t ect has been empha at criticism appears * political effect. Thi tendency will be to t e sameâ€"SspItIiL. LDAiS wilil nJo 10t a tbit fairer on the on the recent unfair criticist mer management was on the incial exchanges include:â€" , Kirkland Lake, with Ada Saskatocn. "Is it not advisable to ad °r than to curtail the useful ervice <f the railway in th t its revenues and utilit creased than dimin th ime the tourist Provision al 0r a highws lDle is that definite dates set when the Northern )e seen. For four months ne NC Phone 674 the couniry north of that the building of the eventually justify itself, ecticns of the road have despite the harsh critiâ€" heir construction in each the roadway ncorth ofi is something that will ‘re many ySats go ov. ia, New Zealand and oneâ€"quarter r provinces of Ca TA tThe DBo.ter for th Cr all Ontario. He: , the former manage ed from illâ€"advised an The Advance believe rtments of the goverr of nnounced 2 ~wWa thery Bigâ€"or Too Small E1r ake, with Doroth; ‘r, England; Gracke with Mrs. Mother. igland; Edith Pulâ€" Ivy A. Hammond irer deal than it culd be allowed enditures for the e and traffic. iIt recently the poliâ€" n emphasized so very properly uring the N is pal land, litical C hould be icr idea inuation of th is irist highway b 11 ) be asszsesse alone. If th excursions, i purposes tha t increase th e ‘T. N. :O 2e profitable pusing?ss to Je ready is mad»> 1y section)." in the Nortn it the continuâ€" new mana This will s oOf Canada xchanges 0o arsd to ib This mean l€ xchanges s of the back avoide a repotr the de re have Ontario parts of t AL 1€ . have ind 1: n th thoug! nigh‘] ie Cn eople week fromwm ind i 1 11 ind Ves of Privy oflicials military unsigne in the and so ment o tem, so harmful in the United States seemed through these dismissals to be repeated on a rvmall scale in Canada. This was pCinted out to the governâ€" moent, and they, gverring that each disâ€" missal was fu‘lly on account of the officials having taken part against them in the late political contest, yet diminished greatly the nunber of disâ€" missals, which they returned to me with the repeated request to sign them. . acknowledged that for a permanent official to take part in a political conâ€" test was wrong, and conceded signaâ€" tures to all dismi:sals where this wa> proved to have taken place. In many cases, however, the threatened man continued in office, because nothing could be alleged against him save that the new minister at the head of his deâ€" partment wanted him removed to proâ€" vide for some political friend of his own." "Nothing of the kind has since tranâ€" spired in the Dominion arena or in any of the provinces. It has been thought that the progress of civilization in the last fifty years had forever benished from Canada the ruthless methods which disfigure public life in the United States. So far as we have seen, no Onâ€" tario newspaper has risen to justify the widespread beheadings carried out by the Hephburn administration. Bome come tem, Party Guillotine Works as .. it Worked Long Ago "Gold mining is essenvially a deâ€" pression industry. It is the only indusâ€" try that is not competitive, the only inâ€" dustry that today creates entirely new opportunities for emp‘oyment and an entirely new market for supplies and is the only indus‘ry in which an increased price for ‘its product does not bear upor the petple Cf the country. To retard its development by an arbitrary inâ€" crease in costs nt?i only affects the in dustry unfavourably but destrCys marâ€" kets for supplies and opportunities fo 2amplecyment that all governments s‘iat they are so anxicus to create." the cost of preduction and them can be passed on to the The cost of production is tne ing factor in the amount 0f can be treated. Increased Cc shortened lives for the mines ing communities and the s millions of dollars‘ worth cf c "Gold pression try that dustry t their faith to the Federal Government statement that the bullion tax is temporary measure that will expire Ma ~lst, 1985. "As a result of higher gol‘ld price beth the provinces and the Dominio were obtaining greatly increased re venuges without any change in the rat Attltude of Mines on Gold Tax Matter Still are a unit in ©pposing the bullion tax. They always were and still are a unit in opposing the singling out of gold mires for any special levy by either the provinces Or the Dominion. They pin their faith to the Federal Government‘s briefly and : Mr., Bateman still are a un tax. They al On fi1 matlter . there is the mit gestion secretar to consider peoar busing to believe : lected by u new moncy lost throug to taxation In recen: Opposed to the Tax, says Secreltary of Mining Association. Assured it was only Temporary Levy. ssurance 1X was rong in C rst place, ns (and 1 ther it m tary egneg he c: I1 of 3 A week. io Minin ‘ase of e placed 0 [ Bir Jo , and tI harmfu throug h ind ncot al it may ‘be ~â€"attitude alms t minior ‘ ow Domini like i diff kin of 6 1€ im ha Joh the tem whe of th discus ignatut 1 orders civil e 1€ ; TOt hat mply dismiss féderal employâ€" was even then nothing to the wholesalse scale Ontario guillotine has b " 0 11 ther Ther for They alw fac oy an aroitrary inâ€" only affects the in ly but destrCys marâ€" ind opportunities fo all governments s‘at is to create." SUlU he 11 ointed Associa d and gether vdded) C C l an sent it 8 uld old irc. of a wl ‘s dismissi and som ent them t a reaso dismissal ‘ord. ‘Phe [acdanld h: oils of ofi( he United e dismissal scale in C ed tha‘ neit ould plac ven that j1a@at Prem 1C mine ,ed‘“ Minin ‘W at Loront out that th icn had bee: he tax in th sufficiont rea selfish reason Indsed rEaso acusands col ix millions c ig industry i 1 ha office neitht wer> he bullion This su: Batema ril) | gove ad | nier H o mak il may be ntinued many n the back hould given vernâ€" 1 just ‘sVSsâ€" A xX id prCc [1ve already 100Ks as OlGdâ€"1 horse and buggy. And tric engines, which seem yesterday, begin to lo0k highâ€"wheeled â€" fawnâ€"coloured tcpcoats. two weeks ago and of sharing honours with JGe Sklanden for the "cat burglar" title was up on a charge of retaining stolen goods. Asked by the magistrate if he had even been in trouble before Romeo veplied, almost tearfvlly, that ne mrad never, never been in police court »xcept for ane Occasicn when he got drunk in Timmins. But the face was 0o familiar for the magistrate to let it g;0 at that. He laid Rtmeo‘s case over for a week, had him fingerâ€"printed and asked the R.CM.P. to lo¢ck up his reâ€" sord if any. From the official findings Romeo has one of those convenient memoriés that retains Only what it walnts to keep. Since 1921 Romeo‘s life has been a case of just one jail after ancither. He started in ‘21 on a â€"forgery and theft charge at South Porcupine which netted him three years in Portsâ€" mouth penitentiary. Nine other "stretches" were served in various basâ€" tillss including Burwash Industrial Parm, thse Ontaric Reformatory ai Guelph, Portsmouth penitentiary again and St. Vincent de Paul penitentiary n Quebec. Once in 1980 he was a free man for a day when he broke out Of Burwash, but that only added to his record of days spen; in jail for a peniâ€" sentence followed. During hnis :rareer he has préetiy consistently stuck o his Christian name although he :hanged the surname Laroz:ue to Leâ€" iuec. His Only cther alias was Romeo. Liberal journals have registsred the strongest kind of protest. But the end is not yet. _ Inexperienced ministers, under pressure from the party organizâ€" ers, go from bad to worse. They are depriving themselves of the assistance of expert civil servants; they are tearâ€" ing the service to shreds and tatters; they are going far to demoralize it and This Romeo is Known in Timmins and Vicinity The Kirkland Lake Nirthern News last week Larocque and the finger print section of the Royal Canadian Mountsd Police at do nco: agrese. Last week in police court Romeo suspected ¢f ‘being the suitâ€" stealer who lifted men‘s garmeonts here ender it inefficient A M U T LA L C OM PA B K 219 increase in October / Further evidence of the leading position of F. N. Whaley G. Keddie FC 2 ol e n sds A NTRA Now vyou can spenp tHE wouays 'N T"E "OMELAND e # e Late Fall sailings ton the O Further evidence of the leading position the North American Life and the high reg in which it is held by the insuring pul l to be found in the Company‘s October si record which was as follows : Investigate the to Plymouth, Havre, London *AURANIA _ L s \ . .‘ ‘Nov. 29 Te . oR s ul . _ o0 _0 . A MAE O Country are most attractiveâ€"oneâ€"third of the way turesque St. Lawrence River. December sailings 1 and Saint John, with dates so convenient for tha and New Year holiday in the Homeland. Our combined fleet, with so many famous ships fr choose, offers you low rates and wonderful acco ROUND TRIP RATES from AS LOW AS §144 50 Representatives * _‘ ; ‘=, _ «â€"~â€"NOV. 23 to Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool From Montreal to Plymouth. Havre, London From Quebec (direct) Fall Sailings PAID.FOR NEW ASSURANCES INCREASED BY 24% Over October, 1933 te the udzanlu;_ws Q/’ A ssuring Mutually. bu BARGAIN EXCURSsION RATES Round Trip o modern little like tles and Allowing 15 days on with so many famous ships from which to low rates and wonderful accommodation. Nov. 23 ctiveâ€"oneâ€"third of the way on the picâ€" River. December sailings from Halifax investig? run acrc investig; Still anc ened by t cording to in vostigati¢ NEXT INVESTIGATIOGN MA BE FIRE MARSHAL‘S®S ( 1J defin then label Third Class from +110 Tourist â€" from }139 on the other side e 1GOGV Wake Up Your Liver Bile . .. Without Calomel, And Feel Like a Million Dollars. Lre _ MArsSs ernmer ‘stigat it convenient for that Christmas THAT DEPRESSED FEELING 18 LARGELY LIVER Late Fall sailings to the Old From Halitax to Plymouth, Havre, ALAUNIA â€" â€" â€" AVUVSONIA â€" â€" Also sails from Saint Dec. 13 to Belftast, Liverpool Christmas Sailings ati Y hC _Ont word sale dA T( Clasgow London â€"«â€" BDec â€"« â€" Dec. and ma y 14 14

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