Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 30 May 1935, 2, p. 2

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Creame Bran Muf Now is open for rhubarb : may mak lades. Th fcund in Jelly, Jam and Marmalade Season at Hand Soon Now Well to Presery]} for Next 5A K Hotpoint Range Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited U k 1 < ( ‘preu 1 F ' m Luncheon ] | Sq Fried Nootdljeés c . Tea CORN SYRUP 11 Controlling and Qperating XORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED M ODERN TABLEâ€"TOP DESIGN ® THRIFT C O 0O KER H1â€"SPEED CALROD ELEMENTS ® UTILITY DRAWER ALLâ€"STEEL CONSTRUCTION * STAINâ€"RESISTING ENAMEL ow to Look for Good Bargains in Fruit for Pineapyples for Canning. Menus for Meals AY maArmaA~â€" 771 1J Vegetable Soup Cottage C Pat Al mext meal until reac And Hotpoint fam r Hotpoint Calrod "c store and inspect Mondayâ€"Breakfast Breakfast Hot Rolls Luncheon itoes Baked Radishes amallow Whip Luncheon Dinner supper Dinn With Dumplin escse Salad 1inp Mu 1C1 Oni You can have a General Electric Hotpoint Range delivered to your home immediately â€" and pay for it on easy terms. $10 Down Watercress Mavonnaise 11 a yV ibl :';‘;_;.g.i HOt Rolls Coffee | Luncheon ; 1 Roe and Watercress Salad _ | MOST WOMEN Rhubarb Tea | BUY THE LARCGE Dinner 7 PACKAGE oast Veal With SLuffmg P aam m tram im ce PMX $ L2 .. Rhubarb Pie saturdayâ€"Break1 Juice With Slice Cooked â€"Cereal s Hot Rolls poon vin cucumbe dressing Banana Tarts Thuisdayâ€"Breakfast id rawhberry Shortcak sShad Ros Salad Fridayâ€"Breakfast Dinner Luncheon With Cr Un( innet Dinner d Mac heon iimbe h Cheese 1 Muffins Tea ast Salad AI Bananas THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TINMMINS, ONTARIO titute of merit, the shorter it is the better. It really ought not to have been written at all. If a piece of writing is worth printing, its worth may be, in part, owing to its length, since its length guarantees its thoroughness. Even arn editorial can be so brief as to be meaningless, except as an exclamaâ€" tion point of hysteria. oÂ¥ San Francisco, Argonaut:â€"Merit is what readers really want, not brevity. Of course, if a piece of writing be desâ€" i#UT1Mg TNE CPBEDTATZIONS, INnE COTmmiIiUlltee have arranged for the official film of the ‘Great War, "Lest We Forget," to be on view in the Empire Theatre in Cochrane." A large influx of visitors is many former residents of the town expected back for the celebrations The general committee, appointed by town council, is under the chairmanâ€" ship of Magistrate Tucker. The adâ€" vertising committee is in charge of W. R. McVittie. The town will be suitably decorated, the arrangements having been placed in the hands of a commitâ€" tee under exâ€"Mayor R. R. Mitchell. Work is proceeding now on the comâ€" pletion of the Memorial Park and durâ€" ing the month of June all committees will be making final. arrangements. During the celebrations, the committee have arranged for the official film of the Great War, "Lest We Forget." to in the evenin in the event. swimmirg races will be run Commianda Lake, where the sy pool is located. The arrangem this portion of the programm: the hands of a committee he Exâ€"Mayorâ€" F. C. Ivy. A grand parade through the of the town will lead off th roon events and will include t men of the Cochrane district : that day staging their annua day in the town. The field sports are in the of a committese under the l6 of Counciller A. D. W. Cuthber the ball games are under the vision of Councilior M. Owens committee. A grand jubilee dance will in the high school auditorium | ninultes more. (Copyright, 1935, by the cate, Inc.) SErvance . sary of t] Cochrane, 30 and Ju Opening of Memorial Park Cochrane, Dominion Day other minutE 1 °gg Few drops onion juic 1 teaspoon salt 4 teaspcon peppéer cup bread crumbs Work all ingredisnts into a loaf and put it greased double frying y er flame, cook twenty side. ‘Turn, â€"ccok fifte other side. Open pan 2 tablespoons melted fat Mix potatoes with other ingredients. Drop by tablespoons on a hot griddle. Pat down with spatula or pancake turner. CoOk slowly on one side until light brown. Turn and cook other side. ucum}k 2 pounds ground beef Grated rind angq juice of 1 tablespson chopped parsl 4 slices bacon, chopped fin So she tried Rinso next washday. 2 teas tablesp cup )6 durir ina ;watercress, Potato Pancakes Oy urn and C Beqaf Loaf 301 auditorium in th necessary other hall [ ‘be taken for thi will be snis together. Form ut in a hot wellâ€" ng pan. Cover, lowâ€" nty minutes on one fifteen minutes on pan and cook five are in the ‘hands der the leadership W. Cuthbert, while under the superâ€" M. Owens and his celebrations. Ccf all kinds have ng the afternoon â€" be run off in ere the swimming arrangements for programms are in mittee headed by e two days and s of the town are f the after lude the fire trict who ar innual sport 4+ i umb ERENCE CE Ww 11 Syndiâ€" 44 held If chain store people are opposed to regimentation, to price fixing and reguâ€" lation to eliminate the soâ€"calleq unâ€" ethical trading practices, it is nOt beâ€" cause higher prices would not be welâ€" come. They are opposed merely beâ€" cause they see, as practical men, the difficultyâ€"the insurmountable difficulâ€" tiesâ€"of regulation. And it may be that one reason politicians (with a few notâ€" able exceptions) favour these schemes is that the dozens of bureaus and boards and insperction services and whatnot will add materially to the army of CGove ent emplioyees. s Those who 1 regulation make miuch of the fact that we have a Railâ€" way Commission which functions fairly well in the interest of shippers. But there are fundamental differences beâ€" tween stabilizing railway freight rates cenkts, pr commodit you CC cents, prices means that chainâ€"store peo; This mistake should you consider that th cents. not commoditic It can be hoped t] sellers‘ market aga then economists lik the first to protest : sumers crying alo> like Mr. Stevens ag into the problem a (Mr. Stevens was â€" Defends the Chain _ _ Stores in Business levelâ€"cann: competition ness long. ‘ enable him sellers than sary To S contrary, ing their who does : eéelâ€"and i levelâ€"can vance ¢I as as 1 per cgnt., oVEI his cost, And the wholesaler is prosâ€" pering, whereas (on the evidence of the 1949 costâ€"ofâ€"living inquiry) he made money in the old days only when he speculated successfully in commoâ€" dities. Mark Senn, M.P. for Haldimand, was a Conservative member of the Price Spreads Commission. Mr. Senn rightâ€" ly was concerned with the prices of farm products. He thought that chain stores might have depressed the prices of ~farm â€" products sold by producers locally. I contend he was wrong, but, even if he were right, the admission that chains also sold cheaper was an admission of an offâ€"setting fact. Mr. Learie‘s fundamental error, in my cpinion, is that he views the price structure as a road on the side of a mountain ang that raising the road to a higher terrace is all that is necesâ€" sary to solve our préeblems. On the contrary, prices are like water in findâ€" ing their level. The chainâ€"store buyer who does not buy at the prevailing levâ€" elâ€"and if he docs not find the real the same basis. If the oldâ€"fashioned wholesalerâ€"reâ€" tailer combination had been as effiâ€" cient as the chain, the chain method would not have made much progress. But the wholesaler was compelled, or thought he was compelled, to maintain expensive services, including many bagmen and long credit and unwieldy, slowâ€"moving inventories. He also was in agreement with his fellows that no retailer could buy direct from the manufacturers. (But, in Eastern Canâ€" ada, the two largest department stores had this privilege). The chain stores were a prime facâ€" tor in breaking down this agreement. For a time it lsoked as if the wholeâ€" sale grocer was dcomed. But he reâ€" formed his methods,. allowed his reâ€" tail customers to make direct purchases, and today the wholesaler serves the retailer, in some instantes, at an adâ€" vance as little as 1% per cent. over his cOost, And the wholesaler is prosâ€" pering, whereas (on the evidence of the 1949 costâ€"ofâ€"living inquiry) he made money in the old days only when he speculated successfully in commoâ€" 10 if his intern those of his « the same bas if :h whien some oT. is devised whi en the bridg consumer, the in importance The duty C his duty to 1 pC at the tributi food c #a@ 1i 1¢ entl her n t had 1¢ is created in m the heyda M 1 artm 11 al expense competitor 1 K ere right, t lso sold che: in offâ€"setting fundamental at he views C margin be mo 1¢€ 36 JUVEeIr 1 € iln some 4@ bu 1€ 2 Mr. Leari?t WIlll J0€ n the event of conâ€" id, and politicians iin sagely inquiring s they did in 1919. purC nplo marke the c 11 They Fill and do N â€"Methods is cfi ruthles yany in busi lloOws that no ct. from: â€" the Eastern Canâ€" 1l 1€ 1¢€ pa agreement the whole nd pay for 1 or left nd 1929. have a uC 11 Y NT 1¢ OW The it m K. Â¥Y. Daniaud, District Passenger Agent, CP.R. North Bay, Ont 1Cl in perit O1 whic mark falil only a portl secondly, bec: turn to carrot sonal opinion scheme will : ceéept that it c marketing of Regulati( it would w at :‘ But alread scheme is | farmers wi only a po: repot ons wWJ demning Young, tainly i eleven, | to the i1 commutr count off the books sufficient all the beoks of the chants in Canada. In thes ve could viCla And ail All bli fresh i1 1l ild easily MM memders Cl which go a BROWN LABEL â€" 33« QORANGE PEKQOE â€" 40:¢ Plan to visit the British Isles or the Continent this year. Canadian Pacific Third Class comfort will appeal to you. Frequent sailings weekly to .4 A\ British and Continental Ports. M 1€ tS 5 brin YWith â€"Presto Pack Waxed Tissue simply reach out and (with one hand) extract a single sheet at a time. e SO CONVENIENT pDa nd 2CAuUSE maktit nd 1l timeé Ts Clle numerous reservai go a long way toward con ‘ majority and E. J Weyburn Liberal, who cez t the least wise of â€" the s the mind effectually bac} st of the largsst class in th 111C j ROUND TRIP THIRD CLASS FARES D. #1 Oneâ€"Way Fare as low as 58299 p thal obably 1€ 1J 16 al urpUus aodlish VIH W jam~ma cli ‘~ take he di violatio i hundt job 1¢ igo d roductior nmaximun nJp in Sp hn 11 (L ind id pT C ‘xperiment in Friendship at Noranda Last Woeek )] 11 V me i] DII much A package of presto Pack Waxed Tissue saves its cost several times over by keepâ€" ing leftâ€"overs fresh and preâ€" venting needless waste. 1 endsh id T skin" we all arge, mit more or less ices and preâ€"conâ€" ose around us to ind friendly reâ€" ild exist between be said in praise ~â€"now in progress own many preâ€" out sympathetic ‘standing which ul and result in local standpoint. a Press warmly associated in ave in any way cess, and ‘hopes us started will ictivities aiming notion of goodâ€" thes> communiâ€" many â€" diverse Mid contributed chusiastically being achiev nmnumty., nother are acâ€" interests suborâ€" A1V / 1b. tran was ever ronfident proâ€" fully justified I work of the ntributed â€" so isiastically to ng achieved, incge so readâ€" by our own king people. 1 the interest ying and the hip and unâ€" elements of 3°> large and bies" to the time for A me to manâ€" till suffering ho late war / i1»}, â€"tO USste ine writer est, which almost c broke it conâ€" hing of France to the between Differâ€" n iA t

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