Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 10 Oct 1935, 3, p. 3

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Selmmacher Young : People Reâ€"organize Mrs. Wm. Hampton Inâ€" fant Son of Mr. and Mrs. Major Dead. Other Schuâ€" macher News. | Officers Elected. ..Death of John, the only child of Mr. and Mrs. John Major, 42 Fourth avenue, passed away Saturday morning after suffering for two weeks from meningitis. The child was cne year and 11 months old. The funcral was held Monday from the Church of the Nativity (Timmins) where Father Pare conducted the fuâ€" neral mass, Burial was made in Timâ€" mins cemetery, Floral tributes were:â€" Pillow, from parents; wrsaths from Mr. and Mrs. S. Bojtos; Mr. and Mrs. John Gettler; L. Russor; M. Risst; J. Kovas; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kovas; John Tenke:; Mr. and Mrs. John Kolik; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lockrie and family; Edward and Marie. Schumacher, October 9th, 1935. Speâ€" clal to The Advance. Capt. and Mrs. Reddingten returned Bunday from North Bay, where they attended the wedding of their son. Mrs, Woodall was called to Dsetroit last week where her sister, Miss Patâ€" terson, is quite ill. Bornâ€"Wednesday, October 2nd, at St. Mary‘s hesvital, to Mr. ang Mrs. Stanâ€" ley Barkerâ€"a daughter (Joan Helen). Mrs. Rioux, Port Arthur, is visiting her sors, Aif. and Tom, and her broâ€" ther, W. James. The many friends of Mrs. F. Flowâ€" ers, of the Coniaurum Mine, will regret to héar she had the misfortune to fall and fracture a bone in her ankle, and will be confined to her home for some Miss S. Yorke, of Sault Ste. Marie is visiting Miss H. Francis. Mr. H. Waite, who has spent the summer visiting at his home in Engâ€" land, returned Monday. Miss Ivy, of Cochrane, and Miss Casâ€" well, of Smoky Falls, were guests of Miss Violet Innes last wsek while atâ€" tending teachers‘ convention. â€" The United Church Sunday school are holding their annual Sunday school Rauy Day on stgnday, Oct.ober tha.lsth Th sb ~ZHAEL s «> k A C on PE O â€" KV KK _ EPE ECE and lectures appropi'late to the occaâ€" For Ranges, Furnaces and Fireplaces i ... 18c ds hi _ _ 10€¢ in 274 Bushel or 55 Bushel lots Approximately 55 bushels to the ton Limited Supply â€"â€" Order Early Come back to the best! Your experionce with cheaper clothes must have convinced you that the best materials and the best tailoring always gave you the best value for your monsy. Society Brand Clothes. have the respect and trust of millions of men. The very name is an assurance that fiimsy, aduliterated fabrics which are now flooding the market have been carefully excludedâ€" ’l‘he new fall fabrics are in our storeâ€"Rhey‘re here for you to come and see. Come in. Wendell B. Brewerâ€"mgr. 60 Wilson Ave. BACK TO THE B EST C W. C. ARNOTT ociety AFrand (clothes Schumacher The Liberal Association have opened committee room at 564 First avenue with Miss Marion Leng in charge. Mrs. D. Battochio and family, who have been in Italy all summer, returned home Saturday evening. Mrs. J. Gannon, accompanied by her sister, Miss V. McKinley, of the public schcol staff, Timmins, spert the weekâ€" end visiting their mother in Cobalt. Th@ Young People held their openâ€" ing meeting on Monday evening, when a very large number attended. Those elected â€"to office were:â€"President, Mr. Allan Fish; secretaryâ€"treasurer, Miss Joar Huxley. Those elected as conâ€" veners were:â€"Devoticonal, Miss M. Roâ€" bertson; missions, A. Higginbottom; literary, Miss R. Duxfield; social, Miss E. Ltck; games, Charlie Roberts; pianâ€" ist, Miss G. Bristow. Aiter the election Rev. M. Tait gave an address, his subâ€" ject being "The Sugar Beet." Refreshâ€" ments were served by the sociai comâ€" mittee. Miss Janet Fraser, Ottawa, and prinâ€" cipal of the Fournier public school, was a guest of Miss K. Duxfield last week during convention. The friends of H.. Miller, who is patient in Grace hospital, Toronto, will be pleased:to hear that he is making "googprogress â€"toward>recovery »~»~««~â€" Political meetings are the most pro- ent events of the week. Dr. Murtagh of Timmins the Stevens candidate for this« riding, spoke on Sunday evening, and on Tuesday evening Jos. Bradette, Liberal. member forâ€"the riding, spoke as did Dean Kester and Dr. McInnis. Other meetings are slated for this week. Mr. Mark Morris, Sheenboro, Que., is visiting his sister, Mrs. Frank Furâ€" long. Mrs. Bullock, of Btreetsville, is visitâ€" ing her daughter, Mrs. RK. V. Weston. Messrs. R. Heath, William Small and Alan MacDonald, Timmins, left Monâ€" day for Mcosonee for duck hunting. Mr. Aiphonse Fournier is a patient this week in St. Mary‘s hospital. Mr. William Cullen, of Motherwell, Scotland, and on furlough from the Navy, is visiting at the home of Mr. The friends of Mrs. William Hampton received a shockâ€" when she passed away suddenly Tuesday at St. Mary‘s hospital. The young woman had been il1l only a few days, and death came very unexpectedly. Deceaseq wis only 26 years of age and had been married abcut three years, residing at 42 Second avenue. She leaves her husband, one brother in Sudbury, and relatives in the Old â€"Country. Mr. J. Beattie, of the Mcintyre Mine, left Tuesday for Larder Lake where he has been appointed: superintendent 6f the Amegia Mine. Mr. Schmidt, of the Bank of Comâ€" merce, was transferred to North Bay, Mtr. G. C. Stewart relieving him. The CW.L. are holding a tea and sale of home baking at the home of Mrs. Frank Furlong, 8 First avenue, on Saturday, October the 26th, from three to six p.m. The funds are to g0 toward charity. Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"The Naâ€" tionalist party has been revived in Quebsc, as if Mr. King hadn‘t enough troubles ‘as it is! extracts he believes hits the nail on the head. Some of these extracts are as "I refer now, Sir, noi to the product of the upper six inches of the earth comprising twentyâ€"five per cent. of the surface of Canada, twoâ€"fifths of which is fit for economic farming, but to the next mile down of seventyâ€"five per cent. of Canada‘s surrace with its proâ€" fitable gold fields, nickel mines, coppeéer, silver, radium and other metals now in world demand, and which development will have tremendous impetus under a National Policy of sensible uniform taxâ€" ation by the provinces together with encouragement of capital as now anâ€" nounced by Right Honorable Mackenâ€" Zie King. He stated that one of the first acts of a Liberal Government (eight out of nine provinces Liberal) would be to evolve a *Canada Forward" mining policy and said "I venture to say that, if out of such a conféerence statement could be sent to the money markets of the world as to a settled policy, we would have capital flowing into Canada in short order, we would have more and more labour employed and we would have made â€"a real start on the road to prosperity." ‘"We need a National Mining Policy which will be known not only to our own people, but all the world over." Extracts from Address in Toronto by Cyril Young, Formerly with theâ€"C.N.R. "Backeq by a record on every page of which is progress; unsupported by any human contrivance of tariff or capital; paying tribute in heavy taxaâ€" tion and tariffis, so that Southern manufacturing sections might reach a prosperity impossible under natural laws, the North Country has grown apace until it is oneâ€"vast hive of inâ€" dustry all across Northern Canada, proâ€" ducing gold and other metals which no commercial traveller needs to be sent out to sell. It affords vast employâ€" ment, creates heavy rail haul traffic, a remunerative local market for the Norâ€" thern farmer and turns the wheels of industry in the south land through its purchasing powers." "An outstanding fact which mining men would appreciate legislators fully realizing, is that while the world conâ€" sumed little more wheat or food stuffs during the last twenty years than forâ€" merly (as we all eat ‘the same three meals per day)â€"yet it has consumed more metals in the past twenty years than in all the preceding years of hisâ€" tory added together, the limit individuâ€" glly being merely one of economiic capâ€" acity, of which the purchase of motor cars and their maintenance is merely one example of our being in a metallic age." "Recollect, Sir, that our gold and other metals are toâ€"day in world deâ€" mand, therscby differing from many farm products and manufactureg exâ€" ports bonused by protection. Canada‘s total average exports yearly are only twice the amount of our yearly mineral production of $300,000,000, of which exâ€" port metals and gold formed the major part. Here, Sir, is food for thought. Further, in metals up North lies the long rail haul which the trucks and buses cannot reach out to get under winter conditions, yet is opening . up trafiic along Transâ€"Canada railways built to carry wheat. Had this metalâ€" lic development with its accompanying water power installation been encourâ€" aged immediately after Canada built these roads amortization and interest charges would not be a million a week as they are todayâ€"but it‘s not yet too ‘"Knowing that mining development creates heavy railway traffic, such a@as built up the T. N. O. Railway, pays higher wages than Southern factories and operates three eightâ€"hour shifts every twentyâ€"four hours; furnishes an excepticnal home market north and south and initiates the development of vast electric powers across Canada from the Saguenay aluminum developâ€" ment to the mines of British Columbia ; knowing that only ten per cent. of the mining surface of the North Country is scratched; that already in the past twentyâ€"five years Ontario gqld mining has increased from $42,000 production to $72,000,000, with the metals already paying the colossal sum of $10,000,000 in yearly taxes in Ontario; do you wonâ€" der, Sir, at the mining menâ€"and the shareholders, whose names are today legion across Canadaâ€"welcoming in a party with a sane sound mining devel- opment policy? Are you surprised that they are standing at the shaft head trying to discover and anticipate posâ€" sibletax changes, so seriously affectâ€" ing the grade of ore to be mined; that they are, Sir, looking for the ship of state to sail in caliner waters on an even keel, rather than to be wrecked on the uncharted shoals of a Stevens Government mining policy, or on the highseasotaBennettgoldmwlifiy frightening investing capital; or in the "Are you surprised at them favourâ€" ing wider world publicity to the ever increasing production statistics of our gold and other metals and informaâ€" tive addresses with U.S.A. hookâ€"ups on Canada‘s natural resources and tourist of in 1084 from 98 thillions to 180 inillions Haileybury Scene: of Crashes Sunday Mmmdmeabwewim‘ hich marny may disagree, but it should be remembered that it was a political. address that furnished the extracts quoted. Some of the references to the Conservative government in regard to mining are not quité The bullion tax has been atmended ‘and other meaâ€" sures taken to prove that the Bennett government is gesirous of helping minâ€" ing. Hon.~ W. A. Gordon knows minâ€" ing and knowsmeflorthandanwm agree that he has done imuch.. But on potnt canhot ‘be overstressed and that is the necessity for a SETTLED policy in regard ‘to mlmng and mine taxation. In some ways the uncertainty, the freâ€" quent chsnges do more to retard deâ€" velopment t.han even the burdemome A charge of . criminal negligence has been laid against H. Latinen, of Cobalt, who is allegedâ€"to have been the driver of the car that struck and :injured Jack Whelan at : Haileybury on Sunday, afterâ€" noon Whelgn suffered severe head inâ€" juries and: Xs; hospibal His conâ€" dition is repoxtted s serious but he is Cobalt. and Toronto. Men Inâ€" volved" in Accidents. © One Man. Badly Injured This taxation itself. Schumacher Hardware Furniture 31 First Avenmnue 480 Third Avenue â€"~~ _ _Yolles Furniture Co. Ltd. 1 Mannisto, all of Coâ€"| artested on charges of havyâ€" car at tho time of the drunk and were allowed out; Mikkalo, Toivo Wainoâ€" | .mnum.m mmm L ces 00 a injured was the second car accident at â€"“ ds .s. o.A h. stt t . Haileybury on Sunday afternoon, and | in the first crash there was a man inâ€" jured ang this man will also face a | charge when he is sufficiently recovâ€" ered to léeave the hcspital. Marin Naiâ€" dinoff, of Toronto, judging from the despatches form Halleybury, was inâ€" directly responsible for the two crashes there Sunday afternoon. Despite the fact that trucks are not supposed to be used on the roads on Sundays, the CV # despatches say that Naidinoff was driving a truck ‘and crashed into the front of the liquor store at Haileyâ€" bury, the truck apparently geiting out of control. Police suggest that one reaâ€" son why the truck was out of control was because the brakes were not workâ€" ing properly. The accident with the truck in front of the liquor store naâ€" turally resulted in the gathering of a crowd. Apparently Whelan was in the crowd and:â€"was on the road when the car carrying the Cobalt men came along. Whelan suffered comparatively serious injuries. Naidinoff, the griver of the vehicle that hit the liquor store, did not escape without some injuries. None of thsse injuries, however, are supposed to be serious. He is in the hospitalâ€" though," but is making good progres$ to recovery. He will face a charge of driving with defective brakes. The ¢two coâ€"rslated accidents caused considerable excitement in Haileybury, the reports on street suggesting that several were injured. Apart from the two arivers, no one else appeared to be hurt. The reports, however, had sevâ€" eral dead and several others more or less injured. That is the way of such The accident in which Whelan was reports. One thing that struck the huâ€" mour of the crowd that gathered was the idea of crashing into the liquor store. "Even if you get in," one wag Called to the driver of the truck, "it won‘t do you a bit of good unless you have a permit. Anyway, I don‘t think they will give you anything out of that store on Sunday." When it was learned that Naidinoff was hurt, there was tendency to drop the humorous line. Then the second accident occurred with the one man being seriously injured Timmins, Phones 111 and 133 Seuth Porcupine, Phone 1850 Toilet Tissue 4 rolls ............ Choice Quality Tomatoes, tin ...... Sweet Mixed Pickles, Ige bot..... Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes 3 «> 25¢ Pears, Heavy Syrup 2 «= 25c Habitant Pea Soup 2 «> 23c Puffed Wheat packaee â€" 10¢ 62 Third Avenue 42 Third Avenue Display at Ideal Hardware an .................... See Our Display . K. Pierce Furniture Co. 40c and that still further curbed the idea of there being any joke about the acciâ€" and Smelly Foot have disappsared since Cress Corn Salve Sunkist O med size, 3?::(! 65c Blne Reoe Brand 2 5 C Veal Steak, Ib. is sold by WILSON‘S Drug Store, Sohumaohcr Itchy Toe a a a a 8 w8 a # # 25¢

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