Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 6 Jan 1936, 1, p. 5

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To Install Letter Boxes at Kirkland Lake Shortly However, even though it may be foung that mail delivery is impractical, it is understood that mail boxes will be installsd at a number of convenient points for the benefit of the Kirkland Lake people. This system will be inauâ€" gurated within the next two months. The locations of the drop boxes are said to be agreed upon now for Kirkâ€" land Lake. The collection of this mail from the drop boxes will not be nearly so expensive as any system of mail deâ€" livery, while the convenience to the average citizen will be very easy to understand. When the news was broadCast INal TNe IaAINOLULS of St. John, N.B.. would not only have to go without lose their home in addition, the guardians of th: Dio heard about it and sent them a cheque. Here are the ha; Edith Mae, Edna Louise, John Douglas and Lyda Christ: the good news. The Mahaney children are 12 years old $1.00 CLEANERS Sloma $1 Cleaners New Premises : 3 Balsam St. N. _ Phone 592 We wish to announce that from now until January it will be impossible for us to handle any work as we busiy engaged installing equ‘ipment and preparing plant to render a cleaning service second to none. QUINTUPLETS AID QUADRUPLETS at 3 Balsam St. North Are Moving To Their in here as not be posâ€" mail until 'I Orgcd Election Card Used | in the Toronto Elections During the very heated eileC test in Toronto last wetek 2 distributq with the apparen of raising racial feelings. was printed as if it were than Phillips, cne of the cand alderman in the city. Mtr. promptly denied issuing the it was apparent from the 3 card was qgistributed that the was to injure Alderman Phi trick was to make one secti people believe that the alds making special appeal to an{ tion by working on prejuc trick has been worked in othe pal elsctions as well as in and D:minion contests. It dic in Toronto, however, Alderma being elected again by a good Alderman Phillins has offe: ward of $100 for information dead to the arrest and convict party o mean f0 A little boy in Timmins with NOrror in his said the other day that he had met a man that didn‘t believe in Santa Claus. The man actually told the boy there wasn‘t any Santa Claus. But there is. It can be proved from governâ€" ment. documents. Bill Herschell, reportsr, of Indianaâ€" polis, was driving some years agC through Southern Indiana when he came to a town that was new to him Inaccurate to Say that There is No Santaâ€" "What town is this?" Hers one of the inhabitants of th "Santa Claus," was ‘the r Herschell looked it up in directory. It was Santa Clau The, Indianapolis reporter to his city gesk and he wrot Claus. He proved there wa Herschell looked it up in the postal directory. It was Santa Claus,. all right. The Indianapolis reporter went back to his city gesk and he wrote up Santa Claus. He proved there was a Santa Claus. The fame of the town spread all over the country. The little Santa Claus post office every Decemper is simply flocded with mail. As many as 100,â€" 000 pieces of mail have had to be hanâ€" dled thers in a single day. Special stamping machines, trained post office workers and staff now go to poCSt OIIICe CVerY flocded with mail. As many 000 pieces of mail have had t dled thers in a single da} stamping machines, trained 1 workers and exttfa staff n manta Claus each year I mas. One 6f the things ab Claus: post office is thn upon thousands of lette parcels ars addressed to t at Santa Claus, Indiana for reâ€"mailing enclosed ticsns to send the mail other addresses. The ide the "Santa Claus" post (ry The Advance Want Advertisement. L suing the card and ‘om the places the i that the intention Phillips. The some. yEeRaTS dst Indiana when he it was new to him. s2?" Herschell asked nts of the place. 1 tOo anolLner setâ€" i prejudice. The 1 in other municiâ€" _ as in provincial s. It did not work Alderman Phillips y a good majority. mation convicti 5th are our andlua C he cal by N tion conâ€" card was , purpose T[heâ€" card hat will n of the for the _ norror that he lieve in told the Claus NA® Shaft Sinking Making Progress at Austin Rouyn Local officials of Austin Rouyn Gold Mincs, Ltd., report that sha‘ft sinking at the company‘s property in the Rouyn gold area of Quebec is making gocd progress, and it is believed that the immediate objâ€"ctive at a depth of 2.5 feet will be reached before the end of the current month. It is said that at the present time work is being pushed at a depth in excess of 200 feet, and according to the present rate of proâ€" zress the 250â€"{oot horizon will be roagcaâ€" ed within the next two weeks, where a station will be cut and lateral work started to intersect the downward conâ€" tinuation of the ore body cut on the station started tinuatio first Sufficient . supplies are on the proâ€" perty to carry out the proposéd camâ€" paign and ample funds are on hand to meet all development costs. Underâ€" ground work is being carried out with three shifts daily A man charged at New Liskeard last week with several breakâ€"ins and thefts at New Liskeard was sentenced to a determinate term of three months, and in indeterminate sentence of two years less one day. There have been regular epidemics | of thefts and burglariecs in â€" several towns of the North. There have be'enl cases of this kind in as good a town as Timmins. There is a general belief that saluâ€" tary sentences will do more than anyâ€" thing else to discourage these epidemics of crime. Of course, before the magisâ€" trate can impose a stern sentence on an offender the criminal must be caught. In this North the police usually may be dspended uvon to do their part and the magistrate equally depended upon to see that his part of the deâ€" fence of the law is equally effective. It is this coâ€"operation that has kept the Northland so free from the ordinary run of crime. Burglary and other epiâ€". demics do not last long in the North because of the coâ€"operative spirit eviâ€". denced on all sides by the police, magisâ€" etc. Concurrent sentences of not less than ‘three months, and not more than two years less one day, were impossd by Magistrate Atkinson at Haileybury on Monday on John Leonarg Aistrop, New Liskeard, whom he convicted on three charges of breaking and entering, with theft. Aistrop pleaded guilty to a furâ€" ther charge of having an unregistered revolver in his possession and on this :ount was given 30 days, also concurâ€" rent. Accused was alleged to have enâ€" tered thrce New Liskearq places, inâ€" cluding the Salvation Army residence, and to have taken money and other articles. Fingerprints found on a box in one establishment were compared at Ottawa with those of Aistrop, secured i'Jy Chief Sid Parsons after the arrest, and an official from the Capital swore they were identical. 162L All CSLVS,â€" UGiUCL~ round work is being carried out wimi Sets 12th High Mgrk i In 1935, value of Canadian hree shifts daily the 12th consecutive mark, bu in production between 1929‘s "CL y iiven Two Year Term fOr |;3 044387 ounces and the 19 (New York Times) him. | James I is not the only English monâ€" } And Harvey Green has a good repuâ€". arch of whom it is reported that for telling the truth. What‘s more once tapped a@ joint of beef with 'he had along with him Exhibit A as sword and said: "I dub thee Sir LOIN:" |they would say in court cirecles in the whence it has since been known @§|shape of the pelt from the wolf which sirloin. A gentleman of old English ‘was making straight for him. Long acâ€" family passed through New York the |quaintance and a form of profound adâ€" other day and told the reporters that |miration have combined to create a in the big diningroom table in the @ANâ€" |feeling of respect and a certain amount cestral home in Lancashire is a brasS |of awe for the exploits of James Curâ€" plate commemorating that fam0us °X~)ran, but even that cannot discount the periment in what might be called|words of Harvey Green, of Buckhorn, managed etymology. _ i trapper and guide. The big Oxforg Dictionary is not S0| When it was menticned to him that sure about James I. It quotes fr0M |jim Curran had said a wolf was harmâ€" Bishop Fuller, who tells the story abOut |jess and not given to making attacks Henry VIII Dean Swift tells it abOUut on human beings we noticed a look in James I. Another source credits it t0|Trapper Green‘s eyes which could be Charles II. Of the three men, blUff‘/interpreted only as being one of exâ€" King Hal and the merry Charles Seem'treme doubt or positive incredulity. much likelier candidates than pedant| 2y James. As for the Oxford Dictionary, it deéerives ‘sirloin‘ from the Cobalt Man Gets Thlrtv form "surloigne‘‘ and brushes Henry, James and Charles aside under the Days fOl’ Beatmg Wlfe heading "fictitious etymologies. [ CIIn fnr o the <seprond Hime within ten ind an OIIICIAl UCAJQiLAL SWGAC | hey were identical. : (Peterboro Examiner) So there you are. Jim Curran of Sault Ste. Marie and Algoma in gencral y %~aVs the wolf will not attack a man. bllDDOaCd On}'“‘ Of the ‘HMHarvey Green from Buckhorn, 22 miles Use of the Term, "Sirloin" ‘n orth of Peterboro, says the wolf he ‘r ; | shot was making tracks straight for (New York Times) ‘him. heading "fictitious etymologies." Can it be that the early English found it easier to believe in Sir Loin »cause they were in the habit of speakâ€" ing of a baron of beef? Based on investigations made in the | area by L. J. Weeks, the Geological| Survey, Department of Mines, Ottawa, | has issued a coloured geological map | shset of the Amos area, Western Quen| sec. The scale is one mile to the inch, which enables the geological features to be brought out in some detail, Marâ€" zinal notes describe the physical feaâ€"| tures, general geology, and mineral deâ€" posits of the area. No important mineral discoveriesl have been made in the Amos map area | though development work has been Geological Map Sheet is Issued for Amos Area smail oulC In additior buildings. line the ccecurrences 0| DASIC lii trusives. Copiscs may be obiained from the Di rector. Bureau of Economic Geology Department of Mines, Ottawa. Burglaries at Liskeard THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO New Record Made by the Mining Industry ibroke th>. continuily of the rise in volume. Two factors ilent hope 1936 would be a greater year. Th» high price launchâ€" ed in 1933 when the United States folâ€" lowed Groat Britain off the go d standâ€" ard has permitted owners of mines with lowâ€"grade ore to resume Cp?raâ€" ons at a profit. It has also resulted in development of nsow min‘s by perâ€" sons eager to tak»> advantage of the boost in value. Canada‘s mining industry this week two new high marks in the river of gold that has been rising across the country for the last 80 years. It viewed the futurs with prospect of still greater achievemnt in 1936. The yelicw stream of wealth mad>: now records in produciion and value, adding 73313 ounces of metal to its value, with an» output of 3,290.654 adding 73313 ounces of metal to 1 value, with an» output of 3,290.6: ouneos worth $115.798,466. Last year production was 2,972,074 ounces, 1 value $102,536,553. The second factor liss in work done last year by the Geological Survey of Canada which sent 900 men into the 4eld to explore and map areas which prospectors may hope to meet with success. The survey spent $1,000,â€" 000 provided by Parliament as part of the appropriation under the Supp.eâ€" ncntary Public Works Act. The immediate result of the r‘s2 in gold price from $20.67 an ouncte to not less than $35 an ounce effected 1933 by the United States Treasury, was to reâ€" duce for a time the Canadian output but to increase its valus. Turn to Low Grads Owners of mines who had been treating only highâ€"grade ore turned again to low grade, realizing they coulda make a profit by trsating it. However, this year mew mines which had beon launched under the stimulus of price increase began to produce gold and by the end of the year their output offset the decrease cxperienced by o‘der mines. that in that year it paid »28,000,080 in salaries to about 20,000 employees, bought equipment and supplies worth $25,000,000, and paid $1,4009,00) for freight transportation. How much the goldâ€"mining indus ry returned to circulation in 1935 has not been determined but 1934 figures show Are Petegrborough Wolves Fiercer than Algoma Ones? alue of Gold Produced in 1935 was $115,796,366. Outlook is for Even Greatâ€" er Output in 1936. Up for the second time within ten months on a charge of assaulting his wife. ta which he again pleaded guilty, Edward White was sentenced to 30 days at hard labor when he appeared before Magistrate Atkinson at Cobalt on Tuesday morning. The offence comâ€" plained of was committed, the court was told, on Christmas Eve, and Mrs. Margaret White, the complainant, said her husband had attacked her. It deâ€" veloped that White had been given money by his wife to buy himself a Christmas present, but instead got drunk. Last March, when chargeq with a similar offence, he was released on suspended sentence and put on bond to keep away from liquor for two years, and George Mitchell, K.C., for accused, said he had bsen behaving himself in the interval. | The following little story from The New Liskeard Speaker last week is good ensugh to pass on:â€" "Hecklers at" a township election mesting trieq to keep a candidate for reeve from getting out. That won‘t worry him if the voters see that he gets in."â€"Toronto Telegram. In some of the organized townships of the Northland the annual municipal election affords some amusement and ,a change from the everyday duliness of life on the new but partly cleared farm. Here is an incident. A farmetr‘s iwife just from the polling booth, was 'Asked which five of the seven or eight ‘whose names were on the ballot paper ‘she voted for. She said: "One." Then, sensing the idea that an explanation was necded, she added these significant words: "I knew all the others."‘ $ Why the Lady Voted Only for One Out of the Eight lent hope 1936 would be Th high price launchâ€" n the United States folâ€" ‘itain off the go d standâ€" itted owners of mines 193 the it gold set _a drop peak of ~ 5 figure t0 198 290 6 34 Ncarl\ as Bad as Some ' Stuff Over the Radio day, toucning paAlICWUWUidIiy iL 1CUCCiIL freaks of literature, and especially on the work of Gertrude Stein. Gertrude makes a specialty of saying nothing and then repsating it, often even withâ€" out changing the wording. It is said that Gertrude is paid by the word, which would explain everything except what is wrong with the publishers and the people who buy the Stein books. This is what The Stratford Beaconâ€" Herald has to say:â€" "Mod*rn literature has given birth to many freaks, but the prize monstrosity ‘so far is the work of a woman by the name of Gertrude Stein, whose only lclaim to notice seems to be the inanity, ‘if not downright insanity, of her verbal | utterances. Here is one of her latest ';bits of monkey chatter: ‘I do know about English literature that it has been determined by the fact that Engâ€" Mand is an island, and that the daily |life on that islang was a completely \ daily life, that they could do nothing |daily life, that they could do nothing but lead a daily life on that island and that the more they owned everything outside of that island the more inâ€" evitably and ccmpletely were they |forced to live the daily life in a more daily way, because if they owned everyâ€" |thing outside they could not possibly The Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald disâ€" usses some of the published rot of the lay, touching particularly on recent reaks of literature, and especially on he work of Gertrude Stein. Gertrude nakes a specialty of saying nothing ind then repsating it, often even withâ€" ut changing the wording. It is said hat Gertrude is paid by the word, ipery grade knocked the child down. |The little boy was playing on the roadâ€" way, when Isadore Levandosky, _;@mâ€" deavouring to get a twoâ€"ton tguc,k up |to the woodyard, backed up. In 1 |anxiscty to rescue his sled | was hit by the truck, with death resultâ€" ing from the injuries the child susâ€" |tained. allow themselves to confuse the inside with the outside.‘ "That such drivel as the above should se printed in a journal entitled "Life and Letters of Toâ€"day," is one of those things that are beyond the understandâ€" ing of ordinary mortals. Yet similar stuff by the same woman has been pubâ€" lished in book formâ€"and, what is more mysterious, there are people who buy her books and read them. There must be many people in this world whose ideas are more or less mixed, angq who have difficulty in sortâ€" ing them out and presenting them in intelligible language. If the Gertrude Stein type of writing comes into general vogue, mental deficiency and illiteracy will ‘be at a premium." little was had Fourâ€"yearâ€"old Kirkland Lad Killed While Playing %% 0 ee00e0000080800¢ #0600 408800 > 00000000000000000000000o%%%%%%%%%%%fi%%%% i; < td bO°0600806866 mm en s ocm uies 4 600 * F*§ 81494# 6 Northern News:â€"First newspapcrs Of the new year show little change from 1935. â€"are still headings atout people being kill=ed in auto accidents. 44 « 44€: th on Ah A ts 4 > 600064 00084 000006 60606404 40 6 94 492 2 F * 4440 _V V o# y y 47 W Y 4#44¢%4 4 Trying to save the little sled that had en given him as a Christmas gift, tle Johnnie Bell, of Kirkland> Lake, is kill:d last week when a truck,that d backed up to take a run atâ€"a slipâ€" Rinn Bmthers on all Hosiery, Linggries, Wool Underwear, Skirts, Blouses, Sweaters, Knitted Suits, Gloves, Scarves, Collar and Cuff Sets, Purses, Handkerchiefs, Linens, Towels, Sheets, Pillow Cases, Kimonss, Slips, Heuse Dresses and Children‘s Dresses, and all our better Dresses in Misses‘ and Women‘s sizes. Here is an opportunity to purchase the highest Reductions _SEE OUR RACK OF DRESSES t2.95s +‘4.95 +©5.95 and ‘6.95 These are older Dresses, but we They are wonderful value and a Now on and continuing throughout the month 1â€"2 Price ine Street North Clearing at C oats to Clear Rinn Brothers 20% DNMiscount We invite you to come in and TERMS DURING SA LEâ€"STRICTIL toâ€"day in needlecraft the Old Settler da Strands cut from 1 employed in knitting vas and burlap embrc ery done on looss w making hcoked and other homecraft rugs, and for af as throws for davenports C Quilt Afghans The quilt afighan is a S velty. Instead of developin pattern in textile patchts, 1 cheted patches are made i s.hapes sizes and colours, sewed together to form the will be necessary to dye so and this is done befgre strips. To minimize the w ing, the colour foung in L stockings, if approximately can be employed fo our in the quilt de There is a luxurious softness | afghans with their lightweight, texturs, ccongenial to the â€"touch crocheted afghan differs sligh being a trifle heavier in weight. same characteristics remain wl the medium inâ€"~which the work veloped. Silk stockings only shC No Exc Old stocki: A handsome crocheted quilt are combined, made entire‘!j qUILT PATTERN Monarch and Jaeger W ools Lydia Le Baton Walker Velvet Hats hanges in aboyv Less 10 p.c. 1â€"2 Price Chacsactecristics Clearing at re Clearing ‘ood range of ERNXN AFGHANS, KNIT OR CROCHET FROM SILK HOXIERY ARKE sMART NOVELTIES wWeave id (J P d quilt afghan in which roses, follage and trellises entirely of old silk stockings. It can be developed equally woll in knitting. 1lY no 12 1ll hould 1€ Ti€ puia gqul roups 11 for these values. 1€ rade merchandise at Big 1| used in CE combining silk. Keep OU Stocking Strands A peculiarity of stocking strips 1s that they curl of themselves to form strands, angq the inside of, the hosiery will be the cutside of the strand. wWidths to make strands and how to cut each stocking in one continuous strip. together with all particulars for making these thrifty, yet choite «‘lk afghans, ‘uccsxm);my pattern sheets. (Copvrigcht. 1936, by the Bell Syiuidiâ€" Municipal Officers at Liskeard Gcot Acclamation With all offices of Council and Pubâ€" lic School Board filled by acclamation, New Liskeard will have no municipal election this year. Mayor W. G. Armâ€" strong gets a second term . and colâ€" leagues of the 1935 Board in Councilâ€" iors A. A. Burns, N. Cruickshank; Dr. D. R. Fleming, W. H. Walter and R. N. Wood accompany him back, with W. V. Cragg filling the vacancy caused by the retirement of J. S. Allin. School trustces are Stewart. Francis, W. R. Adamson ang E. C. Perrin. 10 p.c. Discount rossard Corsets and Grassieres Coltons and Flanncletles excepted In ard Goods at 1â€"2 Price s of original price. the lot. making of afghans. Avoid tton. lisle or wool, with the ie silken texture throughâ€" y

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