Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 20 Jan 1936, 2, p. 1

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formation on farms in the Sudbury district have been comparatively comâ€" mon in recent years, but finding go‘ d has not been so frequent as the disâ€" covery of other less valuable minerals. The new gold find is about a mile and a half from Espanola, and is contred in Merritt township. The farm is on the north side of the main highway runâ€" ning from Espanola to Sudbury. The farm is owned by G. E. Fielding, who purchased it some time ago. It was formerly known as the Hodgins farm, and consists of about 88 acres. The is said to be practi¢cally in the centre of the farm. Mr. Fielding says that he has uncovered some fayvâ€" Reports from Sudbury tell of a resent gold discovery on a farm near Espanola. Recent work on the claims which have been duly staked following the discovâ€" ery of gold on the farm, indicate that the first promise of the discovery is likely to be eclipsed by the actual facts of the case. Occurrences of mineral says that he has uncovered some fayâ€" ourable showings. The discoveries were first made last July and Pielding has performed conâ€" siderable work on the showings. A test pit has been sunk and the arsa slashed for a width of 14 feet, in which minerâ€" alized quartz stringers in chloride and Indiana. Pattie Monroge (Miss Koski),. an "orphan," is supposed to have been adopted by Josie Randall (Mrs. Liles) for her brother .Bob (Ron Jones}), who is "Cyclone Williams," lightweight champion of the â€" world. Winnie Richardson (Miss Stella Anâ€" drechuck), Sarah Smithers (Miss Doroâ€" thy Gregson), reporter for the Jonesâ€" boro Bugle, Maranda (Miss Doris Lochrie), the village gossip, add plenty of spice to the action. Fred Saunders (Charles Yates) is a friend Bob has brought home from New York. Spike Maloney (Wilson Thompson) is Boo‘s trainer and a graduate of the Brookâ€" lyn school of accent. Caleb Harper (Ted Blockley) is 70 years old but still is youthful in his outlock. Mr. Randall, (Fred Darling) is head of the houseâ€" hold in which all the fun goes on Lord Beasley (John McClung), drops in unexpectedly, to make things worse, and the apvearance of Lyman Ross (Tom Glaister), the rich but mean man Gold Discovery on Farm Near Espanola appyf ning threeâ€"act com is in the Ran Indiana. Patti Koski, an "C It promises to son in Timmil talent has been Music, Dancing, Drama in Kiwanis Production Rehearsals now nearly touches need will be ready parts Music, sing! the big Kiwal CGoldfields ths W'W Favourable Gold Showings Reported Close to the Highway. The Mineraliâ€" zation at the Centre of the Farm. Some Further Particulars About the Musical Comedy, "It‘s a Knockout," to be Presented at the Goldfields Theatre on Wednesday and Thursday Evenings. The main pa mt 4 t A A AC P P P PA t it AP P AP P is W nearly Second Section JaAI OV 10 be added and dramaâ€"they‘re ail in mnusical comedy at the e this Wednesday and i Knockou <A h in Jonesboro, (Miss Ruth ; supposed to Josie Randall her .Bob (Ron 1€ I1¢ 1JVe When Jam:ts L. Quit, of Burk‘s Falls, was charged with being drunk at North Bay, he claimed that he was a relative of Sir Harry Lauder. Also he boasted that he could drink a quart of whiskey without taking the bottle from his lips. He talked incessantly in court, stating that he had the gift of drinkâ€" ing born in him and that with two cther ordinary people he could "kill" a case of whiskey in three days. He specified it must be Irish whiskey. "Put my scarf on," he ordered Conâ€" stable Belanger as he was preparing to return to jail, "I‘m paying for this, or the Slaght government is, ang 1I want service." He is to be kept undetr cbservation to discover the state of his mental health. The line between normal condition and a less normal state is a fine one. Probably if he had called it the Slaghtâ€"O‘Comnnor government he would have been classed as normal. Waterloo Chronicle:â€" Couples have been married in airplanes this year. Bachelor friends are reminded that the grcom comes gown to earth just as quickly as though the ceremony took grcom comes gown quickly as though . nlace on the groun member Moisley the pwan served. "summer‘ g1 Melville, Cons drews, Marga ards, Coletha mIca sChnist for 75 or. 100 banded qua teen traced states, gave vs 70¢, $21.170 and were made by and the Ontar Thinks Ontario Ruled by Slaght Government schist or. 100 f w Che PQorcupine Five Chorus Numbers are five big chsorus ind Ball is now 0 Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Kvery MONDAY and THURSDAY re disclosed. Adjoining et in width is an area of zit=. The showing has r a distance of about 150 rab sampls, Fielding ilues of $84, $8.75, $8.05, 70c in gold. These assays W. J. Bell of Hailleybury io Department of Mines. round 3€ nâ€" MO i Shaw arris, I: , Thelr and M tore, where eats are reâ€" 1umo Careful search was made last week at Timmins, Espanola and other places in this district and in the Sudbury area in the hopes of nding Helen Daviut, of Sudbury, a girl 15 years of age who has been missing from her Sudbury home since Monday, Jan. @h. All efâ€" proposed purpose of visiting a show. So far as can be learneg by questionâ€" ing all connected with the Sudbury shows,â€"theâ€"girl did not attend the show, or if she did no one noticed the matâ€" ter. At last the father of the girl beâ€" came alarmed, and he started general plans for a search. Pictures of the missâ€" ing girl, together with a descript,ion and cther details. Along with the picture was a xelerenoe to the fact that the only clue to the whereabouts of the missing girl was contained in the statement that she may have gone to Timmins or Espanoâ€" la, These two towns were specially asked to make a very quiet and effecâ€" tive search in the hopes of finding this youns girl. Her father, Mr. Daviut, cannot unâ€" derstand why the girl should fail to turn up for schcol or for her home. "I don‘t know why she should go away," he is quoteq as saying. He added that she had never done anything of the sort before, nor was she the type to get into any sort of trouble. In an interview at Sudbury last week the father referred to all the little he knew in connection with the mysterious disappearance of this daughter of his, there being no apparent reason either for her to run away or for others to prevent her return home. "She asked me for 40 cents to go to a show," he related. "She was to call for a friend on the way down town. She diq call, but her friend was workâ€" ing at a house and couldn‘t get off, so Heleén went on alone. "Another girl told me sh> met Helen on the street, nearly uptcwn, and she was alone then. Nobody saw her go to a theatre." She disappeared on Monday. She was reportsd to have been seen on Looked Here to Find Stray Sudbury Girl home since Monday, Jan. G@Gh. All efâ€" forts to locate the girl through private endsavour having proven unavailing it was eventually decided to appeal to the nolice and other authorities. The mfssing girl is the young daughâ€" ter of Mr. Ed. Daviut, 373 Bertram aveâ€" nue, Sudbury. She left her fathetr‘s home on Monday, Jan. 6th, with the Girl of Fifteen Missing from her Home in Sudbury Since Monday, Jan. 6th. She disappeared on Monday. She was reportsd to have been seen on Station street the following Thursday. "The fellow that saw her didn‘t know she had left home, so he didn‘t ask her where she was living," the father said. Hs atitempted to follow that slender clue but without avail. A girl friend r<ported that she saw her at a Sudbury theatre about the same time, and it was to her she is said to have declared she was going to Timmins or Espanola. Ancthsr girl was questioned by police when she was reported to have said she knew where Helen was but wasn‘t telling. The girl deniled ever making are telling me that for my mcney ... that‘s no help to me‘." Mr. Daviut had a picture of the girl taken at school some time ago. He had a number of copies made of this picâ€" ture so that copies of the photo could be sent around the district in the hopes that someone would identify the girl and notify her parents as to her whereâ€" abouts. The picture and description TIMMINS, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 20TH, 1936 has also bren given to every place in the Sudoury district who may have an idea as to where to look for the missing girl. A special call was made on the police at Timmins ang at in the hope that the girl might be picked up and returned to her home. Apart from the picture of the girl, and the photo was not any too clear or distinct, there is little adequate deâ€" scription of the missing girl. Here is the description given of the missing Sudbury girl at the time she left her home on Monday, Jan. 6th:â€"*"She was wearing a new brown coat, red tam, req scarf, and wine coloured dress, toâ€" gether with furâ€"trimmed overshoes." The request was made to any who might have seen the girl after she left the home of her father at Sudbury, to communicate either with the police in the municipality where she might be at the time, or else to notify the Sudâ€" bury police, or the provincial police at Sudbury or at other provincial police quarters. at the« property of Bidgood Kirkland Gold Mines, Ltd.,. has been started. The winze will be three compartments and the first level will be eâ€"tzablishcd at the 650â€"foot horizon. Lateral work on the 500â€"foot level is proceeding and the 520 viein has now been opened up for 100 feet with the face still in ore. Two samples taken over an average of 41 inches returned an assay of $33.50 per ton. The averâ€" age of the muck samples for the first week of the current month is reported at $12.80. The effect of including this ore in the millfeed has already raised the millâ€" heads. The heavy sulphide character of this ore is throwing the present mill flow shest somewhat out of balance, but investigations are being made, with the help of the government testing laboratory, with a view to overcoming these difficulties, and the full effect of the increased millheads should shorily become evident. Toronto Mail and Zmpire:â€" An American railroad has operated for a year without the death cf a single pasâ€" senger. Railroag coach:s would seem to be the ideal retreat and defence againrst motor cars. Work â€"Started on Winze at 500â€"ft at Bidgood Mine Excavation of the chamber for the winze to ‘be sunk from the 500â€"ft. level eP P PP l ""*"""""""' (gDOove» Of[ Wasn.ngLion, 12. 100K her own life as a protest against war. Mrs. Koltts drank poison, then handed it to her son, who also :drauk. Both died. Friends say Mrs. Koltes feared another Euroâ€" pean war would fortce her son to 2flgm. She left a note urging all mothers not to sacrifice their sns in war. # «tm P BRA BPA P A P PAAA A BR A L A A 4 B A A A P Many in the North, and especially Ooldâ€"time residents west of Cochrane, heargq with deep regret last week of the death of Rev. Fr. Paquette in Ottawa General hospital on Thursday morning. For several years he was stationed in Northern parishes and he did much for the advancement of this country and its pseople. Former North Land Priest Passes Away Rev. Fr. Paquette was Acâ€" tive and Helpful in Hearst Moonbeam _ and Other Northern Places. Surviving Relatives Father Paquette is survived six brothers, Thomas, of Winnipeg; Emâ€" manuel Paquetts, of Napierville, Que.; Alphonse Paquette, of Rochester, N.Y.; Palma, Dosithe and A. E. Paquette, of Ottawa:; two sisters, Rev. Sister Marie Fidelis, of the Good Shepherd Home, Toronto, and Mrs. Joseph Rochon of and Coniston, Ont Sudbury Star:â€"It has been suggested that Mussolini‘s grandiose dreams are the result of Ethiopium! Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Every MONDAY und THURSDAY New Members Provide Programme for Lions mins Lions Club themselves on / R. McKnight and â€" ers for the cccasion, along very smoothly mum of fun. One of the great J ning was the rendit bit of poetry, read first time by the po anid. ;. â€" â€"V.;_ Ball. was in the nature o St. Patrick‘s Day da sponscring. the new memb the entertainm Herrington ma and the progr Spence and hi Quartette Was Good Another artistic offering ws by a quartettie composed of L One of the first official a Kirkland Lake council this to accept the resignation 0 Huglhes as deputy chief of Teck township. No reason for the retirement. Depu Hughes had been a membs Teck township police force years. The politce committe mendsd the appointment of © Pinegar as deputy chief and cil endorsed this recommend pointing Sergt. Pinegar to th Timmins is returning to standing in the reports for atte The current issue of The Kâ€"R Kiwanis magazine for the C @uebecâ€"Maritime District, gives tendance of the clubs in the for November. In the Northern I Kirkland Lake leads the list with centage of 80. Cobalt comes ne 78. Noranda is third with 77.5 tang is fcurth with 75, while T is in fifth place with 74.53. Fift clubs is not so bad, with kig cli Toronto, Owen Sound, Barrie ar lia in the list. New Liskeard Rrag centage of 58.7. In the five divisions o the the average percentage is cnly Timmins is well above the : Division No. 2 had an averags this being the only division 0 As Niagara Falls had a full cent. attendance in Divisicn No had a material effect in raisl average of the clubs in this c St. Catherines with an attendan centage of 93.5 also had its effe only other two clubs in Divis 2 *with a higher percentage tha mins were:â€"Lindsay, with 7 Peterborough with 76.4. One of the Features_of Thursday‘s Meeting of Lions was First Reading of Original Poetry. Tickets Now Ready for Draw to Provide Funds for Bovs‘ Band. Deputy Police Chief at Kirkland Lake Retire: Timmins Kiwanis Club in Attendance Standing In Division No. 3 ther with attendange percen These included:â€"Sarnia soll, 80; Kitchenerâ€"Wate re ham 79; and Guelph, 7 1e prograimime andgd his com nmetr made Ogtral meilt 4 ‘Tel in nmi Al 1€ public for the Dr, R. Hughes e masterpiect "plug" for thsi g wWas a song of Lions Fred A1Gâ€" QLS1 cnly . 70.1 he aver i1 <â€"Ray, the Ontarioâ€" ves the atâ€" ‘he district Tn Division with a perâ€" 15€ year was f â€" Harold police of was given ty â€"Chief iaing. chairman 1 by Ben mext with .0. Peneâ€" Timmins ifth in 12 clubs like and Orilâ€" > of" the for eight Al 1810n NO. ian Timâ€" 70. ‘and § of the ove! 100 ing the division 11 ecom . es coun a}p 3.9 _ Work Going Ahead * on Kamiscotia Claims slow job, but that‘s the way things have to be done at the Kamiscotia proâ€" perty, the financing of which has not been attempted on a big scale. Mr. Jack is quite confident that there is some "real stuff" on the claims in a formation not unlike that of Noranâ€" da. He is one of the older prospectors of the Porcupine and was here in the very early days. Work on copperâ€"gold claims, 12 miles west of the Hollinger property in the Kamiscotia area, is going aheag slowly this winter, says Tommy Jack, who staked ground there some years ago and is now engaged in development. A shaft nine by six feet is down to a depth of 20 feet. Hand steeling is a Copperâ€"Gold Ground Being Explored Twelve Miles West of Hollinger Claims in Kamiscotia. alr lanss were ‘blocked." A school teacher from Garson Mines and a number of miners from Creighton Mines wanted to get back to work afâ€" ter visiting Sudbury, ut there was no way of getting back by railway or highâ€" way, so they tried the air route. Th aviators, however, refuseq to go up. The air conditions, they said, were such snow sStorm Stopped Even the Planes at Sudburyv The severity of last wseek‘s storms at Sudbury and the way communication was stopped in the district through the storms may be illustrated by the fact that even the planes found traffic imâ€" possible. Not only the highways but the alr lants were ‘blocked." A school teacher from Garson Mines and a number of miners from Creighton Mines wanted to get back to work atâ€" as to make flying" too addition there was th finding suitable landing ingly both the school t miners had to wait u: I‘ry The Advance Want Advertisements all, Rev. Father McManu atus and Walter Greaves. Dr. Kelly told a few we ories, the truth of which ding suitable landing places. Accordâ€" ly both the school teachers and the hers had to wait until the storms ; subsided and the roads were clear in for traffic. T; ~refused tO gO up. is, they said, were such ing" too dangerous., In was the difficulty of _ piCctures to The photos my eye operâ€" ne with the rogramme. ch has been for the purâ€" e boy‘s band he members. is the prizes that there claims in of Noranâ€" the O 18

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