Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 May 1936, 2, p. 3

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clals announce. Diamond drilling will be started next week to prove at depth showings revealed in earlier operations. The Augarita claims received attention anumberotyeammwmw drilling indicated an ore body 100 feet wide that gave core assays of $12 gold per ton. The new programme is to paign to be started immediately, offiâ€" New Augarita Porcupinc Mines, adâ€" joining Dome Mines and Preston East Dome on the east in the Porcupine The moment that anyone enters the carnival, if they want to find the Loopâ€" oâ€"Plane it is not hard for all they have to do is to listen for the shrieksâ€"and there it is, even if the huge revolving arms do not show up plainly enough. Even the most hardy feel that they have ‘been places after they step out of the car at the conclusion‘of the ride. Here‘s a tip worth knowingâ€"leave your hat with someone who is not going up, also any valuable in your pockets because after you have balanced on your tummy, two or three times, it is surprising how the quarters, dimes. pipes, matches or what have you, fall out. But, no fooling, it‘s the ride of a century, without a doubt! ‘The feeling of being sent backwards i% a car at a rate of some 70 miles an hour and then fcrwards at the same spezsd until evenâ€" tually you "go over the top" cannot be equalled in anything tried before. £o, don‘t forget the Loopâ€"oâ€"Plane. It‘s safe, smocth and snappy and is now at the Canadian Legion Caernival on the Timâ€" mins Ball Park. Development Planned by New Augarita Porcupine Invented last year, this ride was carâ€" ried by Conklin‘s and made a great hit with the public. So much so, this year they invested in a revised version of the machine and doubled the seating capaâ€" city.. This apparatus, harmless though it looks while resting at ease by the entrance gate, actually loopsâ€"theâ€"loop with its riders, sometime hovers with them hanging upsideâ€"down, some fifty feet in the air, suspendedby a iron bar. If that‘s notâ€"a thrillâ€"then go and find one! of gra.fityfi‘ "Everything that goes up. must come down," said Sir Isaac. Toâ€" day ,people who have ridden on the new ride at Conklin‘s Shows, feel the same way, but only after they have landed on terra firma.. This ride‘ is known at the Loopâ€"0oâ€"Plane. In a few words, it is the most thrilling ride ever to grace a Midway. It‘s a long cry back to the days when Sir Isaac Newton discovered the law Thrilling New Ride ‘at Conklin‘s Shows Based on the Principle of What Goes up Must Come Down, the "Loopâ€"oâ€"Plane" is Makmg Big Hit. ~ _ _Says Mrs, A. Aubry, Montreal,â€"*"I was ‘troubled for years ‘with liver ~complaint and dizzy headaches. I was ~constipated and almost crippled with kidney trouble. After taking Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives for a very short time my health g_reatly improved. I highly recommend ruitâ€"aâ€"tives to anyone suffering as I ‘did." Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives are the discovery of .a famous Canadian doctor. They conâ€" extracts of fruits and herbs. They clean 1 the elimination organs and their tonic effects help bring new energy. AiLxOST CRIPPLED with KIDNEY TROUBLE If you have been thinking of restyling or repairing your furs, have it done during the summer when costs are at their very lowest. All work fully guaranteed. Call in and let us discuss it with you. of your own valuâ€" ation including STORAGE Costs Just 24 i);;;;l;t"re'li'o} -l;: Alsosleeplessness‘ constipation, liver complaint, and dizzy headaches. very short time. FRUITâ€"Aâ€"TIVES Let us protect your valuable fturs against loss by moths, fire or theft. Don‘t delay or it may be too late! The cost is just a trifie compared to the protection. Just 2 p.c. of your own valuation and insurance is included. ~ and have us place Your Furs in 'Fur Storage They‘re great at handing out advice: It seems their brains don‘t know fatigue. You‘ve surely heard of them by nowâ€" The Pileâ€"Eyed Piker and his League! But wait! There is a remedy! You shall be masters of vour fates! You simply have to join the league O disappointed candidates. The people didn‘t vote that way. But votes don‘t seem to carry weight Agrinst a man who wants the town To buy or sell some reail estate. In modern times it‘s much the same. The people want a new town hall: And even though they vote that way, It isn‘t what they get at all. * The mayor promotes another scheme : ‘"We‘ll sell our halk for twenty grand. And then we‘ll buy a great big school And seli a yard or two of land." He did the job, and did it well, But when he went to claim his gold, The mayor reduced the sum by half, And left the poor Pied Piper cold. "O. K. by me," said Piping Pete, And quickly started down the street. He -p!ayed tune upon his pipes This so impressed a certain mayor, That he engaged the piper bold. Said he, "If you can slay our rats, I‘ll pay you off in yellow gold." He blew upon his pipes, they say,. Bo all the rats would scamper out; And then he dunked them in the creek Or rapped the iblighters on the snout. In years gons by there lived a guy Who had a way of charming mice; And if, perchance, they pestered you, He‘d rid you of them in a trice. On the nonâ€"jury list there are three cases, all of them being suits for amounts of money alleged to be owing by the defendants. On the civil list there are two cases for the jury, Gwyn Thomas vs. P. M. Fleming, a.suit over a machinery deal which has been on the list before and Brisson vs. Morris Kirkland Lake Mines. * Then there are charges of highâ€"gradâ€" ing and conspiracy against Stanley Bolsev and Henry Pastrowick and one of conspiracy against John Cudelich and Louis Jaskouski. Both these latter cases are from Kirkland Lake and have to do with the sale of alleged gold ore to a police officer. Four criminal â€"cases will be srought to the attention of the jury at the spring sittings of the Court of General Sessions at Halleybury next week. One 4s a case traversed from the last sitâ€" tings of the court, that being the charge of perjury against 7T2â€"yearâ€"old William Phillips, former resident of Thornloe, who is alleged to have committed that crime in connection with the securing ‘of an old aAge pension. Another is a charge of aggravated assault stated ito have been committed on the person of a Chinese restaurant proprietor of New Liskeard on Christmas Eve by Clifford Paquette. Cases at the Haileybury Court General Sessions Each year the Noranda Mines Co. sees to the planting of a number of trnses to assist in the work of beautifyâ€" ing the town. It is a very pleasing and valuable idea and the virtue of the goodly thought will be the more evident as the years go by. Last week some 175 trees w*re planted on the various streets and avenue of Noranda. Of the 175 trees, about 50 were to replace trees previously planted but that had failed to come through the winter. or for other reasons had died. Tree Planting at Noranda Carried on Again This Year The Pied Piper (By A. Sittizin) rat with every tweet It is to be hop:d that he and some of his members will also visit Kirkland Lake and be given an opportunity to study Reeve Carter‘s brief, the most forceful point of which is the citation of mines tax figuresâ€"64 per cent. for Recently 25 members of the Dominion House returned to Ottawa from a trip here fully convinced : of the nseds of the North, and . now <the (provincial premier admits that he is similarly imâ€" In view of the campaign that counâ€" cil and others have ‘been fighting for Teck, and of the efforts on the same lines .made in other mining centres, culminating in the formation of the mining <municipalities section of the recent conventionâ€" at. Sudbury, the statement is most encouraging. Mr. in the course of the interview went on to say that in consideration of the large amount of highways revenue coming from the North this squrce of revenue should be encourâ€" aged, rather than discouraged.. Northern News,~â€"Kirkland Lake) It was The Porcupine Advance of Timmins which in an interview with the occasionally inaccessible Premier Mitchell Hspburn secured from him for the first time since he came into power a statementâ€"of tremendous significance to the mining country. "In regard to the Porcupine, Kirkâ€" land Lake and Sudbury districts I have always believed that they should reâ€" ceive their fair share of government revenues." Biggest News the North Has Had for Some Time Young Prince Farouk (LEFPT), sixteenâ€"yearâ€"old son ‘of the late King Fuad of Egypt, is shown (TOP) saluting his farewell to England, as his crossâ€"channel boat left Dover, for the first stage of the lad‘s sad voyage to his native land where he ascended the throne of his father. Farouk had ‘been studying in England when news came of his father‘s demise. He automatically became ruler of Egypt. The young king is seen BEâ€" LOW, chatting with the Duke of Kent at Victoria. Station, London. The 16â€"yearâ€"old monarch paid a visit to King Edward before leaving. King Farouk‘s first official act was to reduce his salary y $250,000 a year. A specialist in houschold science; a male ‘specialist in English and History for second and third year high school; ard a male teacher of English and Hisâ€" tory for the beys of the technical deâ€" partment will be required for the fall torm. An advertisement will appear in a Torento paper this week inviting apâ€" plications. . Three new teachers will be engaged by the Timmins High and Vocationai School Board, it was announced, folâ€" lowing a committee. mesting on Monâ€" day. They will replace thoss whose resignations are now in the hands of the bcard. The Porcupine Advance has secured an intervicw, which in the light of cther recent deve‘ opments is the biggest and most satisfactory bit of nows we have had for some time. f New Teachers for High and Vocational .School There is nothing like a personal inâ€" spection to follcw up the reception of delegates to Quecn‘s Parkâ€"the Muniâ€" cipal Board, for instance, took little time to approve the major part of our works program here once they ‘had seen the camp for themselves. i ~ Significant, ‘tco, is Mr. ‘"Hep3urn‘s stattemnt that he never called the North a "sinkhole." He explamed that he objected to the vast amount of money sunk in parts of the North from which there was no prospect of a return. the Dominion, 28 per cent. for provincs â€"and the crumbs, consisting of eight por cont. for the township‘s share. The New Yorker:â€"If you like to meditate about things, you might mediâ€" tate about United States Patent No. 2,038,455, issued to a Mr. Fritz Studer, and described in the Official Gazetts of the Patent Office in these words: "Apparatus for making imitation counâ€" terfeit articles." "You did," replned the obher grimly, expecting at least an apology. _The fat man turned to his wife. "All right," he said, "this is our row." The fat man and his wife were reâ€" turning to their seats in the theatre after the interval. "Did I tread on your toes as I went cut?" he asked a man at the end of a no longer hold true. At slower speeds of 30 or 20 miles an hour, it provides a necessary margin of safety where the driver needs it mostâ€"in the driving range for city streets. There‘s many a place where 20 miles an hour is dangerous speed, unless there is extra stopping room. ‘"The 1936 model motorist is no longâ€" er anxious to see how fast he can go. He has learned that it‘s much more important to know how fast he can stop. He is finding safety in numbers â€"the numbers on his speedometer dial." "SGee how easily it works out: 50 imiles an hour, 55 feet times 3; total 165 feetâ€"or about ten car lengthsâ€" necessary for room to stop the car. Only when the road ahead is clear for more than 165 feet and there is no posâ€" sibility traffic will enter your path from side roads, can fifty miles an hour be ccnsidered safe. Any moment that the driver is unsure of the road ten carâ€" lengths ahcsad he must reduce speed accordingly or prepare to pay the penâ€" alty. "This simple arithmetic of safety is only dependable up to 50 miles an hour. As the driving speeds increase beyond 50 miles an hour, our easy formula will There‘s a safety in "numbers‘ for motorists, if the driver will learn what they mean, according to Barney Oldâ€" field, safety expert for the Plymouth Division of the Chrysler Corporation. Numbers as simple as oneâ€"twoâ€"three are the basis of a new "arithmetic of safety" which Oldfield recommends as a guide for safe driving anywhere, unâ€" der any traffic conditions, day or night. ~ The dean of American race drivers, now engaged in a safety crusade, offers a new method to measure the limits of safe driving speeds. I ‘"When the speedometer is at 40, think of 44 feet; if at 30, think of 33 feet, and so on down the scale. It is purely accidenthl that the figures for various speeds are such easily rememâ€" bered numbers, so the figures on the dial automatically bring them to mind. "To find how much room you need to stop safely from 30, 40 or 50 miles an hour, merely take the ‘reaction disâ€" tance‘ and multiply by three. "Any driver can read the numbers on his own speedomoter. Those figures are all any motorist needs, for the simple arithmetic of safety. ‘The same speedomoter figures, which tell how fast you are going, also tell how fast you can stop when you learn to read their message. That‘s the first rule of safe drivingâ€"to be able ‘to gtop in time. ‘"Here‘s how the system works, to make any speedometer a ‘stopometer‘, too. When the needle points at 50, think of 55 feet. That‘s how far the car will travel, after the driver decides to stop, before his foot can touch the brake pedal. Experts call this ‘reaction disâ€" tance‘, and it varies with the speed of the car. "The arithmetic I propose," Oldfield explained, "doesn‘t require a college professor to teach it. It‘s the Little Red Schoolhouse brand of figuring, not the college grade of higher mathemaâ€" tics. Safety in Numbers Says Famous Racer Barney Oldfield, Safety Exâ€" rt for Chlg:ler Co., has ystem of "Safety Arithâ€" metic‘ for Motorists. HELPFUL METHOD That golf seems to be on â€"the wane in Scotland was a view expressed by. an offical of the city at a recent meeting of the Edinburgh Town Councii .when the question of allowing golf on Sunday was under discssion. To support his statement he cited figures. In 1930, he said, there were 325,000 players on corâ€" poration courses. The numbers® had declined year by year unt.il in 1935 they| had fallen to 250,000. â€" These figures are of the courses belongmg to the city where a charge of a few pence a round is made. Scotland has always regarded golf as a demoscratic game, much more «50 t;pan in England, where it is still more a game For the defence, Mr. Inch insisted no responsibility was admitted in connecâ€" tion with the coat, and Crown Attor ney argued Mrs. Dohsrty had aided in conâ€" cealing the articles. ~X The watch, the Crown claimed, was found wrapped in the coat when th: garment was locatedâ€"in :a.hollow. space in the dining room table at the Doherty home ‘when police searched the place: last month. The son, only witness o his mother‘s behalf, swore he had put the coat in the table after. FTeceiving it from another man last September and that his mother knew nothing of eithtr coat or watch. : Provincial Constable R. 0 Strombexg- told the court that when the . hiding place was revealed, Mrs. Doherty â€" at first claimed to cwn both articles. Actually Claims that Golfâ€"on Wane in Scotland W.C. Inch, for leniency, Hisz Honour said there had been so much crime of this nature in the. North that it had to bee stopped and suspended sentences were not stopping it.., n :.;. . Judge Hantman said he had no doubt but that the woman knew the goods, a fur coat, claimed by Mrs. Jeanetts Reaâ€" toen of Kirkland Lake, and a_ gold watch said to be the property of the mother of Frank MacKay, . Coleman Township resident whose home had been ‘oroken into admittsdly by the youth, had besen stolen, and that she was trying to screen her son, but the Crown had not fully established posâ€" session on her part. Of the son, and dealing with the plea of his counsel, Sentence of six months‘ definite imâ€" prisonment in the Ontario Reformaâ€" tory, with a further indeterminate term not to exceed one yrar, was imposed at Haileybury last week by Judge Hartâ€" man on CGeorge Doherty, Jr., 20â€"yearâ€" old Cobalt youth, who pleaded guilty to a charge of breaking and entering by night; but his mother, Mrs. Anna Doâ€" henty, was acquitted on two counts of having in her possession goods alleged- ly stolen by him. Cobalt Youth Given Term But Mother Dismissed BIG PACKAGEâ€" LOW PRICE best for all your Baking Vlourâ€"rich in glutenâ€"has more ‘"Meo** and nutrition. It also imparts that fine, m Hlaver which will make all yeur baking delightful. : Chas. Pierce Sons Ltd. *14 Third Ave. Phone 16 . Sudbury Star:â€"Max Baer is now an orchestra leader, but there are those who doubt that he can even beat time! And so the question of Sunday golf in Scotland is no new one. The Town Council was divided again in 1936 when debating the same question, though in this case it was more an academic quesâ€" tion because a tenantâ€"the Craiglockâ€" hart Golf Clubâ€"wished the prohibition taken out of its lease, If the working men of Edinburgh are neglecting their golf the more fashionable courses still attract people from all parts. The links at St. Andrews, North Berwick and other eastcoast places are more popular than ever. Golf is a pastime peculiar to Stotâ€" land, and the game certainly is of great antiquity. Frequently references are made to it in old records. In 1457 the Scottish Parliament passed an act enâ€" joining the "Fute ball and Golfe be utterly cryit downe and nocht usit and the bowe merkis be made at ilka paâ€" roche kirkeâ€"a pair of buttis fand schutting be usit ilk Sunday." A simtiâ€" lar act was passed in 1491. The inferâ€" ence is that golf was so popular in Scotland <was the practice of archery was in danger of neglect. In 1592 the Edinburgh magistrates issued a proclaâ€" mation against playing a game. of golf in Sunday. â€" . . a shape, size and price for every require» ment. _ Also. Natural Grit Stones,. Grinding Wheels, India Oilsteonés. Buy Norton producta From your Hardwcre Storc or write us. Norton Company of Caneda Lid:, Hamilton, Ont. for the wellâ€"toâ€"do. A game of golf over the Braid Hills which are.withinp a twopenny ride from the centre of the city, offers a really good game with some of the finest views cetebrated bven in Marmion‘s day. For mower knives, around the home, for the farmer, blacksmith, machinist, garageman. Made of fast cutting, long wearing Norton Crystolon Abrasive . . . the best you can buy. the Fitle with the \Cou need this S handy FILE for 1000 Jobs Q:fl '/‘/'”m \\\§ l1 cannot get lost _ Usk your dealer ’ / 2" _ SCYTHES i/z

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