Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 15 Apr 1937, 2, p. 2

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A dengmful’ mis:e]lannous showe-r home of Mrs. W. Aide F‘ourth "avenue, in honcur of Miss Muriel Tisdale. ‘The. eveninz was sper: in cards ‘"and at the clusion Miss Tisdale: was â€"preâ€" sented with a hampsr of linen~ and kitchenware for the new nouse. Lunch was served by the hostess, an t assist= ing her were Mrs. C. Mrs. Charlebois, Mrs. Stevenson and .Mtrs. Hormel. Rev. Murray C. Tait was m Iroquois Falls Sunday evening, taking ‘charge of the United Church service there. The Schumacher firemen entertained their wives to a turkey ainner Thursâ€" day evening in the banquet room ‘of: the Daffodi1 tea rsom. After ‘tuei‘dinaâ€" ner, the evening was spent in comâ€" munity singing, ard severa: cof the members contrisuted solos, duets anc monologues, after whicth dancing. was! Schumacher, April 14th, 1989==(Speâ€" cial to The Advance)â€"Mrs. G. Johnston of Kirkland Lake was the guest of ner sister, Mrs. Harry Manstte, Msm wesk, and also attended the Dalt n-Hender- son weddiny. : e Popular Séhumacher Young Couple Wedded Miss Hazel Gertrude Gilbert andâ€"William George Leck Married at Kirkland Lake. CMiss Muriel Patricia Tisâ€" dale and Peter Woodrnff Wedded at Timmins. Other Items of Interest from Time Table â€"â€" Changes _ Effective Sunday, April 25th__ Full information fronm Agents Canadian Pacific NElLL’S SHOES _ _For Growing Children :; .. Youngsters must wear shoes designed and bui for young feet. They need scientific care an o} ~~:â€"~ Specialâ€"attention, if they are to develop norn :# <« ~â€"ally;>Neill‘s is the place to buy good children <<y* .~~shoes, because we give every assurance of prop« | fit and expert care. And every pair is smart â€"~= styled, too, so that your youngster will be mo than pleased with Neill‘s. Ask to see Neill‘s "KNOCKOUT â€" SHOES" â€" enjoyed to end a perfect evening. . Mrs: D.: Jones, of Orillia was the g»ues_t of her daughter, Mrs. W. Mackie, at the Coniaurum last week. * "The ladies of the W.A. of Trinlty ‘United â€"OChurch‘intend holding an apron sg@te and afternoon tea and bake sale «m Friday afterrniooh, April 30th. Bornâ€"Tuesday, April 13, 1937, to Mr. and Mrs. J. Vanciana, 46% Second aveâ€" ,:nueâ€"â€"-a. daughter. . : * Tom Leck i was im Kirkland Lake on "Gaturday for the wedding of his broâ€" " "A wediding ‘of great interest tock ‘place on ‘Saturday morning last at 11 c‘clock‘ in Trinity Tnited Caurch, Kirkâ€" Lake, when Hazel Gertrude, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. Gilbert, ot town, and William George Leck, twin ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. William Leck of town, were‘ united in marriage. Rev. Murray C. Tait efficiated at the coreâ€" mony. The wedding music was played by the church organist. The bride wore beoming gown of printed Diue crepe, ni¢y‘ blué"coat and hat and matching "and> carried â€" Amgrican ‘Beauty Fobbs: ‘She was attended by Miss FMorénce Nicholson, of Timmins, as bridesmaid, who wore navy blue "orâ€"tmends Eéxtend to them their wishes for a long and happy married life. Mr. sand Mrs. Leck will reside in Larder Lake. "Mtr.R. Heath was a. visitor to Northn ‘Bay last week. ° supported by his brother, Tom. After the‘ceremony a wedding breakfast was serveéd at the Princess hotel. The young cdupfe‘aré very popular, and their hosts The Child Welfare Clinic will be held .Youngsters must wear shoes designed and built _for young feet. They need scientific care and . â€"specialâ€"attention, if they are to develop normâ€" + ~ally Neill‘s is the place to buy good children‘s "«shoes, because we give every assurance of proper fit and expert care. And every pair is smartly " styled, too, so that your youngster will be more ~ * tham pleased with Neill‘s. rs. George Henderson and Chas. t ere in Cochrane last week atâ€" These areâ€"calf leather oxfords made. by ‘the makers of Hurlbut Shoes. Black or brown and welted soles. Ask to see Neill‘s "KNOCKOQUT â€" SHOES" for Children Sizes 8 to 12 12% to 3 ~*_ _X â€" RAY Fitting in all Children‘s Shoes North Bay Nugget: Attire to be worn by young men this year will make it impossible for the girls to turn a deaf ear to their suits. The Catholic Women‘s League held their annual meeting and election c{ cffisers on Tuesday evening, when a good many of the members were in atâ€" tendance. A vote of thanks was tenderâ€" ed the last year‘s cfficers for their work and coâ€"operation, and Miss Nora Dillen <hird viceâ€"president; secretary, cident‘s cffice, with Mrs. Ed. Robinson, first ‘viceâ€"president; Mrs. Laundreâ€" vealt serond viceâ€"president; Mrs. Jas. Dllon third viceâ€"president; secretary, Mrs. Frank Lyons; treasurer, Mrs. John Griffiths; and the six councillors are: Mrs. F. Furlong Mrs. J. O‘Donnell, Mrs. ‘J. Philliban, Mrs. A. â€"Pournier, Mrs Fitzgerald, Mrs. J. Scullion; Mrs. J. O‘Donnell, recording secretary; and a visiting committee was chosen by the executive. ‘moon, April 16, rrom three to five. Mothers are invited to come and bring their preâ€"schoolâ€"age children. A quiet wedding tock place on Satâ€" urday in St. Matthew‘s Church, Timâ€" mins, when Muriel Patricia, eldest Gaughter cf Mr. and Mrs. Ernest T‘sâ€" dale, became the bride of Peter Woodâ€" ruft. Rev. Canon Cushing officiated at the ceremony. The bride, given in marâ€" riag»> by her father. wore a rust woo! crepe suit, brown blouse, brown hat, and matching accesscries, and wore a corsage of roses and lilyâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. She was attendedb y Mrs. Clarence Fiendel, as bridesmaid, who wore a grey suit, and black accessories, and wore a corsage of sweet peas. The groom was attended by Mr. George MacNaughton. After the ceremony a wedding supper and reception were held t the hcme of the bride‘s parents, 14 Railroad street, where many friends called to wish the young couple hapâ€" piness. Mr. and Mrs. Massacre spent the weekâ€"end visiting Mrs. Massacre‘s sisâ€" ter, Miss M. Purlong, in Haileybury. ‘Miss Doris Cocoke enter:rained at a post nuptial shower cn Tuesday »night in honour of Mrs. George Leck (formerly Miss H. Gilbert). About thirty of the bride‘s friends gathered to express their congratulations to the bride, and on kbeshalf of the gathering, Miss Cooke is sending the brids a complete set of cream and red kitchen ware, as a reâ€" membrante from the "gang." The heostess served a delicious lunch to her guests. Coronatieon Services at St. Matthew‘s on May 9th Rev. Murray C. Tait was in Kirkland Lake Saturday cfficiating at the Lecxâ€" Gilbert wedding. Classes are being held in preparation for the rite of confirmation to be adâ€" ministered by His Lordship, the Bishop of Mocsonee, in St. Matthew‘s Church cn the morning of May 9th. Mrs. J. Stiles returned last week from a vacaticn in Toronto. On the evening of that day, special Ccoronation services will ‘be held at which His Lordship, the Bishep, will be speaker. in the public school on Friday alteâ€" The many friends of Jack Leng will tbe pleased to hear that he hnas again taken charge of the pastorate at Laâ€" vant for the summer months. ‘ing to bust loose" soon and believes the theatte"of ‘battle" will be Europe. _ Literary Digest: "Covering a war isn‘t a hard job," declared Mark Barron, day city editor of the Associated Press. "But secing men who have become your friends torn to pieces isn‘t pleasant." Barron predicts ‘another big war is goâ€" Hutton figured it out. He had preâ€" viously paid the women who worked for him â€"two cents a hank, so that accordâ€" ing to his caleulations each mouse earnâ€" ed eighteen cents every six weeksâ€"$1.62 a year. Allowing a quarter for machinâ€" ery and twelve cents for board, his vermin showed him a net profit of $1.25 per mcuse per annum. He applied for the tenancy of the cisused Dunfermline Cathedral intendâ€" ing to house 10,000 working mice, but he died before his idea could be reaâ€" We haveall heard of horseâ€"power, but Hutton was probably the first man to establish mouseâ€"power. So he set up mouse mill in Dunfermiine for the making of thread. In five weeks one One day a canny Sczot, David Hutton, happened to make a tcur of the prison, and was struck by the sight of a mouse utilized to make a wheel revolve. Huttcn set to work. He bought the little house, mouse and wheelâ€"all for twelve coppersâ€"and began to experiâ€" ment; Then he worked out the cost or the upkeep and found rmmas a single mcouse could live and work for 35 days on a cent‘s worth of ocatmeal, during which time it would revolve the wheel the amazing distance of three hundred and sixtyâ€"eight miles. threads of twentyâ€"five inches. Scotsman Made Mice Work and Earn Their Daily Keep (From Blairmore Enterprise) During the Francoâ€"Prussian‘ War 9 number ¢<f prisoners were interned in the Scottish town of Perth. To while away the time they were allowed to make trinkets, gadgets and novelties to amuse the visitors. These they sold to augment their slender meams of susâ€" tenance. tle wooden toy house with a wheel in the gable. To make the wheel revoive ke captured ancther prisonerâ€"a comâ€" mon ‘house mouse. "The mouse," he said to his friends, is a pest. Why should it not be comâ€" pelled to justify its existence?" One prisoner, more ingenious than his fellows, painstakingly contrived a litâ€" W.C. ARNOTT Custom Service Stglé Li eac{ers/up Men‘s and Boys‘ Wear Tailoredâ€"toâ€"Order by Society Brand There is no mistaking the style leadership and fine fitting qualiâ€" ties of Society Brand tailored â€" to â€" order clothes. You‘ll recogâ€" nize this instantly*by style lines, their smart casual fit, and the way they feel under the arms. Such things are not there by accident. They are there by skillful designing plus expert tailoring: by hands trained the Society Brand way. There is an especially choice selection of new spring and sumâ€" mer patterns ~and models that will win the admiration of every forward gomg man. SCHUMACHER Boston Herald: We‘re a trifie lame on that international stuff, but as far as we can make out, a buffer State is one that‘s in the middle, between two biffer States. 6. Do not eat tco much. Eat just barely enough to satisfy your hunger 7. Eat more vegetables than meat and eggs. 8. Eat a variety of foods. 9. Eat slowly. 10. See that the bowels move fully once a day. 11. Stand, sit and walk erect. 12. Use no poiscnous drugs. 13. Keep clean, by daily bathing ana avoid ecntact with dirt and disease conditions. 14. Work hard, but do not forget to rest and play. 15. Be (tcheerful and learn not to ‘‘We pray that urder Divine blessing and‘ guidance the foundations of conâ€" stitutional government may be firmly maintained and that Your Majesty may be vouchsafed. strengsth and wisdom commensurate with your exalted and exacting task." 5. Breathe deeply and slowly through the nose. "The solemn form and charactsr of Your Majesty‘s coronation, compreâ€" hending both old and the new, will we believe afford a more vivid sense of the meaning and value of the crown, there. by strengthening the bonds of mutual trust~and affection between the soverâ€" eign and his peoples. "We rejoice that the great responâ€" sibilities of the throne are shared by one who already holds a place in the affections of your psoples, and whose example fosters those simple and homeâ€" ly virtues which beautify character and enrich family life. Fifteen Good Rules for Keeping Health the Best 1. Live and work in fresh air. This does not necessarily mean out of doors but in a well ventilated, airy room. 3. Spend part of your time in the cpen air. 4. Have an abundance of fresh air when you sleep. ‘"To Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, we desire also to express our sentiments of loyalty and devotion. "The crown, symbolizing the unity and the free assozciation of the nations of the British Commonwealth, conâ€" tinues to embody the principles of govâ€" ernment which they hold most sacred, and their common attachment to the ideals of freedom and of peace. 2. Wear light, loose, porus clothes; they should be comfortable and well fitting, clean and easily cleaned; the undergarments always fresh. "Justice, civil liberty and ordered freedom, thus secured, constitute a most precious heritage.® "These timeâ€"honoured principles perâ€" meating the relations of your peoples and their homelands one with another, have served to create a community of free states, responsible for their own destinies, yet resolved to conserve their common inheritance as one of the treasâ€" ures of mankind. ‘"The companionship in service thus enjoyed, while ensuring your personâ€" al happiness, will afford to Your Maâ€" jesty support and strength in the disâ€" charge of your public duties. ""Through this stormy and baffliing era in human affairs, the throne has remained broadâ€"based upon the people‘s will. Canada Sends Loyal Message George VI "Lince your accession, we have not failed to recognize in Your Majesty‘s public utterances the assertion of those principles under which the prerogatives and powers of government, vested in your person, are held and exercised only according to law and custom sanc. tiored by general consent. Both Houses of Parliament at Ottawa Unite in Adopâ€" tion of Address. It was read in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Mackenzie King and in the Senate by Senator Raoul Danâ€" durand. government leader. Opposiâ€" tion leaders in both Houses joined in the sentiments expressed. An address of loyalty to King George VI on occasion of the coronation was adopted Saturday by both Houses of parliament at Ottawa. ‘"We, the members of the House of Commons of Canada, in parliament asâ€" sembled, desire respectfully to renew on the occasion of Your Majesty‘s coronaâ€" tion the assurance of our united loyalty | and support and to offer our heartfelt good wishes for Your Majesty‘s reign. I In the form in which it was presentâ€" ed to the Commons the address was as follows : BOOK NOOK Library Service Latest Books Greeting Cards LENDING LIBRARY and GIFT SHOP Basement MclInnis Block Announcing the Opening The Woman‘s Almanac . we have not On Thursday Chief Justite Rowell will hear a motion in hisschambers for an order admitting the appeal of the nextâ€"toâ€"kin against the judgment upâ€" holding the validity of the baby clause and approving the security of costs. The relatives have deposited $500 in this regard. There is barely ‘time for the appeal to be included on the Suâ€" preme Court list for its sitting which begins in a fortnight‘s time, and it is Anlikely to make it. The next sitting is in October. ‘ W. N. Tilley, K.C., acting for the Millar will executors, â€"purposes asking for an Osgoode Hall hearing to investiâ€" gate the claims of the mothers entered in the "baby race." Mr. Justice Midâ€" dleton, asked ‘by The Telegram if this hearing might go on before the nextâ€" toâ€"kin‘s appeal is ruled on, said the arguments of the lawyers appearing for those concerned would first have to be held. (Toronto Telegram) Possible "payâ€"off" to Toronto stork derhy mothers is almost certain to be delayed several months by reason of an appcal to the Supreme Court of Canâ€" ada now being <launched by Samue! Factor, K.C., on behalf of the late Charles Vance Millar‘s nextâ€"toâ€"kin. The six mothers concerned best chances of sharing in the $500,000 beâ€" quest, are impatient over the prospect of further delay. In particular, Mrs. John Nagle is anxious to get off relief. Literary Digest: Pronounced dead for five minutes Theodore Prinz of Aberâ€" deer, Washington, when his heart stopped after an auto accident, describâ€" ed the sensationâ€"<later. ‘ "I seemed to float into a soft darknmess. There was great peacefulness and great contentâ€" mflnt 99 Leadirg lawyers consulted on the same point lean to the opinion that no judge would grant the hearing until the appeal is disposed of, since all the work done might go for nothing. Appeal of Millar Relatives to Delay Stork Derby Split w r06® 08 # 110 Pine Street South 4 en on Phone 130 .2. n sn 2s * .“‘“.“.“ .“.“ Slow in school and shunred in play. Nervous and irritable and tired . .. denied even the companionship of books, hecause they "hurt his eyes." His is the tragedy of childhood that too often passes unnoticed . . . the barrier that poor eyesight raises, Deâ€" fective eyesight in children can be remedied, often completely curâ€" ed, by the attention of a competent optometrist and the aid of properly prescribed glasses. IRVIN ROSNER R.O. h t .4 PHONE 212 Located in Halperin‘s Jewellery Store Timmins Pine Street North HE LIVES ALONE of a new and doesn‘t like it! Gifts for all occasions Bridge Favours Lamps, Linen Huntingdon Gleaner:> A pin cushion made by a Scottish soldier stationsd at Gibraltar in 1890 is owned by a Foreâ€" most, Alto., resident. It is a sixâ€"pointed star of beads. In colours are the words of a lonely soldier, ‘""Remember Mce" The cushion is made of 5000 beads and 1,000 pins. ‘} â€"â€"(Egezial to . ,;_5 government bet have received inâ€" tfrestmg souvenirs Of '_'“Carcnafion of King George Sixth month, thess taking the form of Pstar shields conâ€" taining the Ontaric ctat 6f arms, with the reverse side carrying, in addition to the commemsration notice, a brief Officials Receixe.Gifts of Co‘ron:l;‘fi%fififiou Niagara Falls Review: There is this to be said for milk, after drinking it, one can get into a car and behind the wheel, unafraid of arrest. And the farmer will make more from milk than he will from history of the arms of the province, with its Latin motts. The shields, which are nine by twelve inches, are the gift of the‘ Provinczcial Secretary, Hon. H. E. Nixon, it is stated, and among other ‘Ontario offizrials in this section who have rezseived them are Magistrate Atkinson and Sheriff W. C. Tnuerck. Tired nerves make you restless, nervous, irritable and sleepless. Most women, and men too, depend on Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food for new nerve force. For new pep and energy use Dr. Chase‘s Tired Nerves Timmins 7 Pine St. North

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