Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 19 Aug 1937, 2, p. 1

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700,000 CHILDREN QUITE A CROWD AT THAT Em;ife Block â€" Timmins " o Aido MA AWTV MAE e «k C I r and Electro Therapist CONSULTATION FREE Diseases Peculiar to Women Phone 1565 Gordon Block 4 Gordon Block Phone 1615 Tim: Dr. Ray Hughes CONSULTING AUDITOR Trustee under The Bankruptcy Act Telephone 611 Corner of Pine and Fourth Wrap all Garbage in paper. Keep your Garbage Can covered. Use plenty of Chloride of Lime which can be procured at the Town Hall free. Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. All Outside Tollets must be made flyâ€" Dr. S. R. Harrison The Pioneer Paper of the. Porcupine. Established 1912. Phone 228 Credit Reports Collecli Accounting and Auditing 6 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228 P.O. Box 1747 «~39â€"2 tickets to the Canadian National Exhiâ€" bition with the compliments ~of the president and directors. Young Canada takes possession of Exhibition Park on DR. E. L. ROBERTS 0. E. Kristenson PORCUPINE CREDIT Corporation Ltd. _ CHIROPRACTOR Xâ€"RAY ~NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 607 _ _ day and Friday nights. 6 Balsam St. N., Timmlns,-_c . D. Cuthbertson, I.P.A. . J. Turner Sons, Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT. Agents Everywhere More than 700,000 pupils of Ontario‘s ementary schools are provided with Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat We Manufacture and Carry in Stock AWNINGS |__ _ FLAGS PACK® BAGS HAVERSACKS â€" EIDERDOWN SNOWSHOES . _ ROBES DOG SLEIGHS SKIIS TOBOGGANS pOoG HARNESS TARPAULINS HORSE TENTS BLANKETS Ask Your Local Dealer for Prices or send your order d‘iuct to Ab> s it ons l WE ie en # ... By .Order of THE BOARD OF HEALTH ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS Dental Surgeon . MOORE‘S BUILDING . GREENIDGE Timmins Phone 2030 Collections , Ont. Box 677 â€"41â€"53 , ‘Ont. Report on Kiwanis Camp Given Club on Monday Average gain in weight of the group of boys whose period at the Kiwanis Camp ended on August 13th, was just over three pounds. During the period half of the nonâ€"swimmers in the group learned to swim. At the regular Kiâ€" wanis meeting on Monday the report of the Camp Director, giving information on camp activities, was read. Boys Gain Weight and Health at Camp. . Many Learn Swimming. â€" Work of Cook and Cookie Praised. Claude Desaulniers and Team Place First in Car Ticket Sales. Ernest Stevens First for Individual Sales. Francis Duggan resigned as cookee and his place was taken by Jim Bateâ€" man. Duggan‘s work and the work ‘of the cook, Albert Taylor, received high praise from the director. Some of the boys had to be sent home and disciplinary measures taken with others. Camp life ran much more smoothly when the trouble makers were removeg Claude Desaulniers and his team placed first in ticket sales for the autoâ€" mobile which was drawn for during the Kiwanis Karnival here several weeks ago. Second place in sales was taken by P. Moisley and his team and third by Phil Kinkel and his team. Highest individual sales were made by Ernest Stevens. (From: Sudbury Star) Hon. Charles McCrea, former minâ€" ister of mines and member for Sudbury in the Ontario Legislature, was a visâ€" itor in Sudbury over the weekâ€"end, in connection with a number of mining properties in which he is interested in the district. He went by plane to Afton island on Lake Ramsay, played golf at the Idylwylde Golf and Country Club sunday afternoon, and renewed acâ€" quaintances with many whom he met casually. The fact that his visit coinâ€" !cided with the Conservative convention The report of the net proceeds of the Karnival was not yet available as many of those from whom the Kiwanians bought goods and materials necessary, have not turned in their accounts. ning. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Kinkel will be host and hostess. The next meeting of the club will take the form of an open air barbecue and ladies‘ night to be held at thMe Buffalo Ankerite Mine on Monday eveâ€" Hon. C. McCrea Definitely Out of Politics Now, he Says this week, was merely coincidence, Mr McCrea said. "I am definitely out of politics so far asâ€"being a candidate, either here or elsewhere," he stated. "I am into mining and business up to my eyes. I gave 25 years to politics, gave the best that was in me during that time, and I am satisfied to let the younger generâ€" ation carry.on.‘ There is a strong possibility that Mr. McCrea will campaign his old ridâ€" ing in the forthcoming fight, in the interests of the Conservative nominee. lmfi «Jnt.., _ Canad AY sad ‘I'BURIDAY have a good look at ye!" "What‘s the idea?" “Incotmmsumn’mtony to ye, an‘ I want to be able later to idemityyepaduvelyasthemnwbo shtruck me." $ j "Step up here, O‘Brien, and let me Pretty Wedding at St. Anthony‘s Church Miss Marie Anne Pauline : Rochefort and Mr. Joseph â€" Cantin Married. Rev. Fr. Lafieur officiated at a pretty wedding in St. Anthony‘s Roman Cathâ€" olic church on Tuesday morning at 7.30 a.m.. when he united in marriage Miss Marie Anne Pauline, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rochefort, and Mr. Joseph Cantin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Azeriase Cantin. Roses and sweet peas adorned the church. The charming young bride was very lovely in a gown of pink lace over tafâ€" feta, made in princess style, with short puffed sleeves, and wearing a picture hat. She carried a ‘bouquet of roses and lilyâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. Both the bride and groom were atâ€" tended by their respective fathers. After the ceremony a buffet lunch was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Rochefort, 32 Sixth avenue, where Mrs. Tremblay, Mrs. J. Rocheâ€" fort, and Mrs. Charles McCann acted as hostesses. The happy couple received many lovely gifts from the numerous friends who were present to wish them all future happiness. EP eA T Mr. and Mrs. J. Cantin will spend their honeymoon at Montreal, Quebec and Toronto, and will reside in Timâ€" mins on their return. (Toronto. Telegram) It is a fact that the securing of a driver‘s permit in Ontario at the preâ€" sent time is pretty much of a formalâ€" CE w t eV ;t-y. It is almo.st, as'easy to get a driving permit as it is to get a liquor permit;. There is no close checkup of the appliâ€" C ces i1 _ â€" Lixrxlawiarr Urges Proper Examination â€" for All Motor Drivers cant. The hazards of the highway are increased by this loose system. â€" There are persons whose temperaAâ€" mental makeup is such that they will: take chances which should not be taken. And there are others whose physical incompetence can only be disâ€" closed by medical examination. : Not so long ago a ‘motorist suffered a heart attack while driving along the Welland Canal highway and as a Conâ€" sequence his wife and children, in the car at the time, were drowned. The man‘s heart weakness was not unknown to himself and would have become known to the permit authorities had a physical examination been compulsory. . _ . SATURDAY, AUG. 27â€"28 ooo mm omm mm mm mm mm mm o Annabella, Henry Fonda and Leslie THURSDAY FRIDAY. AUG. 26â€"27 “(‘rmunal Lawyer g also James Dunn and Marion Ma FRIDAY, FRIDAY MIDNIGHT, and : "Step Closer Folks" coming to our theatres, we request our later than 8.00 p.m for the Second Show if " theydesxretoseethefullshow Edmond Lowe and Florence Rice in '- _ Banks in ‘.‘W'mgflg of the Mornin " g "Under Cover of Night" TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 19TH, 19837 Woman Mayor Found West in Very Serious Condition Mayor Barbara Hanley, of Webbwood, only woman mayor in Canada recently returned from a visit to Saskatchewan, found the farmers of the drought area in a terrible plight. She travelled west by train to Moose Jaw, where she stopped over en route to Bounty, Sask. She also visited at Mossbank, Sask. "Of course," she said, "there was no indication of the drought in the city of Moose Jaw, but when we got out of the city, it was so pitiful that my daughâ€" ter, Ella, wept." When she visited . Saskatchewan, many Ontario buyers were already in the province buying up what cattle were left. There were no signs of feed and they were disposed to sell livestock, they were disposed to sell I11vesLO which they would be unable to keep. Just, Trying to Kid the rospector from North The following is from that everâ€" happy source of good yarns and amusâ€" ing incidertsâ€"the "Grab Samples" column of The Northern Miner:â€" A tale is going around about one of our Northern prospectors who came to town this spring. trying to raise some morey to hit the bush for the summer. In the interests of economy he took a room in a private house up around Bloor street. However his regular haunt was the old stamping ground of the Northerners, the King Edward Hotel. There he parked day by day in the hopz> of making a contact with a ‘"stake." One day he met some other oldâ€"timâ€" ers and they wound up in a hotel room for an all day and all evening session. Early in the morning he decided he had better go home and, once on the street, he pointed it might be a good idea if he walked all the way, to sober up a bit. Presently he discovered that the naviâ€" gation was ‘exceedingly rough. There seemed to be a heavy wind from the port quarter that kept turning him to the west. Repeatedly he recharted his course but each time he was blown off it. Reluctantly he was forced to the conclusion that he would have to run for some port. He did not know exactly where he was but, blundering along the street he finally came to sign which read "Hospital" and he staggered up and pushed the night bell, sitting down on the step to meditate and to await whatever action the gods decreed. A nurse presently appeared, called a couple of orderlies and they hoisted him into an elevator and eventually got him into bed. Next morning he awoke in these strange surroundings in someâ€" what of a panic. He demanded to know where he was and was told that he was in hospital. "What hospital?" says he. "Maternity hospital" says the nurse. And they kept him for the reâ€" gulation ten days, "At that," said he later, "I was a pretty sick woman." h t ts t Magistrate Gould Holds His First Court Day Here Sunday Wedding at St. Athony‘s Church North Bay Relieving Magistrate Occupies Bench Here While Magistrate Atkinson on Holidays. Docket on Tuesday Was Comparatively Light. Assult Case Main Miss Vania Galipeau and Mr. Dan Pilon United in Marriage St. . Anthony‘s Roman Catholic Church was the scene of a pretty wedâ€" ding cn Sunday at 8 p.m. when Vania, daughter,6f Mr. Mose Galipeau, of Otâ€" tawa, and the late Mrs. Galipeau, beâ€" came the bride of Mr. Dan Pilon, son of Mr. and Mrs Pilon of Montreal. The service was performed by Rev. Fr Therriault.. The bride was attractively attired in an afternoon dress of turquoise blue chiffon with white accessories and a corsage of roses. After the ceremony, a reception in honour of the bride and groom was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lâ€" marche of 14 Commercial avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Pilon are spending. a. honeymoon at Ottawa and Montreal but will reside in Timmins. Noted Prospector of North Passes Away at Jellicoe John A. Knox, 63, brother of Walter Knox, former champion allâ€"round athâ€" lete of Canada, died suddenly at Jelliâ€" coe, in Northwestern Ontario, on F‘riâ€" day night. He was a prominent prosâ€" pector in various Northern Ontario fields, and was one of the group which made the finds leading to the Sturâ€" geon River gold rush in 1934. Humour Proves Strong Weapon Even in Strikes (Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald) A strike is usually a very serious busiâ€" ness for both employer and employed, but there must haveâ€"been many orous incidents in connection with the recent strike epidemic in the United Statesâ€"incidents which, at least temâ€" porarily, relieved the tension. One of these was recounted by the United Press in a news item. It told of a butcher in Oklahoma City who unpicketed his shop when striking emâ€" ployees stationed a man in front of it with a placard telling their troubles. The ‘butcher hired a negro mammy who was said to be full of years and of ample girth, and had her walk along side the picketer, with a sign reading: "Just Married." iblished ot Timmins, Ont.. Canad Every MONDAY and mmu ‘Magistrate M. G. Gould, of North Bay, conducted his first court session here on Tuesday afternoon. Through arrangements made by the provincial government, Magistrate Atkinson, who regularly handles the Timmins court, is having an ‘official holiday, the first since he has been off the bench. During his absence Mr. Gould has been apâ€" pointed special magistrate. | Remanded cases and pleas of gullty shortened the court session considerabâ€" ly on Tuesday. The one criminal case of any import was that of Cylvia Asse lin and Mrs. Florence Lebrun, of Mountjoy township who were charged under the same information with comâ€" mon assault. They were alleged to have assgulted Louis Pelletier by striking him on the face, hicking him on the body and scratching his neck. After hearing the evidence, Magistrate Gould disâ€" missed the charges. Through an interpreter Pelletier, an elderly man, testified that Albert Leâ€" brun, who was charged under the same information with assault, but who did not appear in court, came to his house and struck one of his boarders who was sitting on the verandah. â€"â€"The boarder fell on his back, said Pelletier, and he caught Lebrun to reâ€" strain him. While he was on the ground, scuffling with Lebrun, Asselin kicked him and punched him on the head and Mrs. Lebrun grabbed him and scratched his neck. Wanted to Show Marks "I still have marks," said Pelletier. He wanted to show the court the marks on his back where he was kicked but the magistrate and court officials modestly declined. "Â¥ou had no marks on your back and neck next morning, did you?" asked Asselin. The complainant said that he did have. Mrs. Lebrun asked Pelletier how he could see who kicked or scratchâ€" ed him while he was scuffling on the ground, in the dark, â€"with Lebrun. The question rather stumped the witness, who, after a long. interval, replied, "I saw him," ~‘ Matrice Ridux sald that he saw Asse lin kick Pelletier twice while he was on the ground. Mrs. Lebrun grabbed the complainant by the shirt. tail and pulled. Denied Hitting Pelletier Asselin denied that he hit Pelletier. He said that Lebrun struck him and that two of them were fighting on the ground but he did not interfere. Pelleâ€" tier started to fight with another man and then progressed to the scuffle with Mrs. Lebrun brought out the fact that Pelletier was "tight." His wife tried to pull him off Lebrun but he was too "tight‘" to effect a rescue, the witness said. She denied that she had scratched or hit Pelletier. She tried to pull mm off but did not strike him. Charge Withdrawn Ernest Albert, who was charged last week with being drunk, and who was given a week to bring medical proof of his testimony that ‘he was not given to drink but to epileptic seizures, again appeared in court. A letter was proâ€" duced from a physician in Quebec and‘ another from a Timmins doctor backâ€" ing Albert‘s statement that he was an epileptic. The charge against him was withdrawn. Fred Snell entered a plea of gullty to a charge of disorderly conduct and was fined $5 and costs or ten days: On the same charge Hans Kristensen was given suspended sentence and told to get out of town. His home was nob in W CC N7 busticcd ECE EDCw EC Timmins Also convicted of disorderly conduct William Jackola was fined $5 and costs or given the alternative of _ Reckless Driving Charges | James H. Peterson was fined $10 and costs for reckless driving and Eugene Lauzon was assessed $25 and costs for the same offence. Pete St. Pierre and Harry Tremblay were charged with reckless driving but were given a weeks remand. Charges of drunkenness against two men were withdrawn while another was fined $10 and costs. ~ Charges of theft against Ben Crosâ€" sette and Hildege Martel were remand- ed for a week. A week‘s remand was given Kenneth McLean, charged with the wilful deâ€" struction of property, and a similar charge against Kalle Ahola was withâ€" There were eleven wage charges unâ€" der the Master and Servants Act. John Majnarick was ordered to pay Oscar Neveu wages of $20.45 and Oliva Neveu wages of $14. Mike Balek was given eight days to pay Barbara Pustine wages of $13.85, and Oscar Brisette was given the same time to pay fages of $5.10 to Sylvio Boyer. Brisette was also crdered to pay Albert Dumoulin $28.60. There were four charges against Briâ€" sette. Only two of them were heard. â€" Percy Relitapple was given a week‘s adjournment in a charge under bhe1 same act against him, and Allen Mcâ€" Iaodwuorderedtomtfi A week‘s adjournment was given John Scenoski and a charge against Homer Goulet was withdrawn. Both were charged unâ€" der the Master and SBervants Act. Timmins _ Branch 88 .. Canadian Legion Presldcntr-Anilftlnw‘Neméfi-’ ie Secretaryâ€"Treasurerâ€"W. D. Forrester _ _P.O. Box 1059, Timmins, Ont. Monthly general meetings. of the w branch will be held in theâ€"Legion Hall. Cedar Street, South. MONDAY..AGUUST 30TH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH Timmins _ Branch 88 .. Canadian Legion Hamilton Block Phone 1650 Tim Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.S. Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Etc. Old P.O. Bidg., Timmins Phone 362 Temiskaming and Northern Qntario Railway The Nipissing Central Railâ€" way Company 7 Reed Block Timmins Pembroke Jct. Ottawa Montreal y Quebec and Ste. Anne de Beaupre via North Bay and Canadian National. Excursion travel will be handled on Train No. 46 cuonnecting at North Bay with C.N. Train No. 2. On the REâ€" TURN journey tickets will be valild for itnvel on C.N. Train No. 1 from Montâ€" "Monday, Swiss fiatfimal?er Graduate of the Famous Horological Institute of Switzerland Phone 1365 Third Avenue ' Empire Block travel on C.N. Train No. 1 from Montâ€" real, 7.55 p.m. Sunday, August 29th and PRICE THREE CENTS To Points in the MARITIMES via North Bay and C.N. y DEAN KESTER, K.C. CHARLES H. KERR animals to men, said Bernard Shaw reâ€" cenfly,hsbownmthcfwtmstmmw ps have invented cows without the presence of the larmer but never NORTHLAND"â€"Trains 49 and 50 For further particulars apply to Local Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MABQBALL-ECCLESTONE BUILDING »nmins « Ontario ~14â€"30 Tickets will be valid to leave destinâ€" Bargain Coach Excursion FRIDAY, AUGUST 27th â€" Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. D. Paquette, proprietor THREE BARBERS IN ° _ATTENDANCE Basement Reed Block, Timmins rvice â€" Satisfaction Banitation MASSEY BLOCK Wednes., Sept. 1st, 1937 Anase Seguin Bargain Coach Excursion © Thursday, August 26th AVOCATâ€"BARRISTER NOTAIRE TIMMINS3, ONT. and South Porcupine BARBER SHOP DE will operate Timmins «â€"14â€"26

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