Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 10 Mar 1938, 1, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Cad ® La #% ® + ## ® «e P# kess The several trac‘ts follows The 1¢ include Blount, Atterbur Cray Swif The us the prese ance tO : all throu; use of th: all printi In Four IV. Con and Wil vear MI #4 * * ++ + A ## # J # _ t# ## ## 4# ®# *#* #+ * L ## g3 to n prinied old desy servatio1 There kep! ths not like ed needl the bocok pearan:: consultir #gd@ to n: bein tion titn flyle part Mr. R volums | has hn back D11 162‘% Pin: Advance t 6W volum ¢i Al umes lish 2 vÂ¥tar ftate page 174 Book One Hundred and Seventyâ€"four Years Old J. A. Rimmer Has Volume of Works of Alexander Pope Published at Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1764, Still in Exâ€" cellent State of Preservation. Contains Letters and Will of Noted Poet [ .. 1 art of The u'I he hip HEAD OFFICEâ€"Schumacher Phone 708 MILL OFFICEâ€"Timmins Phone 709 Porfâ€"Aâ€"Tape joint treatment is a patented reinâ€" forcement for exclusive application to the joints of Sheetrock Wallboard. The problem of how to conceal wallboard joints has always been one of prime importance. Many makeâ€"shift methods were devised and are still in use. Now, however; it is possible to have dryâ€"plastered walls with Sheetâ€" rock, and concealed, reinforced joints with Perfâ€"Aâ€" Tape. The application of any decoration over the entire surface will uniformly cover the Sheetrock and wafer thin joint treatment, to make an unâ€" broken wall of fireprdof gypsum plaster. sSHEETROCK WALLBOARD AND PERFâ€"Aâ€"TAPE ARE EASY TO APPLY Poerftâ€"Aâ€"Tape joint treatment consists of a special ly processed Fibre Strip which is perforated. and a joint cement of unusual strength and adhesiveness. When the perforated Tape is embedded into the thin layer of cement applied to a Sheetrock joint, a union of the two shaets of wallboard results. This joint when dry and sandpapered to a smooth finish is stronger than the board itself. "a Wiil. _ HKINnIUuIr MDUCCLXIV." 11 THOUGHTFUL CARE AND DIGNITY CHARACTERIZE OUR SERVICE last will and testament occupies pages of the volume, some exâ€" from this doscument being as t2 u* .*®, .*® D. .“.“.“ ## * * ;t (% .% ‘“'“.“.“. % ve*es* #. * "“’ uns uts uts 28 ”.“.“.“.“.“.“. **s * "® *# “’0.“.00 #. * #4 # * #* w #. * “..0.0 ® ’. #* # LJ Sand # + #4# *# # #4 Â¥* #* ® # ** #* 0% *# ## *#*, ## *# # 44 * ,* 1764 PERF â€"A â€"TAPE il *./ .* D.OO. ## #* * *# #* ...0 © #_ ."0 *# )* .“ C 46 N 4 # 00. C n Pn J P ) 00.“.“.“.“.“ .00 #4 #, * "® #* # La #4 # 0“0 *Â¥ * “.0 * 0.“.“.“.0 * o o uts at, “.“.00. #4 *# # #. ®# “.“. #, .*® ectested® #4 *# + #* #4 #4 * + A1li 1764. anc 1€ . T. WALKER TELEPHONE 509 M a r mply long "s" (simillar to ives a quaint appearâ€" che title page, while xt of the volume the ‘° prevails, as it did in at time. lished in the volume and from:â€"Edward . Robert Digby, Dr. lMlexander Pope, Esq.; . Complete. Volume e Rest of his Letters zh: Printc@ in the COMPANY LIMITED impressed reserved C Funeral Director zx on the binding is possible that und, though the as any other 4 of the Works? uire, in four vol-l book was pub-l Sotland, in the‘ in an excellent‘ A:chough thei jloured with the ssed, every page ard <he binding‘ ‘ntur.es. On the _of the volume, celient pznman- ollegeo, his Book. 19th, 1826," this| 12 first inscripâ€" revious inscripâ€" is likely on the this flyleaf apâ€" . of the bosk. this interesting e empsy house, that ne does not id was made. He because he did lost or destroyâ€" . he came az>ross essed by its apâ€" ved c‘ age, and £ was asionishâ€" »lume had been ) was 174 years * siate: of preéeâ€" of ‘its ‘future haqpinesg as in the disâ€" prsal of a Being‘ infittitely good. As to my body, my will is, that it be «buried the monument of my dear parâ€" ents at Twickenbam .: . . and that it be carried to the grave by six of the psorest men of the.parish, to each of whom I order a «srit of grey coarse cloth, as mcurning. If I happen to die al" any inconvenient distance, let the | same be done in any other parish, and the inscription be added on the monuâ€" ment at Twickenham . .. But all the manuccnp and unprmted papers which I shall leave at my dscease, IT desire may be delivered to my Noble Friend, Henry St. John, Lord Bolinbroke, to whose scle care and judgment I comâ€" mit them, eithéer to be preserved or deâ€". stroyed; or, in case he shall not surâ€". vive me, to the aboveâ€"said Ear)l Marchmont. These, who in the course ¢f my life have done me all other good offices, will not refuse me this last afâ€" ter my death: I leave them therefore this trouble, as a mark of my trust and friendzhip}; only desiring them each to scep. of scme small memorial of me . I give and dGevise to my sisterâ€"inâ€" | law, Mrs. Magdalen Racket, the sum of three hundred pounds; and to herl sons. Henrv and Rabhert BRuyw_kst ame ASK ABOUT THIS NEW INVENTION AT THE llows Alexander Pops, Englisn pset, was born in London, the son of a linenâ€" draper, and died in 1744. He was largeâ€" ly selfâ€"educated. His reputation was made first by his "Essay on Criticism" (1711), and next by "The Rape of the ock" (1712), a satire on the fashionâ€" awhle life of his time. The first part of his translation of the "Hiad" appeared in 1715, the last part of the "Odessey" in 1725. He is said to have received some $50,000 for this transiation work, and was thus ena‘bled to establish himâ€" self at Twickenham in 1718, where he lived until his death on May 30th, 1744. Among his best known works are: "The Dunciad," a satirical poem in which the critics were made to suffer; "Essay on Criticism;" "An. Essay on. Man." During his lifetime his fame came alâ€" mosiâ€"as ‘equally from his satires on i0 himself, and his wife; and to the poor of the parish of Twickenham, twenty pounds, to be divided among them by the said John Searl . . ." stroyed; or, in case he shall not surâ€" vive me, to the aboveâ€"sald of Marchmont. These, who in the course ¢f my life have done me all other good offices, will not refuse me this last afâ€" ter my death: I leave them therefore this trouble, as a mark of my trust and friendzhip}; only desiring them each to azscep:. of scme small memorial of me . . I give and devise to my sisterâ€"inâ€" law, Mrs. Magdalen Racket, the sum of three hundred pounds; and to her sons, Henry and Robert Racket, one hundred pounds each . .. and to my servant, Sohn Searl, who has faithfully and ably served me many years, I give and devise the sum of one hundred pounds over and above a year‘s wages the county of Middlesex, make this my las will and testament. â€"I resign my gsoul toâ€"its Creator in all humble hops 81 THIRD AVE ENUE Perfâ€"Aâ€"Tape Joint System comes in packages contalning the following items: a roll of Perfâ€"Aâ€" Tape, 2 3â€"16 inches wide and 250 feet long, sufficient te treat joints an about 500 sq. feet of Sheetrock. A bag of Perfâ€"Aâ€"Tape Joint Cement containing 17 Ibs. in powdered form, ready for mixing as directed. A direction sheet for applying the cement, the Tape and spoiting nailheads. Pert â€" A â€" Tape Members appointed to the special resclutions committee include G. P. Lucas, Sarnia; G. R. Moyer, North Bay; Wilfred Lanthier, Ottawa; J. B. Brown, Hamilton; J. B. Bradley, Welland; R. H. Jamieson and L. B Beasor, of Toronto. P COMPLETELY HIDES THE WALLBOARD JOINTS A committee of seven retail grocers firecm Sarnia, North Bay, Ottawa, Hamâ€" ilton, Welland and Toronto was formed to study and make recommendations for provincial legislation to eliminate unethical and unfair business practices to achieve more orderly methods of merchandising. Minimum wage and maximum hour legislation will not be satisfactory unâ€" less concurrent and adequate provisions are made for uniform closing hours for retail food stores, without any exempâ€" tions or evasions ‘being psrmitted, the committée decided. They will advise the Labor Minister to this effect. Compulsory Wednesday halfâ€"holidays and a maximum work week of 54 hours for store clerks will be recommended to the Ontario Minister of Labcur, a comâ€" mittee representing Ontario retail gsrovers decidéd at a meting held in Torcnto on Tuesday in the Royal York hotel. Grocers Ask Province for Enforced Halfâ€"Holiday cbey." The first collective edition of Pope‘s ‘"Works" appeared in 1751. The stanâ€" dard edition is one first published in 1871, according to Sir Paul Harvey. "JQ Uravzri <â€"whnere w thy vIcLiOry? U Death! where is thy sting?" "Just as the twig is bent, the tree‘s inclined." "Do gocsd by stealth, and blush to find it fame." "Lt, the psor Indian‘! whose untuâ€" tored mind sees God in the clouds, or hears him in the wind." "The righth divine of kings to govern |contemporari¢s and current events as | from his powers as a poet. He was contemporary with Dean Swift, Addiâ€" son, Dr. Jchn:on, Savage, and others of a day when criticism was given serâ€" lously and taken seriously. Indeed, the quarrels of literary men in that day sometimes mads doubtful their appraisâ€" al in the world of letters. Pope, howâ€" ever, has survived the centuries, In Hoyt‘s Encyclopedia of Quotations, his name in the index of authors quoted is marked with‘ a star, to indicats that there are so many quotations from his works that it is not practical to list i them under his name in the index as is done with many other authors of rrencwn. Among the quotations from Pope retaining porennial popwarity and currency, the followinzx may be noted :â€" WrOon "An honest man‘s the noblest work of. God." "The human form divine." "Looks through Nature up to Naâ€" ture‘s God." "Parity is the madness of many for the gain of a few." "What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? Alas! not all the hlood of all the Howards." "True ease in writing comes from art, nct chance." u "Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul." "Be not the first by whom the new are tried, nor yet the last to lay the old asids." "Vir.uous and vicious every man must be, few in the extreme, but all in the degree." "The proper study of mankind is man." Time congquer is the madness of many for of a few." can ennoble sots, or slaves, or Alas! not all the blood of all rill., and we must time thy victory? O THE PORCUPINE aDVANCT, oNTaRIO How can boys and girls of Ontario help along this great plan? Well, first of all, we should think of the lakes and strcams of our beautiful Province as ours to protect as well as ours to enâ€" joy. Then we would take care of them as we care for our own personal properâ€" did plan, but it will work only if every one of us does our part. The Ontario Department of Game and Pisheries is thinking of tomorrow and trying in every way to keep up the stock of fish in our lakes and rivers for our pleasure and that of our visiâ€" tors. How are they doing this? By raising trout in fine trout hatcheries and rearing ponds and placing them in suitable waters when they are large enough to fend for themselives, by rearâ€" ing young bass for the same purpose and by sensible laws which protect the fish when the yare spawning and raisâ€" ing their young. They call this corserâ€" vation, but it simply means planning for tomorrow‘s fishing. It is a splenâ€" The good sportsman thinks of and plans for tomorrow. If we want to have fish in our lakes and rivers to cnjoy and share with our summer visiâ€" tors, we must do something about it. In some waters there is still a good supply of speckled trout, bass, pickerel and lake trout. The maskinonge, often called thke lunge, is decreasing far too rapidly. Our summer visitors who come to fish and spend a happy holiâ€" day among us are delighted with the fishing, and do of course catch a large number of game fish each season. But we are glad to have them come, and it would be too bad if the fishing were no longer good enough to attract them. Because of this thoughtlessness and extravagant use of our natural reâ€" sources, today the passenger pigeon and the Lake Ontario sea salmon are gone, the buffalo are found only in Governâ€" ment reservations or parks and only an odd white pine woods still stands here and there throughout Ontario. In the same way our game fish, so plentiful twentyâ€"five years ago, have been decreasing at an alarming rate. and luck seemed against you. Then you did catch one you thought was big enough to keep, only to find it was an inch too short, were you sport enough to keep the law and put it back? A good sportsman thinks of toâ€"morâ€" row, when he may want to fish again. He thinks of others who love this great outdcor sport of angling too, so he leaves the tiny fish to grew into bigger ones and stops fishing when he has enough for his needs. Just as a good camper leaves his trail and campsite clean and puts out his fire in true woodsman fasltion, so that others may enjoy the pleasant places as he has. Profit From Past Experience Years ago there were so many bufâ€" falo in Western Canada, so many pasâ€" senger pigeons in Ontario, so many Atlantic salmon in Lake OGntario and the streams flowing into it, such solid' white pine forests from Lake Ontario. right up to Stoney Lake and Sturgeon1 Lake, that the early settlers thought these riches would last forever. They did not plan for tomorrow. What is Censervation? Who doesn‘t like to go fishing? There is something in this sport that apâ€" peals to almost every one. Whether you fish in a stream or a lake, with a fly, frog or a worm, you get a lot of enjoyment just from being outdoors with the birds and trees, the flowers and the blue sky. But you like to catch fish, too, and have thnem to cook over the campfire or to take home to show your friends and family. Obey the Law COne day the fish were biting and you caught your limit in short order. Did you keep on fishing or were you satisfied with your count? Another day you were catching only little fellows six articles on conservation written by members of the Dept. of Biology of the University of Toronto for The Globe and Mail. The following is No. 1 :â€" The Good Sportsman Thinks of Toâ€"morrow There have been a number of recent references in The Advance to conserâ€" vation of fish and game in Ontario. The topic is particularly timely in view of the essay contest being conducted by the Federation of Anglers Of Ontario. The full rules and regulations of this contest will be found in another column of this issue. For the benefit of any of the school children in this district who may wish to enter the contest, The Advance intends to publish a series of "irst of a Series of Articles on Conservation. The Yorkshire Kennels, Timmins.â€"the only ragistered kennels in the North,â€" Specialize in St. Bernards and Newfoundlands. The Newfoundlands shown above are mother and daughter, their names in the sczial regist>r of dogdom bemg Probsp Peggy Ascania, and Yorkshire Dixie Queen, their r aspective ages being 4 years and 9 months. J and Mrs. Cousentine are tne owners of the Yorkshire Kennels, registered. Advance Staff Photo Engraving A TIMMINS MOTHER AND DAUGHTER tION, Dui, as wse sege it, it will remain unsolved to the very end. If distribuâ€" tion is to be equalized, then there can be no reward for energy, industry or brains. If that be the erd sought, then we can see no benefit to be derived from universal education or ambition to excel in any line that may be emâ€" braced. We should all be cast in the same moulid, mediozcrity or worse would be Whether, under any system that may be devised by man, however and idealistic, distribution of comfortsi can be equalized. is still a mute quesâ€"| tion, but, as we see it, it will remain| tures at seven billion a year; unfair taxation and official strafing paralyzâ€" ing business of all kinds; class hatred played up in high places, all under an assumption of Divine wisdom and right. If what we have seen in the past five years is the best this new crop of brainâ€" trusters can devise, then we think it may be said that a bad condition has only ‘been made immeasurably worse. Five years have flown and with them| twenty billion dollars. Eleven million | people unemployed at the start; eleven| million pseople still out of work at the! end of a colossal spending spree wibh-‘ cut counterpart, even proportlonately,| in world history. Government expendiâ€"| It is not with the purpose, but with the results, that the world is conâ€" cerned, and, judged by hat standard, it may safely be said that another egregious, monumental folly has failed, largely because the human equation and the laws of supply and demand have been ignored. Upon tne country, like a plague of locusts, have descendâ€" ed a flock of harebrained theorists, keeping the profit system welli n sight for themselves, but denying it to othâ€" ers through a series of crackpot exâ€" periments that have set the wholie world of business by the ears. There are ten main points set out as objectives of the New Deal, which began in 1933 in defiance of the platâ€" form of promises of the victorious Demo:ratic party, running the whole gamut from the right of men and woâ€" men to work for decent wages at reaâ€" sonable hours, or engage in farming at fair return, clear through to security against want and war. None are new; none may quarrel with them as Utopian dreéeams. All are representative of the highest ideals. (From Globe and Mail) Unctuosity is about the only word we can think of to describe the tenor of President Roosevelt‘s preamble to his own story of the New Deal, as set forth in the current number of Liberty. It is merely a rehash, in redressed verbiage, of the ageâ€"old idlistic yearnings of the human race for more equitable disâ€"< tribution of this world‘s comforts and good things. Does Not Favour the New Deal Very Much Discusses Ten Main Points of Roosevelt Policy This is conservation. 4 The Royal Ontario Museum, Departâ€" ment of Zoology, Toronto, has three different leaflets on conservation which they will send to any one for 10 cents. The good sportsman thinks of tomorâ€" row. Anything that can be done to ksep cur lakes and rivers free from these wastes will help our game fish to live and increase. It is simply common sense looking ahead for ourselves and those who will eccocme after us, It is not enough to place hatcheryâ€" raised fish in our waters and to proâ€" tect them, if we allow the lakes and streams to be polluted so fishn cannot live in them. Some of the materials that harm fish life are the wastes from such places as mines, pulp and paper mills, dye works, gas plants, canning factories, creameries and dairies, sugar beet factories, also gas and oil from garages, Some of these wastes poison the fish, others kill the tiny animals that fish feed on, others use up the oxygen, and a fish needs to get oxygen from the water just as we need to get oxygen from the air we breathe. ty. We woflilld see that it pays to be sportsmen and help our visitors to be sportsmen, too. no one taking the small fish or more than his share of the largâ€" er ones. We can also help by seeing that no one disturbs fish when they are spawning or raising their families, and that no one breaks the law by netting or spearing fish. This will give them a chance to increase and thrive so that we may enjoy this wholesome, happy sport of fishing tomorrow, next year and in the years to cormme. go boom Sudbury Star:â€"Out in the west, folks are hopseful that when business reaches the bottom of the depression, it will sharp, one of the special features will be the fact that a radio to be installâ€" ed for the evening will broadcast the Farrâ€"Baer fight round by round. There will be good prizes for the cards, and a pleasant time is assured for all in the dancing. The event is for the benefit of a disabled Scotsman. Acâ€" cordingly, both the event and the cause for which it is held should assure a large attendance. At the whist, lunch and dance, adâ€" vertised by the Porcupine District Pipe Band for Friday evening of this week, March 11th, commencing at 8.15 p.m. As a shortâ€"cut to the more abundant life, the New Deal has failed, and it has been definitely demonstrated, if any prcof were needed, that nations cannot spend themselves into prosperâ€" ity. Canada‘s highest judicial. body has recently squelched a similar fanâ€" tastic theory in Alberta and, with the example before her eyes across the inâ€" ternaticnal border, is not likely to go Off on blind trails. There is no shortâ€" cut to human equality or happiness, pclitical prestidigitators to the conâ€" trary, nevertheless and notwithstanding Whist, Lunch and Dance, Auspices of the Pipe Band Wealth is nothing mors than a pubâ€" {.> trust, no matter how the individual may regard it. The wealthiest man in the world can sloeep no more than eight hcurs in but one bed; can eat no more than three meals a day without injury to himself; cannot buy happiness with untold millions; in fact, the more he has, the less happines often may be his. It is the foundation upm which his wealth is built that is important to us all. That means employment and happiness for the many. It is only a generation or two from shirtâ€"sleeves to shirtâ€"sleeves, and profit from enterprise must be reinvested to earn more profit â€"~Lto the advantage of us all. of accumulated wealth to vamtage of great and small ious halt in the cnward Ccivilization to an inevitable dictatorship or worse. a virtue, everything we needed would come to us as a matter of right, withâ€" cut effort. It is the spirit of adventure, the deâ€" sire to excel, t(ne determination to lift aneself, the hopes of reward for seilf and those dependent upon us, that have made the world go round in the past, brought about the high state of civilization in which we now live, The very of comforts has made their distribution more and more aifficult. The profit system may have its faults, but, so far, human ingenuity has not devised a better plan, nor do we believe that bureaucrasy, such as the New Deal has set in motion, can have any cther effect than fine dissipation R FROM YOUR DEALER 9 RICH DELICIOUS FLAVOURS Chocolate V anilla Assorted Fruit Fresh Cherry Neopolitan Fresh Strawberry Fresh Pineapple Maple W alnut ICE CREAM EPLET TS Instantâ€"Frozen the disadâ€" and a serâ€" march â€" of ending in The Wheel:â€"For first crash condition Conceéert Association Big Success in Northern Towns past season, there will be offorings of greater calibre, and possibly more than three concerts. » The organization certainly has a sound and commonâ€"sense plan pf finâ€" ance, and the many who wished they had joined previously and who by not jcining missed the programmes should lose no opportunity to sign up. sSmooth â€" Eplett‘s ice cream rolled in crisp pecan nuts, with a crushed fresh fruit and nut centre, 3 0 c Special Im1e} Success of the movement here and in Timmins has resulted in formation of plans for a more ambitious programme next. year, and while no fault could be found with the fare offered during the past season, there will be offorings of An oculist is a physician w ho specializes in eye work. Glasses cost no more and are fitted with precision at ROBERTS OPTICAL DEPARTMENT Where an QOculist Examines You Weekâ€"End Special Optical Dept. 1 Emuvire Block This especially applies to children on whom only a physician â€" can make the complete examination. and . many wearing glasses that are only a parâ€" tial fit or an entirely inâ€" correct fitling. Glasses are useful only if they fit perâ€" fectliyv.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy