Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 Apr 1938, 3, p. 6

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:‘29 Kimberlex henue Phones 298 or 169 “'0 “olive: ‘ Wmmonmonooomwnoo oooommouooonooooooooouooououo Rcuyn, Apxil that took Rou mum employees PAGE SIX firs Rouyn Police Havp Double Chase Affair 35.73 Man Said to he Former Resi- dent of South Porcupine Gives Officers Lively Time EMPIRE MEAT MARKET Cost Less 'lhls Week â€" AL 1m VALUES Eli‘l“E("l‘l\'E APRIL 27th to :2mh l2lS( U ITS (Snot! Mixed) .2 lbs. .22 \l AX“ Ell HOUSE C ()I‘ F F F per Ih. ............. :2 (‘ORN ST-‘\l2( H perlmx ....., .............. DOROTHY Mil K 2tins ....................................... :2 (‘lark’s PORK 12E \NS 22.2 oz. tins ........... 2 for 2 SALT (F ree Running), per box .............................. SHORTENING, Schneider’s, .1 ll). pkg. .............. 4 MONARCH FLOUR. 7 ll). hag ......................... '.2 LUX FLAKES. per box ................. . PEANUT BUTTER, 20 oz. jar ......... (‘LARK'S KET(‘Hl'l’. per bottle ..... HABITANT PEA SOUP, 2 tins...._l... FRY’S (’(M‘OA. '72 lb. tin ..................... STRAWBERRY JAM, 4 lb. pail ....... Libby's VEGETABLE SOUP, 3 tins Libby’s SPAGHETTI. 16 oz. tins . ..... Taylor Hardware "cad Officeâ€"New Liskeard. Ont. Branch Stores. and Warehouses at Cobalt, New Liskeard. Swastika Kirkland Lake. Cochrane, Timmins. Ont., Noranda Que. Phones 30U~â€"2}0lâ€"â€"1601â€"1602 “1C SERVE THE NORTH PAYS FOR ITSElF Schneider’s Sliced Bacon, per ih. .. .A Schneider’s Shankiess Picnic Ham. lh. Bo-IOgna (by the piece), 2 lbs. Shoulder Roast Beef, lh. _ .. . __ . Lean Hamburg,2 lbs. .. . . .. ., . .. A SPECIAL LOW PRICE To introduce This Brand New Model For a limited time only the manufacturers have permitted us to make this special ofler in order to introduce these new Norge Washers. Norge is known for quality, so don’t miss this opportunity to save moneyâ€"It may n.,ver he repeatedâ€"Come in TONIGHTâ€"FREE Demonstration! Pump and hose not regular equipment. Ask about uur Use-As-Yuu-l’uy Plan. Liberal trade-in ulluwum'c. CHOICE QUALITY MEA'l‘S Less This Week . At The EMPIRE MARKET OUTSTANDING VALUE WHILE THEY LAST! 1 cfl‘icer or lumber pilt 'I‘HE GEORGE and other LIMITED th first instance and through back lanes and over fences in the second both in- volved the same manâ€"Vania Salonen. aged 36. formerly of South Porcupine. Ontario. New in the Rouyn lockup. he will face two charges on Monday of breaking and entering and the other of escaping fom custody. It all began on Sunday afternoon when a woman called from 505 Noranda street . saying that she had entered her home to find a man rummaging around in her bedroom. Chief of Police Jean $119.95 WTRODUCTORY PRICE $12995 Value 3 for ’l‘immins 22c 25c 16¢ 47c 29c 21C 216 15c 23c 19c F 00 p ')C i-w oo,’ 0C SARIHNES New Brand Sweet Standard Quality RASPBERRIES TOMATOES SUGAR 101bs.u. PE A S Standard Quality No. 1 Grade- per lb. While They Last (‘huia‘ Quality B U 'l"l‘ E R PEACHES Size 50-60 I’R UN ES Tissot and Constable Ronald Churtier responded immediately. the chief going to the front door and Clmrtier to the rear. The. constable saw Salonen sit- ting on a. pile of lumber in the neigh- bouring Bishop lumber yard and called to him. The man immedately started climbing over the lumber piles. the con- stable following. ' Monday morning as another prisonei 'as being brought of the basement lockup for fingerprinting. Salonen made a break for freedom and got clear of the building before he could he stopped. Chief Tissot. Fireman Colin MacDonald and Caretaker Cyril Lapalme pursued. The police car was in use at the time. to tlw: three commandeered the Beau- chemin grocery truck and finally cor- nered Salonen at the corner of Gali- peault and Latulipe. Weighing 160 to 170 pounds the man again put up a fight but was subdued shortly and re- turned to tie lockup. , Used Night Stick Finally Chartier 'aught him by the shoulders and finding that Sulonen would not come quietly but was kicking and. struggling. the constable used :1 night. stick. Even this did not quiet the prisoner and while two officers were trying to get the man to the police car. he threw himself on the ground. injur- ing his nose. Monday morning as {mother prisonei Blairmor prefer blcr overhead. He appeared in court Tuesday before Justice of the Peace J. O. Tardif and was remanded until Monday. Rt. Hon. Leslie Hore_Belisha. Britain‘s dynamic War Minister, seen here boarding his plane, has flown to Malta to inspe'2t the defences there and later in the month will visit 11 Duce in Rome. It is regarded as signifi- cant that the British Minister will see Mussolini between the time the atccord with Italy is signed and the official visit, of Hitler to Rome. WAR SECRETARY ON FLYING 'I‘Rll’ :- 'l‘l\' .) A 2 TINS '3 TIN I} TINS '3 TINS Enterprise on accom LB .17 35 Z9 27 23 25 Z9 'n THE PORCUPIN'E ADVANCE, TIME. ONTARIO {1161' 1L Mines Add Another 2 Town to Their List Scarlet Fever Started This Man Collecting Photos it up into the hundreds. When he re- tires he plans to take his camera tra- velling and get many more. "Practically every picture I have," he says. "is accompanied by information as to weights. dmiensions and other particuiars. My object is not so much to acquire a great number of pictures as it is to secure representative types. Some day this collection may possess considerable historical value as it will One of at least 10.000 men whose hobby is collecting photographs of loco- motives. Robert G. Pilkington. Jr.. a Chicago insurance man. got his start when his whole family was down with scarlet fever, writes C. J. Hanratty in the Canadian National Magazine. He had a few pictures but with plenty of time on his hands he was able to boost arm. and miners are receiving par-I :iculm'ly good pay .hrough the bonusI system. Managements of the principal mines are doing everything humanly; pessible to make the lives of employees; Lsmt‘ortuble and healthful. Many new homes are being built. and it is said that, bitween Lhirty and forty new 1 :isiness establishments will be erected varly .his year. the work goes on. to the everlasting boner?» of the country and the further czedit of the industry that has done so much in the past and will undoubt- (rdly do more as the days go by. Thirty-two years ago the town of Larder City was started out there on .he shore of Larder Lake. east of Kirkland Lake. Its life was brief, its hoped-for metropolitanism but a dream. Three years ago but forty- t‘ive old-timers were left, and they to large extent subsisted on relief. Now the picture has changed once more, and a bustling town of 1800 peo- ple has been incorporated and is to hold an election for its first council on April 26. Within two years the population has increased tenfold to 1800. due wholly to important devel- cpments at near-by mines, including Cmega. Kerr-Addison and a, score of lesser enterprises. Among the improve- ments now under construction is a $1CO.COO theatre. with stores and dance hall. behind which. it is said, is the Famous: Players Corporation, and which will be completed in June. The first job to be tackled by the new coun- cil will be provision of a filtration and sewage plant. and other modern touch- es are to follow in rapid succession. 'Tlizre is no unemployment in the :1 new town, officiated at the birth of new optimism. provided a few more worthy men and women with gainful occupations. That has been the in- spiring history of recent years. and still tFi'om Globe and Mail) Nothing pleases us more than to be able to point, to instances where the mining industry of Canada has created Larder Lake, Incorporated Making Big Strides as Town. reflect progress In design from 1915 w the end of my life. In the streamline classd have a photograph of the Crum- dlan National 6400.“ Jury Komnnnmuls 'l‘ruck Inspection Another collosu Flint. Michigan. h He specialize; on Western. Advam‘ h m which thv v Slicm. 23 years born. killed wte tvg-‘en the box a: he was driving magami. Slicer Halt ho-qtlml :ml Inmwst Int“ 1) Worker M-u CQb'JlL. describ traumatic shoc Eviience giv closed that S] only {leven day ir thi- section or the main highway on which L. ’1‘. Martin Ltd. have a contract for reconstruction. though A. Martel. another truck driver. and Fred Dubois. shovelling gravel on the side road where the accident occurred. were nearby when Slicer was injured. neither of them knew what. the victim was doing when he was hurt. but it was established the truck had jammed when partly raised to unload three tons of gravel it carried. and that Slicer. getting out of his cab to inves- tigate. was working;r on the mechanism when the box descended suddenly. crushing him across the shoulders. The truck was in good condition when he had lam“. seen it ten days be- fore, according to Cowley. while Don- aid Gow. Martin‘ mechanic. swore its mechanism was defective. and inter- fered with the proper operation of the vehicle when he examined it after the accident. Henry Beckinsoie. another of Martin‘s employees. had assisted Gow while the superintendent. J. R. Gorman. gave evidence of the identity of the victim. as did also Provincial Constable R. O. Stromberg. Cobalt. Slicer had two sisters and a brother in England. his belongings reveal-3d. and friends at Forest. Ont. police said. included a nurse to whom he was en- Globe and M:.iil:~«Among recent curiosities to be noted in Lhe criminal news is the growing frankness of highway/men. hivariably when they are about (:0 hold anybody up they an- nounce “This is a stick-up." gaged to be mam. sent there for bm'i England. Slicer ha since boyhood. noli p Ln wh i1 zfcrd 1m W District Officesâ€"Bank of Commerce Buildings, Timmins, Ont. 1U descendcd suddenly. gs the shouldms. in good condition seen it ten days be- Cowley. while Don- mechanic. swore its efective and inter- longm L. Ont. whom 1. Th WU fill 1 ()1. Road ttchfurd U \Ii ) Provincial 112;. Cobalt. .1 a brother gs reveal-3d police said he was en- 9 body was n in Leeds in Canada} the identity I l i I H and mm b to inves- nwchanism 1 suddenly. .: ‘ .11 mt work u m befor Jught bo- Lne .' ruck on of L110 {If her the ancther assisted 1113A lhumix ll .U )ury xaels. ( ugraph Wx)!‘ IO l‘runk nma rd uglish ybury )erg which 11111 'Hu H ll Sudhury ”Ly Hunts. that His Nmnv is His Fortune mon name Limes as bee In their to L1) he is namc er: is be an Odd coincidence two 01‘ this uncommon of names in the one 10 any connection between ever, it should be noted ers for alleged drunkenness. The name seemsd unusual enough to avoid reflec- tion on others of similar names. Be- cause the name was “Wellington Jef- fers." friendsâ€"and othersâ€"attempted to have some fun with Mr. Wellington Jeffers, financial editor of The Toronto Globe and Mail. 01‘ course. they knew But Sudbury is now forward with a claim for that. Engl'wh fortune. There is a Sudbury lad of the right age and also with the unusual name of Arden Miller. This lad is a son of Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Miller. of Sudbury. The in North Bay this Arden Mi gest the-.6 he named in m. Arden M II‘I‘ \Iorth soung .0m( 1K :IL .cat .l( h ll in \'-'(l to or at North Bay. The only on Milk-r that North Bay could t:- was: a yonng fellow about the suggested in ll): will, but who had 1 a .mnslent caller at North Bay. connection with the unauthorized ,ng of .11 motor car this Arden Miller aid to how svrvod thirty days at th Buy jail while in that city. This ng fellow is now t3hoved to be on irm near Newmarket. A girl friend {mes are not .- as they app imo ago a It ld coincidence if there were this uncommon combination ; in the one locality without motion between them. How- ,hould be noted that uncom- es are not as uncommon some- they appear. For instance. I) ago a man in Toronto was incl had his name in the pap- eged drunkenness. The name nusual enough to avoid reflec- ithers of similar names. Be- r name was “Wellington «Jef- ll Ill wa. wil ,1 \' Advan 0 information about that seemed to sug- ; the Arden Miller llbury in LOUU in Arden 1‘ 11 Miller. The only 1y could I] tl land cash that it was not the Wellington Jnflers 01 The Globe and Mail who was in police court. but ~l13 friendsâ€"and (.t.1ei'sâ€"~t.r,ok the occasion to point out that it, was odd that there should be more than one in the city with a com- bination of names like Willington Jef- ftl‘S. neither name lWing common. It. developed that there were actually three “Wellington Jeffers" in Toronto. none of th 3m being related m the other and none of them even knowing the others previously The 10 new Lockheed Model 141-! monoplanes to be delivered to Trans- Canada Air Lines this year will be equipped with hydromatic or full fea- thering propellors it. was learned at headquarters of the 'I‘. C. A. This pro- pellor is used in the latest army and navy planes of the United States and is regarded as a distinct advance over for- mer types. In the case of engine fai- lure the new propeller ceases to turn. thus eliminating wear to the engine and vibration which might impair the accuracy of the instruments. Each Trans-Canada plane. it. is pointed out. is equipped with two en- gines. Should one fail to function for any reason. the other is sufficient to carry the plane safely and efficiently. Before every flight. the plane is thor- oughly checked in every detail. Perth Courierzâ€"What's become of the Nova Scotia child of three who knows all the answers? We should like to have her meet! another. who knows all the quesl‘ions. “Equipped with new Model 811320 Pratt Whitney Hornet engines and the hydromaiiic pronellors. the T.C.A. 14-place planes will embody the latest features of aircraft construction and will be as inodren as any aircraft in operation to-day." says P. G. Johnson. Vice-President of Trans-Canada Air Lines. llydromutiv Propellers for New 'l‘.(‘.A. Planes THURSDAY. APRIL 28TH, 1938

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