Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 4 Jul 1938, 1, p. 5

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44. *# «6 # # #+4 #4 # .. * .. *# # #4 * + #4 #* * * *4 # 4+ *#* * # *4 # # #4 *# # #* # # #* ## t .%. .. .. *4 # # #* #. ®. * 0. .00. # .0 ## # Li #4 t h.( h. h. s .t .00.00..... O.”‘“. #* * # #4 .. # # .. #4 teste *# *2 ThelNo. 1 hole was not drilled deep enoug) to intersect the main vein, and a seemd hole has been spotted to be carriel down some 400 odd feet, The hole is expected to be completed later this fiveek. The veri consists of quartz and white earbonaf in green carbonate schist, mineralied with pyrite. Assay results ooveriné the new vein together with two fee on either side in the wall rock are expcted to be available in a few days. â€" The first iamond drill hole put down on the Wiiamson Mines property in Deloro Tonship, Porcupine area, for general imrmation purposes and as a guide to iture holes, has intersected an entire new and unexpected vein at a dept] of 141 to 143 feet, according to word rceived at the company‘s head office. Surface conruction is well advancâ€" ed. A steel eadframe, power house, 20,000â€"gallon ater tank, machine and blacksmith sops, cookhouse, dormiâ€" tory, office gail dry have all been comâ€" pleted. Wiiliamon Mines Drill CutsEntirely New Vein MONKDAY, JULY 4TH, Hoyle, in the Piour section, is the | consolidation of tree previous underâ€" | takings on whichan extensive devel-} opment â€" programie was _ recently | launched with Vetures and associates | financing. Plansre to sink the threeâ€" compartment shit to the 1200â€"foot horizon. then eracut north and carry , on diamond driing to prospect the‘ conglomerate bad. In earlier work, ore bodies werencated on the 200â€"foot level but resulbk reported from the nearby Pamoumperations was the inâ€" . fiuencing factoin the decision to push | immediately ts unusual program of â€" prospecting atdepth, President Lang reports. | mm mm ~â€"â€"mmga 400â€"foot level, Preslent Bert W. Lang said toâ€"day after a/isit to the district. Shaftâ€"sinkisg cpeations at the proâ€" perty of Hoyk Gol¢Mines in the Porâ€" cupine area have pogressed below the Shaft Smkmg at Hoyle Gold Mines C oo afn ate ate ate of e afy ate ste e o ath fuate ate at s abe ate 0fi rogress at Pm»perty in the Pamour secton. The next time you want to buy, rent or seli something just remember that The Porecupine Advance Want Ads. get more results, dollar for dollar, than any other businessâ€"getting medium in Timmins and District. They get them faster and with less agony. It‘s been proved again and again. Fourth Ave. The Porcupine Advance Doherty Roadhouse Co. STOCK BROKERS Timmins, 19 Pine Street North Toronto Kirkland Lake 293 Bay Street 34 Government Rd. Direct Private Wires for fast and accurate quotations and executions in all rket Quotations Broadcast ezach day at 12.20 noon Acecurate Markets and Executions in Commission basis only Local Phones 1200 and 1201 Membears Toronto Stock Exchange Unlisted Stocks Mining Stocks Industrial and Public Utility Stocks Bonds and 5.20 p.m Durnville Chronicle:â€"This is the time of year when a good many people fceling the need for outdoor exercise, move the bridge table out on the side porch. F. D. Roche Underwriting | Property in Little Long L4 As he passed Tony one night recentâ€" ly, both pushing their popcornâ€"filled carts, he greeted him. Tony was here long before Mike started pushing his whistling wagon about the streets and Tony resented their invasion of his territory. PFor a long time neither has had a thing to do with the other, until last week, when Mike thought he should try to be a little more civil. ness?" Tony merely stared. A passerby noticed the incident and asked Tony why he didn‘t answer. "Answer, why should I answer?" reâ€" plied the irate vendor. ‘"Does Eaton‘s ask Simpson‘s ‘How is business‘?" (From Kirkland Northern News) There is a story told, we won‘t vouch for its truth, about two peanut vendors in town, Tony and Mike. Thought Practices of Big Business Should Prevail F D. Roche, Toronto, wellâ€"known in the North, is underwriting the Rolac Mines Limited, in the Little Long Lac area, and from present indications he has again gotten hold of one that may well prove a winner. The Rolac Mines is a property with an unusually proâ€" mising location in a gold area that has shown itself rich and progressive. The Rolac is located in close proximity to such wellâ€"known mines as the Mosher Long Lac Gold Mines, the MacLeod Cockshutt Gold Mines, Hard Rock Gold Mines and the Connell Mining and Exâ€" ploration Co. The property has the same sort of geology as the MacLeod Cockshutt and the Hard Rock. Just at present it would appear that the Rolac is very likely to ‘go places" and prove more then usually successful. The success of the MacLeod Cockshutt should br duplicated in the Rolac, and for those wishing to invest in a proâ€" perty that, though still in the speculaâ€" tive stage, seems to promise good reâ€" turns, the chance to invest in a mine like the Rolace seems like an excellent chance. afusteataaty afe s Good night, Tony Phone 26 fi ! Oy ate at 2e ats alte otesPeala ) : oql + * How is busiâ€" Gicbe and Mail:â€"A veteran British Columbia politician admits that he cnce considered adopting crime as career. It is too bad that wiser counâ€" sels did not prevail. b: This Torpedo Beats the Boomerang All Hollow Hionger Preston East Dome Premier Read Authiecr Reno Red Lak® Goldshoret San Antonio Sherritt Gordon St. Anthony Sullivan Con. Sudbury Basin Stadacona Sylvanite Siscoe Teck Hughes Toburn Ventures Wrightâ€"Hargreaves Afton Ashley Base Metals Bigz Missouri Beattie 3idgood Bobjo Bralorne Buffaloâ€"Ankerite Canadian Malartic Castle Tretheway Central Porcupine Central Patricia Coniagas Coniaurum Con. Chibougamau Darkwater Dome Eldorado Falconbridgso Goldale Glenora Granada Cunnar Hardrock Hollinger Howey Hudson Bay International Nickel Jackson Manion Kerrâ€"Addison Kirkland Lake Lebrel Oro Leitch Lake Shore Little Long Lac Macassa McLeod Cockshutt Manitoba and East McIntyre McKenzie Red Lake McWatters Miningz Corporation Moneta f McVittie Graham Naybob Noranda Nipissing O‘Brien Omega Pamour Paymaster Pick‘s Crow â€" Toâ€"day‘s Stocks | CLAIMS TO BE LARGEST RAISER OF GEESE Said to be the largest raiser of geese Jacques, of Manchester, Me., with the money she makes frd goose nursery six years ago wil who incidentally, is the larges! girl‘s annual production of gos of geese in New England, 12â€"yearâ€"old FPav .. plans to put herself through university from her feathered flock. Fay started her with a few birds given to her by her father, est turkey raiser in Maine. Now the young roslings is 500. 17 69.00 1.175 3.185 494 3.45 50.00 3.55 4.65 29.50 51.00 10% 1.71 1.07 28.00 2.18 6.10 2.68 14.75 2.30 4.60 2.10 5.170 7.3D 2.95 4.55 3 .20 1.14 Rouyn, July 4.â€"J. I. Glick, arrested in Rouyn on June 22nd, when he was found illegally transporting 444 beaver pelts and some 49 other valuable skins, having an estimated value of $10,000, and who was remanded for eight days on bail of $100 by Magistrate Bolly, failed to appear when the case was call â€" ed in Magistrate‘s Court here last wreek. It was learned that he nad gone to Montreal, and a bench warrant was issured for his arrest. It was expected that this would be effected yesterday afterncon and he will probably be Three survey parties are engaged by the Quebes Streams Commission maltâ€" ing a power survey in that section of the Ottawa, and in the party with which the two men drowned were enâ€" gaged some eighteen men are emâ€" ployed. The two men were in a canoe which over turned going through the rapids. Warrant Issued for Man in Hegal Fur Charges A telegraphic report from Amos, Queâ€" on Saturday said that Joseph Lesâ€" sard, of Timmins, was killed about 100 miles north of Amos on Dominion Day when he was run over by a train. No particulars of the death are available here. Rouyn, July 3â€"A drowning tragedy which claimed the lives of two men, one of them a civil engineer from Queâ€" bec city, occurred at the Fourth Rapid on the Ottawa River, about ten miles each of the Kinojejvis from Clerion, about noon on Sunday last. The vicâ€" tims were C. A. Cousineau, Quebec, enâ€" gineer, aged 38 ‘yvears and Jos. Dusse reau, father of twelve children, whose home is at LaSarre. The bodies have not yet been recovered. Two Lose Lives in Drowning Accident in North Quebec Timmins Man Reported Killed by Train at Amos Lancq@ Corporal R. C. McDowell, of the R.CM.P., is shown here as he began his duties as cox_nmissionaire_at‘_Can‘ada'House. Trafalgar Square, London. A veteran ofseven years in the Arctic, McDowell is the object of obvious heroâ€"worship by some London boys who gaze, allâ€"eyes at their first Mountie. ON DUTY AT CANADA HOUSE Halifax Chronicle:â€"â€"Nova Scotia ediâ€" tors and tourist officials frequently on the advantages of the Noâ€" va Scotian climate. Tornadces, heat waves, and dust storms which plague less fortunate regions leave this provâ€" ince untcluched. Nova Scotia appears to be removed from any of the major earthquake belts and is sparsd °xâ€" tremes of temperature. It is felt that the Sudbury fur dealer will probably plead guilty, and if it is established that the fur was taken in Ontario, which Ontario officers claim they will have no difficulty in doing, Glick will likely be turned over to the authorities at Sudbury for prosecution. If convicted he faces fines of $20 per skin, or a total of nearly $10,000, brought here i couple of days New Teachers for the High and Vocational Five â€" New Next Term TMHMIS MADP|S NPAWAM FROM TIONM REFLJFEVED PEUJABLE, BUT iNDINM DUAL ANO ExACT LOCAâ€" mon ARE JUNE 28 38 NOQMAN A PMJNPIM Notice of Offering of 200,000 Shares only of Rolac Mines Limited will appear on Thursday, July 7th, priced at 10¢ per share. (Subject to prior subscription.) MosHe /:f LONG~LAc COLO MINES in the course of the next Teachers for Orders in Advance of the Public Offering May be Placed Through Your Own Broker. The later newspaper comment in Germany had some justification. It is quite true that Schmeling was given a runâ€"around by the boxing authorities of the United States and that he should have been given a shot at the title two years ago, whemt presumably he was in better condition and when he was at Once the fight started the German announcer ran into difficulties. He had to report the murderous attack of Louis with blow after blow raining on the hapless Schmeling., who fell, scrambled up, collasped again and finally fell prostrate the most completely and most rapidly defeated heavyweight in hisâ€" tory. The German station did not take theâ€"time to make any comment whatâ€" ever; it simply switched to organ musicy Defeat is not good propaganda in Nazi Germany. How Germans Took Schmeling Defeat as they figured that once licked a man can never come back. Canadians, lisâ€" tening to German stations, got a lot of advance dope the night of the fight. The whole nation was sitting up to gloat over the victory. Special permission had been granted to innkeepers and bars to open at three in the morning, loud speakers had been installed and the loyal population flocked to these centres to hear the good news. It was amusing to hear the German announceâ€" ments right from the ring. After desâ€" cribing the setting, the crowd and the former champions introduced by the ringmaster, the announcer went into ecstasies over the appearance of Schmeling, his condition and his conâ€" fidence. _â€"(From Grab Samples in Northern Miner). The manner in which the American negro settled the championship ambiâ€" tions of the Nazi leaves little room for comment on their respective fighting abilities. The slow motion pictures proâ€" vide a story somewhat different from that given by the ringside commentaâ€" tors. They show that Louis hit Schmeling with everything but the ring posts about sixteen times before the kidney punch was delivered. The Gerâ€" man was out on his feet and probably never knew about the blow that finally flattened him. The whole exhibition and particuâ€" larly the build up and predictions of the alleged experts, is a peculiar examâ€" ple of modern sport publicity. Just why the general public pays any attenâ€" tion whatever to the sports writers is a mystery. Forty percent of them were dead wrong in this instance and of the remainder there was only a small perâ€" centage willing to predict a knock out and most of those daring individuals reâ€" treated to late rounds for the debacle event. However, it must be admitted that the former heavyweight chamâ€" pions were almost unanimous in grantâ€" ing in advance the victory to the negro. Strangely enough the only exception was Jack Johnson who picked the Gerâ€" man. Jack, though, was probably a litâ€" tle late with his homework, as the old noodle has not been functioning so well of late. Much Boosting as the Battle Started, but Then Turned on the Musie. The German contingent of newsâ€" papermen had the whole thing in the bag. The previous win by their fighter seemed the groundwark upon which they made their calculations. To a German mentality this was sufficient STAR TRANSFER MacLEOD COCKSHUTT GOLD MINES CAREFUL SERVIC E We Can Take It! MOVING YÂ¥ELLOW FLEET " HARDROCK GOLD| MINES ROLAC The following tribute was paid last week in the editorial columns of The Huntsville Forester to Rev. F. J. Baine, who is the new minister at Trinity United Church, Schumacher:â€" "The itinerant system, which long characterized the movement of pastors in the old Methodist Church, was abanâ€" doned when union with the Presbyâ€" terians was finally concluded. But there are those among the ministers of the United Church who still adhere to the principle of the old system. Among these is Rev. F. J. Baine, who has just concluded a successful fiveâ€" year pastorate of© Trinity United Church in Huntsville. Mr. Baine, who leaves Huntsville this week, was urged to remain for another year. His courâ€" teous rejection of the invitation was based upon a conscientious conviction that the old itinerant system was still rezarded with respect by boath minisâ€" ters and congregations, and his own convictions were very definite. Picton Gazstte:â€"There is really no perfect place to live. If you live in the land of milk and honey, you will probably get kicked by a cow and stung by a ber. least the two years younger. In the interim the negro matured physically and mentally, gaining in experience. ‘Conre on home," says Hitler, "EBveryâ€" thing will be all right." Oh, yes? "His going from Huntsville, needless to say, is not only regretted by his conâ€" gregation, but by the citizens of all religious denominations. He has, more than the average denominational pasâ€" tor, incorporated himself into the life of the town and community, finding time, in addition to his arduous pasâ€" toral duties, to render wellâ€"merited serâ€" vice in many branches of community activity. He has made a distinct conâ€" tribution to the cultural life of Huntsâ€" ville, his leadership in literary and musical circles being of a specially valâ€" uable type. "His personality has impressed itself upon all classes of citizons, and he will be remembered here, not only for his devoted service to Trinity Church, but likewise for his unselfish service in the interests of all needy persons, and for his unwavering interest in the welfare of Huntsville. "Mr. and Mrs. Baine leave lus, reâ€" spected and admired, for their true worth as devout Christian citizzns, and their contribution to the upbuilding of high standards in the moral consciousâ€" ness of our citizens." IRVIN ROSNER, R.0, Editorial Tribute Paid Last Week to Rev. M. Bame EYES8IGHT SPECIALIST For Appointment Phone 1877 GOLDFIELDS BLOCK 23 Pine St. N. Timmins EYES EXAMINED CGLASSES FITTED with Scaoentific Accuracy by 42 ]

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