Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 Jul 1938, 1, p. 3

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

Tuesday‘s sentences brought to a close one of the most sensational fur poaching trials ever held in Northern Ontario, the exposure coming with the seizure of books and records of Glick‘s made at Gogama early in June. The major investigation work and "breakâ€" ing" of the case was done by Game Waerden Lawrence Hemphill, of Elsas, who seized Glick‘s books and many of the beaver skins taken during the probe. Charges of acting as Gliek‘s agent in the trading of fur at Peterbell were dismissed against J. B. Lacroix, but he pleaded guilty to the purchase of five teaver from Jolin Davies of Elsas and was fined the minimum of $100 and costs or 30 days. Lacroix paid his fine, totalling $103. For purchasing 95 beaver pelts from six Indians on the Eisas Reserve Glick was fined $1900 with an option of a oneâ€"year concurrent sentence. On the charge of illegal possession of six beaâ€" ver skins at Gogama he was given the maximum fine of $600 with the alterâ€" native of six months consecutive senâ€" téence in jail. On the seven charges of illegal possession of the 444 beaver and other skins which were flown from Peterbell to Rouyn, Glick was remandâ€" eda until called. Defence counsel, G. M. Miller, of Sudbury, said it was doubtful if an apâ€" eal would be filed. On the charges of exporting furs from the Province of Ontario to Queâ€" bec without the proper permit, Glick was fined a total of $13,895 with an option of two years less one day in the reformatory. Seven separate charges were dealt with under the exporting clause, made up of 444 beaver, for which he was fined $13,320, ten otter, seven marten and one fisher, for which he was fined $540, and two cross fox, two mink and 31 muskrats, for which he was fined $35. Glick is not expected to pay the heavy fine and as an alternative will serve two years and six months less one day in the reformatory. Sudbury, July 27.â€"The largest fine in the history of the administration of the Department of Game and Fisherâ€" les was meted out to Jacob Isaac Glick, Sudbury fur buyer, on Tuesday mornâ€" ing, when he was ordered to pay a fine totalling $16,395 on 21 charges arising from his furâ€"buying operations in the neighbaurhood of Elsas, Peterbell and Rouyn during the month or June. Senâ€" tence was imposed by Magistrate Wilâ€" lard Cooper in Sudbury District Court after the accused had been convicted late Monday afternoon on the multiâ€" plicity of charges. Sudbury Fur Dealer May Take Jail Term "ined Total of $16,395 on 21 Charges of Illicit Dealing in Furs. DOMINION AOVSING ACT THURPEDAY, JULY saTH The governmentâ€"approved home shown above can be built in this district for $3,550, local contractors estimate. If built on a $450 site the whole project can be financed with $800 in cash and ga sw ENT F190R Appeal Unlikely PL A * ANOTHER D. H. A. HOUSE IN THE ADVANCE‘S SERIES Merrime Qanvmes of Pus Birint Purcursco by rea FRort Twmk , AMe MA COuPRLETE SKT â€" _ O# 4 sars of PBiwik PANMNPrES wno I Dweurnvior Plemng VWiemorunnoure (re as in 4y rei QOwnir BuonuoLk®) rimy acr _ #Aor TnHi SW4T 06#% 2,0.00 LQnN ak 2gnofl ngcopu| 19 _ NOINIWO(C Qeosa ay MNrmrata seomâ€" _ Hoousing Aormisrrarrion. *# Toronto, July 27.â€"No sign of rabies was discovered in the brains of a dog near Sudbury which bit two Torento people, Dr. McNab of the provincial health laboratories stated on Tuesday. Staff of the government iaboratories have completed microscopic examinaâ€" tion of sections of the brain of the "In Nova Scotia, three centres which forwarded reports recorded the pasâ€" teurization of part of the milk disâ€" tributed." ‘Survey of Pasteurization of Milk in the Dominion "In Quebec four centres reported complete pasteurization and pasteuriâ€" zation is conducted in at least 29 other centres. In New Brunswick the reports indicated that four centres have some pasteurization, the city of St. John having approximately 90 per cent. of the milk pasteurized. conducted in at least four municipalâ€" ities. Pasteurized milk is also sigplied to the several municipalities adjacent to Winnipeg. "In Ontario prior to the recent legisâ€" lation which will prohibit the sale of raw milk in towns and cities, a large rumber of municipalities had adopted local byâ€"laws requiring pasteurization. A total of 523 municipalities had comâ€" vlete pasteurization. Of the municiâ€" palities of 2000 population and over, 32 had achieved 100 per cent. pasteurizaâ€" tion. "In British Columbia and Alberta there are no cities having either comâ€" plete or compulsory pasteurization. Data were received concerning nine municipalities in British Columbia and four municipalities in Alberta in whch pastclurization is conducted in part. Reâ€" ports also indicate that pasteurization was conducted in four other municiâ€" palities. "In Saskatchewan, the municipalities of North Battleford and Saskatoon have compulsory pasteurization. In Maniâ€" toba there are no municipalities havyâ€" ng compulsory pasteurization butt he data indicate that pasteurization is No Sign of Rabies Found in Dog That Bit Couple With the impetus given to the moveâ€" ment for pasteurization of milk by the recent Ontario legislation, a survey of milk control in cities and towns throughout the Dominicn provides maâ€" terial of value to all interested in naâ€" tional health. The survey is described in the Jiune issue of the Canadian Pubâ€" lic Health Journal by Dr. A. E. Berry of the Ontario Dept. of Health. A table iisting cities and towns of over 2000 population shows whether there is pasâ€" teurization, and if so, whether complete or compulsory. The numbers of pasâ€" teurizing and raw milk plants are givâ€" en. The amount of milk daily conâ€" sumed and the percentage pasteurized are also indicated. Summarizing the information, whieh was obtained through the coâ€"operation of the medical officers of health, Dr. Berry said : 13/6 Ggorr Bubrg. Hoarmiror. Ont. rFRET: PLO CR P Aâ€"R CUVU BAG t â€"â€" 11 880 Cu. FT Aivinx~ R. Prack Orcrearriinr or Prramc£ OrrRW L . _ ONTHROO . M R.A 4.C monthly payments of $33.76. These equal payments will retire the $3,200 mortgage and pay the 5 per cent interâ€" est charges in ten years. After that time there is nothing further to pay. Smiles:â€"Mother: "That brazen Miss Vamp boasts that the has been kissed by every married man in town except one!" _ Father (absently): "IL wonder who he can be?" Included in the payoff was a 12â€"yearâ€" old youngster, who got back a dollar. Provincial Constable Brown helped to quell the disturbance. No more disâ€" order was apparent and the show left town the next night. Their record indicates they will never be welcomed back. One hammerâ€"wielder was never more glad to see the law in his life. He had teen separated from the rest and had tuilt himself up for a tidy trimming when the constable intervened. The fight was settled when the gamblers paid off close to $150, said to be owing those who had been playing. The lumberjacks claimed they had no intention of "letting it ride," after they won in the comeâ€"on stage of the game. The carnival operators refused to pay off, it is alleged, and then the fight began. Clubs and hammers were used by the carnival crew against their opponents, but the fistâ€"flingers were leading when Town Constable Labbe broke it up. The following despatch from Blind River this week will be read with speâ€" clal interest by many here:â€" Blind River, July 25. â€"Bushâ€"hardened lumberjacks and brawny millworkers were too much for a carnival crew here when "Hey, Rube!" sounded at the Gray‘s Show iot. The traditional carâ€" nival call to battle came after gambling game grafters were attacked bydisâ€" gruntled citizens, who said they had not been given their winnings. Miss Jackson, second victim of the animal, on Tuesday contacted the proâ€" vincial laboratories. Arrangements were completed for her to take the Pasâ€" teur treatment from her own physician, Dr. McNab stated. "When a dog bites people, it should be held under observation for 14 days," he declared. "Killing of the dog so soon afterâ€" ward prevents development of the disâ€" ease to a stage where it can be certainâ€" ly diagnosed. â€" This animal was shot in the head. This further complicated the examination. On the whole, I don‘t think the dog was infected with rabies, but scientifically I cannot be wholly certain." Blind River Battle Over Carnival Games Men Claimed They Were Refused Their Winnings and Made Rough House. as conclusive because the dog was shot scon after it had bitten the Toronto people. animal which attacked Harry Clarke and Miss Mary Jackson of Toronto. Dr. McNab added that the laboratorâ€" ies‘ examination cofild not be regarded THE PORCUPTNE apVaNCE maaimfis, !’J‘â€"fléâ€" _o! Globe and Mail:â€"Dr. Manion, it is said, likes peanuts, but does not eat them. There is nothing so unusual in that. Many persons like political speeches although they can‘t swallow them. Beside the softly curtained window at the front is a small, comfortable chair slipâ€"covered in apple green to pick up the diagonal plaid in the wallpaper. I placed my Priscilla sewing cabinet conâ€" veniently near the chair. There is a small desk with a matching chair and scrap basket against the wall opposite the bookshelves. My bridge lamp with a du‘!ll parchment shade bound in green, standing between the comfortable chair and the desk, provides adequate light for both. ~The desk is well supplied with letterâ€"writing accessories and noteâ€"books, so it is indeed used rvery day. Oh yesâ€"and a small neutral rug is my devoted Cocker‘s favorite place for naps! All in all, this is a delightful corner; convenient, â€" restful, andâ€" decidedly homey and cosy. Almost filling the wall space on one side are open bookshelves painted white to match the woodwork. They stand about four feet high, and are filled withi nviting books displaying colorful bindings. Just above, in the centre, hangs ‘"‘The Bookworm" by Karl Spitzâ€" weg. (It is one of my favorite pictures, though I always feel that the whiteâ€" haired old man may drop the volume that he is holding between his kners!) Perhaps it was my early memories of one with aâ€"sewing machine and a cutâ€" ting table piled high with mending that prompted me to concentrate on the upâ€" per hall in our home.» At any rate, the transformation of a bare, ordinary place into a miniature living room was most successful.. So I am suggesting the. idea to those of you whose hall may lend itself to a similar or perhaps better arrangement. If you live in a house where the stairway starts at the front door and extends straight up to the second floor, you have upper hall space of unlimited possibilities. There is no excuse for it to be a neglected area housing a lone fern or an old spring rocker considered too cumbersome for use on the first floor. Instead, it can be anything from a hobby nook to study. (By Ruby Price Weeks) That even the smallest space is useâ€" ful and important is a lesson we are learning from toâ€"day‘s designers. They make one> piece of furniture serve the purpose of two or three, just as they make one room suitable for both living and dining, or by means of a recessed dressing table make a useful closet into an attractive mirrored niche,. Then, why not use yclur upper hall? Why Not Use That Upper Hall in Home: Even Small Spaces May be| Put to Good Use. | BUILDING SUPPLIES Head Officeâ€"Schumacher, Phone 708 When you can have your home without paying out any more money each month than you now pay for rent, after the initial payment, then there shouldn‘t be anything to keep you from building. That‘s been the attitude of hundreds of persons who are taking advantage of the Dominion Housing Act, which makes it possible for you to own and live in a home of your own, on terms that a short time ago were impossible. Interest rates are extremely low, just Hundreds Of Families Throughout Canada Are Building Homes Like This. You Can Too! hen you can have your home without paying out y more money each month than you now pay for it, after the initial payment, then there shouldn‘t anything to keep you from building. That‘s been > attitude of hundreds of persons who are taking vantage of the Dominion Housing Act, which ikes it possible for you to own and live in a home your own, on terms that a short time ago were possible. Interest rates are extremely low, just your requirements. 5 p.c» and you have ten years to pay. Stop in toâ€"morâ€" row, let us talk things over with you, and give you a cumplete estimate on the style and size home you have always wanted. We have a registered archiâ€" tect in our organization ready to plan and take charge of your home so that it will be well built to Make your decision now!â€" You will be surprised at the reasonahie cost of a fine Feldman built home. . Feldman Timber Company Ltd. e ) PA ty "% 'Bunldmg Starts Chain » of Prosperity for Many With the aid of anâ€" experienced plumbing contractor, a skilful architect and the easy financing of the Home Improvement Plan, many of such older hcuses with more rooms than conâ€" veniences have recently been brought up to modern standards. A typical exâ€" ample was a house with five bedrooms on the second floorâ€"more than the family neededâ€"with only one bathâ€" rcom, affording quite inadequate conâ€" venience. One of the bedrooms was changed into an attractive combingaâ€" tion bathroom and dressing room, sharâ€" ed by two other bedrooms adjoining on either side. The old bathroom, becomâ€" ing the "master" bathroom, was at the same time transformed into much more attractive shape by the replacement of the outâ€"ofâ€"date original fixtures with modern coloured equipment, including a lavatory with two metal legs, oneâ€" piece closet and builtâ€"in bathtub with modern lines harmonizing with the other pieces. A wainscoting of light blue tile was selected as a background for the darker blue of the fixtures. One of the most striking differences between the type of house being built today and that of twenty or more years ago is the ratio of rooms to conâ€" veniences. The chief object in earlier days was to have as many rooms as possible while convenilences were not considered so essential and were often sidetracked into places where they were not even particularly convenient. Today, says the Canadian Institute of Plumbing and Heating, the most popâ€" ular household design is for the utmost in conveniences with merely a suffiâ€" clent number of rooms for the size of the family. (By Mary E. Hopkin) When Canadilans build, the Dominian prospers. And as it prospers more Canadians build. It‘s a neverâ€"ending ecyecle, and once it gets in motion it takes a major calamity to halt it. It has been said that more fields of endsavor, more industries, workers, and wageâ€"earners are affected by the buildâ€" ing industry than any other.. Analysis of the statement only supports its verâ€" acity. When you buy or build a house, you not only give work to the architects who design it and the laborers who put it up, glving them allâ€"important spendâ€" ing power, but you also do the same thing for the workers in the factories that turn out the sinks and the bathâ€" tubs, the gutters and piping, the doorâ€" knobs and hinges, the light fixtures and windowpanes. You do the same for the lumber mill workers, the lumâ€" berjacks, and brickmakers, the men in the quarries, and a host of others. And you keep busy the men who transport all these things by truck and by train. Suggests Fewer Rooms But More Conveniences We‘ll Help YOU Build The Home You‘ve Wanted‘ $30 PER MONTH IS ALL IT COSTS AND YOU‘RE THE LANDLORD! All FHAâ€"insured homes must have at least one bathroom, and 27.6 per cent. of those tabulated here have two or more. At the $8080 level, more than half have more than one bath. Above $13,000 three baths predominate, and above $20,000 four. Of the total 78.8 per cent., have garages, and of these 52.4 per cent. are attached. In the $8000 and over class a majority of the houses have two or threeâ€"car garages,. I1d4VE LWO OFP UNnreeâ€"Car garages There is a significant trend, among present owners, away from larger to smaller, more compact,. less costly Below is a table which shows that the fiveâ€"room house leads in the price classes from $2000 to $5000, while the sixâ€"room house is ahead in the classes from $5000 to $10,000. Another feature is the fact that fourâ€"room houses are being built in fair numbers in price ranges where good five and sixâ€"room homes can easily be constructed. In some places such houses find good sale, but in general they are said to be somewhat risky for resale purposes. From "Building in Canada") With recent amendments to the Doâ€" minion Housing Act bringing increased interest in small house building, it is interesting to note the popular trends as indicated by a survey of houses built under the Federal Housing Adminisâ€" tration. Trend Now is to Smaller but Better Type of Home survey Made Under Federal Housing Administration Shows that the Most Popular Type of House is the Fiveâ€" Room or Sixâ€"Room Home. Trend Noted in Canada. Mill Officeâ€"Timmins, Phone 709 a military display Thursday that must have caused Messrs Hitlere and Miusâ€" solini to bite their lips with envy, and possibly suffer fear shakes. North Bay Nugzget:â€"Honoring Briâ€" tain‘s King and Queen, France put on Installation in new buildings is most effective when the closet is first lined with wallboard, felt or other insulating material free from offensive odors, the cedar lining being applied over this. Absolutely no paint, varnish or other finish should be used on the interior of a cedar closet, as any surface coatâ€" ing would destroy or lessen its effiâ€" clency. Existing closets may be lined with cedar over the plaster, care being taken to nail the lining on the studding. Pace nailing is recommended. End joints do not have to be placed directly over the joists, as end matching will hold the short pieces in position. An aromatic cedar closet is a conâ€" ven‘ent protective storage space for woollens. The volatile oil in the heartâ€" wood of red cedar gives off an aroma which kills newly hatched moth larvae, but cannot be depended upon to kill the larvae after they are haif grown, or to kill the moths themselves. The entire surface of a cedar closet inclluding the inside of the door, should be covered with at least a % inch lining of red cedar heart wood. The lining for walls, floor and ceiling must be practically airâ€"tight, with the door weatherâ€"stripped to prevent the cedar fumes frome scaping. The shelves may be made of red cedar to add to effiâ€" ciency and appearance. Protective measures against damage to clothes, blankets, and other woollen materials from moths should be underâ€" taken through winter months, as well as through summer, although the damâ€" age is much greater in warm weather. All woollens should be kept in mothâ€" proof places when not in use. Special pains, however, should be taken to brush and air each article before it is stored, in order to remove any moth larvae that may be present. "mroe home for the money." The challenge to satisfy this ideal has been accepted by architects, builders, manuâ€" facturers of building materials and maâ€" terial dealers,. Better designing, better construction methods and better maâ€" terials are now available to a greaber extent than ever before. homes. In brief, the demand toâ€"day is Install Cedar Closets to Protect Clothing DUMBER

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy