Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 15 Sep 1938, 2, p. 6

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To us three fact humps on a camel. There is a piece that projects into the in a way that must s like a coon‘s claw chicken . coop. This projection into Germany is apâ€" parently largely inhabited by Germans who prefer the form of political insanâ€" ity prevailing in Germany at the preâ€" sent time. So far we see nothing to cause Britain to loose the dogs of war, even if the Sudetens do insist on piking their own "Vaterland." On the cther hand, there ars a numâ€" ber of treaties, which we do not pretend About Passes to Ex. Fresh Air, Tires, Ete. (‘Thomas Richard Henry in Telegram) The London Times doesn‘t seem to have much support for its suggestion that Germany be tossed a piece of Czechland as a solution to the present situation. We stopped keing an idealist in these affairs a long time ago. Garbagana, Traffic and Coal and Other Things. AMERICA M Solid as the Continent you can save 306 a monta" you can make certain of a cheque for $25 every month besinning at 65. You‘ll have "I‘m 65 and I‘m st j A * * down strike‘ of I‘ve quit work have a vhmlue ( every month as lon F. N. WHALEY A, NNICOLS 8 Reed Block 10 Marshall W. M. ADAM, 10 Marshall Block ou, too. ean ‘ed retirems{é 2 # F Â¥ i piece of Czechoslovakia into the present Germany t must seem to the Heinies ‘s claw reaching into a Represeniatives DON‘T BUY ANY AUTOMATIC HEATING EQUIPMENT UNTIL YOU SEE s long as I live." have a guaranâ€" nt income. If 88 a month* tand out like ging a sit Imnv â€" own A, NTICOLSON 10 Marshall Blk PLUMBING and HEATING TIM MINS If Europe had two or three statesmen with the intelligence of a jack rabbit, all these disputes could be settled reaâ€" sonably without even a hint of war. Tough R. A. Stapells is a director of the Canadian National Exhibition, but he is very much perturbed. Incidentally Mr. Stapell‘s limousinc was wrapped around the Exhibition pass when the pass was stolen. Fresh Air We see that Ontario rugby players are being invited up to the Ontario Athletic Commission camp at Lake Couchiching. It is a fine thing to give thess undex nourished waifs a breath of fresh counâ€" try air. Maybe it‘s time to consider just what is the most convenient and most appoâ€" piate time to pop him. Somebody has stolen his Exhibition pass. y Things must be fairly tough when a director loses his pass and cannot get another. He calls attention to the inconvenâ€" ience of losing his "Exhibition pass, diâ€" rector‘s sign and other important docuâ€" ments." Civilization has not progressed very far when nations still go to war. to understand, ard there is the fact that Hitler seems intent on expanding until somebody pops him. an income three times as large as your payments. And, in case of your death beâ€" fore 65, this same policy will pay your family $‘)(').') immediâ€" ately plus an income of $25 a month for 10 years. Arrange with a North American Life man to talk over this double purpose income policy. *Approximate rate at age 35. q m /.Ulu(: "Traffic conditions in Toronto during rush hours and how the police fail to enforce the byâ€"laws re ‘No Parking beâ€" tween 4.30 and 6.00 pm." We tax payâ€" ers paid good money for the signs you We think maybe this chap has a betâ€" ter argument than the city official who objected to the unofficial collectors beâ€" cause he thought the collector‘s thrill was combined with the practice of carrying off anything around the place that didn‘t have to be nailed down. We don‘t think his deduction was sound because we do not think that anybody but a rank amateur would After floundering around for words i1, which to express his admirationâ€"(or something) for us and our column, a reader asks why we don‘t write on the following : We don‘t think his deduction was sound because we do not think that anybody but a rank amateur would try to do more than one thing at a time. A few years ago this man was paid $100 fee to listen to new radio proâ€" grams and give his opinion of them. On some of them he gave long reâ€" ports, but on one he simply replied The S.C. puts forward a fairly good argument. "Wait until you have your can turned over on your side drive to be picked over and you may not be as enthusiastic for the rag pickers‘ visits in the early dawn." "Besides," he said, "it is messy and unsanitary. These fellows gather up mattresses that should be destroyed, r2â€" cover them, and sell them for new." We don‘t think a prowler with his eye on your garden hose would bother with the rather unpleasant business of picking over your garbage. $100 Worth We were discussing four expensive words that Jack London once sent t a U.S. paper, the other day. A former newspaperman, once on tne staff of The Evening Telegram, writes in to give Jack London a run for high pay per word. "lousy" when asked his opinionâ€"and he was paid his $100 fee for that one word. For all you could tell by watching him he was not a bit more disturbed at the commotion he was causing than if he were changing his tire on a counâ€" try side road. | He gave the best show that we saw at the Exhibitionâ€"and he certainly pick2d a spot to put it on. Garbagana A solid citizen takes issue with us on the cuestion of letting the collectors of early garbage, or rather the early garâ€" bage collectors, help themselves before the city representatives arrive on the scene. In the midst of the hundreds of cars trying to move ahead, with horns squawking and cops yellingâ€"in the very thick of all this was a man cooly changâ€" ing a tire. He was calm, unhurried and nonchaâ€" lant. We were crazy enough to call at the Ex. on Monday and the cars were piled in six deep getting through the western gate. Picking Your spot Kipling or somebody like that omâ€" mented on the virtue of keeping your head when everybody about you is losâ€" ing theirs. We are always interested in seeing a man showing composure under trying circumstances. We saw it on Labor Day at the C. N Traffic and Coal THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARITO "For this country and the Empire the pssition is clear. Fitheor we stand with France and other friends against Gerâ€" man domination of Europe while there is still time to avert that domination and while we still have friends, or we shall presently be confronted with a choice between abject surrender to a Germany mistress of the greater part cf Europe, and a desperate, friendless fight for existence in which the odds would be heavily against us. "So I urge you to bethink yourself "It is comprehensive that Germany should wish to be rid of this Czechoâ€" slovak thorn in her flesh. It is not comprehensible that any British jourâ€" nal, no matter how inadvertently, should help her to get rid of it. Such a course is not compatible with the loyvyalty to King and Empire which the Daily Mail professes. "I need not remind you of the patriâ€" otic part played by the Daily Mail b>â€" tween 1908 and 1914 in arsusinz this country to a sens> of the G>rman canger, nor of its steadfast action throughout the war in helping to withâ€" stand that danger. Two of your sons VMiiVAiI Y J O JUCiliJ. â€" L _ â€" U CIIIlMAIl i The Spectator report says of the canger, nor of its steadfast action | s ‘"" icontroversy : throughout the war in helping to withâ€" "It may be noted that though the stand that danger. Two of your sONS |correspondence was circulated to the thsn gave their lives in this cause. s press generally only two London papâ€" Would .they approve of what you are ers, the Newsâ€"Chronicle and the Daily now doing? o : Herald, published it, the Daily Mail For this country and the Empire the ‘__itself remarking, with a santimonicius pssition is clear. Fither we stand with ‘propriety which sits as well on it as France and other friends agaix}st Gerâ€" kimono on Lord Rothermere, that it man domination of Europe while there withholds publication ‘in view of, the is still time to avert that domination | negotiations now proceeding in Prazue, and while we still have friends, Or we |ang Lord Runcimna‘s mission‘." to learn the truth and to proclaim it. This is your duty as a newspaper ownâ€" °r and as a British peor. "Ycurs very sincerely, (Signed) Wickham Steed." KRothermere Feels Flattered ord Rcethermers replied on August ‘"Moreover, if Wittkowitz, Skoda and | their various hranches below ground | were to fall into the hands of Germany, | her facilities for the manufacture of armaments would be double those of Great Britain and France. i "Dear Mr. Wickham Steed,â€"Your letter flatters me. It suggests that an article by me in The Daily Mail is erful air forecs which could threat-en] Dresden and Leipzig, Munich and| Nuremberg in half an hour in case of German attack, and to control the| great armaments works of Skoda and | Wittkowitz. In ordsr to crush Czechoâ€" ] slovakia swiftly, Hitler would nsed at least 1,000 airplanes and thrse milâ€"| lion men. Thess airplanes and these men would be available against Great Britain and France were Cz2chosloâ€" | vakia overthrown. vion, in its turn, is an indisp2nsable preliminary to a final German reckonâ€" ing with the British Empire which forms the ultimate obstacl> to Gerâ€" man stupremactcy in the world. Bulwark For France and Britain "It would be dangerous for Germany to attack either France or Great Briâ€" tain as long as the Czechoslovak Reâ€" public is able, as it now is, to mobilize 900,0C0 wellâ€"armsd and wellâ€"trained trsops in a week, to dispose of a powâ€" Contrcversy by mail between Lord Rothermere and Wickham Stesd has been published in London. The subâ€" ject was British policy with regard o Czechoslovakia and the letters show "I can readily understand why Gerâ€" many shcould wish you to do this. Czechoslovakia juts out into the heart of Gormany. Her existence as a wellâ€" armsd State, inhabited by a detorâ€" mined and efficient pzople, impedes German domination over Central and Southeastern Europe. This dominaâ€" tion, in its turn, is an indispensable It would be too bad to spend a lot of time checkng up on the above and have it so far down in the column that the man who suggested it, and who can‘t quite make up his mind whether we are higoted, self opinionated and conceited ‘5r not, would never see it a sharp conflict of opinion. Lord Rothermer> is owner of the Daily Mail and Wickham Steed was long connectâ€" ed with the Times, of which he was editor for some years after 1919 On July 18 Mr. Wickham Steed wrote to Lord Rothermere: "Deéar Lord Rothermereâ€"IL have rarely written to you, but I must writs after reading your article in this mornâ€" ing‘s Daily Mail, for that article, basâ€" d on misleading information, may help to bring on a European war into which Great Britain would willyâ€"nilly be drawn. Rothermere Rapped by Noted Journalist Britain Must Stand Against ‘"Why you should wish to weak>n the defence of this country by encsuragâ€" ing Germany to attack and, if possible, to obliterate Czechoslovakia, is a mysâ€" tery to me. We might comply with this lad‘s request but he insists that he only reads a few lines of our efforts and doesn‘t know how the management enâ€" dures them. "Combines are illegal. It is admitted that the Welsh coal situation is conâ€" trolled by three companies. The miners in Wales cannot make a decent living so we are told,. The spread between buying price and selling price is now | 100 per cent. They buy on a long ton‘ basis 2240 lbs. and sell on a short ton basis 2000 lbs. Why was that fact not brought out to the fore long ago? Welsh coal up $1.00 per ton over last spring. ! | see on the posts. Go down some evenâ€" ing on Queen east and check the obâ€" structing cars from Woodbine to the City limits at sgbout 5.30, on the only thoroughfare avail®le in that section and you will form one of the 30 to 40 cars accumulating behind the TTC. The police are short of men, they say and cannot check eaverything, yet they seem to think it necessary to have a man at the junction of Queen and Kingston road to do nothing for an hour or more, except just keep waving his hand up Kingston road. Watch him and write him up showing what contriâ€" bution he makes to the scheme of things. German Aggression, Says Steed. "Déear Lord Rothermere,â€"Nothing in your Daily Mail article, or in yolur Jetâ€" ters, shows a more ‘confused and disâ€" torted judgment‘:than your mention of a view which you allsg> your brother, the late Lord Northcliffe, to have held ‘in the last days‘ of his association with me; for in those last days, and for so¢me months earlier, as you may on reflection remember, the character ‘of his fatal illness unfortunately made it impossible for him to hold any coâ€" herent view at all, even about you. "I shall arrange for the of my correspondence with "Yours sincerely On the same date will appear Stanâ€" | ley Liukas, who was also arrested last June on similar charges, and who likeâ€" wise when he appeared in court, last Friday, requested speedy trial without| Jury. Amos, Sept. 14. â€" Appearing before Judge Miller, here, on Saturday, Joseph Shapiro, arrested last June at Kirkland Lake, on highâ€"grading charges, asked for a speedy trial before a judge withâ€" out jury and has been remanded until QOctober 27. "Please publish the whole of your correspondence with me. ‘"Yours very faithfully, Rothermere." On August 12, Mr. Wickham Steed wrote: Kirkland Man Remanded on Highâ€"grade Charges ‘"Dear Mr. Wickham Steed,â€"So it appsears, according to your letter, that Czechecslovakia is now the frontier of Great Britain. This will be news to the people of the Dominions. If you or anyone else are so foolish as to beâ€" lieve that Great Britain and her Domâ€" inions will fizht for the Moscowâ€"ownâ€" ed Prague governm ent, ycu are laborâ€" ing under some strange delusion. Why should the People of London and Manâ€" chester be bombed to perpetuate the tyranny of the Czechs? "Your letter confirms the view held by Lord Northcliffe, in the last days of his asscciation with you, that yoau are a man with a confused and distorted judgment. "And it happens, today, that the deâ€" fensive frontier of Great Britain is no longer on the Rhine, as Mr. Baldwin once said, but along the borders of Czechoslovakia. Tomorrow it may be »alsewhere. And the surest way to save curselves from having to defend it in arms anywhere is to have a firm and <trong purpose of psace and to dare to make it known. "Dear Lord Rothermereâ€"If I may publish my letter to you I will gladly publish your replyâ€"which is no answer â€"to it. "I am proud to be what you call a ‘jJournalistic Bcurbon‘ who has not forâ€" gotten the lessons of 1905â€"1918. Forgetâ€" fulness of experience is not wisdom, nor is Nazi German propaganda the surest guide to the truth. "Lik> meâ€"and unlike youâ€"they would approve of, and support, resisâ€" tance to attack upon the defences of Great Britain and upon the essentials of British freedom. Like meâ€"and unâ€" like youâ€"they would not, in the last nasort, fear to fight for the principles upon which the British Commonw2alth is based. "Your information about the Domâ€" inions is faulty, as I, who am in conâ€" stant touch with all the Dominions, can testify. Like me, their peoples would never approve of a British war ‘in purâ€" suit of some aim or design in Central Europe‘. "I suppose you do know, but I should ike to impress it upon you, that the day Great Britain goes to war in purâ€" suit of some aim or design in Central Europ» two or three of our most imâ€" portant Dominions wili declare their neutrality and, by doing so, will bring an immediate end to the British Emâ€" pire. "Yours very faithfully, Rothermere." Provd of Remembering Lessons of War On August 6 Mr. Wickham St wrote>: Lr‘y is allow th self dire ‘"Yours very sincerely, Wickham Steed." Sees Soviet Influence in Prague Lord Rothermere replied on August Wickham Steed publication ; Slabs and Coal The patient 1: fifteen minutes : then reappliecs are given two o1 QOverweight A splendid bs dealing with the as ‘a factor in When we think of tages of the injectio) cannot be blamed 1 opsration. Dr. PA lando, Florida, in Tl nal of Surgery, stat ticn method is pra canger, and not at patient keing able t individual is not reqi The first need in t ment is a ccmfor truss that will keep t under all conditions workingâ€"whils the progress, that is bet1 What should who dislikse or : case is ncot suit: althcugh an oJ ting, they go physical condit of time, no pl pAysical at TNneIt of time, no pus conditicn emergzncy of any kind, ar cperation is concerned, it i free from danger. surgsons decid@ed not use During the past few ysar. soluticns used have been trustworthy and many cases have been treated by the injection method. There are some surg:ons who still refuse to use any method but surzory because they still feel uncertain about results of this method. This may ssem unfair because a surgeon knowing and working so often on the structures invelved in a rupture should be more expert than the family physician in usin‘z the injection method. The injection msthcod is now recogâ€" nized and i:ndorsed by pension and compensaiion boards because the reâ€" silts obtained in cases ‘suitable‘ for this method are very satisfactory.. It is unfortunatse, however, that only about 15 per cont.â€"cone cas> in every six or sevenâ€"is considerecd suitable for the injecticns; the great majority of herâ€" nias still require the surgical operation for satisfactory resjults. What should b> rememsered by those who or fear operation but whose case is ncot suitable for injection is that, althcugh an operation does mean cutâ€" ting, they go into hospital in good rhysical condition, at their own choice There ar refuse to u because the the results The Injection Treatment of Hernia When the injection method for trea ing herniaâ€"ruptureâ€"was first put fo ward it so happened that the solutic used to rarden the tissues was not a 0b 0 0000000000 000009 0 0000000004480 004000000 00 40 0044 0 0 4 6 0 4 0040000040080 000 6009068008 0 0 00 0 0 9 0 % 000 0 0 6 0 4 6 0 8 4A 6 0 6 0 0 06 00 0 Yard Schumacher Phone 725 Clear B.C. Fir Vâ€"Joint; Gyproc: Hardwood Floorâ€" ing; Vâ€"Joint and Shiplap; White Pine Featherâ€" edge; Clear Fir and Pine Doors in Stock Sizes; Sash in Stock Sizes. (by James W. Barton, M.D.) sate or 86 Spruce South Coke â€" Welsh Anthracite Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" wheat â€" Nut Slack â€" ROUGH A ND DRESS K D) John W. 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