Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 22 Sep 1938, 1, p. 5

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We may question their judgment. Are the democracies alone to pay the price for peace, supposing any peace can come from this surrender? The world had grounds for hoping that thére was a solution of ‘the Sudeten question based on allâ€"round sacrifices. The Sudetens could have had all they ever asked for within the framework of the Czechoslovak Republic. The guarantes of neutrality proposed in the present settlement would have dissolvâ€" ed the Soviet allience and given Hitler what he has insisted he wants most. A settlement on such lines, morover, by furnishing a working model for a new approach to the problem of minâ€" orities, might lay the foundation for a peaceful evolution in Central Europe. For ther> is no escape from the fact that what khappens in Czechoslovakia today will happen in other States toâ€" morrow, and only a formula that can This is not to say that collective security is dead beyond recall. The time will come when men and nations everywhere will have to think of it again, to plan for it again, to work to make it a reality. For collective security is much more than a noble dream in an ignoble world ; it is a pracâ€" tical necessity under the conditions which prevail today, with the fate of every nation tied inextricably to the fate of every cther nation, and the world wil know no peace and no real respite from alarm until the dream is realized, but before they can be brought to pass, many thinzs miust happen. The faith that will die, if Czechosloâ€" vakia is sacrificed, will somehow have to be revived. The sanctity of promises and treaties will have to win respect azgain through the slow process of obâ€" servance. The mistakes of the past, the mistakes of will and of judgment and of execution will lead to the presâ€" ent tragic situation, will have to be corrected. Many must be thinking today that the. most tragic of thése mistakes is the present surrender. It is a surrendâ€" er befors the war, a surrender to evil made by the democratic powers to save themselves from what they consider a greater evil. Having refused to assume any obligation to strengthgn the strucâ€" ture we helped to build, the structure of which the keystone and symbol was Czechoslovakia, the State born in Pittsâ€" burg and sponsored by cur Governâ€" ment, we have no right to urgs on others the terrible risks and responâ€" gsibilities we do not share. _ The terms which the British and French: Governments have sent to Prague, have not yet been revealed ofâ€" ficially, but if present reports are acâ€" curate, and i#f the capitulation to the demands of Germany is as complete as it now scems to be, one thing can be saild with certainty. This is the end of the whc:le systom of collective security built up in the postâ€"war treaties. It is the end of that system trcause a deâ€" monstration will have been given, in the very heart of Europe, before the eyes of all the world and in a manâ€" ner which leaves no possible room for doubt, that force or the threat of force is the determining factor in the relaâ€" tionship of nati®hs. Collective Security Dead, Say N.Y. Times Under the caption, "The End of An Epoch," the New York Times discusses the with regard to Czechoâ€" slovakia in an editorial article which says:> be used ag to war Must be Revival, Civilization to smm men o > UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF POowWER CORPORATION or CANADPA Prejérred Dividend No. 85 OTICE is hereby given that a Dividend of 144 ©% (being at the rate of 7% per annum)} has been declared on the 7% Cumulative Preâ€" ferred Stock of CANADA NOR THERN POWER CORPORATION LIMITED for the quarter ending September 30th, 1938, payable October 15th, 1938, to shareholders of record at the close of business on September 30th, 1938., By order of the Board. L. C. HASKELL , Secretary. Montreal, September 6th, 1938. Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited galin Doherty Roadhouse Co. Timmins, 19 Pine Street North Toronto Kirkland Lake 293 Bay Street 34 Government Rd. if present report f the capitulati offers a re Direct Private Wires for fast and accurate quotations and executions in all mpursek» Commission basis only Local Phones 1200 and 1201 Market Quotations Broadcast each day at 12.20 noon and 5.20 p.m. the British and nts have sent to et been revealed ofâ€" Accurate Markets and Executions in However of Continue. Members Toronto Stock Exchange al alternative Unlisted Stocks Mining Stocks Industrial and Public Utility Stocks Bonds quer others Hath made a shameful conquest of hnerself ... This space has been offending again, darn it. It has been flippant and disâ€" respectful, if not downright irreverâ€" ent, in comment on Mr. Chamberlain‘s flight to Berchtesgaden. A lady called by telephone to say so. The tone of its reference to Sir Horâ€" ace Wilson, Mr. Chamberlain‘s Berâ€" chtesgaden adviser, was not ‘amusing, merely "deplorable, cheap and trivial." M.P.M., who carelessly neglected to sign a name or give an address, wrote to protest about it. Some Harsh Words for British Premier doar land, Dear for her reputation through the world, Is now leas‘d outâ€"I die pronouncing itâ€" Like to a tenement, or pelting farny; England bound in with the triumphant sea . . . is now bound in with shame, With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds: That Enzsland that was wont to conâ€" (From Sudbury Star) The part played by the Ontario minâ€" ing indiuxstry in the economic recovery of the country during the last five years is impressively indicated by the statistics showing the remarkable exâ€" pans‘ion in wages and number of workâ€" ers employed in the period from 1933 by procious and base metal mines. Moreover, its "Constant succession of Bilious Utterances and Dirtyâ€"Digs at Adolf Hitler and the German Nation" has caused In Disgust, Amelia M. Reses of Markham Street and the Church of the Tiluminati (sic) to ask is it subâ€" sidized by Jewâ€"money or only the proâ€" duct of a Nasty Scotch Disposition? There‘s a dirty dig below the belt if you likeâ€"Nasty Scotch Disposition. (2) Czechoslovakia. Page old John of Gaunt. This land of such dear souls, this dear, 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 (By Judith Robinson in Globe and Mail) Embarrassing poetic questions Nos. 100,000,000,001 and 2: "Who stands if frmedom fall? Who diss if England live?" Answers: (1) The Right Honorable Arthur Neâ€" ville Chamberlain, P.C., M.P. (Cons.), Prime Minister of Great Britain. There‘s what must humble the highâ€" est stomach. Yet what is humbling this one is somewhere else at the moâ€" ment. * It‘s in an anniversary. Twenty years ago Sunday, on Sept. 18, 1918, a British Prime Minister was pretty busy, too. The big push for the Rhine was beginâ€" ning and Mr. Lloyd George had to atâ€" tend to that and still keep his diary up to date. Yet he found time to send a irowth of Mining and the Effect on Ontario Business â€" Recalled o f Great Service of Czech People. !â€" _ John Bobor, convicted on a charge of indecently assaulting a local woman, was sentenced to sixty days in jJail. The court was cleared of spectators for the hcarinz of both cases. Last Sunday the servicss were repaid the Czech pzople by a British Prime Minister. And if there‘s anything but cause for bitter shams in the coin of the repayment, the respectful and reâ€" verent admirers of Mr. Chamberlain‘s flight to Berchtessaden had better hurry iup and produce it. "A noble act"; wasn‘t that what the Premier of Canada called it? Politicians have strange ideas of what constitutes nobility. estimable service" rendcred to the cause of freedom and democracy by the Czech Legion‘s victory of the Volga. It doesn‘t take much study of the war rmcords of 1918 to make it clear that a British Premier did not exâ€" aggeratse when, twenty years ago ast Sunday, he called those two services inestimable. It‘s quite true that, placed in Mr. Chamberlain‘s embarrassing position, only a great villain or a great man could have made a choice other than Mr. Chmberlain has made. It is quite true that Mr. Chamberlain is neither. He is only an old, rich, successful party politician. So he will have to be exâ€" cused. telegram. It was addressed to the Naâ€" tional Council of the Czech people in London and it carried the thanks of the whole British Empire for the "inâ€" What Mr. Chamberlain cannot be excused is the six years of power wherein he betrayed not only the cause of freedom but the safety of his counâ€" try by refusing to face the fact of Gerâ€" man rearmament and admit its purâ€" pose. That was the Czech Legion that made the famous trek across Siberia to join the allisd armies, fighting Lenin‘s Rusâ€" sians off all the way. The Volga vicâ€" tory, to which such glowing and grateâ€" {ul reference was made on behalf of the whole British Empire, twenty years ago Sunday, was won by the Czzch Legion after hsavy fighting against heavy odds. There were two reasons why Mr. Lloyd George called the serâ€" vice it rendered inestimable. One was that it cut the Revolutionary Governâ€" ment of Russia off from Siberia and the Siberian food reserves that Mr. Trotsky, Lenin‘s representative at Brestâ€"Litovsk, had contracted to supply to the German armies as soon as Russia could get at them. The other was that it prevented the release for service in German armies on the Western FPront of a hundred thousand or so ableâ€" bodied German prisoners of war, inâ€" terned in Siberia. Neville Chamberlain _ was British Chancellor of the Exchequer six years before he was Prime Minister, and beâ€" fore that hr was Chairman of the Conâ€" servative Party of Great Britain. The Conservative Party has been in office in Egland since before Hitler‘s rise and Mr. Chamb>rlain all those years has been leader of his party‘s councils and either first or second in power in the British Government. He was in a posiâ€" tion, if any man ever was, to know and to act upon the truth in time. There is only one reason for the painful position that Mr. Chamberlain now finds himself in. It is Mr. Chamâ€" berlain. Either he was so stupid durâ€" ing the past six years that, with all the facts him, he could not know the German threat to freedom and his country for what it was. Or he was so good aa party man and so bad a friend to liberty that he chose to betray his country‘s safety and that of all free peoplies ratheor than risk splitting his party by facing the truth and tellâ€" ing it to his countrymen. Will the Post Laureate of England please oblige with a suitably classic epitaph in four lines? Found guilty of a charzge of indecen exposure involving twoâ€" young girls, aged eleven and twolve, Leo Lizzette, of Timmins, was sentenced to six meonths in jail at hard labour by Maâ€" gistrate Atkinson on Tuesday afternoon. Evidence was introduced showing that Lizzette had been charged with the same offence previously. Six Months for Improper Conduct With Young Girls Blairmoor Enterprise:â€"Get your hair cut now. Rumor has it that the price will go up a nickle next spring. hen Sir Edward Beatty, G.B.E., LL.D., ~chairâ€" man and presideont of the Canaâ€" dian Pacific Railway, attended Cranbrook‘s Pioneer Reunion, Friâ€" day, September 9, he received the freedom of the city and heard himself extolled as an outstandâ€" ing Canadian and head of the company which 40 years ago forged the Crows‘ Nest Pass link of its great railway system into the rich Kootenay country. Sir Edward is seen receiving a silver tray commemorating the occasion, from Mayor T. M. Roberts. On Sir Edward‘s left is Judge G. H. Thompson who swore him in as a freeman of the bustling Bast Kootenay city. Ross H. MceMaster, of Montreal, director of the Canaâ€" dian Pacific Raiywyay. is at the exâ€" Sir Edward Beatty Becomes Freeman of Cranbrook THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO German Naval Plans No Menace to Britain Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"Making a call in the courthouse at Roxbury, Mass., Samuel Cohnen, member of the legislaâ€" | ture, hung up his hat in a cloak room. ‘ Someone stole it. In answer to his apâ€" | peal, Theodore Glynn, county clerk. iadvertised the thief was known and warned him to return it or stand proâ€" secution. By the end of the next day twentyâ€"two hats of all descrpitions, most of them the worse for wear, had been sent to Glynn‘s office, but Cohen‘s lid was not among them. "There can be no quarrel with this statement," opines Sir Herbert, "inâ€" deed, the moderation with which it is worded almost sugzgests that it was written with an eye to British opinion. But all the same the detailed calculaâ€" tions by which it is supplemented rathâ€" er bring home the result of British naval expansion. When the Angloâ€" Gsrman Naval Treaty was signed, the RBritish navy was almost at its lowest point of decline since the war, and thrre was then no hint of any great reaction. A ratio remains a fixed quanâ€" tity, but ons nsed not be a strategical expert to realize that 35 per cent. of the British Fleet four years ago is a very different matter in numbers from th> sams proportion four years hence; and it is only necessary to recall how many vessels were employed to hunt doawn one little raiderâ€"the Emdenâ€"to appreciate what this might mean. HMHun Supremacy in the Uâ€"Boats In London "Truth," Sir Herbert Rusâ€" sell, distinguished as a war corresâ€" pondent and writer on naval matters, comments on the survey of the Gerâ€" man navy mad2s by Viceâ€"Admiral Cluse, chief of the naval operations staff, which monopolized an entire number of Die Wehrmacht, organ of Germany‘s fighting forces. The policy is to build up to the full 35 per cnt. ratio laid down in the Anzloâ€"German Naval Agreement; the purpase is to create "a modern fleet well adapted to its duties of protecting the Reich, maintaining the sea routes necessary to her existence, and repreâ€" seonting Germany abroad. "Viceâ€"admiral Guse figures that on the basis of the Angloâ€"German Naval Azreement, the new German Fleet will consist of 255,000 tons of capital ships, about 87,000 tons of airâ€"craft carriors; 300,000 tons of cruisers and destroyers, and 37,700 tons of submarines. In the latter catezory the proportion to Briâ€" tish strength is advanced to 45 per cent. by understanding with Great Britain, the being adjusted in other classes. This will give Gerâ€" many 24 submarines of 250 tons and 44 of between 500 and 700 tonsâ€"a total of 68 Uâ€"boats, or nine more than this eccuntry will possess when the present great rearmament program is comâ€" pleted. But then the bulk of the Briâ€" tish boats are of the oceanâ€"going type, 27 of them ranging from the 1,311 tons of the Oxley to the 1,850 tons of the Severn and Clyde. "Apart from this inequality in numâ€" bers â€" illivstrating the difference imâ€" posed on shipbuilding policy by worldâ€" wide obligations compared with a limitâ€" ed zoneâ€"the rest of the German naval program will be regzarded with equanâ€" imity in this country. "Another Jutland" Not a Possibility Two battleships of 35,000 tons, two of 26,000 tons and three of 100,000 tons do not maks a formidable comparison with a British total (by 1940) of 22 capital ships, the smallest of which is At Least That is the Story They‘re Sticking. To. tons. ‘She will also have about 42 motor torpedo boats of small mixed classes designed for coastal defense and antiâ€"submarine duties. The number of aircraft carriers is as yet undecided; present there are two on the stocks, each of 19,250 tons. We are indebted to Viceâ€"Admiral Guse for this clear and complete exposition. Whatever else the Fuchrer may contemplate in his ‘strength through joy‘ visions, the posâ€" sibility of ‘another Jutland‘ is certainly not indicated." 29,000 tons, and three more under conâ€" struction, probably of 400,000 tons. Of cruisers, Germany will have 14 as aâ€" gainst the 70 at which our program is aiming. Her 26 new destroyers will be fine bceats of between 1,625 and 1.811 of its great railway system into the rich Kootenay country. Sir Edward is seen receiving a silver tray commemorating the occasion, from Mayor T. M. Roberts. On treme left of the picture. This, the third ceremony of its kind in which Sir Edward has participated, Saint John and Vancouver having preâ€" viously conferred the freedom of their cities, was a joint tribute to Sir Edward and to the pioneers of the road, many of whom were present to see the brilliant cereâ€" mony and to hear their own work of four dsceades ago praised. Anncuncement was made toâ€"day that the contract for the building of the new mill at Preston East Dome Mines has been awarded to the Canadian Comâ€" stock Company. Construction will start at once. Toronto, Sept. 21.â€"Boundaries of the longâ€"projected James Bay wildfowl sanctuary will be fixed this week by D. J. Taylor, Deputy Minister of Game and Fisheries. Mr. Taylor left Toronâ€" to last week for Mossoncre to begin his work. At least ten miles of shoreline on the southeast side of the bayâ€"the Hanâ€" nah Bay section as it is known to sportsmenâ€"are likely to be posted, with severe penalties prescribed for any hunters who cross this territory in purâ€" suit of the geese and ducks which nest in ccluntless thousands yearly. Certain areas on the west side of the Bayâ€"in from nine to fifteen miles from Moosoneeâ€"may also be converted into sanctuary grounds, although this course depends, Mr. Taylor intimated: on Friâ€" day at Toronto, on the survey which he will make with the coâ€"operation of the Hudson‘s Bay Company and other local authorities. The districts to be set aside will be patrolled by Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers from the Moose Factory post, under the jurisdiction provided them by the Fedcral Migratory Birds laws. Contract is Awarded for Building of Preston Mill Boundaries of Bird Haven to be Fixed Deputy Minister Now in Moosonee District Studyâ€" ing the Situation. Powassan News:â€"Imagination was given a man to compensate him for what he is not, and sense of, humor was provided to console him for what he is. "YOUR BANK AND HOW YOU MAY USE IT"â€"Ask for bhooklet BANK WHERE SMALL ACCOUNTS ARE WELCOME!‘‘ INO account is too small, and none too large, for the Bank of Montreal to handle with efficiency and courteous attention to its customers‘ individual requirements. You are invited to open an account with this bank. BANK OF MONTREAL Timmins Branch: T. W. TOD, Manager | Toâ€"day‘s Stocks Afton Augite Ashley Pase Moetals Big Missouri Beattie Bidgood Bobjo Bralorne Buffalo Ankerite Canadian Malartic Castle Tretheway Central Porcupine Central Patricia Coniagas . Coniaurum Con. Chibougamau Darkwater Dome Eldorado Falconbridge Gillies Lake Glenora Goldale Granada Gunnar Hardrock Hollinger Howsy .. Hudson Bay International Nickel Jackson Manion Kerr Addison Kirkland Lake Lebel Oro Leitch Lake Shore Little Long Lac . Macassa . ; McLeod Cockshut.t Manitoba and Eastern Mclntyre ... McKenzie Red Lake ; McWatters .......... Mining Corporation Moneta _ 4 McVittie Graham Naybob Noranda . Nipissing .. O‘Brien . Omega Pamour Paymaster Pickle Crow ... Pionger ... ced Preston East Dome Premier t Read Authier Reno . ‘Antonio. .;...::....... Sherritt Gordon ... St. Anthony ... Sullivan Con. Sudtiury Basin TS Sylvanite Siscce . Teck Hughes ‘Fopurn «....%.%...... Ventures ............ Waiteâ€"Amulet Wrightâ€"Hargreaves ... 23%% Pine Street North Timmins ESTABLISHED 1817 I NS U RANC E SIMMS, HOOKER DREW Listed HOUSES AND LOTS FOR SALE CONVENIENT TERMS 29,00 48.00 44 .40 46.50 ; 1.06 . 43 4 69.50 1.55 223 Brampton â€" Conservator: _ Captain 1.30 watt, one of the two officers of the 1.105 Army who regularly attend 25 the Toronto police courts to assist unâ€" 7 fortunate women, was recently interâ€" 30.75 viewed by the press. "It‘s getting terâ€" 1.88 rible, the number of women charged 5.00 with being drunk," she said. Captain 10% | Watt‘s remark was no doubt promptâ€" 2 ed by her personal experience without 20 reference to statistics. The cold facts 9 from the records of women charged 60 , with drunkenness in Toronto courts for 11683 the last few years are as follows: 1934, 14 on | 227; 1935, 345; 1936, 453; 1937, 538. 1.63 14.00 Dome Mines, Poroupine district, has 4 | d=clared the regular quarterly dividend *3 |of 50 cents por share, payable October 9 / 20 to shareholders of record Septemâ€" 28 ber 30, calling for distribution of $973,â€" 25 | 334 on the 1,946.663 shares outstanding. 142 ) This is the first divideond on the new 27isock following split of two new for 1344 ; one old earlier this year. 9.10, Current dividend will bring total disâ€" 1420 | tributed for the year to date to $3,893,â€" 711336, and grand total since inception 92 %of dividends in 1915 to $38.232,962. cmues 4.20 504 4.65 2.85 1.23 2.10 3.20 35 2.90 1.72 4.65 1.80 4.40 4.95 7.45 2.00 1.37 1.75 1.06 WN““NWNMNNOQQOQQQOOOOQO009 @% 0000 0e e OO 000000 0000 0060 % 0060690440 4 Dome Mines Declares Dividend for Quarter Phone 212 for Appointment 7 Pine Street N. Timmins A registered Eyesight Specialist at . Your Service Does a man go to work â€"â€"â€" day after day with a toothâ€"ache? _ Of course not. Yet . men go. to work day after day with defective vision and beâ€" cause it gives them no actual pain, they do not realize it. Don‘t take a chance o n straining your eyes. Have a comâ€" petent eyesight speciaâ€" list examine them beâ€" fore it is too late. OPTOMETRICAL DEPT Phoneâ€"Office 112 Residence 135 tnJ

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