Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 30 Mar 1939, 2, p. 1

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Presidentâ€"Walt” (lrvawvs Secretary-'l‘rcasurerâ€"W. l). Forrester P.0. Box 250, 'l‘immins, Ont. Vislhing members of the Legion and cx-scrvlcommi are welcomed at. the Legion Hull. Cedar St. South. The: next meeting 01 the brunch will be held on VIMY NIG HT, S'ut. Apl. ‘th Wife (npologetically clpe for this cake ou boot. Gets Speedy Reiiei n-ptic now (Hammad b; can. thn will bring an the itching and distre- Not only do. this that he rfl promou rapid usd hour up!» son-s Ind wnunde. but pie ulcers are quickly rPHn‘ hauled. In thin diseases t Farm: is instantly swarm dry up and scala- o" in a The tune in true of lbrh Rheum ‘nd nth" akin erupt may, Hera-3:1 You an obtain Llonne’s l 'thh) in the origin“ V01. XXIV. N0. 25 Servin- ARCHITECT 7 Reed Block Timmins CHAS. V. GALLAGHER Ontario Land Surveyor Townsitcs Mining (.‘lnims (,‘ontrzu-ts Municipal Building. South Porcupine Phone 46 I’.O. Box 312 10 Balsam St. Nurth, '1‘immins, ()nt. Accounting Auditing Systems lnstullod Income Tax Returns Fin-d Phones 270-228-286 P.U. Box H7 P. H. LAPURTE, 0.0. A. ‘ MARSHALL-ECCLESTONE BUILDING Timmins - - - Ontario -14-26 273 Bank St, Ottawa, (72m. "Grotto J. E. Taylor, LL.B. Langdon Langdon MdNNIS BLOCK Timmius, Ont. Pl S. W. W'OODS. 0.1..5. Registered Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plane Estimates, Ii“. 23 Fourth Ave. Phone 36:! Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.LS. The RAMSAY COMPANY BAILIFFS. COLLECTORS and AUCTION EERS Room 6. 3 Pine Street North 'l‘immins. Ont. Room 5. 313 Government ltd. W. Kirkland Lake, Ont. E. (T. Brewer Ltd. Timmins Branch 88 Canadian Legion Barrister DEAN KESTER, KC. CHARLES H. KERR Reference Schumacher High School and many others on request. Barristers. Solicitors. Natal-”ms 1.". DE Ll’Xl') AN!) llY(illi.\'l( Barrister. Solicitor, Etc. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. Registered Patent Solicitors Full Information FREE on Request D.- R. Franklin BARBER SHOPS Bruno Cumovulc. prop. Basement Reed Block and 6 Third Avenue. 'l‘immins cc Satisfaction San drug store. Rrflsters, Solicitors, Etc. MASSEY BLOCK TIMNHNS. ONT. and South Porcupine ll.\ RDLY A ’I‘RlBl'Tl-j S. A. CALDBICK 'MOOOO¢IooooM_ ling moceucally)â€"â€"I took the 1 as cake out of the cook: Second Section Money to Loan lot-In! Solicitor nev C ou a 5m; Phone 1580 Sanitary Notary .UG 12-8-38 44-26 44-26 quit tf number. and only the light “miners'” hats were rcflccte the glow 0f the ice surface youngsters performed to a tu gave good advice. “Whistle V Work," and each little parta his work. A number which ‘brought forth ex- ceptional group form, was “Pride of the North." in which eighteen girls of the junior skating club took part. These girls were attired in identical yellow and blue “bell-hop" costumes, and their skating harmonized as they gracefully “danced oh ice" to the music of “Stom- pin‘ at the Savoy.“ “Below Surface," in which a large number of the juniors performed in the mining outfits so well known here. was a special hit for its “difference." All the lights were turned out for this number. and only the lights in the “miners' ” hats were reflected against The presentation of the cup was made by Mr. 'D. Keeley, of the “McIntyre Mines. and judges were Mrs. T. A. C. Tyrell, Mr. Bruce Palmer and «Mr. Wohl- rob. The cup was presented to the Porcupine Skating Club at the begin- ning of its active season by Mr. W. G. Reburn. of Toronto. who was a visitor to this part of the North with the skat- ers of the Granite and Toronto Skat- ing clubs. The local club has a proud possession in this cup. and it serves to remind them that the donor of the cup is the father of Stewart :Rcburn. who has won fame in the Sonja Henie Ice Carnival. club McIr Skating Carnival at the McIntyre Arena Is Delightful Event First Exhibition of Figure Skating by Porcupine Skating (‘lub Makes Decided Hit \Vith Big Crowd. Audrey Sherbin and Olga Bernick Outstanding Juveniles. Many Notable Numbers. dished at Timmins, 0nt.. Canad: cry MONDAY and THURSDAY donor of the cup m :Rcbum. wha Sonja Home Ice tum: take gaiust. These which c You L was so jlunblcc who was drinking :1] said the witness. “"I the floor and nude: There was no room accused there so I to When he brought, in. he knew I the people in the kit and co other wom-c n Principal witness for the prose-cu was Police Sergeant, DcsRochcs. said that. he raided the Chartrand sidcnce at 30". Wende avenue, real 2.40 am. on the morning of Mon March 26. With him wene Consta chic and Guolla. First. said Sergeant DcsRoches. listened at the window. Inside 0 'Elpliier xChartrqnd will spend the next three months in jail as the result of a conviction on a charge of keeping liquor for sale. in police court on Tues- da-y afternoon. Principal witness for the prosecution be heard the clink Elphicr Chartrand Sent to Jail. Police Said House So Crowded Had to Take Accused Outside to Question Him. lVIagistrate Gives Fatherly Advice to a Young: Couple. “Party Results in Term of Three Months For Keeping for Sale Will Remember Vienna." Watching her grace and sure ability. the onlookers were able to understand how the one hundred members of the skating" club (Continued on Page Three) Miss Margaret =Eyre Austin was a very popular entertainer as she performed a, single number to the music of “You Will Remember Vienna." Watching her grace and sure ability. the onlookers rSL. said ‘crgeant DesRoehes. he ncd at, the window. Inside could leard the noise of many people and clinic of bottles. When they enter- he house they found three men in kitchen. They were wearing hats coats and drinking beer. In an- -r room were six men and two Above is a picture showing the wav the Hudson‘s Bay Company is to pay its rent to the King. in accordance with the Company‘s charter. when he visits Winnipeg on May 24th. Elsewhere in this issue will be found an article explaining the terms of the charter and jumbled yo TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 19 namc his hou nder the chcstcrfielc com to question L11 I took him outside.” zght. Chartrand bacl name of only one o 5 house. Only one o HU [)SONS l’ AY (0. TO PAY ITS RENT TO THE [\1N(. 1nd who w There was :1‘ the one; \H nue, rear. : of Monda e Constabh ”(In Man He 11' the eleven people knew the name of their host. Chartrand admitted that. he was not working. and when brought to the police station, he had $47 on him in bills and silver. On previous. occasions. said Sergeant DcsReches, police have noticed heavy taxi traffic to the place. In the house were found 13 pints of beer and a part bottle of liquor. Chartrand lived there with his common-law wife. ’Religious Drama at ' the United Church at 7 p.m.. there will be a feature of very special interest. This will be the presentation by members of the Young People‘s Union of the religious drama. “The Alabaster Box." Sudbury Starâ€"Well, anyway. spring must be just around the next snow cornice. At the morning service. at 10.45 mm there will the the reception of new members. whil at the evening service There will .be special services at. the Timmins United Church on Sunday. April 2nd. “The Alabaster Box” to be Presented ‘by Members of the Young People’s Union ll ‘obC-ratory evidence was given by able Lepic and Guolia and two .1 appeared as defence witnesses. were Pearl King and Miss 'A. Pel- They both said that a party i progress. Testifying; on his own Chai'trand said that he never Mm Abbmum iquo; is no doubt, that. this :1 Magistrate Atkinson. rntenec of three month place public for a yeai .e liquor confiscated. Fatherly Talk to Atkinson gave 3 fm no doub the plans under which the “rent." will be paid. “T0. fulfill this part of the charter." says a lette1 from the Hudson 5 Bay Co. to The Advance we will yield and pay two elk heads and two black beave1s to His Majesty King Ge01ge the Sixth at Winnipeg" 24th May 1939'.’ MR ) a your [5 char: md MC Nine drunks were given the option of a fine of $10 and costs or thirty days in jail. Three men paid fines of $1 and costs each for minor traffic infractions. George Parise, Louis Cyr and George Sirois were each fined $10 and costs with the alternative of thirty days. All three pleaded guilty to having ob- tained meals by false pretences. “You are very generous to withdraw 031‘ . whc ing her husband with non-support. She maintained that her husband just left her without reason. They were living with her parents she said. The husband. on the other hand said that he had written a letter to his wife asking her to come back to him. He Said he bought her $35 worth of cloth- ing and she took it home and her sisters tried it on. He objected to that. furthermore. he had been kicked out by her ‘l‘ather who threatened to kill him. The couple .were given a week to make up ‘by the Magistrate. “Why you are only a couple of kids.” he said. He advised them to get away from their “in-laws.“ um ll 11 Resolutions asking for a new bridge across the Mattagami River. a clean- up of slum areas in Timmins and a programme of reforestration in the North, were sumitted by the Timmins Cltizens' League at the regular meeting of council on Monday night. The present bridge w pedestrians and motorist preface of the resolution 30TH, 193E Citizens’ League to Ask New River Bridge Will Also Ask Government to Start Scheme of Refores- tration. Ask Council to Build Low Rent Houses Under Dominion Housing Plan. Mayor Objects. Is Taxpayers’ Money, He Says. Am .u'l 'Ol ha large in Vic said the M wiLhdx-cw 11 lllCll 1t rf N C) Nim- Drunks h 11' 11111 1C char .1111 p ll 1( i5 .o withdraw lour of your 7 a plaintiff of assault 2 complain- of a “shin- ght. a danger to like, said the A new bridge ll 'ublishod at Timmins. Ont.. Canada Every MONDAY and THURSDAY IA ‘workman appeared to ask the council to assist him to get an increase in his pension from the Ontario Com- pensation Board. He lost an eye in the Hollinger Mine a while ago. he said. Now he was out of a job and living on a pension which recently was increas- cd from $5.75 a month to $11.25 a month. Asked how he lost his eye. he said, “They sent me to the most dirty place in the mine.” He said the Hollinger gave him a light job immediately after he lost the sight of the eye and then insisted that he go underground again. That he couldn‘t do. “T he compensation board has a 30 or 40 million dollar slush fund down in the South and it can’t pay this man more than $11.25 for the sight of one eye." said Councillor Armstrong. “There is all kinds of that. sort of thing in this town. It is saturated with similar A resolution was passed ordering that the volunteer firemen be paid $625, the usual amount, paid after their first quarter. President of the League “Eligenc'La- fontaine said that a delegation was going from he1e to Toronto to inter,- view the government with legai‘d rt’o thei1 pioposals 1ega1ding a bridge, 'a housing programme and reforestation. He would also take up the matter of the rock construction. Mr. Lafontaine wanted a delegation from the council to accompany the League's representa- tives. However. the mayor assured him that the council would 'be extremely busy on the estimates during the next fortnight. ma A more important matter which should be taken up was that of the rock construction just this side of Sandy Falls. Each year cribbing; piled up a- gainst the obstruction forming a dam which ‘forced the water back and flood- ed the banks of the river in ’I‘immins, said the mayor. He advised the League to get busy and have the government remove that obstruction. Later Hugh Anderson spoke of the League's resolutions. He [pointed out the advantages of such schemes and could not see why the council itself did not launch into a. housing programme under the National Housing Act. “Don‘; forget it is the taxpayers’ money we are spending." said the may- or. ' League should approach the govern- ment about, the matter. Referring to the housing resolution the Mayor said that it would be diffi- cult for the town itself to finance and carry out a. low cost housing program under the National Housing Act. How- ever. there were many private com- panies which were willing to do so. He understood that the Dominion govern- ment. under the Act. paid the first year‘s taxes on such a house. said the mayor, fifty per cent of the second year’s. and twenty-five per cent. of the third year's. was needed and its construction would relieve an acute unemployment prob- lem in Timmins. The slum area resolution pointed out by a town planning expert brought here some years ago by the Lions Club said that the town resembled a city slum area. Furthermore, said the re- solution. Dr. Russell. Timmins lung ex- pert, said that the town was badly in need of a clean-up of housing condi- tions if tuberculosis was ever to be com- batted here. Under the terms of the National Housing Act ninety per cent of the cost of a municipal housing programme would be provided by the Dominion government. The resolution urged that the council take steps to secure the necessary permission from {provincial government to put a hous- ing programme into effect. Previous councils had approached the government about a new bridge across the river. said the mayor in reply, and had got just exactly nowhere. How- ever. he believed the Timmins Citizens’ JDE R( 11 U fei'ring to an earlier discussion strong said that if Dr. Norman ell started in the mines he would the original cause of most of the rculosis in this town. 9 council promised a. look into the er of a pension for the man. _e Department of 'Health of the cial government, wrote to Juk'L \.OD.u.. «UUEQZ 333». 23er 54.0..qu £233) .33.u 92.442 Int/w \rbOnwOZ LrU} \3- Z. H.242 .030 22,021 Lhdm we Sudbury Stanâ€"11 the like war in Spain a the a hose on the bur Cochrane. March 20-~ IL this year to merge the t districts of North and Sout and celebrate July 12th 11 of Cochrane. The eterritory included in t tricts thus united exu Hearst in the West, to K11 1n the South. {From pres tions all Orange lodges in diStrict will be represenm rane on July 12th. It. 5110 large and noteworthy gum: expected to have a numb-’- ers of outstanding talenL 1. as well as inside the area. be several bands in the par: procession is expected to he: Orange parade ever gun”; North. mayor to tell him that the worclin the National Health Am had I slight]:-r changed. When the director of sanitary en eering was last in Timmins. said mayor. he was told that the (‘01 here did not feel that it could as: enforce the section of the Act mm ling 13801316 to have sewage (-onnvct Now that the wording was changed council did have that power. Districts Merge To Observe [My 12th. North and South (Huihl'zum Lodge L.O.L. to (fcld‘n‘utc at Cochrane. Meets Second and Fourth Munduys 01 each month in Oddfcllows‘ Hall. TIMMINS. ()N'l‘. Meets First and Third Mondays; ()1 uurh moth in the Oddfellows Hull. Visiting Brethren Welcome Wm. lsnor, Treasurer Third AvcnUe ST. CATHARINES, ONT. (‘.'\.\' 6-16_39 REDGRAVE-REDGRAVE CO. Counsellors in Selling. linuminv of Unpatentedâ€"Patontul nu.” Write Open for Auditing and Acvuuntin Engagements SYSTEMS INSTALLED Swiss Watchmakcr Graduate of the Famous IIomlugicul Institute of Switzerland Phone 1365 Credit Reports (‘ullvt'tinnb Accounting and Auditing 10 Balsam Skeet North. 'l‘immins Phones 270-228-286 1'1). [50x [47 -39-2 9.0. Box 1591 Empire Block -â€"â€"“â€"_â€".â€"â€"â€"lâ€"ou- I’ORCUPINE (‘ RE l)I'l‘ ' Corporation Ltd. ) L...0L N0. 2 Q5; Ci! [\2 0. E. Kristensen CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENUE Phone 640 DR. E. L. ROBERTS Certified Public .-'\C('ount;un PHONE 386 CHIROPRACTOR X- RAY NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 607 |â€""_.'I JOS. L. I’ATE N'l‘ SPECIALIST Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat Single Copy Five Cents AUDITOR ’. BAUMAN INVENTORS L. Callahan. W.M G. N. ROSS Iflâ€"llâ€"llâ€".._||â€"-||â€".loâ€" rlIâ€"IIâ€"I._|.â€"||â€"II-â€"OOI Timmins, Ont Empire Bluvk L. Taylor. {cu St'u'rtu ry Tim mins ll U said coux compc m 1H“ all) ()r ll doub 11mm 1X ) (u 14-26 Jr .0! will )WH Ll Kk 01 l( H I)

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