Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Sep 1939, 2, p. 8

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JOe The husband corroborated. Trachy broke his Jaw he said, and put him in the hospital for five days. During his evidence he spoke in a low voice. His jJaw still was not functioning perfectly. Magistrate Atkinson sentenced Traâ€" chy to three months on the charge of assaultâ€"occasioning actual bodily harm «in the case of the husband and to one month on the charge of common asâ€" sault with regard to the wife.. Senâ€" tences were to run consecutively, he Saves Henry Kuusela Henry Kuusela was charged with naving liquor without a proper permit. When the case was to be tried Jan Haapa came forward and admitted Thomas Trachy admitted that it was quite likely that he slapped Mrs. Marâ€" garet Goudreau‘s face and broke the Jjaw of her husband. Theophile Goiiâ€" dreau. He was drunk at the time. The admission cost him a penalty of four months in jail. Mrs. Goudreau said that Trachy was angry at them because they refused to keep him while he was out of work. He came to their home and gave her a slap on the face. He smashed her husband on the jaw fracturing it. A Slapped Face A Fractured Jaw A Four Month Term Man Comes Forward and Admits Guilt of Charge Against Henry Kussela. Takes Penalty. l Sun. Midnight, Mon., Tues., Sept. 24th, 25th, 26th .Phil Strong‘s Exciting, Human story of the Great Middle West MATINEESâ€"2.30 p.m, (except Saturday) Saturday 2.00 and 4.30 p.m. EVENINGSâ€"1.00 pm. and 9.09 p.m. MIDNIGHT SHOWSâ€"Sunday 12.01 Tuesday 12.00 FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPT. 22nd, 23rd ‘ith Anne Shinlcv, Edward Ellis, Samuel 8. Hinds, Janet Beecher, Leon Errol ADDED SHORTS "SAGEBRUSH SERENADE" "GOLD" "ON THE WING" JANINE ECNARRAT AND Mia SLAVENS KA was drunk, Mrs. Goudreau A French production with English Titles that movieâ€"goers everywhere have relished keenly ALSO ADDED SHORTS Last Showing Toâ€"night, Thursday, Sept. 21st ALL THIS WEEK, ALL NEW ACTS HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE ALSO COMEDY AND NEWS PURE Well known to police all over the North is ‘Wild West" Couture. He apâ€" peared on his third charge of drunkâ€" enness this year and was sent away again, this time for three months. A bench warrant was ordered issued for Vaino Hurme, who was charged with second offense intoxication. Hurme did not appear in court and $50 cash bail which was provided for him, was ordered estreated. Blairmore Enterprise; â€" The only things getting larger about women‘s gowns are the shoulder straps. Three Months c Leo Massicotte was charged with keeping liquor for sale. He pleaded guilty but said that Albert Cauchon, who was jointly charged with him, "had nothing at all to do with it." The charge against Cauchon was withâ€" drawn and Massicotte was sentenced to three months, His place was made public for the period of one year and fifteen pints of beer seized by poli¢e was ordered confiscated. . ~ Walter Lejambe, pleaded gullty to a charge of reckless driving and was fined $25 and costs. There were many other traffic charges for such offences as speeding and violation of local bylaws. Charges of failing to instal sanitary sewerâ€" connections in places where were adjourned for a week. Wilfred Beaupre, just released from Jail was found sleeping in one of the stock markets. He was drunk and had no job or money, police said. Beaupre grinningly accepted the 60 days senâ€" tence. He seemed very much pleased in fact. Caught in Room Inspector Olson said that Leo Allen} who was charged with vagrancy, was caught redâ€"handed in another man‘s rooin with a bundle of the man‘s clothâ€" Iing. He was ready to decamp. As he was drunk the charge against him was vagrancy. Sentence was 60 days. Accordingly, the charge against Kuusela was withdrawn and a new inâ€" formation sworn out against Haapa, to which he pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to the alternative of a fine of $100 and costs or three months in jJail. that the liquor found in Kuusela‘s car was his and that he had it there withâ€" out Kuusela‘s knowledge. He did not have a permit, he said. 4+ o a _ an tm 46 uit »Ae Phone 590 seWwer, _ Again, he says: "Germany in the Arabic world is repeating the game she played with Italy in the Balkan. If she has no aspirations in Tunisia and none perhaps in Algiers, she cerâ€" Dr. Borkenau discusses Germany‘s vast territorial ambitions in Europse as well as in other parts of the world; in fact, he sees Germany‘s ambitions as worldâ€"wide, He points out that the whole talk about needing colonies to settle her surplus population has beâ€" come obsolete, for while it â€"might imâ€" press people when Germany: had eight million unemployed, it is meaningless today, when she is suffering from an acute shortage of labour. "Germany," he says, "regards her colonialâ€"claims as all her other present claims only as steppingâ€"stones to something else." ‘"In order to realize the full implicaâ€" tions, one must remember that some of the essential raw materials come from as far as Mexico, Brazil and Maâ€" laya, whereas these countries in their turn are supplied with industrial goods from all over the world. Germany‘s need of,. politicalâ€"economic expansion is therefore absolutely limitless.. She wants to keep up the highest standard of industrial efficiency. She cannot therefore dispense>~ with the products of the furthest corners of the world. Her .economic system prevents her from buying them. The only solution for her is to conquer them." f Dr. Borkenau possesses the quality of detachment so essential to sound historic writing. He writes dispasâ€" sionately and he uses phrases which are startling until one weighs them carefully, on secord thoughtâ€"such, for instance, as the following:â€" y ed value because it indicates bom the farsightedness and the clarity of the author‘s vision. Perhaps one of the most interesting is the mhort volume written as a Penâ€" guin Special by Dr. P. Borkenuu. afid entitled "The New German Empir (Collins, Toronto. Price 230¢). Dr. Borkenau, who will be remembered as the author of "Spanish Cockpit," in which he presented the results. of his personal survey of conditions in Spain in 1936 and 1937, has been resident in England.since 1934, having fallen out with the Nazis after holding a position as a regsearch Fellow of the ‘sociology in the University of Frankfort. In his, youth he was an enthusiastic supporter of the extreme section of the German labour movement. Last year in May~ Dr. Borkenau published "Austria and: After,‘ in which he revealed himself as a prophet of remarkable accuracy, forecasting many of the changes which have since taken place in the .Euroâ€". pean scene. <In the "New â€" German Empire" Dr. Borkenau has sought to set forth the definite aims of the Nazi crusade og expansion, the general drivâ€" ing forces behind that crusade, the manner in which it varies according to the areas in which it operates, and the most general common features beâ€" hind all variations in time and space. with every Dr. Borkenau Sets Forth the | Method Behind the Madâ€"| e P 1 n sds oo ts o host of Terry Kilburn, John Mills and a Garson, With Greer Last Showing Toâ€"dayâ€"Thursday Sept. 21st from the book reâ€" Prices at All Matineesâ€"CHILDREN 10c Sunday Midnight, Monday and: Tuesday ~September 24th, 25th, 26th Friday, Friday Mldmght and Saturday September 22nd and 23rd ROBERT DONAT INâ€" WITH BARKRBARA O‘NEIL, ONSLOW STEVENS W“SNOFFY’S PARTY" Band Numberâ€""WILL OSBORNE" EXTRA ADDED FEATURETTES | THE 3 STOOGES inâ€""SAVED BY THE BELL" Also OQOther Good Short Subjects "wWHEN TOMORROW COMES" CHARLES BOYEE IN l9 "CLOUDS QOVER EUROPE" With Ralph Rlclumxi and Valerie Hobson PALACE "GOODBYE MR. CHIPS" . Thursday, September 27 LAU RENCE OLIVER in A rather remarkable i;n;erview was given last week by Bernard M. Baruch, who is known to many in the Nortn. The int.erview is covered. in the followâ€" ing despatch appearing in a number of Canadian daily newspatpers es “The best way for the United States to keep out of war is to create an army, navy and airforce so, strong that noâ€" power or possible combination of powers would risk fighting,. in the opinâ€" ion of Bernard M. Baruch, financier head of the United States War Indusâ€" tries Board during the last year. . Dr.>â€"Borkenau regards as quite seriâ€" ousâ€" Germany‘s intrusion into South fiAmerlca He declares that if Gerâ€" many could win domination over the ;Buropean continent and break up the British Empire, her threat from Latin _America to the United States would become very strong and dangerous inâ€" 'deed "But," he adds, ‘"at present this is only a dream." Qulte so. In conclusion, Dr. Borkenau observes: "Nazi expansion is primarily an atâ€" Jsempt at a Fascist world revolution ~stimulated and backed by Germany. Here, and only here, lie Germany‘s \chances If all the countries threatâ€" ened .by her united against her, she (would be crushed by overwhelming force. She sets her hope in a disinâ€" tegratiqn of her adversaries, in the supposed decline of democracy and in the revolt of the more mature colonial \and semiâ€"colonial nations against the old empires. However much she may lure her potential enemiés into temâ€" _porary alliances, a fight along ideologiâ€" cal fronts is the mainstay of her policy. She could never, in the long run, put up with the existence ofâ€" a democratic country. The breaking of the power of Britain, France and the United States is therefore. her main Urges United States to Look After Its, Defences “ll _ e +6 is unpossible to say i\o’w far the Fascist world revolution_ will go. But it is cert.ain that its heirs wall not again be : Fasclst Even if Nagi Germany sweeps half the world _o@=mere, she will« m the end collapse, owing to her inhen"nt instability. She ,would then have been the pace-ma.kar for some otherâ€"regime not yet discernible." tainly has in the countries around the Suez Canal and the Red Sea." "After returning from Washington Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett has reâ€" spondsd‘to an appeal, delivered by -At.lantic telephone to underâ€" "‘the post of director of all Europea.n activities of the Canaâ€" dian Red Cross. The former prime minister of: Canada recently retired to an estate in Surrey. Rt. Hon. ; 1 "WATERFRONT" PERRY is k BRIAN DONLEVY AND JAC. WELLS IN â€"z28 |Tuesday, Wednesday, September 26th, 27th . l :GEoRIA DICKSON, MARIE WILSON, DENNIS MOORE IN ww wming to our theatres, we request our patrons to attend the Theatre not later than NEW LOW SUMMER ADMISSION PRICES AND FIRST RUN PICTURES Adults 25¢ â€" MATINEE â€" Children 10¢ Adults 30c â€" EVENINGS â€" Children 20¢ Thursday and Friday, September 21st, 22nd JACK HOLT, KATHERINE DEMILLE IN Matinee Daily at 2.30 p.m. Evenings 7.00 and 8.50 p.m. Special Children‘s Matinee every Saturday Morning at 10.30 a.m. Children‘s Ticket 10c "TROUBLE FINDS ANDY CLYDE"â€"A Comedy "AFRICA SQUAWKS"â€"A Cartoon "YANKEE DOODLE HOME"â€"A Musical "BEHIND PRISON GATES" d Shortâ€""YKOUTH IN THE SADDLE"â€"A Sport September 23rd, 24th and 25th Final Episode of "THE LONE ‘RANGER" "BARNYARD BASEBALL"â€"A Cartoon "WITNESS TROUBLE"â€"A Variety PARAMOUNT NEWS "God help the United States if they ever get by our oneâ€"ocean navy. Our army is very deficient and unable to put up any real defence against a strong invasion. The army is pitifully small, untrained and lacking modera arms and upâ€"toâ€"date munitions." "There was a possibility which the United States must prepare against. "A combination of powers might atâ€" tack us on one or both oceans. Toronto Telegramâ€"It will soon be rarder to keep up with the Joneses as the new 1941 auto models will soon be out. where he conferred (with President Roosevelt and others on national deâ€" fence, Mr. Baruch said in an interview Saturday that the ‘United States was "seriously unprepared" for war. Not to be overlooked in a cast which includes some 2,000 English boys, is little Terry Kilburn, child actor disâ€" covery of "Lord Jeff" and "A Christâ€" mas Carol," who offers all his childish appeal ‘to the part of Peter Cooley in the new offering. The varied episodes of the story have been deftly woven tozether in the deft hands of Director Sam Wood whose contribution to the success of ‘"Goodbye Mr. Chips" is a large one. Among the thrilling moments of the story are the rescue of the heroine from a peak in the Tyrolean Alps, a spectacular air raid during the World War and a great ball in the Vienna of the old days. Cricket and football matches add inâ€" terest and fast action. To the difficult role of "Chips" Roâ€" bert Donat brings a forthright and sinâ€" cere acting talent which marks him as one of the outstanding actors on the screen today. Playing four different stages in the life of the genial schoolâ€" master, from youth to old age, Donat makes him at once a human, breathing man, eccentric at times, but always understandable and lovable, and a symâ€" bol of the great profession of teaching. It is a performance which will live in the memory of screengoers for some time to come. Although "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" is dominated by Donat‘s powerful characâ€" terization, tremendous appeal is offered in the role of his wife, played by Greer Garson, who has never before been seen on the scercien hut whose work here insures her of stardcm .n the near fuâ€" ture. Lovely to look at, Miss Garson gives a warmth and intimacy to the role of the young girl whose life ‘~ ut off all too soon which make her sceac;: with Donat amonz those which stand out with clarity and power. The story of "Mr. Chips" is the story of the education of youth the world over. Donat plays the kindly schoolâ€" master who comes to a lanze English school as a young man and passes his entire life there. He becomes the ideal of the boys in his care, and when these boys grow up they send their sons tack to "Mr. Chips.‘" He meets and falls in love with a young and beautiâ€" ful girl and when she ultimately dies the tragedy deaves "Chips" with a great understanding and compassion. Chips," filmization of the celebrated James Hilton novel, which is to be at the Palace theatre Friday, Priday midâ€" night and Saturday of this week, Sept. 2s2nd and 23rd. Robert Donat, who gave the screen one of its finest performances as the idealistic doctor of "The Citadel," once again reveah_maconmmmm artistry Noted Film Showing Here Friday and Saturday. @ 00 YY AAA1ALX â€" L VY ~â€" OO ATEA N) Cartoonâ€""SNOFFY‘S PARTY" Band Numberâ€""WILL OSBORNE” Nn M _X S J J J _ C _ -oooooooooooooooooooooooo?ooooooooooon?.l "However," said Crown Attorney Caldbick, "I do think that there should be a charge of impersonating an ofâ€" ficer laid in this case." "That apparâ€" ently was what happened." Magistrate Atkinson agreed. Following the court hearing charges of impersonating police officers were There were two other witnesses but they could not say that they saw any one of the three actually take the beer. Accordingly, before a defence was subâ€" mitted, the Crown asked for a dlsmissal of the charge. The third and final visit saw another fight. Again he let them in "in the name of the law.‘" This time a fight was staged in the room where "I keep my stock." One of the three took two tLo*tles out of a case, Chenier said. "‘.00..0.0.000.. . -oooooooooooooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooooooooouoooofl On the second visit a short time later the men said that they were polâ€" ice officers. Thinking that they might be, he let them in, Chenier said. They said that they wanted to search the place but he refused to allow them to do so. A fight began and his attention then was riveted on the attempt to hit the biggest of the three "with a crock." The first time they came they asked him to sell them some beer, Chenier told the court. He informed them that he did not sell beer but that he did tell fortunes and if the person whose fortune he told gave him a "reasonable amount‘"‘ after, he was in the habit of setting up a round of beer. men, Joseph Maconse, Rene Broscoupe and Ernest Hebert, was dismissed, Maâ€" gistrate Atkinson recommended to polâ€" ice that the trio be charged with imâ€" personating police officers. Accordingly such charges were laid. Complainant in the case was Franâ€" cois Chenier. He said that the trio pald three visits to his home on Sepâ€" tember 14. All three were after midâ€" night. "‘They asked me to tell their forâ€" tunes and I did so," Chenier said. "After they gave me twentyâ€"five cents. They said that they had nothing other than a $20 bill. I borrowed scme money to change it for them but when they gave me a Chinese bill I refused." Fortune Teller Says He is in Habit of Setting up a Round Although a charge of stealing two Cartoonâ€""THE OLD FIRE HORSE" 1ciier, vays e Js in AMadit of Setting up a Hound of Beer for Patrons if Their Donations for His Mystic Forseeing are "Reasonable." Crown‘s Suggestion of Further Charges Adopted. Starring Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Cecelia Parker and Fay Holden Mascioli T heatre, Schumacher MIDNIGHT SHOW SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th, MONDAY AND TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th and 26th / LAURENCE â€"OLIVER IN WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27th and 28th ROBERT DONAT IN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th and 30th IRENE DUNN AND CHARLES BOYER IN FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22nd and 23rd THE HARDY FAMILY IS BACK AGAIN IN Wednesday, Thursday, September 27th, 28th NELSON EDDY, VIRGINIA BRUCE, LIONEL BARRYMORE SHORTS "POINTS ON POINTERBS" â€" "MINUTE TO THR BIG APPLE" Friday and Saturday, ROBERT TAYLOK, FLORENCE RICE, WALLACE BERRY in “STAND UP AND FIGHT" Shortâ€""MICE WILL PLAY" NEW EMPIRE Last Showing Toâ€"dayâ€"Thursday Sept. 21st "3 LOVES HAS NANCY"__ _ O AdXJ V Adhdi [RAAA AL) â€" A C d d 4 l ; Starringâ€"JANET GAYNOR, ROBERT MONTGOMEEY and FRANCHOT TONE SHORTâ€" "STARDUST "FLAMING FRONTIERS"â€"No: 13 . ... «y "I L‘:’- q‘a‘, \j' R s 6 Sunday Midnight Monday and Tuesday September 24th, 25th and 26th Adults ... Children The 3 Stcoges inâ€""SAVED BY THE BELL" FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW, MICKEY ROONEY in â€" "CLOUD $ OVER EUROPE "GOODBYE MR. CHIPS" Serialâ€""FLAMING FRONTIERS" No, 14 FREEDOM RING" .oooooooooooooouo.u‘noono?uoooo\ooonoonooooooooooi‘uooo‘ooooooooo,ooooooooooooooonooofi EMPIRE THEATRE, 25¢ Adults ......... Ti 10c Children ... laid against the three men. They were released on summonses until next court day. Toronto Globe and Mail:â€"The maâ€" Jority of men prominent in Canadian affairs today started work without prestige of any kind, and they reâ€" celived very little pay. They studied their particuplar line of activity; but, above all, they worked at‘their jobsâ€" worked hard and for long hours. A generation hence another group of aging and successful meéuwil! have the same story to tell of humble beginnings and the hard upward climb. For the right note in service and satisfaction in moving: get in touch with us. We guarantce greater care, greater courtesy and greater speed at NO greater price. Tnminr or TA R TRANSFER 22nd, 23rd TVE x* 20¢ 15¢

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