Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 21 Jul 1941, 1, p. 6

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imali polita could the v 100 y: We point ball from told daurin AaA W nic mning surfa ed Qur guard cCliffe, perili isle beacl M.C.A dinn tine tyâ€"fi1 and : trans toI anod finis} bette iml hut oT mad secu later araf aut che gIra pa thre low . righ ied ng 11 for 0o: pickin to ma seen and afte cgom{ wialk waitress last, how beckoned fore. 1 descent friends graph fron girl, "but you Sudbury Statr unifo "Hov we C( formn fAirst one Was day avwed ted t the ¢ the : erly (By trict Air F stude: Train the n the D Series of Stories to Experience from Duty to Wings. Students in the Air Training Plan Write of the Work Not 1b PACGE 1% 1t %] A 11 1 I inished h I owe?"~ for moving mord loubleâ€"decker Australians, men. plaved nd l1 aJ 11 romoted nd mbe mmonwealth Air were formerly in ‘ss. Arranged by Information, the ‘les are by Leadâ€" mmy Lee, formâ€" of The Toronto admirers â€" asked going overseas?" r embarrassment ut of confessing mly the day beâ€" modesty we conâ€" k‘to our civilian n1 give our autoâ€" 1] notl interesting. One xnpected lecture bo stint 20â€"belo 11 11 trainmning wWas ing to Rockâ€" s ‘by shortly a change for «exercise was the bus. Beâ€" eat help, too, worry about suit, and ties hether people shouldâ€" its, WC OU 11 ted" to the course, and 1 over again we were "on Twenty years ago at a meeting of o Tell of the Timmins town council it was deâ€" : r OL | cided to lay 7600 linear feet of cement m Guard | walk during the year. The walks were to be on Hemlock st., Sixth ave,, Secâ€" ond avenue, Pine street, Fourth avenus, should be of , Fifth avenue, Second avenue, Birch, ins and dis.| Ralsam, Maple and Elm streets. The 1e â€" joined thei total cost was estimated at $15,000.09. s written by| At the same meeting of the town nwealth Air| council a byâ€"law was duly passed for formerly in | the more stringent regulation of trafâ€" Arranged by ) fic in town. Commenting on this byâ€" ormation, the‘ law, one good citizen said:â€""Accordâ€" are by Leadâ€"| ing to this byâ€"law a man won‘t be awble / Lee, formâ€"| to run a wheelbarrow without parking The Toronto} it on the right side of the road and wearing harness approved by the town 1 T. R. L€€) | inspectors and police while the said light â€" that | wheelbarrow may be in motion." This The NArSt! pyâ€"law, however, proved very valuable d somewhat| in safeguarding life and property in s they strutâ€" | pimmins and good people soon recogâ€" probably 80t ) nizeq that its restrictions were not day we were| particularly onerous, especially in view “’fho glanced of the protection given the public. e sn eP iar s SstanCce ind hi nCt he 1f1 oyal Winter erly housed nd assorted sure what . and that the â€" be n On (OOK t} hours were untry docâ€" transition life dian‘t h being up by shortly smnent given the rouble, At s meal and wéometr 11 of grapes. me sunny ic, â€" sandy and dusky here we‘d mice warm ‘ €@ogs and 1t Wantedâ€" tralia, C said the cents."â€" 1J i1is mifle breakâ€" tripped ind his t Man $ it your; vas the a to be inother in Oreoeâ€" . meet m the themâ€" €£IT ire £1 1 uni~â€" family silent ~the night gGown m all isked s in upon r1ard uch O #Tel: the il id and maintenance of existing roads 1 this country. The Advance urged tha both the railway extension and th road work be carried on, but that : | finances were such that ons or th other had to be dropped then certainl it was the railway extension rathe i than the should be deferred There was no use opening furthe country if the government could nc ‘ look after the immense area alread ‘ opened. Wide circles of friends and acquaintâ€" ances were deeply grieved twenily years ago at the news from Iroquois Falls that Hiram Alexander, for many years a popular resident of ‘Timmins, had been drowned in the river at the Falls. He was crossing the river in a canoe when a violent gale sprang up. The canoe upset and Mr. Alexander met death by drowning. In referring to the death, The Advance at the time said:â€""He was one of those quiet, steady, fine charactered men who win the respect and esteem of all. For several vears he was foreman at Timâ€" mins for the Northeéern Canada Power Co. Some months ago he left here to accept a position in the electrical deâ€" partment of the Abitibi Power Paper Company at Iroquois Falls." An article in The Advance twenty years ago dealt with the great importâ€" ance to the North of the forest indusâ€" tries. Protection of the forests from fire was urged, as well as better reguâ€" lation by the government to prevent exploitation by a few of the forest wealth that should be viswed as the property of all. In referring to an Old Boy‘s Reunion at Goderich, Ont., The Advance called attention to the fact that there were many Goderich people in this district. In referring to an Old Boy‘s Reunion at Goderich, Ont., The Advance called attention to the fact that there were many Goderich people in this district. "There is somebody from nearly everyâ€" where in the Porcupine camp," said The Advance: Among thoss in this district from Goderich, the following were noted:â€"iProvincial Officer Moore, R. Richardson, Sheriff Caldbick, T. . N. 0. Cammissioner MzLaren, and the Youngs, of Cochrane. PBwenty years ago suryvey wo being carried on by the T. Commission north of survey was being made in prep for an extension of the T. Railway some seventy miles n{ Cochrane. Some suggested th NX V oniy judge roll, â€" of Fi in a T wenty Y ears Ago zl"rom the Porcupine Advance EFyles D P PA â€"AL AAL LAAA P AP P P * ies the B00 linear feet of cemer e year, The walks wer lock st., Sixth ave,, Sec ne street, FPourth avenu was not neari necessity for road North and the : eparAalLor N. O north 0o Mne 1€ sergfantâ€"major can drink | Height of Someth A Detroit man has been advice from Canada that i of something or other, It read: Ccanyv a men the â€" * . passed a bill hav Turk mak aoesn‘t set th Well, for on them that {fram{ of th deput men‘s thing: A lady is very muc the government doin We have aocuments pourIng r yed chario peared had difficul in bathing o give advice For instance s quite enthu ineâ€"but h hat soaks gram week Street Railw xh 91 All was loveliness and allure. They were gazing with wonder into hat fair room where the girls manuâ€" acture all those bright (?) remarks hey turn out about the society folks. There swung the men on, a swing Toronto Goes to Extremes in Rain hould i6 °mM â€"aAillâ€" iem have nCt e minsos Wouldn The las 3,01 Imagint nen rve and But she Th uch Hert With the preser T drivins in fu it n LN ite 76 Itself 11 Ani1 il cnhnegqlu iment of howed I It Rains When It Rains No nigh nod TC ) ap O 31 na(k come Welcome to German:y ) W ‘olt 12 n 1l howed Berlin. Tea On a Scaffold o B6 nohl 9l @c1l1o0n 'the.')" s going west on Kir Always the Same of 1USIA driv Ccnservatism ery much pet M it ncludin It1 1l 1e border. No Chegu 11 man wWwe W Punch avid T *A nd hnha thing, it is much easi> han to follow it. we know one man who astic to coaonserve gasoâ€" History Repeats And Other Items. :can drInk Deel of Something 20â€"minu gOVv illy xh ppi l nt im pUut O 11 pron ir ma up n rdodv le practist the people _~and wha Al af 17 Thomas Richard TT "Misses the y in ible 1€ J11 11 hi lookin 1920. iragement of th wan in old lookin wait in ths uple of the 16 GqUu f1 h iven some the height »ld di reat ; coquld bu 11 m jJed abou f preach ng comâ€" Governâ€" T TV n ing out Russian tradesâ€" SDPia V d will penIin I«¢ â€"gasoâ€" vachts 1C wveild M THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO TL 9Y from pan be 11 k of ho motr â€" bu veI wh mM has OU bu th and fill la 1 h AK (From Dept. of Health) The outbreak in Hamilton, a few | months ago, of no less than 23 cases of l Trichiniasis, the disease conveyed to | humans by eating infected pork, turnâ€" ed medical attention of that city, as well as that of provincial health auâ€" thorities to a fresh study of the Cases "In the affair at North Cobalt the ladies of the LO.B.A., when they arâ€" rived at the hall for their regular meeting on Monday evening, found the building had been entered but, with the exception of breaking the lock on a cupboard in which regalia was stored, there was no damage and nothing had been taken. An opsn window showed how the marauders had left, and proâ€" bably how they entered, the hall. They had taken a number of sticks of stoveâ€" wood from the supply kept in the building and had arranged them on the floor‘in the form of a cross, placing the lodge Bible carefully over the inâ€" tersection of the two lines. There was no clue to the identity of the gullty parties, Constable Simpson said, but the building will in all probability be more securely fastened up in future." Possibly Moses, when thousands :)f‘ years ago he forbade the Children of | Israel to eat the flesh of swins, hadi an inkling that a disease was con-! nected with its consumption, Mohammed, following his example in the seventh century, consciously or unâ€" conszsiously protected the hosts of I.s- lam against Trichiniasi«. It was not until a hundred years agol that Sir James Paget noticed the charâ€" l acteristic trichiniasis nodules while performing an autopsy. Other cases were reported from Europe and Ameriâ€" | ca through the last century but little, was kncwn about the extent of the | disease until the last two decades, Workers in various surveys of. autopsy ; j said on Tuesday. "The girl at Granite Lake, a Miss Doris St. Louis, aged 17, was certainly bitten by a dog, Constable Simpson found, but there was every appearance that the wound, on her leg by the way, was healing up nicely. The affair had been reported by a Cobalt man who had been fishing in the lake, the Ofâ€" ficer said, and it was claimed the girl‘s wound had not been treated by a doctor. The dog was tied up reguâ€" larly and had been fed on raw meat, and when someone started teasing him he aitacked the girl. There was no question *of rabies affecting the aniâ€" mal and no alarm felt over the girl‘s injury. "With reports of a girl severely bitâ€" ten by a dog and left without medical attention at Granite Lake, and the pranks of alleged practical jokers who made the "sign of the cross" on the North Cobalt Orange Hall, Provincial Constable Fred Simpson had a rather busy day on Monday before his invesâ€" tigations into the doings of the disâ€" trict wore completed. Nothing serious developed, however, and so far as the two cases cited are concerned, there will not likely be any action by the law enforcement authorities, the officer said on Tuesday. thorities disease. Recent 1 that three ill, one be similarity found to have ealen Ssausage Dougnt from one dealer, about two weeks beâ€" fore the onset of the disease. FPurther research through the packing comâ€" pany revealed two potential producers, one of whom had five cases of Trichinâ€" iasis in his own family from eating sausage prepared from one of his own no The following is from last Thursâ€" day‘s issue Oof The New Liskeard Speaker:â€" They did. It was 446 feet high. The party broke up just before th boss arrived on his rounds, with th painters saying they hoped they dre that window for the second coat abou 3.30 pm. this afternoon. We bet that window gets 16 coats be fore this job is finished. Howevetr dangling 1 the girls t tall it is. They dit t Meantime down cams the rainâ€"b nobody noticed. Sincs the chatter couldn‘t be like is when the girls get together witho the painters being embarrassed (v found out about that from seeir "Charley‘s Aunt") small talk filled . the time between tea gulps. It was discovered that one of 1] painters ‘came from Coventry (whi is something quite different than b ing sent to Coventry). It was also discovered that th: didn‘t know the name of the B. of | buildinz, and replied, to the gir amazement, that "there were oth almga plac jJOKe and stage in the afternoon downpour, but never notiqing the rain because of the dazzling loveliness of the ladies, and because of a cornice that prajected alice Probe Sign of Cross on Orange Hall suspect Trichiniasts. re followed up and tw es discovered. All twenty ind to have eaten saus m one dealer, about tw 16 1z2ement, es beside n there." their neads just happened d outside tha mq-chat.-and-s irls with the t big p bit c their paintâ€" they are no handed out in Province lating Infected Pork ‘r, they probably visu from the top of it and to phone up and find ou O he mark, servicties painters must hary coy with serviet‘e chins .pro smattered s at "there Toronto: | 1€¢ Lake, a Miss , was certainly table Simpson ‘ry appearance 2g by the way, The affair had and that‘s n 1 were id th ph arge were | . e bought| material now esiimate that in Canada 31 n Mi stated rcutely JR nilder t now irls he; 13 CV 1 of | Cause Cannot Win tof God never meant that such a cause 1â€" gshould win. In all the world it never is has. In all the world it never will. ~Now come the winer of the people‘s ie | discontentâ€"nature‘s signal for the undoing of the Hapsburg and the Hoâ€" d henzollernâ€"and the bold Von Hindenâ€" ly | burg, that erst cried havoc and let slip ie the . . . (part of the clipping is not is | decipherable here) . . . of a poor mother s and talk of peace; to talk of peace like very drab regardless of Serbia lying swoop across Belgium‘ and on to Paris; possessed of France, to turn upon Rusâ€" sia. ‘Twas to the Kaiserâ€"mind as easy as falling off a. log. Now as ever, here as elsewhereâ€" "The bestâ€"laid plans 0‘ mine and men gang aft agley." , There stood Belgiumâ€"little David with his sling ! ! ! Who so believed it possible? And, the French !!! z The Lord had not deserted France, and the French peopleâ€"may heaven continue to bless France and the French people ! ! A little late and a little lame, rich old old lubberly John Bull ambled up, but "Got there,"‘ the battles of the Marne were fought. Slowly the encirâ€" cling lines widenedâ€"the over confident hordes drew backâ€"and Paris was saved. There and then the cause of the Hoâ€" benzollern and the Hapsburgâ€"to hell with them ! ! !â€"was lost. It was lost and they knew it. It was lost and they proclaimed it lost by the last ditch campaigns of murder which followed on land and sea. Terror might piece out the shortage of "kultur"â€"the defiâ€" ciencies of Kruppism might perchance be made good by frightfulness. Fatal mistake ! ! ! they are freed by the gastric juices. They reproduce in the intestines and the larvae find their way to the muscles of the body, sométimes the brain itself. The larvae in the muscles encyst themselves and die. The cyst calcifies, causing irritation in varying degrees,. and occasionally death. Health authoritiese point out that the disease may be completely preâ€" vented in twe ways. Hog raisers should see that thrir animals have no access to raw pork clippings or to rats (which also entertain the parasite at times). Most important, however, citizens may protect themselves by thoroughly cookâ€" ing all pork or pork, products. Many cases of "Growing pains" .or slight "rheumatic attacks" are unâ€" doubtedly caused in this way. The parasites, enter the digestive tract in infected pork, insufficiently cooked. They are enclosed in cysts from which and United States, one individual in seven has been infected with Trichinâ€" ella Spiralis. Article of Quarter Century Ago Applies to Germans Toâ€" â€"day Local Citizen Has Clipping of Interest Toâ€"dav. the reâ€" the the dead at his feet: regardless of Belgium slain in her sanctuaries; yet betraying ‘ the spirit of his dream of bl and conquest when he said, "If the Prench want Alsaceâ€"Lorraine let them come and get, it." Please God they will, not the war end until they do. _ _ The loyal, the true American hates no land and no people, but he loves only his own:; and loving his own, he says Ito the rest, the United States wobld stand friendly and just in his combat of nations, demanding that each shall | respect the law of nations; expecting geach to obey the laws of God, but reâ€" quiring of all the homage due alike to our dignity and prowess; due alike to | our rights and our standing:; our rights on land and sea: our marine. commerâ€" cial, industrial and territorial rights. "Our Turn Next*"* We may take nothing for granted, however; we must prepare to defend our rights. If Germany win our turn will come: nothing is surer than that. In that event the Kaiser would snap his finger in our face and exclaim, "A fig for your Monroe Doctrine ! ! !" We have no quarrelâ€"could have no guarrelâ€"with France. Our quarrel with England is but skin deep. Putâ€" ting the blathering Englishman and the spreadâ€"eagle American aside, John and Jonathan can always reach some kind of common ground. Touching the dssues of this war,. John is wholly right i‘â€"-he is indeed fighting the battle of Libertyâ€"and Jonathan asks only that !he have a care and not monkey too ifreely wifth the buzzâ€"saw of Yankee sensibilities. But, apart from our obâ€" vious interest in a European balance, with the Hohenzollern and the Hapsâ€" burgâ€"not the German peopleâ€"we have. a score to settle which will down at no man‘s bidding; the organized moveâ€". ment to involve us#in civil war by a. proâ€"Teutonic propaganda which was none the less an invasion than it was contemptible and absurd; the murders in the Irish Sea, yet unatoned for and unavenged; the criminal activities diâ€" rected from Berlin at once against our neutrality and our industries, and the impudent support given these first by the Hapsburg through Dumba, then by the Hohenzollern through Bernstorff, Boyâ€"Ed and Von Papen yet lingering on the forbidden threshold. | The Traitors Here t Except for these, public opinion in | the United States: might be divided. It is subsatntially united. As reatters| stand the American who sides with the | Hohenzollern and the Hapsburgâ€"to| hell with themâ€"is disloyal to Amcrica., Whoever ‘he is, wherever he be found,| he is a traitor to his country; the man | Leave destination up to and including Monday, July 28, EXCEPT as folâ€" lows: From Stations North of Toronto, tickets will be honoured on Train 47, ex. Toronto, 11.15 p.m., Monday, July 2##%; from Windsor up to 12.30 a.m., Tuesday, July 29; from Jellico, Geraldton, Beardmore, Nakina, Tashota and Longlac up to Wednesday, July 30, 1941, Children 5 years of age, and under 12, when accompanied by guardian. HALF FARE Tickets Good in Coaches ONLY No Baggage Checked Bargain Excursion tickets NOT GOOD on Pool Trains Nos,. 6 and 15, between Toronto and points East thereof. Bargain excursion tickets to Peterboro good anly on €. N. R,. exclusive trains between Toronto and Peterboro, Bargain excursion tickets NOT GOOD on "The Northland"â€" Trains 49 and 50. CORNWALL, HAMILTON, LONDON, PETERâ€" BORO, (Via Toronto), WINDSOR and Intermediate points. T. N. 0. and N. C. R. Stations, via North Bay and Canadian National Railways TCO 3. Application will be made by the Corporation to the Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertaking of the said work and any owner imay within twentyâ€"one days after the first publication of this notice file with the Board his objection to the said work being undertaken. Notice of Intention to Open and Construct Lanes (b) A LANE between Maple £ of Fifth Avenue being composed 216â€"217â€"218â€"283â€"284â€"285 and 286 a 2. The estimated cost of the work is $5,500.00, of which $157.25 is to ‘be paid by the Corporation. The estimated cost per foot frontage is $5.24. ‘The spceial assessment is to be paid in ten equal annual instalments and the estimated annual rate per foot frontage is $0.646. 4. The said Board may approve of the said work being undertaken, but ‘before doing so it may appoint a time and place when any obâ€" jections to the said work will be considered. TAKE NOTICE THAT 1. The Council of the Corporation of the Town of Timmins intends to open and construct as a local improvement the following lanes: {a) A LANE between Maple, Street and Birch Street north of Fourth Avenue being composed of the North 12 feet of Lots 223â€"224â€" 995â€"226â€"275 and 276 according to Plan Mâ€"30 Sudbury and of the North ten feet of Lots 277 and 278 according to Plan Mâ€"30 Sudbury. CORPORATION OF THE TOWN OF TIMMINS Dated at Timmins, Ontario, July 14th, 1941 BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company For Fares, Departure Times and Further Information Apply to Local Agent, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1941 ations; expecting of God, but reâ€" i1age due alike to ess: due alike to nding:; our rights marine. commerâ€" reen Maple Street and Birch Street and South ng composed of the South 12 feet of Lots 215â€" 85 and 286 according to Plan Mâ€"30 Sudbury. Ford, whether he is a selfâ€"exploiting advertiser, or a poor wretch made inâ€" sane by the onrush of gold; the man Bryan, whether he be the crazy visionâ€" ary he has always‘seemed, or a sleek humbug out for gate money and the Nobel Prizeâ€"in short, the man behind the alleged peace socities, whether a crank or an emissary. Von Hindenburg sounds the first ofâ€" ficial note of despair. The Prussian staff begins to realize that there is a people, if not a God. ‘The popular shoe is pinching at home. There is a Gerâ€" man winter maheadâ€"yea, there is a Russian winter ahead. Peace were a boon indeed. Nor will the government of the United States stand idly by and see the slaughter go on is there be some Teuton power definitely to treat with on the basis of the only settlement which the world can permit or tolerate, the dismemberment of the German Empire and the relegntion of the four kingdoms embracing it back to their original sovereignties; the recession of Alsaceâ€"Lorraine to France and the reâ€" turn of the money wrung from FPrance in 1870; complete indemnity to Belâ€" cium: and finally, universal disarmaâ€" Our little billion account of the Luâ€" sitania, the Arabic and other matters appertaining to the massacre of women and children, not to mention pay for each factory destroyed by German agents, can wait awhile. The Hohenâ€" zollern and the Hapsburgâ€"to hell with them !| ! ! gium ment Being down and out, we shall not b too pressing. But Belgium first ! ! ! Come, Hind, old sport, since you Ar such a lover of peace, how do you lik the way out? PHONE 324 Cor, Spruce St. Third Ave,. The King Edward Hotel Clean Rooms Day or Week Very Reasong@ble Rates Quiet Atmosphere 4# S H A W Clerk

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