Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 10 Aug 1944, 1, p. 8

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* There have been a few changes in the layout for the 1044 Flower and Vegetable Show catalogue. The Novice Class, which has practically fallen into disuse during recent years, has been omitted entirely; bedding pansies, which were limited to 1% ins. in diâ€" ameter in previous catalogues, have also been left out. Bedding pansies have D of embarrassment to judg years‘ because of their : size with violas; because 0 of violas that intrude the this class and viceâ€"versa pansies have become sc with each other nowada PACGEB ETGHT A. Sinclair e s 1 P. ILillund â€" â€" « xYX .XXX VA Y â€" â€" â€" hob hb J. Chatson ~ â€" 21 Wm. Wallace â€" â€" 21 F. Tomkinson § § 21 H. Mackey â€" â€" â€" 21 (%. Armstrong > C 2( M. Kobzik s â€" /+ 20 (i. Oreskoviech t 21 0. Cote â€" â€" â€" S 2() 3. O‘ Connor â€" â€" â€" 20 E. Duxfield _ â€" â€" â€" 20 E. T)uyahin â€" ~ â€" 20 8. Dupuis â€" â€" = 2() 1 A. Spackman â€" _ «w 20 F. Webber â€" C â€" 20 T. Moofe ~ â€" â€" 2() t. â€" is 7 2() 4 J. StHtrat 5 s 20 F. Nelson â€" o = 20 F. H. Howard x 2() A. Z. Fournier â€" a 2() J. Frantsi â€" â€" â€" 20 J. Tinsley C = â€"~I "%P20 Disano â€" â€" â€" 20 L. E. Kelly : = e 2() WM“WWWW‘“’MQOOOOOC 0“0“0“00”.00000000000000000“0“0000000000000000000000000 4 PUBLIC RIVERSIDE PAVILION P L BA LC P t Music at the "PAV‘" by GENE CROCCO and His ORCHESTRA Gentsâ€"75 Wednesday and Friday Nights 8.30 to 10.30 Enjoy Dancing to the Finest Music on the Best Floor in the North. Dancing Saturday Evening A dmission 3D¢ «o cnmunmercny â€"oune 00000000000000000000:‘0‘%’2‘02’:00000000 44446 66 ( . 4 % W ‘eâ€"versa. Violas and ome so intermixed nowadays that very J. LnDIS E. Everard Boisvert A,. Wookey Lopez Deluca Hadley Ostoff Maltais McMillan A. Prentice _larroceo Rochefort DeFeu been es for many imilarity in the number mselves into Mcintyre‘s Safety Record is one of which Mine Officials and Workmen are Justly Proud. Mine Safety Comes from Complete Collaboration Between Mine Bosses and Workmen. | Both these conditions left the field open for experts who know how to prepare a potato for exhibition. A potato should be selected carefully; first for its trueness to type, then all the potatoes in the exhibit should be free from scab or other blemishes, and uniform in size. After digging, the potato should be dried in the sun and the dirt removed carefully with a brush. Uniformity in size and shape is very important. Distorted tubers do not have a chance. Size is not always a deciding factor in judging vegetables. It has some bearing on a judge‘s decision, to be sure, but their appeal to the eye, freshness, succulence, freedom from blemish, etc., goes further. It is a good idea when selecting vegetables from the garden for showing to be guided by the judgement of the lady of the house. Select them as she would buy them for the table. Beets, kohl rabi, the round white turnip and the milan turnip are all very often shown in an advanced stage of growth; carrots; are often too large and course. Root exhibits require careful treatâ€" ment. The tops of carrots and beets The ruling, "Potatoes must not be washed," has also been left out,. This does not mean that potatoes should be washed before entering. The ruling was inserted in the first instance for the protection of the exhibitor. Washâ€" ing damages the skin of a new potato and is quite apparent to‘ the eye of a discerning judge. The reason for omitting the ruling was because a number of exhibitors refrained from reading it and washed their potatoes; others read it too literally and brought their potatoes in straight from the garden with thee soil still adhering to the skin. Some entries left the judge in doubt as to where the soil ended and the potato began. few exhibits in these two classes have been entirely above reproach. This placed the judge in a position where he was faced with the prospect of ignoring these dissgrepancies entirely or, keeping strictly to the catalogue, to disqualify every entry in the bedding pansy and viola classes. Violas and the two classes of exhibition pansies, which are large enough to be distinctive, will remain in the catalogue as before. THESE ARE SOME McINTYRE SAFETY RECORDS : NO "LOSTâ€"TIME ACCIDENT‘"‘ RECORDS FOR SHIFT GROUPS . Bennett Groupâ€"55 Menâ€"100,298 contin $. MacMillan Groupâ€"40 Menâ€"92,447 33 years Ladiesâ€"25¢ £x.. : = * 6 ho J y x) +) 1. â€" 31,123 RECORDS OF OVER 20 YEARS AT MeINTYRE WITHOUT A COMPENSATION ACCIDENT _ (Over 6 days Lost Time) should be kept covered with soil to prevent sunburn. No commenrcial growâ€" er would thing of attempting to marâ€" ket a carrot with a green ring around the top caused by sunburn. Select these for their symmetrical appearance in preference to size, although size counts, especially in the larger varieties of tuinmips, such as the swedes. But a medium sized turnip, wellâ€"shaped with all the roots carefully trimmed and the exhibit properly cleaned will catch the eye of the judge where a larger, less attractive specimen will be passed over. Beans should be brittle and show little swelling. People often write to National Deâ€" fence headquarters at Ottawa asking "the present location of Thomas Smith who is in the Canadian Army‘". Well, there are 124 Thomas Smiths in the Army, 14 of them from Toronto, for instance. Hence the necessity of supâ€" plying full Christian names, rank, number, and properly spelling the surâ€" name. Here‘s why. There are 5,118 Smiths in the Canadian Army, 362 of them having the Christian name of Wiliiam. There are:â€"Allan 308, Allen 759; Cook 746, Cooke 221; Johnson 1,807; Johnston 1,114; Johnstone 232; The McDonalds in various ways of spelling total 3,754;â€" Arsisnault 551; Arsenault 184. So just picture the task of clerks at NDH.Q., when enâ€" quiries come in. They would appreciate your coâ€"operating with adequate deâ€" tail. Most employers in Ontario got a letter from Arthur MacNamara, Diâ€" rector of National Selective Service asking for their coâ€"operation in the saving of vital crops, by giving leave of absence to their able bodied emâ€" ployees â€" wherever possible â€"for harâ€" vesting. The letter also intimated that the Department of Labour, by arrangeâ€" ment with the railways, will run a harvest excursion to the Prairie Provâ€" inces late in August and early in Sepâ€" WEEKLY EDITOR LOOKS AT JMC Group 49,764 Safe Man Shifts 45,265 37,499 36,091 D. E. Keeley â€" J. 8. Amm o J. Wojeiechowski J. 8. Kitchen â€" W. Mansfield â€" R. E. Yorke . â€" (G. Moller â€" J. Rochefort â€" A. Blais â€" A. Hayward â€" J. MceFarlane A. Pappone L. Martin 1,. Difant P. Edlund Wm. Wallace M. Kobzik E. Duxfield F. Webber F. Nelson J. Tinsley C A WEEKLY EDITOR LOOKS AT for the weekly newspaper: of Canede 100,298 continuous safe man shiftsâ€"6 years and 77 days.... Claimed as a record in metal mining. The Millâ€"70 Menâ€"846 Days without a "Lostâ€"Time Accident." â€"J. K. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTIMMINS, ONTARIO continuous safe man shiftsâ€"7 years and 163 days. Still going strong. tember, and for this the garnting of temporary leave to experienced farmâ€" ers, or other a@bleâ€"bodied persons in industry is sought. The government will provide men going West for harâ€" vesting with return tickets at a cost of $10 to the man. Mr. MacNamara says that employers in other provinces will also ‘be invited to give leave to men for harvesting in their localities. The response of the farmers of Canâ€" ada to the appeal of the government to raise more sugar beets to ease the sugar situation is indicated in cold figures. The Dominionâ€"Provincial Agriâ€" cultural conference in December last year set an objective for 1944 of 63,â€" 400 acres, but latest reports is that the actual average contracted for between the companies and growers; this year totalled 71,438 acres. At the middle of June, Ontario reported plantings of 16,000 acres; Alberta, 30,000; Manitoba, 14,000 and Quebec 9,500. Prospects at present are good for the crop, with help supplied by Japanese and German prisoners â€" ofâ€" war, conscientious .obâ€" jectors, Canadian soldiers and civilians. Consumer Branch tip to women to make shoes last longer and wear better. Women buying shoes for their children are urged to see they are the right size and fit. When the children come in with wet shoes, do not place them over direct heat to dryâ€"such procedure bakes the soles, weakens leather fibres and causes them to 3l years P. Bailey H. Cowden N. McAlpine R. Anderson A. Duval N. Bogdanic A. L. Joyner J. Dillon â€" J. Tomiuk M. McMillan J. Podlezny A. H. Cooke P. Villeneuve A., Kuly â€" J. D. Chileott W. I_JCCk = W. Hayward . L. Urquhart 8. Adams : Tomkinson Oreskmgich E. Dunbabin ‘P. Mooz F. H. Howard G. Disano a m mR break down. Rather, wet shoes should be filled with newspapers and allowed to dry in normal. temperatures. And polish them. ' Until November 15 farmers may use their trucks to transport harvest help, and a general permit has been issued for the harvest season exempting form truck owners from the ban on carryâ€" ing passengers except in the cab of a vehicle operated â€" for _ transiporting goods. It does not, however, exempt one from provincial or municipal truck regulations or the 35â€"mile travel limit on trucks not transporting farm goods. Special provisions are, of course, in effect allowing the conveying of perâ€" sons to and from church or religious ceremonies or for medical assistance. Everything humanely possible is done to save lives of our men overseas Group 45,912 Safe Man Shifts 38,363 36,424 31,921 29,951. 30 years 28 26 C. AUBREY SMITH + JOHN CARRADINE â€" Bill HENRY ROBERT BARRATâ€" WALTER HAMPDEN â€"JOYCE REYNOLDS as witness the shipment of 7000 pounds of penicillin which reached Montreal one day recently, and was immediately loaded on RAF. transport command planes setting out for the Middle East, India and Britain. Greater than any corresponding period in history of Canadian comâ€" merce" was the value of our exports during the first six months of 1944, a total of $1,746 million, an increase of $488 milions over the same period last ytar. Canada‘s contribution to the fighting strength of the Allies is comeâ€" BROAD W AY A FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRE TODAY AND FRIDAY The Greatest Gangster Picture of Them All The Hitler Gang Step Lively FOTOâ€"NITE $475.00 Frank Sinatra (Gloria De Haren Adolphe Menjou (George Murphy STARTS SATURDA Y ! . G. Skavlem . 8. Robinson . E. Waddle . Dennison . Pooley . Schmidt . M. Asselstine . Cookow m I/Qnfl' . Nilson . Mackey ..Cote: > . Dupuis . Berard] . 4. Fournier .â€"F. Kelly R. S. Anderson D. Carlin A. Rochefort J. Besley ND thing we can point to with pride. Just a few items for comparison with the last sixâ€"months period. We sent motor vehicles, such as tanks and trucks to the value of $234,900,000, nearly $60,â€" 000,0(00 more than a year Ago. Wheat export at $196 millions was a great adâ€" vance over the $80,000,000 in the period a year ago. Meats were almost, doubled, as was flour, fish and eggs. It is noteâ€" able that wool exports advanced from $1,400,000 to $10,700,000, Sense and Nonsense:â€"A wave of popularity is the permanent wave. THURSDAY AUGUST 10TH, 1944 RONALD COLMAN The Prisoner Of Zenda Russell Hayden Bob Wills in "Adventures of the Flying Cadets" (It Outâ€"thrills the Book with Sydnmney Greens Street Z‘ Achary Scott Mondayâ€" and Tuesday Double Feature "THE ‘MIRACLE OF MORGAN‘S CREEK" "THE GHOST WALKS ALONE" | My Best Gal with Jane Withers and Jimmy Lydon sSUN. MIDNIGHT MON. â€" TUES,., â€" WED. PLUS â€" Chapter ‘"No "The Mask of Double Feature 29 years 6 ‘) 20 () 3

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