Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 18 Oct 1945, 1, p. 4

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mmm h Snndays _gt,n.nom t\ â€" Holy Communionâ€" _ ist Sunday at 9.00 a.m. ,’2nd8unday at 11.00 a.m, Sunday at 7.00 p.m. ~. dth Sunday at 11.00 a.m, Bundayâ€" Morning Worship ‘11 a.m. Sunday School 1 p.m. Evangelistic Services 7. p.m. Fridayâ€"Childrens Church 7. p.m. Prayer Meeting 8 p.m. 25 Golden Ave., South Porcupine Sunday School 2.30 p.m. Evangelistic Service 7.30 p.m. Tuesday Young Peoples Meeting 7 p.m. Thursday Childrens Church 7 p.m. Prayer Meeting 8 p.m ' All Welcome MAJOR AND MRS. KNAAP â€" < Come and enjoy the singing ~and gospel. *J : 4. 2.15 Sunday School i SBervices Sunday. Octcber 2lst 11 and 7 p.m. The Salyation Army / _â€" CAPT. and MP5S. DOUGLAS CHURCH s Snd _ dnc id Evening Serviceâ€" 7.00 pm. â€" SUNDAY SCHOOL Sunday Schoolâ€"10.00 am. .‘ 11.00 a.m.â€"Dome â€"Sunday School, ‘ why o s 11.00 a.m.â€"â€"Morning Prayer â€" ns zm mt MACKAY PRESEBYTERIAN CHURCB 113 ELM STREET SOUTH Mlnlster- Rev Dr. Geo. _ Aitken, The Presbyterian Church in C T n e oys ) ons ... s i9 Porcupine United Church Morning Worshipâ€"Schumacher 11 a.m. Evening Serviceâ€"Golden Cit.y--'l .00 p.m. SUNDAY BCHOOL Golden Cityâ€"1.30 pm. °* Schumacherâ€"2.00â€" p.m. Come to our. friendly, lnsp!ratlonal' â€" Servicesâ€" 3 fige that your children are at S’Imfluy" School â€" â€" ' Pentecostal Assembly Cor. â€" Rea and Commercial Ave., Schumacher Anglican . Church _ BANK OF COMMERCE BLDG. > Rev. Canon.R. 8. Cushing, B.A., L Th. Priestâ€"Inâ€"charge 10.00 a.m. Sunday School 11.00 a.m. Morning Prayer 7.00 p.m. Evening Prayer ; Holy Communion on first Sunday of month at 11.00 a m. f 2 Minister; Rev. A, R. Olfld\fick. -L.Th. 11,00 a.m -Mommg Prayer._ t 0 2.00 p.m.â€"Sunday School. _ . . . 4.15 pm.â€"Baptismns. â€" <â€" ~ o * 700 pm.â€"Evening Prayer. + Holy Communion on first Sunda,y of ‘ month at 11 am.; on second. aunaay at 830 am.; and on thh'd smfiday at 7 | REV. E. GILMOURâ€"SMITH, B.a. 11 a.m. Morning Worship 7 p.m. Evening Worship School: 12.15 for 9 . yei and over. : aamnmmsflmeesmm Bunday Service 11.00 a.m. Bunday School 9.45 a.m. Christian Science Readi McInnis Block, i8 Pine f Open Tuesday, Friday and from 12.00 noon to 5§ p.m. . St. Luke‘s Evangelical Lutheran Church B‘nai Israel Synagogue Cedar Street North _ ISRAEL I. HALPERN, Rabbi W. LINDER. Cantor Mountjoy United Church 11 am. Morning Worship.. 700 pm. Evening Worship. The Church Sunday School: * 12 16 pm. Intermediate ard Bentfor United Church South Porcupine, Ont. BLOOK AVENUR. â€" Trinity United Church ;I:’ t .-.‘ /# a.m. Morning Service. . noon Sunday School. p.m. Evening. Service. St.:Matthew‘s Church _ South Porcupine, Ont. for‘8 years and under, . 4 ite 145 Sunday School; 2..45 Public Worship . Pastor J. Spillenaar 100 Mountjoy Street 8. wmms-uum mywkmmwxm Cuds’s _ < G. H. Daowes, Manager: ~ “‘,._‘ 19* resldence in England During the course of the Qvenmg little Miss Helen Forrester presented Mrs.: Shaw with ‘a walnut serving tablé as a token. of ‘the â€"esteem in which she was held by her: many friends The Young PeOples Literary and Social "Club of South Porcupine enâ€" tertained their friends from Timmins at turkey dinner twenty ~years~ago, this week. George Horner was the Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Forrester enterâ€" tained a number of friends at a fareâ€" well party in honour of Mr. and Mrs. G. shaw who were leaving to up served the tenth anniversary of thei wedding in About fifty friends gahhered at their hospitab‘e home and â€"pleasant ~social »timeâ€"was en« joyed. ‘A large number of handsome and valuable gifts.â€"were made to Mr. fand Mrs. Halperin which evidenced the popularity ‘and esteem in which the "couple were hneld. | _ years ago word was reâ€" ceived in town that Miss Beatrice Mcâ€" Cracken had been awarded the Moâ€" wat; Scholax:ship for mathematics and =physics in the . recent departmental examinations for matriculation. This Queen‘s) "University. prize is not only a much éoveted honour but it carâ€" ries with it a value of $50 cash and $25 per year for four years off Uniâ€" msit.y fees. f . Congratulations were extended to Miss McCracken as sme had brought honour to the town as well as to herâ€" self by her talent and success in her 'wheh 1t was reported that Pictro Peâ€" rllecl, victim of a shooting at Nellie | Lake on August 17th. of that year had died at the hospital. Perucci had lost an enormous amount of blood during the two months he lived after being shot. He had weighed 175lbs. at the time ‘he was admitted to the haspital and only 75 Ibs. when he died. A pos; mortem revealed a badly abcessed kidâ€" ney. ‘The man, who told a story of having been shot by a woman near whose place he lived, had been born in Italy but was a naturalized Canaâ€" dfanâ€"citizen and had worked hard on‘ . his Nellie Lake farm where he had heen since ‘the year before. "W. D; Watt, one of the twenty charâ€" ter members of the Timmins Caledon-| lan. Society,; was. elected president of that organization in 1935. Other ofâ€" fica's Feturned at‘the annual meeting of that ‘year were:â€" A. Wilson, Mrs. l Cowan, T. Young, Jas. Geils, J. Nicholâ€" W. Shewan, W. H. Wilson, D. [mxwell, A. Roberts G.. N. Ross, G. A. Maodona!d and Mrs. A. Roberts, _P. Caimeron and T. Devaney of Schumacher were interessed in 1925 in some gold properties in the Tashota areaz They were considering option- ‘1118 them LTor +$350,000. # first of the indoor band conâ€" certs given by the Timmins‘ Citizens‘, band in 1925 was given at the Goldâ€" fields) Theatre and was well atteénded in. the corresponding week, years ago. ] won, three were drawn and one taken all the draws were with Kirkland Lake, who seemed to put up Lbetter opposition than any other team in the country, . "It must have been a relief m him to die," was the statement made in security, no help from outsiders, to get a loan from Household. If you can make the monthly payments*shown, don‘t hesitate to ask for whatever amount you need. You can usually get the cash the same day you apply. Small monthly payments. Notice that g mny choose the payment plan that fits your own income. The sooner w . i / * ut ,*. L be e â€"â€" Ti ho hi : ul WV 4 J no . guarantors or. security, no help from outsid ow you can borrow from Household Finance at the monthly rate of only 1!4%! At this rate you pay only $1.50 for a $100 loan for one month, : only $3.75 for a $250 loan! All you do. To apply for a loan at this reduced rateâ€"$50, $100, or as much as $1,000â€"you merely telephone or visit the Household office, say how much money you want and the payment;plan. you prefer (see table below.) You need and Mrs. Louis Halperin obâ€" $ . Pn t n s‘ yâ€" ~4 a* w <~ 9 RE ..LOANS AT VUCED COST $20 to $1,000 monthly rate of only 1/2%, ~No endorsers â€"Quick service 3 paymts CHOOSE YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENT HERE 17.17 £5.75 17.55 13.16 bankable 10 paymts. $ 2.71 ~.8.13 10.84 16.27 | â€" Building permits in Timmins up to ‘the end of, September,, 1925 totalled nearly $250,000 according to figures ‘published in the Advance twenty years â€" ago. _ If you need money to pay old bills, your doctor or dentist, or for some other purpose, phone or visit Household Finance. Take advantage of Household‘s reduced rate now. instalments as shown, come to only $5.32. A $300 6â€"payment loan costs $15.95; a $500 3â€"payment loan $15.07; a $1,000 6â€"payment loan only $53.15. Why pay more? Now see what reasonable costs Household‘s rate makes possible. A $25 loan, repaid in 3 monthly payments, for example, costs only 75¢. And that‘s the total and complete cost! Charges on a $100â€"loan, repaid in six monthly you repay the less your loan costs, Payments shown include principal. and charges. No fines, discounts or. extras of any kind. . had a proper chance to mature. _ . H.. Sidney Hancock, a well known enginéer, handed down a report of the china clay found on the banks of the Mattagami river in Kipling township, north of Cochrane, in the fall of 1925. He classed it as "high class koalin..a vast deposit of comâ€" mercial material Oof unique character. In . the Cornish déposits it takes from five to seven tons of clay ground to produce one ton of merchantaible clay. In this case I am cnservative in asâ€" suming that the deposit contains 30 per cent of clay, the balance being silica sand of at‘ least equal value. In a letter to the Advance twenty years ago W. F. Richardson of Wawaiâ€" tin Falls: sent out a plea for the protecâ€"= tion .ofâ€" Wild life in the North, partiâ€" cularly the ducks, which he beliei'e(i were being slaughtered ‘tbeflore Tnty. had a proper chance to mature. Hon.â€"Chas. McCrae was to at the Domeâ€"in the Fallâ€"of 1925 to preâ€" sent first aid shields to â€"the St. ‘John Ambulance Corps of the Dome Mine. Mines all over Ontario had competed for .the honour. The St Matthew‘s Social Club began in the ‘fall of 1925 and had an auspiâ€" cious: beginning when a large: number of the congregation turhed out. Ofâ€" ficers <~of the "association were >‘ J. Morgan, W. D. Fcrrester,;, â€" Miss, R. Simms, . Mrs.: ~W. D Fowle1 and Mr. Fowler. 4 $ Silas owned a farm near the foot of the Great Smoky Mountains. Silas was a good farmer and way ahead of his; generation in the management of his farm. It was his theory that nothâ€" ing should be so:.d from a farm which could not walk away. He never sold. chairman when 40 guests sat down to the banguet. Then I rememberd Silas Campbell and his farm. ‘I have a suspicion that I have told you this story before, but if I did, it was a ago and you probably have forgotten it. Anyâ€" how, it‘s a gocd story. j s Magazine by Roe Pulkerson are very ‘{imely in regard to appreciation of the country for which so many ’young men,â€" the "cream of the erop", fought, suffered and died that we may continue to enjoy the privileges and ! good things of life: in the peéace and | plenty of this vast Dominion. Quota for «the Porcupine district is 10% above that of the Eighth Victory Loan. <It is just a question of whether {we value peace and freedom and the plenty of this country . whether we reach the quota set for our district. Silas ‘Campbell‘s Farm by Roe Fulkerson | This is Monday. When I went out to get in the car this morning, the battery was dead.> I had to call a taxt to get to an engagement on time, and when ‘I got there, the other man had forgotten all about it. â€" These were only the first things that went hayâ€" wire this morning. .A few minutes ago I found myself sitting on a selfâ€"made mourner‘s bench feeling very sorry for myself and the way the world was mistreating a fine fellow. > Oour efforts in the Ninth Victory Loan will prove just how much value we place on the freedom and opporâ€" tunities, greater than any to be had anywhere else in the world at the preâ€" sent time.. ; 12 paymis. $ 2.29 15 paymts. 20 live, and to have a family and the friends I have. Maybe I need someâ€" body to tell me how lucky I am to be guing 10 be no sunle, I never knew what a fine place I had here until I heard this city feller telling about it!" I like to think about Silas when I get to feeling sorry for myself. Maybe I need a high power salesman to tell is es uEs V 'I‘hen he contrasted the life of a city dweller with the life of the: man who lived in his own _cozy cottage in the ;country where he had his own fruits _and berries, his own fresh vegetables from his own kitchen garden, his own eggs and chickens from his own flock. He told them hew happy and healthy life became with working out of doors. For twenty minutes he described the wonders of life on this beautiful tract of land. Then he. told. them to look at the maps . in . their hands. He was now about to sell at public auction the first lot in this new subdivision, this modern Utopila. Right there Silas Campbell mounted the platform and held up his hand for silence. "Folks," he said, "I hope you have had a good time at the barbecueM and I hope you liked the band music and the ride on the train. I‘m going to pay for everything but there ain‘t He called attention to the ever flowâ€" ing stream of.ice cold â€"water from the mountains which. â€" would supply the water for their village. He told about the dam across; the_crystal clear creek which would make an artificlal lake for their amusement. rolling green hills of the. farm. and told how theâ€" pine scented cool breezes from the mountains rollickeq over those green hills and the valleys b>â€" tween. . He spoke of the magnificent grove of, walnut trees. which had been reserved as a park where the happy home owners would relax in the Jeafy shade. a . h a ALA v_.. QAUC â€" LV â€" grove for a public park and planned c a}] VA W p _ by } t dam across the creek to create a,i. a large banquet !thought which led to Ontario mayors and reeves being invited to hold their small lake for a swimming pool. They marked off sites for a schoo‘!, a church and a town hall. Then hey put on an advertising â€"campaign in Big City, There was to' be an excursion on the train on a cerâ€" tain date.. As added attractions, they planned a big barbecue and a concert by a brass band. At long last the day of the sale arrived and the special train pulled in loaded with prospective purchasers of â€"villa sites. ~ ; ‘~‘The band b:ared and ‘the customers ate of the bountifully supplied barbeâ€" cue, . When.every: one, was. filled to repletion, they gathered around the bandstand for the sale. First on the program was the ;'eal estate promoter. He thanked the people for coming and Mrs. Ann Shipley, the reeve of Teck Township (Kirkland Lake), deserves far the inspired annual association meeting in her mining community. Not only did the visitors, who nwmbered 175, have an | opportunity to visit the mines of Kirkâ€" land Lake and Porcupine and to sze what solid towns and cities they have founded, but the publicâ€"spirited reâ€" presentatives from Southern Ontario were given,. a real impression of what the mines mean to Galt, St. Catherâ€" ines, Toronto and scores of other cities, and the reeves of agricultural area.s-.j and ‘small industrial places, could see. crates, and boxes and carloads of maâ€" chines,: equipment, groceries labelled with the names of their own home ‘towns and bought and used by the 'hOped they had enjoyed the barbecue , mines and the people who work at th»e and the concert. Then he began to mines. On their return home the vis!iâ€" paint a_ word. piéture of the suburban , tors could go around to the local facâ€" estate Whlch wa4 to be a paradise on | torles and could go out to the neighâ€" earth. _ peaks of the Great. Smokles boring farms and say with conviction whlch‘ prosperity of Canada and» the. wages formed a _backdrop to one of the mos} hb beautiful landscapes in America. He mining industry of Northern ‘Canadsa." undulated. his arms to illustrate the | Mrs. Shipley had told them that for rolling green hills of the farm, and|every miner employed, 11 other perâ€" i | | "He beg"an with gestures to the lofty| and knowledge, "A large part of the' | and income it enjoys, springs from the told how theâ€" pine scented cool breezes | sons were given work in supplying him | Then hey put on an advertising campaign in Big City, There was to be an excursion on the train on a cerâ€" tain date.. As added attractions, they planned a big barbecue and a concert by a brass band. At long last the day of the sale arrived and the special train pulled in loaded with prospective purchasers of villa sites. I don‘t believe that those ten million Being a wellâ€"toâ€"do farmer, Silas had sent his three chfidren to college, and at the time of the sale those children were married and established in busiâ€" ness in the neflrby Big City. There was no one left on the farm but Silas and his elderly <wife, and he decided to sell the farm ‘andâ€" move into Big City himself. He thought it woulg be niceâ€"to have no chores and no responâ€" sbility, and be‘able‘ to see his grandâ€" children and the »picture shows. He contracted a high‘ power real estate salesman who went out on the train to see the farm. Having looked it over, he told. Silas it would be a crime ‘to sell that place as a farm, when by cutting it up into one and two acre vil‘a sites it cou‘ld be sold for] many times its value as a farm. They: brought out a landscape architect Wh' plotted the farm, staked it out into lots and streets, si°t aside the walnut grove for a public park and planned a dam across the creek to create a! small lake for a swimming pool. They i marked off sites for a schoo‘!, a church! and a town hall. cattle, sheep, hogs turkeys and chicâ€" kens, and sold these. his grain or. hay, but fed it to his, boys we sent overseas to fight this war agat South Views The North We people of Canada and the United States are the most fortunate people on earth. We have freedom and we have opportunity. But there is no maâ€" gic in either unless we learn to apâ€" preciate our freedom and to take adâ€" vantage of our opportunity. for us, who saw the way people live in Italy, in Germany, in Africa, in China and Japan, need to be told how lucky they are to live in the two grea: countries on this continent. I know that, like Silas, they are going to be more appreciative of their homeland and our way of life than they ever were before. Maybe this new viewâ€" point will be as good.for them as Silas‘ new viewpoint was for him. SUGAR COUVPON 65 l‘ BVUTTER COUPON 126 PRESERVES COUPONS P18â€"P19 tzs BUTTER COUPON 127 MEAt couron s J surter couron 125 MEAtT couronr 6 DEPOSI MEAT couron 7 BUTTER COUPON 124 MEAT COUPON 5 _ THURSDAY Victory Bonds are the oouudelt in- fvestment in Canada. In the evont of‘ an emergency, they are readily lalable ’or you may borrow money agalnbt them at anybtanch. y It is our privilege and patriotic duty" to urge all our deposltor,c to lnvest ln $ Vlctory Bonds to the fullest extent theirindividual circumstances permlt 3 and to withdraw funds from their Dank accounts to do so. A Message:to Our and medical plans. They Jearmed that | the Kirklandâ€"Larder golg camp ml the first to take advantage Of‘the Proâ€" vincial District Health / Plan. They discovered that northern towns lack nothing to make life + healthful and happy. They found social enjlormant and civic improvement on a high‘ PR Pm EwE bautoar . " /) Like many ot.her cidhans of the South, some had an idea taat a mining camp is constructed of ileg amd tar. paper shacks. That notion is now far from their minds They saw communities that are the equal of any in the sou« thern part of the/ prevince, possesging buildings of solid :construction ang‘ the last word in stores, pavements, schools, and homes packed with the fimest in electrical devices \and other convenâ€" iences and |\luxitries. These . fineâ€" spirited vigitors, wlio take such interâ€" est and pride in their own communiâ€" ties, saw in : the \ North â€" protective equipment such as fire fighting apâ€" paratus that even excelled their own. They learned that theâ€" Noflth is well anhead of most ‘Southern lpcalitiesu in the matter of publlce healtth. : They found that the miajorlty of ‘the cltizens' of the mining towns belong to hospitat and his operation. ?Béelng what they saw, they could well beliewée the truth of her statement. / n For most of the} delesltes lt was their first trip to the North Mtryz Valid cOUuPoN .YALUT BUTTER . »] 1 povad SUCOAR +) poond . ‘They learned that| NT RS most of them were I O U." s progress. Reeve, Shipley‘s ;lnvitation wasi indeed a happy one and the commissioners of the T. .N. 0. Ranway deserve thanks for the efforts fthey put forth to maake the trip posâ€" sible.. Now that travel is becommg easier it is to be hoped thatâ€"other boâ€" dies of influential people and individâ€" uais, will arrange to see North: Country for themselves. Their visits preate extra werk for,mine and civic: officials but there are plenty of compensations. Tike North iwas no problem that educaâ€" tien ‘will not ‘cure. will impress on the populations they represent must so a ijong way toward securing ‘that unders:anding of mining W which is vital to the mining _________ goldfields of the North Country are in the front® rank of this country‘s parade toward econmomic . wellâ€"being. ‘l‘he oplnlons the _mayors and reeves #G l Those few visitors whb; s0GIF thought. in this 38th year of important gold mining production in Oh‘ that all goid mflinilig operations are Wildcats, em«’ at the clubs ana fAsurishâ€" ing in the North Albert: "So you claim you were a reeâ€"letter man at college. Wiha re the _Jletters " Filbeft: â€" "Well, Hotel _ ..Cor. Sqpruce St. and Tl'n:lrd- Avo. PHONE 3214 ; "TIMMTNr Clean Rooms Day or Week The King Edward Very Reasonable Rates Qulet Atmosphere BY great fac;, that the ‘‘Northern Miner" s ks $ 4 4*

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