Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 25 Jan 1922, p. 3

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f‘flardware & Furniture | #600§098088000000080080800000000000000000000004Q00006600846 BO§G000000000900000000000000000000000 0000400006 0006006 $0008989000009090900000000000000000000000000000000060004 Â¥IMMINS, â€" PHONE WILLIAM HAMILTON COMPANY, LIMITED â€" â€"â€"â€" Peterborough, Ont. ; ‘\â€" Hydraulic Turbine Machinery Pulpmill Machinery â€" Sawmill Machingery Structural Steel and Steel Plate Work ; \Pransmission Machinery Grey Iron and Brass Castings Northern Representative 493 VINCENT WOODRDBURY COBALT, PHONE 177 ® |ot] SUGGESTS NEW PROVINGE Of ES ARO NORTH DXT. A great many people up in the Porâ€" eupine know John R.AStewart, Town pngineer for the Town of Renfrew for about 22 years. Thoge who know him best would not expect him to do much ?lking for publication. But that is ust what he has been, doing recently. And, to use a popular slang phrase, "He‘s said a mouthful.*‘* â€"Jack must have been considerably, ‘‘thet up‘‘ to ?lking for publication. But that 1'5( ust what he has been, doing recently. And, to use a popular slang phrase, "He‘s said a mouthful.‘‘ ~Jack must have been considerably, ‘‘het up‘‘ to talk as much as he did, but no one will deny that he bhas had ample jusâ€" tiflcation. â€" According to an interview given by Mr. Stewart to The Renfrew Mercury, he has special faith and beâ€" lief in the future of Eastern Ontario and Northern Ontario, and he sugâ€" gests that both parts of the Province slg'ould be combined into a new Proâ€" vince which he suggests would soon become the greatest of all the Proâ€" vinces of this great Dominion. . Mr. Stewart would have a straight boundâ€" ary ]ine.from Kingston to Parry Sound and on the eastern side of that boundary line he would set up a new province which would} he is satisfied, hold the place of honour in the Canâ€" adian Confederation® ‘*©There is no reason on earth,"‘‘ said Mr. Stewart to the Mereury, "why the eastern sections should not be more ‘highly developed than they are today. We havye the ~chief timber ;\\'f‘il!r'fl,' the‘ richost mineral deposits and the most valuable water powers to be found‘in the Dominion. In spite ‘‘Lhe reason oT {AIS CONGILION i3 pot far to seek. We have never been given a fair show., All the money reâ€" ceived from the sale of timiber limits for timber!tdues, for royalties on the output of the mines, in short gveryâ€" thing in the way of revenue from our natural resources goes to Toronto. All we get back is an occasional grant for a colonization road which is built but which disappears after the first heavy rain falls. We should be the greatest province in the Dominion instead of being where we are today, a mere tail to the kite that Toronto and western Ontario are continuously flying."‘ The views of Mr. Stewart are very "interesting.> The Advance agrees with him as to the absolute necessity for aither a better deal all round or the ‘ereation of a new Province. In the imatter of ‘boundaries, however, there is not the same agreement. The Adâ€" yance believes that the North Land, ‘ha\'ing interests and possibilitiee in common, should be formed into a proâ€" ’vince of its own if these interests can ‘not be fairly conserved by the present Province. / Under the present Governâ€" ment there does not seem to be much hope of fair treatment or intelligent usage. Thoseewho have sceoffed at all talk of secession will one ofâ€" these days wake up to find that the strengih of the secession sentiment is immeasâ€" urably greater than people realize: The truth is that‘ the secession idea is about as strong as the idea of a square deal and fair play. The North : Land ;'lms been getting a raw deal right aling. To judge from Mr. Stewart‘s interâ€" view Eastern Ontario has also sufféred lrecently\ *Cursing the thoughtful peoâ€" ple of either the East or the North will not accomplish much. The motto !in each ease is practically sure to stand :â€"*‘ Square Deal,â€"or Secesâ€" ’sion. f Mr. Stewart points out the wealth of water powers in his proposed new Rrovince,â€"400,000 horse power availâ€" able on the (Ottawa River, 125,000 horse power fronr tributaries of the Ottawa, and 400,000 horse power from the St. Lawrence, and the immense supply of water power available in Northern Ontario. He shows how water potrers have been developed in Western Ontario b} the Governments of the Province, while the East and North have been neglected. 200 miles. ‘The Northern News» Cobalt‘s new newspaper, last week says:â€"**There are new newsies on the T. & N. O. trains tihese days. Since the first of the year the privileges formerly held by the Canada Railway News Comâ€" pany have (been in the hands of Mr. Arthur Stgvens, of Cochrane, he takâ€" ing over the business after his tegder for the business had been accepted. Mr. Stevens has opened an office in North Bay and=he has control on theé T. & N. O. trains of the newspaper, soft drink, fruit, ete. sales."‘ ~® _ '.\Ir."’Ste‘wart is also in favour of the Georgian Bay Canal which would shorten theâ€"shipping route by about NEWSES ON T. & N. 0. NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Mr. Stewart thought North Bay would be the logical place for the caâ€" pital of the proposed new province. ) W w ‘and _ : herwise bi n Ontariol ‘"The rea t far to s ven a fair ived frorm he most found in these as: and we wâ€"Town Enginesr Sayb »Wes ARA South Are Hogging y _ Everything. we are ind ehind the pe adie watet Dominion. TUME PORCUPINE ADVANOE conaition ) 11 powers In spite ias heen lly â€"and W ®" of i Thore is ® 'thcse days est consery ;tland peéople FORESTRY. ASSOCIATION TELLS ‘‘"WHY IS FORESTRY?*"* Thore igx good deal in, the press those days about the necessity for for: tst conservation and wise utilization, and peéople may be led to ask: Why should Canadians bother their heads about forestry? The answer is very simple.~ Canada, like every other equntry in the world, has a large proâ€" portion of laad that is not good for agrichiture but which will grow time ber. In some countries it is with great difficulty that thes& nonâ€"agricultural areas are got to grow trees, and even then the timber is of inferior quality. In Canada, on the contrary, the land, if given a chance, readily ‘bears a new crop of trees, and when grown these trees provide the fnest structural timâ€" bers in the world. How much of Canâ€" ada is of this character is not yet deâ€" finitely known but a conservative esâ€" timate places it at sixty per cent. of the country. The reason why Canadian statesmen and leaders in all walks of life are urging the study and practice of forestry is that if citizens sit still and allow these nonâ€"agricultural lands to be repeatedly burned over, then these immense areas will become,deâ€" %rts, whereas if kept growing timber they will p}r})vide a permanent and inâ€" creasing révenue. This is the ‘*+Why" of forestry. WRIT ISSUED AGAINST & + .EXâ€"INSPECTOR ROWELL {formerly n LemIsk the dama ation of the Giannini houss/ and spent some time there.. Eventually Giannini went to bed and the othe®man leff. Rowell stayed with the womanâ€"and GHannini came down to.the kitchen and found them togefher. He went back upstairs and secured a gun., Returning he said he shot at the man and his wife in atâ€" tempfing to turn the gun aside was injured. When Gianini came before Magistrate Atkinson for preliminary trial on a charge of shooting he pleadâ€" ed not guilty and was committed for trial before a judge. Before Judge Hartman he entered a plea of guilty and was allowed to go on suspended sentence. Through his lawyer, Mr. W. A. lon, of~Haileybury, Mr. Louis C iini. of Cobalt, hgas issued, a COCHRANE CLUB PROVES NOTEWORTHY SUCCESS its members an initiation fee of $10.00 with additiohal fees of $10.00 per year, payable halfâ€"yearly in advance. The president for this year is Mr. W. (G. E. Bishop; viceâ€"president, Dr.mJ. W. Fraser; Secretary, R. R. Miitchell; Treasurer, W. W. Mitchell, An Exâ€" ecutive Committee ‘of eight members was Appointed to assist in the conâ€" duct of the Club. The Cochrane Club has purchased the furniture of the g.W.V.A. branch in the,town, and, as the Cochrane Post says, ""‘the rooms are now nicely fitted up andâ€"are a creâ€" dit to the organizing officers who worked so hard to achieve the result."‘ The Committee of Management inâ€" eludes:â€"Messrs. R. R. Mitchell, A. T. King, J. M. Greer, Dr. Murray, Dr. Fraser, W. W. Mitehell, A. Stevens and F. H. Adams, * §3 Memibers of the Timmins Intermeâ€" diate team visiting Cochrane recently, were very much impressed with the Cochrane Club and the fine quarters occupied by the Club. The visitors thought the Cochrane Club idea one that might be earried out in Timmins with much satisfaction and advanâ€" tage. On many occasions suggestions of all sorts have been made for a Timâ€" mins Club that wou!ld provide regular social amusements and a permanent meeting place for the men of the Camp. But the plan here has never progressed beyond the suggestion stage. In Cochrane, however, the plan is well under way and is meeting with signal suceess. The Cochrane Club was drganized some months ago, and on New Year‘s Eve the ‘new club rooms were formally opened by a turâ€" key supper at which some forty memâ€" bers were present. The Cochrane Club has fine quarters nicely furnished and conveniently located. Any member can take his friends or acquaintances to the club. Therse is a reading roome in connection with the Club and alzo a special eard room. Every evening: sees something special doing, one of the features‘ in progress now being course, t and spec to time. dro L as mine understc nt affan )I1 ry of L d LC it was to. L1 inother man n My. { )1 AUdanninl or allegec effections O al nalt 0 Y04 Cly K« TTes in cla ) W C n1an WYE Ni 1 §©€-‘$°M®'&&CGMO’OMO@&C*OOOQOOMQ@MWQWWOM} ¢ J3 4P &A © edlle: e . ° NEW DAKCE HALL mc * _ * * 4 0800080005606 k + $@000099000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000¢e | $8000000809000000000000000000000000000000800000000000¢00 ©@00900000000088080009000066406000006000000000 800000040040 0/ . 0000600608 006000000006006060L00000000000 86 #000646600040008 Illâ€"health is no one‘s fault but your own.* ‘‘Pep energy, the spitit to be up and doing all follow in the footsteps of good health. Loss of weight, loss of appetite, grq‘uchy spirit, ‘loss of energy, ambi;ion and nerve foree as well as dyspepsia is man ’fiv nemesis. They make men and women feel homeless, despairingg despondent and blue, struggling and rebelling against fateâ€"a failure in their chosen work. Few people realize the terrible agony caused by the dopletion of nerve foree and poor blood. Many suffer its tortures. But thousands of people are esâ€" caping its terrors, are restored to "thae un!imitgd joys of youthful health hy REDMAC the great tonic of herhs, roots anxd hbark. Both a blood ana nerve 1or( mo NS bud t 040A0OLEEEQOLA EQLE§O0000000004000900008400406946064%4 CQOME AND HAVE A GOOD TIME, BEST MUSIC Anson‘s Iceâ€" Cream Parlor« 1 ‘ Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings. Large number of interesting events, inâ€" cluding half mile race for men. Timmins Citizens‘ Band in Attendance. Under AOMISSIGOG N a h 'y.”- P ACie E: f£F(0 w B ol n Ee [littby UTC ( A~ 1B RI G a Ne a _Â¥ (¢&Jj B 2 Z % (kaÂ¥" [( J OS f & %& $ * ; 3 1 § F elfed Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenirgs s & Dancing commences at 8 p.m. sharp. ©00000000060 ; In South Porcupine or T immins Seelingof youth! orces to you 1.CC proven 1 Square Dancing Round Daccing DALTON‘S LIVERY the auspices St. Anthony‘s Altar Girls‘ Society A GOOD PRIZES ins Rink, Mon., Jan. 30 By Buarke‘s Drus Store. Never Sleep â€" #40008%004 100 MA M 11 1 brain ce aUE fi PI to () 50c this moâ€" , restorâ€" & Positive all Canâ€" )1d only vour #) i act 38

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