DR. GEO. W. KERBY ON NATION BUILDING ll`b 1l'UIll E111 U\lfl' IIIU \V`UllU. One of the tasks of the nation was to provide means of etlucation for every child. Our children are the greatest asset. and the hope of the nation is in the chara.r:t.er of her people. The Government must learn to look on education as the _::1'eatest thing. Every child has a right to be we)` horn and to receive a proper orluca/ion. Eighteen years ago one sinfe graxin of wheat (the famous .\Iv,niuis) was bro1x;.:ht to Canada. I.~n.4t year three hundred miztlion Ixnnhnln f\ thin rnknno uvnn hm-nn:-0, l.'ilSl _\K`ill' lll2'UL.' uuuunu llHL'HU11 bushels of this wheat. was hm`vest- ed. Let us see that our children get :1 proper chnn-ce and we need not fear mlmut the nation. Qnnnl.-{nu nF flan (`nu-nhrnov-c in nnr ICIIY ilIl)l()lll [H0 Il1l,UlUll. Speaking of the foreigners in our umlst. Dr. Kerlny pointed out that the country spent some eighteen msillions of dollars and the I`a.l`l- rcads another eighteen million in buinging those foreigners to our count!`-_v. Now it was up to us t:o Canadlzmize them. They have done much of our dirty work, and it was up to us to give them 9. square deal. They should be taught that when they come to this country they must .(Ia'1)t themselves to the ways of the Development Issue W. 0. PA RTRIDGE country. We need teachers and leaders who are 100 per cent. Can- adian to guide them in the right way. In nnqinsr hr k'nrIhv Inndn :1 W'il.,V- In closing Dr. Kenby made :1 strong plea for unity and lrigh ideals. The grealt war has taught us many lessons. Our boys went over the top without a. flinch, they followed their leaders. Now our task is to CZ1I`1`_V on. VVe need strong leaders in our govevnments, in our church- es, in our schools, in our commun- ities, zmd in our homes. W'e need more of the community spoiril. It is only by playing `our pzwt in whatever sphere we are in that we can build up our nation and make it \\'h'u!L it rlglltfully is, the gnu-test nation in the wold. J1` IV. to S1`. IV.--1st I -Edith Mcliever. 2nd t --.\l1en Brown, SIE-\\':L!`K 1 Wilson. I -ass--I\ e.nneH1 In III on Qr Ill 1;~v Class Hon. Class I-Ion. Bell. Santly, .\I.il1er. -i Jr. III. to Sr. 1lI.--1st Class I-Ion.` ---.\n.xLie Storey. 2vnd Clrass H0n.-~ Lorraine .\IcKever, Stanley Ro1l'e. Recom-mended-.A\1`1o Ferris, Rem ]:IzLvers0n, Douglas Ferris. I Q1` 11 m n- ITT__`In1I{lnuc T-Tnn The closing scene at the Chauta.u- qua on Friday night was the stir- ring address by Di`. George VV. Kerby on "The T2151: of a. Nation." Dr. Kerby was born in Ontario wnd has spent 21.11 his life in Czinzuizi. The past nineteen years have been spent in Cz11ga.i'y, where he is presi- dent of .\I0unt Royal College. He is a. ne appearing man with :1 charniimz pers0na,lit,\'. On I*`ridz1.y night he eloquently outlined the pos- sibilities of this :._:x`eaL country of nllvc nvui nrrnuH\' I`ni'ni`-1'r\(i In UK`: 'I1'(L\'L`l 5UIJ, 1JUll.j-;litS 1`Ul`I'l`.'5. Sr. 11. to J1`. III.-2n(l Class Hun. --Helen Bell and Evelyn )lcGi1'x`. Jr. 1. to SI`. I.--1st Clvass I-Ion.- Cl`ifl ord Baldwick. Ca,theI'ine Brown, 2nd Class Hon.--IIazel Story. Pass -Audrey Walsh. 171- A in `Ir T11` :1cO (`llama '| .Tnn --.-\uun:_y \V'iJ.lll. Pr. A. to Jr. P1`.-1st Class Hon. -E(1win Vale. Pr. B. to Pr. A.-Cl`arence Win- grove, Bobobde Story, Mildred Lock- `hart. Dnin \ln'l. nunn VF.-nu l'|`II\l< Mines are all made, made by money, brains and muscle, and for a Very limited further period Lebel Lode will make its eifort among Canadians to raise the necessary funds for development. Every day our men are working away 011 the property, their picks are busy developing new Value for our share- holders, but they have to be paid and will continue to have to be paid from sales of shares until suffi- cient development has been done and equipment. provided to turn the tide the other way. American interests have picked up, this spring, tl1ree miles of the choicest mining la11d in Lebel Township that wrap half way around Lebel Lode p1'ope1't.y. To them Lebel Lode looks like a choice morsel and for the price of control Lebel Lode could be immediately and indcpdendcntly nanced. The only object for our appeal to the Canadian public for subscriptions to our development issue is that the Canadian Executive of this young Canadian company have ambitions to keep this a Canadian controlled company. wealth produced in the same time in the shape of reserves and equipment. Surely such a conquest is worthy of any coun- try, surely Canadians must learn to take pride in the development of such a golden harvest that will continue to shell out its wealth for decades to come whether it freoozs, snows, blows or rains. Surely they will not wait for their American and other cousins to pick up all the plums a11d be satised with the husks ? VVe are making our appeal in a few Canadizui towns where we have appointed a local representa- tive to difspense fu1-ther information and receive payments for stock, etc. The support we receive S.S. N0. 1, VE1SPRA Reta. .\IcKever, Teacher. slbllllles ()1 H115 .I'eaL cuuuu'_y U1 ours, and proudly rater-red to the part slw has played in the past. Dr. lierhy xmule a stirrin,-.: plea for bet- ter citizeuslxip, better etltlcutinnal facilities. greater development of our national resources. and es1)ec.ia.l- ly for _:;1-a,=.;uter leuderslnip. His 03.111- ost plea for 100 per cent. Czuna(lizm- ism met wilth hearty zLppx'0\'21l. r`.n-uln uv-.4: nn Innrvnr :1 r'nlnn\.`_ `((`umllcs) Barrie, Ontario PHONE 861 THE NORTHERN ADVANCE Mr. Wauchope spent :1 few days with his family at Pu'in::e Albert. I Alia: Qnnxvrlnn Rnnftv nf lhp unl- VVILH [HS Iilllllly ill. 1"I'll1C(;` .*XH)Ul`L. Miss Snowden Beauty, of the col- lege staff, is spending her "acution at Galt. 1-.. rs r<.....z.m I\c n...-.4... `)n:i_` LLL LI2.llL. Miss C. Gordon, of Barrie Busi- ness College staff, is spen a Va.- cation down the St. Lzuvrence River and in Quebec. \h~ 'T` I nuunhnno Hm nnw u.uu 111 QUUUBC. Mr. T. W. Wauchope, the new proprietor of the Barnie Business Colilege, recentfly attended a conven- t.ion oi` the Busirness Educators .~\s- sociation o=f C-a.nia.da. at which he was successful in ha.vin::; the Barrie school umlivated with the Associa- tnion. This is another px'<)_gressi\'e step for our Business College, as cnly business schools with u1o'1;>rn equip- u1en.t. and :1 good reputation, as well as a well quzulied staff, will be ad- mitted to nienrbershizp. The object of the Business Educators` .-\ssociu- tion is to set a hiigh Sl:1n':).1`d for coinim-1-rial and stenogrnpliic train- - ing. The Associnlioxi sets an indepen- dent examination marked `by an in- dependerit Board of Exzrniners, and Z1 diploma issued by the .:\ss:)eia.t.ior1 is 1Lw11l`(let] to sucees:-;:`ul cnntlitiates. Barrie school is to he (`OnL;I`:l.tIl1il1C(] on being nduiimed us (1 nzrriubvr ot` the Association. \ uu\.u... Prisonc-r chmged with check- rnising said bootleg whiskey made Ihim see dowble. "I-YI\1IY1(\V1rv-IHIYQ vnn hnnn in 1'g'.M"l `mm see uowme. I-Iow long have you been in ja'rl?" asked the judge. "Ten days." Ten days more, said the court. I see double, too." B.B.G. NOTES mm wt-tn neurry zLpp1`U\'1u. Cunzuln was no longer a colony. but {L . (letvt'minin_L: nation, and the ntost f:u`ox'e nation in the whole xvorld. Cnnudzt is on the eve of the- _`..(l`021I`S( in and _`.;I`lClll1lll`z1.1 tlevelotmtextt. of am` country in the world. The almost nnlimitml space of Canzulvn, cam ac- commodate lIJU,000,tJuU people and then have lots ot' room to spztre. In \\'os Cunndat there are 1'1-fly million acres of land undeveloped along the railroads. C{l.I121(1Zl. has more than half the fresh water sup- ply in the world. This wrll mean much in developing lmlustnial power, etc. Her soil is one of Can- nda's greatest assets and she witlil become the granary of the world. Canada has 17 per cent. of the coal OFFICE--46 BAYFIELD ST. \VAR RECORDS The other day in police court a young man was fined heavily for violating an automobile trafc law.` He paid his ne without a word. I Outside the courtroom a friend ask- ed him why he hadn't told the judge he was a veteran of the war. The judge would have let you off had he known your war record," said the friend. \f-u uynvu v-nnrn-:1 H: nnnunihinrr On LFIBLIU. My war record is something llive up to, not something to get ' on," replied the ex-service man. ..--u .: u v.-uhv .u.u.- Following is an estimate of the total composition of `the average man, which has recently been pub- lished by :1 big industrial cotnpany, and which may be thus sttmtuzu'izeti: fat enough for seven bars of soap; iron enough for 21 metlium-sized nail; su-gar enough to fill 11. shaker; lime enough `to whitewash :1 chicken coop; phosphorus enough to make 2,200 mzLtch-tiups; iungitesitmt enough -for zt dose of tmtgnesin; potassium enou.;h to explode 21 my cannon, and sulphur enough to rid :1 dog of fleas. '.\lun_\' items in this estimate are left` lmrgely to the lllli1.,"ll11lIi(Jll. such as the size of the doj.-: and the number of his I0lTlllellit)l'S. but the total cost of the i1i;;t'etlients is _L_:iven as 95 cents. | Cl'd.h`:i. ,Can any little boy tell me what a. sh net is made of?" he inquired. "A lot of little holes tied together with strings." smiled the never-fail- ing bfigll-t boy. LIIE class. n during the next week 01' so will decide the 11:1tio1m1- ity of 0111' company, Whether We remain Canadian A 1 - n 1 1 `:1 1' ` 1,, u ' .1 01- Ame1'ican-the closing of a deal with big inter- ests will close opportunity for Canadians to partici- pate in the early issues of Label Lode shares at 250 01' any price. Only a very moderate amount is required to prove our property to a depth of over 400 feet-0u1' rst objective. At this depth we believe we will l1ave proven such substantial values that shares bought at 25c now will have hundreds per cent. ad- vanced market value. Three hundred purchasers of only 1000 shares each will close our requirements for this year and see us down the required 400 01` more feet; any town of your size could easily pro- vide this amount al0ne-the little town of Graven- $23,000,000 i11 dividends from the Gold Hines of Kirkland and Porcupine have already been paid back to their shareholders in eleven years oper- ation, in addition there is more than $100,000,000 Surely we are not expecting too much from a half dozen hustling towns of from 5000 to 10,000 p0pulation-300,000 shares at 250 per share, that sold and we close our books absolutely for this year at that or any other price. 300,000 more shares sold will still leave 1,100,000 shares in the treasury out of a total capital of 2,000,000 and our property clear of debt and developed to 400 feet, with 1,100,000 shares to sell at aclvanc-ed prices to carry on to production stage and dividends. Ahurst itself. Read this over, think it over, if you like look the property over, size it up any way you choose. `V0 don t care what. methods of investigation you take, so long as they are intelligent. You can get some information from the Bureau of Mines at T0- ronto on the district and location, and you can get our prospectus and further details and engi11ee1"s opinion and shares i11 this issue from Dened The visitor was examining the Inc: a i The .~\\'emp;e Mun has bought and paid for over 40000 shares Judging by the number of peopi who are go/ing on long hikes, hiking must be included in the ranks of 511 11111181` SDOFIS. nn Qnnrltuv nvn vmrnrr hnvg nf islnmner sports. On Sund`zt_v two young boys of Windsor High School passed through Barrie on El. hike to Temagami. These two, R. S. Scott and M. Wood, carried their tent and all other re- quisites with t.hem, each shotrldering 8. pack wihch weighed about forty- tive pounds. The pair are in ex- tremely good spirits and speak high- lly of the beauty of Barrie and the hospitality of its citizens. Through Iontririo they have been given num- erous ]`iftS," which speaks well for tho ntnrin nuntnrict 1_BARRIE BALL TEAM i BEATS HAWKESTONE 1 The Barrie b:1seba11 team j~ou1*ney- led to I~Ia,\vkest0ne to play their re~ `turn game with the Haawkestone ag- l:.:1'e:.:21lion last I*`1'ida,v. The nal `score was 5 to 4 with Barrie the lwinners. Ennms `pitched for Barrie, iwhile Hzwrkestone had :1 new pncher, Roy Reid. The teams: Hawkestone--T. Pugley 1.b, R. [Reid 1), A. I ug\s1ey 3b, H. Pugsley c, |A. Mcconnchy ss, J. Reid 2xb. M. unn v-P Kendall cf, J. Pugsley 1f, J. Patter- _ The gold mining industry has attained its present day affluence due to money placed in their o11e-time ventures by the men who had the grit and courage to back up their convictions and the evi- dence obtainable. 'VVherever the required money has been intelligently expended the reward has duly followed, is the history of Northern Ontario Gold Mining in Timiskanling. These men have made un- believeable fortunes for themselves, a mint of wealth to Canada at large ,and blazed the trail that when intelligently followed will build up and de- velop Ontario s gold production so as to tower above that of any country in the civilized world. `BARRIE VISITED BY I WINDSOR HIKERS lJLll2LI'lU L'HU_y 1ld.\vB UU| s the Ontario motorist. 1`l.. Barrie-I-I. Carson 1t`, J. Dobson lb, J .Harris ss, `C. Pae 3b, M. Liv- ingstone 2b, C. Livingstone cf, R. Flaherty c, L. Emms p, K. Lally rf. Lebel Township is undergoing more aggressive gold development at the present moment than any other section of the north c0untry-and it warrants the activity. No other property oers better geo- logical and structural conditions, cleaner promotion, more moderate capitaliaztion, better locatio11 in Lebel Township than does Lebel Lode Limited with its 176 acres of choice mining lands patented and paid for with t11c exception of $4000 not yet due, fteen goldbearing Veins all backed by an Executive that commands respect and covers all phases of honest mining principles. Twelve years ago there was less to be seen on any of the present producing Gold Mines than there is to be seen to-day on Lebel Lode property-and this notwithstanding that the Gold Mines of Porcu- pine a11d Kirkland Lake are to-day producing close to one ton of gold bullion weekly. areas of the world. Her minelral Wealth is une.\:cel'led` in the world. Only a few days ago a. mine in Northern Ontanio was estimated to produce at least a. billion and a. half of gold. The wealth 0.1 our forests was only be.ginn.ing to be realized. Dr. Kerby was condent that if our `.o\'ern.ment would take and develop our pulp industry the 112111011211 debt could be paid off in six years. The nzLt.urzLl scenery and grandier of Canada. was one of the wonders of the world. .\lilLionls of dollars are left in Canzldu every year by tour- lslis from all over the world. the the nu: vnco no.-n0 and vhn knnn nit Ohn