0464060404 ©4¢%¢0646 Firstâ€"class Meals. Best of Service. Everything clean and neat. Specialty of putting up Miners‘ Lunches (Opposite the Goldfields) Under the management of Miss Alice Gratton Homeâ€"made pastry made to order , I 8 $ '? ' , |:p : Business is like an aeroplaneâ€"to stop is to drop. ‘*‘In view of the number of Canâ€" adian workmen who are unemployed and are anticipating going to the United States to better their condiâ€" tion, the following letter received by The Star from a former member of a Toronto firm, who is on the other side, may be of interest: ‘*I hope you will exeuse me taking liberty of writing to you at this time. Now, as you see by address, 1 am a little way from Toronto. **I came on here from ~Detroit. Work here is very plentiful and wages good, but boaard and lodging are very high. I am paying $6 per week for room, and then to eat in restaurants, which I find is still higher, takes all the good there is in the job. I think if you can see your way clear to give me a chancee and place me in your serâ€" vice youraction will be fully appreciâ€" ated by me."" high. 4i am paying room, and then to e which I find is still the good there is in if vou can see vour FARâ€"AWAY FIELDS ARE NOT SO GREEN AS THEY LOOK Some weeks ago The Advance referâ€" red to the mistake made by some in fAying to distant points because the hills look green from far away. Someâ€" times, the green is all in your eye. Why, they are even finding out this idea in Toronto. An issue of The Toâ€" ronto Star last week said :â€" Red clover, 4 Ibh; alsike, 2 lb; white Dutch clover, 1 lb; and timothy, 2 Ib. per acre. This is not heavy seeding; but subâ€" sequent annual reseeding takes place from the parent plants, and it is not long before the ground is covered with a mass of celover and timothy which continues to mature seed. Thus the pastures are of a permanent nature. Red celover shows perennialism very strongly here; pastures that were seeded in 1918 ‘being still 100 per cent red clover, so dense last year that the stock could not eat it down. Whe eloâ€" ver pastures in the north serve a double purpose, furnishing livestock with an abundance of grass and buildâ€" ing up the fertility of the soil. A great difference in the productivâ€" ity of the soil has been observed when it was seeded to pasture for ‘three or four years, compared with when the virgin soil was broken up. The cost of seeding is not high, and soon pays for itself in pasture for the stock. â€" several mixtures of grass were tried out at this Station in stump pastures, but the best results were obtained from the ahove mentioned. ‘Clover is one of the best forage crops grown, and is well adapted to this climate. There is room for thousands of catâ€" tle in Northern Ontario as soon as the pasture to feed them is seeded; and it should not ‘be long before stock can be brought in and fattened, and sold off the erass for the markets. Last week Mr. D. St. Onge asked to have his want advt. discontinued in The Advance. ‘‘I want to stop the crowds coming to see me about rentâ€" ing that house,"" says Mr. St. Onge. Mr. A. Prout also warned The Adâ€" vance not to run‘ his advt. a second time. **I just want the one girl,‘‘ he said, ‘‘not a dozen or more."‘ Mr. J. P. ‘S. Ballantyne, Superinâ€" tendent of the Experimental Station at Kapuskasing, Ont., last week sent The Advance the following article. While Mtr. Ballantyne is writing parâ€" ticularly with the Kapukasing area and the district east and west in view his article applies with equal forece to other sectiors of the North Land where the soil is of the famous ‘‘*Clay Belt‘‘ type. Much of the land in the immediate vicinity of Timmins has an overburden of sandy loam, but is good growing land. There are also large stretches of the regular North Land clay belt land. The article by Mr. Ballantyne is as follows:â€" The settler in Northern Ontario is early faced by the problem of pasture for his stock, as there is no vegetation when the timber from the virgin forâ€" est is removed. But it need not take long to get abundance of pasture, when once the necessary clearing is done; red celover, alsike and white Dutch clover grow like weeds in the north, and if seed is sown at the proâ€" per time there will soon be all the pasâ€" ture required. oEEDING PASTURE 1M KCRTHERN DNTARIO As the soil at the Experimental Staâ€" tion is representative of that found east and west of it, the method of seed ing used here should be suita‘ble un der most conditions in the clay belt. When the timber has been removed and a good burn got over the s‘lash it is usual at the Stition to sow broadâ€" cast, directly the snow is down enough in the spring, the following mixture: Red clover, 4 Ibh; alsike, 2 lb; white Dutch clover, 1 lb; and timothy, 2 Ib. ‘‘*WHAT YOU WANT, WHEN YOU WANT IT,‘"‘â€"ADVANCE ADVT. Red Clover, Alsike and White Dutch Clover Grow Like Weeds in ‘The North, THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE Here you will find anything you wish in Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candies, Fruits, Wines, Tobaccos, Cigars, Cigar ettes. Stationery, Novelties, Jewelry, Phone 347 Come to P. Antoine‘s Pleasure Ice Cream Parlour sona@ble. Order your wood now beâ€" fore the rush. â€"33 H. CHARLEBEBOTS. Fire Wood in any iengtns to suit, from 14 inches to wood in log. Dry and green Jackpine. Prices very reaâ€" Tyrell, one of the deading consulting engineers of (anada, has been retainâ€" ed as consulting engineer for the Keoâ€" ra, and will supervise the work to be done on the «property. The Keora owns 120 acres in the northern part of Whitney Township, and also owns two million shares of South Keora Mines Limited. in this section of the Porâ€" cupine there is much promising actâ€" ivity at the present time, work being in progress on properties rot far from the Keora. At the Poreupine Grande, east of the Keora, there are 30 men at work,. At the Sceottish Oatario and other properties in the district work is also under way with very pleasing results so far. At the recent annual meeting of the Poreupine Keora, the shareholders raâ€" tifled the byâ€"law increasing the capital from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000. The new stock is said to be underwritten already, and it is understood that an extensive diamond drilling campaign will be carried on to explore the posâ€" sibilities of the property. Mr. J. B. DIAMOND DRILLING TO BBE DONE ON PORCUPINE KEORA * _ article on the Canadian Sulphite Pulp Industry. Every owner of pulp and paper securities should read it. eéTNVESTMENT ITEMS" is a comâ€" plete review of Canadian investâ€" ment and ‘business conditions, and commodity markets, written by leading authorities on each subject. HIS month‘s issue contains a striking pipel i 44, ie arty \ . se Ne 2s * m mm ao ant ho ies ie e *h m COCKROACHES, Bugs and all other kinds of vermin.. Contracts taken for this, and satisfaction guaranteed. _ Hundreds of people have been delighted with my serâ€" vice. _ References, Apply to A. Coter, 49 Hollinger Lane, Mattagaâ€" mi, or send postcard to Box 468, Timmins, Ont. 45â€"49p. Royal Securities Corporation, Limited 244 Bay Street TORONTO Now open for business. Firstâ€"elass rooms, and steam heated All upâ€"toâ€"date conveniences. Reading and Sitting Rooms. Sample Rooin for Travellers. Best dining room in town. Meals at all hours. *‘ now and we will torward you the latest issue. 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HE new SUPERIOR Chevrolet answers the ever increasing demand for a completely equipped qualâ€" ity car furnishing comfortable and reliable transportaâ€" tion at a cost lower than that furnished by any other make of car in the world. Sixty â€"seven new improveâ€" ments in the Chevrolet make it more than ever the world‘s greatest motor car value. Scee the new Chevroâ€" let, ride in it, drive it yourself, then LO'DPI’C it point by point with any other car. B416