P. O. Box 62 Phone N Te n 120022434 53+ 20080 afeate ts 1 Ts a30a 20439 ids ate g}%}tfltfl.é.u..ut?uxut":uzuxuxutnznz. 2 Â¥*% w * _ â€"% , 0. ho For lists of publications, geological maps and reports, copies of the minâ€" ing laws, and other information apply to Assistance is rend%?ed by the Govâ€" ernment in the way cutting trails, cleaning streams and bmldmo roads, in order to afford access to mining claims or areas, and where a dlstrlct proves its ore deposits to be of suffiâ€" cient value and extent to warrant the expenditure, it is provided with railâ€" way «communication. The Temiskaâ€" ming Testing Laboratories at Cobalt are equlpped to sample ores, and proâ€" vision has been made for the purchase of gold ore. Ontario is now one of the leading sources of gold, being outranked only by the Transvaal and United States. In 1925 the production was valued at $30,207,545 over 83 per cent. of the entire output of Canada. The nickel mines of Sudbury produce 90 per cent. of the world‘s requirements of that metal. The silver output in 1925 had a value of $7,084,864. Dividends and bonuses paid by gold and silver minâ€" ing companies to the end of 1924 amounted to $140,289,729. An attractive field is offered to the prospector in Northern â€" Ontario. Seventy per cent. of the entire northâ€" land is underlain with preâ€"Cambrian rocks, in which occur the nickel mines of Sudbury, the silver deposits of Cobalt, South Lorrain and Gowganda, the gold of Poreupine and Kirkland Lake, copper on the north shore of Lake Huron, and iron in Michipicoten and other areas. By virtue of a warrant issued by the warden, Reeve of the Township of Calvert bearing date of the Tenth day of August, A.D. 1926, sale of lands in arrears for taxes in the Township of Calvert will be held in the Municipal Hall of Ansonville, Ont. at the hour of ten o‘clock in the foreâ€" noon on the 22nd day of November, AD. 1926, unless the taxes and costs are sooner paid. _ Notice is hereby given that the list of lands for sale for arrears of taxes is being published in the Ontario Gazette on the 14th day of August, 1926, and that copies of the said list may be had at my office. Treasurer‘s Office, This 14th day of August A.D. 1926 TREASURER‘S SALE OF LAND FOR TAXES Deputy Minister of Mines HONOURABLE CHAS. McCREA, Minister of Mines Toronto Ontario. You will be sure of the Finest Quality, and the Year. IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY YOUR COAL NOW. District of Cochrane, Province of Ontario ONTARIO‘S MINING LANDS Excavations for ~For Brown October‘ BR EW â€" THOS. W GIBSON, 44â€"46 PEARL STREET, TORONTO. ° 20E 214 Ib. can $1.50, at your Dealer‘s, or write us. Flavored with hops ; no boiling of Hops makes the best Stout 0.000000000000000000000000 D.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“‘“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“‘“. *# “0“0 * “. is 2281 .2, .4. .8, .0. .0. _% t+ .0 0.“.“.“.".“ .“ .“ .00 .“ .“.“.“.“.“.0 J. M. BELANGER, MANAGER Retailers Anthracite and Bituminous Coal. C Reed Block, Pine St., Timmins TIMMINS FUEL CO. LEO MASCIOLI CONTRACTOR PAUL DUBE, EMPIRE BUILDING Treasurer. , Bewers, Etc. Contracts of all kinds Satisfaction assured you here whether you Buy or Sell. Give us a Trial. Goods Delivered Free. Don‘t Buy or Sell Before You See Me, 36 Wilson Ave.., cor. Preston St Phone 610â€"J. Best Prices on all Goods Purchased. Lowest Prices on all Goods Sold. New and Secondâ€" Hand Store All Kinds of Furniture, Bought, Sold or Exchanged. Goldfields Theatre Building Timmins, Ont. Phone 428M DR. C. SULLIVAN Bank of Commerce Bldg. Pine St. N. Tim T. N.O. Station, Timmins, Ont STEAMSHIP . TiICKET S Steamship Tickets all lines, at Station Ticket Office where you can buy Rail Tickets at the same time. Open Evenings BARRISTER, ETC. Phone No. 321 DENTIST New Office 38â€"50p | of the (xothmv she woreâ€"but it‘s all Â¥ I used to love my girl just beceause yÂ¥ ga | off now .-â€"Gett}aburg Cannon Bawl. *‘* Now, the improved processes, and the market demand for zine makes the old slag dumps valuable.. It is estiâ€" mated that the Eastg Helena smelter has 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 tons of zine slag on its dump, that can be reworkâ€" od with a profit. ‘*The old Congress mine in Arizona is said to have $8,000,000 worth of lowâ€"grade ore on its dumps, which once cost fortunes to throw away as waste, but that now can be concentâ€" trated at a profit. *+*Mining is an enduring industrial enterprise. It is the farmer‘s good friend because of the markets it makes for its produce. ' *‘*From Idaho to New Mexico, minâ€" ing has been the basis of prosperity for every mountain state. It has been the great employing and taxâ€" paying industry and it deserves inâ€" telligent consideration at the hands of the public.‘‘ s ho ie oo us arn Te onl ut t t n n h d “For years the great East Helena smelter was operated under the curâ€" rent milling practice of penalizing zinc ores as a metallic menace rather than an asset. metallurgical world considered that zine was a pest dnd the zmc ores were frowned upon. w n In the article given herewith, minâ€" _ng is referred to as ‘‘an enduring inâ€" dustrial enterprise."‘ Certainly in most countries. it has ‘‘endured"‘ enough, through false ideas and conâ€" ceptions on the part of the public. When a man puts money in an ordinâ€" ary commercial venture and loses his cash, usually his business judgment are considered to be at fault. Busiâ€" ness as a whole, however, is not conâ€" demned. In the mining game it is otherwise. The man who loses money in mining, no matter how wildâ€"catâ€" tish the scheme may have been, at once, as a general thing, sets up a howl that miriing is a crooked game, and the ery is taken up by all his friends and his wife‘s relations. If he should make an honest dollar or two out of mining, he is hailed as a lad so smart that even the mining. crooks are not able to trim him. The fact, of course, is that mining toâ€"day is little more venturesome than the ordinary lines df commercial busiâ€" ness. In fact, there is no doubt but that a man has a better chance of making good money from an honest mining venture than from any other ondinary business investimen{. As the industry develops the prospects become more extensive and stable While these thoughts are along a different line than prompted by the main part of the following article, they are roused by the implications of the concluding paragraphs. The Triâ€"State Miner recently said:â€" > Primer Câ€"Marjorie Spires, Jack Picard, Mary Curtis, Reggie Kavanâ€" agh, Buddie Spitz, Irene Eyre, Joyce Hughes, Sloco Ustianyk, Agnes Roâ€" bertson, Iris Webb, Stewart McGinn, Elsie Parsons. Primer Bâ€"Katie Zaitz, Doris Woods, Marjorie Costain, Johnnie Shumilak, Annie Cartonik,. â€"Glanata Gallai, Jimmie Murphy, Dorothy C Ox, Edwin â€" Kavanagh, Lloydie Doran, Regegie Butler, Rayno Rauhala, Walter Baker, First Classâ€"Orry Costain, Elsie Armstrong, Margaret Lahti (Vivian MeCaffrey, Mary Shumilak equal); Florence Lloyd, Hattie Baker, Helen Laitz. > Room Iâ€"H. M. Green, teacherâ€" Primer Aâ€"Charlie Eyre, Basil Libby, Nora St. Denis, Betty Jordan, Donâ€" ald Picard, Jackie Burke, Stevie Usâ€" tranyk, Jennie Gallai, Violet Lahti, Joyce â€" Hughes, Buddie Robertson, Carmel Kavanacgh. ‘‘*MINING IS AN ENDURING INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISE‘*‘ ~arsons, Room IIâ€"W. B. Marshall, teacher Junior Secondâ€"Cecelia Spitz, Ida Tanney, Mildred MeCaw, Beatrice Spiers, Herve St. Denis, Billie Milâ€" lions, Florence Johnston, Grace Murâ€" ray, Roddie MePhail, Frank Parsons. First Classâ€"Orry Costain, Elsie Jr. IIIâ€"Stella Zabiaka, Lois Denâ€" nis, Mar y Cartonick, Jack Bray, Nick Zaitz, _ Norma McePhail, _ Clarence Cronk, Maurice Varker, Ross Mcâ€" Phail. Sr. IIâ€"Billie Lahti, Alice Eyres, Eva Baker, Irvin Richardson. Ina THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Room 3â€"Vera Dick, teacherâ€"Sr. III Aâ€"Flossie Duggan, Verbino Della Vedova, Maizie Yeomans, Jennie Doxan, Stanley Shumilak, Terence Sampson, Nilo. Della Vedova. Senior Third Class B.â€"Bogdon Dimitroff, Margaret Lloyd, Nora Cosâ€" tain, Lorne McCaw, Jameb Miner, Margaret Stone. The following is the Dome School report for September :â€" Fourth Classâ€"Marcella J. Lynch, teacherâ€"Malcolm MeCaw, Kenneth MceCaffrey, â€" Helena \furrd\ Bella Zaitz, Ruh\ Richardson (\Ieta Melâ€" ville, Vera Doran, Annie Zaitz, Tona Andrew equal); Carson Young (Irene Armstrong, (George Johns equal) ; Hilda Rowe, Romeo Beaudry, Francis Horne, Maud Tranter, Leda (0\ Eiâ€" leen Larkin, â€"Clarence ’\IoCaflrm Geradine Fulton, Perey Millions, Marâ€" gearet Gardham. REPORT FOR NOME SCHOOL FOR MONTH OF SEPTEMBE: Standing of the Pupils in the Various ~Classes for the Past Month. Besides this, such a roada would be a good thing for the Forestry Departâ€" ment, as it would be close to water most of the way, and in case of fire Now that‘. there is alre; ady a road from Elk Lake to Matachewan and on further, “h) not get our eyes open, and put it in shape to Timmins, and tlien make a quick run to Gowganda or Shiningtree, right through the fuâ€" ture mining country, and it would be like *Silver Threads Among the (iold."" In a few hours we could leave a gold country, pass through a silver countn and into another gold one. far as prospecting is concerned, but the precious metals are there in quanâ€" titvâ€"somewhere. The following letter explains itself and is well worthy of careful consiâ€" ‘deration because it is written by a man who has spent more than twenty years in the North, who has helped to pioneer more than one mining camp. here, and who has the firmest faith and the most intelligent thought for the future of this country. Elk Lake, Ont., Sept. 29th, 1926. To the Editor of The Poreupine Advance . Dear Sir:â€"Mr. L. Acheson, the Chief Fire Ranger of this district, is the first man to run an automobile to Matachewan, which he did last week, leaving in the morning and returning at evening. It is to be hoped in the near future that this road will be put in good shape for autos right on from Elk Lake to Timmins. I believe that the future of Timmins and the Poreuâ€" pine to the southeast, south and southwest, where there are already good showings of gold, and which seeâ€" tions are in the Kirkland Lake belt. This road could tap MeNeil and other townships, and would also conneet Poreupine and Gowganda and Shinâ€" ingtree. The latter place at present is having the power line built to it. Who is so blind as to say that this road would not be a grand thing for Porecupine? Let anyone come to the Matachewan country and go up on one of the fire rangers‘ towers, and on a clear day he will see about sixty townships, about 2000 square miles of forest, and northeast he will sec Kirkland Lake gold camp. â€" Northâ€" west he will see the black smoke of the MelIntyre Mine at Poreupine. Southwest he will see Gowganda very plainly, and southeast he can see the Beaver Mine at Elk Lake and the silver country around (Get up on the ‘ tower! Look south, and as far east as one can look there is silver minâ€" ing! Then turn around. and look north and from east to west there is America‘s greatest gold mining! Where else in the world can you find such a place, and in between these zones there are hundreds of square miles of country not yet seratched as "Porcupine Pioneer" Believes the Future of Timmins and the Porcupine Lies to the Southeast, South and Southâ€" west, and Advocates Connections by Road With Elk Lake and Other Camps to the South. Urges Road Connections Southward from Timmins Senior Primerâ€"W. Francis, teacherâ€"Leah Aspin 78, Nelson Woolâ€" cocks 76, Janet Garrow 75, Albert Hornby 75, Edvin Peterson 75. Number enrolled 403. Firstâ€"J. Acheson, teacherâ€"Beryl Arnold 89, Walter Jackiniski 85, Mary (Goode 85, Muriel Goode 84. Doris MeKinnon 83, Willie Mason 83, Marie Getty 81, Chas MeCafferty 80. Alti Salo 79, Helen Jackenisky 78, Billie Gibson 75. Sr. IIâ€"H. M. Sprague, teacherâ€" Emily Hornby 86, Mary Mason 86, Marion Garrow 84, Roy Jones 83, Nelâ€" lie Drady 82, Loella Wear 77, Edward Garrow 76, 'l om Brunton 76, Ralph Duesharm 76, Gwendoline Rll(‘) 783, JIr. 1Iâ€"M. Ferguson, teacherâ€"Marâ€" garet Horuby 86, Taimi Forsberg 82. Douglas Robertson 82, Wyman Brewer 80, Rose Lucas 80, Hugh Duesharm 78, Clifford Jennings 75, Lilhian Mason 75. Fourth Classâ€"E,. J. Transom, prinâ€" cipalâ€"Olive Paver 82, Bronnie ’\Tele- dith 79, Winnifred Harvey 78, Aileen Milton 7‘(3. Sr. 11Iâ€"Mildred Tackaberry. teachâ€" erâ€"Madge Webb 88, Aila 1*1«)\(1 80, Milford Doyle 80, Kustaa Jaakola 16 Jolhn MacLean 77, Joy Lake 77, Berâ€" tha Waldon 75, Margery \Telbon 70. Jr. IIIâ€"Inez Carruthers, teacherâ€" (George Burton 80, Helmi Kumzsul 78, Ora Hulju 76. The following is the report of the Mattagami Public School for \optem- beriâ€"â€" REPDRT FOR MATTAGAM! 3GNOOL FOR SEPTEMBER Standing of the Pupils in the Various Classes at the Mattagami School. between the places, the autos conld get there with the fire pumps. Porâ€" cupine is still Ontario‘s greatest gold camp, and her future lies to the east, west and south. She has already roads east. Why not have one south to her silver sister, Gowganda, and to her son, Shiningtree. There is only the stretch of country to the height of land and a little beyond to be built and then she is connected, and it will cost very little to put it in shape. There is plenty of stone, gravel and sand all the wayv. William 0. Langdon Barrister, Solicitor, Etce. ROOM 2 Yours Truly, oreupine Pioneer."‘ J. Transom, prinâ€" 82, Bronnice Mere- Harvey 78, Aileen 5 Reed Block Timmins New Offices Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries of Public, etc. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETCO Gordon Block Platus Lewlis Thursday, Oct. 7th, 1926 Frank J. Kehoe Phone 610â€"W 29 Wilson Avenue Sweet Clover Milk Bread Have the Wagon Call Wedding Cakes Cakes Pastries Canadian Pacific faâ€" mous the world over. For rates, descriptive literature, etc., apply Sports? An%vthing you liï¬e. Golf, motoring, dancing, fishin‘g, climbing, swimming, riding;in the sweetest, purest air on earth. Swiss guides for Alpine climbing, courteous attendants, and hotel service that makes ies. What a tonic for tired brains and frayed nerves! Appetite reâ€" gained and sleepâ€"sure nights n the Plyor i the Specialty TR Y