An attractive field is offered to the prospector in _ Northern‘ 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 Meposits of Cobalt, South Lorrain and Gowganda, the gold of Porcupine and Kirkland Lake, copper on the north shore of Lake Huron, and iron in Michipicoten and other areas. For lists of publications, geological maps and reports, copies of the minâ€" ing laws, and other information apply THOS. W GIBSON, Deputy Minister of Minesâ€" HONOURABLE CHAS. McOREA, Minister of Mines Ontario. Ontario is now one of the leading sources of gold, being 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 eompanies to the end of 1924 amounted to $140,289,729. Assistance is rendered by the Govâ€" ernment in the way of cutting trails, cleaning streams and building roads, in order to afford access to mining claims or areas, and where a district proves its ore deposits to be of suffiâ€" cient value and extent to warrant the expenditur®, it is provided with railâ€" way communication. The Temiskaâ€" ming Testing Laboratories at Cobalt are equipped to sample ores, and proâ€" vision has been made for the purchase of gold ore. _ to pay fer extensions to, and addiâ€" tional cost of a Waterw oxks distribuâ€" tion system together with appurtenâ€" and connections in the Townâ€" ship of Calvert, and that such byâ€"law was registered in the Registry Office for the District of Cochrane on the First day of October, A.D., 1926. Any motion to quash or set aside the same or any part thereof, must be made within three months after the first publication of this notrce, and cannot be made thereafter. Dated this 4th day of October A.D. 1926. Notice is hereby given that a Byâ€" law was passed by the Municipal Council of the Township of, Calvert on the 22nd day of September A.D. 1926, providing for the issue of deâ€" bentures to the amount of $16,000.00 Notice of Registration of BYâ€"LAW No. 128 Dated this 4th day of October A.D. 1926. Notice is hereby given that a Byâ€" law was passed by the Municipal Council of the Township of Calvert on the 22nd day of September A.D. 1926, providing for the issue of deâ€" bentures to the amount of $44,000.00 to pay for the construction of extenâ€" sions ‘to and additional cost of a Sewerage System together with apâ€" purtenances and connections in the Township of Calvert, and that such Byâ€"law was registered in the Registry Office for the District of Cochrane on the First day of October A.D. 1926. Any motion to quash or set aside the same or any part thereof, must be made within three months after the first publication of this notice, and cannot be made thereafter. Notice of Registration of BYâ€"LAW No. 129 R. RICHARDSON AGENT T. N.O. Station, Timmins, Ont Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. * ROOM 2 GORDON BLOCK TIMMINS STEAMSHIP TICKET S Steamship Tickets all lines, at Station Ticket Office where you can buy Rail Tickets at the same time. ONTARIO‘S MINING LANDS William 0. Langdon Thursday, Oct. 21st, 1926 Township of Calvert Township of Calvert PAUL DUBE, » Township Clerk Township Clerk 38â€"50p TIMMINS BRANCH, SOUTH PORCUPINE BRANCH Another new witness has appeared in the Hallâ€"Mills murder case.â€"As this accounts for about the whole population of the village, the murâ€" der must be a ‘‘mystery‘‘ by, acclaâ€" mation.â€"Harry Farmer in Edmonton Bulletin. ‘‘Interests associated with Mr. Noah Timmins, of Montreal, are negotiating for the purchase of Bathurst, Limited, which company owns a large number of mining claims in the Narrow Lake section of the Red Lake district. The Bathurst is capitalized at only 40,000 shares, of which about 26,000 are Nsued It has been stated here that the Timmins interests have offered half a million for the property with a payment of $50,000 to start the deal. Other inâ€" terests are officiallys stated to have offered close to one million for the property, but the vendors appear to be in favor of dealing with Mr. Timâ€" mins on a basis which would leave them with a substantial interest. The more important group of Bathurst lies three miles north of the Dunkin McBain. One vein 17 feet in width ecarries very rich ore at surface. Anâ€" other vein which carries considerable visible gold is from 10 to 30 feet in width and has been traced over half a mile in length. AlM indications point to a very important revival of interâ€" est in the entire Red Lake District. A channel sample of over $#18 per ton has been secured by the Timmins inâ€" terests on property recently examinâ€" ed at Narrow Lake."‘ JOHN L. HUNT, NEGOTIATIONS UNDER WAY FOR BATHURST CLAIMS A despatch last week from Hudson says :â€" IMPERIAL â€"BANEK Money Gives Confidence. 741, TIMMINS, ONT. Our Collection Service 119 Wilson Avenue Public Auctioneer Residence : P. 0. Box Those who have money carry on their work in life with greater confiâ€" dence. A Savings Account with this Bank if added to regularly even with small sums will soon give you the confidence that only the possession of money can give. There is a Savâ€" ings Bank Department at every branch of this Bank, o1 ITH branches and correspondents throughout Canada and strong finanâ€" cial affiliations abroad, we are in a ppsition to make prompt collections in all pafts of the world.© Acceptances are quickly obtained, payments promptly transmittedâ€"details are carefully and accurately handled. Ask our local manager for complete information. " 24 TIMMINS BRANCH, The next band concert will be at the Goldfields Theatre on Sunday evening, October 24th, after the church services. Excellent proâ€" gramme. afsertion was thaf many young women were kissed without ever lifting either foot from the ground. And this was advanced in full sinâ€" cerity. It had not been my priviâ€" lege to see so very many kissed, but all of these accepted the caress flatfooted."‘‘ = Mr. Broun is well within the,facts. The â€"movie caper is unnatural. The actress ‘does not receive a real kiss, and consequently cannot ‘""live her part.‘‘ Were the intimate salute genuine, that is, an expression of mutual love, she would have to take it fHatfooted in order ot withstand th@é dynamic shock of the explosion, for the first kiss of lovers is the exâ€" plosion of electrical currents on the lips which solders two hearts toâ€" gether.. The stage and movie exhibiâ€" tions of the kiss are frauds, and would eause an anticlimax if attenâ€" tion were not called away from the lips as they approachâ€"but do not meet. Hence the kick that gives the bogus kiss its kick for the audience. At least that‘s the way we have figured it out. In real life a pretty girl accepting her lover‘s kiss has no time to kick. She‘s not thinking with or of her kicking apparatus. A cheap car affords more peace of mind. Another squeak doesn‘t matâ€" ter.â€" Vancouver Sun. WHERE DID SUDBURY STAR LEARN THIS ‘"KISS‘*‘ DOPE Heywood Broun, whose column "*{t Seems to Me,"‘ gives remarkable inâ€" terest to the page following the pure and undefiled editorial columns of the New York Herald, touches on a subâ€" ject of interest to all movie patrons, as follows :â€" ‘‘Some years ago I charged the motion _ picture 'producerq with falsifying life in the matter of the method in which all sereen ingenâ€" ues received a kiss. I mean a welâ€" come kiss. It was the custom of the actress alwaysto do a back kick with her right leg, raising the limb precisely to horizontal. My The Sudbury Star last week had the following :â€" THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO D. SUTHERLAND, Manager. J, PAUL MICHAVUD, Manager. Acting Manager. “Tonv Tucker, a Russian, aged 50, was found dead Thursday moxmng, Oct. 14th, with his skell fractured, in the basement of John Wagner‘s store on Station street. Tucker was seen there about eleven o‘clock on Wedâ€" nesday evening by other lodgers. in the house, who presumed that he was drunk and did not go to his assistance. _when he was found yesterday mornâ€" ing he had been dead about ten hours. It is believd that in a drunken stupor Tucker fell down stairs fracturing his skull on the cement floor in the basc- ment. _ He came to Sudbury from Kapuskasing a week ago with about $95.00, but when found he had no money left. It is presumed that he spent the money on liquor. Little is known of the man except that during the past three or four years he has made a few visits to Sudbury."‘ ns ks A despatch from Sudbury last week refers to a former resident of Kapusâ€" kasing as follows.â€" _ e a MAN DIED AS RESULT OF FALL AT SUDBURY STORE. A Hallowe‘en Tea and , Sale . of Home Cooking, under the auspices of the Humane Society, will be held in the store next to Therriault Houriâ€" gan‘s tailor shop, opposite the New Empire Theatre, Third avenue, on Saturday of this week, Oct. 28ra. The success of previous events under the same auspices gives assurance that it will be a pleasing affair. The cause is a very worthy one, and the attendance â€" should be© particularly large. HALLOWE‘EN TEA AND SALE OF HOMEKE COOKING, OCT. 23 As announced in the advertisement elsewhere in this issue for the openâ€" ing of the new store a special offer is being made to the first hundred ladies, and the first hundred gentleâ€" men making a purchase of one dollar or over. * Mr. Pommier‘s new jewelry store is a credit to the town of Timnuns and will considerably brighten up corner of Pine St. and Third Ave. Also>in connection with the new store will be a small repair shop for quick repair work. Mr. Pommier will keep his old store in the New Emâ€" pire Theatre Block open, and will do the finer and more intricate repar work there, In his new store Mr. Pommier has the most complete furnishings of any jewelry store in Northern Ontario. In connection with the store, there is an optical parlour which will be in charge of Mr. Sylvio Andre, genseral manager of.the National Optical Co. The new and upâ€"toâ€"date jewelry store will be in charge of Mr. Thompson, formerly of Toronto. MEW JEWELERY STORE T0 DPEX HERE ON SATURDAY In an advertisement elsewhere in this issue Adrien T. Pommier makes announcement that on Saturday he is opening his new store, which has been entirely remodelled, on the corner formerly occupied by the Bank of Commerce, in the Reed Block. Mr. Adrien T. Pommier Has Well Equipped and Handsome New Quarters in the Reed Block STANDARDINE 5â€"TUBE RADIO .... 20 Bloor Street, W., Toronto CGoast to Coastâ€"No Idle Boast . Engineering and Sales Co., Ltd. FUNERAL DIRECTOR Telephones 608â€"J and 608â€"W. ‘©Sportsmen in the North Bay disâ€" trict are talking of the possibility of creating a game reserve in this disâ€" trict, similar to the Sudbury reserve. According to the plan suggested a certain area in the vicinity of North Bay would be set apart as a sanctuary where wild life would not be disâ€" turbed by the guns of the hunters. The suggestion ha‘s been made that a portion of tlie country being opened up by the new highway to Cobalt would be a particularly suitable place. Here game of all kinds aâ€" bounds. â€" One motorist reported havâ€" ing seen a moose on the road about a week ago, while bear and deer are plentiful. Prospects are that as soon as the hunting season opens North Bay hunters will flock to this section and the fear is expressed that the game_will be considerably decreased by the shooting. The suggestion is a good one. In the new ȴO6ad to Cobalt North Bay has a scenic route that should attract many tourist‘s to the North. (Every effort should be made to reserve .portlons of it in its presâ€" ent state.‘ ‘‘When you have a camp erected, wolves may come around your tent, and even lie on your bed, without cause for alarm. I would just as soon hear them as I would a bunch of frogs. I have never yet heard of an authentic case of a man being atâ€" tacked by a wolf, though I have often heard of men ‘being devoured. These cases, when sifted down, always peter out. Perhaps if there were a large number of wolves in a pack, and a man had no shelter or fire, they would give him trouble, but I have never yet heard of it."‘ Under the heading of **Sport Here and There,‘‘ The North Bay Nugget last week say‘s:â€" SUGGEST GAME RESERVE NORTH OF NORTH BAY Mr. Andy Cullen, prospector, of Haileybury, has added himself to the long list of oldâ€"timers who are satisâ€" fied that wolves do not go out of their way to attack men. Mr. Cullen recently returned from a prospecting trip in the district near Sgult Ste Marie, and in an interview at the Sault he mage it clear that the stories often feaâ€" tured by The Toronto Starâ€"do not meet with his belief. The Sault Ste Marie Star says that Mr. Cullen ‘*thas a fund of wolf stories, all, going to show that wolves will not attack a human being, provided the latter has had a chance to make ecamp.‘"‘ Mr. Cullen says a tent or a fire is the best protection against wolves. ‘‘The red deer and the wolves are always found together,""‘ Mr. Cullen said. ‘*Where there are deer you can expect to see or hear wolves, though an odd wolf is sometimes found where there are plenty of partridges or rabbits. The average man someâ€" times thinks the wolves are after him when they are giving tongue after deer, and the man needlessly takes to a tree. NEVER HEARD REAL CASHE OF WOLVES ATTACKING MAN E: goog?egE TEA ‘ve been inlinding To : eAE wi i@ Kashiou Fanries Great Rejoicing by Rheumatic Cripples It‘s a remedy that is astonishing the whole country, and it‘s just as good for gout, sciatica and lumbago as for rheumatism. It drives the poisonous waste from the joints and musclesâ€"that‘s the secret of Rheuma‘s success. But we don‘t ask you to take our word for it; go to Moisley Ball or ary druggist and get a bottle of Bheuma toâ€"day ; if it doesn‘t do as we promise get your money back. It will be there waiting for you. If So Crippled You Can‘t Use Arms or Legs, Rheuma Will Help You or Nothing to Pay. Following the provisions of the statute passed some years ago, Thanksgiving Day and Armistice Day will be observed together on the Monâ€" day mearest to Armistice Day, Nov. l1th, which this year will be Nov. 8th. Aceordingiy Thanksgiving Day this year is on Monday, Nov. 8th, which is three weeks from next Monâ€" day. While the Thanksgiving and Armistice ‘events are both to be obâ€" served on this day, according to the statute, at the same time a special observance has been requested for the actual day of armistice. Last week Hon. James A. Robb, acting prime minister _ stated ~ that in _ acâ€" cordance with the agrangements for Armistice Day sanctioned by His Majesty the King, the people of Canaâ€" da are invited to mark the occasion by two minutes of silence at 11 0‘â€" clock Thursday morning, November 11. This is a special observance sugâ€" gested by His Majesty, and is in adâ€" dition to the regular holiday recognizâ€" ed by the Parliament of Canada for the Monday previous. Get a bottle of Rheuma toâ€"day and wear a satisfied smxle on your face toâ€" morrow. . Pale blue silk with a delicate flower pattern brocaded in satin threads makes the garment, while the wide sleeves and deep V neck are edged im pale blue marabou flanked with deeper blue ostrich. A slipâ€"on affair might be planned on the same lines, with no opening down the front and ia *‘ halter‘‘ collar THANKSGIVING DAY THIS YEAR ON MON?AY, NOV. 8. The Hollinger Recreation Club are holding one of their pleasant dances this (Thursday) evening in the Holâ€" linger Recreation Hall. The A.S.D. orchestra will provide the music. Refreshments will be served. Daneâ€" ing from 9.30 to 1.30. All certain of a pleasant evening. } The silhouette of the hour, wider in the upper portion with perfectly straight lines for the skirt, is exploitâ€" ed in the becoming negligee pictured above. HOLLINGER RECREATION CLUB DANCE THIS EVENING Marobou and Ostrict Make a Becomâ€" ing Trimming for the Negligee. By Marie Belmont