Arthur E. Moysey Co. recerivea the following wire last week from their office in the Rouyn camp:â€"‘‘A recent surface discovery made on the Hormme, we believe, will prove a big thing for Noranda. It is approxiâ€" mately 700 feet west of the new No. 3 shaft, ‘This is considerably west of their main workings. . It has only _ /J been stripped for about 40 feet, and is _ ~A_jat least 15 feet wide. It was coverâ€" _ ed by about four feet of overburden and appears to have been discovered when they were locating foundation for the primary crusher.. Samples ‘were shown to several engineers aAâ€" roumd the camp, and they are all of the epinion that it runs very high in copper; some estimate 15 per cent. and are also .of the opinion it will prove very much richer when a few rounds are taken out,‘‘ HIGHâ€"GRADE FROM RUN OF THE MINEâ€"AND MILL Some radio entertainers play on the ordinary saw. Listeners could sugâ€" gest a new use for the ordinary axe.â€" Woreester (Mass.) Gazette. This smaller paper money will be all right if it desn‘t disappear quickâ€" er.â€"Worcester (Mass.) QGazette. â€" HORN SURFACE SHOWING . MAY BE VERY IMPORTANT The modern girl fills her hope chest with letters her‘ sweetie told her to lslurn.â€"-sWindsor (Ont.) Border Cities tar. Alas, it is man‘s fate to keep on growing older long after he is old enough !â€"Toledo Blade. The eï¬ectivenees of that. popular touch of "makeâ€"up" will be greatly enhanced if the skin has the velvety smoothâ€" ness and clearness that result The Charm of A Veivet Skinâ€"and the Pure Blood Under It Time it hourséelfâ€" ItstheFastest Llectric Rangeonthe Market AÂ¥ . CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC PRODUCT â€" The effectiveness of that popular touch of "makeâ€"up" will be greatly enhanced if the skin has the velvety smoothâ€" ness and clearness that result , from the use of TRUâ€"BLOOD. This muchâ€"prescribed Blood Tonic corrects the coarsening tendency of "complexion aids‘ and makes the skin clear, * or the dealer‘s demonstration room as it was proven at the thorough test of Electric Heating Elements which demonstrated the new Hotpoint HIâ€"SPEED Element as the fastest electric element on the market. There is a Hotpoint for every need. The Time Payment Plan makes buying easy and convenient. .. _ YOU can prove the Hotpoint HIâ€"SPEED Range in your home aAr the dealer‘s Aemanstration raom as it was nroven at the Goldfields Block S .‘ E. M. Allworth TIMMINS ELECTRIC On Saturday morning, June 18th, at 10 o‘clock, the Ladies‘ Home Leaâ€" gue will hold a sale of work. They have been very busy and have many useful articles, and invite the ladies of the town to come and buy. ’ At 8 p.m. on Saturday a musical programme will be rendered by local and visiting talent. This programme promises to be of especial interest and excellence. It will include vocal numbers by Miss Mills and Miss Mair, of Schumacher; selections by Mr. J. Newman, ‘cello soloist ; and selections by a few of Mr. Birrell Bell‘s pupils who will take part in the programme. For this event the nominal admission fee of 25 cents will ‘be taken at the door. . The programme will be worth "several times this amount. ‘ Teacher “Why, where.did you get that ?" Eddie: "It said his father fell on his neck.:. I bet it would hurt you to fall on your neck.‘‘ the Salvation Army here will be held at the S.A. hall, Timmins, on Saturâ€" day, Sunday and Monday, June 18th, 19th and 20th. ‘"‘The services will be, condncted by Adjutant and Mrs. Crowe and Lieut. Patterson. It was expected that Brigadier Taylor, ediâ€" tor of The War Cry, who visited Timâ€" mins last year and made many friends here, would be present for the anniâ€" versary, but the Brigadier now finds it impossible for him to reach here for the occasion. In the mentime effort is being made to have some other proâ€" minent officer of the Army here for the event. ANNIVERSARY SERVIGES OF THE SALVATION ARMY To be Held During the Weekâ€"end. Sunday afternoon at 3 o‘clock, there will be the United School and Dedi¢ation of Children. came home, what happened, Eddie?"*‘ Eddie: ‘‘His father ran to meet him and hurt himself.‘‘ The anniversary services of the Salâ€" vation haveâ€"always ‘been noteworthy for their interest and inspiration, and this year it is expected. to, have them up to the usual high standards. L ie Sunday evening, at 7.30, there will be a Gospel Service. An enrolment of new members will take place. . On Monday, at 8 p.m., the young people and Sunday School children will be entertained to tea, games, etc. On Saturday evening the members will have a private banquet. On Sunday morning, at 11 o‘clock there will be Holinesg Service. Arch. Gillies, B.A.Sc.,0.L..S. gineering, Reports, Plans and Esâ€" Gentract Mining Clasim Assessment Work. Land Surveys, Mine Surveys, Enâ€" P.0. Building, â€" Timmin. RESIDENCE PHONE 362»W-2 â€"~â€"OFFICE PHONE 362â€"Wâ€" ‘The sixth anniversary services of Teacher: ‘‘And when the prodigal Events on Saturday, Sunâ€" day and Monday. CGE for Forest Once an Enemy to Canada‘s Development. Now One of the Most Important of the Country‘s Industries. _ |COVeR PAgTIRE > Canada‘s Forest t + A > * ‘â€" And lndnstrlés Alhed MGs At N “mm The following on ‘‘Conserving the Forests,‘‘ is one of the timely artiâ€" cles sent out by the National Commitâ€" tee for the Celebration of the Diaâ€" mond Jubilee of Confederation :â€" The forest was an enemy, to the early settler in Canada, a heavy handicap. ‘Toâ€"day it is one of our most valued and productive ‘assets, yielding a harvest only second to that of our farms. The whole of Canada was covered with it,â€"the prairie of course was not then in Canada. Before a farmer could plow an acre of land, ‘he had to destroy an acre of forest, saving only enough logs to build his house and barn. When he had cleared as much land as he had any ambition to cultiâ€" vate, he spared a little wood lot, just to keep up a supply of firewood and fencing, with sugar from the maples. The trees that he cut out when clearing, he burned. â€" Presently he found that wood ashes, properly saved had a cash value,â€"they were used in making soap. These ashes were the first crop, and often the only crop for years that a ipioneer.farmer had to sell. . _ As villages and towns and little ships were built, a lumber inâ€" dustry grew up,â€"but slowly, till the beginning of the 19th century. ‘Then it went ahead by leaps and bounds, for Napoleon‘s conquest of Europe threatâ€" ened to cut off the supply of timber from the Baltic for the British navy, and the mother country stimulated the supply from Canada by heavy duties on the foreign article. These duties finally vanished in 1860; but when the Dominion came into being seven years later the lumber industry was standâ€" ing strong on its own feet. ince, then, despite occasional setâ€" backs, the woodworking industry has made enormous strides. Other maâ€" terials have taken the place of wood, but wood has also taken the place of other articles. Canada‘s net forestry production in 1924 mwas valued at $311,265,874 including $78,309,517 in logs for lumber, $25,036,749 in sawâ€" mill products, $44,241,584 in pulp mill What a swell section boss was lost to one of our railroads when Mussolini neglected to join the migration over here.â€"J. J. Montague in New York Herold Tribune. , JOHN‘ HUNTER (Falkirk), inside left, 5 ft. 74 ins., 150 lbs. A forâ€" ward of the best Scottish traditional type. / Quiet in his methods, but adâ€" mirably effective in holding the ball, as every good forward should be able to do, and give a cleanâ€"cut pass aâ€" long the ground for his partner to take it in his stride. Has tireless energy and never knows when he is beaten. Born in Stenhousemuir. Women are said to have little inâ€" ventive genius, but we‘ll bet that one of them invented alimony.â€"Florence (Ala.) Herald. SCOTTISH FOOTBALL TEAM TO VISIT TIMMINS products. Of Canada‘s total manuâ€" facture thï¬t year nearly one fourth of $300,425,516 consisted of wood and paper. In the first year of Confederâ€" ation. our exports of forest produce including $55,958 in manufactured arâ€" ticlés of wood, were valued at $18,814,â€" 188; in the year 1925â€"6 they amounted to $279 917,650. _ The pine which used to float down to the sea in rafts of great square timber has almost disappeared from St. Lawrence and Ottawa; but regions farther north and west have been made accessible ; the huge forest wealth of British Columbla almost unâ€" touched for the first twenty years of our federal history is being largely drawn upon; and an entirely new use has been found for trees once thought little of,â€"the making of pulp for paper and, quite recently, for artifiâ€" cial silk. _ According to a statement given out' ‘by Frederick C. Munson, a mining man who has opened an office at Oba, mear Sault Ste. Marie, there have been 'smty claims staked in the new gold ‘district southeast of Oba. Also the information is mentioned that encn- neers from the Hollinger and other important companies have over the district recently. The acâ€" ‘counts from Oba are to the effect that the new area is very promising, good gold showings being encountered and the geology (being favourable. In 1870 the first Canadian mill was started, at Windsor Mills, Quebec, for the grinding of wood into pulp. In 1925 the Pulpwood cut in Canadian forests was valued at $62,181,537, the pulp at $140,608,177. â€" Pulp producâ€" tion increased 363,079 tons in 1908 when statistics were first collected, to 2,772,007 tons in 1925 and paper, from 853,689 tons in 1917 to 1,884,705 in 1925. About 37 per cent of the paper used in the United States is of Canaâ€" dian material, We are cutting 2,800,000,000 cubic feet of standing timber yearly; probâ€" ably 2,200,000,000 more is consumed by fire, insects and other destructive forces. On the other side of the acâ€" count must be reckoned the natural growth of young trees, the setting aâ€" part of great forest reserves and. naâ€" tional or provincial parks, the plantâ€" ing of some 9,000,000 trees by farâ€" mers, mostly for windbreaks on the prairies, and the increasingly strenuâ€" us efforts of the Federal and Provinâ€" cial Governments to prevent and check forest fires. Fortunately Canâ€" ada‘s wealth of timber is so vast that by these and other means there is good hope of yet escaping the calamiâ€" tous depletion from which our neighâ€" bours are suffering. â€" Omer Dube, who had been lost track of month or so, and who was wanted as a material witness in conâ€" nection with the inquest into the death of Mrs. Therrien, whose body was found floating in the Spanish river near Massey on May 12th, was picked up by the Espanola pohce at a lumber camp at Dalton, near Chaâ€" pleau. Dube is believed to be the last man to have seen Mrs. Therrien alive, and explanations are to be askâ€" ed from him as to his whereabouts since the murder.â€" _ i SIXTY CLAIMS STAKED : ‘NEAR SAULT STE. MARIE "qcst Dr. 1. T. Brill, D.D.S. Phone 90 Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Block Dentist Open Evenings In order to some data on this feature of pork production, an experiment was commenced at the Dominion Experimental Station, Kaâ€" puskasing, Ontarro, in 1922 ‘and has been repeated each year for a period of five years. The first two years of the test two lots were used. Lot one was ‘housed inside and given a small run, while lot two was housed in a portable hog cabin and given clover pasture. Both lots were fed normally on the same meal ration. The grain ration has varied slightly from year to year, but it has been the same for all lots and has consistâ€" ed of ground oats, ground ‘barley, midâ€" dling, shorts and tankage or skimâ€" milk,. ‘The feeds were charged at average market prices. Farmers are often undecided as to whether or not it would pay to proâ€" vide clover pasture for growing pigs. The last three years of the test two other lots were added, both of which were fed lightly, one with and the other w#â€"out clover pasture. Each lot has consisted of ten Yorkâ€" shire pigs, ranging in age from eight to twenty weeks when the experiment commenced, with ‘the exception of 1923, when eight pigs only were used in each pen. Experiments Carried on for Put Five Years at the Experimental Farm «. Writing to The Advance this week Mr. L. Hanlon, of the Dominion Expenmenta.l Farm Station at Kapusâ€" kasing, Ont., says :â€" The results from this test show that the pigs which were fed normally on clover pasture ate a little more feed, made somewhat larger gains, at a deâ€" crease in cost of production over those without clover pasture. The pigs which were fed lightly on clover pasture have also consumed more feed, made larger gains, but at an increase in cost of production over those getting no pasture. ~~TIMMINS _ _â€" . . _ Hollmger Stores Limited _ Mcintyre Mercanhle Cï¬mpany B'u'yH;llinger‘Qualityâ€"lt Pays Electric R Also see McClary’s A Ff i ready the established leader of elecâ€" tric range elements. Its performâ€" ance, reliability and speed have brought new cooking convenience, â€" economy and safety to tens of thouâ€" sands. ~The Speediron is now used on all sizes and styles of McClary‘s Elecâ€" tric Rangeâ€"from the small, comâ€" pact range for tiny apartment kitâ€" chens, to the handsome No. 10 range for large kitchens. Made in the very style and size you require and sold at a price you can afford. Your electrical supply dealer will gladly show you. A Sensational Success ; in Less Than Two Years The sweeping, worldâ€"wide acâ€" ceptance. of McClary‘s Speedn‘on element is itself the most convincâ€" ing evidence of Speedxron s dependâ€" ability.: Fourth Ave. Thursday, June 16th, 1927 only natural, with such a high quality product, that Fireâ€" stone has attracted the best tire dealers in the country. Call your nearest one toâ€"day. Known as the pioneer of the Balloonâ€"Firestone has conâ€" sistently led in its developâ€" mentâ€"using only the best ‘The faith of thousands of tie Dipped Balloons is founded FIRESTONE TIRE RUBBER CO. OF CANADA LIMITED years old, yet alâ€" JutH For men who like comfortâ€"and good looks JOS. BERINI, Prop. ams RUOD. 1928 Opp. Public School : Garage It Af