3%» ‘The ty t 1e $s e BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA Promptly issuedâ€"â€"â€"payable anywhere * . moderate. ESTABLISHED 1832 .’ ) mles per hour Studebaker‘s adranced engineerâ€" ing is evident in every detail of the u A'a aymbol of the extra year. of careâ€"_ Free service built into this quality NQWforthefltsthmealowpï¬eed C car has been develoned which vou B 8. . on .: %6u Do you. occasxoï¬ally wish to send money out of town? Step into any Branch of this Bank and secure a Draft for the amountâ€" as conveniently and with no more delay or formality than in buying an article in a store. "The Bank of Nova Scotia Drafts are payâ€" able at par at any banking point in Canada, .and the scale of charges is very moderate. 00,000 . _ Reserve $20,000,000 Resources $260,000,000 m [ 0: . C . Walkerville al it 'n.'T..g-. tention gven to the follow ‘ by Mr. J. B. Mawdsley, Geol al Bm'vey, D'epartment of ï¬mes, wa. as furnished to The Advance last ‘*There are indications of a renewâ€" al of interest in the mineral possiâ€" bilities of the regnon around Chibouâ€" gamaun lake,. which is sxtuated in the But even these authentic facts and figures cannot tell you the story of engiâ€" neering tyiumph represented in this new mmphmtedmmunew Canadian Edition of the Erskine Six. A biggerâ€"roomierâ€"more powerful This new Erskine Six is the chamâ€" pion performer of its classâ€"concluâ€" sively demonstrated when a stock Erskine sedan averaged better than 54 miles an hour in a 24â€"hour test. This set a record never equaled by any stock car in the Erskine‘s price class. L* Biggerâ€"More Powerful W !3 oomp‘l)eted its line from Quebec and this has made the region maore readiâ€" ly accessible.: Other discoveries of snlghigles carrying values in copper and gold have been made, and at least two of these showings have givâ€" en substantial assay valnes in copper and gold. ‘The area already prospectâ€" ed is confined to a belt some fifteen miles long by six miles wide immediâ€" ately to the »west of Chibougamau lake; but mineralization is wideâ€" spread and the geology of the region would indicate equally favourable ground in other parts. found that altho h the eonntry gave . gmmm of reward to the prox:ator, faith in the possibilities of ‘ posits then known was not sufficiently strong to warrant the comission makâ€" ing a report in favour of the bï¬ildmz of a railway to them. __*North of Chibougamau lake the region is underlain by an area of greenstone; immediately south of this and to the west of the lake is a belt ofâ€" acid feldspathic rocks and related granitic intrusives which is followed to the southwest by another area .of greenstone. Mineral discoveries have so far been confined to the acid fieldspathic rocks or adjacent greenâ€" stones near the southern contact of trict were made in 1903 ‘and created much interest, but the report of the ~~"Since the gtolblic‘atioh of the reâ€" port of the Chibongamau Commission, "t «P ... pPVLL VL MUMAC WGHUIU WUVLIALLLLDBAYUALq the Canadian Na.tlI ona.l Railway has Ehe central mtrusxve belt:. Prospectâ€" ing : is hampered by the> standing forests, the heavy moss cover, and glacial drift. _A few prospecting parties are known to be proceeding to Chibougamau, either to stake ‘before the end of winter or to be on the spot for the opemn:g of the pr ospectm" season. - ‘««The general geology of the Chiâ€" bougamau district is shown on the Nottaway map sheet recently publishâ€" ed. Copies of this may ‘be obtained on application to the director, Geoloâ€" gieal Survey, Department, of Mines, Ottawa."‘‘ Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"â€"‘*! Wilâ€" bur Glenn Voliva, of Zion City, off on a trip to prove that the earth is flatj will probably discover, if he goes far enough, that it is like the wheels on the Toronto street â€" carsâ€"mostly round, with frequent flat places.‘‘ _ ether work will be carried through. According to statements credited to r. Douglas Muitch, the holdings of ithe Apex in Porcupine have imporâ€" tant possibilities as yet undeveloped, and although former diamond drillâ€" ing failed to show pay ore, there is confidence that in the view of recent showings on adjoimng properties the drilling this spring will indicate something especially good. It is held that . former diamond drilling was done in seetions that were not nearly ‘so. favourable as others that will he looked after now. â€"Mr. A. Bilsky president of ithe Apex Mines, Limited was in the camp some days ago and it is understood that the next visit he _be undeï¬uken m she spring, which is only a few weeks away now. The necessary fnane ancing. has been arrahged with New York interests. are of the opinion tlmt the Apex has properties of co le promise, and wonthy of good tryâ€"out. The Apex owns claims both in the Porcupme eampandmtheRouyma, and in the spring it is planned to make a geological survey of the holdings eon-, trolled by ‘the company in both cam If this survey is not unfavo le. While work has not actually started now _?a‘_ the properties held by â€" the to be Alf Whlfll!flkh pays ‘here the property will be the scene: of active and extcnded work in development. _ / Donald (handing account to tailor) : ‘*Wad ye mmd recenptm bhls account for SOLDIBERS WILL SYMPATHIZE ~â€"~ WITH THIS POOR HORSE .‘ The Cobalt correspondent of. The 1Sudbury Star writes last week as folâ€" OWS C o Tok * ‘Vermin were so thick on some of. the horses he had examined at Sloan‘s camp, in (Gillies Limit, actcording to Dr. Dunn, veterinary surgeon, that ‘‘you could not put a lead pencil on them without lice running over it,"‘. giving evidence in police couxrt here on Baturday, when John Sloan, foreâ€" man at the camp, was charged with permitting unnecessary suffering to dumb animals. He was fined $10 and costs, $46 in all. Defendant declared he did not consider he had done anyâ€" thing wrong. He thought he had been doing his duty. The horses were not being abused, they had lots to eat, were working on a good, hard road, and the logs had to be got out. As for the lice, "‘it was a pretty hard job to kill them,‘‘ but he was trying: his best with tobacco. The vet. and:. Provincial Constable Houlderoft told of having visited the camp and of have seen animals with sore shoulders or sore feet, some in what Dr. Dunn deseribed as "debilitated cases,"‘‘ and. most of them very thin. There were 23 teams, according to the vet.‘‘ â€"‘~Carrty On. Exchange. GHOULO GIVE THE NORTH "A mA DL in NCKEY Present System of/ Allan Cup Eliminâ€" â€" ation Generall:‘ Mected to as . ©‘The present system of finals in hooâ€" key ‘in the South is generally, conâ€" demned as unfair. Last week The Advance referred to the matter, and papers in the North and the South alike have questioned the system, â€" ‘"How long wiil Northern hockey fans tolerate the manifestly unfair conditions which greet their senidr championship hockey teams when they make their annual prilgrimage to Toâ€" ronto in quest. of the Allan Cup?‘‘ asks The North Bay Nugget. ‘‘And under the present systeim can Northâ€" ern fans reasonably expect that. anâ€" other Canadian hockey «hampionship will come.to the North? â€" Perhaps the most glaring example of the unfairâ€" ness of the present system is to be found in the series just concluded by Kitchener â€" and South Porcupine. Weak physically, after three gruelling games one of which went into overâ€" time, with the Port Colborne team, the Poreupines were compelled to meet the Kitchener seniors in two. games in as many days, which culâ€" minated a series of five games, the Porcupines played in eight days. This would be bad enough were it in the regular group play, lbut when champions are pitted against chamâ€" ‘pions,. the injustice of theâ€"system«is moreâ€"than even apparent. *4 ‘*The Northern series was decided this year in good time. The. O.H.A. senior series was also decided in the specifiedâ€"time, and the Kitchener team which won the title had plenty of time South Porcupiné team ‘had senior rating in ‘Northern Ontario. The team proved in the recent series ‘"If the O.H.A, wants to provide its intermediate champions with an opâ€" portunity to meet the senior 0.H.A. winners. well and good, but the O.H.A.. gshould declare a championship team and the Northern winners should be given theâ€" opportunity of competing with this winner on an equal footing. that it was worthy of this rating. In the future there is no reason why the Northern champs should be classed as intermediates when they compete in playâ€"downs for the right to continue in the Allan Cup semies. 3 Energy all . gone ? â€" depressed ? â€"work a condition. Eno will provide you with inâ€" ternal cleanliness which assures good health. butden ? . Nearly always these are signs of The contrast between disease conâ€" ‘ditions, as Dickens has recorded them, and ‘the cirenmstances under which we live today, tends to be a startling one. . Of particular interest is the outline in House‘‘ of the ' medical procedure of the time, as far as smallpox was concerned. or if Preddent Coolidge were to write "It may be as the president of the Social Hygiene Council rather than as the former honorary president af: the Dickens Fellowship that I speak when I say that no physician can read, without interest, of a time when it was the natural thing, calling for no remark, that anyone could be alâ€" lowedâ€"or, . indeed, â€" compelledâ€"to roam the streets with smallpox, with no attention but ‘a ‘bottle of cooling medicine‘ and no cure against infecâ€" tion but ‘sprinkling a little vinegar‘.‘‘ ‘‘The thoughtfnl physician would remember,"‘ Judge Riddell continued ‘‘that Queen Mary of England and Logis hX (()}féo Fran c%' di‘%d of smallpox and that rge Washington, when president of the United States, in one and the same letter congratulated a friend on the birth of a son and the passage of his family through ‘the smallpox. : From the tenor of his mesâ€" sage, it is evident that the one was Just as normal an event in those days * crReading this, the phykician of eadi is, the physician of toâ€" day. might wonder .what the world such a letter;"" GREAT ADVANCE MADE IN . OEALINE WITH sMALLPOX gracefully victory or defeat on Toâ€" ronto ice. Mr. Justice Riddell Points Out the Relative Position of Sfuallpoxr : in Dickens‘ Time and Now Hn. Mr. Justice Riddell, in a recent address to the Dickens Fellowshlp at Toronto on ‘‘Bleak House,‘‘ noted that not only did the great English author â€" display ‘an â€" extraordinary knowledge of the lawâ€"a fact which the speaker had publicly noted sonw years beforeâ€"but that there were also sections of his work which were of peculiar interest to those mteres't~' ed in public health. cows, condensed and blended with best refined sugar., Since 1857 the ideal food for bottleâ€"fed babies. A pure, rich milk, TL obtained under perfect sanitary conâ€" ditions from healthy CONDENSED MILK exs in y\ NT3