20 *, 26 04 886 ob rad rnatndran n 2t 2e 20 2 0t 2282 24224224 narna*an*aa* %’1 01000?000"‘0000010‘0000000000000000000000000000000000000900000000000o0000005.00000000000 n Snd e o0 2e se se w0 to t4,44,! 2884A tSE i5 i5 5 15 55 455 055 4 is.....1 . s o 2s 2882222292 e n * nc nd * ns 208 2282 282282242 242 282282 24e 242 28228 n 24 22 F2 2 t 28 8 #. .@, * . ,*, 3 #, .@ ate ralaate otaate oteata ce ate ie ate oteate n afe ate ate ate ate ces Ottawa Journal:â€"It is remarkable that there is only one generation beâ€" tween the horse shed and the 10â€" storey garage. It‘s Like Summerâ€" Many visitors to California plan their itinerary via the North Pacific coast. The beauty and cosmopolitan charater of Vancouver and Victoriaâ€" Canada‘s famous far western cities, make the journey enjoyable and interâ€" esting. Complete inrormation _ regarding Californiaâ€"fares, accommodation literature gladly supplied by any Caâ€" nadian National Railways Agent. 44t.1f. Sumptous hotels at the many resort centres along the Pacific Coast will make your stay a pleasant one. In sunny California you will find wonderful places to spend a month or two this winter. It is a land of unâ€" equalled climate, of high mountains, of colourful deserts and fascinating cities. A Glorious Place to Spend the Winter Why Not Buy Your Soft Drinks made with the best Spring water of Northern Ontario? SPRING WATER BOTTLING WORKS Jos. Clusiau, prop. Telephone 60 P.0. Box 19 SoOUTH PORCUPINE ‘ _ Warehouse in Timmins at 106 BALSAM STREET SOUTH MWWWM“M'MN. 71 Third Avenue Timmins Excavations for Cellars, Sewers, Etc Contracts of all kinds taken EMPIRE BUILDING Time in California HOME IS WHERE THE ‘HART IS LEO MASCIOLl John R. Roach, goalkeeper for the Toronto Maple Leafs, and former member of the Granite team which won the Olympic championship in 1924, has been traaed to the New York Rangers Hockey team for Lorne Chabot. The Maple Leafs received a cash consideration in adâ€" dition to Chabot. FAMOUS HOCKEY PLAYER TRANSFPERRED Phone No. 321 Phone 327 * *% * 4 «t lt es 6*%*%* e As noted on more than one occasion ] in The Advance, Mr. Waddy gave very lgenerous and effective help ~to the I search for the missing prospector. Inâ€" deed, there is a disposition on the part of those who know to feel that his | work in the matter was really indisâ€" ‘ pensable. In such a case it seems | f | unreasonable, absurd and unfair for the Government to leave him *with outâ€"ofâ€"pocket expenses. The Governâ€" ment should pay any such expenses without a question. As The Herald } suggests, he did his duty without waitâ€" P I ing to consider costs. The same sort of sprit on the part of the Governâ€" ment might help retrieve the Ottawa authorities from the unfavourable light in which some incidents placed ‘them in this matter. North Bay Nugget:â€"A Los Angeles baby, 22 months old, has a vocabulary of 300 words. That would spoil her for songâ€"writing. Mr. T. M. White, manager of the Sudbury branch, and also formerly of Timmins, says, in part, as follows:â€" ‘"The mining as viewed by many of the leading tyaders seems to have reached the turning point and all present indications point to an upward trend due to the favourable developâ€" ments at many of our leading mines during the past six months and their present low quotations. I am of the opinion that the tremendous interest created by the spectacular rise in Inâ€" ternational and Mond will also be reâ€" flected in the near future in the other wellâ€"known issues." In reâ€"producing last week the article from The Advance in regard to one of the birch bark messages written by Andy Taylor when he was lost in the bush north of The Pas, and which message was forwarded here by Mr. J. W. Waddy, the Indian Agent for the Pas district, The Pas Herald says: "Mr. Waddy has forwarded the other messages he picked up to his departâ€" ment at Ottawa, together with a bill for his outâ€"ofâ€"pocket expenses. Tf the Government does not foot the bill, Mr. Waddy will have to stand the loss. This knowledge does not prevent him doing his duty." INDIAN AGENT SHOULD NoT HAVE TO BEAR THIS COST Mr. R. F. DeLong, now manager of the Windsor office, but formerly of Kirkland Lake, and previous to that in Timmins, says:â€"*"There is a keen inâ€" terest in the Canadian Mining issues in this district and a quiet accumulaâ€" tion of the shares of the higher class issues, anticipating the active market which, it is confidently expected will develop in the near future. Many enâ€" quiries are coming from the United States." IMPROVED CUTLOOK FOR THE MINING MARKET NOW Mr. Gordon F. Black, manager of the Moysey Co. office at Timmins, says:â€"Owing to recent advances, conâ€" siderable switching into promising stocks for some time neglected, may be expected, thereby causing the mining market to gradually broaden out. The return of interest to Hollinger Consoliâ€" dated has apparently created spirit of optimism which will greatly affect stocks of major gold operations, partiâ€" cuarly in Porcupine and Kirkland Lake camps. The opinion of Mr. Frank Horne, executive officer of the company, Toâ€" ronto, and formerly of the Dome Mines, is given as follows:*â€""General market conditions indicate a firm unâ€" dertone, with recent selling pressure eliminated. This selling has been in evidence for a long period, created, more or less, by the banking conditions relative to loans on mining securities * _ * * My opinion is the potential stocks, both gold and base metal, at present levels are purchases, with inâ€" dications that the aggressive developâ€" ment policy now outlined will place Canadian mineral resources well in the banking and public observance." Mr. Jas. Heppleston, general manâ€" ager, Toronto formerly, of Timmins, condenses his opinion into a few lines. He says:â€""The Canadian Mining Market is now in a very strong techniâ€" cal position and I am firmly of the opinion that the potential issues will reflect higher prices in a reasonable period of time." No matter how much some people may curse the "market" it remains a fact that when the "market" is goâ€" ing there is a general air of contentâ€" ment and wellâ€"being ever among those who never play the stocks, while durâ€" ing the dull times in the market the general tone is liable to be equally dull coloured. There may be some who will assert that it is the optimism that induces the good market and the pesâ€" simism that brngs the market to lower levels. But such a vewpoint is not at all consistent with the thought that grows more and more firmly entrenchâ€" ed in the mind of the average manâ€" that markets and actualities have litâ€" tle connection. If market quotations and conditions and circumstances and values were closely related,â€"well, nearâ€" ly everybody knows that many things would not be as they are. However, there will be general agreement that most people are interested in whether the market is dull or live, and so there will be more than passing attention likely for a synopsis of opinions as to the outlook for the mining market. Such a review was made last week by the executives and managers of Moyâ€" sey Co. Some of the opinions will be of interest to quote. Consensus of Opinion of Heads of Brokerage Firm, Based on Viewâ€" points at Various Branches. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE i "Canada‘s mireral output for the years 1927 was, according to the figures of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Iof a total value exceeding a quarter 'of a billion dollars. That large addiâ€" tion to the wealth of the country is to | be credited to private enterprise, owing | nothing to the favour of national | Governments, domestic or foreign. Neither bounties nor material tariff ghelp came from the Dominion Govâ€" ernment, and heavy duties have been }maintained by the United States 'against several Canadian minerals. So far from the Dominion Governmeut giving‘ effectual tariff help, except in the case of soft coal, it lowered the customs dutiesâ€"virtually wiping them out in the case of many forms of iron |and steel to be used in Canadian | manufacturing industriesâ€"so as to deâ€" prive our own mineral producers of a |large part of the home market. Ottawa Journal:â€"It has been wisely said that little troubles trouble you less if you reflect that pebbles seem mounâ€" tains only to insects. "It is impossinie to overestimate the part played by fortuneâ€"seekers in the building up of this country. Without them the vast heritage of our natural resources would still be a sealed testaâ€" ment. Not until our wilds began to attract men of the iron will to perâ€" serve in their search for treasure, braving the dangers of streams and lakes unknown to them, of trailless forests and unmapped ranges, endurâ€" ing the tortures of black flies and mosâ€" quitoes in the summer‘s heat, and the rains and frosts of other seasons, alâ€" ways with the risk of perishing of hunger or of wild fire, did it dawn upâ€" on us that we had one of the most richlyâ€"endowed countries in the world. These hardy pioneers showed us what talents lay buried in our soil and they go on adding to the revelation. Imâ€" mense good they have done to the country. What has been their reward? In some cases wealth beyond the dreams of avarice. In the majority of cases bitter disappointment. Winâ€" ners or losers, Canada‘s debt to them at least equals its debt to others who are honoured as the makers of the naâ€" tion. The pionsers of our mining fields were in most cases preceded by the pioneers of transportation. What prodigious difficulties were overcome, what seasons of despair were lived through, by the men who constructed the C. P. R. across the continent! And brave adventurers in large numbers, and with no less indomitable spirit, are toâ€"day abroad in our northern latitudes pursuing the quest for wealth. "No rightâ€"minded person can dwell on the magnitude of our mineral outâ€" put in recent years without thinking about the men who laid, and are layâ€" ing more broadly toâ€"day, the foundaâ€" tion of our mineral industries. The trials and tribulations undergone are n many cases matters of moving reâ€" cord, and the imagination of the citiâ€" zen can fill in the picture. This is being proved a great country by the manfulness of its adventurers, People who are living in affiuence as a result of these labours or as the result of lucky speculation in Canadian mine shares, should give a thought to the men who located the bonanza." "How, then, is the building up of our mineral industries to their presâ€" ent strength to be accounted for? The main advantages to which it is to be credited are, first, the country‘s abounding deposits in metallic and nonâ€"metallic minerals; and, second, the enterprise and industry of its peoâ€" ple. It has long been known Canada is gifted above most nations in natural resources, especially those to sustain mining industries. For a long time the inaccessibility of rich deposits, the lack of markets, the adverse tariff duties of foreign countries, and the shyness of capital held back some of the mineral industries most favoured by nature. In due course, railway exâ€" tensions brought mineral areas within range, the demand for raw materials widened, tariff obstructions counted for less, capital became more ventureâ€" some, and, above all, prospectors got into the field and found many rich spots. TAIBUTE TO THE MEN WHO ARE BUILOING THE NORTH In an editorial article last week on the debt owed to the men who pioneerâ€" ed the North in mining and other lines, The Toronto Mail and Empire says:â€" Men Living in Affluence Through the Mining and Othere Industries Should Not Forget the Pionâ€" eers 440 Money back if Quaker Flour does not give you complete satisfaction Alwavs the Same C ...‘ * v Li ‘k i * 4 P g !‘-': 4 W * ®s4 M ' * K4 * o W ds * " We . * L4 LA * a $ 4 lt +. §A " + 38 B C e 6 S# L * Always the Best Same good results every time you bake, because always of the same high quality. Always the Same @B Always the Best You can depend on Barrie Examiner:â€"With all its supâ€" posed sophistication, New York City probably has more "rubes" than are to be found in any section of like popuâ€" lation. It is estimated that more than $100,000 in worthless stocks are sold every day by telephone in the Ameriâ€" can metropolis. Ottawa Journal:â€"‘"Mussolini had a conference in Italy with 70 editors of various papers. He instructed them how they should be run. There are lots of people who are not dictators who can tell us how to run a newsâ€" paper." Carnation Milk For Anything Creamed "From Contented Cows Westinghouse _â€" Genuine ADIOTRONS The new Tubes You should have in your set W HIE T HER it‘s creamed vegetables or creamed fishâ€"creamy Carnation Milk makes all the difference in the results. Keep Carnaâ€" tion always on hand for all cooking. It keeps. It saves butter. Just pure, whole milk evapâ€" orated to double richâ€" ness. Carnation Milk Products Co. Limited Aylimer, Ontario Write for free Cook Book UX U Xâ€"121â€"B Thursday, Nov. 8th, 1928 a 0 2 0 o _ / _ _