UJ ~~â€"~ 1‘9" for you Thursday, April 18th, 1929 NAME ADDRESS Make it a rule to add THE BORDEN CO. LIMITED, 140 St. Street West, Montreal, Dept. A. I would like St. Charles Recipe Book, free. J+‘s surprising what a difference OXO makesto plain, ordinary fare. OXO gives the appetising richness and savour of freshlyâ€" cooked lean beef to any dish in which it is used. OXO is concentrated Beef at it3 Best â€"the Housewife‘s Great Economy. This book, sent free, shows new ways to serve more milk in the daily menu. Your family needs more milk. Serve it in their food, in soups, sauces, breads, desserts, candies. Nestlé‘s Food Company of Canada Limited, Toronto yNSWEETENED . SWEETENED Made in Caonada by the makers of Nestlé‘s Baby Food PORCUPINE HARDWARE, South Porcupine MAIL COUPON " better luck _ ; on bakeday . Write for free Nestlé‘s Milky Way R ecipe Book Teacher‘s Bowling Scores for Week of April 11th Thé following are the scores for April 11ith for the Teachers‘ Bowling: A. TEAM . ....___..... 100:....101.... W. James ho e t on ns se ues 158 Y. Jackson 2 O n i ic . 210 . 282 .230 .. 185 N. McLeod W. James V. Jackson B. Gowan G. Hughes Dummy ... M. McDonald H. Sprague . M. Morrison G. Robinson E. James ... C. McDonald T. McDonald G. Everett ... O. Ramsay .. M. Smith. ..... M. Dodge ...... T. Carruthers H. White ... M. Tackaberry K. Monck ........ /; Fortuneg 2l O Ti : 14 CG@ : HuUghes. :.a..........:..« 8 Standing of teams: A A saleswomen representing some sort ~f an advertising scheme recently talked 35 minutes to the Sudbury town counâ€" cil. The councillors at first flatly reâ€" fused to entertain the proposal but the lady kept on talking until she finally landed an order. The 35 minutes talk cost Sudbury $95.00. Total Total Total Total 675. ........... 177 137 179 607 762 148 175 153 173 113 189 149 214 131 162 845 184 141 169 134 125 142 69 266 266 266 229 230 291 242 293 290 306 218 328 234 348 222 114 220 186 "Spring is here again, and one‘s thoughts naturally turn to making of a garden. Some of us perhaps visited :the old home in the country during ;Easter week, and we there saw the first preparations for the farm garden. The windows of the spacious farm house were filled with boxes, in which the tiny plants were breaking through the soil. As soon as they are large enough |and the weather is warm enough, they will be transplanted within that "loveâ€" some thing." a garden. A garden is a nursery, where baby plants are cared for until they grow to be big plants and give us flowers that we enjoy seeâ€" ing or food which we like to eat. Plants are alive, just as you are, but they cannot run around; they musi stay in one place all the time. They want plenty to drink, lots of sunshine, and room to breathe. So we set aside a place where they grow in sunshine, and where we can water them and keep other plants away, and keep ou>= baby plants from being crowded. Wouldn‘t you like to make a garden? The first thing to do is to decide what plants you want in your garden. You can have fowers or food, which we call vegetables; or you can have both if you wish. Seeds cannot be grown in the garden outdoors until spring really comes, and the sun has melted all the snow and ice and warmed up the ground. But some seeds can be sown indoors before that time, in a box of earth set in a window where it will get the sunlight. Later these plants can in the outdoor garden." remmmmmnnn ns e ho on ie mm omm mm mm % uen hm ons mm V alue of Horticultural Society to Community There was a very timely editorial published recently in The Gananoque Reporter, the article reading in part as follows:â€" Comrr;enting on this editorial, The Perth Expositor says:â€" "The â€" horticultural societies give leadership to each community in garâ€" den efforts and home beautification. For almost thirty years the Perth Soâ€" ciety has done excellent work for this town. Many societies exist today, and people are now finding out what Perth people found out years ago that a horticultural society is an excellent institution. Societies are holding thei> annual meetings, some early, some late, but the main thing is to get the peoâ€" nle interested and in the garden in P L2 4A $ 0. 06. it plenty of time. Perth‘s society will this year urge the people of this town to plants bulbs, flowers and shrubs and to make beautiful gardens, so that the town may be made still more beautiâ€" ful. You will very shortly receive an invitation to join the Perth society, and as the premiums you receive are worth more than the membership fee, coâ€"operate with the officers by selectâ€" ing your option promptly." Grand Jury Recommends Jail for Cochrane Area In its presentment to Mr. Justice Wright at Cochrane last week the Grand Jury embodied a recommendaâ€" tion that a district jail be erected for the District of Cochrane. Mr. Justice Wright in addressing the Grand Jury had referred to the inconvenience and expense entailed by the lack of jall facilities at Cochrane. Prisoners had to be kept at Haileybury and then brought to Cochrane for trial.. The plan was not a desirable one for many reasons, as the judge suggested, and in its presentment the Grand Jury tooxk occasion officially to call attention to the situation and point out the need for a jail at a centre like Cochrane. Mr. Justicee Wright told the jury he would forward the recommendation to the proper authorities for consideraâ€" tion. Save Money! London (England) Humorist:â€"In Los Angeles a man was twice divoreâ€" ed by the same wife. This emphasizâ€" es the necessity for Los Angeles wives to keep some kind of a rough diary. Make your own hard or soft soap by using waste fats and ~ " it costs less to make 1 soap than to buy i FULL OIRECTIONS WITH EVERY CANM THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO MINES PLAY LARGE PART IN PROSPERITY OF PROVINCGE Hon. Chas. McCrea Delivers Characâ€" teristically Optimistic Address at Barriec Last Week What is termed "a characteristically cptimistic address" delivered by Hon. Chas. McCrea at Barrie last week is reported at length by The Barrie Exâ€" aminer in its last issue. As Hon. Mr. McCrea spoke almost exclusively on mining affairs the address has a very particular .interest for readers of The Advance. The following is the report as given by The Examiner:â€" "In a characteristically optimistic address before the Conservative Asâ€" sociaticn of Barrie in Oddfellows‘ Temâ€" ple, Monday night, Hon. Charles Mcâ€" Croa, Minister of Mines, emphasized the part which the development of Ontario‘s mining industry in the north was contributing to the prosperity oi not cnly of the province but the entire Dominion. "Hon. Mr. McCrea has just returned from a winter‘s sojourn in Bermuda for his health and although greatly improved, still displays the effect of his illness. His customary "fire" was lackâ€" ing but his address delivered in a quiet unassuming manner, was nevertheless both instructive and educating. There were about 150 present, it being midâ€" night before the Minister finished, folâ€" lowing a very late start. "In Ontario," the Minister of Mines said, "the veil has been drawn aside to reveal to the world outstanding riches in mineral wealth which no other country in the world can point to. We are producing wealth mountâ€" ing into the millions. "Some people do not grasp the magâ€" nitude of our mining industry; some are prone to size it up through the medium of the stock market, but the stock market is not the mining indusâ€" try, it is merely an indication of what is going onâ€"of the hum of business development, leaping ahead in bounas startling the world, with capital pourâ€" ing in in millions to develop the preâ€" Cambrian Shield now in the process of being "cracked open." "One cannot look around without realizing the tremendous part which the mining industry is playing in the upbuilding of this province. It gives employment to 20,000 men, from 30 to 35 per cent. of the wealth produced is paid out in wages, 40 per cent. in equipment and supplies and 30 per cent. in taxes and dividends. "These dividends do not lie idle. They go back to further open up the country. Older Ontario feels the purâ€" chasing power of this wealth, it is giving added impetus to business. This year we expect to add twenty million to our production, bringing the total to $120,000,000. This means greater employment, greater fackory expansion and greater buying power. "Here Hon. Mr. McCrea digressed to say that the Dominion Gov‘t., which was claiming credit for the country‘s prosperity, was playing little, if any part, in Ontario‘s mining, forestry or agricultural development. "But the Dominion Government has a ‘part to play. Ottawa‘s duty is to regulate the great fiscal lever, to deâ€" termine how much of this great wealth remains in Canada for the benefit of our people and how much is allowed to go out for the benefit of peoples other than British." “ï¬p to 1928, he said, Ontario had BABY CHICK FOOD Feed your baby chicks with PRATTS BABY lhc‘é"h“ but makes them strong and sturdy and fits them to become heavy layers. Be sure you get PRATTS, peed yvour CinCcks with PRM.\l.i i3 BADY CHICK FOOD and prevent the scourge of White Diarrhoea. It aot only saves chicks‘ Pratt Food Co. of Canada, Ltd., Toronto Live and Grow .pPratts produced $1,515,000,000 from its minâ€" eral areas, in the space of forty years "Of this the silveér mines produced $264,500,000 and paid $96,000,000 in dividends and the gold mines of the province, in the same period, proâ€" duced $281,600,000 and paid dividends amounting to $83,000,000. "Just think that over," said Mr. McCrea, "and then reflect that we have only just nicely begunâ€"284 milâ€" lions of dollars in divldends in 25 years paid by the three great metallic producers of this banner province. "HMe then went on to quote more enâ€" lightening figures. In the space of a quarter of a century wages had inâ€" creased 261 per cent. Labour employed was 50 per cent. British and the bosses. 85 per cent. Canadian. i "This preâ€"Cambrian shield of ours, is the greatest metal bearing area in the world," he went on. "It is of identical formation to the mines of. south Africa, India and Brazil now working to a depth of 7,000 fest and ours is scarcely scratched. Let that sink home. I§ there not justification for optimism? Why, the first chapter is being pritten now. "It is only a wef years ago since our S.P.C. graduatesh ad to go south to get employment. Toâ€"day the mines and power companies cannot get enough of these fine young men to fill the cream of positions offering themselves. "I have had the duty of assisting in laying down the policy under which this development has and is taking place. We have been telling the world about it. We have invited foreign capâ€" ital to come and help us ‘crack it open," and the response has been milâ€" lions of new money. We have tried to give these strangers a square deal and to display a sympathetic attitude. Whether or not we have succeeded, I will leave with yourselves," "Hon. Mr. McCrea made reference to the fund for scientific research, now amounting to $5,000,000, to the new copper refinery at Sudbury costing $4,000,000 and which would distribute $750,000 in wages alone. "I want you peopie to realize that| a sound, energetic policy of a governâ€"| ment toward a development of such great magnitude as our mining indusâ€" try is not only necessary, but vital. Everybody in Barrie will benefit from| it. The C. N. R. will have increased traffic with this expansion, manufacâ€"| turing and agriculture will feel it. I| want you to grasp its significance; it‘s your business and your family‘s busiâ€" ness to do so. Take a sustained inter-| est in the public welfare of your proâ€" vince. It is easy to let down. Men in public life don‘t get a chance to let down, but the rank and file are very apt to do so. Your continued interâ€" est will make for peace, contentment and happiness. I humbly submit that the Conservative party is the best avenue through which you, as citizens,; can contribut to the development of | your province. Keep Barrie one of the | anchor posts of Conservatism in this | section of the province. It‘s worth while fighting for. We want to work | with you, because our business is your | Eusiness; it is big business, too, and it | is going to be bigger." ‘ "In his opening remarks Hon. Mr. McCrea paid high tribute to Barrie‘s contribution down through the yéars to the public life of Canada. It was indeed a proud record, he said. Barrie has sent out into all parts of Canada and the world men of high repute, integrity and ability, men who had coupled the lustre of good names with high achievement. He also said that the lot of the public man was not the sinecure which most people imagined. "Major Knowles who presided, reâ€" ferred to Hon. Mr. McCrea as "the man from the north who had done great things." and who had bean reâ€" turned by acclamation in his constituâ€" ency at the last provincial election. "In a space of twelve or eighteen months both federal and provincial elections will be a thing cof the past. We have got to get ready and organâ€" ize. You cannot win elections with one or two months‘ effort," said the major. "W. J. Blair, a former Sudburyite, inâ€" troduced Hon. Mr. McCrea, as a young§ man who had gone into a pionger country a product of the north itself, and had succeeded in placing the minâ€" ing industry, by sympathetic treatment on a stable and prosperous basis." Hudson Bay Co. Factor Married at Sudbury Despatches from Sudbury tell of the marriage there last week of James Grant, Hudscen‘s Bay factor at Peterâ€" bell, in the far north, and Miss Etac. Lloyd, a native of England. Mr. Grant was for ten years the Hudson Bay factor at one pf the posts in the Moose Factory area. He had come out > this country from Sectland and was consequently a stranger in a strange land. He met some time ago a young lady who came out to Moose Factory from England, and it was this young lady that he wedded at Sudbury last week. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. Wylie at the minister‘s home on Elm street, Sudbury. The despatches describe the bride as charming in an attractive gown of white chiffon and carrying a bouquet of sweethsart roses, The gown had been made entirely by the bride herâ€" self. The couple were unattended. After a day‘s honeymoon in Sudbury the couple left again for Peterbell post to take up residence there. Pembroke Standard Observerâ€"A Chiâ€" cago millionaire, who is a native of Guelph, is giving that town a large modâ€" ern hotel, a golf course and a large playâ€" ground Guelph is net the only city, who has native sons able to do someâ€" thing big for their homstown, but posâ€" sibly it has never struck them that there is no better way to dispose of their wealth, Kenogami Prospector Found Dead in His Shack Word this week from Swastika tells of the finding of the dead body of John B. Hardwick, a man of 50 years of age, in his shack at Kenogami. Death apparently resulted from his shooting himself when in a state of despondency or melancholy induced perhaps by pain and trouble. He is understood to have suffered quite seriously from stomach trouble. When found by his partner on the claims, Hardwick had apparently been dead for around 48 hours. He was dead in a chair with a rifle resting on the table and pressed against his chest. He was shot through the heart and it would appear that death has been inâ€" stantaneous. The Provincial Conâ€" stable at Swastika and Dr. Edis, the coroner, investigated the death, but in view of the circumstances it was not thought necessary to hold a jury inâ€" quest. The late John B. Hardwick was formerly in the tailoring business at Ccobalt, but for some time past has been engaged in prospecting. He and his partner had a promising claim at Kenogami, but recently Hardwick has been suffering considerably from stoâ€" mach trouble and is reported to have been depressed as a consequence. Acâ€" cording to the despatches from Swasâ€" tika he left a note saying that he "could stand the pain no longer." Ashville Times:â€"A de facto governâ€" ment in Mexico is one that has the most guns. For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad. Column for The Roof Handsome, inecxpensive, fireproof, easy to lay over old roofsa â€" permanent. Get the facts. Ask your tinsmith or carpentex. GALVANIZED SHINGLES DOMINION BANK Many people have special savings accounts for speâ€" cial purposes. Why not start a vacation account?! When holidays come a round, the money saved will make your vacation a pleasant, carefree relaxaâ€" tion. THE Y ou will never regret the purchase of a Shoeet Steel Ceilings look well, rasist fire effectâ€" ively. Add brightness to halls, stores, churches, schools, kitchens and bathrooms. Do nothing till you get the price and full particular.. John L. Hunt, Manager Etop falling plaster ; end unsighuy cracked ceilâ€" u.’.‘f:_. 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