ts After Taking Lydia ] Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Fenwick, Ont.â€""L am taking 1. Y E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable C ompound during tike Change #10f Life for neryous [{celings, loss of apâ€" |petite and to gain PAAA It is a tonic and I taken a dozen fibottles of it. It was recommended to t me by a friend and Anow I recommend glit to all women for éIsuch troubles as Fcome at this time." SSELL, R. R. No. 8, W. V. RU Kenwick, Ontario. from on the labe!l means ontented Cows Every sack of Quaker Flour carries our unconditional guarâ€" antee that if it does not give you â€" PERFECT â€" SATISFACâ€" TION your dealer is authorized to refund your money. _ This guarantee is printed on a tag attached to every sack. Every bushel of wheat for Quaker Flour is specially selâ€" ected and must pass scientific tests for its milling qualities and food values. Every hour in milling, Quaker Flour has to undergo other severe scientific tests to make "I am taking Lydia ...... \.-wx. MILLED BY THE MAEKERS OF QUAKER OATS ééfï¬r So Quaker Flour is GUARANTEED to give you perfect satisfactionâ€"to the last pound in every sack EVAPORATED MILK of highest quality JAMES AVERY OFFERS PLAN T0 SOLVE WOLF DANGER Man In replying to Jack Miner‘s articie published some weeks ago in The Adâ€" vance Mr. James Avery, for forty years an outdoors man, much of that time being spent in the Algonquin Park area, gives emphatic answer to the question as to whether we should look to the preservation of the deer, or the wolves. He very rightly picks the deer as the desirable animals to save, and agrees In the feeding of infants, with Jack Miner that we cannot have both. Mr. Avery also has a carefully considered plan for the decreasing of the wolves. Here is his letter:â€" "In reply to the article "Deer and Wolves," by Jack Miner, would say that I agree with Mr. Miner. I knew the Algonquin Park 40 years ago, and I now it toâ€"day, and who should know it better than I, for I have fireâ€"ranged n With Forty Years Experience in Trapping and Outdoor Life In Canada Gives His Solution For Wolf Menace arna Babies ion Milk Products Co., Liinited Aylmer, Ont. sure that it comes up to Quaker standards established by our fifty years of milling experience. Every day we bake with it in our own kitchens, under actual home conditions, to be sure that it acts right in the oven. Quaker Flour must conform to all these severe requireâ€" ments before it can bear the Quaker name. With Quaker Flour you know that your bread, cakes and pasâ€" try are going to turn out perâ€" fect. It takes all worry and guesswork out of home baking. It is the ideal flour for all household purposes. and timberâ€"estimated and guided in the Algonquin Park. Now, what comâ€" parison do I see? I see aA distinct inâ€" crease in wolves and a very distinct deâ€" crease in deer. There is no question that in a comparatively short time we will have no deer in the Park if the wolves are allowed to breed. "mow for the solution: How can we lessen the wolf numbers, and thereby ncrease the deer numbers? I have _ riven the matter very careful considerâ€" ation and feel sure I have the solution, which is, simply increase the bounty. joms less experienced men may smile, or will any man not kill a wolf if he ts a chance, regardless of bounty? ‘as, but will he go after them? No. "now consider our method of game conservationâ€"we know if we leave the does we have a greater increase. Let us just reverse this plan and work it on the wolves. I don‘t mean let the male wolf live, but rather make our special aim toward the destruction of the bitch wolf and her dependent whelps. VY ME CHTT "Our only hope is by the use of steel traps in month of June, when the bitch wolf bears her whelps, when the black fiy and the mosquito hold dominion over the forestsâ€"that is the only time she can be successfully trapped, and men must be offered real money to go into the woods to trap at this season, fighting the flies in the heat of June and carrying canoe and pack. i I "The bitch wolf after she has whelpâ€" ed is hungry, and as deer are hard to catch in summer she is attracted by bait, rabbit, or, in fact, anything that is meat, but she will not come near a trap unless it is placed under water. The "stepping stone set" is very sucâ€" cessful. This is to place the bait on a stone in the centre of a creek or about six feet out in a pond and put in stepâ€" | ping stones with tops above the water, placing the stones two feet apart. Reâ€" move one of the stones and replace it by a trap just under water and put some stone moss on top so that it is just above water. The wolf will be caught in this manner. That night you will probably hear the whelps cryâ€" ing with hunger, that is, if she has been caught within three miles of her‘den, which would be most likely. The rest is simple. If, however, you cannot loâ€" cate her den, what matter; they will starve keep the trapper interested, and I am " previ sure it will be like the grain of wheat | meat planted in good ground, and will be one | balt of the best financial investments the‘ butc} people could make for themselves." Imidd it Raise the bounty high enough to And the khilltop gardens yield this fragrant tea. ‘Fresh from THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO COMPENSATION BOARD NOW sUGGESTED IN AUTO CASES A despatch this week from Hamilâ€" ton says:â€""That the principle applied in the administration of the workmen‘s eompensation act, with necessary variâ€" ations, should. be adopted to relieve courts of hearing actions arising out of auto collisions, is the novel suggestion of Warden Smuck of Wentworth. The warden was able to show that in supreme, county afd division courts now the greater part of the time is taken up in hearing these cases. The cost is steadily growing. At the suâ€" preme court now in session the end is not near and jury fees amount to $2,â€" 000. ~It is estimated that nineâ€"tenths of all actions in the courts now result from auto accidents. "Admitting that the move would meet with opposition, Warden Smuck declared that it is feasible. It was not many years ago when the court lists were almost solely comprised of emâ€" ployees‘ claims for damages for injurâ€" ies received at work and the creation of a special board saved time and money and improved conditions genâ€" erally. It is contended that the same scheme can be arranged to apply to auto claims." KIRKLAND LAKE HAD SMALL FAMINE IN FRESH MEATS Years ago the train service here) suffer little by comparison with more than once caused delays in foodâ€"| business flotations. On the other stuffs reaching here. By the foresight| hand, it is a certainty, granted that and attention of the dealers, however,} trustworthy sources of reference are the public never suffered seriously,| sought by the investor, that no other though there were one or two days) medium offers the possibilities of reâ€" when the camp faced a shortage. Beâ€"| turn that mining affords. fore an actual famine occurred, howâ€"| The stock in trade of a mine lies ever, there was always the arrival of l in its subterranean vaults which are some foodâ€"bearing trains to relieve the| unaffected by the elements, fire, theft, shortage. In recent years there have| or any other of the multitudinous hazâ€" been so many wholesale houses cenâ€" ards that surround a business. Time red in Timmins that train service has effects no diminution in the value of to be delayed several days before any the deposit. Depreciation and obsolesâ€" shortage is noted here. The recent‘ cence bear no fatal message. disarrangement â€" of train â€" service! In the future as in the past, the poâ€" through the floods in the south did noti wer and wealth of every nation will be find Kirkland Lake in as pleasant A)its mineral riches provide. _ Canada | position. In referring to the matter| may, with her vast metallic wealth deâ€" ‘The Kirkland Lake Northern News| fabricated about the framework which last week said:â€"â€" !pend upon a basic structure of great i "Following the delays in train arriâ€"| solidarity. caused by the heavy rains and| w22« fioods in Southern Ontario during the "Dad, what‘s a ground animal in !lprevious weekâ€"end a famine of fresh| S°VEn letters?" ‘meat was experienced last week in Coâ€"| "Sausage, son." i tanares, havine â€"any in the'u | â€" tA o im oo meat was experienced last week in Coâ€" balt and Kirkland Lake, none of the butchers having any in stock in the middle of the week. A return to norâ€" mal train service corrected the situaâ€" tion later in the week, but in the meantime cooked, smoked and canned meats had to satisfv even the most IF IN LOVE, CALL THE DOCTOR BUT BE SURE HE‘S THE ONi A little article has started the rounds of the press and opened up wide field for question. WwWill there be speciallists in this new disease discovered, and will they be able to avoid contagion themâ€" selves? Will there be wards in the hosâ€" pitals or asylums, for the treatment of the newlyâ€"named malady? If‘a boy gets it, can he get it again after he grows up, and if so how often, and how? The trouble is all told about in a despatch from Paris, France, which reads about as follows:â€" fastidious eater "Love is only a disease, like whooping cough, measles and chickenâ€"pox, thing to be greatly dreaded and careâ€" fully avoided, in the opinion of Profesâ€" sor Pierre Vachet of the University of Higher Social Studies at Paris, France. "But Paris, which has thrived on this disease for quite a number of centuries, if history books are to be believed, is finding consolation in the fact that there are no known cures for it and nc practical vaccinations. "According to the professor, all the science and art of loving, which have been the inspiration fer poets and painters and composers, are merely the result of wrong orientation of our imâ€" aginations. Love really is an infectious diseasa, and those strick n with it should be given plenty of room and avoided as are all carriers of contagious diseases, he Said. "It is a hard blow to all women WNO, have loved to hear that all the passionâ€" ate movements of their hearts and the anxieties of their souls were merely a result of rundown organisms and that the great loveâ€"hercines of romance and history, Helen of Troy, Cleopatra and Francesca Di Rimini, really belonged in hospitals. "Love is a phenomenom caused essenâ€" tially by physical attraction," the proâ€" fessor said, "and the contagion of this illness is carried along by the eyes, ecars and scent. Then the brain and the soul put a conventional decorum to it." Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"Washingâ€" ton is said to be all agog over the senâ€" sational breakfast given the other day by Ned McLean. What made it sensaâ€" tional was the absence of intoxicants. Perhaps Mr. McLean was trying to establish the theory that if Washingâ€" tomn people could get by the morning meal without a drink they might be able to conquer their alcoholic thirst for the rest of the day. gardens‘ rd blow to all women who hear that all the passionâ€" ts of their hearts and the their souls were merely a down organisms and that §16 â€"â€" Washing~â€" ‘ There is an old story told about the man who could not see the bush on acâ€" ( count of there being so many trees. in the same way many in the mining sections of this North do not realize the mineral wealth of the country or the importance of the mining industry on account of the amount of work enâ€" tailed by mining activity and the numâ€" ber of mines opsned or opening up. lFor al such, and, indeed, for all |others,. it is well to read such an ‘article as the following from the last .\ issue of "News From the Mines":â€" MINERAL WEALTH BASIS OF EVERY NATION‘S No Other Medium Offers the Same Possibilities of Returns to Invesâ€" tors as Does Mining. The power of any nation has always been in constant ratio to the extent of that state‘s natural resources Of these, mineral wealth has been the foundation upon which has been constructed the strongest and richest governments. During the present cenâ€" tury, it has been demonstrated that metalilic wealth constitutes one of the two factors essential to the national safety of any psople. The m.mmg of any mineral, be it precxous base, or nonâ€"metallic, creates the nucleus of wealth. The miner, cn whom rests the burâ€" den of satisfying the demands of inâ€" dusiry, follows a vocation that is danâ€" gerous, dirty, replete with hardship, and ofttimes illâ€"paid, but he produces the cleanest wealth in the world. Mining, truly, is the one industry that functions without infringing on the rights of others and creates wealth to the benefit of all. Without mining, the progress of civilization would have made but slight advance. The question of whether the public incurs greater losses in mining than in commercial enterprises is a mooted one. The most hopeless propositions suffer little by comparison with similar business fiotations. On the other hand, it is a certainty, granted that trustworthy sources of reference are sought by the investor, that no other medium offers the possibilities of reâ€" turn that mining affords. For Sure Resuits Try Our Want Ad Column Marshall â€" Eeclestone, Ltd if you‘re Looking for THERE are people who look for "charâ€" actrer" in the car they buy. They want n _A lA,AlAs MAAA i)cut.u\. NCV uts / e N t h 1y Nes ult Oe i O ECCC 2t ce acter" in the car they buy, They want Pcrformance. They expect appearance. 1 ‘hey z‘.pprcciatc luxury. But they demand indi'vid-u_ality. It was for such pcople that this finer Oldsâ€" mobile was created. Leaving aside its astonishingly low price (now lower than ever) Oldsmobile is an exclusive car . . a car of character and distinction. It is a fine car with all the engineering excellence, all the distinguished style, all the quiet elegance and luxury, with all the easy mastery of miles and minutes, and all the desirable attributes of a fine car. And the attraction that Oldsmobile posâ€" sesses is more than the result of its 62 h.p. highâ€"compression engine . . more than its handsome Bodies by Fisher . . more than its Lovejoy Shock Abscrbers and scores of fine car features. It is the blending toâ€" gether, in one easily attainable car, of all the qualities which spell "character" in an automobile. o.30.4.23¢ CENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED Timmins, Ontario