New If you want to be iree Ol LM_ HILVILEIT itching and burning painâ€"if you want your skin clear of unsightly inflammaâ€" tionâ€"use "Soothaâ€"Salva‘". |This presâ€" cription of a famous physician soothes the irritated surfacesâ€" destroys the germs which are causing the diseaseâ€" and quickly clears the skin of every trace of Eczema. 50c at all druggists. It costs you nothing if you do not benefit. After using two boxes of "Soothaâ€"Salva‘"‘, if you are not satished, just return the empty tins to Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont., and we will refund your monsey. '..0.....’... .%, .# *.; ie @ "#® c Thursday, Aug. 22nd, 1929 Lâ€" \N“WWWX\“NWQ“‘“\\\““‘“\ vou want to be free of the intolerable s o k x Ointment Gives Quick Reliefâ€"or Money Back P. 0. Box 62 Excavations MACDONALD‘S offer more than othersâ€"a great deal more. Note what comes free and extra with three famous brands. Get the gifts Macdonald‘s offer in fairness to vourself. No. No. Gift No. Gift Gift When you buy Smoking Tobacco why not insist on the utmost? These gifts belong to youâ€"don‘t fail to get them. Demand the brands that give them. Ask your dealer for Macdonald‘s list of more than 100 premâ€" iums or Write to Post Office Box 306, Montreal. Why Not Insist? thing if you do not benefit. boxres of ‘"Soothaâ€"Salva‘"‘, if shed, just return the empty tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont., M A C DO NA for Cellars, Sewers, Etc Contracts of all kinds taken * * n in uns esns se * as"at ‘a4 it h °* §30.\oo£3oi§o¢flo¢u‘?o‘o‘o‘o‘o‘.oooo.oooonoonf»louoooooooooocoooocoo'oooooooooo y~ CONTRACTOR To Lovers of Fine Smoking Tobacco MACDONALD‘S BRIER is Canada‘s standard brand. It has always set the pace in value, as you know. â€" Every package contains twice the cards of any other smoking tobacco at any price. Free Zigâ€"Zag Papers MACDONALD‘S FINE CUT is the only Fine Cut which offers a free book of the famous Zigâ€"Zag papers with each packâ€" age,. â€"A card picture is also included. MACDONALD‘S â€" BRITISH _ CONSOLS Tobacco sells for 10 cents. That is oneâ€" third cheaper than any other tobacco of even lesser quality, You save 5 cents per package. EMPIBE BUILDING A Saving More Cards PREMIER AND HOLLINGER AND KAMISKOTIA LINE The Northern Miner last week says: "The Northern Miner learns that Holâ€" linger Consolidated officials and Preâ€" mier Ferguson have made some adâ€" vance in the last few days toward an agreement on the building of a line from Timmins to Kamiskotia by the T. and N. O. They are a little distance from putting names on papers. Wheâ€" ther there has been some giving of ground on both sides is not known, but the prime minister was pretty firm in his stand that the government was willing to use the public money to build the line, but that the mine should be willing to protect the public against year to year operating losess, should there be any." North Bay Nugget:â€"Even though pyjamas for street wear may not be universally adopted, the idea may enâ€" courage venturesome souls to leave off their coats. PFPhone No. 321 INCREASE TN GOLD OUTPUT FOR PAST SEVEN MONTHS Monthly Output Up $100,000 Over According to monthly figures receivâ€" ed by the Ontario Department of Mines from the gold mines of the provinces, the cumulative total for the first seven months of 1929 was $696,960 in excess of the corresponding period for last vear. During July producing mines, in orâ€" der of output, were as follows:â€"Porcuâ€" pine (8)â€"Hollinger, McIntyre, Dome, Vipond, Coniaurum, â€" March, West Dome and Porcupine United. Kirkland Lake (6)â€"Lake Shore, Teck Hughes, Wright Hargreaves, Sylvanite, Kirkland Lake Gold and Barry Holâ€" linger. July receipts of crude bullion from Ontario at the Royal Mint, Ottawa, totalled 9,024.89 crude ouncés, containâ€" ing 6,855.67 fine ounces of gold and 936.71 fine ounces silver having a total value of $142,202.20. The following are the figures in deâ€" tail for the past seven months:â€" Source ard period. Total value Porcupineâ€" Calendar yvear Average pet January ... February ........ March April May JUNGE â€" July Kirkland Lakeâ€" Calendar year Average per month January February March April May ... June ... July N.W. Ontarioâ€" January to July inclusive Total for calendar year Average for month January total .......:.. Tebruary ‘total March total April total ... | May total June total ... July total Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"It is either an ‘"invasion of immigrants," "an invasion of jobless" from the United States, or spots on the sun that accounts for unemployment, accordâ€" ing to the federal employment bureau. Really it is just lack of jobs in a counâ€" try that buys too much away from home. Year Ago. Kirkland Lake Doing Well. l m aAar t 13 15¢ 10¢ THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, QNTARIO Total value Crude bullion No. 175 $1,6014,861 1,463,684 1,587,601 1,498,671 1,687,477 1,529,598 1,549.104 1,058 413 1,151,710 1,196,959 1,200,166 1,157,028 1,358,690 1,165,124 2,663,274 2,615,394 2,7184,560 2,6098,837 2,853,704 2,888,288 2,.714;:0206 MAIN ROADS OF NORTH LAND NOW IN GOOD GONDITION False Reports Should Not Deter Southerners and Others from Usâ€" ing the Ferguson Highway As remarked elsewhere in this issus, and worth repeating here, the Ferguâ€" son highway and the road from Iroâ€" quois Falls to Timmins are now in good shape and the outside newspapers that are suggesting otherwise are not doing this country any service.. Also, as noted elsewhere in this issue it would appear that the outside newsâ€" papers are either six weeks behind the times or six months ahead of the seaâ€" son. Early this summer some parts of the road were in bad shape and it was necessary to object, but between the work done on the roads and the coming of dry weather the difficulty was overcome. The roads are not as good as paved roads, even yet, but they are much better than the most of the rural roads down below. If the department watches the matter of grading and ditching and sees that attention is given to the roads EARLY IN THE SPRING, there will be little honest cause for objection hereafter. A very good ‘"slant‘" on the whole matter is given by the following ediâ€" torial in the last issue of The Haileyâ€" burian :â€" "In a recent series of articles on the condition of the highways of the North Country, the Toronto Star has given wide publicity to the worst posâ€" sible features of the roads, with scarceâ€" ly a word that would lead people in the more southern sections of the continâ€" ent to even consider a trip in this diâ€" rection. A Star reporter drove over the Ferguson highway from its southâ€" ern end to Timmins and in the whole stretch found nothing in its faver. wWith the "quagmires" which were caused by rainy weather, the "washâ€" boards" that he found on the level stretches and the up and down hill trips which apparently got his nerves, the reporter had an unpleasant jourâ€" ney. He found, several wrecks of abandoned cars along the route, which were duly photographed and published as a horrible example of what might happen the luckless motorist who found himself in this backwoods, shoved sticks into the roadbed and otherwise explored the whole route, with results that shocked his tender sensibilities. "Just what object was to be gained by the adverse publicity that the newsâ€" paper gave to the North Country 1s somewhat obscure. In this section it is generally attributed to the Star‘s well known antipathy towards and enâ€" deavours to discredit the Ferguson Govâ€" ernment. Of the effect of the publiciâ€" ty it is difficult to judge at present. It is believed by those directly interâ€" ested in the tourist trade to have had a deterrent effect on travellers comâ€" ing north and, taken together with reâ€" cent unfounded stories about forest fires, to have prevented many tourists from driving over the Ferguson highâ€" way. "Evidence that the Star‘s articles on the highway conditions were exagâ€" gerated may be gathered any day from those who, in spite of warnings, have so far braved the dangers of the wilds as to venture up to Haileybury. On Friday last a Mr. Richards, who is a special writer on the staff of the Deâ€" troit Free Press, was a visitor at the Haileyburian office and in the course of a chat with the editor stated that he found the travelling over the highâ€" way very enjoyable. He said that the gravel roads compared favourably with those in other sections, that he had exâ€" perienced no difficulties so far and that he. was greatly impressed with the North. Mr. Richards was spending his holiday in seeing some new country and gathering material for special arâ€" ticles in the Sunday edition of his paâ€" per "This week a traveller for a Toronto firm told The Haileyburian that there was a marked improvement in the conâ€" dition of the roads over last summer. He was agreeably surprised, and thorâ€" oughly enjoyed the drive up. A Hailâ€" eyburian who had a drive from Iroâ€" quois Falls to Timmins at the weekâ€" end, over the stretch that was partiâ€" cularly dwelt on by the Star reporter, found that only the traffic regulations prevented a speed of forty to fifty miles per hour over the whole distance. "The roads in the North are not paved, there are hills and valleys, rock cuts and bridges, spots which are unâ€" der repair or construction, but on the whole there is nothing to hinder the reasonably careful driver to travel with safety from Toronto to Cochrane or visa versa, and any person with judgment will not expect that in two years a highway of that length, which passes through so many different conâ€" ditions, both climatic and geographical exist, can be made perfect." AND HERE‘S ONE MORE (From the Blairmore Enterprise) Sandy: "Are ye fond 0‘ moving pic tures, lass?" "Aye, Sandy." Sandy: "Then, maybe ye‘ll help me t get a few doon oot 0‘ the attic." Brantford Expositor:â€"If Russia wants to teach in her schools that there is no God that is her business. If she wants to look with favour on illicit love, that also is her business. If she is content to see half savage children of unknown parentage roam the streets of csities, that is likewise her business. When, however, she seeks to establish similar things in other lands. that most emphatically is someâ€" body else‘s business and should be promptly attended to. MINERALS NOT CONFINED TO PREâ€"CAMBRIAN SHIELD Woealth of Canada May Extend Beyond What is Usually Known as the Mincral Belt In a recent interview given to the press at Toronto, Alfred R. Whitman, professor of gealogy at the University of California, and noted as an expert in mining and geology, said that much has been heard of the Preâ€"Cambrian shield and the territory it covers, but that in his opinion this shield comâ€" prises but a small part of Canada and that there is not a section of the Doâ€" minion that does not offer some measâ€" sure of mineâ€"making possibilities. He suggested that the eyes of the mining world are fixed on Canada, a country whose full possibilitiese Aas a producer of mineral wealth can scarceâ€" ly be appreciated at this stage of deâ€" velopment. Prof. Whitman pointed out that Caâ€" nadians have become yearly more apâ€" preciative of the national assets the Dominion possesses in the nickelâ€" covered deposits of the Sudbury disâ€" trict, the gold camps of Kirkland Lake and Porcupine, and the new copperâ€" gold wealth of the Noranda. To these are shortly to be added the Flin Flon and Sherrittâ€"Gordon, while the farâ€" fiung parties of vigilant prospectors who are working from the Mackenzie River Basin, north to the Arctic, and east of Labrador, have created an expectancy for news for further rich finds in the Preâ€"Cambrian shield. While in no way depreciating the effects of exploration companies and prospectors in their search for hidden wealth in the remote regions of Canâ€" ada, Mr. Whitman pointed out that there were other sections of the Doâ€" minion that well warranted intensive prospecting and whose possibilities are not as much appreciated as they deâ€" serve. The sedimentaries or lime stone forâ€" mation, he says, deserved particular attention, and he is satisfied will reâ€" pay the effort. This section embraces the greater part of Alberta, Saskatcheâ€" wan, a portion of Manitoba, sections of Ontario and Quebec, and most of the Maritimes and Newfoundland. In them has already been found the coal and oil deposits of Alberta, the coal mines of Nova Scotia and New Brunsâ€" wick, and the famous Bunchans leadâ€" zinc mine of Newfoundland. Much of this territory yet awaits intensive prospecting, and in Mir. Whitman‘s cpinion affords great possibilities for the discovery of commercial deposits of lead, zinc, fire clay, coal and oil. Mr. Whitman sees evidences of Canâ€" ada‘s increasing dominance as minâ€" ing centre in the extension of Canaâ€" dian mining activity into the United States. Mines are being examined or operated by Canadian companies in Arizona, Washington, California and Idaho, and this because Canada has become the centre of mining developâ€" ment, whereas the people of the Unitâ€" ed States have from year to year shown a lessened interest in the d4ndusâ€" try. Money to finance mining enterâ€" prises is pouring into Canada, and this country has become the centre of mining activity. Not only are Canaâ€" dian mining companies and engineers devoting their attention to likely lookâ€" ing prospects in the United States, but the possibilities of Africa have also atâ€" tracted their attention, and at the present time several companies have representatives in that country closely following developments there. Lands Dept. Now Making Survey Forest Reserves According to announcement made in Toronto last week the longâ€"planned airplane inventory of the forest reâ€" sources of Ontario is now under way. While the lateness of the season will not permit of any great amount of work in this connection being done this year, the foundation for a whirlâ€" wind campaign next spring is being laid. Three Air Force machines are enâ€" gaged on an extensive campaign of forest typeâ€"sketching, with Pilots Lyâ€" ons and Dawson, in filying boats, workâ€" ing out of Long Lac and Orient Bay. respectively, and Maj. Jack Leach, in another machins, recently purchased by the Province especially for the job at hand, working over the area between Fort Hope and Orient Bay. Sketching work is being done in the first two machines by Harry McCausâ€" land and H. H. Parsons, of the Onâ€" tario Forestry Department and in the other by R. N. Johnston, departmental radio engineer. It is first planned to "cut out" all the death areas in the Province. The James Bay coastal plain, as it is known, is one of these "dead areas"â€"15,000 square miles in size, but with only timber fringes along the lakes and rivers. The rest of it is nothing but muskeg. As much as possible of this "cutting out" work will be completed this year, so as to enable the department to proâ€" ceed next spring with the actual inâ€" ventory of timber stands itself. The mapping branch has its work cut out for it, for William Finlayson, who planned the project, is known to fayâ€" our a map of every tract in the proâ€" vince> Carrying out of such proâ€" gramme will mean that new gasoline caches will have to be established up north of the Albany River, because at the present time there are great timber stands that could not be reached beâ€" cause of lack of sufficient refuemng stations. Red Rose Tea comes direct to us from the finest tea gardens, then straight to your grocerâ€"brimful of flavor and freshness. Every package guaranteed.;, "is good tea‘ TEA RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good Isn‘t that interestâ€" ing news! Just think of all the delicious flulfly bavarians and charlottes and Creams that you can have, without a bit of expensive whipâ€" ping cream! This is what you do. Buy a few cans of Carnation Milk. â€" Take off the labels, put the cans in a pan of water and boil the water five minutes. Let the cans cool, then put them in the refrigerator to get thoroughly chilled. Whenever you want a dessert with whipped cream as a basis, simply open a can of Carnation, pour the milk into a chilled bowl, add 14 teaspoon gelatine (dissolved) to cup of milkâ€"and whip! Carnation makes wonderful desserts, rich and smooth and creamy. â€" It has a double portion of cream, you know, broken up into the finest particles so it stays distributed all through the milk. Its richness and fine texture make canâ€" dies and ice creams, cream sauces and soups, puddings and cakes exceptionâ€" ally fineâ€"textured and delicate. And when you think that this pure whole milkâ€"evaporated for convenience and sterilized for safekeepingâ€"costs only oneâ€"third as much as whipped cream, you will surely want to use it for all your cooking. Send for the Carnation Cook Book. It‘s free. Address Carnation Milk Products Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont. Carnation Chocolate Charlotte Rich for Desserts on the label means EVAPORATED MILK of highest quality Hillâ€"Clarkâ€"Francis, Limited â€" Timmins, Ont The Geo. Taylor Hardware, Limited â€" â€"â€" _ â€"â€"_â€" Timmins, Ont Marshallâ€"Ecclestone, Limited, Timmins, Ont Jrom Contented Cows tbhsp. gel Whipped cream desserts at plain milk cost at 1€ tbsp. cold water For Sale By by Carnation Milk is doubly rich in cream. It makes the most delicious desserts. It is dependable, too. Pure, whole milk, sterilized for safekeeping. You‘ll find it more convenient, more ecoâ€" nomical than imilk in any other form. 4 cup sugar, 154 cups Carnation milX, 14 cup water, 1 square bitter chocolats, 4 tsp. vanilla, 14 dozen lady fingers. Soak granulated gelatine in 2 thsp. cold water 5 minutes. Melt shaved chocolate in double boiler, add sugar, 4 cup water and 4 cup Carnation. Let cook 5 minutes or until smooth; pour over gelatine and stir until disâ€" solved. â€" When cool, add vanilla. Whip cup Carnation which has been chilled for a couple of hours, gradually add chocolate and gelatine mixture and stir until it begins to thicken. When well Carnation Macarcon Dessert 1% tbsp. gelatine, 34 cup water, 9 macaroons, crumbled, 134 cups Carnaâ€" tion Milk, 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten, 4 cup sugar, 1 tsp. vanitla. Soak gelatine 5 minutes in !4 cup water mixed with :4 cup Carnation. Scald 14 cup Carnation diluted with 14 cup water; pour over slightly beaten egy yolks to which the sugar has been addâ€" ed ; cook in double boiler until mixture thickens slightly (about 3 minutes); pour over gelatine and stir until dissolâ€" ved. When cool, add vanilla. Whip 1 cup Carnation which has been chilled for a couple of hours, gradually add gelatine mixture and stir until it k;egins to thicken,. Add crumbled macaroons and pour into mold. Chill for hour or more. â€" Serves 5. thickened pour carefully into mo which has been lined with lady finger Chill for hour or more. Turn ow cover with whipped Carnation at garnish with maraschino cherries â€" nuts. (See recipes above) sp. gelatine, 34 cup water, 9 is, crumbled, 134 cups Carnaâ€" ., 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten, ugar, 1 tsp. vanitla. Soak 5 minutes in !4 cup water th :4 cup Carnation. Scald arnation diluted with 14 cup nur over slightiv beaten eggz cups Carnation M