Increase Your Weight 5 Pounds 30 Vays Or Money Back Real pharmacists and chemists everyâ€" where know that McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tablets contain just the proven essential ingredients that inâ€" crease weight, create appetite, build up the power to resist disease and puts good solid flesh on skinny men and women. So now men and women who keep up with the times are taking McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tabletsâ€"rich in health builiding, strength creating fiesh producers and as easy to take as candy. Sso why not start toâ€"day? not fill out those deep hollows in neck, cheeks and chest? Why go on through life with sunken cheeks and narrow chest when you can take advantage of this straight forward offer. Try them for 30 days if you want to gain five pounds or more. And bear this in mind, if they don‘t help you in that time your money will be refunded. 60 Tablets 60 cents â€" Economy size $1.00. At Moisley Ball, F. M. Burke and Sauve Pharmacy and druggists everywhere. Thursday, Sept. 5th, NESBITT, THOMSON COMPANY S Canadian Power and Paper Investments â€"Litnited Power Corporation of Canada Limited, McCollâ€"Frontenac Oil Company Limited Foreign Power Securities Corporation Eastern Dairies Limited, â€" ie se Power Corporation of Canada Limited Convertible on basis of $150 p Great Britain and Canada Investment Corporation Carrving warrants to receive 10 shares of Common S Whippct §1x Coach Montreal Quebec Ottawa Hamilton London,. Ont. Winnipeg Saskatoon Victoria Vancouver arrying a \Vhippet Fc Coach The following investments are well secured â€"pay a good interest return, while affordâ€" ing through their conversion features splendid opportunities for appreciation. ombining the Advantages of Bonds and Common Stocks arrying warrant Convertible int "O¢50 Paying unusuc!ly attractive di SEDaAN VALUE Royal Bank Building, TORONTO, 2 PREFERRED STOCKS L I M I T E D A c mI 77 HIPPET Sedan value has always "Jed the field", but when you see the new De Luxe Whippet Six Sedan you‘ll have a new idea of what "full value" really meansâ€" It now has a new and larger body, designed by a creator of custom cars. Trim smart lines, rich color harmonâ€" ies. A roomier interior, comfortably upholstered and well appointed. The new Whippet‘s increased wheelâ€" base,shockabsorbers, oversize halloon tires and longer springs both front and rear, all combine to effect supers> Added to his church activitie: Mr. Carrington nasium work, a been chur GYMXAsSIUM ESTABLISHED AT ISLAND FALLS CAMP m dditions this summer to the activiâ€" ies of Island Falls was the starting of gymnasium there. This was part of he capable work of Mr. Carrington, he student preacher at the camp. dded to his Sunday School and hurch activities, a correspondent says, ir. Carrington has had daily gymâ€" asium work, as well as Latin classes hree times a week. A choir has also een organized in connection with the hurch services, and Mr. Carrington Berini Motor Sales Timmins, Ontario ing qualitie cupation in There will be general interest in the t that this summer a gymnasium s organized and started at Island lis, the northern terminal of the T. N. O. railway extension north of chrane. Most of the community at EVER BEFORE / ind bu communl hful, wh TI h $1,000 D has bee h each $1,0(KK ‘end returns Trallway â€" Most of I1s are C Most of the communi is are connected with rer Paper Co. work, e indirectly, but the . in independent one an s own resources so fa n ty ck w Market â€" 6 pare moment oncerned. One ummer to the Price rs in the together While a ff or 100 100 ry helpful effec 5o O I190* lebenture,. it cost ind endance Y‘ie!ld VE Price nplete equipâ€" 1€ trL he activi 2L com inmnen Y h he and heavier materials, give greater strength and rigidity. The new Whippet is the only lowâ€" riced car with a/Z these vital advantâ€" ages: full forceâ€"feed lubrication, silent timing chain, "Fingerâ€"Tip Conâ€" trol", invarâ€"strut pistons, big fourâ€" wheel brakes, and, in the Six, a heavy sevenâ€"bearing crankshaft. See and drive the Whippet at your earliest opportunity. You will find its beauty instantly appealing, its perâ€" formance remarkably brilliant. And long service will prove Whippet‘s dependability anrd operating cconâ€" Speaker also shows that The Globe is consistent. Consistency is a jewel, when it is based on broad principles inspiring right views on matters of imâ€" portance. Broadly speaking, newsâ€" papers, like The Globe, that are govâ€" erned by principles such as loyalty, fairness and truth will be consistent from year to year and even the fyles of fifty years ago can not be brought forward to confound them. In the case in point The Globe fifty years ago had the same views as it holds toâ€"day because it was imbued with the same loyalty and foresight and desire for public welfare. The article in The Speaker last week was as follows:â€" Antiâ€"communistic editorials are no new thing in The Globe. Here is an extract from one taken from the files extract fro of 50 years "What is willing. To fork out his penny and pocket your shilling. "On this continent, comfort is readiâ€" ly obtainable and practically exists for allâ€"except those who will not work. Communism, consequently, has here no widespread misery for an ally, and the men who would wish to put those doctrines into practice are ignorant reâ€" probates. Where they are sufficiently numerous to become a factor in poliâ€" tics, it will be foundâ€"as in California â€"that their aid is to be more feared than desired."â€"Sept. 8, 1879. In our last issue we quoted a porâ€" tion of a Daily (Gilobe editorial on the Toronto police and Communists, and above we have given the views of The Globe fifty years ago. has yearnings. For equal division of earnings. Idler EDITORIAL ON COMMUNSIM PUBLISHED 50 YEARS AGO happy topics unde lishe No matter whether or not one agrees with The Globe‘s politics, all must agree that this splendid newsâ€" paper is always on the right side when any question affecting the wellâ€"being of the people of the British Empire is concerned. The verse above sizes up Communism in a few words. A despatch last week from Toronto said that Rev. Edwin Smith of Zion Church, Carleton Place who is in Toâ€" ronto after a motor tour of Northern Ontario, says that if the Ferguson Highway is not the best in the world it is far from the worst, and he has no complaint to offer. Any one can drive 35 miles per hour over it with perfect safety, if not with absolute comfort. Mr. Smith estimated that the proporâ€" tion of American to Canadian cars met on this highway was about 10 to one. | 4 1 sAYSs FERGUSON HIGHWAY NOT THE WORST IN THE WORLD Many I mportant Features be hC last issue to commiinsim comes this head. The Speaker pubâ€" an editorial from The Toronto New Liskeard Speaker has the kneek of giving new slants on of the day, and one reference ast issue to commuinsim comes iffecti torial ago bunglerâ€" reproduc hows that SIX DE LUXE SED A N 81070 THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO o.b. Factory, laxes extra bothâ€"he One â€" who i Empit by â€" T i "Within four years a new rallway was building from North Bay northâ€" ward, resulting in the accidental findâ€" ing of siverâ€"even to a "silver sideâ€" walk"â€"at Cobalt, and the opening of a source of wealth. The railway was pushed on, and Porcupine gold was found, where are still operating some | of the world‘s greatest mines. Kirkâ€" !land Lake followed, now the most ; spectacular gold camp of the Province. ‘The same golden trail was followed : over the boundary of Quebec to Rouyn, !with its great wealthâ€"makers, such as ! Noranda, Red Lake holds promise in | the far western part of Ontario, There Iis boring for oil and development of lignite deposits on the James Bay slope, and now Premier Ferguson plans anâ€" ! other railway westerly through the | same region to the rich lands of Patriâ€" GREAT NORTH LAND 1S NOT APPREGIATED BY SOUTH As noted elsewhere in this issue, and mentioned also in previous issues, the North Land is receiving much intelliâ€" gsent publicity from the recent visit to the North Land of the party of daily newspaper editors. In The Toronto Globe on Wednesday last Mr. M. O. Hammond, staff correspondent of The (Globe had the following article. headed with the words, "Great North Land is not Appreciated by Southern Folk.":â€" "Old Man Ontario has much to learn about his lusty son who lives north of the French river. Here is a vast reâ€" gion, many times larger in area than the settled southern portion of the Proâ€" vince, which is steadily revealing its natural wealth and giving promise of greater days to come. ‘"‘Thirty years ago Northern Ontario was still described as a "wilderness," about which only the most fiamboyant optimists spoke with hopefulness. There had been a beginning in nickel and copper mining at Sudbury, thanks to an accidental discovery by a construcâ€" tion gang for the Canadian Pacific. There was talk of gold in the Rainy River country. and there were heavy shipments of sawlogsâ€"largely to be manufacteured in a foreign land. In 1899 a Port Arthur orator greeted a party of touring members of the Legisâ€" lature with a welcome to "the silver gateway to the golden West," but the location of the silver was improperly described. "Swinging round the circle" from North Bay to Sault Ste. Marie, in a rapid tour just closed, a party of reâ€" presentatives of Ontario daily newsâ€" papers found much to surprise them. Instead of one railway, east and west. there are now three. The Temiskamâ€" ing and Northern Ontario has been exâ€" tended, and is operating 96 miles north from Cochrane. paper mills are surrounded by new young cities. Obâ€" servation towers lift their skeleton frames on hillâ€"tops, and their occuâ€" pants coâ€"operate with zooming aeroâ€" nlanes which steadily break the Norâ€" are off to some new land where they can use their axe again, leaving the land to be developed by other hands Along the national transcontinenta ways, level and straight as a prairi¢ section of the Canadian National Railâ€" line, settlement has made headway from Cochrane to Hearst, with varyâ€" ing intensity, but never far inland from thern : North i pants coâ€"operate with zooming planes which steadily break the thern silence as the empire 0 North is patrolled again=t forest "Last week‘s travellers, for the part, saw this modern developme the first time. The Provinceâ€"( Temiskaming Railway, now payi way, is paralleled by the Fe: Highway, a good gravel road North Bay to Cochrane,, with a tension westward 90 miles to KR kasing, the thriving new town the enormous paper mill of the DADDY CGAN NOW EAT ANYTHING Wealth in Mines. Timber and Agriâ€" culture is Abounding. Romance of Progress. he Ross Gove ie traveller pierces a settled gion which would do credit ies much farther south. om Quebec have had much ocated Not far from Cobalt the ; t of the North, discovered hentic information is con cen agiC ntury Temisk n are wordsmen iney e pulpwood, clear the land like Samuel Chapdelaine, in story of Louis Hemon, they some new land where they heir axe again, leaving the king the regular dose of alts it is quite different, and njoy themselves seeing me dare not touch before. My was the same, but since he Kruschen Salts he can eat whatever is put in front of he iAl expiorers a qual s southward t ind for 25 mile i settled farmin esh was weak. rich, his boys e wil pay the id the sequel it <0OCAl! anadians ol |1 t firke owned most n the steel highway. Beyond Hearst the heavy timber holdings of E. W. Backus and others prevent even the opening of roads under an arrangement that seems to call for revision. "No visitor can fail to place paperâ€" making among the greatest of Ontario industries, and nowhere is it seen to greater extent and perfection than at Iroquois Falls, which lies some thirty miles to the east of the Porcupine gold camp. Indeéeed, the Abitibi Power and Paper Company is one of the largest paper companies of the world. Spruce logs come by rail on a private railway or are floated down the Abitibi river to this plant, and here with a dazzling speed the pulp is converted by a row of gigantic machines into sheets of paper 15 feet wide. Each night the day‘s outâ€" put of 550 tons, or 22 carloads, is shipâ€" ped to distant markets. Around the plant are ranged scores of attractive homes for workers, set is a wellâ€"planâ€" ned town, and in front of the hotel is a 9â€"hole golf course, where men take exercise, sometimes even at lunch hour. The young city is less than 200 miles from James Bay, but radio, numerous visitors from outside and resourcefulâ€" ness in local amusement, such as hocâ€" key, as the outside world knows, break the sense of isolation and give zest to life. ‘"‘Timmins â€" have aspiration and McIntyre : and the pursuli enlarged. "Almost literally under the midnight sun, so far as Ontario agriculture is concerned, Cochrane hopes to show the way in Northern farming. The town is still devoted to railroading. but the good land in all directions, in what is, after all about the latitude of Winnipeg gives hope of a new section which will soon do credit to Ontario. Last week‘s visitors had a hurried visit at Cochâ€" rane to a subâ€"station of the Kapuskaâ€" sing Experimental Farm of the Ontario Government. Under the clear skies of this James Bay slope, they picked strawberries on Aug. 20th, at the end of the berry season; saw excellent vegeâ€" tables growing. and a good field of Garnet wheat. Surely here was an ilâ€" lustration of the value of pushing exâ€" periments with all speed for the proâ€" duction of the quickest possible growâ€" ing variety of wheat for the millions of acres of land Wwaiting to be tickled by the plow." Identification badges with a number corresponding to that on their huntâ€" ing licenses will be issued to all huntâ€" ers this fall, according to an announceâ€" ment by the Ontario Game and Fisherâ€" ies Department. No hunter will be allowed into the bush unless he is wearing the official badge, the purpose being to prevent shooting of deer and moose before receiving a license and to nut an end to the exchange of licenses The official government bulletin on mineral production referring to prosâ€" pecting in Ontario, states that, as in 1928, there was great activity in exâ€" ploration work during the first half of 1929. The more important areas atâ€" tacked were Sudbury, in which diviâ€" sion there were 1,488 claims recorded, Red Lake, Pickleâ€"Crow and other disâ€" tricts in Patricia district. In 1928, 15,046 claims were recorded in the province. There has been a falling off in the first half of 1929, only 5,000 claims being reported filed. RECORDED OVER 15,000 CLAIMS IN THE PROVINCE ALL HUNTERS ARE TO USE IDENTIFICATION BADC LIFFE /J CANADA WATERLO O _â€" _ O 1O SULLIVAN NEWTON o s e amnhay TIMMIXS, GONTARIO Canada has taken a leaf from the book of successful exporting countries and established through the Departâ€" ment of Trade and Commerce, a numâ€" ber of Trade Commissioners abroad. Thirtvâ€"two offices have been estabâ€" velopment of Canadian export tradd Each commissioner is a specially train ed Canadian, living among the buyer of other countries, seeking out channel for the release of Canadian goods. The service includes the making 0o direct inquiries, the surveying of an particular market, the reporting of th kind of goods wanted, the best metho of packing, shipping and billing an the provision of reliable information ol business conditions generally. The offices of Canada‘s Trade Com missioners abroad range from Australi to the United Kingdom. In ever country of commercial importanc there is at least one office and in th more imnportant countries several ar from the Bible?" "T‘ll say I can," replied Ethel. "Very well, my dear," answered the bishop, "which one is it?" ‘"The Lord is my shepherdâ€"I should A certain girl: "Ethel little girl. For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column Summer Tounst AsSsIXTIXG CANADIAXNX BUSNE®S® The : mmil West coast cruises. From â€" Vancouver. days, meals and berth enroute. $31 and $39.00. A ak a bo ut allâ€" expense condueted Toars of the West V ancouver Island iC § World‘s Greatest Travel System hotut services 0O ASSl idian h :â€"â€"lhose enaur he endurance 0o ho WOr diat ducers o on. Jaime and Com ) a little i bright a verse h th To Banff and return, reached only via Canadian Pacific, In effect June 1st â€" To Lake Louise and return, reached only via Canadian Pacific, Return Limit October 31st Stopâ€"over allowed. C. H. White, District Passenger Agent, North Bay, Ont. Let us arrange your itinerary Ilustrated literature will be glad ly furnished by Salad Dressimng THE BORDEN CO. LIMITED, Dept. A ADDRESS Please send me free recipe booklet "New Magic in the Kitchen‘" This dressing will keep for weeks 2 eggs beaten until light. 1 teaspoonful salt. 1 teaspoonful musâ€" tard. 1 can Eagle Brand Milk. 1 cupful vinegar. Beat the first four inâ€" gredientsvigorously for a few minutes, add the vinegar, stir well and set aside for a few hours to thicken. 140 St. Paul Street West, Montreal Replaces cream and sugar. Really delightful. Try it! SWEETENED CONDENSED Recipe for delicious