Thursday, Sept. 26th., 7%?%/ / HOME BEAUTY _\ _ COMPARATIVE tests . . made with the "fhfthâ€" *A wheel" speedometer . . prove Pontiac to have the highest top speed and fastest acceleration of all cars in its prive range.> Its 200â€"cubicâ€"inch engine delivers 58 brake horseâ€"power at 3,000 r.p.m. exceptional power at moderate engine speed spelling F uis nV W\ longrl-iï¬f‘e for Pontiac‘s Big Six engine Highâ€"compression performance, with ordinary iueis is provided by Pontiac‘s GMR cylinderâ€"head, developed by General Motors Research Corporation and available in no other car at Pontiac price. Positive fuelâ€"pump assures full supply of gas and prevents starving on long, steep hills. The only true performance is allâ€"round performance . . power, speed, acceleration and LONG LIFE. That is why Pontiac is worth more today than other cars at its price. Compare Pontiac‘s BIG SIX beauty, performance and dependability with anyâ€" thine this price field can offer . . then make your decision. L s Ask your Dealer about the CMAC Dejerred Payment Plan PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED AKE your roof colourful and distinctive . .. with the new Flexstonc. Here are colours that have never even been attempted before in roofing . . . Blended Romany Reds, full of life yet in perfect taste; gentlerâ€"toned Brittany Blends where copper, moss, purple and bronze melt into one another; Tile Red; Dark Green; Blueâ€"Black; Green and Red . . . wonderful. More than this . .. Johnsâ€"Manville Flexâ€" stone is Fireproof and Timeproof. _ Made from asbesmos (rock) fibre, mined in Canada . .. and Flexstone can be bought at the same price as any "fairly good" roofing. Insist on the genuine Johnsâ€" Manville Flexstone. Your roofer, contractor, lumber, or building material dealer should have Flexstone in seock; but if not he can get it for you quickly from our authorized distributors . . _. then also there are the famous JoAbnsâ€"Maenville Rigia Asbestos Shingles, slightly higher in cost, but beautiful beyond words and :sverlasting. "=â€""=~"~ C mm uo _ IT"‘s CC AN aAa D I A N BE T TER BECAUSE__IT‘Ss CA NA DTA Marshall â€" Ecclestone, Ltd FLE XST O NE AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR : The George Taylor Hardware Limited Cobalt TIMMINS Cochrane New Liskeard Swastika Joh ns ~â€"Manville Timmins, Ontario. Asbestos Shingles that may be yours â€" with ordinary fuels Canadian Johnsâ€" Manville Co., Limited MASTER OF ASBESTOS Asbestos Mines and Factory: Asbestos, Quebec Sales Offices: Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, V ancouver Canadian Products are Mincd and Manufeactured in Canads. J.M, the brake lining you get at all Keystone Stations, will give your brakes a grip of steel and will keep you in the good graces of the law. Made from long strand asbestos, reinforced with brass and treated to stand up under heat and grease. The Best Brake Lining There‘s no magic in the way Johns, Manville Asbestocel saves fuel. It simâ€" ply stops heat wastage from pipes and furnace. In many homes Asbestocel coatings have cut down fuel bills amazingly. Cut Down Your Fuel Bill! l numerous experimental stations located ; throughout the country, i research (scientific study of the art of | growing forests) may be said to be still in its infancy. Some eleven years ago a beginning was made in silvicultural research by the Forest Service of the Department of the Interior with probâ€" lems in the eastern forests. Since that time the work has gradually extended to all provinces of the Dominion. Forests, unlike most natural reâ€" sources, are replaceable and if handled correctly may be rightly considered 2s inexhaustible, as nature will renew the crop after the mature one has been reâ€" moved.~ In fact, as is true in agricul- ture, the crop can be greatly improved 'by correct silvicultural practics. Naâ€" ture, if left to her own devices, is wasteâ€" ful of time and material. she may i produce a crop of sorts and of species that are not presently valuable, But, if assisted by wise management, there will be developed a much larger crop of | more valuable species. FOREST RESEARGH MAKING GOOD PROGRESS IN CANADA Work of the Silviculture Branch of the Department of the Interior ow Extends to all the Provinces The forests of Canada are, in the agâ€" gregate, the second most important natural resource, being exceeded in acâ€" tual value of products by agriculture alone. During the early history of Canada there was a period, when white pine lumbering was at its height, in which forest products represented over 37 per cent. of Canada‘s annual exâ€" ports. _ But although agricultural reâ€" search has long been established and numerous experimental stations lozated throughout the country, silvicultural rncasareh («scientific study of the art of UYUALVC _ AC The most pressing forest problem in | o species. Canada, obviously, is the regeneration | of forest types under the varied condiâ€"| Having succe: tions found from Nova Scotia to Briâ€" | stand is, howeve tish Columbia. While silvicultural | forest managem methods have long been defined in | stand throughou parts of Europe, similar treatment is‘importance. If not applicable in Canada where logâ€" | eration has resu ging practice and market requirements | age, it is ncessa as well as tree species, soil and climatic | vals to obtain conditions vary radically. The art of | results. By this silviculture must be developed especialâ€"| the resultant sta ly ‘for Canada. Only by experiment | valuable, and m and research can the factors which |ed ten to thirty control the regeneration of our Canaâ€" thinnings obtai dian species in the widely different sites % quanity to almo and types be determined. This preâ€" stand. Where dicates the establishment of experi-‘thinnings can be mental cutting areas on which certain | able byâ€"product l‘ mathans" and> Tariations ‘of *‘These ‘are. on ud U L L CULL TL 3 : LA L , V A NJ d «Y | 3 . oo fln Lo . N 16 00 Mel Cl( en acs 40 s dR Cc â€" of forest types under the varied condi-} Having successfully regenerated a | tions found from Nova Scotia to Briâ€" | stand is, however, only the first step in tish â€" Columbia. While silvicultural| forest management. The care of the methods have long been defined in | stand throughout its life is also of great| parts of Europe, similar treatment is‘importance. If the method of regen-! not applicable in Canada where logâ€" | eration has resulted in a stand of even‘ ging practice and market rcquirements{age, it is ncessary to thin it at interâ€" as well as tree species, soil and climatic ‘ vals to obtain the most satisfactory conditions vary radically. The art of | results. By this practice not only will | silviculture must be developed especialâ€" | the resultant stand be very much morci ly for Canada. Only by experimeni ' valuable, and merchantable size reachâ€"| and research can the factors which |ed ten to thirty years earlier, but the control the regeneration of our Cana-';thinnings obtained may amount in dian species in the widely different sites } quanity to almost as much as the final and types be determined. This preâ€" stand. Where they can be utilized | dicates the establishment of experiâ€" | thinnings can be looked upon as valuâ€". mental cutting areas on which certain | able byâ€"product of forest managementI wellâ€"known methods, and variations of | ~These are only two broad silvicul-! them to suit conditions of utilization, tural problems which form the basis of are employed in removing the majiure | experimentation and research already crop. \ well under way. Problems in nursery | practice, seeding, planting, forest menâ€" During the last ten â€"years several | large experimental cutting areas, rangâ€" suration and protection, and many ing in size from 200 to 500 acres each,, others are constantly arising and waitâ€" ‘ing for some authoritative investigaâ€" ‘\tion. Many of them are now being | by the PoPOSt SCTVICC â€"NACLOLNâ€" have peen established in Nova Scotia ) al Resources. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO 26 Try these supremely efficient sugar !coated tasteless tablets for 30 daysâ€" | if they don ‘thelp greatly your money | will be refunded. One woman gained ten pounds in ‘ltwentyâ€"two days. Sixty tablets, sixty : centsâ€"Economy size $1.00. Ask Moisley i Ball, F. M. Burke, Sauve Pharmacy ’or any druggist for McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Directions and forâ€" ‘mula on each box. New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario and | Saskatchewan. These are being careâ€" fully studied at fiveâ€"year periods and‘ the results of the various methods anaâ€". lyzed and compared. . On extensive | areas of the National Forests, the pracâ€" \tice of marking the trees to be cut has |ebeen followed t.hat is selection cutting !has been practised. and the effect upon ithe remaining stand and upon the reâ€" production are under systematic obscerâ€" |vation. Throughout all the provinces \permanent sample plots, upon which \each tree is numbered and carefully Emeasured. have been established. These plots will be remeasured from time to itime to obtain a record of the condiâ€" tions following logging. This work \ must be extended to include all the ‘broad types and districts in Canada, before the management of our forests can be placed on a basis to ensure adeâ€" \quate regeneration of the desirable | species. That‘s going someâ€"but skinny men, women and children just can‘t help putting on good healthy fiesh when they take McCoy‘s Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Gained 10 Pounds in 22 Days Full of health and weight building substancesâ€"the proven and successful kindâ€"the knd that are a real help to frail, rundown, skinny men and womâ€" en. Teachers‘ Convention to be Held at Kapuskasing The annual convention of the Disâ€" trict of Cochrane and North Terr.iska-! ming Teachers‘ Institule will be held this year at Kapuskasing on Oct. 2nd. to 5th. A very attractive programime is being prepared for the sessions, and in addition there will be a round of entertainment for the visitors. In reâ€" ferring to this feature The Northern Tribune says "a full programme of entertainment for the visitors is in preparation to fill in every minute of time not taken up by convention sessâ€" ion.‘" Attendance at the sessions is compulsory in regard to all teachers in the inspectorate, which includes what is known as the District of Cochrane and. also a part of Temiskaming. Beâ€" tween 160 and 200 teachers will be present at the convention, which will open in the Diamond Jubilee public school at Kapuskasing. BRACEBRIDGE EDITOR AND MAYOR HAS IT ALL RIGHT Collingwood Bulletinâ€"Editor Thomâ€"| as, who is mayor of Bracebridge, is | through fussing over hikers and such who come by way of his town. He telils| us that last week there were two "hikâ€", ers" through town, one on a bicycle, the other on foot. They were both| going round the world or across the | contintent or to the moon or on some’ other crazy stunt and each expected| the mayor would make a great official | fuss over him. Never again. The maâ€"‘ yor of Bracebridge thought it over seriâ€" ; ously after he saw a couple of fema-let tramps whip some lame, starving, | mongrel dogs out of town last winter} and he regretted having failed to have them arrest edfor cruelty to a‘nimalsi The world has spent hundreds cof : thousands of dollars in the past tv.'ol years hunting for fiiers who were tryâ€" ing to win notoriety by airplane fiights.| If it were in the interests of science| those fiiers could have tested their enâ€". durance or possibilities just as well by fivinx over earth as sea. What good ; does it do when men or women walK or swim foolish distances? _ Mayor Thoaomas is right. There are too many of the class referred to by him and they should be exterminated on the ground that they are a common nuisance. Edmond Proulx, K.C., of L‘Original, Ont.. has been appointed District Court Judge for Sudbury, in succession to the late J. J Kehoe who died last March. 4A 4 i Brief reference was made last week to the platfurm on which Hon. G. H. ‘Ferguson and his Government re making their appeal for reâ€"election in the provincial elections to be held lon October 30th. The references to | the development of the North are natâ€" | urally of special importance and interâ€" ‘est to readers of The Advance, and | so are given in full herewith. In the !election manifesto issued last week by Premier Ferguson the following were the special references to the North :â€" ! "8. Al Ontario is proud of the great heritage we posses in the northern portion of the Province Its great agriâ€" | cultural possibilities, its amazing iminâ€" |eral wealth, its huge forestry indusâ€" . tries, its power sources, its fish and its |\ furs all combine to make that wondâ€" | erful land excel in potential wealth and | opportunity any area of its size in the | world. A vigorous settlement poycy | must be carried on to fill the millions | of acres of rich arable land. This must | be done in a systematic way that will | make for compact settlement. Generâ€" ;ous assistance must be given to the [ pioneer of the soil. Increasing settleâ€" ‘ment demands the improvement and Iextension of roads. In New Ontario ‘as in Old Ontario it was necessary to l construct main roads before the minor lroads would be of service in reaching | the markets. We were now in a postâ€" | tion to devote more attention and more | widespread assistance to the roads |\ necessary for the settlers‘ local use. REFERENGES T0 NORTH IN GOVERNMENT MANIFESTS More Attention to Roads for Settlers Bounty on Iron. Development of Big Coal Fields North of Cochrane. , "Four years ago the Province passed | legislation undertaking to pay a bonus i of one half cent per unit upon condiâ€" tion that the Federal Government pay a similar amount as a bounty to enâ€" ; courage the use of Ontario ore. The Proâ€" | vincial Government, realizing the treâ€" mendous importance of developing and : using our own iron resources, proposes | to assume that portion of the bounty | which it was hoped the Dominion Govâ€" ;ernment might pay. At next session the Legislature will be asked to enact |\ Igeislation to enable the Province to pav the oneâ€"cent bounty "We must build up the great Northâ€" land by making it an attractive and prosperous place for a great agricultural population. "Our advance in mining operations has been marvellous. Ninety per cent. of the world‘s nickel is ours. We hold third place among the goldâ€"producing countries of the world We have imâ€" mense supplies of silver and copper. Our most extensive mineral deposit is iron. It is known that hundreds of millions of tons of iron ore underlie many portions of the Province. Not a pound of Canadian iron ore has been used for years in any Canadian steel plant. Our ore is lower in iron conâ€" tent than the American ore which is imported for use. Investigation has demonstrated that this handicap can be overcome by a method of preliminâ€" ary treatment. "The faith of the Government in the possible discovery of valuable coal deâ€" posits on the James Bay slope has reâ€" cently been vindicated and the subâ€" stantial expenditure in explorations amply justified. A huge deposit of high grade lignite coal, which latest estiâ€" mates place at 20,000,000 tons, has reâ€" cently been discovered and those in charge of the operations are confident that a much more extensive field will be uncovered. Nothing has occurred in the history of the Province that could Ibe of greater moment to Ontario. _ ‘"There can be no more accurate inâ€" ‘dication of the progress of the North ‘than the increased earnings of the T. |\ N. O. Railway. During the past three | years the railway has handed over each ‘year to the Provincial Treasurer $1,â€" |200,000 to pay the interest on the | money invested in the enterprise. In | keeping pace with the needs of the | North it will be necessary from time ) to time to build extensions of the railâ€" way. The Government has now under ;consideration some plans for extenâ€" | sicns that it hopes to be able to justify. "It is estimated that this payment will be sufficient to overcome the hanâ€" dicap and induce the mining and conâ€" sumption of our native ore. It is conâ€" fidently predicted by those competeni to speak for the industry that in the near future vast stretches of the Proâ€" vince known to possess deposits of iron ore, many of them now sparsely peoâ€" pled. will becowie alive with industrial activity. !_Last week at North Bay two youns men from Niagara Falls were allowe d ‘their freedom on suspended sentenc: !when they pleaded guilty to aoducting \a girl under 16 years of age. They ‘had been visiting in North Bay and the |girl accompanied them to the south ‘in their motor car. The boys testified | that they had offered to return her to \her home. but she had not wanted this. ‘The court was of the opinion that the \girl had accompanied the young men | entirely of her own free will. In allowâ€" | ing the young men to go on suspesded sentence the magistrats intimated th«t ‘he had been actuated by the fact that they had previously enjoyed blameless \reputations and their families were !highly respected in North Bay. YOUNG MEX ON SUSPENDED SENTENCE FOR ABDUCTION Rev. A. A. Barnes, pastor of the Bapâ€" tist Church in Cobalt for the past three years, is leaving at the end of this month to assume a new charge at Forest, Ontario. For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad. Column No matter how generously filled your refrigerator is, there are al ways times when you find yourself called upon to concoct an unexpmtcd meal for guests and find that the iceâ€"box stores are inâ€" adequate for a really festive menu. I take great delight in anticipating such emergencies by a special shelf filled with little extras that turn themâ€" selves into the most delightful meals whenever I have need. I never touch this store except for emergency use, and I see that it is refilled promptly. On this shelf are cans of soup and vegeâ€" tables. olives and relishes and special conserves, shrimp and tuna fish for creaming or salad, sometimes nuts or hard candies for the afternoon table of bridge that materializes unexpectedly. But the real basis of my emergency shelf is a row of Carnation Milk. 1 know of nothing that is so invaluable in the making of all sorts of "company‘‘ dishes. As long as my Carnation supâ€" ply is generous I am prepared for any emergency. I can cream eggs or make a cream soup; stir together hot biscuits or date muffins, cream chipped beef or crabmeat from the emergency shelf, contoct a pudding or even serve as a muchâ€"appreciated luncheon treat. h zen t t h S is S EL S iss C emergency. I can cream eggs or make a cream soup ; stir together hot biscuits or date mufflins, cream chipped beef or crabmeat from the emergency shelf, contoct a pudding or even serve walffles as a muchâ€"appreciated luncheon treat. â€"I buy Carnation Milk by the case and use it constantly, not only for its great convenience, economy and deâ€" pendability, but because it really gives better cooking results than even the best of bottled milk. Carnation is simply pure, iwhole milk of uniformly porin ut en m tm umm mm Carnation Cream Chipped Beef 1/ Ib. chipped beef, 2 tbhsp. butte 2%4 thsp. flour, pepper, 14 tsp. salt, 1 cup Carnation Milk, 34 cup wate Shred the dried beef, cover with h water, let stand 10 minutes, then drau Make a white sauce of the butter, flowu seasonings and Carnation diluted wit 1z cup water. Add the chipped be: and serve on toast points or wit mashed or baked potatoes. You can count Use It EKvery Meal from c se [ Contented Cows on the label means EV APORATED MILK of highest quality Delectable Meals from My Emergency Shelf OROTHY" BRAND is simply gure, rich, creamy milkâ€"filtered, homogenized, sterilized and concentrated to a creamy consistency by evaporâ€" ation. Nothing is added. It tastes like fresh milk and it is fresh milk with all the lifeâ€"giving vitamins retained. \ _ You can rely absolutely upon its %mrity. And it is easy 02] digestion or babies because the fat globules are broken up into finer ?orm by the homogenizing process. Try it. Look for Baby Dorothy on the label â€""Our Emblem of Purity". for Cerealsâ€"for Soups for Teaâ€"or Cofféec by high quality, evaporated to double ri ness, ‘‘"homogenized" to break up : double portion of cream into mint particles and distribute them through the milkâ€"so that every d; is rich in creamâ€"and sterilized for sa keeping. If you ever make a real t of Carnation Milk, you‘ll use it for cooking. I wish you would send the Carnation Cook Book. It is fr Address Carnation Milk Products C Limited, Avimer, Ont. 214 tbsp. butter, 214 tbsp. flour, tsp. salt, few grains pepper, paprika 34 cup Carnation Milk, 34 cup water 1 cup shrimps, 1 cup canned peas. a white sauce of the butter, flour, sea sonings and Carnation diluted wit! water. â€" Drain the shrimps, remove th dark vein; break shrimps into piece and add to white sauce. â€" Also add th drained peas. When mixture is:thor oughly heated serve on toast point: Garnish with parsley or olives. Serve In emergencies, you can plan almost anything in the way of meals if you have a shelf of Carnaâ€" tion Milk. It is the basis of so many delectable dishes, and it makes them all better. arnation Shrimp Wiggle (See recipes above) it i\'i In hot ain.