Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 20 Feb 1930, Section 1, p. 8, 2, p. 6

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For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column Thursday, Feb. 20th, 1930 Softer . .. More white tecth Ithy gums hllst t A Wh;aticn‘"'flo:; and Qualtine Ov‘:xrl:mc used in making ne Rusks. They are delicious and ar more nourishing than ordinary rusks or Kotex, the New and Improved Sanitary Napkin, safeguards feminine health. Doctors and nurses urge its use, because it protects as nothing else can. The fleecy softness of Kotex assures absolute comfort. Kotex deodorizes utterly. It gives complete freedom from worry. No embarrassment when buying. Just say Kotex at any drug, dry goods or department store. Regular size 60c for box of a dozen. Superâ€"size 75¢c. Directions in every package. OVALTINE RUSKS LS. _ iRhey are a means to sound fAnest That‘s why women choose this modern sanitary napkin st Canadian r _ and gre used in Kotexr is softâ€"Not a deceptive softness, that soon packs into chafing hardness. But a delxcate, lastmg softness. Safe, secure . . . keeps your mind at ease. Kotex fillerâ€"is far lighter and cooler than cotton, yet absorbs 5 times as much. In hospitals . . . Kotex is the identical material used in 50% of Canada‘s leading hospitals. Features of the New and Improved Kotex Deodorizes, safely, thoroughly, by a patented process. K O T EE IN Ovaltine you have three of Nature‘s best tonic foodsâ€"milk, eggs and barley malt, concenâ€" trated by an exclusive scientific process and afâ€" fording, unimpaired, every one of the essential vitamins, as well as the organic phosphorus to feed nerves and brain, the proteins for bone and muscle, and the carboâ€" hydrates and fats for warmth and energy. Easily digested. . Quickly assimilated. Delicious. Children love it! Sanitary N apkins MADE IN CANADA 40¢ 1t dosts WANDER LIMITED Comfortable G. T. Smith, in a talk at the Kiwanis Club last week. Reports of the Assocâ€" iated Boards of Trade meeting at Anâ€" sonville last week appear to give force to the remark. Kirkland Lake had no representative there and as a result its name was detrimentally bandied about in connection with efforts of represenâ€" tatives of the Canadian Fire Underâ€" writers to justify high fire insurance rates demanded of municipalities in Greater Ontario. Northern News, Kirkland Lake:â€" "A dead Board of Trade is a millstone round the neck of a community," said Isâ€"up Brain, Newe and Bedy Ovaltine is sold at all good stores, in 50c, 7: family size tins; also served at soda fountains WHEN your children come home from school they are tired. If not noticeably tired physically, nearly always tired or a little fagged mentally and nervously. They are ready for a cup of delicious Ovaltine to restore their spent energy. Indoor confinement during school hours, with its pursuant call for mental concentration, comes at a time in a child‘s life when Nature is making insistent demands upon his or her strength and virality . . during the days of growth. Recognizing this truch, some schools serve milk to the children at recess time. Milk is Goodâ€"But Ovaltine is Better Ovaltine is the finest thing in the world for replacing quickly the energy children use up so fast. A sure way to build strong bodies and to maintain rosyâ€"cheeked, glowing health. The friend of orowing children. TONIC FOOD BEVERAGE Sudbury Starâ€"The British Empire will be represented when Belgium celeâ€" brates her centenary. It well ought to be, since the British Empire is about all that stood between Belgium and oblivion soms few years back. With this new type of construction every provision is made for the comâ€" fort of drivers and passengers. Doors are wider, seats are desper and more restful. There is more leg room, head room and elbow room. The bodies are larger with long flowing lines, pleasing contours and stylish appearance. The railway mail car is recognized as a substantial wellâ€"built unit. The Durâ€" ant 6â€"14 embodies the same principle of construction. The strength of all steel has been combined with certain adâ€" vantages of wood frame construction. There are allâ€"steel doors built to form individual "box trusses." Double "channel" section fabricated steel lock pillars are bolted at top and bottom. Front cowl assembly and pillars are all steel securely welded and riveted into one unit. At every point where strains are concentrated, reinforcement is exâ€" ceptionally strong and rigid. During the past few years the aim of automobile body designers has been to combine maximum strength and rigidiâ€" ty with generous roominess inside. That this has been successfully accomâ€" plished by Durant engineers in designâ€" ing the new Durant 6â€"14 is the belief of those who have had an opportunity to closely inspect this new car. Deliveries of machinery and supplies ‘to the Central Patricia mines, owing to several accidents due to unfavourable weather conditions, have been held up. It is now reported, however, that better time is being made and supplies are beginning to reach the property. Deâ€" velopment work has also been retarded but workmen are preparing the way for the erection of a plant, which will be ready some time next summer. Inâ€" cluded in the proposed work will be the sinking of a threseâ€"compartment shaft to a depth of 525 feet, with four levels at intervals of 125 feet. Approximateâ€" ly 3,000 feet of drifting, crosscutting and raising will be undertaken on the variâ€" ous levels. The aggressive development programme is the result of careful surâ€" face sampling and diamond drilling unâ€" dertaken last year.â€" According to the field engineer‘s report io ®. M. Conneil,. president of the company, surface samâ€" ple averages showed a length of 557 feet with a width of 17.45 feet, with gold values of $12.57 to the ton. 'I'he‘ average of the diamond drill holes at the 250â€"foot level shows length of 680 feet and width of 6.83 feet, with gold values up to $15.27 to the ton. sSTRONG ALLâ€"STEEL BODY IN THE NEW DURANT 6â€"14 EXTENSIVE DEVELOPMENT FOR THE CENTRAL PATRICIA 455 King St. West THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO , 75¢, $1.25 and special $4.50 oronto, Ontario "Observer" writing in the column. [“Sporbology" in The North Bay Nugâ€" get last week says:â€""Reports from the Maritime provinces state that Stan. !Burgoyne, late of South Porcupine, is | proving to be the most successful of the imported coaches "down east." Stan‘s team, the Truro Bearcats, are leading the Eastern Nova Scotia group with nine wins and three losses, while Steve Vair‘s Halifax Wolverines are in third place with six victories and six reverses. Criticism has been rampant in the Maritimes about the wholesale importation of coaches. This originatâ€" ed with the homeâ€"coaching talent, who have had to take a back seat this seaâ€" son. The Maritime groups are this year striving to produce a team that will be capable of making a strong bid for amateur senior honours. This enâ€" deavour has been the means of exciting unusual interest in the game and the imported coaches have instilled into the contending teams a fighting spirit that has enlivened matters to a degree never before experienced by the Atlantic Coast fans. Their champions will pair off with the Quebec champions in the spring playdowns. Formerly the Easâ€" terners have rarely succeeded in getting as far west as Montreal, but this year expect to make the deciding fight beâ€" tween themselves and whatever the reâ€" mainder of the Dominion can produce. The Ontario and Western Canada 4 4 1 coaches who are working with the, Maritime teams have been tutoringl them along the methods used by the associations that have been in the foreâ€" front in the annual playdowns." | IMPORTATION OF COACHES CRITICIZED IN THE EAST 26 1 Other men have approached him on the question of hounding deer, also re killing of does, and I have spoken to him about both. They are big quesâ€" tions, and every state or province where dezsr have increased in great numbers, Different men have approached fathâ€" er asking him to advocate salaried paid wolf killers Not that he is opâ€" posed to this, as he is certainly in favor of anything that will reâ€" duce the number of wolves, but the failure of salaried paid game wardens to control wolf situation in Algonquin park makes him more in favor of bounâ€" ty system to make sure of reducing wolves. Different men have written in wantâ€" ing more light on what he means by Game Commission. In brief I would say that every state that has made a success with their game conditions has been under the management of a nonâ€" politicalâ€"nonâ€"denominational game commision who had charge of game conâ€" ditions, the same as we have various commissions in our province in charge of other matters, such as Hydro Comâ€" mission. | Some men have advocated that bounâ€" ty be raised to forty dollars or fifty dollars at once and trapper retain hide, as he does at present time; but I have never heard father even hint this. Not that he would oppose it if the Governâ€" ment felt they could afford this, but as wolves are so thick at present time he has always said to me he thought if bounty was raised for first year to twentyâ€"five dollars or thirty dollars, and wolves gradually decreased in numbers, raise bounty each year, andj when they became quite scarce, say in five years time, the province could afâ€"| ford to pay one hundred dollars bounâ€" ty; and when speaking on this subject,l he would always add, raise the deer| hunter‘s license to help pay extra bounâ€" ty. To use his exact words, he would‘ say, "Let one hand help wash the other." ’ Another question has ben raised, "that when the Drury Government paid forty dollars bounty, no doubt Ontario paid for a lot of Quebec wolves that were smuggled in for high bounty." Personally, I cannot see it that way, because as 1 have outlined above, at that time I believe Quebec paid fifteen dollars bounty and trapper sold hide elsewhere, for which he could get at that time from fifteen dollars to twentyâ€"five dollars, and perhaps more. Why would the trappers go to all the trouble of smuggling them into Ontario when they were receiving practically as much or more at home? i The question has peen raised, "that | there are more wolves being killed now under the fifteen dollar bounty system, | than there were when the Drury Govâ€" ernment paid forty dollars." Our opiâ€" nion of this is: First, there are more wolves now to kill, as wolves increase like dogs; because back in the time of ithe Drury Government, the price of | fur was so high, the trappers paid very | little attention to killing wolves. Then 'a,gain, one thing I think should be made clear is that when the Drury IGovemment paid forty dollars bounty the Government took the whole pelt, thus the total revenue to the trapper per wolf was forty dollars. Now, with the Government paying fifteen dollars bounty and allowing the trapper to :keep pelt and sell it to fur buyer, for from fifteen dollars to twentyâ€"five ’dollars, more or less, his total revenue lfor one wolf under present system is practically the same as during the Drury administration. In other words,i the point I want to bring out is, there was no more inducement for the trapâ€"| per to kill a wolf under the Drury; system of paying forty dollars and takâ€"; ing the whole pelt than under present| system of fifteen dollars bounty and} trapper selling hide elsewhere. In comâ€"| paring the grand total of wolf bounty paid under the Drury system, and total of late years one wants to deduct from | the Drury bounty the revenue the Govâ€" I ernment received from pelts that it sold. The question has been raised, "if Onâ€" tario raised the bounty there would be many wolves smuggled in from Queâ€" bec." In answer to this, I would say, it is of as much importance to Quebec to reduce the wolves as it is to Ontario, and I feel if a delegation of Governâ€" ment authorities or a commission apâ€" pointed by the Government were to inâ€" terview Quebec officials on this wolf question, that they would gladly coâ€" operate with us. I think as a citizen of Ontario it would be quite in order for such a conference, as no doubt this province is often interviewed on other questions such as water power, etc. Dear Provincial M. P.â€"Since father sent you a letter at Christmas holidays re the wolf menace in Ontario, he has receivetl many replies, all of which agreed with him, and in several letters various questions have been raised. Owing to father attending and,being speaker at several sportsmen‘s convenâ€" tions in Chicago, New York, Boston, and other large United States centres, he has been ungable personally to anâ€" swer your letters, and I am taking it upon myself to make a wholesale reply. All interested in the preservation of| game and in wiid life in general will! be pleased to read the following| thoughtful letter from Manly Forest Miner, son of Jack Miner, the noted| Canadian nature lover. The Advance| has published many helpful letters! from the father, and is equally glad to print this one from the son. This’ letter tells its own story in effective| wayâ€" Kingsyville, Ontario, February 7th, 1930 | JAGK MINER‘S PLANS FOR GURBING THE WOLF MENACE Would Gradually Increase the Bounty as Wolves are Killed Off, so as to Assure Their Total Extinction is the wolves and not the hunters that | have killed the deer, I will say, moose are as plentiful as ever in northern Onâ€" | ario, and had it been the hunters who | were responsible for deer decrease, the ‘ moose would have been decreased to ,' same extent. for your information, I am , informed from reliable sources that in |some places in the North where deer are cleaned out, the wolves have turned | on the moose, and are killing calf | moose. i Before I close, to prove to you men it | Victoria Daily Colonistâ€"There is something radically wrong with governâ€" ment in a country of such undeveloped resources as this Dominion when the spectre of unemployment can rear its head to the extent it has during the present winter. Fiscal statesmanship at Ottawa could have made such a condition impossible. The unemployâ€" ment menace of Mr. Mackenzie King‘s regime will be remembered against the administration the next time it appeals to the people. Blairmore (Alberta) Enterprise:â€"The man who is unable to work and smoke at the same time usually smokes. As I said in the beginnning, father is away and not here to sanction this letter, but as I act as his secretary, I feel it my duty to give you members who have written him, the above wholeâ€" sale reply, and I will bear correcting cn any of the above statements. I assure you of father‘s wholeâ€"hearted support in any action yotu officials take. He has said time and again publicly, he is devoting the balance of his life to constructive conservation, endeavyâ€" oring to leave this world better for the generation following him. Yours very truly, Manly F. Miner, Secretary and oldest son of Jack Miner be plentiful enough that no man would shoot a doe or fawn when he knew if he only waited his chance, that ho would take home a ten point buck. the does are not allowed to be killed. Father, commenting on this, would alâ€" ways say, "Although I am in favor of a buck law and stopping the hounding of deer, this would automatically take care of itself if wolves were taken out of province and desr allowed to inâ€" crease; why? because no one would need dogs to get deer, and deer would FIVE ROSES EFLOUR Name â€"â€"the most famous cook book in Canadaâ€"over 950,000 copies in daily use in homes thmughout the Dominion. 1t contains 140 pages of tnod and proven recipes dy revisedâ€"handsomely illustrated in coloursâ€"printed on fius 1» perâ€"bound in sturdy covers. Write your names and address below and mail with 30¢. poutal order to Dept. 11q Lake of the Woods Milling Co., Limited, Montreal. How to make ... Brown Betty Pudding NTO a buttered dish put a layer I of sliced apples. Sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon, and cover with soft bread crumbs. Continue this process until the dish is filled, having bread crumbs as top layer. Dot all over with small pieces of butter. Add a few spoonfuls of hot water. Bake in moderate oven until apples are tender. Serve hot e with vanilla sauce or cream. Get Your Copy of the Famous Five Roses Winnipeg Tribune:â€"The vast possiâ€" bilities of Canada as a copperâ€"producer may be guaged by the fact that over seventyâ€"five years ago the Yellowknife Indians on the Coppermine River, away up on the Arctic Circle, were making their knives and utensils out of pure copper, picked up in drift along the shores of the stream. There may be immensely rich deposits in this area and once more the Government engiâ€" neer has shown his value to the counâ€" try by starting on an intensive investiâ€" gation of the district. "But the days when the taking of a chicken for the purpose to which we have referred have gone. Now chicken stealing is regarded not only as a criâ€" minal offence, but as a lowâ€"down sort of offence. And every decent citizen so considers this offence. Last fall we heard of a farmer living near town having had some fine show birds stolen. The thief ought to have made restituâ€" tion ere this." "In the "early days" to which we have referred, the thieves were "The Boys" who must have bouilion before going homse at the close of a night‘s jollification. We understand the cusâ€" tom was for them to draw lots conâ€" cerning the preparation of this bouillon. Some were to prepare the chickens, and others were sent to capture the chickâ€" ens. And woe betide them should they come back without the poultry. And hence these predatory thieves were no respectors of persons. The man who had the best poultry was generally the owner of the first coop to visit. The purer the breed the finer the flavour of the bouillon. If the chickens belonged to "Dad" all the better. The only thing which mattered was that those who were sent for the chickens must get them. "Although in the early days in Temâ€" iskaming there were those in the setâ€" tlements who would steal chickens, it is quite a long time since we have heard of many depredations of this kind in the New Liskeard neigbhorhood. Last week in reâ€"printing an item from the previous week‘s Advance in regard to the thefts of poultry recently in this town and district, The New Lisâ€" keard Speaker says:â€" CHICKEN STEALING IN THE EARLY DAYS IN TEMISKAMNG

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