j /ta‘Meat'v«M"lvyou It cools, soothes instantly. A fluid that actually does wash the blemished skin clean. A bad skin is unfortunate, embarrassing, unnecessary, with this formula so rich in healing elements. DDD for skin affections AKE it a habit to have a msteaming cup of "OXO" with your lunch. You can prepare it in a momentâ€"it is delicious, wholesome, invigâ€" orating. Just what busy workers want! FIVE ROSES FLOUR 34â€"cup builler (or half lard)â€" 1 cup sugar $4â€"cup sweet milk 14â€"leaspoon soda 1 egg 2 cups rolled qals | 1 cup Five Roses flour You can oblain a Five Roses Cook Book â€"â€"140 pages of selected recipes of all kindsâ€"by sending a 30 cent postal order to Dept.L14* Lake of the Woods Milling Company, Limiled, Montreal, Quebec GOLDFIELD DRUG STORE How to make ... NOT stiff enough, add a little more flour and oatmeal mainâ€" taining proportions. Turn a large dripping pan upside down and roll out the bottom covering the whole pan, and bake in a quick oven. When done, cut in halves and spread jam between the halves. Then cut in squares. Date, or raisin or fig hillings may be used instead of jam, if desired, These are really delicious, O ATME A L 41A M â€" 4JA M®S Gleason and Dixon ran in two apiece, Roy Bennett being the other scorer. For the Falls, Max Bennett got both gsoals. The first was a real beauty, the right winger working his way through the Cobalt team to draw Roy out of the net, but the other was a bit of a gift. He took a long lift shot from about his own blue line and it eluded the goalie. The goal that tied the round was a fine effort on Roberts‘ partf the centre working right in on Abel,. to count. Roberts had smoke on his shots all night and his shooting was too much for young Abel, the Falls goalie. The score at the end of the first period was The game was four seconds of being a minute old when Cobalt shot in the first goal and cut the Eskies‘ lead to four on the round. Roberts pushed the puck past Roy almost before the specâ€" tators had settled down for the battle, and five minutes later Roy Bennett reâ€" duced the leeway still further. The visitors fought back and Max Bennett breather Both sides depended to a considerâ€" able extent on long shots fired at the net minders or the side of the rink, but here also Cobalt had the edge. Roberts had a particularly deadly aim and he tallied four of his team‘s nine counters. Iroquois Falls made the mistake of playing a defensive game, aparently figuring their five goal advantage was too big a handicap for, Cobalt to overâ€" come. The homesters, who had to be aggressive to stand a chance at all, sarried the play to their visitors all the time and the strain was too much for the Eskimos. Their defence, which had been a strong feature of their play in the first game, cracked under the pressure, and the forward line, once Mack Bennett had been stopped, was impotent. Sporadic raids were their only efforts in the latter stages of the game, and while they were dangerous occasionally and at least once were in on Roy the goalie saved brilliantly from Max Bennett and the last serious threat had been thwarted. gressed. For the first twenty minutes the gcame was evenly fought, but after that only one team was in the hunt. The biggest crowd that has gathered at a hockey match here in years went wild as one shot after another found the net and the Eskies‘ lead wilted under fire. As possibility turned to probability and gave way to certainty, there was no holding the local fans, who swarmed on the ice at the end of the game and carried Roberts shoulder nign from thns arena. COBALT JUNIORS WIN TAE N.0.H.A. JR. CHAMPIONSHIP Cobalt Juniors are champions of the Junior N.OH.A. They won the honâ€" our last week when they upset all calâ€" culations by a spectacular win at Coâ€" balt. The story is told in the following despatch from Cobalt on Saturday last: There was nothing filuky about tins win, either. For twoâ€"thirds of the game the home team had nearly all of the play. The visitors were reduced to shooting the puck as far down the rink as the rubber would go, and they became badly disorganized as play proâ€" Took the Round from TITroquois Falls by 10 to 8. In Game at Cobalt Won Out by 9 to 2. Lost First Game to Falls, Cobalt are the other N.O.H.A. junior finalists. They gained the right to meet the Soo next week by trouncing Iroquois Falls, nine goals to two, in the return game of the home and home series which constituted the semiâ€"finâ€" als, and took the rcundâ€"ten to eight. In turning the trick which pushed the Cub +Eskimgs into the discard for the season, ‘the locals accomplished the most spectacular upset in the history of the association. They faced a fiveâ€"gcal defcit as a result of their defeat in the Falls earlier in the week, but last nizht they piled right in from the first bell, scored one goal in less than a minute from the start and never eased up until the final gong rang. y and Cobalt led, 5â€"2 at the second As between the first and second games, there was no comparison. At Iroquois Falls, the young Papermakers had the better of the argument, preâ€" senting a sound defence and a fair atâ€" tack, but last night their rear guard collapsed and the front line was seldom it the picture. Cobalt had not a weak man on view all night. The locals are leaving for Sault Ste. Marie today and will play the first game of the finals there on Monday night. The lineâ€"upâ€" Cobaltâ€"Roy, goal; Dixon, Foyle, deâ€" fence; Roberts, centre; Gleason, Roy Bennett, wings; Moore, Rowe, Kostiuk, alternates. Cobalt shifted its strategy somewhat during the game. Dixon and Foyle started out on the defence, but later Roberts, who had been playing at cenâ€" tre, was moved back to replace Foyle, Moore coming on at centré. The last named did not figuré in the scoring, but checked well, while Roberts uncorked a series of briliant solo rushes that really won the game for Cobalt. At the outset the Falls adopted the tactics of feeding Max Bennett at every opportunity, but the locals concentrated on stopping him, a policy that worked cut successâ€" fully, and the other forwards gave litâ€" tle trouble, Cobalt staged a fourâ€"man attack a good part of the time and kept the Eskimos bottled up at their own end of the rink, and in the third period two of the home team‘s goals came with onhe of their own men in the box. Iroquois Fallsâ€"Abel, goal; ‘"Red" and "Slim‘‘ Porter, defence; Walsh, centre; Max Bennett, Kingston, wings; Laâ€" londe, Yurinchuk, Wilkes, alternates. Summary First Periodâ€"Cobalt 1, Roberts .56 seconds; Cobalt 2, R. Bennett 4.59. Iroquois Falls 1, M. Bennett 6.41; Iroâ€" quois Fal‘ls 2, M. Bennett 6.06. Second periodâ€"Cobalt 3, Roberts 6.27; Cobalt 4, Roberts 6.20; Cobalt 5, Gleason, .06. Penaltiesâ€"Kingston, Gleason. Third pericdâ€"Cobalt 6, Dixon 3.55; Cobalt 7, Roberts 2.25; Cobalt 8, Gleaâ€" son 6.01; Cobalt 9, Dixon 3.42. Penaltiesâ€"Max Bennett,© Roy Benâ€" nett, "Red" Porter. Then in the third Dixon, Roberts, Gleason and Dixon in that order, piled in goals and all was over but the shoutâ€" ing. Eight penalties were handed out by referee Ailex McKinnon, five of them going to Cobalt, and Gleason getâ€" ting three of these. All were for minâ€" or offences. Friends ‘of Mrs. John Burrows, of Porcupins, will be interested in the folâ€" lewing paragraph from a Vancouver newspaper of recent date, and there will be general sympathy with Mrs. Burrows in the death of her mother, The item referred to reads as follows: "On January 20th, at. "Whytehome," 1705 Thirteenth avenue, west, Vancouâ€" ver, B.C., the home of her daughter, Mrs. T H. Whyte, there passed away Jean McBride, aged 86 years, widow of the late Robert McBride, of Collingâ€" wood, Ont.. and mother of Mrs. John Burrows, Porcupine. Funeral private to Masonic cemetery, Burnaby." DEATH OF MOTHER OF Maus. .. JOHN BURROWS, PORCUPINE scored twice before the bell to even the count on the;game and restore the original advantage to his team. Hopes were temporarily dashed, ‘but they sprouted again in the second when Roâ€" berts banged in two goals and Gleason made it five all told. Sargon may be obtained in Timmins at the Goldfield Drug Store. "Sargon made a new man out of me! I‘ve got the strength and endurance to get through the day‘s work now and never have the slightest trouble with indigestion. The Sargon Pills, that go with the tonic, are without doubt the best laxative I ever used and regulated me perfectly. My appetite is so good that I‘ve already picked up five pounds, and IT‘d go out of my way to tell others about this remarkable treatment."â€"J. A. Pogson, 190 Snowden Ave., Toronto. "T‘d gotten in such a rundown conâ€" diticn I could hardly muster up enough strength to get myself out of bed mornâ€" ings and always felt fagged out before the day was half over. The trouble was I had indigestion so much, my food wouldn‘t do me any goodâ€"just soured on my stomach and caused gas and heart palpitation â€"and constipation helped pull me down too. "Although TI‘d heard some wonderâ€" ful reports about this new Sargon mediâ€" cine, T‘ll have to admit that I was surâ€" prised at just how much it did do for WOULD G0 OUT OF WAY T0 TELL ABOUT SARGON Penaltiesâ€"Leason 2, Roy Bennett J. A. POGSON THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO The Haileybury last week says:â€""To Mr. James Hill, of the Haileybury Minâ€" inz School, goes the honour of having reported, the first robin in town this year, and from all accounts it was the earliest bird Oof its species ever to visit this section of the North Country. Mr. Hill saw the robin in the woods beâ€" hind his home on Latchford street last Saturday, February 22nd." "The premier was inclined to think that reports of unemployment were exâ€" aggerated, and wondered why Eastern Canada was not represented. There is no doubt, unfortunately, that condiâ€" tions in the East are far from normal The delegation referred to immigration, and elicited the interesting reply from the premier that he did not think inâ€" ducements should any longer be offered to people to come and settle in Canada. "They should regard it as a privilege," he said." REPORTED FIRST ROBIN TO BE SEEN AT HAITILEYBURY "In other words the government isi considering the inauguration of a sysâ€" tem of uremployment insurance, the fund to be made up of contributions from the Dominion, provincial and . municipal governments, supplemented by payments by employers and em-| ployees. "The scheme would be simiâ€" lar to the old age pensions and workâ€" men‘s compensation schemes," explainâ€" ed the premier to a deputation from Western Canadian provinces. The country has been prepared for such an announcement. At short while ago, Hon. Mr. Heenan, federal minister of labour, hinted at the project to a deleâ€" gation of municipal representatives. It is the intention of the government to endeavour to find some permanent ‘clution of the recurring unemployâ€" ment difficulties, rather than deal with them as emergency measures when they arise. It seems rather strange, at first i blush, to find the Canadian governâ€" ment following in the footsteps of the Mother Country in this regard, after all that has been said in this Domin--l ion in criticism of the "dole." There j is sure to be Ktrong opposition to the | propssal in some quarters, but the fact remains that a condition exists urgentâ€" ly seeking a remedy. An unemployâ€" msnt insurance scheme, on the lines suggested, removes the stigma of chariâ€" ty. It takes account of the responâ€" sibility of employers towards the workâ€" ers and it requires fron» the workers themselves a proportionate contribuâ€" tion, on the principle of "all for one and one for all."‘ Under modern conâ€" ditions of industry it is not possible to ignore the obligations of society toâ€" wards those who, through no fault of their own, are in distress, temporarily or otherwise. The day is past when the state can look on with compiete inâ€" difference while its citizens are made th»> of unfortiunate cirecumâ€" stances. (From The North Bay Nugget) "Whatever criticism may be extended toward Premier Mackenzie King and his government the Premier must be given credit for speaking plainly on the question of unemployment, much of which is due to our climate, but which this winter has been accentuated by inâ€" dustrial depression. There is to be no dole in Canada, the Premier makes it plain, and he further states that those people who are engaged in seasonal ocâ€" cupations will be assisted by the govâ€" ernment to put something aside to tide them over the lean months. Dominion Planning for Unemployment Insurance offers "Body by KFHisher" in the Lowest Price KHeld CHEVROLET Timmins Garage Co. Limited "Inhabitants of Boston Creek and cutsiders were grieved to hear of the sudden death of Miss Mildred MacFarâ€" lane on Sunday morning, the 23rd inst. Miss MacFarlane was 24 years, 5 months old. Miss MacFarlane is well remembered by the "Oldâ€"timers‘"‘ or Boston Creek, havmg come here with her family some years ago. The reâ€" mains were laid to rest at Swastika Morgue to await internment in the sprnig. The pallâ€"bearers consisting of "Oldâ€"timers" of Boston Creek, seemed indeed very appropriate. They were Pete Tagliomonto, Fred Webster, Alec King, William Stewart, Neil Armâ€" strong, and Christie McCrea. A serâ€" vice was held at the Mortgus, conductâ€" ed by the Rev. Mr. Goss, members of the family and friends being present." In reference to the death and funâ€" eral of the late Miss Mildred Macâ€" Farlane, who for some years was popular and esteemed resident of Timâ€" mins, where she was in the office of Dr. G. F. Mitchell, The Englehart Times last week says:â€" FUNERAL SERVICES FOR LATE MISS MILDRED MACFARLANE The classes held annually under the auspices of the Ontario Department of Mines for the training of mining prosâ€" pectors and for the advantage of others interested in prospecting and mining will be held this year at Timmins comâ€" mencing Monday, March 10th, and conâ€" tinuing for eight days. The classes will be held in the Oddfellows‘ hall. There will also be a number of evening lecâ€" tures by Dr. E. M. Burwash, who will be in charge of the classes. These evening lectures will be held in the Central public school and will be made interesting by lantern slides. Dr. E. M. Burwash, who is in charge of these classes for prospectors, has won a wide and enviable reputation as an expert in matters concerning the prespector. In previous years the classes for prospectors have proved of unusual value. To the prospector who has not had opportunity for a thorâ€" ough grounding in the technical side of the business these classes are really invaluable. The experienced prosâ€" pector will also find them very helpful as a means of brushingâ€"up and renewâ€" ing his knowledge. In past years those who felt they were just learning the pr‘ospecting'game found the classes to be of great service, while oldâ€"time prosâ€" pectors were even more enthusiastic in their praise of these practical courses. For years past the classes have been very largely attended and all taking the course have felt that "they have been remarkably well paid for the effort of attending. All prospectors, and all who have the notion to do some prospectâ€" ing, would do well to make a special note of the prospectors‘ classes at the 1.0.0.F. hall, Timmins, from March 10th and continuing for eight days. The classes will give tuition in eleâ€" mentary chemistry and geology, with particular attention being given to the spotting of minerals. Both the classes and the lectures are free. The public generally is invited to the lectures which will be of very wide interest and bengfit. Tuition will be in Elementary Chemisâ€" try and Geology With Particular Attention Being Paid to Mineral Spotting. PROSPEGTORS® CLASSES AI TIMMINS START MARCH 10 Timmins, Ont. Toronto Main and â€"Empireâ€"Will Thorne, Labor M.P., could not wear court clotï¬es. so the King received him privately to bestow a decoration. Verily, and indeed, Britain is "the freest country on ear.th"â€"-that is why she will come out on top. "Poor old Timmins is still worrying for fear the North will be left without a senator. Just what use a senator might be to the North, except perhaps he, (presumably it is now in order to Unless, and we hate to suggest its posâ€" sibility), the supporters of the idea think that it might secure a certain amount of patronage for the North country. As we understand the men of the North that is the last thing they desire. If, what they ask for cannot be shown to be a thing to which they are entitled, we rather imagine that they would prefer to go without. Anyâ€" way the senate is generally looked upon as something in the nature of an old people‘s home for politicians who have past the stage of usefulness in active affairs. Of course this idea may be changed somewhat by the inclusion of a gracious lady in the senate chamber. But in the meantime, will Premier King please note that Timmins is likely to become real peeved if it‘doesn't, get at least a model of a senator all its There are many people who do not the usefulness of the Canadian Senate, but it is rather disappointing to note that The Northern News of Kirkland Lake is in that class apparâ€" ently. Much helpful legislation origiâ€" nates in the Senate and the Upper House has also a valuable influence on the more partisan attitude of the House of Commons. The chances are tha: The Northern News really understands all this, but would sooner conceal its knowledge than miss what looks like a good chance to have a comedy slap at ‘"poor old Timmins," as it sympathâ€" etically terms this town. It would take more than the eloquence of The Norâ€" thern News, however, to convince "good old Timmins," as many of Kirkland Lake‘s own citizens call this town, that there is any basis for any reference to "poor old Timmins." Timmins is all right, all right, and everybody is happy. Many would be happier if the Nortn were not so persistently ignored by the Federal authorities both in regard to the Senate and to other matters. All of which is but an introduction to the following paragraph which was pubâ€" lished in the, editorial column of the queer old Northern News last week: sAYS TIMMINS LIKELY TO BE REAL PEEVED ABOUT IT dicts "CANADA‘S GREATEST SEED HOUSE " TORONTOâ€" HAMILTONâ€"WINNIPEG â€"REGINA â€" EDMONTON STEELE, BRIGGS SEED C2. Read [f193 0 Smsce t( o ww o. . s s n STEELE, BRIGGS SEED CATALOGUE Send for your copy. Fully illustrated â€" beautiful color plates â€"lists all your old favorites and many new varieties of flower and vegetable seeds, bulbs, roots, shrubs and garden requisites. Your Garden needs Steele, Briggs‘ Seeds. ,___Sold everywhere in Canada. Thursday, March 6th, 1930 Geo. Taylor Hardware Ltd. A purely vegetable laxative such as Carter‘s Little Liver Pills, gently touches the liver, bile starts to flow, the bowe!s move gently, the intestines are thoroughly cleansed and constipaâ€" tion poisons pass away. The stomach, liver and bowels are now active and the system enjoys a real tonic effect. All druggists 25¢ and 75¢ red pkgs. Avoid lub.ricat‘i_ng_ coils which only grease the intestines and encourage nature‘s machinery to become lazy. Countless remedies are advertised for constipation. Many relieve for the moment but they are habit formâ€" ing and must be continued. Others contain calomel and dangerous minâ€" eral drugs, which remain in the sys= tem,, settle in the joints and cause aches and pains. Some* are harsh purgatives which cramp and gripe and leave a depressed after effect. Have your tubes tested reqularly SUFFER FROM CONSTIPATION? HUM MAY BE CAUSED BY A WORN TUBE Distributors