Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 Jun 1930, 3, p. 3

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IMPERIAL BANR OF CANADA Mail T his Coupon Now "Confederation Series" New Low Cost Policies . Find Favour with Public Confe(iAg{gfiion Life TIMMINS ~ â€" « D. SUTNERLAND, SOUTH PORCUPINE . â€" â€" ~C. A.KEHOE, CONNAUGHT STATION (Tuesday and Friday) They have found favour becauso they proâ€" vide life insurance at lower cast, and yet allow policyholders to participate in profits. Premiums are less, consequently you can buy more insurance for your money and provide that much extra protection for your dependants. "Confederation Series" Policies may be had on the Ordinary Life, Limited Payment Life and Endowment plans, and the Total Disâ€" ability and Double Indemnity Benefits may be added. Mail this coupon and get the particulars â€" do it now before commiiting yourself elsewhere. Your local manager This is the price at which you can now buy Head Office Send me further particulars of the Low Cost Confederation Series Policies, as issued by the Confederation Life Association. Name Address Occupation The Bank will give you painstaking and dependâ€"~ able service. n Branch Managers comâ€"~ mand the knowledge and experience of the whole Bank, and every local Manager is devoted to furthering the interests of the community in which he resides. P.O. Box 81% « : * TORONTO Capital and Reserve $15,000,000 | Association A. W. PICKERINC: D. SVTNERLAND, Manager â€" _ C. A. KEHOE, Manager Toronto Age 40 1 London Morning Post:â€"Our Governâ€" ment is, no doubt, being persuaded to grant those credits which our merâ€" chants and our bankers reuse. The result, we believe, will be an eventual loss to this country; but that will not be the full extent of the damage, for these credits will be used to bolister up the Soviet system; to furnish it with greater prestige and greater power; to provide it with more munitions of war ard more means of propaganda. Broadly speaking, what it all comes to is simply this, we are giving to an enemy stick which will be used on our own backs. It is a sorry business, which has, for many of us, sinister aspect. Trains carrying the most modern equipment, including standard sleepâ€" ing cars, convey passengers to Temaâ€" gami. Pirstâ€"class accommodation is obtainable at the Temagami Inn, so well and favourably known among freâ€" quenters of the area. Lake Temagami lies in the Laurenâ€" tian area, its shores and hillsides being composed of granite rocks. The almost entire absence of limestone has caused its waters to be comparatively soft, and there is neither mud nor sand but rock bottom only. The air may be said to be as pure as the water, proâ€" ducing perfect immunity from hay fever, that affiiction of so many people. For the canoeist there is literally no end to the trips and explorations open. He can paddle all day and every day, if he so desires, and always there is something new. The 3,000 miles of shore line of Lake Temagami rirovides a canoe trip equal to the distance from Halifax to Vanâ€" couver, and on some 200 miles into the Pacific Ocean, without ever lift or a carry, or being more than a mile from shore, for the lake is never two miles wide. Its 1,800 islands and isletsâ€" there are 1,259 surveyed and numbered ready for leasing to prospective cotâ€" tagersâ€"provide an endless variety of scene. Lake Temagami is otherwise famous as the location of the first organized camp for boys to be established in Canada. It is still operated by its founder, A. L. Cochrane of Toronto, supervisor of physical training at Upâ€" per Canada College. As a region for the angler, Temagami cannot be excelled on this continent. The rivers and streams between North Bay and Temagami are alive with speckled trout, specimens up to two pounds and over having been taken. Great lake trout from ten to fifteen pounds are frequent, and some have been caught weighing even thirty. Black bass from ten to twenty inches in length are found over the whole is nearly 100 miles square. Exactly as nature left it fresh from the hands of God, this vast park is a veritable netâ€" work of streams and lakes, the ideal ground for hunting, fishing and canâ€" oceing. Big game abounds in the reâ€" serve; moose, deer and bear awaiting the sportsman who is seeking big things, as well as geese and ducks for the fowler. An area, as large as that of many an American State or of a lesser European country, Temagami Forest â€"« Reserve, three hundred miles due north of Toâ€" ronto, embraces four million acres. It The attractions of this North Land are not perhaps sufficiently impressed upon tourists: In this country, for inâ€" stance, they may see some of the world‘s greatest gold camps, one of the world‘s most noted silver camps, some of the greatest pflp and paper mills in the world. This is in addition to the crdinary attraction of fine agricultural sections and good farms in many areas of the North, notably around New Lisâ€" keard, Val Gagne, Monteith, and Cochâ€" rane. The scenery in the North Land would be difficult to excel. Were the belt line of roads for the North comâ€" pleted, this country could offer tourâ€" ists something that could not be equalâ€" led in the way of scenery and unusual and interesting industry. Even withâ€" out the belt line of roads the North has much to offer. In extolling the wonaers of the North from the standpoint of beauty of scenâ€" ery, healt)h of climate, and variety of. natural interest, the chief emphasis has been naturally placed upon the Temagami area. Of course, the Tem-{ agami district is a wonderful place, but the North has many others equally atâ€" tractive, except that the facilities for tourists and travellers have not been developed to the same extent. For beauty, there are spots around Swasâ€" tika and Sesikinika that can fully rival Temagami. In the Porcupine .camp| there are many beauty spots, like Bayâ€"| side Beach, Golden City, and "up and down the Mattagami‘" that leave little| to be desired. Facilities like those Bayside Beach, Golden City and Child‘s| Beach will please tourists and will| oveniually attract big crowds each yea.r.[ T ore will be increasing interest in places from year to year. 1 In the meantime it is well to rememâ€"| ber the wellâ€"known places like Temâ€"| azsami. Get tourists once in the habiti of coming to Temagami and with the ' increasing use Oof the motor car and| the yearly improvement of the roads, the tourists will soon be tempted farâ€" ther north. Writing recently in Thel Mail and Empire one writer has the following to say about Temagami:â€" | IOURISTS SHOULD SEE THE ATTRAGCTIONS OF THE NORTH Scenery Can Not be Excelled: The Best of Fishing and Hunting. Big Gold Camps, Silver Camps, Large Paper Mills, and Other Things of Speâ€" cial Interest. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Gore Bay Recorder:â€"Not long ago the editor of the Wiarton Echo had a trir to Toronto at a total cost of apâ€" proximately $1.47. Last week he went down again and got caught for a barâ€" ber‘s bill of $1.25. Toronto will get you in the end. Carol of Roumania might be a good topic for Holly wood, if it were not for the scruples of the censor. His return to Bucharest shows what a forgiving people his subjects are. We have had some kings in English history who were not much to be proud of, but that was long ago and times have changed. It is doubtful if any other country would welcome back a prince who had been guilty of such follies. In Daudet‘s hisâ€" torical romance, "Kings in Exile," half a dozen imaginary sovereigns were exâ€" pelled because their people turned reâ€" publican, and His Majesty of Illyria and Dalmatia made vigorous fight before expulsion, but Carol merely ran away, to continue his scandalous conâ€" duct. He will give a promise to mend his ways, but it will be something like the excuse of aFrench King for his conâ€" version, that the throne was worth a mass. The rest of the world is not parâ€" ticularly interested in the future of Carol, but it will sympathize with the three women upon whom he. has brought so much imisery. His first marriage was with the daughter o; A Roumanian general, but she was conâ€" sidered beneath his rank, the marriage was declared "morganatic, and he deâ€" serted her after the birth of a son, who was left without a name. He then married Princess Helen of Greece, but deserted her after the birth of their son Michael and eloped with the wife of a Roumanian military attache, with whom he has since been living in Paris. His legal wife, Princess Helen, threatâ€" ened to leave Roumania if he returned, and no one will blame her if she carâ€" ries out her threat. RETURN OF PRINCE CAROL _TO ROUMANIA AsS ITS KING As the summer comes along there will be the usual accounts of ptropie suffering from contact with poison ivy. Many people have very good reason to wish that there were some way to rid the world altogether of this same poison ivy. It is true that there is apâ€" parently less of it than there used to be at one time, but anyone who has suffered from poison ivy will agree that any of it is too much. Like many other evils, however, poisc:r ivy may be eliâ€" minated. Cultivation 4s the most efâ€" fective means for the eradication of poison ivy, observes H. T. Gussow, Doâ€" minion Botanist. Poison Ivy grows generally throughout Canada, and it causes considerable annoyance and inâ€" comvenience to peorile who are susâ€" ceptible to the poison cil which comes from its leaves and berry when injured by contact. It can be readily ident:â€" fied by its leaves which occur in threes after the manner of those of the strawâ€" berry, but unlike them poison ivy leaves are quite smooth and firm, with the edges sparingly coarseâ€"toothed. The use of salt, kerosene and cheap fuel oils are helpful in killing the vine ahbout camp sites; or its roots may be dug or pulled up. Many prople are immune from the effects of the poison of ivy, but with all it is a plant which it is well to avoid. (From The Toronto Mail Empire) CULTIVATION THE BEST WAY TO KILL POISON IVY Chas. Pierce Sons LIMITEITY Timmins, Ont. % Porcupine Hardware South Porcupine Ramsay‘s Paint has been used for preserving and beautifying Canadian proâ€" perty for nearly one hunâ€" dred years and during this time has won an enviable reputation for itself. little "good" paint works wondersâ€"â€"â€"it transforms ugliness into beauty and provides the finest and cheapest insurance to the surface against decay. For Sale by Dr. ‘Hurst is a graduate of the Uniâ€" versity of British Columbia, taking post graduate work in geology at the Uniâ€" versities of Toronto and Wisconsin, and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, obtaining the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the latter inâ€" stitution. He was instructor in geology at the Ohio State University and at Brown University. He has had several years‘ experience with the Dominion Geological Survey, during which period he prepared a report on the arsenic occurrences of the Dominion of Canâ€" ada. He was employed temporarily by the Department of Mines of Onâ€" tario, reporting on the Ranger Lake and Favourable Lake areas. He spent the summer of 1926 in visilting the Lake Superior iron and copper disâ€" tricts. Dr. Hurst joined the permanâ€" The deposits at Grand Rapids are in that part of the Moose River basin withdrawn from prospecting or staking out under the Mining Act of Ontario, and if extensive, will be of added imâ€" portance because of their proximity to the lignite deposits at Onakawana on the Abitibi. Dr. Hurst is already in the field, his first visit being to the iron ore derciosits near Temagami. This study will naturally fit in with the investigations regarding beneficiaâ€" tion and utilization of Ontario low grade and complex ores, which are beâ€" ing conducted by the Ontario Research Foundation. The Research Foundaâ€" tion is investigating many processes, more particularly those for‘ the direct reduction of Ontario‘s low grade iron ore occurrences. Dr. Hurst will visit the deposits at Moose Mountain, Temâ€" agami, Michipicoten, Atikokan, and . in August, when water conditions are favâ€" ourable on the Mattagami river, will examine the deposits at Grand Rapids. At the last session of the provinâ€" cilal legislature an act was passed, enâ€" titled : "An Act to Encourage the Minâ€" ing of Iron Ore." This act provided for a bounty of one cent per unit of metallic iron, on iron ores mined in the province of Ontario. The bounty is paid on low gradse ores which are beneficiated whether they are smelted in the province or not; but is only pait on high grade ores if the same are smelted in the province of Ontario. Since the passage of this act, enquiries as to Ontario‘s resources in iron ore have increased greatly, and the governâ€" ment believes a real service cauld be performed to the province by making a study and compiling the latest inforâ€" mation regarding the occurrences of iron ore in Ontario. SURVEY OF IRON ORE AREAS | c OF PROVINGE BFHNG MADE On several occasions in recent years The Advance has had references to the iron ore deposits at Temagami and in cther sections of the North this side of North Bay. Only a few weoeks ago reference was made to the iron ore claims held by D. O‘Connor, of Conâ€" naught. These claims are north of North Bay, and are distinct from the O‘Connor claims at Temagmi. Both the Temagami and the other iron claims seem to be well worth considerâ€" ation, and there has been considerable interest roused in their proposed deâ€" velopnment.. It will be recalled that Mr. O‘Connor has had faith in the possibilities of the iron ore deposits of the North Land for a great many years. Indeed, for many years he was an ardent advocate of the development of this country‘s iron ore fields when others were discouraged by conditions. With the bounty system now in force to assist the iron ore industry, it would applrar as if conditions were much‘ more propitious than at any previous time in the history of the industry in this part of Canada. Another encourâ€" aging and helpful sign is the interest being shown generally by the Ontario Government. Hon. Chas. McCrea, Minister of Mines, announced at Toâ€" ronto last week that the Department of Mines had started a survey of the iron ore resources of Ontario, and that Dr. M. E. Hurst of the Geological Branch of the Department had been | assigned to this work. ‘ Dr. M. E. Hurst, of the Ontario Geoâ€" logical â€" Department, at Present Busy on Survey of Tron Ore Deposits in Province. GILLETT PRODUCTS TORONTO MONTREAL WINNIPEG 2 tablespoons butter 3 teaspoons Magic $ cup sugar Baking Powder 2 eggs 2 cups Graham 1 cup white flour flour A pinch of salt. 1} cups milk Cream butter and sugar, beat in eggs, then sift flour, baking powder and salt, and add to first mixture alternately with milk. Put in wellâ€"buttered muflin pans and bake in hot oven. Magic‘s unvarying quality TRY THIS RECIPE FOR GRAHAM MUFFINS and branches in all the principal Canadian cities ensures uniiormly good baking results For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad. Column The watchword of the Highway Safety Committee is Care, Courtesy and Common Sense in driving. Its good work in past years is indicated by the fact that the ratio of accidents to traffic is actually decreasing in Onâ€" tario in spite of the fact that the highâ€" ways are becoming more crowded every year. ent staff of the Geological Department on June 1, 1929. As in previous years, the work of the committee will consist principaliy of an advertising campaign in daily and weekly newspapers and cther publications. Radio and billboards, as well as public meetings, also will be used. There will be safety posters in garages and filling stations and safety folders for tourists. In this town the following have signified their willingness to be assoâ€" clated with the work of #he Highway Bafety Committes, as members of its Honorary Advisory S. Drew, Mayor, and L. McLauch!an, Chief Constable. There has been much interest in thns work of the Highway Safety Commitâ€" tee of Ontario. The work of this comâ€" mittee was closely watched at first to see if it could accomplish anything. There seems to be a general opinion that it has done much good,. The committee is representative of every section of the province. In every comâ€" munity one or more meon in public or semiâ€"public positions have accopted invitations to join the Honorary Adâ€" visory Committee, and many have subâ€" mitted to the executive excollent sugâ€" gestions and ideas which are being inâ€" corporated in the programme. LOCAL MEMBEES ONTARIO HIGHWAY SAFETY COMMITTEE You want just a light breakfast "so you can do some real work"â€" and then you yield to the allurements of heavy foods until you are loaded down for the day, unable to do any clear thinking or planning. A breakfast of Shredded Wheat and milk is even more flavory and will give mental pep and physical alertness. It‘s readyâ€" cooked and readyâ€"toâ€"eatâ€"delicious for any meal. YOU WANT JUST aA LIGHT BREAKEAST $ is i OF THE WHOLE WHEAT THE CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY, LTD, You never have to experiment with Magic Baking Powder because its leavening quaiity never varies. Every spoonful from every tin is identical. 3 out of every 4* Canadian women, who bake at home, say they use Magic because it gives consistently better baking results. If you use Magic Baking Powder, it will ensure better baking results for you too. *This fact was revealed in a recent Dominionâ€"wide investigation. Look Jor this mark on every tin, It is our tee that Magio owder does mot eonuun alum or any harmful ingredâ€" If you bake at home, send for the New Magic Cook Book. It contains over 200 tested recipes and will save you time with your baking. WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF Ppowen Comfomnon or (GANADA Thursday, June 19th, 1930 LIMITED for the quh_ncr_ éndi'x;é June 30th, 1930, payable July 15th, 1930, to shareholders of record at the close of business June 30, 1930. By order of the Board. L. C. HASKELL, Secretary. Montreal, May 27th, 1930. * * Dividend of 1%{% (being at the rate of 7% per annum) has been declared on the 7% Cumulative Preâ€" ferred Stock of CANADA NOR THERN POWER CORPORATION OTICE is hereby given that a Mividend af 13147 Theing at the Canada Northern Power you can do more â€"y6u feel better. J oi C M tz The increased flow of saliva feeds new strength to the blood, When you need new energy, when you are hot and mouth is dryâ€"pep up with Wrigley‘sâ€"it moistens mouth and throat. _ Corporation, Limited Preferred Dividend No. 22

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