DOBROT H YBmomponmto MILK Thursday, Qct. 1st, 1931 welcome for any mealâ€"Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes! Breakfast, lunch, nursery suppers, bedtime snacks. Always easy to digest. No trouble to serve. Few foods are so convenient and That was the wisest step we ever took" "It makes me happy too, John. Every time I turn a switch I think we are part owners of the great company furnishing the electricity and that as it continues to grow part of the profits will come to us regularly ... I think we should invest some more money the same way." A‘m certainly glad we toox aavantage of that first offer of Canada Northern Power Corporation and subscribed for these shares of preferred stock ... It‘s given me a feeling of security I never knew before to have a stake in this great enterprise which;means so much to the north country .. . And it‘s wonderful how our fund‘s growing. Of the money we paid for these ten shares in 1928, nearly one fourth has already come back in dividends." * Serve with milk or cream â€" fruits or honey. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. CANADA NORTHERN POWER CORPORATION new uskeEarp ontar1o, canapa COR N FLAK ES Dorothy Brand is rich, sterilized milk in concentrated form â€" nothing except water removed. Use it wherever milk is required. It is safe, convenient and economical. * Dorothy Brand Evaporâ€" ated Milkâ€"so nourishing, so easy to digest. It stands to reason that if it‘s good for baby, you, too, will find it a wholesome milk food. OUR baby will take Dnrnrl-nr Heansal Watch for the announcement and make your application early NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY ALimited NEW LISKEARD ELK LAKE coOBALT « ENG] TIMMINS % ROUYN SOUTH PORCUPINE Controlling and Operating : More than 4,000 families are today customerâ€" partners of Canada NorthernPower Corporation through purchase of its preferred stock, a highâ€" grade security paying a dividend of seven dollars per share per year . .. A further opportunity to purchase this 7%, Cumulative Preferred Stock on easy terms will shortly be given customers,. My parent club, Barrie, was the next to invite me. This meeting was in 100 ger cent. week and Barrie again came to the front. I found the club very strong in all its activities, and I was able to learn much to convey to other clubs. My first visit was to Sault Ste. Marie on Aprril 9th. My five hundredâ€"mile travel to this club was well repaid by the grand reception I received. These fellows know the full meaning of hosâ€" pitality. The club is 100 per cent. enâ€" thusiastic and is out to get the 1932 convention. In addition to being very generous in relief work, they are conâ€" stantly impreving their playground equipment. The report of the Lieut.â€"Governor of the Northern Division of Kiwanis Clubs, Garnet E. Tanner, who visited Timmins some months ago, appears in | the current issue of The Kâ€"Ray, the i Kiwanis magazine. The report will be 'of particular local interest because of its references to Timmins and the Timâ€" mins Kiwanis Club, while it should alâ€" so prove of general interest because of its attention to community service acâ€" tivities in the North Land. The reâ€" port says:â€" I found all clubs in a healthy condiâ€" tion, physically, spiritually and finanâ€" cially. They were all very enthusiastic and demonstrated real Kiwanis fellowâ€" ship. I visited all the clubs, posed as speakâ€" er on each occasion, and met with the board of directors and some committee chairmen following the club luncheon. The Northern Division consists of twelve clubs, namely: Barrie, Cobalt, Kirkland Lake, Midland, New Liskeard, Noranda, Orillia, Owen Sound, Peneâ€" tanquishene, Sault Ste. Marie, Timâ€" mins and Toronto. The totai memberâ€" ship of the Northern Division on June s0th, 19%4:, was 733. Last vear, at the same ume was 734. Manv clubs have been cutting out deadâ€"wood and report better progress and more effective work. The percentage of attendance covering a period from Jan. 1st to June 30th, 1931, inclusive, is 80 per cent. This I consider very commendable and I beâ€" lieve will compure most favourably with other divisions in the district. Northern Division of Kiwanis Club Report of the Lieut.â€"Governor of Kiâ€" wans, with Special Reference to Timmins, New Liskeard and Kirkland Lake., My northern trip was most enjoyable Branches ENGLEHART ROUYN w N NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER CcOMPANY Limited NORANDA BWASTIKA HAILEYBURY THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO EARLTON After a week‘s rest I again stepped into activity by visiting Orillia. Here is a club we all admire. How a club can have five 100 per cent. meetings consecutively is a matter worthy of study. Their organization is complete. When asked to what they attributed At Cobalt I found a very active club. They are quite energetic along vocaâ€" tional guidance lines. They had just recently completed a very active atâ€" tendance contest under very able leadâ€" After the luncheon I was takâ€" en to Bass Lake where the club has fitâ€" ted out a fine beach and equipment for boys‘ work. On our return trip we visited New Liskeard. Here efficiency prevails. This club has been so organized that the committees do a great percentage of the work. I feel that this club can teach other clubs a great deal on team work. The hosplitality in this town was very marked. Upon our arrival we were escorted to a room which was cheerfully decorated with flowers from Mrs. Ralph Taylor and Mrs. Dr. Farâ€" linger. We were also entertained at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tayâ€" lor and Dr. and Mrs. Fuller. The next day found us on our way to Timmins, a town of which I had heard much but had never before visited. I was very much impressed with the city in general and in the club in particular. The club is 150 miles from its nearest club. The members are very active and the club has many strong points. They have recently concluded a bridge tourâ€" nament which was a great success and which may be copied by cther clubs to advantage. I found the Noranda club in a very healthy condition. This club, although quite young, has proven itself the backâ€" bone of Noranda. They have been busy planting trees, organizing sptort and imâ€" proving the town in general. Bill Rosâ€" coe, manager of the Noranda Mines, together with several cthers, escorted us through the smelter, and it was not until well after midnight that we reâ€" turned to the Noranda hctel, one of the best hotels in the North. The Kirkland Lake boys turned out 100 per cent. strong. They were full of pep and their grand success at their recent carnival is but a keyâ€"note to the way in which they do things. Presiâ€" dent Earl Rogers escorted Mrs. Tanâ€" ner and myself through the mines and he and Mrs. Rogers proved themselves real friends. It can truly be said that anyone wishâ€" ing to learn the meaning of the word "hospitality" need not consult Webâ€" ster‘s dictionary but should merely take trip up North. KIRKLAND LAKE x VILLE MARIE "K" club and its many branches is a world within itself! and hundreds of boys are the reciphents of many lifts in life. The Toronto club has proven a great factor for good. After the luncheon we visited the Bowmanville Boys‘ Farm and received firstâ€"hand information that every Kiâ€" wanis dollar spent in this insiitution |has reaped, and will continue to reap, ~{ real harvest. us of none of our power to create. We may lose some beautiful things but we have lost of the beautiful. "It is a challenge, not a catastrophe. A generation that has conquered the ‘"No nation becomes great by becomâ€" ing rich,. Neither does a man find enâ€" during satisfaction in life by owning somethingâ€"only by becoming someâ€" thing. The most degrading poverty is that which results from killing the sririt that the body may be served. "The depression has cost us some of the things we created but it has robbed "My faith in the goodness of the uniâ€" verse is unimpaired. By that faith I am emboldened as I face defeat and despair. The prayers my mother taught me and the faith in God instillâ€" ed in me by a devout father remain as priceless treasures no depression can touch. "The depression has not lowered the value of a single friendshir. Neighâ€" bours still greet us in the same old cordial way, business associates believe in us, and our sons hold us in high respect. The wife‘s welcome at the close of the day has not depreciated in the least and our daughters continue to lavish their affection upon us with the same old extravagance. "When the depression came I was compelled to take an invoice and soon discovered that I was still rich. All my capacity for the enjoyment of life was intact. "The stock crash cost us much more that we never hadâ€"plaper profits which never got nearer our pockets than the financial pages of the daily papers. The market failed but nothing else did. Prices went down but not one acre lost its fertility and all the elections, proâ€" tons and ether waves went on working n their accustomed ways. "It may be true that I have much less to live on than I had a year ago, but it is certainly true that I have just as much as ever to live for. The real values of life are unshaken and solid. ‘"We have passed through a panic, suffered from a crash on the stock market and are now more than half way through the depression, andâ€"I am still rich. Under the heading, ‘I Am Still Rich Roy L. Smith writes:â€" in comfort for so many from every dolâ€" lar invested in their maintenance! It is the same with all the institutions for the service of humanity! The depresâ€" sion has not stoptisd their value. Inâ€" deed, their worthâ€"their real profit to humankindâ€"has been rather increasâ€" ed by the general conditions. Roy L. Smith, in his article in The Rotarian, features this thought, and stresses the idea that the greater value of the better things of life, in contrast to the more material should by no means be forâ€" gotten. With loss of money, he still is rich. With more money than they ever had before, some men are poor. Writing in The Rotarian, Roy L. Smith touches on a feature of presentâ€" day life that has not been sufficiently stressed. In all the talk about undeâ€" sirable business conditions, factories closing, businesses shut down, and the muchâ€"discussed depression, there has been lost sight of, perhaps, some of the lines that continue to pay great profits, wonderful returns. Not in cash, perhaps, but in something better than cash. Take the hospitals, for instance: See the returns in health, in strength, Investments Still Pay Big Dividends Money and Effort Given to Service of Humanity Continue to Show Nok able Profits, Despite the Deâ€" pression. serving as Lieut.â€"Governor. It has been a real pleasure. It has given me an opportunity of widening my field of fellowship and has broadened my outâ€" look of Kiwanis. In conclusion, allow me to thank the district for allowing me the privilege of My last visitation was to Toronto on July 8th, This is the largest club in my division; but one of the easiest clubs to visit. From their activities I learned many useful lessons and received inâ€" spiration of Kiwanis possibilities The On July 2nd I went to Owen Sound. Here I met another of our best clubs and a strong comphtitor for the Atâ€" tendance Cup. Owen Sound is to be especially congratulated in its attendâ€" ance record as it is eightyâ€"five miles from its nearest club and absent memâ€" bers have not the same chance to get their attendance elsewhere. After the luncheon I visited the swimming pool and was deeply impressed with the good work the club is doing. My next visit was to Penetanguishene. This club is a credit to our district. It is not large, but is very active. I was very much impressed with the many accomplishments in such a short time. My next visit was to my home club. Midland. I took as my topic "What I have learned from other clubs." The Midland club is full of pep and is acâ€" complishing a good deal. Plans are under way by which visits are being arâ€" ranged between Midland and its child club, Penetanguishene. their success, they replied (1) quality membership; (2) their division of their club membershift into six teams, each team being responsible for two months‘ programme. This accomplished variety of programme and kept each member acotive. 55 Third Avenue Last week The Advance published a despatch from Cochrane telling how a preacher in that district had resorted to swimming across the Abitibi river so as to be able to reach his flock for the Sunday services. The preacher unâ€" dressed on the one side of the river, rolling his clothes in his raincoat and holding the parcel on his back by: means of strings, and then, of course, dressing on the other side of the river and proceeding to the church services. The chief point The Advance made in regard to the story was the probable: need for a bridge over the Abitibi riger for the convenience, not only of this worthy and resourceful minister of the gospel, but also for the benefit of the settlers in general in the area. In mentioning the matter the despatch stated that the Minister in question was a United Church clergyman. Word comes now from Cochrane that the iminister was not of the United Church but was a Baptist. In this case his taking to the water may not be conâ€" sidered as so remarkable, though swimming the Abitibi river to attend church services is quite a chore even for Baptist. _A letter from Cochâ€" rane corrects the church affiliations of the swimmer as follows:â€""You gave sSAYS PREACHER SWIMMING RIVER WAS BAPTIST MINISTER "I am still rich because I am inâ€" dependently richâ€"none of my wealth depends upon business conditions or market reports." "The investments we made in amâ€" bitious youth, hospitals, crippled chilâ€" dren‘s camps colleges, and service inâ€" stitutions â€"« go on paying dividends. The deepést satisfactions of lifeâ€" those which come from sharing and serviceâ€"remain secure. air and sent glant planes circling the credit, in your article about the minisâ€" globe, which has plunged ‘into the | ter at Gardiner having to swim the deeps and disported on the ocean‘s| Abitibi river, to the minister of the fiosor, which has climbed above the | United Church, being the man who had clouds and lived in the stratosphere, ; to do this. In putting the matter in is now faced with the challenge to]this way, it is not correct. The man rise above its dependence on mere; who had to swim the river was the things and seek an emancipation of!Baptist student. He had had to do it the spirit of man. more than once this summer to his "The last six months have been appointments. He deserves credit for for many men thrilling spiritual;his courage and enterprise, and so let adventure through which they have | us give credit to whom credit‘s due." discovered their real wealth. Beâ€" |In writing thus it is a pity that the reft of dividends and profits they are | name of the swimmer was not given as discovering the sustaining power of a‘well. The writers of despatches and strong religious faith, the abiding | the newspapers in general are only too values of courage, heroism, honor, | ready to give credit where credit is due, charity and trustworthiness. and not only are they sincerely anxious "A financial crisis can wipe out|to have the credit go to the right profits and bring business to a standâ€" | thurch, but also by having the names of still, but character is beyond nslthe minister they would like to be reach.. It can rob us of all we have l able to publish it and thus assure creâ€" but it cannot affect what we are. dit also for the man in question. air and sent giant planes circling the globe, which has plunged ‘into the deeps and disported on the scean‘s fiosor, which has climbed above the clouds and lived in the stratosphere, is now faced with the challenge to rise above its on mere things and seek an emancipation of the spirit of man. "The last six months have been for many men thrilling spiritual adventure through which they have discovered their real wealth. Beâ€" reft of dividends and profits they are discovering the sustaining power of a 3 O 1 A N A D I A N â€" B U ILT F O R C A N A D I A N S 7 o omm oys itc d Py > * > PLIEASE MEN IMPERIAL MOTOR SALES CHRYSLER SIX 4 Body Types +$1140 to $1205 CHRYSLER EIGHT DE LUXE 5 Body Types + $2010 to $2525 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL EIGHT 4 Body Types +$3625 to $4150 All prices f. o. b. W indsor, Ontario, sacluding standard factory equipment (freight and taxes extra ) 50© Sn 00 London Newsâ€"Chronicle:â€""For the first time in history," Dr. Robson told the local Government officers at Oxford gloomily, "the police are coming into contact with the wealthy classes. They are discovering that far from being lawâ€"abiding people, wealthy people are the most lawless." But it is not the lawless rich who are the new portent. What is new is a police which does not hesitate to tackle the wealthy lawâ€" breaker, and is strong enough to do so effectually and that is a portent full of hope. The reason isâ€"WRIGLEY‘S. Jones has found out that if you keep your mouth fresh, you feel fresï¬. Timminrs