QVRIL "Beef Goodness‘" A RPTTDTR TT T NDE MAY save you weeks of weakness « This guarantee is backed by a $10,000 bank deposit which absolâ€" utely assures satisfaction to every Silent Glow owner. ‘There are more Silent Glows in use than all other burners combined. Here is one recent letter from an enthusiastic Silent Glow user: "I have two Silent Glow Oil Burners, Model Wâ€"one in my cellar (furnace) and one in my kitchen stove, and heat my 7â€"room house which is much exposed to the wind. I use the two burners only when it is very cold. 1 bcwe saved thirty dollars on my heating tb:s year. It is a pleasure for me to recommend Silent Glow." Salada Green tea is a masterpiece in blending ©BANK s NOVA SCOTIA No Noiseâ€"No Smokeâ€"No Odorâ€"Lights Quicker: Gives more Heatâ€"Consumes Less Oil per Unit of Heat Generated. GREEN TEA Mr. Geo. Brodeur Mr. Makers of Silent Glow Pilgrim Heaters for homes, camps, etc., and Silent Glow Power Burners for heating large bhomes, apartments and other large buildings. _ ‘Fresh from the gardens‘ 19 Montgomery Ave Timmins. ESTABLISHED 1832 ’ Capital $12,000,000; Reserve Fund $24,000,000; Total Resources $265,000,000 Timmins Branck: W. S, Jamieson, Manager CS Nt TAE UA OBA CO t S LEMT GLOW *1440 *A1Yd *S°M NY *NYI Z_ ‘O3H MHYPW fl. ts V us 1 Tess C y ied OU cannot be too careful about your milk supply. Use safe milk only. Dorothy Brand Evaporated Milk is sterilizedâ€"just as safe as if there were not a germ in the whole universe, It is rich, and uniformâ€"better in every way for cooking and drinking. It is more digestâ€" ible, too, because the large fat globules of the milk have been broken up into small onesâ€" homogenized. Uii1t. UbA â€" OpCn a Bank of Nova Scotia Savings Account now A time will come when you will need money for a business investment or some other special purpose. A Bank of Nova Scotia Savings Account lays the foundation for a fund to meet such emergencies and protect you in your old age. Regular saving paves the way to future independence. Enâ€" quiries are invited at any of our branches. P. P. Sicard 32 Fifth Ave. (Name upon request) Timmins Interest compounded half yearly = "As a matter of fact one of Paul‘s principal troubles was supplying his men with a variety of food. The camp cranks were as hard to please then as now and after a few weeks of a new dish they would Gdemand something else. This chronic dissatisfaction was responsible for another inventionâ€" corned beef. The particular winter which ‘saw this delightful dish introâ€" duced found Paul and his gang logging in Algoma. They were a long way from their meat depot, which was in Kansas and occasionally there was a hitch in the line of communication, resulting in msatless days. The old practice of driving the beef up on the hoof had its drawbacks; the steers were two years on the way and had to feed en route. So Paul consulted Johnny Inkslinger and Big Swede and they decided to put up a cannery in Kansas, send the Blue Ox down once a year for a sledge load of meat. They had to pioneer in the packing industry. When they were throeugh contriving the Kansas cowboys simply drove the steers in one door and the ccrned beef tumbled out the cther, all canned. A man named Fray Benâ€" tos was boss of the works and to this day you will see his name on corned beef cans. This factory had some noâ€" vel features. It was seven storeys high. The steers went in on the ground floor; tails, all ready knotted, flew out an opening on the second storey; beefskin moccasins rained down from the third; bones, neatly wrapped in bundles, were lowered from the fourth storey; matâ€" tresses stuffed with hair bounced down from the fifth; condensed groans, in fiveâ€"piound packages fell from the sixth and from the top storey emerged the canned meat products. Fray Bentos was the only man on the job and he U.S.A., though the original Paul was Canadianâ€"born and lived in Canada all his life, except for cccasional forays to foreign parts. But such is life, To atâ€" tempt to give any complete story of Paul Bunyan would require bigger volumes and more of them than anyone but Paul Bunyan himself could handle, and Paul has passed along. The only logical way ‘to kgep the story or stories of Paul Bunyan in circulation seems to be by the odd reference. That was the way Paul lived his lifeâ€"on a grand sca‘le, but without any cut and dried sc.rieme. The Advance from time ito time has been referring to Paul Bunyan and has published a lot of information about him, all of it guaranteed to be as true as any information coming from Sault Ste. Marie and just as funny. Here is the latest reference to Paul Bunyan as published last week in that treasureâ€"house of interest and enterâ€" tainmentâ€"the "Grab column of The Northern Miner:â€" "Paul Bunyan invented the doughâ€" nut, with the assistance of his cook, Flap Jack Slim. To toll the whole truth it was a bit of an accident. Slim, who was strong on sourdough, let a cauldron ‘boil over, The liquid dough poured out cn the 10 by 20â€"acre range at the main ccokery; it Acvoded a@around the 5,000â€"gal. tea boiler. When the boiler had been removed, Paul gazed at the round hole in the centre, pried the big biscuit off the range, trimmed the edges around with a broad axe and rollâ€" ed the doughnut out to the bush where the men acclaimed it as a new confecâ€" tion worthy of the traditions of the cam,\ After that the cookees could be seen every day labouriously wheeling them out for lunch. Eventually the size was modified to 110 diameters for home use. of Paul Bunyan spread to the outside world. Indeed, this original Canadian figure became so much of a worldâ€" known character that books have been written about him and several attempts have been made to collect the many stories about him. Of course, some of these books have centred his activities in the woods of Maine and Michigan, First Doughnut and First Corned Beef TPaul Bunyan, the legendary hero of "12 lumberjacks, for many years was a s~vrees of interest and amuseément to th3 men who worked in the bush in this N>~th. I}uring the day there were odd refarences to Paul as the work went on in the bush or on the river, and at n‘gshts the men talked much about the wonders of Paul Bunvan. The fame Both Credited to the Redoubtable Paul Bunyan. Paul Aiso Used Square Beans, Because They Piled Easier. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO The Advance thanks Mr. Joseph for his kindly words and in regard to the numbering of ‘the pages would say that this is recognized as a convenience if it were practical, but mechanical difficulâ€" ties make it almost impossible. As The Advance has to be printed in sections, and as it is impossible to know the number of pages there will be in any certain issue at the time the first secâ€" tion is printed, and as "front page" reâ€" quirements make it necessary that this first section to be printed is the second section of the completed riiper it will be seen that there are difficulties about numbering the pages. However, there is one thing The Advance consistently ties to do and that is to avoid "turnâ€" ingâ€"over" articles from one page to anâ€" other. which is the bane of so many dailâ€" lies, where an article is started on one page and then there is a hunt to find the continuation of the article on some other page, a difficulty that exists often even when the pages are supposed to be numbered. It is only in very occasional instances that The Advance has any of these "continuedâ€"onâ€"anctherâ€"page" arâ€" ticles. In sending his subscription to The Advance from Gravenhurst, where ‘he is at presen,t P. K. Joseph writes in part as follows:â€"*"I am glad to say your paper continues to ‘improve week by week and is a wonderful home paper, though by numbering the pages of The Advance you would make it easier for *# many." « Music lovers in Canada will welcome the announcement of the inauguration of a Canadian Musical Masterplece series on the Victor Records, the first release of which is the Quartet in F Minor by Haydn. In assigning to the Hart House Quartet the task of recordâ€" ing this wellâ€"loved suite, Victor could hardly have chosen better in all the length and breadth of ithe world. Fitâ€" ting tribute has been pa‘id to the musiâ€" cianshir! of the four artists who make up this internationally famous group, and their interpretation of the quartet is something which will add to an alâ€" ready established position in the world of music. The Haydn suite, Opus 20, No. 5, is reproduced on three doubleâ€" sided disces. THAT THE ADVANCE IS A "WONDERFUL HOME PAPER®" "In Paul‘s camp the little round white bean of modern commeéerce wWas unknown. In those days they used square beans for conveniences in takâ€" ing in the dapots which Paul establishâ€" ed on the shores of the Great Lakes at strategic points. Besides piling better than the round ones these beans were easier to raft from place to place." "The Bunyan grindstone was no orâ€" dinary one, but of a size to correspond with the other features of his gigantic logging cpetiations. It stood eight pike poles high and was surrounded by cribbing, with stages every seven feet, so that fifty men at a time could sharpâ€" en their tools, twentyâ€"five on the upside and an equal number on the downside. Trouble arose over the job of turning the grindstone, so Paul installed windâ€" sails When moving camp the stone was fitted up with side frames and the wheelbarrow was thus evolved. In this banrow Flap Jack Slim moved his bean kettle. CANADIAN QUARTET RECORDS WELL KNOWN HAYDN CLASSIC stone. Prior to that the men used to have to roll a boulder down a mountain, {cllowing it with the bl:ade laid on the stcne to sharpen it. And when ‘they were logging in level country they used tz have to bore a hole in @a stone, fit it with shafts and run it around, with the men following and taking turns in layâ€" ing their axes on for grinding. Paul pprceived that it would be much simâ€" pler to set the stone in a frame and do all the sharpening right in the camp. "Anctheor of Paul‘s troubles arose from the rapidity with which he and nis gang logged off the country. One winter, while working in the Cigarette Grass valley, the crew had such splendid camping ground that they proâ€" tested against moving. So Paul tried various schemes to keep in touch with his forest operations. Farther and farâ€" ther each day the men had to walk to work. Eventually it was necessary to it on two shifts, one at work and one walking to work. Later three shifts were required, one walking to work, one working and the sther walking back. Finally the distance from camp became so great that all the men were en route and those going out only reached the bush in time to turn around and come back, so that not a single tree was cut. Paul moved the camp with the Blue Ox, as usual and in order to make up for lost time he tried to make an Aarâ€" rangement with the moon to shine every night; but China protested and this scheme came to naught. About this time he had the Big Swede travel to the North Pole to investigate the Northern Lights. He reported back, saying that they were unreliable and anyhow it would take six months to move them down. "This was the winter that Paul conâ€" trived the chain axe with four blades. ‘The loggers swung them around in a cirecle and cut four trees at once. The first day they used the new tool no chips fell, but the third day they startâ€" ed to come down, burying the men. Loggzing was greatly speeded up that year by Paul‘s invention of the grind "The tails could be had with one, two or three knots as desired; they were sold to fiction writers for plots. "The bones wore eagerly sought by the darâ€" kies of Dixie. Mattresses and shoeâ€" packs went to Paul‘s camp. The conâ€" densed groans were shipped to New YÂ¥ork for use in the vaudeville indusâ€" never did have time to find out what happsned to the horns which disapâ€" peared in the process mysteriously. Sudbury Star:â€"Synthetic silk stockâ€" ings may be made out of air, says a scientist, but they will dissolve if washâ€" ed. One understands, too, there would be difficulty about darning a run in a zerlhyr. A despatch from British Columbia this week says that the government there has been appealed to by a group of members of the legislative assembly‘ who claim that the 12,000 Doukhobors} in the south of British Columbia are | openly avowing communism and the lives and property of the settlers in the area are being threatened. Adeâ€" quate police protection for the settlerg is demanded for all living in the viciniâ€" ty of the Doukhobors. It is said that the Doukhobors are instituting reign of terror. Capt. Jas. Fitzsimmons, M.L. A., summarizes the situation by saying that nude parades, burning of schools and other buildings, orien threats of violence, and other forms of disorder are coming to the surface right along and constitute a menace to the whole area. No indication has been given so far as to what the government of Briâ€" tish Columbia intends to do in the matâ€" ter, but it is understood that if the proâ€" vince does not take some action there will be an appeal to the Federal govâ€" ernment for some form 6f assistance in guarding the lives and property of loyal British subjects in the area that is now said to be under the control, more or less, of the Doukhobors. « These combined investigations are to be made next year because that is the fiftieth anniversary of the estabâ€" listment of the first meteorlogical staâ€" tion in the Arctic regions. In charge of the party is Capt. F. M. Williams. His companions are A. Louie, assistant scientist and camera man, and Robert Marshall, colour exâ€" pert. It they cannot get what they want at Churchill, they will try to get farther North. Their stay in the North will last about six weeks. BRITISH COLUMBIA THINKS DOUKHOBORS ARE COMMUNIST as a preliminary to the scientific invesâ€" tigations of Arctic atmosphere phenoâ€" mena which will be conducted next year by parties sent by all nations interestâ€" ed in Arctic exploration. Equipped with motion picture cameras possessing an exceptionally high rate of speed, and with film sensitive to all the colours of the spectrum, three exâ€" plorers and scientists, repreSenting the United States government arrived in Winnipeg enroute for Churchill, where they propose to film the aurora boreal‘is To Film the Beauties of the Aurora Borealis Enjoy Y Free Mondays when you Wash ELECTRICALLY Washday terrors disappear when you own an Electric Washer. Long, hard, backâ€"breaking work becomes a light, pleasant task, quickly accomplished. Simply put in the wash, turn the switch . . . and let the Electric Washer do the work . . . a delightful change from oldâ€"fashioned Mondays spent over steaming washtubs. Come in and let us show you how quickâ€" ly, easily and cheaply, Electric Washers work, Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited CONTROLLING AND OPERATING Northern Ontario Power Company, Limited « Northern Quebec Power Company, Limited Gilbert Stinson, aged 22 years, son of Fire Chief and Mrs. Wm. Stinson, of Cobalt, was instantly killed on Priday evening at Sudbury when he attempbed. to board a C.P.R. passenger train bound | for North Bay. His body was cut in two by the wheels of the trains. The body was found just east of the iron bridge by two young men, John Benâ€" nett and Sam Turner, whose homes are said to be at North Sydney, N.S. They were walking along the tracks at 7.15 p.m. when they made the gruesome disâ€" covery. They found the lower half of the body first, and notified Chief of Police Louden, who investigated the accident. The upper half of the body was found about 18 yards away from the cther half. It is believed that part of the body was carried this distance by the train. The body was identified by means of a jitneyâ€"driver‘s license which the deceased had in his possesâ€" sion. His watch had stopped at 7.06 c‘clock and it is thought that this would correspond with the time of the fatality. There were no eye witnesses of the tragedy so far as can be learned. l It is believed, however, that in attemptâ€" ing to board theâ€"train the young man fell beneath the wheels and so met death. The despatches from Sudbury suggest that the deceased had left his home in Cobalt some time ago and was last heard of by his parents when he was in Sundridge. It is thought he was on his way to North Bay intending from there to proceed to his home in Cobalt. Surviving him are his plurents and three brothers and to these there will be the sincerest sympathy extendâ€" ed in their tragic loss. The remains were sent to Cobalt for interment. An inquest was decided upon by Coroner Henry but it is not likely, so far as may be judged from the despatches that furâ€" ther light will be shed on the tragedy. For Sure Results Try a Classified Ad. COBALT YOUNG MAN LOSES LIFE INX BOARDING TRAIN Sonâ€""Pass the butter." Mother (reprovingly)â€""If what? Sonâ€""If you can reach it." Chinaware QuIck : QUAKER OaAts â€" Lovely in each package of ‘y, NS. They tracks at 7.15 gruesome disâ€" lower half of . Ure As smart as shoes can be HOLLINGER STORES, LTD Timmirs, Ontario Thursday, Oct. 8th, 1931 . . delight in their exquisite craftsmanship .. and marvel at their low cost. When you wear them you will find such supreme footâ€" comfort and ease as will make you a lifeâ€"long friend. We guarantee a perfect fit for any foot. Come in and see these fine shoes. We like to show them. The ideal ghoes for nurses and those who have to be on their feet a lot. You will approve the graceful smartness of these fine shoes Pay Only Balance in easy monthly payments Down 1024