Our Want Ad. Column Brings Sure Resuits THURSDAY, OCTOBER a0TH. 1032 Well Children J am sure t} any seflous | and most delic tatement in eac mended by w troubles, simple disorders, cor Fasy to take a "Occasional children B VW Crisé, light, flaky and slightly salted. Delicious. TOM TAKES IT EASY Extra rooms in atâ€" tic or basement are quickly and easily made with Sheetâ€" rock.The walls take any decoration. Wewill supply you promptly. The FIREPROOEF WALLBOARD TOM TAKES IT EAsy THESE PAYS Geo. Taylor Hardware Ltd. John W. Fogg, Limited Hows THat P l Dr. Williams‘ 50 wWoOuLo you IF YoOU HAD A REGULAR INCOME LIKE HEe HAS Christies â€" MIUM SODA. CRACKERS HE GETS AN INCOME CHEQUE EVERy MCNTH FOR L\FE â€"FR@OoM me CANADA LIFE NECESSARY FOR BUSINE®s TO KEEP UP VYVOLUCME OF doin: than A gIr increase in have incre prepriation Their adve pared and ng owing having pulled in the average mt penses have be with the depres: have lagged, of the business 1 the volume of s is the big consid chant, who g trought, will re sive advertising this. To keep | strong for him : now than it w before 1929. iapt WVrOIT Toronto Globe:â€"After all, there is some little drawback to all the good things of the world. For example, the charm of Vancouver‘s winter climate is attracting the unemployed transients of the Western Provinces. ed of some $100 in The. money was house and consiste bills and two HUNDRED DOLLARS IN HIDDEN MONEY STOLEN AT COBALT The Cobalt W says:â€""A robbery O‘Brien property week, when Mrs. ed of some $100 i the ALl T did 1J it red Te| en mo n the PRETTy SOFT HEsS coung ABROAD NEXT weEek, Too/ th th 1. And the merâ€" he matter any hat live, aggresâ€" help him to do rertising working Would You Like $100 a Month? Why Noi Plan For It Men and women are turning to the Canada Life to provide their Retirement Income. They have found how difficult it is to save money or invest it wisely. They find an answer in the Canada Life plan. An income of $100 a monthâ€"or more, or lessâ€"can commence at age 55, 60 or 65, as you wish. Read our booklet "Getting the Income You Want," sent free. drawer, in the ed his anada Life Assurance Co., Teoronto, Ont. Plcase mail me your book, "Getting theIncome Â¥ q , WP2CK d from the day of last was relieyvâ€" er} ng wWorkIng » important flush times COUPON WILL BRING BOOK BY MAIL very littie sales that the profits To keep up as possible d the merâ€" id A r 14711 8t ap it AI 11 nd Mr., Mrs., Miss) Cecil White, of Elk Lake, trok the alâ€" ternative of three months in jail when faced with a fine of $150.00 and costs for shooting partridge illegally. He came before Magistrate Atkinson at Haileybury some days ago on the charge, having been found with 15 of the birds in his possession before the season opened. Although the partridge season did not open this year until Oct. 10th, there were a number who illegally hunted partridge before that date. This was very unfair to those who tried to observe the law. For several years past there has been no open season for partridge with the result that the birds increased at a notable rate, though they had for a time been‘ in danger of extinction beâ€" fore the close season was made effecâ€" tive the year round. Last year when there was a general demand for an open seasonâ€"even a short one and with a small bag limit, Hon. Chas. McCrea, then Minister of Game and Fisheries, opposed the idea, pointing out that an open season might undo the work of years in preserving the birds. The action of a number this year in breakâ€" ing the law by getting in ahead of the open season seems to uphold the idea of Hon. Mr. McCrea that if game is to be preserved there has to be rigid reâ€" strictions. It does seem from this year‘s experience that <some people do not know how to accept any sort of concessions. They got the advantage of an open season for partridge and immediately that is announced they deliberately take an illegal time ahead of the season to do their hunting. In the Haileybury district this year there have been a number of prosecutions for shooting partridge before the season cpened. There have been one or two prosecutions here as well, but it would appear from all reports that not enough people were prosecuted for this breach of good sportsmanship as well as infraction of the law. Milverton Sun:â€"Franklin D. Rooseâ€" velt says that "in statesmanship an ounce of foresight is better than a pound of hindsight." Stanley Baldwin puts another angle on the same idea when he says: ‘"‘Facts that are not frankly faced have a habit of stabbing us in the back." But in this statesâ€" manship is not dGdifferent from any other human activity. ' GOES TO JAIL FOR SHOOTING PARTRIDGE OUT OF SEASON WELL HE CAN AFFORD T. HE CAN SPEND EVERY CENT HE e GETS,. BOESN‘T HAVE TO SAVE ANYTHING WILL DE VALERA TRY FOR GOVERNORSHIP? % Now that President de Valera of the Irish Free State has forced the reâ€" signation of Governorâ€"General McNeill, reports from Dublin state that de Valera will try for the Governorship himself, combining it with the Presidency, and severing the bonds which bind the Free State to the Mother Country. Other reports from Ireland would convey the impresâ€" sion that the Irish people are beginning to tire of Mr. de Valera‘s attiâ€" tude. However, October 14 is the date set for the big conference between Mr. de Valera and Mr. J. H. Thomas, British Secretary for the Doâ€" minions, and there is every indication that the Irish president will have to change his decisions on the annuities question. by W.B,. :.0,.LAW §#101 THE PORCUPINHNE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO A resolution asking that this district have representation on some of the different Boards being formed, viz, the Hydro Commission, T. N. O. Comâ€" mission. It was felt that in the perâ€" somnnel of these and other boards no consideration was given to any part of Northern Ontario. A resolution asking that some of the dangerous curves in the Ferguson highway between North Bay and Latchford be straightened. A further resolution which, only afâ€" fects the three towns of Cobalt, Haileyâ€" bury and New Liskeard was to the efâ€" fect that in the fall change of time by the railway, some effort should be made to make it possible for people living in the north to come down to Cobalt and return the same day, on trains No. 17 and 18. In addition to these resolutions oriâ€" vinating with the board itself the Coâ€" balt board of trade approved several resolutions by other boards. These included a resolution from TIroquois Falls with regard to a radio station in the North â€"as contemplated under the recent report of the radio commission; one with regard to having the Conâ€" tinental Limited, the returning to serâ€" vice of which is contemplated, run over the lines of the T. N. O. Railway, and one respecting a road from Gowâ€" ganda into Tyrrell Township. At a recent meeting of the executive of the Cobalt board of trade three resolutions were passed as follows:â€" TRAFFIC MUCH AFFECTED BY DETOUR ON THE HIGHWAY "Articles have of late appeared in magzazines telling of pioneer industries in Ontario which are now no more. Reading these articles, there is little danger of Renfrew people playing the role. of doubting Thomas, or feeling that if pioneer industries have disapâ€" pearea from communities in other parts of the rirovince this burgh has escaped losses of the kind. For instance what about those Smith industriese which stcood on the Smith creek at the foot of Hall street? Where are the tanâ€" neries of other days? Where the coopâ€" er shopss _ Where the axe factories? The ruins of an old mill may be seen on the Smith creek, on the Farquharâ€" son property, out the Second Line. At Burnstcwn the stone walls of an old mill still stand, speaking eloquently of the past. Two or three miles down the C.P.R. track is a big gully or raâ€" vine on which the late M. L. Russell once operated a sawmill. There were in Renfrew once upon a time both the Stevenson and the Hynes cabinet facâ€" tories. Once there was a foundry and machine shop where the Argyle street arena now stands. There was a sawâ€" mill at‘the Second Chute of the Bonneâ€" here. The Madawaska snye at Calaâ€" bogie was in olden days the secene of two mills. And even the minds of kinderâ€" garteners in Renfrew can recall the days when a factory for the manufacâ€" ture of hardwood fiooring operated in a field to the northeast of the town." The Northern News last weeks says: "Repairs were being made this week on a wooden bridge at Round Lake which collapsed last week when a truckload of timber was being driven across it. Traffic between Kirkland Lake and Southern centres was thrown out of gear as a result of the mishap, and motorists were forced to use a detour via oston Creek and~Krugersdorf in order to get from one place to another. The detour became almost impassable late Monday night, and many cars were stuck in the snow while returning to Kirkland Lake from below." Ottawa Journal:â€"Airplanes can now be bought by easy paryments. Sounds like the higher purchase system. W. J. Stiles, who has been in newsâ€" paper work for a great many years, more years, perhaps, than his youthful spirit would seem to make probable, has an interesting article in his column in the last issue of The Renfrew Mercuâ€" ery, ‘dealing with industries once imâ€" portant to Renfrew, but now disappearâ€" ed these many yvears. He writes:â€" PIONEER INDUSTRIES THAT HAVE DISAPPEARED NOW ASKS REPRESENTATION FOR THE NORTH ON COMMISSIOGNS Opinion of a Man Who has Sseen the Truth in Russia "I stopped and wondered. All Hayâ€" wood‘s life he had been a destructionist The Soviet put him in a constructive job in a coal mine. Then, I found, the had failed and "gone art." I came to the conclusion that there must be something wrong with a system ‘where. a human got just so much blood and then turned back. Mr. Chapple says that he came from Russia with the impression that ‘theâ€"Communists were more ruthâ€" less in their pursuit of power than the capitalists, and that the whole system was merely a disguise under which inâ€" dividuals "bunko" the pecple and keep them in a condition of slavery. Soon after his return he found an opporâ€" tunity to exercise his new convictions. Through the La Foliette control of the University of Wisconsin he undertook to tie the La Follettes to Communsim Travelling around the state he made the oldsters shiver by shouting to them that the university was‘ teaching their chiltdren atheism, free love and desâ€" truction of American institutions. He begged them not to take his word for it but to ask their own children. He pilloried Glen Frank, president of the university, and other members as "ofâ€" ficers <of organization antagonistic tc the American system." The result was that he secured the Republican noâ€" mination ‘for Senator, and expects tco be elected on November 8 in Wisconâ€" sin, hitherto radical. Those who at the opinion of in Russia and v their prejudices may well read from The Mail One of the sut politics is Mr. Joh of the Press, of 4 a year ago he wi big man in Ashlan cf 10,000 or 12,000 publican candidate tes Senate and t speculation. Wisconsin was progressive and radiâ€" cal under the sway of the La Follettes for 30 years. Chapple, who is now only 32, was a leftâ€"winger and radical a few years ago, but a visit to Russia in 1926 cured him effectively. There he met "Big Bill" HMaywood, whose ‘advocacy of the proletariat made him undesirâ€" able in the United States. "The first qustion I asked Haywood was what he thought of the probability of Communâ€" ism sweeping Poland. He . sauntered over to divan and picked up a piece of tapestry and caressed it. "Isn‘t this a beautiful pattern?" he said. The Northern News, of Kirkland Lake, last week says:â€"*"Ukrainian Comâ€" munity +Centre, which is the loyal Ukrainian Society organized here last May is making satisfactory progress Among other activities the society is foctering choral music and dramatical work as well as general social pleaâ€" sures, all enterprises being held in the High School auditorium.. To commemâ€" orate the arising of the Ukrainian Free State in the year 1918 the Society is preparing a solemn programme to take place Sunday, November sixth, in the High School auditorium commencing at 8 pm. An invitation is extended to all citizens to attend." "I asked him absout Bessarabia. ccuntered with an exhibition of other piece of ‘woven work. He |] made collection of Russian fabt It had become his passion. Several times recently people have suggested that The Advance is a little hard on peddlers, pediers or pedlars, or all three. The reason for this hardâ€" ness is because they are so hard on the town and the people. There have been complaints beyond nun}ber from readâ€" ers of The Advance as to the nuisance and annoyance of the peddlers, pedlers or pedlars. Hoousewives find them an outrageous nuisance. Read this paraâ€" graph from The New Liskeard Speaker last week:â€" "We heard a Liskeard lady say that she prefers to have the tramp come to her home and respectfully ask for food than to have the highâ€"pressure pedlar â€"sometimes he is a healthyâ€"looking fellow selling silk hosieryâ€"who will not take "no‘" for an answer. And this lady is quite right." KIRKLDAND LAKE UKRAINFANS TO HONQOUR THE REPUBLIC PREFERS PLAIN TRAMPS TO THE HIGHMâ€"PRESSURE G The Mail and Empire:â€" Radical Editor Ceonverted by Visit to Russia n 11 hA¢ n HC Death of R. Lillie _ of Sturgeon Falls Father of Mrs, E. M. Allworth and . Hamilton Lillie, of Timmins, was Pioneer Setter acd Promwminent / Merchant of Sturgeon Palls, suffered paralytic S ago from which he f: Born in the township C( deceased man, son of the late Mr. ind Mrs. James Lillie, spent the earlier nart of his life in the lumbering trade. wWith his brother, he carried on lumâ€" sering cperations along the Ottawa, Mattawa and â€"Kipp>â€"wa rivers, later zsoing to Huntsville where he continâ€" ued lumbering with an uncle, James for a number of years. In 1881. he came across Lake Nipissing in a sailâ€"boat, landing at the mouth of the LaVasse river, then going on to Sturâ€" zseon Falls where he established a hardâ€" ware store. He retired five years ago and two years later came to North Bay to reside with his son. He is survived oy his wife, formerly Miss ‘Catherine Hamilton, Renfrew, whom he married n 1883, and who resides with a daughâ€" ;er in Timmins; three thildren, James, North Bay; Mrs. E. M. Allworth, Timâ€" nins, and A. Hamilton Lillie, Timmins; me brother W. J. Lillie, and a sister, Mrs. W. J. Cavanaugh, both of Kinâ€" »jurn. The funeral was held this afterâ€" 10¢n (Wednesday) at 1.15 o‘clock from she home of James Lillie, 25 Seventh ivenue west, to the United Church at Sturgeon Falls where service was conâ€" 1lucted at 2.30 o‘clock. Interment was n the Union cemetery." "Following a lengthy illness, the death occurred at Timmins, Ont., over the weekâ€"end of Mrs. Cyrus Hodgins, formerly of Shawville, Qu., and also a former resident of Ottawa. Mrs. Hodgins was Miss Annie Margaret Smiley before her marriage. She was born at Shawville 40 years ago. Since moving to Timmins she had been idenâ€" tifled with the United Church there, and had made a large number of friends, who will join relatives and friends here in mourning her death. In addition to her husband, Mrs. Hodâ€" gins is survived by six daughters and two sons; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Smiley; two sisters, Mrs. E. Steele, Quyon, Que., and Mrs. John Daley, Parry Sound, Ont., and four brothers, Gerald, of Ottawa; Ellis, Keith and Lloyd, all of Quyon. The funeral was held this afternoon from â€"her parents‘ home at Quvon, at one o‘clock and inâ€" The Hfaileyburian last week says:â€" ‘A new system whereby a certain perâ€" rentaze of entrance pupils will be adâ€" niffed to high schools without an exâ€" imination was cutlined to the teachers f the inspectorate of South Temisâ€" caming, 4y R,. A. A, McConnell, public chool inspector, at the teachers‘ conâ€" rention at New Liskeard on Friday last. PThe plan..will only. apply to. schools and the larger graded schools n the rural sections, the inspector said, and is being introduced into the inâ€" pz2ctorate as an experiment. Departâ€" nental regulations permit the scheme o be adopted by the Entrance Boards, where it is felt that it will prove adâ€" antageous, and is regarded partly as a measure of economy." FUNERAL OF THE LATE MHKS. C. W. HODGINS AT SHAWVILLE iast week tock pl2 on Thursday of ring to the death on Thursday last "Following a jeath occurred at Tall lied moving to tified with ind had p12CLtOT nental o ‘be a where A1 iE HIGH SCHOOL ENTRANCE WITHOUT THE EXAMINATION it funeral of M leath was nott 1t James s life broth ) a1 t it last said wnship of Fitzroy, in the rleton, on April 8, 1847 ~Mrs. C. W. Hodgins, noted in The Advance rice at Shawville, Que., last. week. In referâ€" i The Ottawa Journal matie past th n~e | Stu Stut bert â€" W his ict and ye ‘geon Lillie son, west. 1t me ars, eks In IT‘S TRUE ECONOM Y 1TO BVUY Huntingdon G Britain 15,000 w« cause they were nedalt _ Order by Mail MONTREAL HAMILTON N OR WINNIPEG _ vaAnctu\®K: _. ... Dack‘s Custom Grade Shoes $11.50 up. "Bond Street‘‘ Shoes, $8.75 plus 25 cents for postage on mail orders. HOES FOR ME N 73 KING ST. W., TORONTO D A C IK SHQES WHEN you buy shoes, by all means consider rice. But go beyond that! [Ehefleputahon of the maker â€"the materials he usesâ€"and the way he uses them! These factors requlate that price! For more than a century, Dack‘s have been making shoes exclusively for men. Only the finest leathers are used. Skilled craftsmen do the work. Styles reflect the latest London vogue. Comfort and fit are inbuilt qualities. And, mark this, Dack shoes give double the wear of ordinary shoes. Send today for new 1932 illustrated Dack catalogue and selfâ€"measurement chart! 1t their mnly d 1] sEVEN A 0e« magistrates not do so the British d that "no rrested and he Debtors on can be 1 AI had the