With Protestants and even Orangeâ€" men winning prizes from time to time at Roman Catholic events in this North, It is only fair that Roman Catholics should have equal chance for prmes at Orangemen‘s events This is why there has been so much interest in the fact that a Roman Catholic won the main prize, an automocbile, at the annual sports day and picnic of Kirkland Lodge L.0.L., Kirkland Lake, held recentiy at Culver Park. J. D. McDougall, timberâ€" man at the Lake Shore Mine, was the lucky winner of the car, with the lucky ticket, 4715; He is a member of the Church of the Holy Name, Kirkland Lake, and will no doubt feel particularâ€" ly pleased to use his "Orange" auto to drive to church,. ROMAN CATHOLIC WINS CAR GIVEN BY KIRKLAND 1L.O.L. Only $2 a Month â€"â€"Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited Saturday JULY 29th is your last chance to take advantage of the wonderful terms of our RANGE OFFER ... Pay Keep up with this everâ€"changing civilization. Come to the Canadian Nazional Exhibition this year and broaden your knowled?c of things worth while. Stroll through the great permanent edigccs. famous for their architectural magnifiâ€" cence, and enjoy the marvellous displays from home and foreign lands. Visit the Motor Show and inspect the advance models for 1934. Admire the equine aristocracy at the Horse Show in the New Million Dollar Horse Palace. Examine the ancient and modern masterpieces in the two Art Galleries. Thrill at the music of the Band of His Majesty‘s Scots Guards and thirty other bands. See the gorgeous, glamorous, glittering pageant ‘"Montezuma"‘ where the Spanish adventurers discover and besiege the ancient empire of the Aztecs. Stand along the lawns that slope gently to Lake Ontario‘s shores and watch the world‘s championship Marathon swims. Experience the thrill of a lifetime at the world‘s professional championship sculling races and other interâ€" national competitions afloat and ashore. Be one of the thousands of happy, carefree people on a mileâ€"long midway. The world‘s largest annual Exposition offers fourteen days and nights (except Sundays) of education and inexpensive recreation for everyone regardless o age orf sex. Free descriptive folders will be forwarded promptly upon request. Exceptional excursion rates arrangedâ€"consult local agents, Railways, Steamships, Motor Coaches. WM. INGLIS. Presigent. H. W. WATERS, General Manazger, Controlling and Opcrating Northern Ontario Power Company Limited Northern Qucbec Power Company Limited Saving Pennies to Squander the Pounds An analysis of the above official reâ€" cord shows the result of our chanceâ€" taking system in forest protection and it is worthy of note that the chances were taken at the expense of the peoâ€" ple‘s property. Ontaric‘s forests belong to the people, to the ordinary taxpayers. We paid out for extra fire fighting over a third of a million dollars. Fires were brought under control finally but under heavy handicaps, and consequent heavy losses. We gained nothing but we lost sime valuable forest wealth. We tried locking the door after the horse was stclen. To place the horse back in the stable by planting would cost over $6.â€" 000,000, or the tctal outlay on Ontario‘s forest fire protection bill for the past three years, and in addition a further loss of over half a century of forest growth. h ‘"The total area burned over was 679,â€" 021 acres. Of this tota! 454,665 acres or sixtyâ€"six per cent. were in the Hudson Inspectorate; the greater portion of this area was burned in six fires. A considerable of the burned area is a direct result of the reduction in staff. Of the six fires, responsible for most of the area burned, it was not p;ssible to place men and equipment on three of these until some days after they were discovered and no men at all were placed on another. Under ordinâ€" ary conditions of staff these fires could have been controlled they were first ,discovered. _ While reduction in staff enabled a â€"saving in ordinary pay roll the extra cost of fighting these fires more than equalled this saving." We had our lesson in gambling in 1929,. We All felt the pinch of the years which have followed, but have we learned our lesson? Ithink not. In the realm of forest conservation we gambled on the b\veather in the spring ¢f 1932 and our forests paid the price oï¬ "economy." The annual report of the Ontario Department of Lands and Forests for 1932 tells the story succinctâ€" ly. "A reduction in staff enabled a deâ€" crease in the amount of pay roll. Only such equipment was purchased as was recessary in actual fire fighting and no improvement work carried out which cculd be avoided. As a result of this there is now much equipment which must he replaced immediately if stock is to be kept up, and improvement work which would increase efficiency and eventually reduce timber losses and fire fighting costs is still further behind." "The total expenditure for forest fire protection for the year was $1,675,938.96, a reduction of $471,984.53 from 1931. (Written by Gordon M. Dallyn, in The Issustrated Forest and Outdoors, the organ of the Canadian Forestry Association). A discussion of Ontario Forest Wealth, the Danger of Forest Fires and ‘some Other Allied Matters of the Day. In the Live Stock Pavilion at the ho on Canadian National Exhibition, there Perth Expositor:â€"If there is any luck accommodation for 2000 head of cattle | in edd numbers, it is comforting to reâ€" 1500 sheep and 1200 swine. â€"â€" fiect that 1933 has four of them. As one of Ontaric‘s pioneer district foresters I can safely state without fear of contradiction that one trained forest fire ranger is on the average worth ten untrained men on the firing line. The question too, of transporting men of feeding and handling them are all imâ€" portant factors. The day of employing unskilled labsur to safeguard Ontario‘s wood industries, second only to agriculâ€" in importance, has long since passâ€" ed into the limbo of the disastrous past. The mayor of London, Ont., refused to sign certain cheques for the board of education, so the board gave the city treasurer power to do the signing. Reâ€" ports of the affair say the mayor was "relieved of his duties." When a man working by the day gets used that way they say he got fired.â€"Stratford Beaâ€" Toronto Telegram: Fort Colborne reports that twoa of, its largest indusâ€" tries have resumed operations. â€"Conâ€" struction work is going ahead on a large scale in Montreal. Real estate is becoming more active in Toronto. Wage increases are reported from variâ€" ous parts of the country. Prices generâ€" ally are increasing. Despite doleful news anent the World Economic Conâ€" ference, the depressicn appears to be on the wane. The improvement first notâ€" ed in business conditions in the late spring has continued to Gevelop. It has become more than a mere filash in the pan. Unemplcyment has by no means vanished, but offcial statistics show that it is diminishing. Condiâ€" tions in the rural districts are also scmewhat better. All the good news is act confined to stock market quotations. Robinson Crusoe, Defoe tells us, reâ€" moved his cloths on . the island, swam ocut naked to the wrecked ship, and there "went to the bread rsom and fillâ€" ed my pockets with biscuits." Mr. Pick= wick, when about ready to retire in the Great White Horse Inn, remembered that he had left his watch downstairs, and went down to get it. Becoming corfused in the labyrinthine passages of the inn, he blundered by mistake into a female guest‘s room, where, Dickens relates, preparing for bed, he began by putting on his night cap. Enjoying the use of pockets when one has no clothes on and, at will, putting on a garment which has been left in a distant room, are two acâ€" complishments little short of miracuâ€" lous which nudists ought to master. They would come in mighty handy in emergencies. We are basking in the hope that tourists will visit us this summer. Will they come to a smokeâ€"ridden country? For you will have smoke, of that there is no dsubt: Our records of the past show us very plainly that when the rangers are not on the job to stop fires at their incipient stage we have large expensive fires and a smoke ridden country. Have we forgotten that we have paid out over a hundredâ€"thousand dollars to put cut cne fire which got headway; this before the lookout systetm had ‘been established in the area.. Yet many of our lookout towers will be unmanned this year "to save expense." Ontario reaps a harvest of some $80,000,000 a year from tourists, a large percentage of whom come to Onâ€" tario to enjoy the great outdoors, to fish, to hunt, to delight in the woodland scenery. Reports of dangerous, fire outbreaks soon spread. Our tourists will decide, as they did in days of yore, to stay at home or go elsewhere where they have at least some guarantee of freedom from danger and smoke. Is this sane financing? We had a providenital spring but recards show that providential springs are followed by heavy hazards during the summer; August being a favourite time for fire outbreaks. Have we so socn forgotten Haileyâ€" bury? Have we forgotten the trainâ€" loads of clothes we sent to families who had lost all in forest fires in the years gone by? Have we forgotten those who paid the price of our former haphazard methods of protection? And in the meantime we are adding fire rangers to our unemployed, to our list of dole receivers, triedâ€"men, with years of training and experience in the new highlyâ€"organized and efficient proâ€" tection system, men who have served us well in the past and sweated to save our forest heritage. Some Good Tricks for the Nudists and Some Others SIGNS THAT DEPRESSION ~IS NOW ON THE RETREAT Not content with this coutcome of "economy" the season ol 1993 with a further cut in the grant 1 est fire protection, a matter of $800,000,. less than was spent last The 1931 staff has been reduced by rangers. in other words we are gambiâ€" ing on a subnormal fire year, in spite of the fact that for the past four conâ€" secutive years we have paid out more than $1,.200,000, for extra fire fighting alone. Much of this money could have been saved, expensive fires prevented and timber kept green if this money had been available in time to be spent wisely in preventative improtements * from emergency funds. This year, boats must be laid up, necessary imâ€" provements and equipment must wait, three air bases are closed, towers will be unmanned. In other words cur forâ€" ests are at the mercy of the weather. (From The Sudbury Star) Although nudists may be pr3of against embarrassment, they are unâ€" doubtedly more or less inconvenienceâ€" ed at times by their‘ lack of clothing. Daniel Defoe and Charles Dickens, we think, must have had them in mind when they recounted certain ingenious deeds of their heroes. and necessary rangers, emergency measures are always expensive. Perâ€" manent foundations cannot be built from emergency funds. This year, "RELIEVED OF HIS DUTIES" To you golfers I enjoy saying that the Haileybury course is cne beautiful green velvet of excellence. Those Hailâ€" eyburians deserve a great hand for the way they have gotten behind this and made of it the magnificent course that it is today. L bid@y AV iss NAAAE + You know after all you can‘t be’t the boostâ€"that pat on the backâ€"that one Northerner gives another. fishing trip some soft evening when sure of black filies, but, does it need a soft evening to make one wild? The following letter was received last week from a local citizen, an oldâ€"timer of the North, who points the better way to thoss who are looking for the "wild," the "woolly" and the "sensational" in this country:â€" ‘Trip to Noranda, Quebec; the road is the old one to North Temiskaming and thence a remarkable drive over smocth roads to Rouyn. The Noranda hotel will see to the rest. From Noranda there is good driving to Amos, Quebec. ‘Trip to Kapuskasing and even on to Hearstâ€"gocod fishing back in those lakes. ~The hotel at Kapuskasing would be The Inn. There are a lot of places to go all around us which motorists from the scuth come hundreds of miles to see. You no duubt have observed some of them shooting by with a wild eye on the rcad and the left one on you. Thin:t what they are going to tell when their vacation is done, and yet we take it all as matter of fact. By the way about that party who went North, I expect them here shortly and if ‘not wild‘, I‘m considering a wee Editor Porcupine.Advancs, Timmins, Ontario. Tourist Missed Much of Interest by Secking Only the Sensaticnal, Sugâ€" gests Local Citizen, Who Points a Moral. My dear Editor:â€"This week a motorâ€" ist from across the border approacned me in Haileybury and asked me whére his party could go where it was "wild." He suggested that he had always known Canada as alluring but now he wanted to see the wild where it was really wild. I thcught of springing that old one of "what makes the wild cat wild," but when I considered he was very much in earnest I tried as best I could to get down to business. N>, he did not conâ€" sider motoring into Rouyn. or Timmins; even to Kirkland Lake, where they adâ€" vertise Crystal Beach as ‘next to Heaven‘ did nst arouse him. In any event I got them started north to Cochâ€" rane and thence rail to James Bay. Here are some weekâ€"end trips for those who love motsring; the roads in each instance are excellent and the accommcedations all one could ask for any place:â€" Only one name was placed in nominâ€" ation before the town clerk at Ccbalt when nominations were called to fill the vacancy on the town council at Cobalt left vacant by the resignation of Counâ€" cillor A. W. Jeffries. ere were three candidates defeated in the last electi>n who could have been given the post without an election, but each in turn refused the offer. At the nominations P,. H. Hassett, Cobalt taxiâ€"driver, was the only one nominated and he has agreed to act for the balance of the year. Wanted to Go Where the North is "Wild" For instance in going south how often do we try to reach the farthest point towards Toronto we can get, knowing full well it is a twoâ€"day journey. We don‘t stop to consider the Haileybury hotel has recently reduced its rates and under Mr. Salmon, recently with the Empire hotel, is furnishing as nice acâ€" commodations, and especially meals, as you can procure between Timmins and Toronto. There is a place to stop overâ€" night. Then say you refuse the hotel, the tourist quarters at New Liskeard that front the lake are especially atâ€" tractive. Think, for instance, of leavâ€" ing here in the morning, arriving Hailâ€" eybury about ncon, giving attention to that greenâ€"jeweled golf course (and I tell you it is in beautiful shape), taking a dip in the lake, getting a good night‘s rest, another early dip and on to Toâ€" ronto. There is a boost for a near neighbour of oursâ€"and I recommend Haileybury with the spirit of a yelling collegiate. I merely mention this as an object lesson forgetting something in Oour minds when we start a trip. Now the American missed all that impressive and shall I say magnificent drive through the Ferguson highway, looking for something wild, and it seems perâ€" haps that we are apt to overl0ok in taking motor trips what naturally lies all about us. . NEW TOWN COUNCILLOR HAS BEEN ELECTED AT COBALT New Rates Room and Board $36.0G per month. ‘Trip (to Haileybury, golf, boating, HOTEL First Ave., Schumacher You will be pleased with the oMs, MEALS AND SERVICE Meals from 30c up Timmins, July 20th, 1933 "Faced with this competition other exporting countries have had to curtail their exports and in some cases even their reduced exports have been possible only through a general lowering of the standard of living of the workers in their timber industries," he said. Hopes for Satisfactory Solution "It is cur hope, however, that this conference may arrive at some satisâ€" factory solution of the problem and that concerted action may bring about a readjustment of the supply and de â€" mand.. Our task is to restore prices to a level which is fair to boeth producers and consumers." But, besides these wellâ€"known minerâ€" als that we usually think of, I want to tell you something of a wide range of cther materials, just as truly minerals as gold or silver. Many of these when regarded as assets for the future develâ€" cpment of Canada, to provide the needs of the larger population which some day we must surely have, may be desâ€" tined to take a place in our national life of even greater importance than some of the better known minerals to which I have referred. These materiâ€" als may be called industrial minerals. To mention a few as examples, asbesâ€" tos, arsenic, barite, bituminous or tar sands, clays, diatomite, feldspar, fluorâ€" spar, gypsum, magnesite, mica, moly â€" bdenum, nepheline source of aluminum, salt, silica, scapstcne and talc, and these are but a few. Many of them are whclly undeveloped; of the extent and qualities of many we know as yet but little. Unlike gold, which, after all, is a metal an arbitrary value placâ€" ed it by the will of man, these minerals are essential factors in the everyday requirements of modern civilâ€" ized life, and the economic standing and prosperity of a nation are in close relation to the extent to which it is possessed of these raw materials. No Regard for Cost He pointed out that production had more than doubled in the Soviet Union between 1928 and 1931. Russian timâ€" ber was sold without regard to cost of production. The Russian timber workâ€" ers must accept conditions and wages laid down by a state which is in a posi~ tion to fix these wages and conditions at a scale necessary to enable the stateâ€" ecntrolled industry to sell its product on foreign markets. The gold mining industry is one of the brightest spots. There has been no in our great gold camps; prospecting has been active, new disâ€" coveries have been made:; new properâ€" ties have been brought into production; the output of our gold mines has inâ€" creased, until this year, a wellâ€"kn>wn authority has predicted that our gold production will reach a value of over . With Canadian gold mines receiving over $30 an ounce for their gold compared with the former stanâ€" dard value of $20.67, and possibilities that the economic adjustment of the world‘s financial structure may mean a permanent increase in the value of gold, the future of our Canadian gold mining industry is indeed satisfactory. Our silver mining industry is also stagâ€" ing a comeback, the value of silver has increased, it is n#°t unlikely that silver may take its part in world financial readjustment. With reserves in Cobalt and British Columbia, and new and important .discoveries in the Great Bear Lake district, we are in an excellent position to take advantage of any favâ€" ourable situation in the demand for silver. At ‘the World Economic Conference in London, a strong protest was voiced by Hon. E. N. Rhodes, Canadian Minâ€" ister of Finance, who is a former Preâ€" mier of Nova Scotia, against the acâ€" ticn of Russia in building up huge timber production by cheap labour and dumping it on the world markets to the severe disadvantage of timber producers who are still endeavouring to protect their capital and give their workers a living wage. Mr. Rhodes declared in the Marketing Committe of the World Economic Conference that if the supply is not breught into line with the deâ€" mand, Canada will be forced to ask the United Kingdom to take steps to keep its guarantee that timber shall nct be sold in the British market at prices which frustrate the conduct of normal trade. Optimistic Outlook on Mining Industry Man‘s first requirement after food is shelter. In various sections of the country we have abundance stone, sandstones and granites in the Maritimes, granties, limestones and marbles in Quebec and Ontario, a parâ€" ticularly fine limestone in Manitoba, other granites in British C#lumbia and a fin»s white stone known as andesite on the British Columbia cOast. It may not be many years before Canadian iron ore is used in making steel work. encouraging outlook on the possiliiiities of the mineral wealth of Canada. Here is whal "Agricultural and Industrial Progress in Canada" has to say along this line:â€" s The ward minerals conjures up in the minds of most of us such wellâ€" known metals as gold, silver, copper. nicke!, zine and lead. then is Canada‘s position " in this respect? Must Stop Dumping of Russian Lumber If we prefer brick walls we have the necessary clays in every province, as well as for tile for partitions. Hor. E. N. Rhodes Tells World Econoâ€" mic Congress that Russia‘s Slave Stype of Labour is Detrimental and Unfair. In the buildings in most of our cities and towns ysu can see examples of the us> of these stones. "Agricuiltural and Industrial Progress Qucting Russian figures, Mr. Rhodes showed that production in the Soviet Union had risen from 10,800,000 cubic metres in 1926 to 23,500,000 in 1931. "The United Kingdom," declared the Canadian, ‘"is the largest timber imâ€" porting country and has undertaken by agreement that timber shall not be sold in its markets at prices which frustrate the conduct of normal trade. "The United Kingdom will be asked to implement this undertaking should Canada be compelled to meet unfair competition in that markets It is. our hope, however, that ‘this conference may arrive at some satisfactory solution of the problem and that concerted acâ€" ticon may bring about a readjustment of supply and demand. . Committee Appointed â€"â€".â€"., .â€" hewn : The committee on the suggestion of | and wo Mr. Rhodes appointed a subâ€"committee | devise â€": to consider the timber situation, on | guarant which ‘the Soviet Union is represented.|the exp Other members are Canada, Czechoâ€" gulated. "Our task is to restore prices to a level which is fair to both producers and consumers. When this is accomâ€" plished ~revival of purchasing power among the timber producers will make them once more valuable customers for the products of cther industries." These Healthy Triplets Were Fed from Birth on EAGLE BRAND! RS. C. H. WILLIAMS, Box 81, Pennant, Sask., the proud mother of these healthy triplets, writes:; "These triplets were fed from birth on Eagle Brand Milk and are now a wonderful picture of health. The other day two Doctors drove over a hundred miles across the Prairie and came to the door and asked to see the Eagle Brand triplets. Everyone remarks on how healthy and fine they are and I cannot sptak too highly of your wonderful product." Insist on Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. When substitutes are offered you, it is seldom in a spirit of service.: Guaranteed by W. K. Kellogg. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. W. K. Kellogg originated corn flakes â€" and for more than 25 years Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes have been the standard of quality and value. The finest, freshest flakes you can buy. With a flavor no others have. | THE QORIGINAL! Miliions use Rinso .in tub, washer and dishpan «fos * 4 4 #€ * ® *4 #e * #+ * #0 @ #* ® #* L 0 * .00.00. #* * . o * #* * # * .0 * *s o * *4 6 *4, slovakia, Finland, France, Italy, Poland. Roumania, Sweden. It ‘will consider hewn and sawn timbers "of all â€"kinds and wood puln. It will endeavour to devise a system of coâ€"operation and guarantees, whereby the production of the exporting countriecs would be reâ€" 92 2%a, 0**s¢ 04 ©a29, % + 00 * L 0 4 # we 4. .0. .0 ‘6* * se * 4 *4 * © ## * 4 *4 * © #4 % #* * @ ® 46 #4 * * *4 * 4 *4 o. _ o* * * 4 * 00. w * *4 * % $4 =*, .. 27 Colombus Avenue Timmins 22â€"30Dp Leaving Timthins at 9 a.m. for Wawaitin Falls Leaving Timmins at 2 p.m. for Sandy Falls SPECIAL TRIPS MAY BE ARRANGED Name The Borden Co,. Limited, Yardley Housec, Toronto, Ont. Please sond me new edition of "Bab y‘a Wolfare," _ containing feeding |schedule, spictures c and historics of Eagle Brand babies. Prov. Addross If you cannot nurse your baby, try Eagle Brand Milk. Simple to use. Y ou will find the directions on every : label. We would like to send you the new 84 page edition of "Baby‘s Weljare." It gives direcâ€" tions for fecding and children‘s care and. has pictures and life storics of many Eagle Brand babies. J. CLOUTIER PHONE 165â€"B On the Mattagami i 3 128