Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 3 Aug 1933, 2, p. 3

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This was made ticon by Empire ence in which it United Kingdom any policy of kee ing at any fixed of another nation The declaration ed Kingdom, Ca Zealand, South A Irish Free State Dublin â€" represen matter to his go Empire delega mate restoratiof gold standard. BRITISH EMPIRE AGREES ON CURRENCY STABILITY THURSDAY atcotst 181 i8833 1/ H T3 Like a Shower Excerr ertrer! Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes bhelp you feel cooler all day through. These delicious flakes are so easy to diâ€" gest they don‘t "heat you up." For comf{ort that lasts, enjoy a bowl of Kellogg‘s instead of hot, heavy foods. Breakfast. Iunch, the children‘s evening meal. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. made aitt itive referred iC ‘rnment. called for the ultiâ€" f the international da This letter from Henry Ford describes so clearly and simply the reasons for the remarkable economy of the Ford Nâ€"$8 that it is reprinted here by the Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited signed by Unitâ€" Australia, New and India. The ot sign but the referred the A lady writes to S: car does not cost more refers to my statement of gas than any car we The use of osâ€"Ccy11nders extra fuel consumers. It . multiplied by two. Our 8Bâ€" ordinary 4â€"cylinder engine By reducing four larger explosions into eight smaller ones, we get engine smoothness and quietness. Eightâ€"cylinders indicate the way the gas is used, not the amount., It is just the difference between going upstairs in four long jumps or in eight ordinary steps. Two things use up gasâ€"â€"bad engine design and useless car weight. Besides having an engine that gets a high percentage of power out of the o 6 uols ar o â€"vas‘ n esnt l and chassisâ€"so that nospower Two things use up gasâ€"â€"DAG@CIELLLD LLGGA E.1l NC C SCn 9 Besides having an engine that gets a high percentage fuel, the Ford Vâ€"8 has a light, strong body and chas is wasted in moving excess weight. is wasted in moving excess weight. The only extravagance about the new Ford Vâ€"8 engine is in the building of it. The extravagance is oursâ€"â€"the economy is yours. The whole question of car economy needs clearing up. An economical car gives economy all round. Price, operation, upkeep, all play their part. If "What you save on gas you lose elsewhere, that is not economy. As to upkeep, our dealers say that in recent years the improved quality of Ford cars has cut down their repair business 50 per cent. As to price with quality,â€"â€"judge for yourself. As to economy, here is the record of a stock car three weeks out of the factory: This should ans laed to McDowell Motors Some Good Stories by Whispering Bill To that brave column, "Grab Saimâ€" ples" in The Northern Miner, readers of The Advance are indebted for the following genuine and typical prospecâ€" tors‘ stories, the kind the prospectors themselves enjoy to the limit:â€"â€" Whispering Bill Smith‘s Stories "Whispering Bill Smith has a new story. He says that one of his crew in Hearst township went over to some neighbours and reported back that one of the prospectors there was panning very coarse material. "Why, there were chunks that would not go through a wire fence," sez he. Screering Gold with a Wire Fence Diving f¢or the Lost Peavey, Oneâ€" Story Bocmerangs. Life of the Prospecter. run of 10,054 miles at the rate of 1,000 miles a dayâ€"â€"the Ford 22+ miles per Imperial gallon of gas. Not a drop of water _to the radiator. The oil was changed once in 1,000 miles. should answer a lot of questions. rites to say that she does not understand why an 8â€"cylinder cost more to run than a car with fewer. cylinders. She statement that our Ford Vâ€"8 develops more power on a gallon any car we have made. of 8â€"cylinders does not mean the addition of two or four onsumers. It is not, for example, a 4Aâ€"cylinder engineée y two. ~ Our 3â€"cylinder engine takes the fuel supply Oof an viinder enging and divides it eight ways. And why? + CWEN FRESH â€" FLAVORPERFECT TN ANSWER TO A LADY‘S LETTER Authorized Ford Dealer ~~A~ _ Miok: was a very conmsc.entious workman having let his peavey slip, dived to cover it. Although this may so somewhat like a fairy tale to any who knows the mental processes : the general disregard for "conce property natural to the river dri the general disregard for "~"concern property natural to the river driver, this particular individual dove 14 times and came up each time with a strange peavey. On the 18th trip he recovered his own. Conscientious is right. "The thoughts that occupy a prosâ€" pector after working hours are indicatâ€" ed by a discussion which Bill claims took place at his camp recently,. The talk got around to dynamiting fish and one oldâ€"timer casually remarked that trout would not come up to surface after blasting. Young Bill, who is out with the old man this year learning the mysteries of the prospecting busiâ€" ness, was interested in this trout pheâ€" nomenon and enquired: "They nevet come up?" and the oldâ€"timer said: "Oh, in nine days. But that‘s a long time to wait when you are hungry." It is safe to enquire too closely into the deâ€" tails of any oldâ€"timer‘s tale. . Often there is a sting in the thing for the curious. "Speaking cof Bill Smith and fish reâ€" minds the writer that the Cobalter spent a season in Great Bear Lake and set off an April fool joke that booâ€" meranged on him. At the camp where A. X. Syndicate, Polar Bear and others had established themselves a communiâ€" ty water hole was maintained in the ice of the bay. It was the custom of the cook to go down first thing each morning and draw ‘a couple of pails of water, after breaking the ice. The gang had hopefully put down a fish line in this hole and although they religiâ€" ously examined it every day they never had the luck of catching a fish. So Bill had a bright idea. He got a herring and attached it to the line on the night of March B1st, thinking that the cook would be the first one to test the line in the morning. He anticipated a genâ€" eral camp laugh. "What happened was this. For some reason the cook did nct make his reâ€" gular morning trip to the water hole but an aeroplane pilot strolled down at about 11 am. for some water and Bill, who was putting the finishing touches to the roof of a cabin, kept his eye on the proceedings. The pilot was joined by Fred Failes, of The Northern Miner staff, and the two of them started an uproar about the fish on the line, knowâ€" ing all the time that it was merely a herring. They were concerned that Bill‘s joke should not completely fizzle. While announcing to the world that the fish line had worked at last they fetched up the herring, the pilot cut the tail off, baited the hotk with it and 8 Baisam St. South THT PoORCOCUPINXE ADVAXCE TADAMINS ONTARTO 1d threw the line No sooner had it a huge trout tCc perty lhhas everyin.ng, incilu and Christmas trees, Cert, pectorâ€"and there are fewe than Billâ€"needs a sense 0 done. There was the rain to be conâ€" sidered. the mosquitoes and sand flies and black fles that kept a man from his labours. Then a man had to get his mail, he had to keep in touch with his neighbours, he was kept ashore certain days on account of the wind, trees fell down and broke his axe handle, shovels disappeared with malice aforethought, there were the innumerâ€" able perversities of nature to contend with. Fire, frost, heat, skunks, deer, flles, wind, rain, snow were run into the story. It was quite clear by the time Bill was through with the detailing of the week‘s activities that there was absclutely no time at all for actual prospecting between Monday and Satâ€" urday night. As to Sunday, said he, there was a fellow‘s washing and mendâ€" ing to do. Besides, it was not good business to work on (Sunday, because Mrs. Smith might hear of it,. People might talk, he intimaited. "If a man were condemned to spend his life prospecting he would have a hard time picking out a better partner than Bill, who can made ordinary tasks light and pleasant with his constant humourous interpretations of prosaic events. The bush hasn‘t got him down vet." At Kapuskasing some days ago Wilâ€" fred LaCasse was convicted of fishing with lights, and Magistrate E. R. Tuckâ€" er, of Cochrane, imposed a fine of $10.00 and costs for this breach of the fish and game regulations. There was charge against John Gagnon, of Opasaâ€" tika, not far from Kapuskasing.> Gagâ€" non was charged with trapping without a license. He was found guilty on this charge and a fine of $10.00 and costs was imposed by Magistrate Tucker in dealing with the case. FINED FOR USING LIGHTS IN FISHING NEAR KAPUSKASING Try The Advance Want Advertisement e C:LOr‘ s week the wood to ‘abin to rep Billâ€"nee alons om all come dowtr uni repial iJck onl Prospectors Rush to the Noranda Region R These events continue to attract upâ€" wards of 100.000 spectators. George Flagden, Memphis, Tennesee, lawyer who won the open swim Maraâ€" thon of 15 miles at the Canadian Naâ€" | ational Exhibition last year, is again a | contender this year. George says there I is more money in swimming than there is in the practice of his profession esâ€" pecially since he is a recent graduate with a new "shingle." been content to hol in anticipation of fa1 minin distric 1 Mi1 11 Motr MARATHON SWIM STILL HOLDING ITS POPULARITY ind ind Â¥ Tig 1€ iously olicy 11 ril 12M C i1 p itly There has been a Bi Men secking Gold in the observed." m the Ontarioâ€"Quebec boundary ind beyond*the limits of the Rouyn ag district and through the Amos ict, scores of mining companies prospecting outfits are using pick shovel, dynamite and diamond drill telling effect. ‘The McWatters very in an area which had been for more than ten years. ed an incentive for prospectors to9 er old ground that had been preâ€" ly examined. The results of this y have proven that the early pioâ€" ; of this camp merely blazed the ; for a new generation of prospecâ€" to whom will fail the chief crop AI vula District ari 11 11 Ds has inSslailed SMAIL SAIij)Lâ€" on the latter property. Norâ€" ring Company has a crew workâ€" he old Huronian Belt Company n Boischatel and Rouyn townâ€" vith N. O. Lautton in charge. Troop, in charge of a crew for l interests, is preparing to start 1 drilling on the Thomasâ€"Monâ€" operty north of Routhier Lake. ual, the Quebec Department of s coâ€"operating with the prosâ€" fraternity with a supply of geoâ€" nformation. Two parties are in 1 for the Quebec Government; ty, under Dr. J. E. Hawley, makâ€" urvey of Rouyn township, and . under Dr. J. J. O‘Neill, taking Duparquet territory. xh di 11 in a geological survey of the : property. North of Noranda cew of prospectors are working ontiac group of claims. Near rmn boundary Of the township inity of the McWatters operaâ€" inda Mines Limited, are workâ€" option from Dransfield and hile on the adjoining property, the Kenojevis Mining Comâ€" iamond drilling jprogramme is y for Consolidated Mining and nnes township, adjoining wnship on the east, further p:voting around the McWatâ€" Noranda, with an option on r Thompson claims, Thomas d T. H. Rea, Northern Aerial Exploration ‘ Company and Gold Mines are all engaged ting their respective options. ospecters Gold Company with in Joannes and Bousquet has installed a small samplâ€" adius of five miles of the very of Ed. Horne, several e actively engaged in gold Directly west of Noranda wnlee Gold Mines is diaâ€" z. South of Noranda on ‘, Gold Bar Mines, Ltd., is â€" geological survey of the wen uessed that the Maraâ€" the Canadian National d lose their popularity years were quite misâ€" ear the eighth annual f ten miles for women 11 for men will be held tinue to attract up: rms a small part of ctivity in this area. for many years have old their properties avourable conditions me by the ‘forelock s itheir efforts are been a Bisg Influx orded since the mpared with 993 i like period in LC idt rIse every ur from Norâ€" greater prosâ€" than has been of excitement ording to Ed. district Claims 800,00 cubic t rise every 1€ pI ownships Sudt the 1¢€ pl COUOOHMHRANE HEL.} Lak: S.xXt( said ladder the di on a." on "Jj1gger‘ 1 Lake hospital. on the shsoulds came down that the boy railway detéect ing that lad a him away fr noticed him. man who was on his prop( freight train was arrested charge. It is bt¢ Doalr Lakt 11 ed "When all else faitled Eagle Breoend pulled her throusgh !}" Phone RS. J. MOONEY, 222 East Eighth St., Hamilton, Ont., writes: "Just before my baby was three months old I found I could not satisfactorily nurse her. For almost two months I tried various milks but none agreed with her. I read different times about Eagle Brand, so I Wnn If 11 1o uU l § thor #AL American Beauty Parlour ermanent Qualits at reasonable prices 0 $5.00 $7.50 $10.00 ALL WORK GTARANTEED our onn baby, follow the ands of mothers and try below will bring you full decided to use it. A week showed a difference. Barâ€" bara became contented, would go to sleep after her feeding without any fuss and no vomiting. Now at 7 months she is just average weight, bright, active, and so contented, which means so much to a busy mother of four active children." OFF GOLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile ilson A venue, Timmins END PAIN â€" Soothe by Rubbins in lley H M a Without Calomel mall organ, but it cerâ€" nid babiles tailuilng

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