©$9§009009999888 0898008800 ¢§¢ e Try The Advance Want Ad ATTEMPTING TO MAKE FORD , AUTONNTO AN AIRSHIP GOLD R.ANGE The â€" CN,P.C. Review, â€" published monthiy in the interests of employees HOTEL I of the Canada Northern Power Cornorâ€" You will be pleased with the ROOMS, MEALS AND SERVICE HERE New Rates Room and Board $36.00 per month. First Ave., Schumacher » you he GIYVING o RECEIVING Meals from 30¢ up Which are the best times toDRINK FOOD ? ue w » e (4 PnA cA n OF CA YA DA The independent, comfortable manâ€"able to enjoy life and freedom‘ with a guaranteed income? For a very small amount each month you can make the future secure and free from worry, your share of the earnings of the company swelling your investment under the Mutual plan. Write for booklets and particulars of this Pension Policy for yourself. _ Pension policies for women are also available. TODAY you are writing your ownlife story .. . which man will you be? The "poor old chap" who has seen better days, depending on relatives or strangers, There are ten good times for drinking Fry‘s Cocoa. One of the best of these is for breakjfast. Head Oflice: WATERLOO, ONT. $9.55 per month saved from age 30 will provide a pension of $50 per month for life at age 65. Annual dividends may be used to reduce the premiumâ€"paying period or inâ€" crease the pension. Pensions can also start at 50, 55 or 60. Established 1869 s s u ra n ce o m p a n y ements The next regular meeting of the Timâ€" mins town council will be held on Mcnâ€" day. September 25th. "Scott Elliot is evidently under a misapprehension as to the use to which his Pord 8 can be put for it is reported that on a recent trip to Timmins he atâ€" tempted to take to the air. His flight was short, however, being no longer than the distance from the centre of the road to the ditch. However, the craft settled gently and a passing truck was able to set her on her way again. Scott will have to build wings for his boat if he wants to use it as an aeroâ€" plane." lowing The â€" CN,P.C. Review, â€" published monthiy in the interests of employees of the Canada Northern Power Corporâ€" aticn, in its current issue has the folâ€" Address Age N ame I am interested in your Pension Policy to help me become indeâ€" pendent. 228¢ 65 294 Cash Prizes are being offered for arranging in what is found to be the order of popularity, the Ten Uses mentioned later for serving Fry‘s Cocoa as a beverage. ENJOY FRY‘S AND ENTER THE CONTEST TODAY OU know how nourishing milk is alone. With the addition of Fry‘s Cocoa it is 45% more so. But that isn‘t the only reason why wise mothers give Fry‘s to their children. Children like the chocolaty flavour so well that they take more milk and profit more from it when given in the form of Fry‘s Cocoa. Fry‘s is easily digested, and provides an abundance of that erfra nourishâ€" ment that all children need for growth and to help them resist colds and sickness. Fry‘s Cocoa is the most economical foodâ€"drink vou can buy. ENTER THIS $2,500.00 FRY CONTEST King George Mounted King George on a white horse and a guard carrying a Union Jack topped a In 1929 this young Prenchâ€"Canadian woman, whose grey eyes smile as she chats, made a cake for another brother who was being married. The cake was 4i feet high and weighed 68 pounds. It took her three weeks to make itâ€" and she had to refuse an offer of $250 by a Winnipeg man for it, because it was "for my brother‘s wedding celebraâ€" tion." A friend of The Advance has sent in a clipping from The Toronto Mail and Empire giving Kathnerine Kyle‘s referâ€" ence to the "celebration cakes" made by Miss Bertha Gaston, now a nurse in Toronto, but formerly a resident of Hanmer and a typical girl of the North. Miss Gaston made the celebration cake for the firemen‘s demonstration at Kirkland Lake last year. "Celebration cake" making is Miss Gaston‘s hobby, and it is a compliment to The Mail and Eimnpire and to the readers of that paper that so much space is given to referâ€" ence to Miss Gaston and her able talent at her pleasing hobby. The compliment to The Mail and Empire and to the readers of that paper rests in the fact that the article about Miss Gaston takes up more space than ever allotted by the same newspaper to such a thing as flagâ€"pole sitting, for instance. To The Advance it seems that the gifts shown by Miss Gaston are far more inâ€" teresting, as wel l as immeasurably more sensible, than some of the soâ€" called newspapers. MHere is Katherine Kyle‘s article:â€" Celebration Cakes Creative Hobby of Miss Bertha Gaston Knowing the number of raisins and silver balls that go nto the making of a cake add to its interest, says Miss Bertha Gaston, 1100A Yonge streetâ€" who makes cakes as a hobby and does nursing as her usual vocation. Winâ€" ning sepcial prizes at the Canadian Naâ€" Exhibition is becoming a habit with Miss Gaston whose cake, last year, drew from Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, Prime Minister of Canada, the comâ€" ment that it was the most beautiful cake he had ever seen. This year‘s cake, which was in class of itself, has 4,500 silver balls on it and 981 raisins in itâ€"Miss Gaston smilingly declared â€" "and I did not count the currants, but there are thous sands of them." So Miss Gasâ€" ton outdistance other exhibitors, last year, that this year none came forward to compete with herâ€"and small wonâ€" der for the cake made by Miss Gaston would have done most confectioners proud and cause artists to consider sugar as a medium for the plastic and sculptural arts. It is her ninth imâ€" portant cake. Necessity prompted Miss Gaston to make her first cake. She was living in Hanmer in Northern Ontario. Her brother was to be married. He wantâ€" ed a cake, there was no one in town to make it. Bertha volunteered to do. the job and since then she has made "celebration cakes" her hobby. 1 Last December Miss Gaston made a cake for the Toronto Council of the Canadian Legion. It was several storâ€" ies and on the top was a charming figure of the Princess Roeyal. Another cake made for the Roman Catholic Church in Kirkland Lake was raffled and brought $179 for the poor of the parish. in n en it ons mscc 22222 Northern Girl Now | NEVER HAS ‘Famous Cake Maker INDPIGESTION Former HMHanmer CGirl Wins Prize for "Celebration Cake" for Second Year at Toronto Fair. Made Noted Cake for Kirkland Fire Brigade ir 1932, For Supper For Iced Drinks For Breakfast For Lunch For Athletes Disrogaxniing the sbove order entirely write down these Ten Uses in what you think is the order of their popularity in the average bome. A Total of 294 Prizesâ€"Aggregating $2,500.00 The First Prize will go to the person whose arrangeâ€" ment of these Ten Uses comes closest to what is found First Prizc ; .‘ ... . ...« $40 Second:Prizec . . .‘\ .> «.. ~ :$30 Third Prizec . ... .} ... 4‘ .:. 820 Fourth Prizc . .... . ... ; .‘ $15 KFifth Prizec . . , .:; . . .. $O 2 Prizes of $75 each . . . . . $15 3 Prizes of $50 each . . . . . $15 4 Prizes of $5 each . . . . . $10( 20 Prizes of $10 each . . . . $20¢ 60 Prizes of $5 each . . . . . $30 200 Prizes of $2 each . . . . $40¢ Here are the Ten Uses: ‘or Supper For Children at all times ‘or Iced Drinks For a Vacuum Bcottle ‘or Breakfast For a Warming Drink or Lunch For Convalescents ‘or Athletes For a Bedtime Drink HERE ARE THE PRIZES: THE PORCUPTINE ADVANCE TrimMtNS oNTARTO £ * . $30 $25 A inss‘ sls cmLXD s e s a k‘ $10 o cach .. . i . $135 30 each . . .. . $15 23 each . + $10 $10 each . . . . $20 $5 each . . $30 While nursing is the profession of | ; this young woman, who is a graduate There were 2384 children enrolled for of the Chicago General hospital, she|the reâ€"opening of school at the public¢, confesses that she can do most kinds of | separate and high schools at Kirkland work, and on one occasion went so far| Lake. There are 350 pupils at as lay the kitchen floor in the parental land Lake high school. Tcing 2 1â€"2 pounds icing sugar 30 egg whites 30 cunces cornstarch 19 ounces lemon juice 4,300 silver balls The cost of cake, exclusive of Iaboux and fuel, is about $10. i1~â€"2 pound candied Ccherries 1 cunce each of candied pear, plum and peach 1â€"4 pound preserved ginger 1 pound of mixed peel 2 teaspoons each of cloves, cinnaâ€" mon, allspice, salt, nutmeg, maze and pastry spice 1â€"2 teaspoons baking soda 6 cups flour 1â€"2 cup molasses 1â€"2 cup rose water 1â€"2 cup brandy 1â€"2 cup rum 2 teaspocns vanilla 2 teaspoons lemon extract 2 teaspoons almond extract 2 teaspoons raose extract Steam cake for four hours, then bake for one hour. came to her as she worked. Graciousiy Miss Gaston gave th cipe for the cake which she calls "C bination Fruit Cake." While w« not w.ish to frighten any of our res we are compelled to note that she 16 eggs in the cake and 30 eggs ir icing, 144 pounds of sugar and abo pounds of fruit and peel. The ir dients are: shows a cathedr; on the first sto Mass. The bre Body of Our Lotr S. done in s.lver are the chalice. cake made for.the K.rk Brigade for their July 1 tion. The third storey truck, ladder and beill to firemen and the reel sign done in icing sugar storey. The first storey men and horses on gree ing the firemen who wer the ledders and hose. Ecclesiastic in design tby Miss Gaston for t shows a cathedral tower 110 re the chalice. Th istrates a fountain It is, Miss Gaston mpire, ‘"only a sm Ck 64 days to make ) pounds and :s on n4 toen inches acr Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives adaches. P cantrut mpletely restored m 2 pounds butter 2 pounds brown sugar 16 eggs 4 pounds of seeded raisins 2 pounds of Australlan cu 2 pounds Gulf currants 2 pounds stoneless dates i pound almonds blended 1 pound walnut halves 4 rings candied pineapple 1â€"2 pound candied cherries 1 cunce each of candied Fruitâ€"aâ€"#tives make stomach like new Fruit Cake $400 $300 $250 £150 £100 $150 $150 $100 $200 $300 $40)0) onl AY all drug stores wh n th mbo n t( 10 wer incht to the address below. Make as many entri sh on the following basis:â€" 1.lb. tin label good for two entries Vâ€"lb. tin iabel good for one entry two @â€"lb. tin lahels good for one entry work ik M a wn th i judg An »f How to Equal Opportunity for All ble for anvore to know in adva Massor C 1} 10 that and t lot of on th 11 Enter the Contest D1 =] 031 larit MA ently y â€"abus telling him. t Scot [ the ( Nâ€"BORN LADY KNOWS QUITE A LOT OF LANGUAGE M hn« arrangement. The n whose arrangeâ€" on down the lst. pool the necessary case at Kirkland Lake licates that sometimes peoâ€" i@ative tongue is not English e lot of words in the latter iat ordinary people do not it least not before children, ie Berzenski, living not far tomn was charged by George ecretary of the Scotty eral Association, with using > and very obscene language im just what she thought is only a short time ago Springs had a Liberal rally advance what That will only Use your best nning prize you wish but ith Address: NS (Canada) atest Family tribut y. Then fuog and ntrics as jus‘t a few days ago., Gaston asserts that the largest number iny lMyving Canadian. ‘e the rule with the and proudly told of ng the mother of 18 ater. A brother has id one son and anâ€" nmnly three sons and s adopsed another ig Miss Gaston there d members of her ind they have 68 nnection person he said, as she exâ€" art for creating _ was probably inâ€" had nsver made A ‘hein the necessity ituation and found she has just kept rna Ob 31 work." ~She is i girls and nine 1 grandfather, awa, has 343 the fifth genâ€" a few davys ago. * brother beâ€" : lumber and in the foor. ked as govâ€" â€"Indians on Ives use as sht on pie: Torot â€" ' Missionary Astonished at _ Bright Lights at Moosonee The Northern News last week says:â€" "A very quiet wedding was solemnized in Cobalt on Monday, September 4, when Marie Lynch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dunn, of Matachewan, was united in marriage to Clifford Henry McCallum, of Matachewan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander McCallum of California. The ceremony, at wh:ch‘ only the immediate relatives of the bride were present, was perforined byl Rev. Father Frank Sowinsky, of St.! Patrick‘s Church. J. B. and Mrs. Moyâ€" neur, of Matachewan, uncle and aunt of the bride, acted as witnesses. After the ceremony the happy couple left for a short wedding trlp to Montreal, and on their return will reside at uamm-' wan, where Mr. McCallum has mining interests." The claims were staked in July by a syndicate composed of Willlam Moâ€" gridge, Ed. Periand, Alex McLeod and Donald Gauldie. Mallard township is about 110 miles north of Sudbury and lies midway between the scene of minâ€" ing activity in Swavze township and the centre of operations in the Three Duck Lake area. MARRIAGE AT COBALT OF COUPLE FROM MATACHEWAN | in seven hours. To come down to ‘ Moosonee and see the eijectric lights, ‘as he did, made him wonder, he said, whether or not he was seeing things. Terrific problems are encountered *by the missionaries in this field even toâ€" ; day. Canon Griffin‘s "parish" ethbracâ€" ing an immense stretch of country, contains over 906 Indian and Eskimo [converts. Last winter 21 of these families in the interior was found starved to death. Canon Griffin and | his host, Archdeancon J. E. Wocdall, who has spent 32 yvears in mission fields in the North, having come to Canada | by sailboat through the Hudson Straits, both agree that the Indians are now healthier and happier than they were a few years ago. They attribute this to the church, the Mounted Poiice now stationed at Moose Factory and the government doctor, who is also Indian agent." Lt _ § The property comprises 18 claims, covering about 720 acres on the first portage on the Opeepeesway River north of. Opeepeesway Lake, and surâ€" rounds the original discovery of this section. Recent staking in the neighâ€" bourhood of the property has been heavy and more than 100 claims, in a half dozen or more groups, have been recorded along the strike of the find. The gold oceurs in a zone in places 35 feet wide, with several sections averagâ€" ing between $5 and $6 a ton in gold over five foct widths. The property has possibilities in opinion of engineers who have sampled it, of developing as a big low grade proposition. N. A. Timmins, Inc., exploration comâ€" pany owned and controlled by the preâ€" sident of the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines, has undertaken a three months‘ examination of the Mogridgeâ€" McLeodâ€"Ferland property in Mallard township. As the first step in the inâ€" vestigation a gasoline diamond drill was taken from Sudbury to Gogama where its was transâ€"shipped into aeroplanes and moved to the property, a distance of 38 miles. Sudbury Diaâ€" mond Drilling Company has the conâ€" tract. Timmins Company Takes Option on Mallard Claims A despatch some days ago from Iroâ€" quois Falls says:â€"â€""After 27 years of missionary work among the iIndians and Eskimos of the James Bay and Hudson Bay region, Rev. Canon J. T. ard Mrs. Grifin are at Porquis Juncâ€" tion on their way to their former home in Ireland on furlough. Canon Grifâ€" fin‘s impressions of the difference made to the North due to the laying of the railway to Moosonee are interesting. He tells how, in 1906, to get to Moose Factory, near Moosonee, where the Anglican Church has a mission, it was necessary to go in by canve from Misâ€" sanabie, on the C.F.R., near Chapleau. When he went in that year the trip required 18 days. He came out the other day from Moosonee to Cochrane «t sth «tr P P DPA â€"APâ€"AAâ€"AC L PP â€"AL NQ PP â€"AL ALPâ€"ALPâ€"AL C PP PA P P SAAA oAE PP P0 P l C m B #1 Opposite Goldfields Hotel Block TIMMINS $ Km’:lflm mS 75200\)':; ' y IUIED y Ti 4 saullk} INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES REAL ESTATE MHouses aad Lots for Sale on Terms DOMINION BANK BRUILDING The Haileyburian last wéaek says "Mr. and Mrs. Matt Richards and M E. Roy and son, George, of Timmi were in town over the week=end for visit with Mr. and Mrs. John Gutch Meridian avenue Mrs. Roy is M ward therxm to tae in of Northern Canada Jack societic ing Bi send h distributors, Rigo Agencies, Toronto, The latest letter which Jack Miner | Arnold C. Herbert c sion {(B.C.M.S.) at ] son Bay. He says t a number of tags ward, but he adds: still in possession C ones, and they ao n up. â€" However, if yo me a good numbe Picture Tracis, to g« t your dr nuinge Madean Brand Shn Pow r with the signature, . Never sold looss. Onl} plmn}ymm'ked,handy aze bottles powder or tablets. â€" Sole Maclean Brand Stomach Puowder it the remarkable formula of a well known and jusily famous , Stomach Specialist. (‘Tcronto Mail and Empire) Jack Miner and his bird sancti at Kingsville. Ont., are wideliy knc But few may have heard of his w as missionary with the Indians Eskimos of the Far North. For m years he has placed on one leg of e oï¬ the ducks and geese he catches aluminum band engraved on one . with his name and address and on cther side with a verse of Seceript When the natives capture such a | they take the band to the nearest r sionary for interpretation. The n sionary uses the verse as a text on following Sunday, wher natives c from long distances to hear whal means. A Leeds, Eng., man writes: ‘"*For th last 2 years I have been atle to d nothing, and quite thoughkt it was ont a case of time with me,. 1 am feeiin better than 1 have for the last five vears I hope everyone suffering with stomec!l lmuï¬e will give Maciean BrandStamacl Powder a trial." Anyone with stomach trouble now can have the same treatment th teful man hadâ€"in daily use by Eng ish hospitals and doctors for treatia acute stomach trouble, Gastritis, Dys pepsia, Indigestion, Flatulence, Acidit and Heartburn. Jack Miner‘s Bird Tags Collected in the No THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 318T There is Only COne FLYâ€"TO 3327 Common House Fly Spreader of Diseases "Vomit Spots" which } leaves as a byâ€"product of h mastication process, contai numberless virulent disea: germs. Think of this 1 pulsive process whien you se a fly about food on your din ing tableâ€"Use FLYâ€"T O Bible Lesson i him a suppl: THOUGHT HIS STOMACH WCUYLD KilL HIM Feels betier than for 5 years to too great Miner hopt s and other THE E. B. EJ LINTEED®: i avenut sister.‘ PHGNE 112 Residenceâ€"PHONE 138 asteo 750 sheets of soft, aterilized tissue. Als in ‘"Recess‘‘ size for i fixtures Sald by dn grocers v * Rady‘s Whi {:‘WW»M Lo U . 80 TMnal 2 can Indians and Eski Perhaps ‘ to secd tracts; I cost, but MPANY ANADA