440480444444 G 4404 4444844844444 44484984 b% 9909 0 9 04 946 90# 04 0# %% 694848 4848484044846 46 Kapuskasing Farm Weekly News Letter Below will be found article No. in the series of weekly letters for ders cf The Advance from ths Domnw ion Experimental Station at Kipu kasing. This Ictter shculd be of pa ticular inferest to readers of The A vance, especial‘y to the seitlers farmers, because it deals in brief w with the work cf the Experimen‘ Farm, indicating some of the ways which the "Farm" is <f value to t country. It may be pointed ou} th the very letters themselves are wee ly evidencses of the value of the E perimental Farm at Kapu:kasing the people of the Norih Country w are engaged in farming or interest in any of the branches of the indust: The Advance has found that the le ters are eagerly read each week n only by the settders and farmers, whom there are many among the re ders of this paper but also by othe who are directly or indirectly intere ted in agriculture, hortisulture, poult and stock. It would surprise sor Something About th« vice Available at t perimental Farm a puskasing. When you feel like a log and your muscles tire easily, it‘s more than likely that wastes that shouldn‘t be in your body are sending out poisons into your blood. At times like these, take a bubbling, bracing glass of Andrews Liver Salt each day till the trouble clears up. Then take an occasional glassâ€"once or twice each weekâ€"and you‘ll stay perfectly fit. Get Andrews now. Small tin, 35¢; Large tin, 60¢c; Extra large bottle, (be. Proprietors, Scott Turner, Ltd., Newcastleâ€"uponâ€"Tyne, Eng. 4* Phone STRIKE MIDNIGHT SHOW CHRISTMAs NIGHT AT 11.30 p.m. PLAYING PREVIEW OF "SHOOT THE Frank Byck WEDNESDAY and THURsSDAY. DECEIT Mascioli Theatre, Schumacher ERIDAY and SATURDAY, DECEMBEEKR MATINEE CHRISTMAS DA\Y "TARZAN AND HIS MATE" SHOW MONDAY, DEC. 23, PLAYVINXG PREVIEW OJ "BOWX TO THEIR LA®T YACHT®~ Timmins the E at K: H OmE in ind ind ults xork nd the i arm ma han For: od uC p1 Kil Th in D hern O i] DP H it l th and > and Quebe idies inclu« > sultable yV and n ial pi AI Availa ‘aad ure d , ndé rd:â€"One of of Mussolini elbarrow load ork on an orâ€" K a maAaAln tudy 11 xperim ecdin ide the inâ€" varieties of llage crops, e mixtures. including lent, bulleâ€" g with reâ€" a lett aent, Â¥Al id i neaning. Sudbury Opposing » »â€"â€"| _ Rocky Shore Route aÂ¥ford n inves improve the cre uskphising @ittention o pay nd WO cluding culturâ€" rtilizers clnance carried 11 Nossib iblishâ€" and k â€"are W 11 farmâ€" th 1 tu the AC rid â€" 11 Organmizations in Sudbur} go on Record as Favour ing the Highway via Oba smm mm cce es en es ce e t e e e CC Ste. Marie ballyhoo an4q are lOoking at the matter in practical and openâ€"mindâ€" ed way. Sudbury‘s solution of the problem is to join the North Bayâ€"Sudâ€" bury route to the route by way Of Cochrane and Hearst, the two branches joining at Oba and then running west. This look like a plan that might be acceptable to all the North with the possible exception of Sault Ste. Marie. Even. in regard to Sault_Ste. Mariec, it is difficult to know what the people there really think apart from the ballyâ€" hoo. When it is noted how even disâ€" tant towns and cities have been mesâ€" meri.zed by the Sault ballyhoo, it is easy to see that right at the source of the ballyhoo the pressure must be enormâ€" ous. If all could get away from this manufactured ballyhoo it might be well for all. Last week there was a joint meeting at Sudbury of the city board of trade. the Lions Club, the Rotary Club, and. other interested citizens. The meeting unanimously passeq a resolution advoâ€" cating connecting the highway Iron Bridge to Chapleau and constructâ€" ing a highway to Oba and Hornepayne to Schreiber, instead of via Sault Ste. Marie, Michipicoten and White River, and completion of the Sault Ste. Marieâ€" Ranger Lake link to glve the Sault A short connecting link to the highway. On Friday evening last a joint meeting of ‘the Chapleau town Founcil and board of trade ang interested citizens unanimously passed a similar resoluâ€" tion which will be forwarded to all cabinet ministers, provincial and Doâ€" minion. As the meetings at Sudbury and Chapleau recognized, the Dominâ€" ion government has baulked at the cost Oof building a road over and through the rocky shoreline of Lake Superior and has advised the provinâ€" cial government either to find a cheaper and better route or to produce some ev.dence that the Lake Superior route is not too prohibitively expensive to construct. The route backed by the Sudbury area is called the central route. This central route counts on there being two branches of the Transâ€"Canada highway through the North. One of these routes would be by way of the Ferguâ€" son highway to Cochrane, Hearst and West. The other would be from North Bay to Sudbury, Chapleau, etec. The two branches would join at Oba and proceed west. An illuminating comment is made by The Sudbury Star in reporting the Sudbury ang Chapleau mseetings referâ€" 82 argument in 1avou is that it serves t At present in the of Aubrey Falls t of 12,134 people ter of fact to The Advance it seems that the Ferguson highway route is the logical one and that any connections for Sault Ste. Marie or other places are for the province rather than the Doâ€" m.nmion to make. Further comment by The Sugdbury Star in its report is as follows:â€"*"Tns mnpting the cost wns and cities aken off the hy e. Marie ballyvh : of cthe ‘Transâ€"C y cf the rocky n perior has roused ult Ste. Marie t In first reports of South Sea tragedy, Mrs.: outside rude s#one hut in the Galapagos Is her stepson. The tragedy may remain which will scon leave from Los Angeles, a railw nly 1,124 peopie. ‘ proof is needed. nâ€"White Riverâ€"SC romic., for in the The that the Dsominion C efused to approve th Transâ€"Canada high rocky north shore C is roused towns othe Marie to the folly people Sau Star in reporlIng tThe Chapleau meetings referâ€" Staur says:â€"*"The greatest avour of the central route es the greater population. the area north and west lls there is a population ple to be served by the reas in the entire stretch Sault and Schreiber there 4 people. This is proof ostly rocky road ies :n the North hypnotic effect of 18 V up the ettled . ONTARIO bet tc. : Theithe re DOba and|thin o benefit made by| Wha ing the| mas t gs referâ€"| Wood 1 greatest | OCCasic varrta i fUlly C Mic} Sault Lak: that Y C central roulte wilil give the area highway connection Lakehead much more quickly than would. the Lake which is almost twice th than would. the Lake Shore route, which is almost twice the distance away. Through the central â€"route moâ€" torists are given a Northern Ontario loop which will take them through the clay belt, the gold fields of Kirkland Lake and Porcupine, the agricultural area between Cochrane and Hearst, then back south through Oba, and Chapleau through some of the most beautiful country in the North, and thence to Southern Ontario or the Uniteq States via the Sault or Sudbury and North Bay. According to lumberâ€" men, nissionaries, prospectors and men, nissionaries, prospectors and others who know the country intimateâ€" ly. the Iron Bridgeâ€"Chapleau link passes through some of the most beauâ€" tiful country imaginable." Christmas Trees Do Not Destroy Forests 1 As usual each year at this time, there has been reference made in more than One quarter to the supposed danger to the forests from the Christmas tree busine:s. "Nothing o it," the experts say. Here is the way Ellwood Wilson Expert Says There is No Need to Worry About Christmas Tree Business Hurting Forests. say. Here is the way Ellwood Wilson reviews the question :â€" Don‘t Worry About Santa Claus Doâ€" storying our Forests (By Ellwood Wilson.) With each recurring Christmas seaâ€" son the children, the parents and the farmers, in some sections, think of trges. The children with delightful anticipation, the parents with thoughts of a balanced budget and the farmer with his Christmas budget in mind too. Occasionally some public spirited citiâ€" zen takes pencil and paper and figures the number of families in the country and multiplies this by one to get the number of trees used and writes to the papers about the forest dGevastation. Maybe he asks some forester friend what can ‘be dons to stop it and gets Te wi‘l serve 723 people between iu and Oba, 268 people in th district and 5,621 pe ly on bounC H Margaret Wittmer is pictured lands. On platform above i _ a mystery until expedition out th its the usn on.t can at C nd oute will ult ind 30t n > vhich is 11 the real story? U ndustry is one of z ones. The writ Oba art 0 > done to stc perhaps, tha e too rank g bu th In s to be ore of the greatâ€" ; :n Ontario and which population of 1,400. The W Balsam fir ind more demanded beâ€" i lsoking. has a delightâ€" holds its nsedles far spruce. which begins to lles after â€"twentyâ€"fours famil s and 5,621 peop‘.e in ea, West of Horneâ€" thin 40 miles of the n River gold area. Ts und on of 3,243 at p world; it wiil s area tributary nder q4evelopms« land dema ory? The Christâ€" one of the minor ae writer has had i to study it careâ€" f the internationâ€" it is. . In the first ly has a tree, unâ€" second place very i the forest. The and wants trees pe. with branches J€, willh branchies he same length v in the open deâ€" Almost all the open stands anc ave szseded in anc n of pasture 0: meet the de s of the north ut 13" miles re connect . Hears jleting both th il it helps wth and lin iple Long Lac with the and easiliy it prCc Chap Th« anC O shipped Townsh Cne tree f1or i The revenue run to $50,000 additional am ing and frei from their ex) with prices i though I haj twentyâ€"five c walks nesar C States good t: five cents to and up, depit I had a fores are of them devastat St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal:â€"The Kitchener Daily Record wants to know why it is so difficult to get a small boy into the bathtub and so hard to get him out of the swimming pool. That‘s easy. He‘s crdsred into the bathtub but not into the pool. rather that ths sents to other the farmers Merry Christm here AarmCrs them. of land abor o 2t hin ly 111 takC i W ind mei; isand alning each tas tien tiss tiasn tiewtiasr § i k Â¥$ 91 Ir > it th 1l Canada Northern Power Corporation Ltd. Chiri XpP C Un ht iAl ‘ï¬#ï¬gd #fl#ï¬bbiԠe s ie and h Q%; * up I] } NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED *A is a very small r The ‘Townships, en acres, roughly. e farmers might here would be an for cutting truckâ€" hich would come I am not familiar nadian cities, alâ€" on â€" trees marked 1t NNA Di * CACII jranch h g ‘enis fTor each mall business to hold the e shipped as ia from this n possible to the â€" number run. for the trees â€" marked cn the sideâ€" In‘ the from seventyâ€" r and a half orm and size. ind s exposed for enjoying â€"the heir presents uches ‘of Oone for forest eyve; rejoice bringing preâ€" and making estry minded. dollar pe! i nice busiâ€" s who havet oun aps Decembt h* stumi Imal sand * stump hauling d CArS, ut 2400 s would hundred rv small LT cutting. ynships States reading foresta 9 thick pt all th can b nothin a â€"â€"th rowin X mMA There‘s no need to overâ€"spend this Christmas: yet you can give everyone on your list the very kind of gift you would like to receive yourself: Electrical gifts, the kind that keep on giving. There is an endless choice of apâ€" propriate individual gifts: irons, toasters, petr‘â€" colators, bridge lamps, table lamps, boudoir lamps, heating pads, air heaters, to name a Yew. Or you can choose a radio, range, refriâ€" gerator, washing machine or vacuum cleaner. as 2 group or family gift. Attractive prices, Individual gifts from $1.00 up. Con A | All. oid bv h1 REMEMBER TO sSIGN THE NEW LIGHTING CONTRACT In last Thursday issue The Advance reminded readers that to secure the benefit of the new lighting rates given by the power company it was necessary to sign the new ccontract forms. These contract forms are now available at the office of the company here and it would be well to secure one of the forms and sign it right away and return it to the power company office so that you may receive the benefit of the reduced rate from the beginning of the year when it goes into force. Last time the rates were reduced many neglected to sign the new contracts and so there was deâ€" lay in their getting the reduced rates. This time customers of the power comâ€" pany should see that they sign the contracts now and so have the benefit of the reduced rates from the start. Controlling and Operating "The glorious privilege of being independent " A W. Stock, Branch Manager REPRESENTATIVES J. E. Sullivan P. A. Macaulay Geo. Gibbons much, and even more, t and women today as it di particularly FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE 150,000 Canadians are using Mutual Life of Canada plans to help them become independent in the years that lie ahead and every day hundreds of new names are being added to our lists of policyholders. Over $13,000,000 has been paid to Canadians by the Mutual Life of Canada dutring 1934 under contracts. Burns wrote these lines but INDEPENDENCE means as The Mutual Life has a sound, practical, methodical plan which will help YOU to become independent hnancially. To those interested we shall be pleased to send without obligation a set of five lmoLm.nks containing coloured illustrations from the writings of Burns together with information regarding The Mutual Life of Canada and our INDEPENDENCE plans. Mail the coupon to our nearest branch or outr Home Offhce. MUTUAL [IFE Timmins, Ontario Mutual Life has a soun \}'l_\_iCh ‘_\yill »help AYOU 1 11 Established 1869 T‘he Mutual Life Assurance Company of Canada, Waterloo, Ontario A d d is down to 400 feet. It is felt by company Officials that a large scale development is merited at this time, due to the high price of gold, and that chances are that a profitable producer may be brought in. T‘l S TO REâ€"OPEN SWASTIKA PROPERTY NEAR KIRKLAND Gate Mining Company wastika is boing kept eady to start operations g is eccocmple‘ed, according from that area. Options f stock are in good stanâ€" would appear that work «put Td M JÂ¥