pral know by thor man the « men 1 by the bridge enough of Yarns abot ied by enor fv the edit The mor papers sho plan of df nouncemer stories of was a that the 1: was not pI had no ex did not n sented for shouldn‘t have More than tw question, beca were famous. the item was newspapermen trustful lot. W name fol the good to twin the neyv vave h cessarily for old ‘coins, r: plan has pl the oldâ€"fash of faith and will likely c newspaper. a message C kinky telenh paper. The the cirecums informant, t explaining. in adding:â€" will have to for publicatic tion opens u; on "proof ac fore publicat to present th there would t to the couple the last issu. pair of twins ily. Under T dent be pairs of twin Ooifice, as evi{ of Miss Trix lished it in g and Mr. Th That sort of for all conc The troubles . optimistic peopie that in a new N mining camp Port Arthur, a : the difficulties t] places. It is no newspaper of Ge in the area, in a statement in a pi the notice of the Canadaâ€"$2.00 Per Year Members Canadian Weekly Newspaper Assoclation: Ontarioâ€" Quebec Newspaper Assoczsiion:; Class "A" Weekliy Group OPPICE 26â€"â€"â€"â€" PHONES â€"â€"â€"â€"RESIDENCE 70 rPublished Every Monday and Thursday by: GEO, LAKE, Owner and Publisher PAGE Fotunr Timmins, Ont.. Thurs ind 1€ Che Yorcugine ADuancee NEWSPAPERS HAVE TROUBLES is evidet T‘hi( 31 16 public 1ccomp 1t ed s in the belief that they are ggt: t10 AC 11 y LAIY d to TTIMMIX®, ONTAR1O 1C it ENC DL Dardone rthern town like Subscrintion Rate bot il a VE i ( 1( th 11 np Det North uld o babic single baby e Advance c pologies to it n and inig t] bel ed 10| i € 1¢ Dom would before proo ould be uspIic1IOu ovemney Adadvan{ 1Cccompe 3 6 11 tatesâ€"$3.00 Per Year compan uth 1t om} d coupl he ima eraldtot northea nsequently make, and 9]¢ it ed instance anied b1 )1 ompan BV enough |a4pn on Why | for roused / thi i1€ well.;be lessened by the repeated rebuffs Britain has alâ€" and ‘lowed Mussolini to get away with, to which I anâ€" 11 Aere | friends and r out,hold the fir item |at the leas prool LI hed VInSs 11 11 11 na 10 1 nda bu Btr 1t Just what mor nition to Miss C in the presentati 11 peat the p he Health ] sazette in this ind red tape. While provi: XpD( not national The medic habit of Dr. J. . Bracebr a fake, no one knows that but medical men. For all practical ; seem that Miss Caisse has a that relievesâ€"yes, curesâ€"cancet It is only fair to medical men 1 COT e deast. T benefit and Mi 1t been able n appro tment o 3 not after en with the ‘ _ and regard 1LI 1n itIOn 1 t] C dering t s The Gaze nd ‘el: W1l it notabl of tht MMe ( nd 11 tult fron ed 710 metr the 11| T1 hC 1€ be i] 10 For all practical purposes, it would Caisse has a method of treatment l( may be done to give full recogâ€" isse and allow her wider scope of her treatment to cancer sutftâ€" question. The Advance would at it proposed some months ago. of Canada has won high standâ€" work for public health. There of cutstanding reputation conâ€" ralth League, as well as laymen tion. Why not have the Health take up the case of Miss Caisse e is done. Cancer is one of the hat has engaged the attention gue in special way. After the d investigated the matter and _ the Government might then essary override the attitude of 1 so that the public as well as! be assured of a square deal. | , s the sotr blessing." )1 1( acebridge Gazette relates a n California with a United s a great admiration for the writer claims that ected and admired in Caliâ€"‘ ve the stars and stripes, and be the greatest nation on , "but I notice they all look e. Everything that Britain d up as a pattern for the nd everything that Italy or es is held up as a horrible 1d at all costs." i mentions one thing about calls him, that should give itish people cause for much paragraph:â€"*"Henry reâ€" ley sent an expedition into one lone Englishman, not to show the world that a respected no matter where if British prestige will not Miss Caisse has none of the or the fakerâ€"showing that ‘y., and that her treatment t pleasing evidences of paâ€" ethicsâ€"The Gazette makes hy of special thought even ‘k of soâ€"called quacks. The ‘ticle in The Globe and Mail f buoying up sufferers with may be thought imposâ€" points out, it does not apâ€" ng to replace despair by a im told." says the editor of one thing that relieves the victimsâ€"that almost to the §o . ILC is _a. point ot be missed. It is a cruel aC «TC 1( 1€ ce with ~which "The ught for a square deal lustration of the value wspaper. The Gazette recognition for Miss It will be to the disâ€" f the medical council ive a full fair deal.. It r other newspapers of lest assistance to The t established prejudice T { of relieving suffering n Miss Caisse and her ‘ts for sufferers from aduate nurse who has tudy to cancer cases. should not be handiâ€" > is not a graduate in 2 or an alleviation for sible to deny that she ven the approval and 1 council as well as of nally investigated the kes in the matter of ital in a limite rovince, howeve is, investigated the ent. and his report doctors have given The Ontario Deâ€" i a measure of enâ€" _ has allowed her a 1 in a limited way. do ince, however, still roval. There does that Miss Caisse‘s cancer. Surely, it whose lives have oOrFsS 83 CAISSG@‘ S are in the treatment. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, OXNTARYO L The unfortunate attitude which Britain has reasoning. The bulldog is recovering now. Th been forced to assume in some recent years beâ€" tonic of preparedness is doing its work. This is al cause of unpreparedness has undoubtedly lessenâ€" |that keeps the bulldog from being attacked i: ‘ |ed the prestige of the Empire in several With renewed health the bulldog will regai 7 gSome indication of this fact may be gathered from |the old prestige and respect. The bulldog afte questions often asked these days by Chinese|all has to do little fighting. Its prestige allows i ‘/people in this country who have been friendly to | to escape many a battle. Any man who has owne 2 ;Britain for many years. Some of them who have!a bulldog knows it is far from a quarrelsome ani ‘ ‘been British subjects themselves for a number of mal. Ready for battle, it seeks no fights. Bu ‘|years and have carried a deep admiration andibulldogs must keep their healthâ€"and their teett ‘ {respect in their hearts for the Empire may be parâ€" l â€"or lose prestige and life itself. | | i‘doned for being puzzled because the mighty Britâ€"| liain stands aside and allows thousands of innocent| IGRAVEL AND SANDâ€"AND PLACER rlChinese men, women and children to be wantonâ€" ‘\ly slaughtered, without even a declaration of war Mayor Bartleman has not yet announced his inâ€" ‘to give an aspect of legality to the wholesale murâ€" tention to be a candidate for reâ€"election as mayor When British soldiers are killed on duty and |The furthest he has gone so far is to state that h« _|nothing seems to be done about it, there is surely |has "not yet made up his mind not to run." Someé jexcuse for further Chinese puzzling. There is gbelieve, however, that his game is to hold off until jalso serious grounds for the fear that the loss of;the last moment and then announce higlself as |British prestige will have evil influence on the ‘a candidate, with Councillor Cousins resigning in of India in the days to come. It is asking his favour. It is difficult to see how Councillor |much of these peoples to expect them to underâ€" Cousins could fairly be a party to any such scheme ‘Istand the fineâ€"spun theories of the pacifisticallas this Councillor Cousins has definitely anâ€" linternationalists. Another place where the loss of :‘nounced himself as a candidate for the mayoralty. |prestige is seriously felt is in the hearts of loyal{Of course, he has a perfect right to do this, and Britishers themselves. All the pacifist vapourings?has equal right to change his mind and run for |in the world form little comfort for the thought council, if he wishes. The right of the mayor to that a great Empire supposed to be dedicated to run again is equally conceded. Indeed, many peoâ€" world progress and humanity stood idly by are anxious that the present mayor should seraps of papéer were scoffed at and thousands!run again. But many will be sadly disappointed upon thousands of peaceful peoples in Ethiopia in Councillor Cousins if he allows himself to apâ€" and China were ravished. The simile of the bullâ€" ‘pear so much under the thumb of the mayor, that dog needs an addition to make it a plausible exâ€" it is the mayor who says who will or will not run. icuse. It must be added that the bulldog was ill. | B and incapable of combat. It has not been pomerâ€"‘ The financial statement for the town shows that anians or pekingese that have snapped and yappedlthere is one kind of a surplus, which no doubt !at the bulldogâ€"but big dogs that challenged and means that there is another kind of a deficit. Well. defied, while the bulldog kept to its own house anyway, it is likely that taxes will increase. acor and saw its own friends, the lesser breeds, 3 worried and killed by brutal marauders. Had the} No, Joseph! The new town hall will not be bulldog been well enough to face the war hounds, {ready for nomination toâ€"morrow, but the contracâ€" there is reason to believe that they would have]tors are certainly making progress. ‘ # 1 1 ese?"‘ swer by saying, "Does a bulldog lose any prestige by ignoring the yaps of a pomeranian or a pekingâ€" their newsprint purchasing from Canaâ€" dian mills in their most convenient freight zone, usually a north and south arrangement. Out from the loading platforms of a score of mammoth facâ€" tories in the heart of the Canadian woodlands, moves a daily procession of sealed freight cars labelled for United States and sometimes overseas destinaâ€" tions. But whatever the intricacies of their routing, whether the eventual goal be Cape Town or Nashville, there exists along every mile the paralleling voice of telephone communication. Even as in the freighting of goods across many eccuntries and varying lines of railway, where "coâ€"ordination" is the key to transit, so in the faultless transmission of human conversation through all the vicissitudes of a thousand or tenâ€"thousâ€" and mile chain, the outstanding Lx'i-i umph of the telephone physicist, enginâ€" eer and operator is that of perfect coâ€" crdiration. Truly, we may look upon the specâ€" tacle of an ever widening river of trade in forest industries as an achievement not only of manufacture, or of transâ€" port, but in considerable measure of the almost magic facility in human contact which came about when "Lone Distance" lost the meaning of both its tCâ€"morrow to the simplé old ways of postal communication,. with not even emergency recourse to the speed of teleâ€" phonic wires. In a field where $204 million of export sales are negotiated between Canadian forest industries and their foreign buyers, chiefly those of the States, rapidity of contact, regardâ€" less of distance, is a first requirement to the making of sales and the delivery of goods. The layman seldom gives a thought to the physical routing of the products that leave his country‘s mills for disâ€" tant ports by land or sea. Mostly the great United States newspapers do |Uustries of Canada is an interprovinâ€" cial and international world. In a field where the corsumer is seldom less than many hundreds of miles away. and where he represents an imperative daily demand for newsprint tonnage. it is essential that communication between head office, mill, and «ustomer be as facile as modern science car make it. It may be that a Grand Rapids newsâ€" paperowner has a few kicks from his pressmen on the last newsnrint shin. | % | Communication in _ the Forest Trade: of the Pittsburgh Clarion are in need of a week‘s fishing and are starting toâ€" morrow for Quebec. No matter what the occasion, if decisions are rapidly made and of important bearing on the day‘s business, and where neither the decision nor the plan can be put into action ‘until they have completed â€" a circuit of discussion, it is fortunate that the genius of ‘Long Distance" has kept pace with such neds. Inded, the tempo 0o: trade between Canadian supply and United States consumer would hardly bear the shock if a return were made iaviit as Imnodern sclence car make it. It may be that a Grand Rapids newsâ€" paperowner has a few kicks from his pressmen on the last newsprint shipâ€" ment from Blankville, Ontario, or that a Quebec mill salesman at his Cleveâ€" land hotel wants to check on the Daily Eagle‘s contract by a quick word with the sales manager at the home office: or you‘ll sometimes findâ€"oh just someâ€" times! that the four chief executives Cilal a where many where dema (By John E. Sinclair. in Porest and Outdoors» ‘Jonquiere calling Baltimore!" "Comeau Bay calling Chicago!" "Dallas calling Iroquois Falls!" ‘Montreal calling Powell River!" The workaday world of the forest inâ€" stries of Canada is an interprovinâ€" Wm ](l A pmece of wooden timber from the "Royal William." first vessel to cross the Atlantic under steam, was recently sawn from the sunken hulk lying in Irvine Habor, Scotland, and returned to Canâ€" ada, where the pioneer steamship was built more than a century ago. It was brought to Confederation Life head office at Toronto byâ€" E. W. L. Noel, Scottish manager, as a sequel to a train of events as interesting as the history of the old vessel, later purchased by words and wrote the knell of Time and Mileage. First Steamship to Cross the Atlantic Royal William was Built in Canada. Piece of Timber from Hulk Returned to Canada. we report that we have examined the above condensed Balance Sheet as at 30th O 1937, and have compared it with the books and vouchers at the Head Office and with the c returns from the branches. We have obtained all the information and explanations that w required and in our opinion the transactions of the Bank which have come under our notic been within the powers of the Bank. In our opinion the above Balance Sheet discloses tI condition of the Bank, and is as shown by the books of the Bank. The above Balance She not include money which has been set aside by the Shareholders from time to time for the p ot a Pension Fund. * We report that we have examined the 1937, and have compared it with the books : returns from the branches. We have obtain required and in our opinion the transactions Commercial Loans and Discount ooooooooooooooooo Other Assets. .. s k10 F Diabilities of Customers under l | and V Other Bonds, Deiset Call Loans (Secured The General Manager Cash on Hand and in Banks...,......... Deposits with Bank of Canada.......... Cash on deposit with Minister of Finance Notes of and Cheques on Other Banks., . . Letters of Credit Outstanding Dividends due Shareholders. . _ The financial statement for the town shows that lthere is one kind of a surplus, which no doubt means that there is another kind of a deficit. Well. anyway, it is likely that taxes will increase. Notes in Deposits Depnosits IMPERIAL BANK ] Mayor Bartleman has not yet announced his in-‘ tention to be a candidate for reâ€"election as mayor. ‘ The furthest he has gone so far is to state Lhat he | has "not yet made up his mind not to run.‘ Some' 'belxeve however, that his game is to hold off untlll fthe last moment and then announce himself as; a candidate, with Councillor Cousins resigning m' his favour. It is difficult to see how Councillor Cousins could fairly be a party to any such scheme | as this. Councillor Cousins has definitely an-'i nounced himself as a candidate for the mayoralty.| Of course, he has a perfect right to do this, and;‘ has equal right to change his mind and run for| council, if he wishes. The right of the mayor to! run again is equally conceded. Indeed, many peoâ€"| a bulldog knows it is far from a quarrelsome aniâ€" mal. Ready for battle, it seeks no fights. But bulldogs must keep their healthâ€"and their teeth â€"or lose prestige and life itself. fled. But the bulldog has been illâ€"ill with the infection of a false pacifism, fevered with disarmâ€" ament, distempered with the scurvy of wrong reasoning. The bulldog is recovering now. The tonic of preparedness is doing its work. This is all that keeps the bulldog from being attacked in turn. With renewed health the bulldog will regain the old prestige and respect. The bulldog after all has to do little fighting. Its prestige allows it to escape many a battle. Any man who has owned CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET, 30th OCTOBER. 1937 16th November, 1937 erial Bank of Canada ‘TORONTCO. irculation . . . . . y the Public.. v Other Banks ind Municip ind Undivided Profit the Spanish navy as the world‘s first® brought t steam warship. History of the "Royal William" is steeped in romance. Not onrly did it play an important role in the developâ€" ment of steam navigation but the vesse1 itself was linked closely with the life and love of John Munn, Scottishâ€"Canaâ€" dian shipbuilder, who died more than 718 years ago. Mr. Munn controlled shipyards at Irvine Harbor, Greenock, and at Wolfe‘s Cove, Quebec, where the "Royal William" was launched in 1831 by Lady Aylmer, wife of Canada‘s governorâ€"general. Munn had a ship built specially to carry his sweetheart 3,000 miles from his native Scotland to Quebec â€" but they never married. He died a bachelor at the age of 80. Oddly enough, the "Royal William" sank outside Munn‘s ancestral home at Irvine, near the grave of the builder. The ship‘s ribs still can be seen at low tide, so Mr. Noel emâ€" ployed workmen in a small boat to saw a piece from the sunken ship, which he gaticn of A story William" Daily Exp had not r reading t] tion Life the 1937 c pictirg th Quebec. I1 to be the Mr. Ncel‘s Samuel the Queb Company, liam" was successful 25 days of for the c Line. The chartered transport, governmen warship. ires and Stock Securities and Loans etters of LIA BILITT ES redit SHEPHERD LIEXDINNIJN lendinning, the Quebec a Company. for liam" was bui successful cros PeauIny Unhne artlICiG, . tion Life calendar to the 1937 calendar bo pictirg the building @Quebec. Mr. Noel‘s to be the longâ€"lost c Mr. Ncoel‘s Glasgow o Samuel Cunard wa the Quebec and H Company. for whom liam" was built, It brought to Canada as leader of a deleâ€" gaticn of Scottish business men. A story about Munn and the "Royal William" appearing in the Glasgow Daily Express, united two cousins, who had not met for ten years. Mr. Noel, reading the article, sent a Confederaâ€" THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8TH is3 Fernie (B.C.) Free Pro young man who tried to ; a waitress has been nursi for several days. When hi young lady, who by the notch basketball player, a hard right to the jaw, stooped over to pick up placed a numberâ€"six ‘s} would do the most good. 14 Pine St. N ‘"Mother Was Irritable " TW I "She couldn‘t seem to inâ€" terest herself in anyâ€" thing. Her eves wouldn‘t let her read for long and her head ached when she did much knitting or fancy work. Her potterâ€" ing around the house nearly drove us mad. Proper glasses prescribed by Mr. Curtis rostored our happy home. Mother is perfectly content now." OPTICAL COMPANY Liberal Terms M Arranzted ; he deve $159,667.419 S 06 $" 6,044,775.00 132,198,088.44 4.673,.269 .39 8,144,544 8,090,4658 :137 507,246.12 000,000.00 753,922.03 036.888 35 110 166 ow off ang 930.64 163.:58 10 165 COu of 9{ l € o get fresh with rsing A sore jaw he got rude, the e way is a topâ€" ‘r, brought over w, and when he up his cap, she ‘shoeâ€" where it 9l Phone 833 tockholder in x â€" Navigation "Royal Wilâ€" this vessel‘s _ Atlantic in ived the wav columnist, as painting deâ€" he vessel at turned out _attached to a the way e Cunard n London, a steam Spanish out as a ernie