THUREDAY, MAY 1ZTH, 1938 In a recent letter, Mrs. Kay Bailey, of Blackpool, England, whose poems have appeared in The Advance, speaks abow. three books which she has read recently. All of these are books that have been published not long ago, and are new to the public. This is what Mrs., Bailey says about "Rice" by Miln. "Rice is beautifully cescriptive in parts and the auchoress certainly knows her China. The story is much after the theme of ‘"The Good Earth," and to my mind some of the passages are without doubt masterpieces of the fertiie brain of a pcetic endeavour, as 2 If You Like instance "He gave his best of artistry Phone 890 Timmins LYNGCH Westinchouse Refrigerators Priced From â€"â€"â€" $189 LYNCH ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE CO. Phone 1870 TIMMINS 39 Third Ave. FULLEST EQUIPMENT IN CAMPS, BEDS, FOOD AND BOATS BUT NOT FISHING TACKLL: 10 . WICKS FLYING SERVICE ELIEVE it or not, you get the extra conâ€" venience, extra protection and extra benefits of the exclusive Westinghouse Meatâ€" Keeperâ€"without a cent of extra cost. In fact, this sensational new coldâ€"storage comâ€" partment for fresh meats actually saves you enough money to help pay for your Westinghouse refrigerator. Y ou save by buying your whole week‘s meat supply at special prices and keeping it fresh, flavorful and wholesome till you need it. You save frequent trips to the store. You save by eliminating spoilage or waste. And you get it only in the new Westinghouse . . , plus the new Humidrawer for fruits, salads and vegetables; the new heatâ€"proof, Thermoware dishes for leftâ€"overs; the new, bigger Storâ€"Dor; and a dozen or more important reffnements. New Models priced as low as *159 visit your Westinghouse DeALER TODAY FLYING SERVICE (Br A. H.) SHOOT MOOSE WITH YOURHR CAMERA $7%,00 OeX OGl N BUDCGCLET PLAN DOWw N :} The Sport Season Is Here ! Parties Invited For if not of truth.â€"He limned and brushâ€" ced his of vermilion and goldâ€"leaf, azure and emeraldâ€"no aniâ€" line lyrics of harmony." Then againâ€" "Nothing crowdsd. The seuse of space, the hush of peace.â€"Marbles intrictately chiselled, old grey wall, lightly frothed here and there with peeping wild flowâ€" ers and trailing climbersâ€"Sunlight splashing, gilding" the burnished moâ€" saic pavement, here and there so‘senâ€" ed by shadows from tall vrees.â€"Song birds loved and did their courting here. The human lovers sought and cherishâ€" ed it as a sanctuary, and here they worshipped Nature as sincerely as they worshipped their god." Many local people have read ‘"The Good Ear‘ch" and many more saw the filmâ€"version of the tale. If, as Myrs. Bailey has written, the story "Rice" is much the same as the former story that proved so popular, all neaders will soon be wanting to read it. The deâ€" scriptive phrases which Mrs. Bailey has chosen certainly show to an adâ€" Phone 203Â¥A sSouth Porcupine Pilot Harold s»mith Every site on daplas h anges The full lhne af V acuum CLOSEâ€"UPS L UARANTEED NEWLY FOUND FISHING GROUNDS at OTHER POINTS REASONABLY DIST A NT EROM THE PORCUPINE. 1938 madel Cushioned Action Washters are here. uum Cleaners Radiosâ€"All by Westing bouse You may combine a Refrigrrator with your presenit account. vantage the writer‘s great ability, and mest readers will that the wordâ€" ing has a great deal to do with the success of a book. From Northern Tribune, Kapuskasing From Winipeg to Kapuskasing is to be the next leg of the Transâ€"Canada Airways opened up by scheduled plane flights, although at firss even mail will not be carried. Cradually a whole force of efficic=© pilois will ‘be ready, traintéd for riwu..ne and emergency flying on this route. We should find out soon if the first of July could be set as a convenient date for official opening of the airport here. On that holiday our citizens like to pay a visit en masse, taking cur town band along for a partyâ€"day program of some sort. It would be a novel celebration. Kapuskasing to be on Next Leg Transâ€"Canada Airway Meat is the biggest item in your food budget ! Come in and get your copy of this useful guide to buying and preparing meats. â€"It will help you make appetizing meals that cost less. a x %\‘ Comé in MA : for this Phone 176 Cochrane THE PORCUFINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIG The MHorse Few wlll dispute the right of the horse to a placs of honor in our Posâ€" tal Zoo. No other animal has played so important a pars in the developâ€" ment of civilization, and nearly all the leading countriecs of the world have pictured him at some time or ciher on their postage _ So many and excellent ar> the postal reâ€" presentation of horses that it is difâ€" ficult to choose one ravkher than anâ€" cther but perhaps the best general view is the Kahti horse shownâ€"â€"one of th2 famous Arab ‘breeds that is found in the Indian native siate of Soruth. Sscientists tell us that all the horses of toâ€"day are descended from an inâ€" significant, 14â€"tced animal about the size of a dog called the eohippus. The eohippus roamed the western plains of the United States over 50,000,000 years ago, but most of the members of the family died cut in the terrible glacial period. No more horses were found in the western hemisphere until the Spanish conquest, but somewhere in Central Asia a larger breed, having only four soes, was gradually evolved throughout the centuries. It was about 7000 years ago in Cenâ€" tral Asia, according to the general opinion, that horses were first tamed by man, although ancieont rock carâ€" ings found in India and Ceylon might place the locality farther to the south. In Europe the horse as a draft animal was long preceded by the ox and the ass; and the first civilized psople 0 use horses were the Babylonians, who received them from the Asiatics noâ€" mads about 2000 B.C. A few centuries later the wealthy Hyksos, or Shepherd Kings of Eaypt brought chem still farâ€" ther west, and soon they were common throuhgout Furope. Toâ€"day there are some 25 widely different breeds of horses throughâ€" out the world, ranging from the shagâ€" gy Mongolian pony chat enabled Gonghis Khan to conquer half the civilized world to the fleetâ€"limbed Kentucky thoroughbreds of American racing paddocks. Intimately comnnectâ€" ed with the development of man, cthey all have a long and interecsting story, and oven the pondercus and unromanâ€" tic cartâ€"horse that draws a junk wagâ€" on may be the descendant of a proud "destrier" that bore some armsored knight to the tourney or the Cruâ€" sades. The â€" Dragon Of all the fabulous monsters that stalked the sarth in the supersiitious imagination of â€" primitive peoples, there was none more frightful than the huge scaly serpent with fire spoutâ€" ing out of his nostrils that was called the dragon. Curiously enough, howâ€" ever, the Chinese have always ven*râ€" ated this grotesque beast and it plays an often part in their anâ€" cient folkâ€"lore. According to one old cradition it was a Gragon who first taught man the great secrets of writâ€" ing and philosophy. and possibly this explains why the dragon has always been the national symbol of China and. as the badge of the imperial family, incorporated in all of the posâ€" tal issues of the Chinese Empire. In European mythology, on the othâ€" er hand, the dragon was always reâ€" garded as the incarnation of evil. ‘"‘The devil," sald the grees cearly Christian writer, St. Augustinge, "is a lion and a dragon; a lion because of his rage and a dragon because of his wiles." The church maintained an open season on dragons and several famous saints, notably St. George and St. Michael, distinguished themsclves as dragonâ€"slayers. Later, in the Middle Ages, dragonâ€" hunting became the favorit» pastime of ambitious young knighis, and it played a prominent part in the deeds of Eigurd, Arthur, Tristram, Lancelo and other members of the Table Round. And since beautiful maiden or a vast hoard of gold was always the reward of the successful hero, it is not surprising that all the dragons in Europe were very soon excerminatâ€" ea! The Okapi This strangs, giraffeâ€"like animal inâ€" habits the dense jungleland of Central Africa. The okapi is the least known of the larger mammals. For years hunters had heard from the natives vague reports of its existence, no white man ever actually saw an okapi until 1900, when Sir Harry Johnston succeeded in shooting one after an inâ€" sixâ€"year searchn. in fGOnoOt oi his discovery the animal has been g1vâ€" en the Latin name of "ocapia johnâ€" ce t it «AzaunfA shrout Â¥*+vec {cot â€"ï¬-’wvâ€"- ILLUSTRATION I L 4 CO.,. BOS5T0) #. E. 4 to . eosto« high at the shoulder and are purplish in color, with black and wnite striped legs. Several live specimens have been brought to Europe, but all died rapidly m captivity, and the okapi still remains something of a zoological myscery. He is somewhat rare in the philatelic sense too, and fortunate is the collector who has in his album this fine specimen on a stamp from Belgian ConSo. The Kookaburra Stamp collectors are herewith inâ€" vited to step up and take a good look at the kookaburraâ€"the only thing of its kind in postal captivity. The kooâ€" hails from farâ€"off Australia, where it is better known by the poetic name of ‘"‘The Laughing Jackass." It belongs to the kingfisher family and possesses the startling habit of letâ€" ting out loud peals of raucous, idiotic laughbserâ€"a wild blast of sound which is said to be all out of proportion to its rather diminutive size. But after seeâ€" ing the kangaroo, the duckâ€"billed plaâ€" tyrlus, and the wingless, cailless kiwi bird, nothing from "down under" surâ€" prises the stamp collector any more, and a kookaburra in the collection may be taken for granted. The following is report for April of A. G. Carson, local superintendent of the District of Cochrane Children‘s Aid Society:â€" Applications for children for Report for April of the Children‘s Aid Society adoption ; out of omcc QOiffice interviews Complaints received Investigzasions made Children involved Mail received y 28e o# 9 HAILIIIIL L PV LI L PASA Ds _ PBA UAAA u. €., HARR!S co., sosto® G V A R D I A N O F O CANADIAN ° HOMES T ROM this great national "Community Chest", families throughout Canada receive Half a Million Dollars every working day. As a result, fatheriess children are fed, clothed and educated. Their mothers are guaranteed money to pay the bills. And men and women, past their earning years, are assured financial security. LIFE INSURANCE This community chestâ€"made possible by the accumulated savings of 3,500,000 Mail sent out Children in shelter Children in boarding homcs Court attendance Juvenile court cases 7 Boys on probation to court Children committed an indusâ€" trial school ...:......... Mileage travelled Investigations for other bOLlCLICb Wards visited Children given assistance in their own homes Mcseting atisnded . ; Children placed in foster homes Legal adoptions completed Children admitted to shelter (not wards) i i9 4 Cases under the Unmarried Parents Act Stayner Sun:â€"Keep your eyes open before marriage. Half shut afterwards. Therc are many "small thrinags of large value" which should have the protection of a safety deposit box. Following is a parâ€" tial list of "valuables" which can be kept safe from fire, theft and carcelessness, for a rental of a cent or two a day. Probably you will think of other valuables, which we have omitted. Agreements Army and Navy Papers Autographs Bonds Certificates â€"Birth â€"Baptismal â€"Marriage Charters Contracts Court Decrees Gurios Deeds Designs Modern, Experienced Banking Service . ... 120 Years‘ Successful Operatton ONTREAL Safety For Valuables thrifty Canadians Thus Life Insurance not only protects Canadian homes, but also performs a great national service in lessening the burden of public as well as private relief. So large are the payments of Life Insurance to policyholders and beneâ€" ficiaries, that they far exceed the total amounts distributed for direct relief by Dominion, Provincial and Municipal (Governments. ESTABLISHED 1817 hank where small accounts are welcome Diaries Diplomas Documents CGems Heirlooms Important Letters Insurance Policies â€"Automobile â€"Casualty â€"Fire â€"Life, etc. Jewellery Leases Lodge Records 115 36 Drunken Driver is Given Thirty Days South Poreupine Man Sent Down on Tuesdayâ€"Withâ€" draw Negligence Charge. Jaolhin Anderson, 44, of 167 Main street, South Porcupine, was sentenced to tlmt.y days in jail in Police Court Tuesday morning when he was conâ€" vico2d on a charge of being drunk in crarge of a car. The case was a sequel to an accident on April 22, in which a car driven by the accused was said to have figured, A woman is alleged to have been inâ€" jured in the crash but a_ charge of criminal â€" negligence was â€" dismissed when no one appeared to press the CasqQ is Life Insurance. the Outcome of Mementos Mortgages Naturalization Papers Old Coins Old Laces Patents Payment Records Photographs Plans Promissory Notes Stamp Collections Souvenirs Wills PAGE FTIVE