pI in policyholder had $2,000 insurance protection for 20 years and then receivea $142.37 for every $100 paid to the Company. Any of our representatives, or our Head ()/}I( c, will be gld(l 10 quote figures for an Endownent Policy for you. [IFE a ° omm O ¢t CANADA DT Established 1869 "Onned by the Policyholders" Nlead Office 6 Waterloo, the prol one for of disca fever, a: waser cr 11 Noted â€" Health ~Authority Speaks of "Made" and "Harvested" Iee. Need for Much Care | in the Ice Supply: HAS GAIN OF $801.59 ON 20 YEAR ENDOWMENT POLICY FRED sSTOCK, Branch Manager » â€"â€" Representatives: 1, E. Sullivan P. A. Macaulay W . M. Ritchie Marvon K. Harp 6 Cedar St. N., Timmins, Ont. Paid to the policyholder Amount of policy Cash dividends ... Endowment, taken out at age 18, became payable to the policyâ€" holder, and the result shows the advantage of insuring while young. i Of DAIM ,t y getting your Canada Dry in the easyâ€"toâ€"carry, 71 "-o"a"o‘ â€â€r".,ll ttl"’/’/‘ CANADA DRY Early ~this week Policy No. 7,222, a $2,000,:@0 . Year A DRY \ \m\m “ d it cinGER*Y panding from Ss1 dov A ) 1E JX Â¥pDC remiums paid $94.60) Ing requires heat which is i surroundingz objects and in ie water is frozen. There are ses; th> one known as ‘"can he other as "plate ice." In 11 ice is now universally immonia process. The at condensed ammonia suppli quality P squee?rd oul during ozess of frsezring. It nes whicn survive. his is that waser used ind is that waser used plies should be of ity and that the d be handled in a Inder natural conâ€" ayer of ice in ponds he impurities and ‘e relatively purer, . Ice grows from 1d the freezing of ut bo‘.r suspended rs. It is cherefore aine the surface of Waterloo, Ont The oaly ginger ale in the world made by the famous D)r. Hoyd "Liquid Process, the one process that coaptures ALL the elusive flaveur, the delicate aroma,. the whalesome stimulating quailities of pure, natural ginger. Far more Canada Dry is sold in Canada than any other ginger ale. No other ginger ale even approaches Canada Dry in popularity ... and it is worldâ€"famous for its quality,. Sare money hy getting your Canada Dry in the easyâ€"toâ€"carry, bandy home cartons. i{er than natâ€" urce of supply he process is $ 801.39 $2,693.59 $ 1,892.00 00000 695.3539 Northern News:â€"Geraldton, one of the babes of the mining towns, is startâ€" ing to expsrience the same troubles as Kirkland Lake, Timmins and Sudbury. A dispatch states that stories of good times are filling the place with drifters who can find no work. Perhaps the most dramatic example of the world wide service which the Canadian Pacific provides is in the serics of 18 electric clocks which tell the time at different points around the world served by the company. These clocks, carefully synchronized, are acâ€" companicd by a system Oof flashing Bbulbs that lighs up continuously to emphasize a service on which the sun never sets. In its exhibit, the Canadian Pacific emphasizes its historic closencess with Sectland by means of two contrasting working dioramasâ€"one, the brig ‘Jean,‘ ClyC>â€"bui‘t, arriving at Qucbec in the throngs of prsople visiting the great Empire Exhibition at Glasâ€" gow, Scotland, have been acquiring a roew idea of Canada‘s greatness and her numerous holiday and business posâ€" gsibilitics by study of the attractive Canadian Pacific Railway exhibit. Throngs at Glasgow Now Learning About Canada The men who work "on ice" should have clean shoes cherwise considerâ€" abvle amounts of filth may be transâ€" ferred to the cans, the ice field and ice tanks. Pollution from every source should be guarded against. If then, ice supplies are taken fr8®m â€" clean sources, or manufactured from clean water with precavwsions against its beâ€" ing fouled by the hadnlers, the danâ€" from this article are relatively the first, the freezing takes place in rectangular cans. The water freezes from the sides of the can toward the centre and the impurities are extruded and concentrated in the core. In wellâ€" equipped plants this core is removed by suction apparatus before it freezes, and clean water substituted. In makâ€" ing can ice the water must first be disâ€" tilled or boiled in order to drive out the air, else the resulting product will be bubbly. Platec ice is made by freezâ€" ing water in large shallow tanks. The water frcezes upon the surface and when of sufficient thickness is cut ow and removed in blocks. In this proâ€" cess it is not necrssary to distill or boil the water since the air is forced out naturally in the process of freczing. | situation had arisen, the head of the | patrol hag come down and issued food I to them from the s.ore, the provincial Warned ¢o return to their homes quictly without carrying out their threats, the men did so and have creatâ€" od no further trouble since. They claimed thas they and their familiecs were practically without food and that unless something was proâ€" vided for them, they would starve. The storekeeper, knowing that the «seitlers had no money, and no immediate prosâ€" pects of getting any, refused to give them credit. A call to Noranda hcadquarters of the Ab‘ibi Patrol prought three police officers. The group of men told them that three yvears ago when simillar "DoOwWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS" ,some sea gulls in the foreground. The Undoubt=dily one of the most beautiâ€" ‘steamship "Hamburg" of the Hamburgâ€" ful sets of ship stamps ever issued is'American Line receives postal recogâ€" the new German Winterâ€"Help Issue ‘ nition on che 25p plus 15p blue, and For 1937â€"38, which was placed on sale :t.hch 4C0p plus 35p violet pictures the November 4. There are nine dlflerem'crack transatlantic "Bremen" of designs in the now series, illuscratiing the North CGerman Lloyd. ;variou.s types of ships used in the Gerâ€" The Founding of Australia | man merchant marine, and each stamp| â€" Three stamps were issued in October | is so interesting and well engraved that to ‘commemors«<s the 150th anniversary ithc popularity of this set seems a foreâ€" !or the first settlement in Australiaâ€" | gon» conclusion. The stamps are valid at Sydney, Now Sowwh Wales. The | for porsal duty until June 30, 1938, and : values are 2d scarlect, 3d blue and 9d : the extra proceeds, as in past years, will purple, and the design shows Captain be devoted to the special winter charity ; (later Governor) Arthur Pauillip tasting fund sponsored by the German governâ€" | the water at Sydney Cove on his first ment. landing in 1788.. The presence of fresh I The 3p and 2p brown shows a Gerâ€" | water determined the location of the man coast guard lifeboat putting ous to l colony, and toâ€"day Sydnsy is the most cid a vessel in distress. The port in Australia. loouking mast on this lifeboat is prob-! Littlse was known of the vast conâ€" |9bly used for rigginz a breechesâ€"buoy.)tinent of Australia until late in the The light ship "Elbe I" is pictured on |18th century. Dutch nxplorers had ; the 4p and 3p blueâ€"grey; and 59p and | touched on is barren coasts during the | 3p bright gresn shows a flecs of fishâ€" |1l7th century and brought back tales I ing boats on the Baltic Sea. of a strange animal called the kangzaroo (From Rouynâ€"Noranda Press) Thrcatening to break into. a «Montâ€" beillard general store and take by; forcte the food they said they needed, a.group of cight to ton settlers created a stit in the «little township settlement on Saturday that required intervention of the Quebec Provincial Police. The O6p and 4p dark green takes us from the stormy Baltic to the warm, semiâ€"tropical waters of the Portuguese of Madiera, where we see a German. exâ€" cursion s{tecamer coming into the harbâ€" our. Madiora has long betn a favorâ€" ite tourist spot, and Hitler is said to reward his most loyal Nazis by sendâ€" ing them there on winter vacations at government expeise! Ths 8p plus 4p government expeise! Ths 8p plus 4p orange pictures whai, toâ€"day is an exâ€" tremely rare sightâ€"a squareâ€"rigged salling ship under full sail. Germany is one of the fow countriecs where sailâ€" ing ships still survive, and all officers in the German merchant marine have to be trained "in sail" before receiving their certificates. The 12p plus 6p red shows the Eas. Prussian Line steamer ‘‘Tannenberg" standing off Pillau in the Baltic Sea, and the engraver has cleverly balanced the design by putting a bellâ€"buoy and Montbeillard Farmers Threatened to Take Food wBb t tR s e e e O te t e e q ¢r eR eR e dR t en en en ce rp s _Ebsb'm GENERAL i8 ANXM ATTEMPT 1o DEFEAT~ 1Â¥ E SoOoNvIiET , ONMH STAMPS FROoM HS SEYAS ToPol HEADQuARITLRS IX . _ * ; Lo. e n USED 1o BIND I1HE BOOK oF * 74E TRIAL OF WIHLL/AM CORDER%=, conpEr WNaS$ EXECUTED ~~ Fopr. A MURDPER N ENGLAND, (3; Timmins Stamp Club Column THE FOKCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO WORLD § CRLIELLEST Toysâ€" 1LIYINMG . FLUHMERING BIRDS wWwERL. IMPRISGSONED iN THESE )18TH 10 MAKE THEM MOYZE Local officials of the department of colonization could not be reached for a statement on the Montbeillard inciâ€" dent, The spring is the northern settler‘s hardest season. Food from the preâ€" vious season‘s crop has almost entireâ€" ly been used and there is little income of any sort to be had. Credit is often quickly exhausted and storekeepers are not in a position to advance necessitics wichout some sort of guarantse of payâ€" ment. Srayner Sunâ€"The big problem right now is to decide whether to trade in the old car or pay for last winter‘s coa‘. The depa‘¢msnt of colonization‘s inâ€" spector was away from the setlement at the time of the incident and when interviewed _by the Rouynâ€"Noranda Press â€"yosterday could throw lii/le light on <â€"the situation.. He could not say whethar or not the settlers had obâ€" tained the food tchey said they but there had been no further since Saturday. i had not been for the American reâ€" volution. Before the Revolution large numbers®sof English convicts had beren sent regularly to the American colonâ€" ies, and the Dgclaration of Indepenâ€" dence left : England at a loss to know what to do wi‘th these undesirable citiâ€" znns.. Somoebody suggested Australia as a place suffici¢ntly remote and disâ€" agrsscable; the idea was finally adoptâ€" ed. Other immigration soon followed, Australia‘s resources attracting colonâ€" govoarniment footing the bill. Action of thatâ€"sort was impossible this time, they were" told. © Even in spite of Cook‘s epochâ€"making voyage, it is doubtfutl if England would have bothered to colonizece Australia if and savages armed with the boomeorâ€" ang, but. Holland showed no interest in colonizinz this remote island, and . remained completely undeveloped unâ€" til Captain Cook landed at Botany Bay in 1770 and formally claimed the land for England. By R.J.SCOTT needed trouble ed by che journal of the American Medical Association will be of special interest to those who have been active in promoting antiâ€"noise legislation. "Air conditioninzg and noise prevenâ€" tion", this arvicle points out "have a definite relationship in controlled huâ€" man environment. Whenever the winâ€" dows of the buildings ar»e kept closed to exclude noiss, air conditioning may become a practical necessity. Coverseâ€" ly, it follows as a natural consequw>nce that occupants of buildings living in artificial atmospheres and thus nc deâ€" pendent on open windows and doors will in some measure be protected against extrancous nolsoes arising from traffic, nearby buildings or low flying aircraft. This beneficient byâ€"produc, of air conditioning is considered of such importance by the Association‘s Committce on Air Conditioning that In many parts of Canada, anviâ€"noiso measures have been advocated in the interest of â€" health. The campaigns have tbeen directed for the most part against noises of a neoedless nature and not against chose encountered in inâ€" dustry. A factor in noise elimination that is not usually referred to is airâ€" conditioning, and a report just publishâ€" Urges Airâ€"Conditioning as Help Against Neuroses Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Ltd. A despatch last week from North Bay says:â€""Bob Babcock, theatre operâ€" ator at Northâ€"Bay is postive that PFriâ€" day the 13th is his jinx day! Not thas o had any bad luck, tiut the "unlucky" number poppsed up at him all day. Friâ€" day morning he collectedâ€" his~ pay cheque at the theatre. The odd cents amournted to thirteen. He was surâ€" prised, but not as much as when he discovered that his name was 13th on the pay list! Taking his money, he very carefully walked down to his docâ€" tor‘s office, taking care that he walked under no ladders, and thas no black "As an example, to avoid the noise and vibration of a pneumatic riveter, prossure riveting may be substituted for impact riveting; the automobile indusâ€" try has successfully applied pressure riveting to the assombly of certain unâ€" its of steel bodics and frames. Another solution is the use of welding in plac» of riveting, and‘at the present time the cceel sknletons of many buildings and other structures are woelded instead of riveteod.‘ than either of the other two procedurâ€" es, The noise in machinery is often the result of faulty design and worn parts; redesign or repair of such equipâ€" ment imay result in greater life, less Icss of power and consequently lower cperating cost. Silent operation may D2 accomplished by the use of wollâ€"balâ€" anced parts to reduce the tendency to vibration. by keeping the machinery well lubricuted, by isclation of machinâ€" ery in sound proof rooms, and by the use of flexible cushioning supports. Friday the Thirteenth and Former Timmins Man 04404400400 4004488 0040 044# 0 0406 0 6 0 ¢ 0 o o b 6 6 0 0 0 4 60 4 6 0 0 06 0 090 0 8 04 4 0 6 04440 44 40400 0 6 006 06 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 OVRHAUL New Mineral Plating called Ovrhaul Recondiâ€" tions Motor while you Driveâ€"not necessary to sSAVES OIL AND GAS 108 ('C(lleSt.R B Mo - Phone 2165 Scientifically approved Ovrhaul is good up to 10,000 milesâ€"costs $3.20 for any imake of car (installation 70b¢c). Moneyâ€"Back Guarantee. Timmins, Ont. lay up your car awaiting repairs. Compression Power and Pep Top Speed Oil Pumping Smoking Piston Slap St. Mary‘s Journalâ€"Argus:â€"Casa Loâ€" ma, the Pellatt castle in Toronto, is to te operated as a tourist showplace by the Kiwanis Club again this sumâ€" mer. Possibly the Rotarians mighs be able to min a similar show at Chorley Park, the Peterborough Examinor brightly suggests. °* cats crossrd his path. The â€"doctor hnanded him the: bill .. . $13 exacily! Herb was amazed. Returning to the theatre after dinner, he prepared his projection machines for work . . . and there were 13 films vo be shown! When midnight arrived he was greatly reâ€" lieved. Not only was Friday the 13th cf the month, but it was also his wedâ€" ding anniversary! "There is one good thing," he said, after the day had passed, "I won‘t have co celebrate my anniversary on Friday the 13th for ancthsr 15 years. It will be that lons anCthor 10 year before w2 have Friday." inoth iat iong 13th on