surface work, such as freighting. At God‘s lake in the days of that operation Indians were engaged to deliver gravel to the mill site from a point down the lake. The arrangement was on a conâ€" tract basis and the mine management found that the native men showed a tendency to let the women do the work while they drew the reward. The graâ€" vel was delivered in canoe loads and while the man of the tepee was willing to paddle he apparently did not like the idea of shovelling, bagging or packâ€" ing. The Indians of that region were guite primitive when the miners came and had"oid@ fashioned notions about the dignity of certain types of labour. Farther to the west Island Lake mines employed Indians for wood cutting and found them satisfactory. This was anâ€" other contract job, with the natives working when they felt like it and layâ€" ing offâ€"when the spirit moved them. The management found that by conâ€" gregating the natives right on the isâ€" Jand, providing them with cabins and feeding them direct from the stores of the mine, the efficiency of the men Indians Work for the Mines in Far North a L Adaptable for Certain Lines of Work Connected With Mining. A Barrier to Fire SWIMMING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ADULTS Riverside Swimming Pool TUESDAYS and THURSDAYS from 7 to 9 Appointments may be made at the pool. at was â€" considerably increased. Prices charged for food were figured on the basis of actual delivered cost which brought the level far below those of the traders who naturally wanted a profit. The Indians seemed to be pleased with the whole arrangement but unfortunâ€" ately the white men could not find enough gold in the erratic veins of the mine to make the operation a permaâ€" iment one. Up in the far north the Indians are employed for various purposes by the miners. They are of course, expert water men and have quite a knowledge of freight handling, having been used by the Hudson Bay Company and other traders for this work for generations Their reliability varies with individuals and families and the good ones are regularly employed. Thus newcomers to the area are likely to get the less dependable and live to regret it. Time to the Northern Indian is a quite inâ€" considerate factor, a_ circumstance which is apt to disconcert the southern white man who is full of energy and ideas. The local whites have pretty well absorbed the native attitude and are inclined to let things drift. It is pleasant to be able to report that the young men of the prairie west are given firstâ€"class rating by the Eastern mining men who have gone North. The engiâ€" neers from Ontario report that they have never encountered superior help. The young westerners take to mining and prospceting like a duck to water. One of the pioneers of the Cobalt camp. recently engaged in mining in the Great Bear and Yellowknife areas, stated not long ago that the class of men now going from the prairies to the Territcriecs remind him of the young felâ€" lows who swarmed into Ontario‘s north in the first decade of the century, switching from lumbering and raillway construction to prospecting and underâ€" ground work and making good The Westerners are equally adaptable, can handle an axe, an engine, a paddle or a drill. They can crack up a cabin, read a map or draw one. They are full of energy and are dependable. Almost equally important is their mental attiâ€" tude. Solitude has no terrors for them. They are accustomed to the long siâ€" lences of the prairies and have resources which render them immune to the insiâ€" dious encoachment of that mental disâ€" turbance which is known to the prosâ€" pecting fraternity as being ‘bushed.‘ A couple of seasoned Eastern prosâ€" Here are two poems by Kay Baileyâ€" each entirely different from the other. One deals with people; the othe: deals with their thoughts. One cenâ€" tres wawbout character; the other is ! chiefly descriptive. The MASTER:â€" "Two references at least I need;â€" give names of folks who‘ll guarantes you are a person fit indeed to do a job of work for ME. It is my cusâ€" tom to inquire; the obvious risk I would not take when seeking serâ€" vants out for hire, I‘m paying neiâ€" ther fraud nor fake?" The SERVITOR:â€" "No doubt you are quite justifind and I will make but one request: Just name two men who plied for you, and I will do the rest? . Find if you gave civility or snapped your orders out with scorn, Do you admit ability or bully workers night and morn? Do you parade Dictator power of Master; making slaves obey, resentâ€" ing the insults you shower upon them for the wage you pay? Or have you earned the high respect of underlings who toil for you? The veriest stranger will detect if you are on the level too! You‘ll ‘know‘if I have not returned toâ€"morrow, that your hesitation preâ€" ceded all I since have learned about a putrid reputation!" pectors went to Great Lake sevâ€" eral years ago and were cabined toâ€" gether for a winter. One of them was unfavorably affected by the darkness, the cold and the loneliness, while the other who had a superior sense of huâ€" mor remained cheerful. The very exuâ€" berance of the one was an additional annoyance to the other. As the winter wore on with few visitors and no chance to get away the morose individual went definitely haywire. He came right out and accused his partner of trying to poison him. He would not eat anything that the other cooked and there deâ€" veloped the spectable of two men up near the Arctic Circle cooking their separate mealis in a little two by four cabin. Finally the more stabilized prosâ€" pector hit on a solution of their diffiâ€" culty which was daily becoming more acute. He proposed to his mate that they compose their differences temporâ€" arily and that they settle the whole thing when they got out by a knock down and drag out fight. Meanwlhile he suggested, they needed each other in thoir battle against the cold and darkâ€" ness. But once they got into the clea: they could battle the whole thing out. The other seized upon this as an ideal arrangement. Eventually, months later, a plane picked them up and flew them out to Edmonton where they promptly proceeded to get lit. All during the southward â€" passage the uppermost thought in both of their minds had been the impending battle. So it was not strange that, with a cargo of stimuâ€" lant aboard, they should revive their grievances. In one of the hotels they put on the act and onlookers report that it was a classic. After it was all over and the bandages has been adâ€" justed they ‘shook hands and resumed their long standing friendship. At Day‘s Ending ‘(By Kay Bailey) Into the night ‘alone, just as this dying sun shall‘ disappear, Soon shall we be gone and ijeave the trials which perplex us here. For this has been ordained, even as ‘* were love and laughter, ecstasy and tears ' On waves of life sustained through the crescence and the cadence of the vears. eP P AP AL PA AP AL L P t O PP If You Like Hirer Versus Hireling (By Kay Bailey) THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE TTMMINS, ONTARIO of conscious. It‘s his blood being thin, several authorities consulted assured this reporter, and Mr. King shouldn‘t to blamed, because he can‘t help it. Statuteâ€"ofâ€"Westminster consciousness is like hives; it comes out all over some ,people at cortain times.. Most Canadian politicians get it from being allergic to the Quebec Vote. Too much or too little Quebec Vote in their poliâ€" tical shandygzgaff and they break out State Craft Sarid to be Only a State some people at cortain times.. Most Canadian politicians get it from being allergic to the Quebec Vote. Too much or too little Quebec Vote in their poliâ€" tical shandygaff and they break out right away in small local blotches of fevered sovrereignty and start itching to> tell the world about Canada bring a nation. LtaCKS â€" O] overtake him in facts of be worst suffer not Mr. Kit ofâ€"Westmins time. It‘s v fortable. S every . 1 11 old Dt the In a nSsuros© his mann dom toge sation Fixati the they the marvels of â€" This body, mere hu garnered sheavi tion). This night, this day rows that are ye This Universe who surely â€" marked Eternity . . remlet 56 If removed from the vicinity of Queâ€" c between eclections and encouraged t to think about votes many of the rst suffer>rs practically recover. But t Mr. Kingz. Mr. King has Statuteâ€" Th United States Attorney Lamar Hardy, and his daughter, Micheline, are pictured on the S.S. Normandie as they sailed from New York for Europe. The young lady is going to Europe for a vacation, but the atâ€" torney is going to run down several "definite leads" in his inquiry into the widespread ramifications of the Nazi spy ring. Sensational new disâ€" closures were promised. He will not visit Germany where 13 persons who are under spy indictments are said to be living. Inferiority â€"of nation ainada ners and S ae a civil q n Whiteha i1lâ€"timec current threate Jn‘ Thii At H ol a repI ubconsci he troub‘: ‘t primari What callu Judi : th:; Jjam aA Statu STILL PURSUING THE SPY RING e yet to be; whose spaced way Kked and timed u h Robinson the Prime Ministet itute of Westminstet O I Creation:â€" husk grown sere (a aves nâ€" consumma C â€" Al mpl sove i] 1C State of Mind lcally recover. B King has Statut estion is address is no more th and useful frie plex. . ‘These â€" : vereigntyness th remier and plurn rgetfulness of t tory and the w freemen sticki e psychic compe e of Westmins Oll les say iL ISN wvith Mr. Kin voteâ€"itch. It him to it his th> toâ€"motr Woestmin 1¢ 1 plunge of the the wisâ€" sticking compenâ€" tminster r is but all â€" th uncom inada ts ale atâ€" that ! "efforts to compensate may involve a domintering attitude which has as its unconscious motive the hiding of all signs of the feeling of inferiority. Failâ€" ing in these efforts, the individual turns away from reality, invents various !cxcuscs and advances reasons for not participating further." "A complex," they read, "resulting from ideas repressed from the conscious !mind shows its presence through the and behaviour of the individâ€" |ual. Its manifestations are often very to know that it had been severely swatted on the head. In any event, if you trust the story, the snake‘s head fell off, and the frog simply jumped out of its narrow quarters and soon got as far away as possible from the place where it seemed frogs stood excellent chance of being called Jonahs. The snake died, the commotion died, but the frog simply crouked. earthiy nose. Turning around, the story says, he saw a small snake tryâ€" ing to swallow a large frog. The frog made strong prtoest against any such proposition. Indeed, it was the froz that was making the row that was so evident. Dr. Nash, so the tale proâ€" ceeds, waited until the frog had fully disappeared, then he took a stick and smacked the snake on the neck. Here is the trouble: the story says that the snake was too engrossed in the frogz wolves. Next comes a mate for such a story. The latter is to the effect that Dr. H. C. Nash, president of the Sudbury hockey club while fishing neat Cutler on Monday heard a most unâ€" It looks as if someone from Sault Sta. Marie had recently moved to Sudâ€" bury and was supplying outside newsâ€" papers with startling items of news. First, there comes the story of three big bad wolves chasing a gentle deer and the deer escaping a rushing locoâ€" motive by a matter of inches, and then the train promptly and properly ran down and ran over the three wolves. Next comes a mat» for such Try The Advance want Advertisements| subtle, the reasoning ability of the inâ€" dividual being used in a skilful atâ€" tempt to rationalize his behaviour. For example, an overzealous reformer domâ€" inated by a complex is not inclined to interpret his activities in terms of his own nm>pression, but too often to disâ€" guise them quite unconsciously in unâ€" questisnably lofty words .â€". ." Lofty wordâ€". .. . This country has unâ€" questionably heard enough lofty words {rom its Prime Minister on the subâ€" ject of the Flying School that the Statute of Westminster forbids. But that dososn‘t prove a complex. ° That doesn‘t prove anything. Mr. King‘s lofty words never do. And it doesn‘t matt‘er anyway. Itch or complex, this is no time to indulge it. This is a time for theâ€"Prime Minisâ€" tor of Canada to put away childish things and act his age. A iman whose house is next a fire does not as a rule keep the fire brigade lingering outside the front door while he discusses their status under the law of property. A man whose farm is threatoned by flood does not, if he has any sense, turn away the leveeâ€"building gang with the haughty reminder that they are tresâ€" passers. If the Prime Minister of Canada does not know that these are not safe times for parading the sovereign vanities of a 7â€"yearâ€"old Statute he is about the only adult west of the Ottawa River who does not. It is evident and it has long been evident to all but this country‘s poliâ€" ticians that the peoples of the British Commonwealth are in a tight place and ali in it together. It should begin to be evident, even to a politician, that the sooner we all park our petty naâ€" tional consciousnesses and start workâ€" ing together the sooner we‘ll all get out of the tight place and the more of such valuables as freedom, justice, mercy and peace we will each bring with us. However, if it would make Mr. King any happier, a compromise might be arranged. Canada could demand the right to establish a sovereign training school for the Canadian Navy on the Serpentine in Hyde Park. Sudbury Snake Swaliows Frog Then Loses Its Head hlyv around, the Sudbury, July Joseph Walker, car thief, it three times and car thief, it surely is not a case of three times and out. Three times Walker has escaped cusâ€" tody. Each time he has been captured. Tonight he rested in his cell in the isolation block at Burwash Industrial Farm, a week‘s growth of beard on his face, bedraggled and exhausted after wandering the bush for seven days and nights with blueberries as his only source of sustenance. Reâ€"captured After Week of Hardship He will appear in District Court at Sudbury toâ€"morrow charge of breaking jail and ¢ lawful custody. Seven miles from the limits of Burâ€" wash last evening, a man emerged from the thick bush and asked a settler where he might find the road. The stranger said he was lost. Recognizing him as a fugitive because of his blue prison garb, the settler directed him to the road that led back to the industrial farm, though Walker didn‘t know it. Then the settler went to the nearest telephone at the C.P.R. station and notified the prison authorities. Guards were not long in picking up the missâ€" ing man. "HMHe offered no resistance," Superâ€" intendent Powell told The Globe and Mail. "He was pretty weak when our men reached him. He was hungry and badly bitten by flies. His clothing was torn. He was not exactly glad to be back in custody, but he appreciated a chance for food and shelter." Shortly after 3.45 am. on Monday morning, July 4, Walker fled Burwash thanks to the aid of a companion, Patâ€" rick McKenzie, 20. McKenzie cut the bars of his own cell with a hack saw and then sewed through the bars of Walker‘s cell door and the bars on the window of Walâ€" ker‘s cell. After â€" pushing . Walker through the aperture in the cell winâ€" dow. McKenzie found that he could not squeeze his 185 pounds through the same opening, and had to stay behind. Yesterday he was sentenced to two years in Kingston Penitentiary for asâ€" sisting Walker to escape. Last March Walker ran from a gang at Burwash, but was recaptured the same day. For this attempt two more months were added to his term of from 24 to 27 months by Judge Edmond Proulx at Sudbury. Before coming to Burwash Walker had fied from the Hamilton City Jail only to be recaptured. He has served about 15 months of his original senâ€" tence. Escaped from Burwash to be Tormented in Bush. From away back in the 1850‘s when a professional jokesmith hung a pair of muddy boots on a telegraph pole and pretended they had just been received by that newâ€"fangled device called the telegraph, writers, cartoonists, radio jokesters and others have twanged the telegraph wire to produce smiles and chuckles that have contributed their bit to the colour and zest of living. "The one hoary joke which has it that ‘love‘ is the tenth word in a teleâ€" gram has now been laid away in mothâ€" "Scotchograms" No Longer Necessary, Says Official [, I M I T E, D General Contractors, Lumber, Building Supplies Head Office Mill Office Schumacher, Phone 708 Timmins, Phone 709 gasy 10 APPLY: _ 3y FELDMAN TIMBER CO Een e is ul M o o e us e o t e snn ... * 4 P 4 lt 4e ts 4 e e * m #*"" m *4 y Q F" k4 \c\vt.hafluihï¬\\ Cap mt n yC1 AIE CONSUMED w LKHMED STA1TES iN ONE YEAR YOuLp FILL A ROUND LAKE FIYE MILES IX DIAMETER 10 A DEPTH sF Km flOï¬p “"m* hm P wink" S 1 eP ue *** p W A L L_ PA | N T AM 7\; T] it‘s washable, odorless ‘ ; n U â€" W A L L â€"~For bushyâ€"haired vearâ€"old Hamilton hours to dry! ® If your walls and ceilings look tired, renew them with NULWALL,. The cost is little, the results are beautiful! Paint your rooms in the morning â€" use them in the afternoon. No brush marks, laps or odor, Choice of white and ten lovely tints. Polict on aping | _ _Send this on» to Ripley after reading it. Near Sudbury this week three big I bad wolves were chasing a deer and were mighty close behind the animal. The deer dashed right across the track in front of an oncoming train. The three big wolves followed the deer. The deer got across the track before thre |locomotive reached the spot but the wolves did not. The wolves were killed by the train, their bodies being thrown clear of the track. The trainmen saw what had happened but did not stop train, reporting the matter at the first !regular stop. Deer Escapes Wolves but Wolves Hit hy Locomotive balls and forgotton because presentâ€"day users of telegraph service are aware that telegrams are not limited to ten words since extra words mayv be added friends "Isaiah 9.6" (For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given) to announce the third of a hoy. "The low cost of the telegram these days for business and social correspondence," stated Mr. Ross, "makes it unnecessary to unduly economize in words." sisting of Drummers Jock Smith, Charles Graham and A. Boyle were awarded second prize. In the principal pipe band contest eleven bands competed. In addition to the Canadian National Railways Pipe Band from Montreal the competitors were: <~The Ford Company, Detroit, Michigan; Chrysler Corporation; The Toronto Scottish; 48th Highlanders, Toronto; The Toronto Police; two bands from the 9lst Argyle and Sutherland Highlanders, Hamilton, Ontario; a civilian pipe band from Hamilton, Onâ€" tario; Niagara Falls and the Windsor and Essex Scottish. Toronto Telegram:â€"News is very inâ€" teresting these days. When, you tire of the deadlock in Spain, you can read abcluut the padlock in Quebec. Embro, Ont., July 13.â€"In a comâ€" petition â€" which included contestants from across the border, the Canadian National Railways Pipe Band from Montreal won the coveted Colonel Frasâ€" er Challenge Trophy on the occasion of the Zorra Scottish games held here. In addition to captiuring the main feaâ€" ture of the pme band competition, pipers and drummers of the railway band were also numbered among the other for the playing of Strathspey and Recl. Piper McNeil.was also second in the open marches. In the latter event, however, it was a Canadian National Railways piper who took first place, Piper George Greig. In the drumming contest a section Railway Pipers Win Fine Trophy at Zorra Games erâ€"UreOrge UTRIg. n the drumming c Canadian National : STAMP .PORTRAY L KK (EORCEN, W TA A i , IK MIS.MOSEA T. z. ANH ERRCRIM. MONDAY. JULY 18TH, 1834 CuRIOUS ST. HELZNA contest a section 1 drummers conâ€" rs Jock Smith, d A. Boyle were