Second place was won by Miss Violet Saxton in 3 hourse and 58 minutes, while the third was also a young lady, Miss Doris Poppleton, who erossed the line in four hours and forty minâ€" utes, ‘Another young lady came withâ€" in sight of the goal but had to leave the water, being played out by the swim. Mr. Yohn, the winner received the Gieo, White trophy to hold for a . year, and a silver cup donated by the T. N. 0. as his own permanent proâ€" perty, as well as a handsome sweater coat from the Geo. Taylor Hardware Co. The T. N.~O. also gave a silver cup to the second and third prize winâ€" The printing of a map involves several processess. It must first be drawn on good paper, preferably backed so as not to stretch or shrink with changes of weather or moisture. If more than‘one colour is to be used in the printing a separate sheet is drawn for the information representâ€" ed by each colour. These sheets are then photographed and the negatives printed on zine plates or in some cases on lithographic stones. These plates or stoaes are put in the printing press and the map is printed from them. "Where more than one colour is used, the map has to be run through the press for each colour and it is very important that the sheets fit the plates correctly so as to get the additional colours on the map in their proper places. For instance main highways are usually printed in red; on the map these red lines must be exactly in the right places. So also for the colour in which water features are shown and the brown for contonrs or form lines. Herein lies the chief difficulty in printing maps in colours. Where an issue of several thousand copies is being run, it is necessary to print all the copies in one colour at a time, and while these are drying the ink is washâ€" ed off the press and the next colour got ready. If the weather changes. especially if the air gets damp, the sheets of paper stretch or shrink and trouble is encountered in making the next colour fit exactly where it should. A list of the maps, plans, and pubâ€" lications of this organization may be obtained upon application from the Topographical Survey, Department of the Interrior, Ottawa. GIRLS AMONG WINNERS IN MARATHON SWIMMING RACE In the recent marathon swimming race, Haileybury to New Liskeard, there were fifteen entries, four of these being young ladies. The race was won by Jack Yohn, of Cache Bay, who made the course of over five miles in three hours and seven minutes. One of the principal map making establishments of the Dominion (Govâ€" ernment is the Topographical Survey, Department of the Interior, at Ottaâ€" wa, where are prepared and published topographic maps covering widely scattered portions of this Dominion. In publishingâ€"a new map all available information of the country is, of course, secured and where some of this has been obtammed by other surâ€" vey organizations, credit is given in the publishing note. Topographical Survey Gives Brief Sketch of How Maps are Made. Many Maps Available. Many of the readers of The Adâ€" vance are naturally interested in maps, and so will give more than passâ€" ing notice to the following reference to the mapâ€"making activities of the Topographical Survey of the Dominâ€" ion Government. One of the principal map making MANY PROGESGEG USED IN THE PRINTING ODF MAP3S M o/re Extract of Cod Liver § for COUGHS, COLDS and BRONCHITIS § obert‘s! ENGO S The first thing in the morningâ€"a "dash" of in a glass of water brings the happiness of hA e 2 1| t h. ‘‘As was noted in last w eek s issue of The Northern News p]d!h are unâ€" der way to erect a large modern hotel in Kirkland Lake. Messrs Leo. Masâ€" cioli and P. M. Bardessono, owners of the Empire Hotel, Timmins, after looking over the possibilities of the hotel proposition here for some time, last week bought from the Kirkland Hudson Bay Gold Mines Ltd. a large frontage of real estate on the north side of Government Road, west of Dr. Armstrong‘s residence. _ It is their announced intention to erect thereon a stricktly firstâ€"class hotel. . The building will be of steel, brick tile and cement construction, making it pracâ€" tically fireproof. It will â€" contain eightyâ€"five room, fifty of which will be with baths, and all rooms will have hot and cold water. The interior plans and decorations will be of a class creâ€" ditable to any large community. Erection of the hotel will commence immediately. The building will face Government Road, the rear having a beautiful view over Kirkland Lake. The need of a modern hotel has been felt for a long time, and in putting up such a building Messrs Mascioli and Bardessono are not only showing their faith in the growing future of Kirkland Lake, but are also proving what others have thought for some time, and incidentally giving to Kirkâ€" land Lake an asset of great value."‘ TIMMINS MEN TO BUILD KIRKLAND LAKE HOTEL \ At Swastika last week a couple known as Mr. and Mrs. Fidely were sentenced to three months hard labâ€" our without the option of a fine. The charge was keeping liquor for sale. The woman gave her name as Mary Dinardo, saying that she used Fidely‘s name just because she lived with h1m Ten dozen bottles of beer had been consumed at the premises of the couple inside of twentyâ€"four hours, it was shown. â€" The man disclaimed all responsibility, saying that he did not have a permit even. The liquor was purchased on the woman‘s permit, and the couple alleged that it was consumâ€" ed by a party of friends from North Bay who happened to come along. They asserted that they had never sold any liquor, but the magistrate was not convinced, nor were the police agreeable to this idea. In his eviâ€" dence Fidely admitted that he had not worked for a year, unless a little gamâ€" bling could be called work. The eviâ€" dence. also suggesfed that the man suplied the money for the beer and the woman‘s permit was used in the purchase. The Kirkland Lake Northern News last week says :â€" ‘EN DOZEN BOTTLES OF BEER IN TWENTYâ€"FOUR HOURS WIappe pac S‘of Vison‘s oTILL MORE ATTENTION NEFOED FOR THE FORESTS Anton Ludwig, 62 years of age, who claimed to have been head garâ€" dener for President MceKinley over thirty vears ago, is to serve a sentence of nine months in the district jail at Haileybury, imposed on him followâ€" ing his conviction on a charge by Maâ€" gistrate Tucker, at Hearst, of indeâ€" cently dssaultmn' a â€"sevenâ€"yearâ€"old girl. Ludwig was brought in by Proâ€" vincial Constable Stanle\ Bush. It is alleged that Ludwig represented himâ€" self to a settler in Hanlan township, nine miles from Hearst, as a hoho making his way through ‘the country, penniless and in rags, although he had over $200 sewed up in a poel\et in his clothing. He asked for a drink of water and is said to have enticed the little girl with a nickel. The Ontario Depariment of Lands and Forests has been doing unusually good work in the matter of forest conâ€" servation. Still better things may be expected from the interest and attenâ€" tion being given by the Department. Ontario is apparently awake to the real forest problem, and it is very necessary that the public should give the Government the heartiest support in its efforts for forest preservation. Other parts of Canada should also rouse themselves in the matter of the forests. The need for consideration is strikingly made apparent by the following paragraph from The Canaâ€" dian Lumberman,â€"â€" ‘*Protection of the forests has been too much left to individuals and corâ€" porations. Lumbermen, pulp _ and paper mills and others interested in gleaning wealth from the forest have been mainly responsible for such measures as have been taken to conâ€" serve the forests for the future. Onlv in recent years have the Dominâ€" ion and Provincial Governments taken a hand in forest protection on a large seale. Some of them are now doing excellent work, though it is doubtful if any province is spending what it should spend on its forests, when the extent of revenues from the forest is Sixty per cent. of Canada‘s Forest Wealth Has Been Wasted Alâ€" ready. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO taken into consideration. _ _ The proâ€" vinces of Canada draw $12,000,000 a year in revenue from the forests. _ Forestry _ protection _ is necessary â€" because presently _ Canâ€" ada is consuming â€" or _ allowing to ‘be destroyed more than it grows annually in the way of wood. Canaâ€" da once had a forest area of 1,300,000 square miles. This area had 925 billâ€" ion cubic feet of timber. Toâ€"day the Dominion has 250 billion cubic feet of timber. And yet of the 73 percent of the origin@al stand that has disappearâ€" Dominion has 250 billion eubic feet of timber. And yet of the 73 percent of the original stand that has disappearâ€" ed the (*nuntn has only cut and used 120,000,000 cubic feet. ~That means that 60 per cent. of all the timber has been wasted, some of it in clearing the land, hut most of it n forest fires and raids by insects and other forest pests." GIVEN NINE MONTHS AT THE HALEYBURY JAIL: Will kill many times more flies for the money than any other fly killer. Each pad will kill flies all day, every day, for three weeks. At all Grocers, Drugâ€" gists and General Stores â€" 10c and 25¢ per package. ® week end pactoge. No Liner c 1to cigar and no kiner FIXED ASSESSMENT FOR HOTEL AT KIRKLANTD LAKTE At a meeting of the council of the Township of â€" Teck last _ week, the council passed a motion to the effect that after the â€" hotel at Kirkland Lake to be built by Messrs Mascioli and Bardessono bad secured a standard hotel license, the hotel be granted for one year a reducâ€" tion of sixty per cent. on general rate, the hotel to pay full school levy. The concession is conditional on the erecâ€" tion of a fireproof building and plans of the structure are to be submitted to council. There was a general disâ€" cussion of the question and all the councillors were agreed that the new hotel would be a great advantage to Kirkland Lake., It was pointed out, however, that the council had no power to grant a fixed assessment for ten years, as some suggested, and that the school taxes could not be thrown ‘ in any case as the law did not proâ€" vide exemption for school rates. Howâ€" ever, the council did all that it felt the law allowed in the matter. CLOSER RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH F. H. Anson, of Iroquois Falls, accomâ€" panied by Mr _ A. F. Kenning and others from Cochrane to Toronto :â€" ‘‘Four men left Cochrane, on the James Bay slope 500 miles north of Toronto, at sunrise on Tuesday, and reached this city by motor car at midâ€" night. â€" The incident is startling in its significance for the future close relaâ€" tionship between Old and New Ontaâ€" rio. Less than twentyâ€"five years ago there awas no railway ‘beyond North Bay. â€" Now there are several great mining camps, cities of fair size and much wealth, and, lastly, an improved highway, connecting with the good road below Lake Nipissing. The Ferâ€" guson Highway, recently opened, enâ€" ables the development of traffiece beâ€" tween the large cities and towns of the South and the playgrounds and mines of the North. It promises to open a new era, and should increase business between two sections of the Province thus elosely connected. The present couriers are the forerunners of the mammoth motoreade of one thousand people who will drive from the far North to the Canadian Nationâ€" al Exhibition, where they will be enâ€" tertained in a fitting manner. Toronâ€" to owes much to the newer part of Onâ€" tario and the future opening of new lands, forests and mines will bring large _ additional _ population _ and wealth to this ceity."‘ The following is the editorial comâ€" ment made by The Toronto GHlobe last week on the motor trip made by Mr. emUGreater Value at Lower Prices PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS » so phenomenally lowâ€" â€"now made LOWER than ever, as Pontiac shares with the public, the economies of volume purchasing and production. See the even greater Value at Lower Prices, in the New and Finer Pontiac Six. engine of any six at Pontiac price. SMOOTHNESSâ€"driving easeâ€"effortless performance â€"proved on the General Motors Proving Grounds. Only the New and Finer Pontiac Six has ALL of these, at prices t priced cars. DISTINCTIONâ€"in appearance and performance. POWERâ€"speed, stamina, assured by the most powerful BEAUTYâ€"which reflects a superb achievement of Fisher Craftsmanship. COMFORTâ€"a luxury formerly restricted to the higher BODY FOUND OF MAN WHO ATTACKED HIS LANDLAY Last week the body of Etienne La Vallee, who had been missing nearly two months, was reeovered from Lake Temiskaming. The body was found about 12 miles from the mouth of the Montreal river, at Point La Barbe bay. The body was badly decomposâ€" ed but identification was made by a brother of the dead man, Baptiste La Vallee, who was awble to recognize the drowned man through the clothing worn and from other details. E. La Vallee made a fieree attack on June 12th on Mrs. Bonin with whom he boarded. ‘The attack was evidently a sudden one and without provocation. La Vallee used an axe in the attack and seriously injured Mrs. Bonin. She was taken to the Mines hospital at Cobalt, where, fortunately, she made good recovery and was able to leave the hospital practically fulâ€" ly _ recovered fromâ€" the injuries received. It was thought at the time that after the attack upon Mrs. Bonin, the man went out and drowned himâ€" self. This is apparently what did occeur. It is believed that the attack and the suicide resulted from E. La Vallee suddenly going insane. The Kiddies just love them Growing children need vitaâ€" mines and easily digested nourishing foods that build bone and muscle. They thrive on CLARK‘S Pork and Beans which older people also find so good.â€"â€" This delicious food which is all ready to heat and eat is most truly economical. A largethelping costs only about three cents. **Canada Approved"‘ on the label is an important guarantee of quality. W. CLARK LIMITED, Montreal, P.Q., St. Remi, P.Q., Harrow, Ont. PORK ‘They taste so Good / Packers of CLARK‘S delicious Soups, etc., etc F CANADA, LIMITED Thursday, August 11th, 1927 Pâ€"2280