Porcupine Advance, 4 Apr 1929, 2, p. 5

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h h hS y id ioh t s i5 b 5 h 1b C t t 5 ib hi o it C t 5 C 4 C C i K o i i5 ib i 1b 15 15 5 5. t i eb rad adrad ob rnd na i # * . .%, ,.@ * < av ev ue ow esies ind mo _ cte ctacteateste ote ctactaate w @, 2%, +. ®, ts 29. 19. 19. .0. 2. s 2s 2 4* 2 2% 2 28 s 28 4 2t s 28 # *, 92 2@# n e 3030303»*03030003? For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column He turns cameraman nowâ€"he‘ll positively grind your blues away in this scramble of gals, gangs and guffaws! PARAMOUNT NEWS "Footlight Fanny‘"â€"COMEDY 12thâ€"Friday Saturdayâ€"13th JOHN GILBERT in "FOUR WALLS" 10thâ€"Wednes. Thursdayâ€"11th Buster Keaton "THE CAMERAMAN" You will thrill to the tense dramatic moments, the spectacular thrills of fiood and volcanic eruptionâ€"in a love story of sweep and power 8thâ€"Monday and Tuesdayâ€"9th "THE DIVINE WOMAN" Seductive! s PE C I A L ! "THE WHITE SSTER " Lillian Gish and Ronald Colman and beauty never excelled on the screen. "Smith‘s Restaurant‘" COMEDY FOX NEWS "SADTIE THOMPSON‘"â€"Gloria Swanson "WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS"â€"Lon Chaney One of the Greatest Love Stories of Allâ€"Times Starring Excavations for Cellars, Sewers, Etc Contracts of all kinds taken R EMPIRE BUILDING 5othâ€"Friday Saturdayâ€"6th Goldfields The Divine Woman of the Screen Sale" COMEDY "Ball and Bat" SPORTS tive! Alluring! Tantal Gorgeous! Put them all togetherâ€"and you get Tantalizing! Phone No. 321 Coming Attractions : "THE STROKE OF TWELVE"â€"June Marlowe "THAT CERTAIN THING"â€"YViola Dana " Under the Black Eagle " You don‘t need to be a dogâ€"lover to hail this as the novelty find of the season. If you‘re tired of society dramas and the run of adventure picâ€" tures. If you‘re aching for the unusual thrill Here it is! COMEDYâ€""That Night"â€"all Star SERIALâ€""DIAMOND MASTER"â€"Chap. 3 MARCELINE DAY and RALPH FORBES Set off along the Great Oregon Trail of thrilling history with Tim McCoy. He‘ll lead you along a road of excitement and action you‘ll never forget 10thâ€"Wednes. Thursdayâ€"11th 8thâ€"Monday and Tuesdayâ€"O9th Always one bound ahead of the wind, one stride in front of fate, and one league to the good of his pursuers was Tony the hunted horse. New Empire 5thâ€"Friday Saturdayâ€"6th Tom Mix COMEDYâ€""Growing Pains"â€"by Our Gang SERIALâ€""Yellow Cameo"â€"Chap. 8 TIM McCOY and DOROTHY SEBASTIAN With Flash the Wonder Dog COMEDYâ€""Tiger‘s Girl Friend" PATHE NEWS AND REVIEW " JUST TONY " There has been considerable disâ€" cussion this year in the south in reâ€" gard to the expenditures for Northern Ontario. It is pleasing to note that most of the discussion is friendly. When the question came before the legislaâ€" ture as it had to do in the usual course of business there seemed to be a very general opinion that insteat of being reduced it would be well if the money spent in the North could be very materially increased. Mr. Sinclair, leader of the Liberal Opposiâ€" tion in the Legislature, did criticize the estimates for the North, but his objection was not so much to the money spent but to the way in which it was expended, and to bookkeeping practices, rather than to actual aâ€" mounts involved. The leader of the Progressive Party in the house frankly suggested that the amount spent in the North should be increased. Mr. Lethbridge has visited the North Land and has great faith in its posâ€" sibilitigs and prospects. Hon. Mr. Finlayson, minister of Lands and Forâ€" ests, made the statement that he felt he should be asking for ten millions for Northern development, instead of for five millions. In this Mr. Finlayâ€" son was going along the right track. Some months ago when he was at the Northern Ontario Associated Boards of Trade meeting at Haileybury it was very strongly pressed upon him that the amount‘appropriated for the North was not nearly large enough to meet the needs. Instead of ten millions double that amount would not be out of the way. The problem of developâ€" Total Not Out of Proportion to the Extent and Importance of the Territory Benefitted by Exâ€" penditures cOME DETAILS ABOUT THE EXPENDITURES FOR NORTH IN "The total of expenditures may seem large, but the territory in which those expenditures have been made is also large The money spent in opening highways for vehicular traffic serves to facilitate the movement of farmâ€" ers‘ produce to markets and the transâ€" portation of other commoditiee proâ€" duced or required for consumption in that part of the province. By doing this the disbursement of the money has helped to prompte settlement business in the northern and northâ€" western districts. The expenditures have been advantageous to inhabitants of those districts and by fostering setâ€" tlement and development there have helped to enlarge the market there for goods produced and manufactured elsewhere in the province." |northern aAnd northwestern dstricts. |'I‘hey supplied the funds for the conâ€" struction of the Temiskaming and ‘Northm-n Ontario railway, which has been an important factor in the openâ€" ing up of the great mining areas in the North. In 1912 the government proâ€" posed and the legislature sanctioned the organization of the northern deâ€" velopment department. Subject to reâ€" gulations laid down by the government, this department was empowered to !construct works and improvements, make roads, improve and develop waâ€" terpowers and take measures for the advancement of settlement and colonâ€" ization, the assistance of settlers, the improvement of means of transportaâ€" tion and communication, and the enâ€" couragement and assistance of agrâ€"â€" culture and reforestation in the norâ€" thern and northwestern districts. The department was specifically authorizâ€" ed to make loans to assist in the operâ€" ation of creameries, cheese factories, grist mills and like enterprises, to purâ€" chase seed and cattle for salé or aisâ€" tribution to settlers, to purchase and operate wellâ€"drilling machinery for the benefit of settlers, to erect and equip schools and other public buildings and pay the salaries and expenses of perâ€" sons employed therein. Under the. Northern and Northwestern Ontariol Development Act of 1912, the Colon-‘ zation Roads Act and the Returned Ssoldiers‘ and Sailors‘ Settlement Act of 1917, the department has been reâ€" sponsible for the expenditure of more than thirty million dollars, of which more than twentyâ€"six millions have been used in the construction of roads and bridges. "The report of the northern developâ€" mernit department discloses that the exâ€" penditures of that branch of the Onâ€" tario government a;nounted in the fiscal year ended October 31 last to approximately $3,815,000. Of this sum $78,755 was used in assisting settlers to purchase cattle and seed and in aidâ€" ing creameries, cheese factories, grain elevators and like undertakings. The balance of the expenditures, amounting to $3,735,1753, was employed in the conâ€" struction and maintenance of roads in the Muskoka and Parry Sound disâ€" tricts, in North Renfrew, in the Nipisâ€" sing district and the territory around Sturgeon Falls, in the Sudbury disâ€" trict, and in Manitoulin Island, in Alâ€" goma, in the Temiskaming district, in the vicinity of Cochrane, Kapuskasâ€" ing, and Hearst, in the territory surâ€" rounding Fort William and Port Arâ€" thur and in the Rainy River and Keâ€" nora districts. "The Ontario government and legisâ€" lature, very properiy, have provided a large sum of money in the past twentyâ€" five years for the development of the northern and northwestern dstricts. They supplied the funds for the conâ€" It is interesting to have the opinâ€" ions of friends of the North residing in the South, so here is the editorial opinion of The Toronto Mail and Emâ€" pire on the province‘s expenditures in the North:â€" ing this North Country is a big one. indeed, and may only be solved if tackled in a big way. As it was pointâ€" ed oui. to Hon Mr. Finlayson expendiâ€" tures in Land mean more than just money spent. The better way to put it is that the money is inâ€" vested and will bring big returns. Hon. Mr. Finlayson at Haileybury was inclined to contest the ideas herewith outlined, but at other points in his addresses to the gatherings at Haileyâ€" bury, he proved the point himself. His use of the fact that the Government had expended half a million in the vicinity of Kirkland Lake and that as a result the people of Canada had an investment in that camp worth many millions, was an impressive proof of the fact that money spent in this North is well invested and will bring returns. A boy at school was asked this question in physics: "What is the difference between lightning and electricity?" And he answered: "Well, you don‘t have to pay for lightning." I1ded A wentyâ€" of the Special note: People who want to reduce swollen or varicose veins should get a bottle of Moone‘s Emerald Oil at once. Applied night and mornâ€" ing as directed they will quickly notice an improvement which will continue until the veins and bunches are reâ€" duced to normal. Ask Moisley Ball or any first class druggist for an original twoâ€"ounce botâ€" tle of Moone‘s Emerald Oil (full strength) and refuse to accept anyâ€" thing in its place. It is such a highly concentrated preparation that two ounces lasts a long time and furtherâ€" more if one bottle of Emerald Oil does not give you complete satisfaction you can have your money refunded. There is one simple yet inexpensive way to reduce inflammation of swollen toe joints and help get them down to normal and that is to apply Moone‘s Emerald Oil night and morning. Before her departure for England, Lady Kitty, expressed her intention of returning in 1930. In the course of that visit she is planning to make a a trip by dog team to North Bay when she will experiment in the use of Alsaâ€" tians as sled dogs. No Need to Suffer Another Day Puts an End to Bunion Pains An interesting visitor to Canada‘s north country recently was the wellâ€" known Scottish sportswoman and writâ€" er, Lady Kitty Ritson, says the last issue of Rod and Gun. For a couple of weeks, Lady Kitty was a guest at the M. U. Bates Camp at Metagama where she enjoyed considerable snowâ€" shoeing and dog team driving. The feminine globe trotter was making her first visit to Canada and was very much impressed with Northern Onâ€" tario and its outdoor life. sSCOTTISH SPORTSWOMAN . PAYS VISIT TO ONTARIO There was a very kindly acton taken by the court interpreter and the juryâ€" men at a coroner‘s inquest t Kapusâ€" kasing some days ago. The jury was enquiring into the death of Georgette Misseley who lost her life when the residence of her parents burned down recently., The girll who was about "But Capt. Maxwell is one of the foremost pilots in America. His skill and fortitude brought the flight to a successful conclusion and thus wrote another epic into the romantic history of the North Country." "Under prevailing weather conditions the injured man could not be moved by dogâ€"sled. The trip would take the better part of two weeks. The aeroâ€" plane made it in two hours. The docâ€" tor set the broken bones. Capt. Maxâ€" well made a second trip three days later to bring the clergyman to Cochâ€" rane. Conditions were anything but ideal for flying and several times the passenger believed that they were lost. It was a bumpy journey. 6 COURT INTERPRETER AND JURYMEN DONATE FEES "Peace, too, has its heroes. Witness the heroic flight of Capt. Roy Maxwell, chief of Ontario‘s air patrol, and Dr. W. S. Paull, young Cochrane doctor, who risked their own lives on a danâ€" gerous midâ€"winter flight to Moose Facâ€" tory for the purpose of relieving the sufferings of Rev. George Morrow, 28â€" yearâ€"old cleryman, who several weeks previously had broken his leg while tobogganing in the vicinity of his staâ€" tion at Rupert‘s house. In commenting on the recent wonâ€" derful feat of Capt. Roy Maxwell in his trips to Moose Factory for humanâ€" itarian purposes, an editorial in The Simcoe Reformer last week says:â€" CAPT. MAXWELL WROTE ONE MORE EPIC OF THE NORTH 4th, 1929

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