Porcupine Advance, 25 Jul 1929, 2, p. 6

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Thursday, July 25th, 1929 MHear this cereal! So CRISP it crackles out loud when you pour on milk or cream. Toasted rice grains. Rich with flavor., Something new for breakfast. Deliâ€" cious for lunch. Use in candies, macaroons. Sprinkle into soups. Kiddies are fascinated by Rice Krispies. Order from your grocer. A crisp redâ€" andâ€"green package. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. t ds * .. 4 M Hilloggs RICE KRISPIES â€" | Telloggs |} | RICE ; KRisPIEs] | _ Â¥7 | ® | Don‘t Pity Poor Young Men Pity Poor Old Men GIVEN health and strength young people who are poor should not be an object of pity. Rather should one strive to arouse ambition in them. It is the poor old folks that require help. You know of poor old mothers who are shifted around amongst sons and daughters for three or four months at a time, because they have no financial means. Well, then, do you yourself want to be in this position some day? Do you want your wife to suffer? Not if you can help it! Then, provide now for an income for either or both of you while your earning powers permit it. A reasonable premium will enable you to buy substantial protection in a Confederation Life Policy. Write now for pamphlet entitled " No Matter What Happens" which tells how this may be done. Address : Head Offce onfederation Life ead and ShOUldCI‘S dose BALL ommonplace Stanclar Association Northland Motor Sales Because of the references made to the tour last year of Hon. J. S. Martin, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of the Masons of Ontario, the address read at the 74th annual communicaâ€" tion of the Grand Lodge held at Otâ€" tawa last week, will be of special interâ€" est to readers of The Advance. In the absence of the Grand Master, Hon. J. S. Martin, the address was subâ€" mitted by R. B. Dargavel, Toronto, the Deputy Grand Master. The Grand Master‘s tour of the North country last September, and the impressions he obtained of the lodges visited, and the general character of Masonry there was dealt with very fulâ€" ly, and made deep impression on the 1.500 delegates attending the gathering. MASONIG GRAND MASTER SPEAKS OF TOUR OF NORTH Referring to this tour, the report was as follows: "One tour, however, I can not pass by so hurriedly, the one which I made last September through Northern Onâ€" tario, a 2,000 miles journey, replete with interest and wonderful associations. Everywhere your Grand Master was C H R YVSLE R MO TORS PR O DUC Address of Hon. John Martin Read to Meeting of Grand Lodge A. F. A. M. at Ottawa Timmins, Ontario Local Agent A. W. Pickering, Timmins, Ont. PLY MOUTH . CANADIA NS O CANApPLA xX s the only ir thatoffers e performâ€" of Chrysler PGo MOULU Many recent the Plymouth such 2s a hea larger main be necting rods, IC stroke, increase« placement, new arrangement an« sign fullâ€"pressur svstem â€"rive PI SA At Kapuskasing "Our party went first to Kapuskasing, where on Monday, September 24 I constituted and consecrated the new Spruce Falls lodge and dedicated their Masonic hall. Great things are to be expected from these pioneer Masons of the north. In Kapuskasing we saw the great $28,000,000 pulp and paper plant, one of the chief assets of this model town, which is itself a rare exâ€" ample of civic beautification. "The absence of the Grand Secretary through illness was partly compensated for by the presence of the Grand Senior Deacon, George wW. Lee, whose unreâ€" mitting attention and care added enorâ€" mously to the comfort and pleasure of the tour. greeted with warm enthusiasm and a fraternal feeling which amply demonâ€" strated the strength of Masonry in the north. Without exception I found the lodges in a flourishing condition. "At Cochrane on the following day I met the Masons of the surrounding disâ€" trict and saw the firp schools, hospital and substantial business section of that progressive place. The same afternoon we went on to Iroquois FPalls. "Here the hospital of the people is far famed. This is the model town of its kind, where all the property of the municipality is owned and directly conâ€" trolled by the Abitibi Paper Company. One of the beauty spots of the northâ€" ern lands, with its lovely park, its wealth of flowers, its velvet lawns, its neat and wellâ€"paved roads, it is one of the gems of Ontario. Here we held a wonderful meeting. "Next day we went to Timmins a city of 17,000, whose identification with the worldâ€"known Hollinger, has made the place famous. We saw the mines and the wealth but more interesting yet to me was the gathering of my broâ€" ther Masons. Nowhere perhaps on earth do we see more evident that boundless hospitality and fraternal friendship evinced than in the north. "The following day we went to Kirkâ€" land Lake, where in the heart of the rocks we found a town of 6,000 people living in fine homes, with churches, schools, hospitals, and all the fittings of a coming city. Although the lodge has only been established four years, I met here one of the most impressive assemblages of all the tour. "It was a Gifferent picture which we saw the next morning when we came to New Liskeard. Here in the clay belt we viewed the oldest and richest farming district of Northern Ontario, with fine farm homes and healthy crops. At Cobalt in the evening the Masons had gathered from Hailybury, New Liskeard, Elk Lake and the vicinity and I had the joy of meeting personally more than 300 of my brethren. "sudbury, home of nickel, was our last stopping place and the Masons of Sudbury, Copper Cliff, Capreol and Sturgeon Falls left nothing undone to make our meeting a success. met here one of the most impressive assemblages of all the tour. "It was a Gifferent picture which we saw the next morning when we came to New Liskeard. Here in the clay belt we viewed the oldest and richest farming district of Northern Ontario, with fine farm homes and healthy crops. At Cobalt in the evening the Masons had gathered from Hailybury, New Liskeard, Elk Lake and the vicinity and I had the joy of meeting personally more than 300 of my brethren. "sudbury, home of nickel, was our last stopping place and the Masons of Sudbury, Copper Cliff, Capreol and Sturgeon Falls left nothing undone to make our meeting a success. "I can not soon forget the impression made upon me by the tremendous growth of Masonry in the north, the character of the men whom I had the privilege of meeting and the nospitality with which I was received by every lodge. Surely when the fraternity has been blessed with such vigour in the 00e xi in ces in D 0 G ; A total depletion of 4,400,000,000 cuâ€" : bic feet per annum does not necessarlâ€" !ly imply that our total resources of subic feet are reduced 'by that amount every year and that | the supply will therefore be exhausted f in fifty years. Estimating the probable jduration of our supply of forest proâ€" | ducts is not a matter of simple arithâ€" metic. The rate of utilization is far ‘from constant. It tends to increase with the discovery of new uses for | wood, the increase in our population ‘and the increase in the demand for forest products from other countries | whose supplies have been reduced to a Egreater extent than our own. The rate of destruction from fires and other agencies is also very uncertain but tends to increase with the increase of population and the extension of settleâ€" ment unless measures are taken to prevent this tendency. | On the other hand there is a steady increase in volume taking place in all healthy stands of timber due to anâ€" nual growth. By the application of scientific forest management this anâ€" \nual growth can be stimulated and icould be made to take place over our entire area of potential forest land. If all the land in Canada which is better I suited for the growing of timber than for any other purpose were under inâ€" tensive forest management on a susâ€" tained yield basis it would furnish \|enough timber and forest products anâ€" inually in perpetuity to supply the | needs of a much larger population than we have at present with a sufficient | surplus for profitable exportation. recent refhinements i7 uth power plant heavier cranksha i bearings and co ds., longer engi mamnifoldit pist THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO 4 X | There is reason to believe that in ‘time the loss due to forest fires will be | practically eliminated once the general | public can be made to realize the neâ€" {cessity of precaution, as ninety per cent. of forest fires are due to human ’carelessness. Scientific methods of | controlling insect and fungus damage ‘are being rapidly developed and in time the depletion will consist almost ‘ entirely of material cut for use. farâ€"flung north. Freemasonry must go on froum strength to strength until all mankind must feel the benign influâ€" ence of these three cardinal virtues, Brotherly Love, Relief and Truth." FIGURES ON THE LUMBER INDUSTRY N DOMINION The latest available estimate places Canada‘s forest resources at 224,304 million cubic feet of standing timber is capable of yielding 424,637 million feet board measure of sawn lumber and 1,121,993 thousand cords of pulpwood, ties, poles and other smaller materials. With the population of the Dominion estimated at 9,519,000 in 1927 this reâ€" presents a per capita supply of 23,564 cubic feet of standing timber to proâ€" vidc an annual per capita consumption for use alone of over 269 cubic feet. Latest Available Estimates as to Canâ€" ada‘s Forest Resotirces. BDepletion per Annum, and Natural Inâ€" crease The use of substitutes for wood tend to reduce consumption but is usually exaggerated as a facto forest conservation. The increa scarcity of wood will result in incr ing prices which will tend to limit sumption. It is now a profitable vestment to plant trees in Canada der certain conditions and the pl: ing and management of forest 1: will become increasingly profitable supplies aecrease but before this p ment can possibly suflicient for our through a period duration and inte tirely on how soo ing and management ol io0rest iands will become increasingly profitable as supplies decrease and prices advance, but before this planting and manageâ€" ment can possibly result in forest crops suflicient for our needs we will pass through a period of lean years whose duration and intensity will depend enâ€" tirely on how soon and how efficiently we apply scientific management to our existing forests. KNew Brunswick and increases in Br tish Columbia and all the other prC vinces. The exportation of lumber de creased and the importation mcrease during the same period. i V INVINCIBLE in name and qua_lituj/, 11 l ry 19 Bu C ada fotr 1C b) a al been issuC Branch of Statistics mt LARENS â€" umTEDP HAMILTON aNTaARIO NH plant land 1M rilen may this n in n nz he 10 (From The Ottawa Journal) Statistics are not always dull. There are, for example, the statistics about automobiles. To us, at all events, they are as interesting as most detective ficâ€" ion, certainly more mysterious. Take the figures that appeared in yesterâ€" day‘s newpapers about the number of new cars, They are simply amazing. Last year Canadian factories proâ€" duced 242,054 cars. As though that were not enough, we imported 47,408 cars. Of course, we didn‘t keep them all; we exported 79,000 of them. But we had 209,607 left. Over 200,000 cars in one year for a population of about 10,000,000. What is Done With All the Cars That are Made And these, of course, weren‘t all our cars. We‘ve been making them and importing them for years. In 1926 we turned out 204,727; in 1927, nearly 180,â€" 000; and so on. And we‘ve been imâ€" porting them at the rate of about 35,â€" 000 a year. Where do they all go? Who buys them? What happens to the old cars? The average life of a car, it is said, is seven years. What we would like to know, therefore, is this: If we keep on turning out and importing motor cars at the rate of 200,000 a year (we already have 1,061,830 licensed) what is going to happen? To the old cars? Over a million cars for Canada means one car for every ten of our population. In other words, we could, with a little crowding, take the whole population of Canada for a ride at any given single hour. And this would leave out motorcyvcles. Considering that there are only 32,â€" 000,000 motor cars in the whole world, Canada, with more than a million of them makes a brave showing. The figures for the leading countries are: United States, 24,000,000; England, England, 1,128,000; France, 1,098,000; Canada, 1,061,000; Germany, 531,000. In other words, Canada, with a popuâ€" lation of 10,000,000, has almost as many cars as England, with 40,000,000 popuâ€" lation, or France, with a population of 45,000,000; and twice as many cars 2s Germany, with a population of 48,000,â€" 000. And this, of course, is but to remind us that, though comparatively small in numbers, there are many things that we lead in. We lead in wheat exports, have the most railway mileage per caâ€" pita, lead in, production of newsprint, have the largest pulpwood resources, the world‘s most extensive fisheries, have more life insurance per capita, most hydro power development per capita, the world‘s largest inland port (Montreal), are among the leaders in production of gold and silver. This, however, isn‘t a tourist booklet, nor a Dominion Day oration,. What we started out to say was that all exâ€" Kirkland Lake in Fine Position Regarding Milk Aberdeen Press:â€"Not long will the Scotch bear the brunt of "tight" jokes. Lord Provost Lewis‘ recent accomplishâ€" ment will to some extent allay all such stories. In two years he has collected from citizens more than $2,000,000 to build a new infirmary. One woman nad to be disuaded from drawing out here life savings of $250 to give to the cause. planations that we‘ve heard notwithâ€" standing, we can‘t get it through our heads what we do, or are going to do, with all of those cars. > ARRY a Letter of Credit from the Imperial Bank of Canada. This letter enables you to draw funds in any country, and in any currencyâ€"dollars, pounds, francs, etc.â€"to the required amount. Take along also a few Travellers‘ Cheques. They will be convenient when vyou are not in reach of a bank, and are honoured in all countries without question. Letters of Credit and Travellers‘ Cheques may be obtained at all branches. Timmins Branch â€" D. S south Porcupine Branchâ€" _ results at various ths ago an epidemic have occurred in the had it not been for effective attitude of Any branck of the bank will give you painstaking and dependable service. A UNIVERSAL CURRENCY ke is owns milk uberâ€" milk. ty is f the unity . milk | GOLD MEDAL COFFEE Y ou‘ll drink it again Drink It Again" B J

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