~~â€" The Leader for Forty Years On payment of a slight additional raualo farecharge for each person ourist sleeping car accommodaâ€" tourist sleeping car accommodaâ€" tien ‘may be se::urod at regular rates. CEANADIAN PACcIFIC Montreal Gazette:â€"News that the Monte Carlo Company has resumeGg payment ‘of dividends after a single year‘s suspension will be hailed as a sign that conditions have improved. The Casino has plenty of patrons and they have cash to hazard on the turn of the wheel. , ance at Lowest Rates. Sullivan Newton 21 Pine St. N., Timmins Phone 104 Established 1912 Insurance of Every Description Security Service if your car or truck is damaged, or wrecked, or the other car is smashed up, or someone is injured, or killed in an accident in which you are involved? We sell Automobile Insurâ€" Full particulars from any agent Stopovers granted at all® stations west of Port Arthur ~ _ THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE â€" ROUND TRIP COACH EXCURSIONS TO ALL STATIONS IN WESTERN CANADA TOURISTS SLEEPING CAR PRIVILEGES AUTO INSURANCE Going Dates: Daily May 31 to June 15 â€"Return Limit: 30 days Who Will Pay A Savings Account and its 4 selling points and day out, thousands of savings deposits, large and smaK, and which aims at giving every depositor courteous and careful attention. Paidâ€"Up Capital â€" 30 Million Dollars Reserve Fund â€" 30 Million Dollars l throuvh a service which receives - thtoughout the Dominion, day in VAILABILITYâ€"Whatever the "Fresh from the Gardens" to thrif AFETYâ€"Hundreds of millions of dollars‘ worth of: conservatively valued bank assets ensure the safety of your deposits. LUE increases through the halfâ€"yearly compounding : of interest. Ask our local branch for a table of typical increases, entitled "How Money Grows." Wiét#té of business or: the money market, your deposits are at your "immediate" dlsposal dollar for dollar. Try The Advance Want Advertisements "Mr. Spry, whose name was familiar in connection with the Radto League has been very alert in securing a memâ€" ber of Parliament as a member of his circulation staff and enlisting her Parâ€" liamentry influence in that direction. But it is bit thick when the use of a rubber stamp bearing her initials perâ€" mits all business correspondence of the Weekly Sun to be carried at the cost of the taxpayers of Canada. It would be. only one step further to frank the entire circulation of the Sun." "The communication from Miss Macâ€" phail is a circular bearing her signaâ€" ture in printed form and soliciting subscriptions to the Weekly Sun, which is represented as "the vanguard and apostle of farm rights." It is pointed out that Graham Spry and Alan Plaunt, who have financed the Sun for the past seventeen months, have conâ€" tributed two dollars toward the cost of running for every one dollar paid by the farmers in subscriptions. Rechâ€" pients of the letter are invited by Miss Macphail to pin a dollar to it a.nd mall it to the newspaper office. | Ottawa without payment of postage, f provided it is on the country‘s business. Itlseasytpseethattfmemberso! iparliament had to pay postage on all the mail sent by them from Ottawa, many letters would be likely to go unâ€" ' answered and the business of the country would be correspondingly reâ€" tarded. The "franking‘" privilege, as it is called, is of general advantage, proâ€" vided it is honestly and fairly carried through. However, there are always tcme who will abuse a good thing, and the franking privilege has certainly been abused in the past. It is bad enough to have the country carrying the postage on circulars and speechesl sent out by members really as part of their political propaganda. It is much worse when the privilege of franking is used for the advantage of commercial concerns. Who would so abuse such a privilege? â€" Well, Agnes Macphail is one of them. â€" Are you surprised? Well, lots of people are not! Those who are are always howling about others grafting and so on usually have some reason for doing so. In discussing this matter cf the abuse of the "franking" privilege, The Toronto Telegram says:â€" "Shameless awbuse of the franking privilege under which members of Parâ€" liament are permitted to despatch their personal mail free of charge from Paras liament Buildings at Ottawa is not unâ€" usual. But there has not of late been a more unblushing example of this pracâ€" tice than in the franking by Agnes Macphail, M.P., of purely commercial literature, as a result of which the Post Office has been deprived of revenue to which it was entitled. Members of parliament have the right to send out mail and matter from Comment on the Abuse of the Franking Privilege (From The Northern News) Cobaltâ€"While there is no doubt that there is a depression at the present time, yet the people who are experiencâ€" ing it are prone to. think that it has never occurred before.: Mrs. Willard Sopha of this town is in possession of a letter written in 1876 by one of her uncles to his son, in which he speaks and he makes the appeal to all to see that they are protected. The squirâ€" rels yere sent to Dr. Edis by the Toronâ€" to Humane Society and the experiment is being tried to see if the black squirâ€" rels will thrive in the North. Black squirrels are common in certain parts of Old Ontario but there are none in the North so far as known. There does not seem to be any reason why they should not live here and it is with this idea in mind that the black squirâ€" rels were released here. Two of the squirrels released in the bush at Swasâ€" tika are male and two are female. In Old Ontario the black squirrel is proâ€" tected by the game laws. It would be in keeping with what all wish to be considered as the "spirit of the North" if these squirrels are protected by the people of their own volition and with without any recourse to the law. When the four black squirrels were released at Swastika they made gaily and with their bushy tails waving in the air for the protection of the bush. All will hope that not only will the four black squirrels be allowed to live and flourish but that their cnildren and grandchildren and so on may also enâ€" joy the freedom and bea.uty of the woods of the North. FOURTEEN DOLLARS A MONTH DURING : 1876 DEPRESSION ‘The bananas can be baked the same way as the potatoes, in about 15 minâ€" utes. You might want to squeeze ‘bit of lemon juice over the banana when eaten. Or here‘s another idea. Lay back a section of the banana peel, reâ€" move two or three small chunks of banana and replace by bits of marshâ€" mallow to fill the spaces. Then bind the peeling on again and roast under the fire. Black Squirrels in the Bush in Swastika Area There are four black squirrels in the bush in the Swastika district, and if anyone sees them they are particularly requested ‘not to kill â€" or injure them. Dr.‘ J. F. Edis, of Swastika, turned the four black squirrels free in the bush The potatoes are baked by wrapping them in wet leaves or wet brown wrapâ€" ping paper and burying them under the fire. This takes about ‘an hour depending upon the size"~of ~potato.~ As soon as the potatces are done, be sure to break them open so that the steam may escape and the potatoes will ‘be flaky and not soggy. Baked PotatOoes Buttered Whole Wheat Rolis Baked Bananas Cup of Milk Kabobs are the campers‘ name for broiled steak. To make them, you will need i pound of round steak and half of an onion for each person. Ask the market to cut the slices of meat into 1}4 inch pieces when it is ordered. Cut a green stick, and sharpen it at one end. With it, pierce one of the pieces of meat, then a slice of onion, then a slice of meat and then another piece of onion, and so on, until everyâ€" thing is on the stick Broil the meat by holding or suspending the stick over the fire. It will probably take about ten minutes to broil over hot coals. It‘s surprising how easily a full meal can be prepared over an open fire withâ€" cut the use of even a single cooking utensil. ~And it is heaps of fun too. Wouldn‘t the following menu meet hearty welcome after a long hike? Do you know how to fix them that way? Find some flat stones and place them beneath the fire to get hot. When they are heated and out from beneath the firg, lay triangles of bacon on them. Flace the three strips of bacon for each triangle close enough to that when the fat melts, and the egg is broken into it, it will hold together and you can turn it by lifting the bacon. Simple, isn‘t it? Jaded city appetites are revived after long tramp through the woods or an invigorating swim,. Johnny, who wouldâ€" n‘t drink milk at home, finds it tastes surprisingly good at camp. And Susan who usually turns up her nose at eggs welcomes them with zest when they are served on a bacon triangle hot off a large stove . piest days of a child‘s life. There‘s a thrill in delving into the wonders of health giving freshness of air and warm sunshine. There‘s relaxation in the long, nerveâ€"soothing silences of the open. ; Camp days can be some of the hapâ€" Judge asked Negro in court; ‘"Would you like a Jawyer?" "No suh, I don‘t want no lawyer, but I suttenly could use a couple of good mother of 18 daughters probably gets go weary listening to the daily arguâ€" ments about whose turn it is to do the dishes that she does them herself, hall the time." She is, therefore, we take it, in the same position as the mother of one daughter. s "It is probably true that lumbering was never more efficiently conducted in this country than in the period when the railways were first invading the hinterland, some thirty years ago. The lumberjack figured importantly in that gigantic jcb, bringing to transportation problems in particular a wealth of an efficiency in action _ "Operations in rough country brought out other phases of skill. Where it was impracticable to skirt a hill the lumâ€" berman went right over it with towâ€" ering loads of logs, by the device of "tracing" and "sanding." To see a load come down a 30 degree grade with the teamster standing aloft, the powerful horses leaning back on the breeching and the sleigh runners literally jump* ing from the sand was awe inspiring. Tracing and winching served for the upgrades. that has never. ibeen freighting in Canada." . Woodstock â€" Bentinelâ€"Review:â€"Says Hamilton Spectator:. ‘"‘That Italian â€"wWas no mean engineering feat. Not long ago a mining engineer who was brought up in Mattawa and had in his youth observed the tricks and strateâ€" géems of the lumbermen, recalled the ice bridge stunt and managed to take a mining plant across streams that otherwise would have constituted an insuperable ?oarrier to heavy transport. The idea was to lay two strings of logs, road width apart, across the stream and to pour water in between. When a sufficient thickness had been built up the loads passed over. These "bridges" remain sound and can be used long after the ice has melted from the lake or stream, a surprising sight to the neophyte. "In the use of ice ithe lumberjack was highly skilled. His haulage roads were the forerunners o6f the smooth concrete of.today. His employment of frozen water to bridge a swift runâ€" ning riverâ€"the making of "ice bridges" "Another engineering department in which the lumberjack shone brilliantly, in the light of subsequent developments, was that of utilization of waterways. His dams and fiumes were highly efâ€" fective, even if crude in construction. His knowledge of flood water was proâ€" found. The rivers and lakes were his freighting highways in spring and summer and he employed them to the fullest extent in ‘the economic sense. Even to this day the structures of fifty years ago form the basis for more elâ€" aborate systems of water control. gctten. That is that the lumbermen had an uncanny sense of "grade" and did engineering work on roads. This fact has been proven in many ~localities, where modern highâ€" ways and railways followed‘ the trail of the original ploneers. Location enâ€" gineers have discovered that their elâ€" awborate tra.versing and instrument work PIQ‘SM them back to the route orlâ€" ginally chosen: by. the lumbermen by instinct or by developed faculty. "Reminiscences of the lumbering inâ€" dustry of an earlier day and of the lumberjacks that made it one of the biggest ‘businesses in Canada in its time, brings in friendly comment from men who have seen the old ‘originals in action. One reader of this column recalls a circumstance that the writer had noted on his own account but forâ€" Mining has so overshadowed lumberâ€" ing in this part of the North that many matters of interest are likely to be forgotten. One of these items is the skill and practical effectiveness of the oldâ€"time lumbermen in the matter of what may be termed engineering skill, though the oldâ€"time lumbermen did not pretend to be enginecers. Some of the achievements of the mining men in the matter of engineering feats have received prominence very properly. As matter of fact every mining property in the North is a notable proof of the skill of the engineer. Because this is so, however, the achievements of the lumbermen should not be forgotten. In interesting way, "Grab Samples" in The Northérn Miner last week deals with ‘the cleverness of the oldâ€"time lumbermer in the line of engineering ability. "Grab Samples" in this conâ€" nection says:â€" Engineering Skill of Old Lumbermen Modern Engineering Methods ‘Take off Hats to Art of the Lumbermen in Choosing Routes for Roads. Skill in Buillding a fine of $1000.00 and costs or three months and ortiered the confiscation of the car. The man giving the name of Likkanen took the ailternative of the term in Jjail. It is interesting to note that the confiscated car, a 1927 t nection . with the appeal loaged with ‘the "court."""~ Alfalfa is sown at the rate of 20 pounds per acre in a good seed bed with or without a nurseâ€"crop and the seed must be inoculated before ‘seeding. Nitroâ€"culture can be procured from the Bacteriological Division, Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ontario. Grimm and Ontario Variegated are two varieâ€" ties that are doing very well in the North country. Grimm yielded 2 tons and 992 pounds of cured hay the past season ‘with a nfirse crop and 2 tons and 1778 pounds without a nurse crop. Seed is reasonably cheap this year, so make an acre of alfalfa, your slogan for 1933. Alfalfa has been grown continuously on the Dominion Experimental Station at Kapuskasing, Ontario, for the past twelve years and has yielded on the average of 2 tons and 660 pounds. This is a high yield of valuable feed and in additicn to this it stores nitrogen in the solil and mellows the texture of the ground for cereals and other crops. The clay solil of Northern Ontario is particularly well adapted to the growâ€" ing of alfalfa owing to the fact that lime content is very high and drainage and other factors being balanced up, there is no reason why two crops of alfalfa hay cannot be produced every season; this ‘being a very important Alfalfa in Northern Ontario Of all the forage crops that are grown in Northern Ontario, alfalfa reâ€" ceives the least attention and a fair acreage should be grown on every setâ€" tler‘s lot as it is a valuable feed for live stock of all kinds. It cannot be beaten fo;ogreen feed for psultry and last but least it is a solil builder. of the highest order. Recommends Alfalfa for This North Land mends alfalfa as a crop to be given special attention, and his long and successful experience in farming wark in the North entitles his suggestions to the closest consideration. Mr. Ballanâ€" tyne‘s article follows:â€" mental Farm at Kapuskasing, is comâ€" mended to all settlers and farmers in in the cost of producing cheap Fine for the children, Order the redâ€"andâ€"green package from your grocer. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. Well, serve Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes. The refreshing crispness and flavor of these toasted flakes make appetites take a new lease on life. Good for you too. So rich in energy and easy to digest. ALREADY you are beginning to enjoy the outdoor season. Wouldn‘t you welcome a crisp breakfast tomorrow? Summer‘s around the corner‘ #* *0 . 90L INOHd _ =â€" ‘011 SONYH+)HV1Oâ€"TIH .0. .0,.0_.0.,0,.0,,0,.0,.0, .0. .0, .0, .0. 0. .6 Vfoooofooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo3000000Qooooooooooo000000000000000030300000000000000003030000 000000000000000000000“00“00u3u * C3 ecin«lecdinelize dotest "Ventures‘ latest enterprise was the outcome of a recent visit to the proâ€" perty by Thayer Lindsley, president, and Ernest Craig, manager at Falconâ€" bridge Nickel Mine, who directed a diamond drilling and development proâ€" gram on the Otisse claims some 15 years ago for the Matachewan Gold Mineés. Previous work on the property has carrled the shaft to a depth .of about 160 feet, with about 1,000 feet of lateral development. Approximately $700,000 in ore is reported to have been indicated in several small ore bodies pling option on the Otisse gold property owned by the Matachewan CGold Mines, Limited, in Powell township, Mataâ€" chewan area, Ontario. A crew of men has been set to work rebuilding camps and preparing the mine for a thorough examination. A boiler has been shipâ€" ped from Haileybury and the work of dewatering the shaft and underground workings will be nprooeeded with immeâ€" diately. Loney‘s Reports, the able mining paper issued by Ed. Loney at Sudbury, has the following in its last issue in regard to Ventures, Limited, and Mataâ€" Ventures, Limited, Now Sampling at Matachewan > lt *x . ov * v * » «t Snd 2 00 1 Alge > ue i Ne us n Av iess > > P ie t 2 + es 3 ty i i ons ; 0e M ooR + Bs $ § 2 sn A uoo t e NB a .0. .0. .0_.0,.0_ _0 0_ .0 _0 _0 _0 .0 _0 _0 .0 _0 o. .0..0..0. .0. .0 .3000000000000000000000000000000000000oo"oooooooooooooovoooooo00000000000000.0000300003030303¢ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo. "Ventures, Limited, has taken a samâ€" BUILDERS‘ SUPPLIES Sanding Floors A ‘Specialty gn%oz service in mining ?;..zonr.roai; gttuzfl.ï¬r.izg Standard Stock .3‘ ‘:flgn Exchange ra Cucb Markee â€" Chicago Board of Trade Phanmne 100 which, while high grade and erratic, up to the present have not been coâ€" related to show commercial prospects. Like many other prospects the inâ€" creased price of gold has gthrovm different light on the possibilities and the forthcoming examination will deâ€" termine what further development will be undertaken." You will be pleased with the ROOMS, MEALS AND SERVICE HERE First Ave., Schumacher Rooms With ahd Without Board European and American Plan Open 24 hours each day Specializing in American and European Meals HOTEL â€"