THURSDAY, AUVOGUST 25TH, 1938 Farouk she recoived a d.amond necklace valued at $120,000 and other gifts inâ€" cluded such widely different items as a sport coup» from Adoiph Hitler, a staâ€" tue of the Enperor Diocletian from the Italian government, and a pair of shotâ€" guns from King George of England. A Cargo From Costa Rica In commemoration of the .National Exposition of Costa Rica five colourful pictcrial stamps was issued depicting some of the interesting products of this litth> Central American country. Cofâ€" fee is Costa Rica‘s principal export, and on the 10c red value we see the freshly picked coffee brans being broutht in from the fields on a primitive ox cart. Ssecond in economic importance are bananas, shcwn on the 5c green. Coâ€" coa ranks third and a fing picture of a cacao ped appears on the large diamond shapsd 3¢c brown stamp. The 2¢ gray triangle brings us the first postal apâ€" pearance of the tuna fish, or horse macherel va‘ued by anzlers for its pearantis Cl t macherel, va‘ue splendid fightin ate atants ite atacten ie ats ste io uie atee ainnie ate aivete ateate dinets assumed â€" the means, approp and Only!" dan counries a matriags is simply a husiness coni{ract betwoen the groom and the bride‘s father, who unromanâ€" tically assess her cash value and then clasp hands to clinch the bargain‘! will be ralieved to learn, howâ€" ever, that Farida was not forgotten in the matter of wedding presents. From Farouk she recoived a d.amond necklace valued at $120,000 and other gifts inâ€" cluded such widely different items as a sport coup» from Adoiph Hitler, a staâ€" tue of the Enperor Diocletian from the Italian government, and a pair of shotâ€" guns from King George of England. To Americans a docidedly odd feature abcut the royal Egypiian wedding was the fact that the bride herself was not precent! It ssems that in Mohammeâ€" dan counries a marriagso is simply a husiness coni{ract the groom pearance of the tuna fisn, or norse macherel, valued by anglers for its splendid fighting spirit and by the genâ€" ezxal public for its delicicus meat, The 1c gretn and purple rounds out the serâ€" les with a beautiful picturs of the "guaria morada," or Costa Rican orchid. (mraning Un2 WhO CA@ADNZI tinguishes Between Right and is the sixâ€"foot son of the lat collecting King Fuad, and he the throne of last Aug youthful bride is the daugh judge in the A‘exandria Coutr peals and hor maidemn name Naz Zulficar. Upon her mari The Jlatest postal issue from Eigypt is a im stamp» commemorating the weddingz of 18â€"ycarâ€"old King Parouk and 17â€"yearâ€" â€"old Quzserft Farida. Farouk 4m;°amng "One Who Carefully Disâ€" tinguishes Retween Right and Wromnmt‘") $ 040 00046 ? Timmins Stamp Club Column : 0 ¢ 0 o 0 9 0 % 6 646 4664 4494 Royal Wedding Commemorated by Stamps he latest postal issue from Egypt a im stamp» commemoraiting the dinz of Kinz Farouk Ski sStamps THOUGHTFUL CARE AND DIGNITY CHARACTERIZE OUR 8. T. WA LEKER From Finland lv er OPEN DAY AND NIGHT he 323C grren. C i fing picture of the large diaimot The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA Executives of sound businesses are invited to discuss their banking problems with this centuryâ€"old Bank. Our broad experience, ample resources and worldâ€"wide facilities are available to those seeking a banking conâ€" nection. last August. His > daughter of a ria Court of Apâ€" y name was Sasi 1or ~marriage she "Farida", which nough, "The One OVER A CENTURY OF BANKING SERVICE ate als a Tealea t al abe ale afeal e ts ols of this Cofâ€" rt, and freshly M M IN S World â€"wide facilities in every department of banking » Invitation imnp~â€" nded W. H. Davies is one of the better known modern authors and his pcems are often quoted for their thought. "The Philosophical Beggar" is one of his poems that has lines that "stick" in on»>‘s memory, thus being quoted by thowe who read such work. The Philosophical Beggar (by W. H. Davies) Out, life of care! Man lives to fret For some vain thing H:> cannot get. csuntries on the Baltic were the first to popularize the exciting sport of skiâ€" inz. The wiry. longâ€"legged â€" Finns famous for their proficiency in Olympic track events, take naturally to ‘the art of slaloms, christiecs and schneepfluge, as can be very masily seen from ithe clearâ€"cut and attractiive designs of these ‘hree stamps. The issue is sponsored by the F.LS. (International Ski Federâ€" which is presumably benefiting by ‘the extra proceeds. Whondrras Honors Her Former Capital Tha. latest stamp from the warlike little Central American republic of Honduras commzemorates the 400th anâ€" n{versary of the fcunding of the city of Comayagzua, which until 1880 was the capital of the country. The value is 8¢ blue and the design shows the Spanâ€" ish governor, Alonzo Caceres, laying out the foundation site in 1537. When Fame‘s as sick As Faillure is, He snores on straw quiet bliss. When rich men loathe Their meat and wine, If beggar has No child or wife He of all men, Enjovs most life Ani no man dies But must look back With sorrow on His own past track. Man lives to want The rich man‘s Is to want things The pzor know The Ciltlss crave (Green solitude; Th2 Country craves A multitude. If You Like Books > thinks dry bread And water fine. 1938 not The British and the Fronch both knew that the Germans were about to try poison gas, learning the dire news from a German engingeer deserter. Tha information was duly around among the higher @juthorities, many of whom openly scoffed (as their d>sâ€" patches reveal) at the idea. But the German documents reproduced in the appcndix make it quite clear that this means of warfare had bsen carefully thought out, specious argum>nts had teen prepared to offset the inevitable But the thrall of the book lies, not in the asssmbling of the army, but in its fighting experience. There was only a scattored leaven of experienced soldiers in the First Canadian Division that went to France. Even the old troops were facing something new in the way of war. Trench warfare had never been the forte of the British army and particularly in the precedâ€" ing century. The use of poison gas by the Germans introduced an rentirely neéw element into the. struggle. How the Canadians met this fiendish thrust, how they fought on day after day around lethal Ypres, how they were cut to pieces by unchalilenged ensmy arâ€" tillery, how they hung on grimly like fizhting wildcats until they exhausted the German attack, is told in this offiâ€" clal and account. government and the Canadian people made in 1914 to raise, equip and dosâ€" patch the First Contingent. . Canada had little in the way of armament or transport. All she had was willing men. The native genius for organizaâ€" ticn and the exercise of initiative was tested to thre utmost. A list of the materials required to put the continâ€" gent on even a marching footing was appalling. The quantities required for even 50,000 troops strained the facilities of Canadian factories. The new army had to start from scratch, like a newâ€" born infant. Thus, the rapid equipâ€" ment and despatch of the First Conâ€" tingent must ever immain a monument to the energy and intelligence of not only government but of the manuâ€" facturers and transportation orzanizaâ€" tions as well. (From "Grab Samples" in Northorn ' Miner) The first volume, and appendix, of the Official Hisory of the Canadian Forces in the Great War, 1914â€"18, have appeared. The volume deals with the outbreak of the war on the fourth of August, 1914, the raising of the first cuntingent, the crossing to Ensland, the first winicr on Salishury plain, the first Canadian Division in the British battleâ€" line, the gas ailtack at Ypres, the atâ€" tacks at F.stubert and Givenchy and gives cetails of olher Canadian fo*ces raised and sent prior to the formation of the Canadian Corps in Soptember of 1915. The record of the initial Canadian effort is enthralling. No war book that has yet appcarmd touches this official account in gripping interest. The story of the gas attack at Ypres is a classic and leaves the laterâ€"coming soldier with an irradicable impression of the heroism and resourcefulness of the troops of the First Contingent. The bcook does not pull any punches. The descriptive narrative is fully docuâ€" meonted in the appendics which reproâ€" duce the secret documents, the instrucâ€" tions, the arguments, the bitter bickerâ€" ings of those in command of the Briâ€" tich, Canadian and French forces. After twenty years appears the credit for heroic actions; the behindâ€"the scenes manouvres of those in power; the row over the Ress Rifle; the conâ€" flicting interests of the politicians and the soldiers; the bungling; the briliant work of the Navy ; the indifferent fightâ€" ing of the French; the hardships of th2> Canadian troops in England in the first winter; the magic transformation of citizens into hardâ€"bit n zroops fightâ€" inz the best trained avimy in the world:; the blame for the tau.ures; all is writâ€" ten into the resord in a literary style admirably adapted to the trem>ndcjus subject. Those who talk and wr.ie today of the possibility of war cannot visualize the enormous effort that the Canadian Remarkable Effort of Canada in the War > Inner Story Told of the Davs of 1914â€"1918. An ovntimist is a man who doesn‘t care doesn‘t happen to him. id wriie today of r cannot visualize hat the Canadian tant materia an impcrigr of large tery which, it is c madse from the clay . For the mason that | provinclal governmer leased a crea‘ts deal examiraticns 6f Jam of the 1 (Ive necessity for t of coal. The other kno the region, china could surely be 1 Ontario. The lat examiraticns Gf considerable of sdvanced is‘ ma is only natural t James Bay mcJlion. While stron@ly posed to the Hepburn propssal, «the Cochrane paper contends that "until such timzs as there is real demand and a steady market for the products to be mads from the natlural resources of the area, there is no particular purpose to be served by pujlicizing those naâ€" tural resources." _This opitnion is hard to analyze, for it was generally understood that the nâ€" sourcts cof the> James‘ Bay region, for the most part, would enable Ontario to process products now imported. For instanrce, if it were found practical to mine and process diknil> as fuel,) the province would sbe partly relieved of 1 There are more volumes to follow.| If they maintain the sam»> standard of | excellence that the first has displayed the series will comprise the mose valuâ€" | able set of war books in Canada a,likei for studeonts and the mere sceker after thrills And the arzuments these volumes will stir up! | although an excelleéenmt target weapon. One brilliant passage in the first volume is that which covers the convoy of the First Contingent to England. Behind the scenes the Navy was havi-ngl an anxious time. Harassed on all sidesl by the necessity to keep open the Britâ€" ish Channel and the Western Ocean j and to curb raiding ships in the Pacific and Indian Ocsans the senior arm of the service had its hands full. The moral effect of successfully bringing over the Canadians in spite of subâ€" marines, mines and raiders, was treâ€" | mendous. Contrariwise, had the Georâ€" ; mans got at the convoy the bad effect woluld have been serious and mightl eventually have had far raching con-l But the Navy came through j and even added thrills to the performâ€" l ance by puttinzy on power displays to divert the coopedâ€"up infantry on the converted steamships. | Need for Publicity for Resources of Far North acain, excepst as a sniper‘s was too closely fitted for 0 fantry work in the mud of t although an excellent targe One brilliant passage i volume is that which covers of the First Contingent t Behind the scenes the Navy curious (¢ closure t} made an« fi htin Germa was prone months b Deen the Britis finally so away and the dead fie.d; Lt ack . mpl A J : of horror \vhk rlkd. mechanical 1€ n nigh commandt Ihe oops led it by throwing the Rosses aking over Leeâ€"Enficlds from and woundsd on the battle le was ever heard of the Ross hat happs of the mainlyv for importin pIne mably from Coral Rapids north, continues to proâ€" imsnt in the T. N. O. North. with all advisinz nown raw materials of na clay and gypsum, 2 asod to advantaze in in contends CNhat "Uunill e is demand and for the products to > natlural resources of no particular purpose pujlicizing those naâ€" 2gr 1s now an imp ‘rial while Canada ge quanilities of px claimed, ccauld y of the Far Nor it the Dsminion a nenits have not @il of information fhtr n ween Hi s noy resourses, rospectus opinion on‘jrecturse, but it der why zovernâ€" went around the t<parations had lers ns be>en asâ€" . uUup ; th rmfA 1e SOmM woapon ordinary ecchuid bs Far North . _ Canad im Hug! | 1€ on and not reâ€" no‘lhuin ps, whC id failâ€" troops rst the t s wakeo Al fire Nals in â€" To the Treasurer of the Township of Whitney: You are hereby commanded to levy upon thereon, with your costs, pursuant to the pro For so doing this shall be your warr Dated at Porcupine this 21st day of July, 1938 Published in The Ontario Gazette, August 6th, September 3rd and October 1st, 1938 Canada‘s cldost trado newspaper, The Canada Lumkerman, is to hand, and to class this issue as interestinmy and valâ€" uable is not to overstate the case. The BY VIRTUE OF A WARRANT issued by the Reeve of the Township of Whitney bearing date the 21st day of July, 1938, and to me directed, commanding me to levy upon the several lands being in the Township of Whitney, mentioned and described in the following list of arrears of taxes respectfully due thereon and costs, I hereby give notice, pursuant to The Assessment Act and amendments, that unless the said arrears of taxes and costs be sooner paid, I shall, on Thursday, the 10th day of November, 1938, at the Township Hall at Porcupine, at 10 a.m., proceed to sell by public auction so much of the said lands as may be sufficient to discharge the taxes and lawful costs, incurred in and about the sale and collection of same. Dated at Porcupine this 21st day of July, 1938 ments could be indifferent toward the building of industry on natural reâ€" soutc:s readilyv availabls. Specially Interesting and Attractive Annual Number No We â€"Canusa Mining Co. â€"Canusa Mining Co., Canusa Mining Co., â€"«Chappie Mammoth Lot 10, Con. 2 â€"Chappie Mammoth Lot 10. Con. 2 â€"Chappie Mammoth Lot 10, Con. 2 ; â€"Chappie Mammoth Lot 10, Con. 1 â€"Chappie Mammoth Lot 10, Con. 1. Chappie Mammoth Gon. 2 W . D. Cochrane Est.ate Torontoâ€"N. W. D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"â€"N. > W. D. Cochrane Estate, Toronto-â€"N.W Dan Miller, South Porcupineâ€"S. Dan Miller, South Porcupine â€"N. !4 McCallum Estate, Timminsâ€"â€"Lot 12 F. McMahon, Torontoâ€"S.W. 4) S. 4 E. Paine, Torontoâ€"N.E. 4 N. 4 LC E. Paine, Torontoâ€"S.E. 4 N. !4 Lo Unknownâ€"N. !4 Lot 11, Con. 1 LO.L. Timminsâ€"Lot 107, Plan Mâ€"17 w. D Con. W. D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"N % W. D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"S.W Con. 2 W. D. Cochrane Estate Torontoâ€"S.E. Con. 2 W. D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"S. W. D. Cochrans Estate, Torontoâ€"S. ï¬: Con. 2 Chappie Mammoth Mining Co., Torontoâ€"S.P Lict 12, Con. 2 Clhappie Mammoth Mming Co Torontoâ€"N.F Lot 12, Con: 1 Con The following lands are all patented . D. Cochrahe ESta'te.' Toronto W. D Cochrane Estdte Tononto Con. L. CGOTl. 1 W. D. Cochrane Estano Torontoâ€"S. 4 W. D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"S.E mot pit D. Cochrane Estate, Toronto D. Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"N.W annual Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"N.W Cochrane Estate, Toronto Cochrane Estate, Torontoâ€"N.F finds in the vast terriiory an a possibility. of the North should keep icstion of exploration and of the James‘ Bay region. is that Northern Ontario is how anything anywhere. a soection of this richlyâ€"enâ€" aory that hasn‘t given some Name, Address and Description ‘y that given som re or loss, of wealth i l resources, and it can b James‘ Bay section is, a known. Treasurer‘s Sale of Lands for Arrears of Taxes TAl retns .. Detroit .. Detroitâ€" .. Detroit Mining h> timber, alont, 0 zion would juslif 1 connections wit 16Ts aroe. convince mual edition of newspaper, The Mining Minin Mining Mining Mining Co.. Toronto In the Township of Whitney, District of Cochrane Warrant Authorizing Sale of Land for Taxes Co Torontoâ€"â€"N.W Toronto Toronto Toronto Toronto 120 | North Bay, Aug. 24.â€"Hers is the soluâ€" tion for all you fishing enthusiasts who have difficulty in landing the big onss. Just put on your bathing suit and go right in after them. That is what happened last week when two Norih Bay men were fishing for pickerel in one of the beiuter spots on th> Frcnch river. When a big one snapped the light silk line he went in after the fish in his bathinz suit. About five feet bengeath the surface he felt the fish linz2 touch his face, it, dustry and all with the broa dview point on Canada‘s welfare and proâ€" gress will find much worth while and valuable in the fiftyâ€"eighth annual number of The Canada Lumberman. Here is a Solution to All Your Fishing Troubles Lot Lot the isior OTY OY MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE A1 On 11 LOot 10 Lot 9 Lot Lot Lot Lot ThE As @iuthority on on on 11 ntioned in the attached list for t Assessment Act and amendment 19 Years in Arrears 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 36 56 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 37 3‘ 37 37 37 37 LITMITED Taxes $178.01 178.01 178.01 106.03 424.12 424 12 and swam back to the boat. There his companion took the line and landed a fine pickerel. 17.37 177.66 117.52 History almost repeated itself several miniutes later when the man who hookâ€" ed the first fish laid his pole down across the gunwale to paddle out from the shore. In a moment line, rod and reel went overboard into 50 feet of water. The swimmer again came to the rescue, diving in as the rod went by the board and catching it before it sank 10 feoet. This time, however, the fish escaped. 138.13 J. M. NICOLSON, Treasurer, Township of Whitney P. ROTONTDXK), Reeve, Township of Whitney Y et with all the extra miles, extra safety and extra value of the famous Goodâ€" year "Gâ€"3" . . . you pay no premium for it. The "G.3" costs no more than anv other tire in its price class! Drive in today . . . let us equip vour car with Goodvyears NOW! Start enjoving the security and economy of Goodvears without delav! Do as thousonds do...specity Geodysars on your new car . . ) It costs no more| © The wise buver ride on Goodyear‘s "CGGâ€"3" not just beâ€" cause more people ride on Goodvear Tires than on any other kind . . . but because the "CGâ€"3" gives him more mileage for his tire dollar at no extra cost . . . greater protection against skids in all directions . . . the best protection against blowouts built into any tire! Cleans More people ride on Goodyear tires thon on any other kind Costs $3,00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3. 00 3.00 3 N0 3.00 3 .00 17« 3.00 3 00 3 O( Comâ€" mission $4.45 4 AS5 4 4§ 2. 6D 10.60 2.65 10. 6() 14 s of tax»s due cotding to law. 3 . 4! 3 .4 2.65 .40 41 $185.46 185 .46 185.48 Total 11,68 4713 .12 11.68 473 72 111.68 471373 144.58 111.68 144.58