Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 4 Feb 1920, 1, p. 6

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Secandâ€"hand. farniture of all kinds thoroughly renovated and in firstâ€" class condition, as good as new at much less cost.., Also many=â€"other apâ€" ticles. Call and SBe us noâ€"matter what you want, we fikely have it.>~ We pay cash for secondhand furniture or anything else, What have yon to sell? E. La SALLE, 40 and 40% Third Avenre 4 C ons € 00 0000000 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00000400 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 e 6 % 6 §$0080000080 0 @00 096 000000006000 cec00000Gmq4000 0006 C eR OR dR dR ORA OR dR dR dR dR R e ce ce ==ARMITAGE FLLS Room 7 Reetl Bldg., Timmirds. DR. JNO. B. AIKEN DENTIST Phone 201 Crown and Bridge Work Plates Consultation Free. Watchmaker Jeweler Removal Notice 35 Fourth Ave:, Timmins Wholesale Tobaccos ami Confecttonery for the best in Meats of all kinds. A full lHine ofâ€"cooked Meats alwaysâ€"en hand Excavations for Cellars, Sewers, Ete. Contracts of all Kinds Taken On or about January 12th, will move from my present stand in the Reed Block to the store 30 Third _Avenue â€" Timminsâ€"3. FOR Between the Hollinger Stores LEO MASCIOLI New Grocery Store and Meat Shop EMPIRE BUILDING CONTRACTOR Church. â€" Â¥4siting questefll to attend A. H. Cooke, market to purchase rough Spruce and fireâ€"peel Spruce Pulpwood. For further information write Harry Towne, C€Cochrane. dop. MOTHERS! MOTHERS Having to sew by why n PULPWOOD WANTED. I am in the YyOLâ€"AAYCG._!4S arrange terms f Call or send a p you. 0. Neguin, Timinins. â€" Also THAMINS LODGE, 1.0.0.F. No. 453 Veterinary Surgeon New Liskeard, Ont Office nerth end of McKelvie Block, Armstrong St. tC (Fotwm nint NoT havd rand or on inferior machines tet cA snew< minger‘ mewIng I will take the old machine as part . and ns for balancee to suit you. T a postal and I will call on uin, Agent, 9 Maple street Also seltinoe Prianos. ~Phone No. 32 Timmins, Ont. â€"and a half wit V erermmary Corps W. G. Smith, orps o zut e y @ @1 1:.),.)HU 000 cords 3‘111\ tfor pulp | Qflu.ld\ shrink: j\lm k of standu all too soo } 1'11" supply.‘‘ 1 j @ <€G <€ «4 § idea Cof five an o1 ]ml‘,vw od ® pomts "x-'lld ]nh ofâ€" 4: $feet mon, reac contineat. or a <€ § nine thousand J may travel for and hardly see Mr. -.umjnm %h irgo ar export .;un the large an | t * is being s OME STARTLING FACTS CANADA‘S FORESTS jstock of standing timber inust necessâ€" [arily all too soon wipe out the remainâ€" imw supply."" In order to make the idea ‘of five and a halt million cords 101 pulpwood 8 comprenensible, _ Mr. Bamjum points out that it means ‘‘*‘a t solid pile of four foot wood, twelre feet high, reaching elear across the contineant. or a pile four high and course, a gross growth and a net growth, but to offseft this the annual wastage by fire, wind, insects and fungi, taking the country as a whole, far overâ€"runs the gross growth. Conâ€" sequently, we are simply consuming our (‘aplt.ll year after year. In some of the wild estimates of our supply of standing timber made in the past, they have simply taken the map of Canada, determined the number of square miles and arbitrarily figured so many cords per acre. Now, as logging by aeroplane has not been perfected as yet, there are only two ways you can get out wood, namely,, by‘river and railroad. Atout all the more important rivers of Canada have been logged on and driven, from the very earliest days. Many of them have. bheen practically stripped or eut off while others are being operated pretty well baeck to their headwaters, so far remots that it takes two years or more to drive logs to the mills. In the cease of the railroad the condition is pretty much the same, with the exâ€" eeption of possibly the Transeontinen al, but inasmuch as this road was built beyond the height of land, there is very little wood available north of this road, as the rivers all drain away from it towards Hudson Bay. This leaves only the territory that lies south of the railroad,. but as sawmills are springing up along this line like mushrooms over night, and as fire is taking a heavy toll in tihis section, the paper mills will derive only a comâ€" paratively small supply from this source,. Every time a railroad is hbult in a wooded country, more wood is burned u; than is hauled out."‘ According to the suggestions in Mr. Barnjum‘s _ article the. pulpwood sources of the North Land (both Onâ€" tario and Quebec}., bhelow the Transâ€" There have been so many récent references in these columns to the imâ€" portance of the lumber and pulp inâ€" dustry to the North Land that perâ€" haps a referencee to the forest wealth of Canada from another angle may be of more than passing interest. ‘The usual reference to the great resources of Canada in pulpwood and timber needs to be taken with a warning. There are enormous fForest resources in Canada, but the conditions surâ€" rounding their growth and marketing assuredly need much more thoughtful ‘consideration. It is this feature of the case that Mr. Frank J. D. Barnâ€" jum, the forest expert of Nova Sceotia, takes up in a recent issue of The Pulp Paper ‘Magazine. Mr. Barnjum says:â€"**The wood resources of Canâ€" ada have ‘been so grossly exagerated that very few are aware how meagre mur supply of available wood really is. I have spent a large portion of the past few years in a personal invesâ€" tigation of the Canadian situation, cue results of which are so alarming that I have refrained from publishing past fIew years in a personail invesâ€" tigation of the Canadian situation, «e results of which are so alarming that I have refrained from publishing my findings. The theory of an annual growth that has been nulnl;_:(-*d in s0o freely in the past has simply become a popular, delusion. There is, of Durned uy TMaln is A(‘('U!‘(_lii);’ to thk Barnjum‘s â€" articl sources of the No: tario and Quevec) continental Line,. : cigar tVaat _ tThagU. . pape now depending practically on Canada for their pulp Mr. Frank J. D. Barnjum Says Raw Material for Woodâ€"Using Industries in Serious M T L Y3 iince. s that in thi on The large amount ol 16e J that is being shipped across th from Quebse, Ontario and New **‘PThe million or more con wood that is annually sh to the Urnited States, returning about 13 imllioncdollars, if mad pulp and paper here would not enrich this eountry to the exteo more than elehty million dollar Â¥vear, hut would prolong the lifte Adter summing u; 8I% *n active r, but would our partp and at least dive travoel To: see rousand nile irDn »LPhn JUImM corids of wood art pulp to understai shrinkage in 0o standing@ timber n by no means inexhaustible. jum makes if absolutely thgs U._ S paper mills are ding practically altogether i for their pulp. Then he that anyvone nseds to know he United States more than woa spruce m believes th irt duty should imount of" fee shipped acros Untario an{it Ne J>)Tuns million or more cords of bein@t annually shipped L States, returninge only Condition. rl 4 nestional Vss On *14 118 111 That n emâ€" mild be placed t‘ece Jand wood lilimce import hizh and , und yet we the railroads nttst ne( D int . bhalanee s, * he adds. iny picture ii‘njuimn sugâ€" U s1 ‘AY. that Jies 3 s:n\'mills line like npargen extent ment i1 l perl OW mal in T Oonilv vÂ¥â€"Ine ipital anInU into tH} )4 rl1 loOrest weaith UGovernments snould 1ag so far individuals in the matter of seeing the needs and seekâ€" Iing remedies. Mr. Barnjum was lett \to spend his own time and money to place a very serious situation fairly before the public. He was left to |seck and suggest alternâ€" atives. ®*In the same way the Abitibi tPower Paper Co. have been ‘lefft, at their own expense, to plan a most ambitious programma of reforestaâ€" tion. So it goes! The Governments are asleep. The new Ontario Governâ€" ment, if not under the usual Governâ€" mental spell of indifference and inacâ€" tion, should take up at once in the most throrough fashion the whole ! Mr. Barnjum, has been largely inâ€" !terésted for the past twenty years in the paper and pulp industries of Nova Seotia, and he has made a study of conditions and prospects. He presented a strong case, and while he may be wrong, perhaps, in some details, his basic ideas can hardly be eontroverted. It is an odd fact that in all matters relating to Canada‘s forest wealth Governments should lag are asleod ment, if mental tion, sh ‘"I will personally subseribe ten thousand dollars,"‘ says Mr. Barnjum, ‘‘to the Canadian Forestry Associaâ€" tion, if each of the other pulp and paper mills in Canada will subsceribe a like amount, to be used in carrying out the work outlined above, under <4 Reforestation on a large seale by Government appropriation, regardless of eost. An embargo or export duty on raw material taken from fee lands; of the annual purchasoe of fee land wood by a combination of all <the Canadian pulp and paper mills. aI Cnange the present wasteful methods of logging by a eloser supervision of woods operations by intellingent prac tical foresters. the direction of an Executive Comâ€" mittee to be appointed by the subscrib ers to the Fund. This will give us a fund worthy of the name and will engable to do some real work."" most question of the Province. Unless is attempted the in the impairme The Ontarioe Gov to receiye very OWn the present fire protection service. 0 1rov e Phone 185. GOKSUL: US ABOU!T YOUR _ MINIKG INVESTMENTS We make a specialty of Porâ€" cupine, â€" Cobalt, Kirkland Lake, and West Shiningtree mininrg propertics, and our expert advice is at your disâ€" posal at any time. We will be glad to give you relitable information regarding any of the mining stocks. EMPIRE THEATREE BLOUK,. TIMMINS â€" TAment expense IVATE stud vit gii TLasulton WNhOIC ie forest wealth of this ess something seriously the Province will dose rment of its resources. rovernment will be able y valuable information > from the. individuals corporations that have ~the question, at their for several vears past. 11() W To be at your best, you must feel at your best. The man that is magnetic, popular, successfulâ€"is the one who rediates vigor and Nothing pulls a man down more inâ€" sidiouslyâ€"than constipation. The poisors arisirg from the decaying intestinal matter take the color out of your fzce apd the "pep‘"‘ from stride. Keep cleanâ€"inside zs well zs out. By an entirely new principle Nujol will keep the poisonous waste moving out of the body. â€" Every other form of treatment e€ither irritates or forces the system. Nujol works on the waste matte~ instead of on the system. =â€" 34 * Nujol prevents constipation by keeping the food waste soft, thus helping Nature establish easy, thorough bowe! evecuation at regular intervalsâ€"the healthiest habit in the world. Nujot is sold by «l druggists in sealed bottles only bearing Nujol tradeâ€"mark. Write Nuijo! Laboratories, Standard Oil Co, (New Jerscy), 50 Broadway, New York, for booklet ‘"Thirty Feet cf A Dress Suit and a Shave Wont Do It It is 2bsolutely harmless zand pleasant to takeâ€"try it. 4 $040000000000000000000000000000000000000400400 0000006 0§099990000000000000000000000000000000¢000000006000000¢ coP" Mr. W. T. Chariton of Waterville, P. Q. restored his frozen fcet to hsaith after doctors had advised him to have them amputated because mortification had set in. â€" \Ke Egyptian Liniment also for Cuts, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, Chilblains, Sore Throat and Chest, Neuralgia, etc. *>**~_ enc t t 22 0 i c s t We P C PR y : DoucLAaS C MAN'J“QCTU’\'LQS,"A"Aflf[.w 4 New Method of treating an Old Complaint State course desired and do it now TOâ€"DAYC. Winter Term begins January 5th. The Haileybury Business College HAILEYBURY, ONTARIO What does the New Year _mean to you ? If you really want the coming year to count for something let THE HAILEYBURY BUSINESS COLLEGE help you to make your progress sure and tangible. We have many enquiries from Ladies in Haileybury, askâ€" ing for young ladies to stay with them. They will give room and board free for a fow services after four. Is it to be the same old grind of hard work, uncongenial empleyment and small pay? e t Is it to be another year of standing still while you watch others got the advancement YOU hoped to get? Or will you make it a Year of real achievement? Will you realize ncw that the better job gres cnly to the man or woman who have the Training that the job requires. Tor the ambitious and earnest, six months will work wonâ€" ders... WRITE FOR PARTICULARS. The coming year is the most important in your life. Get a real start NOW. $A J. SHEPHARD 3 § Plastering Contractor tisement QLO RIVER ROAD â€" BOX 17!, TIMMINS Ornamental, Plain, and Roughâ€" cast Plaster Work. Terms moderate. Best of Work. A trial solicited . XT»â€"On Balsam street, a lady‘s urse containing. money. O\\ ne in hbave same by proving propâ€" and payinge for adver [H’H\'Ul_;" l)l‘nip- for adverâ€" rerskyv, 13 Biro® 1â€"Gp

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