**+Few, people,""‘ said he, "‘know the. remoter parts of Ontario, the vast hinterland that runs almost to the Avetic etrele, :A year ago I went to James (Bay to study the desirability of a sea port and to survey mineral and forest weallth. It tool seven days to paddle down to the sea, with 20 half breeds and Indians to do the portâ€" aging. I came back by hydroplane in two and oneâ€"half hours"‘. On the return trip ‘he was unâ€" forgettably impressed ‘by the vast panorama beneath him. He could Northern Ontario had a great future, but Southern Ontario lhad a great past as wall as future. It had developed a variety of life and occeuâ€" pation, which made it unique amongst the countries of the world. It was said to ‘be primarily agricuitural, but it produced 50 per cent, of all that was manufactured in Canada. It had the greater part of the minenal wealth of Canada and it paid oneâ€" half of the taxes that went into the federal treasury. For some time past the citizens of |see at a glance the riches of the north, the North have ‘been pleased with the|its timber, rivers and waterfalls, and effective and earnest way in which|that kaleidoscope of landseape colorâ€" "upon every possible occasion Hon. ing which is the raw material of the Chas. MeCrea has been advocating the|school of : In short, he found case for the great North./ In the that Ontario had beauty as well as Minister of ‘Mines the North has a}|utility. capable and puwblicâ€"spirited friend.| ‘‘In the James Bay district,""‘ said It has ‘been felt, too, that Premierjhe, are great possibilities. One Ferguson is a good fmend to the North | hundred miles north ofsCochrane there witir vision enough to see its possibilâ€" ities and sincerity to advocate the assistance and development of this great country and its natural reâ€" sources. ‘Last week Premier Ferguâ€" son in an address to the Daughters of the Empire at Sherbourne House, Torâ€" onto, emphasized the fact that the future of Ontario depends on the exâ€" pansion of Nonthern Ontario. * Look at the map,"‘ said he. *‘ You must at once be impressed by the size of the province. It is far larger than «we ordinarily imagine. What we normally know of: as Ontario is, only oneâ€"fifth of it. Fourâ€"fifth is in the north and has a population of only 250,000"‘. are wonderful water powers, then alâ€" most unlimited timber of good quality. I am confident from the geological formation, the coastal plain of muskeg and serub timber, Ontario will eventuâ€" ailly develop great oil flelds. And we may get good coal. There is already plenty of lignite."‘ Another discovery of great value was China clay. There were immense deposits of it, and experts compared it favourably to the Ibest French clay. Here was the raw material for a gneat pottery industry. ‘‘‘The policy of the government," said the premier, ‘‘is to secure if possible all the business for Southern Ontario. We are linking the north to Eï¬ï¬%ï¬%gï¬%ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬gï¬gï¬%ï¬ï¬ï¬gï¬gï¬ï¬%gï¬m 56 esmm Fourâ€"fifths of the Province is in the North. "There is No Investment Better Than Money Spent to Develop the North," Says Hon. G. Howard Ferguson in Address to 1.0.D.E. at Toronto. Premier Refers to Great Future of the North Land o se i i i s i i i i i i ie in in i in in i i5 15 5 18 15 15 1 15 19 15 15 151 1 1 4y 1 51515 9 49 15 115 15 04 64 55103515 14 15 15 15 5. 5 5 5 5 i i i is i i i . o i. i i i . hb i i i i i ig i i i i 1 13 95 454 xn ty s s s 4 o o o o o o | These Machines are manufactured by the Canadian Westinghouse Company Ltd., Hamilton, Ont. Westinghouse are the Pmneer Broadcasters of the World. S * * t * * * * * * s 3 4 s 3 3 5 3 4 t 3 5 5 4 4 . . o. . . i i5 5. i5 55. in in 4 4 344 %4 Complete with Four Tubes, Phones and Loud Speaker. Operates on Dry Batteries and the upkeep is very small. *E The Air is Full of Things YÂ¥ou Should Not Miss ! ! With the New Prices listed below every family can easily afford to own one. Free Demonstrations in your own homes and sold on Easy Terms. George T aylor Hardware Limited FOUR STORES IN THE NORTH. He then declared: ‘*Ontario above all parts of Canada is the province of opportunity for young men, energetic and jwilling to work.‘"‘ To illustrate the natural advantages of the supposâ€" edly ‘barren north shore of Lake Supâ€" erior, he pointed out that Dorion twenâ€" ty miles iwest of Nipigon, grows practically all through the ,summer a strawberry that outrivals Oakvilie, and dominates the Duluth market." Regarding tariff matters the Premien refertred to the resting on Ottawa for much of the present unemployment. ‘‘When you see unâ€" employment,‘‘ said he, ‘‘yon feel that some one isn‘t treating this country ‘‘‘The policy of the government,‘ said the premier, ‘‘is to secure if possible all the business for Southern Ontario. We are linking the north to us by a highway system which in two years ‘will enable you to moton from Toronto to Timmins. We ‘have already in the north 550 miles of railway and an investment of $32,000, 000. In fact, there is no investment which Old, Ontario can make which is better than money spent in Jlaying the foundation for the great gropwth of provin@ial wealth in the north."" Another discovery of great value was China clay. There were immense deposits of it, and experts compared it favourably to the Ibest French clay. Here was the raw material for a gneat pottery industry. see at a glance the riches of the north, its timber, rivers and waterfalls, and that kaleidoscope of landseape colorâ€" ing which is the raw material of the school of seven.> In short, he found that Ontario had beauty as well as utilityv. The Geo. Taylor Hardware Limited en on oi A highâ€"grade Receiver suitâ€" Bbattery Clamps An ideal and. handsome set, | | : ‘~~_ L ol able for head set use. Reâ€" superâ€"sensitive and highly ture§ in The Radiolaâ€"X, exâ€" _ceiving up to 1,500 miles on All necessary materâ€" selective. Non radiating. cepting that loud speaker is _ phones. ials to start any set. Equal to any five tube set. not contained in set. | _ s t Kb SS * * * * o ib i5b ib ib 5 i5 i5 in i5 5 s io o o i i5 io io io i5 in is is h is o t io i o s s i s io t o d is A S t 5 5 5 4 5 5 5 4 t s 4 s 5 4 4 4 i t t i i . i i i i . i . i i . n . . i i t . . . . s . . 5 in io i; 15 4 i. 5 Compiete with Two Tubes, and Phones. A highâ€"grade Receiver suitâ€" batiery Clamps able for head set use. Reâ€" ceiving up to 1,500 miles on All necessary materâ€" 5$ M A 5 H "Always at Your Service" _A very pretty wedding took place at the iPresbyterian Mianse, Timmins, on Wednesday last, Feb. 18th, when Miss Gladys Vera, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. Little, 74 Fourth Avenue, was united in marriage to Arnthur Edâ€" ward, son of iMr. and Mrs. A. G. Randall, 76 Lake Front, Toronto. The Rev, J. D. Parks, pastor, of the Timmins Presbyterian ‘Church, officiâ€" ated at the ceremony. T‘he bride, who was attended by hen sister, Haze!, was delightfully gowned in gray Canton crepe, trimmed with shell pink, and with hat to mateh. The groom mwas atâ€" tended by Mr. R. ‘Cuthbertson. The groom left for Montreal where he was been transferred to a ‘higher position with the F. W. Wooilworth Co., with which firm he has been jconnected for some time. The bride will follow at a lTater date. Friends in ‘Timmins will extend sincere good wishes to the young coupile. PRETTY WEDDING AT THE PRESBYTERIAN MANSE, FEB. 18 The premier ended ‘his address with a statement of the reasons ‘‘iwhy ‘boys and girls go wrong‘‘ even in Ontario. He put it down to two causes, surplus energy misdirected and ‘bad environâ€" ment. ‘The first it was the business of the family to nemedy, the second it was the duty of the state to cure. The minister of education revealed himâ€" self as also a minister of sociology. must shoulder the nesponsibility,‘‘ he said. He referred to the proud Onâ€" tario ‘he onee made in the west and, which ‘brought on ‘him rebuke fnom the inferior provinces. He reâ€" iterated that assertion that a man from Ontario is like Lord Curzon, a very superior person, but, he added, in exiplanation : ** When I say we are the dominating provinee I_ don‘t mean to be insulting ‘but I do iassert that we are the big factor in Canada."‘ ‘"The objective of this country should ‘be selective immigration and Ontario as the dominant province must shoulder the nesponsibility,‘‘ he sarid. He referred to the n»romd Onâ€" After Ontario had given its youth the best education in the world many of them went south instead of north. ‘*Why is it ?"‘ asked the premier. His answer iwas: ‘‘ We are.not trying to produce what we can for oun own use. We don‘t even develop interproâ€" vincial trade, but we keep up indusâ€" tries in foreign countries."‘ right. you go mcross the line you see every wheel of industry humâ€" ming, and you wonder why we shouldâ€" n‘t put up fences against cheaply made Gemman goods."‘ THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO “A CHAIN OF SERVICE i C 5d t t 3 5$ W.D. 11, W.D. 12, and W.D. 25, Tubes. All Batteries, All Styles Antenna Wire Leadâ€"in Wire Battery Wire Ground Clamps Battery Clamps $4.00 each. Tubes summons in the matter had not been successful!, the police ‘being unable to locate ‘her up to Thursday morning. The charge of nseekiless driving â€" gainst T. Petraweara was dismissed, it being shown that he was not the driver of the car at the time‘of the alleged offence. _A charge of theft of a motor car is to ‘be pressed against the driver Otto Toko, who resides at Mns. Mary Peterson‘s, was fined $500.00 and costs or three months, for illegally having liquor. He took the three months. The evidence went to show that he had bmought liquor into Mrs. Peterson‘s house for some young men and young women later found at the place by the police. A charge against Mrs. Peterâ€" son in connection with the liquor was u0t proceeded with as efforts to find Mrs., Peterson to serve her with the of the young ladies figuring in the recent cases ‘of immorality and alâ€" leged immorality, was again before the court on the charge of vagrancy. After the recent cases she had been alâ€" lowed to return ‘home on the underâ€" tanding that she should lead an onderâ€" ly life and remain properly at â€"her home. Recently the police found her with others in a rooming house whevre liquor ‘had figured as one of the enterâ€" tainments. She was sentenced to not less than three months nor more than two years less a day, with the hope that the inprisonment may ‘benefit her morailly and physically. A remand iwas also made in the case of a young fellow accused of making a disturbance in the Goldale Cafe. _ _ The case against C. Basta, charged with having firearms while ibeing an alien, was remandéd to this nweek. L. iGitto, on a similar charge, was asâ€" sessed $5.00 and costis. T‘wo local men, charged with wilfal destruction of property, were remandâ€" ed s<to this iweek, some of the lawyers in the case being out of town. chiarge, acase against one young lady of acssuajlting another young woman, resulted in a fine of $20.00 and costs. (Mrs. J. Maki, on a charge of obâ€" the police in the discharge of their duty, paid $50.00 and consts. At the pollice court ‘here last Thursâ€" day, Magistrate Atkinson had a lengthy docket to deal with, evidencing the activity of the police department in keeping the town decent, orderly and ‘lawâ€"abiding. LARGE NUMBER OF CASES AT LAST WEEEK‘S POLICE COURT Complete with Four Tubes, and built in Loud Speaker. Severall of the Cobalt Junior Hockey team visited Timmins last week during their visit to this part of the North to play iat Iroquois Falls. Seeing the Cobalt Juniors on the street here more than one man ‘was tempted to refer to the ridea of the Nonth ‘being a land of ‘‘growth‘‘ and ‘‘big‘‘ men or ‘‘big‘‘ bovs. Reference was made in the last isâ€" sue of The Advance to the death here of Miss Bridget Kilgore. The Charlâ€" ton correspondent of the New TLisâ€" keard Speaker refers to the death and funeral as follows :â€" **The death occumred recently at the thome of ‘her brother, Mr.Wm,. Kilâ€" gore 16 Wende Ave., Timmins, of Bridget Ellen, daughten of the late Mr. Jno. and ‘Mrs. Kilgore, of Charlâ€" ton, t the age of 40 years. Miss Kilâ€" gore suffered patiently and silently for many yeans with a tumor and a few days ago pneumonia set in from which she succumed. (Miss Kilgore was ‘born at Cobden, Ont., but lived here for many years and was well known and loved by a large circle of fmends iwhose sympathy goes out to the ‘bereaved family. They are the mother _ and two brothers, Jno. and Wiailliam of Timmins, and four sisters, Mrs. Thos. Casey and Mns. Jos, Pinâ€" eauit, of Timmins; Mrs. Trueman Gibâ€" bens, of La Reine; and Mrs. Thos. Henebery, of Charlton. The funeral service was held at Charlton in the St. Stephen‘s ‘Roman Catholic ‘Church, wherne ‘Rev. Fr. Reame sang High Mass after which interment was made in the Koman Catholice Cemetery. The pallâ€" bearers _ jwere two â€" ‘brothersâ€"inâ€"law Messrs. Gaibbens and Thos. Henebery and Messrs. Jno. Morrissey, Genlad Cuddy, Jno. Regan and Wm. Kitts. FPUNERAL OF THE LATE MISS BRIDGET KILGORE of the car at the time of the recekt« driving,. COBALT COCHRANE NEW LLSEKEARD TIMMINS Dated at South Poreupine, in the District of Cochrane, this 7th day of February, 1925. Notice is hereby given that a Byâ€" law was passed by the Council of the Municipal Corporation of the Townâ€" ship of Tisdale on the 8th day of Deâ€" cember, 1924, providing for the issue of debentures to the amount of $42,â€" 000.00 for the completion of the Conâ€" tinuation School, its furnishings and equipment, of School Section No. 1, and that such Byâ€"law was registered in the registry office at Haileybury, in the District of Temiskaming on the 20th day of January, 1925. Any motion to quash or set aside the same or any part thereof must be made within three month after the first publication of this notice, and ‘annot be made thereafter. TOWNSHIP OF TISDALE F. C. EVANS, Clerk of the Municipality.