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Check over your Fire Insurance Policies and see that you are fully protected. Reductions in rate may now be had in many cases. Come in and talk it over. * °% Thurs., Nov. 19th, 1925 Watch and Jewelry Repairing Promptly and Efficiently Attended To. 25b Third Ave., For anything in Watches, Clocks, Siiverware, Chinaware, Crown Derby, Cut Glass, Etce., it will pay you to come to 2e adootadrad nc nc ns 00 .0, .0, .0, _a, 10. 16. ce e m 00.\0‘000â€300000000300000000000000003000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000,%0000000000000000?0000000000000000000. .. A is good tea The same good tea for 30 years. Try it! If you‘d like a little better tea than you are using, please try "Red Rose" THOROUGH VIOLIN TUITION ALSO Public School MciIntyre Hall Public School Bouth Porcupine (one day) SORE THROAT BRUISES INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Block (Upstairs) CORRECT VIOLIN ACADEMY Studio: St. Onge Block, Timmins, Ont. THE QNLY GENUINE iS PERRY DAVIS‘ PAINKILLER APPLY IT FOR Schumacher (one day) metween the Hollinger Stores FROST BITES SPRAINS Dome Mines (one day) 1+ Y Mily / / k YiRG â€" ~ UdAYEC â€" ~UHIneS@ â€" rIng puzzles, and you Older Folks, all sorts of puzzles. But our readems will find this new puzzle picture equally tantalizing to everyone. You will have a mighty good time solving itâ€"because it‘s everybody‘s game And the Puzzle will be easy to solve,. as a large picture will be published with the objects showing clearly withâ€" out any effort to disguise them. Don‘t fail to look for the announceâ€" ture will be aâ€" real t1 readers. All can parti Games, from the tinies and Ma, and even (¢randma. Baby has a Young Folks have _ puzzles, and you Older All cash prizes offered in connecâ€" tion with the picture puzzle game will be awarded in time to reach the successful participants .by Christmas Day. Any one of the prizes offered ranging from a First Prize of $2, 000.00 down to the 100th prize $15.00 will make a handsome Christmas present for the successful puzzle ‘‘fans."‘ Everybody likes puzz Mail and Empire‘s new The Mail and Empire, Toronto, Ontario, publishes this week in the columns of this newspaper an anâ€" nouncement of a ‘*‘Câ€"Word‘‘ Pictâ€" ure Puzzle Game. The picture puzâ€" zle will contain a number of objects and articles beginning with the letter ‘*C‘. The idea of the game will be to see who can find the most. One Hundred cash prizes, totalling someâ€" thing over $8,000.00, will be offered for the One Hundred best answers submitted according to the rules of the puzzle game. #=®i to see who can find the mo:s Hundred cash prizes, totallin thing over $8,000.00, will be The Mail and Empire to Inaugurate Fifth Picture Puzzle Gameâ€"To Distribute One Hundred Cash Prizesâ€"Everybody Can Participate. 96, 000. 00 IN CASH PRIZES T0 BE GINEN AWAY Now I do not think an eightyâ€"acre farm is large enough for a progressive farmer. If you study farming condiâ€" tions in Southern Ontario you will find that the most successful farmers have more than one hundred acres. By a successful farmer, I mean one who is free from debt, has a fine house and barn, a wellâ€"educated family, the very best of stock and a complete set Then in farming school sections people will be close together. The children will not have so far to go, and, as the winters are very cold here, there will he fewer accidents or casualâ€" ties in the line of frozen feet and hands. This, I should think, would result in better school attendance durâ€" ing the winter. We have also got to consider the type of settler who settles on the land. Also we should know what his prevâ€" ious surroundings were. If he came from a Luropean city, eighty acres would be large enough in most cases. Supposing he came from a seetion in which farms were small and numerous eighty acres would also be enough. So, I should think, it would be adns- able for the government to learn the qualifications ot the settlers and grant the land accordingly. I feel sure the government is doing what it thinks is best for the countrv By only giving eighty acres to each settler, it will result in more settlers settling in each township. This should benefit social activi‘ties in new communities, Also having â€" smaller farms will mean less road expense, and road tax for each farmer. As it is, each farmer has to keep or pay for keeping up a road half a mile long. By havmg an eightyâ€"acre farm, each settler‘s taxes will be therefore low er. The New Liskeard Speaker has been actively opposing the change in the regulations, and in the last issue of The Speaker there appeared a letter that seemed to corner the quesâ€" tion in effective way from both angles. This letter was written by a farmer at Brethour and is as follows :â€"Regardâ€" ing the action of the 0'overnment in only granting eighty acres instead of one‘ hundred and sixty, I just wish to say a few words. Several settlers and others with special knowledge of conditions have been asked by The Advance as to their opinion in regard to the recent change in the regulations decreasing the size of farms obtainable by setâ€" tlers in this North Land from 160 acres to 80 acres. Not one man spoken to regarding ‘the matter has favoured the idea of the smaller farm. One man said: ‘‘Any size farm is both too big and too small until there there are roads.‘‘ Another suggested ironically that the settler who had only 80 acres would be likely better off than the one with 160 acres, if they both had sold pulpwood to the Mattagami Pulp Paper Co. four years ago. It seems to be a general opinion that no settler can ‘‘make a go of it‘ on as small a parcel of land as 80 acres. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO General Opinion of Settlers and Others Seems to be That 80â€"acre Farms Will Not be Large Enough for Success. One Settlers Reviews Question from Both Sides. New Regulation Likely to Retard Settlement of North will be Y likes puZZiles, and lhe @mpire‘s new Puzzle Picâ€" : _ a real treat for our llâ€"ean participate in the m the tiniest child to Pa and even Grandpa and Baby has a block nuzzle. puzzle Di0ocK puZ Chinese ; Be considerate of The wall that a man out seeing, shuts off heaven. |There was a record crowd rchre and Dance given last nesday evening in the under the auspices of the Schur L. 0. L. Everybody had a ve time and the evening was mu joyed. The best of musie was 1 ed by the Ramblers Orc Luncheon was served during the ing. â€" In the Euchre, the first pr ladies was won by Mrs. Harry The first prize for gentlemen w by Mr. Alex. Mackenzie. This istice Euchre and Dance was ; enjoyable evening and Schun L. O. L- No Y is hninrx‘ SCHUMACHER L. 0. L. HOLD °_ __FINE EUCHRE AND DANCE 4 ACOIULCIIL . .¢. .. . . L. â€"Ar,â€" Ftansman Vlce-Presldent R. ‘W. Thompson See.â€"Treas....... ts ; H, Perry The manager for the Junior team will be Mr. Roy Grills, while the Juveniles will be in chartre of Mr. Gordie Spence. a slump in this town. However, there has been a newly organized club put on the map, to be known as The New Iiskeard Fire Department Amateur Athletic Club, the object being to carâ€" ry on with a Junior N. 0. H. A. team, and to inaugurate a Juvenile League in town. The officers elected for this new club are as follows:â€" President..........M. G. Hansman Viceâ€"President....R. W. Thompson ;A sA ol e H""PaAarru The New Liskeard Speaker Jast week says:â€"Owing to the disastrous two seasons experienced by the local Athletie Association, it began to look as though winter sports were due for NEW ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION FORMED IN NEW LISKEARD â€"â€" . Li SNO. I1S D€ mgratulated on its su« ment in this paper this week and when you see itâ€"start right in makâ€" ing up your list of “C-\Vordsâ€, and try for one of the big cash prizes. The problem of social activity in new communities where the farms are large and families widely seattered will be adequately solved by the inâ€" troduction of "‘tin lizzies.‘"‘ In education of the young children I would advise school consolidation for each township. This is not necessarâ€" ily a more expensive form of educaâ€" tion. Even if it is more expensive, a consolidated school is more efficient than an ordinary country school unâ€" der one teacher. The government is evidently dissatâ€" isfied with the way the country is opening up. Here is a remedy, which I think would work. As the law stands a man has to pay fifty cents per acre for the land and has to reside on the land for three years. Also a certain amount of land has to be clearâ€" ed. Some of this land is taken up and then held for speculation. To prevent that I should pass a law compelling each landholder to put improvements on his land. If he is not living on his farm and puts no improvements on it for a period of three years it should go back to the Crown and be given to the next applicant with the same conâ€" ditions attached regarding the settleâ€" ment and patenting of the land. In this way, if one owner failed to make any improvements in opening up the land, it would be given to someone else, who could also have a chancee to open up the land. This, I should think would also prevent speculation, which is a great drawback in a new country., â€" Again, I say that the government should grant each settler one hunderd and sixty acres, and more if thought advisable. on eighty acres will therefore have a greater investment per acre than the farmer on a large farm. Implements were made so that a farmer could work more land. And the more land he works, the greater his crop will be and also his profits. As implements are destroyed more by careless usace and exposure, a large farm should not necessarily shorten the life of impleâ€" ments. Therefore a large farm will have practically the same investment. In other words, more money is made ‘‘Per Acre"‘‘ on a large farm than on a small farm according to the investâ€" ment. | If you take a survey to find on which size of farm the most money is made per acre, you will come to the astonishing fact that the farm from two hundred to three hundred acres makes the most money per acre, acâ€" cording to the investment of money made in the farm. This is easily exâ€" plained. When you consider that each farmer needs a complete set of implements to farm with, the farmer of implements. . Also the farmers who have gained publicity almost alâ€" ways have large farms. Therefore I belle\e that the government should give each settler a lot of one hundred and sixty acres, and in this way a good®chance to become a greéat farmâ€" a man steps over withâ€" ff a child‘s view of child‘s grief nfg n last Wedâ€" cintvre Hall a very fine is much enâ€" was providâ€" Orchestra. ng the evenâ€" rst prize for m was won This Armâ€" vas a very chumacher generally en 78 THIRD AVENUTE Telephones 608â€"J and 608â€"W.