1p EXCLUSIVE INVICTUS ACENT HOLLINGER STORES LTD. _ Thursday, April lst, 1926 inss 4 uit 4 hA ds hi s A 2 dLm ent u aloo for Frost Bitts, Burns Scal uts, Briises, Sore Chest and 'rhroat. Neuralgna, etc. Mr, J, A. McFarlane of Napanee, Ont., had chilblains so bad that he couldn‘t wear boots. ptian Liniment relieved them, Don‘t suffer from chilblains this winter. CO MANUFACTURERS, NAMNEE,ONUL ~clwaug keepe its haope~ Invictus "Prince Invictus shoes are built to enâ€" dure more than the hardestâ€" worked shoe has to encounter. Only the choicest leathers are used, stitched with sflk thread that will not rot or fray. Dollar â€"«for â€" day, you‘ll find Invictus your very best inâ€" vestment. satisfy Easter morning appetites there is no more savory dish than Brookfield Eggs served with tender slices of "Premium" Bacon or Ham. Swift‘s "Premium" has long been recognized as the highest standard of quality. Always mild in flavor and unifortm. Serve Premium for Easter and you will serve it all year around. Order from your Grocer or Butcher T B ///[ /I/////Wi;' M Swift‘s Premium Hams and Bacon ThE BestT GOOD SHOE Swift Canadian Co Limited. Miss Joannisse, accompanied by Miss Jeannd Larcher on the piano, won all hearts with her vocal solo, ‘‘Maudite, Soit la Guerre,‘ and, her second number was anothtr detided favourite. This young lady sang unâ€" usually well and pleased all, >.The overture, .L‘Esyoir de I,/â€" Alsace,"‘ was very eéffectively given by the band, and won yery hearty a-p};lause. : ons he imprompt pianoforte solos by Mrs. Gauthier was ong of the specialâ€" ly appréeciated features the evenâ€" ing‘s programme, this talented Panâ€" ist, as usual, playing with a gifted effectiveness that delighted all. . Little Miss Boutin made a decidedâ€" ly favourable impression with} alcleâ€" verly presented pianoforte solo that showing decided talent, She was enâ€" thusiastically recalled, and her second selection on the piano was equally apâ€" preciated. sc y ~â€"_Mr. Lucien Pare‘s pleasing voice was heard to advaptage in a well preâ€" sented voeal solo iï¬at won very meritâ€" ed reeall. His responding number was another very attractive selection, in French, and won very general apâ€" proval. Mrs. Gaughier added to the effectiveness of these solos by her talâ€" ented accompaniments. In a few wellâ€"chosen words, Rev. Fr. Theriault spoke of the early days of the band when he was a playing member, and complimented the â€"boys on their present excellence. His inâ€" troduction of the first number, the march, ‘‘Carillon,"‘"‘ by the band, was of interest to all and aided in the apâ€" preciation of the band‘s effective presentation of the selection. Miss Perrault delighted all with her gifted piano solo, which was deâ€" servedly encored, her second number being equally pleasmg and well reâ€" ceived. ty Nights. It was ‘‘French Night,"‘ and the French artists presented a very attractive and excellent proâ€" gramme of highâ€"class vocal and inâ€" strumental music. The event was particularly fortunate in having Rey. Fr. Theriault as chairman for the occasion. He introduced the numâ€" bers in both French and English and made illuminating and ‘interesting comments on ghe programme. His humorous stories and witty referâ€" ences were much appreciated, and he was highly successful in holding the interest ond attention of all. Before the lifting of the eurtain, the Timmins Citizens‘® Band, with a large turnout of members, rendered ‘"*OCanada,‘‘ in very pleasing way, the curtain rising as the band conâ€" opening number. Sunday evening‘s band concert in the Goldfields Theatre; after the church services was another and one of Tthe best of the National and Counâ€" Programme of Outstanding, Merit Enjoyed by Capacity House on Sunday Evening "FRENCH NIGHT"‘ ANOTHER RAND CONCERT | be cibtséfl Tor â€" repalrs-‘â€" Askansaw ) Thomgas® Cat.." Messrs J. B. Pare, 0. Demers, L. Maltais and H. Perrault and the rest of the ‘band committee responsible for the programme are also entitled fo credit for the splendid evemng of good music. ~ % Where you start does not matter so much as whaere you finish. + The evening‘s programme was conâ€" cluded with a well given selection by the band, ‘‘Laurentian Echoes,"‘ folâ€" lowed by the National Anthem, after the artists of the evening had been duly thanked on behalf of the band and the audience. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO. Oné of the most popular‘ features of the programme was the playing of the Orchestra tuneâ€" ful and harmonious combination that included piano, violin, barjo, saxaphone, cornet and drums. The first number by this attractive orchesâ€" tra brought very enthusiastic encore and there was another recall for the responding number, with the audiâ€" ence tempted to keep on encormg Be open mined and close mouthed. Sonfé o:eAllÂ¥d Open minds should Look for the "No parboiling" tazk when you bu y a w h o l e "Premium" Ham or when you buzy slice. ‘*Are you Dr. Smith?"‘ asked the automatic attendant of the stranger, to which the replied, ‘‘No, but I know where we can get some.‘"‘ "The "weh as produced by the.| spider is ‘ordinarily number of strands spun together somewhat in the form of a rope. Single strands separate from the freshly spun web give t.he,best results though some pres fer to take the web directly from the spider‘s cocoon. Grains of dust sometimes collect on the spider lines, which detract from their use when viewed in the telescope. In the Laboratory the webs are dusted off and the single strands separated. An idea of the delicacy of touch reâ€" quired may be formed when it is stated that spider webs have a thickâ€" ness before the strands are separated of only two or three tenâ€"thousandths of an inch. It has been calculated that a pound of web, as used in the telescope diaphragms, would stretch around the earthâ€"some 25,000 miles â€"and 500,000 tons would reach to the nearest fixed star.‘‘ The price of progress is everlasting effort. _ **Did I! They say I gave my wife $10 and tried to kiss the preacher.‘‘ ‘*Gilbert, did you your wedding day?"‘ ‘‘*Did I| They savy One of the most deplorable crimes is~reported from Cochraneâ€"a crime so low and senseless as to make it almost impossible to find words adeâ€" quate to , deseribe its despicable idiocy. _ Civilizgtion, sportsmanship, manhood and decency all were lackâ€" ing in the perpetrators of this deâ€" plorable outrageâ€"the desecration of the last resting place of the dead. It is unthinkable that there should be human+beings so perwerted that the dead areâ€"not left in peace and reâ€" verence. ‘In referring to the crime, Nhe Northland Post, of Cochrane, very justly uses strong language, sayâ€" ing:â€"*‘‘The limit of depravity apâ€" pears to have been reached here in a ghoulish attempt to desecrate, the Roman Catholie Cemetery. On Monâ€" day night several of the caskets were broken open ahd defiled. No clew so far has been found to bring »the perpetrator of this Uastardly crime to justice." DESPICABLE CRIME AT , THE COCHRANE CEMETERY) ‘*‘The operation that is so difficult to perf’orm in camp, is quite readily performed in a properly equipped laboratory. Thus, in the Physical Testing Laboratory of the Topograâ€" phical Survey, Department of the Interior, where instruments used in topographic mapping are regularly inspected and tested and other work in connectiqp therewith is carried on, the spider lines are handled with ease and assurance. New spider ljines are inserted at the correct spacing and proper tension. Afterwards the disâ€" tances between them ure accurately measured under the microscope. and with special testing apparitus the inâ€" strument is again placed in perfect adjustment ready for field use. "Owing to the superierity of the spider web, the surveyor may endeaâ€" vyour to replace a broke web with a new one. This is an extremely deliâ€" cate operation and one that is very difficult to perform in camp, particuâ€" larly as the lines require to be accurâ€" ately spaced. Sometimes they are only about oneâ€"sixteenth of an inch apart. + ‘‘On Canadian topographical surâ€" veys, these lines are ordinarily of spider web, and are stretched across an annular ring within the teleseope itself. For emergency . use,. when this spider web becomes accidentally broken some other device earried as a spare part, such as a glass diaâ€" phragm on which the lines are etched, is generally substituted. The spider web, however, is much more satifsfacâ€" tory. The lines must be very fine and black and no artificia@l product which has yet been tried has the reâ€" quisite _ combination _ of _ fineness, strength and elasticity. h across the field of view. These lines may be arranged in one of several different ways and, may be of any number up to a dozen or so. They are used to enable the surveyor to make the intricate measurements necessary in the practice of hi» proâ€" fession. AGTUAL SPIOER WEB USED [N SURVEYOR‘S INSTRUMENT ‘‘The lowly spider, as he spins his web to entrap the unrwary fly, is exâ€" ercising a faculty that has been made use of for years in the construction of certain kinds of scientific instruâ€" ments. Included in this category, is the surveyvor‘s transitâ€"theodolite. ‘‘If you look through the telescope of such an instrument, a nunmber of fine straight lines will be seen cutting In a new country like this where the mining ‘and lumbeéring industries are so prominent and where there is so much mapping out of new townâ€" ships and townsites, surveyors‘ inâ€" struments are naturally of special inâ€" terest, and there will be a particular news value to the following informaâ€" tive article with its cwrious informaâ€" tion. It was written at the Dominion (Gieological Survey Department, Otâ€" tawa, ands is ag follows :â€" Spider‘s Web the Most Satisfactory for Use in Surveyor‘s Transitâ€" Theodolite get excitegc on The County of Temiskaming North LO.L, will observe the «Twelfth of July ths year at Schumacher. There will be the regular Orange Walk a day of sports, speeches, music, etc. A number of prozinent and ‘eloquent speeches are being gelected for the occasion. All the Orange lodges in the district are expected to take part in the day at Schumacher on July 12th, 1926. TO CELEBRATE TWELFTH, OF JULY AT SCHUMACHER The ibaseball enthusiasm in past years has never thawed out until it was really too late to perfect proper organization. _ Iroquois Falls and other towns organize for baseball early in the season and so have an advantage over this man‘s â€" town. Why.not make a change this year in the matter of organizing for baseball ? Why not try this one year to organize in lots,of time? Why not call a meeting of the basenall enthustasts right away, to see what may be done to provide good ball this summer? And if a meeting is called, why not all the baseball fans turn out and giveyfullest support to good baseball here for the coming season ? WRY NOT GIVE BASEBALL AN EARLY START IN 1926 Hockey is over! Why not‘ start in\ right away for a big season â€"of baseball? Every year baseball hangs back until the season is started and then a hurried and imperfect orgganizâ€" ation results. Until (baseball is acâ€" tually being played it seems to be impossible to get any‘ organization going. On the other hand there are many good sports who believe that the popularity and success of footâ€" ball in this district is due to the organization that the soccer enthusiâ€" asts perfect at the very commenceâ€" ment of the season. When football weather eomes, the football lads are all organized and ‘""rarin‘ toâ€" go."‘ . 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