#* *# * #* *# *# + #Â¥* #@ # #* *# #% #4 # + #4 # *# #* # # #4 w #% # © Â¥* #@ 4# #4 +€ *# ## * #% *# # *# ** # #@ *4 *# * ## # 4 #* + #* * * °% #4 @ #© ## # + *# ®, Ld #* *, * ## *# La #* # # #* * * ## # # #* *# Â¥* *# # Â¥* *# ¢ *# ht #* * * ## ## *# #% W# #@ # Â¥* #@ #@ # “.. # *# # *« LINIMENT _ in Prizes Exercise your wi Mr. J. A. McFarlane of Napance, Ont., had chilblains so bad that he couldn‘t wear boots. Egyptian Liniment relieved them,. Don‘t suffer from chilblains this winter. This linimentis also for Frost Bites, Burns Scalds, Cuts, Bruises, Sore Chest and Throat, Neuralgia, etc. DOUGLAS CO MANUFAC TURERS,NAPANEE, ONL LIMITED 41 Queen St., W. Opp. City Hall Toronto no slightest trace of any dangerous habitâ€"forming drug. No asmokes, no spraysâ€"just swellow two RAZ.MAH Capsules a hot drink at mealtime. **‘To Sleep Toâ€"night, Use RAZâ€"MAH To. T j day, for Asthma, Chronic Bronchitis, Head and Bronchial Colds, Hay Fever." Tt taken according to directions, dces not bring positive relief, your druggist will return your money. RAZâ€"MAH contains no slightest trace of any dangerous habitâ€"forming drug. No Kou may, night after night, have been robbed of sleep and comfort by Asthmaâ€"have endured all the agonizing sensations of slow strangulation . Nevertheless, if a $1 box of RAZâ€"MAH, Chronic Bronchitis, Head and Bronchial Colds, Hay Fever for Comfort use A S T HA MA person sending the list conâ€" taining the greatest numâ€" ber of words will receive $100.00 in cash. Twenty other cash prizes will be given. Just go into the Nyal Drug Store and get as many entry sheets as you wish. Wr{tc your words on these sheets and send them to Nyal headquarters. No obligation. Just a friendl method of making more people make up from the letters in NYAL CREOPHOS? The How many words can you method of makinz re people wonderful winter rexnedy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, etc. Better drop in toâ€"day at the Thursday, Jan. 13th, 1927 ' l y MAORT jEBLAINY A mOP .oe?" Lessons each week $1.00. Instruments worth $7.50 To induce adults,â€"and parents to send their children,â€"to try our simple and correct methods, we are supplying a violin to practice on free, and at the end of 12 lessons the violin is absolutely the pupil‘s own property. OPPOSITE GRAY‘S DRUG STORE. BOX 1724. GENUINE GERHARD HEINTZMAN PIANOS DRUG STORE GERHARD HEKINT/MAN ite« #* ®# L ®. *# *4 *# ®# *# ## t *# ## * # *#.,* T/‘ * C * * *# °#% #4 # * °# #* +. # # .0 *# ’0 w# * # #*4 # # ##â€" ## e *« ## # # ## # *# #4 * # w# ® La ## *Â¥ *# @4# $ # # t# + «o #4 w .’ # 5 ®#, + _# 4 Violin Jree Birrell Bell‘s Violin Academy "COmce a trialâ€"â€" always Nyal" 5 Similar offer for Hawaiian Guitar or Mandolin Write for catalogue and special list of slightly used pianos .. .. AT ALL DEALERS ‘‘The half million dollars now beâ€" ing secured is intended to pay for a big mining plant, as well as a shaft to 500 feet in depth and extensive lateral development a million dollars for one million shares, the company will still have 1,500,000 shares in its treasury with which to take care of mill construeâ€" tion, as well as provision for hydroâ€" electric power. "The Howey Company is capitalizâ€" ed at 5,000,000 shares Of these the original owners hold 2,500,000 shares agamst the outstandmo‘ umts This leaves 2,500,000 shares in the treasury. This means that after receipt of hali Howey (Gold Mines themselves, From present appearances, the entire transâ€" action can be announced in full detail before the end of the current week. In the meantimge, your correspondent can announce that a number of the more conservative mining men in Northern Ontario are the chief subâ€" seribers. _ Individuals _ repesenting some of the more successful mining companies in this country have subâ€" seribed for big blocks of stock. It is also stated that Douglas Wright will take over management of the mine. ‘©Very important news for the Red Lake mining division came to hand officially toâ€"day when your correspondâ€" ent received official advice that two of the more important mining enterprises in that field had been financed for work on a big scale. Howey Gold Mines, original discovery in the Red Lake district has secured half a million dollars with which to â€"commence development. This has been obtained through sale of one million treasury shares at fifty cents per share. The offering of the stock was made quietly to various proâ€" minent mining men in an individual way, and the offering was taken up so fast as to even surprise the officials of Howey Gold Secures $500.000 Through Sale of Treasury Stock. Batâ€" hurst Now Reâ€"organized A correspondent of The Toronto Mail and Empire writes that paper from Cobalt saying :â€"â€" ‘*‘While this deal is being announcâ€" FOOT 3rd AVENUE. PHONE 567M. For booklet end generâ€" ous trial of RAZâ€"MAH, send 5¢c to Templetons Ltd., Toronto 2. R48 Tuesday, Jan. 18â€"Timmins at Iroâ€" quois Falls. _ Tuesday. Jan. 25â€"Iroquois Falls at Timmins. Friday, Jan. 28â€"Timmins at Iroâ€" quois Falls. Friday, Feb. 11â€"Timmins at Iroâ€" gois Falls. Note;â€"Game of an. 18th may be changed to suit either club. NEW T. N.0O. POWER CAR INSPECTED AT NORTH BAY The following are the matches â€" on the Junior hockey series schedule :â€" â€" Tuesday, Feb. 1â€"Iroquois Falls at Timmins. Friday, Feb. 4â€"Timmins at Iroâ€" quois Falls. â€"Tuesday, Feb,. 8â€"Iroquois Falls at Timmins. The \01'th Bay Nugget this week sSays :â€" *A large number of citizens, inâ€" cluding a good repréesentation of railâ€" way men. availed themselves of the opportunity afforded by the T. N.0. Railway CommisSsion of viewing the ‘‘The assays sheets on both proâ€" perties leave no room for doubt but that important gold mines are in the making and that the Red Lake diviâ€" sion is assured of a place among the important gold mining districts of Northern Ontario."‘ COMING MATCHES IN THE JUNIOR HOCKEY SERILES gasâ€"electric passenger car which was placed on exhibition at the CP.R. station on Saturday last. The car was recently purchased to provide railway service to Cheminis, the eastâ€" ern terminus on the Rouyn branch. It was: moved to Kirkland Lake on Monday and made a test tripâ€" toâ€" day to Cheminis, ever which route it will be operated. ‘*The car is of the ultraâ€"modern type in every respect, electrically operated, the power being generated by a six cylinder 250 h.p. gas motor, each cylinder having 74 inch bore and an 8 inch stroke. The engine drives to 160 K.W. generator which supplies power to two 140 h.p. elecâ€" tric motors, fitted to the frout trucks of the ear. and which do the work of propelling the ear. The mechanism is very simple of operation, the. enâ€" tire arrangementâ€" being controlled by one lever and the entire operation beâ€" ing done by one man. The ecar is capâ€" able of attaining a speed of 60 mules an hour and car also cearry a trailer when necessary. Arrangements are so that the car ean be operated from either end in the event of it not being possible to make a turn at any point it might visit."‘ "©The original Bathurst Company therefore continues in existence on the strength of its shares held in the new Bathurst Mines, Ltd., and also on the strength of a large number of additional claims held in the Narrow Lake district. The deal just elosed involves only nine claims. but this emâ€" braces the rich discovery group. Diâ€" rectors of the new company will inâ€" clude J. Y. Murdock and H. Chadâ€" bourne, of Noranda Mines. It is now evident that the road to Red Lake this Winter will probably witness more important than that which marked the boom days of a year ago. ed, your correspondent has also been officially advised that the Bathurst, Ltd., in the Narrow Lake section, has hbeen financed through a deal which was ratified yesterday at Ottawa. This deal involves incorporation of a new company with two million shares capital. One million goes to the oriâ€" ginal Bathurst, Ltd., while one milâ€" hon shares go into the treasury of the new company. The new company in turn has optloned 700,000 shares of treasury at a price Whl(‘h is to proâ€" vide $500.000 for workmb capi‘tal. In addition to this, the option holders are also given an option on 300,000 of the vendor shares at 75 cents each, or a total of $225,000 for.this block. In all, the option on treasury, as well as vendor stock. involves a total of $725,â€" 000 spread over a total of two years. ‘*‘This deal would leave the original Bathurst holders with 700,000 shares, of which 100,000 are to be paid to Bert Ray as commuission. . It also leaves the new company with 300,000 shares in its treasury. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTAIO remaining N.QO.AI .A. ‘"‘Itis hard to see how England could have bartered a certain measure of her perilous grandeur for future security and good will any more wiseâ€" ly than she has done; or, onece having made up ther mind to the trade, how she could have put it through more gracefully or in a manner more acâ€" ceptable to her Dominions. The first law of survival is adaptation to cirâ€" cumstances and surroundings. _ Briâ€" tain has perceived the existence of this law, has correctly interpreted it and has applied it unsparingly to her own situation. Britain bends, but never breaks. Weathering storms is one of the best things she does. Eight or nine centuries of catchâ€"asâ€" catchâ€"can have made her an adept in falling on her feet. Today she is not only recovering from the greatest war in h‘story but is at the same time payâ€" ing the penalty for having been too slow to discard her outworn social and economic systems. Her heaviest burdens were piled up, not between 1914 and 1918 but in the eighteenth and ninetrenth centuries. Even had there been no World War, England would still have been subjected to the rending strains of major social readâ€" justments. ‘"‘The Imperial Conference, whch traces it hazy beginnings â€" fugtier: back than 1887, the year of the gubiâ€" lee of Queen Victoria, has, within‘this short span of time, become one of the most august deliberative bodies to b» found in all history. Its voice is the voice of four hundred and fifty milâ€" lion persons. _ Its decisions un through all the hemispheres and are binding, subject to _ parliamentary ratifications, upon oneâ€"quarter of the inhabitants of the globe. ‘‘Such were the power and seope of the Conference which sat in Lonâ€" don a few weeks ago and. declarea that Britain and Dominions were cach and all equal one with another. It was further decreed that though the British Foreign Office shall conâ€" tinue to be the spokesman of the Em pire in matters international, British ministers shall sign treaties in the name of Britain only and not for the Empire as a whole. Dominion minâ€" isters are henceforth to sign for the oversea nations which are to be bound. Each Dominion will assume its own obligations at its own pleasure, and none will be asked to live up to agree ments not of its own making. _ The British Foreign Office will thus be shorn of its last claim to being the sole arbiter of relationships between the Empire and the outside Worlï¬.! The very title of the sovereign is to beâ€" modified to conform to changed conditions. Thus does the Common wealth of Nations, in fact as well a in the name, supersede the unwieldy Empire,. con(diitIons. I[hus does the Common ‘I\n()ther area in Whic-h there was a wealth of Nations, in fact as well @8 preat amount of claimâ€"staking during in the name, supersede the unwieldy the past fall. and of which considerâ€" Empire, \lable is expected in the future, is the every land there are those wh# Lake Savant aver, North of Bucke hail with delight every ~concession Station, on the C.N.R., where a good made by Britain to her Dominions ~‘many years ago ‘‘finds"‘ of gold in not because of any advantage whichithe lake sands were reported and will acerue to cither but because theÂ¥y where during the past year, . solid regard these amenities as sure SigN§ yeins of quartz were uncovered. of weakness, as signs that the Empire \ The recent discovery in Munro is slipping and crumbling. _ No on ‘ lownship by R. S. Potter, of copperâ€" can deny that the Commonwealth of, ‘tineâ€"lead ore has excited the attention Nations of 1927 is a less imposing ,f the mining world. Samples of this structure than the towering edifice Of pe have been assayed and have reâ€" 1887, the year which marked the 7.0 per cent. copper and 18.01 pletion of Queen Victoria‘s half CeNâ€"|jay cent, zinc, a fine showing. tury upon the British throne. _ Norl Other ‘finds‘‘ of the past year are can any sane observer deny that by Thomas Gibson. Deâ€" new, structure is less topâ€"heavy than |nty minister of Mines. It follows in the old, that it sits on a broader base, § that its strains are better distributed | ©@Tn the Michipicoten area there has and that its equilibrium is more|hen some revival of gold mining. stable. M a Pinnaar Minine C‘nmnant. 4 suh. fow ‘‘Many thoughtful Englishmen reâ€" gard the future of their country with gloomy forebodings. Even. though the coal strike has petered out and the outlook for trade and industry is distinetly brighter, their horizon is peopled with hostile shapes. The best they can hope is that their counâ€" try will somehow muddle through. We cannot share this common pessiâ€" mism; or yet do we believe that she will muddle through in the sense that she will blindly stagger to safety through a Slough of Despond. _ All history teaches us that when‘ Englishâ€" men are said to have muddled through the crises of the past they have actuâ€" ally hacked their way through by grnt and courage, superior headwork and steadiness of character. Much as Briâ€" tain has suffered materially, she has not been bereft of these priceless adâ€" vantages. _ They will serve her in the future no less effectually than they have served her in the past.‘" An old friend and reader Advance sends this paper a | of an editorial from The Evening Post of recent dat makes no comment on the edi simply wrote his name on a c( the margin. The editorial spe itself. Coming as it does f journal that has not always friendly to Britain, it is parti worthy of note. In one or two the words ‘‘England*"‘ and **E man‘‘ are used instead of "‘*Br and ‘‘Britisghers,‘‘â€"but let,that Here is the editorial,â€"it is worthy of careful read, ‘‘{lest w get‘‘ some things :â€" L Soc GCOURAGE DF BRITAIN CARRIES HER THRIGh ‘‘When Englishmen are Said to Muddled Through. They KW Actually Hacked Their W by Grit and Counrage.‘‘. The aln“‘ '*ld\' He sen rly "es vell of or 88, MINING TN NORTH LAND MAKING GREAT STAIOES Many Promising Districts Now ceiyving Special Attention Along Development Lines. In an interview given last week by Hon. Mr. MeCrea, Minmister of Mines. Toronto, information fFurnished by the Minister indicated that the Province‘s new mineral development of 1926 more than kept pace with that of former vears. The range extends over some miles. Two hundred and fifty thousand dolâ€" lars has been spent in diamond drillâ€" ing in the last two years by American capital. _A shaft is now being put down. A road is being opened into the area, and work of development will be continued through the winter. After long tests we are conâ€" vinced Alu{mnum is the best container for tea. The department is inclined to look upon the steady devolpment of the lange range of copper zine léead ore in the townships of Creighton and Balâ€" four, in the Sudbury basin, as the beâ€" ginning of an important new industry. The recent discovery in Munro ‘ownship by R. S. Potter, of copperâ€" incâ€"lead ore has excited the attention if the mining world. Samples of this re have been assayed and have reâ€" ‘ealed 7.0 per cent. copper and 18.01 ‘er cent. zinc, a fine showing. Other ""finds‘‘ of the past year are ammarized by Thomas Gibson. Deâ€" uty minister of Mines. It follows in rt: / ‘‘In the Michipicoten area there has n some revival of gold mining. Ne Pioneer Mining Company, a subâ€" liary of the Huronian Belt, is openâ€" Although the reports of geological parties sent out last summer to surâ€" vey Ontario‘s mineral wealth and deâ€" velopments have not yet been drafted, enough information is obtainable to show that the northern part of the province has made great strides durâ€" ing the year in uncovering its mineral resources. im up the Minto mine with the apâ€" Jaranceâ€"of good prospects of success Dscoveries of gold during the present eson at \Voman Lake and Narrow e in the Red Lake are quite proâ€" Bsing. "®West of Poreupine, in â€"Jamieson an Robb townships, massive copper suohides have been found, and parâ€" to developing it. "On the Ontario side of the Queâ€" bboundary, copperâ€"zineâ€"lead ores e been uncovered in Ben Nevis and llord townships. _ Some distance thwest of these areas a good find tomship of Munro, 12 feet in width 0 he solid ore ha\mu been uncoverâ€" sers are still attached to pencils be@use making mistakes has not beâ€" coOm® a lost art. 1s good tea‘ 104 | EA. Now packed only in Aluminum. HEAD OFFICE « w TOF E. C. WARD Dis. Manager A. W. PICKERING Gen. Agent SIMMS. HOOKER DREW Local Agents A MONTHLY PEXSIONX FOR LIFE For yourselfâ€"say from age 60. A GUARANTEED M O N T H L Y INXCOME For your wife if you die. ANX EDUCATIOXNX FOR YOUR SONX OR DAUTGHTER The road to success in life. Now Reâ€" Will meet in the Hollinger Recreation Hall the first and third Fridays of each month at 8.30 p.m. J. THOMAS, President MRS. E. RICHARDS, Box 692, Sec‘y. GEO. HKALE, Treasurer Meetings held in Hollinger Recreation Hall, third Saturday of each month. Open to all of Cornish birth or Corâ€" nish Associate. C P. VARKER, President R, BURNMAN, Secretaryâ€"Treasurer, Box 1507, Timmins Cornish Social Club Dr. I. T. Brill, D.D.S. Phone 90 Goldfields Theatre Building Timmins, Ont, Phone 42 St. David‘s Welsh Society Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Block Phone 610â€"W 23 Wilson Avenue Have the Wagon Call Open Evenings Sweet Clover Milk Bread Wedding Cakes Cakes Pastries TORONTO Dentist Specialty Open Evenings Cochrane Timmins Timmins Phone 428M 45â€"58 ho Â¥