In the Estate of Moneta Pharmacy, Limited, Authorized Assignor. Notice is hereby given that Moneta Pharmacy, Limited, of Timmins, Onâ€" tario, did on the enghtventh day of February, 1928, make an authorized assignment of all its property for the benefit of its Creditors and that Thomas J. Bourke, Esq., Official Reâ€" eciver, has appointed me to be custoâ€" dian of the Estate of the Debtor unâ€" til the creditors at their first meeting shall elect a trustee to administer the estate of the debtor. Notice is further given that the first meeting of creditors in the above estate will be held at the office of the Official Receiver, Thomas J. Bourke, at North Bay, Ont., on the 9th day of | March, 1928, at ten o‘clock in thol forenoon. To entitle you to vote thereat proof of your eclaim must be lodged with me before the meeting is held. Proxies to be used at the meeting must be lodged with me prior thereto.| And further take notice that if you have any claim against the debtor for which you are entitled to rank, proof of such claim must be filed with me within thirty days from the date of this notice for, from and after tho expiration of the time fixed by suh- section 8, of section 37, of the sai(‘l Act, I shall distribute the proceeds of the debtor estate among the parties entitled thereto, having mgard only to the claims of which I have then notice. Mrs. Melville and daughter, Meta, wish to thank all the friends who were so kind and sympathetic to them in their bereavement. . Also to exâ€" press appreciation to those who sent such beautiful floral offerings. â€"O0h, Mrs. Frank Martin and brothers wish to thank the Moose ‘Lodge and all theirtother friends and acquainâ€" tances for their kindness and symâ€" pathy in the death of Mr. Frank Marâ€" tin in the Hollinger Fire. Also for the many floral tributes sent. â€"9p Mr. Zack Hart and family wish to thank all their friends and aequainâ€" tances for their. kindness and symâ€" pathy in Mrs. Hart‘s long illness and death. Also. for the floral: tokens sent. â€"9p Dated at Timmins, Ont., this 27 day of February, 1928. GEOR(}E N. ROSS, C.A., he Great Lakes for a summer holiday have no equal. Contrary to the generally prevailing opinion that the automobile and touring and camping are a greater attraction, these large bodies of fresh water, really inland seas, are holding their own, indeed, by those who know it is said that they are doing more. From Port McNicoll to the Head of the Lakes, is practically an ocean voyage. The great white steamers of the Canadian Pacific Railway are operated the same as the huge ocean liners. At Port MeNicoll the visitor sees a man made harbor, surrounded by a village which has been develâ€" oped from the original within the last twenty years. About an hour and a half after leaving port, a bugle sounds the dining call, and going below the traveller finds the diningâ€" room spacious and comfortable which greatlyy whets the already huge appetite. L 1. The Great Lake Steamer 8S.8. Assiniboia, of the 2. Serving a little bovril during the trip. 3 reld at the office of the er, Thomas J. Bourke, Ont., on the 9th day of at ten ojclock in the be lodged with me« is held. Through Canada‘s Inland Ocean Custodian. T HURSDA Y Associated Boards of Trade Bulletm ' to Meet at Timmins, March 8 Hamilton Block, Timmins, Ount. Phone 501 P. O. Box 223 Miss Jean Valade has accepted a position as stenographexr with the firm of D. Kester, local barrister and soliâ€" citor. Mr. Ralph Paul has joined staff of the Hollinger Mines grapher. TOWNSHIP OF TISDALE Miss ~Esther â€" DeHetre, Iroquois Falls, Ont., and Miss Aldea Paut, Timâ€" mins, are among the latest enrollâ€" ments at thv Timmins Business Colâ€" lege. Enrollment or reservation should be made now for the Easter term. For full information regarding tuiâ€" tion or subjects taught, call, ‘phone or write The above are both students of the Business College and have secuzred their positions thorugh the employâ€" ment department of the school. The February Theory exams are beâ€" ing held at ‘the (ollewe this week as well as the monthly speed tests in typing. ‘‘A Gold Medal School in a Golden Centre‘‘ E. M. TERRY. Supervising Principal. All dog .owners must call at the Chief of Police‘s office either at South Porcupine in the Council Chambers, or in the Fire Hall at Schumacher and pay their dog license on ox before the 3lstâ€"day of March, 1928. The Offices will:sbe open from 8 a.m. till 12 a.m. every day and from 8 a.m. till 10 p.m. on March 12th and 27th. After that date all dogs will be taken and put in the Pound and the Owners will be dealt with in accordance with Byâ€" law 90. This Byâ€"law will be enforeâ€" ed â€"to the letteyx. Chief Constable of the Twp. of Tisâ€" dale. â€"0 Mrs., A. E. Donovan and Mrs. J. Kyle left on Tuesday for Rouyn to visit some friends there. <Mxy. Mecâ€" Leod is carrying on Mrs. Kyle‘s busiâ€" ness until her retur A meeting of the Supporters of Timmins <Separate Schools will be held in School on Wedâ€" nesday, March 7th, at the hour of 5 p.m., for the nomination of a trustee to fill the vacaney occasioned by the resignation of F. J. Kehoe. + J. A. WALSH, After dinner a promenade of the broad white decks, as motionless as the city streets, but with what a difference! The fresh clean breeze stiffens, the sun strikes the horizon and sinks in blazing splendour leaving behind a sense of peace and wellâ€"being. Host upon host of graceâ€" ful whiteâ€"spread wings appear over the stern, crying the poignant call of the hungry gull. So still they are as to appear motionless, a floating bit of white feather; but a chance opening of ts cooks galley port hole brings them swooping down, screamâ€" ing with the wildness of the blizzard, with a strength and speed that is amazing. Land slowly disappea, and the islands are lost in the soft enfolding darkness. Stars come out, and a waite moon floods the lake with an ethereal beauty. All is quietâ€"a friendly intimate quiet â€" broken Timmins Business College Seey., Timmins Separate Schools e GCP. Fleet which carries its passeenger through the land of charm. 3. The passengers companions and wellâ€"wishers of a bonâ€"voyage. Notice. CHAS. MeINNIS, the office as stenoâ€" here and there by a merry laugh, a passing footstep, the throb of the great engine and the spark on the wireless up above. A little later we pass the protruding Bruce peninsuala, then the Manitoulin Islana, the home of the Great Spirit. In the disâ€" tance can be seen the blinking light of the mariners‘ guides, the lightâ€" houses at Cabot‘s Head, Lonely Island, the Flower Pots and in the furthe listance ahâ€"ad, Cove Island, the marking point of the entrance to Lake Huron. These steamships, the "Keewaâ€" tin", ‘"Manitoba,""‘ and "Assiniboia‘" of the Canadian Pacific service are firstâ€"class in every way, and ply thege inland waters from May 21st. to September 28th. The journey oecupies the better part of three days, with every wave bringing {further charm and amazement at the unfolding beauty of the trip.‘ . Delegates from South to Reach Here Wednesday Evenâ€" ing, March Ith. Curling Arranged for Them That Evening. Business Session on Thursday Next. Banâ€" quet by Timmins Board of Trade and Kiwanis in the Evening. The quarterly meeting of the Norâ€" thern Ontario Associated Boards of Trade will be held at Timmins on Thursday of next week, March"8th. Delegates from the south and from a distance will arrive on Wednesday evening, and for these curling games have been arranged at the rink here. This was the decision of the Timâ€" mins Board of Trade at its annual meeting last Thursday evening. On behalf of the Timmins Board of Trade Mr. M. Boivin at the last meetâ€" ing of the Associated Boards had inâ€" vited the Associated Boards to hold their next regular quarterly meeting here. The date was left by the preâ€" sident to the Timmins Board of Trade, and Thursday, March 8th was selected hy the meeting last week. The business session of the Assoâ€" ciated Boards will be held on Thursâ€" day, there being morning and afterâ€" noon _ Many important quesâ€" tions will be before the Associated Boards. Among the resolutions from Timmins will be suggestions to the Government for the consideration of the matter of building an extension of the T. N. 0. to Kapuskasing, passâ€" ing through Kamiskotia, and also reâ€" quest for Government consideration of the idea of a ‘belt line of roads for the North. This belt line of roads would connect Timmins and Sudbury, open up a great section of new counâ€" try, rich in secenery, fish and game, minerals and timber. Another resolution from the Timmins Board of Trade will be in reference to the question of the care of indigents. This resolution will ask the Governâ€" ment to assume responsibility for inâ€" digents from unorganized territory in the same way that the Dominion Govâ€" ment does in similar unorganized terâ€" ritory in its line. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO greater benefit and value than in the past, and it assuredly has been a very helpful organization. It includes all the Boards of Trade of all the towns of the North Land, including Cobalt, Harleybury, New Liskeard, Englehart, Matheson, Kirkland Lake, lTroquois Falls, Timmins, Ansonville, Cochrane, Hearst, Kapuskasing, and other cenâ€" tres. At each meeting of the Associated Boards of Trade there is a live and helpful discussion of all topiecs of inâ€" terest and importance to this North and the Government has come to look upon the Associated Boards of Trade as more or less what a former preâ€" sident, Mr. R. A. MeInnis, often urged that it ‘be made,â€"the Voiee of the North. e 1927, totalled 117,8418,500 pounds valued at $22,667,501. Most of this cheese found a market in the British Isles. Exports of Canadian butter in the same period were 3,527,400 pounds valued at $1,317,593. For the twelve months ended Octoâ€" ber 31, 1927, Canada exported 4,188,â€" 974 gallons of fresh cream and 3,842,â€" 175 gallon«s of fresh milk having a combined total value of $8,131 ()() 2. Practically all of these dairy pmduots went to the United States. Exports of cheese from Canada for the twelve months ended Octobey 31, It is estimated that Prince Edward Island, the smallest of the nine proâ€" vinces of Canada, will ‘have a total production of potatoes this year of 8;â€" 000,000 bushels. A considerable perâ€" centage of this crop will find a market in the United States. There are 1,310 flour mills in Canâ€" ada, with an annual output of over 17,770,000 barrels, of which about 10,â€" 500,000 barrels are exported. The sugar beet crop in southern Alâ€" berta this year, it is estimated, will yield between 45,000 and 50,000 tons, the largest crop in the history of the industry in Alberta. Last year‘s crop was 41,000 tons. FPACTS OF INTEREST 48 Third Ave. Timmins, Phone 303 For Four Days Only S QCI al Fri., Sat., Mon. Tues. -- March 2, 3, 5 and 6 Oranges . Strawberry, 38. Strawberry, 4s Raspberry, 38. Raspberry, 45. Peach, 38. ....... Peach., 4s. :.....:: Apricot, 38. ...:... Apricot, 4s. ...... Nick Blahey Real Bargains and Choice Cuts in our Meat Dept. The Jelly that made all other Jellies jealous per dozen:.:....";:.;... ... Standard PUMPKIN 3 tins 18c Lynn V alley Nuâ€"Jell Jelly Powders Assorted Flavours VEGETABLES FRESH EVERY DAYâ€"TOMATOES, CELERY, LETTUCE, CAULIFLOWER AND RHUBARB â€"Bxchange 25¢c. doz. 15¢. per can 61¢ "a¢ BMAc 62¢ DJ¢ 62¢ BAc 62¢ l <â€" UeS U uces Le At midnight last night the Temiskaâ€" ming Telephone Co. took over the telephone system only of the Poreuâ€" pine iPower and Telephone Co., in the Towns of Timmins, Schumacher, South Poreupine, Porecupine, and in the townships of and Whitâ€" ney, the sale being arranged recently. Mr. iP. R. Craven of the Temiskaming Telephone Co., was in Timmins this week from the head office of the comâ€" pany at New Liskeard, seeing to the final details in connection with the transfer of the system. It is understood that the sale of the etlephone business, so far as the Porcupine Power and Telephone Co. is concerned, was induced by the fact that the company is chiefly interested in lighting and power. **The sale of the telephone system does not in any way affect our other business in the Poreupine campâ€"our lighting and power business being carried on under the names of the Poreupine Power Telephone Company, Limited, and the Northern Canada Power, Limited,"‘ said Mr. B. V. Harrison, general manâ€" ager of the Canada Nonthern Power Corporation, Limited, this week. ‘*The Temiskaming Telephone Co. will conâ€" tinue to supply telephone services and assume any obligations entered into by us in connection with this department. In Timmins, the Temiskaming Teleâ€" phone Co. will occupy the full second storey of our new building, and in South Poreupine they will occupy the building in which the exchange is at present located."‘ Telephone System Only Sold by Porcugine Power Teleâ€" phone Co. Lighting and Power to be Carried on as Beâ€" fore. Temiskaming Telephone Co. Now has an Extendâ€" ed Series of Services in This North. Temiskaming Telephone Co. Take Over Phone System Here With the addition of this system to the Temiskaming Telephone Co. the latter company covers this part of the North in the telephone line and asâ€" sumes an important place indeed as a public utility. The Temiskaming Telephone Co., whose head office is at New Liskeard, now has exchanges at the followng towns:â€"New Liskeard, Cobalt, â€" Haileybury, North Cobalt, Silver Centre, Gowganda, Kirkland Lake,, Cheminis, Rouyn, Noranda, Clericy, Larder Lake, Elk Lake, Bosâ€" ton Creek, Swastika, Uno Park, Earlâ€" ton, Charlton, Englehart, Pearson‘s Landing, Schumacher, South Poreuâ€" pine, Timmins, Tisdale, Whitney and Kapuskasing. In addition to the serâ€" vices in these places, the Temiskaâ€" ming Telephone Co. has lines to North Temlskammg‘, Guiges, Ville Maire, Judge, Thornloe, Milberta and other Libby‘s FOKRK Tea â€" 1 tin Pink Salmon 2 tins Sardines (3 Tee) 1 tin Kippered Herring 1 tin Shrimps Lenten Special CHOICE BLENDED i d i9 $1.00 . 10c per pkg. CLAKES First Ave., Schumacher, Phone 733 62¢ Ib. Sugar Crisp ZI'L._,;:’ ;.;_J‘!.;Zl’";k_'“.l ol u... WB mm Fancy Sweet Biscuits Assorted SPECIAL Coffee Special Blend Ground Old Colony Pure Maple Syrup Pint Bottles .....:.;..:.. 42¢ Quart Bottles......;..... 75¢ 5* 1b. Ting 68¢ 3IDb. Tins .0223 $1,.28 Prunes **How did you serew up courage to propose to the rich Mrs. MacTavish, Sandy?‘*‘ cetnres. â€" The Temiskaming Teleâ€" phone Co. started in a smallâ€" way in 1905, and the fact that it has grown to its present proportions, practically covering this whole big area of the North Land, suggests that it has prosâ€" pered by good service and filling a need in acceptable way. ‘*Losh, mon, ‘twas awfu‘! 1‘d sworn 1‘d do it come Monday nicht, so I took her for a ride in a itaxiâ€"cab, and wi‘ ane e‘econ the meter tickin‘ awa‘, I had her won as the end o‘ half a erown." â€"â€"~‘Pit. BICS. â€"A news item mentions the case of a New York man who started life as an errand boy and has now been made an editor. This just shows the danâ€" ger of starting life as an errand boyv. ‘‘How ja like my dress, it‘s a sample ?** : Youth â€"You don‘t get much for nothin‘ these days, do you? * Office: Room 2, Post Office Block, Timming Samples may be left at Gordon‘s Drug Store, Timmins, Marshaliâ€" Ecclestone Hardware, Schumacher. Samples by mail promptly attended to. House Phone 757â€"J, Schumacher H. Burnside 331 Bay St. Toront Thursday, March 1st, 1928 State Quantity and Price Wanted CUSTOMS ASSAYER AND CHEMIST aa¢c Ib. Geo. C. Murphy Furness Shares 19¢ per pke. BUCKWHEAT FLOUR 12¢. per lb. Toronto 2, Ont. 8â€"9 Toronto Goblin. an errand boy. â€"â€"Punch. .. 42¢ â€"19G¢ ...68¢ $1,28 A9¢