‘Local Distributorsâ€"National Grocers Co, Ltd., Timmins Never econclude that an illiterate man is necessarily an unwise man. â€"Exchange. less Thursday, April 26th, 1928 No exeeutive is a real executive unâ€" s he can keep busy. k 1. _ .â€" .‘ . . ~ e * Bulh ’T_v DURANT MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED TORONTO * CANADA DURANT A tall can of St. Charles (with an equal part of water) gives you four cups of pure, rich milk. Velvety cream soups full of flavor, breads of extraâ€" fine texture, smooth, rich creamed dishesâ€"all made with Borden‘s St. Charles Milk. F striking appearance . .. because of the new radiator . . . long body ... wide doors ... low, sweepâ€" ing fenders . . . cadet visor . . . and attractive Duco colors . . . the Durant Four performs as well as it looks! Maintaining those splendid qualities which have firmly established the Dusant products as "quality" automoâ€" biles, such as the Red Seal Continental <te blishing a Please send me this book BORDEN CO. LIMITED, MONTREAL Rugby Trucks, Four and Six Cylinders; Capacity 1 ton and 1!4 tons Jhe FGamous Red Seal is ’LJour Guarantee of Puritg â€"Exchange Made by O‘Keefe‘s Beverages, Limited, Toronto Tlmmms Garage Co. Limited Timmins, Ont. Ruilt in moidlets, Ri Sdan; Coupe; Standard Called upon for a speech in London at a banquet given in his honour, Henry Ford said but 32 words; this probably jbeing all that time â€" perâ€" mitted, after the chairman got through with his introductory remarks â€"â€"Sudbury St: New Standard in A u t o m o b i l e s" The Durant "Four‘"‘ Rideau Sedan moilets, Rideau Sedan (illustrated); Frontenac Sedan; Two. Door ; Standard Touring; Special Touring and Collegiate Roadster, M I LK( UNSWEETENED ) Motor with its superior engineering principles . . . the Durant Four offers the greatest value, the longest and most economicai service that modern skilil can devise. The Durant Four is awaiting your inâ€" spection . . . your criticism . . . your judgment . . . at your local Durant dealer‘s. See it! Drive it! Then compare it! The total power purchased and genâ€" erated by the Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission at its Niagara Falls system last year was 1,072,387 horsepower. ‘*For some time past rumors have spread that the Quinze dam has movâ€" ed several inches on gmecount of the pressure of water, and that there is danger of flooding around Lake Temiskaming. On Monday Mr. Harâ€" rison, Superintendent of the Power Plant here, had a message from the engineer at the Quinze plant saying that the story is ‘‘absolutely unfoundâ€" ed.‘‘ ‘*‘Of eourse, there can ‘be no guarantee about any dam of this kind, but so far as engineers are able to form an opinion there is no greater danger at present than at any previâ€" ous time. But in any event we think the risk of damage on account of flood, say in the business part of New Liskeard, is not as great as some peoâ€" ple imagine, for the reason that the outlet at the foot of the lake is much larger than it was when in its former state. The work at the foot of the lake not only keeps the water higher in the dry but also lets the water off quicker in the early spring, because of blasting away a wide qtnp of rock on each side of the original outlet. Even before this wider chanâ€" nel was made the water did not cover Armstrong street at any time, and rarely reached within hft\ yards of the street, and then but for a few days And again, it should be remembered that there is an immense expanse of country on each side of the lake which is lower than Armstrong street, and which would have to be flooded ere New Liskeard would suffer, so that we think there is no occasion to hbe alarmed *‘ According to an estimate made by a large Canadian financeial house tourists from the United States spent about $200,000,000 in Canada in 1927. â€"Exchange NEW LISKEARD ALSO HOPES TO HAVE BREWERY THERTE The New Liskeard Speaker says:â€" ‘*Last week promoters for a brewery to be established in New Liskeard vi=â€" ited town, and we understand, securâ€" ed an option on two acres of ground near the peaâ€"canning buildings. We undertsand, also, that a fixed assessâ€" ment at twenty thousand dollars will be asked by the Company. So far as assessment is concerned, it is a matâ€" ter for the Towu Council and the rateâ€" payers to deal with, while the grantâ€" ing of the lgcense rests with the Liquor Control Board.‘"‘ FALSE REPORTS ABOUT DANGER TO QUINZE DAM The following is from the last issue of The New Liseard Speaker :â€" Having enemies is a healthy sign. â€"Exchange TEMAGAMI SAVEO FROM BAD FIRE BV FIRE RANGERS Ten Geological Parties, Under Experienced Men, Going Out This Year for Ontario Department of Mines. Boston Creek, Patricia, Sudbury and Other Areas to be Studied and Surveyed. Party No. 4â€"Dr. E. M. Burwash will take party No. 4, including three assistants, into the Fort Hope area, on the Albany River, some 50 or 60 miles Resourcefulness of Forestry Men Conâ€" fines Bad Fire in High Wind to House and Church Last week the town of Temagami, on the T. N. 0. main line, about 73 miles north of North Bay, had a narâ€" row escape from being completely wiped out by fire. There was a high wind blowing at the time, and for a period it looked as if the whole town would be destroyed. The blaze started in a house near the Catholic church, and soon the wind had ‘blown the fire onto the church. Temagami has no municipal fire fighting equipâ€" ment or organization of any moment, and it appeared as if the community would be wiped off the map for the present. â€" Fortunately, however, there were forest rangers stationed at Temâ€" agami, together with the fireâ€"fighting equipment of the forestry department. Through the good work of the forest rangers the town was saved, only the house and the church being destroyâ€" ed. The details of the fire are told ‘n the last issue of The Northern News, of Cobalt, as follows:â€" To Investigateâ€"the Mineral Areas of Ontario This Year Party No. 1 will examine the Boston Creek area, also the Townships of Barâ€" net and Skead. The principal minerâ€" al here is gold. Some mines are unâ€" der development, and in other places spectacular finds have ‘been made. This party will be headed by Dr. T. L. (iledhill, one of the department‘s geologists, who will have two assisâ€" tants. a Party No. 3â€"Dr. J. H. Hawley, with three assistants, will head party No. 3 in the Sepawe Lake area, on the Canadian National Railways, west of Fort Arthur. _ Gold and iron ocecur in this area, and many claims have been staked. ‘*‘Temagami, the little town on the shore of the lake of the same name Party No. 2 will be headed by F. F. Osborne, who with three assistants will investigate the zine and lead deâ€" posits in and near the Townships of Hess, Monerief and Craig. "It is felt,""‘ says the department, explaining the programme, ‘‘that the expansion of the mining industry now going on calls for every effort being made to meet the insistent demands for investigation and information.‘‘ The Ontario Department of Mincs in carrying out its programme of inâ€" vestigating the mineral areas of the Province is undertaking what is perâ€" kaps the largest season‘s work in its history. Ten geological parties will start out as soon as the ice and snow are gone. The personnel of these parties has just been completed, and, with the deâ€" tails of the season‘s undertaking, is now announced. C RCQC C T i/ 1 WYUARDLLIL LPLIELLLI3.3 l1 JOLMAVLILLZ! SAQUVRBR.® | Earlier Layers and â€" Bigger Broilers It is the early bird that makes the profit for the poultry man. You will have EARLIER layers and BIGGER broilers if you feed Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Growing Mash. The base is pure oatmeal, which all tests show is the most easily digested food for young birds. Cod liver meal is added to sharpen the digestion and to impart to the birds QUICKLY all the highly nutritional value of the other ingredients. Minerals, meat, fish and alfalfa meal balance Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Growing Mash perfectly. Up to six weeks of age, feed Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Chick Starter. It contains cod liver oil as well, which wards off chick diseases by keeping the birds healthy and strong. The Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Poultry Feeds will raise more of your chicks, and you will have bigger, stronger birds than you have ever had before. You could not mix feeds like the Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Poultry Feeds. You cannot buy them except under the Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep brand. and the other Fulâ€"Oâ€"Pep Poultry Feeds are SOLD BY T. J. CHEN«LEh â€" Porcupine Feed Transfer 17 Wilson Avenue, Soutn Porcupine, Ont. Phone 588â€"Jâ€"2 Phone 88 BUY QUAKER FEEDS IN STRIPED SACKS FULâ€"O â€" PEP GROWINCG MaAsH and gateway to Ontario‘s greatest forestry 1)1(1)g1°()1111(], faced total deâ€" struction by the fire fiend on Wedâ€" nesday morning when fire, which broke out in the frame house of Mr. Felix Lepierre, a few feet west of the Roâ€" man Catholic church, and driven by a strong wind quickly spread to the ('hmch threatened to engulf the whole town. _ Only the resourcefulness of the forest rangers, who brought thei pump into use, backed by a large and determined volunteer bucket brigade, saved the situation, and confined the fire to the house in which it started and the church, both of which were a total loss with their contents. _ The fire started in the roof of Mr. Lapierâ€" re‘s house, apparently from a spark from the chimney. After smoldering for a time the spark, fanned by the strone west wind which was blowing, burst into flame and before it was noticed, about 11.45 a.m., the fire had secured a good hold of the roof and rapidly engulfed the lower part of the building. Driven by the high wind the flames made light work of the leap across the 15 or 20 feet which separatâ€" ed the house from the church, an ola frame building, and it too was quickly wrapped in flames from end to end. Carried by the wind, sparks reached the roofs of nearby houses, several of which took fire but the flames were extinguished by a stream of water from the forester‘s pump or by the Party No. 5 will include Dr. W. S. Dyer, geologist, Department of Mines, and two assistants. They will make further investigations along the Moose and Albany Rivers. On the Albany the limestone formations are extenâ€" sively developed, and it is thought there are possibilities of oil. Party No., 7â€"J. E. Maynard will have two assistants and will investiâ€" gate the gold discoveries centring on Oba at the junction of the Algoma Central Railway and the Canadian National Railways,. Party No. 9â€"M. E. Hurst will be at the head of Party No. 9, and will proâ€" ceed to Favorable Lake and Sandy Lake, in the extreme northwestern corner of the Province where interâ€" esting discoveries of gold, silver and lead ore have recently been made, and where there has been much staking of elaims. _ This area is twoâ€"weeks journey by canoe, but can be reached by aeroplane in a few hours. Party No. 10â€"R. J. Montgomery, Professor of Ceramics, University of Toronto, is to study the brick and tile making establishments and the ceraâ€" mic industry generally. Party No 8â€"Provincial Geologist A. G. Burrows will, with three assisâ€" tants, continue his examination of the interesting zineâ€"leadâ€"copper deposits in the Sudbury Basin. north of the Canadian National Railâ€" ways. Here, promising diseoveries of gold have been made and active stakâ€" ing is going on. Party No. 6â€"Dr. E. S. Moore and two assistants will examine an area on the north shore of Lake Huron, where copper and gold are known to exist. There is more. independence nowaâ€" days than you might think; except in the ballrooms most people are standâ€" ing in their own feet.â€"Cincinnati Timesâ€"Star. Timmins Garage Co. Ltd. . More than five thousand persons, including many from foreign counâ€" tries, visited the huge factories of (General Motors of Canada at Oshawa, Ont., during a period of twelive months. A check of the register whows that an average of more than 20 visitors inspected the plant each working day. Every province in Canada, almost every state in the Union, and places as widely separated as England and Australia, Caleutta, India, and Berâ€" muda, are represented by those wuo come to see how motors cars were manufactored in Canada. Those who visited the factories say they ‘‘wouldn‘t have missed their experiâ€" ence for anything." In addition to the interest of a tour through a modâ€" crn automobile plant a tremendous amount of information is gathered, as guides thoroughly conversant . with all manufacturing processes are supâ€" plied to escort visitors through the factories. trip throug the General factories. A trip throug the Greneral Motors factories at Oshawa is a reâ€" velation to _ those who formerly thought that the cars were only asâ€" sembled in Canada. Visitors are alâ€" ways weleome, when in Oshawa, to take these trips. bucket hrigade before any semous damage was done. It is understood that the total loss is placed at around $3,000. There is said to be $800 inâ€" surance on the church, but no insurâ€" ance was carried by Mr. Lapierre. The fact that everything was more or less covered Iby snow undowtedly arided the efforts of the fire fighters to confine the fire to a limited area, but for a time even the snow appeared to have little check on the menacing flames. The first general alarm was turned in from the telephone office, located in Herbert Lloyd‘s general store, dhout 300 feet away from Leâ€" pierre‘s, when some one yelled to Mr. Lloyd to ‘‘eall the rangers dlld tell them to bring their pumps.‘‘ The roof of the store was amongst those reached by flying sparks, fortunately without any damage.‘‘ § JOSEPH BERINI, Manager Next to Subway, Opp. Park MORE THAN FIVE THOUSAND _ VISIT BIG OSHAWA PLANT We Buy and Sell, all Kinds of 14 Wilson Avenue tifically designed three years ago, and unchanged today has the wearâ€"resisting qualities that give thousands of extra tires to you at the lowest prices in the history of the industry. This tread must be placed on a carcass that has the qualifications to withstand terrific filexing. â€" The Firestone carcass is made of cords dipped in a rubber solution which not only saturates and insulates every fibre of every cord, but unifies sidewalls with carcass, climinâ€" ating any possibility of separatien under the extreme flexing of lowâ€" volume that enables them to sell these The demand from car owners for Fireâ€" Gumâ€"Dip od Tires Cost Less" Ii’er Mile" The Firestone Dealer in your locality will gladly explain the Gumâ€" â€"Dipping process, the scientifically designed tire tread, and other advantages that only Gumâ€"Dipped Tires can give. See him Firestone Builds the Only Gumâ€"Dipped Tires Firestone Furniture, Stoves, Etc. FIRESTONE TIRE RUBBER CO OF CANADA LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario MOST MILES PER DOLLAR New and Secondâ€"Hand Telephone 375â€"J.