PEDDLERS NOT POPULAR WITH MIDLAND PAPER SUCCESS 1§ YOURS _ Moderate Price. MADE IN CANADA + NC ALUM iA 1 Highest Quality, randise sold when you use €.W.GILLETT CO. LTD. TOoRonto, can. World‘s e § 0 ? CGreatest Travel [ Bysterm 1 € Ins in Lt 18 iany business men ng the peddler of no,. â€" What is trim ng. â€" What is true of «peddlers ious other goods is equally trus« nting. _ The Midland Argus â€"*The summer season, now a brings with it an economic i innually takes a toll of thou of illâ€"gained "dollars.â€" It is thi int peddler, the house to hous ringer and those of his kin{ neasluure,. â€" /Ct C185 © se fellows> and that they tell t and confidenc >‘ ceustomers."" ently peddlers are not poplt The Midland Argus. Perâ€" »Midland newspaper is thinkâ€" of the printing peddler from s who offers cutâ€"rate job work ns out to be ‘‘inferior merâ€" _sold at higher prices or in easure."‘ It is an odd thing} av business men agree in conâ€"| of the unthinking, »effering in this and that which most urn out to be inferior merâ€" sold at higher prices or in asure. It is well to beware _ and plausible hat they tell ‘â€"to engage the anadian ind the C K. WHITE, 87 Main Street West, North Bay, Ont. "Castle in the air‘ is Banff‘s magnificent new hotel, enthroned on a crag overlooking the spectacular Bow V alley. "Shrine to Beauty‘‘ is Chateau Lake Louiss, kneeling in golden popâ€" pies beside the loveliest picture in all the world. b Here the smart and great of two continents come to play in soulâ€" expanding grandeur. Ban#f has the warm sulâ€" phur baths, the newly remodelled golif course. Lake Louise has the glaâ€" ciers and tea houses in the clouds. Both have tennis, swimming, boatâ€" ing, dancing, thrilling motor and trail trips. Some prefer Banfi, some like Lake Louise. Most people stop at both â€" that is, they do if they make reservaâ€" tions early enough. It‘s time now. Full inforâ€" mation from h it an economic ill kes a toll of thouâ€" d "dollars.â€" It is the , the house to house ind those of his kind agree:l11 l1 good ‘ngage the their pros= ABOUT MINIMG AT DEPTH IN NORTH LARD MINES Schumacher Shaft Going to Great Depth. â€" Lake Shore, Teckâ€" Hughes and Others Going Deep. they likely to cause . grouD work is carried much deepe movement, â€" caused .by pres: been overcome where existent ‘There are old imines C twice as deep as Ontario‘s While it will be many years, ire not i1 thev_ xersity, who is at prese Johannesburg, and who time ibheen studying probl ed with mining at dept} persistence of orebodie: sures, and. temperature. Graton says that he has ed a conclusion asâ€"to the .. operations dowmn to 4 interesitin in the grade of ore is slow and that minin deep as physical lim low, provided the cof does not increase to considers the outlook tersrand encouraging cineets find a means ¢Almost simultaneously with Proâ€" fessor Graton‘s rather optimistic deâ€" Alarations, J. E. Healey, consulting engineer of the Village Deep, the world‘s deepest mine, issued a someâ€" what dismal pronouncement in his annual report on the prospects of this remarkable enterprise. _ Mr. Healey makes the statement that at the great depths at which operations are being carried on (over 7,600 feet) the danâ€" ger of pressure bursts is increasing. In a number of instances the pressure hag become exeessive .when blocks hbave been reduced by stoping to it ceertain size and these remnmants have been abandoned. _ The area so left ahout 10 per ‘cent. of the ‘ontinuung lepths than ~d. Howeyt amounts to about. 10 original block area. *Douglas â€" Cristor of â€" Mine presiden meeting to beâ€" solved as mining operations, especially in the «central~area of the Witwatersrand, . approach â€"â€" vertical depths of 7,000 feet or more; yet 3 venture to say that, with the everâ€"inâ€" creasing strides ,science is making these problems will be solved and we shall see mining at depths which were once thought impracticable."‘ "‘It may be well to note that, while we are down in one. instance to 4,000 feet and are talking of other mines reaching that depth 75% of the gold produced in Ontario is being drawn from between surface and a depth of 1,000 feet." _ Northern â€"Miner ing interesting ref at depth in North ‘With Hollinger s cher shaft will not nrevious objective HAILEYBURY HIGHWAY ENGINEER WAS WEDDED Thompson, .« eungineer for priudge. The Hai wedding was sole Saturda; DMickie, public s of Willi: J aInt medi are frie trict residGd the a the activilties of YyounZeF adlitl was a popular member of the school staff. â€" Mr. Thompson is well known as resident engineer for the Northern Development Department of the Fer zguson Highway and has taken a promâ€" inent part in sporting and other cirâ€" cles in town. _ Their many friends all ioin in extending eongratulations.‘‘ the PC T‘ ho i a ITew Y@rsSs, w »ld Mine steadily hat M j § ~IM ~ TL Mrs. nce here Dickie, in > frieends r. and Mi o their hi _OL) pns'i ti0n Bot las â€" Cristopherson s, remarked at t of the Transvaa of the Chamber t 14 rial eolumns last week Miner made the folâ€" ting reference to minâ€" n North Land mines :â€" linger saying its Schuâ€" will not be stopped at objective of 4,000 feet, lown indefinitely, probâ€" aAr 7000 feet, with Lake int nown Haild s. TJj e imany y Northern i +1 (l\ to > be ~at 1 veers, with Kirk] nCt m is such UPNat re is likely to be ver mining should go .« 1. limitations \nll ie eost of productic se too greatly. C 000 feet, wilth 11 Melntyre ¢ i. 4100 feet., firons ;‘ at ) ilready been reac [oes Dnel .000 f‘c ompsot aresent who ha t| opherson, â€" retiring ed ~at the annual Transvaal Chamber amber tlhmat, ‘*It is great problems yet mining operations, central~area of the mining DC Northern i1 y and this disâ€" son,â€" during her in active part in vounser set and H ; elsewhere )‘s deepest rs, ten an}y: old mine as t. it may be n its 3.000 that the Witw e Rand c <=IIPC i1 I0N nor are e â€"untail Rock O Phere Pype hange e vyery A V mâ€" ith 1lemaâ€" people ‘cle of MA h EARLY BLOOMING ROSES REPORTED AT HAILEYBURY Please touch wood before and after reading the following! A local young man says that the reason the weather has been so bad in this North this summer is because The Advance pubâ€" lishede an article in March about the pansies blooming then in this country outside. â€" If an article about pansies could eause so much rain, one about roses may start it snowing, so please touch wood and then read this paraâ€" «raph fromâ€" The Haileyburian last try . U tions the the bloof 1¢ rliet W hV( M j hlooming stage so Cdrily, L lid not say, but it promi a good season, even if the somewhat backward for jer in the yvear.‘"‘ all JournAl i~â€"â€" ies but vyou work the Within these battlemented towers they drink this grand old ginger ale :: ndet POSt on Satur rose in bl« about to h thi This is no accident, for this fine old ginger ale is served in all great hotels . . . from Claridge‘s in London to the Empress Hotel in Victoria, B. C. You will find it in New York clubs, at St. Moritz, at famous summer and winter resorts, in Cairo, Egypt, in British East Africa, on the tables of Cld smokingâ€"rooms of transatlantic liners. in Ottawa, at the Chateau Laurier, is the natural meeting place for the political and social life of the Dominion. Here, wellâ€"known people congregate. Here is that inevitable air of governmental mystery, that current of excitement. And here, if you noticed when we were in the diningâ€"rooms, they serve ""‘Canada Dry." get art1« been Its Universal Appeal is Due to Its Distinetive T aste 14 n C 11 promist K. W t} ith Thi a + + '_“.“M-‘.k y P a i e i o y 4 * * es _ *‘ Nes SRA old s «* k nmmnaws o o u "Canada Dry" Ginger Ale is drunk in countless homes throughout this country and the United States. Such universal appeal must have some reason, some good reason, for the favor and popularity accorded it. And it does. "Canada Drv‘ is a real ® . M L tory north Railways {( REGULATIONS FOR PROVINCE OF ONTARIO Local Distributors:â€"Gambleâ€"Robinson Co., Limited Carihs Fran« 9t u and Deerâ€"â€"In 1e Canadian Nationa M inent Â¥ 1\ Made in Canada by J. J. McLaughlin Limited, Toronto and Edm Caledonia Springs Corporation Limited, Montreal in U. 8. A., Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Incorgorated, New Y ork line +t h 1 IlM( In Squirrels, Quail open season, but orderâ€"inâ€"council, warrant. Daily Bag Limit more than 200 in «>A brant 15, rauils 22 golden plover, gre And how well does its careful you mix it with other beverages. more delicious than "Canada D: serve ‘ CA at home or w It is especiall Each process of blending ingredients to make this fine old ginger ale is controlled with scientific exactness. The proportions are determined and watchfully guarded by trained men. A special method of carbonation gives each bottle of "Canada Dry" just so much charging. This amount of charging is not allowed to vary by so much as oneâ€"tenth of one per cent. Thus, "Canada Dry" retains its sparkle long after the bottle is opened. And its purity is a matter of hourly examination day by day. "Canada Dry" therefore has a mild, a mellow, a subtle, gingery taste. It has a magic, an allure and a witchery about it that set it off forever from any other ginger ale you ever drank. And rightly too! Serve "‘Canada Dry" alwaysâ€"when you are dining at home or when you dine out. Give it to the children. ginger ale, made from real Jamaica ginger and other absolutely pure ingredients. Blended and Balanced in Exact 10. Licenses 1t d verts LAX and Pheasantsâ€"XNo| CHANGES ON PROVINCIAL swbject to . change by| POLICE FORCE IN DISTRICT t e +.43 5 4 ® € '! as â€" may * i o uc ./ s seuson Ducks nd 1t it was hej referred to / NXAHIUAM 4A 109 ; geese 15, North Land has b(’l‘l‘ 814 stavjle Stringer, who lessey yvei| land Lake for | som« ilmn_gï¬iw.;traxhterrod to \lado q Finger, formerly at \the past year or so a nall game) | resigned some weeks private business. ;thnl the two offticers \(Constables Franks a .07 C is !hbe stationed at Kirk 25, but not l rabbitsâ€" wWOeTrC ila eful blending show up when it A number of changes in the Proâ€" vincial Police force in this part of the North Land has 6een reported. Conâ€" stable Stringer, who has been at Kirkâ€" land Lake for some time, is being transferred to Madoe. Constable H. Finger, formerly at Timmins, but for the past year or so at Kirkland Lake, resivned some weeks ago to enter into Thursday, June 21st, 1928 i it 1UL heet ro portz'o ns 1ess. _ It is understood afticers at Kapuskasing, ranks and Dunsford, will at Kirkland Lake. â€" Conâ€" (i, Kennard will be ttansâ€" Gowganda to the South, » be stationed at Kapusâ€" O QsoOon mout thieer rnal :â€"â€"An 0 Washington Thig: â€" Ig er ale hbootlt nresiâ€" has