Thursday, July 18gb, 1929 Tell him to take McCoy’s Cod Liver Extract Tablets for a couple of months and get enough good healthy flesh on his bones to look like a real man. 7 Tell him, it's the only way to take those grave-like hollows from his cheeks and neck. Tell him that thousands of thin, puny, peaked, scrawny men all over America have improved their physical health and appearance and bless the day they ï¬rst heard of these wonder- iul sugar coated tablets so full of weight producing and health building essentials. Ask for McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Moisley 8:. Ball, F. M, Burke. Sauve Pharmacy and every druggist sells themâ€"60 tabletsâ€"60 centsâ€"econ- omy size 81.00. Almost any thin man or woman can put on ï¬ve pounds of healthy flesh in 30 days or your money will be refunded. One woman put on 15 pounds in six weeks. Children grow robust and strongâ€"feebly old people feel younget in a few weeks. " TIMMINS DOMINION TIRE DEPOT And the special "homogenizing" process it undergoes breaks up the fat globules of the cream into minute particles. This makes it easier to digest as the cream remains evenly disrributed throughout the milk, and cannot rise to the top. "Dorothy" Brand Milk comes from a district where govern- ment inspection of dairv cows is in force. It is ï¬ltered 1n specml ï¬lters. The process of ex aporation, while retaining all the \itamins and food value of fresh milk, sterilizes it. It goes into the air tight cans pure. absolutely. And it is guaranteed to keep fresh and sweet for six months. Take "DorOthy" Brand with you this summer and you won't have any worry or bOthcr about milk. "Dorothy" comes In cans of convenient sizes to suit daily consumption. Look for Baby Dor0thyâ€"-“Our Emblem of Purity†on new label. Rugged carcass is built with web cord. It has strength where 1929 motoring con- ditions demand it. Side-walls are strongly buttressed to resist rut and curb wear. Extra thick tread has deep-cut blocks to give greater non-skid mileage. For safety and long mileage, for the job your 1929 car has to do, the new Royal Cord is the one tire for you. Here is the 1929 tire for the 1929 car. New in design and construction. .Timmins Garage Company Limited The conservation of ï¬sh and game is something that should be of special in- terest to everyone in the North Land. It is not so long ago. for instance, that this district had a liberal supply of both ï¬sh and game. Now. Ed. Allsworth and a few others are the only ones who know where the ï¬sh are gone. and each year it is necessary to go farther a- ï¬eld for game. Naturally. the estab- lishment of towns and big industries means the pushing back of game and ï¬sh preserves. but with immense tracts of wild land available there seems no fair reason why ï¬sh and game should be eliminated. A writer in the last is- Urges Intelligent Effort for Conservation of Game Writer Points Out That People in General are Too Opti- mistic About the Supply of Fish and Game. Unless Proper Measures are Taken Fish and Game Will Prac- tically Disappear. Something Should be Done and May be Done, in the Matter. sue of Rod and Gun takes up the ques- tion in detailed fashion. and has some new viewpoints that may be helpful. In any case there can not be too much discussion of the conservation of ï¬sh and game for the more the matter is discussed the more interest will be tak- en by the general public. and the big- ger chance there will be for effective action. The writer in Rod and Gun conceals his identity under the initials. “L.C.." but there is no question of the careful thought he has given the ques- tion. All may not agree all the way- with “L.C..‘° but all interested will be ready to admit. that there is much food for thought in his article. “L.C." writes as follows. under the heading. "The Rocky Road to Conservationâ€:â€" "The hunter is an optimist. It is the bounden duty of the conservationist to examine critically all facts relating to game and among them he ï¬nds this optimism as a fact. Sometimes the conservationist must say that the hun- ter's optimism is not entirely justiï¬ed. and then he becomes unpopular with certain of the hunting fraternity. and being in part. opposed to the views of the hunter-optimist he becomes a pes- simist. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO STERILIZE UNSWEETENED a menace to their own sport,‘not the only menace by any meaus, but 21 im- portant factor. Rising license fees. long closed seasons on big game. scar- city of big game that should have close seasons but hasn‘t, laxity of law en- forcement because of inadequate public support. laxity of law observance on the part of members of the hunters' army all point the way to what will happen in a few years if there is not a great change for the better. “Some people who do non hunt and to whom the answer “no" to all these questions in the previous paragraph is not obnoxious do think about the ques- tion, and talk and write about it. and their remarks are all discounted by the hunting rafternity as being from senti- BRAND YES fflADE IN CANADA MAGIC BAKING POWDER Biscuits, Doughnuts, Cookies, etc. you can easily make the most delicious witli €.W. GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO. CAN. CONTAINS NO ALUM mentalists. The demands of senti- mentalists. of hunters. and the silence of the great public which belongs in neither camp is the basis for the work of the conservationist in serving the public. The silent majority likes to see wild life if this can be done in comfort and without too great exer- tion. It is silent about protection. sil- ent about killing. its thoughts are else- where. and although it. may accept con- servation as necessary it wants its gov- ernment to do it all without even the guidance of a word for or against whatever conservation programme may be in hand. “If the same demand were made in Canada, the Provincial and Dominion administrations would all hear it. The public say our paid ofï¬cers do all the demanding of reform that is necessary, forgetting that a public servant merely advises the administration of the facts. and the administration decides finally what action will be taken on those facts. The servant of the public speaks to advise the administration when he is spoken to. as a general rule. It. is not his duty. but the duty of the public. to tell the administration. the government. what the public wants. The disadvantage in this situa- tion is that the servant of the public who often knows more of the need for conservation than anyone else does not. and practically cannot. tell of this need. He keeps his knowledge to him- self on the chance that the administra- tion may ask him pointed questions on any part. of his particular subject. and in case his employers. the public, ask deï¬nite questions about his work. This applies to all democratic governments. “If the public demanded more and better conservation in Canada. the ï¬rst need would be for more knowledge of Canada‘s wild game and fur. More particulars on ranges of species. distri- bution. numbers. for without good cen- suses we cannot tell whether we have increase or decrease. This increased knowledge would probably point the way to the reforms necessary. such as adequate control of fur trapping to the end that the crop would be gathered. but the stock remain unimpaired. No doubt the British Columbia system of leased trap-lines would become general and by 'this method the trapper would be encouraged to conserve along this line instead of to make a clean up. Stock would be taken of deer and moose. of sheep and goat. and grizzly. breeding sanctuaries would be provided at short intervals and those that. are established would be well-nigh per- fectly protected. In water-fowl all un- known factors would be. solved. such as the accurate breeding range of each speciesâ€"there are some 01' which the I] W “I ike noisy and active. and for a time all the conservationists of the land have little time for doing their necessary work because they are dealing with the temporary flurry of thought that the hobbyists have raised. Nor is that the only evil of such cranks. for they serve 'm 5 measure to detract public atten- tion from main problems and to direct them to minor side lines. 311113 â€In The poacher who is pinched is far 63 Southern ki 'riculture ha There are many sides to conserva- ur ve am car 31' de rmerly 111C am a 11d W )1 has whi' roac 1m 1-11 C I] I] )I' 1V 31' a1 N 011 C l'( nd )od win which the lâ€"and £01 It to whic} l. and i: mi h n udie b8 tion. many people are concerned. the problems are biological and hence in- volved to the extent. that the public seldom can connect the line of action and the ultimate result. To succeed. the general public must be interested. the elements that make up the demand for conservation must. work as a unit. and this unit must be well advised. Then the need for action will be im- pressed on administrations everywhere. and a good share of North America's Challenging Variety at 0217' Color 550212 IEM OME see at oprColor Show the beauty and variety of color which Essex offers at no extra cost. With its open challenge, that excepts no carâ€" â€"â€"with its 24% greater powerwgreater beauty, adult- size capacity, riding ease and economyâ€" Essex establishes also an out- a Wide mm,“ a“ standing leadership in proven AT N0 EXTRA c VALUE. Essex offers standard fine car equipment, formerly identified only with costly carsâ€"available onl .at extra cost on cars of Essex price. A bowlful of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes at breakfast. With milk or cream, fruits or honey added. Golden flakes of toasted corn. Rich with flavor. Crunchy with crispness. It’s a treat 12,000,000 people welcome every day. Kellogg's Corn Flakes are delicious for lunch and dinner breakfast. 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H. â€I (‘.I’urr‘ha to Plan 0!- Icr: the lowvst terms available A N D U P All prices I. o. b. \Vindsor, taxes extra. So easy to as well as