NO DESSERT IS MORE WHOLEâ€" soME OR MORE DELICIOUS MLaren‘s Ask chout the CGMAC Dejorred Perxmenit Plan ~~ CHEVROLET Head Ofhce HERE comes a time when nearly every son sits in mental judgment upon his father. Sometimes, alas ! that time does not come until the father is dead. The son, perhaps, may be a mere lad, faced with the knowledge that his is the task of helping to look after mother and, perhaps, younger brothers and sisters. Then it is that he judges his father. Then it is that he remembers his kindnesses, condones his weakâ€" nesses, anpd then it is that he wonders sorrowâ€" fully, why his father did not make better finanâ€" cial provision for his mother. If you have known of an instance where ason has thus sat in judgment upon his father, remember that the time may come when your own son (or your daughterg- â€"if you have childrenâ€"will sit in judgment upon you. What will their verâ€" dict be insofar as it applies to your provision for their, or for their mother‘s and your wife‘s maintenance ? If you haven‘t provided sufficiently for their maintenance until they are able to look after themselves (and their mother)â€"isn‘t this the time to do itâ€"by means of Confederation Life Insurance! onfederation Life INVINCIBLE in NAmE AND IN QUALITY Timmiuns Garage Co. Ltd. When the Son judges the Father‘| Write for the pamphlet "No Matter What Happens"‘. You will find it very interestingâ€" to say the least, Address your request now toâ€" PRODUCT OF CENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED MCLARENS LIMITED ONLY behind the wheel, can you learn the whole amazing truth about Chevrolet. you will experience the advantages of a smooth, sixâ€"cylinder, valveâ€" inâ€"headengine, thesuperiority of design,and staunch construction which make Body by Fisher an emblem of distinction. You wili be astonished at the performance, luxury, and quality now available, for the first time, in the price range of a four. And you will realize why over a million Chevrolet Six owners have been "sold behind the wheel" . why they would never again be satisfied with anything less than Chevrolet gives them . and why Chevrolet is one of the most sensational values ever offered. Take your trial ride today. Get behind the wheel . . and sell yourself the car you want to own. Timmins, Ont. Association A. W. Pickering General Agent Timmins, Ont. HA M I LTON ONT smith north mild will while cause if success is won the whole North will be benefitted. Indeed, if the present discovery is anything like as good as believed now, the whole province of Ontario will be enriched. wWord from Toronto this week is to the effect that Thos. F. Sutherland, Deputy Minister of Mines, and Dr. Dyer, one of the experts of the departâ€" ment, left this week for Blacksmith Rapids to take charge for the immediâ€" ate present of the further operations planned. Large Coal Deposits Found On Abitibi, North of Cochrane "The Department of Mines," said Premier Ferguson in his announceâ€" ment at Toronto last week, ‘"in unâ€" covering this coal deposit has made a notable addition to the known minâ€" eral resources of Ontario. The story is not yet complete, but in the opinion of the department enough has been disclosed to warrant the discoveries being described as the most important development in the mining field of the province in many years. "The discovery comes after years of painstraking study and examination of the Abitibi area by Dr. W. S. Dyer, geologist, and other Mines Department officials. It comes on the heels of the completion of a $25,000 diamond drillâ€" ing campaign which the Government on the recommendation Oof Hon. Charles McCrea and his aides, voted at the last session of the Ontario Legisâ€" lature. It is a remarkable illustration of what an unswerving faith in the future of the North Country can lead to." as to tap the new found source of wealth. The Government, Mr. Ferguâ€" son admits, has the matter under conâ€" sideration at the present time. Systematic mining of the coal will be commenced this winter. Diamond drilling according to the Premier is to be prosecuted with even greater vigor than heretofore. The Temiskaming and Northern Onâ€" tario Railway will in all probability be extended next spring, to join its present terminus Coral Rapids with Blacksmith Rapids, some 30 miles, so Now that a substantial deposit of lignite is assured, it is urgent, in Mtr. Ferguson‘s opinion, that its full extent and possibilities for development be made known at the earliest possible date. With this in mind, the government will immediately establish a complete mining camp and sink a shaft at Blacksmith Rapids so that sufficient coal may be mined this fall of tests for domestic and industrial uses in the north, as well as on the T. and N. O. for railway fuel. "The government," Mr. Ferguson further stated today, "will withdraw from staking all the areas in the vicinâ€" ity of the discovery to prevent stock exploration and any chance of imposiâ€" tion on the public. We believe it to be the function of the government in so important a matter to ascertain the extent and value of this great asset so that the public interests may be proâ€" perly conserved and the province may get its full share of the benefit which may derive from the discovery." L2ALVUIC. 14L 153 d 1 CIiILMAi iliilLoUl A CAZiL of what an unswerving faith in the future of the North Country can lead o." The Temiskaming and Northern Onâ€" | tario Railway will in all probza.bilit,yl be extended next spring, to join its present terminus Coral Rapids with Blacksmith Rapids, some 30 miles, so as to tap the new found source of wealth. The Government, Mr. Fergu-! son admits, has the matter under conâ€" sideration at the present time. Systematic mining of the coal will be | commenced this winter. Diamond drilling according to the Premier is to be prosecuted with even greater vigor than heretofore. l Now that a substantial deposit of' lignite is assured, it is urgent, in MtT.! Ferguson‘s opinion, that its full extent;i and possibilities for development be made known at the earliest possible date. With this in mind, the government will immediately establish a complete mining camp and sink a shaft at Blacksmith Rapids so that sufficient coal may be mined this fall of tests for domestic and industrial uses in the north, as well as on the T. and N. O.| for railway fuel. "The government," Mr. Ferguson further stated today, "will withdraw from staking all the areas in the vicinâ€" It is getting nowadays that nothing much happens unless the North Land has a hand in it. The famous Ned Clarke was beaten up in Toronto the I other day and he told the police that his injuries were sustained in saving a | man from Kapuskasing from being robbed. Ned Clarke is one of the bestâ€" known gentlemen in Toronto so far as ! the police are concerned. Few lawyers or policemen have been in police court oftener than Ned. The newspapermen all know Ned, and both the police and the press have a sneaking regard for Ned. He might be dharged with being drunk and he might give a little diffhâ€" culty before or during his arrest but he was always a gentleman in court and afterwards. Usually it was necesâ€" sary to invite Ned to the police station, but last week he walked into the Dunâ€" das street west police station one evenâ€" ing to complain of a beating he receivâ€" ed from six men in vacant house on Barnaby place. He was in his stockâ€" ing feet and without coat or hat. The side of his face was swollen and he had two deep cuts, one behind the left ear. He told the police that he had been sleeping in the empty house with a Frenchman from Kapuskasing whom he knew when working in the bush. The gentleman from Kapuskasing had more than $100.00 in cash in his posâ€" session at the time, and while the two were sleeping Ned said that six men o s en im mm omm s emumum o ity of the discovery to prevent StOCK | entered the place to rob his friend. As| exploration and any chance of impOSiâ€" | mignt be expected a fight ensued. Ned tion on the public. We believe it to be | putting up a valiant battle. He kept the function of the government in S0| ina six men so occupied for a few important a matter to ascertain th€ | minutes that his Kapuskasing friend extent and value of this great asset 59 | was able to get out of the house with that the public interests may be PrOâ€" | nis money and without being hurt. Ned perly conserved and the province MAY | yajjantly fought on to cover his friend‘s get its full share of the benefit which | may derive from the discovery." l For a long time it has been known that there were fragmentary indicaâ€" tions of lignite formations in the vicinâ€" ity of Blacksmith Rapids, but not unâ€" | til the Government engaged Smith and Travers, diamond drilling operators of retreat and eventually the six men had to use bottles to beat Ned over the head to quiet him enough so that they could get away. Ned Clarke is a tough man to beat, but he does succumb, it seems, to the use of a bottle, outside or inside. Ned explained to the police that the six men pounded his feet with 3 t Sudbury, at the commencement of the | pottles, causing injuries that made him present season, to undertake a vigorous : limp. Police went to the house referred | exploratory campaign, was the first ; to by Clarke, but they found no clues, definite effort to establish the extent | further than Clarke‘s shoes, coat and, and value of the formations under way.| hat and a heap of empty canned heatl The preâ€"Cambrian formations which | tins as well as some empty bottles. | The preâ€"Cambrian formations which overlie so much of the province preâ€" clude, it is known, the possibility of coal deposits, but bordering on James Bay is a later formation, the Cretaceâ€" ous, in which coal, oil and other nonâ€" metallics have been found, as in Wesâ€" tern Canada. It is in this formation that the lignite outcroppings at Blackâ€" mith Rapids occur, and in and around which the diamond drilling crew, under the supervision of Dr. Dyer, has to date, centred its efforts. Up to the present time, according to Mr. Ferguson‘s announcement, 10 holes have bsen put down. "In five cases," said the Prime Minister, "the lignite seam has beon reached. It proved to remier Ferguson Makes Announcement of Discovery at Blacksmith Rapids. T. N.O. Extension in Areas Likely to be Made Next Spring. Estimated Ten Million Tons of Rich Lignite in Big Find. Should be Great V alue to North. h ie striking announcsement was made Poronto last Thursday by Premier ruson that a rich field of lignite been definitely located at Blackâ€" h Rapids, on the Abitibi river, h of Cochrane. The new coal field t least one mile long and half a wide, and it is estimated that it yvield between seven and ten milâ€" tons of commercial fuel. The deâ€" NO / °ear for uggest tha commence â€" nt has been duly ncoted s of a Montreal syndicate oil and coal have alsc to. While the coal fields in iC > from â€" ial inter vndiC even an ‘cial fue nto sin« h THFE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO ThUuUs IUuli ifforded. The innouncement miml t he DT re th sprin om I hu en milâ€" The deâ€" the anâ€" e beâ€" whole ke minâ€" > end the sland last hole show of lignite. Ht of mingable 1i thick and No croppings on three places. eight feet in t was about 20 1 in thickness i Ma This means that an area ol one hail square mile is underlain by the lignite af an established thickness averaging 18 feet. This in itself constitutes a reâ€" serve of several million tons and it is in every way likely that a seam of such thickness will be found to be more exâ€" ‘ensive, and it is anticipated that furâ€" ‘her drilling will prove the deposit to be truly a large and important one. The present ten holes merely constitute a start in exploratory programme. Samples of the lignite taken from the outcroppings on the river have been tested for us by the fuel division of the Department of Mines at Ottawa and have been found to be of low temâ€" perature carbonization 44 per cent. char, having a composition similar tQ anthracite coal and of a califerous vyalue of 12,750 BT.U. There are reat possibilities for its use as char or as pulverized fuel for industries or as briquettes for domestic use. If coal is added to the other proâ€" ducts of the North Land, the result should be good. This North Land, as one hopeful Northerner remarked the other day, will be SOME mining counâ€" try with gold, silver, copper, nickel, coal and gas all being actively and profitably worked. NORTH LAND MEN NOW HAVE TO BE IN ABOUT EVERYTHING DY Orillia Newsâ€"Letter:â€"â€"Germany hatâ€" ed to see the British troops occupy the Rhine country going on to eleven years ago. Germany now begs that they be allowed to stay until all foreign forces are withdrawn. Some compliment to Britisl fair play. Forest Free Press:â€"â€"It has bsen sugâ€" gesied that the old familiar hymn. "For Those in Peril on the Sea," should be revised and made to read, "For Those in Peril on the Road." The sugâ€" gestion is a good one, as today travelâ€" ing on the sea is ruch safer than traveling on the roads and atiagaml RIiVv eful in future Up en emDle located iC i1 iC present t( by drill t a width of hat an atr 11 Tird ind ma bod ne half 1M the seam f boulder whiC f1 have h o mile half TOURIST TRADE WELL WORTH CATERING TO BY GOOD ROADS In a month or two it will be timely to start an agitation for continued imâ€" provement to the roads in the North Land. At present the Ferguson highâ€" way is in pretty good shapeâ€"better, indeed, than most roads in the south, apart from the paved highways. But every spring and early summer there are strips of the highway that are just about impassable. This could be reâ€" medied by early attention. It seems that every year the work of repairing the roads is left too late in the season. There may have been some excuse this yvear, but such excuse was more apparent than real. It is true that there were several weeks this spring when little progress could be made with roadwork owing to weather conâ€" ditions, but at the same time this drawâ€" back could have bsen largely offset by the placing of large gangs at work the minute the weather permitted. There is reason* to believe that the Ferguson higshway may be made into a firstâ€"class hishway and the people may well inâ€" cist upnon this being done. In this conâ€" same Americans into the North Counâ€" try during the year 19302 Northern Ontario can hardly estimate the inâ€" come which would be received by its people if the tourist trade is encourâ€" aged as it should be, and now that the automobile has become such a factor in transportation every effort should be made to meet the necessary conditions by safe road construction." Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"‘"This is an age of slang and the fact was forcibly brought to mind the other day when reading an episode at the recent police games in Chicago. A summary of the proposed stunts was printed on the programme, and among them was this: "A cannon fades a mark and takes it on the lam with the bosodle. He 1s tailed by the bulls, dunceâ€"capped, givâ€" en the weeps by a Niagara pineapple and hooked for the rap." An elderiy gentleman who rather prided himself on his English asked for an explanaâ€" tion, so an obliging police sergeant wrote the above as it would appear in the English language: "A gunman holds up a citizen and runs away with the man‘s money. He is trailed by the police, cornered, driven from his reâ€" fuge by tear bombs, captured and sent to jail." Kitchener Record:â€"A city without an airport will soon be like a "thriving" town miles from a railway station C ad THE CHALLENGER Ba |â€" § § Th Timmins Garage Co., Ltd Timmins The Grand Prize for reliability in the 15â€"day running of the famous ‘"*Tour de France"‘ was awarded to Essex the Challenger. The two Essex entries finished the race without a single penalty â€"the only cars with perfect scoresâ€"winning by a great margin over the strong field of highâ€"priced American and European cars. . . . U Not only the Grand Prize, but the Ansaldo Cup, for quick getaway; the Lyonnais Cup, the Pyrenees Cup,the Atlantic Cup, the Cup of Brittany, the Cup of Normanâ€" dy and the Cup of the North were also taken by Essex the Challenger. is built like a c to claim qualit found possible. More than 2{ facts. You can know them to Essex the Challenger looks apart, and altogether different A m C r think i 1IOuUur Cf ican ca pertorm like Essex without bus/ld 1 r , the Superâ€"Six of C for . rï¬jlablln‘y _4z 74L /4 Performs Like a Costly Car Because Built Like a Costly Car 1sS met OfI rs. Have ild entice ) North C 12 llenger looks and acts like a costly car because it stly car. Its enormous success has inspired others s "‘like Essex‘‘. Yet everything about itâ€"appearâ€" th BC SALES AND SERVICE IN ADJACENT TERRTITORY McGill Hardware Limited HEARST â€" _ â€" th oun her rt and luxurious smoothness â€" mark it Through the use of a new serum the spread of infantile parlysis in Ontario| is believed to have been deï¬nitely! checked, Hon. Dr. Forbes Godfrey, Minâ€" ister of Health, stated last week. He said he had enough serum on hand to meet any situation which might arise but his department did not feel able to | meet the request of Quebec health authorities for a quantity of serum at | present. 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