Thursday, Jan. 23rd, 1930 For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad. Column Her husband‘s death left her very run down in health, unable to eat or sleep much,. â€"Now she is brighter in spirits and eats and sleeps well. What caused the difference ? t her answer in her own words :â€"â€" * I think Kruschen Salts are a splendid tonic. After my husband‘s death in December last I became very run down in healtfh. Had terrible fits\of depresâ€" sion and was unable to eat or sleep much,. I was also troubled with rheumatism. I decided to take Krusâ€" chen Salts and have now taken the little daily dose for nearly two months, during which time my health has greatly improved. The rheumatism has completely left me. I am â€"much brighter in spirits and both eat and sleep well." When life begins to " get you down," when you begin to feel the results of modern artificial conditionsâ€"errors of diet, worry, cverwork, lack of exerciseâ€" then you should turn to Kruschen Salts. They possess a wonderful power of giving new life and vitality to the countless millions of cells of which the human body is composed. The way to keep smiling is to take Kruschen Sailts every morningâ€"just a pinch in your first morning cup of coffee or tea. Could not Eat or Sleep after Husband‘s Death Stock up with Lamps at this New Low Price MACDONALD‘S TOBACCOS CIGARETTESs for 6 Genuine Edison Mazda Lamps in a Toy House. NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED GREAT NORTHERN POWER CORâ€" PORATION LIMITED Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited Put in a stock of lamps this easy economical way. End the inconvenience of empty lamp sockets. Lamps range from 15 to 60 watts to suit all needs. And the House itself is a treat . a toy the kiddies will play with by the hour. Controlling and Operating ©1,45 URGING APPOINTMENT OF SENATOR FOR THE NORTH On several occasions in the past The Advance has urged the appointment of a North Land representative to the Senate. The argument has been that the North Land is an important section of Canada and so should have some reâ€" presentation in this important chamber of the government of the Dominion. In the past care has been taken to see that the proportion of representatives from each province was kept up, and also that a fair balance was preserved in the matter of religious tenets of the senators. With these distinctions, however, the North Land has been comâ€" pletely ignored. When some time ago there was a Senate vacancy of a seat formerly occupied by an Ontario man of the Catholice faith, The Advance urged the appointment of the late L. Gencral Agreement That North Should Have Representative in the Upper House, and That Dr. McInnis, of Timmins, Should be the Choice ECT THE CARD PICTURES For the pipe smoker. is also a wideâ€"spread feeling that Dr. J. A. McInnis, of Timmins, would make an ideal man for the place. To note newspapers politically opposed to Dr. McInnis advocating his elevation to the Senate may appear odd to some outâ€" siders. It is, however, only an expresâ€" sion of the North Land idea. Here poâ€" litical matters are not altogether party tsomRntopsTaedsdgniurged t dineC affairs. While politics may be taken seriously in some ways, there are other ways in which party lines are not alâ€" lowed to figure. Dr. J. A. McInnis is an oldâ€"time resident of the North. He is publicâ€"spirited, and knows the needs of the North, and would work for the North. Accordingly, there is a generâ€" al tendency to feel that he would make a very desirable representative for the North in the Canadian Senate. V. O‘Connor, a man who knew the North, believed in the North and workâ€" ed for the advance of the North. Alâ€" though practicall all newspapers in the North and the leading public men of this area endorsed this proposal, the Government made an appointment from Older Ontario. Later, there was an Ontario vacancy in the Senate, with precedent to suggest the apprintment of a Protestant, and The Advance urged that this should be filled by the apâ€" pointment of North Land man, sugâ€" gesting the name of Dr. J. Â¥A. McInnis. Since then there have been other vaâ€" cancies, but up to date the North Land has been consistently ignored. There is yet time and opportunity, for the Government to right the matter. At present there seems to be a general agreement that the North Land should be represented in the Senate, and there In commenting on the matter of a northern Senator, The Kapuskasing Northern Tribune last week said:â€"â€" "Premier King can fill a vacancy in the Senate fast enough when it suits his political necessity to do so, as in the case of the translation of Hon. Robt, Forke to open the Brandon constituâ€" ency for the new Minister of Railways and Canals. Then, why is there so much delay in making the other apâ€" pointments, longer vacant? Let us have our new Northern Senator withâ€" out further shillyshallying, so that he can take his seat when Parliament conâ€" venes in Febuary. Our Senator should be a man in the prime of physical and mental vigor, able and willing to make at least one trip yearly up to the Hudâ€" son Bay region and keep a close eye on its important interests as they exâ€" pand. The Yukon has had a Senator for many years, and the Yukon isn‘t a patch on what this new North will be. After the 1931 census we should have ancther member in the House of Comâ€" mons, representing roughly the new population along and North of the Transcontinental from Kapuskasing to the readjusted boundaries of Kenora constituency, and also taking in the James and Hudson Bay territory. So, a little speed, please, Mr. King" Other newspapers interested in the North have given similar endorsation of the idea that the North should have Senate representation. While The Northern Tribune in the above referâ€" ence does not mention Dr. McInnis, it does describe some of his qualifications, and in previous issues it also named him and specifically urged his appointâ€" ment. Another newspaper mentioning the popular appeal that the appointment of Dr. MciInnis would have is The Otâ€" tawa Journal, a paper that probably carries more weight in this North Land than any other outside daily. While the Toronto newspaper described by the premier of the province as the papâ€" er with the large circulation and the least influence may have more readers in the North than The Ottawa Journal, the latter assuredly has double the inâ€" fluence and respect of the people here. The Ottawa Journal has a comparaâ€" tively large circulation in the North, and its influence is proportionately large. The Journal last week carried a desâ€" patch from Timmins which read as follows:â€"*"The question of having at least one representative in the Dominâ€" ion Senate is agitating Northern Onâ€" tario at present to a great extent, and it is quite apparent that if some fayâ€" orable action is not taken by the Premâ€" ier to remedy the neglect to which the North has been subjected in this matâ€" ter there may be a different complexâ€" ion on the results of the northern ridâ€" ings in the next Federal election. For some time now Northern Ontario has been entitled to at least two representâ€" atives in the Senate, in comparison to the representation of the South, and THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO the Golden North is still waiting to have one. Of the several Liberals whose names have been mentioned recently in this connection, Dr. John A. McInnis mayor of Timmins for several years, seems to be the most favored for the position. The doctor did some good work for the Liberal cause in the recent Provincial election, and having been a resident of the north for close on 20 years he possesses the knowledge of the needs and condition of the North in a remarkable way. Not only is Dr. Mcâ€" Innis an outstanding figure in Northâ€" ern Ontario Liberal circles, but it is safe to say that in the matter of senatâ€" orial appointment he is supported by all parties without exceptipn. It is said Conservatives, Progressives and Lgborites alike unite with the Liberals in putting the stamp of their approval on Dr. McInnis as the right man for the North." The death occurred on Monday, Jan. 13th, 1930, of Mary Rhea Bazinet infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ubal Bazinet, 17 Elm Street, south, Timmins. The child was eight months old at the time of death, and is survived by three sisâ€" ters and three brothers as well as by the bereaved parents. The funeral was held on Tuesday afternoon at 2.30 to St. Anthony‘s church and thence to the Timmins cemetery. The sympathy of all is extended to Mr. and Mrs. Bazinet and family in their loss. DEATH OF INFANT DAUGHTER OF MR. AND MRS. U. BAZINET SETTLERS IN THE NORTH NEED 160â€"ACRE HOMESTEADS In an editorial note last week The Northern Tribune reproduces the folâ€" lowing paragraph from The Advanceâ€" "In its issue last week The Northern Tribune urges the Government to reâ€" vert to the provision allowing 160â€"acre farms in this part of the North Land. It may be said that at some time or another in the past few years every newspaper in this North Land has adâ€" vocated the change from the present 80â€"acre land grants for settlers to the more reasonable one of the 160â€"acre allowance. How would it be for all the newspapers in the North to advoâ€" cate the change all together all the time until the change is made? Probabâ€" ly, if all the newspapers of the North would unanimously and persistently demand this right for the settlers, even Hon. Mr. Finlayson might be convinced that the change is necessary and desirâ€" able. In any event it would be interâ€" esting to note whether the Hon. Mr. Finlayson would be mere impressed by the voice of all the newspapers of the North than by the suggestion of some member of the civil serve all arrayed in red tape." To this paragraph The Northern Triâ€" bune adds the following comment of its own:â€"The suggestion of the Adâ€" vance is a good one, which we trust will commend itself to other Northern ediâ€" tors. There need be nothing cabalistic about the campaign; there is just the great need that every Northern editor should use his utmost influence, unâ€" ceasingly to get a better deal for the settlers." 2I1G~ZRAG Book attached to every package On Wednesday evening, Jan. 15, at the regular meting of the Daughters of England Benefit Society, Timmins Branch the officers for the coming year were dully installed. The installing ofâ€" ficer was Mrs. E. Wheeler, P.P. The officers for the ensuing year are as follows :â€" Presidentâ€"Mrs. S. Goode. Past Presidentâ€"Mrs. E. Wheeler. Viceâ€"Presidentâ€"Mrs. A. Jennings. Secretaryâ€"Mrs. A. Pye. Treasurerâ€"Myrs. H. Backhouse. Chaplainâ€"Mrs. A. Parks. First Guideâ€"Mrs. W. Halliwell. Second Guideâ€"Mrs. J. Hallam. Third Guideâ€"Mrs. M. Jones. Fourth Guideâ€"Mrs. J. Lawry Inner Guideâ€"Mrs. G. Gibson. After the installation ceromony a delightful lunch was served and a pleasant hour was spent in conversaâ€" tion and in formulating plans for the future progress of the lodge which promises to go ahead with rapid strides under the newlyâ€"installed jofficers. Officers Installed at Daughters of England ‘The Dubuisson sheet (Map 224A) reâ€" cently published by the Geological Surâ€" vey will be of interest to prospectors in western Quebec. This geological map is one of a series of eight sheets, on a scale of 1 mile to 1 inch of the area immediately south of the Canadian Naâ€" tional Transcontinental line amnd stretching from the Ontarioâ€"Quebec boundary to beyond Harricanaw river. The Dubuisson mapâ€"area was reported on briefly by W. F. James and J. B. Mawdsley in the Summary Report, 1926, Part C. It is underlain in part by Keswatin volcanics and intrusive granodiorite and includes Siscos isâ€" land on Lake Da Montigny on which the Siscoe mine is located. Considerâ€" able prospecting has already been done in this area, but in view of the evidence of mineralization, more extensive prosâ€" pecting may be warranted. Copies of this map may be obtained upon appliâ€" cation to The Director, Geological Surâ€" vey, Ottawa, Ontario. DUBUISSON MAP ISSUED FOR USE OF PROSPECTORS Drumheller Mail:â€" Take, for inâ€" stance, the movies, In Alberta the film censors in their wisdom cut out every "Damn‘"‘ before allowing any talkie to be released in the province, while in Ontario "lousy" and "broad" are on the black list, but apparently there is nothing to stop a film star from thinking what he likes as for instance those notable examples in reâ€" cent releases where, by clever lip manâ€" ipulation, the old sergeant majors refer to the dubious ancestry of certain black sheep in the rookie line. "I was very weak after an opâ€" eration. My nerves were so bad I would sit down and cery and my husband would not go out and leave me alone. Now my nerves are much better, thanks to a booklet that was left under the door. Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound surely put me on my feet. I have taken eight bottles. My friends tell me I look fine. My sister has taken this medicine too."â€"Mrs. Annie Walton, 67 Stanley St., Kingston, Ontario. 252 is forever through with investing in the tremendous bodies of metals demonâ€" | strated to exist in the North of Canada, ‘or that he is through speculating on the success of endeavours made by ‘prospectors and by mining engineers. We say this because we believe that the public of Canada is more conscious than ever before of the wealth containâ€" ed in its mining industry and in the potentialities of the future. And at the same time the public is becoming thoroughly convinced of the evils of marginal gambling, a type of trading which has aroused all the suspicion which is at present directed toward the financial side of mining, and which ecmtributes very little to the upbuilding of the industry. We are passing through a phase which should rid the mining industry of much that hampers " its progress toward complete public apâ€" preciation. Then our goosd friend, and many others like him, will see that speculating, if on the mining industry, and on margin, is. legitimate and worth while." n mmsmmmpmes s * o+ Mining Industry Vital to Presentâ€"Day World So many people in the past few months lost money in the stock marâ€" ket that there is a general tendency to make rash statements about being "through with the mining game." The Advance has repeatedly pointed out that the stock market and the mining industry have little bearing upon one another in vital way, except that durâ€" ing stock depressions it is difficult to get money for new mining ventures. The stock market is a thing of itself. It does not reflect the mining industry. Anyone who has carefully followed the stock market knows that stocks often go far down when a particular mine may be at its best and flare up when the physical condition at the mine is certainly not at its best. There was the standard case some years ago when one stock went down just when the mine had declared a dividend, and anâ€" other stock for a mine in the same camp went scooting up though this latter mine was cutting its dividend on account of the earnings. To the man who says, "I‘m through with mining because of the market," The Advance has pointed out that the market and the stocks themselves do not by any means keep in any sort of perfect tune. To a similar sort of statement from the disgruntled The Northern Miner last week had another and even more imâ€" pressive answer. A man wrote to say he was "through with the mining inâ€" dustry.‘"‘ The chances are that The Northern Miner could have told this man that in a material way he had never really been connected with minâ€" ing. The Northern Miner might have suggested that now that he was tired of stock speculation he might try minâ€" ing investment, but this is the answer (From The Simcoe Reformer) Advertising is like a farmers work. Cultivate a field, harrow and drag it as you will for a yearâ€"for ten years Then quit for a single season and the weeds and brush will spring up and claim it. Bo with advertising. Let a concern advertise for a number of years until it has created a big volume of business. Then cease advertising for a short time and its business suffers. Competition is so keen that to survive n the business world, the merchant must tell the public what he has to sell â€"not once, onlyâ€"but constantly. MUST KEEP CULTIVATING THE BUSINESS FIELD, TOO The Northern Miner did give its readâ€" er. The Northern Miner said:â€" "A man who has lost money gamblâ€" ing in the market writes us to say that he is through with the mining industry. "We tell our friend that it is imposâ€" sible for him to remain alive and be through with the mining industry. He has, in every action, contact with the mining industry. Every time he looks at his watch, picks up his knife, passes out his money, steps in his car, travels on a train, he shakes hands with mine managers and miners who toil in the depths of the earth. "Close down the mines and mankind dies out in a month, for presentâ€"day man is not equipped by instinct or naâ€" ture to return promptly to the stone "Without mines there can be no light, no fuel, no food. Metals and mineralsâ€"the mining industryâ€"are the foundations of man‘s existence. ‘"We repeat to our friend, he cannot be through with the mining industry. He probably is through with gambling on margin. But we cannot beileve, if be through with the mining industry. He probably is through with gambling on margin. But we cannot beileve, if he retains a spark of ambition, that he 710,000 Our increase in sales in 1929 over 1928 shows that there were over seven hundred and ten thousand additional SALADA users last year. ‘Fresh from the gardens‘ BURIED FOR TWO HOURS IN | ROCK AND MUCK AT MINE Last week one day Jack Williams, a young man of 27 years of age, employed at the Lake Shore Mins, was buried for three hours in a slide of "muck" that occurred at stope 1409 in the mine. He was caught by the sliding ore and practically buried in the material. He did not lose consciousness at any time and was talking to his fellowâ€"workmen as they sweated in their labour to reâ€" lease him. There was about 18 inches of the broken ore over him. When he was finally released he was found to have sustained aâ€"cut on the head and a severely crushed right leg. He wah taken to the hospital and The Northern News says that it is reported that he is doing well. Kapuskasing Northern Tribuns:â€" There is big money in Wall Street for anyone who knows how to play the market, and Beethoven‘s sonatos are on any piano if you happen to hit the right notes. Geo. Taylor Hardware Ltd. Have your tubes tested reqularly Take a winter vacation along the palm shaded coast of Florida. Famous golf courses, yachting, fishing, polo, lawn bowlâ€" ingâ€"and other sports and recreations make each day better than the last. Numerous hotels, known the world over for their Continental atmosphere and cuisine, will cater to your every wish. For full particulars apply nearest T. N. O. Rly. agent, or Mr. F. P. Nelson, D.P.A., Canadian National Rlys., North Bay, Ont. HU M INDICATES A WORN TUBE Distributors