b# bow...â€"stf sw t i A in css "CANADA‘S GREATEST SEED HOUSE " TORONTOâ€" HAMILTONâ€"WINNIPEG â€"REGINAâ€" EDMONTON Age 25 Age 30 Age 35 Age 40 Age 45 Age 50 By Buying Low Cost Life Insurance. Rates Disability Benefits can be added covering Total Disablement from Sickness or Accident. Goldfieclds Block, Timmins, Ontario. Increase Your Estate $10,000 or More School Hours #*~*: ‘"After Dividends apply on second and evetry year "premiums. Mutual Life Assurance Co. of Canada THE CANADA STARCH CO., LIMITED, MONTREAL Children love CROWN BRAND Syrup on breadâ€" give it to them every day, it‘s delicious and wholesome. Write for our New Edwardsburg Recipe Book free. CORN SYRUDP soLD EVERYWHERE IN CANADA Send for Mustrated Catalogue A Friend of the Family The folowing little paragraph is from The North Bay Nugget, published in the "Gateway to the North.". Eviâ€" dently the intention is to give The Adâ€" vance the gate. Read it, friends, and weep! This is the way the "Gateway" slams : â€" "They‘re picking pansies in the north now. Mrs. A. Allan, resident of Timâ€" mins, gathered a bouquet of these flowâ€" ers from her garden on March 10. They were brought to the office of The Porcupine Advance, where, after one lcok at the newspapermen they up and died." HERE IS A NAWSTY SLAM FROM THE OLD "GATEWAY" Orillia Packet:â€"In the old days it used to be the custom for newspapers in towns to lambaste one another for the amusement of the inhabitants. But weekly editors have got far past that semiâ€"civilized practice, which is now confined to the city dailies. ....... $15.73 per ......... 18.21 per ....... 21.51 per ....... 20.93 per ....... 3al.79 per ....... 39.57 per thereafter to reduce Sullivan Newton, District Mmanagers Sainsbury and LaDuke discovered the deposits in 1914 when they ran in out of a storm to a harbour on the extreme eastern island of the Belcher group and, stepping ashore, found a body of iron ore washed by tidewater. They were, with the exception of Captain Belcher, an early explorer after whom the islands were named, the first white men to step on them. It will be recalled that several years ago the wellâ€"known prospector, John Jones, made a trip to Belcher Islands, and on his return made particular reâ€" ference to the iron deposits on the Belâ€" cher Islands. Mention was made of this in The Advance at the time. Reâ€" cently there have been references in the Toronto papers and in other newspapers to these iron deposits. A despatch last week from Toronto says:â€" Within the next few weeks, accordâ€" ing to Sam Sainsbury, of Toronto, oriâ€" ginal discoverer, Canadian and United States financiers will undertake to mine the iron ore which are known to exist in the Belcher Islands, three hundred miles from Moose Factory, in Hudson Bay. At present, options on the property are held by Belcher Iron Mines, reâ€" presenting the criginal discoverers, and Northern Aerial Minerals Exploration, the Jack Hammell air prospecting comâ€" pany. Right then they staked a body of ore five miles long paralleling the shore. But it was late in the fall and they reâ€" turned to Moose Factory. They went back next summer, winâ€" tered and worked into 1916, during which period they discovered four disâ€" tinct seams of ore running parallel, each of them outcropping to a distance of between four and seven miles. These deposits were discovered by Sainsbury and D. E. LaDuke, prospecâ€" tors in 1914 and have laid untouched since owing to the inaccessibility of the region. But factors which have recently enâ€" tered into the picture have changed it to a degree were the mining and transâ€" portation of this iron ore becomes not merely practicable, but attractive, acâ€" cording to Sainsbury. One is the disâ€" covery of coal in the Moose Factory district. Others are the completion of the Hudson Bay Railroad to Fort Churchill and the imminence of shipâ€" ping there and the fact that the T. and N. O. Railway now being pushed north of Cochrane will reach tidewater at James Bay next year. "If plans do not miscarry," he went on, "the Belcher Iron Mines will be shipping ore to world markets in 1932." No drilling, according to Mr. Sainsâ€" bury, has ever been done and the exâ€" act tonnage is unknown, but engineers have estimated that there is 500,000,000 tons of commercial ore in the bodies exposed. Thus they comprise one of the world‘s largest undeveloped deâ€" posits. HUGE DEPOSIT OF IRON ORE WILL BF AVAILABLE IN 1932 "Plans are being drawn," Mr. Sainsâ€" bury said, "for a large expedition this spring with diamond drills and survey partics, the object being to prepare for the mining development on a large scale. ' "The exposed faces," said Mr. Sainsâ€" bury, "are richer than the exposed faces of the Minnesota ores before they were developed. The Wabana mines in Newfoundland shipped ore for three years before they could bring the meâ€" tallic iron content up to 50 per cent. As a comparison, ore of 50 per cent. or better can at once be shipped from the Belchers with the installation of minâ€" ing and loading facilities." Said that There will be Ten Million Tons Annually from Deposits on the Belcher Islands in Hudson‘s Bay. On the islands is a big fresh water lake more than twenty feet above sea level, capable of developing 5,000 horseâ€" power. A mere 50 miles away, on the mainland, enough for mining purposes, in Ungava, are waters capable of deâ€" veloping 250,000 horsepower. in December and fills Hudson and James Bays, though there is always even then, due to wind shifts, room for considerable ship movement. Bui, there is, he said, at least five months free shipping possible. Hudson Bay never freezes over, acâ€" cording to Mr. Sainsbury, but floe ice makes its appearance from the north Last year Canada imported 2,447,807 short tons of raw iron ore, valued at $5,426,265, of which Wabana mines in Newfoundland contributed 763,168 tons, valued at $1,930,815. "Belcher deposits when developed," he said, "will be able to take care of Canada‘s needs at the rate of 10,000,000 tons a years for the next hundred years at a price, owing to its metallic content and its low phosphorous content, which will compete with Minnesota ores laic down in Canadian furnaces. As compared with this, "Belcher ores," said Mr. Sainsbury, "can be brought to Moose Factory at a miniâ€" mum cost of a dollar a ton." And England and Scotland are using 16,000,000 tons of raw ore annually that does not average 30 per cent. meâ€" tallic content. "There is an unlimited market over there for pig iron. Ships carrying it over can bring return cargoes of coke for smelters, which presumably will be erected at Moose Factory or on the isâ€" lands. Ottawa Journal:â€"As a further gesâ€" ture of civility to the United States, the proposal may be made that Ameriâ€" can visitors to Canada should be refusâ€" ed the right to purchase liquor here. "In addition to this, the grain boats trading out of Churchill will be able to bring back coke cargoes." THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO TO USE AIRSHIPS AGAIN FOR PAYING TREATY MONFY Arrangements have just been comâ€" pleted by the Ontario and the Dominâ€" ion authorities whereby a 2,000â€"mile aeoplane flight will be made this sumâ€" mer into the heart of the Patricia barâ€" Walter C. Cain, Deputy Minister of Lands and Forests, will represent Onâ€" tario on the flight, and H. N. Awrey of the Department of Indian Affairs, Otâ€" tawa, will be the Dominion Commisâ€" sioner. A Federal machine will be usâ€" ed for transportation. A headquarters will be located on Nikip Lake, in Patriâ€" cia, while negotiations with the Indian tribes of that area are being conducted, From that point the fliers will push on to the ocean, working down to Severn and Winisk, where further moneys will be paid out, and then folâ€" lowing the coast line down to Moose Factory, on James Bay, where Mr. Cain will undertake some important survey work for the Ferguson Administration. Approximately a month will be occupâ€" ied in carrying out present arrangeâ€" ments. No estimate of the amount of money to be carried is yet available. ren lands, and to Hudson Bay and along its coast line, to carry gold to isolated Indies tribes who "missed out" in the treaty payments of last year‘s aerial expedition. First details of the trip were revealed last week with the appearance in the Further Supplementary, Estimates. tabled in the Legislature, of a vote of $5,212 for "annuities and bonuses to Indians under treaty." Treaty 9 is one of the first big treatâ€" ies entered into with the Indians of the North by the two Governments. The spectacular flight of last year, in which a big Dominion plane was wrecked and lost on Lake St. Joseph with the loss of one life; in which Capâ€" tain W. Roy Maxwell, in an Ontario machine, was forced down in the wilâ€" derness for lack of gas and was reportâ€" ed "missing" for two days; and in which Mr. Cain was stricken in the bush with illness and almost died beâ€" fore he could be got out to a Sioux Lookout hospital, was an expedition for the purpose of negotiating with the In that itinerary the Severn and Winisk Indian bands were included, but inadequate gasoline supplies for the planes engaged made flights to these remote points out of the question for 1929. Government Officials Will Carry Cash to Indians in the Hudson Bay and Patricia Areas This Summer. ' the purpose of negotiat tribes what was known sion" to Treaty 9. Nikip Lake, on which this year‘s fiight will establish its first operating base, is the inland water on which capâ€" tain Maxwell and Mr. Cain were forced down last summer. Here they found a band of Indians, who, through some faulty instruction, had not gone to Trout Lake, the big treatyâ€"making assembly point, and who were disapâ€" pointed when the Ontario officials could not "come across" with the money they expected. Mr. Cain, howâ€" ever, assured them that "me come backâ€"next yearâ€"1930," and now the plans have been laid that will see him, in June or July next, keeping his proâ€" A twoâ€"day call will probably also be made at Trout‘ Lake, Mr. Cain stated. "It is on our line of flight to Hudson Bay," said he, "and there are several points regarding the treaty of last year which Mr. Awrey and I would like to take up with the Indian chief." Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"The Grand Lodge of the LO.B.A. say that the Union Jack is all the flag we need. Which is very wise. Our nation can make any flag respected and loved; no flag can make poverty, injustice nor crime respected. Let us work on the land, not the flag. Wake up and pep up with PEP BRAN FLA K ES Tug finest way to start the day. A heaping bowl of Kellogg‘s Pep Bran Flakes., There‘s sparkle in ths fiavor â€" heaith in the whole wheat â€"and the extra bran helps keep you fit and regular. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. 4t plo99" died beâ€" a Sioux, lition for yith the NEW MINTSTER CALLED TO ENGLEHART AND TOMSTOWN That the congregations of Englehart and Tomstown had extended a unâ€" animous call to Rev. Evan Thomas, of Eimvale, was reported to the North Bay Presbytery at their meeting in Scotia Junction on Thursday by the clerk, Rev. W. L. Atkinson, of Burks Falls. The call was sustained by the Presbyâ€" tery and forwarded to the clerk of the Barrie Presbytery with the request that it be dealt with as speedily as possible. It is understood that the call will be accepted and that the induction will take place in Englehart on April 3. UKRAINIANS AT SUDBURY FIGHT RED PROPAGANDA A large number of the Ukrainians of Sudbury held a meeting recently to disâ€" cuss the injury done to the Ukrainians in general through the spread of the idea that they are all "Reds," and to form a@ lawâ€"abiding brotherhood of Ukrainians who are striving to be useâ€" ful ‘and loyal Canadians. The meeting held in itself showed that there are large numbers of Ukrainians who are actually giving all their efforts, and with success to being honest, honourâ€" able, loyal and industrious citizens of Canada. The noisy few are giving the decent many a bad name far from deâ€" served. The meeting decided to estabâ€" lish a new organization to be known as the "League of Christian Workers," of which the aim is to unite the Ukrainâ€" ian workers of the Sudbury district into a loyal brotherhood working for the true interests of the members, these true interests being to follow the high ideals of Canada. The new society inâ€" tends to use lectures, plays and literaâ€" ture to counteract the evil effects of communism and to assist all Ukrainâ€" ians to become intelligent and loyal citizens of Canada. It is intended to teach the constitution of Canada and other things that will tend to give the members a greater knowledge of citiâ€" zenship in their adopted country. The officers of the new society are given as follows:â€"President, A. Buchynsky; viceâ€"president, Nicholas Tuynciw; treasurer, Michael Zavaly; financial secretary, Louis Demcheshen; recordâ€" ing secretary, John Dacyk; controllers, Mrs. A. Belinsky and Mrs. T. Nazar. It might be a good idea for similar organizations to be formed elsewhere in Ontario where there are groups of loyal new citizens of Canada. In the case of vast numbers of those born in foreign lands and coming to Canada to reside the desire is to be faithful citizens of this country. A few asserâ€" tive agitators, however, often put their fellowâ€"countrymen in Gdisrepute when there is no organization to oppose the organizations these noisy fellows someâ€" times secure to further their evil plans. Perth Expositor:â€"There is a friendly sun these daysâ€"with the exception of an odd dayâ€"That is whispering someâ€" thing that pictures green fields, golf links, ball parks, long plimmering ribâ€" bons of good roadway, trout brooks and gladsome open spaces. The sun whisâ€" pers of beautiful spring waiting just beyond to transform the open places into fairyland of flowers and foliage, running brooks and lovers‘ nooksâ€" coming like sunshine after rain, hapâ€" piness after pain, releasing the prisâ€" oners of hope who have cuddled close all winter to the fireplaces, letting the children out with joyous shouts into the fields and woods to gather strength from nature‘s bountiful medicine chest. Spring is in the air. Buay This Positive Proof PackageToday 4 7:: ‘re Not Sesbet~ a r 0 5 V@ HE Stewartâ€"Warnerâ€"Alemite Corporation aninave the enanfidence aof Canadian motorâ€" 3 enjoys the confidence of Canadian motorâ€" ists, and therefore would not cheat them with false statements regarding any of its products. When the Corporation says that Carboâ€"Solve will remorve carbon from your car you can believe that it willâ€"And further it has been proven on over 100,000 motor cars. Carboâ€"Solve is heralded by the leading Autoâ€" It has been tried, tested and proven on over 100,000 Cars STEWARTâ€"WARNERâ€"ALEMITE CORPORATION of CANADA LIMITEDâ€"BELLEVILLE, ONTARIO "Upâ€"toâ€"date dealers and service stations are now prepared to give you a Carboâ€"Solveâ€"ing Service" In an effort to reduce the number of injuries in the bush caused by axe cuts the Lumbermen‘s Safety Association, Ottawa. has sent out the following noâ€" tice: "One of the most common injuries to workmen in the woods is axe cuts about the feet. The highest frequency of such injuries occurs in the period from early in September to late in Deâ€" cember. Investigation has shown that these cuts are usually on the toes or outer side oï¬ the feet. It is felt that many mssn in logging camps have good ideas about the protection of the feet of workmen from axe cuts. We want to get these idgas and pass them on to the industry as a whole so that a reduction in the number of axe cuts next season may be secured. We hope to receive letters from workmen, clerks, foremen and others who are interested. The men in every camp are cordially invitâ€" ed to write to us at once giving their ideas and a description of any guards they believe could be worn to protect the toes and outer side of the foot. We will send $25.00 for the best suggestion received by March 21st. Please put up the enclosed notices as soon as they are received and explain them to the men in your camp." SEEKING TO REDUCE NUMBER L#J OF AXE INJURIES IN BUSH | ‘ Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"It was extremely tactless for a noble lord to call attention at this time to the fact that many millions of dollars worth of bonds issusd by various states of ths Union have been repudiated. T is, in fact, generally considered tactâ€" less to bring up the subject of a debt on a social occasion. motive Engincers on the Continent as the greatest development in the Motor World in many years, because it absolutely eliminates the bugbear of motoristsâ€"Carbon. Have your garage man install an ejector on your car for permanent use, or he can give your car a shot with his Standard Shop Cun â€"â€"Any authorized Alemite dealer will know about Carboâ€"Solve. B Y THE MA AKERL AL BM ITE Thursday, March 27th, 1930 to 15 Ibe. in 3 weeks. Skin clears like magic., Constipation, nerves, end. Get pleasant lronized Yeast tablets from druggist today. "" writes Susan Salino. Thousands % say new Ironized Yeast adds *4 m. AINED 11 Lbs. in 8 Whks : W " And a Boy Friend." ¢â€"€6