There are few combinations of indusâ€" try in Canada that hold «o important WIDE SCOPE OF BUSINESS OF GANADIAN INBUSTRIES, LTD. Notable Concern Manufactures Amâ€" munition, â€" Fabrikoid, Explosives, Paint, Salt, Heavy Chemicails, Ammonia, Fertilizers and !é!ifliï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬‚ï¬ï¬!ï¬!i%ï¬ï¬‚ï¬ï¬‚ï¬ï¬!ï¬!ifli%ï¬ï¬‚ NATIONAL MOTOR SALES Service Dept. 7 Cedar St., south Telephone No. 3, Timmins GOOD for100,000 miles Drive a Reo and con« vince yourself. COME IN TCDAY] long life and Reo‘s new range of prices place a fine car within the reach of every family! a part in the national industrial life as the Canadian Industries, Limited. This is very clearly shown by "The C. I. L. News for 1930," an eightâ€"page, eightâ€"columnâ€"phge just issued by Carâ€" adian Industries Limited. This bright newspaper, with its attractive layout and its advertisements and illustration; shows the complete institutional adâ€" vertising campaign for 1930, together with a description of the company‘s plants, products and personnel. The remarkable growth of the business of the C. I. L. is frankly admitted to be Show Room 55 Third Ave. Timmins â€"_"ITvory, jade, pearl, tortoiseâ€"shell and ;other semiâ€"precious materials used in industry were Oobtained with great diffhiâ€" culty. The devétopmen!t of pyroxylin plastics gave to ‘the world matcrials very like naturés own in appearance, but with better physical properties. fArticles made 6f Pyralin and Lucite @are now relatively inexpensive. Th "Fabrikoid wus first developed to take the place of teather for certain uses when that protiuct became scarce and costly. The use of pyroxylinâ€"coated fabrics relieved ‘that situation and also speeded up the manufacture of many articles formerty made of leather. "Canadian Industries Limited is supâ€" plying numerous products that acceolerâ€" ate the processes of industry. Consider explosives, for example. A wellâ€"placed charge of black powder or dynamite can accomplish in a split second tasks that would reguire days and perhaps weeks of labour with hand tools. Inâ€" dustrial Canafin could never have adâ€" vanced rapidly ‘wibhout; the aid of exâ€" plosives. One article in the C.ILL. News of 1930 is worth reproduction in full, showing as it does how the C. I. L. products so materially a‘d industry in many ways: ryis, points out that every person in Canada is a possible customer for C. L L. products. Every home, for instance uses ‘salt. Duco is ano‘ivear product that has almost universal use toâ€"day ‘for cars and domestic use. In mining and other works, the use of explosives made by the C. I. L. is practically esâ€" sential. â€" Farmers used the fertilizers manufactured by the concern. Heavy chemicals form the basis of many proâ€" ducts. From gasoline to dyestuffs, and from dynamite to medicine there are few products in which chemicals do not play an important part. In "C. I. L. News of 1930," the prâ€"oâ€" sident of the company, Arthur B. Perâ€" (a material of many uses, including upholstery for furniture and automoâ€" biles, as a waterproof top for motors and other vehicles, as well as Damasâ€" klene, resembling finest linen and beâ€" ing development of fabrikoid), paint, explosives, salt, heavy chemicals, amâ€" monia. fertilizer. largely due to the judicious use of leadâ€" ing newspapers as a medium for pubâ€" licity for the company‘s various proâ€" ducts. Of course, The Advance is one of the newspapers used by the C. I. L. There is a branch of the C. I. L. in Timmins, the Canadian Explosives beâ€" ing part of the combination of indusâ€" tries making up the C. I. L. It is inâ€" teresting to note the number and varâ€" iety of products handled by the C. I. L. These include ammunition, fabrikoid THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO The ammunition division is another omne that is of far further importance that may generally be realized. As The C. I. L. News for 1930 says:â€""It can be ‘safely said that no other ammunition company in the world has done as much as Dominion to encourage shootâ€" ing among the boys. It can also safely be said that there are few organizaâ€" ;'ticns in the world comparable to Doâ€" Iminion Marksmen. Organized in 1917 \by the Dominion Cartridge Company with the idea of teaching younz Canaâ€" | dians.how to shoot and how to handl»e firearms with safety to themselves and ‘ others, the organization has grown unâ€" m on ommmeny t mae t se on til today it comprises 20,000 members. Each year, Provincial and Dominion championships are held and many reâ€" markable records have been made." Lake Teiniskaming was free of ice on May 5th this year, the same date as in To the people of this North Land there will, perhaps, be special interest in the Canadian Explosives Division of the C. I. L., P. B. Yancey being the general manager of this division, and A. LaPrairie being the manager of tne Timmins and district branch. The manufacture of expliosives is a key inâ€" dusitry on which other basic industries depend. Coal and metal mining, quarâ€" rying, transportation, construction and ocher activities could not be carried on successfully toâ€"day without the use of explosives To the settler and farmer explosives are also essential. It is inâ€" teresting to note that for every mile of hardâ€"surfaced road Ithat is built one thousand pounds of dynamite and blasting powder are used. Indirectly, explosives are mecessary for practially averything in which metals of any kind are used, from everâ€"sharp pencils to. household utensils, for the metals would. not be obtainable without the use of explosives in mining. | "Before the development of" Duco, finishing automobile bodies with paint and varnish required many days‘ time Several coats had to be applied. Quickâ€" drying Duco enabled automotive manuâ€" facturers to speed up their output. Pyroxylinâ€"type finishes today are standard throughout the industry, beâ€" cause of their great durability and the time saved through their use. ‘"Vartous cother preductsâ€"once obâ€" tained by chemically treating raw maâ€" terials from farâ€"away sourcesâ€"are now made synthetically in C. I, L. fFants, all of which results in improved proâ€" ducts, faster producticn and quicker deliveries in keeping with the tempo of modern living." use of chemicallyâ€"made materials has speeded up pioducticn. Temiskaming Council of the Knights of Columbus intend to hold an initiaâ€" tion of the three first degrees of the order at Cochrane on June 8th, which will be attended also by candidates from Timmins Iroquois Falls Smooth Rock Falls and Kapuskasing. Marquis wheat still constitutes more than oneâ€"half of the western grain crop. â€" This is shown by the test samples taken from 48 carâ€" goes of Canadian wheat exported to England in 1928â€"29 and reported by the Dominion Department of Agriculture. The tests were made at the Dominion Experimental Farm at Brandon from samples, collected by the Canadian Coâ€"opâ€" erative Wheat Producers at exâ€" port ports. td The _ new â€" Montreal Harbor Bridge, a twoâ€"mile span across the St. Lawrence River, built at a cost of $12,000,000, will be formalâ€" ly opened on Victoria Day by Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Prime Minister of Canada. This bridge, work on which was commenced five years ago, is one of the longâ€" est and largest in the world. With 1,969,200 pounds more fish landed in Nova Scotia during March, 1930, as compared with the same month of the previous year, fishermen of the province received a total of $385,384 for their catch, according to the monthly report of the fisheries branch of the Departâ€" ment of Marine and Fisheries. Toâ€" tal quantity landed in March was 9,473,000 pounds. Contracts are let and grading has been started on three addiâ€" tional branch lines of the Canadian Pacific Railway covering 145 miles in Saskatchewan and Alberta, it is announced by the company‘s enâ€" gineering department. These new sections of railroad will provide facilities for _ passengers and freight into one of the richest agriâ€" cultural areas now under settleâ€" ment and will give encouragement to farmers already settled in the areas affected. Twelve representatives of the New Zealand press are at present travelling through Canada via Canâ€" adian Pacific on their way to the fourth Imperial Press Conference to be held in London, Eng., next June. The members of this party with their wives and children have been visiting Banff and Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies. Reference is made elsewhere in this issue to a promise made by Major Mac Lang in regard to the resumption of the Toronto mail service from this part of the country. This week W. O. Langâ€" don, president of the Timmins board of trade, is in receipt of a letter from | Jos. A. Bradette, M.P. for this riding, conveying the message that he belisves | that it will be only a mstter of a few days now until the Toronto mail serâ€" vice will be resumed from Timmins. Mr. Bradette has been working on the matter of the mail service to Toronto and he and Mac Lang, M.P., have very _evidently been impressing their views,‘ on the post office department It is now only a matter of arranging the details before the service is put »backl on, according to the suggestions in Mr. Bradette‘s letter. No. 46 will carry Toâ€" ronto mail from Timmins and other points along the line, the locked bag plan being used. It is expected now] that the service will be put into effect | within the next week or so. The change in the service, or rather the dropping of the service, has been a serâ€" ious handicap to business men and others wishing to send mail to Toronto, and the sooner the Toronto mail serâ€" vice is restored the better it will be.' All will hope that Mr. Bradette is right and that the post office department has altered its ideas on the matter. In the letiers sent to the Timmins town council and to the board of trade here the post office department seemed to suggest that Timmins was asking for a double mail service to Toronto. What the people here were asking, and still ask is a service to Toronto. Inâ€" stead of asking for a duplication of the present mail service to Toronto, the idea is that while now the Toronto serâ€" | vice is subordinated to the Montreal mail service, the arrangements to made to give a proper mail service to Tcoromâ€" ; | Spring seeding in the west is proceeding at a rapid pace, acâ€" cording to report at the end of April from the agricultural deâ€" partment of the Canadian Pacific Railway at Winnipeg. Taking the three prairie provinces as a whole it was then estimated that 43 per cent. of wheat seeding is completâ€" ed, with some districts in southâ€" eastern Alberta reporting between 50 and 65 per cent. finished. Heavy showers have somewhat retarded progress in »northâ€"western Saskatâ€" chewan. (d20) ITwentyâ€"two days will be occuâ€" pied by the annual tour across Canada to be conducted by Dean sinclair Laird, of Macdonald Colâ€" lege, when his party leaves the Windsor Street Station, Montreal, by special frain over Canadian Paâ€" «ific lines on Sunday, July 20. This year will be the seventh trip con;, ducted by Dean Laird and, as in past years, will include automoâ€" bile drives over the famous Ban{ffâ€" Windermere highway and from Field, via the Yoho Valley, to Lake Louise, as well as steamer trips across the Kootenay Lake to Nelson; from Vancouver to Victoâ€" ria; and on the Great Lakes steamships from Fort William to Port McNicoll. Letter From Mr. Bradette Regarding Mail Service :elt'e and There "Canada Northern Power would fit in well with the Commissioner‘s plans from an operating standpoint. There would be no need to change plans for running the new transmission line from the Abitibi development direct to Sudbury. With the absorption of the Canada Northern Power system, howâ€" "‘The Commission can strengthen its position, however, by reaching out and taking in the Canada Northern Power system. This would not only provide a larger market for its power, but would also fit in with the plans of the Comâ€" mission to serve the province from one end to the other with its own power lines. "It is apparent that a good slice of the territory in Northern Ontario has been cornered by Canada Northern Power Corporation. The Ontario Hyâ€" droâ€"Electric Commission will have Cochrane, Sudbury and other points. While nickel is the biggest power cusâ€" tomer in the whole area, Canada Norâ€" thern has by far the largest number of mines on its list, and has good prosâ€" pects of steady expansion for many years to come. While the demand for Commission power will undoubtedly gain from year to year, the question is whether or not the increase will be rapid enough to take care of the 100,000 from the Abitibi dévelopâ€" ment when delivery of that amount is made. EVERYBODY WELCOME ALL WILL FIND THIS EVENT A VERY PLEASING ONE words of some interested, that the pcwer company be amailgamed. Speakâ€" ing of the matter The Sudbury Star ADMISSION FEE 10c The fact that when The Advance several months ago suggested that powâ€" er would be brought from north of Cochrane to Sudbury and that the Canada Northern Power would be amalgamated into the Hydro plan, there was much questton over the matâ€" ter. The power line is now an assurec fact and there remains, despite the Suggests Taking Over Canada Northern Power Including Weaving, Spinning, Etc One of the Special Features will be the Exhibition of and continuing every evening until SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 3ist for benefit of St. Anthony‘s Church Opening Monday Night Timmins Rink Entry Prize given Every Night. Scores of Attractive Booths and Features Novelties, Etc. London _ (England) Punch:â€"This world is f:ull of trouble. Hardly a day passes but there is an election being held somewhere or other on earth. "In this way the two systems could be linked up. There would be ample pow+ er for all the municipalities and mines and the Commission‘s field of operaâ€" tions greatly widened." So quit being ashamed of "skinniâ€" ness," sallow skin. Get Ironized Yeast from druggist today. Feel great toâ€" morrow. Money back from manufacâ€" turer if not delighted with quick reâ€" sults. ever, the Commission could connect up the new transmission line with that of Canada Northern near Cochrane. The mines and towns along the T. and N. O. railway as far down as Cobalt could then be supplied with Abitibi power, while the power formerly used in that area could be transferred to North Bay and meet that cifty‘s needs of an inâ€" creased supply of electric energy. Two great tonics in oneâ€"special weightâ€"building Malt Yeast and strengthening Iron. Pleasant little tablets. Far stronger than unmediâ€" cated yeast. Results in i time. "Gained 15 lbs. takâ€" ing TIronized Yeast. Was always ashamed to wear bathing suit but now I can and not feel too skinny."â€"Eulah Lanâ€" ningham. Thousands write of 5 to 15 lbs. gainâ€" ed in 3 weeks with Ironized Yeast. Bony limbs round out. Ugly hoHows fill in. Blemished skin gets clear and rosy like magic. Nervousness, indigesâ€" tion, constipation disappear overnight. sound sleep. New health and pep from very first day. "30 SNINNY SHAMED IN BATHING SUIT GAINED 15 1B85." Thursday, May 22nd, 1930