being sure that sooner or ilater <he puolic would have to provide the phantom millions. On top of this objectiorable type of high finance, there came revelations of som» seven hundred thousand dollars being paid into the Liberal Party treasury, and some odd thousands going to individual Conâ€" servative camjpiign funds, At first though: it might seem that both political parties were venal and the difference in their corruption was only a matter of degree. There are, however, encouraging and inspiring to the picture. to be. Soâ€"called financie and the amoun: seemed value given. The : lions, still without any a being sure that sogoner c "The ordinar; wouraged to th a£ scandal agitator and the bonused al Post is right now in urging towns of the North from t! generous hospitality. The strongly. The towns of the the burden of the transient b agitator and foreign sneak sh and where this is not possibl citizen, writing to The Nort]l a nutshell when he says:â€""I laws, and jail those who brea ed. If there are cases where bona fide residents have sufâ€" fered hardship it has been wholly due to the influx of transâ€" lents, many of them foreigners. The towns have done more than cthey should have been expected to do. Many honest ratepayers are under hardship as a consequence. Parades and similar evil nonsense do nothing but harm, and should not be tolerated. When everyons has done more than a reaâ€" sonable share to help there is no room or place for the evil Womber of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association TIMMIN®, ONTARIO worthniand Post to a belated appreciation communism. Now, when it is late in t harm has been done by foolish theorizin Post is no longer concerned with idealisti( COanata Timmins, Ont serious injur NMorthland P Thursday, July 23rd., 1931 16 he Vorrupitne Advanee GEO LAKE, Owner and Publisher Bubscription Rates: $2,.00 per year United States .. $3.00 per year Published Every Thursday by int of despond â€"the Beauharn The mill any ap;la Thursday, Julyv eryone Ahas done more than a reaâ€" e is no room or place for the evil alien. The Cochrane Northland g the Government to relieve the the transients who have abused @ Advance endorses this very e North should be relieved from but that is not enough; the alien should be deported where possible ible he should be sent to jail. A rthland Post, puts the matter in "Deport those who don‘t like our eak them." be inclin Â¥ and ho “! nAnAt used Ahe aay and mucnhn ng, The Northland ic thcughts of free is freedom for the a fia . but the fact Â¥ould have to s objectionable of som» seven Iine COCn he menal rd, 193 ng ke $2500.00 ssness ove mil anV |ask that his own country, the United States, should follow Canada‘s lead in barring the products of slave labour and slave conditions, but he also demanded the several thousand highlyâ€"trained American engingers and experts in various fields of industry now in Russia helping the Soviet to carry out the fiveâ€"year plan which aims at demoralizing the whole world should be ordered home at once and if they refused to come that they lose their citizenship. In this comnection he said:â€""These Americans should be brought home. If they are willing to barter away and stain the high ideals of American citizenship for Russia gold, then our Government should say to them, ‘You are an unworthy son and no longer deserve prctection of ‘he American Governâ€" ment.‘ Thirty days is long enough for their return home and failure to do so shculd forfeit their citizenship in cur proud republic." The soâ€"called experts who have been aidâ€" ing Russia have in the majority of cases sold themselves to that country. Not only are they assisting in a plan designed to destroy all that normal men in Canada, the United States, Great Britain and other countries hold as elemental to conâ€" ten‘:‘ment and true life, but these experts have further sold themselves to Russia by their attitude in speaking of the conditions as they saw them. For Russian gold they have turned themselves into propagandists for the Soviet abroad. One engineer returned from Russia told The Advance of the wretched conditicns in Russia and the hopeless situaâ€" tion the people. Yet he wanted The Advance to publish only eulogy of Russia and its communist creed. "If I was quoted as saying anything against the counrtry I could never go back,." he said. This mar was desirous of going back if he could get money encugh. He followed the same methcis as others returning from Russia He wanted a faise imâ€" pression given of Russia and its schomes. _ The glitter of Russian gold made him blind to the menace to his cwn land. Col. Owsicy is right, indeed. Working for Russia, talking for Russia, toâ€"day means figh:ing against all other lands. Canadian and British experts, as well as those from the United States, should be recalled, or the citizenship they gdo not seem to value and mt thay do not appear to believe worthy of defence. cHfensive. In this class may be placed recent déliberate smashing of <the red lights placed at the Schumacher railâ€" ‘;v ay crossing \to protect the public. The smashing of these 'lights must be strongly condemned because of the fact that their destruction endangers the public. The man breaking one of these lights can scearcely avoid placing himself in the catezory of being a potential murderer. In addition he must be classed ‘as thief and a mean thief because the red sigâ€" nal lights are the property of the whole psople. They cost | $45.00 each and no less than four of them have been broken to date. The man committing a crime of this kind should ceritainiy be severely dealt with when apprehended. It is the sort of crime discourages decent peopile in regard l ‘There are some crimes that are particularly mean and | At the annual convention of the Association of Lions Club neld in Toronto last week, Col. Owsley, of Dallas, Texas, president of the association, made an eloquent and inspiring address in which he made telling reference to the menace of communism. In words that gripped the hearts and minds of his hearers he snowed that civilization and Sovietism could not exist toegether in this world. He praised Canada for refusing to assist the Soviet in its plans to demoralize the world. He made it plain that the successful industrialâ€" ism of Soviet Russia with her conscript labour would mean ruin for the workers of the United States. Not only did he ask that his own country, the United States, should follow Canada‘s lead in barring the products of slave labour and slave conditions, but he also demanded "Shat the several thousand highlyâ€"trained American engingers and experts in various fields of industry now in Russia helping the Soviet to carry out the fiveâ€"year plan which aims at demoralizing the whole world should be ordered home at once and if they A Timmins man who was feeling unwell recently consultâ€" ed a doctior. "There is nothing really the matter with you;" said the medical man, "except that you have been applying yourself to business and other affairs too closely; You need a change. You must have a change." The mam replied:â€" "Say, Doc., if I had the change I need to take the change you recommend I wouldn‘t need the change you mean at all." Both the patient and ‘the doctor felt better after that; When Hon. R. B. Bennett, premier of Carada, insists upon carrying through some pulicy that he believes to be for the benefit of this Dominion and its people, tl}ere are certain people who express much indignation. "That man," they say, "Just smashes his way through. Nothing can be done with him. He always insists on having his own way: He is an autocrat." When Mr. Bennett accepts new facts or new views and is ready to change a policy to suit the new condiâ€" tions that appear, tnese same psople® are equally upset. "Did you ever see such a man?" they ask. "Never knows his own mind. Always changing his opinion. He is not firm enough." Appurently, no matter what Mr. Bennett may do, these people will be dissatisfied, and if he were to ds nothing their static would disturb high heaven. Fortunateâ€" ly for Hon. Mr. Bennett, and still more fortunately for the Dominicn of Canada, there are a great number of people in this country who recognize patriotism and ability, and so are ready to praise the present premier on frequent occasâ€" ions. It is doubtful if any premier of Canada has had a more difficult situation to meet than has fallem to the lo: ocf Premier R. B. Bennett. It should in fairness be allowed that he has faced his task with bread‘th of mind and large tolerance and yet retained the firmness without which the situation would be serious indeed. The Renfrew Mercury has discovered a duck at Douglas, Ontaric, that lays two eggs in a day but only every other day. That duck evidently thinks itself a pair of twins workâ€" ing on a T. N. 0. schedule of every other day, like trains Ncs. 17 and 18. Sir Henry Thornton has the temerity to suggest thatracom+ mission be appointedc to study the transportation problems of Canada and make recommendations in the case. The question may we‘ll be asked:â€"*"Why is Sir Henry Thornton being parid arcound $100,000.00 a year?" Possibly Sir Henry is like John Aird, Jr.; he may nct remember why he is paid trifling amounts like $100.000.00 or $125,000.00. For instance, there is the fact that the chairman of the committee investigating the scandal is hewing to the line, letting the chips fall where they may. It is no more than would be expected from Hon. W. A. Gordon. He is seeing that the facts, no matter whom they may concern, are being brought to the light cof day. Then there is also comfort in the thought that there was one politician big‘ enough to scorn any money that had the slightest suggestion of wribse or influence atiached. That pfolitician was Hon. R. B. Benâ€" nett, now premier of Canada. The evidence shows that $200,000.00 was offered to the Conservative Party, but that Hon. Mr. Bennett would not consider its acceptance. There will be general regret that Hon. Mr. King did not keep as close a watch on the contrbutions going to the Liberal Party treasury. The Beaubarnois scandal has many feaâ€" tures that rouse ribald. laughter at the simplicity of the suppised big financial men figuring in the deals, It is not, however, a matiler that can ‘be dismissed with a laugh, or swept asige by any broad suggestions of wholesale crookedâ€" n=ss in this day and generation. It is a case that should be investigated thoroughly with criminal pwosecution inâ€" situted in the instances where such seem: warranted. From the presont indications it would appear that several neople should face trial in the courts for flagrant breaches to community life THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO ‘"Cochrane cannot cure the grievances of the unemployed. so. why do they parâ€" ade here singing the "Red Flag‘ and atiempt to terrify our peaceful citizens? Let them go.on to the seats of the govâ€" ernments, Federal and Provincial, imâ€" stead of: sponging on this town. so comâ€" sistently.:. ‘"North Bay has no unemployed in such groups as we see here on our sideâ€" walks, blocking: traffic and demanding from our womenftlk food of their own choosing: fully recover or noi. Alien agitators have been busy in Cochrane for some time and thesse> féllows with the enâ€" couragement and support of some tinâ€" horn . blindpiggers are held: responsible for the. trouble in Cochrane recently. The letter reférred to déeals with the question:as follows:â€" “Hav-e thee communistic agitators mongst the unemployed chosen Cochâ€" rane, because> of its isolated position, for the testing ground: of their subâ€" versive theories against the established order of things?: Are the homeâ€" â€"~loving citizens of this . small town: going: to: put up very long with: the temper of that mb whichnearly stoned to death Proâ€" vincial Constable Crozier last Monday nigsht? The following letter expresses the opinion of so many psople t in Cochrane but elsewhere in that it is given here in full. A Cochrane people had looket thousands of transients who â€" claim on the town and simply in there, these travelling work: start parades and cther nonsense to annoy the people of Cochrane just as they had troubled. Timmins, Sudbury and other centres.. They concluded their ungrateful performance by tonly assaulting a police officer. It is not definitely known at the time of writing this whether the officer will fully recover or noi. Alien agitators "Are a coupleâ€"of lowâ€"type Bbootleggers and another small potato of this town, who pveach that the existing society should be destroyed to build anew, goâ€" ing to rum this town: from now on? "It is about time the wellâ€"thinking people of this community should band together: in some kind of a Law and Order Committee take direct acâ€" tion:. "It is about time something should be done dtones and hangersâ€"on who are capitalizing the hardships: of the few hundteds of hardâ€"up labourers with a lot of pet on. Communâ€" ism. "Deport. Those who Don‘t Like Our Laws, and Jail Those Who Break Them," is His Summing Up. Citizen of Cochrane |â€" *High Lights in Harmony"â€" Voices His Protest A Canadian Chautauqua Feature week a merchant in North Bay Corn Flakes Mew Cheese o C VICTORY 30â€"OZ. JAR C ZEXTRAORDINARY VALUE!! KoOoXNXâ€"~â€"CHIP BENSON‘S NQO. TIN % * DOHFNIONSTORESE3) What a pleasure it is to shop where your individua} likes and <~dislikes, deterâ€" S [,)‘5’6 Your Dollar Will Never Buy More Than Today, looked â€" after who had no simply drifted OR HALVES 19. ple not in Ca AMA ke CARTON OF 6 DOMINION STORES, 2 PKGS. 9 "Why are these seekers of work not able to drift southwards over the T. N. O. Railway after coming here in droves on the C.N. Railway? told the writer tlat one of the jobless stated that there was more charity and beiter food to be obtained in small towns. Quite true. But are the small towns,. going: to be forever burdened with all the cities‘ problem of relief? "At the rate of 500 or more fioaters to regular population of less than 2000, that this town is handling, all the cutâ€"ofâ€"work cases in Canada could be absorbed by Montreal, Toronto, Winniâ€" peg, Ottawa, Hamilton and Vancouver. "Why don‘t the drifters give us a relief an1i zo to the cities where the moneyed interests are and lay their problems before them? "Cochrane Ihas no work and no hope of providing work for its own indigent populasion. The householders are reâ€" fusing to accede to demands that tea coffee and special foods be prepared at all hours of the day and evening. And why should the taxâ€"payers in general be obliged to maintain a feeding staâ€" tion that has only drawn in more floatâ€" ers because of its very establishment? "The problem is not of our making and should not be laid at our door. "Are we going to have_ to barricade our homes and live in fear and tremâ€" HEDLUND‘S READY COOKED DINNERS Roast Beef Gravy tin : Meat Balls Gravy Tin : Quick Dinner Tin : FOR PRESERVING > Bot. 30 MAYFIELD Side Bacon ...... .10 ICING SuUgRar........ .. J Ibs. 28 McLAREN‘S Summer Drinks. .. Bot. 23 CLARK‘S Potted Meats. ..3 ‘Tins 25 PKGSâ€" 25¢ One: of the most unusual entertainment companies before the public today is the Petrie Quartette and Constance Nevilleâ€"Johns, which will be one of the big musical attractions of the coming Canadian Chautauqua here Miss Constance Nevilleâ€"Johns is a charming coloratura soprano who comes from farâ€"away Australia. She is a graduate of the Melbourne Uniâ€" versity and has appeared in concert, opera and as soloist with symphony orchestras. throughout Australia, New Zealand, Italy, United States and Canada.. 39¢ 293C Dissolves Quickly Reg. Price A Varied Assortment of Highâ€"Grade Biscults 10c¢ 1b. "Where Quality Counts" PARISIEN PACKAGE 1â€"LB. PKG THE PETRIE QUARTETTE INSERTâ€"HERBERT PETRIE QUAKERK BRAND a BC 29e 24¢ "It is time that the believers in law and order to get together and cope with the growing evil of communism and deport those who don‘t like our laws and jail those who break them." bling with a shotgun handy? ‘"The main agitators are known and ncthing is dong to them. Some cf them have ‘been living here for years, mreaching seditious and treasonable doctrines and doing worse and they are allowed to go up and down the highâ€" ways and byâ€"ways, in and out boardingâ€" houses where unenlightened foreigners congregate and spread the insidious proâ€" paganda of Communism by which they expect to profit, not having anything to lose. This year a big black bug, common encugh im this North Land in other years, has been a special nuilsance this year in town, there apparently being ten times the number of theSe big black bugs compared to other years and their presence continuing for weeks instead of for days, as formerly. One man. who ptirticularly hates these bugs has chrisâ€" tened them "the communist bug." Master Lorney Bazinse: is spending his holidays at Cobalt, Verner and cther points scuth. What a pleasure it is to. shop where your individual. likes and <~dislikes, deter=~ mine â€" delay the contents of â€"the . market basket â€" andâ€" you know your dollar> will go further â€" andâ€" buyâ€" more. Just see what you, cam save on your> complete order â€" at » your â€" Domijniwa» Store this week. MAPLE LEAF «ow 2 5> LARGE BOXEs SWEET MIXED 18. Onions ONTARIO COOKING 4 lbs., for Oranges SUTNKIST. SWEET AND JUICY Per Dozen Bananas FINE RIPE FRUIT Per Dozen New Potatoes FINEST ONTARIO 90 lb. bag Weekâ€"End Specials Sausage 2 lbhs. for Rib Stew per Ih. ... Boneless Pot! Roast, per Ib:, .._. Breakfast Bacon Half or whole per ID,;":;;;:..."::.; Chuck Roast, per Ih. Shoulder Roast Beef, per Ib....... WE CARRY A COMPLETE RANGE O0F FRESH FRUITS AND VEGEâ€" TABLES AT ATTRACTIVE PRICE®S® w* ONLY HANDLE THE CHROITâ€" CEST OF MEATS The Kuights of Columbus of Tim+ mins have anfmounced that they wili hold their annumal basket picnic at Porâ€" cupine on Sunday, July 26th. The proâ€" gramme for the day will include races, sports, bail games and other items, and a firstâ€"class good time is assured to all. All_ K. of C. events may be de« pended. upon. to be pleasant and enjoyâ€" able and.it is intended to make this year‘s picgnic an extra spscial event. The picnic this year is to be held near the Hunter Mine and all plans are comple.:e for happy, healthy and wholesome day at Golden City where so many picnics are held and where the pseople enjcoy themselves so well. The Continental Limited, Traing Nos 1 and 2; between Montreal â€"and Vanâ€" couver, daily operating through sleepâ€" ers. These trains use Canadian Naâ€" tional Railways Station at North Bay Trains Nos, 46 and 47â€"Through serâ€" vice diily© between Toronto ang Timâ€" mins, Troquois Falls, Rouyn and Noâ€" randa;, operating Cafe Car Service beâ€" tween â€" Nort‘kt Bay and Swastika, througtr sleepers between Torento and Timmins, also between Toronto, Rouyn and Noranda, Que. These trains use Basket Picnic of th¢ Kaights of Columbus Canadian Natfonal Railways Station at Nortlt Bay: Train No. I7â€"North Bay to Cochâ€" rane Mondays, Wednesdays and Priâ€" dayss. Trailr No I18â€"Cochrane to> North Bay, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturâ€" days. Trains Nos. 17 and 18 use Canadian Pacific Ruailway Station at North Bay. Comnections at Earlton for Elk Lake daily except Sunday. Comnnections at Englehart with trains No. 17 for Charlton Mondays, Wednesâ€" days and FPridays. Local service between Cobalt, Founâ€" taiir Falls and Silver Centre Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Connections at Englehart with train Ni. 18 from Charlton Tuesdays, Thursâ€" days and Saturdays. Comnections at Porquisâ€" Jet. daily for Comnmnaught, South Porcupine, Schuâ€" macker and Timmins. General Freight and Passenger Agent, North Bay, Ont. Service daily except Surday between Coctkrane, Island FPalls, and Praserdale Service Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays between CockHrane,,., Island Falls, Fraserdale andâ€"Goral Rapids. See current Timetabi» or apply to any T. N. O. Railway agent for furâ€" ther particulars. Comnections at Swastika, daily,;, with the Nipissing Central Railway. for Kirkland Lake, Cheminis, Rouyn and Noranda, Que. PEMISKAMING _ AND NORTHERN ONTARIO RATILWAY Commections at Porquis Jit., daily for Troquois Falls. Train Service 21¢ J. PAERRt 10c 120