;pmsssxsxxsxssxssx“xsss- Rinn Bros. 4 54* *3 *4 Moving SALE Jms new Indian Herb Tonic Never Die Don‘t suffter, you are only here for a has taken Timimins by stor.n. Men | short time. You can‘t be happy if you are not well. This new tonic will make zgmogén;gnggje:ge;;eâ€glyou w-:ll.t If it doesn‘t it won‘t cost it. The sale is so great that you we were sold completely out. Toâ€"day| NCVver before mnas a medicine been we have lots more. sold containing the wonderful herb This new â€".â€"flâ€".oâ€"-ggâ€"uâ€"uâ€"-u-u-â€"gcâ€" 0M .\/.,.l/llllllflf’f%’lrff’éfgf,ffjflfflu%?lll’déf“yfllyyffflféffé’?ffï¬lllf/.l/l./ï¬fu(, Poison causes illâ€"health, it hangs around somewhere in the sysâ€" tem and keeps gathering more all the time. The New Marvellous Indian Herb Tonic (Never Die) goes right through your whole system. It enters the blood and poison moves out. Are you Weak, Nervous, No Ambition, No Appetite and all Rundown. Don‘t Give up. At last a new remedy is at hand. Hundreds have proven its wonderful healâ€" ing powers. Never before has a medicine worked such wonders. Drive the Poison Out. Thursday, April 21st, 1932 In keeping with the times we are cutting our overhead and are moving the last week of April to the Ostrosser Block. We want our stock as low as possible for moving, consequently for the next two weeks we are giving exceptional prices on our complete stock. We strive to give the same courteous treatment to all and no merchandise will be thrust upon you. Visit our store during this sale and buy your requirements for Spring. Sale Prices are Strictly Cash Compare the Merchandise and Prices Then Use Your Own Judgment automobile bearing this emâ€" blem, you not only get the utmost in motor car value but you provide gainful employment for a Canadian workman for an average of 87 days . . . SEE THE, NEW CANADIAN.BUILT OLDSMOBILES AT OUR SHOWROOMAS will end April 30th Marshallâ€"Eeclestone Limited Timmins, Ontario Timmins, Ontario â€"Good Health Comes In. Shoes and Rubbers | Newest materials and styles on sale right at the start of the season. Just a few of last year‘s Coats and | Dresses which must be cleared beâ€" E fore moving hence the rldiculous] price of [ Exclusive numbers to choose from Newest styles, colours and priced right. Sizes 14 to 44 Moving Saleâ€"20 p.c. Discount Lingerie, Hosiery, Gloves, Scarfs, Millinery, Purses, Handkerchiefs, Sweaters, Blouses, Skirts, Corsets, Many lines that are discontinued broken sizes, etc. Moving Salcoâ€"Half Price 25 p.c. Discount on all Y ard Goods Every Shoe and Rubber in stock to clear less While the thndisns and animals were aware of its magic power to heal the sick, the white man knew little about it till toâ€"day. For the first time it is scient. "cally compounded and is offered to you in palatable form. It is so harmless that a child can take it. Bad Stomach, Rheumatism, Bad Kidneys and Liver all sit up and look after Never Die is fed to the system. It fills Never Die. While this new tonic conâ€" tains other herbs and barks, we attriâ€" bute the wonderful magic healing powers of the tonic to the herb Never Die. 20 p.c. Discount Moving Saleâ€"20 p.c. Discount 454444 * 25 p.c. Discount you buy an Dresses $2.95 each THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO One of the outstanding addresses at the recent convention of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy at Montreal was that of Lord Bessborâ€" ough, Governorâ€"General of Canada. He referred in commendatory to the Minâ€" industry of Canada and pointed out the suprising developments achieved in the past few years He made it plain that he considered that Canada had very decided importance in the way of mining when viewed from the world standpoint. In opening his address Lord Bessborâ€" ough said that he had been for many years connected with the diamond minâ€" ing industry in South Africa, and diaâ€" meonds, as it happened, were one of the few treasures of the earth that the teeming soil of Canada had so far not yielded to man‘s ingenuity and perseâ€" verance in any considerable quantity. After delving into history to show the importance of metals of various kinds, His Excellency said: Mining Impresses Governorâ€"General A large bottle sells for $1.35 worth $35.00. Cut out something else to save the money for this new healthâ€"giving tonic. You will live longer, you will enjoy good health. It‘s up to you. If you are satisfiea to go on grumbling about your ill health, feeling tired and a bore to everyone around you, then C.K., but if you wish to be filled with new energy and pep, bright and cheerâ€" ful. take Nover Die and note the transformation. Every bottle is full of pen. Every bottle brings sunshine into the home. Come on, it‘s here waiting for you. Wide Range of Mineral Wealth of Canada Considered Remarkable by Lord Bessborough. Adâ€" dress at recent Minâ€" ing Convention. Mining‘s Influence "In fact your profession has probably had a more profound influence on the course of the world‘s history than any other that aone might name. Civilizâ€" ation began no doubt, with the discovâ€" ery of agriculture,â€"with the realization that two blades of corn could be made to grow where one grew before. But that very discovery, though it turned man from a nomad, ever wandering from place to place in ssearch of food, into a domestic creature of settled haâ€" bits, soon came to act as a drag on the rirogress that it had initiated. Man tended to becomeâ€"as agriculturists, sometimes do even to this dayâ€"rooted to the very soil he was tilling, and loathe to think of anything beyond the prospects of his next crop. Its failure and the resulting hunger, may Ooccaâ€" sionally have driven him to revise his methods, or to shift his quarters; but the spur which really urged him forâ€" ward on his next march towards civilâ€" ization was his everâ€"growing need for metal. In his struggle with the unâ€" born forces of nature, in his struggle against the ravages of wild beasts, in his struggle to protect his own life and property from enemies among his own kind, it was metal, and only metal that gave him the hope of mastery. Rudyard Kipling, in a story that probâ€" ably every metallurgist reads, has drawn a vivid picture of what initiation into the art of metalâ€"working meant to a primitive people who had hitherto had to rely on the treacherous fiint for its weapons; it must have been a revolution in living infinitely greater you with peéep, energy and makes men and women strong. Never Die Tonic is sold in Timmins at The Goldfield Drug Store and in South Porcupine at The Rexall Drug Store. D~a‘t put it off until toâ€"morâ€" row get a bottle toâ€"day, toâ€"morrow you will feel better. OLDSMOBILE QOwners Know Dependability "It is not so many years since Canâ€" ada was not generally classed by the world at large as ons of the leading metalliferous countries; the world at large thought of her largely as a proâ€" gqucer of wheat, lumber, woodâ€"pulp, and furs What sn immonss change the work of one generation has wrought in the whole position! "It is only a very few days since Dr. Camsell gave you a wonderfully clear exposition of Canada‘s share in the mineral production of the British Emâ€" pire and I will not enlarge on this topic. But I cannot refrain from reiterating one or two of the most startling and striking points in his address., "But, though I have not yet had the opportunity of entering a Canadian mine or smelting plant, I have had access, like every other Canadian citiâ€" zen, to one mine of inexhaustible treaâ€" sures. I refer to the publication of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics,. We are told that figures talk, and the voice of the figures relating to the mineral wealth of this Dominion speaks no unâ€" certain message. It is a message that should bring considerable comfort to those who hold by the old adage about not putting all one‘s eggs in one basâ€" ket. For a study of the facts and fiâ€" gures to which I refer brings home to one very forcibly indeed that Canada has a particularly fine assortment of baskets for her eggs. "For instance in the total mineral production of the whole Empire, Canâ€" ada now stands third. As regards the rrecious metals, she comes next to South Africa in the production of gold, and the prospects of her largely inâ€" creasing her output in the future seems assured; her contritbhution of silver again is over 50 per cent. of the supply of the whole British Empire. But it is the wide range of Canada‘s mineral wealth which is so particularly reâ€" markable; Canada is the only source for aluminium in the Empire; she finds nineâ€"tenths of the nickel consumed by the entire world. She is the Empire‘s leading purveyor of platinum, and gives it oneâ€"third of the lead which it reâ€" quiries; while she is a notable contriâ€" butor of asbestos, gypsum, mica, sulâ€" phur, pyrites, and a number of other minerals, of whose very use, I am ashamed to say, I am ignorant.‘ Empire Sursey "All over the British Empire statesâ€" men and economists are engaged in making survey, with especial care, of the resources of their own countries. They are engaged in estimating with the aid of innumerable exprrts, the exâ€" tent of the contribution which those countries can make towards the realizâ€" ation of some form of economic unity within our common Empire. We are all, in fact, at this moment busy takâ€" ing stock; and in that process, the reâ€" markably comprehensive and scientific record that has been compiled of the mineral wealth of this country will be of the greatest possible value. "In this stockâ€"taking, Canada can show one asset quite ptculiar to herself and io no other country. Canada‘s capital city has been selected as the meeting place for a conference to which future generations may well look back as one of the landâ€"marks in the history of the British Empire. Its imâ€" portanceâ€"though there is no need to emphasize it when you all appreciate itâ€"can be gauged by the strength of the delegation which will represent the than we can concieve, familiar though we are with immense and revolutionary changes in methods of transporcation and communication, and in othar phaâ€" ses of human life. "Its importance is indicated, indeed, by the actual names given to successive stages in man‘s developtnent; the Stone Age gives place to the Iron Age, which in turn is followed by the Bronze Age:; in fact our own civilization might well be said to rest on a foundation of all the metals known to man, so ind sp;:nâ€" sable has each and all of them b>s>mnso "Within the next few years tha‘ ° ; here I hope to see for myself, above and below ground, corvst1 amount of both mining and metallurgy withâ€" in this great Dominion of Canada; but for the moment you will not expect me to claim more than a superficial knowledge of these two great industries. Scott Turner, director of the Bureau of Mines at Washington, D.C., brought a message of greeting and good wishes from the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, to the Canâ€" adian mining industry and the people of the Dominion. _ He mentioned the fact that the best of relations had always exâ€" isted between the mining industries in the two countries, He himself was a member of the Toronto branch of the Mining Institute and he had spent The president of the Canadian Inâ€" stitute of Mining and Metallurgy, F. W. Gray, then presented to His Excelâ€" lency, Lord Bessborough., the Governorâ€" General, a paper weight made from a block of gold ore from the Hollinger Mine at Timmins, as a souvenir of his visit and of the interest he had taken in the mining industry. Arthur B. Purvis, president of Canaâ€" dian Industries Limited, was another speaker who made interesting points. He thought the most promising road cut of the present depression was through new discoveries and that in this regard the mining industry had a better chance than any other. Care would need to be taken, however, that the burden of taxation was not made too hard to bear. Mr. Gray then introduced the new president, Prof. J. A, Allien, of Edmonâ€" ton, who spoke briefly. Hon. W. A. Gordon, Dominion Minâ€" ister of Mines, was the next speaker at the banquet at which the Governorâ€" General smtke. The Minister from the North paid tribute to the wide knowâ€" ledge that the Governorâ€"General had displayed on many occasions regarding the resources of the Empire. Hon. Mr. Gordon did not think the people of Canada had come to a full realization of the value of the mining industry to the Dominion and how much mining had contributed to the advancement of Canada. He paid special tribute to the men of Cobalt and other parts of the North Land who had contributed so largely to the impulse and the inspiraâ€" tion that had opened up other mining camps throughout the country. They had shown great courage in overcoming the difficulties and their work was an inspiration to the ~prospectors of toâ€" day. Hon. Mr. Gordon said that with all the natural resources of the Dominâ€" ion, the problem that confronted them at the moment was how they could, as part of the British Emri‘re, coâ€"ordinate those great resources with the other units of the Empire so that they could be interdependent. He looked forward to the time when the British Empire from a mineral standpoint would be independent of the rest of the worla, and in this connection, Canada would surely leag the way. Old Country; and if, as ali of us must earnestly hope, results commensurate with its importance should issue from it, then those results will be indissolubly connected for all time with the name of Ottawa." Branches:â€" COBALT KIRKLAND LAKE Specializing in Canadian Mining Shares GONTARIO Rrivect private wire connections to Toronto Montreal, New York, Chicago and Winnipeg Wrap all Garbage in paper. Keep your Garbage Can covered Use plenty of Chloride of Lime which san ne procured at the Town Hall free. boH it for at least 20 minutes. Ali Outszide Tollets must be made A;$ prposf. By Order of THE BOAERD OF HEALTHE Outlining various modes of preparing fish foods for the table, and giving number of recipes, a new fish cook book is being issued by the Dominmion Departâ€" ment of Fisheries. The booklet, whici is entitled "FPish and How to Cook it," has been prepared under the «direction of Mrs. Evelene Spencer, a woman with a continentâ€"wide reputation as a speâ€" cilalist in fish cookery, who is now on the department‘s staff. Both English and French editions of the book have been made and coplies are available at a price of ten cents each. Persons who wish the book should write the Departâ€" ment of Fisheries, Ottawa, giving name and address plainly, specifying whether the French or Englisn edition is desirâ€" ed, and forwarding ten cents for each copy ordered. Alliston Herald:â€"That many young fellows in Toronto are abusing the genâ€" erosity of people in the towns betweern. here and the vity came to light in the course of an investigation made by some CP.R. detectives who discovered that Toronto young men jump CPR. trains, andg doubtless the trains of the C.N.R,. running in other directions ard got‘ing off at the outlying towns beg their mea‘s for a day and sometimes more while they are picking up all the cash they can with a hard luck story. Go‘ing back to Toronto they visit the theatres and see the hockey games as long as the money lasts. Arthur Notman president of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgy also ‘briefly expressed his congratulations to the Canadian society for the contributions they had made to mining progress, congratulating them that they had passed the United States in gold production and hoping that they would soon pass Africa. NEW FISH COOK BOOK NOW AVAILABLE TO HOUSEWITVE® many years in the North Country. He said it was always a pleasure for kKim to return to Canada. Among other guests were Hon. J. E. Perreault, Minister of Mines for Queâ€" Architect Ontario Land Surveyer Buillding Plans Estimates, Etc. Old P.0. Bldg., Timmins Phone 362 Arch.Gillies,B.A.8c.,0.L.S. ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS asing well water mus