Made in with Magic Baking Powder Devil‘s Food Layer Cake bake at home, the new Magic Cook Book will give you dozens of recipes for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd., Fraser Ave. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ontario,.. FREE COOK BOOKâ€"When you For luscious layer cakes, light, tender biscuits, delicious pastryâ€" follow Miss Dutton‘s advice. Use Magic Baking Powder. And Miss Dutton‘s praise of Magic is seconded by the majority of diectitians and cookery experts throughout the Dominion. They use Magic exclusively because they know it is pure, and always uniâ€" form. Teething Canadian housewives, too, pree fer Magic. In fact, Magic outsells all other baking powders combined. "I know from experience," says the cookery exâ€" pert of Western Home Monthly, ‘that Magic makes most baLed dishes look and taste better. Its uniform leavening quality gives dependable baking results." "Baby‘s Own Tablets take away that teething fever," writes Mrs. Alired Bungay, North Sydney, NS. Effective also in relieving colds, fever, colic, upset stomach, I constipation. Chilâ€" B dren like them. § §| Absolutely SAFE â€"See analyst‘s "’f- certificate in each m 25¢ package. 231 3 Dr. Williams‘ BABY‘S OWN TABLETS Miss Gertrude Dutton tells why she makes her tins and ‘bake in moderate oven at 350° F. about 30 minutes, When cool, put together and cover thickly with Chocolate or White Icing (recâ€" ipes are in the Magic Cook Book). Cream butter thoroughly ; add sugar slowly, Add beaten yolka; mix thorâ€" oughly,. Add flour sifted with baking powder and salit, alternately with milk; add vanilla and melted thocâ€" olate. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Put into 3 greased laver cake 24 cup butter 44 teaspoon 1% cups sugar 3 teaspoons 3 cegs Magic Bal 1 cup millk Powder 24 cups pastry 1 teaspoon flour (or 2 cupe nilla »xtra and 3 tableâ€" Jeq. unsweet spoons of bread chocolate, flour) melted Davil‘s Focod Layer Cake 4 teaspoon sait 3 teaspoons Magic Baking Powder 1 teaspoon vaâ€" nilla »xtract 3eq. unswectened The Matachewan Premier Mining Syndicate has been organized with a capital of 10,000 units of no par value. The syndicate‘s property consists of 32 mining claims of approximately 1,280 acres, located in Argyle, Cairo and Tvrrell townships in the Matachewan district. Group "A" comprises nine claims adjoining the Ashley Gold Mines where surface work revealed a vein carrving commercial gold values. Group "B" consists of 10 claims in Cair> townâ€" shin and surface work opened up severat strong veins carrying good values in gold. Group "C" comprising 13 claims in Tyrrell township has good indications of mineral values. The syndicate plans to carry out an intenâ€" Chesley Enterprise:â€"We haven‘t seen anything about Gandhi in the dailies for some time. His campaign against the British government must be peterâ€" sive campaign of exploration and deâ€" velopment on its various holdings. ing out or else he has run out of safety pins to support his loin cloth. to civilizationâ€" a contribution in line with the highest humanitarian conâ€" ~iderations." "The supply of this medicinal metal is very inadequate in every country. As the speaker said, it would be absurd to consider the production of radium from Cazadian pitchblende as a mere mining industry. Pitchblende is a meâ€" dicinal ore required chiefly for medical rtwuirposes. Canada has an unique opâ€" portunity to come to the rescue of its swn sufferers and to the succour of suffering humanity in every country under the sun. In his speech, Senator McRae made a remarkable contribution MATACHEWAN PREMIER MINING SYNDICATE NXOW ORGANIZED is, therefore, prohibitive in the majority of cases. If, as is said, the radium can be produced from the Great Bear Lake for a small fraction of this price, it will be easily seen that Govâ€" ernment control and operation of the deposits would mean a beacon of hops for the 45,000 Canadians who are toâ€" day suffering from cancer and for milâ€" lions of other sufferers throughout the world. "At the present time the radium supâ€" ty of the world is absolutely cantrolled by the Belgian trust, which produces 95 per cent. of the world‘s radium supâ€" ply from its African deposits, and which charges exorbitant prices for its proâ€" duct. It is said to charge $70,000 for a single gram, or $50,000 a gram for four grams. As eight grams are elleged to be required for a cancer centre, this means an investment of $400,000 and "It is understood that such action wou‘ld not interfere in the least with the mineral development of the Northâ€" west Territories. As to claims already staked, it is agreed that the holders should be treated generously. In Gen. McRae‘s view, as the Government, through its Radium Commission, must educate the prublic and regulate the disâ€" tribution of radium so as to confine it to qualified users, the Government will probably have t>deal with the manuâ€" facture of radium in one of two ways. It can carry on the manufacture under the direction the Department of Mines or through some controlled private scorporation, or perhaps under the direcâ€" tin of a permanent radium commisâ€" Senator McRae‘s suggestion is that the Government might well consider reâ€" serving all pitchblende deposits from further stakings. Empire puts a different complexion cn it. The Mail and Empire sys:.â€" ‘"Majorâ€"General A. D. McRae, wh~> has been prominently identified with the tremendous . minecral discoveries lately made in the Great Bear Lake region of Nerthwestern Canada, madse 2 prop3sal in the Senate yesterday which, if adopted, will save tens of trousands of lives in this country and throughout the world. The Great Bear Lake deposits, which have already been proved by Government experts to be of large extent, are rich in pitchblende and silver. Pitchblende is the ore from which medicinal radium is extracted. 10on Savys Radium Claims Should be Acquired n ithe proposai of Majorâ€"CGeneral A D. McRae that the Governinent take aver the radium deyusits and develop them for humanity in place of allowâ€" ing the development to profit any group of financial men. The plan, of course, would provide for very generous treatâ€" ment of the prospectors who have acâ€" quired claims and of others who have snpnent time and monty ¢« ~~osnverting Gen. McRae Urges Government to Take Over Radium Discoverics fir the Benefit of Humanity in Genâ€" eral. liscovery they may have made. Wheth:: the claims are deoveloped by public 0 private enterprise the pro:p2c:or shou‘c be well rewardsd. There does not seoem to be ‘any reason why the Governmen: chould not deal as generously as private capital with the rrospector. The Govâ€" vernment, y euch wa . that t *, Tthat the question is w2 ome consideration. No or e to anvythiny that woul to equa rations e matte aeve‘opment w al ight t lookin 1€ it t has been taken Majorâ€"CGeneral A. CGroverninent take nsits and develoyn 1 Min ‘nto MA!ll and comnlexion cn The Norther t migh nlv on l Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"So bashful and shy are the girls of Streatham, South Wales, that they are costing Streatham Hill Congregation Church £60. The sum is to be spent in turning the choir seats round so that the choristers will not face the congregation. The pretty Streatham girls apparently did not like to sing sitting face to face with the congregation, so they decided to leave the choir. Many boys left for the same reason. Now the church is to entice them back by turning the seats so that they face each otherâ€"a position from which they were altered nine years ago. "I love to dream that the birds will swing On the topmost branches and gladly sing, And happy children will gather here _ To play ‘neath my trees from year to year, Then, perchance a pilgrim will pass some day And find a shade by the bleak highâ€" way." ‘"Why toil, kind mother, the livelong day. Planting trees by the bleak highway? You have earned a home and an easy chair In place of toiling and sweating there." She answered, "I love the work, my son, And rest comes sweet when the day is done." (By Richard Posey Campbell) I saw a woman, bent and grey, Planting trees by the bleak highway, And seeds of grases and seeds of flowers She scattered there through the hours. She looked so fragile and old and worn That, touched with pity, I spoke to her. Why plant the flowers on the highâ€" way‘s hem?" She smiled, "The chl.dren will gather them," But the trees you‘re planting, you‘ll pass away Ere they cast a shade by the bleak highway." It matters little that I should die. I can but plant them," she made reâ€" You‘ll know then why W. K. Kellogg makes this uncondiâ€" tional guarantee : "If you don‘t think Kellogg‘s the best and freshest corn flakes you ever tasted, return the empty redâ€" andâ€"green package and we will cheerfully refund your money.‘ We have thousands of visiâ€" tors, every year, who take home with them a picture of sunlit kitchens, gleaming machinery, employees in fresh white uniâ€" forms . . . of cleanliness and care for quality. If you ever come to London, Ontario, we hope you‘ll stop and see us. YOU like to know that the foods you eat are made under sanitary conditions. That‘s why we are always delighted to have people see ‘"where Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes are made." Proud to s how Visitors The Tree Planter THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMIN®S, ONTARIO * |Suggests Views of _ North About Radio grammes has grown so large that very few people listen to the radio now exâ€" cept for some unusual broadcast of special interest. If our American adâ€" vertisers could realize that a minute‘s "blahn" to every two or three minutes music only results in listeners shutâ€" ting off their sets, perhaps th°y would modify the preséent conditions. At present, many cowners use their reâ€" ceivers scarcely at all, and nonâ€"owners brag loud and long at their good judgâ€" ment in abstaining from purchasing a radio when there is so little entertainâ€" ment and so much unadulterated "bunk" on the air. "While we have no hard fseelings against our American cousins, on the contrary the warmest friendship for them, it is extremely unfortunate that the people in the North should be comâ€" pelled‘ to depend for 99 per cent. of their radio reception on U.S. stations. Even if the programmes were not saturated with advertising, they still would be American in thought and ideals, American news, American poliâ€" tics and justice, or lack of it. While the steady stream of this is exasperatâ€" ing to the adult citizens of Canada, the effect is much more serious on the reâ€" minds of the rising generation. From the tiny tots who listen to Santa Claus in Cincinnati to high school students following rugby and ‘baseball finals, it is a steady flood of A.merica.n propaganda. Not In North "The present Canadian system of broadcasting may be satisfactory to people residing in the vicinity of the "There is, of course, practically no daylight reception in Northern Ontario worthy of the name, except, perhaps, in the odd "freak" location where the noise level is exceptionally low and the signal strength exceptionally high. In this district we occasionally get some U.S. stations during the daytime, but almost invariably with such a backâ€" ground of noise that there is no pleaâ€" sure listening. ‘"The percentage of advertising to entertainment in the evening proâ€" Programmes Not Good "In addition to the difficulty of getâ€" ting and holding reception from a Canadian station, the quality of proâ€" grammes that come in are very poor. Quite often we find that when CKGW or CKAC do happen to come in, that they are hooked up with an American chain broadcast, that, if worth listenâ€" ing to, can be better heard from any one of a dozen U.S. stations. assigned â€" Trequency latterly," Mr. Wood points cout, "CFRB is the only statior that has been comâ€" ing in well, but even when listening to this station on a modern selective set, WLW‘s signais wili yuite often break in repeatedly. CKAC is now heterodyned by a Mexican station and CKGW is alâ€" most impossible to get, free of interâ€" ference." big United States stations. On many sets it is easier to get three Mexican stations than any Canadian station. Much of the recertion is marred by American stations swinging from their assigned frequency ‘"Forâ€"â€" instance, most Tfavourable conditio Canadian stations come in wif a small fraction of the volume F. E. Wood, of the TIroquo‘s Falls board of trade, has writtenâ€"to the parâ€" liamentary committee on radio, setting forth what Mr. Wood believes to be the general views of the North in the matter. Mr. Wood has sent a copy of his letter to W. O. Langdon, president of the Ontario Associated Bosards of Trade with the suggestion that the question might be further folâ€" lowed up. Another copy of the letter was forwarded Jos. A. Bradette, M.P., whoa is following the work of the parâ€" committee very closely., The letter deals with a matter of great interest to the North Land. Iroquois Falls Mian Writes to Radio Commission. Believes that the Views be Expresses are Those of North. The letter continue are so many : chould be very s matter at issue. he points out t out thas even under irable conditions the as come in with only 12 NTA â€"Land. radios here that special attention In Mr. Wood‘s GLM_ When you buy a the Toronto Star:â€"What next? A corâ€" respondent writes a letter to the New York Sun suggesting that the Washingâ€" ton government issue annual permits at $5 each to anyone who wishes to visit gda. He explains that these tourists *tirnd money for go>xd liquor in Canada which should be spent at home and the United States governâ€" ment ought to derive some revenue from this outâ€"ofâ€"bounds spending. larger centres of South Canada, but * would like to meet one "member" of the Ontario Radio League who would testify that present conditions were satisfartory anywhere in Northern Onâ€" tarit. Surely the population up here deserves some consideration. "If we in the North could get conâ€" sistent receprsion from even one powerâ€" ful Canadian station free from adverâ€" tising, it would be marvellous and any reasonable fee would be gladly paid by every set owner in this vast country. "I sincerely trust that the report of your committee will pave the way to a radical change and early improvement in present conditions." According to eyveâ€"witness stories, Mr. Pinard was driving in an automobile when, in some unexplained nanner, ho fe‘l from the ear, his head striking a fender and causing a fracture of the skull. > Lucien Pinard, wellâ€"known and proâ€" minent lawyer, of La Sarre, Que., was fatally injured on Thursday of last week on the Amos highway and died a few hours later at the Amos hospital. Only in unity can the problems of proâ€" er land uses be solved. The forester is trained for just such services. Canada possesses lands for alil purâ€" poses in plenty. It remains for a uniâ€" fied service to segregate lands for their most profitable use and then manage them is such a way that they will be | most productive of the forest products they are best fitted for, whether it be for farm, forest or fish and game crops. conflicting or overlapping services.l LUCIEN PINARD DIES FROM INJURIES IN CAR ACCIDENT the harvesting? _ Further, the great lure of our tourist business is fish and game. Here again the proper use of land comes into play, and the pros and cons of how such lands can be most profitably used must be carefully weighed and definitely decided, with a view to attracting and holding tourist business. We cannot afford to have conflicting or overlapping services. of Porestry. There is much to | unification of services Oof land is well nigh complishment unless is put into practice. adsa has suffered bec ng alone. The proper utilization, alâ€" vays with an eye to conservation, can only be observed if the porest is hanâ€" dled by competent foresters. What proâ€" t in fire protection alone if timber is W "mined" and forest growth wasted in An important law was enarcted in Minnesota in 1931, that of organizing the Department of Conservation. This act provides for the appointment of five citizens to act as a conservation commission. The plan and purpose of this law, according to the provisions, is to coâ€" ordinate and unify the administration and objectives of the departments conâ€" cerned with the state‘s natural reâ€" sources, which include Porestry, Game and Fish, Drainage and Waters, and Lands and Minerals. The management, authority to sell and supervision of cutting of timber on state land has been transferred from the Timber Department to the Division Forest and OQutdoors, the journal of the Canadian Forestry Association, had the following editorial reference in its last issue:â€" Unified Forest Service Urged for the Dominion h An inquest will be held fort orestry pursuits ed for settlement ) failure from th intrinsic qualitie Then, again, t ed b All will be pieased to see I. E. Dunn, relie! officer, sanitary inspector, etc., recovered from his recent illness and able to be back at his dutiecs again. fire until the dence as lv be des ugaInst. Il is ds New Liskeard pl There is danger alty for giving : small fire the culty th much greater of volunteer service than most citizens realize., Even at that, however, every fire call means a cost of some proportions. This is inâ€" dicated by the following paragraph from The New Liskeard Speaker last week:â€"â€""Owing to the fact that there have been so many small fires this year it was decided at the regular meeting of the council on Friday night, that in future, all those causing fires through gross carelessness would be prosecuted. The building byâ€"law of the town states that no ashes are to be placed in woodâ€" en conta‘ners, etc..and yvet some of the gross carelessness w The building byâ€"law that no ashes are to on conta‘ners, etc..a citizens of the tov lor instanc mutch grea Ratepayers do not always remembe the cost of services of one kind or an other given them by the municipality There is the matter of fire protection for instancs. In this service there is : UOF SMALL TOWX OR CTTi T A THE COS IRE®S® TO ABOUT FE he MILK FROM CANADIAN COWS, PACKED IN CANADA CANS AND CAsSES Carnation y im proving some of the things ried against the householder. If a en holds off sending in an alarm i1 the fire gets headway, the eviâ€" ce as well as the building will likeâ€" e destroyed. It would seem better agave ‘byâ€"laws regulating the cleanâ€" of chimneys and the disposition cf es, etc., and then enforce these byâ€" s strictly, irrespective of whether s occur or not. It seems to be false icmy to do anything to discourage turningâ€"in of alarms for firs at the . sign of danger. Some Bab|es owe i L\ their lives! bevond ‘‘from Contented Cows So far this 3 > Aalarms and is danger tha THAT‘S what grateful mothers often write us, praising Carnation Milk for baby feeding. Famous specialists recommend it because of its, purity, uniformity and safety. _ Carnation is heatâ€"treated forming finest, softest curds in the baby‘s stomach. And homogem/atlon breaks up the coarse fat globules into easily assimilable ones. [This makes (arnatmn superâ€"smooth in cookery, too. _ Splendid when creaming coffee and for use with fruits and cereals.â€" Economical because doubleâ€"rich. the hold Listen to the Carnation "Vagabonds" on the "Contented Hour"‘ from Station CKGHW 8 :o 8.30 every Monday night. eraf chimneys ‘onsiderat uUJUiUul, AROWESver, in will prove pra kpi>rienced Liskeard is and many may o likely to bs diffâ€" me of the things rite for free Baby Book and Cook Book Carnation Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont. there wlll b n in case older may ing the ca Sam itin en ha McLAVUVGHLIN â€" BUICEK " Iry this for Supper tonight ! " Now we can own a 4A tablespoons 2M cups St. Chasles Milk rice § cup sugar 1 54 cups water § teaspoon salt Nutmesg Wash rice thoroughly, then add with the sugar and salt to the milk diluted with water. Pour into a buttered baking dish and add a sprinkling of nutmeg. Setthe dish in a pan of hot water and bake three hours in slow oven {300°F.), stirring several times the first hour to prevent rice from settling to bottom. This is just one of the many practical recipes from our new cook book "The Good Proâ€" vides."* This book tells you how you can make nearly 200 delicious dishes with St. Charles Milk. Send your name and addrews end the book will be malled to /’\ you FREE. CANADIAN. MADE April 28th