(ae M 34144 3 S *LX 414 Our Want Ad. Column Brings Sure Results Everythinsg for Building MILLWORK Branch Offices and Yards atâ€"Sudbury, Kirkland Lake, Timmins, Ont. and Noranda, Que. Timmins Office closed Saturday afternoons all year round. LET US MACHINEâ€"SAND YOUR HARDWOOD FLOORS HILLâ€"CLARICFRANGIS LTD. Head Office and Factoriesâ€"New Liskeard, Ont. CHEVRCLET §S1X EVROLET LEADERSHIP! Lrve esfiablCoh=A hundred thousand owners of lowâ€"priced cars throughout Canada were invited recently to tell what they thought was Chevrolet‘s most imporâ€" tant story. Like a recurrent theme through the thousands of entries received was the conviction â€"Chevrolet leadership is based on the goodwill of the men and women who have tested the Chevrolet Six in millions of miles of driving. The Chevrolet Six you buy today is a proved car; proved on the hard testing ground of a nation‘s roads and byways to the satisfaction of thousands of your fellowâ€"Canadians. It has won acknowledgâ€" ment today as the Great Canadian Value, just as this proud title has been won by each succeeding Chevrolet since the first of the line came No wonder, then, that since January 1st, Canadians have purchased more Chevrolets than any other car, regardless of price. Wise motorists have said in no uncertain way that they want sixâ€"cylinder smoothâ€" ness, freeâ€"wheeling, syncroâ€"mesh gearâ€"shifting, Fisher bodies, four parallelâ€"mounted springs â€" and the other Chevrolet features without which no 1932 car can possibly be called complete! Timmins Garage Co. Limited torvy at Oshawa, seventeen years ago Prompt Attention Given to all Kinds of Repair Work. Timmins, Ontario BUILDER‘S SUPPLIES N OTORS this year, net } 040,806, equal tC against net prof equal to $1.06 rv From the tot: IN CANADA out of the be found on it. I am sure all these be found on it, I am sure all these take up arms and fight for the island if Uncle Sam were to claim it. One thing that the Almighty did was to put lots of big rivers and lakes, in the North to supply water to make a deep St. Lawrence river. Why howl at the iNcrth and say there is nothing any good? It is pure craZy for anyone to condemn the North after it has alâ€"| ready put us in second place for gold mining. The West is) just like the North. It has its grain and gold and other products, and it is for no other reascn that the deep St. Lawrence wWaterway is wanted to the head of the lakes. Never mind‘ Mr. Kicker and \ Faultâ€"finder, the North will not miss you! She will forge ahead faster than ever in the near future and if you don‘t like it my advice is keep away from it. The world is a big place and if you think there is a better place than Norâ€" | thern Ontario, why, go there. Tf.." At were not for Northern Ontario and Quebec and all the northern parts of Canada, the tourist traffic in Old Scuâ€" thern Ontario would be cut off threeâ€" quarters. If Old Ontario wants to keep ! thousands of her men unemployed and ldo herself all sorts of harm just kick and do all she can to prevent Northern Ontario from getting new roads or anyâ€" ! thing else she needs. Howlers About the North are Busy Now Moosonece Being Knocked, but the Whole North will Continue to Develop and to Confound Those Who Now are Howling. Dear Sir:â€"The wolves are howling | at the Sault these days, and an army of twoâ€"legged wolves are howling at Moosonee and everything else that means prosperity and a greater Norâ€" thern Ontario. Canada holds second place as a producer of gold, but Southâ€" ern Ontario and a great imany of its| newspapers certainly hold first place , for world knockers and kickers. The Knee" would be a more appropriate | name than Moosonee, and it states| that from Coral Rapids, nine miles| north is moss, moss, moss! It dces not state what there may be underâ€" neath that moss down deep. _ There was moss, moss, all around Dome Mines and a golden sidewalk was under it. When the T. N. O. was started everything North was Christmas trees, moss swamp and nothing any good. Toâ€"day it is towns, cities, farm lands, silver mines, gold mines, paper mills and many Other things, and down in Toronto and Old Ontario there are skyl scrapers and many millionaires, also | many fine residences and thousands of people working who would otherwise be with the unemployed away down there. Yes, the new North is such a wonderful I place toâ€"day that they are even runâ€" ning cheap excursions from it to Toâ€" ronto, whereas it should be cheap exâ€" cursions to Northern Ontario. Some days there will be excursions from Mocoâ€" sonee. Now, you who are knockers let me ask you if there are not thousands cf miles of rock and mineral in the North, such as iron and coal, beyond all this moss they talk about. There sure is and billions of dollars are there waiting. No doubt when the country does prove up good things you and those who toâ€"day are knocking will be some of the first ones to go there seekâ€" ing a fortune. It makes me laugh to read about Toronto and the southern part of Ontario being so good and reliâ€" gious, especially on Sunday, and beâ€" lieving that the Almighty made the world in six days, yet a great many of these same people seem to think that He did not know what he was doing when he made Northern Ontario, and in fact, all Northern Canada. If the Lord had put an island out in the "Fram.«©ranradanr and it was two To the Editor The Advance, in fact, all Nortnern UAIldtUd4. A1L Lord had put an island out in ccean from Labrador and it was miles square and nothing but mo be found on it. I am sure all 1 ‘anâ€" it Tâ€"â€"am" sure all /1 ‘Try The Advance Want Advertisements A year or so ago I was sending writeâ€" ups to The Advance from the lookout tower at Ramore just five miles south of the Croesus Mines and I made the remark that I felt sure a new mining town with some big ones would be seen a short distance from the tower. Good luck to the Hollinger in the Hyslop opâ€" tions! May there be a bigger Hollinger there, and it is just a few miles Aaway from this tower. The gold is there, and the mines too. No better spot! But the kncockers will not think so. Yours truly, H. A. PRESTON NORANDA MINES OUTPUT sSHOWS INCREASE OVER $3,050,046 in the first quarter of the year, while net profit at $2,040,806 conâ€" trasted with $1,081,441 in the first three months of the yvear, 718942 100,000 4,034, 2 .18 Schumacher, Ont 2A Y $6,203,363 Timmin THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO he pare 3( 040,8066 half of , Limâ€" 03 363 ON netr 19 Hope Renewed in the Lumber Industry Building of St. Lawrerce Waterways Would Assist Industry. Embargo on Russian Exports to Britain Would Help. The mining industry is so importi to the North that it often overshadc the importance to this country of other industryâ€"lumbering. The c lapse of the lumber industry has Tt its effect in making the North if the present depression. Many men out of ‘work in Northern towns conditions in the lumber industry. It is recognized that if there were an embargo on Russian forest products now going into Britain the situation for Canadian lumbermen will be vastly improved. For this reason the decision of the Imperial Conference at Ottawa is watched with the keenest interest. If the Conference fails to result in the shuttingâ€"out of Russia‘s slave products of the forest, the Conference will itself be in large measure a failure, for it will chow that other considerations than the good of the Empire are given first place. In an editorial article last week The Sudbury Star took up the question of the rehabilitation of the lumber inâ€" dustry. The article is well worth thought and consideration. The Sudâ€" bury Star says:â€"â€" "Renewed hope that the Canadian lumbering industry, at one time virtuâ€" ally first in importance in the employ â€" ment of labour, expenditures for genâ€" eral commodities and in contribution to the favourable trade balance of the Dominion, is to be rehabilitated, is now discernible by virtue of the progress made in negotiations at the Imperial Erenomic Conference between Canaâ€" dian representatives and experts of the United Kingdom. other industryâ€"lumbering. The coiâ€" lapse of the lumber industry has had its effect in making the North feel the present depression. Many of the men out of ‘work in Northern towns at present are men who could normally find employment in the woods. There is practically no forest work in progress at present, so the situation for the North is certainly not improved by thae "That the consummation of.an agreeâ€" ment with the old country resulting in largely increased trade for Canada in forest products would mean renewe. activity in : Northern Ontario worth millions of dollars annually, is a foreâ€" gone conclusion, and lumbermen of the Sudbury and Algoma districts have nt been slow to place their cause squarely before the British delegates at Ottawa. In Mr. George B. Nicholson, M.P. for East Algoma, who is chairman of the Canadian lumbermen‘s committee, and a man who has intimate knowledge of the lumber business through years of association with it, the presentation of every phase of the industry‘s claims every pnase will be th championed. "Though t wWilling TO @Adopt wWIilll TESDECL iJ LIi¢ purchase of Canadian forest plâ€"oducts in preference to those of Russia and other countries outside the Empire. The Canadian committee representing lumbermen of the various provinces, it is reported from Ottawa, have maae encouraging progress in their efforts to effect an understanding with the 3ll Cy says that a car is as young as it acts and looksâ€"our mechanical staff, body and fender departâ€" ment can make an expert job of keeping your car acting and lookâ€" ing voung. 44 Bruce Avenue South Porcupine, Ont. AT Iveready Service Station *A woman 1s onLy AS OLD AS SHE LOOKSâ€"AND aA MaAn \s NEVERMR OLD TILL HE APPROVED AUTOMOTIVL SERVICE G) Ciol©®GY) QUITS LOOKIN®‘!â€" Phone 15 UumDe i still eality he v OT ng and millions m the zh] Sudbur Anug:! infai bre ndustry meet 1 im . > PhI chrane pend ‘upon porters are °S clalim efficientl With hich nave TE oodman in the bilities thne an in ant i1de fin aen n British Isles Preliminary negotiations IROQUOIS FALLS MAN RUNS have given reason to hope that some CAR OVER SLEEPING GOALIE agreement may be evolved which will mean millions of dollars extra in trade Howard "Shorty" Waish, goalie of the for the fjumber industry. Eskimo hockey team last season is in "Last year, according to informatiOn | ine fTroquois Falls hospital suffering revealed at the conference, Russian €*®â€" | from injuries sustained at Harmon porters sold to the United Kingdom 1.â€" | rake last week when a car driven by 300,000,000 board feet of lumber of variâ€" | yjckey Osborne, passed over him unâ€" ous species, which is equivalent t0 | ger peculiar circumstances. nearly half of the normal production After a dip in the lake, Walsh rolled of lumber throughout Canada. As a himself in a blanket and went to sleep preliminary to a transfer of this huge | directly in front of the wheels of Osâ€" business to the Dominion, the Canaâ€"| | borne‘s parked car. The owner apâ€" dian lumbéermen clamour for An CM® / wasaamnas tha rar tha ranar ant dian lumbermen bargo against S ber, and their casual observer, signed. sudbury district represents per cent. of the selling price la at Liverpool. If ports along th shore", such as Little Curren River and Spragge, were made ible to seaâ€"going vessels, freight under the proposed plan of Lawrence waterways adeve would be reduced by half. ‘"The Canadian proposal of an emâ€" bargo against Russian goods within the Empire, it is authentically learned from Ottawa, has not been well reâ€" ceived by the British delegates. But the inexhaustible supply of standing timber available for commercial purâ€" poses and the dependence upon the lumber industry of a large porticn of Canada‘s population are special conâ€" siderations that are being stressed at the parleys. That they may overâ€" shadow the political and economic asâ€" pects as seen by the experts of the.old land, is a good ground for hope, at least." PROFIT IN LOW WITH CHEAP A reduction in the cost Of power, following the acquisition by the Onâ€" tario Hydro Commission of the Abitibi Canyon power development of the Onâ€" tario Power Service Corporation, will make it possible to develop hitherto unâ€" worked lowâ€"grade ore depioasits in Norâ€" thern Ontaric, Premier Georgs S Henry stated last week. "Power at the Canyon will be availâ€" able to the province at capital cost of less than $90 a horsepower." said the Premier. "It is the lowest cost of any major plower development that I know of in the province. Power at Chippeâ€" wa was produced for $140, and even the power which will be made available by the seaways project will cost $120." Defending the terms offered by the province to the Ontario Power Service bondholders, Premier Henry claimed that the cost of the project as r!anned by the province compared very favourâ€" ably with that under the original priâ€" vate ownership scheme. "Nct only have the interest charges on the bonds been reduced, but, the entire capital stock has been written off. There will be no dividends to pay. In addition to this, the government has retained unâ€" der the agreement the privilege of reâ€" deeming the bonds at any time," h: said. Milvertorn Sun:â€"What thi needs is less people saying country needs. raed Ct § S ~S # VY J Z Â¥HH O YVZ V Lo ui ST A N DA RD attitude clamour for an em iet dumping of lum GRADE ORE POWEKR AT HAND ‘ made acC freight cha in of the ccount[ry what this nort Blin n Howard "Shorty" Walsh, goalie of the Eskimo hockey team last season is in the Iroquois Falls hospital suffering from injuries sustained at Harmon Lake last week when a car driven by Mickey Osborne, passed over him unâ€" der peculiar circumstances. After a dip in the lake, Walsh rolled himself in a blanket and went to sleep directly in front of the wheels of Osâ€" borne‘s parked car. The owner apâ€" proached the car from the rear and, without noticing the recumbent form of his companion, started the engine and moved it forward till the front wheels had passed over Walsh‘s body. Osborne could not see his chum for the reason that he was closely huddled to the car wheels.. Walsh‘s injuries are of his companion, © and moved it forw wheels had passed o1 Osborne could not the reason that he v to the car wheels. Y not serious. hearty coâ€"operation which they have beem able to enlist from the various clubs and women‘s associations of the town. With such stout and sympatheâ€" tic backing they should have splendid success in their movement to«develop a strong and healthy séentiment in the community to support local gozsds and local products first. ind also Marys â€" Jow of St. Marys r their ente: mmunity buy Opposite Goeldfields Hotel Block TDMMINS it se in .â€"home Tatula which from DOMINION BANK BUILDOING ich they m the ciations 1€ utting campa bu Thursd ’WWMW 4 Address VETERINARY sURGEON All domestic animals scientifically treated. Tuberculine Testing Special attention to Cats and Dogs TERMS MODERATE Phone 65â€"1 Canadian Milk Products Limited, 115 George St., Toronto Please send me free booklet " Your Child‘s Health." Name PHONE 112 residenceâ€"PHONE 135 CHILOREN THRIVE ON IT / Atug ||