that there should be any discrim tion shown toward the returned soldier, especially as contrasted with what may be termed the civilian employee. On the contrary the whole proposal emanâ€" ated from a desire to afford, during this period of distress, an opportunity to the returned soldier who served .his country faithfully, but who at the moment finds himself, through no fault of his own, without either pension or empleyment. as contrasted with some of his comâ€" rades who at the moment receive a pension, and at the same time are given employment with the full salary atâ€" tached to the position. "To this course objection has been Â¥, to pensioners in the Civil Service. Agreement has been reached between the Administration and the various.so!â€" dier organization heads:â€"Mr. Rhotes‘ statement was, in part, as follows:â€""It too late for the publishing in last week‘s issue of The Adâ€" All will be interested in the reâ€" Through Finance Minister Rhodes, the Bennett Government today withâ€" drew its Budget proposals with respect TheCanadian Legion in the Porcupine DUNL ~4REINFORCED» DUNLOP TIRE RUBBER GOODS®CO., LIMITED Now made in Canada in a limited number of sizes, the "FORT" is the leader of a complete line of DUNLOP Tires which offer youâ€" unsurpassed value in every price range. A HE DUNLOP "FORT" TIRE boasts a more distinguished patronage and a greater reputation for de.â€" pendability than has ever been accorded to any other tire. To families of title and prominence in Great Britainâ€"as in every country where it has been introducedâ€"the "FORT" Tire is more than a tire.; It is a symbol of correctnessâ€"an essential to the fine car. The "FORT*‘" Tire has achieved this dominance because cost was not made a restricting factor in its design and construction. Considerations of perfection alone ruled. Consequently the "FORT" Tire is a higher priced tireâ€" and the most economical. certain applicants will be remedied and that this course will effect a substantial saving to the Treasury. . "In conclusion, may I express, on behaif of the Governthent, our appreâ€" clation for the generous coâ€"operation we have received from the representaâ€" dents to ible . or are to be no additions of depenâ€" the list of those who are eligâ€" who may become eligible for pensions. j "I desire further to announce that, as a result of extreme care in reviewâ€" ing existing pensions, it is believed that, while affording full protection to those who are justly entitled to pension, certain â€"irregularities which have arisâ€" en through misrepresenteation, whether fraudulent or otherwise on the part of Taking the above all round it can be truly stated that another Legion victory has been s»ut on the roll. The whole question has been an interesting one, and now all those in receipt of penâ€" sion will have to go in for arithmetic because income tax is now chargeable to pensions and earnings. This means to say, that a returned soldier, unmarâ€" ried and in steady employment at a weekly »~wage of thirty dollars which yearly would total $1440 and who also "I desire further to announce that, as a result of extreme care in reviewâ€" ing existing pensions, it is believed that, while affording full protection to those who are justly entitled to pension, made to the Income War Tax Act proâ€" viding that pensions shall be subject to income tax. 3. That on and after May 1,‘1933, there are to be no additions of depenâ€" dents to the list of those who are eligâ€" next session of Parliament. as an example by other emâ€" ployers with detrimental results. or contract, and, secondly, would ment be "1. That any consideration of a genâ€" eral readjustment of the rate of penâ€" taken by representatives of the several seturned soldier organizations upon two main grounds: Pirst, that it would, in that there would for the present be no interference with the existing program, "After full discussion it was agreed is in receipt of pension, which we will say brings in another $120 yearly, makâ€" ing income a total of $1560, would have to pay income tax on the $560.00. The married veteran would have to earn double that and in receipt of a larger pension as income tax exempâ€" ‘The Minister‘s statement regarding a deadline on May 1 for dependents is, we understand, applicable only to ‘new wives and new children.‘" Satisfaction was expressed here toâ€" day by officials of the Canadian Legion at Mr. Rhodes‘s statement on the penâ€" sion situation. ‘"We appreciate the action of the Minister, speaking for the Government, in clearing up situation that had caused the exâ€"service men of this counâ€" try grave concern." said a statement issued by Major Roper, Dominion Presâ€" ident of the Canadian Legion, following the Minister‘s pronouncement. ‘"The announcement that consideraâ€" tion of a reduction in pensions has been postponed for at least another year is particularly gratifying, for it is the hope of the veterans that by then the economic situation will be such as to render a pensionsâ€"cut unnecessary. tives of the abovenamed service organâ€" presentations on behalf of the members of their several organizations." DISTINCTION THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Can We Grow Old? The above question is asked because a recent ruling of the Board of Penâ€" sion Commissioner says that a decision which they rendered about twelve or more years ago must stand. It conâ€" cerns an old man at South Porcupine. This party before the war had a fine family, and all were happy and growing into manhood and womanhood. ‘The father was one who looked to the fuâ€" ture of his family and so secured proâ€" perty whenever a chance availed itself. The war came; his sons answered the call, and two gave their lives for their country. The shock was too great for the mother to stand and she too passed tion for him is $2,000 with $400 for each child. Therefore it looks as though it were the big salaried men and those of high pension who will have to face the shot. The Big Five have received the highest of praise for the manner in which they coâ€"operated with the government. The returned soldiers have a year to decide whether they will accept a general reduction in pension pay. In the meantime every one should get in one or another of the organizations of returned veterans. In this part of the province the only one toâ€"join is the Canadian Legion, so do it now. Min Bank of Commerce Bldg. Phone 701 P.O. Box 1239 Fast and Efficient Service World‘s Finest Tire" have crept slowly upon the father of the two brave sons but the government won‘t move an inch. Recently the Timmins branch of the Canadian Leâ€" gion paid for a local medical examinaâ€" tion for this man. The doctor‘s findâ€" any strenuous work was liable to cause his death. This was forwarded to the Board of Pension Commissioners and now it has been ruled:â€""That the preâ€" vious decision in this case must stand." We will all be very pleased to learn that: although the years may pass and time may fily, we poor humans will never grow old as long as the above commission sits, and thinks of monkey about to be augumented by the erection of a plant at Toronto, according to the industrial department of the Canadian National Railways. The juvenile population is said to be planning a protest meeting. Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald:â€"Britain has taken the first move to cut off trade with Russia, and Russia is country with which we were supposed to trade cattle for oil. SHINGLES USED TO BE USED BUT NOW IT 18 THE SLIPPER The Viceroy of India Captainâ€" Sirâ€" Malcoim Campbell the\_I 1 OFFICIAL WORLD‘S AUTO SPEED RECORDS YWERE MADE ON DUNLOP TIRES His Majesty King George V His Royal Highness His Excellency The Governor General of Canada His Excellency Some Distinguished Users of DUNLOP FORT TIRES .4/7%,6' OFF The Prince of Wabes additional reason for completing the roadway ‘between Sudbury and: Porcuâ€" pine at the present time is the benefit to be derived from the work that would thus be given to the unemployed. 1t would appear that just as the requireâ€" ments of various sections to be served by the ‘proposed Budbury toâ€" Timmins rogd have forced the biullding of various sections, soâ€"the â€"matter ‘of unemployâ€" ment is @lso bringing pressure to bear on the powers that be in so far as the rompletion of the work is concerned. A couple of weeks ago The Advance referred to another section of the road that it was proposed to build at an early date, and in connection with this complete the roadway comnecting Porâ€" eupine and Sudbury camps. The Adâ€" vance has pointed â€"outâ€" that for the development of the eountry such a road must eventually be bullt. Proof that this is the fact is given when it is noted the various sections of this road that â€"already haveâ€" been© built. â€" Someâ€" the following from The Sudbury Star May Start Sudbury to’l‘mins Roadway Milnetâ€"Westree Link may be Built This Year with Reliet Labow. Pha is Approved by W. H. Alderson, Supervisor of Relief for For years past The Advance has been : An independent tour ‘atound the world is not at all as expensive as one may think. Bring your travel aspiraâ€" ‘tlons to the Canadian Pacific. »16 Barrie â€" Examiner:â€"That ~diphtheria ,hrMyvamatï¬ngasacagwofmor- tality, is indicated in the further deâ€" eflneotï¬wdeathra-te botH in Canaâ€" 'da and the United sta.tes For the You will go inland from Auckland or Wellington to this amazing district. Queer little houses, with carvings on the sides, sit on poles. Other homes, 'buflt ‘*‘down on the ground, are rudely thatched on roof and sides. The Maori were a race of warriors, _ hunters and seamen. A thousand years F ago these Polynesians came in big canoes ‘from South Pacific isles. ~Their legends came with them and have been handed ‘down from father to son. What reâ€" markable memories they have! How ‘poetically they relate their stories. ovenâ€"and great clouds of steam rises up to cook the food. It is not magicâ€" but these clever Maori have choosen to live where geysers spit into the air, where pools seethe, where great underâ€" ground grumblings are heard, where the waters are healthâ€"giving. . "The suggestion was made to me toâ€" day by Mortimer Moore,,.who is in charge of constructing the:â€"extension of the Westreeâ€"Shining Treer®‘road into Tyrrell township, with reli¢éf labor from. the district, that the Timmins road might also be constructed by relief laâ€" bour from Sudbury, his worship said. Suggested by Laforest Possibility of utilizing relief labour to build the Sudburyâ€"Timmins road was first suggested to The Budhiiry Star by W. J. Laforest, district rBlief officer, several weeks ago. Mr. Laforest, while a member of the 1931 Sudbury council, had sponsored a motion"rédtesting the ‘provincial government t8 "build the "highway as a relief measure. The proposed‘ Sudburyâ€"Timmins highâ€" way would follow the present road from Sudbury to Milnet, through Capreol From Milnet to Westree, a distance of about 48 miles, a new road would have to be built. A road is already conâ€" structed from Westree to Shining Tree, in Churchill township, a distance of about 20 miles, and a 15â€" mile road is now under construction from Shining Tree east to Tyrell township. From Tyrell township the road would proâ€" ceed north to Timmins dist.ance of 50 or 55 miles. Sudbury and Timmins Boards of Trade and councils have, during the past two years, passed several resoluâ€" tions endorsing the highway. She is washing the family clothes in hot spring. Her handsome tattooed husband pulls his slender canoe up on the beach. To prepare dinner she throws water on the stones of a little "I believe I can build that highway and at the same time save the city money," Mr. Laforest stated.‘ "I do not believe it will cost any more to feed and care for the men in highway camps than to feed and care for them at the soup kitchen and in the old jail." In the interests of the men‘s morale, Mr. Laforest considered it better that they be employed at some form of laâ€" bour than spend their days in idleness. la;t week should be of interest:â€" Announcement Made by Mayor Brodie to City Council. Commencement of Sudburyâ€"Timmins road may be undertaken this year, with the first lap, from Milnet to Westree, near Gogama, being built with relief labour from the Sudbury soup kitchen, Mayor W. M. Brodie informed city council last night. Construction of the highway by relief labour has the apâ€" proval of W. H. Alderson, agministrator of relief for Northern Ontario, Mayor Brodie stated. It is, understood howâ€" ever, that"it will also require: the apâ€" proval of provincial reliefâ€" authorities. SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER Your liver‘s a very small organ, bu: it cerâ€" tainly can put your digestive and eliminative out of kilter, by refusing to pour out its two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels You won‘t completely correet such a condition by taking sal(s, oil, mineral water, laxative candy or chewing gum, or roughage, . When they‘ve moved your bowe‘s they‘re throughâ€"and you need a liver stimulant. Carter‘s Little Liver Pills will soon bring back the sunshine into your life. They‘re purel{ vogeâ€" table. Sufe. Sure. Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes. 250 at all druggists. 48 pla Wake up your Liver Bile â€"Without Calomel OFF COLOUR ? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? THUORSDAY. MAY atrH, 1933 waRM comonfnp% ROOMS Restaurant and Boarding House 29 Fourth Avenue NEW ZEALAND