"Abandonment of the Bullion Tax. and the substitution of a tax on profit will meet with general favour, even though we may not agree with the raâ€" tios of depletion allowances decided upon. A return to taxation based on profits will permit greater exploration of marginal ore, which was definitely excluded under the Bullion Tax; and the Government is to be congratulated for adopting this course." Wrap all Garbage in paper Keep your Garbage Can covercd Use plenty of Chloride of Lime which can be procured at the Town Hall free. Householders using well water must boil it for at least 20 minutes. All Qutside Toilets must be made fiyâ€" proo{f. By Order of THE BOARD OF HEALTBH That the tax changes will promote work on lower grade gold ores is noted by Charles G. Williams, secretary of the Canatdian Metal Mining Associauon who said : Dropping of Tax Means More Work in Low Grade J. D. Campbell . T. J. Bailey Electrical Contractor, Refrigerator Engineer We Repair Anything Electric Phone 1205 Basement 30 3rd Ave. Corporation Ltd. Credit Reports ‘ Collections Accounting and Auditing 6 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228 P.O. Box 1747 Electrical Refrigerator D. Paquette, proprietor THREE BARBERS IN ATTENDANCE Basement Reed Block, Timmins Service Satisfaction Sanitation of Natural Teeth Evenings 7 to 9 _ _ 1 P.O. Box 1591 Hamilton Block, 3rd Ave. Special Attention to Preservation Dr. Arthur C. McKenna Architect Ontario Land Surveyor Building Plans Estimates, Elc. Old P.O. Bldg., Timmins â€" Phone 362 Arch.Gillies,B.A.Sc.,0.L.S. PORCUPINE CREDIT Langdon Langdon Crown Attorney District of Cochrane Bank of Commerce Building â€" Timmins, Ont. Timmins Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Matheson, Ont. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BUILDING CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENUE The Pioneer Paper of the Porcupine Established 1912 DEAN KESTER CHARLES H. KERR ATTENTION HOUSEHOLDERS Nixon T. Berry Dental Surgeon formerly of Ottawa, Ont. DE LUXE BARBER SHOP Barristers, Solicitors, Ete, __ M.A., L.Ph. AVOCATâ€"BARRISTER Hamilton Block Barristers, Solicitors, Ete A. E. MOYSEY BLOCK, TIMMINS, ONT. Service Shop and South ) w t ut y i e y Phn ul e ud ult ul ul ul Ns Timmins, Ont. Phone 630 Ontario | 14â€"26 | Ontario 14â€"20 An Age of Incompetence "We are living in an age of specialists but at the same time in one of incomâ€" He gave England as an example of a country whose industries are toâ€"day turning out as much produc> as in 1924 or 1928, yet the unemployed are double in number. His idea is to make the farm a pleasant place in vgmch to live; to extend electrical power to the farms, so country women may have all the household aids their city sisters have; to make the t>lephone more uniâ€" versal service, as an even greater need. for communication exists in the counâ€" try than in town. "If you don‘t give those same advanâ€" tages to the farmers, we will have anâ€" other movement to the cities," he preâ€" dicted. "When manufacturing starts again with ever increasing efficiency, more workers will be displazed." He predicted a new leisure for the working man when industrial hours are shcrtened. Thse change must come he believes, and when it does, a great appreciation of the good things the land can give will be a part of the laâ€" bouring class. At the same time, more leisure for city workers would autoâ€" matically create another desire on the part of those now living on farms to move to cities, where their workingi hours would not be so long and they would have more physical comforts. The boy or girl who is brought up "in the face of wide horizons" has a distinct advantage these days, Prof. Bouchard believes. The country life with its greater independence from the changing conditions of an industrial world brings contentment and a full happy life, he gave as one of the reaâ€" Eons "The back to the land movement is an admission of our failure in the past. We have set standards of living and standards of life based on the stanâ€" dards set in the cities. It is the appliâ€" cation of two pounds of cure where the ounce of, precaution is still neglected," he stated. ] "There is a cry coming up from thouâ€" sands of lips in this crisis that it not over yet," he said, "As long as we reâ€" main blind as we are toâ€"day, we will never be out of this crisis." The cry of "back to the land!" that both provinâ€" cial and federal governments have heeded is a step in the right direction, Prof. Bouchard thinks, but not the gos-! pel of,"dividendâ€"minded" people of ‘"If‘s usé'igesâ€g ‘to go back to the l'ar%i' bebï¬ï¬isé‘i the land doesn‘t pay." This, he sald_,i is not the way the problem should be considered but rather from the viewâ€" point of how the farmer can be conâ€" tent with the little money he does: make. "The farmer is not looking to farming as a moneyâ€"making proposiâ€"| tionâ€"there are other advantages of ‘ rural life. I invite you to oppose those who look to farming as an industrial| proposition. How is it that farmers leave the farm in more prosperous times and they are going back to it now when it does not pay?" "We Forgot Something Important" The speaker reviewed the trend of the past 25 years and emphasized thel everâ€"growing favour into which urpan | life has come. ‘"We were all so much imbued with technical and scientific. advancement that we forgot something| very important in rural life," he exâ€" "All our social bodies revolve around the cities and we were proud of their development. Now our major populaâ€" tion is in big cities and we suffer froim it.:" "I know I‘m getting the support of all citizens of the North in the fight to get us better reception of our national stations," he concluded. Advantages of Old Civilization Prof. Bouchard was very modest of the value of his own work and said that he might be considered by some to be a fossilized type. During his address, his listeners found quite the opposite to be true . "Two weeks below Quebec‘" there exists what most people consider a retarded civilization, he said, but it has preserved some of the things from the old civilzation that are needed toâ€"day in solving the problems that confront the people of Canada. l Prof. Bouchard was accompanied on his visit by Jos. A. Bradette, member of the House of Commons for Temiskamâ€" ing North, who told the Kiwanians a little of his friend‘s accomplishments as a professor and writer of agricultural subjects. Mr. Bradette apologized for the shortness of their visit. "I am going back to Ottawa toâ€"day because I want to fight for radio in the North,â€â€˜ he said. "We should have a powerful station in the North," Mr. Bradette stated that he did not doubt that the local stations were serving a certain' purpose, but that as radio is supposed to be nationalized now, the North ha.s! a right to hear our national programsi over a national station. Canada will never be out of the preâ€" sent crisis until the "heads and hearts" of more Canadian people are turned to farming, it was predicted by Prof. Georges Bouchard, M.P., at the Kiwanis luncheon on Monday. "Our troubles toâ€"day are not only financial ones," he declared, "Our society toâ€"day is not well balanced." Prof. Bouchard Extols Value of Country Life Tells Kiwanis that Present Crisis will Not be Truly Over Until the Heads and Hearts of More Canadians are Xl(lll('lned Again to Farming. Aneloquent and Convincing ress. Ehe Porrnpine Adpbancre Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Kvery MONDAY and THURSDAY Pembroke Standardâ€"Observer:â€"It is said that the budget, which may be present2d toâ€"day, will bear heavily upon those whose incomes are $10,000 and <ver, and it will strike everyone that this is a fairer way to raise a revenue than by a tax on sugar, although the present tax is so small that it should not be considered. All the juvenile cases arising out of the recent police cleanâ€"up of small robâ€" beries in various parts of Timmins were remanded at Tuesday‘s juvenile court, owing to the absence of A. G. Carson of the local Children‘s Aid Soâ€" ciety. They will be heard next Tuesâ€" day at four o‘clock. Mr. Carson had been summoned to Cochrane on Tuesâ€" day as a witness in one of the cases beâ€" fore the court. Juvenile Court Cases Remanded to Next W eek guest speaker, . Tis subj the cos%'o"f education t and the difference in cost between the present high school education and more practical kind. The Kiwanis: club is coâ€"operating with the local Canadian Legion branch in the celebration for May 6th, Kings Jubilee. The public affairs committec with Geo. S. Drew as chairman will be in charge of the Kiwanis share of the work. Next week, W. W. Tanner, principal of Timmins High School, is to be the After the guests of honour had left for the station, arrangements were made to hold the Kiwanis bridge tourâ€" nament as some of the members‘ homes this week. Kiwanian Geo. S. Drew introduced Mr. Bradette to the meeting with the words, ‘"Mr. Bradette is as well known in the district as Father Theriault is in Timmins." Kiwanian Arch Gillies thanked the professor for his talk and said that he had given the club members someâ€" thing to think about. Father Theriault who accompanied the two visitors exâ€" pressed his appreciation of the address by translating a French proverbk, "Speaking is spending, but listening is acquiring." He gave as an example of what going "back to the land with a heart" might accomplish right here in Timmins, where he said there are between four and five hundred families who have nothing to do. In his concluding remarks, the speakâ€" er summed up his address with the words, "The unemployed of toâ€"morrow are to me more important than the unemployed of toâ€"day." petence," he said. "Urban people are trying to shape rural affairs." Pro{f. Prof. BouchMard said that when he spoke of "rural population," he meant not only the farmers themselves® but all the proféssional men, business men and cthersâ€"half of socviety. "I am not making an appeal for a class and I am not for the extension of our farming area but rather for the extension of our farming population. It does not matter so much if consumers are fed with food produced below cost. There are all these other things that do. matter." * â€" reinas "~ : P esc y n hen > :A > +5 m protessionals and amateurs of the United States will compete Aprh 4, in the second annual national tournament over Bobby Jones‘ course at Augusta, Ga. Jones who tied for thirteenth place in the first Augusta tournament over course on which many holes of worldâ€"{famous courses are duplicated, has trained earnestly for the matches this year. ?ome of the 138 invited stars who will play, and an air view of the part of the course called a "golfer‘s paradise," are pictured above. Te tyR d Ns 1 isnn en e e n snn ce o uen _ bJCCt w111 mvolve to the taxpayer TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 4TH, 1935 Spring Brings Golfers Together for Bobby Jones Tournament Ottawa Journal:â€"Sir Austen Chamâ€" serlain, hearing of Hitler‘s army decree, said, "Good gracious!" It reminds the New York Times that when the news arriveqg that Ludendorf had broâ€" ken through the British front and that the Channel ports were in danger, Lord said, "How annoying!" The Burbank Ramore Syndicate, which cwns a group of twelve claims in the Ramore district, has taken an option on a group of ten claims in Mcâ€" Vittie township, adjoining a group at present under option to one of the large mining interests in Northern Ontario. Work on this group will commence as soon as the snow is off the the ground. Work will also be continued on the Raâ€" more claims following recommendaâ€" tions which have been made by its conâ€" sulting engineer, as a ‘result of, work which was carried on last fa‘ll. ‘ I "Wake up and lisisn io birds in lthe trees as they come whistling with ,the Spring. Wake up and clear away all the signs of the old dead, cold winâ€" ter and give spring the happy welcome. Wake up and get those old cellars cleaned out, those walls repainted and those store fronts decorated. Think about those repairs and the little plans for the garden and the house anl the street. If you will start these works now you will be getting others in line. In another two weeks there should be a great demand for repair labour and those who are ready to do cleaning. Why not make your plans at once. This is the season to start a seneral repair campaign. If such a campaign were put across it would mean that there would be work for hundreds of men and women. Money would be cirâ€" culated and merchandise would be in demand. These are the needs of the hour. Men and women want work everywhere. You have it in your house, your store, your cffi¢e, your plant and in~the back yard.:~ Just set to work and plan to start some of that work at' cnce." l W ork to be Started Soon by Burbank Ramore Syndicate An editorial note in The Amherstâ€" burg Echo last week is worthy of speâ€" cial notics and consideration. It reads as fOollows:â€" Help Yourself and Help the Town by Creating Work vuUuunuus3 OF BEDFORD Though reports have her missing on a flight to East Africa, friends of Duchess of Bedford, 69â€"yearâ€"old aviatrix, scoff st them, saying that seas and deserts are no stumblingâ€" block to a flier ofâ€"her experience. "We don‘t want to raise anybody‘s temperature unduly, but we hear a perâ€" sistent rumour that is interesting enough to print, to the effect that a big mining company has paid $100,000 for an option on a farmer‘s land at Fauâ€" quier. There has been a trek to Fauâ€" _ The first announcement of reported gold finds in the Kapuskasing area was made in The Porcupine Advance some weeks ago when there appeared to be something in the nature of a small rush to the district. The Advance as usual with matters of interest to the North had the first news on the matter, though <there>~was not muclh definiteâ€" information available. It did seem the fact, however, that a number of prosâ€" pectorsâ€"were active in the Kapuskasing area and some good finds were reported. Later, one reported find was said to have proved less notable than at first supposed and this caused the usual tendency to reflect on the whole new field. The wise ones were inclined to say: "Nothing to it!" Further rc-:ports,| however, show that there is something| to it, though it is impossible to even| rightly guess as to the importance of} any work now being done in what may being done in what may be called Kapuskasing area. The Northern Tri-f bune, of Kapuskasing, has taken a‘ sympathetic but careful interest in thbi possible new gold field from the start and the following from the_last 1ssue’ of the Kapuskasing newspaper is of | more than passing interest:â€" l Story that $100,000 Option has been Taken on Gold Property Near Fauquier. Reporting $100,000 Kapuskasing Deal Brocke Into Store Two other boys, just out of their ‘teens, pleaded guilty to breaking into and entering a neighbourhood store one evening. They had never .been in police court before, they said. "Will you behave yourselves if I give you another chance?" ‘"Yes, sir." "You will never get into trouble again?" "No, sir." They were bound over to keep the peace for two years and were ordered to make restitution. Two young men were charged with stealing hockey pads and other equipâ€" ment, the property of the McIntyre Hockey Club. In answer to Magisâ€" trate Atkinson‘s question as to whether or not they had ever been in trouble before, one replied that he had not and the other admitted to having been inâ€" volved in a beer case some time ago. An average of a minute a case was sufficient to dispose of 19 charges laid in Tuesday‘s police court here. It was a record day, for in all cases heard those accused pleaded guilty. Only two remands were asked. It was then merely a matter of finding out wnhiat the circumstances were, delivering a lecture where necessary, or imposing a fine. Record Time Disposing of Police Court Cases Only Nineteen Minutes Needed to Deal with Cases at Court on Tuesday. Two Serious Cases Remanded. Young Men Pleading Guilty to Thefts Bound over to Keep Peace. "I don‘t know what‘s getting to be C. N. P. C. Review:â€"According to some authCrities we are within measurâ€" able distance of the time when sights as well as sounds will be broadcast, and television equipment will be in the psople‘s homes. Published at Tiinmins, Ont., Canada, Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Bruce Matachewan has an authorized capitalization of 10,000 shares, no par value, and has issued 5,246 shares. The property consists of seven claims, adjoining the Margo. J. L. Manley, syndicate trustee, states that the syndicate owes no money and is in good shape. The immediate proâ€" gramme cf exploration calls for an exâ€" penditure of some $7,000 or $8,000. Officials of the Bruce Matachewan Gold Syndicate have een laying plans for the resumption of work on the synâ€" dicate‘s properties in Cairo township in the Matachewan area. George L. Bruce, staker of the properties is to take in a crew just as s3>0n as weather conditions permit. Trenching and surface exploration will be carrieq Out on the showings which have been preâ€" vicusly opened up. Briuce Matachewan Plans Resume Work on Property quier for several weeks past; prospecâ€" sors have nosed the fact that some gozdâ€"iooking ore was picked up near the Groundhog river last summer (some of which we have seen). After the spring breakâ€"up, it is likely that the vicinity of Kapuskasing will get a pretty thorâ€" ough combing by prospectors looking for showings of gold. Local syndicates have already been formed to send men into the bush to beat this later rush. If there is any truth in the above yarn about the $100,000 option, it‘s a sure bet that no experienced mining comâ€" pany would get stung to that extent on any illusory showing. Their geologâ€" ists steer them." The two remanded cases were one of having liquor not acquired on a permit and one of attempted rape. A middleâ€"aged man was charged, with operating a motor car for hire without having a license to do so. He pleaded guilty. In response to the magistrate‘s questions he said that he had only takâ€" en out a license during the first year he was in town. He claimed to have an injured leg and stated that he made a bare living from what little business he did. He was advised to get a licenss and was fined five dollars and costs. One fine of five dollars and costs was collected for indecent exposure. Two speeders paid $10 and costs and one young man charged with parking less than five feet from a fire hydrant was warned not to do it again. S Gus Landry pleaded guilty to perâ€" mitting drunkenness in his place and was fined $50 and costs. Five first offence drunks were. treatâ€" ed in the usual mannerâ€"$10 and costs or 30 days. the matter with you boys," said his worâ€" ship. "Perhaps I‘m too lenient." He told them that the maximum penalty for a similar offence was 14 years in prison, and he warned them that if they ever appeared in cour again, it would be much more serious. They signed bonds for two years to keep the peace and were released. Swiss Watchmaker of the Famous Horological _‘ â€" Institute of Bwitzerland [Mrs. J. Wilkins, L.R.A.M. | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Electrical Treatments for Medical and Surgical Cases Venereal and Skin Diseases Treated by Modern Methods â€" 19% Third Ave. â€"Tel. 203 (Avove Holly Stores) Timmins, Ont. â€"â€"18tf Ridecau Licensed Private Malernity Home and Babies Maintenance 62 Rideau Terrae, Ottawa P.O. Box 1059, Timmins Ont. Monthly general meetings of the above branch will be held in the Legion Hall, Cedar St. S., on the following dates: Monday, April 29th Third Avenue Commerce Specialized Business Training Classes 7 o‘clock Monday, Wednesâ€" day and Friday nights. 6 Balsam St. N., Timmins, Ont. Phone 1143 Box 677 41â€"53 Meetings held in the Hollinger Recreaâ€" tion Hall two evenings a month. Dates to be announced in The Advance. Sec‘yâ€"W. Avery, Phone 396W, Timmins Pres.â€"T. Trevenna, Box 417, Timmins Building Contractor Stone and Brick Mantels a Specialty Timimins Ontario T A-725-38]J Cornish Social Club 153 Mountjoy Street Phone 279â€" TIMMINS LODGE NO. 1658 Meet 2nd and 4th Thursdays in Moose Hall, Fourth Ave. Sec. T. H. Richards, 37 Kirby Ave. Box 1037. VISITING â€"BROTHERS WELCOGMIE »6â€"12 Gordon Block Meets every First and Third Friday of the month in the Oddfellows hall, Presidentâ€"Austin Neame Secretaryâ€"Treasurerâ€"W. D. Forrester Chiropractor and Electro Theraj CONSULTATION FREE Diseases Peculiar to Women Phone 941â€"W Meets cvery Tuesday evening in the Oddfellows‘ Hall, Spruce Street, North. Visiting brethren requested to attend. CHAS. F. LACY 8, J. MORGAN, Meets on the Ind and 4th Fridays of every month in the Oddfellows‘ Hail. J. T. Andrews, W.M., Box 1415 H. J. Richardson, Rec. Sec. Box 1715 Timmins. Visiting Brothers Cordially Invited. SPECIALIST Eyc, Ear, Nose and Throat Empire Block: Timmins Mrs. J. Langman, W.M., Box 2252 Mrs. H. Parnell, Rec. Sec., Box 1246 14â€"20 Dr. J. Mindess DR. E. L. ROBERTS Porcupine School of F. BAUMAN W. H.SEVERT Second Sectio n Phone 382 Timmins Branch 88 Canadian Legion Timmins, Ont. ~17â€"43p Empire Block Therapist Secretary oys