Candlewick cmbparcidered bags are d4eâ€" lightful accossorizs of the costumeé, for autumn as well as summer. They are amcong tho easiest bags to make, and are excoptionally attractive when the . designs are developed in two contrastâ€" | ing colours on a third one of the founâ€". dation textile. A firn:, good Japanese crepe is recommended for the foundation material. It is not so closely woven that the heavy candleâ€" wick embroidery medium â€" tears it when drawn through and the weave of the goods accords with the work. Bags in Varying Sizes Sizes of th:se bags are large for knitting and other needlework, and of medium size for hand bags,. Simple wooden or composition frames suit the candlewick type of embroidery. The bag is made large enough to leave a plain portion to extend over frames of front and back portions. Narrow bands of the material with two rows of alâ€" t=rnate coloured candlewick, form dots the entire length of each handle. Cut the strips wide enough for two turnâ€" ings on each side, thus insuring strong handles. Linings ; The bags are lined with the same material as the cutside, or with a good grade of mercerized sateen. This wears like iron, andhas a sheen. which so closely resembles real satin that it is difficult to discover whether it is or is not except on close examination. Designs ..A dainty design to use for the canâ€" dlewick embroidery is the Growing Plant. Outline the pattern units in colour, and fill them :n with scattered tufts of the same colour. Tuft the foâ€" Mage and stems in one colour and the flowers in another, using a third colâ€" our for tufting the background texâ€" tile. The tufts are worked about three quarters of an inch apare. The cand]lsâ€" wicking is cut in half between thess stitches, and will of itself form wee tufts like balls The space between WESTERN CANADA SPCCI.G', E x c u R s ' o N s Fror'r:, /:'!/?St:::on! Bargain GOING DAILYâ€"SEPT. 21 to OCT. 4 inclusive Return Limit: 45 days CONVENIENT TRAIN SERVICE Standard Class Tickets good via GREAT LAKES route ; meals and bert} BAGGAGE Checked. Stopovers at Port Arthur, Armstrong and we Tickets, Sleeping Car resereations, and all information from any agen!. A SK FOR M‘%@W\W‘WWW* sns |'o CA NA DIAN NATIO N A L CANDLEWICK EMBROIDERED BAGS IX TO MAKE THY Where olnmvcu m itâ€"lw the fol owing stightly higher fares apply : (1) Tourlst Sleeping at approximately 1 ! ;c per mile, plus regular berth rate. (b) Standerd Sleeping and ParlorCare dmliw ] per miie, pius regular berth or chair rate UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF powE®r CORPORATION or CANADBA LIMITED for the quarter ending September 30th, 1935, payable Octoâ€" ber 15th, 1935, to shareholders of record at the close of business on September 30th, 19358. By order of the Board. L. C, HASKELL, Secretary. Montreal, August 27th, 1935. ferred Stock of CANADA NORâ€" THERN POWER CORPORATION Canada Northern Power jleclared on th Corporation, Limited Preferred Dividend No. 43 OTICE is hereby given that a Dividend of 14%%, (being at the of per annum}) has been ared on the ?7%, Cumulative Preâ€" Lydia Le Baton Walker n caindlew‘ck embroidery developed in designs obtainable CENT A MILE ~â€" EACH WAY apare. The candleâ€" half between these of itself form wee The space between SLEEPING CAR ACCO AMODATION soopn m OiNLY xt tufts shows the background clearly. How to Get Pictorial Design The pattern can be used for apâ€" ‘ plique also. It can be obtained by | sending 10 cents with a selfâ€"addressed, stamped (3â€"cent) envelope with a reâ€" quest directed ~to Lydia Le â€" Baron Walker care of this papetr. i Applique and Tufting I â€"A smart variation from the cusâ€" tomary candlewick embroidery is to cut motifs from contrasting colour oï¬ the same material as the ‘*foundation or in another kind of textile, and apâ€" plique them on to the foundation. Outâ€" line edges of the applique and work as described for plain rurting. Use the colour of the applique for the candleâ€" | wick tufts on it. A unique embroidery will result, smart and distinctive. Gift Bags in Diversity For Christmas gifts, which women are making already, and for bridge prizes and bazaar sales, these bags will imeet with a good sale, if well made and not priced too high. The emâ€" ‘broidery when used alone without apâ€" North Land Prospector Died Last Week at Cobalt Alexander Donald MacDonald, a naâ€" tive of Stormount County, and for neanly a generation a prominent prosâ€" pector of Northern Ontario, died last week in Cobalt Municipal hospital, where he had been a patient since last July. He was in his seventyâ€"eighth vear. The late Mr. MacDonald hAaAd ITO[â€" lowed prospecting in California and in Nova Scotia as well as in this part of Ontario, to which he came in Coâ€" balt‘s early days and where he made his home for the greater part of the intervening years. He had lived for a time also in Alberta. He was born near Apple Hill, whers the family was long established. He was a Roman Catholic, Mr. MacDonald was unmarried. He is survived by three brothers, Angus Peter of Cobalt and Archie and Donald John in the Canaâ€" dian West; also three sisters, Mrs. Marâ€" garet Fisher of Monklands; Mrs. Mary Jane Woods of Harrison‘s Corners, and Miss Teresa MacDonald of Cornwall. § IN MAXNY STYLES AND HOW Sudbury Star:â€"Oh well, we don‘t have to worry iong. Soon we‘ll get rid late Mr. MacDonald had folâ€" prospecting in California and i Scotia as well as in this part ario, to which he came in Coâ€" arly days angd where he mads ne for the greater part of the ning vears. He had lived for a meals and berth extra Finding Romance in the Trees and Woods 1 Charm and Beauty of Trees add Much to Human Hapâ€" piness. People Dependent on Trees. Harry D. Gains, gave a teresting paper lately befo: nesday Club of St. Low "Finding Romance and Trees and Wosds." a living things, he stated. wood trees ir. California v himself was a C King Solomon s the forests to fa temple, says the "Atlantic Log" in reâ€"| producing extracts from the address . The eventful voyage of Columbus and. Magelilan and later of our forefathers arriving on these stormswept shores ol America was made psssible by woad used in shipbuilding. So trees witness in mute splendor the changing era of our planet, while races of men rise, live out their span, and pass into the ages "Trees provide the human rate wi‘h a multitude of life‘s necessities. . They are abundant reproducers. They are the only natural resource that reproâ€" duce themselves," said Mr. Gains. "No chemical laboratory in thei world built by man and fitted with all the wonderful appliances of modern sciense is half so marvellous as the leaf of any kird of a tree. It is the fsod factory of the tree. The motive power is sunâ€" light. and in the filtering process the tree inducts, through its leaves, imâ€" mense quantities of carbon dioxide from the air and in return the tree createos and pours forth pure oxygen. Thus the usefulness of trees as a provider of fresh oxygen is vital to health. You have, perhaps, wondered why air was so fresh and pure in a forest and why you felt so invigorated as you tramped through the sunâ€"dappled paths in the woodland, surrounded by psace and solitude, and found a contentment of mind and body not met with elseâ€" where. claim his gospel. Ark of the Cedar The Joyous Christmas Tree "I can detect romance in trees, when during the Christmas holidays, millions of children in America thrill to the joy of 3 Christmas tree said Mr. Gains," Deny a child a decorated tree at Christâ€" mas, adorned with its myriad of lights tinsel and gifts, and you have destroyed one of the most sacred Christian tradiâ€" tionsâ€"one of the fondest â€" rememâ€" brances of childhood. Many wellâ€"meanâ€" ing but posorly informed enthusiasts of forest conservation have urged the adcption of legislation prohibiting the cutting of Christmas trees, claiming it to be a form of vicious forest devastaâ€" tion. There are millions of these small spruces and cedars, growing upon soil that is not conducive to the growth of timber trees, anad these small bushiy, pointedâ€"top trees never attain mature height or girth under any condition; so it is simply a fallacy that the cutting of Christmas trees is a wasteful extraâ€" vagance, and foresters, in fact, recomâ€" mend the cutting or "thinning out" of these small trees so the younger trees will have light, air and rcoom to grow and expand. Trees mature, like any cther crop, and they must necessarily be harvested, so their right use does not exhaust th.e supply but rather perâ€" petuats it." Healthâ€"Giving Properties Apart from the inspirational value of trees, their healthâ€"giving properties, and their beautification of the earth‘s surface, these are a multiplicity of uses derived from these living trees which enrtitle them to a conspicuous place in world‘s Hall of Fame. From the tims we were lulled to sleep in a wooden cradle to the evening of life, the tret‘s intimate service to us is manifest. Continuing, Mr. Gaings said:â€""Trees furnish us the newsprint for our daily papers, our magazines, our letterheads. Large quantitiee of calabash and French briarwood furnish us pipes. Without the mulberry tree of Japan we would not enjoy the luxury of silk. It is the impregnation of wood fiber that mercerizes cotton and makes rayon. "Certain trees are responsible for many of the colours you desire in your clothing, for the basis of the huge dye industry is wood dyes,. Annatto, from Brazil, is widely used for the colouring of fabrics, and because it is nonâ€"poiâ€" sonsus is further employed for colourâ€" ing butter, cheese and chocolates. Braâ€" siletto wood, another Amazon jungleâ€" growth tree, produces the reds. Logâ€" wosd from Central America yields the blue, violet, and black dyes. Camwood from Africa and Fustic from Cuba are highly recognized woods, essentially necessary in the dyeing of fabrics, furs, skins and leathers. Fcood Value of Trees "Cataloguing thP foo@â€"producing values of trees is also interesting. Maple syrup for one. The milk tree of South America, the sap of which resembles rich cow‘s milk, is used entensively by the natives. The\ "Butter‘" tree Oof Africa produces as much as a hundred pounds at a time, only to be renewed in a few months. The Mango, a native of the tropics, is the most important fsod tree in the world. The Mango is the mainstay of the coloured populaâ€" tion in the West Indies, and they eat little else. "The cuisine would not be complete, nor life so enjoyable, nor health so vigorous were it not for apples, pears, peaches, plums, cherries, olives, dates, figs, oranges, lemons, limes, grapefruit, avacados and a host of other lessâ€"known fruits, not to mention a wide variety of edible nuts. "A few of the world‘s trees produce some of the finest and rarest perfumes: the Bois de Rose tree of French Guiana, Sandalwood one of the oldest woods, ofttimes mentioned in the Bible, proâ€" duces a charming fragrant oil, typically and highly prized by the Chinese and Hindus. )n these stormswept shores ol was made psssible by wosd hipbuilding. So trees witn<ss splendor the changing era 01 t, while races of men rise, live span, and pass into the ages provide the human race wi‘h de of life‘s necessities. . They dant reproducers. They are natural resource that reproâ€" nselves," said Mr. Gains. 5 ir., Oalifo: ze when C t 8,000 lon the Some Redâ€"| were of subâ€" came to proâ€" nstructed his anon. Christ: Tee ighl: the ratut met Formosa, voted to derful tre duces $5, ANSON WEEKS STATION CKGB at 6.15 p.m. $T. CHARLES EVAPORATED MILK Irradiated for extra sunshine vitamin Monday Night Sponsored by the Makers of s $5,000 worth o chemical. ‘KI wn as Cinchona mong the trees wh a medicinal angle tree, a native ~of osa, where large | I to the cultivation i1 tree. A single tre: and his Orchestra Borden presents ANCH, TFTMMINS, ONTARIO ST. CHARLES MILK l bet you a new hat you can‘t lool me when it comes cream 2A in my 2 collee" The Quinit which contribut ‘le are the Cam Â¥ this won {ttimes pro very neces L1 Many Beverage Rooms in This District l1And, 18 Aail Ebony, yet | tic grain anc "HMHave abundat Our dey 1 A 1 fo {he p°o daces no A lude towards the JVCVEIAgC rooms in the city. If the citizgns were accorded an opportunity to express their views by vote on the desirability of and necessity for these parlors, exâ€" cepting old established hotels, it would be found that they are very much in the unwanted class. "since the Ontario Liquor Board did not deem it advisable to consult muâ€" nicipalities before extending the beerâ€" selling privilege beyond the standard hotel class, they should now be reâ€" quireq to show justification for taking this privilege_of visiting a lot of unâ€" pleasantness, if nothing else, upon a community. "Only rscently it _ was learned through inquiry at the offices of the Liquor Control Board that an appliâ€" cation for a club authority in North Bay to sell beer and wine had been denied the District Sports Association, an organization entirely unknown to mt jJvernmet "If the O quor Cont 1g6 uUIn feeling people RIls will by night noted betf f North I condalt followi1 ublic o liC im De¢tr notl GISsTCYaL North Bay C Am 1tire of rely meosrsure J the surfeit 0 city. If the cit opportunity t 11 ha The Advance the »rotested to ths numb that e citizgns were y to express the desirability ese parlors, exâ€" hotels, it would > very much in If ungud( nber of bevâ€" at city. The in Timmins | The Nort}k Sherman i# circeumferâ€" ilyptus, the uth Africa he wood i £ tree curiâ€" anytn public lesti0onDiy r more ol nvthing, if matter and wine, resolution incil Monâ€" 1 in Ireâ€" sembling A€ ni Al Smoke llowest indit Ki athlstic circles of the city and districet It was said that strong protests against the issuance of this license were mainly the reason for the board denying the application. "North Bay citizens realize that with retail sale of wine and beer legalized under license in the province, it i1g more or less necessary that the priviâ€" lege extend to their city, but they can see no reason for ‘the authorities being issued outside the standard hoâ€" tels established before this form of sale was permitted. North Bay is a tourist centre in the summer months and were severage rooms abolished entirely, it would likely follow that a percentage (‘)‘f thie trao so gainec would be diâ€" verted to centres where the privilege is tolerated. "The majority of citizens recognize the necessity for authorizing hotels of long standing to offer beverage room service to their patrons, but they canâ€" not be convinced that there has been, or ever will be, a need for extending the privilege to places which were in no way required before the new law was enacted. "The Liquor Control Board, inspecâ€" tors and all others concerned with the issuance of beerâ€"selling permits would do well to hsed the resolution of North Bay city council. This city is at the saturation point insofar as the sale of The Porcupine School of Commerce Filing, etce. Stenography : including Pitman and (Giregg Short hand, Typewriting, Commercial C()l'l'esponcjgpce (grammar, punctuation, spelling, etc.), Filing Writing. Special Courses as required. Coaching lessons given to members of | mation studving for the C.G.A. Degree i1 ‘Except when your coffee is ‘creamed with ST. CHARLES" September 15th to October 15th FALL COURSES Write to Box 1747, or Phone 228 The Porcupine School of Commerce 6 Balsam North, Timmins, Ont. announce the beginning of their intoxicating beverages is concérned . .. to go beyond this point might mean total abolition." s THE WAY SOME NEWSPAPERS DO ALL THEIR "$sCoo°ING" The following is from The Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association Bulâ€" letin :â€" A newspaper announced the death of William Jongs, who, it turned out, was not dead. Next day the paper printeg the following note: "Yesterday we were the first newspaper to publish the death of William Jones. Toâ€"day we are the first to deny the report. The Morning Star is always in the lead." The only Furrier in the Porcuâ€" pine district doing fully guaranâ€" teed work on the premises Phone 1160 e Cieneral Accountants‘ Asso Accountancy. Expert Furriers and Ladies‘ Wear 2 EMPIRE BLOCK PAGE FIVE Timmins