VWVA 1i NiXA of the Experimental Farm of Kapusâ€" kasing, and Dan Pomerieau, Agriculturâ€" al Representaitive, for the fine work that they are doing in the rural sections in showing to the farmers the beneficial effects of fine flower and vegetabie garâ€" dens and also of hedge and tree plantâ€" ing around thir habitations. I noticed a resolution passed by the aboveâ€"named organization asking that the water reserves controlled by the Frederickhouse dam be raised to a comâ€" mon level the year round so as to asâ€" sist in the propagation of game of wild ducks and geese. It is only a legitiâ€" mate request which should be granted, but before the lake level is raised I hope that the area affected will be properly of all trees and shrub growth that could be found on the intended flood area. If this is not done, it will make an awful mess of part of the lake bottom whicl could then never be remedied. I have already received PA AAAA,. Ai% YÂ¥ UA JA AÂ¥AA . i 1 tion. Such men would be a credit not only to our section but to the whole of Canada, and I make the fervent wish that in the near future the Mderal Government will rectify the anomaly that rexists at the present time as far as our representation is concerned. Bill No. 21, dealing with the export of Hydro Power, had its second reading Friday afternoon. The Prime Minister made it very plain that all members in the House were left to their own disâ€" cretion to vo‘te on this measure as they pleased, and again he repéated the statement that he made a week that by the adoption of such a bill it would give more responsibility to Parâ€" liament which is the proper public body to deal with a national problem of this nature. The Governmentâ€" Bill, he attested, was for the prohibition of power exâ€" port with provisions for licenses to be made for export only if Parliament MR. MERCHANT: place your message where it will be refd by the greatest number of people each week. For parâ€" liculars phone 26, The Advance. J. A. Bradette, M.P. Deals with Many Public Issues Everybody who visits towns like Iroâ€" quois Falls, Kapuskasing and also the town of Cochrane is very much imâ€" pressed by strides that have been made on those line. I want also to give some words of praise in favour of Mr. Goring of the Experimental Farm of Kapusâ€" kasing, and Dan Pomerieau, Agriculturâ€" al Representaitive, for the fine work that they are doing in the rural sections in showing to the farmers the beneficial effects of fine flower and vegetabie garâ€" dens and also of hedge and tree plantâ€" ing around thir habitations. Dear Sir:â€"In this week‘s letter I want to make a few comments on two special kinds of activities that I have noticed in reading the "Porcupine Adâ€" vance" and the "Northern Tribune." I want to compliment most heartily the ‘"Porcupine Fish and Game Proâ€" tection Association" for their activities in gaime and natural resources preserâ€" vation. A large number of citizens of the Porcupine districe? belong to that organization and I hope that it will be found possible to have such associations instituted in a great many sections of Northern Ontario. There is no doubt that in our section we have been great destroyers and wasters and it is not a bit too early to start on a campaign of education for the preservation of our game and natural resources. Take for instance our forest resources, we cerâ€" tainly have been great wasters on that fine heritaze and we should have more and more clubs for forest preservation and tree planting. That movement is, to some limited extent, well under way, even in new centres of population like the "Porcupine section" where quite a lot of tree planting is going on and also some fine private lawns. These activities should be greatly encouraged by the municipal authorities. OtUawa, Monda To the Editor of The Advance, Timmir Compliments Porcupine Fish and Game Protective Assocâ€" iation on Good Work. Shows Why North Should be Represented in Senate. Touches on Railway Question, Divorce Question, Monetary Matters and Other Subjects. 8 FREE PALACE THEATRE PASSES PAE BX 1933 CHEYVROLET service Truck. 4 new tires on For 30)5 quick sale ....... CÂ¥ + *‘% P Now‘s The Time To Buy _ A Good Used Truck 1935 INTERNATIONAL Dump Truck â€"First Class shape. * License included .. $695 1933 CHEVROLET Pickup ® in good condition ........ $160 1933 CHEVROLET Pickup 160 in good condition .. ...... A Small Deposit Will Hold Any of These Trucks Uniil May Ist 105 Balsam St. N. Phone 296 Why not drop in and look over lhe Smart New Hats at Hyacinthe, Miss Comissione will advise you on restyling and reâ€"blocking your last year‘s hat to look like new model!s. Blake Martin, Kirby Avenue Cor. 4th Ave. and Cedar Present Fashionable Furs AT MOS®ST REASONABLE PRICES At Our Representative Mrs, Vita Andrews, Box 1557 â€"Hyacinthe = MILLINERY Mrs. E. Durocher COMPAXNXY LIMITED Cash or Terms We have in our own section men wellâ€"versed, not only with our own sectional problems, but also with the national and international situation, men who have made their mark in the professions, newspaperdom, business, labour and agricultural activitics, men who are fully qualified to hold in a very capable manner that exalted posiâ€" tion. Such men would be a credit not only to our section but to the whole of The other article to which I want to make allusion is the fact that a Norâ€" thern Ontario Weekly of Temiskaming has stated that the appointment of Duncan Marshall is one that can be considered as pertaining to Northern Ontario. I absolutely agree with the editor of the *"Northern Tribune" of Kapuskasing who said that only through the wildest stretch of imaginâ€" ation could that appointment be conâ€" sidered one that could represent our section in the Senate, To keep the reâ€" cords straight on this question at the moment, although we must have over 500,000 people living in Northern Onâ€" taric, as defined by the eastern bounâ€" dary of the riding of Nipissing, there is only one Senator who represents that whole area, namely, Senator Gordon of North Bay and, according to the ratio of population in the Province of Onâ€" tario, we should have at least three Senators for our own section. This is not a regional statement but one statâ€" inz actual facts. many letters on this subject which I have transmitted to Toronto and I know that the Provincial Government is givinz to that demand its immediate attentior. Phone Thorpe Radio Service EXPERT REPAIRS Miss P. Mullen, Box 644 We use only the highest quality leathers, this together with our many years of experience assures vou of satisfaction. Carioca Shoe Repair 63 Third Ave. Timmins 180 Cedar st. N ALBERT‘S, BAKERY 10 Pine 8. â€" Phone 1875 Harry Leblanc, Avenue Road BILL‘S 71 A X 1 Advance "Hidden Name" Contest GUARANTEED Shoe Repairs FOK â€" PROMPT CAREFUL SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Member H. M. Phone 1989 Lately in the Senate, quite a lot of discussion has been given to the railway question of this country. A lot of outâ€" standing senators have expressed their viewpoints on this matter and no doubt we will also have a fullâ€"dressed debate on that important problem in the House of Commons. It is my intzention to speak on this question as our section is very vitally interested in the railâ€" way situation and although I am not for any kind of amalgamation, unless it is under public ownership, I am, however, in favour of the closest coâ€" cperation between the two railway systems. In the resclution of want of confidâ€" ence on going into supply, there has taken place in the House a great disâ€" cussion over the monetary system of this country. That motion was preâ€" sented by the Social Credit group who used this opportunity of propounding their particular theory in our present monetary system, and then the discussion became general. Some good information and arguments were put forward and there is no doubt after listening to the speech of the Minister of Finance, Hon. Dunning., that we are making some headway in the governâ€" mental control of our paper money. When that matter came to the attenâ€" tion of the House one particular fact disclosed was, I think, quite contrary thought it rig ed. to general opinion. That was the fact that Canada had gone off the gold Prepare your lunch with Albert‘s sliced Bread, specially wrapped to stay fresh longer. It will please your guests, Mrs, B. McGillis, Balsam South AFTER THE SHOW VISIT US Gordon Blk., Timmins Plumbing and Heating ALL WORK GUAEANXNTEECD 8 CEDAR ST. N. PHONE 1872 Sir Harry Twyford (right, Lord Mayor of London, handing a plate of sandwiches to Dr. Julius Lippert, Burgomaster of Berlin, Gemany, at a tea in the honcur of Dr. Lippert at the Mansion House, London, during nis visit in connection with the International summer Schools. YXOU‘LL ENJOY A T ASTY LUVUNCH PREPARED BY AN EXCELLENXNT CHEF. Delicious Pastry Matinee daily at 2.30 p.m. Evening 7.00 and 8.50 p.m. On Double Feature Nights patrons should attend not later than 8.00 p.m. in order to see full show WEDNESDAY THURSDAY MAR. 30â€"31 HOLLYWOOD HOTEL lbert‘s Iways TOâ€"NIGHT AND TUESDAY MAR. 28 â€"29 Claudette Colbert and Charles Boyer in PALAGCE THEATRE ution of want of confidâ€" F into supply, there has i the House a great disâ€" the monetary system of it they should ‘be gran With Dick Powell, Rosemary Lane, Hugh Herbert, Ted Healy, Glenda Farrell, Lola Lane Johnnie Davis, Alan Mowbray, Edgar Kennedy and a host of others International Tea Party read es t THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMINS, ONTARIGO Coâ€"starring Basil Rathbone and Anita Louise (A Superâ€"Musical Production) standard in the year 1931â€"32 and that this country is still off the gold stanâ€" dard today. The bill that has been revised and passeq for several years and which was once given quick and unanimous apâ€" probation was the private bill of Tommy L. Church, Conservative, Toâ€" ronto, requiring newspapers to file a sworn statement with the Postmaster General, disclosing their ownership. As usual, Mr. Church was highly critical of what he termed ‘"Newspaper cannibalâ€" ism" brought forth by newspaper mergâ€" ers and so forth, stating that such conâ€" ditions are strangling democracy and the party system of Government in Canada and threatening the lives of many weekly newspapers. I hope that the fate of his bill will not be the same as in previous years because in all those several occasions it was thrown out. The byâ€"election caused by the recent death of Peter Sinclair, Liberal memâ€" ber for Gueen‘s Prince Edward Island, will be held on the second of next May. The premature death of this relatively young Parliamentarion was quite a shock to the deputation. Gecrge Reon, a young 35â€"yearâ€"old lawyer, recently elected in Argenteuil, has succeeded to the late George Perley. He was introduced in the House. He came here with quite a reputation as a speaker and he will likely be named Conservativ leader in the Province of @Quebec. He said during his campaign, and since he was elected to the House, that he was a Duplessis Conservative, 5444 S *4 *4 Each Monday eight peoâ€" ple chosen at random from this district will receive free passes to the Palace Theatre. Look for your name hidden in these adâ€" vertisements. If you find it, clip the ad and bring it to The Advance Office and receive a free pass. Watch these ads careâ€" fully. Your name may appear at any time. Passes good for any perâ€" formance except Saturâ€" day. THE KING EDWARD HOTEL Corner Spruce S8t. and Third Avenue, Timmins Rules Quiect Atmosphere although his selfâ€"made qualifications have yet to be endorsed by the Premier of Quebec who stated very definitely yesterday that it is not his intention to have anything to do now or at any time with federal politics. Ernest Bertrand, Liberal, Montreal. opened discussion on his private bill to legalize provincial government lotteries in aid of universities and hospitals. Tremcendour sums for purchase of lotâ€" tery tickets are now going out of the country to Ireland and Great Britain, he said. and why should not these sums The private bill of Senator McMeans, of Winnipez, for widened grounds for divorce in Canada was sent to a special committee for further consideration after it had been given second reading by the Senate by 40 to 29. The bill | was opposed on religious grounds byl Pmuchâ€"Canadian and other Catholic | and Anglican senators. Some Protestâ€" , ant senators showed pronounced dis-i approval of the current unsatisfactory situation in Quebec where so many annulments have occurred over mixed marriages of a Roman Catholic and a Protestant where the marriage was not solemnized by a priest, The second reading of the bill which follows, pretty | closely, the recent British divorce law,| was supported by Senator Cairine Wilâ€" | son of Ottawa. The bill will still have | to run the gauntlet in the Commons after it passes the Senate and doubts are expressed as to whether it will get thermm. l be kept in Canada for charity here. He characterized Canada‘s present prohibitory law against lotteries over $50, as farcial and he declared that there is wide support throughout the Dominion for government conducted lotteries for charitable In 1934 the Senate approved lotteries for hospitals but the Commons threw out the bill. A similar fate, it is felt, awaits Mr. Bertrand‘s bill when it is finally voted on. The Minister of Fisheries stated that the Canadian Government would welâ€" come any overtures from the United States for an agreement regulating fishing on the Great Lakes. Similar ugreements have brought mutually benefical results on the Pacific coast fishing grounds, he said, and something may come of the proposal as regards the Great Lakes. We know, for a certainty, that the budget will not be brought in until after the Easter recess. No doubt that the complicated situation in Europe will likely retard the trade agreements beâ€" tween Canada, England and the Unitâ€" ed States. The standing committees are now in full function, and although the work of Parliament is progressing normally, the session cannot be over before the end of next June. Yours Sincerely. Kitchener Record:â€"A man may be on the square and still move in the best circles. Dapper Dan‘s new styles for spring PRICED 23 5 PRCO M O new patterns new shades Dapper Dan‘s BRIGHT MEN GET A BREAK BY Ordering Their Spring Suit or Topcoat Cedar Street South Across from Dalton‘s Taxi. J. B, Cormier, Chatftles st., N Just off Third Ave. Tatlored to your measure with from Jos. A. Bradette Phone 324 Gold Inflation Only Practical Solution Opinion of Noted Writer Supports Suggestion of Canadian Authorities. Several Canadian authorities, and notably the mining editor of The Gliocbe and Mail, have been contending that increaso in the price of gold is the only scnsible and practical means by which the heavy public debt of the world can be serviced and general prosperity restored. The proposal has dsuble interest for the North. In this North thers> is the common interest in public debts and in addition there is the interest of the country as a maâ€" terial gold producer. Any increase in the price of gold would give double serâ€" vice to the North. The suggestion of increase in the price of gold thus has special attraction for this country. However, it would seem that from the | I s occomen: smcs es« m it i. t standpoint alone of public interest and apart from any probable impetus given the development of the country from increased gold price, the advantage of assitance to a world burdened with debt now apparently about impossible to carry has its own particular appeal. This theory of the vital value to the world of a further increase in the price of gold is given strong support in a recent article in The New York Journal and American by Gugleimo Ferrero, deâ€" scribed as the "foremost historian in Europe." The article says there are two kinds of moneyâ€"natural or metal money, exâ€" tracted from mines, and artificial or paper money, produced in printing facâ€" tories, There are, also, two kinds of inflationâ€"natural or gold inflat:on and artificial or paper inflation. _ A rapid increase in the production of gold acts. as an inflation, increases the quantity‘ of gold coin in circulation and gives a lively impulse to industry and commerce quadrupled. From 1870, in twenty years, thanks to the impulss from Caliâ€" fornia, the world produced as much gold as in the 250 years from 1600 to 1850. The most common form of inflation is multiplication of money. The procedâ€" ure is simple and the effect never fails, iinmediately at the least. When money is abundant, everyone buys, prictes rise, industry is busy. trade prospers. ure is simple and the effect never fails, iinmediately at the least. When money is abundant, everyone buys, prictes rise, industry is busy, trade prosper=. The writer then traces the history of gold and points out that the first great inflation followed discovery of gold in California in 1848. That was a decisive event, even for Europ»s in revolution, and was fcllowed by discoveries in Ausâ€" tralia, From 1848 to 1851, in three years, world production of gold was Judging by history, paper inflation has always been harmful and deprives the world of the benefits of natural gold inflation. The latter, being naâ€" tural, has two decisive advantages over paper inflation: it is not arnurary and gold inflation. tureal, has two c paper inflation 3 Third Ave., Timmins OFFERS â€"EXCELLENT â€" SERVICE Rooms @ Kingston Hotel Mrs, Shephard‘s sStork Shop is just full of smart wee things for Baby, Visit this new shop on your next trip downtown. 35¢ upâ€"also Meal Tickets Room Board 811 and $12 per week CEDAK ST. N. AT FOURTH AVE Your films deserve the best. Let our experts develop your films. Royal Studio A. TOMKINSON ) Balsam N. PFh Films left at the studio before 9 a.m. will be ready the same day at 6 pim OQOur ‘work is done standard, not down EVERYTHING FOR TH E, BABY Quality Wooien Wear am N. Phone 417 B. Rowe, Patricia Blyvd. Sshephard‘s Stork Shop For Every Occasion WEEKLYX $4.90 © Mcals @ Bring Your Films To Us. Up Lo a to â€"# price Look For Your Name in These Advertisements it regulates itself. It does not depend upon the will of Governments. All the Governments in the wond, if united, could not increase the proquction of gold by a ton. That depends upon the work, the intelligence, the initiative, of millions of men sceattered over the enâ€" tire globe. The article continues: "Gold inflation regulates itself. The multiplication of go‘ld coins causes rise in the price of all commodities; the rise in prices inâ€" reases the cost of extraction of gold and, in consequence, reduces the proâ€" duction of the gold mines, which after a certain time causes a reduction in prices, rendering possible a new inâ€" crease in the production of gold. This automatic balance between the prite of gold and the price of other merchanâ€" dise, is known to all who have studied the economic history of the 19th cenâ€" tury." The great superiority of gold inflation over paper inflation is that, being a natural phenomenon, independent of the will of governments, it is impossible for States to abuse it. On the other hand, the faculty for abuso is the great danger of artificial inflation which deâ€" pends exclusively on the will of a State, The more money produced, the more it depreciates; the more it deâ€" preciates, the more must be produced. The French Revolution and Germany after the World War are memorable examples of the moral and economic, disorder to which an excess of inflaâ€" tion of paper money may lead. ‘"Why," asks the author, ‘"‘has the world completely forgotten the great experience of the past century? Why does it not know that the gold mines of California saved it once and that toâ€"day there are many Californias in full activity on the various continents? It is one more proof of the great conâ€" fusion that reigns toâ€"day in people‘s minds and renders it so difficult for the Government and public opinion in each country to find its bearings. "We seek everywhere for complicatâ€" ed and difficult remedies, when Nature often offers us simple, easy remedies which cost little or nothing. This aberâ€" ration, remarkable in such cultured epoch as surs, has complex reasons. In order to cure it, we must not cease reâ€" peating to the public certain truths, whereon science, common sense and exâ€" perience are in agreement. One of these simple truths is gold inflation and its effects." North Bay Nugget:â€"Half a million Chinsese farmers are said to be stemâ€" ming the Japanese advance in North China . . . indicating the pitchfork is mightier than the sword. Watch for the "Hidden Name" section every Monâ€" day. Your name may be in next. Eight free theatre passes given away each week When in need of a permanent wave, dont forâ€" get to call us. We are pleased to announce to all patrons that we have reâ€"organized our shop and have reâ€"opened for business at our former address, FPOR APPOINTMENTS 66 Fourth Ave. Th Finest W aves We hbhave the equipment to give you the finest hair dress obtainâ€" able the world over. We offer a splendid assortment of Chocolates and Candy, also Ice Cream in all seasons. Cigars DelLuxe Beauty Salon Fourth Ave and Balsam Street LOUIS KRAJCHI, prop. Henry Wiison, Cedar st, South Imperial Corner BASEMENTâ€"REED BLOCK MONDAY, MARCH 28TIH ,1938 CONFECTIONERY Now Reâ€"opened Phone 2280 Cigarettes Prop.â€"Lauria. Rose Room Beauty Sshop Tobaccos Timmins