Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-08-13, Page 7
if Tea SMOKING TOBACCO FINANCIAL .. J. B. Tyrrell and other officials of Northern. Canada Mtotog Corp, plan to visit the Argosy Gold- Mines property far the pouring of the first gold brick about the middle of Au gust. The mHl started operating a few weeks ago and is handling 75 tons of ere daily with 'awera'ge grade of about -$24,. Ore reserves, are of ficially estimated to be' 71,237 tons with a gross value of $ 1370,900. •t * . ’ * ' ■ . . I Wendigo. Gold Mines’ second gold brick for July covering production for the second.-ten days of the month had a value of $5,767,. ac- cording to official word. Thto com pares with output far the first ten days of ■ the ‘ month of $5,744, or a, total 'of $11,511 'for the period. Average' tonnage for the period was- 48 tons. daily, while recovery ha* shown improvement of. late. t Mfll- herids averaged 373 ozs. ©f, $13.05 per ton. ‘ ; The centinuation of Bidgood’s 515 veto as been" definitely established on the 425vfopt. .level; at Moffat-Hall Mining ..On, according to M A. Poti, ter, MJiL,. in charge-of operations. 'TEe'’~4G‘2'”eful’Scu:t across a: width of -better than six feet and oyer a length of 25 feet returned $-7.40 per t&n to gold. Between 4^0<> and- 5,GG0 toils of ore grading $12 per ton have already been blocked out at the Moffatt-Hair property.’-The amount of drifting done on. the new workings on aH^levels including-the 550, is approximately 950 feeti On the 150-foot level, No. 103 crosscut .across one foot of the east wall as sayed $28 and cress one foot of the i west wall assayed $10.50 per ton. Qn the 425-foot level to the 49^ west ! drift one assay returned $1536 in gold per ton across * width of 3.6 feet. AH new equipment has been installed -and is. working smoothly. A crew of 45 men- are' employed at . present. •' Que-On Mines, ■ a pa-rtinripating- holding company recently tocorpor- atedi, announce the ^uppointnieiit of'.' SL B. Goldberg, ELM., as field. en gineer on the- /DOrval! Siseoe, Nu- maque ' and Snowshoe (formerly Varsan> properties. Drilling to erin- ttoutog on the Numaque ■ ground with' two drills reported cutting rntoeraEzatiom ;The two diamond drills ordered for Borval Siseoe are. expected -to he a-n.the ground some time this week, while the driHtog .outfits 1 for Traverse Longiar Mmes and P'ertage Longlac Mtoes are ex pected - to-' arrive on- tito properties Eater tins week. ...-' . f' • I Aloneh Britan Surrey Richest County —- Scotsmen Have Biggest. . Families A There are 2,000,000. .-people to Great Britain who live alone. Nearly half the women workers to the country are employed in two in dustries.. One man out of every fifty to either of independent means ‘qt unemploy able. ' In 1934 the total population of Great Britain was 23 2-3 milticn females and 21% males — 1,084 wo- ■fefen to every' 1,000 men. . It to estimated.. that -in 1941 the population will be 448&MJ00; that by 1951 ft will have fallen to 42,- 670.000; and that by 1961 it will «dy be 39.358,000. p r The Census regards a fa any group of person, inelw yants._.and„kdgers,.. whe... live- to - a every”hundred people live a famfly life. Large; famiEes—parents, children, and servants—are most, numerous to Scotland. There 15J>. per cent, of all famiEes consist of e» rit or more- P®r- ons. ■ . ■ ’ Women, on the average Eve longer than men* ~y, __M«re boys are- born than girls, tfo to tie age .of 15 there -are only 980 girls, to every 1.000 boys. After the age of 65 there are 1,316 women to every 1,000 men. . . ■There are 90,000 persons with in comes exceeding $10,000 a year. The number ri rrfn- less than $750 a year is 151900,000. . Two miJEon seven hundred thou sand earn between ’ $1,250 and $2J500 a year,and 54000 people have, in comes of between $2,500, and, $5,000. Only 1 one family to 20 to Britain has a-' weekly income exceeding $50. DIXIE 3 X-Ray and Painting 1 .7 With the danger of fire- over, .drill-■ tog Operations' have- been resumed at j the .Kaw Cro-Wi Wtooga and 'Gateway | ' '.Surrey-has a larger proportion °f properties to the Pickle Crow-Ceurral J Patricia area. While the "fires which occurred duri; y the recent hot, dry ■ spell did .not reach- any of these pro- ’ per ties, it- was considered , advisable : 'to halt operations. As a result, 'drill- , 'tog- eq;ikipment ’ was •. buried. 'While crews made - preparations to fight • fires' ■should the wind change and threaten , the mining properties. ■■ A Rembrandt Injured, Chem ists Say It Was Over? . .. Exposed 1 British Motor Statistics 1 ' East year's, total of motoring of fences’in England and - Wales for the first time exceeded 50O J300.' ■ The increase was over 85;60*l, from 433,060 in 1934 to 518,240 to 1935. The number of, persons involved' last1 year was 449',653 compared with 366> 446 to 1934. . „ . The return for- 1935 to the first since the imposition of ,thc speed- limit' to bufit-ap areas. Of the 121,757 speed Emit oftonces, 804)10 related to huflt up areas, arid 35,635 to -goods vehicles- “Speeding”- fines totalled over £1334100; Against “failing, to stop at traffic rignato,”' 31,427 offences were record ed, at pedestrian crossings 7,503, and “faHtog to stop at police tignalsfi 4,124.. J weH-to-do families- than - any ' other ' comity. Every year $5,960,000 .is • food. ; ' The maintenance of the ’ sorbs $3,120,000 annually. i Savings, including new houses■ and ' furniture, are estimated at $2,250,- .0OO4W' every'year., . The expenditure on tobacco'to 1934 was $600.000,000, arid- orT drink $1,- 150,000.000. The British nation spends $4235i- 000,000 annually. on sport and, enter tainment; $325,000,000 on reading; $165,000,000"on religion-; and $1^95,- 060.000on clothes. One-third of all the women work ers in the country—I^OS.QOO-— are in domestic or'personal service. ■ ** T, < -V spent on home ab~. , ENTIRELY PROBABLE , ; My' lady loves' a tenor whose voice to me to brittle, . But, oh,- she loves him such • tot, ■and loves me such a: Stile. She nestles fey the radio - and listens to his theme song, His warbEng keeps' me wide awake,, to her ft to a dream song. So aR that I can do is' wait tin we have television, ' And when 'she'* has a look at Mm she’may change her decision. For more than" two years the dir ectors -of the State Mdseum of Ber lin have ref used. permission to make X-ray pictures of 3ny painting to their possession- And the reason? A Rembrandt belongtog to the art galleries of E-a=sel had been X-rayed on behalf of the Fogg Art Museum of Harvard with disastrous- results. A sort of cancer had ruined' the pigment. • . -- Half a dozen experts rush to the defence of the. X-rays—indispens able in determinirig whether 'an old, perhaps -more valuable, -work . Hes beneath the surface that gladdens tic-.-eye. Among them are- Vflftor Bauer, Helrnuh Rinnebach, Dr. Ed uard Petertil, Dr. S. . Gotzky, Pro fessor Paul- Gunther and Dr. F. Muller-Skjold, all of whom , have measured X-ray dosages and noted the effect. There is no denying that if the dose to too strong a painting may be damaged irreparably. But there to nothing to fear if the’ to- ;'tensity of irradiation to no more than that required to .penetrate the layers of pigment. , . Paunt chemists have long known 'that short-wave radiation profound ly changes -eheimcal-pgments. But tiie '.exposure must he^rihg and the radiation strong. Muller-Skjold, who to on the staff of the 'physico-chemi cal Iahoraory of the Federated Statip Schools to Berlin, found that X-rays injure a painting’ when thejr are from 10,000 to 100,000 times -ns strong as they need fee fori normal penetration of all layers. Gunther and Gotzky (physico-ch^mieal in stitute of tile University of Berlin) found that paintings can be X-rayed repeatedly without harm provided the dose is riot greater than that actually" required to obtain good shadowproWs of all • layers of pig merits, j ’ - Stammer Praning s .. Vesuvius, the famous volcano, is nw yielding .^potash, which is useful -in agriculture. '. ■ Classified, Advertising ■ ASVwtmml tnrag . LIANGER.. STANDARD LIMB CO. • 126 Wellington West, Toronto. Im proved limbs without 'sMculder cr-arap Free catalogue. Aim> ACCSSSQBXES YEW AND -PSED CAR AND TRUCK 'parts shipped everywhere. Satis- facti'Ga guaranteeC or. money .-refunded. Prompt ■'Attention to ea-quiries: Levy Auto Parts, Head Office- "55 Qseto St. Wes*. Toronto. , . nOTOCOAHKX yOCH ROLL FILMS DEVELOPED, * printed with free enlargement.- Sic. Photo-Craft. lS3t EEtn^East, Toronto. WWWTSKET ro» &ua pURNISHED -HOUSE, SG ; ACRES - land. Station close. ; Good business opening; Bargain. Lively's. ChudJeiah. Ontario. svskt paxcKs num m? sees 2<-33 OUNCE EGGS SELECTED .from our town* blood-tented. F> pCtmd White Leghorn, 2-year-old hena. Free catalogue. Gerald Hegadorn Poultry -Farm. Route X Kingston, Ont. AG30VT9 ATXXamo* |£ING EDWARD’S BIRTHDAY. JUNE r* 23rd. Attractive -ph-nto buttp139 32.50—or 4Ge d«reu, Yon sell- ICC ’each. Tainsfey Cd™ 21S4 Melrose. Mont real. KDVCATx<nra& QIESEL ENGINEERING — STUDY *-* Immediately, big field; .new book cow ready. Write' today fey circulsr. General Publishing Utt. Toronto. Pttira DMtXriGMSD * NY. P.OLL FILM DEVELOPED AND p-iated, 2Sc cola Reprints, ifl for 2Se Wjhdso# Photo' Finishers. 1'32 Wel lington- St- Windsor. Out. BBSSCTS jjXTBMBI I MATEU r Hi r r ✓ recreational attractions* AUFKEQ ROGERS L SO1.E AGEMT _ ’ 'ME-M. GENEST ch SWEPSaOOKE. QUE. ■ ■ , BICYCLES, to up, AUTO- I-*- v’res • Free ns’.il-'snie. fee>"’a-cr rrppii-M ISS T-'TCr'^ ■ ')-gr_—----a___ _______________:----- 3BTGS • COCKTRp ACHES. AJSTS; aaotha. (See, .tlcfes. cuamrteed ex- w?th ■•Puffer mick- Drtjgeists -"T nerro pre-d-ucts, to; - _ _________‘ . r. , . l^E aac atrro basgaxs3 . ty.-f ACHIEVEMENT! MWRlwPfflWi!tre Z" OF THlf HE COVE RY YE A It As results show, - trees can be pruned as well to Summer as. to Winter or' Spring., There to no • seri ous after, effect of Summer pruning where pruning is needed' badly-. ’Weak ,and,, .crowded wood can really mcTfcto Friday evemag-^r .»*» . Summ. Tr Take Part With Special .hr Be- ^^^Jtweea Numbers nothin;. , • .' ~ ‘ ■ little Lucknow Crtmzens’ Band is’hope keep 11 that to-morrow night (Friday I around^/see a long stream of cars and compE -ople pour into the Caledonian irk, where the annual, tattoo of the ganizatiou will • be Staged. - Such an event is well-known to the bKc and. needs nd further' ea- Fgementi If yon cane for band mus- * and an. a^ompfcnying program - And 1 novelty numbers you art assured ha evening’s 'entertainment- well the price of admission. .^g^Leavmg from the Town Hall at -jK*orW„ o’clock, -ibands from Wtogham, • Sfl^ussefe, ^Teeswater, the ' Lucknow g^^toens* Band and the Lbcknow Pipe' sJsP A. rid will parade to the park, where ; ipdkVlZffJl lf.ll I'll V massed band selection “O Can-! ®O wiH open the program. Special j ^mbero will be given between band! fif — ■ •' ■'-:3 ss fclv,. Vjrtds te ■cr’OJiSE, / -ftds. The matoh wu!" end the th performance and after the up- am. paz^de, a platform dande will •ins; mto activfty.