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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-08-13, Page 7if 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.