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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1936-10-22, Page 7Financial - News T. C. Fawcett, 11'i.16., in charge of operations at the Morris Kirkland Goid Mines, in a wire tr local offi- cials, states that a .trash on the 808 crosscut on the 808 velli returned a value of $28.70 across 3,8 feet on the east wall and $11.55 across 4.6. feet on the west wall. This is undercut- ting the .708 orebody. J. D: Tinaler, 'mane manager of Skookum • Goad M,iales, reports that • diamond drill holo No, 1 put down ofi Nord vein• has .eut a 50 -foot dyke and is -in altered grailjte. Both the dyke' and granite contain 'qu rtz and mineralization. Surface work'.to date on the property has revealed nine veins which have been opened up for 'Various lengths° , "L he• present drill ,''•.programme is clegigued to test these showings at depth. A partyof To- ronto, London, St. Catharines and Hamilton business .men visited .the property in the Red Lake area over the we k;end. Twenty-four feet of the 55- feet —Of ore so far opened up on the down- ward extension of the new oast -west vein .on the 7th level at Darwin Gold Mines, averages $20.50 per ton across three' feet, according to company of- ficials. Assays for the remaining 31 feet are expected shortly. In the sec- ond round in raising operations in this vein on the sixth level fairly well mineralized quartz was encountered. Sonia fine free gold was noted on the right side of the last face. On the 7 th:level, . in addition to work on the south drift on the Grace vein and the downward extension of the east - west vein, a raise has , been started with the object of locating the down- ward extension of the Grace vein north of the new shaft. On the eight level the last two rounds on the Grace vein drift were in well -mineralized quartz. Cross -cutting has been start- ed toward the downward extension of the east -west vein. Brae-Breest Gold Mines, following receipt of a wire from the property In the Icenora mining district, re- ports that 400 feet south of the or- iginal showing a discovery has been made which is believed to be the ISain orebody. Trenching of the showing has revealed -mineralization across 60 feet with 15 to 20 feet of the material carrying high values. An extensive programme of surface exploration and deeper diamond drill- ing has been recommended by H. M. Whimster, mining geologist of Winni- peg, who recently examined and re- ported on the property. A contract for additional drilling has been let while the crew has been augmented to speed up surface work. Directors of Ronda Gold Mines at a recent meeting decided to follow the recommendations of - Mark Little, M. E., and proceed with a new program of development involving an expen- diture of approximately $75,000, The new campaign was decided on as a result of encouraging results secur- ed from preliminary work at the pro- perty in the West Shining Tree area. The programme calls for about 2,500 Now Ease Neuritis Pains Fast "Aspirin"Tablets Dissolve Almost Instantly In 2 seconds by stop watch, an "Aspirin" tablet starts to disinte- grate and go to work. Drop an "Aspirin" tab- let into a glans of water. By the time it hits the bottom of the glass it is disintegrating. What happens in this glass happens in your stomach. For Amazingly Quick Relief Get "ASPIRIN" If you suffer from pains of neuritis what you want is quick relief. "Aspirin" tablets give quick re- lief, for one reason, because they dissolve or disintegrate almost in- stantly they touch moisture. (Note illustration above.) Hence—when you take an "Aspi- rin" tablet it starts to dissolve al- most as quickly as you swallow it. .And thus is ready to start working almost instantly . . . headaches, neuralgia and neuritis pains start easing almost at once. • "Aspirin" tablets are made in Canada. "Aspirin" is the registered trade -mark of the Bayer Company, Limited, of Windsor, Ontario, Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet. Try it. You'll say it's marvelous. Demand and Get.- TRADt- . MARK REG, LOOIC F'oP 'PF,yIE' iaArE9 RPP9SS WITH THE SIC SC A, small tent city was required to accommodate the 250 boys from points throughout the Niagara Penin- sula at the first district week=end camp rally at Lakeside Park, Port Dalhousie. A program ne of practical Scouting tests and athletics was con- tested with keenness, The 1st Port Dalhousie Troop too" the Zeller Tro- phy for proficiency and the 3rd 5t.. Catharines Troop the "Silver" White Shield for 'athletics and the O'Neill Tropp, for First Class first aid. A special prize for the neatest camp sit went to the 1st Niagara Palls Troop. A mystery contest, which turned out to bo the most correctly d:essed Scout, was won by Troop Leader MacDonald of Port Dalin..sie: * * * One of the lecture stops of Ottawa sightseeing buses this summer. was Dominion Boy Scout Headquarters, where conductor. pointed oat the tall Indian totem pole on the lawn.' The pole was carved during a winter by junior Scout leaders, and reproduces a genuine Pacific Coast Indian tribal totem. Like the original, it Is bril- liantly colored. The three-foot rep- lica of the original which was used as a working model, is occasionally borrowed by Ottawa a public school teachers when discussing early Can- adian history. * :k * The establishment of a bureau of Government, Arebives, in Southern Rhodesia and the collecting of doeta ments concerning the early days of the: colony has revealed a series of maps ,prepared by Lt. -Col, Radon - Powell, They are • described as not- ably well done and complete, and 11- lust'rated with sketches of consider- able artistic merit, * * * Two 19 -year-old Polish Sea Scouts, who set out three years ago to .voy- age round the world in a 28 -foot yacht have experienced some of the adven- tures they sought. The seven weeks' crossing of the Atlantic 'so' battered their boat that they had to dispose of it. They purchased a par- tially • constructed hull, 48 feet long, finished it, and set off across the Pa- cific. They were last reported at Sydney. * * :y A party of English Boy Scouts hik ing on the Continent prepared tO spend the night on an island camp- site. One of the rules was that light- ing ing fires was strictly forbidden unless permission was obtained from the pe' - lice. The Scouts sought the police station and made their request of the only person about. "Certainly," the man agreed. "Go ahead." The man not being in uniform, one of the Scouts inquired who he might be. "Oh," was the reply, "I'm the prison- er. I'm looking after the island while the police are away." feet of diamond drilling, and the sink- ing of a 2 -compartment internal shaft from the 300 -foot level to a depth of 550 feet, Additional power equipment will be purchased immediately. , A party comprising Pittsburg and Toronto business men ani brokers have left fin' the Duquesne Mines pro- perty in Destor and Duparquet Town- ships, Quebec, where a programme of diamond drilling is underway on the Galatea section of the pruperty. In a report to local officials of Beresford Lak., Mines, E. S. McCar- thy, mine superintendent, states that work will be started without delay on the new campaign of development that will involve the opening of two new levels at 365 and 500 feet. He states that preliminary work on the Solo shaft, from which operations will be carried out, is practically completed. Lack of Moisture Is Most Injurious Dry air at the usual room temper- atures is injurious to health. It tends to dry up the mucous Membranes of the nose, throat, and lungs, weaken- ing the resistance of these organs to the disease germs carried in large part by the dust which it is an im- portant factor in creating. It has a drying and harshening effect on the hair and skin. The excessive evaporation of mois- ture from the skin in dry air with its abnormal loss of heat requires the maintenance of high temperatures for warmth. Authorities point out that these high temperatures pro- duce an enervating effect and cause nervousness and irritability. Gordon F. Perry., President of the Royal Winter Fair, Toronto, which is being held Nov. 18-26. He is chairman of the English Electric Company of Canada, Ltd., director Canadian National Railways and several other public bodies in the Dominion. POISONED KIDNEYS Stop Getting Up Nights To harmlessly flush poisons and Acid from kidneys and correct irrita- tion1 oof bladder so that you can stop "getting up nights" get a 40 -cent package of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules and take as directed. Other symptosis of kidney and bladder weaknesses are scant, burning or smarting Passage — backache -- leg cramps—puffy eyes. Issue No. 43 '36 D-1 Scientist Tests Border of Insanity New Haven, Conn.—By chilling his body to the early stages of freezing, Sir Joseph Barcroft, one of the world's foremost physiologists, . told a Yale audience recently he took a personal excursion into the border- land of insanity. I3e was able to pass beyond the "censorship," the mind's self-impos- ed standards for. safety. Cold felt de- liciously warm. Conventional ideas of modesty disappeared, he said. In still another "borderland ex- cursion," made by inhaling carbon di- oxide, lie passed into a sort of "land of errors," a condition when mis- takes seemed absolutely correct. Sir Joseph's knowledge :of mind and nerves contributed notable ser- vice in the Great War treatment of shell shock. He' once lived in a glass sage six days in air so rarefied that blood tests left the main artery of one arm permanently useless. He is professor of physiology at Cambridge• University and was one of 62 famous scholars given honorary degrees at the Harvard Tercentenary last month. The experiments described recent- ly, show effects on the mind of changes in the blood stream. He tried chilling twice, naked in a freez-. ing room. "In each," he said, "there was a moment when my whole menial out- Iook altered." Brings War Closer To Horne Writes the Buffalo Courier -Express —A Madrid newspaper makes circum- stantial charges that an "Italian dic- tatorship" has been set up in the Balearic island of Mallorca: Eleven Italian airplanes, under command of one Lieut. Rossini,: are reported to have landed at Palms, the principal city, to have forced the removal of the civil governor and to have placed in office a successor subservient to. the Italians. The newspaper, La Voz, further asserts that "numberless Ita- lians" have lauded on the island in a "real occupation" which has made Mallorca virtually an Italian colony. Spanish government spokesmen have charged from the beginning of the civil war thaa Italy has been backing the Fascist rebels, even to the extent of supplying military air- planes and pilots to fly them. The story about Mallorca is the most de- tailed of such charges niade publie thus far. If Italy really has seized Mallorca, Mussolini has violated a pledge of non-intervention and has in- tensified the peril of European war arising from the Spanish conflict. It will be recalled that, early in hostilities, the Spanish government revealed a purported bargain between the rebels and Italy whereby an Ital- ian naval base would be established in the Balea'•ics in the event of there- bellion's success.I Such a naval base would be designed for hostile opera- tions against France or Great Britain —or both. . Does Mussolini expect his protests of peaceful intent to be believed in London ane Paris, if he really has oc- oupied Mallorca? Someone says that Rip Van Win- kle slept twenty years because ne took his nap before there were ra- dios in the country. "It would be in the interest of the world to comprehend that well-fed peo- ples o ples are more sensible than hungry ones," Adolf Hitter. New Stamps Newfoundland Series to Be Ready About Time Of Coronation ST. JOHN, ,NF1,,D„ --- Newfound- land will issue a new series of ;Stamps about the time of the' coro- nation of King Edward VIII next year, according to an announcement of Major B. E. Harper, secretary for posts and telegraphs. Although it has not been decided definitely as yet, the new issue prob- ably will be of three denominations, similar in size and design to a new colonial series being prepared by the British Government. The new colonial stamps now being prepared will have a three- quarter profile vignette of the King's head in a circle placed towa:pd the top left-hand corner of the stamp with the imperial crown in the top right-hand corner. The name of the colony is shown beneath the vig- nette, the duty tablet at the bottom right -ha' corner, and the denomin- ination in words across the base. es urees Must Be Developed for All EDMONTON — Declaring Cana- das' resources must not be develop- ed in the "interests of a privileged few," Hon. T. A. Crerar, Federal Minister addressed a gathering of the Edmonton Chamber of Com- merce and Edmonton Chamber of Mines here recently L-ndertainty and lack of confi- dence on the part of investors were factors in retarding development, he told the gathering. "Development must not be in the interests of a privileged few as we have had too mach of that in Can- ada," Mr. Crerar declared. "To do that you must have help of the out- side world and make no mistake about it. "Banks cannot be blamed for lack of development as some people do. Investment experts are uncertain of the future and it is this fear that is responsible. There must be confi- dence. "If Germany's position were dif- ferent, giving us again a wheat mar- ket, it would spur business here and soon. "I greatly fear anything that shakes confidence is bound to re- tard development in this provnse as well as elsewhere. "Reforms are not achieved ht ov- ernight jumps but are always going on. Yet I do not say we must con- done things of the past, but reforms must be brought about in an orderly way it Mr. Crerar told of speaking re- cently with a friend "who holds some Alberta provincial bonds" and he wanted to know what the prov- vince had done with its wealth that it now had to reduce interest on its bonds. "Tat may be an embarrassing question but it certainly is a pertin- ent one," said Mr. Crerar Canada's Gold Oat - put New High Record Ottawa.—A new high monthly rec- ord for gold production was set in August, giving evidence of accelerat- ed mining activity since Dr. Charles CamselI made an estimate of $130,- 000,000 for total 1936 Canadian pro- duction some time ago. August production was 328,697 ounces, the Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics "reported Iast week. The new high mark compares with 319,505 ounces in July and 295,S96 ounces in August, 1935. For the first eight months of this year output amounted to 2,415,711 ounces, an increase of 14.9 per cent, over the same months last year. Ontario led the other provinces . 1 production in August with 199,830 ounces, while Quebec was second with 61,402' ounces. Other provinces follow: British Columbia, 42,524; Manitoba and Saskatchewan, 16,011; Yukon, 8,408, and Nova Scotia, 507 ounces., The average pric . of gold in Lon- don during August was slightly be- low $85 an ounce in Canadian funds. Based on that price, Canadian output had a value of $11,504,395, compared with .$11,153,920 in Jlily. Sewelry and scrap receipts at the Royal Mint in August contained 2,167 Ounces of gold, as against 2,570 ounces in Jitly, meat, MOVIE MACHINE. Com- plete with films, batte,ies and s11, - Vel screen, ready to operate. 1 Positively no mon- o to pay,given Y g e to you absolutely free an guaran- teed d 1 g teed as represent- ed. Simply send your name and address, W5 will mall you only 12 tins of liygeia Heal- ing Salve, 'which you sell at 25c. a box. Every henio needs a tin, Sell within 3U days, remit $3,00, and Ivo will send Movie Iilachine at once, postpaid, or cash eon- mission. IIYaErA CIIEMICAL CO„ Dept. (".13.4 Sox 433, Toronto, 'Ont. • Stuff and Nonsense Indignant Mother—Are you kiss- ing that young man, Geraldine? Geraldine — No, Mother. I'm on - 1 ]y brushing my teeth on his mous- tache, A man, who seems dumb and who realizes it, more or less, quite often succeeds where a man of superior mental attainments fails. Reason, the dull one has poise and patience,1 where the smart one has neither. Helen — I know a woman who lived to the age of 40 without learn- ing to read or write. Then she met a man who made a scholar o: her in two years. Henry — That's nothing. I know a man who was a scholar at 40, but he met a woman who made a fool of him in two days. The one objection to the wages of sin, is that too many other people don't get paid off soon enough. Herbert — Too bad about the village blacksmith. Julian — How so? Herbert — He was arresteil for forgery. "Well Sambo, how are things a this resort?" "All right, boss, all right, de sk' am de limit, I'se suah you al gammen will heb a good time." Bride — Dear, what is the true definition of a groom? Hubby — Why, a groom is a man who takes care of dumb animals. Our wants will, at any time, vast- ly outrun, the most high -geared production of the machine age. But the one trouble so .far as the de- mand on the producers is concern- ed, is that we want vastly more than we can pay for. Mother — What is your baby brother crying for? Junior — He's dug a big hole in the back yard and can't bring it in the house. Think it over: A building can be razed after it has been raised, but it cannot be raised after it has been razed. The man who had an inflated idea of his own importance usually finds that the community has • him sized up as he would look after deflation. The customer proved most exact- ing, and the clerk grew impatient: Customer — Are you sure this is a genuine crocodile skin? Cleric — Quite sure. I know the man that shot it . Customer — It looks rather dirty. Clerk — Well, yes, that's where the animal struck the ground when it fell out of the tree. When you always tell the truth you don't have to remember what ` you've said. A local doctor says he answered a telephone call a few days ago and was told this: "Say, Doc, my wife I just • dislocated her jaw; if you hap- pen to be out this way in the next week or two, call in and see her." Woman — He used to kiss me ev- ery time our train passed through a tunnel before our marriage. Friend — And doesn't he do so now? Wonsan — No; he takes a drink. The pian who tries to work at several things at; a time stands a very good chance not to get any of them done. - Little Boy (looking at his moth- er's new fur coat)—How that poor beast must have suffered that you could have such a fur coat. Mother — Ilush, Junior. You shouldn't talk so of your father. The transport was shoving off for the Orient. Two little flappers were waving good-byes from the dock. First Flapper — 1 think it's a shame to send all tl ose nice Mar- ines to China, What will they do there? Second PlNapper — What'll they do? :Ain't yeti ever been out with Marine? 55 i.; Oh ! What a Roll! Yes, sir -You can bank on rolling a better cigarette with Ogden's Fine Cut. For Ogden's has the balance you want—coolness, smooth- ness, fragrance that satisfies on every count. Ogden's gives you a higher percentage of smoking enjoyment because it's a better tobacco. And be sure to use "Vogue" or "Chantecler" papers. N.B.--The purple easy -open- ing ribbon on the Ogden's package is a great conveni- ence. y FINE CUT P.S.—Your Pipe Knows Ogden's Cul Plug Remorse is merely memory that has begun to ferment. A minister denounces betting be- cause it's a "means of getting mon- ey for nothing." It's even worse than that—it's a means of getting' nothing for your money, Tobacco production in British coI- onies, which was practically un- known a few years ago, now sup- plies the United Kingdom with one-fourth of its tobacco require- ments. "Differences between peoples are due entirely to their history, tradi-) tion and culture, and not to different heredities."—Sir Cyril Fox. Classified Advertising ASTIIMA SUFFERERS ASTHMA — A missionary from Incna com- pletely relieved of asthma 15 years will gladly send valuable information to any sufferer. Send name and address, Gladys Roberts, 302W Avenue Road, Toronto, Ont.I .PERSONAL r`REYING IIAIR INSTANTLY Darkened.' \i No. (Ile. Safe. 50e. Trial size 25c. 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