townslnp ( Gold area tloh ‘of: s tl .mprl S ts C t% fender. . _ .;.. .__. .. .. ... _ A cortified cheque for ten per cent. 91 e price offered to accompany éach ender, forfeitable upon nonâ€"paymeht of b‘he balanoe of the purchase money 'ï¬f--f'-?"f'f; The sale isâ€"subject to <the provi« e# lions of the: ‘Mlmng Tax Act and any gxmend;nmts thereto, and to an addiâ€" ,é,.,tgonal charge xg favour of the Crown _ of two per eent: on the net praflts calâ€" eulated on the basis contained in the ‘ said Act. >The boundmes of the parcel to be surveyed and delimited on the: gmund :"3 Deplrtment of Mmes before :,, O€" any tenkr nbt P Un in ccnied caâ€" lated the 11th day of December, 1923, ;that part of the hbed of Porcupme‘ Lake in. the townghips of Whitney and Tisdale, in the Porcupine Mining vision, remaining the property of e Crown and containing 539 acres ~THE PORCUPINE: GOLD AREA ° POROUPINE ‘GoLD ABEA 3;} ~ ~ONTARIO. _ ;’a ‘k OTICE is hereby giverm:hat under and by virtue of an Orderâ€"inâ€"Council ;; Tendérs :o be received not later :_‘f'n 12 o‘clock noon on Thursday the 165th day of May, 1924. Tenderers to‘name a lump sum for :;_‘e said land, payable in full within tgen days of the acceptance of the sender. â€" certified cheque for ten per cent. f the price offered to accompany each tehfler, forfeitable upon nonâ€"payment g’ff}-.'he balance of the pur cchase money TPhin the prescrlbed time. _ :;f;'.mThe sale is subject to the proviâ€" Bions of the Mining Tax Act and any amendments thereto, and to an addiâ€" Eional charge in favour of the Crown of two per cent. on the net profits calâ€" u]ated on the basxs eontamed in the. aid Act." ' : The boundaries of the parcel to be ",:"j}"._;veyed and delimited on the ground: by the Department of Mmes before flï¬e day of sale. < The highest or: any> tender not ï¬eeessanly accepted.. _ to be enclosed in sealed en- Blopes. marked on the outside ih galn for iPorqupime: ' . /« Minister of Mines, i’l’oronto, 17 th December, 1923. _ N.B.â€"No unauthorized insertion of hls advernsement will be paid Ior se @5 Py IB, _ .A. J.. DOWNIB, Eu.e Precxdent. . Secretary. «. ~ + Box 1338 39 Nee 5.: 30 s 22 marked on the outside in ain letters ‘‘Tenders for East Part n Luka,â€and tormrded by reâ€" e‘ and forwarded, by. registered l to the Minister of Mmes, Parâ€" nent Buildings, FToronto, Canada.,; 'E“ï¬â€˜r less, too'ether ‘with the mmes, aerals and mlmng rights . therein ‘thereunder, is offered for sale by ipgs :the. secondand . fourth ; ,tï¬ofbtho.monï¬n, in the 1.0.0.F. Te f, ltmmg at 8 p.m: ibmb-p fee, .06 per year Â¥ry members and 50¢. per year I to Mve-brn Scata and Wlmn and thone of Seottish Aeâ€" tender on following condiâ€" CHARLES MeCREA, w ‘The itinerary ‘covers the beauty spots of England, the British Exhiâ€" bition, andâ€" on the Continert, the Bnges, Zeebruge, Brussels and special visit to Paris for the: Olympic Games ~ Leave Montreal June g1st m: ‘to Montreal July 26th * For full information apply «AM Lancastrians welcome and their Friends are invited. ; § Allâ€"ExpenseCollege Tour to Enrope _ ._Aâ€"36â€"DAY TOUR FOR $330 Timmins Gold. Nugget Rebekah Lodge, No 173 Lancashire Club â€"â€" Timmins Meets every first and second Sat- urday in Each Month. H. UNSWORTH, F. Y. UTTLEY, : JNO. B. AIKE DENTIST Phone 201 and 50c. a boxâ€"6 for $2.50â€" at druggists or sent postpaid by Pruxt- aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. ‘Fourteen years ago, Mr.. James S. Delgaty, of : Gilbert Plains, Man., was a nervous wreck, His system was shattered ~by > Nesvous : Prostration, and he was reduced in weight from 170 to 115 pounds. ; _ He wrote on May 15th, 1917, "Every n;edicine I tried proved useless until a friend induced me to ‘take ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives.‘ I began to mend at â€"â€"‘AJA_“- once. After using this fruit medicine for three months, I was back to normal. I~have never had such good health as I have enjoyed the past six. years. We are never without a box of ‘Fruitâ€" aâ€"tives‘ in the house.:‘"‘ ‘Writing again on September 27th, 1923, Mr; Deigaty says, ‘"I ‘stand by my letter_ to you in 1917â€"I still 9 93 recommend ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives . "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ is a complete fruit treatmentâ€"â€"being made of the juices of fresh ripe fruits and tonics. Gonsultation: Free A. L. HERBERT Dr. C. L. HUBBERT Bidg 'ï¬mmms, Ont Phone 66 J ‘M. Belanger, Manager Wbolcfe‘sjjgl'ef Steam and Anthracite Coal ~Gordon Building, Timmins Chiropractic Specialist Cars Always in Transit Examination Free President. some are alble to conceal the effort more than others. Hard hitting and pressing are two very different things. Pressing means ‘misspent energy. Usually when the unskilled player atâ€" tempts a longer shot than ord‘mary it rarely comes off, and the réason is that he has not learned how to conâ€" trol his ‘strength. : iPressing is always apparent for it results from the muscles not working together. There is always an effort| present, and a misguided effort it is. In the golf swing certain muscles imhibited at one point and others ! | speeded up at another point.:~ It is the proper coâ€" â€"ordination of. these muscles which gives the long iball. I do not think it can be gainsaid, howâ€" ever, that in order to drive a long ball it must Ibe hit very hard. There is no substitute for speed when disâ€" tance is desired. .Moreover, it canâ€" not be denied that oftentimes when a: player attempts a lone his efforts mee't with anything but success. . ‘ The Golfer‘s Greatest Evil l ~In attempting the long ball one must be careful about several points. As a rule when one tries to hit hard. he hits quickly, and the temptatmn’ to hurry the swing is perhaps the golfer‘s greatest~evil. Distance and. speed seem to ibe so inextricalbly as sociated in our minds that when the: idea of distance suggests itself the: ;motor accompaniment, spéed, follows in quick sequence. If the player is not extremely careful the speed is apt‘ to exhibit itself in the back swing and instead of a lon,gel shot result-l ing the very reverse is more than: likely to follow. It is this very temptation that has given rise to. the ‘titheâ€"honored maxim of "slow back‘‘ ‘of which there is none more ‘valuable in golf, not ewtceptlno' its famous twin. of “keep the eye on the ball.‘ ~ In the short shot eteeptmg haps ‘the twrge foot ‘putt, thete ; des not seem, to be . the saime inclination fto hurry the shot. But in driving, es pemally where a little extra distante 18 requxred this weakness is alwavs latent in the SW‘an' Aibe Mltchefl 18 a very good emm'ple of the slow back ‘swine. I think it is largely ibecause of his slow back swing that his down Trot and Old Time Square Dance, a Broom One Sbep, with the usual Paul Jones. The â€" winners of the Luc\() Number Dance were Miss Berâ€" geron and Dr. iM. I-Ioney Prizes were also given to the best dressedâ€"lady and gentlaman. (Miss Nellie Stndor in a becoming costume of the. Vietorâ€" ian period won first for the ladies, and Mr. A. W. Pickering, as a Tark, ferocious mustaches and ‘all, won the first for gentlemen. : iMr. Harry Ausâ€" tin as a habitant lawyer made a gpecâ€" hit with the gathering.. ‘Refreshâ€" ments were served ‘by the lady memâ€" bersofthe(}lub The meeting this evemng wil the ~nsual dance. This will be the: M ~#f the Club danees this summer, all mensbers are requested to attend.. is fast it is usually jerky. If it is fast and smooth then I dowbt if this is a defect. The Novelty Masquerade held last Wednesday evening at the A.SJD. Club meeting in the 1.0.0.F. Hall here, was a very suceessiful affair. The atterndance was not large, but the good time enjoyed by those present testified to the . popnlarlty of the Novelty Masquerade. ; Among the feature dances for the evening were a Lucky Number Fox NOV'E{LTY MASQUBRADE HELD AT THE A.S.D. CLUB sw'mg a:p'pears to ‘be so very fast. The contrast is much sharper in Mitchell‘s back and down swings. There are far. other equally long drivers who do not seem to speed up the club so quickly as Mitchell, and yet, in fact, they must do so, for they drive the ball as The Back Swing . The slow back swing must be carâ€" ried out a:ppronmwtely _as all golf principles. There is no absolute slowâ€" ness with which to measure each swing. Dunean, for example, could not swing as slowly in the back swing at Mitchell, for it is not in his makeâ€" up to do . anything slowly.. ‘*Slow 'Hug moth,Wk g is the im« portant fantm In the effm‘t to. drive a long ball the player ‘generally grips the club more tightly, which usually means that (he stiffens ‘his muscles. Now this is fatal:to long hitting for the muscles,cannot do their effective work when tensed. There is tuna when : the: nxnseles con'trac.t but it is not in the ‘back swing. The: elu?bi should be takenr ~back slowly and| smoothly,; not with a loosenor rigid grip ibut with a firm one, and especlal-‘ with the left hand. The back swing should ‘be allowed to finish and start to reverse before the speed is conâ€" sciously increased. It should then be speeded up as fast as possible. /This is apparently the method of the long drivers, judging from ‘both personal ‘observation and pictures. It is surâ€" | prising ‘how â€"one‘s dnive lengthens out !if the point of speeding up on the down swing:only is concentrated on. Position of the Arms Sarazen emphasizes the straight left arm. There is no doubt but that this is important,. but very few players could keep their left arms as straight ‘as® his and feel at all co.mfort'alfle. This must ‘be approximated, and it must: not be forgatten that there are ‘Tong drivers, more so than Sarazen, "Atho do not keep the left arm anyâ€" l avhere as straight as his. | â€" The straight left arim seems to facilâ€" itate the leverage procégs, which takes place when the ball is hit. It is imâ€" |portant to have the left anm approxiâ€" straight at imipact. Press, Lumted ) Next Lookmg Through t.he Camera | â€" at the Swing. 107 on Smlday next. «m . whists in "the last *fmaarw«m the: sKing before impact. Ihere Are not pfrposing forces. The firmer the left arm andleft lég are the more vigorâ€" ous the nfovemnent of the right hand becomes and, of course, the. more leverage hhére ig. If" the left elbow is broken "the leverage is thereby weakened, _ : Another item often insisted on as an aid;to long driving, is to keep the nicht elbow close to the. bhody. f That Leverage Process The leverage process in golf has often ‘been described as a seissor movement. The léeft hand is spoken of as working in the opposite direction to the right, as the blades of a seisâ€" sors. ‘This is not literally true, for both hands are moving in the same diâ€" rection, does seem to be two movements; ithe long swing of the arms and elith mntlated ‘by the reversâ€" ing of the body, and the smaller or superâ€"added â€"movement of the club inâ€" duced ‘by the ceversing of the right NLast week a party of some twenty students from the Ohio State Univerâ€" sity visited Timmins on a brief tour of â€"the North Land. They had visited Sinmdbury, .Cobalt,, New Liskeard. and other North Land Centres. They were in chargeâ€"of Prof. W.:A. Muller of the _Metallurgy Department of the Ohio State University, and travelled in a.CNR. special car. Whe purpose of the visit is to see the country and to sindy mining conditions here. /+ : A practical working of the leverage process may be got from the ‘simple experiment of fastening the end of: a ruler while the other end is: drawn back and then released. The moveâ€" ment is quite vli-go'rous. But ifâ€" the fastened ‘end is released while <the other is drawn baclkâ€"and then released, the motion is quite weak,. The placâ€" ing of the left hand well over and the right somewhat under, the shaft, seems to help many golfers in getting greatâ€" er leverage.> All these points must be carried out approximately, but on analysis the swings of, the long drivâ€" ers do reveal these factors. Rememâ€" ber, however, there. is no substitute for chard Bitting. if dlstance is reâ€" quired. PARTY OF STUDENTS FROM + â€" OHIO UNIVERSITY HERE OLDEST, MAN IN CANADA LIVES.:ON CALUMET ISLAND C n PCms hy ns M 0 ue v‘v- thoae Paults whmb do. not. ooptem onr- (Copyrighted â€" British : Colonial We PE C hx LA CA Ot o en( uiB PAE 0 J Sowe,ibanephawoflr Beâ€" at n in our fnends o. not. congern:ourâ€" | *L 9 )A m > aha" x wl