The Advarnte last week had referâ€" ence to a couple of Kirkland Lake young pecple lost iin the bush seven hours while partridge hunting, but it was after the paper was cut that it was learned that ancther Kirkland Lake _couple were lost in the bush searching for other lost couple. Gil Stevens, 27â€" yearâ€"old newspapnr reporter, and Bill Thompson, 18 years old, were two of the crowd of helpful people who started out to help in the hunt: for Marion Taylor and Wm. Dangler, the young couple lost in the bush six miles east Of Kirkland Lake whilse partridge hunting. Miss Taylor and Mr. Dangler were found all right after being 1¢st some seven hours, but in the:meantime two of the searchâ€" ers, Messrs Stevens and Thumpson got lost themselves® and wandered in the bush all night. They managed to make their way back to civilization the next day after a walk estimated at twenty miles. â€"+Recently there" has, been a golumn in The Northern News, of Kirkâ€" land Lake, headed “The Roving Reportâ€" er"... Is this the one? If s9, is it true that the make-up man put the column ..... heading, "Lost, Strayed or Stolen." f REPORTER GETS LOST IN SEARCHING FOR LOST COUPLE exploring =the walls indicate that the zone has a width of 145 feet on. theâ€" 1,000â€"foot level, and 27 feet on the surface. I%esulbs from work on the two new levqs, At 1,175 and 1,315 feet, are very satisfactory, R. T. Birks, president reâ€" ports. Long drives have betn put out along the ore zone on these levels, and reguisrly spaced diamond drill holés are Production in the third quarter of the year was<lower than in the first second quarter, due to a drop in the.average grade milled. Indications trom production results in October. to date: ‘gre that grade is on the upward swmg officials state. Howey Gold Mines production in the first nine months of this year approxiâ€" mted $856,000 from 242,700 tons treatâ€" ed. a.n average of $3.12 a ton. Exâ€" ch compensation revenue totalled $113,000. : After all operating charges there was an operating profit of $355,â€" 000, or $1.55 a ton. PRODUCTION OF HOWEY FOR ~FIRST NINE MONTHS OF YEAR oi se s 2 °. ce bntor s m ALZL CAAA to A OLAL A4, of oh]y 3Q Oxo Cube Re‘c_!'\vj'nppe;‘s'.' 6126 .l..i-;x;e:i:?t lgeter Street, Montreal OF INTEREST TO WOMENâ€" PV ITEIERET WOMENâ€"We are repeating, for a limited time only, the Offer of a Britishâ€"made, 13‘ aluminum cooking spoon for the return LA JC smmA _ _R E.: m > of 224 p se i0 s 20 h. ., ... _ _ _ J YOURE TI‘IINI(ING assisting _ charitable and other institutions depending dn the municipality for supâ€" Spend Your, Doilars Te t 4 cluuus .you aid in the emâ€" ployment of local peopleâ€"in the paying of town taxes, in FRANK BYCK RBy buying from local. merâ€" 64 Spruee St. S COAL AND woop Your Home Town [# _ Detroit News: Since it became eviâ€" dent that prices are rising and probâ€" ably are due for a contiiuous climb, hcarders are concluding that there are better uses for their money. Trehsury officials estimate that money is being returned to. normal ‘uses at the rate of from $25,000,000 to $50,000, 000 a week. It is a good sign. The annual general meeting will be held in the Tr and : Guarantee Building, Bay Street, at 10 a.m., Nov. 21. While efforts in varisus purts of the mine yielded some ore, on the whole results of development work have been disappointing, ~both as regards this year‘s work and as regards the expandâ€" ed development programme undertaken in the fall of 1930, Robert E. Dye, Manâ€" ager, states in his report. * "Ore resulting from the development work done during the past two years has fallen far short of meeting mill requirements. Formal reserves have been depleted to such an extent that the buik of the present ore supply is coming from prospects stopes, raises, salvage operations, etc., all of which are becoming in-crea,sin-gly . he concludes. h in t ces nc t n i4 Added to bullion receipts of $478,021 was the exchange premium of <$59,988. and dividend and interest earned of $48,820. â€" The sum of $136,519 was spent on ‘development, $258,537 on mining $111,089 milling, $58 176 administration and general, and $24,519 in insurance and taxes. Net profit on securities sold amcunted to $8,854, and sundry adjustâ€" ments to $2,956. The sum of $22,757 was set aside for depreciation. Surplus was reduced by $17,365 to $703,387. $199,400 to $136,769.,. Shares in mining companiles at cost were up from $255,â€" 200 to $538,624,â€"and had a market value at the end of the year of $568,000. Curâ€" rent liabilities totalled $43,190, as against $48.930. The balance sheet shows current assets of $870,275, of which cash on hand and in banks of $167,679 comâ€" pares with $383,663 in the previous year. Secured loans were reduced from his report, "and produced bullion tÂ¥ the value of $478,022, representing a recovery of $4.69 per ton from 102,000 tons milled. The cost of production amounted to $593,248, or $5.82 per ton milled, as against $5.73 per ton in the previous year." The operating loss of the past year compares with an operâ€" ating profit before depreciation and other charges, of $133,897 in the preâ€" ceding twelve months. The agnual report, issued last week, shows that an oprating loss, before allowing for deptecuuou' and writingâ€" off of othéer charges, of $6,418, is shown by Vipond Consolidated Mines Limited for the fiscal year endeg July 31, 1932. Net current assests of the company, not including the shares of Huronian Minâ€" Ing Finance Company, amount to $827,085, as against $821,404. "Your mine and mill were in conâ€" tinuous operation during the year," states R. Home Smith, President, in Vipond Mine Shows an Operating Loss covery During the Past Year. The Canadian hen recognizes no bad times, according to the Agricultural Department of the Canadian National Ratiways, She just goes on laying and her average output of eggs for this year wili be 112 per hen. Multiplying this bythe number of hens in the country, the rather startiing total of 286,882,447 dozser eges is reached. If these were hldendtoendandthensmnhedthey would make a lot of omelets. i guns. A big bag of both geese and ducks fell to their expertness as well as a number of prairie chickens, which were found in great numbers along the. wide grassy shores of the Bay. Fred says he never had such a good time, but it is no place for any one who does not want to do some hard walking. Indian cailérs assisted them in getting the wild geese within shooting distance. i The tide variation and the innumerable small ~streams running through the grass into the bay makes travelling difficult and uncertain, especially if the hunter happens to be caught in the dark a distance from camp. Up there there is no twilight at this time of the year. When it decides to get dark it is dark almost at aonce." Somebody ought to tell the Canadian hen that there is a depression. LIKE OLD MAN RIVER, THE HEN KEEPS ROLLIN ALONG "Messrs Fred E. Thompson of New Liskeard>and Gordon Ej@ett of Timâ€" mins spent a week‘s holiday at Mooâ€" sonee and the hunting grounds north of that point, returning home on Satâ€" urday last. These two sportsmen seâ€" cured a guide at Mossonee and proâ€" ceeded out to James Bay where they had the time of their lives with shot This year the Mcostnee country apâ€" parently will be popular for hunting parties, and next year it will have still greater attraction as its merits become more generally known. Hunters from Timmins have enjoyed hunting in the Moosonee â€"area for some years past. The chief drawback previously was the difficulty of reaching Moosonee and the time taken up in the trip. This drawâ€" back has been removed through the completion of the railway, while the new hotel at Mocsoncee provides a base for the hunter and assures comfort and convenience. The fact that Jas. Kingâ€" ston, formerly of Irgquois Falls, and previous to that in other parts of the North, is in charge of the hotel assures the best of attenticn to all, with genial and kindly carge. The reports of huntâ€" ing parties returning from Moosonee should be of special interest now. Here is a reference to a party of two enjoyâ€" ‘ ing a week‘s hunting there.. It is from The New Liskeard Speaker, that paper saying:â€"â€" Hunters Enjoy Pleasant Week‘s Sport at Moosonee Steven‘s Amusement Parlours â€"the most popular of all indoor sports What!~ Another blinkin‘ war? Not this time, we‘re ‘only going to Egypt for guard duty. ‘These cheerfulâ€"looking Tommies are members of the Ist King‘s Dragoon Guards from . Feltham, Middlesex, and thkey are off to Egypt with their families for duty overseas. â€" bowling Phone 280 Timmins, Ontario GOODBYE PICCADILLY! GOODBYE LEICESTER SQUARE! Joyed bycve:tyom.: one, Come in toâ€"night . and unt:u.ï¬â€"no ‘Avj8 07 OJloY §1 }1 .odw feuopeu Lus @XTT Py ® jou s; (the latter being $402,388, up from ;lM)theremmflnedasnetmw Total recovery set a new recent high at $3,075,950, against $2,6654,069 in 1981, $3,114,454 in 1920, and $2,804,002 in 1928. A highly satisfactory earnings stateâ€" ment was received last weéek by shareâ€" holders of Dome Mines Limited along with the quarterly dividend cheque of 25¢c, plus 10c bonus per share. The earnings statement was for the first nine months of 1932, and shows that, after all charges, the net profit per share was $1.84. This was a surplus of 89c per share over and above diviâ€" dend and bonus disbursements, and compares with $1.37 per share in the 1931 period, $1.76 in 1929, and $1.40 in 1928. In the nine months tonnage milled was 399.950, against 406,350 in 1931, 411,900 in 1929, and 401,100 in 1928, Reâ€" covery per ton was $7.69, up from $6,533 a year ago, and comparing with $7.561 in 1929 and $6.832 in 1928., General costs were $3.82 a ton, against $3.519 in 1931, $3.887 in 1929, and $3.840 in Satisfactory Statement for the Dome Mines, Ltd. "The drop in money rates, which has become very noticeable during the past month, is one of the most significant signs of business improvement that has yet been seen. The markets may conâ€" tinue to behave uncertainly for some months, but great. underlying factors are steadily bringing a return to prosâ€" pflflty o | "Following every major depression in the past there has been a drop in money rates, signalizing increased supplies of funds. This depression, different in many respects from former periods of bad times, is similar in this important feature. We may now expect that exâ€" perience will repeat itself. People who have money to lend and who can get only one or two per cent for it in orâ€" dinary money markets will first buy up government bonds. They will then turn to the safest and soundest of inâ€" dustrial equities. The more substanâ€" tial mining enterprises will be classed among the best of the industrials. They are doing this in England, where they have had much experience in such matâ€" ters. The English people for months have been buying Rand gold shares at advancing prices. The yields of ten per cent. or better, orf highâ€"class Canaâ€" dian gold mines have appeal to mohied interésts, and would have a wider apâ€" peal if certain classes of Canadians, still blindly tied to prejudice, could see the facts. However, that is aside from the main point, which is that the world is accumulating a great reservoir of money that is available® for business, for building, and for the®@markets, and with the acceleration of gold output the | reservoir is overflowing. "The situation is due, in part, to reâ€" cession of business needs, to American government provision of new money supplies, and in very large part to exâ€" panding world gold reserves. As we have long predicted in these columns would happen, not only has production of gold increased tremendously the world over and become of record proâ€" portion but large supplies of the metal have ‘beéen made available from the stored up treasures of the East. * "Necessary for improvement , is a plentiful supply of cheap money, and money todayâ€"is a drug on the market. CAll loans are down to one per cent in New York. Time money is now availâ€" able at one per cent for any maturity, the lowest rate on record. Yields on Treasury bills. have dropped to the amazingly low figure of oneâ€"tenth of one per cent. Commercial paper rates are one and a half to one and threeâ€" quarters per cent for best names. We are talking of rates per annum. Truly, money has become a drug on the marâ€" ket. | "Commodity prices may rise and fall, business: indices may fluctuate . wildly, stock prices may be as unstable . as a weathercock, but the basic facts of business trend steadily,â€"slowly, toward improvement. In an editorial article last week unâ€" der the above heading. The, Northern Miner said;:â€" Plenty of Gold and Money Signal Return Prosperity "While numerous Nimrods are scourâ€" ing the bush with varying success in pursuit of the nimble partridge, J. W. Myles, Haileybury merchant, had his quarry come in search of him. It hapâ€" pened thuswise, yesterday. Mr. Myles, starting business for the day, opened the doors to admit the air and such customers as might chance that way, but when he looked in the front oof the year have had to really hunt for parâ€" tridge. It is interesting accordingly to learn of a bird that in this open season has followed the summer custom of hunting up the people. Such a piarâ€" tridge was in Haileybury last week. In referring to the mcldent 'I‘he Hailâ€" eyburian says:â€" During the summer, partridge have been quite free in the matter of pearing along the highway. Some of them, indged, were ‘so indifferent to people and motor cars that a number of the birds were actually killed by beâ€" ing run over by cars. It looked as if theQ knew there was a close season on. Since the open season began, however, the partridge seem to have largely disâ€" appeared. ‘Some hunters have got a few of the birds but others have not been so fortunate. Those who went out recently shosting the birds before the open season started have been reâ€" sponsible for the disappointment of others. â€" The® hunters® this â€"The North Bay Nugget states that a very careful survey would have to be made before there could be any serious thought given to the idea of the T. N. 0. taking over the C. N. R. from Cochrane to Nakina Quite right! And I would like to say that the most serious thought that â€"should be given the idea is:â€"Will the Transâ€"Canada highway be routed up the north shore of Lake Superior, so that the C. N. R. between Cochrane and Nakina will be put in a worse condition than at preâ€" sent as well as reducing what the T. N. O. now earns from North Bay to Cochrane, and, later on to James Bay, but if the highway is routed west from Hearst, then by all means let the T. N. O. take over the C. N. R. because the settlers will remain and more . will come: andâ€" there are‘ excéllent chances of gold mines to the south as well as other things to make it pay.. No one can tell what. will be found north of it. But before any more taking over takes place or any more extensions made the Government wants to drop that ruinaâ€" tion idea of putting a rock road along a big stretch of water where then don‘t own any railway or land suntable for settlers. Partridge Looked for Hunter at Haileybury Schumacher, Ont., Oct. 21st, 1933 To the Editor of The Advance, Timmins. Dear Sir:â€"About the T. N. O. takâ€" ing over part of the C. N. R. Yes! And what about the rocky shore of Lake Supertor taking over a lot of tourists and business from the T. N. O.? In the following letter to The Adâ€" vance H. A. Preston gives his idea on the suggestion of the T. ... O. Railâ€" way taking over part of the C. N. R., so far as this idea concerns another quesâ€" tions:â€"that of the route of the Transâ€" Canada highway. Mr. Preston‘s letter is as follows:â€" About Taking Over Part of the C.N.R. Poor health is so often due to common constipation. Yet this condition can be overâ€" come by simply eating a de- licious cereal. Laboratory invaï¬m; have proved that Kellogg‘s THINK back over the last six months. The days that you were the happiest were days when health was at the peak. Enjoy more sunshiny days. l[ealthy, you‘re: happy Yours, truly, H. A. Preston Our Want Ad. Column Brings Sure Results Cttawa Journal:â€"Hudson Bay Railâ€" way fans will be gratified over the asâ€" surance given them by a contemporâ€" ary that blame for the wreck of the "Bright Fan" must be attributed ts an iceberg 100 feet high and not to the "unique and tremendsus periis of the Hudsoen Strait route," store, there sat on the floor one plump and quite unconcerned bird. It made no effort to escape, submitted to capâ€" ture without resistance and, doubtiess quite unaware of its uitimate destinaâ€" tion, submitted to being placed on exâ€" hibition temporarily in the store winâ€" dow for all who cared to behold and Isn‘t this pleasant "cereal way†better than taking:pills and drugs â€" so often harmâ€" ful? Get the redâ€"andâ€"green package at your grocer‘s. . _ Two. tablespoonfuls : of Kellogg‘s ALLâ€"BRAN daily are usnally sufficient. With each meal in chronic cases. If not relieved this way, gonsult your doctor. This "bulk" in ALLâ€"BRAN is similar to thet in leafy vegetables. Biological tests have demonstrated that it is mild in action. Timmins Be Healthy and remove excess avoirdupois with Slendor Beauty Tablets. This new English formula is a safe and same way lto attain a smart, svelte, sn appearance. F. M. Burke Ltd. THREE WEEKS‘ TREATMENT £$1,50 SsOLD ONLY BY Druggist Ont.