wlfl/ll?//ll/llllfl///////////l///////////i///z/z *%> . "*JHG * \\‘S\\\\S\\\\\\\\\\ % 11 Spruce Street South g *« removes corns nails, warts. of people around the Albanese shoe store. Someone said there was a man dead. I went over and saw Frank Vena lying on the ground. I helped put him in the police car that took him away." Piromelli said he was out for a walk when he suddenly encountered Vena and Falbo. Hedid not see either man until he was directly opposite them, he said. let went past my nose," Falbo said. "There was the sound of two shots and then Frank Vena ran down James St. I ran across the street and went into the Venetian Cafe, After a few minâ€" utes I came out and there were a lot of people around the Albanese shoe store. Someone said there was a man dead. I went over and saw Frank Vena lying on the ground. I helped put him in the vpolice car that took him away." Falbo said he stood with Vena at the corner of James St. and Albert St. west, in the doorway of 141 James St., a store that was vacant. They talked about witness‘ sonâ€"inâ€"law being ill and experiencing hard luck. Suddenly there was the sound of a shot. "A bulâ€" let went nast my nose," Falbo said. was Joseph Falbo, who admitted under crossâ€"examination by Defence Counsel C. W. Bell, K.C., that he had killed a man in Italy. QUIVERING NER V ES Piromelli claimed that he killed Vena in self defence, On the night of April 8, he said, he received a telephone call from Vena, warning him to leave town within 24 hours or he would be shot. Vena had just been tried and acquitted on a charge of murdering Tony Piroâ€" melli, brother of Frank, in a poolâ€"room It will give you just the extra energy you need. Life will seem worth living again. Yield to Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound When you are just on edge ... when you can‘t stand the chilâ€" dren‘s noise . .. when everything is a burden . . . when you are irriâ€" table and blue . . . try this mediâ€" cine. 98 out of 100 women report benefit. A despatch from Sault Ste. Marie last week said that fifteen years in the penitentiary was the sentence imposed on Frank Piromelli, who was found guilty by an assize jury at the Sault of manslaughter in connection with the death of Frank Vena, whom Piromelli shot from ambush on the night of April 10. Piromelli was accused of murder, and the jury deliberated for five hours before reducing the charge to manâ€" slaughter. "The jury has taken a very lenient view of your case," Mr. Justice Kingâ€" stone told the prisoner, in passing senâ€" tence. Sault Man Given 15 Years for Shooting Frank Piromelli Accused of Vendetta on Account of the Slaying of his Brother, Guilty of Manâ€" slaughter Says Jury. 41 Wilson Avenllg s\\\%\\\'\\ï¬ï¬‚fl\\\‘6\\\\\$\SS%$§§$§S\\\\\'\'SS\\S‘SSS\%S%} ! # . 2 i Every fur collar, cuffs and skins for cloth and fur coats must bo sold at cost price. Â¥ € # _ â€"39. Moving to 15% Wilson Ave. Only Cress Salve Moving Bargains NEW TRANSFPER NIGHT 862â€"J PHI WE HAVE ALL KINDS OF STORAGE ROOCGM FOR ALL KINDS MERCHANDISE. WE ALSO DO CRAYING OF FURNITURE INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE South Porcupine Now is the Time to Buy Property in South Porcupine elli said that he expected to be ind that in the fear and panic ment engendered he pulled his m his pocket and discharged a€]] in it at Vena. He said he en Vena was facing him and t any«@mme while the latter‘s Ls turqé crown alleged that Piromelli Black Muck, Gravel and Sand for Sale at Reasonable Prices. Also Two Lots for Sale near the High One a Corner Lot. GIVE TS A CALL WHEXNX N NEED Three, Four and Fiveâ€"roomed Houses for Sale Also Good Lots. s, calluses Sold at M Apply es, ingrown toeâ€" Moisley Ball. Timmins to approximately 1,400 tons daily for a | boost of approximately 40 per cent., beâ€" cause about 300 tons of ore will be sorted before milling starts. It is antiâ€" cipated that, with the increased proâ€" duction, a lower grade of ore will be treated, but due to the decreased cost of operation the profit per ton will reâ€" !main about the same. The grade of ore treated by Howey is the lowest of any Canadian gold mine, but reductions in costs have also made it the lowest cost operator in Canada despite its isolation, 110 miles from the railway, with no other producer in the area. When production started iin April, 1930 the ~success of the operations was shrouded "in considerable doubt. Not only did the grade of ore prove disapâ€" pointing, but trouble was experienced in getting the mill up to capacity which, coupled with a debt of some $600,000 nearly sunk the enterprise. In 1931 F. D. Reid was made general manager and H. C. McCloskey joined the Howey board to lend their years of successful mining experience in Cobalt to the Howey undertaking. How successful the enterprise has been is told by the wiping off of the $600,00 debt at the end of 1932. Successful as has been the mining operations, the steadily advancâ€" ing price of gold has been more appaâ€" reut in this company‘s operations than probably any other Canadian old proâ€" ducer. Now, with increased milling faâ€". cilities made secure by ore developmentsl the company is fast piling up a surplus for a dividend, which R. T. Birks, presiâ€" dent of the company, expects to be declared betore the end of 1933." Ottawa Jourral:â€"Success thing that can turn a man‘s he has a stiff nec‘t. | 800,000 tons of concentrating ore, averâ€" iaging $4 a ton in gold. At present l prices for gold this represents a grade 6of more than $6 a ton, having a total | potential value‘ of around $90,000,000. ‘ The proposed increase in smelter capaâ€" lcity will give an additional output of | between $150,000 and $200,000 monthly, l the bulk of which will be profit, Ernest iHibbert. former general manager, latâ€" terly consulting engineer, has been elected a director in the vacancy creatâ€" j ed by the death of Judge Phippen." ! Noranda Mincs to Boost | the Capacity of Mill The Sudbury Star last week says:â€"| °Nn days i1or Degging on SsUtreel Anticipating itse schedule by a few days | after refusing to work. the new mill addition at Howey Gold| There were two ordinary common Mines was brought into production last| drunks, each f@ned the regular $10.00 week, increasing treatment capacity| nd costs, or thirty days. One paid from 900 to 1,200 tons daily. ~At the| and the other went to jail. As Judge annual meeting, held last March',Stubbs says there is one law for the shareholders were told the new addiâ€"| 4runk who cannot pay his fine and a tion would be in operation by October, better one for the man who stays sober. and disappointments have been met in ‘hree men, Pete Shnalif, Joseph the programme. With the milling rate Yonick and Frank Kushma, the latter increased from 800 to 1,100 tons, the orel living on Commercial avenue, and the hoisted for treatment will be increaseq|Other two on Cameron street, were 100â€"ton .i :1 at least two years. l ~ ~c )=_. 3 shaft, a halfâ€"mile from the| No. 1 on the main break, is down 232 feet, with two levels under development. This area shows similar conditions toI that in the No. 1 shaft zone. New Equipment at Howey to Increase Capacity Considerable mine development has| been completed. The No. 1 shaft has been carried to a depth of 850 feet and five levels are under development, with the main orebody iprtersected on each level. Three stopes, 200 ft. apart, averâ€"| aging about 50 feet to a stope, have | been completed in ore from the 450â€"foot | level. The two lower levels are being opened up, and it is stated that ore at three points has been indicated by diamond drilling. Assays on the lower levels over a vein width of five feet‘ show $6.60 per ton at the standard price of gold. Ore blocked out and in | to mill production, with additional shares underwritten to take care of future development work while the mill now being installed is brought to capaâ€" city production. In the latest progress report Lakeâ€" land Gold Mines, Ltd., deals fully with developments to date and states that the company has recently completed financial arrangements which will proâ€"| vide sufficient funds to bring the mine| LAKELAND GOLD MINES, LTD, NOW IS FULLY FINANCED A despatch this week from Noranda says:â€"*‘"Noranda Mines, Limited, stepâ€" ped into the forefront of the companies, bold enough to definitely utilize the present high price for gold, with the announcement last week that directors had decided to increase the capacity of concentrator from 2,000 to 3,000 tons Ontario is the only head when Announcement is made elsewhere in this issue of an important sale event starting on Saturday of this week at A. Shaheen‘s. Every department in the store has been brought under the force of this sale and there are attracâ€" | tive offerings in every line carried. A number of the big values offered are listed in the announcement in this issue and others will be found on a fvisit to the store. A very «pleasant and sucvessful tea and sale of work was held at the home of Mrs. R. Anderson, 22 Sixth avenue, on Saturday afternoon, under the ausâ€" pices of the Eastern Star. as it did millions of years ago." A local Jew reading the paragraph on the bulletin board exclaimed, ‘"My, my! I don‘t think that man likes the Jews at‘ all."‘ A despatch coming over the F. O‘Hearn Co. private wire this week from New York says that Chancellor Adolph Hitler of Nazi Germany has written book which is to be published on this continent this week. The book is called "My Battle," and in it Hitler proclaims that he is the emissary of God in his war against Jews. He gives the waorld his political and moral beliefs in this week. He is evidently about as wild as our own Mr. Mitchell Hepburn. Hitler hardly calls a spade a spade; it is a decrepit old shovel to him. In one part of his new book he is credited with writing:â€""If the Jew with the help of his Marxian creed conquers the nations of this world, his crown will be the funeral wreath of the human race, and the planet will drive through the ether once again empty of mankind, HITLER TALKS ALMOST LIKE OUR OWN MR. M. HEPBURN Three men, Pete Sshnalif, Joseph Yonick and Frank Kushma, the latter living on Commercial avenue, and the other two on Cameron street, were before the court on charges of vagranâ€" cy. They were remanded to next weoek. When they appear next in court it is likely that more serious charges will be presented against them. In the meanâ€" time it is understood that two of them have admitted complicity in the holdâ€" up some weeks ago of a Chinese resâ€" taurant keeper at South Porcupine. They also implicate the third man in their confessions. SPECIAL SALE STARTS ON SATURDAY AT A. SHAHEEN S Leo Lawrance, 17 Maple street, faced a charge of assault. The case was adâ€" journed for a week, the assaulted man mot being in condition to appear in court. According to the information given by the complainant, he was lookâ€" ing for another man and called at the house where Lawrance was stopping. The complainant says that Lawrance accused him of being a "spotter" and then proceeded to "beat him up." Failâ€" ing to secure bail, Lawrance is in the cells here. A man named Omer Laprise was givâ€" en thirty days for begging on street after refusing to work. John Lonergan, South Porcupine, was charged with reckless driving, but the case was adjourned to next week. He was driving the car that ran into a freight car at the Hollinger siding last week, the car being badly damaged and the two occupants also being injured. A young man who raised a disturbâ€" ance on street the other evening was fined $5.00 and costs. Ronald Lachappelle was charged by C. W. Pexton with fraud. He pleaded guilty and was sentéenced to not less than three months nor more than a year less one day. The fraud was in connection with the collection of inâ€" surance premiums without turning over the money so collected to his employer, C. W. Pexton. Nick Pouffe, 68 Pine street, charged with having liquor without a permit, was fined $200.00 and costs, or thrsee months. He accepted the alternative of going to Haileybury. Another charge of obstructing the police was withdrawn. When the police made a raid on Pouffe‘s place he did not make their way easy, but in view of the more serious charge the obstruction one was withdrawn. here for several weeks in connection with some alcohol brought in by car, had the charge against him dismissed. The R.CMP. arrested Drouillard and another man some weeks ago in conâ€" nection with alcohol brought in here, the other man pleading guilty and goâ€" ing down to serve his term. Drouillard at court on Tuesday said that he had simply been hired to drive the car and that he didn‘t know that there was alâ€" cohol in the car, having been informed that it was malt that was being carried. A number of highway traffic cases resulted in fines from $2.00 to $10.00 each and costs. Aa reckless driving charge against Jean A. Lauzon was dismissed. A young man, arrested on the charge of M. Mavrin who said he had been robbed of some $48.00 while in a car with the young man, was dismissed by the magistrate. Three Months‘ Term for Having Liquor Fraud Charge Results in Three Months Term for Local Young Man. Other Cases at Police Court. At police court this week a nonâ€"supâ€" port case was dismissed. Laura Larocque, 5 Kirby avenue, charged with a breach of the L.C.A., did not answer when her case was callâ€" el and a remand was made to next week to give her opportunity to reâ€" spond. At court last week she was finâ€" ed $100.00 and costs for another breach of the liquor laws, the fine being paid. Serephin Drouillard, Windsor, held by the piece Ib SLICED Ihb. Fresh Hams » 17¢ Beef Hearts b¢ Prime Rib o. 1d¢ Blade io. 10¢ Rump io. 13¢ Porterhouse 1 19¢ Shoulder Butts These pricers good Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Oct. 12, 13, 14 PRESHâ€"TENDER CUTS OF CHOICE QUALIT * in. 180C Salmoen » 20¢ Bacon BACK BACON Scotch Kippers Cod Tongues Fresh Scallops Fresh Cod â€" in 1¢ PEA MEALED Half pound package @UALITY 16c io. 14€ Quaker Oats [ _BEEHIVE OR CROWNâ€"G Corn Syrup Cabbage Onions Dandy Brand Feeds Bl‘an 50 pound bag‘ }5] c mm i ho comeis m > S hGl"tS | 50 ?.Oï¬ia_g_: 6' C Middlings 100 pound bag $l .59 Scratch Feed >« °2 Laying Mash >« *2*° Jam ®: Baking Powder :; 20c Crisco . Soap Chips 4 Ibs. 2850 Cheese Pork Beans 6 ¢ 29¢ LIBBY‘S AYLMER‘S or CAMPBELL AYLMER ORANGE i V OSE BLACKWEEIL/S J aspberry, Strawberry 9298 Ib k in TIN 24 1b. bag 50 Ib. bag 990 29 nr $ 3 9 jar C Ib. 24c arge L. 200 2 ». 9c ~O%. 250C 6Ac