Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 7 Jan 1937, 1, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THUREDAY, JANUARY T7TH, 1937 Led by gold and the Canada‘s mineral indu all previous records in 1 returns indicating that 1 of output will probably 2: 000, a gain of close to $ 1935, the previous peak y figures for the ten month ber, the estimated value for the year is $130,000, $44,000,000; of copper, lead, $11,702,100; of zi: and of silver, $7,915,400 the six metals of $241 compares with $214,586,C most ercouraging featu was the notable gains T outputs of the principa minerals, asbestos, ogm ducts, coal, gypsux, lim petrcleum, and salt. Golds Exceed | Rapid Gain in Gold Due to the Juniors Year‘s Mine Harvest in Canâ€" ada Expected to Reach $340,000,000. lNhe 1M UINC Vailt UL _ O£UVMU production is traceable largely to the expansion of activitiee at the mary properties that have entered production during the past five years.~ In the maâ€" jority of cases these properties have more than exceeded early expectations and operations at several of them have been so successful that they may be listed among the Dominion‘s leading gold producers. Properties like Lamâ€" aque, O‘Brien, Sullivan, Canadian Maâ€" lartic, and Beattie in Quebec; Pickle Crow, Central Patricia, Little Long Lac, and Buffalo Ankerite in Ontario;, San Artonio and God‘s Lake in Manitoba, and Bralorre, Pioneer, and Cariboo Gold Quartz in British Columbia, most of them raw prospects a few years ago, have amply demonstrated that an optiâ€" mistic view of the industry‘s future is in order. Moreover, the success attainâ€" ed by these properties has been a powâ€" erful incentive in the search for, and the development of, other deposits, and this in turr, during the past year in particular, has been unusually successâ€" ful. Based on early returns, the total value of gold output for Ontario in 1936 is estimated at $80,000,000; Q@Queâ€" bec. $25,000.000; British Columbia, $15,â€" 340,500; Manitoba, $6,000,000; Nova Scotia, $393,000; and Yukon, $1,872,000. In each case the values represent notâ€" able gairns over the previous year. GQueâ€" bec‘s gain of close to $9,000,000 deserves special mention in view of the remarkâ€" able headway that Province has made as a gold producer since 1926, in which vear the value of outout was only year $76,000 An . tically the cCc and the yearâ€"end a nearing the produc quently, before the total daily producti industry is likely to of ore daily, compar ti¢ daily at the cl efforts were i developments area in Quebé Ontario, the E toba, the Golc wan,. and the There was a terest, howeve other. followin iBRy Hon Minister of industry has e ence in many ed new sources of employmen tivities in indu required to ket amnd above all ie Northwes e industry 20 Pine Streect N., Timmins jlon OLl Vere r the ten months ending Octoâ€" estimated value of gold output year is $130,000,000; of nickel, 0; of copper, $37.990.100; of 1.702,100; of zinc, $10,914.9C0; silver, $7,915,400 or a total for metals of $241,908,200. which s with $214,586,000 in 1935. A couracine feature of the year This is Available in Timmins. Schumacher and South Porcupine Ontario Still Interest still Shifting of Mines and Resourtc Ottawa) old and the base met ds Exceed Hopes ase in the value of gold is traceable largely to the )f activities at the mary iat have entered production ast five years.~ In the maâ€" ises these properties have early expectations ns at several of them have rcessful that they may be ig the Dominion‘s leading ‘ers. Properties like Lamâ€" n, Sullivan, Canadian Maâ€" Beattie in Quebec; Pickle Balance payavle e, Pioneer, aAnd CAFPIDNOO in British Columbia, most prospects a few years ago, emonstrated that an optiâ€" y directions. It has creatâ€" ses of traffic, and new fields ent. It has stimulated acâ€" dustries whose products are keep the mines in operation all it has brought to Canâ€" nsciousness of the value of ‘ and of its notentialities. Low Interest Rate LOAÂ¥A NS On First Mortgages $500 up aid back monthly in small payments. 1 activities in pratâ€" ndeavour marked d industry during 1irty new properâ€" he producing list, many more were on stage. Conseâ€" close of 1937 the e capacity of the exceed 40,000 tons g with 16,000 tons 1937. Exploratory in particular by Cadillacâ€"Malartic Red Lake area in aish area in Maniâ€" rea in Saskatcheâ€" e baso metals, istry surpassed 1936 with early the total value xeeed $340,000,â€" $30,.000,000 over vear. Based on Leads ClIÂ¥it. benet overies, of disâ€" of ore at proâ€" » development, id o the comâ€" angements for properties. orded in the nonâ€"metallic t, clay proâ€" natural gas, y‘s future is ccess attainâ€" been a powâ€" rch for, and jeposits, and »Sast vear in Â¥ T reque! nflu in full at any time. AM he Canada‘s base metal producers enâ€" joyed an exceptionally prosperous year, aided by the steady improvement in the prices of copper, lead, and zinc, and by the heavy demand for the metals in British and foreign markets. For the twelve months ending October, 1936, the value of exports of nickel, copper, lead. and zinc totalled $97,537,000, which compares with $76,791,000 in the twelve months ending October, 1935. The table below shows the comparative value of exports of the metals for the two periods. Exports of Canadian Nonâ€"Ferrous Metals 12 Months 12 Months ending ending Oct. 1935 Oct. 1936 $33,112,800 $43,191,300 Ccopper ...... 20,453,500 34,395,300 tiead .;::... 22â€" 6,386,300 10,238.900 NC ..s. 7,.838.500 9,711,500 Nickel Lead inCc .. Totals:::. .. $176,791,000 $97,537,000 Canada‘s base metal industry has undergone a rather remarkable change in status during the past ten years, a change which has been effected by the expenditure of approximately $100,000,â€" 000 in plant expansion and equipment, and in the coâ€"ordination of mining, smelting, â€" refining, fabricating and marketing facilities. The Dominion now holds first position in the producâ€" tion of nickel, third in copper and zinct, and fourth in lead. This notable gain, and those recordâ€" ed by cement, clay products, gypsum, and lime, are traceable mainly to the progressively upward trend in building construction activities during the year. This, in turn, has been stimulated by the many millions of dollars which have been expended by mining comâ€" nanies in rnew construction. Severe Cold W ave to Sweep Over Province of Ontario According to word from Toronto this week, the provincial weather bureau man is credited with saying that in the next day or two a severe cold wave is to sweep over all Ontario. It is hopâ€" ed that such a wave is already over for the North, the weather on Tuesday night and on part of Wednesday being severe enough for comfort. The proâ€" vincial weathermun leaves it open to make such an interpretation as he says that the severe cold wave is sweeping down from the North. It may have come this far before he noticed it. But a wave like that in the early hours of yesterday morning would he noticed by most people who happened to be out in it, or whose fires at home failed. In the South it is expected that the therâ€" mometéer will go down to zero, which apparently is severe cold down there, Snow is probable for Georgian Bay and Lake Huron aresas but not for the rest of Ontario, the forecaster suggests. Kincardine Reviewâ€"Reporter:â€" We note that the King of Italy has been ill with the flu, and we had almost forâ€" gotten the fact that there was such a person. Phone 1135 ending Oct. 1936 $43,191,300 34,395,300 10,238,900 9.711,500 Mining in Vanguard of Ontario Progress Y (By Thomas W. Gi Ontario Dept. The production 0o amcunted to 609,303. and in 1935 t it is estimated These figures of gold mining try really bega the mines at production pre might be expec Thus, during t 1935 the initial plied by ten. due mainly to two great I1210Ss Of POr land Lake, and especia mance of Hollinger it Lake Shore in the la fields these mines h: by McIntyre and Do: and by Wrightâ€"Harg: Hughescat Kirkland 1 $34,177,43" group of fields are the west, increasing year 193( stretching of new p are year portant, additiors In ‘PaLl Matachew Larder La Woods an are being At the pr is the sce: over the groups or various stag actualityâ€"p mond drillii Othe: egramm erect,. 1 the yea number of bull widenit only st industt rocks c ing out : cutput n 1Y ng, th 135,000 in 1935 tinent, especif consut rgC For th proroun: manufact plication ar‘s Output of Gold Estiâ€" mated at $82,000,000. Was $8 . 501,000 in 1915. Bu l€ 11 1€ aLl A 1 began W1 33 Xickel O 11 1€ Areas ce 1 11 Rovyal Sponsors Gave Portraits Widen Ti1 de1 I1C 31 940 1C inCc apin: Teck 11 nin nadusâ€" 1¢€ in ap 40 PV which chemists and engineers seek to reveal the qualities and applications of any given substance has nowhere yieldâ€" ed better results than in nickel. The industrial world seems to be entering upon an age of alloys for which nickel is preâ€"eminently suited. Nickelâ€"steel, starless steel, nickelâ€"chromium plating, and a thousand and one other applicaâ€" tiors of nickel, call for greater quantiâ€" ties of this metal. In addition to the main products of nickel and copper, other metals of imâ€" portance and value are recovered from t10r nas CE aercplane Railways ] fields, wh Dominion combining camps, or of railway Doesn‘t Pay to Treat Coughs Too Lightly nilar; imes (By G. W. Cragg in "Health") Couzh is one of the principal means Nature has of telling us something is amiss in our respiratory organ. Cough is induced by irritation of the lining of the bronchi or large air passages in the lungs. When such irritation is present we cough, which is the explosive and violent expulsion of air from the lungs which tends to carry out with it the irritating substance. If fiuid or semiâ€"fluid material, called sputum, is expelled from the lungs the cough is said to be productive. If no sputum is coughed up the cough is said to be dry or nonâ€"productive. A nonâ€"productive cough is usually induced by a dryness of the lining of the bronchi, fumes or casses, or some irritation from ijtst beâ€" company‘s proudest possessions the Roval York Hotel in Toronto and the 20,000 ton Atlantic linet Duchess of York. The illustratior shows the autographed photograph g Of ( oduce etals, Spasms of cough may persist or less continuous cough may persist for the whole day. Here I wish to warn anyâ€" one who has what they believe to be ‘oughs Should be Heeded, Health Authority Says, and Cause Attended to. eath the lining. Any cough which lasts for more than airee or four weeks is, for all practical urposes, a chronic cough. Chronic ough is a characteristic of certain 11 se i1 doubt t 1¢ Sudbury $2.428,935 Confidence here are other a situation which ; . The bugâ€"bear 0 been eliminated future restored. develoepment of 1 ranspo our If: O ino obt ant are chnronit? dronont is, bronchiectasis, canc . lung abscess, asthma, C ion by fumes, smoke, et le of which is cigarette 11 oY ; pros their PmE 1 V Â¥all alued i ~the incr 1€ ent C the 1 o di allab ortat rtation arâ€"flung ) be so : has penetra th« of out Je so severe a nandicap. Ihe has abolished AGistances. enetrate most of our mining le the governments of the ind the several provinces are in building roads to outlying to contact mines with lines ed i The t of exist e past be difficulty exploitat Chronic Rronchitis m covers a multitude ionlyv used to indicat scouts lcookout from â€": per, other m ralue are rec res. Gold to and silver in 1935 fror e mines are platinum put in 1935 | at $5,400,053 price of p r of excessive taxat ted, and confidence d. Adequate funds of new prospcts, or xisting mines, have ; been scarce, but 1 10 ation of any stablished con â€"constantly t for promisin across the bc r the same L an important mining indu aspeC are Restored sects of S1Ss, Cancer of @asthma., chroni m whic} vellowis ich the more imâ€" bronchitis, tuberâ€" rlue wWoOr in proauc metals of recovered to the am WhiC ditior 3. A larg platinum and bein the h anyv is of imâ€" red from > amount $1,4563,719 he refinâ€" > greatest platnoid io 190.104 11cp. 11 distance ur minit om}p . ~In fC _ an ough mln~â€" menâ€" ation L _ now monâ€" meriâ€" i the finds being 11n yoks for the the of ‘Their M the liner w Her Majest) A similar p to the husze Aa T chronic bronchitis, not to be satisfied with that diagnosis until a thorough investigation of the respiratory system has been made. A review of a series of cases with the original diagrosis of chroric bronchistis, in one of the Toâ€" ronto hospnitals, showed that after every means ol investUgatlol Rausted, in approximate cases the cough was du« serious condition cancer of the lungs, l cancer bronche ‘This terribl cough as a 1 quires ITreq true cough worse over and develo) and, becon productive containing solid mate streaked w appea nasal pains chest cough tum ancer of the lungs, lung abscess 01 ronchectasis. Pulmonary Tuberculosis | This is the most common and most errible disease causing cough. Th ‘ough may begin in two ways. Firsi is a tickling in the throat which reâ€" juires frequent clearing and is not a rue cough. This gradually ‘becomes wvorse over a period of weeks or months | ind develops into a dry,. hacking cough ind, becoming worse, finally becomes productive with a clear white sputum containing little white flecks or more solid material ard not uncommonly streaked with blood. Secondly a person may have what appears to be a common cold with a nasal discharge, headache, general pains and aches. This develops into a chest cold with a harsh distressing cough and only a small amount of spuâ€" | tum is raised. This apparent "cold" | persists for weeks and months until the irdividual is driven to see his o1 her physician because of some othe: symptom. Bronchiecctasis This is a disease in which the smallâ€" er air passages in the lung become enâ€" | CE L33 â€" â€"h 2t PA T hink what this wonâ€" larged and instead of being the size | d f B fi ““ i. e ~ of the lead in a pencil or smaller, are | i er l‘a offer will mean es a quarter to oneâ€"half an inch in dm-% n en!oyment fih[@“ghn meter. These dilatations form little | h h g f cesspools where pus and other M'(‘I'v-i ou t e w o e ygaf or d s T c C R ! â€"-‘----‘I‘ H_J «t 40 e 9 t T8 s@m_ s er air passages in the lung become enâ€" larged and instead of being the size of the lead in a pentil or smaller, are a quarter to oneâ€"half an inch in diaâ€" meter. These dilatations form little cesspools where pus and other secreâ€" tions collect and give rise to the charâ€" acteristic cough. This cough usually dates back to whooping cough with a severe bronchitis or to pneumonia. The cough is productive and is brought on by chanse of position of the individual; when the patient rises in the morning; when he retires at night or even when he turns in bed or bends over. The cougn lieved brings much severe This usually fcoll ation in the nose . moval of tonsils o Following the ope well for a few da to Iour wEeek quently has which gradu ‘The peak 6| The peak of severity is â€" the sudden coughing up quantity of yellow sputur foul smelling. The patie acutely ill. Carcinoma (Cancer) of This cordition arises whose ages are usually o the cough begins when cou cha late ng failrly Aim give you a th: ard do not hesitate examination. A fe this way may save a This alr rgeed hysiciatr n 1l In It may DeF tickling 11 s frequent cough. ; :‘ e over a pe develops in becoming s to be discha: and ach cold â€" wi and onlh and only s raised. s : Tor JAVC dividual on and 1 e blood pell. ns in bed or bends over. The comes in spasms and is not reâ€" for several minutes. Coughing up large quantities sputum. as as ons or two quarts a day in cases: the average daily amount nnit T 1€ fhicu aD arises in palients s are usually over 40. Here i begins when the condition ng to affect the bronchi. The short and rather barkirg in and there is no sputum until e dGdisease. Not uncommonly 1 wWas SJp nid namf( S A nonâ€"produ lually increases of severity is re i coughing up f yvellow sputum 11 nt cle; This period into a fcilows upon some Oopetrâ€" se or mouth such as reâ€" s or extraction of teeth operation the patient i: days, then in from on( he feels poorly and fre: _ nonâ€"productive coug! 11 *Asthma prC n ng cou two w throat Abeess to requ x dolla mon C( adache s deve! adually weeks 0 y, hackiu finally ar white that after every i had been exâ€" ely 75% of these ic ‘to some more as tuberculosis lung abscess 01 eases in. severity, is reached with ; up Oof a large utum, frequently jatient is usually amount 0 apparent 1 months 1 see ntC dauring a cougn t usually feel not consult until some mor ther he i red by t her. soented Jliats spent | it many dolla satisfac have what old with a 2, genera lops into a distressing the Lung aVSs. which re is not y ‘become or becomes sputum or more bourhoodt 11 hnhave New Buildings at Kirkland Lake Total Close to Million The Porcupine Advance Says Kir} llar derful offer will mean in enjoyment throughâ€" out the whole year for yourself and your famâ€" * ily. , Magazines of your own choice and this newspaper, packed with stories, time=â€" ly articles, helpful departments and color= ful ilustrations. Now is your chance. . Think what this wonâ€" \"â€";‘?\ 11 TAKE YOUR CHOQOICE 4 land Lake reached the million mark in new building last year, revealed in the annual report by hief R. J. Mathieson,. city buildâ€" snector. although official figures Doherty Roadhouse Co. [7] Maclean‘s (24issues) 1 yr. ) National Home Monthly 1 yr. [ Ganadian Magazine + 1 yr. ) Chatelaine â€"â€"â€" â€" â€"â€"1yr. (7] Pictorial Review â€" â€" + 1yr. [~) Sitver Screen â€" â€" â€" + 1yr. [â€"] American: Boyâ€"*>*«~1 yr. Parents‘ Magazine â€" â€" 6 mo. ~] Can. Horticulture and Home Magazine=â€" > â€" 1yr. he individual if nothin rsent, to be aware of th Toronto 203 Bay Street Market Quotations broadcast each day at 12.30 neon Direct private wires for fast and accurâ€" ate quotations and executions in all Acecurate Markets and Executions in Local Phones 1200 and 1201 Members Toronto Stock Exchange STOCK BROKERS Commision basis only Unlisted Stocks Mining Stocks Industrial and Public Utility Stocks Bonds 11 and 5.20 p.m gave only $931,371 as the total. Undet estimation of several large projects at the time permits were applied for, more than makes up the difference. The year 1936 was the climax of a fiveâ€"year period of transformation which turned modern city 1932 reading: 1932, $455,000; 1933, $281,170; 1934 $418.072;: 1935, $594,000; 1936, $931,.371 Timmins 19 Pine St. North This Offer Fully Guarâ€" anteed â€"All Renewals Will Be Extended. with building tot a imining camp into

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy