Daily Scenes of Activity In South Porcupine Many People in Town and From the Mines Drawn By Special Attraction Offered Phone Connections at all Branches BRANCHES: Porcupine, South Porcupine, Schumacher Doors, Sash, Frames, Mould- ings, Flooring, V Joint Rooï¬ng Building Paper Glass, Builder’s Hardware Knight Bros. _ Mckinnon Head Office: COBALT, Ont. When enjoying these refresh- ments one has opportunity to obâ€" serve the splendid array of station- ery, the Kodales, in connection with which pastime every kind of ï¬lm is available, and many other goods really of too wide a range and variety to be enumerated. Everybody knows the place “Pins and Things†at South Por- cupine, under the personal superâ€" While the ladies are fond of ices they also delight in Chocolates and their every fancy can be met in the choice assortment of Neil- son's Chocolates kept It is pleasing to note that South Porcupine is every‘ day becoming busier because of the splendid assorted stock which Chas. A. Sea is showing and at such prices as to attract crowds. A great many are calling these hot days to partake of the excellv en] ices and cooling drinks where- in the highestâ€"class of syrups are used and only Purity Spring Water. vision of CHAS. A. SEE. Rough and Dressed and TIMMINS Limited All the Popular (has. A. SEE Watermans Foun- Shaving Outï¬ts; Na-Drug-Co. Somefof the Specialties Offered By Chas. A. See Toilet [Requisites Post Card High-class Perfume Ladies Satchels, Call and See for Yourself South Porcupine Ladies Gents Magazines and tain Pens Watch Fobs Periodicals Souvenirs THE PORCUPIN E A DVA NCE SuppHes SPORTING (‘hristy Mathewson has passed his twelfth auniVersary as a National League pitcher. It Was on July 17, 1mm, that (iwn‘ge S. l):l\'i.~'. than managing the Giants. sent out his new reeruit to relieve Ed. Deheny. The Giants were playing the Brook- lyns on the grounds of the latter team. When Big Six was sent out in the ï¬f‘lll innings. the score stoml 5 to 3. and the Brooklyns had tWo men on bases. Mathewson was new to big league circles and maybe had stage'iriu'ht. Anyway. the Brook- lyns got eight runs off Matty in the four innings, winning 13 to 7.31am- ewson 'was secured by the, (liants from the Norfolk club of the Vir- ginia League, where he had burned up the circuit. It was about a year before he broke into his winning stride and became one of the great popular heroes of baseball. This year his perforn‘ntinces have been outclass- ed by those of Rube .‘lartpiaml.. who is now occupying the limelight that once .was all for the peerless Mathew- son. It the Rube keeps up his pace, the end of the season will probably find the great Ohristy relegated to a secondary place in the affections of the ï¬ckle fans of Gothanvtown. Such is life. Matty is a good old wagon. and all baseballdom loves him. but -â€"Hurrah for Marq’uard! “'I‘he Kink is dead! Long live the Kink!" is likely to be the cry before many moons have faded. With the passing of Denton “Cy" Young. Matty is the last of the o.d-time pitchers now wearing the spangles in the best baseball circles. Mathewson will be thirty-two years old next month. which is really patriarchal for a pitcher. ’l‘welve years of steady big league twirling is an excellent per~ formance, but it is probable that Matty is good for several years yet. with a decreasing fame and salary envelope. The marvelous control that was the source of his success is still with him. and as long as he keeps that he is in'no danger of be- ing released. For the last year or two Ohristy has shown a tendency toward husban'di‘ng his powers by permitting opposing teams to hit him freely when hits do not mean runs. but always he tightens up and is the old Matty when the moment of danger comes. That is real head work and sets an example that many a tired business man might follow with proï¬t to himself. Most men. in baseball and business. wear them- selves out when there is no necessity for it and lack the strength and abilâ€" ity to meet a real crisis. “Let the ï¬elders do the work,†has become Matty's motto when things are run- ning along smoothly. Ty Cobb, of the Detroit Tigers,hss taken the lead in the American League henvrhitting list for the ï¬rst time this year. the “Georgia Peach" having batted for .3†to date. This Speaker. of them 80:, is only two points below him. while Joe Jackson is thin! with an aver- age of .384. Then comes a big drop in the hitting marks. Dimmons, of New York, and Baker. of the Ath- letics. tying for fourth rank with .336. 'Finlzmd... Germany ...... . France ...... South Africa Canada ........ honmm‘k........ Norway ...... Australia ...... Italy ............ Huncary ...... Greece... Russia ...... Belcium ...... Austria ...... Hullaml ......... Not. all Johnson. The ï¬ght pictures show that Flynn put up a. game but- tle at Las Vegas. The moving pictures of the what heavyweight championship hattlebe. tween Jack Johnson and Jim Flynn 'l‘hc table of points by countries in who Olympic sports just. closed are given below and place Canada in the ï¬rst. division: l'nitod States ............................ .128 Sweden ..................................... 100 (ireat Blitain .............................. 66 were shown last week for tint-t as an Thry depict battle from mi fur the ï¬rst round until tht oflicinls stopped the contest. are intermtinn with a float! L'XIIHL‘IICSS tn the hattlv. The p fail to show John-ton winning way. as many reports had it tho and came Flynn looked as as Johnson and he seemed s: that the battle ended as it (I I‘hc picture the pr any ht ‘- L. ‘0 ‘4 .1!‘ ml‘ “I†13W: been wanted satisï¬ed l as it (“11. ll' the bone visitors . dval pivtm I“! all HIP Wlwn DWI! l hi hey 13 1:; 14 10 66 46 16 34 itiy with distrust ‘.’" he was asked. i “.\'0 house fly can be caught. in- ;doors or out of doors, that is not icarrying on its legs and body bac- lteria of all kinds. and the spores of imoulds and other organisms that ac- !company decay." he replied “No liv- ,ing fly is free from germs; the ex- istence of such would he more than a miracle. its legs and body pro- iboscis and wings are coxered with [small hairs and bristles. so that its 'legs mat be compared to ï¬ne bristle jbrushes: it frequents ev'eu kind of filth imaginable. and besmirohes it sell uith the microsmpic batteria and other decay-producing organ- iisms. of which it cannot. possibly irid itself. and flies about, a wing-2d land wandering bundle of bacteria. lAll this might be expected as a reâ€" sult of reasoning alone. but such would not be proof. and the proof :is astonishing in its vindication. Any house fly, whether caught in ione's room or our in the open. and lallowed to walk over a medium suit- jable for the growth of bacteria and moulds, will deposit the germs of ;these organisms in its tracks. which 'in a short time will yield colonies of baCteria and decay-producing fungi. i SPREAD INFECTIOUS DISEASES w-" “It does not require any play of the imagination, therefore. to appre- ciate the ability of house flies,if they carry about such germs, to infect themselves with the bacilli of typhoid fever, tuberculosis, infantile diar- rhoea, and other similarly infectious diseases. Typhoid bacilli have been obtained from flies frequenting places where the disease existed. It has been found that such flies will remain infected for some time,and also that typhoid and tubercular bacilli can murderous it' given their way. “In the South African and SpanishoAm- el'ican wars they were reSponsihle for more deaths than bullets.“ said he. "Enterie fever in those wars carried oil its thousands. which was not to he wondered at. in View of the preâ€" vailim: insanitary conditions. with open latrines frequented by incipient cases of enteric and myriads of flies swarming: indiscriminately about the latrines and the mess tents. On a smaller scale similar conditions oc- eur in the insanitary districts of our towns and cities and on farms in many localities where the house flies frequent indiscriminately and in turn the privies and kitchen tahles. Once typhoid establishes itself in such places, the house flies will account for the subsequent spread of the in- t'ection. The warmer the weather the more active will the flies be. and with greater ease and rapidity will the disease spread." “Do you hvlievo all flips carry germs? Need a person regard every Killing more people every year than lmllets. the fly is the deadliest. toe of our homes. It should he re- garded as a winged carrier of disease and decay; without doubt the mmt dangerous pest. on the farm. Wher- ever there is ï¬lth, suppuration or purulent discharge, flies are invari- ably attracted. and as they are 005- mopolitan in their attentions and no «listinmiishers of such bacteria as that THE FLY KILLS MORE THAN BULLETS m Deadliest Fee to Our H0mes--Every Fly 21 Germ Carrier--fl0w t0 Exterminate Them Doctor C. Gordon Hewitt. Domin- ion Entomologist, has been \‘ic'or~ uusly ï¬ghting this: little pest for the last couple of year. He believes the fly capable of do- ing much more harm than is com- monly attributed to it. and his charges are based on many years of close study of its habits and the ex- tcnsiw‘ncss‘ of its wrong-doings. It is not the “wholesome little animal" some have termed it. but. in the opinion of Dr. Hewitt. a fearless, dashing mats of heat-itth.t~‘cd vital- ity that does no one any good, and seems to have been created to tor- ment and kill the innocent. I’UES KILLED MORE THAN BULLETS. distimruishcrs of such bacteria us these substances may contain. It is not a question of eradication in the case of this insect; such is impos- sihlc Control and prevention, how- t‘\’t‘l'. are within the bounds of pos- ever. are WI sibilits'. and EVERY FLY .\ ('iFIR..\Iâ€"BFL\RER ll'l That the fly torment 1crally realized mam: 0\\' ll Lt the fly tm'moms, all who live “‘11 or country will readily . but some are not convinced it really kills:. â€1'. Hewitt do- ‘t-mphaticully that flies are these will be regarde when the facts are mo: pos ms,’ "The .vhief and faVorite breeding ;al- {place of the house fly is in stable llltl :l‘t'fllst'. which may sometimes be or-gt'ouncl to be literally alive with the "titag-irots' of the house. fly. A single refuse heap will suppl.\' a whole street gin a town with flies; a single un- it‘lnï¬l‘d and lint frequently emptied iye ,refuse bin will colonize a house, for ily lthey breed in incredible numbers in 30d 4 waste and decaying vegetable pro- de-:iltiets sneh as accumulate in the household refuse bin. All decaying “Inland ext'remental substances, prOVid- fed the temperature is suitable,serve ‘las breeding places for house flies, he. land in these facts lies the solution to the house-fly problem Which we are compelled to face if we would re-[reduce the infantile mortality rate ‘and the death rate of typhoid fever. in! "5 fl ' U i." “â€"9... f" - go l “'l‘here are two ways of dealing iwith a nuisance: the one is to ahol- iish it; the other to render it innocu- inns. Boards of health and local authorities should make it illegal to km‘p stahle refuse exposed for more than six daysâ€"that is. a period of .tinu- less than that required by the :ily to pass through its complete de‘ iwlomuent from em: to fly. Refuse thins should he similarly treated. iltefuse slmuld he hurnt.aud it, should die made (-mnpulsury to keep refuse receptacles closed. and consequently fir-proof. The alternative. to render 'surh nuisances innocuous. can he m-cmuplished by the provision of darkened fly-proof pits or chambers for the reception of stable refuse, to lhe frequently and periodically re- :mm'ed. Flies may be prevented from 'hrewiint: in such refuse by treating it with such substances as chloride of ilime or kerosene. By scattering {chloride of lime over the refuse after each addition in the closed chamber, or spraying with kerosene (which is inot so effective),-the flies are pre- 1 vented, should they haVe access, from lhreeding in the excremental or vege- l'tahle refuse. But the removed method is the most successful wherever it can be accomplished; and in the case of small stables this is not impos- sible. In houses it is not. sufï¬cient to proni-de fly screens to windows and doors, but such foods as milk ’and. sugar, to which flies are espe- cially attracted. and w-hich.are more lthan usually suited for the reception 1of whatever chrms they are carrying, ishould he carefully covered with , muslin. " l‘lr. Hewitt told of a particular in- stance of where flies had been re- sponsible fora number of deaths through the uncleanly handling of milk on the farm. In August of 1909 the wife of a dairyman of. Denver, (‘01., took typhoid and remained at home three weeks before going to a hospital. during the greater part of which time she was doing her ordinâ€" ary work around the dairy. It was on August 28 that she was removed to the hospital, and during the ï¬rst two weeks of September numerous cases of typhoid were reported in the distriCt. Upon investigation it was found that all the persons afflicted had been received milk from this dairy. The dairy supplied 143 per- sons; of thee humber55 were strick- en with typboid,and in all six deaths resulted. pass through the digestive tract of the fly in a virulent condition. and that their dejecta are infective. It has further been demonstrated that flies rented from maggots which have been bred in matter infected with ty- phoid bacilli are infected with the bacillus. "An allied diseaw. infantile or summer diarrhoea. is responsible for the m‘catvst mortality among young ehildren during the summer months. or third quarter of a year. The speciï¬c ‘anse of this disease has not. “00" satislartmfily determined as yet. hut it is probably airerm allied to the typhoid harilli. and in the same way that we know the mosquito car- t‘ics the germ oi yellow fever, al- though it has not been discovered,“ is fairly certain from statistical and circumstantial or epidemiological vyidem'e that house flies are the chief atrents in the disseniinatiog of this l°'.\\°1)RlTF. BREEDING PLACE- MANURE. FLIES‘ ON THE DAIRY FARM $9380 .\RR\’ SI'MMER COMPLAINT HERMS.