A RT For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column * _* :% * 26e 28 5o s « 404 #4* 44 t* 44 000.0000....'0 0‘0"0‘00’0.00000000.000:0‘0:..00000’000000.000" * % °+ °%° °*% @ mb astad 08540000 + 0000000 oo e featosfecfoc? ote ote ateatentente atecte 20 +4 00 atnataate en dn i on en +2 *2t *s * s 4ou. *Â¥. .% en‘ es‘ e8" o,oooooouoooooooo000000000000000099000000». W“MWOOWMM“WMOMOOM _ _@. *%,. * ..-. #__® v.....‘....‘.... 0.0006" 0 62 26. .%,,*, *, 000 testest 00 x atastactoctoo? o4 000000 00 00000 00 00000 00 0000 . d 00 o 00 o 0.90 00 oo 00 0 THE DALY TEA CO., LTD.â€"Head Office: Napanee, Ont. e o 0. 8. 282 292 292222 2 a o ndt ns nsl and*ns*nan"* omooxooooooooooooooooooooooootoooooo)!.\oooo tect ‘. wl enAE -0000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000.0000000fl ‘20 44 0000000000000:0000.00’00000000000000'00’00000’00000’000000000000000000000000‘000000000000000030’0000000000000000.000000:0000000’00000000000’000000 *# _%. *,. * Â¥. .%, .%, .%,. .%,.,% #_ _ os*os*ve‘ 303?0‘000.30’00?‘03009"0:030000 "® °% #. _# ‘a"*s* ts is 2i ons 8. 8. 2828 n 282 28 24424 ustt s 282 28 1a* s s is is is 2s 29 28 16e 2120822822822 e * na * aa*na*as*, ® *®, .l.‘.:.z......... ...z“:.z....z.z.........‘8.’..’....?.}......3‘.."...’.................’........3.'.....'..‘.‘.‘.‘.’.’.’.‘"‘.‘"’.‘:’. .“! Orange Pekoe Blend Always has satisfied three generations of customers who say they cannot find better in Canada, and the best value for their money. â€" Its fragrance and flavor is delicious For sale by A. P. Dooley, Nick Blahey, F. Feldman, Timmins, F. Feldman Co. South Porecupine, Ont. We carry the largest stock of house furniture. Don‘t buy or sell before you see me. Our Thursday, Nov, l1th, 1926 When leaving town and selling off your household effects, why trouble with the secondâ€"hand man? He gives you just as little as you‘ll takeâ€"and no more. Bring your furniture, ete., to the Auction Mart where it will be promptly sold off at good pricesâ€"and immediate settlement follows the sale. WHY CONSIDER THE SECONDâ€" HAND MAN? THOROUGH VIOLIN TUITION Excavations for Cellars, Sewers, Etc. Contracts of all kinds taken â€"EMPIRE BUILDING Phone 567M Sam Finkelmanâ€"91 Third Avenue ALSO Public School Mcintyre Hall Public School South Porcupine (one day) .‘ voooooo,00000000000000.0000000000000000q00000 * 44 09 on . 4448 0+ 4006 5.04 o e 000000000000000000.. Â¥ 000.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000900000000000000000000. (ï¬;d_géâ€"ai'_â€"gted _egï¬d mv‘vi‘th New Equipment) ooooooooool.ooooo 000 as oe se 2s 840. 44,40,04,! 000000000000000“000000000. Try a pound and be Leading Second Hand Store in Timmins CORRECT VIOLIN ACADEMY Studio: St. Onge Block, Timmins, Ont. TIMMINS AND KIRKLAND LAKE Bowling, Billiards, Cigars, Etc. â€"â€" OPEN ‘FO ALL _ BEST ALLEY IN THE NORTH LEO MASCIOL] A. MACDONALD FUNERAL DIRECTOR 73 THIRD AVENUE Telephones 608â€"J and 608â€"W. furniture outside of town. ate en ebeatantentantante afe Te a2+ ie 19e 19e boofeatocfactaecfact oc oc on 68. 00 0 t on t ts * *g 00000000000000000000000 A." t #* @ “. # # *4 w # *4 *# *4 # "% Â¥4 # ¢ # # *4 + *4 + * "® ## #4 * # ++ # # #4 . #® *4 #. 4 ** # 3 *#4 * ¢ #4 * 4# *4 ® <€ #* *# 4 ## # *4 ® 4 *4 *# @ *# <4 *4 w 4 #* # + *# i Mclntyre / C \\ \K *A a yc convinced you never tasted better terms are very reasonable. We deliver Schumacher (one day) uis 1i 0s 292 292 29e s Pn P naP n d '0'0.00000000 000.’0000 .'00'000000000000000000.0000:0:000000.000’00’00.’00.0.0M Recreation Hall SCHUMACHER Dome Mines {one day) FIRST GOLO BRIGK AT THE BARRVYâ€"HOLLINGER MINE At the 800â€"foot levei, where .deepâ€" est lateral work is being done, the No. 7 vein is being drifted on, and 125 feet of vein matter has been opened up to the east of the crossâ€"cut and 45 feet to the west. Spectacular values were found in the first three rounds taken out to the west, and this face is still in good ore, showing over a width of 8 to 9 feet. In the east, preâ€" parations are being made to raise on lLe ore body 125 feet from the erossâ€" cut. â€" Here.theâ€"vein has split into three sections, but for this distance it shows widths from 6 to 9 feet of schist and quartz. _ The calcite vein ulongside the quartz on the upper levels showed widths of over 2 feet. At the 800=foot level this has narrowâ€" ed down to around 6 iniches, a factor that makes for much easier mining. The walls of the vein are much better defined at this horizon than on the upper levels also. Altogether over a mile of underâ€" nmund work has been completed on the Barryâ€"Hollinger. _ .One thousand feet of shaft sinking and a similar : mount of raising has been done d]()n"‘ with 5,000 feet "of drifting and crossâ€" cuttine. A correspondent writing from Bosâ€" ton Creek last week to some of the outside newspapers, referred to the pouring of the first gold brick at the Barry Hullm"er on Tm,sda\, Novemâ€" ber 2nd, a date to be noted. The balâ€" ance of the first full month‘s run of the mill was put through the refinery last week in the presence of a party of officials and â€" shareholders, who, with President H. C. Crow, were on a visit go the property. _ Aceording to the correspondent proâ€" duction for the morith of October will amount to $25,000. The ore has been drawn chiefly from a surface dump which had to be removed before the arrival of winter, and was augmented by inclusion of some of the table conâ€" centrates recovered prior to the inâ€" stallation of the cyanide milling proâ€" cess. _ There was about 150 tons of this material on hand, running beâ€" tween $40 and $50 per ton. The ore in the surface dump ranged in value from $4 to $20 to the ton. Practicâ€" ally all this ore has been treated, and the mill is now being fed from underâ€" ground operations entnelv The milling plant is treating beâ€" tween 110 and 120 tons of ore a day at the present time, and operating 95 per cent. of possfl)le running time. Manager Smith expects a productlon of I)etween $35,000 and $40,000 durâ€" ing the ecurrent month The grade of ore isseXpected to average around $12 a ton. Costs of mining, milling and overhead are stated to be between eight and nine dollars. A substantial margin of profit is therefore indicatâ€" ed,. « On the 300â€"foot level stope timberâ€" ing is under way to extend lateral work on No. 307 vein east and west. This vein has been opened up for a distance of 100 feet, and shows a width of about 30 inches of â€" high zrade ore which it is claimed by the management will run between $20 and $30 per ton over at stoping width of 4 feet. Further development of theâ€" No. 5 vein at the 350â€"foot level is beâ€" ing commenced where left off some time ago. Installation of the new hoist which should be at the property in the course of a couple of weeks will proâ€" bably, take a week. Following this it will be possible to commence opment of the 1,000â€"ft. level, \\hele first work will consist of drltt over to the No. 7 vein at this hori on While the shaft is completed to this level it has been found advisable to withhold development until the larger hoisting apparatus is available. e Mill Now Treating 110 to 120 Tons. Production Will Reach $35,000 to $40,000 This Month, It th As the mill bins hold around 250 tons of ore, there will be but slight delay in milling during installation of the new hoist. The first producer in the Boston Creek camp, Barry Holâ€" linger established on a paying basis with a large acreage of ground to explore, is the prineipal operation in this district, which is becoming a very active mining camp where eight proâ€" perties are now developing with Bosâ€" ton Station as their nearest railway point. it Every privilege carries with it a responsibility. f A "©Do it today"‘ is an excellent motâ€" to, bu+ the chap who can say, *‘‘*I did it vesterday,"‘ has a betterâ€" one. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO is Said. Even taking all three reasons into it a | full account, however, the lack of a Head Office Yard quorum was somewhat discouraging. ONT. There were over eighty notices sent Phone 117 mot. | out for the meeting and three replies I did l does not appear to be a good percenâ€" tage orf returns. n s w Y ard Phone 533 .mmmmmmm avoTEM OF GOVERNMENT GONTROL GHEGKS EVLS NO MEETING OF BOARD OF TRADEâ€"TUESDAY NIGHT. Mrs, Murphy, Magistrate, Says Plan Effective in Alberta and Doss Check Bootlegging Mrs Emily F. Murphy, Police Magistrate and Judge of the Juvenâ€" ile Court for the Province of Alberta, and known in jliterary circles as Janey Canuck, has come out strongly in support of Government control, as it is in operation in Alberta. Mrs. Murphy has been president of the Federated Women‘s Institute of Caâ€" nada, and of the Canadian Women‘s Press Club, and viceâ€"president of the National Council of Women, of the Social Service of Canada, of the Caâ€" nadian Association Child Proâ€" tection Officers, and of the Canadian Committee on Social Hygiene, as well ‘*‘There is no doubt that eduecation along temperance lines is having an immensely powerful effect, and that one day the gospel of abstinence will gairf aâ€"vastly greater hold upon our Canadian peuple, but until this hapâ€" pens we must rigidly control the conâ€" sumption of liquor. Before Governâ€" ment control became the law of Alâ€" berta I opposed it vigorously, both on the platform and by my pen. I was fearful that our last state would be worse than our first. It seemed only logical that if the restrictions were removed there would be more drunkâ€" enness and crime. No living person could persuade me to the contrary. i had a fine line of arguments on theâ€"subject too. ‘‘After a period of several years in which I have been called upon to enâ€" force the present Iiquor Control Act, both as a city and provincial magisâ€" trate, I am bound to acknowledge that my fears were largely unfoun-l ed. There was not even a rush of inebriety as I had predicted, the peoâ€" ple showing a remarkable degree of restraint â€" The condition has qteadlly improvedâ€"again I say, not from any degree of spiritual enrichment on the part of our peopleâ€"hbut because the law was well conceived, and is being well <‘enforced."" as being prominently connected with many other welfare organizations. [n the course of an interview, Mrs. Murph) stated, in part, as f()l]m\'s: ‘‘*Government control may not conâ€" trol in other provinces but it does control in Alberta. â€" It has not climâ€" inated liquor in Alberta, however, It didn‘t aim to do so. There was a meeting of the Timâ€" mins Board of Trade called for Tuesâ€" day evening in the town hall to hear the _ secretaryâ€"treasurer‘s _ financial statement for the past season, and to select delegates to attend the annual meeting nf the Northern Ontario Asâ€" aoclated Boards of Trade at Cochrane toâ€"morrow (Friday). There was no meeting, however, only two members of the board turning up in addition to Secretary W. 0. Langdon.. As a conâ€" sequence the delegates for the Assocâ€" iated Boards meeting will have to be selected by the executive. As usual, it will not be a cas6 so much.of **‘seâ€" lecting‘‘ as of securing delegates will â€" m" to take the time, trouble and exâ€" 'pense to attend the gathering of the Associated Boards. ‘*So long as liquor is manufacturâ€" ed, it cannot be eliminated. _ Every quart distilled or brewed under Govâ€" ernment inspection or_ control will find a consumer. It is meant to find a consumer. ‘‘The same is true of the illhcitly distilled or compounded stuffâ€"â€"unless it be found by the polics. In this event it is ultimately emptied into the city sewers, or ]mured out upon the unappreciative prairies by the drastic officials appointed to enforee the liquor laws. This is not done for anything markedly moral but, "1. Because the law requires it. ‘*2. Because Governments are not wxllmg to share the profits with the local stills. ‘*3. Because the allicit _ liquor known as ‘moonshine‘ is harmful in its effectsâ€"that is, considerably more harmful than properly distirlled liâ€" quors, ‘*Personally, I am one wno claams that neither whiskey nor beer are hygienic drinks. We would be vastly better without themâ€"better physiâ€" cally, mentally and morally, but as long as theseâ€"are produced for conâ€" sumption we must regulate them in the ‘best manner po»1blc., To argue otherwise would be imbecility. There were three main reasons for the failure to secure a quorum for Tuesday evening‘s meeting. One reaâ€" son was the usual one of indifference, or neglect or call it what you will. The second reason, no doubt, was the very unfavourable weather. It was the worst night for many a long month,â€"snowing, blowing and blusâ€" tery, and heavy walking. The third reason was the Conservative convenâ€" tion at Matheson. As one man put it next day, **Every publieâ€"spirited citizen of Timmins was down at Matheson on Tuesday to back up Fred Kenning. DEMPSEYâ€"TUNNEY FIGHT PICTURES AT SCHUMACHER as taken at the yvingside on the occasâ€" ionâ€"an ‘oceasion that gathered what is said to have been the largest audiâ€" ence that the world has seen for such a feature. The crowds at Schumachâ€" er have been good but not recordâ€" breakers like at the fight itself. â€" The general opinion, however, is that the pictures give a far better view of the big battle than could be seen by any ticketâ€"holder at the fight itself at Philadelphia. Those seeing the picâ€" tures this weekâ€" say they wouldn‘t have missed it for three times the adâ€" mission fee. â€" There are four showings yet,â€"toâ€"night, Friday and Saturday evenings and_ Saturday matineeâ€" when any and all interested will have opportunity to see Dempsey and Tunâ€" ney in action in the fight that won for Gene Tunney the~championship belt of the world. +"*, °0 < evtrastectos*es*. 4 44 :“.“..0 @ 4 °4 "% esot "¢ * "¢ °+ °@ estes®sdtactectectss # PAAA “‘“.“.N.“ astostactrostest * °* * °+ s**s *4 %, ,% Li #4 * #* * + #4* in 2t 28. ,2, .“.“.“ © %#* #..%, * 0"00 *4 *# %° "*% @. “. *4 * € #Â¥4 w # #4 s 2*22*, 4 < ““' *4 # *4 *. ,*, # #4* # 4 ## @ < *4 #. a**, *, o# There is great interest this week in the excelusive official motion picâ€" tures of the Dempseyâ€"Tunney chamâ€" pionship fight, as shown at the Maple Leaf Theatre, Schumacher, each evenâ€" ing through the whole week. These pictures are the ones authorized by Tex Rickard, and showing the battle round â€"by round and blow by blow, Ooooooooooooooocoooooooooo00000000000000000000000000“ 000_000000000000000000.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000‘000000600000000000000000000000000000000000000600000000000.00000000000000000000000000000000000000. V nAAA LAAA 28228422 22aa*, %,%* .“.00.“.“.“’“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“‘“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“}0.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“ #4 04 6 + 44 242222222 2 a*2a*2 a* “.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“.“2. Success calls for ability, will power and endurance. U i i e o m e i m o m n ie n Pss 64 n 2 4n n 4 n n P66 Pn n 4n o Pn is 2 Pn n 2s 2222222 2na *n ® tob..b.’o. 0000000000000000_000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 n n io o Pn 2P n 4n 24 n n * m ns 1 n a Pn a Pn a ts 182 282 2822822024522 4n 282 281 282 28292 12. ,2, 0 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000’00000000."...’0’000000000.00000000:'» You will be sure of the Finest Quality, and the Lowest Price of the Year, IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY YOUR COAL NOW. QOpposite Goldfields Hotel TIMMINS SIMMS, HOOKER DREW (Agents for Confederation Life Association). J. M. BELANGER, MANAGER Retailers Anthracite and Bituminous Coal. Houses and Lots for Sale on Terms. DOMINION BANK BUILDING Reed Block, Pine St., Timmins Next to Blahey‘s Store are experts. BARBEE SHOP 46%/, Third Avenue PHONE 112 Residence PHONE 135 Timmins, Ont.