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Lk d ®. * * ... ... ## # # #4 #4# ® + #4 #@ * + #4 + + ## ##@ # *# # # #ot * + ## # . .# +**s *# 4 #* + *# *# * *# Cad *# *# #* +. *# #* + 4+ ## # # *#+ # + *4 + #@ #4 *# < #* # LJ ## *# # *4 ® L #* * *# ## # # #* * # 4 #4 +, 4+ ## *# # Cad * Li *4 # *4 # Ld *4 #. 0. .0 #4 *# # # + w _ _ ® '0. * .0 «++ A-\o. é*e .A.. es "ac"ec"ec »* *astectectes* 0..0..-.-00-« . o *s *« s Mloootuiob e e *E C 4 *E * * e * e * e * 0e e * *s**s**o s****:**,**.¢ *# * % t o o4 t t :t t it PAAA Cad 0.0 9’00. # 0'00: .'000 * Cz ...0: 0..0’ ® 00 00.. .... *# t en t t o i5 4 00 15 1000 1100 1. 00â€" . i5 i 4 i in i o M i UR U L R U ECCC CCA e C o i o C i i t o n i o i i i i i in i in i in in io i o n K i 4 4 C 4 8 C ECEA 44 44441 % DPÂ¥ C JP ZOG JP NK KSE TL TK HR . , tw, u. va, P# on baleat oc , + s «> # * .«A l es 00000'00. ’-.vo 00000 '00000000.0000'090'0'0090090.000‘100 000 00 600..000v000 # 0. * 0 i Phone 280 or 281 HEEKIEIEIEIEE CC * C * 5 . 5 ) i c P Thursday, Jan. 17th, 1929 | Noranda, Que. i | ROOMS WITH BATH | ! Dining Room Open from | ! 7 am. to 11 p.m. | | POPULAR PRICES | ! I | | M. L. Dohan, Manager 52 ©990008 008900090006 0 $ SESESESESE S S E * 3 5 4 t i 3 i + : King‘s Cleaners Dyers s Did you ever notice how ,better you feel when you don a, freshly cleaned garment. Retain that good spirit by usingz our Superior Dry Cleaning Service\ Have you tried Dr. Stinâ€" berg‘s Vitâ€"Oâ€"Lax? PHONE 119 South â€" End Pharmacy Special Brunswick Offer " We Clean Everything " # The . ' Brading Breweries HAVE YOU TRED THE Hotel Noranda MAIN STREET south Porcupine, Ont. ‘ja'.'m 4T3 Fortify your children against winter colds with Wampole‘s Cod Liver Oil Opposite Goldfields Hotel TIMMINS Valu been Goldfields Block Phone 104 It may be a call to your own home or place of business. Are you fully protected? FIRE INSURANCEâ€"at the reduced rates Sullivan Newton FEEL GOOD Bring in 4 old records and we will give you 4 new ones for the price of 3. Canadian Mining Securities Purchased for Cash District Managersâ€"Mutual Life of Canada _ Limired Comman invidend No. 20 604 Northern Ontario Building Toronto 2 Phone Adelaide 8354.8355 fire Alarm INSURANCE IN BRANCHES 1>0 > (Agents for Confederation Life Association) ns for Cella at Houses and Lots for Sale on Terms DOMINION BANK BUILDPING Nâ€"KANKIN, Sec.â€" Trea Automobile Sickness and Accident Plate Glass, Etc. ny, has ness taksc ‘‘The City of Dreadful Din," as New York has been so often called, may soon become "the City of Eternal Quiet," inâ€" sofar as building operations are conâ€" cerned, if a special committee of The Merchants Association has its way. This committee is drafting a new building code which will call for eclecâ€" tric welding instead of the presentâ€"day method of joining steel columns, beams and girders by means of the diabolical compressed air riveter. Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"It was a curious idea of hospitality for the Canâ€" adian hosts of the Americans who have come to Canada to discuss liquor proâ€" blems to provide them with a boneâ€"dry dinner out of respect for the Volstead Act. Why the conference might as well have been held in Washineton. staked by T. A. Jamieson and exploraâ€" tion and development carried on by the Jamieson Exploration and Development Co., Ltd: At the present time work is in proâ€" gress at the property of the Jamison Exploration and Development Company in the way of erecting camps and proâ€" viding other accommodation. Supplies and equipment are also being taken in and it is expected that arrangements will be completed very shortly for the extended work planned for the proâ€" perty. JAMIESON EXPLORATION T0 D0 DIAMOND DRILLING Camps are Now Being Built and plies and Equipment Being Tran ported to the Property E+ Timmins, Ontario Night Phone 237 or 151 Contra PHONME 1192 Residence PHONE 13A Phune No n1iis lt stt uns .: es otfih oo 2 #Hp : Foundations Underlying n Canada‘s Mining Industry ‘â€"‘Importance of the Preâ€"Cambrian Shiek in Canada, and Conditions Under Which Metals are Deposited Through _ Long Ages. Problems of Developing Various Types of v‘_â€" Ore Bodies. Prospectors Now Aided by Aeroplane and 9/ _ Electrical Surveying. |\__ "Different metals and minerals might be deposited at different times. For ‘example, the first deposit might be quartz and goldâ€"bearing solutions | might be introduced later. As a genâ€" eral rule copper pyrite is deposited later than other minerals in the same ore body. This is instanced at the Norâ€" ‘anda, where the highâ€"grade copper ore are the result of the replacement of ’the valueless pyrrhotite or iron sulâ€" ph ae, by copper sulphides. _ "Certain lotal conditions may play an important part. Faults may act as dams and hold back the solutions until !t.hey have deposited their contents in ‘ a limited area. Dykes may often have the same effect. and it is quite probâ€" able that some of the rich ore shoots in f the Kirkland Lake district are due to ,the diabase dykes which cut the veins ‘ more orâ€"less at right angles, having | acted as dams for the solutions. Dyikes are long and relatively narrow bodies of igneous rock, which in a state of ‘*Mining appeals to the spirit of roâ€" mance and adventure which exists in every man. A share in a mining venâ€" ture gives to many the sense of belongâ€" ing to that fraternity of adventurous pioneers who have opened up so many of the distant places of this and other countries. To maintain its place in the estimation of the people, however, minâ€" ing must appeal not only to the romanâ€" tic side of their nature, but must also satisfy, to some degree, at least, the desire for profits. There is. no place in the world where mining stands highâ€" er in the public estimation than in Caâ€" nada, due to the calibre of the men in charge of most of the operations, to the attitude of the Government and its sane legislation, to our having a growâ€" ing prosperous industry, to the great belief we have in its future, and to the new and important discoveries which are being made from time to time. With this increased public participation and interest there is a desire to know more about the industry and to know more about the foundations underlying this structure, which has grown within a few years to hold such an importan:t place in our financial and industrial life. The annual Financial Survey of the Toronto Globe always contains a numâ€" ber of articles on mining and in the reâ€" cent special issue The Globe had a conâ€" tribution from Mr. G. C. Bateman, seâ€" cretary of the Ontario Mining Associaâ€" tion, that will be read with particular attention and will be of special imporâ€" tance to many. In this article Mtr. Batec:man says:;â€" No Better Winter Breakfast than Narms~ high in calories and carhohydrates lealthfui~easy to digest, a safe regulator etrcious~ heat in oven, serve with hot milk by The Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Ltd. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO "The mere presence of the Preâ€"Canâ€" brian formation itself is no evidence of the presence of mineral, There is too great a tendency in this country to beâ€" lieve that, because we have vast un>xâ€" plored areas of Preâ€"Cambrian, mines will be found everywhere. This will not be the case. We do have evidence for believing that we have a field of wonâ€" derful possibilities, the evidence being based upon new discoveries made from time to time, and upon a comparison with the portion which has been prosâ€" pected. In the unexplored areas we must expect to find thousands of square miles containing nothing of value, and can only hope for scattered areas of the Preâ€"Cambrian to be productive. "In the ages succeeding the formation1 of the ore bodies, great glaciers came down from the North and literallyi planed off the surface of the rock, sometimes to a depth of hundreds of feet. They succeeded in exposing many of the ore bodies which did not quite reach the surface, but other cases they| carried away a large percentage of the| ore. It is, for example, quite probable| that the glaciers carried away from Cobalt district almost as much silver as, has been mined, and when it is conâ€". sidered that the production to date| amounts to almost 400,000,000 ounces. the importance of this will be realized Following the glacial period, prospectâ€". ing would have been a much simpler, matter than it is today, as the rock plain was practically laid bare, but in succeeding ages it again became, covered with soil and gravel, forests, sprang up, and lakes, rivers and swamps were formed. It will be seen, therefore, that under present conditions ore bodies . are not only difficult to find, but that they may only be expected where ; geological conditions were favourable . for their formation, and that even| where the geology is favourable ore| bodies do not necessarily exist. | "‘The development of mines having the first type of ore body is a comparâ€" atively simple matter once the size and extent of the ore body is known. The second type of mine is much more comâ€" plicated. The different ore bodies arc sometimes encountered by chance, but are usually found as a result of close geological study and a large amount of diamond drilling and development work. The third type is the most comâ€" mon, but also presents many difficulties. Veins may, and usually do, persist through different formations, but the ore lenses may occur only in one formaâ€" tion. In Porcupine, for example, the rich lenses are found in the basic schists associated with the porphyry, but very little ore is found in the porâ€" phyry itself. The number and size 0s lenses in the vein is also important, and will show many variations. One Northâ€" ern Manitoba gold vein was stripped for a length of about 3,000 feet, and conâ€" tained only three lenses having an ag~ gregate length of 450 feet. Underground workings bear little relation to the ideal pictures on one‘s mind, and the task of finding and developing ore calls for the highest degree of skill. 3. Lenses of ore occurring in a yvein. Sometimes the lenses occur in echelon with the lenses constituting only a portion of the vein. This type is exemâ€" plified by Hollinger, McIintyre and Teckâ€"Hughes. "2. Irregularly shaped bodies, often unrelated to one another, which are found distributed in the rock somewhat like plums in a pudding, such as the Dome and Noranda. "1. Large single deposits, such as the Sudbury nickelâ€"copper mines or the Flin Flon Mine. "It must be remembered, however, that the different periods of fracturing are not always accompanied by the deposition of valuable minerals, which accounts for the fact that some veins are barren, some contain mineral but not in commercial quantities, and the comparatively few contain bodies which can be worked at a profit. The formaâ€" tion of an ore deposit covered a long period of time, possibly thousands, hunâ€" dreds of thousands or even millions, of years before they were finally in the form in which they are now found. The more common types of ore bodies found in this country fall into the following classes: rocks and there solidified. Faults are formed as a result of strain or pressure, and are breaks in the earth‘s crust atâ€" tended by a movement on one side or the other. ‘This movement, or displaceâ€" ment, may be a plane at any angie between horizontal or vertical, and in extent may vary from a few inches to thousands of feet. What is generally termeg the Kinkland Lake ("break‘" along which the veins are found is simâ€" ply a great fault, in which there has been a vertical movement of at least. 2,000 feet. Ore bodies often occur in faults themselves. In Cobalt a number of veins occur in secondary faults, tha: were formed as a result of the Cobalt Lake fault, and which run at an angle with it. | _ *"Aeroplanes are now used to a greatâ€" ‘er extent than ever before, and will be ‘used to an even greater extent in the \future. They have demonstrated their usefulness and efficiency, and are not |only used to transport men and supâ€" Jplies to distant points, but to take in the complete outfits for the preliminary \opening up of properties. _ Electrical prospecting has been used to a very considerable extent, but is still too unâ€" certain to meet with general approval. During the next few years the speeding ! up of prospecting through organized | efforts, and the elimination of distance through the use of the aeroplane, will | result in large areas being covered, and !should result in many new discoveri¢s; [ but in the future, as in the past, the i lone prospector with his canoe will conâ€" ‘ tinue to be an important factor." Toronto Globe:â€"Serious crime is deâ€" creasing in Scotland, according to reâ€" ports. That must be because it does not pay. Oscar (rising. to _ the â€"occasion): "Yes‘m. Ain‘t a bloody category thing?" (And ever since then he‘s been writâ€" ing for Judge.) "The task of the prospector is, thereâ€" fore, by no means an easy ‘one; but prospecting, which formerly was conâ€" ducted on more or less haphazard lines, is now much more of a science. For many years the typical prospector, as he existed in the minds of the public was a tough, hard old specimen, who promptly wasted on dissipation any money he received for his work, and who existed in the hope of, another lump of cash, which he could. dispose‘ of in a similar While such: types may exist, they do not typify the prosâ€" pector of this or of earlier days. As a class, the oldâ€"timers were competent and courageous, and embraced. among their members representatives of. pracâ€" tically every trade and. profession. Their normal life was prospecting in the hills, performing their camp laâ€" bours, and pounding their: drills into the heart of the mountains, day after day, and week after week, as long as the grub lasted. They would often work for years driving tunnels and sinking shafts, quite frequently all alone, anc they were responsible for many of the most notable discoveries of this continâ€" ent. While this type has been gradualâ€" ly disappearing, a new type has sprung up which has many of the best attriâ€" butes of the oldâ€"timers, and who also brings to his aid new resources che importance of which is not generally appreciated. Teacher: "Johnny, please use the word ‘category in a sentence." The distribution of these areas may reâ€" semble the occurrence of islands in a lake. Henri Rivet, Smoky Falls, was sen enced on Tuesday morning by Magi trate Fortier in district court at Stu geon Falls, to from six months to or year indeterminately, when he pleade guilty to raising a cheque from $4 : $94. The cheque, from a jobber for en ployment services, was issued by Clark and Lounsbury. Rivet cashed t cheaque at the Dominion OutStte $94. T‘he cheque, from a jobber for emâ€" ployment services, was issued by Clarke and Lounsbury. Rivet cashed the cheque at the Dominion Outfitters store. Arrested in Smoky Falls on Dec. 31, the prisoner was returned to Sturgeon Falls by Provincial Constable 3. N. C. Smaill, located at North Bay. sSMOKY FALLS MAX GETS TERM FOR CHEQUE RAISING . 66 iA : "Mademoiselle from Armentieres" L KA / BJ # * ALIAS the DEACON AND WHAT AN ACTRESS! She‘ll take you behind the scenes of stage life 25thâ€"Friday and Saturdayâ€"26th ’3rdâ€"Wednes Thumdayâ€"24th ? Owen Moore and Norma Shearer, Hobo and Gambler he played his game for the love of a boy and a girl. June Marlowe and Allâ€"Star Cast THE PICTURE YOUVE BEEN WAITING FOR and what a picture. LIKE«*"THE â€" BIRTH OF ~Aâ€"NATION®" YOU‘LL REMEMBER IT FOKRK ALL TIME FOX NEWS COMEDY "Mickey in Love" SCENIC "Land of Storms" 21â€"Next Weekâ€"Mon. Tues.â€"22 A sacrifice on the altar of warâ€"Married to the brother of the man she loves! What a situation! 18thâ€"Friday and Saturdayâ€"19th D. W. GRIFFITH‘S 4 DIEEJMS LOVE" | WHAT PUZZLED HIM Goldfields Another answer to Why Girlsy Leave Home COMEDYâ€""Snookums Cleans Up" A NOVELTYâ€""Alfce in Wonderland" COMEDYâ€""Limousine Love" WITH RENEE ADOREE John {GGilbert PARAMOUNT NEWS â€"Chaparral ,/f \Annual Meeting of the Canusa Mine Last Woeek ; For Best Values Phone 88, South Porcupine, Ont. Â¥% lar demand for ice hockey in that counâ€" try, and similar surfaces are being conâ€" structed in other English cities,. A few more years and it looks as if this will be the big winter sport of the world, with teams playing for the different counâ€" tries it a world series. The annual meéting of the Canusa Mining and Exploration Company, Lirnited, was held last week at the King Edaward hotel, Toronto. At this meetâ€" ing reference was made to the fact that the shaft was down 200 feet and that a change of formation was noted in the shaft now which indicated the presence of an ore body in proximity. Mr. Geo. J. Millér was reâ€"elected oreâ€" sident of the company. The others on the board of directors are:â€"Geo. Newuâ€" kom, Toledo, viceâ€"president; Robert Schram, Detroit, treasurer; A. T. Waâ€" terfal, Detroit; Peter MacLaren, Toronâ€" to. \mxxm\m\\m\\\\mxx\x\\\\\\\\\\\\“\“\\\\\u ? PORCUPINE FEED TRANSFER % . . C D . . . o . ib i e t e in i5 n in ib i6 h ib 5 it i. o 1p5 o. ib i5 in o ib o. i 1 0 005 05 05 05 05 05 15 5 96 4, 4 x _ * * *A @3 % 4A * 4.", % t °n 4 % @ t 4 QUALITY SERVICHE Our cartage service is the best and our price is Agents for:â€"Cockshutt Plow Co. Ltd., @filson Mfg. Co. Ltd., See the Gilson Parlour Furnace and Electric Washer before you buy A full stock of dependable all hand made (only No. 1 leathor used) Collars, Blankets, Storm Covers. Beat our price if you can. Complete line of FPullâ€"Oâ€"Pep Poultry Feed and Quaker Dairy Ration John W. Fogg Ltd t! 4 Clear B.C. Fir V. Joint; Gyproc; Hardwood Flooring; Spruce Flooring V. Joint ana@ Shipâ€" lap; White Pine Featheredge: Clear Fir and Pine Doors in stock sizes: Sash in stock sizes RED AND GREEN Slate Surfaced Roofing in Strip Shingles and Rolls. Asphalt Roofing and Sheathings. Spruce Building Paper. umber, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Milll Supplies â€" ad Office Yard COMPLETE STOCEK OF ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER Coal, Wood, Ice, Feed Transfer Harness and Repairs *Ne‘w E mpire Whoopee!.. Here comes Rex Bell, the screen‘s Western Ace, in his latest romanceâ€"comedyâ€" thrillerâ€"He was Girl Shy until a flock of beautiful girls crossed his trail 23rdâ€"Wednes. Thursdayâ€"24th Rex Bell© A story of tenderness and allure, with a romance of great beauty. "Happiness Abhead" for all who $¢e this marvellous screen story 21stâ€"Monday and Tuesdayâ€"22nd Colleen Moore Look Outâ€"Here‘s Ken Maynard in another fighting, shooting, peppy pictureâ€"Life, Love, Thrills galore. 18thâ€"Friday and Saturdayâ€"19th Ken Maynard sSERIALâ€""Man Without a Face"â€"Chap. 7 COMEDYâ€""Cross Country Bunion Race" sERiAL~â€"â€""‘Tarran the Mighty"â€"Chap COMEDYâ€""Your Darn Tootin‘" PATHE NEWS AND REVIEW Coming Attractions "FLEETWING "WOLF FANGS" COMEDYâ€""Racing Blood" which can be procur Hall, free. Mouseholders nsing boil it for at least 20 All outside tollets #y proof. Why Not Buy Your Soft Drinks made with the best Spring water of Northern Ontario? SPRING WATER BOTTLING WORKS Jos. Clusian, prop. Telephone 60 f P.O. Box 19 sOoOUTH PORCUPINE Warehouse in Timmins at 106 BALSAM STREET SOUTH Wrap al)l Garbage in paper. Keep you Garbage can coveres. Use plenty oi Chioride of Lime iich can be procured at the Town IN ATTEN110N nHOUSEHOLDERS By Order of THE BOARD OF HEALTBH Y ard sCHUMACH ® well water must minutes. must be made