| rackimge PpicTtuRres ar TtHe Tthearres | For further information apply to Running to all points on White Fish and Night Hawk Rivers from Conâ€" naught. Thursday, June i1th, 1931 Short*Route Into Matachewan GOLD MEDpAL CoFrFreE Also weekâ€"end trips to Fishing Grounds. Wilson Irwin Connaught, Ont. Gasoline Launches to Hire Midniscsht Show COMING ATTRACTIONS: Two Stars in on Specia‘lt Ten times WEDNESDAY THURSDAY. JUNE 17â€"18 Note â€" Special Children‘s Matinee Cartsconâ€""PICNIC wWITH EYELYN BRENT, ROBERT AMES, IVAN LINOW AND JOSEPHINE DUNN With Ben Lyon, James Hall and Jean Harlow Â¥You may be shocked at "HELL‘S ANGELS" but you will never forget it. Three years in the making. The mighticst drama the world has ever seen, Tops them all in Air Spectacles. Midnight Show, Sund Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday 4 Days June 10â€"11â€"12â€"13 4 Days Howard Hughes‘ Thrilling Multiâ€"Million Dollar Air Spectacle s MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 P.M. Eveningâ€"7.00 p.m. (continuous performance) Complete Change of Programme Every MONDAY WEDNESDA Y FRIDA Y GOLDFIELDS YELLOW LABEL FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JI WINNIE LIGHTNER and JOE MONDAY anrd TUESDAY. JUNE 15â€"186 50c per Ib. JUNE 22â€"23â€""CIMARRON®" JUNE 24â€"25â€""TOO YOUNG TO MARRY" JUNE 26â€"27â€""SEAS BENEATH®" JUNE 29â€"30â€""NEW MOONXN‘" JULY 11â€" 2â€""TEN CENTS A DANCE" JULY _3â€" 4â€""HOOK, LINE AND SINKER" SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 13th AT 11.00 A.M Admission AlH Childrenâ€"10c. A dramatic story ¢ ADDEDâ€""REVIE _ PARAMOUNX one big hitâ€"Twice the fun of "Life of the Party" good as the best time yvou‘ve ever had. "Sit Tight" is a gsenuine tornado of laughs, DAD KNXIGHTS" FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Cartoonâ€""BIRDS OF A FEATHER" w, Friday, June 19thâ€"Showing Above Programme "SIT TIGHT * DON‘T MISS IT A V "REVIEW AND SPECTIALTY AMOUNT SOUND NXEWS Tune 1l14thâ€"Showing Above Programme the totals for the corresponding month cf 1930 Copper producticn in Canada totalled 25,508,733 pounds, an increase of 11 per cent. over the February output but a decline of 9.5 per cent from the March, 1930, tctal. During the month under review Ontario produced 12.46 million pounds; British Columbia, 5.57 million pounds; Québec, 5.39 million pounds; and Manitoba, 2.08 million pounds. Canada‘s leadir report for March Dominion Bureau incresses in the pi ver, zinc, petroleu the totals for the Products of Mines Show an Increase Gold, Silver and Zine Among the Minerals in Which Increase is Shown, While on the Other Hand, Copper is Down. love and redemption FOX MOVIETONE NEWS RED LABEL 60c per NE 19â€"20 E. BROWN _ mineral products just issued by the of Statistics shows duction of gold, silâ€" 1i and cement over rresponding month Hur ingdon Gleaner:â€" A woman telephconed police headquarters asking what to do about a neighbour‘s rooster that Aawakened her by its crowing. Police Judge J. B. Lovell solved the problem. Said the judge: "Tell the lady to lower the roof of the rooster‘s cocp to an exact rooster length from the perch, or raise the perch. This will pisevent the rooster from lifting his head. A rooster thas can‘t raiss his head can‘t do any extensive crowing, and there you are." Asbestos production from Canadian mines amounted to 13,114 tons, as comâ€" pared with 13,147 tons shipped in Febâ€" ruary and 19,559 tons in March, 1930. Canadian producers of zinc reported an output of 23,297,788 pounds of reâ€" fined metal in March, an increase of 13.3 per cent over the February proâ€" duction and 4.2 per cent over the March, 1930, total. The average price for zinc on the London market was slightly lower at 2.65 cents; in February London quotations averaged 2.67 cents per pound. Silver preduction from Canadian sources amounted to 1,886,652 ounces in March, a decline of 10.7 per cent from the February total but an increase of 44.0 per cent. over the March, 1930 outâ€" put. According to the Engineering and Mining World, early in the month silver developed considerable strength the price advancing to 31,375 cents per ounce on March 16, a new high for the year. Silver quotations averaged 29,192 cents per ounce for the month as comâ€" pared with 26,773 cents per ounce in February. COMING ATTRACTIONS: Canadian gold production continued at a high level in March when 203,818 ounces were produced. In February the output was 195,118 ounces and in March, 1930, the production was 163,771 cunces, During the month under reâ€" view Ontario‘s output was 165,697 ounces, consisting of 84,947 ounces from Kirkland Lake, 786,.238 ounces from the wWITH J, HAROLD MURRAY, NORA TERRYIS, ROUGLAS GILâ€" MORE, STEPIN FETCHIT, ROBERT EDESON and MYRNA LOY A thrilling roman‘ic drama with a scintillating musical score. Comedyvâ€""FIFTY MILLION HUSBANDS" specialtyâ€""SPLASHING THRU" FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Midnight Show, Sunday, June 21stâ€"Showing Above Programme Electrolytic copper averaged 9,854 cents per pound on the New York market as compared with 9.724 cents per pound in February and 17.775 cents per pound in March of the preceding year. With ROBERT LORAINE, WARWICK WARD, AUBREY SMITH, AND DOROTHY BOYD. The crime that almost defeated fjustice! Smashed by faith and love of two valiant hearis. Comedyâ€""WHEN THE WIND BLOWs" Specialtyâ€""GOOD OLD SCHOOL Days" WEDNESDAY THURSDAY, JUNE 17â€"18 Comedyâ€""BRELOW ZERO®" Specialtyâ€""H A Addedâ€""SKY SKIPPERS" FOX MOVIE" Midnight Show, Friday, June 12thâ€"at 11.30 With BARBARA BEDFORD, DOUGLAS GILMORE AL SMITH A tiger in actionâ€"subdued by a woman. Here is Jones in the best fight of the yearâ€"in the most dramatic role of his careerâ€"in a climax that will make your hair stand on end. zn it i in ie csmmc WEDNESDAY THURSDAY, JUNE 10â€"11 William Powell Addedâ€""SONG SERVICE" Specialtyâ€""PICTORIAL® Special Attractionsâ€""JUST A PAL" and "PLASTERED" MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 P.M. ° Eveningâ€"7.00 p.m. (continuous performance) Complete Change of Programme Every MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDA Y @RANT MITCHELL, LUCILLE POWERS AND PHILIP HOLMES Strangest love triangle the screen has ever known. SERIALâ€""THE LONE DEFENDER"â€"Episode No. 12 PATHE SOUND NEWS NEW EMPIRE With KAY FRANCIS, SCOTT KOLK, JOHN ELLIOTT AN HARRY WALKER â€" * FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JUNE 12â€"13 Buck Jones MONDAY and TUESDAY, JUNE 15â€"16 " MAN TO MAN" FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JUNE 19â€"20 "CAMEO KIRBY " JUNE 22â€" JUNE 24â€" JUNE 26â€" JUNE 28â€" JULY 11â€" In a thrilling, breathâ€"taking, allâ€"talking Western 22â€"â€"23â€""JUNE MOON" | 24â€"25â€""GOING WILD" 284â€"2â€"â€""GENTLEMEN‘S FATE" 20â€"30â€""KICK IN" in his greatest role as the attorney 2%â€""HEAD IN NORTH" 4â€""UNFAITHEUL®" THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Blairmore (Alberta) Enterprise:â€" The closer a man is the more distant his friends are. Specialtyâ€""HAPPY GOLF" FOX MOVIETONE NEWS \ on a down grade it skidded into the ditch, turning over on its side and pinâ€" ning Mr. Robitaille underneath. Miss ‘Robitaille and Mr. Bowen, who was driving, were able to raise the car sufficiently to get the injured man froem underneath, and help was sought with all possible speed. Despatches from Cobalt say that the unfortunate acciâ€" dent was featured by a series of misâ€" haps. There was a lapse of seven hours between the time the car he was ridâ€" ing the road, and the time he was admitted to hospital. Por more than two hours he was pinned beneath the overturned automobile. Then the resâ€" Icue car in which he was being rushed to hospital burst into flames and was destroyed, and part of the journey had w0 be made by wagon. He was talken first from the scene of the accident to North Temiskaming, but operating facilities there were found inadequate and he had to be ruched nsarly 30 miles to Haileybury. The driver cof the car, Mr. Bowen, is understood to have scapx with ncoching worse than a few bruises. Miss Robitaille was injured to some extent, but mt seriously. She did not have to remain in the hospital. The expy.analion given in regard to the accident by on2a of the accounts from Haileybury is that in going down the hill the front brakes of the car failed to function and that loose gravel mads it impossible to keep the vehicle cn the road. the time of death. He was ons of the early residents of the Cobalt camp, but for some time past he had besen livâ€" ing in Rouyn, Quebec. He died as the result of an automobile accident near New Liskeard, the death being the final tragic incident in a regular series of unfor .unate mishaps. On Monday of week while Mr. Robitaijle, , his Miss Helen, and Leo Bowen were returning home to Rouyn after a visit to friends and relatives at Cobalt, ‘he party met with an accident while nmaking a sharp turn on the road near the Casey hill not far from New Lisâ€" keard on the road to North Temiskamâ€" ing, As the car made the sharp curve As the result of a series of mishaps George Robitaille, one of the pioneers of the Cobalt camp, died last Friday at the Haileybury hospital, The late Mr. Robitaille was 47 years of age at Pioneer Dies After a Series of Mishaps Georse Robitaille, cf Rouyn, Dies in Malilcybury Hospital, as Result of Automobile Accident Near New Liskeard. the tTimg car nhneg was rid the road, and the time he wa since the municipalities have no mou:s with which to keep them. Until two 0 three years ago miners managed t: scrape along, even wh:>n they cbtaine only 100 to 125 days‘ work x year be cause the slack season was coinciden ared were iet out Pass and anothe Drumheller. Thes thrown on provin« days w pointed number getting According to ( from the West in who has made a matter, miners in The despatches proceed to say that there is question at the same time as to whether or not the state shculd not take over all the coal mines and shut down one third of them at once to remedy the situation. It is claimed that the electrification of railways, the wide use of natural gas, the rapidly inâ€" creasing use of fuel oil for heating houses and operating ocean steamers are rapidly replacing coal in many lines of activity. Threso years ago the use of fuel cil in Canada was limited to an amount equivalent to the replacement of 200,000 tons of coal. Today accordâ€" ing to F. G. Neate, secretary of the Dominion Fuel Board, this has increasâ€" ed to 3,000,000 tons. The 300 mines now attempting to cperate in Alberta could produce, if run at capacity, 15,â€" 000,000 tons a year, according to the Dominion Fuel Board. Last year‘s proâ€" duction was slightly over oneâ€"third of that total. One hundred mines could be shut down at once and the remainâ€" ing 200 could easily supply the present ng 20 marke ng to 1. Dominion ed to 3,0( now att2r ng the bhe vari it is well for the public also to study the situation so that the Minister of Mines may have full support and coâ€" cperation in any action taken or deciâ€" sion made. Despatches from Ottawa a week or so ago‘say thet three thousand coal miners of Alberta face permanent unemployâ€" ment and their 10,000 dependents face starvation or perpetual relief unless the plans now being worked out by the Pederal Minister of Mines and the Alâ€" berta government for a wholesale reâ€" establishment in other industries and other parts of Canada come to a satisâ€" factory conclusicn. The clay belt of Northern Ontario and certain lands in the maritimes are being considered as ossible locations for the transplanted miners. placed on homesteads. Will they stay| This is supposed to be the mojor age on homesteads? Are they fitted for the|and there is a genmncral belief that the work? Is there not grave danger that number of horses in use has very maâ€" after a few months they will drift into|terially decreased in the last few years. the towns and mining centres to beâ€"| The average man, if questioned on the come a further burden on the North|ma‘lter, would nc doubt venture the Land that would not have had any unâ€" opinion that the number cf horses in employment problem had it not been |any province of Canada has very maâ€" for the influx of men from distant|terially Gdecreased. Becauss cf this parts? It seems to The Advance that|op.:nion generally .held as to the disâ€" the greatest care should be taken to piacem;n: of horses, there was some assure that the men from the West are|surprise expressed by many recently really bettered without injury to the !when casual menticon was made in The miners already in the North. Hon. W.!Advance that there were five blackâ€" A. Gordgn, Minister of Mines in the Dominion Government knows the North Land and its present problems, and no doubt will guard the interests of this country, but at the same time it is well for the public also to study the situation so that the Minister of Mines may have full support and coâ€" cperation in any action taken or deciâ€" sion made. Despatches from Ottawa a week or so ago‘say that three thousand coal miners of Alberta face permanent unemployâ€" ment and their 10,000 dependents face :tarvation or perpetual relief unless the | e C NC |smith shops in Timmins. 'many was that there were not more The idea of than two or three such shops in town as the increase in the number cf moâ€" tor cars and cther vehicles seem to mean a corresponding decrease in the number of horses and there would be need for fewer blackâ€" smith The decrease in the number of horses has not bsen as great as many suppose. Horses still appear to be about indispensable for miany purposes. A humsrous fellow a eccuple of years i{g;o suggested that horses were ncot even nacesary any !with the spring and harvest season on ; o ‘the nearby farms, but to day because of b the development of power farming, the Coal Mlners May e |combine and the truck, this source of | T \additional revenue has been cut off. Settled ln the Nort | So fare as this North Land is con-! y cerned, the preoblem must be studied ; Plans Said to be Under Way to Place|amost altogether from the effects any Uneémployed from West on the arrangement might have on this counâ€" Land in Northern Ontario and try. Men coming to this country with | Maritimes. lthe voluntary desire to get on the farm | and with experience in that line of A plan is said to be under considerâ€" |‘work are difficult to hold on the homeâ€"| ation for the settling of unemployed steads here on account of the difficulâ€"| lminers from Alberta on land in Northâ€" !mes inherent to the situation. The road | _ ern Ontario and in certain parts of the problem, the school problem and the Maritimes. No doubt the plans will be!market question all have a bearing on very carefully considered before anyâ€" | the temptation to abandon the North thing is done, and certainly the greatâ€" |Land farm. With their old calling of est care is necessary to avoid serious mining to lure them to nearby mining consequences for the North Land. It/jcentres would the settlement of any is possible that the serious unemploy-!number cf Western miners in the ment situation in the West may beiNcrth be of final advantage to them? more or less transferred from Alberta; Would it nct be likely to create a situâ€" to the North Land, where there is an jation prejudicial to the miners already unemployment problem already whichiin this ccuntry? It may be that a the people have been taking urgent|satisfactory plan can be worked out to measures to remedy. At the present| the advantage of all, but to The Adâ€" moment the North Land has more men | vance the propositicn seems to be full than it can care for and supply with of high explosives. anything like steady employment. To o n n . hete ie simply to fasten aen mommeme in this country. It is all right to say that ME PROVINCE Of qQUEBEC the unemployed for the West are to be placed on homesteads. Will they stay| This is supposed to be the molor age on homesteads? Are they fitted for the|and there is a genmncral belief that the work? Is there not grave danger that number of horses in use has very maâ€" afiter a few months they will drift into|terially decreoased in the last few years. the towns and mining centres to beâ€"| The average man, if questioned on the come a further burden on the North |ma‘lter, would nc doubt venture the Land that would not have had any unâ€" |opinion that the number cf horses in employment problem had it not bsenlany province of Canada has very maâ€" Nbiftemmntn ie mm ons n umm mc mm m omm omm mm omm mm sn $3.00 eachâ€"Chas. Pierce Son., 5. L Honey, D.D.S. $2,50 eachâ€"Simms, Hooker Drew. $2.00 eachâ€"S. David, S. Bucovetsky Hillâ€"Clarkâ€"Francis, F. Feldman, 8. A Caldbick, Dr. J. A. McInnis, Dean Kesâ€" ter, H. C. Garrity, A. Shaheen, A. J Shragge, J. Dalton, Ideal Hardware, I K. Pearce Co., Timmins Provision Shankman Bros. $1.00 eachâ€"D. Laprairie, I. T. Brill D.D.S., Dr. E. L. Roberts, V. Woodbury A. E. Phillips, A. Ellies, F. Scullino, Ross O‘Neill, J. Martin, National Mcto:r D.D.S., Dr. E. L. Roberts, V. Woodbury, A. E. Phillips, A. Ellies, F. Scullino, Ross O‘Neill, J. Martin, National Mctor Sales, E. M. Allworth. Sundry contributionsâ€"$2.20. Totalâ€"$111.70. Plans Said to be Under Way to Place Unémployed from West on the Land in Northern Ontario and Maritimes. Geo, A. Reid, secretaryâ€"treasurer of the National Sanitarium Assoctation gratefully acknowledges the following contributions made to the Muskoka Mo:piital for Consumptives by donors in Timmins:â€" $10,00â€"Rev. Fr. Theriault. $5.00 eachâ€"W. H. Pritchard, M. E. Williams, E. L. Longmore, A. W. Young, T. E. Pritchard, W. T. Curtis, Taylor Hardware, Sullivan Newton, John W. Fogg, Timmins Theatres Ltd. Timmins Donations to the Muskoka Hospital OrkK week in t out fortnightly of representati rom jers in the Crc ged between t Having failed among all the thre e Domin ecial stu tA pa imb wW‘s N T hun HC6 aAalt h sm‘th chops. The decrease number of horses has not great as many suppose. Hor appear to be about indispens miany purposes. A humsrous ccuple of years 1430 suggest horses were ncot even naceks more to pull cars out of holes, her er gives such figures for h of Quebec. This of figures in which the pr; in Canada should give fac interest. The Quebec figt meantime will be cof intere of the great increase in the vehicies and all that h: labohut ithe disappearance At the ladigs‘ section of ths> Timmins Go‘f Club on Friday, June 5th, the hidâ€" den hc‘e malch was played. The winâ€" ners were:â€" First flightâ€"Mrs. Keddie, Ssecond flightâ€"Mrs. Allworth. € Third flightâ€"Mrs. Pickering. On Friday of this week, June 12th, a putting contes; will be held. LADIES‘ SECTION, GOLF CLUB, FRIDAY, JUNE 5TH than in 1929 tween cthe ber of ho bec increg there we Jhe provi as compa cbhatistics ngu eral Phone 647 EXPERT WORK GUARANTEED, PROMPT SERVICE. EVERYTHING IN SHEET METAL WORK. _ PIPES OF ALL KINDS. ALSO FURNACE WORK. N E W TIN SHOP 13 Spruce Street South C. J. Lapalme ime WIill D8 CI inlférest, In Spite great increase in the use of moâ€" hiciles and all that has said ithe disappearance o¢f handed out by J. C. Morel, genâ€" ecretary of the Association of miths of Quebze show that beâ€" the years 1923 and 1929 the numâ€" horses in the Provinces of Queâ€" rreased by nearly 30,000. In 1923 were 341,641 horses throughout ovince, according to Mr. Morel, ipared with 389 060 in 1929. The es show that in Mcontreal alone were 699 more horses last year numb 13 Spruce St, South Hunt Y in In nsus auch the )i\