Chicago Tribune wedding notice:â€" Wineâ€"Soboroff.â€"Mr. and Mrs. David Wine of 2440 Lakeview avéenue, anâ€" nounce the approaching marriage cf their daughter Laura to Juel Edward Ggda oboroff The J uses for FRYV‘S To Make One Cup of Cocoa with Fry‘s Mix one half to a teaspoonful of Ery‘s Cocoa with sugar to taste. Add three teaspoonfuls of cold milk and mix into a smooth paste. Pour on boiling water or water and milk brought to the boil. Stir briskly while pouring. Give your breadwinner a lunch kit treat tomorrow â€"a vacuum bottle of piping hot Fry‘s Cocoa. Men like Fry‘s for lunch because of its pleasing, chocolaty flavour, and also because it is a sustaining food. Unlike some other drinks which change in taste when kvept in a bottle even for a short while, cocoa has the same enticing flavour when he drinks it at noon as when you made it in your kitchen. The nourishing food value of Fry‘s Cocoa provides quick warmth and strength in wintertime. Healthy and Happy with FRY‘S Cocoa Other FRY Products:~â€"â€"Fry‘s Premium Chocolate (unsweetened) and Fry‘s Chocolate Syrup Send tor iree Recipe Book to J. S. Fry Sons (Canada) Limited, Montreal, Ciue VtR THAT MAKES â€"tL S$D0 WRETCHED er Bile rlomel necessary COCO A etnesp wake N0X Take one heaped teasp Cocoa with an equal q: to each cup. Mix into teaspoonfuls of milk. P stirring all the time. P\ obtained into a pan boiling point. ! compliete position rangemet tailed re Brunswick Pilot:â€"‘ past due mortgage be prosperity could be )x eeutions. company‘s s should reflec the company ed financial of which cet fore the holding « ing, additional a: ed@ from the sai furnish the comy ancial requireme1 tended submission ment of Ma Tur the wpon to Montrea Meeting of Moss Mines Adjourned to April anniual ge he prese! To Make ""Hot Chocolate" with Fry‘s The com king naAk capiti confic t im ir 321 Labor Factor Important "There are others and more | tant factors in golid mining cos bor, for example. It is well know in the mining areas of the nor efficiency of labor has greatly inc in the past three years. The reg obvious: there are ten men re; silfeosis ............ 500,515 .10 Supplies other than explosives .. 6,004,927 1.20 Depreciation, > .34 "It will be observed in Mr. Neilly‘ table that the cost of supplies, includ ing explosives, was $1.40 a ton or abou 22 per cent. of the total. This is : close approximation of the recent Hol linger experience. In 1929â€"a high cos commodity yearâ€"Hollinger‘s supplie accounted for $1 per ton of overal costs. In 1981, when materials wer cheaper, the figure was 92 cents. "In 1929 prices were really high. I: march of that year copper was 21 cent a~ pound; wheat was $1.30 a bushel silver 56 cents an ounce; cotton, $20 : bale, and other commodities were ofr a proportionately high level. Yet thi year was an excellent one in making at the gold mines; in fa best year to that time in the expe of Canadian gold mines. Would per cent. rise from present low of commodities seriously affec profits of the gold mines? is « ful if it would add five per cent. costs of goid mining. Three pe: might be nearer the mark. TiXE ............. Explosives ... Compensation "On the subject of posslble rise in commodity prices it may be noted, in addition to the important consideration that the basic items in mining costs, power, freight and labor, are fixedâ€" that the prices of supplies such as exâ€" plosives, drill steel, Gdrills, and other items have not fallen seriously in price in the past few years. Higher tarifis have kept price levels on steel products on a fairly even keel. NOt having gone down importantly it cannot be expecâ€" ted that they will rise to points higher than those obtained in the boom years of 1928 and 1929. In any event, the item of supplies does not dominate mine costs, as many people think. In June, 1932. The Northern Miner pubâ€" lished an excellent cantribution on this subject from Ba.lmeq Neilly, secretary of McIntyre Porcupine Mines and an authority on Canadian gold mine costs. Mr. Neilly presented the following inâ€" formuwiion, which is relevant: Material Costs 22 per cent. of Total "In 1931, 14 Ontario gold mines proâ€" duced $44,986,737. The operating costs, including taves and depreciation, amâ€" ounted to $27,352442. This sum was accounted for as follows: "Important assaults on gold mining profits. could come from other direcâ€" tions. They could originate in: "1. Disappearance of the exchange compensation. "2. A sudden worldâ€"wide abandonâ€" ment of gold as a money metal. "In the following paragraphs, the three points, viz., material costs, exâ€" change and gold money, will be dealt with in order. Holders of gold shares are invited to consider the various facâ€" tors which may affect the market value of their stocks. Cost Labor ems in the per ton handling charges and these items are static. Mining supplies could fise considerably in price without seriously affecting costs and profits. freight rates. These are importan Confidence in Gold Grows as It Stands Successive Shocks asked in regard to gold, the golid st lard, and the place of gold in the w toâ€"day, that it is pleasing and prc iable to run across an article that iwers these questions in authorita way and yet in language intellighle ommodity Price Rise will not Seriously Affect Mine Proâ€" fits. _ Premium Likely to Remain. . World Not to Abandon Gold. â€" Canadian Mines in Splendid Condition, with Efficient Labour. â€" Thoughts Suggested for the Holder of Gold Stock Shares. Gross $247, 352 442 $13,820,000 2,200,000 2,116,000 1,000,000 Per ton Milled $5.46 $2.16 for municlp be be ir Thes dustt chnan its suddet noting th ment, these h: the new minin pI Am iY rorld financ managed C hat Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives X} )ld iche YA 7e wÂ¥ F4 + 1€ 11 untry ) mat NO MORE SICK HEADACHES II ual L Wa nas WOULLLECUL 1UVL â€" premium on U.S. funds would rise in embarrassing point in the comâ€" Even P Amel an id e DT AC T * *« mm Abandon Gold? there be a worldâ€"wide abandonâ€" gold as a money metal? This . has apparently agitated the f some people, who have watchâ€" try after country go "off the indard." Gold has its critics i the most bitter of them canâ€" itively identify the danger of andonment. They all find a )r it, all give it an important en Prof. Keynes, famous British st and critic of the existing nancial structure, proponent of ng to the factor of exchange ation and to a consideration of n withdrawal, it is worth while iat Canadian governments and lities owe the United States ) billion dollars and there has the slightest suggestion that it debt is to be forgiven this Much of it is payable in gold; ‘r what steps are taken in the States to inflate money and amedity prices in that country, collections will be in gold, inâ€" al financial transactions will d through in that medium. not the advantage of this where the dollar is under close y the gover@ment, to permit onal currency unit to rise in to the American dollar. While ase in the Canadian dollar »lp in paying off the external e countervailing disadvantage e direct competition with i products in foreign markets, esirable development. Great ias no intention of surrenderâ€" ‘esent advantage; it is not likeâ€" ‘anada will do so either. la has large commitments t3 is year, with some especially aym‘ents due this summer. erican money sent into Canada keeping is now beginning to ‘k, causing an extra demand funds. It is no secret that i1as been worried for fear that ium on U.S. funds would rise xchange on Gold 1} anything and was badly consti I realize now, of course, that 1 was n condition. Fortunately for recomimended ‘*‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘ HML velopments in the id go a long way toâ€" those who fear for ," comes back to nternational money glad I rsysemandwuzdm : 1 am in the best of esitate to recommend 11 all drug stores s« exceed. ingly with indiges» tion and sick headâ€" aches for years. I could hbhardl m anvthing an _ sum, the day have to compete years off. It is , at no time since )ld mines experâ€" skilled workmen. Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives endyearc of pain ains to even an 1appy condition mining camps. rise in commoâ€" lly put millions erica seems raâ€" nen and | 1i 15.000 me C 1d Ly prices e to be . in the s would workers. yould be ffciency certain allable lonal ong old P { "The scramble for gold continues. ‘The embargo placed upon its export in the United States; the eagerness withn which Britain, wise in currency affairs, is buying the precious metal these days; these are pointers in a direction opâ€" posite to that which would harbinger a fight from gold. "In times of great activity in the security markets the gold shares have enjoyed a large measure of public inâ€" terest. Our Canadian golds were at about their highest preâ€"depression levels in 1928. It is a point worthy of consideration for the man who holds his gold stocks for investment, for yield and surety of income but who is quite properly concerned with the possibility of capital appreciation. The nimible dayâ€"byâ€"day trader comes into another eategory and a publication that must perforce deal with an industry from the standpoint of those who give it substance and who compose the bulk of the shareholders, cannot consider the situation as it concerns the flighty spectator. "It would be a mistake for the citiâ€" zens of Temiskaming to entertain the idea that because so much of the Temâ€" iskaming Claybelt was run over hy fire in October, 1922, that the fire hazard has disappeared; because that fire did not run through the great bush region from, say, Temagami north where lumâ€" bering has been carried on extensiveâ€" ly for upwards of thirty years. A farâ€" mer who knows the country has assurced us that there is a very large territory extending from Temagami on the south to the Matachewan mining region on the north, in which there is inflamâ€" mable material, and he suggests that the Department of Lands should take steps to remove this fire menace and protect what pine and other marketâ€" able timber there is in this territory; by having dry brush put in small piles and burned precautions being taken to keep fires from spreading. It is weliâ€" known that the two seasons when fires have been Inown to do the greatest damage is during the early spring and the late fallâ€"of course, depending upon whether or not the spring or fall has been dry. In the spring ere the leaves come out and the grass is green the dry grass burns quickly and fire is carried to the dry bush, and then a big fire is under way. And in a late dry fall similar conditions exist. It is suggestâ€" ed that those who are on the list for receiving Government aid might be given work as soon as snow disappears to do all that it is possible to removée the danger of our having another great fire. Practical men should be in charge. There should be no delay in giving attention to this very important matter. The Northern press has given In an article last week The New Liskeard Speaker touches on a point well worthy of special attention at this time. The suggestion in The Speaker‘s article implies very greatly needed work â€"work that is in the na:ure Oof a true investment, meaning the guarding of the country‘s resources and the avoidâ€" ing of danger to human life. It is work that is much needed and desirable at this time and that at the same time would provide employment for the idle and for those now on relief. It could be done at present without any material extra cost from ordinary relief exâ€" penditure. This work is the guarding of the timber resources of the country from the fire danger. The Speaker confines its remarks to the Temiskamâ€" ing area but the same arguments and considerations apply with equal force to other sections of the North. There are areas in this part of the North holding serious fire menaces. Now would be an excellent time from every viewpoint to remove these dangers to property and life. The Speaker says:â€" Suggests Further Guards from Forest Fire Danger The world has tu to the one stable ¢ all credit struct: Switching to Base Metals "It has been reasonably suggested that gold shares are at the moment beâ€" ing sold by people willing to take a chance on a rise in the price of base metals and a resulting appreciation in the market value of base metal shares and in industrial stocks. Some specuâ€" lators in this category point to the fact that certain of the Canadian base metals shares are selling at plantâ€"value levels, allowing nothing for ore reserves or potential earning power. They argue that such stocks, being at unâ€" reasongably low figures, have normally a long way to go from present bottom. "These speculations are based on the assumption that copper, lead and zinc are to rise abruptly in price. There is, however, serious uncertainty on this point. Even the most hopeful forward looker cannot see in the foreground a radical change in a situation that bristles with diffculties. The Britishâ€" American conversations on war debts, from which much was expected, are postponed. The U.S. banking collapse cannot be remedied in a week. The world economic conference may also be delayed. There is a very large overâ€" supply of metals in sight, And Washâ€" ington, while anxious for a moderate rise in prices, is against extreme exâ€" pansion. "On the whole The Northern Miner feels justified in retaining an optimistic viewpoint with respect to gold and gold mines and holds to the belief that the gold share market will continue to reâ€" fiect ore and earning power and reâ€" sponse to new orebodies, as hitherto." average man, whos hazards of tamp machinery has rece graduate polish by Germany, Austria, and elsewhere, sho vinced than ever of retaining gold for as a stabilizer in wo ties. e future of gold. the Amercian ba of the nation A TY o seasons whien Nnres r to do the greatest the early spring and urse, depending upon e spring or fall has spring ere the leaves grass is green the dry 1y and fire is carried ore isabi ares have mublic inâ€" were at lepression worthy of souclh ion on nflamâ€" s that d take holds yield quite ibility Scores Last Week for the Ladies‘ Bowling League Ladic 1933 : M. Eyre E. Brennan A. Brodeur ... M. Donaldson V, Aspin ... I.. COOK .;...... C. Campbell B. Stevens M. Stephens Muskogee Phoenix:â€"As we under stand it, each nation believes in pre serving the sanctity of the other fel low‘s signature. * .% .« .00 .00.1 * * . .00.00. #. *.: 0.00.00.00 .0 # *4 ++ *4 *# + #4 ## # # #* #* ** # # *4 # # ¢4 . PPA X .00.“. #* *# # *4 *# # #4 *, # #* * # #* *# # #* # #* # # ## # # ## # w #4 # + ## ** * # #+* *# # ## *# # #* # ® *# #@ T‘C Tot Johns Steven Savery Keene 19 s .e Perreault McCarthy Verner Hawkins Stevens THE CAMADIAM SHREDDED WHEA!T COMPAMY, LTD., mm 4 Niagara full:, Canada SHPEDDED WHEAT ‘Ah attention of late to the importâ€" e of having the recipients of Govâ€" mnent aid work for the money they so as to remove the idea that they paupers. Well, here is work for n which would be of advantage ts province if rightly done, and at the e time be helpful to worthy eitiâ€" with this hot hreakfast M ADE I|IN CANADA â€" BY CANADIANS +« QF CANADIAN YWHEAT SHREDDED WHEAT TODAY to help your family fight the cold‘! Overs wins four points CROWN BRAND ollowing ard Bowling Lea L. wins three points. st single score:â€"L. Leck, 251 st total score:â€"C. Camphbell, 621 BUSINESS GIRLS â€"<104.;;....17G i1It:;;;100;.:: LEFPT OVERS «. i0ks. . ... 1127 170 153.;:....: 24k0 rOILERS 141....... 251 I0Xk... .:. .~ U 153 164 210 149 188 153 are the scores for i League for March 14 88 32 WARM UP 183 131 21‘ 108 109 164 219 . 158 140 . ~ CORN SYRUP 145 168 146 136 115 139 159 105 186 153 173 135 150 156 209 18"7 ... 123....464 2440 465 243 206 518 439 446 109 _XÂ¥ pure, wholesome, and economical table Syrup. Children love its delicious flavor. > [ ; Monda TEMISKAMINXG AND NORTHERN ONTARIO RAILWAY TRAIN SERVICE opt Na Nipissing â€" land Lake Ont., Alde Que. Connection Iroquois Fall: Connection Connaught, South macher and Timmin: Service Cochrane intermediate points, Tuesday and Thursd: 8.45 a.m. arrive Frast intermediate po Tuesday and Th 8.45 a.m. arrive J Train No. 102 rane, Tuesday General Frei North Bay, C a .m p.m Train No. 104â€"Leave M a.m., Monday, arrive Cochr Trains NOS. 101, 102, 1 operate Restaurant Car. See current time table any T. N. O. Railway A particulars. ike aserdale 1.20 5 p.m. Train No. 103 n.. Saturday, eha Alderma V lv W igh On| 1 0 p.m al Ro 11 yastika, daily with alilway, for Kirkâ€" Lake, â€" Cheminis, ivn and Noranda, T1 11 ) Moo chran UT 1l Mon A V *All 103 Canadian North Bay. t for BIlk hrane 8.45 sonee 4.45 No. 101â€"â€" Cochrane 45 p.m. to Cochâ€" ipply ainadian th Bay. turday immin nd ervice and ly for Schuâ€" 6.00 p.m. ind 4* 104 NC 1A VC nt, 9t 2n h