1934, Pickle Crow Gold Mines tot away to a good start, with ample to carry on a systematic carmâ€" paign of development. Since then it mwmwmmw- vion as the richest mine of its size or proved the existance of suzzsessive zsones of banded iron in the greenstone." A few months later the great crash on Wall Street cccurred, and the world was wunged mtomedeepest.awm- ¢est depressicn of history. While some riore surface work had meanwhile been cone at Pickle Crowd, development upâ€" on a stale commensurate with the imâ€" portance of the dissoveries was nevesâ€" surily deferred. Discovered in 1928 Company Organized Threce Years Ago Raising of the price of gold to $35 an ounce in 1933 put a very different der NAM.E.‘s engineers, trenching, stripping and prospscting surface, and is said that a strong vein has been proven for over 1,000 feet. The counâ€" try. is low lying, and it has been imâ€" possible to determine full length of the expeosure, but the company‘s engineers believe the showing warrants further Minerals Exploration, the airplant prospecting company of Mr. Hammell, swooped down upon attractive showings recently dissovered at Pickle Crow. Early in 1929 the writer a news‘item upon the early development, While the record of Ashanti Goldâ€" fields Corporation on the Gcald Coast of West Africa is not yet available for 1936, it may be taken for granted that the $21.44 average per ton value of 1935 was not exceeded, and it is not beâ€" lieved ary other property in the world came anywhere near the $30.786 per ton level of Pickle Crow, both Pioneer Gold of British Columbia and Benquet of the Philippine Islands, at one time conâ€" tenders for the honcur, having shown considerable decline in recoveries in recent years. On a lesser tornage basis, Reno, Sheep Creek, B.C., is secâ€" ond in point of per ton recovery on busis of last year‘s results. The history of Pickle Crowd dates back to 1928, when Northern Aerial Leads the Wor‘ld in Grade of Ore Milled Toâ€"day. (Glcke and Mail) Judged by last year‘s performance, Fickle Crow mine, Patrizia District, Onâ€" tario, a Jack Hammell project, was the richest minge of its size or greater, not only in Canada, but in the world, so far as available statistits bear upon that subject. Pickle Crow Mine Richest of Its Size 6 Pine Street N. Harvey Graham Son ALL FITTINGS VERIFIED SEE A COMPETENT FOOT BY Xâ€"RAY AUTHORITY REGULARLY VEN while he worked unceasingly each day in his famous Wilâ€" liamsburg, Canada, foot clinic, Dr. M. W. Locke was thinking how he could help millions who suffer the agony of aching feet. A scientifically correct shoe that assists pressureâ€" bound bones and muscles way man went to the rescue of his young son who was attacked by the dogs. The boy was so badly injured that‘he died. previous conviction for the same ofâ€" fence. All the machines were confisâ€" cited by the police. Haileyburian:â€"If a man is happy, be is successful. before Gustave Roberge, J.P., and P. X. Cosseétte, J.P. Six of them paid $20 and sosts with the option of a month‘s jail, and one $40 and costs, who had a Eleven Slot Machines Seized at Amos, Quebec At Long Lac, the mining town, 175 miles northeéast of Port Arthur, on Monâ€" day Charles Smith, Canadian National Railways operator, was severely mauled by a team of slitigh dogs. The team was passing Mr. Smith and the lead dog snapped at his leg. In his sudden effort to escape the dog he overbalancâ€" ed himself and fell right on the team. The dogs piléd upon him as he fell, biting and maulirg him. The driver of the dog team was a young lad of only about fourteen years of age and it took him some little time to get his dogs under control. In the meantime Mr Smith was badly bitten and is likeély to be laid up for several days as a result of the incident. It is only a few months ago that the station agent at one of the smaller places near Cochrane was badly bitten by sleigh dogs. In this case the railâ€" Amos, Que., last Friday by Sergeant Morel, assisted by Constable Dussauit, both of the Quebec Provincial Police. Sever persons involved in opgrating Sleigh Dogs Bite and Maul the Operator at Long Lac Capacity of the plant is now being increased to 400 tons daily, andâ€"yill be sgradually brought up to that capacity as mine conditions warrant. The main shaft has been completed to the 1,200â€" foot level, where a crosssut has rectentâ€" ly reached the vein reported to show gcod width with values not yet reâ€" csived. greater in the world under the flailing ige of Mr. Hammell. Within little more than a year a 150â€"ton mill had been placed in comâ€" mission and electric power brought in, Mr. Hammell loaning the company $170,000 to complete the installation. It is worthy of notice that this entire amount had been returned by August of the same year, and that dividerds zere commenced within twelve months after the mill started. Eleven slot machines, representing e value of $3000, were collected at to return to normal posiâ€" tion was the result. This same shoe, the only one designed and approved by Dr. M. W. Locke, is now available right here in your own city, fitted to your individual requireâ€" ments by our registered. certified fitters. Come in tomorrow and start down the road to foot health. DA.M W 10¢ Phoneé 11 walls above the tiles. The walls could be painted a lovely pale blueâ€"green, like a spring sky during a shower and may be of the same colour and to carry out the sprirgâ€"rain effect you might car.‘t buy the material you want by the rard, you might invest in a shower curâ€" tain of it and cut it up for a â€" small dressing table skirt. We suggest a nale springâ€"rain green over white. An amâ€" ber bevelled glass top would be effecâ€" tive with this with amber glass bottles for accessories on the table. Your the is of a size to permit it, here is another place where dressing tables are obvious mecessities. You might drape a small oblong table with this shining new transparent and waterproof cil silk that is so popular now in shower curâ€" a period dressâ€"you might get some grand ideas from the detailed descripâ€" tions of Scarlett O‘Hara‘s dresses in "Gone With the Wind." If you can place your table in a position where part of the back is visible, say at right angles to a window, you1 might be inâ€" spired by the bustles of the ‘80‘s and pay as much attention to the back of the skirt as to the froentâ€"imagine a crisp taffeta in a lovely dark red colâ€" lour, with fluted pleats around the botâ€" of your primping. Since what you are tem, the front draped with an extra really making is a skirt, why not copy, length of the material caught up on A lady who has,a way with a bow finds the same abiding gratification in ‘Tixing tip a dressing table as in makâ€" ing clothes for a pretty little girl. But there‘s been tso much ravelled thinkâ€" ing about a dressing table as something to make cver out of a left over. Maybe the idea of a dressing table did begin with a packing box for a base and an old curtain for a skirt, but that‘s no sign a dressing table shouldn‘t graduâ€" ote to better things. _ The unpainted dressinzy tabies that the stores sell now are irexpensive and A Dressing Table Idea From "Gone With the Wind"â€"Another for a Little Girl Made With a School Desk.â€"Even a Kitchen Dressing Table. lines added in silver. The lineâ€" Flowered chintz was the material selected by the lady who made herâ€" se this crisp dressing table to match the bedspread. The collar of the dressing table is scalloped and finished with green pleated chintz ruffling and the skirt itself is box ‘pleated. Red and White checked gingham cut in a gored flounce makes the skirt for this provincial dressing table. A wise little doll in a peasant costume strikes a grace note. Dressing Tables for All Sorts of Places. PLEASANT HoMES There will be a hole in the flat peart rerhaps in crisp white dotted swiss with pale blue dots. Fasten a mirror on the under side of the desk top that lifts up. In the desk itself your young An oldâ€"fashioned school desk would make just the rightâ€"sized dressing table for your young daughter who finds hair ribbons and their tying o great importence just row. A desk like this should not be too difficult to obâ€" tainâ€"inquire from your local school ruthorities where they buy theirs anc order one from the school supply house. Get the whole unitâ€"desk and the seai that folds up. Paint the whole thing pale blue and drape the desk part as you would any other dressing tableâ€" _either side of the tab‘e and with a bow ! to simulate the bustle in the back. Sirce tables don‘t provide any too ~much drawer space. you might hide i two small composition shoe boxes unâ€" | der the skirt. l Waterproof Oil Sillk Drapes Bathroom Dreéssing Table . Many women like to do the really good facial cleaningâ€"up jobs in the :hathroom where steamed towels and iceâ€"cold water is handy. If your bath paintirg could be done by your husâ€" band, with a drawing pen and a yardâ€" stick neld at a slanting angle. "have drawer space as well as a proper frame work for the petticoat. And we ’tknnk the mirror and appointments should be as nice as the budget will | pllow. We‘re certain that you don‘t have as many dressing tables as your ; house could hold, and that will be good rews if you like to putter with your | ruffles. First there‘s your own room. Here your dressing table must be just about the most alluring object you ever saw â€"coupled with practicability for this is the one table where you will do most by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin [ What is confidently expected to be the dance hit of the weekâ€"indeed, the dance hit of many a weekâ€"will be the event to be held at Harmony Hall,, Fourth avenue, this (Thursday) evening February 25th, commencing at 9 p.m. ‘There will be square and round dances, with Andy Cangiano‘s orchestra. mission tickets éntitle holders to opporâ€" tunity for valuable priges, including new 1937 model G.E. radio. Dance Hit of the Week at Harmony Hall Toâ€"night Other information in the handbook iircludes commissions brokerage houses are allowed to charge on selling stocks; stock transfer rates under Dommmon oOnrtario and Quebe: tax laws:; yearly transactions of the Toronto Stock Exâ€" changs; and range of stock prices on the mming section cf the Toronto Stock Exchange since 1929. Mcre than 1200 mining companies are listed in Part I, the "principal comâ€" panies‘"‘ in the field. Three thousand more are taken care of briefly in Part If, the "suplementary list, including inacttive companies." In the latter secâ€" tion of the book there is also informaâ€" tion received too late for publication in the first part. In most cases, deâ€" tails are complete to the end of 1936 ard in some cases to January of this It is by far the largest edition of the handbook ever published and the growth not only of the service, but: of the industry is reflected in the addition since last year of nearly twenty pages. Since the type used in the current ediâ€" t:on is much smaller than that previâ€" cusly employed, the handbook contains summaries of ‘hundreds more companies than were included last year. Easily Available Information No attempt has been made to sumâ€" marize Canadian mining, yet all the information is there for anyone who wants it. The book is intended priâ€" marily for investors who require acâ€" curate, easily found, and readable inâ€" formation about mines. In that way ‘L serves its purpose even better than o‘:her editions. Information about more than 4,000 Canadian mining companies is included in the new Canadian Mines Handâ€" book, yearly publication of the Northâ€" ern Miner, Toronto. â€" Three hundred and eightyâ€"three pages, crammed with aztails about the hundreds of mining companiés in which the public of Canâ€" ada has invested; is made available hy the book in a form not > be found elsewhere. New Canadian Mines Handbook for 1937 The part of the bench whetre you used to keep music will be obvious place to store your guests‘ supplies of ecctton, powder puffs, cleaning tissue and the like. It might also be thoughtâ€" ful to include a needie and various coloured darning thread so that disâ€" tressed guests with sudden runs in their stockings can get firstâ€"aid. The piano bencth can be put away between parties and the draped> mirfor and small chests with lamps will be left to enliven an otherwise dark hall. Finally in the kitchen you. might bave a hanging shelf with mirror, pairted to match your kitchen colours. Here‘s.the place for an extra lipstick and a box of powder for a quick dab to lift your face and your morale beâ€" fore going to the door. And here, of course, is the obvious place to give yourself those rather medsy ye! very effective egg facials. Northern Miner Publication an Unusually Helpful Volâ€" ume. And now for the bencth. What better use for that old piano bench that‘s been up in the attic for so long? Drag it down, paint it white, make a quiltéd pad for it in silk to match the organdy craperies. Tie the pad firmly to the seat at the four corners and> your bridge club wiill love to sit in pairs on it, gaze at themselves admiringly in the long mirror and powder their noses in a duet, so to speak. (Copyright, 1937, by Elizabeth Macâ€" Rae Boykin.) velvetâ€"topped pin cushion to fit this. A pair of flower prints, framed in pale ~blue, can hang directly over the deskâ€" intoâ€"dressing table. The seat, painted pale blue, cen have a thin pillow, made to fit and covered in the dotted swiss with crisp ruffles around the edge. A Dresser at Which Your Guests Can Make Up in Pairs Women at parties always like to primp in pairs. This presents a probâ€" lem if you have but one dressing table. You might place a large minror on the wall of your upstairs hall. The mirror should be square and large enough so that fullâ€"length vision is possibleâ€"we have in mind one about six feet tall and four feet wide. It viould be best to order the plain unâ€". framed mirror and have it secured to. the wall with screws in each corner Draps the mirror as you would a winâ€" cdow, perhaps with pale peach organdy tieâ€"backs with a ruffled valance. Place two small chests of drawers (you may uy these unpainted and paint o stain them ycurself) at either side of the mirror with a pair of boudoif lamps on themâ€"plain mirrored ones with organdy shades would do nicely. of the desk beyond the liftâ€"up top for Once the printiple is accepted that a group of citizens can join togethéer and follow a course of action outside the law in regard to one kind of situation, and there would soon spring up other groups with other aims.: The safest and wisest course is to hold the elected reâ€" presentatives responsible for law enâ€" There is another way, too, in which what the Nugget refers to as "rightâ€" minded" and "respectable citizens‘"‘ can help to keep the community clear of undesirable places. Let such citizens make it abundantly clear that they do not approeve cof them, nor of those who patronize them, and it will be found that there will be few such plaoes long continue in existence. It appers that the reports from Timâ€" mins regarding the action of soâ€"called vigilantes was exaggerated if not enâ€" tirely without foundation. But, if true, the course of action to have been followed shou‘ld not be condoned (From Cochrane Post) Commenting upcn the report that vigilantes had taken the law into their own hands and raided a “den" on the outskirts of Timmins the Nugget ofâ€" fers some curious and we think, unâ€" sound commendation. The Nugget beâ€" lieves that the Timmins vigilantes "deâ€" serve commendation" and that "every community should have a band of vigilantes"â€"qualifyir‘g that last by th# observation that "their activities should be réstricted to seeking out breeding places ‘of vice and ‘causing the® authoriâ€" ties to enforce the law to the limit." No right thinking person condones the existence of organized vice and crime in the community. But that it is advisable to have a vigilante comâ€" mittee in every community to seek cut such places is hardly the best way of dealing with them. After all, every orâ€" ganized community has an eletted body whose duty it is to sée to such matters. Police activity or the ladt of it is merely a reflection of the wishes of that elected body, and if the citizens of a community are not satisfied with the way in which the law is being enforcsed they have the means to hand to alter the situation. If citizens, individually, will make it quite clear to each elected member of that body that they need nct seek reâ€"election unless the laws are enforced, there will be but very litâ€" tle trouble. No Milk contains all the esâ€" sential vitamins that the body craves throughout the winter months. Make up for lack of sunshine by drinking plenty of fresh rich milk. f Pork Chops â€" 25¢ TRIMMED LOIN ~peéer 1b. BOSTON STYLE TURKEYS, 8 to 10 lbs â€" â€" â€" â€" lb. 29c SHOULDER 2 lbs. Roast Veglâ€" â€" 35¢ Pork Butts â€" 19¢ Vigilantes in Timmins and None Desired Here Salmon, 2 tins 21¢ MURATORIâ€"16 oz pkg 2 for SHOULDER â€" per lb. Roast: Beef..â€" 14¢ "A" GRADE Red Coat Brandâ€" KETA THEY ARE ALL "A" GRADE NOT "B‘s" 1,000 Bags Just Arrivedâ€"P.E.I. No. 1 Green Mountain _ BUY NOW ts sc Phone 935 for Delivery Service Timmins Dairy " Bottled Sunshine" , and if they fall down on 66A 39 99 16 oz. tins Large, dozen . ..... Medium, dozen... Pullets, dozen ... pér lb. The appeal of Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, physician of the Diorne quintuplets, against a $385 reduction in his salary as Medical Officer for North Himsworth Township was postponed until March 2, due to his iliness. Hearing was to have, cpened on Tuekday at Callendar, before Judgs B. Moon: Dr. Dafoe cbjected to a cut in his salary from the township from $75 a year to $49, and anpointed Kenneth Valin of the law firm ~f Tannery Valin to act for him. Dr. Dafoe Appeals to the Courts in Salary Cut Made While giving the warmest praise and commendation to the Kiwanis Club for the excellent community work they were doing, the Tek township council this week refused a pei‘mit to the Conklin Shows who were planning to play at Kirkland Lake this summer uiilder the auspices of the Kiwanis Club. The. Kirkland council, in fact, went definitely on record as against admitâ€" ting any travelling carnival shows to Kirkland Lake this summer. Members of the countil pointed cut that there had been a decided general outcry against travelling carnivals. Gambling features were espetially objected to and it was claimed that a lot of people lost a lot cf money every time one of these shows hit town. In â€"favour of the carnival it was argued that the plan gave the Kirkland Kiwanis opportunity to make good money for the various community purposes of the club. Against this was the suggestion of Reeve Carter that the travelling carâ€" nivals were not philanthrophists and that if they gave any local crganizaâ€" tion money it was because they made a whole lot more by doing so. It was also argued that the merchants wantâ€" ed the travelling carnivals kept out. Reeve Carter mentioned in addition that this particular show had been reâ€" fused a peimit by the town and now were trying to get it through the local tlub. He was against granting the perâ€" mit and so were a majority of the counicil. So that settled it. Kirkland Council Refuses Permit for Conklin Shows the job, replace them with cthers who will see that vice and crime are.kept down‘ to a minimum. TEXAS MARSH SEEDLESS PINK Grapefruit, 3 for......23¢ KILN DRIED SWEET Potatoes, 2 lbs. .......... 17¢ CA!JFON!A. Good: Size Celery, per bunch......17¢ GREEN o Cabbage, 1 lb. ............ 8e Carrots, 2 bunches.... 15c Pimeapple â€" â€" 25¢ Blue Mountain CUBESâ€"19 orz. tins 2 for ONE CENT SALE 1 Cake of Lifebuoy Soap for 1¢c. when you buy One Large RINSO PRIMED ROLLED per lb Rib Roast â€" â€" 23¢ Both for 26c .. 28C ..26¢