uf/ or///////’II/Jff/’//’fl/ffl/’/l///’//’//4 vlf//’///////f/////l/’ff/f/f’//’/’/’f’f’: * e ons ce d1 .. \ IASt In C place neat VischofT 1 it. When car gone. rowe after men. drink drivi Trips Wwerd Arcund nine wWwere be¢ Magistrate Pleased at Chivalrous Stand from Frida * 44#A 44 4* 4 * * * * 4 Phone 32 64 Spruce St. South Timmins b 06 0# 4 4408680484846 4048444848484 4484840800441 044 0464004688406 641 | s l d us s T TR s C460 % 0000 0%%® @04 e Each Canadian *t*C '-\:“ l\(.‘ M * * *4 l/.sr.Il///.l./fl/////l/lIIIIIIIIIIIlll//l///l, ACGE ETICG sund: FRIDAY, FRIDAY MIDNIGHT AND sATURDAY, JULY 16â€"17 William Powell and Myrna Loy in WEDNES. THURS., JULY 2 Double Feature Programme Herbert Marshall, Ruth Chatterton and a New Sensation Simone Simon in "GIRL‘S DORMITORY" also James Melton and Patricia Ellis in "MELODY FOR TWO" Noticeâ€"On double feature programmes coming to our theatres, we request our patrons to attend the theatre not later than 8.00 p.m. for the Second Show if they desire to see the full show. (Continued From Page One) Connaught, Schumacher and to ‘rage rooms and bootleggers where was procured. The party lasted 1 Friday afternoon until later than )‘clock on Saturday morning. Ruth riere and a woman named "May" : the ladies in the group.> After was picked up there were three . The woman ‘"May" was not king. Viochoff said. because she was FRIDAY,. FRIDAY MIDNIGHT and SATURDAY, JULY 23â€"24 Shirley Temole, Robert Young and Alice Fays in " Last Train from Madrid" Algoma Cokeâ€"Welsh Anthraciteâ€"Pennsylvania Blue Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" wheatâ€"Nutâ€"Slack and Steam Coal. "THE BROWN SKIN MODELS" ON THE SCREEN Dorothy Lamour and Lew Avers in s were made to Connaught and acher early in the evening. d nine c‘clock the party arrived Carriere home where Ruth borâ€" $5 from Viochoff. Some time he party had eaten a $3.65 breakâ€" _a cale it was decided to go to a rear the cemetery for more beer. ffT left the car to go in and get hen he came out he found the mne. His roll of bills was also That was his story. Lack of oration brought the magistrate to iday Midnight, , Monday, Tuesday, Tuesday Midnight, July 18â€"19â€"20 MIDNIGHT SHOWS EVERY FRIDAY AND ®UNDA Y special Matinee Every Saturday at 11.15 a.m " _ After the Thin Man " MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 p.m. Timmins Theatres MORE HEAT FOR YOUR FUEL DOLLAR Special Matince at Palace Theatre Every Saturday at 11.15 a.m. ADMISSIONâ€"All Children 10c Palace O OUR sTAGE IN PERSON our variety of coal COAL AND wWOoODYARD AND oFFICE 64 Spruce St. South Kiwanis Convention Reviewed, Monday Of the cighty Canadian delegates who attended, thirtyâ€"three were from Wesâ€" tern Ontario. The other fifty from Onâ€" tario and Q@uebec. The representation frcm the Maritimes was negligible. During the business session the Canaâ€" dian group was paired off with the delegates from the District of Columâ€" township. Frank Otonica, of Deloro township, was charged with keeping for sale. A remand was given. Also from Deloro, Frank Deluca was grantâ€" ed a remand on a charge of illegal conâ€" sumption. Dominic Brant, Deloro townâ€" ship., was charged with illegal conâ€" sumption and also with illegal possesâ€" sion. His charges were remanded. Three men, convicted of being drunk, were each fined $10 or given the alterâ€" native of 30 days in jail. sI Some cther police court cases (conâ€" nected with the recent near riot) will be found elsewhere in this issue. them Henry said that they treated him with the gin they brought and he.hin turn, gave them half a dozen bottles of beer that he had. "I think it is all very plain," said Magistrate Atkinson, imposing a three months sentence. Charges Remanded A charge of keeping for sale against Tom Sullivan, of Mountjoy township, was remanded as was a similar charge against Alex Jajeunesse, of Matheson The accused, Frank Henry, took the stand and denied the Constable‘s stateâ€" ments. He said that he told the officer that he did â€"not sell any beer. When the party came to see him he sold them soft drinks to mix with whiskey they brought with them andâ€"cigarettes. The party was made up of five men and two women, he said. Again denying that he sold beer them Henry said that they treated ] with the gin they brought and he, turn, gave them half a dozen bottle: beer that he had. that it was true and then admitted that he had sold them "all that I had." When Henry was asked to account for the money he had, in connection with Constable Johnston‘s investigation into the $250 theft charge he accounted for $1.50 he received for six bottles of beer. SATURDAY, SUNDAY MIDNIGHT g and MONDAY, JULY 17â€"18â€"19 4 Gene Autry in # THURSDAY FRIDAY, JULY 15â€"16 Pat O‘Brien, Henry Fonda and Marg Lindsay in " Slim " MIDNIGHT SHOW Every Sunday at 12.01 (midnight) TUESDAY WEDNES., JULY 20â€"21 Double Feature Programme Ralph Bellamy and Marg. Churchill in i1 V ALIUIL 1111 he accounted Place Using "Waste" v MRA also Ann Dvorak and Smith Ballew in THURS., JULY 22â€"(One Day Only) FRIDAY, JULY 23â€"(One Day Only) Czechoslovakian Talking Picture Monday, July 19th at 4.30 and 11.30 pm. only and Tuesday, July 20th at 11.30 p.m. (Midnight) only Preston Foster and Jean Muir in "OUTCASTS QOF POKER FLATS" Goldfields ENING 7.00 and 8.50 p.m. " The Old Corral " From this mud the refinery takes i gold, silver, iridium and many other metals. There is one metal, however, that they are unable to remove from the mud, and that is platinum. Over in Wales is a little refining plant where !they know how to remove platinum | from the mud. So the mud is shovelled ‘into nail kegs and sent to Wales for | further refining. Among the features Mr. Kinkel menâ€" tioned the Pageant of Speed, staged for the delegates Aat the Indianapolis speedâ€" way. It was the demonstration of the | progress made in auto transportation. | Speed races were held at which an average speed of 117 miles an hour was maintained for fifty miles. In a tire changing contest tires were changed on racing automobiles in as little as seven seconds. Whole sets of spark plugs were changed in fortyâ€"two secâ€" onds. Mixed with the mud in each keg may be thousands of dollars worth of platâ€" inum, but it would be absolutely worthâ€" less to any thief, for he could not separate it from the sludge. That is why n2 precautions are taken to safeâ€" guard the shipment. This is just an indication of the way in which scientists, not by any means all German scientists, are learning to utilize materials that were at one time waste. We in Canada are just learning that Cliff, the greatest in the world, a mudâ€" dy deposit sinks to the bottom of the tanks. The copper and nickel mines of Norâ€" thern Ontario produce almost every known metal in more or less small quantities. After the copper has been refined at the great plant of the Onâ€" tario Refining Company at Copper But really Canada has been shipping mud to England and Wales for years â€"mud that is much more valuable than ‘he mud that is going to Germany. Shipped in ordirary nail kegs, each keg full of mud is worth many thousand dollars, yet no precuutions are taken in its shipment and it is dumped into the holds of ocean freighters like so many barrels of flour. For strangely the mud isn‘t worth a cent to any perâ€" son except the ore to whom it is conâ€" signed. These wonderful Germans, you can‘t beat them as scientists, exclaim the marvellers. (Germany not the Only (Palmerston Observer) There has been a lot of "oh mying" and "by goshing" over large purchases of mud made recently by Germany in North America. The mud is iron mine waste from the Great Lakes region, from which the Germans, by what is said to be a secret process, are recovâ€" ering platinum, silver and tin. Arch. Gillies moved a vote of thanks for the address. The resignation of Dr. Herman H. Moore from the club due to a protracted stay away from Timmins, was announced in a letter to the secretary. The chairman of the Carnival Comâ€" mite, J. L. Fulton, announced that a meeting would be held in Taylor‘s Hardware Store tonight. Wales Has Been Taking] Treasures from "Mud" for| Many Years. 1 ginia "fairy stone" as a memento of the convention. * ** THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMINS, ONTARIO It was the la: Timmins silver old home week Timmins silver jubilee and Porcupinge| Mr. Carroll also described the rush old home week and crowds milled in | that started as soon as it became comâ€" the strgets all evening. or not, the law must be obeyed, and when the vocalists would not coâ€"operâ€" ate they were taken to the cells. hour was aroun.d midnight, when even ; But celebration | mon knowledge that a new find had been made. From Monday morning on, there was The|an aeroplane flying in at least every half hour," he said, "with almost every amidst silver jubilees some folks ‘plane carrying two or three, prospecâ€" doubt wanted to sleep. The episode, however, eï¬ect of mob psychology. Probably only | eight a few, at the outset, were at all interâ€" ested in the fate of the singers. Yet as the time passed the crowd which| trict stormed the town hall, pelted. stones stresses the|was staked for the time I left, the ground a radius of seven or milcs arcund the original disâ€" tors. By covery.‘ "Special planes were sent to the disâ€" , by several of the large companies. The plane from Hollinger. flown by and broke windows. jeering at the mayâ€"| their field man, M. Murdock, was one It would be a foslish person indeed who would say toâ€"day that mud or any other material is valueless. Sudbury Star.â€"It transpires that the trio who were arrested in Timmins and in whose interests a mob of nearly 1,000 demonstrated, were street singers, who played guitars and sang cowhkoy songs, and that they ignored orders from the police to perform on side streets rather than interfere with the progress of citizens and visitors on the main thoroughfares. than was possible a few years ago. Closer at hand we have an example in the Luther marsh. A few years ago the marsh was a liability. Toâ€"day a large firm is preparing to take valuable materials from the swamp. Finds Mob Psychology to be Very Peculiar Thing cr and {Nne CAl eral hundreds mediate releas any regard to mand had any many things we believed were valuesless are now of great worth. The way in which gasoline was once wasted in the early days at Petrolia is a classic. Crude petroleum was once refined for the kerosene it contained, and which was used as illuminating oil. Gasoline was teo explesive to use in lamps, and gasoâ€" lene engines were then unknown, so the gascline was pumped into ditches and allowed to trickle away. preventing heat prostratr drinking water. The secr that it replaces the vital thereby causing weakness Numerous high temper: machines in their plants Tennis clubs, baseball gro the lead given by industri THLETES, as we foundries, mines, k iuthorities the world preventing heat prost: e, however, stresses the psychology. Probably only outset, were at all interâ€" day of celebrations of f polil amoril or n fication, 1nGust riember U ture d carin ind other sun m Ti€ Much Interest in New Fish Lake Gold Find Claims East of Geraldton â€" Attracting Much Notice Several recent references have been Thade in The Advance to the new gold rush to. Fish Lake district, east of Geraldton. It is said that approximateâ€" ly one hundred prospectors are now working near the scene of the recent gold discovery. One of these prospecâ€" tors, Frank Carroll, described the possiâ€" bilities of the find to The Port Arthur Newsâ€"Chronicle, about as follows:â€" "This is the culmination of several years of intensive prospecting on the part of Ward, Morrows, Powers and myself," said. Mr. Carroll. ‘"The first trip to this country that was made by any of us was completed in the winter of 1933. The heavy snowfall made prosâ€" pecting impossible, but from rock forâ€" mation fcund and the gengral topoâ€" graphy of the country we were convintâ€", ed that the district has a good chance of being mineralized." Over 14 Miles "The line of break has been followed for 14 miles," he continued, ‘"and over the whole length, gold bearing rock apâ€" pears at fairly frequent intervals. Howâ€" ever, the conditions in the neighbourâ€" hood cof Fish Lake lead us to believe that the main vein is in the immediate vicinity." O 1 less. â€" All of which goes to show that a certain portion of the public is easily led, and also that the arm of the law has little sympathy sometimes even when it conscientiously strives to mainâ€" tain peace and order. ) mother, then! Smith‘s Weeklv Monday morning on, there was lane flying in at least every r,‘" he said, "with almost every rrying two or three, prospecâ€" the time I left, the ground ed for a radius of seven or les around the original disâ€" Wi NIZ m Hollin: ; M.. Mur arrive M ind Monday. 1t wWa 1 field man fror r from ProspeC 100 men were i on Thursday. istralia at 1 It was n from 11 Others who staked claims included Eric Johnson, Bill Lahti, John Short, Murray Watts, Gordon Watts, Ivor Erickson, Ed Rask and Fred Hays. Family Doctor‘s Aid in Battling T. B. (By J. W. 8. McCullough) Dr. William J. Dobbie, Physicianâ€"inâ€" Chief of the Toronto Hospital for Conâ€" sumptives at Weston, Ontario, says that one of the chief faetors in the early discovery of tuberculosis is the family doctor. ‘"‘One desires," he says, "to pay tribute to the part the family docâ€" tor has taken in the reduction of tuberâ€" culosis mortality. The family physiâ€" cian has done this because he is the first one to be consulted by the patient." Dr. Dobbie refers to the procedures in common use in the diagnosis of tuberculosis disease. These, in order of importance are: 1â€"â€"The intracutaneous tuberculin test. 2â€"Xâ€"ray film. 3â€"Examination of sputum. 4â€"The patient‘s history. 5â€"Physical signs found on examinâ€" ation. The first procedure is of infinite importance. The tuberculin test if negative to an adequate dose, eliminates those who are not infected. The posiâ€" tive cases are the ones rcqumng conâ€" sidcration. The xray film of those with a posiâ€" tive tuberculin reaction will, in the majority of cases, show, (1) those who have had no more than a primary healâ€" ed lesion and (2) those who have a secondary lesion of some type. Only those in the second group require furâ€" Rill Skeen, who also staked nine claims in the district, said: "I haven‘t done enough work to show what is on the claim that I staked. We will be goâ€" ing in again in a few weeks and will investigate the property thoroughly." Tribute Paid to the Work and Interest of General Medical Practitioner. Asked to comment on the new disâ€" covery, Murdock Mosher, who was secâ€" ond to stake claims, declined to comâ€" ment. However, Mr. Mosher said:;: "If you had a good berry patch you wouldn‘t call the rest of the world to come and pick them. I have nothing to â€" say." Freddie Powers, who was the first to stake claims and who was the leader of the three who made the discovery, stated yesterday that he had had sevâ€" eral offers from large companies for options on his holdings. secking Main Vein Mr. Powers also stated that the main vein had not been found yet but he was confident it was located somewhere in the immediate district. A good deal of trenching, he said, will probably be necessary before it is revealed. Lawrence Signs â€" Moved â€" DON‘T FORGET! Our New Address Hamilton Smithville Dunnville Woelland gration requirements of U. S.A. and going and returning. Tickets valid for travel Train No. 2 from Timmins, Thursday, July 15th, connecting at North Bay, C.P. Train 857 and a Sudbury with C.P. Train No. 28. All tickets valid to return so as to leave Toronto not later than C.P. tain No. 27,»11.05 p.m., Sunday, July 18thâ€"arriving North Bay and connecting with T. N. 0. Train No. 1, 1245 p.m., July 19th CENTRAL LOCATION 30% Third Ave. Under Goldfields Drug Tickets on Sale from Regular Stations ONLY Tickets good in coaches onlyâ€"No baggage checked Children 5 years of age and under 12, when accompanied by guardian Half Fare. Tickets to U. 8. destinations sold subject to passengers meCting immiâ€" For fares, departure time and further information apply to local agent., ONE CENT A MILE BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company Around the Corner to a More Thursday, July 15th 13 Years in Timmins of RELIABLE SIGN WORK Buff alo Kitchener Galt Guelph Woodstock (',h.atham London Windsor Detroit Via North Bay and Canadian Pacific wW. LA WRENCE (Prop.) Buff alo Galt Woodstock London TO The afterâ€"care of the tuberculous person is of high importance., He cannot, even if apparently quite woell, ’be turned loose to look after himself. The prospect for the tuberculous perâ€" sen in this country was never so bright as it is today. In 1935 the mortality rate in Canada was 60.3. Only four of the provinces had lower rate than this, namely Saskatchewan 27.8, Ontario 36.2, Alâ€" berta 42.2, and Manitoba 58.5. When it Boy So Scared That He Was Saved From Drowning Huntsville Gleaner:â€"At Belleville, Ill., twoâ€"yearâ€"old Warren Paule, fell into an open cistern and is known to have been under water at least two minutes before he was rescued. Docâ€" tors examining the little fellow later, found no trace of water‘in his lungs or stomach, indicating he hdd held his breath all the time he was submerged. Except for the fright, he was all right and was back to normal before the day was over. It is thought the shock of falling into the water caused him to hold his breath as terror stricken chilâ€" dren do. In this instance, it saved his life. ther consideration except that any of group one, showing any suspicious symptoms or who have had intensive exposure, had better be included with group two. The sputum gives valuable informaâ€" tion. Any person may have the sputum examined at one of the public health laboratories, either provinciai or muniâ€" cipal, and this without any expense. One examination is not. sufficient. Perhaps this examination should exâ€" tend to ten or a dozen specimens. The family history, as well as that of the patient, is of the highest importance. It reveals information in respect to the patient and it also may indicate where he gained his infection, thus allowing of action in regard to persons who may be spreading tuberculous infection. The physical examination is a matter for the individual doctor. It must be thorcugh for in tuberculosis, as in most diseases, the earlier the disease is disâ€" covered, the better for everybody conâ€" cerned. is remembered that in 1900 the death rate in Ontario was 160 per 100,000 of population it will be admitted that much progress in the control of tuberâ€" culosis has been made. The hope is that this rate will in another generaâ€" tion be brought down to 16. It can be done. There is no question but that the effort would pay. Early treatment is essential in the conduct of the tuberculous cases. Its principles are rest, thorough rest, good food, sunshine and fresh air. Sanaâ€" torium treatment is the best because this form of treatment is in the hands of trained tuberculosis workers, Moreâ€" over the patient who serves his time in a sanatorium learns how to take care of himself in the future. 30 J Third thought the shock of water caused him to s terror stricken chilâ€" instance, it saved his