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The Colborne Express (Colborne Ontario), 19 Jul 1928, p. 7

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THE COLBORNE EXPRESS, COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, JULY 19, 192& Are You Sharing in the < . keep l«forllJ^the lo«s"canaalan mi^a reliable V„™ Mnaiy v°>f°V nt, therefore ».lst to iece> Th(a places me &cr "° Clrthur DMouseif& Go. ; Hind ' ' \£j.m,i.tccLi \FoundedJ9d4 * jCirrvitecCi ■ ----- Elgin B171 MOYSEY BUILDING, 242 BAY 8T., TORONTO Direct Private Wires to all Offices FINANCIAL NEWS claims until October. Prospecting, however, is being done. Kirkland Lake's present depth pioneer--the Kirkland Lake Gold, ported to resume drilling from bole 5-foot level at i early The rich vein on Wright-Har-greaves' 1,760-foot level appears, This Is the first time this heading cording tq a despatch from the north, has appeared in your paper. Week by! to be the apex of three ore bodies, week we will give you the latest bul-JThe vein is said to be steadily grow-letins of interest to that great public ^ ing richer. Millheads are improving Which wishes to know authentic hap-: rapidly, and July looms as a month penings In the financial and mining | of record production. Investment world. j Tough-Oakes is still plugging away The news we give is as authentic anQ hanging up records for perseveres Is possible to get, and the sources :ance Tne sinking operations are be-of our Information is authoritative. I }ng conducted by working two eight-Nothing of a misleading nature will hour shifts and work is being accom-'appear in this column with our knowl-1 piished at a cost of approximately edge and consent. We give you the j |g0 per foot. It may be seen, there-[best and latest and hope it will be of: fore that the continuation of the value to our many readers. | shaf't to 2,000 feet this year will not 80ME CHANGES IN STANDARD impose any very serious financial de MINING EXCHANGE COM- | mand. While milling operations are MISSION RATES i confined to treatment of tailings until i possibly the end of October, and while At a meeting of directors of the miIling profits win not be large, yet Standard Stock and Mining Exchange tne income win carry part of the yesterday afternoon a change in com-!hea|| lnvolved in the sinking program mission rates covering stocks above ._including the cost of hydro-electric $30 was Inaugurated. According to1 power President N. C. Urquhart the new, ^ Crossland, consulting engineer rate on stocks selling between fQr ^ Woodbtae'Gold Mines, adjoin-\Arr™ I inB Premier Gold, B.C., has made the nT" announcement that a conservative es timate of the ore blocked out is 900,000 tons at $10 per ton. H< recommends the erection of a 200-ton mill. The company is erecting an assay office and has engaged T. Com-rie, formerly assayer for B.C. Silver and $100 per share will k for a hundred shares. The old mission rate, which has stood for several years, called for a rate of $25 on stocks selling between $30 and $50, but directors found it had become antiquated. No other changes in the mining issues Immediately affected by the alteration of the commission rate will be International, Coast Copper Bnd Noranda, the latter having had unusually heavy trading for some weeks. Strength in Potterdoal may be attributed to the fact that reports from the north state they are in 100 feet of ore on the 225-foot level. Although this is not official, the report comes from a very reliable source. It is the • intention of the company to drift on this ore for a time and then proceed with shaft sinking. Nothing has 'been heard lately regarding the galena strike. This vein, only 6 inches on surface, had widened out to 3 feet at 27-foot depth, where a shaft was put down by hand steel. The ore was exceptionally rich. Directors of Windfall Rouyn Mines have just issued a progress report covering the various operations of the company. The properties dealt with are in Marshay and the Sudbury Basin, in the Sudbury district, Ontario, and Clericy and Mglartic in Quebec. Drills are busy on the Sudbury Basin and Clericy holdings, yielding indifferent results. Camps are being erected on the Malartic property and equipment is being sent in. Owing to fire laws, no surface trenching, test pitting, stripping, etc., can be carried out on the Marshay Mines. Diamond drilling is ed, for the purpose of outlining the ore bodies before erecting a mill. The snow has been late in going; this has delayed seasonal work throughout the Portland cement district. Ribagi is still pursuing its search for mining properties. It is reported that the company has now optioned the Sunders and Bradley groups adjoining the Treadwell Yuyon. These have a combined acreage of 640 acres. A directors' meeting will be held tomorrow at Haileybury, and it is understood that a new company, to be known as the Ribago Sudbury Extension Mines, will be applied for. According to the report, Ribago's attempts to get in on.the property was contested by the Chelmsford Mining Corp., who had similar intentions. Ribago is now said to be the winner, with Chelmsford out of the picture. Mandy is reported to have commenced diamond drilling in the hope of picking up extensions of the known ore zone between the old shaft and the Flin Flon boundary. The new shaft is now nearing completion, 525 feet. The stock was quite strong recently. Area has commenced diamond-drilling close to the Amulet boundary, where chances of picking up extensions of the Amulet ore are considered O ALSCHBACH £ A SECOND * ^ TECK-HUGHES MINE $70 to the Ton Across Shaft! Some Facts About Development Work on The * ALSCHBACH GOLD MINE KIRKLAND LAKE DISTRICT 9 Veins Upon the Property. Average assays of $70 per ton at depth of 45 ft. over full width of shaft. Exceptional geological structure, with veins running practically in parallel and increasing enrichment with depth. This property is in charge of Mr. Clarence Alschbach, who sank the original shaft at Teck-Hugbes, and is in the heart of the active development going on in the western end of Kirkland Lake District. WE 8TRONGLY RECOMMEND THE PURCHASE OF THIS ISSUE. Engineer's Report and Prospectus mailed upon return of attached coupon to W. H. DE UDY & COMPANY, LIMITED. TORONTO Investment Brokers_MONTREAL W. H. DE UDY & CO. LTD. 755 Yonge 8t., Toronto. Please mail me report and prospectus of The Alschbach Gold Mining Co. Limited. XdWom0Rouyn.t0 """^ ^.P^nt Party a Big Force in Shaft sinking at the Jackson-Manion j Rumania Is nearing a depth of 200 feet, and | "The National Peasant Party repre-should arrive at the first objective Bents the economic and political in-of 250 feet by the middle of July. The terests of the mass of Rumanian pea-crosscut run from the 125-foot horizon gantry. It has not ruled so far, but it disclosed a vein width of over ten ls more llke!v to I0now a iarge nation-feet, together with high values in gold. ai policy for the advancement of all No drifting has been dona on the vein, soclal ciasgeg than the Liberal Party." however, but with the completion of Thus speaks a Rumanian editor, Aure-the shaft to the 250-foot level, a cross- 1Iu lon p0pescu, in the July issue of cut will be to the vein from that Current History Magazine. The Peas-depth and drifting started. When in-'ant Party; the article continues, tersected at the 125-foot level, the ("stands for economic co-operation be-vein showed greater width, together. tween domestic and foreign capital with an increase in values as com- for the purpose of developing Ru-pared with those in evidence on the mania's tremendous natural re-surface- sources." It was the agrarian reform of 1919 which led to the formation of the National Peasant Party, composed of millions of small but independent peasant proprietors. "I can state without any hesitation," asserts Mr. Popescu, "that were it not for the reforms, Bolshevism would have swept Rumania in 1919. * * * If Rumania and Hungary had turned Bolshevik, the Balkans, Poland and the border States would have been compelled to follow suit. It Is very doubtful whether Austria, Czecho-Slovakia, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Germany could have resisted the onsweeping tide. In any case Europe, half Communist, would have had a different history in the post-war period." ST. VITUS DANCE A Trouble That Usually Attacks Young Children. St. Vitus dance Is the name generally given to a disease described by medical men as chorea. This trouble usually attacks young children, though older people may be afflicted with it. The most common symptoms are a twitching of the face and limbs. As the disease progresses the twitching takes the form spasms, in which the Jerking motion may be confined to the face or all the limbs may be affected. Frequently the patient is unable to hold anything in the hands or walk steadily. In severe cases the speech is often affected. The disease is due to debility of the nerves and relief through an enriched blood supply. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been most successful In reaching this trouble through their specific action on the blood, which it enriches and purifies. The following instance proves the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in this trouble. Mrs. Thomas Bowen, Bath, Ont., says:--"Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been in use in my family for years and always with good results. I believe they saved the life of my only son. At ten years of age he grew very nervous and the trouble developed into St. Vitus dance, legs and arms would jerk and twitch, then his speech was affected, and his condition was pitiable. Just then there came to me a little book telling of Dr. Williams* Pink Pills and I decided to give them to him. By the time two boxes were used there was improvement in his condition and by the time six boxes more were taken all traces of the trouble had disappeared, and he was well and strong. I have also given the pills to my growing girls, and I know of better strengthening medicine. I may add that the same applies to grown-ups as well." You can get these pills through any edlcine dealer or by mall at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. Dutch Motors Holland Has More Bicycles Than United States Has Cars Leyden, Holland.--Bicycles are ore frequent in Holland than automobiles in the United States. There "rijwiel," or bike, to every two one-half inhabitarfts. In a university town like Leyden virtually every student, male or female, owns a heel. The great popularity of the bicycle attributable to the fact that there re practically no hills in Holland. The uniformly level country offers every inducement to save carfare by pedaling one's way. The importance of the bicycle is recognized by the authorities in that they provide separate "rijwielpads" or bicycle roads running parallel to the itomobile and horse-drawn vehicle The pedestrian in Holland must take far greater care not to be run by a bicycle than by an automo-although the auto is also very popular. A Fair Sized Candle Giant Beacon .at Mitchell Field Will Pierce 75 Miles of Fog A giant landing beacon, capable of piercing fog and whose orange-blaze it, is claimed will be visible aviators through mist and darkness for more than seventy-five mi be installed by the United States Army Air Service at Mitchel Field, L.I. The new lamp promises to reduce materially the hazards of night flying, because in addition to visibility at long range It will provide brilliant illumination at the landing field. It also may be used for flashing signals. Instead of the knifelike beam of a searchlight the new beacon gives a l|£ht that is diffused In all directions, reaching every corner of the field and guiding aviators from whatever part of the sky they may be flying. Through electrified gas-filled tubes the lamp generates the equivalent of 500,000,000 candle power, but it consumes only about a third as much kilowatt power as is used In other types of illumination. The Air Service has for a year conducted a series of tests of the lamp. It was found to be ten times more powerful than any other beacon in existence. Sour Stomach tasteless Milk of Magnesia dkali, effectivt has been the stam years among phyi One spoonful will many times its vo right way, the efficient way to Jr.: The stomach br.cci a happy again In five rescribed by physi-i correcting excess contains full direc- The Responsibility for v Great War the| Have a Heart The RED HOT JULY DAYS HARD ON THE BABY July--the month of oppressive heat red-hot days and sweltering nights is extremely hard on little ones Diarrhoea, dysentery, colic and chol era infantum carry off thousands of precious little lives every summer. The mother must be constantly on her guard to prevent these troubles, or if they come on suddenly to fight them. No other medicine Is of such aid to mothers during the hot summer as is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels and stomach, and an occasional dose given to the well child will prevent summer ( plaint, or if the trouble does come suddenly will banish it. The Tablets sold by Medicine dealers or by mai! at 25c a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Progress of Civilization A kiss used to tell whether or n< she loved you. Now-a-days it merely tells yo whether she smokes Camels or Luck Strikes. Efficiency in the Henhouse Sign lamped on Chatham-London EGGS Fresh Laid in Cartons. Immediate responsibility for the Great War hinges on the fact whether Germany did or did not incite Austria to issue the drastic ultimatum to Serbia, and whether Germany advised Austria to refuse to accept Serbia's reply. In this issue a symposium is printed wherein the then Austrian Foreign Minister, Count Leopold Berchtold, Chief of Cabinet of the Austro-Hungarlan Foreign Ministry, Count Alexander Hoyos, and Legal Counselor of the Austrian Foreign Ministry, Dr. Friedrich von Wles-ner, categorically deny that Germany influenced their demands or their decision to attack Serbia. Corroborating these affirmations the magazine prints statements from ex-Kaiser Wilhelm; the former German Foreign Minister, Gottlieb von Jagow, and the former German Under-Secretary of State, Alfred Zimmerman, who explicitly confirm the Austrian state-Professor Harry E. Barnes, who spent last summer in Europe Investigating this question, joins the Austrian and German Ministers in acquitting Germany of having influenced Austria's decision to attack Serbia. Dr. Michael T. Florlnsky of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who has also been studying the question in the United States and abroad, takes precisely the opposite view, and declares that the records confirm the facts that Germany gave Austria a free hand, thus encouraging her in her aggressive policy toward Serbia; and that the German Govern-responsibility for Austria's course of action is overwhelming. With the mythical prosperity, mythical economy, mythical facts, mythical figures and mythical men, the last eight years may well be treated by historians as the mythical age American history.--Claude G. Bowers. Time for "Big Bill" Thompson burn all the school histories that s Lindbergh wasn't the first man to across the ocean. How MuchWater Should Baby Get? ^A. Famous Authority's "Rule Ify TluthSrittatn those few drops of blood. Business ha; outgrown the feeling something to fear in .--John J.^Raskob. Classified Advertisemenli BABY CHICX3 lard's Liniment heals cuts, bruis Cows Give More Milk Production of the average cow has increased 1333 pounds of milk and 48 pounds butterfat the past eight years, I. Parker, dairy husbandman of United States Department of Agrlcul-, is reported a saying In the Bos-News Bureau, a leading financial daily. The average cow is now producing 4,500 pounds of milk. Examination of more than 100,000 yearly records showed that in any breed the have larger cow Is the better producer. -wis hatch ] Baby Loves A Bath With T Cuticura^ Soap .A Lovely Skits Smooth Texture Soft, glowing color and velvet smoothness are the skin's reflecir>ns of "blood health " within. ^ TRU-BLOOD, the pleasant - to - take blood tonic, by acting directly on ths blood and driving out impurities, corrects the underlying causes of skin affections and gives natural color and beauty to the complexion. When taking TRU-BLOOD usj Buckley's OINTMENT as an external treatment. This magic Ointment does winders in correcting skin blemishes, in soLcniuJ and beautifying the skin. Read what these users say. One writs-: "TV* and they find it better tlian any preparatio i embark- You will img its pran< Go to any good druggist for "Buckley's" products--and acqutfi That Charms'*. Every, r- ; Needs Minard's Lin Baby specialists agree nowadays, that during the first six months, Uabie3 must have three ounces of fluid per pound of body weight daily. An eight pound baby, for instance, needs twenty-four ounces of fluid. Later on the rule is two ounces or fluid per pound of body weight. The amount of fluid absorbed by a breast fed baby is best determined by weighing him before and after feeding for the whole day; and it is easily calculated for the bottle fed one. Then make up any deficiency with water. Giving ,baby sufficient water often relieves his feverish, crying, upset and restless spells. If it doesn't, give him a few drops of Fletcher's Castorla. For these and other Ills of babies and children such as colic, cholera, diarrhea, gas on stomach and bowels, constipation, sour stomach, loss of sleep, underweight, etc., leading physicians say there's nothing so effective. It is purely vegetable--the •eclpe is on the wrapper--and millions of mothers have depended on it In thirty years of ever Increasing It regulates baby's bowels, makes him sleep and eat right, enables him to get full nourishment from his food, so he increases In weight as he he should. With each package you it a uook on Motherhood worth Its eight in gold. Just a word of caution. Look for the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher on the package so you'll be sure to get the genuine. The forty cent bottles contain thirty-five doses. tea Tones the Blood I Oearsihesm THE Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires hold the longest mileage records. You get more for the money because Firestone builds in extra miles with special processes, including Gum-Dipping--and the scientifically designed Tire Tread. The largest bus, truck and taxicab fleets who demand mileage use Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires. See your nearest Firestone Dealer--he will save you money and serve you better. Always put a Firestone steam-welded, leak-proof lube in your Firestone lire. FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED Hamilton, Ontario. ffrettone Builds the Only GUM-DIPPED TIRES COULD NOT WORK FOR MONTHS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Port Elgin, N. B--"For three months, I was nervous and weak with ■•tired feelings and could not do my work. A friend advised me to take Lydia E. Pink-ham's Vegetable Compound and I have got good results from it and recommend it to others."-- Lila Taylor, Port Elgin. N.B. This dependable

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