West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Jun 1936, p. 2

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4 on the board of trade left the "longs"" holding the bag of losses. Veteran traders wno watched the "Battle of May Wheat" since its inâ€" ception several months ago said it was the first time in the exchange‘s history that holders of wheat had been forced to accept delivery of cash grain whether they wanted it‘ or not. A number of small traders an expected " On CHICAGO May Delivery Price Drops at Chicago as Futures Deals End SPLIT LAKE GOLD MINES LIMITED HUG Address _ ....... Kindly forward prospectus, full information on Split Lake Name To SPLIT LAKE GOLD MINES LIMITED, 1104 Bank of Hamilton Bldg., Toronto, Canada Lose Heavily H C. M: VEIN REACHED AT FIRST LEVEL OF SPLIT LAKE GOLD A telegram received from H. L. Donaldson, May 16th states: "Crosscut 19 feet south at first level just broke into north side vein Number 5. Very heavily mineralized and plastered with free gold. Gold coarse in sulphides. Will have another round out Sunâ€" day and will wire you details regarding width of orebody also assays." 1 C. McBAE, President Torciuto, Ont. ' A message received from the Split Lake Gold Mines propâ€" erty states that the crosscut at the first level of the mine shows 15 feet in width of highly mineralized vein containing over one ounce of gold per ton with some other metal which asâ€" sayer believes to be platinum. Samples and check samples from along entire side of dump where ore is being dumped from full width of vein yields this result. Stringers of quartz could be seen in the shaft and in the staâ€" tion. The crosscut continued through this condition for 19 feet at which point it broke into the vein. _ Since the above information on the 15 foot vein width further word has been received that the crosscut is being continued and at 40 feet from the shaft was still in good looking vein matter. _ This means 6 feet additional to the 15 foot width referred to. The vein matter throughout the 21 foot width consists of mineralâ€" ized quartz and heavity mineralized alterations. swift collapse of e" in May wheat HEAD OFFICE: 1104 BANK NOTICE OF CLOSING DN QGEERING AT 40 CENTS PER SHARE WILL POSITIVELY BE CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC CS oR BEFORE THE 6th DAY OF JUNE, 1936. MEANTIME THE RiGHT is RESERVED TO DIS. CONTINUE THIS OFFERING AT ANY TIME, WITHOUT NOTICE 220 T C i a8R iA 10 s Uf the above 2,124,857 shares 200,000 shares are being sold at 40¢ per share. A portion of these said 200,000 shares have already been sold. Applications are being filled in the order received but the risk is reserved to reject applications in whole or in part and also to award in any case a smaller number of shares than applied for. No commissions are paid or payable to officers or director« nf th« ...,..____. "_ "Nares than applh T ABWENE im mm agma s o 0 . 19%__~ _ t tC HAK t Feserved to reje/ or in part and also to award in any case a smaller number of shares than applie are paid or payable to officers or directors of the company on any sales of stock Of the above HARRY L. DONALDSON Fifteer F oot Width Yields High Results E 9 S C = A C AZ" Capitalization (No Par Value)} ........./«.. Incorporators‘ shares issued ............. ... For acquisition of properties Originally issued to the parent company Smelter Gold Mines Li 995 shares (including 40,000 shares contained in above item tion of properties") leaving a balance of 2,659,995 shares. these for purposes of Split Lake Gold Mines Limted . . ... .. The proceeds from the sale of these 535,138 Shares have been ri Lake Gold Mines Limited. Unsoft batance ...;:...;:..m.3."... t °_ el Such portion of the said unsold balance of 2, 124,857 shares : able by the directors of the parent company are available for fut Mines Limited. Over $100,000 has already been provided for the present en terminated under a new exchange rule which prohibits trading in any future the last three days of the month in which it is deliverable. The rout of the "longs," who bought May wheat any time since August in the hope that war fears, inflation talk or crop disaster would enable them to sell later at a profit without actually taking the grain, was indicated by the fact th: conâ€" tract was closed out revently withâ€" in 1% cents of the lowest level of the season and 17 cents below its high. The close was 90%, which representâ€" ! , managing engineer‘s report, Gold Mines Limited. CAPITALIZATION aAND were said to have been losing "longs" and there were indications that some of the "short" interest represented foreign accounts. The climax in the May wheat struggle occurred just before the fuâ€" tures market closed. The price dropâ€" ped 6% cents from an early high of: 96%. Dealings in the May contrnct.‘ under way since last August, were rturrnesanensenssne0sen0000000s00emsz008e000 ALDSON, Managing Engineer Toronto, Ont. Capitalization â€" 4,000,000 Shamâ€"(lio Par Value) OFFICERS AND DIRECT ORS GLEN A. REA, Se cretaryâ€"Treasurer Toronto, Ont. PRESENT OFFERING arnesssesecssss0s P uim 0e CCCe TT EVC te sample horizontally and vertically. _ Assays result in combination of gold and what we feel sure is platinum plated in parting cup, after annealing, probably well over an ounce per ton. Impossible for us to part the two metals with assay supplies here. Sending sample to Ottawa for analysis to determine proportion gold and platinum. Also sending parting cup showing our results after anâ€" nealing assay. Foregoing is from sample shovelled along full length of dump. Check assays give similar results." Another telegram â€" from H. L. Donaldson dated May 18th states: "From 19 to 34 feet in south crosscut large percentage mineralâ€" ized quartz in veinlets running every diâ€" rectic:n :nlking s:mp"n! slow. Will have to and OF HAMILTON BLDG., 3. The farmer has more difficuity to grow crops and wheat and clover kill out because the fields lack _ the protection that is given by the woodâ€" Hand. 2. Springs and wells that previousâ€" ly had a steady supply of water go dry because the woodlot that was & reservoir has been removed. a cash outlay to purchase coal o} wood and often the farmhouse is adâ€" equs@tely heated. 1. The farmer with a woodlot has a cheap and convenient supply of fuel, while the one without a woodlot has to haul wood long distances and make ed the maximum 5 cents per bushe! drop permitted in any one day by exâ€" change rules. U ~ m m 6 $ (g852 $ss o s 90“ «5t o 8 .S-g.g fi £&385 alue of Woodland o Agriculture n# o A®g & 0 a 30 9 $~ 80 > aRo a UV= s 8. SEZ * 1 s$ $g 8 _ &B §14§° 3 i. 2 05.5535 8 g i# Esi?s? buibsf =55!§' Telephone : _ 5 & m o 6 =°h‘ o »s E5 itained in above item “fofaE:qIJisi- 2.6_5?.99._5 shares. Sold from Address Witness Name 4 wl o ho all c e 1. Mn t c n mont T KA ie OE AHODACE AIF: through the diamond drilling, heavy coarse gold was enâ€" countered in the crosscut. _ The visible gold is mixed with the sulphides. Further information will be available from this level accordingly as the work proceeds. Although no free gold was seen in at 40 cen{sâ€";e-r- sl‘l:;‘e Enclose please fir Dated this .......... Kindly issue and The presence of platinum was not suspected and assay supplies at the property are not ample for a proper analyâ€" sis of the combination of gold and what is believed to be pllatilr\xum. Meantime samples are being sent to Ottawa for checking. i nereby make app! Stock of SPLIT LAKE bl fi-“ To SPLIT LAKE GOLD MINES LIMITED, Head Office: 1104 Bank of Hamilton Bldg., Toronto Gentlemen: â€". . I herebÂ¥ make 4bhliratian £.. c This vein has been proven to extend over a length of over 500 feet through diamond drilling with widths ranging up to more than 20 feet. Both diamond drilling and the presâ€" ent underground work have shown the vein to have widened greatly as compared to surface. Limited 2,699â€" received by Split *errrsesessseen0es marvirbnentente sinteinitHCRens se tunpemencnmun All Moneys make application for ttrrhttweneasenentsssese8ss000es *en®ntsressepssse000e000 *trresrtrerresseseesesne00sszence0 Students who figure it‘s about time to get down to serious study for the final examinations should be told that the hours between sunrise and breakâ€" fast give the best results. â€" Kitchenâ€" er Record. ‘ C RsL 1O OOT CrTreressassesces LAKE GOLD MINES LIMITED, hare. se find the sum of FegeSHSSERUETE cone ind nverecnenninines UBY O seriennnnnnnamoiercocss and mail these shares to: 6. Scattered wood!land increase conâ€" siderably the beauty of a countryside. 7. The various factors mentioned have a marked influence on the moneâ€" tary value of farms; 5. Woodland helps to control floods as it retards the surface runâ€"off in all seasons. FIN A NCE 4. Deforestation on hilisides and valleys is often followed by erosion and .sandy soil is Hable to develop in valuesless sand dunes. DANIEL 1. JARVIS, Director Thornloe, Ont. . TORONTO, CANADA Best Time For to be paid to the Company. Intermmss2220 S O0. 0 OO 20000 200. TZOuaIdson, dated May 19th, states in part: ‘Have cut another 2%; feet of highly mineralized quartz with balance of 7 feet banded structure quartz apd alteration. Still in this condition. Going ahead with crosscut. This looks awfully good. Furâ€" ther study assaying trouble suggests large quantities tellurides. Getting necessary supâ€" stt o c in C on Tss / plies to flux telluride Ano(he.r‘_tele.ram from Mr 4,000,000 1,340,000 535,138 shares *aretssseesss000 TORONTO â€"â€"«............... Shares of the Capital 3 LIMITED, (4,000,000 shares) ressncnnnsnnpermmncesscssessesscese=»s»«s DOIAFS arvnnecsnensransmenncmsmssmennntanta9) . WE racese, shares shares shares W. S. KICKLEY, Director Winnipeg, Man. this vein on surface or . Donaldson, A young man was in court at Markâ€" ham and the trouble was he had been driving a car with one hand. Beside him was a young lady and his free arm was twined about her. The chief VOICE THE WORLD AT LARGE y supâ€" ten:" F 0e .m 3 1 , Mosquitoes are on the warpath, and spo‘ling the walks abroad, our golt and other outdoor pursuits. â€" Winpi Pes Tribune, CECC COCY TV TUHC by persistent campaigning for greatâ€" er attention to the teeth of growing boys and girls. It may be noted that young people nowadays have far betâ€" ter teeth than those of a generation ago. This is real progress. â€"â€" Toronta Ontario Dental Association is told that during 25 years there has been among children in Toronto schools a reduction of from 97 to 67 percent in defective teeth, This is encouragâ€" ing and it indicates what may be done ihay ~ 4s m ce ie ie 0 io ‘ In the main, the Leaderâ€"Post in clines to the view that most comic strips are entertaining without doing violence to anyone or anything in particular. The grammar is often _ a little loose â€" deliberately so â€" for often the persons are not grammatiâ€" cal persons, They might not be very entertaining it they were. Sometimes we think the speiling might be improved; it sometimes does look worse than necessary, And the worst of it is that a newsâ€" paper can get enough bad spelTing without having to buy it from a synâ€" dicate. ver sure how his crop is going to turn out. Unfavorable growing _ weather can nullify his efforts to a great deâ€" gree in short order, and then he has has to make the best of it by carefully planning a way out of the difficulty, if possible. â€" The Kitchener Record. of the Miss Macphail might aiso have ada ed that the farmer must be an optimâ€" ist and a bit of a gambler. He is neâ€" Miss Macphail put it very well when she said that â€" "People think that any fool can farm. They think all a farmer has to do is to scratch _ the earth and sow some seed. Actuailly, a successful farmer must be a good adâ€" ministrator, a good executive, He has to know everything; he must be a horâ€" ticulturist, a cerealist, a stock breedâ€" er. Running a farm is no job for an amateur‘. are such that the farmer‘s margin of profit is quite small, the successful agriculturist must apply not only the brawn but the brain as well to his work. Contrary to the opinion of some people, farming isn‘t an occupation at which any Tom, Dick and Harry can come out on top. In these days when so much stress is placed on the qualâ€" ity of farm products, and the prices } It has been one of the distinctive characteristics of the English langâ€" uage that it has accepted contributâ€" tions of value regardless of the origâ€" in. American contributions are not more numerous nor basically different from those already taken from Greek, Latin, French, German, Scandinavian, Arabic and the Oriental languages. The United States may enrich and modify the language, but it will proâ€" bably remain the English language, wherever or by whomsoever it may be spoken,. â€" London Advertiser. Still Hope For Peace To look for the restoration of Ethiâ€" opian independence now or for peace terms dictated by the League may appear fantastic and would perhaps involve the end of Mussolini‘s regime. Yet the expectation of lasting peace in Europe appears to rest largely on that perhaps extravagant hope. If the war proves to be an economic disasâ€" ter for the winnerâ€"and it will so prove if Mussolini cannot get help in paying for it â€" the peace advocates in Europe will have new and gtronger ground for their attack on the feverâ€" ish war preparations now proceeding and on the nationalistic tariffs which have nearly destroyed European trade, â€"Winnipeg Free Pross, Note From The West _ And right there we are moved to a feeling of admiration for th» magisâ€" trate of Markham, He has a knowâ€" ledge of human nature; he seems to know what Spring does to young men and maidens. He has one eye on the law to see that it is not broken beâ€" yond repair, but he also has a bit of consideration for young people who are bent on a bit of courting. â€"â€" Peterâ€" boro Examiner. l oldâ€"fashioned way." But the magistrate, W, B. Mcliveen did not stop there. He told the young man something. This way: ‘The next time you better pull up at the side of constable of the place saw him _ and then there was the deuce to pay. He had to be brought to court, made to part with $10 and every person would know about it. Better Teeth Farming As A Job PRES S English Will Last anyone or anything "l; e grammar is often _ a â€" deliberately so â€" for and use both arms in the CANADA THE EMPIRE Derate‘y so â€"â€" for are not grammatiâ€" might not be very and.gain. By the pride deposed and the passion slain, And the vanquished iI‘s that we hourâ€" ly meet, «â€"Nalantad 1 count this thing to be greatly true ’l‘ln;;:‘noble deed is a step toward Lifting the sou! from the common clod To a purer air and a broader view., We riss by things that are under our feet By 'i!t we have mastored ot good ks Sm enee ege O®n JC Te Pageantry dating back for centurâ€" ies is observed when a new king is formally ~crowned. The ceremony customarily takes place in the year following the accession of a â€" new sovereign to the throne. It had been announced some time previously that the coronation would be in May next year but the actual dl&_e had not been given out. ’ LONDON â€" Coronation of King Edward will take place on May 27, 1937, one year from tomorrow, it was announced recently. The youthful Duke of Norfolk, in his capacity as Earl Marshal, will be in charge of preparations for the ceremony. The Amhbhhop of Cantesbury will perform the actual coronation in WWr Abbey, Archbishop of Canterbury to Perform Services on May 27, 1937 Coronation Date Is Officially Set # § Russian Armaments 1 When the +Japanese War Office starts to draw attention to the weight of Russian armaments, there is some | reason to suggest that the pot is calâ€" ling the kettle black. Japan devoted 47 per cent of her whole budgetary expenditure last year to defence, and this year proposes to spend 50 per cent. Even so her military budgets, and those of all other countries, pale into insignificance by comparison with Russia‘s, Marshal Tukbhachevski, deputyâ€"Commissar of Defence, recentâ€" ly announced that in 1936 the Soviet would expend 14,800,000,000 roubles on her military forces. At the official rate of exchange this sum represents 2,600,000,000 pounds sterling, and at the unofficial rate, about 600,000,000 pounds, Britain has for months been debating whether she would spend a half the latter sum spread over a perâ€" iod of years on modernising her sea, land and air forces. From all this it is clear enough that, whether the Jaâ€" panese War Office wishes to put the nation on guard or merely to raise a bogey, it has substantial material to exploit. â€" Auckland News. How much truth is there in _ the statement that, next to malaria, tuâ€" berculosis is the most â€"serious of the diseases which affiict the people of Ceylon? It is true that the notified cases for the first five months of the last year exceeded the total for the whole of 1934. This increased incidâ€" ence can be attributed to the reduced vitality of the people, following on the malaria epidemic. Apart from this sudden increase, the official statistics in the annual administration reports of the Director gave a fair indication _of the ravages of pulmonary tuberculâ€" osis, although there are grounds to believe that the total number of its victims dragging out a miserable exâ€" istence at death‘s door is far in exâ€" cess of any figures that could possibâ€" ly be collected. Tuberculosis is a soâ€" cial evil of modern civilization and it is more a social than a medica! probâ€" lem. â€" Times of Ceylon, Colombo. Let the legislation committee _ beâ€" ware. We must bear each other‘s burâ€" dens. There are too many byâ€"laws now, the police tell us, â€"â€" Savult Ste. Marie Star. Is this a free country or isn‘t it? Does a man run some risk of having a bylaw passed on him, if he is given to absorbing his pea soup too loudâ€" ly? Is everybody to be reduced to a whisper? Nobody knows where this interfer ence with individual liberty will now end. If cows cannot bawl to their heart‘s content, jand dogs and alder men must be stopped from barkingâ€" perfectly natural phenomena â€"â€" the next thing we know the wolf pack of sixteen will be requested to lay off too audible conversation, It will reâ€" called that Sam Dodd‘s big timber wolf, Jemima, which was wont to join in a duet with the four o‘clock train whistle, suffered a fate untimely at the hands of a neighbor because of her vocal efforts. The Poet’s Corner It all arose out of Citizen John Wat ker‘s complaint that the bawling of a neighbor‘s cow kept him from sieep ing, and the matter was referred to the legislation committee. "The dogs don‘t do as much barkâ€" ing as the aldermen," remarked Jim Petrie, the official dog catcher, at the council meeting when an alderman suggested that they should be resâ€" trained from making so much noise, The Empire $ysn( ie . we ‘hourâ€" â€"â€"Selected D4 Bone diseases and caused by a shortag« the feed rations of has recently been J« mre large areas in C matural crops are ph Western Ontario, # southern Saskatchew Itoba and the Fraser «all affected. It is clait phosphated salt bloc ly as effective in pro Meving these two dise «eas as jodized salt h venting goitre. in the 4 which consists of the glon in Ontario and t fed districts in Albe Polumbia. Phosphated combatting th phosphate defi bave been rec« padian salt fir New Salt Bloi Combat Di Young Lawy many divorce : you would ha months ," Girl â€" "Th; Ther ty is M# 1 . #d those Diner â€" Natural H Proud Mothe going to be a ; Aunt Mary â€" ®what #sanita ninw () are th for the *â€""And Mods mother there i they H# yo thin} desi With th It‘s everyone a Ab, no! It‘s vas something But something and trip And perfect Mo Nott Tume, Rare lace and sty] Expensive Doi WHAT MaAKES What makes a lado*» It may be be known ; they ought hotter tor 13 Hrisoner pocket â€"hook Visitor your love Many a persor in miracles buy in the bope of y ®ne came ©€anes, an( gentiomen M Look who Ww l t c toriun lezy â€" la was knoeder Dirzy â€" * lezy â€"â€" "gy her wading 1 Theve a; putation f, 10g their p ©pen . t} CC th at wonds t1 me D d Rati D HA chil 10 2l e for book trg Â¥4 t th n t« ‘or wisd moUthe t« "And w She pron liet " t Wnn in § O pl nigh in d gl 6 We

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