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Flesherton Advance, 9 Sep 1936, p. 3

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\ -Tj . I' yt F INANCIAL LASHES New Angarita Porcupine Mines has completed the first diamond drill hole on its property adjoining Dome in the Porcupine area, and the core, 10 feet of which was in quartz, has been sent out for assay purposes. Tlie second drill hole is now being put down. The drills have been set up to explore the vein on which old re- cords of the company show that val- ues ranging from $6.25 for a core length of 6 feet to as high as $15.28 for a length of 40 feet were secured. The present diamond drilling pro- gramme is designed to seek coniirma- ation of the previously reported val- ues, and to extend the limits of the examination previously made. Moffat-Hall Mining Co., adjoining Bidgood Kirkland in the Eastern Kirkland Lake field, has carried on approximately 1,300 feet of drifting in the new workings. A. M. Potter, mine manag;pr, reports that in work- ing down the raise from the 425 to the 600 foot level an assay of $31.40 in gold per ton was obtained across the full drift width. I Faulkenham Lake Gold Mines has completed three drill holes in No. 1 vein and results secured jjive every indication that the rich surface show- ing is continuing to depth. No. 1 hole passed through 25 feet of well miner- alized vein material, while No. 2 en- countered six feet of quartz well min- eralized with free gold showing in two and a half feet of core. No. 3 cut two veins, one two feet wide and another one foot wide. Drilling is continuing to determine the length and locations of the mineralized bod- ies at depth and to assist in locating a site for the proposed shaft. Sur- face work is proceeding on the Pipe- stone Bay group of 14 claims with drilling to commence as soon as pos- sible. The drift on the 200 foot level at Golden Gate Mining Co. has advanced for a distance of abomt 60 feet with high values in gold persisting. The orebody was previously intersected in a crosscut which is being driven to intersect a high grade discovery open- ed up on surface some 200 feet from the shaft. The crosscut to this vein is continuing. Drilling from the 360- foot level intersected favorable con- ditions and drilling will now be un- dertaken from upper levels. Diamond drilling is continuing on the Mylamaque Gold Mines property adjoining Lamaque Gold Mines in the Bourlamaque section of Quebec. Drill- ing in the eastern section of the prop- erty has Intersected a new vein showing good mineralization. Imme- diately on completion of the present drill campaign an enlarged develop- ment programme will be proceeded with. McManus Red Lake Gold Mines, holding 722 acres in the Red Lake area about half a mile east of Howey, is making a public offering of shares to provide finances for a campaign of exploration. The claims were orig- inally staked by Gus McManus in 1922 and were the first discovery in the district Surface work has shown four breaks, one of which has been proven across four claims with widths of from 16 to 20 feet. Present plans call for the sending in of a crew imme- diately to complete surface explora- tion. The ground will be groomed for diamond drilling, to be carried out in conjunction with the sinking of a series of deep test pits. An ofTering of tiUU.UUU iHares or Boyd Kirliland Uold Mines, a new m- corporation, is being made to pro- vide funds for development of the Company's property in the Kirk- land Lake area. The property com- prising 12 claims In Lebel tc. -isnip is located approximately 2 miles east land. The company proposed a tliorough surtace exammation ot tne property Including trencblng and blasting preliminary to a programme of diamond drilling, i'rom tlie results of the drilling, tbe future development of the property will be planned in- cluding shaft sinking and under- ground worl . Development to date has been mostly on claim L6994, ac- cording to T. R. Buchanan, consult- ing engineer, where stripping and test-pitig has been carrie dout on 3 -qBqojii auoz b ui 8;iJuiJB3t|8 (OubjbU ly 150 ft. wide. The vein: have been from to 10 ft. A quartz vei.i 12 ft. 1,000 't. and sliow widllis rangmg fror- 8 to 10 ft. A quarter vein i:! tt. wide and striliing east and west has bern discovered on claim L25U51. Tde company is ciipitallzed at 3.UUU,U0U s] of which UUU.OOU were issued Cor properties. (JHlcers and directors lnci'"'r' (!<n'don '<'. Summers, presi- dent; Colin A. Campbell, vlce-presi. dent; \V. R. Salter secretary-treasur- er; Adelard Beauchemin, J, Edwards, D. M. H. Lebel, J. A. Grilflth and H. f. Thompson, directors. >••»<•> I ,; »••*•••••»•#» »â- Â» »>•••••• »'»• »â- â™¦â- â™¦ ••»»»»» »# » > > » PROBLEMS OF By Dr. M EVERY DAY LIFE . M. Lappin «»»i»»i»i CAUSE OF CANCER Cancer is a result of a wild g^rowth of normal cells of the body, and like every other characteristic of the body, is started by heredity plus environ- ment, both in born conditions and variations in surroundings playing their part said Dr. E. C. MacDowell, of the Department of Genetics. Car- negie Institution of Washington, in a recent address before the American Institute. Dr. MacDowell has been studying the cause of leukemia, a di- sease produced by the wild growth of the white cells of the blood which has defied all known treatments. Dr. MacDowell has raised through scores of generations of close inter- breeding a black strain of mice which is so susceptible to leukemia that nine out of every ten will develop the disease, while a light strain is so free of it that only about one out of 100 will get it. "In the black mice," Dr. MacDowell explained, "the heredity predisposing to leukemia is strong, but under the conditions met by one out of ten it is overbalanced and leukemia fails to appear. But the offspring of these mice that escape leukemia have just as much leukemia as the offspring of leukemia parents. In the light-col- ored mice fhe heredity tending toward leukemia is weak, and it is expressed only under rare conditions met by one out of 100. "When heredity is strong the en- vironment is less important; when heredity is weak the environment be- comes exceedingly important. This is true for leukemia and for other traits. Think of this the next time you hear some one claiming 'heredity is all that matters' and think of this again when you are told 'environ- ment decides everything.' " A WAYWARD HUSBAND "I have a husband I cannot under- stand," begins a letter â€" in some re- spects vei'y pathetic â€" which I have just received from a woman who has been married for nearly thirty years. Apparently, off and on, her husband has been wont to go off and have little flirtations with oth3r women. He has one of his spells now and is "going crazy over an old maid". "The gossip is nearly killing me, what can I do?" she asks. Well, it is one of those cases in which a personal interview would be helpful, and without such an inter- view, it is difficult to know wlint to advise. Of course, 1 might be able to get to the root of this woman's problem tlii-ough a protracted period of correspondence in which I could ask her many questions and weigh up her answers. But that takes time and she is desperate. In the first place, I should like her to be quite sure she is not misjudging the situation and making it worse than it is. The human mind is cap- able of playing some queer tricks, and sometimes, one little indiscretion by someone very close to us, is enough to set our imagination work- ing, and imagination can go a long way. In the second place, I would ask her to face up to her own position frankly and ask herself if she has unconsc- iously said or done anything at any time to create the rift between her husband and herself. If she finds she has, then she should immediately take steps to put that right. If she is quite sure that she is in no way responsible for her husband's misconduct then she should face him frankly on the matter and ask his reasons, taking care to point out the harm the gossip is doing to both of them and what a nerve-wracking or- deal it is for her. Perhaps she has some trusted relative or friend who could be present when she approach- es the subject. Of course, she will have to study to choo.se a time when her husband is in a reasonably good mood. Sometimes the appeal direct to a man's sense of chivalry works won- ders. I think, however, that in this par- ticular ease, much more could be ac- complished through common kindness. My coi respondent says "I feel I can never forgive him", and that betrays a spirit o [bitterness an dresentment. She will never win back the lost love of her husband so long as she har- bors that spirit. If she will get rid of her feeling of resentment, and set herself out deliberately to be kind and attentive to him and lavish her love upon him, that, 1 bulieve, will do more good than anything else. Of course the husband must never be made to feel that a deliberate ef- fort is being made to win back his love. If he is made conscious of undue attention, it ma yspoii the whole thing. In this connection, may I remind my correspondent that suem men need a little mothering, but care must be ex- ercised tha fit is not overdone. NOTE: The writer of this column is a trained psychologist and an au' thor of several works. He Is willing to deal with your problems an dgive you the benefit of his wide experience. Questions regarding problems of everyday life should be addressed to Dr. M. M. Lappin, Room 42., 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto, Ontario. Enclose a 3 cent stamped addressed envelope for reply. Murdering Our Language "Vacationing" is one of the most unpleasant words in the English or rather the American language, ob- serves the Toronto Mail and Empire. Yet it was used twice in American newspaper service despatches recently in the Canadian dailies. We have al- ready objected to another barbarous innovation, namely, the use of the newly coined "messaging" to signify "notifying." Still another atrocity which has crept into cable despatches lately has to do with the manhand- Ung of the word "source." "Such and such a source expresses the opinion, etc." If this tendency to economize the telegraphic costs con- tinues to spread the English tongue will be hopelessly degraded and the public taste ruined. Wheat Champion's Crop Suffers Drought Damage Stavely, Alta. â€" Frelan Wilford, winner of the world's wheat king title at Chicago in 1935, won't defend his crown this year. He said he will not be threshing any wheat good enough for show purposes. What he termed the "most serious drought I have witnessed in the 33 years of my residence in Alberta," has cut his wheat crop on his farm near this southern Alberta town to 11 bushels an acre. His wheat, he said, probably will grade No. 2 nor- thern. Mrs. Hepburn Confident Of Accomplishing Aim New York. â€" Mrs. Katharine Hep- burn, birth control advocate and mo- ther of the actress of the same name, returned to New York from Europe expressing confidence "we will win out in our fight for birth control." Accompanying her on her trip, dur- ing which she conferred with Dr. Gerta Kelberg, in charge of the birth control clinic at the City hospital in Stockholm, Sweden, were two of her daughters, Peggy and Marian. They toured both Sweden and Denmark by automobile. MAN OF FUTURE BOYD KIRKLAND GOLD MINES LIMITED (No Perional Liability) IN THE HEART OF THE KIRKLAND LAKE AREA Check the market action and appreci.itlon In tlio last â- Ix months of lioyd Klrkland'a neiRhbors, Lake Sliora. Teck- Hughfs. M.ioHSsa, Bidgood and Tobuni. . KIRKLAND LAKE GOLD AREA ONTARIO I.CS LiMirao roRgnro Boyu Kirkland Gold Mines, Limited lies within the pro- verbial stones throw of those major producers, In a world- famous gold camp. A one and one-half mile radius drawn from the Toburn Mines includes, as shown above, many of the leading gold producers. Boyd Kirkland is fortunate in having two eminent min- ing engineers as President and Vice-President of the Company, with a lawyer as Secretary. CAMBRL\N SECURITIES CO. 100 ADELAIDE ST. W. TORONTO WAVERLEY 5060-3348 0*BUun*n: Kindly forward full Information on Boyd Kirkland Gold Mines .Limited. (No Personal Liability.) NAUB ADDRESS Hamilton, N.Y. â€" Man in his evolu- tion may be headed for an all-fours posture; or for a survival of only the slim-waisted ; or for a race that for- gets its three square meals and eats frequently and lightly. The reasons were advanced by Dr. Donald A. Laird, professor of psy- chology at Colgate University, in tlie Medical Record. He reports that after finding that office workers slowed down and made increased errors the first hour after lunch, he experimented with Colgate students to learn whetlier blood drawn from the head by digestion explained the dullness. Students did mental arithmetic after eating and wliile liyng with their heads lower than their feet. In this position they were better than with heads higher than feet. Dr. Laird found the explanation in the "splanchnic reservoir," tlie area where the Wood gathers around the viscera. Digestion, he stated, draws blood from the brain to the splanchnic reservoir temporarily. Feet above head drain it back to the brain. "In the assumption of an ujjrighl position through evolution," Dr. Laird states, "homo sapiens has gained ad- vantages and suffered losses. If man- kind went around on all fours the blood supply of the brain would be better. "The superior size of the human brain may be an overcompensation to make up for this slowing and in accu- racy the upright position has brought in its wake. Sleep may be more im- portant for men than animals because the horizontal position permits an in- creased flow of blood to the brain. "It is interesting to conjecture whether the future evolution of hu- man beings will be first into a stooped position and then later into a quad- ruped walking on all fours or whether through a survival of the fittest we will become a race which eats lightly but frequently, or whether survival will come to the narrow-waisted with a small splanchnic reservoir for shunting blood away from their brain." CITY MEN ON FARMS Says the (Owen Sound Sim-Times) It must be remembered that the ma- jority of the men who are sent to farms are not farm- hardened. They have been living on too much starchy food. Their hands are soft and blis- ter easily, and they cannot work the long hours without becoming more or less exhausted. These are things every farmer should consider. It takes time for a city man to accustom himself to the handling of farm implements. He cannot be expected to go off the city streets and pitch hay all day. It is physically impossible for him to do so. Such men should be given a fair chance to condition themselves. Postage Is Saved By Arctic People Anchorage, Alasl<a. â€" Hugh Brew- ster, aeronautics inspector just re- turned from Kotzebue, Alaska's northernmost aviation base, explained how the Eskimos save the six cents it costs to send an air mail letter. "Planes in the Far North are cov- ered with penciled messages. When an Eskimo learns that a ship is going to a town where he has a friend, he writes a note on the tail. When the ship lands, Eskimos crowd around reading all notes, looking for one from a friend." The Shortest Poem Issue No. 37 â€" '36 What is the world's shortest poem ? There is one by George MacDonald: "Come Home." But another (by Walt Whitman) is still shorter: "I: Why?" Most of us have asked Walt Whit- man's question, but few of us so briefly. Surely there cannot be any shorter poems than tliesc, one of eight letters, and one of four! But if there is, well than, it mus; be short. NDW a Denuine Coleman ,^^^- LAMP TorOnly 300 Candlcpower "Llva'Prectura Light, CEB UiM* bwutlfnl n«w •^ Col«m«n Lampa that araMtaaily brighte r thi ft ordlnarv Koro- nenaManUelAmps o» 80 old atyle oil ©Sana »« allâ€" aa^lll lampa. ASK VOOK '"•'• DIALBII or writa for rillll POLOBR pietanpg ih* maay ^^ Bi6 BEN IS <300D/ Down To The very LAST CHEW nieearinii noaqtliiil mmlfli , , , botli KlROaXflB â-  nd OASOLINI. THE COLEMAN UMP ARDITOVEJO..Ltd. Dept. WI^159 TorontOt CAuada # Ootts I«H than \y n hour to opcTAta. • Um» » 10^ D&Dtla. A No rIms ehtmatri ^r •h*dM to br«u M oImo. 8«f*~fa«1 rr<nfln«l In iturdy mct«i fount. SPIRIT OF THE NORTH Great Spirit of the North, I love you so, Your mighty breath that speaks of God, Your biting winds that make men strong And fill with iron their noble blood. Spirit of the North, I see you, girt In friendship's stronger clasp. In smiles of gold that grip the heart With a strength that makes one gasp. Spirit of the North, your strong sons go Where mighty rivers run. To lay the gold that's ages old, Bare 'neatli the wintry sun. Spirit of the North, your sons go forth To challenge the ice-locked dawn. Strong as the rock that binds your streams, Yet gentle as the fawn. Spirit of the North, your strong built men. With courage red that cannot fail. Wage ceaseless battle on Life's high hills. Yet brothers are on Life's great trail. â€"PERCY HOWARD. , GAINED I 12 Pounds "I was terribly thin, rundown, tired all the time yet couldn't sleep. I tried all sorts of tonics, and was getting discouraged when a friend told me about C. C. & B. Tonic Tablets. I quickly gained 12 pounds and felt like a new person. Believe me I can't praise C. C. & B. enough." â€" M. Fry, Lachine, P.Q. You, too, can gain good solid flesh to fill out your body to its natural weight. C. C. &. B. Tonic Tablets contain four vital ingred- ientsâ€"Calcium Carbonate to purify the blood, clear up pimply skin and put the stomach in first-class order â€"and Brewer's Yeast, Blaud's Iron and Extract of Cod Liver, all mak- ing you an abundance of rich pure blood. Sold at all drug stores. $100 in Cash Prize* FDEiEi Ask Iinm-Kisl rS^EvEl for C. i\ & i-. irst lUiml;. HANDBOOK' (or Stxophone, Clarinet, t Flute, and Double-* Reed Players GIVEN FREE "ne«l['Uyer'« lUndbook" tfUs how to : for your instruments w they'lfRlve iKst fMulu. Contains trtlcle tty Merle Johmton on Mxophone itUylnR posUtons. TflU liow to make otK>e, enellsh horn, and bajsoon rwdt. TpIU how to Relect mouth [>leces and reods. Also mntaliis the most comtilfitely tie* Mrlpilve KhowlnK of rteil, woodwind, uid fiut« acce5SorlM frer Rhown tn one public*' lion. Send for your (re« copy today; mention Infctninuat you play. 5Wmrr •r. iRii.\-ro, lint. J Proof! "Losson.s aro wonderfully helpful inil Inspiring-" "I have l>cen able deflnltely to change the habit of â€" " "You are a great help and I hope It I.S given to mcusure up." "Results are wonderful." We could quote from njany more letter!!, but tho above extracts ore proof that others are being helped. If others. WUY NOT YOU? Give that mind of yours a chance. Write today for particulars of an Intoii.'ilve course of montnl traininR. The Institute of Practical and Applied Ptychology 910 Conieileration Bnildinff MONTBEAI., F.Q. STYLE FLASH NEW YORKâ€" So far we have nc^ had to abandon those widened should ders that create the pleasing optical illusion of slim hips. There is still a tendency to build them out with foldi and pleats, or with a squarish cut. In most cases a bib of padding encour- ages them to hold their shape. There is no rule for skirts; they; are straight and narrow or flaring. You have but to choose the silhou- ette you prefer. But the edict has gone out that they must be short â€" at least 13 inches off! Classified Advertising ASTITXCIAA UXBB UANGER STAI^DARD UMB CO., •^ 126 VVeJllngton West. Toronto. Im- proved limbs without shoulder stracNt. Free catalogue. AUTO ACCESSOBZBS N EW AMD IJSKD CAR ANI> TRUCK parts oblpped everywhere Satl«- facUoii Ruaraiitef f" or inoney refunded. Prompt attention to enaulrlea: Levy Auto PartB. Heart Ofrice 73G Q<ic.:n St. West, Toronto. AOEIfTS WANTED CXCLUSIVB TERRITORY AVAItr able improved household articles. Literature, sample free. Labor Savinji Devices Limited, 570 Queen East, Toronto GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules Fine For Weak Kidneys STOP RESTLESS NIGHTS One 40-cent box of these famous capsules will put healthy activity into your liidneys and bladder â€" flush out harmful waste poisons and acid and prove to you that at last you have a grand diuretic and stimulant that will swiftly cause these troubles to cease. But Bo sure and got GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil, Capsules- safe and harmless â€" the original and genuine â€" right from Haarlem in Holland. Millions have liidney and bladder trouble and never sus- pect it^ â€" some symptoms besPdesi restless nights are backache, moist palms, puffy eyes. The Graphochart Shows how to reaij chiuaclei from handwriting, at a Riance. lOc PREPAID Graphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St., W. Toronto The Original 7-Rib Roofing ^B€Q li.xlru Mb.s mean uxiia sli.nBl!i and greater ease in laying. Koscu Kib it.iof- l„g_tho original 7-rib roofing â€" give* you the best value obtainable and lt'» Council Standard quality. Economical, too, for sheets lay 32 Inches to th« weather. Wo will Klaclly ^f"d you liti-rnture .•md i)riocs. Write us NHW ROOFERS SUPPLY CO., LTD. TOnONTt! LONDON MONTnEAli OTTAWA QUKBKC

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