Die 1 gee Te i ie Vir be eae vr FLIN FLON We went back up and down be- tween levels in small elevators hold- ing just an operator and two or three on Piday Might “ = en at men who religiously snapped out vs The Story of Its Finding thelr acetylene torches as they got| st and Position To-day on and relit them on leaving. cy How and why was diamond drill- ing done? Down we went and atens| a narrow winding passage in the IMPERIAL TOBACCO’S INSPIRING PROGRAM. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT By PRATT KUHN solid rock, lots of water underfoot here, and at the end two men who shut off the'r diamond drill (run by irst What surprised me in some days compressed air) to talk to us. Fi | thing I wanted to know was why On a National of ropmeevatah was the springy healthy walk and appearance of the Coast to Coast Network men, both underground and above the water” and found it was injected | —— = grotind workers. to the point of the drill to keep the | They didn’t seem fagged out as so | diamonds wet and cool. many city people do. Part of this is} The idea is to run holes up— down—and sideways from the little WORLD HAPPENINGS lof course attributable to the fine air and elevation of Flin Flon. and to shaft sunk directly in the ore ven, simple food, but much must be due, and as the drill is hollow. take out BRIEFLY TOLD | to cond’tions under which they work. | cores of ore, place them in long hat | | hat's the way I thought, so per- round boxes marked with the exact | | mission (rarely given) was sought to Pos tion thev're taken from, how Lord Nelson's writing desk has; £0 underground” and see actual FeSR the drill was an ete., Then up Been -prese: i *| mining from that angle. I wanted in the engineer's office they can fig- Si aries hes ae by JoS-| +t go in the afternoon but was told Dre exactly how wide the actual ore Ses nea. ion ship owner,| plasting was done at 4:20 and the is and mult ply up by known aver- in celebration of his 70th birthday. | m’ne cleared before 4, so that was ages till they can tell vou how much Lucian Desbiens, Montreal news-|Ut—and ea I'd rather be above ore or Hoey pace a cue core iy sround while blasting is going on g how copper, zinc, go! paperman, has been awarded a silver SR owl * pe ae j,and silver there is in Mhelt Ae medal as a French language prize by| However, ne xt morning at 8 sharp Another thing I found out was the French academy, it was an-|I presented myself at the office ‘and that is it costs real money to sink nounced. was escorted by A. A. Koffman of shafts, therefore all sinking is done a the Chief Enginecr’s office to the in paying ore, except when a big shaft Newton D. Baker, who as United) Supply Department, where I was fit- is necessary like the passenger one, States secretary of war mobilized the ted (over my clothes) with long rub-, Which re! oa the sane positon atest a i » of his, ber. pants, rubber smock and a Permanently. ie small- elevator ahs et ee ae ue eet of his) Miner's helmet for all the world ShAtTs. being in ore, will eventually ry, died in Cleveland after &) shaped like a war helmet, only made be cleaned out and filled up. heart attack. {of a transparent substance like __ This fillng up is interesting. At me ay earices hough te geayHERL OO vu ane JME Fan ot ate He ah ii are a laced rubber boots were put on have a pe Kingdom's este rate down) over extra heavy woolen eoclan and 1) ready been hauled 16 miles and to 9.2 per cent. in 1936 as compared| was ready. By the way, these rub- poured and tamped into empty and, with 13.2 in 1910, says a ministry of| ber boots have steel toe-caps inside finished workings. health report. for protection. __ The sand train never stops haul- Si : : Carrying an acetylene gas lamp ing, day or night, makng at least ir George Ogilvie, retiring after! (which is filled just before going into six trips in the 24 hours, because sand is also used in the smelter. But 06 87 years in the Indian Service, de-| the shaft and always carried lit ex- o hold on—I'm still below ground and| Cut for action . . . Tailored for 5 | chic—these two tidy aprons that Hon! of the todependent principals’) theiworkings or. s8\t Haket iin to,| Before I ring for the elevator?) every busy homemaker will be proud would unite the whole of India. }one of every kind. want to see the man who drills and|to own! And if you're hunting for The Elevator Drops 1,200 Feet blasts the ore and here he is with @| design that’s easy to cut Eade SLIME: raanistete M companion and an air compressor|jook no further than Pattern 4678. . drill on a shelf oree see seems Las Like a pretty model that wil of blackness, and) you whei ing? tain, the Dominions, India and the : } that’s just what it is, an immense eae PAE prnerertiey cists ee each floor and dropping down the| funnel in the rock. swiss, accent its panelled-bodice wil is his holes, alwayS|q crisp bit of as | Dynamite is placed and) gnish off its han is loaded with ten! exploded in the afternoon, fans are} eye-catching buttons. rises 1,800 feet a!put to work and gas blown to the|, winner when it comes to finishin, times it will, surface, then back to work again to)» kitchen chor he clared that nothing short of federa| cept when in elevators) my gude yy u took me below and showed me all I've got to get up! Men and women under 35 years ot age held a junior conference on 2) perial affairs in London. Great Bri-| The big main elevator, by the way, | immense void is a double decker, carrying 20 men trown Sones ore Reprenegeen shaft at 1,200 feet per minute.. The miner drill Chief Inspector William Barker,| The b’g ore elevator carries a five| downward. known as one of Scotland Yard's) ton bucket which tons of ore and cleverest wits, retired at the end of} minute. During busy December. He has played a big part! raise and dump this 10 tons of ore) repeat. levels the same operation in solving many notable crimes. | every two minutes. Some speed and| On many The London Sunday Referee (Con- precision needed here to avoid acci-|is taking place, put nobody overlaps.| pattern 4! dents and the ore pours down steadily. small, medium and large. servative) declared Winston Church- Well, we're dow: ill, veteran Conservative, had accept-! astonished at fini |ally lighted, plenty high to walk up- Chamberlain i | Tiel Swinto: e a » fee ae stam | fact I didn't stumble all the time be- | electric power, mn. as secretary for alr. |lJow, although those rubber boots Great Britain built more cruisers Nisha ie in 1937 than i i he| boats, not p than in any year since the ‘The acetylene lamp is lit by spin-| elevats and shows an unprotected flame|same. Nobody knows W about an inch long. There's no free|a cheerful custom. 8 Way down on the 1,170 foot level dstroyers and submarines. Everywhere we went, ore seemed! we stepped into as complete a ma- The Cuban government withdrew | to be cracked off—blasted away and|chine shop as you'd wish to see, alb charges against former president! raked along tunne Gerardo Machado, of Cuba, who had | wants DOWN, always OG db # tal ie ether it was the aati y yates authoy | 1000 foot level everything ba dn temporary CuRtOOY \O% an eX-| still further and it wasn’t tll we got tradition warrant. \to the 1,170 foot level that I saw dropped | look strange in this permament room to see the why. Here, little trains of five cars with | avoid accidents. an electric engine, motorman and| Working thus right down in the loaded up, then spu! APPLES MAY BE DRIED FOR matic trip which threw each ways and unloaded it into a hopper time waster, besides holding up other hile the elevators are WINTER USE from which the big ore elevator car-|operat’ons Ww! Have you looked over your supply ried it to the top. blocked. of apples to see if they are keeping | all right? Sometimes you will find p 7 ing a few of the early varieties showing > ke Diamond Drilling Is Done. A STYLE-WISE APRON PAIR HELPS Complete Underground Workshop YOU PROTECT YOUR FROCKS! nk of Canada Reports Good Year $14,000,000 — Deposits uid Assets 65.53 9 d Profits Shown Royal B Total Assets $869,538,000 up Increased $10,000,000 — Liq’ Liabilities to the Public — Increase Seen t of The} other banks, while $245,606.374 is Dominion and Provin- Public — Canadian 927,482 show an in- This increase din d British Govern- investments amount to $316,568,917, an increase om the previous year in the history ts are to the public, flection of ather than of doubt the bank to have re- tion of The Annual Balance Shee | Royal Bank of Canada hows a moderate growt and total assets and a 8 osition. Total deposits amount to | amou! $756,089.696 and are higher any period in the bank’s history, W! the single exception of 1929. _ Commercial Loans Incre: Cirrent Loans in Canada, ith|is understood to |U: includ-| of $23,398 096 fr and a new high record i t to of the bank. Total li crease of approxi-| 65.53% of liabilities which, of course, is a re resent conditions 1 deliberate policy. No would have been gla laced a considerable propor’ its investments by commercial loans. | Provincial Governments. amoun' | $200,563,727, an ini f Canada amounting of seven years, the reversal in the) rend of commercial loans is encour-) oe 7 aging. As might be expscted in view at $8,711,379 and toitucle marketzeituation, ;mclcate ane ras Ati anada and abroad | Dividends \pald’ 38 e been substantially reduced. Ca in Canada amount to $19 392,- reduction of approximately) $6,700,000. Call Loans abroad amou it the ycar are shown compared with 1936 ement of $207,138. ‘orbed $2 800.000. tion of $200,000 remises but the Pension Fund ed to $300,000 as 4 former appropri- Balance of Profit t carried forward increase of was made for Bank P' Society was increas Strong Liquid Position position is strong, total 1 General Meeting of the Shareholders will be held at the Hi : bank at 11 am. on and January 13, 1938. this amount $168,638,928 d by cash on hand or the Bank of Canada a] 3 A Welcome Guest per Not Forced On Anyone And People Like It Did you ever stop to think that t| people read newspapers because they The newspaper is not People pay for it, Whole families await it eagerly and contest good- naturedly over their individual turns ie read it. Each praises and criticizes ie it as one is prone to criticize the other members of the family. The a spaper is a definite part of we \the family. That is why its sales 3 force is immeasurable. jJater at|salemen use all kinds of ingenious devices to get inside the home, But the newspaper is a welcome guest. One type of selling is forced, other is received cordially. Door to door tS handbills are most times an intrusion 1-| upon the privacy of the home, but in. Its d avidly and its ad- left amid| vertisements are considered a part of The newspaper is so rt of the people, so ted member of the d| family, that its pages constitute the — least expensive advertis- ‘y Queen Mary Remembered Receives Share Of Cheers When | Newspa Royal Family Attends Festival When the King and Queen an ) Queen Mary walked into the box a THEN the Albert Hall to attend the Fes-| w the whole} forced on anyone. organdy ruffling, an! of nine thousand people dy pockets with four turned and faced Model “B' iS the first cheer across for the King. After a series of three cheers for the Queen, the audience prepared to But from up in the gal- lery came a voice: “And no’ And once more we cheered and cheered, The Royal party stayed es—and ‘tis indeed a cheery sight if you choose a polka- dotted perc: 678 is available in sizes n the mine,andI’m| One thing outstanding to me W&S| taxes 2 yards 36 inch fab d apron A, 1 yard ruffling. Door to door — ding it all electric-| the small adhount of hard physical apron ani d step-by-step sewing in- ed an invitation from Prime Minister Jabor I saw done. Everything WAS) thustrate t and very clean underfoot. In controlled by compressed air and structions included. and another thing 7 t saa ear veqaey, tule eyOu passed & wee twenty cents (20c) in coin or ies felt like|man in the mine you said, “Hello-”| Anne Adams pattern ts, on my feet! You may have come down on 4N/Gize Name, - or with him five minutes be-|ber ‘and send order t but you said “Hello” just the|Agams Pattern hy, but it's) Newspaper Union, Aye. E., Winnipeg. Usually they leave shortly before the} end, but they waited until the final hymn had been sung and still o the Anne] .tooq while the cheers resound the thousands of ex-Servicemen, So! d nurses who were| the newspaper Address and Style Num- The King and Queen In A Generous Mood Je who had peen| the messages. 1s anton holed that ee or Hs eS ore An amusing advertisement ap-| cheers from peop WIN Fo, 800, carved cut of ot idaecicnatald| fence Aon irked tiewaPeP es : cently. as to catch a glimpse of them. was noticed that as the off in his motorcar he | and turned on the he crowd should not be disappointed t not seeing him clearly. It said: The elderly Scots- helmets on every man,|man celebrating St. but there they were. No unneces-|in vicinity of Peel St., 11:30 p.m. sary chances were taken in order t0| geeks the return of his watch and chain, pipe and pouch, set of teeth | ALICE STEVENS’ RECIPES _ || conauctor, set under each hole and|mine is an economy, because the| and wallet. Probably given away in| a' n away to anauto-| hauling of materials to the surface|q generous moment. car side-| for repair is a costly procedure and connected therewith will be met. eant forward) finest and ht so that| ing medium yet devised. A Arthur M. Hanks, who made a fortune peddling flowers in the finan- — cial district of Los Angeles, left no -old high| will because he believed he urn through reincarnation and claim Keith Brown, husky 17-year would re- of Omaha, Neb.,| t “Do you mean to say that Sand, dolls in his spare time. is famous for his after-dinner speak-| knits yarn ‘The honeymcon is over when. the pride complains of the noise the hus- band makes in getting his breakfast. a Maybe the reason our dog is faith- ful is that he doesnt know our | faults as people do. “Yl say. He always manages to be speaking on the telephone when the waiter brings the check.” < x signs of decay. Even if only two or three apples are affected, you will be) ¢ surprised how quickly the trouble| % will spread. Pick over the apples and remove| all the spoiled ones. Great care should be taken in handling the apples. Careless handling will cause more b Apples should be stored in a dry| cool place and away from light. If your storage space is not satistac- tory, it-might be wise to dry a few) apples. Putting them in jars, using | — : id Pack Method is also ad-) See rin r nity Seteniail 7 "tg| Test Plant, 1928. Power plant and stack at Flin Flon situated at what 1s y 2 PP Pp y now the centre of the Open Pit Mine. the earlier varieties of apples. Next week we get out of the mine and see the above ground al DRYING APPLES | cesses as carried on at Flin Flon, Manitoba. Pee] and core the apples. Cut the} = ee apples into rings about 3/16 of an inch| — a 5 : Earal pate eT i thick. Place the sliced apples on a! Military Controls Industry British Road Accidents large piece of cheesecloth. Gather) aad Se , by For| Concern Is Felt In The United King- oth, s0| Chinese Pass Stern Rulings Duration Of War dom Over Death Toll The Chinese government has placed| soncern increases in the United a minute. This stops the enzyme control of industry and agriculture | Kingdom over the death toll in road action and the apples do not discolor. | in the hands of the military affairs | accidents. F Allow the apples to drain and| commission and decreed death for} In the course of a debate in the Jayer on @ cheese-| employers or workers who try to House of Lords the Earl of Munster cloth. Place in the warming oven. resist supervision by closing their announced the Government approved If a clothes rack is available, spread| enterprises or agitating for strikes. | establishment of a select committee) some wire netting on this and | The military affairs commission, | t® consider how to reduce the num-} the with cheesecloth Place the| headed by Premier shiang Kai-Shek, | ber of casualties. A motion to this | apples on this improvised scr¢ and! has supreme control for the duration | effect was accepted by the House. | Rt. Rev. Cyril Garbett, Bishop of} up the corners of the cheesecl that a large bag is made. Lower| into a pot of boiling water for half) spread an even let dry at room temperature. With| of the war. } the usual heat in the kitchen, the —_——_—_—_—_—_— | Winchester, contended an average of ruil : | 20 people were killed and 600 in- apples should dry very quickly. 1 andy W {20 peor ve ; ze LN das nat va, ured daily on Britain's roads hei a ‘ ears old,) Readers are invited to write to When Robert Micas, 07 year | ESS Alice Stevens’ Home Service for a magazine salesman, Geen a | Cattle Exports Down door 27-year-' ‘s -} = =- ee joor of 27-year-old Mrs. Lucille Sh@B-) ortawa—The Dominion bureau of free advice on home cooking and lems. / ess let- e} . ality, Illinois, she| household problems. Address let. huey’s home in quality, Tilinois, ee statistics reported Cana Ja's Novem-| ters to Winnipeg Newspaper ey, ‘s . on : Union, 175 McDermot Ave. ice Maal ‘who a ee : eta ber export of cattle was 9,861 head) Winnipeg, Man. deaf mute, could not answer. TT) valued at $800,727 compared with | ae ae, warning, “If you don't answer, I'll 5 447 a¢ $365,496 in November, 1986. Annually, more than 400,000,000,- 000 tons of mud are carried into the| Shotgun through the door, killing the) Voyember to 663 head valued at Gulf of Mexico by the Mississippi salesman instantly. The housewife) 577.938 from 1,127 at $12,089 in the | was held for the grand jury- | game month last year, river. To be proud of learning is the} lis reputation ———_———_——_- The most serviceable of all assets For motorists: Use horse sense or 2236) get a horse, greatest ignorance. Two New Ford V-8 Cars for 1938 =a essay ae ORD MOTOR Company of Can- hodd and flowing curves. Interiors nd neatly appointed. t panels have knobs The radiator e back into + smooth flowing lines from bumper to bumper. It is built on the 5! outward beauty. Longer bodies pro- vide more oom and com: there is larger luggage space in all models. The De Luxe car is pow- ered with the proved 85 horse- first time Ford presents tw recessed for safety. tinct lines, the De Luxe Ford V-8 —a big luxury car—and the newly ame 112-inch De Luxe and Ford V-8 engine. d Tudor Sedan is shown above (lower photograph). shoot,” Mrs. Shaghuey emptied | Foor of horses fell considerably in| (top photograph) is th d Ford V-8 for 1938 styling with a longer in appearance, longer, front design is mo 1 deeper and| brings new