to Free Cook Bookâ€"When you bake at home, the new Magic Cook Book will give you dozens of recipes for delicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Llad., Fraser Avenue and Liberty Street, Teronto, Ont. * Cur Want Ad. Column Brings Results And Magic is the favorite of Canadian housewives. It outsells atlother baking powders combined. You‘ll find Magic makes all your baked foods unusually light and tender ... and gives you the same perfect results every time. Most dietitians in public instiâ€" tutions, like Miss McFarlane, use Magic exclusively. Because it is atways uniform, dependable, and gives consistently better baking results. COMMEND I M agic beâ€" cause 1 know it is csas, _ pure, and free _ \"> from harmful inâ€" "A _ gredients." Miss McFarlane‘s opinion is based on a thorough knowledge of food chemistry, and on close study of food effects upon the body. On practical cooking experience, £oo. use Magic Baking Powder," says Miss M. McFarlane, dietitian of St Michael‘s Hospital, s k. T oronto "For Light, Flaky Biscuits 3ift together flour, baking powder and salt. Cut in the chilled shortening. Now add the chilled liquid to make soft dough. Toss dough onto a floured board and do not handle more than is necesâ€" sary. Roll or pat out with hands to about 14 inch thickness. Cut out with a floured biscuit cutter, Place on slightly greased pan or baking sheet and bake in hot oven at 450° F. 12 to 15 minutes. TryMissMcFarlane‘s Favorite Recipe for BISCUITS 14 teaspoon sait 4 teaspoons Magic * cups pastry flour Baking Powder (or cups 2 tablespoons bread flour) shortening §5{ cup milk, or half milk and half water The Household Word For Tea "Fresh from the Gardens" m»rgely decide the colour scheme. East rooms are "cold" rooms after midâ€"day and, therefore, can usually be best treated in warm tons. West rooms that vary in the time of greatest use should be decoratedt» wecordingly and where a compromise is made, in the :sorm of mixed colours, the cool tone should be dominant in west rooms to offset the hot afternoon sun. Westâ€" ernâ€"facing bedrooms, being coul rooms until midâ€"afternoon, need warm colours â€"yellow, yellowâ€"greens, tans, creams and mixtures such as grey and pink, and grey and yellow. In rooms used a great deal at night, care should be taken to choose colours that will look well in artificial light as welil as during the daylight hours,. All blue, purple and mulberry hues appear duller and greyer under night lightâ€" therefore, select brighter shades in these colours than for rooms to be used principally during the daytime. Ye!lâ€" low and orange are much softer in efâ€" fect by night. Reds and greens are not much affected by artificial light but as they absorb lTight to a marked degree, a room papered in these colours requires twice as much illumination as zrey and purple. These cclours tone down the brilliancy of the sun, and #ive a "comfortable" effect at all seaâ€" In north rcoms, therefore, warm colours such as red, pink, orange, yelâ€" low, yellow brown, red brewn, tan, ecru cream and "warm" grey should preâ€" dominate in your wallpaper. In sast and west rooms, the time of day in which they are used most should south rooms, warm in colour tone because of the sunlight, can be adâ€" vantageously riapered in designs that include blue. blueâ€"green, lavender, mulâ€" barry, cool browns mixed with green, Checsing the Right Colours Pattern is one essential factor in selecting wallparer. Colour is the other. Rooms which have sunlight are "warm"â€"rooms without direct sunlight are "cold." In wallpaper, some colours give the effect of warmth. Red, orangs and yellow suggest firelight and sunâ€" light. Blue, grsen and purple are cool colours, suggestive of shadows, twilight and early morning. on, A room.can be redecorated with wallpaper more artistically, at less cost and in shonter time thar by any other means. The walls are the background for all the furnishings of a room. To reâ€" new the furnishings without changing the background is to invite sure disâ€" appointment. On the other hand, freshly decorated walls can be made to give a new lease of beauty and service to furniture, rugs and drapéries. Wallpaper Mot Popular of All First in popularity for wall decoraâ€" tion come wallpaper, the most fiexible of all wall coverings. Because it emâ€" bodles the myriad effects of colour, light and shads, wallpaper is capable of almost endless interpretations, suitâ€" able to any room. Wallpaper lies abâ€" solutely flat, and holds fast. It is saniâ€" tary, because it does not hold dust or provide breeding places for bacteria. It is inexpensiveâ€"and it is quickly put Treast your walls fairly, and they will veam their gratitude. Ignore them or take liberties with their dignity, and you will find them hostile. Neither you nor your guest will feel "at homse" in a rcom that has unfriendly walls. . Value of Wallpaper in Decorating Home Their position at constant eyeâ€"level makes the walls the most observed feaâ€" ture of a room. They are seen first, and they are seen most. The furniâ€" !ture and the rug may pass muster though wornâ€"but the walls must be everâ€"inviting, fresh and unbroken, or the whole effect of the room will be disappointing. It will lack that conâ€" genial atmosphare that makes a house a homeâ€"and with an "indoor season‘" for most of us of more than half of each year, good health and contentâ€" ment demand that Canadian homes be cheerful, restful and redolent of outâ€" door beauty. Correctly decorated walls can bring sunshine into your home in the dullest weather. The dingy and oppressive room can be made to radiate good cheerâ€"and the low, cramped apartâ€" ment given an air of height and spaciâ€" ousness. Architectural fiaws can be corrected by proper deccration. Unâ€" lovely angles can be "ironed out." | Empty wall spaces have never beon the willing choice of any progressive peo;te or of any school of architecture. Woman‘s love of the refined and beauâ€" tiful demands that the walls of her home be decorated in some manner. The following article by an expert in the matter ¢of homes and home decorâ€" ation is worth reading by all:â€" Friendly Walls are First Esential of Good Room Wallpaper is Most Flexible of Decorative Media. Some Timely Helps and Hints. New wallpaper is almost magical in its powers of rejuvenating "the ~f>ur walls of home"â€"and now that â€"Canaâ€" dian wallpapers are obtainable (at quits modest cost, too) which do not fade out but remiain bright and beautiful month after month, Can@dian women ars more and more relying on wallpaper to make and keep their homes friendly and attractive exptressions of their own good taste in interior decorating. does cne done in yellow, for example. Affect Apparent Size of Room Remember, too, that wallpapers alâ€" ter the size of rooms,. Light tone values in wallpaper make the walls go away from usâ€"hence cause the room to look larger. Dark tones have the opposite effectâ€"and the room seems smaller, Medium colourâ€"value papers maintain the normal size of the rcom. Stripes or vertical patterns lend height, and horizontal designs lower the ceiling. Set piitterns minimize the presence of too many angles ana corâ€" ners. "The last major demand which Norâ€" thern mining areas united to impress on the Ontario government was the completion of the Ferguson highway. Two items that will be impressed on the Provincial and Federal govern-’ ments as affecting the mining areas during the present year and thereafter| until realized are those of a highway§ connection between Timmins and Sudâ€" bury, and the need of establishing a| chain of airports to facilitate commerâ€" cial flying throughout the mining counâ€" ery, While these promise to be the| "Signs are again making themselves apparent that the agitation will be reâ€" newed this year with greater vigour than ever throughout Northern Ontaric for number of items of provincial and federal expenditure in the interests of those areas now chiefly supported by prospecting and mining activities. The above is one of several subjects taken up recently in The North Bay Nugget,. The following is the article from The Nugget:â€" There is reason for believing that definite and determined effort is to be made to have an immediate start made on the roadway to connect up the Sudâ€" bury and Porcupine camps. The value of such a roadway in the development of the North can scarcely be overâ€" estimated. In the meantime it would prove a valuable factor in helping proâ€" vide work for the unemployed. For some time past it has been apparent that this road should be built. Everyâ€" body has been able to see this expect one or two men. One of these one or two very unfortunately is Hon. Wm. Finlayson, Minister of Lands and Forâ€" ests. Hon. Mr. Finlayson himself knows the reason for this attitude. In the meantime it is interesting to recall the fact that some years ago Hon. Mr. Finlayson wrote the Timmins board of trade to the effect that he favoured the proposed roadway and that it be built as soon as finances were availâ€" able for the work. This letter is on fyle at the office of the secretary of the: Timmins board of trade. Mining District is Asking Recognition Road from Sudbury to Porcupine Among the Demands Being Made. Also More Airports Needed. Down Payment Do Not miss this Opportunity Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited Playmayd Model B and the BIG ELECTRIC WASHER SAÂ¥ALE featuring the Saturday April 2nd is the last day of our Controlling and Operating Northern Ontario Power Company Limited Northern Quebec Power Comparty A BC THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO "Boards of Trade of Timmirs and Sudbury are uniting this year on a campaign for a direct connection by highway between the two camps. At the present time the only connection by road is via North Bay and the Ferâ€" guson highway, making a total disâ€" tance of about 325 miles, whereas in a direct line the distance would be little more than 100 acres. There would also be the added advantage of connections with such old and well known prospecâ€" "In view of the widespread recogniâ€" tion that mining in Canada generally and particularly in Northern Ontario and Quebec has attained, the feeling is strong that governments should be preâ€" pared to encourage its further developâ€" ment in every possible legitimate way. "In recent years and partizularly since the depression the importance "of mining as an economic factor in the life of the country, and not merely a vehicle for market speculation, has been strikingly demonstrated before the pubâ€" lic. Evidence of this was the announceâ€" ment that the value of Canada‘s minâ€" eral production had grown to exceed that of even the wheat crop, while gold mining has been heralded as practically the only industry that has been able to ficurish and grow in the face of the world wide depression of industry and prices. The report of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics for 1931, just isâ€" sued, draws attention to the fact that ‘‘Canada, during the past twenty years and more particularly the past ten years, has been able to build up a minâ€" ing and metallurgical industry which today is one of the chief props upon which many other industries can lean for support in these times of national and international stress." Iu a recent address Dr. Charles Camsell, deputy minister of mines at Ot‘awa.stated that asurvey of the various basic industries i indicated that the greatest hope ‘for' expansion of population over the unâ€" populated areas of the Dominion lay in the development of the mining inâ€" dustry. ; ‘‘In the past a "recitation" of the deâ€" mands of the North Country, coupled with the well founded objection to inâ€" ‘creased taxation of either mining proâ€" ‘fits or of capital invested in the minâ€" ing industry has met with a mixture of serious consideration and amused tolâ€" erance from legislators at both Ottawa ard Toronto. Those were the days however, when mining was a second or third rate industry. when prosâ€" iperity was at its height and the base metal mines as well as gold and silver were in the ascendancy the average mining areavhad to petition for years before receiving an appropriation for much needed improvements. Torento Became Centre "The reason was simple,. Pioneers of the North Country who had grown rich on the profits of mining, desired a field where they could spend their winnings with more eclat than the woods and rocks of the Northland afforded. For: several years while the boom of 1924 to 1929 was in progress quite an invaâ€" sion of Toronto from the North took place. Toronto became in theory if not in practice the centre of mining, deâ€" spite the fact that most of it was done from the arm chairs in brokers‘ board rooms or in the sanctuary of hotel lobâ€" bies. While this was going on the average "mining man" was too busy spotting claims or negotiating deals with his broker to pay much attention to the need of roads. Roadsâ€"what were roads for anyway. If a road wasn‘t convenient he could always fy. main items there will be also the usual if not more than ever insistent deâ€" mands for maintenance of existing trunk highways and for attention to secondary roads for serving the settlers struggling against the handicap of isoâ€" lation on the back concessions. When a recipe calls for MILEK Use ST. CHARLES Only mi lk that has been subjected to the highest tests for purity and richness is good enough for acceptance in the St. Charles plants. Packed under the most saniâ€" tary conditions, St. Charles Milk represents the best evaporated milk you can buyâ€"see that you ask for it by name. sT.C.i1 Whenever a recipe calls for milk it is a safe rule always to use Borden‘s St. Charles Evapâ€" orated Milk. St. Charles is economical, simple to use and definitely imparts an improved flavor to your cookâ€" ing. Following the experience gained in the Great War, aerial photography was at first employed in Canada principally for topographical purposes. It was quickly perceived, however, that photoâ€" graphs so cobtained and maps made from them would effect a great saving of time and labour in forest surveying. No longer, for instance, would it be necessary to send out a party to survey a remote tract, only to find, perhaps, after weeks of difficult travel, that the tract was a brule, or burnedâ€"ove: area, with little or no utilizable timber on it, or else a barren strip of muskeg toâ€" tally devoid of forest growth of any kind. For the photographs clearly inâ€" dicated the location of brules and musâ€" kegs, while sparsely wonded areas could be easily distinguished from heavily timbered regions; there, ground survey operations could be limited to those areas where the timber growth was of sufficient value to justify the labour and expense of detailed survey. ‘ Among the fields in which the aeroâ€" plane has done, and is doing, good serâ€" vice according to the Forestry Branch of the Department of the Interior, is that of surveying Canada‘s forests. In this work aerial photography, which is dependent upon the aeroplane, has comse to play an important part. The photographs, it may be noted, are of two kinds, namely, vertical and oblique. Vertical photographs are those ‘depictâ€" ing the territory lying immediately beâ€" neath the plane; the oblique photoâ€" graphs are those which take in terriâ€" tory lying to the right, left, and front of the line of flight. ting camps as Matachewan, Gowganda and Shining Tree, while access would be provided the Grassey river area, reâ€" cognized as prospecting ground of merit Air Yravel Facilities. . "In the matter of airports the need of certain specified airports for landing of airplanes in Northern Ontario has been discussed for some time. Under modern methpds of prospecting the airâ€" plane is assuming more and more imâ€" portance as part of the equipment of lthe mining industry. In spite of the Federal government‘s assault on exâ€" "Although the Ontario government recently passed its annual appropriaâ€" tion of $5,000,000 for Northern Develâ€" opment only a small part, estimated at not more than $3,000,000 will be availâ€" able for expenditure this year, as some $2,000,000 has been already spent, chieftâ€" ly on relief employment. Expenditures that have been made in the unfinished sections of the Transâ€"Canada highway cannot be charged against Northern Ontario as the demand for the Transâ€" Canada highway cannot be said to have come from Northern Ontario as a whole, as there were other projects waiting of much greater importance to the general development of the country. SPECIAL VALUE OF AIRSHIPS IX sURVEYING THE FORESTS revived with the possibility that Sudâ€" bury and Haileybury will be among the first applicants for sites. penditures for development of aviaâ€" tion the question of airports has been (Gives Bmmmmg Zest and Energy wy.., to Every Child with or without chinaware. in Quick Quaker Oats 4 * marked "chinaware." . Also the small 10¢ size. Sealed Every package contains pacl-:ages ouly., NE\ ER in a piece of !g(_n uine TT I rted E. h chinaâ€" BULK. All Quaker packages '“r:r,’z i y R’“Bl;\’ cp'x‘r?‘_ _ _contain coupons. Save them TERN . . . ivory tint. ' : and obtain useful articles. m’(}:o‘:i"‘;:g'(‘t :’f large QuaAkER Oats Made by The Quaker Oats Company, Peterborough and Saskatoon, largest cereal millers in the Em pire Makers also of Quaker Crackets, Corn Flakes, M uffets, and otLr highest quality cereals. Our Want Ad. Column Brings Results Moose wins three points. N.B.B.QO. ........:....040......1008......000..... 24460 Business Girls .641.....787....676. ... 2104 N.B.B.O. wins three points. Leftâ€"Overs ... 817....800....880 .. 2497 Business College 712 ....627..... .811... 2150 Leftâ€"Overs wins four points. High single scoreâ€"Miss R. Verner, Scores for March 15th:â€" Ramblers ............ 726......714 Y.P.L, ........0@8......805 Y.P.L, wins three points Mouse >....:........... 000,;.:...G0L.., Trained Nurses 628. 715 The following are the scores for the Ladies‘ Bowling League:â€" Leftâ€"Overs .........886 . 891 . 882 . 2559 Trained Nurses 662 .. 706 ... 638 . 2006 Leftâ€"Overs wins four points. Correction of March l'nh report :â€" High single scoreâ€"Myrs, A. Bmdnur 265. High total scoreâ€"Mrs. M. Donaldsn, 586. Ladies‘ Bowling League Scores for Recent Games High total scoreâ€"Miss R. Verner, 629 what would they do WITHOUT YOou ? This policy enables you to carry more insurance than would be possible with any other form of life plan. Surely it is worth 51c a day to you to be free from worry about your family‘s future. Doesn‘t it worry you to think what would happen to your wife and little ones if your support were suddenly withdrawn? Yet it is easy for you to provide for them through In large household packages, with or without chinaware. Also the small 10¢ size. Sealed packages only, NEVER in BULK. All Quaker packages contain coupons. Save them and obtain useful articles. Quick Quaker Oats is the one cereal which people never tire of, because it is so deâ€" licious, so nourishing and so agreeable to digestion. For cleanliness and purity always buy oats in packages, never loose in bags. For quality and deliciousness, see that the name and picture of the kindly Quaker are on the packages you buy. And yet Quaker Oats costs less than a cent a dish. Women everywhere turn to it for economy. And for time saving, too. It cooks in 24 minutes after the water boils. HILDREN need boundless energy both in and out of schgol. As 70% of the day‘s work and play comes in the four morning hours, health authorities everywhere recommend Quaker Oats for breakfast. No other food has such perfect balance of the elements for growth and energy. These, with plentiful mineral to enrich the blood, give children stamina and brimming good health. Yet costs less than a cent a dish ... delicious, nourishing Quaker Oats The Greatâ€"W est Minimum Cost Policy Haileybury, Ont. 746 780 760 20785 2073 2219 2413 Thursday, March 3ist, 1932 CARTERS IEXZPIILLS HAND Busy handsâ€"at hard tasks day in and day out. Persian Balm keeps the skin soft and pliable. Removes redness and relieves frritation. imported ILnglish china~ ware . . . EW PATâ€" TERN . . . ivory tint. A fine selection of large handsome pieces. Lovely English China in Quick Quaker Oats marked "chinaware." Every package contains a piece of genuine imported English chinaâ€"