Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 Oct 1933, 2, p. 2

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You may think your stomach is a very bad actor, but listen to this letter from a Chester, England, woman, who lived ‘ for months on one invalid food, and was ‘ in despair: "Maclean Brand Stomach Powder is m very good remedy. J have been a martyr to Indigestion which gradually developed into acute stomach trouble. I have tried every known remedy withâ€" out permanent success . . I have taken 8 bottles of Maclean Brand Stomach Powder and the result is great, for L | now â€"can eat anything I like." _ Maclean: Brand Stomach Powder, new to Canada, is the famous formula of an eminent Stomach Specialist of London, England. Used constantly by leading English hospitals to treat stomâ€" ach Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Flatulence, Heartburn, and Acidity. At your druggist‘s. Be sure to get the enuine Maclean Brand Stomach Powâ€" er with the signature, "Alex. C. Macâ€" lean." Never sold loose. Only in plainly marked, handy size bottles, 75¢, powâ€" der or tablets. Sole Canadian distribuâ€" tors, Rigo Agencies, Toronto. MARTYR 10 STOMACH TROUBLE! CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO., LIMITED 1 1 Now enjoys her meals BF KIND fi%% 3 c 4 7 zon EDBISON MAZDA Kellogge‘s Corn Flakes must always be uniformly high in quality, They are sold with the personal guarantee of W. K. Kellogg: "If you are not more than satisfied, return the empty redâ€"andâ€"green package and we will refund your money." Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. GUARANTEED! ONLY the best light is good enough to guard the eyes of young and old. So beware of "bargain" bulbs, and play safe with gesuine EDISON MAZDA LAMPS. The Goldthorpe correspondent of The New Liskeard Speaker writes last week as follows:â€""Our new road is not as yet pavedâ€"in fact it is not quite ready for paving â€" But we now have three trucks hauling crushed rock and hope soon to have a real road. And just while we think of it, why cannot the powers that be send up a few hundred of those men working on that luxury called the Transâ€"Canada highway and make roads where they would produce something." Since the rapid advance in the price of gold from a normal value of $20.67 an ounce to over $31 an ounce, Mr. Siscoe said American financial interests have manifested a keen interest in the proâ€" gress towards production of leading Canadian gold properties. He believed that the influx of $1,000,000 new capiâ€" tal is but a forerunner of other similar developments in the very near future. Considerable new U.S. capital will come into Canada for mining developâ€" ment work in Northern Quebec gold fields as a result of a special meeting of Canadian and American interests held in Montreal, Stanley Siscoe presiâ€" dent of the Stanley Siscoe Extension Gold Mines Limited® and director of Sisâ€" coe Gold Mines Lumited, second largest gold producer of the Province of Queâ€" bec, announced, adding that first payâ€" ments in this regard will be made durâ€" ing the coming week. Hon. Judge John F. Hylan, former mayor of New York from 1910â€"â€"1925, author of "Goldâ€"Its Control Over Naâ€" tions and Men," Mr. Siscoe said, will visit the city towards the end of the month, together with othet members of the American group he is representing in the capacity of chairman of the advisory committee of the Stanley Bisâ€" coe Extension Gold Mines. The latter eorporation is developing valuable proâ€" perties in Northern Quebec. WANTS ROADS MADE WHERE THEY WILL BE PRODUCTIVE Former New York Mayor Interested in Quebec Mines C(CANADA J. B. Broughton, head of the firm of J. B. Broughton Son, Riverdale Garâ€" dens, Monteith, was visitor to Timâ€" mins last week. ‘WThe Riverdale Garâ€" dens 4o a large and yrowing business in flowen:, shrubs, ete. The business of this firm in the Poreupine camp vonâ€" tinues to increase in ypleasing way. Mr. Broughton agreed practically all who have used advertis‘ng in The Advance in that this newspaper certainly brought results. A recent adâ€" vertisement in these columns brought many orders and enquiries and next season Mr. Broughton intends to profit still more by advertising earlier and oftener. Blairmore Enterprise:â€"In Turkey, a woman never sees her husband beforr marriage. In America she doesn‘t see much of him afterwards. 1 cup cheese 2 eggs 1 cup milk 4 tablespoons flour 4 tablespoons butter or shortening 1â€"2 teaspoon salt Pepper Make a white sauce of milk, flour, fat and seasonings. Add cheese and beatâ€" en egg yolks and stir until cheese has melted and the yolks are set. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into a buttered dish or buttered individual moulds, and set in a pan of hot water. Bake 15 minutes in a slow oven, 300 deâ€" grees F., or until egg white is set and serve at once.. It begins to fall as soon as removed from oven. Cheese Fondue Some Pleasing Ways for Serving Cheese 1 cup boiled rice 4 wellâ€"beaten eggs 4 tablespoons milk 2 tablespoons butter 1 1â€"4 teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 1â€"2 teaspoon pepper 1 cup cheese Saute rice in butter, add the eggs with the milk, and cook slowly. When nearly thick enough, add salt and pepâ€" per. Worcestershire sauce and the cheese grated. Just allow the cheese to melt. The mixture should be of the consistency of thin scrambled eggs. Serve on todst or crackers. Cheese Souffie FOUND THE ADVANCE GAVE | GOGOD RESULTS FOR | We lnclude some diShes here tmt givei QUIl1ICECE WiLii d EuiL. A. A CCA _ YÂ¥ $Aid cheese varying importanceâ€"sometimes| 4 struggle in the office during which on the side of flavour, sometimes on | the revolver was discnarged the bullet that of substantial nourishment. | piercing an empty chair. In‘ the tussle Vegetable and Cheese Cassercle Bellensky managed to escape from the 1 cup cooked or canned vegetables building. Later he is said to have shot 1â€"2 cups scalding milk | at other targets round the village and 1 cup soft bread crumbs | also entered the school house where an 1â€"4 cup melted butter | attempt was made to frighten the teaâ€" pimientos, chopped ‘cher and her pupils. The man wWas 1 1â€"2 tablespoons chopped onion |arrested at the Continental. hotel, 1 1â€"2 cups cheese |\ North Bay after provincial police learnâ€" ‘ed of the shooting around. 3â€"8 teaspoon salt [ 1â€"8 te e Dash ;ifilx:ap i Only 8 Out of 546 Ready 3 egss l to Accept Work in Bush 1 tablespoon chopped parsley | Pour scalding milk over the bread| The following rather startling article crumbs. Add butter, pimientoes, parâ€"| is from last Wednesday‘s issue of The sley, onion, grated cheese and seasonâ€"| Sudbury Star:â€" Then add the wellâ€"beaten eggs. Puti "In Sudbury there are 546 heads of the vegetables in a wellâ€"greased l0Af| homes on relief. They have a total of pan, and pour the milk and cheese mixâ€"| 2124 dependents, all of whom are also ture over them. Bake about 50 minutes| dependent upon the city of Sudbury in a slow oven of 350 degrees F., until| and the government for their liveliâ€" the loaf is firm. Servings, 6. â€" ’ hood. Cheese Custard | "Recently the city received a request 2 cups bread crumbs for 300 men to work in the woods at 1 cup grated cheese $30 a month and board. 2 cups hot milk \__"Yesterday Employment Agent A. E. wWoods endeavoured to round up a crew of 12 experienced bush workers from the list of 546 heads of homes on reâ€" 2 eggs lief.. He succeeded in getting eight. Mix bread crumbs and cheese. Add "Admittedly, there are any number milk, butter and seasonings. Add eggs,| of bush workers on relief, but none of well beaten. Turn into a buttered bakâ€"| them will accept a job, though the pay ing dish; overâ€"poach until firm. of $30 a month and keep for years pagst Chinese Rarebit has been the standard scale for bushâ€" 2 tablespoons butter, melted 1 teaspoon salt 1â€"8 teaspoon cayenne 1 1â€"2 cups milk 2 cups soft bread erumbs 8 eggs 1 1â€"2 cups grated cheese 1 teaspoon salt 1â€"8 teaspoon pepper 1â€"8 teaspoon paeprika 1 tablespoon meltei shortening Pour milk over bread crumbs. Add beaten egs, cheese, salt, peoper, papriks and shortening. Mix well. Pour into greased individual baking and bake in moderate oven, 350 degrees F., 20 to 25 minutes. A lady who says she reads The Adâ€" vance from first page to the last each week and is particularly interested in the recipes published in these columns from time to time, recently sent in the following .clipping from The Toronto Mail and Empire, the article and reâ€" cipes being written by Ann Adam for the Toronto newspaper. There is no comment from the friend of The Ad-! vance in sending in the recipes, and none is given here in passing them on.| ‘The clipping is as follows:â€" i Cheese at Any Rtage is Good Food When you find that you have lost track of the last part of a package of cheese or that there is a snubby end of a cut of nippy Canadian cheese thati has gone dry when it has been out of | sight and out of mindadâ€"don‘t feel that there is any waste implied. , Small dry pieces of cheese can be used to give a piquant touch of flavour to a dish of vegetablesâ€"just grated over the top of a casserole and sprinâ€" kled with paprika; or grate the cheese and melt it in an otherwise finished creamed sauce. Cheese is too important a food proâ€" duct not to merit deliberate inclusion in meals. As a meat substitute, ‘or to carry on as meat does in a meal where the latter is lightly represented, cheese is of very great value. So count quite regularly on interesting and varied uses of cheese as a nutritious part of regular meals. Vegetables and Cheese Casserole Cheese Custard, Chinese Rarebit, Cheese Souffle Recipes, TH* PORCUPTINETE ADVANCE, TROMINS, ONTARIO ; Steven‘s Amusement n Parlours | "The motion of the welfare board |auth~orizing an adjustment is your | written guarantee that your family will not be taken off relief," Relief Officer IS' C,. Manson told him. "I want it written out on paper," he } demanded. \ _ ‘"Meanwhile, P. J. McAndrew, proâ€" ’pnetor of a private employment serâ€" vice, reports that he has been sending an average of 20 men a day to Nicholâ€" son Siding for Austin Nicholson, and to points along the C.N.R. for the Pineâ€" lands Timber Company. Unlike the government employment office, Mr. Mcâ€" Andrew is not restricted to ‘selecting his men from those on relief. "I have not had any trouble getting ‘ men," be said. "I can secure all the {experienced bush workers required in | short order," He sent 20 more men | to Nicholson Siding today. "The majority of the men approachâ€" ed refused to go, giving no other reaâ€" son, except that the payâ€"the same that bush workers received before the depressionâ€"was _ not . high enough. One man, The Sudbury Star was told, demanded a written guarantee that the relief given his family would not be reduced, and none of the money he earned would be taken to support his family, before he would consent to go. HIGH DISTINCTION GIVEN TO PIONEER NORANDA SURCGEON Dr. E. W. Lindlater, of Rouyn, reâ€" ceived a notable distinction last week being given the degree of F.A.C.S. (Felâ€" low of the American College of Surâ€" geons) at their twentyâ€"third clinical congress held at Chicago. Dr. Lindâ€" later is the only surgeon in Northern Quebec holding this degree. Dr. Lindâ€" later was the first surgeon in te Rouyn camp, going there by airship in May, 1925. At the {ime there were only 80 people at Noranda. Try The Want Advertisements "Admittedly, there are any number of bush workers on relief, but none of them will accept a job, though the pay of $30 a month and keep for years pagst has been the standard scale for bushâ€" men. Mikc Bellensky was charged beforei District Magistrate McGaughey at North Bay last week on a charge ofl carrying offensive weapons dangerous to the public. Heentered a plea of mt! guilty. The accused, who is Polish was | formerly an employee of the Fasselt Lumber Co. at Foss Mills, and it is said that enraged because he claimed the concern owed him money he went | to the mill last week and threatened | the office staff with a gun. There was a struggle in the office during which| the revolver was discnarged the bullet | piercing an empty chair. In‘ the tussle| Bellensky managed to escape from the | building. Later he is said to have shot at other targets round the village and| also entered the school house where an' attempt was made to frighten the teaâ€"| cher and her pupils The man was| arrested at the Continental. hotel, North Bay after provincial police learnâ€"| ed of the shooting around. | "Yesterday Employment Agent A. E. wWoods endeavoured to round up a crew of 12 experienced bush workers from the list of 546 heads of homes on reâ€" lief.. He succeeded in getting eight. FIRED REVOLVER AROUND VILLAGE OF FOSS MILLS An Allâ€"Weather Recreation You will be pleased with the ROOMS, MEALS AND SERVICE New Rates Room and Board per month. First Ave., Schumacher GOLD RANGE HOTEL Meals from 30¢ u Phone 280 Timmins, Ontario O rain checks issued for Billiards. You can enjoy a game night or y in any weather, any season of the yearâ€"â€"and never tire of this greatest indoor pastime, espe when played on our m ern Brunswick equipment,. At least one Toronto newspaper is making considerable copy out of the fact that three of the men who went ‘trom East Windsor, and two sons of one of the three, have returned to East Windsor from Fauquier, condemning the "Backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"land" plan and saying few good words about the North Counâ€" }try. It is an interesting commentary ’upon their stories of hardship and | starvation in the North to note that | these men left their wives and families \behind them. If conditions were as the | men are said to claim it seems decidedâ€" ly hard on the families to be left beâ€" hind to face the terrible situation alone. A certain or uncertain Toâ€" ‘ronto newspaper in referring to the reâ€" \turn of the supposedly wouldâ€"be setâ€" ltlers to Windsor calls the North, "the land of promise," and places the phrase in quotation marks. "They were 14 months up there," says this Toronto newspaper, where they knocked the last | icicle off their beards in May and where | sometimes the frost is on the rumpkin in July. Only there is no pumpkin, even in containers." | . _ Wit "‘"Why this is Thursday." j Nit: "I know it, ‘that‘s why I keep thinking about it." Disinclination of som> men receiving relief to take advantage of opportuniâ€" ties for employment is likely to become more and more a knotty for the welfare bourd and its oficials unâ€" | less some drastic steps are takten. The iattttude of many on the question of again entering some gainful employâ€" ment, even though it may not be at top wages, is jeopardizing the positicn of conscientious men on relief. { On the same authority the returned 'settlers are telling of "harrowing exâ€" ‘ periences," "tales of privation, desperâ€" Iat;ion and semiâ€"starvation," and so on. One of the men lefts a wife and four young children to keep on facing it all ‘alone. Another of the two left eight ‘ children and a wife, and the third man left behind his wife and his eight childâ€" ren. The East Windsor settlement is | about five miles from Fauquier. There }are 105 families in the settlement ana ione of the returned settlers says that i102 of them are on government relief 'to-day. How they can be on governâ€" ‘ment relief and still ‘be starving to death is difficult to understand. ‘The stcries told by the returned settlers at East Windsor are to the effect that the { country is so affected by frosts that ! crops can not be raised and vegetables |can not be grown even to provide for the families themselves. One of the men admits he reported he raised some oats, "three tons from three acres," but jthat he could not sell the oats. They ‘ tell of one man with 40 acres plowed, 20 acres in hay, and with cows, bull, a few sheep, a large comfortable dwelling and suitable barns, "yet he can‘t eke | out a living because he can‘t sell his produce." The pulpwood business is condemned as useless because the jobâ€" bers pay only $3.00 per cord for the l pulp. Another complaint is that it alâ€" ways takes two weeks to get a doctor \ from Cochrane "and then the patient is either better or dead." All sorts of | special details are given, all of them reflecting more or less on the country and on the backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"land plan. It would ‘be well if the Government could find some method whereby these stories could be definitely settled one way or another. When the mayor of Windsor some months ago visited the North and presented a list of the same kind of grievances, Hon. Wm. Finlayâ€" son made very complete and effective reply. It seems to be necessary for him to make reply again. Special attention has been given this group of seitlers from East Windsor. It is unthinkable that their story should be true after all that has been done to assist them, unless they have failed to do their part. There are, of course, two other alternâ€" ativesâ€"they may be so unsuited for the life of pioneers that the trouble may rest in the fact that they should never have been alloweg to take up the life. Or it may be that they would sooner talk than work. Everyone in the North knows that the settler here has a hard time. The most of them, however, would think they were fortunate indeed if they were receiving all the assistance given to those going on homesteads on the backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"land plan. Sudbury Alderman Says "Lock up the Relief Office" The following is the editorial referâ€" ence made last week by The Sudbury Star to the fact that bushmen at Sudâ€" bury refused to accept work at usual wages, preferring to continue on city relief :â€" "And they all forthwith began to make excuse." Yet, not allâ€"all but eight. The eight are those on relief in Sudâ€" bury who were willing to accept regular employment in the lumber camps when it was offered them. The excuseâ€"makâ€" ers are still satisfied to live upon the public. A government employment agent apâ€" pealed to several score jobless men on relief this week in an effort to secure 12 men for work in the bush. About one in a dozen showed any inclination to work. The rest declined to accept the offer. One begins to wonder if the ultimate solution will not be the adoption of Alderman J. D. McIinnes‘ suggestion that the lock be turned in the door of the relief office. One went so far as to demand a writâ€" ten guarantee from S. C. Manson, city relief officer, to the effect that the reâ€" lief payments to his wife and family would not be reduced because of his acceptance of a steady job. Fauquier Settlers Return to Windsor Five Men on the "Backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"Land Plan Curse the North, but Leave Their Families on the Farms. Nit: "I keep thinking this is Thursâ€" day." â€"FExchange Searching for Lost Balloon : ; Between Sudbury and Here: Reports from New Liskeard say that the farmers in Hudson township are again heavy losers through the depreâ€" dations of wolves. One farmer had so many sheep killed recently by wolves that the flock was reduced to only five and he thought it the better plan to sell these before they too fell victims to the wolves. Frank A. Trotter, of Akron, Ohio, one of the pilots who was wrecked on Sunâ€" day, Sept. 3rd, in the Thor Lake disâ€" trict, north of Sudbury, in an internaâ€" tional balloon race event from Chicago, is back in the Sudbury district with the idea of searching for. his balloon, Goodyear IX. He and Mrs. Trotter motored from Akron to Sudbury. At Sudbury he explained that his purpose was not to salvage the balloon. That was considered a@bout impossible or impractical. ~What is really sought is the outfit of instruments that was with the balloon. Their value is estiâ€" mated at around $2,000. . The bag was also equipped with two. parachutes worth $600 each. Recently, Alec Bailey, veteran Thor Lake bushman, with directions given to him by Trotter endeavoured to find the wrecked balloon, but saw no sign of it. It is believed to be 20 miles north of Thor Lake. For six miles from where it crashed Trotter and his pilot, Ward T. Van Orman blazed a trail through the woods. "If we pick up that trail, we‘ll be all right," Trotter stated. wWOLVES NUMEROUS IN THE DISTRICT AROUND LISKEARD Jor SAYS MISS ANN ADAM, popular writer of food articles for the Home Servzce Bureau of the Canadian Home Journgl Assurance Company WATERL OO > ONTARIO "Owned by the M A G I C â€"costs not quite 14 of a cent more per bakiffg than the cheapest inferior baking powders. Why not use this fineâ€"quality baking powder and be sure of satisfactory results? tin is your guarantee that Magic Baking Powder ' "CONTAINS NO ALUM." 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