Winter winds c are not fashionab what is not fashic whle either. The i with a little care | smooth and silky. ‘The choics of 1 portant item thes do a lot of smoki find that their | easily, usually sco find a colour that will not come off | soap and water | cleansing cream. very indelible are and hard. This n to be rubbed on t ly to leave a COl that‘s bad because the lips irritated. A lipstick that greasy and that is Precautionary measures are to avoid roughness and chap skin of the lips is very thin er and easily bruised and | good rule to follow is to mi lips with a little tissue cre retiring every night. Anott cream before applying your Blot off the excess cream | lipstick is applied. Choice of Lipstick Toâ€"day onl} veins undergo tion" method is now the "u« During th with varicos: to hospital t It meant tw tal and littl« to six mont! physician has one, into the way. PC may be varicose uon trea inflame t its walls become h With som up, and a t leg above th is to be n preventing t flowing upw vein to swel of course m needle, and Th vein beci when the m no bleeding A nun through vein fro As you k that becom much work of the blooc that l1e mo:! cose veins : way. which c office, wi hospital, hospital stand w When the pati tion, an lodion, few hou WO V a When The pa ANN GHIRLEY follows the Advice Miss Pierce gives to her day. She suggests that everyone apply a little cream on lips applying lip colouring to keep them smooth and free of (hdppln CHAPPED LIPS NOT FASHIONABLE inter winds or no, chapped lips , ing dï¬ving is truly a gem. I not fashionable. And nowadays| such a lipstick by all means : is not fashionable is not excusâ€"|to its last little drop and t gither. The fact is, though, that| the same brand. If you ha a little care the lips can be kept|found such a stick, seek an Bc BEAUTIFUL pare this method, in the physician‘s method of weeks in n work, expense of »m, you can undetâ€" rgical operation is ut few cases. chapping. Ihe â€"thin and tendâ€" and broken. A to massage the ie cream before Another bit of your lip rouge. eam before the reamy but no ible without be of Pours Ehat Bodyp he injecâ€" nsert | inject i so tha ind thet | re. wh 11 nto wWwa y macd n hi inds the question | headed, * as follows "One h be on Now lipstick sion." 1 and sh stars C that is nect any more s will give a then the co No sermon 1 a few don‘ts. particularly . v gon‘t bite or don‘t wet ther stick. Permit minutes at le only a more irg drying is ! such a lipstic} to its last lit! the same bral only a more sa a protective ma Copyright 193 cate, Inc.) mus pres in t Or Situation has longed Hes Radio Owne Time. line men aAnC WAKC, inhe two private limited ran "This am long way tC Nor AmoI ervice _~ommil rieed fo O supt tand One mooth ced or Radio Station is Needed Obi‘em Any t ird LariO D Rather same btr id such rewarded SeTl $9 k hin} effe id mak App T} rADP} as been Headacl Don‘t tI reader 1¢ lv change in the zseen slowest of In the North capped by the ing materials. of homes This type ce‘st adap i1 jla It is trus that the application of cel in large office structures, schools, ire buildings, and public buildings is altered a few of fundamentals of sign but the home has not been eatly affected and the home is, in e end, the place in which the greater rt of our lives are lived. Predictions have been made for deâ€" des that the home of man would ange in many essentials. Modern sizn and modern accessories were to ake it a more comfortable, healthy ace. Mcn were to have in their imes all the advantages that science uld give. ‘Compared with the adâ€" rces made in other fields, the home s been exceedingly slow in changing. ‘om the outside there is littie or no fference from the home of fifteen ars ago. Inside there certainly are ore comforts but they have not inâ€" eased in nearly the proportion in a1ich they have been invented. Men and women are quick to accept change in the fashion of their thes, their motor cars, their radios, eir places of work, but the coming ange in the fashions of homes has en slowest of all. by "Shakes" Until a few years ago the scisnce of ilding was basically the same as it s in the days of the ancient Greeks, yptians and Romans. So far as the rth Country is concerned, the ence ¢f building has changed very Change in Home Design Farâ€"Off ? e that we shall continue to live in den houses. ‘he "monolithic‘ type of house conâ€" iction in which concrete is employâ€" has been shown to be inexpensive, of g life, and has many qualities of ping to make a more comfortable 1 healthy home. No serious attempt been made in Canada yet to try out _ scheme. What places have been It are of an inferior type because lty design has been used. ‘hen there was the "glass house" at â€"Chicago World‘s Fair built of variâ€" coloured glass bricks which may nt a new way in home building. The stances involved in the manufacture zlass are not expensive and the nslucency of the glass wall gives the of construction many obvious adâ€" tages. Glass, being a good insulator inst heat and cold might be very ta‘le to the North. ‘here is one big recent development t will, according to men in a posiâ€" 1i to know, force the change of home ign to a considerable degree. Thaf he still young science of air condiâ€" iing. An engineer of a firm in ithern Ontario who had been in nmins leoking after some ventilation ‘ on a big building once told the ter that the object of the experiâ€" nters in air conditioning was to proâ€" ‘e a homs in which the atmosphere ried that softness of springtime. e air at the ceiling and the air at floor should be of the same temperâ€" re and humidity. If this were the 2 the home would be so muth more ifortable and so much more healthy that it would scearcely seem to ngston â€" Whigâ€"Scandard:â€"Profesâ€" il baseball contracts are going out 1e maills so spring must be on its pears that with the type of conâ€" on used in Canada ideal air conâ€" ng cannot be accomplished. This particularily in Northern Ontaric homes must be heated for sc months of the year, be a tremendâ€" vantage and by no means an imâ€" nen Ti@Aiik with Canadian a views, MHow ation powerful United | ations making good reception | e runicipalities of the North | North, we are perhaps handiâ€" y the lack of variety in buildâ€" rials. Wood is cheapest and ) get, hence the large majority s are of frame construction. e of building is certainly not pted to either the North or to invention, but it seems probâ€" t we shall continue to live in United States much is being ‘r the home loan policy of the nt but even there where such ‘ul opportunity exists to make ‘ a more suitable place in live, relatively little is being hed in radical change of deâ€" eV ws, â€" How many accorded the pri% 1palilie: nmedia mMUs 1t ities of the NOrLN diately and effectiveâ€" radio authoritiss with region is nonâ€"existent insofar as Canadian d, Big changes are 1€ all y y Ine f ddubtfui lln A € the re: dvL mIY he t t J€ THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO Weather Ranging from 31 Above to 12 Degrees Below Chidren 5 yeéars and Under 12 Half Fare. Information and Tickets from All Agents, T. N. O,. Rly. nd PEMBROKE oOTTAW A MONTRE AL QUEBEC CITY AND RETURN GOING Thursday, Feb. 21 Canadian Pacific Tickets good in Coaches only Baggage Checked Viontreal D in, Sunday ; 24th ind to. 120 10â€":0. iA V | TELLS EXPERIENCE â€" BEFORE A NOTARY There seems to be no end to the forms that "rackets‘" take and th: genuity shown by the racketeet planning new schemes to separate ple from their money,. It is : particularly regrettable that p with cleverness encugh to some of the rackets should not their thoughts to honest tin help others instead of using ginality simply to defraud. one of the dlatest fraud Oone of the dlatest frauds reported from Toronto is in regard to a scheme to take $125.00 from jobless m:en 6i the idea of providing them with jobs fishing through the ice on James Bay. The scheme was upset throughout the coâ€"operation of the Employment Serâ€" vice of Canada and the Ontario Seâ€" curities Commission. In this matter the Employment Service bureau has again proved its outstanding value. The investigation which led to the upsetting of the James Bay fish racket developed from a complaint made by an unemployed man who had answerâ€" ed an advertisement which promised men on profit of between $800.00 and $1000.00 before spring in return for what was mentioned as an "honest investment." If the investment were "hqnest," the scheme did ncot appear "fair‘" and ‘"‘square." ‘The money was to be used for the purchase of four gill nets for fishing through the ice on James Bay, For the nets and other tmed a great many laxa most of them too vio started taking Fruitâ€"aâ€"t short tinl\e my health| lr)ec roved. I now eeJO) ife : »efore I learned about Cony of Mrs. Aubry‘s and 50¢ EVERYWHERE \Attempt to Get $125.00 Each from Jobless in Toronto on Plea of Jobs Fishing Through Icee. itatement how her health. St years of poor I se sure of its tr experience under oath. roubled for vea M K bowels did I had no appe was difficult fo aking a Racket of James Bay Fishing 06 violent. ruitâ€"aâ€"tives th dizzy headaches function regulariy I had no sleep. J to do my work. | s to separate peoâ€" ney. It is often ible that people ugh to think up should not turn nest times and so f using their oriâ€" aime greatly it auch more th; alleged expenses $125.00 was asked from each applicant. Those taking up the plan were to receive four cents a pound for their catches and $4.00 a week for board, but they were to proâ€" vide their own transportation and outâ€" fits. The investigatiOn showed that the comnanv making the offer had no the CC Domit tion t vide their own transportation and outâ€" fits. The investigatiOn showed that the company making the offer had no Dominion license and all the informaâ€" tion the company could give as to the possible catches was what they had found in a government report of 21 vears ago. The Securitiee Commission made it absolutely clear that the scheme must not be carried further as it wias impractical and unprofitable for all except those who were in the originâ€" al plan that had been advertised. It is said that more than four hundred replies had «been received but that those in the game were not allowed to retain any of the money received. The racket was discovered before the money fSunid in vears agC made it scheme n Colebrate Twelfth Anniversar; THURSsDAY. FEBRUARY 14TH, 1 who thel the idea the to the p In the will save others b Miss Pearl Hart, of Cannington, sisâ€" tor of Mrs. Gzgo. 8. Drew, returned home on Friday after a month‘s visit in Timâ€" mins. ike the lovmen arted migh r mon! chanc uUIrI he l’rMO 14. .50 to flow in so the trusting people ght have been induced to put oney in the venture were saved nce of loss. It would be a good all cases of this kind, where reâ€" made for money to be invested n for profitable employment to e question up first with the Emâ€" at Service of Canada or with ce. In the case of any legimitâ€" x the firm concerned will have ction to explaining the matter police or to the crown attorngy. case of "rackets," the people e their own money and that of by directing the matter to the Model 54 Price $69.90 H m Mi