Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 11 Mar 1935, 1, p. 5

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The many lectures and writton arâ€" ticles preaching feminine . loveliness have not been in vain. Originally the beauty concept seems to reduce itseif merely to physical perfection, or even less than that, to symmetry Cf features. That standard has been radically changed. Features are now regarded as far, far less important that the effect of loveliness which perfect grooming gives. Effect on Others Now the matter of perfect grooming is being taken pretty much for grantâ€" ed. Every thorcughly "nice" woman is expected to keep her hair polished, neatly coiffed, hoz skin clear and smooth, her makeâ€"up flawless, is expectâ€" ed to devots the maximum possible time to the little details that go such a big way in creating a perfect appearâ€" ance. Now more is expected of the modern woman. She is expected to be a charming, gracious, graceful perâ€" son. Charm . . . charm . . . personalâ€" ity ... poise ... . we hear so much of them these days. We‘re learning, we‘re lsarning. We‘re making progress, We‘re getting there. Getting where? Nearer and nearer to the beauty goal. But, stop a minuté, just what is the beauty goal, you ask? No sooner do we attempt to reach it, or seem to be getting near it than it shifts to a higher pcsition in the beauâ€" ty horizon. And it keeps us stretched up on our beauty tCes all the time, making grander and grander ladies of uUSs. One reason why it is more difficult to cultivate charm than to he perfectâ€" ly grcomed is because charm is a more abstract quality. You can‘t put your finger on it. It is made up of so many things. Perhaps the nearest definition of it is one‘s effect on other people, ‘True, some may think more of you, cr respond more spontancously to you than others, but for the most part you t DPA A AG P AP P P AP P P P AP C ME CONCHITO MONTENEGRO has . tA Sn Bs . ts c eR OB T 224 4. of assurancc.'con_fidence is enhanced by the knewledge that her hat is striking. Her suit with its ruffied fur collar and long black gloves are smart accessories. 1935 BEAUTY STANDARDS CALL FOR CHARM As A FACTOR This coupon, if presented at The Clarridge Hairdressing Salon 66 Third Avenue, within two weeks will give you $1.00 off Permanent Wave. CORN STARCH THE CLARRIDGE SPECIAL OFFER Frigidine Wave $7.50 Product of the St. Lawrence Starch C Over Feldman‘s Store 66 Third Ave. e BEAUTIFEUL Guaranteed to your completc satisfaction. _ All experienced operators, Miss Evelyn Church, Miss Viesti Tynjala and Mr. G. 8. Clarridge. Have you Tried? Hairdressing Salon By ELSIE PIERCE personality and charm plus ‘+and 1Ives Dominion ada notes l short tim impress people the same wayâ€"the way [ you walk, the way you talk, the quality "of your voice, the grace of your gesâ€" | tures, your ability to se a gcod listenâ€" er. to. do things easily, smoothly; all these details and more govern charm. _ _One‘s posture is a tangible thing, and lit's part of charm. So do check up on your posture and improve it. Your mannerisms, your spsech are other facâ€" tors. Avoid grammatical errors, exâ€" tremes in slang expressions, repetition cf such phrases as "you know what I mean" at the end of every other senâ€" tence. They stamp you, blur you, they detract from _ charm. Poise is another important factor. _ Seifâ€"confidence, by all means, assurance too, but ni; selfâ€" centeredness or a cockâ€"sure attitude. (Ccpyright 1935, by the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Intc.) impress peopie LN you walk, the way of your voice, th tures, your ability New Bank of Canada Begins Operations Started This Morning. Doâ€" minion of Canada Notes to be Replaced by New Smallâ€"size Bills. This morning the Bank of Canada begins operations. Orders have been issued from Ottawa calling in all Doâ€" minion of Canada notes for replaceâ€" ment with the new small size Bank of Canada bills. InC of tae on at presen! notes, the should b Phone c one dollar bills, twos sent in circulation are the new Bank of Canâ€" d begin to make their Timmins within a very Want Advertisements Her air Canada‘s Eskimos (ar way the Canadian gov the word, not Esquimau come a race of the past the government can help l We need those native: Otherwise that land, 0o useless, but now the mec pector, will become alm the Canadian who dare .trozen "wastes." Men I the Arctic without their and the development of â€" Territcries would be re| | erations if the Eskimos s | ed to die off. "The Department ¢of the Interior ha accmoplished much in the way of proâ€" viding medical care and regular inspec tion of the Eskimos, the setting aside 0 wild life preserves for native use, an{ the establishment of permanent staâ€" in the ‘Arctic Archipelago froir which regular patrols are made by Rcyal Canadian MCunted Police," say: a government report. The Eskimo pecple are quick to lea.: the ways of the white man. Many 0 them cwn their own gasoline drive: boats now and have a shrewd idea 0 the value of their furs. No longer ar: a few beads or a packet of tobacc encugh to part an Eskimo from his har earned catch. He uses a highâ€"powere: rifle when cut on the hunt. ‘The government hopes the cha from centuriesâ€"old Eskimso ways to m ern Canadian ways will not be too f They are prepared to help the Esk in every way they can, but whet their efforts will be successful is a st that won‘t be told for many years come. So the government is setting u; elaborate system of safeguarding Eskimo from extinction. Aeropl play an important part in this, shculd an epidemic ‘break Out amo the natives, supplies and medical tention can be rushed in immedia Lonely wireless stations, scattered a the Arctic ccast, will give warnin disease. The permanent homes iqaca is ground swi#ftly and toâ€"day, the igloo is giving way to a house â€" gramcphones and radios are their appearance. Wealthy even have gasoline engints dynamos which supply electric for lighting the long Arctic "It is generally realized that the of the Eskimos will be invaluable t development of whatever resource North holds." says an article or subject in the Canada year boc 1931. Mail order catalogues ar krown and the aeroplane ha: familiar sight as well, as a us of quick conveyance to them. If what the department considers be true is really a factâ€"that the fat the far NOorth hangs on the ability the Eskimo to endure the half consi ated changeâ€"then no sum ¢f mo within reason and no amount of w within possibility is too much to sp on the "saving." They do suffer from disea never knew before the comin white man. The common col enza and pneumonia were | within Canada‘s strip of th circle before the furâ€"traders their ships. Now they have disease"‘ in the summer when steamers get to port. It is si aggravated cold, brought to white men. A writer in a London, England, m gazine states that "the Canadian Esl mos are dying out." To support tl statement, he quctes a figure of 7,] as representing the number of Eskir in Canada in 1927. This informati was garnered from a careful survey the Eskimos made by the Royal Can dian Mounted Police in that year. T figure according to the census of 15 is 5,979â€"a difference Of over 1,0 which in a pcpulation of that size mt be considered a serious decrease. the figures are accurate, the Eskimo indeed dying off at an alarming rate But the Department of the Interi has not been idle in the past few yea eVn "The Whispering W Fitzgerald. (LOve anc "Converging Shadow gerald. (Strange thin old English castle.) "Farewell to Dreams bury. (An idyllic t; lish sisters, their dre lives.) "The Misty Pat! Riddell. (A Londot 5,000 pounds and fit ture in the spendin "No Other Gods," (Nevel of Saskatche "Glorious Thut Smith Ferguson. changes a girl‘s lif "The Lone Wolfe‘s La Louis Joseph Vance. La wellâ€"known writer, now and adventure.) Fiction Volumes ai the Public Labrary Adult fiction added public library within includes :â€" New Books Added to the Timmins Library During the Past ‘Week. Some Notes on the V olumes. Is the Eskimo a Passing Race? Byâ€" "Shakes are quickx to iea e man. Many _gasoline driv a shrewd idea ‘s. No longer a acket of tobac imo from his ha rda iT becom CA Eskim A 1 MU n Te ) Beautltul Garden 760 _ Feet Down in N.S. Mine THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Nowhere Else in the World is There a Similar Garden. Reâ€" markable Garden is a Mile Out Under the Atlantic Ocean 11 10CL. Turning off the roadw crderly. From the pit bottom the ty boarded a "riding rake" and were i conveyed a distance of a mile out er the ocean. Dismounting from conveyance, Mr. . Burden stated that rest of the jzsurney would be made of a long tunneiâ€"shaped passage, n this long passage that leads to enerator house, were met with a that must ‘oe seen to be appreciatâ€" The passage is 75 feet long and 12 One Look Suggests a ks ago The Advance made plants found growing unâ€" i the Frood mine and many ted in the item. Quite reâ€" Richards of the Timmins » had cccasion to search a desk and accidentally enâ€" clipping from an old newsâ€" Ialifax Herald. of July 16th, bing a wonderful underâ€" en in a mine in Cape Brcâ€" his garden makes the Frood nimportant. Also, it is of interest for its own sake. ‘r residents of Cape Breton ested in the clipping, while be read with attention by 5. The Halifax Herald acâ€" feet wid fo‘ct wal spread cn the rocky pavement ol TN mine, and lawn seed then spread on the loam. Rose bushés, dalhias, eleâ€" phant ears, pineapple plants and variâ€" cus other kinds were transported, and in a short time everything planted was blcoming. Powerful 1,000 candle powâ€" er lights supply an artificial sun for the garden, and the passage being on the path of the air intake for the mine, there is an even temperature Of air at all times in the place. Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald:â€"The chief attendant at the Ontario Hespital in Hamilton read in the newspaper that he had been suspended from duty. A man who has a position in the gift Of the government is taking great risks if he does not read the papers. mM1l 1€ "Farth of down in box Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Ltd. K WI On the generator house, which â€"shaped affair built in the are ts be seon on the shelves ho w 1B c( xes from the sSurilace, the rocky pavement of the lawn seed then spread on Rose bushés, dalhias, eleâ€" pineapple plants and variâ€" nighn V 00 volt rimenting The place M OTO BR 11 1 pro it li ontiac â€"Buickâ€"Oldsmobile wn to supply the e‘l>ectric and wWwNho is ry, conceived with flowers, A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE lected was t nerator hsuse electric lin> ers from th lom Ww a 11 was taken irface, and and D. me man growin f{ ow aid ou it T no th i€ Semiâ€"Weekly Review of News in General Edward Johnson, famous Canadian tenor, has been appointed assistant manager of the Metropolitan Opera, a despatch from New York states. Toronto school trustees have agreed to the city‘s request to cut the salaries of the teachers of the city schools. The raductions will be from 2 1â€"2 to 3 3â€"4 per cent. of the salaries. Attorneyâ€"General Rosbuck‘s proposal to have a director of police appointed for the purpose of exercising full conâ€" trol over all police forces in the event of a major crime, struck a snag in the Legislature last week when Opposition members voiced criticism of the measâ€" ure. Due to the lengthy discussion which ensued on the merits and deâ€" merits of the bill, second reading was not given. Faulty automobiles will be barred' from Manitoba highways if recomâ€"| mendations of a legislative committee are incorporated into the Highway Act. The committee last week urged all| vehicles be examined and receive ccrti-’ fication cof approval every three months before they can be operated. | Archbishon Tascual Diaz, primate O Mexico, was arrested last week by federal agents at Mexico City, the charges against him are said to from political activities. Definite intimation that the Hepburn Government has no intention of enilireâ€" ly "repudiating" the Hydroâ€"Quebec eccntracts was supplied by Hon. T. B. McQuesten, minister of highways, in the legislature debate last Thursday niglit. Both Liberals and Conservatives unit ed at Ottawa last week to help advant Canada‘s tourist traffic. A leading Labour paper in England last week blamed Italy for the rebellion in in Greece. Premier Hepburn is quoted as saying that if the Quebec power companiés do not agree to his proposals for revision of the contracts with the Hydro, he will have the contracts cancelled without reference to their legality. Items of Interest from Far and Near. Special Notes on Happenings of the Day 17 Pine St. N SPODE‘S "Rose Briar" . REMUS, Jeweller Lethbridge Herald:â€"In spite of the preference for coal and other fuels for heating purposes in ‘Canada, large amzunt of wood is still so used. The quantity used in normal years is estiâ€" mated at 913,000,000 cubic feet, or 9,â€" 611,223 cords. Fuelâ€"wood formed about 30 per cent. of the total amount Of wood cut in the Dominicn for all purâ€" poses. During the past two or three years there has ‘been a large increase in the amsunt of wood used for fuel. The United States post office authoriâ€" ties last week intercepted a parcel conâ€" taining a bomb addressed to the notoriâ€" ous Huev Long. Anthony Eden, Lord of the Privy Seal in the British Government, is to visit Moscow to discuss affairs of state with the members of the Soviet. The Provincial Government intends to investigate municipal government in Ontario with a view to a thorough funâ€" damental overhauling of the system, Premier Mitchell F. Hepburn announcâ€" ed Friday night at the dinner given by Toronto Liberal members of the legisâ€" lature at the Eglinton Hunt Club, for members of the cabinet, Toronto memâ€" bers in Opposition, members of city council, and civic officials. Without a doubt Noxâ€"aâ€"Pain Tabâ€" lets are the most wonderful little tablets known to kill pain. They act so quickly and do not leave any bad afterâ€"effects. FOR HEADACHE Generally cne or two tablets taken with a little warm water will stop the most severe headache in from three to five minutes. MENSTRUAL PAINS Taken at the beginning will save a lot. of. discomfort. and pain. TOOTHACHE Two or three tablets taken with warm ‘water will stop the most stubborn toothache in a few minutes. NOXxXâ€"Aâ€"PAIN Tablets are put up in three sizes 25¢., 50c¢c., and $1.00 A tine Cup and Saucer in j Rose Briar for For Sale aw the Goldfields Drug Store, Timimins, Ont. FOR â€" HEADACHE, â€" RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURALGIA, MONTHLY PAINS, SsTOMACH ACHE AND TOOTHACHE, Nox â€"aâ€" Pain A floral wreath design of charm and interest. The laintvy colour treatment of bright red, green, mauve ind orange painted under rlaze is particularly well adapted to the quaint is paArlicuiariy well ipted to the quaint ielsea Wicker‘" shape. Mr. Remus by buying Spode direct from Engâ€" land can offer remarkâ€" ably low prices; for ex«â€" ample: Phone 180

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