Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 29 Aug 1935, 2, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Didn‘t Like it When the Lady Handed Him a Rose ASKED BUTCHER FOR AN OPTICAL DEMONSTRATION A}M man e QOTrLll Apply at Room $2000 and up on Private Residences Up to $10,000 or more on Downâ€" town Business Properties For a demonstration, phone your dealer SELECT FROM 16 SPECTACULAR NEW 1936 PHILCOSâ€"$42â€"59 i:, $9 5.00 P4] Pj iply at Room 12, Dominion Dollar Store Bldg. Phone 840 for Information and Appointment INTEREST LOWER THAN PREVAILING RATES GENEROUS TRADEâ€"IN ALLOWANCE AND EASIEST TERMS AT ALL PHILCO DEALERS For First Mortgages CUTTENâ€"FOSTER SONS;, LIMITED new fullness an , WAQ iives upstairs came down to watch a little. lWV ALITS YÂ¥OLu 31 SL WEECEK : â€" Hudson â€" Bay ashing, being a use, as well as of a boarding NEW PHILCO 36108 $59.95 M â€" P Complete with Philco Allâ€"wave Acrial s85.95 1mnp phone your dealer or the Philco distributor : PHILCO DISTRIBUTORs I don‘ scal ns a 1€ richnt N invention which make possible qusried, "They did go right neighbour of the belli ‘"Well, they can all His Worship said, "t missed. The blame is a as the other." {ering, it transpired. give Charlie a rose : in a pot and she â€" bother removing th nothing" girl was Je Then a neighbout separated the comb refsres cCcaught her Kincardine Revic may have a means TORONXTO it as he Jennic Syrlju wea 16 VE GG naturalness and reaiisin »grams reach you with an ecause of sensational new AK p washit Ither cor anning range! Ask you new 1936 modelsâ€": Lilli UE t ren the aught harlic nnic NEW PHILCO 3s630%x â€" s119.50 th WA they ned Complete with Philco Allâ€" Acsrial $125.50 1A ] AI )f puttin Nt hi ba in much 11 na AlIY 1€ th An pial but dami rit @ C © | © | | quickly disappears when the Liver and Kidneys are aroused by Drâ€"CHASE‘S K6.L.PILLS: eP MHeéLl Â¥} tor: in effect e Control #L1r es 1I The fi1 heed these voices. mic situation of moment well calâ€" h ground for the reding of those i Europe brought n of individual )arliamentary inâ€" n of responsible establishment of s, Thoreoo are ol TC nized groups and noti too t in no counâ€" s and for its 1e subject of in full: d of late in n Canada of it. Exâ€"service JU WIll ibmit â€"RUuSS1g, case hisâ€" element t patrioâ€" Minority YI demorâ€" install iunist:C washed water. LYT word tribut THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, oONTARtO to "Another local lad saw opporunity in his own back yard ten years ago. He had made a hobby of trapping and he got the idea of starting a mink ranch. At the end of ten years he has one of the best mink ranches in Canada. Last year he and his brotherâ€"inâ€"law, who also went into the minkâ€"ranching busiâ€" ness, sold oneâ€"third of the highest price minks on the Montreal Market,. This Spring he completed® a four years‘ course at Ontario Agricuiltural College, 10n ind Th money into it. It was a place to live. Work was scarce here, no jobs to be had. He found odd jubs around town and in his spare time fixed up his home, putting in a new heating sysâ€" tem and constantly adding to its atâ€" tractiveness. He managed somehow to keep the wolf from the dJsor. And now at the end of four years he has a splendid home ll paid for and a perâ€" manent job. He has also a sense of security. He wouldn‘t go back to the city. , "A local young man felt the urge to go to the city some years ago. He earned big money as a mechanic. Livâ€" ing costs were high but he saved a little out of every pay. Hard times came. He saw ahead the prospect of being| laid off work. He realized that his| money would only last a year or so. « What to do about it He said, I an arise and go back to my home town.) ba He came and heard of a chance to buy a snug home cheap. He put most of his money into it. It was a place to live. Work was scarce here, no jobs to be hnad.. He, found odd..jubs aroundl C I'U _ _"St., Marys stone was a drug on the market up to a féw years ago when a farâ€"seeing gentleman conceived the idea of turning it into cement. The result has been an industry anâ€" nual turnover runs into millions of dolâ€" lars and which has added tremendously to the prosperity of this town. "In a nearby community a young man was nearly down and out physically. He could not walk and only got around in a wheeled chair. He appeared to be in an utterly helpless condition. This man conceived the idea of carrying on a business college. He did so and it succeeded. He added branches. Today he is also superintendent of a Sunday School, still wheeling around in his chair. at home if they are observant enough to see them. As a matter of fact, in many lines of effort the leading men of the continent live in towns no larger than St. Marys. "One lesson that the depression has taught many ruralites is that they do not need to go to the city to seek their fortune. There are opportunities right There should be more than passing interest at the present time, and under the present conditions, in the followâ€" ing editorial in the last issue of The St. Mary‘s Journalâ€"Argus:â€" Opportunities Presented in Rural Communities "Do you remember when Ladysmith was relieved?" etc., etc., will be the chief topics of the evening. There are only about 30 veterans of the South African war in this North Land and it ambitious to the extent of countenancâ€" ing the usurpation of power." "Do You Remember When?" Perhaps you don‘t! Well it won‘t matter much if you do! There will be many interested in what the above ramble is all about. The answer will be forthcomingâ€"when the Timmins branch entertain the South African veterans in the Legion hall on Septeinâ€" ber 28th. "Canadian exâ€"servicemen would be fools to barter their individual liberty for the shackles of distatorship ana they would be traitors to the memory of Fallen Comrades if they succumbed to the honeyed words of the politically ambitious to the extent of countenanceâ€" "These are lessons enough,. However distressing conditions are in Canada, the path of remedy lies along strictly constitutional and orderly action, and emphatically not by the slavish imitaâ€" tion of peoples who had never enjoyed responsible government as we know it and to whom freedom of political thought was never more than a chiâ€" mera. paws to pul fire, the lea ditched the been served 1€ In other words veterans Â¥s to pull thei: ders C them. o1 â€"â€"W. A. Devinge, BOXx 1428 ans int heir che *s of the year or so. Chop and He said, I an hour and se Vvarious heir purp« A C f the isms‘® had Detroit News: Il Duce rule that Italians must « lantic in Italian boats. Columbus will not be aff« is not retroactive. Toronto Star:â€"It apy mosquito can keep in the hours without reâ€"fueling quitoes we encounter mu the ground staff. Unripe Cucumber Picke (Gherkin) Wipe four quarts of small unripe cuâ€" cumbers. Put in a stone yar and add 1 cup of salt dissolved in two quarts of boiling water and let stand three days. Drain the cucumbers from the brine, bring the brine to boiling point, pour over cucumbers and again let stand three days, repeat. Drain, wipe the cuâ€" cumbers and pour over I gallon of boilâ€" ing water in which 1 tablespoon of alum has been dissolved. Cook the cucumâ€" bers ten minutes, a few at a time, in a quarter of the following mixture, heatâ€" ed to the boiling point, and boil ten minutes. Strain remaining liquid ov pickles which have been put in jJar. There are many and varied recipes but the following are examples of the three classes of pickles and have been tested in the kitchen at the Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa. | Sweet Pickled Fruit Peaches, pears, sweet apples, crabâ€" apples, etc. 1 peck prepared fruit 1 quart vinegar 1 cup water 2 cqunces stick cinnamon 1 cunce cloves 4 pounds sugar Boil the sugar, vinegar and spices 20 minutes. Dip the peaches in boiling water and rub off the fur but do not peel the pears and apples. The crabâ€" apples may be pickled with the skins on. Stick the fruit with whole cloves. Put into syrup and cook until soft, using a quarter, or half of tne fruit at a time. 124 tomatoes 6 apples 1 bunch celery 2 red peppers 1 3â€"4 cups brown sugar 4 tablespoons mixed whole spices tied in a cheesecloth bag 2 onions 2 green peppers 3 cups vinegar 1 tablespoon salt Chop and mix all together and boil The only Furrier in the Porcuâ€" pine district doing fully guaranâ€" teed work on the premises sour pickles, which include mustard pickles; that large variety of pickle in which the ingredients are chopped fineâ€" ly. There are three main classes pickles: sweet fruit or vegetable pickle The preservation of food with salt or vinegar, either with or without the [ addition of spices or sugar is commonly known as pickling. The preéedominating flavour determines the kind of pickle, scur pickle, sweet pickle or spiced pickle. Green or slightly unripe fruits and vegetables are generally used. The vinegar used must be of sufficient strength to exert a preservative action, writes Lilian Heney of the Central Exâ€" perimental Farm, Ottawa, and ther» must be enough of it to cover the maâ€" terial pickled. Pickles have little food value but they make a meal more palatâ€" able. They should never be given to children. Only porcelainâ€"lined or graniteware kettles should be used when cooking pickles. Acid will attack metal utensiis, so they should not be used. A granite Choosing the Fruit or Vegeâ€" table for Pickling. Kettles to Use. Other Hints and Advice. Recipes and Hints on Making Pickles No blind man could possibly make a success of the bee business! But that is just what Harold Webb of Allandale has done. During the progress of the Canadian National Exhibition in Torâ€" onto this year, Mr. Webb will demonâ€" strate how he does it. He will occupy booth in the exhibit of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind. In the large space occupied by this exhibit in the Electrical and Enginsering Building, the various types of work enâ€" gaged in by blind men and women in Canada will be demonstrated. gallon vinegar red peppers tablespoons allspice tablespoons cloves sticks cinnamon anC Blind Bee Keeper to be at Toronto Exhihition pti and Ladies‘ Wear 2 EMPIRE BLOCK Expert Furriers bottle Chili Sauce x all together and boil half. Remove the spice the pickles at once. Il Duce la must cro: boats. C be affecte uce lays down a t cross the Atâ€" ts. _ iffected as same ippears that the air fourtten ing. The mosâ€" nust be part of Timmins e C%)\ 11th Annual Exhibition "/‘J,\"-?‘ . P Timmins 004 wOI pom the OWIt der are 11 why 1 for tal clo 1Mm poli n it still. of her 1 all that about h the desi motners s or 16 is m about bea to keep I YÂ¥ou may I¢ The simple ids USs sponst hea mpie: At 14 râ€"he od o1 Th And Monday and Tuesday September 2" and 3" no the um 1€ Every high school ltoilet articles, an Horticultural Society Sale of Flowers and Vegetables by Auction on Tuesday Evening Timmins Citizens‘ Band in attendance Monday Evening Porcupine District Pipe Band in attendance Tuesday Evening 11 I lo it E BEAQUFDL simple F A M O U Bc BEAUTIFUL Opening Address by His Worship Mayor Richardson Admission : Free sSCHOOL GRADUATES WILL THRILL TO A BEAUTY 11 AMU school graduate will thrill to a gift of beauty. Their very own es, an atomizer, eau de cologne, a handsOme mirror, ANNE sHIRLEY poses while using her favorite atomizer up when This desire for b eauty Aids irket â€" all h bath : Monday Evening at 8 o‘clock h mi and most complete exhibition of l Vegetables north of Torontd she ‘does think ‘on‘t even have If looking wellâ€" rouble is, that means a lot of ki1 is well. table of ki p h her don ‘ market ng, keer (without ot a Jar ‘ sachet perfumso her hair r clothes 0 young , or bath ind wash initials. aids but vell. And e of her y, the reâ€" born with of powâ€" i Very Biu P many beauty _ more . mi€ at the hinyv iking want 16. 16. rally 1M with must }at: ep V nt 14 St. Thomas in the United a human icicle many "human are not on dic 000 miles travelled. That means 10,000 cars with an average trip of 400 miles each. That is really not too high an average per trip because many of the license plates carry the names of Caliâ€" fornia and Florida and Texas, and they all go up the North Bay highway for the express purpose of seeing the babies. The young sirens of Callander are certainly "doing their stuff." At latest computations they were luring tourists off the beaten path at the rate of 10,â€" 000 cars a month. Every time the smiling Quintuplets are held up to the gaze of the curious throng beyond the wire fence which surrounds the Dionne hospital, it means that the fame of the youngsters spreads still further abroad and more and more tourists may be expected. It means money for the Proâ€" vincial Treasury, too, if the estimate is correct that nearly $12,000 a month in gasoline taxes is being paid by visitors to the Quintuplets‘ home. Then 200,000 gallons of gasoline are being consumed in that period, or an estimate of 4,000,â€" 000 miles travelled. That means 10,000 Most girls in their teens need a tonic and reguâ€" * 3# lator. Give your | % daughter Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegeâ€" # table Compound for the next few 3. months. Teach $# ,.,** her how to guard §#%*% _ ; her health at this critical time. When sbe is a happy, healthy wife and mother she will thank you. Sold at all good drug stores. Ten Thousand Cars a Month Calling to See Quintuplets WHEN YOUR DAUGHTER COMES TO WOMANKOOD those for the hig We think not. FPa them. T‘ry and see (Copyright, 1935, ydia E. Pinkh Veget:ble Conq;oam us C IDcunct â€" tiak Times: There is a man States trying to become by rigid diet. There are iclles" in the world who high school graduate? Pact is, she‘ll thrill to by the Bell Syndiâ€" t

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy