Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 13 Apr 1936, 1, p. 2

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The girl today, however, can make a chiffon pie in half a twinkle. For pasâ€" try she may use plain paste for a baked pie shell, or she may use another moâ€" dern recipe for a crecker, cornflake or nut pastry. This latter typ> of pastry is not only quick but foolproof. Most of the fillings, whatever flavour is used, are all madse very much the same way. Gelatin is soaked in cold water, the egg yolks are beaten and cooked with the sugar and flavouring over boiling witer until the mixture js thick. Then the softened gelatin is added, the mixture is cooled and the egg whites are folded in. Some recipes call for only egg whites or whipped cream instead of whole eggs. After the fillings have been made they are poured into pans, lined with pastry and chilled in the refrigerator. Whipped cream flavoured accordingâ€"to the mixture, may be piled on the top. which may be also garnished with cut nuts, shredded coccanut or fruit. Chocolate Chiffon Pie 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin. "I am looking for the girl who can make a good chiffion pie," announced a young man not long ago in my hearâ€" ing. That is modern. Once upon a time, you remember it was: "Can she make a cherry pie, Billy Boy, Billy Boy." And the answer was, "She can make a chetry pie in the twinkle of an eye," Young Man Looking for Girl to Make Cherry Pie Girl of Toâ€"day can Make a Chiffon Pie in Half a Twinkle, “‘ Says Culinary Expert, who Gives the Recipes for ; h Several Samples that Sound Good. en PAGE Tw O ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION PAYS FOR ITSELFE ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION simplifies W ork in the kitchen, too‘! Only a woman who does her own homeâ€"keeping can fully appreciate the mamnifold advantages of electric refrigeration. Her first concern, of course, is with the health and comfort of her family. The baby‘s foods are kept fresh easily in the electric baby‘s refrige takes a defin m Ned . is . t e ts ds d e ut A\vaav Noh ols us like a miracle. No spo refrigerators. Foods are the gleaming white po vegetables, fruits, dessert use. Everythina tidyv, com Canada Northern Power Corporation THE GEORGE TAYLOR HARDWARE LIMITED (By Edith M. Bat Branche L i m i t e d Controlling and operating NORTHERNX ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERNX QOUEBEC POWER COMPAXY LIMITED Refrigerators Washers Electric Appliances _ Radios Phone 300 For Repairs to New Liskeard, Swastika, Kirkland Lake Timmins, Ont.. Noranda, Que. 1 tablespson grated lemon rind Soak gelatin in cold water five minâ€" utes. Add half the sugar, lemon juice and salt to the beaten egg yolks and cook over koiling water until of cusâ€" tard consistency. To this mixture, add the grated lemon rind and the softenâ€" ed gelatin and stir well. Csol. When mixture ‘begins to thicken,, fold in stiffly beaten egg whites to which the remaining sugar has been added. Fill baked pie shell and chill. Just before serving spread a thin layer of whipped cream over the pie. vanilia and as thicken, fold i Fill a baked pic and chill. Befo whippqd cream minutes, Maik: chozsolate .hot r softened gelatit ing thoroughly. cup crearm the ; utes. Ma Inc cup qua Make not m 1936, by The Bell Syndiâ€" in in in the water five a sirup of the sugar, k and salt. Add the to this mixture, stirrâ€" Allow to cool, add the ho mixture begins to the whipped cream. hell with this mixturs serving garnish with + "When the egg was discovered, it was believed to be a doubleâ€"yoked one, similar to those occasionally laid by hens of various breeds, it was larger than any that the owner of the bird had ever seen. It weighsd six cunces and measured nine inches around the long way. In replacing it in a paper bag, Mr. Hurteau accidentally cracked the shell and when he went home he found that there was another largeâ€"sized egg inside. The inside one was complete, with a good firm shell, but it is of the brown variety, while the couter shell was white. A quantity of ordinary ‘white of egg‘ separated the shells." Correspondence was read in regard to the Iroquois Falls and District Rod and Gun Club‘s efforts to secure a shipment of elk to be placed in the Abiâ€" tibi preserve. It was stated by the deâ€" partment that if there was sufficient increase in the herd of elk at Burwash this coming summer, a carload of elk would be forwarded to TIroquois Palls for the purpose noted. Other matters were discussed at the meeting and the secretary was instructâ€" ed to secure information concerning the Michigan Game Commission, in order to be able to intelligently discuss the resolution of the Ontario Federation of Anglers that a similar politicsâ€"free, permanent commission be established in Ontario. glet ng lers "A freak of nature, in the shape of an egg with two shells, was shown to The Haileyburian this week by A. Hurâ€" teau, who kseps a pen of barred rocks at his home west of the T. N. O. Railway," says The Halileybury newsâ€" paper, continuing:â€" gg with Two Shells the Latest Freak at Haileybury There were several items of imporâ€" tance at a mesting last week of the Iroâ€" quois Palls and District Rog and Gun Club. One of these items was the anâ€" nountement of the appointment of P. J. Conway as Ooverseer for the Game and FPisheries Department, in succession to Fd. Olayson. Mr. Conway was prcâ€" sent at the meeting and the club exâ€" pressed its goodwill to him and ofâ€" [roquois Falls Rod and Gun %}ltlltb Seeking Shipment of wb New Game Overseer for Abitibi Region Milk for Baby ense discussed at a recent meet he Ontario Federation of Ang Refrigerated Flies Here‘s efficiency for yor. A man who raised mushrooms, in manure "soil," was very much troubled by the flies that hatched out from the heated manâ€" ure. A friengq designed a system by which the air in the mushroom baseâ€" ment, and the flies too, were passed over refrigerator coils. Instead of wastâ€" ing the bodies y throwing them into a fire, the mushroom grower canned them and now ships them to another friend who raises frogs and who can use flies by the thousand for frog food. The West Is No Desert There‘s plenty of talk thesse days about the Canadian and American West becoming one vast desert. This cannot happen, says Dr. J. W. Humphreys of the United States Weather Bureau, usually a most reliable source of inâ€" formation. The making of a desert would call for a complete change of climate, such as that occasioned by the withdrawing of the glaciers over Eurâ€" ope that left the Sahara as a result. The dust storms of the West may be expected to subside, the scientist claims, through the next fsw years, and the government aid of planting tree belts will help things along. The dust storms have occurred mefore, he says, and will occur again. Mail and Empire â€" It is announced that alcohol may be useful in treating certain kinds of pneumonia. We were confident that sooner or later some use for it would be discovered. lengths, legally, too. ship to shore radio t nication may be in : time; and the busine modern shiv with the ried at the same time Dam on t niling upâ€" Self Heating Canned Food It‘s supposed to be for the airways, but probably bachelors will make use of this invention. The food is in a douj)le can. The space between is diâ€" vided into two parts, one for water ard the other for unslaked lime. Punch a hole so that the water gets into the lime and prestoâ€"the food in the can begins to warm. says. The apparatus, which weighs about 75 pounds, is now on the market and it expected to ‘be popular not only in cities where frequent garbage collecâ€" tion is a problem but also in the smallâ€" er towns where there is sometimes no collection at all. Artificial Fever Uscful New methods of producing temperaâ€" tures of 105 degrees in patients are being qeveloped every day and the useâ€" fulness of the treatment is becoming more and more widely recognized. In both Canada and the United States temperatures of patients are sometimes k®pt at the 105 mark for as long as five hours. The theory is that the germs causing a disease cannot live in such heat. Demolition of the old Salvation Army citadel cn Fourth avenue was begun last week to make way for a further addition to the Empire hotel. The work proceeded rapidly and is now alâ€" most complete. The newest part of the Empire will house a convention hall on the lower floor, it is understood, which can be used for dances and banquets alike. Collected by Shakes Five minutes work by a quarter horse power motor will grind all the kitchen garbags, except tin cans and (sottles, so that it can be flushed down the kitchen sink, a recent American patent claim Addition to Empire Hotel to Replace Old S.A. Hall t that po adjustmen: aIm "sSshorts" from the Science of the Day THE LENSES FOR YOUR EYES MUST BE RIGHT HALPERIN OPTICAL PARLOUR ip of n add Evenings by Appointment EYESIGHT SPECIALIST we recommend Orthogons, the wideâ€"vision lenses that give you perfect correction. T is not enough that your eyes be carefully examined and that the exact correction required be determined. The lenses placed before your eyes must carry out that corâ€" rection exactly. Thet is why 7 Pine Street North HALPERIN‘S Jewelry Store 16 CcruUs BT: Boulder Dam Located in Phone 212 Dellfve tha have to be made it before long. iG of e acerial sy the mill building. While the time of the damage done could not be definitely fixed, the police learned that it was prcbhably ‘between dusk and 11 o‘clock. The offics and mill have not been in use for a considerable perioq and there is no watchman. Should there ie anyâ€" lone who was passing during the eveâ€" ning who noticed anything out of the ordinary going on, a word to the offiâ€" cers would be appreciated, as little or nothing in the way of clues was left. The same evening there were several panes of glass broken in the Allard service station, at the northern limit of \Haileybury, and the police are of the |opinion that the same parties may have |been responsible for the damage at both places." ' "The officers found that a glass in the gqoor had been shattered in order !to gain ingress to the small structure and before the marauders left a typeâ€" writer had been smashed, the telephons instrument torn from the wall and broken, every pane of glass in the winâ€" dows broken and some of the window sash, filing cabinets ard other furniâ€" ture upset and their contents strewn arcund and the place generally wrecked. A hand fire extinguisher and aq garden those with a steel handle, apparently |used as wrecking tools during the depreâ€" dations, had been carried across the !roag and thrown through a window of March 8, when the provincial police had turned over a case to him to inâ€" vestigate in Neelon township. At that time, Couture had asked him about the reward for informing on a person having a still illegally, and had been told that it was $25. South Porcupine. Ont., April 8th, 1936. Special to The Advanse, Dear Sir:â€"Your South End corresâ€" pondent indites this simple ode to chronicle a shakingâ€"up on the South Endâ€"Timmins road. ‘"One of the most despicable episodes I‘ve had before me in a long time," was the way Magistrate J. S. McKessock at Sudbury last week characterized the case of Napoleon Couture and Emile Herbert, of Neelon township, whom he convicted of having an illegal still in their posssssion, for which they were fined $125 ang costs. The pair had planted the still in the barn of a neighbour, Charles McGowâ€" an, and then informed RCM.P. officers for the i$25 reward offered in such cases. McGowan and Couture had had a disâ€" pute over wood some time previously, and it was surmised Couture was also motivated in his attempt to "frame" McGowan by a desire for revenge. stabbed himself while in a state of mental depression. No serious reasons have peen found for his action. The man himself during his illness at the hospital maintained that he did not know why he attempted suicide, but that he "had not been fesling good." In a recent issue The Advance reâ€" ferred to the case of Joseph Kowalski, a settler living near Cochrane, who was brought to the Lady Minto hospital in that town a little over three weeks ago, after having stabbed himself in the abdomen. Doubt was expressed as to the chances of recovery for the man, and a week ago Kowalski passeq away. Last week Coroner E. R. Tucker investigated the case and a jury inquest was conâ€" sidered unnecessary. It seemed to be established that Kowalski delibperately Plant Still Settler Near Cochrane Dies from Knife Wounds Vancouver‘s playful sea serpent, rival of the Loch Ness "animal" and the monster of the Okanagan Lakes, is back for the jubiles celebration at Vanâ€" ccuver, it‘s been said. Referring to a case of apparently senseless destruction recently at the cld pulp mill near Haileybury, The Haileyburian last week says:â€""Destrucâ€" tion, pure and simple, appeared to be the desire of a party or partiese who into the office of the Canada Northern Power Corporation, at the pulp mill on the Lake Shore road, sometime on Saturday night last, acâ€" cording to provincial police officers at headquarters here, who investigated. There did not appear to be anything missing from the luilding, but there was practically nothing moveable left untouched and the damagses will run untouched and the damags will into some hundreds of dollars, it estimated. This time the coils of were seen by three fisher sionals). Police Court News The charge was one of speeding and the magistrate looked grim. The culprit saw by his worship‘s face that things looked bad for him. "How fas: was defendant driving?â€"at twentyâ€"five or so?" "Your honor, he went at thirty, you should have seen him go!" "This crime occurred on the Timmins road?" "Yes, sir," the chief replied. "Your chargeâ€"sheet‘s wrong," said the magistrateâ€""Attemnted suicide!" Senseless Destruction in Haileybury Distric VANCCUVER GETS Magistriate, the Poet Sugâ€" gests, Considered t h e Crime Sheet was Wrong. Yard to S SEA SERPENT IX THE sSWIM AGAIN re‘seen him go!" ceurred on the Timmins s, sir," the chief replied. sheet‘s wrong," said the â€""Attempted suicide!" in Neighbor‘s Get $25 Reward iIs of the serpent fishermen (profesâ€" has D6 irom it which enab On the ott erage individ may do some Clan S so anx10] young or oldâ€"in The patient is 1 feels that if he arcund his appet bowels would ac regain his strens Now this would not for one im bodyâ€"the heart. various al tierts rem that they as most 2 definite c patient is the sctne D the most pa Iot, though in the way motor cars offenders a fort to avol hose. pend upon the 6 minut 1rom from the sure was Building able to through . Oakum between the build smoke th difficult. either on By James W. Barton, M.D., Toronto Why the Patient Should Remain in Bed During an HMiness Perhaps vou wondsr why the physiâ€" cpen nearb throu Altsrations bath buildin following a the same fur morning furnace r the interi stckedq ha the after Niemi. cp Damage of $1000 by Fiwe at Steam Baths woOomen ) i he h hat c zoo0od Work of Firemen Averted a More Serious Fire on Saturday. pY do PURITY FLOUR All 50 muC how t] J1I10nen 15 Te cwWwnEe Drivers Show Littl en uld Best for all your Baking Y ) Her: Ki 11 alime Ccourst 11 Purity Flour mcans real economy. It goes farther. Rich in nourishing gluten, it makes bread that rises right up out of the pansâ€"â€"and the most delicious biscuits, cakes, pies and fMlaky pastry ever baked! Il 1€ reC We damage nda, how )1 â€"~An optim i m made D ering rapidly and ld _get up and vould improve, the zsularly and would n much less time. be true if it were 1i mofrte or ver whether the )r not doesn‘t deâ€" disease as it does s to keep ut durin m 1 } of Pours WEre â€"given: 1 _that the» pa he chances ar N C Ebhat Bobdp 1i bui will be don ver,. the a~ Sens( UDOn )le di Drive 1€ moke 1€ wWwnen IL weakened ‘ ailment. 12e phys patientâ€" n illnes _ POoSs1D! ip befor Saturday m damage ling spacts part of ) heavy ers‘ job _ gon! Niem Ste hneart hnheart p up 6: > Mrs arm nen roml 11 ol m Oof 16 1€ 1€ Qu bla Timmins New Method Laundry Do Away With All Exam M.P.F 1€ . Mc palr C bear

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