Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 1 Nov 1937, 2, p. 2

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Fortunately on account of the vacuum process used in canning, and because of its acid content, the valuâ€" able vitamins, A. B. G. and C are not affected by the cooking necessary durâ€" In its canned form, it has, however, become an allâ€"yearâ€"round staple. You may choose rings, fingers, diced: or crushed fruit, with or without extra sweetening. Pineapple juice in its naâ€" tural form, ‘or with extra sugar, has made a place for itself since it came on the market as a breakfast beverage and as an ingredient for punches and other mixed drinks. | Among these none is more important than the pineapple. Half a century ago this fruit appeared upon only luxurious tables in its whole fresh form. Toâ€"day we find it much more plentiful in its season and at a .comparatively low price. (By Edith M. Barber) Time and space have been conquered; to such an extent that toâ€"day we can call upon the tropics for certain fgods which make important contributions to our nutrition. Pineapple may be Used in Many Attractive Ways. More ,’ and More the are Su Tables on This Conâ€" | tinent with Deli as Well as Nutritious Foods, says Expert. ! Pineapple Juice in the Menus for Breakfast Canada Northen_a Power Corporation Limited This big, powerful, sevenâ€"pound capacity 4 (Py FJdith M. Barber) [â€"ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED 3 egg yolks 1 cup granulated sugar 3 tablespoons cold water 1 lemond rind, grated ‘2 tablespoons lemon juice ‘‘1 cup sifted flour 1% teaspoons baking powder 3 egg whites % cup butter 1 cup sugar _1 cup shredded pineapple Beatâ€"the egg yolks and sugar until verylight. Add the cold water, lemon and rind and juice and the flour sifted @gain with the baking powder. Fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites, pour into buttered cups ard steam threeâ€"quarters of an hour. Serve with the following sauce; Cream the butter with the reâ€" maining cup of sugar, add the shredded pineapple. (Copyright, 1937, by the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.) . The slightly astringent quality which is characteristic of pineapple makes it particularly good accessory to meat. especially ham, with which it contracts in such a way that each brings out the flavour of the other. j Orange and Pineapple Jam 4 cups citrus‘ and pineapple mixture. 7 cups sugar _ lkcup bottled fruit pectin Add grated rinds and juice of two oranges and two lemons to crushed pineapple. Measure fruit mixture into large kettle. Add sugar, mix and bring to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly. Boil hard one minute. Remove from fire. andâ€"stir in pectin. Stir for just fivei minutes to cool slightly. Pour quickly. Cover hot jam with film of hot parafâ€" fin; when jam is cold, cover with oneâ€" eighth inch of hot paraffin. Roll glass to spread paraffin on sides. Pineapple Sncwballs aAre becoming more ard more popular As it is realized that the natural sugar content contributes to flavour. ing the preparation. A worth while amount of phosphorus is also provided by pineapple. The natural sugar conâ€" tent makes it like other fruits, a source of energy. The unsweetened products s s â€"â€"_ S se e A | quiet but pretty wedding took place as Nutritious Foods, says im the Dnned cmuron on ns it |2 p.m. when Rev. W. M. Mustard unitâ€" the preparation. A worth while, ¢d in marriage Miss Loule Hawkin, of unt of phosphorus is also provided | Montreal, daughter of the late Mr. and pineapple. The natural sugar conâ€"| Mrs. Hawkin, of Kent, England, and makes it like other fruits, a source| Mr. ‘Arthur Stanlake, son of the late nergy. The unsweetened products| Mr. and Mrs. John Stanlake of Cornâ€". Limited Quantity at this price. Order yours at once! Women â€"who â€" know real value and are keen for a lifetime of washday ease, will snap these up quickly. Here is the kind of Electric Ww asher any woman would be proud to own. Beauâ€" tiful, stream â€" lined, ribbed tub. Super agiâ€" tation. Seven â€" pound capacity (about five sheets). Long life . mechanism. A powerâ€" ful motor that never needs oiling. Handâ€" some modern wringâ€" er with instant reâ€" lease. We are forâ€" tunate in being able to offer this outstandâ€" ing washer at a cash price of only $79.50. Or, if you wish, pay only $7.50 down and take 2 years to pay the balance in monthâ€" ly installments. e for o n 1y _ _ Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"Youthful wife of a 78â€"yearâ€"old farmer of Stara~â€" Kanjizah, Jugoslavia, ran away with a younger man. The aged husband took a sickle and went to fetch her back. In spite of his age he broke down the locked door of the lover‘s house, bound the lover with ropes, and locked him up in the attic. Then he carried off his wife and took her back home! "It is absurd," he said, with axi airy wave of â€" his hand. A despatch from Philadelphia on Friday says that Leopold Stokowski, orchestra conductor whose rumoured romance with Greta Garbo excited Hcllywood gossips, denied emphatically that he would mary the film star. Mae West was Equally Scornful About Rumors After the ceremony, a wedding dinâ€" ner was served at the home of Mr. Alâ€" fred Stanlake, Dome Extension. In the evening a reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Masters, 67 Lakeshore Road. Mrs. Masters received the guests wearing a streetâ€"length dress of coronation red crepe, with matching accessories. The bride and groom received many lovely gifts from their friends. Mr. and Mrs. Stanlake will reside at 210 Hemlock street, Timmins. ihe groom was attended by Mr. Joâ€" seph Starlake, his brother. or $7.50 Down 2 Years to Pay _ _ The bride was charming in a streetâ€" length dress of maroon chiffon velvet, with matching hat ard other accessorâ€" ies, and a corsage of white carnations. She was attended by Mrs. Joseph Stanlake, sisterâ€"inâ€"law of the groom. who wore an afternoon dress of maroon velvet, with matching accesâ€" sories and a corsage of white carnaâ€" tions. ‘ Miss Louie Hawkins and Mr. | _Arthur Stanlake United in | _ Marriage on Thursday. Pretty Wed at United Ch:ri:'lf Here with the first ‘strapping and after a period of seven yearsâ€"wearing the When the patient returned he stated that the pain did not come on quite as soon after arising in the morning, but tcward evening the pain seemed to be just as bad as ever. e | The physician then looked at the sole ‘of the left shoe (the side on which the pain was located) and found that it was worn on the inner side, and that the heel was also worn on the inner side. He had:the patient. ta.kue off his shoe and found what he §pectedâ€"â€"a flat foot or fallen arch.â€" C He explained to the patient that the weight cf his entire body rested on his Iarch and on the inner side of the knee: The arch was then strapped up with two or three pieces of: twoâ€"inch adâ€" hesive tape ing from outer side of foot across the sole, then pulled up on yinner side liffing the arch, and across the upper side of the foot inâ€"front of ‘ ankles bones to the outer side of the lower legâ€"a few inches above where it started. This strapping was done once a week for six weeks, a plasterâ€"cast of the foot then made, and an arch supâ€" port made to fit the foot. that if the rch was down, a.llowing inner side of the foot to reach or nearly reach the fleor or ground. then â€"the extra strain of holding mg weight of the body was‘ ‘put on the inner side of the knee. It was thus the fallen arch or flat foot that was causing the pain at the irner side of the knee. As the pain was directly over the inâ€" ner cartilage of the knee the physician concluded that the knee had been wrenched slightly, unknown to the paâ€" tient, so he strapped the knee with adhesive tape and told the patient to come back in five or six days. a half hour; that while there was pain on retiring, there was no pain when he awoke in the morning. There was no history of injury. A Flat Foot Can Cause Pain on Inner Side of Knee A patient consulted his physician reâ€" garding a pain on the inner side of his left knee. He stated that there was no pain after he had rested the knee for l And it means that a good underâ€" garment must head your listâ€"of essenâ€" tials Certainly your new wardrobe is fwoxthy of such a garmeht. And cerâ€" tainly you need it, no matter what the figure. Even if you are a much envied, sleek one, wear such an undergarment for moral support. I contend that it adds immeasureably to one‘s poise. When you know that you are slender and straight' and not protruding or It‘s all horribly hard, I‘ll grant. But there‘s no denying that it is beautiful. It means more deep bending than you‘ve done in many a day, honestâ€"toâ€" goodness exercise, or else you‘re just out of the picture. slim, sleek, .controlled, straightâ€"hipped but altogether feminine form. Fashionists, the hard. hearts, are making similes of the fall silhouette and the cylinder or lamp post. Were it not for the accert on the round, upâ€" lifted, molded bustline I would shudâ€" der with fear that the boysh form might be making a comeback. But I hardly think the new cylinder silhouâ€" ette is the forerunner of the builtâ€"likeâ€" Proper foundation gai;;t:ents‘ _will give (by James W. Barton, M.D.) Good Undergarment Now on Top of List of Essentials By ELSIER PIERCE ~PAMOUS BEAUVTY Tt â€" Bz BraUTiIrUL of Pours Bobp s will give you the smooth, lovely lines of GAIL PATRICK. The politician explained that he was sour.ding out the sentiment in the disâ€" __"For instance, there is the classic of the Wisconsin politician who, in the presidential campaign of 1912, toured the back districts of his native state to electioneer for his party. In a remote neighbourhcod he came upon a talli Scandinavian sitting on a log in a clearing. The stranger hauled up his team and greeted the resident, who reâ€" plied with a nod. Here is another one of those "laughs a day‘" by Irvin S. Cobb. Quoting. A Touch of Swedish (By Irvin S. Cobb) ‘"Personally I do not know a great many persons of Swedish birth. But those Swedes I have met struck me nearly always as being keenâ€"witted. Nevertheless, it is customary among afterâ€"dinner speakers, at least, when telling a yarn purportirg to deal with alow thinking, to make the central character of it a Swede, and preferably a Swede farmer. 1 "Aye don‘t know," drawled the other. "Well, how about Roosevelit?" ‘"Aye don‘t know.‘" ‘"Maybe you like Taft?" The alien shook h tawny head "Well, now, look here then, you must (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act.) â€" _ That a flat foot can cause pain on inner side of knee by stretching ligaâ€" ment holding the cartilage (cushion) between the upper and lower leg should be remembered. Health Booklets Available Seven helpful booklets by Dr. Barâ€" ton are now available for readers of The Advance. They are: Eating Your Way to Health; Neurosis; Why Worry About Your Heart?; The Common Cold; Overweight and Underweigh’c;l Allergy, or Being Sensitive to Various Foods and Other Substances; and Scourge (gonorrhoea and syphilis). These booklets may be obtained by sending ten cents for each booklet deâ€" sired to cover cost of handling and service, to The Bell Library, 247 West 43rd Street, New York City. "What do you think about Wilson," If You Like f Books arch supportâ€"has not returned. (Copyright, 1937, by the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inzc.) Of course, if you want to get right down to the root of all figure evils, you can exercise the flaws away! bulging you‘re bound to carry â€" your shoulders all the better and your dresses are sure to look handsomer, too. There‘s nothing like a good undergarâ€" ment to set you up beautifully. It‘s the Lines That Count If you are a little slip of a thing you can wear an inexpensive little poof or whatâ€"doâ€"youâ€"callâ€"them just to shut cut the wobbles. But if you really have a figure flaw, have your corset or girdle fitted by an expert. It‘s worth the inâ€" vestment. Don‘t buy your corset on the bargain counter, unless you want to take a chance of having it look it. If you do, the undergarment may mar inâ€" stead of make your new costume. Leadâ€" ing corsetiers are doing all sorts of tricks with line and fabric. They are creating optical illusion miracles noâ€" thing short of them and for all that are really allowing for freedom. Someâ€" thing our grandmothers never knew and they weren‘t called upon to be cylinders! (By A. H.) It has been made the active componâ€" ent of a number of patented preparaâ€" tions but doctors have been afraid of It will also be remembered that it was this drug which was credited with having saved the life of President Roosevelt‘s son last December when he had a serious case of septic sore thrcat. This drug according to pertinent meâ€" dical literature in the United States has been brilliantly successful in the treatment of gonorrhoga, scarlet fever, meningitis, erysipelas and diseases caused by the glicbular bacteria known generically as "cocci.‘" The use at Torâ€" onto General Hospital for streptococci infections and, venereal diseases was announced to the public only this year. The Ontario Department of Health has been followirg the progress with interâ€" est. Sulphanilamide is a nonâ€"proprietary rame adopted by the Council of the American Medical Association for a drug which originated in Germany. This drug is generally known as pronâ€" tosil or prontylin and within the past few years has apparently enriched medicine with a specific as extraordinâ€" ary as salvarsan. It seemed to have the miraculous property of attacking particular germs and letting the rest of the body alone. These germs were mostly of the coccus family. The "red dye" or sulphanilamide is not held responsible for the fatalities but the carrying vehicle, which is said to have been diethylene glycol, a subâ€" stance similar to automobile antiâ€" freeze, is suspected, though other facâ€" tors may have entered into making it iratal. | this "Elixir," an immediate effort was made to recall all shipments but upâ€" wards of 700 bottles had been distribâ€" The "Elixir‘ is a compound containâ€" ing the ‘"red dye" which created so much interest early in July and was manufactured by a firm in Tenessee, The first deaths occurred in Tulsa, Okla. Nine persons having died from (From Health League of Canada) Dominion health authoritiee are watching carefully to discover any posâ€" sible importations into Canada of the ‘"Elixir‘ which up teo the end of last week had caused 36 deaths. Enquiry at the Toronto Branch of the Food and Drugs division of the Dominion Deâ€" partment of Pensions and National Health reveals no imports up to a few days ago and in view of the wide search for the fatal chemicals , by agents of the United States Food andi Drug administration, it is not likely now that any bottles of the "Elixir‘ will turn up in Canada. "Aye tell you," he answered. "Me and Ole we bane walkin‘ on railroad track. Train come by and Aye yump off track. By and by, when train is gone, Aye don‘t see Ole any more, so Aye walk on and pretty soon Aye see one of Ole‘s arms on one side of track and cne of Ole‘s legs on other side of track, and then pretty soon Aye see Ole‘s head, but Ole‘s body is not there, so Aye stop and Aye say to myself, "By Yupiter, something must a‘ happened to Ole!" Canada Watching for Fatal ‘Elixir‘ Preparation Caused _ Deaths in U.S.A. Then there is the timeâ€"honoured yarn of the Swede farmhand in Minnesota who, on the witness stand, was called upon by the attorney for the railroad to furnish details touching on the tragic death of a companion. The simple Swede gave this question lengthy consideration. Then, with a faint change of expression, he saig : "Aye tank Ringling Brothers got the best show." have some opinion," said the visitor. "You and your neighbours must have talked the thing over among yJurselves. Who do you think has the best show?" Notice is hereby given that a Byâ€"law was passed by the Council of the Municipality of Timmins on the 13th day of October, 1937, providing for the issue of debentures to the amount of $12,805.00 for the purpose of Direct Relief in the year 1935, and that such Byâ€"law was registered in the Registry Office at Cochrane in the District of Cochrane on the 20th day of October, 1937. Any motion to quash or set aside the same or any part thereof must be made within three months after the first publication of this notice and cannot be made thereafter. Dated this 25th day of October, 1937. Notice of Registration of Byâ€" Law 20 Cedar St. N. WOOL â€" HOSIERY â€" Linens Flowers for Every Occasisn Quality Woolen Cioods BABY WEA Mrs. Shephard H. E. MONTGOMERY, Clerk Records of the syndicate, produced by the present secretary, William Ramâ€" say, showed no interest held by Busâ€" traen. At the conclusion of the plainâ€" tiff‘s case, His Honcur suggested to M. W. Flannery and L. A. Lillico, lawyâ€" ers engaged in the action, that they reach a settlement, and subsequently the terms agreed upon were given the court. It was claimed that Bustraen, who works in Larder Lake, and who was friendy with Mr. and Mrs. West at their boarding house in Kirkland Lake, had first paid Mrs. West $25 in cash, followed a week later by $125 also in cash, together with a postâ€"dated cheque for $150 to close the deal. This cheque had been cashed by Mrs. West, the evidence disclosed, and the court learned also that no reczeipts had been received by plaintiff at any time. Bustraen alleged he had been put off on various pretexts when he sought the 30 units he claimedâ€"to have been bought. Get Yours Now ! Blustraen alleged he had given Mrs. West $300 for units in the Lombroff Lucky Strike mining syndicate, an enâ€" terprise of the Kowkash district of the northern fields. Subsequently, he was informed, it was sworn, by Leo Lomâ€" broff that no units in the syndicate were held in his name, and when he got no satisfaction from Mrs. West, entered suit against her as secretaryâ€" treasurer of the syndicate at the time. â€" Haileybury, Nov. 1.â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"A dispute over a mining deal which plaintiff alleged never had been consummated, was settled in Disâ€" trict Court here on Friday afternoon, when counsel for the contending parâ€" ties accepted a suggestion from Judge Hayward and reached an agreement under which Michael Bustraen was to be paid $300 by Mrs. May Wost, with $75 additional for costs. commertial sulphanilamide prepara« tions besause they krew so little about them. Since last summer reports of bad effects have been coming to the Ameriâ€" can Medical Association. In Milwaukee destruction of red blood cells followed administration of the drug. Chicago had a case of loss of vision. Skin eruptions were reported from New Orleans, Baltiâ€" more, New York and other cities. The deaths at Tulsa, however, aroused the authorities to the danger to such an extent that the most intensive search was commenced for all the bottles of the "Elixir‘" which had been distributed. Should any of these bottles have got into Canada, it is believed the publicity given to the danger will result in their being turned over to Government thorities. Larder Lake Man Sues for Syndicate Shares Cleans Dirty Hands A Full Selection of the Choicest Quality Hard and Soft Coal! Call 129 Toâ€"Day Timmins

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