Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 8 Dec 1938, 3, p. 4

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. Schumacher Salutes its New Community Building sud»ury Star: Some of the "modâ€" ern" wisecracks, it transpires, were laughed at as much as 300 years ago, and they probably do not sound any funnier now than they did then. T wo With these two specials we are feaâ€" turing the style shown above, The smart, sophisticated Upswept Coifâ€" fures, Free Finger Wave and sShamâ€" poo with each Permanent,. RECG £5.00 Beauty Shop NU â€"FASHION Glea m in chrome _ a n d enamel of the very best qualâ€" ity, 3 â€" piece sets, onlv Roberts‘ Horehound and HMHoney for colds, coughs, and Bronâ€" chitis, â€" Large econâ€" omy size bottle. special at ROBERTS‘ DRUG STORE FIRST AVE., SCHU MACHER 10â€"Day Special‘s Extra heavy! Large 40 oz, bottle., Dresser Sets Russian Oil Robert‘s Cough Mixture 56 First Avenue SCHU MACHER on our Outstanding â€" PERMANENTS Vitominoil Permanent Lido Permanent Roberts‘ ONLY $3,00 .290 and poise on the ite in free She won her first title, the Toront and district championship in 1934, an since then has been a popular and out standinz skater. Mrs. E. H. Gooderham, runnerâ€"up t Sonja Henie in the world‘s champion shinp in 1930., holds the gold medal fo Miss Veronica Clark and M McCreath, of the> Toronto Club, are pair champions 0 America 1932â€"1938; pair cham Canada, 1936, 1937, 1938; memb adian champion four, 1938. figure skating. In 1925 Canadian figure skatin Mr. Morczgomery Wils ing champion of Nort!] to 1938; champion 0o 1930, ‘1931, 1933, 1934, . adian . Olympic â€" repre 1932, 1936; member C; ionship four, 1938. Misses Dorothy and the Granite Club, atr Brunes and Joly, of Paris, Franceâ€" World‘s champions in pair skating, 1926, 1928, 1930, 1932; Olympic champâ€" the Granite Club, popular among the j ers, .Miss Dorothy C figure skacing cham Below will be found bric ‘o some of the outstanding iting here on the occasion . ing of the new MciIntyre Building tonight and Frid urday this week: Sketches of Some _ |.. of the Skaters Here © Highlights on the Northern Lights of 1939 And Jergen‘s all purpose â€" Face Cream. â€" Full 25¢ s i z1 e absolutely free. â€" Special at an A Sure Cure for Dandruff. Reg. $1.05 value but reduced for limited time only SHAEFFER PEN and PENCIL SETS.......$2.50 Christmas CARDS, complete assort. HEATING PADS, complete only FITCH‘S DANDRUFF Remover and Shampoo nam} â€" her FREE FAST DELIVERY T After â€" bath Coâ€" logne, a miniature champagne bottle 3+ oz. filled with after â€" bath Coâ€" logne in a chamâ€" pagne â€" cooler, made of brass or i "A.00 Y Bath Cocktail 10€ » '-.)(' . ely lark and Mr. Ralph Toronto Skating hampions of North : pair champions of Fragrant sets! Powder, soap water, enly A L S QO_ ASHESâ€"OFâ€"ROSES, SETS,â€" EVENINGâ€"INâ€"PARIS ‘th America, 1929 of Canada, 1929, 1935, 1938; Canâ€" resentative 1928, Canacdian champâ€" YARDLEY‘S SETS im, runnerâ€"up C orld‘s champion e gold medal fo 5â€"26 she won th ig championshiy sonâ€"â€"figure skat Haz <_‘ .« / will make ROBER ES Their Headqguarters for Worthwhile Gifts This Christmas. The Wise Shopper is the one who buys the gifts that give most pleasure . . . at a price that is reaâ€" sonable for quality received . . . Shoppers too, . . . will enjoy the pleasant atmosphere that prevails in this truly modern Drug Store . . . In schumacher its Roberts‘ for courtesy and quality. for el Caley, of ensationall y f the open Communi{c v and Sat refert of Canâ€" ‘anadian pair the he ShCo sSparkling â€" crystal perfume boittles, c o m plete owit h tray. . An . "I:O0 Sparkling Crystal lady ind 11M AT Programme for Opening â€"New Rink Listerine Tooth Paste w You get one large 25¢ tube for only One Cént, 2â€" large tube for limited time only ‘o@e sieok or dn sutppadsoud Uj.I0U IB, t Jo stmsd ayp poAarIiq OUM ‘cUuld =Â¥T qJa@IID JO oAlmemIuI puUt ‘quswata quexiodut G] joodsat ut sdausutuoid [EtaIautu0da yyanog UoutwmoG aU} sSst snyp, ‘SouUtn pics opecpq untPBI UÂ¥PIPEUE;) jo y1I0MA 000000 T$ sut4ngq st qjuUuau â€"W2A08 USMUS oL :‘42}§g Limgpng Official Opening Toâ€"night. Programme. Repeated on Friday ~and Saturday Nichts. GiuDs and men Skating Club. Thursday ever McIntyre employ "The Northern I i0ns in pair ean champit ble disp. hampiot Thursd mem!} Kiw b n ALL FOR mal venIin ihe art. noon,. D the B M Th Te 1} TELEPHONE 2170 g, 1930, 1932; FEuropâ€" pair skating, 1932; 15 malr skating, 1932; 15 s and their families. hts of 1939," a ing by distinguished 1Dn! ul / 1 for 75¢ ind 1939 ature rink ‘IncyV Official reception Granite Skating of the $3.95 ind Saturâ€" remarkable Lights of the same worthy of They â€"are Porcupime hool chilâ€" in hbe acâ€" 26 also the h a given job may vary with the circumâ€" stances but the inevitable happens one day; the cook quits or is fired. The peripatetice cook of the bush areas has improved vastly in his habits in recent years. In the old raillway lmnstruction era he was of the ordsr |of the tramp printer or the journeyâ€" man telezrapher who moved frequently and who had the proclivitiee of the roving clan. Many a time a distressâ€" ed boss found himself with an incapâ€" | acitgted cook and a hungry and growlâ€" crew. Some cooks, knowilg their lown weakness, would prepare for che !inevitable by baking a whole raft of pies and bread, boiling a lot of beans roasting big chunks of meat. When they passed out they left these supâ€" ‘ plies for the cookee to dole oug until the spell passed. worried sleep, has a twontyâ€"four hour job.. There is recognition of this fact im the payroll, too. Unlikz»s the mine run of employees the cook must look ahead quite a disâ€" tance. If the operation is a new one, wich a crew just starting in, he is consulted in detail concorning not only the equipment biut the food supplies. In this duty he evinces a wide range of taste, Each man has his pet ideas about what should be served in bush operations, how much of is should be usiad, the kind of stove and utensils. The boss might as well save his breath arguing with him, because if he does not get what he wants he will grumble as long as he stays on the job. And that brings up ancther point. Bush cooks are always changing their jobs. The reason for this is twoâ€"fold at least. He tires of the job and the job tires of him. It is a fact that a crew of men, far removed from the ordinary diversions of civilization, have little pleasurable to think about exâ€" cept their food and their fancy is fickle. After having sampled for some time the variety of dishes in a man‘s repertoire they begin co grumble and start what is in effect an lunconscious conspiracy to get something new. By that time the cook is pretty well fed up. coo. The period of employment on In those days when a cook was fired or quit he simply repaired to the nearâ€" est commiunity where he proceeded to release his inhibitions and unload the strain accumulated in months of caterâ€" ing to a critical clientele. Afser a while, »verything gone except a headache, he started looking for another job and found one without difficulty. Frequentâ€" ly he crossed trails with his predecesâ€" sor as he went in and che other cams out, If they had a chance to conâ€" verse the newcomer was given the deâ€" tails of the dirty work h> could exâ€" pect to encounter on the new job. These men were highly competent. Some of the difficultiss which they overcame were astonishinz. Baking 50 loaves of bread daily in a draughty tent in stormy weather, either in winâ€" ter or sumer, with wet wood, was a Bush Cook Has to be Unusual Sort of Man they usually stick to the one firm year in and year out. When one camp ctires of them or they tire of it they request to be moved and their employers, wise in their generation, comply. Moreover, their behaviour nhas been streamlined. The old custom of going on benders peiodically has been discouraged to the point of elimination. The new order of cooks has better equipment, more help, a wider variety of food to play regular ssunt that would make the housewife‘s eyes bulge. Contending with tainted meat in the hot spells, with swamp water or a scarcity of that commodity, with mosquisoes, with sand and mud, with snow and cold in the winter, these bush cooks managed to produce apetizing meals for enorâ€" mous appetites. In order to get the work done the cook had to be an autocrat. Even in places where cabins or board camps offered improved accommoda‘tions it was astonishing what the chef had *to put up with. In more or less travelled secvrions, with bosses, subâ€"bosses, salesâ€" men, reporters, photographers, peddlers and what not dropping in at all times of the day and night expecting or defanding to be fed, the exercise of patience and courtesy often failed to be a virtue. Many people travelling a rightâ€"ofâ€"way, a new road or a young mining camp for the first time failed to understand that there had to be some sort of schedule for meals and that the long suffering cook was not running a restalurant. Anyone who woke up a cook at one in the mornâ€" ing, looking for something to eat, was given a demonstration of an art not even remotely connected with the culâ€" inary. Even Chinamen have been known to blow fuses under such cirâ€" cumstances, And small wonder. some sot that the running woke up ing, look Camp catering entered a new, orâ€" ganized phase several years ago and amongst the changes chat resulted was the introduction of a new order of cooks. While they may shift about Why Bush Cooks Chang Their Jobs, and Othe Notes, hours of more or less has a twontyâ€"four hour recognition of this fact too. LV Ai the recent mt ican Mining Congre one of the most in was delivered by Ro! atrccious penalti( criminal, ence of the metal ADOUt A.! hand the Indian, 1 enough t Is There Danger in Canada of Losing ‘Right to Mine‘? torney of San Fr fied with the mini cussed the subjed Mine." He poinced out that the Wagner Act, Securities Exchange Act and Wagesâ€" Hours Act had shown the government entering the picture with a heavy tread and that no longer could the miner rely upon practical and sympachetic consideration of his individual probâ€" lems. Arbitrary policies were adopted without giving him a chance . to be heard and they were enforceable with atrccious penalties, both civil above, but that it has along the road of des cratic, pestiferous bureal tent fact and one that : here, â€"It is one thing t tincs and universal rule miner and the promoter by provision for penaltie ter the dishonest from a credulous and greedy quite another to <hrow and promoters of slend one classification of po ality, while at the same mum of protective mondo around the broker and ¢t} er of gambling instincts most as leaky our friends acro. ally bailing that Are we, too, on Jhe miIint caught in mental legi the clash rOCKS world of reguiatlion to perties be closed remain in the gro ist can abide his but what, he ask â€"the hiundreds 0o pend for their d those mines? H and localities in T‘l to bt mimes are IC that confisc up on itsel that must J Canada l as Gdestructi that has made t to our rescue in If we do lose Globe and Mail team has defeat® bridge. The gent Sudbury Star: In a brief circul which has just come to hand, an i truist offers to show us how to hanpyvy for the small fee of $1., Anoth happy 1 way. we 1€ s are 10caled confiscatory n itself an ash Am ind improved 11 The m 1CC 2yX 1€ n Che working Ccrew 1i the gate by the boss competent cook more ea worker. There is a hi 1l U} 11 ?ral imptt lon bridg prod down, t und and time to C irlly Sus| ow â€" a bot which 1 ~"Chie: â€" PC ded by plignters commil ookery will long m the memories oldiery who had T burgaucral U monopo n«( id a adventut Empire g ceresting Addresses Jert M. Searles, atâ€" icisco, longz identiâ€" industry, who disâ€" "‘The: _ â€"Richtâ€". to about the workers housands who deâ€" sustenance upon abouwt the towns w us how to be fee of $1, Another . mighk be to start 1€ ind Mail) ns of the Amer in Los Angele: resting addressd 11 ot ten| tim procee ructive commodat ICL: ; L he zovernments. idopted laws mentioned provide disâ€" to guide the upplemented that will deâ€" omflamming public, but prospectors means into itial criminâ€" very exISSâ€" industry. id, has been this experiâ€" 1] will Ametr cre 15; andâ€" thi ticism 0 _ he maxiâ€" s thrown hu hn epâ€"ro rectat Ante CcOSst If proâ€" ‘es will an alâ€" ipitalâ€" which anticâ€" a floa«. nov whole 4Wns down i pa proo ‘ome and ge a Free Toy from Santa Himself. COm =â€" spiri! comE 11 saVs back PM this yoll. do ho he Lilian‘s Store, Schumacher it \Homeâ€"canned Baked Apples _ Baked Apples, Ete. Apples Make Many Attractive Del1cacies The foll Departmen special int 11 ng recipes are taken from the Publicity and Extension Division, Dominion Deâ€" partment of Agriculture, Ottawa. Apples Baked with Almonds Core and pare six ‘or eight tart Canâ€" adianâ€"grown apples; lot simmer till tender in a syrup made by boiling one cup of sugar and one cup of water for three minutes. Turn apples often to avoid (breaking. â€" If desired, a little lemon juice may be added to the syrup. Set the apples in a pan and press the almonds into them, the almonds hayâ€" ing been previously blanched and split in halves. Dredge with powdered suâ€" gar, and brown in the oven. Serve hot tin con be used sistency Set the apples in a almonds into them ing been previously in halves. Dredge gar, and brown in < MEN‘S CHRISTMAS TIES Of good quality, individually )h Biu The ap} er fres] LV Next to Masciolh Theatre FLANNELETTE PYJAMAS The ideal Christmas gift. Only Du | PINL ST. â€" JUST OFF FIRST AVE. BRROADCLOTH PYVJIAMAS Gordon Rutledge 1€ MEN‘S DRFP 2@ tO LAe large amount of pecâ€" arined in apple juice, it may in other fruits to give a conâ€" to jams and marmalades, and ‘ parings and cores of apples utilized for jelly. The followâ€" es are taken from the Publicity colout MEN‘S SLIPPERS quality leather. A $1.95 to $3.95 $1.50 to $2.00 winz from cthe Dominion of Agriculture should be of rest at ithis timg: Apple Delicacies is a wholesome food, wheâ€" dried, evaporated or canâ€" is no waste in a good apâ€" FRl. SAT. DEC. 9 10 s no wa the larg ome and See Me at LILIAN‘S TOYLAND colout Toyland _ opens tomorrow at 9 a.m. What joyvous news for your â€" youngsters! Answers to magnificent dreams . . . . dreams that only a, child can dream‘! Of rosyâ€"cheeked Dollis . . . of flashing Soldiers . . . of Skates and Trains, Bicycles and Games. Tomorrow and Saturday are THEIR Days at Lilian‘s! Tomorrow is the Day when all their dreams come true. For Lilian‘s Toyland is a magic world . i fairy city for all boys and girls‘ Come to Toyland Tomorrow and Saturdayv. A FREE TOY to $2.00 C irl accompanied by their parent, that visits our store Friday or Saturday will receiveâ€" _ n a a imount of SHIRTS $] All siz ind hboxed the pan to keep from bake until the apples are oftin. Serve hot or cold,, out cream. »l}IM 40 MM JO FOU ‘jJjos ats sarddre ayy tmun ayeq put Sumoms wou; daay 0; ued o) ojut 1JajtM arg3tt e amod ‘wuel A.taqma®ys WIM IILI ‘UstP sutyes(q B UI gosd puse sardds: utBIpBU®E;] a.10;) wtrfp um paoyrg ‘sgmes pIBl[ JO WB3Id UWUJIM 10U dAIlog ‘SoqmnUIttW ¢p a[BQGq pUB jo uted t u1 jog ‘dnid4s t Ojut apetlUu Ingns pus 19jBA ut nod purs |Â¥loAas UI ajtUy ® qtasuI ‘[[NJ ST YSTP ow;: mun qeBsdaoy J0o s$s1IG UQ;M jop pus pUs UowWsuuUIo UA apyurnidg ;o e ‘squuin.to jo e qnd ‘ystp sumyeq t 1Jojng ‘Jojtm pfoo dno esns dna at0o ‘sorddut uvpBury pool[s 1USISH proq dna aud» with jelly Home Canned Baked Apples In order to have the delicacy "Baked Apples" the whole year round, they may be canned in the home. The process is easy. Bake the apples as usual, takâ€" ing care that the apples are kept as whole as possible. Pack them in clean hcs, sterilized jars, filling the jars with a thin hot syrup; seal as in any canned fruit and stors in the usual way. T‘ry The Advance Want Advertisement Wool In The hb Durable material in black or red coteh MEN‘S FUK FELT HATS uine Material in all shades uUp BROGLTE OXFORDS lined * is wl % LEATHER a Bs a 4 GLOVES $1,.25 to $1.75 MEN‘S SKI CAPS O ed, . obtainable in brown and black yrup; seal as i tore in the ‘us Brown Betty bread crumbs. n0w r whipped in which whiit o onl * *J Schumacher SHITIRTS CIC am and the apples were in fither Reduced pecial ind

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