Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 Jan 1939, 2, p. 2

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If you pr( youUu may s boil them (3 the secasoni oven to be: be turned beans will retained ho of chem can be u oven.â€" I bean pot may liks or soms With a 1 have you Perhaps .han canty on the m How Women in Their 40‘s Can Attract Men ales of sta lang, Importance of the Full Pantry Supply Shelves â€" Especially the Business Woman Housekeeper Finds i Important to Keep Supply of Canned Baked Beans on Hand. Idea Also Applies to Others Needing Quick Meal. PAGE TVO Get a modern Gâ€"E Washer that gives you snewyâ€" white clothes. By EDITH M. BARBER 11 1p B puU . but particu‘ariy in ~ss woman hoauseâ€" n‘ have so much ces the woman who For this reason the ORTH trying kin * oOr > 80 sUrips ol baz:on p of the bseans. d you will then planned. cur own beans ring. the . day, nix th:m with them into the The fire may time and ing with the 1J tyle y may b n}p more which are you like ‘ be. Some ays which em in the oA small cu‘larly in red and full week. So he had a timeâ€"clock atâ€" tached to the covered wagon. Now, beâ€" fore they mount their bronchos and ride out on the lone prairie, the cowâ€" bovs clock in. 24 lzsrge pkgs. RINSQ ~4 â€"a whole year‘s supply â€" with any General Electric Washer. Come in today! Huntingdon Gleaner: Movie cowbosys in Hollywood have to punch timeâ€"clacks now. Film ex:ras have now a 48â€"hour week instead of a 54â€"hour weekâ€"and ‘he producer of a new cowboy seriss starring William Boyd Gdecided that he would mak> sure they worked the Coffee Method of Preparation Light oven. Bake beans. Prepare saiad. Mix dressing. Heat brown bread. Prepare colery and carrots. Open can of chilled apricots. Open can of chilled tomato juice and pour into glasses. Make coffee. (Copyright, 1939, by The Boill Syndiâ€" care, Inc. Canned aprico Celery Baked beans Mixed in the beans. Mix salt, musts molasses and add oneâ€"fourth ci boiling wator. Pour over bea enouzh boiling water to cover. and bake in a slow (250 degre: remnheit) oven eight hours. Meck Hcollandaise: Sauce One cup thin white sauce. Two eag yolks. Three tablespoons butter. One tablespson lemon juice. Gradually pour the hot whil into the woeliâ€"beaten 228g yolks. the butter and lemon juice an cinue stirring over hot wateor ui butter is me‘ked. Dr‘cd lima Sear even morse quickly after boiling and d which is krown a I should like to name because I d I used with any f30: Boiling water. One and oneâ€"half Onz2 tesaspr3on mus Onzâ€"half cupful m ths beans in night. Drain, cover and simmer until soft in an carthen pf( you light your oven as soon as home the nex: day th> bsans bakesd and ready to sorvo by i you have your cther prepara®ior Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY, LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY, LIMITED Toma Quick Me y fo3od. Baked Beans ira h cup can: Ookic T "Since I have voluntarily assumed the cask of raporning such vagaries of feminine decoration as come to my notâ€" ic?2," writes John O‘Ren in his column in the Baltimore Sun, "I ougsht to call attention to the exceedingly charmingz miss I saw on Charles Ss. yesterday. The apex of her costume was a has with a wide purple stripe across the tront.â€" With a fine sense of color she had painted her lips the same shade of purple andâ€"I swear itâ€"her eyeâ€" brows were purple, too. She wore gloves and shoes, so I am not able to toll you about her fingernails and toenails. but here is no law againss your 1magimng what you please." Colourful Vision Seen on Streets of Baltimore 111 1€ ‘odit to the nurse in charge. . As soon ; vhe prematurs child was born, he ys, ths nurss bathéd him in warm ive oil and wrapped him snusly in because there was no inâ€" ibator at hand, the tucked Wee MzcG. to a tiny basket, which was placed _a warm kitchen oven. For the first w hours, the babe‘s sole diet was ‘o drops of brandy in water, fed by eans of an eyeâ€"dropper. At the aze _ ycar, Wee McG. weighcd 13 unds, 12 ouncts; and measured 254 chos. He is perfectly healthy, and in ery way enjoying life. says the World‘s Tiniest Babe was Born in Canada Baby McG. was not weighed th> day _ was born, a premature mite of ven months‘ torm. It didn‘t seem rth while, because the mdico did t expect him to survive. RBsides, scales wore available at «he time. it, on the following morning, the ctorâ€"J. S. Monro, of North Sydney, va Scotiaâ€"â€"was astonished to r>â€" ve a telcecphone call from th> nurse ving that the in‘f‘ant was still alive, d requescing feeding instructions. d the same day, the nurse carriod ‘e ovr to the losal grocory re and had him wsighed. Two affiâ€" vits sworn before Jamz>s G. Hackâ€" . nstary public, North Sydney, N.S., te that <‘he weizht of che infant 24 ars After birth, was 14 ounces. dical literatur»> has record of y surviving babe weighing less than . grams, or within a fraction of 22! icos. Honce, once azain, medical tory was made in Canada. t _was on June 6, 1937, thes the ‘ld‘s Slinicst babe was born. He is | alive, flourishing, and of normal ght:; and the case is roported in current issue of the Canadian Mcâ€" il Association Joaurnal. r. Munro frankly hands all the 1¢ 1j (From Toronto Telezram}) ada claims the world‘s smallest woigh.. baby to survive and fourâ€" Inlike the Famcus Five of Corâ€" vhose names. games, and every detail down to teeth and tonsils, mmon ‘knowl-sdge; Canada‘s tiniâ€" by boy is known to fame meroly iby McG."â€"so designated in the ing physician‘s case history. ly he is the Wee McGregor in the THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Drink the scrained juic> of a lemon in twoâ€"thirds glass of warm water every morninz directly after csarly elmination, at least oneâ€"half hour before breakfast Choice of: 1 ordmary drinking tumbler of Before gcing on this recucing diet get approval from a physician. While redurcing follow Miss Lindsay‘s Diet Hcealth Rules which may 32 had upon request. Enclose a s:lfâ€"addresced, stamped (3â€"cent) envelope. Addreoss me care of this paper. L‘Aiglon is a eccmpromise between the American woman‘s desire for fresdom, and the Parisian woman‘s insistence upon being chic. It is for old and young prcviding the hair is in goosd health and its roots have been trained to grow "up." So, if you have been lagginz beâ€" hind the hair fashions, you had better get busy and brush your tresses upâ€" ward and anchor <chsm there with one of the new contrivances designed to help you. It is Guillaume‘s belief that "square" h:addresses have seen their day and the effect of ‘the "oval," with a natural head ov{line, is the style you should strive to wear. Baby Joan Denny (LEFPT) of Palmerston recently swallowed a one brass safety pin accidentally dropped from her mother‘s mwouth. open pin shown (RIGHT) in an xâ€"ray of the fourâ€"monthsâ€"old girl t to puncture the intestine. After consultation, three Palmerston dof ecoperated to remove the pin, easily located in a halfiâ€"hour opera The baby came through the ordeal with fAying colours, Boldini, is best suited to the young girl with a lovely neck and exquisite profile. Curls are piled high in frons and the hair is drawn up smoasthly and simply in back and anchored with a perky bow or one of the newer barrots. It‘s simplicity of style was inspired by the old French paintings in which graceoful, languid ladiss quietly reveal their charms. The last, L‘Aiglon, is a prophecy for the futurs. It emphasizâ€" es gracious fragiliy of the New Womâ€" an. And is definitely for the lass who has already trained F>r hair to stay up! Short hair curls upward and forward round the temples and foreâ€" head in a free, classic manner, and a soft fluffiness outlines the shape of vyour head in back. fures which he has named Versaillos, Boldini and L‘Aiglon. From These You May Chooase Supple curls lishtly drawn back from the face, with higsh ringlets sw the back of the head as well as high over the fcrehead is Versailles. This was inâ€" spired by the romantic coiffures of the Louis XIV period, and is especially beâ€" coming for the cider woman who finds a too severe hairâ€"do not to her liking. Th: most prominer© Fif‘h Avenus salon of Now York has imported a masâ€" tor mind 6of coiffures. And if you do not think the art of hair fashisning requires a master mind, then you should see the hordes of women who flack to this one daily? It appsars that numâ€" ercus women need :xpert help when it comes vransforming pag>â€"boy bobs to coiffures of upswept elegance! Convinced that doing the hair high is no mere whim of the current season, but a fashion here to stay, Giullaum> presents three simple but chic coifâ€" stunning in its simnlucity for the chic young girl is this coiffure by Guillaume which he has romantically called Boldiniâ€"reminiscent of exquisite women painted by the famous artist. A velvet bow to match your gown is tied hish on the head. Visiting Parisian Hair Stylist Brings Three Simple, but Chic, Hair Fashions. Beauty and You OoPERATION REMOVES I Fif‘h Avenus as imported a masâ€" >s.. And if you do of hair fash:oning adl, then you should omen who flsck to abp2ars that numâ€" xpert helo when it by PATRICIA LINDSAY Calories [chaced 50 t ‘Lived in Timmins for Many ; Years. Left Here in 1926, whers one of Craig, makes hi Fercy, who liv: and Irvint, of 1 Orillia . graphs the sal Timmins. Craig‘s dea returned to a2 half late Haileybury, Jan. 19.â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"With Captain Mundy, in charge cf che Salvation Army corps atf New Liskeard, in charge of the services,| the funeral was held to Mount Pleasâ€" | ant cemetr>ry here on Tuesday afterâ€"| nson of the late Mrs. Alex Craig, who! was for about 11 years a resident of | the Porcupine district, and who died last Saturday at che home of Mrs. Piphâ€" | °r, in New Liskeard. In her 77th year, Mrs. Craig had been in failing h:alth for some time past. With her husband, she camse to Temiskaming district moare than 35 ycears ago, the family settling| in 1903 in Hailsybury, where they lived for 12 ycears befiore moving noarth to Total 550 Total caloriss for the day in«... L200 Tall girl allowed . 2. 1500 (Copyright 1938, by Tne Bell Syndiâ€" cate,. Inc.). Death at Liskeard of Mrs. Alex Craig nd more effi 1e front door Kale or spinachâ€"1 cup 1 cup stewoed tea cup rice puddin: 2 thsp. thin cream Tuna fish nalse 1¢ raw Ccarrot stl acpped . round pattics) ale or spinach alertown cg@nt. eéeda th slic halve 1JY C ko orange Juire # boiled or butter: Coffes Melba vVeraq Thoy lived h in 1926, Haileybury * ~moved t kimmed m ewed LUI:ICHEON rlad with 1 th @a ~Ly N@éewW r five sons, William jlome. Other sons are in Cochrane; Albert ‘onto; and Edaward, of ik broiled hedc there until Mr. when his widow _and a year and ths. mayvon a 1 fru : â€" Phongâ€" Since 1932 ne up 500 hich once entertainer mon toIr i newer oh in by or bran Total 300 Total 350 200 | 100 50 100 , 60 : 200 100 50 30 The regular moeting of 1L0.D.E. Girl Guides was day at 7 p.m. trains, ships, etc., are second; stories abow©. adults follow, and, curiously enâ€" ough, stories about fairies are in thr lower part of the list. This may be because the modern teacher and parâ€" ent read or tell stories deliberateoly chosen for their range of educational content. is *‘nowadays a wide cnough varcty ifrom which the proper choice can be made. For the very young child it is important to get stories which help him to learn about his immediate snvironâ€" ment. Children have boundlesss curioasâ€" ity amabout preople and things arsund [them, and to satisfy that curiosity is an important duty and valuable opporâ€" tunity for the teacher and parents. The ichild is corcinuously havinz exporiâ€" t ences, and stories that help him :3 corâ€" relate them become milestonss in his life. So are the stories which help to awaken his imagination and which teach him to know the difference beâ€" ‘tLween the world of reality and that of | imagination. The very young child ‘lives in a world of action and sensory experience. ~All day he seos new things, touches and hears them. As he grows clder he begins to form mental images, _and it is then important to help him to separace facs from fancy. Otherwise Im>> becomes confused and the conseâ€" qrences are, both for him and for othâ€" ers, painful. Language is a skill that the child nseds to learn. A child loves to play with words, to make sounds and constriuct phrasss. Stories that help him o teach him new words, and new ways of using them, ars helpâ€" ing him to bscome creative. What <tories do children like best? A recent survey showed that animal stories coms first, stories about objects, such as trains, ships, etc., are second; stories adults follow, and, curiously enâ€" ough, stories about fairies are in thr lower part of the list. This may be becauss the modesrn teacher and parâ€" mm ns on mss + mm m | ie n T NNNEA us t Un n 4 w w.__._____â€"_ GIRL [;UIDKS I Uime an avenu develop powe: L knowls An interesting and help.ul appearsd in last week‘s issucC LErmington FPost and N:ws. ‘heac}ed. "The Children‘s Ho rctad as foliows: ! "Children love to hsar a nursery school many parents : ance of telling young children and in a good hbhour forms a 1P .hne wWorl them eit or to m FOR FINERâ€"FLAVORED BREAD that‘s setrer M For you * NUAAAE CID OVA _COâ€" ~Aâ€" £20 read aloud. There is than â€" tainment value in this pastime, 1 Ang U 2 2( children Benefit of RKeading Aloud to Children Fosters Love of Literature in the Minds ‘ of the Youngsters. Tap 11 1¢ cCcarn it meeting s. _ *ThHC Orange Pekoe Blend primarily _ for them, they provic avenue by which r} 5 playe ind the _closed > GCGuidt )k which t to learn the us tory h can h the Guides prac compccition f3 i Clup. â€"â€"horseshac wa yhich th thought Kindere Y )1 en h1 106th held Monâ€" ind brarians and [ the importâ€" m stories to W C C it C2Z mgil that h saks of he sam> children ind â€"asâ€" 23 ind in h>lp hildt han itil T12 | The C frocks and skirts, and fo i‘ the races, if you‘re wi these days. Ligshter wsight jackets for cruise wear ar> and worn with exciting a crs. Carmine, for instanct ed squthern shads in sho bags, locoking as smart with as it dses with sharkskin with one bt: lowed to swi fitted to sht and skirt are keing compo Hoere is jacket mixture The lar it smart initial diamo newes wroug pear | antd ) gift whe with th about se with ba: or green in the c( dinner p Answer gift with tinction. 1 BELONG to a woman‘s club and we are having the most dificult time deciding on a wedding qift for one of our members. She is moving to another city and we wan?t the gift to be something ouilsitanding and unique. This member is a person with unusually yood taste. Can you help us? MOTHERS‘ CLUB. nd fun anC 1€ rant ind ampo CDn n at t0 1 JO f,}/{/;//,/.}’ fie’/myx"fi‘ Mo unic nd :; Handsome Suit VERA WINSTON wear in mild regei ft Dif id we wan? the gift rigq oulatanding and member is a person gyood taste. Can you TOTHERS‘ CLUB. mograms endow any ue and personal disâ€" good gift is a better _ carefully inscribed ent‘s initials. How )lates of fine china eobalt blue, marcon e bride‘s monogram They will start off a L 11 .Lweed in dark red and blue. r has a turnedâ€"back The jacket butions her high and is alâ€" , thouch the line is vest baneath. . Vest plish wool, the skirt invericda box pleats. probection 1or Im A1} silver apâ€" i the host a interestâ€" trays and copper or ogram are ldge table, t of three S ~OwWner‘ s ed with a n. On the of O handâ€" v8ol, the skirt a box pleats. ir with other r chilly days tnossing any t, palor tweod cut similarly .. 18 favorâ€" s., hats and Irish twoeeds sorvy colâ€" ions, and cold, are practical. ge!t: â€" The J hAe ner‘s

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