Electric Dutch Ovensâ€"Glass Tops Many a lady with a house will rock along contentedly enou:h with a 1920 rug on the living rcoom floor, and she won‘t mind tso much if her curtains are early Herbert Hoover. But her kitchen, ah, that‘s something else againâ€"it must be as upâ€"toâ€"date as her crazy little new hat. Don‘t ask us whether we approve of such emphasis â€"we‘re just telling you. It must take a bit of doing for the manufacturers to keep up with all this interest in bigger and better kitchens. But they manage very nicely, thank you . . . maybe simply b:cause men, for some reason, are the ones who think up practically all the clever timeâ€" savers and modern improvements we gloat cver in modern kitchens. That daoesn‘t make senes, but yet there you THURSDAY. FPEBRUARY 16TH, 1939 Last week, I went to the debuts of several very impressive new rang>s and refrigerators. Here are some of the bright ideas at your beck and call. Speaking of Ranges A deepâ€"well cooker that sets in the top of a range and coocks an entire meal all in one operation. The thing is available in a portable indeâ€" pendent unit that would be very grand for apartments. It‘s a lot like a Dutch oven, only better. Signal bells as â€" are features of ne case you are a go and automatic tim go without saying New broiler with a twelveâ€"chop capâ€" acitywith a deep pan that can be used also for rasting, cooking scalloped things, puddings or gravy. Glass oven docors are featured on our pet gas range, That means all the pecking you likeâ€"withous cooling off the oven. Checkerboard â€" topâ€"provides burners in checkerbtard ‘arrangament to giv? space between, Also useful are the ranges with the centre space between the two tiers of burners free for table A hcod ought to be a "must" on modern takes care of smoke, steam and cooking odors. | q 1 T i z Coal and Wood 4 b 44461444# C on First Mortgages Available in TIMMINS SCHUMACHER SOUTH PORCUPINE Paid Back Monthly over 3 to 5 Years. 4PPLY TO 400400000000 90000000008008$400080480804484644444 REAL ESTATE INSUT sSTEAMSHIP OFFICE 20 Pinec North Timmins our variety of coal Coke â€" Welsh Anthraciteâ€"Pennsylvania Blue â€" Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" wheat â€" Nut Slack â€" Steam Coal and Cannel. COAL AND WOODYARD AND OFFICE 86 Spruce South Phone 32 News of electrical cookingâ€"on the left : cocker that is a part of one of the ne electric ranges, On the right, the san s well as signal lights new electric ranges in gocd forgetter. Clocks ime controls, of course, INSURANXCE LAST* WORD IN KITCHEN EQUIPMENT Phones 1135 1580 PLEASANT HoOMES About Refrigerators For vegetablesâ€"a drawer compartâ€" ment with a plate glass cover thal serves a doubls> purposeâ€"it‘s a shel above, but when the humidrawer below is closed it fits in tightly so thal. the glass shelf makes a cover that keep{ vegotables and fruit at the proper d> gree of humidity as well cold. For meatâ€"ancither© drawer is espe cially planned for keeping fresh meat at their best. Tightly covered, t90, an degrees colder than the fest of the re frigerator. Another special compart by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin ment is for keeping frozen 100Gs. Aljustable shelves are more vers than previously. Now they‘re ma tuck away a turkey without wa. space around it. e left a deepâ€"well the newest model the same idea is Fair warning â€"â€" All INndic tells you when to defrost, and, the really modern refrigerato gdirect lighting. The Washing End The Eleotric sink is the answer Lo t maiden‘s prayer. It‘s a slick, white ca inet about the size of a flatâ€"top ran One one side there‘s an electric dis washer. On the other a sink with electric garbage disposal uit beneath A dishwasher is a tremendous ti saver once you really got the habit . remember this is a thresâ€"aâ€"day jcb. that efficiency hbhere really adds up. A kitchen laundryâ€"think that C1 "Tis a wonderful improvement OVEeTr 1 for Vegetable Traysâ€"The Electric Sinkâ€"The Open Kitchen. I am sentimental about kitchens like this one in ? dan‘s‘ kitchen, bright with painted birds and deâ€"sera none of its efficiency therebyâ€"note the linolsm: s *3; boards, and in the edge of the picture you cain S range as big as life. irawer compartâ€", glass cover that roseâ€"it‘s a shelf iumidrawer below zhtly so tha. the cover that keeps An indicat rost. and, of shown in a portable model that can be used wherâ€" ever you like, Like a Dutch Oven, only better, Timmins ids up. that over t over kitchens like this one in '.wzite Jorâ€" h painted birds and deflmat is._ It loses PS fnr the cupâ€" rebyâ€"note the linols~: of the picture you can see an electric U All basement laundry. Espec‘ally now that all laundry equipment, such as washers and ironers, are available in cabinet models that make fine workâ€"tables beâ€" tween time. Or consider having an clectric laundry on the back porch (it would be a simple matter to enclose an open porch for this purpose). There are new ironers that give you as much lseway to arrange the clothes as a hand iron, and the new washers nave three different speeds for different speeds for different kings of loads. Kitchen Designs Mcodern kitchen units have an sparkle. But what they lack in decoraâ€" ticon they make up in convenience. â€" In {2ict the unit kitchen with sink, stove, | cupboard and refrigerator all d,esignedg to:ether is probably the last word that will be said on the subject of practical scientfic kitchen planning. So help vyourself to a kitchen like this if it‘s superb utility you‘re after. But if you‘re a bit of an expcerimenâ€" tor, ‘ake a flyer at an openâ€"face kitchâ€" en ‘Tis said that this is what the diningâ€"room in the maidless home is coming to â€" there is a wide counter cpening between kitchen and diningâ€" room. The dining table is placed withâ€" in reach of the counter which is equipâ€" ped with all sorts of clecirical gadgets for preparing and serving everyday mals smocthly. Of course, this could be closed off on special occasions. Why wculdn‘t it be better to have stools at ths counter and use instead of the table for informal meals? As we do at the darug store. The answer there is why not have this counter in the kitchen then, maintairing the dignity _af the dining rcom? think, stepping oul Of that you were really C far away instead of drive to a commuters I like big kitchens, like more personaiity in is usually to. be seen. Jordan‘s kitchen . it‘s quite efficient taste with all the modâ€" its. But it‘s bright and bargain with bird deâ€" n the cupboards and an ling. Miss Jordan lives from the city (up near ) but she has preserved »leasant, leisurely air â€" hoause and vou might of her kitchen door, y over the hills and of a few minutes‘ ets® train. n1ns. tooâ€"with roonl Automobilos careening erazily over an ‘area as big as the field of an athletic stadium, crashing headâ€"on into one ‘ another, turning over and over in somâ€" srsaults; doinz in fact, all the perilous things every motorist prays he‘ll never do, are io provide hairâ€"raising thrills for spectators at the New York Worla‘s Fair, 1939. Exhibits at World‘s Fair at New York Automobiles Will Do Some Remarkable Stunts. These breathâ€"taking "stunts," perâ€" formed with gleeful disregard of life or limb by Jimmy Lynch and his teain of daroâ€"devil drivers, ars to be part of the exhibit presented by the B. F. Goodâ€" rich Company, tire and general rubâ€" ber goods manufacturers of Akron, Ohio. The scene of these adveniurecs witn disaster is a "proving ground," comâ€" prising a large portion of the exhibit plat of 120,150 square feet in the Fair‘s Transportation Zone, contract for which has just been signed by David M. Good~â€" rich, Chairman of the Board of the company; S. B. Robertson, its president, and Grover A. Whalen, president of the Fair Corporation, in Mr. Whalen‘s office in the Fair‘s Administration Building. The object of the exhibition on the "proving gsrciund" is to afford dramatic testing of the antiâ€"skid and trustworthy character of the Goocdrich automsisile tires. Parts of the surface of the "proving ground" are to be sprinkled with water and other parts will have mechanicallyâ€"controlled "bumps," and visitors will be permitted to ride in the cars Gdriven over these manufactured hazards to note the manner in which they tires Unique "properties" were called into use during the signing of the contract. One of these was a bell of the size of those which railroad locomotives sound their crossings. This beil once surâ€" mcunted a tall pole jus, outside the original office of Dr. Benjamin Frankâ€" lin Goodrich, a Civil War surgeon and fcunder of the rubber industry in Akâ€" ron. With it, in the 70‘s Dr. Goodâ€" rich used to summon his workmen to their tasks in the early morning and at the end of their noonday lunch perâ€" icd. The bell was wrung in sentiment as the signatures were affixed 0 the conâ€" tract, which brouzht into use the secâ€" ond "prop." It was with the identical pen used for many years by Dr. Gocrich in his Akron office that the names were written to the document. The ink used was rubber ink, a waterproof fluid manufactured by the Goodrich Company. At the main entrance of the Goodrich Exhibit Building, designed by Wilbur Watson, of Cleveland, Ohio, to cccupy one end of the generally cval plot, there is to be a 90â€"fost Stretchâ€" there ng aA one e are t ing Unie Along the ways will vantage ] whom ca time. The sog cuillotine visitors v blade plu helgh! and a tion < strate to the way train thus equipped is reported as scheduled to be pw in service within a short time in New York‘s metropoliâ€" tan arca. A feature of the exhibit building is it,o be a huge wall map constructed of ;rubbcr which will trace the origin of the various products employed in proâ€" ‘ducing the pneumatic tire of todayâ€" srubber from South America and Africa, ;mmerals from the southeastern part of ‘the United States, sulphur from Louisâ€" ‘ijana and Texas, and cotton from "Dixâ€" [ ie," Railway and subway car trucks ana springs developed by Goodrich enginâ€" eers in coâ€"operation with equipment marufacturers are to be displayed in operation in a similar exhibit. A subâ€" The Goodrich exhibit is said by comâ€" pany officials to be one of the‘ most comprehensive rubber displays ever asâ€" sembled. In additicn to presenting all kinds of tires and a wide variety of household rubber goods, spectators will be permitted a behindâ€"theâ€"scenes view of many of the 32.000 products manuâ€" factured by the Goodrich organization, which was the first to lozcate in Akron, now known as the "rubber capital of the world for a rocker and even a fireplace. And I do think a checked linen cloth on the kiichen table is worth taking some trouble for. It oughin‘t to interfere with vitriolite walls or air conditioning. (Copyright, 1939, by Elizabeth Mucâ€" Rae Boykin). a wa y end ¢ to be the are negotiated by the company‘s ors will se e plunge c hts directly airplane ti of the "g rolled by buttons and levers ors may opcrate. Included in demonstration of the Cutless Bearing which is lubricated er instead of cil. Th2r mech exhibition is to be enclosed s waterâ€"filled tank. Pressurse the . will Db ‘ point can be 1 irom f tne ecnrand ig tower is io hsuse a Through its glass . see a heavily weig e downward from val ‘tly upon automobile, | ) tires, The scientific 1 "guillotine" is to dg sistance offered by the of the weighted blade of the exhibits are | vy buttons and levers v toOwer. : Througl see a . downw! ly upon CTY for ac it 1 trance of the Go , designed by eland, Ohio, to > generally cval 90â€"foot St t in a curve to proving ground,‘ tands for those automohbile d of the field the ened to afford a spectators, commedated weighte« exhibit is and 1 > IncIuC TIMMINS, ONTARIO e Goodrich by Wilbur to cccupy Ccval ~plot, T. Stretchâ€" to enclose ind,""‘ there 38 s1G2S, weighted varying ile, truck fic functcâ€" _ demonâ€" e walkâ€" another 5,000 of at one watch driving to be whichn i these s Marâ€" 1 with 1anish: [ â€"in "a > upon permit (From Northern Tribune) Chief of police J. R. Macdonald lost no time in acting upon the instruction ‘ of the Kapuskasing board of health last | week to round up any local supplies of shaving brushes made in Japan. He at once visited the stores, and with the willing coâ€"operation of the merchants took away with him many brushes they had in stock from that counitry. The local board of health acted upon cmergency instructions of the Ontario \board of health, which last week disâ€" covered that a brand of cheap Japanâ€" ese brushes marked "Made in Japanâ€" \sterilizedâ€"332" were impregnated with the deadly spores of anthrax, a maligâ€" nant disease mostly confined to rumâ€" inant animals but capable of transâ€" mission to humans, among whom it has been known to assume epidemic proâ€" ‘port,xons The Ontario board, upon tracing the origin of a few cases in this province to these cheap Jap brushâ€" ‘es acted with commendable promptâ€" Infected Shaving Brushes Seized at Kapuskasing ness in publicizing the danger and callâ€" ing upon all health authorit‘es and merchants and citizens to seize and forthwith destroy any that are found. It is known that these anthrax spores can linger in such things as hair (the common medium of transmission from animals to humans) for years wihâ€" out losing their virulence. The disâ€" is ocften fatal, taking the form of malignant carbuncles, ulcerations, enlargement of the spleen and general coliapse. It works fast. Sterilization in the home should not be depended upon {o make suspected brushes safe for shaving ‘use . The wisest course is to burn any Japanese brushes, and make sure that the new cne bought is made under human? labor conditions from reliable, diseaseâ€" free products. In other words, don‘t let Japan get under your skin or you‘ll be sorry. Conduct Business by Carrier Pigeons Stray Pigeon Shows Plan Whereby Pigeons are Used as Mail Carriers. Montreal, Feb. 14.â€"In these days of air mail, telegraph and radio, quite a stir was caused here when it came out that a firm of wholesale grocers in Malone, N.Y., was doing business by carrier pigeon. The story comes from LIFE INSURANCE G U A R D I A N L C A N A D 1 A N H O M E WWWM/ T ‘hn> files of the CanadIamn LAt~ press. It begins in Quebec City, with Rev. Rosario Benoit, Abbe of the Queâ€" bec Seminary, who loves to watch the pigeons in the University gardens along the St. Lawrence. A few days ago he noticed a stranger in the familiar flock, notlced a manger in the familiar flock, a bird with a ring around its fco.. Makinz friends with it, he finally capâ€" tured the pigeon, examined the band and found that the bird belonged to Dufort Brothers of Malone, 60 miles southwest of Montreal, just over the United States border. At their request Abbe Benoit put the piegon in a little box with holes punched in it and shipâ€" ped it home by Canadian National Exâ€" press. A letter from Malons to Quebec neâ€" vealed the fact that this pigeon, No. 20, was the offspring of two United States Army birds from Fort Monmouth, N.J. His background was gocd but he was only eight weeks old and an inex~â€" perienced {fraveller. Released at North Tawrenrr NY an ‘his first 25â€"mile only eight weeks old and an perienced {raveiler. Released at Lawrence, N.Y., on his first . flight, he went astray and beC tourist. The job he neglected was Abbe Benoit by Lso Dufort pat tners of the whole R E T U R N F A R E S TIMMINS, ON‘T. Standard . .. . $129.45 TourIst ; . . .. 113.15 Coach .. .. .. .98.40 Canada‘s Evergreen Playground Sleeping car fares e Low meal rates on trains. VANCOUVER VICTORIA SEATTLE m www in mrmmenmemmmmmerm FEnjoy Summer Activities ALL WINTER the modern way Wuy Do MILLIONS OF CANADIANS prefer the Life Insurance way of travelling through life? Because it is the proved and modern method of reaching their objective safely and surely. Life Insurance aids countless men and women on their journey through life. It is the only way by which the average man or woman can create a sizable estate for the protection of loved ones. And Life Insurance is the safest way to guarantee financial security for old age. anadian â€" Pacific Today, more than 3,500,000 Canadians cnjoy greater happiness and peaceâ€"ofâ€"mind by "charting their course" the safe Life Insurance way. Canadian National Exâ€" y and bscame a al rXtra firm. An ofâ€" outlined to one of the Attractive Fares And Train â€" Services TO PACcIFIC COAST ! Indulge in your favorite Summer sport â€"all Winterâ€"in the balmy, invigorâ€" ating climate of Canada‘s Evergreen Playground. Golf, â€" hiking, _ riding, motoring, yachting, riding . .. enjoy majestic mountain sceneryâ€"â€"see snowâ€" clad Canadian Rockies en route. Special Winter rates at hotels, Attracâ€" tive rail fares now in effect and until May 14. Return limit: Standard. 3 months:; Tourist and Coach, 6 months, Stopovers allowed at intermediate points Enjoy Winter sports in the Canadian Rockiesâ€"special low rail fares in effect during January, February and March. Full information from any ticket agont WINXTER GOLF TOURNAMENT Victoria â€" March 6â€"11, 1939 ficer in the National Guard, Mr. Duâ€" fort became interested in â€" carrier pigeons while studying an army Corâ€" respondence course. He thought a few pairs and filew them for fun. Then he hit on the idea of using the birds in his business. Each day, the salesmen take out two birds and at ncon reâ€" lease them with the morning‘s orders attached to their legs. ’ Huntingdon Gleaner: The Queen Mary, British liner has the largest ‘.whistles ever fitted to a ship. It uses ‘three sevenâ€"foot instruments, two on |\the fore funnel and one on the midâ€" ships funnel. Although the giant ;whistles can be headr five miles away, ; they are pitched so low that they ~cause no distress to the ears of pasâ€" sengers aboard the luxury liner. About 95 per cent. of the time, the pigeons return promptly, Mr. Dufort said, and the orders are assembled and ready for shipmnet much earlier than if the firm had to wait for the travellers to retiurn at night. The father of the Dufort and founder of the firm is a Embrun, Ontario. PAGE FIVE 158X Brothers native of