It‘s pretty romatic to think about dinâ€" ning in the â€"moonlight, but civilization has softened us, no doubt about that, to the point where nature gets a litâ€" tle too thick if we take it straight. A little forethocught, however, will bring all the comfort of home to our garâ€" den spot, and so if you‘re intending to embark on a season of outdcor haspiâ€" tality, now is the time to make .Ccaâ€"eâ€" ful plans for doing it as if it were "noâ€" thing at all, my dear, s‘mply nothing." Here are the necessities. 0000080804040 0400009000 004008 06004060060 % 0600 00 0 6 0 6 6 6 6 6 6 a Comfortable Furniture, Gay Pottery and Linen, Pr: for Service Are Impor Table and chairs, of cou No. 221 No. 222, mixed Mon. only No 223, mixed Wed. only Our train service between Cochrane and points north, will be as follows Coal and Wood Coke â€" Welsh Anthracite â€" Pennsylvania Blue â€" Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buck wheat â€" Nut Slack â€" Steam Coal and Cannel. This cleverly contrived centrepiece is made with table is set with ral Rattan and plate make this pleasant outdoor table very appealing. The chairs have cushion seats and interlaced backs of split ash. . mixed only , mixed Thurs. only Effective, SATURDAY, JULY 8STH COAL AND WOoOooDnDvYARDn AND oOFF] CP #% 00008000000 000 0 0 0000008 0 6 00 0 0 0 ¢ e our varielty of coal PLEASANT HOMES Phone 32 | Ly Q‘ Ar .’ LÂ¥ ’ LÂ¥,. Cochrane ) Ly l Arr. Moosoner the size you‘re going to be nseding. That usually means a big table because you probably wculdn‘t be going to so much trouble except for a party. But if you‘â€" re really sericus about the romantic ftsouch and want to have intimate bridgeâ€"siz> tables i are always availabl« sometimes several 0 uation better han touch and want to have intimatie breakfasts or suppers for two on the porth or lawn remember that smart by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin made with acgarden hose and cellophane straws set with raffia mats and pottery plates. Cochtrane Cochrane Cochrune Fraserdale Macsonce r#serdale elv Timmins metal or rattan For that matter suit the sitâ€" ) mM 445 pim p..n p.I»1 71. 1M p..n retiH ABOUT IT al Light and Convenient Bells or flowers,. Leaf and vegetablesâ€"shaped dishes aren‘t new but they continue to be smart, so do plates with fruit and vegetabled ecorations. Mats are of bamboo, straw, cellophanme, cork glass, Be sure to ‘provide places to sit for es many guests as you plan to have. There are nested metal chairs that will come in handy as extras or you can have a supply of inexpensive white foldâ€" inz lawn chairsâ€"these in addition to your regular lawn chairs. TO KEEP FOOD HOT For keeping food hot while it‘s being brcught out and served our pet idea is a plate warmer or a warming oven with a sliding door. If you‘re within reach of an electric plug, use it for a buffet warmer; otherwise use a sterno or aleohol burner. Or else one of those warmer jackets with hot water for heat. Don‘t forget a big coffee pot with a keepâ€"hct arrangement, and some sort of vacuum tub for ice cubes. Wo‘ve hunted around in vein in search of something better hurâ€" ricane lamps for illnminaion, but they seem to be the best looking and most practical idea still. Available in table medeols or with stands of their own and in all popular finishes. There are also hurricane lamps with candles that burn down inside. adjusting themselves as they burn. For garden iHumination baby spot lights are dramatic. table when desired. FOR BUFFET SERVING If you plan to serve buffet style, you‘ll want one large table and auxiliary bridg»o tables or else some of the cleverly nested tables shown about. ~You‘ll also find round cr semiâ€"circular nested tabâ€" les in either metal or rattan and with glass, sandâ€"blasted cak or tile tops. Garden tables are grand excuses for picking up odd and irresponsible potâ€" tery and linen. Plates with rope deâ€" sign edges to set on a starry cloth patâ€" terned with the constellations or wood plates to use with cellulose mats cut out and colored in shapes of vegetables If you‘re serving the meal at the table, add a side serving table to the list of musts. This may be a large tray with a folding X base or else it can be a cart style to be wheeled out with a ad. Some cof these lawn carts are deâ€" aned to carry almost everything you‘â€" egoing to needâ€"choose between wheelâ€" arrow â€" models, pushcarts, portable ars and such, an infinite and debonair rriety. for spray. The Polynesian designs are very new in summer linens. A tablecloth with shell and fishnet patern is in lovely soft colâ€" orings. Mats with lei garlands are pretâ€" ty and tropical looking. Jaunty linen mats are in various casual themesâ€" hunting, music, French proverbs and the like. A cloth with antiques scatterâ€" ed over it could make conversation for collectors. There is also a cloth with oldâ€"time eyelet embroidery ruffles printed demurely on it. NOT ALWAYS SILVER Silver isn‘t also always silverâ€"outâ€" asoors. Wood, glass or corkâ€"handled knives and glass isn‘t always glass. There are various new metal beverage sets that suit garden use. though perâ€" sonally we‘ll take the painted glass for informal use. Lastâ€"but maybe first in importance is the bug question. If you have a couple of slaves to wave peacock fans, all well and good, though not just our idea of modern hygiene. However we‘re in favor of the less picturesque but more effective method of electrocution the electracide looks like a lantern but actually it kills insects that touch it. Necessary if you‘re really going to enjoy your foray into the great opet spaces. "There is but little ‘that can be added to what the Advance has said. It has covered the ground admirably and has given the one hope of reducing the evils of direct reliefâ€"land clearing bonus, and we might add, marketing facilities." Toronto Telegram: Many a man nowadays likes to live in a house by the side of the road in order to rent rooms to tourists, Medical and Diet Treatment A patient apparently in good physiâ€" cal condition consuiwed a _ physician because he could not eat solid food: in fact he was living on milk alone beâ€" cause solid food gave him distress. As he had formerly been suffering with stomach ulcer the physician though: that p:rhaps the ulcer in healâ€" ing had partly closed the passage from the stomach to the small intestine. An xâ€"ray examination showed that the barkun sulphate meal which should be out of the stomach in six hours at least, was practically all present at the end of ten hours. Only a tmy stream, I am mentioning the above case beâ€" cause many patients with stomach uleer are afraid of sudden death if they do not undergo surgical operation, whereâ€" as most ulcters toâ€"day are treated by diet and medicine and it is only when diet and medicine do not bring relief, such as the above blocked opening or when there is perforation into the abâ€" domen, or in some cases of bleeding that operation is performed. Of the remainderâ€"1272 casesâ€"161, about 11 percent, are rear, but only 87â€" about 7 per centâ€"dfed of petic ulcer. The average age for the whole group was about 56 years, the average time they had suffered was between 12 and 13 years, and there was little difference in this respect between the patients who died of their ulcer and those who did Fend today for this special bockl2t (No. 1€1) by Dr. Barton entilled "EFatâ€" ing Your Way to Health." It deals with calcries, vitamins, mineral, what and how muth to eat. Encose Ten onts with your request to cover cost of service and handling and sent your reâ€" quest to The Bell Library 247 West, 43rd, New York, N. Y., or The Advance, Timâ€" mins. Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act.) The Cochrane Northland Post then reprints the greater part of the editorial in The Advance cn the matteér, and concludes its editoral with this paraâ€" graph :â€" smaller than a slate pencil, was carryâ€" ing some of the barium sulphate into the cintestine. ‘This meant that the opening was practically closed due to the scoarâ€"tissue formed when the ulcer healed. As this â€" condition _ requires the patient, by watching his diet, enâ€" joys good health, While more cases after operation and their age was lower at death, this was due to the Tact that the "surgical‘" casâ€" es were more severe. cer (ulcter of the stomach and first part of small intestine) handled in the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital from 1913 to 1932. They were able to trace all but 156 patients. The thought then is that pati¢nts with stomach ulser often live a longz time bezcause cof medical and dist treatâ€" ment. Drs. Monroe and Emory sug:est that medical treatmeont should be used for inost cases and cperation should be perâ€" formed only when medical trsatment has failed. EATING YOUR WAY TO HEALTH Dr. R. T. Mconroeâ€"and E. S. Emory, Jr., Boston, in New England Journal of medicine review 1428 cases of peptic ulâ€" In an editorial article last week, The Cochrane Northland Post says:â€" "Under the capticn "Evil Eifects of Relief‘‘ the Porcupine Advance recentâ€" ly published an outstanding editorial on upon conditions among the settlers of the North. In answering a claim by the Sudbury Star that relief conditions wer> not so bad in the North as in othâ€" er parts of the province the Advance showed quite conclusively that such is not the case." Believes Land Bonus is Necessary for the North (by James W. Barion, M.D.) of Bout $ Bobp |_Writing this week in his column in | The Toronto Telegram, Thomas Richâ€" ard Henry seems to be concerned parâ€" with iaventions. First there is About Inventions and Other Affairs Noise, Consistency, Beauty and the Bridge, Not to Mention Et Cetera. "If the horn were attached to the foot brake and could only be blown at the same time the bakes go on thereâ€" by slowing up the car, quite a number of accidents might be avoided. To preâ€" vent the horn blowing every time the brake is used it would be necessary to have a thumb contact on the steering wheel. "My contention is that in 90 per cent of the cases where the horn is blown the brake should be used instead." cxhaust its possibilifies a permanent wave and all the other doodabs. Bill $5. When it was all finâ€" ished she calmly announced she had lost all her money playing bridge and would pay for it some other day. That was two weeks ago and the bill is still unpaid." "We are all beset by the driver who blasts his way through traffic using his horn to excess. Besides this it sends her ahead all the tim» and the first thing she knows she is clear out of the garden, it has been long felt wanting. It is an awful thing to make an nice big garden and have these demn chickens scratch it all up. I want to get it made on royâ€" alty. They can be build for a dime apiece and will quickly sell for $6.00 a pair let me know by return mail if you can make these thinzs in your factorâ€" Even the hen might find it useâ€" ful. Every time the pup took a notion to chase her, she would just give a vigâ€" orous scratch, causing herself to be proâ€" pelled forward in a form of lseomotion so different from the usual that the pup would naturally stop in amazement. This would allow ‘the hen, to procered le‘surely under the nearsst coop. Now if anybody takes this up the profit of $5.90 on each pair will have to be split four ways because we ar? going to insist on the first ninety cents for promotionâ€"or we won‘t give up the names of the lad who wrote the letter. A Letter "Would the following amuse you?" It didâ€"actually occur. It does amuse usâ€"and also reminds us that Canada is a country where difâ€" ferent opinions can exist side y side while the possessors of these opinion‘s ca remain at Prace with each other. Beauty and the Bridge A lady writes: "Ycu have given prominence to the meanest man, how about the meanest woman ? Neise "Why cannot the motor car engine think of some scheme to help reduce excessive hornâ€"blowing?" sug:ests a reader. "Please find cnclssed model on hen scratcher and ken walker I just took out a patent on this thing. I have a good thing as the idea is nou and need it is nct infringing on nobody else right as ther> was nothing like this before ever patented so the record shows at Washington. You fasten this device an the hen‘s lez by the means of thes? 2 strings the bottom piece is flexible it don‘t interfere at all with the chickens in walking or anything they wish to do but the minute the hen throws her foot backwards it gives her a heck of a counterstroke it makes her turn sumâ€" mersult 10 or 12 times before she can pick herself up she can‘t imagine what in heck struck her so sudden. For instance, it could be billed as an attraction for paying boarders who would naturally be amused by tumâ€" bling hens. A married woman went into a neighâ€" borhood beauty parlor, and a ‘baby bob‘, an Italian inventor, with a qusstion mark, and the there are other "Invenâ€" tions‘" following, somewhat as follows: Italian Invexstor? Agit, the Italian News Agency states: "The ‘autostrada‘ or rcad buillt exâ€" clusively for motor traffic is a typically Italian invention. The first road of the kind was that connecting Milan with Lake Magziore . . . . The road has now been in use for fourteen years." "Fourtsen years ago" would land us back about 1925. We suppos> the catch is in the "rcads built exclusively for motor tra{â€" fic‘" but after all there were very few cams c¢of cxgn travelliny on our motor rcads for a considerable period before *"Two men riding side by side on the strzet car, one a typical German, reading a pictcrial type of marazine, "S‘cigecende Flut,," with pictures of mighty Mighty German bombing planes and Hitler plastered all over the pages, them an next to him, a Jew, reading "Prediction," the leading article of which was "Th> Downfall of the Dicâ€" tators." A loral commercial company recelived the following offer to sell aâ€" patfl'nt to Ahim : The man selling this patent did not Hen Scratching Invention ‘"Nearly a hundred immigrants are stowaways on the Atlantic Clipper‘s return flitht to America and I am helpâ€" ing them," says Leonard H. Engel, Science Service aviation writer, "As a matter of fact, they have the consent and approval of the U. S. Government. Little Margret went visiting on a farm . yesterday. She tol‘d her hostess that her mother culdn‘t let her drink anything bu "paralyzed" milk. Tht Archdeacon‘s Choice There is an archdeacon in the Anâ€" glican church who smokes a lot of pleaâ€" sure out of his pipe, and is quite fussy awhbhout his brand of tobacco. He recommended ‘"Presbyterian mixâ€" tur>" and "three nuns‘"‘ to a friend ‘he other day. Maybe there are no Anglican namss for tobacco. "I have them cooped up in litt> wocden cage, not much bigger than a cigar box. It is quite appropriate that they will fly to America, for they are flies., This is in the story. "She met him in Kansas City in 1924 maried him in 1925, divoreed him in 1927, remarried him the same year, came to Hollywood with him in 1929, separatâ€" ed from hium for the second time in 1935 her mind. The New York Journal and American tells the story of one yaung woinan in atch of Immigrants to Take Atlantic Flight th "To the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine of the U. S. Departâ€" Timmins Dairy Well, it is an idea anyway. Consistency It is a woman‘s privilege to change THE GEORGE TAYLOR HARDWARE ‘ LIMITED RETAIL STORE T!MMINS WHOLESALE oo ww a‘% m Y wC oo Â¥oFKANXLUE‘ RETAIL STORE PHONE 300 13a Pine Street North Timmins A FLOOR THAT 3 TO CLEAN l l Taylor‘s factoryâ€"trained linoleum specialist will take complete charge, design special patterns if needed, supply all materials and apply the floor or wall at one low cost, All work is guaranteed. â€" â€" â€" for samples and sketches of Marboleum floors and Muroleum wall treatments. He‘ll gladly call and show you what these durable, washable linoleums will do for your rooms. Estimates prepared without charge or obliâ€" gation. Paralyzed Milk Marzret went visiting@g on INSU RANC E. © A kitchen built for efficiency and spotless cleanliness! From the floor up, everything is designed to make life happy and comfortable for you. The floor of Dominion Inlaid 0. The floor of Dominion Inlaid Linoleum makes a delightful setâ€" ting for the washable Muroleum walls, while green Marboleum is SIMMS, HOOKER DREW Ask Taylor‘s Hundreds of mothers in this district choose Timmins Dairy Milk for their bables, and with good cause! For years now, we‘ve put all our energy into giving this town a milk that‘s richer, purer and better in every way. It‘s a superiority gotten through unceasing efforts at improvement! HOUSES AND LOTS FOR SALE CQONVENIENT TERMS "WE sSERVE THE NOR lrll »# Phone 935 for Delivery IS,THE KEY / Y fhat Les Hornick and Pilot Wally Sip e, of the Kirkland Lake Flying Club, used a light plane for bill distribution this werk. Flying over the town at as low a height as safety warranted, the fliers tossed out copies of the official proâ€" gramme of the Kirkland Lake Lions Club Carnival to be held at Culver Park on Saturday. The sight and sound of the airsbip attracted much atâ€" tention, while the programmes dropped from the plane also came in for special notice, the novelty of distribution giving it special effectiveness. ment of Agriculture, I am bringing back a consignment of parasites that will fight the asparamus beetle. These creatutes look like ordinary hous> flies and they are called scientifically Meigâ€" enia fcoralis. I received theimn from Dr. H. L. Parker, in charge of the U. S. Enâ€" temciog!:cal Station at St. Cloud nsar Paris, one of Uncle Sam‘s two permanâ€" ent parasite stations in foreign countâ€" ries, The other is near Yokchama, Jaâ€" pan. Delivering Bills Now by Aeroplane at Kirkland "Parasites are studied in foreign lands and when they give promises of usefulnéess are carried to America and set upon EuGCean corn borers, Hessian flies, oriental fruit moth, gsynsy imoth, lima pod borers and ctherâ€"p>sts." Specialist â€" â€" â€" used on the cabinet top and surâ€" rounding walls. No backache goes into the cleaning of a kitchen like this! No need to worry about grease spots and stains. They come off like a charm! All kinds of upâ€"toâ€"date designs are here for your selection, and«ew! will be glad to serve you. Phoneâ€"Office 112 Residence 135 Pagat seyen WHOLESALE PHONE 1601