Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 14 Mar 1940, 2, p. 2

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In the bottom of a baking dish arâ€" range a bunch of leeks. Sprinkle over the leeks one sliced carrot, two sprigs of parsley, one minced celery stalk and a sprig of thyme. Add one cup of meat stock and cook uncovered in a hot Leeks take therefore the sionally at a ation is simp the green top fore they are minutes in bs 4A Crgam yolk has be or a sauce sour cream, gus. They : which may with grated be braised same mannt They m stock in or celery. This mem} not so com as are many leek or ftwo stews.â€" Few leeks, oorved nish an inex table. They cold with a F 146 years. We a consumption of do with either h long lifs. Just recent bration of M On that date supposed to : According to : uncle ~f Kin faycurite me; leek, He is with a contey Domestic Science Expert Has Many Good Words To Say About the Leek Vegetable Associated with Wales is Inexpensive, Says Miss Barber. Lecks with a Cream Sauce, are Savory Addiâ€" tion to Quick Meal. Club Steak for Main Dish. m Braised Leeks 1M ith ni ro0rt time to ccook and ay be featured occaâ€" k meal. The preparâ€" The tougher parts of iculd be removed beâ€" ked fifteen to twenty t ] 1¢ up stock in th ce or celery. Perhaj juring h 2C 1J and 2 that boiled furâ€" LOr asp? vith bu d choird WE i1 V 17 ind D2 tmis chicensemble the dress is navy blue crepe, and the blouse is of white and navy printed crepe. The print is ised also on the boxâ€"pleated skirt, givâ€" ing a smart striped effect when the wearer is in motion. Cufls of the printed crepe and a navy blue leather be!t are other features tisement whichâ€" a} lcwing day the sigr s3red by ‘the Don have been doleted, Mcntreal Star announcing the theatre political propaganda is becoming mors and more apparent. Premier Hepburn‘s: banning film urtil after the election threw a bombshell into the plans of the Liberal Campaign Committee. They were quite surprised that any. cbhjection should be taken to a fi‘lm showing the work of tho governmert ard the advertiseâ€" ments of the film boidly exploited that "achnievements Since the ba rdvertisements Government Advertised as Sponsoring Picture TOâ€"DAY‘S FASHIONS THERE‘S a lim °GZ jolitical ind mo Potato chips, Loek Sliced Orange until sauce with cauliflio with fish. oven, 425 fifteen minute: Slice Orange:; and Chill Prepare Leeks and cook Light Broiler Make Sauce Broil Steak . Open can of Soup and t Drain apd dress Leeks Make Coffee. Released by the Bell Syn (From Toronto Telsgram) Evidence that the March of m ‘"Carada at War‘" was desizr ta x Salt Paprika Bâ€"ialt 2f ediet egS8 cup im n ensemble Method of Preparation Breath of Spring Quick Meal Vegetable Sou olled Cube S Snecial sSsauce reéeath of : navy blue advertis2] under dat showing: s this ve 2C] Wa nIC of. tI been dats of March 1 ngâ€"at the Capital very interssting March of Time ored by the Doâ€" In the adverâ€" ired on the folâ€" ant words "sponâ€" on Government" Advertisements ernment." e picture the changed. For ert _ ‘inâ€"_ the Specia!l Sauce Cocvanut MA add other laot water en. Serve broceoli or in the In for about Time a 1or mors2 At arscund five in the afterncon MacDougall told him that she considerâ€" ed her apartment all right and would sleep there that night. Inasmuch af hss could still smell gas in the apartâ€" ment he warned her not to. At 10.30 pm. he saw her again and at 11 p.m. there still was the cdor of gas in her apartment. However, she was deterâ€" mined to sleep there and said that she would leave all windows open. At 1130 p:m. Ned Rochon and his wife and three children came into the suilding. He warned Rochon to have the children sleep somewhere else. However, he and his wife decided to use their apartment. Dr. Metcalfe was called shortly after four o‘¢lo*k by Mrs. Rochon. When he Buckholtz and little to add t had testified. R. Gaudreau Vercival warnt children in Mr. Vercival. Asked if he had had experience, Mr Vercival said that he had done at leas! 155 fumigating jobs for Mr. Proulx who had a license. He said that a was his custem he used tear gas alsc in the house. The tear gas was to reâ€" pel any psossible intruders while the hydrogen cyanide had a chance to inâ€" jure them. The fumigator said he told Mrs. Macâ€" Dougall that it would be all right for her‘ to go back in that night if she keapt the windows open and provide for plenty of ventilation. He told her that no children would be allowed in and she telephoned and told her grandâ€" son that he could not stay with het Verc:ival said that he used a blowet to clear the gas out of the three of four foot deep attic. He blew out what he cculd and left the maching running un there for half an hour. He and his men compressed ali pillows and beddinz in the building and blew on them with the machine. The children‘s mattresses were put outside, where they remained all day. He gsot instructions from the janitor by telephone to fumigate the house, said Mr. Vercival. On Saturday, March 2. he had a man measure the building to determine the number of cublic feet. On Monday, March 4 at 9 p.m. they began the work of fumigation. The windows and doors were sealed, toilets were locked and food was removed from the building. In the afternoson on Mon« day cyanide cans were taken in and gas released in the building. The house was locked and guarded until the next day at 12.05 p.m. when the fumigators donned masks and took the cyanide cans out. . All the windows were cpened and the storm windows whicnh were hinged at the top, were shoved out. amination for a license for fumigating. The license certificate was on the way. Mr. Vercival produced a letter from the Department of Health which said "as soon as we have reteived an inâ€" surance policy covering. liability we will forward your license to do this work.‘ A letter from the insurance man, J. W Sposner, to Mr. Vercival said that he had been accepted for a policy and that the policy would be in his hands in a few days. Versival, the man who did the fumiâ€" gating, was the next witness called. He said that he recently passed his exâ€" |cival's representative; Dean Kester reâ€" presented J. W. Fogg Company, cwned the ‘Crown Attorney S. A. Caldsick did the interrogating. Coroner was Dr. H. E. Minthorn. Giving the jurors an cutline of the ,caae. the Coroner said that the J. W Foggâ€"owned, sixâ€"rcoomed apartment at the corner of Rea and Hollinger Lane needed fumigation so the janitor of the building ccontacted the fumigator, A Peéercival, and instructed him to begin IFcur or more hours after the house had been opsned Mrs. MacDougall was found dead in her bed. Dr. J. A. MoInnis, M.O.H., said that he issued a permit to A. Vercial to fumigate the building. The gas to be used was hydrogen cyanide which was considered most effective in the deâ€" struction of vermin. The gas, said Dr. M:Innis, had a distinct, pungent flavor and was easily disseminated in air. By terms of the permit,. the building was to have been closed from 3.30 p.m. on March 4 to 12 o‘clock, noon, on Marcth 5. It could not be cccupied for four hours after it was opened. "I think that is too short a time myself," said Dr. McInnis. "ILf ; the weather is inclement it should be. at least six hours. In this case the fumiâ€" gator was well within the regulations. It was five or six hosurs before the tonâ€" ants were allowed back in." 2@TE Memsers of the jury were Thoma. Villeneuve, James Harry Shepâ€" herd, J..A. Tremblay and W. L. Purdy Gregory Evans was present as . Mr. Verâ€" cival‘s representative; Dean Kester reâ€" pressnted J. W. Fogg Company, whic‘ cwned the buiitding. ‘Crown Attorney dea in her apart in future, fu finished their ing, have it « phaysician bef to go back in Memszsers 0 She promised me faithfully that she brought engquired Chemist Should Examine Fumigated Buildings, Jury Says Find Accidental Death in| MacDougall Case but Reâ€" commend Medical a n d Chemical Inspection in All Cases. udreau, the janitor, said that warned him nct to let any in the building but told hiur was all right for him to sleep night provided he kept the in his apartment open. und five in the afterncon Mrs. ler attached to the vordict in ty the coroner‘s jury which 1 on Monday afternson int> the Mrs. Hugh Allon MacDougall, s poisoned by toxis gas while apairtment, recommended that e, fumigators, after they had their work in a house or buildâ€" e it examinei by a chemist or n befcre allowing the ozcupants of Vercival, William oseph Barrette, had what their employe THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Constable Atkinson said that he pu)lâ€" ed himsel{fl up and put his head in the attic. The gas there was very strong. Between the gas there and that in the MacsDougall apartment he turned sick and was forced to sit down. sleep in the building it was all right for him and his family. The baby was coughing in the night but he thought it was because she had a cold. At around four o‘clock he and his wife b»rought the child into their bed and shortly after it lapsed into unconsciousness. The other two children were ill and retâ€"hing. When he arrived said Constable Reed, he saw the closed door the hallway from the Rochon apartâ€" ment. He picked the lock with a hairâ€" pin and went in. Mrs. MacDougall was lying across the bed. "The apartment smelled very strongly of gas and one could almost see the purplish haze," he told the jury. At 4.50 a.m. after a politseman had broken his way into the MacDougall ipartment, Dr. Alex Finlayson was salled. He testified that he gave the woeman adgrenelin and injected methaâ€" line blue but there was no sign of life even after 45 minutes of artificial reâ€" spiraticn. Ned Rochon said that he figured that If it was all right for Gaudreau to sleep in the building it was all right Relax and allow feet to fall back in place. Repeat five times. Relax â€"a few seeâ€" Another Exercise Still lying down with feet apart, exâ€" tend the legs straight out, heels pushâ€" Ing hard, and rotate the toes inward, big toss touching. You lie down limply on"a hard matâ€" tress without a pillow. Ral.se and bend one foot unward (the toes pointing toâ€" ward your head) while an assistant tries to retard the movement by pulling away from you. When she releases her grip, drop your foot limply to the bed. Repeat with other foot. You should get a feeling of relaxed, soothed foot muscles. The second part of the movément is this. Without raising your foot off the bed, press your toes against the hand of an assistant as she presses toâ€" ward youâ€"note the tenseness in the calf of your leg. When she pulls her hand away, allow your foct to drop as It will in relaxation. Repeat with other fCot. First teach . yourself. how to relax your feet at the end of a busy day. Begin with the exercise llustrated above by Janize Logan. 5o let‘s do everything we can this winter to prevent that ‘sithouette from becoming an actuality. From this quotation we may see how ‘mpcrtant your feet are In relation to yeour beauty. If your posturs is destroy.â€" °d by ailing feet, you may be sure that uunlove‘y strained lines will appear in your face, your abdcmen . amuscles will weaken and your breast muscles sag, An unlovely picture, isn‘t it? Soa let‘s do everything we can this "Considering your foot as the foundaâ€" tion of your body, and in :s proper reâ€" lation to the body‘s posture, we must say that, like the wnole body, it hnas "wo attitudes, that of activity and that of ~fatigue. The body weight falls downward through the leg and on through the centre, or slightly to the outer side of the foot. The body balâ€" ances uron the centre of the foot.® The muscles cn its inner border and the long flexor muscles of the toes, by their aciivity, hold the arclh supported. "In the attitude of fatigue we may assume that the muscles, exhausted, have given way, and the arch is supâ€" ported by the ligaments alone. In this attitude the tces are turned out.> The body weight then falls on the inner side of the foot, the weak side, where there are only ligaments to support it." In his splendid book for the layman," cnds Doctor Armitage Whitman writes: | five ILI?E uty and You You h PATBRITMCTA T a V These preéity iesei vC.â€"viig «U J _ iL s U:A:N ul .10 SCreen,. Th(‘}' demonstrate the exercize described in toâ€"day‘s column. Learn to Relax and Groom Feet for Comfort and Beauty. by PATRICIA LINDSAY Sudbury Star:â€"In a late harangue, the Fuehrer makes no mention of his No. 2 man, Goering. Trus, there was an allusion to the fat of the land, but not by name. the money in 1932 at 4 per cent interest and signed a contract that specifies the bank is to pay the money to the heirs of the winnerâ€"$2,084,495,â€" 605.22. (From The World Almanas) Two friends made a bet in Baton Rouge, La. that will pay the winner over two billion dollars, but it won‘t do either of them any good. Payoffs will be in 2432. R,. E. Collins bet J. D. Stotler $2.50 Louisiana‘s $5,000,000 capitol buildâ€" ing will not stand up 500 years. They This Certainly Would be a Lovely Wager to Collect Now when your feet arse relaxed you should get up and give them a dousing in hot water, then, cold, then hnot again. The next twenty minutes you could use to advantage in giving them a proâ€" fessional pedicure ending up with a soothing focot masage. (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.o cnds. Gradually work up to twentyâ€" five times. D O W N 3 years to pay the balance. Installed in s your Kitchen FOR OMLY CANADA NORTHERN POWER GORPORATION LIMITED Electric cooking is fast, cheap and HEALTHâ€" FUL. You don‘t lose valuable vitamins when your food is cooked on an electric range. Let us show you the 1940 models. Use electricity for cooking, wood or coal for heat. Get the most out of your food COOK WITH ELECTRICITY Grcctming VEGETABLES RETAIN V iTA M IN S wit h Controlling and Operating NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY, LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY, LIMITED TACK BE NIMBLE Jack Br AUICK JACK BEâ€"FuLL or ENERGY: You Et More Prtcious VITAMINS, With ElEctrRic cooxery! Townfolk:â€"A beauty parlor in Wilâ€" mette, Illinois, has a number of young patronesses who bring their dolls for a permanent or water wave. Almost any day, nine to a half dozen dolls may be seen sitting under the drying maâ€" chine. For page after paze one could list the fragrance of our varied and fasciâ€" nating world. Yet scierce is being inâ€" voked to condemn us to live perpetuâ€" ally in a lethal chamber Oof attar of roses,. cdors have this power of reca arg oid experiences, o.d friends, old plases, I, for cne, enjoy the fragrance of a clean sarnyard and the sharp unforgettable Lmell of a singed from the blackâ€" nith shop that now, alack, is almost cbsolete. It is the some with the odcr of a harness shop. Other odors are memcrable, Th <«mell of printer‘s ink, which produces ar excitation in ors who has left the printao0p for years and then someâ€" where picks that odor out cf the breeze; the simell of a fresh magaâ€" zine, just opened; the fragrance of a leather binding on an old book; the symphonic odor of spic cabinets, with cinnamon, sage, and curry playing pungent s=los. and the ::nell of labcratory juiscss and strong soap. Yet the smell of a horse is a fine smell, and we do not sBray i‘s hide with eau de cologns, Nor do I object to the whiff of keroâ€" sene, which has a clean, heady odor, and brings with it a ruch of memories of the lamp we once studied under. More than any other sense impression, Al~~, as a result of advertising comâ€" paigns, the human family has bascom> ashamed Of the odor of clean bodies and the nell of labcratory juisss and have made almost obsolete the good smell of cloth, remembesed from our childhood when the passing of Mother in th@ rscm meant the passing of the fruga‘ fragrance of girgham and the faint, urique odo; of sweet punger man‘s cream polishes are t thetic attars., have made â€" Perfumes Toâ€"Day Hide the | Honest, Wholesome Smells ® An adave that rubbe the most :( V A1n it eac nha 31 By Ernest L. Meyer) ertisins main has discov 1@t€e ; .20 they be n business, it ssem;s; to me, g:ing in tos heavily for sieés. All the modi‘n woâ€" 1s, oirtments, powder and heavily freighted with synâ€" These stupefying aroma:s Very Finest Qualit and h new. ; mM ra(¢ H rking nme ‘HURSDA t MAR CH 141 i g in a restricted Last r the magistrate‘s automobile gged by a patroiman. When tke ime up in court four months latâ€" > magistrate called out his own pleaded sguilty, fined himself $2 he cout CHeaner â€"â€" Magistrate nta, presiding in Brookâ€" irt fBAned himself $2 for

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