Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 18 Sep 1947, 2, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

3 (1) Th ruler and religious head of N. W. ~Indian State: (2) ‘But money‘ gives m> pleasure all+the time." (3) Lewis Carroll. (4) "The ‘dog it was that died." (5) "Thgurâ€" Just steals the just‘s umbrella,! ; .. of thisâ€"â€"â€"The Olive Thomscn Shop which is now located at 39 Third avenu?, in a wonderful new setting, is ready for you with a splend.d collecâ€" tion of exquidtely fashioned coats. Some are lavishly trimmed with fur ‘and for those who prefer them tnat way ther2 are some bsauties and are made‘ un in som» of the nicest colors I‘ve seen since before the war. I couldn‘t pessibly tell you all the fabrics, all the colors or th> furs that go with them but I can say they are all "I:." For thoss who like a plainer type coatl, there is a grand collection of tailored styles, somse are fitted, others semiâ€" fitted, and again there are the new full backed, longer leagth and hooded affairs that has set New York, Paris and London agdg. So do go to Olive Thomson Shon for that extra special wintesr coat. a *Â¥ + + Â¥ Any time is a gocd time t’ get marâ€" ried but, still the spring and the fall are weddingâ€"record seasons. Now that we are approaching the days of autumn leaves you‘ll find that you have several wedding gifts to buy and that can be a great pleasure if you stlect them at C. A. Remus, corner of Third and Cedar Str:et. This exâ€" clusive shcp imports from England the finest of silverware, massive tea and coffee sets, trdys of every size, entre> dishes, etc. In add tion there is a wonderful displaly of crystal and the JjJewe‘ll:ry ‘is something out of this world. Thers are hcavily chased braâ€" celets, brooches, pendants and lcocke‘s, the sort of thing that zoes beautifwly with the styl:s of 1947. And . . . have you seen the wonderful shipment of handâ€"made Sicilian Terraâ€"Cotta ware, imported direct from Sicily? If you haven‘t you are n»ssing something. These charming charactsrs, exquisitsâ€" Jly carved and perfect in every minute detail depicts the every day life of the natives of that country. We were more than intrigued with "The Street S{nger," "The Old Violin Player" and the one of a cow gazing fondly upon her newborn calf while the old farinir sat look ng benigning upon the stene. Mr. Remus is vleased to present to the peoule of th> Porcupine this very fine collection of unusual art. This is the first showing in Timmins and you are Iinvited to view these collecâ€" tor‘s items. IVLLF, INECHMIUS 1s$ DIGASEQU %4O0 presEnNtT O the of th> Porcupine this very fine collection of unusual art. This is the first showing in Timmins and you are invited to view these collecâ€" tor‘s items. { + : These lovely chill Septembar . mornâ€"« 2 ings one is even pleased to think of w.nter, of snow and frosty air, but above all, winter coats. When your thoughts drift in that direction think Not that the age limit for ccllege entrance has ‘been reduced. It all stems from the greatly swollsn number of married exâ€"ssrvicemen entering unâ€" iversity this year and who. combined with the number of high school gradâ€" uates seeking a college education, will make th‘s. year‘s enrollment ons of the greatest on record. Student ‘baggage, according to ofâ€" ficers of the Canadian National Exâ€" haccaloa Ahnnmarl in \a n arearl m oo aa There is plenty to write about these Beptember daysâ€"â€"â€"the shops glow with color, variety and n:wness and noâ€" where is this more striking than at Jen Langs Shop. Her collection ci beautifully tailcred dresses is an *%¢câ€" full. And the great lur»> just now is her marvellous parads cf tartansâ€" clans MacDuff, Margaret / Rose, Black Watch, Buchanan ctc., are represented in the smartly pleated, smartly swingâ€" ing skirts, in b:coming slacks and cui‘ts. and dresses. Ths tailoring is flawless naturallv, all bearng stamuos of perfectich. Then too, Jen has a glitterimg array of dresses for afterâ€" noon wear, cock.:a‘ls, dinners and parties, th:s> are ccming in in handâ€" some array . . . its going to be a lovely fall and winter for cloths at Jin Langs, 17 Pinz street North. Answers The young man in the dock was charg:d with disord®erly conduct. Eyeâ€" him coldlyv, the magistrate asked his profession., "My client is a baller," â€" explained lawyer; "he plays They suggest to the stud:ints that all luggage be packed carefully. with a permanent label pasted inside the trunks and bags, the removal or oblitâ€" €ration of all cld address marks, and that all luggage should have at least two address labels firmly attached on the outside with complete names and addresses of shipper and destination. Student ‘baggage, according to ofâ€" ficers of the Canadian National Exâ€" press, has also changed in accordance with the times. In the cases of married students, the familiar college pennaut has been replaced by baby clothes. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, C.N. expressmen state that football, tannis and other sports equipment has given place to baby clothes, baby carriages, c=.bs, playpens and diapers. College cheers this year, according to present indications, will be heavily inâ€" terspaced with wials of bables seekâ€" ing att:ntion. College Cheers This Year Interspaced. With Wails Rod K hy PARTY PINK â€" A strapless pink chiffon dancing dress is Helen Parrish‘s choice for wwinter. parties. The dress, which was designed by Ceil Chapman, is full skirted and has sequin cm:broidery on tha bodice. Miss Parrish is the stas of NBC‘s "Hour Glass" show. Household Hints professional: footâ€" the â€" defendant‘s cutsideâ€"right for From th> b:sinning every child diâ€" vides the world sharoly into the things which taste, feel nleasant and smell, as against those which cffend ihnis senses. Often a child adopts a werd like nice which designates persons ar things that he likes. On the other hand he cmay take a strong disl:ke or become thoroughly frightened By someone whos> voice is lcud. He may refuss to eat food without tatt ng it, If its texture or color repsls him. So many things in this big w‘de wonderful world are nfw, his tiny brain cannot catologu> them all neatly nor put th:m in nroner relaticn to each oth:r, But every new that he xeouires through his childlsh curiosi.y adds to gennxal knowâ€" ledge. What Billy‘s father says about Billy Jr. is true of most threeâ€"ysarâ€"olds. Billy, like all oth:rs in his ag> group, has acquired a gcod deal of physical strength and coordination.. He can camb upon chairs, he can run, walk and crawl under cbjects and open drawers, doors and cupboards but h: isn‘t advanc:d enough in the matter of sp2:‘ch to make inqui‘ries atkout all he wants know. Therefore he uses his eyes, ears, nose and hands to explove the wcorld around him. In these, his explorations, h> often appears to exâ€" haust himself in what to adult eves seems a meaningless chase. "That sgn of nzine, just turned three," says Billy‘s father, "has more curicsities than his pup has fleas. I couldn‘t it, until suddenly one day I realized just how big and how full of things the werld must look to a littlzs fellow. I guess it is like belng starved for food, and then faczd with a table filled to capacityâ€" with so many good things that you couldn‘t decide where to start." (3) Under what namse did, Charles Lutwidge Dodson write famous comic verse? (4) What happ:ined when the mad dog: bit Goldsmith‘s good man of (2) Can you complete Belloc‘s "I‘m tired cof love, I‘m still more tired of rhyme . .>. 9 (1) Edward Lear wrot>s a long poem asking "WWo cor why, or which, or what is th2 Akond of Swat?" Do yo‘u know the answer? How Expert Are You â€"Children of Today over, and bake in moderate oven Poetry Be..ng adventurous themselves, Billy‘s parents have been able to let the child learn by doing more freely than parints who are apprehensive. Thsy try to say no as seldom as posâ€" sible, and to participate in his advenâ€" tures by showing anvroval of any new capab‘.liiy, and by showing interest in things that he brings to them for inspection. For it is a wise parent who know:s, from their own exp:riencs, that if their youngster can kzen his curiâ€" osity as an adult, it â€"will make him eager to learn and him a much »2:ter understanding of thoss> with whom he must come in contact. Alâ€" though it keans both Pilly‘s parenis on the run to look after him and fcllow where his curiosity leads, they ar» thankful that at such an early age he> is showing dfinite signs of determination to explore the world for h mself. They feel that the child who is without curioitty, or who is notâ€"allowed to pursue it may well beâ€" com> . the sort of adult who accepts withcut questions whatever the wor‘ld chooses to dole out to him. _ There is a lesson to be learnsd by ‘every young parent in what Billy‘s paron‘ts say. Your child, like Billy, is growirg; up in a world where the abirty to do independent thinking may msan the difference between surâ€" vival and destruction. So parints, b2 gladâ€" whon yvou sse curiosity in your children, do more than let them goâ€" go with them in their starch for high adventur> in this ever lovely progresâ€" sive world. CC | Billy‘s young parents had a diff.cuit time understanding some cf these illogical likss and dislik:s until they realized that Billy liks other youngâ€" stsrs his age, can onlyvy believe what their little hands, eyes and ears teli th:m. "You know I do, pet." "And do you think of me all the time?" "Not at street crossings, darling." Orange Meringue Custard 1Â¥ c. sweetened 3 oranges condensed 3 tbs, granuâ€" snilk lated sugar 3 eggs : Blend condensed milk with diceg pulp and juice of oranges; add we beaten egg yoiks. Pour into butâ€" tered baking dish, .cover top with meringue made fromâ€"stiffly beaten egg whites and sugar. Bake 15 minâ€" utes or until meringue is brown, in a moderately slow oven (325 F.,. Serves 6. There is no information ‘y:t on what they will hang men in India for the wearing of. (5) "The rn it raineth on the just and also on the unjust fella, but chiefly on the just, because . /. why ? me?" Islingtcn? darling, do you really love Miscellaneous Phone 327 h 71 Third Ave., Timmins t S o S N O T EP 4 %4, € * 229. se 00,00,00 282082 a®na® :.:.“.“.“.“.“.00.“.1 M WE PE P PE AND WAIRED For Quick Piskâ€"Up Phone 3690 103 PINFE ST., SOUTH Phone 510 83 Third Ave. ! Night Phone 1733 without consulting us! We make moving pleasant and simple, with expert service. The heat required to drive off th‘s moilisture is lost as far as warming the room :s concerned. Dry seasoned wood kindles more quickly and is easir to tend and regulate than wes or green wood. Drving wcod for a short time is better than not drying it at all. To hasten drying, spl:t the gres>n logs in*to cmall sticks. Another disadvantag> of green wood is that it leaves more creosote scot and other deposits in the chimn:y than dry wood, MOVING a« S T O RAGE Don‘t Make A Move . .. Woods that give the most heat for their weight ars, oak, hickory, swest b:rch, hard mavle, rock elm, locusts and longleaf vin>. A combination â€"cf hard ad soft wood, such as oak and together makes a successful fire. Wosds that throw off sparks are chestâ€" nut, butternut, tamarack and spruce. Thess should burn cnly behind a screen.. Grien wood is pure in héat value because of the moisture it conâ€" tains. Anywhere from 25 to 50 per ccont of ths wzsight of green wood is water, dvending on the variety bed for glowing charccal which will yield stsady heat and help ighite n:w logs as they are add:d. Before layving the fire, put one log :i th»> floor of the hearth against the back wall and behind the andirons. This backlog keens the draft frcn drawing th> f.re direcily into the masonry and wasting heat. Split wood kindles more eauly than whols round logs, Softwoods from coneâ€"bearing tri‘es in general make a quicker and hotter firs than hardwoods. The light:r hardwoods make a hotler and shorterâ€"lasting fire than the heavior hardwocds. they say that the sxcessively neat homemaker â€" who keeps all cleansd from the f.replace makes a mistake. ‘The ashes should b»> kent lev:l with the andirons to provide a Ffor‘!_ih Cogfm AndcerfA *"+ att h tbos. Natural Fire Place ; K9 w6 . B For a fireplace ftre that gives cheer and comfort in Winter and als> burns wood most efficiently, here ar: a few suggestions that might help thise who ars lucky encugh to possuss a natural firevlace. To begin with, ALLI MAKES OFP RADIOS Radio House United Movers BUSINLCSS DIRECTORY Plumbing and Heating Sheet Mctal Air Conditioning Contractors 9. a2, 28, ,9, 0. .0. . < *0..%_ _o leelog o%oooooflooooooo.uooooonxoooozo. LIMITED B 3 * 4 0 , k %*, 220 ce 4n en an" etante ate ofa efeatect octe I paused to thrll at a rose‘s beaut;, Set like a blush on an emerald briar In the silver cool of early October. The weather is always too hct or cold, Summer and winter alike they scoid; Nothing goes right with the folks you meet Down on that gloomy compla‘ning street. Th:y growl at the rain and they growl at the sun. In fact their growling is never done. And if everything pleased them, there isn‘t a doubt. They‘d growl that they‘d nothing to grumble about. But the auserest thing is that not ane of the sams ' Can be brought to acknowledge his family name. For never a grumbler will own that he Is connected with it all, you see And the worst thing is that if anyâ€" one stays Among them too long they will learn their ways And before he dreams of the terrible jumble He‘s adopted into the family of Grumâ€" ble. Against the blus a glow of soft fire; And I thought, how lovely a thing is rose, Smiling from the depths of its heart as it grows. Myrtle Boa Armstrong. There is a person nobody likes to me>t They live it said, on Complain‘ng street, In the City of Neverâ€"are Satisfied. Th river cf Discontent beside. They growl at that, and they growl at this, Whatever comses there is something amiss; And whether their station be high or humble, ; They are always known by the name of Grumble. ~PAUL‘S Recipes Acress the years Thiy will come to you aga‘in If your hopes held fa.th, in other lives, So changed you may not know them But still a part of times archives. Irma Jeffers Nelson. 5 They will returnâ€" Those dreams you The hopes you held, The things you yearned for thenâ€" Long after you have forgotten The splendor of your years, Your happiness, ycour toars, Are written there. I clasp them in my own Remembering. Alone, I br:athe a prayer Of thanks to God above That you were mine to love. And I was thine . . . . I ak that will be To you, as you to me O mcther mine. ‘This is the way to schcol That every child must take; This is the first advance Beginning fcotsteps make Leading to wisdom‘s rooms Where minds can freoely grow, Reaching towards living truths That every child shculd know. This is thr> way to school; Along this broadening way Walk leaders of tomorrow;; The children of tcday, PHONE 1135 32 THIRD AVE. On property anywhere in the Porcupine Camp, to build or buy other property cor finance busiâ€" ness. _ Pay back in monthly payments up to six years. â€" All lines of insurance â€" Louisa Darcy In the Christian Science Monitor. 'wm return to you again. THE WAY TO SCHOOL Paul O. Black §,vi Lt' »'3

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy