Porcupine Advance, 22 Sep 1938, 2, p. 6

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Total coast o. cperating tae prison here is given as $12455.27, of which $9,682.28 went in salarics and the balâ€" ance of $2,772.99 for food, clothes and fwel. No repairs were done in the pericd noted. The report discloses that the daily ecst per prisoner for fuel and clothing was 11.31 cents, while the dietary cost (which means meals) was 13.68 cents for broakfast, dinner and supper. Nearest approach to economy in this regard was reported from Belleâ€" ville, with per capita daily costs of 68 ceéents and from Sudbury,, where the figure was 70 cents. The highest for the province was at Orangeville, where the figure was $3.35, explained larzely U O0 400 0OU0 0 000 @90 0000048 6 § 66w44 0““"0000. ) 04444840449# 46@ 9000:0000’00‘:‘0000000000:‘0:’0:” Haileybury, Sept. 22. â€"Special to The Advance)â€"It cast a fraction over a half dollar every day to feed, clothe and ctherwise maintain each of the 72 men and 36 women who passed through the district jail here in the 12â€"month period covered by the last annual r>â€" port, just issued by the provincial auâ€" thorities. This per capita daily cost of 51 cents was the lowest for any of the 47 insti‘uticns of this nature in Ontario, ten of them jalls in the disâ€" tricts and the other 37 located in cities or county towns in the olderâ€"settled parts of the province, and covered in the report. Keep is Cheap at the Jail at Haileybury Lowest of the 47 Similar Inâ€" stitutions in the Province. Partly Due to Large Numâ€" ber Housed. THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hamilton One pad kills flies all day and every day for 2 or 3 weeks. 3 pads in each packet. No spraying, no stickiness, no bad odor. Ask your Druggist, CGrocery or General Store. CENTS PER PACKET WHY PAY MORE? Slabs and Coal COAL AND wWOoDvÂ¥ARD AND oOFFICE 86 Spruce South Phone 3: our variety of coal Coke â€" Welsh Anthracite â€" Pennsylvania Blue â€" Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" wheat â€" Nut Slack â€" Steam Coal and Cannel. 71 THIRD A V N FIREM “ N 7 ;é%aowfl-uxe ‘:é-/‘? 3 54 W FPRANK BYC h SMITH ELSTON DON‘T BUY ANY AUTOMATIC EEATING EQUIPMENT UNTIL YOU SEE A Of he 1242 passed through the 12â€"month ist annual r>â€" Hailleybury‘s jail l»mas 32 cells and thore were never fower than 46 prisonâ€" ers within the walls, while had been as many as 95 men and women cial to 'n!' held at one time. The average in this over a half} respoct is given as 67.2 persons, and in clothe and| this connection it may be noted that f the 725)late last week 131 prisoners were deâ€" ed through| tained in the jail. The daily averag> : 12â€"month| is the second for the districts, annual r2â€"|jeing exceeded only by Sudbury, with vincial auâ€"};17713. The total number of days‘ stay zse Numâ€" Ont. PLUMBING and HEATING TIM MINS Commitments during the pericd inâ€" cluded 646 men and 35 women for a ; total ramber of 681, and there were 79 men and cne woman held in the {an ‘at the start of the year the report eavers. Of the persons commiited, 204 men wore married and 442 single; the ‘correspondmg for the women were 23 and 12. All were over 16 ysears of age, the report notes, 458 men and 31 women were temperate, With 188 m2>n â€" and jour women intemperate, whib> 65 men and six women are put | dewn as illiterates... One woman and 81 men were serving more than their third t*rm. First offenders numbered 378 men and 25 wom>n, 136 men and '}women were serving a second term and 51 men and a woman were in for the third time. Thers wenrn»>» no escapes, Jne man was deported and two men died, on> while awaiting trial and the cther as he was serving his Sa‘aries paid inciluded $1,600 to the gaoler, $300 each to the matron and surgeon and the tkalance to other offiâ€" | cilals. â€" The largest numbr of sentences \ were from 30 days to 60 days, ramely 281 men and four women. Sixteen men went to the Reformatory by transfor and nin> were sent there direct, 18 men were sent to the penitentiary and 39 lmen and six women to "other places of confinemeypxt," meaning mental instituâ€" ticns. Five :n went to the Reâ€" fcrmatory and three to the Mercier. Twelve men were released on bail, 20 men acquittsd on their trial and 13 men and four women were liberated by order of a judge or court without trial. One man was hanged and there was no corporal punishment, the report dis~â€" | closes. by the fact that there were never more than eight prisoners on hand at on* | time in a 23â€"cell jail, with an average of 36 persons. Fort Frances was highest in the districts, with $2.15, 13 prisoncrs at the most and sometimes none at all for a 86.3 avorage. Th dist: the Ha Timmins â€"| Sinks Dispose of Garbageâ€"Refrigerators Have Radios â€" Mcdern Chimneys W aft ‘] Heat Back Into Rooamâ€"Electric Signals Call Family to Phone. er cleaning, two ovens for the family who go in fer elaborate menus, a giant burner for special topâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"stove cooking, five cooking spreds in the new slectric ranzes and, of courss, smooth signed to make the best use of the kitchen space as a whole. Hero are somse of their newer talents: the pullâ€" cut drawer broiler, the chime clock to remind you when something has cooked long enough, the cabinet bag> for easiâ€" clothes be sprinkled. The Newer Stoves Stoves, along with sinks, refrigeraâ€" tors and cabinets ar> tending more toward unit installations. That is, they are purchased as a part of an enâ€" tire kitchen layout and fit into a niche with cupboards and work surfaces d>â€" Bu rcund dishpanâ€"shapsd section, where you wash the dishes, and another square section, just richt for a wireâ€" pan basket. A hose spray that pul‘s cirt of the wall will be a boon for rinsâ€" ing dishes as woll as for cleaning vegeâ€" tab‘les and other j¢os like that. All the newer sinks are a part of cabinet units, cf ccurse, and w> saw one the other day fixed so that th> garbags can lid underneath opened automatically as the cupboard daoor opened. Then there is the sink that has a gardags disposal unit in it; this looks so practical that we fi2l certain there‘ll be more heard about it before long, and we don‘t mean to do the garbage man cut of a JjJob either. A table top automatic gas hot» water heater is fairly new. It fits into kitchen like an extra tableâ€"high cupâ€" board, providing extra working space. Insulated, of ccurse, and very efficiens. Another mew piecs of for the kitchen is the allâ€"inâ€"one laundry. This is a small affair that does everything from wash to damp dry without any attention . . . no wrinzing or changing water, no nothing as a matier of fact. The elsthes go in dirty and come out ready to iron. Since the laundry seems deostined to end up in the kitchen, this would apâ€" pear to be the most practical solution of the equipment problem. Another bit of laundry is the steamâ€"electric iron that irons without requiring that clothes be sprinkled. square pan b cit of ing di: cupboard daoor opene the sink that has a unit in it; this looks we fi2l certain there about it befere long, a lectric ranzes and, of urfaces, rcunded corne were gotling p u‘d think. with a A T In the Kitchen take the kitchenâ€"Sinks have star for progress of late. Th ink has two compartmnts, a ishranâ€"shapsd section, where it C 1© eak 31 1at NU quite with i@at s, covered tops usework immishing 11 ouse today s mechaniâ€" ire lots of lightzn the sillusion ver hou poin THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO PLEASANT HoMES automatic lighting, insulation to a fareâ€" vyeâ€"well. The satellit> kitchen is an idea that should have bsen r2cognized long ago. It‘s the extra little kitchen for baby‘s rcom, for the game room, for the porch. Selfâ€"Help Refrigerators can now be opsned by a foot pedal, which you‘ll appreciate most when yoiu approach with both hands full, They also have special meat compartments whore a supply of meat can be kept almost frozen for a long while. Special compartments for your frozen food packages are also proâ€" vided, and there‘s a tightly cove@ered compartment section for keeping fish so its odor won‘t permeate the rest of the refrigerator. Slideâ€"out milk trays, pullâ€"cut â€"egg. baskets, oddsâ€"andâ€"ends compartments all are a part of the new refrizeration picture. . Space for tall bottles can bh> had if you like and izse cubes are really easy to get out in the new model refrigerators. You can even get 2 into it about 1 Hardly to aGry new house we s a small radiato the downstairs to suit your co meant for use i ed place is In the rnew is getting to saying" part sides cocling . ing in winter a small radiator installstion located in the downstairs hall. You can adjust it to suit your comfort. A portable unit meant for use in an apartment or rentâ€" ed place is also availablkseâ€"it cools, heats, humidifies or deâ€"humidifies, filâ€" ters and ventilates, Also installed in a new house we looked at was a grill on either side of the firsplace through which the heat that usually goes up a new nouse We at wWwas on either side of the firsplace through which the heat that usually goes up th> chimney was thrown back into the room. Electric fans with rubber blades are safer and better than the old types, and there‘s an improved. turn of blade being featured. ave enough by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin This modern kitchen with a platform stove and builtâ€"in sink unit is about as convenient as a lady could expect. The Quimper tile designs on the wall add a decorative detail. These chimes are electric and you can have a special signal for each member of the family. They operate from upstairs or down. The grill in the door facing is really a speaking arrangement whertby you can talk to the person at the door from any part of the house, The knocker has a grating behind it through which you can see the person at the door without actually opcning it. refrigerator with it. The main word t rofrigerators isâ€"get i ily anybody really d« be an economy in the enough | Electric Signals essential to life but contributing cons Oonstru immer ‘s, air conditioning® "itâ€"goesâ€"withoutâ€" truction. And beâ€" ner and humidifyâ€" Iso now adjustable ind mildew. In a °e unit looked like he lon r spac radio built of warninz nou But run h folding int for shelve electric clC one othcor Another feature in this house was a speakinz board on the cutside beside the front door.. A housewife can pick up the upstairs phone and inquire the business of the person ringing the bell, just as in an apartment. Think what a ‘lot Oof running through the house that would save. Another handy little tcuch was the grill that opened just back of the doorâ€"knocker, through which the person inside can see who is at the door without spening it. Ililuminated Stairs of cord. that mak basis. No a lot to the gracious atmosphere of a hcuse was the signal system also feaâ€" tured in the same new house. Electric chimes were adaptable in a number of waysâ€"for the doorbell, for the dinner signal, and to call different members of the family to the telephone. There is a button beside each phone which operates the chimes; it can be pressed so many times for each person. alluring basis. Not fs2 mill, fo the freshne mothproof Edinbursh Dospatch: In a suburbh of Salisbury (Rhodesia) there is a little church to which, each morning, with great rmegularity, there comes a man and his Alsatian dog. The man goes inside to worship and the dog lies outside to wait. If, however, the sermon lasts longer than twonty minutes, the dog pats his head inside the church dsor and looks inquiringly up the aisle toâ€" ward the preacher. Illuminated house numbers, a packâ€" e recriver, bath scales built in and an electri which yvou the 1938. wall, indirect lighting iminated stair steps, hese and a dozen and conveniences are getâ€" ird equipment. There‘s lawn mower to be had hsed a hundrsd feet double waffle griddle at once on a swivel ention an electric cofâ€" _ frazranc>» as well as Vacuum cleaners that impressive thoroughâ€" their other talents, are zabeth Ma | P thes ame subject. 45 Degrées Rest Lighting Angle In general, you will find thai the three important characteristiecs of tone, atmosphere and contrast are best obâ€" tained in the morning or afternoon, when the lisht falls at an angle of 45 degrees or less, as then you get longer shadcws and a greater range of gradaâ€" tion. A side lighting is nearly always to ‘be preferred to a flat lighting when the sun is back of the camera. You can often secure striking dramatic effecis with back lighting, as, for example wh:en you photograph a saillboat aâ€" gainst the light. In such a case, of course, you will see that your lens is shaded from the direct rays of the sun or frem any strong reflections of results in making wator scegnes, there are certain princip.es which should be fClK wed if the prints are to have the mCost satisfactory pictoral qualitiecs. One thing to 3e observed is the <everâ€" changing eff{ecis of light on the water. W> should aim to make the picture when the illuminaticn brings out the utmost beauty in acmosphers, tone and contrast. Look over a lake, for instance, at imidday when the light is flat, or when there is fog or haze, and comâ€" cpar> the effect with that Roduced unâ€" dar a clear sky in late afternoon, and you will see very different pictures of Reflections add much to the comâ€" position of a water scrne and, in fact, frequently are taksn as the principal subject of the picture. But when we have prominent shadows, we should decide whether they are to be "the picture" or accessory features in the seene. In the latter case we should chocse a time of day when the reflectâ€" ed images are not overstrong, or when ripples break up the surface of the water. As a rule, photographs which show refl>ctions as strong as the main subject arse not as artistic as those in which reflections are subdued, because the attention with the real object of interest. Watlter Breaks Scenic Monatony If your subject is a rural scene which includes a brook, take such a viewâ€" point that the stream will lead the eye into th> distance, and avoid having it cut the picture into equal parts. The same rule applies to the shoare line of a beach. In landscapes you often can utilizz the prewsence of water to avoid monctony in the sceene. A pond will balance a piece of woodland, are cerlain printci fClkK wed if the p: mCost satisfactory oOne thing to ;s changing effecis c W> should aim fascinatin that in w Expert in Photographic Work Suggests the Studying of Lighting and Reflections Before Snapping the Shutter. Filter Advisable for Strong Contrast, Expert States. Water Scenes Provide Fine Pictoral Effects is not diffiiiil sults in makin in the GCks and 2: While, frcm sECURITY â€" 21 Pine Street North Phone 725 Clear B.C. Fir Vâ€"Joint; Gyproc Hardwood Floorâ€" ing: Vâ€"Joint and Shiplap; White Ping Featherâ€" edge; Clear Fir and Pine Doors in Stock Sizes; Sash in Stock Sizes. ALSO Automobile, | Sickness, Accident, Life Insurance Real Estate and Mortgages. ROUGH AND DRESSED John W. Fogg Limited iphic amate or accessory ITcatures l1 LC In the latter case we should , time of day when the reflectâ€" es are not overstrong, or when insure your New Building or Improvements. Engquire about our NEW LOW RATES umber, Cement, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies. YÂ¥ Head Office and Yard Branch OMce 1umacher Timmins Kirkland LAke 725 Phone 117 Phone 393 ULLIV A N NEWTON 1L,. U MBR By d much to the comâ€" ater serne and, in fact, taken as the principal picture. But when we ; shadows, we should they are to be "the 1€ 1 on Jones) r always for his « enters t] 5 6T lak which indpoint in find | stream will break up the | meadsw, and a lake or If you are making pictures in which broaking waves appsar, try to snap the shutt>r an instant before the peak is reached, and not so fast as to make the wav> rppear "frozen." By the time you have made the sxposure, the wave will be at maximum . An inâ€" stant later, it will have broken. : In making photos of watserfalls, also avcid the appearance. . Yoqu may have to make several short exposures in surccession, if the fall is. in the shadows, in order to give is sufficient tim>» and avoid blurring of the image. sut you need not make it needle sharp: "Always look for the "little, things" which give pictorial emphasis. to a@a picâ€" ture, such as rippling paths of light. separation of tones between sky and watr, shapes of shadows and . the posiâ€" ticn of clouds to form a suitabl2 backâ€" grclund. As a rule, the most satisfacâ€" tory picture is obtained by selecting some object, perhaps a boat or.an old clock, or a natural efféct, such as a contrast If you broaking clock, or a natural efféct, such as a great cloud or dashing surf, as a prinâ€" cipal subject, subordinating. the. surâ€" rsundings to it. Filter Advisable for Strong (‘(mtrast t Exposure, naturally, is an important factor in making pictures in <which water appears, particularly broad exâ€" panses like lakes and the sea. _ On bright days you are likely to find the sky too light in‘ the picture,: unless you use a suitable filter to hold back the blue rays, and thus obtain a tone in the sky but desirable contrast with water. Then you will often find, in photographing certain subjects; that that presence of mist and haze between the principal object and the ‘camera causes the subject to appear too light. In such a case you will use a contras.} filter to absorbh most of the blue rays which are reflected by the haze and cause the trou‘ble. ?: Try The Advance Want Advertisementa THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2ND,. 1938 xâ€"YVia DeLuxe Coach Lines to HMHuntsville Standard Time. Tickets and Information at Union Bus Terminal GRAY COACH LINES Phones 101â€"2â€"3 LEAVE NORTH BAY 5.20 a.m., x9.05 2.41., .) /1') p mo NORTH BAY TO T O RO N T O $9.15 background fo v On shore by 5â€"Day Excursion Rate SERVICE Timmins, Ont. RETURN flat arsa of. a river will serve ome {bjsct q( iving desirable

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