Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 20 Sep 1928, 1, p. 3

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To handle Western Canada‘s crop this year the Canadian railways have despatched to key points on the prairies 80,000 box cars and 1,913 locomotives. Brass and copper products produceéd in Canada in 1927 were valued at $24,â€" €54,657. This is the highest value ever recorded for the Canadian industry. "She works in a questionablz2 place." ‘"You don‘t say?" "Yes, an information bureau." The men in the camps had to take reâ€" fuge in lake nearby. While they saved their lives in this way, all they possessed in the way of clothing, exâ€" cept the little that they wore, and all the food and other supplies were vicâ€" tims to the flames. Under past methods, the outside would not even have known what happened until at least a week or two Had passed by for the camp was 109 miles from the nearest railway. Clearwater is 45 miles from Gold Pines and the latter is 64 miles by air from A striking illustration of the great value of the airship to this North Land was given in the Red Lake area last weeke,. There were fifty men, who, through the effects of a forest fire in the Clearwater Lake area, were without food or change of clothing. The airâ€" planes saved the day and saved the men. The men were at the camps of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company in the Clearwater Lake disâ€" trict. A bush fire came along and swept over a wide area. The fire got beyond control and swept through the forest on the edge of the camps, deâ€" stroyed the bunk houses, cookeries, dinâ€" ing halls, offices and supply houses. Fifty Miners at Clearwater Lake Relieved by Airships "orest Fire Wipes Out Red Lake Camp and Men Over a Hundred Miles from Steel are Saved from Hunger and Given Supplies Needed Through the Use of Airplanes Investigating the Bush Fire. Teas of finer quality are unchanged in price. An avalanche of the cheaper grades has made possible a slight reduction in that class of tea. roduced in Canada by tne T OR years Nestle‘s Milk has been the choice of the British Admiralty. The choice of the British Navy is best for your homeâ€"Nestle‘s has been the world‘s standard of quality for four generations. Use Nestle‘s Evaporâ€" ated Milk for every purpose where fresh milk is used. Better results are always obâ€" tained with Nestle‘sâ€" it possesses more than H E __MILKY WAY TO HEAL T A Tea of Finer Quality â€"Exchanao CANADA®‘S K O Hudson, Ont., from which latter place | the story came last weekâ€"end in regard , !to what happened. Fifty men, strandâ€" {ed in the Red Lake area, without food Jor clothing, had been saved * by airâ€" ;i planes, the despatches said. Airplanes + ’ investigating the forest fire in the _ clearwater section, who discovered the {unfortunate situation of the fifty minâ€" lers and at once saw to their relief. Emergency rations were rushed by air .jfrom Hudson. Clothing and blankets ’and food stuffs were taken in by air from Winnipeg. The Ontario Forestry ! planes and the Western Airways both showed how useful airplanes may be in time of dire need. The situation was remedied in a matter of hours. It does not take an airship long to travel a hundred miles or so. As one man said in discussing the matter, an airâ€" ship would get from Hudson to Clearâ€" ‘water with the actual supplies, almost ‘as quickly as a train could be made up |to journey a hundred miles if the wayi ‘could be covered by rail. The airship ‘promises not only to be a mighty force | !in pioneering the new sections of the |North, but also to be a vital factor in making the country safe for the prosâ€" pector and the miner . Three years ago British Columbia was importing eggs. This year that province has already exported over 200 carloads. The British Columbia salmon pack this year totalled 519,359 cases comparâ€" ed with 335,562 cases up to the same date a year ago. All of us have our ups and downs, the hardest of which are trying to keep appearances up and expenses down. Unsweetened Evaporated Makers ol the famous Nestle‘s Baby Food Sweetened Condensed â€"Exchange bottled milk. C 3 Nestle‘s enhances the flavour of food when used in baking, and is delicious in tea or cofftee. For your own protection accept no other as " just as good." Hucklebury Pie 24 cups huckleberries; flour; 4 cup sugar; 1â€"8 teaspoon salt. Line a deep plate with pie paste, fill with berries slightly dredged with flour;‘ sprinkle with sugar ‘and salt, cover, and bake fortyâ€"five to fifty minutes in a moderâ€" ate oven. Six green grapes (from which the seeds have been removed) cut in small pieces much improve the fiavor. If a few corn flakes are sprinkled over the bottom crust before the berries are put in, the crust will not soak up the juice and become soggy. \ Health Fruit Pudding 1 pint milk (scalded); 4 cup bran; 1 egg, beaten; % cup applesauce; 4 cup melted butter; 1â€"3 cup raisins or dates; 3 tablespoons brown sugar; 4 teaspoon almond. Scald the milk, add the all bran, beaten egg, apple sauce, melted butter, fruit, sugar and flavoring. Bake in oven in a dish set in a pan of hot water. Peach Salad | Arrange halves of fine large peaches,! hollow side up on salad plates on a bedl of lettuce. Chop hearts of celery and; almonds, moisten with mayonnaise and ful in cavity of peach. Cover, if desirâ€"| ed, with another half peach, to resem-| ble a whole peach, cover with mayon-* naise and over this a rather soft jelly. ' Sprinkle with parsley. Pickled Plums 7 lbs. plums; 34 pounds sugar; 1 quart | vinegar; 2 doz. whole cloves; 1 teaspoon' whole allspice; 1 small stick cinnamon. l Prick the skins of the plums and stxck! three cloves in each. Put the vinegar,| sugar, and spices into a large saucepan, and let them come to a boil. Then put’ in the plums. Cook for twenty minutes or until plums are tender. Remove plums from syrup and pack in glass Jjars that are standing in hot water. Cover over the jars and leave them in | the hot water. Then boil the syrup for ten minutes. Drain back into the saucepan any syrup in the jars. Pour the syrup over the plu:as, and fasten | up the jars while the plums are stilli hot. | (By Barbara B. Brooks) Grocer‘s wingows and market stands are attractive at this time of year with their array of manyâ€"colored fruits. There are peaches, plums, apples, huckâ€" leberries, and other small fruit on disâ€" play. Fruit is being canned for use next winter and some kind of fruit is a part of every, meal. For breakfast we serve sliced peaches, stewed apples or berriegâ€"with our readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal; for lunch there is perhaps a fruit salad or fresh fruit sherbet and for dinner fruit may be served as a cocktail or we may wish to utilize the seasonable fruits in pies or puddings. Following are several ways of serving some of the early fall fruits: Some Interesting Recipes Given by Notâ€" fHollinger Makes ed Authority on Culinary Matters. l for the Jamiest 1 Very Timely Dishes for Season. | iskotia. To GEVERAL WAVS TO SERVE [FINAL PAVMENT MADE OM ThE EABLY FALL FRUITS) THE CLAIMS THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIOQ Nestle‘s Milky W ay Recipes salads, candy, puddings, ies, milk drinks, etc. e'bis book is free. Write to Nestle‘s Food Comâ€" any of Canada Limited, etropolitan Building, Toronto, Ontario. A book of over 100 tested ways of adding to the varâ€" iety and attractiveness of meals â€"Soups, cakes, Dated the 12th day of September 1928. â€" HOLLINGER CONSOLIDATED GOLD MINES, LIMITED (No Personal Liability)~ A dividend of 1 p.c. on the outstandâ€" ing Capital Stock of the Company has been declared payable on the 6th day of October 1928, on which date cheques will be mailed to shareholders of *eâ€" cord at the close of business on the 19th day of September, 1928. The report that the Hollinger “has completed all its payments on the proâ€" perty, together with the announceâ€" ment that the T. N. O. is being asked to build a line to Kamiskotia, as noted in The Advance last week, are generâ€" ally taken as the best sort of evidence that theére will be "something big doâ€" ing" in Kamiskotia in the near future. . According to announcement made last week the Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines has made the final cash payment of $70,000.00 for the claims at Kamiâ€" ! skotia, purchased from Geo. Jamieson 'and his associates. The total paid in | cash for these Kamiskotia claims is unâ€" | ’derstood to be $150,000.00. In addition, George Jamieson and his associates reâ€" | tain 174 per cent. interest in the proâ€" | perty. According to the reports, for l some time past the Hollinger has been negotiating for the purchase of this 17 ‘ per cent. soâ€" that the company would , own the property outright, without any' percentage of the control being held by, the original holders of the claims. It: is understood that Mr. Jamieson has | refused to accept any offer for the 171 1 per cent interest. One report has it that he was offered $250,000.00 for the | 174 per cent interest but found even( this goodly amount to be no temptaâ€" | tion to sell. One man who knows Geo.| Jamieson well says thtat he has such a particular regard for the Kamlskot1a| area that nothing is likely to mduce him to sell out completely there. C034 BRA _ _ x uarmalade ollinger Makes Fina! Cash Paym®nt for the Jamieson Property at Kamâ€" iskotia. Total Paid Reached $150,000, Dividend Number 180 I. McIVOR, Assistantâ€"Treasurer Mr. Newman is particularly enthusiâ€" astic about the "Coastâ€"toâ€"Coast"â€"Four and the "Roundâ€"theâ€"World"â€"Four. The "Roundâ€"theâ€"World"â€"Four is a comâ€" plete shortâ€"wave receiver that appears to have most of them beaten so far as excellence of reception is concerned. Five continents have been heard in one evening on the "Roundâ€"theâ€"World"â€" Four. \__Mr. J. R. Newman, graduate of the National Radioâ€" Institute, and holding the degree of Associate of the Institute .of Radio Engineers of New York, has been appointed to conduct a service ;'station at Timmins for the Silverâ€"Marâ€" ’shall Inc., of Chicago. The serviceâ€" station of this company offers radio fans a unique service. This service lconsmts of the following features:â€" §Anyone wishing advice on the purchase of parts for Silverâ€"Marshall receivers {can receive the same from the Timmins .service station; or if one has already ,purchased parts and wishes them asâ€" sembled into a receiver, Silverâ€"Marshall, Inc will stand back of Mr. Newman‘s 'personal guarantee of a firstâ€"class job at a moderate rate. Another feature, known as customâ€" â€"~building, consists of the buyer ordering the parts through the service station and having them‘ built right here to Silverâ€"Marshall speâ€" cifications and to the satisfaction of . the radio fan. Radios to be Built Here To Order on Unique Plan Mr. Newman, who is wellâ€"known in ROLLED OATS .â€" . .â€" WHEATLETS .â€" . . GOLDENXN CORNMEAL â€" RICE Fancy Blue Rose â€" ROLLED WHEAT â€" . © z-lb. Pkt ms. tor 2B l ) 0:0 0):}{a:0:2. "m‘fi' Peaches Pears or Tin Cherrices | One smile from within is worth a | thousand painted on from without. this district as a genius at radio and similar work, will no doubt be glad to give any explanations or details desired in the matter by any radio fans. North Bay Nugget:â€"An unusually exhilarated linotyper in California says of a notable, injured there in an autoâ€" mobile wreck, that "his condition is pronounced gravy." . Mesa (Arizona) Journalâ€" Tribune;â€" If Al Smith were as depraved as the drys says he is, and Hoover were as perfect as his admirers say he is, this country would be in one terrible fix. Sudbury Star:â€""Another difficulty aâ€" bout being lost in the bush is that messages thrown out in bottles are of no use." North Bay Nugget:â€"Australia has a compulsory voting law. They should go a step farther and make them vote right. Louisville Times:â€"The usual issue in a Mexican campaign is an issue of ammunition. HIGHâ€"GRADE SAMPLES FROM WEEK‘S RUN OF THE PRESS Ashton Hood Syndicate (Philadelâ€" phia)â€"No one should expect the Solid South to be liquid. Thursday, Sept. 20th, 1928 â€"Exchangse

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