For Sure Results Try Our Want Ad Column Women are saying: ‘"Pinkham‘s Compound keeps me fit to do my work." "I was nervous and all run down. Now I eat better and sleep elped year old daughter."â€""I took it beâ€" foreandafwmybbymbm" a as ts “n Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited 1 . Controlling and Operating ' L Northern Ontario Power Company, Limited Â¥. Northern Quebec Power Company, Limited PALMOLIVE The Soap Recommended For foundation cleansing nothing equals Paimolive Soap say the foremost beauty authorities of two continents. by European and Canadian Beauty Specialists Cream butter, add sugar dually, and egg well beaten. ftlnhx:f c and to the first tetmtdy w:th milk. Bake in buttered gem pans. Ovcnhatwbcmedmm 2 cups scalded milk 1 cup compressed yeast 3 tablespoons butter cup warm water 3 tablespoons sugar 534 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt Add butter, sugar and sait to milk. When lukewarm, add yeast dissolved in the lukewarm water and add three cu‘r- of flour. Beat thoroughly, cover and let rtise unti liht. then add remaining flour. Toss on board, knead, cover and let rise again, double in bulk. Pinch of or roll out and cut into rolls with a cutter. Use handle of knife to crease the center of the roll. Brush oneâ€"half of roll with buster and fold. Place in oiled pan 1 inch apart. Bake in hot oven. .Wtu‘ AME ND V MeQ Wns W gtdtcn uscemdmthamghl Pack ap:d’uam about 4 hours. ‘hhnt wded. Sctvewuhl'mmynuce dclmmhneuohpwu.fnï¬umduuuu mwh:aplunpoddmg eoakcddecuhfly TWIN MOUNTAIN MUFFINS ‘PARKER HOUSE ROLLS :5 cup butter !3 ;::r sait 1 cup milk 2 cups bread flour Indian rapper at his work while chasing an otter in the woods, followed itt.oaholeandputtmtmshandm drew out human hair. It is thought that this may be a clew to the finding of the remains of John Dick, who was lost in the woods last fall. _A search party will be organized as soon as weaâ€" ther conditions make this practical. when.prepared .by \t ELECTRIC Cookery «* ELECTRIC ~RANGE Can enjoy these marvellous dishes Pay Only o e Take advantage of the reâ€" markable terms of this sale. Modernize your kitâ€" chen with Electric Cookâ€" ery . . . andâ€"cook each meal in cool, clean comâ€" fort. Waste is ended anq all food values retained when you cook electricalâ€" ly. You have more leisure "@° 2 TT T ® YOU Electric Gookery is Modern for an h An editorial note in The m[ a mumu IlflllARS News last week says:â€" tmia tha cavine "the Roger Babson Lets the World Into the Secret. Of Course There is a Catch in it. make its inventor a millionaire. And, according to Roger Babson, the indusâ€" trial statisticilan, who writes in The|l Forum, the device will come within | twentyâ€"five years. The machine will probably have its cylinders arranged in a circle and its exhaust will empty on the roof. The sidewise motion will be a convenience in parking. And here are nineteen other ways to becomerich via the invention route. Mr. Babson‘s Forum â€"suggestions aAare summarized thus in the New York Sun:â€" A Diesel engine for automobiles that will use crude oil, which is far cheaper. than gasoline, not having to go through! any refining processes. He prophesies its appearance. The man who does it first will make more than a million. A practical and foolâ€"proof helicopter â€"that is, a device that will lift an airâ€" plane directly off the earth, and do away with the need for starting and landing fields, enabling the aviator to light on city building roofs or the decks of ships without difficulty. in this An automobile that goes sidewise as | _ rding well as forward and backward will 5 make its inventor a millionaire. And, O .rl le:l according to Roger Babson, the indusâ€" formatl trial statisticilan, who writes in The trol Tarim the device will come withinl rologic L 224 A light that will pierce fog, someâ€" thing greatly needed in the field of air navigation. Until this is aiscovered Babson holds commercial aviation will be dangerous. Gliders for children. Babson preâ€" dicts that these will be some time as plenty as toy wagons and bicycles and "little boys and girls will fly around their yards as safely as they now play in their sand piles." _ New sources of powerâ€"from the sun, the tides and the heat of the earth. These are the big sources remaining to be tapped Fireless cities Babson would have some man get rich by sending heat to houses direct from miines or generating sources close to power sites. “A _x-{e.w electrical development exploitâ€" ing the shortâ€"wave lel_lgthsl Cold light which will do away with Select variety of: vegeubla. Wuh and for cooking. Cook in a cendet Drain, season withaltandbum veï¬; etablesâ€"cooked in a tiny bit of water, retain vor arJ goodness when cooked electrically, j tetunul ‘Trim and wipe steak and place on broiling pan. Sear one side, turn and sear other side, Turn again for me» dium or well done. Season with sait. Broil without smoke! There are no darting tongues of flames to ignite the fat when you broil electrically, BROILED PORTERHOUSE STEAK dini ealt. Smï¬ng may r be addeci. Brush over with meilted butter. Put on broiling pan or other shallow pan. Place in the oven and roast, Temperatureâ€"medium. Wash and: prepare chicken, Chicken roasted to a golden brown perfectionâ€" and full favored, comes from an Electric Oven. MIXED VEGETABLE DISH This beautiful threeâ€"piece silver tea service will be given FREE, to every purchaser of an Elecâ€" tric Range during this sale. ROAST CHICKEN we have always with us," is, received confirmation this week, when an old reâ€" sident dropped in to inform us, that a similar belated winter was experienced in this northland in 1909, when, acâ€" cording to his statement, similar spelils of real winter, with blizzards, lasted until the beginning of July. ‘This inâ€" formation was interesting from a meâ€" trological and historical point of view, but when he added, that conditions point to a similar experience this year, his exit was more welcome than his arâ€" 95 per cent. of the electric current now wasted on resistance to create the glpw. rival." Central cooling systems, on the plan of central heating and lighting plants. Electrical clocks. He expects time to be on tap like gas or water. Horizontal "elevators" that will subâ€" jugate the labyrinths of department stores. s ) Auasd Talking booksâ€"that is, pages that may be fed into a machine and save the bother of reading. Readyâ€"made subways smaller in size, but of easier construction, being made in cast sections, ready for installation. Grass paper that will substitute the annual product of the soil for trees hat take from fifty to a hundred years to grow into woodâ€"pulp size. Pills for plantsâ€"some condensed form of fertilizer that will do away with wasteful spreading and supply the needed help to plant life economically and directly. Flexible, unbreakable and bulletâ€" proof glass. Synthetic foods. These are fast on the way. Milk, cream, butter, and cheese already come as byâ€"products of petroleum. Synthetic_vegetables have been devised that outdo nature in viâ€" tamins, while eggs can be made direct from grasses. Mahogany lumber from native hardâ€" wood trees, by inoculating them with dyes and chemicals that shall make them take on the qualities of the tropiâ€" cal product. ' _A tooth powder that will prevent the decay of teeth. How true the saying "the pessimists CE, TIMMINS, _ _. _ Expects Giant Planes to Travel in the North Mining machinery in the past have displgye_d great _Ec_"egulty in uo opportï¬ty now for them to develop light, easilyâ€"transportable machinery, which can be moved by airplane and will do preliminary development. Portâ€" able airâ€"compressing machines that are capable of handing several drills are on the market now. One company operating in the Crow River district considered moving in one of these portable gasâ€"driven plants to start shaft sinking. They found that the largest part was 8800 pounds. ‘The planes fiying in the North can‘t carry this much dead weight in one block. Planes and tractors are opening up the Canadian Precambrian at 20th century speed. Peculiarly enough, few of the materials for these machines and the force that drives them comes from the Precambrian; gasoline and oils are found in much later geological formations. § Captain H. A. Oaks, of N.A.M.E. preâ€" dicts a time in the notâ€"distant future when giant freighters of the air will be travelling in the North. They will take supplies, men and equipment to the bases from which smaller planes will ; operate. With other pilots, he is of the opinion that the next ten years will make just as much change in the North Country as the last The last people to discover that the North is not the same country it was 50 years ago will probably be the seâ€" condâ€"rate fictionists and editors. Their ignorance of the country in its primiâ€" tive state was always appalling; what it will be like now is beyond the imaâ€" gination. In a novel recently publishâ€" ed in England, the hero is made to travel from Toronto to Edmonton in 48 hours, not by plane but on horseâ€" back. Who knows? Perhaps we may see cities on the rim of the Arctic, great airports in the Barren Lands and minâ€" l w ts o n t Sn i 14 ing men tra(relling between dffierent centres like commercial t_x'aveuers. One interesting question is: ‘‘Will ‘ lighterâ€"thanâ€"air craft be of use in the North?" England has R101, the world‘s largest dirigible, ready for a transatâ€" lantic flight. It is 709 feet long, has an engine power of 4,200 h.p.. supplied by six Rollsâ€"Royce engines, and A maximum speed of 80 miles per hour, with a cruising speed of 71.5 miles per hour. It has a carrying capacity of 100 passengers and mails, and a cruisâ€" ing range of 3,500 miles. At a cost of about $500,000 a mooring mast is being erected at the St. Hubert aerodrome, few miles from Montreal. From the experience gained in constructing this dirigible; it is stated that the British government could now build a vessel caple â€" of carrying 160 passengers, with a small amount of baggage, for 6,000 miles in still air at a cruising lspeed of 95 miles per hour. HAILEYBURY CHILD PICKS FLOWERS IN OLD GARDEN The Haileyburian last week says:â€"â€" "What we believe to be the first flowers to be found blooming outside this spring were picked by little Rae Sutherland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Sutherâ€" land, on Tuesday evening. The blooms are a species of crocus and were found on the old Colonel Hay property on Rorke avyenue, which was, up to the time of the fire in 1922, one of the finest gardens in town. While the tulips and daffodils are apparently coming along nicely, there is still no bloom, so far as we know, and the crocus blooms found on Tuesday are the first to be reported. The recent cold weather has held up the growth and appearances are that the season will not be much earlier than last year." CANADIAN ASSOCIATION * TO FOSTER AERONAUTICS The Canadian aeronautical chamber of commerce was formed at a meeting at Montreal last week of representaâ€" tives from Toronto, Winnipeg and Montreal firms interested in the manuâ€" facture and sale of aircraft and accesâ€" sories. In a statement issued the objects of the chamber were set out as follows: "To foster, advance, promulgate and promote trade and commerce throughâ€" out Canada and foreign countries in the interest of those persons, firms or corporations engaged in the business of manufacturing, buying, selling, dealing in and operating aircraft, airports, airâ€" craft motors, aircraft parts and accesâ€" sories of every kind and description. "To advocate and promote in every lawful way the enactment of just and suitable laws, both international, fedâ€" eral and provincial, pertaining to aeroâ€" nautics." Among those present were John Hunter, of the Western Canada Airâ€" ways, Winnipeg; A. B. Kerr, "Canadian Aviaticn;" C. C. Brown, of C. C. Wakeâ€" field, Co., Ltd.; R. A. Loader, De Havilâ€" land, Aircraft Co.; Captain Earl M. Hand, National Air Transport; Chas. A. Collins, Ericson Aircraft Co.; W. J. Russell, Canadian Air Review, all of Toronto; J. G. Needles, Canadian Goodrich Co., Kitchener, Ont., and reâ€" presentatives of Dominion Aircraft Ltd., Fairchild Aviation Co., Canadian Westinghouse Co. Ltd., Northern Elecâ€" tric Co., International Airways, Conâ€" tinental Aero Corp.. Canadian Vickers Ltd., Cie Aerienne Francoâ€"Canadienne, Curtissâ€"Reid Aircraft Co., and Canaâ€" dian Colonial Airways, Ltd., all of Mocontreal. Edmonton Journal:â€""Mr. Dunning‘s life history is declared to be_ttx_e magâ€" net that is attracting British boys to Saskatchewan. It is time Mr. Greenâ€" field did a little selfâ€"advertising. He too, though an immigrant lad, rose to a Provincial Premiership." the _ THE CROWNING PLEASURE OF A MEAL COMES WITH DESSERT . M‘Larens MATCHES IN THE P.D.F.L. sCHEDULE FOR THIS MONTH The following are the P.D.F.L. matches scheduled for this month, weather permitting:â€" Saturdéy, May 18â€"Sons of England vs Cornish. T. Duxfield, referee. Wednesday, May 22â€"Dome vs Mcinâ€" tyre. E. Tomlinson, referee. f Saturday, May 25â€"Lancashires vs Sons of England. R. Wallace, referee. ‘Wednesday, May 29â€"Cornish vs Dome. P. Larmer, referee. GOLD RESERVES DEPLETED TO OFFSET TRADE BALANCE Writing from Ottawa last week T. H. Blacklock, Mail and Empire staff writer SsaySs : â€" "Recently Progressive members have shown a curiosity about Canada‘s gold shipments and reserves that is distinctâ€" ly embarrassing to the government. "Further information on those subâ€" jects is demanded by H. E. Spencer, Battle River, in a series of questions placed on the order paper toâ€"day. There is no reason why there should be any concealment. Threadneedle street, Wall street, the banks of Canâ€" ada, United States and Great Britain éii imow what gold Canada has shjp- "NVINCIBLE in Name And in ovaumy‘‘ JELLY POWDERS HAT a difference Ovaltine makes in a very short time! Weak and ailing children become strong and sturdy . . full of life and energy and with cheeks aglow with glorious health. Such is the experience in many thouâ€" sands of homes. _ The secret of good health is simpl adequate nourishment to build up healthy bodies, sound nerves and alert minds. This Oveltine supplies in abundant measure. After illness Ovelfine rapidly restores health,. strength and normal weight. We receive grateful letters constantly . always with praise for Ovaltine. One mother writes: "My litile girl Dorothy has derived wonderful benefit from the daily use of Ovaltine during the past six weeks, For the first fortnight of the time she was in bed with measles and bronchitis. She made a quick recovery, rapidly regainin health, and looks so much better than before her illness that people are remarking on the change in her, as preâ€" viously she was always ailing." Ovaltine is not a mere haphazard mixture of its several ingredients but is manufactured by an exclusive scientific process. Ovaeltine retains, unâ€" impaired, all the essential elements of its valuable ingredientsâ€"ripe barley malt, fresh eggs and creamy milk from England‘s richest pastures. Every particle of Ovaitine is easily digested and assimilated. Make delicious OveZtine your chilâ€" dren‘s daily beverage the year ‘round. They‘ll thrive on it. . . Made in England. Sold at 50¢, 75¢c, $1.25 and special $4.50 family size. The larger tins are more economical to purchase. fa . WANDER Llh;l‘lt"rfg; BUILDS . _ and OV ALTINEFS respomible MCcLARENS LimiTeEp â€" HAMILTON, ONT. UP BRAIN, NERVE AND BODY MITED, 455 KING STREET TORONTO, ONT. beginning of the year Hon. James A. Robb, finance minister, has shipped to the United States $40.000,000 in gold, in a vain endeavour to hold the exâ€" change rate at par, as against the enâ€" ormous unfavourable trade balance with that country. There remains in Canada about $60,000,000 in gold which is about 29.7 per cent. of the federal note issue as against about 50 per cent. in gold of the federal note issue a year ago. Canada cannot keep the Canaâ€" dian dollar at par in New York by shipâ€" ping gold, but only by buying less in the United States, or selling that counâ€" try more, and the latter solution has been rendered impossible by the proâ€" posed tariff revision." London Daily Express:â€"The old lady in Essex who has just bobbed her hgir at 103 is one more proof of how far greater is the influence of youth on age than of age on youth.. We love her for laughing at the years in this dauntâ€" less fashion, for refushing to be thought an eccentricity because she is a centenarian. That she caught the fiu as a consequence of her act is a misfortune she will accept as part of the suffering demanded of beauty. The great thing is that she has never lost her sympathy with the high, adventurâ€" ing spirit of youth." d(