Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 5 Sep 1929, 2, p. 2

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Thursday, Sept. Kow you can stop burnin itching skin tarâ€" ture. Apply the pure coolin l'q';_xd D.D. D. YTCOHINX TOPS INSTANTLY, The hbeslivng elements penetrate the skin and sooth the irrtâ€" tated tissues, Eczema, fimples. ulcers, razher, 111 forms of skin trouble quickly yleld to this famous antiseptic. A 35¢ bottle proves Its merit or {our dru t gives your money back,. D.D.D,. gives skin kRealth, (Use D.D.D: p). | MOISLEY AND BALL With a Penetrating Antiseptic Quality maintained for 50 years. Pocket pack of FLIT Your money always BUYS MORE in honestâ€"toâ€" goodness CIGAR QUALITY when you buy IT TAKES only a few minutes to make bran muffins if you use the famous ALLâ€"BRAN recipe. Just try it. You‘ll get the lightest, Auffiest, best muffhins you ever took from the oven. All the family will surely praise your skill that night! And remember, you‘ll be .‘“‘-J helping them to better \ health at the same time. For ts _ » * so many foods are lacking in bulk or roughage. And it is this lack that so often causes constipation â€" which in turn steals energy and health and may even cause seriâ€" ous disease. Kellogg‘s ALLâ€"BRAN provides bulk in genâ€" erous quantity because it is 100% bran. By serving it in some form every day you can protect your family. So many ways to serve it too. In waffies, breads. Sprinkled into soups. Mixed with other cereals. And, of course, with milk or cream, fruits or honey Quicker?! /2 Old Reliable ut a "handful of health in the muffins tonight ENXGLEHART MAN HAS RARE OLD 16TH CENTURY BIBLE In recent issues of The Advance reâ€" ference has been made to old and rare coins and many examples given where local people have currency that either for age or oddity has special value or interest. The articles in regard to old coins have been read with much inâ€" terest and attracted considerable atâ€" tention. to judge from the many comâ€" ments made. Some of the coins reâ€" viewed have certainly been of special interest, but The Advance would agree that none of them have any more inâ€" terest than has a bible now in the posâ€" session of Mr. T. S. Woollings, of Engâ€" lehart. Readers of The Advance will no doubt be interested in the following reference made in The Englehar: Times last week:â€" "Mr. T. S. Woollings has many inâ€" teresting souvenirs of his travels around the world, but it is doubtful if he has anything more interesting than a very rare old sixteenth century bible which he recently received from England. The book is most remarkable in many wavys. Bound in wood covers and in a good state of preservation it includes many features we have never seen in bibles of these days. The whole is printed in great primer old English type, which gives about four lines to the inch. It also gives in detail the lineal descent from Adam down to Jesus Christ. It is a remarkable book, and we congratulate our fellow townsâ€" man on the possession of such a treasâ€" ure." Be sure you get genuime ' Kellogg‘s â€" the original ALLâ€"BRAN. Partâ€"bran prodâ€" ucts, at best, bring part results. Doctors recommend ALLâ€"BRAN, Just eat two tableâ€" spoonfuls dailyâ€"chronic cases, with every meal. Sold by all grocers. Served ir taurants and diningâ€"cars. Made in London, Ontario. s "Eating is one of the pastimes of _ l bush life. Some men actually brood over their grub. Every time they change jobs they are delighted with ; | the new cooking, but they soon tire of e it and grumble about this and that. Cooks get to be pretty hard boiled, and occasionally raid the dining room to |clear their minds of little grievances 11 engendered by comments on items of g | the bill of fare. Some men take a + | peculiar pleasure in baiting the cook or the cookee, who faithfully reports all remarks to his overlord in the kitâ€" q , chen. A Little Essay About Cooks and Their Ways The cooks in mining camps, their virtues and their peculiarities come in for mention in a recent editorial article in The Northern Miner last week. The Miner says:â€" pies cheers up his day and makes the commentator persona grata in that cookery. "Whenever you‘re passing this way drop in and have a snack," he says. "Like everybody else, the cook reâ€" sponds to flattery. A few words in praise of the meat or the bread or the "But some cooks are ferocious. The preparation, the endless preparation, of huge quantities of food for other men to eat geis on their nerves in the long run. They are autocrats, every one, and few are the camp managers who have the temerity to seriously cross a good cook. "The cookery is run on aÂ¥ business basis snd in most cases, particularly where a good man is in charge, makes a profit. To the casual observer there does not seem to be much system to the running of the dining room, but there is. Apparent carelessness in throwing around quantities of groceries which would appal the ordinary houseâ€" wife is only an evidence of familiarity with the job in hand. "Travellers and visitors to mining camps in the bush usually wind up at the cookery for a meal or two. They sit with the manager, who usually has a place at one of the tables. They are carefully watched, and their peculiariâ€" ties of dress and manner are noted for subsequent comment. No unnccessary talking is allowed at table. When leaving the camp the visitor is expected to recompense the cook for his trouble. If he doesn‘t he may be sorry for it some cther time, when he is badly in need of a meal." EXPERT GIVES RECIPE FOR BUTTERSCOTCH PIE For those who at the end of the have a particular 2 tablespoons shortening. sugar, 1 cup sour cup Kel]oggs ALLâ€"BRAN fiour, 4 teaspoon soda, spoon â€" salt, teaspoon powder. 4 A 4 .A 4 _A.4 ; Cream shortening and sugar to: gether, add egg. Mix and sift flour sodz, salt, and baking powder. 1« creamed mixture add ALLâ€"BRAN then milk, alternately with sifte dry ingredients. Pour into grease« mufin tins, and bake in moderat oven~ (370°% F.) for 29 minutes Yield: either 8 large or 12 medium size muffins. If sweet milk is use instead of sour, omit soda and us 3 teaspoons baking powder. added, it makes a delightâ€" ful breakfast dish. Kellogg‘s ALL â€"BRAN is sold with this defiâ€" nite gucrantee: Eat it accaording to directions. If it does not relieve constipation safely, we will refund the purâ€" ALLâ€"BRAN Muffins Guaranteed! Served in hotels, resâ€" s. Made by Kellogg chase price. THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO like a swee 1 baking weet dessert s recipe will cup cup use SHIP DRILLS TO NEW HND IN FAR NORTH COUNTRY Two Machines and Crews Leave Sudâ€" bury Last Week for Unknown Destination in Far North. Another of the many romances is| Amon suggested by an article in last week‘s , give th« Sudbury Star. Many are inclined to| terest t think that with the advent of airships ; tention radio and other ultraâ€"modern methods : this pa: all the romance has departed from [ air rou! mining. Of course, this is not so. The ! other c fact is that prospecting and mining | terest have if anything more romance than ; fixing t they used to have. The only difier-%other a ence is that the adventure and glamâ€"|who at our are along different lines to what| Canada they used to be. One of the last roâ€" | roused mances of the prospecting and mining | regard game are referred to by The Sudbury | using R Star, as follows:â€" tion ins "Another step in the. adventurous task of pushing back the mining frontiers of Northern Canada was takâ€" en this week when the van of an exâ€" pedition left Sudbury having for its purpose completion of arrangements for shipping diamond drills and equipâ€" ment to an unnamed destination, somewhere near the 60th parallel of latitude and close to the Arctic cirâ€" cle. This is the first definite step that has been taken in opening up the great open stretches of the Barren Lands over which ie iseverai prospeating parties of several companies have been scouting for more than a year. The expedition is being undertaken by the Sudbury Diamond Drilling Company at the instance of Dominion Explorers, Limited, one of the asrial prospecting companies, who report the discovery of a deposit of copper, nickel and preâ€" cilous metals believed to be worth the expenditure of transporting heavy maâ€" chinery for diamond dGrilling. Prosâ€" pectors of Dominion Explorers are alâ€" ready staking up all the available terriâ€" tory in the vicinity of the find. "In connection with plans for transâ€". porting the necessary machinery andi supplies over the tremendous distance involved, S. J. Fitzgerald, president of Sudbury Diamond Drilling Company, leftf Sudbury on Friday morning for Edmonton where he will arrange for shipment of the drills and equipment with the least possible delay. Two Sullivan drills left Sudbury on Tuesâ€". day for the same destination and with a complete set of spare parts. Crews of men are now being picked from Sudâ€" bury diamond drillers to man the drills. Sufficient supplies are being purchasâ€" ed in Winnipeg to maintain a crew of twenty men for nine months to a year. The entire shipment will amount to beâ€" tween 200 and 300 tons. "In order to reach the interiot and get drilling under way before the fresze up, the drills are being taken over the Canadian Pacific Railway as far as Waterways, where they will be tranâ€" shipped to barges on the Athabasca River. Their destination is said to be at least 800 miles beyond this point. It is expected that the drills will reach Waterways on September 3rd. Suffiâ€" cient provision has been made in the arrangements to allow a month from this date for reaching the property, after which the barges will have a month in which to return without beâ€" ing in danger of getting caught in the freeze up. ‘"‘The entire crew at the property will consist of ten drill men and helâ€" pers with an additional eight or ten men employed as woodcutters, cooks, etec. The crew wil lbe under the direcâ€" tion of Fritz W. Moberg who will be foreman in charge and Clem Simmons, setter. Expvlorers the purpose OoI making their assays on the property. "Apart from the usual batch of ruâ€" mours which follows in the train of such activity very little definite inforâ€" mation appears to be available about the new discovery. On report states that a deposit, carrying values in nicâ€" kel, copper and precious metals, has been traced for a distance of two miles with width ranging from 20 to 30 feet. The discovery is said to h made simultaneously by J. C scouting over the territory by a prospector on the ground. also montion a striking simil tween the samples of ore seer MMIGRANTS APPARENTLY DID NOT WANT EMPLOYMENT {0OOk the trouble to intervlew some of the sixty British immigrants who were on their way back from Winnipeg to Montreal to be deported to England. He told the immigrants that he could get work for them in the lumber camps and on extra railway gang, and if they cared to arrange things with the imâ€" migration authorities they could reâ€" apartment without success. Her pe: : May, and when asked if there was any parrot watched the procedings until it chance of an early resumption, the manâ€" dentl)%relged some exc;it:ment. ;3 the birg :s ager replied that this depended entirely gra some matches and snapped on the finding of more ore." them in its beak. The matches caught | : fire and Miss Beatty ran to the bird to; Toronuto Globe:â€"The proposed anto put the blaze out. The bird started to line across the Sahara desert suggests choke and the first thing it coughed up l some fine new locations for filling staâ€" was the lost clasp. tions. Huntingdo day Miss Jea was horrorâ€"s irn to the jobs 12 men did not were no tak ‘archsed martmer Mavor Bibby of Sudbury offhce also learned that Dominio: are taking in their own as and laboratory equipmen Jean Bea râ€"stricke1 O the Geological con o be similar." Carroill, air, and Revorts BY CANADA THE SAEESI AlR ROUTE TO EUROPE North Land Interested in Opinion of Dr. Stefanson on World Air Routes "There were among his audience, of course, some who had realized the sigâ€" nificance of the statements he had made that Canada constitutes the shortest and safest air route between any two points in the Northern world. But there were many who, not having taken the trouble to follow the tracing laid down by Dr. Stefanson in his articles, had not absorbed the details of his reasoning, when disussing the subject of aviation in the Arctic reâ€" gions or flights across Canada to reach points in Europe. "Dr. Stcfanson‘s contention tfhat.l Canada is the natural way for flying from one part of the northern world to another part has been of more sigâ€" nificance to aviators and those interâ€". ested in aviation, either as fiyers or' owners of commercial fiying ventures,| than it can possibly be to those not so ' interested. But there is no reason why one and all should not be interested in the general subject of Canada as shortest air route between Asia and America. It is in this latter connecâ€" tion that the illustrations were shown and the talk delivered by Dr. Stefanâ€" son. He is a missionary endeavouring to arose the enthusiasm of Canadians in the advantages,. their own country possesses, not to detract from advanâ€" tages that other countries possesses, but to lift those that are our own and to make the most of the peculiar benefits that a generous and beneficient Proviâ€" dence has showered upon us. "A study of the maps supports every contention of the Missionary of Arcetic Canada that Canada offers the most feasible routes for fiying between the different parts of the Northern Hemisâ€" phere, where the vast bulk of the world trade and traffic lies. It is this part o® the globe that possesses the greatest population and in which trade is carâ€" ried on between the various countries. Recognizing this fact, Britain cut the Suez Canal and the United States the Panama Canal to facilitate transporâ€" tation and save the long voyage around South America and Africa before these works were accomplished. What these canals are to navigation, Canada may attain is beyond the ken of man. The science is but in its swaddling clothes yet. Progress is being made, to be sure, and imagination cannot carry us past what the future holds in store. EWhat has been achieved may be said to be in the nature of experiments, and hundreds of individuals are engaged in !improving by what those experiments have shown. It would not be an exâ€" aggeration to say that all eyes are turned to the skies as the way man will ‘take in his restless movements in the world, and that it may not be a very long time until the farthest reaches of \the world will be but a day‘s journey SEARCH FOR ORE CCNTINUES AT THE ANKERITE PROPERTY Among those i e thought to ‘est there has ation paid to Northern Miner last week says: ent rumours heard in the Porâ€" camp that the Ankerite Mine t to reduce the sceale of operaâ€" ailed to receive confirmation at pperty late last week. Various ad been heard previously to the hat tracks were being torn up, cemoved and every gesture of nment made. Still, while thess s could not be confirmed, noâ€" i a startling nature has been from below. Development work | proceeding on the 600â€"foot he manager says, and while he i that some encouragement was net. declined to comment on reâ€" nd when asked there was any of an early resumption, the manâ€" plied that this depended entirely finding of more ore." k ha whetr in the mill. This end been closed down since No atime, not INTERESTING STATISTTCS ABOUT WHAT PEOPLE EAT The last issue of The Northern Minâ€" er gives some interesting information about the amount of different kinds of food: eaten by people in the mining camps. In this connection The Miner sys :â€"â€" "Good feeding is proverbial in the mining camps of the North. Few peoâ€" ple, stitting down to dinner in the cookery, realize just how much a miner can tuck away in a month. D. L. Jemâ€" mett, of Cobalt, has gone to considerâ€" able trouble to secure accurate data on this rather important point, with a view to giving mining companies who are planning operations an inkling of what supplies are required over a periâ€" od, particularly when the work is carâ€" 8 6 THE CROWNING PLEASURE OF A MEAL COMES WITH DESSERT M‘Laren‘s For Sale By Hillâ€"Clarkâ€"Francis, Limited â€" Timmins, Ont The Geo. Taylor Hardware, se _ â€" .. * ‘TPimmins, Ont Marshall â€" Ecclestone, Limited, Timmins, Ont In Building Your Home it Costs No More to Stop Fire By specifying Gyproc Wallboard you assure walls and ceilings that are efficient fire barriersâ€" yet the cost is no more, and often less than with materials that give no fire protection whatever. The World Famous "Ounce of Prevention" INVINCIBLE IN NAME AND IN QUALITY JELLY POWDERS causes it Intestinal poisoning from absorption is the cause of many ills, It yields and succumbs to ENO‘S "Fruit Salt* because ENO so surely, but ever so gently and safely, climinates the poisonous waste matter that Harold F A dash of ENO in a glass of water daily. P M 1 } ried on at points distant from transportation. "You would not credit it, to wiat man reaching for the cookies, tha average consumption of them : month is 7.7 dozen, but it‘s a And he eats 13 pies in the same | od, to say nothing of oneâ€"fifth pound of Johnny cake, eight po of ordinary cake and a couple of en buns. He just fills up with ei loaves any little spaces he has sounds like Paul Bunyon, but i fact, proven by figures kept for 0: vear in a mine boarding house. "The total consumption of f weight reaches 6.85 pounds a da can a man eat that much? derground work is hard and ay raising. It‘s no place for a ma diet." *# 8 2 16 | by How

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