female domination Kingston Whig-Standard :â€"The Oak- vflle Record sees a heartening sign of the tuna in the almost unanimous re- turn to the good old-fashioned night- shirt. It argues that pyjamas are an instrument of torture and a symbol of The Junior grouping for Kirkland Lake is not as far advanced as the Senior, though general favour is ex- pressed for placing the Gold Miners in a group with New Liskeard, Hailey- bury and Cobalt. With teams operat- ing in two tour-town leagues, hockey fans in Kirkland Lake should be able to see two home games in about every ten days. The ice manager this year is Art Throop, former coach and ice- maker at Iroquois Falls." ed. 'I'hb will mean that there will be twice as many games between the teams at the ends of the loop as there will be, for instance between T'unmlns and Kirkland Lake. The distance between the towns is the reason for this move. a space of over 150 miles of train separ- ating Noranda and 'I‘lmmlns. “When the N.O.H.A. executive meets in North Bay to draw up schedules the proposal to have double schedules be- tween the two Porcupine towns and between Noranda and Kirkland Lake and single schedules for the {our towns in the league. will doubtless be accept- “That a. four-team Senior NORA. League will operate in this section of the North this winter seems almost as- sured. Doug. Briden. N.O.H.A. execu- tive member for this district has al- ready received assurance from hockey authorities in Timmins, South Porcu- pine and Kirkland Lake that they are willing to place a. team in such a. group- ing and on Wednesday morning he was waiting word from Noranda as to their intentions. It is expected daily and is almost sure to be in the amnnative. “ Before the ink on this issue of the Northern News is dry, prospective mem- bers for Senior and Junior hockey teams in Kirkland Lake will be havâ€" ing their ï¬rst workout in the local arena. A large number of the hockey- ists have been taking physical training in the high school gymnasium for some time and should be in fair condition to start the season. In discussing the hockey plans Kirkland Lake for the presem sea The Northern News last week sav Kirkland Lake’s Hockey Plans for This Season MALT % mm South Mrlca, which produces prac- tically as much gold as all other coun- tries combined. for the month of October made a new high production record. Gold output from the Transvaal in Ocâ€" tober was 945,113 ï¬ne ounces. valued at £4,014.585. an increase of 29.089 and it also is the first occasion on which the total output has exceeded .£ 4.000.†in value (or a single month. dinw. nne ounces, or £123.56Q100mpared with September" 3 total. The men an under review was the ï¬rst occasion on which the output from the Witwaters- rand alone has exceeded 900.000 ounces. Sllced bread thin, remove the crusts, and without buttermg make into sandwickes with thin even slices of sharp-flavoured cheese as the ï¬lling and a sprinkling of salt and a. dr0p or two of tabasco sauce for seasonirb In a heavy skillet melt sufï¬cient but- ter to cover the bottom and brown the sandwiches delicately and rather slow- ly on both 'sides. adding more butter 11 necasary. Take care that the but- ter does not become so hot that it browns the sandwiches before the bread is heated through and the cheese melt- ed. Serve the cheese dreams at once with a salad of vegetawa or of sar- SOUTH AFRICA GOLD HAS RECORD OCTOBER OUTPUT toasted side to the very edge. If the cheese mixture does not come to the edges of the bread, they become brown and hard. Brown the cheese delicately under a low flame or in the oven. The heat allows the chem mixture to heat through before it browns, gives it a chance to become light, and keeps the cheese tender and soft. Too great heat makes the cheese tough and stringy. If desired, place a strip of crisp bacon across each slice of cheese toast. Serve it hot from the oven. This recipe makes enough for 12 to 14 slices of bread. The cheese mixture may be prepared, except for the bak- ing powder, the day before it is to be used. Since the mixture stiflens on standing, beat until soft in a double boiler. let it cool. and add the bak- ing powder. Then spread the cheese on the toast. Toast one side of the bread. Spread the cheese mixture thickly on the un- toasted side to the very edge. If the cheese mixture does not come to the 4 drops tabasco sauce, or a few grains of cayenne pepper A little onion juice, if desired A teaspoon salt 1?.- teaspoons baking powder Shave the cheese into thin small pieces. Heat the milk or cream in a double boiler, thicken with the flour which has been mixed with the water. and cook for 5 minutes Add the beaten eggs, the cheese, and the sea- soningsl and coold slowly until the cheese has melted and the mixture is thick and creamy. Allow it to cool; then add the baking powder. Heat the milk in a double boiler. Mix the melted fat, flour and salt, and stir into them a small quantity of the heated milk. Add this to the remaindâ€" er of the milk, stir until thickened, add the cheese and a. few drOpG of each of the seasonings, and beat lightly until the cheese has melted. Pour a. little of the cheese mixture into the well-beat- en egg, then add this to the rarebit, and cook for 2 or 3 minutes longer. Serve on thin, crisp toast or crackers. Cheese Toast Some Happy Cheese Recipes Suggested flavour Mute: Cheese 1; Favourite and will very shortly issue its seventh re- it Also has Menuhin†as Well port dealing with the number of civil as Noteworthy Food Value. service employees and the expenditures ,cn their salaries during the ï¬scal year > cook over a 1 and creamy Lbasco sauce z 1 pint milk 4 tablespoons melted butter Other fat 4 tablespoons flour 1- teaspoon salt :1. pound chm, shaved thin Tabasco sauce Onion juice Soy sauce 1 egg acke pound cheese E cup rich milk or cream tablespoons flour mixed with 2 tablespoons water . 1 supper. It. is made withâ€" tablespoons butter or; other to: cup ï¬nely-cut. celery green pepper, chopped small onion, chopped tablespoans flour pint canned tomatoes pound cheese. shaved thin ,, and add the cheese and salt over low heat and stir until thure thickens and the cheese ,ed. Pour some of this mixture 1e well-beaten eggs, then pour k into the skillet. and continue : over a low heat until thicken- ato rarebit uple of weeks ago The Advance 1 some recipes for Christmas and pudding: and these proved L118? with so manyq readers that dvance is tempted to go to the ource for similar material. The ls recipes were by a writer for rronto Mail and Empire, and the rig recipes with cheese as a lead- are from the same writer:â€" ended March alst. 1931 The compilation give tion or permanent and ployees which is further to show full-time. seasc etc.. employees by dep statistics are arranged also the numbers engm mental headquarters, 9hn~n nï¬hn- O‘qnn n6 Any-1‘ Cheese Dreams pepper, chopped These employees are known as non- onion. chomzed enumerated classes and only the ex- poons flour penditure on their salaries and wages mnned tomatoes is shown in the report. Notes, explan- inely-cut celery laperabion of the Civil Service Act. 1 cheese. shaved thin [story of the non-enumerated employ- i ! >on salt ment for the departments concerned, are given in the report. . sauce The report shows that, on March Inst, fat in a heavy skillet, add 1931. there were 32.715 permanent em- green pepper, and onion. plcyees and 12.866 temporary employees, few minutes, and stir fre- I making a total of 45 581 persons engag- >rinkle the flour over the ‘ ed in the public service of the Domin- etables.. your :ln the t-o- ion. The expenditure on the salaries i add the cheese and salt of these employees for the ï¬scal year low heat and stir until , ended March 3lst. 1931. was $55\967.975 W'elsh areblt, ls noon dinne and skillet. and continue v heat until thicken- Add a few dashes of . serve on crisp toast Rarebit good dish. ,’ that mid- 01‘ The report shows that there were 11. - 766 persons employed at departmental i headquarters, Ottawa, at the end of the ï¬scal year 1930- 31, of which 8, 009 were p§9rmanent and 3 757 temporary. The 1 total expenditure on salaries at de- partmental headquarters, Ottawa, was ' $15 237,113 for the permanent employees : and $3, 897,049 for the temporary during the ï¬scal year ended March alst, 1931 :making‘ a grand total of $19,134,162 I paid to employees at departmental lheadquarters. The remainder of the ipersonnel is employed at various cen- ‘ tres throughout the Dominion. There were in all 33 815 persons employe I other than at departmental headquar ;ters. Ottawa, and the total expendlture { on their salaries was 351032149 {in the post ofl‘iée department. which {renders services of an industrial ra- ther than a Governmental character [and is in the main paid for by the ‘voluntary payments of the citizens for services rendered rather than out of taxation. The wages and salaries paid gin this department alone accounted for I $33,110,042 out of the aggregate of $94,- 310,983 for the ï¬scal year, leaving $61,- :200,941 as the total of salaries and wages paid in all the other depart- ,ments put together. 01' the salaries §and wages paid in the post ofï¬ce de- partment, a very large proportion is the renumeration of the non-enumerated ‘ classes throughout the country, includ- Sing postmasters cat the smaller ofï¬ces, [mail contractors and licensed vendors I of stamps. "It. would appear that when a man or woman decides to become a. thief the main thing is to get the money. and 11 they can get. it from a widow. A former chief of police of Timmins used to comment quite frequently on the good times enjoyed by prisoners in jails in Ontario. The average man knows nothing of the inside of jails and rather glories in the fact that he does not know. The average man would prefer that conditions should be leaning to leniency rather than to hard- ship. In any case he strives to avoid the jails altogether. There is a very wide-spread tendency to leniency in such matters. It is due. perhaps. to the reaction roused by the brutality that once prevailed. even in Canada. It may easily be that the reaction has gone too far. In discussing an item from a daily newspaper in regard to thieves who stole some childrens from a widow who was in poor circumstances a police force will laugh at the thought of “honour among thieves." or the supposed klndnws that make “Robin Hoods" or anything like that. Among professional thieves there need be little ablind person orachlld. itisall the easier got. They realize, it would ap- pear, that when they fully decided to become outlaws there was no need for them to foster feelings of sympathy for suffering humanity. Indeed, they muscthlnkbodosowmud beto make it more W for them to continue The New Liskeard Speaker makes some points that will impress thoughtful po- pie. The heal-amass of the average crook is well-known to those who see much of this class. Any hard-boiled police court reporter or any member of éood of any land expected. As The Speaker suggests they are a poor lot. The Speaker says:â€" 3 salaries or wages of the nonâ€"enumerat- ied classes for the ï¬scal year amounted ! to 324144.672, more than half of which 3 was in the post cflice department. The {grand total expenditure for the year was $94,310,983 on salaries of perman- ient, temporary and non-enumerated 3classes. It should be pointed out that {not nearly all the employees of the ‘Government are engaged in adminis- trative work. To take only the mos: Ioutstanding example of Government employees performing services of an lindustrial rather than of a. Governâ€" ; mental character, it may be noted that lout of the 45,581 persons engaged in the enumerated classes of. the public .service on March 31, 1931, 11,961 were THINKS PRISONERS ARE TOO “'ELL USED IN JAIL 'I‘O-DAY A table in the report gives in detail for each month and in each depart- ment, the numbers of employees, to- gether with expenditures on their sal- aries. for permanent empflo 336 for the tempera salaries or wages of t] ed classes for the ï¬sc etc.. employees by departments. The statistics are arranged so as to show also the numbers engaged at depart- mental headquarters, Ottawa. ano those other than at departmental head- quarters. Throughout the service. however. there are a number of em- ployees whose work is of a casual na- ture and who do not come under the Statistics in Regard to Canada‘s Civil Service The compilation givegs a classiï¬ca- lon of permanent and temporary em- 'loyees which is further analyzed so as 0 show full-time. seasonal. part-time. The Dominion Bureau of Statistics mr.\loye THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO 6.967.975 $14,198.- ; The The job Lieut.-( quently yc fr-c living a life of crime. There was a time when thieves received greater pun- ishment when found guilty of criminal offences than they do today. The change was brought about because of over-zealous humanitarians who de- plored the severe punishment meted out to law-breakers. Today. the sentence pronounced on an ordinary thief. espe- cially if the weather be cold, makes him smile. A month or two in a comfort- able Canadian jail, with a mattress to sleep on. and sufï¬cient food to eat. is all the thief wants. He will be in full sympathy with the Yukon Indian who refused to leave the prisan when told he could leave. “Me no go." said he. “Plenty warm, plenty eat." And when compelled to leave. he declared he would go back and steal two bags of flour the next time. All perhaps agree that prisoners ought to be made to work. but there is objection to having them work at any kind of work which wauld interfere with the selling price of the product of the honest working man. Road-making oughr. to he the kind of work the criminal should be required to do, and he should be made is work good and hard. Our present system of punishment. t3 any one who has lest his self-respect, will not in the least degree act as a deterrent against committing crime." be nd 3m sp sal‘ the $10,000 $40,000 to ’5 brc iovernor 8.1T applic. :ke be cw VICTOR RADIO ELECTROLA REA! Nine-tube Super-Hwodyuc com. bination, cngincercd to two pen- todcs and two supct-control tubes. Automatic volume-control of radio rcCcption. 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On 1131 W 1y biscuit outâ€"terinB'aL oven, 450'F.,121 “ï¬g . This recipe and do ' g$ v baking suggestions ' ""6“ “ Cook Book. "\z/o sent you. r Fraser Ave. \. Buy Ma I ‘t. Miss Dutton says: "I recommend Magic Baking Powder because I know from experience that its uniform leavening quality gives dependable bak- ing results. Most baked dishes look and taste better when Magic Baking Powder is used." Sometimes it's difficult to think up new ideas for varying daily menus. Here's one that offers pleasing variety and combines healthful qualities as well. It was prepared by Miss Gertrude Dutton, Western Canada's best known cookery expert, conductor of the Better (ookery Section in the Winnipeg Western Home Monthly. VEGETABLE DINNER Scalloped Potatoes Creamed Cornâ€"Diced Beets Cabbage au Gratin Hot Tea Biscuits)? Apple Pie with Cheese Chase Sanbom's Tea or Coffee 0 MASTER BUILDERS OF RADIO Something entirely new . . . something that only Vicmr can offer! 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You will realize that no combination is really modern without today's three great entertainment features â€"- radio -â€" records â€"- and 30-minute record's. that Play the new Victor 2 cups flour 4 {go'spoogs Mpgic Try Miss Dutton’s Favorite Recipe for TEA BISCUITS* Thursday, Dec. 17th, 1931 1 tablespoon lard 31 cup cold milk or half milk and '14:†watet equally delightful n the New Ma ii: in a rnnu will a