Tickets good going by any train after 3.00 a.m. Sunday only, returning to leave destination not later than midâ€" night same day, Standard Time. 2. One Day Trips Single Fare fo 1. Two to Four Day Trips Fare and a quarter for the round trip. Tickets good going Friday noon till Sunday noon; good to return leaving destination not later than Monday midnight, Standard Time. men now on relief can get work if they want to and are not too "choosey" about it. Also the authorities at Kirkâ€" land .Lake point to Haileybury, South Porcupine and other places where reâ€" lief has been cut off. Also, referencéd might be made to a lot of other places where the men themselves have rusâ€" tled jobs and got off relief on theit own account. In referring to the matâ€" ter The orthern News last week says: "Timmins has nothing like the number on relief that the township of Teck is obliged to care for, it is s##d, and yet Timmins has a population considâ€" erably larger than Kirkland Lake and Swastika combined." Kirkland Lake Aims to Cut Relief by July 15th According to a decision of the Teck township council, direct relief for ableâ€" bodied menâ€" will be discontinued at Kirkland Lake after July 15th. This move is necessary to protect the taxâ€" payers and the:â€" council feels that the THURSDAY, JULY 1#TH, 1934 Tickets and complete information from any agent. WEEK END FARES COMFORT SAFETY LOW COST Exquisite _Quality Between any two points in Canada PACIFIC Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes take the bother out of breakfast. No cookâ€" ing. No pots and pans to scour. And everybody likes them‘! Kellogg‘s will give you more hours of freedom to do the things you enjoy. They‘re rich in energy â€"easy to digest. An ideal supper for chkhildren. Always ovenâ€"fresh. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. * â€" FOR CONVENIENCE for _ the round trip. 1â€"2 pound prunes 1â€"2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 teaspoons butter 1 tablespoon flour Wash prunes, soak in water to cover. Cook ‘below boiling point until soft; uncover to allow water to evaâ€" porate; remove stones, cut in pieces. Add sugar, lemon juice and 1 1â€"2 tablespocns prime water. Line pie plate with pastry and pour in the mix« %ture. Dot with butter and dredge with flour. Cover with an upper crust and bake 30 .to 35 minutes. Temperature 150 degrees F., reduce to 400 degrees. Custard Pie 1 1â€"2 tablespoons flour 4 tablespoons sugar 1â€"3 teaspoon salt 2 eggSs 2 cups scalded milk 1â€"2 teaspoon vanilla Few grains of nutmeg Cut cold fat into flour coarsely, using two knives or a pastry blender. Mix to a stiff dough with cold water. Wrap in waxed paper and chill. Apricot Pie 1 pint stewed dried apricots Few gratings lemon rind 1 1â€"2 tablespoons cornstarch Pie crust Line pie pan with pie crust. Heat fruit with lemon rind and thicken with cornstarch, smoothly mixed with an equal amount of cold wated. Partâ€" ly cool, pour into pie pan, put strips of pastry across top and bake 30 minâ€" utes in moderate oven. Prune Pie Here are some recipes for pies and puddings, or more exactly for some pies and one pudding â€" butterscotch pudding. â€"The butterscotch simply follows the butterscotch pie. As a preface to the recipe for the pies there is given a recipe for making "quick paste," or as it is sometimes called, "chopped paste." These recipes may be worth clipping out and pasting in the ccok‘s scrap book. Quick Paste 3 1â€"2 cups pastry flour 1 1â€"4 teaspoons salt 1 cup shortening Cold water Sift and measure chilled flour. Reâ€" sift with salt. Some Recipes for Pies and Puddings rieot Pie, Plum Pie, Custard |1 Caramel Pie, Chocolate Pie, Butâ€" *T P Aa rotch Pie, But seotch Pudding reversal of form, which is more or less unlikely. There are more than the Consols to hurdle, but the Frood will have to bow to no one if they play the game they are capable of. Whether they win or lose, they are putting up a great game and deserve al the supâ€" port that Sudbury can give them." calibre of the football played in Toâ€" ronto is any criterion of the teams they will be up against, the Frood have a big chance of making themselves the Dominion cup holders this yeat. Toronto Consols, the class in the Queen City, played North Bay over the weekâ€"end, and though they did look very classy and flashy, they manâ€" aged to eke out no better than a 3â€"2 win over the C. P. entry from the Bay. The North Bay club hasn‘t won ga game this year in the S.DF.A., and have absolutely no chance of taking the Frood unless they show a startling Frood‘s Fine Chances for Dominion Football Cup Among the paragraphs of sporting comment in The Sudbury Star last week was the following that will be of interest to fcootball enthusiasts here: "Frocd Mine are now the undisputed champions of the Northern Division in the Dominion Football Assocfation‘s cup tie by a battling finisn iast nighnt that netted them three goals in the second half of the second game after their fourâ€"goal first game lead had been wiped out. Frood have shown a spirit that won‘t be beaten all year, and it is this as much as their footâ€" ball ability that has carried them through. In the first half last night they were outplayed, and it looked as though their chance /for going any further was over, but the old lastâ€" minute fight got them another win Coupled with their fighting spirit is their youth that leaves them fresh and able to go at top speed when the older and more tricky veterans are gasping for breath. They have taken some bad bumpings by heavier and more rugged teams, but they come back for more all the time and always manage to walk off with a win. If the Butterscotch Pudding 3â€"4 cup corn syrup 2 1â€"4 cups milk 1â€"3 teaspoon salt 6 tablespcons cornstarch 1â€"2 tablespoon butter Scald corn syrup and milk. Add butter, salt and the cornstarch, mixed with an equal quantity of cold milk. Cook in a double boiler, stirring conâ€" stantly until thickened, allowing at least 20 minutes. Add vanilla, chill and serve with cream. Wash 1 pound dates, and soak over night; stew in some water until sort enough to rub through colanger. Add 1 cup sour cream, 2 level teaspoons of butter, the yolks of 3 eggs, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, and little salt. Bake in 1 crust. Make a meringue of whites of eggs, if liked. Butterscotch Pie 4 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons cornstarch 1 cup brown sugar 1â€"2 teaspoon salt 2 cups milk, scalded 3 yolks of eggs 3 teaspoons caramel Cream butter; add cornstarch, salt and sugar mixed; add milk slowly and place over hot water; stir and ccol until thick; cover, cook 20 minâ€" utes, stirring occasionally. Add yolks of eggs and cook until thick. Remove from heat and add caramel. Poutr into a cooked shell; cover with a meringue. . Pie crust 2 tablespoons cornstarch Line pie plate with crust. Beat egg yolks and add corn syrup, cornstarch and vanilla, mixed thoroughly. Fold in egg whites, stiffly ‘beaten, and pour into pastryâ€"lined plate. Place strips of pastry over top and bake from 25 to 30 minutes in an oven, 3745 degrees. Chocclate Pie 1 1â€"2 squares chocolate 1 2â€"3 cups scalded milk 2â€"3 cup powdéred sugar 1â€"2 tablespoon corn starch 1â€"2 teaspoon vanilla 4 eggs Pastry Melt chocolate over hot water, then add hot milk and cook together till smooth. Add sugar sifted with cornâ€" starch and stir constantly until mixâ€" ture returns to the boiling point. Cool slightly, pour over 1 whole egg, 3 egg yolks‘ slightly beaten, and 1â€"4 teaspoon vanilla . Pour into pastryâ€" lined pie pan and bake in a hot oven (450 degrees F.) for 10 minutes and in a slow oven (320 degrees F.) for 30 minutes. Plain pastry Mix flour, sugar, salt and wellbeatâ€" en eggs together. Add scalded milk, vanilla and nutmeg. Line pie plate with plain pastry and pour in the cusâ€" tard mixture and ‘bake in quick oven (425 degrees F.) 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 300 degrees F. and bake 20 minutes, or until custard is firm. Caramel Pie 2 cups corn syrup 1â€"4 teaspoon vanilla Few grains salt Fresh from the Gardens Pie o« THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARITO While sane retrenchment must be a plank in the new government‘s poi:â€" cy, no negative policy will be ample for the needs of Northern Ontario. It is still New Ontario; its day has only commenced. The trail has been blazed and ways and means are apparent to all. We believe Mitchell Hepburn is a man of visionâ€"and a man of action. He is fortunate in having the solid support of all the constituencies of the North. In the face of such supâ€" port, the people will look to him for Agriculture and industry must have markets and orders. The North sends constant stream of orders to the farm and the factory, which can be increased to a flood, providing that the pork barrel is smashed for good and the northern developer and vionâ€" eer given the measures of assistance he deserves. And it is in the North, from the Manitoba border across James Bay to the Quebec boundary, that the great hope of speedy restoration and sound development lies. Gold‘s Open Letter to the Premierâ€"Elect That clean page extends not only @cross the older sections of Ontario. but into the far greater virgin areas of our North. At the same time they placed in the hands of Premierâ€"Elect Mitchell Hepâ€" burn and his followers an opportunity for service and progress which has greetad no cther victorisus Ontario party in 30 years. "Gold," the magazine of the North, addresses an open letter to Mr. Hepâ€" burn, the premierâ€"elect of Ontario. It heads the letter, "Your Great Opporâ€" In a veritable avalanche of votes on June 19, the people of Ontario cried aloud for men of action and vision to Liberalism has a clean, white page and a mandate like Franklin D. Roosevelt holds. lead the way to recovery and sane government. letter in full:â€" agazime of the North " Premier That He Has the of the Century to Adc Policy for the Nort yX w Â¥ « including Automatic Choke, Heat Control, Idle Control Water Temperature Control and Vacuumâ€"Spark Control Hepburn!" Here the Chance Adopt a Tells is the Let this new, young government apâ€" proach the northern job as though it had discovered a new continent of opâ€" portunity, teeming with new and unâ€" claimed wealth; manned by the best brawn and brains Canada possesses and ready to put its shoulder to the wheel with determination to «+make every citizen of Ontario look forward with reborn confidence to the new dawn for Ontarioâ€"and for Canada! The North calls for the best you And we believe that they will recogâ€" nize that Northern Ontario developâ€" ment offers an empire of constructive opportunity unparalleled in the world. The North is the biggest business Ontario has. The North can lift Old Ontarto and its people to great and universal prosâ€" perity and equality of opportunity. We believe Mr. Hepburn and his lieutenants are big enough and farâ€" sighted to formulate the greatest policy of northern developâ€" ment the North has ever had. They know what new mines mean to this province. They know that sane»mining development _ will save the day for Ontario. These men are outstanding and uiâ€" derstanding thinkers regarding the North and for years they have been urging many needed reforms ant positive policies. Theése men are all Northerners. They watched at close quarters the development of the North since the building of the T. N. O. railway through the decision of the late Hon. G. W. Ross. Let them now vindicate the original policy of Northern deâ€" velopment. They know the crying problems and great capacity for achievement of the northern people. publicâ€"spirited rather than partisan action. And for a great constructive policy for the North, embracing mining, the tourist trade, water power, more picgneer roads, aviation as an aid to exploration, lumbering and fishing, with special attention to the support of the prospector and the pioneer worker and developer. Mr. Hepburn is doubly fortunate in having about him men of the type of Arthur Slaght, KC., Arthur Roebuck. K.C., M.P.P.â€"elect, Daniel W. Lang, K.C,, who made such a splendid run in South York, and T. B. McQuesten, K.C., who remembers the early days of Gowganda. There are six models to choose from. See them at owm showrooms. Drive the one you preéferâ€"â€" try the rideâ€"today AVE you always wanted a McLaughlinâ€"Buick? Thenshere is the car for you:; The newest McLaughlinâ€"Buick Straight Eight, at the lowest price in history for McLaughlinâ€"Buick beauty â€" quality â€" dependability. It has all the timeâ€"proved McLaughlinâ€"Buick features . .. it offers you new, tested MeLaughlinâ€"Buick triumphs of 1934 . . . it is big, spacious and streamlineâ€"styled by Fisher. Men Driving Cars for Years Without Permits A checkâ€"up on motor car drivers by the provincial and municipal police al Kirkland Lake reveals the fact that many men have ‘been driving motot cars for years without having driving Go ahead, Mr. Hepburn, Mr. Slaght, Mr. Roebuck, Mr. Langâ€"and you new northern members, with the youthful, hopeful, conquering outlook you have shown in your fight to lead the pecple! And "Gold" is certain that this change in public thought as expressed in new government, will usher in the greatest era of progress, based on "a fair deal to all, of which the North has ever dreamed! have, Mr. Hepburn! You will} find everyone ready to help, including, we feel sure, the ‘"finest Minister of Mines Ontario ever had"â€"the Hon: Charles McCrea. Â¥ae /ss‘ a 25 PALMOLIVE SOAP Product of the St. Lawrence Starch Co. Limited, Port Credit, Ont. Blended from olive and palm oils A GENERAL MOTORS Y ALUE . .. PRODUCED IN CANADA Have you Tried? _ PER 711C CAKE KEEPS COMPLEXIONS YOUTHFUL Try The Advance Want Advertisements permits. The Northern News is inclined to think that this is a North Country custom. It isn‘t so far as Timmins and Tisdale are concerned. At any rate if there are drivers without permits it is because they have kept away from the remotest touch with accidents and all other sorts of motor trouble, for in every case here that the police touch upon the names, addresses, license number, permit and all other details are very painstakingly taken. Also the Timmins and Tisdale police and the provincial police here make a regular checkâ€"up every once in a while to see that licenses and permits in general are OK. At Kirkland Lake recently, however, some men wgre discovered who had been driving cars for fout or five years and yet had no driver‘s permit in that time. It would appest that in Kirkland Lake buying a drivâ€" er‘s permit is as distasteful as paying for a radio license in Timmins. esz WOs 26 ie ol Mâ€"84A,