The fOllowing is No. 37 of the series of weekly letters supplied by the Home Builders‘ Service Bureau for readers of The Advance, the articles dealing with homes and homeâ€"building:â€" Add a New Charm to Your Hcuse The general appearance and attracâ€" tiveness of the front dcor of your home is the first impression a visitor gets of you. The features combined in every pleasing and attractive entrance are, hardware, woodwoOrk, glazing, elecâ€" trical work, flagging, brickwork, trellis arrangements, exterior planting, and so on down the line to such minute deta.ls as the electric push button for the door bell or even a wrought iron foot scraper. An architecturally ill fitting front door may ruin the entire effect of a very expensive and well constructed home. Therefore, it pays any home owner to give careful attention to its entrance features. In the same way, an old home, which has perhaps grown a little "down at heel" might be greatâ€" ly enhanced in value and appearance by some renovizing around the front entrance. â€" What You Should Know About Houses â€" of stains discolour teeth. _ Colgate‘s removes all seven â€" leaves them sparkling white. Valuable Baking Book FREE Te t Please send me of booklet "The Quaker Method of Easy Bread k NO W â€" with Quaker Flour and the Quaker method of easy baking, you can make bread or rolls almost as quickly as A Weekly Feature Service Supplied to The Advance by Home Builders‘ Service Bureau, 177 Jarvis Street, Toronto 2 QVIY8 ASYI 10 QOHILIW YIMVNO IJHL MIX BEFORE L Special LARGE 2 1 C SIZE 2 for 39c COLGATE‘S Orange Pekoe Blend Ribbon Dental Cream Nam Always the Same @ Alway for Bread, Cakes and Pastry Bread or Rolls before Supper cake â€" without Aneading â€"and without setting the sponge overnight. Send coupon below for particuâ€" lars and full information. Make no mistake, the entrance enâ€" semble, is the first item to attract the attention of the visitor at your home. Every front door creates some sort of an impression.‘ It may be favourable or otherwise. If otherwise, it requires a considerable amocunt of skill and taste in interior decoration to overcome it. An attractive front door is the first step in the creation of a favourable efâ€" fect, and it is not so much a matter of expense as it is of design. An inexâ€" pensive entrance ensemble expertly dsâ€" sighed and executed, is a prime asset for any home. Spezsially designed switches can be installed which leave the light lit for a short time after the toggle has been thrown, and is recommended for just such purposes. Using this particular kind of a switch, the family may have the oportunity of leaving the house, locking the docor, and getting into the automobile beftre the front light exâ€" tinguishes itself. It is a convenience that any family can appreciate. It is extremely easy to blunder if an inexperienced person attempts to tamâ€" per with an entrance. â€" A lumber comâ€" pany or sash and door manufacturer can assure the home owner a good jOob, but no matter how much skill is exâ€" pended, maximum satisfaction cannot be attained if the other features of the house have not been carefully considerâ€" ed in the design. Most people .ask for a light at the front entrance. Suitable. electrical equipment may be left on during the evening to bid welcome to expected guests, or it may be fiashed on when an unexpected knock comes on the door, to assist the hostess in welcoming her visitors. An architect is prepared through his long years of training and study to reâ€" commend certain features that the average home owner might be excused for ovetrliCoking. The vogue of twenty years ago in which front doors were equipped with a large windOw in the upper half, is now conspicuous by its absence, and in lieu thereof we find solid wood doors with attractive, well designed hardware affixed thereto. If you are anxious to make the front entrance of your home as pleasing as possible, you will not attempt to dabble with this very important subject withâ€" out first obtaining professional advice. go to the barn to do some chores on Monday afterncon at about 2 p.m., and when he did not put in an appearance in the evening nothing was apparently thought of it. However when he dia not return on Tuesday an alarm was sounded and enquiriss made. On Wedâ€" nesday morning at 11 o‘clock his badly mangled body was discovered about five hundred yards from his home, in some shrubbery. The bushes and ground for some distance were spattered with blood and clothing, indicating that he had put up a terrific fight. It is beâ€" lieved that the animal, which is about 4 years old, had jumped the fence and attacked the unfortunate man. Dr. J. S. McCullough, coroner, and Provinâ€" cial Officer S. V. M. McClelland inâ€" vestigated and decided that an inquest is unnecessary. A wife and four childâ€" ren survive." the fellow who shot himsel{ for cheatâ€" ing at solitaire. The New Liskeard Speaker last week says:â€"*"Word was received in town on Wednesday that Rudoliph Gagnon, 47â€" yearâ€"old farmer, of the township of Casey, had been found dead a short distance from his house. From inforâ€" mation to hand it was learned that the late Mr. Gagnon had left his house to Only moderate sized fir trees such as grow in pastures and second growth timber are suitable. The new industry is of great assisâ€" tance to farmers and others in Truro district where the‘r natural avenues of income this season have been decreased thrcugh an extremely dry summer. The direct result of this industry goes to the small farmer who is clearing his land for cultivation can more than cover the cost of the clearâ€" ing labour by marketing the fir trees suitable for Christmas trees. The trees will be shipped from Nova Scotia .n November and if operations prove successful this year the future business of this industry is assured. At present the American men are cutting every available tree in the district. Casey Township Farmer Gored to Death by Bull Nova Scotia has a new industry that this year promises to reach a peak that will place it among the first inâ€" dustries of the country. Earlier this summer the Hoferd Christmas Tree Company of Los Angeles, California, sent representatives to Nova Scotia with the intention of buying Christmas trees for their American trade. Nova Scotia Hopeful in Christmas Tree Industry ‘"Another feature of importance in connection with the Northern Teleâ€" phone Company, Ltd., is their policy of doing as much of their business with men Of the North, as possible, and thereby leave a gengrous portion of their expenditures with the people from whom they also in turn receive their revenue. If mors of our Northern busiâ€" ness men would practice this system, even if they did have to pay a trifie more for the products thus secured in the North, it would ‘be better for them as well as for the entire business life in the North. To a greater extent, also, does this idea apply to municipalities, who insist on the payment of taxes, but send Oout for various necessities which could be supplied them clossr at home, even if the price charged might be a trifle higher than that of the distant dealer, who pays nothing into the cofâ€" fers of the municipality which thus diverts its business." "It is gratifying to learn that the hopes of the pioneers in the telephone fisld of Northern Ontario are being realized, and that such a substantial business has been firmly established throughout the Temiskaming and Cochâ€" rane districts, with extensions into the neghbouring sections of the Province of Quebec. The visitor to do business with the telephone, must ‘be more than surprised with the upâ€"toâ€"date facilities made available to him, and with conâ€" nections to any part of the world. "In order to take care of their graâ€" dually increasing business, the manâ€" agement of the Northern Telephone Co., Ltd., has found it necessary to add considerable further ficor space to their head office at New Liskeard To do this a contract has been let to the local conâ€" tracting firm of Messrs Hillâ€"Clarkâ€" Francis Ltd., and already that firm has the work under way. The addition will be some 20x30 fest in dimensions, with full size ‘basement, two storeys high and of brick veneer construction. In the past year omn two there has been marked improvement in the teleâ€" phone service of the North. The Norâ€" thern Telephone Company provides the telephone service for practically all the towns of this area of the North. Adâ€" ditions to equipment and staff have made it possible to handle the increasâ€" ing business with public service kept uppermost. There appears to be a sinâ€" cere effort on the part of the telephone company to give the best possible serâ€" vice and to do all possible to accomâ€" modate the public. Last week in referring to the Northâ€" ern Telephone Co., The New Liskeard Spsaker says:â€" Telephone Company Shares in Expansion of North Fresh from the Gardens 111 THE PORCUPINE ADVANUCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Cheese Souffle _ This is a very nice substitute some night when you canntt think of a meat to have for dinner. 1 scant cup milk 1 tablespoon flour 2 tablespoons butter Mock Chcese Cake 1 1â€"2 lemon, rind and juice 4 yo‘ks 1 can Borden‘s Eagle Brand Conâ€" densed Milk 4 beaten whites Make crust of one box of zweiback crumbs mixed with 1â€"4 lb. butter and i tablespoons sugar. Grease spring form and line bottom and about 1â€"3 of yolks with lemon and milk. Add whites last. Pour filling into crust and oake in moderate Ooven 20 minutes. 4 yolks 1 cup sugar 1 cup flour 1 teaspOon baking powder 4 beaten whites 2 tablespoons water Beat yolks until light. Add sugar, then other dry ingredients and water. Then beaten whites,. Take 4 tableâ€" spcons butter, 1 cup brown sugar, 1 can sliced pineapple. Heat butter and sugar together in heavy skillet until sugar is all melted. Cool, and arrange pinepapple siices over the surface of this mixture. Pour cake batter over this and bake 40 minutes in moderate oven or until cake is set. While still hot turn out of skillet upside down on serving cake plate. If desired, top with whipped cream and decorate with cherries. stir in gelatin. 2â€"3 cup sugar 1 cup cold coffee 4 yolksâ€"mix with sugar Put in double boiler and stir until thick. _ When cool, add coffee and 2 teaspoons vanilla. Beat 1â€"2 to 1 cup cream and mix into custard and put in moulds. Chill in ice box for 4 or 5 hours. very fine 1 small can of tomatoes 1 onion chopped fine 1â€"4 pound grated American cheese 2 tablespCons butter Meat left over from the day before, such as pot roast, is just as good to use as fresh. Boil spaghetti in salt water for 25 minutes. Brown the meat and onion in butter and add tomatoes. Mix and cook 5 minutes more. Pour over.hot spaghettiâ€"andâ€"serve with gratâ€" ed cheese. | Coitage Cheese and Peach Salad _ Place half canned peach on lettuce leaf. Mix cottage cheese with a little cream, bit of salt, chopped chives and place ¢n top of peach. Serve with French or boiled mayonnaise dressing. ‘ Southern Corn Bread 2 cups cornmeal 2 cups milk 1 tablespoon butter or lard 2 eggs separated 1â€"2 teaspoon salt Pour boiling milk over cornmeal. Melt butter and add to meal. Beat egg yolks until light and thick. Add salt and mix with cornmeal mixture. ‘ Fold in stiffly ‘beater whites and bake in quick oven in shallow buttered tin. Bake 30 minutes. Cut in squares to serve. Potatces with Brown Onions Boil and mash potatoes with salt and pepper, milk and butter. Cut and brown One large onion in butter and serve Cver top of potatoes. Spaghetti with Meat and Tomato Sauce 1 small box of spaghetti 1 pound round steak ground and Stuffed Lamb Chops Use double loin lamb chops, one to a person. Brown chops in butter with onions. Use same stuffing as for turâ€" key or chicken. Put large spoonful to top each chop and bake in moderate oven for one hour and a quarter. When half done, add a bit of water and butâ€" ter to keep from sticking to roaster. Serve on large platter and garnish with fresh mint and watercress. Dinner Crab Meat Cocktail Cheese Crackers Ripe Olives and Cucumber Pickles Stuffed Lamb Chops Potatoes with Brown Onions Buttered Green Beans Hot Biscuits Apple Pie with Cubes of Cheese Coffee This dinner is very simple to preâ€" pare and one that can be made much more so by preparing such things as the stuffing and Cocktail Sauce, washâ€" ing and cutting of the beans, all the day before. Put in ice box and place beans in large bowl with a little water. Griddle Cakes 1 1â€"2 cups sifted flour 3 1â€"2 teaspoons baking powder 3 teaspcons sugar 3â€"4 teaspoon salt 1 egg slightly beaten 3 tablespoons melted butter. Drop wet ingredients into dry ones and beat thoroughly and quickly. Cook on Oone side and when bubbles show, turn Over just once. Serve with syrup or jam. A skilled and experienced culinary expert has prepared the following reâ€" cipes for readers of The Advance:â€" Breakfast Half Grapefruit Griddle Cakes ..... Pork Sausages Coffee Griddle Cakes, Stuffed Lamb Chop Potatoes with Brown Onions, Cofâ€" fee Custard, and Other Items. Another Collection ; of Tested Recipes 1 cup grated cheese 1 package gelatin dissolved in 2â€"3 cup cold water 1 1â€"2 cup milk, let come to boil and Spaghetti with Meat Cottage Cheese Peach Salad Pincapple Skillet Cake Coffee Custard _A friend of The Advance at McIntosh Springs last week sent the following article to The Advance. Unfortunately it was received too late for publication in the last issue of the paper but is gladly published herewith. No thoughtâ€" ful person can question the fact that it expresses the views of a very large number of settlers and others in the North. The article is as follows:â€" R Voice of the North The elections are over.. Theâ€" people dissatisfied with the old administration have chosen a new chief. Has he actâ€" ed wisely? Or has he simply changed a oneâ€"eyed horse for a blind one? Four months have passed since the Liberal government went into power, and apart from inquests and dismissals nothing Says North Waiting for Promised Help Direct Relief Condemned. Work, Land Clearing Bonus Suggested as Better than the Dole. Calling Mass Meetings. Easy Chocolate Cake This cake can be made in m hurry if necessary as everything is mixed together. Butter and sugar do not have to be creamed as in most cakes. 3 squares bitter chocolate 3 tablespoons melted butter 2 eggs 1 cup sugar 1â€"2 cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup flour 2 teaspotns baking powder Mix all ingredients together and bake in two shallow greased cake pans. Bake in moderate oven 25 minutes. Frost with raw chocolate frosting made with 2 tablespoons cocoa, about 2â€"3 box confectioner‘s sugar. Thin out with cold coffee as needed. Frost in tins and cut in small squares. Sweet Potatoes with Marshmallows Mix with three cups of ccoked, mashâ€" ed sweet potatoes, one beaten egg, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon pepper and two tablespoons brown sugar. Put in a baking dish and heat it thoroughly. Then top with marshmallows cut into halves and replace in the oven until the marshmallows became brown. Serve while hot. Make a sauce of the milk, flour, butâ€" tez and egg yolks. Add the cheese and beaten whites. Bake in moderate oven 25 minutes. Of course Carnation is just as good in other cookingâ€"speciâ€" ally for cream sauces, cream soups, candies, salad dressings. And millions use it just as it comes from the tin for creaming ND how the children‘s eyes do glisten when the right kind of pudding comes to the tableâ€"and the right kind is any pudding made with Carnaâ€" tion Milk. There‘s a flavour, a smoothness, a tempting goodâ€" ness to Carnation puddings which children (AND grownâ€" dps) can‘t resist.s It is all beâ€" cause Carnation is pure, rich milk concentrated to double richness, then homogenized so that every drop is just as creamy as every other drop. GEORGIE PORGIE MAPLE LEAF BACON DATED * Maple Leaf®‘ Radio Programme (Donald Heins and Ernest Seitz) every Sunday afternoon, 5.00 to 5.30, Stations CFRB, Toronto, and CKPC, Branthord To make the authorities understand the mistake they make and to show them clearly the situation that we have to face in the North, we call a mass meeting of every settler in the North. We have sent invitations to the Honourâ€" able Minister Oof Lands and Forests (Hon. Peter Heenan) to our representaâ€" tives, Jos. A. Bradette, M.P., and John Rowlandson, M.P.P. Tell the Government what you want. Tell them that you need work, a Minâ€" Settlers of ‘the North come in full strength to this meeting. Let every section of the North do the same. The petitions your sign are sent to the basâ€" ket. What is left to you is to call meetings. Then members of the Govâ€" ernment will open their eyes. has been done yet to repair the misâ€" takes of the Conservatives, I don‘t know what is happening in the southâ€" erm part of Ontario, but I know very well that here in the North our status is worse. We refused the "Direct Reâ€" lief" with the old administration, but the new one, despite the violent camâ€" paign, has put it again in honour. We don‘t want alms. We want work. In four months what we have obtained is six days‘ work. Our hope was that in the formation of a new cabinet to see one of the North to represent us in the administration, but the Hon. Mitchell Hepburn has not thought suitable to honour us with a portfolio. The North contributes 85 per cent. of the governâ€" ment‘s receipts. The North is still the inexhaustible milking cow that you can feed with pine needles without recriâ€" mination, and grant our favturs to the other parts of the province. But beware of the awakening! It will be painful. Illâ€"treated under the preceding administration, no better favoured by the nsw one, the North is in effervescence and some day may speak louder. coffee, cereals and fruit. At today‘s prices it is a real econâ€" omy. _ Write for free booklets CANADA PACKERS LIMITED AND PIE" No purer, safer soap than 14 cup tapioca, few grains salt, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups CARNATION MILNK, 2 cups water, 2 eggs, 1 cup chopped dates, 1 tsp. vanilla. Heat the Carnation Milk and the water together. Add the tapioca, salt and sugar to the hot milk. Cook in a double boiler for 25 minutes or until the tapioca is transparent. Pour into well beaten eggs, return to the double boiler and continue cooking for 2 minâ€" utes. Add the vanilla and dates. Chill. â€""©100 Glorified Recipes" and "Contented Babies". Carnation Co., Limited, Toronto, Ontario. Renfrew Mercury:â€"Kings rise, reign, fall. Foreign ministers grow to greatâ€" ness, knit and separate nations, pass away in the midst of their work. The world wonders, trembles a little. Beâ€" cause it doesn‘t know what next.. Yet men do make progress. _ They learn somewhat to look above the heads of each other. They do perceive an unâ€" folding reign of intelligence. This reign is unfailing because it rests over, not upon, receptive men. Down with direct relief! Down with the dole! We are no beggars. We are true Liberals with a Liberal ideal and we claim our rights. ister of Colonization, the landâ€"clearing bonus. Date Tapioca Cream MAGIC SHORT CUTS IN COOKING You can learn many new Magic Short Cuts in making Macaroons, Candy, Frozen Desserts, Pies, Puddings, Cakes and many other deliâ€" cious things to eat by followâ€" ing Miss Adam‘s radio talks. will present another of her popular talks on on Friday morning at 12 noon over radio station