For dessert you may choose melons or berriesâ€"or possibly ice cream for which you â€"may use a sauce of fresh fruit, chocolate â€"or butterscotch. You may like to serve a cold beverage such as iced ‘tea, beer or ginger ale, lout if yOour whole meal has been cold, you will probably like to have hot coffee for a finish, (By Edith M. Baiber) j The first hot day usually gives us a craving for a meal, which has the further advantage of being qnlck}y set up. You probably have discovered which delicatessen in your neighbourhood ofâ€" fers the best cold meat. You may choose one or several kinds snd serve with tartare sauce. If you are pressed for time you may buy your salad ready made, but you probably will prefer to make one up yourself, We all like our own individual touch when it comes to salad. Perhaps you will like waffle potatoes which only need to be crisped in the oven a few minutes to go with meral â€"of this sort, If you would like to have one other vegetable, you have ‘probably discovered that your grocer will shell peas or lima beans at your request, or you may get one of the cartons of frozen vegetables which ‘are all ready to cook. | in CrealtT Salad Bowl Iceâ€"Cream, Butterscotth Coffee Method of Preparation Prem salad and chill. Prepare beans and cook. Make®sauce.~ > Arrange cold cuts. Make tartare sauce. Maike coffee. There is No Disposition Here is Where Your Handv. Hot Weather Brings Desitre for Cold Meals Cold â€"Cut Lima Tartare Sauce cup mayonnaise Hundreds of customers "who gook with electricity" do so for less than $38.00 per month. anada Northern Power Corporation Limited Tartare Sauce in â€" Cream COOK with ELECTRICITY Controlling and Operating NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED to Spend Time in Preparation. Delicatessen Dealer Comes in Robert Chevrier, Johhnie Shumilak. Junior Fourth Classâ€"Kathleen Con nelly, Margaret Munro, Jean Stringe: Elsie Parsons, Margaret Hegedus, Emel The following is the Dome sch port for May:â€" Senior â€" Fourth Classâ€"Marce Lynch, principalâ€"Ralph Michell Lillhocg, Marian Jordan, Joe dian, Helen Munro, Laura M Teddy Raymer, Walter Baker, Doran, Robert Rickward. Garth Dome School Report for the Month of May Two cups su sugar in heav with wooden s until melted :: créeam graduall Berve hot at 0 jar in the refrig ready to serve. (CGopyright, 1: cate,. Inc.) Standing of the Pupils in th« Various Classes at the Dome School for Las Month 1 teaspdoon salt 1 teaspoon sugar w4 teaspoon must: 4 teaspoon paprik Black pepper, frest 1+3 cup olive oil 1% tablespoons T‘a â€" Wash and separat maine. Pare in salted water for . drain. Wash waterc Wash radishes and All vegetables should or after preparation ables in large salad At the table, mix se spoon and pour oil orv salad anmd toss the salad spoon and fork should be coated wi Adq the vinegar and Give your family new taste thrills by cooking with electricity. Meats and vegetables cook in their own juices, retaining all their nutritive goodness and giving an added full flavour that is truly delicious. It costs only 1c per meal per person to cook with electriâ€" when Te ngretiients head iceberg Romain ablesy Butterscotch Sauce t on friger are nC Michell, Vieno n, Joe Sloboâ€" iura Millions, Baker, Lloyd . Garth White, In a low brown ht choo en Conâ€"| nginee Stringer, | bunkhouse smooth covered it when Accommodation for | Crews of ‘Porcupine‘ pine," north and southâ€"bouns« presses. Facilities for cooking ar ing provided and the place will vide comfortable accommodation the men. Since Trains 46 and 47 their northern headquarters here train crews have been rooming 0 sleeping on the cars of their t Their homes are in North Bay. New Threeâ€"room Bungalow Being Built in T. N. O. Yards for Use of the Train Crews. _ threeâ€"ro ler construction ds near the w of the train c t Klimo, BRobby hy, TLouise Kellt )oï¬ â€" r. A.â€"Richard Barnes, Jackie Phil , Tony Pasan, James Andrew, Bill gworth, Mary Kemsley, Esther Col Mona â€" Richardson, Kathlee cevard Mary Leiterman, Phylli ‘ly, Audrey Edwards, Geraid Kjill m, Dorothy Mitchell, Lillybell Kel â€" Douglas McGinn. . _ Primerâ€"Doreen |] od, Keith Stroud, ] Raymer, Paulit Hocking, Marion Cc ie, Edith Uren, Douglas Leit Warner Burritt, Patricia Mast maverne Stroud, Eleanor Burke Iâ€"â€"Honours:â€"Susan Klimo, L |, Victor Trite, Catherine Mor rene Libby, Germaine Raym« Vesentin, Lois Countrym Campagnola, Mary Richmond nary Roomâ€"V. Morris, teache *‘rimerâ€"â€"Marion ri, Beulah Lan e Zabiaka, Do ryman, Jackie . Williams, All ignola, Ada C\ v Knutson. KIng, Mariol anet Richm Procopio, 1x TT hreeâ€"roomed # 8t city. There is no wasted heat, no tireâ€" some ovenâ€"tending. Your kitchen is eool, clean and comfortable. _ We have an Electric Range for every sizec home and budget available on interâ€" esting terms that make ownership ha mAn i North Ba ccommodat s been on in th @iter t Â¥. Kenn . Mau Walte Miche Myimn Chs Hen 1J Kellow, Billy Ha Welbh, The P( bound + n Bi hayv 2 J s *1 _ j Rock Garden Primer| w ent- wes eiNew Book at Library A1 appies and a crate laid before Magi vealed. \Temiskaming and Northern ( Ontario Railway | The Nipissing Central Railâ€" | way Company dealer within t] Township of T produce ~withou for and Oobtaint CU 1 Kirklanc John S that has been Kirkland Lakt The sale of 11 Unlicensed Peddler Pays Fine of $20.00 at Kirkland Via North Bay and Ca Railway l Ticket Tickets good to return leaving destina M on wou cdadl Aughterin me pedd] Wed nesd v o w d o n en e o OY ilid to return leaving destina point Monday, June 17th ition p ‘lal somewhere the other day int that stood out from the ission Oof the mass buying ‘his was the thought that tion should have been given uiry to the menace to the ‘s at large in the unethical [ some peddlers and agents. he North have hpeen injured is generally realized by these â€"ast year The Advance heargd where loss was sustained ‘aling some of these d there was no possible reâ€" ie peddlers had gone. ‘The z of fruit and vegetables by ‘rs is one form of the trouble en experienced in Timmins. ike has also complained.. of vegetables and fruits at ces by outside truckers reâ€" initial summer setback at ike over the weekâ€"end when i, Toronto, was fined $20 n a charge of selling fruit in A nnd 11 ip council passed a byâ€" o check the practice. It ‘son not being a ‘wholeâ€" Ontario shall sell or ofâ€" r deliver to any retail the municipality of the Teck fruits and ‘garden ut first having applied ied a license from the Cost of such a license i had sold a barrel of int June 19th TO TO lune 14th sold a barrel C oranges, evidenc ite Atkinson ‘re anadian National Ottawa Quebee City Beaupre lune 12th 1€ Particular ‘nt Indications from experiments now being carried on indicate that heavy water slows down life. Life appears to depend to a great extent on water and what effect "heavy water" will hbhave upon growth or ageing, is a probâ€" lem that is being worked out now. the substance eventuaily became lead. The medical world knows a little of the possibilities of radium now and is able to predict to a certain degree its efâ€" fect on certain diseases, knowing what actions go on. Were it not for those men who give up their lives to the study of such a thing as heavy water, it is doubtful if even a very small perâ€" sent. of the blessings of modern mediâ€" cine woulj; be known. What good dor eral public? is a world has alrea benefits from th of physics and ch only through pr Until practical things that mal} constructed, it is for them to put Hydrogen being all those known, the simplest isot vious that a whol strucutre and be Before isotopes in the physical w with transmutat exceedingly hard radium was studi The discovery that hydroge mass is 1 unit in the system isotope of mass 2 units, was great whit of work. Previounsl beqn possible to find an isotop tion of one part in 1,000. The c atoms, which have a mass o as compareqg with ordinary h 1 unit, occur only about once 4,500 parts. It was not until covery was made thas the w over from a commercial me separating hydrogen and o3 oxyâ€"hydrogen blowâ€"torches C deuterium in a concentration 1,200 that real progress was Now there are dozens of places ada and the United States w perimentation is goirg on wi hydrogen and its oxide, heav gen is by no means t known to have differ though they react the ; ically. About 1911 dout} appear that all atoms ment were the same. of a single oxygen atc discovered ‘through Jlor tion that the element one that makes the sign‘swred glow) hws ty having a mass of 20 uni a mass of 22 units. Ti isotopes, as these varia element are known. The isotopes of hydrogen don‘t just In a recent s done on hydro Ph. D., professo umbia Universit tific American, s Aa most interes technique is prett which is of enorm{( is practically cert;s compounds with v tiesâ€"particularly i medicines and dyvf Heavy water still costs abou a gallon and there is little doubt that it‘s probably worth that and a lot more. Here is wh Bcience Advisory Board of the n Academy of Sciences and Natio: search Council has to say in its repert: "A ‘scoop‘ for American was the discovery of the heavy Of hydrogenâ€"hydrogen of tw atomic weight of ordinary hy This opens up the possibility 0o ing an entirely new group of h: of thousands of organic che with properties differing sor from those which are now know is a most interesting problem 0f£ it just to prove it could Fantastic possibilities were in the use of it., Since that interest of the layman ha cooled off a bit and "deute membered as the word scie to the new form of hydrogen covered that was supposed tc set soeme longâ€"founded theor structure of atoms. | Work on Heavy | Water Progresses "Starlight "One House Beckett. (A sto two daughters | ly Yorkshire m pens along.) Bowt lem disa Proper positior Th A great toâ€"do was 1 0 now in connec ater." Men offered Betweer an â€" (M blogt omm the 4 and chem Dry ht AI Rid 1} rtain to _ valuab 11 3€ il ent, i vield map new prop eAd of dru T1 perimeé (the ; 1 SAIT eory . w the th are ifficult d use, om of _ being 1€ d whi hemic wnen that ; Oobâ€" omic genâ€" great ledge ssibple eavy ater ) do met 11 11 AINnt 11 Then there‘s the blonde:; sweetheart stick of the sun, we call her. The golden | 5 too tints of her hair are her glory. Everyâ€" i That thing elseâ€"her makeâ€"up,. her clouhes.ior A her goloursâ€"â€"must be subordinated. ,and Vivid colours are not for her, nor vivid | aliâ€"it makeâ€"up. The minute she chooses loud | (C colours Or makeâ€"up the gold in her cate, complexion. We think of her of pastels, fair and frail, and colours or strong perfumes harshâ€"like so much discord 1€ few quintuple count all thit compo dent J SEVENTYâ€"TWO ARE sSERVING AS HUMAN GUINEA PIGS® titute Sulp oison:! Di JOAN MARSH beams with health, joy, trous, teeth gleamingly white, eyes starry bronze of the great C i1 AnC meeting of the Ameritan f Homeopathy. ir compounds and alumi have been fed to the g: 1 of volunteers from the dy. Tests of lead poisons 11 BC BEAUTIFUL 11e BOYyGd S8 did not 5 alread »{ OnC 1] ncrete examples. The ype, a dresden china hink of her in terms d frail, and any vivid ; â€" perfumes become AND YOUâ€"SHINING THROUG ve were talking about , hair takes on it can glorify or beâ€" | ity. That‘s wh D1 VE on wl despatch from Ne women and 68 your as human "guint York _ Homeopath o test the effects 1 After all, the world ‘e an the hi ‘poison â€"squad Linn J. Bovd. head the college, the Americ( By ELSIE PIERCE lisclose th made â€" on fin a dlearnt ‘,â€" havir produce :‘ â€"gare i can s ‘of Uup. will the Inâ€" ) i hic hn cla Detrs vited J 1nIm holdin 5;. â€" pQQ. Phe titian 88. Anyth 1.0.0.F. and Rebekahs Joint Memorial Service Wit cheeriness. MHer hai bright, and skin a be utdoors. Phone 10 Byndiâ€" LOO0â€"=BLrOng e or X powder, a dress, Too much you coat : igh. YC hadt L