Nothing tastes better for dessert . on a warm night than iceâ€"cream. Of course you know what store in your neighbourhood offers your favuorite ice cream which may be bought in so many fliavours. You may like to serve a Chocolate, caramel or crushed fruit sauce with this iceâ€"cream. | If you have an automatic refrigerator you will, of course, like to make a frozen dessert with its help from time to time. For this you will need special recipes, as it is not possible to get a | _â€" Shmteoth mixture with the use of a recipe . > whose WWirections : call for turning in a “’muer All} kinds of mousses which, are n;ade with flavoured‘ whippedâ€" cream _ ~~~Enjoy the Best Tea ; There are also a number of other * ~recipes which are> not quite so rich, .. but which give satisfactory results. Perâ€" »"\ haps the easiest and least expenmsive i’h my own refrigerator without stirâ€" rinx, bub refrigerators difféer and you may find‘\it necessary to beat the mixâ€" ture when it is Half frozen. The time which frozen mixtures take also deâ€" pends upon the type of refrigerator. If you have a cold control two . hours is wsually long enough, otherwise you will have to allow four to five hours. PISTON RINGS g i PISTONS, PINS g MB New Ontario Machine Works Cor. Spruce First, Timmins What Better Than Ice Cream on a Warm Night? frigerator. fsn‘t it the Right Dessert for Hot Weather? Automatic tefrigerator will Provide All Kinds of Mousses, and e are Many Other Less Expensive Dishes. Vanilla Iceâ€"Cream 1 cup condensed milk * cup water 1% teaspoons vanilla Salt 1 cup cream, whipped Mix milk and water, and vanilla and salt. Fold in whinped cream. Turn into freezing trays and freeze three to four hours. .m : a.#w_ 4.‘..,; «m made successfully in your\ reâ€" (By Edith M. Barber) Variation Peppermint iceâ€"cream: Substitute a mint flavouring for vanilla and colour with green colouring. Burnt almond icsâ€"cream : Fold in one cup macaroon crumbs and freeze. Chocolate iceâ€"cream: Melt 2 squares of chocolate in double boiler. Adg conâ€" densed milk and water. Stir until thick and smooth. Cool, add whipped cream and one teaspoon of vanilla. Coffee iceâ€"cream: Substitute strong coffee for the water. Strawberry iceâ€"cream: Substitute one and oneâ€"half cups strawberries for vanilla and reduce the water to oneâ€" half cup. Crush the strawberries very fine. (COpyrlght 1935 by the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.) Apricot Iceâ€"Cream % cup sweetened condensed milk 2 cups water 4 pound apricots 4 teaspcon lemon extract 1 cup whipping cream Cook apricots in one cup water until tender. Blend together sweetened conâ€" densed milk, one cup water and oneâ€" half cup liquid drained from apricots. Chop apricots and add with lemon exâ€" tract to mixture. Chill. Whip cream to custardâ€"like consistency and fold into chilled mixture. Pour mixture into freezmg pan. Place in freezing unit. Strawbtrry Delight 1% cups (1 can) sweetened condensed milk 3 tablespoons lemon juice Port Arthur Newsâ€"Chronicle:â€"In a Port Arthur theatre this week was shown a picture, closing with a love scene in a pastoral setting, the romanâ€" tic couple driving off with a horse and buggy, the young man, driving, on the left; There were many young men and women of like age in the theatre. Wonder how many of them knew wheâ€" ther the driver was in the proper seat? 1 cup crushed strawberries 1 cup vanilla wafer crumbs 18 vanilla wafers Thoroughly â€"blend sweetened conâ€" densed milk, lemon juice, and crushed strawberries. Stir until mixture thickâ€" ens. Place in six sherbet glasses alterâ€" nate layers of strawberry mixture and crumbs, leaving topping of crumbs. Push three whole wafers into mixture arcound sides of each sherbet. Chill. fop each sherbet with a whole berry if desired. Serves six. Word from Toronto last week candidate in the that Premtier that Col. with Premier Hepburn. Col. Mac Lang has done excellent work for the North and for the T. N. O. and there is general hope that nothing will occur to change this happy conditidon. In referring to the matter a despatch last week from ‘Toronto says:â€" * the premler wants Col. Lang to remain as Chairman of the T. ° N. 0, comâ€" "Col. Malcolim Lang, chairman of the T. N. O., will not be a candidate in the Dominion election if Premier Hepburn ‘can persuade the doughty Hailleyburian into withdrawing {from the fight, it was reliably reported. conference yesterday and this morning it was rumoured that Premier Hepbutrn urged Col. Lang to remain as chairâ€" man of the T. N. 0. and forego his federal aspirations. The prime minisâ€" ter is anxious, it is said, to retain the present chairman of the provinciallyâ€" controlled railway in that post.. "The reason for Premier (Hepburn discussing the situation is said here to be due to the success which has attended the T. N. O. operations during the past eight months, Net and gross earnings of the road are reported to have been the highest in five years and the initial efforts to secure new business is credited by the government to the aggressive policies instituted by the board‘s chairman. "Demands for a new convention in certain parts of the Temiskaming ridâ€" ing were seized upon by Queen‘s Park, it is said, to induce Col. Lang to withâ€" draw from the fight. "Col. Lang, according to report, inâ€" dicated a desire to contest any new convention and flatly declined tq withâ€" draw as a Liberal condidate at this time. The matter is understood to have been left in abeyance for the time beâ€" ing. + According to despatches from Barrie in Toronto newspapers W. H .Wright, of the Wrightâ€"Hargreaves and othet Kirkland Lake mines, is at present seeking a new place of abode. He is quoted as saying that he is going to find a country where he will not be taxed seventy per cent. of his income or be bothered as in this country with peoâ€" ple trying to sell him something Or make him do something heâ€"doesn‘t want to do. When he finds that sort of a ‘country, so the despatch suggests, he is going to move there and live hapâ€" "The T. N. 0. chairman left Torâ€" onto last night, and may discuss with Dominion ieaders the suggestion of Premigr Hepburn that ‘he withdraw A bed of geraniums around the staâ€" tue of Quéen Victoria on Parliament Hill just west of the Farliament Buildâ€" ings at Ottawa was stripped by unâ€" known miscreants who drove up with a truck late Saturday night and cleanâ€" ed it out. Gardeners employed by the Department of Public Works discovâ€" ered the theft and reported it to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who patrol the grounds. | SEEKING NEW HOME WHERE TAXES ARE NOT TOO HIGH py ever after. MOUNTIES HAVE MYSTERY OF MEAN MAN TO SOLVE NOW from the Temiskaming campaign." Port Arthur Newsâ€"Chronicle:â€"Chicaâ€" go‘is establishing a theatre for the deaf. Perhaps those youngsters who screech and whistle at critical moments could be induced to attend. When the Aeroplane Came to Ville Marie ing on the Cobalt area, which has manâ€" aged by some sort of magic to retain its quaint bucolic character while minâ€" ing has excited its Ontario neighbours, ‘has: on many occasions contributed to [the amusement of the peOple from T Out of the 136 pages of interesting material in the remarkable annual numâ€" ber of The Northen Mintr issued last week, The Advance hunted first for "Grab Samples.‘" Many oldâ€"timers of the North would do the same, as well as others who may not be oldâ€"timers but have a special love for true humor. And this is what the "Grab Samples" column held in that special number: "Ville Marie," the quaint Quebec vilâ€" lage across the lake from Haileybury:â€" Interesting Account of a Day at Quaint Hamlet on Lake Temiskaming "on the Quebec Side. Ville Marie “Ville Marie, that quiet transplanta- tion of old Quebec into the Northern regions on Lake Temiskaming frontâ€" across the big lake. Sunday, in Ville Marie, is a holiday as well as a holy day and in the tranquil summer weeks many Sundays are devoteg to enterâ€" tainment of the country folk, the vilâ€" lagers and the visitors. "Time was when one reached this picturesque. village by steamboat from Haileybury .or New Liskeard, when roads were very sketchy affairs on both sides of the lake and when it was necessary for venturesome motorists to ferry across the Ottawa River at North Temiskaming in order to reach the narrowsand roads on the Quebec side _â€""In the middle of these festivities the ,airphne arrived and made a landing in the ball field, temporarily suspendâ€" ling the game. The crowd left the side lines, ran across the track down which the horses were thundering and some }of the excitegq citizens narrowly escaped Injury. The pilot got a great welcome, and so to the ol4 village, estabâ€" lishedâ€" some 70 years ago by the pionâ€" eéring missionaries. "In the morning at Ville Marie there were the usual religious exercises and perhaps a special pilgrimage to visit the grotto set in the side of the hill behind the church. In the afternoon there was likely to be a game of baseâ€" ball or horse racing in the dusty sports field. Frequently Ontario lads ventured over to try their luck in the ball field and their fathers came to bet on the running horses, of which there were half a dozen or so in the North. These race meets were extremely informal, usually providing some highly amusing incidents. "One Sunday a group of young Hailâ€" eyburians took a ball team across on the steamer, which also carried several harness horses, a number of the betting fraternity and a crowd of spectators. As an added attraction there was an airplane visit promised. This was about the first plane to come into the North and it was an object of intense interest to all hands. It had been operating from the park field at New Liskeard, taking up venturesome souls at $10 per soul for ten minutes. The old crate was strung together with bits of: haywire and it creaked and groaned but nobody noticed little things like that up North at the time. By the way, the pilot had a broken arm in a sling, a circumstance which should have provided a warning but did not. "The Ville Marie sports field was hot and dusty; the Ontario lads found themselves one man short and through one of their players who spoke French they managed to secure a" Ville Marie ocutfielder. The races ran concurrently and it was quite a job to keep track h c is oi ns esd m rel before planâ€" MNO ve m Tn'!‘ rlil unl !""dogx gested highways. Arrive ‘Frosh particulars of these Bargains LOW FARES peanmmeit destination up to Mon ay midnight. On sale all year. 21 DAY FARES to > Maritime Provinces, June 15 â€" Sept. 8. 48 DAY FARES to Western Canada and Pacific Coast. May 18â€"Sept. 30. 16 DAY FARES to National Parksâ€"Jasper, otc. May 18â€"â€"Sept. 30. GREAT LAKES CRUISES June 20â€"Sept. 10. SPECIAL SUMMER FARES to Ontario, Quebec and many United States points, May 15 TRAVEL BY RAIL Ask any Agent about low fares and vacation resorts. WELAQ. ARZZAERAR S C ME MCV Cmm M . WB Oe e M e e e e t ane arrived and made a lan Keeping the home too hot and too e ball field, temporarily suspendâ€" | dry will also irritate the lining of the he game. The crowd left the side|nose and throat and cause head colds. , ran across the track down which Remember, then, that we have in us horses were thundering and some and about us the organisms of the comâ€" e exciteq citizens narrowly escaped | mon cold. ‘We may avoid the symptoims 7. The pilot got a great welcome,|by watching diet and intertine, and srowd ciosing in on the stationary also the temperature and > moisture feeling the wings, peering into our homes, offices or factories. â€"Sept. 30. Coast, May 18 the eockpit and in gereral behaving as people who have not previdusiy seen a plane do. Meanwhile a showetr French broke over the pilot and fieâ€" chanic, who could only nod and smile. "The naturaily resented thil intruston and he-ld up the races. At this juncture a habitant farmer stand, in a buckboard, with his wife and was an excited colloquy in French and much laughter from the bystanders. However, some agrcement was reached, the farmer drove his rangy and wild looking nag behind the grandstand, from where he emerged presently pullâ€" ing an old high wheel, ironâ€"rimmed sulky. He was entered in the next race. been some race horse in his day and, scenting battle, he pranced and caraâ€" coléed about the track, scattering the other horses and generally making a big toâ€"do about his comeback. At last the judges got them straightened away and that old farmer‘s nag made the rest of the slicklyâ€"groomed horses look like milk wagon devotees. Me won his heats with the greatest of ease, to the vast amusement of the Frenchâ€" men who had apparently been tipped off to the trick and who had bet against the Ontario money. [ “Preaent the crowd returned to the Iplane which showed some signs of life The pilot motioned to the crowd to keep away from the propeller and lshepherded them back of the machine. He then got in, turned on full engine and gave the people such a blast of dust that the field thtereabouts was invisibleâ€"for a matter of minutes. The crowd could be seen emerging from the cloud, the men and women brushing their black Sunday clothes from which spurts of dust arose. Considerable forâ€" cible French language was used but the | pilot was well out of hearing. "With the departure of the plane the horse racing and the ball game were resumed. At the end of the seyâ€" enth inning the game was tied and another: inning was proposed and agreed to. But the Ville Marie man, the ringer for the Haileybury team, refused to take the field. He talked volubly to the captain who could not understand a word. Finally a bystander clarified the situation. The fielder was through for the day; he had to go home and milk the cows. "Toâ€"day Ville Marie has a railway and motor roads; it has turned its atâ€" tention to the mineral possibilitiee of its own hinterland, where gold has been found in promising quantities. Many of the youth of ten years ago are now gone farther north into the Amos and Rouyn country, where they have learned about mining, but all the while keeping an eye on a likely secâ€" tion of land for homestead. Ville Marie will see them again when they return to pick up beribboned bride, to drive on theirâ€" wedding day franâ€" tically about the town, heading a proâ€" cession of decorated and hooting motor cars." Travel Many Miles A ship may touch at a port.for or to 4leliver freight, and a few days after the ship leaves an epidemic of colds or cther infectious ailment breaks out among the inhabitants of the port; yet not a single passenger or member of the crew has been ashore. Recent experiments have shown that the organism causing the common cold along with the organism of pneumonia, scarlet fever and septic (poisonous) sore throat, will live fore more than fortyâ€"eight hours suspended in midâ€"air. During this period they might easily be carried for many miles. There is no question but . that the epidemic was caused by the arrival of the ship, and you may wonder how a cold could be transferred without those on the ship coming in close conâ€" tact with the inhabitants of the port. According ‘to Dr. W. L. Holman, Professor of Bacteriology, Uhiversity of Toronto, the exact cause of the comâ€" mon cold has never been found The organism cannot be distinguished unâ€" der the lens of the most powerful micâ€" roscope that man has been able to produce +so far. "We carry a certain amount of the poison or virus of the cold around with us all the time, but it is only when our system receives a shock such as a rapid change in temperature and moisture in the atmosphere when we step out of our homes on a winter‘s day with= out the precaution of donning enough heavy clothing, that our resistance is lowered and the virus of cold has the opportunity of getting in its work." Cl l C It is admitted that keeping the body or the blood warm enables your disease fighters in the blood (the white corpusâ€" cles) to fight harmful organisms more successfully, but more than heat is required to prevent colds. Thus if we eat too much and have too much ‘acid in the blood, cold or other organisms can attack us more successfully. Thus taking Epsom salts to rid the bowel and blood of wastes, and using baking soda or other alkali to make the blood more alkaline, and: also making the patient perspire is considered the best treatment for the common cold. By James W. Barton, M.D., Toronto The Organism Causing Colds May of Pours Ehat Bodp It would surprise ‘you hcw many Hollywood celebrities who could easily afford to employ professional gardenâ€" ers prefer to get down to earth themâ€" selves. They may employ gardeners or handy men to do the heavy work and landscaping but when it comes to digging and planting, its a hobby that any number of. screenâ€"stars «wouldn‘t Wear Gloves It‘s quite the fashionable thing to wear gloves indoors while doing houseâ€" hold tasks and outdoors of course, parâ€" ticularly when gardening. Heretofore the objection to gloves has been their clumsiness, weight and the fact that the hand felt hampéred and stiff in them. The beauty urge must certainly Hbe without. But pfease do give your hands the necessary care and precaution against scratches, discoloration and gemeral roughness. The excuse, "I‘ve been diggâ€" ing all day," won‘t excuse sandâ€"paper skin. Not these days. The modern woman may work all day at various and sundry tasks but evening finds her fresh as a daisy and her, hands white as th lovly lily. It‘s a hobby that is worth cultivating and if you have a back yard or several acres go to it. Now is the time. And you‘ll get s much pleasure out of watchâ€" ing the first little flower pop up and smile at ‘ysu as in the seedling. MONA BARRIE, lovely Australian screen actress, starts digging in her Hollywocd garden at the first sign cof a lilac, dogwood cr cherry blosâ€" som. But she protects her hands with gloves. And you should too. F. N. Whaley A. Nicolson Represen Room 7 Reed Block tatives GARDENING A GRAND HOBBY, BUT SPECIAL HAND CASE 1sS NECESSARY. FAMOUS BEAUTY EXPER T Bc BEAUTIEUL By ELSIE PIERCE have made itself felt these many years because now â€"we have special gloves for the purpose that are light and easy on the hand, so much so that you do not know there‘s a glove there. And what splendid preservers they are! If you like the rubber gloves to wear when doing washing of one kind or anâ€" cther; there are dlovely pale pink ones. They‘re paper thin yet strong, flexible as can be and use yvour favourite cream underneath. The cream softens the skin, the gloves keep it that way. A grand duo. Then there are soft lambskin gloves with special cream treatment to soften and whiten the hands while protecting them and we understand that women wear them for housework and gardenâ€" ing as well as for golf, driving, horseâ€" back, tennis and similar sports. Soap and Almond Milk Just how hand conscious the beauty world has become is indicated by the fact that one of our leading manufacâ€" curers has a superfine hand soap, soft, fragrant and conveniently curved to fit the hand. The same house of beauty cffers a milk of almonds, that promises to keep springtime hands soft and smooth as silk. Not hard to hand yourself beauty these days. (C3yright 1935, <by <The Bell Synâ€" dicate, Inc.) . 1998