Boftâ€"Cooked Eggs Baked Potatoes Poached Eggs Mashed Potatoes New Peas Romaine Salad With Cheese Dressing Orange Ice Chocolate Cake Poultry is a reasonable choice for your Sunday dinner. A duckling or broiler may be used; or you may have a roust if you wish some over for another meal. If a Roast is Served the Leftover will Suffice for Another Meal. Creamed Eggs and Chicken in Rice Ring on Monâ€" day‘s Menu. Ducklings or Broilers for the Sunday Dinner Bacon 1008 rwt) Iced Tea nmnelet Hot Rolis Dinner Ripe Olive and Bacon C Roast Duck Dinner Creamed Eggs and Chick®n in Rice Ring String Beans Luncheon Fresh Vegetable Salad Toasted Cheese Sandwiches Iced Chocolate Dinner Crab Newburgh Dinner LaAmb Chops Scalloped Potatoes Carrots With Onion Tceâ€"Cream Wednesdayâ€"Breakfast Raspberries Readyâ€"toâ€"Eat Cereal Baked Eggs Coff Celery Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited suppea Toasted Ham Sandwiches Watercress Salad Huckleberry Cake Thursday â€" Breakfast Orange Julice Readyâ€"toâ€"Eat Cereal Mondayâ€"Breakfast Btewed Prunes Readyâ€"toâ€"Eat Cerea Peach Pie Tuesdayâ€"Breakfast OQOrange Juice Cooked Cersal Toast Luncheon Chicken Soup Gingerale Salad Sundayâ€"Breakfast Melons Coffee Luncheon Cheese Souffle Lettuce Salad SAVE MONEY @ \ C e Controlling and Operating NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY LIMITED Broiled Tomatocs ITced Tea sreal Toasted Rolls Coffee Olives ELECTRICITY Not only is electricity the most economical of all fuels. ~ It is also the most convenient. Just snap the switch and perfect cooking heat is instantly available for just as long as you want it. No waste. Your kitchen keeps eool and soâ€"do you, while the meals, with every bit of flavour and nourishment retained, taste better and go further. Choose your Moffat without delay. Make a small down payment. The balance is spread on comfortably easy terms. Tea nap Coffes Coffee a MOFFAT Electric Range (Copyright, 1935 cate, Inc.) 2 cups mashed potatoes 4 cup midget onions 4 cup mushrooms 3 tablespoons butttr «s teaspoon pepper 4 teaspoon salt On platter prepare a border of mashed potatoes. In the meantime brown the onions and mushrooms in butter. Put browned mushrooins and onions in cavity in centre of platter, break eggs on top, season, dot with butter and bake in moderate oven (375 degrees F.) until eggs set. Kansas News: A minister says there will be no baseball in heaven. Maybe not, but where‘s the sense in discouragâ€" ing effort to get there? Ginger Ale Salad 2 tablespoons gelatin i# cup water 1 cup boiling water 1% cups ginger ale + cup sugar Juice of one lemon 2 cups fruit, cut fine 4 cup nuts, chopped Soften gelatin in cold water five minutes, dissolve in boiling water, Add ginger ale, lemon juice and sugar. Set aside to cool. When beginning to thickâ€" en add fruit and turn into fancy molds. Serve on leytuce and garnish with dressing. 2 tablespoons flour Cut veal in small pieces. Melt butter, add flour and when blended, gradually add hot milk and seasonings. Stir over fire until thick, add chicken. Serve hot with boiled rice, garnish with raw bananas cut lengthwise, and top with parsley. Macaroni With Cheese â€" Peas in C Peach Pudding, Foamy Sauce REQUESTED RECIPES Cutried Veal Bcerambled Eggs Balt Pepper Parsley Roast Beef â€" Brown G Browned Potatoes _ Corn Berry Pie Fridayâ€"Breakfast ced Bananas Readyâ€"toâ€"Eat Cerea Bealluped Tomatoes W Toasted Roll Berrics cups cold veal tablespoons butter cups milk teaspoon curry powder Berric Dinner Broiled Bluefish Boiled Potatoes Broccoli With Hollandais Endive Salad Chocolate Roll Saturdayâ€"Breakfast Melons Cooked Cereal) Shirred Eggs Dijon Luncheon Shirred Eggs Dijon Lettuce Salad Dinner Cold Roast Beef Lunchoon Frizzled Beetf by the Bell Syndiâ€" ITcet eas In Crea Coffec Tea CI ten years ago. § Bert and Art Studor were injured by a hit and run griver on the Schumacher road ten years ago this week. They had bein walking along the road, had heard the car coming behind them and had moved off to the side of the road. Despite the precautions, the two Stuâ€" dors hagq besn struck, thrown 20 or 30 feet, had their clothes torn, and Art suffered a bad cut on the back of his head while Bert had a broken wrist. The motorist had not been caught. Ten years ago, Civic holiday was not fixed in August, for in 1925, it was set as Wednesday, September 9th, followâ€" ing inquiries from people of the town as to whether or not there was to be a holiday that year. Hollinger told the council they would build a deviation on Liberal candidate for Temiskaming federal riding in 1925, though he was at that time a member of the provinâ€" clal house for Cochrane riding. Six other Liberals contested the nominaâ€" tion but all retired except one. The vote gave M‘r. Lang a good big majority. In his speech after the nomination he gave as his reason for accepting the konour while still a member of the provincial house, the inclusion of a great part of the riding he was repreâ€" senting in another. home of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. McCarthy, of 166 Eim street, south, was the scene of a very pretty wedding on Tuesday morning of this wesk, when theirâ€"eldest daughter, Nevada M., beâ€" came the wife of Burton G. Rutherâ€" ford, of Timmins, the ceremony being performed ~by ~Rev. Mr. Hall, of the Baptist Church," says an Advance item cf ten vears ago. Mac Lang, then a major, was chosen Liberal candidate for Temiskaming federal riding in 1925, though he was at that time a member of the provinâ€" Ontario wholesale grocery houses into National Grocers Limited, was anâ€" nounced ten years ago this week. The company had already been operating a house in Timmins, but the merger brought in a good many of the old esâ€" tablished companies of the province. Formerly the company had operated only in North Bay, Sudbury, Pembroke, Cochrane and Timmins. The skating rink was chosen as the place in whitch to hoid Timmins farâ€" chance of recove! would die, the ma. police, saying that a woman who, af had met him at t QudSnate aBuate ateaie ateate «Bs ate ate ate ate ate ate ate te ce ie a ie oi io a in ate aie ate ate ataw in ate ate ate a*s ate t s ate ate woOunda Advan did mim 1923 ane and Timmins. skating rink was chosen ; in which to holid Timmin market in 1925. Previously eAmMm merge: â€" whole TEN YEARS AGO IN TIMMINS im at the doo; aim. No reasot from Nt From data in the Porcupine Advance Fyles, ht 1 nis i1@ad besn iking party, a house and Th imb 1V 1( A J PORC(CTUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARITO by "What would have been a very enâ€" ‘ty, | joyable evening was spoiled by a boom nd ; for the of ato n â€" ‘he ng zer esâ€"= ce. ed ke, he irâ€" ad elt of logs which, occupying more than its legal share of the river, swung out, and effectively blocked the Mattagami so that not even a canoe could get through when the A.S.D. Club held an evening cruise last Wednesday on the steamer ‘Minga‘," says The Advance ten years ago. The boom in question was about a mile down the river and though when the steamer was on the way down a narrow charnel was open for river traffic, on the return not even a l6opâ€" hole was open, and the "Minga‘" disâ€" embarked its passengers, who got to shore via a pointer and the root of a stump, "which required the skill of a cireus acrobat to accomplish," accordâ€" ing to the Advance item of August 26, 1925, Editorially the newspaper said: "The Mattagami is supposed to have a navigable stream, but too often this summer there has been more supposiâ€" tion than navigation possible, Log bsoms have bsen allowed to block the river and the result has besn serious inconvenience . . . The attention of the government has been called to the blocking of the river. The government should see that the practice of monopoâ€" lizing this highway is stopped for good." Appeal by Hollinger and the Northâ€" ern Power Company against assessment of the Town of Timmins in certain equipment was dismissec by Judge Carâ€" on at Oochrane ten years ago. The Timmins football club won their fourth trophy of the year, the Goodâ€" year Cup, by defeating Kirkland Lake Three arrests in August ten years ago followed the breaking of a lock on a shack. A Dome miner had rented the place but on returning from work one day found three strangers occuâ€" pying it. Impressions of Timmins, as given by a visitor, John W. Eedy of the St. Mary‘s Journalâ€"Argus, were published from that paper in The Advance of ten years ago. Schumacher‘s football club had a very successful season in 1925 and a banâ€" quet was tendered to them in honour of their many victories. In the T.BL. ten years ago, the Haileybury team came up for a twoâ€" game series with Timmins. They broke even, Timmins winning the first, 7â€"0, ang the visitors taking the second 11â€"7. A little lad at South Porcupine, Frank Urbanavitch, lost four fingers of his hand in 1925 when an axe in the hands of his smaller sister fell across his hand. a very poor year for gardens, but an Advance editorial seemed to prove othâ€" erwise. "Never in my long residence in this North Land have I seen so many rocbins gathered together in one place here, as are to be found on this farm of ming," saiq the settler. "They do eat a little fruit, but the harm they do is negligible and they are very useful and beautiful and cheery around a garâ€" den. We encourage them all we can in every way we can, and I think I will have signs put up with the inscription, ‘Welcome, Robin, and Make Yourself at Home‘." Said The Advance: "It may be true that the presence of the birds is responsible for the absence of the garden pests. At any rate this gardener is one who may justly claim a crop of birds, and a bird of a crop." "Some senseless criminal placed a large stump and several pieces of lumâ€" ber on the road to Schumacher Monâ€" day night," said another Advance item. "As the obstructions were at one of the turns in the road, it was difficult for an automobile driver to see the obâ€" struction before coming too close to avoid a collision." "There are no destructive worms in my garden and there are no flies in this year‘s crop," said a settler who had been farming on the bank of the Matâ€" tagami for five years. Previously the Horticultural Society had said it was The marriage of Mary Klelah, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Brown, James avenue, to Archie L. Monaghan, sen of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Monaghan of Matheson, was held at the home of the bride in August ten years ago. Rev. T. Armstrong Sales officiated. Mrs. Oscar Chabot, wife of a settler near Cochrane, was struck by lightning while going aobut her household duties one day in August, 1925, and died alâ€" most immediately. A man named St. Onge had his leg broken when a cable, being used for moving a house, slackened, catching the workman. Mrs. Frank L. Donaldson of Brockâ€" ville, president of the Rebekah Assemâ€" bly, was a visitor to the Timmins soâ€" clety in 1925. A lorg article in The Advance ten years ago gathered together informaâ€" tion on nearly 100 organizations in Timmins, from the town council to the soccer club. The municipal organizaâ€" tions themselves totalled seven; reâ€" ligious organizations were most nuâ€" merous, while sports, patrictic, junior, fraternal, social, trade, music and hobâ€" bies made up the remainder. owe! toward c ¢ ident: vy road pin« taculay ore was being Iound on iims of the Hughes mine, near ne, téen years ago this summer everal areas in the district were horoughly explored. The Hughes amples showed plenty of free ha 3t ) tirme central parlt 0i company wanted the esponsibility for any ight happen on the und on "Miss Mabel Herber gugest of her sister, the past three wee morning for her h Ontario." "Mrs, H panied by her mot "Mr,. Jas. Cushing of lice Force is spendin at Sault Ste. Maric toulin Island and o home last Thursday from a visit of some three wseks to England, Wales and France." "Mrs. C. Laronde and daughter, Miss Annie Laronde, of Sudâ€" bury, are visiting Mrs. Laronde‘s daughter, Mrs. T. J. Lawlor." "Miss Grace Pearce, of Cobalt, who has been visiting in Timmins for the past two weeks, left this morning for her home in : Cobalit." "Mtr. K. C.;: Dick, of the Imperial Bank staff, is spending a few weeks on a visit to his home in Toronto angq other points south." "Firs Chief A. Borland, Mrs. Borland, Mr. Alex Borland, and Miss Maimie, left last Thursday for a holiday visit to the South. They will motor from North Bay and intend to visit London, Woodâ€" stock and other centres south and west before their return." "In connection with the accidental geath on August 15th of Torlesi Braalten, a deckman at the Hollinger Mine, there is a special touch of sadness added to the death by the fact that at the time the late Mr. Braalten met his death, a young lady was on the ocean on her way from Norway to join her fiance here, Braalâ€" ten and the young lady having planned on being married on her arrival here." ‘"Mr. J. D. MacLean, assistant town !ï¬ngineer, left this week for Toronto where he will take specialist‘s treatâ€" ment at the new Lockwood clinic. This clinic has already a noteworthy repuâ€" taticn for the cure or relief of serious Cases in many lines. Some of the docâ€" tors in this clinic were formerly exâ€" perts in the hospitals of the famous Mayo brothers. Mr. MacLean is again suffering with a form of sciatica or some other back trouble. All will deeply regret this and will sincerely trust that Jack will return at a very early date completely and permanently cured." "Mr. A. W. Pickering was a weekâ€"end visitor at Iroquois Falls." "Miss Horster, of the Imperial Bank staff, is visiting Schreiber, Fort William and other points on her vacation." "Mtr. H. Egan, of the Imperial Bank staff, left on Sunday last on a visit to Montreal and Quebec City." "Mrs. Victor Cripps and family are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Olton of Newray Mine." "Mrs. F. Ansara left on a vacaâ€" tional visit to friends =nd relatives at Torontc, Montreal and Flint, Michiâ€" gan." "Miss Doris Sopha, of Cobalt, has been the guest of her cousin,. Miss has been the guest of I Margaret Cole, for th weeks, returning home Montreal, is bac to the South." Cairns Hospital earned vacation Greer left th weeks‘ holida points east." Timmins are ; for the Palm W. Wallace, ago included: M this morning for . n Scotland." "NM is the guest of 1 Wim. Rinn returt ning from a thr the South." "Miss wWas A known vestigation, the explosi bread prev the "sAausag advised the police. Cutti wise to tal D. Chile« € IA i Timm SR a § 8 SHREDDED WHEAT tiiree wee Miss Nell 8 mana back 11 g nome this morning. ng of the Timmins Poâ€" ending a week‘s holiday Marie, Sudbury, Maniâ€" ind other points west." rbert, who has been the ter, Mrs. P. Moisley, for weeks, left on Monday r home near Hamilton, Harry Rinn, accomâ€" mother, Mrs. Dunstan, THt 4 Jeen o bakit A c Irom noild Mrs. Moffat, is away on to th,g south ‘chumacher, r ul pas _ AaAnd imber nt, Michiâ€" of Cobalt usin, Mis: ast iumach ‘ "Mt,. Bank â€" M mM At Dartmouth, Massachussetts, the cther day a burglar broke into the home of J. Cornell Brown and amazed the family by the way he ransacked things, apparently looking for cash or other valuables. The burglar also visitâ€" ed the garagse and in some way or anâ€" other managed to set fire to Mrs. Brown‘s auto. He gid not run away and leave it to burn, however, but gallantly stopped and extinguished the fire he had commenced. When he eventually departed he apparently took nothing belonging to the Brown family away with him, but he lefi a most disorderly cutfit behind him. The thoughtfulness of the burglar in stopping to put out the fire was much appreciated by the Brown family. Indeed, Mr. Brown had the following notics put on the local post office bulletin board:â€"‘"Now that we have all our money in the bank, if the thief will call during the day at Creemore, Ont., returned on Saturday evening from a â€"two months‘ vacation in the South." "Mrs. T. Latham and daughter arrived \ home on Saturday everning after a two months‘ vacation in Ottawa and vicinity, visiting relaâ€" tives and friends."‘ "In answEer to a question at the council meeting on Monday afternoon, Mr. Macnamara, one of the contractors, told the mayor that they expected to have the road from Timmirs to South Porcupine all comâ€" pleted by September 5th. The road is now part way compluted from both ends." "Mr. A. B. Wilson left on Saturâ€" day last for his old home in Aberdeen, Scotland, where he will visit for a time, after which it is his intention to proceed to Australia to take up resiâ€" dence. ‘Scotty, the barber,‘ as he was known to differentiate ; from other Scotty Wilsons in the camp took a big interest in hockey and urner sports and will be much missed in town in many circles. He was secretary of the hockey club here last wintsr. He sold his business here some days ago and it is not his intention to return to Timmins, at any rate for some yvears." | Glad the Burglar Did Not Try to Bite Their Dog. For further particulars call at any of our local offices. NEW TELEPHONE NORTHERN TELEPHONE COMPANY, LIMITED DIRECIORY Closing Soon The next issue of the telephone directory goes to the press shortly. There is still time to have a telephone installed so that your name will appear in the new book. Or, if you wish to change your present listing or to make any addition, we will include these also. Advertisers wishing space in the new directory should arrange for same at once. my home, I will gladly give him a cheque, as his present methods are anâ€" noyirs us, Thanks for not biting the dog." Toronto Mail and Empire: â€"1 batt case seems in.a fair way cleaned up, and credit for fine al sistent work must go and American police, ¢ notable officers from C Cleans. Dirty Hands The above is given for its own interest ind also so that the people will know ibout it before it happsns near the Sault. BIG PACKAGEâ€"LOW PRICE GRADE" to both. On xcluding the ovington, K TT y to be ind per.â€" LWO