_ Speaking of Preserves Don‘t Overlook Quince ga Tantalizing Flavour and as a Preserve can be Used Uiptighout the Year as a Marmalade and Dessert, Usuâ€" . J Terms and Tradesâ€"Ins Easily Arranged _ _ Imperial Motor Sales ©59â€"61 Third Ave., Timmins 2 "®#£ . *% Edith M. Barber) No matter what cther fruit I . let pass the preserving se.ason without atâ€" tention, come quince t\ime and then 1 fall. There is something about the tanâ€" talizing flavour and the\lovely colour of a cook:d quince which is more enâ€" ticing to me than any other fruit. Hard and nubbly, indeterminate in colour and often wormâ€"eaten though they are, I still search the :markets for them. Uncooked their flavour is cerâ€" tainly nct appealing, but how they imâ€" prove with treatment! 1 * When you prepare them for baking and stewing or preserving you must be sure to get out every seed because they contribute a gummy jellylike sub-‘ stance which may be a very good founâ€" dation for hang lotion, but which, does not belong when we use them for food. My grandmother actually used.to make such a lotion from the seeds extracted from the bushels of ‘quinces she put up each year. Believed Sale of Timber in Temagami Not Wise "Though Hon. Peter Heenan, minister of lands and forests, defends his action in calling for tenders for lumbering operations in Briggs township, in the heart of the Temagaimi Forest Reserve, the step has been regarded with conâ€" sternation in all parts ; of the Temisâ€" kaming cow)try LVAE CE An editorial on Friday last in The Budbury Star reads as fCllows:â€" "It is considered an unwise policy and unfortunate from every aspect, that the provincial governmnt is thus opening up the Temagami reserve to lumbering cperations when the tourist traffic has had such a great impetus during the last 12 months. "If the few virgin forests now left in Canada are to be destroyed, then we might as well stop spenting‘ money in advertising for tourist trade," is the way many Northâ€" erners look at‘ the matter. "‘Thg region to be let to lumbermen is on thenortheast arm of Lake Temaâ€" ga _x}g"is said to contain‘\ just about the finest stand of virgin timberâ€" white and red pine an white®#spruceâ€" in the province. The reserve has alâ€" ways been advertised as a tourists‘ and fishermen‘s paradise, and the Ontario Government still invites tourists to visit Temagami for that reason. Destruction of this natural national park is feared From the skins sh> thriftily made Not Many Left but every one a real car Just glance over this list. Aren‘t there some fine ones? Now Come in and see them yourself. Don‘t just glance but give them a real going overâ€"we‘ll let you be the judge. Take one out on trial, learn what we mean by "a real car." Then make us an offer on your favourite. No reasonable offer refused. 1931 DeSOTO SEDAN 1931 DODGE 8 SEDAN rides like new. re wheelis, perfect shape 1931 PONTIACSEDAN 1931 CHEVROLET wl TCP NÂ¥ «ie C _ V h CE Cugh im 'Good m Car, A1 condition C UPE O 193‘1 REO 8 SEDAN Ideal for the Business Man o e 1933 PONTIACSEDAN 1930 DSS%RQUETPE 6 wire wheeis, like new 1993 PLYMOUTH COUPE abe spava sthire ROADSTER real buy, be sure to see it A sturdy powerfal car MAKE AN OFFER NS from $50 to $100 $ i1â€"3 pounds quinces } 4 oranges { 4% pounds sugar 2 cups water Wash, quarter and core quinces careâ€" fully. Quarter and seeq oranges,. Put quinces and oranges through food chopper. Add sugar, water and orange juice. Simmer slowly, stirring frequentâ€" ly until juice thickens. Pour mt.o hot jars and seal. French custom in a heartâ€"shaped form and surrounded with the rosy transâ€" lucent slices of quince in its thick syrup. Preserved Quinces 1 peck quinces [ Wash quinces, pare and core. Cover with water and cook slowly until fruit can be pierced with a fork. Add amount of sugar equal to the weight of the fruilt and stir carefully until sugar is dissolved. Cook until fruit is clear and deep red colour. Pour into hot jars and seal. Quince Dumplings 1‘% pounds quinces 4 cup water % cup sugar Dumplings. Wash quinces, pare and core and cook covered with water until they are tenâ€" der. Stir in sugar. Drop gumpling dough from a tablespoon on top of the quince mixture and cook slowly for 15 minutes. Serve hot. (Copyright, 1935, by‘the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.) by the people of Temiskaming, who visâ€" ualize what the five square miles will look like when the lumbermen have taken their toll in the section. "Merely for â€"the sakeâ€"of lumber dues that will accrue to the government, the opening of the area to timbermen is scarcely justified, when its derogatory effect upon the influx of tourists is considered. The Temagami reserve was criginally set aside as a summer resort and beauty spotâ€"a national parkâ€"and it has attracted thousands from all over the continent. It *would be a great pity to take any action now that would despoil the section or even detract minutely from its wonderful natural attractiveness." Coloured Gentleman Knew his Cemeteries All Right A friend of The Advance came across this one and passeq it along for the entertainment of other readers of The Advaiice:â€" # When a coloureéd preacher said to Brother Jones that he should give a small donation to a fence around the cemetery, what did Jones‘ say? He said: "I don‘t see no use in a fence around a cemetery. Dem what‘s in there can‘t get out, and dem what‘s out sho‘ doan wanna get in!" Pry The Advance Want Advertisements 1933 SEDAN Open Verdict in the Case of Death of Ivar Laakso Following half an hour‘s deliberation Thursday evening, a coroner‘s jury imâ€" panelled to inquire into the death of Ivar Laakso, found that he "came to his death on September 22nd, 1935, on or about 6.30 pm. on Fourth avenue between Balsam and Birch streets in the Town of Timmins by being struck by truck number 53222â€"C driven by Ilâ€" mari Koivu." No riders of any kind were addsd and no recommendations made. Death Due to Being Struck by Truck, Says Jury, No \ Riders or Recommendations Added to Verdict. Witâ€" nesses of Tragedy Say that Laakso was Under Influence of Liquor. | The story, as pieced together from the evidence of eyeâ€"witnesses, made it clear that the dead man was drunk. He had been sesn by two men a few minutes previous to his death, and alâ€" though able to walk, was well on the way to intoxication. He had started to cross Fourth avenue, coming from behind some parked cars. Instead of going straight across, he went diagonâ€" allyâ€"southwestâ€"looking only in that direction. Truck Travelled Slowly The truck came downhillâ€"westâ€"at a rate variously estimated at from seven to 15 miles per hour. The driver apâ€" parently saw Laakso just before the bumper touched him. The left front wheel passed over the man‘s head and the truck stopped a‘cout four feet ahead of the body. After the driver got out, the truck again began to move ang did not stop until it had gone 50 feet. Four eyewitnesses told versions of the accident that were almost identiâ€" cal. K. Mankinin was standing in front of the bookstore next the Finn hall on Fourth avenue, about 25 feet away from where the accident happened. Laakso was just about three feet onto the road when the truck came along, witâ€" ness said. The truck had â€"stopped "a little way" after striking the man. Ilmari Suomi had been standing At the entrance to the Finn hall. After the accident "One young fellow with a red sweater took the car down, but Toivu took key away from him," witness said, through an interpreter, Tried to Grasp Bumper J. Lynn saw the truck at the corner before Laakso started across the street. It was going slowly. Lynn shoutâ€" ed when he saw the man in front of the truck, but it was too late. He saw the man go down, grasp the bumper of the truck as he went down, saw his hand slip and saw the head go under the wheels He kntgw the man was dead by then and, since â€"he had known him by sight, did not want to look at the body. He gave Laakso‘s age as about 45. Matti â€" Boutanen watched Laakso start across the street, he said, and was sure he hag not looked east, in the direction from which the truck came. S. Schroder kad known Laakso for 40 years, he said, and had met him on Fourth avenue between Elm and Maple abcut 15 minutes ‘before the accident. Laakso had gone north on Maple. "What was his condition when you were talking to him?" asked Crown Attorney S. A. Caldbick. "HMe was grunk. I had known him for 40 years. He had been working in the bush but had not been working lately. He would drink as long as he could get something to drink," Schroder said through an interpreter, "On this day was he able to walk straight?" Hag Asked for Food Junes, cook at the Workers‘ Coâ€"operative boarding house, said that Laakso had been around there looking for food about six o‘clock,. Asked why he did not allow Laakso to go into the dining room, Junes said: "It was too late and he was too drunk." He hag had 25 cents in his hand then. Junes had given him some sandwiches without charge. pr. Irvine had seen the body on Sunday evening about 6.30 as it lay on the road. Pretty well in the centre of the road, it had been lying in a pool of blood. Blood streamed from the ears, nose and mouth. The base of the cord injured. Death had been almost Constable: Archambault had arrived |completely. . . at the scene of the accident a few minâ€"| Some of these utes after it happened. Koivu, driver | from symptoms / of the truck. was not drunk, he said,|treatment. Ste but there was a faint smell of liquor| method has not on his breath. While making his inâ€" | patients free fro vestigation, the constable noticed the truck begin to move. He jumped in, | t trieg to stop it with the hand brake,| then with the foot brake. Neither )n seemed to have any effect. a% "He could walk but he walked like Jos. Leroux, mechanic at a local gaâ€" rage, had been summoned by police to take the truck to his garage and test the brakes. All the pressure he could get on the right rear wheel was 10 pounds, where it should have 300 pounds, and on the right front wheel, 3 pounds where it should have been 250 or 275. "What was the reading on the left?" asked the crown attorney. "None at all," replied the mechanic. Wirq Held Connection The main brake rod had ‘been tied to the connecting brake rod with a piece of very heavy steel wire, the mechanic said. The brakes would have funcâ€" tioned fairly well if the wire had reâ€" maineg solidly in position, but accordâ€" ing to the expert, very heavy, quick pressure might have strained the conâ€" rection so that it would give a sudden braking, then none at all. The brake linings were greasy, the grease retainers for the rear wheels having besn in bad condition. "If the hook on the wire had not opened, he would have had brakes?" asked Juryman J. E. H. Chateauvert, "Yes," replieq the mechanic. "If he had put on the hand brake I think he could have stopped in a few feet," he said later. D:puty Chief Mervyn Salley had tried the brakes of the truck when it was brought to the police station. Neiâ€" ther service nor emergency would stop the truck, even on a slight grade, he said. The inauest was held under Coroner H. E. Montgomery, with A. G. Carson foreman of the jury and John Dalton; J. E. H. Chateuvert, Alex Borland, Sr., P. J. Doyle, I. E. Dunn and W. S. Jamieson as members. 4 Asthma Many cases of asthma are now being cured because it has been found that the pollen of certain plants, the hair or fur of animals, some kinds of foods, dust and other substances are the cause. By avoiding these substances to which they were sensitive these indiâ€" viduals are kept free from asthmatic attacks. Other cases have been cured where deformities in the nose were corrected as these were evidenty the cause of the attacks. However there are sufferers the cause of whose asthma has not been discovâ€" ered and any relief that can be obâ€" tained is eagerly sought. It is interesting therefore to read in Science of the method used by Drs. N. F. Shambaugh and S. M. Alter, Los Angeles, in a series of fifty cases of bronchial asthma. They first give the patients someâ€" thing to make the mucus or phlegem less "sticky‘"‘ in order that it can be zotten up out of ‘the bronchial tubes more easily. The patient is then inâ€" structed to kneel on a chair or stool and place both hands on the floor. By putting his chest against the edge of chair and letting his head nearly touch the floor (just as if he were trying to stand on his head) he gets the best position for draining the mucus from the throat. Whily he is in this "upâ€" side down" position he coughs as much and as long as he can and is able to get the mucus or phileem out of the tubes and then spit it out. This upside down position is main i tained for at least three minutes wheâ€" ther or not he gets rid of the mucus. { I 1 This is done twice daily; on gett.ing upandbeforemmbed. P By James W. Barton, M.D., Toronto A Method of Controlling Bronchial of â€" Pours TEhat Bodp \Fear Destruction of | the Temagami Park "A bareâ€"faced outrage." "Spoilation of the finest natural park in Ontario." "Another Heenan blunder," are only a few of the indignant comments. In the Temagami summer resort area, which has just enjoyed one of the greatest tourist seasons in its history, the govâ€" ernment action is regarded with outâ€" Tight consternation as marking the beâ€" ginning of the end. (From Mail and Empire) The action of the Gntario Departâ€" ment of Lands and Forests in calling for tenders for the right to conduct lumbering operations in Briggs townâ€" ishp, in the heart of the Temagami Forest Reserve and on the northeast arm of Lage Temagami, has been gre:tâ€" ed with shocked incredulity in Temisâ€" Protests Said to be Made Against Planned Sale of Timber in Temagmi Forâ€" est Reserve. "Once let the lumbermen get into this country and Temagami‘s goose is cooked," said a prominsnt Cgbalt man who spends his summers on *"Lake Teâ€" magami. It is estimated that there are 11 and a half million feet of white pine, two million, seven hundred thousand feet of red pine and over a million fest of white spruce on the area. It is specified that operations must be undertaksn during the current season 1935â€"1936. While it is indicated that cooming or towing operations will not be permitted in Temagami lake during July or Auâ€" gust, the clause banning summer operaâ€" tions betwen May 15th and September 15th carries the phrase "except by special permission of the minister of lands and forests," and there is no guarantee that sawmills will not be erected, the location of same depending on approval by the minister. Locally it is considered significant that the cpening. of the Briggs townâ€" ship tract to lumbering operations ocâ€" rs on the eve of a general election. olitical adherents of both oldâ€"line parties were as one in condemning the department‘s action. "The Temagami reserve was set aside many years ago to be just what the name implies," said F. W. Todd, Cobalt business man and summer resident of Barrett Shingles are easily applied too, they nailed right over your old roof, ‘Think of t blanket of roofing will give. It acts as an your fuel c( and embers. Barrett‘s, with a wide variety of colours and styles, have a roofing for every type of building. They are all staunchly weatherâ€"tight, will neiâ€" ther rot Hor rust and never need painting. The cost is low too. â€" and Have a livable Home ingles are easily applied too, they come in strips and can be} t over your old roof, Think of the added warmth that this new : roofing will give. It acts as an insulator, greatly reducing: costs. Moreover, it makes your home safe from flying sparlg REâ€"ROOF NOW! Be prepared for the fall rains, the cold winter and the penetrating spring thaw. Temagami. "The sectlon contains the finest stand of virgin timber in the province. The reserve has always been ‘advertiseq as a tourists‘ and fisherâ€" ; men‘s paradise, and the present governâ€" 'mem still invites tourists to visit Teâ€" ;magami for that reason. It is hardly necessary to mention just what the five square miles will look like after ‘the lumbermen have taken their toll, "all for the sake of timber dues to ‘se ‘paid the government and, of courss, for the sake of a few wsealthy lumberâ€" men." Tenders for the tract are being reâ€" ceived up to October 3rd, and already a strong move is afoct to interest Bcards of Trade and other district orâ€" ganizations to register a protest. And if Hon. Peter Heenan invades Temisâ€" kaming on his promised visit to Northâ€" ern Ontario, it is promised that he will be asked plenty of questions about Briggs township, for although the townâ€" ship is in Nipissing, Temagami is in Temiskaming district., Hon. Peter Heeâ€" nan is none too boBular s it is, on acâ€" count of his stand cocnerning the transâ€"Canada highway route, and this latest development has not addeq to his pepularity or the popularity of the Liberal government. It is considered doubly unfortunate that the provincial government in opening up the Temagami reserve to lumbering operations when the tourist traffic has had such a great imp:tus during the last 12 months, largely by reason of expenditures made for adverâ€" tising abroad by the Federal governâ€" ment of just such places in Canada as Temagami. "If the few virgin forests now left in Canada are to be destroyed, then we might just as well stop spendâ€" ing money in advertising for tourist trade," said ons Haileybury citizen. Powassan â€" News:â€"Successful~ men don‘t succsed on account of their faults, Jut in spite of them. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER a0TH. 1935