Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 27 Apr 1936, 2, p. 2

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‘hare is no reason why dinner should pleate the eye as well as the palate. Dflflierat this time of year may keéep to the seasonal yellow and green withâ€" out straining the point. Subndayâ€"Breakfast Btrawberries Btuffeg Celery Ripe Olives Roast Lamb, Mint Jelly Potatoss With Parsley Butter Broccoli With Hollandaise Mixed Green Salad Lemon Ice 6mali Cakes With Mint Icing f Supper Cottage Cheese Salad With Slioed Tomatoes ’I‘oasted Easter Bread Hot Chocolate Mondayâ€"Breakfast Cookeq Cereal Dinner - MLGET lnursuay, MmMay /(tn Hot Sliced Lamb, Tomato Sauce Baked Potatoes String Beans | The Local Association of Boy Scouts Sliced Fruit will. hold its â€"regular monthly meetâ€" Wednesdayâ€"Breakfast ts ling on ‘Thursday, May 7th, it was anâ€" Baked Rhubarb naunced toâ€"day. Thers is much of inâ€" Cooked Cereal lteres.t to Scouting m Timmins to be Baked Ham With Apricots Grilled Sweet Potatoes Cabbage in Cream Baked Chocolate Puffs, Hard Sauce Tuesdayâ€"Breakfast Frizzled Toasted Rolis Coffee Lunchéon Broccoli Soup Crab Salad Cakes Tea Frizzled Ham With Raisin Sauce Baked Sweet Potatoes Buttereq Carrots Cheese Cake Poached Eggs Bran Muffins _ discussed Coffee |attendan \Luncheon tion and i Lamb Hash Arrang Raw Carrot Salad the use 0 Tea Cookies ing is sc _ Vegetable Soup Cottage Cheese Salaq Tea Cookies d Eggs Easter Bread Hot Rolls Coffee Stewed Prunes Readyâ€"toâ€"Eat Cereal FEdith M. Barber) Easter Canape 45 sn w omm ie ie( : Coffee discussed at the meeting ang a good attendance of members is the associaâ€" tion and Scouters is expected. Arrangements have been madeâ€" fozj the use of the town hall, and the mestâ€" ing is scheduled to begin at 7.30. Livers of 2 chickens, boiled . Yolks of 2 hardâ€"cooked eggs 4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon prepared mustard w# teaspoon white pepper ~â€" 3 tablespoons vinegar % cup olive oil. .â€"~Ghopped parsley % teaspoon Worcestershire sauce. Mash and mix to a paste the chicken livers and yolks. Add seasoning, pour in olive oil drop by drop, stirring in the same direction until the consistency of thin mayonnaise. Mix with salad and chopped parsliey. (Copyright 1936, by the Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.)} St, Louis Timesâ€"Star:â€"With referâ€" ence to that watch on the Rhine, sooner or later somebody‘s going to get the works. Boy Scouts Association to Meet Thursday, May 7th Baked Pork Chops Cupried Rice Dandelion Grsens Strawberry Pudding Cottage Cheese Salad 4 pound cottage cheéese 2 tablespoons minced onion. 1 tablespoon minced pimento Mix the onion and pimento with the cheese and ‘season. Press into small Dowl ‘and set in refrigerator to chill. When ready to serve salad, turn cheese out on small platter and arrange letâ€" tuce orâ€" romaine around it. Pass French or spicy dreéessing. Dressing for Green Salads Noodles With Creamed Mushrooms Fruit Salad Cheese Crackers ie â€" 3 * y k | as Palate 100. One of the Kiwams Leaden Rice Pudding Saturdayâ€"Break{fzst Orange Juice Cooked Cereal Cofftee he hits it back. When a child pours créeam on cucumbers and wants to cat the mess and it is taken from him, he believes only that the parent who is trying to prevent an intestinal disturbâ€" ance, is doing it just to ibe mean, so he becomes enraged at the hand stretched out, to save him. â€" So also the man with a grouch tries to take it out on innoâ€" cent people who have the misfortune to be helplessâ€"sexvants, employees, his wife and whildren! There is no worse disease,, nor one more likely to become chronic, than grouch. There is nothing more absoâ€" lutely childish than a grouch. When a child runs into the corner of a door and gets a lump on his head, he believes the door was inspired to injure him, so he either calls the door what nasty names are in his limited vocabulary, or. else The disease I have this morning, the disease which caused my ‘friend\to lose his job, is as childish as whooping cough, measles or chicken pox. The fact that it is mental makes it‘ even more childish, because it can be cured instanter if the patient wants %o cure it. Somewhere in. the hinterlind of my mind is a fragment of poetry which tells of the bulbul which sang to the red, red rose although the thorn on ‘its stem pressed ever further into his koâ€" som. A chump affliicted with my parâ€" ticularâ€" mental disease is so proud of his affiiction that he nurses it like a mother tiger nursing her cub, that it may become a bigger and stronger killâ€" er. > c This momning I have fastened myself up in my office away from miy wife, my baby and even my, dog, because I have one of my intermittent attacks of the same contagious disease which cust my friend his job. I once stole a "Do Not Disturb‘"‘ sign from a hotel room. Now and then when I am very busy, I hang it outside my door and even my wife stays outâ€"that is,; «nless she has someâ€" thing really important to ast me, like how I liked the dress wore to the party last night! Burton Rascoe says that no writer‘s wife"can ever unâ€" derstand, even after she ‘has ‘lived him for twenty years, that he is\ working when he is staring out of the window. My digression shows how bad an attack I have of my contagious disease. I have a good friend who lost a job tmnmnthsagobmmahemsmudon coming to work in the large office of which he had entire charge, \with a contagious disease. Having done all in his power to prevent the man‘s spreadâ€" ing this contagion, his boss reluctantâ€" ly decided that as much as he‘ liked him, he would have to let him go before the rest of his employees were inocuâ€" Discusses on His ‘Grouch It‘s Catching, he Says. nct get my way. The reason these people didn‘t do what I wanted them to do was because I was not a conâ€" vincing enough speaker to sell them the idea. I did not have enough fire and enthusiasm to inspire them to action. The failure was mine, not theirs. I am sore ibecause I am not as good as I thought I was. I am aiming my grouch at them, whert in my heart I Every health department. has a Ict of signs to tack on hotuses in which there is a connagious disease. "Diphâ€" theria Within" ahd "Scarlet Fever iWithin” are signs that warn people on the "cutside away from these contagiâ€" ous diseases. I have been sitting here wondering if it would not be a good plan to give some group of psychologâ€" ists the power to make a man feeling like I do this morning, wear a sign "Grouch Within". I believe that if some cone would hang such a sign around my neck, the absurdity, the absolute childishness of my mental atâ€" titude would be impressed on me, and I would laugh and take off the sign. If, instead ‘of putting me in a good humor and curing me, it only made me grouchier, ‘there would ‘at least be the advantage that others could stay away from me and notâ€" catch my misery to carry to still other people who would spread it yet again in ever widening circles.. I have had my dish of cucumbers and cream snatched away from me. I did the finish, I admit that I am licked!] I am sore as a mashed thumb bechube I have failed. I want to bark at . my. wife und children. I am as silly as the child which smacks the door against which he bumped his head. I want to take this out of somcbcdy‘s hide. I want to find fault with my wife. I want to tell_ my baty to go some place else and play and leave daddy to suffer in silence. My wife is no angel, thank heaven. If I snapped at her, she would snap back. My grouch is contagious and she would become infected. ‘FProm her, the ccook or the grocery boy wotild catch my grouch, and heaven only knows., where it would scatter from there. | For two weeks I have been struggling to inspire a group of people to action which is unquestionably to their best interest.. My motives are absolutely altrustic. â€" There is nothing in the world for me to gain, and everything for them.. I have met with disheartâ€" ening indifference. Now, just before subject to passengers meeting the reâ€" quirements of the United States Immiâ€" Tickets to Buffalo and Detroit sold gration. For complete information and tickets Apply agents T. N. 0. Ry and N. C. Ry. Hamil ville, Well Smithville, I , Buffalo, (by T. and N. 0. Train No. 2 and connections) AND RETURN _ Going Thurs. April 30 Canadian Pacific Tickets good in Coaches only No Baggage Checked Children 5 years and under 12 just before I am lickedl umb bechuse bark at my s silly as the door against alump in Cobalt mine sbhares. On the sther hand the veins proved to be far m@mmemmthanmemostopumis- tic could have expected. "As the boom expanded claims were days, were without the guidance of gqoiocical information later developed. such long, rich veins existed they would persist to great depth and when it was realized that they did not there was near the Beaverâ€"Temiskaming and ,mmmged to make a good surface disâ€" covery. Powered with enthusiasm and dynamite the gratified owners proâ€" ceeded to ‘blast int> the vein, which promptly disappeared a few, feet down, leaving them with a small stack of saoked ore. This was a warning which did not go uitheeded by others. When vein was discovered the people in charge of operations were very cautiâ€" ous in handling it until such time as its dimensions were well publicized and the necessary financing was completed. Even then they sometimes hesitatéd to molest it. A vein in the hand was worth two in the brush. Occasionally their worst fears were realized and a little gash vein developed. But, in any event, they had money to go ahead and strange to say. A "In ‘those days of feverish activity when each evening brought word of some new find or of a new and rich develcpment in the established proâ€" perties there was a lot of bitter disâ€" appointment as well. Companies that held ground exasperatingly near to high grade discoveries failed to pick them up on their claims, despite franâ€" tic efforts to do so. There were some curious cases of veins petering out near line or failing to live up to surface showings. One outfit had a property the government of the day took a hand, finally emerging with a nice slice of the profits. The government also went inâ€" to the prospecting busin»ss and securâ€" ed at least one property which proâ€" duced for a time before it was sold. It is undersiood that the government "The O‘Brien struck rich stuff after some considerable looking and promptâ€" ly got itself into a lawsuit, in which _ "The old Trethewey was a case in point. While waiting for the machinâ€" \ery to come Capt. Reddington, now in charge of operations at Coniaurum, took out two carlcoads of high grade, which returned enough to pay for the plant and leave money over. The La Rose had mbout the same experience, with the first consignment of high grade yielding over $20,000. Some of theâ€"others were a little slower in get= ting into the rich ore tut they were spurred on by the sucsess of their neighbours. The Buffalo property had trouble in locating its veins and at ons time this rich claim could have been had for less than $20,000. In fact one speculator offered $15,000 for it and it was refused, the man in charge getting instructions to hold out for $20,000 but to acceps less if he had to. The prosâ€" pective buyer, an Amerizan who had drifted into camp, dropped the negotiaâ€" ons and went away, never to return. T‘wenty years later the mine sold for nearly a million dollar\s, after having been continuously and profitably workâ€" ed in the interim. What a bargain that strolling gambler missed! | "The flush days of the Coba‘t camp are so far past that few people recall how rich its ores were. In the year 1904 there were five mines shipping high ‘grade, the total valuation (for a part year only) ‘being $136,218 and the average value per ton, $862. By 1908 the number of ghippers had risen to 30, ‘he valuation was $9,284,869 and the average value of the ore was $436. This was rich stuff and the mines had little or no troubleâ€"that is, the good onesâ€" in making operations pay from. grass Oldâ€"timers in the North, and parâ€" ticularly those who were in Cobait in the early days, will read the followinz with livelyâ€"interest. There is also a general interest in such an article, It is from "Grab Samples," that bright column in The Northern Miner. "Grab Samples" says:â€" I like them. Now she has ‘probably contracted my grouch and will have parsnips for lunch because she knows I loathe parsnips. Richness of Mines | in Old Cobalt Camp In Many Cases Operations . _Paid "from the Grass . Roots." â€" Some Reminis: cences. ; â€"I‘m going to pull the sign off my study door.‘ I‘ve cured myself because I don‘t want to look ridiculous in my owhnr eyes. And I think I will try being extra nice to my wife for fear I was a bit silly at breakfast when I said the tecon was burned. After all, she had the bacon and fried apples for breakfast because she knows We are in a cruel state of mind and want to wreak our cruelty on those wo love most. Could anything be childish? Could anythinz be more contemptible? know I " E*‘ ‘took spread the contagion, no m what happens. 1If my friend who is chronic grouch to the offite had C those who can as much as the iness can give us unâ€" saime, boss afford. can h love "The mine operators of the earliest made money on this deal, were not done, and the What more should she have? What more should she ask? Here is a mcther taking a very sane, broad view, meeting the young modern more than Lalf way. But the young one has a will of her own and a dressing table full of samples. Oh, she‘ll appreciate her. mether‘s preaching some ten years, from now. That‘s the un{ortlma‘te part of it. An end curl permanentâ€"that‘s fine anq quitt in order particularly if straight hair makes its owner feel inâ€" ustt h itc 22 unuffomd 5. and a manicuring set with dry polish and a buffer, which made her "squak." What more dao you think she should have?" "We (her older sister and I) tell her that therss a profound beauty in being lovely and charming and healthy and ever so natural at that age. But the young kopeful is stubborn. She has a mania for clipping coupons and her dressing table is flooded with samples of all kinds. What‘s more she uses them all indiscriminately, which worries me. And I know she uses more lipstick ‘outside than in the house. It seems so utterly unnecessary, like gildlng the lily, for she‘s really a pretty little thing. I‘ve permitted her an end curl permaâ€" nent, a little powder, a good hair brush which she uses, an eyebrow brush A "muchâ€"concerned mother of a 13â€" yearâ€"old" to ask just where I would draw the line for beauty "nesds‘ and ‘"nots," if I hag a daughter of teen age. She goes on to say: John â€"C. Piorenza, 24 years of is reported from Newâ€"York as having conâ€" fessed to the murder of Nancy Evans Tittertor, wellâ€"known author whose nude body was found in a bathtub on April 10th. The only clue available was a small pieca of cord, but the police used this to such good advantage that they believe they have soPed the crime. Police were able to prove that the coard was similar to that used :y upholsterâ€" ers. The cord was actually traced to the factory at which it was made. Then by a series of eliminations the cord was tracsd back after it had left the facâ€" tory. Eventually it was shown, the poâ€" lice say, that Ficrenza hagq purchased such a pieec of cord. Then it was shown that he was an upholsterer by trade. Wher he was arrested and charged with the murder he is said by the police: to have admitted the crimée and proceeded to show just exactly how the crime was committed. SAID TO HAVE CONFESSED IN NEW YORK MURDER CASE staked far out from the main camp and shaft houses arose everywhere. It was not uncocmmon in those days for d company to be formed on a single 40‘ acres. (The staking regulations had something to do with this, as a disâ€" covery of mineral in place was preâ€" requisite of staking). Pretty soon the professional staker developed and he would contract to deliver the required numser, fully sworn in, for set price poer. claim. This was very for the share pushers who could draw a little on their imaginations, with reâ€" spect to locations and discoveries. Bome young men who just had barely enough brains to throw stakes around a lot made tidy fortunes supplying the claim marke.." | L TCO HAUVT ‘but also prevented P Fire Losses in Ontario Serious in First Quarter During hse first quarter of 1936 fires claimed the lives of 37 persons and caused injuries to 38 others in Ontario. Casuaities resulted in 44 of the 4124 fires in this period. While thaere wers 19 less fires in the first three months of this year than in the same time in 1985, the property loss was $2,577,751.00, an increase of $789,046.00. Weather conditions are considered largely reâ€" sponsible for the increased fire losses of the past winter. Prolonged spells of cold weather and hsavy snowfalls, not only required more heating in buildings, fire departments from functioning as efficiently as usual when blazes occurred. Miss Pierce approves of permanent wave end curls for the girl in her teens and the coiffule worn by ANYA TARANDA is appropriate and flattering. mmmn.homhe k muw-ww is iunlu by Western Canada hard Opring wheat. Am“nm © garther â€"â€" eoonsosmieal. Best for all your Baking . By ELSIE PIERCE FA M OUS BEA UTY T Br BEAUTIFUL HOW MUCH BEAUTY FOR THE TEEN AGE? ing is permissible for brows and lashes. Point out to her that people measure beauty in the very young by health ang the natural glow and The time she spends at the dressing table had better be spent outâ€"ofâ€"do0;#,, ; , (Copyright, 1936, by the Bell Gyndiâ€" be a chemical reaction to such a me}pf* that may make her skin blemjsh;d harsh, coarse. Have her use a4.good, bland soap and a complexion ~brush, rinse thoroughly, lsave the skin free‘to breathe. Outdoor exercise, instéad~ of rouge, to keep the cheek colour at its height. A little powdér to tone ‘town shine on the nose and accentuate t.he cheek roses by contrast. A little pomgde on the lips if they are dry, but no colour. A wee bit of vaseline and brushâ€" But things off her face. ‘Adâ€" monish her not to use this and that inâ€" discriminately Explain that thfire ,may ferior. That‘s fine, too, if the ends happen to be unruly and the permanent will help to keep them in curl. I would permit the little inexpensive curlers too, to encourage the ends. But I‘d get her wielding <that ‘hairbrush up and out hundred strokes every day. Tell her there‘s a beauty tonic in every .little bristle of the brush. The manicuring set is fine, too. Don‘t let her‘ cut her cuticle, iaut have her file with emory board; push back euticle, cleanse with nail brush and orange wood stick, ‘use buffer and dry polish, and use little cream or hand lotion on her hands. New . Yorker:â€"Prof. Josephine L. Ratlhibone of Teachers College thinks people â€"ought to relax more, and one of her rules is: "Delegate as much of your offitce work and worries as posâ€" sible to your subordinates." But what ifâ€"thsy relax right sack at you? In dwellings throughout the proâ€" vince, 3293 fires originated during the first â€"thres months of 1936, causing losses of $738,521.00 to propsrty. While the number of fires was slightly less than in the first quarter of 1935, the loss was $88,644.00 greater. The loss from factory fires was $467,674.00 in 112 fires. This represents an increase of 29 fires and $302,591.00. Stores also sufâ€" fered heavily as 342 fires caused damâ€" age of $633,015.00, an increase of 62 fires and $215,085.00 in property losses. Barn fires since January lst, 1936, dsâ€" creaseq considerably from the same pericd last year. Only 33 barns, valued at $49,377.00 were destroyed, a decrease Of 16 firss and $55,766.00 loss.

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