Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 Jul 1938, 2, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

In regard to the occurrence of epiâ€" demics in Canada of other milkâ€"borne diseases, Canadian records in recent years show that milkâ€"borne cases of typhoid fever, paratyphoid, scarlet fever and septic sore throat amounted the type. Bovine tubercle bacilli were isolated from bones, joints, élands, kidneys, meninges, and other parts of the body. In every instance It was found that thes> children had been fed raw milk. In contrast to this, the records at the Hospital for Sick Children show that since compulsory pasteurization was introduced in the Cty of Toronto in 1915, not a single case of milkâ€"borne tuberculosis (bovine tuberculosis) has occurred in children whose sole source of milk has been Toronto pasteurized milk. Pasteurization of milk prevents the development of all milkâ€"borne discases. In actual practice under Ontario conâ€" ditions, wherever milk has been properâ€" ly pasteurized there has bsen no record of any ca» of milkâ€"borne edisase. For instance, as a result of a study begiun eleven years ago under the auspices of the National Research Council of Canâ€" ada in coâ€"operation with the Breeders Association of Canada and the Federal Dept. of Agriculture, and carried out in Ontario in connection with the medâ€" ical and surgical divisions of the Hosâ€" pital for Sick Children, Toronto, it was found that just under ten per cent. of 490 tubsrculous chldren suffered from the bovin> type. Bovine tubercle bacilli were isolated from bones, joints, glands, kidneys, meninges, and other parts of the body. In every instance It was found that thes> children had been fed raw milk. In contrast to this, the records at the Hospital for Sick In the June issue of the Canadian Public Health Journal, which is devoted to articles on milk, Dr. Allen Brown, physicianâ€"inâ€"chief the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, contributes the folâ€" lowing editorial : 20 Pine North Timmins REAL ESTATE INSURANCE STEAMSHIP OFFICE on First Mortgages Available in TIMMINS SCHUMACHER SQUTH PORCUPINE Paid Back Monthly over 3 to 5 Years. arPLÂ¥ TO About the Value of Pasteurization Dr. Alan Brown Explains Advantages of Treatment of Milk. Co: L I M I T E D General Contractors, Lumber, Building Supplies Head Office Mill Office Schumacher, Phone 708 Timmins, Phone 709 gasy 10 APPLY _ @ 23%% Pine Street North Timmins AND REAL ESTATE IN ALL BRANCHES two hours to dry 1 U â€" W A L L L L PA i N T I NS U RANCE sIMMs, HOOKER DREW e If your walls and ceilings look tired, renew them with NUâ€"WALL. The cost is little, the results are beautiful! Paint your rooms in the morning â€" use them in the afternoon. No brush marks, laps or odor. Choice of white and ten lovely tints. it‘s washable, odorless HOUSES AND LOTSs FOR SALE CONVENIENT TERMSs Phones 1135 1580 Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"Five years ago when Joseph Zangara tried to assassinâ€" ate Presidrnt Roosevelt at Miami, Fla., one of his bullets struck Margaret Kruis in the head. She still suffers with headaches but is able to fill a federal pcsition in Washington, and was more fortunate than Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago, also hit but who died from his wound. By th> passage of a compulsory act during the 1938 session of the Legislaâ€" ture of Ontario the province assumes a unique position in the record of public health throughout the world. In the passing of this act, Ontario becomes the largest political area in the world ossessing a comprehensive compulsory pasteurization law and it must be conâ€" sidered as a great tribute to the public sagacity and humanity of the premier and his cabinet in a supreme endeavor to allsviate the appalling loss of life and sickness caused by infected milk. It is thus evident that the only adâ€" verse seoffect of pasteurization of milk from the nutritive standpoint is the slight destruction of vitamins B1 and B2. This deficiency in pastsurized milk is not of importance as vitamins B1 and B2 are widely distributed in the foods ordinarily consumed.. Pastourization increases the case of digestibility of the protein in milk. does not affect the utiliâ€" zation of the minerals contained in milk. â€"Pasteurization reduces the vitaâ€" min B1 content of milk by aproximateâ€" ly 23 per cent., and vitamin B2 conâ€" tent by 14 per cent. Vitamin C is preâ€" sent in milk in such small amounts that it is of no practical The other vitamins, namely A, D and E, are not affected. statements. Thes> are the results of careful investigations by many eminent workers. The question of any harmful effect of pasteurization on the food value of milk can be answered by the following _ _Even with the greatest care raw milk is not safe. Although the agricultural departments are doing a remarkably fine work in weeding out tuberculaus and othe>r diseased animals from Canâ€" adian herds, this still does not make milk safe. The careful control of the milkâ€"producing cows is not sufficient. Septic sore throat, scarle fever, and yphoid fever, for example, do not come from th»e cow but from the handlers of unbottled unpasteurized milk,. In reâ€" gard to tuberculosis, even tuberculinâ€" tested cows although showing a neogaâ€" tive tist, have been found to develop the disease and produce tubercle bacilâ€" li in milk befor> the next routine tuâ€" berculin test was done. Living tubercle bacilli have actually been found in corâ€" tified milk formerly produced under the requir:ments for certification in Toronto. It‘s Summertime to no less than 8034 with 703 deaths. All 6of this could have been prevented by the use of pasteurized milk. Couple 75c. Dancing every Wednesday and Saturday Andy Cangiano‘s Orchestra Phoneâ€"Office 112 Residence 135 You‘ll have a gala time at the A Real Custom Toucn For informal rooms, chintz shades are a pet of ours. The allâ€"over floral designs are the easiest to make into a lamp shade of average shape, but the medallion designs work out all right if you chose a straight up and down or squared frame. It‘s a real custom touch to have chintz lamp shades that repcat the same chintz pattern used elsewhere in the room, and we‘ve seen it done in fashionable places. Finish these with a simple cotton braid, with ball fringe or with a narrow piping. For a colonial, a provincial or a modâ€" ern reom, linen homespuns or cotton tweeds make delightful lamp shades, especially if you trim them with a thick mossy type of fringe. Any linen or cotâ€" ton material of textural interests is suitable for lamp shades. Choose of course the more severely shaped fram»s. Novelty Summer Shades One amusing idea for someâ€" Trimmings play a very important part in the design of the stretched silk shade. When the fabric itself is rather elaborat>, then you‘ll want quite a seâ€" date braid or piping only. If the fabâ€" ric is plain, you can choose quite a fancy braid, or even a wide fringe. We saw a stunning pair of lamp shades the other day of antique satin in eggshell with a wide scholl braid in dusty pink around the top only. Another interâ€" esting lamp ensemble had shades of maroon satin with wide white rope fringe dripping down from around the top of â€"the frame. ‘Trimmings are also offered in nice variety in the art needlework departments of leading stores where you can also get informaâ€" tion on how to make lamp shades. (Our bulletin ‘"Making Your Own Lamp Shades" likewise gives directions in deâ€" tail.) And Oh So Smart Among the fabrics, silk is of course the aristocrat, and so we‘d suggest it for any rather dignified type of room. It‘s better stretched on a frame rather than shirred, and be sure, if you‘re making your own shade, to get pure silk because the artificial fibres don‘t stand the sb well. In brocade, antique taffetas and other fancy weaves of fine silks, which you can get in the art need‘ework department of the larger stores, you‘ll find that white, eggshell, beige or gold are the best colours to choose. In novelty fabrics, such as slipper satin, you can be more daring and oh so smart and choose maroon., dark grsen or deep blue, then trim and line the shade with white of a light colcur. These deep toned satin shades are grand for accent in a pastel room. The fabric shade is coming into its own after an era of much too much paper and parchment. And there are several composition materials that are viry much in the swimâ€"clair de lunge among others. Readyâ€"made shades inâ€" clude stunning cosmetic tones and inâ€" teresting metallic effects. A wide choice of novelty print shades are amusing and where paper or parchment is used, it‘s in a tailored or sporting way. The pleatsd clair de lune shades are stunâ€" ning in deep tones or in lace effects on pastel grounds. parchment shades for a song. Lamp shades are bigger, for one thing, and more important looking. Which is good news for a lady who wants to reâ€" juvenate a room without spending a lot, for a new ensemble of shades can often pull a roaom together, lift it out of the dcldrums and make the old furniture "do" very well by diverting attention from it. shades that are too small and puny looking for the room. Half the interior decoration troubles of the town could be correctcd by the simple formula of clearing out the junk and being ruth-‘ less about throwing away or stowing away ornaments that are noither useful nor beautiful. And by buying or makâ€" ing a few new lamp shades that really belong on the scene. More Important For a lot has been happening in lamp styles sinc> you picked up those old Ever take a stranger‘sâ€"eyeâ€"view otl your living room? Most of us would see an awful lot of odds and ends that shouldn‘t be there. Along with lamp! Lamp Shades are Stepping Out Into the "Fashion Pictureâ€"Silk for Best, Chintz and Linen Homespuns for Informalityâ€"Metallics and Composition Have Their Say. Extra Lady 10¢ PLEASANT HoMES ow and effective for indirect lightâ€" Ing are the urns that are frequently used on pedestals, Inside these urns strong bulb lights are placed without On the subject of bases, here is a word or two. Better just quietly throw away any of those old water bott}»e bases if you still have any about, beâ€" cause they‘re out. Porcelain hases ar> th> nicest things now, and you will find some lovely ones at reasonable prices. Plain white porcelain or potâ€" tery are favourites of ours; so ar> those in any of the pastel shades. Crysâ€" tal bases are quite something these days; so are woden bases, painted china, alabaster and the various fashâ€" ionable metals such as pewter, copper and brass. crisp fresh effect like a little petticoat. Around a plain white or >ggshell shade, it is sometimes quite dainty to attach a wreath of artificial flowers, such as cornflowers, daisies or tiny roses. Gold or silver paper rubber cemented onto a plain parchment shades achieves a scintillating effect for a shade that can go places in style. The good part about using gold or silver paper in this way is that it can be put on in small piecesâ€"the patchwork effect will make it look more like gold or silver leaf. One problem often encountered in putting a fresh big shade on an old base is that the new shade swallows up the old base. Be sure to try out the frame of the shade and see that it isn‘t too small or too big for the base to do anythinga bout. If the shade is all right except that the light bulb won‘t hold the shade up high enough, then Jjust use two or three sockets, one fit in the other, to lift the bulb high enough to bring the shade to the right level. thing out of practically nothing is to take a plain white or light parchment shad> and decorate it with cutâ€"outs of flowers or birds from chinz orâ€" wall paperâ€"attach with rubber cement. Anâ€" other novelty shade you can make by pleating wall paper and running a cord through it (our bulletin tells about this too). For summer, ‘decorators often use an organdy or taffeta ruffled flounce tied around a plain shadeâ€"this gives a crisp fresh effect like a little petticoat. Around a plain white or >ggshell shade, it is sometimes quite dainty to attach a wreath of artificial flowers, such as cornflowers, daisies or tiny roses. LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT pas by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin A ‘before‘ and ‘after‘ view of the same setting., Above you see an interâ€" esting pewter base with a veryâ€"muchâ€"tooâ€"small shade of tole. Below you see the same base with the proper stretched silk shade finished with a suitable braid. How much more important the ensemble becomes. In the lower picture chairs and table with more body likewise improve the selting. Nicest Now His catch was a black bass-â€"qne of the largest to be taken out of Ramsay Lake. It mesasured 17 inches. Just oane stage advanced from the bentâ€"pin category, Robert doesn‘t beâ€" lieve in elaborate equipment. As a matter of fact, he disdains the advice| of older anglers, particularly those who | say there are no fish in Ramsay Lake.| It was last week that Robert stripâ€" ped a threeâ€"foot branch from a thick2t and attached an inexpensive line and | a black hook. â€"From behind his home, he dug up a juicy worm and applied CPrrom EL Tenâ€"yearâ€"old R« Mr. and Mrs. Ro! Charles street, is but he has reason t to the hook. Down to Ramsay Lake he went, his 10pes high, and esconced himself offâ€" hore, in a bay, at the east end of the ake. It was ten o‘clock in the evening, when there was a sudden tug on his ine. He played the fish carefully and it last landed it with a sweep of the revealing the sourc> of illumination. This type of lighting is excellent for halls and other rooms where direct lighting is not needed. Of course you also know about the very modern type of indirect lighting combinations for table and floor lamps. Look into these when selecting specialized lighting arâ€" rangements.. Watch for the I.ES. tag in buying a lamp that must do duty for close work of any type. This LE.S. tag stands for the approval of the Tllumâ€" Inating Engineering Society, a nonâ€" profit organization that has set up speâ€" cifications for lamps that fulfill scienâ€" tific lighting requirements. Now thenâ€"don‘t say we didn‘t give you ideas for making a big splash at small expens>! We mentioned our bulâ€" letin several paragraphs above, "Makâ€" ing Your Own Lamp Shades." It is available on receipt of a stamped, selfâ€" addressed envelop». addressed enveloy (Copyright, +193 Rae Bovkin.) Boy Proves Equipment Doesn‘t Make Fisherman Star) Robert Bradley, son of Robert Bradley, 260 St. is a modest fisherman, son to brag today. ge advanced from the ory, Robert doesn‘t beâ€" ‘ate equipment. As a he disdains the advice Flizabeth Macâ€" Mr. Thacker ridiculed the idea that lthe Board of Trade bureau would hand ‘out false reports to tourists, telling them that certain roads were unfit for travel, or that certain districts had no fishing to offer. The bureau is used as an advertising means by caterers from points all over the North, and cnly by giving them all a just shan» of attention could it be a success. Temagami Plaint ! "I went to Temagami not long ago, | and heard there that a tourist had been told at our bureau that he could not travel north because of bad road conâ€" dition. I told them who I was, and asked to see the tourist, but was inâ€" formed that he had gone away," the manager stated. "I wanted to see if he could tell me where he got that sort of information." The tourists are largely to blame themselves when they run into trouble |In finding their way through the country, according to Mr. Thacker. With the development of tourist trade in recent years, there are very few towns that do not operate information | bureaus, and few tourists who are not well aware of that fact. Reports of fishing and campinz conâ€" ditions are submitted by the various If they would take the time to go to such bureaus, instead of trusting to the word of some incompetent bystandâ€" er on the street. much of the trouble would be avoided. "If people com» in here asking for information about New Liskeard," said Mr. Thacker, "we give them one of these folders. We make no attempt to stzer them to any definte point, but leave that to their own desires. If a man says he is going to the West Arm of Lake Nipissing, we give him literaâ€" ture of camps in that area. Naturally, we ar> not going to hand him folders about other parts of the district." "If any tourists are receiving incorâ€" rect information about northern points it is because they enquire for informaâ€" tion from psople on the streat who are not acquainted with the matter," Mr. Thacker said.. His statement refuteos a claim of The New Liskeard Speaker. Liskeard Folder He pointed to the information bureau table, on which a large quantity of adâ€" vertising from resorts and tourist camps of the Temagamiâ€"New Liskeard area were displayed. One of the most prominent was a large yellow folder published by the New Liskeard Board of Trade. (From North Bay Nugget) Reports that false information reâ€" garding the district around New Lisâ€" keard is being given tourists by the North Bay Board of Trade Information Bureau are untrus and undeserved, acâ€" cording to T. L. Thacker, bureau manâ€" ager. Claim New Liskeard Complaint Not Right Bureau Manager a Bay Makes Reply. 044 000000:00"0:0‘00’00000”:;3 0090009900009 00004 0 00000 0000# 090 %% 04 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0@# 0 4 4 % % 6 0 8 Schumacher Phone 125 Clear B.C. Fir Vâ€"Joint; Gyproc: Hardwood Floorâ€" ing; Vâ€"Joint and Shiplap; White Pine Featherâ€" edge; Clear Fir and Pine Doors in Stock Sizes; Sash in Stock Sizes. ROUGH AND DRESSED John W. Fogg Limited Lumber, Cement, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies. COAL AND wWooDpYAaARD aAND oFFICE 8§ Spruce South Phone 32 Slabs and Coal our variety of coal Coke â€" Welsh Anthraciteâ€" Pennsylvania Blue â€" Briquettes â€" Alberta â€" Pocahontas â€" Buckâ€" wheat â€" Nut Slack â€" Steam Coal and Cannel. 11L UMBER Head Office and Yard Timmins North Northern News:â€"Labor Day, hy the way, will be on Monday, Sepiember 5, and, by official Ottawa proclamation Thanksgiving Day will be on QOctober 10, also a Monday. Then there‘s Christmas Day, which this year falls on a Sunday! THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hamilton, Oont. at Druggists, Grocers, General Stores, Each pad will kill flies all day and every day for three weeks. 3 pads in each packet. The stuff of human beings themâ€" selves must be changed in ‘order to bring about a better world in which we live, Dr. Louis Berman, New York physician and author, warns in his new book, "New Creations in Human Beâ€" ings," states Science Service., "Neither Communism nor Fascism, neither monarchy nor democracy can resorts and tourists returnmg from them. Rsports of highway C‘nditions that are givwen out by the btureau are taken from the Ontario government weekly noad bulletin. Accurate reports, obtain:d by the Nugget from the Deâ€" partmnt of Highways each morning, have also been posted in con.spicuous placss in hotels and gasoline stations throughout the city, and will in future be displayed in the information bureau. Such action will leave little basis for such unjust statements about the burâ€" eau reports as have been @Appearing periodically this summer. Must Change Humanity Before World in Better Jeseed Tam THURSDAY. JULY 8TH: 1938 Kirkland LAke Phone 393 Branch Office Timmins

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy