Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 18 May 1939, 2, p. 2

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

By GRACE THORNCLIFFE It is amazing how much style can be found in an apparently simple little print frock. Study the silk model shown nere. It is a combination of two toneés of the same print. navy with red dot, and vice versa. The navy backâ€" ground is used at the waist in a wide band and tops the gathered skirt. The dress zipperâ€"closes from the neck to below the waist in back. Besides the fuel value which butter supplies we can count on it for valuâ€" able amounts of Vitamin A which we need throughout the year as one of the safeguards of good health. Mocha Butter Frosting Oneâ€"third cup butter. Oneand oneâ€"half confectioner‘s sugâ€" Through modern machinery and reâ€" frigeration, most of the butter produced in this country has a consistently good flavor and quality. If you like figures you may be interâ€" ested to know that of the 47,000,000,000 quarts of milk producea on the farms in this country in a year, almost oneâ€" half is used to supply the cream which is turned into butter. The largest part of our butter supply wasâ€"once made on individual farms. Toâ€" day most of it comes from creameries to which the farmers bring their milk. A can of milk which has an odor of garlic will be refused and therefore the cattle are now forbidden the privilege of indulging in this particular spring vreen. The cows, hcwever, did not consider this when they nibbled the fresh young garlic which put forth its tender roots in the sprinz. flavor. Even a devotee of that particuâ€" lar savor prefers to choose the time and the place for using it! TOâ€"DAY‘S FASHIONS When T was a little girl, our butter supply came to us every week in a fiveâ€"pound brown jar covered with a salted cloth. In the sprinz it was alâ€" most certain to have a slight garlit Difference in Butter Now and in the Long Ago Domestic Science Expert Recalls the Old Fiveâ€"Pound Jar of Butter and Contrasts it With the Modern Pound Print and the Roiled Varieties of Toâ€"day. C Iwo Tones, ~same Print By EDITIH M. BARBER scourge Dr. Barton‘s latest booklet entitied "Seourge" with reliable information reâ€" gardinz the two most dreaded social diseases, ginorrhaea and <yphilis, is now available. Know the facts, proâ€" tect yourself, and save endless worry. Address your request to Dr. Barton, The Beoll Library, 247 West 43ra St., New York, N.Y.. enclosing Ten Cents to cover cost of service and handling, and mention The Advance, Timmins. (Registered in accordance with the Convright Act). One of the mistakes made in the use of the new insulin is in giving it too often or in doses that are too large, beâ€" cause it seems to act so slowly. Dr. Joslin says "A diabetic patient has 20 vears or more ahead of him andg one need not hurry." Dr. Joslin answers the criticism of some unthinking individuals who state that there are now more diabetics than before the discovery of insulin. The apparent increase in numbers is due to (a) a more systematic search for diabetics and the closer megical superâ€" vision of the population in generail, (b) many more people now live beyond the age of 40 years when the onset of diabetes is twice as frequent as it is up to the agse of 40, and (c) diabetics live longer than they used to. What would, on first sight, be conâ€" sidered a most unfavorable result from the use of this new insulin compound is the apparent increase in the number of cases of diabetes. Dr. E. P. Joslin, Boston, whose name has been assicatâ€" ed with diabetes for many yearsâ€"long before insulin was discoveredâ€"points out in the Michigan State Medical Jourâ€" nal that protamine zinc insulin has probably ‘increased the number of diaâ€" betic patients using insulin by 70,000. This is due almost entirely to the fact that the new insulin is injected but once a day whereas the original insulin is injected three times a day, a regulâ€" tion that many diabetics would not or sould not follow. In the treatment of diabetes, howâ€" ever, research workers socught to preâ€" pare insulin in such a way that it could be taken by mouth instead of by the hypodermic needle three times a day. While no method of preparing insulin so that it will be effectively takâ€" en by mouth has been discovered, what is helping the situation to some extent is the new treatment by protamine zink insulin. I have soken before of this treatment and its advantages and disâ€" advantages as recorded by physicians csing special work in diabstes. More About the New â€"~Insulin Fsr Diabetics i When Drs. Banting and Best, of Torâ€". onto, discovered insulin, and Dr. Collip,, now of Montreal, made it safer to use,: it was felt that all had been learned about insulin in the treatment of diaâ€". betes. Many research workers then. began experimenting with insulin in the treatment of other ailment such ; as lack of appetite, dementia praccox (persistent dream state) and others. (Copyright, 1939, by The Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.) Cream butter. Add salt, pepper and parsley, then lemon juice very slowly. Use as sauce for fish or meat. Maltre d‘Hotel Butter Oneâ€"quarter cup butter. Oneâ€"half teaspoon salt. Oneâ€"eighth teaspoon pepper. Oneâ€"half tablespoon parsiey, chopped. Threeâ€"quarters â€" tablespoon , lemon juice. One egg yolk. Salt. One tablespnon boiled coffee. One tablespoon cocoa. Cream butter and add oneâ€"half cup of sugar gradually. Combine with Beaten esg yolk, salt, coffee and cocoa. Add remaining sugar, working it in well. This amount is sufficient to cover a cake eight inches square. One tablespoon of orange juice and one teaspoon of lemon juice may be substiâ€" tuted for the coffee and cocoa. (by James W. Barton, M.D.) Pours ibedsraiseda foot or so above the surâ€" rounding paths presents a very attracâ€" "tive appearance to the eve and is a i fine «errangement for dGdrainage, but !during the hot months of summer |conservation of moisture is far more »; important than anything else, and unâ€" iies your garden is situated where cannot easily escape it mignt | be better not to raise your beds high. Among the various inquiries that we receive. the question of what fertilizer to use and where to obtain :t crops up very often. The supply of wellâ€" rotted barnvard manure does not apâ€" jmmmgmy with a hoe and raked e w* _ 7 t‘ |completely over so that an entirely new surface is exposed and the old |agepleted surface buried. The beds or ‘borders should then be pulverized parently equal the demand and its cost is very aoften comparatively equal the demand and its cost is very often comparatively high. In some sections of this locality, however, humus is enâ€" tirely lacking and some of coarse orâ€" smooth. Whether to build your beds high or leave them level with the rest of the ground is a debatable question. | (Contributed by the Timmins Horticulâ€" tural Society) _ _May is undoubtedly the busiest and most important month in the year to the gardener, dedicated mainly to the garden spade and the fresh girding up of loins, orâ€"to express it more accurâ€" atelyâ€"a general loosening up of joints that in no way seem to relish the opâ€" portunity suddenly presented to them o regain their oldâ€"time suppleness, and creak less like the hinges on the garden gate. Upon the preparation of a garden for seed or plants at this time depends its success or failure later. The ground should be dug as soon as it is ary enough to be turned over without packing. Barnyard fertlizer should be spread before digging and buried with last year‘s topâ€"soil. Digging must be carried out methodically, the depth of the spade. It is not enough to merely produce an upheaval in the yard:; every spadeful shouid be carefully turned Success or Failure Depends on the Results of the Work Done Now: Some Helpful Suggestions for the Work of Gardening. Questions Asked in Regard to Fertilizers. Here are some of the cues she gives women to help them in buying the hat "a man will admire!" Pay Attention, Ladies The width of your cheekbones has a lot to do with the hat selection you make. Your hat must balance them. Too wide cheekbones is no proper foundation for a tiny hizh crown hat! Too narrow cheekbones cannot carry off a swooping wide brim and a heavy crown! May the Most Important Month for the Gardener Small featured ladies, and those deliâ€" cate in appearance, cannot wear heavy hats even though Garbo looks devine in The middle aged with large figure looks ridiculous in tiny hats that are kittenish. Strive for proper balance of . _ Unless your face is small, and your skin is young and not wrinkled, keep away from off the face models. Such a hat draws attention to your face and skin! Although Miss Tennyson is as pretty as a picture herself, and appears to have little difficulty in selecting a chapeau or wearing it smartly, yet she too must watch her P‘s and Q‘s when she starts out for a new head wardâ€" Every woman must take time to buy a hat and follow certain fundaâ€" mental rules," claims pretty blonde Jean Tennyson, of the Chicago Opera Company. And I agree with her. Too frequently you see girls and women wearing the wrong headgear and their entire appearance is spoiled. Take Time to Select Your Hat If You Wish It To Flatter You. Extreme as it is, this Dache model is most becoming to JEAN TENNYSON, Chicago Opera Star, wheo is a milliner‘s dekght building up the soil. a medium for storing laid out in neat THE PORCUPINE ADVANCKE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO orâ€" for the ground. It is safer not to plant beans, corn, or Oother tender plants outâ€". side until the end of the month. Dwarh Zinnias, Calendula, Casmos, Eschscholtâ€" i gz:a {(California Poppy) Calliopsis andi Bachelor Button may als> be sown in the border. A dwarf. compact type of Bachelor Button may be obtained in Jubilee Gem. Zinnias need protection against frost. Sweet Peas need careful soil preparaâ€" i tion to geit the best results. Daggmg* a trench about a foot deep and partnils packing it with barnyard manure is the ‘ first step in sweet pea culture. Cover | this with soil and sow. The seed should g be covered about two inches deep. Conâ€" ungous flowering and the maintenance of long stems are Gue, in a great measâ€" ure, to the health and vigor of the plants. Be prepared, therefore, for| early spraying against aphids. One| maquanotwaer,wizhamaem castile soap added to make it â€"stick, is an effective spray against aphids, or Try The Advance Want Advertisements dutch setts, parsnips and lettuce should be sown immediately, if not already in up a reserve supply of moisture also. This applics especially to those secâ€" tions where the subsoil is composed enâ€" tirely of sand and grayel. Barnyard manure is also excellent to help break up heavy clay. Plants need a judicious balance of both mineral and organic nourishment to thrive. A gooad artiâ€" ficial fertilizer may therefore be used to supplement the barnyard manure. You need go no further than your loâ€" cal garden supply merchants in your search for a good mineral fertilizer. A combination of 4% nitrogen or amâ€" monia, 10% superphosphates and 8% potash makes an excellent all round fertilizer: twentyâ€"five pounds would probably be sufficient for a small garâ€" dgen, depending, of course, on its state of fertility. Your local store also carâ€" ries sheep manure; this a safe, reliable and very convenient type of fertilizer; easy to handle and quite harmless to foliage or roots of plants. (Copyright 1939, by The Bell Syndiâ€" cate, Inc.) Over forty should refuse to wear shiny strawâ€"softer materials such as fur, felt, dull lacey patterns are much kinder to the face. Brims are usually too unless you keep your skin attracâ€" tively fresh. Veils and flowers are softâ€" ening. And . . . your hat should be bought last. Your hat tops your entire enâ€" semble, it deco¢rates your head, it draws attention to You. Buy one which goes well with what you plan to wear and choose a color to blend with your outâ€" fit and one which flatters your own natural coloring. If your budget is limited avoid the fads. If you all will take a tip â€"or two from our chic French sister you will learn what hat materials can do to your beauty! Shorter girls, and those inclined to be stocky, must definitely select lines in a hat which add heitht. Picture hats are not for them even though their heart craves for the romantic! Fluffy types must pass up the exâ€"| treme. _ Such models will dim your. sparkle, whereas a dainty number will emphasize your attractive vivacrty ;, If you are tall and commandmg, reâ€" i member your Gignity. A hat should dramatize your poiseâ€"a rare quality | to ‘be cherished and shown offâ€" to ad-. vantage! hat and YOU so your age and size will be minimized! of There has been keen interest in each succeeding serial story in The Adâ€" vance, but the new one commencing in this issue should hold even more than the usual attention. It is "Table Top," by the famous English novelist, Eden Phillpott. â€"Many readers have been delighted with this gifted author‘s tales of Devonshire, England. In "Table Top" they will find a new setâ€" Aime Clement pleaded guilty to makâ€" ing a dangerous turn from Fourth Ave. to Cedar St., thereloy driving recklessly. He said that the turn he made was the only alternative to hitting a motorcycle. Fine was $15 and costs with his driving permit suspended for ten days. Serial Feature by Famous English Novelist Great New Story Starting in The Advance This Issue. He had had a couple of bottles of beer earlier in the afternson admitted Hurley on the witness stand. He was griving at 25 or 30 miles an hourâ€"not over ‘because his car started to "shimâ€" my" at a speed over thirty. Hurley was driving so fast that tns whesls of his car would leave the road when he made a turn, said Constable Roland Munro. A companion in the car with Hurley told police that the accused man "always drives crazy wheâ€" ther he is drinking or not." He said that he warned Hurley that he would be picked up. Constable Joseph Gariepy said that Hurley was driving east on Wilson Ave. Heo was passing cars and cutting in at a speed «of 40 or 45 miles an hour. and the other constable managed to catch him in the police car after a chase of several blocks. Stewart Hurley was charged and conâ€" victed of reckless driving. A fine of $25 and costs with the alternative of 30 days in jail, was imposed. His drivâ€" ing permit was oxdexed cancelled for three months. Constable Amlin said that he and anâ€" other constable saw Mrs. Gauthicr driving on ‘Third Ave. When they stopped the car and went over to it she ind the the man with hor had clhanged places. However, they saw her move from btchind the whocl. "I knew when I talked to her after her last conviction that she didn‘t inâ€" tend to chey my instructions and thas she would be back here," said Magisâ€" trate Atkinson of Simone Gauthisr, who was charged with drivinz an autoâ€" mobile while her permit was under susâ€" pension. Sentence was the alternative of a fine of $50 and costs or 30 days in jJail. "Knew She‘d Be Back" Says the Magistrate of Traffic Violator Simone Gauthier Makes Seâ€" cond Court Appearance, for Driving While Permit Suspended. Little Lessons in Home Economy! eyes, and the heat /Q/- upsets you, and the waste of ‘\(.-f/‘ leaf ... COOK WITH ELECTRICITY. Then just snap the switch and begin to really enjoy cooking. overdone roasts @- gets you down ... Turn over a new When you‘re "fed to the teeth" with r uU 0 Y in ts €3 8 5 l fir ulky 5 f 0 j e 3 k 0 m 5 e h t d n a »{ ood W A beantiful new Electric Range like this Gâ€"E model can be installed in your kitchen for a small down payment. Balance on easy terms. After calling the meeting to order horseshoe was formed. The «acting color party for the evening was Chrisâ€" tine Brown, Vivian Pazzetta, Marian McLeoa. The Guide Prayer was then repeated. The followinz: Beryl Crisâ€" pin, Everil Eade, Pesgy Lloyd and Helâ€" en Rodgers had the honour of being enrolled by ‘Capt. Wadsworth of the 51st Company, who was the guest oI the evening. Due to the splendid work they had been doing during the winter they wore rewarded with a surprise party. Games were played and lunch served. There was a good deal of ~â€" _ The weekly meeting of the 106th L.O. D.E. Girl Guide Company was held as usu@l on Monday evening at 7 pm. "Table Top" starts in Peru and proâ€" ceeds to anâ€" island on the equator. These new locations afford the author wonderful opportunities which he «uses with the skill of a great craftsman, It would be absurd to try to tell the story of "Table Top", when the author does it so well in the tale itself. â€" Tt may be noted, however, that miuichof the plot hinges round a remarkable parrot of seventy years of age.. The parrot is the repository of the secret on which the story turnsâ€"and the parrot talks. To learn what it is all about just read the opening chapters in this issue, and follow the story to its thrillâ€" ing conclusion. ting but the interest, the thrills, the romance equals the writer‘s other charmint stories. GIRL o GUIDFS °6 7 For an Enjoyable Vacation Swimming, Boating, Fishing, Tennis, Baseball. Accommodation for 175 Guests. Excellent Cuisine. Finest Dance Pavilion in Muskoka. For Orange Pekoe Blend DANCING TO JACK REID‘S NEW ORCHESTRA Illustrated Folder and Rates Write Jack Tresidder, Manager, Port Stanton, P:O., Ont. or P.O. Box 1030, Kirkland Lake Ontario‘s Beauty Spot Combining Woodland and Lake SPARROW LAKE, MUSKOKA NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER LIMITED Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited Controlling and Operating SPEND IT AT discussion over the possibility of going to Sudbury for June 5th to see the King and Queen. It is expected quite a number will arranze to go. Before closing prizes were presented to the four who sold the most tickets for the concert presented May Marion MclLeod came first and received a loveâ€" ly birthday stone ring; second. Freda Campbell, a pair of hose; third, Erwen Williams, received a Guide purse and pencil; fourth, Helen Rodgers also reâ€" coived a Guide pencil. A happy eveâ€" ming was spent by the Company and all left joyfully, looking forward to the hike planned for Saturday afternoon. ‘Guides, don‘t forget the time, 1.30 p.m. and bring your lunch. Lets‘ hope t will be warm; at least fair weather. BUSINESS SUITS e SPORTS SUITS ®e â€" OVERCOATS $45 . . $55 . . 865 Materials imported from the best London Houses.,Individually tailored to your measures. Customs Tailors to Men for Over Fifty Years 94, King St. W. Toronto Samples and sef{â€"measurement form on request. THURSDAY, MAY 1i8TH, 1939 coal and SPRING

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy