Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 22 Jun 1939, 2, p. 5

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I write frequently about migraneâ€" oneâ€"sided headacheâ€"â€"because thousands suffer with it and the only relief usually obtained is by going to ‘bea for two or three Cays to a week by which time the attack passes, As the cause has been believed to be due to overwork, mortal and physicalâ€"rest would thus seem to be the logical treatâ€" ment. Perhaps the most efficient treatâ€" ment discovered is that of ergotamine tartrate, full details of which were given by Dr. Mary O‘Sullivan some months ago in the Journal of the Amerâ€" ican Medical Association. The ergotâ€" amine tartrate is given by injection into the muscles by a physician or may be taken in tablet form by mouth. Even when taken ‘by mouth however the size of the dose should be as ordered by the physician,. The dose usually deâ€" pending upon the severity of the atâ€" tack. This drug is given different names by the different Gdrug manâ€" Your Own Home i8221A $25. a month Migraincâ€"Oneâ€"Sided Headache will build you a modern 5â€"room house with Aull basement, on your our lot, under the National Housing Act, including architecâ€" tural fees. WHATEVER YOU BUILD! (by James W. Barion, M.D.) No matlter what type of construction you are planning, you can build it better with Bricks or Blocks, for they are cheaper, 100%, Fireproofâ€" More Permanent and Easier to Lay giving you a big saving on Labour Costs, Plant 6163 COLUMBUS AVE Porcupine Brick Block Supply Co. Bricks or Blocks Architectural Draughtsman FIEFTH AVENUE Laurence Pacey OPEN EVENINGS 7â€"10 Phone Enguiries Invited Will more IVIW IN L I help your business qrow Have you a new development in mind? Will a rearrangement of your operations make them more profitable? Have you a new product to be marketed? Do not let a lack of ready money restrict your progress. A Loan from this Bank may take care of your requireâ€" ments. In addition to the money this Bank has to lend, it places its experience and judgment at your service. Make this your Bank and use it. Consult the Manager of our nearest Branch. Timmins Branch THE DOMINION BANK Rock, Sand and Gravel For Sale 13095 Branches also at Kirkland Lake and Rouyn, Que of PBoutrg m «3 Ehat Boup BUILD WIT ESTABLISHED 1871 MONFEY Physicians have found that occurs in families and in individuais who work hard or do things in the hard or "tense" way. In other words inâ€" dividuals of this type need only an exciting cause to bring on an atâ€" tack. ufacturers but druggists know these names. graine is civen by Dr. W. H. Riley. RBattle Crgek. in the Michigan Medical Society Journal, who, among other points, mentions the following: of migraine are depressive emotions such as those assozciated with worry, anxiety, fear, anger, fatigue, exhausâ€" tion, loss of sleep, eyestrain, excessive use of the eyes, using the eyes in a bright light.. 2.. Being sensitive to certain foodsâ€" e:rgs, fat rich foods, milk, cream, ice cr:am, wheat and others. 3. Increased alkalinity of the bloo. These individuals often work so hard they starve themselves and often do not eat encugh meat and fish. 4. Spasm in the blood vessels in the brain. In the opinion of Dr. Riley this spasm of the arteries of the brain which of course prevents a proper supply of blood from reaching the brain for many Oother symptome besides the headaches, such as temporary loss Oof lszght and speech, and also dizziness. Lhese individuals who have this tenâ€" ‘dency to migraine .should learn them that it is tenseness that causes the spasm of the ibloodvessels, and thus the migraine. i MIGRAINE Miz;iaincâ€"oreâ€"s.ded headache is one ;31 th2 commonest results of food alâ€" ! ergy. Ooher ailments due to overâ€" sensitiveness to certain foods are desâ€" cribed and diet suggestions to overâ€" come these ailments are given in Dr. Barton‘s helpful booklet "No. 106) enâ€" | titled "Focd Aller;y”. send Ten Cents to cover cost of service and mailing to The Boll Library, 247 West 43rd. St., iNew York, N. YÂ¥ mcntiomn(r The Adâ€" | vance, Timmins. (Registered in Accordance with the \Copyright Act.) Gicbe and Mail: President Roosevelt‘s tcast to Their Majestiss and the King‘s reply were masterpieces of restraingd oratory, each revealing what may be done with the English language by those who know the value of words, Some further information on miâ€" r. A- Burtc Manager PHONE 1680 It‘s no insult to be called a hick these daysâ€"in fact it‘s quite the style to be soing back to the farm. This trend to the country isn‘t just a playâ€"time idea of the wealthy. It has become a pactical and pleasant way of life for many people of ordinary means who have discovered that, with modern means of quick transportation and communication life in the country can be far more satisfying and secure than city life with its uncertainties and crowded living conditions. THE HAYSEED MOTIF Naturally as we turn our eyes specuâ€" latively toward the rural scene, we are creating a vogue for country things. For everything that goes on in the world has its influence on the way we ‘arm Designs and Garden Vegetables Take Precedent in New Summer Decorative Artsâ€"It Must be All a Part of the Backâ€"toâ€"theâ€"Land Movement well as out. ‘Ssome of the wall papers are the nicest of th2 group. There‘s one that takes a bird‘s eyeâ€"view of a farm house with barn, fields, fences stock all laid out neatly, which makes a grand wall paper to use with most any forthright unpretentious furniture such as maple or painted pieces or even with some modern furniture. We‘d probâ€" ably want to have the plainest of white muslin curtains used with this paper, and braided rugs. Or it would also be quite stunning in combination with some of the new textural fahrics. wWITH BIG WHITE TABLECLOTH Another wall paper recently introduâ€" ced has a picnic for its theme, a real cldâ€"fashioned picnic the kind where you spread a big white tablecicth on the ground and lay out the lunch on it Rather modern in feeling, for all of that, this paper is in clear fresh colors, so you could use it with furniture of some dignity or with some brightly painted furniture. ; CHICKENS® AND COWS Amonz the rustic fabrics, there is a blocked linen that has great style about it. In cream with a design in brown and orange it is copied after a handblocked pattern from a Finnish farmhouse with chickens and cows, windmill and silo. This would be grand material to use with oak furniture, or with straight forward types of walnut or with most any maple. Men would like it for its coloringâ€"the design is conventional so you needn‘t get. too worried over its country flavor if you wouldn‘t want to go in for anything too obvious. Those chaming pastoral fabâ€" rics from France, the toile de Jouys, are coming back into style too. live and on the things we use in our homes. When the designers got wind of this rather sudden widespread inâ€" terest in rusticity, they turned with gusto to their drawing boards and dashed off all sorts of zayly hayseedy dosizns, suitable for use in town as Even rugs are feeling the pull of the A hand blocked Finnish design was the source for this bright linen recently vresented by a leading American _ manufacturer. Farm â€" yard animals, trees, windmills and barns contribute an attractive (Qne of the newer wall papers has a farm yard deâ€" sign for its motif with orchard and field, windmill and haystacks making a pleasant pattern. THE RURAL NOTE IN CURRENT DECORATIONS THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINB, ONTARIO PLEASANT HoOMES great open spaces. One of the most \ dramatic rugs at the World‘s Fair is shown in the Polish pavilionâ€"woven ‘into its design are fields, gardens \streams. And in the Norwegian pavilâ€" ‘ion there is a large round rug in the 'main lobby which has mountains and | fiords, rivers and Viking ships. In the ‘American building, a handwoven, handâ€" carved rug in simiâ€"circular shape repâ€" !re.sents the industries and products of each of the states while two smallet matching rugs represent the products respectively of the Pacific possessions ‘and the Atlantic possessions. You‘d be surprised how decorative are pineâ€" |app1es, sheaves of wheat and other ‘farm products. by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin Speaking ‘of wheatâ€"it is one of the | most popular motifs just now, even in sophisticated rooms and decorative deâ€" ta.ils. At the Golden Gate Exposition in San Franscisco, a pair of tables of white plaster in the shapes of shocks 11 Wmdsdr Avenue Timmins â€" Phone 945 with a modern O o R a D efficient heating system SUNMMER IS THE TIME TO PREPARE Hot Water Heating Shocks of Whceat A picnic in the country is the subject of this new wall paper in clear pastel colourings. PLUMBING HEATING motif. The colourings are splashy and brightâ€" the one we liked best was a natural ground with pattern in brown and orange tones, of whcat are smart and interesting There are fabrics and poteries using the wheat motif, including a gracefully delicate celaness ninon with a wheat motif in self tone. Potery has for quite some time reeâ€" ognized the charm of rural themes Kitchen garden vegetables and fruits are popular and decorative on plates and platters and the same designs are used to decorate wooden salad bowls and grand big cheese and buffet trays There‘s a finse interesting wood from Hawaii that is being made into those handsome salad bowls carved in deep leaf .shapes. Naturally you would want table linâ€" en to go with these backâ€"toâ€"nature acâ€" cessories, and you can find plenty of it. Printed clothes with fruits and kitâ€" chen vegetables are shown all around and in addition it is the vogue to do a bit of individual applique in rural motifs. We‘ve seen checked gingham table mats appliqued on one side with barnyard animals, and a coarse white linen crash is stunning with Tyrolean ccuniry dancing figures appliqued in chocked ginzsham. Plaid fruit, appliqued on a plain white cloth, is amusing too. S3 is the pie clothâ€"this is round and made with p‘e shaped wedges of cherry patterned cotton alternated with wedâ€" ges of plain white. All of which just goes to show how the world goes from one extreme to the other. Here it‘s been no time at ali since it was the thing to move "in" and now it‘s the thing to move "out". And so we warn you, as you get interested in the decorative rural designs for home,, you‘ll be joining the ranks of those who are countryâ€"bound. Whether you mean to or not, the urge will creop up on you as you contemplate the fresh simplicity of the vegetables on youtr lplatos which match, day by day, the 'well ordered life on your wall paper farm,. For now that the novelty Oof NO CAsSH NEEDED 2 YEAKRS TO PAY town life has worn off, life looks prettly comfortable and secure down on the Six Banks in Rouyn and Noranda for 20,000 People The Rouynâ€"Noranda Press On Thursâ€" day last had the following:â€""At the close of business toâ€"day, there will be three banks in Rouyn instead of four. Customers of the Imperial Bank reâ€" ceived notices on Friday that the busiâ€" ness was being transferred to the Doâ€" minion Bank and that the Dominion Bank is closing its Larder Lake branch on the same date and transferring its business to the Imperial Bank here. The Imperial Bank has been in operaâ€" tion in Rouyn since May 8th, 1937, when J. R. Bunn was appointed manâ€" ager. Mr. Bunn was transferred to the bank inspection staff and in Januâ€" ary, 1938, Mr. Scott replaced him. The Dominion Bank had opened a branch three months earlier, when only the Canadienne Nationale were established in town. As reported last week, Mr. Scott will go to Toronto, as relieving manager of Toronto branches, for the summer. Donat Houle, teller, goes to Noranda branch of Imperial Bank, reâ€" lievinz for summer months. Louis Beâ€" land, ledgerâ€"keeper, goes to the Timâ€" MATERIALS FOR EVERY BUILDING or REMODELLING NEED AT LOWEST PRICES HEAD OFFICE SCHUMACHER PHONE 708 FELDMA N TIMBER COMPANY LIMITED LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS GENERAL CONTRACTORS COMPLETE STOCK AT ALL TIMES Asphalt Shingles Brick Cedar Siding Cedar Posts Cement and Lime Cement Blocks Doors (all kinds) Fir Lumber Flooring Flue Lining Frames (Door and Window) Glass Insulation (Red Top Wool) Insul Board Now! with our help You‘ll be amazed at the low cost of the whole job, and it is the easiest way to protect your home and maks it more beautiful, If you wish we can arrange a loan for you under the Home Improvement Plan. PAINTINXG CONTRACTOR 265 Elm street N. Ph Free Estimate on Request mins branch. For their size, the twin cities together have as much banking accommodation as any place in Canada. In addition to the three in Rouyn, there are the Imperial, Royal and Comâ€" merce in Noranda, six banks, to serve a population of under 20,000 in the towns." Try The Advance Want Advertisements on First Mortgages Available in REAL ESTATE INSUE STEAMSHIP OFFICE 20 Pine North Phs Timmins 1135 TIMMINS SCHUMACHER SsoOUTH PORCUPINE Paid Back Monthly over 3 to 5 Years. APPLY TO Insul Brick Siding Lawn Fence Locks and Butts Lumber Metal Corner Mouldings Nails Oakum O.P.WwW. Paints Plaster Rocklath Roofing Sash Sheetrock Shiplap Veneer Vâ€"Joint Phone 1174â€"W MILL OFFICE MINS INSURANCE Phones 1135 1580 PHONE 709

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