Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 24 Jul 1939, 1, p. 2

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If you want to be a popular weekâ€" end visitor, I‘d advise you to read the garden magazines and farm bulletins If you can qualify as an authority you may be able to get away with acting as a supervisor. Otherwise you‘d betâ€" ter do vour exercises, every morning Blueberries Among the Popular Fruits Toâ€"day "What is the Difference Between Blueberries and and Huckleberries?" Asks Domestic Science Expert. Her Own Answer is "Who Knows?" Some Blueberry (and Huckleberry) Recipes. and stint . of your favorite occupation is berry pickâ€" ing, you may be allowed to roam the hedges, When you return, it is well to display a few scretches to testify that you filled your basket yourself, instead of stopping at a neighboring farm or shopping in the village to purâ€" chase your quota. I‘m a better picker than I am A weeder. I found, however, that gatherâ€" ing blueberries in New Jersey was not the easy task that it is in Maine where one bush will sometimes provide a pint or more. The wild berries in our section of the country are small, although the cultivated berries, which we find in the shops are so large that they seem like a new berry. It seems pies, cobbler or mulffins, and thereâ€" fore we usually reserve them for serâ€" ving with cream for breakfast or as a dessert. At this point the question of the difâ€" ference between blueberry and huckleâ€" berries should probably be brought up The flavor of the two berries is very much the same. The former, howâ€" ever, have fewer seeds and a frosty bloon. The others have. a clear dark color, and~generally _ripen« a little latâ€" ter in the season. I will be satisfied with either one for use in cooking. There is just as much discussion in regard to the proper use of the term blackberries . Up in the part of the country from which I came, the small early dark berries were called black raspberries. (The large Ones were known as dewberries, and the highly flavored small berries which ripen later in tihne season were the only ones which were allowed to use the title blackberry. Of course, it doesn‘t matâ€" ter what you call them, when you are enjoying them. When in doubt as to what to have for dessert in the summer, you may alâ€" ways choose a combination of cooked fruit and rich biscuit dough, which you may call a cobbler, a slump, grunt or hot fruit pudding, For these, the fruit is usually placed with sugar in the baking dish, and covered with the dough. ‘ Sometimes, the dough is pat=â€" ted into a thin oblong, covered with the fruit and sugar and then rolled. You may also stew the fruit on top of the stove, and drop soft biscuit dough on it. In this case, the kettle should not be covered while the dumpâ€" lings are cooking. Sugar berries may be put into any mixture which may be baked in rings or in pie pans when you may call it tea cuauke. PAGE TWO To be at their best, cobblers, muffins griddle cakesâ€"whatever you bake with berriesâ€"should be served piping hot. The butter should melit when it touâ€" ches the hot bread. ‘Cream or sauce should serve the double purpose of adding to the flavor and of cooling the cobbler just enough to avoid burnâ€" ed tongues. 2 cups water. 1 cup sugar, Grated rind of 1 lemon. 1 1â€"2 cups raspberry juice, 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 egg Make a syrup of water, sugar and grate dlemon rind. Boil five to ten minutes. Cool, strain add fruit jJuices and freeze to a mush. Turn into a chilled bowl.. Beat egg white until stiff and fold into the frozen mixture. Reâ€" turn to refrigerator and continue freezing, stirring once or twice. Melon Halves With KRaspbertie "Thoroughly ~chill cantaloupe and raspberries. Before serving, cut the melons in halves and remove centres or slice in 1 or 1 1â€"2 inch pieces and peel. Fill centres with raspberri@s and sprin kle with powdered sugar. Garnish with mint leaves. 1â€"2 teaspoon salt 2 cups flour 1 cup milk 1 cup huckleberries. - Cream butter and sugar and add egg. Sift baking powder, salt and rest of fluor and add alternatively with the teaspoons baking powder By EDITH M. BARBER Muckleberrty Muffins ecup butter cup sugar Raspberry Sherbet 1 autnority you ay with acting vise you‘d betâ€" every morning 1 esn do voutr milk,. Add floured berries twentyâ€"five minutes at 409 in greased muffin pans. T may be baked in a greasec in a moderate oven for thi: and served with a hard or c Mix and sift ingredients. Beat eggs. Stir in shortening, then milk. Stir well and add dry ingredients all at once. Add berries. â€" Beat well and bake in hot waffle iron until no steam escapes between edges. S@rve with ice cream, hard sauce or with butter. Blackberry Curls Rich biscuit dough 2 tablespoons of softened butter 1 1â€"2 cups of sliced blackberries 2â€"3 cups of sugar ' Make rich biscuit dough and roll out oneâ€"quarter inch thick. Spread with butter. . Sprinkle with berries and sugar. Roll as for jelly roll; cut into oneâ€"inch pieces. Place in greased muffin pans, cut edges up. Bake in hot oven for about 25 minutes Serve as a tea biscuit or as a dessert with whipped cream (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Alex. I. Wells, New York, New King of Lions Clubs â€"~Chicago (Special) July 22â€"A new King Lion was crowned yesterday in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, when the inâ€" ternational convention of Lions Clubs unanimously elscted Alexander T. Wells of New York City president of Lions International. Wells, who is a lawyer, servad the past year as first viceâ€"president and was United States representative upon the International Council of Lions Clubs, He succeeds retiring president Walter F. Dexter, state superintendent of public instruc- tion in California. The voting concluded a fourâ€"day convention climaxing the association‘s greatest year for growth. In the past twelve months charters were issued to 557 new Lions Clubs, an all time high, and more than 17,000 net gain in memâ€" bership was reported t5 the convention by Secretary General Melvin Jones of Chicago. Lions Clubs are now the most numerous service club in the United States and Canadjda. There are 3,500 in the association, with a membership of 125.000. ‘The new president is a native O6f New York city, where he has always lived, He was educated in the public schools and at St. Lawrence Academy, New York; Dwight Preparatory School 21 and the New York Law School. He has been a member of the Bar of the State of New York for the past thirtyâ€"three years. Wells has held many offices both in his own Lions Club and in the Internaâ€" tional Aassociation. He is a past disâ€" trict governor of New York state, has served on the board of directors, was chairman of the committee on internaâ€" tional relationships for one year, and in 1936 was electer third viceâ€"president. In succeeding years he has been unâ€" animously elected to fill the second and first yviceâ€"presidencies, Annual Meeting North Whitney Routine Event were reâ€"elected and reâ€" ports approved and adopted at the annual meeting of sharsholders of North Whitney Mines, held in Toâ€" ronto yesterday afternoon, when 21,â€" 190,488 shares were represented in perâ€" son and by proxy. At present time, it was stated, comâ€" pany is awaitinz arrival of a new minâ€" ing plant and equipment for a hydro substation, but this is expected to be installed and actual underground work started within a month. Thomas W. Fage, the new minge manager, is on the property attending to foundation work and preparing for the underground campaign. First work will} be on the 250â€"foot level. Crosscut was previously driven to the 30â€"foot shear zone so that drifting can‘start at once, cups milk cups blueberric Blueberry Woffles ups flour aspoon salt ablespoons sugar. poons baking powder J# NEW YORK NEW YORK 1939 â€" PRESIDENT 1940 % â€" LIONS INTERNA TION AL ingredient 101 Funeral Saturday at Schumacher of Florenz Radosevich in the Argentine; and one sister and brother in the Old Country, The funâ€" eral which was a very large one was held on Saturday afternoon at five s‘clock from the residence on Fifth Ave. to St. Alphonsus Parish Church. Father Martindale conducted the funâ€" eral service. A large number of his fellow countrymen attended, There were many beautiful floral tributes. Burial was in Timmins Cemetery. The pallbearers were Walter â€" Gregurich, Jchn Ernie, John Radosevich, Bob 3an. F. Radosevich and George Pake. Funeral Yesterday of Schumacher Boy Struck by Car Schumacher, July 22, (Special to The Advance)â€"Everybody was shockâ€" ed when they heard of the death of son of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Young, of Kingston, and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Craig, Fourth Ave. Mrs. Young and Charles motored up about two weeks ago, and on Thursâ€" day night Mrs. Young was visiting her sister, Mrs. Gordon J¢ohnston, 93 First Ave., when the fatal acident hapâ€" _ pened. went to cross the street when he was struck down by a car driven by William Flynn, Fourth Ave. Dr. Armitage and Dr. MacLean were called but his injuries were so serious the little lad only lived a few minâ€" ‘utes. A sad feature of the accident ‘,was that Lyman: Young, brother of Charles, was a passenger in the car that hit him. Mr. and Mrs. Young ilived in Schumacher prior to moving to Kingston. The funeral, which was a very large one, was held on Sunâ€" day afternoon at 3.30 pm. from the home of Mr. and (Mrs. Gordon Johnâ€" ston to Trinity United Church, The Rev. F. J. Baine conducted the funerâ€" I.al services. Burial was in South Porâ€" cupine Cemetery. The pallbearers were:â€"Walter Davidson, Noble Cousinâ€" leau, Keith Hannah and Hector Bomâ€" bardier. Other News from Schuâ€" macher and District. | â€"â€"Miss Nancy Holme, of Janesville, ! Wisconsin, arrived in town last week with her cousin, Miss Mary Emma scavlem, and will spend some time visiting here. ' Mrs. D. Craig is very ill at her home from heart trouble. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, of Val d‘Or are in town for the funeral of Mrs Jackson‘s brother Charles Young. argely Attended and with Many â€" Beautiful â€" Floral Tributes. Mrs. A. H. Cooke, and son, Weseley, left on Saturday for North Bay, where they will spend a few days visiting. Mrs. Harry Rathwell and son arâ€" rived in town last week to join her husband at Pearl Lake. Miss Agnes Robertson, First Ave., and Miss Marguerite Smith, Second Ave., left on Saturday morning for a two week‘s vacation at Bangor Lodge, Muskoka. New Aerial Service Will Not Affect North Bay The new air mail and passenger serâ€" vice linkinz Toronto, Ottawa and Monâ€" treal, ‘Inaugurated on Tuesday by Transâ€"Canada Air Lines, will not affect the schedule of planes operating in and out of North Bay airport, TCA officials have announced. The new planes might land at North Bay if weather conditions at Toronto or Ottawa were to delay their landing at either of those cities. Apart from that, however, they will not touch this city. The commencement of the two new trips has â€"caused Transâ€"Canada Air Lines to revise the numbering of their trips. Former Trip No. 1A, operating between Montreal, Ottawa, North Bay and Toronto each night, is now Trip No. 21. What was formerly Trip No. 2A, covering the TorontoNorth Bayâ€" Ottawaâ€"Montreal journey each mornâ€" ing, has been numbered Trip No. 22. The Advance Want Advertisements THE PORCUPTINE ADVANCRE, TTMMTNS, ONTARIO The primary rule for hot weather, if you wish to keep.comfortable, is to eat lightly. Salads, eggs, milk and fruit will give you ample nourishment and you can do nicely. without heavier foods. Contrary to bslief, you should not drink iced drinks frequently. Cool drinks yes, but not iced. Beer and other alcoholic drinks are heatinz: and also weight producing. The daily shower frem warm to cool, or a tub bath is most essential. It is good if you can start off the day with one and ond the day with another. If you give your skin a nice cool splashâ€" ing wih a fresh fragrant cologne, after your bathing, you will stay cooler longer and will be sweet, smelling , to, boot! Pody powder is nice if the day is not too hot. But if the weather is so torâ€" rid that you perspire ten minutes after your bath, powder is apt to clog your pores and prevent them from secreting freely., Use an antiâ€"perspirant or deoâ€" gorant instead, under your arms, across your back. lo. A clean fresh scalp and skin a to your enjoyment of hot weather. C greasy hair requires washing at l« once a week. Dry hair, every ten C or once a werek if you travel m! Sometimes a harmless dry shampoo tween soap shampoos is necessary keep your hair fufly and ruly. (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) “ Beauty and You â€" by PATRICIA LINDSAY ELLEN DREW takes to freauent sWwWIms When Uit SUIL iWV uEL How to Keep Cool Though Active During a Heat Wave to freauent swims when the begin her hose, and es where â€" business you have y should they will You may â€" lJeaSt i days much. adds Olly Activity on Roads While Minister in the North The New Liskeard Speaker last week had the following item:â€"Thanks! Mr. McQuesten,. Motorists were hfheard to remark this week that not sin‘ce your visit a year ago has there been such activity on the rcoads in this section. On Tussday afternoon there were no Iess than three graders at work on the short stretch of road between the nine mile corner and Earlton, and now the road is in good condition. Residents of Temiskaming and Cochrane disâ€" tricts would be extremely: grateful if you wouldâ€"announce that you were goâ€" ing to make a monthly tour of inspecâ€" tion of the roads and issue instructions that they were to be put in fit shaps for even a cabinet minister to travel upon." For Summer Days and EVERY DAY ELECTRIC REFRICERATION sun Shines too hot Mrs. N. Wilenius and family, Mr. and Fllllel’al 0“ S“nday Mrs. Kaitola and family; Mr. and Mrs, T Â¥rio Santaharju and family; Mr. and Of NeStor Kl“\ga Mrs. R. Pryor and family; Aino Vailve T and Mr. and Mrs, $@m Slack, Timâ€" at SOllth POl’Cllpllle mins, Ont; Mr. and Mtrs. Teppari and se Mrs and Eila Oillila; Mr. and Mrs. Rusâ€" Many Beautiful Floral Tokâ€"|tari. Mr. and Mrs, Savijaryi; Mr. and ens Express Regard for 'Mrs. John Olga and John Koskela, Timmins; Mr. and Mrs. Rauâ€" Pioneer Citizen. hala and family; Erma and Victor Sa«â€" memont ie mc lomaa, Timmins; Mr. and Nrs. Mola South Porcupine, July 23rd. Special and family; Mr. and Mrs. Nick Thanâ€" to The Advance. der; Levinson family; Mr. and Mrs. The death of Nestor Klinga, oldâ€"|Prank Maki, Pottsville; E. J. Stadtâ€" timer of the Porcupine, came as a great ‘lander; Mr. and Mrs. O. Proulx; Mr. shock to his family and friends. ‘and Mrs W. W. Wilson: Mr. and Apparently in his usual health he Mrs. Svensi and family and Matti was stricken with a heart attack soon | Tuomi. : after rising at 6 a.m. on Thursday and| Out of town friends present at the succumbed soon after. He had had | funeral were:Mr. and Mrs. Victor Sai«â€" three attacks previously but not of ?mmon. Kirkland Lake:; Mrs. Hilnrh Nyâ€" sufficient seriousness to alarm his famâ€" | holm, Windsor, Mrs. E. K. DeVore, Deâ€" ily. He was born in Finland 58 years | troit, Mich.; and a number of friends | Euo and came to Canada from Elimki,|from Timmins, Schumacher and Pottsâ€" Kesola,. in 1906, with his wife, locating | ville, * first at Sturgeon Falls. o South Porcupine, July 23rd. Special to The Advance. The death of Nestor Klinga, oldâ€" timer of the Porcupine, came as a great shock to his family and friends. Apparently in his usual health he was stricken with a heart attack soon after rising at 6 a.m. on Thursday and succumbed soon after. He had had three attacks previously but not o From that town he came to Cobalt in 1909, and came to the Porcupme} "along the trail‘ in the earliest days of the camp. After the fire of 1911 he settled in South Porcupine and started a small farm, keeping cows, in the north end of the town. Later when the building boom beâ€" gan, his farm was subâ€"divided into lots and is now a prosperous part of South Porcupine. He leaves, besides Mrs. Klinga, who is wellâ€"known and resâ€" pected equally with other citizens as ,well as her own Finnish friends, two idaughtex‘s Lempi (Mrs. Ron. Mansâ€" |fi°1d) and Ingrid: (Mrs. DeVore) of Detroit. The funeral was held on Sunday afternoon from their house on O‘Brien avenue, Archdeacon Woodall officiatâ€" ing. Both daughters were present at the funeral and the two grandchildren Viola and Garry Mansfield, besides numbers of friends from town and others from Porcupine, Schumacher, Timmins and Kirkland Lake. The pallbearersâ€"old friends of the deceased were: Nestor Riihinen; Matti Ranta: Matti Kautto; Toivo TIhander; Frank Mikkola (Schumacher); and Frank Alanen. Interment was made in Tisdale Cemetery. Floral tributes were sent from: Wife and family (Lem â€" pi and Ronald Mansfield, Ingrid and Edwin Devore), pillow; Consumers Coâ€" operative Board of Directors; Worker and Farmers Society; Canadianâ€"Finâ€" nish Society; Consumers Coâ€"Operative society; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mikkola and Lauri, Schumacher, Ont.; Order of the Eastern Star No. 84; Mr. and Mrs. Matti Kautto and family; Mr. and Mrs. Riihinen and family, Timâ€" mins, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs. Haapanen, Timmins; Mr. and Mrs, Lahti and Mr. and Mrs. Toivo Ihander; Mrs. Eva Manner; Mrs. Hulda Bostrom and and Mrs. Gernecki and Olga; Mrs. Hilma Nyholm, Windsor, Ontario; Mr. and Mrs. Matti Ranta; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nelson:; Mr. and Mrs. Kinnunen; Miss Viano Ranta; Impi and Kalle Kanerva, Schumacher, Ont.; Mr. and Canada Northern Power Corporation, Limited > NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY, NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY, Delicious ice creams and frozen desâ€" serts; tinkling ice cubes for cooling hotâ€" weather drinks: enjoy them ANY time with Electric Refrigeration. And save money all the time, too; for Electric Refrigeration ends food spoilage and waste ; keeps leftovers delightfully fresh and tasty; enables you to buy perishâ€" ables in quantity at bargain prices. Models for every home and purse. Just make a small down payment: balance on easy terms,. Controlling and Operating Confederation Cemented by Air Mail Says P. M. J orest, OUni., JUIy 1O for cementinx Confederation is proâ€" vided by this type of communication," said Hon. Norman A. McLarty, K. Postmaster General, speaking here of the telescoping of the provinces by air mail. "It is time that accentuates our problems. ‘This service is to accelerate the speed with which our thoughts may mail. "It is time that accentuates our problems. ‘This service is to accelerate the speed with which our thoughts may be transmitted, so that we may realâ€" ize we are all part of one country and that ours is a common heritage, that ours is a common heritage, "If the fisherman on the east coast can place his problems before the fisherâ€" man in British Columbia; if the grain growers of the West can quickly and easily communicate with the grain growers of Ontario, for instance, doesn‘t that mean that instead of Canâ€" ada being 3,000 miles across, with the EFast and the West days apart, our troubles in a day can be mutually shared and we can more easily promote prosperity and the unity of our counâ€" try ?2" Including the Transâ€"Canada _ Air Lines services, Mr. McLarty pointed out, Canada had 64 air mail serveces. Toronto Telegram:â€"To live in clover a man can‘t lost the grass grow under nis feet, MONDAY: JULY 4TH, 1939 Ont.. July , UMITED [rs. . Proulx; Mr. Wilson: Mr. and family and Matti The possibility

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