Bacon Grapes LP CA £% Co _ 3 Cabbage salad Boston cream pie Coffee Thursday Breakfast Stewed apricots _ When thinking of measles. romember j the danger om the complications. | | Health Booklet Available Seven helpful booklets by Dr. Rarâ€" Readvyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal ton are now available for the readers of Bacon rolls Coffee| the Advance. They are: Eating Your Luncheon Way to Health; Neurosis; Why Worry Creamed vegetables in bread cases | About your Heart; The Common Cold; Grapefruit and avocado salad Overweight and Underweight; Allergy Toasted crackers Tea or Being Sensitive to Various Foods and Dinner Other Substances; and Scourr:e (gonorâ€" Cream of mushroom soup rhoga and syphilis). These booklets Cold roast beef may be obtained by sending Ten Cents Baked potatoes Baked onions| for each booklet desired, to cover cost Apple and banana brown betty of handling and service, to The Bell Coffee Library, care of The Advance, 247 Wost Friday Rreakfast | 43rd. St., New York City. Tomatoe juice (Registered in accordance with the Caoked ceéreal Copyrischt Act) Omelet Toast Coffee Luncheon !_Christian Science Monitor: â€" The Baked bean soup |truth is that the 1 ong ex e‘lencn 6f MiXEd gl‘eens alad Ifl‘main- . , C Ves T -:g.Ax p ’ cone mm Raw carrot strips Waflles 51 TLauncheon Noodles with giblet and chicken gravy Lettuce salad Poached egos Hot rolls (By Edith M. Barber) find grapefruit cheap and small oranâ€" also in the bargain class. Avocados are at a low for the year. Sunday Breakfast Baked apples Mackeral brked in milk JustPhone 427 CBAL Dinner Boiled tongue with pickle sauce Cauliflower, Cabbage, String Beans, Spinach and To Hold "Pot Luck" Suppe: are Among the Popular and Economical Vegetables. _ on November 23rd. Grapefruit and Small Oranges are Low Cost Items. ziss c . Menus For Seven Days Featuring Vegetables Dinner Baked spareribs Baked sweet potatoes Butered strin!y beans Chocolate pudding Tuesday Breakfaqt Grapefruit Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal icon Toast Luncheon Tomato soup Dinner Baked beans brown bread Baked tomatoes Cabbage salad Boston cream pie Coffee Thursday Breakfast Stewed apricots Readyâ€"toâ€"eat cereal con Hot rolls Coff Creamed vegetables in bread cases Grapefruit and avocado salad Toasted crackers Tea Dinner Cream of mushroom soup Cold roast beef aMes Sirup CC _ _ Dinner Roast Beef Browned potatoes Cauliflower with Brown butter Apricot souffle Coffee Wednesday Breakfast Pineapple and orange juice Cooked cereal Boiled eggs Whole wheat rolls Coffee Luncheon Toasted cheese sandwiches Celery and apple salad Doughnuts Tea Shrimps with horseradish sauce Anise Coffee Brown fricassee of chicken Hot biscuits Baked squash Mixed green salad Baked alaska Coffee sSsupper OQOyster stew ; Cabbage and green pepers salad Ginger cakes Tea PAGE TW3 Cookies flish fillets olloped potatoés with oni pinach with chopped bee Lemon pie Coffeg Saturday Breakfast Stewed prunes Readyâ€"toâ€"cat cereal Bran muffffins Luncheon Potatoe soup Grape and orange salad Tea Monday â€" Breakfast Orange juice Cooked cereal pas Toast Dinner fish fillets Dinner horser th onions d beets Coffee Tea Coffee Coffee Coffée Celety Tea Coffee | Coffee Tea Christian Science Monitor: â€" The truth is that the long experience of Empire has taught Britain a sense of almost worldâ€"wide responsibility. If there is slave raiding in Africa or piraâ€" cy in the Yellcw Sea, or buoys in the Persian Gulf badly placed, Great Briâ€" tain at once has to see to it. While Britain is the world leader, such duties are a part of Pax Britannica. So is the prevention of war. Therse is another power stronger and richer and fitted by her moral outlook to share or even take over the place of world leader. But she is not yet accustomed to her posiâ€" tion. She prefers to sit back like secâ€" ondâ€"class nations with no responsibiliâ€" ties : done |_ ""Measles is a dangerous disease and | should be regarded as such bl the pubâ€" lic. ‘Too often the careless parent fails to see any connection between sending to school a husky boy, broken out like a broiled lobster, and the death rate of a ‘neighbor's baby, which can usually be ! traced through this husky boy handing | it on to others, one of whom finally ‘ hands it on to the baby." l When I was a boy I heard my mother speak of a neigh‘z>oring youngster as ilikely to die because he was very sick with diphtheria. Measles, searlet fever, whopping cough were all taken as a mattéer of course; all youngsters were likely to have thess ailments. Dipâ€" theria was, however, a most dreaded disease; it was worse than smallâ€"pox, | pneumonia or typhoid fever. Toâ€"day diphtheria can be preventâ€" ed by innoculations and when it does } scecur its symptoms are reduced in danger. The death rate in diptherâ€" ia is now less than from measles and. the complicatiop which follow measles. However it is now admitted that the death rate from measles though perâ€" hlaps not higher than before, is neverâ€"| | theless too high, because measles is inot such a harmless ailment as has thought | Children are now innoculate measles. "In measles there is first noticed the catarrh, sneezing, eyes running, hard brassy cough, and a temperature of 101 to 103. Bright red slightly raised spots with a tiny white speck in the centre then appear, accompanied by headache, lack of appetite, drowsiness and irritaâ€" bility. The rash appears first on the face and neck and spreads rapidly to the chest, body, arms, and legs. Durâ€" ing the next two days the rash fades and within seven or eight days from the onset the temperature is normal." When you read the above deszcription of measles you may wonder why it is considered an important or dan‘zerous disease. It is particularly dangerous to young children and infants because of the complications â€" bronchopneuâ€" monia, pneumonia, middle ear disease, and finally heart failure. In Florida Health Notes some very valuable advice is given to parents. one t milk. or co and complain that the work is not Dip Measles Is An Important Discase (by James W. Barton, M.D.) hed potatdes Mashed le dumplings with cream Coffee Baked Fish Fillets i1¢h fillets in salted mi wblespoon of salt for eacl Dip into fine dry bread nflake crumbs. Arrange ol of Poutrs EChat Bobp The > of e of Blairmore Enterpriseâ€"Calling a man a liar is just so much wasted breath. he is a liar, he already knows it, ! and you are springing old stuff on him: if he isn‘t, you are, and he has foiind vou out. q ip is reported that consideration is beâ€" ing given by police to his story that he felt he was being encircled. Manchester Guarian:â€"Owing to the adsoption by the army of the Bren light machine gun, the banks at the Bisley ranzes have had to be strengthened to stop bullets from going through. This was stated at the London general msetâ€" ing of the National Rifle Assoriation. Sudbury Starâ€"A suspect carrying 21 sticks of dynamite in a suitcase was picked up in the New York subway. It Newsweek:â€"Paul Gurtler, who was Corporal Adolph Hitler‘s sergeant durâ€" ing the World War and is now natâ€" uralized Canadian working in the Alâ€" berta coal mines, enlisted in the Canâ€" adian army. Trenton Sun:â€"Buy Canadianâ€"made and Britishâ€"made goods; buy and eat homeâ€"grown foods as much as possible very dollar so spent helps bring vicâ€" cvery tory. "Who, for example, is to pay for that last round Of drinks, served just beâ€" fore the explosion?" North Bay Nugget:â€"Mystery piles on mystery, in the Munich beer hall blast, remarked The Detroit News, asking: Blairmore Enterprise:â€"PFolks were wondering why the "rough box" in front of Colombo‘s lunch parlor on Friday last. It developed to be repairs for his Neon sign. Brandon Sun:â€"Speaking of the neutrality again: the steamer Camerâ€" ona reached New York safely with 709 passengers and 40,000 cases of Scotch Whisky. Railway ‘Age:â€"The Pullman Comâ€" pany has received a request from . a man who was forced to take an upper in the car Aloha, that the car be reâ€" christened Anuppah. Guelph Mercury:â€"A French doctor says he has a sure cure for seasickness. But if a tourist were not seasick, it wvauld sboil one of the most interesting pa,a‘ves in the story inflicted on his friends at home when the trip‘s.over. A vivid description of an attack of seasickness is second only to the phrase, "the roughest voyage the capâ€" tain ever knew." ' circle determined to give him a rise which will be followed by a tragic desâ€" cent. North Bay Nuzsget:â€"Hitler cannot kid all the people all of the time. There‘s an element within his charmed Sudbury Star:â€"A Scotsman has inâ€" vented a bagpipe which plays when plugged into a light socket. And yet it is said that necessity is the mother of invention. Globe and Mail:â€"Mr. Chamberlain‘s gout is intermittent. Hitler‘s headache is perpetual. London, En‘zland, Punch: â€" "What are the duties of a Knight of the Garter?" asked a correspondent. We don‘t, konw; but we imagine they are fairly elastic. Sudbury Star:â€"A college dean is of the cpinion that automc‘siles damage the generation of school age. W2 can only say again that turn about is fair play. just] held North Bay Nugget:â€"The quints will be "front page" news fcr many, many years to come and it is whethâ€" er they will ever have to zgive way to other "human interest" writings. Sudbury Star:â€"A famed coiffeur describes the Hitler hairâ€"do as an exâ€" aggerated bang. This is not to be conâ€" fused with the ‘barâ€"roocm explosion i1 Munich. Sudbury Siar:â€"A little more of this inacticn and the warring nation may s sending the warrior to the front on his furlough. ular as the last event of its kind held by the club. Followiin»s the business of the evening, finishing touches were put on the clubroom, and lunch was served by the president, Miss Lily Glaister, assisted by Miss Janet Lucas. Highâ€"Grade Samples from Week‘s Run of the Press It will be remembered, that each girl brought some item cof food such as meat pies, pickles, ise cream, rolls, pastry, and then tried her "luck" at making a supper out of all that was brought, after the food had been placâ€" ed tozethcr on the supper table. It was hoped that the "Pot Luck Supper" this yoar will prove as popâ€" ular as the last event of its kind held es femining "HMH5m#" PDurin‘ the meeting it was decided to have a Luck Supper" on Thursday November 23rd, in the clubroom. The inly difference between this novel supâ€" per and the one ‘; :ven last F:bruary for the members is the time, the event ‘ommencing at 8.39 p.m. instead of 6.30. The change in time is merely because a umjser of the girls are attending the Rred Cross Home Nursing Class from 123 to 8.39 and could not possibly atâ€" end Before 8.30 p.m. It will be remembered, that each girl Grought some item ¢of food such as Business Girls Now Meeting at Their Own Club Rooms 161 gayer the better. And each year finds |the girls exploiting a new fad. Disâ€" | covery which fashion fad is good this l year and enjoy wearing it. Fads, of |course, vary with locality and climate. What may be the fad north, would be the fad south. Grooming Details You haven‘t any excuse whatever if | you go to a football game without havâ€" inz your hair prettily set, your nalls manicured, your skin clean and sparkâ€" ling. You may be able to do all these at home. If so fine. But don‘t go unless you are groomed meticulously. | You‘ll be sorry if your nail polish is chipped, if your hair straggles beneath your hat or if your skin looks like the last shade of summer. Your makeâ€"up should harmonize perfectly with your costume and it should ‘be cleverly applied. The chic girls can use every artifice yet appear as if their beauty was natural and unâ€" touched. That‘s the art you should maeter s ! ~Take with you all the beauty axd.s necessary for a thorcugh touching up,. for you know how a windy day, or ‘a) rainy day, or a very hot day can . make a nice mess of your beauty! Carâ€" ty supplies in your handbag and excuse l3,'3urself for repairs Don‘t repair in | front of your adoring escort! _ And turn on the charm! Be a zood | If you dress formailly at night fry to look as much like a dream girl as posâ€" sible, and behave like one! And turn on the charm! Be a "O0Od listcner, be enthusiastic about the plans your tsau has made, flatter him, smile to his comrades. If your cold or hot, bored or tiredâ€"don‘t let on. Bear up and realize that every football game ends at a given time and then you can have a gocd dinner aAnd some fun. (Few girls actually like football! They like an audience and the extitement of the croxwd!) What Should You Do Clothes, unfortunately, are pretty important if you strive to ‘be a belle. You needn‘t have scads of them, but you must have the right sort. Smart outdoor clothes and tricky hats are worn to games. woolen . suits and sports coats are most popular. But girls who are able to wrap themâ€" selves in mink or beaver, or other costâ€" ly furs, do so. They may wear beneath them a casual but smart woolen, or afternoon dress for the to fsllow. But ‘the exterior is tailored Hats take the eye. The trickier, and Â¥su and I know that many a cirl} is popular as the duece around the dormitory or in the office. But when she gets cut to a football game with a group she falls flat! Why is it? Part of the trouble is her selfâ€"consâ€" sjousness. The rest of it is her pasti indifference to the details of grcomâ€" ing and the requisition of charm. At] school or in the office she didn‘t seem to need either. Her good nature and j comraderie carried her along. But out" in the scical lifeâ€"in keen competition with girls who strive to be beautiful and charmingâ€"she hasn‘t a to shine. Naturally she feels préetty| bad about it, and you shouldn‘t includeâ€" her on the next date because she seemâ€" ed to be so uncomfortable on the last one. Saturdays during Octcber are pretty SECOI‘ld Timmins the cwn important America‘s country throughout. great sport, football, calls many of us out into the fresh air io watch two teams tussle with each cther. Sunset brings the gay hours of tea or cocktail parties followed by| dancing. Evoeory American beauty wants to shine this month, deep in he1 heart she yvearns to be a fostball belle! Rangers to Hold Dance on Friday There will be a dance of more than special interest held in the Hollinger Recreation hall on Friday evening of this week, Nov. 24th. This dance will be under the auspices of tAe2 Second As competition is keen, girls you must keep on your toes. That means you must dress appropriately and act charming! You must use all the enâ€" gaging feminine devices you know of to keep the lauréels on your head. Fascinating BRENDA JOYCE, one of Hollywcod‘s young lovelies is a man‘s ideal dream girl! Beauty, poise, charming manners and a beautiful voice. ||“*B“éa§£§ and You _ by PATRICIA LINDSAY Be a Football Belle with Your Charm Int: There will be both round and dancing at the Rangers‘ event, general pleasant time for all att There will be a dance of more than special interest held in the Hollinger Recreation hall on Friday evening of this week, Nov. 24th. This dance will be under the auspices of tAe Second Timmins Rangers which is assurance that it will be an enjoyabile and pleasâ€" im> event. The music for the occasion will be supplied by Paddy and his Cotton Pickâ€" ers, and this means that there will be melody and rhythm and lots of life to the music for the danzting. CANADA NORTHERN POWER CORPORATION LIMITED The Modern Way to Cook Better, More Economical Meals Free yourself from the drudgery of cooking long hours over an oldâ€"fashioned stove. Cook with electricity, The speed of an electric stove will amaze you. In no time at all you have a complete meal deliâ€" ciously cooked with all the precious juices and vitamins retained. INone of the waste or heat or dirt of oldâ€"fashioned wood or coal stoves. An electric stove is econoâ€" mical, too â€" costs less than Vc per meal per person. And you’fl like the way your kitchen utensils stay clean even after conâ€" stant use. Buy an electric stove toâ€"day and start enjoying the new free hours it will give you. Cook with L EC T RICIT YÂ¥ Controlling and Operating NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY, NORTHERN QUEBEC POWER COMPANY, square and 2@ nding. The Gold Nugget Rebekah Lodge held its regular weekly meeting on Thursâ€" day evening in the »«Oddfellows hall, with many members present, and visiâ€" tors from Mission City, British Columâ€" bia and Englehart. Two new members, Mrs. Lillian Marâ€" riott and Mrs. Beryl Cochrane, were initiated, and welcomed to the Lodge, and short business session was héld. It was decided that the Rebekah Lodge would entertain on Thursday, November 23rd, at an afternoon tea to b2a held in the Oddfellows hall, comâ€" mencing at 3 o‘clock, and lasting until 6 p.m. Entertainment is being planned for the afternoon, and a door prize will be awarded. This is an annual event, held for the first time last year, when it was a great success. IT‘ry The Aavance Want Advertisements Gold Nugget Rebekahs to Entertain, Thurs., Nov. : aUuU New Agnewâ€"Surpass Store Attracts Big Crowds at Opening gaemand size Iv feat Company Now Has Eighty Five Stores in Canada. A la the ew Ee Mi |ax< ured by the sto eathers e number of local people visitâ€" new Agnewâ€"Surpass store, loâ€" , 36 Third avenue, when it held d openit> on Priday and Satâ€" ‘The which is one cf ive stores throughout Canada, the newest in smart fsotâ€"wear i. wom>n, and any friensgs when it first apened th 1€ ® For ten cents and the label end, showing the teapot tradeâ€" mark, from any packet of SALADA TEA we will send you a Beginner‘s Outfit of : 1â€"64 page Stamp Album. 2â€"100 allâ€"different stamps. 3â€"Big list of thousands of stamps offered Free in exchange for SALADA labels. SALADA STAMP CLUB â€" 461 King St, W., Toronto thetre was a IiArge illy small and narâ€" vhich are abundantâ€" e and courteous @mirably fin‘shâ€" ind spacicusnes® cA are ; new st hC showin menit ig the in the i7 i5 1 HEALTHFEYL 6 " davs 1r *3 ECONOMIZCAL Detroit. Frca Press:â€"MHitler and his aides blame the British and the French for the increasin‘; unfriendly "encircleâ€" ment.‘" Really they have only themâ€" selves to blams. They have made themâ€" selves a general threat 3y reverting to the standards and methods of Attila. That is the big oastacle in the way of their permanent survival. ‘BMABJJIEWN JO [(Â¥ ‘Uuozne"?t pue ‘oroudsoleI BUB ‘BME}1I0 J0 ‘UuBIJOWN c CSJW ‘3IC1430G JO ‘uos ~pIAÂ¥CI }J2@G[V ‘SI[Â¥A Uoai;inj§g JOo B spmauuy ss;wWn puB nBau1 Joj39f ‘sIWN PUB JW ‘Uoley) sIBUJEIKL CSsIn ‘uozntT CCI JW ‘e3Cp9 osutpuotd ‘ojco udasorp ‘useam â€"~Ing@ J80 ‘a16p9 adloM squtcd aptsno wicl; [u.sun; ayp Sutpluajiy Also surviving are four sisters, Mrs. T. Cousintau, and Mrs. J. Cote, of S:urgeon Falls; Mrs. J. Brunette, of Notre Dame de la Salette, and Mrs. D. Gauthier, of Hull, Quec.; and four broâ€" thers, Peter Lauon, of Sturgeon Falls; Jo:eph and Damasse Lauzon, of Timâ€" mins, and Fabien Lauzon, of Notre Deme de la Salettse. Attending the funeral from outside year. ie was dorn at Noilrée Salette, dater living in T Que., Sturgeon Falls and N Surviving are his wife, Patrick and William, of No: Telesphore, of Mattawa:; datughters, Mrs. M. Pilon : Gosselin, of North Bay; M of Ottawa, and Mrs. A. I Detroit. Also survivine are four Funeral of A. Lauzon at North Bay on Thursd ONDAY, NoVEMBER 20TH,. 1839 1r‘s { ; ~â€"And : â€"I9ur and Mrs. H. Is. H. Moran Davidson., of 4 1t