Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 30 May 1940, 2, p. 5

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place built into that. MMQMOf“m' feeling of an outdoor room, though it| The same thing doesn‘t apply to was entirely open; the idea would work furniture, however. Man has been sitâ€" everybody can have plenty of outdoor | for steak, hot dogs and such like. Man living right at home. The ‘only essential | are built cn wheels. All are neat trick ingredient is forethought * which will }to appeal to the men who like to tin provide such practicalities .as picnic | ker. Then there are picinc kits an parajphernalia and an outdcor fireplazce. | baskets to pop anybody‘s eyes. Not t Sometimes this outdoor fireplace can | mention remarkasle affairs for keeping be built right, on the porch iby ‘"plugging hot things hot, cold things cold, fresh matter, muldbeahamwtmdalbfortehosemhocantqmwm sumptuous parties cutdoors. nature undiluted. But watch out abcut As attractive an arrangement as\. _too many gadgets that complicate the we‘ve seen was planned by Russel scene and make work. After all, it‘s Wright and consisted of a semiâ€"circular civilization you‘re fleeing from, and segment of a stme wall with a fireâ€"! civilization after all is just a large in" to the main chimney if it is pheed things fresh, And adequate lighting that way. Again a strne oven can be where needed. Spotlights are our psets built right cout in the yard with an . for cutdoor illumination. iron grill for really particular broiling.| . Many of these equipment items add Better yet, if you‘re serious abeut the‘ a lot to the joys of the outdoors, espeâ€" Right at Home aren‘t many people who can doff the: rasponsibilities of home for an entire summerâ€"cr even for the vacation weeksâ€"what with jobs. and budgets to ‘ta co:midered. But almost Tor the summer. And at the mere sugâ€" gestion i3f such a life the children whirl their hats in the air with delight, Much as we may like to bask on our dignity during the more sober months of the year, most cf us would prefer to revert to the native state when summer comes. The staid business man sudâ€" denly reveals talents as an cook. The most fastidious housewife confides a suppressed desire to throw formality to the winds and rusticate CHl- ndthellmkSm intheKindof Interior Deeontmg That Lures Us This e of the Year. these days. Picnic kits are an important part of the equipment necessaryâ€" and don‘t forget a therâ€" mos jug for keeping hot things hot and cold things Getting ready for picnics is occupying the time and though:t of a big segment of the younger generation Ansontdoor fireplace for cooking is charmingly deâ€" signed in this old stone wall and arranged with hickory furniture.â€"â€" This setting iHustratedâ€" hereâ€" On Wheels If your family prefers to roam arcund the ccuntryside in the car, exâ€" ploring for their camp sites, there are any number of grand portaible grills for steak, hot dogs. and such like. Many are buill can wheels. All are neat tricks to appeal to the men who like to tinâ€" ker. Then there are picinc kits and baskets to pop anybody‘s eyes. NOt t mention remarka‘sle affairs for keeping trautifully if your need is for privacy from a to>â€"near public road. Rustic hickory dfurniture was drawn around this sociable. spot, Miriam Hcpkins on the other »hand has a patio adjoining the house where her outdoor fireplace is built. A marâ€" collection for cooking utensils for fireplace cooking attest the popularity <f this spot. But that‘s only halfâ€"adâ€" joining the patio is a swimminz pool. Which certainly spells fun at home of a s‘‘mmer‘s day. THE CALL with was designed by Russell Wright and is part of the "Contemporary American Industrial Art‘ show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. cold. : Apropos of that, we are told by those who shouid know that hot tea is the most refreshins thing for a hot dayâ€"believe it or not it really cools you oft. C ant asked. "No, for my mother," reâ€" plied Cline, who then explained that his mother, Mrs. Lucinda Cline, of Wisâ€" ner, Ncb., 108, hud suffered a broken hip in a fal. He got the chair for her. â€" Blairmore Enterprise:â€"A newspaper states that Vitamin E may correct ing for Hit}er. o Huntingdon Gleane:râ€"Chicago, IIl.â€" and said the was looking for a wheel ehair. "Is it for yourself?" the attendâ€" and still can give plenty of good serâ€" vice. Along with tables of this type long benches are a socigble solution. ‘Whatever your taste in the furnishâ€" ings for your place in the sun ©r under the stars, we hope a good time will be had by al. beautifully. If even ‘that is too much strgin on the family exchequer, then what absut a pair of saw horses with that‘s the tingz on chairs too long to find it comâ€" lfortable to sit on his feet oar squat on ,the ground even if around a camp fire. So you can‘t have too many chairs for your retreat cutdcors. These may 'be simp.e rustic cnes. In fact they are /: setter so if you want to leave them out in the weather. And if you have periodic sprees of company or make excur:ions over hill and dale, you will find that folding camp su:ols are a big Bcon because they can ‘be tucked away Estween times and are so easily portâ€" atle. . Those cushion seats are good too. Ansther essential for comfortable lawn entertainment is a large table. Preferâ€" ably, if.you want to ibe very grand, a wrought iron with a plate glass ‘top. The next choice is rattan with plate glass top, but these both are expensive. There are perfectly adequate trestle type tables that come unpainted. These can be finished in either white or with a sturdyâ€"woodsy stain, and they serve Y im one rare staikâ€"a mutationâ€"found on added to the blossoms of annias; and the taryâ€"blooming orange cosmas sends forth its blessoms three weeks earlier after being treated. Dosed with colâ€" chicine, too, snapdragons forget to bloom with the customary terminal spikes, andthmwmxtflowersaboveme Py YVast Possibilities As an indication of the vast possibiliâ€" ties of mutations, it may be noted that alt goliden bantam corn originated in Ed ads about cnge in nine times; and since the resulting mutations are occasionally beautiful, the research now extensively pursued, is a most promising field. At Burper‘s seed farms in California, colchicine treatment by experts has alâ€" ready produced encouraging results. Small moonbeam petunias have been made to flourish with huge leaves and gold with a stem as thick as your thumb and a flower four inches wide is the first creation commercially sucâ€" cessful, in this pioneer field as yet largely experimental. How did the researchn get under way? It was an acctident. Ten years ago, Doncho. Kostoff, a Bulgarian plant breeder found his tcbacco and eggâ€" plant patches in the grip of an offenâ€" sive attack by hordes of aphids. His ccunter offensive was a heavy spraying with nicotinge sulphate. â€" Following this fumigaition, crosses were made with some of the plants, and their offspring; KostOff was puzzled to find, were conâ€" sistently abnormal. He examined the cells of these mutations under the microscope, and found. that all the ahromosome counts had increasedâ€" usually doubled., It was an exciting discovery because it is by the accidental ‘ increase of chromosomes that nature, perhaps once in a million times, will create a mutation, or what the average gardener kncws as a "sport." l more satisfactory and efficient agent than Kostoff‘s nicotine sulphateâ€"the Written by Frank Taylor, it concerns a subject with an irresistible fascinaâ€" tion for usâ€"the improvement and variation of floral species by artificial means. This article threw new light upon the use of the drug colchicine toâ€" Presently, that golden robin, the Paltimore Oriole flies to a branch of ‘the cherry tree and warbles a few notes 'c.f melody. His mate of more modest hue watches him from a poplar in the ‘nmext garden. No man surely, ever had his name remembered in a lovelier way than Lord Baltimore. Orange and black were the family colors of Lord: Baltimore who cnce had vast possesâ€" sicns in Maryland. Deep, orange and velvety black are ‘the colors of that immense oriole family that recalls the Baltimore name in the Americas, from Brazil to the towns of woodlands of Canada. Somewhere hereabout the elusive nest of the orioles is suspended in a tree like a snug little shopping bag.. Made of fluffy material like wool or cotton ‘orâ€" evem vegetable fibres, it is actually sewn itogether iwith hairs of fine string, to the consistency of felt. Some odds and ends of these materials were placed in the garden when we first saw the birds, and they were quickly carried away. But it is time we reaflembered that the backyard garden was not entered to admire the hummingâ€"birds and orioles, but to read an article in the current issue of Better Homes and Gardens. previous article, Tetra, a giant mariâ€" _ _ Lying on the grass and pseeringe unoâ€". ward thrcough the charry Bos: _however, there is beauty ard intsrest enough even to beguile thoughts away from the heartâ€"breaking tragedy of Europe for a few h2ppy minutes. With breasts of breuzs and green and their wings , vibrating at a velocity that makes them invisible, two hummingâ€". wbirds make a branch sway gontly as they dart in and out of the bicz:ssms, His celebration spoiled by the rain of. the Queen‘s birthday, a boy at the feot of 't;he lot is exploding firecrackers a cay or ©o late. No alarm is registered by the huirmingâ€"birds. They carry on their important business of nectar sipâ€" ping above the racket, as the larks scoar and sing above the ghastly thunder of Flanders. ‘And, as that incredible winz v‘bration carries them forward or backâ€" ward with <equal speed, their tiny bodies gleam in the evening sunshineâ€"now a. tepaz, now an emerald, now a Cullet of gold! > (By Percv Ghent) th~ time the tuds tegin ts ¢men, througch the May days of 1 y and until the robins hWave nibb‘si or stolen the last cherry. thet Japanese cherry tree in the backvyard here is a favorite hevint of the bir‘s. There‘s a SMlcessomâ€"laden p‘um tree where the ‘wrens have their house a frw feet rrvay, but vava wren sings hiz kest solos in the cherry branches. Except fcr an ormasional brief call, an aspe and a csar tree, brth in jrorgeâ€" cfis blo~m, hava no especial appeal for the visitors of plain or gaudy feather. As; for the tree of heavenâ€"at the mo«â€" ment e3 bare as a plucked chickenâ€"| cur old frigri1 the wocdpecker is mhe| only callar of note tapping for admisâ€" slon there. I Magic With Flowers Since, by wetting stems and soaking A Valuable Discovery Orioles Sew Nests in advance before she left. Fine Ryan Drilling Co. | .. The Ryan Diamond Drilling Comâ€" pany Limited was fined $25 and cosats for keeping on its premises at 216 BSpruce Street, south, a quantity of dynamite tweighing more than» twenty pounds. His voice trembling with rage, Gilâ€" lard denied that the argument he and his wife had had that night was ‘"one of the usual arguments you have been having for the last eight years." During these ‘eight years, Gillard said, he and his (wife had been separated about five He lived with his wife at; 75 Fifth Avenue, Gillard said, On the evening cf May 24 he gave her the money and went to work. When he arrived home next day she was gone. The hu:Band charged that his wife tcok the $95 he gave her to pay bills, $100 worth cf bedding and left tcwn cn May 25. He informed police and they Coarded the train at Matheson and brought. her back. A charge cf theft, laid by C. W. Gillard agairst hi; wils, Mz (Chret Gillard, was dismissed in police coutrt on Tuesday. The case, in the cpinion cf the Magistrate, was very involved inasmuch as one had the difficult task of dezcicing what houseshold goods were ciyvned by the wife and what by the hu{zâ€"and. Theft Charge Laid Against Wife by Husband Dismissed Diamond Drilling Co. Fined for Having More Than 20 Pounds Powder. ferms, horticultural science will preâ€" sently witne:s some startling developâ€" ments. Nature will be speeded up inâ€" Cddly encugh, colchicine was long| weed as a drug for the treatment of‘ gcut before boeing enlMsted for service :n the creation of bigger and bnghterf flowers. Extractsd from the roots of, ‘theâ€"modest meadow saffron or autumn : cxopus, it is a potept polson. For horâ€" ; exporiments, it is used in weak solutions. | Sergeant DesRoches said that the A roomer in the house said that Mrs. came and gct his room rent {- Loquacious Witnesses . There was no difficu‘ty getting inâ€" 9‘ formation in the hearing of an assault f |case agairst Karl Worz. The difficulty :e-'was to stem the flood of words which *ipoured from the ligs of accused, comâ€" firtainant and witnesses alike. Finailly court stimerged under the s%a ~iwords and Magistrate Atkinson ‘disâ€" 7/ missed the charge. That, he said, would 'be one way to quiet them. TY it appeared from the story given . by complainant Rese Lizoc that Wors hit her in the jaw with his fist. Mrs. Ligzae led up to the affair with a Getailed description ocf how much beer had been crdered ‘by all thememkers of the large |party in the hotel beverage room. Waiter Ely FMluter te«tlfie:l as did "head bartender" ~Jchn Atavachuk, Asked 4f he saw Wore hit tire woman Acavatchuk replied negatively and addâ€" ed the philoscphical comment: "A scber man never do that." CURTIS . and until recentlyâ€" I thought the terrible headâ€" aches I was having wou:ld drive me wild.â€" I didn‘t realize that they were being caused by eye-stram P‘Il always be grateful to Mary for persuading me to see Mr. Curtis.. He discovered my glasses were wrong. Ihaven‘t had one headache since I got my new glasses." /( 0e (efa‘@g® 14 Pine Street North, Timminsâ€"Phone 835 M a man cculd have half his wishes, he would proibably double his trcubles. Kruschen containsâ€"not one or two, : but several highly refined specially selected mineral salts. In combination‘ these salts make a mass attack on these ailments that keep you away from work and take the joy out of life. ~ So get a bottle of Kruschen and use it. Just what you can put on a imeâ€"every morning. ‘Then you be the judgeâ€"after you‘ve been taking it for awhile. ou‘li see what is meant by that priceless millionâ€" dollar Kruschen feeling! At drug« atores 25¢, 45¢c and 75¢. 60 ‘t neglect this important matâ€" ter. for the aohmon is simple fensive pl take your "lxtt daily d of ~Kruschen zlliom throughout the Empu‘e take Kruschen every mornâ€" ing of their lives. e look to your “fi m”m of d-ny affairs don‘t Keep Well and Buy British! .

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