3 egg yolks, beaten 1 enup sugar. _5 tablespoons blueberry si _1 cup flour sifted. 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt. 3 egg whites, beaten stiff. Whipped cream. _ Cook together butter and berry sirup from a tin Oof until sugar is dissolved. Cove tom of a 10â€"inch baking dis} the blueberries. Pour the coo over berries, Make a hatter arained Today we can hardly imagine cookâ€" ing without the use of a baking powdâ€" er of some type but it is actually less than a hundred years since houseâ€" keepers have had this at their disposâ€" al." The recipes orginailly called for soda and sour milk for the risin‘. Many of them have been adapted to the use of baking powder. This luncheon was served to celebrate the eightieth anniversary of the beginâ€" ning of the manufacture of a famous baking powder, which of course, was put to use in the hot breads and cake At the factory which was inspected beâ€" forehand, a bust of Count Rumford, a famous American who was given title in Bavaria for his contributions which helped solve the food problem of Ihe] people of Bavaria. are never seen outside of New England. Then cameâ€" tender, â€" broiled lobâ€" sters and broiled swordfish. Garden sass, sliced tomatoes, cucumâ€" bers, onions, each in its own dish, were on each table and of course there were blueberry muffins and cornbread. For dessert there was frozen rum punch and believe it or not, rum cake to go with it overs which Vermonters like so much when fried in deep fat. Among the other New England recipes are Rose Petal Jam and Popdoodle Cake. On my last trip to New England 1 had a delicious shore dinner at a wellâ€" known restaurant near Providence. With the cocktails were served tiny codfish balls and lobster Newburg and tiny baking powder With the luncheon itself, we had a clam bisque in which â€"were whole small clams which'! Slump Blueberry (A Delicious Maine Recipe) 2 tablespoons butter. 1 cup brown sugar. % cup blueberry sirup. 1 mediumâ€"sized tin bluebe That‘s when the blueberries are heavy on the bushes waiting to be pickâ€" ed especially for muffins, for pie, for elump, or for grump. The two latter by the way, may be the same, or they may be different, according to the secâ€" tion of New England in which you eat Perhaps you have never known the Cape Cod name for a stew is "stifie" and that a fried pie is known as a "frizzler‘.. Perhaps you are not familâ€" lar with fried pies, those fruit turnâ€" New Engzlarders have a reputation f eating well and lavishly all the. year ‘round. By personal experience I know that this is true but for obvious reaâ€" sons, I also try to plan my visits there for the summer. That‘s when the lobâ€" ster, the swordfish and the clams are at their best. Sea Foods a Feature of the Menus Popular in the Homes of New England South Porcupine, July 25th, 1940. Victor H. Evans, GOD SAVE THE KING Now is a Good Time Says Edith M. Barber to Pattern the; Menu on the Famous Diskes of New England. Area| has Reputation for Good Food. Recipes from Y ankee Cookbook. | Monday, August 5th A CIVIC HOLIDAY Proclamation and i respectfuily request all citizens to observe the same. ‘r builter and !4 cup blueâ€" om a tin of blueben'ies lissolved. Cover the botâ€" nch baking dish with all . Pour the cooked sirup Make a batter by beatâ€" By Resolution of the Council I hereby declare TOWNSHIP OF TISDALE STuUp blueberries However research workers, while ackâ€" nowledging the great advantage of this slow effect of protamine nevertheless find that there are disadvantages also, and for the benefit of the large number of diabetics now on diets alone, or diets and insulin, I am quoting from an artcle in the Journal of the American Medical Association by Dr. Anthony Sindoni, Jr., Philadelphia, Chief of disâ€" eases of Metabolism, St. Agnes Hospiâ€" fal:~â€"~ , Insulin or Protamine Insulin in Diabcetes Insulin has been established as a life saver in diabetes in that as long as the insulin is taken life will be preâ€" served to the ordinary limits. The fact that insulin must be taken so often and so regularly has imposed a burden on my diabetics, so that when protaâ€" mine insulin was so favourably reported by Dr. H. C. Hagedorn and his associâ€" ates some months ago it was hailed with relief by patients and physicians alike. The protamine insulin, by actâ€" ing more slowly, prolonged its beneâ€" ficial effects and thus the treatments were taken less often. w teaspoon salt. 1 cup milk. £ 1 egg beaten. 2 teaspoons cinnamon. * cup sugar. Mix and sift dry ingredients: cut in jegg and add. Spread dough on a | greased layer pan. Before baking i‘sprinkle top with sugar and cinnamon, mixed. Bake in a hot oven (400 deâ€" $grees~F.) about thirty minutes;> Make one coffee cake. s o i Advantages of protamine insulin are Pepper. 2 eggs 1 tablespoon water. Drain clams and dry between towels. Dip in seasoned crumbs, egg diluted with water and t hnenicmusbrDN2â€" s with water and then in crumbs again. Fry in deep fat (325 degrees FP.) until golden brown. Drain on soft paper and serve with tartar sauce. Fried oysters are prevared in the same way. Popdoodle Cake (Sometimes called coffee cake) 2% cups flour, sifted. 2 teaspoons baking powder. 1 teaspoon salt. 4 tablespoons butter. Heat 4 cups of milk and add molassâ€" es, sugar, cornmeal, salt, spice and butâ€" ter to is. Cook twenty minutes or until mixture thickens. Pour into baking dish, add remuining cold milk. Do not stir. Put into slow oven (300 degrees F.) and bake for three hours without stirring. Serve warm with cream or hard sauce or vanilla ice cream. Serve eight. This pudding is also called Whitpot (also Whitspot) pudding. Fannie Daddies (The Cape Cod name for fried clams) 3 dozen clams, removed from shells. 1 cup fine bread crumbs, cracker crumbs or cornmeal i teaspcon salt. (Released by the Bell Synlicate, Inc ing together egg yolks, sugar and the five tablespoons blueberry sirup. Sift flour, baking powder and salt and add. Fold in egg whites Pour mixture over the blueberries and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees P.) fortyâ€"{iive minâ€" utes. Ser?t upside down, topped with sweateéned whipped cream or berry sauce. Original Injun‘ Puddin‘ (One of the oldest of New Englands desserts.) 85 cups milk. 2â€"3 cup dark molasses. 1â€"3 cup granulated sugar. 4 cup yellow cornmeal. % teaspoon cinnamon. 3â€"8 teaspoon nutmeg. Bvy lames W . Rarton, M .D vans, Reeve. of Pours EThat Bobp Ks, sugar and the eberry sirup. Sift and salt and add. Pour mixture over ake in a moderate 64 # % ; 4*"""*++0y, ul ue Ns d d NJ o o $ Nok No Nes bUlllH“bu Â¥Y A 4A If a diabetic patient is responding) tops this moderately priced group 0 favourably with small doses or ordinâ€"| beauty aids, is of so luscious a pin} ary insulin after meals that maintain with a wee touch of gold that it look: |a blood sugar that is within normal}| yood enough to eat! limits two hours after meals, it is not : | A » advisable to use protamine insulin." | More Fun for the Beach {(Copyright, 1937). ; In an honestâ€"toâ€"goodness canteen "What is one man‘s food is another; W‘ith strap for your shoulder, comes man‘s poison" is an old saying but the| the latest of sunburn preventativesâ€"a truth of it is being proved almost | Gardenia scented oil which promises daily by leading research physicians| YOU 4 gradual tanning until you reach throughout the world. Some indiviaâ€"| 4 lighter golden bronze. An authenâ€" uals are overâ€"sensitive to certain foods: UC replica of the marine signal code and will have colds in their heads,, Of Nags decorates; the gay canteen, "Snuffy" noses, pains in the stomach or, 424 can bet your boots that every abdomen when they eat those foogs,| ImAn on the beach will want to show while other people suffer no ill effects O his marine knowledge by telling ;eatjng the same foods. "Food Alergy~| YOUu what the flags mean! If you have booklet (No. 106) by Doctor Barton,| in for a red, white and blue beach tells how to discover the offending| Outfit this season, or all white, nothing foods and what to do about them. You COUld be smarter swung over your may obtain this booklet by sending Ten shoulder than this useful container! Cents to cover handling and service, to| After you have bronzed smfficiently the Bell Library, 2247 West 43rd Street,| Yyou may use the canteen for other New York, N. Y. purposesâ€"which is always an incenâ€" (Registered in accordance with the | tive to buy! w Copyright Act). i l (Released by The Bell Symdicate Inc.). Dr. Sindoni Concludes with this reâ€" assuring statement for that large group of diabetics now taking ordinary insulin but wondering if they should not be taking protamine insulin. Because of its slow absorption proâ€" tamine insulin may, were much starch food is eaten, allow symptoms to get started that upset patient and physiâ€" cian and too many injections may thus be given to control these symptoms. 2. Protamine insulin combined with ordinary insulin will not only reduce the total amount of insulin needed to keep patient free of symptoms but surâ€" gical wounds and infections clear up more rapidly by the use of the comâ€" bined treatment, Disadvantage of the protamine inâ€" sulin is: 1. With one injection of protamine insulin when the patient retires, the sugar in the blood is slowly reducedâ€" showing the delayed, slow prolonged but continuous action of insulin. This effect will avoid the necessity of awakâ€" ening the patient who previously reâ€" quired an early morning dose of ordinâ€" ary insulin between 3 to 4 a.m. The bride, who was riage by her uncle, Mr looked lovely in a simp cream chiffon velvet: The bride was Miss Beatrice Irene Armstrong, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Armstrong, of South Porecupine, and the bridegroom was Dr. Charles 1}. Kochikian, of Hooverhill, Mass, The Rey: UnHranl aEMat~ ; Their wedding took place on Saturâ€" day afternoon (July 27th), at 3.30 in the Colgate Divinity School Chapel at Rochester, New York. South Porcupine, July 27â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"Mrs. Charles D. Kochiâ€" kian (Irene Armstrong) is expected by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James E. Armstrong, to arrive in South Porcuâ€" pine with her husband on Tuesday. On Tussday evening (July 30th) a reception is to be held at the Armâ€" strong home, 55 Rae Ave., when Dr. Kochikian and his bride will receive theâ€"good cwisiics . of friends of the family. This beauty is using that new clear liquid which ins mascara and brow pencil. Said to be perfectly safe lashes and brows. Reception to be Held at South Porcupine for Newlyvâ€"Weds Dr. Kochikian and Miss Irene Armstrong Married at Rochester, NY New Makeâ€"Up Kit Offers Variety Rev. Conrad Mollhonas officiatâ€" , Mr. Luther Pedlar, simple long gown of €et; a fingertip veil by PATRICIA LINDSAY given in marâ€" THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO clear liquid which instantly removes ling of makeâ€"up in the same tantaâ€" lizing scent. And the compact which tops this moderately priced group of beauty aids, is of so luscious a pink with a wee touch of gold that it looks good enough to eat! More Fun for the Reach In an honestâ€"toâ€"goodness canteen, with a strap for your shoulder, comes the latest of sunburn preventativesâ€"a Gardenia scented oil which promises you a gradual tanning until you reach a lighter golden bronze. An authenâ€" tic replica of the marine signal code luxury when you look at them. If you desire to go the whole hog, so to speak, you may have a complete A reseption was held later at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Nassit, Mrs. Luther Pedlar, the bride‘s aunt, reâ€" ceiving in a gown of peach lace with a corsage of talisman roses. Dr. and Mrs. Kochikian left later for honeymcon ky motor to Canada. Ushers we bort Driver. Her only attendant was Miss Otildge Tupper, who was gowned in pale pink net with lace insets, and who carried a shower bouquet of garden flowers. man irom â€"wWhich white veivet gardenias. the card South Porcupine, July 27â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"Please noteâ€"mothers of small childrenâ€"the advertisement printed elsewhere in this issue concernâ€" ing admission of children to school in September. . No children under five years will be admitted or whdose fifth birthday occurred after May 31st, 1940. Birth certificate as proof may be askâ€" ed for with hew Kindergartners. Notice to Mothers of Small Children at 8. Porcupine Dr. E. D. Nassit officiated as best caught ught to the head with knots of arls. She carried a white bible vhich dessended streamers of Williams: The truthful man is who never sends a friend a ing him how many blankets ening under. of Effects re Jolin Lambay and Roâ€" > to use on the Mr.~and Mrs. B. Breakey are leavâ€" ing on Monday to take up residence in Toronto, Mr. Breakey having enlisted for overseas service. Mr. and Mrs. Roderick and baby reâ€" turned this week from holiday in Toronto. Mr. Louis Gentile, of Slotnick‘s staff left on Friday for holiday in Sault Ste Mrs. H. Disher, who has been visiting for the past few weeks in Toronto, reâ€" turned home this week. Mrs,. Lorne Callahan Golden Ave., left on holiday in Chatsworth. Mrs. McIntosh and son, Homer, left this week for holiday on Lake Temisâ€" kaming. Betty McIntosh will spend a holiday at Camp Lorraine, and Miss Mary McIntosh is taking a summer course at the Toronto Conservatory of Music. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pether, of Moore St., are on holiday in Thornbury. Mrs. R. Mitchell, with son, and Miss Dorothy Andrews, of Dome Ex., left on Saturday for holiday in Toronto and points east. Mr. R. Connelly and family, of Dome Ex., are leaving on Sunday for holiday in Shawville. Bornâ€"To Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd King, of 173 Pine St., Timmins, a daughter, on Saturday, July 27th, in Porcupine General Hospital. Mrs. R. Mitchell, with son, and Miss| Dorothy Andrews, of Dome Ex.. left son at the Dome, left on Sunday for his home in Shawville. Miss Hazel Cameron, of Preston East DBome, left for her home in Shawville on Saturday upon learning of her mother‘s illness there, Scouth Porcupine, July 27â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"An accident between a heavily laden truck and a car on Rea Hill occurred on Thursday evening around 10 o‘clock. A car driven by a ,Mr. Rathwell, leather traveller, from North Bay, was proceeding towards iTimmms when it came violently in contact with the rear end of a heavy truck, carrying rock. The impact [stove in the engine of the car and [broke the windshield, the driver being eut about the head and face by filying glass, while being jammed beaind the steering wheel. He was taken to Porâ€" cupine General Hospital where his inâ€" Jjuries received attention, and was able to leave next morning. Mr. and Mrs. V. James spent last weekâ€"end in Arntfield, Quebec. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Horner left on Friday for holiday in the Ottawa Valâ€" ley. Mrs. Winson Hodgins, of Cecil Ave. and family, left on Friday for holiday in Shawville and other points. ’Other News of South Por | _ eupine and the Dome.. Mrs. G. F. W. Anderson, of 33 Goldâ€" en avenue, left on Saturday for a week‘s vacation at Barkber‘s Bay. Guests of Mrs. McAlpine, of Crawâ€" fcrd St., are her mother Mrs. Frank Plato, and Mrs. Eric Gremlik, and daughter, Geraldine, Mrs. A. Hovney and Mrs. A. Beckie with children, all of Fort Erie. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Welsh left by car thig week for holiday in Timagarmai, Ottawa, and New York World‘s Fair. Collision Between Car and Heavy Truck at South Porcupine for a small down payment. The toast pops upwhen it‘s doneâ€"always the way you wait it, Don‘t deny yourself the many advantages of electricity â€" the cheapest of all servants. Make your summer more enjoyable with electric refrigeration, electric cooking, elecâ€" tric fans, an electric water heater and the many small appliances that help to lighten household tasks. This week we are featuring modern electric irons, electric toasters and electric coffee makers. You can buy all three for a small down payment. and family of Saturday for e driver being face by fiying d beaind the taken to Porâ€" With M aker delicio heavy lunch impacet eveni Silex you ca A fire alarm in the middle of the storm on Thursday afternoon proved to be for a chimney fire at B. Laffin‘s home on Golden Avenue. No damage was done. Mr. N. G. Brown, of Strachan Ave., received news today (Saturday) of the sudden death of his father in Thesâ€" salon. He left in the evening accomâ€" panied by Mrs. Brown and child for Thessalon to attend the funeral. from week Mr. and Mrs. A. Chevrier, of Front St., are on holiday in Shawville. Mrs. G. Michell, of Connaught Hill, leaves on Tuesday to take up residence in Chatham. Mr. Andrew Pirie, who has been visitâ€" Ing his daughter, Mrs. Helmer, and His son at the Dome, left on Sunday for Dyve‘e ho: July 20th bleod, secret pine Branch South Porer Will Knit for Red Cross During August at Ssouth Poreupine Sewing to be Discontinued for the Month. Mari (M 1 Mrs. J. Burns, and the gifts for the guest of honour were placed in a pink and white decorated basket for her acceptance. She received manv usefnu Prifts for South Porcupine, July 27â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"The home of Mrs. Wilâ€" liam Farren, of Connaught Hill, was Miss Clemiss Honoured at South Porcupine Event and Mrs. C. Bell have moved O‘Brien Ave. to Powell Ave. this announcement from A. Trueâ€" secretary of the Eastern Porcuâ€" ranch of the Canadian Red Cross Porcupine, says:â€" meéeting was held at Mrs. R. E. home on Saturday afternoon, ‘0th, to discuss the recommendaâ€" nen o a t Deliciouns and Refreshing h many useful gifts for en of her future home. served a delicious ter the guests had enjoyed an of cards. BAVE wit h th an aut never vork and fabrics omatic iron the gifts for the Canada Northern Power Corporation Limited Controlling Korthern Nort hern "The rooms will be reopened again for daily routine work in September and exact dates will be announced toâ€" ward the end of August. "‘The above notice is effective August PHONE 3213 Furthermore, it the teacher has any reasonable doubt of the age of such children we wil require a birth certificate, This is to notify parents that we shall not enroll in KINDERGARâ€" TEX in SEPT, 1940 any child who is not 5 years of age on or before May 3ist, 1944 Cor, Spruce St. Third Ave, The King Edward Hotel Clean Rooms Day or Week Very Reasonable Rates Notice to Parents Quiet Atmoszshere B. M. C. Shaw, Principal 8. 8. 1, Tisdale and Op Ontario , Limited Quebec IAimited MONDAY, JULY 29TH 1940 Operating RVY Power