|\ onl en itA l c 3 0 n > PR i a *A + w.vfl . 1 y i y eooled is diss ening smoot well. knead grease rning, let ris shape grease "~ brush Mrs. Bla telephone ; him the wr Whoe Whe*at Bread Use preceding recipe for white bread, subsfituting threse cups unsifted whole whe@t flour for thres cups white flour. A little additional white flour may be needed. Brown sugar may be substiâ€" tuted for white. (Released by The Bell Syndicate, In>.) Notoe: The entirs prosess will take abolif five hours To shorten time to 2%â€"nours, use two yeast cakes. OIf m is mixed to rise overnight. use only }; yeast cake. ening, cover set in a warm place and letâ€"rise until double in bulk. Knsad, shape into two loaves and place in two greased 8 by 4 inch loaf pans and brush with melted shortening again. Cover and let rise again until douj}le in bulk. Bake in moderately hot oven (425 degrees Fahrenheit») fifteen minâ€" utes.,then reduce heat 10 moderate (375 deï¬ies Fahrenhneit) and bake thirty to a'nrty-ï¬ve minutes longer. Yield: two loaves. White Bread 1 cake compressed yeast * _2 cups milk, sealded 2 tablespoons suger 2 teaspoons salt 34 tablespoons melted. shortening 6 cups sifted (about) Criumbole yseast cake into bowl <and slowly add scalded milk which has bsen eooled to lukewarm, stirring until yeast is dissolved. Stir in sugar, salt, shortâ€" ening and s the ficur. Beat until smooth. ~Add remaining flcur and mix well. Turn out on fioured board and knead until smooth.. Places dough in greased bow!l. brush with malted short. I like to add the melted shortsning last as this makes the dougzh easier to knead. You will need almost no floury on your board. Bread is kneaded enough before the first rising, when it is very elastic. This is snown by the sprinzing hback when pressed wWith the finzers An even shorter kneading is all that is necessary after the bread has risen and before it is foarmed into loaves. You may test this by cutting the dough with a knife. T there are no large buklsl@q, it is ready to be siimap:d. Dougsh should always be allowed to doubl> in bulk both at the time of the first and the second rising. We generally us> the quick process which by means sof several yeast cakes allows us to have bread out of the oven within five hours after starting it. One thing to remember in mixing is that milk or water must be lukewarm whan it iss added to the crumbled yeast. Ts3o high a temperavure will kill the yeast plants which whills growing in the dough producs th> bussles which raise the loaves. On the sther hand tco low a temperature will make the actian slower. eral iuse. Onsce nothing tasts so few loaves for tc ner while we ec for toast. The other day some one said to me, "Now that th> holidays are over, I‘m going back to plain bread and butter." Bhe went on to ask me to publish some recipes for yeas® breads and rolls. Homemad» bread, which once upon a time was mad> once or twice weekly, is nowadays rated as a luxury. Few of us think it is wort‘} while to mix and bake it in the home kitchen for gonâ€" Homemade Bread Again Popular in Most Homes Domestic Science Expert Gives Hints on Making Bread at Home. Temperature Should Neither be Too High Nor Too Low. Add Lukewarm Milk or Water to Yeast. Frank Byck Son 86 Spruce South Canmore Briquettes, Western Stoker, Iron Fireâ€" man Stoker, Western stove and furnace Coal, Alexo, Pocahontas, Coke, Steam, Woelsh, American Blue and Welsh Blower. JIELLO! _ MHELLO:! i iind, of number Bread is kneaded he first rising, when it This is snown by the ig back when pressed ‘s. An even shorter that is necessary after risen and before it is i2es. You may test this 11 vÂ¥or know Groen had AaV S | dear, he married a aof course, she gave M. Barteor ugsoales which raise ;ther hand tco low make the actian FOR GOOD COAL AND sERVICT Coal and Woodyard and Office ind uns > to mix and hen for gonâ€" ile. however, d we make a ich and dinâ€" 0 buy bread Just Phone 32 for prompt delivery Phone 32 Ked Coats look cheery in dirty winâ€" tor weather, â€"and are deservedly fashâ€" icnable. This model is of flecked dark r8ed tweed of nubby texture, its colourâ€" ing enriched by a collar and tuxedo bands of Alaskan brown seal. The belt ¢f the mod®l is set in and buttons over the fur, centre front. Unpressed pleats, stitched at the waistline control the fabric for a front flare. ‘In India, a hc:; climate and also trepisal and subâ€"tropical Africa, there are examples of people of fine stature. These conditions occur wher» food of the right kind is plentiful. Where food is secarce the stature of the inâ€" habitants is poor. It is, one thinks nutrition and not climate, that chiefly influences the growth activity. T15 is food and the influenzce <of weather, past or to cpme, that gives th> wild animal his weight, his s?iny _ coat and his strength and endurance. smaller in the hips. They have reach»>d womanhood earlier. This has bsen alâ€" most universally attributed to better nutrition. Dr. Mills attrisutes this physical precocity to a delayed effect of cold weather in the 18th and 19th <onturies. Sinvze 1929, while p:ople have grown m1gzer, ithe world weather has grown warmer and Mills looks for as a conâ€" sequen:ce, an ebbing tids in human growth. Well, we shall seoe, ut common sense still points to fosd as the chief factor in this growth. There are of cours? other factors tbut cold, excsept as a Everyone knows that for the last 80 or 90 years college foys have steadily grown taller and heavicr. Girls have grown longerâ€"legged, biggerâ€"watssted and ~«timulant to appetite, is an unlikely raus»e of the increased growth of the period us. Ccold climat:s stimulate pbeoople, he says. It tends to make them grow faster thus prstecting them against In the Dark azes, when wine grapes grew in England and carâ€" cals in Iceland, men were poor speciâ€" mensâ€"short, sluggish, casy victims of the plague. (By J, W. S. MCullough, MD., DPMH.) Dr. Clarence Alonzo Mills, professor cf experimeontal medicin> at the Uniâ€" versity of Cincinngti, has the theory that a warm climate tends to the growth of a shorter, s{oker and less healthy raczce. Health Less Affected by Climate Than hy Foods TOâ€"DAY‘S FASHIONS you don‘t feel just right, If you‘ can‘t sleep at night, you moan and sigh, Anda your throat feols dry, â€"you don‘t care to smoke If your food makes you your heart doesn‘t beat, If you‘re getting cold feet, your head‘s in a whirlâ€" Why not marty the girl? Red Ctats for Winterâ€" Weather T immins‘ \the Military Medal in the first Great! | War, was not able to be present. He is| f«tamoned with the Royal Canadian Ajr, Force at Sydney, NS. | Exchanse: The man who knows on which side his bread is buttered is usuâ€" ally the one whose convictions lean to the buttered side, located. One brother, who lives in the vicinity of Ottawa, at once took a train~to the Patawawa Camp. The reunion was arranged with the minimum of delay and both were able to smend Christmas together with the sister and another The third brother, who won H,. See; Thos Small; South Porcupine i Skating Rink; Andrew Suttisc, South M Porcupine. i | 1 I ; r t Miss Ethecl Tinney; J. Thomas; E. Thompson; Mrs, J. P. Thompson; J. H. Tomlinson, Schumacher. . M. Wallingford; A. J. White; W. Widdifield; John Wilder, South Poreuâ€" | pine; L. N. Worthington; J. Worrell, Kapuskasing; E. J. Uren, Dome Minss. Dccember 27th 1940:; Alex Abramsan, South Porcupine: PBarnard Ash. L. Banning; W. P. Bennetts; Daonald Bergeron; E. C. Brewer; Austin Brown; | Charles G. Brown, South Porcupine; Michael Bugera, Schumacher. I | | ! | E. Mulvihill;: Kenneth Myers, South Poreupine. F®. O‘Hearn. Miss. HH. M. Patterson; A. S. Pesl; H. Péppler. Wm. K. Redden; Charles A. Remus; T. H. Richards; M. Ro>; Mrs. A. Ross;â€" I. Rosner; F. D. Roy, Schuâ€" macher. The supervisor of the CLWBS,. reâ€" creation hut a; Petawawa notified the Legion personal services bureau at Otâ€" tawa which immediately got to work. Three days after the notification was recoived word was sent to Petawawa that the man‘s relatives had been The man, a gunner with the 24th Antiâ€"Tank Battery stationed at Petaâ€" wawa, appealéd to the Canadian Legion War Services to assist him in locating thres brcthers and a sister whom he had not seen or heard from for more than 16 yvears. QOttawa, Jan. l1stâ€"To ons Canadian on active sarvice this has been the happiest Christmas h» has ever known. Jos. A. Tapper; Miss Ellen Térry; Mrs. L. E. Tessier; Gerald Trueblood, South Poreupine; Wm. Trumble; Ferâ€" gus Turner. W. E. Donaldson. Emplovess‘ Fund Buffalo Ankerite Mines. Thomas Fisher; F. Ford. Andrew Gordon; Robt. Gray. D. Hallett, Schumacher; Miss Gerâ€" trude Heinonen; William Hitch; F. A. Holmes, Schumacher; F. E. Hocking; Hollinger; W. H. Hutchison, Ssouth Porcupine. Wyman N. Irvine. Charles Keates Calvin â€" MacDonald Schumacher; Donald Martel: L. S. May; A. McArâ€" thur; J. A. McCulloch; Herb@rt Moin, Schumacher F. Melville; Mike Melko; Henry Miller, South Porcupine; J. Jahin Mitchell; G. Monohan. Mrs. O‘Leary, Schumacher. Walter Paterick; C. G. Pirie; J. Pet. erson. Wm. Rutchynski. Tony Slak; Garfield Smitheram:; Mrs. E. Spadafore, South Poreupine. FPitz Williams, Mace Gold Mines Mrs. A. J. Wikston. Frank Zickkar. Happiest Christmas on Record for This Soldier 5. Habib; Miss HMHammond, South Porcupine; Victor Hedges, South Porâ€" cupine; Stanley Hindson; Mrs. Howse: Nick Tlander, South Porcupine. Gordon Kirt; Oscar E. Krist@nson. Charles Lamothe, South Porcupine. La Federation Dss Fommes Francais Canadian; Miss Bertha LaSalle; William Leâ€" KÂ¥dock; M. Leohtisalo. A. B. Cadman; O. FP. Carter, Schuâ€" macher; Hatrry Crick; Miss I. Cunning. ham. Further Donations | Made to Porcupine Christmas Seal Fund! D). A. MacLod; Finlay MacPhail, South Poreupine; Richard Mills Sandy Falls, Jolhn A. Mitchell; J. E. Morin:; W. F. Moyle, South Porcupine; Miss J. Mrs. Carbona; Carlido Cattarello south Porcupine; C. W. Caverly; Mrs. James Cowan:; B. Curtis, South Porcuâ€" pine. The Porcupine Christmas Seal Comâ€" mittse is pleased to announce that the response to the campaign up to Dec. 2ith, 1940, has been most gratifying. The total amount subscrib>d to that date is $2,€56.15, which compares fayâ€" ourably with former years. The comâ€" mittee wish?s to remind thos> who have not yet obtained seals and who wish to do so that they are still availâ€" able. To all whose who have supported this worthy cause, the committee exâ€" tâ€"nds the ssasons greetinmas. The following are further donations acknowledged: 23rcd, 1940: Mrs. D. N. Adams, Schumacher; Frank Ahigren, South Poreupine; Sevâ€" erino Anzel; L. W. Appleton. Louis Ballando, South Porcupine; Gerald Banning: Aledric Beauchamp; W. A. Belanger; G. Bender; J2an Blair Schumacher; Mrs. A. Burrows. P. Edlund, Schumacher; Charles Edâ€" ney: Nick Elli¢s. John Pogg Co.; Mrs. D. FrCcoman, Ssuth Porcupine; J. L. Fulton. Miss K. Gallagher; Fernand Gauâ€" thier, A. Grandbois. Response to Call! for Funds to Fight Tuberâ€" culosis. ) He is irrepressible and his sharp wit has made his typ2 famous. Bombs and blackouts have failed to dismay him. A few days ago the blast from the explosion of a delayedâ€"action bomb upset a coster‘s barrow in a north@rn part of London. A fellow coster passed and laughed. "Wot abort it, ‘Arry?" "Thats nuffink, mate," returned the other, "you aucht to see me Berlin branch." ._._.â€"~â€"Sudbury Star No character is more famliiar in the i London scene than the typical costerâ€" monger, wheeling slowly along the street an overladsn barrow of fruit or vegetables for sale. Jan m mm omm n ons t Decision to granit this privilege to men undeéer arms came as a result of a letter from the Legion to the Postâ€" mas‘er (General citing an incident where heavy charges wers made on a gift package that journed from one end of Canada to the other before it reached its dcestination. The Legion acted on behalf cof its Saskatenewan Command to which the 20mplain‘t from a service man was first made. Mr. Mulock stated that instructions have now been issued that parcels adâ€" dressed to men under arms must in future be reâ€"directed free of charge. Ottawa, Jan. 1stâ€"Parcels addressed to any member of the naval, land or air forces in Canada that fail ;o reach the owing to transfeér are to be reâ€"directed without further postage charges, the Canadian Legion was adâ€" vised by Postmaster General W. P. Muleock. Parcels to Troops to be Reâ€"directed Without Cost Dry climates, high altitudss and hard rch the skin of its moisturs, and prolonged illness, nerve strain and undernourisiimont can quitkly cause your face to look dull and aged. S9 all should he avoided if poassi‘ole. The most important step in a dry The most important step in a dry skin treatment is the stimulation. You must wake up those lazy, inactive pores, through exersise o‘ the body and with â€"xternal massuge.. With a quickened ficry of blood to your face your skin will take on new beauty. What to Do To keep face skin nicely lubricated we begin with the scalp. Your hair must be brushed daily and if your scalp is dry too, which is usually the case if your face skin is dry, you keep it lubricated by using a pomade or tonic several times a week. If you want to prove to yourself the truth of this, feel your skin when your scalp is thoroughly ancinted with olive oill beâ€" fore a shampoo. Your skin feels like velvet even though you didn‘; put a speck of oil on your face! Why! Well, But, fortunately for us, the skin has a power of yrenswal if it is given suffiâ€" client nourishment and the proper exâ€" t:rnal treatment to stimulate, cleanse and soften it. Its normal elasticity and texture may be restored if you resolved to give it the care it requires, We are told that tha condition comâ€" monly known as "dry sikin‘" is caused by the failure of tiny moisturse and oi!l glands which are in the second layer of skin to function normally. This in turn is caused by one‘s faiure to supply the bloovdstream with food mecessary to create the protoplasm reâ€" quired to rensw the skin. INSURANCE and REAL ESTATE TN ALL BRANCHES 132 PINE STREET NORTH TVMMINS Phones: Res, 135 Office 112 PR II Beauty and You â€" by PATRICIA LINDSAY sz WALLY WESTMORE, makeâ€"up artist of Paramount Studio ceaches MARY MARTIN the corvrzct application of a protective powder base. Special Routine Suggested for Dry Skin During Cold Weather. SIMMS, HOOKER DREW To lose one‘s heme by fire is tragic but not as bad as it could be if it wasn‘t protected by insurance. Protect yvour investment . . . See us about insurâ€" Sudbury Star and Mail IN CASE OF FIRE A _ Wialil } When you cleanse your face do not otoplasm reâ€" handle it gently. Give it a good $ | brisk massage. Remove the first cream the skin has} / licati ith tissue d th t y | application wit issue an en pu g,wenqsu § {on a richer cream. Massage that well a * c‘ aAy < [ . a 3 ?mpil' X ,mto th> skin and slap your face briskâ€" la e .cean.se.ly every once in a while. This second lascicity @and f cre r d lved‘alfp cation of cream may be remove NOe with cotton moistened in a skin tonic ires. | or stimulant, or it may be removed les anq hard | with warm water (not hot) and a bland its molstur®, | seap. Eithor the fonic or rinsing water e strain and| should be very chilled to give the # ] y cause pores a bit more of a workâ€"out. d aged. Sâ€â€˜ Protective Creéeam Important 35;1.3i11.1. a dry Umil dry skin becomes naturally ulation. You | and softened, one should use active pores, | 8 protective oil or cream after a thor_- dy and with;cugh cleansing as desc.rxbed above and a quickeneg| going outdoors in cold weather. our skin will Finding the most satisfactory proâ€" ‘ective formula is nofp easy. There are lovely refined oils, fluffy creams, richer vy lubricated heavier creams) and lotions from which â€" YÂ¥our hairp to Some women, though. resort nd if your, t9 heated drop of ol.we, mineral or usually the almond oil as a protective base, simply v, you must because they cannot find the perfect g a pomade commercial formula. But un};s:ss your reek. If you skin is too dry and too sensitive the the truth of Chances are that one of the makeâ€"up your scalp is base mixtures will suit your skin to a T, olive oil be. And by asking the aid f:f a competent in feels like Sales girl at a 'cosmetxc counter you put a may be wisely aided. Why! Well, (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ance loday. ‘"Well," snapped the landlay, "and | whats the matter with the chicken?" Briggs shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, nothingâ€"â€"â€"nothing," he said, offâ€" handedly. "I was going to say it‘s quite evident that the bird was an offâ€" spring of a hardâ€"boiled egg." â€" Globe ‘ Sn ies ie smm mc ts apate ns w "Of course," said Briggs, as he began to tackle the leg of the chicken, "I may be wronz, but it strikes me that this chickenâ€"* DISSOLVED those dreams; we‘ll give | a hint. We found it all of no avail; i Befor» those lines appear@d in print, "Twasâ€"SEMPER IDEMâ€"same old | talg ‘! !â€"! | RESOLVED that gambling never pays Although perhaps we‘ll take it hard With true intentâ€"in future days We vow we‘ll never touch a card. RESOLVED that we shall never take A liberty with any girl; No Whoopee we intend to make; Nor join the thronz in aimless whirl. RESOLVED that nicotine is bad For health; that we have smokeda enough Cigars or cigarettes, and had Too much of pip@s; no more we‘ll puff. RESOLVED that 1941 Shaill be a vastly different year; Of grievous faults there shall be none; That we‘ll abstain from wine and beer. oll travels rapidly deown the minute crevicss of the skin surface. So you sse if you could keep your scalp natâ€" urally lubricated your face skin would not be so dry besause any excess c‘ would flow down the face. A CAREFUL APPROACH Semper Idem Robert Whitâ€"man l Friday, January 10th â€" Fveoning. ‘Rumanian Women. ' Mcnday, January 13thâ€"Finnisy Wo. gmen of Harmony Hall. | Tuesday , January 14¢hâ€"Finnish. ' Wednesday, January 15thâ€"Polish, Wednesday, January 15thâ€"Evening. |Czechoslovakian. i â€" Thursday, January 16thâ€"C. W. L. + Thursday, January 16thâ€"Evening. !Mrs. Thompson. Waodnesday, January 22ndâ€"Evening. School Teachers. Thursday, January 23rdâ€"C.W L. Thursday, â€" January â€" 23rdâ€"Evening. Mrs. Thompson. Friday January 24thâ€"Italian Women Friday, January 24thâ€"Evening. Ruâ€" manian Women. Monday, January 27thâ€"Finnish Woâ€" men of Harmony Hall. Tuesday, January 28â€"Polish Woemen Wedn:sday, January 29thâ€"Women‘s Institute. Wednesday, January 29thâ€"Evening. Czechoslovakian Women. Thursday, January 30thâ€"C.W.L. Thursday,â€" January â€" 30thâ€"Evening. Mrs. Thompson. Friday, January 31â€"Fronch Canaâ€" dian Women. Friday, January 31stâ€"Evening. Ruâ€" manian Women. Friday, January 17thâ€"French Canaâ€" dian Women. Friday, January l7th â€" Evening. RKumanian Women. Maonday, January 20thâ€"Finnish Wo. men of Harmony Hall. Tussday, January 21st â€" United Church. Tuesday, January 3lst â€" Evening. Sshool Teachers. Wednesday, January 22ndâ€"St, Matâ€" thews and Presbyterian Women. Friday, January 10thâ€"Italian Woâ€" m>n. s The following is the Red Crow; scheâ€" dule for January, 1941 Larger Room Monday, January and Finnish Womsn of Harmony Hall. Tuesday January 7thâ€"Finnish. Tuesday, January "th â€" Evening. Sshool Teachers. Wednesday, January 8thâ€"Presbyterâ€" ian Women. : Wednesday, January 8thâ€"â€"Evening. 3zhool Teachers. Thursday, January Othâ€"Lsegion Woâ€" mon. Thursday, . January â€" Mrs, Thompson. Schedule for the Red Cross Work for Month of January Dates for Various Groups for Larger andâ€"Smaller Room. NORTHERN P OW ER â€" COMPANY LIMITFD Make a resolution now to be kind to your cyes all year. Be sure you have enough lTight in every room. Be sure it is of the right quality â€" don‘t use bare bulbs in Be sure it is properly distributed throughout the room and concentrated on the chairs or tables where you sit to read, sew or do other eye work. Re# memberâ€"Better Light means Better Siglu"f{uid you‘ll never have another pair of cyes! Treat your eyes to BETTER LIGHT in 1941 Tusossday, January men. Sudbury Star: ‘"My word!" said the minister‘s wife, tasting whisk@y (to know it) for the first time in her life clair. Thursday, January 23 porte. Friday,.. January 24th p3at "IT‘m tired of cooking for you; you do nothing but find fault," snapp@d a young Sudbury wife. Her Husband replied; "Leot‘s dins at a restaurant thenâ€"that‘ll give you a chance." â€"Sud@bury Star "It tastes just like the imedicine my husband has beren taking for the past 20 years Smaller Room Monday, January 6thâ€"â€"Mrs. Kearns. Tuesday, Jaunray Morris and Jewish Women. . Wednessiay, hnunm $thâ€"Myrs. Sinâ€" clair. \}.\‘* Thursday, January 9tNMr% Laporteo Friday, January lmhâ€"-»'flmted Church Women. Monday, January lathâ€"*-\m Ostrossor Tuoesday Januaty j4thâ€"Jewish Woâ€" me!l YÂ¥ou probably know that constiâ€" pation sets up poisons in the large intestine or colon. But do you know that these poisons seep through the walls of the colon and infect the bloodstream? â€" They set up. toxic accumulations in kidneys and liver and are contributing rheumatic pains, sciatic ache. Do you really know why constiâ€" patnon is so harmful? Most laxatives only act in the colon. Kruschen does more. It is the laxative with a double action. Resides ridding the colon of stagnating waste matter, Kruschen‘s mineral salts have a diuretic action. ‘They flush the kidneys, help to clear the bloodstream of all poisonous matter, and so protect your whole system from that form of infection. Wednesday, January 15thâ€"â€"Myrs. Day Thursday, January 16thâ€"â€"Myrs. Laâ€" orte. Friday, January 17thâ€"Mrs, Martin. Monday, canuary 20thâ€"Mrs. Kearns Tuesday, January 2l1stâ€"Jewish Woâ€" DID YOU TAKE A LAXATIVE TODAY? You can get Kruschen from all dgrug stores. <Prices 75¢ and 25¢ THURSDAY, JANUARY 32ND Fridey, January 31st Wednesiay, January Thursday,. Janvary Monday January 27th Wednesday, January HER CHANCE @Indâ€"â€"Myrs. Sin 20thâ€"Mrs, Day. 30thâ€"Mrs. Laâ€" 23rcâ€"â€"[M 1 Mrs. Martin causes of i and backâ€" Mrs. Ostros rion Wo La do