0::000000000000%’:00%‘00000000000000 2 cups tomatoes 1 t2aspoon paprika., Have short ribs cut into pieces !or setving. Rub with cloves of garlic and sprinkle with sait and pepper. Brown meat in drippings on all sides.. ~Add enough boiling water to half cover. Cover kettle and let cook slowly about an hour and a half, until meat is tend>r. Place msat in a baking dish add tomatcss and paprika, cover and c00k in a moderate oven, 375 degrees F. about a half an hour. Sliced onions and parboiled carrots and turnips may: be us>d instead of the tomatess. In this case a little extra water may beâ€" needed in additicn to th» stock in w.hich{ the meat was cooked. Ham Baked With Ncodles I 1 package of noodles 1 teaspoon preparsd mustard 2 cups thin white sauce + 1 cup diced ham. | 1 cup mintc:d ham. { Cook noodles in boiling saited water seven minutes and drain. Stir musx.ard into white sauce add nosdles and djced hnam and pour into casserole. Sprinkle top with minced ham and bake in a hot oven, 450 degrees FP., for ‘ ten minutes or until brown. (Released by Th> Bell Syndicate,. Inc.) DOMINION SEFD HOUSE, CEORCET OWN, ONT. im mm un s 0# NC 9 CGERANIUMS | 3 pounds bee 1 clove garlic Drippings 1 small onion Salt, pepper The question has arisen as to whether the inclusion. of an unusually largs amount of vitamins might be harmful No scientific discovery has ever apâ€" pealed to the puslic so much as that of vitamins. Pertaps the term which was adopted for lack of a better on> has something to do with the interost which has been and is increasingly taken in the vitamin Of course, there are other factors in diet which are perhaps of even greater importance, but fortunately th:se will be supplied automotically if we choos>2 our foods especially with reference to their vitaâ€" min contribution. Essential Vitamins May be Supplied by the Use of a Well Chosen Diet FREEâ€"OUR BIG 1941 SEED AND NURSERY BOOK â€"Better than Ever In Their Turn Pror Turn Essential Vitamins Contribute Other Imâ€" portant Factors in Foods Necessary for Health. â€" Reâ€" cipe for Short Ribs of RBReef and Ham Baked With Noodles. a yorgeous collection eonâ€" taining Dazaling . Sogriet, me Red‘k Brick l\!;ed Crimsan, Mar * OFâ€" Soarlq:t?’.'flakntm. Cerise, OQGrangeâ€"Red, . monâ€"Pink, _ Bright~ ‘Pink, Peach, Hlush Roge, White, Blotehed, V arieg akgesd . Margined. Easy to rrow oom 90 days after plantâ€" r 25¢, postpald. Plant now. : 1 pkt. as above d alce Houseplant Seeds, ali Y grown in Nalue ~Order dGireet o ts tb veryong interested _ in onseplants «Bowd â€"gylant a packtt or $s» our CGeranlum Seed. Yp offer 18 for 15¢ no Barbeyr f By VERA WINSTON ; GOCD â€"OLD navy ~blue serge has staged a big comeâ€"back and is well rmsâ€" presented in advance spring fashions, of which this frock is one. To conâ€" trast with the blue serg>, the yoke and slseves are of red, white and blue aotted ti> silk. From under the turnâ€" down collar a knotted tie of red silk is attached to the top of the Yoke. The bodice is simple with a f:w inside tucks radiating from «he centre and torminâ€" ating in seams on the skirt. London, Eng.:â€"Eightâ€"y:arâ€"old Sadie was frequently sent home from schocol [ for fscrgetting to bring written excuses for tardiness or absonce from classes. One day she was sont home to bring an {important docsument, the birth certifâ€" icate of her little brcther, Joey, who was just starting to school. Her mother cautioned her ta tak»e great care of the document. Sadie turned up at school crying. "What‘s the matter now?" asked the teacher. "I‘ve lost Jocy‘s exâ€" cus> for being born"! she wailed. Jewish Chronicle:â€"Don‘t fool yourâ€" self, brother: Girls who are easiest on the eyes ar> hardest on the nerves. Sens:> and Nonsense:â€" The Greeks have a word for it and ws bet the Italians have a hot one for it, too. Toronto Telegram:â€"Gerti> the Plirâ€" tie sraysâ€""It takes expsrience to kiss like a beginner." TOâ€"DAY‘S FASHIONS A common way in which to provide vitamin C for children is to giv> them a daily allowance .of crange juice, of cther fruit juices and tomato juice. All these juices deteriorat> on standing exâ€" posed to the air, so they should be freshly prepared. ‘This is particularly tru> of tomato juice. â€"Thse saving azent in fresh foods, fruits and vegetables is ascorbizs acid. Both strawberrics and cabbage are amply supplied with this acid. The berri:s have from 36 to 65 millisrams foneâ€"one thousand of a gram) of asâ€" corbic acid in each 100 grams of the frui; (a gram is a little over 15 grains). In cabbage the proportion runs from 48 to 181 milligrams to the 100 grams. celsry himself and those of his crew who demurred were given the end. On his first voyage of discovery Capâ€" tain the celebrated navigator, insist:d that his sailors should use soups made from wild celery and other plants. He set the example by eating wild celcry himself and those of his crew such for example as sjinach, turnips or potatoes do equally well. Of from three to five ounces (say 30 berries) of abcut 1 to 4 ounces of cabbage daily will suffice to provent scurvy. [Many cther foods (From Health Leazu> of Canada) The old scourg> of seamen, soldiers and explorers, namely scurvy, which was caus :d by lack of fresh fruits vegetables and fresh food gensrally and for which lim>â€"juice (really lemon juice) was a specific, is now readily prevented by the use of either cabbaze or strawberrics. Cabbages and Strawberries As Sources of Vitamin C NÂ¥ur hair may be gray, graying or| that whiw but that is no excuse for feelâ€" ; it is ing you are an old woman! Your skin| and can be beautiful, if you care for it, and | and your eyes and colouring can take on | Ever new glamour by carefully sclecting | your beautiful color shades which flatt@r you| â€" (R a great deal, There is no sin in lookâ€" ‘ Inc ) nat.," at ail. It was simply a stunning hat with a fashionable air all its owh What Older Women Sheuld Do. Older women get timid as the y>ar: pass and they are likely to draw intC a sheu and begin looking very drab ‘even though they uy new clothes each season. A woman should never fee] old¢r and she should never 1o00k drab! There is a young hat designer in New York named Eva Tartar who 1s convinced that matrons of middl?â€"agso or more can wear the same hats that very ysung matrons can wear. "If a woman keeps her face youthful. and dresses her hair simply but smartly, she can wear any hat I design with the exception of the frivolities which debs clamor for. T don‘t care if her meaâ€" surements have increassd as years, passedâ€"a woman can still look most: attractive in even an @xtreme hat. if| she has an alert, wellâ€"cared for face bzneath it!" And just to prove her point, Miss! Tartar photographod for me a young woman in her twenties, and an older woman in her fifties"wear.ng th> id>nâ€" tical hat! It was a velvet pill in | a rich red with a stiff@ned, streamâ€"lingd j velvet bow shcoting diazonally and | rakishly in the air. The yvounger wa-( man had her hair dressed in the popâ€" ular pompadcur fashion with back% hair h@gnging low. The older woman : had her hair dressed hish and simply | Both l:oked stunning in the hat andf one would not class it as a "matron‘s| hat." at all. It was simply a stunning | hat wiith a fashionable air an its awn | stopping the spread cf inf?zction." The second great advantage of hosâ€" pital care of tuberculosis is that when more than bed rest is suddenly or urâ€" géently needed, sgreat varitty of operations to make the lung rest are available in the sanitorium.. cp>rations require a degroe of surgical expertn2ss whicth can be develzzped best only in a spezial tuserculosis hospital. Should your physician réecemmend the tub>rculosis sanitorium f°r you or a loved one, remember th> two psints | _ The first point is that as the patient has developzsd tuberculosis, there is therefore a tendency to tuberculosis in the family, The fact that thers» is this ’tendency méans that as long as the | patient remains in the hom»s there is "there is nothing that the health deâ€" partment can do in the way of sanitary control of the patizsnt at hom>s, or to separate the sick from the well, comâ€" pares for effectiveness with hospital or sanitorium care as a means stopping the spread cf infezction." . Jt is in thesse early cases whon the CS rercy Doyle, tient has been going to scnool or| 7+ M Everly. work that the patient himself or his| A J. Fish; Fcurnier; Mrs. family cannot understand why hc:é. A. Fournicr * should not be tréated at home. Thy| Geo. Gedgo; G20, E. Golden. point out a very significant Edward Hart; F H Hepburn, South and that is that if rest is ne@ded most, PCrcupine; W C. Homer South Porcuâ€" patisnt can certainly rest better|pine; Dr. Loe. Honey. always the chance of him infecting other members of ths homs or houseâ€" hold. Even if physicians and nurses visit the home and give instructions in pisventing cthers frem being infected. ! Why the Sanitcriam is Best for Tuberculesis Patients. When a patitnt with a persistent cough is losing woight, the first thoaught is of tuberculosis, By the help of the Xâ€"ray early tuberculosis, if presnt, can be shown. Once tuberculosis is found, the most important part oaf the treatment is ros and these patitnts ars put to ted for weeks» months,. and even years. Now there is no denying the fact that there is no place like homs but there are two important facts that the patient and his famxlx do not know. the. pationt can certainly rest better|pine; Dr. Lee. Honey in his own home than in a rosm or| C:orge Jopson. ward in a sanitorium where he will be Frank Klisanich, lonely, unhappy, unable to sleep, and K!lobucar. his appetits will Je poor because the W. R. Lowry S food and the way it is served may be Maple Leak Cake strange. "AMMtasaint ‘Thaatra " L. Matron Can Wear Chic Hats If She Keeps Her Face Youthfully Alive Looking youngtr and Older matron demonstrate that a BRy lames W . Barton, M .D Beauty and You by PATRICIA LINDSAY of Pours That Bobp 0k drab! ayving or Th2 S“i surgizcal | s2d best | hospital.| emmend | you or a creation of EVE TARTAR‘S to smart hat becomes all ages. it ISs a new sonnet. Go into the shop and ask for "smart hat with color," and take an alert face in with you! Every friénd will ccmpliment you on vyour choice! lor is harsh looking n>ar your fa>s then do not wear it, but if a brightens your face and eves then wear it as often as you can! If your hair has grayved you will discover tha: you can wear which y:ou could not previously wear. Highlight your personality by wearâ€" ing pretty materials, lovely colors and jewelery. Don‘t go "fancy" but ds be decorative! And when you next go to buy a hat don‘t‘ ask for a "matron‘s hat, please,‘ or you will be shown Y | above mention£d, for the patients‘s cwn | t0 | sake ~and for the safe of memâ€"| 2â€" | bers of the housshold. | al | Overweight and. Underweight. + â€" Overweight may be a forerunner of | diabetes, failing heart and other serâ€"| 5â€" ‘* ious ailments. Underweight is oft>n a | n / forerunn:@r Of tuberculosis. Snd for ‘â€" | this interesting booklet by Dr. Barton ‘ f E entitled ‘Overweight and Underweight‘ | *2‘ (No. 105) with its many helpful sugâ€"| se;gestions Address your reques: to The Boll Library, Post Offic2s BOx 75, Staâ€" t / tion O, New Yâ€"rk, N.Y., enclosing Ton‘ 1.|Cnts to cover cost of handling and | bit of gla. Then l Don‘t be ; colors if i ! l i ing as ‘beautiful as you canâ€"in fact it is every woman‘s social duty to look beautiful. Earrings can be so flattering to the older woman. They can be inexpenâ€" sive earrings or very valuable on?sâ€" it doesn‘t matter. What does matter is their shaps and coloring. Th button carring is stylish for daytime wear but the longer earrings not too ornatse, ar> growing very much in favor for sala evenings. . A combination of rhinest>ne and pearl, or pgarl and saffire or other semi precious stones are most decoraâ€" tive if your costume is plain and simâ€" ple. Take a few mzments, if you are of this age group, and model a few styles before a mirror at a jewell@ry counter. Surpriss the family with a bit of glamour! 1 4 l THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTIMMINS, ONTARIO (Released by The Bell Syndi>st>: Mon 1G, New ~:rk, N.Y., enclosing °n Conts to cover cost of handling and mention the name of this newspaper. (Roegist>rsd in accordance with the Ccopyright Act.) d Ao.LC ~UIM °J ‘LUM .SUWUE[IIM °M W SSTIW uysntA *°H ‘SIOABLL T ‘N ‘SIW stwuiuun ‘UOSHJ â€"Ad,5$ ‘suais3$ ‘4GOU ‘outdnoIicd YNMOS [[EMXBp ‘qUBJIIIIS °) UEWULMCN °J ‘H William Nincon. Frod Passmore; Charles Pazzoetti. Wm. Ramsay, Albert H. Rodgers; Maynard W. Rcyeroft; Burton Ruthâ€" erford. W. R. Lowry Son.; Mrs Tillenson:; Maple Leak Cake, South Porcupine; Mascioli Theatre, South Porcupine; E. J. Mason; R. E. Maore, Delnite Min»>:; Cliff McConnell; Dune»n H M> Naughâ€" ton. Further Donations ‘“‘"‘;'rï¬; to Help in the Fight t Against Tuberculous ~a s _ Charles Campbcell; Mrs. A. Carriere W C. Clarke, Schumach:r; James I Clatworthy: Thos. Coulson. Miss Bsan, South Por:upine: Mis Dorothy Dxdge, South Porcupin>: D3h erty Roadhouse: Percy Dovle. maAC The Por:upine Christmas Seal Comâ€" PM h‘“ mittee is very pleas»d to announce that' the contributions t> date total mm x tm _ Herewith is another list of donors:â€" "We don n let me harp on co be afraid to wear theâ€" if they are becoming. _ harsh looking n>ar do not wear it., but 1 NE Thos. Blackman: Ben Blas Sâ€"h T; Frank Bozzor: J. Brusa>l. harp on color again‘! _ to wear the most vivid are becoming. If a coâ€" ooking n>ar your fa>s ear it, but iHf a colt face and eyes then n as you can! TIf yvour 1itimacnaner A. Carriere;]*** *~ : James p.| The T On Tuesday it was stated that after carelul thought and sioudy, hospital authorities and attending physicians were hopeful there would be no more deaths. For four days the authorities waged a very earnest fight to save the babies exposed to the infection. Six deaths have occurred in the last few days among thirtesn n#wlyâ€"born badies at the Kingston hosâ€" pital. The children are reported as succumbing to a rare and extromely virulent typs of intestinal disorder. Of the six deaths, five of them ar> itely attributed to the rare disease. Th» c‘:her death was ithe case of a baby born prematurely, and ths cause of whose death has n>:t been established as yvet. "To hell with it!" he said be mad." Chica zo The paused for the result; The customer paused dig@st this new development. threw his napkin on the tabl sesture of fiery defiane>. waiter aside: "When we stop in Milâ€" waukse in a fow minutes," he said. "we‘ll got a plum pudding. Tell ths chef to make hard sauce and sOrvo some Oof that good brandy with it.‘ It was done. Just out cf the wait?r reappeared at the customer‘s side, smiling proudly. "Well, sir," he said, "I‘m happy to you that we have th> plum pudâ€" ding and the chef has been working all the way on the sauc>. He hop*s you‘ll like it. And with it, with the ctir‘»liments of the line, we would like to serve you this 5â€"yzsarâ€"old brandv." oncelâ€"whon I t: line I can‘t geo: what I I‘ll take this up with the I‘!l zo to the top." The s:cward. interc>di Inusual Type Intestinal ‘Flu Kills Five Babies Giving a Sidelight on One Brand of Human Nature A traveler ;« ad was givit NORTHERN ONTARIO POWER COMPANY LIMITED ELECTRIC WASHER cn the Milwaukee Rail irg the diningâ€"car waite ind for dessort." he saicd he said. "T‘d rather Chicazo Daily News stated ‘that after d simdy, hospital nding physicians pudd pected co,‘ to i>n ho ‘AZseuUcUy d.I2M eSoUu} pueseâ€"sn J0 [(E apms 01 AEmujted UMOP S2Ul[ alIUM 919M OS qusItt 4q 1a1e;{em apmS$s 01 spBOoI S.pUEISUM UMOP SaUlIl diUM se qsnlf 13843 ‘3j93go ut ‘ptESs an eXUIY] no4 3,uop ‘ojeridoidds â€" taujet â€" .,3oU[tTt slIUM.. SBA UOUWLME3s oU} JO }jx31 oU.L ‘SIoALDP aUj IJ0J a2IAIdS B (tutY pincA ‘uewu48.t01p o0 utedeus) aiped Ino 006 (¢‘;â€" uscmjsq jUStuoO,1r ‘saull s3IUM eS04]} AMoOoI the drivers ] their carsâ€"J1 glimmer that a glowworm. white lin> do are painted and in x. In my chaps w and litt and the ver boy, recel fath*er, Major ing with the C ing with the C: Vancouver Pro My Dsar Colin o. > Father Advises Son to _ Follow the "White Lines" have 1 in effo iken Th e lin> down th painted white s; and the fe: painted whiteâ€" 1] little. And th they work very dark nowâ€"ge stays dark until And theâ€" driv A small deposit will place one in your home. Balance on easy terms. lin Every woman knows that washing by the oldâ€" fashioned hand method is the hardest kind of backâ€"breaking work. Washdays are dreaded and leave many women tired and irritable. What a contrast are the smiling faces of women who own Electric Washers! They let electricityâ€"the greatest of all servantsâ€"do the hard scrubbing and rubbing for them. They know that their clothes will come out snowy clean and know that Electric Washer acâ€" tion is so ‘gentle that clothes actually Last longer, too. KOulâ€" light s thi company 10 drive 11 Quality Counts Most ‘ must drveâ€" as . as by day And there‘s 0 lights in windows, no the whole country is as wide of an inkwoll. And ave no propr lights on t a stingy little bit of a shows about as much as So the roads all have a n the middle, the curbs whiteâ€"where "there sre e fences or f°ncs posts iteâ€"and the drivers folâ€" tenâ€"yearâ€"0o this letter M. Clark, hard B dark ab ht in th VC 423 Griv ind trucks now soryâ€" my in Britain 11 Om sSAt it ut fiv ~morn here‘s starsgd. The young man sts s, n, moment the bull gave a is as started to charge. With . Wwarning to the girl, the youn ts on across the field, jumped the *of a | fAung himself through the t clh as | Wondering how the girl | ave a lhie was surprissed to st?e hor : curos milking the cow, while the ‘ _ sre}| sauntering shamefacedlv aw posts ! _ "why didn‘t vou run when mning day. tist plied the ( St. Mary‘ dentist tell "I know he‘d st scornfully. ‘"‘This his motherâ€"inâ€"law he aski stopped ht ‘"Only tha girl, swoetly, The youn prehensively baleful glar and decency, and ca: friendliness towards â€" lessness, and braveory, above all loveâ€"love.f everything, and â€"a t others who perhaps g tired and discouraged . Mary‘s Journalâ€"Argus, says:â€"Our tist tells us he had an absentâ€" ded motorist in his chair the other "Will you take gas"? the d:nâ€" asked. ‘"Yeah" the patient reâ€" d, "and you‘d better check up on 1, ‘"and you‘d 100. Are th asked. e young man from town was strolâ€" round the farm when he noticed tty girl milking a cow in a field. r‘e there any bulls raund h>re?" RAVE ENOUGH didn‘t you 7. â€" "‘Ths 1 oung man glanced round apâ€" véely. His @yes caught the Flare of the bull. The bull The young man stared. Next the bull gave a snort and to charge. wWith a yell of to the girl, the ysunz man fled 1€ ny son â€"under ‘d stop," retorted the girl, This cow happens to be OHN i run when I yelled?" bull mizsht not have I say to you, and I tandâ€"watch f3r the drivers do and you‘ll evy‘s ond. ver t ANUARY 16TH, 194 Exchange ind couragse; but r everybody, and lerance towards t frizthened and for others. and i6rs, and fsarâ€" Your Dad hedsge had fared still calmlv ditch, and bull was said the