Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 26 May 1941, 1, p. 2

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Boston Has Personality ce e Even in Matter of Food an organ of the stomach or heart ache or discomfor gated. â€" Infected ecause pain in the of the foot just wrist, knee or sho ecause pain in a fl; the flat foot itself or no relief. And, of course, there was lo Mow difficuit it was to choose bet the famous stew and the boiled ster with butter sauce, both of y are typical New England dishes. there was a fish dish which was . to me, Have you ever had scal seallops? They were fully as go« oysters prepared in this way, anc be a useful addition to the quick menu now that the next few m lack the essential "R." Quick Meal Cream of tomato soup o scalloped Seallops Asparagus with lemon butter these individual get about for They mean free means less stral temi. poris shnol known th when me have fail wWhnat are the si There are three on the patient can se THREE SIGNS OF FLAT FEET You read so much about flat feet that when you have the slightest pain in the feet you may wonder if you need arch supports and perhaps straightâ€" way purchase a pair. Now, arch supâ€" ports are of great help when they are needed as they make it possible For these individuals to earn a living and get about for business and pleasure. They mean freedom from pain which means less strain on the nervous sysâ€" There were doughnuts for breakfast and T forgot that my breakfast always consists of orange juice and coffee. There were fish balls, not cakes and you might have them for breakfast or lunch. There were the brown pots of baked beans and the steaming loaves of brown bread for Saturday night dinner. I always take adva cuse to go to Boston. personality and this food in these da; tion. Domestic Expert Thinks It is an Attractive Personality . in Food. _ Doughnuts for Breakfast, Fish Balls for | Lanch, and Baked Beans and Brown Bread for Dinner. | However, th rts should ht Excursion travel will be handled on Train No Bay with C.N.R,. No. 2 in the RETURN journey, tickets will be valid for travel on ( Train No. 1 from Montreal 8.20 p.m., Monday, June 2, 1941, Vickets will be valid to leave destination points Wednesday, June 4, 1941 PAGE TWCO Points in the Maritimes via North Bay and Canadian National Railways Pembroke Jct., Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec via North Bay and Canadian National Railways shoul By James W . Barton, FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS APPLY TO LOCAL AGENT Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway The Nipissing Central Railway Company WILL OPERATE BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1941 BARGAIN COACH EXCURSION FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1941 Bargain Coach Excursion tickets not valid for travel on the "NORTHLAND® Trains 49 and 50. .'lt; tl'\ d realize that the foot is f the body just as is the heart and the cause of any comfort should be investiâ€" ected teeth or tonsis can in the joints and tendons just as in ather jointsâ€" or shoulder. Infection can in a flat foot; treatment of t itself may thus give little DFTH M. BARBER) wearing of arch supâ€" left until it is definitely ; are really needed and to correct the arches ‘, there was lobster. as to choose between and the boiled lobâ€" sauce, both of which England dishes. Then dish which was novel u ever had scalloped ere fully as good as in this way, and will on to the quick meal the next few months 11 s Of a flat foot? anding signs that for himself: crf of Pours That e of any exâ€" is a city with tends to the E standardizaâ€" ote oteateafaate or electric besater until amixture is smooth. Beat in butter, unbeaten eggs, one at a time and pepper. Chill fifâ€" teen minutes. Drop by tablespoons in deep, hot hat (375 FP.) and cook three to four minutes, golden brown. Drain on soft paper. Cook only six balls at a time and reheat fat beâ€" fore cooking another batch. Serve with egg sauce or tomato sauce. Yield: Bix servings (12 mediumâ€"sized balls). Sealloped Scallops « 5 tablespoons butter. 4 cups soft bread crumbs. 144 teaspoons salt. teaspoon pepper. 1 tablespoon lemon juice. 1 pint seallops. Melt butter, add crumbs, seasonings, and lemon juice, and mix well. Arrange secallops in alternate layers with butâ€" tered crumbs in a greased 2â€"quart baking dish, using crumbs for the top layer, Bake in hot oven (450 F.) twenty minutes. Yield: Six servings. Note: Large scallops should be sliced. (Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 8. In a normal foot, the large tendon which raises the heel bone upward off floor runs straight downward to heel bone. If left foot is flat, this tendon turns outward to left; if right foot is flat, this tendon turns outward to right. Remember, (a) this treatment is for the middle arch, not the front arch of foot, and (b) flat feet may. often be prevented by exercises such as walking on outer sides of feet and gripping, or trying to grip, small objects with the toes. sCOURGE The two most dreaded social diseases are gonorrhea and syphilis and it is wise to know the essential facts about them. Send for Dr. Barton‘s helpful booklet entitled "Scourge" (gonorrhea and syphilis), addressing request to the Bell Library, Post Office Box 75, Staâ€" tion O, New York, N.Y., enclosing ten cents. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act) 1. He stands on a large sheet of white paper and outlines his feet with a pencil. If left foot is flat, the inner side is down on the floor and bulges to If the right foot is flat, inner side bulges to left. In the norâ€" mal foot the arch of the foot is enâ€" tirely off the floor, the left curving to left and the right curving to right. 2. If right foot is flat, outer edge curves inward to the left, instead of outward to right; if left foot is flat outer edge curves inward to right inâ€" stead of outward to left. With these three signs, and parâ€" ticularly if feet are "rigid" arches are made to fit the feet. This is done by making a plaster cast of foot in a correct or slightly overcorrect position and making a support from the cast. Light oven. Prepare scallops and cook. Prepare asparagus and cook. Prepare carrots and cook. Make ginger bread according to directions on carton and bake. Open can of soup and heat Dress carrots. Dress asparagus. Whip cream. Make coffee. New England Codfish Balls 1 pound (2 cups) salt codfish. 5 cups cubed potatoes. 1 tablespoon butter. ~ 2 egygsSs. 4 teaspoon pepper. Soak codfish in cold water thirty minutes, or scald wice and drain. Cut in small pieces with scissors. Combine with potatoes and cover with boiling water. Cook until potatoes are tender, ten to fifteen minutes. Drain well and shake over heat for a moment. Beat with wooden potato macher, wire whisk Buttered Carrots Bread, Whipped Cream Coffée Method of Preparation 46, connectinng at North Institute for the Blind a Notable Organization Annual Appeal Should be Given Hearty Response. McCaul, Rawlinson and Sandrelli were released on bail at the local police The Canadian National Institute for the Blind employs more blind people than any other agency in America, if not in the whole world. It is not a government organization but it is reâ€" cognized by the Dominion Government and the Provincial Governments and station but Stefanelli w taodyv toâ€"day. given some financial support. The main bulk of the revenue required by the Institute comes from public subâ€" seriptions. The policies and financial setâ€"up of the Institute are in the hands of a publicly elected board, none of whom are emplovyees of the Instiâ€" tute. Eome Oof the members of the Police are still invt more charges may be la four men. They may tional charge of illegal beer. Stefanelli gave his address as 116 Pine Street South, Timmins. Police say that Sandrelli owns the place where the second raid was made and also say that Stefanelli admitted to them that he was the barender. Four Persons Charged with Keeping for Sale as Result of T‘wo Raids. The crowding of air raid shelters has not resulted in epidemics of sickness, to _the contrary, a â€" communicable disease has decreased. In part, this result is attributed to the provision of medical service in the shelters, and to the avoidence of delay in the treatâ€" ment of illness. The Health League believes that greater attention to public health in Canarda should be paid at this time, and that thousands of working hours now lost yearly could be saved by the elimination of preventable diseases Provincial Police Strike Twice in Cook‘s Lake Area Torontoâ€"In â€" connection with its campaign for increased health and efâ€" ficiency as a part of the Dominion‘s war effort, the Health League of Canâ€" ada points to what has been effected in Britain by the added insistence on public health measures. Official figures from London, says the League, show that the general health of the people is higher today than it as been for several years, deâ€" Health Better in Old Country Despite War spite the appalling conditions under which they are forced to live. There had been fear that damage to drains, as a result of hombing, might produce epidemics of typhoid in the large British cities. Actually, there was less typhoid in Britain during the early months of 1941 than in corresponding periods in 1939 and 1938, though the incidence remained about the same as in 1940 > still investigating and s may be laid against the They may face an addiâ€" e of illegal possession of still in cu PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO aIB ala} paIlopIStUO0d §St }1 UaM | ‘punos st afdrounrd ayp ijtyy paioid | SeU 11 ‘sousptadxo strof gotpâ€"{4Gom) | S11 UI puts suo;w({naaoi Awetu ut smo[ta; pojuSts SsY aoed Sty ayesq uro at ‘uor®13doâ€"09 JO ehSssaow t pus | â€"sSe awos taAtS stt uos.ad pUuq fuarsd | â€"wi0d B Jt st oy} «oJ | â€"u/, fettiopen 30 ardtourid _ sBuipimns aou.t, ‘suontsod aimnaoxs u;; 4q pafodus ardosd puiltgq | Jalg0 AuBuu att odalf u.tei ! â€"~pou U snouoy UYSTY UJIM 4q;tsr3Atup DW wuop pojenpesis OuMA ‘jJIMy3 J ‘HB ‘JCI OH puI[q@ st SUL ‘altant ap xIOID ‘ON O ‘1o | ~XEH V M UMoUWy | 1s9q J0 auo ‘jou; J0O C s-e! ‘st ‘DPUITG St 10j9aup Sut8sueuw 341 | ‘spEUE;) JO pUIIGqQ ef[} JoJ adtaias [Bt208 i jo csuturridoid r ;o quaudofaagsp atf} UT J0o souamadxa teomoreid yjIMA UoW UjIM 0j yo Aotod ayr st 31 se are preoqgâ€" diaminad drilling « ried out undergro, tion did not resul any new orebodi#¢: were $7.078 per ton are CoOntridouling Oone and oneâ€"quarlter hours per month of their pay to the Red Cross and War Servives, with the Company adding an equal amount to the fund. One hundred per cent of the company‘s employees are contriâ€" buting to these services. amounts to 12.2¢ peér ton T far 78 per cent of the bonus used by the men to purchase ing certificates. In addition Despite every effort to discover new orebodies during the past year Monâ€" eta Porcupine was able to develop very little additional tonnage, the presidGent, W. E. Segsworth, states in the annual report for the year ending March 31st. Exploration is continuing at the proâ€" perty and. meanwhile officers of the company are endeavouring to find a new property worthy of development. Production in the fiscal year showed a gain, grade was higher but operating costs also rose. Ore reserves, howâ€" ever, showsed a drop from 135,229 tons to 8£3,258 tons and grade was off from $1946 to $18.73 per ton. As Moneta mills 65,000 tons of ore annually the reserves are good for less than two years, unless supplemented. The balance sheet discloses that the company is in a strong financial posiâ€" tion, total current assets being of $206,113, the latter including a diviâ€" dend payment of $76,316 disbursed in April. This represents a gain in workâ€" ing capital of $267,666 in the year. Net earnings, after all writeoffs and taxes, totalled $494,035, or 19.42¢c per sflare; this compares with $519,434 and 20.42¢ per share in the preceding year. Taxes rose from $40,446 to $92003 in the year. Dividends amounting to 12e were paid in the fiscal year. J,. D. Barrington, manager, reports that during the year 3,929 feet of drifting, 393 feet of crosscutting, 270 feet of raising and 29,860 fet of diaâ€" mond . drilling were completed. The major part of the underground deâ€" velopment was done on the 975 and 1,425â€"ft. levels, where long exploration drives were made to the south and southwest. In addition an extensive diamind drilling campaign was carâ€" ried out underground. This exploraâ€" tion did not result in the finding of Moneta Treasury In Strong Position Annual Report for t h e Moneta Poreupine Issued. approximately twelve thousand blind people in Canada, the extent of the work undertaken by the Institute can be appreciated. To carry on its great task it needs funds. On May 31st there will be a tag day in Timmins under the auspices of the Women‘s Committee T.O.D.FE. There is an opâ€" portunity for the citizens to assume their share of an important national duty which is being magnificently disâ€" charged. The tag day is designed to give those opportunity to help who have not sent in donations to the local treasurer, Mtr. A. F. Burt, Dominion RBank, Timmins. ommencing _time bonu n paid to e increased Janu of £ to purchase war sayâ€" In addition the men one and oneâ€"quarter Zic per shift has employee to offset t of living. This per ton milled; so Operating has been is alleged to hotel with a Just before h in front of t than his by the T MacLenn early Sa Timmins Police Charse Three Under Liquor Control Act Armand Avenue, T 59 Presto when they appear befor Atkinson tomorrow after mins police raided an est 39 Preston Street South, ; Sunday morning and the that are charged were al been drinking a pint of b« the police entered. After the police enter ‘hey conducted a search to have found a quantity was not purchased in the netr. Bridge at ‘Calamity Gulch Now is Being Dismantled concrete will salvage value Work on dismantling the steel and concrete bridge generally known as the "Calamity Gulch" bridge, because of the number of accidents there, has been in progress for some days. This bridge is about two miles from New Liskeard on the Ferguson highway and for the six years or so of its use it has been the scene of a series of mishaps and some tragedies. The bridge itself at times has been considered unsafe from the acltion of the water and quicksand. After spending considerâ€" at times has been considered unsafe from the acltion of the water and quicksand. After spending considerâ€" able money to make the structure and approaches safe, the authoritiese reâ€" placed it with a "fillâ€"in" nearby. This fillâ€"in has taken the place of the bridge route and dcecision was mad»> to salvage the steel from the bridge. The concrete will be left as there is no IE‘wo Persons are Charged With IHegal Possession After Raid Sunday Mornâ€" ing. "Calamity Gulch the number of been in progress bridge is about â€" Pictured above are Mr. and Mrs. Frank BRoivin and their attendants, as they paused on the steps of St. Anthony‘s Cathedral follqpwing the wedding . ceremony â€" on Saturday morning. In the photo from left to right are: Miss Cecile Sebastien, maidâ€"ofâ€"hoanour, sister of the bride: Mrs. Boivin, the former Gilberte sebastien; Mr. Boivin and LAC Caâ€" mille Sebasiica, groomsman, broâ€" ther of the bride, chat OL y of ill« ze of having liquor in other private residence was laid mimins police against Donald in, Room 21, Albert‘s Hotel, urday morning. MacLennan to have come out of the h a parcel under his arm. ‘e he got into a car that was of the hotel, an alert conâ€" Boulanger, 44 Commercial mmins, and Lucienne Allard, ret o. muth, will face session of beer fore Magistrate ernson. Timâ€" ernogon. Timâ€" stablishment at , at 3.10 a.m. on he two persons alleged to have beer each when d the place ind are said of beer that proper manâ€" fiscal year. The company‘s balance sheets showâ€" ed current assets of $19,806,009 and current liabilities of $2,346,076, leaving net working capital at $17,460,023 comâ€" pared with $15,640,805. +Broken ore reâ€" serves at the end of the yvear totalled McMhi‘yre Porcupine Mines Limited in its annual report issued last week reported $3.819,C32 net profit for the fiscal year ended March 31. This was equal to $4.78 per share on the 798,000 shares of $5 par value issued and comâ€" pared with $3,719,257, equal to $4.66 per share, the preceding year. Gross bullion produced was valued at $9,452,491 from the milling of 884,â€" 000 tons of ore compared wilh $8,793,â€" 5745 from 883,780 tons of the previous ns Annual Report of Mines Satisfactory Says Viceâ€"President speeding on the Hollinger Flats at various times over the weekâ€"end. Three persons face charge laid un der the local byâ€"laws. One for going through a red light, another for failâ€" ing to bring his car to a full stop at a stop sign and another for failing to have his name on his truck. Two lonely drunks were picked up over the weekâ€"end and will face the magistratse charged with their first seven persons«â€"will face charges tm tomorrow‘s police court as a result of a police campaign to stop the dangerâ€" cus practice of speeding on the highâ€" way. They were all charged with stable appeared and asked the man what he had in the parcel. Upon inâ€" vestigation it was found to contain a bottle of liquor. e :\ mA /A ......... ........ ........... ............. o ) Â¥ Va There‘s nothing more important than guardâ€" ing your precious baby‘s health. You wouldn‘t knowingly give your baby conâ€" taminated milk, yet often milk which looks alright is dangerous because it has not been kept at the proper low temperature. Don‘t take chances! Electric refrigeration will stand guar« night and day in the hottest weather and will protect not only your baby‘s milk but the food for the whole family as well. You really can‘t afford to be without it beâ€" cause it will actually save you money by stopâ€" ping wasteful food spoilage. There are many models available at terms that make it easy to enjoy the benefits of electric refrigeration NOW, Electric _ Refrigeration Schumacher Lions Start Their Jamboree The annual Jamboree of the Schumâ€" acher Lions Club opens toâ€"night at the McIntyre Arena, and will continue Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. The events start each evening at 8.30. There will be games and fun and frolice and prizes and a generally happy time. The programme includes four hoxing bouts each evening. In his report Mr. R. J. Ennis, genâ€" eral manager, sayvys:â€""Ths> Clinic at St; Mary‘s Hospital, Timmins, finanâ€" cially supported by the mines in the Porcupine district, has made. very satisfactory progress in the treatment ‘of silicotic miners with aluminum powâ€" ger. The number of men undor treatâ€" ment will be gradually increased, and i is hoped that added knowledge, gainâ€" ed during the next twelve months, vall warrant the publication of the detailed clinical results. In the meantime, the use of aluminum powder is being conâ€" tinued in our underground workings." General Manager R.J. Ennis reperts operating costs during the vear were $5.14 per ton compared with $5.22 the preceding , year. â€" The earned surplus was $15,702,673 compared with $13,â€" 832,179 the previous yearâ€"ond. In the current ligbilities provision for taxes is $1,759.688 compared with $1,029,304 a vear earlier. 177,201 tons with a value of $1,636.12#7 at $35 per ton, compared with 166801 tons with a value of $1,565.368 a year before. Ore in place is estimated at 4,029,690 tons valued at $47.883.413 compared wi‘th 4,078,665 tons valued at $47,750,063. The year seis a new company record in point of bullion production and inâ€" come and the net profit was the bast for seven yvears. MONDAY. MAY 2BTH. 1941 220kt PP ::::::

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