calle in town yei gular trips To the A chairman 0 very pleasi: past couple c purchased n( 53 individua North Bay UNION BUS TERMINAL â€" NORTH BA Y In The Ad NO. I ha Jla Pine street North INSU RANCE sheaflfer Pen and Pencil Sets from $2.98 to $14 Cedar Chests filled with Stationery ...........$2.50 Bath Salts and Dusting Powder Sets ..........$1.25 TEN YEARS. AGO IN TIMMIN®S SIMMS, HOORKRER DREW Timmins RODAKS Various Prices oW o 4O O U se From data in the Porm;pino Advance Fyles Phone 101â€"2â€"3 SCHICK Electric Razor.......$13.00 PACKARD Electric Razor...$8.50 sUNBEAM Electric Razor $16.75 GILLETTE Electric Razor $20.00 SFKS AND LOTS FOR SALE CONVEN~x~IEXT TERMS up The Ladies‘ Auxiliary to the Canâ€" adian Legion held a very pleasant whist drive at the home of Mrs. Cornell, Schumacher, ten years ago.> Mrs. W. A. Devine won first prize and Mrs. Porrester th¢q consolation prize. Reâ€" freshments were served and the many present had a very pleasant evening. There was a good turnout of memâ€" bers at the luncheon of the Kiwanis Club, ten years ago, and all present thoroughly enjoyed the meeting which was full of interest and information. The only visitor for the day was Mr. Cigarette Lighter and dso 30e to $10,.00 Phoneâ€"Office 113 Resigence 135 Phone 835 pieos nragine that they can confiscate the enltire wealth of Jewish citizens and then expor them wholesale to other lands, then there may be a rudcl awakening. : Let Germany confiscate if she willâ€" anything in excess of what is required to settle the Jews in foreign climes. Confisortionâ€"Or legal robberyâ€"can have grave consequence. Perhaps the drain on the treasury caused y the insatiable cost of armameuts will cause Hitler and his cronies to expropriate next the property of the various churches. Such a procedure has alâ€" ready been hirced at. Let us suppose that foreign powers Schumacher, Ont.., Dec. 14, 1938 To the Editor of The Porcupine Advance. Doar Sir:â€"The ruthless German persecution of the Jewish minority in I‘s midst continues and the world probâ€" lem as a result may have grave rcâ€" precussions. Germany which recently made such a great hullabaloo about the suffering and persecution of its minoritiecs in Czechoslovakia has officially inauguâ€" aled the most spleenful and diabolical campaign ever perpoirated since the Spanish inquisition. i If the leaders of Germany have dc-! »rlded that the third Reich will thrive more speedily without the hantdicap of nonâ€"Aryans that is their prorogccive. | However, if Hitlere and his accomâ€" plicos imagine that they can confiscate Sees Day Coming When Mob Will Turn its Furvy. Believes Germany Will Turn on Nazis "Mr. W. A. Taylor is the president for the ensuing year for the New Liskeard Kiwanis." Among the local items in The Adâ€" vance ten years ago were: "Bornâ€"On Sunday, Dec. 9th, to Mr. and Mrs. S. Duggan, Timminsâ€"a son." "Bornâ€" At Sudbury, Ont., to Mr. and Mrs. T. M. White (formerly of Timmins) on Tuesday, Dec. 11, 1928â€"a son, (Allan Fobert)t" ‘"Boruâ€"At Mrs. Goulet‘s hospital, Timmins, on Friday, Dec. 7th, 1928, to Mr. and Mrs. E. Reynoldsâ€" a daughter (Teresa Dawn).‘"‘ ‘"Mr. Jolhn Watt returned on Tuesday eveâ€" nimg from a trip to the West, vory much improved in health and recoverâ€" ing splendidly now from the effects of the accider© ho suffered last summ>r." "Mr. Art Saint, who has been at Toâ€" ronto for some months with the exâ€" press company, is back to town for the winter at the local express office here." The program presented by the Birâ€" rell Bell Concert Party in the Goldâ€" fields theatre ten years ago, in aid of the â€"St. Anthony‘s Roman Catholic Church, delighted all by its excellence and its variety. The house was filled to capacity and two or three hundred had to be turned away for lack of room. The se‘ections by the largs orchos‘ra were particularly well given and were warmly applauded. vass was made. The committee inâ€" cluded Mrs. H. W. Darling, Mrs. Karl Eyre, Miss Farr and Miss Robarge, and with the assistance of the clever workâ€" ers gathered round them for the camâ€" paign, the result was most pleasing. Last week they turned oyer to the Children‘s Aid Society the handsome sum of $2,289.62, from the drive made in the Porcupine area." The annual cribbage tournament held between fires and business at the Timmins fire hall, is always one of the sporting features of the North Land. The fire chief ten years ago thought it was only excelled by the turkey stag, and, at that, not much. The cribbage kings, ten. years ago. were: First, Harry Jackson:; second. Bert Cook; third, Fire Chief Borland. Harry Jackson was the best player: Bert Cook had the most luck: and Chief Borland was the only member of the fire department to stay in the running to the end of he race. In The Advance ten years ago: "The ladies‘ committee in charge of the campaign for funds to pay off the indebtedness on the C.A.S. shelter and to raise the necessary money to carry on the Children‘s Aid Work for the district in the ensuing year completed their efforts last week and deserve the highest praise for the thoroughness and the success with which the canâ€" Friends of the family 4n Timmins and district learnt with deep regret of the death in the West, of Alice Muricl Goode, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Goode, of Timmins, ten yvears ago, Some four months prior to her death the young lady, who was thirâ€" teen years of age, went to visit her sister, Mrs. Feckley, at Makepease, Alberta. with the hopes of benefitting her health. She was taken ill and transferred to the hospital at Bosno. Alberta, on Dec. 8, living only 10 hours. Death was due to infantile paralysis and meningitis. From the opening Teeâ€"off Waltz to the strains of the final dance, thne fourth annual dance of the Abitibi Golf Club held in the Iroquois Falls town hall ten years ago, was perhaps the acme of many successes which the golf club had to its credit in stagins their annual dances. From the deâ€" corations in the hall itself to the unique decarations in the banquet hail, the committee in charge of this feature were deserving of great credit, and music was exactly fitted to the ocâ€" casion . Hugh McEwan, of New Liskeard, who gave a message from the New Liskeard Kiwanis to the local club. He referred to the appreciation felt by the New Liskeard Club for the number from Timmins who had attended the New Liskeard Club‘s Charter Night.. The speaker for the daxy was Mr. C. N. Alston, local manager for the Northâ€"| ern Telephone Co. Mr. Alston exâ€" plained in detail the tolephone sysâ€" tem in use in the district, and hxsl address was of interest to every memâ€" ber present. ! if Hitle re that wealth Ccredlit in stagin‘ From the deâ€" l1 itself to the the banquet hail, ge of this feature reat credit, and However, day is approjmtion of the Germany to the law will acs as a boomeran lust of the mobâ€"wreo« on the greatest enem; the Natzi party. Try Tt stratsgy which lmis be tyrants since time imme Storse up disserv.on ag creedâ€"and sadistic . de forscs; their own gricy: incdulge in vidlence o the tent.. The advent of Hitler was the signa for the great>st armament race in his: tory. The German industrialis‘s capt talizing to a great excent on. the conâ€" scription of labourâ€"have amassed grea fortunes. Toâ€"day in Germany thi poalicies of Hitler have ground th2 comâ€" mon pecple undfr. on the ore handâ€" and built up great fortunesâ€"for Aryar indusralists on the cther. 11g6 ~Us â€"GCrII The Krupps, Von Thy of their UK ars amas nuallyâ€"with the cor ool, Adolph Hitler. Admittedly the: and millions in cold cruel facts thousands of milli the face cf the origin. largely ‘poppycock. In Poland, Hunâ€" gary, Rjumania, and to a great exâ€" tent in Germany imillions ar»s on the bordcrline of Speak to any authority who has travelledâ€"and has not imbibed that much repsaied proâ€" pagandara ‘"the Jews â€"have all the money" and he will verify that stateâ€" mey .. ' Much has been uitered ‘s fabulous wealth of the Jews largely ‘poppycock. <In Pola Imagine if poscimc the reactl German pi2ss ItG is "l(’lt to be able vo selves in true perspecture. In country in the world does the a â€" appi'aach C gangstecrismâ€"as it doos in iN many. ng CLf Imagine German which to a larg bear the costâ€"Yt ed to â€" confiscat Imazine the hue ; Nearly 250,000 Italian and French troops are reported drawn up along the Libyaâ€"Tunis border on D#c. 8 as France heard reports that Gerâ€" many would back up demands of Italy for territorial expansion in the Mediterranean. This map shows the area. dÂ¥ TUNISIA J eQ QABES Sain_ / egGHADAMES Unimindful of her possible fate, little Dorothy Lewis, cightâ€" New York girl, plays at home while her father, William Lewis whether to permit surgeons to amputate her right leg, givin meagre chance to live, or refuse, with death prospects within She is suffering with a malignant growth on her thigh bone. Trouble Arca which large exten‘t will have to stâ€"retaliated and proceedâ€" fiscate Corman propetcy. hue and cry and the grashâ€" h emana‘ting from Berlin. possible the reaction of the 11} »*‘ TRIPOLN Father Must Gamble With Her Life German Want Adve ermany for instanc Thyssensâ€"and other imassing millions an connivant» of thel ‘e are: Imgn ol wea their midstâ€"but 1 are that there be abie o see ~ourâ€" pecture. . In no other rld does the policy of ipproach â€" downright doos in ‘Nazt Gorâ€" nmninemomnial. on against a ri degenerates nailre coming when governmeont of the jung ig with the b aking vengos vÂ¥ of Germai in not of heart LV ut thse ‘This is d qver Jewish th i 3 0| oI lAter that | million anc accident and believed him KDnown D; and h ed by 1roOm VRINWO time fOo1 McLcean The dcath this week at Springfield Missouri, of Gaston B. Mcans, who was in turn. arch swindler, master crook and gifted de‘ective, recalls stor‘cs thai make the averagr> crime novel seom pSrat ittack Seek Hidden Wealth Of Noted Swindler Death of Gaston B. Means Revives StOI'l.eS of Master Crook. 1p dictm Cdln Mucht o hn Mc H unds Mcoiaiu heyr JC1 41 kidnappit of the at he had looted her of, a half and a court ruled that he had i "second" will of her first husâ€" . nothing ever came of it. 11 1l McLcear $104.000 H MJ1 m of 00k Nonmne Reeoveredg iyErag2c criine nove! ~sesgm probable. Means died a { ~the government, serving: frauding Mrs. Evelyn Walsh ealthy owner of the Hope He is said to have swindled ov<.of more than â€"$100,000. say tha‘: he was 59 years o‘d nt‘s fram>: had beeon withorâ€" Moans wer ness ecxtending over seve was brought to Springfi deral penitehtiary at L Cansas, a week ago for He succumbed a hss his prime, he weighed MCL( Lewis, cightâ€"y2arâ€"ol William Lewis, ry ‘lit na ail iry in Ais native s Her lawyers chat windled an hundreds 3 G1l, As h2 Uusual 6, many beliey wily confidenc O is:â€" oneâ€" of the oddâ€" acular Oof his genâ€" en indic‘led for such espionage, formcery, nbezzlemiznt,; <violaâ€" ial Prohibition Act. is a soelfâ€"confessed he was convicted wealthy Washingâ€" f owncr and society weply ouched by Chaxlcs A. Lindâ€" to her with a uch with the kidâ€" villing {o surrender $100,000. ~She gav: narryV N) iunmed ‘reabou of 111 iving hetr a pamoy to The kidâ€" ippear and wild goose 11 sually lived lieved that (1T) L11 convi JrfOrâ€"an a hsart n SWn( â€" $4,000 million (inx. irâ€"old 3 TLl men cand C wWa it hat finâ€" m a l W iAs his ‘thy ome het il ‘Of6I u; parin:d0o jto:dxo jSeI ‘SalII? o1 1OJ supy10M Squr;d suoptuntu dn .10 J sosnsttoq; ut Spuesnoy1 fueut put yaamM °t O00‘T$ ‘IEM PIIOM oyj EuHnp jusSe aseuo:;dsoa uP §st psAass oaty 01 po â€"Ue[d SH ‘AÂ¥D StY JO SSAJP9jJ3DP ~ILMQ }Sout auy JC cuo St peje.I Ssem suasy sumg oy; ;0 quaSe her dau this ser He was released in published his book Dsath of Presidcnt F he inferred that Har a natural Gcath, but ed.â€" He became a V munis and authoriti¢ mént of Justite and in 1921 he sucâ€" ceeded. Two years later he provided a major scandal of the Harding adâ€" ministraston. It developed that he and his accomplices had accepted bribes toialing $65,000, that they had opened government warehouses to bottleggers, profiting $100,000 cthereby, that they had shaken down a Chicago bootlegz:er for $75,000, and that they had attempted to bribe four of his <high supsriors. For this, he sorved four yvgears in Atlanâ€" or | ta Next he wrapped a pigsce 0o in hcavy brown paper, insured a gold brick, expressed it to I then tried to collect $57.000. failed. Meanwhile, he had be Mcatr mp )int 2 and Jâ€"thread Chiffon y Crepe and Service Weight.......... 75C 'dfld )1 HarveyGraham Son PINE ST. NORTH If you‘ve been putting up with cold and discomfort or your coal bills are too high have us give you an estimate on insulation. A layer of Gyproc Wool over the cciling of your upstairs rooms will Leep the heat in like a blanket and you‘ll be surprised at the savings in coal, too!_ Don‘t out up with a cold house a day longer, It costs you nothing to learn just what insulation will do for you. CA LL TOâ€"DA Y Winter loses most of its terror if your home is casily kept comfort able and warm at reasonable cost. HILLâ€"CLARKâ€"FRANGIS us So Insulate NOW with Gyproc Wool! GENERAL CONTRACTORS in agent Wooden Gold Brick Brilliant Sleuth ved for several 12en put had Been poisonâ€" a violent antiâ€"Comâ€" orities next found him Jo0b ~"protecting"~ a ‘k society woman and m "Red ag>nts‘". For vas said to have perâ€" to part w.ch $100,000. d in 1928 and in 1930 book, ‘‘The, Strange nt Harding" in which Hardingz had not died rry t ~$57,000. This e had ‘been.â€" atâ€" o gcs, himseolf apâ€" he federal departâ€" in 1921 he sucâ€" later he provided v2r ~A1o provIdeo he Harding adâ€" ped that he and accepted bribes hey had opened s to bottleggers, e of wood ired it â€"for to himself, He to smugg prison he originated the Li: was taken as a sch prison, and he was Stratford â€" Beaconâ€"Herald: bachelors must pay up ov taxes in either cash or work must still be dearly bought seem. his illness. She cls will be returned t in Concord, N.C. and burial. mate carrer there, and brilliantly educated, brainy, sauve, likesable, seemâ€" ed woell on his way to a legitimate suc« cess when, in middle life, h turned crook. His wifte. faithful to him i# If you are mechanically minded, interest@d in the success of, your future, write C€Chicago Vocational TTajning Corporation, 358 Bloor St. West, Toronto. Just as the pioneers who built America made their own success, there are open today opportunities for farâ€"secing ambitious young men in the vocations of Aeroplane Conâ€" struction and Diesel Engineering, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration . . _ . noeed trained men. You can within a few short months prepara yourself for Home Study agd Pracâ€" tical work to uanswer yes3 to the questions: *"Do you know how to handle this job*" spC aTO lInt( Mechanically Minded W € ho wWas born in lt ploneers who built their own success, today oppormmhos BUILDING MATERIALS Lindb PHONE 11 wC HC to hiin through i )2 with him during iimed the body. It > tkhe family home for funeral service ferald: Mceaford up overdue poll mfessin rgh plo Freedom it would out of ‘_ that This out of