Groaning boards ha of avoirdupois.. Maybe dining rooms in toâ€"da lows and cmtage’ lmv‘ to do with the challenge any cook to Cushioned Renchs IT‘S SIMPLER, AND LESS EXPENSIYVE, TO FURNISH AND ENTERTAIN IN A DINETTE. | uine goanin THURESDAY OCTOEER 13TH. 1038 Leskew‘s Cabinetâ€"Upholstering Shop NEW LARGE PREMISESâ€"63 WILSONX AVE Modern as toâ€"day responsible for th \l ahogan y Strlpv(l ch Furniture Made to Order Yoerton Furnuiturr ; have had someé matter. Anywa in the 18th Century tradition is now avail able in suites for the modern small sized dining room ir seats give a smart air of toâ€"day to this conventional grouping. enches, Builtâ€"in Sections and More Fragile Furniture, Make Space Deâ€" voted to Hating Easier to Planâ€"Decorate the W alls Daringly to produce e gone the way the diminishing ‘s small bungaâ€" paper is this trim d lighter, more graciol i Gdinette thin PLEASANT HOMES ind ple Restored to Its Original Craftsmen. Beautyvy hy how could. a b groaning board looks as if we I in part at leastâ€" Certain it is â€" for many gay tI m dining room furniture that is influenced icious lines than the more bulbous modern See Our New Drapery Samplt.'s by Elizabeth MacRea Boykin he compact a body get fat without ard in the offing? So 1 we had dinettes to thankâ€" astâ€"for our modern figures is that they‘re responsible iy times for the young couâ€" nall hou PHONE 975 duâ€" plex. toâ€"da nette to da Oldâ€"Timer Leaves His Mark on Rouyn Street ma He ppC by the Ot niniature it‘s Ofter T: a brigt After all It 1Ll breakfast or casual you‘re not expected pig or a leg of mutâ€" y tiny dining quarâ€" asy to entertain in dining room, or diâ€" r calledâ€"so simple lians who are wWrgIner or rot Ahis i the north sid». : tHat trail for ten wil continue to ds Crowds, heat, conâ€" me of these have vy should a buncn of nud? He went on ustice to be old | whose habits are ~elderly person, the south side ‘ther or not his! vo residents of y walk on four istice to be old his usual way one day this week. Soon there were. roars of workmen, franti«â€" \cally shouting at him to go eway. He had the sidewalk completely to himâ€" self, so paid little attention to ‘"hem. His mark on Rouyn is a permanent one. He left a trail of large collie paw marks right down the middle of Perrault street‘s new concrete waulk. \__ We‘ve also seen some interesting and !new provincial dinette groups that are inspired by Dutch, Swedish and French provinzial sources. These are mosily map‘e with a suggestion of color such \ as. dull green rubbed into the wood, themnâ€" wiped off while still wet. The effect is informal and refreshing. The lin:s> of these pieces are simple and they are scaled to use in a small inâ€" formal room. ters. and that‘s a grand "out" for the hostess who can do a swell job with walfes or Welch rarebit. No wonder you don‘t notice any signs of reverting to oldâ€"time dining rooms with those mileâ€"wide buffetsâ€"remember? Even fullâ€"fledged dining rooms these days are showing the influence of the dinette in that you rarely see bulbous, too wellâ€" fed looking diningâ€"room _ furniture about. Smart on a Budget For you can be terribly smartâ€"pracâ€" tically in a nutshell, And on a budget. How many times have you envied picâ€" tures of those leather upholstered builtâ€" around one corner of the room seats with a slick table to slide in front just like you see at your brightest night spot? You can buy leather and blonde wood made in sections, but when set up it looks as builtâ€"in as you pleaseâ€" all at a modern price. Makes a smart and comfortable dinette enseéemble and takes advantage of every inch of space., But if you‘re a traditional soul, for all your modern ways, then you‘ll be interested in dinette sets of Sheraton But if you‘re a traditional soul, for all your modern ways, then you‘ll be interested in dinette sets of Sheraton mahogany that retains that graciousâ€" ness you still covet, yet is designed fo: the simple and rather miniature reâ€" quirements of the small family dining room. The table closes itself up to nothing at all for the occasions when you‘re only two or three, but it open and combine with a separate console table to seat as many as eight. A small cabinet and a trim little sideboard are part of such a set, as are a charming group of chairs with striped seats. The best point about a group like this is the fact that every piece can be used in some other room when you‘ve gradâ€" uated to larger quarters. The dinette is also a place for some of the more brazen new wall papers that will carry the burden of your deâ€" coration. Mirrors also rise to their oldâ€"time magical reputation and do wonders in a small, unimportant room. such as the dinette. And here‘s a bee for your bonnetâ€" the ibest decorators usually throw cauâ€" tion to the winds when they‘re asked to do a dinette.. For a room Oof this size can‘t make much of a show on its own r2sponsibility . . . So you might just as well take a flyer on sometning really exciting. Your friends will probâ€" ably make remarks, but at least they‘li talk about you. And Mary Gardon used to say that was all that mattered. (Copyright 1938, by Elizabeth Macâ€" Rae Bovkin). Space Saving Decorations The present fashion for showinz oif your china and glass is a boon to the dinette, for it gives you aa chance to make decorative use of all the wall space available. Builtâ€"in shelves or hanging shelves filled with unusual porcelain or crystal will practically furnish a little room that might otherâ€" wise be hard to put to lay claim to distinction. The Noranda post of the provincial police, advised of his most recent arâ€" rest, warning police there of his ianâ€" gerous character. In both his reâ€"cnt jail breaks, he clubbed the guard and scaled the prison wall. Perhaps the most important developâ€" ment of all, however, is the turn that modern furniture has been taking. it is stronger than ever as a style trond, but the lines are lighter, more graceâ€" ful. more curving than they‘ve been and hence far more suitable to use in limitâ€" ed quarters. As a result you will find ever so many dinette groups of furniâ€" ture that rsally look right in a twoa by four dinette or in an end of a livâ€" ing room. Yet they‘re designed for dining and so are comfortable and adeâ€" quate for the purpose. All this talk about Swedish modern really amounts to a definite slenderizing influence thail is invading mod"n design. So you‘ll see less of that overweight, unwieldy modern of some seasons kack, and more smooth sleek looking furniture that might be.regarded as transitional since it seems to bridge the gap betweon traditional and extreme modwren funcâ€" tionalism. Rouyn, Oct. 10 â€" Maurice Fiset, northwestern Quebec‘s escaped criminâ€" al, has been caught again, after two successful jail breaks. This time, was involved in an attempted holdâ€"up for a taxi driver at Blind River, Onâ€" tario, in which one of his companions was the victim of a police bullet. is now in Sudbury jail, under special Not only will he have to answer for the attempted armed robbery at Blind River, between Sudbury and Sault Sie Marie, but it is also probable he will be charged with a theft at Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, breaking jail there, and breaking jail in Amos this fall, H:z was unds>r a tenâ€"year semtence in S. Vincent de Paul for robbery whes brciught to Amos to face another charge on which he was convicted and had three years made concurrent with nis tenâ€"year sentence. Man Who Escaped From Amos Jail Held at Sudbury New Provincials Believe Hitler to Make More Demands Sudbury Czechs Feel He Inâ€" tends to Grab Czechosloâ€" vakia, Roumania, Poland. (From Sudbury Star) Native Czechoslovaks livinz in Sudâ€" bury, now naturalized, are of the opinâ€" lon that MHitlee will not respect the Munich pact and will take what he wants when he wants it Sam Vuykov, 407 Pine St., formeor sergeant in the Hungarian army durâ€" ing the war, and a native of Yugoâ€" slavia, today declared that Hitler would take ithe Skoda munition works within six months. Then, he said, with threats he would annex Hungary with its food, and Rumania with its cll. "I am a British subject," said Vuyâ€" kov, "but it is my opinion that peace in Europe can last but a fow years. "Poland got her minority rights in this last week because Germany let her. The time will com»> when Germany will take Poland, and the adjustment of the Polish minority will have been settled y the Poles, making it easier for Gerâ€" many. "Our work cof the past 20 years has been lost," W. Kolasta, 218 Whittaker St. "And in taking this terâ€" ritory, Germany will meet opposition naturally. She will have to use the iron heel to Germanize the Sudetens, for there are many who are Czech in spirit. "They were Czech soldiers, 80,000 of them, who gave their lives at Verdun to keep the Germans out of Paris. and Daladier forgot this. "War in Eurcpe is a case of brother against brother, father against son," deâ€" clared the war veteran. "In 1916 I was fighting against Austria and the next year I was fighting with them.. Then: is no sense to war. "I firmly believe that the Sudeian Germans will be crying for the Czechoâ€" slovak Republic within a year," deâ€" clared Vuykov. "No democratic people can be satisfied under a dictatorship, such as Hitler offers." "The peace of the world is worth the sacrifice of a fow miles, if that is all. Czechoslovaks throughout the world know that this is just the beginning, and that bit by bit their homeland will be swallowed up. "Censorship is now very heavy," deâ€" clared Mr. Kolasta. "Many Sudetaas will attempt to leave the new German territory and will flee towards the heart of the Czechoslovak Republic." Soldiers of Spanish W ar Have No Claim on Canada (From Toronto Telegram) On another page of this issue appears a letter on behalf of the Canadian veterans of the Spanish republican army. The writer speaks of Canadiaas who went over to fight in the ranks of the Spanish government forces as preâ€" contingents of the forces of democvracy, and remarks that on their return hnome they ‘have not been cared for as were men returning from the world war si twenty years ago. There is a request for help for these veterans in rehaâ€" bilitating themselves. All who are in distress have SMITH ELSTON DON‘T BUY ANY AUTOMATIC HEATING EQUIPMENT UNTIL YOU SEE A aturâ€" PLUMBING and HEATING TIMMIN®S al claim to assistance from persons of goodwill, but it is difficult to underâ€" stand what sp:cial claim on Canadian sympathy is possessed by those who lo!: this country to fight in Spain on etthor of the civil war. They did not go as representatives of Canadian sentâ€" ment. Thevy do not return as Canadian men! vetetr veterans. Canada has been even more solidly for no commitments in the Spanish war than in regard to any struggle in which the British Commonâ€" wealth of Nations may become invo‘!yâ€" ed. British pclicy has definiteély been to keep out of Spain, and volunteers fromâ€" British Dominions enlisting on either side have been a stumbling block in the way of isolating the Spanisn trouble and preventing it spreading intc an allâ€"European blaze. It is quite possible dian participants in may sincerely regard serving champilons of democracy. It is deoubtful, however, if that is the way they are viewsd by a majority of Canâ€" adians. Certainly there will be no genâ€" eral disposition to bracket them with veterans cof the Great War as equa:ly entitled to Canadian regard. If they are looking for special recognition it should be towards those who enrolied them and sent them out. Perhaps ‘n the rebuilding of Spain there will be as many openinss for employment as in the war which has so suscessful‘:y destroyed a considerable area of it. Clear B.C. Fir Vâ€"Joint ; Hardwood Floorâ€" ing; Vâ€"Joint and Shiplap; White Pine Featherâ€" edge; Clear Fir and Pine Doors in Stock Sizes; Sash in Stock Sizes. Schumacher Phone 725 John W. Fogg Limited Lumber, Cement, Building Materials, Coal and Coke, Mine and Mill Supplies. 1L,. U MBR r, if that is the way by a majority of Canâ€" y there will be no genâ€" to bracket them with Great War as equa:ly that these Canaâ€" the Spanish wat themselves as doâ€" democracy. It is tHhat o ojec the wa« Head Office and Yard Timmins Phone 117 Camrade Wm. Ross Elected President Cobalt Legion Comrade William Ross was elec‘ad president of the Cobalt branch of the Legion at the annual meeting last week, Comrades Alonzo Fortin and ~William Martin (the latter being the reeve of Coleman township) were elected as the viceâ€"presidents of the branch. Comâ€" rade Frank Mountford was reâ€"elect»d as the secretaryâ€"treasurer. on First Mortgages Available in TIMMINS SCHUMACHER SoOUTH PORCUPINE Paid Back Monthly over 3 to 5 Years. APPLY TO Study vouLr REAL ESTATE INSURANCE STEAMSXHIP OFEFKICE 20 Pine North Timmins Branch Office Kirkland Lake Phone 398 Phones l) lJ80 isks, then