Page 6 THE HAILEYBURIAN THURSDAY, APRIL. 9th, 1932 Haileybury in 1924 Items from the Files of The Haileyburian of Seven Years Ago 4 4 4 4 4 it club Street, where a lot could be se- cured from W. Robb. V new 7 was decided to build a house on Browning Work on the rebuilding of the local wharf was completed on Saturday last and it is now ready for the opening of navigation The as just sessment for the year completed and shows a total property value of $1,778,037, which is an increase ot $760,067 on building values and a decrease of $36,583 in land values from the previous year. has beén The new pipe organ is being in- stalled this week in St. Paul's Church and a recital will be given tomorrow night by Mr. Arthur H. Lye, of Toronto, under whose} direction the installation is being made An early start is expected on the erection of the new 1.0.0.F. Pemple The site is that of the former Stitt House on Broadway street Over one hundred readers have sent in guesses on the date of the ice going out, but fortunately they cover a great number of dif- ferent days Motor running be- tween Haileybury and Cobalt, the almost clear of cars are roads being now no\ Cc. H. Burton has commenced the erection of a new house on Rorke Avenue, the site of his for- mer home THE RHYMING OPTIMIST By Aline Michaelis Plowboy How good to be a plowboy And tramp the bright day long Across the sloping, fertile fields, In time to robin's song! The furrows lie so closely, So strong the dark earth's scent He hears wise Nature's beating heart And guides his plow content. Not his the futile groping For goals too far, too high; His heart is lighter than the wind Unvexed as summer sky. Not his the high endeavour, The swift, world-thrilling deeds He makes his furrows straight and true, And sows the fruitful seeds. How good to be a plowboy, So far from worldly strife, Untouched by all life's fitful rage | And yet so close to life. TRAIL RANGER AND TUXIS DOINGS | Don't forget the "Bazaar" in the basement of the United Church on Saterday afternoon, April 11th, from 3 till (oj, AUN "Pathfinders" will hold a sale of | . , home-cooking and candy. You can drink tea, play Pee Wee golf, and visit the "Old Curio Shoppe" Bring your friends and help the \Trail Rangers. Admission free. | TRAIL RANGERS TAKE | FIRST IN BANTAM FINALS Kirkland Lake Trail Rangers took the first game of the ban- ltam league play-offs defeatinig the Flyers 5-0. The second game will be played as soon as weather permits. | Three old Tuxis Boys Graduate | Earl Lautenslager, James Gib- son and Edward Devitt, three old time Tuxis boys who were very active in the Older Boys' Parlia- ment, graduate from Victoria |College this year. Lautenslager | goes to England for Post Gradu- jate work, Gibson to the dear old \farm where Short Horns are |raised, and Devitt into camp and | , boys' work. Trail Rangers and Tuxis A new and what promises to be a most popular hat for Trail Ran- gers has just been issued by the Provincial Board. It is a beret |hat and comes in black to match |the rest of the official Habite. On |the left hand side appears the Trail-Ranger Emblem, embroid- ered in silk on a cardinal back- jground of felt. The proper way to wear the hat is with the right side pulled down over the side of the head. Because of its natty appearance and serviceable nat- ure this new hat will undoubtedly enjoy wide spread use through- out the province. When ordering be sure to state size. The price IS /OC. |New Hat For Clean Up in April April means (clean up) to C.S. E.T. boys. With the dirt and grime of the winter months lay- ing around and nature radiant with new life who wouldn't want the forces that| Former Families Brought To Light in Epic at The Empire Theatre, Liskeard to co-operate with make for beauty and growth. A group of Trail Rangers in a small mining town in British Columbia caught this spirit when they ob: What is said to be the most ac- served that their town had .a i ; : number of old dilapidated shacks curate reproduction of historic and some vacant lots that were|landmarks ever completed for covered with debris, the leftov ers | money pictures appears in Chas. from more populous and prosper-| Brabin's exciting talking picture ous days and decided they could|of (1775, "The Great Meadow" improve matters. They set to|\ hich will be playing the Empire work on an extended campaign|Theatre Monday an dTuesday, to clean things up. It took them |April 13-14. Eleanor Boardman, several weeks, working hard ev-| John Mack Brown, Lucille La- ery day after school and on Sat-| Verne, Anita Louise and Gavin urdays, but finally the job was|Gordon are the main protagonits completed. Tottering shacks had|of the tale. It is full of exciting been torn down, vacant lots had|Indian fights and an absorbing been cleaned, the useful lumber |love story. had been stacked and best of all} RuthChatterton gives vibrant there remained a lot of useless|life to the emotion-tossed joys lumber which they enjoyed a|and heartaches of two people, a monster bonfire. 'mother who stakes happiness on ' And Her Ideas . From Paris ° she neaDby couldnt feed cy [very aad about monique "a with white ait aatin blows, & it cane jt in time for hex to wear to the } atation / fot a bon voyage gift Vy ahe gave monique thia hermes dress li ing case with aimly hundweda of tiny S Lange bott2ea in the top hab for evescything ahe could posa- Urty need. monique waa chic it- acl in hee auit edged in canacube, abnzyser.ginal, men white acany which hidden in hex HEARTBURN | HEADACH | cases-NAUSEA Comes HAT many people call indiges- | 'Y tion very often means excess | acid in the stomach. The stomach nerves have been over-stimulated, and food sours. The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes the acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science is Phillips Milk of Magnesia. One spoonful of this harmless, tasteless alkali in water neutralizes instantly many times that much acid, and the symptoms disappear at once. You will never use crude methods when once you learn the efficiency of this. Go get a small bottle to try. ®Be sure to get the genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. and 50c a bottle-- any tore. gold stripes (J with white rings '. «. is a smiling salt- water diplomat, who sees that all your affairs run smoothly while on board. Your entertainment, your comfort, your general well-being are his charge. He is an expert in ocean travel and his fund of knowledge is always at your service. Sailings weekly from Montreal Cabin rates from... . $130 Tourist Third Cabin. . . $105 Third Class Round Trip $155 Special Seasonal Third Class Round Trip Excursion Rate $129. Information from Cor. Bay and Wellington Sts, (Phone Elgin 3471) Toronto or any steamship agent Sail : CUNARD as A Water Drop "TWENTY Thousand Leagues Under the Sea" is out of date. Scientists are going a pace never heard of before in the history of the world. They tell us that the temperature of the flame at the surface of the sun is ten thousand Centigrade, that Sirius, the bright- est star, sends out a temperature of eleven thousand, Vega, fourteen thousand, according to the astron- omers' instruments. But man has outdone the stars and the sun, In his labs a million degrees is not unknown and forty million prob- able. Arthur Eddington made the statement recently that "forty million degrees is, perhaps, not beyond attainment. " "At Cay- endish Laboratory," Eddington says, "Dr. Kapitza produces momentary magnetic fields in which the concentration of energy corresponds to about a million degrees Centi- grade. If he should be able to raise this to forty million--well, I don't really think subatomic energy will come pouring out, but, just to be on the safe side, I shall take care not to be too near the laboratory when the exper!ment is tried." "There is enough energy in a drop of water," says Eddington, "to furnish two hundred horsepower for a year. Instead of pampering thc appetites of our.engines with coal or oil we shall induce them to work on a plain diet of subatomic energy." Trucks and trains will disappear and a year's supply of fuel for a station--thirty grams of water--ean be carried in a tea cup. Scientific research into the various problems with which the pro- ducers of crops have to deal is on the move at a rapid pace much along the same lines. Too many farmers, however, are clinging tenaciously tc old traditional methods. Others are moving slowly but surely along the read of progress. All are anxious for better and more profitable methods in the selection of seed, the cultivation of the soil, the harvesting and the sale of the crop. For the purpose of making better and surer progress still large numbers of scientific agronomists and practical farmers from all over the world are arranging to meet in conference at Regina in 1932. It looks now as if this will be the means of giving to the agricultural in- dustry the biggest boost e Scientists have not yet been able to produce rain at a time when farmers think that crons require moisture. They have, however, dis- covered some wonderful things glong this line. Dr. Compton, the 1927 Nobel Prize winner in physics. savs that. "by observing the diameter of ANCHOR- DONALDSON the halo round the moon we can estimate the size of water drops which love and loses, and a daughter | Woolsey in "Half Shot at Sun-- who gambles on love and wins. 'rise", playing Fri.-Sat., April 17- Playing Wed.-Thurs., April 15-16,|18th. The story deals with two with Paul Lukas, David Manners! American soldiers _who go A. W.. and Irving Richel. jO. L. in Paris during the World Cuckoo Kings of Cock-Eyed}War. comedy are here again ae a bombardment of laughs, take a 3 bath towel with you when you go) Want Ads. Bring Results. to see Bert Wheeler and Robert TRY OUR WANT ADS for the greatest adva __ in motoring tree wheeling EVENTY-NINE years of Studebaker prog- ress reach a brilliant climax in Free Wheel- ing... the most important motor car improve- ment of modern times at $1090 to $1250. And with it come all these benefits... 15% to 20% savings in gasoline and oil . . . reduc- tions in chassis wear and repairs . . . freedom from clutch slavery . . . and a driving thnill you've never known. * Highway commissioners and safety directors throughout the country have driven Free Wheeling Studebakers and pr Free Wheeling with positive gear control a new measure of personal and public safety. d 'HSS 4DOOR SEDAN Other models $1090 to $1250. Prices at the factory Walker- ville, Ont. Bumpers, spare tires and govt. taxes extra. Come to our showroom today and arrange to go Free Wheeling in this brilliant new seventy horsepower Studebaker Six. CENTRAL MOTOR SALES Haileybury and Kirk and Lake STUDEBAKER MADE-IN CANADA - Tariff of Tolls _ TO BE COLLECTED DURING SEASON 1931 Spy The Quinze Rapids Improvement Company, Limited For Use of Improvements Sawlogs 17 feet and under, per 1,000 ft. B.M. .------_--_5e Red and White Pine, Tamarac, Spruce, Hemlock and all other woods, round or flatted, over 17 feet and under sO feet longa perme O00) tt. 8) ME senses oe 64¢ Red and White Pine, Tamarac, Spruce, Hemlock and all other woods, round or flatted, 30 feet and up- wards in length, per 1,000 ft. B.M. eS ee OTE TAC Red and White Pine, Tamarac, Spruce, Hemlock and all other woods, square or waney board, per 1,000 Cubic feet ame sewees ae eos aioe a eee 75c il pod! Detkecordyse esp ee ets ee ee 5¢ E. C. Woolsey, Sec'y-Treasurer Remember! That the best goods are always advertised. Therefore, if you wish to secure the Best Value for your money Look Carefully Through the Advt's in This Newspaper cause it. A shrinking halo means' a growing drop and hence probable Tain. --_ Condensed Ads. in The Haileyburian Bring Results