TYE HAILEYBURIAN Vol. 28; No. 14 HAILEYBURY, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JULY ith, 1932 Subscription Rate: $2.00 per year Separate School Issues Promotion Exam Results Lists Below Give Standing of Pu pils After Tests Made at End of School Term; Many Awarded Honors for Good Work; Names Are Given in Order of Merit The following statement of the results of the June promotion ex- ams. at the Separate School have been handed in by the Principal, Miss Costello, and will relieve the minds of the pupils who have been on "pins and needles" for the past few days. Names in order of merit Jr. IV to Sr. IV Honors--Clarissa Marcella and Bridget Holland, equal; Law- rence Connelly. Pass--Eleanor Foran, Kathleen McCarthy, Joan McGinley, Ger- ald Bruce, Teresa Belec. Recommended--Eddie Police. Sr. III to Jr. IV Honors--Norman Bruce, Syl- vester Laronde, Agnes O'Hallor- an. Pass--Bert: McGillivray, tle Sulphur, Herbert Doyle. Recommended--Helen Doyle. Jr. If to Sr. Ill Honors--Alan Mclsaac. Pass--Robert Howey, Bernard Belec. Recommended--Patsy ly, Martin Dolan. Sr. II to Jr. III Honors -- Elaine McGinley, Margaret Holland, Albert Belec, Marie O'Halloran, Rita Gutcher, Alan Gorman, Gerard Shields and Gordon Bruce, equal. I to II Class Pass--Henry Gutcher, Louise Ward, Lawrence O'Shaughnessy. Honors--Eunice Connelly, Dor- othy MclIsaac, Margaret McCom- iskey. Myr- Connel- Pass--Milton Doyle, Gerald Furlong, Mac. Whelan, Billy Troke. Recommended--John Sulphur. _ Sr. Primary to Jr. I i - Pass Laronde, Denis Gorman. Jr. Primary to Sr. Primary Charles Milner, Richard Flem- ing, Thomas McConnel, Robert Yorgovitch, Constance McDon- ald, Shirley MacDonald. A Jr. Primer to B Jr. Primer Louise Whelan, Zora Yorgo- vitch, Nora' Labine, Margaret Sulphur. --_--.--__ Sainte-Croix Separate School--French The the highest standing during the year: Jr. IV. Pupils enrolled: 7 % General Proficiency--Rejane Regim- following pupils have obtained bal, Eveline Charbonneau, Therese Perrier, Blandine Forget, Paul-Emile Joyal Perrier, Eveline Charbonneau, Rejane Regimbal, Anne- Marie Rochon, Paul-Emile Joyal. Spelling--Therese Reading--Therese Perrier, Paul-Em- ile Joyal, Rejane Regimbal, Eveline Charbonneau, Jeannette Brouillard. Writing--Rejane Regimbal, Therese perrier, Paul Emile Joyal, Anni Marie Rochon, Blandine Forget. Literature--Rejane Regimbal, Ther- ese Perrier, Eveline Charbonneau, Blandine Forget, Paul-Emile Joyal, Donald Bynre, Kenneth}, Language--Rejane Regimbal, Paul- Emile Joyal, Blandine Forget, Therese Perrier, Anne-Marie Rochon. Geography--Paul-Emile Joyal, Eve- line Charbonneau, Therese Perrier, Re- jane Regimbal, Anne-Marie Rochon. History--Eveline Charbonneau, Paul- Emile Joyal, Therese Perrier, Blandine Forget, Rejane Regimbal. Arithmetic--Blandine Forget, Rejane Regimbal, Jeannette Brouillard, Ther- ese Perrier, Paul-Emile Joyal Grammar--Blandine Forget, Rejane Regimbal, Eveline Charbonneau, Ther- ese Perrier, Jeannette Brouillard. French Grammar--Blandine Forget, Eveline Charbonneau, Rejane Regim- bal, Anne-Marie Rochon, Therese Per- rier. French Literature--Blandine Forget, Paul-Emile Joyal, Therese Perrier, Anne-Marie Rochon. French Charbon- Rejane Regimbal, J Spelling--Eveline neau, Rejane Regimbal, Jeannette Brouillard, Blandine Forget, Therese Perrier. Sr. III. Total enrolment: 12 General Proficiency -- Marguerite Huard, Albertine Philibert, Jean Joyal, Roger McCurdy, Leonard Labine. History--Aurele Beauregard, Roger McCurdy, Albertine Philibert, Leonard Labine, Astor Vachon. Geography--Jean Joyal, Leonard La- McCurdy, Simonne Se- guin, Albertine Philibert Literature--Marguerite bine, Roger Huard, Leo- nard Labine, Roger McCurdy, Aurele Beauregard, Imelda Mino. Spelling--Imelda Mino, Marguerite Huard, Jean Joyal, Onida Blanchard, Albertine Philibert. Composition--Jean Joyal, Albertine Philibert, Simonne Seguin, Roger Mc- Curdy, Leonard Labine. Arithmetic -- Albertine Philibert, Roger McCurdy, Marguerite Huard, Leonard Labine, Florence Deraiche. French Grammar--Imelda Mino, Jean Joyal, Deraiche, Onida Blanchard. French Literature -- Marguerite Huard, Simonne Seguin, Aurele Beau- regard, Florence Deraiche, Albertine Philibert. French Spelling--Marguerite Huard, Simonne Seguin, Florence Deraiche, Jean Joyal, Albertine Philibert. Jr. WI. Total enrolment: 16 General Proficiency--Jeannette De- raiche, Rosina Lebeau, Robert Meaney, Paul Dupuis, Lucienne Dunn. Geography--Jeannette Deraiche, Ro- sina Lebeau, Joachim Huard, Laurent Allard, Eveline St. Louis. History-- Joachim Huard, Laurent Allard, Rosina Lebeau, Donat Rochon, Jeannette Deraiche. Literature--Robert E Meaney, Eveline St. Louis, Alexis Dunn, Paul Dupuis, Laurent Allard. Spelling--Jeannette Deraiche, Robert Meaney, Eveline St. Louis, Rosina Le- beau, Paul Dupuis. Composition--Jeannette Lebeau, Ro- bert Meaney, Laurent Allard, Cecile Brouillard, Lucienne Dunn. Arithmetic--Jeannette Deraiche, Al- exis Dunn, Robert Meaney, Joachim Huard, Jeannette Lebeau. French Grammar--Rosina Lebeau, (Continued on Page 5) Th acm KODAK SEASON a ESH LAURA SECORDS | ty) SMILES & CHUCKLES 2 Nia Peaggdetoir's CHOCOLATES ad IS ALL THE YEAR All Styles and Sizes In Stock Films and Supplies FERGUSON AVENUE Knechtel's | 86, Drug Store ") HATLEYBURY_ Aurele Beauregard, Florence; Stolen Motor is Recovered After Found by Owner at Swastik With Some Damage Done; No Clue to Guilty Party Browning Street, where he ha Friday last. He recovered it th had been abandoned at the Swas tika station. Some damage wa done to the car while it was a way, approximately to mount of $50, Mr. Ferguson say The car, a Chevrolet coupe, wa an hour of its being taken. H the house at 1 p.m. and when h away. On Saturday the owner, with W. started north on a search for th missing vehicle. Kirkland Lake, where they con Swastika, where spotted the car at the party or parties. against something, and a muffler will be required. Other wise the car is not badly damag ed. ee Brown trout fry to the numbe of 20,000 were deposited in 25th, and a like amount of trout is expected shortly. 100 Mile Drive To have his motor car stolen from in front of his residence on left it standing while he spent an hour in the house, was the ex- perience of Gordon Ferguson on following day, after it had been driven a little over 100 miles and the a- had left it standing in front of came out at about 2 it was gone. No one had seen it being driven afternoon McFarlane, They drove to sulted the police, with no result, and on their return stopped at Mr. Ferguson station. No one could be found who could definitely state when the car had| The fenders had been damaged apparently through being driven new the waters of Larder Lake on June|have squatted on privately own- lake'ed land in Widdifield Township, 'Lumber Yard at Goward Burned a Blaze Saturday Night; All Stock is Destroyed Fire of undetermined origin reduced 11,000,000 feet of white and red pine lumber, the entire d stock of the Temagami Timber Company at Goward, to heaps of ashes on Saturday night. | The fire was reported at 9.50 and rag- ed fiercely till 4 a.m. before the huge mill and other company buildings were déclared out of danger. A. B. Gordon, managing director, estimated the loss at -1$250,000, covered by insurance, and stated that sawing opera- tions will be resumed as quickly 'as the insurance claim is adjusted e s Ss S missed by Mr. Ferguson within| and the mill yard cleared of de- \bris. The entire mill force, reinfore- ed by forestry fire fighters from Latchford and Temagami with equipment put up a valiant fight throughout the night to restrict the flames to the doomed lumber piles. The mill and company of- fices, storehouses and employee's dwellings were seriously menac- ed until 4.a.m. The blaze origin- ated in one corner of the yeard and quickly enveloped pile after pile til lthe entire yard was in flames. The fire fighters were un- able to do much more than con- e e been left there and up to the pre-!tne the fire to the mill-yard and sent there is no clue to the guilty | protect the mill and buildings. bordering The yard was nothing than heaps of live embers after the fire had swept through the area and gangs have since been employed at stirring them up dousing them with water to pre- vent a second conflagration. | Tr --<--<--<--<--$ ------ more Seven families from Hamilton 'and are having grave difficulties. re Eldorado Mines at Great at the property erations will silver and discovered by Gilbert Labine 1 commence on Canada. Haileybury, having it placed ir the cars which from Southern Ontario. whole includes a complete min will run two drills, etc. The cars go from here was assured they wonld on Monday next. With the addi be then sent to the end of stee over to the Hudson Bay Trans port, which company will take i the remainder of the way, abou Diesel power will be used fo the mining operations, Mr. La bine says, engines of the Junker type being supplied to compressor. These of supply to the property. a be used in the operations ht been fabricated right in Hai bury at the machine shops M. Fleming. It is a self cont unit, with a Junkers engine © the drum and gears from a dinary hoist built to run by s Mining Plant and Supplies -- Shipped to Great Bear Lake Equipment for Eldorado Mines Left Here on Tuesday Night and Will Reach Property in About 30 Days; Complete Plant Includes Hoist Fabricated at P. M. Fleming's Two cars of equipment for the|tested out. Bear|burian was invited to pe present Lake left here on Tuesday night|2¢ 2 test of its lifting power on and it was expected that in about 30 days*the. whole will be landed contained the other parts of the plant shipped) plant is set up. Considerable of The|the ore has already been broken ing plant, with compressor which blacksmtih shop equipment, hoisting engine, at Waterways, 300 miles further the radium-bearing ore will north, where it will be turned) started within two weeks, aa In fact the Hailey- Tuesday afternoon and, speak; ing as a layman, we would say that it is just about the most and;\ when the;complete machine of its kind that plant is set up, actual mining op- | cauld be thought up. the|}pact, being all in pitchblende deposits should give no one great difficul- It is com- one piece, n|ty in transportation and will be what has been hailed as the most}all that is required for the initial important new mining field in|operations at the mine. Mr. Labine personally superintended the loading of the equipment which was secured in|that the mining of silver and the Mr. Labine, who is the manag- ing director of Eldorado, states N\radium-bearing pitchblende ores will commence as_ soon as the and will be shipped out in due course. While the price of silver is low, the ore ayailable is suf- ficiently rich to be mined and shipped profitably, it is stated by n direct) Mr. Labine and, as the silver and to Edmonton, where Mr. Labine pitchblende come together, op- arrive| erations will include the product- ion of both minerals. tion of a considerable quantity of| Tn addition to the plant to be supplies, the entire shipment will|jnstalled at the mine, an extract- lion plant for the treatment of be Mr. >| Labine says. This will be erected t\near Toronto and will be the t first of its kind in Canada and the 1,400 miles, to the property. The only. one in the British Empire. whole shipment, Mr. Labine said,|The Chief chemist of the com- would be between 65 and 7Ostons.| pany, a man of wide experience rjin the handling of radium-bear- -\ing ores, has recently returned s|from England and will superin- run the|tend the construction of the new burn the;pkint. crude oil from the Fort Normigh wells, which is the nearest sourcélavhen Eldorado will become an ac- "Asked as to the probable time |tual producer of radium, Mr. La- The hoisting engine which will|bine said it would be within less than a year. The general public does not yet grasp the signifi- .{cance of this and the importance of the new mining fields is yet to \be brought home to Canadians, although mining men throughout the country can readily apprec- or electricity. It is the only one jate something of what is being of its kind in Canada, Mr. Labine|done in the Great Bear Lake dis- says, and has been thoroughly |trict. | Buildings Saved | Loss is Quarter Million in Big! 'Promotion Lists are Issued From the Public School Classes for the Coming School Year Are Outlined in Statement by Principal R. J. McClanahan; Pupils Will Now Have Their Minds Set at Rest Over Examinations Pupils of the Haileybury Pub- lic School will now have their minds set at rest as to the out- come of the recent promotion ex- ; aminations. The following state- ment, issued this week by Prin- cipal R. J. McClanahan, will be perused eagerly: Sr. IV Cecil Belland, Eileen Billedo, Jack Cooper, Dorothy Davis, Margaret Elkins, Enid George, Gordon Hamilton, Amy Herbert, Winifred Hincks, John Jemmett, Elva Johnson, Alan Keddie, Lil- lian Lawson, Vera Lawson, Shir- ley Liddicot, Frances McFarlane, Joyce MacLean, Winona Mc- Naught, Gladys Palmer, Adele Paul, Carmen Reade, John Ross. Jr. 1V Edna Abraham, Kathleen Adair, Wesley Austin, Wilbert Barkley, Harvey Beecroft, Royce 300th, Robert Carlson, Arnold Cooke, Eunice Davis, Gladys Davis, Allan Dodd Bobby Farrell, Adela Fleming, Randolph Hughes Alice Johnson, Keith Kirkpatrick Martha McFarlane, Jean Mc- Cracken, Jean McVittie, Margar- et Palmer, Marjorie Poppleton, 3essie Scott, William Scott, Mil- ton Sullivan, Ella Thorpe, Don- ald Tuke. Sr. Il Adele Abraham, Asquith Bel- land, Merton' Blair, Melvin 3rown, Florence Buchanan, Ste- wart Coe, Doreen Coon, Emily Cooper, Gwen Davey, Winnie Dempster, Walter Dent, Marjor- ei Eckensviller, Muriel Evans, Louis Fitzpatrick, Elvina Fortin, Fred Hughes, Fores Hurteau, Kathleen Jenkins, Jean McFar- lane, Hugh McMillan, Jack Mc- Millan, Jack McVittie, Maureen Allen 'Aistrop, Clifford Austin, Buddy Andrews, John Bagshaw, Doris Belland, Amil Carrier, Hugh Carlson, Sheila Coe, How- ard Coe, Peggy Dempster, Wil- low Davis, Howard Davey, Cyrus Elkins, Lloyd Evans, Billie Fish- ley, Mac Fleming, Violet Gro- zelle, Helge Johnson, Teddy Johnson, Betty Wawhiney, Mar- garet Milroy, Bert McNaught, Charles McMillan, Mae Northey, Arnold Olson, Muriel Palmer. David Paul, Robert Peter, Helen Poppleton, Henry _ Poppleton, Clara Pretty, Clinton Pretty, El- eanor Ross, Joyce Ross, Jack Roger, Dorothy Strong, Wilma Somerville, Ethel Stewart, Mar- garet Tuke, Frances Teare, Bar- Moore, Sarah Milroy, George Manyhbiney, Pearl Palmer, _Bob Pipe Arvilla Pretty, Jack Ryder Gdrdon Ruttan Donald San son, Mildred Saxton, Edwin) Short, Bobby Thorpe, Martha Woodend. Jr. Hl teau, Howard Hutt, Pearl Kelley, Jack McFarlane, Jean Milligan, Ruth Olson, Fraser Reavell, Bes- sie Ross, Gerald Ryder, Bobbie Scott, Teresa Scott, Nona Smith, Rae Sutherland, Shirley Suther- land, Charles Trepanier, Evelyn Warren, Beatrice Young. Jr. I Ada Burton, Gerald Burton, John Cawley, Arthur Coe, Laur- jeen Coe, Lloyd Cook, Lloyd Cur- ry, Laura Davis, Fern Davis, Howard Ferguson, Billie Glazier, Margaret Harrison, Jack Hughes Evelyn Hurteau, Mildred John- son, Lloyd Liscumb, Lawrence Liscumb, Mona Lyttle, Ramsay McFarlane, Lorraine McNaught, Ruth Pipe, Walton Rose, Lois Smith, Isabel Stuart, Oswald Thorpe, Harold Trepanier, Leon- ard Villeneuve, Marjorie Whelan, Paul Burnett. Sree Gordon Austin, Violet Baxter, 3illie Beecroft, Billie Blair, Blanche Carrier, Velma Cook, Lloyd Dempster, Audrey Eckens- viller, Mary Flintoff, Gladys Hurteau, Josephine Isherwood, Helen Liscumb, Norman Mc- Naught, Dureen Paul, Irene Rice, Ivan Ross, Freda Maracle, Aud- rey Rice, Jimmie Warren, Helen Whelan. Jr. Ia Nola Austin, Gordon Coe, Ken- neth Davis, Lucy Ferguson, Francis Fishley, Nancy Hassel- bring, David Hunter, Donald Hunton, Billie Inch, Hector Mc- Geraldine Austin, Osborne ton, Joseph Coe, ( non, | fois pees Madeli mn ' 'Ir. Norman Abrah er, Albert Scott." Sr. Primer . Billy Austin. Doris Burton, Gerow, Phyllis Rice, Vera Stew- art, Viola Gagnon, te Jv. Primer A. : ; Glen Carlson, Lawrence Coe, Marian Dempsay, Mildred Ferg- uson , Frances Hincks, George Johnston, Leonard Johnston, Donald Morris, Neil McAulay, Joan Pipe, Jean Reese, Malcolm Scott, Joan Thompson, Margaret | Weston, Sam Woodend Jr. Primer B. Dorothy Blair, Betty Cragg, Arthur Crosscombe, Wanda Hun- ton, Arthur Inch, Jack Leishman, | Clifford Whorley, Edwin Young. Farlane, John McLean, Harold McLellan, Edna Milroy, Betty Ryder, Iverna Scott, Billy Thuerck. ; Jr. Ib Raoul Carrier, Helen Coon, Ernie bara Taylor, Victor Tukkanen. Sr. Il Week ending Wed., July 6: Verna Aistrop, Velma Austin, Max. Min. Phyllis Buchanan, Harry Burton,| Thursday 70. 8: Frank Cooper, Ruth Crosscombe,; Friday 53 Mae Davis, Eva Edwardson,| Saturday 49 Peter Edwardson, Wallace Ed-| Sunday -----------__- 44 wardson, Douglas Erenhous, Nor-| Monday 45 ma Farrell, Mary Fleming, Tom] Tuesday --- BS WAS Flintoff, Jean Grant, Richard) Wednesday --- Sha oe, Hancock, Graham Harvey, Lorna| Precipitation --_ Gs Herbert, Jack Hill, Melvin Hur-| Highest Wind.-----20 m.p.h. e e } Cordially invites you and your friends to a Special CHICKEN DINNER Featured Every Sunday, 5.30 to 7.00 75c a Plate Dinner Music Have you already tried our Pasteurized Milk? Order a FREE Sample at HUTT'S TEA ROOM! Lowest bacteria count. Last week's test: 1200 per cc. GRAFFE'S DAIRY ORDERS TAKEN AT HUTT'S TEA ROOM |