renner Page 4 _ THE HAILEY BURIAN ea ei a a A eee * THURS., OCTOBER 8th, 1936 THe HAILEYBURIAN Issutd Every Thursday from The Haileyburian Office Broadway Street, Haileybury SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 2.00 per year in advance .00 per year in advance. Leishman & Sutherland, Publishers BEGINNING TO SEE LIGHT That at least some of the peo- ple of Algoma district are begin- ning to see the light in regard to the Trans-Canada Highway route is made evident in a short article printed last week in the Algoma Advocate, published at Thessalon about 50 miles east of Sault Ste. Marie, .Thessalon was among the municipalities which three years ago joined in overwhelming the T. & N.O. districts at a con- ference in North Bay, when a resolution was passed pressing for the Trans-Canada road to be built around the rocky shores of Lake Superior. The Advocate says: "The Highways Minister, when in the Sault, declined to comment on a trans-Canada road. Our guess is that a Lake Superior route for a highway will never become an accomplished fact. It will be discussed over at elec- tions but that is all it will amount to. Canada would, if unwise enough to build an expensive road into the wilderness, have another white elephant on her hands." Temiskaming and Cochrane districts have been long of the opinion belatedly expressed by the Advocate, and it may he hop- ed that other municipalities in Algoma will eventually be con- vinced of the utter uselessness of such a highway, except for a pos- sible three months . during the tourist season Setter use the road building to open up some territory that will prove valuable rather than spend millions of SIMON LAKE | | | | | | Confident that he has Iecated the sunken treasure ship "Hussar" near Hell Gate in New York's East River, Si- mon Lake, veteran submar- ine inventor, is engaged in a salvage hunt for the $5,000,- 000 believed lost when the British frigate sank during the American Revolution. small is the number of residences thus equipped. The incipient fire has all the potentialities of the conflagration. FIRE CHIEF SAYS NEW TRAFFIC LAW IS NOT PROPERLY OBSERVED Fire Chief Ken Watson asks The Haileyburian to call atten- tion of certain motorists to a re- cent amendment to the Highway | Traffic Act regarding fire trucks, ' ambulances and other public ve- hicles. The following are two sections which apply: (10b) The driver of a vehicle, upon the approach of an ambu- lance, fire or police department vehicle, or public utility emergen- | 'cy vehicle upon which a bell or Isiren is sounding, shall immediat- lely bring such vehicle to a stand- 'still as near as is practicable to jthe right-hand curb or edge of the roadway and parallel there- Haileybury in 1926 } Items from the Files of The 'with and clear of any 'tion." (10c) No vehicle shall ltance of less than 500 feet." | ;caused inconvenience 'garding these regulations. intersec- follow any fire department vehicle when the! responding to an alarm at a dis- The fire chief says that on recent oc- ;casions the ordinary traffic has by disre- 3 t y ) aYXY le Q f a MILANO - ny lo UA 5, Ya (e) . ' : . Mrs =i a) FRENCH SARCASM "No doubt, with the exceilent moral encouragement which your governments are giving us, we shall get somewhere " --Le Canard Enchaine, Paris If it cannot be stamped out or if the water bucket does not sutfice, there is still a way to prevent its spread provided the home has been equipped with small fire ex- tinguishers. An old saying among those who deal with this question is that "all fires are small at the start." If caught in time, the number of fires that get beyond control may be very materially reduced. "First Aid" is a present-day necessity in the protection of the home against fire no less than in dollars in a section that has not the remotest chance of ever re- turning anything like the outlay | required. | ~-- | "FIRST AID" AS APPLIED TO FIRE | Many a life has been saved as a result of modern "First Aid'|record at the local station com- treatment. |piled by Jas. Reavell. September The kit of the camper or the/of 1935 showed an average of 7.6 Boy Scout is not complete with- out its tape, its gauze and its an- tiseptics. Immediate treatment when the victim is far from skill- ed medical assistance, forestalls countless amputations and the days of thousands of accident victims. | The home itself will he thus! supplied, if its occupants are as wise and cautious as thev should be. ; "First Aid" has its place, too in the protection of the house against fire. Yet how deplorably longs pro-|vailing winds were also from that the safeguarding of life against cuts and scratches and burns. Light Winds in Septeniber Compared to Month in 1935 September of this year had winds of an average velocity of 7 miles per hour, according to the The total mile- age recorded last month was 5.484 last year. The highest for the month was 24 miles per hour from the southwest, and the pre- miles per hour. direction, the records show, al- though the longest continuous wind was from the southeast, 31 hours on the 14th and 15th, with a total mileage of 253. There were 26 calm hours in September this year, compared to last Sep- tember this year, compared to last September's 10 hours. --by "Movie Spotlight" ITY TOUGH TO BE | "THE MAN WHO | LIVED TWICE! 1T TOOK OVER THREE HOURS EACH MORN- ING TO FIX THE FACIAL DISGUISE WORN BY RALPH BELLAMY IN T COLUMBIA DICTURE. LADY OF i semen Faratare Ser ice LINUSLIAL FACTS REVEALED | UNKNOWN womAn COUNT eReeit "CRIME aud eunisHment =S aes ISABEL JEWELL us an AUTHORESS. SHE HAS HAD SEVERAL SHORT STORIES AND POEMS PUBLISHED, AND. Has SOLD A STORY FOR THE SCREEN. ~ aa New Rail Line Through Northern Mining Area TIONAL NA TRA NSCONTINEW > aL Ra Lag Y M TASCHEREAU whe y 4 -- b LS Sy 2 nose ~ = ey ~ © - x eS ST Lae RS o\s i iG MALAPTIO eye 2 #? =) i - Shy Si eae we ag OBRIEN MINE Siscoe Mine OF s' THOMPSON-CADILLAC Hine @ OR amy SHAWKEY MINE @/ be" ~) aw" Oe aay og SS Pe NORANDA Pr al Cantaraaric Mine @ gss ROUYN _ AR = ve Vv McWATTERS Mine \ Ry ae (6 he an ( ie \ wets Y . Ress h a LF , SENNETERRE a) *ccrerce Gas apes new branch line of the rich mining territory to the south of the National Transcontinental in Northern Quebec has been surveyed and construction work is to be com- menced within the xext few weeks. The Canadian National pioneered this mining country by the construction of a branch from Taschereau on the Transcontinental to Rouyn in the Noranda district. The new branch extends from Rouyn to Senneterre, 72 miles east of T: tinental line, and is 1004 miles h _ The surveys for the new line have hoe made and tenders for the clear- ing, grading, culverts, etc., have been called for. The clearing is to be finished during the coming winter, and possibly some of the concrete work of the rtant bridges on the line. The grading is to be finished by the end of the working season in 1937. The track- laying and ballasting, which, as is customary, will be done by the track forces of the National System, is to be expedited throughout next summer. substructures of the two im Canadian National Railways serving the ereau on the Transcon- in length. A con- siderable section of the line running southwest from Senneterre, as well as the portion from Rouyn east to the navigable waters of the Kinojevis River, will, it is expected, be completed by the Fall of next year. The above map shows the location of properties which it will serve. In addition in the district in various stages of development. the line, and the principal mining are many other properti The new branch will also aid in the colonization of a number of large arable tracts which are within access of it. Colonization districts have already been opened up to the west of the portion of the new line between Senneterre and Pascalis and in the Kinojevis River district. Extensive lumbering operations are also expected to follow the construction of the line, there being many good timber areas in the district. Sixteen miles south of where the line turns southwesterly from Pascalis, in the Lac Victoria district, is a very large stand of white pine (shown on the map). Haileyburian of Ten Years Ago The homes of Harry Stoughton and family and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce, on Rorke Avenue, were totally destroyed by fire,to- gether with all the contents, the fire apparently starting in the Stoughton house. The local market was held on Saturday last, for the first time in many years, and was well pat- ronized. A small beaver colony has es- tablished a home on Dickson Creek, a few miles north of Hail- eybury, where a dam has been built quite close to where the T. & N.O. and Nipissing Central Railways cross the strearn They can be seen at work frequently. Mac. Lang, M.P.-elect, and H. A. Day went to Ottawa on Sun- day night to interview the Minis- ter of Public Works in regard to the completion of the arena build- ing here. Jack Gordon of the Haileybury High School, who qualified for to compete in the provincial ath- letic meet at Toronto, won second place in the high jump when the meet was held in the city at the week-end. The teachers of Nipissing Dis- trict, meeting this week in annual convention at North Bay, will visit Haileybury tomorrow, Fri- day, and will be entertained by local people. Extension Mines has _ been formed to reopen the old Coch- rane Cobalt property, adjoining the Temiskaming Mine, to the east. Plans call for the sinking of the shaft to 700 feet. Bowlers of Cobalt, Haileybury and New Liskeard expect to open their fall season at an early date. While Haileybury is still without alleys, they have become so used to the other runways that they should make a good showing. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of Lucy Ann Coomes, deceased NOTICE IS HERELY GIVEN that all creditors and others haying claims or demands against the estate of Lucy Ann Coomes late of the Town of Hail- eybury in the District of Temiskaming, Spinster, who died at the town of Hail- eybury on or about the 9th day of July, 1936, are required to send by post prepaid or deliver to the undersigned executrix or her solicitor on or before the 3lst of October, 1936, their christian names and surnames, addresses and de- scription with full particulars of their account and the nature of the security, if any, held by them. AND TAKE NOTICE that after such above mentioned date the executrix will proceed to distribute the assets of the estate amongst the parties entitl:d thereto having regard only to the claims of which she shall have notice. AND THE SAID executrix shall not be liable for the said assets or any part thereof to any person or -persons of whose claim notice shall not have been received by her at the time of the said distribution. DATED this 22nd day of September, 1936, MARIA BRIDEN, Executrix, by JOSEPH A. LEGRIS, K.C., Her Solicitor, 26-3-c Haileybury, Ontario. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate o} Ivan Charron, deceased. 4 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that all creditors and others having claims or demands against the estate of Ivan Charron, late of the Township of Cairo, in the District of Temiskaming, mer- chant, who died at the Town of Hail- eybury on or about the 29th day of August, 1936, are required to send by post prepaid or deliver to the under- signed executrix or her solicitor on or before the 31st of October, 1936, their christian names, surnames, addresses and descriptions with full particulars of their account and the nature of the security, if any, held by them. AND TAKE NOTICE that after such above mentioned date the executrix will proceed to distribute the assets of the estate amongst the parties entitled thereto having regard only to the claims of which she shall have« notice. notice. AND THE SAID executrix shall not be liable for the said assets or any part thereof to any person or persons of whose claim notice shall not have been received by her at the time of the said distribution. . DATED this 22nd day of September, 1936. EMMA CHARRON, Executrix, by JOSEPH A LEGRIS,.K.C., Her Solicitor 26-3-c Haileybury, CAtario. of them Financial Statements Booklets » Pamphlets Brochures Folders Fine Stationery Statement Forms Intricate Rule Forms Factory Forms Business Record Forms Blotters Manifold Forms Interleaf Forms Cheques Receipts Envelopes, all kinds Printed forms save us, enquire. We can supply you with all LET US HELP YOU WITH PRINTED FORMS many otherwise tedious tasks. 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