- wanr ape FOR SALE pe HOR- SAGE -- Baby's pla en _| and bath tub, in good canaliia: | Phone OS 2-3595, Haileybury. 15 ;}, FOR SALE -- Large Duo Therm ; space heater with blower, $75; small size space heater, $25: two piece chesterfield suite, $50; heavy . | duty ithree burner electric range, My $40; hot air furnace with pipes, * suitable for 5 or 6 room house, ; °$50; one set laundry tubs, $10; bath tub and bathroom sink, $40,-- OS 2-3662, Haileybury. 15 ; } i | { £8 i Ee REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Gece ATE FOR SALE: yi | E, SALE -- Haileybury business Her /, to close an estate. Reason- | able terms. Phone OS 2-3475, Hail- eybury. 15 FOR SALE -- In Haileybury, two storey house (duplex), new furn- ace with thermostat, reasonably priced. Phone 4515, Cobalt. 15tf eo USED CARS FOR SALE. -- 1950 half ton G.M.C. Bo truck, also power lawn mower. | 'Phone OS 2-3739, Haileybury. 15 TO RENT TO RENT -- Attractive house at 78 Brewster St., Haileybury, oil heating, three bedrooms, modern kitchen; wall to wall broadloom, garage. Phone OS 2-5363, Hailey- bury. 15 a renters if Boor heated apart- ent in auleybury. Inquire at MI 7-6569, New aigtccaral® ° 15 | TO RENT -- Heated apartment in ' .good location in Haileybury. Phone OS 2-3667. é 15 go ae -- ag) to rent, suit- r one or two Oe oe ' WO persons. Phone 15} ' TO RENT -- Modern four room ReSuUn En, all conveniences. Main ~ Connelly, OS 2-3057. -LO) RENT -- one stairs apartment, 3 piece bath, one bedroom, spell kitchen and liv- ing- reom, Heated,- Phone OS 2. | | 3128 Haileybury. 14tf _ TO RENT -- one bedroom with hot and cold running water. On "| Ferguson Avenue. Phone OS 2- -- 3128, Haileybury. 14tf 14tf unfurnished up- lle. | ae HELP WANTED - FEMALE \ I ie OF .88 é P28 LES A ARR mR GS Tos ee ieee = 8 WANTED : Experienced typist and receptionist. Apply in person to Morissette Diamond Drilling Ltd., Haileybury, Ontario tf PERSONAL WHY FEEL OLD? Feel Years Younger. Ostrex Tonic 'Tablets reyitalize thousands past 40. Only 69 cents. At all druggists. [2;-0; 7,-9) 10s 116 14,15, 16 MISCELLANEOUS If you wish to have your piano tuned Morin, Call Mrs. Neil Turnbull, 'New Liskeard, Phone .MI 7-6365. Leonard Morin is bi-lingual and has thirteen years experience in piano. repairing and tuning. 33ti CARD OF THANKS I wish to express my sincere 'thanks to all my friends and neigh- bors for their many acts of kind- ness and lovely floral tributes and - messages at the time of our be- Teavement over the loss of a lov- ing wife and mother. F. G. Berg, Bertha and Martha. 15 oo. ~ Coming Events Lakeside Rebekah Lodge will hold a pot luck supper in the Lodge rooms Thursday, June 18, start- ing at 6:30 p.m. This is the clos- ing meeting for the summer and it is the wish*that all sisters at- . tend. , 15 The first 'Field Day Iuncheon of the Haileybury Golf Club will be held Friday, June 19, at one - p.m., for club members and their friends. ae { ¢ | 'it $ tpt 'Haileybury phone Clarence | or repaired by Leonard |. A Tourist June 8 D The black flies are really bad to-day. Even Mose was swatting at them. One of the young. hunters asked Mose how come, he thought black flies didn't bother Indians. 'Mose always has an answer. "Oh," he said offhand, "since biting you Americans, Indians really taste good to them." June 10 The weatner has: been very warm and co-operative lately, ex- cept for the strong winds. It blew so hard the other day, our old hen laid the same egg four times! After supper, the winds died down to a mere gale, so we took the little Piper cub up and pointed it to- wards an island thirty miles away where some of the fishermen are camping out. As our lake became smailler and smaller beneath us, the bush country opened up ahead and around us: this Temiskaming Dis- trict, this rich wonderful wilder- ness of forests and lakes. Through the variegated greens of pine, poplar and 'birch, the thin brown 'rope of the road coiled away intu the distance. Soon we spotted the lake and ithe campsite we were looking for and landed beside the island. The boys were still out after the big speckles, so we lelt ithem.the fresh salad and the pie Outtitter's ARY that we had brought as an excuse for dropping in on them. Or may- be we don't need an excuse to take the plane up for a spin on a hot evening. As we headed for home again, a bluepurple heat haze turned the sun into a blurred ball of fire. June 11 Flew in to vote this morning. Seven minutes for a trip that takes almost a half hour by car. June 15 Now that the spring bear hunt- ing is over for another season. we can catch our breath before the family vacations start. Hunting sure 'brings out peculiarities in human nature. One party of seven fellows arrived with twenty-eight cases of beer and one loaf of bread - for one week. Don't know what they were going to do with all that bread. However, they didn't get really drunk while they were here, they just had a contin- ual rosy glow about them. They took turns shooting at a bear that was coming in to our garbage dump, but couldn't hit it. Finally the bear came right in without paying any attention to them. Then there. were the two hunters from Delaware who saw a bear the first afternoon they went out. They "Thursday, June_ 18; Bar Canadian Legion Honors J. Reavell Members of the Canadian Legion Branch 54, gathered in | Hailey- bury last week at a special cere- mony to honor Jack Reavell with life membership. Mr. Reavell has been a member of the Canadian Legion for 39 years. Mr. Reavell came 'to Canada in 1908 and settled near Charlton where he farmed for a number of years. In 1915 he enlisted with the 159th courteously asked each other to shoot first; finally one of them did shoot, a long shot 350 yards, and he brought that bear down with the one shot. You would thiftk that would make them both happy, but the other hunter started thinking it over, and finally came to the conelusion that maybe he should have shot first as he had seen the bear first. Well, one word led to another, and finally they weren't even speaking. They wouldn't eat together, and the last night they wouldn't even sleep in the same cabin together, one of them slept in the car. And they had a thousand miles to go home together. Takes ali kinds to make a world. As Mose says, "Good thing everybody don't like same thing, or everybody want my squaw." The. Haileyburian Page 3 battalion of the Canadian Expedi- tionary forces and went overseas in 1916 with the Canadian Rail- road Troops at Ypres, France, where he earned the rank of Ser- geant, He returned ito Canada in 1919 and went to work for Northern Canada Supply Company until going into service for the Federal Government 'as a weather record= er, where the worked for 22 years. Mr. Reavell opened a grocery store in Haileybury on the corner of Blackwell and Georgina Streets in 1921 and has been ithere since. In the course of his Legion Mem- bership he has held every office. He was awarded his twenty-five years service pin some time ago. (Mr. Reavell's wife Elsie, died in 1952. Mr. Reavell has two sons and a daughter, Keith, Sierra Le- onne; Fraser, Haileybury, and Mrs. N. G. MacPherson of Cobalt, FINDLAY ELECTRIC HAILEYBURY 4 Cecil St. Dial OS 2-3682. Electrical installations and maintenance. ' Guaranteed repairs to all household appliances, radios and small motors. We will pick up and deliver' anywhere in the Tri-Town area, 5 > STRICTLY INFORMAL Soe Once he finlahes his banking he'll be : for a little Like millions of other Canadians, he finds the local bank a handy, friendly and familiar place where he can drop in as casually as into the corner store. He knows ' fishing. there is nothing formal about banking. Bank premises are designed, and bank personnel are trained, to provide speedy, efficient and convenient.service in an easy and informal way. Wherever you go, you will find-bank:staffs providing the kind of personal:service that is keyed to the-easy, modern way you like to do your banking. SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY off THE CHARTERED BANKS