Page 2 The Haileyburian Thursday, July 30, 1959 THE HAILEYBURIAN and COBALT POST Published by Temiskaming Printing Co. Ltd. New Liskeard, Ont. Member Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association. Issued every Thursday, from The Haileyburian Office, Broad- way Street, Haileybury, Ontario. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office, Department, Ottawa. In Canada -- $2.50 per year'in advance. In United States -- $3.50 per year in advance. Dog Days It seems no matter how some people are warned, their dogs are still on the loose running all over and getting away with it while others are forced to keep theirs within their premises. Running and barking after cars, which can easily cause an accident while the motorist is trying to avoid them and also it is most annoying to persons trying to get their rest listening to them hours of the morning which has been happening lately. These being what they call (Dog Days) it is particularly dangerous to have them running loose among the children at the Park and beach as they get cross and snappy, es- pecially in hot weather. If one keeps .up with the news they will note that ever so often a child is bitten this time of year, sometimes seriously. If the citizens who own dogs would keep them at home and co-operate with the council defying them to make them do it, trouble and money both would be saved. bark, especially in the early instead of more or less 1 See by THE PAPERS SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) Charles Coval, a missile engineer had his own private rainstorm Sunday - in a 20-foot square area without a cloud in the sky. Impossible, said the bureau. "T know it sounds screwy," said Coval, "but I can't find the source any place else. It's got ito be rain."' He checked neighbors' sprink- ling systems and the water com- pany said there were no mains out in the area. The rain. began at 6 a.m. and continued most of the day. The San Diego Union sent re- porter Joe Brown to investigate. He reported back to the newspap- er that it looks like rain, tastes like rain and, in his opinion, is rain. 1 weather But 20 feet away--and every- place else in San Diego--there was ho rain. WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP) -- Mrs. Clive Boyd, using a rifle for the second time in her life, bag- ged a skulking bear that tried to steal fish from a barrel in her backyard. Mrs. Boyd, whose husband is a construction worker, brought down the. animal with two shot. She said she didn't think much about the correct way to hold the gun. All she thought of was what the bear would do. ROTTERDAM, Netherlands (Reuters)--Aida, an elephant at the zoo here, in a single day ate; without any apparent ill-effect: 1,706 handfuls of peanuts, 198 Sandwiches, 891 chunks of bread, 516. gum drops, 814 peppermints, toffeees and liquorice, 811 biscuits, seven ice cream bars, 17 apples, 198 slices of orange, one meat ball, one leather glove, 16 pieces of. pa- per, two small tree branches and a shoelace. Total weight of food--approxim- ately 126 lbs. BOMBAY (AP) -- Fifty thous- and head of cattle were reported swimming helplessly .in flooded areas of the Kutch Peninsula of worthwest India. Several hundred herdsmen were said to have taken refuge in treetops. The government is arranging to parachute in sup- plies and is also sending relief by special detachments of mount- ed police. STANTON HILL, England (CP) --The last film shown at the movie theatre in this Nottinghamshire town before it closed was "A Kiss Before Dying."' BARRIE (CP) -- Ontario High- ways Minister Cass experienced a "shocking thing to happen to a minister of highways." He got lost on his own roads. Mr. Cass related the story when he eventually arrived for the offi- cial opening of a new bridge which carries Highway 90 over the Nottawasaga River some 10 miles southwest of here. The minister was unable to find signs for the cutoff from Highway 400. He asked a service station attendant. "That's what they all ask," said the attendant. I wouldn't be surprised to see some signs up here very soon in- deed," commented Mr. Cass. KINCARDINE (CP) -- Motorists aren't the only ones to get demerit points for highway infractions in this town. Ned Police Chief Earl Wrightson has devised a _ plan of demerit points for bicyclists. Twelve de- merits mean use of the bike is withdrawn for a week. NEW YORK (AP) -- Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller told a na- tionwide television audience Sun- day night he might, under certain circumstances, run for the presi- dential nomination in 1960. JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) Snow mantled the Drakensberg Mountains from the Transvaal to Natal as a freak cold snap hit South Africa recently. WEMBLEY, Engljand The early-moryj been knocking4 on doorsteps & town was expg@y Residents watq dogs and birds "® hedgehog. ADELAIDE, Australia (Reuters) --A_ conscience-smitten burglar, who fumbled an attempt to blow an insurance office safe, phoned a warning to police. They found gelignite jammed in the lock. The explosive might have gone off had a key been turned. TORONTO (CP)--Judy O'Leary of Calgary is the only woman in Canada who is currently studying meteorology. This summer she is enrolled in a class of 38, taking a training course for government meteorol- ogists. All the other students are men. Miss O'Leary was selected for the course after taking her senior year in the bachelor of science degree at the University of Alber- ta. She spent the first five weeks of the seven-month government course at RCAF Station, Trenton, Ontario. ; (CP) -- ayduief who has F wilk bottles ANATOMY OF A MURDER By Robert Traver Paul Biegler felt his world had come to an end that Sunday in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan when he got back from fishing and from thinking about the future. He was forty. After his ten years as the small town D.A. and local hero, the people had found and elected a new hero, a young veteran of foreign wars. Then the telephone rang. Laura Manion told him her husband had been jailed for sus- pected murder. She said that Bar- ney Quill, the man her husband had -shot had criminally assault- ed her. Perhaps this case was Biegler's providence. Outwardly sardonic and cynical, he could certainly show his young rival, Mitch, who had won from him the only job he loved, as well as the State Pros- ecutor's whole staff, that he could defend better than they could prosecute. - Idealist beneath his flippant shell he loved the law. Even this man caught red-handed would stay innocent until a jury could be found to declare him guilty. Biegler knew a great deal about juries. It was Biegler's last chance of making a new begin- ning for himself. And yet could he believe his client or his client's attractive wife? Beneath the pla- cid surface, the small town seethes and boils with deep and primitive drives as events, like the jetsam in the river rapids, sweep toward the. great trial. The plan of de- fense is explored and assembled in Biegler's mind and in the mind of his ancient legal crony, Parnell McCarthy. One by one the lesser characters become enmeshed, frequently to their surprise and occasionally to their horror," in Biegler's anatomy of the murder. Biegler dislikes the cool and egotistical Frederick Manion in- creasingly as he becomes progres- sively more devoted to his defense. He cannot fully trust Manion's beautiful wife. He loses his heart to the enigmatic Mary Pilant be- fore he can determine her role in the dead man's life. The vain and brawling Barney Quill, now dead, who in the intervals of his main occupation--the pursuit and cap- ture of women--ran-a resort hotel, grows even more vivid than when he was alive. The relentless pros- ecutor, Claude Dancer, is ever more ruthless and more cunning. Judge Weaver, from his patient contemplation of the secrets of mankind, emerges calm and wise, ing laboratory work in Toronto, she later will go to the depart- ment's central analysis office at Dorval, Que. 1 The federal government has 1,800 weather stations throughout Canada. Most women meteorolo- gists have worked at Dorval. Dur- ing the Second World War there were about 55 women meteorolo- gists there. MONTREAL (CP) -- The Cana- dian Underwriters' Association has announced a move to reduce auto- mobile insurance rates for drivers least likely to become involved in accidents. The CUA, representing a seg- ment of the Canadian insurance industry, said last week that a new insurance rating classification --class 1A Select--is to be estab- lished September 1 by its member companies. (i The classification calls for a 20-per-cent discount 'off the insur- ance rates the motorist normally would pay. The reduction would be in addition to the discounts of up to .35 per cent off standard rates already granted drivers with three years of accident-free driv- ing. The additional discount will be given to drivers who: ~ : 1. Have been driving for five years without an accident; 2. Drive their cars not more than 10,000 miles a year; 3. Do not use their cars for bus- iness, or for driving to and from work; 4. Have no male driver under 25.in the household; and not more than itwo drivers of the vehicle. The announcement said motor- ists eligible will move into the new classification as their car insur- ance comes up for normal renew- Now attending lectures and do- al on or after September 1. Highgrade at Cobalt Library the personality on whom Biegler gambles for success. With authority and assured com- mand, Robert Traver, himself a lawyer, who can write, tells a most original and unforgettable story in which the prosecution and the defense battle for the prize of a man's freedom. Here is an at- mosphere that is the very essence of a small Midwestern town, salty and tangy in its speech. This book breeds a new respect for /the pro- cess of the law and an increased awareness of the drama of a lone man pitted against the massed re- sources of the State. Library Hours--3 to 5; 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday each week. Reading room open. Whirly-Bird In Haileybury Sparton Air Services caused a stir in Haileybury last week when they dropped down on the town park with their huge Vertol 42 Helicopter. The craft was making a scheduled stop for refueling and one of the local oil dealers was on hand with two 45 gallon tanks of fuel for the job. The copter which is one of the largest of its type in use was pro- ceeding from a strategic defence zone somewhere north of Moos- onee, to Ottawa at the time of refueling. The flight plan included a scheduled stop at Haileybury the copters size it is forced tg make frequent stops for fuel, Pilot Doc Demerah and his eo pilot Paul Ladouceur, were carry ing an undisclosed cargo from the secret defence area to headquars ters in Ottawa. New Song Birds For The North s northern Ontario becoming warmer, or are birds beeoming - more curious? Among recent res ports to the Department of Lands and Forests here tare these: A pair of mocking birds were seen in tthe town of Sioux Lookout. Known range of the birds is usually 400 miles south. A large water bird from the Waubaushene area was identified by Department officials as a double crested cormorant. While common in the eastern pant of Lake Onitario, Parry Sound and Severn River areas, it is seldom seen around Waubaushene. A swan which appeared to have q broken wing was sighted at Mile 152 on the Algoma Central Railway north of Sault Ste. Marie. When officials tried: to capture it, it flew away without difficulty: It was tentatively identified as a trump- eter swan, of which there are very few in North America. Members of the Nipissing Natur. alists' Club identified 32 species of birds on the Little French River; among nests found were those of ospreys, song sparrows, least fly= and one at North Bay. Because of eatcher, white-throated sparrow. same, PROCLAMATION TOWN OF HAILEYBURY By the authority of the Council of the Town of Haileybury, | hereby proclaim Monday, August 3rd, 1959 as "Civic Holiday" in the Town of Haileybury, and respectfully request all citizens to duly observe GOD SAVE THE QUEEN Arthur H. Cooke, Mayor. 21 at Haileybury, Road, and Lake Temiskaming, in District of Temiskaming, namely: Street lying between Lake Shore laid down on Plan M,37 North-Ba PREMISING that the southerly of north 68° 36' thereof; of Probyn Street; THENCE south 68° 36' the northerly limit of THENCE south 21° 24' limit of Lake Shore Roa AND FURTHER TAKE effected by the By-Law and who above-mentioned and a draft of may be examined at the Town east 66 feet measured along the easterly d to the point of commencement. j , _NOTICE that' the Council will at the said time and place here in person or by his Council, Solicitor or Agent any person who claims that this land will be prejudicially NOTICE OF PASSING OF BY-LAW TAKE NOTICE that the Council of the Corporation of the Town of Haileybury will take into consideration the passing- and if approved will pass in its regular meeting in the Council Chamber, é on the 14th day of September 1959, at 7:30 o'clock in the afternoon, a by-law to close, stop up, and sell to the Owners of the lands abutting thereon the following portion ;of Probyn Street, as shown on Plan M.37 North Bay between Lake Shore the Town of Haileybury, in the ALL AND SINGULAR that certain parcel or -tract of land and premises, situate, lying and being in the Town of Haileybury, Dis-. trict of Timiskaming, and being composed. of that part of Probyn Road and Lake Temiskaming as \ : y, of record in the office of Land Titles at Haileybury and being further shown on a plan of survey dated June 22, 1959, signed by V. R. O. Praskey, Ontario Land Surveyor, said parcel being more particularly described as follows: limit of Probyn Street has a bearing east and relating all COMMENCING at the south easterly Lake Shore Road and Probyn Street; THENCE north 68° 36' east a distance the southerly limit of Probyn Street bearing herein thereto; angle of the intersection of of 238.0 feet measured along to the south easterly angle THENCE northerly along the original shore line of Lake Temis- kaming a distance of 66.58 feet more or less to the north east angle west a distance of 229.0 feet-measured along : 7 Rrobyn Street to the north easterly angle of the intersection between Lake Shore Road and Probyn Street; * applies to be heard, AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that the Plan of Survey the By-Law Clerk's Office. DATED at Haileybury, Ontario, this 29th day of July, 1959. proposed to be passed a