census rank Cant Figure Out Ramp Examiner Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited 16 Bayfield Street Barrie Ontario WEDNESDAY OCT it 61 Psge Eight Bariieergencies Are SupporiedByllniiedï¬ppe To help serve our community in health welfare character building and recreation for another year Barries United Appeal is again underway with this years objective being set at $14 BDD to help the eight member agencies carry on their vitally needed program These agencies March of Dimes Victorian Order of Nurses YMCAYWCA st John Ambulance Canadian National Institute for the Blind Canadian Red Cross Society Retarded Children and the Mental Health Association who benefit from Barries annual United Appeal provide services which meet the problems of daily life at all times health problems that require skilled nursing service family problems idle hour pro blems and countless others The United Appeal is deserving of the support of all Canadian citizens says Claude Jodoin president of the Cana dian Labor Congress In special message on behalf of the United Appeal the labor leader says this organized method of giving is sensible method designed to avoid the confusion and possibly the inefficiency that may result from multiplicity of appeals Various organizations affiliat ed with the Canadian Labor Congress continue to take an increasing interest in community welfare and we hope that our activitiesin this direction villi be backed by generous giving onï¬ie part of trade union members across Canada We fully agree with the president of the Canadian Labor Congress that this organized method of giving is sensible one and if the UnitedAppeal receives the support it should by an citizens glv ing their fair share the fund objective will soon reach the top and the eight member agencies will be able to plan their programs for the coming year Votes On Liquor Movies Applications have been made to Barrie City Council to arrange plebiscites on Sunday movies and cocktail lounge questionsr There should be no hesitation on councils part in acceding to both requests Both questions have become vital issues in many communities in Ontario They transcend the personal reasons of theatre proprietors and liquor interests The people themselves have the right to be heard and the mostsatisfactory way of obtaining their opinions is through the ballot box The liquor vote usually hot potato in any community is favored by the Barrie Junior Chamber of Commerce The chamber as publicspirited organ ization has not expressed itself for or against cocktail lounges It feels as The Examiner does that the time has come to obtain the thinking of citizens of Barrie through plebiscite The theatre men as representative of their group told council feel they musthave Sunday movies to compete with other media of entertainment The people of this city on the other hand are concerned solely with the matter of whether they should have movies on the sabbath There are sharp differences of opinion on open Sundays Some communities have turned down Sunday movies others have supported them The time has come for Barrio citizens to give their opinion The votes should be taken at the reg ular municipal election to save expense and perhaps most important to assure the best possible expression of opinion Down Memory Lane HOPELUCK NUPTIALS In The Barrie Examiner of Sept 1E36ristheaccountofawedding couple with wonderful start in names when in Crown Hill United Church Loretta May Luck became the bride of Leonard Stuart Hope thB of Oakville Rcv Irwin of Uhthoff officiated assist ed by Rev Fred Berner pastoralthe church Mrs Coutts presided at the organ and during the signing of the register Mrs Matthew Lowrie sang At Dawning Gladioli in shades of apricot blue lake and white carried out the INSURANCE MAN BEATEN The Barrie Examiner of Sept 10 1936 told of dastardly crime perpetrated on the night of Sept when Albert Wight man Goodfeilow 60yearold insurance agent residing at 10 James Street Barrie was cruelly attacked by thugs robbed of his money and left lying in infolostjmucifblooa DoigTasEfdgTr his aut obile on the sldé of Highway 11 near Giorgiannls service station When found hewesmnconseious lying over the steering wheel with an artery severed on one wrist from which blood was streaming Glass in the windshield and also the left front window was broken and the inside of the car showed evidence of struggle piece of elec tric cord was in his mouth and tied at the back of his head bloodstained handkerchief was used as gag but had dropped on the floor Two blood stained rocks were also there and he Allandaleandothersdriszingpast not ed his condition and asked passing motorist to call police Traffic Officer Jack Lewis took over the case and Mr Goodfellow was taken to Barrie hosp ital where he was given medical atten tion and eventually recovered still lives here at an advanced age despite this experience JAPANESE UMBRELLA WW La Stamps Turin Umbrellasrfrom Japan are new best seller on the Italian Riviera It never rains here but the umbrellas contain transistor radios pleasant to modern ears and they can be used as canes for IWalking in the mountains They are also protection against the sun and ogiers NEED HEADS READ London Free Press Are our courts finally ready to con cede that some motorists need their heads examined hopeful indication comes from Toronto where man who was chased by police all the way from Grimsby at speeds up to 110 miles an hour was remanded for psychiatric ex aminatio His time more magistrates understood that anyone who drives at nearly double the legalspeed limit there by proves himself to be person unfit to be on the road it was sheer goodluck that this driver did not kill anyone i1 hr fore he was stopped What bothers the The Barrie Examiner Authorlsed as second elese ms Post omr orpirtnent qttawa Dally sunsyr ns Stitute mcemso mailingldftor canalEs wspae BusineuMsnegar HARRY Pi WILSON Adflfllllllt Mungr roan aotnsa cirnuuuon Mungar tion rate daily by carrier lie weakly rifliolwnr sinri copy in ay mail in Ontario mm so no months sass tam months uni Wedeanmr menu4m 425 University Ave Toronto cm sterilififontrui iiu Welt drorrin strut Vengun at tho Candun Daily Newspaper Pub mm ciruun Th Canadian Prcn end the or burn atlone In PI LI exclusively entitled to thc for ubflbaflon of all new dispatched In this credited in it or The Assolclaflgg Presa or culations magazines are worse lawabiding motorist isthat most similar o£fencescasult in aefina andpermission to go out and speed some moremenace unless we were sure DOUBLE CAUTION British Travel top London newspaper reporter tak es no notes during interviews This he believes encourages people to talk freel But once when interviewing politi fan who was notorious for denyingstate merits given to the press he hid minia ture tape recorder in his coat pocket Half way throughthe interview the con cealed recorder began to make loud buzzing sound The politician stopped talking and lookidSqMIBIYaLmEmiOnermustunderstand the re porter Is that your taperecorderor mine he asked PRESS ADVERTISiNG BEST St Thomas Timesdournai The Canadian Consumer Survey centiy sent questionnaire to 36649 peo ple from coast tocoast asking them what type of advertising influenced their buy ing most Radio Magazines Television or Daily Newspapers The poll resulted Radio Magazinesll Television 24 Daily Newspapers 61 Dldnot of the Can in Daily Newspaper Publishers ciaiion in Vancouver the board of direc tors resolved to transmit that informs tlonrto member newspapers so that they could if they wished compare the na tional average with the data pertaining to their face market It will be noted that daily newspapers faroutweight all other sources put to getherliadio ad rtising is almost neg Iigible and televi on which is the most expensive form of advertising is poor second best And with all their Villst ciru the primem ister OTTAWA arpoai Disagreement Shows Up On Economics Ev PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA sharp disagree ment on major economic policy has suddenly shown up within the cabinet Dominant up to now has been praiseworthy job But this job compels him to be the minister of nonimportation io protect our manufacturing industries Look how he cuts back imports from our good customer Japan whilst George lines is encouraging Red the restrictinnist school of eco China to sell us goods so that mimic thought which would keep it can afford to pay us for more urblinkercd so that our eyeswheat cannot roam to enticing pros But look too how Donald Flem pects of the brave new economic 115 chairman of treasury world blossomingaround us But board has fought every extra now we suddenly learn that the dollar ofour tax expenditure cabinet containh expaninnist we especially in our heavyspending ianaries who foreseeihat these defence departmenfyng not he developments will leave us stem is faced with crippling bills and hung behind it we continue to rising deficits through decisions be guided by outgrown doctrine to add 15000 men to our active Hon Gearge Heep our min forces to recruit 100000 civil de ister of trade and commerce se fence militiamen to expand our lected the unlikely audience of winter works program the KiWAnis Clubs of Eastern 15 Canada is recognise that Toronto to lift the curtain of cab trade is stwoWBY W111 inct secrecy just enough iore Epvernmem spend EVE veal the telltale clue to this top hisher portion at our national in ievel disagreement come for us is Canada about to Remember that Trade Min Immth Wenuï¬lmfl ister iiees last month chided is mg ï¬rming Bntain at the Accra Cfihfelence Fwedfmmï¬m WEE way fmï¬ungIWEW the coin falls is pretty exercise ropesn Common Market What Edam apectly They Were Such Comfort When They Were Little BIBLE THOUGHT See that ye walk circum uot er fools but so wise Redeeming the time be cause the dlys are evilEp heelus 515 In Happy Is the man who spends his time in benefiting his fair lows Time files We must be about our Fathers business Crilicize Roberis Education Stand TORONTO lCPDonaid MacDonald Ontario New Dem ocratic Party leader Tuesday night criticized Education Min ister John Roberts for recent statement opposing free univer sity education Mr MacDonald speaking to the University of Toronto School of Business Alumni Association said the ministers statement is confused and outmoded con cept in our day and age Mr MacDonald quoted the minister of education as saying free university education would not jibe with free enterprise The New Democratic leader said this places human values and the development of the in dwidualui secoFdilace to free enterprise with itsbasic motive of profit he added different song he sang last week in Toronto when he hinted that Canada might join in free trade associationnot lust of the six Common Market nations but of the countries of Western Eu rope Britain the 115 and Can ada The potentialities in Cam ada joining liessid are being very carefully studied in Ottawa MUST BE SURE Canada would not wish to en ter intoan agreement which might seriously affect our eco nomic structure and its related 1mploymentf1ie assured his au Recalled By ll GEANDE PRATRIE Alta CP Mrs Hugh McDonalds proudest possession is Chri mas card she received in 1931 from her boys The card framed is lure of small plane superi posed on goose in flight Sur rounding the plane and goose are small photos of about 29 young pilots and some of their parts of call Coppermine Aklavik Fort Simpson Fort Resolution Goldfields The pilols names are roll of the famed names of the eary days of aviation in Can adas Noflhwestï¬ Grant McConachie Wop May Punch Dickins Archie McMu len Val Patriarch Walter Gil best among those who shared Auniy and Uncle McDonalds home iniort McMurrsy 250 miles north of Edmonton for 18 years Only one of her boys died in crash during the years from 11922 to 1940 Mrs McDonald re calls although the aircraft that there would be to us How different tbi from the earlier cry that Britain would wreckvtlie Commonwealth if she Joined the Common Market and foresook her present impoverish ment through charitable prefer ence to ungrateful Common wealth partners That suggestion was descrjbed in Britain as an other piece of impudence from Fleming the Canadian finance minister who drafted the Acorn communiqueand whom indeed nobody loves pet galn spective Flemingflees roles to appreciate the controversy For controversy it certainly now is although for months Heea has been loyaliy saying me too to whathissenior colleague Firm lag declared Ourirademioisicrisas he has made abundantly and suc cessfully clear supersales man charï¬d with creating an interaction rciimate in whichour exporters can sell their goods overseas Further George Hees has already elf2 celled his predecessors as trade minister in pitch forking our stayathome salesmen into overseasmbrkets which to resolutinn earned at the the surprise and prof are groups Dominion convention mamatogyelegmHhemftflldlhecff¢t ï¬f the ceiling is give co em uiee $1251 DOLLAR PROTECTOR month pension for orlé leg and Our finance minister on the uni other hand is charged withihe $5 or other The convention was told that responsibility of keeping our dov amcanedian veteran who lost mastic economy in conditions as both le above ih near to beam as possible He is ea mm maximum pension plus at thus the manvwhom we must isndance allowanc of $325 thank for fighting inflation so month compared with $600 is successfully for keeping taxes month paid in the United down and for finding the money Staten to finance governmentdefitits The attendance allowance is in all these Donald Fleming our paid amputees and other dis hardcst wor minster after ebled veterbns who require ape hesAoiie ilsk For Removal Of Pension Ceiling TORONTO CF The War Amputations of Canada lues day called for removal of the shimsyear maximum on the disability pension payable double amputws and other sev erely disabled veterans olal home care and MattEerrywerrMcMmen He was Early Days Of Canadian Aviation Chirstmas Card flown in all types of weather were held together by shoe strings and wire Mrs McDonald now is wid owed and living in Grands Prairie She has fund of memories We simply could not have made it without sense of humor she says She remembers Fort McMur ray in 1922 as cluster of shacks in the northern wilder HESS She recalls the superstitions of the pilots about what to wear and how to War it Some would enter plane on one side only hotel but one would fly anywhere anytime in any weather she says The excgptlon was Archie an EX tremely good pilot but cau tious one Archie would stand beside his aircraft scanning the sky for any sign of weather dis turbance refusing to take off if there was cloud the sky Mrs McDonald tagged him Onecloud Archie By DON OHEARN TORONNfllere ll surpris ineg little speculation about this leadership coolesi Normally by now the papers would be full of opinions and forecale on the race In Andtbe reason is that with seven candidates in the field and at least five of them merliing serious coinideratfoo nobody has too much of an idea of just who really is ahead And this includes the writer Frankly be has no real convic tions as yet who really is ahead He does have the feeling that Energy Minister hlsceuley has puHsoeihe most effectivetam palgii and that of Education Ml ister Roberts has been the poor csi That Treasurer Jim Allan must be looked on as the man to beat and that AttorneyCeo cral Rubens may get respect able vote on the first ballot but will lose from there But these feelings are based on ncihiiig concrete merely ob servation and whatever sixth sense one picks up over the years about politics One veteran cabinet minister not in the race himself has vol uniccred an opinion however and this is the way hTsiiee it up Allen he feels it first ballot Behind him will be either Mr Macaulay or Mr Roberts in sec ond place And following them will lead IMhHhMW This LeadershipRece Mr Roberts Health bllnlster Dymaod and Rev Mr Downer in that order He does not expect Reform in siflutions Minister Wsrdmpe to actually get to the wire in the end however he sees erflsculay and Mr Roberts observer cant follow through to this point More likely he feels the last vote would show Mr Allan fighting it out with one of the younger men NOT 10me Mr Werdrope probably wont get to the wire His candidacy hasnt been taken seriously it is assumed that bypuifiug his nalne in he is lust striking one more blow for his beloved northwestern On tario Letting the province know that it also can produce leadership material it is shame in way that the convention cant somehow or other pay tribute to Mr Ward rape For if the leadership were to be decided just on the basis of popularity ihcre would he no question who would be the win ner He would take ii hands down Airtr not often in politics or any other field of endeavor that you run into man who Is all heart But Mr wardrope And everybody here amusmimor it REPORT FROM UK Debate Settled On Church Origin By MriNnmE noon Specill London England Correspondent For The Barrie Examiner LONDON The Pilgrim Felli ers Memorial Church in Great Dover Street in the Southwark District of Moduli has settled hate as to the origin of whet was first known as the inde pendent Church members of wblcir were the first Pilgrim Fathers who sailed in the May flower to found the English col onies in America Blld lay the foundations of what today are called the United States of America The other daylhere was uiiv led at the church plaque which sets forth the his tory of the early days of the independent Church movement which actually had its beg nings in prison in Southwark Members of the presentvday grim Fathers Memorial Church have recorded this fact for pos ferity in the inscription on the plaque The Pilgrim Memorial Church the oldest Congregational Church in the world it has direct link with the first Independent Church which was started in the Ciinlr Prison at Southwark CLAIM FROM YORKSHIRE There has been some contraW versy over the origin of tlils church many people claiming that it has been founded in Yorkshire Rev Dr Albert Belden former minister at the Pilgrim Church however has conducted exhaustive re search into the beginnings of the independent Church The result of this research has been incorporated in the inscription on the plaque It states that group of people imprisoned in the Clink Prison because of their fight for religious freedom founded what they called the independent Church during their period of imprisonment Later when they were releas ed they founded the Southwark independent Church which eventually became the Pilgrim Fathers Memorial Church The change in name was made be causebf those of its original members who sailed for Amer ica in the Mayflower in 1670 ARGUMENT SETTLED Dennis Godfrey church member who was one of the leading spi ts in having the plaque erected says We hope the plaque will set tle all the arguments Many people think the Independent Church movement began at were congregation4laimylhaLipistatharsfoFAmericaran Scrooby in Yorkshire That was because someoftlie prisoners from the Clink Prison fled to Yorkshire for safety and were given shelter by William Brew ster the postmaster there Sen vices were held at his home But that was several years af ter the services began at the for all time longranging de cunkj As matter of fact records show that the Southwark church was founded in 1592 The first independent seridce of this religious reform group is generally believed to have taken place among group of religious prisoners in the Bride7 well prison in 1571 These pri iioweveerInnoIï¬irm church but simply carried out services in defiance of the au thorities Members of the Pil grim Fathers Memorial Church point out that even when these prisoners were released from Hndewehriheydidnot form church it was left to those whohsd been incarcerated in the Cilnk Prison to take this ac tion which in infer years led to the sailing of the Pilgram founding of the Congregational Church now incorporated in the United Church of Canada so far as Canada is concerned VSaysQasiro Threat To Press Freedom NEWXORKAEiA report of the inter American Press Association Tuesday called Cu ban Premier Fidel Castro the number one enemy of freedom of the press in the Americas 111ereport from the iAPAl committee on freedom of the press also declared that there is Communist conspiracy to inï¬ltrate and seize the press of the Americas Only luck ex ed plots against the press of Argentina and Peru which were SCK ments of an overall plan di rected by MoscowI said the re port read to the associations general assemblyrby Jules du Belle of the Chicago Tribune chairman of the committee Accompanying the report were photostsls of three docuy merits which the committee said prove beyond any reasonable doubt that Premier Fidel Cas tros government instructed the Cuban embassy in BuenosrAires to subvert the Argentine press and instigate its seizure by the Communists as has been done in Cuba iciiiiiini sures nouns Bull news now in odor omit at on twirl oiiloPoqol rniï¬fimux or causes Athegt