With Bentley Ci ina Mme aecwt ayor imitation tn adebata oothe radio programuï¬ytiall Houloe The mayor lsued the dial Bread Stolen FrontBakery Collier St youth was ar rested early Saturday morning and charged with the than at 55 worth of bread cakes and cookies from the Canada Bread Co in Oriilia The youth Alan Dobson it of Collier St was stopped on Dunlop Street at by Bar rie constable Alon Brandt Dobson works as shipper with the bread company He was arrested in his car while return ing from work it moundyuhwmum eabyAldltobertrthat maximum Aspecirimeetiogoldtyoeuo dl hubeencalladforlpm tonighttodhwsrthehirinlofe novelty manager The present city manager Wal ler Gigg will resign in Swim ber His resignation sparked Aid RoberB charger Aid Roberta issuod the allow ing statement to The Eranainer this morning do mydebatiogln the coun cil diamberwhera the corpora tions business should be discuss ad at an open meeting before the public How much more open can it be have enough faithia the news media to keep the public informed of the issuer and re port only on the acts as they happen in council have no intention oi de In Accidents series oi accidents occurr ing in succession during peak traffic periods resulted in back ing up of cars on nghway 4m whidt took longer than ttsual to clear Cars were moving at snails pace on the highway be tween Highway an intersection and Bayï¬eld Street at various times last evening The mishaps resulted in $2815 damage At 655 pm George Erie Barr 60 of Toronto and Dennis Ralph 43 of Mono Mills were involved in crash resulting in total 70f Sssodsmagkrihewmlshap occurred on too at Highway 27 At 1030 part on Highway goo at the Highway overpass foracar tangle caused 1550 damage Drivers were James floss 75 of Burlington John Conlln as of branLiord Andre Allain 40 ol Willowdale and Heinz Ahrens of Weston total at two resulted alter mishap which snarled the Thornton cioverleat at l1 pm Drivers were Gary Philip Spen cer 21 of Toronto and Peter Chubak 46 of Toronto Earlier on Sunday at 735 pan on Highway 26 at 27 Terry Forbes 28 of Wiarion and Da Mollo 21 oi Toronto were drive erainvolved ln amishap which cause $4175 damage were no intufles Barrie Passengers Escape Serious Injury In Bus Mishap No Barrie residents were ser iously injured Saturday when bus en route from her to Tor unto overturned on Highway 400 near the King slderoad Southbound trafï¬c was tied up for four hours alter the bus nvertunred into the median King sideroad is about 15 miles north of Toronto Police said the accident oc curred during may rainstorm The driver Robert nomie 45 at Toronto and 25 or 33 passen gers aboard the Gray Coach Lines bus were injured Damage to thebus was estimated at 95000 Four ambulances and private care took the passengers to has pitals in Toronto Ridimond Hill and Nawmsrket Most of those iniured received cuts and bruises injured from Barrie were ï¬lmIInd Everett 48 of 17 Blake St Apt soc Madeline Bistro 29 of 75 William St and Alexan der Proctor 54 of 36 Toronto St All three wereetreated for minor injuries and then released spokesman for Gray Coach Lines said the bus WELBIIAEX lpierlmental model trifling tested lg fW ltw be check for medraatcal failure Mp Cromble bus driver for 25 years told police the brakes locked when he applied them alter car pulled across his Elgar and the bus went into only two of the injured were kept in hospital one with hrok There my tines padlill do nudebatlnglnmuflwhefe tactreanbeprerentad open Ind above board beforetha Ilfurtherhave no intention try to band dying radio grant for someone else $550 Damage In Collision Toronto man was charged with tailing to yield the right of way yesterday following an accident on Highway so at the junction of Highway 400 Pollenseid car driven by Jose Defreltas as wasstrucir by another driven by Patrick batondress of Rerdaler Mr Defreitas was treated at the scene for minor lacerations of the head Hiï¬urlgststgiood 3350 damage no ress vdricle received mo damage Three injured In Car Crash Mrs Langmll is in Soldiers binomial Howital inOrillla in satisfactory conditon with whip lush injuries and midllple lacer ations Two passengers to the fourth car Jack Koppel and James itichcy both of Coraopolls Penn were treated and then released at Soldiers Memorial Hospital ltlr Koppel suiierad lacerated lip Mr Rickey broken nose Bï¬jhargcs are pending police NEWS THE BARBIE EXAMINER TUESDAY JULY 19 1M INSPECTOR inspector William McDonald of the Ontario Humane Society will be replacing Harry Brown formerly of Barrie who has been promoted to superintend ent and transferred to Smiths Falls Mr McDonald is respon sible iorlife Barrie area and all of York County and is cur rently stationed in Aurora lie makes regular and continual checks at all the shelters in his area plus inspections of any lo cation whore cruelty to animals is suspected MAD prams MOUNT in the ï¬rst four monthsof 1968 15610 persons died in traf fic aoddents in the United en pelvis the other with brok en collatbone and cracked ribs 20 Witnesses From Barrie To Be lit Meet Twenty ldnovahs Witnessa from Barrie will attend four day convention in Ottawa Aug ii to ll The Barriedelegation will be among 13000 Witnesses from cross Canada and the United Statesvuhorwilivgathehat tha Ottawa Civic Centre for the cons ventioo Barrie representatives are Mr and Mrs Russell Hershey and two children Mr and Mrs Ross Robinson and three chil dren Len Cook Lar ry Cook lliiss Sandra Holston Mrs Pat Jaifny Mrs Harold Tordies Mrs John Haniler and five chil dren Mrs Burt Hamilton MI and MrsTeize Horvnveld Mrs Elsie Evans and Mrs Arlen Campbell vLalonlaine Man Drownirï¬ VicttTn sunaunv or rune Sunday afteran recovered the body of Robert Breland 45 of Toronto one of three men drowned Thursday when boat capsized in the Frendt River other victims were Jean Paul Fairnent 42 also of Toronto whose body was found shortly after the accident and Ernest Ladoucnur stool Lafontaine near Midland whose body was recovered by police divers lata States oonrpared to 14810 in 1997 Friday Need New Internationalism Pedrson Tells Otillia Meet tester Pearson former prime rnl ster Saturday told the 37th annual Couchiohlng thinkers conference at Gen eva Park near orillia that Can But Mr Pearson said inde pcndence today does not mean freedom from US influence or pressure determination of Ca nadian destiny by Canadians ada should strive to create only new kind oi inleraatitinslism rather than concentrate all her eftorts to reinforce national in dependence We should be in the forefront of every move to widen and deepen political internation alism even if it means accept ing through international treaty arrangements limitations on our own independence he said llia address was the keynote oi the sixday conference entitled The us and UsAre We inde pendent sponsored by the Ca nadian institute on Public Al fairs and the CBC Mr Pearson said Canadians should look to the future and join other countries in interna tional courses This is the wave of the in tura for Canada and it would be tragic if we joined the Candies on the beaches trying tohold back this international wave with taritt walls aadvnatlonalist restrictions fThe international course for canada would not be betrayal oi our independence it would be making independence work for us for our progress and seen ritywhich are inseparable from that of other nations arotrr morrsson Mr Pearson said he was speaking as professor and not as former prime minister He said he was free trotn official restrictions onvhls words for the first time since 1m Heysaid nationalJndependence thas always been Canadl obsession in lier earr was Downing Street that was nui obsession basically for the reasondomination of Canada by and dependence oi Canada upon another governr indeed worrying about the Am consthelr friendly prea sures probably the stronth Canadian unifying force at time when weare doubil about the reallt It must mean lessif there is to be international cooperation and peace Independence lsrel stove and limited even for the most powertul For Its it can onlymean theright to make de cisions to our own country through our own institutions Whileflpolicies discouraging foreign investment mold weaken us WSiie monetary policies could make us morein dependent by increasing our econorruc drongthr Gordon Fairweather Pollutio esay NE accused the govern ment last night at not trusting members of Parliament on for eign affairs matters particulars ly delence treaties He was speaking at the 37th annual Couchiohiog conference at Geneva Park Mr Fairweather whohas been inFarilament six years termed tho House foreign af fplro comrnitteh memberaapolo ment policy The topic of Hie slxvday con ference is The US and UsAre We independent it is seminar sponsored by the Canadian instr grééot Public Affairsyahdthe Mr Fairweatirer noted that the NORADagreementvwas ilej newed this spring just after the Liberal leadership convention and just before Parliament war dissolved tor the June 25 federal election flt didnt have to be an nounced then it could have been raueWed for three months place where for governv nndfhrougltt up in the House hasaid The former prime minister warned that policies could result in US control or Cana dian politics but suggested the trap could be avoided by ap plying some of the recommen dations of the Watkins report on foreign ownership of Canadian industry We will need to receivethe kind of special treatment we have enjoyed in Washington while making clear to our friends thatthis is not matter of grace and favor on their part but smoothing to which we are entitled by the nature of our trade and ï¬nancial relations mm them PostmasterGeneral Eric was done that way be cause its very uncomfortable for the government to hpve public discussion of these treat ies musr manna What we really need is tie paitrnent of external affairs that trusts the members of Pan liament its time we had an external affairs committee of the House instead of aplace where mem bers just apologize ior thegoy arnment Before Mr Fairweather spoke British journalist and de tenee specialist LeonardBeaion said Canadas rnajor foreign policyshotlld be to combat tha present us return to ism vlie told theconference Canlt odaa centralpolicy objective is increasing world econom ntelleetual de pendanca on the US and in that context indepenge and national courses Kierans later told delegates Canada does not and should not impede the flowon money be tween countries but suggested the law be changed to forcn in ternational subsidiaries to dis close information about gth profit orloss situation Id like to use tull disclosure to pressure the executives by making it possible tor share holders in the US to ask whetle er that capital collldnf be bet ter used somewhere else he said ltir Kieranssaidthe US is no longer abletn supply lot of capital because of its inner diffi chilies and Canadians would have to generate more them selves coil fMPs th roster In Fareign Affairs Area Amenicans should be ttold they can count on Canada as long as they are working for an economic and security order he said it they retreat to isolation theny find the deep north far more difï¬cult to handle At the opening seasonal the continence Saturday or mcr prime minister Lester Pearson in keynote addre urgadCa nadiatut tocreate new kindrot internationalism in the world We should be in the ioretront ot every move to widen and political lnternauoog alism even if itlmeans accept ing through international treaty arrangements limitations on our own independence he said Mr Pearson sai Canatliana should fool to the future and the other countries in inten This is the wave of true for Canadaand it would he tragiciif we joined tile Canines on thabeaoitea trying to hold hadr this international wave withtariif walls and iaalist affa ira polio Mr restrictions ssld handsome Casanova holding hours roaming eftt Rough water rain and chil ly onshore wind kept swim mers and suahatherato min imum thisweekend at Wasaga Beach Even the scagulls ta hovel stayed awayjfrom the water huddling together orv lieu hovering close to the sand Hooded and wra up warm ly the litaguardmldhelow res malnad on duty for the few awnnmers who had taste for the waves KingOi Beansliould Rather Sleep Than ChaseVLioness NAIROBI Kenya APiThe lion king of thevjungle is not only the largest of the big cats of Africa safariiand he is by lar the laziest Leo spends as muchas 20 hours dozing or last asleep And as love he can draw zero The reputation of the lion as nonehalant and constant guard over theAtrican plains and regular playboy in the harem at offduty time has heenrudely shaken by current research project in Tanzania sponsored by the New York Zoological So eieiy and financed by the National Science Foundation of the United States The social life of lea has been under close scrutiny from George Schaller an Ameri can export now in die middle of threeyear study at sprawling Serengeti National Park Schalier has literally tuned in on theiion at homotwill the helpof Howard Baldwin of the Sensory Systems Laboratory in Arizona They have managed the candidradio method or fut iog fr sistor radio gadgets on collars fixed around the necks at several lions alter the initial precaution of downing them with ttaaouillizer darts The routine varies but the erage day for ten consists of 20 hours reshng orsleeping1 about gt and around halfanhuurford Schalier findsle poor la ther as rule Moria tyomong cubs is fantastically high as much as 75 pencent and usually occurring in the first 18 months Leo does quite well at mealtimes but iunior often starves to death As to sex hire survey has found the lioness ametimes trbotbér about oinvj WEEKLY Females as Schiller put it in an interim report tail to is up to their breeding poten in addition the survey has found that Leo is an active scavenger Nomadic lions on the plains scavenge more than 25 per centvnf dieir and from hyen BS ear Sweeplrt Paddling Trials TORONTOKCE Mississau gapaddlcrs won 21 or 22 races Saturday to sweep the western Ontario division trials for the Canadian Canoe Association championship Trailing the Mississauga pad dlers who piled up 257 points were Toronto Balmy Beatin 66 West Rouge 37 Mohawk lo and Sudbnry 12 Themississauga girlsfcanoe team led its division with 34 points followed by Sudbury 21 West Rouge rid Mohaw MARINE rostersr TORONTO cm Marihe torecasis or Great Lakes issued at 830 am EDT Monday and valid untilll am nor Tues day Lake Superior tnds west to northwest 15 to Zn knots creasing to near 10 this aite noon becoming light and art ble tonight and soother nehr 21 knots early Thesis economic oatrs est Bradford 72656474 BARRIE patvsacan Hopelor Belem Strong in Trance Deputy Slates OllAWA IAIcian Ne wirlh Gaullist daputyin the tomato National Assembly for the constituency of Saint Etiennesays the partys strong mandate in recent general elec tions in France springs from popular desire for reform Mr Newirth secretarygen eral of are rranceCanada 1n terparliamentary Associatr said in aninterview Friday the new assemblys task ill beta legllsate reforms in both the political and economic sector Excessive administrative cen tralitation would be corrected with the establishment otnew local and regional political structures and creation of re gional capitals he said Oo the economic level re forms wouldba aimed atim tween workers and their em ployers and giving the employee share oi profits Mr Newirth met arlier day with Inclen Lamoureur Speaker of the Houserot Com4 mods to discuss arrangemen for the oextmcating of to France Canada lnterparli meotary Association He arrived in CanadaThur lay and met with Senator Paul Martin acting prirneninister while Mr Trudeau continues an Archie tour Pleasesl Business and VPerronal Stationery Competitive brleas THE BARRIE XAMINER Weft to syoufiofs Gulhireom