Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 4 Oct 1961, p. 5

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HOPES FOR UNITY Thurs was aware EXAMINER WEDNESDAY OCTOBER rans Credit Employee For Lives Of 14 aniaolntionroomopeningonto VEYBURN Sask iCPlTbe courage of zlywold em ployee who locked himself and it patients in room when flames licked through his es capo route was credited with limiting the death toll in fire Tuesday at tho Saskatchewan Mental liospitai here Six elderly patients were sui focated as result of the yet unexplaincd fire Provincial health and fire officials started separate investigations the hospital for only three weeks found his escape route through corridor blocked by heat and flames and herded it tients into dormitory ward int the doors He plugged crack beneath thedoors with blanket to keep out the srnokeI tried in vain to smash window oi tough safety glass then waited until firemen chopped through the wall to re cue the group The six victims were suffe dated in heavy smoke from fire which apparently started in Anglican Administrative Setup In For Overhaul In 1962 Debate onawa or The admin istrative setup oi the Anglican Church at Canada is in for major overhaul Wide organizational changes were approved Tuesday at the annual meeting here of the churchs executive council They will be debated further at next years general synod in Kingston The changes recommended in cluda an overhaul oi the general synod the logislatiVo policy making body oi the chureh tha holding of synod meetings every two years instead oi three and the replacement oi the present executive council by new national executive council Delegates to the meeting which continues today also heat the head of the church say world events may hurry church union and plea from The West indies for more mis sionories Most Rev Howard Clark Archbishop oi Ruperts Land and Primate of All Canada said We all hope that union of the Christian churches will come in our time Rt Rev HR Hunt Suffra gan Bishop of Toronto said the administrative changes would allow the synod to proceed with great efficiency and effec tiveness Convening of the general synod every two years would permit the legislative body to deal more effectively with the rapidly changing position of the church it would also bring the church more into line with the United Church which meets every two years and the Pres byterians who meet annually Composition of the synod would be reduced to 210 mem bers from 300 by lowering rep rasentation from the larger dio ceses The missionary religious ad minim anti social Seme partmental boards would sit separately instead of in joint session with the executive enun cil and the council would be abolished to be replaced by HUBEBT Every Kinsmen ingo Nightu lunsnsn ODD FillOWS All plml co cams amp mmun GAMES JACKPOT 52500 Consolation Prize HELP KIN Finance finaldtbere are some male sick ward room No other patients were re ported seriously aifected by the fire Three main bursts over come by Imolre recovered TAKE OUT 84 Sixtyfour patients were one noted successfully by the staff of the i5topatient hospital from two wards on the fourth and top floor oi thehospital in this town 100 miles southeast of Re me ey Bands deputy tor oi the provincial health de Eartmenta ohiatrist services ranch damage to the building was confined mostly to that done by smoke and water Dead are hank lunard 7i Estevan Saalrs Stuart McGib ney 79 Welwyn Sash Clan ence Anderson 72 Church bridgo Sash Gordon Archi bald as Regina Thomas Sin clair 37 Conduit Sask and Oliver Taiseth 7a originally from Norway and with no known relatives in Canada large central committee to be called lhe aationainacutive council WILL BE SYNOD The electoral college which chooses the primate would be the general synod itself At present only at the synoda lower house are represented in the electoral college The church was urged by Archdeacon Crosthwaite oi ibronto to use imagination and creative insight to per suado wealthy church members to leave bequests to bolster church finances He said there was lots of such money available and the church was making only half hearted attempts to get share of it William Wright Bishop oi Al goma predicted there will be great bequests to the church but only if we confront each individual personally our selves There was growing tendency among those who might give he said to fear that such money would be spent on buildings rather than in direct human assistance APPROVE RESOLUTIONS The executive council ap3 proved resolutions authorizing the setting up of new curri culum designed to meet the present day needs of Anglican Sunday schools approving eon tinuation and expansion of the religious ti depart ments leadership training pro gram for clergyI lay readers and teachers and encouraging setting up oi regional training institutes to provide more ex tensivo training for lay workers and centres for short term training courses of clergy and lalty Canon ll Davis the miss sionary societys general secre tary said the Anglican church in The West indies is calling desperately for Canadiansas 000000 Anglicans in The West indies but they are served by only 300 clergy By contrast Ja pan had an estimated 40000 Anglicans served by 220 clergy Eskimo children play in the snow outside hostel at Fort Smith NWT where they at tend school Smali family Bl FORBES RIIUDE Canadian Press Business Editor HALIFAX CP Canadas economy must grow faster it jobs are to be found for peo ple who will need them in the future three speakers at the Canadian Chamber of Com mcrco annual meeting said Tuesday New thinking is needed in government business and labor in such fields as taxation trade education research and produc tion they said Speakers in session on Can adas economic ills were Dr John Deutsch viceprincipal of Queens University Crump chairman and president Canadian Pacific Railways and Little Toronto chairman of the Canadian Tax Founda tion Dr Deutsch put the needed growth at between four and five style hostels are gradually alachi ¢91F£5FFJE Canadas North where many children are transported by per cent annually in real pro duction compared with the growth in gross nationnl pro duct of around two per cent in recent years AGAINST lSOLATiON Dr Dcutsch and Mr Crump both turned down protectionism as an answer to Canadas prob lems Dr Dcutsch said The answer to the problems of trading blocs and of increas ing lowwage competition does not lie in retreat to some now form of economic isolationiam inside protective shelitho Ca nadian market is much too small for satisfactory ruin of growth Mr Crump said our prob lems cannot be removed by tar iff action Canada must export The danger in further enclos ure of the Canadian market to goods of foreign manufacture is that other countries may retal 01rAWA CPlA doityour self guide to spotting counte ieitera and badchequa artists was issued Tuesday by the RCMP The 16page booklet entitled CBllIGlIURST Anniversary services in Knox flesbyterianjhumhiwerecon October with two services 11 and 780 Mr Stone in charge Mrs Dawis Carr spent few days in Toronto and attended her brothers wedding on Satur day Harvest service in St Johns Church was October at 1115 We are all so glad to have Mrs Arthur Sniden home from anspital Mrs Gordon Smiths father and mother Mr and Mrs For get of Penetang celebratedtbeir golden wedding in the Public Hall here Saturday evening Mrs Mary Elismere of North Bay is visiting Mr and Mrs Ernest Ellsmere Allan Sinton and friend Thursday Night is $1 000 aaar moms Edward Sexton of Chalk River spent the weekend with Mrs Sinton Miss Nancy Kirton of Tiiden Laloowas home for the week end Bill Sheffield of Camp Borden spent last week at home err eczmcffv Two DAYS ON iRCMlTIsslies Guide Tollssist Merchants To SpotBad Cheques Bad Paper is prepared for merchants to help in fighting muliimilliondollnr crims indus try that preys mainly on small businessmen foreword to the booklet by RCMP sionar Harvisnn estimates that in 1960 bogus bills alone netted forgers $250000 with the hoodwinked businessmen whopacceptad the billsforced to turn them over twpolice withoutcompensatiom The booklet illustrates with photographs that is ground design and lines on counterfeit notes are blurry and indistinct when compared with genuine money Another sure means of tiling good money from bad is to look for the specks of green paper called planchettes that are embedded into the naner of genuine notes in good money these can he picked out with pin leaving recess in the pa per surface In no Melt money the plancbettes are usually simul pleces of paper on the surfac SKIMO cum nor oursm HSTEi air for distances of more than 1000 miles The smaller edu scationaiicentreswiilsservorai radius of from 50 to 100 mil es Photo Economy Must Accelerate If Jobs Are To Be Found into and this will damage our export markets for many Cana dian raw materials and some processed goods The crux of tho problem is to find our niche in the world economy Dr Deutscb and Mr Little both emphasized need for technical education SKILLS OBSOLETE Old occupations and tradi tional skills are becoming ob aoieta with amazing rap dity Dr Deutsch said and Able calls for an entirely new ap proach to tho retraining of man power Mr Little said the recent tax amendment granting form of accelerated depreciation to companies was an example of an incentive that is timid and cautious not hold and hangin ative He said Canada needs na tional plan and suggested planning department which might be an adjunct of the dc partrncnt of finance or of trade and commerce butvwbichrcould bo finder separate ministry of economic development Mr Crump said the European Common Market presents both problems and opportunities for Canada 0n the opportunity side was the rapidly increasing proa perity of the Common Market countries in certain areasrda rate than could be supplied from within the market rononro CP railway signalman charged with trying to extort $100 from Ziyeamld atenographer who disobayed his red flare at level crossing was sentenced sad six months in jail by senior coun edgeRobert Forsyth Marlene Flash of Toronto told court she became flustered when she saw Stanley John Hel iam 2A of Toronto waving the flare and drove on She stopped when he shouted permission from police to sum atedbyprintingjrecmdats new by sticking drefllfiheaard baiold her he bad if These simulated pianchettes they can be removed at all will leave no recess The booklet also recommends that merchants keep in touch with their local RCMP offices for lists of serial numbers of counterfeit bills known to be in current circulation HURONIA DriveIn mans anyma who disobeyed his signals and took her licence number Miss Flash said Helium IMPERIAf mand might increase at faster BETTER AND CHEAPER Bad Business Leadership Blamed For OWn Troubles By FORBEE RHUDE Canadian Press Bullpen Editor HALIFAX CF Business has itself to blame for most of its problems Covert Halifax lawyer and industrinilt istaaidlnanaddrmtotbl annual meeting of the Caoa dian dumber oi Comm In bardhitting talk in bi fellow businessmen Mr Covert saidtheir failure to we leaderv 115 borvmanagernent relations for the socaiied welfare state and for the heavy taxation levied by governments Management be said have solved the problems ch meaVLbeeamahucdensnm der government solutions Busi nesl could do anything better more efficiently and cheaper than overnment could do it bad leadership offii Climate Shifts Puzzle Experts ROME APlTha earth has beanJotling groduafly warmer since moo but now wlda reaches from Soviet Siberia to Greens land are getting colder Climate experts dont know why Mcteomlogists and climatolo gista here for the World lliete orological Organization meeting say the pattern is so mottled they cannot tell even if trend tonersnor or cooler climate has so Dr Murray Mitchell clima tologistrwltbetha US weather bureau said hlcsdny the United States still is warming up along with central Europa and the Pacific coast of Asia Some places are getting coldertbs Kuriis Kamchatka Peninsula of Russia and parts of Canada Greenland and Alaska he told reporters But its too early yet to tell if trend in that direction has startEd UTOPIli Mr and Mrs Vivian McCann entertained the Bantam boya 2311i team at weiner roast ny night Welcome folks to Mr and Mrs Allan McPherson our new Township policemen who will reside in the Ralph Bell home in the village Mrs Kelly 77yearold aunt of Mrs Arthur Dobsoll enjoyed bor first trip via jet airline from Vancouver and spending holiday with her slater Mrs John Murry Barrie Mr and Mrs Hector llun bull spent Sunday with relatives in Orangaville Mis Dlanne McMasler is visi ting with her friend Juno Brun akill in Hamilton Mr and Mrs Allen Miller Misa Bellaehiillerrliarrleand Miss Docohty Miller enjoyed three day motor trip to Wind eIaiLRailwaysSignalmaln To Extort $100 From Stone 24 initth sor Iondon and Delhi phoned her the same day and saldhe bad 24 hours to turn in his report and didnt know whether to report her or not She said he asked her to meet him that night She went to the police beiorar meeting Heliam At the meet ing she said1lellam told her she could go to calm he could take it out in trade or could pay him $100 Miss Flash said she again met him anbour and halt laterhndpaidbimvsw marked money given her by pow liee After similar transaction short time later Helium was arrested and charged with ex tortion sum THURSDAY AN UNHULY ALLIANCE lAST SHOWING TODAY FEEPING TOM and THE CONCRETE JUNGLE Adult Entertainment Tried part Mr Covert declared that has put management and labor in opposite camps This ll not only unnatural but it is bad for both labor and management as well for the consumer NEED INCENTIVES Mr Covert who is president of lliolrs Ltd Ind of Maritime Paperiroductx Ltd and di rector of ninnber of loading mended systems of incEntivea to employees Dont tell me it cant be done he said know three plants that have started it and every one of these pilot is un ionized In one plant reduc tion summaries ymors than ill per cent and labor has been cut by nearly so per cent in another production has been increased in one year by 12 per cent and labor cut by over l0 per cmt In all plants em ployees are receiving higher hour than before and overt me has been cut to is years of labor negotia tions bir Covert said he had found employees as whole the most reasonable people with whom one could wish to deal SHOULD REALIZE Taming to taxation Mr Co vert said Free enterprise should long ago have realized that it had to deal with old age pensions and 11 should have been the one to provide medical and hospital care Free enterprise was the one to deal with unemploan this had been so the east at all these things would he been eumfllh New imam outrageous and tho services an inadequate How can you expect govern meat to do these things rearo ably when every four arm years they must offer for res election and must vlc with one another in give away pro gram and promise to do ovary thing for nothingi WI To Use EVidenceigi MTAWA CPUReaders Di gart Association Canada Lim ited has lost round in its pro longed court fight against $1000000 federal magazinu tax The Supreme Court of Canada in unanimous judgment nlos doy rejected an attempt by the magazine to introduce the 1956 budget speech of former Liberal finance miniator Walter Harris as evidence to support its con tention that the tax is monasti tutloanl and discriminatory The ninemember court ruled that the budget speech of Mr Harris is not admissible in court as evidence to argue that the legislation is either discriminat ory or unconstitutional Mr Justice it Cartwright his reasons for judgment said If it were bcldgthAaLthaminias ters statement should be ad rnittcd there would appear to be no ground on which anything said in either House the Com mans or Senate between the in troduction of the bill and its fi nal passing into law could be excluded The court upheld an appeal the federal government again decision of the Quebec Court of Appeal that Mr Harris speech and other evidence coldd ho introduced by Readers Di goat The Quebec Appeal Court had reserved an earlier deci gico by Chief Justice The Readers Digest can in volves Zodiaccant excise tax that the former Liberal govern mentimposed effective Jan 1957 on the gross advertising Woodbrillgg revenues of Canadian editions of foreign magazines The tax was repealed 18 months after it be came effective by the present Progressive Conservative gow rnment After Readers Digest refused to pay the tax it was taken to court by the federal govern ment in opposing payment of the tax the magazine laid it was invalid in law on grounds that it related to property and civil rights field of jurisdioh tion reserved for thoprovinces As result of incsduys rul ing the ease now reverts to the Quebec Superior Court for argu ment on whether the tax is un constitutional and discriminat ory lbe Crowns action to col feet the tax stands adjourned in the Exchequer Court ofvcanadal The merits of the Crowns case have not been argued as yet the litigation started more than four years ago Publications subject to the tax were the Witch and French language editions oi Readers Digest and Tlnw me gazine Time paid the tax nn der protest STARTS MONDAY lMPERIAI One Show Nightly At 745 Fun Big Days of Horse Show NEW WESTERN HORSE SHOW and SENiOR HUNTERS JUMPERS SAT OCT 1030 oclock JUNIOR HUNTERS JUMPERS Nam Oei Racing Thanksgiving Day Onlyf wnh Usual Privileges FUN FOR ALL Tho Biggest Rural Fair in The Dominion use My shnléybyrscnnin rwo LOVES Mani Tin fabulous ivanhlm ill the Rollin iinnd of ill Sivan shunts most coinrflri undeadm satchel av to rage some the sumal

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