Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 29 Nov 1961, p. 24

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34 1m EARRIE KRAMER WEDNESDAY NOV 29 CI The last gap in the interna tional bridge across the St Lawrence River between Com uall and hiassina NY was INTERNATIONAL LINK MJA closed earlier this month The $5 million north span is ex pected to be ready sometime In 1962 Traitie now uses the completed south span Worlds Top Wool Promoter Rather Be Riding The Range TORONTO CPIThe worlds top wool promoter says hed really prefer to be back riding the range on his 35000 acre shleep station in Australias Queensland state Sir William Gunn husky board chairman oi the Interna tional Wool Secretariat stopped oil in Toronto on roundthe lorlri visit to he Secretariats 20 country network oi wool bureaus Pndres Widow It Parole Oiiicer VANCOUVER CPIWhen harsh Columbia prison inmate applies for parole chances are the oiiicer that comes to inter view him will be woman Mrs Grace liu ya widow oi Baptist padre at Dalialla prison is member of stall of three handling both In and women prisoners in and the Yukon For years the job of parole officer was the exclusive do main of men Now there are twowomen in Canada the other in Montreal Mrs Humphreys investigates prisoners requesting parole and supervlses or arranges super vision for those who receive it She assesses responsibility of the applicant and determines whether he has tried to over come his problem and gauges his readiness for parole Mrs Humphreys met her bus hand while she was attending therToronto Bible College She completed her theological train ing and could have been or dained but chose instead to con iinue studies in social work When her husband died she again could have gone into the ministry but decided instead to go into parole work KLEERPAK FOODS All But any yearning ior tbs peacciul atmosphere oi his ranch doesnt detract from an obvious zeal Sir William has ior the onerous chairmanship to which he was appointed last May he IWS is expanding its ac tivities more dramatically than at any other time in its his tory he said in an interview Were planning increased pro motion oi our product Were sinking more iunds into de velopment and research it means that with competi tion tmin synthetic fibres grow ing iiercer all thetime we be lieve that the wool industry sirfiply cant afford to stand sti FACES PROBLEMS With moves now elect to boost the mandatory contribu tion at wool growers toward promotion costs to £1 bale the secretariat sees itself spend ing about $18500000 year or about 120 times as much as it did in the 19105 Some of Sir Williams iavor ite targets are the claims of producers oi wash and wear fabrics many of which he feels are excessive But claims by the opposition arent the only problems facing the wool industry in Britain still the industrys best customer IWS investigat ors have iound wool has sud denly become an oldiashloned word to atom age consumers Part of the secretariats 1962 budget will go toward combat ting this image In Japan IWS promoters are pushingwool kimonos And in Australia the IWS found long ago the nations staple must be sold as aggres sively as elsewhere We feel that it we cant sell the product on its merits it cant be sold at all We Ask Is That You COMPARE rIIESE pnICEs With Any Store In Town Big or Small ALL OUR MEATS ARE GOVERNMENT INSPECTED TOP QUALITY Tiny Cobs May Reveal First Village Corn Growth OTTAWA CPIADDIEDI corn cob no bigger than cigarette butts may help reveal the ori gin oi the first New World vil lage and the birth of corn agri eulhrre The archeological assumption is that village and city life started where the first plants were domesticated Dr Scotty hlncNeish chief oi the National Museums archeological section heads iield iorce tracking down the spot in hot dry valley south east oi Mexico City in one of the caves excavated by his expedition which began digging in earnest earlier this year tiny primitive corn ears perhaps 7000 years old were tound These the oldest yet dis covered are thought to be the cabs oi the wild highland grass that was the ancestor oi to days hefty corn stalk WIDE RANGE Dr hlacNeish native New Yorker digs for traces of early man each summer in the Yu kon then goes to Mexico in winter His Mexican project in the land where the early New World culture reached its high est level is associated with the Peabody Foundation of And over Mass in an interview on his return from the southwest Yukonhe goes south again in December he set out these aims ior his Mexican venture Finding the home at com New World product which the lroquois were cultivating in Canada when the iirst white men arrived This appears to have been accomplished he said Tracing Mexicos pottery history and the location of the first village survey has re vealed possible site in the area dating to about 2500 BC without pottery Ascertaining how civiliza tion on this continent began in its sequence irom primitive hunter and enter at wild plants ASIAN ORIGIN The ancestors at all the aboA rigiltal residents of North and South America are believed to have come from Asia starting perhaps 20000 tosoooo years 380 Work done prior to 1960 by botanists indicated where corn might first have been domesti cated its highland grass so reestornow apparently extinct and hot dry climate able to preserve the earliest knees led to selection oi the Tehuacan area for digging Dr hiacNeIsh who is on leave without pay train the museum ior his southern work says more corn cobs are needed Several rears ago he had hired traces of other cultivated plants similar to pumpkins beam squash gourd and eat too Early diggings in the present location show promise oi ions at early tools woven cloth and other primitive remains he added BERLIN AP The wind whistles through broken win dow in the huge stone building on the Kuriuerstenstraase in West Berlin it stirs up hit oi dust re mains oi homh rubble And it stirs up an occasional most at pigeons which flutter to more sheltered corner The building is iive storeys high the only structure at any size on the street to survive al lied bombing and Russian shell ingii you can call it surviv my No one may enter the main section now The Berlin police iorbid it as matter oi snicty NOTHING PRETTY Theres nothing pretty about the building And theres noth ing pretty about its history This was headquarters ior the Third Reichs Gestapo bureau IVBd The chlei was Ober stuermbannluehrer Adolf Eich manmldis lob To liquidate the Jews This is the same Eichmann who hid out in Argentina was captured and kidnapped by the Israelis stood trial in Jerusa lem and awaits judgment Sco ience is due in December The charge lie was in charge of assembling Jews in general community responsible to him arranging transportation to con centration camps which turned into death mills it was in the Kuriuersten sirasso that Eichmann iunclt tinned from 1939 onward as the specialist ior Jewish niialrs in the Gestapo network GE TOASTER GE FRY PAN GE COFFEE PERC GE CLOCKS GE KErrIE GE GRILL GE lRON GE MIXER USE OUR LAYAWAY $100 DOWN HOLDS ANY ITEM UNTIL DEC22 259INNISFIL 57 PA 66531 Former Gestapo HQ In Berlin New Abandoned No One Enter It was to this building that the Jewish leaders had to come on summons irnm EicbnIann to quake ln dread at the next awiul news Berliners go past the building now without much oi thought Theyre concerned enough about the Russians and the much more real to them than something that happened years 830 The infamous headquarters now is held in trust The city of West Berlin doesnt quite know what to do with It nor does the surviving Jewish com munIty The expense oi restorv lng It would be monumental In one tiny corner of the ground floor is the only sign of lite it is beer siube where one can get stein oi Pilsner it is not the busiest saloon in town The property undoubtedly has great value but lying in the old lIergnrten district once the diplomatic quarter it lacks at traction now because of the big investment that would be re quired Should the Berlin prob lem ever be satisiactor Iiy solved Kuriuerstenstrasse would be an immedate target for the constructors and build CPS DUAL PURPOSE The dairy and beef breed known as Brown Swiss cattle was brought irom Switzerland to the United States In 1869 George Davies CONSTRUCTION LTD Aussie Pilots Getting Lost BRISBANE AIDThe grow ing popularity oi light planes II posing problem in this vast sparselyPopulated country Too many pilou are getting lost Nearly always the lost planes turn up again but often not un til eostly air and ground searches have been organized Once the coastal ranges are left behind thousandspf Square miles oi Australias cattle and sheep lands are completely ice tureiess One stretch oi country looks like any other days like lloolhoolhman light might not bring dozen houses into view The Australian Aircraft Own ers and Pilots Association thought it had the solution when someone suggested that every ranch should have its name painted on the homestead root That sounded fine especially as about 4000 ranches have their own landing strips until con 16 COLLIER STREET FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS pie oi pilots began counting on their fingers Where would you find root top big enough to take names Australian aboriginal ior dead white mant or Yoothapina very great in To be readable Irom light plane cruising height of 6000 to woo ieet every letter or ilgure would have to be 20 ieet high Youll just run out of roof So the ownerpilots have re iemd the problem to Australias civil aviation department whlch admitstbe urgent need for aer ial signpostlng of the lonely out back One idea is ior symbol code Each homatead roof would be numbered in sequence running inland from the coast with letter to signily the state Try An Examiner Want raous es nus FREE lEATHERCRAFT INSTRUCTION Is available every Wednesday night Irom 730 930 pm CLARKE CLARKE lEATHERS Jchh Street gt EVERY YARD IN THE SHOP 25 PE CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS SKIRT LENGTHS PACKAGED OR GIFT CERTIFICATE WORSTED WOOLENS TWEEDS FLANNELS SHETLAND WOOLS IM PORTED BROCADES LACES LAMESVELVETS SILKS PRINTED AND PLAIN CORDUROYS WINTER COTTONS COMPLETE DRESSMAKING NEEDS LARGEST STOCK OF FABRICS IN SIMCOE COUNTY LOIS ROBERTSON THE FABRIC SHOP OF BARRIE Barrio 52 Phone PA $24M gt In WEEK ONLY NOV 30th TO DEC 6th SDIXEVJ SDIHIIVJ SOIIIIVI SOIQIHVCI SOIZIEVJ SDIHEIVH SDIHKVJ PEG MORE PA 877 ABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS FABRICS Christmas is II time for cherishing the happi ness of home perfect time for gifting her with lovely robe shell wear with pride and pleasure for many happy hours at home Here findrobes casual tailored dressy find just the robe that will please her most FABRICS FABRIC nmmmhnrnnnmmnnnnxnnmn Round Sirloin Wins TBone os Loin Park Iorterhnuse lb 69 cnors mmm lb 69 Butt End CHOPS lb 55¢ sliced Side PORK II 49 STEAKS Igean Pot ROASTS Slowing affirminww lb 49 LOOK WHAT You CAN BUY EEI= lbs Ioo F°R 75° Steak ROASTS It 69¢ IT RIBLETS We give FREE delivery in Town on orders $500 or over BIIQEKET sum Finest your own om BACON BOLOGNA 53¢ sliced lb pkgs SAUSAGE 75 Pure Pork lb SAUSAGE lb 39 WIENERS 75 Ask About Our Fainin FoodtPIun Shoulder Lamb CHOPS IIWI ID 39¢ SPECIAL THIS WEEK use to In Prime Heel mm lb Pork Liver lb outin Chicken lb sliced nxcnn yo cascosrs an coars INSUEDINE COATS IN CORDUROY 75c 75 75s Honsacoars TARTAN sums SKIRTS punsas BLOUSES Hosrnnv BULKY SWEATERS lb Minced Beef lb Blushing Parties lb wing Steak In stewinl Bee ALL FOR ONLY

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