Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 25 Jul 1961, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

EICHMANN CONCLUDES TESTIMONY Adolf Eichrnann flanked by guards look toward the iudgcs bench as he answers questions from the judges during his trial in Jerusalem yesterday Elchmann on trial for criminal responsibility in the Nazi slaughter of six mil lion Jews concluded 25 days of testimony with plea that muzs unr INNISPII NOTES Plebiscite Rejected 0n TwoYearTerm By RG SIMPKIN special meeting Monday evening called to catch up gwith unfinished business and the judges accept his conten tion that he was only low ranking person who had to keep my nose to the card in dcx files AP Wirephoto Farm Family ant Leave Despite Drought Disaster BISM it ND AP Qtit Thats the last thing Ill do as long as can work Were going to stick it out even if it gen so had we have to eat bread and water Thats the feeling of Mr and Mrs Frank Gartner who live with their family of five on 1500 acre farm in drought stricken valley in western North Dakota Their feeling is fairly typical of North Dakota farmers hard hit by drought Mrs Gartner spoke in the liv ing room of her immaculate home about eight miles west of St Anthony with the quiet ser iousness of farm wile who Three Negroes lain In Violence Which Erupts During Strike SALISBURY AP More army and police reservists were called up in chief Southern Rho desian cities today following vio lence here Monday in which three Negroes were slain Four other Negroes were wounded when police opened fire after they said Negro crowds stoned them The reservists were called up to protect Negroes who want to go to work in defiance of gen eral strike called to protest the pew Southern Rhodesian consti ution Armored cars convoyed buses with Negro workers into Salis bury this morning and soldiers and police patrolled main roads The streams of workers into this capital indicated the strike had failed Premier Sir Edgar Whitehead in broadcast to the nation claimed the strike had been broken and said The failure of the strike has caused fury among the organizers Whitehead accused Joshua Nkomos Airican National Dem use Witié ocratic party of organizing the strike WILL BE FIRM Whitehead said 24000 whites and Negroes have been mobil ized as security forces and added that any further disor ders would be put down with rod of iron The new callup brought the territorials of the ist battalion Royal Rhodesia Regiment streaming into Salisbury drill hall after midnight At the same time elaborate security measures were taken by police at industrial Bula wayo where many hundred po lice reservists have packed into the Negro townships surround ing Southern Rhodesias second largest city The racial troubles and strikes are expected to reach climax when referendum is held Wed nesday an acceptance of the new constitution The Negro nav tionalisis rejected the constitu tional proposals as inadequate in monk referendum held Sunday more than boy He was not yet man Dangerously inbetween and betweenk three girls THE THREE Lovrs or ADULT iNlERiAINMENT Wéz mwnusn nos FEATURES AT700f925 LAST TIMES TONIGHT DARK AT THE TOP OF THE STAIRS 700 915 iRUY flflNAHUt fliliifliiii iifliBtRi munsitiiusiiiiirlcillfiilii ll haul ior three years in their valley knows the coming winter months will not be easy Since April nearly four months of the belt growing sea son thu entire valley had seen only 90 inches of rain The ers will harvest nothing fro their 400 acres of wheat oats and corn The corn will probably not make silage From their hayland they cut l500 bales They are in the process of hauling 4600 bales of hay from near Carson about 40 miles southwest where rains have fallen Many of their neighbors are travelling 200 miles to tha eastern part of the state to buy or make hay in the lush fields there The Gartners have watched the droughtgrow steadily worse They got their seed backlast year They have talked of moving The chiidr asked where Mrs Gnrtner related and we told them to another place They told us they wouldnt go with us and that pretty well de cided it Nrcn omen mans Michael is expressed it this way its really nice around here when the stuff grows Theres lot of wild flowers and all sorts of wild animals and game What will Gartner do next year Hes depending was pro duction loan to get back in bus iness Gartner 47 kicked ah the dusty earth and saldMy mother made it all through the 30s after my father died Well make it too correspondence lnnisfil Coun cii was in session until midnight without some of the touchy busi ness ahead coating up for dis cussion motion introduced by the deputy reeva Mr Cochrgne suggated that the continuing twoyear term of council be put before the ratepayers in the form of plebiscite He said be had been told it was voted into effect without authorization of ratepayers The motion was turned down when tie vote was broken by thcgreeve voting against plebisdte on the bai lot ter fall Councillor Mrs law said that whenthe ratepayers voted in their favor at the last elec tionafter the woyear term had been introduced they vindica ted the change Councillor Gibbins said he felt the electors should have the privilege of expressing an opinion then the matter would be settled We lose out at the county level Mrs Law commented The reeve had to decide on the tie and voted in favor oi leav ing the matter as is LIQUOR VOTE COSTS The figurm for the vote taken last spring on the question of having beverage store and banquet licences in the township cost the ratepayers total of $108231 This included enum erators who counted the voters polling booth personnel includ ing in one case constable hired to keep order the return ing officers salary of $300 and mileage and the general re turns DOG DAMAGE CLAIMS Over $500 was paid out to cover damages caused by dogs which molested sheep flocks and one which got into pen of growing pullets specially bred from top laying stock and kill ed mo of the birds The dama ges in this case happened in two nights and the owner of the birds Art iitfin shot the beast on the second night The loss was evaluated by the town ship valuator WilliamNew as being worth $36 Sheep and lambs belonging to Tom Bowman and William Lit tle were damaged and killed to value of $135 for Mr Bow man and $100 in the case of Mr Little One member of the council remarked that it would require lot of dog lie encedollars to get through the year at this rate of claims Mr Bowmandestrnyed one of the dogs which caused his loss SHORTSTAFFED when Mr Cochrane asked about some matters which were in abeyance Allen lreton clerk told Council that until he had sufficient space to seat his staff he was unable tolkeep abreast of his work We have been shortjstaffed for nearly aycar now and the HURONIA DRIVE1N THEATRE PA 8439 IItrvIutm ours at our nun or unit snvz mum littllEthllllllEll sex IN The sunuaasi 2ND BIG HIT mm annals new natal naoauevm coals fiticnaao oar wlpmrx rue runner gt or Love he voufihmo scaur ln CloMk5 rails canrooN other winter like the last one work is getting heavier do not know of any other office where the assessor gets more consideration on cilia space than the administration depart ment if you feel am not giving satisfaction am will ing to accept motion for my removal the clerk said Reeve Sprouie remark ed that the council hambers would hold half dozen clerks and remarked about unneeded employea beiiig retained 11Ierehas been room other years why not now the Reeve questioned Mr lreicn said the new accountant had started work that morning and hadlosharaadeskwlthatyp lst He said this Mayear manshould have room to work on matters needing care and attention Mr Cochrane said they could bring in mrpenter and re adJIut the office space in day or so He could not feel that job needed an architects re port or that the amount men tioned was instilled it was pointed out that as well es en larging the administration off ice the new school building had to be tied in with the present arrangements The matter was left to get the estimates on the costs which architect Bolgen was to submit Why was Stuart Keys re placed on the office adJustment after we had him make plans earlier Deputy Reeve Coch ranc questioned There was no reply The touchy matter of the as sassor and the motionpassed at previous special meeting was not mentioned while the press was present We stayed till nearly midnig Citizens Protest Parking Charges PHILADELPHA AP An angry crowd of about 2000 citlt izens booed Mayor Richardson Dilwnrth Monday night as he defended his proposal to charge $40 annually for city parking privileges Bricks and stones were thrown through the windows oi school auditorium where public hearing was held All available highway patrolmen were called to the scene Several persons wera cut by glass Protests have mounted place themayorannouneed he would impose the $40ayear fee for parking privileges in pilot area Dilwnrth said it was no cessary to keep the city thor oughfares from being choked to death by tratfic He also said Philadelphia cannot take an when some streets were not pas sable for days because of snow bound cars blocking cleanup two boxcars holding about 3300 els of grain were worth about crews PAVE armourswam mourns Use Precious Water Fight Elevator Fire WILCOX Sask CF Droughtvstricken farmers rallied with their previous water re sources Monday nlsht to battle wild grain elevator fire that bit this little mmmunity The blots of undetermined or igin destroyed three elevators their four annexes two railway boxcar and the curling and skating rink There was no official estimate oi loss Some estimates ran as high as $1000000 The wind fanned flames at one time threatened the Roman Catholic college of Notre Dame and two 5000galioa tale of propane gas nearby lint shift in the wind swung the fire away in what Rev Athol Murray head of the institution described as another Notrs Dame mir acle Many of the 310 residents of Wilcox miles south pf Re frain helped battle the fivehour pm between thePotterson ale valor and an annex We were right there loading grain but nobody knows how it got started paid Patterson agent Ray Argue As fl wooden elevators southwest wind swept spark across the community igniting fires on house rooftops and in surround ing prairie hedge near the college caught fire but thats as building The propane gas was between the hedge and the col UliAWA The federal government has approved plans for making three once haughty queens oi the Yukon River major tou rl st attraction at Whitehorse in the Yukon Ter ritory The three paddle wheelers hullrs on the banks of the Yu kon River are tobe located in park to be built on Whisky and Mocassln Flats now occu pied by 80 squatters shacks Under the plan the squatters lndians half breeds and whites are to be given the opportunity of purchasing low cost housing to be built on section of land purchased from the Whitepass and Yukon Raw way The housing development is expected to cost about 800 000 enough to provide for con structlon of 50 homes ions for locating the paddle wheelers Whitehorse Klondike and Casca in the park were dis closed foliowing visit to the city last week by Prime Min ister Dieienbnker Members of the party heard eriticlsmflrom residents and tourists thpt noth ing was being done to preserve the boats as link with the gold rush days of 1898 The boats are rapidly deter iorating and sign on the IMPERIAL anulrnntl WATER SCARCE They were hampered by water shortage so men from surrounding areas hauled water from their parched farms to three dugouts near the commu nity The water then was piped to the elevators and nearby buildings can tank train rushed 25 000 gallons of water about 80 mllu southeast from Moose law CPR passenger train transported another 10000 gal lons irom Estevan Father Murray who joined firefighters in his shirtsleeves said if the wind hadnt changed the whole town would have gone Parents everyone helped If only the hounds his students had been here They could have done lot Destroyed were the Patterson grain elevator and two annexes containing 135000 bushels of grain two Weyburn Flour Mill elevators and two annexes hold ing 119000 bushels of wheat and 7000 bushels of coarsegraln bushels of wheat and the 41 yearold rlnk The 265000 bush $375000 The blaze broke out at 315 CANADIAN COLORS PIKE NH CF resolu tion urging Canadian manufac turers to promote childrens wear with distinctive Cana dian coloring was passed at the annual conference of the Chil drens Apparel Manufacturers Association here Maple leaf greian Mountie red Laurentian berry Rocky Molmtain grey andBanff blue were colors sug gested WHO IS LULU suns rasr AND anAvmuuY WHOLSTERED THEQWAY fIiOR ROFITABLE Hoe GAINS Youll iindttiat the SHunaAIII Step Hog is the pllan Feeding Plan that paves xlheway forniost proiitsior you It dons provide exaoty the nutrients needed for eachjstep of lionsgrowth Dropld anytime gain you shoulldlpagetting roa Quinn who nILtsaALE FLOUR AND FE well talk new nonprofits and the scavIc CALLL Ina WILSON coonsrowu ames raced pthe close as the flames got to the leg and about loo yards from the rink went to the church and the wind shifted said Father Mur ray Tradition says the first mir acle at Notre Dame occurred in the lean 1930 when the Ni lege owed $100 to grocer who needed the money to pay his own debts Father Murray called his stu dents to the chapel and asked them to pray When he stepped from the chapel stranger handed him $100 cheque Plan To Make PaddleWheelers Major Attraction For Tourists Whitehorse warns tourists to keep away from them SIGN MISSPELLED The sign says traspmscrs will be prosecuted by the federal government The word govern ment is misspelled with the left out The three boats will be placed on cement foundations when they are moved to the park probably in about two years af ter the housing development has been completed and the squat ters moved off the flats Gordan Robertson eputy northern affairs minister said one of the boats likely will be turned into museum All three Vessels will be refurbished and it is hoped to rcfumlsh at least one of them Much of the fur nIture used on the boats is be lieved to be in the Whitehorse area and it is hoped that much of it can be collected through public appeal Finns also are being consid ered for iirepmoiing the log ca bin of Sam McGee and small museum operated by the city of Whitehorse adjacent to the cabin This museum contains ir replaceable itans from the days of the gold rush including pho tographs of Klondike Kate and Diamond Lil NOW SHOWING Eves AT 700 and 900

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy