Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 7 Nov 1959, p. 1

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69 In Montreal Root Collapse coir rnspaonss For Enmlnar wm as 719 plans en mugm telephone nnmhtr to all for the Business orEdltoriuDeptsuPAon Ruling is Upheld POLICE VOLUNTEERS PROBE STEEL RODS CONCRETE FOR PODIES Workers Die 20 Injured MONTREAL tCPJFour con struction workers diedFriday in lethal nlcss of wet cement and twisted steel Twenty others were injured The dead men were trapped when the concrete roof of an ex tension to an eastend plant col lapsed as it was being poured They were working inside the structure For time it was feared the death toll might reach seven No or three men were missing and notaccounted for until nearly mldnlght more htan nine hours after the roof fell with roar However oullioritics said at 11 am today they are sure there are no bodies lclt now in the tangled wreckage MEN 0N ROOF BURT Thc injured were working on the roof and not beneath it Six were detained in hospital where Mom whyiewnl say Goodbye To Dear Ontario litter 18 Years BOWMANVILLE or Mrs Bertha Morn Wliyte will say goodbye Sunday to Ontario the province she has lived in for 18 years hate cave and would have persuaded me to leave dear Ontario had it not been for the constant persecution of certain Welfare officials she said inan interview Friday night Mrs Vhyte announced last month that Whytehaven her home for children 110191WZ5 up for saleThc home was closed last July after the welfare deA parlment removed more than 100 children from the premises The action followed an outbreak of in fectious diseases at the home and court hearing ruled the children had been neglected Mrs Vhyte will leave from Malton airport Sunday for WinniA peg where she will stay with Rev and Mrs James Spiers before continuing to To rn BC seven miles north of Nels where sheplans to open new Vhytehaven She will stay in VinA nipeg until she gets an appoint rncnt with EC welfare authori ties to discuss her plans Mrs Whytc said earlier she would es tablish her new Vhytehaven as religious mission Until about two months ago thought would never be able to face leaving But now that am on my way have feeling of reliefa feeling that we are moving into much wider field Mrs Whyte said The new Whytehaven will be established on 25 acres of land given to Mrs Whyte Cancer VciniSheS Hospital Excited BREMERTON Wash AP Seven months ago Joseph Mayerle 37 was sent home from the hospital believed doomed by lung cancer We fig or he would diewithin few weeks one physician said Today all trace of the cancer has disappeared the doctor re ported The same physician said We got real excited when litayerle given up as hopeless case walked into the Us Vteians Ad ministration Hospital in Seattle looking likeva new man The doctors do not say that Joe might not have avrecurrence of cancer lttakes at least five years to bereasonably sure the physiciamsaid They operated in March and the lung was so bad they could not take it out said Mayerle They sewed me up and gave me Xray treatments for four weeks The doctors had told me it looked hopeless and said the Xrays couldnt begin toclear it lipjust hunters disappelared Oct 23 have found no trace of the men Taylor Raps Military Policy now you AP Gen Maxwell Taylor Isays crnments military pollcies haverincreased the dange make me feelhetler When walked into the vet erans hospital fewweeks ago NoiTrace0fHunters CHAPLEAU GP Searchers the doctors acted like theyd seen aghast Joe whose family has inlt creased by the arrival of Joe Jrl three weeks ago has no idea why he got well East West Clash 0n Laos Mission UNITED NATIONS NY GP East and West have clashed again whether it was blunder to send United tlions factfinding mis sion to the troubled kingdom of Laos in Southeast Asia The Security Council subcomA mittee set off achain reaction of argument at the UN Friday when its report was made public say ing that its information did not clearly establish whether there had been an invasion of the coun try by regular troops from Com munist Nnrth Viet Nani But the fourmember subcom mittee did say there was evi once Laotian rebels received military supplies andpolitlcal ad visers from the Communist side of the border ho investigated reportd Thursday thatravens were circling bush area where two VU ited StatEs backing into general war Chinese Hail Revolution PEKING Reuters Gommunist chinese newspape the gov of the today but it thceznd anniversary of thehussran revolution th red lopinn headlines and congratulatory no page editorf 1iPRESSiTthlEinstills contained nothin miniature sports earl their condition was reported good The otherswere released after treatment Searchers used bulldozerscut ting torches and their bare hands to probe the rubble for missing men Time worked against them as the concrete steadily hard erred The dead were identified as An drew Kish 58 carpenter fore man on the construction job Aime Monctle 45 Jack Mend guzzi 23 and Akuilar Filipu 1200 TONS POURED About 1200 tons of cement had been poured since morning into the root forms of an extension to the eastend plant of Johnson and Johnson surgical supply cornA pony come it wn said fiche Morissct supelint dent oFfile Donolo Con struction Company building the extension Things happened so fast Ernest Donnln company offi cer said he had no idea what caused the collapse Winds were gusting up to 40 miles an hour and some witnesses suggested this may have been factor in the collapse Highway Death Toll Appalling TORONTO CPI Attorney General Roberts said today the highway death toll in November might reach the worst tom on record in Ontario The number of highway deaths within the past few days is appalling he said Highway patrols were doing everything possible to cut down speeders and reckless drivers But more police on the high ways isnt the answer Mr Rob erts added It isup to the motor the traffic laws of this province suonr Miiirlilw MOSCOW APlMoscow today celebrated the 42nd annivarsary of the Communist revolution in Russia in festivemood with the shortest military parade ever staged for the bigholidoy The wordJpeaceK is evident everywhere both in speech and signs throughout the Soviet Un ion said Moscow radio as three making got under way In the keynote addrbss at Red Square rally Defence Minister Marshal Malinovsky praised Prerrn Khnlshcbevs world di rmament proposals but saidthe Soviet Union will maintaina state of high military preparedness until the pro osals areacceptcd and all tilted States foreign bases are liqui ute military parade spectacularly new in equipmen accordingto The Western military attac said there were some merits of what he had seenrbe The div landemons dont really know how it lsts themselves They must obey 116th Strike Day WASHINGTON AP The Supreme Court today upheld an injunction ordering striking steel workers back to the mills The ruling means the 500000 striking American steel workers must return to their jobs for no 80day cooling off under emer gency provisions or the Taft llnrlley Labor Act The ruling came on the tisth day of the strike The court action makes the to day coolingoff period effective immediately beginning this morning The dosdayjnjunction upheld by the Supreme Court in itself will not solve the strike it merely will send the men hack to their jobs for that period and order both sides to try to reach an agreement before the Injunction ieriod suds The strikh could resume at the end of the dodgy period if an agreement is not reached The high tribunals action was announced in fivcvpnge un signed opinion Justice William Douglas wrote ltpage dissenting opin ion The courts vote thus was to The majority opinion said the coolingoff provision of the Taft llortley law as applied here is not violative of the United States constitutional limitulion prohibit ing courts from exercising pow ers of legislative or executive nature The opilllon noted that the union contended that the TaftHartley section involved was constituuon ally invalid because it dld not set up standard of lawful or un lawful conduct on the part of lo bor or management It then added But the statute does recognize certain rigth in the public to have unimpeded for time pro duction in industries vital to the national health or safety it makes the United States the gualdiun of these rights in liti gation The majority opinion said that we do not find that the terminu tion of the injunction after spec ified time or the machinery es tablished in an attempt to obtain peaceful settlement of the un derlyingdispute during the in junctionspendeney ctr ct from this conclusion Dies At nonnvwoon Calif Victor screen star who once lived in Canada died of heart failure to day at the age of 72 McLagleu whoSe early career matched some of his later acting rota was miner farmer sieve dore and railway policeman in Canada before the First World War Once in Vancouver he went six rounds with Jack Johnson the then heavyweight champion He was in Britlsh Columbia when the Eirst World War broke out and went back to England to rejoin the British Armywhich he had joined at the age of 14 at the time of the South African War It was after the war that he started his acting career other films in which he won fame included WhatPrice Glory and Under Two Flags DIES AT HOME The burly Londonbum actor died at his home at nearbyNewi port Beach after an illness of six weeks His wife son Andy and daugh ter Sheila were at the bedside when death came McLagIen who won an Acad emy Award in 1935 for one of the has the parade cheered Khrusheh on that screens classic performances as pantie the st me such cars had ever appeared Red Square pa rade Us Thousands ofathl civilian groups part pa and other government and3 party leaders atop the mammoth tomb piLénin and Stal oscow street were decked with red streamers and flags to markthe 19 evolutr There also wa plenty dence of Russiasrécents nt advances model of Lunik III whichtransinitted the first pic tures of the hidden sideof the moon hung Sverdlovsk Gunmen Rob Bank Take $500l1 Loot MONTREAL CPlzTwo armed men Vsmasheddhrough the plate glass windows of an eastend branch of the Baroque Provincial du Canada during the banks Friday night lateopening period and took $5000 to The rnenheld the banks seven followed included the lay of MCLdglen Age 72 job was in Rawhide television show which hisson produced McLaglen also was nominated for supporting actors Academy Award in 1952 for The Quiet Monk like The Informer astory of Ira land Bormthe son of the Anglican Bishop of ClaremontMcLaglen grew up in South Africa where his father was stationed formany years WAS PRO BIDDER For time he was profes sional boxer but later went on the stage where he soon devel opened into one of the top port rayers of roughinlkingvtypes Dilringhis yearsin Canada Mc Laglen farmed in North Hast ings 0nt then prospected with little success in the silver fields of Northern Ontario Once when out of funds in North Bay he médemoney singing in cafes cnnsu INJURIES ram Mark 44 of Brampton died Fris Halloween night twinar crash near Hagersville 22 miles south west of here Roasted IAnniVérsdrv Sqliiire lluge photographs and models of other Russian space REPEATS CLAIM In his speech Malinovskyre peated the claim frequently voiced by Khrushchev that the correlation of forces inthewnrld arena is changing iofovor ofso ci Ism mmenling on Khrushchevs American tr it opened broad prospects for th establishinén of stable péacednearth But in on tones the dc fencechietpiitthe orld onno letting down its military guard After his references to disarm nme hétold the crowd gath squarc in front ofthe Kremli VAs long as oitr proposals are not accepted alongas the nu merousAmericnn mllitary bases HAMILTON CP James day night of injuries suffered in vehicle were placed in promin Malinovsky Said lice that the Soviet ion is not ered the hllilffllllly deeorated TRAFFIC GUIDE nor HELPFUL TORONTO CF man who rerouted troffic around construction project caused giant traffic jam which took Scarborough police an hour to straighten out He was flagging ears lnto dead end street Hopes Workers in Six Weeks OSHAWA CF An official of General Motors of Canada Ltd said today he hopes the corn panys employees will all be back to work in six weeks Im awfully pleased and know all our people will be said Larry Gough public rela tions officer commenting on an announcement thatUnitcd States steelworkers have been ordered back to work for an fluday cool ing off period If there are no other interruplt tions and normal flow of steel is reestablished General Motors in Oshawa should be bask in full prpéductioo lnrabout six weeks he 53 Employees will be called back to work gradually just as they were laid off gradually Mr Gough said He could not saywhen the first group might be called back General Motors now has 6000 workers idle In OshavVlL lt sus pended its assembly operations moo CP qhe Informer had been fair in iydgfigymixfimjm Mllng 01W new maintenance which do not depend on supply of steel search For Guide ESPANOLA CPBad weather has caused postponejnent of the search for the body of Arnold E54 quimauxhar Ztyearold guide be lieved to have drowned in the WhitefishRiver Oct 29 Verne Rose skindiver from the Sudbury areaziwas hampered by snow and overcastskies The Indian guide took his 210an mm ovumin on week and tonight is am Sun dAy 40 For damned luminary in Oshawa Back weather Postpones JeemeltMtoofthlslmu LongeSt CQst $6 PITTSBURGH APlThc 116 day steel strike longest industry wide shutdown in the history of tho US steel industry cost more than $6000000000 to wage and production losses Striking steelworkers and the basic steel industry absorbed most of the loss but other indus tries ollied to steel also felt the effects Thé 500000 strikers lost on esti mated sllmoooooo inwages Lost steel production totalled nearly $500000000 based on preslrllre operations The strike shut down about 87 per cent of the US basic sleelmaking oapan city More than 35000 workers in The abandonment of the ONE branch lne between Creemore andLako Junction because of falling revenue and the high cost of diesel changeover has been proposed by the railway in brief sent to the Board of Trans port Commissioners for Canada The report claimed that the fenmile stretch of line that presently serves Crcemore Glen Huron Duntroon and Nottawa is in poor condition and thcAcost to rehahllitatethe line for diesel operation is estimated to be $260000 This amount according to the CNR is out of proportion for the actual revenue the line af lords In making its case to the board the CNN in the report showed the decrease in traffic and revv 1956 to $2766 in 1957 and still further to $2625 in1958 The cargo traffic fell from 74 unloads42 with coal bound for Creemorein 1956 to 54 carloads in1957 of which 38 were with coal and dropped to 45 earloads brother across Ithe river in boat Oct 29 29 coalin 1958 two parties having IllLLlNG REVENUE enue had fallen from $3147 in per CopHM Pages Strike Billion algalrelated industries were laid Union Stronger cooper Claims HOT SPRINGS Va AmTho Steelworkers union is much tho stronger power in the steel diss pute the bead negotiator for the hlgsteel companies contends This is not struggle between two giant forces of cguel power said Conrad Cooper of US steel It is dispute between vastly ms equal powers Abandon CNRs Cieeniore Line Brief From Railway Proposes There is no pzissengcr service on the Alliston subdivision and the bulk or the traffic is taken up with shipments of coal The outbound cargo has been con lined to three carlnads of wheat in the last three years The communities served by the branch have total population of 1400 people The brief said the railway be lieves that abolition of the line would mean no great discordfolt to the general public gt Early this year the branch ceased operations temporarily and truckers rserved the com munities The rates were up proximately $10 tripjrom Col lingwoad to Creemorc According to the report trucks ers could as theydid in 1955 carry the goods to nearby sta tions in Stayner or Cellingwood The estimated annual lossto the railway in operating this branch is $15000per year As for the unemployment issue die job at one man the Cree moro agent is at stake and ac cording to the railway he would be absorbed according to senior ity

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