Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 29 Mar 1962, p. 1

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

IOUR TELEPHONES For Dunner Want Ads Talo phune PAszm The telephone number to call for the Business or Editorial Dept is PA 66531 95th YearNo 75 FRONDIZI SUPPORTERS MIX WITH POLICE Ellie Til Supporters of President Ar turo andizi are controlled by police outside Government liouse in Bucnos Aircs The fastly defying the militarys demand to resign signed do nree summoning Congress into emergency session The move apparently was lastditch at tempt to hang on without let tiag mounting military pres sures erupt into coup AP Vircphoto via radio from Buenos Airest atria Ex emitter Barrie Ontario Canada Thursday Mercia BO 96 LOCAL msrml warm today Cooler air ex pected Low tonight 13 High tomorrow is For complete simmery turn to page two Not More Than 71 per Copy16 Page FRONDIZI IS OUT TOSSED INPRISON Labor Here Must Be Free Of US DominationBridges TORONTO CF Canadian labor must be free of American domination and world labor must unite union rally was told Wednesday night by long ahoreman head Harry Bridges long controversial United States figure The European Common Mar ket spells nothing but trouble for North American workers the left loaning Mr Bridges said in freewheeling attack on United States foreign and domestic policy He spoke to an evening meet ing of the 57th convention of the international Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers This first mceing in Canada of the full CanadianUS convention due to end Friday comes at time when the hard rock miners union is facing hcavy Canadian raiding pressure from the rival United Steelworkers of America Wednesday nights meeting which included the 200 Mine Mill delegates plus some 150 guests was show of strength featuring visitors identified as members of other unions in ciuding Hamiltons big Slelco local Steel group MineMill the Longsharemea French Ilrmy Liits Blockade ilrea Serene litter Blood Bath Argentine president stead Ottawa Feeling Grows Election Set For June OTTAWA CPlThere is firowing feeling in Ottawa that the federal general election ex pectcd this year may be called for June ilor Hum Usually wellriuformed circles who previously banked on an autumn vote now consider its an almost even choice between June and October They hold the view that the final decision has not yet been made Governing factors are ex pected to be issues which de vclop over the next few days the mood of the country and the mood of the Housorof Commons Round up with the almost ceaseless speculation in political circles on the election date is the date on which Finance Min ister Fleming will bring down his budget for the 196263 fiscal year which begins April Persons who look for June election suggest the budget may he presented as early as April or but no later than April 10 IN NUTSHELL Sugar Refineries lire Charged MONTREAL CWThree large sugar refineries were for mally charged Wednesday with conspiring to restrict trade in Eastern Canada between Jan 1954 and Jan 20 1955 The companies the AcadiaAtlantic Sugar Refineries Limited the Canada and Dominion Sugar Company Limited and the St Lawrence Sugar Refineries Limited pleaded not guilty through counsel and will face preliminary hearing April 11 Defends Chamber 0n 72nd Birthday OTTAWA fCP Liberal Senator JeanFrancois Pouliot marked his 72nd birthday Wednesday with rousing defence of the upper chamber The Quebec senator spoke in the Sea ate denouncing CBC Frenchlanguage television network panel program Tribune Libra Jury Finds Doctor Druggist Negligent TORon GPlA coroners jury eaniy todayrfound doc tor and druggist negligent in the death of an eightyeamld Toronto girl Norma Mary Coulson died March after taking sEven tablets of periactin an antiallergy drug in 24hour period medical witness said child her age should have no more than half tablet three or four times day Objects To Canada its Nuclear Power OTTAWA OPlCanada should not become nuclear They look for dissolution of Parliament April 13 for June 11 election April 18 for June is etlon iPrimo Minister Dicienbaker has presented an inscrutable front in the Commons to opposi tion probing for clue as to the election data So has Mr Fleming to queries as to when the budget will be brought down An air of election expectancy hangs over the daily sittings of the Commons Tension is con tinuous Tempors are short Pri vate members greet provocalt tive statements from opposing beaches with derisive taunts and applaud their own speakers with unusual vigor Speeches are tuned to an election pitch Across the country election preparations have been intensi fied in the last few weeks There are party nominating conven tions almost every night to pick candidates Key members of the 3de av 1957 the revenue department Commons are away frequently on procampaign speaking tours It is known that in ConserveV tive co ciis ny een press for avote Some wanted it in April Chief Electoral Officer Nelson Castonguay needs minimum 57 days notice to organizcan election Enumeration of voters starts 49 days before polling day and it takes few days to get it organized official nominations close two weeks before the election date in 252 of the 253 constituencies two of which return two mem bers apiece Closing day in an other 21 large scattered consti tuencies is four weeks before election day Board ligrees Good Will Price High OTTAWA PlWhat is good will worth in dollars and cents The Income Tax Appeal Board has had to calculate it for the Village Inn in Bradford Ont to settle dispute over capital cost allowances The inn has $9277793 worth of good will the board decided Frank Clegg bought the inn for $260000 in 1957 with the price described as covering the hotel land building equipment and good will Legal fees brought the total bill to $282750 In assessing Mr Clegg for decided that the purchase cost was made up of $11400520 for land building and equipment and $14794080 for good will Mr Clegg himself had called in an appraisal company which said the building alone was worth $17783471 and after udd ing other costs placed $31 07275 value on the good will ALGIERS APlThe French Army lifted its blockade of the European workers suburbs of Bah el oued today Groups of men and women gathered on street corners to swap experi ences as troops in halftracks armored cars and jeeps slowly patrolled the narrow streets There was no visible hostility between the troops and the in habitants who attacked army patrols in the section last Fri day killing 15 Ergo goldlers thk anchwugmgmroieiflufi outb After real thearmy sealed off the section and PREDICTS SUMMIT GENEVA tamExternal Af fairs Minister Green flew home to Ottawa today after declaring there is reasonable chance of summit meeting as re sult of the 17nation disarma ment talks here Green who flew home in an RCAF plane with top members of his staff told reporters am quite pleased with the progress made in the disarma ment conference so far The general atmosphere is quite favorable and construe tive spirit is being shown think there is reasonable chance of agreement on some points and reasonable ohance of asummit meeting Park Mining Treated On Its Merits TORONTO GP Bide to power Liberal Leader Pearson said Wednesday night We should not have pohcy that requires us to be nuclear power by having our soil used as nuclear baseunder the national control of any other country be said May Call Premier To Testify TORONTO CPLFormer Ontario premier Leslie Frost may be called to testify today at the provinces royal commis sion on crime Crown Counsel Wilson said just before todays session that Mr Frost who retired last year as Pro gressive Conservative leader in Ontario might testify today See Possible Wheat Shortage wlNNfPEG CPlThe latest sale of Canadian wheat to Communist Chinameans that if Western Canada has short crop this year the country could be short of wheat for sales to other customers President Rudy Usick of the Manitoba Far mers Union said Wednesday Kick Students Out Professor TORONTO CPlBalf the students now attending univer sities should be kicked outProfessor Marcus Long of the Uni versity of Toronto said Wednesday Prof Long speaking to the industrial Contractors Association of Canada said those students who should not be in university are those without in Viiectual interest ings Docked If Late for being late for work comes law Its very marked discrep ancy the appeal board com mented It also would make big difference to the amount MrCiegg cotlld claim in tax 81 lowanceson the land and build Weeks Holiday OTTAWA CmNew regula tions effective Monday will give civil servants four weeks an nual holidays after 20 years employment but dock their pay The regulations were made public Wednesday by Sam Hughes chairman of the Civil Service Commission which rec ommended them to the cabinet They were passed Monday and are to be effective April when the new CivilService Act he start mining operations in prolt vsncrai parks will be treated on their individual merits Lands and Forests Minister Spooner said Wednesday he told the legislatures com mittee on conservation that the government as yet has no set policy allowing unlimited min ing in provincial parks If there is valuable mineral depositlwithin the confines of gt provincial park weas gov ernment could hardly say it cannot be exploited Mr Spooner explained It could have tremendous impact on the economy and job situation in the area brief presented to the com mittee by the departments parks branch said tremendous increase in wilderness travellers in Algonquin and Quetico parks is creating administrative prob lems There were 57992 wilderness campers lastiyear up 62 per cent from 1960 the brief said stricted the 50000 inhabitants to their homes in house to house search they rre it some 3000 or mostly youths and men between 10 and so and seized more than 1000 arms of all kinds and large quantities of munitions and ex plosives Tho streets of Bab el Oucd were littered with garbage be cause Mosiam garbage men had refused to enter the hostile quar ter Scores of autemob riddletiby bullefi and been flattened bya tank Many shops reopened Shop keepers surveyed broken plate glass windows and other wreck age left by tbebnttle French flags draped in black hung from many balconies The black was signvf mourning for the 53 European civilians killed Monday in demonstra tion organized bytherlghtwing secret army in sympathy for the inhabitants ofBab el Oued Cant Argue For ilrgue TORONTO CP Douglas Fisher the NDP CCF member of Parliament for Port Arthur who nominated Hazen Argue for leadership of the New Demo cratic Party said Wednesday night he was very wrong about Mr Argue and cant forgive him Mr Fisher speaklng to meeting sponsored by the Dan forth Beaches NDP Riding As sociation labelled the reasons for Mr Argues subsequent res ignation from the NDP as one of the greatest lies ever put forth by Canadian politician MixFisher called entirely pho ney Mr Argues statement that the NDP was in the hands ofn small sinister group of labor leaders The charge was completely ridiculous and Hazen Ar gue knew this Mr Fisher said the United Electrical Workers and Teamsters all are outcasts from the central American in bor body the AFLClO in Can ada the Longshoremen are the only one of the four affiliated with the Canadian Labor Con gress Readand in some cases re readwere telegrams of sup port from the Teamsters Jimmy Hoffa and other union leaders Stcei raids at Sudbury and northern Manitobas Thompson nickel field have dominated much of the business at the Mine Mill convention begun Monday Mr Bridges said the US pretends to know everybodys business around the globe and if those countries didnt under stand what was good for them the US was liable to shove in few bayonets New Prisons To Be Built OTTAWA CPLFour special institutions for young oifen tiers will soon be built by the federal government Minister Fulton announced Wed acsday2 Hesald it is hoped that these special prisonsone each in the Atlantic provinces Qucbec 0n tario and the Westwill be fin ished within four years Mr Fulton said this will make it possibleto isolate the young offendersbe did not cite an age limitfrom other penitentiary prisoners The emphasis would benot only on custody but also on treatment and rehabilitation The minister gave no further details of the plan in referring briefly to it in speech to the Ottawa womens Canadian Club At present full segregation of juvenile delinquents serving federal prison terms has been impossible due to lack of facili tiesuln the year ended March 31 1961 000 persons under 21 were sent to federal peniten tiaries DISCUSSES STUDY Mr Fulton mentioned the new building program in context with his departments current study of juvenile delinquency The departmental committee al ready has heard argument from interested groups in several cities he said Some persons appeang be fore the committee feel that the high percentage of dropouts from school is factor contrib uting to delinquency Mr Ful ton said He said that despite the lack of statistics it already is ob vious enough that juvenile de ilnquencyin Canada is increas ing It had been estimated that 15000 juveniles were before the Canadian courts last year Riot Squads Go Into fiction Guido Slated For Top Iob Bucnos Alres Argentinas military leaders today deposed President Arturo Frondlzt and sent him to prison triggering clashes between police and dam cnstrators here Police riot squads threw tear gas at people who demonstrated in Plaza de Mayo the square in the heart of Buenos Aircs shouting we want the presi dent we want the president Frondizl was arrested by naval officer at his luxurious private home in nuenos Aires suburb and driven in motorcade of five cars to the capitals airport Twentyfour minutes after the 53year old president was ar rested he was rushed aboard an Argentine Air Force plane for the island of Martin Garcia military reservation 30 miles northeast of Buenos Aircs in the Plate River estuary it was on this island that the military held Juan Peron after they overthrew him in 1955 The three armed forces chiefs announced that Senate President Jose Mario Guido next in line of presidcntial succession under the constitution will succeed Frondizi GIVES N0 WORD There was no immediate an nouncement from Guido how ever that he will take the post And Hector Gomez Machado who heads Fronsizis intransig eat Radical Party in the Cham ber of Deputies said he would not Guide is also member of the intransigent Radicals Guido had stood by Prondizl earlier in the crisis and said he would notsupplanthlm But military sources said Guido had accepted the presidency after Frondizi told him it was the best way for tha oourrtrv ARTURO FRONDIZ it was not immediately cleag wbcthcr Guide if he took ever would have full presidential power or be figurehead for military junta determined to crush Perenism The genoralhe lief was that the military would be least insistent on countexv signing all decrees The ousting of Frondizi when four years in office had been beset by constant conflict with the military was the culmina tion of crisis resulting from statiiingsnd sweeping Peron lsta victories in congressional and provincial elections March 10 Frondizi had allowed the Po ronistas to campaign as party for the first time since Peron overthrow Communists and Castro supporters got behind them while the antiCommunist forces remained split between the intranslgcnt Radicals and the rival Peoples Radicals Brandt Heckled At London Speech LONDON AP Hecklers shouting gangster fascist tried to drown out speech by visiting West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt Wednesday British Labor Party Leader Hugh Gaitskeli tried to quiet them and failed Police stepped in and ejected most of the demonstrators Hecklers and police scuffled before and during Brandts speech criticizing Communist policy on Berlin and Germany Several demonstrators leaped on the stage Brandt and Gaitskcli watched impassively as police hauled them away No serious injuries were reported Outside the hall members of the British campaign for nu clear disarmament paraded with banners saying No war over Berlinno German bases here The West Gannon troops have recently trained in Britain Brandt was asked about the beokling during goodwfll visit to Newcastle today There was some opposition he said but think oneshouid not exaggerate what hap pened HECKLING STARTS EARLY Tho heckling broke out as soon as Brandt and Gaitskell walked on the platform The interruptions are com ing from minority of Commu nists ahd Fascists Gaitskell declared ask you once again to be courteous But such shouts as semen ber our war deadremember the Vz rockets continued Po lice ringed the audience and hauled more hecklers away rStriCtly Fcirrri Day AnnouIICe WheatDl OTTAWA CPL strictly farmday in the Com mons Wednesday highlighted by the announcement of another major wheat sale to Red China Agriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton reported that an addi tional 39000000 bushels of wheat worth $75 000 has been sold to the Communist Chinese The new grain sale gave body to an opposition contention that the surplus problem of the east era dairy farmer has replaced that of the Prairie grain grower as the maintrouble spot on the Canadian farm scene Mr Hamilton making his first Commons appearance since bewas sidelined by illness two months ago said the latest Chi nese purchase is the sixth and largest made under the long term agreement signed year ago It brings total sales to data under the cash plus credit agreement to 100000000 bushels of wheat and2d000000 bushels of barley China also lbought 31 lt was 700000 bushels of wheat and 12 700000bushels of barley on an allcash basis last spring Outside the House it was learned that seventh major grain deal with China is near Completion Mr Hamilton said most of the wheat involved in the sixth deal will be shipped from west coast ports between June and Decem her But 5600000 bus will move from Atlantic and St Lawrence ports in the next two months it is thought that the eastern shipments are being diverted to European Communist countries China has previously seat part of her Canadian grain to East Germany and Albania Mr llanillton said the sale is covered by the $100000000 gov ernment guarantee given to the Canadian wheat board last year to cover possible defaults in the Chinese payments China has paid $108000000 for $190000000 worth of gr received so for meeting all stalments on time The agreement for eventual total purchases of 186700000 bushels of wheat and 46700000 bushels of barley calls for 25 per cent in cash on delivery and 273 days credit with interest The interest rate has not been disclosed WELCOME DEAl Opposition Leader Pearson welcomed the dbal Arnold Peters CCF Timlslraming called it at this time Mr Peters and several Lib erai MPsexpressed the view that the eastern dairy surplus has become Canadas Na ag ricultural problem Mr Peters said last summers drought and heavy wheat ex ports havereducod the great grain surplus on tbePrairies But Canada still was producing for more dairy products than the market could consume We produce so much of them that the government now is in the same position as that in which they were year in sinix assumes the nutter of wheat be said They are worrying what they are going to do about the sur pluses of these commodities

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy