Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 7 Jul 1964, p. 12

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wmrfltmwrwnw sum mum Whywvwwrwflfigwgt ¢r new scone son ans Stilt1 Four hours alter Bob ilrom opened his new furniture lore in Vancouver it was wrecked by fire during the weekend Here he picks his wa across ealteud Commer cta Drive with his records one of the few items left an damaged in the 0125000 tire lie says troiilindarrewstore and hold fire sale Wirephoto Doctor Acquitted on first Of 40 Charges TORONTO CPtDr Burns Newes chief surgeon at Tor onto East Gcneral Hospital was acquitted Monday of tail lng to notify coroner of the death at we so who died in the hospital atcr surgical clamp was left in her abdomen during an operation jMeglstretc James Butler dis missed the chargetho first of 40 against livu doctors and the hospitals administratoron technicality lie found the Crown had failed to prove that the death of Patricia Morgan as was not reported John Hooliban special Crown counsel sold iatcr Dr lnquests Set in Two Deaths Flower will be arrai ed today on another of the charges against him all to connect on with the same death thnac cused are being tried singly The chici surgeons first trial Monday opened tho scrlce Magistrate Butlers abrupt ruling in case that had roiscd public furore several months ago over allegations that medical men covered the causes of some hcsptta cathe came as lolt to both prosecution and deicnce Defence Counsel Laid iaw had argued that Dr Piewes had no responsibility to report the death oi the woman to coroner but had not suggested hi there was no evidence that report was not filed Prosecutor lfoolihnn said there was clear contravention of the Coroners Act by Dr Piewes MADE CHARGE son to believe that reportabis circumstances exist has an obligation to report death John Wagner secretary at the Metropolitan Toronto coac nere aliicc said he had relt ceivcd no prior notice oi the Morgan death until he received letter Jan billnom Mrs Ruth Neale the womens sister She reported that she had heard an autopsy showcd the surgical in strument responsible and asked for an inquest Dr Picwee ordered the oper ationno iorat one for stomach bio agehalted slat the patient lost much Dr Brown said he became spectator alter Dr Verge took over if speaker is amed Indicrs High Commissioner omwa tauiron Roland wealth prism ministers the prime minister said Mr tum swearold Toronto lawyer will leave for New Delhi shortly to take up his new duttaay replacing Greater Running who is retiring from the diplomch co Mr Pearson sat in press statement issued here that be Is deiiditetl Mr Mtobemrrls rt turning to the public union to differences in our pollti views maids him an outstanding Canadian and it gives are great personal satis faction that he has accepted appointment to our aatio dip loman service be said ASKED EARLIER The Liberal government was reported to have asked Mr Miohener year ago to be member of the royal commis sion on bilingualism and blcul turalism but he declined the appointment reluctantly be cause of prior commitment to the Manitoba government lie served two years as ctan man of the Manitobaroyai conuniesionon local govern msnt Ind financing which re ported late last year it was the Pearson lovem ments second appointment oi prominent Conservative fig ure lormer trade minister George Haas was named di rector ol the im Worlds Fair Commotion year but re Commissions Cost Revealed OTTAWA CF The royal commission on bilingualism and bicuituraltam has cost the led crsl treasury $421700 sincedt was appointed nearly one year ago the Commons was termed Monday Jack Davis parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Pearson supplied the informa tion in return for Lloyd it Grouse PC QueensLanca burg film Wright if com on gpen fiscal year ending March plus sisssoo since then Mr Davis also iaioi ed Mr Grouse that the co store has hired 30 research specialists to date Plans call for total of 65 fulltime and 2a parttime re search workers by the end oi the year patches of trouble non roman museum lived later alter bis meat as pmident oi the scat Stock Exchange ldr Nidsencr was Commons ant Speaker from 1061 to 1002 dur ing the tenure oi the match bairer government ruling dc batu with light and impartial bend tha brought him respect from all artica lie was defeated in the 1062 general election in his Toronto St riding by Liberal fan Webb PKWY COUNCILLOR few months after his eiec lion detest he was named to the Canadian Privy Council by then prime minister Dielrn baker ilrls honorary politics entitle him to the prdix bon orabia for life Sen oi the late Senator Dd ward Mitheoer lormer Con scrvalivs leader in Alberta be honeyedto England in laid as member at the Canadian delegation to the coarcmnce on British Commonwealth relations in london in addition to iris other ddlics over the years Mr Midrener has served as chairman of the Tomato Board of Trade dub governor of the Western Hoe piial in Thmntoa mniber of the council of the Canadian Ac eoctation oi Adult Education and Canadian liaison officer for British colonial service appoint ments Mr itilchcuer former general secretary for Canada of the Rhodes Scholarship lrurt mar sled Norah Evangeline wtiiia of Vnneochr in 1927 They have three married daughters lleport Crop Prospects Good Drought llliects Part Oasis Farmers across Canada are mostly cheerful about crop pro sets although droughtis cans sierra in northcentral Saskatchewan and there are elsewhere Exceiisnt says tarmer Robert Newcombooi harvest ing prospects in his acres in of ass and sin fields near Po Williams to Nova Scotias Annapolis Valley We had slow start and lcrttliscd pretty heavy The ground is moist rough but not overly wet Across the cotmtry in British Columbias Oirsnagan Vsilc Tbm Mchugblin expects to ntuchbetter than last year lrorn his 7000 apple trees and his cherries and peers We need some sun to bring the cherries on now he says Weekend rains came hint in time to save parched crops in the Ottawa Valley along the north shore of the St Lawrence and in the Easterahwnshtps of Quebec Youve heard farmers talk Hartley Wilson whoiermsm nosqu Osirvlliebianabout so miles west of Winnipeg says his grain is shaping up well and could devcirmQ into tbe best crop in number of years Milli sly9 we smqmmwnurhAWeuamnm seaer wmwm to aerosols unevenness arson nun scram no chance to see the iiimA Hard Days Night because tich had been sold out for ninth at it guiem mot OI The beetlesPaul McCart nay George Harrison John iaanon and Ringo Starr wen presented to Princess Margaret in the lobby oi the theatre What do you think at the film asked the princess dont think we are very good miam replied ale Cortney with arntle But we had very good pm ducar Four Arraigned In Counterfeiting MONTREAL CF iour men and two women were an reigned Monday on charges laid in connection with counterfeit racket that policoley opera ea in Montreal and1hr on Judge Claude We er said the rocket is once Iibiic alarm lie ordered that six eccrtsod sit tmrn Moatlcal be held without bail until their prclt tintinary bearing tod All pended not iv Seven persons have been an ralgncdin Montreal in cbrineo tion with the rocket Four other persons are in ctntody in ion onto iWomons iipoi Brings Release at it Web recognisanoa stating ah would keepitha peace fori months and stay away from her sisters le dsiidrcn Mr Justice Kelly was heah ing civil action between Eli mer Aidred Burkids Falls Ont harbor dealer and his wile and Mrs Agnsws sister Olive when he mtenced lilrs Agnew lbe action was regard lag the custody of the Aidredl children Mrs Agnswa lawyer Hugh inch said he talked with Mr Justice Kelly regarding the matter during the weekend hlrs Agnew said she declined to sign the bond because she believed it would be an admin stab at guilt in pending action in which Mr drcd charges her with allocating the slicej lions of his children LONDON Flavoured Vitae assessors cares score or am ms lthllilN ViNilH till tuitiww BREAKING oneness or remnant TORONTO CPt Dr Mor about million dollar rain ton Shulman chief coroner for Metropolitan Tomato Monday ordered an inquest on Itug it into thu death of Donald Ferris 17 who dicd Sunday several hours after being released from hospital where he had been treated for murtatic neid pol vsdningi errrls had been taken to the hospital Sunday after his wife format or unconscious on his veranda Beside him was note and bottle of the sold his was released from hos tel in the custody oi his wlo Sunday night alter having his stomach pumped But he be came ill at home and Wes re turned to the hospital where he wsls pronounced dead on arri va An autopsy performed on the body Monday showed Ferris died of acute corrosive poison ing from muriatlc acid Dr Shulmaa said The coroner also eat Aug it as the date for an inquest into the death of Mary Walrar 70 who died at her home here last Thursday Relatives of the woman claim she was refused admission to hospital law hours bolero her death During an inquest into Miss Morgans death in February Mr llooiihan charged the case had been swept under the rug by the hospital but hospital ars thorities denied thie The cause of Miss Morgans death last Nov become pub lic knowledge only in January alter members oi her family ureued reports that it had on caused by clam and brought the matter to to at tention of the coroners oliica here Following the inquest six charges under various sections of the Coroners Act were lodged against four hospital doctors Hospital Administrator Eric Wtilcocire and Dr Kenneth Brown the womans personal physician who headed the op erating team on not 10 Dr Brown also faces four charges of falsifying the death certifi cate Much of Mondays evidence was repeat of testimony at last Februarys inquest new witness was Dr Cotnam chief supervising coroner for Ontario view that under Coroners that every person who has res who on reased the Huge iidvcmcés In Rehabilitation MONTREAL CPlAiter two years the thalidomide crisis has taken on new perspective The tragedy of deformed chii dren remains but the resultant public outcry over the tranquil ti ising drug has stimulated scien tists to unprecedented progress in rehabilitation work Dr Gustave Gingras execu tive director of the Rehabilita tion institute ofMontreai and chairman of the Canadian Med icai Association committee on rehabilitation says the concen trated eilort of lighting the el lectsof thalidomide has helped untold millions of babies since the first thalidomide victim was detected in the summer of 1962 Because at thspublic outcry over the thalidomide crisis we trove made amazing advances in the field of moratorium he said in an We have made to years of progress in really little more than year it has been fantas We have had international meetings to exchange important ideee finances have been made available and the public interest has been aroused CAKES FOE VICTIMS nthe Rehabilitation Institute described as one of the most modern on the North American continent has been given re interview Well this was it says Nicho lasD Young manager of mam market garden near Napiervitie 20 miles south at Montreal its real life saver But in Saskatchewan persist ent ileum is tllng northern crops and concern in central areas Weekend rain helped some regions but in some other places the storm brought ball that destroyed groin Federal Agricultrne Minister llsys scheduled meeting to day with the Saskatchewan cab inet to discuss the drought and plans to aid lamers should the situation deteriorate further Provincial Agrictaihire Minister McDonald said altars weekend tour oi northern and centroi farms that the drought situation is the most serious in years in reversal of past patterns in which most of southern Sass iratdiewen has been afflicted by lirnbsDrGiagraa eat thalidomide babies has bones vDr Glngras an day on sevenday viitt in Bus till be making great aponsibility lor caring for all the thalidomide babies born in Quebec and the Maritime prov incoHtctal of as All were born without limbs or with deformed limbs because We have improved to swim wherewe can fit the youngest of these children with artificial dliid can be taught to eat with its nttncinnents at the age oiiourrnontbsl The director said the work on ilted couhticsa children with congenitai dclormities fihere are about 200 children born every year in Canada with deformities he said Gingrss end his associ rnosereflecttve artificial lime Janllndbur present equip meat toobuikyyl can visualize the day when wwwili bury tiny transmit inlexlsting muscle to control small motors in rti flciebilmbs 1apursuit of this program es other scientists plan leave Salli sia Where researchers are said advances in circuit iteid dxpusht crop prospects this ysar look good But there in cen tral oarees rain is needed and in the north any and pashrrage are critically short and grain in their mothers used the tranwll We plum but leer during pregnancy flslngere better in rematch log Alberta and Maniboba ex cept in districts boogie the Saskatchewan drought 31 Ruby Oswald Could Have Met DMJLAS AH14 03on and Jackltuby could have seen one another by accident be caueeol thalpirzyrdmityvot post office boxes rented the Dallas Times eraid saya Cihe bores ofeccueed presi dentist assassin Oswald and the manwho killed trirlawero in feet apart at theTerminal Annex postoliioe here says the news iEPtl However therei no evidence that they didmcct rOswaid accused of staying President John Kennedy Nov 12 rented hi boszov ltubyrrentedhia Nov Both are The Times Herald any pick up mail in their box Both paidrent through the quarterendlag Decnal means spons narratives WieniAPL viotnflBrown The readinessairbus was ceived the highpoweredtilia he allegedly used to fire the hula leis which iiitled the ipresideat and wounded Governorlohn Connaiiyvoi Texas That box rented underthe name of liidell was tit attics not the one at which Oswald rev DAYS for our exciting trimsashtray DELIVERED to Your poor as visa ens amuse Inrn Sr ELM nmwruo WATCH THIS APE WEDNESDAY ULY sm mamasa reels

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