at Circula the Examiner is member at The Canadian Press tCP and Audit Bureau tions ABC Oniy the Canadian Press may republish news stories in this newspaper credited to The Associated Press Reuters or Adence FrancePresse and local news stories published in The Examiner Published daily except Sunday and statutory holidays BUSINESS Marian Gouah accountant Dorothy Bowland ADVERTISING Len Sevickmanaaer NEWSROOM Sean Finlay managing editor Randy McDonald ciiy editor Sheila McGovern assistant city editor SALESMEN GallMcParland WEEKLY by carrier or lumena Weiusing material created Lyali Johnson Vikki Grant 90 cents gï¬3igï¬gy£g¢ 22 Newman Elwiiffiiiï¬pliiiï¬iiii 325 2222 M° YEARLY by me S4630 mbe Jais ister at Monday June 1978 serving barrie and simcoe county mum Km mm Men 5mm BY MAIL name Copyright registration nu 20 e9 Published by Canadian Newspapers Company llmllEd ï¬gggggjmmmowmph Leo Rena CIRCULATION $4680 wreaaladverltstno crimes as Queen st Toronto i0 CKI ld Si L4M 4T6 mam CLassiriao BiilHaikesmanaoer SIMCOE COUNTY OY fee ome Pm Ruth BiaIS supervisor W° 650 The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall not be liable tor itemm ermine out at 69 Freda shinner MOTOR THROW OFF errors In advertisements beyond the amount paid tor the space ectuoiir occupied by Bruce ROWIOnd pUblSher ggaï¬tggr Karen Atkinson gum3122 $39 year that portion of the advertisement In whicbhtene error Pewv Chane ELSEWHERE IN CANADA due to the negligence or its servants or rw so N°°M CIICULITION DVIIiSING ClAstlfllbs 353rixigpolls Dan Homewood yï¬tzeggggeiro no Year MJMCMM any advemwmem beyond ye mwm mid tor advertisement 7266537 72665 7266537 728 Bad driving habits nowsocial problem Traffic accidents claim the lives of 6000 Canadians annuaHy Many of those lives could have been saved Resear chers looking at fatal accidents say the majority could have been avoided The victims are average citizens who simply got careless This carelessness is the result of bad driving habits Its just as lethal as mixing booze with driving and its brought the destructive nature of the motor vehicle down to the level of critical social problem The motor vehicle in its short history has killed or maimed more people than any bomb or firearm made by man Making our highways as safe as possible is everyones concern It encompasses the fields of law education and public attitude Not until we make determined effort to improve mass driving habits will needless suffering and loss of life be prevented car Sir it was with dismay and surprise that read inc article concerning the North Collegiate Bands by John Bruce of The Exa miner wonder if Mr Bruce can remember back to his first year of reporting or is this his lilSll and know that he was strickly plus As both parent and much interest person in music was very proud of all the music that was performed that evening With good reason our Concert Band was ter rific coming from both talent and four hard years previous training The Repertoire Band and Junior Band played their very best also 71nd especially when one considers that thc lunior Band is composed of many students who began music in Seotcmber with no gletters to the editor Dismayed by report on school band preVious training would say they did very well indeed would think music critic should be capable of understanding compassion sense of humor and enjoyment of music applaud the teachers for their lighter moment of the evening which most of us appreciated The last thing our Junior Band needs is thumbs down attitude by Mr Bruce and would ask that the next time he is required to attend such an event to take along his humanities Some day his child might be in that same youp Sinceriy Mrs Wendy Beard Midhursl Would like cats to be tied up licar Sir lhopc soon that the City of Barrie will have bylaw that says all cat owners must keep their cats tied during the day on own pro perty and in the ousc at nights They sure can make mess of your gar bage gardens flower beds not to mention the smell and dead birds on your veranda and lawns Its not very nice to wake up to that in the morning They roam all night screaming and sleep half the day There are somc considerate cat iNIIPIS and the rest dont give darn It niild be trcat to be abic to sleep all night From the legislature By DEREK NELSON iuccns Iark Rurcau Thomson News Scrvicc TORONTO The Ontario Human Rights Commission OHRC has expressed sympa thy for Brampton Communist who was denicd riicmbcrship iii the Royal Canadian irgion Ono OHRC official was quoted as saying that present law prevents lht commission ttoing anything except pointing out the discriminatory nature of the legions action Thc legion constitution forbids membership write your mpp if you would like to write your Member of Parliament or Member of Provincial Parlia ment printed below are their mailing ad dresses ii you send us copy of your letter it might be suitable for our Letters to the Editor columns After all if there is matter of concern that makes you wont to write to your MP or MPP ii it is not personal matter it should be of interest to your triends and neighbors loo DEIAL Dr Iynerd MP North Simcoe Parliament Buildings Ottawa Ont Ian Mltte MP PeelDuHerinASimcoe Parliament Buildings Ottawa Ont ShelIr Stevens MP7 YorkSimcoe Parliament Buildings Ottawa Ont Gus thu MP7 rGreySimcoe Parliament Buildings Ottawa Ont PROVINCIAL George Taylor MPP Simcoe Centre Ontario Legislature Queens Park Toronto Gordon Smith MPPV SimcoeEast Ontario Legislature Queens Park Toronto George McCague MPP Dullorin Simcoe Queens Park Toronto once read in The Barrie Examiner that the dogs must be tied up and no noise by them after certain hour and that included all other dometic animals well cats are domestic animal It should be the same for cats as it is for dogs Tie them up There are some considerate cat owners that have them tied up Mayor Ross Archer told me the bylaw would not prove out But it is sure worth try and think lot of people in Barrie will agree with me taxpayer of Barrie No concern got the OHRC to Communists fascists anarchists or those who advocate overthrowing the government by force The OHRC spokesman found this upsetting In recent report entitled Life Together the OHRC urged that discrimination on the grounds of political belief be forbidden by aw But my reaction is to wonder if there is anything wrong with discriminating against someone who wishes to impose here political system best known by its murdered millions Whether the legion decides to let the man join or not is its business but it should be no concern of the OHRC The commissions job is to prevent discrimination against people on groundssuch as color or place of aiginthat the individual can do nothing about It is not to launch crusade on behalf of those who reel choose to worship Moscow or any other creedi Speaking of Communism nothing better illustrates the naivety of the New Democrats There are lot of exam les to choose fron but the latest is the reso ution introduce in the legislature MPPs Mac Makarchuk NDPaBrantfor and Mike Breaugh NDPOshawa opposing the neutron bomb Obviously its not matter that even remotely falls within provincial jurisdiction Equally obvious is that the two MPPs dont seem to realize that the campaign against neutron wca ns originated in Moscow and is orchestral from there thuavvanfl your opinion Something on your mind Send Letter to the Editor Please make ilpn original copy and sign it The Examiner doesnt publish unsigned let tars but if you wish pen name will be used include your telephone number and address as we have to verify letters Because of space limits public interest and good taste The Examiner sometimes has to edit condense or reject letters Letters to the Editor are run every day on the editorial page Send yours to letters to the Editor The leather Port Office lo 110 IAIIII 0M MM 416 Hy VINCENT rzom Business and Consumer Affairs Analyst Thomson News Service Even though Canadas unemployment rate remains high 86 per centwthat is slightly more than one out of every dozen people in the labor forcesome em loyers are having trouble finding skilled wor ers few economists in fact have been predicting fairly extensive labor shortages in Canada the mid19805 Tay or Kennedy as president of the Canadian Manufacturers Association is in better position than most to get feeling interpreting the news WELL WHATS lliE NEXl SlOP ONTllE 0i CAMPAIGN TRAIL about the job outlook across the country Im more hopeful about the mediuintcrm aspects for unemployment than am for in ation he says In the past we have relied on im migration to meet the demand for skillcd workers But now theres less inccntivc for lllOSt highly skilled European workers to come to Canada and our educational facilities have shown little interest in encouraging and training Canadian students for those crafts As result shortages are imminent and unless we see some speedy changes in various Cdrter is hitting hard at SovietCuban involvement By GARRY FAIRBAIRN WASHINGTON ICP In coordinated attack President Carter and senior aides have been hitting hard at Soviet and Cuban involvement with Katangan rebels who recently invaded Zaire Casting aside the conventions of diplomacy the White House has bluntly and publicly rejected Soviet and Cuban denials of complicity in the bloody invasion US spokesmen have made it clear their opposition will not stop at rhetoric that countermeasures in some form are on the way against growing SovietCuban in volvement in African troubles But there is more than global strategy SCOOPS Dli AiiP NIGHT HES DEGlPiilti oil tits iDVlsiiiti oii Tilt continue or sometime ELSE behind the increasingly hardline Whitc House attitude toward Africa President Carter and to some extent Democrat litical leaders in general face twopronge domestic olitical threat from the increasingly voca conscrvativcs come char es that the countrys leadership is not stan ing up to communism and from vir tually everywhere comcs the complaint that Carter is wishywashy indecisive president who cannot handle hardnosed con frontations Former president Gerald Ford in wclli publicized recent speech appcalcd for strong measures against the spreading Cuban and Soviet presence in Africa WEVE FINALLY REACHEP lilil Ml llLllAilWT iii cilil OillY SVARE MINUTES Some employers are unable to find enough skilled help training programs serious difficulties are likely to bc cncountcred in the years ahead INFLATIONS ROLE The key to restoring growth and creating employment portunities Kennedy believes is uction in the rate of in flationmbccause it adversely affects con sumption and investment patterns But another obstacle to economic progress he says is the intrusiveness of the govern ment sector He questions whether government policy makers understand the full extent of com promises such as that between environmental purity on the one hand and employment and inflation on the otheror between the 0b jectivc of having effective competition among Canadianbased companies and having an internationally competitive ginadianbased operation The latest figures show that manufacturing in Canada certainly hasnt been flourishing during this era of everexpanding govern ment influcncc over industry The index of manufacturing production compiled by Statistics Canada has risen only three per cent in the last four years19 per cent in the latest 12 months llAOTlt POLICY The Trudeau govemments industrial policy if in fact it has oneseems to combine Marx and Galbraith into kind of Orwellian big brother stance Its symbolized by such activities as the lat service where firstclass letter rates ve risen 250 per cent in 10 years while service has deteriorated imagine the outcry if gasoline prices had done the same and the nuclearreactor program where millions of dollars have been spent without proper ac counting to persuadc foreign governments to buv equipment that they are eager to have can be hard By DON OHEARN Queens Park Bureau Thomson News Service TORONTO Premier Leslie Frost retired in 1961 One day few months later going out the east entrance of Queens Park he was standing there annoyed He had been waiting for government car for 20 minutes Damn it he said Theyre quick to forget The incident was both bit shocking and bit sad And it was forceful reminder that few lights dim so quickly as that of the ex politician With this there can be an adjustment most hard to cope with In the present house there are couple of men going through this adjustment Neither Stephen Lewis nor Sidney Handelman have fully retired as yet But both are now private members Lewis from being leader of his New Democrat Party and Handelman from bein member of the government It is expect both will get out completely with the next election In the meantime they are more or less pass ing time And it can be distressing watching them Neither seems comfortable And both seem tobe itching bit TWO OUT In the period directly after Michael Cassidy was made leader Stephen played no part in the house This was undoubtedly intentional to stay in the background and not get in the way But recently the former leader has been coming to the fore bit Particularly at ques tion period he has been getting into the pro oeedings And it has not always been the happiest of sights He still has all his brilliance He can cut 31me and cleanly like nobody else in the se But his thrusts are not from leader in front of his troops but from the pack And you feel what waste Handélman it would seem doesnt like life in the chorus and you suspect perhaps good bit of boredom He has been making what could appear as grandstand pla In advance the Rene Levesque visit here he announced he would not go to the govem ment reception And then he made speech about which the press carefully was alerted disagreeing with the government He got some limelight But what about his dignity It didnt gain Proving once again the lesson that one of the hard arts of politics is saying farewell canadas story Cadillac on snowshoes By BOB BOWMAN One of the worlds most famous automobiles is the Cadillac which was named after colorful pioneer in Canadian history Cadillacs real name was Laument and he was given seigneury in Maine which was then part of Acadia after serving in the Frenc army While there he invented an elaborate genealogy for himself and changed his name to Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac Then he went back to France and married wealthy woman of society Cadillac was sent to Quebec to serve as one of Count Frontenacs officers and he helped Frontenac Ian attacks on New England Frontenac appointed him commandant of the important garrison at Michilimackinac where he made great deal of money in illicit furtrading There was one handicap Cadillac had to make trips to Montreal and Quebec sometimes walking on snowshoes How he would enjoy that trip in Cadillac today His next move was to persuade King Louis XIV to let him build fort at presentdo Detroit which is derivation of the Frenc word detroit meaning on the strait He called it Fort Pontchartrain Cadillac set out from Quebec June 1701 with 25 canoes carrying soldiers and work men He insisted on travelling via the Ottawa River instead of through Lakes Ontario and Eric and his men rebelled Cadillac was an expert swordsman and challenged them to fight They did not dare tackle him even as group and agreed to go on The reason Cadillac took the Ottawa River route became apparent later He wanted to pick up kegs of brandy he had hidden at Michilimackinac Fort Pontchartrain was great success Cadillac made more money there in the illicit fur trade and was romoted to governor of Louisiana job he id not want He was put in the Bastille for hindering immigration in Louisiana but was later made governor of town in Gascony OTHER JUNE EVENTS twoShip from France brought supplies to Champlain at Quebec I155Acadians at Grand Pre NS were told they would be deported tautBill Graham warned British of attack on Stoney Creek tanSteamship Frontenac was first launched on Great Lakes IsaMontreal and Quebec were in corporated as cities 1876Manitoba abolished Legislative Council