Thursday Sept 29 1977 NEWSROOM 7266537 CIRCULATION 7266539 the examiner serving barrie and simcoe county Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited 16 Boyfield Street Barrie Ontario LAM 4T6 Elio Agostinipublistier Whistle action long overdue You can always hear train comin in Barrie Boy can you hear it coming Usually when youre just nicely falling to sleep or have just connected on long distance phone call Aid Nelson Garrett Monday night got council to do something about Barries train whistle problem The city is going to consider installing signal for the level crossing at the foot of Mulcaster St reet If the city considers signal important enough and one is actually built then the city can pass bylaw say ing to train engineers no whistling in Barrie no matter how pretty she is The bad news is that it may take until film to get all this done But it is start and long overdue Thanks Mr Parry Not too many of us are really willing to help others Thats what makes Lawrence Parry unique He retired last week after being leader of the Third Barrie Cubs for 18 years You cant put value on 18 years of work with the young people of the community All you can do is say Thanks Mr Parry down memory lane Sept 1963 Heavy rain forced cancellation of livestock events and harness racing at the Barrie Fair Manager Malcolmson said at tendance would probably be the lowest since 1948 when the Fair moved to the Essa Road site Mr and Mrs Schmidt Pine Street Hanklinville were the 30000 and 3o001 visitors at the Bar rie Travel and Publicity Reception area They were greeted by Art Evans MIP Simeoe Centre and Barrie Mayor Les CookeBarrie Jaycee Doug Moorhouse was get ting ready for twoday conference in Barrie of District It Junior Chamber of Commerce members Ross Cowan Barrie lawyer was to be one of the guest speakers at the conference The first week of Barnes annual Lnited Appeal cam paign was coming to an end with the news that the Canadian National Institute for the Blind was to send 14 blind people to first aid course held by the Barrie St John Am bulance Training aids such as replica of the human heart were to be loaned to instructors for the course by the HCAMCS of Camp Borden Joe Jewell chairman of the commercial division of the lnit ed Appeal spoke at meeting of the division at the Bayview Terrace Water fluoridation university for Barrie and clean Kempenfelt Bay were discussed at general meeting of the Barrie Chamber of Com Your business If VINCENT EGAN Business and Consumer fairs italyst lliomson News Service Tariff policyprotection for Canadian in dustry is the most persistently longpaying debate in the economic history of this couii try from the pre Confederation Reciprocity lreaiy through Sir Iohii MacIXinalds llini national policy and the treevtrade elections of Itltil and fill no truck nor trade with the Yanktssfl right up until today the con troversy has gone on The appeal of protectionism is especially strong at time like the present when unem ploynient stands officially at 82 per cent of the labor force Keep out imports so the argument goes manufacture the products in aniidii instead and there will be more Jobs and fewer iuieniployed In certain specific cases that may be true llul on national scale the evidence and ex perience of past years often tends to showlthe contrary that excessive protectionism leads to economic slowdown and lower domestic livuig standards SLIDING BACK Looking at trade flows on an international scale European Community VicePresident Wilhelm llafcrkamp recent ly reported The world is nearer sliding back into the bible thought And as ye would that men should do to you do ye also to them likewise Here is the beginning of the new world yoti have always wanted to create mercc committee was formed to study fluoridation Mayor Les ooke reported that city council was holding informal discussions about university with the department of education after hearing talk by John Iiffin who was spear heading the drive for university Mayor ooke indicated second sewage plant would be built as soon as possible to keep Kempenfelf Hay clean Iwcntysix Simcoe ounty residents were sworn in as ana dian citizens pot luck supper opened the fall season of the lnited Church Women of ollicr Street nited hurch Mrs It Stephens reported at the meeting that plans were being made for the lW an nual bazaar in November Advcr tisemcnts in The Examiner included one for the littiil Studebakers which featured disc brakes ladies vanity and power shift transmission The Studebakers were to go on sale flct 12 at Jackson Motors Ltd lar7an toes To liidia was playing at the Roxy The Barrie Firestone Stori was selling two wliitewall tires for $2793 Woolworths had anti freeze on sale for $237 gallon the Barrie District Collegiate Board was advising of registration for evening classes carton of cigarettes was $299 sirloin steak round steak and rump roast was be mg sold for To cents pound at Dominion Tariff policy long debate protectionism of the limits than at any time lor the last ï¬lo yeiira tiiiiiipliiiiiltiit is high and is likely to continue hiin ivcll into the 1980s Industries in crisis on both sides of the Atlantic are pressing governments to restrain imports and the protectionism that stifled trade and kept millions on the dole to years ago is now being presented in it new guise with seductive modern rational sounding slogans tut these problems can be dealt Wltll without recourse to doctrines that under dil ferent but plausible names would return us to the chaos of restrictions and beggarmy neighbor policies that characterizwl lllt lfifltls That is why the commission believes that these problems can best be tackled by the oneworld trading system that has served us well for for the last Jutyears lhe HOIIOIIIISIS at First National City flank of New York in recent surVey of inter national trade concluded that the current wave of protufionism reflects the more general trend of the 19715 toward government intervention in lrecmurkets But they caution theres no such thing as unilateral protection The country thats ex cluded from anothcrs markets can and will retaliate with measures of ifs own licsules playing the restraintof trade game merely redistributes cianoyiiiint within the economy with no net gain in jobs to the not ion as whole In smaller country that resorts to policy of high protectionism the tariff raises the do iiiestic price of the Iltlptilf by the full amount of the tariff reducing the total consumption of that iiiipoit NEWSROOM Sean Finlay managntu dtiOT Randy McDonaldCity editor SALESMEN Sheila McGovern assrstattt ity etfitni Dan Gdynu Bill Curran county editor Lynlt Johnson Werner Bergen sports editor Barb 80mm Bill McFarlane wire editor Hope Dempsey lifestyle Marina Quattror chi photographer REPOR ERS Joiiii Bruce Paul ilean Richard Dunstan Pat Gueruis John Zarecky Janet Guthrie CLASSIFIED Lesley Youitu Iltld Stiiniiei ADVERTISING CLASSIFIEDS BUSINESS i61 533213 21231 7266537 7282414 7266537 ADVER Tl SING Len Sevirk manmier Dana Graham tentti lltitis illllfl yisoi BUSINESS Marian Gouuh acrountant Betty Armor Dorothy Bowtand Gnu Mr Parland Vikki Grant CIRCULATION Jon Butler manager Linda Hatkesasst manager Andy Hauqhton Judy Hickey Alva LaPlante Elaine Porter Gary Priniilc Published daily except statutory holidays WEEKLY by carrier YEARLY by carrier BY MAIL Barrie SIMCOE COUNTY MOTOR IHROWOFF ELSEWHERE IN CANADA Sundayond CP The Associated Press published in The Examiner 90 cents $4680 $4680 $3650 $39 year $3850 year Whats talent and quality got to do with it lts Canadian Parliament hill lh SllI ltl lacllIUII Uttawa lilireatt Thomson ews Servici Prime Minister lriidcau has always been vcrjv gracious inward lll followers and for mii followers tlt lllf pit ked holes in his policies and performances liven when tllltlltl ministers liivc iiuu lll cascade of criticism the prune minister has never rcur iiid the favor instead he lll always made pout it praising that Mlsolrs contribution to tilllllltl iiid wishing him well in the future SiIl criticism healthy phase of liberalism he once told policy ciiiivcnlioii lltlt We should not be about of it In tut he seemed to lxciicoiirugliig it But despite all outward appearances would love to know wliiit the prime niiiiiter rcal tlnnle of llal llcrberts coninieiit ii he sits alone at night wading through that littlrpngt ltlttl llf recentl ltiilii tlit itlli spoken Liberal ll Mr llcilicit litllixll born construction executive who fllllS ltI lead all self criticism therapy fSSIIill within the Liberal patty ccitiiiil tlllll pull iii punchestlusiiini It was one thing for tonsctvufivc Inidcr What happened today ow By JOHN llltllltft Ionign ffain naly st Thomson News Semico IIcouoinic nationalism is dead in ttttawa The lrudeau govenuncnt wliicli incouragul ll ill the start of its nearly to years in power has reiuvenated the historically close anadalnitcd States economic ties which neither lestcr learsoii or Innis St Laurent really wished to interrupt lwicc llllS year Prime Minister Trudeau has been to Washington to direct the eitd of the trend by assuring lresidcnt llinmy tar tcr of tunadiaii continental support in ltllllxllV and to prepare for the Alcan pipeline signing agreement in September He has been aided and assisted by IIxfernal Affairs Minister on littllltStllI who in his totally informal way talks publicly about anadii being on good terms With the big hoppers flllftll whom the lluring his brief soiourii as llIIlIIiltl of III dustry trade and ioiiiiiiercc iii Ittti iti Mr liiinicson Illiltlf if vii citii the thrust would be back to encouraging the American market and less so the new not opening up say In the Third World So wliattVer has happened to the famous lrudeau third option which me also sup posed to be an expresaon of mu economic nationalisiii liltl2l3ll You may remember the pi iiiii tlllIItiltl of tered thieetrade options during the IllL elec tioli campaign to maintain lllt utiitiis quo in LS anada trade increase out reliance on it or diversify more into Europe the lar Host and the Third World Irudeau gave orders we were to go for the third opt ion and to reduce our strong reliance on the US market That was brief five years ago llave policies changed so much or is ll the titties More likely the lat ter anadii cont inUes in deep trough of high unemployment and almost in growth no time to practice the control measures proposed by Walter Gordon in the ltltifts and line Kierans in the 1970s We need the foreign investment as much of it as will come given the bad impressions in the II about Canadas economic per formancc in recent years In addition the Foreign InVcstnieiif to third option ltcview Agency lllil set up in the early tEthrs to control foreign takeovers itlll llll anival of new foreign firms will become more of weak sister than it has been sin it was formed Jack llorncr the new industry trade and commerce minister is western free tll ferpriscr opposed to economic nationalism of the eastern tanadian acaileiiiic varier iid IlllA comes under his departments jui isdic tioii lithll the Very few foreign lllllh if has prevented from doing business iii Canada or the equally few number of mergers it has prohibited the lll offices llllgllf lust itS well close up and disappear And now there is another man in the scenario of restoring those close anada economic ties ot the fios and ties He is American aiiilxissadoi llionias IInders who told prestigious conference that Canada and the can work more closely togetlici and thereby mutually increase their prosperin Among his key proposals made to tiiii tcreiicc Board of anada meeting in lttlttllflt Sept 22 was new set of institutions but an iitttnisified process whereby we list iiifor iiial contacts often at less than ministerial level Walter iordon and cohorts where are you we want your Opinion Something on your mind Send us letter to the editor llcaw iiiilic it an original copy illttl sign it Wt tlltltl publish unsigned letters although pii name will be used upon request lllt Indi IIll address and telephone number Iiiinn haveto verify letters but we wont piiiit iilll iildicss should you prefer Weve found that short letters are the best ieid ltcciiie of space llllltlitlltltlS public IIlllltl iiid gmit taste we sometimes have to edit ciiiiitmiw or reect letters Letters to the ulifii inii Wednesdays and Saturdays Scnd ttllt to lAttciu to the edlloi llic liiiiinei ttot iii llariic ttnt MM llt ls Herberts Liberalism what Trudeau has in mind loi tlaik and lltllititlilllt leader lItl itimdl cal to cicalc critic ttlllilliflll iliou tllt llill tllltl litltlit wini tlltl op lIIlilfi pukeinch do ungiuhg cfsr lrl lllf elitiitLHl it iiicie innit5 ioiiipiiicd Alli the Hi rlici tlth lx KliSlt lilIl llic iicii fl ll who icpziseifs Ylw ik per loiiiul tillilf of atidriuil lot 11ch ti iii lllllil uiil tltt iii if liml inst pii wtli iiiin iiitipioiii ud lllvl llltl sir ltft tlti why lltlit ltlt of star lil Soviicliwi 3w tits is who Trude if when he iikui tll121 sci cii civi phase at iilnizisi wi ii foil wiiche iii iltllilt si Iii llt llt clll Ill ll ll4illt lli ll lit llilllll litiillilstii it iiiii llc Irtt vi tc wirtueio iie lbdllltliilSlitl lijviic iross not you ir diiiaty lili il Smith of lii1ttllttllltt ciuic to this ttlllliitll ll tl will It lit at iioiincid that l1ltttl were beginning iiiiculioi itic ltttltl lllttf udcau lt iikay tortinsitsscii1ciliy at their lttIlIZ in 21M cizils to lllthlt llltlll itli ciiiiiiiziii piiipir or flu its no He fol Intends llcibci learned liis when sonic of his coiliaiucx tricd to civil butt off over lllgt tilthllt comments iliut plans to move he veterans lltitll ifcpiliiicl lot but hutchAn from Hlfawa it not litllllllilltlt to criticic deccntruliatiti particular when it bliiiiiiit ciiipliiyiiient to slow growth regions Ill tticcounliji Fashionable of not lltllitli told lrlldcau that the lItl tins at iiis stupid It Just diwsiitliiukcui tltt And while he on llll snbicct he added the observation that lllllllltlldl stupiilifics iretixifreiiniiit That as it turns out ii there warm up He now cpliliis llt was keeping ltltll Iltlll lii lllt illltlf ts ill national llliil lttlt tliituiicliadioiiii toutcal lll Itttttlli lllt tilllltt flillllsltl tll till ll ucfiiii lllt weal iliinif xiiicc tlic tttiltts lti lll that cttoii liid been made to find strong llltllltlllllllv loi lllt many ible iiiiiiiutii who ll lt iiuit lllt cabinet And on that crucial lilll tl national llIlIl he said JHUINI liiiii iipliiiiic llttlllhltl have been so iiinct to iiilci iliiiiiut lillll support for the liiti thirtwciii language ptilltltv llltlliuftiiiii1uttill llc llIl or to Iliit iiicn lluiiiul llll itiil tiizlo Illltil ltl lltllll twitter lllll llt lii liid iicitlici lllt llillt iiiu llic inclination to pii tllltltl on ltlIlll iit flicilt Illlllllllltl unit It tlltttlllltHlt ltl ttliliii llt iillilllfltl lllt giiiei inticiit liltl iiliiu llllllltlt lttltl tlic iii ti llllt ioiittiillii be blasted the lltlltllllltlllliltl of the Iiiliiigualistii ptogtinu lic loic punt st ed lllt oil It iiiiiml thtlluttill tlltl Illtl ltt titn Itntlftd out that Iliioiiigli in cnuiiiiili lltt lttlttfll pmiiitutiitif ltltl lttlticil liltlttii stpttttlllSl pitiptiiiiili ltetliiitt Iltt oi itit llot ll light on it within lilll Il tlii point Ill history lrudeau iiiiiiiit wont to iiznoic IIiigtish speaking int lttlltl Iltltlitt iid lleibeifs voice is lltlllltl lt iitlin flllltll pi ttt lfl nevi lttll ItlIt national polity iunvcufiott At llltll lllllt will ltltll wbcflici this particular pti it itwi iitii all that healthy the Examiner is mamber of The Canadian Press CF and Audlt Bureau of Circulation ABC Only the Canadian Press may rapublish news stories in this newspaper credited to Reuters or Agonce FrancoProsse and local now stories The Barrie Examiner claims copyright on all original news and advertising material created by its employees and published in this newspaper Copyright registration number 2036I5 register Notional advertising offices 65 Queen St Toronto B64I7IO 640 Cuthcart St Montreal The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall not be liable for rors in advertisements beyond the amountpaid for the tion of the adventmment in which the error occurred negligence of its servants or otherwise and there shall any advertisement beyond the amount paid for such advertisement damages arising out of or poca actually occupied by that por whothar such error to due to the be no liability for nonInsertion of Queen park Deputy not new By DON HEARN Queens Park Bureau Thomson News Service TORONTO One of the changes in the recent Ontario cabinet shuffle which didnt get very much notice was the naming of Culture and Recreation Minister Robert Welch as deputy premier This in effect makes Welch the second man in the government Just what the scope of the office will be has yet to be seen It is not an entirely new post There was deputy premier at least once before Leslie Frost named George Doueett deputy when he took over in 1949 However this was largely thank you for Doucetts support at the leadership con vention It was the major factor in Frosts winning And after establishing it he never paid much attention to the office of deputy Frost ran his own show Completely And the deputy was figurehead in so far as the first ministership was concerned GAVE STATLRE With Welch the position should be different There have been many guesses as to why the premier appointed him probable true speculation however is that he did it to give recognition and stature to this hardworking veteran minister Welch has been in the cabinet since 1966 the is senior to everyone except Davis himself and Jim Auld both of whom date from 1962 and has tended to be the joeboy of the government He has twice been house leader The only time he has had high profile job was during litmonth term as minister of education in WT ilVfll more st at Lire be well could be one of the most appealing candidates to succeed llills when the premier decides to retire rand from all indications this is far in the fu ture For one thing when he is properly fired up he can give probably the best political speech of an one in the government So the appointment well could have been calculath move by the premier to give loyal supporter an earned leg up ABINICI MATERIAL Of the half dozen parliamentary assistan tships in the shuffle two were of particular interest These were the naming of George Ashe of Dmham West to treasury and Reuben Baetz of Ottawa West to the attorneygeneral These were unusual in that both men came into the house only in the last election and their quick appointments could augur tha both are considered prime catizzte riaeriaL Parliamentary aSszsfaristh greatly in important ie Ashe is taking imr lt1 op of their all For the as much oi he tac No booze ol lowed Ih HUB BU In ivln during hc IV World War tiiida imposed pri igiin the sale of liquor so grain iicit i1 would be entirely mailable for war produt riot The entire country was dry ecep for Qtiebec This prohibition mntiiiucd into hc lttltlS and was gradually replaced by the present system of government control of sales There was also prohibition in the United States where it cont iiiiicd lull it late 1933 However there was strong effort to have prohibition in finadi as early as ltllltl in Sept 30 ilnitlltll were asked to vote on the illltSlllIl Are you in hint of the passing of iii licf prohibiting the iniixirtation iuaiillfat hire or sale of spllllS wine ale beer cider and all otlici ilcoliolic llflllttlS for use as beverages The vote was in favor of prohibition by LtitlJttll to Lttttlt0 Only the people of Quebec were opposed The breakdown by provinces was IllfHleII FUR AGAINST int ario lvlillllllr Al Qlltbtc ilelfltil327tifl Nova Scotiii it ili0 New lliiinswick iltittltttl5lï¬ Manitoba liglltllLtliit Iliitisli oluinbia It illilfilifi it lfil llill ltttlltilits filtl1ll2gtl ZETNIth3tilfiftll Alberta aiitl Saskatcliewin were not provin ics in those days and their votes were my chided iii the Icrritories Even though the majorin was in favor of prohibition flte federal government did not put it into effect It said that the majority was too small to be conclusive liiirtlici more the people of Saint loliii It had voted twice first as rate payers of the city aitd then as residentsot Saint Ioltii County UIIlldt SIIII Ltt II2NIS liltttt iiptaiii Ziiclicriiih titliani sailed NolNltlt into James llay on trip that led to the cieation of Hudsons Itay Company I7ttl Lieutenant lirencli began survey of the llideau ltiver titttl apfain Meares built the ship Nortlt West America at Nootka Vancouier Island