Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 7 Oct 1961, p. 24

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

PAGE TWO With this special 100-tablet nackage of ASPIRIN at the regular price An attractive tortoise-shell plastic pillbox with a beautiful stamped gold design! There are three reasons why vou can always put your confidence in ASPIRIN for truly fast pain relief. First, speed. Thanks to instant flaking action, ASPIRIN is ready to go to work instantly. Second. purity. Over ninety quality inspections go into every ASPIRIN tablet you buy. Third. reliability. ASPIRIN is a name that has been known, trusted and preferred by over 3 genera- D tions of Canadians. It has brought fast relief to mil- lions more people than any other pain reliever. Get ASPIRIN for Fast Relief from » HEADACHES * MUSCULAR ACHES * SORE THROAT * PAINS AND FEVER OF COLDS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SPECIAL FREE OFFER TODAY! Aspirin is the registered trade mark of the Bayer Company, Lid., Aurora, Ontario. ONTARIO TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 Premier Frost (above) and his 1949 cabinet (below ). AN the machine be beaten? The Ontario Progressive-Conservatives are holding a leadership convention Oct. 23 -- 25. Twelve years ago, in April 1949, they held their last leadership contest. There are some parallels between the two conventions and many differences. But one thing you can be certain of. In the end it will be a case of "the machine" against the rest. Political parties, of course, always try to present an unruffled front to the public. But behind the smooth surface there is almost continually a back-ground of dissent. It 'is always there, though sometimes only smoldering. At conven- tions it naturally is at its peak. Despite what political psalm-singers say, there is "rigging" in politics, and there are "machines", headed by men who often have nearly as much power-- if not more--than the elected politicians. And you usually find that a political con- vention boils down to the free-spirits in a party being out to try and defeat the entrenched leaders of the machine. T the 1949 convention the late Leslie Blackwell was the free spirit -- the maverick. Mr. Blackwell, it will be recalled, was a courageous, fighting Attorney-General who was generally regarded as the number two man in the Drew government. In the election of June 1948 this =ov- ernment was returned but Mr. Drew personally was defeated in Toronto High- Park. A few weeks later there was a strong rumor that plans were. afoot to move Mr. Drew to Ottawa to replace the then national P.C. leader John Bracken. At that time --in July -- Mr. Black- well announced that he would be leaving the cabinet because of "pressure of personal demands', but said he would stay on until Mr. Drew was ready to replace him, 3

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