THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, November 10, 1965 18 Lowest Illegitimacy Rate In Canada Ontario-Held TORONTO (CP)--A_ welfare department survey of unmar- tied mothers in Ontario Montreal Le Pearson has pi muffed his last only thing we can hope for. is 8 iwi that the parties will realize the folly of such conduct and de- termine to do their utmost to legislate in an atmosphere of sanity until such time as a future election will produce a majority government. . . . and in the case of Prince Ae tke tieaee| NEWS IN BRIEF wounded feeling over 'he) PaTTENCE WINS THROUGH Herald (Ind.): Twojgroup of ama m ns months of strenuous effort and| formed this Durham town's first millions of dollars wasted. That|orchestra but had to wait 20 sums up the 1965 federal elec-|years and go through 1,000 re- tion; ii was an election that/besrsels before the first public was not needed and one which'Performance. N.ow~ officially should never have been called,|recognized as the Stanley Civic is smart, Mr. Pearson will un-|Absolutely nothing was accom-|Symphony Orchestra, the dersiand that he must, in the 's first concert is to be light cf Monday's results, begin| yesterday 'by this be: to prepare for his departure. > as a personal political defeat for Medicine Hat News: The peo-|Prime Minister Pearson, ple just don't want Mr. Lester/though not one to topple him B, Pearson at the head of alor his government. majority government. Sad, but true. Let's face it. It's equally obvious that the people don't want Mr, John George Diefen- baker at the head of any sort of guvernment--despite a gain here and there. Canada's Editorial Writers 'Take A Look At Election: t =n m-- tant 66 tat than, mae rt 'By THE CANADIAN PRESS Mis Segia Witting tcm sz, Toronto Star (Ind. Lib.): whether led by John Diefen- Canadian people have shown|aker or 'they neither want John Diefen- pete Pearson.| Sudbury Star: . . .We have ag Fo ay a aan thatjcome full circle, the house of resulted from eneral elec-}minorities is still a house of mi- ions of 1962, 198 and again|norities. Nothing has been re- fread can only mean that re- solved. It could be said the Lib- 'placements must be found for lost the election because leaders before their part-|they will return even weakerjhas achieved little if anything jes can hope to win a majority|than before, but it cannot be). . . it is not the voter who ;.. .They must now open th said that any of the other par-jhas failed. Rather it is the way to new men--young, cap-|ties won. Perhaps the truth is|government which, faced with able, imaginative' -- who canjthat Canada lost the election,ja minority but not untenable earn the respect and support/for our nation still has no firm|situation, failed to govern in that Canadians are prepared to|hand at the helm. But this need the manner it was capable of, offer. not be so. Other minority gov- ernments in other lands have ' Toronto Telegram: Prime/faced and overcome more ser- Minister Pearson . . . wanted ajious crises than now present clear majority in the House of|themselves to Canada. Commons to support his gov- ernment and a wider represen- tation to support his claim that 'the Liberal party was truly na- 'tional, He failed to achieve ei- was neither smashed or lightly. beaten. In one way, it was worse: He was told, for the fourth consecutive lime, iat fe is fot able io claim the adherence of a ma- jority of the voting body. If he ti eae Ths lection tas served only to increase political instability and confusion for an indefinite period, so that. sooner or later a new appeal will have to be made to the people. Belleville Ontario Intelligen- cer: From the point of view of jnational interest, this election Fae iu Timmins Press: After two months of campaigning and multi-million-dollar election all we have to show for it is a small group of new faces in the House of Commons. That the election was a waste of time and money has been proved by the result. The elected mem- bers must now get down to the task of passing legislation for the good of the people. "HOME COMES OFF LIST : A brief presented to the legis- walt teeter so eee on you elfare Min- ister Louis Cecile said rates of 'out-of-wedlock birth rose only slightly for all Canada between 1948 and 1961, and Ontario showed an increase of only four- tenths of one per cent, the low- est of all provinces. The survey extended from 1943 to 1961, : (A welfare department offi-| "We hope to obtain data on ca} git beter that _ the mobility of Ontario's popu- atio rates were estilation, on the ° in Canada, accounting for 5.2 term: rar, oo per cent of all live births.) ae ora ad eee he as a yd il be ore form group unmarried mothers in Ontario,|Sentative ists, the town council here put} up signs to mark places of in- mg ly the cottage ) + century poet William Blake. However the present oc- cupant of the cottage was not told and the streams of un- invited. guests brought strong complaints. The | council now has agreed that, as Blake would have said, a person deserves privacy, and the sign is being removed. SECRETS EXPOSED LUTON, England (CP) ~-- A senior customs official lectured to the local Rotary Club on the Cornerbrook Western Star: It may be the time is ripe for the merger of the Liberals and the New Democrats--not a brand- new idea. Before the dust had settled Monday night, there was talk of coalition. Moncton Times and Tran- script: The result of the voting is a personal defeat for Prime Minister Pearson. He asked the people for a mandate in the form of a working majority. By giving him what now appears a smaller majority than before, Kingston Whig - Standard: Since the Liberal party made the need for majority govern- ment its basic issue in the elec- tion there will be a great deal of soul searching as to what went wrong. One thing that obviously went wrong was the decision to call this election in the first place. Sains John Times-Globe: The commonest conjecture is that Liberal setbacks in Nova Scotia az2 Prince Edward Island were not related--that in the case of Nova Scotia it was due to in- tensive personal campaigning by Premier Robert L. Stanfield in the final stages of the cam- Woodstock Sentinal Review: This is the third time a mindr- ity government has been elected in little more than three years. In each case two pres- ent party leaders were at the helm. We are still apparently | without a Moses and the need} Winnipeg Free Press (Ind. for one is greater than ever. |Lib.): As he faces the task of Montreal Star: An unde- served humiliation for Mr. Pearson. There is no other ver- dict. The humiliation was unde- served because the record, ta- ther. He put his case to the nation. Its verdict was: Not Proven... . ' Hamilton Spectator: The Lib- '+ fals will form the next govern- ment but they lost the election. 'Lester B. Pearson won the greatest number of seats; John .G. Diefenbaker won at least 'part of the moral vindication vhe souht. The splinter groups 'won continued existence. The pessimists would say that Can- ada itself was the real loser; but we think the country is big- ger than that. Kitchener - Waterloo Record: Prime Minister Pearson and "those advisers who urged him 'to call the election have re- 'ceived a massive snub from the 'electors. The first thing the newly elected Parliament must do is determine to get ahead with the business of governing the nation. Peterborough Examiner: The Liberal party's gamble on a majority government in_ this election campaign has failed and there will be many who feel that they have deserved 'what they got--an approximate -return to the status quo. The "result is a heavier indictment of them than anyone else, for their hopes were higher. . . thus, the electorate, faced with an unpleasant. choice between unsatisfactory alternatives, re- fused to make a decision. Welland Tribune? Much of 'the continued strength shown 'by the Liberals in Monday's federal election remains in re- gions where it could do them the most good when redistribu- tion finally comes. But it faces} a new challenge in the mount- ing muscles shown in_ those ;same regions by the New Dem- socrats. At the same time the Conservatives have solidly es- tablished that this is no time -|a calamity in a period of in ken as a whole, was good. Out of all this one fact surely be- comes clear. Redistribution now is the first priority of gov-| ernment. The House of Com-) mons' which will sit as a re- sult of this election is based on a census taken in 1951. The only way to break the electoral lo' jam, as far as we can see, i to delay another election unti redistribution is completed. Montreal La Presse: The election nobody wanted has de-| cided nothing, settled nothing. Apart from a few details we are exactly where we were Sept. 8 at the dissolution of the 26th Parliament. An aimless election campaign which never, dared touch on the real prob- lems ended in a sadly negative| result. Was it necessary to) throw the whole country into a) turmoil for this? | Quebec City L'Action:. . . | Monday's vote simply illus-| trates the need for a quick and) clean return to the two-party system in a country like Can- ada. The marginal strength of} other parties is the exception) that proves the rule: It is the) luxury one can offer oneself in the face of an excessively strong government. But this is} " stability or of crisis, ... | Quebee Chronicle-Telegraph: | |. . . . Mr. Pearson would be} decidedly foolish to think of an-| other election now. The coun-| try's clear answer to his call| for a majority government must serve as a warning that one cannot fool the people all the time. ... Quebec City Le Soleil: . . . The immediate result of the election is unfortunate, for if there ever was a period of our history when we need political Stability it's certainly right iieiaiiaian Tremendou NESB Due To The s Response ITT' _ ANNEX Entrance § CELINA STREET eeress from Loblew's and Marks Theatre North Bay Nugget: If the last Parliament is any criterion, the minority form' of government will again see all parties at each others throats. . . . The FORMER IMMIGRATION MINISTER Richard Bell is elated over his. victory for the Conservatives in Carle- ton riding as he regained the seat he lost to Liberal Lloyd Francis in 1963. The 1963 Liberal pin was the only time the seat has not been won by the Conserva- tives since Confederation. once more forming a minority government Mr. Pearson is confronted by some hard and unpleasant truths. One of these \truths is that, despite repeated \warnings and dange r signals dating from the government's first budget, he- has failed to jact decisively when everything) but his personal loyalty to friends has argued that he should. A- second is that he has left far too much power and jcontrol in the hands of a small group of elected and non-| jelected officials whose views are at variance with those of the majority of the Liberal' party and the nation as a whole . a third hard truth, the jmost painful of all, is that Mr. {Pearson must re-examine his own position as leader of the government and try to decide whether in the not too distant future he should pass the Imantle on to younger and jstronger hands. | Halifax Mail-Star: There has) jbeen general belief--and early ipublie opinion polls indicated jthat it was well founded--that \Mr. Pearson would get working majority he so ear- nestly desired. But the public was of another opinion when it went to the polls. Much as they might deplore a multi - party /Parliament, it was made clear they were not prepared to put their complete trust in Mr. the} 4d LIBERAL JAMES mc- Nulty was confined to bed at @ St. Catharines, Ont., hospital with pneumonia for the last nine days of the election campaign but his didn't stop him from being re-elected in Lincoln in Monday's election. His wife, Helen, took over the cam- paign trail on top of look- ing after her five children. Joe Reid the Progressive Conservative candidate con- gratulates McNulty in hospi- tal. McNulty retained the Pearson's party... . seat by 6,000 votes. (CP) the people have produced what is tantamount to a vote of non- confidence. OFFICIALS SHUN COLOR HOLTON, England (CP) -- Newly-built houses in this Lei- stershire town, some of them already occupied, may be de- mnolished because they are the wrong color, The town council ordered red bricks to be used, to match the neighborhood, but the construction company used jthe only ones it had--yellow| lpricks. Now the council has to jdecide what to do with the 19 houses. CAST GETS TOO MANY BROMLEY, England (CP) -- The repertory theatre in this /Kentish town bought six rats in a cage for use in a play. By ithe end of the run, the number lhad increased to 24. It took all ithe efforts of the stage man- jager to preserve them from |Tilly, the New Theatre cat. FALSE TEETH | - 'i | Don't Neglect Slipping | | | | Do false teeth gH slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze Don't be annoyed and emba: OF, such Hraserene 49 FASTEETH, an kaline (non~acid) powder rly a kle on your plates, keeps false | more firmly set. Gives confident feel- | ing of security and added comfort. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feel- ing. Get FASTEETH today at drug counters everywhere. ' JR. BOYS' BOXER SET Various patterned Knit Polo Shirts with long sleeves and lin- ed drill boxer pants with zipper fly front opening and 2 pistol pock- ets. Navy, charcoal and Browns colors in sizes 3 to Compereble Value 2.57 NOVEMBER 1 88 . SPECIAL TRIPLE - Extra. Durable Heavy Gauge Steel pan size 10%" diam, and 2" deep. This fry pan is de- signed for even heat distri- bution and wey cleaning. le Value 77¢ CLAD FRY PAN MC ligious groups five best ways of smuggling tion,"" he said. our nation," dutiable goods through the-cus- toms. However David Sinclair, chief officer at an airport, ad- vised his hearers not to try the tricks because his staff knows them all. DISDAIN PLAIN PROOF LONDON (CP)--A man threw an ashtray through the wind- shield of a £2,000 sports car at} London's recent Motor Show to) prove his complaint that the manufacturer does not make the glass strong enough. The firm said it had no plans fo im- prove the glass because flying ashtrays are rarely encount- ered by its vehicles. | The percentage of unmarried mothers under 20 increased from 29.7 in 1943 to 57.9 in 1961. RATES DECLINE However, the rates of all other age groups have declined as part of a general trend across| -- North America, the survey re-|= vealed, Mr. Cecile said 4,493 unmar- Dr. Scholl's Zino- icholl's pads pressure on sensitive spot, soothe and NEED A NEW ACE? Ne Bown Nine ARs Payment December--Cal PERRY Dey or Night . . . 723-3443 D! Scholls Zino pads GO Comparabi jus NOVEMBER SPECIAL WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC THURS., FRI. i LADIES' BLOUSES Attractive styled Terylene Blouses with 3%. length sleeves in sizes 10 te 20. 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