attic Examiner Publlsned by Canadian Newspapers Limited 18 Hayfield street Barrio ontario TUBDAYAiAUGUlT 15 Fllfl Vision May Be Blurred About The Pharmacists m4hewuemmnuoversyregardinglaߣbumacistsLAsmdauon inNiagarn high prices of drugs there has beena tendency to make sort of whip ing boy of the practising pharmacist hat this is not quite fair has been pointed out by the Sudbury Star which in re cent editorial said The high prices ofdrugs to the urchaser from the retail pharmacist has been headline news in the past year or so on both sides of the CanadaUS border Inquiries investigations and committee studies have been launched in an effort to find out whether it is fact or fiction that public health has become the tool of profiteers The line of inquiry has thus far been turned in the direction of drug manfacturers rather than harmacists and it is wise to keep the pic ure in per ective The skill and knowledge of the graduate barmacist cannot be measured in do ars Nor can dollar value be placed on the alleviation of human misery or the treatment and cure of illness through the use of drugs An interesting point was raised at the annual meeting of the Ontario Re Concessions Out Municipal tax concessions as an in ducement to industry are going rapidly out of fashion for sound reasons according to booklet published Jointly today by the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities and the Inst itute of Public Affairs of Dalhousie University Such concessions went out of favor long time ago eTherauthor Stewart Fyfe political scientist of Queens University con cludes from Canadian experience that tax concessions are minor if not negligible factor in influencln indust rial executives who know their usiness More important is the ability of the mun icipality to provide and administer mun cipal services and tax concessmns may limit that ability Related to this is the productivityotlabor which in turn de Falls The delegates pointed out the possible dan ers that could arise in the purchase of ru from discount or mail order dis ares Among these are the misin erpretation of forged prescriptions lack know edge of age or condition of the person for whom the drugs are ordered and easy access to controlled drugsby addicts or peddiers There are occasions when barmacist finds it necessary to check th the prescribing hyslciari for ver ification of the ingre cuts or clarifica tion of ambiguous direction The main concern of the pharm acist is not how much money he can make from the sale of drugs Careful and accurate preparation of prescrip tion and protect on of the person for whom the drugs are prescribed are his first considerations In the volume of words that have been published the past year on dru prices the public vision may be blurre in recognizmg the true value of pharm acist in the community They have earn ed pubiic respect and confidence Of Favor pends on good schools good housing and good recreational facilities Far sighted industries and farsighted munico alities can together bring these con itions into existence Reviewing in some detail the legisla tion and practices in nine of Canadas provinces all but PEI the Fyfe hook et shows marked tendency to limit or prohibit the userof tax concessions The Province of Ontario for example has recently rescinded at the request of the municipalities themselves the law permitting fixed assessments Quebec has for 20 years rohiblted tax exemptions fixed valuatons or loans for industry except occasionally by privateacts but its present government as announced that no more such private bills would be passed prescrl tion heroin mom on Cant FindMen To Fill New Jobs Mm 300 undon England Correspondent For The Barrie Examiner CRAWLEY NEW TOWN Sill Iex In this now Industrial town there are soo jobs avail able for workers not local In dustries are unable to find the Jncn to fill these jobs There are still 100 acres of land set aside for new Indust ries The development corpora tionhowever in not accepting any more Industries of the mo men It has not accepted new factory for more than if Wmoigbn new ions SAME OLD HOOK peaceful Ger man Invasion Will Land On British Soil LONDON CPlIn Septem ber single German pnnzer battalion will accomplish peace fully what the whole armed might of the Nazis failed to do during the long hot summer of milland in Britain The battalions 40 American made tanks vlll rumble ashore from landing craft Sept onto the beaches of Cnstlomartln In southwestern Wales Under NATO training scheme they will spend three weeks on the 5000acrs Caitlemsrtin fIring range The manoeuvre has been planned as carefully and as comprehensively as any war time Invasion nilght have been It will be conducted against background of Increasln East West tension plans unite Britain more closely with Eu rope and possible bitterness Down Mgrnory Lane HUNTSVILLE BOOSTS BARRIE From Barrie Saturday Morning July 1911 which had front page photo of Huntsville came information that three citizens Cooper Abraham from Bradford to Collingwood Barrie had none but Allandale had and popula tions of 16 towns or villages Barrie then had 1200 Bradford 700 Pensions uishene had 360 and the Garrison 30 randH Hebner were Barrie on Coronas OnibrazorMonoMills 300 Bond Head tion Day They were fboostlng the big Firemens Tournamentand Band Com petition for August and bad big anner displayed in one of the shop windows In Barries favor was in formation that at the event would be distributed 2000 colored cards pro rnising ngh Old Time at Barrie MAP OF COUNTY IN 1853 In possession of George McLean was map of Simcoe County ublished in 1853 at Collingwood by illiam Gibbard Vhe railway The Northern was shown 200 Goldwater 150 Collingwood had but 80 Gwillimbury Township was leading with 3894 Saw mills and grist mills were scattered everywhere In nisfil had Tollendal Cox and Thom son grist and saw mills and Hortons en noxs Groves and Jacks saw mills Innisfil and Cookstown were the only post offices in that area Essa had three saw mills IIayters Haydens and Flat chers and Ayersts grist and saw mills Post offices were Drury and Latimor Settlers mentioned were Smith Perritt Morris and McLean soil The reason the tanks are being brought In by beach and the body of the Wman battala Ion flown directly to Costlemar tin Is to avoid antiGerman de monstration en route During their stay the German soldiers already well briefed about possible British reaction will not pass through any major town In uniform but will be al lowed weekend trips to Cardiff and London In civilian clothes Among other tiungs the Gen mans have been told how to con vnrt decimal currency Into ster ling and tomako careful dis tInctinn between the Welsh and the Englisbwbllo remember ing both are British REACTION UNCERTAIN Nobody is quite sure how the mass of the British people will treat the Germans In many ways the situation could be more delicate than the recent station Ing of German troops in France Germany and France are his torical encmiesdlvldcd by ap posing cultural and raclnl herlv tages Yet in the last 10 years the exigencies of the cold war common border and the Euro pean economic community have done much to make cooperatlon betweenthe two countries less strained britaln on the other hand possesses strong cultural and historian ties with the Teutonic race But unlike Franco she has takenhbnoat no part in the aMubGemairtroops orBrIIishApostwarflnwerlngofWestm pean brotherhood Until recently no real attempt has been made to bridge the wide gulf cleatcd between Brit ain and Germany by twoworld wars the North Sea and fre quently clashing political phi losophies West Germanys cur rent economic boom has done little to make matter better Whenever as now Britain ls faced with one of her periodicr financial crises Britons gen orally start casting resentful and jealous glances towards Bonn and murmur vaguely boi tIle complaints about England always seeming to win the vic torlu and lose the wars Noriliemers Enjoy The ISOlation ti allo in no prlelEges ofothor NATO troops Realizing this sort of feeling may start trouble the British and German authorities have planned the visit with on acute sense of political timing The German will have left before Parliament reassembles after its summer session This means members will not be asking embarrassing questions while the troops are still on Fri tish soil This will be greater help to the parliamentary Labor party which opens annual confer ence at Blackpool Oct two days after the Germans leave for homa WEEblready censured seven members of Parliament because the rced party de claim to abstain and voted ngaist the goverpmcn mm here The rebels led by leftwing in tellectual Michael Foot claimed members were exempt1mm party orders when It comes to matters of deeplyheld per sonal conscientious conviction On Sept the 22nd anniver lary of the outbreak of the Sec ondWorld War protest march organized by the National Youth Peace Committee will leave for Castlcmartin from Coventry The marchers hope to complete the mmile trek LonJIie day of the Germans arr But reports fromCastlemartin Itself show that residents seem more or less indifferent to the lbo reason for all of this in the desperate housing shortage in the town It now ban population of 54000 It In creep ing close to its planned total of 55000 so some new planning is urgently necessary Industriath in the town com plain tbni the rate of Industrial development has outpaced the rovlslon of houses for the war era which are required Urgent Iolko on the future of the town have been arrang ed with the minister of bour ing and local development deputation will meet with the minister to ask for any cnrly decision on iho future of tho community The development corporation which administers the town will be represented at the talks These will not be the first discussions that have been held on thraubject Theyhava boen going on with the ministry for the past three years The min istry of housing has already given permissionfor the build 01an mm tag of 300 more house These however will not be started until next spring The develop ment mrporation says prob ably 000 more home will be needed to meet the present Iit nation regardless of what may be decided in tho way of long term policy 1000 MORE YEAR At present about H000 peo pin Ire employed In Crowley New Town Eventually there will be 1000 new schoolJeav whotrill be seeking work 11 year To maintain output on firm bilngn Iliolder wor rd Croydou to Crawloy Another firm In giving womenwork to do In their own homes Somo employ marriedwomen to co lncldc with school hours Sub Iidlzed canteens extra holidays after 10 years service Incentive bonus schemes and even premium bond for no lost time record are among lha Incentives offered by Industry Gage chicf execut ive of the devcopment corpor ation says This problem was realized three years mo We are walt lng for policy decision by the planning authority West Sussex County Council and tho mlnlstry of housing about who newhomosand where they will be agree that three years is long mo in wait for decision ut we are nearly finished our or Iglnal jobarr development corporation As We are the first new town to reach this stage any policy decision must Also affect all new towns Unknown Country Embeds OTTAWARecent reports In the LS press about Canadian public affairs have heavily un derlined the need In our own natIona interest for citi zens to be better informed about Consider for example what certain US publication hndta my about the recent Coyno of fair One newspaper reported that Coyne was Canadas high est paid civil servant drawing $62000 year the fact Is that he did not draw $62000 year nor was be our most highly paid public servant Anothernewsoapen alleged the Canadian government was guilty of McCarthyism in its lservant Coynewasnotnclvi One aspect of to situation 115 of puibllc egnllery which is open an us ovc the Senate sits There are daily perhaps even better examples proving that to the USA their closest neigh bor and biggest customer ls deed the unknown country This is the reverse of the coin represented by the Royal Com mission on Publications which urged that phony Canadian editions of US periodicals should be restra ed in the in terests of true Canadian maga zines whereby today four US maga zines are read in Canada for every one Canadian magazine concerns the operation of our post office our post uftice de livers in Canada without charge handHIIE DIIhcm°fld every magazine mailed In the which showed an abysmal Ig nurance of our democratic proc esses in general and of Coynes position In particular Yet ï¬llrd publication re ferred to the sudden Interest in the proceedings of the Senate when the Coyna dismissal bill wasdebated in our Upper House So long had it been since any journalist had attended the Senate declared that news mag azine that the key to the inur nrrival of the GumanLJhoynalisuiegallery In the Senate are prepared to judge the men without prejudice on their indi Other Editors Views 05 VIEW OF GEORGIAN BAY Owen Sound SunTimes An unknown friends has mailed us 0ng of the Duluth Heraldwhich in clu as report of l200miie cabin cruiser trip by Duluthians The art icle is by David Fedo of the Duluth Heralds staff and tells of Duluth family of four taking tmeweek cruise on their 33foot words added by our unknown contrib utor are No comment without exclam ation mark and without name The words which drew his or her particular Their whole life was centred around the water Barnard said There were enatheskidrwentrtrschool Quite commentary on the Georgian Bay by Americans who had been there It is understandable of course in view of the vastness of this great body of water But it would indicate porter writing of their experiences had studied the charts very closely nor given thematter much bought We dont feel so badly for Owen attention carefully flared irradwsToun of course situated as it is on these The Barnards travelled through num erous locks that bypassed barriers in the 240znile stretch to Port Severn In Geor an Bay relatively unmarked vast ody of water dotted with more than 30000 islands they were plagued with bad weather conditions and tricky course Among the islands were small settlements where prongs Canadianshvedin quiet sec usion The Barrie Examiner Authorized no round on mollu Port Ofllnl Department Ottl muyysunony and statutory Holion KENNETH when Publishr BRIAN nnuour Gonlru Muller MannusoN Managing Editor CHARLIE wImGB puriner Itlnnlnr nonsm small Advutlslnl Mung sons nonnim circulation Manager subscription rats daily by cantor llovw train your Slnllo copy By mail In or mm yon65 in months 1280 month Onttin 5900 yo ma moo your own 425 Univeran Smolbdontrcll urn copied Ave Toronto cum on damri stun Vonoou domainlmly Nomnopor unborolAzzocll on The Canadian Pru Ha AuditBnleIn or Circulation Condition arm in exclnuvaly nntltlcd to um sjorerrpuoucatIonotmiienmkdisnstchedun tn dited to it or The Allociltnd Pro dolnotbo idea nl puhimna tannins of half these its own little bay at the southwest extremity of the bay and so close to Lake Huron which shared by the Americans is so well explored and populated But for Midland roud of its modern ways Port McNico Collin ood Mealord and number of other thriving strictly georgian Bay communities its nasty No the Barium weVGeorgian Bay folk have our own lar communities and cities there are ran on that there mainland and also on the islands and our kids neither swim nor go to school by boat butmake their own landward waymany of them in their own late model sport cars CHILDREN DRIVERS Edmonton Journal An Alberta Safet about children an farm machinery deserves wide prominence The all porting statistics simply for tractors ustrate the robleni Of the 73 lives claimed in Iberta by tractors alone in one recent threeyedr period nearly oney third Ware eraons under 18 Almost ctims were children under nine Council warning Altogethe 18 of these children Get To Like We OpenSpaces FORT SMITH NWT IO Canadlans in radio ment north of the 80th parallel of latitude will not ho surprised theNorth Pole sayshe was acttlco Jbushed for the first time 135 year Involved in Arctic Ocean atfindingSLentlunnnflced soldier since 1055 the 31year wmfumr Richard torts of the University of Tor on The psychologist told dele gates to Learned Societies conference In Montreal that penplol behaviour and attitudes at Theyonlyrthatneitherthecruiser+northore=chrnxrmma on old scientist found thoieerim to ice pack silence of the and tha Mhour day sunlight made him forget ime and the outside world lie says he felt strange and out of place in September arriving among the crowds andllghts of Yellow Tho northerners way flaks more than 2000 But before the log It In The colloquial term has dif ferent meaningo In different parts of the country and some of them are derogatory But in the far north It Is often applied to persons who refuse to con alder living outside meaning more settled legion Most common symptom of the person who may be called hushed In his dislike for the citles the crowds and tho traf fic of outside or southern civilization Ho Intends never lingo the north Therre hushed prolectJesumethiLaurlnLJl was anxious to go back STAY BY CHOICE Those who dont fall In love with the north soon leave it and the country in left with those who prefer its vastness and isolation Rev McCollum came to Fort Smith as an Anglican lfliSlt sionary after the Second World War and has flown over the country often also administr Ing Hay River on Great slave Lake Fort Simpson on the ieAMackonzio vRiver andPortRa LVE NORTH Prof Walter said 20 men can fined In isolation for four days gave negative answers to ques tions about society and positive answers on the subject of soil tude Many northernern got like that They are not necessarily antisocial they just get to like the vast open spaces Gerda Hamncek attractive 22yearold northern affairn do partmsnt crnployce hero or rived from Calgary more than year ago Now she cant un derstand why people would leave She Intends to spend her 1000 miles north Arthur Collins on oceano graphar with the Canadian Po lar Continentalbhelf project at ach IRlllgne mile diurn on Great Bear Lake From the day first flow over lt he says lyo loved this coun gt One who might have beonre garded as hushed and was happy about it was Matt Murphy who died last year at 71 He left his home near Lake Temagaml Ont In 11907 and spent the rest of his life in the north oxcept for one year which he calleda failure Trapper prospector and re specied friend of the Eskimos be lived alone on the barren lands northeast of Great Slave twoweek vacation at Inuvlk an Lake us In even more Isolatedzcttlomontmcï¬iarï¬aï¬ï¬ Tmipolsb or period were his only contacts with other white men rpvh said he never fl oiit to hiivo welltralned allies than not ourrns PARK Itch For Pow By DON OHEABN °ronoureï¬n Thereis one grou of Progressive Conserve tiveopwho want to live danger curly The storybeblnd theFroot rc tirement and particularly the timing of it lesiowa scoping And thorn on Interacting conflict of opinion involved It centres on asectlan of on thusiastic new dealers These men predominantly young have had an itch for some timaï¬im want pgwer and they are In urryto get It So they have convinced thcm selves that the provincial party at present is not right They fool it badly and quickly needs new hnnga FEDERAL INFLUENCE They got this new image corn pie principally from the fed oral field Many of them were associated withtlio movement that eventu ally put Mr Dlefenbaker in power And of course much of the credit for his victories has been given to the highpressure pro motion and tho age it cre rofesslonnl linings creators tbe DIefenbaker campaigns is sympthl but can be The actual influence of the could not be found That is worse thanwhat Sir Winston JburdiilLiimuldJaliJ termin that since the Germans aro ologlcal inexactitude it Is based members of NATO It In better on Ignorance since journalists some of whom attend in the Senate regularly use portion renew Dealer er However those who worked on the planning of the campaigns are convinced And now they hwant to transfer the technique ore T00 HURRIED Which is living dangerously For the PCa in Ontario ni 4readthayean£hnago1 It in true that this apparently has centred on the public ro flectlnu of Premier Frost But actually it goes beyond Mr Frost personally For be In turn has only rep resented lecurlty and stability wbidrhavobcentheprizea aetde his party in the public nun To fit in bright ymiiig inab now which is what the imagern wantperforce de Itroya this Tbe partymuat build com pletely new Imagoand In hurry And what would this mean That the partywould not ugly loao much of the identity which has been its great strength at the polls With this itwould still carry all the am there was of the oldadmi stration and along with it open up an on rely new field of dissatisfac ion Thls observer at least feels it might be wise to stick as closelyas possible toits old im age for whileonghmora elec nfldLllbecos USA to Canadian subscriber in return the US post office delivers without charge every Canadian magazine mailedin Canada and addressed to US subscriber on which the post age has been paid to the Ca nadlgripost office his is ardly an equal tib Iortat We could of course de mand nlump sum annual pay ment in adjustment from the 115 post office just as the British post office demanded and received an annual pay ment to compensate it for tho erous flow of Canadian food pan cels on which all postage chargeswcre paid to our post office at time when the flow of parcels In the reverse direc tion was much smaller But PostmasterGeneral Hamil tnn has not negotiated such compensation from the 115 Thus our post office loses money heavily on the handling of 175 perioiflcals Even when as in some cases they are trucked in Canada and mailed here to gain the benefit of Can adasflower mailing costs the loss flandling each item is estimated at just over four cents Were it not for thisvheavy deficit on handling US period icalsit has been estimated wo couid enjoy icent postage on ordinary intercity letter mail as there is in USA Now to rectIfy this situation Postmaster Hamilton has an pounced on agreementwiththew us boosting charges But alas the effort on this will put more vmonay in the pockets of the U5 post office on magazines mailed there for delivery in Can ada Here the Increase will have In disastrous effect in another single newspaper to will leap from around cents to around cent per copy In the case of large newspapers the increase will be higher one big city daily paper estimats that it will now have to boost to $50 the annual subscription by US residents BIBLE THOUGHT 0Lordlpraytliecgo onion no for it stiff necked people and pardon our inquiry and our aimExodus 349 Prayer today must he made in the name of Christ and the awcostofhandlingthatgeH