to Emma Examiner Furnished by osmium Newspaper 15 Blyald Smut Burk came it Walls Publisher Kerry Lonbio Genera Human McPhsrson Managing Editor murmur auavsr is in Pan THE LIFEGUARDS DILEMMA Time To swaman en in jgrmr young ople More than that it has can ong long summer for adults who have found themselves talking more and more about young people Perbaps this is good time to put some ofjtltese comments into pers ective 0n the one hand we have spectacle of Mosport with its drugs nudity and handsroff police attitude We also have the malefemale travelling companions sharing summer on the open road with only few dollars and one sleeping bag between them Begging has become young persons ort and they are seeing Canada from tchhikers point of view Unfortunately this is the scene that gets the most attention We would like to make the point here that it is not the scene that necessarily gets the most newspaper ink but It too often is the onelhat leaves he strongest impression On the other hand we have another side of youth These are the kids work ing through the summer to pay for fur ther education or simply because they prefer working to humming We have the young parks and recreation counsellors the lifeguards and the young people working at everything from church programs to Boy Scout camps We also have the Barrie Collegiate Band and tha sufficient comment about that We all know what the hand has accomplished and the effort that Went into that accomplishment Benelvv PerSpecve Canaans srosr Dangling Sword iii El Eliilszgi Elliglggi 529352 iii Edie Er committee were court dress of uniforms of dark blue decked with gold braidrcockcd hats and swords dangling from their waists George Brown Madonolds most bitter political enemy published the Toronto Globe His newspaper which always watched for opportunities to rid icqu lifacdonald reported great deal of time has been wasted by John in learning to walk for the sword rus pended to his waist has an awk ward knack of getting between his legs especially after din ner The first royal tour was great success and enjoyed by the Prince of Wales who was from tho austere life of Queen Victorias court Later he boa virvrhroughout this summer newspapis calm mgEdwud lolly including numerous articles about the multitude of activities of the young Here wevere ported the day camps the swim lessons the sports programs Weve also report ed about motor clo gangsvMosport the drug scene As yourself which stories and which hotographs you remember most in look ng back over the summer Perhaps we ado despair too quickly Sure there are at more eung people doing lot more things wh ch upset us But there are still quite few your people who cherish oldfashioned atan ards like unity of the home and mutual respect Should we not turn more of our atten tion to the things that our young people are doin right and try to develop these more tuiy In our books that beats handwringing and meaning any day of the week We also believe the time is ti for movement in this direction he have that permissiveness towardselfin dulgent youth has just about run its course Adults the people who pay the bills and clean up the messes have had enough If we do curb the permissivencss we must also assist the good things that young people are doing in our commun ty One step without the other is mean inglcss OTHER EDITORS VIEWS CONSUMERS NEED HELP Gait Evening Reporter Propoacd changes in Canadas con sumer credit law are long overdue 4be to protect consumers from be ing forced to pay for something they didnt get has passed first reading in the Commons its aimed at onus of the current situation whereby denier selling goods on timepayment plan force the buyer to sign promissory mete Often finance company buys the note its legally able to force collection whether or not the buyer has celved delivery of the goods bill seeks to correct practice that has caused considerable hardship specifically it will provide consumers with legal defence when caught by avshady dealer It will give them an oportunity to show that the seller qfdnt honor his part of the bargain fora transferring the note to sales once company oat important of all the billwill forcc finance companies to police the epmpaniosdt takes notes from byrmuk lug certain the terms of sale have been goofWhonpromissory notes oro used in oorizicotlonwith conditional sales dintrocta thobiiiwui require that they marked consumer purchase to make it plain the buyer is signing pillch order aurhetnew rules will also apply to cheques postdotod more than 30 days This has been done to prevent any eva sion of the intent of the amendment by the substitution of postduted cheques or other types of bills or exchange for promissory notes Promissory notes were originally used in tronauctlona be tween merchants or business men who understood fully the nature of prom issory notes The bill will give some much needed tAceLth to the federal Bills of Exchange IDEAL STORE HOURS The Printed Word The ideal store hours are the ones that rovlde for the store to be open for bus ness when the consumer wants to buy There is of course degree in which the consumer could be unreasonable in his demands for service It also is fact that the re rietor or manager of store par lieu ary big store does not wish to Eggpoittmopei whent there or not enough ocovcrt thcnllorlght ligyhttlz and ere school of thou ht that sa that legislation is necessar improvellt extension of store hours to the point of absurdity lire wideopen store Sunda included tenemething viewed with tusto by many eoplc who have know ledge oi the re all business Ontheothor handrestrictions as to lmurssuch as now confront the retail food stores in Quebec arecqually absurd equally intolerable The Examiner have carried good time ioisFather Le Caron cele brated first mass to Ontario near Thunder Bay nosBorder was establishcd between Canada and New York minCharles lnglls became first Angueon bishop of Quebec and Nova Scotlc indGeorge Cormack discov ered gold at Bonanza Crcck Yukon mooFort William placed Court Decision Confronts Govt 0n Oil Policy By FRANK FLAIIEEIY OTTAWA court fudgmcnt handed down last weekconfronts tho govommc with new prob lems in tho ministration of its nauonnl all policy It wild muse it more receptive than it has been up to now to tho so called continental ollcy favored by tho Unltcd alas The Exchequer Court found provisions in the National En ergy Board Act which enable tht agency to control transpor tation of petroleum products within Canada are unconstitution to now these provisions havg been used to restrict tho sale of lm rtcd oil and oil pro ducts to most easterly part of tho CWIIIIX Specically this moans tho tlantlc rovincos Quebec and the Outer section of the Ottawa Valley fhn effect was to rcsorve tho big central and western Ontario market for western Canadian oil which moves to the cost by pipeline and allow the custom area to be served by oil imported by ship mostly from Venezuela So far policymakers have brushed all proposals th at pipeline he built from Alberta to Montreal to serve that area with Canadian rather than imported oil The reasons advanced have been the high cost of longdis tance lpelino transport compon crl wit the low cost of import cd sonborne oil it is felt that western Canadian all can be sold to greater advantage in the Unit ed States than in Montreal Tho cnuncintion of contin ental policy of President Nix gt nns advlscru some months ago found little favor in Canada it seemed to cut across the nation nl policy in that it called for ro duccd dcpondonco on offshore all for both Canada and the United States tn return for guaranteed movement of Canadian oil Into the United States US policymakers suggest it is unsafe to leave any par of North America dependent on slilpborno all because supplies could be cut off by enemy action in war The only ulteruutlvn of course lsplpcllna umpurmuon mm the caslrrn section and the exclusion of foreign oil Sir john Problem wwmmhm mm mtdward Wahuvdatswl Io dueWand BIBLE THOUGHT Eventually no that Mmbemzightoaed ail Gummy the will might come down in Berlin Warthoglsedtdphava gt OTTAWA serum of skilled people to the West This wasiha worlds severest braindrain Ever line the wall was erected and the brain drain stopped East Germany has prospered one might even say she has boomed East Germanys suspicions Morale Of Diplomats Shows Signs Falling By PATRICK NICHOLSON The morale among Canadian diplomats tho vaunted cilia of our civil service is falling There have been layoffs and closures at Canadas amh sir dorlal taxhavens around the world True lush new $26 million palace is being erected here as their head office but on the very day when the contract was let for that building Foreign Minio ter Mitchell Sharp announced parliamentary committee that the government is examining plans for rollyourIlcevcsup merger of its varied activiiis overseas This would entail streamlining our representation in trade matters political rela tionships cultural ralatfonahlps travel promotion scientific ac flvitlcs military information or 19 and 11 my espionage if you like and other fields the Icnpe of which he laid enlarges almost daily mapstho basic reason for diplomatic moralo is Canadas withdrawal into its North rlc shell For many years after the Socond World War our countrys name was prominent and honored on the lntcrnationei Itaga list today man politicians of all parties fee with regret that perhaps coinciding with thcr ro tlromcnt ol superdiplomat it kc Pearson Canada has walked away from contra stage it wastha voice othanada in foreign IMPERIAL THEATRE Watch minister Louis St Laurent which in 1940 made perhaps the most significant and farroach lng proposal ovar hezd and adopted at the United Nations Generai Assembly lhat pro posal In words drafted by Dep uty Foreign Minister Mike Pearson was that regional def cace alliances could and should be net is under the UN charter iha foiowlng year Canadas proposal was implemented by the creation of the first such al fn liencc the North Atlantic lrcaty Organization or NATO in the ensuing decade Can ada proud and praised played the role as leader of the mid is powers We participated then and later in every peacc keeping exercise by tho United Nations the voice of Canada notably was pmmlnoutat the Suez crisis above all we made contribution moderate in also but superlative inquullly to the western worlds to NATO shlold in Dunn HEATI NO PRAISE But we hear nothing eat this middle Iaudcrdhip now And we hear nnupralsu for the halving of our ml tnry prcsonco In that NATO shieldCnnada has been diminished on the international stage David Groos MP for Victoria former naval captain and now parliamentary secretary to Del cnco Minister Cadleux reasons that limited resources have compelled us to place more cm phasls on NATO defence in Now Playing pm and pm lfTT thelandlord get his THE MlRlSCH PRODUCTION COMPANY omens NORMAN Jonson esooucnou HALASHBY usuntanu mLQRbypeLmts COLLI NGWOOD DRIVEIN THEATRE NOW PLAYING Every falhora daughter to virgin PNWW PIC UIIISPRISLNIS ruuuunu IIIIMM nunsm mm HIIIPIUHI APNWNIIMME IIDNIIlm pronoun PlCIUIlES Stimuli ENIERPRISES FILM I06 COLORi PARAMOUNI IICIURE GOlFOR rue FURY FquCE AND FUN or aucnv TOUGH AND swoon North America than in Europe prominent Liberal senator however angrily tells me that our partial pullout from Europe was not to better protect our own sovereignty and our own norih country but had its roots In the game of politics and the desire to win votes in certain sections of our country NAN savers of war and con scriptlon but UN peacekeeping exercises are the contrary Our military and diplomatic role in that field now may seem to be muted but thls is not the gov ernments intent As the white paper on foreign poilcy reecntly asserted Con ada has gained some special knowledge and experience in the broad area of paaca talks dsarmament and arms con trol dotcnta and peacekeeping Tho government as no inten tlon of roiegatlng that knowhow and owertcnce to the national archlvcs while the possibility ro malns that Canadian participa lon may be needed in can of need Canada has lot of elasticity in its muscio once to our limited resources contrary to David Groos refer cnco to our Ilmlled resources We enjoy the slxtbhighcst per capita gross national product among the nations of the world which would enable us to afford disproportionately largo milllt tary effort again yet we spend on defence lesser proportion of our national budge than al most all of our 14 NAN alllc other warmmemo Meanwhile now that West Germany has accepted this present European boundaries as inviolabla he relations with the Slavic work can improve fur ther Trade will improve And danger need not increase or causo both Rmaia alid TVcst Germany In reaching their agreement stated that each would respect its existing mill tory commllrnans SIX MAN HONEYMOON PLYMOUTH Engllnd AP Margaret Dowe is going on honeymoon with six men She is to marry lea Staples in the day before they leave with five men on mountain climbing on peditlou to Afghanistan Uhe ame Biyold Street Barrie Ontario Telephone Second Class Mail II Registraan Nimber MM More guaranteed Dally Sunday and Statutory Holiday excepted Subscription rates daily b1 carrier doc weekly $5120 yearly Single coplcs10c By mall Barrie lamyearlys Ootarlo lloooysar Other mail $1500 year Motor throw off $2100 year National Advertising Off 51 megs wvcrcslt Avenue Montreal Member of the Canadian Press and Audit Binco circulations The Canadian Press is clusivciy entitled to the for rooubtlcauoa of all news 11 Jan momenta it to it or The Associated Press or Routers and also the local news published therein The Morris Examinarciaims Copyright in All original ad vertising and editorial match interested by ill employees and reproduced In this news paper Copyright iteglsuatloniNun be 200815 register 61 ammonium rmMmmwioimuTWmmhbnnmn coiwsu newu mum oevmo uoouclm colon BOB CAROL SHOWN The Restoration comedy AboutWhat Cannot Be Restored IST MONTUESWEDTHURS um Irruswwu Ilium 13 Wllla MEI mm COLOR by DcLlDiE immatuream RUN WILD RUN FREE