CP and Audlt Bureau of Circular NEWSROOM Busmgss Published dailvexcept The Examiner is member of The Canadian Press Dave Henshaw managing editor Cfnvsislfingaw Marian cough accoumam Sunday and tions ABC Only The Canadian Press may republish news stories in this newspaper sean Finlay my editor SALESMEN egny Armer statutory holidaYS credited to CF The Associated Press Reuters or Agence France Presse and local Randy McDonald sports editor Dan Gaynor Dorothy Bowland Subscriptions news stories published in The Examiner guréanl COUNT wig LV J°hs° Pazland WEEKgcgzBcanen The Barrie Examiner claims copyright on all original news and advertising material serving barrle and slmcoe county RgseagngMiaggfï¬yg 323222 YEARLY by tamer created by its employees and published in this newspaper mdav Juno 1977 p0 Kramer phomgraphe John 2mka 34630 Copyright registration number 203815 register PUbIIShed by canOdion Newspapers Compony Limited Toi$JCERS ERgghnggmger BY Mujagarne National advertising offices 65 Queen St Toronto 86 NW 640 Cathcart St on I6 BOYIIeId Street Barrie OHIOIlO IAM 4T6 Paul Delean CLASSIFIED David Jenkins asst manager SIMCOE COUNTY M°ea Richard Dunstan Ruth Blais supervisor Andy Haughton $3650 The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall not be Ilable for damages arismg out P61 Guefgis Lesley Young Judy Hickey MOTOR THROWOFF of errors in advertisements beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied Elio Agostinlpubnsner ADVERTISING 7266537 Scott Haskins Sheila McGovern Sue Routlilte $39a year ELSEWHERF IN CANADA $3850a year Freda Shinner Alva La Plante Elaine Porter Marg Scarll by that portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred whether such error is due to the negligence of its servants or otherwise and there shall be no liability for noninsertion of any advertisement beyond the amount paid for such advertisement Karen Atkinson PeOOY Chapell CLASSIFIEDS 7282414 cincuunou 7266539 NEWSROOM 7266537 BUSINESS 7266537 County museum still expanding Simcoe County has many diversified tourists attrac tions of interest of which the beaches lakes and rivers and other recreation facilities are the most popular dur ing the summer season But there are other important attractions which also merit due attention Historical places such as the restored Sainte Marie and Indian Village at Midland the onetime British naval base at Penetanguishene Sephen Leacock home at Orillia and site of the Huronia capital of Cahiague near Warminster also have interested many visitors as well as local people Most Barrie residents are familiar with the history of this city which was maned after Admiral Barrie who was in command of the British fleet stationed at Kingston during the War of 1812 The significance of the name is linked with this site having been chosen as the starting poing of the NineMile Portage military supply route from Lake Simcoe to Penetanguishene Simcoe County museum and archives at nearby Midhurst annually attracts many visitors interested in obtaining morre information about the background of county history or in viewing the displays and exhibits drawing attention to the pioneer era Relics pertaining to the early history of Barrie as well as from other municipalities throughout the county have made tours to the museum popular for school children as well as adults The general store exhibit of the 1890 period near the front with its wall telephone bulk merchandise antique weigh scales and other relics of long ago presents vivid scene of the past It is of course only one of numerous interesting exhibits The Edison Victrolas or talking machines as they were once called directs attention to the prewireless communication age before radio or television Fashions of the gay nineties when anklelength frilly dresses with ruffled bustles were popular horsedrawn carriages blacksmith shop and old farm implements demonstrates more about life in the interesing past For those interested in further historical background of the area the archives section has numerous books documents photographs and other records about impor tant events Attendance figures show the museum and archives now attract more than 40000 registered visitors year and there are undoubtedly many more who stop for casual inspection It is an important county stantly expanding project which has been con and reflects credit to the administra tion board staff and all of the many others who have con tributed to its success Simcoe yesteryear 44 Heres view of the Grand Trunk Railway station and post officc in Barric as they ap peared back in thc cra at the turn of the ccntury Kempcnfcll Buy can bc sccn in Ilf background Photo courtcsy of thc raig family of Kit Barric Your business By VINCENT EGAN Business and onsumcr Affairs Analyst Thomson News Scrvice Gourmets might not approve but the growth of fastfood shops in Canada has been well gastronomical Limitedmenu restaurants and takc out shops now account for $1 out of every $4 spent on food up from $1 in 37 decade ago The success of the fastfood industry wasnt built upon the sensitive palates of those who enjoy hautc cuisine but rather upon on in satiable appetite of younger Canadians for hamburgers hot dogs fried chicken pizzas doughnuts french fries ice cream fish and chips and so on More than that however faslfood operators offer the luxury of convcniencc and as their name indicates speed And the tendency of consumers to buy on impulse if they happen to pass such an outlet is another major ingredient of their successand the reason why the selcction of sites has become science in the industry The preferred locations are those that people under 35 years of age would find easily accessible Fast food firms are growing fat EROWIII PROBLEMS Ihc reputation of lhc cnlirc chain is in the hands of thc individual outlets comments ch Kizcmchuk of Midland Dohcrly Ltd lorontohascd invcslmcnt firm Poor service from few can readily discredit the chains namc growing trend in the industry is to provide morc scaling accommodation for customers who would rather not take away lhcir orders This has forced some chains into costly cxpansion of ccrtuin of their outlets Kizcmcmuk notcs that Ianzidns instfood operators had sales of morc than $42 billion lost your and that the industry still is in its growth stagc simple projcction would indicate that roughly one food dollar in two will be spent on fast foods by the midewmis assuming con tinuation of its growth ralc hc notcs Whether this will bc the case or not there is still adoquatc room for further pcnctralion He adds What used to be considered treat now has become an established pattern ofealing Parliament hill My By STEWART MaclEI Ottawa Bureau Thomson News Service As soon as Parliament begins its summer recessï¬and all the planning is being centred on June 30tcchnicians will move in to install telivision cameras and the institution will never be the same again By October enough epui ment will be in place to begin recording dc ales and for the first time in history parliamentarians will be able to talk directly with the people of Can ada through the House of Commons This may not have profound impact on the viewing habits of Canadians but it could be just what Parliament needs to refurbish its stature Perhaps even the party leaders will decide they can deliver their major By JOHN IIARBRON Foreign Affairs Analyst Thomson News Service year ago more than 500 black South Africans were killed inlthe Soweto riots some of them in fights by blacks against blacks most of them from the suppressive measures of the racist South African government The first anniversary of onc of the more recent outbursts of the many examples of mans inhumanity to man was rcmcmbercd throughout the Third World and in industrial ones with protest marches against the offices of companies doing business in South Africa and Namibia We have seen some cxplosivc and racially brutal attacks in the world since l945 the worst so for being in Asia with the millions killed in the IndiaPakistan partition of 1911 48 Again in the Indiunzsubcontincnt the tem porary fli of 10 million East Pakistanis in to India uringlthc 1975 IndiaPakistan wur resulted in deaths of hundreds of thousand not from gunfire or civil war but starvation and old age In both of these cases the holocaust of racial war was the outcome of disastrous political event It did not happen during the time of political crisis leading to an ex plosive solution But in southern Africa this is not the cusc The explosive situation is race and the riots arc about race The ultimate revolution will not be for social goals alone but for racial liberation MORE SERIOUS The implications are just as serious for massive human destruction as were the cour se of events in India and Pakistan But the impact will be greater in the West since it will be whites against blacks with no LISTEN MP NEW GUY WE JUST BLEW 20 MllthN BDCKS ON llllS ELECllON 30 AV OFF THAT GUFF ABOUT SffTiN lN THE CHEAP SEATS speeches in Parliament rather than juggling for prime time television outside the House In the last few years there have been escalating complaints that the leaders par ticularly Prime Minister Trudeau have been consistently bypassing Parliament in favor of so callcd fire chats with television audien ce DOWNGRADING IIOLSE This declared former prime minister John Diefenbaker is just another example of Irudcaus systematic efforts to downgrade the institution of Parliament And when the prime minister makes an im portant announcement on television the other party leaders naturally want chal time to respond As resultthcrc have been many occasions when parliamentarians arc Racial attacks have been brutal more priority for the horror of human destruction in our time except the nations of the West are white and identify more closely with southern Africas race crisis So far nothing seems to have moved South African Prime Minister Forster in spite of the subtle visitations by Henry Kissinger as secretary of state Cyrus Vance as the more passive performer and thc clcar resistance to any moves iof the South African regime by US ambassador to the Unilcd Na IIOITS Andrew Young South Africa still is important cnough in the strategic schemc of things to tell off President Carter and to warn that hishuman ri ts campaign will have no weight in South rica whcre thc govcrnmcnt knows bcsl how to handle events The fact is it does notlhc road is to inevitablc race war of an intcnsity not cvcn Asia has experienced Canadians knowni to this columnist who huvc had to live and work in South Africa nrc more than rclicvcd to leave lhc lcnsion and lhc sense of forclxxling they fch making them morc uncnsy than lII foreign assign ment in country undergoing opcn political crisis The first to fall could bc lthodcsin in blood both which in the long run could still see Western intervention If this does not come in Rhodesia isincc there are blacks and whites on either sidc ready to live in new multiracial Rhodesian society will South Africa change ac cordingly Unfortunately and most ominously there are no signs it will Down to the wire for the heirs of the Alrikaunersu ap cars to be their commitmcnl no matter how loody And the Soweto first anniversary is only foretaste Television cameras to make Parliament session changes huddled in lobbies watching TV while spar selyattended debate drones on within the Commons few feet away This should change when the cameras finally invade the Houseafter years of con troversyThe TV networks and radio stations will be able to plug in for live feeds or carry statementson delayed basis and eliminate the need for politicians to search out prime time telecasts And it could also weaken the power of the media to decide what type of exposure individual politicians receive since Parliament will retain ju risdiction over the televcsion system in the Houso Not long ago former Conservative leader Robcrt Stanfield was talking about how the press now is screen between the op position leader and the public Their per ccptionziof Joe Clark depends upon what you decide to print or what you decide to show on TV or something like that Asna result he said that Parliament has become somewhat irrelevant to the every day life of Canadians Its much more irrelevant certainly than would like to see it be and say it again that the opposition parties in Parliament cannot copc under existing arrangements No one is quite sure how the coping will work out under the new $5 million parliamen tary television system but there seems to be general optimism that the relevancy of Parliament will be given sharp boost Sinh parliamentary experts as Liberal House Leader Allan MacEachcn and former Conscrvativc House Leader Jed Baldwin are among those optimists And Ray llnalyshyn PC Saskatoon Biggar was saying the other day that if tclcviscd Ilousc proceedings cnd some of the current imbalances in TVs political coverage it will bc well worth while He referred to Irudcaus speech in Winnipeg enrlicr this year which had bccn bilch as major pronouncement and attracted na tional livc telecast It turned out to be an outrageous abuse of the facilities he said and meanwhile 100 Clark was talking about party policy and being virtually ignored we want your opinion Something on your mind Send us letter to the editor Please make it an orignal copy and sign it We dont publish unsigned letters although pen name will be used upon request Include your address and telephone number because we have to verify letters but we wont print your address should you prefer Weve found that short letters are the best read Because of spacc limitations public interest and good lnstc we sometimes have to edit condense or reject IOIlfIS Lctlers to the editor run Wednesdays and Saturdays Scnd yours to letters to the editor The Examiner Box 370 Barrie nl IAM 4T6 Queens park Try to avoid early vote By DON OIIEARN Queens Park Bureau Thomson News Service TORONTO In this next house it appears the opposition parties will be called on for some adroit stickhandling It now is completely agreed that nobody wants an early election It was clear in the election that large share of voters resented it feeling it was un necessary The politicians got fhe message All parties are going to do everything they can for good while to avoid an election Some government members are even talking of the minority government lasting for four years But avoiding an election could be not all that easy ITS TRICKY 0n legislation and routine matters before the house there could be little problem The key to an election is the defeat of the government on question of confidence On legislation this can be easily cir cumvented government bill can be defeated or radically changed and the opposition can say this still isnt nonconfidence and the govem ment can recognize it as not being con fidence But there are two main motions before the house at every session the adoption of the throne speech and the budget speech And by tradition these automatically are taken as confidence motions At the same time there traditionally is custom probably close to duty opposition to oppose both And the major stickhandling will be in get ting around these This will put the NDP particularly on the spota spot that the Liberals had to suffer through during the last session As the official opposition the Liberals now will be placingjeiw first amendments Then it will up to the NDP It presumably will place subamendment which will be tougher than the Liberals and which the party will be able to vote against But when this is defeated the main Liberal motion will be before the house and the NDP will be called on for fancy footwork to duck voting for this NDP PROBLEM For two years the Liberals had to swallow their spit and lose credibility by voting with the government on the official opposition amendments Now the NDP is faced with this em barrassmcnt There is chance however that it will avoid it All three parties now seem to be agreed that probably some extraordinary measures should be taken to avoid an election Presumably they will discuss this And stopgap procedure might be worked out to avoid crises Canadas story Mapped coast of Pacific By BOB BOWMAN In June 1773 two great British explorers were probing the Pacific coast at the same time although they may not have known about each other Captain George Vancouver in his wellequipped ship Discovery was map ping the coast of British Columbia and still hoping to find water route across the con tinent Alexander Mackenzie who had discovered the Mackenzie River in 1789 was trying to find route through the Rockies to the Pacific He had the more difficult task Vancouvers men lived on board their ship for the most part and travelled in small boats They had seines for fishing large stocks of sauerkraut oranges and lemons and essence of malt and spruce Mackenzie began his epic journey to the Pacific from Peace River on May 1793 with Alexander mackay six FrenchCanadian voyageurs and two Indian guides In order to pass through the Rockies they had to haul their canoes laden with supplies up rivers and streams that were raging torrents from the spring floods it was often necessary to portage and one of the carrying places was nine miles long Eventually they tried to run the Fraser River although it had not been named then The trip was so dangerous Mackenzies men staged mutiny but he managed to keep go ing until they arrived at present day Alexan dria Then Mackenzie gave up on June 21 and they had to make their way up the river again to Blackwater River The Indian told Mackenzie he could reach the Pacific that way They were right but Mackenzie did not reach Bella Coola until July after weeks of walking and travelling in canoe obtained from Indians along the way bible thought Let all thosc that seck tliec rejoice and be glad in tlicc and let such as love thy salvation say continually Let God be mugnificd Psalms 704 Wc must be careful to hate nothing but sin and exalt none but God Oh Lord we praise thch