Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Nov 1962, p. 20

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20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, November 5, 1902 | BIRTHS Cairn Planned CARROLL -- Rev. and Mrs. ( eorge are proud to announce the birth of their son, Philip George (8 lbs.), on Sunday, October 28, 1962 at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother for Sharon and Paul. we thanks to D Halam-Andres and the nursing staff of Oshawa General Hospital. FITZGERALD -- Ken and Rose are happy to announce the birth of a daughter, 6 Ibs., November 5 at Oshawa General Hospi- tal, A sister for Gail, Gary and Cathy. Special thanks to Dr. Anderson and the nurses on 4F. LYONS -- Bill and Margaret are happy to announce the birth of a son, 9 Ibs., on Monday, November 5, 1962, at. the Oshawa General Hospital, A brother for Karen. Many thanks to Dr. D. Rogers and staff of 4th floor. MoGLASHAN--Don and Yvonne er Rocheleau) are happy to announce the birth of their son, Michael Andrew, 6 Ibs. 12 ozs., on Tuesday, November 6, 1962 at the Oshawa General Hospital. Thanks again to Dr. J. E. Rundle. MORRISON -- Ted and Dorothy (nee Mitchell) are happy to announce the birth of their son on Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962 at the Oshawa General Hospital. A BAPPY occasion -- The birth of your child. To tell the good news to friends and neighbors The Oshawa 'Times is as near as your telephone. 'The day of birth just telephone 723- 3492. The rate is only $1.50, ¥+!being assembled here for To Symbolize World Airlines MONTREAL (CP) -- Airlines in 100 countries are contributing) to the building of a stone cairn erec- tion in the northern Vermont town of Swanton. The idea of a cairn to sym- bdlize international flight began when Swanton staged its fourth international festival last sum- mer. The theme of 'the festival was world airlines, 'Trans - Canada Airlines' in Montreal, only 75 miles north of Swanton, was asked by Swan- ton for suggestions to create a permanent festival symbol on international flight. Mike Hildren, TCA's public relations manager in Montreal, suggested a cairn of stones from around the world, One hundred ute a suitable stone from their} country. DEATHS Sixty - four stones have been| received so far. The Greek Olympic Airlines! FISHER, Laure May : At Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville, on Wednesday, November 7, 1962, Laura May Rickard, aged 75. years, wife of the late Earl Fisher, Newcastle, and dear mother of Carl, Cornwall. Resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow- sent a chunk of gleaming white stone from hte Acropolis. Deutsche Lufthansa flew in a} charcoal grey Disbas stone! from Germany. Alitalia chopped up a piece of RC Law Against Mixed Marriage By JOHN GALE ROME (AP)--In the volumes of canon law lining the 'shelves of many Roman libraries, No. 1061 represents a source of grievance to Protestant society. No. 1061 is the ruling of the Roman, Catholic Church on mixed marriages. The ruling has produced, on the admission of both Roman Catholic and Protestant authori- ties, stormy eve - of - wedding quarrels, painful soul search- ings and long 'wrangles over childrens' education. i The law requires the non-) Catholic party in a marriage to refrain from influencing the re- ligious beliefs of the Roman Catholic partner and to bring up made in the law would not be in the essentials." A young Irish priest: "It is very difficult to think that the council would do anything to drop these promises. It is not It is a question of Divine law. 'slackening but you cannot en- danger your faith." An Irish canon law expert: "It's a law that can be changed. It's an ecclesiastical law. The fundamental obligation to safe- guard the religion and the con- science of the Catholic faith could be met in other ways." He did not specify which ways. No. 1061 has been in the stat- utt books of the church since the children 'in the Catholic faith alone." The promises, or guarantees airlines were asked to contrib-|as they are sometimes called,| are required in writing. Some Catholic sources expect} the law-to come under study by ithe Roman Catholic ecumenical) WRITTEN GUARANTEES 5 One expert suggested there)? session here, the possibility council, now in They concede \that changes, or some easing of/this quarter. No, 1061 even to- the position, may occur. Other Catholic sources regard the sweeping recodification of canon law carried out in 1917-18. |the church previously relied more on "a moral understand- ner than on written promises, { |might be room for change in 'day does not insist absolutely on |written guarantees, but says Some experts in the field "said|} ing" with the non-Catholic part-|) 4 only a question of church law.|-- I suppose there might be some/f This heaithy child, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hartree changes as unlikely even if the|they should be required "as a| of Vancouver, wouldn't wait approximately 2,700 counci rule." called seven- day. Mrs. Hartree neighbors and the ~ BORN IN LIVING ROOM ing room floor. Mother and baby are fit, '\hire white sidemen for 4 |groups, are trying to prove jazz 'lis African, she said. Singer Attacks Myth About Negro Jazz TORONTO (CP)--Jazz is the combination of heredity and en- vironmet and anyone with the normal capacity for music can "grow up and swing like crazy," says Eve Smith, a Washington - born singer who has lived here for nine years. "IT can't buy this business about white people not being able to play jazz." She was referring to the "Crow Jim' feeling among many musicians of her race that Negroes have exclusive rights to jazz because it por- trays the dramatic story of their people and what they have been through. Musicians: such as drummer Max Roach and pianist Thelo- nius Monk, who even refuse to their "But it jisn't, It's American, And what's wrong with having a white, or \Japanese American for that jmatter, playing it." "Why should we want to es- tablish a close link with the jAfrican Negro anyway. He doesn't want to have anything jto do with us. He is an entirely \different kind of person." Negro supper - club entertainer whose repertoire consists of "maningless" material. : "Idle prattle is boring and so are' trite lyrics," she discov- ered, working a year with Duke Ellington and then with the {group Three Bees and a Honey. "I even-gave up singing the blues once because white people keep thinking that that's what Negroes are god at, I just had to prove I could sing other things." "There's even a stigma, for a Negro, in being considered. a jazz singer. I'd rather be thought of as just a singer." Before she was discovered by Ellington, Miss Smith was'an elementary schol teacher who Sang part time in a small Wash- ington club, She now appears from time to time on television and in Toronto clubs. Indians Plan Telephone Service . LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The telephone is to be the next step in modernization for the 7,000- acre Oneida Indian reservation 15 miles southwest of London. Ninety per cent of the 220 homes on the reserve have had | | for hospital delivery .Mon- pound boy was born on liv- --(CP Wirephoto) manville. Service in the chapel on Sat- _--(CP W \ urday at 2 o'clock, Interment Bowman- ville Cemetery. MOHUN, Undine At Strathaven Nursing Home, Bowman- ville, on Wednesday, November 7, 1962, Undine E. Mohun, in her 72nd year, wife of the late John Henry Mohun, 133 Elgin Street, Bowmanville, and dear mother of Frank. Resting at the Mor- ris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville, Serv- ice in the chapel on Friday at 4 o'clock. Interment Bowmanvilie Ceme-| tery. | RINEHART, Agnes : At the Oshawa General Hospital, on Wednesday, November 7, 1962, Agnes Rinehart, in her 73rd year, widow cf the late William Rinehart and mother of Mrs. Garnet Johnstone (Vera), Mrs. George Bunfield (May) of Oshawa, Mrs. Howard Drinkwalter (Myrtle), the Appian Way, and Indonesia|fathers give the issuewa full-/ A German Catholic source, delivered a block of a Jakarta|dress debate. | said the conflict might be solved road. 3 anee ' on a regional basis. He said/| Hildred's office has been con- QUALIFIED OPINION R mixed marriages present few! verted into a virtual geolgist's| A sampling. of qualified hig| Problems in the Roman Catholic] workshop as the Vermont cairn|™an Catholic opinion gave this! coystries of Latin America and, grows and grows: |divided verdict: Spain while causing tensions in! An American expert on canon protestant states. | |law: "There is some likelihood! There has been open specula-| |the whole question will be aired) tion in church quarters that the! RADIO LINK The South Viet Nam govern-| at the council and that the coun.) council might decide to what| cil fathers will see just how far\extent a bishop could exercise | Soeene Get ant ee people !hydro installed within the last ) ae jean't play jazz is just as bad as OS muidenke a this is our one powerful counter|the myth propagated by the 2 ee pe pee jagainst the dedicated Commu- whites that Negroes have some ing a only half a deren |nists operating in most uncom-|special kind of rhythm, shej) ono. have phones. bai . fees - | said. : | mitted countries as well as} "The J. R. Reid, Bell Telephone within the Western alliance." irhythm than anyone else. My Company's London manager, | Nossal, born in Austria 34/father, for one, was a lousy|Said a delegation came to him Study Of Chi Under Red Rule lyears ago, migrated to Aus-jdancer." a year ago for service, explain- ltralia at the age of 12 and his) Miss Smith says that at its|ing that phones were needed to jment is giving or selling 250,- By THE CANADIAN PRESS ,their eventual effect on ourijournalistic career has taken|very rots, jazz is church music provide efficien fire protection 000 transistor radios 'o outlying|there might he a relaxation for|his powers without reference 1o| The Wests one powerful coun-jeconomy and says "we must/him to many parts of the world.|with European, African and|and provid communication bes villages to maintain a radio link|better inter-church relations. I|Rome. However, this form of|te' against communism is ajface up to the fact that commu-|/From 1959 until this fall whenjeven Middle Eastern strains|tween residents and their em- with Saigon. {would think osmething might bel decentralization has not been| vast force of space-age mis-|nism is not as unpopular as We/he joined the editorial board of|such as its tonalities and its use|Ployers. jaccom plished along these! nyblicly mentioned in the con-|Sionaries . . . to spread educa-|might wish. |The Globe and Mail in Toronto! of the minor key- Bell now is installing under- | lines." f tion and knowledge among illit-) } ground cables and service is Negro has no more MANY SOUGHT MOOSE Toronto, William of Barne, John of Hornepayne. Resting at Steckley's Chapel, Barrie. Service Satur- day, November 10 at 2 p.m. Interment Crown Cemetery, Barrie ROSS, Grace E. Potter, snowball into rest suddenly in Oebaws: SASKATOON (CP) -- More! than 1,300 hunters sought moose| during the first week of the} pervisor reported. An American bishop: "I would not be a bit surprised i matter came up. This is a Ontario, on . 1962, Grace E. Potter Snowball, beloved wife of the late Elmer Ross, ee 18. ) Millier (Dorothy) of Newmarket. For further 4 call the An Funeral Home, 728-5173. WHITELEY, Robert Adair Jr. In the Oshawa General Hospital on » 1962, Robert Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Whiteley, aged nine days, The funeral was held from the Funeral Home, Oshawa, Thursday, November 8 at 2 p.m. Inter- ment Mount Lawn Cemetery. WILBUR, Mary Vivien At Port Perry Community Hospital on » 1962, Mary Doroth, ), Hillis, Glenn, Keith Hooey), all ment Breadalbane Cemetery, Utica. LOCK'S FLORIST Funeral arrangement ond floral requirements for all occassions OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226 390 KING STRET WEST IN MEMORIAM ASTON -- In loving memory of a dear wife, Florence Aston, who passed away November 8, 1961. A good wife, mother mother, God be with you till we meet again. and grand- Said Too | MONTREAL (CP) -- The) speedy trial of two mien,! charged in Montreal's fake vot- ing-slips affair, before Chief) Judge Edouard Archambault of| vented by a writ of certiorari} issued against the judge. | The writ, claiming Judge| Archambault acted with par-} tet\tiality and beyond his powers in| granting the speedy trials, was) obtained Wednesday by the} Crown from Mr. Justice Ignace} Deslauriers in Queen's Bench} Court. Argument on the writ will be! heard Friday. garde, chief organizer in Mont-| 'real of the Union Nationale| party, and Gaston Archam- bault, former head of the Que-| bec Provincial Police homicide} squad. | The charges against the tw were laid under the Quebec! iElections Act and followed the |seizure in Windsor station last} |Friday of 4,000 fake voting slips jallegedly addressed to Union aera i 'Nationale candidates. MUST PRODUCE SLIPS at the polls by voters-on Mont- real Island and in Quebec City when they appear to cast bal- --Ever remembered by a loving bus- and > A AUDLEY -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Jessie Lillian Audley, who passed away No- vember 8, 1956. In my heart your memory lingers, Always tender, fond and true, 'There's not a day, dear mother, I do not think of you --Lovingly remembered py daughter Dorothy, son-in-law Keith, grandchil- dren Barbara and Catherine. DONALD -- In loving memory of a dear father and husband, David Donald, who passed away November 8, 1931 Too dearly loved to ever be forgotten. Ever remembered by wife and MILLER -- In loving memory of a dear wife and mother, Ida Laura Mi'ler, who passed away November 8, 1957. We cannot forget you, our loved one 80 dear, Your memory grows sweeter year after year; 'You cannot return, so our tears are in vain, But in Heav you again --Sadly missed by 'en we are hoping to meet daughter, Dorothey and family, sonsigrand fight, Bruce, Carl and Glenna. PARKINSON -- In loving memory of! # dear husband, who passed away on November 8, 1959. family. lots in Quebec's Nov. 14 provin. cial election. Three others have been ar- rested in connection with the case. The writ the contends that |two cases to speedy trials. 'claims he had proceeded ille- Speedy gally in changing bail of $5,000 property bond to $1,500 cash. Following issuance of the writ, Judge Archambault said he disagreed with it but it had the sessions court has been pre-|been issued by a higher court! and he had no alternative but to accept the decision. At the hearing the defence al- luded to what it termed "'a $20,- 000 frame-up'"' of one of the ac- cused. WILL ORDER ARREST Crown prosecutor Guy Des- jardins replied: "If anyone places strong The accused are Andre La-|tion wrong-doing, I will ask for! warrants for their arrest re- gardless of their political affil- jiation. {text of mixed marriages. Rev. Gustave Weigel, a Jesuit at Woodstock, Md., and a prom- northern Saskatchewan season) major issue in so many mixed | jnent public speaker, said he this year, a game branch su-|Catholic - Protestant marriages/phelieves it is '"'in the order of 'In the .states. But any changes| possibility" that the law might Voting Slip Trial | be modified. | "This is a rea] issue with the non - Catholics in the greater part of the world," he told this! reporter. "I mean Germany, Holland, England, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and nearly all the coun- tries of the East." Widespread external pres- |sures have been brought to bear the church to revitw N | 1061. Dr. W. A. Visser't Hooft, gen- jeral secretary of the World {Council of Churches, has said |both the Roman church and {other Christian denominations jare the losers under present jconditions because some part- jners in a mixed marriage place themselves completely outside |the church to avoid trouble. | The Archbishop of Canter- jbury, Rt. Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey, has said the Catholic conditions are "'very painful" to jenough proof before me of elec-| Practising Anglicans. Canon Bernard C. Pawley, an {Anglican in Rome as the arch. |bishop's observer, has said they igive "grave offence and are 'erate populations.' | f the priest from Woodstock College| This is the conclusion of Fred- erick Nossal in Dateline--Pe- king (Longmans), a study of China under the Communists written by 'Nossal after eight months as head of the Toronto Globe and Mail's. Peking bu- reau | Nossal, the first Western newspaper man, as opposed to news agency reporters, allowed to live and operate in the Chi- nese capital, was in Peking from October, 1959, 1/1960, when his visa was can- jcelled by the Chinese for un- jspecified 'in accuracies." He iwas not replaced by The Globe land Mail. Dateline -- Peking describes the China that Nossal was al- lowed to see during his tenure in Peking.. His impressions re- \flect respect for some changes jmade by the Communists but jthis is overladen by unqualified jconcern for the future. |AWAKENING GIANT | He sees China as jawakening from a nightmare of jhunger and civil war" where \factories are the new temples, jmachines the altars. He terms \China's population.-- probably 700,000,000 now and maybe twice that number by the end | In seeking speedy trial Mon.|widely held to offend against|of the century--"the most ex- day, Jean-Paul Cardinal, repre- jsenting Lagarde, sought the o| speedy trial for his client on|Reform and _ Reunion, the grounds "'he was being pre- judged by politicians in the present campaign and his repu- tation could suffer enormously." Lagarde and Archambault are charged with conspiracy to violate the election act, with aiding and abetting others to The slips must be produced|commit a crime and with con- ispiring to utter forged docu- ments. } Omer Fontaine, arrested near |a Windsor Station locker where |police said the fake voting slips were found, has been held with- jout bail since Friday. In another ramification of the jaffair, provincial police Fontaine. j } { By KE NKELLY husband wia,, OTTAWA (CP) -- It was ajline from their colleagues Everybody ma. won. {points among all four political ly missed by wife Violet and/parties over the exercise in 'brinkmanship in the Commons In Remembrance turday, November 10, The wa Times will be pub- lishing an In Memoriam Tri- bute Edition to Men and Wo- men who gove their lives in the service of their country. Friends and relatives are in- vited to place their tributes in this edition in remem- brance of those who made the supreme sacrifice, For further information and rates: telephone 723-3492 THE OSHAWA TIMES CLASSIFIED Tuesday night when the minor- jity government squeezed out victories on two non-confidence That about sums up the view-| | charity."" | Ina recent book, The Council, Rev. | Hans Kung, noted Swiss - born Catholic theologian, write: "It might also be considered} whether in mixed Catholic- Protestant countries, for the sake of creating a better inter- confessional atmos phere, we could not return to the rutes for mixed marriage which were in force up to 1918." Before 1918, in many coun- tries of western Europe the Ro- man Catholic Church prohibited mixed marriages involving a Cathoiie from taking place in Protestant churches but recog- nized them as valid if they hap- sus-| pened. Now such marriages are} judge acted illegally in chang-| pended a cell guard, Robert Le-|not only prohibited but regarded) ing preliminary hearing in the|vesque, pending investigation of|as invalid and the children of| It|"suspected intimidation' of/them as "'illegitimate' in the! eyes of the church. Comforts All Parties 'plosive issue the Communists will eventually face' and says food will remain for years "the cruellest of the nation's count- 'less problems." Yet in the face of these diffi- culties, "it is obvious that Pe- king's dominance over Asia is coming ever closer, and today the Chinese Communists are ap- }pealingnot to the West, or even to Russia, but to all the have- not people of the world." "China is trying to head this crusade of the poor against the rihc, The only sure way to halt China's leadership of the poor is to help her--and indeed all the world's poor nations--grow rich more rapidly." Nossal writes that Western hate for Chinese Communist methods does not minimize to June,| "a giant) 'NOT ALL BAD' "Communism is an alien, "i idoctrine, But it is not all bad.|- It has some excellent points--; socially, economically, interna-} tionally. These aspects of com- munism we of the West should ibe studying. If people knew ;more about communism they would be less afraid of it, and we would be in a better position in the struggle between the two jsystems."" | | The need of the West today! is a common cause, Nossal; |says. "Western global policies are} |beset by a tragic aimlessness. | . We have come to accept the easy life as a matter of course, and we push aside se-| rious thoughts about people and} nations who have not yet! reached our standards. Unless| ou rchildren are taught in their} schools that the advancement! and well-being of the poorer) lands is the responsibility of the) jset on a collision course with disaster." Nossal says the giving of money and food to the poor is not enough. NEED MISSIONARIES "The West must recruit its own vast force of space - age missionaries who are prepared/ to leave their homelands, as did) the Christian crusaders of old, to spread education and know!-! edge among illiterate popula- tions, More technicians, doctors, | jnurses,. engineers and archi-/ tects, farmers and economists; must go from the rich world into the poor to preach and to} teach." | The United Nations, the Co- lombo plan, President Ken- nedy's Peace Corps are fine, he says, "but how much greater would be the impact if the West as a whole initiated an interna- tional education campaign with the sole purpose of elevating the underdeveloped nations' to our iliving standards,' "Such a scheme can be con- ducted on the world-wide scale needed only if we realize that | he was the newspaper's Far| And just as she rejects Crow East and Southeast Asia corre-|Jim feelings, she rejects the spondent. Istereotype of the glamorus expected to be available to most of the homes by January, PLEASE!..... Pay Him Promptly! ... He's on YOUR PAYROLL NOT The Newspaper's YOUR CARRIER is an enterprising young man in business to serve you and the many other customers ---- on his newspaper route, quickly and dependably each day. HE BUYS his papers from us at the wholesale rate and sells them to you at retail. The difference in price pays him for serving you. AND BECAUSE he works for you in this way, he looks to you for payment each collection day. Thus, he is on your "payroll", not ours, and appreciates being paid promptly -- so that he can pay his own paper bill and enjoy the full profit he has earned! She Oshawa Cimes Non-Confidence Vote PRE-CHRISTMAS UPHOLSTERY SALE (Frontenac) voted -a different Liberals said, clearly shows| evidence of a serious split. They also noted that six Que- bec Social Credit MPs--Deputy jLeader Real Caouette, Charles- 'Eugene Dionne (Kamouraska), 'Bernard Dumont (Bellechassez, Jean Paul Cook (Mont- magny-L'Islet), Gerard Perron (Beauce) and Gilbert Rondeau i | they believe in what they vote on |posed in Social Credit ranks {when Mr. Thompson voted for |his own motion and against the Liberal one while Deputy jLeader Caouette voted for the |Social Credit motion and left lmotions by margins of eight! (Shefford)--voted with their col-/the chamber rather than vote jand 13 votes. Sources in a |greater or lesser degree--in the jvoting lineups. All seemed lagreed that the government's jtenure of office was more un- jcertain than earlier in the ses- jsion although the measure of|0f non-confidence was shattered| leagues on one vote but ab- As Liberals saw 't, there were these other advantages: 1. The government's confi- jdence in gaining enough Social \Credit votes to stave off a vote jon the Liberal motion that was Il parties found) Stained from voting on the sec-|rejected by a majority of Social {something comforting -- in Credit MPs. Progres sive Conservatives were gleeful that the Liberals, in voting for the Social Credit motion, gave the appearance of subscribing to Social Credit doc- trin, although Paul Martin (L juncertainty ranged from slight'and, when it appeared they|--Essex East) in explaining the \to extreme. might be defeated, cabinet min- |Liberals' s'and said they did not | Liberals were confident the !Sters openly sought to swing|interpret the wording in the jvoting opened a split in Socia Credit ranks which will widen jin coming weeks. {ment on the floor of the cham- ber. }|Social Credit behind the govern-/d0ctrinaire manner Social |\Creait did Both Conservative and New 4: A leadership split was ex- as|they fear an election more than! CHAIR | Progressive Conservatives; 2. The New Democrats were|Democratic sources said the! jconsidered it only. slightly less|isdlated as a prop to the govern-|Liberal action indicates a de- jcértain Social Credit votes wil}|ment when Liberals and Social|8tee of irresponsi v |continue to'give the government|Credit MPs formed a_ voting) Will seriously concern business-| a majority. And they weren't|Combination on a Social Crediti}men who may regard Social) too worried, contending that if non - confidence motion which ty which |Credit's mone i tary ideas as dan- THIS TV CHAIR IS YOURS «++ every 2 3 elece upholst- with or by ut sted eautiful FREE chair 4 custom ered is ond YOUR' CHOICE OF COLOR! LIMITED TIME ONLY ! NOT EXACTLY AS SHOWN More people rely on OSHAWA UPHOLSTERING CO. than any other firm. This Is What OSHAWA UPHOLSTERING . Craftsmen do... RECOVER and REBUILD our 2-piece Chesterfield Suite © 3+ Year Workmanship Guarentee. Suite stripped to the bore frame. : a Frames re-blocked. Springs replaced. New cotton. New filling. All white felt. Cushions and back springs replaced, Sides padded. Free Pick-up and Delivery within 50 miles. RE-STYLING IF DESIRED, AS LOW AS $99 MATERIAL INCLUDED @ Easy terms to suit your budget. @ Order now! Have your chesterfield done later @ Be assured of your FREE TELEVISION CHAIk. e@ Our representative will call at your home without obligation .., day or evening, NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1963 OSHAWA UPHOLSTERING CO. 10 BOND ST. WEST 725-0311 --or-- 725-0310 ADVERTISING Social Credit voting' support|W@s defeated by 121 to 113. CARD OF THANKS fails, the New Democrats will/ p.. ; | , FEAR ELECTION aw - eae | 8 pull the government out of a| fl argh esha Saw an advantage in what they sincere appreciation to friends ana rex|tight spot. 3. Social Credit MPs, having|called "Liberal : bed-hopping"--| atives who sent flowers, cards and gifts jaccepted the substance of the/the fact that the Liberals sup- during my stay in the Oshawa Gen-/TAKE DIFFERENT LINE |Liberal non-confidence motion|ported a New: Democratic non- Liberals pointed to the fact|by incorporating it into their/confidence motion during the eral Hospital. Special thanks to Drs. Hull, Baldwin, Stocks and Grant, nurses voted for it the/throne speech debate and a So- Lafleche) first time but a majority votedjcial Credit non-confidence mo- and staff 1E and 3B, aiso specialjthat Social Credit MPs Gerardjown motion, Cedardaies United Church i bs : i = and Henri Latulippe (Compton-iagainst it the second time. This,'tion Tuesday. | gerously inflationary. Conservatives also said they, thanks to Reverend Mr. John Porter, Lamy (St. Mayrice - Waiter Krants.|

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