-- § She Oshawa Zines Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario T. L. Wilson, Publisher FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1963---PAGE 6 Hunting Regulations Could Be Lot Tougher . ' ' . . * . ' . . 7 * . 7 . . « ~ . . . . . . . * . . . Peewee eee eer mare The Ontario government has finally heeded the annual toll of life and property taken by hunters. Lands and Forests Minister Roberts has announced that his department is preparing new regulations under the Game and Fish Act that will mean more uniform testing of hunt- ing qualifications, with the tests conducted by departmental staff throughout the province. Tests will include written examinations for new applicants for hunting licences. Mr. Roberts said the pending changes were part, of a safety pro- gram launched in 1959. That pro- gram has had only limited success. The department has plenty of time between now and the next hunting season to draw up regulations which will meet present-day hunting con- ditions. Mr. Roberts said he anticipated no need to establish special lincence- examination centres, and that no consideration had been given to a demerit system similar to the one in effect for motorists. These sug- gestions came from the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, and Mr. Roberts should give them more thought before summarily dismissing them. The hunting season so far has demonstrated the need for much stricter regulations, more rigidly enforced. Eight human lives have been lost. Heavens knows how many domestic animals have been shot. Song birds are being massacred by immigrants -- and natives -- who claim to be ignorant of the law. Many of the offences are being committed by persons who have had hunting licences for years. Indeed, examination might well reveal that the younger hunters who' have taken safety courses before obtain- ing licences are much better be- haved than the "veterans". Why should there not be tests for all would-be. hunters as a condition of the issuing of licences next year? There should be recognition tests, to determine whether the hunter can identify the various kinds of game birds. There should also be an eye test: Judging by what is happening in the field, many hunt- ers' have extremely poor vision. Some cannot even tell the differ- ence between a man and a partridge at shotgun range. Challenge To Business One of the Canada's most color- ful businessmen, Loblaw President George Metcalf has issued a chal- lenge to other leaders in business and industry to help make Canada's centennial a memorable event. Speaking in his capacity as director of the National Centennial Ad- ministration, he urged the Cana- dian business community to show the world what private enterprise can achieve in a nation of free men by taking on, voluntarily, meaningful projects to mark 100 years of Canadian nationhood. The number and variety of cen- tennial projects Canadian business could undertake were infinite, he declared. They could be great pro- jects befitting the resources of giant industrial corporations, or modest programs adapted to the limitations of the small firms. The point was that there was room for all to participate, either as indivi- dual companies or as part of a nationwide organization. The centennia] offered a natural vehicle for reaching the world with Excuses For A Hamilton magistrate remarked, a few days ago, "If ever I assumed the role of social worker, nobody on the streets would be safe." What © prompted the remark was a case » before him. A man said to be "suf- fering from frustration" had struck another man over the head with a shovel; the magistrate sentenced ' him to a-jail term on the assault : charge. Commenting on the magistrate's remark, the Hamilton Spectator * suggests that in recent years there * has been a tendency for the courts . to become like psychiatrists' clinics -- "a host of entirely new expres- * sions have come into being which * have little to do with the law as * such but which tend to make id eee ee eee ee ee wrong-doing in the legal sense a matter of 'sickness'. She Oshawa Gimes T. L. WILSON, Publisher C. GWYN KINSEY, Editor The Oshawa Times combining The Oshawo Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays and Statutory holidays excepted). "Members of Canadian Daily Newspaper Publish- ers Association. The Canadian Press, Audit Bureau rd Circulation ne can _Ontario Provincial Dailies titled to the T vecbtioaten s enti lo use o ication of al! news despatched in the paper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights of special des- potches ore also reserved. ¢ Offices: Thomson Building, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 640 Cothcart Street, Montreal, P. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby Ajax, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Liverpoel, Tounton, tyrone" Dunbarton Goriskilen? |, Taunton, rone, irton, iski Seta ha, en Ca ol i, Kinsale, Raglan, Blackstock, Manchester, Pontypool. and 'Newcastle not over 45c per week. By mail (in Province of Ontario) 3 outside carriers delivery areas 12.00 per year. Other 15.00, and C fh =Countries U.S.A, end foreign 24.00. «© Canada's story: "Canadians know Canada and her amazing produc- tive capacity, her great wealth of natural resources, but does the world know? . ... Let's think big and plan big. It will be good busi- ness for Canada and good busi- ness for all nations." Tremendous organizational ability and execu- tive talent could be brought to bear in any joint industry or business- wide project. Specific projects he mentioned as possible centennial contribu- tions were: Perpetua] endowment of chairs in Canadian universities devoted to studies which foster better understanding between Canadians or between Canadians and people of other nations; assis- tance to the handicapped; an un- dertaking to provide special facili- ties for teaching Canada's iwo national languages to those citizens who are not fluent in one or the other. His warning should be heeded by all: "There are less than 1200 days to January 1, 1967." Criminals ~ "No.one would want the adminis- tration of the law to go back to old and savage times, but all _too often these days it seems that the line between right and wrong -- in both the legal and moral sense -- is smudged. Talk about an accu- sed person being emotionally this, or mentally that, at the time the offence was committed is too often considered defence enough. The idea that a person could be just plain 'bad' seems to have gone out of fashion. Psychology has enriched the eloquence of defence lawyers and given them new fields in which to exercise their skill in fulfilling their first duty -- to defend their clients. "The judge must redress the _balance. A court is a court, a place for dispensing justice, not the office of a social counsellor. The great anonymous host .of innocent. citi- zens have a case too when ugly violence is charged in court." Bible Thought God accepth no man's person. -- Galatians 2:6. Here is both encouragement and warning. None is so good as to deserve God's favor; none is so bad as to be uncared for. Briefly Noted People don't love money as much as they are reputed to; they're constantly kissing it goodbye. REPORT FROM U.K. Historic Industry To Be Protected By M. MCINTYRE HOOD Special London (Eng.) Correspondent For The Oshawa Times LONDON The National Trust is an important body in Britain. It is entrusted with the buildings and of seeing that the amenities which give distinc- tive character to English towns and villages are not sacrificed to the demands of modern pro-. gress. It is actually the owner of thousands of acres of amen- ity land and scores of historic buildings. The Trust-has just announc- ed that it proposes to widen the scope of its activities to in- clude the preservation of "state- ly machinery". By this it means to preserve for posterity old in- dustrial plants and their equip- ment which have a_ historic value in relation to the develop- ment of industry in Britain down through the centuries. The scheme will include fac- tories dating back to the days before the industrial revolution, early canals and aqueducts, many of which have been long forgotten. But they are exam- ples of a heritage which cannot be matched by any other coun- try. FIRST STEPS TAKEN The first steps in the direc- tion of industrial preservation have already been taken by the Trust. It is now negotiating for the preservation of half a dozen important. works of the first in- dustrial revolution. One is Wors- ley Delph, a canal basin near Manchester. It forms the outlet of' three undefground 'canals ----~from coal mines. At present it is partly owned by the National Coal Board. Another of the Trust's pos- sible preservations in the indus- trial field is a west country gas works, which is said to possess some of the earliest gas-making equipment used in this couniry. This new field of activity for the National Trust is revealed in its annual report, just is- sued, for 1962-63. It says there has been a "strange delay" in the preservation of Britain's early industrial buildings, with their "stately machinery". Taste and interest in them has lagged. The report goes on to say: "Not only has 200 years lapsed since some of these were built, but they are unique. Europe, which easily outbids Britain in classical and modern buildings, has little that is com- parable to offer. Britain, the first great industrial power, has in its early factories, bridges and canals an inheri- QUEEN'S PARK tance that is often of supreme historic interest and sometimes of considerable beauty." The Trust feels that it is pioneering something in what it considers to be a_ neglected field. It claims to be deeply in- terested and concerned over the future of this part of the nation's inheritance. It has dur- ing its history redeemed mediaeval abbeys, renaissance palaces and Regency mansions. Now it feels the time has come to add industrial monuments to the list. The size of the trust's opera- tions can be judged from the fact that in the year 1962-63, its property expenditures its administration costs were over $600,000. It was heldped during the year by legacies and donations totalling over $300,000. Plugging Member Gets Senior Post By DON O'HEARN TORONTO--Donald H. Mor- row will be Mr. Speaker in the next house. Don is getting to be one of the old Hands around here. He first came down from Ot- tawa in 1948. At the time he was a school principal, He later had to drop this and entered insurance. A plugger, he never has been brilliant, but has held most of the routine chairmanships around the house, including the deputy.- speakership, and has done an acceptable job. When you ave been around this place for 15 years as he has, you have a senior job com- ing to you. And Mr. Robarts, not choos- ing to take Mr. Morrow into his cabinet, is making him Speaker --which, of course, is a position of great dignity and worth an extra $5,000 a year. An incidental point is that Mr. Morrow did not support Mr. Ro- barts at the PC leadership con- vention. He was one of the strong men behind Hon, Kelso Roberts. The lights are on again in the Liberal office downstairs. BY-GONE DAYS 35 YEARS AGO October 25, 1928 Oshawa was far ahead of most cities in disease-prevention, with 60 per cent of the school chil- dren immunized from diph- theria. Six factory permits that were issued since October 1 totalled over $100,000 and fifteen resi- dential permits were issued for a total of $45,300. The Little Theatre movement was received with great en- thusiasm. John Craig was the director. More than 800 people accept- ed the invitation of General Motors of Canada to get a pre- view of the new Oakland Six of the Olympic series. Thieves entered a window of the Bishop Bethune College and stole money and valuables. to the amount of $150. Leslie F. McLaughlin, presi- dent of the McLaughlin Coal and Supplies Co., Ltd, an- nounced that the company's new office building on King street west was open for busi- ness. A. J. Parkhill was elected president of the newly-formed Oshawa Kiwanis Club, Major R. B. Smith was elected vice-presi- dent; J. B. Waterous, secretary, and T. W. Joyce, treasurer. Some 40 members of the Scot- tish Rite Masons, and their wives, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Osier at a theatre party to see a picture starring Lionel Barrymore. At a supper following the show, A. G. Storie, presideni of the club, presented Mr. and Mrs. Osier with a token of appreciation. Vencrable Archdeacon Warren of Toronto laid the cornerstone of Christ. Anglican Church, which was under construction. Rev. R. B. Patterson was the rector. ; A new sidewalk was being constructed at King and Mary streets by the J. W. Butler Co. who were building the Genosha Hotel. ; CARPET COMPANY 282 King W 728-9581 BROADLOOM TILE Following the election there Was a great exodus. Dr. Boyd Upper and Harold Greer, the key members of John Wintermeyer's personal Staff, quickly cleaned out their desks. And for a while the party's rooms were in darkness. Now a new executive assis- tant, Gordon Awde, has been brought up from downtown Lib- eral headquarters. _-And Farquhar Oliver is back in Mr, intermeyer's office as opposition leader--a post he has held twice in the past. > ARTY CONVENTION Chances are there won't be an early Liberal leadership con- vention. Feeling in the party seems to be that it would be best to let it go for a while. : As one old hand expressed it: 'We'd better take a breath and start picking up the pieces." Guessing is that it will be a year at least before a new chief 's elected. And another guess is that this time a federal man will get the job. At the convention which elected Mr, Wintermeyer in 1958 there was a party split. The federal wing was trying to put Walter Harris in the job. And the provincial members re- belled. They got behind Mr. Winter- meyer and he won. There probably will be no such strong groupings at the next convention -- and the sta- ture an experience of a man from the federal field 'will have many attractions. lierin ine OTTAWA REPORT Consultant List By PATRICK NICHOLSON It wasn't only the mercury which soared to recoré heights in Ottawa last week. The tem- perature on the Liberal front bench in the House of Commons did the same--for shame. The lowest point would be hard to pinpoint, in that week when our $18,000-a-year MPs collectively descended to the puerility and irrelevance ard irresponsibility. But I would vote for motion No. 99 as that lowest point. - That motion by David Orli- kow, NDP member for Winni- peg Morth, asked for "a list of consultants prepard in the ef- fice of the postmaster general * YOUR HEALTH SERS Ra a tea ta _ Proved To Exist for the guidance of cabinet min- isters." Secretary of State Jack Pick- ersgill asserted: "This docu- ment does not exist." Then, under opposition prod- ding, Postmaster General Azel- lus Denis asserted: "I never sent out any list for the guid- ance of any minister. It does not exist." If words mean what I think they mean, that was a flat de- nial by two ministers of the Crown that such a list exists. But under further needling, Mr. Denis dodged. "Like any- body else, I can have in my own office a list of my rela- tives and friends." Vaccination Site Matter Of Choice Sy JOSEPH G. MOLNER, MD Dear Dr. Molner: Why do some women prefer to be vac- cinated for smallpox on the up- per arm, and others on the thigh? What are the reactions te such a vaccination? at might be helpful to advise women who are going abroad to have a vaccination long enough before the trip so that there will be no unsightly mark. --D.C. For medical purposes, the site of vaccination is not im- portant. In the old days when a large scar was usual, women preferred it to be on the thigh where it wouldn't show. How- ever, with modern fashions in bathing suits, there's not much hidden space left. Vaccination scars ate uw very small--no more of those as big as a quarter. Here are three basic reac- tions to smallpox vaccination: 1. The "take reaction." This occurs in from five to seven days as a rule, and usually in a person who has never been vaccinated, First a pimple ap- pears, then a vesicle, a pustule, finally the scab which later drops off, leaving the scar. T'1e significence of the "take" is that the person had no immun- ity and hence was in need of vaccination. There may be some feverish- ness, perhaps a headache, and there can be some knots or swelling of lymph glands in the neighborhood. 2, The 'delayed. reaction." This is much milder and oc- curs sooner, usually in three or four days, with a small vesice, small pustule, small scab, and maybe a small scar. This indi- cate; that the person had some resistance to the disease but was also in need of a vaccina- tion. : 3. "Immediate reaction." This occurs within 24 to 48 hours and amounts to nothing but a pimple comparable to a mosquito bite. It indicates that TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Oct. 25, 1963... Maurice Duplessis an d his first Union Nationale government were defeated when the,Liberals won 68 of the 86 sats in the Quebec provincial election 24 years ago today--in 1939. Adelard Godbout led the Liberals in a campaign filled wi th charges that the Union Na- tionale was lukewarm to- wards the Canadian war effort, Duplessis however was again victorious in 1944, and was premier until his death in 1959. - 1917--The Russian revol- ution began. 1913--The Calgary stock exchange was incorporated. Ronald W. Bilsky, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR @ Rheumatism @ Migraine Headaches 100 King St, E. 728-5156 'ANIMALS' f For Fascination Read 'ANIMALS' This new magazine contains fascinating stories, and pictures in colour about animals the world over Edited by Armand Denis and an advisory staff of experts, it will interest both the general reader and the student of natural history. The - full-colour pictures and the quality of their reproduction are superb. Here, truly, is dn opportunity to broaden your horizon. 'Animals' is published weekly and printed in Great Britain. Subscrpitions are available at $26.00 @ year postage paid or $13.00 for six months postage paid. Z Address cheques or money orders to: Department T, 244 Bay St., Toronte 1, Ontario, Canada the person already had good protection against smallpjox. Dear Dr. Molner: I am 13 aad my skin breaks out. I was told Vitamin A will help, What do you think of this recommenda- tion?--S.A.J, First of all, "m rather pleased that a 13-year-old van spell "recommendation" vor- rectly. Second, yes, Vitamin A quite often helps, but not al- ways. And even when it does, there are some _ procedures which do a great deal of good, with or without Vitamin A. Dear Dr. Molmer: Do all hu- mans have the same color of blood?--R.S. Yes, all blood is red regard- less of race or nationality. Characteristics such as skin, stature and facial features are not governed by the blood, but rather are transmitted by the germ Cells from which the body grows. Therefore, for transfu- sion purposes, blood may be used from any race or national- ity -- provided, of course, the usual technical precautions are taken as regards matching of blood types and so on. Dear Dr. Molner: During the menstrual period is it common to pass large clots? I am in my 20s and am worried sick, as I have always been ex- tremely healthy. However, our family has been under quite a nervous strain lately. -- LM _Clots are not unusual, par- ticularly in the first day or so, but you migh' benefit doubly, if you are so worried, by seeing a gynecologist. It would put your mind at ease--and could have a secondary effect, since rervous tension can alter one's cycle. Dear Dr, Molner: Iam the 26-year-old mother of one child. I would like to have another but have not been able to conceive. My doctor tells me one of my fallopian tubes is cloged and that I have only a 50-per-cent chance of becoming pregnant. Can anything be doe to assure pregnancy?--EC, The usual (but ot invariable) pattern is for one ovary, then the other, to release an ovum T* one fallopian tube is blocked, then the ovum cannot descend. So, yes, your prospect of becom- ing pregnant is more or less limited to every other month. The best time for pregnancy is midway between the beginning of one period and the beginning of the next. But there is no way to be certain of becoming preg- nant, - cal More needle produced this further evasion: "I challenge any member in this House to say that he had no: a list in his own office for Christmas cards and other purposes." Yet more needle ripped aside the curtain, or rather, tore the _ bag, and the cat jumped out. Mr. Denis admitted "I chal- lenge any member of Parlia-, ment who does not know about. the defeated candidates." oa The next day, the Conserva+' tive whip, Eric Winkler from Hanover, Ont., actually duced this list and waved it aloft in the House. He rose on. a question of privilege, which he correctly said concerned all honorable members of the House, and, of course. the whole country, to prove that the list peo exist, despite cabinet ae' als, a I have studied this document, Without question, it is that sought by Mr. Orlikow, and, equally without question, i could easily be identified by his description. ; It is entitled "List of Mem- bers of the House of Commons and Consultants--Confidential-- Revised 13 May 1963." Its seve eral pages contain three col- umns, headed "constituency," "consultant" and 'member of parliament." WHO REPRESENTS YOU? Where the MP is a Liberal, his name also appears in the But where the MP is not a Libe-. eral, the name in the 'consult- ant" column is, in almost every case, the same as that of the Liberal candidate who was de- feated in the election last April. For example, under Oxford constituency, the MP is. listed as Wallace B, Nesbitt, QC. He is a Conservative. The relevant "consultant" is "William E. Young," presumably the man of the same name who, as a Lib- eral candidate, trailed Wally Nesbitt by nearly 10,000 votes. Examples of other '"'consult- ants" who bea> the identical name .as the defeated Liberal are Allison Gillis of Queens, P.E.I.; Ovide Laflamme of Quebec - Montmorency; John Palmer of Grenville - Dundas: Norman Cafik of Ontario rid> ing; H. J. Fraser of Prince Albert; and E. L. Pudden of Moose Jaw-Lake Centre, Some of. these "consultants," whose names are 'presumably listed as a guide i cabinet ministers in patronage matters, are now civil servants, or even on the bench. Such are "Tom Kent, the prime minister's of- fice, East Block, Ottawa," who was beaten by NDP leader Tommy Douglas in Burnaby- Coquitlam, and Sidney L. Clunis, now a county court judge, who was beaten by Tory Harold Danforth in Kent. Why, on two separate days, 'was more'than half an hour of Parliament's time wasted by denials that such a list exists? -- The Perfect Gift for CHRISTMAS al Truly The Gift * That Lasts Forever! MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW Groland. Photography Studio