She Oshawa Times 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited T! L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1967 Oshawa Fair Good Thing But Could BeMuch Better There have been times in recent years when the Oshawa Fair seemed close to extinction. Then, almost overnight, the pendulum swung in favor of the fair, then known as The South Ontario Agriculture So- ciety Fair, Nobody seemed to know why, but attendances started to shoot up at least enough to allow for small profits. The fair still leaves much to be desired, but when it closed last week after its three-day session (heavy Thursday night rains spoiled that date) one point was fairly obvious-- the Alexandra Park show can still draw sizeable crowds. The total three-day attendance was 19,873, up about 600 from last year. That the 60th annual presentation of the Oshawa Fair drew nearly 20,000 patrons marks it as a major attraction. And it also raises the question of whether the fair has yet reached its full potential in the way of displays, exhibits and attendance. The fair's format remains ar- chaic, dull. It hasn't changed much in the past years. New ideas are needed, ones which will attract a far wider field of exhibitors. The exhibition serves as a valuable link between urban residents and their rural neighors. To many city youngsters the farm exhibits, for instance, provide about the only first-hand evidence they have that cows, chickens and farmlands are the true source of foodstuffs, not the supermarket. But more, it should grow as a vehicle of friend- ship and rapport between the city and district. To continue to do this certainly greater promotion on the part of the fair board is necessary. A new site for exhibition away from the heart of a residential area, it surely a consideration of some urgency. A location on the outskirts of the city would prove more convenient, per- mit the expansion required and cer- tainly foster goodwill. There is absolutely no doubt that having an annual exhibition is a good thing for Oshawa and district. The attendance shows there is in- terest. However nothing can remain static --- to maintain the fair as an annual event will require a continu- ing program of progress and promo- tion. Aggressive Pattern The aggressiveness which Cana- dian manufacturers display in ex- ploiting new market opportunities will determine the degree of success they may have in capturing a larger share of expanding world markets. In its current Busines Review, the Bank of Montreal stresses that this attitude will set the pattern of Canadian development for years to come. Tax environment, the nature and scope of any asistance the govern- ment may give in the transition period, and the whole complex question of controlling costs and increasing productivity also are seen as influences on the country's economy insofar as results of the Kennedy Round of trade negotia- tions are concerned, The substantial lowering of tariff She Oshawa Times 86 King St. E.. Oshawo, Onterin T. L. WILSON, Publisher E. C. PRINCE, Generol Monager Cc. J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES mes combining The Oshowa Times and the Whitby Gazette and hed 1863) is published daily utory holidays excepted), dian Dolly Newspaper Publish- "The Conodian Press Audit Bureau e Conadion Press is exclusively The Oshawa T established 7 chronicle (es entitled to tt gespotched h Der t or t¢ Associated J the tocol ews published therein. All rights of special des- potches ore also reserved ing St. E., Oshawe, Ontario ic iomson Bui in ©, Ontario; 40 Oshowa, Whitby, Ajax, e, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, rone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, sham, Burketon, Claremont, Menchester, Ponty and Newcostle not over S5c per week. By in Province of Ontario putside carrier de! oreo. $15.00 per yeor. Dther provinces ond Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per year, U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 per yeor, barriers which was agreed to 1s likely provide a real stimulus to, and stronger competition in, inter- national trade. "Assuming this to be the case, the main issues for this country, speaking generally, are . whether Canada will be able to maintain or increase its share of expanding world trade and whether the Ken- nedy Round will, in fact, prove to be a turning point in Canada's transformation from a natural res- ources-oriented economy to a more industrialized one." The bank says the trade talks provided Canadian manufacturers with easier access to the major industrial markets of the world. "At the same time, a relatively high degree of protection has 'been retained for large segments of the Canadian market. For other Cana- dian manufacturers who have lost protection to a significant degree there are offsets in the form of reduction of duties on materials, in- termediate products and machin- ery." Other Editors' Views NEW CANADIAN LEGEND The name of Cool Reception has entered this country's animal hall of fame. The great horse died as a result of his attempt to win the most prestigious race of this con- tinent, the mile-and-a-half Belmont Stakes. He will forever be a Cana- dian legend. ~-Hamilton Spectator OTTAWA REPORT Population Shifts Alter Commons By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA--Saskatchewan had 17 constituencies at the 1965 federal election. Our most changed province, it will have only 13 at the next election, and probably no more than 12 by 1973. This dwindling parliamentary representation of a booming prairie province highlights the shift of our population from vil- lage to city. Our House of Commons basi- cally consists of 263 MPs; 261 are divided between the ten provinces in accordance with their population, and the other two represent the Yukon and Northwest Territories. Repre- sentation is redistribution - of constituencies on the basis of the 1961 census was completed very late, (only last year) so the 1965 election was held on the basis of the outdated, 1951 census. The population of the 1961- base constituencies as in 1966 has just been tabulated by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. This again reflects the mobility of our population and the growth of our cities, and re- veals that the new constituency boundaries are already out- dated. ONTARIO GAINS 3 As a result of population shifts between 1951 and 1961, Ontario gained three seats for a new total of 88: Alberta gained two, to have 19; B.C. went up one to 23. Quebec dropped one, to 74, and Nova Scotia and Ma- nitoba also lost one each. The total size of the House thus dropped from 265 to 264; it used to have two extra MPs to ac- commodate Saskatchewan. Our constitution provides that no province shall have fewer representatives in the House of Commons than in the Senate. On the basis of population, for instance, P.E.1. would only have one MP; but this senate cushion ensures that it shall have four, the same number as it has senators. Similarly New Brunswick's Commons _repre- senate whereas its present population would only justify eight MPs. Under these simple rules, it sentation rests on its cushion of ten, is possible to calculate what changes would be necessitated on the basis of the 1966 esti- mate of population-- although in fact no change will be made until after the 1971 census. On this hypothetical basis, New- foundland, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan would each lose one MP; Ontario and B.C, would each gain one, and the House would drop to its basie 263 MPs To eliminate a further cone stituency from Saskatchewan, and still have 12 constituencies approximately equal in popula- tion, would involve major surgery of the boundaries. So would the enlargement of To- ronto's representation from 20 to the 22 justified by its en- larged population. LACK OF CONTACT Have the new redistribution rules removed us for ever from the regime we knew in our first 100 vears, when there was some continuity in the name ond area of many constituencies? This prospect promises a regrettable lack of contact between MPs and their constituents. Yet what else can be done as our urban population continues to explode? After the distribu- tion based on the 1961 census, all Toronto's constituencies ranged in population only be- tween 76,000 and 83,000. But the city core continued to wither and its suburbia to expand, so in 1966 those same areas had populations ranging from 71,000 to 140,000. This may seem like dull psy- chological arithmetic, of inter- est only to election officia's. But on the contrary, herein lies the seed of problems for politi- cal candidates and hardship for individuals. The voters may find their MPs becoming more remote, and less familiar with the people and problems cf the Seats they represent. Legal Aid Likely To Top All Predictions, Budgets TORONTO (CP)--The On- tario Jegal aid plan, inaugu- rated March 29, shows every sign of topping all predictions and budgets. About 15,000 individuals ap- plied for legal aid in the first three months--the same num- ber as were aided by voluntary, unpaid lawyers in the whole previous year. The cost is esti- mated by one Toronto lawyer at $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 a year instead of the $2,000,000 set aside in March "But what if it does?" he went on. "That amounts to about a mile and a half of su- perhighway."' Even so, "the man in the street hasn't vet fully realized what he is entitled to under the legal aid plan," says Dermot McCourt, financial administra- tor of the system. He estimates about 80 per cent of the appli- ecants get full or partial legal aid, depending on their ability to pay. Applicants for legal aid, available for both criminal and civil cases, including divorce, are interviewed by a welfare officer first. Lawyers handling indigents' cases are paid by the province 75 per cent of a fee schedule drawn up by senior lawyers. The post of duty counsel has emerged as more important-- legally and_ financially--than had at first been predicted. Duty counsel are not assigned to clients by the legal aid plan but are paid $18.75 an hour up to a maximum of $75 a day to sit in courtrooms and see no- body suffers for not fully know- ing his legal rights. totmemerranen stant GOOD EVENING AN A ae NNN TEM AN msn There were more than 1,000 each on the lists of criminal and civil duty counsel May 10, nearly a third of Ontario's 6,500 lawyers, With 20 of them work: ing five-day weeks in Metropoli- tan Toronto, that means an an- nual cost of $450,000 a year. Suspicions have been aired that legal aid lawyers, feeling they are on to a good thing, may drag out minor cases into jury trials or 'hustle' for clients for their friends. But the plan's director, 39-year-old An- drew Lawson, says the Upper Canada Law Society, the prov- ince's professional association of lawyers which administers legal aid, is ready to punish heavily any such infractions of the rules. The plan is organized on a ro- tating basis, so no lawyer can carve himself a permament niche. Many in the profession think this will also save crimi- nal law practice in Ontario from shrinking, as it has tended to. About half the applications for legal aid are in criminal cases. Divorce law reform may increase the number of civil cases because divorce now ac- counts for one in seven legal aid cases in the province, BIBLE "Six days thou shalt labour, and do all thy work." Deuter- onomy 5:13 The man who won't take out time for God shouldn't expect the Lord to take up a lot of time with him. USL a AAMT By Jack Gearin Young Must Teach Us To Forgive And Forget REV. JOHN PORTER of Osh- awa had some sage advice last week. He was worried about Canada's unity, or lack of un- ity (if you wish), He said, too many Canadians subscribed to the theory that a)! of the important lessons of life should be taught by the old to the young "This is a fallacy," he add- ed and continued: 'Such thinking can be danger- ous, especially in these trouble- some times when we conscien- tiously search for solutions to the problems which often di- vide us on important issues" This is where the youth of today comes into the picture, he said. Then he came to the more candid parts of his speech "Perhaps the older genera- tions have botched things up in the past; whether they did or didn't, it is up to youth to come to cur aid. This is where the young must teach the old to forgive and forget the past and to have faith in the future." Mr. Porter couldn't have pick- ed a more appropriate time or atmosphere for such candid Canadian - unity talk. Not only was it made during tours, the tempestuous visit of Gen. Charles de Gaulle to Quebec The (Which threatened to ruffle se- time - partists' feelings further. It was one; delivered at the annual civic dinner in the Hotel .Genosha for exchange students. Some 64 Oshawa and Quebec students were the special guests at the social soiree, kick-off for a two- week visit here by the French- Canadian students (who previ- ly ouslly entertained their Oshawa etc. during the two - week stay. consuming and detailed but without: it the program would fall pretty flat. The Jaycees have been doing this sort of thing locally for eight or nine years and doing it well. It's another example of the valuable civic services frequent- rendered by the who are, perhaps, best known social entertainments, Yaycees" task was a local Jaycees, es of industrial works, consider- ably urban and industrial centres. The overall current registrants does not appear sig- nificantly spring averages for the Oshawa area over the He also rejected the proposal (made in the brief) that the Osawa area be designated for special benefits under the Incentatives act. lower than in many other ratio of higher than the last 10 years. City's recent Area Development He said this counterparts in La Belle Pro- vince). The essence of Mr. Porter's speech was this: The student exchange plan sets a splendid example for the world in these troubled times. Unlike so many elders, the students are ever willing to mingle socially with those of other racial backgrounds. These annual student ex. changes are primarily sponsor- ed by the Canadian Council of Christians and Jews, but other groups deserve great credit for helping to implement them. The City put on the civic din- ner and the Oshawa_ Jaycees carried a heavy share of the local program by arranging for their Town Hall Civic For- ums before city elections which help no end to stimulate inter- est in municipal affairs C. M. DRURY, Federal min- ister of Industry, has not changed his stand on the Can- ada - U.S. Auto, pact. He recently expressed confi- dence (in a letter to the City of Oshawa) that benefits from the controversial pact will far outweigh what he calls "tem- porary adjustment caused by rationalization of production fa- cilities within the industry". Mr. Drury pointed out that the current level of registra- tions at Oshawa's Canada Man- power Centre office is no high- er and indeed, in some class- ( program was not designated to overcome municipal problems caused by sudden and _ short- term adjustments within exist- ing industries. There was one favorable as- pect to his letter. J. W. Pick- ersgill, Minister of Transport, is giving consideration to the Oshawa harbor development proposal recently made'by the OHC, The City's recent delegation headed by Mayor Ernest Marks went to Ottawa armed with a detailed and impressive brief, one based on deep research; but the results achieved 'thus far were anything but satisfac- tory to the local powers that be. (otra i) ua nL LL LL LL THE CRUTCH FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS LBJ In 'Vicious Circle' fr By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst Ending the American racial riots may well be impossible without ending the Vietnam war; ending the Vietnam war may be impossible without end- ing the racial riots; that is the vicious circle on which Lyndon Johnson is now orbiting. H. Rap Brown, a Black Power leader urges the Negroes of Washington to loot stores and burn the American capital. He calls for a Vietnam style guerrilla war. The presi- dent in a speech to his people on July 27 talked of helping law enforcement agencies, training the national guard for riot duty and he told the Negro agitators to think again because they are the losers in any riot, and the context in which he issued this warning was replete with im- plied threats. But the threats will not likely work. The young Negro who riots possesses nothing of what he sees around him; above all, he has no hope of ever getting enough to feel he is a man by being the head of a family, Worth Of Silver Dollar Bill Soars While Others Slide By JOHN CUNNIFF NEW YORK (AP)--While the value of most world currencies continues to erode, the worth of one U.S. denomination--the sil- ver certificate dollar bill--has suddenly soared. This dollar bill guarantees the holder the right to obtain silver at a fixed price. The demand for the metal-- and its rising price--may make 1967 the year of the great silver Tush, Speculators and currency dealers recently were offering $1.10 and $1.12 for $1 certifi- cates. But this is just a whole- sale price. They intend to make even bigger profits later. The explanation is that silver certificates guarantee the hold- er the right to exchange his bill for silver priced at $1.29 an ounce, although silver prices in the open market have risen to $1.87 or more. This price spurt resulted from a two-step U.S. -govern- ment decision to discontinue sales of silver at $1.29. Freed of restrictions, the market price now is determined- by supply and demand, And since demand far exceeds supply, prices are rising. This silver shortage results partly because of increasing de- mands from industry, FElec- tronic computer circuits, for ex- ample, are made largely of sil- ver. And the light sensitivity of photographic film is derived from the metal, Despite this rising demand, the price had remained stable because the U.S. treasury had a hoard of the metal and was willing to sell from this pile at a fixed price. Why should the government have a stockpile? Primarily to assure itself of the raw mate- rials for coinage. And why should it try to keep the price depressed? Simply to protect its silver coins from being melted down for other uses. If silver prices rose it would make melting profitable, despite the illegality. Now the treasury says so many copper and nickel U.S. coins have replaced silver coins that a coin shortage no longer is an immediate danger. In May it began restricting silver sales at the $1.29 figure to American industrial users only. Previously anyone could buy at that figure. On July 14 the ban was broadened to exclude almost all Sales at $1.29. Instead, the treasury said it would sell up to 2,000,000 ounces a week at free market prices. This action does not affect the holders of silver certifi- cates, who are, in effect, al- ready holders of the metal. By turning their bills into the treasury they are merely ex- changing a symbol for what the symbol stands for. The repercussions of the new policy were immediate. Speculators accumulated sil- ver certificates and advertised for more. PRICES TO RISE Major producers of sterling silver tableware and other household objects said 'their prices would rise immediately while film manufacturers said much the same thing, as did some manufacturers of jewelry. Prices of silver mining shares rose sharply because the higher metal prices are expected to mean higher profits later. Industry forecasters scouted for more supplies and looked to the day when India's 5,- 000,000,000 ounces, almost all in religious objects and jewelry, might be offered for sale. In Nevada, mining officials said that a continued rise in sil- ver prices might even make it profitable .to reopen the old Comstock Lode region. How long the boom will continue is disputed. Some in the silver business foresee prices near $3 an ounce. But prices that high undoubtedly would lead to substitutes. These substitutes might take the pressure off some industrial demand, but it isn't going to help the film manufacturers, the largest purchasers of silver, Neither, says the housewife, can you create heirlooms out of substitutes, owning a house, feeling secure. He does not believe the moder- ates because, essentially, they promise long run solutions that may work in the next genera- tion but human beings always reject such solutions: They want solutions now. Even solutions to help the next generation have been sac- rificed by Lyndon Johnson to Vietnam. In his Thursday aight speech, he listed all the welfare and civil rights measures he has passed through Congress but he has starved these activi- ties of funds. UNBALANCES ECONOMY The point is that Vietnam un- balances the American econ- omy; that war and the policy of over commitment abroad pro- duce inflationary pressures, a drain on U.S. gold reserves and as a consequence force retrench- ment at home; retrenchment al- ways hits welfare first; funds for the ghetto are not available and the ghetto explodes. There was in the White House an unspoken assumption that after the next election the pres- ident would be able to make peace in Vietnam and so have money to spare for welfare. But the Communists know that un- less he spends urgently to reha- bilitate the ghettos, the Ameri- can racial war will grow progressively worse. Hanoi, Pe- king and Havana already say openly they rely on the gheito insurrections to force the U.S. out of Vietnam. The Communists, in other words, are seeing a new oppor- tunity for victory and are less eager to make peace; and if they do not make peace, it will be much more difficult for Johnson to spend money reha- bilitating the ghettos which will explode ever more violenily making the Communists .ever more hopeful that the U.S. will be forced to withdraw. te Not to meftion the other problem--that of seeming to re- ward the advocates of violence in the ghetto if the federal gov- ernment increases welfare pay- ments. in 'response to violence. It is this.fear of seeming to re- ward violence that makes it hard for Johnson to adopt the one alternative open to him: an electorally dangerous; substan- tial tax increase to rehabilitate the ghetto. Verdict Of Jury In Regina Fateful One For All Canada -By BOB BOWMAN On: August 1, 1885, a jury at Regina brought in the most fateful verdict in Canadian history. Louis Riel was de- clared to be guilty of treason and was sentenced to be hanged. Canada still feels the repercussions of that decision. Actually, Riel should not have been convicted of treason. He had become a citizen of the U-S. before returning to Canada in 1884 to lead the rebellion in what is now Saskatchewan. Riel was defended by four good lawyers brought from Quebec, but perhaps they did not know that he had become a U.S. citizen. They based their defence on the claim that Riel was insane, but Riel cut the ground from under their feet by insisting that he was com- pletely sane, and knew what he was doing, otherwise his "mis- sion' would have had no meah- ing. INCONCLUSIVE Four doctors examined him several times, but their reports were inconclusive. Two of the doctors said that he was sane, but the others had doubts. From the jury's point of view, Riel insisted that he was sane and he had led an armed rebel- lion. They felt their only verdict could be "guilty" but they added a recommendation for mercy. Riel was sentenced to be hanged on September 18, but the outcry was so great that the execution was postponed to Oc- ee ae then November 12, an id not actually happen until November 16. . Kg Appeals were made to the Privy Council in Britain, and even to President Cleveland of the U.S.A. Prime Minister Mac- donald was under great pres- sure, for and against the hang- ing! He had a special commis- sion inquire into Riel's sanity. Two of its three members re- ported that Riel was "'accounta- ble" while the other .said that he was not accountable in polit- icah or religious matters, but could distinguish right from wrong, in QUEEN'S PARK 'Day' At Expo Proud One For Ontario By DON O'HEARN TORONTO -- Ontario has been making a lot of mileage out of Expo 67. And it is going to make more. Ontario Day at Expo is Satur- day, Aug. 5. And it promises te be a day of which we will all be proud. A very ambitious program has been lined up for the day. A cast of some 1,200 people are being taken from the prov- ince to present a pageant (two performances). It is said it will be the largest "national" day program at the fair. One of the points of the pag- eant will be to demonstrate the international character of Ontar- 0. In its 26 groups of singers, dancers, musicians and gym- nasts will be representatives of all the major nationalities in the province's population. There will be Indian dancers, Estonian gymnasts, Chinese dancers and an 140-member Ukrainian choir. There is a Portuguese song and dance group from Ottawa and a Lithuanian dance group from Hamilton. The highlight of the pageant will be the 1867 military tattoo of the 75-man Fort Henry guard and a band and drill perform ance by the Brockville Rifles. Anybody who has seen the Fort Henry guard's tattoo knows that it will be an im- mense hit--as it has been in the U.K. This group of university stu- dents, recruited and trained each summer, puts on a thrill- ing and colorful display. It has made a big impression for years on tourists. And it should get the province a lot of publicity at Expo. A BIG WINNER Once again Ontario will be a big winner through Expo. It has already been recognized that a lot of money has been coming to the province from Montreal- bound tourists. And our pres- tige has gained, of course, through the Ontario pavilion. Some people say that with half of federal revenues coming from the province, and with Ot- tawa having to underwrite the fair for many millions, the province may actually be @ loser. But this is negative thinking. There is no doubt of the value to Canada of Expo. And we are part of Canada. The only way we actually are losers probably is that when it comes to big thinking Quebee has shown us up. TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Aug. 1, 1967... Slavery was abolsihed tn all British possessions 133 years ago today--in 1834-- though it was not until the victory of the Union in the Civil War in 1865 that slaves were freed in the United States. Opening up of the West Indies and the southern states of America had made slave trading to the New World lucrative, and it was outlawed only after campaigns at the end of the 18th century and be- ginning of the 19th roused public protests. 1798--D efeat of French navy at the Battle of the Nile cut off Napoleon's troops in Egypt. 1914--Germany declared war on Russia and invaded Luxembourg. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--the Allies cons oli- dated their gains near Ypres in the face of Ger- man counter-attacks; Ger- man troops retook St. Jul- ien and gained a foothold at Westhoek; Russian forces began an offensive in Gali- cia while retreating in the south, Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day--in 1942--British motor boats sank two German E- boats off Cherbourg; Japa- nese troops landed on Che- kiang province coast, 30 miles south of Wenchow; Ottawa announced the ap- pointment of Fyodor Gusev as the first Russian minis- ter to Canada. YEARS AGO 20 YEARS AGO August 1, 1947 Mr. and Mrs. Steve Lukow of Drew St. won the grand prize in the Lawn and Garden Contest held by the Central Mortgage and Housing Corp. Homes along the lakeshore were under water today when a sudden squall sent the water across the street from the beach to the harbor. 35 YEARS AGO August 1, 1932 In order to encourage more people to play golf the fees for the Oshawa Golf and. Country Club have been lowered to $25 for the remainder of the year. Mr. Mike Bouckley of Golf St., won the Hart Challenge Trophy for the best! kept flow- er garden in the contest held by The Oshawa Horticultural Society. ~ pens WHITB' Revolvers rifles, and an assortment gerous weapons are play at the Whitby Salv< Wrec By CAROL KENN KINSDALE, Ireland | unique salvage opera take place shortly upor end-haunted wreck of tania, 315 feet down i lantic off the southern Ireland. In the next week or weather and tides American diver John L made a television film wreck for NBC in 1961 been planning his sal tempt for five years, v the long descent with a fon to the Cunard liner a German torpedo in | Using sophisticated r niques pioneered by Catp. Jacques Cousteau U.S. Navy 'sea lab" ments, they will carry first stage of the two- vage, first such atte secret and unsuccessft were made by a Britis! company in the early 1f Light's first job wi blow off the liner's fc propellers with geligni of manganese bronze : weighing 14% tons, th lers could sell for betw 500 and £19,300 at curt don prices -- enough Light's anonymous / OPP Patr Average During a single y patrolling, the Whitby ment of the Ontario P: Police cover enough di: equal a trip of over t the distance around th at the equator. During the week end 30 the detachment | 16,700 miles or an av over 2,385 miles per da In the same period they investigated 34 2 in which 14 persons ° jured, three were killed drivers charged. However, road patrol the only duty of the OP During the same weel eral occurrences were gated. These include varied happenings as fi and enters, four malicio age, two thefts, two li fences, one assault and cellaneous happenings. The OPP report cont "What do you suppt to a person's -- courtesy when he take: road in his car. Does | it outside on the rear or perhaps wrap it aro car's aerial? Certainly n't take it into the c him. "No normal person ever dream of running crowded sidewalk dod and out and cutting per: He wouldn't follow som close behind that his n almost touching the ot low's back, nor would h some slow moving per yell and swear at him. BUY YOUR @ SUNBEAM @ IMP @ ARROW @ ALPINE @ SIMCA All With 5 Year 5,0f Mile Power Train Warr BELL'S GARI 668-3693 BUNDAS E. WHIT