Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Sep 1967, p. 3

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s Study e Sniffing INTO (CP) -- Baby-doe- ttending the Canadian ic Society convention up the four-day meeting iy listening to speeches agressive children, pre- lood transfusions, and iffing. <. N. McRae, associate yr of pediatrics at the ity of Manitoba, said people do not realize the of glue sniffing by teen- . Canada. id that although only 15 are recorded as being a result of glue sniffing, ire is "'not indicative of gers of the habit." id cardiac arrest, halu- s and softening of bone are possible conse- y ol principals now esti- student involvement of | two and five per cent,' . "But it's much more ead in Winnipeg than res indicate." era Gellman, director of son Control Centre of g Children's Hospital, ¢ teen-agers had been i to the centre over 9 period last winter suf. he effects @f drinking la spiked with nail pol- ver, then the centre has th only 18 cases result- 1 various forms of glue but Dr. Gellman said other evidence indicat- practice ig widespread peg. yays re with dy cash a ARA FINANCE ANY LIMITED KING STREET W, 723-3487 UMINUM OSHAWA -E PARKING rotection .. omfort 9) >! Ventilated VENT All-Aluminem Y CANOPIES IINGS g enduring color. xtra utility to all nay for themselves | replacement sev- lor combinations, | FHA Financing ND FACTORY | OSHA 128-1633 idieieeipeiliiiininiacicadadipemnansed ope WA fessor Bell ' yhoo n boy leaf, s fingers. Graham Bell But to himself | was that of af? ng methods, of speech. tions of the nsmission of nvent what we It was only s work, -- particularly a tradition ir very utmost ial telephones cial larynx for ' & canada Se neg egy FEW HAVE PLEDGED VOTE Uncommitted Delegates - Wait New Developments TORONTO (CP)--How will the uncommitted and undecided vote gc at the Conservative leadership convention? The man perceptive enough to answer that question ought to be able to forecast the out- come of at least the first ballot in voting Saturday afternoon that winds up the five-day con- vention. Veteran Conservatives esti- mate that comparatively. few of the 2,429 people eligible for accreditation are actually com:| mitted to any one. of the nine announced candidates in the sense that they have pledged! their vote. They conclude that a some-) what larger group have decided) how to vote, at least on the first feallot. A still larger number seem to have come to a tenta- tive decision but are awaiting|area, both firmly decided per- developments before making it! sonally, i final. jabout the five-member delega- thinking of those attempting to assess the outcome: 1, What will John Diefenba- ker do? Will he seek once more the leadership mantle he has worn since 1956? Will he come! out for one of the candidates? Or will he sit tight and let events take their course? 2.) How will the candidates go over in their formal speechmaking pitches Friday night? Many delegates put heavy stress on this aspect. | MPs CANVASSED | Random canvassing of MPs! and others produces the follow-| ing picture: A southwestern Ontario MP} estimates that 60 per cent of | the delegates from that part of! the country are both uncommit- ted and undecided. Two others from the same told similar stories said his group have not. decided and he doesn't know whether he can persuade them at a meet- ing Friday to go his way, but he'll try. Another said his group not jonly. have not decided but he| jdoubted he could swing them/behird the scenes for Premier his way. In any case, he could not deliver their votes to anyone in the sense in which people talk about this proce- dure. But an eastern Ontario MP had a different story. In that riding, all the delegates are actively working for the candi- date the MP _ supports. Still janother from that same area) Says he and the delegates will be. supporting different people on the first ballot. A check of some 20 delegates lattending a policy committee|Mr. Camp led the movement, meeting said during one of| their coffee breaks that they haven't decided what to do. However, they have settled on Two events loom large in the'tions from their ridings. One preferences in their minds Candidate, Voter Contacts Seen Best Election Gimmick TORONTO Duff Roblin of Manitoba stood in the middle of the little group of voting delegates at the Con- servative leadership conven- tion. "No, I won't abolish family allowances by any means," the leadership candidate told one questioner. To an expression of support: "Thank you, I'm very glad to hear it." To another: 'It seems to be shaping up very well. Things are solidifying." And so it went. Hands in pockets, or arms folded across his chest, the didate stood any subject. from Western Canada says he| RESENTMENT EXISTS \thinks most people have pretty) well decided in their own minds how they'll vote but aren't tell- i policy, manpower Mr. Fulton had just complet- that the Conservative in positions and prom- at ease looking each questioner in the eye. He smiled easily ang often. e little hotel room scene at a gathering arranged by Roblin supporters was one of many such sessions held by him and other serious contenders. e USE GIMMICKS In a convention dominated by vote-getting gimmicks, demon- strationse and other more sophisticated campaign meth-|c ods, putting the candidate next to the voter is still a favorite. While Mr. Roblin is a "hop- per," moving from one recep- tion to another in the conven- tion hotels, others use varia- tions of the same device. Donald: Fleming, for instance, was host at a two-hour morning reception in a hotel ballroom. So he stays in one place longer. Davie Fulton, campaigning hard for the uncommitted dele- gates, has been addressing "ask Davie" sessions twice a day. His workers fan out among the del handi out invitation cards to them to d d P. I ised that if ment ments of women, not on the basis of their sex, but solely on their abilities. lin camp, three girls who go around snap- ping pictures of delegates--any he forms a govern- he'll consider appoint- Some of the gimmicks used by candidates are low-pressure nough not to offend. The Rob- for example, has lelegates. The print in the fast-action amera comes out in 10 sec- onds. The picture-taker puts it in a little folder and hands it to the pleased delegate 'with the compliments of Duff Roblin." Some candidates leave daily brainy newspapers at the doors of d and reporter she} lare waiting until Saturday to|Candidates is anxious to upset | decide whether that's the way! they'll go. An astute and forthright MP ing anyone. However, they are (CP)--Premier)fire questions at Mr. Fulton on|}@@Ving things open for @ baker wing at last November's |change of heart. After one session, in which| Given 'this fairly large body Mr. Fulton tackled queries|of Um" about his trade policy views,| fiscal foreign affairs, one woman delegate told a was ready tg vote Fulton. PLUGS FOR WOMEN ship candidates much credence. { As one man put it, by and large candidates haven't got behind them a body of voters so firmly committed that they can |transfer them at will to anoth- ed a pitch about governmentjer. They may be able to exer- making better use of the proven capabilities of women. urged Party put more women jes persuasion, but can't guar- He|antee delivery. | Moreover, some proportion of jthe commitments and decisions appears to relate only to the first ballot. One veteran say. there may be marked shifts in strength when it is over and a bandwagon effect could develop quickly if one man stands out early as a leading choice. Japanese Joins Press OTTAWA (CP)--Growing Japanese interest in Canada will be reflected in the press gallery when Parliament resumes sitting Sept. 25. The is the same: Our boy is a winner. The Hees Convention News, put out by the George Hees camp, found that the delegates "are moving behind" their man. But it's obvious the candi- lates don't count on supporters' rognostications for victory. They like to see the voter first- hand. THE LEADER FACES HIS PARTY Conservative leader John . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Priday, September 8, 1967 3 CAMP QUIETLY WORKS | arten otuer reports itt woo | ll see Economic Report Forces } Plenary Session Overtime That is the cruel but oft-re- peated phrase heard at the Con- servative convention about Dal- TORONTO (CP) --.Delegates|programs and worked on the managed only a fleeting glance premise that Canada is enter- at proposed economic develop-|ing a recessionary period. It recommended monetary poli- cies with high costs and rising unemployment. It recom- ton Camp, the party's national president. Mr. Camp, 46-year-old New Brunswick-born Toronto adver- tising man, has been on the convention scene since Tuesday ment programs Thursday as) . a mended monetary policies be the plenary session of the | URGES (0-OPERATION |developed to free the 'flow of Progressive Conservative lead-| The report recommended} money--without federal injec- ership convention needed over-/Stringent review of federal|tions--and to mobilize private time to wrap up its work. spending, a cautious approach'c¢a pital. During this period, The wide-ranging report of '© shared-cost projects with the | attention should be directed to --but not prominently, |Robert Stanfield of Nova Sco- the economic development sub-| Provinces and delay of ae need for housing and urban |tia, for whom he has run more than one election campaign. Mr. Camp himself is saying nothing publicly. He exchanges greetings with reporters--but that's all. ; He has been seen in the suites of at least a few of the |leadership candidates. | But no candidate has made a point of being seen or photo- graphed with Mr. Camp. The reason of course, is that He is said to be working \committee, which contained|Care insurance. It» emphasized |}enewal, more than 50 recommendations,|the need for co-operation) During the long debate on was handled as a total package. | between the federal and provin-'\Canada's defence system, It was received and tabled to cial governments in all fields of| payid Meynell of Toronto said become a working paper for the | ©conomic development, but par-|the nation will. be hard-pressed party's leader and members of|tic ularly in the immediate! to maintain its independence in Parliament. if 7 " an : conservative | any buildup of military defence. : i ve. | Spending Is needed. , |Such moves would affect Cana- oe ek yo i ma Significantly, delegates of the' dian posture in areas of. dis- hour to get through an extra| Subcommittee had a last-minute armament, the non-proliferation |plenary session held to consider | Change of heart and deleted of nuclear weapons and foreign | y aid. lreference to means tests and Snore after subcommittee! income tax being used to deter- mine need for welfare pro- CITES DANGER The plenary sessions had grams. They agreed, however,| The danger, he said, {s that if dropped behind schedule Thurs-|that social. welfare programs|Canada becomes involved in day morning with lengthy dis-)should be reviewed and some|new alliances it will find itself cussion of defence and foreign! should be amalgamated. in an inflexible position. after others had failed, for a jreview of John Diefenbaker's \leadership. His work led to the present convention. None of the nine declared the Diefenbaker loyalists fur- affairs. | The report suggested Canada David Crena of Guelph ther by seeming to endorse Mr. The economic development! may be entering a recessionary moved that Canada not partici- Camp in any way. report was aimed at creating period accompanied with high| pate in any anti-missile defence short, medium and long-term' costs and rising unemployment.| program. Dr. Thomas Hockin of York | University, Toronto, added that such systems deify China's nuclear weapons. It is better to concentrate on peace efforts through disarmament. There is still deep resentment among the Diefenbaker backers over the treatment dished out |to the chief by the anit-Diefen- Regimbal Links Progress jmeeting of the party's national committed and undecided, talk of deals between leader- is not given association. I Diefenbaker was hissed and booed. The chief said later: 'I am wounded but I am not slain; Wallace Nesbitt, MP for Oxford, cautioned the meeting about tying the hands of people drawing up Canadian defence arrangements through such suggestions. - With Two Official Tongues TORONTO (CP)--Progressive,ada will only end and progress Conservatives were told Thurs-|begin with recognition of two ya Fujiwara, 30, of Tok- yo's Jiji Press, is the first Jap-|ser vat ive convention--and\keep ie or if | DALTON Camp, national ceived a mixed reception |day night that progress in thelofficial languages in every) « a RF tag =r ee ae cnet president of the Progres- from the crowd when he jnation is tied to recognition of|province, in legislatures, the ciation Ge uk Fahy rt de "And then arise again." | sive Conservative Party, was introduced by conven- two official languages and to a/courts and the schools. all the classified information Mr. Diefenbaker is still hurt} Si!S on stage at Maple Leaf tion co - chairman Eddie changing political system; Mr. Regimbal charged the needed for a decision." by what happened last Novem-| Gardens in Toronto Thurs- Goodman. f ' aimed at positive action, |Present Liberal government) 'The Crenna proposal was eas- ber and he holds Mr. Camp--| ay night. Mr. Camp re- (CP Wirephoto) | The assessments were made|with forcing the dialogue ofjily defeated, with about 12 dele- and some _ others--personally | by Roger Regimbal, co-chair-| bilingualism into a full-fledged) gates among the 50 present vot. accountable. | Mr. Camp was also deeply|leadership clash which has rent) man of the Conservative leader-|(bate with cliches of two-na-ling for it. He has said more than once|hurt last November. tion concepts and co-operative! 'The meeting supported a He were party. that Mr. Camp spent more than| publicly called a traitor, turn-| It is considered likely that any other candidate -- $43,000 | coat and worse. Mr. Camp some day will try for r-- in the 1965 election campaign) But he kept his cool and has|the leadership himself. In any jand still lost to Finance Minis-|made no slighting re marksl/event, he is likely to remain a ter Sharp in Toronto Eglinton. labout anyone involved in the'power in the party. j ship convention, and Peter | federalism. % J L ou gheed, party leader in| The last three years, he said,| re get erat raga Alberta, who delivered the key-| has confused the situation, fray-|delegates who objected to the note speeches at a rally star-/ing tempers and patience. | step so long as Communist ring John Diefenbaker. Mr. Lougheed also spoke of a\China continues to harass and "Mr. Regimbal, MP for Argen-inew approach to Canadian| abuse its neighbors. tuil-Deux-Montagnes, said thejaffairs. He said the public is|_----_ French-English debate in Can-|looking for a positive political) : jsystem rather than the essen-| jtially negative system it now! quam ute vung Hi nn pin mi it i wn FREE Estimetes, Reesoneble Retes, Repeir Specialist. |must be replaced because it is, TORONTO (C P)--Roland)Mallory and Mrs. W. H. Wright.|baker's supporters, few of them|consumer price index jumped|hoqy The mood of the nation e 2 \has. | e "adversary system" with Faithful Party Followers ae |government and opposition at jeach other's throats at all times | Overcome Many Obstacles Increases misveus.xov : +.| "The people want to vote for| OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's|something, not against some- McRae drove 1,300 miles, took|Both appeared to be around 80\voting delegates, appeared to\seven-+tenths of a point in|iqaay js positive, not negative." pest Dependable Redie Dispatched two escalators and climbed 34|but wouldn't talk about age. | outnumber all. others on the| August under pressure from He urged the party to lead a Plumbing Service, steps to get to this spectator's| 'We came here because we/|sidewalk. price increases in food and|.ying away from this. tech- SERVICE MADE US. perch at the Progressive Con-|think enough of our country to| An abandoned service station| most other items of the family nique, to attack the "real ene- Coll 723-1191 abreast of what is going\and a vacant lot across the| budget. mies" of poverty and crime. t see a thing. on," said Mrs. Wright, widow|street from the Gardens| The index stood at 150.9 at wn) anese foreign corr time basis. Li Yueh, 45, of Taiwan's Cen- tral News Agency. Li's competitors in a foreign press corps that now numbers 19 in the Canadian capital include two representatives of Communist China's Hsinhua News Agency. Yao Jen Liu and Pu Chao Min are the first and only Red Chinese correspondents to be posted to North America. They arrived here in 1964, shortly after the Toronto Globe and Mail became one of the few Western news outlets to get a man into Peking. | Yao and Pu_ returned to} Peking last December, appar- ently temporarily although they haven't returned yet. Their Ottawa telephone number is still. described by the operator) as "temporarily suspended." Of major interest to Li and his news agency is Canada's attitude towards the Communist Chinese regime. While Canada has diplomatic) relations with Taiwan, it doesn't with mainland China. All Canada is the oyster of Fujiwara, who finds this coun- try "young and fresh and excit-| ing." | Japan is now Canada's third | greatest trading partner, both| in exports and imports, ranking only after the U.S. and Britain. (CP Wirephoto) Established for over 30 yeors 10% King Street West 725-0444 Diefenbaker sits with his wife on stage at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto Thurs- day night and faces a huge crowd of newsmen, delega- tes and spectators. The couple received a standing ovation when they enter- ed the arena. 723-5278 AQUATICS STAFF WANTED BY THE OSHAWA DEPART. Qualified swimming instru pool. Written applications only stating age, qualifications and ex- perience must be submitted before September 15th to -- Aquatics Oshawa Box 10, Oshawa, part-time employment at the new indoor swimming RECREATION MENT ctors and lifeguards for Supervisor, Recreation Dept., Airport, Ontario. o be placed in Ottawa on a full- Another newcomer in the|didn't mind a bit. Parliamentary Press Gallery is But the Baddeck, N.S.,/of an Ontario Supreme Court pia provided visual evl-|the beginning of August, up native, who isn't a delegate,|justice. lence of the tough fight the} 'aly Mr. McRae, the sisters and|leadership candidates are wag- from per or aly eae Rs "Who's speaking now?" heljabout 2,000 other spectators/ing. points higher than a year ear- asked the man sitting next to/filled all the seats available in|) The garage was rented by| er. him below the rafters in Maple|the grey sections of the Gar-/Michael Starr supporters and| In percentage terms, the |Leaf Gardens as Eddie Good-|dens. plastered with appropriate pos-|increase from July was half of | man, convention co-chairman,| A large block of the grey|ters and balloons. Then Senator] one per cent over the 12-month/ delivered his opening remarks.|seats was put out of action by|M. Wallace McCutcheon follow-|Pperiod consumer prices were up| "Goodman, eh! Boy, I/radio .and television booths./ers parked a huge mobile sign|4-1 per cent. | wanldat miss this for the/There are normally about 3,840/in front, all but obscuring the] The index is based on 1949 world." greys in the 15,500-seat forum. | Starr efforts. prices equalling 100. Mr. McRae, 69, sweating and| ENTRANCES BLOCKED | ce oer as HA RRA SAAN ec an RRSP aruRCCRNRTNC winded after the long climb to} Spectators had to enter the his seat, said he has been vot-|Gardens through a side door ing since 1919 "and I never/because the front entrances) voted Liberal once." were all but blocked by demon- "I came to see John Diefen-|strators and two bands--one baker, I don't want to see the|thumping for Mr. Diefenbaker, party throw Mr. Diefenbaker| the other for George Hees. BALANCE YOUR BUDGET AND PAY ALL YOUR BILLS WITH A SUPERIOR LOAN eee and reduce your am monthly payments =» by as much as half hj SALES - BATTERIES - CORDS Lint REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF AIDS out. He's a great man. The) The arrival of Mr. Hees' sup- party didn't give him alporters in two buses--one > chance." double-decker and the oths CHOOSES STANFIELD vl eg A ge ia ii $50 to $5000 His second bag ced prod Confusion was multiplied! ership race was i. Mr By OD-\ when a Highland band arrived| ert Stanfield. But i r. Stan-i49 pipe Mr. Diefenbaker to the) field won Nova Scotia would) speaker's platform. Mr. Diefen-| lose "the best premier we ever|--__ | had." SUPERIOR FINANCE the fastest growing all-Canadian loan pany 3% Simcoe Street South, 725-6541 Don Rees, Manager | . Also winded and hot afte-| CALL OR SEE | HOME APPOINTMENTS Daily to 5:30 p.m; Friday to 8.00 p.ms reaching their seats were two a | BUDGET TERMS re asonunia cise te dak iia Toronto sisters--Mrs. F. S. DIXON he | offices to serve 1 s DOWNTOWN = FOR Canadian OIL FURNACES DELIGHTFUL Aig CONDITIONED | SERVING OSHAWA OVER ME ARING AID 30 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 | REASONABLE PRICES Special Noon Luncheons Hotel Lancaster 27 KING ST. WEST 10 BOND ST. E. 725-2771 Consultants SAVINGS ~ ON -- ALL PHOTO FINISHING Colour and Black & White - at - JURY & LOVELL nc271/4 DRUGS OSHAWA and WHITBY 4 OPEN THIS SUNDAY 4:30 TO 8:00 P.M. With bar facilities. Meke your reservations NOW. Phone 723-4641,

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