Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Oct 1967, p. 4

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She Oshawa Fimes 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited { T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1967 Extravagances Of CBC Weaken Sharp's Plea The concern Finance Minister Sharp expresses for fiscal "belt- tightening", his appeal to labor and management to curb expenditures, would carry a great deal more weight if the federal government acted to control spending in one particular branch of its business -- the Canadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion. With apparent upon extravagance. This summer the CBC covered the Pan-American Games in Winnipeg. The budget was originally set at an exorbitant figure of $1.1 million but it climbed to an actual expendi- ture of some $2 million. The CBC rented an entire staff to accommo- date its personnel. To add to the comfort of this staff the govern- ment spent $50,000 to air condition an armory for the brief two weeks the CBC was to use it. The staff assembled numbered 450 persons. And, for the same cov- erage the CTV, the rival network, managed with seven. Then came the Conservative con- vention in Toronto. Channel-switch- ers who viewed coverage on both networks generally agree the CTV did much the better job. But hear this: It was revealed in the com- indifference or perhaps distain to public concern, the Canadian Broadcasting Corpora- tion continues to heap extravagance mons last week that the CBC spent $400,000 and used 486 people to cov- er the Tory leadership meeting. The privately-owned network employed 48 people at a cost of $43,000. In bringing the latter extrava- gance to the attention of the Com- mons, Jack Davis (L-Coast Capil- ano) suggested the government could be more businesslike with the taxpayers' money. He predicted the CBC would get a badly needed shak- ing-up when it comes under new management after the passage of the revisions in broadcasting legis- lation. There'll be those who will argue that the CBC is leading in the deve- lopment of the medium of television and thus cannot hew closely to an economic line, The cases of the Pan- American Games and the Tory con- vention effectively shoot down such contention, Thousands of dollars were squandered by the CBC in straight coverage without breaking any new ground in television report- ing. It represented sheer waste. Finance Minister Sharp would amass muscle more quickly for his concerted attack on inflation were he to trim the sails of the CBC spenders. Instead, the budget pre- sented to Commons an increase of $30 million in estimates for the Can- adian Broadcasting Corporation? How's that for belt-tightening? Home And School Role For many years one of the more active organizations connected with the elementary school system in the province has been the Home and School Association which has groups in many schools. Oshawa has been prominent in this field and for many years the late Mrs. R. R. McLaugh- Yin was one of the leaders of the movement . As is the case with most organi- zation, the Home and School has detractors who believe it does little to advance the cause of education and devotes to much of its time to the palnning of teas and bazaars. In some instances this may be true but in Oshawa individual school units have been the medium for the raising of money for slide projectors and other equipment for use in the schools, There have been radical changes in educational methods and curricu- She Oshawa Fines 84 King St. E.. Oshawa, Ontarie T. L. WILSON, Publisher &. C, PRINCE, General Manager C. J, MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times combining The Oshowa Times (established 1871) ond the Whitby Gozette and Chronicle (established 1863). is published doily (Sundays and Statutory holidays excepted). Members of Conadion Daily Newspaper Publish= ers Associaton, The Canadian Press Audit Bureau Association, The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use of reproduction of all news despatched in the paper credited to It or to The Associoted Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights of special des patches cre also reserved 84 King st. E., Oshowa, Ontaric Netional Advertising Offices: Thomson Balding, 425 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario; 440 Cotheart Strest, Montreal, P.O. Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Pickering, Bowmémville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple ove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, iiverpoc!, Taunton, Tyrone, Dunborton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Manchester, Pontypool! and Newcastle not over 55c per week. By mail in Province of Ontario putside corrier delivery area. $15.00 per year. Other provinces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 per year. lum in recent years. It is in this field that Home and School Associations could give leadership. Panel discus- sions in which teachers and parents took part would do much to enlight- en parents about phases of educa- tion with which they should be ac- quainted. We.'believe also that this is the place to air and discuss edu- cational problems. If the public were better acquainted with the work and problems of the teacher as well as the reasons why costs are high there would be a greater acceptance of the imoprtance of education to the community as a whole. In an industrial community such as Oshawa the inclination of the student often is to drop out of school and begin earning so they can purchase an automobile and some of the luxuries of life. If parents understood to the full the import- ance of the student securing as muc® education as his abilities will per- mit, influence could be exerted in this direction. Home and School Associations are the medium through which educa- tion can be sold to the public. This we believe should be their prime ob- jective. Other Editors' Views | BUTLERS FADING Reports from Britain indicate that the familiar English butler is on the way out. The older ones are hanging on but the younger ones are looking to the United States for their employment. opportunities. Well, look how well Arthur Treacher did. (St. Catharines Standard) enn OTTAWA REPORT ona irs a SO Ue TEA EN QUEEN'S PARK Local Level Autonomy Outdated? by DON O'HEARN TORONTO--Premier Robarts finally has begun to recognize the opposition in his campaign --to reply to its criticism. But at the time of writing this recognition has been on only one point. He has replied only to the proposal of the Liberals and NDP--and the point being most stressed by the Liberals in the campaign--to pay 80 per cent of the cost of education. Which at least gives us some- thing to talk about in this elec- tion other than how poor the campaign fs. So what about paying 80 per cent of the cost of education? Mr. Robarts' reply in reject- ing it is the standard one that it would take away local autono- my. But just how valid is this these days? Perhaps I am prejudiced in commenting on it for I feel very strongly that the fetish on respect for local autonomy that has been so pronounced here for years has been the greatest single drawback we have had to progressive government in the province. Control of pollution, land planning and proper develop- ment? If it's a key problem you will find the abnormal subservi- ence to autonomy has held it back. But on the question of educa- tion, just how important is it that there be local autonomy and control? Originally it probably was well justified. In the early days Ontario was divided into pock- ets of people of different cultur- al backgrounds--Loyalists, Scots, Irish, Freneh. And it was important to the people that the education in the various com- munities should be in line with their cultural character and philosophies. But today this situation doesn't exist except in very iso- lated spots. ; And what other reason is there for local direction of edu- cation? It means that local elected officials, who are amateurs, have the final say on the educa- tion in their communities. And it means that beneath them is a multitude of local directors and superintendents of education--so large a num- ber there must be incompe- tence, for there just isn't that number of able men available. The one political value that is readily apparent is that with education being run locally there is some character to school buildings, they are not a series of cell blocks as they might become under a central administration. But local say on_ buildings could be retained. And except for this single point. there is no apparent benefit in local auton- omy in education. Centralized control, and financing, of education could solve many of the problems of proper physical development of our communities. And obeisance to autonomy would seem to be a phobia that ' not only outdated but harm. ul YEARS AGO. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 10, 1947 East Whitby Township Coun- cil has granted permission to Joseph Arvay to build a $14,000 tourist court on King St. E. at Farewell Ave Don Hurlbert, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Hurlbert, Oshawa Blvd. has recently been appoint- ed editor-in-chief of the Moody Student.a bi-weekly newspaper at the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago. 35 YEARS AGO Oct. 10, 1932 The steamer 1L1 No. 101 of the Seaboard Great Lakes Cor- poration was due in Oshawa to- day to pick up the first ship- ment of turnips grown in On- tario County consigned to a large produce house in New York, Qimernns ANOTHER COLLISION COURSE ? noun eeensce cn genre FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYSIS 'Hawks' Mobilizing Too By PHILIP DEANE Foreign Affairs Analyst Norway has joined with Can- ada, Denmark, Sweden, France and many other countries in urging an end to the bombing of Vietnam; in response to such outside pressures, the doves within the U.S. have been mob- ilizing and even making some notable recruits: Senator Stuart Symington, for insiance, hereto- fore an administration sup- porter on Vietnam has changed sides. Governor Rockefeller, the forerunner in the popularity polls in shifting from support- ing the war to ovposing it. But the hawks are also mobilizing and they are scoring notable successes too, so much so that it is understandable for the Vietnamese not to believe offi- cial American professions of peace--if indeed the North Viet- namese care about peace through negotiations. Defence Secretary McNamara, always a_ strong influence on the side of modera- tion, has been losing his. fights with the generals. It seems he cannot even appoint one of his favorites as commandant of the Marine corps and, as every- one knows, he has lost his bat- tle to prevent the building of an anti-missile network. The gen- erals and ther supporters in Congress have prevailed on this issue, Senators Henry M. Jackson and John Pastore, both demo- crats, both extremely influen- tial, talk of the thin anti-ballis- tic defence line as a mere beginning and proclaim they will press the iight for a defen- sive network covering the whole country. Meanwhile, they and the generals have achieved another breakthrough--the White House nas announced it will multiply by five times the stockpile of nuclear weapons at the disposal of U S. forces. Already, the U.S. has enough warheads to strike each Rus- sian with the equivalent of ten thousand tons of TNT; now the figure will be half a milton tons of TNT equivalent per Russian. The increase. is due to the system of multiple warheads that McNamara wanted instead of anti-missiles--multiple wer- heads to saturate the enemy's defences are better, he had argued, than a _ network of jon ee by Patrick Nicholson American defensive anti-mis- siles, Well, he is going to get both. SUMS ENORMOUS The sums involvea are encr- mous, easily in tie region of sixty billion dollars and some say that the "military indus- trial complex," the alliance of generals and tycoons that Eisenhower warned against, is capable of imposing even greater spending programs from which the industry derives enough profits to launch inten- sive public relations campaigns in favor of continued military expansion, It is said that the support for the hard line by such senators as Jackson (Washington state) and Kuchel (California) may not be entirely unreiated to the tremendous importance for their constituencies of the aero- space industry. In any case, such support for warlike activity, including building rockets and bombing Vietnam, is not confined to sen- ators: the episcopalian bishops could not get their church's House of Deputies, which repre- sents the parishioners, to sup- port a resolution calling for an end to bombing in Vietnam. Framework For BNA Act Set In 16 Days At Quebec By BOB BOWMAN It was on this day in 1864 that the Fathers of Confederation got down to hard work at Que- bec. The meetings at Charlotte- town, Halifax, and Saint John had been exploratory and social. When the Americans met at Philadelphia in 1787 to frame their constitution, the first great federal system in the modern world, they met twice a day for eight weeks. The delegates from Canada, New Brunswick, Nova. Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland who met at Que- bec in 1864 drew up the frame- work for the British North America Act in 16 days. It is possible to make a com- parison between the founders of the United States and Canada, Some of the Americans who met in 1787 were George Wash- ington, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Fames Madison, Patrick Henry, Rob- ert Morris, and James Wilson. RESOLUTIONS FRAMED The chairman of the Quebec conference was Sir Etienne Tache. John A. Macdonald played a leading part in fram- ing the 72 resolutions that were passed, and he was ably assist- ed by George Etienne Cariier. Other notable leaders were George Brown, Dr. Charles Tupper, Leonard Tilley, A. T. Galt, and d'Arcy McGee. It is said that Cartier resem- bled Madison in his views ahcut federalism, while George Brown's ideas were like those of Benjamin Franklin. McGee The 'Evaders'-- War's Unsung Heroes OTTAWA -- "Lest we forget' were the apt three words used by Hon. Sydney Smith to key- note his sincere welcome to the unusual and deservedly honored Europeans among his guests. The senator for Kamloops and Mrs. Smith were entertaining a party of 30, dining and wining royally and boisterously in the impressive Speaker's cham- bers, and chatting animatedly in English. What a contrast from the ori- gins of that gathering, when some of the Canadians as guests of the Europeans were accommodated not in a com- fortable living room but hidden huddled, cold and dark beneath floor boards, fed not on roast duck but on scant potato soup or meagre rations, forbidden to speak English, and transported not in limousines but under a bale of hay in a farm truck. For these European visitors were "helpers," who had risked their lives in wartime to help Canadian airmen evade capture by the Germans when their air- craft were shot down over occu- pied territory. The "evaders" ate entertaining @ representa- tive group of their "helpers" on an expenses-paid visit to Cans ada, as their centennial project, CIVILIANS AT WAR There are about 2,900 known evaders, who served with the British and Commonwealth air forces, and of these 122 are Canadians. Some 4,000 of their helpers have been traced; another 6,000 are known to have been shot by the Germans when discovered or betrayed. Their help was vividly described at Senator Smith's party by P.F.I.'s Hon. Angus MacLean, former minister of fisheries, who was captain of a bomber shot down over Hol- land, and then was helped to freedom along the dangerous underground route through Bel- gium, across France, and over the Pyrenees to Spain and free- dom. "I was without clothes, and they clothed me; I was sick and they visited me; I was without meat, and they fed me; I was without friends and they took me in." A Senator Smith has always had a warm spot for the air force; two of his sons served in its pale blue uniform in the war, and one made the supreme sacrifice. Thus he generously invited Angus MacLean, president of the Canadian Chapter of the Evad- ers, and some of his fellow evaders and their European visitors to this party to honor those. courageous helpers. Who were these brave men and women who, a quarter of a century ago, were risking their lives as they fought the Ger- mans with nothing but their cunning and courage? That tiny little frail old lady? That type- cast businessman? That ele- gantly-dressed army officer type? That smiling blonde "dish"? That typical! after- noon-bridge fan? The quiet old man who says he works at a filling station? WAR'S UNSUNG HEROES What a story each of. those quiet heroes and heroines can tell! _--e The dish is now Luxem- bourg's first lady judge; her war record of crimes against the Gestapo dwarf the crimes she now tries. The little old lady sheltered evaders in her castle; only when her husband the count and 10 other members of her family had been shot by the Germans did she dye her hair, leave her castle, and continue her work elsewhere. The businessman ferried a complete Canadian bomber crew to Britain--but would only hand them over in exchange for half a ton of munitions for each, munitions which his group would use against the Germans. The bridge player started hid- ing and escorting evaders when British soldiers were left behind at Dunkirk, and she stopped only four years later when she was taken to a concentration camp. But she was awarded nine decorations for courage by four countries. What a story--lest we forget indeed. oe resembled the _ grandiloquent Patrick Henry. Galt was the Robert Morris, and Tupper was the James Wilson. Tupper was such a_ hard worker that he became known as the "'war-horse" and later events proved him to be one of the most astute Fathers of Cen- federation. One of the reasons why the Quebec delegates completed their work so quickly was the danger of an invasion by the U.S.A. OTHER EVENTS OCT. 10: 1615--Champlain was wound- ed while helping Hurons to attack Iroquois at Onondaga, el present-day Syracuse, 1710--First Anzlican service in Canada held at Halifax. 1792--Alexander Mackenzie left Lake Athabaska on trip to Pacific. 1806--William Weeks, mem- ber of parliament for York, was killed in a duel. 1849--Manifesto urging that Canada join the U.S.A. was published at Montreal as result of Rebellion Losses Bill. 1878--Alexander Mackenzie government resigned following election defeat. 1911--Sir Robert Borden wee Prime Minister of Can- ada. 1921--New Brunswick voted against import of liquor for per- sonal use. 1927--R. B. Bennett succeed- ed Arthur Meighen as leader of the Conservative party. 1942--Carleton and York Reg- iment was first Canadian unt to arrive in Italy. BIBLE "T tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."' Luke 13:5 You can't turn over a new leaf if you don't have @ new life to go on. Repentance is turning our lives around and over to God. Anything short of full surrender is compromise. TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Oct, 9, 1967... Sir Wilfred Grenfell, medical missionary, died 27 years ago today--in 1940-- at his retirement home on Lake Champlain, Only 27 years old when he began the Labrador outports' first medical mission, Grenfell treated 900 pativnts in the first two months. His bravery and the need of the outport people led to the foundation of the Interna- tional Grenfell Association to sponsor a_ hospital and children's home at St. Anthony at the northern tip of Newfoundland. 1858--The first overland mail reached St, Louis from San Francisco. 1938--The St. Clair River { bridge from Port Huron, Mich., to Point Edward, Ont., was dedicated. - ' First World War Fifty years ago today--in\ 1917--British and French troops attacked in Flanders and captured Poelcapelle. Counter-attacks south of the Ypres-Staden railway forced back Allied advance troops. Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--Gen. Chiang Kai-shek called for the fu'l mobilization of every man and woman ia China to defeat the Japanese invad- ers. The United States informed China that Britain and America were ready to give up extra-territorial rights in that country, THEN AND NOW Proud Day In 1924 Oshawa A City By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Staff idents of Oshawa have & right to look back with a vi the year 1924 when the munici- pality was accorded the raed of a city. As Ontario's 25th c' ty, Oshawa then had a population of 15,545 compared with the ap- roximately 80,000 people with- hh its boundaries today. Muc' has happened in the intervening 43 years, but it can truly be said that once the community became a city it never looked te question of separation from the County of Ontario had been in the minds of the city fathers for some time; yet it was not until January, 1924 that J. F. Grierson, town solicitor; Peter A. Blackburn, town treas- urer; First Deputy Reeve E. 1. Vickery and Mayor William J. Trick appeared before the On- tario Railway and Municipal Board with an application for a charter as a city. : The board held a hearing in the town hall on Feb. 19 when the board granted the applica- tion. The chairman announced the charter would become effec- tive at noon March 8; a nom- ination meeting would be held March 15 and an election to se- lect the first city council March 22. The first meeting of the new council was set for March 25. No opposition was offered by Warder McMillan who appear- ed for the county with Arthur E. Christian, county clerk. As- sessor R. H. James told the board there were 2,716 people in Ward 1, 5,818 in Ward 2, 1,846 in Ward 3, 3,716 in Ward 4 and 1,449 in Ward 5. At 11.45 a.m. on March 8 the city's charter was presented by Mr. Grierson to Mayor Trick in the presence of hundreds of people gathered at the corner of Simcoe and Richmond Street, outside the city hall. Rev. C. R. deRencier, rector of St. George's Anglican Church and Rev. A. M. Irwin, minister of King Street Methodist Church, offered prayer. As the clock in the belfry of the town hall tolled the hour of noon, factory whistles were blown, bells were rung and the Ontario Regiment fired a 25- gun salute as the gathering broke into cheers. At a gathering in the arm- ories immediately following the presentation of. the charter, Mayor Trick recalled the ar- rival in the area in 1794 of Benjamin Wilson, the first white settler, the opening of the first trail from Toronto to Port Hope which later became the Kingston Road, the opening of service by the Grand Trunk Railway in 1856, the laying of the Oshawa Railway tracks in 1895 and other historic events in Oshawa's history. Other speakers were Reeve George T. Morris, Deputy Reeves, E. L. Vickery, H. P. Schell and J. L. Whattam and Councillor A. J. Graves. During the afternoon the ju- venile and senior Salvation Army bands and the Ontario Regiment Band paraded through the business section. A similar parade was held in the evening followed by a public meeting in the armories, Speeches by W. E. N. Sinclair, George W. McLaughlin, Gordon D. Conant and Dr. Thomas f, Kaiser, At the nomination meet nine candidates were a inated for the office of mayor, However, only W. J. Trick qual. ified and won the office by ac. clamation, Others nominated were: E. L. Vickery, George T. Morris, Robert Preston, T, B. Mitchell, E. Bradley, John Stacey and J. L. Whattam. The only election requi was in Ward 2 where oe Burns, A. J. Graves and John Stacey were elected as alder. men. Nelson S. Baird was the unsuccessful candidate, The new aldermen in the var. ious wards were: Ward 1 -- R, D. Preston, J. L. Whattam and George Hart; Ward 3 -- kq, Bradley, George Morris and p, F. Johnston; Ward 4 -- 0, M, Alger, Thomas J. Sheridan and E. L. Vickery; Ward § -- Eq. mund Jackson, R. C. Henry and H. P. Schell. Among the first acts of the new council was to strike a tay rate for the year of 43 mills and to decide to hold an Old Home Week during the first week in August. Members of the reunion com. mittee were: W. J. Trick, pres. ident; T. B. Mitchell, first vice. president; Peter A. Blackburn, second vice-president; Charles E. Davis, secretary; George Morris, finance chairman; M, D. Begley, publicity; David M, Tod, decorations; O. R. Burns, transportation; E. A. Donald, field day; V. B. Woodruff, horse races; George Henley, music and entertainment; FE. Brad. ley, concessions and J, ¢, Young, billeting. The early months of the year were prideful ones for Oshawa citizens. It was reported col lections of customs and excise for the fiscal year ending in March totalled $6,227,728 which placed Oshawa sixth among On- tario customs ports. The city with a total of $152,195 in build. ing permits in April was in seventh place among Ontario centres. Early May also was the oe casion of the first sitting of the newly formed police commis sion. Judge McGillivray of Whitby presided. Other mem- bers were Mayor Trick, Magis trate A. F. Hind and Chief of Police Owen D. Friend. Despite disagreeable weather, which cut into the financial re- turns, the Old Home Week was a huge success with many for- mer residents who had not been back in 45 or 50 years renewing old acquaintanceships. The celebration opened at Alexandra Park where Mayor Trick welcomed former resi- dents and the General Motors Male Chorus led in community singing. This was followed by a dance in the armories, On succeeding days, parades, church services, a boxing tournament, harness racing and a field day with many top On- tario athletes. Oshawa talent presented a pageant and the Chautauqua circuit unit gave special programs. Concerts by the 48th Highlanders Band and fireworks topped off the event. Who Did What And When In Canada Detailed Closely By THE CANADIAN PRESS An archivist, says Norah Story, is someone 'whose function it is to know who did what when." Miss Story, who spent 32 years working in the Public Archives of Canada before retiring in 1960, epitomizes this definition. She demonstrates it in The Oxford Companion to Cana- dian History and Literature, a one-woman tour de force, 935 pages of remarkably con- cise and informative articles on literary, political and his- torical figures and events. Miss Story, an English- born, Camadian-reared Uni- versity of Toronto graduate who was head of the manu- scripts division of the archives when she retired and moved to Toronto, has spent the last seven years on this monu- mental work. An encyclopedic volume in which the entries are arranged alphabetically, it contains 2,000 separate arti- cles, more than 2,300 cross- references and bibliographies listing more than 6,000 books. The nearly 500 literary entries and 1,500 historical articles are notable for her facility to pick out the inter- esting and salient points and present them in an economi- cal, straight-forward manner, Typical of her no-nonsense approach is this entry: "One of the decisive engagements of the War of ° 1812, the Battle of Chateau- guay was fought on 26 Oct. 1813. It was a victory for Lt.- Col. Charles de Salaberry and the Canadian Voltigeurs who effectively stopped an Ameri- can army under General Wade Hampton-who was invading Lower Canada by the Chateauguay River oppos- é ite Lachine. Salaberry showed skill in posting troops and in fortifying a sharp bend In fhe Chateauguay about fif- teen miles from its mouth." Or this one on sheepskin coats: "The coats worn by eastern European immigrants par- ticularly Ukrainians and Dou- khobors who came to Western Canada in large numbers between 1896 and 1900--became a symbol in a bitter political controversy. To Clifford Sifton, minister of the interior from 1896 to 1905, who was responsible for the immigration policy of the ministry of Sir Wilfrid Lau- rier, one of the 'men in sheepskin coats' was worth two of any other type of immigrant. To his opponents, 'Sifton's pets' or the 'peasants in sheepskin coats' were 'the scum of Europe.' Sifton was adamant, and in later years he was to recall with pride the contribution made by these immigrants toward the development of. the agricul- tural potential of the north- west." On the contemporary level {s another volume jammed with a notable variety of facts, ranging from member- ship of the Hockey Hall of Fame to the volume. of freight and passenger traffic carried by the railways. It's the 28rd edition of Quick Canadian Facts, an almanac edited by C. J. Harris and published in Toronto With 135 Pages of general information plus a 23-page "quick history of Canada," this compact book is likely to settle a lot of those arguments that crop up at parties and usually lead to a telephone call to the local newspaper or radio station. \ 5 } 4 : NO MAIN re) BLASAM (Staf trends four years may/not, indicate Ontario South ridi vincial election, But, until the tr ed next Tuesday, candidate William 0 can take son m, Ontario South, was carved from Ontario ridings | show that in the voters in what is South, cast 7,453 Conservative can for the NDP and Liberals, "There are no | {ssues, the other trying to develop Mr. Newman in t his farm house, so front-runner. A resident of Pic ship all his life, youngest reeve in at age 27. He | years on township He is familiar and outs of politic ing and knows the feat. In the 1959 pr tion he trailed T. of the NDP by 1, has also served | manager for MP } in five elections, HELP PEOPLE Why does Bill N to sit in the Ont: ture? "This may sound said, "'but I have 1 sire to help people "The Conservatiy is to create the quired to finance ment of our provin spend it and to d wealth on a sens basis to all the pe tario," he said. Asked what in would be the mos issue regarding the at Queen's Park, } "Mom" For Nige BOWMANVILLE Bertha "Mom". Why ure in the contre moval of 100 child from an unlicensed | is making a Nort! tour to raise mon latest Nigerian vent Mrs. Whyte, 52, le Bowmanville home | week stay, to tour ' raise funds for Youth Centre whict lished six years age pected to make appt U.S. centres as we "Mom". Whyte's home, near Bowm: closed nine years : vincial authorities { outbreak of influenz tious hepatitis. She founded an \ home in British Colu ly after the Whyte dent, but when she cure a licence for | home, she left for N Her son, Ralph Queen St. in Bowme his mother has built independent of mi groups, but has rec tions of clothes a supplies from Cana Mrs. Whyte and run a bake shop to the income,which primarily by donati

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