She Oshawa Cimes 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario Published by Canadian Newspapers Company Limited ' T. L. Wilson, Publisher E. C. Prince, Associate Publisher OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1967 Claim Of Special Status For Quebec Discounted Clarity of definition has long been direfully needed in discussions involving the future of the province of Quebec. Before constructive action can be contemplated a clear consensus is required on the mean- ing of separatism, special status, associated statehood, deux nations by those who bandy them. In this regard Rene Levesque, avowed separatist although he is, has rendered great service to Can- ada by putting his beliefs on the line. His campaign, the Quebec Liberal pary's repudiation of it and his subsequent resignation all repre- sent progress. If his lead is followed by others who claim separatism as a cause Canada and Quebec can as- certain how many or how few of . them there actually are. A t the same time, there's the - necessity for dealing with the semi- + separatism which would seem to be involved in the categories of special , status and associated state. How- ever these terms are equated the final result will place Quebec in a different role than is held by the other provinces. And as such it would be a mistake. A stand has been taken this week by Prime Minister Pearson on the special status proposition. 'This kind of particular status could lead to a separate state, a result that cannot be accepted," the Prime Min- ister declared. He warned, too, that separation "would not occur in a tranquil or rational way". Such a view is certainly shared by a major- ity in Canada and it is one to which separatists should pay particular attention. In his opposition to special status Mr. Pearson also underlined a point too often overlooked by the people of Quebec. As Canadians (which they are) all Canada is their home- land just as it is for the rest of us. They have closeted themselves in their chosen bailiwick denying themselves of the opportunities other Canadians have found in other than their native provinces. They've abandoned the chance to broaden the base of the cilture they now champion so vociferously. Because they have failed to exert nationwide influence, it is not logical that the rest of Canada should be called upon to compensate them through special status which sets their province apart from the others in Canada. Great Expectations Help Nothing compares with the power - of positive thinking -- except nega- - tive thinking, writes Don Oakley of ' NEA. A study conducted in a school in California has disclosed that teacher expectancy of a pupil's in- tellectual growth is raised, "start- ling improvements can be achieved in pupil 1.Q.," reports the National Education Association. On the other hand and on the other. side of the country, in New Jersey, if another study has found that students who fail have teach- ers who think they are dumber than 1.Q. tests indicate them to be. In the California study, teachers were deliberately misled to believe that about 20 per cent of the chil- dren in their classes had revealed "unu test. sual" Eight months later, potential in a special these "unusual" children, who had actu- ally been selected at random, showed significantly higher gains than the kids who hadn't been selected -- She Osharwa Fimes 84 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontarie T. L. WILSON, Publisher &. C. PRINCE, Generali Manager €. J. MeCONECHY, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES The Oshawa Times The Oshowa Times eombini \estoblished 1871) and the itby Gozette and Chronicle (established 1863) is published daily (Sundays end Statutory holidays excepted). Members of Canadian 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 Associated Press or. Reuters, and also the local news published thereii patche: $s Gre-aiso reserved. € King St: E., Oshawa, Ontario Notional Advertising Offices: Thomson Building, 425 University Avenue, Cathcart Street, Montreal, P. Sade Ontario; Mave rights of special des- 0 Delivered by carriers in Oshawo, Whitby, Ajax, Pickerit Bowmzenville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, -iverpool, Taunton, 'fyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Orono, Leskard, Brougham, Burketon, Claremont, Manchester, 55c outside. carrier Other Pe aun Un Pontypoo! and Newcastle not over per week. By mail in Province of Ontario delivery area. $15.00 pér year. previnces and Commonwealth Countries, $18.00 per year. U.S.A. and foreign $27.00 per year. vasa nent EE OTTAWA REPORT nearly 25 I.Q. points in one first- grade class. By contrast, the New Jersey study found that very little was expected of the failures -- by their teachers, their parents and them- selves. It was also noted that the school had discouraged parent par- ticipation in the education of the failures and that four-fifths of them had a record of health defi- ciencies, including poor vision, bad teeth and excessive weight. This should spark some hard thinking on the part of every teach- er and administrator and every parent of a school-age child. The worst thing that can be done to a child is to saddle him early in life with the conviction that he's under par. Excessive pressure to reform is not a good thing, of course, and heaven knows there is enough pressure in -- and on -- the schools today. Pushing children toward goals beyond their capabi- lities can work actual harm. But an attitude and an atmos- phere of great expectations, at home and in school, can apparently work wonders. Other Editors' Views A SOUND STEP The U.S. has stopped training officers for Arab armies, obviously not on the theory of quit while you're winning. (Guelph Mercury) A GOOD BUY! -- A recent survey shows that food is the best buy on today's market. This report is extremely gratifying to those who have allow- ed themselves to become addicted to eating. (Cornwall Daily Standard-Free- holder) A CLIMACTIC TURNING POINT COLLISIONS OF ALLIED, AXIS ARMS Glory Clings To British Victory At Alamein By CARL MOLLINS Canadian Press Staff Writer Glory clings to Alamein as to no other British battle honor of the Second World War. In the 25 years since that collision of Allied and Axis arms in Egypt's Western Desert, historians and mili- tary experts have tried to dust away the fictions and distortions. The scholarly exercise has been a popular failure, large- ly because the experts are dealing with a romantic leg- end as well as an episode of history. The 12-day battle of el Alamein that began Oct. 23, 1942, became part of Brit- ish folklore even as the fight- ing raged. Winston Churchill, in an extravagant verdict on the battle's importance, encour- aged the idea of Alamein as a climactic turning point. "Before Alamein we never had a victory," Britain's war- time prime minister said later. 'After Alamein we never had a defeat." It was not strictly true even in the North African cam- paign, where British and Commonwealth troops had scored notable victories against Italian forces in Libya during 1940 and their German reinforcements the following year BECAME SYMBOL Yet Churchill's exaggera- tion is accepted in the sense that before October,: 1942, Britain and its allies were fighting defensively from a background of _ disastrous defeats at the hand of Nazi Germany. The tide ran the other way after Alamein, although not primarily because of that vic- tory. For Britain and the Commonwealth, however, Alamein became a symbol of victory after years of gloom. Looking back, it is clear the tide was turning even before Gen. Bernard Law Montgo- mery led the British 8th Army, composed of a dozen TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS Dek, 19; 1967: os The United States embar- goed trade with Cuba in an effort to topple the Castro regime seven years ago today--in 1960. Canada: was criticized by some U.S. sources for continuing to trade with Cuba but in reply argued that Canada had always traded with all countries irrespective of politics. 1814--T he Star-Spangled Banner was first performed at Baltimore, Md. 1944--Russian_ troops advanced into East Prussia, First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1917--Zeppelins raided southeast England killing 27 and wounding 53 in London; four were destroyed over France on the return trip; the British auxiliary cruiser Oceana was torpedoed and sunk by a German subma- rine Second World War Twenty-five years ago today--in 1942--the German offensive against northwest Stalingrad weakened; Allied planes sank four Axis ships in the Mediterranean and damaged aircraft; U.S. aircraft bombed Japanese bases on Guadalcanal. " ,.. death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?'"' § Corinthians 15:54-55 Death is not a dead end but a door way. Jesus said, "H2 that believeth on me though he were dead yet shall he live." us ENA nationalities, against German and Italian forces under the formidable Gen, Erwin Rom- mel. The records indicate Rom- mel's army had about arrived at the end of its supply tether in July, 1942, when it reached the Alamein line, just 70 miles from Alexandria and 130 miles from Cairo, with nothing else to stop the Axis reaching the Suez Canal and choking off Britain's essential oil supplies from the Persian Gulf. WINNIE IMPATIENT The Alamein front, named for a cluster of buildings on the railway line near the Mediterranean coast, was the scene of two battles in the summer of 1942 that showed the way the power balance was shifting. Some military historians believe Geh. Sir Claude Auchinleck's halting of Rom- een SR ea F Sar See eer GENERAL BERNARD MONTGOMERY «+»He Turned Tide With 8th Army me] in July and Montgomer- y's containment of Rommel's last desperate bid to break through Aug. 31 were more brilliant examples of military tactics than the October vic- tory. Montgomery's takeover from Auchinleck in mid-Au- gust was the direct result of Churchill's impatience for a symbolic military victory against the Germans. Impetu- ous pressure on his generals had already brought about disasters for British arms in Greece and Crete and was about to cause another, the Dieppe raid of Aug. 19. Churchill was under severe political pressure at home. The _ beleaguered Russians were demanding action in the West that would divert Ger- man attention. Further, the Americans were on their way and Churchill was eager for a purely British victory in the desert before U.S. forces nina n sie DE GAULLE UNDER FIRE landed at the other end of North Africa in November. ALEXANDER TOOK OVER When Auchinleck insisted that the decimated 8th Army could not attack before rein- forcement and re-equipment was complete in September, Churchill replaced him with Gen. Harold Alexander as Middle East' commander-in- chief and Montgomery as army commander. Ironically, Montgomery held off the offensive until a month after Auchinleck had planned. By then, the 8th Army _ had overwhelming superiority. Along the 40-mile front between the sea and the impassable Qattara Depres- sion, 50,000 Germans and 54,- 000 Italians faced an enemy numbering 195,000--m ainly British with Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans, Indians, Free French, Czechs Individual Cana- dians were attached to Brit- ish units for battle experience and the RCAF's 417 squadron of Spitfires was part of the Desert Air Force. Greeks, Rhodesians, and Poles. The British force had 1,029 tanks to 489 for the Axis, twice as many artillery and anti-tank guns and 3-to-1 superiority in the air. DEAFENING BARRAGE At 9:40 p.m. on the moonlit night of Oct. 23, more than 1,000 British guns opened a deafening artillery barrage. At 10 p.m., infantry led by Sappers left the white tapes marking start lines and moved forward to clear two broad corridors through Ger- man minefields--an estimat- ed 500,000 mines spread in a 30-mile line up to five miles deep. The battle teetered and shifted and Montgomery changed his plan when Ger- man resistance proved tough- er than expected. Rommel, in Germany when the attack started but back two days later, recorded that "rivers of blood were poured out over miserable strips of land which, in normal times, not even the poorest Arab would have bothered his head about," By Nov. 4, Rommel was on the run. The victors had suf- fered 13,500 casualties in 12 days, the vanquished an esti- mated 59,000. The victory was incomplete because Rommel's decimated army escaped and led Mont- gomery on a costly 1,500-mile chase across Libya to make a final stand in the mountains of Tunisia. Combined British and American forces finally drove the Axis out of North Africa in May, 1943. MONTY WAS HERO Nevertheless, Montgomery was hailed. Churchill had his symbolic victory and a hero for the public. In fact, the incompleteness of the Ala- mein victory gave Churchill and "Monty" more than they had bargained for. The chase across the desert kept public attention focused on victo- rious Allies chasing retreat- ing Germans for 100 days. All scholarly sniping at the North African victory, all attempts to show that the tide was turning anyway, did not tarnish the triumph. The Desert war, fought in an empty arena and leaving civilians untouched directly, was the last to have at least a pretence of chivalry and romance--the casual dress, the special jargon, the pri- vate raiding armies, the mutual respect of top men on both sides, the sharing of experiences, including the German ballad Lili Marlene. Perhaps most important for Britons, it was the last cam- paign of the war won exclu- sively by a British army. All subsequent action was to be shared and increasingly gov- erned by the powerful Ameri- can forces, Te Stormy Winter In Paris By RODNEY ANGOVE FARIS (AP) -- Storm clouds are forming for what may be the longest, coldest political winter France has had in recent years. Most Frenchmen were vaca- tiouw'ng when the first lightning bevan to crackle. By the time they began returning home, many were chafing from more than their sunburns. Francois Mitterrand, com- bined Socialist-Communist oppos'tion leader, has rapped President Charles de Gaulle's method of intervening in Cana- dian affairs. "Haughty vigi- lance" is bad enough at home, muh less abroad, he said. Mitterrand was mild com- pared with a man in de Gau'le's own camp, Valery Gis- cari d'Estaing. The former finxnce minister claims control of 42 cf de Gaulle's 245 seats in the 487-seat assembly. When he criticized de Gaulle's "one-man method '"' the political Commu- nists spilled alot of ink. De Gaulle apparently decided to bat down Giscard d'Estaing before he went too far. He got Finance Minister Michel Debre to accuse Giscard d'Estaing of retu'ning to the ruinous back- biting of the Fourth Republic. The three members of Giscard d'Esiaing's party in the cabinet issued a reminder that they are sworn by election circum- stances to uphold de Gaulle. "The vase is cracked," said one columnist. "It remains to be scen if it will break." De Gaulle is in no quieter watery with labor and manage- ment, Reports of minor strikes began reaching Paris on the first day plants were open after vacation. nN EAL by Patrick Nicholson Harvison Puts Record Straight For RCMP OTTAWA--Clifford Harvison, retired commissioner of the Royal' Canadian Mounted Police, is a liar and a cheat. I know--because he says so, in his racy description of his ca- reer in The Horsemen. That, he admits, was the only way he, as an eager kid under the mini- mum age of 18, could enlist in the old Royal North West Mount- ed Police. He told his little white lie in October 1919; just 44 years and 267 pages later, he retired among governmental and com- radely praise, having attained the top rung of the ladder as head of the force. In the years between, he had performed his duty faithfully and well, in pres- erving law and order at the eos- teric level of a national security force. Cliff Harvison's very readable ~autobiography describes how, in *deug pediars, his daily routine, he combatted silk smugglers, rum tunners, Nazi saboteurs, immigrant gangsters and Cana- dian subversionists. At the time of his retirement, the RCMP had been dragged reluctantly into a headlined peak of public- ity, following its work in no less than four cases which were sen- sationalised as Parliament gave them more attention than poli- tics itself. These were the sex, spy, dope and union scandals as- sociated with the names Munsin- ger, Rivard, Spence and Banks, FUN--BUT FICTION But despite the many humdrum and humdinger tasks which fell to Harvison's lot, probably his most valuable con tribution to the service which he dearly loves is his autobiogra- phy, The Horsemen. The sub- stantial library of books and ar- ticles about the RCMP, he rue- fully confesses, does not give the force a fair break. These writ- ings tend to give it either a dry- as-dust or an airy-fairy image. The authorized memoirs are too often prosaically unreadable. The fictional Mountie is a clean-cut young stalwart in a red tunic who ample time off from getting man--which he always triumphantly achieves--foz the pleasantes task of getting his woman--im- probably often a beautiful buck- skinned Indian maiden strolling through the snow-clad Rockies --such as experienced girl- watchers know to be almost non-exitents in real life in that locale. Today. that Rose-Marie image is alas being replaced-- except among camera-toting fourists on Parliament Hill--by a less desirable picture in the Hippy and anti-authority cricles: That of an arrogant, beat-you- up, uncouth horseman. POLICE NEED YOUR HELP None of these reflects the true picture. So Cliff Harvison's ac- count of his own career, liber- ally illustrated by his always en- thralling and often amusing word-pictures of well-known cases, in which he was involved, adds a valuable true look to tha old RCMP saga. The Horsemen should be re- quired reading for responsible citizens, especially all our politi- cians--from the minister in charge of the RCMP, Solicitor- General Larry Pennell and Prime Minister Pearson, down to Chipmunk Creek's youngest alderman, They would do well to ponder the views and advice of this experienced top policeman, who warns gravely against the growing menace in our midst of Mafia-type empires of untouch- able lawlessness. In the punish- ment of law-breaking, he urges that "the same sympathy and help which is extended to begin- ners should not also be extended to the top brass of crime." And in public judgment of the police, he urges, the same yardstick of proof should be demanded as in judging criminals. "Deteriora- ting conditions will someday compel a radical overhaul of our law-enforcing and judicial sys- tem,"' he ominously predicts. The Horsemen, the cynical tifle. chosen by Commissioner Harvison for his autobiography, is, he says, the most printable of the terms commonly used by spy rings and underworld ganzs in reference to the RCMP. Their work described in this book suz- gests the better deserved nick- game The Knights." Labur is angered by two Gaullist decrees, One, to put the svucial security and free medical plan into the black, would cut services while increasing the working man's costs. The other decree on shar- ing of profits, the union says, would yield nothing to the worker while reducing the chances of straight pay raises. The management clas s-- largely anti-de Gaulle anyway --is also up in arms about the same issues, They say the measures will greatly increase the cust of doing business. The latest opinion poll shows that only 49 per cent of those questioned wish de Gaulle to stay to the end of his term in 1972, against 56 per cent asked the same question in May, 1966. Parliament could be the win- ters time bomb. Many parlia- seen: annoyed by de Gaulle's request for special. economic powers, let alone his method of wie!ding them. It will be parlia- meat's turn to swing beginning Nox 1, when the special powers end The deputies may try to reverse, nullify or otherwise render impotent the most con- troversial parts of de Gaulle's deciees. Recently de Gaulle's views on foreign affairs have come under attack, too. Only one dai'y newspaper upheld his extoriation for a "free Quebec" when) ke visited Canada. That paper was Humanite, a Com- munist organ. The others accused him of bad manners or meddling. When the Middle East war sta:ied de Gaulle abandoned Israel, long close to France. That a}so brought protests. Andre Francois-Poncet, retired ambassador who now is a political columnist, said recently that history shows what happens to the all-power- ful nan. "Little by little," he said, "the very facility with which he gets over the obstacles and realizes his wishes, the docility that he meets, the flatteries tha: he surrounds himself with, all muddy up his view, isolate him and make him lose the sense of his limits at the time when he should observe them. He no longer consults anyone bui himself. . Objections and res:stance exasperate him," Joques Cruelly Tortured Refused To Quit Mission By BOB BOWMAN Among the many. great French missionaries who were murdered by the Iroquois were Father Joques and Lalande, Joques had an amazing career. Although he was a_ delicate man, he chose to endure the hardships of Canada to work among the Indians and achieve some success with the Hurons. In August 1643 he was. pad- dling up the St. Lawrence with some converts when they were attacked by Mohawks along the shore of Lake St. Pierre. Most of the Hurons were killed or tortured to death, but Joques was taken to the Mohawk vil- lage as a prisoner, He was tor- tured continuously until rescued by some Dutch fur traders who put him on board a ship going to France. Joques' condition was pitiful His fingernails had been torn off, his hands were shapeless stumps, and his arms had been sawed to the bones by ropes. When the Queen received him, she went down on her knees and kissed his unsightly hands. 'Yet Joques asked to return to Canada the following year. TREATY SIGNED A peace treaty had been signed by the French and. the Iroquois and Joques agreed to go back to Mohawk territory to establish a mission. However, the Mohawks were divided into three groups, Bear, Wolfe and Tortoise, and the Bears did not agree with the peace treaty. Prophetically Joques' new par- ish was te be called "Mission of the Martyrs" and he foretold his own doom when he wrote to a friend in Paris that he was willing to go but would not return. Joques was accompanied by a young priest, Father Lalande, and a party of Hurons, On the way there they were warned by friendly Iroquois that it was not safe to go on. The Hurons deserted, but Joques and Lal- ande were determined to con- tinue. Before long they were captured by Bears and taken to their village where they were beaten. Then one of the Indians cut strips of flesh from Joques' back to see if the white flesh was that of bad magician. Joques is reported to have said "T am a man like yourselves. Why do you treat me like a dog?" He and Lalande were killed during the night of October 18- 19, 1646. Joques was invited to visit the chief in his tent, and as he stooped to enter, a brave cut off his head with a toma- hawk. Lalande was killed the same way a few hours later. Their heads were mounted on poles and carried through the village. OTHER OCT. 19 EVENTS: 1690--Sir William Phips' expe- dition defeated at Beauport, Quebec 1787--Mississauga Indians were given land and 2000 pounds 1864--Confederate soldiers raided St. Albans, Vermont, from Canada 1946--House of Commons rati- fied United Nations Chartez THEN AND NOW Debate Over Roads Got Early Start By FORD LINDSAY Of The Times Staff The early 1920's were marked by heated debates not only in the Ontario County Council but in the Oshawa Town Council on matters dealing with road im- provements and paving. The district in those days was not criss-crossed by a network of highways and even the Kingston Rd., the main artery linking Toronto and Oshawa was not in good condition. Work was under way on the highway but resi- dents complained of the many detours and the dust nuisance. At one of its early sessions in 1921 the county council approved by 15 to 9 the Ontario govern- ment's rural highway policy and suggested the proper route for the highway between Whitby and Lindsay should be via Man- chester and Sunderland. Resi- dents of Port Perry wanted the highway to run through their village, north to Seagrave and east to Lindsay. The Oshawa council backed the Port Perry position. The debate on the route 'waxed loud and long with Reeve Vickery of Oshawa claiming county council has been stam- peded by the members from the north end of the county who wanted the road improved from Sunderland north to the Ather- ley narrows. Ontario County representa- tives met with municipal and farm organizations in Lindsay when a battery of speakers pre- sented facts calculated to show the Sunderland route was the proper one. Assessment and population figures were cited to back the claim with the result that the support of Victoria County was secured. At its February meeting county council] was told by County Engineer David J. Kean that 251 miles of roads in the county were designated as pro- vincial county roads, During the previous three years they had cost an average of $166 per mile for maintenance and over $118 a mile for construction. As a result a levy of 1.5 mills was approved to raise $118,858 for road purposes. The condition of Oshawa streets was bad particularly fol- lowing rains. On one occasion a tallyho bus, carrying a football team, bogged down on King St. POINTED PARAGRAPHS Don't waste a person's time by telling him your troubles. And don't waste yours, as what you say about your troubles doesn't register with him. Historians continue to deive into the past and cruelly dis- illusion us. Now they say that Lady Godiva was fully clothed when she made that ride, (VTECH HRN W. and had to be pulled out by a team Of horses-the next day. On another occasion a horse fell into a manhole and had to be destroyed. Four money bylaws were sub- mitted to the electors. They called for the expenditure of $22,000 to repair portions of Simcoe St.; $19,200 to repair portions of King St.; $20,000 for the rebuilding of the King St. bridge over the Oshawa Creek and $29,000 for additions to the waterworks. With less than 30 per cent of the electors exercis- ing their franchise, the two road bylaws were defeated. However, a month later, coun- cil decided to repair Simcoe and King Sts. immediately, filling holes with broken stone and using a tarvia top dressing. At about the same time Hon. F. C. Biggs, Ontario minister of highways, announced plans for paving the Kingston Rd. from the CNR crossing in Scarboro to Oshawa. Soon after the county approved a $50,000 debenture issue to finance its share of the provincial highway cost. The Town of Whitby was the first Ontario municipality to sign an agreement with the pro< vincial government to co- operate in the paving of streets to connect with provincial high- ways. Two blocks east and west and north and south of the "Four Corners" were paved. To mark the opening of the pavement a street parade was led by the 48th Highlanders Band of Toronto which attracted 10,000 people, A street dance was held in the evening. The Hon. Mr. Biggs and other de- partment officials attended. Bowmanville, which had paved King St., held a_ street fair to.celebrate with the pro- ceeds going to the Women's Hospital Auxiliary. Late in the summer, Oshawa council awarded the contract for the King St. bridge to T. B. Mothersill and Son for $13,450. Part of this amount was sub- Lowe by the provincial govern- ment, YEARS AGO 15 YEARS AGO, » Oct. 19, 1952 The new Ajax hospital has been awarded a Federal grant of $33,000 towards the removal and renovation of the hospital building. Sydney T. Hopkins of Oshawa was elected to the bdard of governors of the Certified Pub- lic Accountants. 30 YEARS AGO, Oct. 19, 1937 North Simcoe School has been awarded the Dr. T. E. Kaiser Shield for fire drill. General Motors of Canada will form a safety club for em- ployees. HAVANA mier Fidel mourning ( night the dea er Ernesto ( a tremendou: lutionary fo to liberate | g0 on, In a voice tion, Castro | his old com died of wou week afier a tle with troor "Che has b a model of a our people bu Latin Ameri crowd assem Revolution Sq He saw nc Strategy of g1 the main path Che himsel! prepared for ; gle for five, 1 --all his life ij Sees An TORONTO | Démson of Toi College said Christians are United Church sor was speak prior to a .tez and internatio opens Friday. Says D: PETERBOR( A. J. Phillips, rector of the | Society, Wedne the value of the publicity prog: local branch of a recent surv fear of cancer factor preventi visiting a docto: of trouble. Gets Fore OTTAWA (CP chard, former of forestry in B Wednesday bec: cipient of a new ognizing outsta ment in forestry No New VICTORIA Bennett Wedne clear there will language school ish Columbia. | one school syste ince and there - arate schools or supported by treasury," he to ference. "HER NOT AM Branch 43, R Legion, is not a United Council Associations in C viously reported story. AMALGAN Ontario County Manning will be the pane] on "An Municipalities" a' tion of the Assoc tario Counties t Niagara Falls ne TAX DEDL Ontario County nesday, gave app tion sponsored | Gould, Uxbridge | tion the ministe revenue asking a respecting incom tions in regard t lowances, etc., p: representatives to cil. The aid of Starr, MP and \V MP, will be sough EXPERT |} Any safety que will be the quest guests at the In dent Prevention supervisory dinne Oct, 25. A panel will answer the ¢ PROMPT. SEI @ BLUE CK @ P.S.I. @ GREEN § NEED N PAY CA You Give The Doc! Prescript We do the FREE City-Wide D MITCHE DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 7: