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Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Mar 1963, p. 13

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EP ES OE Fe mea pe gem « x At Darts Intet tact week, he ren goers ge pe material oa a day so cold windy that tors in the outports cast the!- ee Sn ey eee pcore|ballats. The average for the Severe! whole riding is about 65 per f.ostbite just walking 50 feet ent. from their airplane to a house. Elections are serious for Lab-|_ The Percentage of the vote' in Preparing For Vote Tough Labrador Job (eirSi ia Brana GOOSE BAY, Labrador (CP),Falis-White Bay-Labrador, a,rection of Hentey Harbor.|fers quite high prestige. A son| "It. seems the same every- Weaker men would probablyiconstituency so compli-/Every one missed. : would be intensely disappointed| where," Mr, Corbett says. "If weep if they had to carry out|cated that even deputy re-| He later received a stiff pro-jif his father had been an elec- ; ; dst the election assignment of Mag-|turning officer--Joseph Yemanjtest from the. Henley Harborition official and he didn't get\)°" have to trek five miles istrate Terry Corbett along thejof Grand Falls, Nfid.--has alelection officials that the 15)the job himself. through snow with a dog team forbidding Labrador coast. deputy: Mr. Corbett. voers there were deprived of ito vote, you will. e By plane, by dogteam and dor had a potential vote|the right to vote. : jon foot, Mr. Corbett travels|of 8,546 in the 1962 federal elec-| "'Nelson Castonguay (chief|Corbett, "like an earldom." through the sub-Arctic, making|tion out of the constituency to-jreturning officer) asked for the sure ties will be available|tal of some 35,000. It isn't many|parachutes back," Mr. Corbe't for people to exercise their|votes, and they are scattered|recalls. "IT had to tell him re- franchise iz the federal electionjover 112,000 s miles, ajgretfully that we couldn't even April 8. reasonable attempt must be/|find the ballot boxes. They'll "T sometimes think," he|made to get them. probably wash wp on the coast) sighed Most of the problems are|of California." _ along = 8 caused by inadequate commu- we are carrying democracy to|nications, but a lot of them by the extreme here." ~ the habits of the Labradorians, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Merch 15, 1963 137 ms Uc strikes, insist on--. CKLEY'S 'If have to walk d 0 -| "If you have to walk around|The fast results will the block to the station, ~ ya About 90 per ecnt of the elec-lyou'll think about i ee > At sea and ashore! Conductor Richard P. Horn, Playing the part of custodian of the "dressing room car" of the spruced-up Boston and Maine railroad, gives the once over to swim suit model as she is about to enter the com- A MODEL TRAIN muters' section. Riders paid $2 for the special trip from Beverly Farms to Rockport, Mass., during which models showed the latest in bathing suits and spring fashions. The each passenger with the other dollar for the benefit of the Beverly Hospital. --AP Wirephoto summer residences. material, station was duly set up. In the far-flung, rough riding, be they Indians, Eskimos or enumeration is often not just/|settlers, a matter of finding out who the eligible yeters are but where|coast in the summer to harvest they are, and where they will|@ cash crop of fish, and move be by election time. They have|iniand or to bigger communi- ta habit of moving from winter|ties in the winter-to be closer Many of them live by the to supplies of wood and oil for are the people of Tri- fuel and game for food. Corbett asked ropped into Square|$00d for us," Mr, Corbett said. Islands te deliver enumerators| A SPring election like the one "A winter: election is very last June--June is spring for us "Pye haan trying to find them is bad, There is too much ice myself," said the postal agent there. '"'The mail is piling up." "Oh, well," said Mr, Corbett. The people were located, most of them in Partridge Bay and Square Islands, and a polling/Mr. Corbett dropped five ballot for a boat or a seaplane and it is too thin for a ski-plane, There isn't enough snow for a dog-team, and too much fog for parachuting." In the last federal election, boxes from a pitching, heaving Mr. Corbett's riding is Grand|small plane in the general di- up in far-away weather. settlements, He has been held places as long as four days by bad fiying . U.A.W. INCOME TAX}| RETURNS | TI SHORT FORM COMPLETED $2.00 Hours: 9-5 p.m. Seturdey 9-12 EVERYBODY WELCOME HALL » 7-10 p.m, RUMS NAVY RUM PALM BREEZE WHITE CAP railroad received $1.00 for Congress Warned By ANPA Chief WASHINGTON (AP) -- The ral manager of the Amer- fean Newspaper Publishers As- gociation says Congréss would be skating on thin ice constitu- tionally in any move to force an increase in "'the number and variety of 'voices' in the news- paper field." Stanford Smith and other offi- cials of the publishers' ongan- ization went before a House antitrust subcommittee with a mass of testimony, @ 189-page legal brief and a sheaf of, sta- tistical data on U.S. newspa- pers. Officials of the ANPA--which represents 90 per cent of the country's daily newspaper cir- culation--urged that the inquiry be broadened to include the "power and practices" of labor q@nions. Smith said current newspaper strikes in New York and @tudy necessary. % The association's presentation touched off a dispute with sub- make such ajcould pttite som make it an effective competi- tor. its publisher sets in deciding the kind 'and quality of news- paper he elects to publish. "Perhaps one of the greatest benefits which can flow from these hearings ig a clearer un- derstanding of the constitu- tional dangers in any govern- ment effort to impose controls over the press through meas- ures designed to increase the number and variety of 'voices' in the newspaper field. The same applies to radio, televi- sion and indeed all media of mass communications." | HEARS OF SALE $n its first exploration of a specific case, the subcommittee heard former St. Pétersburg, Fia., publisher Loyal Phillips say his evening 1ewspaper was sold to its morning rival only after beavy financial losses and a futile search for a buyer who spend enough money to Nelson Poynter, president of ttee members about the the St, Petersburg Times, scope of the House in-|which boug ning Independent last June 30, ity into concentration of own- ership in the nemspaper field. Chairman Emmanuel Celler @em. N.Y.) said the ANPA e@rguments imlicated the organ- fation objects to the whole in- quiry. RAISES NO OBJECTION Smith said the association "raises no question as to the authority of this subcommittee to inquire into the general busi- ness practices existing in the newspaper publishing business and in other media of mass communications." But he said the organization reserves the right to object if the subcommittee goes into the gathering and dissemination of news. That area is guarded by the freedom of the press guar- antee in the constitution, Smith aid. He said it would be "clearly @neonstitutional for Congress to énact special legislation aimed): at curbing only newspaper} 4 mergers... "We believe the courts willl ] «. » strike down the use of the antitrust laws when they con- fuse the commercial activities) 7 of @ newspaper and the goals Bitten Boy Fit As Fiddle With Serum NEW YORK agen four- year-old Canadian en or by a dog suspected scratched pected |g of being rabid received his first of anti- Queen Elizabeth at ; tether said he was "fit as a A U.S. Coast Guard plane geached the Cunard liner 250 miles east of New York several before sunrise and @ropped the package in the sea. The ship lowered a small boat dog's body were inconclusive, but that there was enough sus- to send material to the -- treatment of injections normally last for 14 days. ht the faltering Eve- said the purchase was made re- luctantly and "because we be- lieve St. Petersburg deserves a good evening newspaper." Phillips, who was editor and publisher of the Independent, said subcommittee investiga- tors have asked him '"'why we eprmitted the St. Petersburg newspaper field to be monop- olized by our sale of The In- dependent to The Times." He said stockholders began looking for a buyer after the paper had lost about $250,000 a year for three years. | "We tried especially to find| a buyer with sufficient profits from other enterprises to en-) able him to pour enough money into The Independent to enable it to compete effectively," Phil- lips said. | Now's the time to switch to top-quality, economical 'blue coal'. >. guaranteed to give you more and better heat for your money! 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