US. ELECTION COSTS Big Money Politics, Both Parties In Red By ARCH MacKENZIE tionailly in the Nov. 3 campaign maliy Republican have tined up WASHINGTON (CP) -- One|will exceed $25,000,000. with President Johnson certainty exists in any early) The tab for nominating con- He has missed few opportuni- sketch of the United States elec-|yentions, members of Congress|ties to encourage that. trend, to tion campaign: Color the cost! campaigns, eoverners and|augment normal sources of red, pra feats will be support fr Mn ie let lly estimated y; y Reet foes -- smaller if more abundant con- ut now! tributors. need ca wok Gee tor te car: yrs based on 1048 com, The unparalielled Democratic cess the Democrats appear. to! ith firm|Party position is represented in be having. Ol the fact that it faced its $1,000,- The Democrats? Color, them The Republi want $12,-|999 nominating convention last rainbow. They own the pot of) oe eee nn nationally| August with a reported $5,000,- gold this time, 000,000 to $15,000,000 nationally 'o99 in the bank. Reports required by Ameri- in 1964 and the Democrats have can law -- and the set a target of $15,000,000. FACED DEFICITS a make these reports a mere hint| There are sound reasons why This contrasts with the deficit that the Democratic|an abnormal. turn of events|that former president Harry since January has col-|puts the Republicans in trouble/Truman~ inherited from Frank- $3,300,000 from various| financially. |lin Roosevelt and which Adiai sources. 'BACK A WINNER frig ge og angel pet ban a cess to erase between ti ( ok Magee bers pee The Democrats enjoy the ad- land 1956 campaigns. \ together $2,700,000, But it js| Vantage of any government that) 'That was the era when the "estimated in some quarters that |seeks re-election with a reason-/Republicans had the fat cats, \ the actual Democratic party ably good record. Contributors|in 1956, for example, $100-a- lharvest eo' tar Over and _under|° political funds like a wines [Plate dinners across the coun- the table has been closer to): and as one Republican said:|try were linked by ol0sed-cir- $7,000,000, "It's always hard for a party|cuit television. That raised $4,- |out of power to collect money!999,000 as a "'salute to Eisen- sr00 MUCH TO SPEND? with the polls against you." --|hower." | Both parties will grab every) To date, the polis certainly] But Richard Nixon's whisker- --show party lared party "$100,000,000 or\Which usually have been) The Goldwater campaign plane costs $280,000 for the pro- posed 75, 000-mile ! mpaign. $70,000. POLLS ARE COSTLY The public opinion poll costs dogs, tend to brush aside the reliability of the polls but. few Poona ve sino today with- ante ad more they are be- ing used not only as indicators of popularity but as detectors of regional trends or spotters of key issues. In today's American politics, it has been deplored, the rich man has it all his own way. It is the candidate at any level. who has to pay his own THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, October 7, 1964 19 Spain, Britain Hassle By CARMAN po ae | UNITED NATIONS (C)-- Gibraltar, a two - square-mile fortress guarding the entrance to the Mediterranean and the erossroads of Europe and Af- rica, is Britain's newest colon- ial headache at the United Na- tions. It is an issue that calls up echoes of 18th - century Euro- pean power politics and mod-. ern overtones of the cold war and the British election. Britain acquired the fortress almost by accident 260 years ago and now is under attack because it is moving the col- ony towards greater internal self-governmet. The site of the debate is the General Assembly's 24-member coloniaiism committee, which has been discussing the future of "The Rock for the last two weeks. The accuser is Spain, and the nub of its case is that Britain agreed, under the Treaty of Utrecht of 1713, that if it ever pulied out of Gibraltar the fortress would be returned to Spain. $250,000 on polls alone up to | Over Old 'Rock' Treaty Now, the Spaniards say, Brit- ain is trying to perpetuate its toehold in Spain by moving the colony to a status of independ- ent association with Britain. BRITAIN DISAGREES Britain replies that it does not accept the Spanish interp- retation of the Treaty of Utrecht and plans to go on defending the colony. In the middle are the fewer than 25,000 "Gibraltarians," who say they don't want to be turned over to Spain and are content with the way things now are going. On. the sidelines. is the Soviet Union, charging that Britain is trying to maintain » base threatening the "national lib- eration movements" of the peoples of Asia and Africa, The Russians demand that the col- ony be demilitarized, hinting that it might become a_ base for NATO nuclear submarines. The UN debate has been marked by Spanish charges of British duplicity going all the) way back to the Spanish War of} Succession. Spanish UN delegate Jaime) de Pinies charged that Britain, For the Wife in your Life ;and vice-versa NEW STA-PREST by LEVI cent they can, although there|have been against Republican| thin loss to John F. Kennedy|way unti] he actually is nomi-|that point. after conquering t he. fortified| #s some talk at this stage that! presidential candidate Barryjin 1960 left the Republicans nated--then the party steps in.| Senator Hubert Humphrey,| promotory in 1704, expelled the the Democrats .actually will|Goldwater. Moreover, in the|$750,000 in debt. Thus, in 1960, President John-|the present vice - presidential] true inhabitants and brought in| wind up with a surplus, heavy flow of shifting alle-| Under law, no political com-|son is said to have spent $250,-| candidate, banged heads with|a "prefabricated" population} , That may be impossible, how-|giance which specially marks|mittee can raise more than|000 in a vain bid to beat Ken-|Kennedy briefly in. seeking the/ which has no right to "dispose| bver, because it is assumedithis.campaign, numbers of|$3,000,000. The solution is sim-jnedy for the nomination, and it |1960 nomination, spent $250,000/of a part of Spain" as_ it} that the cost of politicking na-iprominent businessmen no r-!ple--the creation of more com-lis estimated Kennedy sipentihe didn't have and retired. pleases. ) J HEALTH ts PRICELESS : c | Because these Slacks need never Trust your pharmacist, he does not take shortcuts or second rate ingredients, health is priceless, your. pharmacist is here to help you preserve it. Health is priceless indeed. You will realize that only, and fully when you, or people near you are sick. get closer to an iron than this! You are helpless, discouraged and feel unlucky. Your're _ depending on help from others. First your doctor, who, with all the knowledge of modern medicine, treats you to become well again. You can buy miracles .. ..and you can buy them from your local pharmacists. 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