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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Oct 1965, p. 15

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+ i w ST. JOHNS, Que. (CP)--The Liberai Organization tn the con- stituency of St. Jean-Iberville- Napierville will support Yvon . Dupuis for re-election Nov. 8, Robert Rainville, president of the provisional Liberal associa- tion, said Thursday night. - "The organization has no in- tention of backing a candidate parachuted in on us by Prime Minister Pearson in an undem- ocratic manner," he said in an interview. 'Mr. Dupuis has represented us as the official Liberal candidate in this con- stituency since 1958. We intend to stand by him now. "If the Liberal party has won this riding since 1958, it has been because of Mr.. Dupuis. The decision of the federal Lib- eral party t oparachute Jean Desmarais into the constitu- ency as official candidate was No Imminent Recession: Gordon SARNIA (CP)--Finance Min- ister Gordon said Thursday night there will be a pause in the upswing of the economy sooner or later but he sees no likelihood of it happening 'in the period immediately ahead." ELECTIO No Parachutist, But Dupuis ae ( a slap in the face for Mr. Du- puis. Thev haye no reason to slap him in the face." Mr. Rainville said he is con- fident that Mr. Dupuis will win, although there will prob- ably be as many as five can- didates in the running. An announcement Wednes- day in Montreal on behalf of Mr. Pearson stated that Mr. Desmarais, a former mayor of St. Johns, will be the official Liberal candidate. Mr. Dupuis replied to the an- nouncement Thursday by saying he will stand anyway, as a Lib- eral. Mr. Dupuis, who resigned from Mr. Pearson's cabinet in January at the prime minister's request, is currently awaiting trial on charges of influence- peddling in connection with an unsuccessful application for a iprovincial racetrack franchise. N TALK} last," Mr. Gordon told the Canadian Club 'of Sarnia. 'That same question, I might say, was being asked a year ago. 'Well, I do not believe any-) one has really been able to claim that the business cycle has been eliminated, It is reas- ble to PP that sooner The current exp ry pe- riod has run from the spring of 1961, the longest sustained expansion since the great de- pression. "Some people have begun to wonder how much longer it can Sharp Assails Diefenbaker BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)-- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker was accused Thursday of de- liberately undermining public confidence to gain votes in the Nov. 8 general election. Mitchell Sharp, trade and commerce minister, told a Lib- eral party luncheon that Mr. Diefenbaker has predicted a deficit of $1,500,000,000 in bal- ance of payments because of the Canada-United States auto! trade agreement. "He is either unaware of the facts or is deliberately under- mining public confidence in or- der to gain votes," Mr. Sharp said, Compulsory Medicare Rapped OTTAWA (CP)--The compul- sory aspect of the federal gov- ernment's proposed medical in- surance plan is wrong and dan- gerous to the best interest of Canadians, .Premier Ernest Manning of Alberta said Thurs- day night. The Social Credit premier, speaking on a CBC free-time political broadcast on television said he is in complete agree- ment with the plan's objective --comprehensive medical serv- ices. But making the plan compul- sory took away Canadians freedom of choice. The medical care plan in its present form would place a to- tally unnecessary burden on the taxpayers because there or later there will be a pause or a dip in the. present up- swing. Opposition leader Diefen- baker chats with Progres- sive Conservative teammate DIEFENBAKER -- AND A TOP LIEUTENANT the two were to altend a political rally. Erik Nielsen on an Air Can- ada aircraft en route to Winnipeg Thursday, where (CP) "However, I do not see any likelihood of this happening in the period immediately ahead." THE BEST BATTLES -- 2 The minister said the Pro- gressive Conservatives and New Democratic Party mem- bers had attacked the agree- ment "rather stupidly." "They are using the same ar- - guments as some senators in| By JOHN LeBLANC | the U.S. who are concerned) TORONTO (CP)--A pair of! that the agreement is too bene-|political powerhouses are steam-) ficial) to Canada," he said. ing up one of the Nov. 8 fed-| Mr,. Sharp said the autojeral election's more notable tus-| agreement was the 'most im-|sles in Eglinton riding at the portant and far-reaching agree-|north tip of Toronto city. ment produced by any Cana+|/ Trade Minister Mitchell) dian government in our genera-|Sharp, who cracked an 18-year} tion" and bears a direct rela-|Conservative reign in 1963, is tion to Canada's balance of|in a hard battle with Dalton C. payments deficit. |Camp, national president of the Conservatives, who has never) run for office before but who} |has masterminded many a win-| ning campaign. Up to this point, it's a case willing and able to pay their a a ees would|f history repeating itself. Mr. mount to $1,000,000,000 a year|sharp was nationally known and would result in substantial | Dut rR get ig agit hustings increases in taxes federally and|!" 1962 when he took on the provincially. jcamp (five wins in a row), Con- Mr. Manning also said medi-|Servative Donald Fleming. He cal standards would be im-|cut Mr. Fleming's previous 19,- paired because doctors, already|°%? plurality ete to bn Fe in- short supply, would have to|"2'xed In by 9, next time) take on more work. jafter Mr, Fleming retired. The premier said the plan| The 1963 voting figures were should be voluntary, the gov-|22,215 for Mr. Sharp, 13,984 for ernment paying for those who|Eric Hardy, the PC candidate, earned less than a certain in-,and 5,151 for Malcolm Mitchell come, of the New Democratic Party j Si ...who will represent his party He said that only Social cre-|¥"° Helicbe : dit candidates in the federal2e%i" this year. Mr. Mitchell, election are opposing, on prin- 32, is a high-school teacher who) ciple, the compulsory feature of is the only Eglinton-native can- the plan. didate. : : : Mr, Manning was introduced) Now it's Mr. Camp trying it by Robert Thompson, National|the hard way his first time out, Power-Names In Eglinton: Liberal Sharp, Tory Camp ltawa as associate deputy trade} and also trying to get Eglinton|has studied economics, | back on the track historically.| "Mr, Camp, 45, whose advertis-| It went Liberal also once be- ling agency is located in the rid-| fore, in 1940, and by just 240)ing is from, Woodstock, N.B.| votes. Unlike Mr. Sharp--who entered) Eglinton's 53,000 vaters--jactive politics only in 1961--he largely in the higher - incomejhas been at it since a youngster, class--have a choice in the ma-|and as far back as 1947 was na- jor parties' candidates between|tional treasurer of the Canadian| a couple of men well-heeled with'/University Liberal Federation. | personal finances, political) He quit the Liberals shortly! ideas, energy and long experi-lafter that over what he de- ence as back-room operators.|scribes as disillusionment at the) Both have received seriouS'way they treated his native mention as eventual leaders of/Maritimes, and since then has| their parties. joperated as a major tactician in| Mr. Sharp, 54, born in Win-|various federal and provincial nipeg, spent most of his life in/elections, with excellent results. touch with the grain trade, first He became national president of on the Prairies and then at Ot-|the Conservatives last year, | Neither opponent is introduc- ng anything radical into the Eg-| linton campaign. "No gim-| micks,"" says Mr. Camp to any-| one asking if he'll pull stunts| out of his promotional back-| ground, Personal contact with jvoters is a key. technique of jboth, and each' has been start-| ing the day with a buttonholing| Tractor Crushes * a sessio. t : Truck Driver (Yonge #t,, Teovmts's mule ciecet' minister, A close aid of the late) ;, Liberal strongman C. D. Howe, he left the Diefenbaker regime) in 1958 to become a vice-presi- dent of the huge international utility, Brazilian Traction, He Se ed ee ees ce gree A PEN EGO MYT ene Ne eens THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, October 8, 1965 15 By GERARD ALARIE TORONTO (CP)--One thing at least is evident at the con- clusion of Jean Lesage's 19-day tour of Western Canada--that English Canada was interested in hearing the Quebec pre- mier's message. Mr. Lesage, who described himself on several occasions as an ambassador of Quebec, 'dd- dressed business and profes- sional men at Canadian Club meetings in a number of cities in an attempt to "'show the true face of Quehec." : : His frank speeches may have shocked many .of his audiences, but at least his listeners were interested. ; In Vancouver, for example, Canadian Club organizers said that if they had known how many people would turn out to hear the Quebec premier they would have installed a system of closed-circuit television, HAS OVERFLOW CROWD In*Winnipeg, where Mr, Le-| sage spoke in the largest salon| of one of the city's main ho-| tels, his overflow audienc e| spilled into adjacent salons and) listened to his address carried] over loudspeakers . In Victoria, 457 club members turned out, an audience de- scribed by the club president the club had ever held. Mr. Lesage's adult audiences always heard him out in per- fect silence, often punctuated by warn? and spontaneous ap- IF YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE Why Not Call TOM FARQUHARSON SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada RESIDENCE: BUSINESS: 668-4371 725-4563 PETERBOROUGH (cp)--|'"at cuts through the riding. Jack Hill, 37, of Markham, a --ae milk transport truck driver,) was crushed to death between his. truck and a tractor on a! farm five miles southwest of here Thursday. | were many people who were Social Credit Leader. Open Daily RETAILERS TO 'THRIFTY CANADIANS plause. Student audiences were} ' more enthusiastic, especially = AUDIENCES SHOCKED -- BUT VERY INTERESTED : Lesage: Biggest Draw In The West the University of British Colum- bia where the premier received astanding ovation. Everywhere, the suggestion was heard that Mr. Lesage as- pires to the leadership of the federal Liberal party. SPECULATE ON AIM "He wants to become prime minister" was astatement heard often in Vancouver, Cal- gary, Regina and Winnipeg. "That's the reason for his tour, isn't it?" A student at Lakehead Uni- Quebec would have a special status, ' AREN'T READY But in Toronto Thursday, he told an Ontario-Quebec newspa- per. seminar that the lack of knowledge of Quebec he found ip the West led him to believe the Canada is not yet ready to start reshaping its constitution. he tour was 'fa great hu- an experience," but "we are far from ripe as far as a new} constitution is concerned," "Mr. Lesage said he had to be brutally frank in his western - speeches to- provoke = desire among his audiences for more knowledge about -Quebec, "My only desite dufing the four," he said in an interview Thursday night, "was that Eng- lish Canada hear and under- stand the message I brought and that it try, in the coming months, to reflect seriously on © the questions I raised and on the reaction I provoked." versity put the question directly to Mr. Lesage during a ques- tion-and-answer session there. To such suggestions, the Que-' bec premier has replied either that he has his hands full in Quebec or that no one can pre- dict what the future may bring. The theme of his speeches! across the country was that de-, sire of French-speaking Cana- dians for equality of opportun- ity everywhere in Canada, a goal that he thought could per- soem R.R, 3, Peterborough haps be reached through a re- shaped constitution under which Best Wishes To Courtice Auto Wreckers ELGIN HUBBLE Contractor 7453-8161 as the largest single gathering} iS We started with Pioneer Professional Power... and here is the result 9:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. All the Best Developer Must Pay For © Pumping Station Costs _ Toronto developers will have) velopments Ltd:, Toronto, until to pay the entire cost of a pump-| council é¢stablished a policy on Courtice Auto Wreckers -- from -- Thursday and Friday to 9 P.M, Z] ing station for their proposed multi-million dollar residential and commercial development on the lakefront. Planning board last month tabled consideration of a rezon- ing request by F. and T. De-| Millbrook's Okay, :' Says Grand Jury MILLBROOK, Ont. (CP) -- A grand jury from the Ontario Supreme Court reported Thurs-} day it has inspected the maxi- mum - security prison in this. village 15 miles south of Peter-| borough and found it to be a well-run institution, | It said it found no evidence) of irregularities. | | cost of the station and force pumping stations. Council adopted a . public works committee recommenda- tion last night that the city will construct a sewage pumping Gus Brown Motors station provided that: --the station is of sufficient capacity to serve the entire area -- the 110-acre Conant property -- which cannot be sewered by gravity sewers; ~--the developers pay the full main; --the developer provides a fund to pay the cost of the oper- ation and maintenance of the station. Council agreed that a rebate would be made to F. and T. Developments Ltd., of part of the cost of the station if other, developers connect to it. for their kifid patronage. MR. A. ALEXANDER .. Former Owner of Courtice Auto Wrecking would like to thank all his former customers and friends And hopes they will con- tinue to patronize Mr, Burley and Mr. Wright. Thank You. COURTICE AUTO WRECKERS Mr. Gordon Burley and R. N. Wright, owners of Courtice Auto Wreckers wish to extend their kindest best past year. We hope that we will be able to serve wishes and deepest tha you again this year. -- Ot-- nks to their customers of the And In The Future . . C We will be able to give our freshly completed location, Turn North at you even better service from garage. Situated at our old the First Road East of Nichols Garage and we're half a mile from Highway Two. 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