Oakville Beaver, 20 Jun 1993, p. 20

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

4| tl‘EENLiILeQ Jadmn's Bum hummus; - PIANT HEALTH CARE- Fmtmbum... - ART GALLERIES I: PICTURE FRAMING â€" Concqat Glen's. MoCdlis'mkpa‘r " OddsrdLimolnMauu ouumam WWW. Robm's Fish CM. -'|NEUNEâ€" WMEW HatzCzlennW‘ men: 845 -5585 ME Kdnic-Sue MushuI - new um. - FREE LONG DISTANCE PHONE SERVICE - WET BA IT" Our customers save up to 50% over other methods No digging inside or outside Finished or unfinished basement Fully transferable written guarantee VISA MasterCard accepted Authorized dealer for: hm..-- "-' E OAKVILLE BRANCH is pleased to invite you to join us at our ANNLLAL GENERAL MEETING to be held at OAKVILLE CENTRAL LIBRARY â€" Navy Street Main Auditorium Oakville, Ontario Wednesday, June 23, 1993 Wine / Cheese: 6:00 pm. Meeting: 7:30 pm. - GROCERY STORES â€" -REAI.ESYATEâ€" Usl atoudltoncor MD. 9'39"!th VFREE CALL! IT'S FUN CALI. 845-5585 Guiemlts ton'cs. 6131 6237 621! .6100 .6101 AW! $104 ,6105 845-5585 .Box #5180 )â€"â€" MW,“ PamChIld Cam. Waa'fnxt Fativd. Vdutmw Romy Cltb of Odtvile Wan deyim My Matthew. Spdyoumnd W Poll: 10p10WeddyMwiam.‘ Top10Wadddeeo Raids Top10WaddyCA§dIcSird§. SLjol'nNnbdauI-MIIL Sm Adeline: â€" Trilliun Gum “Mlle Came folk Pufomirs N's, (Built: Symphony Ord‘m Hdton Twism. HEALTH rm. -HOROSCOP3-D/MO‘K¢¢¢ Iftpdayisymlbifidw.... - COMMUNITY NONâ€"PROFIT - - HALTON SPECIAL EVENTS â€" -OAKVILL£N|GHTUFE- in Odtvillc. â€" ENTERTAINMENT - - EDITORIALâ€" sum thé'fldi'ji'té " of WHEN PROMPTED 91‘ 5134 5417 5071 6104 5410 Homage was. mamm... worm” Trivia QiL GlmAbbcyUbuym. Odtvillc nblicLibruy . WcOdcsliblavy ........... Woodsidzfltardmbmy. Laurie. MiéMMC-zanm. Canmtitprlidre koqwsRldssz ................. HMQIterdGmMchms. Childrmf M'ai'n Coma Glen Abbey Golf Cm‘ Milled! GolfCouse. ....... Odo/illeYad'lSqndm. Hdton Board of Edme MSpmsSdnol. WHcCMsfideuool. WeGsSmrduySdool HE. LP ljfdim" Suicisldotmuionum. Dali/TM“... Minor Soccu. Scomboadâ€"MimSocca .......... Tmflhzh/s19935dndug Dim Una ......... Mum Poll. antdErMmm. Pdl. 3| ENTER CODE "you're n39er â€"JUSTFORLAUGHS- rduliis’civkc press 5000 when! Mm n I! about â€" OAKVILLE BEAVER - -LOTTERIES- - ”IMMIâ€" - WUNE - - SENIORS â€" â€" RECIPES - 5417 5416 5416 51 91 .5037 5270 5557 ,6070 ,5135 511! .5‘56 ,5!” 5170 517! .5119 “I think the public is ready for action. It is ready to tighten its belt if it thinks the government is doing its share,” he said. “But when we do tough measures, we have to get the public on our side and I hope (new Prime Minister) Kim (Campbell) can communicate a little more effectively with the Canadian people than Brian (Mulroney) when tough legisla- tion has to be enacted.” Speaking from the perspective of the owner of an Oakville busi- ness, Sparling advocated “getting government out of the way of business” â€" especially small businesses which provide most of the jobs in this country. Although government cannot create jobs, he said it creates an environment in which business can flourish. As councillor at the town and region, he noted that he had always striven for balanced bud- geting and there was no reason The No. 1 priority of both can- didates was control of the govem- ment debt and a more efficient economy. Sparling said he was prepared to make tough decisions, even if not “politically correct. “Stephen Sparling stands for less government. I believe it’s fundamental to the Conservatives to have less regulation of busi- ness,” he said. “Success depends on the political will to make changes and hard decisions.” S'p’firl’ing wants pension reform (Continued trom page 14) parties is not relevant,” she said. “They are of another decade â€" tired, irrelevant and not saleable.” The No. 2 priority in Sparling’s platform was the Senate which he thought should be abolished. Mulvale agreed â€" if it was deter- mined it was of little use. ANN MULVALE WE CHALLENGE YOU ...and the Em loyees of the Town of Oakville to etter our increase in percentage of participation in the 1993 OAKVILLE UNITED WAY CAMPAIGN OAKVILLE HYDRO Signed: Jack Brewer, Chairman Oakvflle Hydro; and The Oflkvflle Hydro Employees Mulvale, too, thought savings in the federal budget could be realized by eliminating adminis- trative overlap. “I think the public is dissatis- fied with the circus in question period and every side of the. House needs to know it’s not acceptable,” she said. “We have to stop that nonsense.” He said Canada’s excellent international reputation should be taken advantage of to promote business in the country. She strongly supported Robert de Cotret’s view that a 15% reduction could be realized with- out touching programs. As to the everyday political process, Mulvale thought the question period in the House of Commons should be revamped to make it more meaningful and less abrasive. The all-candidates meeting was the last between Mulvale and Sparling before the nomination night on Wednesday. “We have to put an end to pet project spending that may not support the national interests,” he stated. He came out strongly on reduc- ing the size of Cabinet, cutting the budget‘and reforming pensions and social assistance payments through eligibility criteria. He advocated privatization of crown corporations like VIA Rail and the post office to force them to pay their own way. He would also like to see the abolition of inter-provincial trade barriers (as did Mulvale) and bet- ter coordination between federal and provincial governments. this shouldn’t be extended to the federal arena.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy