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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 1 Oct 1975, Section 2, p. 9

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Poor but Eciger Turnout at Applefest Perseverence finally paid off for 8 year old Cynthia Cosgrey at the Lione Applefest on Friday evening, Sept. l9th. After several minutes futile effort, she finally sunk her teeth into the delicious Me-lntosh at the end of the elusive strin'g. The weather for the event was fine and 'the Lions were keen, but unf'ortunately not too many people showed up. The location and limited publicity were partly to blame for the poor turnout. Nonetheless, the B3owmanville Club expects to break even financially despite the lack of visi tors. Woprks fo Coi-nsider Lights a-f ing-Division Newcastle Works Depart- control inent will be requested to tion of corne up with a report on the Streets possibilîtv of nf'aliniýtraffir, The i J Do You Need Il 8 2,OOi - $54 - st, 2nd or 3rd Morta - Cût Your Paydénis in- -Consolidate Ail Your L -Pay Off an Existing M -Combine 2 Mortgages1 -Purchase or Improve F Any Worthwhile Pu ~'Farms- Commercial - Mike LCoug Tel. 7O5-743-ý Great Northern Finai -SAME DAY APPR< I nfersecftion 1 lght attheintrs Committee of the Whole lighs atthe .nterec- Monday due to the fact that f King and Division younger children are now in Bowmanville. involved in crossing -the cor- mat 1er came befare oer enroule to the newly opened Bowmanville Senior ?Public School. H o01 ev ? Councillor Ivan Hobbs ad- .7vised the committee that several traffie counts bave o oo ibeen taken at varions times in U3U3UJan attempt to get approval for Elinstallaton of rfilghsa the intersection which bas neyerbeen .granted. ~es ~ ~ ncîlor fobbsfurther H aifcould not understand, as .oans students have been crossing brtgagethe inter'section for years why .ortgagethe sudden urgency has arisen into One Io gel lights installled. Properfy Councillor Ann Cowman irpose advised Mr. Hobbs that yourn- «Residential the intersection than thosb previously going to the former Hiigh Scbool. Councillor Hohbs advised )rh ll* ilthat, as approval bas neyer been granted by the traffic counts, that if counicil decides 2500 1ta instaîl the lights themselves the town wouldhear the entire coL and no subsidy from the nejal Corn province would be forth- r coining. As a resuit Councillor Bruce OVALS - Tink moved it be referred ta ----the works department. Liberals Elect Delegates, For Ottawa Conventio'n The Liberal Party of Can- ada is holding a convention ir Ottawa on November 7, 8 and 9 and Northumberland-Durham riding association is sending 17 people to express loca] opinions on national issues. Last week, about 40 Liberals from across the federal riding gathered to, elect delegates and alternates to the convent- ion. Three people are automa- tic delegates- Dr. Ian Wilson,' because he is presi- dent of the riding association; Allan Beckett, Liberal candi- date in the last federal election; and Isobel Kirk- patrick, Liberal candidate in the provincial election. There was a secret ballot election for the other 14 representatives from this area. In this land of demo- cracy and minority groups, there were restrictions placed on the selection of seven delegates and seven alter- nates. The federal party rules say that at least two delegates and two alternates must be Appointment The appoiniment of Lieuten- an t-Coloniel A. Graham Coul- lei-, CD. as Hlonnrary Colonel of The Ontario Regirnent, Royal Caniadian Armoured Corps, was announced recent- ly tiy the Regiinent's Coin inaiiding Otliceî', Lieutenant Colonel N.M. Hall. The an- nouilcement tollows a recent communique received from the Departîioent of National Defence in Ottawa. Colonel Coulter, whose ser- vice with the Ontario Regi- ment dates to 1940, succeeds Majoi General Churchill C. Matin, CBE, DSO, CD whose tenure as Honorary Colonel of The Ontario Regiment has been terminated early due to ill health. The Honorary Coloîtel's tour of duty is usually three years, and is awarded on the basis of long service to the recipient's country and Regiment. Bori'i nToronto, Colonei Coulter is a graduate of the University of Toronto, obtain- ing a Bachelor of Arts in 1939. His fit-st m-ilitary experience was as a young militiaman with the Royal Regiment of Canada, and he later transfer- red to he Ontario Regiment's 2iîd (Reserve) Battalion. In April, 1942, he enlisted iin the regular corrponent of The Royal Canadian Armoured Corps aind was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant ai the Ofîcer Candidate Sebool at Gordon Head, B.C., in Novem- beir, 1942. He proceeded over- seas lii March, 1943, and after a series of appointments, joined the Fort Garry Horse ( loth Canadian Arm-oured Re- giment) soon after the inva- sion of Nori'andy in 1944. Colonel Coulter served witb the Fort Garî'y Horse as a Troop leader and squadron Baitle Captain in France and Nocth-West Europe anid was appoinited Adjutant of The Foi') Gari'y Horse in May, 1945, secviîîg until Novemeber of' that yeai'. He won the Fî'ench Croix de Guerre with silver star, and returned to Osh)a\,a 10 the farnily busi- ness, Coulter Manufacturing, i'ejoining the Ontario Regi- ment in 1946. He became Lieutenant-Colonel and Com- manding Officer in 1951, and i'elinquished comnmand of the Regiinent in 19541. Colonel Coulteî' bas been a successful husninessi-nan since World Waî'Il operatîng the family company, Coulter Manufac- tui'ing Limited, a large Osh- awa automobile component manufact4ring firm until the conmpany was sold in -the mnid 19605s. He is presently President of Seeborn Metal Pî'oducts Limited, Beaverton, Ontario and a Director of Hayes-Dana Lirnited in Thor- nId, Ont. The newly-appointed Honor- aî'\ Colonel en 'joys skiing as one of his winter sports and is a member of the Oshawa Golf and the University Club of Toronto. He serves as a Diî'ecr of the McLaughlin Art Gallery and has served as a memhei' ofthIe Board of Control of the City of Oshawa, as weIl as a miember of the Council of Past Commanding Officers of the Ontario Regi- ment and a trustee of the Ontario Regiment Founda- tion. Colonel Coulter and bis wite Heather live at 633 Bî'ookside Drive in Oshawa. His first official function as t le new Honorary Colonel was to read the seripture tesson at a church service held Sunday, September 14, at St. George's Chui'ch on Centre St., Oshawa, markinglthe Regiments to9th birthday. AIl ex-members and friends of the Regiment were invited to attend tbe cere- mony. women and at least two delegates and alternates must be under 25 years of 'age.' Elected as delegates were: Alice Alîchin, Bill Gorstine, Betty Jibb, Harry MacDonald, Bill Finley, Jamie Wilson and Phil Cane. This slate fulfils al requirements. Elected asalternates were: Frank Entwisle, Doreen Gor- sline, Shirley Cane, Joe Ric- hardson, Gordon Cochrane, Richard Lovelin and David Ford. The convention has a num- ber of purposes including: evaluating and establisbing party policy, electing federal goveî'nment account for its actions and deciding whether a leadership convention is needed witbin the next year. Policy discussions wilI fol-, 10w a workshop format with cabinet ministers available for the various fields. General headings have been set for the poiicy discussions. They are: political action, sharing among countries, balanced growth, and the individual and society. Vague sounding as tbey may be, these topics encompass the full range of federal government policy and the delegates wîl have the opportunity to discuss any federal policy they wish. By E. P. Chant In the end, the only person you will ever have to answer to is yourself; not your parents, your wife, your children, or your god. What- ever your place in eternity is, it is you wbo is going to have to occupy it and you probably got there without any help. With this in mmnd, it is amazing to find 50 many people walking around with practically no ethics. They have no sense of fairness, no bonesty, no idea of what is right. They are more often than not greedy and very ruthlessly in love with the dollar. Those who are truly money-hungry are usually not too picky as ta the means of ascertaining it. Money is the most powerful thing on earth, for it has the strengtb to rab men of their morals and their dignity. Shakespeare said it best when he said, "He that wants money, mneans, and content, is without three good friends." However, there are others aside from the greedy who are lacking in ethics. It is a cbaracteristic of those who bave lost their individuality - those wbo have become a 'Imember" of society because tbey felt they had to, even if that society doesn't meet with tbeir idealistie beliefs. These are people who give up their true beliefs to gain friends - tbey say they believe in capital punishment, even if they are against 1h; they agree with the racial slurs, even tbough they believe in equality of ail races - they gain friends for themselves, even though they bad ta be someone else ta gain them. This is the worst type of misrepresentation - misrepresenting yourself and Section Two your ideals. You have lost your ethîcs in doing so, for al ethics begin with being honest with yourself. To see ethics and ideals in full bloom, ail one has to do is look at youth. Time bas not had time to erode the beliefs and dreams of the younger generation. 0f course, you find a dummy every once in a whiie, but generaily speaking youth is usuaily pretty well- informed and very much opinionated. Youth sticks by its opinions, its ethics and its ideals. Age, however, often seems to break the strength of these convictions. Aside from grey hair and occasional irregularity, that's another strike against aging. Getting back to where we started, it is you and oniy you who will suffer the consequen- ces of a poorly lived life.,As J. A. Froude said once upon a time, ,"The moral law is written on the tablets of eternity. For every false word or unrighteous deed, forý cruelty and oppression, for lust or vanity, the price bas to be paid at iast." Enough said. OBITUARY MIRS. CLAUDE IVES Born and educated in Cart- wright Township, Mrs. Claude Ives, passed away in Memor- il Hospital, Bowmanviile, on Saturday, September 20, 1975, following a two and a half iYonth's illness. She was in ber 85th year. The former Tryphena May Hyland, daughter of the late Thomas and Lucinda Hyiand, was married on JanuarV 29th, 1972 to Mr. Claude Ive s. She was a resident of Cartwright Advrtising helps make jobs. The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville, October' i, r 7 Township until moving to Intermn twas, in -:' 's Bowmanviile in 1969 residing sA gùct., (erncter, i a first on Concession Street and stock. then on Temperance Street, the past four years. Mrs. Ives attended Trinity United Church, and was a member of the Senior Citizens Club, the Friendship Club and the U.C.W. Besides her husband, she leaves to mourn her passing four, daughters, Verna (Mrs. Lloyd Windover), Buckhorn, Annie (Mrs. Robert Fowler), Oshawa, Elva (Mrs. Gordon Hopeson), Leaside, Velma (Mrs. Leslie Johnston¾, Ca- van, two sons, James White, HeesJhny Blackstock, Rupert Graham, e 'sJhny Bowmanville, 25 grandchild- STYLES AT ren. and 18 great grandchild- ren, two sisters, Adella (Mrs. William Ferguson), Susie (Mrs. Williard Spencer), both of Oshawa, and two brothers, Larme'i Hyland, Nestleton, and Orma Hylanr' of Black- stock. The funeral service was conducted by Reverend Wes- ley Oake on Tuesday, from theMESWARTD Morris Funeral Chapel. Palbearers were Messrs. Leslie Johnston, Gordon Hope- J oe Pa tra boy son, Ronald Windover, Floyd Fowler, James Hopeson and MID)TOWN MALL Roger Gillespie. Tributes in her name were Oshawa received from the General The Style Centre of Motors, six Gideon memorial The Durham, Region bibles. GeealCnratn for Recreation Roonis, Tiling, Kitchens Bathrooms, bouses, Barns and Garages Contact- Grmaydon lConstruction liowman'viIle Phone 623-7222j -Value and Sye. They Cornelbgether atYour Chewrolet./Oldsmob lie Dealer for76 C hevrolet' Monza Towne Coupe 39.~925. 2--m(G Thai's based onU.S. EPA test resulis with the 140 1-bbi, 4-cyinder engine and manual transmission. Chevrolet Camaro 30.0way 20.4 MPFG Tha 's based on U.S. SPA test resulis wiih the 250 1bbf 6-cylinder engine and manual transmission. Remember: These mleage figures are estimates. The, actual mileage yon get wll vary depending on the type of driving you do. your drivîng habits, your car s condition and optional equipment. -lirn Chevrolet Impala 2 8 15.6MPG Th a ts based or US, OPA resuits with the 350 4-blI V8 and standard automatic trarsrrssion Chevelle Mali1bu, MPG Higldway 20.4MPG City That's based 0 n U.S EPA test rpsoits with the 250 1-bbý 6-cylinder engine and manua'. transmission Some of the equiprnent illustrated is optional at extra cost. Chevrolet Chevette 30%3 06-MPG City Tha' abased on U.S. PA ts eut o h orsa model wth thestandard 14lte4clne nie bre carbureto o 4 speed manua rnmsinad37: xerto PRO VINCE OF ONTARIO PUBLIC HEARINGS The Royal Commission on Violence in the Communications Industry Appointed to study the possible effect on society of the depiction of violence in the media, the Royal Commission on Violence in the Com- mnunications lndustry will hold public hearinýgs in: Februairy 27, 1976 Central Public.School GENERAL PURPOSE ROOM Murray Street, Peterborough, Ontario You are invited to submit a written brief at least thr ee weeks before this date. Everyone is urged to attend,'whether or not a submission has been made. Submissions and requests for information should be directed to: *',e Royal Commission on Violence in the C ommunications lndustry, 'ti Bloor Street West, Room 810, Toronto, Ontario M5S 2V5. The Hon. Judy LaMarsh His Honour Judge L. A. Beaulieu Scott Young Commissioners Cail us tolI-free anytime at 1-800-261-7091. Ouf of the Mouths of, Babes Highway 48au-n' MPG ,

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