The Guardian, Chartottetown, Tues. ‘Sept. 28, 1985. 7! Forces Morale At Lowest Ebb, Dief Declares HALIFAX (‘CP)—Conservative | Leader Diefenbaker said here that morate in aid here armed forces has dropped to its | lowest point in history through | the Liberal government's ‘“‘unt- fication” program. He told a press iheuas | here “‘one has only te cross the bridge to Dartmouth and see the battleships tied up to know what has happened.” He said that the government's | closing of armouries and the wiping out of historic militia | units was a retrograde step. If elected, his government would | Rive ' ‘very sympathetic consid. eration" units He said there -was great difference between “integration and unification" and he would not oppose integration. Mr. Diefenbaker also said he would welcome a television de bate with Prime Minister Pear son on the issues of today. “But I would be less than | frank if J didn’t point out that | T argued the reverse when I was in his position—and he is glad 1 | did” Commenting on Mr. Pearson's decision_to have a lawyer exam: ine the Canad: Elections Act te see whether a way can be found for university . students to vote Diefen- | can't get near their campus, Mr “You faker said to reactivating militia | jaround the law by submitting | the matter to lawyers.” He said it might be only a| |coincidence “but it's factual that ithe Liberal party feared the loss” of university support. ‘Olds Shows ‘New Model MILFORD: Mich. (AP)—Gen- eral Motors Corp.'s Oldsmobile | division unveiled its muchdis- | © |onado to the press here, predicting it would stimulate 'Olds salea all along the line. Harold N. Metzel, GM vice |President and general manager of its Oldsmobile division, made the prediction as Olds became | i P | he st Gal division to show tts Ea 11966 cars. The Toronado and other Olds- mobile products were shown at |the national press: preview at the GM proving grounds here. | In addition to the Toronado, jnew models in the Oldsmobile ‘lineup this year include the Cut: lass Supreme, a new four-door |F85 hardtop sedan; and a con vertible in the Delta series. Metzel said over. 40 pilot {models of the Toronado had |been driven over 1,500,000 miles | ear: FEWER WILL WORK MORE | The Canadian lumber indus- try expects to double its output by 1980, employing 35,000 men | instead of today’s work-force of 50,000. jin exhaustive testing of the new Pte. Jean Jolicoeur of .St.. vres on northern Germany's +P ». GERMAN WATER BOY FOR CANADIAN | Giiial Shek Sankeest ert of 2,400 Wiaiais Attend Texas % sare ren 18 hving et Planned Parenthood Centre By RONALD THOMPSON CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex ‘AP? Clutching orange identification cards’ several mothers wait patiently and quietly in an of- fice Methodically, the receptionis’ checks each woman's card, the: hands her a package of 20 small spills. If the woman hos $1.50, she gives it to the recep- tionist. If she hasn't, she gets the package anyway This is a planned parenthood centre. For these women, more children means still greater poverty for their famil'es. Tho average patient is 26, has five living children. a third - grade education and a family income , of $35 a week. é These women pick up their birth control pills each month. The card is their prescription. _CAN’T AFFORD MORE Most of the 2,400 patients at the centre just don’t want or can't afford morg babies. Some are under a doctor’s.orders not to become pregnant again The U.S. government ¢stab- lished in February its first birth control project with a. modest grant of $?,500 for four one-day- a-week neighborhood clinics. Ii has not been in operation long enough to fully test its effec- iveness. But the private, non - -profit planned parenthood centre, which administers the federal project, has been in existence six years, producing some startling statistics: Nickel Company | Plans Expansion] NEW YORLK (AP)—The Inter- national Nickel Co. of Canada, Ltd., announced it pl.nms a 1. The sumber of live birth: recorded by the city’s charity clinic has declined to 1,637 in 1964 from 2.159 in 1961. a dror of 24 per cent in births to indi- gent parents. 2. The number of post-abor- tion treatments at hospitals dropped to 220 from 374 during the same period and . steady decline continues 3. The number of obstetrical cases is slightly more than half the rate of 1963, the vear prior to the widespread use of oral contraceptives—the pills Corpus Christi, a city of about 20000 on the Gulf of Mexico coastline, has a large popula- tion of Latin American descent —almost 40 per cent. One church official said 60 per cent of its residents are Roman Catholic. COMPRISE. MOST PATIENTS Of the patients enrolled in the program, 86 per cent are Latir American, 10 per cent are Ne- groes and four per cent. are Anglo-Americans. Mrs. Tony Abarca, executive director of the program, includ- ing the federal project, cites case. after case of children be- ing born to large families who can’t afford them. year-old woman came te \came im, she wae pregnant She had again with her 19th child” The centre does not advocate total birth control, but family “Neither she nor her husband “If they want more . i had ever heard pf any method ee we help. them plau of contraception and when she them.” Mrs. ‘Abarca said Wed., Sept. 29th 9 - 11 a.m. & 7-9 p.m. ~ Tuesday: Sept. 28 - Friday, Oct. 1 MAKE TIME TO ATTEND Red Cross Blood Donor Clinics Confederation Centre, Charlottetown ~ * (Box Office Entrance Queen Street) Tuesday, Sept. 28th 2 - 4 and 7 - 9 p.m. Thurs. Sept. 30th ... 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Blood Donors Are Urgently Needed —BE ONE! Red Cross is a. Partner with United Fund SUPPORT YOUR _UNITED APPEAL (Please clip and keep for reference) ONUMENTS Granite - Marble - Bronze — Cemetery Lettering. Vere Beck & Son Ltd. “Memorial Craftsmen Since 1870” Canada's tand force serving in Europe with NATO. (CP Wire- photo from National Defence) Arthur, NB., gets a drink of Luneburg Heath, ntar Ham, .. water from a German farm burg. Ptc. Jolicoeur is a mem- —boy during fall field manoeu- ber of the 2nd Battallion, Local Pride To Be Tested By Vote In Prince Albert —_| PRNOWLEDGES DEBT By KEN KELLY {a handful of acknowledged Con Mr. Diefenbaker acknowledged OTTAWA (CP)—Strong local|servatives in the city, which|@ Special debt to them for ask-| | pride-which cuts. across politi-/has a population today of about | | ing him to run in 1953 after his party “lines and equally-/ 26,000. There wasn't even a Con-| | Lake Centre riding to the south | strong personal: friendships ‘will! servative riding association um | had been redistributed out of ex- Hundreds of shoes from our regular stock now in bargain depart., second floor. You pay regular sale price for one pair and take another of the $79,000,000 expansion program to produce an additional 20,000,000 pounds each of nickel and cop- -per-at its Sudbury, Ont., opera- tions. : @ Henry 8. Wingate, chairman , { a tia tamed, Gea a once same value or less for < | includes a new mine to be is : =====| LePAGE SHOE CO. | Credit candidate at one time, and Martin Pederson, the pres- ent provincial Conservative leader. ACKNOWLEDGES DEBT a mile north of the company’s Frood-Stobie Mine. ‘ The project also will include a new mill near the Frood-Stobie + 1 bee Mine capable of handling 22,500 Montaque Charlottetown ; ibe put to the test when Prince/ti! after Mr. Diefenbaker was istence in 1952. tons of ore a day and a pipeine Albert ‘voters go to- the polle in| elected in 1953. . He also acknowledged the to transfer concentrates to a me BIE ct ‘ the Nov. 8 federal sae | And hie campaign was con- multi-party ‘character of his vot- company smelter at Copper BARGAIN DEPT. - SECOND FLOOR “Re C. BARWISE \ Mf In @ constituency with a long ducted as a Diefenbaker cam- ing support. Cliff, four ‘tiles away. ae Lar — : R\Y / } Liberal voting tradition in fed-| |paign, with little reference to To’ the Prince’ Albert voters, Other parts\of the project will G a Phone 4-4316 Uy, feral politics and powerful, Lib-|his party affiliation’ who hadn‘t elected a Conserva- include inStajlation of a rafton Street ottetown jeral and. CCF. attachments pro-| F Hadley, Mr: Diefen- tive before Mr... Diefenbaker which will a capacity Houses Warm Up > = tS \eaneiatty, he" Aoction share’ ot leant’ cet” tris and the|since 1911, he said: ithe smeter.(” = (Conservative John Diefenbaker man who still runs his cam-, “We'll join together now ‘as Z x aa |in the last five federal elections paigns, was vice-president of We did in 1953, 1957, 1958, 1962) to may_appear_unusual.____-___ the Liberal Association. His at- and 1963__in_ that comradeship ___— |. But it's not unusual to voters tachment to Mr. Diefenbaker is that is. beyond political consid- 1 SS" jin the Saskatchewan ~ constitu-_ so strong that when the Pro- erations. ..."’ NZ S| oa fency who have °sent him back ;to Parliament at every election |since 1953 with increasing plur- gressive Conservative leader was renominated for the sixth™ time Sept. 20 he all but brote The Prairie lawyer's love af- | fair with Prince Albert is based | on an intimate -knowledge of | Furnace _ ;@lities. down in the middle of hig Many of its citizens. He’s been Fuel : Residents say part of the rea- Speech. -_ : known to joke publicly with a |son is that the Progressive Con- Another key figure in the Dief- Pro™minent citizen about having @ Stove Oil | servative leader is almost a na- enbaker organization in Prince ‘fended him on charges of jtive son. He has roots in the Albert is Ed Jackson, a close, Norse theft. @- 2,Way. which some of ita friend and formerly area organ "1 usually the first thing ee a did not have, not-|izer for the CCF. He's affec- jably Mackenzie King who held tionately referred to at times by ithe seat from 1926 until 1945. Mr. Diefenbaker as ‘‘my CCF reaction against outsiders organizer." Prince Albertans say about | him, when asked to define his support, is that he's probably | given half his electors legal help at one time or another. ~ KEPT MANY HOLIDAYS ok C. BARWISE* chief —reason=-for-- Mr=-Diefen-‘ affections with-Mr- Hadley. and Prior -to 1830, British —banks | Charlottetown, baker winning the seat in 1953. Mr. Jackson. They are Tommy took 40 holidays on saints’ oa 5 it. -that. time, there. wera. only. Martin... who. -had._been._a. Social. 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