2B THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 11, 1964 29--Automobiles For Sale 36--Legal ann tn cn, he wher p.m, Port Perry, 985- WaT VOLKSWAGEN in Me G condition. T 'ort Perry 985- four aa standard , A-l condition. Any offer 725-9988 alter 7 p.m. R Classic 6, custom sedan, condition, spotiess throughout. aoe extras, Best offer. Tele- ptione 723-771 CHEUROLET,-hutmn 'Autumn Gold, 4 Rone ea A ston Mist set Ty CHEVROLET red, black top, matic, » low mileage, radio, seat speaker. Many w oxtres. Tele- Bowmanville 623-5976. CHEVROLET Bei Bel Air, Power Glide, Beat offer, Telephone res, oc hv yg . $150 or - chassis Pontiacs, 1956, 1958. to choose ._ Al 1 condition. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Estate of DONALD JOSEPH KOLYNKO deceased All persons having claim the Estate of the z , late of the City of Oshawa, in the County .of Ontario, General Motors Employee who died on the 26th day of April, A.D. 1964; are hereby notified to furnish proof therof to the undersigned before the 7th day of December, A.D. 1964, After the said date the Ad- will distribute co Sedan de Ville, Fleet- alk METEOR, automatic sedan; 1957 , A-l condition, new paint; 1955 seden; 1955 Chevrolet sedan; the Estate having regard only to claims of which notices have been filed. Dated at Oshawa, Ontario, this Second day of November, Bel Air, No r 1953 |. Trades accepted, ~ 1950 Pontiac. Good transpor- ae $75 each. Apply 509 Bloor East OLDSMOBILE F85, black, 4door, automatic Urges eae radio. Other ras. 5,700 miles. tlephone 728-1408, ian CHEVROLET c coupe, oupe, partially re- re ery, licence, $550. and A.D, 1964 JOSEPH KOLYNKO Administrator, by his solicitor, Z. T. SALMERS, B.A. Box 333, Oshawa, Ontario, oa yeey. oy Me ates Motors, Kent Street North, Whi USED CAR mae Spindles to make trailers, also used ren. 509 Bloor Street COMING EVENTS East after 4, 723-228 i CHEVROLET, caylee r, automatic. with silver and bive interior, fee eld washers. in excellent . Call 723-7916. ito CHEVROLET convertible, one owner, tic 6 cylinder, radio, good tires, 5 after 6 evenings. Call 723-9833. BUICK Special, two-door hardtop, ) condition, h, srandard shift, Phone 942- im Po pouTTac : hardtop, é-cylinder, auto- oa Lael or $650 and take over pay- Telephone 723-7671. 1955 CADILLAC S convertible, Needs body OSHAWA JAYCEES Monster BINGO Thursday, Nov. 12th 20 GAMES AT $20 5 GAMES AT $30 1--$150 JACKPOT Werk. $200 or best offer. Apply after 5 Bm. 79 Cromwell Avenve. ie PONTIAC two-door hardtop V8 or best offer. Telephone after 6 p.m. | al , A KSWAGEN van, with windows, able for bus or van. Good condition. fost be sold $245. Telephone 728-1336. CHEVROLET sedan, A-! condition, 6, radio. $600 or best offer. Tele a7 CHEVROLET, four-door herdion &tylinder, cus' it radio, te tires. Excellent condition, Call after 4, 723-3588. PONTIAC two-door hardtop. Must Excellent condition, aay 155 Ver- LAURENTIAN Pontiac stationwagon condition, one owner, low mile automatic 6, good tires. 725-0368. = VIVA Vauxhall, 24 months old, 61475. Like new, owner transferred. Bow- Manville 673-5629 after 4 p.m. i owner 1959 Buick, automatic, two » radio, Very ey oes condition, inside 4nd 'out. Best offer. Telephone 725-4249. PONTIAC Lavrention, 8 ¢ ben power steering, r: Divs extras. $2,750. Telephone 30--Automobiles Wanted = $ ALL CASH $ "For clean cors, or trucks we =.deal up or down. Liens paid. "NICOLS MOTORS LTD. $20 PER LINE PLUS $50 PER FULL CARD 2--$250 JACKPOTS $10 PER LINE PLUS $200 PER FULL CARD IN 50 AND 55 NUMBERS. THIS WEEK PLUS $25 CONSOLATION PRIZE $150 TOTAL PRIZES GUARANTEED IN THESE TWO GAMES, EARLY BIRD GAME EXTRA PRIZES, DOOR PRIZES $1,00 ADMISSION RED BARN, OSHAWA CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED OSHAWA LIONS CLUB BINGO 146 BROCK ST. NORTH Across from Royal Hotel ~ WHITBY 668-3331 4 CARS WANTED Buying « New Cor? "Sell your used cor to "Ted =Telk "Cash" to the New "Cor Dealer and "SAVE" "TED CAMPIN MOTORS WED. NIGHT $1,200 in cash prizes Jackpot Nos. 56 ond 54 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION Children Under 16 Not Admitted «723-4494 Res. 725-5574 WA AUTO PARTS _--™ og ee ea, V17S Nelson Street, wrecking. Telephone M2162 0 or Tas, CAKESHORE Auto Wreckers want cars ( wrecking. Highest prices paid. 200 East, 725-1181. iW Auto Wrecking ee: bought. parts for sale. iron and metals bought. Street East. yeaa. CALIFORNIA Escorted tour 27 days March 2 to 28 Places of interest Salt Lake City, Reno, Son Francisco, Los Angeles, Hollywood, Dis- neyland, Son Diego, Grand Canyon and. many others. 31--Automobile Repair BARGAINS "Anti-freeze ~All Chev., Installed .. es 4-way Flasher "kit se Ignition Wire Kit .... DOC'S AUTO F 1600 King E.-- 728-7781 | "(All other acc, 10% off with | «this coupon) aaws tune-up 5 Centre offers en | retor and auto electric service. 222) Street West, 728-0817, PERT brake service and front endl sion alignment. 226 Celina Street.| i} 723-4233. TRANSMISSION specialists, "Transmis-| sions are our only business. 1038 Simcoe) North. Phone 728-7339. | 35--Swap and Barter THTUBS, $20; toilets, basins, sinks, nets, pressure systems, laundry tubs, mace, fittings, piping, H. Chinn, 288 side Avenue. | - $2.29 | Pontiac mufflers $7.77 $2.79 $2.95 A--Lost and Found -- | ist: Large » male eek Hound, white! i black = marki "Answers 10} i Vicinity of Coitege Hill, Phone} 72h-422. LOST -- Blue and red checked pencil case, Containing pair of glasses. Vicinity) MéLaughiin Collegiate iast Thursday.! Call 728-8313. GOST -- Biack male poodie. Vicinity Brock Road area. Pickering township. Good reward. Dia! 942-0453 --_-------- a 36--Legal NOTICE 'TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS In the Esate of ALEXANDER SHAW MITCHELL deceased All persons having cloim against the Estote of the above-named deceased, late of the City of Oshawa. in the County of Ontario, Gen- eral Motors Employee, who edied on the 7th day of April, "A.D. 1964, are hereby noti- ied to furnish proof therof to the undersigned before the 7th day of December, A.D. 1964. After the said date the 'Administratrix wil! distribute the Estate having regard only 4%o claims of which -notices hove been filed Dated at Oshawa, Ontario, 'this Second day of November, A.D. 1964 VIOLET OLGA MITCHELL, Administratrix, 'by her Solicitor, Z. T. SALMERS, B.A Box 333, Oshowo, Ontario | Bathe Travel air conditioned motor coach, No night travel. Tours and hotels arranged. or write | ROWE TRAVEL AGENCY | PORT HOPE, ONT. BINGO FERNHILL PARK CLUB HOUSE WED., NOV. 1ith EARLY BIRD -- 7:30 P.M, 16 games $6 each 1 each $10 - $15 - $20 - $30 Shore the Wealth Free. Admission--Door Prizes CHARTERED BUS Sento: Claus Parade ond Yorkdole Piaza, « Saturday, November 14. Phone Bowmanville 623-3265 BINGO Park Clubhouse | EULALIE AVE. Wed., Nov. 11th AT 8 P.M Increase in price and prizes NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY, EVENINGS 7:45 ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL {Albert ond Jackson Sts.) Gome $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $220 IN JACKPOTS Door Prize $15 GOOD used clothing sale, Friday, Nov.| |13, at CRA. Doors open at 1.30, Albert | Street UCW. BINGO, Bathe Park, Eulalie Avenue, Thursday, 2 p.m. Euchre Saturday, 8 8 p.m. A" VACANT apartment costs you money! Fill that vacancy quickly with a low cost Oshawa Times Classified Ad. Just dial 723-3492 today to reach the re- liable tenants you want. EUCHRE at Herman Park clubhouse avery Wednesday at 8 o'clock sharp. Lunch, prizes, special door prizes. Ad- mission 50c NORTH OSHAWA Park Euchre, every Thursday at 8 p.m. Refreshments, prizes, monthly prizes. 50 cents admission. WHITE DOVE Rebekah Lodge Bazaar, Saturday, November 14, 2:till 6 p.m. Club room of Alax Community Centre RUMMAGE and Bake Sale Friday, No- vember 13, 1.15 p.m. at UAW Hall, Bond Ly Coronation School Community Club RUMMAGE SALE, Simone Halli, 1.30 p.m Friday, November 13. Auspices Pilot Club of Oshawa. BAZAAR AND TEA, Ukrainian Presby terian Church Ladies Aid, Saturday, No- vember 14, 2.30 p.m. 499 Simeos South, Malcolm. Campbell of Lon- don, Ont., is seen here with his wife. He was arrested HOME SAFELY whiie a civil rights worker in Mississippi two weeks ago. He finally made it home for a visit. He will return next week, By KEN SMITH Press Busi Editor TORONTO (CP)--A bid to breathe new life in the United States' iron-rich Mesabi Range could have important implica- tions for Canada. Voters in Minnesota have} overwhelmingly approved a pro- posed amendment to their state constitution that in effect will di C: Jassure a tax break for compa- |nies which come in to develop |the abundant reserves of low- grade ore, The amendment means, Ca- \nadian observers say, U.S, com- | panies could turn their interests from the rich iron-ore deposits in the lower St. Lawrence area back to the Mesabi Range. If so, it could mean a slow- REGINA (CP) leaders won instant agreement from government officials and residents of the Bethune, Sask., area this year. when they sug- gested that the 16th Hutterite up there. It struck a contrast with 1052 when the first Hutterite colony moved into Saskatchewan in the southwest near Maple Creek and encountered strong opposition from residents. It also reflected the change since the situation only eight years ago when opposition to Hutterites prompted the Sas- katchewan Association of Rural Municipalities to ask for legis- lation restricting their purchases of land. Authorities say the new atti- tude toward the isolationist, pa-¥ cifist Protestant sect has been the result of a government pro-| gram introduced in 1958. "There isn't a Hutterite prob- lem in Saskatchewan,"' says David Sanders, a Vancouver lawyer who in May published a Ae of the Hutterites entitled A Case Study in Minority | Rights. "The Saskatchewan approach is certainly the most enlight- ened and progressive of any jurisdiction." |\NO HATE CAMPAIGN Ray Woollam of Calgary, di- rector of Group Resources Con- sultant Services and liaison agent between the Saskatche- wan government and the Hut- |terites, said in an interview here: | "The Alberta anti-Hutterites |hate campaign has been javoided in Saskatchewan. "In Saskatchewan there has |been a careful rrogram of mu- jtual co-operation between col- jonies and the government and la program of providing effec- |tual information about. Hut-| |terian life in communities where they propose to locate." | Both men were talking about conditions brought about under | | | |Saskatchewan, defeated in the | April 22 election, but the pres-| jent Liberal administration has made no move to change the | policy. | The Hutterite sect, founded |during the 16th century. Protes- jtant Reformation in southern Germany by Jacob Hutter, ar- rived in Manitoba and Alberta about the time of the First World War after fleeing! perse- jcution in Germany, Russia and jthe mid-western United States. AGAINST MATERIALISM Today there are 'about 6,500 |Hutterites in Alberta, 1,900 in Manitoba and 1,600 in Saskat- chewan. Several .thousand re- main in five U.S. states. These industrious, frugal and Canada only after receiving as- empt from military service. The Hutterites, distinguished | by their black clothes, do not; take part in civic or political affairs. Their isolationism ptt from a belief that mod- ern society is too materialistic. The colonies are run on a communal basis. Education generally goes only to about Grade 8 During the Second World War |the young men remained at Hutterite| colony in the province be set) jthe former CCF government of} deeply religious people came' to} surance that they would be ex-| Hutterite Colony To Be Established In Sask. home and, helped build up an efficient network of farms in Alberta. They were able to ex- pand their land holdings with money made through rising wartime prices. Land values were pushed up and this annoyed Alberta veter- ans returning home after the war with hopes of buying their own farms. They were joined by merchants in towns who complained that Hutterites, be- cause of their emphasis on spartan living, contributed little to community economy. PASSED LAW This has been disputed by a survey of Hutterite trading in one Alberta community which shows that except for food, in which the people are almost elf-sufficient, they buy just as uch in town as the ordinary farmer. | Faced with growing resent- ment, the Alberta government passed a law preventing the Hutterites from _ further ex- panding their land holdings or approval of a communal pré- perty control board. The law specified that new _ colonies could not be established within 40 miles of an existing colony withoat government permission. In recent years the board has generally ignored applications for permission to buy land any- where in southern Alberta, where most of the existing col- onies are located, although it has approved purchases. in less- developed northern areas, The usual pattern is for a |Hutterite colony to split in two when it reaches 100 persons. But since few older Hutterites want to leave friends and rela- tives and move hundreds of miles away, some present col- onies in Southern Alberta are becoming overcrowded. Manitoba Hutterites voluntar- lily agreed to buy land on al |checkerboard pattern and so avoid a situation that would |make undue economic impact on economies of nearby towns. | In .Saskatchewan a_govern- ment committee studied the question in 1957-58 and con- cluded that the aim of govern- ment policy should be develop- ment of dispersed Hutterite col- onies. | VERBAL AGREEMENTS The Saskatchewan govern- ment now has reached verbal agreements (the Hutterites will not enter a legal agreement, as a matter of principle) with the Hutterites under which they ad- vise the government when they contemplate a settlement in the province, recognize the princi- ple of dispersion of colonies, and agree that colonies should |where possible be located: close to large market areas. The Hutterites voluntarily limit the size of individual col- onies and the province has un- |dertaken. to avoid regulation of land purchases -so long as the jagreement is honored, The provincial government also distributes literature on Hutterite ways of life to resi- dents of communities where col- onies are to be set up. The re- sult, government officials say, is seen in the swift, unquestion- jing acceptance of the new col- ony in the Bethune area 2 piles northwest of Regina. setting up new colonies without} Mesabi Range Boom 'Could Aid Canada JACKPOT NOS, 50 and 55) | | down in further development of the Quebec and Labrador ore bodies until. other markets are found and, more immediately, YOUTHFUL CANOEISTS AFTER CYCLING ACROSS LAKE MICHIGAN These two adventurous 22- year old canoeists are shown in their canoe after crossing 50-mile wide Lake Michigan from Manitowot, Wis., to Ludington, Mich. The pair were reported missing early Sunday and were found 10 miles south of Ludington by coastguard after an overnight fog lifted yesterday. At left LA PRESSE EDITOR: Newspapers 'Dangerous' To Writers MONTREAL (CP) -- Gerard) Pelletier,' editor - in-chief of Montreal La Presse, said Tues-| day a directive issued by the management of two Quebec newspapers to their newsroom supervisory staffs "was entirely sitly and very dangerous." ~ Speaking during a panel dis- cussion on biculturalism at the annual meeting of the Canadian could cost Canadian pr operating in the St. Lawrence Seaway a portion of what has proved to be a lucrative piece of business. Last year about 5,000,000 tons of iron ore were shipped through the seaway from Sept- Iles, Que., alone. Shipments this year are running much heay- ier, sources say. USE CANADIAN SHIPS Most iron-ore shipments from) Canadian ports to the U.S. are} carried in Canadian vessels. | Lawson Kaake, vice-president and 'general manager of Upper Lakes Shipping Co. Ltd., says it is too early to have a firm assessment of effects of the Minnesota amendment. But indications are lost busi- ness is certainly a possibility-- either because of lower ship- ping volumes to U.S. mills once the Mesabi developments start operating, or because future cargo increases that had been anticipated now may not ap- pear. "We have not yet been in touch with our customers to dis- cuss the matter, but we are very much aware of: it," Mr. Kaake says. The Mesabi Range, for half a century and more the key sup- plier of rich ore to U.S. steel mills, has been depressed in re- cent years as the rich ore was depleted. Thousands of miners have been laid off as 32 'mines in the area closed. CANADIAN ORE AVAILABLE Development of huge reserves of low-grade taconite was not considered economically feasi- ble--especially with good-qual- ity Canadian ore readily avail- able--until Minnesota voters ap- proved the proposed amend- ment. It promises for the next 25 years taxes on taconite produc- tion will not be higher than the corporate tax level in the state. Previously, some taxes on min- ing have been well above the corporate levy. Approval of the amendment al: week ago had immediate re-| © sults. U.S. Steel Corp. announced it will build a large taconite plant} © at Iron Mountain, Minn., to cost between $120,000, 000° and $150,- 000,000, it will produce 4,500,000] © tons of concentrated taconite pellets a year. Other pelletizing mills are ex- pected to move into the area. CONTAINS IRON Taconite is a hard rock con- taining about 25 per cent iron. A pelletizing mill crushes the rock, removes the ore and con- centrates it into small pellets containing about 60 per cent iron, Iron ore pellets have become increasingly favored in recent years by steel mills because they are more economical to use and because they make pos- sible closer quality control. Steel Co. of Canada Ltd, has a 10-per-cent interest in one pioneering pelletizing project in Minnesota, Erie Mining Co., which has a capacity of 8,000,- 000 tons a year. A Stelco official says, how- ever, the company has no plans] © to go shopping for more iron ore pellets in Minnesota or to Last Chance To Settle Bitter War KHARTOUM (AP) -- The overthrow of Sudan's military regime and installation of -an outwardly more liberal civilian leabinet offer what may be the last chance for settling a war that could enflame much of Af- rica. The little known conflict in Southern Sudan has been rag- ing with savagery for several years -- pitting black Africans against Moslem administrators from the north. In the last year the resent- ment of the southerners has flared into all-out guerrilla war. About half Sudan's 18,000-army is tied down in the -south. The southerners live at subsistence level and can carry on the war indefinitely -- .as their Jeaders say they will do. The fighting is spread over three provinces, Bah el Ghazal, Equatoria and Upper Nile with a population of about 3,500,000. In this region the Sudanese army controls only the large centres and, when it patrols them, the roads. Independent sources and trav- ellers who have recently been through the south say the army has resorted. to widespread re- prisals in an effort to curb the rebellion. Whole villages have been burned and slaughtered, The southerners frequently crucify captured prisoners. This enrages the Moslem Sudanese not only because of its brutal- ity but because they see it as a reflection of Christian mis- sionaries' teachings. All missionaries -- some 300 --were expelled last year. ~| about separatism, land protests against established families | Directive Public Relations Society, Mr. Pelletier said: "A very great number of newspapers throughout Canada are doing just that--suppressing news," Quebec Le' Soleil and L'Eve- nement issued instructions Oct. 22 to their newsroom super- visory staffs to limit in prom- inence and ban some reports nationalism authority. In a front-page statement Monday the two dailies said they will treat news on the ba- sis of recognized journalistic standards, keeping in mind the nature and importance of facts and statements as well as the public standing and authority of persons concerned. |MAKE PROTESTS rective. In\ Jonquiere, Que., the Na- tional Federation of Pulp and Paper Workers, an affiliate of the Confederation of National Trade Unions, asked the man- agement of the two dailies to modify the instructions and ex- pressed the hope that the di- rective will be changed, ' 'Two additional organizations) have aimed protests at the di-| John F. Baker, U of Michi- gan Jr., and Richard Kiiski, an ex-marine from Boston. LBJ, Dillon Want Luxury T JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (CP- AP)--President Johnson meets with Treasury Secretary Doug- Jas Dillon here today to make /plans for a cut in the excise or so-called luxury taxes, a 10-per- cent levy imposed as a war- time measure but never fe- pealed. Johnson, winding up a first round of post - election confer- ences with cabinet advisers, also invited Commerce Secre- tary Luther Hodges to visit his ranch to talk about voluntary jcompliance with the new civil | rights law: and the business out- look at home and abroad, Both .State Secretary Dean Rusk and Defence Secretary Robert McNamara conferred with the president Tuesday at the 400-acre LBJ Ranch. Johnson wanted to talk over with Dillon tax legislation to be submitted to Congress in Janu- ary.. During the election cam- Congo Town Retaken By ax Cut: paign the president said he will recommend a major cut in ex- cise{ taxes. He also hinted at broader tax cuts in the longer range future, The president's efforts to re- duce the budget deficit, now totalling about $5,700,000,000 a year, will be affected by the size and timing of the planned cut in excise levies. NEED FOR CAUTION Excise taxes net close to $15,- 000,000,000 a year--an amount large enough to discourage any proposal to eliminate them én- tirely. The 10-per-cent. tax .is levied on a variety of items such as furs, cosmetics and leather goods, The president, who will be concentrating for the next sev- eral weeks on budget planning and new legislative proposals, got some encouraging budget- ary news Tuesday, McNamara handed him pre- liminary figures indicating that defence spending next. year can again be kept below $50,000,- 000,000. 'This would increase prospects of a total budget be- low $100,000,000,000 -- a psycho- logical barrier Johnson wants Congolese LEOPOLDVILLE (R eu t ers) In Quebec City, the ve of the French-language Corpo- ration of Catholic Teachers in Quebec Province (conporation des instituteurs et institutrices Catholiques du Quebec) also adopted a resolution of . criti- cism. The 70- member executive, representing 40,000 teachers throughout Quebec, urged that the question of freedom of the press be studied in depth to find out how the power of media of information can best be used to serve society. The resolution recommended that journalists initiate the in- quiry and keep the public in- formed of the progress of the studies, which it said could be carried out under the auspices of the journalists' professional organizations, }of universities, CANADIANS AT 'POOL BLACKPOOL, England (CP) Blackpool is to have a 10,000- seat rodeo stadium as part of a £350,000 Canadian exhibition, covering 400 acres, due to open next summer. or with the help} White ries and Congo- lese army troops have recap- tured the town of Opala, about 100 miles southwest of Stanley- ville, army headquarters here said Tuesday. Opala, which the headquarters said fell Monday after a fight, is the closest any government unit has come to the rebel capi- tal of Stanleyville. Opala is on the road from Ikela, from which a large group of rebels fled last week with about 45 white missionaries and plantation staff. However, the town is on the left bank of the Congo River, while most of Stanleyville is on|P. the right bank, and the river is more than a mile wide in the city area. Earlier Tuesday there was a report that the head of the rebel armed forces had been shot, and killed. Maj. Mike Hoare, South Afri- can leader of the Congo mer- cenary forces, claimed his men shot and killed self-styled Gen. Nicholas Olenga during the re- capture of Kindu a week ago. to avoid. stimated at Defence spending rent year now is esti $49,800,000,000 of a $97,200,000,- 000 budget. Gunman Ends 66-Year Bank Record TORONTO (CP)--A gunman ended a record of 66 holdup- free years at the National Trust Company Tuesday when he took $1,500 from a west-end branch. The tall, well-dressed man entered the branch at about 2 p.m. and approached teller Christine Galbraith, 27, just as she was balancing her day's cash. He said: "This is a hold. up. Hand over your big bills." Manager James Holmes, 35, described the holdup as "'very quick and very quiet." He said there were no customers in the branch at the time. William Thom, -assistant vice- president and treasurer of Na- tional Trust, said it was the first robbery since the company started in 1898. change its development pro- gram for the Lower St. Law- rence. GETS HUGE GIFT PRINCETON, NJ. (AP) -- New York investment banker Shelby Cullom Davis gave Princeton University, his alma mater, a $5,300,000 gift Tues- day. The money will be used by Peru's 1,500,000 whites own the university's history depart- ment, which granted Davis hon-} ors when he was graduated in} 1030. four-fifths of the arable land. The country's 5,000,000 In- dians and 5,500,000 ~"cholos, Peruvians of mixed Blood, are * a either landless or work on large white-owned haciendas to which they are tied by debt passed from generation to generation. Indians have re- Pw, IN PERU sorted to violence: in cases, invading and squatting on large estates and resisting attefapts to move them, Here some a gathering of Indians or- ganizes a protest demonstra- tion. --(CP Photo)