Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 13 Jul 1957, p. 1

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TIMES-GAZETTE YELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising RE 3-3492 'All Other Calls ...c.. RA 3-3474 ILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Occasional Weather Report Mainly cloudy, clearing Sunday. showers today. VOL. 86--NO. 163 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1957 ot Over Prise Ni Cents Per Copy SIXTEEN PAGES Missing' Blast Caused By Dynamite THREE ARE INJURED IN MINE EXPLOSION New Aga Khan 200Cities Is Chosen "Adlai is such a wonderful man. | But don't take that as an expres-' sion of my political opinions." Laughing, the new Aga declined to say whether he would keep up his grandfather's famous racing stables. BY FIRST MARRIAGE The new Aga is one of Aly Khan's two sons by his first mar- riage, to Joan Barbara Yarde- Buller, daughter of a British | | By STANLEY JOHNSON ONTARIO REGIMENT LEAVES FOR SUMMER CAMP | [GENEVA (AP) -- A Harvard {Umiversity senior is the new Aga! The men left the armories | battle scheme. The Tegiment Khan, spiritual ruler of 20,000,000 i i . i will break camp next Saturday Ismaili Moslems. ibis morning at ya an yi and following an inspection by | The will of the old Aga Khan, the Commanding Officer, Col- | jc" pyjjitia group commander, 'made public Friday night, by- onel Wotton, marching ahead, | will entrain for Oshawa -- ar- (passed his two sons and named they marched'to the rail riving back in: the city at 5 as his successor his 20-year-old way station, down Simcoe o'clock in the afternoon. grandson, Prince Karim. The street south. The week's | MURDOCHVILLE, Que. (CP)-- the United Steelworkers of Amer- |An explosion Friday night dam- ica (CLC) which called the work- aged a waste pipe leading from|ers out on strike to back demands {the Gaspe Copper Mine refinery, for higher wages, said the incident here and seriously injured three | was due to "the irresponsible anti- of the company's striking employ- union attitude of the Gaspe Copper ees. Mines and its decision to hire Ger- A company spokesman said the Man workers to replace the strik- explosion, which occurred about a|Ing employes; the provocating ate mile and a half from the plant in| titude of the provincial police; and this Gaspe Peninsula town, was the indifference of the Quebec gov- In Air Test By STERLING F. GREEN Newspoint, operation Alert (AP) Hampered by hitches, delays and] admitted foulups, the United States civil defence forces of Op- eration Alert 957 struggled today against a make-believe nuclear holocaust. Its enormity grew by, | troop carrying train for Camp | Petawawa and the annual week- long training scheme there. This is the largest contingent of soldiers ever to leave the city for summer training. An ad- vance party left Friday morn- ing under the command of Ma- Officers of the Ontario Regi- ment receive last minute brief- ing from Major W. C. Paynter before falling their men in for the march through Oshawa to the CPR Station this morning More than 150 officers and men handsome, six-foot youth imme- diately became Aga Khan IV. of the regiment left by special ' jor James Carson, Wellington South ForFederal Member Monday Starts In There are 29,589 voters eligible to cast ballots between 9 a.m. and GUELPH (CP)--A riding that has voted Liberal in 16 of 22 pre- vious elections votes Monday in a/7 p.m. EDT. contest that holds national inte: In the 1953 election Mr. Hosking est because of the close party polled 9,275 votes, Mr. Hales 8,- standing in the House of Com-{722 and Mr. Withers 2,431. The mons. {turnout of 20,228 voters repre- The voters of Wellington South sented 74 per cent of the 27,196 name 'their member late because|eligible of the death during the campaign for the June 10 federal election of Liberal candidate Henry Hosking. He had held the seat since 1949. | In 22 elections since Confedera- tion, Wellington South has voted Liberal 16 times, Conservative five, and, during the First World War, for a Unionist Two of the three candidates seeking the seat Monday have had previous political experience. They ran as opponents to Mr. Hosking. Only David Tolton, 29-year-old business man running for the Liberals, is making his first bid for political office. day's contest has been fairly quiet and confined largely to local issues the vote holds more than usual interest because of the narrow margin held by Progressive Con- servative government forces in the 265-seat Commons. PARTY STANDING Prime Minister Diefenbaker's forces hold 109 seats. The Liber- als, including a Liberal - Labor member who supports the party, have 106. Others are: CCF 25, So- cial Credit, 19, Independent 2, Independent-Liberal 1. Independ- Alfred D. Hales, 48, is running ent-Progressive Conservative 1. ssive Conservative. He! There is also a vacancy in Lan- is a training will culminate in a --Times-Gazetie Photo baron and ex-wife of a British the hour. caused by dynamite, He said dam- Although the campaign for Mon- | The Aga Khan III's sons, Prince |Aly and Prince Sadruddin, will |share in their father's immense | estates. Aly, 46, is the new Aga's |father and - Sadruddin, 24, his uncle. Aly Khan appeared pleased at the decision, Sadruddin seemed in a pettish mood, forcing his sports car through a crowd of reporters, blowing his horn violently and driving off at high speed after the selection became known The old Aga, 79, died Thursday in his Swiss villa, He had reigned for 71 years, since he was eight In his will he said he was picking Karim as his successor because he believed a young man brought up during the atomic age should take over the post. The new Aga wants to return to Harvard this fall for the comple- tion of his senior year. As a sophomore, his roommate was John Fell Stevenson, son of Adlai E. Stevenson, the two-time Dem- ocratic candidate for president, "I don't know whether I'll be To Vote Gold Rush La Ronge LA RONGE, Sask. (CP) -- 17,000-square-mile piece of the preCambrian shield in northern Saskatchewan is involved in what appears to he Western Canada's biggest claims-staking rush. She said the years in opposition It started Friday when new Sas ing given By I Ly Con- katchewan government mineral servatives "the best training" for Survey maps were released in the the responsibilities of government | village 400 miles north of Regina, and 'no one is going to bulldoze and elsewhere. In the first half- or frighten us into doing anything hour at La Ronge, 100 sets of the that is not good for all of Can- maps were sold to sourdougsh who jada." Earlier Finance Minister immediately began the hunt for Fleming also spoke for Mr. Hales. | base metal and uranium occur- Walter Harris, former Liberal rences. able fo go back to Harvard." he finance minister, toured the riding! Estimates of the number of men said in an interview, "But I cer- for several days on behalf of Mr. already afield range from 500 to|tainly hope to, and hope I can Tolton. : 1,000. Fifty planes used the Lac room again with John Fell. . . In one speech he said the Pro-|1a Ronge docks Friday, and more TTT etre gressive Conservatives would not, were operating from Flin Flon, be able to carry out their elec-kMan. Some prospectors already tion campaign promises. In an-| were in the bush--they got coded other he said Mr. Fleming, as fi- radio instructions. nance minister, 'has nailed the, 'Mining men have been con- Progressive Conservative flag to verging on this village from all | the mast of inflation." over Canada and the United |jof canvassing and newspaper, letter and pamphlet use A few outside speakers made an appearance Mrs. Ellen Fairclough, state secretary, wound up the battle Friday night with a speech at a reception for Mr. Hales. have Dulles, Diefenbaker brewing heir. His half-sister is Princess Yasmin, seven-year-old daughter of Al and his second wife, actress Rita Hayworth. A Briitsh subject, Karim is of Persian and Italian descent through his father and English through his mother. He has dated French film starlet Anne Marie Mersen, but otherwise has not shown as much interest as his father, uncle and grandfather in fast cars. race horses and beauti- ful women, Anne Marie insisted last month there was nothing serious in their dates, saying: "Hes' a sweetie, but he's four years younger than I am. I couldn't stand a husband that much younyer. I'd feel more like a mother to him." ' Karim was a member of the freshman soccer team in 1954. He often skiied at Stowe, Vt., and on fair days was frequently seen rowing on the Charles River, One of his professors called him "an intelligent, serious and charming, but rather shy boy." He is work- ing toward .a bachelor of aris de- gree, specializing in Middle East history. The presumed '"'enemy" who swept across the North Pole Fri- day with H-bombs to spare and supersonic bombers them had "smashed" vital U.S. targets. An early-morning bulletin said| "countless lives' were me civil defence measures. But tens) : Tan of 'millions were lost, hypothetic. | (1 said one of the men is in ally speaking, and the raves of . airborne contamination were yet! POLICE INVESTIGATE to be felt. Lieut. Gerard Timlin, head of a "It is too early to tell whether|provincial police detachment of the exercise is a success or flop," more than 100 which had been on one official said. "The results will|duty here. since 1,000 employees| be trickling in for days. We've went on strike March 11, said the | had painful delays in communica- explosion and the injuries had tions. But the real thing would be been reported to him, but said a lot slower." {he had no further details. President Eisenhower, after a| Herve Berube, company assist- | helicopter flight from a capitaliant manager who visited the site that was theoretically blasted soon|of the incident, said he does not after, was in safe "hiding." Al know why the men were there! mock national emergency was ini when the explosion occurred, force, and a rudimentary 'war % effort" was being patched toge- Roger Bedard, spokesman Jor ther, on paper. |. At another secret headquarters, |{the twin problems of civilian sur- vival and of assessing what re- mained to fight with were being dealt with by leaders of the Fed- eral Civil Defence Administration and the Office of Defence Mobil- ization. | SEATTLE (AP)--A gra The total of theoretically flat- has indicted Teamster Brand td tened cities, it appeared, might ident Dave Beck and his son, |age was slight and repairs would |take about three hours. to -- deliver, Injured were Herve Bernatchez, at least 153 Nestor Henley and Norman Bou-| dreau. They were taken to Mur- dochville hospital, where Dr. Will- iam May said their injuries are serious, | Dave Beck, S Face Theft Charge | ernment, UNION BID STALLED The workers are seeking hourly wage boosts averaging 50 cents, The company has refused to bare Bain with a non-certified union, and last summer stalled the un- ions certification bid with a writ of prohibition questioning the Que- bec labor relations board handling of the case. Ten days ago the company noti - fied striking workers, renting come pany homes, they must pay rent, unpaid since the strike started, or the matter would be put in the hands of solicitors. A similar no tice was sent last week to men buying company homes. The company has operated on a reduced basis since late May. About 300 of the striking work. ers are Murdochville residents. Angther 300 left the area for other jobs when the strike was called. The rest live in the surrounding district. Oo |of "inadequate laws" and | Statute of Limitations, pp. | The older Beck, charged, kept for his been called| CCF Leader M. J. Coldwell ap-| States," said Regina investment To Hold Informal Talks approach 200. Dave Beck Jr., on. charges of fi 900 for a union - Guiniph alderman who oper-|ark due to the death June 16 of ates his own farm and retail food, Progressive Conservative William store. Blair. A byelection has s L. Wi for . 16. 3 ampaign meetings in] Wellingtowr South have not been Sartor rs of America and od standard-bearer, Mr: ing and Mr. Hales in the 1953 election. igood. The candidates have con-| | centrated' on a personal campaign! June 10. ared to support Mr. Withers, | ihe with Donald C. MacDonald, | Ontario leader, and Douglas minister Howe in Port Arthur staking. dealer lon Tanner, "It Was created a staking rush unlike any inthe pag Evens ran third behind numerous, the turnout has been | Fisher who unseated former trade able-bodied man in the area has|take place here July 27-28. been employed to take part in the | OTTAWA fCP)-A Meeting that Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr. Men. cou ave great significance jinl vill probably reves fustier | Canadian: American Ferations: [discusdions on the Canadian prime John Foster Dulles, the U.S. | minister's proposal al the recent | secretary of state, is coming to, Commonwealth prime ministers' |town to talk informally with Can- conference in London for a Com. |ada"s new prime minister, Hon. monwealth trade conference. POST MIXED UP OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadians addressing mail to the Com- monwealth's latest autonomous The rotund i TE § wl SI i rendered Friday for routine book- |ing, mugging and fingerprinting, {posted $3,000 bail and called a | press conference to denounce the action as "simply ridiculous." Young Beck went through the the IF, receives iy & d y 0 S56 rate A $4,650 from the sale of two teamster Cadillacs. er f "It isn't so," said the father in.' dignantly, not "by the wildest stretch of the imagination." Certainly, he said, the money Civil Servants Rights To Bargain Discussed A new answer is to be given soon in British Columbia to this ques- tion: Are provincial government em- ployes entitled to bargain col lectively? A survey by The Canadian Press shows that up to now in Canada, the answer usually has been a firm no. When the 11,000 members of the B.C. Civil Servants Association threatened to strike this week for full bargaining rights, they were striving" for something enjoyed only by provincial government workers in Saskatchewan 'Winds, Rains Rip Chicago, One Dies CHICAGO (AP) Torrential STREETS CLOSED rains, violent winds and lightning| Two of the city's main trans- tore into Chicago and suburbs Fri-| portation arteries--the Outer and day night, flooding thousands of| Lake Shore Drives and the Con- | homes, blocking roads and ripping | gress Street expressw ay were down power lines and trees. closed for a time when as much Some residents of at least one|as four feet over water piled up suburb were forced to evacuate|in spots. their homes as the storm, de-| Whole sections of the city were scribed as one of the worst in|cut off as water swirled across recent years, dumped more than streets and roads. five inches of rain in some areas, As.the heavy runoff threatened within an eight-hour period new floods engineers opened locks At least one death was reported on the Chicago River and reversed when a man was electrocuted 'as |its flow back into Lake Michigan mier Bennett and civil servant leader George Horridge have agreed to abide by his recom- mendations Government workers in Sask- atchewan received their bargain- ing rights when the CCF govern- ment came to power in 1945. They have the right to strike, but never have used it In 1945, employes of the Sask- atchewan' Power Corporation threatened to strike for wage in- creases. They were not in the category of civil servants, how- ever, and the dispute was settled through conciliation John Diefenbaker. And although Mr : 3 the announcement--made by the on Ba ee rs a American Embassy here Friday , brief visit to the U.S, stressed the informality of the eV, visit there was immediate specu-| CAPITAL BUZZES lation that the talks could take on| But it is the Dulles-Diefenbaker quite a serious note, talks that has Ottawa buzzing at The American Embassy an-| the moment, nouncement said Mr. Dulles] Mr. Diefenbaker has been quite "looks forward to meeting in- critical of the U.S. since he took formally with Prime Minister and |over the prime ministership June Secretary of State for External 2), On his return from London a Affairs Diefenbaker." During his week ago, he told a press confer. two-day stay Mr. Dulles will be ence that the U.S "giveawa »" the guest of American Ambassa- program for disposing of ay dor Livingston Merchant, wheat was an abrogation of the Mr, Diefenbaker, on his way to General Agreement on Tariffs Calgary to take part in the stam-| and Trade in that the Americans pede and also for a short vaca- were demanding future markets in tion, said at Winnipeg Friday return. ritual, too, but didn't attend the from the sale of the three auto- conference at which his dad said mobiles had found its way into his he spoke for both. own bank account or safe where Today, after saying there he keeps 'large amounts of cash." wasn't "a chance in a million" he His secretary put them there by would be convicted, Beck left on alerror Beck explained. tour which will take him to a half-| But, the money was returned to dozen union meetings around the, the union 'as soon as I returned coum. tind J Hick sat 3 4 from a business trip and found i Y | jury, which sat a to- out the error Hid Ghana, which is on the West !tal of 15 days and heard 55 wit-| He couldn't od been made the African coast. nesses, indicted no other persons|return but insisted it was as soon 'The manner in which Ghana although it considered a number as possible. Neither could he be is written is being interpreted |of other matters. It did, however, certain, he said, that the transac- as Oshawa," the department return a lengthy report lamenting tion would show in the union books said, and "particular care |its inability to do more because!but "it will be shown I repaid it." should be exercised (by postal | HERE sorters) in the sortation of 1 such mail." member; Ghana, are asked to pay more attention to their penmanship. The post office department said today the postmaster at Oshawa, Ont.--20 miles east of Toronto--reports his office is receiving '"'a considerable quan- tity" of mail addressed to | night that "a meeting with Mr. | - Dulles is important" but he had w In Manitoba employes of a power corporation retained their union membership and continued to bargain after the government {took over ownership of the firm Sloan, whose appointment to a But their rights, not guaranteed royal commission on the matter by law, can be abolished at the helped avert the strike. Both Pre-| government's discretion Bootlegger Tells Of Bribe Offer (CP)--Geof- In other provinces civil servants can submit briefs to their govern ment employers, and that's all Whether this will be so in B.C is up to Chief Justice Gordon PETERBOROUGH frey (Gyp) Feeley, one of the most-talked-about men in Peter- borough's police inquiry, has taken the stand and told his own story He testified Friday he had been offered a $1,000 bribe at a private meeting with two aldermen He denied ever informing in ex change for police protection Feeley, an admitted bootlegger and informer said by witnesses to be under the protection of Dep- uty Police Chief William (Bud) Clarke, said Alderman Stanley McBride had offered him $500 for a statement about his connection with the police force. He had scorned it. When McBride raised the offer to $1.000, he said, his reply was "I'll think about it." HEARD REQUEST Sgt. Stanley Palmateer of the provincial police, later testified he was at the meeting in McBride's home in April and had heard the request but no mention of money Feeley said Ald. Mrs. Bernice Graham was at the meeting. He quoted he saying "Who is this man Clarke? Is he everybody afraid of GEOFFREY FEELEY drawn or dismissed in the 14 vears up to 1954, when he began to be convicted, Magistrate W. R. Philp, a commission member and th magistrate who had dealt with charges against Feeley in court, took the stand to deny he had condoned in 1954 the operation of bootleggers and brothel-keepers as sources of police information. Thursday Insp. J. Allan Stringer of the provincial police said Judge John Kennedy and the magistrate had condoned the policy at a meeting of the police commission he had attended in 1954. Only Norman Graham dead husband, 21s lice Feeley testified he had "squealed" to the police on. five or six occasions, but denied he had done 0 for money or .protec- tion. At one point he said: "I was being told by so many people that 1 was paying off the police force and Deputy Police Chief Clarke was fronting for me, 1 was be-| ginning to believe it myself." CANNOT EXPLAIN He said he co not explain why $ve charges against him under the Liquor €ontro] Act were with- the or the had late ma alderman's opposed it. he pumped out his flooded base-| Engineers said it was the second press reports," ment. | time since 1905 that fhe river was| Mr. Diefenbaker told reporters _ More than 30 persons were in- reversed because of high waters. that he trusted the people of Can- jured, none seriously, when gusty The river .in downtown Chicago/ada would understand why the winds knocked down a tent theatre| had risen six feet by early today. next session of Parliament was on the southwest side during an| An estimated 24,000 cubic feet of opening in October instead of evening performance. About 250 water a second gushed through | September. He said earlier that preside at the opening. | came crashing down 3 (He said Friday that he will re- | flow. Woman Was PHONE PoLE | PROUTS Assaulted ; 5 ROUTS SPRIGS Tests Show was a surprise for Mamie Moloney, newspaper columnist when she looked out her win- dow. A newly erected power CHESTERVILLE (CP) -- Mrs. | Lois McLaughlin, 22 - year - old farmwife killed 'Tuesday night in a hammer-ana-sickle slaying, was pole had been turned into a" silvery green pylon sprouting evergreen branches. sexually attacked before her She had complained in her |death, police said today. Inspector Don Nicol of the On| {tario Provincial Police criminal Vancouver Sun column that the newly erected power poles investigation branch said evidence now indicates death followed a were ugly blots on what had sexual assault. once been a lovely vista of trees # B. C. Power Commissio When Mrs. McLaughl 7 isso buried Friday Mclaughlin was linemen bucame exterior dec- ported as saying there was no evi-| dence at that time to indicate a days later will name mainder of his cabinet.) Mr. Dulles' visit will be pre- |ceded by a three-day official call by Australia's Prime Minister Menzies who will be here from Monday, July 22 to Wednesday July 24, the guest of the govern- ment. Noon Chimes Strike ' At Midnight TORONTO (CP) Residents near Deer Park United Church in north Toronto were awakened by {hymns at midnight Friday night. | Organist John Weatherseed, awakened from a sound sleep him- self, said the church's electronic chimes had been repaired Friday by electricians. "They must have hooked it up incorrectly and the chimes went |off at midnight instead of noon," he said orators early in the morning. b They plac od evergreen sexual attack had occurred, There| Dranches on the. pole and was no indication of what new evi. Wrapped a roll of silvery green dence had been discovered since] P2PEr down its entire length. then . - -------------- Miners Reject I] VANCOUVER (CP) Miners at the Britanpia copper mine For Plane At Val d Or have rejected 4 company propo sal for a wage cut fo prevent the VAL d'OR, Que. (CP) -- A low Val d'Or from the Hudson Bay ©Peration closing cloud ceiling over northwest Que- hamlet of Great Whale River, 500 __ The International Union of Mine, bec forced "another halt today in miles north of here Mill and Smelter Workers said a the search for a twin-engined The four men aboard were pilot| Union committee recommendation photo-survey aircraft that disap- John Haffey of Brooklin, Ont; 32ainst accepting the wage cut peared 'July 3 with four men flight engineer John O'Neill of ¥3% endorsed unanimously by a aboard Oshawa, Harvey Hule of a Mon Tass Heeling) ral RCAF search headquarters in| treal construction firm, and RCAF ze B ris genera man; {this mining community said a/WOL James Clemens of Cyrville, Re a he ining anc Lancaster and three Dakotas took| Ont I oa ae an gat off on a short weather check but! Haffey last reported his position Wages m would close oo of a were returning to base less than an hour after leaving sharp drop in the price of copper A spokesman said the weather Great Whale. He said then he wa Labor Minister Starr is ins ope 'does not look promising" fore a at 11,000 feet and on course for ing department officials in Van resumption today of the hunt for Val d'Or couver fo inquire into the threat. the Lockheed Hudson that van About 15 planes are based here ened closing and report back to lished shortly after taking off for and at Great Whale. him. In 14-Year-0l discussed such as indicated by BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- A her husband 14 years ago was charged Friday with first-degree turn to Ottawa July 23 and a few murder. But the medical exam-|she the re iner who issued a. suicide certifi-! cate in the case called the wom- an's story "'a fantastic ereation of the mind." Friends and relatives of the woman, Mrs. Helen Ginter, 39, also said they found 'the story hard to believe, Mrs. Ginter's mother, 'Mrs. | Mary Brudek, insisted: "What my daughter told the police is untrue. Helen is sick." Mrs. Ginter walked into a police station Thursday and told the new version of the death June 13, 1943, of her first husband, Edward Kemmery, a 200-pound truck- | driver. | WOMAN'S STORY She said that when her husband d 'S . un | uicide |fell as'eep, 'she took his belt and i persons were watching a play| controlling locks along the river--| Parliament will start sitting in| Woman who said her conscience strangled him, then dragged the £ when the canvas roof and supports more than 12 times the normal| October so that the Queen could| forced her to confess murdering body to a closely tied sash cord): I around the peck and suspended|f the body from a ciothes rod. Then, | | said, she cut the cord and screamed for the landlady to call| police. But Dr. Paul Rutecki, medical | | examiner at the time, said the § physical evidence the day of Kem. | mery's death "is contrary to what | # would have been found if the: death occurred as she now tells = it." | Mrs. Ginter said her physician | had been treating her for a ner-| £ vous disorder and had urged er k to "unburden herself." ney John Dwyer : | District attor: [said he would seek a complete | | mental examination for Mrs. Gin-| iter, who has been separated from | : | her second husband. ; Sitter was sent to Erie/ ail. | | Mrs. ! County Special Work To Ease CNR Layoffs OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal government will finance a special work program in the CNR to ease the effect of prospective layoffs of shop workers by the ' railway, Transport Minister George Hees announces. His statement Friday was issued a day after a union delegation called on ministers to issue a 'stop order' directing the CNR fo halt a proposed layoff of about 1,200 men because of a reduction in rail traffic. The layoffs would affect em- ployees at Pointe St. Charles, near Montreal; Moncton, N.B.; Winnipeg, Edmonton and Port Mann, B.C. The amount of treasury money to be contributed is uncertain, the announcement indicated MET CNR HEAD A statement issued on behalf of the transport minister said he and Labor Minister Michael Starr had conferred with CNR President Program | | | Donald Gordon and that there will {be "a special work program in an effort to minimize the effect of country-wide layoffs." "While a severe decline in traf- fic has called for an adjustment total employees," the state- ent said, "the government has! undertaken to finance the cost of a special program of car repairs and other shop work, and on that understanding the CNR will re- employ the required shop working | § forces at the end of the coming| , vacation period. | "It is uncertain how long or to' what extent the proposed special program will be continued, but in any event the intention is to spread the work so that, if down-| ward adjustments remain neces- sary, they can be effected gradu- ally. The statement also expressed the hope that a declining trend in traffic will be arrested so that existing levels of employment may be maintained, han PARTICIPANTS IN rkle, 11, of 122 Crom- well Ave., a member of the Loy- al True Blue Juveniles, was ane of the many Loyal Orange Lodge members taking part in the ,parade fo the Ceno- taph in Memorial Park Nancy A 11 ORANGE PARADE prior to -their departure to take part in the celebration at Peter borough. Here she 'watches Piper Roy Hume of the Gen- eral Motors Veterans' Pipe Band as he tunes up for the parade. Photo by Rae Hopkins

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