4 Ie OOMAWA Lilhbd, Podey, Norwimber 3, Winter Works Money Totals $86,000,000 HAMILTON (CP)--Citizenship and Immigration Minister Fair- clough said Thursday the fed- eral government has approved $86,000,000 worth of municipal winter works projects for the coming year. | Mrs. Fairclough said that up) to Oct. 16, 1,253 applications from municipalities had been approved. "My colleague, Labor Minis- ter Starr, has estimated that this early start could result in on-site employment for more than 150,000 men--an increase of 30,000 over last year," Mrs. Fairclough said. She spoke at the official open- ing of M and T Products of Canada Limited's $1,250,000 plant. The company set up Canada's first detinning plant in Hamil- indian Lanas No Different PENETANGUISHENE (CP)-- Cottage owners protesting a He B assessment on their Christian licity. It should be settled once | {sland Indian reserve properties, and for all. |were told Tursday the fact| "If the NMEBA is given @)they are on Indian land does chance, it would soon get all|not entitle them to exemption. | the engineers under one roof.""| Joseph Kyselka, one of 27 cot pidhenn taivas, Vane cayetlnvabaiap, Cold © toetnehly Cour ec reaves, 'ownship, told c township Cour' national president of N.A.M.E. jof Appeal only Parliament can|} : Sama neg : " ay ee = on the Georgian Bay) interested the > oar d/island. | Chairman C. Rhodes Smith said) Township assessor Howard) the board wanted to be sure that|French replied that the depart- the new union is an independent|ment of municipal affairs states organization and is not a "front|the island is part of the town-|/ for the SIU." ship, and the ------, 'gi does not exempt the lan it is SS ea as point orcupied O geet than members : A "lof an Indian banda. blank what the new union's rela-| The eourt made no ruling on "4 tions were with the SIU. | |the validity of the $23,200 assess-| i, sek tae ng Foo gy «a ment because it is out of its jur- New Union Makes Certification Bid OTTAWA (CP)--A new mar- ine engineers union, founded this summer at meetings in halls of the Independent Seafarers Inter- national Union of Canada, made its formal bid Thursday to enter the troubled Great Lakes labor scene, The newly - created National Marine Engineers Beneficial As- sociation of Canada went before the Canada Labor Relations Board for certification as bar- gaining agent for 173 licensed engineers employed by seven shipping firms. The Canadian union was set up in July under a charter from the Marine Engineers Benefi- cial Association of the United States, an affiliate of the AFL- CIO, The SIU in the U.S. is also affiliated with the AFL-CIO, but its Canadian wing has been ex- With nurses looking on ap- | in serious condition with both provingly, Fern Poulin, 18, | pulbar and spinal polio. Now smiles as he prepares tO 80 | 16 nas 9 paralyzed chest mus- home after just over nine years in the Sudbury General | cle and will continue to spend some time each day and Hospital. Fern, son of Mr. and Mrs. Laurent Poulin of | sleep in an iron lung respira- Minnow Lake near Sudbury, | tor provided by the hospital. --(CP Wirephoto) was admitted Sept. 11, 1952, NEW CENTRE STRATFORD - UPON - AVON England (CP)--a £250,000 in- ternational appeal has been launched to build a new Shakes- MEET THE GANG! «. ICE SKATING EVERY FRI. & SAT: NIGHTS 8:00 - 10:00 P.M. SATURDAY AFTERNOON -- UNDER 12 YRS. BY POPULAR DEMAND PRE-SCHOOL SKATING WEDNESDAYS -- 1:30 - 3:30 P.M. peare centre at the playwright's Warwickshire birthplace. It is hoped the building will be com- pleted by 1964--the 400th anni- versary of Shakespeare's birth. Curbs Suggested For Suicide Rate KITCHENER (CP) -- 'Can- ada's growing suicide rate can be curbed if enough people are ready to listen to the cries of | isdiction, but it did rule the as- west coast engineer who split/sessment could be reduced be- ; the SIU until April, 1960. | 'The owners were told they will) ton after moving here from To-|petled from the Canadian Labor ' ronto, where its Canadian head-|Congress. He agreed that the founding| probably have to go to the On- : : sons, was held in the SIU head-| cision. | ithe Jast 40 years, It is a subsid-|o,50sed by the National Asso- Sons, 'Was ; ; uarters in Montreal and that he| Christian Island, 13 miles jiary of Metal and Thermit Cor-| .jation of Marine Engineers Inc. as : i at Thorold. |miles northwest of Orillia, ¥ ee ; tle" lisete bi or A aged oo trict), which successfully fought -- ' el s ig off the SIU in a recent certifica- . ' galt), used by automotive and : re t T al BULLET COMES CLOSE 'airplane companies to plate alu-/@e™8, om six of the seven com orrup 10n Tl while the SIS manager pat- = P panies. | district manager of Security | narrowly missed striking him. "Canada will no longer be de-| , and Investigation Services, | Police are searching for a | North Bay Wednesday. pendent on the United States for|was rejected by the Labor Rela-| Has --(CP Wirephoto) : ot used here annually," Mrs. Fair-|dence of fraud and misrepre- . on oe -- OTTAWA (CP)--An RCMP in-|final arguments by counsel and No Big Over haul In Thursday's case, the board|that Abbe Bergeron of Cornwall,|A. R. Willmott of the Carleton : ' oe " # reserved decision and will make|Ont., went to the RCMP a year|county court. e e W ith Vision Canadian Tourists | Claiming majority sup port|gypped of $1,000" by a member by Judge Peter Macdonald after or mmigrda 10n TORONTO (CP) -- Proposed|from the s, John K. Mc-lof Parliament four years be-|the jury at the first trial failed a with regard to regulations| Need Cited regulations will have little effect/ness manager of the new engin-| Sgt. Sam Drader was the last|Bruneau were charged under a eral government's long - stand-|which will to a very consider-| lon Canadian tourists going there cers union, contended thejof eight witnesses called by thejrarely - invoked section of the ing promise to water down ar- r bitrary and discretionary pow-|cation of the act itself," he General Vanier told the opening announced here Thursday. \*men on the job." trial on a charge of corruptly|a maximum penalty of 14 years ers in the Immigration Act will| said. of the 1961 Massey medals for c Alistair McLean, manager for) 11 said he carried a mandate|giving $10,000 to Raymond Bru- imprisonment. change in regulations and not/feels that as a result of these|night there is '"'a crying need visitors from Canada will not'. turbulent situation caused by|Glengarry-Prescott. cien Caille of Montreal, general by any immediate overhaul of|changes "objections that have ise architects with viston." have to undergo some sort of. unions in their field--the| Sgt. Drader said Bergeron, a|manager of G. B. Lefebvre Shoe Prime minister Diefenbaker| implementation will be resolved of fine old buildings and all too legislation becomes law. _--_--__| 44 with the Canadian Broth-|ator, was quite co-operative in received protection of the Can- made this clear Thursday at 4jin large measure." few really-inspiring new struc- Entry procedure for Canadian) | ood of Railway, Transport! giving information to the police.|ada Evidence Act for all of his questioned on a 1957 election|yised regulations will be an-|ence of 200, at the National Gal- Oot thy tanieite <a: tan taroies his own new union. vindictive towards Bruneau, who|4sks PROGRESS promise to revise the act and/nounced before the next session|lery for presentation of medals "tm ted up." sald Mr, Mo. he claimed had gypped and vic-| He said he saw Bruneau five remove features the Progres-lof Parliament whether It opens|to 20 of Canada's top architects. ciation ig 'the official British|Cuaiy. "We're the fourth bod sive Conservative party found|in mid - December or early) "How many acres of esthetic tourist promotion office in Can-|in this arrangement. I'm just The case is expected to go tolabout the progress of negotia- B , ; |the jury sometime today, after|tions between the federal works tion. ' | Many legal officials feel that|ugliness do we see?" asked _ oe The prime minister said pres-|.ome sections of the Immigra-|Gen. Vanier of the appearance government later bought Berge- | : i b being examined carefully by the| certain persons no right of ap-| His predecessor, Vincent Mas- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Poth ay oy leech hig immigration department. |peal from a deportation order,|sey, also attended. post office. | Mr. Caille said he gave Bru-| will be an announcement made Other Conservative criticisms! credit for instituting the awards mae of the act -- a statute the gov- belonged to Mr. Massey. They Senate Abolition with N.A.M.E. and worked for|cause of lack of services. quarters had been located for| The NMEBA application was meeting, attended by 17 per-|tario Court of Appeal for a de i works now out of the SIU hall/northwest of here, is about 30 poration of New York. (Great Lakes and eastern dis- and produce stinnates (= tin tion battle over marine engin- Mi 5 his car door where a bullet minum pistons. i ak ce a oe relied near a metal plant in | | In those cases, the SIU's bid| . looks at the spot (arrow) on | gunman who fired at Millard the 200,000 pounds of stinnates|tions Board after it found evi- i ast Witness s pi Architects RESERVES DECISION lyestigator te st ified Thursday|the charge to the jury by Judge ' H | Change Won't Hurt its judgment known later. lago and felt "he had been| The trial was ordered Oct. 18 2g! t changes in British immigration Cuaig, Thorold, president-busi-|fore. to agree. Both Bergeron and OTTAWA (CP) -- The fed- able extent determine the appli-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Governor- the British Travel Association|N.A.M.E, did not represent the|Crown at Bergeron's second|Criminal Code that provides for be accomplished mainly by a| The prime minister said he/architecture display Thursday Canada of the association, sald's.o., marine engineers to settle\neau, former Liberal MP for Also heard Thursday was Lu- the legislation itself. lbeen taken to the act and its) 'There is a dwindling number detailed solvency test" if the SIU, the N.A.M.E., which is| 45-year-old service station oper-|Stores Limited, who asked and press conference when he was| It is expected that the re- tures," he said before an audi- tourists probably will still bel nd Gerieral Workers (CLC) and| 'He seemed quite irate and|testimony. yl rage rl a Mle timized him," he said. or six times in 1956 to enquire i -| : objectionable while in opposi-| January. desert and how many miles of sta. getting 404 up with all this pub- department and Bergeron. The ent immigration regulations are|tion Act, including one giving|of Canadian cities. Ont., for $48,000 as the site for a ' iP "I expect that shortly there) confict with the Bill of Rights.| Gen. Vanier. said much of the) ' e and a Ss 1rl +S) neau $200 over a period of| ernment inherited when it took|were.. set up by the Massey| weeks. Bruneau had asked for) the money to entertain officials office in 1957 -- are that the Foundation in 1950 and medals} of the works department at din- immigration system operates in an arbitrary fashion, often be- hind closed doors, and that de- portation decisions are not sub- Said Impractical LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Abol- ition of the Senate is an imprac- were subsequently presented in 11952, 1955 and 1958. | The top award, a gold medal,| lwent to the Vancouver firm of} By GRAHAM TROTTER With Japanese those in need of help, Col. Leon- ard Evenden, national director of the Salvation Army's anti- ocracy in the Far East, remain|suicide bureau, said Thursday. ner. "He said, 'You need money to keep these things rolling,' the ARENA STREET businessman testified. OSHAWA CHILDREN'S ARENA PHONE 725-8071 tical measure that would be vigorously opposed, Senator G. S. Thorvaldson of Winnfpeg on42hurs@ay night. { to™ the London Young ressive. Conseryatives the to appeal on a satisfactory|Thompson, Beriwick and Pratt.) Canadian Press Staff Writer ted nay ol "\The winning design was for i Hired -- more harmonious . hea Koerner House, a gradu-jrelations between Canada and) w, i | These provisions may be af- T 2g Phar : : est, especially through trade|that for every person who fected by the new regulations. 2% students' social Cee Ene ee itm Prine Miciste Sau jbartiers against goods she must|commits suicide another five Howevet, well-informed sources| University 0 - , dnister Mievexport to survive, could spelllattempt to take their own lives. said the regulations will notigo ON DISPLAY |fenbaker's visi : { piccnesaig sit to the Asian! plenty of trouble. For instance,|phe Salvation Army is estab- Senate can approag its 'work/constitute sweeping reforms to) There were 325 entries. Win-| The two have much in com- ro fe age gprs of the vast!jishing 33 anti - suicide bureaus in a businesslike manner be-jremove all traces of discrimin-| ners plus another 80 designs|mon although they are at oppo- nev rd of Communist Chinalin the country, including one in cause members do not have tojation, opening Canada's gates\went on display Thursday night site ends of the Pacific Ocean|J its manpower millions and) Kitchener, he satd. face re-election. jto immigrants from all parts ofjas part of an exhibit that willland are different in language apan with its technical know-| H_ said members of Parlia-|the world. tour the country. and culture. ply a --. yee ret fl h is-| ; ists : ould be a potent force indeed. een sae ia ten ee ee aaaee rg nad a Ana of the Diefenbaker- "there is a tremendous amount| Limestone, heated with clay Catharines and Huget and Se-| 3, 's ; ey eda talks, Japan will continue Ps a ie te aoe Tac vrpoum end tans crushed. crt, st Catarinen" [eam cenedas fhrtben te coeperaie in trade by ap tT AP) 8 real work of the senate, done/makes cement, while broken| The exhibition will visit Ing-|is second only to Britain in pur- al ora ~4 ys as on ex- NEW -- Hu- in committees, is not often pub-|into lumps it is an aggregate|ston April 9-30, and Windsor,| chases of Canadian wheat. Can- products that could se-| morist James Thurber was licized. lin concrete. May 11-June 13. lada is Japan's sixth-largest os: Fe eo Rapp days. One day his editor ning pimeee Canadian indus- t / \port Market. With a population Ty ey were to flood in. smy\0f 18,000,000, she buys more|, 0, two prime ministers) Cay! '\made-up textile products fr agreed not only that trade be-| decided that all stories '\Ja e ee ad should begin with one-word pan than does the whole of first paragraphs. Thurber responded by tween their countries can be ex- 4\ Western Europe with more than panded greatly but that this *\200,000,000 people. handling a story in this manner: should be on an orderly basis. _.|\COMMON INCENTIVES CANADIAN CONCESSIONS '| The other major link is the On the other hand, Canada "Dead!" ommon incentives of the two|"@8 Provided Japan with an im- "That was what the man was the police found in an areaway 'ast night." countri i portant concession in agreeing) Meee ngsigiee iatgee abe to allow into the country non-| The editor soon rescinded his edict. in the Western fold. He told the Kitchener - Wat- A Japan disillusioned with the/erloo Social Workers Council a fiom the worlds largest stocks of rum* yan (Mongan blends these four great brands Each is a near neighbor of|jmmi " : : . grant managerial and ;|the Soviet Union. Geographic-| technical personnel required for ajally, Canada is caught between|pianned Japanese invesimenti| _4\the world's two great antagon-|in Canada. And Mr. Diefenbaker| ists, the U.S.S.R. and the United|has hinted that forthcoming] States. Japan not only lies!changes in immigration regula-| within a few miles of Russian| tions will meet with Japan's ap-| GOOD FOOD -s|territory, but also has a neigh-| BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER. | proval. bor the world's other gr Som- ae rere | ; great Com-| In addition, the two countries BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 2 to 2 P.M. jjmunist state, China, j|have set up machinery for their) : HOTEL LANCASTER {| Both countries have been/cabinet ministers to meet reg-| jamong the most vocal middle| ularly so they can familiarized| jpowers in condemning Russia's|themselves with each other's| nuclear testing in the atmos problems ! \phere. Japan is the only nation seit which has known the wholesale destruction of nuclear warfare, and Canada knows by her geo-| graphical location what such a| ,|war could visit on her. So the incentive to prevent a nuclear war is shared by both, but more important to Canada and to the whole Western world Mr. Diefenbaker and Prime; Minister Ikeda were able to soli-| dify their approach on how this should be done, An unusual rap- port was developed by the two, \boding well for the future. JAPAN IS VITAL Forecast Temperatures It is vital to the free world Low tonight, High Saturday: |that Japan, the strongest dem- Windsor ..ssccvess 40 St. Thomas ...+.+5 38 Florida -- Caribbean ? MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW! Just tell us where you want to go end how long you want to stay. We'll do the rest. Complete reservations. Hotels, tra- velling, tours, etc. .. .. Donald Travel Service OSHAWA--WHITBY--BROOKLIN--MO 8-3304 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY ae LESS. fe, lil Rahat iki RAIN TONIGHT, COOL SATURDAY | WEATHER FORECAST Showers Today Cool Saturday : Forecasts issued by the Tor-)south to southeast 20 to 30 and| : onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.:|gusty today, shifting overnight Synopsis: A belt of strong)? west 25. but windy today, turning much cooler overnight. Moderate snowflurries beginning overnight and continuing through most of Saturday. Winds southeast 25 to 35 and gusty today, shifting to northwest 25 and gusty over- night. Captain Morgan RUM - Captain Morgan Rum Diatitters Lomited southerly winds extending from ' the Gulf of Mexico to southern and central Ontario is carrying warm air into the province. Temperatures today are ex- pected to range between 75 at Windsor to 50 at White River and Moosonee. An extensive rain area covering most of lower Michigan and Northern Ontario is expected to spread) slowly eastward to cover the re- mainder of the province today. Cold air pushing slowly through northwestern Ontario will move eastward to displace the warm air. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron regions, Windsor, London: Cloudy with showers today, continuing warm but windy. Cloudy with showers and turning much cooler overnight. Cloudy and cool Saturday. Winds Niagara, Western Lake On- tario, Niagara regions, _Hamil- ton, Toronto: Clouding over with showers beginning this after- noon and continuing overnight. Mild but windy today, turning much cooler Saturday morning. Cloudy and cool Saturday. Winds southeast 20 to 30 and gusty to- day, shifting Saturday morning to west 20 and gusty. Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- burton regions: Clouding over today with showers. beginning late this afternoon and continu- ing overnight and through Sat- urday. Continuing warm but windy today and Saturday, turn- ing much cooler Saturday even- ing. Algoma, Timagami, Cochrane, White River regions, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Overcast with rain todav. 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