It It's Good The Guardian Is For It For The lsland “Covers Prince Edward Island VOL. LXXVII. N0. 25 ROBERT F. SHAW. mmissioner general of the 1967 Montreal World Exhibit- deputy ion. was the special speaker last night at an informal _meet- ing of the P.E.I. iation of Retarded Children at the World F To Boost Island Interest By GEORGE CONDON Robert F. Shaw, deputy com- missioner general of the Can- adian World Exhibition to held in Montreal in 1967. arrived in Charlottetown last night with the purpose of "informing the ggovenmrienit and the popula. tion" of the fair and to gain their interest. One of several cngagements:tli . ' a'Hot 1. c l dinner meeting of the Associa-ii The meetings with representa-;;is me minimum iami area i-e_ lion of Professional Engineersitivcs of the provincial govem-iiiuii-ed for 3 woi-id Fair is 300, I. this evening at the i mciit will serve to air the views 3 acres and me si, even-iol ‘the province and discussion isitfi “win be goo guestlwil centre around‘ Momma iparticipation in the World Fair. would "eiiihance the oommun_ scheduled for aw is of P. . Charlottetow-n Hotel. Last log was the s at an informal meeting of the P.E.l. A ' 70 Feared Dead In Train Crash ALTAMIRANO CP-AP A police physician estimated at least 70 persons lost their lives early Saturday in the fiery collision of a crowded holiday passenger train and a freight near this Argentine community. Only 12 bodies have so far been recovered from twisted remains of the Firefly Express which was carrying 1.030 passengers when it smashed head - on into the freight train at dawn. The collision derailed the first four of the 10 passenger cars and sent the fourth coach vault- ing over the first three and crashing atop the flaming en- pa :7‘ 0 nc. Most of the dead were riding ssociation for Retard- I flhie fimtrdiaitt Like The Dew” WEATHER Snow, becoming flurries this, morning; northwestcrly winds 40, gusts to 60. Low-high 20 and 23. ,:,":,;__i ,,,,_:,-;-__°';; _-;:___-3 _'-__,-_-;_ «gt-_-__ CHARLOTPETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 3, 1954 "emigre SEVEN cams 12 PAGES» Diet Leadership Endorsed By PC Students, YPC's It has been announced by the loney of Charlottetown has besn unanimously elected a fellow of the College. Born in Gaspe. P.Q., Mr. Ma- loney graduated from McGiu University in 1942, and served as a medical officer in the Canad- ian Army in the Second World War. Following demobilization, Ihe specialized in Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Royal Victor- ia Hospital. Montreal, and in Liverpool. England. i He was examined for his mom.’ Legion Home. He shown here with members of the local association. From left to right they are: Robert Inkpen. pres- National President of the As- . sociation; F. W. Hyndman. P.E.l. representative to board of honorary governors of the BULLETIN ident of the Charlottetown Re- Canadian Association, and SMGON (Ap)_A V’ i C ‘ - - - ._ tardcd Children's Assgilciatiiiii; (grant Travers. provincial pres- assassination squad sighed oinig i ilzenrghilg igiigheincfiilfgfian: YEEI r. who is so .e i ent. - l ' ' way into a United States mili- tary compound in a South Viet‘ Nam city early today. hurling grenades into an officer's billeti and wounding one American of- l ficer. he began practice in the Char- lottetown Clinic: and since then he has been active in social and community affairs as well as in medical practice. He is a past- president of the P.E.I. Medical Society. and is now president of P.E.l. Division of the Canadian; Mental Health Association. has been a member of the Char-I lottetown Board of School trus-l: air Official Here Caouefle Condones Doctor Honored By Fellowship lHctlrcut Prices Spark Protests struck against barbers Satur- day. complaining about price increases which a ed more than 50 per cent to the cost of a haircut and doubled the price of a Barbers a . prices: 26 cents for a i 20 cents for a shave. tllitoiise Storm Hits lMaritimes intense weather disturb- ance moved across the Maritime ‘ ” Provinces late Sunday bringing DR‘ MALONEY to most areas heavy snowfalls, iege oi Engiaiid is an honor gifldrifting, freezing rain and winds haircut. 1-lc’ ven in recognition of proficiency; 3“5il“5’- l° 75 miles 9“ l‘°l”'- i,i.aciice= The storm was expected to and is iimiied ii, 3 Sim," iium_:move into the Strakt of Belle Isle _and sweep over Newfound- ‘land's northwest coast early to- in specialist medical ed Ohildren. Mr. Shaw is theithe exhibition last night. M-r. i tees for the past six years. ibcr of the whole membershp of .national president of the or-‘Shaw. said the reason for creat- I Feiiowship in me Royai C0,, the C(,iiege_ i'gaii.iZaiioii‘ jir._ the site on St. Helen's Is-lA . Also a vice-president of thellaiid. ratihe-r using some of Can- 6 ‘Crown agency organizing i theladas abundant unused land. iworld fair. Mr. Shaw is ' ac- ‘was that “it is the most specta- 'companied by $4.000 scale ‘ cular and beautiful spot." and he jmod of the exhibition. Ex- was convinced ‘ draw lpected- to arrive this morning, i more exhibitors and visitors for the model will be on display inilhis very reason. e lobby of the Charlottetown» He said that the site ‘would e lbe more than ample for the fair MONTREAL (CF) —— Credit- iste Leader Real Caouelte said here the theft of wca. pons from a Montreal armory Thursday was nothing compar with the “butchery" of French-. Canadian youths conscripted for military service in the Second World War. . Heieii Islam-ii He told a byelection rally the; am-eg_" irald by 11 ba of youths on leol i_Fusiliers Mont-Royal Armory reflects profound dissatisfaction= Expiaining certain aspects ofliiy oi Canada and pmmoie im- with economic conditions in Can-i iity in the country both econ- iomically and culturally. When asked his views on n irecent statement by Alan Lam- iport. Toronto controller. who siiggested that Toronto chosen as an alternate site for the fair as in Montreal there was the danger of sepa-ratist violence. Mr. Shaw offered no comment but said in his opin- ion Montreal was "the site." Mr. Sthaw said it was ex- Sch y NEIL MATHESON ; Douglas Roloson, Ocean Vie’! expects to ship a trailer truck-' load of tobacco leaf to market tomorrow. and that will be the! first tobacco shipped from thisi‘ province's 1963 crop. ; , Most of the tobacco leaf in the‘ province will not be shipp un-;' til early March, it is suggested; by avid eacock. provincial‘ idepartment of agriculture field-i i m 0 works closely with the , “Was it not a graver matter‘ tobacco growers here. I to have the government's blood-. hounds scouring the countryside 3 FOUR NEW GROWERS and the towns during the years F0111‘ "OW SPOWEFS are EXPEN- from 1939 to 1945 to ransack the t ed for the coming season. one of them coming from ntario, -rs. the Island?’ He felt the l"‘”site 93 Q. a. “These youths stole machine guns in 1964 in the centre of Montreal." he said. “But didn't. the Rouges (Liberals) and the; Bleus (Conservatives) steal our young people to send them to the butchery? 'in the ill-fated fourth coach. The multilation of bodies by fire i t was so severe that- attics and the cellars and take- d . 3“-iciais doubied the exaci mil ipccted that some 30 40 struc- 18-year-old boys from their and the rest are lsland farmc wmiid 500" be known. itures would be built for n.a—.mothers—even if the mothers T r ' general agreement The oiice physician who. (Continued on Page 3 Col. 8) lshed tears of blood?" that a really good job is .im.,‘ made the death estimate Sun- day. Dr. Haroldo Croccc. said: “There were dead and injure lying everywhere when I ar- rive. There is no accurate way telling how many bodics burned up in the fire." Officers brought nine sacks of SEVEN ADJUDICATORS MEET ‘ Ticket Sales For Festival PASADENA. Calif. (APl The United States’ moon explor- llion program hit another anal: Sunday when the camera-can tying Ranger VI crashed into the moon without lelevising a Sillltlc picture. Th 804 - pound spacecraft. launched Jan. 30 from Cape Kennedy. I-‘la., performed beau- ules of flight. when its six cam- eras were supposed to begin “limg a series of 3.000 pictures from 900 mile: high down to impact. They failed to operate. Scientists bad lio lures would give them their first close-up look at the moon's surface and help them select a llt_c for manned Apollo moon- Ialilgl landings later in this dec- ltl was the sixth straight fail- '"" in to Ranger program. Which so far has st some llN.000.ooo figured at about it 000 I shot, "ODE Homer Newell of the Na- nal A . Aeronautic! and Space ldministratlon said three more :p".“°hll|lls of identical Ranzcr called : miles to the right of the cen- 0i the vlillih IMO of tho mm Ranger Fails lo Send . Single Moon Picture lilullv up to the final 10 min-' ped the pic- Shipment Ol lobacco eduled lhis Week her late the past few years and lliisi 1“ ‘3 59°"-"t balm’ delegaies "A friend of mine a h d in _ lobsters. tells me that there‘? K359 55 ° °“5' day. l More than 10 inches of snow (fell on the Chatham-Newcastle iarea of New Brunswick an Moncton. Some communication lines were report Sunday night advised motorists to stay off highways and high- way crews were called done by rergisi snciiwfclearing equipment. farmers here. thougha few are’. . 8 e an mezmg spray-we-m‘ still having difficulty getting uiei ‘"35 “’°" l5S“°d ‘°' 3" "‘°"‘“° best results. " ost of the grow-‘ areas‘ . . 91.5 are doing an exceiiem job... The weather office said wlnds Mr. Peacock told this paper. ,P“"°9' ,Ed“'a”l 55la"d .w°"ld Asked aboui the possibiiiiy Mi over mainland Nova Scotia and early planting in spring to cull reach 4'0 down the peril of loss from ear-E 3155“ ii’ 60 °3"lY mday ly frost in the fall. Mr. Peacuchiwmds were forecast to l most of the tobacco . The slowly said that most desirable. dlmlllishtby €V€hiflS- Though some of the growers es-‘ caped with almost negligble los-" scs last year. several were real- ly hard hit. One man who lost virtually 50 percent of his crop from frost damage in 1963 could have cut his loss by at least 50 per cent, had he been able to plant his crop a week earlier. M“ Peacock °b59”'9d- igressive Conservative Student [,,\1*[.; spmixias ‘Federation endorsed the lead- Mi-_ Roiosoii agreed ihai ea,-. ership of John Diefenbaker Sun- iiiaiii-mg is a mu - ii isiday over the v_ehement protest y RON LEBEL OTTAWA (CPI — The Pro- possible, but springs have beeu.°f 3 -‘lzeable "‘'"‘“'”Y has cut down on that possibility.l°athe feg§ra“°'l'5 zimnual imp?!‘ who i-isiiesiin, pass a simpe reso ution Be it resolved that this con- University of Manitoba rejected . W5 W“ {mm me 59'’ ’°5°” °‘. OTTAWA (CPl —- Advance “looking for th eatre excite-‘ Ste Marie and Ottawa- A drewl a he emph~a-sized the latela P9909 Some dfilefiaieli Ma’ ‘lei Plat“ to B“°“°5 Alma’ ticket sales for the Dominion merit." Approaching a difficulti Allan. Torontb. television“ Pro-i Egginggxpgggfiztggnsin thiaiite fiiiflthai the exact tally be 3"‘ .Drama Festival's national fi- play with courage was moreiducer who will adjudicate in , l'I°"{‘°9d- H? ?‘“d "'9 federa‘ goals in Charlottetown May lll important than perfection ml Toronto: Walter Massey. Mont-i feigufegzn though 5 ring imail“°"5 °°“5“i"i“°" l°"b3d° ml’ ‘to 23 are the heaviest in the setting and production. he said. real actor, who will judge mi p IMO1-ION CON-I-Es-I-ED ;festival‘s history. National rector Richard Macdonald i The heavy nce ‘ended earlier fears that audi- ences would be a e at the festival's national competition, Dl- The other adjudicators andlcorner Brook, Nfld.. Montague.l says. their distr‘cts are: Hcrbei'tiP.E.I.. and Dartmouth. sate Whittaker. drama critics of The and CBC television produceri Globe and Mail. Vancouver and Florent Forget of Montreal, to C813-WI MP5; Ntllma 5l>“n8- adjudicate at Sackville. N.B..l ford, Mountain Playhouse pro- tlicy are not 5 can wipe out a large portion ofified by 8 V0i9 €Siim3l9d by 1‘9- great deal of expense to grow. losses are experienced at limes,; 'ous compare 1 A motion to hold a secret bal- with the early fall frosts thatllot was hotly contested and car- porters to be 29 to 27. The chair- man declined to announce the ‘result of the standing vote. the crop which has entailed ii i and Quebec City. which will be the opening event ducer. Saskatoon and Port -Ar~ at the $5.000.00(l Fathers of Con- thur Arthur Dagenais. Mont- federation Memorial Centre. real author and producer. Saul! Tickets went on sale before - ”l“'”'l “'",“ 3”" mderlng ; Christmas in the island capital “'9 “l""‘°°°'.‘a“s "lmcra S3”; , and by Jan. 1. local organizers "fem ti‘ begi“ ‘_”",m‘"3 "l" I“ ‘were reporting that both the l"_ "?‘l’l"“'°“”~V ‘.'l‘d."t d° 5‘; ire °' ‘ opening and closing nights of :"'5‘°" ‘Fa"Sm's5'""s _:‘:’° dralin the May festival were "heavily ii ‘.'.‘Z.‘1.‘£‘f.§‘§3§.2.i;'f.¥°....§ --«--~~ — mum in ii . . _ . we hum antennas at me Go”. ' Va'l“h: national director madel 1. ' . ‘ n 170 miles . 4fiti:)i.[ii?ie::iCl(;lni!>a:i:dld)na. is comment: a a meeting of ‘ ‘ round iiieithe seven Canadian adjudica- “5”““°m°" ii i (,i am, . tors who will judge plays en- lwmd watched t 0 am tercd in the festival’s 14 ‘:in the hope of secini! 8 H35“ Makarios May Reiect NATO Force CP from AP-Reuters" l NICOSIA. Cyprus B * nd American diplomats ritish de- . . . - ' l t’tions. scheduled livered to President Makarlos ‘Oi “El” lml" .Ra“g."5 ‘mriiaci : il'.°E:cinC::i?»:s' Canada in early Sunday official proposals for n or a cloud False“ "‘ ‘he "5 ‘Mmii ll0.000-man NATO force to keep which is thoucht to com the d in 9 the peace on Cyprus. ‘ ry seas er. I d’ d‘ t . ll w - T" 3 ’" ‘ca W are 3 9' Authoritative Greek — Cypriot UPC . . I - , ‘ r. radio. i But the worlds biggest tcle- l;l'[l1(z‘\\roles/agiitglmfigrggfigiiges. I es said akarms in . ,sc0P¢‘. W‘ 20°“""h" ‘”t.“°".m __ . i I in i ‘reply expected today would ‘pfllflmal’ l“ 5"’”"‘"t" iSfm0rnm' Fqueggifinglfiic itinntreaieigiiilreject the proposals and possi- ‘could not SP0 ‘"1!’ ~ '11-", , ‘ i _ ‘ Harris Sc-liurmcicr. Ranger l'l€_‘5l“"l"“‘z l"rwald.'" Ia)d]"m"ideas on ow to settle the project manager at the jet pro- eating for the Dominion raniaiexpiosive cmisiiiuiinnai diiieh l“€‘5i‘V3l ‘““"' 3 3 fences between the majority ulsion laboratory in P?‘-‘?"'l°"3' ‘I m‘ . ' 'l)uiiicv.i controlled the sparrfrali ‘‘’l‘‘’ W‘" be 3‘ - speaking and minority Mr. Bcaulne. (Continued on Page 3 Col. 9) ‘.‘.i....9.“ VF.’ ,(l ..,. ‘ Delegates from Nova Scotla. ‘i.-’iQuebec. Ontario and British icolumbia assailed Mr. Diefen- -:6 baker's leadership and said the Conservative party has no prun- - pect of winning an election un- er im. An equal number of speakers from the Prairie provinces and the Maritimes supported Mr. Dlefenbakcvr and appealed for u ‘Canada attended the two day MADRID (AP) — Customers. N ,3 right to say I am a Canadian."— lheaivy drifting was reported in NOT AN“ RCMP in northern Nova Scotla 3 into . miles an hour with. Student Leadership Vote Held With Secret Ballot ‘debate took place. .ing enbaker's l Open Criticism Faced By Fighting Speech By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CF) Fi.‘.’hting‘i; open criticism of his continued leadership of the Conservative_._. [party from within its youth ' roups, John Diefenbaker de- clared Sunday he has never been anti-Quebec and the prov-. ince is neither anti-Dietfenbake ‘anti-Tory. f The former prime minister- 'told a meeting of univerrity' Conservative club delegates .that he had taken stands in the past which were unpopular aty. ithe time. But later they were c Sat . He told the Progressive Con- servative Student Federat.ion—— as he told the Young Progres-. sive Conservatives Saturday —. that disagreements are not al- ien to an_v vigorous organization such as a political party. 2 ~ ‘But." he told the federation. “solutions must be re- roved right, ' 1--, -. . 3 I ’ALTER ellow, a 30- _3;_ri‘tl .t.° me View of the "'3' year-old lawyer from Halifax, J Mil,‘ Diefenbaker said the Con-’ was elected president of ch’ servative party has frequently “°‘l'}g Pr°E.":'.§s“'e. %°"'Se'" ‘had its disagreements over ob- Vame Assoclamn '" flaws ‘jectives and the manner of 5”“d3iV- 5"‘-'°"°‘l° Carl achieving them but it has al- M°""5 “F F1’ede'“d"“- MF- ways been united in seeking “a G°°d‘l9l‘l°W dellealal L35’ Canadian nationality and the} K\'l€- 30- 01' Rfiilifla '01‘ ill’ executive post. (CP Wlrephoto) study national subjects and “We dare not become a party h seek solutions to recommend to tat is anti-anything in Can- da, he said. “The Liberals the pariv “.‘.“Z"’§‘§. ‘.:‘.‘:re’;:.:...‘:..**;:*:l ----«« «-- l 8"“-S°m°"“" - HIE “’..‘?.‘3t"'i‘3i.‘1.‘?.5i§"°...‘?§l$$“i‘i eral)(i>nai‘t3lettou:a5imt(fi‘ii,s 1ii‘aert;'ll: pmblems as ill.” afltge‘ Pmvide ‘-apiiquebec we are pi.0_evei.y s with additional information lpari of Cénada pi.0_0n-E’ cam ‘on these abstruse subjects. and iada. Thev Said in was I was you will become the architects lami_Quebéc but the Quebec of a better Can-ada whether or {people are ‘not anti-me or anti- ."°tbi,-"°}'.f Sfbsequenfly 3° int" this pa’,iy_.. ipu l(' ie. The Conservative leader told .LI-IADERSHIP NURSERY ‘the llniVEI‘Siiy EFOUD it should He called the universities the work with faculty clubs and “nurseries the country's .professors “who agree with our leadership." and said his gov- :viewpolnt and concepts" to ernmenl had doubled university grants. given tax exemptions ifor student fees. promoted fit- incss through amateur athletics n E. W _'l .’D E {to a big program of vocational and technical school construc- Tiie iiei,-M9 mi Mi; [_)ipf(:n_ .\lr. Diefenbaker said he .baker's leadership. punctuated '“"‘”l‘l ilk“ if’ 59‘? "'9 C°mm°'‘' by ii i 5595 and b005, Came wealth scholarship program ex- panded and a system of post- graduate praclic-al studies instil- tuled in Ottawa for political sci- ence students. “You can have all the theory in the world but there is no one who can become a parlia- mentarian without practice." The federation annual meet- ing gave Mr. Diefenbalrer I standing ovation when e ar- shorily after he made an emo- tional appeal for support from‘ the students at a luncheon. He had left the meeting when the Federation P r e s l dent Joe Clark of High River, Alt:-i., student at the University of British Columbia. moved tha the results of the vote of con- fidence in the leader be com- III llilialiliglli h:°r:“’Slfl‘:dat)° the pollceil ‘lilhaewinziegooggiaguigeocfigziogielzfvention express its confidence 5 . 'thldh'fJl‘ _ _ The wi.,_.ck Sm. 5,? miics ’ ° [unable to set his traps for the Diefengakgf fiilstilig i?rogi,e's)5i]v:i _ td t M D_ f b k rived for its Sunday luncheon southeast of Buenos Alres was - i first of May,_and three of them Conservative party of CaMda_.- .ml""¢‘a 9 0 1'~ “" 9" 3 9' and a polite hand-clapplntz re- a scene of tragedy and chaosl * "a"° " 9°“ ‘" ‘"9 l’ 3 5‘ ‘°" hairman John Sinclair of the ‘by <'°P‘i°“ WW" <1 after the crash ended the Fire-l i years," Mr. Roloson reporte This motion was carried una- nimously. There were 85 voting dele- gates at Sunday's session and 82 ballots were cast. The federation also passed a resolution stating that Conserv- atives “guarantee and reaffirm the equality of the two found- cultural groups and eqality of opportunity of all Canadians within the greater whole of Canada." CALLS IT TRIPE The bicultural motion was passed unanimously although a Toronto law student. G. Alexandrowicz. described it as “just a collection of tripe and platitudes." The attack against .\lr. Diel- leadership was launched by Paul Murphy of Dalhousie University. .\’lariiinic vice-president of the federation. “The word Diefenbaker is a bad word in Nova Scotia." he said, spelak. At the end of the speech. there was another standing ova- lion. ROL'SlNG WELCOME On Saturday. the YPCS gave him a rousing welcome and ap- plauded his speech vigorously. Later llie_\-' voted 117 in favor and 51 opposed to a resolution asserting YPC “trust, loyalty and confidence" in Mr. Dieteti- baker. The former Prime Minister told the YPC the party mu st more ahead with the times while holding true to its bas-ic philso- phy and one-Canada concept. “We must conserve those things that are proved right and good. and make changes based on experience rather than ex- pcriment." sa' He rew laughter and cheers when he added in a political jibe at Prime Minister Pearson and Fi- nancc ;\’li.ni.<t¢‘r Gordon: "if Gordon and Pearson had follow- ed that. they wouldn't have had the budget nicss." 3- to ilncrease By RALPH CAMERON l Unanimous approval of the T . . . _ _ 240,- ' d’ ting the l‘el£i0n3l iesilv“ T kl h- k’ "ti. fthls new two-year wage agreement ‘during ‘ts’ncar]yI(?6t}h:mll'nlll)le till 5”i:l(‘n0. Ont. said he will be M‘f,f,ii‘;,,s,,"n°.,',,}"'i‘,i§',,.i’,°"s 0 reached with civic employees i000-mlle flight. sa‘ _ _ ( , . ‘ in isifhpr the Makarios ‘ii oriiiodox ai.ch_ Local 501, was expressed by ‘apparenu-‘ ‘la’ gntintarq - - ' G ‘ i City Council at the special meet- rcameras or the iran. _ hi bishop. is a reek-Cyprot._ _ mg Smurday mnminl - Em“ " W" M" Mm M mp unfit: klgadtehre »- It provides a flat increase at ‘u‘‘' """5°' , L ’ ' ‘l’ S i i- - $300 a vcar for the police force: 1 Rang". "1' "1". mm‘ Births. deaths 3, 10 I:‘l$‘°‘g‘§fghfl£fi§.heppgsofifigcplfig from inspector to constable, andi ("W ;:"t.°..:tr.«:" ...: *. souour IN SHOOTING mm-nem was Pl‘('C¢‘ U “ ‘ ’ . - ‘ -pi, mcm pi-egenuiioii oi ment employees. for the yeari 1"“ " “d W’ US‘ *7'“'°"“" """""""" “ ‘ the tiritish-US proposals to the Police have launched a nnt- day night. Officers said the “'34- EmPl°Y°°= 0* "'9 ‘"9’ reluleg 5"“ back mm 1 . S90?‘ - -t 7' 3 ‘Greek- rklsh - Cyllflol‘-ion-wi man M for a man suspect fled. leaving behind {Nd P“b“¢ P"°P°"Y d°Pa"" . °"“" '°“‘ Khltllh 0u°=n9- aides came after three days of the identlfv as Leeman us- Mrs. Barbara Ruth Walker. 2i. i menls set an increase of ' ' Russia‘-‘ L""'k lihmhl: Sunimcrside . I intense diplomatic activity in sally Smith. night. followimz left. She has been booked on -per cent over their 19$‘? saint‘ graphed the back me 0 ‘ women‘! » - - - - Nicosia. London. ashinglon. ~ the sin of two police dc- -Mnicion of murder. ies. The MW agreement ll 2 . l l n from altitudes Oi lfhlll Mm” mllel ?Athcn| and Ankara. "‘°”’i lzclivu in Lou Angles satir- (AP Wlroplob) troacllvc to Jan. 1 this year. ‘i ii convention. . lWagesOtCivic Employees In New Contract For the year 1965 there will bei '6!‘ a flat across-the-board raise «it three per cent. Finance committee chairman .\lrs. Catherine Etlaclmod. the Union. A progrcssi\'c step in compel- ation was taken when the agree- H.l-‘.. H_vndman said the terms menl included a clause for the setting up of a nianagemenl.-it were mutuall_\- agreeable to the Union and the City. They rt-pre-I bor relations committee to meet quarterly for discussions of pro- sent some variation in the orii ginal terms asked by the Union. blems. On the committee will but the agreement was reached. be two m¢‘mh(‘l‘S Oi C-ii.V Coun- after a series of friendly disuis~ cil. two members of the c it)‘ gionsi staff who are non-union and four lt is expected the new agree members of Union Local 501. mom will be signed this morn ‘m: by Mayor A. Walthcn Gau- del and (‘ity Comptroller Butler. for the city. and (‘an- irroznillnn of the Union ts K030 stable Warren Maclienzlc andl (Continued on page I. col. I