* Pope calls for ban on nuclear weapon | | i” PROVINCIAL LIBRARY Q , | 24 Mu ae VICTURIA, BC ‘ . DEC 31/€3 Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port — And Key te the Great Northwest PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1963 PRICE TEN CENTS Sports 3207, Social 3205 Business, Classified 3203. Advertising 3201 News Desk 3204, ical leaders try order out of federal | “Either we have a clean city VOL. 5 3, No. 71. POPPDOLOS COLO SOLO ODOR ORILORODDLOD ODEO CLEP L OPO DOLO ROOD DOC COO CCFO: OFFICIAL COUNT FOR SKEENA WILL TAKE PLACE APRIL 29 Returning officer Alek Bill said today it will prob- ably be next week before last returns come from some points in Skeena riding such as Takia Landing, Tele- graph Creek and Eddontena- jon Lake on the Stewart- Cassiar road. The service vote is also gwaited to add to vote count in Monday's election which rao ts 43 a, 7 va Tae ay gee es: RA os od dant RS aaah SE Gd ears Res Parliament may ; saw Frank Howard re-elect- b va +h J e | | convene May 16 ~edas MP for Skeena. t ft I 7 _. . j Cfficial count will take OF dar age aqump | a S$ po icy | OTTAWA (CP)—Political leaders begin if ‘place April 29. Represento- | - ; tives of each party, the elec- | At the instigation of its health’ users must either tear them/tion under the well-directed pro- (le a gathering today to see what order can be e tion clerk and Mr. Bill will ‘committee headed by Ald. H. J.! down or rehabilitate them. ‘gram. po : brought out of the topsy-turvy result of Mon- 1: Fourteen owners are getting | Clean-up orders under the city’s | rubbish bylaw, for various things :. conduct the official count at (Scholten, City Council is pursu-: Car ports will be allowed on 9 am. that day ing with determination its pol- city property if off-street park- ‘ ‘icy of cleaning up the city. ‘Ing cannot be obtained, but the “OOOPPEPEEEORICODOOL EES OOP IDETI ECOL ELLLO OL ORDO COE EDbObbDDs eo: Huge $ sign hangs _:' day's general election. | —_— i} Prime” Minister Diefenbaker | jority in Monday's voting, plan- | was due late in the day from; ned to take time off while the ' The meusures, first directed at; design and building of themisuch as general litter, scrap |: pve : . other parties hold their meet- tidding the city of unsightly andi must come under rigid bullding|cars, stumps, a dilapidated bus | , Prince Albert, Sask., | to meet ings p ‘dilapidated garages on city, regulations. shelter and so on. Li { Thursday with his cabinet, crip- : COQULD CHANGE DATE '- pled with the defeat of six min- iproperty, is now being extended ‘FIRST BIG LIST Similar listings will be furnish- - to tumbledown buildings, car. The first large list of privately'ed to the health committee from | eg i isters in their home ridings. ea nty was majorite in i wrecks and unofficial rubbish owned untidy and unsightly! time to time by the works de- | & Social Credit Leader Robert,;"20 party w " y ; Monday's voting, and there are !N. Thompson arrived early to- I y precedents for the government ‘day for a mectine with his Que- ‘dumps cn private property. ' properties has now received ac-' partment. over next govt der a cleanup of private property within 30 days. If the owner | The city has the power to or-! | i ‘ibec lieulenants, Deputy Leader :Real Caouectte and parliamen- ; to remain in office in such cir- icumstances and test its future by a vote of the House of Com- jtary whip Guy Marcoux. mons. The date set for conven- | RETIRING | New Democratic Party officials OTTAWA () --- A huge dollar worked out in the NATO mceet- Sign hangs ominously over the fails to comply with the order. Swimmer Sharon clips time ing. and government revenues the city can then do the work ° ; ; : ing the new Parliament. accord- heads of whatever political farty may be affected by decisions itself and bill the owner. i C, d te * ester ¢ ‘a oy. began preparing for a national | Ie § a : ' Governs Canada as a result of taken on trade questions by The cleanup drive admits of 0 dno er ana lan recor West German chancellor (executive meeting, probably to! ing to a proclamation which can ’ Conrad Adenauer announced ee Monday's federal election—whe- ther the Conservatives remain in office or give way to the Lib- : eras, * Prgplems of both national and international finance are com--— ing to a point where decisions appear urgent. They range through such matters as deter- mining the pay of post office workers, drafting a new na- tional budget, charting a course for Canada “in internationa! trade and boltsering the treas- ury of the United Nations. . A series of international meet. ‘ings starting in mid-May al- ae". «A ready sets the deadlines for some major decisions. The next ParHament’ will be contronted with the massive problem of approving a new budgct, authorizing a spending program, and passing lIegislation to meet situations needing Par- liamentary action soon. These include shoring up the nearly bankrupt employment insurance | fund, redistributing Commons! seats on the basis of shifts in population recorded in the 1961 census, and casing the cffect of railway branch line abandon- ments on. small communities “across the country. Mereover, the domestie and international decisions to be made are in some cases inter- woven. The size of the national budget will depend to oa large extent on the defence program PILGRIMS ARRIVE JERUSALEM (Reuters) -— Pil- prims and tourists arrived from many parts of the world Satur- doy for Easter. Thousands of such visitors have come here this season, GATT and “ministers. ' The new Parliament also will have a backlog of financial work the Coummonwealth left undone before the election. | Governor Generil’s warrants for expenditures which were not eovered by appropriations must be tabled. No appropriations were passed for the. fiscal year which ended last March 31, though all the money has been [spent under inserim supply bills and the warrants. No estimates ifor the current year’s spending iwere tabted befere the Diefen- baker government was defeated :in the Commons Feb. 5. few half measures. The words of Ald. A. D. Ritchie at a re- cent committee mecting: Eith- er we're going to have a clean city or a garbage dump,” sum up the view of most council- lors. Ald. Norman Bellis blamed most of the offending eyesvres on “plain laziness.” The problem of the accumu'a- tion over the years of unsightly or view-blocking garages on city .prope:ty is being tackled section by sectiqn. More gariges in Section 1, first :Section to come’ under scrutiny, will be demolished or improved under latest Council orders. The awn~w Pope John urges end to arms race VATICAN CITY © @ from Reu-: ters - WW) — Pope John XXIII today appealed to “men of good- will all over the world for an end to the arms race and the, equal and simultaneous reduc-_ tign of arms stockpiles. He urged, too, that the United Nations be given the structure and means too safeguard world peace. The pontiff, ino his importatt 15,000-word — eneyelical “pacem- in ferris” Cpeace on carthy, eall- ed fora ban on nuclear weapons and said “a peneral agreement should eventualy be reached about progressive disarmament. and oun effective method of control,” POPLPLOLPOOPF PR POCPODUPLDODUDVOCY FOP PELAOCHIUIOPOL OOO SIPARAOLOOEC EOE | Rupert Rambles POPOPIRERIYEPIIEI LOVER EDLIOPPUOOL OPORTO T ODER OO ROOD OO OD ON PPOOOE With exams coding tomorrow, high sehool students are pre- paring for the MeCracken High School bonsplel whieh starts Monday. Bonspiel chairman Phil Uioyd says 57 rinks are entered for the four-day spiel, Lioyel also says a new committee with the title “roof housing committee" WH be put into effeet ta keep fhe rink cold) enough to eur, Chairman of this committee is ardent curler Gury Norberg, fe of Oo Proofreaders are often the victims of criticism: when typo- praphien! errors appear dn the newsprper, Dally News proof- reader Lana Wutehinson won't have to worry about this any- more, She's heading to Vaneou- vero fo enter a secretarial col- Ilepe and then out Into the ernvel, ere) business world, fe qe of The Prince Rupert Mlappy Gay, WH meet wt 8 o'clock to- morrow nlpht ino the Civie Cen- ORMES DRUGS LTD, DIAL 2151 portation is asked to eal) 2507, not later than o]e iu pielure ils ye stray *k When white (See make home odin The Editor Charles 6, Giord Plopped puss ina copy box dubbed it "copy eats ‘The Stan the other | Hight. uy tonight, The unique document — ad- dress to both Catholies and non-Catholics — said it was the Pope’s earnest wish that the United Nations should be- come increasingly equal to the “magnitude and nobility of its task.” The Pope warned that the “conflagration” of war “may be set eff by some uncontrollable ane unexpected chanee.” He added: “Even though the power of modern weapons acts asia deterrent, it is to be feared that the mere continuance of nuclear tests, undertaken with warin mind, will have fatal con- sequences for life on the earth.” | Smithers plans | golden jubilee tre. A spokesman for thre BPOUp | said that anyone wishine trans- celebrations The first ineorporated village in Vritish Columbla, Smithers kitten with eclebrate its 50th anniver- below! decided tol sary this summer, Dyvily¢ Nows editorial department, News’ A week tong purty dine dota July G@ will bring former residents WO to Smithers and eelebration-po- HN ers from throuphout the region, inept, Smithers was founded fn 191g statfor pets all kinds of nllen= 9 with stort oof cloning of the Lion, Mrs. wohn Magor, wife of townsite and onrrivab oof the the publisher, went so. tar Ws! Grand ‘Trink Paelfic Rallway Lo reseue dt from on HB NEON dine from Prince Rupert, SPP PVP OP LE VO DIIVOGIODVPOEOIPOVEDD PARTIES REVEAL B.C. SPENDING VANCOUVER '® -- The four Major parties estimated Tues day that they spent a total of wpproxinuulely $194,000 as each puto up oa tull slate of 22 enn. Uidates for Brilsh Columbia's federal sents, NDP party offleials estimat- od $4,000 was spont da the province ~~ approximately $1,- 500 no rlding, Soelal Credit offleials esti. mated expenditive wt $18,200, or $600 a constituency, Tiberal and Progressive Con- servallves estimated they spent about $44,000 eneh, PPAPEH EPO OLOLO PVPORODIDIDOIO DD U4 monstrous , Sharon Pierce, Prince Rupert’s gift to the Pan American games, showed well last night in Van- couver at a special swim meet -held for visiting Japanese swim- /-mers. In the 15-16 age Broup 100- metre butterfly, Sharon set a new Canadian record with a ‘time of 1:104. This is two- tenths of a second better than today he will retire in October the old mark. ’ Or November. The aged chan- Fellow Pan Am swimmer Ralph | celior has been under pres- ' sure from his Christian Demo- Hutton of Ocean Falls also had crats to retire. ibe held next week. NDP Leader; he changed if the present or a iT. C. Dougias, however, said. New prime minister wishes, is “Tuesday he plens to remain on; May 16. ‘the West Coast until the end: Monday's election result gave -Oof the month. ithe Conservatives 96 members And Liberal Weader Lesterito the Liberals’ 128. Social Credit a good night as he broke the. 15-16 age group 100-metre but-| terfly. Hutton’s time was 1:03.3 compared with the previous — mark of 1:13.8. Honorary citizen WASHINGTON (# — The Unit mirnar for Grade 10 students were announced today by the Prince Rupert district board. Pending permission from the department of education in Vic- tcria, the seminar will be held iduring July for grade 10 students ‘who have failed English 20, so- Cinl studies 20, mathematics 20 ‘or science 20. Sufficient interest j must be shown by the failing ‘into effect. _ After consideration by mem- ‘bers of the board and the archi- ‘tects concerned, a two-room ad- ‘dition to the cast end of Seal Cove school has been changed. T. will now be placed on. the west end of the school, Preliminary psans are being | drawn up for this work. The buard gave approval to an expenditure of $200 toward ex- ipenses of students attending the iband music workshop at the /University of British Columbia ‘July 4 to 24. Band parents will jbe giving a similar amount to- /ward these expenses, © A request from. the Parent Teacher Couneil to use the sen- jor secondary high sehool audit- porn for a Holiday Theatre pro- duetion was ’ t out Summer scho for grade 10 Plans for a summer school se-! board. school} formances. | granted by the, ‘ed States ol arranged an students US. citizen today. in the time in which we live Holiday Theatre will ap-! pear in Prince Rupert May 23 with afternoon and evening per- anyone an honorary citizen. Daily smile Board membcr W. A. Dibben, was authorized to attend a se-! minar training course for new’ man definitely knows where hi trustees at UBC May 8 to 11. money goes, Today's News Briefs . . POPOL IS LOLS LILOLELIL IE FLO DLOCL LEC EIOCEECCODOOCOORDOT COLO}; COC LTC +e students before this plan is put British gov't faces strong criticism LONDON (Reuters) — Prime Minister Macmillan’s govern- ment faced strong criticism today following publication of the former Anglo-American agreement on the supply of Polaris missiles to Britain. The agreement is the most controversial defence proposal here in years. There is no cleur picture of size or cost. + + + te Alleged war criminal found BERN (Reuters) — Erich Rajakovitch, alle red former as- sistant of Nazi Adolf Kicamann, today was escotted to an un- disclosed frontier after the justice ministry announced he had been found in Switzerland. News of his deportation came as Dutch authorities asked other countries to proceed to “pussible trial" of Rajakovitch, } + + + Cease-fire announced in Laos PARIS (Reuters) -. ‘Phe Southeast Asia Treaty Orguniaa- Lion ministers meeting here foresee a lessening: Of tensions in Lios following a Communist Chinese press conference of at cease-fire between neutrilists aud the pro-Comumituist. Pathet Lao, gece oy : Labl fl D A $ Never before has the U.S. made: Between now and April 30 ay i PIPPPOOVOO OOOO K - Pearson, who with 128 Liberal | elected 24 and the New Demo- ;MPs came five short of a ma-!cratic Party 17. Here are the party standings by provinces: Copyright, 1963, by The Canadian Press L made Britain’s Sir Winston Churchill an honorary |?arty President Kennedy called him “the most honored and -hemorable man to NDP walk the stage of human history Total Nfld PEI NS NB Que Ont Man Sas Alta BC Y-N PC 96 0 2 7 4 8 28 10 17 4 #4 2 Lib. 128 7 2 5 6 47 51 2 0 1 7 0 3c 24 0 0 O O 20 0 0 0 2 2 OB 17 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 0 0 9 0 Cotal 265 7 4 12 10 75 85 14 47 17 22 2 The votes of armed forces,;seats if the service vote has the personns} and.their overseas de- |same Liberal preponderance it ;pendents are expected to be an-!had last year, but they doubted -nounced this weekend. Liberal there would be a_ sufficient :party officials said Tuesday swing to gain a parliamentary ‘they might win two or three majority. amloops man denies g money on side VICTORIA @ ~- Vincent L. by Montana contractor Dick .Gresty of Kamloops, a former; Holzworth that $135,000 was paid Brilish Columbin highways de-' by the dewartment for work nev- _ partment employee, denied Tues-|er performed on Trans-Canada day that he made money on the! highway project 819 near Revel- oxide by renting equipment to stoke in 1957 and 1958. contractors on government pro-| pects, | Gresly appeared at) the re-: h pSumption of hearings of the B.C,. Gra nby S OWS legislature’s board of inquiry into’ e ilegations of praft within the highways department, net profit i He denied being a partner or, active participant in ia contract-. VANCOUVER «& Granby ing firm while with the depart- Mining Company Limited showed tnent, but admitted he had been a net profit of $280,634 after all Sivenoa “letter of intent’ grant- charges in 1962, the annual re- ‘ing him shares if the company port showed Tuesday. This com- Made wood th business, pared with $7,613 in 1961. Farlier, Pyvan Jones, former In the previous year, however, deputy hiphwavs minister term- the net profit shown on earn- ed “funtastie’ allegations made Ings was $892,932 including oa non-recurring gain on sale of Grandy’s interest in) Granduc Mines in northwestern B.C. to Newmont Mining Corp. for $885,- 319. The report showed 1962 pro- duction included $782,839 worth of fron concentrates at the sub- sidiary Jecdway Iron Ores Lim- ited mine in the Queen Charlotte Ishinds. Copper production at the Pheonix mine was valued at $2,121,775 compared with $1,380,- 882 in the previous year, WEATHER _ Sunny today, clouding over slowly tonight. Mostly cloudy Overnight and Thursday. An occasional shower. Winds light becoming southerly 1 this afternoon and ocea- slonally reaching 25 in open western waters this after- hoon tnd tonight. Law to- Hight and bleh Thursday 35 and Ay, ne 7 ae Daily News Readloags ; ri . Temperature at noon. CE aR) Barometer, steady Ss ! makin hit U0! 1 o4 i) La ay Kine weather bas given a helping hand to construction of this new sehool fn Seetion “site ab whleb tas aa out- ot ‘NEW SCHOOL COMING AL ONG IN June 30 und be in spanking Hew condiffon for opening of the 1968-04 eehool yeas in September, Anime tor the standing exposure and view, The new elpht-roam elomen- tary school with aetivity room Is expected ta be completed by SECTION TWO. TIDES Thursday, April tt, 1968 school has not been chosen yet, Wigh oo. a2s3e9 20.4 feel (Wurrington photo) 16:03 Th.0 feet Low 08:36 4.6 feet ' 0:50 40 feet t