If It's Good For The island .The Guardian Is For It who @uurdiun “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVI]. N0. 88 By RALPH CAMERON Budgeting for a modest sur- plus of $982 f‘ina-itvcc chairman HE Hyizdnian told City Couli- eil tstiimated expenditures of the city for 1064 would be $2.— 071l.~1tl2.811 while estiinaled rev- enues would amottnl to 32.030, 352 .79. Mr. llynrlnian also unveil-3d the new tax assessment of prop- erty which showed a tremendous tete' property valuation or $77.- 000.tffltl, Last year civic taxes were based on an a~~tu.siii-t,'itt of tuttotmm, This year's taxes. based oi bu."ness occupancy tax. meant the city was able to slttirpfv de- crease the mill rate firm last year's 53.35 per $100 valuation to a flat rate of $2 lhls year. INCREASED CHARGES Total taxation for the year is up only 3320.000. the finance chairman stated as he gave rea- sons for the increase. Primarily the rise in spending is due to iner'ases in salaries in A'u‘l‘RS this connection he cited the School Board request If an additional $60000 this year f. r teachers the standard of teaching and hold tramed members of the staff on their lobs. Another factor. he stated was cost of tlte Teepce incinerator -— which includes garbage col- lection and disposal as a lr service of $89000; a jump l." street department expenses of $31,000 to cover snow remov- ai including Sidewalk clearance. Debt charges for this year “t? A flat rate of $25 oti all auto— mobiles. regardless of age or size. was set for budget pur- poses by City Council last night as finance chairman H.E. Hynd- man outlited revenue and ex- penditures for the. city for 1964. It is expected to provide an increase over last mobile taxes due to several fac- t rs. Mr. Hyndman said. Among them is the fact that the city has a list approximately 1.- 000 mote a-utomobilds than were listed last year. A welcome break was given taxpayers when Council passed a by-lavv ending taxation on Ilurtiiturc. The phrasing stated. "all household chattels in-cludv lug furniture and furnishings and household equipment and effects shall not be subject. to assessment as personal prop- arty.” BUSINESS TAX The by-law providing for a business occupancy tax based on the square footage of the picintises used was also pass- ed. All types of business were listed specifically with varying assessment rates per square foot The tax payable will be two per cent. of the total assess- ment W1th 3 minimum basis $2.500. li'inatncml institutions have. the. lulu-st ' with banks scheduled for assessment at a rate of $39.75 per square foot and finance companies at $30. Dec-tors will pay at the rate of $15.25 as will dentists while credit unions with backing fac- . I . the new assessment and the new i many ; iii order to main-3 year's auto— ; as Second ('l-n Ottawa. Ind for Authnrfud "'parfmrnt. MODEST SURPLllS FORECAST * Budge’r Figures For Year Presented City Council would be $00,000 h'iglherr due to .(w ' finmce capital works such as building new streets. sidewalks. providing parking areas and the purchase of properties; completion of the new schools; expansion in the water works and building of new sewers. Air. Hyndman said protection; of the public. through police aitd fire department services. would increase under the ‘realistic’teost an additional $40.00“ this valuation which "ives the (-ttylyear principally due to in- .rr-‘ascd salaries. 1 He said of particular interest ; was the fact had thc~e increases ;in expenditures not been neces- ‘sarjx the mill rate would have been as low as 1.37 On the nth- e' hand he noted that with these tint-ceases had the new assess- ment not taken effect the mill i'lee would have jumped last year's 3.35 lo a high Hit of ! The finance chairman also flatly expressed his opinion that provincial government an church property should be tax- cd. Ills reason. said. was that of the 377,000,000 valuation i of property in this city over 20 per cent. or $19.000.000. was nan-taxable. The latter. he add- .ed. did not include the tie w ‘l"a:ht-rs of Confedei'atrion Memv imiiii Buildings. DEBT (‘HARGES As with most governments he stated. debt charges represent. ling by the city. ‘his year they Ianielin-l to $728341 compared to last year's 5048.023 l (lifter civic departments and illlf‘li‘ expenditures for the year. 1\\llh last year's totals in brack- evis. are: piiblit works $370,804 City Auto Tax Set $25; Furniture Tax ls Ended illlllf“: will pay $28 and those ‘Wll‘llOUl such facilities $19.50. . Any business with a multip- ll'teiiy of operations mil be as- fsessed a rate according to the Evarious oponations with office {and sales areas having the high- lest assessment. value and stor- age areas the lowest. ‘NI-ZW ASSESSMENT Real estate taxes will also he lbascd this year on the recently completed ‘rcalistic' assessment ‘whieh drastically raised the total .valuation of city property from .30.000.000 to $77,000.000. However. a compensating fac- tor entered whcn the mill rate was noticeably lowered from ilast year's $3.35 per $l00 of lvaluatton to a flat $2. t it was also stated last night real estate taxes would once again be payable in installments livith the first of such due June 30. The. remainder will be due :on August 31 and November 30. ' l NOTICES SHORTLY It. was also stated Mr. gHyiidman assessment notices lwould be going out shortly and by gpear at an ‘opcn house' to be gheld at City Hall when repre~ tsentait-ivevs of the assessing lle fof .l.P. Ooombe Assooiates ‘wou‘d explain how the assess- ment was reached. He said no ioity Councillors Would be per- lmiltnd to hear tgarding such assessments be- icausc only the assessors were lin a position to explain all de- ila-ls. LONDON IAPl The Khrushchev r u m or swept around fife world within min- utes Monday night before it was shot down by a Moscow denial. The origin of the death re- port. was wrapped in some- thing of a mystery today. A language difficulty be- tween an inquiring Japanese reporter and a Soviet Tass agency man in Moscow may caused the trouble. But. confirmation of this was not forthcoming. and there were other versions. in Washington. PI‘ESIdelll Johnson was kept informed “5 the rumor spread through the United States. htit White House Press Quite reached prompting the president “so the hot line teletype wires lo Moscow. The mor set off a frantic flurry of activity in Europe] chancellei-ies and new: organ- lzatlone. VIEWERS Television newsca stain ham. Main and German! Khrushchev told viewers of the rumor. stressing it was unconfirmed. and then broke in with the de- nial. The rumor hit London just as its mass circulation morn- ing newspapers were rolling with their first editions. It hit print in only one—the stop press column of The Daily Mail. But throughout Fleet Street. newspaper row. London's emergency staffs were called in and special editions flung together only to dis- carded immediately when the report was branded as false. How did i one version Early in the evening Tass started transmitting to sub- ; scribers throughout the world | a transcript of Khrushchev‘o I speech at a Moscow banquet b for Wladyslaw Gomulka. Po- lish Communist Suddenly Tass broke off its transmission. Breaks of this . kind are not unusual. Then. according to the Ger- man news service DPA: "A Japanese journalist in Moscow inquired at Tass why the report on the Khrushchev from 1 all I |the greatest amount of spend- lany property owner could at». complaints re- i it happen? Here is 1 Mill by the Poll Offlen payment of postage In cull 313260.117); education $352,357 ‘ and propert pdllce an -fireme~n $303,732 ($264,894) l general city government $185.52! ($175.533l; health and welfare 1 $41.65? ($46,752): recreation and E community services $36317 l $24,459); other expenditures, ranging from depreciation of 1 equipment to town planning and Centennial. :3 854.748 ($36.499l. Estimated revenues for the 'coming year from taxation :ainouut to $1.695.437; from var- li u. grants 3229.180; from var- , iotls J Commissioners 3 of Sewers and Water Supply. Police Court. alk assessment. and otheis 3155.747. Taxation , , revenue is broken parking meters. street and sidev l to] 133293.196); protection to persons i d . l i l f .3 down into the following receipts: I treat estate 51.175.709: business tax 3346.649: auto tax $108725; educational tax. males. 993.950. temlales. $12,384. Of this amount Mr. Hynrlman said $42. is ip'uccd in the reserve for ll'nCOl- leetable taxes, Astronauts Selected I For Flight HOUSTON tAPi—-—A veteran tspace traveller and a rookie lvasironaut were picked Monday l‘fol' the next. manned flight. in the United States' race to get a man on the moon by 1970. Mai. Virgil 1. «Gus' Grissom, the ' spaee. and -'nung. 33. a former navy test pilot. got the nod as the first crew to fly a two-man Gemini spacecraft into orbit around the ' earth later this year. . Named as backup crew were Cmdr. Walter M. Schii'ra. 41. of l a six - orbit Mercury flight Oct. .13 1962. and Air Force Maj. ‘ Thomas P. Stafford. 33. a te. l i l l CHARLOT’I‘ETOWN. CANADA, 'iitESiiXiCiPiiilithium Rouune Business Domed Presentation of the 1964 bud- get and the passing of the new business occupancy tax by-laiw highlighted the April meeting Charlottetown City Council, held last night. 'l'wo letters were received from citizens who had suffered injuries during the past winter on the. city‘s sidewalks and these were turned over to the City Re ur‘der. for action. Commenting on the. sidewalks. Conn. Elmer MatcRae stated that in the budget. which had been presented. some 510,000 had been placed aside for the street committee's use removal ' we'.k:‘_ He s was giving the problem serious thought. If it. is feasible. then he. had no objections. but mam- tcn-ance is the idea's big prob- em. in his report to the Council on town planning. Conn. a Cox stated that since the last meeting he had received a large number of calls concerning the that the calls came. from people dissatisfied with the new zone No. l arrangement. " SPECULATORS HIT Mayor Gaudet said that he had rec ’ ed a number of calls from "speculations" who had I l . t l i lost money because of the move. but he stated filial he thought the Cotmcil's concern slhould be for the citizens of Charlottetown. not a few people who wanted to make smite "quick money." went on to say u ’(‘ontinuod on Page 3 Col‘ 4i Spending On New Car Ferry l Exceeds Vote l pilot who has wpitten textbooks i on flying. 4 At a press conference at ‘ i \lllll( h the astronauts w e l' e named. it was also disclosed by i Dr. Robert R. Gilruth, Manned ‘ Spacecraft Ce n t r e director, ? that an ear ailment similar to l the one. suffered by former ast- ronaut John Glenn. knocked Lt.-Cmdr. Allan B. Shepard .112, .40. from consideration for the {first Gemini crew. l Hunter River j Postmaster i Appointed I 1. CAPITAL BUREAU 1 OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA W.E. Nicholson ‘has been appointed postmaster ; at Hunter River. effective June 1 1. this year, it was announced phere Monday by Solicitor Gen- eral J. Watson MacNaught. The ;position will become vacant ‘ on that date due to the. retire- ‘ ment of Mrs. B.M. MacLeod. ‘ The. Civil Service Commission 1 has issued a certification of ap- ; pointment covering the mo motion of Mr. Nicholson. who is assistant. at Hunter River. He has over 11 years of service and meets all the requirements of the position. Mr. MtacNaught i SHI . best—hiRumor . Denied Within Minutes speech in the English service was not being continued. REPLY MISUNDERSTOOD "He Apparently misunder- stood the reply. given to him in Russian. "International agencies that exchange each others service (not including the Associated Pressi used the erroneous re- ort Japanese source that Khrushchev had died. at- tributing the report to Tau." Within minutes the report had flashed around the world. In London the foreign office alerted F 0 re l g n rotary Richard A. Butler. and the cables started humming to the British Embassy in Moscow. In Tokyo. a top executive of the Japanese news agency Kyodo said it had been re- ported that a German news agency was carrying the story btit said that Kyodo itself had not carried an Independent story. either out of its Mos— cow bureau or out of Its Tokyo headquarters. The report caused brief pain- demonium in Japan's newspa- per world. It came after final morning editions had gone to press. and editors had gone home to CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA —- The federal g ernment actually spent than the allotted amount of pre- liminary work on the new auto feiiry for P.E.l. in the last fis- oal year. Transport Minister J.W. Piekeesgill revealed here Monday. Replying to a- written quest.- ion from Hon .1. Angus Mae- I.ean. MP for Queens. Mir. 'Pickecsgiill said that the ex- penditmu‘e on the project to March 31. 1964 had totalled $109,169.85. The federal esti- mates for the. 1963-64 fiscal year had provide a sum of $100.- non for the ferry, of l 0V- more . l f t Parliament At A Glance By THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Pearson said he. has no intention of calling an early general election. Associate Defence Minister Cardin said C A n a d a has agreed to supply another 156 men the UN's Cyprus force. The Commons debated a proposal to set up a commit- tee to consider broadcasting of Parliamentary debates. Senators complained again of being made a rubber-stamp for Commons‘ legislation. Eric Winkler. Conservative whip. said the Canada Pen- sion Plan should be scrapped in favor of one like. Quebec’s. Liberal MP: criticized the government‘s proposed maga- zine legislation. UESDAY. April 14 The Commons meets at p. . to resume the budget debate. The Senate statnds ad- journed to 8 p.m.. Tuesday. April as. Sir Winston Attends House LONDON tReutersi -Sir Win ston Churchill faltered slightly in making his way to his seat in the House of Commons Mon- *4 day. But he quickly regained his balance without aid and 'is- tened for a short time in min- isters answering questions on a variety of subjects. Churchill. 89. has attended parliament on most days in re cent weeks. INSIDE TODAY Blrfhs. death 3. in Chandler! . 12. 11 Comic: . . . . . . . . It “anaemia-rivet: 10 s . . . . . . . . . . . I Editorials I Klan, Queen. on: ...._ I Summon”. 8 Women'o . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 'l WEATHER Clear. cloudy in afternoon. showers late in evening; Winds increasing to southwest 20. Low-high 3-3 and 52. mint" SEVEN "3le and ‘Swap' Wll‘l‘l Quebec uggesfed By Smallwood l 2 t Prince Edward Island's l Centennial Barby. Kent. .l‘ohn Peters. North Rustico, was presented with a baby earri- : age last. night. as the. village. l of North Rustico opened its NORTH RUSTICO CENrEuNiAi BABY HONORED V; l l .t._' .‘0 North Rustic-o. left. ’lhe two— hour concert drew a large audience and featured local Centennial Year celebrations wi variety concert at Stella Maris Hall. The. carri- age was passed to the pin-J talent. Master of ceremonies ents. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pet- was Joseph Gaiidin, North ers. by Alyce M. Gallant. Rustico. iRules Request TO Senate :5 i By STEWART MaeIJ-ZOD ‘ OTTAWA asked to waive. its rules again. .the Senate snarled back at the, House of Commons Monday :with a series of stiff warnings J that it won't be pushed around. i ‘ a. Iconsent . Senator M. ,Grattan O‘Leary thundered. ‘ Urging his fellow senators to i get to their feet with clear sup- port for his stand. the Ottawa Conservative said: i “It is not enough to come to 1 me after and say. ‘Grattan. you ‘ ldid very well , . .' " l "I can't stand the pussyfoof- ‘ing that took place last week ion the part of my own party." iCONSENT REFUSED ‘ That was who. it Senator O'Leary refused to give unani- . e 'mous consent to three readings . lof a bill of supplementary esti- mates on the same. day. His ac- tion resulted in a mailing delay f some unemployment insur- ance cheques The Senate was not a gramaphone of the Com— mons. he declared at that. ‘ time. Another set of supplementary estimates for the 1963-64 fiscal [year was allowed to go through at that time. and Monday the. third set of the same group of spending estimates came before .the Upper Chamber. They were allowed through all stages. with lots of warnings. few minutes later they received troyal assent. ' Senator J. .l. Connolly. gov~ .ernmentt house leader. did not ask for unanimous consent for three readings. but Senator ‘O‘Leary said this was the bur- i Are Expected By Thursday l Ry Thursday of this week it is ‘exupeeted that definite arrange-‘ i merits Will have been completed ‘ for most of the heavy vehicle traffic at Borden-Toi'mentine ferry crossing to go on trips of the MV Confederation. This will apply particularly to 'riieks too large to go on the upper deck of the SS Prince Edward Island. . B. Graham Rogers. director of itransportation for the Province said railway freight traffic cun- tlnues to be very heavy and in- cludes a lame number of re- frigerator ears to come to the province. IC‘PH—After being ‘ . i. will never give my: . Announced i the audience to accept their Os- ; Miss Rutherford. l New Ferry Traffic Rules parks Snarl Al Commons den of theI House leader's ai'gu- he said. because several sena- ments. ors. be si do 3 himself. had "Thp Spnalp is helm; 35km clearly indicated during the ear- to suspend its rules to bail out ll” (“hale 0" the “llmales that the. House of Commons from its "0 "fin-‘9'“ “’OU‘d, “ff-“wen 1“ Own .inrapacity_~ said Senator. future cases of this kind. 0 "all" . . PART or SAME mm. It was a mere—0‘ "muffs: The only reason he would agree to letting it go through this time was because the bill was part of the same package on which the earlier debate took place. and it didn't represent a complete violation of his prin- . ciple. HOLLYWOOD IAPl Melvin Senator G. P. Burt-hill (L— . who once played ro-l New Brunswick) said it was an heroes with Gretal absolute farce the way bills won the academy awami came into the Senate for quick for best supporting actor Mona apprm'a. ' Senator L.l\1. (louin t1.-»Que- day night for his role. as the. El'lZZlCd Tam‘hf‘l‘ l" Hildr beeI felt quite humiliated about ‘ The veteran British comcdt- the way the sonan was being; into Margaret Rutherford was1 froalocL but he said that to hailed as host supporting an some exent the chamber was ress of 1963 at the 36th annual the victim of circumstances. Oscar Awards awards ceremonies at Santa 5mm“... Thomas (x p. \‘ign Monica Civic Auditorium. Site .1. ,_ Quehef'l 53m that it it Nah/Pd fhf’ dOWd." dmvaflpr 1“ wasn't the Senate's job to study money bills then “why should ‘ we foolishly spend our lime and money to consider the bill?" Neither of the winners was in "my _ The time has come. he said. nmlalas award was "WNW." in be a little more logical. by his fellow player of Hlid.‘_- ...._._.._...._.-._,.-g._- Brandon de Wilde, Fellow Bri- ton Peter listinov accepted int Ncg‘rn actor Sidi.ty Pnilier won an Oscar as the best actor o the year in Lilies On l'he Field. Patricia Neal for her part in Htid was named for Ill best alll‘t-‘SS award. She is preznanf at her Errzliuh home and elw award was accepted on her be- RF-liflelW. RA!“ half by French actress Anna» quake mum arms; nnnhem Wla' W__ Yugoslavia and southern Hun. gary Monday, shook the capt. itals of both (‘tlllnll‘lfls. damag— ing dozens of and thousands flee- An earth 5 towns lace: and sent 'ing in panic He said it Would be necessary "u “we for “prynm. m enflpomle in killed in Yugoslavia and incom- every possible way for the next plele reports reaching Relgradr_ least two persons six weeks while the \l\' Aheg- the Yugoslavia capital. told of well is in dry dock. The Abbie more than 100 injured. some ‘left Sunday. The railway is ‘ seriously. Lward Island and Scolia t Wednesday. working the ferries Prince lid- irnund the clock. A lot will depend on. weather and ice conditions fot the next two weeks. At the. these look favorable. A movement to the province, of gravel. began last night. A‘ Thousands total of 3.500 cars are to move. Mr. Rogers sald an announce- ' members the disaster of the ment by the. railway concern- earthquake at Skopje which in: ferry traffic was expected killed more than l.000 A man also died in Belgranc. apparently of a heart attack in— duced by the excitement of the shaking earth. ironically. he had survived last year's deadly quake in Skopje. fled into the but streets of Belgrade. which re-- 'jnnrthwest of ergrade. I ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. Premier Smallwood told the Newfoundland Legislature Mon- day there is a possibility his government may cede 11,000 square miles of southern Lab- rador to Quebec in exchange for a like portion of northern Que- ‘ Mr. Smallwood said the ‘idea came ' discussions ' with Premier of Quebec. “What emerged from our dis— ctissions is the. thought and it is no more than a thought-~tliat Newfoundland might exchange a piece of her Labrador terri- _tory in the south for a piece of .Quebec territory in the north." the premier ' I “This exchange. if m a d e. would mean that Newfoundland ,and Quebec would each receive a piece of land about the same sin: that It gave. i Lesage f r as 1 am aware f ~there is no mineral or timber wealth in the piece of Labrador territory that Quebec would get. I have no knowledge of what ' may or may not be in the Que- bec territory that Newfoundland t_ would receive " . He said Quebec's Inlf‘l‘f‘sl in 1 the South Labrador territory ‘ is that it contains the headwat- ‘ers of Quebec Rivers flowing .into the north shore of the Gulf . of St. Lawrence. Premier Smallwood told the . Legislature he wished to make it absolutely clear "there is no power capable of forcing \‘euu ‘foundland to agree to any , change of the boundary." ‘VO’I‘F. POSSIBLE The premier indicated the {boundary question may be the 1 subject of a plebiscite or prove _ incial election if it meets oppo- rnifion in the legislature. Mr. Smallwood. reading his statement before a packed gal- lery. repudiated an article in e current issue. of Time mag‘ azine that said Newfoundland would cede a large portion of southern Labrador to Quebec in exchange for Quebec's approval .of an agreement on the Ham- ilton Falls power corporation. "The Time article is a mix- ture of correct and incorrect statements," said Mr. Small- Miirkei OutlookWGuotl-F Spud Shipper Reports Potatoes are bringing Shh per 754pound bag to the farmert and the. market outlook is good, a Charlottetown shipper told the Guardian last night. i The M a in e market is up i slightly. there are no potatoes left from the Ontario and Que hoe crop. and the holdings in the United States are less than last year, he said. From the Prince Edward is- land Potato Marketing Board it was learned that shipments in date from the 1063 crop here are some 021 carloads up from this time a year ago. The overall shipments from [some walls cracked damage was reported in Bel-l rade but schools and many factories and offices rinsed Budapest radio liaid the llllll-‘ garian capital was shaken aiitit ‘ reported pame in southern Hilll-’ gary. .\u tille i SEVERAL TOWNS I).-\.\1At;1-ZII. Several prmmcial towns weir. damaged but there were no CAN'- tiallies. the lll‘tlJIdt‘nSl added. The quake also was felt in Western Rlllllillliil but appat ently caused no damage The Belgrade i station plat-ed the centre of the quake about 125 miles west oi SClSllllIfl‘apll Belgrade. and the tirst death lwru reported in that area A 13-year-old girl the collapse of a staircase at a School in llakovo. At Kara vultovo, t 75 l‘lllL“ 75 fee,» -‘ ‘ a and‘ if have taken steps to find out1 was killed in' ’aged at Szeksut'd. 16 PAGES El Issue Reaction : May Spark Vole wood “\'o agreement fins been made in change the boom-larg— no agreement. no bargain. no deal, no commitments. "Ii reel is therefore quite incor- uheu the magazine says at anything in the nature of a bargain has been made be. tween Premier Lesage and me that Quebec will buy Hamilton power if Newfoundland agrees to thanges in the boundary." ,'\lr. Smallwood said in his conversations with Premier Le-t saze he made it abundantly clear \‘ewfonndland's p of i e y was to treat the Hamilton Falls development project and the Labrador boundary as two sep- arate things. completely on- cotiiteeted " 0n the whole l\\|l0 of a pos- sible boundary change. Premier Smallwood said he had made no commitments beyond lit! promise to bring the matter by lure the house of assembly. MAY RF. REFERRED He said if the House after considering it did not give it overwhelming approval "my feelin: is the matter should then be referred in tlu3 people of Newfoundland." This could be done in either of two ways' lion or a secret b dtim. general elec- allot referem He s a id Newfoundland”! would react violently to any suggestion of force or compul- tlie development of Ham-ilton Falls." Mr. Smallwood said he sent a copy of Monday‘s statement to Premier Lesage, who “fully un— derstands and appreciates our feeling in the matter. just as I understand and appreciate tho feeling of the people of Quebec. "My statement to Premier Le- sage on the boundary question was that this question. if we consider it at all. would haveto be considered lll the light of justice and common sense. and not as part of any bargaining or trading. My impression is that Premier Lesage did not reject this approach in the problem. August 1063 through Maw-ll a! this year were 9.432 earl na d l which is tip 743 car: over the same period a year ago. Shipments for the first l0 day. of April this year of 562 earloadll .are tip 78 earlnads over those for the same period in April '3 . 100. However. the marketing board spokesman explained. ship- ments in April a year ago reach- ed lhe tremendous total of 1.700 ears. so that shipments from the prov int-e this year will have to be unusually heavy to It... pace with that performance. Quake Raffles Wide Area In Yugoslavia, Hungary when knocked from I at an ambulance stalio 'l‘lie epicentre was a short distance son t h of Slavonslei Brod. a railway and tural centre 10 persons were injured, two so- riously, About 40 houses were razed, 100 badly damaged and staircase n. [the local hospital was so hard hit the 200 patients had in be moved to tents The town is 135 miles west of Belgrade. From the Slavnnski Br Gd ‘ area the quake rnllerl north and northwest across the Danube River Valley and on 50 mile. north into Hungary. rt. .1 houses wrecked or damaged and chimneys falling an. front towns and village: in a wide area of northern Yugo.“- via. Budapest radio um buildings m” “"9 mall! CI. and“ border about m mm. lJuly. Building: swayed analyear ~ old woman wax l\lllf.‘fl i west of the Human T