ate = NEGRO HOME BLASTED | 1963. Police Capt. McDowell said of Thursday's oe , Unidentified sie officers check damage caused by an apparent dynamite explosion which injured at least one Ne- gro boy Thursday morning. Police Capt. Maurice House Repatriated Constitution ; Can-End Sad Status Quo. MONTREAL (CP) Eric , are iinpleménted, “. diitaees | “But today, raiations between Kierans, Quebec revenue min-' outcome” is possible in the governments are more complex | ister, said -here Canada can Ottawa - British Columbia im- | and it would be easy to si10w unlock itself from “‘an unhappy passe over federal banking pol- that such a measure would ser- status quo” by repatriating the cies. Canadian constitution and at-| He was referring to a Feb. 6 initiatives and obligations. taching more importance to fed- announcement in the Commons “And yet, on any strict and eral-provincial conferences. by Finance Minister Gordon that | legalistic interpretation of the | Ottawa ‘intends to ‘British Nerth Rotary~.Club of Montreal that | amendments to the | acts |iawa ‘is perfectly within its | said’ force of the medias “Themae bomb: Was about the same as that which killed four Negto girls in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing Sept. 15, blast ‘that, ‘in my opinion, it was dynamite.” (AP Wirephote) fiously interfere with provincial | Ontario French— See Possibility _Of Move To Que. TORONTO . (CP) Some Frene - Canadians in Ontario pooh they may have to go to | ebec to preserve their heri- | tage. ms royal commission on ee and biculturalism here. young. spokesman for LAs- | | oltsataen des. Etudiants~ de | Langue Francaise du Nord de YOntario (Association of | French-Language Students of | Northern Ontario , said their }language will gradually. decline /until it disappears, unless im- ; mediate—measures, are taken. Gaetan Gervais, a student at Laurentian University in Sud- bury, said. Northern - Ontario students feel they are in a dead consider__that_t | “live, as it were, in a ghetto.” | Language was an obstacle to) /metics empire, died Thursday. | stowal upon ‘womanhood of age- 14 Te Gerda, Charan, PL, Ae 2, 108 ede me GIRL GOES TO PAY DUES; ELECTED BOSS OF UNION an... I stood up and ols ney ee there were any other nomina- BIRMING-H.A M...England (AP)—A 1%year-old gir! who attended a union meeting just to her dues is Britain’s tions. and there were none ” | youngest 2 Bh boss VOTE UNANIMOUS “I'm absolutely thrilled.” Her election was unani- Said dark - haired’ Valerie mous. Cresswell, “but you can say “I think I'm fully aware of ; I'm the most: surprised girl in my presidential responsibili- Birmingham.” ties. she said, ‘and I hope to » Her union’ is the FElectrie carry them: out to the best .of Trades Union. Valerie now-is = my ability.” i president of the 2.40)-member Said Harry Mason. regional Ticninghem branch and has secfetary for the union: + been appointed to the “Valerie is a good union | pl oll Trades Union member, and she’s not afraid | ‘Council. to stand up to the manage- ment. We're expecting great things. We're sure she'll give a strong jead to our women | “The only -reason | went to that mocting was to pay my subs (subscription or dues’,” said Valerie. . members.” “I didn’t even knownaey Valerie. assembles lighting were taving an electjon. but. fixtures, QS Cosmetic Queen: | oe | Dave Peacock, “recently: — Named acting livestock direc- tor for the province is. seen Dies In New York “NEW YORK (AP) — Helena nae “at” the Angus steer” that went reserve grand champion at the Easter Beet ~ Show York. ce EASTER BEEF = SHOW RESERVE GRAND tor Tha MacDonald.” Ina’s father, Irving MacDonald, is at the halter. Artchil Gourielli - Tehkonia: In, London Council (GLC), ‘wheel WELL - 18 CAPPED ‘tralia with . dozen jars of Private life. Pr Rubinstein | jing over 32 boroughs carved out ;* EDSON, Alta. (CP)—A natu f ‘was known a unwieldly Lond: ' : home - made face cream, She 8 Princess Gour-| of the. old aly on ral gas well, that “had been — a tiny, peppery queen a $100,000,000 world-wide cos- emigrated there as -a young ‘ielli. | county council’s 85-borough net- girl. (uae had aon enade | work, had been in office only a : : in advance o r death | few hours when it an ced BU: SINESS VENDETTA ‘for continuation of her ‘far-flung | £35,000,000 (9105.00.00) se Ts She opened her first New business operations. A company |paign to modernize the older York salon in 1915, embarking announcement said her majot-|houses and apartments built by OF ° a ey vengetta ei ity stock in Helena Rubinstein |jts predecessor. the then reigning queen ~ of | Incorporated, be closely | : -American beauty culture, Eliz- | held _by oa ° igh eee ae ee Her age, Which she long had kept secret, was revealed as 4. Mme. Rubinstein, as she was known in more than 100 nations where her firm operates, had as her life-long aim the be- spouting poisonous hydro- gen sulphide gas for two weeks, has been capped successfully, a svehe an for. Hudson's ay Gas Company™ of Cal- ‘less beauty. She once declared: “It is easy in America to en- visage a time when ne woman will ever leok old, regardless of her age—indeed,” the time is practically here right now.” Essentially a skin specialist, Mme. Rubinstein also was cred- they |ited through = nonety aren woman to a sees and tia until these things are done Can-—- which, would-_control__the__com- | SS though ce rtdim free: tie iaerovement of” relations (ess which has made her sym- position. of bank ownership. | SEES NEW ATTITUDE |doms that provitigial govern- Mr. Kierans said Mr. Gord- | ments now ‘enjdy “do go quietly on's proposals to prov-! gown the drain.’ : ee ee t ownership of | “This erosion of ownership, have passed without a ripple 10 ne said, “amounts to virtual years ago. nationalization.” mat ada will be’ locked in an “un- happy status quo” which> thwarts. the ‘‘legitimate_aspira-__ Quebec” and blocks Progress towards bicultural and binational unity. Mr. Kierans said %e can fore- see that, once these measures Military. Task For. Canad May Mean Nuclear Arm By DAVE McINTOSH . that they. would operate under designed_ to block: any Commu ’ OTTAWA ' (CP)—Canada has cover of air support which has nist incursions on NATO’s ex- taken on a new military task.in the capability of delivering tac- treme flanks in Europe: Nor- with tieir’ English-speaking fel- |’ | low students. He. spoke in French to the 10- ,man. royal commission as it- | opéned a three-day sitting here. The’ commission heard spokes- men for nine organizations dur- ) ing “the day. | .Mr. Gervais’ creation of a French secondary schools sys- | tem in “Ontario. . Prof David M. Hayme of tae » University of Toronto's French Saeer speaking in support a brief from the department, suid he would favor diiingual ere rather than French brief . proposed im- foonetlnee and enlargement in French‘ teaching and cultural exchanges between Ontario and Quebec. J bolic throughout the world. Polish. - born, Mme. 8ubin- {Stein's career began in Aus- — the North Atlantic alliance which involves possible use of | nuclear weapons, informed sources disclosed here. However, the Canadian troops jnadian participation inthe force | concerned. will not themselves dees not involve a new nuclear be. armed with such weapons, they added. Canada has contributed aj} 1,000-man battalion group-to the 5,000-man NATO special air- borne force. Other participating NATO. members \ are, Britain, ' the United States, West. Ger-. many, Belgium and Italy. Gen.t Lyman L. Lemnitzer, supreme allied commander in Europe; has “stated that the force now has a nuclear. capa- bility. Informed sources here, the: troops in the- force~ are equipped with nuclear arms but said Passamaquoddy Plan =a Seen A Losing Batt! WASHINGTON (CP) — Inte- rior Secretary Stewart Udall in- dicated Wednesday ‘he -is fight- ing a battle—and perhaps a losing one—for the Passama- quoddy tidal power project by itself. ‘ Passamaquoddy, the long-de- bated project in New Bruns- wick’s high-tidal Bay of Fundy off the Maine coast, has been under ‘very intensive” study within the United States govern- _ment, Udall told a press -con- ference. He had been asked where the Passamaquoddy stands in 1965 planning. There had~ been in- formed reports the interior de- partment might seek a half- and-half approach to the whole concept of Passamaquoddy tied in with a hydro dam on the upper Saint John River near Quebec at a site called Dickey. Estimatéd cost by the U.S. Corps of Army Engineers for the “whole package was $896,000,000 and $582,000.000 for Quoddy alone. Udall said Wednesday he has conterred in the last two weeks with Kermit Gordon, head of the budget bureau which has, a major rol@ in approving seat ing plans. ' CLOSE TO DECISION “We are very close to a de- termination and _ decision of | some kind.” Udall said. But the fact was -current interest rates were against construction of . Passamaquoddy by itself. He said the cost-benefit ratio for Quoddy. had been a shade better than 1 to 1, meaning that its economic return would a slightly higher than invest Bat with the current c borrowing ‘money to build the project,“ which would be the first such in the Western Hemis- phere the cost-benefit ratio had fallen below 1 to 1. “Our own view is that Pass- “amaquoddy should not be put on the procrustean bed used to measure other water projects, ot tical nuclear weapons. NUCLEAR ROLE SMALLER | way in the north and Greece = and Turkey in the southeast. CITED. FOR BRAVERY . a | Officials maintained, that, Ca- | t for this country, especially\.in the light of Prime | Minister arson’s statement that he would expect a dimu- | E nition” rather than an increase \coney. 7 wach in Canada’s nuclear roles. The Canadian armed forces ‘TRANSPORT TESTED now have three. weapons sys-| RCAF transports have already — tems, which can. deliver nuclear flown. Canadian Army equip- warheads -- the CF-10A jet ment to Bardufoss in northern bomber, the Honest John artil- Norway for cold-weather test- lery rocket and the Bomare ing. A few Canadian soldiers | anti-aircraft missile — and are took part in a small.reconnais- about to get a fourth, the air-to- sance exercise there by the air Genie nuclear rocket for (force. | Voodoo jet interceptors. The .Canadian contingent In | The NATO special -force is the airborne force is the Battalion ofthe Black Watch | Regiment, stationed at ome Gagetown, N.B. This battalion, augmented by commit an emer- ain and winter warfare and | = fly to Norway late ‘-this § year for a full-scale exercise. Members of the Black Watch | now are being referred to here | ,as the only kilted ski troops | )im the world.” , Ist |. Canada does not contribute to the force's aif support of six TORONTO (CP) ‘squadrons of jet fighter-bomb- iers..It is the o participant |whose contingent/is \stationed on ithis.side of the |planes “Conn the, 70-year-olld hockey mil- liomaire who won honors in two §. world wars, has been cited for | bravery again — this time for | rescuing his dog Billy. The - tario Humane} Society lists Mr. | Smythe among? recipients of. awards to be presented April” 22. | Shortly after his 70th ‘birthday in Febrdary, Mr.°’Smythe jumped into a chest-deep pond to save Billy. Udall said: Passamaquoddy was not a routine project in his | opinion and “it is my own hope that we can move -forward.” He mentioned possibilities of firm power in Eastern Canada \) —apparently referring to the Hamilton Falls in’ Labrador— seem to hold promise of a | strong trans - boundary powér | link. The proposed Dickey Dam | itself is near, the Canadian bor- der, he-said. | But ‘Dickey itself has some opposition in -Maine.-A private power interest has filed an ap- plication before the federal power -commission to build a hydro site on the’ Ajlagash River near the Dickey, site. Phis may never go. ahtywhere, how- ever, infofmants say. Industrial Co-Operation Needs Study NEW YORK (CP)—Industry Minister Drury of Canada said here Canada and the US. must investigate new areas of industrial co-operation in search of ‘mutual economic and social benefits. He told the Traffic Club of New York that ‘the-recent auto tariff agreement and the nego- | seer for a new air travel A st DuPont's a The creators“of Nylon, Da come up with CORFAM, agreement “are real milestonzs in the history of oir co-opera- | | tion.” Mr. Drury said the continen. | tal approach to Canada - US. problems has also heen recog- ‘ed the first Jarman shoes made of ; upper. “ maierial. Corfam looks and feels like fine leather. It is flexible and long-wearingg it “breathes”; ep into tomorrow mazing CORFAM cron and Orlon now have “an amazing new shoe Let it rain... men’s all-weather coats let it blow in one of these all abeth Arden. Eventually, Mme. Rubinstein’s business became twice as big in total volume as Miss Arden’s. Mme. Rubinstein, -ever con- temptuous of age, had vowed that she never would retire—. and. she never did. She was at the desk of her Fifth Avenue headquarters Monday. Wednes- taken to New York Hospital, where she died. She had been a widow since her second husband died in) 1958. He was a Georgian prince, | Is SPRING Fashion Time _\men ’s all-weather topcoats will give . molern bathroofs, kitchens and other necessary _|amenities- to municipal proper- ties built as long ago as 1919. Also announced was an am- bitious scheme to build a new rifig highway around inner Lon- Gov't Lays Plans to cope. with the strangled | LONDON (CP)—Quietly, with- out tantare, London's sew lecal et: _situation in the metro- polis. = : Thursday, and immediately | The” Labor government | 2 taid Tuesday. ‘London’s New _— ne i Streamlined launched a drive to improve the | handed ‘the new GLC the aw | capital's and traffic | some task of bringing some | problems. jorder and planning to the cap- The streamlined new Greater |ital’s rush-hour chaos. housing “If we sell them — we service them.” ‘men’s rain and shine coats This spring stay dry and comfortable im this , fully lined coat tailored by Utex. Scotchgard » treated hie of terylene and cotton that is ' : it holds its. shape better and its shine longer; it is more —- look your yery’ best. 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