I UnemploymentPicture Shows Little Change 14 The Guardian. Charlottetown. Mon. April 22. 1963. Alvin (‘urley and Miss Mar- ion Bryanton are seen here receiving their prizes for oh- taining the highest point ag- gregate in the pro-marriage course conducted this winter Canadian Economy Registers 8 Per Cent Gain lastYear By ALAN DONNELLY OTTAWA ICPr —-- Canada‘s economy registered an eight~ per-cent gain last year in the value of its total production. the advance was showing signs of running out of steam: towards the year's end. ‘ Gross national product~value of all goods and services pro-‘ dllf‘Pd--i‘DSP to $40.40].000,000 from the revised 1961 figure of 557.421.000.000. the Dominion" Bureau of Statistics reported. ‘ It was the largest economic? advance since the 1956 boom. Higher prices accounted for about. one-quarter of the gain. In volume terms. output rose PRE-MARRIAGE COURSE PRIZE WINNERS _ lSubstantiaI Boost Noted ‘ In Canadian Nickel Sales tially increased nickel I ____ w ._ ,, pounds. an increase at moral than 10 per cent over the final three months of 1962. Deliveries or its own production were up more than 15 per cent. For the year as a whole. Info, ' -‘tdliermorenice TORON [‘0 'CP) -— Substan-lhave been reported by Henry s. 15:33"; 13629 V Sale" Wingate, chairman. at the an? A m I I nual meeting of :remains good that deliveries of km) P'enny and highlight“ the’ ' '01 'hest “’9 9"” have ‘9' earned in the final quarter of This meant that. it it were nott agreement for 1960 covers a entertainment. ted that $70 waq‘Cofigagggga132332113336“ d9. cngde 3' 1962. Final figures willbqavail-ffor its operations. pantadg audit; 3 ggmiessépfigéielt) :ledlCtiln. ‘relatllZ‘L‘SS the ‘bring a nd liveries in the'first three months Nevertheless, Mr. Wingate able in about a months time. iii-100: “fifflflaa‘gts Elwm’ldI needs of the national econimi: .tbuyv sale held bv the associa- of this J ear. Mr. Wingate continued. the rate. of deliveries n the corresponding first}; vin an” 25 per cent greater. ‘ of both mumries‘" 3 tion at the March meeting. istated, totalled nearly 85.000.000‘15 below production capacity quarter of 1962 net earn 115;: a e , nickel-containing materials. “and the prospect; International :our own production will be the more “a the cmmy' r, emdmgjwere 321211.000. The figuru arel Dml CHINA BILL! its research facilities and intern-5m U-S- czmfiy-wmm com: LONDON rAP) .— Communist slfylng its efforts to invent mummy:1 “396 after 'paymem of ford China and the Soviet Union .clgn liabilities including dm_; signed a new trade agreement dends to “Mfume!” 0; Cam! Saturday in Moscow. the Soviet the companyus operation“ news agency Tass reported. 'th Russians also agreed to defer payments by Peking due from 1900. The news agency said the u EARN MORE . The company estimates its net i ada. l . ’ . ‘ ‘ earnings in the first quarter of i resultefd in bringhinigg inérzmtg- this ear were up $2.000. or;na a oreign exc an e - y the $22,210,000 lent to more than 3220000000. at the Basilica. Making the presentation to Rev. Preston Hammill who conducted the 15-week course. attended by 130 people. Father Hammill also conducted a 10-week course for married people at the same time. The presenta- tion was made last Friday night at a banquet and dance in the Charlottetown Hotel. for those who completed the course. 6.2 per cent. Measured in con-tone per cent was the smallest stant 1957 dollors. GNP rose to since the upswing in the bust. 537.195.000.000 from $35.023.000,- ncss (‘ycle began in the spring DOD—equivalent to a record of 1961. $2.003 for each Canadian. ‘ The 1962 expansion compares: For five years this measure with the 12.7-per-cent Jump in of production per person had GNP in 1950. been below the previous peak The DBS report said the 1961- of $1,959 In 1956. 62 recoveryia total rise of 13.8 - - per cent since the first quarter BgfifNye;§.:9:’11rong growth of lStiI~~was not as strong as rate wasn‘t maintained through- the zo’per'gem g3”) dunng the out. The GNP in the last quar-iggggcssfipzifygssmgmlm of ter of 1962 hit an annual rate . ‘ ' . A , . , 3 seasonally adjusted. of $412.32.: Bl”. "1 'hal Cam” expansion: mlmup 1.2 per mm from *unlike the latest one—a high, the third quarter. Half of the propomm “I we . Omand fort gain was due to higher prices. bonds “'35 m“ by Immns' The volume increase of half of Censor Cut in Story On Stalin MOSt‘OW IAPJ — .Sovici writer II.\'a I‘lhronbur: has published more of his memoirs assailingl Stalin. But they appeared two weeks late and in short form.l arousing speculation they had. been cirt by censors over hisf protest. ‘, The voice of Soviet artists? and writers in revolt ‘ Communist cultural dictation.l Ehroobur'g heard his memoirs? denounced by Premier Khrush-t Chev last year painting too dark a picture of the Stalin era. 5.1 a March meeting with in- tellectuals. Khrushchev also sig- nalled the crackdown on writersr and artists by rejecting Ehren-i burg's thesis of eo-existcncel heiwr-‘on officially approved so-l crabs! realism and Western art forms. Ebrrvnhurg‘s m e m o i r 5 ap-1 pnarorl in the magazine Novy Mir 'New Worldi. The new in-. stalment hart been expected to run 40 to 60 pages but was onlyi 22 pages. half as long as thel first. The magazine also ap-‘ two weeks later than. against Of the purges of his friends: by Stalin. the 72-year-old noveln isl wrote: lconsidered him a maniac." r Douglas Aims At RCMP Probe '1‘. C. of the Suspected VANCOUVER ((‘I’t w Douglas, national leader New Democratic Party said here I the would ask the justice minis- ter “for a select committee of the House of Commons" to look; into security investigation pro-‘ Cedures of the RCMP . “I knew that they were notl In a statement issued fromi traitors but the most honorable: 1"5,d hnmol hf"? Ml!“ hnmgzlasr . , _ sat recon saemens y om- and llpngm WWI“ mat me lo , missioncr C. ’. Harvison of the pressrons against them and RCMP upnints up the. need for commanders of the Red Armv,i a . special committee of the against engineers and the iniel-j House of Commons to look into teiigentsia. had cost our nation; the security investigations of dearly." rthe RCMP. REBUKED SILENT ONES r Hewleflmjr‘“ ‘31.“ “3”” ‘5“? the previous instalmentu‘ ‘ ac e‘ms ‘ dgazme “Inch reported that a Reghta woman was interrogated periodically by the RCMP. .ommissioner Harrison labelled the report of. e incident “pure fabrication, Ehrenburg rebuked C o m m u-‘ nists who knew of Stalin‘s? crimes while he lived bill said nothing. This implied criticism‘ of Soviet leaders who worked: . or Stalin. including Khrush-’ Sa'd Mr-Dm‘glasi chey. :I “i am prepared to produce Khrushchev told the meeting- this woman as 3 “’lmvss before of intellectuals he knew noth-r a Parliamentary mmmltle“ 0" ing of the crimes while Staltnl, any: other body of competent lived. And the party‘s chiot' ide- JUI'IS‘IICIIOW ‘ ologist, Leonid llyichcv. re-j “The tendency to label inno- proached Ehrenburg for writ-' cont people as Communists 01“ mg praises of Stalin while he. had security risks without any knew the truth about his repress-.1 opportunity for them to be‘ ' heard has gone far enough. ; “When Parliament meets 11 shall ask the minister of justice. for a select committee of the House of Commons to investi-‘ gate this whole matter." ‘ Z! c 3 .II In his latest instalment. Eh-i renburg said “I myself wrotel about Stalin the conqueror."t But he said that had be known about the crimes laid at Stal-‘ in's door by the 201h party con-i gress in 1956 "I would have; Recreation Plan By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA tCPt ~~ Both em- ployment and unemployment showed little change between February and Mar h c . The DominionBureau of Sta? (titties and the federal labor de- partment reported that swim orkers were pobless last month. x 4.000 from the previous month lint down 11.000 rom March. 1062 This meant that 8.4 per cent d the labor force was out of work—the same percentage as ‘L'u February. However. this job- ] rate .was down from the war-earlier rate of 8.7 per cent ‘16 well below the 11.1-per-cent‘ of M reduced activ- 5.983.000 worker; mil-March, compared mid—retro: :The Atlantic region. with 09.000 man of the Charlottetown Plav-. lOutIined To H&S The importance of a chil- dren's recreational program to build good. healthy bodies. as well as an educational program strong minds. was Brig. W.W. Reid. Assocr . Schoo T speaker. he who 1s aii- outlined l organ- jobless workers, had the high- ground Commission. est unemployment rate — 15.3 briefly the role of that per cent of its labor force. com- ization. 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