_ 635-9049. (c?) PAGE A8, THE HERALD, Monday, May 9, 1977 BY TI Clark urges long-term tax aid for firms in depressed areas By ERIC HAMOVITCH ROUYN, Que. CP : Federal Opposition Leader Joe Clark urged the government Sunday to ovide contracts assuring ong-term reductions to firms investing in economicaliy-depressed parts of Canada. ; Clark issued his call in a written statement at the end of a weekend campaign trip to Temiscamingue riding in northwestern Quebec, one of six federal ridings electing new members of Parliament in Ma, 24 byelections. The government’s lack of concern about unem- ployment “is particularly pronounced in areas such as Temiscamingue, where federal policies -have retarded expansion and job creation in the. resource sector,” he said. In a news conference Saturday, Clark called for fax incentives and other stimulants to spur development of mining and other resources in Canada. The government is shif- ting too much energy to social programs while neglecting the resource industries, he said. As he attended Sunday mass, a storm that brough 16 centimetres of snow raged outside. And because of a breakdown in the city 58. Trailers "For Sale: 30 ff. trailer with a friple axle with ball hitch, Also one triple axle with springs and electric brakes. Balt hitch on fifth wheel hook-up. Ail for $3,000, Ask for Gary, Phone 847- 3702, Call after 5 p.m. (p%} For Sale: 10x54 trailer. 13x26 joey shed.: SemI-furnished.! $4,000 or best offer. Call 624-3601 after 6 p.m. or write Box 241, Prince Rupert. (pé) 66. Campers -"For Sale: 1971 Sportseraft tent’ trailer. Hardtop. 12V interior lights. Sleeps 6. 2 new tlres,, geod spare. Call after 5 p.m. - "oasis trailer. New Interlor, mew glass, propane 4 burner stove, electric fridge, propane & electric lights. Sleeps 8. Porta potty. Best offer $2400. Call 635- 7746. (6) , 24° jandem Skipper. hollday fratlier. Self contalned. Ex- cellent condition. $4,200. Phone 635-4002. (p7}- 68. Legal DEPARTMENT OF FORESTS TIMBER SALE A-09217- Sealed fenders will be recelved by the District ‘Forester at Prince Rupert, British Columbia, not tater than - a.m. on the 31st day of May, 1977 for the purchase of Licence A-09217, ta cut 735,200 c.f. of Hemlock, Cedar, Balsam and trees of other species located Lot 6257 and 6259 approx. & mites south of Terrace on Beam Station Road. C.R. 5. One (1) year will be allowed for removal of timber. The successful tenderer will not be considered as an established operator for the purpose of applying for further timber within the Skeena Publie Sustained: Yield Unit. Particulars may be obtained fram the District Forester, Prince Rupert, British Columbia, or the Forest Ranger, Terrace, British Columbla. (¢1,6,11,16) DEPARTMENT OF FORESTS TIMBER SALE A-09219 Sealed tenders witl be recelved by the ODlstrict Forester- at Prince Rupert, British Columbia, not later than 11 a.m. on the 3lst day of May, 1977 for the purchase of Licence A:09219, to cut 553,300 cf. of Cadar, Spruce, Hemloek and frees of other species located 6 miles south of Terrace on High- way 25. C.R. 5 One (1) year will be allawed for removal of timber. The successful tenderer will not be considered as an established operator for the purpose of ‘applying for further timber within the Skeena Public Sustalned- Yield Unit. ; Particulars may be obtalned from the ‘District Forester, Prince Rupert, British Columbia, or the Forest Ranger, Terrace, British Columbla. (c1,6,11,16) water system, Clark had to shave that morning using bottled mineral. water heated in a kettle. Norman Grimard, Progressive Conservative candidate in Temiscamingue said in an interview that of 36 mines once active in the region, only six still are in production. He blamed federal capital-gains tax for the layoff of thousands of $2 million discovered in dead INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) — A wealthy woman was found shot to death Saturday in her home where police discovered more than $5 million in cash stuffed in trasheans, drawers and tool boxes, Police said the home had been set afire. The blaze had been set in two places, and, police said they found evidence that gasoline was used to ignite the fire. Marjorie Jackson, clad in flannel pyjamas and a housecoat, was found dead on the kitchen floor. She had been shot once at close range with a .22-calibre pistol, Deputy Coroner Charles Green said. Money found in the house totalled $5,015,480, the miners and a sharp drop in prospecting. Some residents say the mines, particularly the Noranda Mines Ltd. copper mine in Noranda, Rouyn’s twin city, were closed because the ore ran out. Noranda Mines continues to operate a smelter there, but it processes:ore brought in from northerastern Ontario. It is feared that a planned smelter at Tim- MURDER VICTIM mins, Ont., may one day force its closure. Rouyn-Noranda com- prises about half the population of Temiscamingue, which is 38 percent French-speaking. The unemployment rate is 19 _— percent. ; For years it was the fiefdom of the late Real Caouette, whose sone Gilles is carrying the Social Credit colors in the byelection. f a woman's trash. Marion County sheriff’s department said. ' Mrs. Jackson was the, widow of Chester Jackson, son of the founder of the former Standard Grocery chain, Jackson died in 1970, leaving an estate estimated at $14 million. Green said he thought the: 66-year-old woman had been dead for two to four days, although fire investigators said it was unlikely the fire had been smoldering for that long. An estimated $2 million cash was found in a garbage can in Mrs. Jackson’s bedroom, -detectives said, and sizeable sums were found concealed elsewhere in the home, including some in a vacuum cleaner hag. Spanish pretender dies a bitter man MADRID (Reuter) — For Prince Xavier of Borbon- Parma, death on Saturday in a small Swiss town far from Spain ended a life of bitter disappointment. The 88-year-old prince’s family of Carlist pretenders retains claims to the throne of Spain in a dispute going back to the Spanish War of Succession in 1700. And Prince Xavier, a distant cousin of King Juan Carlos, clung to the dream of seeing a Borbon-Parma on the Spanish throne. He renounced his own claim in favor of his elder son Carlos Hugo, under whose direction the Carlist movement has become increasingly radical, | Prince Xavier was born May 25, 1889, in Tuscany, northern Italy, and as a young man __ studied agricultural engineering and political science in Paris. SPANISH PRINCESS EXPELLED PAMPLONA, Spain (Reuter) — Princess Irene of the Netherlands, wife of Prince Carlos Hugo. of Borbon Parma, pretender to the Spanish throne, was expelled from Spain on Sunday, Carlist sources _ said. Paramilitary civil guards stopped her at a checkpoint near here and escorted her to the French border. - Princess Irene had come to take part in an annual rally of the Carlist party at Montejurra which has been banned by the government. Several leading Spanish Carlists, followers of Prince Carlos Hugo, were also detained but freed after a few hours. The sources said Prince Carlos Hugo, who is barred from Spain, slipped into the country but left for Swit- zerland to attend the funeral of his father, Prince Xavier, who died there Saturday. Civil guards manned roadblocks around Mon- tejurra to stop the Carlists from holding their traditional rally. In January, 1936, when the weakened second Spanish republic edged toward civil war, he was named regent of the Carlist movement by his uncle Alfonso Carlos. But at the start of the war, he was expelled from Spain by the late Gen. Francisco Franco afier disagreeing over the political objectives of his insurgent offensive against the republic. Thousands of Carlist volunteers, nonetheless, supported Franco, and their - red berets and fierce fighting won them fame in the three-year conflict. Prince Xavier was con- demned. to death by the Gestapo during the Second World War after being arrested for supporting the French resistance movement. But he was freed by American troops in 1944, to assume the leadership of _ Carlism and to return to Spain in 1952. His followers proclaimed him king at a congress in Barcelona—but the act was not recognized by any other European royal family and it provoked Franco to expel him a second time. Soviet aid rises WASHINGTON (AP) — A sharp increase in Soviet aid to Third Worid countries in the last two years and its expansion into black Africa suggest ‘‘the emergence of a new imperial phase in Russian history,” a Library of Congress study says. The study, made public Saturday, said the con- tradiction between Soviet desires for detente and aggressive new actions in Africa carry the danger of ‘potential confrontation and war’ with the West. It said aggressive Soviet support for the victorious faction in the Angolan civil war is being interpreted by some experts as an in- dication of the new imperial phase. And it noted the Kremlin’s role in building a black guerrilla force in Mozambique and Tanzania to fight against white-run Rhedesia. Two 1977 Sevilles, one unlicensed and _ ‘partly covered with a blanket, were found in the: - garage, detectives said. ~ Police speculated Sunday that the killers may have been three burglars Mrs. Jackson once refused to prosecute. Although the fortune was left untouched, police said robbery might have been the killers’ motive. They said the victim’s purse and a - suitcase she used to tran-. sport money are missing. Police would not identify the three suspects, but said they had allegedly broken: into Mrs. Jackson’s home in January. They said she refused to prosecute at the time. Deputy Coroner Charles Green said Mrs. Jackson died between Thursday and Friday night. speculated that the suspects might have returned to the home early Saturday to start the fire. . N-CONTROL EYED BY LEADERS LONDON (Reuter) — U.S, President Carter and six other non-Communist world leaders, unable to settle differences over controls on the export of nuclear technology, bought more time Sunday to find a solution. The problem in which the United States has taken a tougher stance than its partners emerged as the most difficult issue at the . seven-country economic summit that ended here Sunday. n : . At a final news con- ference, Carter explained that the summit leaders from Canada, the United. States; Japan, West Ger- many, Britain, France and — Italy have ordered experts to prepare a report on means of increasing in- Cadillac _ ternational controls over ..nucldar technology exports within two months. But West German officials added a note ‘of discord at the summit when they warned that the Bonn government would not feel bound by the experts’ find- ings. ; West Germany and France are in the forefront of the critics of Carter. Carter said Sunday the United States—as a major supplier of enriched uranium for nuclear power—stresses the im- portande of making sure the uranium is not diverted for making into exolosives, Carter banned the shipment of enriched ‘uranium to European countries in order to press them to tighten control procedures. He partially Police lifted the ban on the eve of: the summit but this did not ease the path to agreement in London. ee since 1970 in Narita airport During May you'll get a real bargain...the Herald will be going into every household . POLICE-PROTESTERS CLASH Riot leaves bloodbath: at Japanese airport TOKYO (AP) — Riot police battled on Sunday with firebomb-throwing demonstrators trying to. block the opening of Tokyo’s new international airport.” About 300 protesters and 110 policemen were injured, po- lice said. No deaths were reported, although one person was in critical condition after being hit in the head by a police tear-gas projectile, officers said. Police arrested 33 demonstrators. The violence erupted after about 3,700 students and farmers confronted 4,000 riot police near the new Narita airport, 40 miles east of midtown Tokyo. . The demonstrators blocked roads to the airport, set fire to two automobiles and pushed the burning cars toward police lines. One of thé cars smashed into a garage, damaging it. Police, backed by ar- mored cars, fired more than. 300 teargas shells and took several hours to disperse the crowd. The new airport, which is intended to relieve congestion at the Tokyo airport at Haneda, has drawn protest from farmers and students. The farmers have ob- jected to the selzure of their land for the airport project, and the students, who for- med most of the crowd Sunday, contend the airport ' will be used for military purposes. En- vironmentalists. have also protested against the air- port project because it might require the laying of a long fuel pipeline from a nearby port. Three policemen have been killed and more than 1,200 policemen injured demonstrations. Hundreds of demonstrators have been hurt and more than 470 arrested. Although the airport was completed in 1972 at the cost of $553 million, its opening has been delayed by the protests. Authorities caught protesters by surprise Friday when they moved in with a court order and tore down wo towers the demonstrators had built to block the runways. oy On Saturday, 4 Japanese: made YS-11 turboprop jet aircraft made a test Landing at the airport after making several passes, Demon- ‘strators had burned rubber tires in an effort tq obscure the runway. The airport is expected to be open by’ next fall, although landing patterns and a method of tran- sporting passengers to Tokyo are still to be deter- mined. IN THE AIR . One language plan promptedbyCanada MONTREAL (CP) — An international air traffic controller group . that criticized © Canada’s bilingual air com- munications policies was heavily influenced by its Canadian members, says the president of a group of French-speaking aviation workers.. Roger Demers, president of the Association des Gens de l’Air, said the resolution condemning Canada's policies was ‘‘rammed down’ the throats of members of the -.In- ternational Federation of Air Traffic Controllers Association (IFATCA) at their annual meeting in Cyprus recently, He said in an interview that the Canadian con- tingent at the meeting was made up of English- speaking officials of the Ca- nadian Air Traffic Control Association (CATCA), which has been opposing bilingual air com- The international meeting approved a resolution Thursday endorsing the use: of one universal Language in air-ground com- munications. English is the generally-accepted , language, the resolution noted. It said the organization opposes a dual-language system for safety reasons. The meeting also sent a telegram to Prime Minister — Trudeau condemning federal policies on bilingual alr traffic control. Detners said the IFATCA group is not very representative. The United States contingent quit last | year, he said, and Canada is’ one of the main contributors to the treasury of the organization. “IT don’t attach much importance to the resolution,” he said adding that more than one language is used in air traffic control munications in this country, . at many European airports, Can turn your don’t wants into cash with a Herald Classified ‘ad. in Terrace and Kitimat. Fill in your ad. copy below (one word per space) and send with $2.00 to The Herald 321 . 2 Kalum St. Terrace SFBEEBEEBSARERGAREORRR ARERR AE RRRRREARRRRREORR ERD ¥ 1 ‘ . ” reas 1 1 oayon nh eens seen ee eee ORES R Rene