|
![]() |
|
| UFDC Home |
myUFDC Home | Help | RSS
|
|
ALL ISSUES
CITATION
THUMBNAILS
PAGE IMAGE
ZOOMABLE
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Citation | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Text | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
qu -'----I
I ENJOY FREE CHAMPAGNE ON ALL FLIGHTS TO FREEPORT -TELEPHONE 77303/77778- (Reitered with Postmaster of Bahamas for postage concessions within the Bahama.) Nassau and Bahama Islands Leading Newspaper VOL. LXX, No. 122 Saturday, April 14, 1973. "rice 20 Cents SOME WHOLESALERS CANCEL STANDING ORDERS FOLLOWING PRICE CONTROL Some 'breadbasket items' may be scarce ac cost more to SB Fmemo T D I ..... than sell E TEL BEFORE THE DEMOLITION ....... By MIKE LOTHIAN SOME ESSENTIAL "BREADBASKET" FOOD ITEMS are likely to disappear from store shelves in the near future as the cost of importing the commodities are fast rising higher than the Government-controlled selling prices, industry sources warned. Burglar who 'don't feel good' to be sentenced later By SIDNEY DORSETT MURPHY SCAVELLA, a 33-year-old Gregory Town, Eleuthera "character" who pleaded guilty to burglary with intent to rape on January 28, was remanded in custody today for sentencing pending a probation report and medical examination. Mr. Justice Samuel Graham for the kitchen window and apologized for his late jumped out," Mrs. Bostwick appearance in court. He said he said. had been detained on a According to Mrs. chamber matter. The jury was Lightbourne "the window had dismissed to Monday after been secured the night before Scavella pleaded guilty to and the other windows and entering the home of Emily doors in the house were also Lightbourne early on the secured, but after the accused morning of January 28. had left, she said the lock had Mrs. Janet Bostwick, Crown been so badly broken, it could counsel, in outling the case to not lock again," Mrs Bostwick the court said that Scavella told 'Lhe court. seemed "to be a character 1 Scavella was questioned and around Gregory Town, charged by police officers on her said he broke into the January 29 after he confessed She said he broke into the to Inspector Pierre that he had home of Mrs. Lightbourne, a gone into the house while he 71-year-old woman, as she was gone into the house while he asleep in her home with her was drunk. sick 80-year-old sister, Bertha Mr. Justice Graham asked Armbrister, who slept in him what he had to say. After another bed. some hesitation he told the "Mrs Lightbourne then court that his head, his mind, threatened the accused. She and his whole body were not said if he stayed there, she feeling good. And he added: would find her cutlass and cut "The whole of my body ain't him up. Hie then made a dash feeling good." Public urged to help over boat & skiing offenders NOT SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE, SO BOAT CASE DISMISSED CHARGES of skiing and driving a boat within 200 feet of the shoreline were dismissed against Brian Dwyl yesterday when Magistrate Wilton Hercules said that neither the police officer nor the defendant had any accurate measurements as to the distance from the shoreline. The incident was said to have taken place in March 1972 off the Lowes Paradise Island Hotel. Mr. Dwyl was charged under the Motor Boat and Skiing Act. He was, however, fined $25 for not having the boat registered. "It is the word of the police officer against that of the defendant," the Magistrate said. "Neither of these two persons had any accurate measurements as to the distance from the shoreline. "There is doubt in my mind as to where the defendant was actually skiing. He also says that he was not the person driving the boat, his wife was." Magistrate Hercules also said that the charge of "driving a motor boat in the harbour about 200 feet off the shoreline without any course is worded superfluous to the charge." EYE CONTACT TESTS LENSES ROBERT T. HIRST Optomeirist Savoy Bldg. FREEPORT Telephone 352-5906 THE PORT Authority is appealing for the public's cooperation in apprehending motor boat drivers and skiers found breaking the Motor Boat and Skiing Act. Port director Leon Flowers said the public could assist by taking the number of the boat and having another witness present. The incident could then be reported to the Port Authority which would pursue the matter from there. It is understood that a number of ski boat cases are due to come up before the courts within the next few weeks. "We want the public to know that we are most concerned over this matter and welcome any assistance they can give in helping to reduce the danger to swimmers and divers," Mr. Flowess said. British Trade Commissioner John Burn was seriously injured last month when he was struck on the head by a speedboat while snorkelling off Brown's Point. Mr. Burn was flown back to the United Kingdom today for further medical treatment. The wholesale and retail selling prices set by Government on March 28 were based on costs that are now out-dated. Many of the items affected by price controls already cost the wholesalers more than they are allowed to sell them fo', and potatoes are among the items that now carry a landed cost that is higher than the fixed retail prices. As a result, some importers have cancelled orders for certain items. One retail source gave three examples of items that cost more than the price at which they can legally he sold. Five-pound bags of regular potatoes can, tinder the Price Control regulations, be sold for 56 cents wholesale or 72 cents retail. But they cost 72!2 cents. Twenty-five-pound sacks of rice can be sold only at $3.51 wholesale or $4.31 retail. The item costs $4.22 to get into the country. GRITS A one-pound package of grits has its price here pegged HEALTH MINISTRY WINS YELLOW ELDER ARBITRATION THE MINISTRY of Health has won in the arbitration of a dispute with building contractor Prince Strachan over the 100 incomplete houses in Yellow Elder Gardens, Government Senate Leader Paul Adderley disclosed in the Senate Wednesday. Sen. Adderley said "an award has recently been made in favour of the Ministry" in the matter. He did not elaborate. Government appointed former Supreme Court judge Hedworth Smith arbitrator on November 27 last year, after Mr. Strachan filed suit claiming damages for breach of his contract with the Ministry. Two weeks of hearings in the arbitration ended on December 20, and Mr. Smith was to submit his decision later. In March last year Health Minister A. Loftus Roker revealed in the House that Mr. Strachan had received more than half a million dollars for the project, although none of the houses was completed. The buildings were to be part of the Yellow Elder Gardens low-cost housing project. The contract for their construction was signed on August 25,1970. The structures so far consist of only exterior walls, roofs and windows. Virtually all of the windows have been smashed or stolen by vandals. There are no floors or interior walls. 2 ESCAPEES STILL AT LARGE AFTER DASHING TO FREEDOM A BAMBOO Town resident being held at Central Police Station for payment on two traffic offences, escaped at 11.57 a.m. Thursday and is still at large. Carl Butler, described as between 25 and 30, had been picked up on a warrant the day before and was being held in a cell at the station pending payment of his fine by a friend. According to police. Butler said he was thirsty and the constable on duty opened the cell door to lead him down to the water cooler at the far end of the cell block. No sooner had the door opened than Butler dashed past the constable and out the rear door leading to Fast Street. Also still at large is Philip "Polka" Ilumes. 21, accused of murder and armed robbery and scheduled to be tried during the April Criminal Sessions. at 19 cents wholesale, 23 cents retail. The package costs the importer 20 cents. The source said those cost figures were based on orders filled some days ago, and all the costs have since gone up further at the source. "We seldom receive the same price twice," he said. Sources said the price limits set by Government last month are based on costs that had changed even before the controls came into force. "Most of the items have gone up at the sources since the Commission checked," an industry spokesman said. "Practically all of them have gone up. "A lot of them are now landing at a cost higher than the controlled wholesale price, 4nd some are even landing at a cost higher than the controlled retail price. CANCELLED "I understand a lot of the wholesalers have cancelled outstanding orders until this can be straightened out," the source said. "More than likely, the town will be out of certain items before too long. I'm talking about what the Government calls breadbasket items." Sources said the pegged wholesale and retail prices provided "a fair and reasonable profit margin," based on the cost figures at the time the prices were fixed. But costs have increased; and this increase has not been taken into consideration. "If controls have be instituted, they should have been to limit the mark-up, not the dollars-and-cents price. Then there wouldn't have been any problem. But they pegged the prices at a fixed level, and it has caused a lot of trouble," one source commented. As soon as price controls were brought into effect, industry sources said, wholesalers and retailers brought facts and figures before the Prices Commission to show the Government's cost figures were out of date, and the pegged prices therefore unrealistic. The Commission has yet to take any action, and many of the items are being sold, at both the wholesale and the retail levels, at a loss. Wholesale food dealers have lodged a new appeal, and Mr. Vincent Higgs is to represent the wholesalers at a meeting with the Commission on Tuesday. IMPOSSIBLE "It is impossible to sell goods for less than they are costing us," Mr. Higgs declared. A further complaint by food dealers is that a number of "obviously luxury" items have been included in the list of controlled goods, even though the list was to have encompassed only essential commodities. It was pointed out that. for example, butter is certainly ai essential, but the prices of certain brands clearly place them in the luxury bracket. Land O' Lakes butter has been pegged by Government at $1.42 a pound, and June Dairy at $1.24 while almost all the other brands of butter have been frozen at 68 cents a pound. "Land O' Lakes and June Dairy are clearly luxury brands," a source said, 'They should not be controlled." A DEMOLITION CREW moved onto property on Farrington Road this morning to tear down this home owned by Lucy Rahming but unoccupied at the time, and the home nearby of Marion Miller. Other homes on the site were demolished by a bulldozer last Friday on orders, it is understood, of the family who claim ownership of the property. The occupants were evicted by a court order. PHOTO: Philip Symonette ..... AND AFTERWARDS MRS. MARION MILLER, second from left in the background, looks at her worldly possessions put outside before a crew of workmen arrived this morning to destroy her home on Farrington Road. PHOTO: Philip Symonette Farrington Road youth defies workmen who ordered to demolish his home By MIKE LOTHIAN A FARRINGTON ROAD YOUTH this morning defied police and workmen to defend his home, but his stubborness only delayed the demolition of his wooden home for 45 minutes. US Treasury Secretary here for conference GEORGE Shultz, Secretary of the Treasury, arrived from Washington this week with Dr. John Dunlop, Director of the Cost of Living Council, to attend the Time Fortune Sports-Illustrated Energy Conference 1973 at Lyford Cay. The publications are hosting the conference, which brings together members of business and government to discuss ways of finding solutions to the world's energy needs while maintaining a concern for the environment. The meeting, held at the Lyford Cay Club, is attended by about 85 delegates, who are accompanied by their wives. The conference opened on Thursday and ends tomorrow. JOE LLEIDA IS MUCH IMPROVED MR' JOSEPH Lleida, who entered hospital on April 3 was, reported today as much improved, but was expected to remain at the Princess Margaret lHospital for a further two weeks. Mrs. Lleida said today both she and her husband were very grateful to the number of people who volunteered blood on behalf of Mr. Lleida. COLLISION & CRASH DUE TO HUMAN ERROR MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIt. (AP)--The collision and crash of a Space Agency jet and a navy aircraft that took 16 lives apparently was caused by humans error, the navy said today. "Someone made an error ,t course" in the collision that sent the navy turboprop and the larger jet plummeting in flames onto a golf course Thursday as the twoi planes approached the navy's Moffett Field for landings, said Rear Adm. Herbert S. Ainsworth. One person survived the crash. The six workmen, hired by the family who claim ownership of the Farrington Road property, took several hours this morning to tear down a house owned by Lucy Rahming who moved out this week before moving at about 10:50 to tear down another house, owned by Marion Miller. Colin Ilenchell, apparently in his late teens or early twenties, a relative of Mrs. Miller's who lived with her, stood on the porch of the house and defied the workmen to lift a hammer or crow-bar against his home. When young Ilenchell ignored a police constable's request to move so the demolition could proceed, the workmen walked a few yards away and waited while the policenian called for re-inforcemrents. Given when three more policemen arrived on the scene at about 11:30, ttenchell for a tew minutes stood his ground. INTO RAIN But hie finally stepped from the porch and told the wo01rkmen: "I hope you glad to see people put out in the rain. But don't worry, I'm going to make sure this come back in your lace." The labourers began their work, but under continued harassment from Ilenchell - all but one of the policemen had left first one then another of the workmen left the house until, by about 11.45. only one rman remained inside, knocking out walls and wckening supports. The rest of the crew went back to work only when the house was ready to be pulled down by a length ofl cable. IToday's destruction was the final stage in the deomlition of five homes and a grocery store, which was started by a bulldozer on Friday, April 6. Named in the eviction notices were Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Rahming, Stanford Strachan, Earnest Davis and Muriel Ingraham. The homes of the latter three and Mrs. Rahming's small grocery store were all flattened by the bulldozer last week. A part of Mrs. Miller's home was also brought down at the time. EVICTED The 17 people who occupied the buildings were evicted and their homes ordered wrecked. Their dispute is with the family of the late Albert Smith. The tenants, who had lived on the property for from 17 to 31 years, had paid rent to Mr. Smith and, on his death, to his son Leander. When Leander died some two years ago. friends of the family are reported to have told the Farrington Road tenants the property was Crown Land, and as a result the tenants have refused to pay rent to Leander Smith's heirs. Mrs. Miller has claimed she was recently told by the l ands and Surveys Department that there was no ownership of the property registered. She was advised to obtain the services of a surveyor and a lawyer and to take steps to quiet her title. She has occupied the site, she said since 1942. A senior official of the department told The Tribune that the Crown has no land anywhere on Farrington Road. All the tenants, except Mrs. Miller, had by today found accommodations elsewhere. But as she watched her home being destroyed this morning her daughter was out looking for another house into which they could move. LOCAL BANK ORDERED TO PAY BACK $155m. OF I.O.S. FUNDS ('1111 I It S 1 I Sir (,,rdon Itr, c' li.i uint d that Bahitiillnis ('olII1nn .n CItll h tilink Ilnust pal th, (> .tsc .i l DcI ehopment Hl.i k I iicink,,tii, S A. the SI S 42 i)ill,>n ) which was idtle )lsiteC ilth it ,in behalf of l ive IO S nii tit i til IM ldi . li ti' ()rdcr, irtid dlit down April I ? ii'h t that rt' ,i', ll -i l bc iin it 11;a 1 series 2.I 1 l~itiiiten', lWicunning the I-,, l tln .i!i l m ir atintg on I :- 0 c.,: 1, l i 1 'l 7(,. S t 11 1 d 1 .1 h A m a s ('(lliill i w t' lltli t 'l.iilt in making I thlic s r .nid aiid third piaymllients itlln sevet n days of the due date iand lthe remainder within 21 kla s Itl lheii due date, th whol c milctanding balance will hAve to Ib' p;i l itA one line. The dispute between i n" Overseas IDevelopmenrit Bank and Bahamas, commonwealth . b o t h subsidiaries of International ancirp Ltd., was settled iouti of court The Tribunti understands. Bahamras ('o inionwealth Bank has been linked with Mr. Robert Vesco who was lOS chairman when International Bancorp was formed. HOL)IN(; (COMPANY When IOS ran into difficult ies with Swiss authorities in 1971, it put its Swiss, l.iixe miboutrg and Bahanuan ban ks, into the Baharmian holding company. The $155.42 million represents balances outstanding on the funds whiIt were originally deposited with tihe Luxenimbourg bank then subdeposited with B('B Olt,'9 ran the risk of losing its licence when the Luxembourg Commissioner of Banks ordered the money repatriated. The funds were deposited with BCB between October 4 and November 27, 1972, and subsequently placed in trust in banks in Canada, New York, and Nassau. The installment pa) ments are to be made as follows: April 12, 1973 $52.5 million; May 12, 1973 $41.5 million June 12, 1973 $42.4 million; December 31, 1973 $2.5 million, June 30, 1973 $2.5 million. December 31. 1974 $2.5 million; June 30, 1975 $2.5 million December 31, 1975 $$2.5 nlillion; June 30, 1976 $2.5 million Decenmbter 31, 1976 $4 million. Overseas Development Bank was represented by Mr. Paul Baker, Q.C. and Mr. Colin Callender. Representing Bahamas (Conimmonwealth was the Ihon. Eugene Dupuch, Q.C. and Mr. Peter (Graham. Linked as co-defendants wit i Bahanmas Commonwealth at their request were the IOS funds, which asked to be included "in order that the matter may be effectually determined." They were represented by Messrs. Kendal Isaacs, Q.C. and Oswald Isaacs. JACKIE & ARISTOTLE HERE ON CRUISE Till YACH(T ('CHRISTINA with Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis aboard, arrived here 3 p.m. yesterday and anchored off the bar. Aboard with Mrs Onassis were her sister Princess Lee Rad/iwell and her two children Antoine and Anna, and Mrs. Ka> Lerner. I 'he children flew to Miami shortly afterwards aboard an I astern Airlihnes flight. Mrs. Onassis's husband, ( reek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, arrived by private iet from New York at 8 p in to join his wife. who met him at the airport. lie Christina, which sailed in front leuthera, was expected to leave today on a cruise of the Abacos. oe ' -la ini Lne ml;h (*[rtbiittt I,--- WIh tribtunt 14 HELD FOR QUESTIONING 3 CHILDREN Saturday, April 14, 1973. 'NEW LOOK LONDON' PROMISE U.S. tlL REFINERY Police raid over 100 DIE IN BRUTAL Labour record huge LSES 2 TANKS oft i AMWOiMi& TWO AMERICAN STORAGE lANKS BLOWN UP BEIRUT (AP) A group called the Lebanese ReRRevolutionary Guard is claiming responsibility for blowing up two giant storage tanks at an American owned refinery south of Beirut earlier today. The group added it will strike at what it called "all imperialist reactionary bases in the Arab world." Lebanese government officials say the raiders were armed and had planted explosves on 16 other tanks in the refinery, but officials say swift action by Leb. nese army demolition teainms saved them. There are no reports of injuries. LEBANON ADVISED TO LEASH GUERRILLAS WASHINGTON (AlP)-i'he U.S. reportedly is pressuring Lebanon to leash the Palestinian guerrillas encamped within its borders. Sources in Washington say the pressure on Lebanon is at the heart of a diplomatic campaign waged by Washington daily since the latest round of Palestinian and Israeli attacks in the Middle I ast. It's understood the U.S. does nor accept the argument that Lebanon cannot exert greater restraints on the Arab guerrillas. At the same time. U.S. officials arc said to understand that xebanon is not strong enough to shut down the guerrillas completely. U.N. POSTPONE NEXT SESSION ON MIDDLE EAST UNITII) NATIONS (AP)-Thie United Nations Security Council has postponed until Monday its next session on the Middle Last. The delay apparently is to allow I gypt's Foreign Minister time to confer with Lebanese and other delegates. The Egyptian Foreign Minister arrived last night at the U.N. headquarters in New York. He apparently is organizing the stepped-up U.N. offensive against the U S. and Israel over the Israeli raid into Lebanon earlier this week. STEPPED UP OFFENSIVE AGAINST U.S. & ISRAEL UNITEDLI) NATIONS, April 14 (AP)- Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohamned lHassan el-Zayyat was organizing a stepped up U.N. offensive against Israel and the United States today over the Israeli raid into Lebanon. The Security Council had scheduled another session on the Middle East today but postponed it until Monday, apparently to allow him time to confer with lebanese and other delegates. Zayyat arrived Friday night. At friday's Security Council meeting, the Soviet Union joined Arab speakers in denouncing Israel and its U.S. backing. "The Soviet Union is prepared to support effective sanctions, up to and including Israel's explosion from the United Nations," said Ambassador Jacob Malik. Informed sources said the United States had not altered its stance from last year, when it vetoed a proposed Council resolution that condemned Israel without mentioning Palestinian terrorism. No resolutions have been introduced in this session, which began Thursday. 'TERRIBLE REPRISAL' FOR U.S. COMPLICITY BEIRUT (AP)--Palestinian guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat repeated Friday a charge of U.S. complicity in Tuesday's Israeli raid on Beirut and vowed ai "terrible reprisal." In an interview published by two Beirut newspapers, Arafat added. "they won't have long to wait." Whether he was referring to the Israelis or U.S. interests in Lebanon, which the guerrillas have threatened to strike, was unclear. The U.S. State Department has denied three times in three days there was any American role in the attack and called on Arab states to end Palestinian broadcasts through their transmitters. Arafat accused a former U.S. Ambassador in Beirut who is now a high ranking State Department official of coordinating plans with Israeli intelligence against the guerrillas. The Al Fatah leader said the official, Armin Meyer, who served as, Ambassador in Beirut 1962-1965, held contact with Ahron Yariv, who is Israeli Premier Golda Meir's security adviser, to arrange the assassination of a Palestine liberation organization official in Paris in January. Arafat said a few days before the Israeli strike, U.S. intelligence leaked a report claiming that the Central Intelligence Agency had monitored his voice allegedly giving instructions for the killing of two U.S. diplomats in Khartoum. "The purpose of (leaking) this,' he said, 'was to justify the murder of leaders in the commando movement.' FULL REVIEW OF PRISONER TREATMENT CALL NEW YORK (AP)-Former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark said today that he had no knowledge that American prisoners he saw In a Hanoi prison camp last year were tortured into seeing him. "I had no knowledge of torture .... I think tctIure Is unacceptable. I'd like the full story to come out," he said. Navy Lt. Comdr. David W. Hoffman, 32, a released prisoner, said Thursday at a news conference in a Saq Diego Naval Hospital that he was tortured into making appearances with Clark and actress-activist Jane Fonda. Hoffman said he hd a broken arm in a cast and was hung by it several times and allowed to drop at the end of a rope from a table which was kicked out from under him. Asked at a news conference here about Hoffman's statements, Clark said he had seen Hoffman and other prisoners only in their rooms and in their dining hall and that no news conference was held. He called for a full review of the treatment of prisoners. ELLSBERG'S TESTIMONY POSTPONED AGAIN LOS ANGELES (AP)-Daniel Ellberg's testimony at the Pentagon Papers trial was postponed for a second day today because of the illness of his chief attorney. Other defense attorneys reported that Leonard Boudin, who has a heart condition, will require medical tests over the weekend, but they said it is likely that Boudin will be able to resume questioning Ellsberg on Monday. U.S. district court judge Matt Bvrne summoned jurors to the courtroom and told them they would have another day off. Because of the judge's court calendar on Monday, court will not resume until 1.30 p.m. Boudin's sudden illness interrupted Ellaberg's testimony Thursday. SEVERAL BEING CONSIDERED TO HEAD FBI WASHINGTON (AP)-President Nixon is considering a "whole list of people" for nomination as FBI Director but the possibilities do not include members of the Supreme Court, a White House spokesman said Friday. That information was volunteered by Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler after noting a broadcast report had said Justice Byron White was in the running for the post. Nixon's first choice for the job, L. Patrick Gray II, asked last week that his nomination be withdrawn after it became mired in a controversy over the FBI's investigation of the Watergate bugging case. Ziegler first singled out White, then later expanded when he said "no other members of the court are being considered." He would not identify anyone on the list of possible nominees, saying only that "a number of individuals are under consideration" and that Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst has provided Nixon with some names. BRIMICOMBE RELEASED AFTER RANSOM PAYMENT BUENOS AIRES (AP) British executive Francis lrlmicombe kidnapped last Sunday was released by his captors Friday night after a undisclosed ransom was paid, a relative of the executive said. The friend said Brimicombe, president of the Nobleza Tobacco Company, is in good health but that he had been beaten during his captivity. Iahanas Tdueffomnialcations Applications are invited for a Telecommunications Training Supervisor The applicant should possess a University Degree homes in 6 UK cities ATTACK IN U.K. win in English to rout out IRA LONIDON (AP) British police, coordinated by Scotland Yard and led by intelligence agents, swooped on more than 100 homes in six cities at dawn Friday in a hunt for Irish guerrilla bombers. Scotland Yard said a quantity (o timing devices and batteries had been sei/ld and TOP IRA CHIEF CAPTURED, MORE ULSTER VIOLENCE B1U I.1 AS I (Al') Army headquarters near HelIfast, the Northern Ireland capital, reported the arrest of a top IRA officer and added: "It is our most important capture this year." lHe was identified as Scan Keenan, chief of the provisionals' 3rd battalion. He apparently is not related to the Sean Keenian who has long been a pro Irish activist in Londonderry, the province's second city. Gun battles erupted during the night in the Suffolk area of West Belfast in the first serious direct clash between Catholics and Protestants for several weeks. The fighting apparently was triggered by Catholic families moving into houses recently vacated by)' Protestants. An angry row erupted around the shooting by British tr oops Thursday night of 2') year old Fdward O'Rawe, identified as an IRA training officer. Time army said ()'Rawe was carrying a gun when surprised by a patrol in the Lower I alls District ,of West Belfast. People in the area, however, claimed he was corneredl in an alley and shot while unarmed. MI R) Ol R Paddy Kennedy, a Catholic member Iof the suspended provincial Parliament, said "it was cold blooded murder by troops." The sectarian feuding crackled around the predominantly Protestant Suffolk housing estate. Security officials suspected it was. triggered because several Catholic families have recently moved into houses there. That's an old story in Northern Ireland's communal strife. A short lived cease fire by the IRA's 'provisional' wing ended in the neighboring l.enadoon estate last summer over the same conflict when Catholic militants marched there to force the resettlement of Catholic families bombed out of their homes in another Protestant quarter. "This is the sort of thing that touches off violence between the two communities," an army officer commented. "And when that happens, it usually means another round of killings and shooting." There were no immediate reports of any casualties in the shooting. Nor in the string of ambushes by guerrillas on army patrols in nearby Andersonstown, a Catholic district that has been the scene of bloody clashes between troops and gunmen in the past. The IRA operates there. The troopers fired back at the guerrillas, but claimed no hits. SHOT D)EAID Thursday night, however, they killed one guerrilla and wounded another in a shootout in the Lower Falls quarter, another Catholic area where the IRA operates. That raised the province's known death toll from more than 314 years of bloodshed to at least 772. The dead man was identified as Edward O'Rawe, quartermaster for the provisional's 2nd battalion operating in the falls. IRA quartermasters are key men because they are in charge of all arms aind explosives caches for their units. The two IRA men were spotted by troops who shot them as they tried to escape. Two other IRA suspects were later grabbed. The shooting sparked a series of gunfights. Guerrillas lobbed several grenades at troops and wounded two later in an attack on an army armored personnel carrier. Four civilians, an elderly woman, a child and two teenagers, were wounded in a rocket attack on an armoured car. In Londonderry, four soldiers were mowed down when IRA men detonated a home-made Claymore mine as a patrol passed it. One of the trooopers was reported in serious condition. The army said troops captured another provisional leader in a swoop through Andersonstown. He was named as liammon Brennan, executive officer of the IRA's first battalion operating in the area. Brennan was later interrogated by Intelligence officers about the battalion's affairs, particularly the alleged embezzlement of about 150 ,000 pounds, or 375,000 dollars, from the unit's fighting fund. While troops scoured the district for the provisionals' Belfast brigade commander, Seamus Twomey, and his deputy, Gerry Adams, Cathal Goulding, Chief of staff of the rival Marxist 'official' wing of the IRA, slipped through a security cordon in Armagh to attend the funeral of one of his officers killed by troops last week. 14 men detained for questioning. In one of Britain's biggest-ever police operations more than 500 detectives converged on homes in London, Glasgow, Birmingha m, Manchester, Liverpool and Coventry, looking for Irish Republican Army (IRA) sympathizers and supporters. They were accompanied in many cases by dogs trained to sniff out explosives. Scotland Yard said the swoops were connected with last month's twin bomb explosions in London, with recent post office letter bomb explosions and with an incident in Glasgow in which explosives were said to have been found in a Roman Catholic church. Police sources said Scotland Yard feared a wave of IRA activity in Scotland and England possibly at Easter to celebrate the anniversary of the Faster rising in Dublin in 1916 which led to the founding of the Irish Free State. EXPLOSIONS On March 8 two massive explosions rocked London. One person was killed and more than 240 injured when blasts erupted at the Old Bailey Central Criminal Court and near government ministry offices. Two other bombs were defused before they went off. The bombings were widely believed to be the work of the Irish Republican army, which is fighting to wrest Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom. In the past two weeks two small explosions have occurred in London mail sorting offices. There were no casualties. In Glasgow, Scotland's biggest city, police recently discovered a cache of explosives. Scotland Yard said more than 200 police officers were involved in Friday's London swoops alone. The police making the raids at an unspecified number of provincial centres from London in the south to Glasgow in the north were led by men of the Yard's Special Branch which specializes in politically-in- spired crimes. 'The operation was controlled by Commander Robert Hluntley and Commander Matt Rodger, operational chief of the special branch. Huntley is in charge of the Yard's bomb squad. Police sources said the officers involved in England had search warrants issued under a 1971 criminal damage law and those in Scotland had warrants under an explosives law of 1875. 14 HELD At least 14 men were held for questioning and police said total arrests might reach 40. Officers seized arms, explosives and detonating equipment, though apparently not in large quantities. A Roman Catholic priest was among four men held in Coventry in the English Midlands. Lawyers named him as Father Patrick Fell and said they had been refused access to him. Six men were held in London, mainly in the northern suburb of Kilburn, a known headquarters of the IRA. Others were held in Liverpool, Birmingham and Manchester. Similar pre-dawn raids were mounted in Glasgow and other Scottish cities, but no figures on arrests were available. Police said raids in Leeds, Bristol, Bedford and Cheshire yielded no results. Roque WORCESTER, ENGLAND (AP) The murdered bodies of two infant girls and their brother were found impaled on iron railings in a garden here Saturday, police said. Detective chief superintendent Robert Booth said the children's throats were cut and their heads had been savagely beaten. Police informants added the infants, aged between nine months and four years, had been sexually assaulted. Booth said: "I have never known a more brutal murder in all my life, nor of any investigator being confronted with a more brutal murder." Hie appealed for help from anyone in the neighbourhood who had heard a child's scream in the night. Detectives said the children had been dragged from their beds late Friday night. They were found partially clothed in the back yard of a house two doors away. The police sources said: "The men who found the kiddies say it was the most sickening and savage act of violence they had seen." As police with tracker dogs combed the neighbourhood for the murder weapon Saturday a plastic tent covered a row of bloodstained, spiked railings in the garden where the children lay. Police gave this background to the slaying which numbed residents of Gillam Street in this quiet cathedral city. The children were Samantha Jane Ralph, nine months; Dawn Maria Ralph, two years and Paul Kenneth Ralph, four. BARMAID At 7:30 p.m. Friday, their mother Dorothy, 24, went out to work at the Punchbowl Tavern two miles away where she was a weekend barmaid. Three hours later her truckdriver husband Clive, 29, went to pick her up. Police said: "At some stage during the evening a lodger was also at the house." The lodger was identified only as a man in his early 20s. The children were sleeping and 'quite content' when the mother left. When the parents returned about midnight, they had disappeared and their bedroom was 'in chaos.' The police were summoned and they quickly found the tiny bodies in the garden of grey-haired Mrs. Nellie Gurney. She told newsmen she had been watching late night television and heard nothing until detectives knocked on her door. "I thought the police were after a prowler," said Mrs. Gurney. "I wasn't curious and they didn't tell me the bodies were in my garden." Mrs. Gurney added she often saw the older children "a nice little boy and girl" playing in their yard. LOVELY BOY Miriam Sherwood, who runs a general store opposite the death scene, said the boy had often come to collect groceries for his mother. "He was a lovely little fellow," she said. "Hie was always laughing and playing about." Police said the parents and the lodger were "helping with inquiries." But detective superintendent Stanley Dixon said there was 'no suggestion of an early arrest and charge." He added: "This murder was the most terrible sight one could ever see and we don't know what the motive was." CALLS FOR NEW CONTROLS ON PORNOGRAPHY LONDON (AP)-A backbench member of Parliament called Friday for new controls on pornography that would let people pursue "their own way to hell" in private, but would keep smut off street corners. He won a government promise to draft just such a law, but only after one of the liveliest debates In the House of Commons this year. AUTO SALES OUR EXPORT DEPARTMENT OFFERS YOU THE BEST, CLEANEST USED CARS IN THE MARKET AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES 27 Ave. N. W. 31 St. .l'2 Phone: 633-5279 633-5270 100 AUTOMOBILES OF ALL MAKES AND MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM, YEARS 1967 to 1972 local elections By Arthur L. Gavshon LONDON (AP)- Opposition Labourites stormed to power Friday in London and the big six urban centres of England and Wales with promises to transform the life and look of the cities. Their victory in local elections was like a political left hook to the iaw for Prime Minister Edward Heath. His Conservative government glimpsed the spectre of defeat in the nation's next ballot, due by mid-1975. But Heath, a shrewd and determined campaigner, seems certain to heed the warning he has been given and he has time to rally his supporters. Labour's win was expected, but its extent was stunning. It regained the control it lost over Greater London six years ago. Just as firmly, it established mastery over the six super Metropolitan councils of Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Tyne and Wear, West Midlands. West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire. And it took over 11 other key councils. All this, under a new electoral system, means easily more than half the nation will be under Labour rule in local government terms when the reconstructed councils begin working next year. NEW POLICY A beaming and elated Sir Reginald Goodwin, Labour leader in the Greater London Council, spelled out to newsmen what it would all mean to 8V/ million Londoners: A new low-fare policy on leading ultimately to the goal of free transportation. Death of a controversial Conservative programme to ring the capital with a network of three huge motorways. The $212 billion scheme would have swept thousands of homes out of its path. A fight to halt rent rises, with an offensive planned against property speculators. He claimed Londoners have given Labour a mandate to make London a radical 'New York' city of the future where life would be fuller. The fact that less than 37 per cent of the voters showed up at the polls about half the turnout expectable in a national ballot did little to dispel a sense of political euphoria among top Labourities. Ron Hayward, party secretary-general, hailed Labour's achievement as "a complete condemnation of the Heath government's policy and broken promises." Jim Prior, chairman of the conservatives, acknowledged the setback. But he vowed the government's "firm and fair policies" will win back support TI SAIiTEURS BEIRUT, APRIL 14 (AP) Armed saboteurs blew up two giant seaside storage tanks at an American-owned oil refinery south of Beirut early Saturday and planted charges on 16 more. But government officials said swift action by army demolition teams saved the other 16 hug,. tanks. The army squads worked as a big fire started by the two blasts raged nearby. Firemen battled to control the blaze. The masked raiders struck in two groups around I a.m. authorities reported. Six gunmen overpowered two guards, two customs officers and several refinery employees and herded them at gunpoint to the beach while another group of raiders wired up the 18 oil tanks with explosives. It was not immediately known why the charges taped to the 16 tanks did not explode with the other two. The two tanks that exploded were owned by the Trans-Arabian Pipeline Co. TAPLINE and the Mediterranean Refinery Co. Both are U.S.-owned. A group called the Lebanese Revolutionary Guard claimed responsibility and said it would strike at "all imperialist and reactionary bases in the Arab world." "Oil feeds imperialism and goes into planes and other destructive weapons with which the United States is generously supplying the Israeli enemy," it said. "The attack on the refinery is intended as a blow to the unholy alliance between the United States, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon that is directed against the life and independence of our people." The refinery processes oil from Saudi Arabia pumped by a U.S. company. REBELS DISRUPTING ISLANDS' ECONOMY MANILA, PHILIPPINES (AP)-Government forces have killed 68 Moslem rebels in southern Cotabato Province in offensive operations aimed at restoring full government control of the area, the Defense Department said today. PanAm I Blmoral BIIuhHoI I aw t. you to IouwUhIn Ip.'daL Tbday in Engineering or Science or other similar qualifications. The applicant will be required to provide basic instruction courses for the Corporation's technical staff and to develop suitable training programmes. He must be qualified to teach Telephony and Telegraphy up to fourth year in the City and Guilds of London Institute's Telecommunications Technician's Certificate Course. The salary paid will be within the Corporation's established Salary Scale for Executive Engineer: $10,920-$13,820 per annum plus 5% Housing Allowance, the entry point is dependent upon qualifications and experience. A comprehensive fringe benefit and pension plan is established within The Corporation for all eligible employees. Applications in writing stating qualifications and experience should be addressed to the Acting Assistant General Manager, Personnel and Industrial Relations, Bahamas Telecommunications Corporation, P. O0. Box N3048, Nassau, Bahamas Sto reach him not later than April 13, 1973. Saturday, April 14, 1973. Saturday, April 14, 1973. IhPr 0ribuntt NULLIUS ADDICTS JURARE IN VERBA MAGISTRI Being Bound To Swear To The Dogmas Of No Master LEON E. It. DIPi'iH., Publisher/Editor 1903. 1914 SIR ETIFNNE DulPicn HO.B.LE. KC.S.G., D).Lit ,. It.LI) PublisherlEditor 191 7-1 972 Contributing Editor 1 972. - EILEEN UPI'1 tt C(ARRON,M.Sc., B A LL.B.. Publisher/Editor 1972 - Published Daily Monday to Saturday Shirley Street, P.O. Box N-3207, Nassau, Bahamas. TELEPIIONES: Editorial 2-4532, 2-2260 General Offices (15 Extensions) 2-1986 Advertising 2-1986, 2-2768 Saturday, April 14, 1973. EDITORIAL All in a day's work By ETIENNE DUPUCH FROM TIME to time I have referred to a farm which we developed to feed our family during the second world war. Recently I have had some enquiries from readers of this column about the land that the operation covered and what was planted there. I will give details of our operation in the hope that some of our people may realize the importance of seeking some security in the land in a limited form of domestic farming at this time when the future for these islands may be clouded in doubt. ******** 4* We now have ten acres of land. At that time we had only six acres, about two of which were devoted to the fanning operation. What did we have growing on this area? I suppose I would be correct in saying .... just about every kind of food and fruit produced in the tropics .... breadfruit, coconuts, mamee, many varieties of grapefruit, limes, lemons and oranges. Surinam and ordinary local cherries, tangerines, tangeloes, quinquots, several varieties of guavas, sapodillas, soursop, pears, ackee, mangoes, sugar apples, mamee suppotos, burgomots, sour oranges, papayas, scarlet plums, governor's plums, grapes. We have several magnificent date palms but they proved to be barren. I love hog plums but we had no luck. They are easy to grow but every time I planted a stem something happened to it. In most cases the animals destroyed it. Finally I gave up trying. We had a large outlay of bananas. They produced magnificent bunches. About 200 bunches were almost ready for cutting when a hurricane struck and destroyed them all. We replanted some of the suckers but that blow seemed to do something to the land .... they didn't thrive .... and we didn't try very hard because we had more than enough of everything else We also had a patch with a large variety of vegetables. ** ***** * This small area of land not only provided all the needs of the family but we sold about 35,000 citrus in the market to pay the expense of the operation. Oh yes, I used to take my products to the market in a wagon. I have never had any false pride about honest work. I shouldn't have any stupid pride about work because in the army during the war I was required to do such menial labour as even cleaning toilets. So what? It was great fun .... I mean driving a wagon to market with the products of my own land. In addition .... from time to time we loaded our car with sacks of fruit that we delivered to our friends and to such public institutions as the Ranfurly Homes for Children. We continued to do this until a few years ago but now the Immigration Department would not let us have even one Haitian labourer so the whole area will now grow up in weeds. Now there is nothing left of the orchard or anything else but still it is a quiet retreat. We had cows, goats, sheep, chickens, pigeons, doves, rabbits, -pigs; also horses for riding and for use in the wagon. We kept bees that produced orange blossom and logwood honey. The logwood honey came from blossoms in a beautiful logwoodd grove at the bottom of our garden. The orange blossom -ioney was crystal clear with a delicate flavour, the logwood :honey was darker with a distinctive flavour all its own. Both first class. SWe had a row boat and at our waterfront place we set fish traps "at a nearby shoal. This yielded a daily supply of fish. Two milch cows yielded about 20 quarts a day. The milk from :one of the cows was so rich that it was easily beaten up with a spoon into a rich yellow butter. Most natural butter is near-white but our butter was a rich yellow. We also produced cottage cheese from the milk. "- In addition my wife used a pressure cooker in which she preserved meats, fruits and vegetables to store up for emergency occasions such as a possible hurricane. Some of this was kept for -over 20 years after we gave up farming as a serious operation when our children went abroad to school after the war. The meat from our farm was so excellent that the butchers we supplied advertised it as prime American meat and charged a top price for it. People who bought it asked for more. So there you are .... that's our farm which we did as a wartime measure. You may ask what experience is required for an operation of this kind. I had had no previous experience with farming. Some of my wife's uncles in Pennsylvania were farmers and so she had spent school holidays on farms. At least she knew how to milk a cow. She milked the cows until our two elder boys Etienne Jr.and Bernard were big and strong enough to do this job. Wherever they were after that they had to cycle home at 5 o'clock to bring in the cows and milk them. More important than any of this was what this operation did for us as a family. Every morning at 5 o'clock my wife and I and all our six children were out in the farm ... digging planting, picking fruit and attending to the animals. By the time we drove them to school at 9 o'clock we had done a full day's work, which my wife and the children continued in the cool of the afternoon while I was at the office. People who saw our land wondered what made it so productive. Two or three times a week we hitched a horse to the wagon and drove to the beach at the east end of the island where we gathered sacks of seaweed for fertilizer. If there was a pile of horse dung on the road one of us climbed down from the wagon and shoveled it in. The wagon went to East end empty but came back loaded and so some of the children rode horseback or cycled on this expedition. The children learned to sit a saddle before they could walk. At the beach we also swam and raced the horses. And then the screw worm fly struck. This plague was introduced to the island with a boatload of uninspected sheep WANTS GOVT. DECORATE TOWN I1:DITOR, The Iribune Please allow me space in your valuable column to express my opinion onil the decoration ot Bay Street for Independence F irst let [ie say this money that is being spent for decorations should be collected and given to the unemployed to help then get bread for their children until they can find iobhs Second why do we the public have to decorate Bay Street with "Flower Baskets' This should have been done by Government because they are the ones that Wa inlt Independence T'hey are the ones getting everything But when it comes to decorating and beautifying our streets and Island we, tile public (and pool people) have to do it What we. the public, want to know is. when is tovernmlent going to decorate"' The Cabinet Office is the first building that should have been decorated, so that when the ships come in over the bar and up the harbour, the first thing that vvwould catch the eye of the tourist would be the baskets of flowers hanging around the (abinet office. Next when is our IHouse of Parliament going to he decorated' This building should have been the second building to be decorated. This building would he the most beautiful and outstanding one to be decorated on Bay Street. Why is the Government so backward in doing their duty' Next when is the (Crown Lands Office going to be decorated? Then also the Government buildings on Charlotte Street'? The Court I louse on Parliament Street and all the rest of the Court Houses? The Public Library? And last but not least our lovely Post Office? I may have forgotten some but these are the most important ones. Remember WE the public are watching . and waiting. We want to see all the Government Buildings decorated and if not we will have to ask WHY'? Surely not for lack of funds! Once again, "Thank You" Mr. Editor. "A TAXPAYER" April 10th., 1973 Nassau. No bed of roses I I-TOR The I nbune, I he Bahamian people are finally being awakened to the haish realities of independence. It is not something handed to us on a silver platter but rather something for which we must pay and pay dearly This has been clearly seen in the form of the new taxes now being heaped upon us with more to cone. Mr. Ilanna has promised to stop the leakage in both expenditure anid revenue. This is colmmendtable and we can only hope that lhe achieves his end. However, with regard to all this freedom that is supposed to be ours come July 10Oth, I would refer the Bahanuian people to Simon Xu/ine's book, "Postwar I'conomic (Growth". Quote" "Whether developed or underdeveloped a small nation suffers from the disadvantages of a limited internal market and division ol labour and must rely heavily on foreign trade which in the case of close proxiimity to a much larger developed nation, often places it in a sattellitic position to the latter. Under these conditions, the economic advantage although great, may give rise to strains produced by t lie fear of losing independence and identity. But, more important, under conditions of hostility and aggression, in the past and even more today, the dependence of small nations on their large allies for protection impedes the pursuit of an independent poli.'y, even in the economic field; and for the large nation in a position of leadership, which may have been thrust upon it, this means a further responsibility in addition to the internal problems that arise in the course of economic and social change. "It is in this connection that the diversity in si/c stressed above viz the co-existence of a few large nations with many small nations is most directly relevant. It creates the basis for the formation of blocs and the interlocking of national and bloc policies and interest raises problems that are nroductlive brought in from Cuba by Sir Ilarry Oakes after seeing my farm at Camperdown. He felt he could do something like this to contribute to the war-time economy of the islands because every bit of food produced locally during that period saved hard currency for the prosecution of the war. This fly was a terrible thing. We had to spend hours every day pouring tar oil into the open wounds on animals caused by this fly and picking with tweezers the hundreds of worms that floated to the surface from a single wound. The worms literally ate an animal alive. The worm was hatched from eggs laid by a fly in an open wound. Every time an animal delivered its young the mother's vagina was attacked and the young's navel was destroyed. For a long time we lost all our new-born lambs. It was terrible .... even today my wife shies away from the sight of mutton. There is one thing I must make clear. The two acres of land didn't produce enough fodder for the stock. Several times a week we had to roam the countryside in the wagon cutting grass and breaking boughs for the creatures. The really hard work was done by the labourers we hired and housed on the farm but all of us.... even our smaller children ... shared in the action. And I might say that this experience was the most valuable part of their education. It taught them the dignity of labour. I suppose I love the land and have a special feeling for it. Every night when I came home from the office. no matter how late it was .... I spent some time wandering around in the quiet of the orchard. Whenever any of the animals strayed in the bush the whole family turned out to track it down. Sometimes it took half the night to find a lost sheep. But every excursion of this kind through the bush was an adventure. During this period I was also running The Tribune and the major War Materials Operation. I was a member of the House of Assembly and several parliamentary committees. I was a member of the Fighter Plane committee, the Agricultural and Marine Products Board, the Health Board, the Duke of Windsor's Economic Committee and Major Goldsmith's Prices Control Committee. And finally, I was Honorary Consul for Haiti. clearing the Bahamian fleet that was engaged in transporting Haiti's banana crop to the American market after U.S. freighters had been impressed into war service by the government in Washington. How did I do it all? I don't know. All I remember is that I never missed a meeting or an appointment .... and that it was all very exhilarating. Remember .... you too could ease your family pressures by producing some of your own food .... and at the same time you will get joy out of seeing things you plant grow and blossom into full bloom. You may not believe it but even my efforts to interest our people in the land was turned into a propaganda issue by Stanley Lowe who was then publishing the now defunct Herald. I made the mistake of calling it a peasant industry. It might have been more discreet to name it a domestic economy. But Mr. Lowe grabbed on the word "peasant" and kept on telling people that I wanted to keep them down as peasants but that I had no intention of making any of my children farmers. The fact was that my children were already farmers, doing all the chores connected with farm life. What he failed to tell the people was that my family was the best fed household in the islands during the war and that I had no problem with rising costs in the shops. Indeed, the farm produced enough marketable surplus to pay its own way. ot I Ill Icr Interinational stra.iIns. Y Puiibl Il,it i i, imlittcic how atird ol tihe hI'n is to be ik-' dived from indletp think. Indke tlhiec will be alin\ I% i)d 'ii, 1,,i .ill it its t , b 'ear. S lir \sill l.til l I~~, lilte waysuldc and ill. lI h ot iiers will hli\r c II.' .iititional resIpo insil'il I \ ; I ii t mill and So. \1Ih and Mrs. Indelpndenit ill/i'll. put on the ws Il' .1ii io road ahead is e\tIcinely outigh. Look dt Ills.% look arountid you, world is watchiii'.. It awailt to sii.' liow iv oui will acqulit youisisel in your new role ais intel nacllimial citi/en's. Than ks ltr lie space, Matl.iin I editor, JAMES E. BROWN Nassi l April 10). 1973. CONFUSION IN ITALIAN POLITICS (O Mi ( I 1') i'enuri i' ,fiul , Andr,'itti \% itil hirec Ouu i. Iotlil C votes% ill 1 2 li tt i In tlhe ',enl.ite I'htirsoay in sI it ssio i ol tIest' underscoriingi tlh, government uncertain iur\ %alou Ihte.' Si-' i,f lI)rll% hid prcvi, uslu 1 defeated Ia government l bill tice ill secret !.illnls uiiritivlh nitflit. ()fie detedt cale righl .ilct r -\lindre lti had \% )I hi' ts irsi inti nice v'me by roll call tours earlier pihie' ii tn ilan had fought i.ettisi slidiit'lls in a guerrilla- like battll highlighting polititil tension in thi nation. A student and a; pregnant lli i lner were ilnjIired serioiiisi. Ohr Zribunr 1() Al 1 ()'R BAIl\\IIA\\ I1 R 1N S AMNI) ( ; S1 MI, RS' .\S y()l I\II 1 1'R)OH\bl i RI \t1 IN YO( R NI VSP\II','tRS. V, i HAVI- SOi ) O(IR P'ASSI \(,1 k ( \CA t,( V SSI.I 1111 M Si N\\\ RD. 111 - 1)1 PARI RI 01 IllS VISSi 1 REMOVIS ( R ( IAPA(ITY TO IIAM )lI. (,\R(,()1 Il 1I BAHAMAS. \ 1 I ()\0 \Sl 10 IXP'RI-SS OUR (;RAl I I 1 IIA\NKS \Nl) Al'II'R (I \ll()\ I OR ON()1R PAS' IPA lROtNA(,t ANI) \I1) lO1101't 1() RIi tLRN I0 Y()OIR WOMNI -RFL'L (OltN i R\ StIM) l-\)AY VI1111 .\ NI I\ AM ) Mt)I)1 RN ( AR\ (,( \ I SSI L. N)RWI (,IAN (CARIBBI AN LINtS 100 BIlS( AYNI B('OUL-VARD, MIANMI. 1 ORIDI)A 33132 pholnc: 358-(070 N \SS.\ ..\(;I NTS: I'M 11 1) SIIIPPING( COMPANY, LIMITII) P. 0. B(X 4005 N ASSAl. BAHlAMAS. phlonc. 2134014. 4 Whr Gribuntt 74th.8HRH81 AHgliCSA Syl011 April 30 SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON SERIES CONVENTION THE seventy-fourth Annual Synod of the Diocese of Nassau and the Bahamas will convene on Monday, April 30, with a concelebrated mass at Christ Church Cathedral at 8 i.m. The Lord Bishop of the Diocese, the Rt. Rev. Michael Eldon, will deliver his Charge to Synod. .. . . . . U ..-- . . Morning and afternoon sessions, and if necessary, evening sessions, will be held on Tuesday and edncicd.,d , May 1Ist and 2nd at Holy ('ross Parish HIlall, ighbury Park. These sessions will be open to the public. Both Driest and lay delegates from each parish, including the VISITORS WELCOME I JAMES N. COOPER. Pastor P.O. Box N4450 Phone 2-1586,5-4320 Sunday Services at 9:45 and S11 a.m., 7:00 p.m.ni Wednesday Family Service 7:30 p.m. NW TESTAMENT CHURCH HIGHLAND PARK -DOLPHIN DRIVE North of Y.W.C.A. We'd be delighted to have you visit us. Baptist Bible Chrid At Soldier Road & Old Trail Cemetery I VANGELISTIC SERVICES FRIENDLY PEOPLE! woo SCHEDULE OF SERVICES: SUNDAY: Bible School 10: a.m. Preaching 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY: Prayer & Praise 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY: Youth Fellowship 7:30 p.m. - Pastor H. MILLS Phone 5-1339 P.O. Box N3622 Turks and Caicos, will attend. The Synod will close with a mass at the end of the last session on Wednesday. On Thursday, May 3rd, and Friday, May 4th, there will be a conference of the clergy. At this conference Fr. Spencer, a liturgical scholar of the Order of the Holy (ross, will conduct a discussion on the Liturgy. On Friday. matters pertaining to the Province and Diocese will be discussed. BISHOP ELDON'S HOLY WEEK ENGAGEMENTS THE RT. Rev. Bishop Michael Eldon, Bishop of Nassau and the Bahamas, will be the celebrant and preacher at a high mass at Holy Cross Church at 9 a.m. Palm Sunday. At 9 a.m. on Holy Thursday he will bless the oils at Addington House Chapel. From Good Friday through Easter Monday the Bishop will visit Exuma. MODERN DAY GOSPEL TONIGHT UNDER the patronage of the Hon. Cadwell Ambrister the music club of C. H. Reeves Junior High School presents Al and the Visionaires in "Modern Day Gospel" at the Government High School auditorium at 8 o'clock tonight. Many other groups will appear. The proceeds will go to the students travel fund. OVER 60 representatives of the committee responsible for compiling the six-year cycle of Lessons produced by the International Sunday School Lesson Series will hold their meeting at the Holding Inn Hotel, Paradise Island, beginning the last week in this month. The International Sunday School Lesson Series is organized by an ecumenical group representing the major evangelical groups in the United States of America, Canada, and throughout the world. Last year this group of churches celebrated the series' 1 00th anniversary. These representatives will be formally welcomed by the Bahamas Christian Council 8 p.m. Sunday, April 29 at Salem Baptist Church, Taylor Street. At this service Prime Minister L. 0. Pindling will address the congregation on "The role of Government in an Independent Bahamas." "The Minister of Education and Culture the Hon. Livingstone Coakley will speak EASTER PROGRAMME CALVARY BIBLE Church choir will present their annual Easter programme of music and paintings at 7.30 p.m tomorrow at the church on Collins Avenue. on "Education in the Commonwealth." The Chairman of the Methodist Conference and vice chairman of the Bahamas Christian Council the Rev. Edwin Taylor will speak on ' Religion in the Commonwealth." This is the first time that this committee is meeting outside North America. The present chairman, the Rev. Dr. Maynard P. Turner, Jr., is the son-in-law of the Rev. Enoch Backford, Superintendent of the Bahamas Union Association. Saturday, April 14, 1973. E Listier laekstmlne CribbeianiLtd. eJtmioe GENERATING SETS P. 0. BOX 6275 -TELEPHONE 2-8488 EASTERN END NASSAU SHIPYARD. iiii"i I BAHAMAS TELECOMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION COMPUTER PROGRAMMER The corporation has a vacancy in a challenging position within the Computer Programming and Systems Section. The successful applicant will be responsible for assisting in the writing of programmes for new computer applications in addition to maintaining and updating current programmes. Candidates should have a high level of numerical ability along with recognized training in programming and systems. A minimum of three years experience is required with knowledge of at least two computer languages including BAL. Knowledge of the IBM 360 system would be an advantage. The position offers excellent opportunities for future progression and starting salary will be based on the qualifications and expenence of the successful applicant. A comprehensive fringe benefit and pension plan is established within the Corporation for all eligible employees. Applications in writing should be submitted to the Actg. Assistant General Manager/P&IR at BaTelCo's Head Office, Oakes Field, P. 0. Box N3048 to reach him not later than April 23, 1973. Saturday, April 14, 1973. Wht irtbune (UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT) 274e SL0W (74 NOW NASSAU'S MOST DISTINGUISHED LATE NIGHT RENDEZVOUS 9:00RM. 'TIL 4 A.M. * SELECTED MENU FOR LATE NIGHT DINING * COMPLETE LINE OF SELECTED WINES AND LIQUOR * MUSIC FOR DANCING AND LISTENING TO THE PAUL HANNA TRIO Y &Sh E ow Sl BAY & DEVEAUX ST. Phone 5-3268 FOR RESERVATIONS ASK FOR MR. TERRY BAIN OPEN TO THE PUBLIC CLOSED THURSDAYS Hunting for fun? It's here. Andre Cold Duck. A happy blend of fine champagne and sparkling burgundy. With deep pink bubbles to tickle your tongue with a surprisingly refreshing taste. Serve Cold Duck when the flock gets together. But make it the best Cold Duck. Make it AndredCold Duck! AMERICAN CHAMPAGNE, & AM[I iCAN rSPAIL lG BUHJUG I I rL)U r ,AFAHKLING WINE CHI P K I Ci '.Lbb ..URALLY FEA0 N4 : I P:.IP l 1 VU BY THE /,,41 ij. Now available in the Bahamas. Buy it chilled from your favourite liquor store. How much does daughter owe her mom? By Abigail Van Buren im IV caNsas Tlrele.. v. NMews Sy., ta-. DEAR ABBY: How much does a daughter owe her mother? Mom divorced Dad when I was five. I'm 23 now, and Dad has paid her a generous alimony all these years, plus child support which enabled me to have the best clothes, music lessons, dancing lessons, and a college edu- cation. Mom never had to go out and work. I recently married a wonderful man whose work takes him all over the world. At first Mom sulked because we didn't ask her to live with us. Now she wants me to stay home with her or invite her to travel with us. Abby, I love my mother, and my husband is very considerate of her, but he doesn't want to make It a steady threesome. Mother is 56, attractive, and could easily marry again but she says she won't let Dad off the alimony hook as long as she lives. [She's bitter because he's happily married now.] I feel guilty leaving her. In fact, I feel guilty just writing this. What should I do? LIFE OF MY OWN DEAR LIFE: If you want someone to tell you not to feel guilty, count me In. A woman who makes a martyr of herself because she's determined to keep her husband on the alimony hook doesn't deserve much sympathy. You'd feel less guilty if you told her how you felt. It might cause her to take a good hard look at herself and possibly change her life's direction. DEAR ABBY: We were planning a lovely big church wedding for our daughter in June. Well, she got pregnant, and she and her boy friend panicked and drove to Reno and got married there. Now she wants to be married in church by our priest. [Do we have to tell him the truth?l Of course, the wedding won't be as big and elaborate as the one we planned origi- ARRIVED TODAY: Emerald Seas, Bahama Star. Flavia from Miami Tropic Day from West Palm Beach; Freeport from Freeport; Madskou from London. SAILED TODAY: De Grasse for Savannah, Georgia, Freeport for Freeport. ARRIVING TOMORROW: Song of Norway, Sun Viking from Miami; Angelina Lauro from Port Laudania. fl, (, jl i t 1i AR', MOOFSTO CA 11 TIDES High 5:26 a.m. and p.m. Low I1:24 a.m. SUN Rises 5:52 a.m. Sets 6:31 p.m. MOON Rises 4:09 p.m Sets 3:45 a.m DANCE TO RAISE REGATTA FUNDS 5:49 THE LONG Island Regatta Committee is sponsoring a dance at the Lions Clubhouse on John F. Kennedy Drive on May 5 to raise funds for the 1973 Long Island regatta at Salt Pond, Long Island, a committee spokesman announced. LAWN SERVICE FERTILIZE-- FUNGICIDE PEST CONTROL TROPICAL 2-2157 nally, but I wonder if we could still have ring bearer? We promised my little niece they will be so disappointed. a flower gir and and nephew, and MRS. J. DEAR MRS. J.: Under the circumstances I think sim- plicity should be the keynote in this wedding. Discuss It with your priest. And, yes, tell him the truth; he can count and will probably be asked to baptize the baby in six months. DEAR ABBY: A girl with whom I work is getting married soon. She and I have spent our lunch hour togeth- er nearly every day since she came here a year ago. I was quite sure she would invite me to her wedding, but the other day she said she wasn't having anybody from the office because if she invited one she'd have to have them all or there would be hard feelings. Abby, she isn't friendly with any of the other girls, and I'm sure there would be no hard feelings if she were to invite me. I am very hurt, and I don't know how I can continue to have lunch with her every day and keep a plastic smile on my face. If the situation were reversed, I'd have invited her to my wedding. I think she should be more concerned about hurting MY feelings than the feelings of the other girls in the office who are mere acquaintances. Should I tell her how hurt I am? Or should I let it slide? HURT DEAR HURT: Let It slide, dear. Some people don't feel as close to us as we feel to them. DEAR ABBY: My husband has made it plain that be prefers the television set to me. Several of my women friends have the same complaint. What could be the reason for this? IGNORED DEAR IGNORED: Maybe t's because he can turn off the television when he wants to. DEAR ABBY: We have been married for 26 years. My wife works by choice, not because she has to. Every morning she gets up at 5 a. m. Her office hours do not begin until 8 a. m. and we live only 20 minutes from her office, so you see there is no need for her to get up at that hour. Here is the clincher: She bathes, dresses, and sits in the kitchen playing solitaire from 5:40 until it's time to leave for the office. It's been the same every morning with the exception of Saturday, Sundays, and holidays. Am I married to some kind of nut? OHIO DEAR OHIO: What's nutty about your wife's routine If she Isn't able to sleep beyond 5 a. m.? If she doesn't distart you, why complain? CONFIDENTIAL TO "PUZZLED IN HOPE, ARKANSAS:" You are under no obligation to send the price of a gift Istead of a gift. People who ask for CASHI instead of weddlaf git are presumptuous. [Suggestion: Why don't you sad six other people get together and send Amy Vanderbit's new book e etiquette? I can think of sno gift more appropriate. HELP WANTED PARADISE ISLAND LIMITED requires one Chinese Chef to prepare gourmet Chinese dishes in the Cantonese and Mandarin styles. Must have had 5 to 10 years experience in frist class Chinese restaurants preparing Chinese and Mandarin dishes. Must have also worked as a Sous Chef. Salary $200 - $250 per week depending on experience. Interested persons may call Personnel Department at 5-7511 or write P. 0. Box 4777 for appointment. ---- DUE BACK FROM PARIS "' MRS. MAE MORTON CURRY shown leaving for a two-week course in advanced hair-styling in Paris. The courses being sponsored by Modes et Creations de Paris, who have joined with L'Oreal to conduct a special English-speaking Assembly at the Sections d'Art de la Coiffure. Mrs. Curry, owner of Mae's Beauty Salon, left April 1 via New York and is scheduled to return home tomorrow. HELP WANTED PARADISE ISLAND LIMITED requires two Chef de Partie to prepare all types of food for gourmet restaurants. Must be able to make estimates, supervise and co-ordinate work for personnel in kitchen. Must also assist in the menu-planning, etc. Must be able to relieve at any station in the kitchen. Should have done three years' apprenticeship at major hotel or recognized restaurant or hotel school. Should have at least 3 years' experience in preparation of continental cuisine. Salary commensurate with experience. Apply to Personnel Department or call 5-7511 for appointment. GEORGE MACKEY GETS COPY OF MAGNA CARTA LONDON: THE ENGLISH system of local government is being studied by Mr.. George W. Mackey, M.P. of the Bahamas. He is among twenty-four overseas delegates attending a seminar in Britain organised by the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association. The visitors saw local government methods in operation when they went to the south coast town of Miadstone. The mayor, Councillor K. M. Graham, gave a reception in their honour and later explained the duties of his post. Maidstone's town clerk, Mr. T. Scholes, spoke in depth about local government. The parliamentarians also met council officers discussing with them housing planning and health. Later they put many questions to a "Brains Trust" on local government chaired by Mr. John Wells, MP. During their stay in Britain, which began on March 28, the parliamentarians have also visited the libraries of the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The Commons' library has a large reference section covering many aspects of politics and history which helps provide MPs with background information for their speeches. In the Lords library the visitors were shown the many law books used by the Law Lords when sitting in Courts of Appeal. MAGNA CARTA A special visit was to Runnymede near London where the famous Magna Carta was signed by King John in 1215. This is the document on which British law is based. The king under pressure from noblemen, made written pledges granting certain civil rights. Four original scripts of the charter still survive. The delegates were all given copies of the document. An afternoon was spent at one of the most modern schools in London a 1,500 pupil comprehensive school for boys and girls. Id scholar donates painting to GHS LOCAL ARTIST NICK SALIGAROS on Tuesday presented a seascape to Government High School headmistress Mrs. Anatol Rodgers. The painting will go on permanent exhibit in the main entrance hall as part of the school's independence programme, featuring arts and crafts. Mr. Saligaros is a GHS old scholar. He held an exhibition of his paintings on April 7 and 8 at the Sheraton British Colonial Hotel, with part proceeds going to the Bahamas Mental Health Association. His donation to the BMHA came to $1,000. PHOTO: Philip Symonette. & M HA TO DISCUSS VIOLENT CRIME VIOI1TN'I crime, with a particular emphasis on rape, .will be discussed on Thursday, SApril 19. at a meeting organized by the Broadcasting ,Committee of the Bahamas Mental Health Association. FTo be held at St. Agnes' School Ilall. the meeting will start at 8:30 p.m. Thursday. Members of tthe panel will .be Senator Mizpah Tertullien who will discuss the psychology of violent crime, Mrs Janet Bostwick who will describe the legal aspects of rape. Dr. Kirkland Culmer who will describe the increasing .incidence of rape among young boys and Mr. Oswald Cuffey who will discuss rehabilitative methods for rapists. - ... IT ALL ADDS UP your reusabhl hut unwanted items of clothing, tools, appliances, clocks, fans, etc... clear out your closets, garage, storeroom .. all can be of help to someone else. Donate them to Bazaar ROSETTA STREET TWO DOORS WEST OF MONTROSE AVE ALL STOCK * STEREOS * REFRIGERATORS * BEDROOM SETS * RADIOS * RED SPREADS * DRAPES * LAMPS * GAS RANGES Tr * ELECTRIC FANS * HOUSEHOLD GOODS * SEWING MACHINES " END TABLES " COFFEE TABLES * PILLOWS * SHEETS * CLOCKS DONALD'S FURNITURE & APPLIANCE CENTRE COLLINS AVENUE AT 6TH TERRACE t OPEN 8:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. MONDAY TO THURSDAY/8:30 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY. 10% OFF Th 'P C fc-jj^; J r yadrutaS April 14 19 3 Who Wrthtme Bahamian doctor at Harvard DR. David Allen, a Bahamian who is instructor in At psychiatry at Harvard Fo n nation university, has been awarded families of battered children at Fellowship for 1973. This is a Boston City Hospital In national award made to addition, as president of the socially active Doctors' outstanding professionals for sociation of the Boston City their contribution in the Association of the Boston (ity their contribution in theial hospital, Dr. Allen is leading maintenance of ethical the opposition against the restraints in society. Mayor's proposed budgetary As Kennedy Fellow, Dr. cutbacks for health care in -Allen plans to continue his Boston. :work at Havard in developing On April 20 he is scheduled protocols for the introduction to be one of the key speakers of ethical restraints in human t the annual meeting of theater research. He is presently active at the anional Students Associationhe as chairman of advisory National Students Association councils to the Boston Health Conference in Philadelphia at Department, using his method which time he will express his for ensuring the rights of views on health care. -patients involved in Recently, he was elected -Psychosurgery and heroin president of the Black -blocking agent research. Psychiatrists' Forum of Greater Dr. Allen has introduced Boston through which he is programmes in consumer setting up a programme to ensure better psychological health education and access of conditions in the Massachusetts gets Kennedy -A Fellowship Prison System. Dr. Allen intends to return eventually to the Bahamas to continue his work. Hie considers the Kennedy award in ethics a tribute to the Rahamas. because it was here that he received his basic education and training. Dr. Allen thinks that "the Bahamas has a great future as an independent nation because of the religious perspective in the Bahamian heritage." lie says that "our strength will not necessarily be in achieving total economic security, but in developing our religious perspective in such a way that we want for each other that which we want for ourselves. This is the basis of community togetherness and nationhood." Commonwealth Of The Bahama Islands TENDERS FOR TREASURY BILLS The Treasurer hereby gives notice that tenders will be received on Tuesday, 17th April, 1973 for Treasury Bills to be issued under the public Treasury Bills Act 1959 and the Public Treasury Bills Amendment Act 1965 on Thursday, 19th April, 1973 as follows:- Bills denominated and payable in Bahamian dollars ........ B$4,000,000 The bills will be in minimum multiples of S100 and are redeemable ninety-one (91) days from the date of issue. The bills will be issued and paid at the Bahamas Monetary Authority. Details of payment will be notified to successful tenderers in a letter of acceptance. Each tender must be in a sealed envelope marked "Tender" addressed to: THE BANKING MANAGER, Bahamas Monetary Authority. and should be delivered to the office of the Authority in the E.D. Sassoon Building, comer of Shirley and Parliament Streets, Nassau before 3 p.m. on Tuesday, 17th April. Tenders must be made on special forms which may be obtained from the Bahamas Monetary Authority and the Commercial Banks and must be for not less than the minimum amount stated in paragraph 2. Tenders must state the net price per cent (being a multiple of one cent) which will be paid. The Treasurer reserves the right to reject any or all tenders. Ministry of Finance, Nassau 13th April, 1973 THE GIN IN BREAK Atk ICE iuA LONDON anY GIN, q.o ... '" BAHAMIAN NOW STATION MANAGER FOR AIR CANADA DR. DAVID ALLEN ...honour in U.S. MR / Z r % IIII I_1 for merl sA.il.cs tuiurIagel Bahamais. if\r \nI ( Ianada. willI be appointed ittion Man.iagei, Nassau Interli.itilonal \irpoit will etlc t tlinl \li 1I Mr. Bethel kais bitrn in Eleuthera. and n till' s t ol iMr Kingwoodi C arl BletIhl iand Agatha Bethel. nou in \a.i:s, lie is married to lthu turinei Beverley Brenda ('Chrntic Mr Bethel iillcd Air Canada in a.inua.iry. I u'3)., .ld has held variis positions withI the iconpan\ in tihe h.lic aris since that tille lie IH s pic'sentl\ on a spec .il maniagemient training pro.gri.inmc in C(anada. and will rtcIretur to \assiau shortly to take up his neIw position. Mr. Bethel will succeed Mr. W. A. Kerr who has served with %k II: n d. l in l c I B.t tla.i i .I[ K erin.r .1 Il.J ii l' i ii! l t st.itwn \l.i', n' \.iss.iii Kic" .0i c !c .i ii.kmbet and se, t.ir't li( Sk.il ( lutl I the h.i l al n ,i Im t'i l 'i r tl \ R \ It 1' 1,, )l,. c .n a tihe airlinee ilt' i i '!!p t tai IIln ' W IN L! t h l h m ll l| i fI t I 'l !,It1 li .tI,, Ii I r Il l l, iirri a n (i t the I I i i' l I' t du re, ic's s111 > 1. ( 1I t II I C t' Ili, cs te 'c. S il is scwcretaiy ot llt 1()c 1)1 ( nrdoii C h.iptcr aild Inl'il bt'i t lthe (.C aniadi n \\ micnf's ( lut I the 3Bahatiis \It Kerr is being appointed to l. Ie' pIolsitiIc ini Vai. oulver. C( anada. JOAN NEELY RALPH MOXE' 2 GET PROMOTIONS AT BUSINESS SYSTEMS Business Systems L[imited has announced the promotion Ot Mr Ralph Moxey, as general sales manager, and Mrs. Joan Neel, as credit manageress. Mr Moxey joined Business Systems Limited eight years ago in the capacity of office supplies salesman. Mr. Moxey was born in Weymss Bight I lcuthera. Mrs. Neely in her new position as credit manageress will be responsible for all credits and collections tier professional experience included several positions with the Ministry of Tourism, both in Nassau and New York and also as director of public relations for Sonesta Beach Hotel & Golf Club Born in Nassau, Mrs. Neely was graduated from Aquinas College and also from the Barbizon School of Modelling in New York and Florida. .'-i -.- a DIWITT Duncanson has been promoted to the position of food and beverage service manager at Loews Paradise Island Hotel and Villas. RECEIVE PLAQUES FROM AT & T THE FROSTED BOTTLE Distributed in the Bahamas by Bethell-Robertson & Co. Ltd. MR. J. RUSSELL FORD, Bahamas Telecommunications Corp. executive chairman, presented R. I. Bartlett, acting deputy general manager and Errol Leach, director of public relations with plaques on behalf of AT&T (American Telephone & Telegraph), for outstanding contribution to the Florida/Bahamas Submarine Cable Project. The presentation was made on April 9. AT&T is part owner with BaTelCo for the submarine cable that was recently commissioned by Prime Minister L. O. Pindling. I It Gazebo Coffee Shop manager MR. ROOSEVELT Adderlev way, managing director, s has been promoted to the that Mr Adderley's promote position of manager oft the canre as a result of the fine Gazebo Coffee Shop. he has done during Mr. Adderley first joined tlihe emplvoymient with the ho hotel in 1968, as a captain in and that he is glad to add the Imperial Dining Rooi In na.ie t to he ever growing 1970, he was promoted tI of B.ahai.iiian ke personnel' assistant manager IrAidCe the hoti el Winds lounge. Prior to that ie r dderlev is seen lb was with the Clipper L.ounge as 1A le y ssen b a captain conigrattitated by assistant I In making the announce- nd b average director. ment, Mr. John M. Galla- (Chailes 'Chuck Stubbs MR. Joseph "Joey" Johnson has been promoted to the position of assistant director of sales at Loews Paradise Island Hotel and Villas. Mr. Johnson joined the hotel in April 1968 as a room clerk aid ion job his tel, his list 1 at being ood Mr. Ili the reser, ations department, ind was later promoted to assistant maiinag er Mr. JoIlnson irightl is seen with Mr. Itm, toth Webster, hliector ot sales Above Mr. Duncanson congratulated by Mr. John Gallaway, managing director he hotel. NOTICE OF CROWN'S CLAIM The Land Title (Carmichael Village) Act 1968 It is hereby notified that the Crown claims to be the legal and beneficial owner in fee simple of all those three pieces or parcels of land firstly, secondly and thirdly described below situate in the vicinity of Carmichael Village and on both sides of Carmichael Road in the Western District of the Island of New Providence one of the Bahama Islands, that is to say Firstly ALL THAT piece or parcel of land containing Four Hundred and Twenty-five (425) acres or thereabouts situate on the Southern side of Carmichael Road as aforesaid and bounded NORTHWARDLY by the said Carmichael Road SOUTHWARDLY by Miller Road or Cow Pen Road EASTWARDLY by a road Fifty (50) feet wide leading from Carmichael Road to Miller or Cow Pen Road aforesaid in the vicinity of Golden Isles Dairy and WESTWARDLY partly by the said Carmichael Road partly by Carker Hill Road and partly by lands used by the Lazaretto or howsoever else the same may abut and abound which said piece or parcel of land is shown bordered Pink on the plan on record in the Land and Surveys Department and marked "Carmichael Village Claim" SAVE AND EXCEPT those areas together containing Sixty-five (65) acres or thereabouts shown coloured Blue on the said plan. Secondly ALL THAT piece or parcel of land containing Twenty (20) acres or thereabouts situate on the Northern side of Carmichael Road as aforesaid and bounded EASTWARDLY partly by Gladstone Road and partly by lands now or late of Lawrence Lightbourne SOUTHWARDLY by the said Carmichael Road and partly by Adelaide Road and NORTHWARDLY and WESTWARDLY by other lands of the Crown or howsoever else the same may abut and abound which said piece or parcel of land is shown bordered Green on the plan as aforesaid SAVE AND EXCEPT those areas together containing Four (4) acres or thereabouts shown coloured Grey on the said plan. And Thirdly ALL THAT piece or parcel of land containing Three (3) acres or thereabouts situate on the Northern side of Carmichael Road as aforesaid and bounded NORTHWARDLY by lands now or late of Da Costa Williams SOUTHWARDLY by the said Carmichael Road EASTWARDLY by land now or late of Harry Black and WESTWARDLY by lands now or late of the Church of England which said piece or parcel of land is shown bordered yellow on the plan as aforesaid SAVE AND EXCEPT that area containing Sixty hundredths (0.60) of an acre or thereabouts shown coloured Mauve on the said plan. 2. A plan of the said Island marked "Carmichael Village Claim" may be inspected free of charge during normal business hours at the Lands and Surveys Department. Nassau. "Carmichael Village Claim" may be inspected free of charge during normal business hours at the Lands and Surveys Department, Nassau. 3. Any person claiming title in fee simple to the said land or any part thereof must file a notice of his objection to the claim of the Crown. if this has not already been done, with the Commissioner at the Supreme Court, P. 0. Box 167. Nassau, on or before the 30th day of May, 1973. M. J. THOMPSON Commissioner. . . . . w ,. . ~______________Ught Wrtaibttt WULFF ROAD THEATRE From Page 4 American States create what is to become the Pan American Union. 1865 U.S. President Abraham Lincoln is mortally shot by actoi John Wilkes Booth at lord's Theatre in Washington, D.C., and he dies the next morning. 1849 Flungarian DFT ) proclaims Independence with Louis Kossuth as governor president. 1834 Republican uprising in France is crushed by army under Adolphe Thiers. 1672 Alliance is signed between France and Sweden against Dutch. 1639 Johan Baner leads Swedish army to defeat Archduke I.eopold William of Austria near Chemnitz and subsequently lays siege to Prague. 1629 Peace of Susa ends war between IEngland and France. 1544 Denmark repudiates its alliance with France. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Christian Huygens, Dutch miatematican scientist (1629 1695), William H. C. Bentinck, English statesman (1I738-1809) SUNDAY PORTRAITS TOOGOODS... OPEN SUNDAY FROM 2 to 5 Especially for the families. ON THEWATERFRONT / ,, East of the Bridge --- Phone 54641 NOW SHOWING THRU THURSDAY l Matinee 3 & 5, Evening 8:30--'Phone 2-1004, 2-1005 S "SHAMUS"PG. Starring SBURT REYNOLDS DYAN CANNON S SUGGESTED FOR MA TURE AUDIENCES. PARENTAL DISCRETION ADVISED. S reservations not canned by 8:15 will be sold on firt come, first served bhu. Now thru Tuesday Sunday thru Tuesday Matinee starts at 2:15 Sunday continuous Evening 8:30 from 4:45 "HANNIE CAULDER" R. from 3:00 Robert Culp "SOUTH OF HELL Raquel Welch MOUNTAIN" R. PLUS Martin J. Kelley Anna Stewart "BARBARELLA" R. PLUS Jane Fonda "THE INVINCIBLE SIX" R. John Philip Law Stuart Whitman No one uncer 17 will be admitted. Elke Sommer 'Phone 2-2534 No one under 17 will be admitted, NOW THRU TUESDAY Sunday Continuous from 4:30-'Phone 3-4666 Monday Matinee Continuous from 1:30, Evening 8:30 St RICHARD ROUNDTREE P PLUS- "SHAFT". No one under 17 will be admitted. 3 Now showing through Tuesday, "SHAFTS BIG SCORE," plus "SHAFT" Sunday showings continuous from 4:30. Monday and Tuesday matinee continuous from 1:30, evening 8:30. No one under 17 will be admitted. Wednesday through Friday, "THE TEN COMMAND- MENTS," there will be one matinee only starting at 3:00, and ending at 7:30. Evening performances will be at 8:30. The fascinating story of the making of the TEN COMMANDMENTS is depicted in this movie, a Paramount Pictures presentation which is ;'lso h'-!sdn on the life of Biblical prophet Moses, born a slave, but who grew up in Pharoah's household as a son and was educated as an Egyptian Prince. Produced by Cecil B. DeMille in technicolour, this movie which has been shown to audiences throughout the world time and time again, is one of the most monumental in history. A picture of reverent and massive magnificence, the story is of how one man's character was forged in the fires of power, temptation, self-sacrifice and love until he was fit to receive God's law, lead his people out of bondage live by law on the one hand and teach them to live under and tyranny on the other are the code that became the Charlton Heston as Moses and fountainhead of several Yul Brynner as Pharoah religious. Rameses II, with the tragic Representing man's right to figure of Princess Nefretiri SAVOY THEATRE Starts Saturday night 8:30, and olavs through Tuesday, "'HANNIE CAULDER," plus "BARBARELLA" Sunday through Tuesday matinee will be continuous from 2:15, evening performance at 8:30. No one under 17 will be admitted. Plus late feature Tuesday night. HANNIE CAULDER, a Paramount Pictures presentation starring Raquel Welch, Robert Culp, Ernest Borgnine, Strother Martin, Christopher Lee, Jack Elam and Diana Dors is the story of a woman's revenge against a group of bank-robbers and cattle rustlers who kill the members of her family during a raid. Taking on a setting in Mexico, the Western movie stars Raquel Welch as the first 'lady gunfighter who puts a notch on her gun for every man that she got. The film was, however, shot entirely on location in Spain. A Tigon British Curtel production in panavision and colour, it was produced by Patrick Curtis. Wednesday through Friday HICKEYY AND BOGGS," plus "RIO LOBO" matinees continuous from 1:15, evening 8:30. Plus late feature Friday night. Big John Wayne, fresh from his Oscar triumph, heads the cast in Cinema Center Films' action-packed western RIO LOBO. It is a role uniquely tailored to Wayne's talents, a tough, bawling ex-Civil War officer who frees a Texas town of carpetbaggers and settles an old score with a wartime informer. All the ingredients that have made Wayne the box-office champion of all time are intact lots of hard riding, an explosive train robbery, nerve-shattering gun fights, and a few fist fights for good measure. RIO LOBO was filmed principally on location in Mexico and Arizona, where the breathless and untamed landscape provided a perfect setting for the events before WAYNE RIDES AGAIN Big John Wayne, fresh from his Oscar triumph, heads the cast in Cinema Center Films' action-packed Western, "RIO LOBO," directed by veteran Howard Hawks. The National General Pictures release stars Wayne as an ex-Civil War officer who frees a Texas town of carpetbaggers and settles an old score with a wartime Informer. the after the Civil War chronicled in the motion picture. As second unit director, famed action specialist Yakima Canutt helped stage the capture of the Union gold train by a Confederate band and other spectacular scenes. The script of RIO LOBO was written by Burton Wohl and Leigh Brackett6Hawks first employed Miss Brackett to write dialogue for Humphrey Bogart in TO HAVE AND TO HAVE NOT. SECOND SEARCH REVEALS I MORE MARIJUANA SAVANNAH, GA., APRIL 13 (AP)--U.S. customs officials have discovered an additional cache of marijuana on a Colombian freighter, boosting the total marijuana seized from the ship this week to 1,309 pounds. Senior agent William Hunton said three packages were found Thursday in the same location where 46 bags were discovered Tuesday. He said the marijuana had been stashed under the floorplate in the engine room of the Adriana. Hunton said someone apparently "figured we wouldn't look there again" and hid the dope. Hunton estimated the marijuana seized on Tuesday and Thursday would value $523,900 in street sales. BE COOL & COMFORTABLE THIS SUMMER BUY AN AMANA AIR CONDITIONER ...EVERYONE DOES. (COOLING ONLY call us for prices on Heat and Cool Models) BTU 6300 9000 10,000 15,000 18,000 24,000 ALL INSTALLATION COSTS ARE EXTRA. FACTORY GUARANTEE ON ALL UNITS. DON'T DELAY- DO TODAY. TAYLOR INDUSTRIES LIMITED. P.O.BOX 4806 PHONE 28941-5 iI~ I AND REFER MADNESS 1 7:00& 10:35 1614rg W: Al' IQ 01:3*>irin:m standing between them in the lovely person of Anne Baxter. Model 6P-2JM 109-2J 11-2J 215-3J 218,3J 624-3J Saturday, April 14, 1973. SHIRLEY ST. Now showing through Thursday "SHAMUS"L matineess at 3:00 & 5:00, csening 8:30. Suggested for mature audience, parental discretion is advised. Starts Friday, "BROTHER SUN SISTER MOON" matinees at 2:30 & 4:50, evening 8: 30. Excitings things are happening at the Fabulous Trade Winds Bar & Lounge Paradise Island WENDELL STUART SHOWTIMES NIGHTLY: 10:40 & 12:40 Make the evening complete with a gourmet dinner in the Imperial Dining Room. Dinner from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. IV's" %l .4 ComngAttacios I WHAT"S O saturday, April 14, 1973. CLASSIFIED S gh gr SEC1 REAL ESTATE 9 FOR SALE C9310 4 bedrooms 1 bath house. LARGI Lot 80 x 100 Phone 4-2876. apart $250 I C9423 -- Thom- FOR SALE 2-4777 Be your own LANDLORD, on -- profitable BAY STREET, Size C9382 57 on Bay and on Harbour BASIC Side, by 240 depth. Store 40 x house 60, Offices, Apartments, Upper bathro Floors, Warehousing. Two monthly outside buildings used as ART evening GALLERIES, loads or parking, even warehousing. Finance C9462 available. Inquiries to NICK DAMIANOS, DESMOND 2 bedr INVESTMENTS LTD., with ca MORTGAGEE. Dial 22033 new au evenings 41197. 58201. C9448 C9399 BLAI R ESTATES, AIRCC RICHMOND AVE. bedroom 3 bedroom 2 bath, living dining Park Av room, family room Telepho aircontitioned. Large kitchen, C9306 laundry room. Front and rear ONE patio, carport, walled in, bedroom .landscaped garden with gates, extraoo Fresh water well. Asking apartme $55,000. Call 32675 after 6 and p.m. fnd h. C9424 FOR SALE 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, maid's quarters, spacious sitting, lavishly furnished, one block from beach rights, grounds 80 x 140, fruited, landscaped and outside PATIO. Was $50,000.00 Owner might consider $46,000.00. Come see - This deal can surprise you. HIGHLAND PARK AREA - Unfurnished house with three bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious living, extra large kitchen, unfurnished with Air Condo, refrigerator, stove, shutters, and some drapes. Reduced to $50,000.00. Considered substantial built house, and has pump for well - water DIAL DAMIANOS 22033, 22305, Evenings 41197. C9494 1 Lot 60 x 100 South Beach Road. Plans available. 1 lot Pinewood Gardens. 50 x 100. Both lots $9,000 CASH. Write: P. 0. Box N3405, Nassau. C9499 BILL'S REAL ESTATE AGENCY LTD. offers a selection of apartment sites in good rental areas on New -Providence with easy finance terms available. Also a selection of choice residential lots in the East, West and South at low cash prices or easy monthly instalments. A large lot ideal for commercial development or apartments 200' x 430'. Price $10,000. For information and appointments call 23921. C9458 FOR SALE 1. Attractive three-bedroom, two-bath residence in quiet cul-de-sac off Village Road. Three bedrooms, two baths, living-dining, porch, patio, laundry, large utility, carport etc. Fully airconditioned. $67,000 furnished. *2. Outstanding residence Montagu Heights, hilltop. Three bedrooms, three baths, dining room, living room, porch, kitchen, laundry, two-car garage, air-conditioned. Large lot beautifully landscaped with bearing fruit trees. Delightful swimming pool area with barbeque, bar etc., all conveniences, changing room etc. $150,000 furnished. 3. 1-storey residence Montagu hilltop area. Five bedrooms, four bathrooms, living room, dining room, family room, porch, patio, kitchen, laundry, carport, etc. $80,000 furnished. H. G. CHRISTIE REAL ESTATE 309 Bay Street, P. 0. Box N8164, Nassau Tel: 2-1041, 2-1042 jWMTS TO RENT C9502, IRITISH HIGH COMMISSION require four bedroom house on long lease. Tel: 21008. C I A l EXECUTIVE requires large three or four bedroom furnished home in East to lease. Prefer ocean view. Phone 4-1150 for Mrs. Thompson, or 2-3367._ FOR RENT C9445 ATTRACTIVE well located 2 bedroom apartment. $325 per month. Phone 4-3017. C9437 " CONVENIENT dowrn wn furnished apartments. One or two bedrooms. Utilities included Telephone 2-2836. C9365 FURNISHED 3 bedroom 2 bath house with airconditioned bedroom in Bamboo Town. Phone 36959. C9308 OFFICE OR STORE SPACE - Charlotte near Bay. Immediate occupancy, ample parking. innir 4-2017 7 Apartm Avenue Bay St laundry aircond between FOR IENT T E ONE BEDROOM ent, nicely furnished. per month.Call Chester Ppson Real Estate -8. ALLY FURNISHED 3 bedrooms 21 oms. East $375 y. Phone 42228, 42198 is, weekends. PALMDALE room furnished house airport, utility area has tomatic washer. Phone )NDITIONED one n apartment Shirley venue. $175 per month. one 58134. EXTRA large two TIS two bath, and one large one bedroom ent. With large living dining all basically ed Victoria Court ents on Elizabeth between Shirley and reet. Facilities, phone, parking T.V. antenna, itioned. Phone 54631 n 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. C9482 Two-Bedroom House in Shirlea, Essex Street. Unfurnished. Call Patsy Key - 22446. C9479 TWO STOREY open span warehouse 100 x 80. Situate on Farrington Road. For Information telephone 2-4782. C9477 BRIGHTLY FURNISHED TWO-BEDROOM APARTMENT, CAREFREE, CABLE BEACH. BALCONY, TELEPHONE, AIRCONDIT- IONING, GRECIAN POOL, PI RVATE BEACH. EVENINGS 77849. C9259 SPACIOUS SPACE suitable for office or school with ample parking at a very reasonable rate. Chesapeake Road and Jerome Avenue in Pyfrom's Addition. Phone 2-4536. C9313 MAUDONNA APARTMENTS - Corner Mt. Royal Avenue and Durham Streets, two bedroom apartments, completely furnished with telephone and all modern conveniences. Telephone daytime 2-8152 after 6 p.r- 5-3418. C9496 UNFURNISHED 3 bedroom 2 bath, house with carport, lawn and private yard. Call 32731. C9492 FULLY airconditioned 2 bedroom apartment - Centreville near Z.N.S. ring 5-8679 ask for Mr. Pritchard. C9474 NASSAU EAST 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, newly decorated. Rent includes gardening service - B$500 per month. Fully furnished, available now. WEST BAY STREET 3 beds, 3 baths, on waterfront. Wall to wall carpeting throughout, furnished. GROVE, OFF WEST BAY STREET 2 nicely furnished 3 beds, 2 baths, available 1st May. DELAPORTE POINT 3 beds, 2 baths, town house, available 1st May. SAN SOUCI just off Eastern Road 3 beds, 2 baths - furnished or unfurnished. PROSPECT RIDGE CONDOMINIUM 3 beds, 3 baths, town house, available 1st May WESTWARD VILLAS 3 beds, 2 baths, available 1st May. CONCHREST 2 beds, 2 baths, beautifully furnished apartment, available 1st May. No children, no pets NEAR BALMORAL 3 beds, 2 baths, good family home - has dishwasher available 1st May. NEAR SAUNDERS BEACH - 2 beds, 1 bath, in pleasant cottage colony available now. TOWERS OF CABLE BEACH AND CAREFREE 2 bedroomed and 1 bedroomed apartments available now - no children, no pets. ARDON COURT, OFF MARLBOROUGH STREET - one 2 bedroomed apartment, one 1 bedroomed apartment - no children, no pets. BEL AIR, WEST BAY STREET one bedroomed apartments available now. Dorothy L. Atwood Limited - Telephones 28763/4/5/6. Call during office hours, 9-5. Monday to Friday. CARS FOR SALE C9465 1970 FORD MAVERICK with extras good condition -- $1500. Call 41553 after 6 p.m. CARS FOR SALE C9501 CADILLAC, 1960, white, Lic. 3156, only 42,000 miles, in fair condition. $1,000. Call 4-1476. C9460 New Providence Leasing Limited have the following list of used cars for sale. Immediate financing and insurance cover arranged. Our lot is located Gibbs Corner opposite laundromat. Please check our prices and low, low, down-payments. 1972 DODGE AVENGER, Automatic Azure Blue, Black Trim. Very Clean Car Cash $2,850.00 Down $700. 1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA, White Black Trim, Exceptional Value, ideal Taxi Cash $1,550.00 Down $500. 1970 VAUXHALL VICTOR S/W, Automatic, White, Black Trim, Absolute Snip Cash $1,475.00- Down $450. 1971 DODGE AVENGER Standard, Green Finish, cannot be repeated at Cash $1,650.00 Down $500 1972 JAVELIN SST Candy Apple Red an absolute beauty - Cash $4,850.00 Down $1,250 1972 TOYOTA CORONA Automatic/Gold in tip top condition Cash $2,750.00 - Down $700 1970 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO, Midnight Blue. Look at the Price Cash $2,550.00 - Down $750. 1970 CHEVY MALIBU 4 door, new paint job. Excellent buy at Cash $2,250.00 - Uown $700. 1971 DODGE AVENGER 'Standard. Another give away at - Cash $1,650.00 Down $500 1970 CHEVY MALIBU 4 door, new paint job Cash $2,400.00 Down $700 1970 FORD MAVERICK. automatic, blue/blue trim - Cash $2,150.00 Down $700. 1971 FORD PINTO automatic red/black trim Cash $2,250.00 Down $700 1972 FORD CORTINA A/trans. Top condition - Cash $2,650.00 Down $750.00 1970 FORD ESCORT, Standard, new paint job, bargain price Cash $875.00 Down $300. 1969 FORD FALCON automatic good buy -- Cash $1,275.00 Down $400 1970 FORD MAVERICK red white trim Cash $2,250.00 - Down $750. 1970 MERCURY MARQUIS new paint job/good taxi - Cash $2,850.00 Down $800 1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA gold white trim, smooth car - Cash $4,700.00 -- Down $1,500 1972 TRIUMPH 2.5P.I. In immaculate condition Cash $4,650.00 Down $1,500. 1970 VOLKSWAGEN 1300 good shape Cash $1,800.00 -- Down $600 COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 1972 FORD 3/4 TON PICKUP as new Cash $3,750.00 - Down $950. 1970 FORD TRANSIT VAN bargain price at Cash $875.00 Down $300 BARGAIN BASEMENT CASH ONLY YOU BUY AS IS WHERE IS 1969 Fiat 850 Sports Coupe $525.00 1969 Vauxhall Viva $150.00 1970 Ford Cortina $300.00 1969 Chevy Malibu S.S. $700 1970 Morris Mini A/T $700 1968 Dodge Coronet $750 1970 Vauxhall Viva $450 1970 Ford L.T.D. Saloon $350.00 1968 Ford Falcon S/W $800 1968 Triumph G.T. 6 $375.00 MOTOR CYCLE FOR SALE 1970 Honda 250cc $225 Cash C9432 1971 FORD SPORTS CUSTOM CAMPER/PICKUP TRUCK STANDARD SHIFT $2600. PHONE AFTER 5:30 P.M. 55124. C9466 CHEV. 1967 2 door, air. T.V. 19" Tape Recorder Steel Wardrobe Appliances, Jinen. Call 58189. C9434 CHEST OF DRAWERS, cream coloured. Mahogany single bed, chest of drawers, bedside table. Dishwasher, electric can ooener garden chairs, records 45 r.p.m., wrought iron glass top table, four chairs, glass top wrought iron coffee table. All in good condition. Phone 5-3477. o _ C9316 MOVING? For Expert Packing & Forwarding by Sea or Air, Contact E. H. Mundy & Co. (Nassau) Ltd., P. 0. Box N-1893, Phone: 2-4511. APP'ROVI-I CAK(;O AI.EN IS CARS FOR SAL C9398 ISLAND MOTOR COMPANY 1970 LTD. 1972 VENTURA, A/C Bucket Seats Gold $4950 1971 VAUXHALL VIVA, 2 Dr. Radio Auto. Blue $1600 1969 VICTOR 2000 S/W, Automatic $850 1972 VIVA S/W Automatic White $2400 1970 PONTIAC PARISIENNE, 4 Dr. Sedan Blue/White $1850 1972 PONTIAC VENTURA, 4 Dr. Auto. Radio. Orange $3500 1967 HILLMAN, Std. Green $450 1969 FORD TORINO, Yellow/Black $1200 1969 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL, A/C Auto. $2600 1971 FORD CAPRI, Auto. Blue $1850 1968 FORD THUNDERBIRD, Blue A/C $2800 1971 FORD MAVERICK, Auto. Red $1950 1969 VIVA 4 Dr. Auto. Green 1971 Rambler, Auto. Blue 1969 PONTIAC GTO, A/C Vinyl Green 1968 FORD ESCORT, Blue 1965 DODGE, DIuee $695 $2100 $1600 $695 $300 Trade-ins Welcomed Located Oakes Field Opposite the Ice Plant Telephone 34646-7-8 FOR SALE C9311 1 CONVERTIBLE COUCH 1 Fender amplifier and speaker 1 250 lb. trunk food freezer Call 77947. C9459 5-PIECE BEDROOM Set, Bookcase headboard, dresser, mirror, night-stand, double mattress and box spring $225.00. Various baby items and swinq set. (2) Amana airconditioners $200 (each). Cash Only, Call 55124. C9417 HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS 1 living room suite 1 dining room suite 2 bedroom suites Stove, Fridge and miscellaneous items. Telephone 5-2272. C9472 SKYLINE HEIGHTS Furniture, carpets, drapes. Friday and Saturday from 10 to 2. Call 7-7871. C9471 TWO TWIN BEDS (one new) $150.00 17ft. Speed Boat, 50 H.P. Mercury Engine $1400.00 1970 Ford Cortina Stationwagon, $1500..00 Phone 28989 (Day) 57905 (night) C9493 VITA Master Belt Massager. Telephone 5-3743. C9495 FIVE ROOMS of furniture including stereo, Television and miscellaneous items. All $1,000 CASH. Write: P. 0. Box N3405, Nassau. C9487 GARAGE SALE 2 p.m. 6 p.m. daily Tuesday April 17th thru Thursday April 19. Many various household items including adult and baby clothes, and household appliances. Smith. 1st. Terrace. Centreville. II 1TS To 11Yl C9433 GLASS BOTTOMED BOAT. State price, size and description in letter. Apply: Adv. C9433, c/o The Tribune, P. 0. Box N-3207, Nassau. C9467 SEVERAL WOODEN MEYERS RUM CASES. Will pay high price if very old ones. Write Herman Wenzel, Staniel Cay, Exuma. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES- C9454 ASSOCIATE DESIRED Inflation hedge. Right party could control extensive Cereal and Beef Cattle Farm, also seaside land with resort possibilities. A stable area, 25 in. rainfall. S. W. Australia. ALSO Ranch and Farm, Alberta, Canada. Write:- Adv. C9454, c/o The Tribune, P. 0. Box N3207, Nassau, Bahamas. IC9473 FOR SALE GOLF CLUBS 1 -- complete set Titleist Golf Clubs, 6 months old, like new. Regular shafts, D-2 swingweight. Call 31393 after 6 p.m. inquire 4 t.- purchase price at the time of P. 0. Box N-3207. Nassau, or practical experience needed sale and balance on completion ANNOUNCEMENTS see yoir broker. just educational qualifications. DATED 4th DAY OF APRIL Qualified applicants should A.D., 1973. C9490 i reply to: Deputy Chief KIRK S. HINSEY GOODS LEFT OVER 30 FOR RENT Industrial Officer Ministry of Public Auctioneer. DAYS WILL BE SOLD. Labour Freeport, Grand NASSAU BIC Y CLE C7320 Bahama, Bahamas. PETS F R SAL COMPANY LIMITED. FOR LONG TERM C7J35 C J 0 LEASE EXPERIENCED MECHANIC; C9475 EXECUTIVE home 4 REQUIRED. BAHAMIANS, DACHSHUND PUPPIES both TH B G oPE bedroom, 3/2 bath. ONLY NEED APPLY. parents AKC registered. Phone MISSION INC., of Montrose Unfurnished, $550 per month PLEASE APPLY TO:, 4-1485. Avenue, Shirley Heights, furnished, $700 per month. GE RT RUDE MUNNINGS, S Nassau N.P. wish to announce Call Freeport 373-2032 or OATES LANE, FREEPORT. MARINE SUPPLIES the SCHOOL and DAY NURSERY 352-9414, Mrs. Madsen. C7342 4' on September 3rd 1973. STEEL BAND DIRECTOR/ C944 foot Glastron -- excellent The Day Nursery will accept HELP WANTED ENTERTAINER TO ASSUME' 14 foot Giastrn n -- excellent infants from 6 months old at 8 RESPONSIBILITY, ALSO. cond.ionl. dealforfh hnand a.m. to 6p.m. C7321 SINGING/DANCING MC. skiing. $500. Night hone The Kindergarten will accept ACCOUNTANT CONTACT BOX F-2735, 4-1429. Day 2-8262. children from 3 years old 9 Required by Bahamas Oil FREEPORT. C9309 a.m. to 1 p.m. Refining Company to assist the C3 C9309 R ft ri Registration for both Nursery Treasurer in various aspects of C7334 Cruising Yacht. Phone 3-2371 and Kindergarten will Management Accounting and JANITORS (men only) must Cruising Yacht. Phone 3-2371. commence April 3rd 1973 Internal Audit procedures with be willing to work night or day S9301 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (On particular initial responsibility cleaning floors, windows and, C Tuesdays & Thursdays) at the for the Financial Accounting bathrooms. Bahamians only. TRAVELLING ? office of the Mission or contact of the construction of new Police Certificate needed.. S Mrs. Nottage c.o. phone facilities. Applicants should be CARE MAINTENANCE, For efficient friendly 24537. Those wishing to Chartered or Certified FREEPORT (352-2292). advice on Worldwide register their infants and Accountants with not less than C7333 Destinations by Airline or children are urged to do so three (3) years post E X P E R I E N C E D Steamships, Contact immediately as there will no qualification. Experience WAREHOUSE/Inventory MUNDYTOURS at 24512. doubt be a long waiting list. A including audit or other Clerk, must have 2 years deposit of $10 will be experience of industrial experience in warehousing and. requested when you register, accounting. be able to keep perpetual For fees and other Bahamians only need apply to: inventory control on all Information, contact the Pastor Personnel Officer, Bahamas Oil incoming and outgoing of the Mission at the office or Refining Company, P. 0. Box shipments. APPROVEDPASSNGER AGENTS for appointment call Mrs. F-2435, Freeport, Grand Apply: Bellevue Stationers Nottage c/o phone 24537. Bahama. Ltd., P. 0. Box F-24, Freeport. I C9449 '69 MORRIS 1300 automatic, radio, airconditioned. Good condition. Asking $1200.00. Telephone 32675. n I CLASSIFIED ADVS. BRING RESULTS- FAST | 1TO PLACE YOUR ADV. TELEPHONE 21986 EXT. 5 OPMBfsc MARINE SUPPLIES ENTERTAINMENTELP MTEI C9425 C9441 C9486 C9464 AGENCY .OFFERED. $1,000 1968 20ft Glastron trailer, ENTERTAINMENT SPECIAL THE BANK OF NOVA needed for first order of radio, accessories. 160 at SCOTIA requires the services Canadian cigars. Money making inboard/outboard mercruiser. SEAFLOOR AQUARIUM of an area Manager. Applicant agency. Write to Economy Phone 3-2739. Easter Monday only. should have at least 20 years Sales Agency, P. 0. Box 6104 Children 4-11 yrs. $1.00 banking experience with iAn f E. S., Nassau, Bahamas C9461 Adults 12 years up those years being In a OTHER AGENCIES 17 FOOT THUNDERBIRD $1.75 managerial capacity. Please OFFERED" with 80 h.p. Mercury Good clean fun for the apply in person at the Bank of C9485 outboard. New seats. Fast, entire family Nova Scotia. Bay Street and W I L L A P P OIN T Geliable boat $1,950. maPhone Spend the whole day. Rawson Square, Nassau. Only Representative to call on hotels 206, Georgetown, Exuma. Snack-bar with delicious native Bahamians need apply. and other businesses in Nassau, C9498 food & drink. Please state references. Scotch YACHTS AND BOATS LTD. Go west Bay Street to C9563 Whiskey Futures Co., Ltd., P. Chippingham Road and follow WANTED Married couple to 0. Box 574 Riverside CHRIS CRAFT the red Dolphin signs. run small Out Island hotel. No Station. Miami, Fla. 33135. children, minimum of two CONCORDE tNa mCE years experience in food and PUBLIC AUCTION beverage, front desk and PU IO IRWIN SAIL YACHTS C9426 bookkeeping, after formal C9484 BAHAMAS YSIYU training. Mechanical knowledge AHAM AS YOU TH of motor vehicles, appliances, KIRK S. HINSEY will sell at MAGNUM MARINE EVANGELISM FELLOWSHIP and diesel generator plant also the parking lot east of the invites you to see "BELOVED necessary. Apply In writing Harbour Moon Hotel, Bay AVON INFLATABLES ENEMY" at the EpworthHall, including picture and Street, on the 28th day of Shirley Street, Saturday April reference lauding picture and P April 1973 at 12 noon the 53 foot Mathews twin diesel 14th 8 p.m. No Admission Box references to Mr. Moxey, P. Bah follAwing property:- double cabin cruiser with -harges or collection. Box 1216, Nassau, Bahamas. 1. ALL THAT piece or parcel flybridge. G.M. 6-71 diesels. I of landbeingpartofalotof n older boat butvery IO SERVICES land situate in the City of carefully maintained. Can N WANTEDI Nassau in the aforesaid Island stand rigid survey $11.500.00 C8500 C9315 of New Providence which said C8500 piece or parcel of land is 30 foot sloop with 30 h.p. IF YOU need a young girl to Pit r's atsmS bounded on the West by auxiliary. Sleeps four and is work in your shop please write Hospital Lane and running very complete. Has everything Adv. C8500, c/ The Tribune, L thereon Twenty-five Feet and for instant cruising. A good P 0. Rox N3207, Nassau. Fifty-eight hundredths of a buy at $6,600.00 C9430 Mackey Street Foot (25.58) on the North by C9430& Rosevelt Avenue other part of the said lot of AT THE DIVE SHOP YOUNG AMBITIOUS single NASSAU, BAHAMAS land reserved as a Footpath Bahamian man with 10 years P N Box N3714 and running thereon We are now completely Accounting and office P Box N3714 Eighty-eight Feet and stocked with all diving gear. management experience seeks HEAVY DUTY TRUCKING Twenty-five Hundredths of a New aluminum Tanks, responsible position preferably FORK LIFT RENTAL Foot (88.25) on the East by Regulators, Masks to fit all with international firm. Willing MFCHANICAL HANDLING other part of the said lot of faces, Fins to fit all feet. Try to work anywhere in the EOUIPMENT land about to be conveyed to us! Bahamas or abroad. Most IATA CARGO AGENTS Ivy Zonah Mackey and running interested in opportunity for CUSTOMS CLEARANCE thereon Twenty-five Feet and P.O. Box N1658 additional professional training & DELIVERY Fifty Hundredths of a Foot Telephone 24869 ana thence advancement in MOVING, STORAGE (25.50) and on the South by company Salary and incentives & PACKING land formerly called Henry C9497 open for discussion. Will have STECL BANDING Stephensons but now the IRWIN 24' fibreglass sailboat, to give reasonable notice when & SHIPPING property of the Estate of the sleeps four, 5 sails, outboard, leaving present employ. SPECIAL QUOTATIONS late Helen Margaret O'Brien dinghy. $5,000 o.n.o. Call Kindly reply to P. 0. Box EXCELLENT SERVICE and running thereon 7-4168 or 7-4063. N7351, Nassau, Bahamas. REASONABLE RATES Eighty-nine Feet and L M Seventy-five Hundredths of a C9491 WANTED CONTACT LYMAN PINDER Foot (89.75) the said piece or 65ft. Steel Refrigerated Vessel OR JACK CASH parcel of land having such like new. R/V Victory Call C9500 2-379, 2-3796, position boundaries marks Ryan at 1-305-3796990 USED BOAT in excellent Airport77 77434 shape and dimensions as are condition 1 8'-20'Airpor shown on the Diagram or Plan C9483 inboard/outboard or outboard C8105 hereto attached and being 8ft. SPORTYAK Lightweight with canopy, comfortable TRY US FOR SAFE SURE delineated on the Pink portion Dinghy with oars, paddles and seating for 4 adults, suitable TRY US FOR SAFE SURE of the said Diagram or Plan. outboard motor in need of for water-skiin fishing CLEANING! ABCORPETS NE 2. ALL THAT lot of land repair. $60 O.N.O. Phone 7-8089 or 74086 UPER STEAM- CARPETS situate Gleniston Gardens 57019 after 6 p.m. or UPHOLSTERY TEL: Subdivision in the Eastern C r51071-2-3-4. District of the said Island of IN MEMnIAAM HELP WANTED New Providence and having the I nC9317 number Twenty-one (21) .. in C9478 C9481 T. V. ANTENNAS. Boostrfs Block number Twenty-seven in loving and precious memory YOUNG'BAHAMI Al FIRM of for homes. apartments Ad Block number Twenty-seven In loving and precious memory Chartered Accountants require hotels. Sales and services. (27) .... on the said plan of the of my dear mother Celest Moss Chartered or Certifed hotels. Sales and services. C-0 said Subdivision the said lot of who departed this life April A c c o u n t a n t s with Douglas Lowe 5-9404 WORLD land being bounded as 15th 1972. Post-Qualification experience OF MUSIC, Mackey Street follows:- More and more each day I miss in a Professional Office. next to Frank's Place. NORTHWESTWARDLY by you Excellent prospects and good Lot Number Twenty-two (22) Friends may think the wound working conditions. Five day C9299 week. epy In confidence to PATIO AWNINGS AND in the said Block Number is healed. Messrs. Pannell, Fitzpatrick CARPORTS Twenty-seven (27) and running Remembrance is a golden chain and Company, P. 0. Box HURRICANE AWNINGS, thereon Eighty (80) feet; Death tried to break N-4665, Nassau, Bahamas. HUTTERS NORTHEASTWARDLY by But all in vain to have to hold SHUTTERS, Lot Number Twenty (20) in And then to part is the greatest C9489 John S. George & Co. Ltd., the said Block Number sorrow in one's heart. BICYCLES, MOTOR-CYCLE For free estimates and prompt Twenty-seven (27) and running The years may wipe out Mechanic required. Nassau service call 2-8421-23-4n5-6. thereon One Hundred and memories which we shared. Bicycle Company Limited. service call 2-8421-2-3-4-5-6. Fifty (150) feet; Gone but not forgotten. Phone 28511, P. 0. Box C9314 SOUTHEASTWARDLY by a MRS. BEATRICE MULLING N8171, Nassau.TROUBLES small or large road known as Elizabeth Street (daughter). T e P .m on ls and running thereon Eighty C9435 call The Plumber on Wheels:-- ( 80 ) feet; an CARD OF THANKS AN UPHOLSTERER with at ROBERT M. BAILEY SOUTHWESTWARDLY in least 3 yrs experience Call P.O. Box N56, Nassau part by a part of Lot Number C9488 22481 for further information Telephone: 3-5870. Twenty-four (24) in the said g ii ig i mmmml iil mi Block Number Twenty-seven G A (27) and running thereon Fifty (50) feet and in further part by R BH1 Lot Number Twenty-five (25) CI IE in the said Block Number Twenty-seven (27) and running thereon One hundred (100) feet; the said lot of land having .such positions boundaries REAL ESTATE HELP MNTED marks shape and dimensions as Share shown on the plan annexed C9447 C 7341 I L hereto and thereon coloured THREE LOTS zoned duplex, P oatalyt fficWest Bondies td4 pink. LUCAYA, 4min. to Freeport Grand Bahama has a Mortgage dated April 28th, SHANNON GOLF COURSE, rjob opportuni avaihaae fha 1970 Sydney K. Whitfield to min. to seashore. All facilities Bahamian in their Refinery the Bank of Nova Scotia. THE FAMILY of the late Errol in. Small cash plus payments Maintenance organization pagRe orded in Volume 1615 Delisltate exprencss their heartfelt takeover now paid. THIS IS Freeport, for the following This sale is subject to a thanks to all those who so A B AR GA oI rand! Also posit IAN INDUSTRIAL reserve price and to the right generously gave their time and single-family lo5ft bulon Grand Bah ENGNEER N cetL for the Auctioneer or any showed their sympathy In Waterway. 125ft. bul a NI n person on his behalf to bid up every way during their recent faitenance paid, in nowall-time aoil ege to train as a Planner to that price, r sold-out PINE BAY. Write other network Maintenance Terms: 10 percent of the thank you. Adv. C9447, c/o The Tribune, Management systems. No , I tha"st_ Wht gributt Saturday, April 14, 1973. I GRAND BAHAMA I HELP WANTED C7336 GARDE MANGER (CHEF): Prepares his station, gives duties to his assistants on the preparation of all cold dishes re appetizers, salads, hours d'oeuvres, etc., supervises and prepares all cold meat tdishe', SAUCE COOK (CH( F DF PARTIE): Takes charge of lthe station, details work lto assistants and makes sure that all sauces for the meni, of tthe day are prepared, dishes ot all sauce items on the meini during meal houJrs RELIEF COOK: To a:t as relief cook to sauce rook,,. vegetable cooks, roast Looks and work at ay other station as assigned by the ELecutimve Chef. SOUS CHEF SECONDD CHEF): Supervises all cooks and takes all Executive Chef duties when he is absent. ELECTRICIAN: Is responsible for the maintenance and repairs of all electrical equipment within the hotel. Must be capable of testing circuits, analysing arid finding faults in systems and repairing them. Must have completed apprenticeship and served at least two to three years as qualified electrician. High School education preferred. PLUMBER: Must be able to maintain and repair all plumbing facilities and .-quipment within the hotel. Must be experienced in welding and pipe fitting and be able to read from drawings. At least two years experience in heavy duty gas and commercial cooking and kitchen equipment. High School education and Institute of Trades. AIR-CONDITIONING AND RE FRIGERATION MECHANIC: Should be able to handle maintenance of all types of refrigeration arind air-conditioning equipment, from fractional units to 100 ton units, plus ice machines. High School education and Institute of Trades, minimum of five years experience and must also be able to supervise staff. Apply Monday through Friday between 9 a.m. and 12 Noon only, to King's Inn & Golf Club, Personnel Department, Freeport. C9480 SYNTEX CORPORATION HAS THE FOLLOWING VACANCY: UTILITY OPERATOR Must be able to operate and maintain oil fired burners, refrigeration machines, water demineralizers and air compressors. Will be required to work shifts. Previous experience essential Applicants should apply in person to Syntex Corporation, West Sunrise Highway, or write P. 0. Box F-2430, Freeport. LOST C7345 LADIES 3-COLOURED GOLD BRAIDED BRACELET, FREEPORT AREA. GOOD REWARD TO FINDER. S. BERNSTEIN (352-6855). CROSSWORD PUZZLE 27. Spotlikt 1. Poisonous 29. Sweet potato 6. Overjoy 31. Combs wool 11. Abbreviated 35. Front swim suit 38. Weir 12. Plant root 40. Lyrist 13. Hypothetical 41. Wading bird force 43. College cheer 14. Incensed 45. World War II 16. Japanese sash area SO 18. Gender 46. Trumped-up 19. Copycat 49. Bone 20. Mattress case 50. Courtship 22. Kind of coffee 51. Father of Zeus 24. Chinese pagoda 53. Fumes 25. Infuse 54. Recognition HELP WANTED ] - .. /1 38 (1) WASHIMAN: To sort soiled linen, feed int o washing mac tine and folding way of same N(N experience necessary. (I) LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING SERVICEMAN: To dryclean aind press silk and swollen garments. Should have experience as .1a Dryclean Press, (1) Htf AD CHt F: Is responsible for the c complete iiepaiattior of the Kitchen aind Coffee Shop foods and supervises on of all first order ( 1 ) M AI N F NANC I M AN A G R STAFFF ()UJARTF IS): Must have sound knowledge of plumbing, also have working knowledge of water softeners. pumps andi sewage treatment plants Other dutties will include electrical repairs, including replacing ouitdooi lights aid ( leaning arim onditioner filters, replacing jalousie glass arid other odd lobs around the building. (?) WASHIROOM HELPERS Aiding i itnloading soiled linens, sorting ami e to prepare fo washing mid unloading of ',,ie after washing ( 1 ) C ONV N I1 0 1 SET UP MAN: To work on shift. Must be able to operate movie proje(toir, lift heavy equipment, clean and vacuum all meeting rooms and set uip rooms for banquets and cocktail parties. Experienced applicant preferred. Apply Monday through I rfiday between 9 a.m. ard 12 Noon only, to King's Inn & Golf Club, P. 0. Box, F-207, Freeport, Personnel Department. C 7340 Catalytic West Indies, Limited, Post Office Box F-2544, Freeport, Grand Bahama, has a job opportunity available for a Bahamian in their Refinery Maintenance organization, Freeport, for the following position: FIELD MACHINIST Must have a minimum of five (5) years experience in trouble-shooting and repair of all Refinery Rotary equipment, including pumps, turbines, diesels, large centrifugal compressors and transfer equipment. Qualified applicant should reply to Deputy Chief Industrial Officer, Ministry of Labour, Freeport, Grand Bahama, Bahamas. C7344 Bahamas Supermarket Ltd. has vacancy for an experienced stock clerk who can order ana merchandise all dairy products. Only Bahamian need apply. Telephone 352-7901 or address correspondence to: The Manager, Box F-457, Freeport. C9453 PERSONAL LOAN OFFICER The Royal Bank of Canada Freeport, Grand Bahama requiress the services of a personal Loans Officer. Applicants must be Bahamian, possess at least G.C.E. '0' level in Maths and English and should have previous experience it; the loaning field of banking. Applications should be directed to The Assistant Manager, Administration, The Royal Bank of Canada, P. 0. Box F61, Freeport or call for an appointment at 352-6631. .1o" na a ,-OC 10MI 0 OD N*moom nuiomi LIINU A 103 atOI .D.ATk+41 LUTION OF YESIERAY*S PUZZLE DOWN 1. Choice morsel 5. Apple drink 2. Approval 6. Work unit 3. Twelve 7. Miss Turner 4. Caravansaries 8. Adjust 7- pt 9. Clothes moth genus - -10. Added 11. High shoes 15. Corn lily 17. Winter peril 19 21. Tonality 23. Grampus 26. Water lily leaf 28. Overtop a, , 30. Grape refuse -S2a 32. Spawn of fish 33. Bypass 4 34. Opposed to lee 1 35. Parish priest 36. Serpent S37. Curtain fabric S.39. Rival 42. Rabbit's tail 44. Demigod - 47. Alternatives 48. Put on pr.A- 52. Denial CARROLL RIGHTER'S ,O.ROSCOPE from the Carroll Righter Intitut "le GENERAL 1ENDENCIES Accumulated odds /and ends must be taken care of and this is just the right Saturday for doing so Clean and refurbish possessions, etc Also good for health measures. ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr. 19) A good day to get your home in spic-and-span condition, so start early Take the exercise you need for better health, too You can do some quiet entertaining in the evening that can be pleasant and relaxing. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Do whatever will please those you love which gives you pleasure as well. Then enjoy hobbies that are relaxing yet mentally stimulating. These can be enjoyed with good pals. GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Good day to get home cleaned and then you can run errands for kin Get those duties done that will free time for more important things in the future Do nothing of a destructive nature. MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Ideal day for shopping for needed items and then getting together with associates for whatever has been planned Show you are specific in communicating with others. LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Make your home as attractive as you can, but stay within your budget. Talk over with an expert whatever is of a financial nature. You get excellent ideas thereby. Avoid one who is irritated VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept. 22) Get busy and make yourself more attractive and more mentally and physically alive. If you get out to group meetings, make a mental or written note of people's names so you will remember them later. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct 22) Take the treatments early that will make you feel dynamic and attractive in appearance. You have good hunches and should make use of them to improve your position in life. This can be a wonderful social evening with congenials. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Make it a point to show those you want in your life in the future that you really like them Attend group affairs you like. Make the new acquaintances who are worthwhile and can be helpful in the days ahead. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Get into the activities today that will help you advance in the future, and gain the approval of bigwigs. Talk less and work more for good results. You can secure the backing of the public as well CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan 20) Secure the data you need now so you can handle certain affairs that will come up soon. You make new friends now who can bring much pleasure into your life Show your most courteous manner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Plan just how to get tasks handled more efficiently via some new and better methods, using true intelligence A romantic interest can be most helpful now or vice versa. This can be a delightful evening. PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You are able to communicate beautifully with associates, so get in touch with them early and make progress. Questionable points hard to clear up before now become easy Show you are intelligent. IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY . he or she will be one of those precise and meticulous young people who would do well in vocations where precision, detail, research and patience are required and also in clothes designing, selling, etc. There will be a very marked streak to be overparticular, but that is the quality that will bring the big success denoted in this chart, so don't let it bother you Give an opportunity to ' travel early, and permit music lessons early too. Bridge By VICTOR MOLLO ARTIFICIAL b.ds, which are so fashionable in some quarters these davs, must have hidden (htirwi., for Lhir .prie in mcncv and matchpoints is undeniably high. Apart from the frequent. and often trag.-comic mis- understandings, they have the added disadvantage of allowing opponents to exchange informa- tion at no cost to themselves. as on this hand in the American National Mixed Pairs Cham- pionship. Dealer East: E W Vul: North 4Q 864 KJ 10 C K 10 9 5 4 3 4 3 West East A 10 7 5 2 4 K J K 3 0 A Q A 7 2 0 - 10 9 2 1 A 8 South S9 9 South Pass Pass. 50 6 2 J 8 6 West 14b 20 Dble East 1 ': 24 30 3 8 7 5 4 6 5 4 North Pass Dble Why West couldn't bid an honest 2NT over 24-or why, for that matter, East couldn't bid 32 over 14-will never be known. Perhaps it would have been too simple. In the event, West's fatuous 20 gave North the chance to double free of charge. South needed no more to find a cheap sacrifice in 50. At matchpoint scoring, saving a vulnerable game for 500 is a clearcut victory. As the cards are, .t isn't easy for North-South to break even 6C. The &K is led, but North has no club to return when he comes in with the 4Q. Or does Chess By LEONARD GARDEN (963) White males in two moves. against any defence (by V. Bar- tolovic). This puzzle won top rize in the British Chess Federation's 1971-72 competition. and has a couple of near misses which caught out several pre- vious solvers. As usual. White moves up the board. Par times: 1 minute, problem master: 3 minutes, problem uc expert; 7 minutes, good: 15 1J minutes. average: 30 minutes, Z novice. O - SOLUTION NO. 9634 - IJ Chess Solution " 1 Q-B4 (threat 2 BxKtP). " if I ... P-B6: 2 B-Q3, or if Kt-Q4; 2 Q-03. or if Kt-B4; 2 Kt-QB3. or if K x P; 2 Q-KS, or if K-B4; 2 B-Q3. No credit for I QxKKtP? PK-BSI nor for 1 Q-Kt3? No. 7.091i iv 'riM it.KAV 1. p10onl11g sides (K) Wi. L.ik Jers'er or Man. <(i) 10. Keeled. (I)) II. Pieces of door frrnilture. (I) 12. Somuethling to eat. (4) 1:1. Expremlligs a sort of loigllne. (9) 14. (iOrld siiname. (4 1 Curtain. (5) IN. Bridge. (") 40. Addltionial. (3) R1. Raise. (4) P2. Period tof time. (3) 23. Dl)as of loung a I. (I) I. lie.% Ised to lie features ul l.owestot m and Varllolll Ih. 3. i('hool iollacile. (t) 3. labpl. (3) 4. iulfer. (.5) 3. 1n un1111 iiIsliialniied fashion (3) 7. StrUIs i-or down., (3) 8. Objetliion. (3) 9. T o I) HI a n. 15. D 11 lle (4) 1t. ru l(t. tI h eP (4) 19. IWee p. (3) adu tra' soiOsn REX MORGAN, M.D. By DAL CURTIS ] APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzk j YESMR. NASH! WATCH ME PUT ON THE POG MAY I BE OF I EON'T THINK SO! ILL'BE BACKTASSISTANCECLTMANAGER, WELL BE HERWHEN YOU MAPAM' PLEASE! TELL HIM IT'S EVE ROE NEEP ME! NMMDRS. JORPAN NASHr WILSONf STEVE ROPER & MIKE NOMAD by saunders & overgard C7346 SITUATION VACANT A NUMBER OF MALE CASHIERS ARFI REQUIRED BY BAHAMAS AMUSEMENTS LIMITED, FREEPORT, GRANI) BAHAMA. QUALIFICATIONS:- Good educational standard. Minimum of 2 years experience as a Bank Teller or equivalent. Applicant must be willing to work at( night. He must be over 21 years of age. Apply in person or in writing to BAllAMAS AMUSEMENTS LIMITED, Box F-787, Freeport, for an interview. he allow the *J to win ? UJ *Ifour letters or more can you make -5J from the A letters shown he re? In maklting a word. each Sleteter ma USE wo m be used once on ah word must contain the larme letter. an4 there must be at wh iTribu least one elght-letter word in the list. No plurals; no foreign words: no proper names. TODAY'S TARGT: 26 words good : CLASSIFIED 31 words. ver good: 6 words. excellent. Solution tomorrow. VESTERDAV'S SOLUTION : 0 iltuIng bluish blush lMLUSHING ADVTS. buhl hunr bush buSlhinx gihu iush hung lung lush shun slub lilnx slug slung snsib snut %tint using . I I )l Saturday. April 14, 1 973. unit unrtbtmr 11 Rupert and the Mixed Magic-30 "Yes, little bear, I am glimpses the Wizard below. thankful the wand obeyed me. "He's unrolling a carpet," Now we must make haste. I breathes Rupert. "What Is it fear we may be too late to for?" That is his magic catch the Wizard The carpet," replies the Sorcerer. Sorcerer races out of the dome "It will carry him to China. with Rupert at his heels. Ha, where he plans to raid my there he is !" On the steps 'he home. We have but a few Sorcerer pauses as he moments to stop him." Brother Juniper "We ran out of tin pans." ypI and8 EfI jaef MY 1)? Hs oKAY, I O US. I CAN O ASK MI... HEVS 51MN' OUT IN E GWA.G.- The Tribune Comics Page SMOICEH]Rin 973. Saturday, April 14, 1 ght Mrtbune W1e (rJtilItti Saturday, April 14, 1973. Becks Bees sting Schlitz 10-2 snap losing streak By GLADSTONE THURSTON BE(KS BEES, coming off a slight losing streak that cost them the lead to Big Q Marketeers, stopped Schlitz Beer 10-2 last night handing them their fifth loss in ten games played. \llihi' fi t h i hal ,I stronger it-in ll ,ih n it previous' years, ohs t hai s h.ippjn!i' d so tir is rh.1t our pitll i i is in;i co rrlingg Ihoii rh ai s r X pr.'lLtld," IMIICe'nl H.' i t ks ,,k, manager ttunini i \lbiii v.- AndiI our hliil n I f i I lin U "is are nr tI lilt li 1 ,n\, r cll ais theN are \ r thlllss 1. hI sl(l, "I an) L'l Iti t II I ha)i lppi' ini' (iw while it I s IN ll ',I ly in tlhI sca.sonI I viist wh. lIen Itics.' Icellows i l hilli Shi rt stIpI Rorsesvclt I urnecr Ad a.iptalin toii Becks I iit i iietn l in l'ead theli way for h ,is h.' ,is hlic st+ rt.ic'! (iiI tire r Iti 1 vi ll :i tf pi i .ndl went (n th s'- .i I' l c c ria ind dillect twoi I nelik- i. l liiii. Addin |i>I tin stie .Ien wias li v, l ;niatitir'ld slhon t stop Sumniin l livcrn last y\'ear's ihest di, rl ,t stop who scored oine A.id kinuckiet in two during his loi 1 litis i, l IA r. ll vcen ialsoi hitd l iur [)it oiits andl two .issis s ( ii trc iecldcr Willie K tiufmo s' kiockcdi ini three' rins ,snln( oi :nirid c(ollecitd two tliits. NI AR SHUTOUT I p to theh bottom of tihe tiIth inning, winning pitcher Stcplicn Ilunies was hurling a shtut o)it gale. Ilowever, in the bhfltomn of the sixth, Godfrey I neas on Schlitz' third hit of the game drove a triple into right centre field at the same time sending Anthony Smith home for the first run. In the same inning, Lloyd Bowleg on i shot to short drove in lineas. Batting first, Becks took a 1-0 lead by the bottom of the tirst and got three more in the ihildt, two in the fourth and one mi the fifth to lead 9-0 before. Schlitz rallied for two. Turner on third following his opening triple scored Becks' first run when second batter Haven grounded to short. Anthony Huyler followed with a single and later scored on an error that sent the fourth hatter Fred Taylor to third. Taylor, who got on with a single, scored on Willie Knowles' shot to short. ORDER OF OUTS One, two, three was the order of outs for Schlitz in the bottom iof the first with Becks following the same pattern in the top of the second. Schlitz still unable to feel the pitching oif Iluimes again went down without scoring to bring up Becks' three-run third innings. Turner leading off that inning picked up his second run, again oft a Haven rbi. laven notched his first run when he look advantage of an error that saw Huyler on base. Iluyler also picked up his sccrind irun when Knowles groiunded out to second. Stephen Ilumes and Turner were the scores for the Bees in the fourth inning. laylor got his second run in the top of the seventh on Knowles' third rbi. Ilenry Williams in picking up the loss walked one and situckout two. Hie gave up II lits. Iliumes the winner, walked tlur and struckout six. He gave tip three hits. BAHAMAS RACECO CUP WINNER FOUR V's, owned by Justin Roberts and ridden by Austin Saunders, outstrode its field by ten lengths to win the Bahamas Raceco Limited Cup in the two-year old, five furlong feature race at Hobby Horse Race Track yesterday. / 014z Spanish Dancer was second and Spanish Contessa third. In the photo above, Roberts receives the Bahamas Raceco Limited Cup from Glen Holmes racing secretary. Trainer Whitfield Demeritte stands to Roberts' left, Saunders in the saddle and at right is the groom. The racing season closed today at Hobby Horse Race Track with the feature being the Horse of the Year Cup race. PHOTO. Rickey Wells 'g H SWEEPING HIGH DEMOLISH r- ? McPHERSON HIGH Bahamas get Caribbean Games invitation IN ACCORDANCE with instructions given by the Central American and Caribbean Sports Organization, the Bahamas was this morning presented with its official invitation to participate in the XII Central American and Caribbean Games. The presentation was made to Mr. Rudy Moultrie, vice president of the Bahamas Olympic Association, by Mr. Felix Acosta Nunez, editor of the Listin Diario, and Mr. Rafael David Henriquez, Big Q keep their one & half game lead over Becks Bees, beat Blenders 10.2 BIG Q M A R KI:TIERS maintained their ine and a half game lead over Becks Bees last night when they defeated Bahamas Blenders 10-2 in the second game at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Centre. Gaining a 2-1 advantage by the end of the first inning, Big Q, behind the pitching of Godfrey hohlison. went ou to blank the Blenders for the second, third, fourth and fifth innings before third baseman Phillip Saunders crossed the plate for the Blenders' second and final run. Among a good field of hitters in the Big Q line up last night, left fielder Vince Albury scored three runs, hatted in one and collected one hit during his three times at hat. Catcher I'd Moxey continued the pace and scored two, knocked in (me and collected two hits from his three times at bat. With two down in the top of the first, an error on the short stop put Vince Albury on first. lie stole second and scored the Marketeers' first run on Moxey's rhi single into left. Moxey also stole second andu was wild pitched homelr for the Marketeers second run. Second baseman Charles Moss did the dariage for the Blenders in the bottom oif the first when a throwing error on Big Q's short stop saw him home. Moss got on with a single. Second baseman Adlai Moss got the first of his two runs in the top of the second inning when he tripled into left and scored on Johnson's rbi single into right. The Blenders threatened in the bottom of the fourth but were good enough for only two hits including a triple. Centre fielder Kermit Graham led off that inning with a single but he fell trying to steal second. Paul Johnson followed and sent a one and one pitch deep into right for a triple. The third and fourth batters however were unable to help him as Ronnie Smith struckout and John Rolle grounded out to short. Spurred on by the Blenders' futile attempts Big Q picked up a total of seven runs between the fifth and the sixth innings to increase their standings to l0(-. BIG Q MARKETEERS ab r h rbi Munroe 3 0 0 0 Rodgers 3 1 0 0 Albury 3 3 1 1 Moxey 3 2 2 1 Higgs 4 0 0 0 Roy Rodgers 2 1 0 0 Bradshaw I I 1 0 A. Rodgers 0 0 0 Moss 4 2 4 1 Rolle 4 0 1 0 Johnson 4 0 2 2 BAHAMAS BLENDERS Ferguson Lee Moss Saunders Grahamn Johnson Smith Sweeting ab r 20 1 0 3 I 3 I 3 0 3 0 2 0 1 0 Rolle 2 0 0 0 Neiley 2 0 0 0 Smith 2 0 0 0 TONIGHT'S GAMES i)EL JANE Saints having dropped into fourth place with a six and six win/loss record meet yet another obstacle tonight when they take on second place Becks Bees in the first game at 7 o'clock. Jet Set "the Upsetters" after a, fantastic winning streak which saw them in their place with a seven and three win-loss record, take on Schlitz Beer in the second game 9:30 at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Centre. BASEBALL STANDINGS Big Q Becks Bees Jet Set Schlitz Del Jane Paradise Blenders Heastie W L 10 I 9 3 7 3 5 5 6 6 WINS SPANISH OPEN LA MANGA, SPAIN (AP)- Neil Coles on Britain won the Spanish Open golf championship Saturday by firing a fourth round par 72. Coles 72-hole total of 282 was three strokes better than Tinie Britz of South Africa and Craig de Foy Former U.S. and British Open champ Tony Jacklin finished the day with a 76 after a disaster on the 17th hole when he drove into a lake_ president of the Dominican Football Federation, both of whom are members of the organizing committee of the Games. The official invitation, cased in a goat skin wrapper and written in English, French and Spanish read: "The Organizing Committee of the XII Central American and Caribbean Sports Games in accordance with the instructions given by the Central American and Caribbean Sports Organization (C.A.C.S.O.), has the honour to invite you to participate in the competition and celebration which will take place at Santo Domingo from February 27 to March 13, 1974." This was signed by the president Ingeniero Bienvenido Martinez. Both Nunez and Henriquez left today for Jamaica and Haiti where they will present similar invitations. The photo above shows Mr. Moultrie (centre) being presented with the official invitation by Mr. Nunez (right) and Mr. Henriquez. PHOTO: Philip Symonette Easter Molday meet will select athletes for Carifta Games A GROUP of twenty-four youths to represent the Bahamas at the Carifta Games is expected to he picked following a track and field meet sponsored by the Bahamas Amateur Athletic Association on Easter Monday. April 23 at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Centre. The Carifta Games is scheduled to be held in Trinidad between May 2 and 6. With entrants to the Carifta Games limited to those 20 years and under and 17 years and under, some of the Bahamas' best athletes including Danny Smith will not be able to participate. However, invitations have been sent to most of the High Schools in New Providence stating the number of events that arc being run. Realizing that there were some schools that were mistakenly overlooked, the B.A.A.A. will hold a warm-up meet on Wednesday to accommodate any athlete under 20 years who is desirous of a chance to be selected for the Carifta Games. Although the B.A.A.A. have been keeping a keen eye on the schools' sporting scene, they have also extended invitations to those outside of schools to participate in the eliminations. Other meets are scheduled to follow that of the Easter Monday meet by the running of Club events and school events simultaneously. This is expected to stimulate interest and also cultivate talent that exist in the schools. C. C. SWEETING High, coming out of "Volleyball City" and making a definite hid for the championship in this their rookie year, demolished Mcl'herson Hligh 15-0, 15-0 and 15-5 yesterday to push their undefeated record to three since the Inter-School Volleyball series started on Monday. "It was an easy win for us," commented coach Tom Grant, who will have his teams playing a series of exhibition games at the Sonesta Beach 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. Going into the first set, co-captain Mathew Lcckey at the line served 10 consecutive points, including two aces, before Mc'herson on a bump over the net stopped the rally. As they served the hall out of hounds. Max Smith and Danny Stuhbs combined for the remaining five points to lead C. C. to victory. Coach Grant then again put on his secondary team and they continued where the first team left off. Behind the spiking of Wilfred Culmer and the all-round play of Leon Wilson, Ronnie Archer moved Sweeting High to a 10-0 lead before his serve was broken. Archer served four aces. Mcl'herson High again was unable to make use of their serve and C. C. ran to another victory. Having seen what McPherson was made of, coach Grant then put on his third grade team and they - behind the nine point service of Godrey Cartwright sped to a 12-0 lead. Over confident as they tried to make it three consecutive skunks, C.C. slipped up and McPherson got through with five points. "They were playing too careful," noted coach Grant. Sweeting High in that last set saw good setting from Creswell Stuart who placed the hall well for spikers Keith Wells and Sherwin Brown. In Thursday's game C. C. Sweeting Iigh stopped St. John's College 15-2, 15-4 and 15-4. "No problems," boasted coach Grant. Sweeting High are now looking towards their clash with defending champions Prince William's High on Thursday. This game is expected to he played at the A. It. Adderley Gym. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pet. (;B Boston 3 0 1.000 Baltimore 4 I .800 Detroit 2 3 .400 2 Milwaukee 1 2 .333 2 Cleveland 2 4 .333 2V1 New York 2 4 .333 2V/ West Division Kansas City 5 2 .714 - Minnesota 4 2 .667 V/ California 3 3 .500 I Vr Chicago 2 2 .500 11I Texas 2 3 .400. 2 Oakland 1 5 .167 31/ Friday's Results Detroit 4. Cleveland 3 Kansas City 12, Chicago 5 Minnesota 8. Oakland 4 Texas 4, C('alifornia 2 Milwaukee 2, Baltimore 0 Today's Games lBoston (Tiant 1-0) at New York (Peterson 0-1), 2 p.m. Oakland (Holtzman 0-I1) at Minnesota (Blyleven I-I), 2:15 p.m. Kansas City (Splittorff 1-0) at Chicago (Wood 1 -1), 2:15 p.m. Baltimore (Alexander 1-0) at Milwaukee (Lockwood 0-0), 2.30 p.m. Cleveland (Dunning 0-0) at Detroit (J. Perry 0-0), 3:15 p.m. California (Singer 1-0) at Texas (Hand 0-0), 8.30 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pe;t. GB Pittsburgh 4 0 1.000 - New York 4 I .800 V2 Chicago 2 3 .400 21A Montreal 2 3 .400 2 1 Philadelphia 2 3 .400 2% St. Louis 1 5 .167 4 West Division San francisco6 1 .857 - Cincinnati 4 2 .667 1l/2 Houston 4 4 .500 2t Atlanta 3 4 .429 3 San Diego 3 5 .375 3V/ Los Angeles 2 6 .250 4/V2 Friday's Results Pittsburgh at Montreal, ppd., cold Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 3 San Diego 5, Houston 4 Philadelphia 7, New York I St. Louis 6, Chicago3 Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 5 Today's Games Pittsburgh (Briles 0-0) at Montreal (McAnally 1-0), 2.15 p.m. Chicago (Reuschel 0-0) at St. Louis Liverpool grab 2 point lead over Arsenal in soccer race LONDON (AP)--Kevin Keegan scored a priceless penalty goal for Liverpool Saturday and sent his team into a two points lead over Arsenal in the race for the English soccer league title. The penalty gave Liverpool a 1-0 UNITED 2. Mike Pejic, Sto'e win over West Bromwtch. Arsenal defender, scored two goals against were held to a 1-1 draw at home by his own team. He diverted a shot by Tottenham and Leeds. also in the Lou Macari into the net in the 65th hunt for the championship, could minute. Stoke then forged into a only manage a 1-1 draw at West 2-1 lead with goals by Jimmy Ham. Greenhoff and John Ritchie, but Liverpool now have 55 points with only six minutes to go with four games to play. Arsenal unhappy Pejic did It again this are on 53 points, also with four time trying to clear a shot by Peter games to come. Leeds have six Fletcher. games left and have 49 points. This was how the games went: Norwich, West Bromwich and LIVERPOOL I WEST Crystal Palace share bottom place BROMWHICH 0. Nearly 50,000 in the standings with 28 points, and fans saw Liverpool attack it locts as if two of them will go persistently but fall to finish off down to the second division. West their movements. But in the 14th Bromwich have three games to play minute Steve Heighway was and the other two have four games brought down and Keegan slammed left each. Leicester are four points the Penalty home. Peter Cormack ahead. hit the post from 30 meters and Burnley lead the second division Alec Lindsay and Emlyn Hughes with 53 points and Queen's Park were foiled by John Osborne's rangers ae one point behind in I second place. There is a gap of brilliant goalkeeping as West seven points between Rangers and Bromwich defended grimly, the third team, Aston Villa. ARSENAL 1 TOTTENHAM I t. e Arsenal didn't look like a championship team. Martin Chivers scored from 15 yards for Tottenham in the 58th minute, after Alan Gilzean had made the opening with a glancing header. LONDON (AP)-Results of One minute later George Armstrong Saturday's British soccer games: pushed the ball through for Peter ENGLISH LEAGUE Storey to equalize. Tottenham Division I goalkeeper Pat Jennings, recently Arsenal I Tottenham I named England's soccer star of the Coventry 0 Derby 2 year, defied Arsenal in the closing Crystal Palace I Ipswich 1 minutes. Leicester 0 Birmingham I WEST HAM I LEEDS 1. West Liverpool I West Bromwich 0 liam pounded away at the Leeds Manchester C. 3 Sheffield U. I goal but had no luck with their Norwich I Chelsea 0 shooting. The turning point was an Southampton I Newcastle I injury to West Ham goalkeeper Stoke 2 Manchester United 2 Bobby Ferguson, who was carried West Ham I Leeds I off in the second half. Bermudan Wolverhampton 4 Everton 2 star Clyde Best put on the goalie's Division 2 jersey and was beaten by Allan Aston Villa I Bristol City 0 Clarke in the 82nd minute. Pat Blackpool 2 Preston 0 Holland levelled the scores in the Brighton 2 Orient I dying seconds. Carlisle 0 Hull City I WOLVERHAMPTON Fulham 2 Oxford 0 EVERTON 2. John Richards scored Huddersfield 0 Burnely 2 three goals in a brilliant display for Nottingham I Middlesbrough 3 Wolves. He breasted down a long Queen's Park 2 Luton 0 pass and swivelled to volley home Sheffield Wed. I Cardiff 0 the first goal from the edge of the Sunderland 2 Portsmouth 0 penalty box in the 21st minute. Swimdon 0 Millwall 0 Five minutes later he scored again from a similar position after Derek Division 3 Dougan had put him through. John Blackburn 2 Bournemouth I Connolly pulled one back for Bristol Rovers 2 Walsall I Everton before half-time and the Charlton 2 Wrexham I visiting team pressed hard in the Chesterfield 2 Scunthorpe I second half. In the last six minutes Grimsby 2 Transmere 0 Richards scored for Wolves, Joe Oldham I Halifax 1 Harper for Everton and Ken Hibbitt Plymouth I Notts County 4 for Wolves. Rotherham I Southend 0 SO U TH AM PTON I Swansea 0 Port Vale I NEWCASTLE 1. After Newcastle Watford 2 Brentford 2 had missed chances Stewart York City I Rochadale 2 Barrowclough sent them into the lead in the 67th minute. Ten SCOTTISH LEAGUE minutes later Mike Channon was fouled, Terry Paine floated a Division I free-kick across the goal and Paul Airdrie I East Fife I Gilchrst headed an equalizer for Arbroath I Aberdeen I Southampton. Dumbarton I Ayr United I LEICESTER 0 BIRMINGHAM Dundee 5 Falkirk 3 1. Birmingham, who until recently Hibernian 0 Motherwell I faced a possible drop to the second Kllmarnock 2 Hearts I division, hauled themselves to Morton 5 Partick Thistle 0 certain safety with agoa by Alan Rangers 2 Dundee United 1 Campbell in the 53rd minute. He St. Johnstone I Celtic 3 headed in from a cross by Bob Division 2 Latchford. Leicester swarmed to Brechin 0 Berwick 3 the attack and gained one corner Clyde I Alloa 0 after another, but Birmingham's Dunfermline 4 Montrose I defense held out. East Stirling I Cowdenbeath 0 NORWICH 1 CHELSEA 0. Hamilton I St. Mirren 2 A goal by David Cross Stenhousemuir I Queen of South I in the 38th minute gave Norwich Stirling Albion 3 Forfar 4 their first league victory in 20 Stranraer 1 Albion Rovers 0 games. Chelsea never got going and only fine goalkeeping by Peter IRISHBEATFRANCE Bonetti saved them from a heavier ISH BEAT FRANCE defeat. MANCHESTER CITY 3 DUBLIN (AP)- Ireland beat S H E F FIEsLaD U N TED France 6-4 ina rugby union thriller Manchester's star trio of marksmen Saturday and the five nations - Francis Lee, Colin Bell and tournament ended in an Rodney Marsh grabbed a goal unprecedented five-way tie. each in a convincing win. Lee France needed to tie to win the slammed home a penalty for hands title. In the closing minutes Jean in the 14th minute. Bell made it 2-0 Pierre Romeu missed a fairly easy in the 28th minute after a move conversion a kick that would involving Lee and Marsh. In the have put France level and won the 59th minute Marsh himself scored championship. the best goal of the game. All The five nations England, Sheffield could manage was a Scotland Wales, Ireland and France headed goal by Geoff Slamons all finished the tournament with three minutes from the end. four points from four games. This CRYSTAL PALACE I IPSWICH had never previously happened 1. Palace, fighting for first division since the championship was started survival, took a surprise lead in the in 1893. 52nd minute when Ipswich Ireland led 3.0 at half-time and defender Allan Hunter handled and went on to lead 6-0 two penalty Don Rogers scored with the goals. penalty. Bryan Hamilton ran round They held that lead until injury time. Then Jean Francois goalkeeper John Jackson to level Philiponneau took a pass from Jo the scorres ten minutes later. COVENTRY 0 DERBY 2. John Maso and went over from a brilliant O'Hare shot a fine goal for Derby in try. the 12th minute after Coventry had Romet who had kicked 26 done the early attacking. Derby got points for France in the three on top but could not score again previous games, missed the until the 79th minute, when Kevin Frenchman buried his head in his Hector netted from a cross by hands amid a roar from the 50,000 STOKE 2 MANCHESTER fans at Landsdowne Road stadium. RnOPIGAST NOTICE TROPIGAS LTD. will be CLOSED during the Easter Holiday Weekend beginning at 5 p.m. Thursday, 19th. April thru Monday 23rd April, 1973. You are therefore reminded to order gas now and avoid any inconvenience during this period. FOR RENT PRESTIGE OFFICE SPACE Marvellous view of town and harbour sixth floor Trade Winds Building contact Higgs & Johnson Phone 2-8571. HELP WANTED PARADISE ISLAND LIMITED requires one Pastry Chef to take complete charge of pantry. Will be responsible for all pastries (french style especially). Must be able to supervise production for variety of restaurants and to instruct pastry cooks to maintain high standards of quality and presentation. Salary commensurate with experience. Apply to Personnel Department or call 5-7511 for appointment. hill |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 68 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |