A West German customs man takes movies of costum- ed Indian from Calgary at Col- CANADIAN INDIAN IN GERMAY Roman Catholic Priest Gets Anglican College Degree who @nordirm WINNIPEG (CW—An Angli- can college Monday night con- ferred an honorary degree on a Roman Catholic priest with the hope at 'fferences between charity and c 83'. l ‘ the two churches will be some- “It also means that we can day resolved. recognize in the faithful teach. Rev. Hugh P. Kierans. dean ers 0 Roman Catholic; of studies at St. Mary's Unl- Church a commitment to Christ: versity in Halifax. was made a and his truth, something for octor of canon law at the 98th which we also stand and with- annual convocation of St. John's'out which we both are ost." truthlhownforthtoallinitsi fulncss through ecumenical en-l counter, speaking the truth in love, througi acts of‘ ourte SECOND SECTION College. ther Kierans, 48. a native _ The Rupert‘s Land News. anIof Montreal. was ordained a Anglican newspaper here, said Jesuit priest in 1949. He entered it’s the first time a Romanl SOCiet 0‘ Jesus in 1936 Catholic priest has accepted an after graduating with an arts‘ ‘. Anglican theological degree in degree from Loyola College ini » North America or Britain It Montreal. l maydbe the first time in the( l wor . I Rev. Dr. c. Landon. std quads Father I lohn’s vice-chancellor presented - gieudeegree toEFiather Kierans. a‘. Has Worrles ro r rc Kierans thel . . ' JACKSON, Tenn. (APl ~ The Q'iibefiis'evcii‘a“§ol‘““Sfr‘tandon day - °“ W“ °“’d’“p‘°“‘ praised the work, Father Kier Tennessee's flat on record~ ans performed at St Pa 1,; are hale and hearty.. but theirl College in Winni .h uh minim” father is concerned peg .w ere 5 about how his family of 10 will mas rector before gomg to St. manage in a foupmom house; ngygoglésnyg‘ ‘and on his $28 a month salary. JENDSHIP . The quads —- Carline. Pollie Dr. Landon said Father Kier- Ann, wmie Jr. and Lamar—l 3:15 PmmOted ,the dPVEIOPment were born early Sunday to Mrsl o a warm friendship between iwinie Grant Lyons, 35, in Mad-' the Roman Catholic school and .ison County Hospital, St. John‘s. both University of} “The \Inthel' and quadl'unlcls Manitoba affiliates. after his ar-‘are doing just fine," a hospital lrlvfll in 19 -. I spokesman said Monday. Prior to tiiat time there had "we've really had some excite; ogne airport. Forty-eight In- West German cities. little opportunity for the _v ~- dians arrived from Canada to (CF Wirephoto v'a cable from staff and students of St. John’s "I’m rejoicing. you can-t do demonstrate their crafts in Bonn) Col 0 come to know the anything but rejoice,“ said met ungory Buys ‘ WINNIPEG (CP) — Hungary as made a 3.700.000-hushel heat rorth $7,400,000, the Canadian wheat board announced here. it is the first wheat purchase ook a small quantity. H ed to take l.325.000 bushels altogether un- ler a three-year trade agree- ment signed June 11. Canadian Wheatadgwn at the purchase from Canada- by Hungary since 1955 when iti 53“ Stl‘denls at St- father “But I 'iaven't . .. . . I. got any Pauls' Dr‘ Land” sald- money and our four-room home 'I:he citation continued: isn't paid for, And now we've Seen here is the new Mon- tague Legion Home. The build- ing. which was formerly the This is the first order under old Memorial School. was re- h the arrangement. cently renovated by t e Leg- diversion is a possibility be-‘ C ion following construction of ause Hungary normally Charlottetown, Wed. Nov. 4, 1964. MNTAGUE’S NEW lGION HME the new Montague Elementary School. The interior has been remodelled and consists of 8 PAGE NINE men's, lounges and a modern equipped kitchen. large meeting hall, ladies’ and mixed wheat exporter. Shipments will be made through east coast‘ ports starting in December and lending next March Hungarian sale has been italked about for several days because of a visit to wheat board '.Ieadquarters here by J. Hammer, managing director of by he F6deral EXPOI‘iAgrinipex. Hungarian statel insurance ACL ftrading corporation. ' The wheat. hoard announce-i APPLE HARVEST 'ment said Hungary “has the ‘ right to divert the wheat to any} The US anticipates produc- theological indifferentism. FLIGHT ATTEMPT rother Eastern European social-jing a total of 14,000.000.000 ap-‘ ” a 01‘ it does mean that We Man's earliest aliempi ist country." Iples in 1964. 13 per cent greater lbelieve that our differences willlflight in historical times began . Oldest City in North America- thatithan the 1963 crop. Ibc resolved finally and christianiwith t'Ie hot air balloon in 1788.? Steel and concrete buildings Hungary will pay 10 per cent time of shipment “ith remainder in three lequal instalments two. 2'": and 7three years later. These are standard credit 1terms Canada accords other Communist buyers and are gov- ‘It was thought to be most ‘ '1 't ' ’t ' fitting, particularly at a tim aging?th .Chldren' I Is” blg e when ecumenical understanding Lyons, 45, a Negro, said he receives $28 a month for preach- is increasing among us, that t. ing twice monthly at Mt. Zion éohn's College offer to Father ierans an honour whereby we 3, -t h h - ~ - can acclaim him doctor despite 1333205“?He’iaiflefi‘bfg‘fi $4 a day as a laborer, when he differences that still exist be- can get work. t M s were started inimchy ately to assist the family finan-" cially. l 0 l3 ween us. erne “Neither he nor we would de- iCrcdits ' Acquiring Moder ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CPL-The at .new look is spreading over this I laction were done in a spirit of.- faced With plastic and glass} overshadow old wooden dwell- ings huddled in the heart of st. Officials John‘s. here indicate ‘ . 4 ki Now available North America's Oldest n Look The days of remaining Geor gian architecture and Gothic columns are numbered. Stark modernity is gradually d replacing the peculiar blen of: Old World architecture bent [0 the me World builders. The city’s newer sec- tions are carbon copies of other Canadian centres of compar- able size. Actually, the tren d away from the old started eight years before Newfoundland entered Confederation in 1949. At that time the city, perched on a steep hill sloping down to its beautiful harbor, extended only a short distance north of the top of the hill. All ma- jor commercial establishments were close to the water, mostly beside the harbor on Water Street. Strings attached houses climbed the downtown area to taper off eventually into more fashions e residential districts on level land behind the top of the hill. in 1941. the Americans ar- rived, and the housing shortage. already aggravated by the Sec- of mm and World War. became immis- sible. BUILT MILITARY BASE Studies seeking ways to Im- prove the housing situation and erase the ugly slums already were under nay. he .5. government began i building Fort Pepperrcll at the ,city’s eastern end beside Quidi . Vidi Lake. I Hordes of American service. ‘men and their families poured Einto the city, paying exorbitant prices in some cases for rented accommodation. ,Mcanwhile. demand for won: ers to build Pepperrell sari other defence installation! brought an influx of men from Newfoundland outports Over- crowding was awesome. . ' had to be shared boarding houses. St. bursting at me seams and sensing correctly that population growth would outlive the war. took action. The St. John's Housing Corpor- ation was formed under Sir Brian Dunfield. Farmland. woodland and wasteland on the northern fringe of the city were bought and cleared. Lots and streets were laid out and building of oules began. It hasn't stopped. At the end of flu war. . John‘s proper had a population l of 50.000 Today it is 63,633 al- ilhnugh the metropolitan area has nearly 100,000. I Downt . modern but a- ins in some ViQGlNlA 11 clu MAURIER at no a, t! 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About 40 s in all business . all in wooden buildings, 0 St. Hospital cost $5,000.000 t provides modation for 341 student nurses and contains classrooms and I swimming pool Another imposing structure is the 11 - storey eration Building. seat of the provincial government, situated on a north of the city. ned in 1960. it commands a view of his- toric Signal Hill and the as- rows leading into the harbor. . :yNal' OF FINANCING provides loans tailored to fit the needs of your business: to finance the purchase of land, buildings, and equipment or other expansion programs...to provide additional working capital or replenish funds spent for fixed and refinance existing aSsets...to consolidate debt...to acquire busi- nesses or start new ones. 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