0 Buyer meets seller T Ads. Dial 8506 ask taker, for quick results. TELEPHONE 8506 ' with Guardian Want for classified ad “Covers Prince ‘Edward Island Like The Dew” dish: 1 WEATHER Overcast with scattered showers; 110' 14 PAGES Authorized as Second Class Mail b . Department’ Draw)?‘ the Post office of CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1958 much change in temperature; south- eastwinds 2o.Low-high4o and 68. ‘ ’i°’,‘,¥;,’,“ FIVE CENTS NURSING ATTENDANTS pre- mued with diplomas and pigs at the Riverside Hospital Training school graduation exercises _he1d 13:,-t night included left to right: '*_ Awards Granted Graduating Class Edith Ann Davies of Eldon this ar won the Department of Health Award of Merit presented annually to the student standing highest in the two-year nursing attendants ‘course given at Riverside Hospital Training school. In addition Miss Davies also won the 1958 Award for‘ the student standing highest in psy- chiatry. Both awards were presented by Hon. M. L. Donnell, Minister of Health at graduation exercis- es held at the hospital auditor- ium last night- The Minister also presented awards to the following graduat- es: award for greatest progress - Robert Austin Leeco. Point M .Pleasaaot;-arwtard for most effec- tive use of occupational therapy ‘-1-lazel Marie MacDonald, South Lake; and award for most effec- tive use of socialization therapy -' Lom'I’Be1yl _Leeco,' ‘ Point Pleasant. , I The two last named awards werepmvided by the ladies of Patlndale Women’s Institute. ‘ ; Commenting on this, Dr. Bon- Iel thanked these “public spirit- ed women” who had -seen fit to donate these prizes. “No hospital can operate ef- . leotively without a community spirit such as shown by Pa k- FRONT new - Agnes Elizabeth MCEWE-‘I1. Montague; Vernita Faye Keenan, Murray River; Lorna Beryl Leeco, Point Pleas- “In the concept ofgthe thera- peutic team contributing indivi- gual skills ta [lilac mentally “ill, e n-ursmg a t ' th t important single paeI:lnstiis1,”eDIx'r.m.sI. E_. Gilbert told._Rivenside Hos- _tga;llt’k graduating class last 111 . . Dr. Gilbert, Ottawa ‘consultant in psychiatry to the federal De- partment of Health, was guest speaker at the annual graduat- ion exerciseo held in the hos- pitals auditorium. ' Graduation diplomas were pre- sented to seven female .and three male students by His Honor Lieutenant Governor F. Walter Hyndunan. His Honor was accompanied by Mrs. Hyndman .and his naval aide, Lieutenant Commander D. G. Saunders. and Mrs. Saunders. DISTINGUISHED GUESTS Distinguished guests included Hon. A. W. Matheson, Premier of Prince Edward Island, and Hon. M. L. Bonnet], Minister of Health, each of whom spoke briefly. The exercises were chaired by Dr. A. J. Murchison, ,medical superintendent of the hospital. The invocation was given by Senior Captain John Carter of the local Salvation Army Corps. dale" Women's Institute,” 1: e Minister observed. ' ‘ ' NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) — Tlmkish Cypriots Tuesdlalf Wok Advantage of a curfew break to 80 on a wild orgy of looting in the main municipal market in the lghsh quarter of NiJcosia’s old c . Mobs through an iron lite and scooped up every scrap of meat and vegetables in sight. Bn'.tish'troops took half an hour 90 arrive on the scene. “A British security officer said 3 Darticularly vicious alt-tack” 6 been made on the market's meat. refrigerator during what W5 called “further looting by Turks.” Seven looters were ar- tested. A A mgld cunfew on the old city 8AcKvn.Lr:, N.B. (Special)- tuned with bright skies, the “Mug sessions of the 34th ses- 'i°f‘ M the Maritime Conference the United Church of Canada Mfed here Tuesday on the 33rd tgfigersafy of the coming into 9f the.Un-i-ted Church. 09911133 devotions were con- gmfed by the president the Rev. is}, hill‘ Forbes, St. P_aul’s ,,s;T°h. Fredez-icton. Dr. Forbes 1“ . Wfisldcd over the opening we 38 session of the confer- the conference in the report was the request gl?$c{ih9_Rt. Rev. C.F. Beharry, mod“ 111 Trinidad, asking the of the Presbyterian Md 9_Conference to examine $5,, ,‘,’;daan_ Mr. Wilfred Dindial Mme PI‘es_byteria-n Church in 35- This request was re- et ciommittee on col- su ents, Rev. A.F. Macggana _01_!-airmarn, for action. on ministers asked to serve ed ~ erence commit-tees includ- mmid,‘ CR- Webber of’ Sum- w’ do "E Bel?‘ i," evs. .. e s, 6rn:,:§‘ C-R Mcase Hunter Riv- e MI‘. Allison MacKinnon hart. - mitté<'e”°t°Wn on the press com- Am gyuglllggtoa number of items V9 leges and 'l‘“« lsla M"".°‘“- from the PE. 1” P"°5bl’t€1'Y. one regarding » 4“ Mrs. L. 0. Kitchen, R.N., dir- urkish Cypriots Go 0n Orgy Of Looting of Nicosia-, lifted to allow Turk- ish Cypriots to buy food and pro- visions, was reimposed after British troops arrived and cor- doned off the manket area. An island-widle curfew was or- dered after weekend rioting tween Greeks and Turks in which six persons were killed and more than 90 iniured. The 90,000 Turks on t-his British island colony are demanding partition of Cyprus. wl1vlc‘h many of the 400,000 Greek Cypriots d e In a n (1 should be united with Greece. Governor Sir Hugh Foot Tues- day d e c 1 a r e d “the ‘situation throughout the island is under control” following the Weekend riots. Maritime Conference Of-The United Church ls Opened a handbook on temperance. the other regarding mrimstri-al salar- ies, were referred to the com- mittees concerned for recommen- dations. _ , A comparative statistical re- port for the years 1956 and 1957 were presented by Rev. Betts, Winsloe, conference statis- tical secretary» Amfimg {fiber 1‘ ems it showed a decided increase in the numbers of elders 1n the United Church Maritime Confer- ence. . _ The memorial service. and sac- rament of holy communion In the opening evening session set a high tone for the sessions Which are to follow. The service was conducted by the Preside“: “Pd tributes of remembrancefor isters who had died during d year were read by REV. Wllllar picketts, assistant_ secretary of conference. Mr. P1cketts_, a_ nat- ive of Kelvin, P.E.I. paid fitting tribute to men who served many years in the ministry of the church. One of the men thus re- membnred was the Rev. John M. Murchison who at one time served the Maloeque °0n31‘92°=’3' tion and who had served for man}. we-al“S as secretary of ‘the B1‘itiVsI]"allCl Foreign Bible Society m P.E.1. m0i(§Bofalfge first items for the de1e,,,,+es on the Wednesday mérEn~fs« ,w.e*""‘ “"“" b9 the 919°’ tion of a new president. Attendant Plays Important Role In Mental Hospitals v four persons and injuring at least , hospital beds. ' ant; Pauline Jayne Brownrigg, Charlottetown; Edith Ann Dav- ies, Eldon; BACK ROW - Hazel Marie MacDonald, South Lake; ector of nursing assisted during the graduation ceremony. Entertainment was furnished by several well known Charlotte- town artists: soloist Miss Joyce McCall-lum; the family trio com- prising Bethany, Margaret and Frank Maclntyre; soloist Myrna Nicholson; and violinists Norma Jean McNeil and Janet Gay. Aeoompantsts were Mr. Roya- ton F. Mugford and Mr. Albert Blanchard. IMPROVEMENTS RECALLED Recalling the great changes that had come about in the housing and came of the men- tally ill in this Province since he more than 20 years ago had been appointed Minister of Health in the Jones Govern- ment, Premier Matheson said that these improvements and staff increases had cost the public at considenable ‘amount of money. ‘ "With these new faculties, (Continued on page 2 col. 5) Dock Strike May yEnc| Soon . LONDON (fReuJ‘ters)—Delegates of Louclolfs 20,000 dock strikers Tuesday —n.ishrc voted We.r'Wlhe1m- ingly to go back to work next Mondla1y~—even if the strike at Smlitlufiield, the captitval-’s main meat market, is not settled. Tlhe vote-pa-slsed by 49 to 4— will be put to mass meetings at the dock gtatexs today. Prospects of an end to the mouth-old strike now are at their briigvhltest. The only condition is that non-union dock labor be wltlidmaiwrn. The docks here were almost at 3. complete stamdstill Tuesday with 20,000 longshoretrnen — two th-imdls of London’s total dockland strength-—on strike. To-rnaclo Hits Kansas Town‘ EIL’yD0~RJA1D0, Kan. (AP)-,-A tornado smashed 30 to 40 houses here late Tuesday killing at least 40, officials at the city’s only hos- pital said. The twister hit at 5:45 p.m. An- other struck at 6:25 p.m. at the little c-omlmuln-i-ty of Pontiac seven miles northeast of El Donado but no damage was re- ported from that one. The hospital here was filled with injured and an appeal was sent to Whichnlta, Kan, for more James Leigh Walker, Charlotte- town; Erroll Boyd Francis, Char- lottetown; Robert Austin Leeco, Point Pleasant; and Edith Jo- Ann Johnston, Murray River. 3 Shots At Moon Planned lVll1LW\AUKlEEE (AP)-—-The US. Air Force will shoot at the moon three times this year, its chief of research and development said Tuesday. But a disagreement de- veloped promptly between him and the defence deplartmenfs over-all space boss on the timing of the project-and the aim. Attempts to hit the moon will be made in August, September and October with a modified mis- sile designed to “grlve some in- dication of its arrival,” Lt.-Gen. S. E. Anderson told a press con- ference here. “We have talked about a lot of dates,” said Roy W. Johnson, director of the defence depart- ment’s Advanced Research Pro- jects Agency (AtR;P.A). “Rt - now it’s touch and go whether we can do it that early. No final de- clsion has been made.” ' “But,” Johnson told the Mll- wauikee Journal by telephone, “you can categorically deny that there will be an attempt to hit the moon." . “There will be no attempt to make a direct impact. They will try to orbit the moon at best.” “At worst, they hope to get around the moon once. They may find out what the back of the moon looks like.” ' sEcREcY IS WATCHWORD HALIFAX (CP)—With secrecy her trade mark, a little, 1,000- ton ship sailed from here Tues- day to mine one of the world’s few remaining Klondikes — the ocean floor. Owned by Risdon Bcazlcy Lim- ited of England, world’s largest deep-sea salvage firm, the Drox- ford and her 32-man crew will spend the summer anchored in an area 17 miles off. Gaspe in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. An informed source said she will work three dlerelrlcts, all victims of German torpedoes in the Second World War. The holds of the sunken ships ca-uried rich cargoes of copper ingots and oneton copper bars. Last summer, working from the Twytford, the same crew salv- aged a cargo of copper from the sunken Greek freighter Mount Pindos in the same area. By working at 800 feet below the sur- face Brltish driver Frank Higgins set a world’s record for deep-sea salvage. DOUBLES RECORD , The crew spent the winter -ln the Mediterreanea-n. It was both successful and u n s u c c e ssrful. They found a ship, but not the one they were seeking. At the same time Higgins almost dou- bled his previous diving mark by working at 1,450 feet. The crew and gruff English skupper J-ilm Hunter have nothing but admiration forllinggins and the other diver alboard, Freddie Smith of the Shetland Islands. Smith, with handle-bar mous- tache and pointed red heard, is the Hollywood dream of a diver. Higgins, on the other hand is the living portrait of a success- ful banked‘. He walks with a limp, a reminder of an accident sev- eral -years ago when an air com- pressor stopped while he was be- low the surface. An ernengeucy a-scent gave him a severe case of the bendls—-nitrogen bubblesin SACKS FOR CZECHS PRAGUE (Reuters)—'l‘he sack dmess will be mass-produced for Czech women next year. Sacks will form the mainstay of a 56- model preview of 1959_ Czech fashions to be displayed at a Communist bloc fashion congress in Bucharest. Romania, from June 12 to June 26. TORONTO (OP) —0ne mangled body was recovered Tuesday from the debris of a four-storey apartment building split open lvlondiay nrilght by a violent ex- plosion that mushroomed up- wards from a basement boiler room. Sections of the shattered wall still teetered dangerously Tues- day afternoon and police ordered evacuation of 20 apartments in a negglhrboring building. None of the 39.survivors_ who stumbled from the shattered brick structure on north end Baxthrurst Street was seriously DEFENCIE PLANS OUTLINED Arrow Output Assured . OTTAWA (CP)~*Defence ‘Min- ister Plearkels left little doubt Tuesday that the government this fall will order the supersonic CF-1.05 jet interceptor into full production. The builder, Avro Aircraft Limited, Malton, On-t., already has an order for 37 “l>I‘9-D=I“0d1lC- tion” Arrows required for full testing of the plane. Mr. Pearkes told the Commons estimates c-ommitrtee that the Ar- row program will cost the gov- ernment $175,000,000 this fiscal year, bringing the total since de- velopment began to nearly $400,- 000,000. He said the manned bomber will be used “for a long time to come” and that the CF-100 jet interceptor, now in RCAF serv- ice, will have to give way to a more modern type of ilitcrceplor. other points made by the min- ister in his two-hour defence re- view before the committee: 1. The navy will get six more new destroyers, bringing the to- tal to 20 instead of the previously announced 18. The keel would be laid for the first of these six this fall but the shipyard had not yet been seetllcted. 2. The army’s three brigades in Cwanada have been “down- graded” to a. strategic reserve but would be maintained to rotate the brigade in Ellrolpe every three years. Reason for this was the unlnikelih-ood that It would be pos>si‘b-le to reinforce the‘ bwri-gede in Europe from Canada in the early days of a nuclear war involving submarines. 3. A new system for control of jet interceptor operations will have to be introduced because of the necessity for more speed 111 air defence processes. A g1'0U11d control radial‘ station now could carry out only five interceptions at one time. One Killed, 39 Survive Blast hurt. Poll-ceman Jam es 1VlcPlhee said: “Only the Lord knows how they survived.” The sole vlcuti-m was John Arm- strong, 53, l«ongJtime superintend- ent. of the 22-year-old building who was cruslhed under the tons of brick, mortar and furniture which flattened his basement apartonent. Earlielr it was feared that as many as eight were trapped in the awesome mound of rubble that marked the ba-se of a 40- little Ship Seeks Klondike On Floor Of Gulf Of St. Lawrence" the blood stream-which left him partly paralyzed from the waist down. His diving now is re- stricted to a metal chamber. -An Italian firm pioneered deep- sea salvage work and with Beaz- ley are the only firms in the busi- ness. The Dronford-"s diving cham- Algerian Defy De PARIS (AP) — Premier dc Gaulle’-s plan for peace in Al- geria was openly challenged Tuesday by the French-Algerian revolutionary junta. llt proposed for one thing that de Gaulle junk his cabinet. The j'runta’»s action in turn ran ‘into opposition from. Gen. Raoul Salavn, the man named by de Gaulle as military and civilian chief in Algeria. The all-Algeria committee of public safety, in a closed meet- ing in Alg-eris, called for what it termed the erasure of French political parties a-nd in their place a real government of pub- lic salvation in Paris. Paris politlcal cricles looked on the action as the most dan- gerous de Gaulle has faced since belts are all Italian-made. As yet English crafvtszmen have not been able to dupllcate Italian wonk- manslllp in chambers built to withstand submarine pressures. Built in Aberdeen, Scotland specially for salvage wonk, t-he Droxlford is brand new. She was commissioned in April this year. Rebek Gaulle he took power June 1. On his tour of Algeria Last week, de Gaulle had told the pub- lic safety committees to get out of politics and confine them- selves to working for the integra- tion of the Algerian and Eu- ropean populations. APPROVED BY MASSU The committee resolution was than-srnlitted to de Gaulle with the approval of Gen. Jacques Massu, key figure in the May 13 upris- ing against the‘ Paris govern- ment. A junta spokesman said the part of the motion urging the alboli-tion of political parties was only meant as an appeal for a party truce until de Gau<lle’s OTTAWA (GP) — -The North American Air Defence Command at the present time has no con- trol over any Canadria-n forces whatsoever, it w a s drisclose-d Tuesday night in the Commons. - Defence Minister Pearkes said at the close of a day-long debate on NORAD that no ROAF squad- rons have yet been allocated to the corrnnland at Clorado Springs, Colo. The RGAF has nine jet interceptor squadron-s in Canada. Under terms of the Canada- U. S. air defence agreement, NORAD includes only “such com- bat units as are specificafly al- located to it by the two govern- ments.” NORAD was set up last Aug. 1 and 15 RCAF personnel are serv- ing on its planning staff. Mr. Peankes’ disclosure came as a stunning anti-climax to a sometimes bitter debate which fiocussed on the opposition con- tention that the government’: handling of the agreement was nslonpyn Vand ui,nept.n Mr. Pearkes was still speaking at -the 10 pan. EDT adjournment -and the government announced the debate will continue today. The minister said an air dc- fence plan has been drawn up by NORA-D but it is not the final plan which will be agreed to by the ‘two governments. At another point, in reply to Opposition Leader Pearson, Mr. Pearkes said American intercep- tors armed with nuclear weapons cannot fly over Canada except in event of grave emergency. This was the policy in effect under the former Lilberal government. ’Mr. Pearkes, referring to con- establishment in power. sultation with Colorado Springs, HAILIIFAX (GP) -— Canadian and United, Sta t e s ‘scientists agreed Thursday to recomrnend comprehensive surveys of rich scallop grounds off the North American East Coast. Scientific teams from both couontnies will place their case be- fore this weeks meeting here of the Intern-ation-al Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fisher- iexs. J. A.‘ P-osga-y of the U.S. Fish and Wlildl-life Service at Woods Hole, Ma.~ss., said Tuesday scien- tists would ask the 12 - nation commllssion to set up scallop re- seamcli “to determine whether. it would be advisable to regulate fishermen." SEE INCREASED YIELD Prelirninary studies of scallop- riiclh Georges Bank off the New England coast indicate the yield could be increased by controls over the age at which the tasty shellfish are harvested, Mr. Pos- gay said. The bank is theblglgest off- shore ‘scallop resource on the At- lantic coast. U.S._ fishermen last year la n d e d about 20,000,000 poundsfmm operations in the area. Canada landed about 1,800,- 000—nearlvy half its 1957 total. The recommendation probably will be presented to the commis- sion Thuersdvay by Mr. Posgay nadian department of fisheries biological -station at St. Andrews, N.B. foot-wide gasih blown out of the buil»ding’s south side. bombers, some of them capable of renaching any target in North America and returning to the So- viet Unaion. It had prototypes of an intemontinental ballistic mis- sile but there was no reason to believe they were in operational use now. 5. Russia now had a fleet of 500-. ocean - going submarines, some capable of launcxhing mis- siles and a few which now or in the near future would be nu- clearlpower-ed. Thus the Cana- dian Navyls role had changed from convoy protection to pre- venting Soviet stubs approaching within missile range of North America." ' 6. Canad«a’s main naval effort woulcl be in the Atlantic but a "certain number” of ships would be required for protecstion of the West Coast. 7. By the end of 1959, the RCAF’s two Maritime reconais- 4. Russia had 1.500 00 1:790 sauce squadrons at Greenwood, Fishermen from New Bruns- N.S., would be completely equip- ped with the new Angus sub- hunter and destroyer. 8. Reesearcli was under way to detenmine whether the DEW radar line in the Canadian Arc- tic could be modified to track missiles as well as bombers. The U.-S. had not asked for permis- sion to build any miss-ile Warning station in Canada. ,9. One battalion (some 900 men) is kept in readriness in Can- ads for United Nations service if required. The unit now desig- nated for this duty is the 2nd Battalion, Royal Canadian Reg- iment, at London, Ont. Mr. Pearkes said the large fleet of Russian bombers is a “very s e r i o u s threat against North America.” The threat of manned bombers and air-‘bnre-athing milssi-l~e-5 (in ef- fect, unmanned bombers) could and Dr. L. M. Dickie of the Ca- ’ be expected for “many years yet." . wick, Nova Sc-otria_and New Eng- land spent more than 10.000 fish- ing days on the sprawling bank sout-hwest of Yanmouth, N .S. an- nually. Most of the catch is landed at New Bedford, Mass. CANADA T0 CONTRIBUTE Dr. Dickie said Canadian sci- entists on the commission will contribixte to the proposed stud- ies. Canada's scallop research was at present devoted almost entirely -to inshore beds. Commission support its not au- tomatic, a spokesman said. Only Canada and the United States of the 12 member countries are ex- ploiting the scallops on George’s Bank, and the expensive research may be blocked by a majority vote. Mr. Posgay said a possible out- come of the studies be reg- ulation of mesh sizes used on scallop dredwges. By increasing the mesh size, mnaller scallops would escape. The commission has already adopted minimum mesh - size I Will Suggest Survey Of East Coast Scallop) Beds standards for trawlers engaged chiefly in cod and haddock op- erations. Canada announced Mon- day that Canadian fxishermen would be ordered to use one type of net. U.S. fishermen have virtually deserted other scallop beds to concentrate on George’s, Mr. Posgay said. CATCH J'UlVlPS The U.S. catch jumped from 6,000,000 pounds in 1945 to about 24,000,000 pounds in peak 1955. Canada’s increase has been more gradual, but has sprur-ted since 1955, Dr. Dickie said. Scientists watching results of mesh standards recommended three years ago by the commis- sion reported improved fishing ln haddock and cod fields off the Atlantic provinces and New Eng- land. A spokesman said 8,000,000 young haddock were saved on GeorIge’s Bank in one year and average catches have been three times heavier since regulations No Canadian Units Under NORAD, Debate Discloses ,1 P. M- Defends Agreement In Day - Long Debate D said he can get in touch with the NORAD commander there in 40 seconds by a telephone call from his office. - Earlier, Prime Minister Diel- enbaker said NORAID “will not and cannot start wars.” “The role of NORAD is de- fence, not attack; its objective is defensive, not aggressive,” he said in launching debate on rail- fication of the Canada-U.S. agree- ment establishing NORAD. “Because these air defence op- erations » are contemplated under NORAD are purely defensive and will be over our territory. no war can be started by a;|’!UOl.1.8 connected with North American defence," he added. Opposition Leader Pearson said the Liberals don’t doubt for A moment the need and desira‘bil- ity of collective defence. ‘~ “We have not asked for th dli-scussion in order to show our 1 opposition to the proposed a:gree- 4 ment on continental defence, not l at all,” Mr. Pearson said. 1 The Ililber-als had sought the die- bate to clear mp the govern- 5 ment's “comedy of confusion 1 and contradiction” and “inept- ness” in its handling of the I agreement. ' jl Mr. Pearson said the a»gree- " ment should have been consid- 1 ered by the cabinet defence com- mittee, then the full cabinet. ‘It should then have been signed by ~* Canada and the U.S., submitted 3", to Parliament for approval and then put into operation. This pro- cedure had been followed in re- gard to the North Artlla-xutlc treaty. He quoted liberally trom speeches by Progressive Conser- vative cabinet ministers to show what hesa-id was the ‘govern- ment's “doubts, amibiguities, con- tusions and contradictions." P.‘C’s Mark Victory Date OFIYPAWVA -OCP)-fI‘!he' ranks at government supporters in the Commons blosmmed out Tuesday with blue boutonnieres on the first anniversary of the Progres- sive Conservative election victory , a year ago. l ‘an... Minesweepers Are Due Here This Morning A six-sh-ip flotilla of mine- sweepersl, based at Halllfax, will arrive in Clialrlotteto this morning at 11 a.m. The squadron will be led by H.M. C.S. Resolute. under the com- mand of Commander A. C. Campbell. The ships will leave on Thursday for exercises in local waters and will have as their guest Lt. Governor F. W. Hyndman. The squadron will return to Charlottetown on the 13th and will remain until the 16th when they will continue their exer- became effective. cises. DRAMA FESTIVAL AS-S’N ELECTS O-FFICLERS .l 0 Six members of the Prince Ed- ward Island Drama Festival As- sociation 1958-59 executive are shown following the annual meeting of the organization held at Prince of Wales College last night. They are (left to right)__ SEATED—~M-rs. Leslie Ramsay, Indian River, who was re-elect- ed president and Miss Dorothy ‘=0 Cu-11911, Charlottetown. who was were: Dr. L. W. Shaw, Charlotte- re-elected secretary; STAND- ING —- Mrs. Eddie Morrison, 1(\3/é1aI‘10tl8’E0Wn. past president; r. vice — president (Kings) convener of nominations. town, honorary president; 11. Barry. Bugden, Charlottetow n, vice-president (Queens); Mrs, John Hughes, Montague, Morris Casely, Kensington, vice and - , - . Mrs. Hsarold Laird, Kensington, presldcnt mrmcc)’ Mm Other ‘Frank Ross, Parkdale, ireasurt-31' '-and officers elected to the Drama Mrs. Fred Gates. West Royalty- Festivals °19.-so - 59 executivel historian.