Elm @uardi'cm Coven Prince Edward Island Like The Dev w. J. Hancox. Publisher Burton Lewis frank Walker Executive Editor Editor Published every week day morning (one l Sun days and-statutory holidays) at I65 Prince Street Charlottetown, P.E.I.. by Ihomsor. Newspapers Ltd Branch offices at Summersido. Montague. Alba! ton and Scum. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Servucas Toronto. 425 University Av. Empire 3-8894 Montreal, 640 Cathcart Slreal. UNivarsity 6—5942; Western office. ‘030 Wu' Georgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). M m r Canadian Daily Newspaper Publisher. Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to tha on for rapub all news dispatches this nape: o it or ID the Associated Plan or Ratr t". In All rights on republication of spatial dispatchar herein also reserved Subscription rates: Not over 35: par week by carrier. SILCO a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serv-ced by carrier. “4.00 ct year off Island and U.K. $20.00 pat year In U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com monwealt . Not over 7c per single copy. “embe- L't-rli: Iii-teem oi Circulation. - Illa‘ stilt/isn't memory :5 weaker than the weakest Ink" Ron 6 SATURDAY. MAY 18. I963. Monday's Holiday Victoria Day, which is being ob- served for convenience on Monday in- stead of on the 24th. is one of those links with tradition which we have wisely decided to retain in Canada. We have made it also the occasion for celebrating the birthday of the reigning British Sovereign. Since the advent of Queen Elizabeth we can call it again by its old name, “the Queen’s Birthday”. Formerly the school day preced- ing this holiday was observed as Em- pire and Arbor Day, affording oc- casion for tree planting as well as for emphasizing the fact that it was under Victoria’s reign that the Brit- ish Empire became a reality. The Empire has now largely merged into the British Commonwealth. and it seems that we are no longer inter- ested in the activities that Arbor Day came to represent. But Vic- toria Day remains, and as the first long holiday weekend of the year it is looked forward to by young and old. Prince Edward Island will join with Canada’s other nine provinces in its observance. though nothing of- ficially is planned by way of cele— bration. Certainly we may expect a big up- surge in traffic on this occasion. Transportation officials are prepar- ing for extra business. and the Police have issued a warning to motorists to use extra care on the highways. We should like to under- line this matter as being of para- mount importance, calling for the fullest cooperation on the part of all concerned. H “The Shape Of Freedom The successful 22-orbit flight of US. Astronaut Cooper has been lauded even by Premier Khrush- chev. It was indeed a brilliant achievement, and a strikingly cour- ageous one as well. But if he shares the views of those who are pushing the space program at Washington, the Kremlin leader can hardly have been very sincere in his congratu- lations. For it is maintained there that the real purpose of this pro- gram is not to win out in a race to the moon before 1970, but to deter- mine the shape of freedom on this planet by determining which sys- tem—the Communist system or the democratic system—generates the will, the resources, and the stamina to do the job. "This Is crucial,” says one Wash- ington spokesman, “as throughout history it has been crucial for every real power to demonstrate its mas- tery of the new. There would have been no Roman empire if the R0- mans had not mastered madman- ehip. There would have been no British Empire if the British had not been foremost in the mastery of aeemanahip, no British-American victory in Europe over the Nazis If the British and AmeriCans had not been foremost in the mastery of air- manehip.” ‘- The United States, it is argued. cannot afford to be second in outer space if it wishes to prevent the Communist system front being first and from denying to the free world whether freedom or tyranny is to rule on earth. If that is molly the Issue to be decided, then it is time that the two ‘ big rivalpoworadroppedtbe hypoc- ' city of “Ch out" on thdr mlbchlevements. This ‘ clam to the tax- ’ -uaqulre- race, but there Is an element of exaggeration in the argument. At best it is but a restatement, in modern terms, of the old power con- cept, taking no stock of the “winds of change" that are blowing through such organizations as the United Nations at the present time. If one studies what is being said by spokesmen for the unaligned nations at this time. one will find that space shots. however dazzling, are of minor importance. The same amount of money put behind some grcatvhumaniiarian cause would do more to win converts to democracy than putting a do7en men on the moon. “'e are constantly being told that this is an ideological warfare in which we are engaged; in which case it will be in the minds of men, in their acceptance or rejection of what constitutes our ideals of ser- vice to humanity, that the race will be won or lost. Seeking Closer Relations Why are the Christian Churches separated? What are the theological doctrines and historical pressures which keep them apart, and in what direction should they move to end their divisions? These are the basic questions which will be. examined by some of the world's leading theo- logians, historians, sociologists, church administrators and lay meh and women when they meet at Mc- Gill l'niyersity campus, Montreal, next July. They will convene for the Fourth World Conference on Faith and Order sponsored by the World Coun- cil of Churches, an organization of 201 Protestant, Anglican and Ortho- dox confessions in more than 80 countries. l’i‘cscnt during the dis- cussions will be o b s e r v e r s from the Roman Catholic Church and from some Conservative evangelical churches which are not members of the World Council of Churches. For the past ten ycarsw-since the last such conference held in 1952 in Lund, Sweden—four major theo- logical commissions and some eighty local and regional groups of theo- logians around the world have been studying these questions in prepar- ation for the conference. The decis- ions taken at the meeting are ex- pected to have a decisive effect on the churchcs’ work for unity for years to come. At a time when there is a grow- ing ecumenical dialogue bet ween the Roman Catholic Church and other Christian churches and an increasing interest in unity on the part of churchgoing people every- where. the Montreal gathering is indeed of very special significance. Should Be Remedied A matter to which the Pearson Government could well give atten- tion has been noted in a brief pre- sented to the Carter Commission on Taxation by the National Council of Women of Canada. It has to do with the injustice involved in the hand- ling under the Estate Tax Act, of widows' annuities and pensions. As things stand at present, many an unfortunate widow has found her- self forced to pay heavy death du- ties on an annuity or pension, only to be required, then, to pay annual income tax on the remainder that is paid out. r The death duty on widows’ pen- sions is the more unjust because it is calculated on the actuarial life expectancy of the recipient. It. can and does happen that a widow has been forced to sell assets to satisfy a duty on pension money she does not live to collect. Here, obviously, is an area in which the Government, at very little cost to the treasury, can earn good will and remedy a longstand- ing cause of complaint. EDITORIAL NOTE A proud new father in Toronto was really swept up in enthusiasm .over Gordon Cooper’s space flight, reports Canadian Press. He placed this birth notice in two Toronto papers: “Ward—Well I see Cooper finally went into orbit yesterday. So what. Nora and I have gone through this count-down procedure seven times already and each one has been all go. Our latest capsule is a beautiful 6 1b. 14 oz. Venus model named Shawn Erica, launch- ed 9:13 am. Tuesday, May 14, 1963, at St. Michael's Hospital. She fol- lows five Venus and one Atlas type capsules now in a state of semi- oontrolled flight. I now retire from Timber research in this line. Eric." ® ® SQUIRREL CAGE OTTAWA REPORT by Authorities Worn Against New Rocker .trade of the fly-by-night “im- r another and reputable contrac- The poorer Canadians who can least afford it, especially old women living alone, are beingi milked by what government au- . lhoritics here call “The H o m e Improvement Racket." So flou- rishing is this get - rich - quick scandal that cases investigated by the RCMP soared in the first seven months of last year to I huge total equal to 2.500 per cent of all the cases probed in the whole of the previous year. The irregularities in this field . centre around the government, provision permitting the private ‘ banks to make home improve— ‘ ment loans to home - owners. 1 backed by the repayment guar- , antee of the federal government. 1 But through a peculiar loop- . hole in the National Housing Act, It is the victim, not the building contractor, who ends up with a socking great fine and cash pen- ; ally. or even in prison. i This column recently referred i to a "housing scandal." It was i to this field of so-called home , improvements that refrence was made. As the figures of recent RCMP investigations reveal, it Is rampaging like a Spring flood 3 across Canada now. One very senior official in government housing circles cemented to me that “it is quite the worst. scan- dal we have ever had." CAVEAT EMPTOR , The old Latin phrase, so fa- . miliar in legal circles. empha- sises that “the buyer should be- -. ware." That is especially true‘i when the fast. - talking salesman, 1 generally a stranger in the community. knocks on your door 1 and suggests that your home , needs repairs or improvements . ranging from landscaping the ‘ lot to repairing the brickwork of the chimney. from installing alu- minum windows to building a room over the garage. T h e government h o u s i ng agency, Central Mortgage and Housing-Corporation, tells m that there are many variations on the racket. but the most dangerous concerns the home- owner who says he cannot af- ford the work suggested. In this case. the "salesman" tells his victim that he can apply to a bank for a loan which Is large enough not only to pay for the work suggested. but also to provide additional cash which borrower can use at this dis» cretion. Perhaps he has debts which he wants to pay off, and thus he can consolidate his bor- rowings at a low bank rate of interest with easy repayment terms. These Home Improvement loans carry interest at 6 per cent only, and may be paid off over from three to ten . But the homeowner who thus borrow a sum in excess of the cost of his home improvements is automatically exposed to pro- secution for making this false declaration In his application for the loan. If found guilty. his punishment will be a fine of up to $500. plus the order to repay the loan with interut at once: If he cannot produce the money, t Patrick Nicholson prover", who frequently over- charges grossly for his work. .What. can the home-owner do? '3F1rst. be wary of the door-fo- , mumt, . always , get a competitive quotation from t of prison! Meeting In EthiOpia door salesman: second arman Canadian Pres African leaders are gathering In Addis Ababa this week under the uniting drive of two forces: Geography and the powerful desire to end forever the con- tinent's colonial age. The meeting in the Ethiopian 3 capital is designed to accom-‘ plish what has never before proved possible — an alliance; among more than 30 countries ' whose differences are almost as vast as the continent. If the goal is achieved. remaining white-ruled of the south-the on territories Portuguese colonies of Angolai 1 a nd 'Mozambique; Southern Rhodesta and above all the apartheid regime of South Af- rica’s Hendrik Verwoerd. The meeting comes at a time when these white regimes are Increasineg on the defensive Excluding South Africa. 32 Al: rican nations now sit in the United Nations. All but nine have entered since the end of the 19505. Together with the Commulsl bloc they have put continual pressure on the white rulers. passing resolution after resolu- Education Education is being given a high priority in Bolivia. In this country. where nearly a quarter of the national budget ls allocat- ed to educational projects. a widespread movement to extend schooling has sprung up among all sections of the populatio n: students. trade union and politicians. Literacy and adult education campaigns are being carried on all over 11 country. A Uuesco mission which vis- lted Bolivia last year noted con- siderable progress in school con- struction: the number of rural sdtools me from 951 to 5799 In 1962. According to the mission, this achievement Is due in part to labor and materials supplied by local communities. December a teacher training seminar was held In La Paz. sponsored by Unesco and the Bolivian government. Partl- cipauts examined various meas- ures which would enable train- Iag colleges to Include m ore he will go to prison In default. The Initiator of this fraud, the building contractor or his fast- talking saiesm a n, ba' touched under the National Hous- Ing Act. and long before bIs vic- tim goes to jail he skips Into ano- ther community to begin his de- predatlons all over again. OUT-OF-TOWN AIDE Canadians spend up to half a billion dollars a year on the re- pair and maintenance of their homes. Of this large sum. per- haps one-tenth Is borrowed un- der government - guaranteed Home Improvement. Loans. Most of this money is spent with hon- est building contractors who give . fair value for the work perform- But the concrete walk which , crumbles. the storm wlntbws 1 which don't open, the newly -. which yield a I harvest of weeds, the chimney x which does not need repair, ‘ the breeseway which drains to- wards the house, the aluminum storm door which .sticks..tha 1 aluminum siding l vecny af- t fixed m the Itock-Ia- 1 Better times are apparently ‘ In sight for Hungary. inlet Janos Radar. himself r a victim of the tanner terror re- tgime, Indicates a trend toward % kinder conditions In an effort to correct the mistakes of Commun- ism's harsh past. Following his one - ticket elec- Ilon victory In February. Radar “I know that a large number of voters do not. accept com- munism and that they voted only in order not to be called be boys. Now It Is up to the party to prove to them that they have rm thing." Home O- t 3 o the change. To wIn the confidence of the still-wary masses. Mr. Kadar's government il making visible . efforts to better the people‘s lot. The change has flooded the market with more food and In- dustrial goods than Hungary has seen la 10 years of Communist rule. lt'brmbh swequu; amnesty tut month that freed mounds It i , could lead to immense pressure 5 Unesco Features New Hope For Hungary Gall Reporter 2%; ‘Ior; and most Important, deal lonly with well-established con- ‘ tractors long known Ir. the com- . v. Caveat empior —- and stay out Cumming 5 Staff Writer ’tion demanding an end to apartheid, Portugal's ousteri from Africa, British action to turn over ower to the Negro majority in Southern Rhodesia. COULD PUSH STRUGGLE The Addis Ababa conference could push the struggle one step farther. A resolution bet 0 re this , week's foreign ministers confer- l coco—preparing the way for the l j and training of liberation fight. ' rs. i The resolution. brought In by i [a complete boycott on tra e with South Africa and deny airspace and territorial waters to South Africa's ships and planes. *med Kheir. also would set lap ‘ The big question now whether the 31 delegations at Addis Ababa can overcome the differences of race, religion. d language—as well as lthose purely political and eco- nomic — that until now have ,dampened the dream of pan- l Africanism. In Bolivia science in their programs and to adapt them to present needs. One of Bolivia’s major problems at the present time Is the in-ser- vice training of some 18,000 pri- mary school teachers—who rep- resent 82 per cent of the coun- try's elementary teachers. To alleviate the shortage of teaching staff students are lak- lng part In literacy campaigns. In March this year. about 50 of versities. participated In an in- tensive training course organiz- ed as part of the national lIter~ acy campaign by their Natlonal Student Union. COSEC and Un- esco. At the end of the course. two campaigns are being organ- ized: one In the mining region of Polosl. the other In the Fun rural area. - Last year. after a similar course. student: successfully carried out a six-month's adult education course In La Paz. Co- cbabamba, Santa Cruz. Tarija and Drum. of prisoners Including most of the freedom fighters In the 1956 uprising. The monthly per caplla Income has climbed In two years from about 8123 to 8150. This is still a meager sum for an average family of four. so more than so percent of Hungary‘s married women work In factories or offi~ cos. Thedollar equivalents used cial ex- change rate. Unlike other consumer count- ries where food prices were hik- ed to curb consumer demand because of shortages. Hungary has kept prices fairly stable. Pork runs about $1.20 a pound, ens 13 cents each. and import- ed oranges $1.10 a pound. Butter at 2.91 a pound Is too high for most. H usury has a busing shortage, but rents are low. A two-room apartment goes for month. It costs i Sudan's Foreign Minister Ah- 5 is a hypeneactor and 85.” to 87.50 a about 814 for electricity plus aa- 81‘ for viola: infill. .‘ iVinegar Leadsi To Pneumonia By Dr. Theodore R. V- belle A CHICAGOAN writes: “ an overdose of drugs. into unconsciousnm and one was able to bring me to un- til someone suggested vinegar, It was poured down my throat, some of It going down sclotrsn‘ ess my throat felt as though I had gar- gled with sulfuric acid. I we! coughing. gag . and vomit- ing continuously and could not eat or drink anything. In time, a cough and shortness of breath became so bad I was unable to walk up a flight of stairs with- out becoming exhausted. “After two months of this I decided to go to the doctor. who x-rayed my chest and told me I had pneumonia, caused by in- haling vinegar. After 21 days in the hospital and being up and sounds in my chest. The doctor says I'm making good progress but I'm somewhat alarmed and suspicious. Should I see anoth- er or?" A consultation may be In or- der unless additional X-rays have been made and definite progress ls noted. In the cir- cumstances, you are doing as well as can be expected. You must be suspicious of all physi- cians. considering the length of time you waited after passing out and developing aspiration pneumonia. There might be some permanent damage to your lungs as a result of your procrastination or negligence. everal lessons can be learned from this reader's etc, perience. so it has not been In vain. The first is not. to give fluids to an unconscious person. He cannot wwallow and some of the liquid is likely to go down the windpipe Into the lungs, Ir- ritating the membranes and leading to pneumonia. An overdose of drugs that causes unconsciousness Is seri- ous enough to call a physician or a poison control center In one of the hospitals. In this in- stance. the contents of the drug must have been known and the best antflote could have been given. SORE, WEAK ARM L.S. writes: My husband baa had Buerger's disease for years Now his right arm Is painful and has lost much of Its mus- cle. Do you think the disease Is spreading? - PLY It could be. If there is evi- dence that poor circulation is the cause of his distress. But Buerger's disease victims are not immune to neuritis, bursi- tis. or other painful conditions. HYPERREACTS T0 STRESS SN. wrtes: If a person's blood pressure rises during a heads'Of‘State meem‘g Starting period of stress. will It go down “9’” WedneSday- would set “9 iwithout medicine after the a specwl fund for the support , stormy period passes, Yes. but. the fact that It went up means that this Individual a ood candidate for hypertension in th ure. INFECTED BRONCHI .P. writes: How does bron- chiectasis differ from chronic V bronchitis? REPLY It Is more serious because the bronchi are dilated, allow- Ing more secretions to accumu- late. Send a stamped. self-ad- dressed envelope for leaflet on bronchieclasis. TUMOR GROWTH E. G. writes: tumors gmw? I was told time years ago I haw one. REPLY Some grow fast and other: slowly. The rate depends upon the type and whether the lesion is benign or malignant. TODAY'S' HEALTH HINT-— Portly? Count your calories. Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO May 18, 1938 . .de W. White. Sum- merslde. newly appointed rec- tor of St. George's Church, Ha- lifax assisted at the convocation ceremonies at the University of Kings College. giving the. Alu- mnl Address. RoderIck Smith also of Summerslde. was the Valedictorian. Halifax, May Ill —- The 62nd Diocesan Synod of the Church of England in Nova Scotla end- ed here tonight, after a two-day session. More th zoo y and laymen from this province and Prince Edward Island were present at the meeting presid- ed over by Bishop John Hack- enley. Rev. A. LeDrew Gard- ner. St. James Church. Halifax. read the Parish Endowment Committee report which the Synod adopted. TEN YEARS AGO May It. 1958 Miss Mary MacMIllau, of Pownal. a graduate of the Char lottetown Hospital School of Nursing. last week. won the Canadian A w a r d of 1951- This award Is for "Excellent nursing care and Interest In profession- al growth and group activities. London. ICPt —— Canada‘s 12 Navy Sea Cadets here for the Coronation visited the Tower of London and Saint Paul's Cath- edral Monday, then took the af- rnoon off to rest acltlng feat. Most of them wanted to know where g of Anne walks In the (owe, win her head tucked underneath her arm. APPROVE CLASSIC PORT ARTHUR, Oat. (C?)— «in Teaching of oral- hone grade I public school clean! here has been approved the board of education. other“ :12. aiy mnula ela starting h September When I visited Montreal briefly in the past week It was for the first time In a little strange because my acquaint- ance with the city, no matter how superficial, stretches back for more than 40 years. Oh, I knew there were im- pressive physical changes to e -— a ansformed central area with many new. massive. towering structures. But those I was largely able to visual- Ize, for I had seen work In progress on several of them— partIcularly Place Ville Marie tiring several previous stays at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel, which has become by now my favorite Canadian do And I lbooglit, too, that I had some understanding of Montreal and the province of Quebec —— a rudimen uu derstandlng, If nothing better —linked vaguely with the long ago time when I used to study their affairs and visit the city quite frequently, while I was r e s id e ut correspondent. at Washington, D. C The Montreal Star. FELT WITH CERTAINTY But the Montreal I visited In the past week was entirely new to me: and most strikingly so in a non - physical sense. The great change was In what could be felt — in spirit and attitud- es —- rather than anything that can be seen and measured. It is. even so. a quality of newness that is far more nuis- sive any of the new struc- tures: and to be felt with just as great certainty as the new buildings can be seen. I was quite pre- pared for a great deal of change—me ve seen no reason for being surprised by if—In view of the fact that the province. since my last pre- vious visit. had seen the rise and dwindling of Social Credit: a surge of French Canadian irrationaliisilc feeling; and even make Itself heard. in part through the activities of bomb- throwing terrorists among its supporters. SEIZED AS RIGHT But the newnes I found this time in Quebec—yes, there to mom for calling it p revolu- tion—seems to lie somewhat apart from_ although under- neath, tthose surface manifen- ations, including the violent ones. It has been described as a French Canadian "explosion of aspirations" a fierce and swift drive to assert and maintain a special. recogniz- able Identity. More important than these things. though. is the fact (as I see If) that the French Cana- dian has ceased "seeking" things -— stopped "demanding" hem — and is seizing as a right those things required to give dignity to a human being. It Is a confided dignity. yet warm and friendly, but it simply refuses to be denied. The French Canadian is not merely marching toward that fullness dignity. He has al- ready grasped many of its parts — has begun wearing them — is becoming an orna- knows merit to them. Re where he is going and what he is doing. The question now Isn't concerned so much with those things, but with how Cana- dians outside Quebec accept and adjust themselves to them. MADE HAIR CURL In a way, I guess. some of the adjustments are going to seem difficult for a time to those of us who are predomin- antly or solely English-speak- we will feel at 8. In times that strengthening the Identity of the French Cana- I Federal. provincial and muni- cipal government, obsessed with the division of rights and tax dollars, must turn their unlted attention to the present problem c me. The terrorist activities in Que- bec are new and horrible. Old- er. but no less horrible. are the activities of other criminals. It Is no secret that the crimin- al element is more formidable. better organised. In November. 1961. Commls- alone:- Harvlson. RCMP. said American crime syndicates were showing Increased Interest In Canada were moving “to take over direct control of some existing criminal organizations and to expand their criminal ac- tivitlea”. Rave efforts to check or- ganlxed crime been successful? Testimony that they have not, a are Canadian commu- nity ls given by Claude Wamer. . deputy chief Crown prose- cutor In- the Montreal district. who says: "There exists today 'a crime oligareby that m vulgar erlmlnals to dance like . Thar ofCubatobo . Tbetraffielallllclt alcoh- I and times has reached the A-‘--AA m ' 1 “rain-s" “Year Island Steal r House” { AA- -A A gratin out The Main Revolution is 0 Quiet One dian is being achieved at some cost to our own identity. Well, even If there is, I do not think that will be too high a price to pay for the correc- ' Must I have now come to see as some ancient wrongs. so long as no guiding princi- ples are sacrificed as well. In Montreal I was meeting with a dozen of Canada’s top news executives as plans were developed for the Charlotte- town session next year of the Canadian Managing Editors' er‘ence. As members the executive committee they came from many parts of Ca- nada, With only three of them from Quebec. 1 think everyone there would agree when I say it. "made our hair cut" as we heard some details of the bald indig- nities — in meat Incon- aiderateness — the failures to show common. basic respect—— which French Canadians have ceased tolerating. FEELING OF SHAME The largest feeling among those editors seemed to be of f — or even of shame, which comes closer to describ- Ing my mood — over having remained largely blind for many years to a number of Quebec conditions that have only lately been made easy to V understand. - Accompanying that feeling was a desire to help bring about whatever adjustments are required by the elimina- tion of those conditions. It is no accident that the editors chose con- ! e r e u c e In Charlottetown: "What French Canada Want! from the Rest of Canada." On the whole. though, I do not.think there is much in what French Canada wants that will be found seriously unreasonable, if the matter It approached in a spirit of un- derstanding. A senior editor of one of Can- ada's greatest French - lang- uage papers put the matter to me in this way: “The troubles will not be too difficult. If only our two races quickly learn to be more comfortable with each other." MEETING OF EQUALS Of course that Is not as easy as it sounds. "Being comfort- able together" requires great deal of efforts on both sides a rapport can come un- der some difficult strains— when there is a language bar- rier to hurdle. Yet there is a way over It, as I‘ve said before about other matters. through sym- pathy—mot by arguing I one for the “poor French Cans- dians" In a mood of condes- censlon—but mum macho. which requires being able to feel what the other person feels. Above everything. “being comfortable together" requires that whatever dialogue takes place, In whatever language. must be between equals. In the new dignity, born out of established human Worth. which I found everyw b er 0 among French Canadians I met In Montreal in the past week, and in the changing at- fltude of English - speaking Montrealers toward them. I am sure a fine basis can be found for that equality. if the rest of us deserve It. Meanwhile. it Is a new dig- nity that has already been largely achieved. and Is not suit (and a lovely one) of the quiet part of Quebec's continu- ing “revolution.” Emma "The Biggest Business” Ottawa Journal point where. If the profits were taxed. g o v e :- nment deflcils would be wiped out. Many peo- ple would be surprised to learn the identity of those who oper- ate gambling here." He said a band of organized emulate had operated with im- puuity, and added that the DUI" he would be astonished to know the whole story about while sla- very and prestllullon. KING’S COLLEGE SCHOOL Windsor. Nova Scotia Founded me A RESIDENTIAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS C Grade VI to Mats-Imam Whadeeipedtoprepara boyish-Ultimo AlfietlcsandCadetsau WMMW ’ O summer”? 1963 . curb “13mm owl m , III!!! by JOHN s. DERRICK. MA pm # " ’.