.....¢. EW CREATION FOR HIGHWAY MOTORING I I D °i \ SCOT!‘ SCIIILL REGINA (C?) — Saskat- chawan’a compulsory medical care insurance plan has been operating for nearly three months without all of its prob- lems ho to the surface. Some of the coals that flamed during the 23-day doctors’ boy- . Medicare Moves Smiooihlyi Background Stir “They had satisfactory doc- tors before and they still have these doctors." Dr. Dalgleish said. “Biggar has set up with another doctor (in the commu- nity clinlcl_ it is not an under- doctored area. This doctor could be used in another area that needs him." ‘ cott of the plan in July stilt Imoulder. Premier Woodrow Lloyd. whose CCI-‘ government inau- gurated North America's first! tax-supported. compulsory med- ical care plan July 1. said in an interview Tuesday. "as was to be expected. problems. are developing and some hem will consvime much time and effort before they are re- solved." Dr. H. D. Dalgleish of Sas- katoon. president of the Saskat- chewan College of Physicians and Surgeons. said “it is too early to say if the medical care plan is acceptable to doctors." Difficulties Premier Lloyd mentioned were the failure of the government and the prov-. ince's radiologists and patholo-E gists to reach an agreement. the departure of individual doc- tors from the province — “not an unusual phenomenon”—and~ apparent difficulty of some citi- administerlng Medical care in- surance Commission directly. DISCUSSION NOT HELPFUL The premier said he does not feel that public discussion of llhe details of problems will help obtain solutions. Dr. Dalgleish said In an in- Top Liberals Plan Election 1 Dr. George Peacock of Sas- 'katoon. .college registrar. said Tuesday 42 doctors left e provincein August and 10 doc- tors registered. Of the 926 doc- tors registered at the end of} August. about 600 were practls-! ing privately. The others werel working government fields or‘ were retired. l Jack Kinzel. secretary of the. Medical Care Insurance Com- mission. said that of 90 doctors brought under contract by the mmission to the prnvinr.-3 in y to supplement the emer- ‘:0 E0 OTTAWA tCPl — Top figures in the Liberal party’s national organization met here Tuesday. tackling what a spokesman de- scribed as "plans for the next- federal general election." ’ The 30-member national cam-l paign committee gathered in‘ closed session at the Liberal.’ federation offices. 1 Liberal Leader Pearson and ! Senator John onnolly. ._ dent of the National Liberal Federation. spoke to the group‘ outlining proposed campaign‘ strategy. ‘_ ,Those on hand included rep-- resentatives from provinciall campaign committees, the Na»; tional Women’s Liberal Feder-g ‘ation, the Young Liberal Fed-z t mm in making arrangements eration and e universityi with doctors who will bill the 8'°"P- . l It is one in a three-day series of meetings being held before Thursday's opening of Parlia- ment. The party's national com- mittee on communication con- ferred here Monday and the 100 Liberal MP5 elected June 18. ment Hill. presl- I '‘ gency services, 28 still are in the province. Thirty - seven of the 90 have shown interest in establishing a permanent prac- tice in Saskatchewan. Mr. Kin- Gzel said and 12 of the 37 have made firm ai-rangements. He said there are 98 doctors working under the Medical Care lnwra-nce Commission and re- ceiving payment directly from ‘The rest either receive direct. payment from patients, who can collect reimbursement from ‘ .the commission. or from ap-3 proved voluntary private agen- cies. mainly group medicall services and medical services‘ incorporated. . egqigrlvalent of 30.000.000 tons of The Guardian. Charlottetown. Wed. ‘Sept. 26. 1‘'“'!.,11 SOVIET TEST RECORDED STOCKHOLM (AP)-—Anothcr' atmospheric nuclear test in the current Soviet series at Novaya . Zemlya was registered at thew Seismological Institute of Swe-‘ den's Uppsala University Tues- l day_ This was the 13th blast re- l cordcd by the institute. The size ; Jwere to meet today on Parlia-lof the nuclear charge was esti- l mated to be 30 megatons. or the I 3/"‘;“‘<7”C Wwéw MENS SPORT COATS In Worsteds. Tweeds and Crombies. In two and three button styles. Centre and side vents. In checks. shades. neat patterns. also plain Sizes 35 - 46. 24.95 to 47.50 terview the worst feature of the current situation is the activity of commu clinics — co- operatives formed during the medical care stalemate to pro- vide faciiities for doctors who would work within the. medical care commis ‘on. “There is continuing harras-1 sment of doctors in small 1-‘ fall collections‘. Made in fine British wool with ulster collar. it is lovat green with a lining of gold cashmere. : .' In.) “ feveneting C ' PETAWAWA. Ont. ICP) ‘(ada has a poor rec-l ord ‘ .=:preserving its forests from re‘ an the blame rests largely with human careless- ness and neglect. the fifth an- nual forest fire control confer- ence was told here Tuesday. F. A. Harrison. Montreal ex- ecutive and conference chair- man. and more and more Ca- nadians are taking to the woods for recreation and are contrib- uting to the increase in the country's "unenviable"' number of forest fires. He said other factors are in- sufficient enforcement of forest regulations and fire laws. lack of research into the techniques of firefighting and inadequate control over -the movements of private aircraft over forests. Mr. Harrison suggested that the army ‘ more often and earlier to battle ma- Forest Fires e communities and this is caus- isg « trouble." Dr. Dalgleisn said. “These clinics seem to be politically inspired to harrass doctors into working within the VISIT BY NATO CHIEF OTTAWA tCP)-—Dirk Stikker, secretary-general of the North Atlantic T r e a t y Organization. will visit Ottawa Oct. 9-10, it P 11- was announced Tuesday. I-lei Dl‘- Dalsleish named the com- will meet cabinet ministers and mlmlties Of Blggaf and Pl‘eECe- senior government officials and V1119 Where 00mm‘-"lit! Clinics attend a dinner given by Ex- have obtained doctors new to ternal Affairs Minister Green. the area. ' You'll both be pictures of elegance wearing what you must agree are most sum g ptuous fabrics—British Woollensl No other materials ‘make a woman look so fashionably _r_igh_’g, ya man so impeccably lsmart——morning, noon or night.-British Woollens are fashion’s image. ‘Every season new patterns and new colours are woven boldly or TENDENCY ro DELAY . "I am afraid that there is aj tendency to delay a call for help ; to such an extent that by the time help arrives the situation has become hopeless." Mr. Harrison, vice-president for woodlands of Canadian In-_ ternational P a p e r Company. said Canada's forest fire record doe not compare favorably with that of the United States and other countries. . He said the sponsor of the three-day annual conference. the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association. has “fallen down" in educating the public about domains." 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