II TELEPHONE 8506 Buyer meets seller with G d‘ Ads. Dial 5506 ask for uzlraslsaiilieidvadii taker, for qulck results Che Cuurdaiu “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” _ WEATHER Cloudy with a few clear intervals and widely scattered showers; little change In temperature. Low-high 45 and 62. /_ .14 PAGES /_ Authorized as Second Class Man 1, . Department, Draw!‘ the Post Office CHARDOTTETOWN, CANADA TUESD-AY‘,_ JUNE 17, 1958 NOT MORE THAN FIVE CENTS CANADIAN ARMY CHIEF IN BONN .Lt. Gen. Howard D. Graham, left, Commander-in-Chief of the Canadian Army, who is paying a Disciplinary Action Taken visit to West Germany, arrives at the German Foreign office in Bonn, June 9. He IS accompan- ied by Brig. Gen. Werner Pan- atzki of the West German Army. (AP Wirephoto) By Council On Officials- At a special meeting last even- ing City Council approved the im- mediate retirement on half-pay of City Clerk James A. Fuller- ton, and administered a severe reprimand -to Office Clerk, George Abbott for his “negli- lgence at"Cilty Hall on April 30th ast.” The first resolution was ap- proved by Council by a seven to one vote, while the second result- ed in a four-four split, Mayor Johnsto’ne' casting th deciding vote. « The latter resolution also call- ed for Mr. Abbo'tt’s immediate removal from the Tax Office‘ staff, but permitted him the op- portunity to apply for employ- ment “in another branch of our civic government." As a direct result of these twin decisions, Mr. John Butler assistant city clerk wasinamed acting City Clerk “pending fur- I ther action of Council”, and Councillor Gerald R. Foster, one of the three representatives re- presenting Ward Five on the Council indicated that he would submit today his resignation as a member of the present civic administration. MAYOR'S STATEMENT In a brief prepared statement read at the commencement of the special meeting Mayor John- stone indicated that the Council had been called together to deal with the report of the investiga- tion into the events which trans- pired at City Hall on the night of April 30tl1‘last. “You, gentlemen”, he said, “have all received copies of that report and have now had ample opportunity to study same. The investigation -was carried out by Chief of Police, C. W. MacArthur assisted by the RC.‘ Report Former Prime Minister Nagy Of Hungory Executed LONDON (Reuters) — Former Hungarian prime minister lmre N391’ has been executed for his Nile In the ant-i-Soviet revolution In his homeland. The Hungarian ministry of jus- tice said he was condemned to death in a secret trial and the sentence already has been car- ried out. The Soviet news agency Ta-ss released the story today on N05y’s sentence and death. It Quoted the Hungarian news 33911535’ MTI. -Al-so executed were three of his associates in the 1956 uprising which was crushed by Soviet “TOURS. They were Miklos I-limes, P31 Malete-r and J ofsez Szila-gy. The ministry of justice said the mused unleashed in October "311 armed counter - revol«u~ntion- _31’Y Uprising aimed at overthrow- lick the lawful system in Hun- gmvyns Ferenc Donat, Zoltan Tildi, F9_I‘9I1c Janos and Miklos Vasar- el were given sentences nanlgmg L, run LATE MR. NAGY from five to _12 years; S8950? Kopaczi was g1V911 1199 1'm'P1'15°n' ment. Cyprus Calm As Paratroopers Continue Pouring Into Island NIIGOSEA, Cyzpnus (‘Red-ters)— hillsh paratrooper-s Monday Iwarmed into Cyprus by airlift “Id -prepared for patrol duty on II‘? eve of Britain’s formal dis- l°5“1‘e of plans for the turbulent ‘3I‘WI’s politi-cal future. 9 British colony was calm w'°‘ViIlg a week of communal WE? between Greeks and Turks h1.‘”°l} cost 16 lives and some 200 lllries. GB“ 3_ general strike among “ell! In Limassol, the island’s H “II largest city, and an- °‘"l0emen~t of a boycott of lav 115 courts by Greek Cypriot MVQTEPS underlined continued éreéliti’ b e t w e e n the 400,000 0 s and 100,000 Turks. "°'il111‘\d of some 30,000 B-ritish mams _stationed on the island out thawed D a t r o 1 s through- r_ 6 island as curfews in force * 1'03 the weekend were lifted. , slim-IFT CONTINUES M Jet and propeller trans- .§;ms.°h'°ned into an airport near at hourly intervals, spill- yhe ’_ I116 armed paratroopers. airlift of some 3.000 Whieh I iiarted Saturday, was ex- pected to be completed by Thurs- da . About 150 troops also headed here from Malta aboard the cruiser Bermuda. . Governor Sir Hugh Foot M01}- day appointed Chief Justice S01‘ Paget Bounk-e to inquire into th? circumstances of the Gcuenliell village clash. . Delegates of Greek CMPFIOI 13*W' ycrs in Nicosia informed B0ll1“ke they will not appear In any Cy- prus court from now on. A resol- ution passed by We la‘WY‘el:'§ 531‘! the boycott resulted from Turk- ish violence." MAYORS FLY TO ATHENS six Greek Cypriot m«ay01'S W979 asked by Archbishop Makarios, exiled primate of the island's or- thodox church, to fly I0 -’§Ih_e1}5 wedn,esd,a,y to (listclujss Britains plans for OylPI“115- The plan. due to be announced in the British Parliament today, was trans-mittediin advance to Mak.arios and Greek and Turkish govemment leaders. Both the Greeks and Turks op- pose the British plan. Turkey re- y iected it in advance in a note to Britain last week. Greece has is- sued no official reaction. M.P. and states that no evidence has been uncovered to implicate any city employee with the re- grettable theft of monies from City Hall on that date. “However, that same report does indicate misconduct and negligence on the part of certain officials on that occasion which demands disciplinary action by this Council.” The Mayor added that he un- derstood the Finance committee chaired by Councillor Gaudet had held a number of meetings on this In-artter,and had -prepared certain resolutions for the con- sideration of Council. MOVED BY HYNDMAN \ The resolution approving Mr. Fullerton’s r e t i r e m e n t was moved by Councillor Hyndman (Continued on page 5 col. 5) Plan Farm‘ Talks At Amherst, N.S. AMHERST (CP)-The three-day ference will open here Thursday Topics under discussion will in- clude all phases of agriculture, with emphasis on research de- velopments, short-term credit and farm improvement loans. D-DAY VET RETIRES OTTAWA CP-Col. Donald B. Buell. 52, of Brockville. Ont., di- rector of militia and cadets at army headquarters here, will re- itary -career, the -army an- nounced Monday. Col. Buell led the British Columbia Regiment ashore in the D-Day assault on Norm-mdy where he won the Dis- tinguished Service Order. He was wounded in August, 1944, and was invalided home. He was ap- pointed to his present rank and position May, 1954. annual summer agriculture con-I tire Aug. 1 after a 30-year mi‘.-2 HIGH WINDS HIT ONTARIO TORONTO ——(CP)—-Winds up to 56 miles an hour whip- _ ped across Southern Ontario Monday, killing a construc- t1on_worker in London and blowing away valuable farm topsoil Harry Van Haeren, 28. died under the debris of a cement wall blown down by a gust at a lsow-cost housing construct- ion site. Soil, seeds and fertilizer were churned out of the rich Holland Marsh for the sec- ond time in a month. Motor- ists on highway 400 slowed and used headlights as clouds of brown dust fogged visibility. At Schomberg, potato farmers said the wind laid bare acres of- tiny pota- toes. Naval Officer Is Acquittecl HALIFAX (OP) — A five-man naval court Monday acquitted Capt. Dudley G. King, 48, of Wil- son’s Landing, B.C., oh a charge of negligently hazard-ing the de- crash off Bermuda last January.. martial concluded Saturday. The; collision with the destroyer; Nootka occurred during manoeu-I vres. Damage was slight. Capt. King is comm~an~d~er of the first. Canadian Escort Squadron com- posed of four ships headed by the Algonquin. Find Dynamite In Thomas River LONDON (AP) —— Police dis- closed Sunday they found 11 sticks of explosives in the Thames near a jetty used by Prime Minister Macmillan and members of the Royal Family during Eton‘ Foundation Day cel- ebrations June 4. Officers said the explosives ap- parently were planted as a prac- tical joke that fizzled. * If the blast had gone off a huge spout of water ~might have drenched the royal party. But there was no explosion. Wonis Royal Probe Into Quebec Sale QUEBEC (OP) Liberal Leader Jean Lesage has reiter- ated a request for a royal coon- mlssion inquiry into the sale of Quebec hydro’s gas distributing system to the Quebec Natural Gas Corporation. “If w-it‘hi'n two weeks no- in- ‘quiry has been ordered the Lib- eral party willliave to take steps ,much more important in a de- jmocrascy,” Mr. Lesalgc said Mon- day night. He did not elaborate. Mr. Lesage held a press con- ference to discuss a series of stories in Montreal Le Dev-oir. The newspaper has said the birth of the privately-owned Que- bec Natural Gas Conporation was marked by one of the “most ex- traordinary” market coups in Canadian history. 104 DOCTORS DIE HALIFAX (CP)— A spokesman for the Canadian Medical Associ- tion said Monday that 104 mem- MAY NOT HAVE NIAJOIRITY Progressive OTTAWA (OP)-Federal geolo- gists this summer will seanch for oil in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, it was announced Monday. stroyer Algonquin in a two-ship} The decision was handed down; Monday after the four-day court; bers died during the past year. The association is holding its 91st annual meeting here this week. The technical surveys depart- ment said the =ear-ch will be made by one of 77 parties from‘- the geological survey of Canada which will be placed in the field this year to assess mineral re- sources in various parts of the country? Geologists looking for oil in the Gulf of St. Lawrence will be‘ making the first systematic sur- vey over Canada's continental shelf. The shelf extends underwa- ter from the Canadian coastline for distances of up to 22 miles. Canada received international recognition at the recent Geneva conference of its right to ex-ploitl any min eral deposits which: might be present in_ the contin-I ental shelf surrounding its shares Manitoba W Geologists Seek Oil I In Gulf Of St. Lawrence off the southern coast of the United States, are important sources of petroleum and other minerals. . SURVEY SHELF The department said aerial magnetometers will survey the continental shelf in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in an area extend- ing from Nova Scotia to Anticosti Island and from the Gaspe penin- sula to Newfoundland. The survey will help determine whether the sedimentary rocks of New Brunswick basin extend beneath the gulf. If they do there’s a good chance they con- tain oil deposits. The geological survey will use a twin-engine Aero Commander aircraft to make the aeroma=g- netic survey and others this year. The plane is faster than Canso aircraft used previously Continental shelves, such as that and requires a smaller crew and less maintenance. » Former Charlottetown Man MONTREAL (CP) — Taxi-drl- ver Harold Hennessy, 43, a na-. tive of Charlottetown, died Mon- day. apparently of a heart at- tack, while driving to the city from Montreal Airport with several passengers in his vehi- cle. Police said one of the pas- sengers grabbed the wheel andsteered the car to a safe stop. No one was injured. Hen- nessey was a driver for Mur- ray Hill Limousine Service. .Mr. Hennesscy was for a number of years a well-known funeral home director in Char- lottetown. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. A‘. A. Hennessey of Charlotte- town, he was educated at Queen Square School and St. Dun- stan’s University. During the Second World War, from 1942 to 1945, Mr. Hennes- sey served with the Knights of Columbus Auxiliary Service, first in Labrador and then in England. He was a member of the Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus and an active mem- ber of the Charlottetown Bene- Tabulation Of Manitoba Vote CP tabulation of Manitoba votes from 695 of 1,717 polls (40 per cent) by parties (percentages bracketed): Prog-Con 42962139 Lib-Pmg 37,193( 33) CCF 24,966 (23) SC 1.947 ( 2) Other: 3,516 1 ml, _ Total 110,584 I -Dies Suddenly In Montreal volent Irish Society. Surviving are his wife, the former Enid Cantwell of Char- lottetown, six children, and one brother and three sisters. They are, Dorothy, ‘Mrs. (Dr.) J. E. Corrilgan; Eleanor Heranessey and Brenton Hennessey, both‘ of Charlottetown and Thelma. Sister Kieran in North Dokata The body will be sent home for burial. Five Killed At Crossing VICTORJAVILLE. Que. (GP)- Five persons were killed Monday night when the car they were riding in was hit by a Canadian National Railways train near this city south of the St. Lawrence, about 100 miles east of Montreal. The car was struck and pushed more than 1,500 feet down the track by the”Quebec-Victoriaville train. Dead are: Gaspard and Desire Leblanc, 59 and 60 respectively, both of Vic-toriavllle; Mrs. Al-cide For- tier, 50, Mrs. Hermengilde Ro- benge, 46, and her daughter, A»g-atha, 5. The latter three are from St. Fortunat, a village about 10 miles from here. Further details were not imme- diately available. SUPERMARKET BURNS . TORONTO (CP)—A supermar- ket and a bakery were destroyed in a fire in suburban Weston early Monday. Damage was esti- mated at about $345,000. WILL BE B|G_GE'R NEXT YEAR ‘OTTAWA (CP)——A forerunner of a possible record peacetime deficit in Tuesday night’s fed- eral budget was laid before Par- liament Monday. A pre-bud-get white paper es- timated a modest deficit of $39,- 400,000 — virtually a balanced budget—for the year that ended March 31, but already-indicated expenditures appear bound to multiply this many times in the current fiscal year. An unforeseen slump in govern- ment revenues during the finél three months of the last fiscal year turned a forecast sunplus into the deficit, on the basis of figures still subject to final ac- counting about mid-August. In the last full-fl-edged budget, former Liberal finance minister Walter Harris 'in March, 1957, had predlicted a surplus of $152,- 000,000. Finance Minister Flem- ing of the new Progressive Con- servative government that took office a year ago revised this to an $80,000,000 surplus when he announced tax cuts last Decem- ber. , But Mr. Fleming's udiite paper, tabled in the Commons Monday, showed that while expenditures stayed up around the later fore- cast, revenues slipped for the first time since the recession ear of 1954-55. The result was the first deficit in three years. following a sur- plus of $257,500,000 in 1956-57. Federal De ici ' The white paper estimated bud- Iget ‘revenues at $5,0-17,100,000 and expenditures of $5,006,500,- 000. For the previous year, the figures were $5,106,500,000 and $4,849,000,000. For the year that started April 1, Mr. Fleming is expected to propose spending of around $6,- 000,000,000 in his budget speech to be delivered to the Commons at 8 p.m. EDT Tuesday night. It would be an all-time high, topping the record $5,322,000,000 in the war year of 1943-44. G o v e r n ment spokesmen al- ready have indicated the budget will go in for heavy spending as a means of providing jobs and getting anti-recession money into circulation. Prime Minister Dierf- enbaker has stated the govern- ment will not balk at a budget deficit to combat unemployment. The forecast deficit could run anywhere from $600,000,000 to $1.- 000,000,000, far ahead of the Pre- vious peacetime high of $390,- 342,000 in 1919-20.. However, there " is. no direct comparison between the two sets of figures, because the total gov- ernment revenue in 1919-20 was, less than $400,000,000. The all-time record deficit was $2,558,277,000 in the 1944-45 war year. Mr. Flemings first full-scale budget may include a few select tax cuts. but in the light of the spending and revenue outlook Is 39 they are unlikely to be wide- spread. No major reductions in; per on-al or conporation income’; taxes are expected. I OVEROPTIMISTIC In the white paper, it was‘ shown that both Mr. Harris and Mr. Fleming were optimistic in, their forecasts of revenue for thei last fiscal year. By comparison‘ with the eventual $5,047,100,000, Mr. Harris had estimated $5,170,- 000,00o and Mr. Fleming had re-I vised this to $5,14-1,000,000 in his] December financial statement. A sharp drop in revenue during! the last three months of the fis- cal year lar-gely accounted for the decrease, the white paper‘ said. ‘- While personal income tax rose, by $98,700,000 to $1,499,200,000,{ corporation taxes slipped by $33,-! 700,000 to $1,234,800,000. These are the largest two items of government revenue.I Virtually all the others were} down for the year. On the expenditure side, de- fence remained the largest singlei item, though the $1,687.000,000; was below the previous year’s1 $1,784,000,000 and represented‘ only 33 per cent of the over-all spending total compared with 37 per cent in 1956-57. Old age security-pensions to all those 70 and over——cost $473,- 500.000. but only $371.500.000 was, covered by the special two-per-1 I Million cent income and excise tax not included in the budget. The re- maining $102,000,000 was in the budget, in the form of an ad- Vance from the general treasury. In the previous year, this deficit was only $6,000,000. Payments under federal - pro- vincial tax-sharing and subsidy arrangements were $382,700,000, down $12,700,000 because last year Ontario did not rent its cor- piration tax field to the federal government, as it did formerly. DEBT CHARGES RISE Service charges on the public debt — second - largest item of spendi~ng—-were $567,100,000, com- pared with $534,100,000 in 1956-57. The net debt rose to $11,048,- 300,000. Virtually all of the in- crease was due to the budget def- icit. Other items in the white paper: The gross national product-— value of all goods and services produced — reached a high of $31,4-13,000,000 in 1957. This com- pared with $30,182,000,000 in 1956, but the rise was due more to higher prices than to increased volume of production. ‘ Personal income at $23,142,000,- 000 was up from $21,958,000,000, and consumer spending rose to $19,768,000,000 from $18,697,000,- 000. Labor income was $15,825,- 000,000, up from $14,719,000,000. Corporation profits dropped to $255,000,000 from $2,602,000,000. nr. HON. MR. MEIGHEN 5 Observes 84th Birthday Quietly TORONTO (CPI —Rt. Hon. Jrthur Meig-hen, twice prime minister of Canada, quietly cele- brated his 84th birthday here lionday with his family and long- time friepd, 91-year-old Lt.-Col. Hugh Clark of Kinvcardine, Ont. Monday night, Mr. and Mrs. Meighen, their children and Col. Clark, were the guests of Lieu- tenant-Governor J. Keill-er Malc- Kay at a private dinner. Mr. Meighen, who retired from politics in 1942, still attends his Bay Street office and went there Monday after he had read a pile of telegrams and congratulatory’ messages. He was sworn in as prime , minister in 1920 after Sir Robert Borden resigned but was defeated in,the general election of 1921. He formed another cabinet in 1926 after Mackenzie King’s res- ignation but the government was defeated again three months later. He was a senator from 1932 to 1941, when he resigned to try leading the Conservative ' party back to power. It was defeated i’ dian Press said at 10:50 p.m. ‘ CDT Monday night that the elec- ' Thompson. 1 in the Wolseley riding where Mr. WINNBPEG (CP )—The Cana- tion of the Progressive Conser- Vative party in Manitoba was in- dicated by early returns which showed the Conservatives had the largest group but possibly not a. majority. WINNIIPEG (CP)—The Cana- dian Press said at 10:26 p.m. CDT Monday night that early re- turns in the Manitoba election in- dicated defeat of the -Liberlal-Pro gressive government.’ WINNIPEG (CPI —— The three major ‘parties were running neck and neck in early returns from lQIonday’s Manitoba general elec- l()ll. The Liberal - Progressive gov- ernment, t-he Progressive Conser- vatives and the CCF were close 111 members elected but the Con- servatives had a healthy marin in the number of candidates leading. Premier D. L. Campbell, won early re-election in the Lakeside riding around Portage la Prairie WIIIOII he has represented since 1922 and Progressive Conserva- tive chief Du/ff Rdbl-in, fighting his first election as party leader, was re-elected in Wolseley. Provincial secretary Edmond Prefontaine won in the southeast- ern riding of Carillon, while Re- -sources Minister F. C. Bell lost in the southwestern riding of Vir- den where redistribution pitted lum against another former mem- ber of the. 57-seat legislature, Pmgressive Conservative J. W. Light Voting was reported in some parts of the Winnipeg area, where meetings werevsm-all and few during the campaign. How- ever, a. heavy vote was reported Roblin was seeking re - election and in the Burrow-s constituency where three candidates, op-posed Labor Progressive (Commu- nist) W. A. Kardash who was try- ing for another term. Heavy turnouts were reported in several rural riding: where sunny skies, temperatures in the mid-70s and good road conditions prevailed. Polls were open from 9 am. to 9 p.m. CD91‘. and he retired. onservafive n Indicated Partial Returns Indicate Defeat Of Campbell Gov’l' P'E'RSO'N.AL WIN WINNIIPE-G ICIP) —_ Premier D. L. Campbell won personal re- election in Monday‘s Manitoba election in the Lakeside riding he has represented since 1922. His only opponent was Progressive Conservative John F. Bate. igible to vote compared with 457,363 in the last general elec- tion in 1953. A record total of 267,363 persons or 58 per cent cast ballots in 19.53. Voters Monday had 1 record total of 179 candnidlatees from which to choose 57 members for the legislature. The Liberal-Progressives and Progressive Conservatives each nominated candidates in 56 of the 57 ridings.‘ The 43 candidates named by the CCEE‘ constituted the strongest bid for power the party’ ever has made in Mani- toba. Social Credit named 12 (‘Continued on page 5 col. 3) The Standing CP Standing-11 pm. CDT Prog. Con. 21 Lib.-Prog. 16 CCF 7 Independent 1 Doubtful 12 Total 57 About 484,574 persons were el- OTTAWA (CP)/— Opposition Leader Pearson Monday accused Prime Minister Diefenbaker of interfering with CBC affairs. Mr. Pearson made his accusa- tion in the Commons in connec- tion with an incident that occur- red here Friday while a C-BC re- porter was lprepafing to interview Visiting Prime Minister Macmil- lan of'Britain. Press reports of the incident said the CBC reporter in-formed Mr. Macmillan that one question would be whether Britain's free trade proposal would be on the agenda of the Commonwealth Trade Conference this fall. The reports said Mr. Diefenbaker in- tervened by saying “no. no." The result of this “no, no,” said Mr. Pearson, was that no question about the British free trade proposal was subsequently asked Mr. Macmillan in the in- terview. CHARGES INTERFERENCE “That seems to me to con- stitute interference in the affairs of the CBC by the prime minis- ter,” Mr. Pearson said, especi- ally in view of the fact no refer- ence about the free trade pro- posal was made later‘in the actual CBC interview. Earlier Monday, in replying to Mr. Pearson’s questions, Mr. Diefenbaker said _“there was nothing whatsoever to justify the conclusions that were arrived at in various (press) items regard- ing the matter.” After Mr. Pearson raised the issue anew later in the day, the prime minister said: “I have nothing to withdraw in any way.” “There was no interference with the CBC.” he reiterated. Mr. Diefenbakex‘ said Monday he was “surprised” to learn of . questions would be. He had been the resulting comment. He .... .. termed it “a mountain made out, of a molehill" FULLY DISCUSSED EARLIER He said that at a press con- ference earlier that day the matter of the free trade proposal had been fully discussed. when he and Mr. Macmillan I emerged from their later meet- ing for the CBC interview, Mr. Macmillan had asked what the Gives Warning To Diabetics I~IA:LlFAX (OP) — Dr. William R. Feasby of Toronto, medical director of the Can-adianDiavbetic Association, warned Sunday there is “no easy street” for diabetics. He told a clinic of doctors here diabetics “must work hand and long” at their diets and exer- cises. He criticized a recent magazine article which said diabetics now could control difficult diabetes perfectly by taking a pill. Dr. Feasby 'said the “actual facts are that only one in 10 can hope to benefit by oral adminis- tration.” P.M. Accused By Pearson With Inierferience In CBC’ told the first would be about whether the free trade proposal would be on the Commonwealth trade conference agenda next September. “I said ‘no, no'and that ter- minated it thereafter as far as I was concerned.” Mr. Diefen- baker said. Mr. Diefenbaker did not am- plify his statement to say what he had meant by saying “no, no.” Mr. Diefenbaker said that inso- far as his government is con- cerned, there has at no time, in- directly or - directly, been any interference with the publicly- owned CBC. SEAMEN UNLOAD COAL TORONTO (ClP)—Seamen on a United States freighter Monday unloaded the first coal to be de- livered on private docks since the Teamsters Union (CLC) called a strike last week against 19 coal yards. Medical Association Ponders Use Of Leisure Time Problem HALIFAX (CP)—Tl1e Canadian Medical Association says con- structive leisure - time activities must be considered an essential part of preventive medicine. The C<M»A's general council — “the parliament of Canadian medicine” — Monday adopted a subcommittee recommendation to urge Canadian communities “to draw upon their voluntary and official resources to efrfect co-ordinated planning for recre- ational facilities and programs." The 12,000-member association opened its 91st annual meeting With M0nday‘s session of the general council. In other action, the council earmarked $7,000 for doctors’ “refresher courses” in cancer diagnosis and treatment, 011117 in CIM-A-approved hospitals. _ _ _ and cumstances urged junior mternes be trained have tended to discourage the Earlier Health Minister Mon- while . . ielih 1ll‘S€‘tl_ Canadian ‘d-o-ctorsto the pliysica.l. psychic and social take a firm lead” in guiding needs for recreation. the federal-provincial hospital in- surance plan. In an address to a luncheon meeting, Mr. Mon- teith asked physicians "to accept the challenge which this scheme presents.’-’ ‘ N0 INTERFERENCE Mr. Mon-teith assured the asso- ciation that the government will not take steps which will “inter- fere with the patientdoctor rela- tion.” The CIlVl'.A’.s committee on pub- lic health sponsored the resolu- tion that c.onst1*u-ctive leisure- time activities would benefit in- dividuals of all ages. ‘ In a report released to a press conference after the closed meet- ing, the committee stated: “Cir- of modern living use of facilities for recreation . they have increased 2 I. , :‘l . i