Maida Roger- university production of ptti’s opera “The Medium” th 12 and 13 and is alsg,sing- in the Mount Allison concert is singing im the Mount Al-|. SINGS IN SHOW OPERA tour. FRONT LEFT, Miss Rogerson, William Jenkins, New Glasgow, and Fhoda Jcan* Mc! eod, _New Glasgow. BACK, Eleanor Robbins; Yar- mouth, Ivan Freebcrn, Moncton, Elizabeth Reeves, Pictou end Mrs. Catherine Judah Daniel, on the vocal staff of the Mt. A. conservatory otf music. Hospital Plan - (Continued from page 1) ng a certain number of em- pes to come under the pian ; expressed the opinion that | is was te the prevince’s advan- in view of the large num-! y already carrying insur'ance ‘this kind. He also’ note th-* > had a large number of, m co-operatives which auto- matically came under the plan. D SETUP | On the Island, Mr., Bell said, setup is different—the popula- is largely rural and he fear- that many would be unable to y while others wou!d gat in ar- in their premiums. He said of the original intentions of | plan was that it cover the | ple population. In ‘Nova Scotia he said ‘they | paying for the plan out of | gneral revenue supplemented by | Sahove that required to pay fy got hospital insurence free. said he would like to see it so no one, if they got sick would the extra burden of worry- “were paid or not. n. M.L. Bonnell said Mr. Bell | feminded him of a satellite fired at the moon.” It didn’t hit the | n but kept going around it.” OH termed the Opppsition Lea- | a master of evasion, stating | he stepped over the question nd Sound it but he never hit it. ie claimed Mr. Bell had objected a compul time felt a sales tax—if hé does, he asn’t said so,” said Dr. Bonnel!. ‘The Health Minister.. said tlie fernment.could make it manda- | for everyone to carry insur-} ‘ if they decide to do so | “we are going to give the mind-,” he said. IEMIER SPEAKS “Premier Matheson reviewed he history of hospital insurance | g back to 1948 when hospital | rants and hospital insurance ere first talked of. He recalled ‘he trip he made » Ottawa in April 1957 when he ped With the then Miris‘er of salth and Welfare. Pau! Martin io become Ozmada’s ‘sixth pro- ‘ to accept the scheme. “The Premier said he accepted . Martin’s proposal with tre . “If you do as well for us pr this plan as you did under i previous hea‘tfi gran‘s, I am g to go along with you.” he Premier staied that Prince d Island had taken advan- of more of the health gran‘s any other province in Can- aad ie - EASTERN GUARDIAN. MUSIC festival membership Dyess Sop. be left at the Jo-Anna AUCTiON “45” Score Cards sale at Guardian-Patriot Printing. AIN Amateur atx & Caval fade Heatherdale Hall Friday} March 13th., 8 p.m. Send entries Margaret Matheson, Hedther iH Cub epepeeret by~ Heatherdale _ SPRING Fashion Show, Mon- lague. Reserve April Is. Spo- sored by Retarded Childrea’s As- sociation, Montague. " BUR—GAIN Amature Caval-| and if we are going to take uw? of industrialized areas which | aeaemeeeeemcencadion “gales tax. He understood that | tax would provide severe] thousand dollars _ over | hospital insurance and every- |- memes their insurance pre-| plan and at the) a volumary plan! ould not be worked. ‘What kind | Mf a plea does he’ want-+<does he}; ada and he felt the Island had go‘ten a good deal. He said he went over to the House of Commons to hear the debates on hospital insurance and there he heard Dr. Baird, the chief Opposition critic strongly advocating the inclusion to TB and mental care. | Was s‘rongly supporred by Queens | member J. Angus MacLean, Mr. Fleming, now Minister of Finance and Mr. Dinsdale of the P7 Op- pos’ son. “It was a gamble |I took,” said | the Premier, ‘“‘One I thought I could not lose—if the government were. returned, I had Mr. Mar- tin’s offer and if the other party got in we had this promise to in- clude TB and mental care. _ “I said I gambled—well I lost my gamble with the .election of ane 10, 1957,” said .the Pre- mier. He went on to tell of a confer- ence he attended in the fall of 1957 and at that time Mr. Flem- ister of Finance | quite would have to deduct such an amount from whatever grants they were nowr eceiving from the federal treasury. “‘That is what Mr. Fleming had to offer us. He | would give us something in one hand and chop it off with the | other,” the Premier said. | ‘The Premier said the cost of | caring for the TB patiapjg,,iand | mentally ill in the province {fs eer ae over~a million dolLars a year and if this were included in the scheme the province would stand to save approximately a half milion dollars recoverable from Ottawa. Mr. Matheson dealt at some length to newspaper comment — had been made regarding the plan. Some of these were cri tical while others highly compli- mented the government. » Mr. Matheson predic‘ed some ‘mess in the plan. Oné of these tributions would not come in so freely from the gotte as they did before. He expressed the belief that every “hospital on the sland now has a bonded debt in addiiion to heavy depreciation costs. EVERYONE INCLUDED Camparing costs with existing Blue Cross rates, ime Premicr noted that a number of peovle had expressed surprise that the government plan was not:cheaper than it wa’? He explained that, Blue Cross coverage was for a preferred risk class while’ the. government scheme included all classes from the cradle to the guave wi'fi no waiting period or exemptions be- cause of certain previous iliness- es. Referring to Premier Frost's presentation to the government in which the Ontario Premier asked for - $100,000,000, Mr. Matheson s?id, “If Premier Frost wes sre of getting the $100 million he wouldn’t be financing theplan by premium, he ‘would be introduc- ing a sles tax.’ : “And if we had gotten five’ mil- | lion instead of’ two and a half we | would be using a) sales tax me- | thod also;”’ he said. Continuing the Premier said, “This tax ‘sharing agreement with the Federal Government is only for four years and if they do not renew i at the end of that time,, we will have to put on a sales tax.” — “TIT am using the same argu-: ;ment as Mr. Frost, some day some government is going to licctitute ‘a sales tax to build reads, provide ‘for education along with health and welfare , New Perth, Hall Thursday | the federal offer through their 19th, Closing date Tues- roads-to-resources program 1%. Send entries to Mrs. money will haye to come from Martin. Sponsored by New| some source,’ “|. . * he added. ” “If we do not take the « pre- ae, the fact that voluntary con- a chance to make up thoir _—_ b mium plan now, we cannot do it later,” the Premier said. + EARLY PAYMENTS Dr. Bonnell said he would like to clarify a statement he had made during the first part of the debate. He said at that time, there would be no waiting period. He stated there were reservat- ions to this statement. He explained that the mac- hinery to receive premiums would be ready to operate in July or early August and any- tone who had their premium | at which the plan is expected to go into operation, these persons would be admitted, fully covered by the plan. On the other hand if pe ‘prem- jums were not paid until after Oct. 1 there would be a three month waiting period _ before coverage would become effect- ive.. This, he said, was being dene to encourage as many as | Possible to take advantage of | the plan as early as possible. It would constitute three months paid by October Ist, the time | ; CBC’s free-time political series, The Nation’s Business. “T reaffirm that sympathy that must be in the hearts of all of us for those who were laid off. and assure them of the highest level of continuing effort on the part of. the back to that C government to get them work a$ soon as possible Canada thay retain their lence, -skilis and lcyalty for the eat | tasks that lie ahead of all of us.” The statements were included aE Min-}in a text of the speech issued to the press before delivery. CONTRACT STIPULATION ‘Mr. Diefenbaker said the Bo- mare an:i-aircraft missile and other contracts involving joint Canadian and United States spending on defence will be de-| signed to assure that ‘practically every dollar of the Canadian share will be spent in Canada.” Canada’s share of costs in .this field will. be one-tbird. The prime minister's speech was largely a recapitulation of his previous addresses to the Commons during debate on the} - Arrow cancellation. “I ask the simple question— should we go on spending your mon¢y as taxpayers to produce the Arrow, which is an attractive aircraft of fine workmanship and design, but which would be out of Bl Jobs For Avro Em ployees Sought, Diefenbaker Says ie pressure brought abjnet to force it to which was not fair to the Canadian people.”’. _ government. had not antici- patedthat A. V. Roe (Canada) Limited would dismiss all its employees the day the govern: ment’s decision was announced. The prime minister said Can- ada must receive a just and fair share of joint Canada-US. de- fence production* ‘ At the start of his speech, Fe Britain to Moscow reveals clearly the desire of free world leaders to do everything humanly possible to assure that the world won't drift into war. — Council Meeting } Is Postponed MONTAGUE —. The regular Hairdressers (Continued from page 1) be read clause by clause so the members could be in- TE, aT attended a meet of the hairdressers and in so as Sia pat tite clvicintien, we waa? go the Price’ ‘of permanent waves. they had conformed to certain re- gulations in regard to ability and payment of a license. Mr. Acora said this would eliminaie a lot of women who carry on a nice little business and do a good job. He felt it would be an imposition to ask these women to pay a license -| fee when their business was so small: ” Mr. Large assured the Souris member that no one—was—being+ shut. out. way of doing business. He said “It is just an orderly bs, there must be some type of pen aliy clause otherwise the act would , be meaningless. I am speaking for every woman in the "| province who goes to a hairdres- ser and there are a lot of them,” “| Mr. Large said. ‘Mr. Acorn said he objected to the, clause which said no opera- tor, unless they became a mem- ber of the association as of Feb. 1 could carry on business and moved the deletion of the clause. id| PREMIER OBJECTS Premier Matheson . objected stating that the very purpose of | the act would be defeated if this were to take picce.. Harold Smith (L-4th Queens ) “Said he thought, it would be wrong to in- *| tarfere with the act wich the SMALL OPERATION ‘o Mr. Acorn said the act did not allow for any new members to come. into the _ associa:ion unti! women had asked for. He said “We all like to see our women looking nice and I think we should let the bill go through as it is.” t RR KH % kkk kw SHOWS- of free hospital care compared | to those who came |ater. The Health Minis‘er explain- ed the building of the Hillsboro | General Hospital and the intro- |. duction of the act. which desig- | nated the hospital as a general | hospital. i He felt at that.time that the care of. patients receiving active treatment ‘for mental illness | should be ~paid -for under - the plan and he still felt they should. Dr. Bonnell said he hoped that from Ottawa where he would meet with the Federal Minister of Health and Welfare, he would be able to report that the Hills General! Hospital would be considered in the scheme. ‘He said most of the patien‘s admitted to the Hillsboro Gene- ral are discharged. within three months. ABSENTEE BENEFITS Speaking of out-of-province benefits, Dr. Bonnell said any- one travelling anywhere in Canada, or for that matter in U.S.A. or ‘anywhere in the world, would be covered at ward | ra‘es | He also explained that ay patient requiring medical care | not available to them in the} province would be free. to go | to any other hospital in Canada | or the United States, subject to } the approval of the eokiet sion, province would be .covered by | the Island plan for the first three months of residence in thei Y new location. Bonnell said the P.E.I. ha was much cheaper and gave wider coverage than any other province. Taking Saskat- chewan for example, he said | | included under the plan as well as many drugs and vitamins now ‘included in the — Island scheme. Mother Is Freed _In Murder Case MONTREAL (CP)—Mrs. Ray- mond Martel, 37, charged with murder of her thrée-year-o'd son in, 1952, today was found no: guiliy because of mental derange ment at the time. A 12 - man court ef queen’: bench jury delivered the verdict after psychiatrist Dr. Arthur Hoard testéfied fhat Mrs. Martel su'fered a persecution complex and “thought people were lauzh- ing gt her’’ at the time she ad- mitted turning on the "gas jets to kil. herself and her son. She ae after he returned * Persons moving to some other | Ig there were many of the X-ray services not included § and} out-patient benefits were _ not |, has since been treated and judged fit to stand trial, : cr % MATURE AT ITS RAWEST.. B | o og. DENTON rs wigs oe NAKE bpd. + EARTH © . -£: COMING WED. - THUR. - FRI. - SAT. THIS IS + “THE BIG COUNTRY” ™ This is the story of the ‘giants + “ % . * who bridled thé untamed land 4 the wilderness that rolled down from snow country to sun"¢ country, and sprawled: sea’ * to sea. It is the story of more than conquering giants. It is fired 4 and fleshed with the women who shared their power—yes, and thetr passions, too, And what a hugé ° Star-east “has been, assembled to re- create the mightiest of American dramas! Gregory Peck as their path-blazing, + the stranger who came from the ocean, to tame a Texas sea of sun, sand and violence . . who stood proud and alone . . Doll fame, as-the woman of unzontrollable love-hungers ... . Chariton Heston, in his biggest role since *‘The Ten Com- + * * mandments”’, as the rutheless ford, as the unrelenting range- fierce, proud buccaneer of the And it is only fitting that . Jean Simmons as_ the gir! Carroll Baker, of ‘Baby foreman . . . Charles Bick- baron . . . Burl Ives as the plains. this giant among motion pic- tures should come from that giant among Academy Award winning direGors, William Wyler, whose credits read like at catalogue of all-time screen greats. * as “The Big Country” is America . . . the stampeding land . . . the pintiacled mountains . . . a million stars overhead . . . and six great ones below! * It's the’ biggest ever made F ne : ot +) NOMINATED FOR TWO “OSCARS” IN THE pt 1958 ACADEMY AWARDS. econ SUPPORTING ACTOR”—BURL ves | a MOTION PICTURE SCORE »! 7: "A Scheduled ay will be > matnlaned during the + May we suggest, for your’ full Policy . pictare. bt * Performance . * engagement of this motion enjoyment, that you see it from the beginning. * Shows begin at 2:30 — 6:20 — 9:00 + GREGORY ra Mr. pane strongly objected , to the last clause of the bill whicia beauty salon who did not con‘orm to the act.He moved that the Speaker take the chair. lg A vote taken on Mr. Acorn's motion indicated that the amend- ment lost. The —count of —10-4 MasKinnon and Arsenault voted for the amendment. showed that Mr. Douglas, Acora| ee eS “2 a. EE oc 3 Ye Curling Draw For Montague ‘Curling at Montague tonight: 6:45 P.M. Ice 1 — L. H. Poole, K. Mac: Kenzie, R. Clow, B. Balderson, vs. C. Stewart, E. Shaw, L. Cat- penter, A. Pilsén. Ice 2 — L, MacDonald vs. E. Cudmore. e/.8:15 P. M. Ice 1 .— Dr. P. Metntyre, 1H. t| Fraser, J. Ballum, S. Vickers vs. Jim McLean, G. Nicholson, J Lowery, L. Hennigar. Iee 2 — .M. Sullivanvs. H. Clair. 9:45 P. M. . Ice 1 — C. Nicholson, A.} Sullivan; R. Lowford, B. Mcln- are vs. D. M an, R. Reid, D. MacLean, Don Williams. Ice 2 — Fred Vuozzo, R. Pet- tit, D. Sorrie, M. Gallant vs. Dr. Inman, G. Kennedy, V. 7 fawn Moore, Uigg Farmer Dies; Funeral. Will Be Today MONTAGUE — *Samuel E. -| MacLeod, 79, died at his home in Uigg on Saturday, Marclf 7th. The late Mr. MacLeod, a well known and respected farmer, mesh oe ~ spent a, wo ife in Uigg. He fe long supporter and maine r of the Baptist Church, Vigg. He leaves to mourn, his wife; the former Mable Vaniderstine, pof Vernon River; also six sons and five dasghters, Malcolm, ‘in Prince—George, B:C.; Gordon, Alexander, Harold, all of Uigg; James, Ingleside, Ont.; Ray- mond, California; Florence, Mrs. “loyd MacLean, Kingsboro, P.E. ”"; Marion, ‘Mrs. Walter Mac- SOURIS THEATRE Monday - Tuesday March 9th - 10th “Paris Holiday” —with—* Bob Hope Anita Ekberg tha Tues “3 HE will Life In Spain Is Talk Topic - | A description of life in pres- ent-day. Spain. was “the highlight ee Name. Boctety_beld us Name. Society ie ene The address was given » Rey. Adrian ult. of St. Dunstan's’ University. The meet- ing was chaired by the presi- dent M. J. Lee. _ The pastor Rt. Rev. .R..V. MacKenzie, introduced _ Father Arsenault who was thanked by R. J. MeCarville. Reports indicated that ‘the variety concert held recently was a sound success: both fin- ancially and socially. It was pointed out the concert gave parishioners the chance to en- joy the top talent present in the area. INDEPENDENT ICELAND by ent republic since it separated from, Denmark in 1944. Iceland has been an independ- ‘ees Rie inhi nah 10, 1959. 5 Dutch Chutch To Iricorporate 5 4 An act. to incorporate the Christian. Reformed ‘Chufch ai Royalty received second in the Legislature yes terday. The bill was promoted by F. A. Large (L—Ist Queens). | R.R. Bell said it was worthy aH ens who supported this church had seen fit to establish their own place of worship on the Is land. He said it was an indica: tion that they were satisfied with ‘surroundings and intended to stay here. HE + —Mr=-Bellsaid- he knew “of—a couple ‘of _Dutch farmers who had settled at Brookfield. he knew of a number of others who had taken over farms that had become vacant and made a success of them. He hoped more of the people from ene would see fit to settle re. 77 SOLID BARRIER Icefields blocking the ap proaches to the Antarctic contin ent are nine feet thick in places ——— WIRE NOW for. service payment . plan line and wiring. MONTAGUE ELECTRIC CO. Patriot. NOTICE TO ——- PATRIOT SUBSCRIBERS Patriot subscription accounts may be paid at the Montague, Souris or Summer- side offices of The wena and The The Guardian - The Patriot Arrow's 100% fine cotton broadcloth Hitt may be touched up with a cool iron if you insist, but it’s really not necessary. Because’ this exclusive Iron Cheater shirt is made with fewer seams to eliminate puckering— - first in dries wrinkle-free, ready to wear. “Smart cord-edge collar and cuffs. Short- point medium spread collar that never curls, Mitoga tailoring for unmatched comfort, “Sanforized” labelled and anchored-on ‘ buttons'for shirt-life satisfaction. , fashion” Cluett, Peabody & Company of Conada, Ltd., Kitchener, Ont. to note that the fine Dutch citit~, Use our convenient monthly | HENDERSON & CUDMORE Charlottetown MOORE & McLEOD LTD. Charlottetown, P.E.I. ee R. T. HOLMAN LTD. Summerside - PROWSE BROS. LTD. Charlottetown — S.A. MacDONALD €T, I EAT ON Oo °° IMES LIMITED ce So CHARLOTTETOWN BRANCH -_keuy a mannis | {" ARROW tonne - Dial 3685 +. — ~ : we yf m2 mARROW> —