l \. .;Good For The Island > The Guardian is For It r @uardinn WEA “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” THER Sunny with a few cloudy periods and very warm: southwest winds 20. gusts to 40. Low-high 47 and 80. Sunday; cloudy. VOL. LXXVII. N0. 145 Author-had In Second Dcpnrtmllt. Ottawa. and for By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA (CPl—A complete. prepaid package of health ser- vices-financed by higher taxes. perhaps even by lotteries in some provinces—was advocated Friday in a huge. forceful re- uort by the royal commission on ealth services. The commission said the r-onomy can afford this big the system—and government n do it for less than the ori~ is insurance companies and “Said it is convinced Cana- I’ns would willingly pay the b, er es required. w 8'1 :ey see what they would get r their money. As envisaged by the commis- pn. practicazll no type or fialth service Would be left to ' one man's ability to pay for it out of his own income. Every- iody could get the services fi- nanced out of taxes. without aying extra charges. Ultimately the scheme would include just about everything t at a' physician can provide—- 4' :n delivery of a baby—«plus filiatric treatment, and den- . e and eyeglasses for chil- under 18. Patients would only the first $1 on cam prescription. scheme .would be put into tion just like hospital ln- her words. Ottawa would the leadership and pay 50 percent of the costs g its money by increas- ome taxes. waits READY the provinces would set eir own schemes. financ- ir share as they pleased. ing the program only when are ready — and then only the health - service prior- - ‘that they consider right for Once a province came into the scheme,. the system would cover everybody in that prov- ince-regardless of age. health. pr a-bility t pay. In that sense lt mould n compuls the provincial pro- shfiidn‘t have to con- form to a "rigid pattern" to qualify for Ottawa's share costs. 0 - To qualiE'. said the commis- sion. a prevince would have to provide universal coverage and "adhere to the basic incluswe features of each of the programs Would a country - widc system of this kind mean state medi- cine? NOT STATE MEDICINE Not at all. said the commis- sion. That system would mean in effect that doctors' services would be nationalized—that they would become mere state-con- trolled functionaries. Instead; the commission en- visaged ,“s course of action based upon social principles and the cooperation and participa- tion of society as a whole . . Patients could choose their own doc rs. Doctors could ac- cept or ject patients. except in emergencies or on manh and 5. would charge their own fees for service. e fees would be set in negotiations between the medical-association and tli agencies which In all cases—never the federal government—would ad- minister the whole scheme. The program wouldn‘t arrive hill-pm. The provinces would freef to “phase in" the pro- .doolding which aspect thould come lrst. As s’ first step. the commis- yllion called for a federalprovin- ciai conference within six months. to start planning. Just as hospital insurance op- erates now. the provinces would free to finance their share of l’OPENHAGEN (APl—Soviet 'm'ller v 1 o c k c d ‘m brl with stoutly pro- m“! Danish leaders on for- in affairs Friday. but was re.- Ned to have agreed with Pre- l'lj Jens Otto Krag to expan- ‘ of - Danish trade. ults " 1X INCREASE WOULD FOLLOW . Commission Advocates ' Complete Health Service Class II]! o] til Post Moo ctr-I‘- paynut‘ n in so. MR. JUSTICE E. M. HALL Chairman of Commimion costs however they pleased—by income taxm. sales taxes. pre- miums. or out of general rev- enues. OTTAWA WOULD PAY Ottawa would pay half the actual costs. plus half the ad- ministrative costs. It also would make “fiscal need" payments the "financially weaker" provinces. All of this would come out of federal income taxes. Ultimately. with the whole system well established. Ottawa then c end its contributions s on: 1. Diagnosis and treatment 01 all physical and psychiatric conditions including mental re- tardation. 2. Maternity services—obstet- rical care. delivery of the baby, even routine care of the new- to 3. .All surgery. including the services of a surgical assistant. 4. Anaesthesia. 5. Services of a specialist. in- cluding those of a psychologist. 6. Inoculations and vaccina- no .— ans. 7. Periodic physical examina- tions—except those required for marriage or insurance or cm- W plo l. CHARLO'ITETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY. JUNE 20, 1964. Rights Bill Gets Okay By Senate .WASHI-NGTON (AP) -— The US. Senate passed Friday night the civil rights bill containing strong new barriers to racial bias in employment. public fa- cilities. businesses and federal aid programs. The action climaxed a 15- week struggle—the longest de- bate in US. Senate history. The measure now goes back to the House of Representatives. which passed basically the same bill four months ago. 290 to 130. Southerners there have vowed a lastditch fight. but the odds appear heavily weighted against em. House leaders expressed cet" tainty the revised version Will be on President Johnson's desk in time for his signing on July 4. Independence Day. Representatives S. M a n u e l Geller (Dem. NY.) and William M. McCulloch (Rep. Ohioiwho led the bipartisan fight for the House version of the bill. said they favor accepting the Senate ' package and no effort will be made by proponents for further changes. The Senate made more than 100 changes in the House bill, mostly minor. and the package was in effect a' substitute. The ‘ main changes revised the en- forcement machinery to give states with their own public accommodations and fair em- ployment laws a limited period in which to handle The Senate also put greater em- phasis on voluntary compliance and somewhat curbed the new powers the bill would give the attorney - general. Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona. the leading contender for the Republican presidential nomination. shouted at ' “no” — as he had announced Thursday he would do. He said 8. Ambulance service. 9. Agificigl limbs midisisnilar W. " . I orders it. , “ 11. Chiropractic and pediatric treatment. if a physician pee. scri i . o National Plan tUrged For Migratory Birds The fates of migratory birds in general and whooping cranes in particular came in for much discussion yesterday during the final sessions of the federal- provincial wildlife conference here. Major speaker of the morning \i/as national resources minister Arthur Laing. He felt the time has come for collective action through both federal and pro- vincial government to preserve the resources of migratory irds. This problem will be discuss- ed at the federal-provincial con- ference of resources ministers early next week. according to Mr. Laing. who commented af- ter the private session on the imperilling of migratory birds as a natural asset. In expressing the hope that the provinces' varying interests in wildlife can be included in a national scheme which they can support. he said “if the provin- ces agree. we are prepared to make representation for mu larger financial attention" the problem. “We have to have a national policy with support from tax- payers if the birds are going ch to i in locks Horns iih Pro-West Danes have offended the Danes’ pride in their prosperous farming‘hy slightlng remarks Thursday, the Soviet leader adopted a mark— edly placatory tone in further comment on their agriculture. shchav said Denmark is not the field of dairy farming. He made that remark on a visit to c Jar. animal Mobsndry exhibit at Which he was presented a Danish red bull and three cows. At the some time. ox- preuod deepest respect for Danish livestock farmers and said the Soviet Union is hilar- ootod in co-opcrathg with tho Done: in livestock and other agricultural fields. to ‘be preserved." said Mr. Laing. The primary problem in his eyes be soliciting support provinces not directly involved with migrating birds. through geographic considerations. Prov- inces which are not passed over by these birds in their twice- yearly flights are more likely (Continued on Page 3 Col. 4) INSIDE TODAY Births. deaths .. 3-16 Classified . . . . . 14-15-16 Comics ........ .. 13 Sport .. 11 Women’s .. 7 Editorials . . . . . . . . . . 4 Kings. Queen. City I Summerside . 8 Finance. Markets TI." is OTTAWA (CPI ———"l‘he Com- mons gave unanimous approval Friday to a constitutional smdmcnt empowering Parlia- mont to pass laws relating to survivors' and disability ben- efits as part of the proposed arc-ands Pension Plan. About I) minutes later. the w a s approved pdr fore the weekend adjournment amendment would then Iiament, which retains the tech- nical power to amend the Brit- in North America Act- of 1N7 through the failure of Canadian governments to agree on NI alternative cascading tornado. loh Parlllmuit is expected to dissolved showy be («atoll o . _ Two oppootlon'm warned thattwoormoropubltcponotoa mm “R be referred to the Drill!!! Par- . plans couldgrowupindsomturchc- l .\ he:couldn't_ accept. the public piercinmodatlons and employ- Defence jobs Are Awarded Island Firms CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — Several Prince Edward Island firms have been awarded contracts by the de- partment of defence production during the first half of May. it was announced here by Hon. C.M. Drury. minister of defence production. Arnold Cameron of Miscouche was awarded a $10,000 contract for repairing the interior of per- manent married quarters at Summerside RCAi“ station. Cur- ran and Briggs Ltd.. of Sum- merside. was awarded a $10,000 contract for repairs to asphalt roads. parking areas and taxi. strips at the station. Toombs Bros. of Kensington were \‘iven a $14,070 contract for coal hand- ling during the year ending May 31. 1965. and White Star Laundry Ltd. .of Summerside was awarded a $16,000 contract for laundering services during the period ending May 31. 1965. The contracts are among 149 unclassified defence contracts or more and total value of the contracts is $7,- 7,243. cause of loopholes created by a rider attached to the amend- ment. The rider states: "No such law shall affect the operation of any law present or future of l provincial legislature in re- lation to any such matter (pen- sions and connected benefitsl." . Baldwin (PC —- Peace Riverl said the rider "opens the way for any provin- cial government to set up its own distinctive pension plan in the fut are. . This Md destroy the uni- form and portable features of present pension proposals, c said. .- l‘urthsrnl’bre. the r e c e n t "deal" between the feder l and Quebec governments to intro- duce separate but identical pen- sion plan- could bewiped out. POSSIBLE CLASH Mr. Baldwin sold the Union Natlonslc opposition in the Que bee Legislature has critlclzed features of the Ottawa-Quebec on proposals I! when it returned to o . nion Nationals might revamp the tan so that it ould club with pension benefits and l mmng SEVEN cams By JEAN SHARP ST. JOHN‘S. Nfld. (CP) Resolutions calling for changes .in the nursing profession were passed by the 1,552 nurses at- tending final sessions Friday of theCanadian Nurses' Associ- ation biennial convention at Memorial University here. One resolution recommended the CNA approach the Canadian Hospital Association and other authorities to ask that directors of nursing be appointed early in «the planning stages of new hospitals. Nursing directors should be consulted on its planning, the resolution said. Another resolution suggested the CNA approach nurse ac- crediting authorities to ask that the criteria be established on the basic qualifications in nurs~ ing administrator should have. Other resolutionsincluded rec- ommendations that an institute every province to identify the social and economic problems be set up to include nurses from . Canadian Nurses. [Ask For Changes 1 of nurses and to establish prior- l itles for dealing with them; and ' that the CNA work with pro- ' vincial bodies to prepare ex- l perimean nursing education | programs in different parts 0 the country. ENLARGE IDENTITY T . OTTAWA (CPl — Conserva- tive MP Alvin Hamilton was 7% naughton Friday and expelled .‘ lfrom the House of Commons . y allegations that Prime Minister : Pearson had attempted to mis- ' ylead the House Speaker Macnaughton said he took the action “with regret." A formal vote to suspend Mr. 1. Hamilton for the balance of the : sitting carried 75-50, with Doug- 1 135 Fisher (NDP—Port Arthurl president, Montreal. . ance speech that “to fulfill its role. nursing must consolidate and enlarge its sense of pro- fessional identity and deepen the understanding of its role as a partner and colleague of ; others. ‘ “Its success in this social role will be influenced by its sensi- ; tivity to changing needs andl attitudes on the part of its own SENATOR. KENNEDY Sen. Kennedy Seriously Hurt one: 1 ‘creditistes voted with the 59 members and its abth to meet ‘ In Plane Crash iLiberals present to expel the these needs in new ways appro< : 30 U TH HAMPTON. Mass. ‘ - .priate tn the times." She said‘ . (APl—A plane carrying Sen- The incident sprang from Mr. A report on the royal com. jator Edward M, Kennedy lDem Hamilton's statements during mission of health was presented ‘MBSSJ to the Massachusetts the tumultuous debate earlier by chairman Mr. Justice E. M, ‘Democratic convention was re- in the day in which Mr. Pear- Hall at the final session, ported to have crashed Friday‘ son said he would ask the CBC servative group. ( l ( i i, l lisociation moved yesterday ~establish a "true ty est debates in many years when breeders of pure bred swine gather to; their nual em. rm I Russel Templar. Ross Butler, Woodstock. Ont.. from a composite of per- haps 20 pictures of‘ good type hogs which had been supplied him Yorkshire now that was painted by p O could be expected model was subjected to con- siderable criticism. Most people faulted it for having too little bone. and most Island breeders though the head lacking in what they like in a Yorkshire. One outspoken observer sug- gested the hog could have been colored black and named a Berkshire. But the type committee of which Mr. Templar is secretary was asked to persist in the ef- fort to establish a Yorkshire type that will be nationally ac- ceptable. “Unlimited benefits both to ‘breeders and the breed would ensue if a true ty model was established." Mr. Templar. “The demand for a true type Yorkshire has been continuous for the past 50 years . . but no consolidated action has been taken, mainly because the Yorkshire breed has never been organized as a breed on a national level.” PUSHES HUNT The idea of asking the com- lmittee to persist in the hunt for in true type model was pushed {by W. P. Watson. a former Constitutional Change !|s Approved By Commons lr-ontributions in the other prov- Linnea. 2 Guy Marcoux (SC - Quebec- , Montmorencyl saw the prob- lem from another angle. but he. , too. warned that differing plans could spring up in the future. The constitutional amendment would empower Parliament to Irevise- features of the Canada Pension Plan Without consulting ,the provinces. he said. Any pension change shmlld .‘only be, done with federal-pro- lvincial agreement to guarantee aSwine Breeders Seek 2 complaints. " lirue iype Yorkshire Canada's Swine Breeders As- Ontario livestock promoter who. tolls now e model" i Agricultural mEof a Yorkshire hog. something;'l‘oronto. ythat should stir one of the keen- 1 speaker at the noon luncheon. ‘ Burford‘, lime“ Ont. showed a type model of a to give a public showing of the 59"- ; controversial TV documentary in —- dropped by the CBC —- lied Mr. Pearson. Mr. Hamilton, member for j the Saskatchewan riding of Oil'- - -. , ‘ Appelle. later refused several Ice and hlemen laboled to . suggestions by Speaker Mac- free th t v t 'v ‘ .. no, “gangs. rapped men' 5”" naughtorl that he comply Witn night. I Kennedy was reported iously i ' e . fil i Two other occupants of the ca Kennedy plane were reported by police to be trapped in the wreckage. Pol Kennedy was taken m leev I the order to withdraw his re- Dickenson Hospital when heimarks‘ (wa. freed from the plane, 5 Mr. Pearson objected to Mr. LHamilton’s suggestion that he had three times attempted to mislead the House in answers about the film. Just before the naming inct- Reports of directors from‘ ANKARA (APl—lsmet lnonu dent “ in “th ML Hamilton gross the country showed a threatened to resign as premier was barred from the communs .allyjupward trend in hog . of Turkey Friday but later No" the “5‘ 0f the days Slums _ f ". withsome improve changed his mind and said he Ml" M’“' 8199108ij {0" in ‘quality. But nothing would hold Washington talks as lone “‘- 39 “id be had been ‘ approached quality- planned with President Johnson JWPODS earlier in answering A wise the report by Maritime on the explosive Cyprus crisis, v‘question that Mr. Hamilton put director Sterling Willis, King- The veteran politician and l-to another cabinet minister- ston. who said that for the first soldier made the threat in talk- ; That question and the Fear- part of this year Prince Ed- ing to reporters just after ne 50“ answer 19d 10 a furious ward Island topped Canada—it 1 failed to get a strong vote of has been doing that for years— confidence on the way his co- land interjections in Wild! Mr. with 59.3 per cent Grade A car-; alition government has been ‘ Pearson said he Will 85" the CBC to put on the film. for the TEk—uhfimTeF Changes Mind manager of the Royal Winter Fair in was the He guest ‘ casses. Nova Scotia being aihandling the Cyprus problem. close second with 58.7 per cent ,————— —— -ilpublic and for MP5. and Brunswick with an“ ' Mr. Hamilton. former Con- average of 51.4 top grade hog Clgarefle L001. servative agriculture minister. carcasses insisted Mr. Pearson was not Present'hog diseases such as‘ infectious Rhinitis can be com-g ASTON JUNCTION. Que. pletely eradicated, Mr. Watson' «Cp, __ A gang of men ear1y‘were made of. the cabinet or a told the luncheon meeting lust‘i-ridav stolekan estimated $40; ‘ Cebm‘ c°mmlilee 1“ “Mal 565‘ as tuberculosis had been wiped ‘ooo worth of cigarets from a 1510"- “.“t 1“ “VESt‘X-‘k There was a ‘warehouse in this community 95 1, DUMONT LAST NAMED time not too many years ago, miles east of Montreal. y The last Memgfl n. parliw he recalls. when people called Pnlice said the group of five, H be ed w Bernard breeders “plain damn fools" for 0.- Six hooded men~_[hree arm me" 0 "am as ' talking about accredited herds, pd win. relevers—drnve a in which there is no tuberculosis. {bl—95.40“ mick to the wholesale ML wats‘m Challengw breed‘ grocers' warehouse. tied up two on; to link performance with watchmem confirmation in developing show ring standards. “Here. where. Canada was born 100 years ago. 1 telling the complete truth when ' the prime minister denied films sentative, in 1962. He was de- feated in the 1963 election. . Speaker Macnaughton ha d f . andl fled WM! 200 ‘ earlier taken the Hamilton case cases 0 clgare 3’ under advisement and returned veloping ever better breeding stock.” he suggested. CITY RECEPTION The meeting was held in one of the conference rooms in the new confederation Centre here where a reception was given at noon by the city of Charlotte- ltown which also distributed c useful souvenir memo pads and souvenir key chains to visitors and Islanders alike. During the reception Deputy Mayor Walter C made a special presentation on behalf of the city to Earl Zavitz of Albinston, Ont.. president of the national association. on be- half of the city. Speaking for the association Mr. Zavitz term- cd Island hospitality "fabulous." The noon luncheon—the main course was pork—was provided by the provincial department of agriculture. Hon. rew ac- Rae was the chairman. The ladies were taken tour of the North Shore yester- planned ll sight seeing tour to- day. with visils to a few Island hog breeders thrown in. Most of the visitors are staylng over until Monday. a uniform plan and protect (provincial rights over welfare. ‘ Douglas Harkness (PC « Cal- gary North! said he regrets the plan's handling and unneces- sary difficulties raised by the government. He had very grave doubts about the impact of the plan on the raising of capital (or new industry or develop» nt Waldo Monteith (PC—Perthl, former Conservative h e a l t h minister. said the government has mishandled the pension plan. But he called for speedy passage of the measure to amend the constitution to make plan effective. S. African Snow Reported Heavy JOHANNESBOURG (APi— South Africa‘s heaviest snow- falls in living memory contin- ued for the second day Friday with the whole country in the grip of severe cold. Tempera- tures hovered around freezing as snow disrupted road. rail and air traffic and telephone communications kl many parts «I the country. Bloemfontein. capital of the Orange Free State with a population of 120.- 000. was reported isolated. ing "named" by Speaker Alan Macnaughton for refusing to withdraw his remark that rime Minisn-r Pearson had ALVIN HAMILTON. PC Member of Parliament for Qu'Appelle. Sask. leaves the House of Commons after be- i p attempted to mislead the “named” by Speaker Alan Mac- 1 lthe lone supporter of the Con- half-hour of questions. answers i Dumont, a Social Credit reprc- ; 16 PAGES Tory MP Ousted For Day In Quarrel Wi’rh Pearson ' Former Farm Minister Refuses To Refract . later to say he hoped it would lend in a pleasant way. Again he asked Mr. Hamilton to withdraw. “I am still in your hands." er. Hamilton said calmly. i Mr. Pearson then rose to say ' he was wrong to have answered the question ut to privy coun- ‘cil President McIlraith. But lie said he objected to the allega- tion that he attempted to mls- lead the House. The word “at- tempt” signified a deliberate ac- ion. i Opposition L e a d e r Diefen- i‘baker. a mid angry Liberal lshouts, said Mr. Pearson was l attempting to back away. i Speaker Macnaughton said ;that once more he would ask Mr. Hamilton to withdraw has i words. Mr. Hamilton said he Igrafted that the words of the prime minister “simply con- vince me my actions this morn- ing were sound and correct." 1;HAMILT0N NAMED 1 "With r e g r e t." Mr. Mac- ‘ nallghlon said. he. would have to name Mr. Hamilton for "dis- iagreeing with the authority of jthe chair." i To applause from the Conser- i vatives Mr. Hamilton slowly walked to the front door of the Commons. After Mr. Hamilton left the chamber. Mr. Diefenbaker said it was up in the government to I move a motion suspending him. “I'm simply asking that they (the governmentl do the rest of ‘ their job." Mr. Diefenbaker isaid. “If you're going to do the I job you set out to do, you must Imove a motion." l Mr. Pearson and Justice Min- [ister Guy Favreau sat motion. ‘less in their seats. ‘ FAVREAU RISES Mr. Favreau conferred in ‘whispers with Mr. Pearson and then rose. with a piece of paper in his hand. and said: i "At the request of the loader lot the oppOsition. I move»—" 5 Mr. Diefenbaker shot to his 1feet and objected to the pre- i face. 1 There were cries of "oh yes" from the Liberal benches. ‘ Speaker Macnaughton said he .could handle the point himself and said if Mr. Favreau were ,going to make a motion. he .would have to take responsibil- ‘ity for it himself. Mr. F‘avreail said he took full responsibility because he agreed with the request Mr. Favreau then moved that Mr. Hamilton be suspended for sitting. N- lthe balance of the day's Ems. concerning the circum- stances surrounding the fill) ing of the CBCdocumentu-y “Mr. Pearson". (CP vacuum. it