’_ If it’: Good For the Island The Guardian is For it if . 1‘ V0 “$5-was--"'-"‘,«-‘-:~‘~.'.‘Vs» A . . fl > I David Broderick. Albcrton holds aloft a Great Horned Owl which was found by his cousin. Bill Broderick. in an Lxxv.-go. 11; A E emit I-ISORNED OWL AT Atssnroui it , old’gravel pit near Alberion. I identified by John Cleaves. lec- swonoclan III! by wmaldfcllvnoddnnagso sometime ago. The bird was ‘ &Pd is @l1fltJfiIifllI “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” ":;I'-'-- CIIARLO'I'I‘E'l‘(lWN, CANADA. TUESTJAY. JULY 24,“1"9?é"2. Cloudy. showers and WEATHER fog patches ending "°,T,]&§fiE"”srE EN CENTS by evening. cool, east 15 changing to west. Low-high at Ch’town 48 and 65. 24 PAG ‘S t ..a ported . discussed Monday as provincial ‘ conference. being closed doors under the Marketing Problems mxmmd QUEBEC (CP) - Inter-prov-r lation of water supplies were re- to be the main subjects ministers of agriculture opened their annual conference. All '10 provinces have sent their ministers to the week-long held behind chair manship of Agriculture Minister W‘ Alcidc Courcy of Quebec. milk. ebec 3 the western provinces because‘ ‘: province does to a river Premier Lesage of Quebec is to address the conference Wed- nesday at a dinner offered by the provincial. government. vin Hamilton. federal minister of agriculture. will also visit the- conference that day. l rlculture ministers was held lnl Charlottetown. clal marketing. particularly ofi ntario both provinces have built up; surpluses. 1 The question of water resour-1 ces is of particular interest to; mber of rivers flow acrossl provincial boundaries. What one up-, stream can affect the water supply of a province down- stream. turer with the Audubon Socie~ ty who has been visiting the Western town. i A Atlantic Premiers Discuss BigCPAP|a lncial marketing and the rcgu-g l i . i ‘In Vacati France (AP) —— A Paris - Marseille ex- press train packed with vaca- tioners iumped the tracks seven miles wast of Dijon today ‘Na- tional railway officials Monday DIJON. speeding night said 36 persons were killed 1 and 48 injured seriously. More than 50 passengers were Last year, conference of ag. ‘ reported less seriously hurt and were treated for superficial in- {juries without being admitted r. Courcy said inter-provin-:10 h0SPll 1 as. eports said all of the more lg of special interest toseriously injured were French becausegexcept three British women. tentative report blamed the accident on the summer heat which might have spread the rails a fatal fraction under the pounding wheels of one of the world's fastest trains. (Reuters news agency said at least % persons were reported killed and 52 injured.) _ The train. which left Paris shortly after noon. was derailed ne Crashes on Train ’as it neared the village of Vei- ars.- sur - Ouc c and one car ‘plunged 150 feet from a viaduct ‘into a dry ravine. Four other fears which left the rails, re- mained upright. Rescue teams worked Into ldarkness. freeing those trapped tin the tangled wreckage of the ‘car lying twisted and bent In lthe ravine. Doctor:Ask_.l Safeguards BELFAST 'APl British ;docfors Monday demanded firm lgovernmcnt safeguards to main- tain mcdical standards if and when Britain joins the European ' Common Market. Worried at the possibility of ‘hclow-standard physicians from the continent practising in Brit- ‘ ain. the British Medical Assoc- iation called for immediate high- ilevel talks between the govern- ment and leaders of the profes- on. ‘ Many British doctors are -alarmed at the provision in the i C o m m o n Market's founding iwhich would allow the free in- iterchange of doctors among E hmfihm Bulldozers HONOLULU (AP)—A Cana- ‘Windsor. Ont..‘ cduple and their Transportation, Economics By KEITH KINCAID ST. -l0l'L\l‘S, Nfld. (CP)——'l‘he Atlantic provinces premiers concentrated an rtatlon and economic matters at their annual conference here Monday [believed to have included a pro- lgress report on the boards istudy of the effect of Britain‘! ‘proposed entry into the Euro- ; an Common Market and the [effect United States tariff and decided to form a cabinet chmges would have on the ,.e_ on. com ttee on transportation to work closely with the Mari- timen Transportation Commis- sion. In a statement following the closed - door conference. host Premier Smallwood of cw- f said the premier: considered transportation prob- lems of high importance and felt it necessary to establish an inter-provincial system of collab- oration at the cabinet level. The conference received a re- port from the transportation commission. It was not made Ml . Also received was in state- ment from the Atlantic Econ- Resenrch Board which (ls l A report from the Atlantic 5 Provinces E c o n omic Council lurged the premiers to continue ;pressure‘ on Ott wa for an At- a Elantic capital projects fund and ‘o 5 development board. -'TO MAKE REPORTS PUBLIC 1 Premier Smallwood indicated ; the reports would be made pub- llic later. Attending the one-day annual meeting besides Mr. rsmallwood were Premiers Stan- field of Nova Scotia and Robl- lchaud of New Brunswick. Prov- : ‘incial Secretary David Stewart and llrovincial Treasurer -Mel- ‘vin McQuaid represented Pre- lmler Show of Prince Edward Is- Tolls. Suspended W For Canal Route ‘ ' In honour RICE orrswn iCP)—-All ships and their cargoes were moving wlth- The toll suspension was prom- out charge through Canada‘: lsed by ter Diefen~ W _ C al Lake baker at a political rally in Wei On and . land. 0nt.. illst three of ya he. my ad fore the June lolgenersl elec- Ioadayiond made the in. order . , ve 1% At that time. he and the sus- 1'ollI‘oothol.aheD ont- aha“; on to shippers in the form of lower cargo rates. pension w ec im- rnedia . llowever. it took more than a month to notify the United states govanment. get its approval and then pass an order - in - council removing the tolls. ' . In seeking American approval -for the . Canada served notice that‘ it reserves the rich! to revoke the suspension and re-lnpose tolls on the Welland Last year. tolls'on the Wel- land produced $1,400,000 in rev- enue. This money was to be used to amortize at capital debt f land who is recovering from In lthffie englflefi W116“ ll Veefed illness. Premier Smallwood indicated -‘more than a dozen topics were discussed. but added that ltl1'°P°1'l9d- ’ interest of ,‘ .the region to make them all l2,000 feet," said Booker T. Wil- i would not be in dian Paeif ic Airlines planc ‘ icrashed into it mass of bull- fdozers in a runway construction r ,‘area at Honolulu internation ‘ ‘airport late Sunday night. kill- ‘ ing 27 of the 40 persons aboard. The turbine-propeller Britan- ; nia was making a perfect emer- ‘gency landing approach on ‘sharply into a left bank and smashed in names into the lheavy machinery. eyewitnesses - “They missed the runway by public. Matters not made public ison. fire chief at Hickam Air were believed to one in I Force Base which neighbors the which the provinces are work- llnternationalairport. ing towards an united front in - ven o the 11 crew mem-f their dealings with Ottawa. vbers. all from the Vancouver ‘These would be mostly econ- mic. : in addition to the transporta- ‘tion committee Mr. Smallwond said the provinces have come to a “complete agreement" on highway and bridge weight glimits. A condition on the agree- ment was that Newfoundland i can impose slightly lower limits -on certain bridges. The f in provinces. which i among them are building 26 vo- cational training schools with an average of about 30 teach- ers. considered creation of a joint training centre for voca- tional school teachers. Consider- able headway was made to- wards this end, Mr. Smallwood said. As encouragement to the re- meaning that a trilcker who buys a licence in one province would not be required to pay ,the full fee of other provinces ‘if he entered the inter-provin- lclal trade. The problem is to ‘receive further study. The premiers received an of- fer from Mr Roblchaud to place the laboratory facilities of the New runs water au- thority at the disposal of the other provinces. This willin- volve mostly water analysis. gional trucking trade. the pre-i mlers gave consideration to re- ; ciprocity of it u c k licences. ‘ Typhoon Kate Loses Punch TAIPEI (AP)——TYDhoon Kate lost her punch Monday after loavlng more than 3.0!!) persons homeless in Formosa and the Philippines. Thirty persons were reported missing in a boat col- lislon off Mindoro in the Philip- ines. , At last report. Kate had weakened lo a tropical storm and was heading toward main- iaoaws. sou. (CP) — lmprovill Welland system a V member of to gang mod s. MI.-am» M-Mid “'“"'"' . ' .- _Wl-fill-f|‘0.F|ND-I'I iaaoooesnooll. softens owns -‘um West said to canvas his MW and, 11 C . I . I nollilsausoou . Vlnllliatluootsa . .9-u’e-uuun . \ land Chino after giving For most! a glancing blow. No cas- ualtles were reported‘ on For- mosa. but the bustling port of Kaohsiunl suffered heavy flood- Asldc from the boat disaster. there were three other known drowning victims in the Phil- llpplnos. The A m e r i c a n steamship Oceanic grounded off the north- west coast of Lu:on..'l’hcre was no immediate word ('1 w ithc 8.171-too shift was “I indoo- l i I area. died in the crash. Four other Canadians. infant son, were among the 20 passengers killed. Icontinuod on Page 5 Col. 2) OTTAWA (CPl - The unem-j ployment insurance fund turned[ back from the brink of bank-I ruptcy in June. After dipping to a record lowj of $19,851,162 at May 31. they fund showed a normal summer} recovery last month and heldi including a I $28.54:l.ll38 at June 30. MAY BE AT AN END WASHINGTON (AP) —- Presi- i United States will not hold any more nuclear weapons tests ' after the present series is com- 'pleted “unless we are forced o. The U.S.. he said, will have to make an analysis of the next round of tests to be undertaken by the Soviet Union. The United States course made clear at a press conference. will depend on what the analysis shows about Russia's progress in nuclear weapons develop- en. ment. Kennedy deplored Russia's In- slstence on holding the final series of tests — a position which has been taken by Pre- '- rnier Khrushchev. He argued the effect of this is to keep the nuclear arms race going _ At the same time he ruled out an automatic cutoff date for the United States s country is testing now. he said. because Russia broke the moratorium on tests last September. He noted Russia has projected a new round of explosions. an an- nouncement having been made in Moscow Saturday. DECISION SHORTLY K _ . id the United istes will not carry out further nuclear tests, once the current . sis of new Russian tests shows we are "orced to. He called it deplorable that an end of nuclear tests could not be strong Kennedy was asked to clarify whether the United tea thought a nuclear test ban possible without o- lnslde the Soviet migh be spections U on. - « . “That's not the position of the ‘- United States at this time." he sol . , hether But he added that informs-I tion on detection of nuclear i den‘ Kelmedé’ -“id MONEY the -matter would be made in a few ; series is ended. unless an analy- v Further Yank lesls Will Depend On Reds ‘ carefully and I decision on lhls l ays. l ra Members of 4-H Clubs across the province are at a five-day training session at the villain you was bolas studied 1 Vocational School. Thirty-five .Common Market countries by 51967 i The standards of medical ‘and surgical practice are~high- ‘ est in the United Kingdom." de- clared surgeon Russcll Cove- ‘Smith. Unemployment Fund Escapes Ba nkruptcy The figures were obtained Monday from the Unemploy- ment Insurance Commission on the eve of the annual watchdog session of the non-governmental unemployment insurance ad- visory committee. ‘ This labor-management com- mittee scrutinizcs the state of the fund at the March Ill end of each fiscal year and reports its findings to Labor Minister Starr. - In recent years. the - mittee has warned the govern-j ment that the fund was in peril.j chiefly under pressure of ex-. e ed seasonal benefits fort wintertime jobless. g Today's m e e t i n g. however- '11. will be held _ in the 5h3d°“’ “I when the merchants will be stag- llhe f°""‘C°m1"F F990" ‘mm 5'-ing a number of special sales‘ jspecial committee set. hyl Prime Minister Diefenbaker to? look into all aspects of the un- e m p l o yment insurance pro- gram. 4-H CLUB GIRLS AT VOCA girls registered yesterday af- ternoon for the course. Discus- sing the staging of formal meetings are. left to right. Pa- l g By RUSSELL ELMAN SASKATOON (CF)-—The Sas- katchewan government and the _- ; province‘: doctors agreed Wad-. nesday on a compromise pres- izcription to end a three-week doctors‘ boycott against Nor:h .America's first government run lcompulsory pi e p a id medical :care insurance plan. A settlement. signed in a hn- ' Itel suite. provides for the im- mediate return of doctors o normal practice and calling of a 5special session of the Saskat- chewan legislature to permit doctors to work privately out- side the controversial Medical lcare Insurance Act. ‘ Premier Woodrow Lloyd .and Dr. H. D.Daigleish, president of the Saskatchewan College of § 1 4 ._ IS PROMOTED James Mclnnis, an Earns- cliffc boy. has been promoted from the rank of Sergeant to Flight Sergeant by the Royal Canadian Air Force. Now at Summersidc RCAF station. he spent three years at 3 Fighter Wing in Germany. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Peter Moln- nis. Ministers Leave Algerian Cabinet ALGIERS (APl——Two minis—.l Other officials of the Bent rers quit Premier Ben Youssefj Khedda regime expressed doubt; Ben Khedda’s Algerian cabinet} the Algiers government couldi Physicians and Surgeons. said in a formal 3,500-word memor- landum of agreement: “The medical care program % sentation on Monday. The provisional gov-; be held together much longer. . cided l One spokesman said: “I can. give you no information about; anything. The only thing I know I ernment of this newly independ- ent nation appeared to he col- lapsing in the face of the de-I 'termined struggle for power hyi for certain is that I have de- Deputy Premier Ahmed Ben } cided not to bring my family 113, there from Tunis for the mo- lnformation Minister Moham-3 ment." 1 med Yazid told ' porterszj Dahlab and Yazid threatened,- “There is no legal provision fort‘ last week to leave the govern-I the resignation of a minister._ ment unless the political Cl'lSl§i but Mr, (foreign minigtm-)§that has paralyzed the nation: Saadl Dahlab and I have de— 3 since its birth 20 days ago was ' in stop functioning asg quickly solved. Both were re- -from tomorrow." .garded as moderates and ap- posed to Ben Bella. 4 HOLD MEETING 1 Remaining members of thel -ARE OBSERVED en Khedda government held Today The Guardian and The Iconsullations on how to meetl _the challenge from Ben Belllai ;F_‘.vcning Patriot present a spec- 1 3" 45‘(.)00'm:°"g reg“ arr lial section devoted to "Rural army supporting mm’ Appreciation Days" in wnlch : ‘Charlottetown merchants ex press their appreciation for the ; patronage of the Island's rural residents over the years. To mark “Rural Appreciation Days" Mayor A. then Gau- det has sent a special message welcoming out-of-town Islanders lo the city during Wednesday. Thursday. Friday and Saturday l I :.”, ‘ By nossnr MAUTHNER . . . BRUSSELS iRcutersl -— Brit-1 .I§i;?3'l..22 ‘L‘I.‘ii"°§§f“L‘;"pii‘l5 ish and F-urovean Common ’ ' Market cabinet ministers to-3 day begin a race against the -clock to reach an outline agree- as a past sion of hope for future goodwill ‘ between the city and rural areas. TIONAI. SCHOOL tricia M a y l e 1', York Point; Marilyn Laird. North Milton (standing): Yvonne Souris West; Joyce Lowther. C o r n w it I I: Jean Mm-l’t~.aii. Meadowbank (standing); and Audrey lolger. I-lunter River. ~ NTS. By-eleciion Will Be Called of July. 2 Hospital at the age of 61. ‘an election writ must ind within six months of the Doctors’ Boycott Ended As Agreement Is Signed 36 Dead, 43 Hull’ Accord Reached On MedicalCare is. we believe, a workable one. inevitably it will have its teeth- ing troubles. “The government and lege will deal with troubles as they arise by frank and f rien y discussion to- gether. It is in this spirit that we sign this agreement." ANSWERS DEMANDS It answers most of the doc- tors’ demands by guaranteeing freedom to practise outside the act: permitting voluntary. non- profit health insurance plans to operate in association with the government scheme; and pro- viding for greater doctor repre- the government's medical care insurance com- ission. It satisfies the chief govern- the col- these 3 . ment point of contention by stip- ulating doctors‘ recognition for the first time of the principle of universal. compulsory. publicly- supported medical care insur- ance. Under the act all Saskat- chewan rcsidents starting in November will begin paying an annual medical care premium of $12 per single person and $24 per family. “We have to find a way of combining publicly - supported universal coverage with the true essentials of professional free- dom." the agreement said. “The government and the col- lege hope that the medical care scheme outlined herein achieves this objective." (Continued on page 3. col. 5) Victor Moore Dies Monday EAST ISLTP, N.Y. fAP>—Vio- for Moore. the round-faced com- edian with the elf-llke smile. died Monday. He was 84. oore. wh died at the Percy Williams Convalescent Home. appeared in hundreds of motion pictures and gained his great- est Broadway acclaim for his portrayal of Vice - President Alexander Throttlebottom in the prize winning musical Of Thee I Sing. U.K. Entry Agreement Is Sought For Market mom. on market entry terms to be offered Britain. Edward Heath. deputy for- eign minister who leads the British delegation. and his col- leagues from the six market na- ‘tions are unanimous in wanting lto reach this agreement by the tend of July. No deadline has been set but it has been tacitly agr that the present negotiations will not be extended beyond the first 10 days of next month, usually well - informed sources here said - The main problem still to be solved is that of alternative markets for temperature food- stuffs now ex rted to Britain by Canada. Australia and New Zealand. ' " Britain and the "six"-4 France. Wes‘. Germany. Italy. ‘Belgium. Holland and Luxem- bourg—agree that world - wide commodity agreements should provide the ultimate solution to the problems of these Common- wealth countries. But there are still wide dif. ‘_ fercnt-cs of opinion over what should happen in the transi- tional period ending in 1970. HALIFAX (CPI -— Premier A‘: Stanfield is to call in provincial by-clcclion in the two- m lnverncss riding before the end The election is to fill a vile- ancy crcaicd by the Jan. 30 death of Roderick Macbean. a Liberal member from 1949 un- til his death in an lnvernou Under provincial legislatlol. ' be ism- time the vacancy is created. The election must follow the swing of the writ by at least 36 duo and not more than six months. so far. no candidates have been snnouocd. I I