a a” i NO SMILE FOR THE CAMERA the livestock show at the Pacific National Three-vear-old Sky Twi lighten of New York “fut>-a strangle-hold on a young goat im an jm an attempt to get i to get it to pose for a photographer. But goat, part of the Exhibition in Vancouver, was having no part of any portrait session. ~ Efforts Are Said: Underway ~ To Curb Medical Plan Abuse ST. ANDREWS, NB ‘CcP) — The New Brunswick Medical So- ciety was told Tuesday that ef- DEATHS COLES — At Edmonton August 27, 1965, the death occurred of Mary Rebecca, widow of the late Frank Coles, formerly of Milton. — MacPHEE At Charlottetown August 30, 1945, Mrs Mary Ann MacPhee of sare, formerly of Lorne Vailey~ia her 95th year Resting at the Cutcliffe Fu- neral Home unti! noon = today thes to Lorne Vailey Presbyter- jan Church, serv've commenciaz at two o'clock, Interment in the church cemeterv: - KOUGHAN In the Charlotte- town Hospital, Aucus: 31. 1965 Charles Koughan of Kine Sircet | and formerly of Elliotvale. azed | 71 years. Resting a: the Hen- nessey Funeral Home _ from where the funeral! will take piace Thursday morning at 7:45 to St Cuthbert's- Church, St. Theresa. for Requiem High Mass at 8.45 Interment in the church cemnie- tery MacLEOD — At Milltown Cross, P.E.1, Aug.. 31, 1965. . Wilham MacLeod, aged 74 vears ing at the Montague Funeral Home.--Funeral-from- Sturgeon United Baptist Church Thurs- day. Sept. 2, at 2 o'clock. Inter- ment in Brooklyn cemetery GRAHAM At Kings County Memorial~~ Hospital Tuesday, Aug. 31, 1965. Andrew Hamilton Graham- ‘of Cambridge in his @5th year. Resting at’ the Mur- ray River Funeral Home until fioon Thursday, then to Peters Road Presbyterian Church for funeral service commencing at 2_o'clock. Interment in Murray Harbor North cemetery. BARWISE On Aug. 23. 1966, im the Victoria General Hos- pital, Fredericton, NB. John Michael Barwise, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond ‘Tom- my) Barwise (nee Noreen Bryan’. conducted at Rural Extension cemetery, Fredericton, by Rev G4. Miniely. WEDGE At. Prince County Hospital Tuesday. August -31. 1965, Frank Andrew Wedge of 472 North Market Street, Sum- merside, in his 88th vear. Re- mains will be forwarded Wed- nesday afternoon from the Compton Funeral Home to his late residence from where the funeral will be held Friday, Sepiember 3, to St. Paul's Church for Requiem High Mass at a.m. Interment in the church cemetery. Chanting, _ banner-carrying TWidonesians sre kept “from fetting too close by armed fi@t police as they show their oo . Rest- ° Commnittal service was! 1 jforts are being made to curb abuses of Blue Shield—prepaid medal plans A Yeport to the society’s an- nual meeting—here said there has-been over-servicing by doc- tors and over-use by patients both, particularly in home and office calls. The result, said the report, is that the Blue Shield program may end the year with a deficit - The report was prepared by a ,committee of the society iwhch | is meeting monthly with the Maritime Hospital Services As- sociation with the aim of curbing abuses. The association adminis ters the plans or | point, All hospitals not qualifying for accreditation—inspection would be reviewed by the committee | ‘to determine the type of treat- ment which might safely, from a professional and public stand- be undertaken.” Dr. J A. MacDougall of Saint John, a spokesman for the —MHSA.-told—the-meeting-the-fi- — nancial condition of the associa- tion itself is ‘good’. However, he -said;-the--use -of the Blue ; Shield’s so-called Comprehen- sive Plan Three is ‘dangerously close” to-100 percent. “If the Province Brunswick's of New Comprehensive _ Pian Three had normal utiliza- © tions, we'd be able to implement the best fee schedule in the coun- try."’ he said HOSPITALS. CRITICIZED New Brunswick hospitals were criticized for failing to provide proper training for foreign in- terns. Every hospital in the pro- vinceis_guilty, with_one_excep- tion, said Dr. John R: Nugent of Saint John, registrar of the Me- dica! Council of New Brunswick. ~““That- exception is Tracadie.” Dr. Nugent said that results of examinations written this year by foreign interns ‘‘does. not dis- close a very happy picture.” Of ~_.2R interns who- wrote the -exam- inations, only _ four pass Twelve failed completely, while the other 12 failed partially. “I'm laying. that firmly on the “nose-of the staff-in—the various hospitals who are accepting the services of these interns,”” Dr Nugent said The interns were not receiving the Jand of training and- educa- tional review that will fit them for the examinations. The society adopted a recom- mendation aimed at improving hospital standards in the gpro- vince “Our main aim is to get into hospitals with fewer than 25 beds and— bring “them upto Scratch.” an official said. COMMITTEE FORMED Under the recommendation, a committee will be established to frame standards of control and supervision of hospitals. The committee would “re: quest and encourage all hosp!- tals to attempt to qualify for hospital accreditation and re- quest inspection by the recogntz- ed accreditation authorities.” " ANTI-AMERICAN DEMONSTRATION anti-American — front af the US” embassy in Jakarta Monday Leader of the 3,000 demonstrators {rom feelings in -ton,- N.B-, where” BORDEN DOUGLAS Poultry Man Gets Transfer Borden Douglas, who has béen poultry officer here for the Can- ada department of since September, 1961, later this month for Fréderic- he is —being | transferred to hold the same position. Mr. Douglas has been popular here among poultry producers He said yesterday that he has received splendid co-operation from everyone with whorn he has worked in Prince Edward Island There has lLeen no announce- ment ‘thus’ far on who will be in charge of the poultry office here after Mr. Douglas leaves Mr. Douglas was born in Scots- burn, Pictou County, NS A graduate’ of Nova Scotia Agri- eultural College, Truro, he has served with the poultry division at Truro and Sydnev. N.S., and at Charlottetown, and now goes to Fredericton Mrs. Douglas is the former Olive Robblee, of Duham_ in Pictou County. Thev have four of a family, thr boys and one giri. The oldest son, Keith, this month at Macdonald Coll- ege where he will take a degree im agriculture. He is a gradu- ate of NSAC. 2 Ree Pee % at various organizations Teft with arms upraised (AP Wirephote by radig from Jakarta’ _ for small Island News Page Western and C The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. Sept. Labor Federation Supports Motion To Halt Moonlighting MOUETON (CPY — A motion! t may eventually put an end * to'moonlighting among members | of the Canadian Labor, Congress and its affiliate members Tues- | \day received the support of the | New Brunswick Fedefation of Labor at its ninth annual con- | vention here. | A substitute resolution present- ed by Local 1151 of Saint John | asked the federation to request * | the CLC and its affiliates to ask J its Thembers,. to” desist from | moonlighting The hour-long discussion, which followed the introduction -of the--resolution. by the com- |mittee, was devoted in part to defining ‘‘moonlighting."” The definition said it is the practise of working another job for less ‘money than the job held in full- time. | A local union member argued entral Districts 1, 1965. that it is sometimes recessar \for the family @arner tn work extra hours in order to pay the ‘bills and supply the family needs. “ Some of these johs only take three or four hours,” she | said, ‘‘but they are jobs which must be done.’ Another delegate said if ‘we need more money le! us get it across a ‘conference table Let's bargain for it, not work more and harder hours. It is people like-us who are willifc -to-work these extra hours that make the millionaires of society A moonlighter is certainly not. a friénd—of the labor movement. For he is defeating the purpose of unions at the outset.” Other resolutions passed _ in- cluded one asking that the oro- vincial. government _be_ petition. ed to gram bargaining richts to all civil. servants in the pro- vince. S‘side Man Pleads Not Guilty SUMMERSIDE A young Summerside man, Lowell Lloyd Oliver, entered a plea of not’ guilty on a charge of leaving the | scene of an accident yesterday | when he appeared in Prince | County Court. Testimony in the case was | heard from two Crown witness- les — Const. Vernon Reeves of Kensington and ROMP OQpl. Vic- tor Cameron of Summerside, the arresting officer: Defence witnesses heard were | the accused and the owner of the car, James Patrick Hughes. Bernard McCabe represented Oliver while George R. McMa- hon acted for the Crown. Folléwing testimony, the case was adjourned to Sept. 2. PARKING . CHARGES The following were each fined $10 and_costs when they appear- ed on similar charges of park- ing their vehicles in a no park- | ing area: James Robert Heath | Hill, Fredericton; Gordon Ar-_ chibald Stewart, Stanley Bridge: Sandra Eileen Mills, St. Elea-: nors. Herbert- Douglas of RCAF -Sum- merside and Kenneth Gordon Ramsay. of Hamilton, P_E.1., were each fined $15 and costs. These two accused entered not guilty pleas. The charges arose as a result of cars being parked in no parking areas on the Freetown Road near the Prince County Stock Car Club Raceway. On charges of speeding, Leon- ard MacDonald, Wiltshire; David Moore Diamond, Northam; Al- phonse Arsenault, Wellington, |} and Eric Bruce Lewis, Mis- | couche. were each fined $10 __and_ costs. Robert. Austin Leeco Halifax Housing Contract Is Let OTTAWA | Contracting Lt. agriculture | leaves | (CP) Cameron of Halifax has |been -awarded a -$1,569,081--fed=~ eral contract for. the. construe- ‘tion of 99 low-rental housing units in the Uniacke Square re- newal area of Halifax. | The Central Mortgage —_and_. Housing Corp., responsible for design and supervision of the project. announced Tuesday the contract covers the first of two | stages of the 184-unit urban re- newal project. Work will begin! immediately and is expected to be completed by September next year. WESTERN BRIEFS $20 FINE The only accused io appear before Magistrate R.S. Hinton, QC, in Town Police Court was fined $20 and costs: or 30 days on a charge of drunkenness. PRICES DROP Egg prices have dropped sharply in the last 10 days and yesterday dealers were quot- Starts ' ‘ing producers for “ungraded éggs delivered 31 cents for A large, 2% for A medium and 20 cents A week ago Monday, the price for grade A was up to 40 cents per dozen. ,-land, Freeman: Austin Bernard On_the._same—charge,—_David-- ; 2 (CP Wirephote) To Leaving Accident Scene of RCAF Summerside and Ter esa M. Gillis of-Shamrock were each fined $15 and costs on sim- ilar offences David Alan McCormack of BRedeque and Raymond = Lewis Wadman of Spring Valley were each fined $19 and costs for driving vehicles not proper~ ly equipped. RIGHT OF WAY For failing to yield the right of way, Layton Ellis Profitt—of Summerside was fined $10 and costs. Russell John Fllis — of” McNeill’s Mills was fined $10 and costs for crossing a Fences , white line. A fine of $15 and costs was | meted to Alan Roy Brown of St. Eleanors on a charze of | driving without due care and at- tention. For a similar offence, Charles ScottPaynter_of Free- town was fined $10 and -costs. | John” Burton Thompson — of | Augustine Cove was fined $10 and costs for failing to halt at a- stop sign. | Two residents of Lennox Is- | and_.loseph._Lee—Bernard,—.were found. -guilty-.on-eharges- of-as- sault and remanded for sentence to Sept. 2 Decision was reserved on a third Lennox Island man, John Henry Bernard. appearing on a similar offence, and his case was adjourned to Sept. 2 CALLING ALL CANNERS! DO YOU HAVE EXTRA JARS? Wf so. you can convert them into cash in hurry with a low-cost, six-titic want ad In Guardian-Patriat “CANNERS’ CORNER” classified feature. It’s sneciallvy desiened to get fast results for peovie want- ing to sell canning and, 'pre- serving equinment Chetk your surolus jars and ‘other canning materials. then call DIAL 4-8506 For Fast, Helpful WANT AD SERVICE aennennenn FOR MASSEY-FERGU Montague ~TOne 840 Self-Pro pelled Slightly Used McGOWAN MOTORS SALE SON COMBINE $3200 E. ‘Quebec Hopes’ vse" wanted avery To Make Ow , Wanted List — b MONTREAL Provincial Police hope to soon publish their own list of most- wanted from a federal nually spokesman said Monday. necessarily on a ae wanted list," eault said not (CP) F added Quebec The largest university puter in Europe, costing $1,200,000, criminals separate’ list issued an- the RCMP, a QPP model Uppsala University, by fu.gtttves ; Sadly in Qaebec the dep- n uty QPP direcior J. P. Dessur- “Listing them publicly would mean they’d be known to the 8,000,000 people of the province, just te@sthe police,” he ” §WEDES “HAVE | BIGGEST | com- an American is at Sweden ‘A24 Traffic. Fatalities OTTAWA (CP)--There were 424 traffic accident fatalities in Canada during June, - bringing the total for the first-six months ~ of 1965 to 1,897, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported Wednesday. June fatalities were up 146 per cent from June, 1964, and the mid-year figure was three ly cent tan a yest leu The bureau said property jdamage in the first six mont’s tot this year as the result of motor vehicle traffic accidents amounted to $60,393,000. com pared with $48,717,000 in thq same period last year The fig- ures covered accidents in which damage amounted to $100 of more, but did not include Que bec statistics which are not ye available for the latest period, A LT HI KIDS! It's Our Back To School Party FREE BOOK COVERS FREE PENCILS FREE SCRIBBLERS FREE BUBBLE GUM (WHILE THEY LAST) -BACK TO SCHOOL SHIRTS Short and long sleeves Entire stock on sale & @ Denims and chinos BOYS' JEANS ‘and PANTS Grafton and ~ Queen Sts. Pe ay Light and dark shades ' 3 ies funeis ‘Yas 0 theaters included @ Blacks and greens and grevs f Pants are washable flannels Regular to 3.99 = anes «$8 18 1 to 6x Reqular to 4.00 ca THICKSET CORDUROY PANTS ‘(Our Best) Continental style for the oiler boy, with Corduroy self-supporting waist and slim legs. Available in Charcoal, , Available in Antelope, Charcoal, -Loden, ua as Brown and Black. Sizes 12 te 18. ee \ - hoxer Pant ay le. Navy a 99 Boys’ Sweaters @ Pullover and Coat styles @ Bold Orlon Stripes , @ Size 4 to 16 PRICED FROM 3.99 —~@: Sizes Tz To Tk SPECIAL Boys' Corduroy a Coats @ Brown, olive, grey 9.98 Boys' Sneakers @ Big new shipment @ Black, green,white @ Hi and low styles PRICED FROM 1.99 For Bigger Boys’ HUSKYS -PANTS & JEANS @ We carry a —eomplete line— of Husky—Pants, Jeans, Sport Coats and Suits for the hard to fit boy. ; JEANS PRICED FROM 4.99 Genuine Leather SCHOOL BAGS @ Beautiful leather crafted by. Carson's of Ottawa. 3 m 8 g FULL SIZE Why not ask about a Budget Charge Account for your ‘boys’ back-to-school needs. (If yours is not already one of the hundreds of families using one). > @ School crests available too! PRICED FROM OFFICIAL SCHOOL JACKETS @ In vour school colours 11.95 © - SHOPPING Hi Mom... SERVICE ; lf unable te person phone our shop. in Mrs. MacDonald at ~ 2-2471