r T 1 ~. S If it’: ‘Good F \ or il-ielsland ' « ’ .Tl'fe’ Guardian is For it VOL. BXXV. N0. 201 DR. A.R. GRANT (left). Sum- mcrside and Dr. Clarence Coady. Charlotte-town_ begin their tour of inspection of the Aulbnrladu "X . . _.-.n«..xt.. --........ '. many exhibits in the Legion Home during this vo:ekeiid's annual meeting of the Can- adian Medical So iety of P.E.l. ISLAN-D DOCTORS MEET AT S’SlDE Hospital Plan Charges Said Exceeding Income SUMMERSIDE BUREAU ship of Dr. George Dewar. The report of the P.E.l. pub- OF THE GUARDIAN P.E.l l\1~edical lectures by thr l'll‘ililLl'l i.-qiiughted the opening session «.1 the two-day convention of the PE.I. Medical Association at sunimerside yesterda . I-‘i'.t.v'cight‘ l‘(‘§._'l3l(.‘l‘e(l at the convention which commenced yesterday, morning under the chairman-) PP Canadian physicians P.E.I. up. provincial education SP0 The three yesterday medical y .. were atchewan-medicare _ . Kenneth R. Trueman, Winnipeg 1960, and Dr. C. Miller Ballem. Mont- real Second onawulndtnpaymal - minister of he and. president of the livereil by the chairman Dr. Burton D. Howatt of Charlotte- lectures town. He stated that costs of Were Elven by Dr. hospital operation continue to A F- W- Pearl. Tofontg; deputy rise. The total net appirov eneral secretary on e. ,m 108% was $2, ,Jm pliii ‘m-e*fl*m*m % total number of days'of ca-re " its finnrcdinn “Covers ‘Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Ibo dputauv Pmlflaa uh Clil-IIIIU [West Pt. . Ferry I Progresses Peter M‘. Maccaull of Ellers- llc. chairman of a West Point fer-ry committee said yesterday pects for establishment of a, ferry service between West Point. P.E.I. and some point iii New Brunswick "never looked better" He made the comment while in Charlottetown where his ‘committee met with Minister of Industry and Resources Leo Rossiter. Mr. Maccaull said the com- mittee received a “g of enmun-ageme " in view with the cabi-net minister. The firm of Whitman Benn‘ and Associates of Charlotte- town was contacted and I maximum figure given on a survey of the proposed service. The amount was not disclosed but the committee chairman said it appeared reasonable and within reach. Mr. Maccauil, who i-s also pres"'.ent of the West Point Ferry Company, was accom- panied by committee secretary Robert Grindlay of Enmore. The committee was formed to fur- The exhibitors are all mem- ther the project and has no con- bcrs e Canadian Phar- Ileclloh Wllll the ferry C0!!!- maceutical Manufactuers As- P371)“ sociation. A meeting will be arranged " between the Prince Edward vey. it was reported. Also the Maritifne Commission at Ottawa ill‘ informedofsurvey plans. Ike Ends Visit, Heads For Home COBH, Ireland (AP)—'I-‘ormer U.S. p r e s l d e n t Eisenhower ended his five-week. 2.000-mile tourist visit to Western Europe and boarded the liner America Friday night for the voyage home. St. Colman’s Cathedral 5 . . “ ; g mu’ d health committee was de- During the same period the Action By BBG provided to all patients was 118,114. an increase of 2.3 per cent over the previous year. The revenue derived from premiums is insufficient to meet the pro- vincial share of the cost of the an. and an additional amount Sets Precedent OTTAWA (CP)—In a prece- dent-setting move the Board" of Broadc in st Governors recom- PRODUCERS B|.AMED Beef Prices Claimed Below Proper-level Bert prices here "are running uoll below what they should be“ at the present time. but the blame was laid on the producers for not asking high enough for. their cattle. when the checking committee named by the Beef Produccrs' meeting recently met here last night. Reports of producers asking three to four cents below the market price and selling some 100 animals at at rate. were discussed by Daniel Gasa. - wall: Leo P. Mcbsaac. Mar aid and Edward A. MacRae.. West Royalty. the threeman commit- lee named to check on whether Canada Packers were living up‘ to the terms of a formula agree-. merit for the three top grades. lht‘ Drice of which would be based on the prices paid at Win- nip-~g. The price paid at Winnipeg last week for the top-grades was 3.29 cents for Red brand. 26.50 to 27.50 for Blues and approxi- mately 25 to 3 cents for the Standard or Brown brabd ani- mals, the committee stated. Emphasizing ‘the strength of the market. they quoted a govern- ment ieport which said one load of choice (Red brand) steers sold last week in Toronto for $30.90 per hundredweight. the highest price paid in more than 10 years. They also said that the aver- of $300,000 has been voted from 2 expected clubs in 1962 penditure on patients referred to larger hospitals outside the province to mended Friday that a television ‘ be rmitted to set up a powerful rebroadcasting transmitter .in a nearby and much larger city already served by its own station. The step was taken board proposed approval application by CHAB-TV Moose Jaw to establish a transmitter in the Saskatchewan provincial capital of Regina. 40 miles to a cast. enecsl revenue to support the 0f major concern is the ex- r -special therapy. and residents requiring lmspital care due to sudden illness or accident while ternporarily ab- sent from PEI. 427 RECEIVE CARE In 961. some 427 residents received this care at a cost of $144,685. while from Jan. 1 to (Continued on page 2 Col. 3) as the of an It coincides with another board recommendation that would allow CHAB-TV to disaf- immed tl from the age price paid at Winnipeg last month for the three top grades that for the same month 1 year. The price for Blue brand cattle was 5.54 cents higher at Winnipeg than at the same week a year ago. the committee spokesman added. Prices here are only one cent to two cents r pound at the most over last year. they stated. They emphasized.__ however, that they are not blaming the packers at the present time. be- cause “we have not yet obtained certain information which need befoi»; we can arrange to have the formula into effect." They the Guardian. though. that they will meet Canada Packers shortly to ne- - gotiate the formula. and they dad that they would also move They were quoted from a gov- ernment rnpoi-t.. sh getting within one cent here of the W nipeg in Drices." the commltlc_e stated. UNITED NATIONS (AP)- tclins Secretary - M World pr0blemI.‘ln::‘liifcll:l1is Iii: seriincrinuiia " I Thant ..*i:.:..::'."..*.*.- ...........*- M ''‘‘..''.’.’;.2- "'0 Burmese My aunt was’ “Wen last mounts: to sue-l as quickly as possible to have Winnipeg prices published here j regularly on the dates when the lnfomiation would be m o s t valuable to producers. Discussion With Nikita May Decide Than’: Future- tion of the Soviet govei-nmeiit. He also will visit Warsaw. Prague and Vienna before he need the late Dag Hammarslo iold as secretary-general. The Soviet Union finally agreed to ran four to five cents aboatétte Plans Appeal ate in e y publicly-owned CBC network so that it can become Saskatche- wan's first point on the fledg- ling privately-owned CTV net- wdrk. The cities of Moose Jaw and Regina have respective popula- tiona of 33.000 and 11 000 The proposed Cl-IAB-TV re- broadcasting transmitter in Re- gina with an effective radi ted power of 140. atts would be _1nucli stronger than the primary Moose Jaw station with 48,000 watts. It would also be higher than CKCK-TV Re- gina's 10.000-watt power. LONDON (AP) .— Dr. Robert A. Soblen lost one more round Friday in his court fight here to eva life imprisonment in the United States. But e mapped delaying actions that may include an appeal o the White House. A high court judge. Mr. Jus- tlce John Stephenson. refused to free the 61-year-old fugitive on ‘a video we . “L - Mayor Willy Brandt appealed_ """""""- CHARLOfl'l'E'l'0WN, CANADA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1962. ._—¢— U Halifax "."..’c;"i..'..;," nntl".‘ot " ers too. will be ' ' Gold Cup and Saucer Girls at- tend the B. C. Cruikshank Me- morial Pace at Sackville Downs. The two girls, Carol MacKenzie and Estelle Coady. w e guests of Sackville Downs during their stay Tendon BERLIN (AP) —- The Soviet Army used armored cars again Friday for changing guards at its war memorial in West Berlin and grudgingly accepted an American escort after only a six-minute argument. The United States Army stood firm; There was no retaliation from the Russians as American military convoys rolled unea- corted over the East German autobahn between West Berlin and West Germany. Army and civilian traffic moved smoothly through Checkpoint Charlie. the U.S. sector passage at the om- munist wa_ll dividing East and to West Berliners to keep calm. declaring: “The ‘wall must go, but until it goes. the city must live." stamp s oius LEAV:E FOR N.S. RAC.E "$.50" SEVEN CENTS W E A T H E R Sunny and warm; southwest winds 15. occasionally 20 in afternoon. Low 50 and 80. Sunday: sunny. ‘H1511 12 PAGES A $86 Million Spending Cut Is Set For Defence Dept. lop Cut ls Faced By RCAF OTTAWA lCPl -- Defencg gister l-larkness announced Fri- ;day. This will reduce the defence ‘budget for the year which be- .gai_i last April 1 to $1,590.000.000 iwhich is about one-quarter of [all federal spending. Defence iexpenditures were originally i c at (II ‘.3 B 2-.) 1:. na .. [previous ycar’s figure. ;_ Mr. Harkness said the sav- Iings are dictated by the gov- .ernmcnt's austerity program ;“and cannot, in any sense of ithe term. be attributed to un- ‘necessary expenditures in the . programs of the services." . “in each case the basic ob- fjective has been to cut expense .without compromising the im- lmediate operational «of the armed forces.‘ ] The navy will reduce expen- ;dltures by $15,500,000. the army iby 529. capability Additional cuts of $5.250.000 lhave been made in the mutual aid p r o g r a in. departmental administration and miscellane- lous expendi -' Savings will be made in this . way: Navy’ , Halifax. Miss MacKenzie, who -represented Bob Brooke in the Evening Patriot Feature in Friday Cup and Saucer..who is to be marrie re this weekend. Miss MacKenzie is represent- ‘Icebreaker Sets Record ‘ , Disbaiidment, of the Banshee ‘:|;iet fighter squadron in Septem- ber iilst d of in. r; cancellation of me‘ refi of the gdestroyer Huron: restrictions .on ships’ fuel consumption; re- lductions in travel: maintenance Charlottetown last mg the group _at the race while f h night, was selected for the Miss Coady is going along as 30 l C TESCFVB Program at U18 trip on the basis of her entry her guest. Here Miss Mac- _°TTAwA (Cpl ” The Calla‘ 1€V9l of 1961-52: deferment of dian Coast Guard icebreaker shore construction programs Keiizie. left, and Miss Coady, wave goodbye on leaving by air yesterday. They will re- turn Sunday nr Monday. finishing second to Dee's Boy in the Gold Cup and Saucer event. She is filling for Mar- John A. Macdonald Thursdayland of procurement of training reached the head of Tanquarylequipmenl. Fiord. 516 nautical miles from Personnel strength will be the North pole and far|;]1er‘Tn3ll‘llal.l|€f'l at the current fig- in I ilyn MacDonald. Miss Gold a writ of habeas corpus and ruled that aii order by Home Secretary Brooke for his depor- tation to the United States is val . APPEAL SET _ Soblen’s lawyers announced an appeal slated for next Wed- nesday. If that s. the case Fireball Truck Kills *=-zi-i‘i‘i-s-r‘-==-'2=.«3 In lexas Rest Home ELECTRA. Tex. (AP) —— A flaming. drlverless tank truck mashed into the front door of a real home Friday. setting off In blaze that look the lives of three elderly patients. only one of the an bed:-idde or mental patients in the mod- ern. one-storey structure suf- fered injuries. ' The truck. loaded with heat- ing gas, rammedinto the build- ing after the driver. Dan Craig- a m from the free- wheeling v e hicle. He was bumcd on his arms and face. Neighboring fire departments came to help firefighters in this town of on about 28 miles northwest of Wichita Falls In M north Texas. - Mrs. Frances Givens. one of the eight practical nurses on support him to fill the vacancy. lreturna to New York Sept. 4. guy. you one of the nu;-gag but insisted it still stood by its later: his fiveday Moa- P.EJ_ woman credited Wm. saying the me of demands that the office of sec- ggvmyisiltuls Mdby i . M,.,,_ M.” Jo 00,-,‘ the only riigyd Ii giniiiiiiemiinnaiii iiiiecrii: culatadc minor; tiiai 1% H‘ '8 Satisfactory ""“°’“ “"“"“" '"'° °'‘'°',}’ ” M H 0°--r-I mm“, . l"i.."n"'l'.3 3.7.?-2.é""ll“i'i..‘1‘Ii"I.'i iii a biiitcktiliies Sgt M”mbhlIa‘;Macl!:owa:I Hatlieson 43 GP)-at Btnsaren 'l”''''"''3 “-'m ' 5'“ ‘gem ' ' ' ' ' alight burns and lacera na. an iii" "'°..:::..-‘:2: *.i:.':.i:.: .. i::-...:°. .. ....~.i.n me we we mtmgg ;; . of condition. “'1 ""9 l-5' 5°""l‘~ - :l:°cl‘ul:_l'| flyxucgsngfi’ 'l,':tof’l-fig’ %h ‘T.’ n in "V5,, |'Qp.oflql in ‘"3 Electra; Mrs. Maud Barker. I8. vflndgugu ujn have the Mn Iltllltlol With “°llll'l|°UPllll . I “ma” -M931‘ ' announced their support of xii-uiiciaov. buttbmhmb nu. Illtbaoon bad but in’ Inknflwm 0‘ EN"- -rimc. . dicatiui as will tabs any was cim-iomuwu Hospital for two» H-m V-we aid the nsmmvmp ‘ in tons-inatlalo-ween, " caushtflreuitrolled Tllesutfellfy-leneralwasivlctlld utanpowcsto lbewugivsaoxnanlai-filuaauatehlthwlylbotlt agcutonloacowsttiiatiivtta-imbsr mootofaafoiii-Iioiirlhiit. hoinilusortiiwestoflicctra. «O Continues High But Berlin Tempers Cool The battle of the wall shifted‘ence on he rule that all arm- to Moscow as a Battle of Notes. ‘ored vehicIes—even American The Soviet Union protested to armored vehicles — must have the Unjged ates -against [hog ‘escorts in the interest of safety recent stoning of Russian soi.i‘and traffic order- diers by West Berliners and. _ warned "necessary measures"lN('l‘h:Rg1fss§§nEhsioldiers in th , . e will be take" t° °n5“r° Safely three armored ersonnel car °f swlet Army guards if the riers showed no parms Frida ~ in the stonings that Russiansic-an order‘ Thursday‘ they lie" changed from buses to armored gfigmfilgeungan and dlsplayed cars to carry the change of the _ , , “"5” M” W” B‘’‘“"' A“ crglgleedablflurgglllilgfligclligustlgilti Berlin's traffic rules call for any 1 draws] of the Russian commam armor-2d car to be escorted. |dam.s post was being played BLAME RUSSIANS out clearly at Checkpoint Char- . .-lie. The Western allies have no The Kremlln l’“’“’5l a“d‘authority in East Berlin with lllfefll Mime Sl10!‘ll.V all" ll_\€' whom they can discuss delicate, 5.. Britain and France Inlpossibly fateful. questions con- sharply - worded notes dircctlly cc;-ning the (|_i[y_ ‘ (2 north than any Canadian ship has ever penetrated. Transport Minister B a l c a r said in a statement Friday that the icebreaker reached latitude 81 degrees 24 minutes north. exceeding her previous record nautical miles. She reached 80 degrees 30 minutes o in Nansen Sound last summer. The icebreaker. commanded by Capt. James Culhbert. is on a scientific research voyage. D‘ '< ure of 21,720. Army Built: - up to the authorized .strength of 59.370 has been sus- lpended. The present strength of 52,800 will be allowe to run down to 50,000. The increase in army strength was announced last September at the time the Berlin crisis. _‘ Mr. I-Iarkness attended a meeting Friday between Prime lMinisler Diefenbaker and U.S. State Secretary Rusk and prob- ’ably informed the latter of this cut ‘lumber Talks lslcited Tuesday OTTAWA (CF) —— Canadian and United States officials will ‘confer here next Tuesday and gwednesday on the sensitive is- sue of Canadian lumher exports to the US , The Ottawa talks were origi- lnally scheduled to open Monday ‘ but have been delayed for a day lbecause of a Progressive Con- Iservative caucus to be attended lby the H6 Conservative mem- l rs of Parliament. l l Personnel postings. travel and ‘material shipment costs will be |reduced. Restricted use of mili- lary vehicles will b lm sed lBui1ding maintenance. primar- ‘ily, painting, has been deferred .where possible. (I AF 3 Disbandment of the four CF- '100 jet interceptor squadrons in ‘Europe Jan. 1. 1963. and of the r unit at Metz, France. bRCAF station Saskatoon will e training program absorbed by 1 other stations. No. 426 Transport Squadmn at St. Hubert. Que.. will be dis- banded Sept. 1. Some of its , (Continued on page 3 Col. 3) blamed the Russians for h wall and for its consequences." The Western allies calledl again for four-power talk hcre= to halt “further deterioration of the situation in Berlin"—a pro- posal e Russians have several times rejected. The Western noles cited par- ticularly the i7 shooting and slow death of Peter Fech- ter. 18-yeai-old East German By cam. MoLL1Ns wounded by East German Com-i‘ 1.;m(;s'roN (cpl _ Tm-ee musist guards and left to bleed mucky Eskimos and 3 pa;-¢.E,. Slowly l0 flefllll ‘mo clergyman Friday tum- Former U.S. prcsidcnl Eisrn- bled the 21st Reneral Synod bower declared in Dublin the the Anglican Church of Canada AtAn Western allies must assert their from complex discussions of rights and added: "Any retreat mission finance to awareness; from the principle might belof its most basic problems in. looked upon as a weakness and ; missionary wo . it could lead to aggression." : "Perhaps you do not under» A Soviet Army colonel accom- l stand that in my country some- nied the ct guards ‘ times we have no food." said from East Berlin to Checkpoint Alec gia of Coppermine. Charlie Friday. He put up only N.W.T.. through an interpreter. ken resistance to U.S. insist- . “I see that there is plenty ofv ifood down here." "I want, our people to learn) to pray.“ said Alanga Simonee of Frobiaher Bay in his first} attempt at making a speech in English. "We are now learningl to pray for everyone in the‘ Jop Volcano Spows Smoke, Fire- '10KYo (AP) A volcano on __ I tiny Japanese island 120 miles ) W0rld._ southwest of Tokyo erupted Fri-E ‘It is a matter of great ll3D-3 1. column, of‘ plness to see all the trees and and fire. The Japanese; strange things in the south meteorological agency said the Gideon Kisuslik of Gjoa eruption allook Miyakejima Is- the synod in the dialect of his] land with strong earthquakes people around Spence Bay. 1.800; but Io casualties have been re i miles north of Winnipeg. . The and has a popu- ‘ WANTS MORE CLERGY of mm. l "How I wish wa had more. /‘i ordained Eskimo deacons and lpricsts," said Rev. Armand lTagoona of Rankin Inlet. first native of the Canadian Arctic of«to be ordained an Anglican priest. “But it is so hard to find the men and the buildings and money to train them." The delegates‘ messages told in simple words of hunger when the caribou don't come; of dis- location when dog - teams die and Eskimos seek out the set- tlements: of the disruption of ancient social patterns when school - taught Eskimo children abandon'thc ways of their fathers WHERE-TO-FIND-ll Announcements. notices ll inancc. Mar 11 Births, deaths. ctr . SI-it ass ed . . . . . .. -11 Comic features . . . . . . . .. 9 Women‘: page K s 5 Co.. City. Queens. Editorials .. sammersida .. . . . Prhce Co.. fifllffifigsl Eskimos Outline Problems glicanGeneralSynod for ll:-3 ways of " hires." . Rev. Donald B. Marsh. Bishop of the Arctic. said in in introductory report that "in common with other agencies in the Arctic. the ch great trouble getting Canadians to go north" In an interview. he said that of 27 ordained men working in his diocese. only four are Ca- nadians. The majority are Brit- Rt. Rm‘. W. H. H. Crump. Bishop of Saskatchewan. intro- duced n comparable problem created by the impact of Indian and while Canadian societies in .northern Saskatchewan . A new film strip. shown pub- ‘llcly for the first time. outlined the social and mental anguish ‘created in Prince Albert and to the north by disruption of tradi- .‘tional ways among the Indiana ‘;and the accompanying failures |l.o absorb them fully into white society. The film referred to the ;degradation of aimless Indians Prince Albert brothels. al- icohol and discrimination. both ‘by officials and the man on tin isu-eet. urch has-