, @pened after being closed for ‘ for the remainder of the’ term. Mrs. Doris Mahalick, 41- year-old mother of two teen- age daughters, wil! be the next , commissione r of the 140-man Bergen County, N.J., police de- partment. Mrs. Mahalick, a shapely 5-foot-5, blue-eyed POLICE COMMISSIONER blonde, assumes her new novice when it comes to police administration. She..was the first woman .police commis- sioner in her hometown of Wal- lington, N.J., in 1962. Study Of Canadian Health To Be Job For OTTAWA (CP) — Twenty-one national church, labor, welfare, business, farm and student or- ganizations will be asked to sponsor a permanent committee to study the health needs of Ca- nadians. At the end of a four-day work- ing on health serv- ices, delegates uk to con- sult their organizations about setting up the committee. Until the conference steering committee receives the reaction the duties of any committee will remain unclear. But many delegates indicated ft should study the whole field of health to determine future requirements for manpower, equipment ard administrative structure. There would also be some means {o communicate the information to the organiza- tions and then to the member- ships. The main purpose of this con- ference was to study the Hall | royal commission report on health services and to hear the views of doctors, public health exnerts and economists on the report. The committee studies would supplement the ‘Hall com- -mission’s work. | added. Committee though Canada soon will have a publicly - administered medical care insurance program cover- ing physicians services. But be- fore the adjournment a spokes- man for the health insurance companies offered a dissenting ‘view. C. G. White of the Metropoli- tan Life Insurance Co., Ottawa the provision of medical insur- ance to private carriers so gov- ernments can concentrate their money on educating medical personne! and financing re- search, He said private, voluntary plans preserve the citizen's right to choose whether he wants to buy medical insur- anee. Private companies are bend- ing every effort to provide a good service and more than 72 per cent of the population has some kind of coverage, he W. Clarke Macdonald of the United Church of Canada in Toronto said province-wide and regional conferences modelled on the Ottawa meeting should be held by the same sponsoring DISSENTING VIEW Most speakers talked as organizations across the coun- try: ~ duties Jan. 1.. She is not a g said it might be wiser to leave. @ Complete range of sizes tots to teens @ Little Girls Dresses @ Children’s Sno-Suits @ Children’s Ski-Jackets The Misses HOLMES & BRADLEY Queen St. Ch’town ee | | -JARITIME STATIONERS LTD. B ercst Ge: St. Charlottetown Yew d DR DR IRD IT Craswell Studio Give one of our famous Island Scenes And a portrait of yourself for Christmas. 163 Gt. George St. ¥ ‘.Phone 4-9712 111 Kent St. onvewnall sFor a ‘pefreshing pe. me-up over the ho : ’ season or a perfect party mix try S . SEAMAN’S Ch’town Water St. Bie iD Fi Be DIA MBA se) Give A Gift Certificate ped Custom Interiors, Prince Street, Charlottetown. WPA Me: with Perfume... Pictured above is «sample of some of the beautiful fabrics on display at GIFTS for everyone em your G- _ Ra { nn Pattersons - Jewellers 113 Kent St. , Dial 4.6732 Orbit Of Canada’s Alouette Only Two Per Cent Off Path By BOB MacKENZIE li OTTAWA (CP)—The orbit of | Canada’s Alouette II satellite is | less than two per cent off its Planned path, the Defence Re- gearch Board said Thursday. Since its Sunday night launch- at Vandenberg air force in southern California, second orbiting space- t ures of 1,866 and. 306. First indications after launch- . PISQUID EAST Mrs. George Jay, Mrs. Har- old Jay and Mrs. Floyd Jay were recent visitors in me Valley where they were _ the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earle MacDonald. Edward Jay was a visitor in Charlottetown, Tuesday. Mrs. Bruce Jay accompanied by*her young son arrived home from the Prince Edward Island - Hospital, Saturday. Mrs. Harold Jay was a visitor im Charlottetown Wednesday. -Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clarkin, Peakes Road were visitors” at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jay, Saturday. Mrs. J.P. Hendricken was a visitor in Charlottetown Friday. Pisquid East School has re- want of a téacher. "Mrs. Freda McCormack iias been engaged Mr. Robin Curran spent the | ~weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Curran, Stan- hope Road. Mrs. Johnnie _ MacDonald, Charlottetown was a Sunday visitor at the home of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wawaed Sey, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Vessey, | York, were Sunday visitors at home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ay. GETS VINTAGE PLANE’ OTTAWA (CP)—A Spad VII First World War single-seater fighter has been acquired by the National Aviation Museum, it was announced a Spad VII was used in 1917 and 1918 by ee of the 'KEEP CRAFT CLOSE | (about one mile) a day. ing gave the maximum and minimum heights as 1,837 and 329 miles. “Those would have been ac- ceptable but the new ones are | even better,” Mr. Boulding | added. While actual orbit has not | been pinpointed for the United States Explorer XXXi satellite that was boosted into space aboard the same Thor-Agena B rocket, both DRB and U.S. Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration scientists feel the U.S. craft will stay witha the required range. <TC RTE RTE IES One joint experiment of the two satellites, involving temper- ature measurements, requires that the two craft stay. within 1,000 miles of each other for at | least a month. Tracking - figures Wednesday | showed the two satellites were only 27 kilometres (16.8 miles! apart and were separating at the rate of only 1% kilometres “This gives us comfortable margin for the one-month pe- riod,” said Frank Davies, chief superintendent of the Shirley Bay telecommunications estab- lishment. So far, Alouette II is provia- ing about seven hours of data a day, just about its planned maximum. Alouette I, which was launched from Vandenberg 38 months ago, still is providing about four hours of telemetry a day, although it had a life ex pectancy of only one year. “We're not sure just how long Alouette II will last,” said Mr. Davies, ‘‘but we expect at least Let us design your let- terheads, bill heads, brochures; call us for all your printing needs. GUARDIAN-PATRIOT CENTRAL PRINTERY PHONE 4-8506 | IRALPH’S = MEN'S Kent St. Dial 4-8444 Re THE PERFECT aunnnhosennaressnsneeseesen ENS Eee CEE Fashion Shoppe; open ali day Saturday 4 Gt. 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