Maxims of a Mere Man All argument will vanish before one touch of nature. ' I4 PAGES x PICTURE!) ABOVE are Mr. Keith Plckard. Summerside. new-l ly elected Pesident oi the Prince New Posts for Naval Officers OTTAWA (CP) -- Five senior llavy officers will take up new positions this summer. the navy an nounced here Tuesday. Capt. iFrancls Birch Caldwell, 40. of Amherst, N.S., and Hamil- ton, 0ut.. will become director of naval intelligence at headquarters Sept. 1. Ills post as chief of staff to the g g officer. naval division at HM slfatriot. Hamilton, will be taken Capt Anton Feu- wick Pickaral.-g; . of Victoria. commanding 3' of HMCS Avalon, St. John's. Nfld. Cmdr. John H. G. Harvey. 89. of Montreal and Halifax. now ' commander. east coast, will become Canadian naval com- mander. Newfoundland. Cmdr. Victor Browne. 87. of Ot- tawa and Halifax. will relinquish command of the destroyer HMCS Edward Island Community Plan- ning Association; Miss Joyce (far- ney. Maritime Secretary. Halifax; Mr. Keith Pickad a Summer- side architect was elected presid- ent of the Prince Edward Island Community Planning Assocition at the annual meeting held laht night at Prince of Wales College. The retiring president, Dr. Henry Moyse. Summerslde, presided. The matter of roadside dumping came in for considerable discus- sion. A point in question was tllat of a dump at Wilmot. It was sug- gested that the Department of Highways be contacted with a view to having this rubbish covered. The Secretary Treasurer. J.C. Mountain read a letter from the Town of Boden in which it was intimated that the community planning program in that Town had been seriously lnterferred with because of talk concerning the proposed causeway. 77:9 Guardian CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27.1956 ”,?3"l4H"?a Mr. J. C. (Bud) Mountain; Sum- merside. Secretary Treasurer. Guardian Photo Summerside Man Is Elected President Community Planning properties had taken a downward trend and in one instance a rail- road man who was about to be transferred to Charlottetown could not sell his property at any price. It was also stated that no invest- ment firm would handle the Town's debentures. Complaints were also heard regarding the lack of a Town policeman or a magistrate. It was suggested by Keith Pick- ard that executive meetings be held every second month with the winter meetings concentrated at ei(tiher Charlottetown or Summer- Sl E. The Community Planning Assoc- iation ls a volunteer organization which works in conjunction with the Town Planning C mmisalor-. to- ward the beautification and im- provement of communities through- out the Province. It is National The letter went on to state that in its scope. Haida to h i com- mander. east coast. Lt. Cmdr. Harry Romeyn Beck. 38. of To- onto and Halifax, will command the Haida. Coming Events Dance Irma Hall. Friday 8. Reserve July 15th. for Ttgnish Picnic. Kelly's day. July Dance Grandvlew Ball, Thursday, June 28th. on tea party Wednes- T. Dance Kory Hall. Georgetown. Wednesday. June 27th. Barn dance at Cliff Peters, Rollo Bay, Monday. July 1. Dance. Lorne Valley Hall. every Wednesday. Webster's Orchestra. Orange celebration. July 12th, North River Rink. ' It. I(nrgaret'l Hall .lune 29. Lobster Iupper. commencing I p.m. Reserve Wednesday. August 3. for St. John's Church Picnic. Crapaud. Ilniling Bill Mcoormack Show at 3:46 followed by dance, St. Charles Parish Hall. Regular weekly dance. St. Mary's Hall, Sourls. Wednesday. Cliff Peters Orchestrg. Ice Cream Festival and Dance. Gowan Brae School. Thursday. June lath. Good music. Lower Montague Regatta Wed- nesday. July 11. Send entries to Roy Aitken. weekly Dance. Fort Augustus Hall every. Wednesday night Burkca Orchestra. Remember dance at Rollaway Club tomorrow night. Sponsored by the Charlottetown Tennis Club. Annual meeting of Mount Her- bert Telephone Company in School House, Friday 29th. at 8:80 p.m. Ice Cream Festival in Morell village: also Bowling in the Al- leys. Saturday evening. July 30th. Dancing at South Rustleo every Thursday night. Rollie MacKen- zlc's Orchestra. Canteen service. Barn dance Thursday night. Garfield MacPhee's. Brookfleld. Eianteen service. Burna' Orches- ra. Dance Cardigan Legion Hn ll Thllrsday night. Webster: Orches- lllt P.A. system and canteen service. - Come to the chicken supper In York Hall. Wednesday. June 21. lam or ahine. Supper starts 5 9l0flt. price SIM). Dance. West Royalty llnll, Wed- "ffdly. Rollie Mackenzleis Or- cihcsttra. Canteen service, 9.30 to Dance Canadian Legion Hall. Cnrqir-n. Thursday night. Web- aters Ch-cbeetra. P.A. system "W rlnteen service. Welgllpgton Pariah Picnic. July ' "80. power swing. various :"', . Supper starting at gggcl. Dance starting l0:00 o'- II to lnupalo -hf: 8. or will he collection. By order LONDON. (AP) - The govern- ment Tuesday trimmed 250,500,- 000 (3l4l.400.000) off datenge spending torfbooat" Britain”: drive against inflation. Chancellor of the Exchequer Harold Macmillan. '. the cuts in the House of Com- mans. emphasized they "do not reflect any change in the size or shape of our fighting forces." He said the savings this year came by abandoning or deferring defence orders and making in- creased use of present military stocks. Macmillan also announced econ omles of .fZ25.500.000 (37l.400.000l in civil departments. The total saving of .t'.76.000.000 (83l2.800.00i was an "interim statement” on the government's aim to economize by .f:l00.000.000 this year. he said. (the pound sterling is quoted around 32.80 Canadian in inter- national exchange dealings but this does not indicate its buying power in the United Ki 4 .) Of the defence cut. .f:36.500.000 comes from the armed forces ex- pendltures and i:l4,000.000 from defence costs of civil depart- ments. Macmillan said 5211.000.- 000 will be saved on the navy. nearly 12.17.000.000 on the army and about !:8.750.000 on the air force. Britain bllcllzciled about 531.500.- 000.000 for defence this year. The cuts are part of an anti-inflation drive which previously hroulllll heavy checks on borrowing and stiff sales taxes to reduce con- sumer demand. Liberal leadcr Clement Davies called the defence cllis "divin- pointlngly small" and dcmandcd a "drastic reduction" in spend- E. Macmillan replied the cuts were Interim stops. The wider ques- tions raised by Davies. he said. HEAVY TONNAGE British Reduce Bill For Arms involved very big decisions which affect the Commonwealth and our allies and while .we should not shrink from t'em we should not reach decisions without consulta- tions." 4 L. Backs France ' Over Algeria U. N. Council UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -The UN Security Council Tues- day backed France and over- whelmiugly rejected a demand by 13 Asian-African governments to consider the Algerian crisis. only two council members. Iran and Russia, voted t'or a full debate now of the Algerian- French conflict. Seven members opposed it. They were France, United States. Britain, Peru. Cuba. Belgium, and Australia. Nationalist China and Yugoslavia abstained. By this quick and summary action. the council upheld the French contention that Algeria is a domestic matter and not the business of outsiders. This deci- sion came on the 11th anniver- sary of the signing of the UN charter in San Francisco. France cited the charter as barring any UN action in domestic affairs of any UN members. Balked at this turn. the i3 sian -African governments plan now to go to the General Assem- bly convening Nov. l2 unless tlleregis a peaceful solution of the situation before that date. ATTEMPT MIDDLE COURSE OTTAWA (CPl -. Last week's New Brunswick provincial elec- tion was fought again in the Com- mons Tuesday with barbed words 81'-Id fl'e9'BWlllEll1E accusation. Charles Van Horne (PC-Restl- gouche-Madawaskal began the rumpus with a vigorous attack on the federal government and some sharp words about the conduct of the recent provincial election. A. Wesley Stuart rlrcharlottel counter-attacked with help from Alberta member C. 1-2. Johnston (SC-Bow River). The interchallge pusllcd aside. for a while. the main Commons debate on a Conscrvallvlz nun-con- iidence motion calling for a fed- eral election ”as soon as possi- ble." CRACK AT GARDINI-TR Mr. Van Horne, 35, who has created a commotion with every Commons speech since his election in a by-election last September. started off by saying Agriculture Before joining Iran in support- ing fl full Algerian debate. the, Russians attempted to steer a mlddlegcourse by proposing that the discussion be indefin- itely postponed. But France insisted that the issue he decided now alld the Soviet move was defeated by a vote of 7 to i with Russia voting alone in its favor. Minister Gardiner ”gives me the impression that he has no more l'f"!.'ll'd for the truth than a tom- cat has for a marriage licence." He withdrew the phrase at the insisten of Sneaker Rene Beau- doin. Mr. Stuart followed with the ob- servaiinn that Mr. Van Horne had made the same speech as those he had delivered every time he AFREE-SWINGING ACCUSATIONS N.B. Election In House Of Commons had "visited" Ottawa. ber had spent three weeks in New we expected him to visit us again." this dimlvitted. boteur of New Brunswick your people will tell you what election." not been involved in political grail and sklllldllgsery ring-leaders in this. SOMEBODY GAVE GRAVEL When acting speaker E. T. Ap withdraw the remark. the Social Credit member said he hadn”t ac- cused Mr. Van Home of political or-aft. He added that Mr. Van Horne probably didn't give loads ofd gravel away. but somebody d . Mr. Applewhatte indicated that was not an adequate retraction Mr. Johnston replied he hadn't accused Mr. Van Home of driv- ing the gravel trucks and then. turning to the Conservative mom- bcr. asked: "Were you on the gravel trucks?" Brunswick preparing the speech "and because it is near pay day parted from his main charge of Mr. Van Horne shot back "Wt- have more to do than to listen to and foul-mouthed sa- W He they think about you in the next jack-in-the-box” in the provin- cial election and that Mr. Van mm,b,-.-g 1.0.... M...” mm trained Home was probably one of tin- plewhaite zlsked Mr. Johnston to, Mr. Van llorllc protested and He said the Conservative mem- finally Air. Applcwhaite ruled that in his Mr. Jollllsioll had withdrawn, Mr. Van llurnc repeatedly de- federal government neglect of New BfllllSlI'l('l( to comment on the Drovillclal election, the Senate lmmllzraiion Minister Pick- ersgill. culled ”jumping, llr Pickersgill a xqlllrllllnn. fl 0 p ping who would be more useful ll0ll)llll.l some fisher- Mr. Johnston said his p8I'l.V had man ball a boat on the Newfound- land sollitl-iluzlllu Lzrolllltl-, i He said that as long as Liberal seals "they can expect to get the famous S. S..H'. that great title ill Liberal polllll-lll lllC. the Safe lScat Somewhere" p The Senate um just another ls SS.-"packed by old Liberal standbys and mullcy-hungry buc- caneers who are often in their dotage when they reach the Sen- ate and merely act as a rubber stamp. . . ." The Senate should be reformed to become elected. in whole or in part. I The New Brunswick was the funeral of the partv th:-re. "The funeral procession bogged dowll Oil the way to the grave. lThcy van ollt of pallbearers." Mr. Vall Horne said 3100.000 in election Liberal Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew PRICE 5c Re-fought federal Liberal tunds were spent riding in the recent election -the first sign of federal aid the area ever got. ”lt is too bad that ii L-alne ill the form of gin, uhisky, nylon stockings and boxes of choc- olates." The federal government had maintained a ”stupid and traitor- oust 'vttitude" of neglect, laziness, indifference and cowardice to- w2'ds the lllarlllmcs. The Atlantic provinces would remain a lopsided economic area until they could adopt trade regu- lations to mr-ct their own needs. iregain traditional markets in the United States and overseas, and o v e r c o m e transportation and market barriers. The federal government had re- fused to build the Chignecto Ca- rial linking the Bay of Fundy and Gulf of St. Lawrence on the ex- cllsc there was not enough need for it. If there wasn't enough need it was because of the govern- ment's stupidity in driving out in- dustrles dependent on cheap water transportation. Industrial growth in the area would be stilled "so long as this .federal government keeps killing our Industries by nlckeling us to -death with ever-increasing trans- portation costs." "Stop selling us down the river. or get out of the way and let us look after our own affairs to our best interests." he said. ”Stop killing us, or make road for us to pass. ' Mr. Stuart said Conservatives will be able to boast once they have held power in New Bruns. wick for 17 years-the period of the Liberal administration before its election defeat in 1952. Before 1952. the Conservatives had had as few as five seats in the legislature, and it would hap. pen again. "I've never seen a Tory yet who if given enough rope doesn't hang himself" Mr. Stuart said. All that New Brunswick Con- servatives had done since 1951 was 20 around with a hat in their h8'"l- "h0i1.vavhins and begging." The federal government had paid more into the province than it took out in taxes-Sl.'l8.00(I.00o out into the province in the I954- 55 fiscal year compared with S45.- 500M0 taken in taxes. The Liberal member also re. ferred to the provincial election campaign. He said that if one- tenth of what the Conservatives spent on lobster dinners. movies and free dancing had been used to help the needy. Mr. Van Horne would not have to say there are needy persons in his riding. Car In Wrong Lone Kills Four OSHAWA (CPJ - A car that sped the wrong lane of a divided super-highway early Tuesday crashed headon into another car. killing follr persons. Two others were severely in- jured. All victims were from To- ronto. Killed in the car police said was travelling west in the east-bound lane of highway 401. three miles west of here, were Bell Telephone employees Kenneth C. Mccauley. 42. and Thomas K. Brownson. 31. Fatally crushed in the other car were school teacher llarold Cheyne. M. who was to be mar- ried Aug. 4. and his mother. Mrs. Mabel Cheyne. 58. Injured in Chcyne's car were Albert Boniface. 42. and Robert Cheyne. 12. Harold's nephew. LONDON (CP)-Canadian Vic- torla Cross winners and their relatives went autograph hunting Tuesday at a royal garden party. Between sipping tea and eating strawberries and cream in the grounds of Marlborough House. the C ” . nabbed important celebrities for their signatures. When big-lime personalities were not around. they traded auto- graphs with other VCs. "I've never asked anyone for his autograph before," said Mrs. Esther Smith. wife of Sgt. Ernest (Smokey) Smith. first Canadian non-commissioned soldier to win a VC in the Second World War. if felt terribly shy about doing it." she added. but proudly scored top marks with autographs from Earl Attics and Prime Minister Eden. She got them at a previous party and will present them to her two children at home ll. New VC's Mix Autograph Hunting With Tea Drinking At Party Westminster. B.C. While the VCs hunted names. the Queen Mother wandered through the gardens chatting with thcnl. Mrs. Raphael Zengel of Rocky Mountain House. Alta.. has col- lected nine signatures so far. in- cluding Pandit Nehru. in- dlais prime minister. Her hus- band. a VC holder, helped. Before they leave Britain. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Kerr of Port Moody. BC.. hope to have at least 300 "important" signatures. Mrs. Margaret Osborn and her daughter. Patricia. both of Win- nipeg, will carry back mlnd-pic- tures of the Queen. "When you see Her Majesty." said red-haired Patricia who plans to get married in Canada July 7. "well. I got a feeling I just can't describe. Her presence awed me. I guess." OTTAWA (CPl--The big Liberal majority. swelled by Social Credit and ' Jependent support, Tuesday night defeatedgby a vote of 115 to 58 a Progressive Conservative motion of non-confidence in the government which called for an immediate election. The vote ended a two-day do bale initiated by Opposition leader Drcw, who coupled his repeated plea for an clcctlon with a do The Great Lakes. during their eight-month season. carry two- ihirds as much shipping tonnage as the total through all U. S. ports. mand tor lcform of the Senate. The voting followed the pattern which prevailed throughout the .itterly-fought pipeline debate of Commons Defeats Motion Non-Confidence In The Gov't a few weeks ago. the Conserva- lives and the CCF siding against the Liberals and Social Creditors and four independents; Paul E Gaguon. Chlcoutlml; Raoul Pou- lin. Beauce; Fcrnand Girad. La- polnte. and Ross Tllalche. Moose Jaw-Lake Centre. supporting the pany had deposited as a token of good faith a cheque of 3100.000 Oil Explorations Continue Oil explorations in the Province to date have been quite encour- aging according to Imperial Oil officials who arrived in the Prov- ince yesterday . The survey for oil has been under the direction of Mr. W. A. Roliff. in charge of eastern ex- plorations for the company. Also in the Province are Mr. J. D. McAlary, in charge of Geological work in Eastern Canada; Mr. W. W. Shatford. Maritime Division Manager; Mr. Don Fraser. mau- sger of marketing. and Mr. Glen Hancoc'. public relations officer for the Atlantic Begion. Mr. Hancock last night said there was no startling announce- ment forthcoming at the present time. The survey is being con- tinued and will continue until it is definitely ascertained whether or not all is btainable in this Province. The visit of company officials does not mean one phase of the work has been completed and all- other started. It is pointed out. however. that of all the Provinces in Canada Prince Edward Island by its geographical position is the most! conducive to the incidence of oi . STARTED IN MARCH The announcement that the Im- perial Oil Company would make a survey for oil in the Province was made in the Legislature last March 21." At this time Mr. Math- eson said the survey would be conducted in an area between Charlottetown and Ellerslie in Prince County. The Premier said the Oil Com- Prospects Still Encouraging tern of. rock formation and of the presence or absence of oil. Mr. W. A. Roliff has been in charge of a seven-man crew since the beginning of operations last March. See Iceland Toning Down Base Demands YKJAVIK. Iceland (Reut- ers)-lceland will. press for revi- sion of a 1051 military treaty with the United States, but will tone down or drop earlier demands for evacuation of an American- observers said here Tuesday- Thls possibility emerged follow- ing final tabulation of results in an election fought mainly on op- psition party demands for re- moval of the United States base at Keflavik. 31 miles west of here. Three major parties that had cr...lpaigned for immediate aban- donment of the Keflavlk base- opcrated by the United States per- sonnel as part of the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization defense nctwork-scored gains in Satur- day's general election. HEADHUNTERS To the tribesmen living in the hills of Naga. on the India-Burma frontier. a severed human head means prosperity. manned air force base. Polmclil 1 HALF TARGET REAG OTTAWA (CF) -- The pra-hol iday polio inoculation program for Canadian children is over and of- ficials estimated Tuesday that only about half the inoculation target has been reached. But so far. the number of polio cases reported is at a record low. W i th production difficulties causing a slowdown in deliveries, a total of 2.300.000 doses have been shipped this year from Can- ada's only production source- Toronto's Conuaught Laborator- es. About double that amount was needed to provide the first two shots for the 2,000,000 children the provinces planned to inoculate be- fore the end of the school term and to provide third shots for the 880.000 inoculated last year. In fact ihc provinces had or- dered 6.000.000 shots. The labor- alorlcs had estimated May 29 that only 2.000 shots could be dc- livcrcd by June 15 but actually de- livered 2,.'i00.000. Cnnnaulzht hopes to deliver thc remainder of the order in October and November. NUMBER OF SHOTS VARTES Just how the 2.300.000 shots were distributed has not vet been analysed by federal health auth- orities. In some areas. children lgot.only one protective shot. In -others they got two and in some communities even the third shot was administered. Most areas tended to concen- trstg on providing protection for children in the lower school grades. The aim iavtp provide immun- Home Building Shows Increase OTTAWA (CP)-The number of houses started. completed and still under construction increased in the January-April period this year. the bureau of statistics re- ported today. Starts in the four-months per- lod rose to 23.477 from 23.307 in the corresponding period last year and completions rose to 34,784 from 32,907. The number of houses -under construction at the end of April totalled 66.674. compared to 60.236 last year. The number of houses com- pleted during the January-April period. with 1953 figures in brack- ets. were: Newfoundland. 370 (l88l; Prince Edward Island. 27 (lat: Nova Scotia. 577 (8221: New Brunswick. 245 (382); Quebec. 10.- 781. (7.796). with the Provincial Government with the understanding that this amount would go as a first pay- ment on any royalties that would result from here. LATEST METHODS the finding of Oil The survey has covered some 700,000 acres. The latest oil sur- vey nlethods have been used in the search for oil on the island. Chief among the instruments used is a very delicate inatrument known as a gravitymeter which gives information of underground rock formations. Gravitymeter .eadlnga w e r e taken at quarter mile V intervals along the roadside and these read- government. lag transcribed on a survey map The Conservative tlcmand for mglvc oiimen an idea of the pat- Each Province must decide for itself whether it wants health in- surance or not. said Dr. Fred Rob ertson at the Maritime Pharma- ceutlcal convention in Charlotte- town last evening. But. he adtivli, "if a majority of tho Provinces, representing a majority of the people of Canada were to indir- PARL ASST. SAYS. State Health Insurance If The Provinces Want It ate their desire to go ahead with health insurance...thc Federal au- thority would have some respon- sibility to assist the Provinces. within prudent and reasonable li- mits. ill achieving the objectivcs which they have set for th:lll- .- 'ves." What is the prcscllt position onl general election grew out of the pipeline debate. Mr. Drew. in moving his motion of non-eoufl- dcncc. asked for Senate reform . saying the Upper House was made subservient to the govern- lnent'l will on the pipeline issue. GUATEMALA CITY (Alli .".esldent Carlos Castillo Armas pllt Guatemala under army con- trol Tuesday. tic blamed Conl- munisls for d i so rd e r s which claimed four lives. The president. a military man. declared a state of siege. or modi- fled law. suspending a constitutional guarantees for 80 da '9. The pm-sldents' decree followed ll all-cot clash between Police HM university students Monday Me: in which four students were hit by rub-msotline-gun and lstol me, Seventeen students do policeman were won several hundred students. about Inf been half nl them girls. nlarclllnl toward the lNIiX'l REDS BLAMED FOR DISORDERS Guatemala is Under Army palare to protest a state of alarm tlecrccd Sunday suspcnrllnlz for n been followers of Communist: moml, mom 5 dozen colutiiu bucked President Jacobo Arlloaz tional guarantt-cs Guzman. These followers fld SEIZE RADIO STATIONS That decree vlas explained as I move against (Inmmlmin-plotted "seditious disorders." It elm! utter a rally the same d-.V If whiph leaflets ll-crc htlndcd out dQm.n(jlng that Gllatcmala re- move curbs on Commllnlst activ- ities and end its mutual old 9803 with the United States. The government TII('l(l8.V Wllfd all radiaostagngsgl l;Tt:;';ltl'll;:'u::: explain a a e A the "necessary to maintain order. helbouaauot Con.1drt1llInl'5i CI:rl'l:':lf:'m " llols S n -.v Lg you hatched nlunicadn nficr Monday nights demonstration. He would not dis- the police gunfire. A fourth died overnight in a hospital. The gov. ernment said Communists had filtrated a small part of the uni. versltyh student body and WEN I D l' 0 ll 5 IIICI the weakly. El EM . . l with many participating who had Guatemala when Col. Castillo Ab ' mas overthrew Arbenz Gunmen two years ago, Minister of the interior Eduardo ltodlguez Gents said he knew of "some 20" students hcld incom- close the total number arrested. Three students fell dead before in- Wife 153. One of the Canadian Navy's newest minesweepers. Ii. M. C. S. Gaspe. Qrlnmander W. S. T. MacCully. C.D.. R.C.N., arrived at the Rail- way Wharf. Charlottetown at five Oieloch under the command of yesterday afternoon on a - J... .. xv tr-3 MINESWEEPER VISITS HERE follr day operational visit. Thlsd morning the C.0. will pay all of- ficial call on His Honour the Llcut. Governor T. W. L. Pl-owse and this evening the otfteen will be entertained in the 'jrdronm at the local Naval Hilton. On Fri- -v ay the local Sea Cadcts will em- bark tor a day at sea whcrc they will have an opportunity to ace and participate in the rudiments of searnanship in I ” tic surround- ings. The Gaspe is scheduled to deli!!! Saturday for Halifax. Ganrllan Photo . nrovldinll a majority of the prov-l ; natlvely. one eastern province and - Manltobawas well as either Ont- ; the federal proposal. the necess- Polio Vaccine Program is Completed For Summer lzatiou for all grade school pupils. Some provinces may then plan vaccine programs for secondary schools. but it may be several years before any such program gets under way. Meanwhile, the polio trend has encouraged hopes that 1956 might be a light polio year. The number of cases reported up to June 9 was 61. a record low. This compared with 110 reported in the similar period last year and the 140 average of the last fivl years. The height of the polio season does not develop until July llld August. cool: or ETHICS TORONTO (CP) - Chief com- missioner William Collings of the liquor control board of Ontario said Monday he favors a national code of ethics for liquor and beer advertising. Mr. Collings. back from a mecting of provincial liq- uor commissioners at Victoria. said most commissioners share his view. Dlttlclmas Cltln stlxtlltrtl ls 1llt Bast ALL-mount toot: Au. Altouuo WHAT National Health Insurance? It will be recalled that last October at the federal-provincial conference. the Prime Minister indicated that the Federal Government was pre- pared to give financial assistance and technical support in the de- velopmcnt of a system of hospital insurance and diagnostic services. inccs representing a majority of the Canadian people indicated .thelr willingness to participate. "This means. in effect. one of the two large central provinces and any other five. DECISIVE Already the three western most provinces have Indicated their rczulincss In procccd. If two of the Atlantic provinces--or. aller- ario or Quebec, were to accept ary majority support would have been achieved and an early start could be made on the implement- ation of this far-reaching social measure. It will be seen then that the position taken by the govern- ments of Newfoundland. Prince Edward Island. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick may exert a de- cisive influence on the future of this plan. Although a majority expression of favourable opinion has not yet been received from the provinc- es. a recent public opinion poll indicated clearly that the major- our action at this time. At it: re- in Medical Association also gave its elldorsation to the program. It bulletin issued by Toronto public weather ojflce at 9 p.m. (Night) (Day) .. 49 ll? Dawson Vancouver 51 I35 Edmonton 46 69 Regina . 45 '71 Winnipeg 58 71 Toronto 53 7t Montreal 57 78 Fredericton . . 49 75 Saint John . 40 74 Mnncton 53 R9 liallfax . . . . . .. .. 30 76 Charlottelors . . . . .... so 7! Sydney . . . I4”. 7" St. Johns N 50 HALIFAX (CPi - The weather office here says a disturbance centred in Labrador is moving east and pressure will be high over the district today. As a re- sult the weather will be and warm. In the evening. Prince Edward Island: Bunny and New Glasgow and Charlottetown I0 and 78. 1.40 a.m. and 11.57 p.m. It utea later than Charlottetown. (Continued on page 11 eoL 4) Ian rises today at (.1 nut. and III! at 8.01 p.m. 5 TORONTO (CPl-Temperatures f auuny . Another disturbance approach-' - ing from the Great Lakes will ' cause cloud in the western regions ' ' Northern. Nova. sooth. H warrn: light winds. Low-hhlt nt- High tide today at Charlottetown it lty of the Canadian people tav- at V V ltuatico at 7.49 am. and ion p.m. . cent annual meeting. the Coaad- sunsnerafde tldea eighteen s-tw,-,.-.- r--.- ;-.-g ;-s.....