fig 18 do EE Oe we eee ee 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, June 22, 1962 FAMOUS CELLIST TOURS WITH QUEEN Belgium's Queen Mother Elizabeth and Pablo Casals, famous cellist, are a pair of smiling 85-year-olds as they leave New York's Idlewild Airport after arriving from Puerto Rico. The queen mo- ther will hear the famous cel- | concert appearance in New | York since 1928. He said his.| Yonkers, appearance in New York is | part of his personal "Crusade for Peace.' The queen mother list conduct in Carnegie Hall | said she will--if she can find where he will make his first | the time--visit Joey Alfidi, 12, | pianist and composer, in his N.Y, home. --AP Wirephoto) Nucletr Weapon Issue Clarified OTTAWA (CP)--One upshot; the defence department main g 10Men, Woman Charged In Election Melee | {in the dispute.~ of the election campaign andjtain that Canada, to live up to) the election itself may have|its partnership in North Ameri- been some clarification of thejcan Air Defence Command, nuclear weapons issue. jmust have nuclear warheads The Liberals are cool to nu-jfor its Bomare anti - aircraft CHELMSFORD, Ont. (CP) -- Ten men and a woman have been charged with creating a public disturbance during t he June 2 visit of Prime Minister By DAVE BOWES REGINA (CP) -- The 925,000 residents of Saskatchewan are rolling-a king-size pill on their tongues, wondering over the ef- fects of the government pre- scription labelled medical care insurance. The province's doctors say it's too bitter to swallow. The government says it's what the province wants and needs. Today the council of the Sas- katchewan College of Physi cians and Surgeons and the pro- vincial cabinet were to meet for the first time in nine weeks, brought together by the Saskat- chewan Hospital Association, which has acted as a mediator If no agreement is reached, the Medical Care Insurance, Act, passed by the Saskatche- wan legislature last November and amended this spring, will go into effect July 1. WILL CLOSE OFFICES And on that date, the college has said doctors will start pro- viding hospital - based emer- gency service only. They save} said they will not work under) the act and their offices will! jclose. | The college, which has ob-| medical care insurance com-} mission set up under the act,| has not singled out specific sec-| tions of the act to which it ob-; jects. | The government, through the} premier and cabinet members,} has said if doctors will point to specific sections, it is prepared to make amendments -- pro- vided its over-all aim is not cut own. The debate began two years ago, when then premier T. C. Douglas said if the CCF gov- {ernment was re-elected it wouid jintroduce a comprehensive jmedical care insurance pro- |gram. | The Saskatchewan College or, |Physicians and Surgeons op-| posed the CCF proposal during} the 1960 election campaign. Since the CCF won the elec- tion, capturing 38 of the 55) seats in the legislature to the} Liberals 17, the Liberals have Medical Care Talks Resumed By Province Davies has not specified what circumstances the govern- ment-employed doctors be used and what treatment The government set up a 12- man commission headed by Dr. W. P. Thomson, former presi- dent of the University of Sas- katchewan, to study prepaid|t medical care and the prov- ince's health needs. The college has presented a solid front against the govern-|¢, ment's medical care proposal, tors have said they will con- tinue to provide service to their patients after the July 1 dead- line. e t The college favored an exten- sion of existing prepaid private insurance plans, with the gov- ernment making contributions to these for residents whose} , economic status did not permit them to obtain medical insur- ance coverage otherwise. t pected to be provided at about 20 of the province's 142 hospi- Nata about two-thirds of the prov- although a few individual doc-|jnce's more than 6,000 hospital beds. plans, have urged those hospi- reduce patient admissions dur- ing the last week in June. In- dividual hospitals have not in- dicated they plan to do so, but has said it will close. Two Sas- katoon hospitals in would hey would provide. The emergency service is ex- als; these 20 could involve The doctors, in line with their als which will not be served to he 25-bed hospital at Radville have asked he plan be delayed. INCLUDES PRE-NATAL The college has not described in detail the extent of what will be covere d as "emergency service'"' after July 1. It has an- nounced that the service will in- clude pre-natal care, maternity service and service for. children with any type of sickness. at "strategically located' hos-|t coast ship owners and unions cee __ ,|reached agreement Thursday/formed at all and for work The service is to be provided/night on a contract carrying a/where bills were sent to both Ship Owners Sign Maritime Contract; SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--West wo-per-cent across-the - bdard! pitals, staffed by teams of doc-|increase and an expiration date; |tors prepared to give service|of June 15, 1965. | free. continue. the public health service. The agreement forestalls re-| jected to administration by the) The college said it could not|sumption of the west coasf|gineer of the Ontario highways guarantee how long this would|maritime strike |last March 16 and was termin- The government has said it|ated April 11 by an injunction|of the company, have also been will use, if necessary, the serv-|invoked by President Kennedy.| charged with fraud in connec- ices of some of 110 doctors in|The 80-day cooling off period of|/tion with the incidents. They the injunction was to have ex-jare free on bail and are to ap- But Health 'Minister W. G.|pired June 30. which began) State-Owned Farms Returned To Cubans By JOHN BLAND state-owned farms are being|/ handed back to private owners|thousands of people who willjrepresenting 40 per cent as part of a major shift in|march with the revolution, it is|Cuba's agriculture are regarded |better to hand them back." d 3 IE | ony:|SOME RETURNED jmade by the farm, and have) Cuba's agricultural policy. Government officials |however, that the move repre-| the contrary, if handing back|tributing to serious food short- HAVANA (Reuters) -- Some|farms which were unjustifiably| ages. ntervened brings happiness to | Some farms were returned to Highway Fraud Admitted By Book-keeper HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP) -- Alfred Harris, 67, former book- keeper for O'Hare Construction Company of Kirkland Lake, has pleaded: guilty to fraud charges in conhection with incidents in- volving O'Hare and the Ontario highways department between 1955 and 1960. Harris was remanded Thurs- day on $1,000 bail until Aug. 3, to allow Judge John B. Robin- son to study°a probation report and a_seven-page statement made by Harris to police. Charles Dubin, special Crown prosecutor, asked that the con- tents of the Harris statement not be made public because he did not want to prejudice the trial of others charged who have not yet appeared. Mr. Adamson testified that Harris received $19,600 of this amount "as salary and bonus" from the O'Hare company. He said amounts over and above the money paid to Harris '"'went to other parties." Mr. Dubin said Harris com- mitted fraud in three main areas: For work done but fal- sely valued, for work not per- the province and the individual municipality concerned. Tracy C. Swartman, sus- pended district municipal en- department, and Mrs. B. M. O'Hare of Kirkland Lake, owner pear Aug. 9. TELEVISION This is the Telstar, a satel- lite designed by Bell Tele- phone Laboratories for relay- ing telephone calls, data mes- sages and television signals In New York today the Na- tional Broadcasting Co. (NBC), Columbia Broadcasting Sys- tem (CBS) and American Broadcasting Co. (ABC) an- nounced jointly that the first SATELLITE live trans-Atlantic television programs to be transmitted by the Telstar communica- tions satellite of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. are planned for next month. In Ottawa, a CBC spokesman said the CBC almost certainly will broadcast the trans-At- lantic shows. --(AP Wirephoto) INTERPRETING THE NEWS - operative farmworkers, | of Co as owners of their land and equipment. been described as "more land-! Chinese Troops Buildup Probed By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer The massive concentration of the coast facing the offshore islands of Quemoy and Matsu whipped by internal unrest; hunger is widespread; the econ- omy shows signs of collapse and They share profits|Communist Chinese troops onjthere are cracks in the China- Russia alliance. Chiang has promised his people on Formosa clear weapons in Canada though)missiles and manned intercep-| they haven't come out defi-|tors. nitely against them. Both So-| These officials say it would cial Credit and the New Demo-irequire a nuclear-tipped mis- cratic Party are opposed to nu-isile to detonate or break apart clear arms in this country. jin the air a nuclear bomb car- During the election campaign ried by an invading aircraft Mr. Diefenbaker did not come|Otherwise, if the aircraft were out with a definite statement/shot down, its bomb would ex- that there will be no acquisi-|plode on impact with the Diefenbaker to this community 15 miles northwest of Sudbury. Don Gillis, Progressive Con- won two byelections and Pub.|sents a setback in the general lic Works Minister Walter Erb,|Policy of "secializing" the land. sorvative-candidate for~ Nickel former health minister, left the| "We are not in a state of ag- Belt and Sudbury local presi- government to sit as an inde-| grpssive communism . . ." says dent of the International Union| Pendent. ae | Dr. Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, cf Mine, Mill and Smelter|_ Mt. Erb criticized the govern-| president of the National Agrar- Warne (Ind) was atruck by q|ment's determination to pro-jian Reform Institute. placard pole during the distur-/Ced With the plan in the face) "What we have to do Is to of the doctors' opposition. eliminate harmful practices in eee our policy, which hinder the owner-minded than were the|/appears to be another indica-jhe will return them to their big landowners." \tion of the weakness and fears|homeland. What greater oppor- "The co-operatives never suc-/of the Mao ome Jone regime, | tunity can he ask? ceeded in being true co-opera-| ile the build-up is seen in| tives," Rafael" Rodrigues" ex-/some Washington quarters as a|EXPERTS WORRIED plained. "'The co operative| possible springboard for a Red] Some U.S. experts worry that worker never felt himself mas-|onslaught on the two tiny is-|the concentration is greater ter of communal property and!lands, a more prevalent view is|than might normally be needed he was« not sufficiently con-|that the concentration is defen-|for defence and have concluded sulted. sive, generated by fear that) the Reds may attempt to grab their owners in April in a clear attempt to win back some de-| gree of lost support for the rev-| | olution. The burning of sugar cane fields by disgruntled peasants undoubtedly contributed to the total yield from the 1962 sugar |harvest being nearer 4,500,000 bance at an election campaign tons than the 5,500,000 tons orig-| nuclear ground, creating enormous tion of weapons in| peacetime. But he did say at! one point -- Vancouver, where most of his speech was drowned! out by a demonstration -- that) his government doesn't intend to have them in peacetime. Throughout the campaign, Mr. Diefenbaker's emphasis on this issue was on reasons for not acquiring nuclear weapons meeting. Charges were laid Wednesday| by Chelmsford police chief) Paul Lacelle. The accused were that some system may be set remanded to July 3. Bel E 2 Below Estimate up for fast delivery of nuclear) Whose charged were. Mit: would pre-suppose some strate-| Val Caron, John Levesque, Bal-| y amounts of fallout. Mr. Diefenbaker has hinted Tonnage Drops fence bases from the U.S. in aniand miners Robert Miller,| emergency. Such a system! Chelmsford; Victor Burdeny,| warheads to Canadian air de-| Peggy Bertrand of Chelmsford] four Township; Joseph McIm/ WASHINGTON (AP)--Despite| full development of the revolu- tion as regards the poor and medium-poor peasants." POLICY "IMPERILLED' i | operation jamounting to "sabotage," 'been officially blamed for con- nally forecast. And lack of co- by the farmers, has "Hence a failing in collective|Chiang Kai-shek may try -tojthe two islands--rather barren spirit and enthusiasm, and a| resulting failure of material in-| centive." The policy of respecting these| classes, he said, had been "im. perilled by many extremists) and would-be experts, resulting! in cases of persecution of the} peasant in his right to produce, | Jaundice Traced make good his threat to attack) the China mainland form his} Formosa base. | The United States has warned Chiang against such a move and has said the U.S. 7th Fleet, stationed in China waters, will) not be available to back him up.| But Chiang is aging and the mainland appears ripe for bits of rock--particularly in the light of President Kennedy's election campaign remarks in the fall of 1960 that he considers them unimportant in terms of military strategy. The offsetting argument is that the Reds are making no secret of their troop movements in Fukien. In fact, as a U.S. gic warning--days or weeks--of|1,>¢ard, William Braun, Clar-| qj inti | » 2 ; family, non - interference with|attack. lence Swift, Harold Kostka me ce Tate Bawa a distribute and consume agricul-| i oO I ran quil l 1zerTs disarmament negotiations --| Defence officials say it would|David Williams, all of Sudbury; | velopment Corporation says its tural products. than on possible military needjrequire several weeks to fit Ca-|Andre Duguay, Larchwood, and/traftic outlook is favorable and| The National Agrarian Re-| for them. |nadian-based Bomarcs with nu- Joseph Mulhally, Dowling) wij) permit repayment of its|form Institute issued a ruling) Meanwhile, some officials in'clear warheads. Township | $130,000,000 Hast month emphasizing a pol-|! a c beh ooo avin eee a, hile thislicy of respect for the small/Thursday many tranquillizers| proportionally to the use made --non-extension of the nuclear : plucking. The -- vast official stated, they are "adver- tising" the concentrations, and thereby have yielded the ele- ment of surprise which is so val- juable in any planned military Red domain is WINNIPEG (CP)--Dr. Mor-jing to the liver, but that the ey Cohen of Winnipeg said| incidence of jaundice has risen MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER j Limited 723-2265 -- 360 King West After Hours -- 728-3376 Free" -- Work Recommendotions Supplied CALL BERT McLEAN 723-2867 Modernize and Improve your Home Now... with Metro Children week by a House of Representa-|Private farmer and making it}and hormonal drugs now on the | of tranquillizers in recent 4 igre aa d int duri a tives appropriations subcommit-| Clear that he must be allowed, | Market can and will induce | years. Begging Near |the "a came lets cae : 1n t '@ | eS tee, the American agency also|Within limits, to slaughter his| Jaundice. Dr. Cohen said that stone or; lies maintained was tantamount k | said present seaway tolls are/own livestock and dispose of it) Speaking at a press confer-|tumor-induced jaundice can us) 2 Ito a Red invitation to take over lcutmilentt to repay all costs, in-|!ocally. Local revolutionary of- ence at the annual meeting ofjually be cured by surgery.| Liquor tores lthe islands. He said he would " {cluding any deficit incurred injficials, it said, had been inter-/ the Canadian Medical Associa- Drug-induced jaundice, he said, not go to war over Quemoy and the first 10 years of operation,,preting too narrowly laws ap-|tion, Dr, Cohen said this is onejoften resulted in injury to the) TORONTO (CP)--School chil-| yatsy unless it was indicated a as & OC Te 6 But the agency left the door)piying prison terms for unau- of the reasons doctors now in-|liver which, in most cases could/dren are practising a form Of| Red invasion there was merely ; lopen for possible increases in thorized slaughter and sale. sist that patients suffering from|be reversed and halted by use| begging outside Liquor Control | stepping stone to an invasion é itolls in 1964. In a speech April 11, Premier|jaundice tell geo if era yo a Peal om i 7 | Board of oe apie! of Formosa. ROUYN, Que. (CP) -- Socialjengineered the capture of 26 of), Mr. Thompson said he does| That's when seaway officials|Fidel Castro referred to "dis-|taken drugs of any kind in the} A New York skin specialist retail stores, a Toronto schoo Ss. icial suggest Credit toeen Te Pataninee eaers 75 seats fn the federal/not intend Ps seek an election|from the United States and Can-|content" among the peasants.|l!ast six months or a year. said 30 to 40 per cent of the board trustee charged Thursday hn gaily mage eve pati sag conferred with the party's new/election last Monday. this year "unless the govern-\ada will review tolls, which now| He said "if we have to give| Jaundice, Dr. Cohen pointed|Public are carriers of infectious night. . lands would be resisted immedi- Quebec strong man Thursday|. 'The national count was 118!ment does something which|are based on traffic estimates), 4. farms which have been|0Ut, is an ailment of the liver boils and impetigo. William C. Dymond told the) tely with the nationalist Chi- and both said afterward they|Progressive Conservatives, 97\leaves us no other course but/the seaway thus far has failed)" veoengy ave been) on which it is unable to properly; Dr. Carl T. Nelson, professor) school board six children--some|" iding the first defenc * are confident the Diefenbaker|Liberals, 30 Social Credit and|to help vote it out." [to realize. badly intervened (taken over! gperate jof dermatology at Columbia of whom he found to be of | hg eae UE ae ee ui ' § . : . ltIni F ; i U.S. the second. uiadke bien Before the seaway opened,|by the state), we shall giv University and director of der- Grade 4 age--approached him|Tine and the minority government cannot19 New Democrats. ' eae as ° : y oP »| DS , Bive| He said the two most common 4 ' ; survive much more than a' year.) They and four aides met pri- READY IN YEAR .|traffic was estimated at 25,000,-\them back. We are not: going : y matology at New York's Pres- on a recent Saturday night. The Mr. Thompson flew -here,vately for three hours at Mr. Mr. Caouette, 44 ~ year - oldio00 tons in 4959 and 50,000,000\to be afraid that this might|Causes of jaundice were stones|byterian Hospital, said keeping | children made a few passes at Thursday for the top-level stra-|Caouette's summer cottage at Rouyn auto dealer, who rose toltons by 1969. look like a step backward. Onlor tumor in the bile ducts lead-|children with impetigo away car windshields with dirty rags tegy conference with Real Caou-\nearbys Lake Dufault and then national prominence after Mon-)| ------- . --e from school is one manner of and waited to be paid, : ette, deputy national leader wha| emerged to chat with reporters. | 44y's election, said Social Credit) ws stopping spread of the disease.) Mr. Dymond said he believes ee ere ee ee ae ee TE be} bent: prepared: to: fight PF PO Dr. S. L. Vanderwater of| there may be as many as 1,000) jan election in about a year. | ee teatenstae vouay Kingston, Ont., said there is nojchildren so occupied each Sat-| e | Both scoffed at reports that| : oe < _ evidence that the application of|urday night. | astic Packages pycwer ee ane | | a : > to a womar in labor can have lof his Quebec showing and the} a harmful effect on the baby. CEM ENT bd party's relatively poor result--| Speaking in a press confer-! a ety uestione four western seats--in the rest ence Dr. Vanderwater said the! RK ge ey ee ok reduction of the oxygen content| is of the blood of the foetus has no By EDNA BLAKELY iby late May but less' than two|the co-leader," said Mr. Caou- effect on the ability of the foetus | Patios Our Specialty KINGSTON (CB) -- A study|weeks ago 34 lots of mixes from|ette. '"That goes for all of Can- | to breathe. | WALKS © STEPS to determine whether vacuym-|three or -four manufacturers|44a, Quebec included. || "Nor is there any reliable evi-| © CURBS sealed plastic packages are|had been seized and destroyed., He corrected himself later to, dence that depression of the res- | e BLOCK LAYING safe when used on certain kinds|No charges were laid. jsay that he meant deputy) piration of the mother in any| of meat and fish was recom-| The mixes had come from|!eader and not co-leader. - way_retards the child." | mended today by Dr. C. A.|cities across Canada including) The two men said they would | He said though that drugs can} Morrell at the final session of|St. John's, Montreal, Ottawa,| Oppose any further deals to sell) . have side effects through the| a consumers' conference spon-|Toronto and Vancouver. The;Wheat to Communist China on} + direct effect on the mother de-| sored by the Consumers' Asso-|bacteria, which can develop in|credit and sterling payment pending on the manner, method| ciation of Canada. |dziag eggs, is not dangerous) 'terms. '/and amount of the drug used. In an interview, Dr. Morrell|wheh cooked but Dr. Morrell) Mr Thompson said Canada| Beer re coe tevealed that some of the same|said it could cause diarrhea if}had sold grain to Red China on smoked fish sold in vacuum-|the cake mix was eaten raw--|the same conditions which it re-| 7 sealed plastic containers which|that is if someone licked the| fused to India and other friendly was responsible for several|spoon or if particles clung to/ nations. deaths in Minnesota was seized|the utensils after they were! 'We should feed our friends recently in Winnipeg. Some of} washed. before we feed our enemies," the Man had reached grocery --~ | Mr. Caouette said | shelves. Mr. Thompscn said the Red| wile, INTO ONTARIO ee MS HEADING He said in experiments sta- phylococeus toxin has _ been produced in bacon in similar packages. "The point to note is that un- der this kind of packaging the usual spoilage organism did not develop and so the warning signs of bad odor and appear- ance were not there." ate laboratory staff said they Voting Machines Urged By Toronto TORONTO (CP)--The City of} 'all elections. | In a brief presented to the/ng sug His food and drug director-| Ontario legislature's select com-| candid mittee on municipal law and it he Mr. would have had no objection to|supported by a submission from! tict elements. eating either the fish or bacon because they looked smelled good. Dr. Morrell said the packaging would be dis- the Association of Women Elec- and|tors of Toronto, the city said/ q |machines would eliminate diffi-| |culties in |China wheat deal was "'one of! | biggest hoaxes ever perpe-| |trated upon Canadians."' j Some of the wheat had been} | Ld dl = bch gen pounds purchased with gold the Chinese ¥ oronto suggested Thursday| ¢tole from banks in taking over that voting machines be used in| the country, he said. "T am not a separatist and I) lon't believe in it." ISOLATED THUNDERSTO _WEATHER FORECAST Warm § Scattered Rain, Caouette said there was/ gestion that Social Credit) ates were supported in| ithe election by Quebec separa-| aturday | Low tonight, Windsor | St. Thomas. {London .... | Kitchener | Wingham | Hamilton | St. Toronto Forecasts issued by the Tor-|Scattered showers and isolated| Peterborough .... Forecast Temperatures High Saturday Ee Catharines.... onto public weather office at|thunderstorms both days. Winds; Trenton light except westerly 15 during} Killaloe Mr. Thompson paid tribute to|5 a.m.: flection procedures | his deputy as "the man who will! Synopsis: Warm _ unsettled! cussed at an August confer-jand result in significant econ-/be both my left arm and my) weather will prevail across On- jomies if federal, provincial and| right arm in Parliament." ence* of meat packers. At an earlier session, he said he could not guarantee that all cake mixes containing the bac- teria. salmonella had been re- {municipal governments shared jthe cost. perfeet! "We complement each other | The city also urged tabulation! team." jof municipal votes at a central The two announced that Dr.|/regions, Windsor, London, Tor-\day and Saturday tario today and Saturday the afternoon. Muskoka Timagami, Algoma, White| North Bay.. |River, Cochrane regions, North| Sudbury 1 Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron,| Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie:|Earlton y. This makes us a real Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake On-|Cloudy with a few sunny inter-| Kapuskasing tario, Georgian Bay, Haliburton}vals and continuing warm to-| White River.. A few iso-} Moosonee moyed from grocery shelves.|location instead of by deputy Guy Marcoux, elected in Que-|onto, Hamilton: Cloudy with a|lated. showers or thundershow-|Timmins He said manufacturers been asked to remove the mixes 'ing station. had returning officefs in each poll- bec Montmorency riding, (been appointed party whip. has|few sunny intervals andjers both days. Winds southwest|Mount Forest..... lwarmer today and Saturday. |15 today westerly 15 Saturday. |Sault Ste. Marie a new oil furnace A brand new, modern Oil Fu rnace is a real asset to your home. It protects its value and assures you of better, more economical heating. Now is the time to have it installed. A small terms spread over the next details. Let us quote you deposit and convenient 5 years. Call us for Choose from mony well-knowe weme furnaces. 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