1 / 8
Quick
Recovery
Being
Made
by
Sir
Winston
SIR
WINSTON
CHURCHILL
comfortable
night
92
VOTE
MARGIN
UlCLabor
Rep
Visiting
City
The
representative
of
organ
organized
�
ized
labor
on
the
Unemployment
Insurance
Commission
A
F
MacArthur
was
scheduled
to
arrive
here
today
to
meet
the
staff
of
the
local
office
Mr
MacArthur
of
Ottawa
is
on
a
familiarization
tour
of
Western
Canada
He
is
being
accompanied
by
Horace
Kectch
regional
UIC
director
for
BC
and
the
Yukon
He
was
to
stay
in
Prince
George
overnight
and
drive
to
Dawson
Creek
early
Wednesday
There
are
three
commission
ers
on
the
UIC
the
chairman
a
labor
and
an
employers
repre
scntative
LONDON
Reuters
Sir
Winston
Churchill
had
a
com
fortablc
night
at
the
Middle
Middlesex
�
sex
Hospital
here
hospital
sources
said
today
An
official
bulletin
Monday
said
the
87-year-old
British
wartime
leader
was
making
satisfactory
progress
In
his
recovery
from
a
thigh
frac
fracture
�
ture
sustained
in
Monte
Carlo
June
28
The
bulletin
made
no
men
mention
�
tion
of
complications
which
earlier
this
month
caused
his
doctors
anxiety
phlebitis
a
vein
inflammation
and
later
thrombosis
a
blood
clot
in
his
injured
left
leg
and
last
week
a
bronchial
in
infection
�
fection
The
doctors
announcement
that
no
further
official
bul
bulletins
�
letins
would
be
issued
until
Friday
was
regarded
as
an
in
indication
�
dication
they
were
satisfied
with
Churchills
all
round
pro
progress
�
gress
Liberals
Capture
Stormont
Riding
CORNWALL
Ont
CP
the
Liberal
fold
Monday
by
of
more
than
25000
cast
In
a
battle
that
saw
the
lead
change
several
times
Lucien
Lamourcaux
41
a
lawycr
MAN
FINED
250
AFTER
ACCIDENT
BURNS
LAKE
Correspond
Correspondent
�
ent
Thomas
White
of
Van
Vancouver
�
couver
has
been
fined
250
or
three1
months
in
default
and
has
had
his
drivers
licence
suspended
for
six
months
throughout
Canada
after
he
was
found
guilty
in
magis
magistrates
�
trates
court
here
of
dangerous
driving
The
charge
arose
from
a
two
car
collision
at
Decker
Creek
six
miles
west
of
Burns
Lake
April
28
Five
persons
including
Mrs
Bobbie
Philip
and
Robert
Seeds
of
Prince
George
were
injured
in
the
crash
and
had
to
be
taken
to
hospital
Stormont
riding
returned
to
a
scanty
margin
of
92
votes
snatched
the
seat
from
Prog
Progressive
�
ressive
Conservative
Grant
Campbell
who
had
taken
the
Liberals
in
the
1958
general
election
Mr
Campbell
39
and
a
law
lawyer
�
yer
said
he
will
seek
a
re
recount
�
count
The
Liberal
victory
narrowed
the
PC
plurality
in
the
265
seat
Commons
to
16
seats
The
stand
standings
�
ings
1962
1958
PC
116
208
Liberal
100
49
SC
30
0
NDP
CCF
18
8
Vacant
1
0
The
vacancv
is
in
Rurnahv
Coquitlam
the
BC
riding
won
Dy
arnart
iiegier
of
the
NDP
in
the
June
18
general
election
Mr
Regier
resigned
to
make
possible
a
byelection
in
which
T
C
Douglas
NDP
leader
will
bid
for
a
Commons
seat
Mr
Douglas
was
defeated
in
Re-
gina
city
in
June
Balloting
in
this
eastern
On
tario
constituency
had
been
de
deferred
�
ferred
four
weeks
because
of
the
death
of
the
original
Lib
Liberal
�
eral
candidate
Final
returns
cavp
Mr
Ta-
moureux
an
aide
to
Lionel
Lhevner
who
represented
Stor
Stormont
�
mont
in
the
Commons
for
10
years
11661
votes
to
Mr
Camp-
Dells
11569
Social
Credit
candidate
Mel
Rowat
and
NDP
candidate
Mrs
Marjorie
Ball
trailed
far
be
behind
�
hind
with
1297
and
970
votes
respectively
From
the
moment
the
first
polls
reported
shortly
after
vot
voting
�
ing
ended
at
8
pm
EDT
it
was
a
close
battle
between
the
Lib
Liberal
�
eral
and
Conservative
candi
candidates
�
dates
The
result
was
in
doubt
until
the
last
of
139
polls
came
in
H
CLOSE
VOTE
STUMPS
FORTUNE
TELLERS
of
a
pay
boost
of
30
cents
an
hour
over
three
years
from
the
Heavy
Construction
Association
Amalgamated
Contractors
As
Association
�
sociation
and
the
Builders
Ex
Exchange
�
change
The
union
sought
an
increase
of
25
cents
an
hour
over
two
years
and
other
benefits
Pres
Present
�
ent
basic
rate
is
292
an
hour
Results
of
the
membership
vote
are
expected
July
26
Prince
George
carpenters
are
affected
Ottawa
Limp
After
Battle
OTTAWA
CT
The
tense
down-to-the-last-ballot
Liberal
election
victory
in
Stormont
left
Ottawa
political
circles
limp
Monday
night
They
had
hung
on
every
vote
count
in
the
see
saw
deferred
election
in
the
vain
hope
of
finding
some
clue
to
possible
changes
in
the
countrys
polit
political
�
ical
atmosphere
since
the
incon
inconclusive
�
clusive
June
18
federal
election
If
the
result
offered
no
such
guideposts
it
did
produce
fod
fodder
�
der
for
speculation
And
for
the
four
political
parties
it
offered
a
mixed
dose
of
satisfaction
and
disappointment
The
Liberals
had
reason
to
bo
jubilant
By
a
92
vote
margin
they
won
back
a
seat
they
had
held
in
six
general
elections
and
one
byelection
from
1935
until
they
lost
it
in
the
country
wide
Conservative
landslide
of
1958
Their
candidate
Lucien
La
mouroux
achieved
victory
de
despite
�
spite
a
late
start
compared
with
his
three
opponents
who
had
been
in
the
field
well
before
the
June
18
voting
deferred
in
Stormont
because
of
the
death
of
the
original
Liberal
candi-
Now
Hear
This
Mighty
chilly
weather
for
camping
wot
The
weather
of
office
�
fice
here
repot
ts
a
grass
mini
mum
thats
the
reading
they
get
from
laying
the
thermo
meter
on
the
ground
of
299
degrees
last
night
The
low
temp
reading
at
four
feet
above
ground
was
only
38
above
icio
to
be
sure
which
caused
the
weather
man
at
the
PG
Ail
port
to
quip
Its
a
mild
winter
were
haing
this
summer
New
general
manager
for
Tartan
Brewing
Co
is
an
old
friend
to
many
in
Prince
George
Tommy
Doucetre
who
ar
aril
�
il
ved
yesterday
to
take
over
at
the
end
of
the
month
from
Jack
Corklsh
the
boy
who
got
the
operation
staited
last
May
and
who
we
hear
is
resuming
his
chartered
accountancy
practice
Tommy
is
a
former
manager
of
the
Canadian
Legion
branch
here
and
latterly
has
been
d
freelance
representative
in
be
v
crage
lines
jA
bouquet
to
the
hard
working
cityrjnptayccs
w
ho
hav
e
done
sucli
a
-good
job
on
the
giounds
in
front
of
city
hall
A
group
of
Washington
toiuists
who
were
stopping
at
a
nearby
garage
was
among
many
such
people
to
walk
over
and
photograph
the
park
School
board
decided
recently
to
dock
Teacher
NDP
Federal
Election
Candidate
Ken
Rutherford
only
the
pay
needed
to
cover
the
sub
substitute
�
stitute
teacher
who
handled
Kens
duties
while
he
was
away
on
the
hustings
Gal
who
did
the
subbing
Mrs
Mary
Marples
said
today
she
thinks
this
is
fine
and
dandy
but
she
wants
to
know
when
shes
going
to
get
paid
Seems
the
person
at
the
school
board
office
who
must
sign
her
cheque
is
away
on
holi
holidays
�
days
and
Mary
is
out
of
luck
until
said
person
arrives
back
about
July
24
Memo
to
Mike
Im
from
Paris
Thornthwaite
In
spite
of
what
you
think
Pouce
Coupe
is
not
pronounced
in
the
French
manner
on
or
off
the
radio
Horses
are
expected
to
begin
arriving
at
the
Exhibition
Grounds
any
time
now
to
get
in
a
few
familiarization
runs
around
the
track
in
preparation
for
the
two
days
of
racing
here
Friday
evening
and
Saturday
afternoon
It
will
be
the
only
parimutuel
racing
here
this
ear
t
date
Albert
Lavicne
Mr
La
moureaux
was
nominated
some
four
weeks
ago
lhe
Liberal
victorv
marcin
compared
with
a
1987
vote
edne
tor
conservative
Grant
Camp
dcu
lour
years
aeo
It
com
pares
with
Liberal
majorities
ranging
from
a
low
of
2290
to
a
high
of
6259
in
their
string
ot
six
ceneral
election
triumphs
In
a
1954
byelection
the
Liberal
margin
was
350
Conservatives
who
for
dav
had
been
conceding
privately
tne
proDaDiuty
of
defeat
found
encouragement
in
the
very
closeness
of
lhe
race
To
them
there
was
real
satis
faction
in
the
strong
run
by
Mr
Campbell
in
a
predominantly
urban
riding
especially
since
they
had
lost
ground
in
urban
areas
of
Ontario
June
18
Social
Credit
althoueh
it
fail-
ed
once
again
to
make
a
dent
in
Ontario
polled
almost
three
times
as
many
votes
as
in
1958
1297
against
331
But
other
parties
noted
that
it
didn
t
win
tne
same
measure
of
sunnort
from
Frenchspcakinc
voters
in
Stormont
as
it
did
in
Quebec
last
month
The
New
Democratic
Party
which
hasnt
fielded
a
candidate
in
Stormont
in
the
last
three
general
elections
came
loser
to
the
1000
vote
mark
with
970
Yet
that
total
was
below
the
1283
CCF
votes
cast
in
the
riding
in
1949
although
National
Leader
T
C
Douglas
spoke
during
the
campaign
The
result
made
little
impact
on
the
House
of
Commons
It
gives
the
Liberals
as
official
opposition
100
seats
against
the
lit
neia
Dy
the
Conservatives
Of
the
rest
of
the
265
House
seats
Social
Credit
holds
30
and
NDP
J8
One
other
NDP
scat
became
vacant
Monday
when
Erhart
Regier
resigned
Burna-by-Coquitlam
to
open
a
constitu
constituency
�
ency
for
Mr
Douglas4jeaten
June
18
in
Regina
City
gone
upstairs
Into
the
store
Russacks
bedroom
is
also
in
the
basement
He
said
he
had
double
locked
the
rear
door
of
the
premises
after
returning
home
that
night
It
was
the
practice
he
said
for
whomever
came
in
last
at
night
to
secure
the
door
The
door
was
partly
open
when
he
went
upstairs
The
in
inside
�
side
doorknob
was
lying
on
the
floor
and
the
outside
knob
was
missing
He
said
a
window
also
at
the
rear
of
the
store
had
been
broken
since
that
evening
30
30
RIFLE
The
shooting
of
Michaud
and
a
second
man
David
Sinclair
Stevenson
21
who
was
only
wounded
is
alleged
to
have
been
done
through
the
win
window
�
dow
after
the
men
emerged
from
Sparkcs
car
parked
be
behind
�
hind
the
store
Sparkes
said
Russack
had
kept
a
30
30
rifle
behind
his
bedroom
door
as
long
as
they
had
shared
quarters
about
3V
years
Facing
charges
of
attempted
breaking
and
entering
and
at
attempted
�
tempted
car
theft
arc
Steven-
son
and
Barrie
Malcolm
Blake
20
Blake
who
was
not
injured
in
the
fray
was
found
by
police
on
the
roof
of
an
adiacent
build-
ing
shortly
after
the
shooting
Blake
told
the
court
he
had
climbed
up
a
stairway
think
thinking
�
ing
it
was
the
rear
of
the
Columbus
Hotel
after
seeing
a
policeman
in
the
lane
He
said
he
was
hiding
because
he
was
drunk
and
had
beer
with
him
illegal
because
he
is
a
minor
He
denied
a
sueeestion
bv
do
fence
counsel
that
he
had
climb-
ed
to
the
roof
after
becoming
ingntened
when
hearing
the
shots
Blake
said
he
heard
no
shots
and
that
he
must
have
been
in
the
corridor
of
some
girls
apartment
when
they
were
urea
During
the
first
day
of
testi
testimony
�
mony
Mondav
Stevenson
pave
evidence
for
about
three
hours
most
of
which
was
taken
up
with
a
meticulous
cross-examination
by
defence
counsel
David
Sturdy
FIVE
BEERS
Stevensons
left
arm
is
still
in
a
cast
It
was
shattered
during
the
shooting
incident
He
told
the
court
that
Mich
Michaud
�
aud
Blake
and
he
left
the
As
Astoria
�
toria
Hotel
beer
parlor
with
a
case
of
beer
about
midnight
He
and
Michaud
walked
down
the
lane
between
Second
and
Third
while
Blake
talked
with
the
girls
who
lived
in
a
build
building
�
ing
next
the
hotel
Stevenson
said
he
and
Mich
I
JuliaiHI
K
f
fe4pp
jLiLWf
I
ERHART
REGIER
who
won
the
Burnaby
Coquitlam
seat
for
the
NDP
in
the
June
18
federal
election
resigned
Monday
His
resignation
paves
the
way
for
NDP
leader
Tom
my
Douglas
to
run
in
a
by
election
in
the
riding
Mr
Douglas
lost
his
seat
in
Re
gina
in
the
election
last
month
oo
the
cm
Man
Claims
He
Didnt
Hear
Two
Shots
Fired
A
man
who
shared
store
and
living
quarters
with
city
jeweler
Steve
Russack
charged
with
non
capital
murder
in
an
inci
incident
�
dent
which
occurred
during
an
alleged
burglary
attempt
on
the
store
May
10
said
at
the
preliminary
hearing
today
he
did
not
hear
the
two
shots
which
killed
one
man
and
wounded
another
Percy
Sparkcs
operator
of
Sparkys
Music
Store
which
at
the
time
of
the
incident
was
located
in
the
same
building
at
1166
Third
as
Russacks
watch
repairing
and
jewelry
business
was
testifying
at
the
second
day
of
a
preliminary
hearing
Russack
a
68-ycar-old
bach
bachelor
�
elor
was
charged
after
Gilles
Jim
Michaud
25
died
of
a
gunshot
wound
at
the
rear
of
the
store
shortly
after
midnight
May
10
HEARING
POOR
Sparkes
told
the
court
he
had
returned
from
Quesnel
about
11
pm
and
went
to
bed
He
said
he
was
wakened
in
his
basement
bedroom
by
Russack
and
an
RCMP
constable
about
1245
am
He
said
the
hearing
in
one
of
his
ears
is
not
good
and
that
he
was
sleeping
on
the
other
Sparkes
told
the
court
he
knew
nothing
of
the
shooting
until
after
he
had
dressed
and
BC
Carpenters
Planning
Strike
VANCOUVER
ten
BC
car
carpenters
�
penters
locked
in
a
wage
dis
dispute
�
pute
with
three
contractors
as
associations
�
sociations
Monday
gave
48
hours
notice
of
intent
to
so
on
strike
It
meant
that
the
1200
car-
Denters
can
strike
after
two
days
and
within
three
months
bui
union
spoKesmen
said
they
wont
walk
out
until
mem
members
�
bers
vote
on
an
offer
from
em
employers
�
ployers
The
unions
provincial
council
has
ureed
reicction
of
the
offer
aud
then
got
into
Sparkes
car
parked
behind
the
store
They
drank
four
or
five
beers
said
Stevenson
then
Jim
got
out
of
the
car
I
stepped
out
of
my
door
thats
when
I
heard
a
shot
I
didnt
know
what
was
going
on
I
walked
around
the
car
and
there
he
Jim
was
He
was
lying
on
the
ground
I
called
him
but
he
didnt
answer
I
was
going
to
pick
him
up
and
then
I
got
hit
Stevenson
said
he
then
went
into
the
adjoining
Embassy
Cafe
through
the
rear
entrance
and
asked
the
manager
to
phone
a
doctor
RCMP
arrived
shortly
after
In
cross
examination
he
de
denied
�
nied
he
had
any
intention
of
stealing
Sparkes
car
The
hearing
is
continuing
Few
Spaces
Left
At
Ex
Mall
Area
Exhibitors
are
snapping
up
the
last
few
spaces
in
the
mall
area
at
the
Exhibition
grounds
a
spokesman
for
the
mall
com
committee
�
mittee
said
today
The
mall
area
is
comprised
of
permanent
quarters
on
a
paved
pad
More
than
75
per
cent
of
the
28
spaces
have
been
signed
up
The
city
Kiwanis
clubs
agri
agricultural
�
cultural
development
committee
volunteered
its
time
to
sell
space
for
the
Prince
George
Agricultural
and
Industrial
As
Association
�
sociation
Committeeman
Trelle
Mor
Morrow
�
row
said
We
arc
leasing
the
rest
of
the
spaces
now
so
that
all
the
12
foot
square
booths
will
be
filled
for
Exhibition
time
-
Utility
companies
building
supplies
appliance
and
furniture
dealers
and
specialty
items
will
be
featured
in
the
mall
area
The
booths
are
all
covered
There
will
probablv
be
sev
eral
kiosks
in
the
centre
of
the
mall
which
can
be
used
for
food
concessions
he
said
Ferry
Bombing
Put
to
Douks
VANCOUVER
CP
A
bomb
exploded
on
a
BC
government
ferry
early
today
and
a
police
official
said
later
there
is
little
doubt
it
was
the
work
of
the
Sons
of
Freedom
Doukhobor
sect
The
time
bomb
constructed
of
two
or
three
sticks
of
dyna
dynamite
�
mite
wrecked
a
locker
in
the
observation
deck
of
the
ferry
Chinook
as
it
was
berthed
at
Tsawwasscn
30
miles
south
of
here
Damage
was
slight
and
there
were
no
injuries
T
P
Brcnnan
deputy
police
chief
of
Delta
the
municipal
municipality
�
ity
containing
Tsawwasscn
said
the
bomb
had
all
the
ear
earmarks
�
marks
of
the
type
used
by
Frecdomites
in
the
Kootenays
We
have
no
proof
yet
but
we
have
little
doubt
that
it
is
con
connected
�
nected
with
the
Doukhobors
The
bomb
was
the
same
type
that
they
have
been
using
Examination
Set
In
Assault
Case
Case
against
a
42-year-old
man
charged
with
indecent
as
sault
of
a
Vancouver
boy
was
adjourned
in
police
court
here
today
for
30
days
so
he
can
undergo
psychiatric
examina
examination
�
tion
at
Essondale
Ralph
Anderson
has
entered
a
not
guilty
plea
in
the
case
He
was
arrested
a
week
ago
Police
allege
the
offence
occur
occurred
�
red
after
Anderson
lured
the
14-year-old
boy
here
with
the
promise
of
a
ranch
job
AMERICAN
NEWSPAPERMEN
COMPLAIN
one
voice
No
was
the
way
the
an
answer
�
swer
came
in
the
transcript
they
received
Monday
ASNE
President
Lee
Hills
of
the
Knight
newspapers
and
Paul
Miller
president
of
the
Gannett
newspapers
said
they
were
distressed
most
that
their
questions
were
inaccur
inaccurately
�
ately
reported
The
questions
were
written
then
read
aloud
at
the
Krem
Kremlin
�
lin
session
The
Americans
said
they
believed
the
ques
questions
�
tions
were
rephrased
to
fit
into
the
Communist
party
line
REGINA
CD
Arrangements
have
been
shaped
for
the
first
face-to-face
talk
betwen
prin
principals
�
cipals
in
Saskatchewans
bitter
medical
care
dispute
since
doc
doctors
�
tors
withdrew
normal
medical
services
July
1
The
CCF
provincial
convention
at
Saskatoon
agreed
Monday
night
to
a
request
from
the
Saskatchewan
College
of
Physi
Physicians
�
cians
and
Surgeons
to
have
a
representative
of
the
college
present
the
doctors
case
to
the
convention
Wednesday
The
convention
will
be
at
attended
�
tended
by
Premier
Woodrow
S
Lloyd
and
all
but
one
member
of
his
provincial
cabinet
Doc
Doctors
�
tors
withdrew
normal
service
in
the
province
in
protest
against
implementation
of
the
govern
governments
�
ments
compulsory
prepaid
medical
care
insurance
plan
It-
is
not
known
whether
the
college
representative
will
be
college
council
President
Dr
II
D
Dalglcish
The
request
that
a
representative
be
allowed
lo
speak
came
Monday
from
Dr
Dalglcish
to
Harry
Link
of
Sas
Saskatoon
�
katoon
president
of
the
provin
provincial
�
cial
CCF
association
The
request
from
the
college
matches
one
made
a
few
weeks
before
the
act
went
into
effect
by
Premier
Lloyd
He
asked
and
was
granted
permission
to
pre
sent
the
governments
case
on
medical
care
insurance
to
an
emergency
session
of
the
prov
provinces
�
inces
doctors
TRADE
VIEWS
Although
there
has
been
no
meeting
of
the
two
sides
since
the
star
of
the
doctors
boycott
of
the
medical
scheme
college
and
government
have
traded
views
and
charges
in
press
statements
A
television
program
featured
both
Premier
Lloyd
and
Dr
Dalglcish
but
they
were
inter
interviewed
�
viewed
separately
Direct
talks
between
the
col
college
�
lege
council
and
the
cabinet
broke
down
last
month
The
government
offered
changes
in
the
Medical
Care
Insurance
Act
which
it
said
would
permit
doctors
to
practise
outside
the
act
if
they
wished
These
changes
were
later
incor
incorporated
�
porated
in
the
acts
regulations
The
college
insisted
the
act
it
itself
�
self
must
be
withdrawn
before
negotiations
could
resume
to
reach
agreement
on
a
plan
ac
acceptable
�
ceptable
to
both
sides
With
implementation
of
the
act
July
1
most
of
the
prov
provinces
�
inces
700
practising
physicians
when
they
appear
in
the
paity
newspaper
Pravda
Felix
McKnight
of
the
Dal
las
Times
Herald
said
he
asked
this
question
Have
the
Soviet
people
been
told
that
the
Soviet
Union
broke
the
three
year
moratorium
on
nuclear
testing
and
was
the
first
lo
carry
out
40
nuclear
explosions
in
the
atmos
atmosphere
�
phere
All
reference
to
atmospheric
explosions
was
deleted
from
the
transcript
Michael
J
Ogden
of
the
Providence
Journal
and
Bul
Bulletin
�
letin
said
be
Commented
thatt
ZEN
The
Only
Daily
Newspaper
Serving
North
Central
British
Columbia
Phone
LOgan
4
2441
Vol
6
No
138
PRINGE
GEORGE
BRITISH
COLUMBIA
TUESDAY
JULY
17
1962
MURDER
HEARING
CONTINUES
7c
a
Copy
closed
their
offices
Emergency
service
has
been
provided
at
40
designated
hospitals
by
about
200
members
of
the
college
through
a
plan
co
ordinated
by
the
Canadian
Medical
Associa
tion
MANY
WILL
DECIDE
Dr
Dalglcish
said
Monday
many
doctors
will
decide
within
the
next
few
days
whether
to
remain
in
the
province
He
said
this
is
the
week
of
decision
Jor
individual
doctors
At
the
time
of
withdrawal
of
normal
service
many
doctors
said
they
would
remain
two
weeks
to
see
how
things
worked
out
before
deciding
on
a
per
permanent
�
manent
course
of
action
There
arc
no
exact
figures
on
how
many
doctors
have
lefi
ihc
province
and
how
many
of
these
went
because
of
the
medical
care
plan
The
college
estim
estimates
�
ates
about
100
Of
these
it
is
not
known
how
many
left
perm
permanently
�
anently
or
combined
a
vacation
with
a
job
seeking
trip
and
may
return
In
Rcgina
the
citys
cmcr-
eminent
British
doctor
and
one
of
the
pioneers
in
the
British
health
services
plan
arrived
in
Regina
by
air
Monday
night
at
the
invitation
of
the
Saskatch
Saskatchewan
�
ewan
government
He
was
met
by
three
govern
government
�
ment
representatives
eight
women
and
a
man
with
placards
supporting
Saskatchewans
doc
doctors
�
tors
in
their
boycott
of
Saskatch
Saskatchewans
�
ewans
compulsory
medical
carq
scheme
He
handled
the
demonstrators
gracefully
gave
a
five
minute
press
interview
and
left
the
air
airport
�
port
with
Health
Minister
W
G
Davies
Lord
Taylor
said
the
purpose
of
his
trip
is
to
try
to
help
the
government
the
doctors
and
the
people
of
Saskatchewan
with
a
good
solution
He
said
it
would
not
be
possi
possible
�
ble
to
act
as
a
mediator
in
the
dispute
since
he
had
not
re
received
�
ceived
an
invitation
from
the
doctors
I
bring
sympathy
for
both
sides
he
said
He
said
he
would
be
here
as
long
as
he
can
do
some
good
but
Yes
Is
No
When
K
Plays
Editor
MOSCOW
Wl
The
13
Am
crican
editors
who
interview
cd
Premier
Khrushchev
last
Friday
complained
today
that
the
Russians
made
numerous
changes
in
editing
the
offi
cial
transcript
of
the
proceed
proceedings
�
ings
Yes
een
came
out
no
At
one
point
during
the
in
tcrviewK4iushcljivaisked
the
Americans
all
members
of
the
American
Society
of
News
paper
Editors
Were
you
restricted
in
any
way
during
your
tour
of
the
Soviet
Union
Yes
they
replied
with
compared
to
previous
ytars
consumer
goods
are
more
plentiful
The
comment
came
out
The
shops
have
all
the
essential
goods
The
Americans
said
they
found
the
average
Russian
citizen
woefully
lacking
in
in
information
�
formation
of
the
West
For
A
ample
nicy
said
almost
no
one
who
knew
that
the
United
States
dropped
the
first
two
atomic
bombs
on
Hiroshima
and
Nagasaki
while
at
war
with
Japan
Instead
the
ditors
sajd
many
Russian
Believe
the
US
was
testing
them
on
two
peaceful
cities
BY
CARRIER
150
per
Montb
HYDRO
CRWS
ARE
COMPLETING
CON
struction
of
a
power
lino
to
serve
a
BC
Tele
Telephone
�
phone
Co
microwave
repealer
on
Tabor
Mountain
east
of
Prince
George
A
section
of
the
60
foot
wide
power
line
right-of-way
between
Tabor
Minor
and
Tabor
Major
mountains
link
linking
�
ing
the
two
towers
is
shown
Power
already
established
to
Tabor
Minor
will
be
available
to
BC
Telephone
on
Tabor
Major
by
July
27
See
story
on
Page
3
Bill
Best
photo
IN
MEDICARE
FUSS
Face-to-Face
Meet
Slated
gency
service
co
ordinator
Mr
Clayton
Crosby
said
Saskatch
Saskatchewan
�
ewan
doctors
arc
angry
and
disgruntled
at
terms
under
which
British
doctors
arc
coming
to
the
province
The
Medical
Care
Insur
ance
Commission
administer
ing
body
for
the
act
has
been
recruiting
United
Kingdom
doc
doctors
�
tors
to
provide
temporary
med
medical
�
ical
service
About
85
have
been
recruited
and
about
half
of
them
already
are
in
the
province
PAY
ALL
COSTS
The
British
doctors
are
being
flown
to
Saskatchewan
licensed
for
practice
In
the
province
then
being
sent
to
points
which
arc
not
covered
by
emergency
service
centres
They
are
on
short
term
agree
agreements
�
ments
which
provide
cost
of
their
transportation
both
ways
expenses
involved
in
practice
and
salaries
ranging
up
to
500
a
week
Dr
Crosby
said
the
provinces
doctors
are
not
feeling
the
strain
of
financial
pressure
This
is
no
factor
he
said
UK
Doctor
Arrives
For
Medicare
Study
REGINA
CTI
Lord
Taylor
that
he
has
an
assignment
with
the
World
Health
Organization
in
September
Lord
Tailor
said
he
had
been
invited
to
come
bv
Graham
Spry
Saskatchewan
representa
tive
in
lintain
on
behalf
of
Premier
Woodrow
Lloyd
He
said
he
had
written
the
pre
premier
�
mier
to
say
one
clause
of
the
Saskatchewan
Medical
Care
Act
was
a
little
bit
unfair
I
understand
this
has
been
fixed
up
now
Lord
Taylor
said
the
British
Medical
Association
has
com
complied
�
plied
with
a
Canadian
Mprliml
Association
request
not
to
pub
lish
Saskatchewan
government
advertisements
for
temporary
doctors
but
the
BMA
1nurnil
had
published
a
leading
article
somewhat
critical
of
the
Sas
Saskatchewan
�
katchewan
doctors
stand
ryf2
c
O
t
rL
F
-rT
81
Last
nights
low
readme
was
only
six
degrees
above
frcez-
ing
Cloudy
weather
with
sunny
periods
is
forecast
for
Wednes
day
with
slightly
warmer
tern
pcraiuies
tignt
winds
Low
to
night
and
high
tomorrow
at
Prince
George
Quesnel
and
Smithcrs
45
and
70
LAST
24
HOURS
Hi
Lo
Precip
Prince
George
63
38
Terrace
65
40
02
Smithcrs
65
49
10
Quesnel
67
50
50
Williams
Lake
65
46
70
Kamloops
7
45
14
Whitehorse
1
70
43
Fort
Nelson
74
54
21
Fort
St
John
63
52
117
Dawson
Creek
64
50
77