oe ~ ) $3,000. year; but pointed out that ee — Dhe GSarar dias | tis rey wstnenaica formate ot Organic NOTES BY THE WAY | = J. Hencox, Publisher oes ° -— : a ’ ; ‘ “Yes, my husband's leid up,) A news item reminds us that vad” pan ae to be old and o olete at 55 years o By Dr. 1 BR. Van @ victim of hockey. ‘But 1 | gol was made illegal in Scot- every week day morning (except Sun | age, with little hope and no prospect aastce .- oa es Jom Se me Paves the ond & ro because i interfer. sronnary eliden) ot Me hee See | of correcting the poverty that — has medical ‘orm thet physicians peony cates tes oe od oes ae offices at Sammerside, Montegue, Alberton | become endemic. To be poor is to ow bag ore re a Seturday—Galt Reporter ~ North American ‘business oe ee fear the future of the children be- is the best example and exists | Father— “This is the sunset one oa oe ew: Pmt ted nationally by Thomson Newspaper cause there is little hope and no pros- when the old ticker cannot mait- | my daughter painted. She stu- ing Services: Toronto 425 University Ave : tein adequate circulation. died painting ebroad, you know. A hes do Empire 3-8894; Montrea! 440 Cathcart trees Uni pect of finding resources to give them The victims are short of breath Friend— “Ah, thet eccounts for Memeheiion - sere Sanat Wennern opie 1080 Wout Seore* ( education and adequate training. To end develop a dry, hacky cough |it! I never saw a sunset. like eae Court on the " Member Canadien Daily Newspaper Publishes | be poor is to be unable, because of eleng swelling of the less | that in this coumtry."—Vencou- | grounds thet General Custer al. Aimstintion ond. oe pee, th Canadian an: ‘ : ; A | o. his locks long. Yes, but 4 The Canadian’ Press. The | illiteracy, isolation, language barriers Many will recognize the a . Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub - : tion as dropsy or heart failure look what happened to him.— Meatinn of oll news dispetches in this poner | OF fear of ridicule to communicate or. est, Giltata. & ah fies ait. ng Se of female out- | Ceigary Herald. , Bee we her pitaeygrs Hor yong | deal with government . . . To be poor ons diuretics usually bring re- | she had given a signal —_ PRLS Tiger s fer republication of special dispatches here | is to be of an age or location or suf- Te a fore her car was struck by ome | the wife murdering ber hus- lel reserved. Subscrintion vate | fer mental or physical limitations tain eee ns oe kane, ores See “aan = bend, but the jury brought in @ F 319.00 « veer by mail on rural routes and ares | that make acquisition of a new and — An over arm go up then dows, then stra- — <n ee eeneuse [aiond Oy satan, Be marketable skill improbable or im- valouee toe oe ee bon os ont, ee a Ri ecquitiel, When aeked how she ¢ "in ae and elsewhere outside British Com i possible.” Tr ne ed Heaven's sake!" ecreeched the — Oe eains ta Tae on 7e single copy | By these standards, one-fifth of ened arches could not support cae cae oe ig BA feéling sorry for her. Ader ail, * Membe) Audit Bureau of Circulation. the nation’s city dwellers is poor and the weight of the body 9s B® |me erase them?” —Montreal | she's @. widow now.”—Montreal . strongest memory is weaker two-fifths of some 480,000 farmers. ae acne no ome ee Star. Star. § than the weakest ink” The same applies to two-fifths. of peo- ' sapperts were obtained end be : ; . oe tari ; , t s of given instructions on . e e whee 4 MONDAY, DECEMBER 13_ 195. | mM, 3 pine 2 _ nage and town to strengthen the creed Sanvegh Russia Takes Harder Line Youth Wins Out | Another report—brought in. by be tonto, eres Canadien Preee Biaff, Washington Young men to add “zest and a the council on rural poverty—said mopertive tissues. ‘ ‘The latest Soviet acts appear | There is growing apprehension new outlook, ideas and energy,” are some Canadians subsist on incomes eat — sa eevee word . eeatem, = vei which |es well that the American role wane ne Liven wees rere gs: low me A111) per pee, Kidaeys.” “Many physicians pre- | in Eest-Weet relations, ansiyets |wer-perhaps bigger then. ie says newly elected. Liberal leader®) month. Another said there was a [- - the se a ot “ee, aes rea—revives substantially the Alexander Campbell; and at 33 Mr. | need for 300,000 units for low-income sation. It implies that these im- | war sais toa ancl & cladoe one ee a sae direct Chi- ~ Campbell has that essential qualifica- | families now,.and that many of the eet organs on testis te Western telotions, a The question, is how much ite , tion which the majority of delegates’ 250,000 Canadian homes in need of oes are oxic Russie eeponneed @ five- | leaders will take, or whether at Saturday’s convention in Charlotte- | repair cannot be brought up to pro- ting enue ee ber cet ae k oo a ee sane ss urge . town agreed was so important. He | per living standards. Still another a0 final, whereas decompens® | line toward the U.S. on the spe- | extreme eaution themselves hi Dr. Bonnell rt said 1,300,000 Canadians with tion could be temporary and im- | cific questions of Viet Nam and |" At least as important, say’ ob- won the leadership over Dr. Bonnell, | report said 1,300, anadia provement takes place when the | West Germany. idk servers, is the impasse to which a seasoned veteran in politics, who | a permanent physical disability must 7 ans oS aaeee de being eee es |the wer in Viet Nam hes led himself is only 42 and a youngling | be poverty-stricken before qualifying SOMEBODY'S S ANTA ate dad wake % Se eempendiatane tee — . — Pry cat's _? ovens a heared relations indeed compared to that still zestful | for government aid. . eniticles kidney was nrectet. vibes: drawing more criticism | The key is an agreement to and new-outlpéking, ideas-and-energy- How long will it take to remedy | OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson waste produete from the blood: ; Taek Toate seteet Goce full. gentleman; Premier Shaw. But | these conditions? Bulletins from the pg ts Gat vesle S06 dues va froin aghinsiiy makes more dubious than ever. Premier Shaw is.a Tory, and Tories, |. conference didn’t say, but it looks . lg « 3 thereatter oven battle. | But time is limited, say observ- y, the kidney field and elsewhere shows North for some reason or other, seem to | like we're in for a long, hard war on Choice Of Senate Spea ker Is Important males te tome, gid termination to | Soriet atepe tn’ the wenig oa have the capacity of cavorting on in- | this front. So many other things re- There is . wealth of carved ; written jaw that partisan politics | Sydney Smith’ not only made —T ee AGE a im e: ter ‘on om i any wuclear agreement are definitely. Age doesn’t seem to wither quiring priorities, and all that! But peer _penetiing, pointing, _— ot oii oo head North American union at the | child was ong year old we were | Own way the steady increase of peoroafil mm say vege = them, or custom stale; though it could | we'll come to grips with it yet, let | the Parliament Bitidines, Much aire Scaler Gna the 3 ditto. altar; he is in his own right al- © ret most of our knick> gente Viet ee — attack by missiles. be that the Conservatives, too, will | us hope. We've already started pay- os ie - ah sen by ies vit: sel Sie Ai see of be — . eee — et ea coven incase te its own manpower resourced and aoe oot soon hind “have to get an injection of new blood} ing Tom Kent his $25,000 salary as. | {# ‘ourist. But some ip Ud pri | mative ld enjoy the arduous role |cated in Ontario and Seokatche. | Keep him away from things, no wine feriet and Chinen ob step in nuclear escalation very, shortly, if they are to keep pace | generalissimo, haven't we? No one | Prime Minister's office on the |as -Mr. Speaker's hostess as | wan, has lived in Kamloops and |m™aver wher we place them. |. cout, tne late wal which had ‘has been taken end nuclear dis- ‘the cam -Mr, Campbell ins | c¢ hat that isn’t something! ~ ftourth-floor—now occupied by | much as her distinguished Can- sat in the BC Legislature. While , _ become a fact armament is that much more paign~Mr, ) an say that t g! toe Oana Sas ase Sonek ni seitnaat “wedla be REPL » diplomats say | difficult, it is argued tens to wage to unseat them. Pe 4 Speaker's Chambers in’ the Senr:| im the past enjoved her company { verealy, welcomed, “he perfor. | A# & father of three children | loomily, with no ®0Y° | sEEPED WHE An there’s nothin tart The Kariba D ate Si ¢ fly, at’ important conferen: | mance would certainly Uve ep,| 200. etandfather of coves, 1 | where that enybody cen do any. | “SEO REAEW ERE . Anyway, there’s nothing so start- €@ Kariba Vam ica ca yo oe o- | "P| know what youu mean, There’s | thing about it poison of Viet Nem hae ling About young men forging to the Back in May, 1960, Queen Moth- a perhaps the most | ces and at casual ’gatherings. | to honour. -an-old saying, “Nothing is out | Militarily, it means that Us, |SeePed elsewhere too — into a y; , Queen elegant suite of offices in the ° — hopes of relaxing trade with the front politically, Mr. Regan, former Parliament Buildings. It ofvreach of a two year old.” | forces will continue‘ to swell. , po ( A i % er Elizabeth, standing on a control date of a coceticn a seers D : k! R ° S Time will your problem. | The present level of around 170,- rele or bloc, inte MP for Halifax, who was guest speak- | building high above the south bank | Mr speaker's male steward aa, . WCehMOFK S RUNIC tones GULLET SPASM 000 will grow perhaps as bigh | Countries and eves mito wre er at the convention and won t’he | of the Kariba Gorge in Central Africa, | female secretary. work, and National Geographie Society Mrs. D. writes: I nearly cho- | 8 350,000 or even 400,000 men, | jantic Alliance where it has ere. Nova Scotia Liberal leadership 14st illi leading off that is “his. office he te dosth etm epanme of the | Hes quarters predict. ated friction among W 3 ip ! formally opened a $220 million pow- | [eading off that in turn is @ bath. | Thousands of stones bearing | graved the runes to-my master jesophagus. Is there any cure | Pressure will increase on | Paris and London.” oe ~ , only 37. But for the —— er project which was seen.as a sym- room and changing room,” where curious. Vikiog sseariptions. are | Vodurid.” Mea Chides | for this onatl mn? President Johneon as the. 66 > Pogo ty TE — eyond compare we must go back to | hol,” in- Her Majesty's words, of ‘‘a_/ fe can | a Se ‘They bear testimony to the ex- king, Harold Bluetooth, cele- |. There iz no need to worry | vember draw closer_for more ca eanee ia aie aa . the-tareer of William Pitt the Young- | new and wider understanding | presiding over the siltings of our | Ploits of the seafaring Norse- | brated the of that nation | about choking to death because | bombing. in the north and per |hardens, West, Germao armen er, son of a celebrated Whig prime te saat ” U Cha : , n and offer examples of the in the 10th century by erecting | the windpipe, rather than the | haps even in Laos and Cam- ‘ b ee ’ throughout this mighty continent.” As pper Chamber : : : : ments could: gain strength to- ‘nist win ie cad f , At the. other end of his suite | first writtem Germanic lan- a runic monument to his par-,| esophagus, controls breathing. | bodia to cut North Vietnamese | ward obtaining a larger share “‘Dpeiater ~ WAO became -teader Of @ | she flicked “a switch,; waters of the | (, on: sttrastively: tiritehed a | 2080": | ents. ‘Harald King,” reads the | It goes to’ the stomach and | supplies of troops and men and |in the making of as as. British coalition government in 1783 | Zambesi, the fourth longest river in | ting room, leading into a large I. Te ae are "nope a i tones this — tee oe — — thereby save the lives of Amer- | epite camnanais reluctance | at the age of 24, after having served, | Africa; began turning the blades of a ae ose — ote acaempeaitt o ra |father, and cw gow | weual anieeueas Soe ts ican troops. : among the Western allies. during the previous year, as: chan- | tyrbogenerator 600 feet ‘below, and { seat -32. mors | design and pictures. The earliest | Harald who “conquered the | possible. runic alphabet introduced. in | whole Denmark and Norway SKEPTICAL PATIENT A feature of this sulte are the | cellor of the exchequer and House Latin quotations carved round. | Denmark about A.D. 250-had 24 | and made the Danes Chris-| D. E. writes: Why are power began coursing through trans- létters. Initially, the runic ston- | tians.” It is the first mention of | sicians so ignorant about Sanne LR Oem ~ Ep SOTO ORE leader in the unstable Shelburne min- istry. He had been elected to the Commons before he was 22; and af- ter hearing his maiden speech the great Edm und Burke pronounced him to ‘be,. “not a chip off -the old block- but the old block itself.” By comparison, Mr. Campbell is really starting late! Which just goes es to show that the past isn’t as old- fashioned as some people think it to be. There were youthful heroes before Agamemnon, and young politicians as far back as Alcibiades, who became leader of a radieal party in Greece at 29—four centuries before the Christ- fan era. We haven't got the text of- his speech at that convention, but we'll. bet rousing pep talk on the need of hav- ( he gave his colleagues a ing young men with zest—and new ideas at the helm! -And why not? Every age needs to be jolted in this way; and ours, ‘surely, is this though P exception. It is with -belt.on-achieveing the leadership-of his party, to carry the new duties. — A Interim pay raises Group A *-Minister Benson: and on his determination the admirable qualities of age into his responsible Long Hard War for 17,000 that we salute Mr. Camp-- | } | | | | | | | federal civil’ servants—15,- | - 000 of them living in the Ottawa area | —have been announced by Revenue The average creases, retroactive to July 1, will total about $8,600,000 and average $446 annually. If this. may strike some taxpayers as being generous, it in- | mission lines to the copper belt, in what was then Northern Rhodesia, . and to the cities of the south. Thus the Kariba Dam be came a reality. Built by an Italian cae tion company, it has a wall of con- crete rising 420 feet from the river bed, with six floodgates to control the river, allowing over two million. gal- lons of water a second to thunder into the Zambesi and continue to the Indian Ocean. It cost, during its con- struction, the lives of 87 of the 2,000 Européan workers and 125 of 8,000 African workers. It threatens now to cost more. For this is the dam whieh is jointly ad- ministered’ by Zambia and Rhodesia’ to provide vital electric power to the ian copper production. At pres- ent all of its turbines, which have a | capacity of 600 megawatts, are on the Rhodesian side. In a second. stage of development, engineers were to be studying ‘this phase when Rhodesia declared its independence from Brit- _ain. It threatens now to destroy the dam installations if'invaded. Britain is not ready to invade; not yet. But she has dispatched forces to Zambia where they will constitute an advanced base from which she can move. if circumstances compel her to do so in the gathering struggle over Rhodesia’s racial policies. Prime Minister Harold Wilson has acted wisely in turning down the ul- timatum from the Organization of African States, demanding that Brit- ain crush the Smith government by Dec. 15. But he has now bluntly ac- cused Premier Smith of “lies and‘ the top of the walls. These ap- horisms, written by . Romans nearly twenty centuries before the foundation of our Senate, ac- curately describe its approach to its duties. For example, Ci- cero said: ‘Let. reason prevail with me more than popular opinion;” and Seneca said: ‘‘No- thing is well-ordered that is has- ty and vrecipitate.” EMBODIES DIGNITY The occupant of these cham- bers, the Speaker, enjoys a sta- tus which is better described by General, the Chief Justice, the Cabinet and the Lieutenant-Gov- | ernors. His wife is therefore re- cognized as Parliament. Hill’s “hostess with the mostes’.”’” When Canada’s 27th Parilia- ment is formally opened on 18th January, next, the Senate - like. the House of Commons - will have a new speaker. Tradition- ally this post alternates between a French-speaking and an Eng- lish- speaking senator. In prac- tice this means that it is filled |. alternately by a senator rom Quebec or from one of the nine provinces. The vast Parlia- ment saw Prime Minister Pear- _.@on, snub and antagonize senior and well- qualified senators from Quebec; he appointed a Liberal Party organizer to the Senate, and then gave this Johnny-come | lately the plum job as Speaker. to which several of his more ex- perienced colleagues aspired. He is unlikely to repeat. that clu- msy act of patronage, so we may expect next month to see a‘senior senator from - outside Quebec installed as Speaker. HONOUR FOR KAMLOOPS Very likely the appointment will be given to the Senator from Kamloops, Hon. Sydney Smith. He has been a member of the Red. Chember for over eight years, and in that time has pro- |. wed. himself a worthy and hard- working senator. He is admired for his constructive contribu- tion to the important committee’ | es were erected in village grave- | yards as memorials or tomb- | stones. RUNIC WHO’S WHO In Denmark, runic stones car- ved between the 9th and 12th centuries form a veritable social registry. They list the names and station of several hundred }men and women ranging from modest rank. By the 10th century, the runic inscriptions touched every as- pect of Viking life. they” re- counted the Norse Jegends, the great exploits, and the dramas of birth and death in old Scand- inavia- The large “‘Rok” stone found in Sweden is covered on all four sides- with inscriptions. written by a grieving father in memory: of his son. : this stone, priest and chieftain of the Helnaes dwellers, in mem- at sea...” ‘ ject of a prominent Viking be- trayed personal pique: “Three daughters shared the inherit- ance as nearest of kin among hig—survivers.But,-I, -Viv, —en-- wears \a somewhat glazed look, may be because he is increds- ingly buffeted by electronic sounds dazzled. by visual aids. circuit end educa- tional TV have infiltrated many elassrooms. Movie and slide projectors are old hat. .Disem- = Wést«Virginia area now propose royalty to people of the most | An early Dane mourned his | seafaring nephew ‘Rolf raised | | | place the Denmark as a unified country. RUNES HONORED VETERANS The conquest. of England in ‘| 1017. by the Danish king Canute “the Great inspired scores of run- ic stones in Scandinavia. mund, a famous runic author of the 11th century, was moved to inscribe, ‘‘Ragnfrid had this stone erected in -memory of ory of his brothed’s son Cud- | land of Kin at the mund. The men were drowned fare ec the te caeey eoadiod their accomplishment by erect- Oni one stone, the faithful sub-| ing cairns etched with® runes and magic .signs. : The advance of Christianity into Scandinavia and use of the Latin alphabet rang the death _knell_forthe runes. Education By Machine Milwaukee Journal Hf today’s student sometimes | while bowling down the highway. A University of Maryland pro- fessor hopes to acquire a couple of reconditi-ned jukeboxes and around the campus. | Instead of Peter, Paul and Mary these “economic random ac- cess machines” will crackle off i recorded. spiels. about. university voices boom out over | courses, canned ihterviews with public address systems. | depeartment heads and other dry many schools and colleges matters. : | which can’t wipe dribbly small As | |, |cellosis? I believe I have this | disease, but when I ask doctors | about it, they act as if I were talking Greek. REPLY | Some persons pay for a phy- sician's advice but refuse to be- lieve what he tells them. ‘I hope this does not apply to you. He- ve the usual brucellosos labora- tory tests been made? ‘ POLAR BEAR LIVERS E. J. P. writes: I understand _| that the ingestion of polar bear livers can result in. illness be- cause of excessive quantities of vitamin A. What do you say about this? REPLY There have been reports of this nature in medical journals. Polar bear liver contains so large amounts of this meat. ’s Health Hint—— Rabies - infected animals do not always foam et the mouth. (Note: All 1 to Dr. Van Dellen should be add ressed to; dr, Theodore Van go, Illinois.) e ; Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian ) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (December 13, 1940) ‘ The fuull striking‘power of Bri- tain’s imperial forces of the Middie East- troops, navy end air force— was the last fleeing and much-reduced Ital- ian army the British command applied the flat word “beaten”. Mr. Walter S. Geant was ap- for much vitamin A that poisoning | iced |has occurred after ingesting Fascist out of Egypt, and to the eet iE J can be argued that it’s peanuts com- : j pared to what our parliamentarians ( fraud”, has declared that Britain can- | work, ‘as he {s tesnected for his | that children ride on School bus | noses, com- t oa ; sound and original speeches in |¢8 with blacked out windows. | Tent: .O°f one. i voted for themselves not so long ago. | not negotiate with men of that type, | debate. He is popular with his | The captive, audience would be | ae ae 6 little tad kas to f But let’s get back now to the War | ‘and that oil sanctions on a worldwide | Liberal colleagues: and his Con- | dosed with educetional movies oe his long division? on Poverty, and to the news from that | scale against Rhodesia are been con- | Servative ‘opponents alike, be- — “F : [ea i cause he is frank and friendly. battle front as it trickled from the | Sidered. with all, and he observes the, un- A Woma / M BOTH FOR ONLY f the four-day federal. | —‘The Kari ins a fi : ns Man. 5 closed doors of the four-day federa e Kariba Dam remains a factor AUTO FUEL SALES UP Calgary Herald $ 95 ‘ provincial strategy huddle at Ottawa in the dispute. No longer a focus of emiies- ce ena ¥ Sel Ga. said hey al we sie ee ' ‘ trad Ls f eater t : (CP). — - | «Women urns ou men | They still like men 5 last week. Canada, it seems—despite | African unity, it could indeed become | jnces collected a record $606, | with bags under their eyes | chem: rough, aliens Veer fe | ne’ WOMEN, CHILDREN i having one of the world’s highest _ a symbol of the most bitter struggle | 522,100 in got from the sale | A female ee a oc = Began This a con Sa = on Melnnis Photo and = @ oe is ;. | Of gasoline a other motor | mewspeper came i$ conc officg success in Kenya | standards of ltving which makes pos- | the African continent has yet experi | fuels in 1964, the Dominion Bu- | sion after detailed study of what | screen idols as the late Humph- | ceiamede taapeney fer . a sible our considerate treatment of | enced. reau of Statistics reported | makes men mogt attractive to | rey Bogart and Olark Gable, |raiders believed to have’ killed | Hobb S | i potiticians and officials in the higher. “Thursday.” The figure. was up | women, The reason bags have | and Robert Mitchum. - | 62 persons in # tribal clash and y Upply Brackets—has almost 4,000,000 peo- EDITORIAL NOTE 144 per cent from 1968 collec- | such’a magnetic effect, she sald, | Now that the secret is being | stolen about 1,000 head of cattle : tee ee tions of — $530,335,500. Another | is that they suggest debauc | bandied about, watch the newly | Police reports said, 33 young | 111 Kent Street — Charlottetown, P.E.L : ple who live below the minimum pov- The cost of living index reached ue aoe came into ee 2 soy wee and a glint | Seen as pen ex Girls, 16 boys, 10 ees and \ Telephone 892-2202 : : ‘ : ; : tr ies from vi wor’ kedness. lustry. if it » man were killed w' a q erty tne. if, another high mark in November— | Chees ‘drivers’ licences abd fe: | Tide sosms to eosfirm thé sus. |store making © weighted clip |joiat force of Merfile, Donyito ' b a How define ae A Man- | another evidence of the “spiral of | tated ane A. wag 6.6 oe picion of many men that women | to hang under the eyes before | and Opotha tribesmen —— The Island's Largest” eee qa ba brief summed it up in terms of | inflation,” and of the need for firm | cett higher than the $31,160,500 | have secretly regretted leeving | going to bed st night in order |a Turkana encampment ta the | wack ng shout other wonderful ” Sige etanpy of four living 25 a than | government action to slow it downy a om ere ae oy anes coll View tear 00d. [vager sea een ee one eee aunties. aaa ; - Baa iaeeners _ E ; : é * ’ q ti i | E fos siete pe is ai = 7 Ci 7