~~ y ' tariffs, producing only an increase of material wealth for the European vating the extremity, or by dip- Tt ie too much te expect thet such . Poor 2. ae The same situation prevails to a. NUMBNESS end a a ee onan mh be up: lesser extent in Canada; but in hanes 0nd fingers, especially | ean do it.— Calgary Herald. | ing for the nail.polish to dry.< Canada it is the government that has at complies th SMG bot | gece ee oe Brenton Oe, et ; while in the -Tindividuals. It may stent fen | Some men re Kemeless and) . ee been dragging its feet, w guie eiveniiien ee lc ee ee ee ee | United States the vision and initiative usually it denotes press ure | “er— Brandon tnd town ors bang tara in this new trade movement is com- |* somewhere along the serve pat A Gime ts about the same size | Save taxes. —St. Catharine’ ing from the. government. We could art, Changing the position of the pao hang a 207 the | Standard. 4 wish that it were otherwise, and that culariy when the connate | Stratiord Beacon-Herald. | - After the goveramest has em Ottawa were showing a lead which held in a cramped or fixed pos-| . perimented with every other would redound to its own credit and ition. : A veteran husband down the | ™eans of reduciay expenses it be a cardinal factor in in- The wrist is a common pres- | “lock says that snoring is tike | Might try spending less. That perhaps be a sure ares because it is a bottle. | ®8Y other form of art: the peo- | has been known to work. fluencing opinion at this critical neck through which nerves: Ble who don't know how to do Brandon Sun. ee | This issue is the most challenging | here, for-example, that the med- 2 <n Oe 8 ee latest faced with at the present | fan nerve passes h a tun- | The tooth of 2 mammoth—‘s Seat wstghhees sak tees dese. hp the’ New. Yor: Tints pute nel of fibrous-tiseue on’ itf way. | large prehistoric animal resemb- | dishes: “Frankly, Sam, ag be ote slhcal: deities ek aude becomes: nervous talk te eee Oe se eeeheet, cay oth See tween you and your wife, I am ae hed born; “an At- ing years and compresses the | ces hear yg on _ ete, sondigeet. — Vancouw nomic entity ng -born; ‘ peaeve. '| Geologists, who are studying the Pages oe lantie World is coming into being. Distress from this condition | ‘00th. which is apparently fair-| A truckload of tobaées worth —_¢nainveraaitie— a It is arising out of necessity and not (carpel tunnel syndrome) usu- > a. said it could | $70,000 was hijacked iz Londoa, Oe er Oe ee out of Utopian idealism: It is being ally appears at night, disrupting | (14 "Now this to whet we ceam | Dresumably by “somebody wie &_ Member Audit Bureev of Circvistion. _, ithout it Russian sleep. Numbness, tingling, and~| °” s0 this ae | ot eet oe oe SS PAGE 6 MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962. born “because. w oes Wash. - coer, sepectaliy| ove the | Stinks chien Seale aa oor Gas ae night ee. Schweitzer’s Example _ | em civilize a” Tucker oe’ oon fe se se ens, Sone lets | Temes. eee mee. ab See ; : . a or @ ” 7 ' . petiwelizer s Pn in | this revolution only a minor deal of bursting sensation. Relief ts ob he Wor 14 We are reminded by & tained a first ‘by olacins tbe | The Woman President‘ a yesterday, January Se _ Economie Community, have missed oe ee The death at a great age of. activity she certainly had some birthday ant ’ the vital point of the movement. No one knows why this tunnel | Mrs. Woodrow Wilson brings Dr. Albert Schweitzer. A half century fo becomes an unyielding cylinder | @¢k te mind @ curious twilight | Though Mrs.’ Wilson had to at the of 30, this man for- No one can precisely see how it pressing on the nerve. Every- | 20ne in the United States Con- | put up with malicious gossip . ago, age Of ov, will be carried across the Atlantic thing from bee stings to fractur- | Stitution. With some stretching | somebody was bound to take up gook a promising career as an or- : . es of the wrist has been blam- | of the truth one could say that |.the burden. The Constitution spe- ganist, theologian and philosopher to |. *"4 into ‘other — oe tree od. The cebdition is five tienes | SPE Wisen was the exly wore | cifles what ts te Regpet' SB Bet. wérld, but those w halt _} more common in. women than in | #9 President ie Uni tat- | President dies says nothing become a medical missionary ’ bbles men and often is associated with | - of an incapacitating illness. Rey ; ca. Hav- | @nd harness it by narrow quibbles eteunnnl of the h | What is undoubted is that for | The Presidency is @ sort of serve his fellow ae Afri 4 desti- | and by the assertion of temporary SH ADOW BOXING Goemations deme at night i the last few months’ of Wilson’s | elective monarchy; in modern ing i wll interests are attempting to reverse = — ~ _| sibly because vessels dilate dur- | term of office she played an im- | times the sanction of universal tute of content, and lifeless, he -. : 4 ing sleep and the ensuing con- portant part P _ discharging suffrage has strengthened the fale to affirm life and the will- the tide of history. If they should OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson gestion increases pressure with- | some of the functions of ‘ the | majesty must attend the - struggled ey, | succeed, it is not impossible that the —— - in the carpal tunnel. Symptoms | Presidency, After Wilson was | leader ot algal federation. Se to-live. His monumental concept, | — cet deitsarite ob- Th E of Ms F emy’ can be reproduced flexing Mie some hy Siness ot Pusb- ite holder te lightly to be set, se a free would ; sts @ | lo, Colorado — he- - | asi some perhaps tempor- “reverence for life,” is the ethic of mS © nemy 1 ni backs of -the ake together, | ing to push the Covenant ae ont sane by Ceoauainea or. Ipve ‘widened into universality. | Having implemented his ideal fa. together in rival quarrels and mis- understandings. le It was Churchill, in a wartime speech, who said that nations which exchange goods not only enrich themselves - but exchange ideas as * well, come to know each other, and find their affairs so mixed up to- gether that they cannot afford to quarrel. The new trade movement has already created this miracle in Western E . To turn a blind eye = to its possibilities on this continent would be an. appalling blunder. About Misquotations The Printed Word comments, with a totich of sadness, on the fact that nowadays, when’a politicai{ut- terance is committed to the A new and ominous note in an already dangerous situation is provided by reports that the Chinese Government is making overtures to Pakistan for a com- mon front against India. At first sight such an align- ment would seem highly unlik- ely. Pakistan is a conservative, Islamic State- whose leaders have always looked with aver- ‘sion on Communism. It is a lead- ing member of the Centrai Treaty Organization (the for- mer Baghdad Pact) formed to check Communist infiltration in the Middle East. Despite these ideological dif- ferences; héwever, the two coun- tries do have one thing in com- ~Chinese have infiltrated into some 50,000 square miles of Hi- malayan border territory claim- ed by India, and Indian leaders have been talking lately of us- mon — enmity to India. The. tToronte Globe and On Kashmir, howeyer, Indian Government was movable. India continues to hold most of the disputed Province— including all the more populous and desirable sections—and re- fuses to consider proposals for a plebiscite to determine the wish- es of the predominantly Moslem ‘population. es PAKISTAN BITTER ; The failure to settle the issue by diplomacy or through United Nations intervention has produc- -e@d bitterness and disillusion in Pakistan + a mood which can only be deepened by the Goa in- the tempt for world opinion. In this situation, the Govern- ment of Pakistan might well be tempted by a Chinese offer of support for Pakistan's claims to Kashmir. Geographically, China -and Pakistat form~a giant nut- vasion with its revelatior of a. new Indian arrogance and con. feve their objectives at India’s expense. Having abandoned non - vio- lence for force in its internation- a) relations, the Nehru Govern. ment may Be about to learn some unpleasant lessons in po- wer politics. ; - NEW VENTURE — Peking’s new diplomatic. ven- ture may provide, incidentally, —_ interesting evidence of the tent to whieh Chinese - Rus sian relations have deteriorated. When Mr. Bulganin visited India in 1955, they went out of their way to declare their support of India’s claim to Kashmir.. Since then the Soviet Govern- ment has carefully . cultivated India, while treating Pakistan as an ally of the ‘Western imper- ‘ialists’’ and -a potential enemy, Yet now -we have China ex- | Nikita * Khrushchev |° _and the then Premier Nikolai | hard time getting into a comfor- with fingers pointing down. Some elderly victims obtain relief by wearing wrist splints at night. Others are helped when hydrocortisone injections reduce swelling. But immediate and permanent relief is obtain- ed by cutting the fibrous tunnel reduce pressure. This_is_a -sim- ple operation that is performed under a local anesthetic. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical—topics if stamped, self-addressed enve- lope aécompanies request.) ; SORE ARM ie zW. my right arm just below the shoulder. At night I have a table sleeping position. It is | getting harder and harder to lift this arm and at night it goes to sleep and wakes me up. What could cause this comfort? on REPLY Pain in this area may stem |. writes: Ihave pain in |. League through the United Stat- es Senate by appealing over ihe Senators’ heads to the American people — he was largely incap- 4 Cabinet officers none of whom enjoys anything like so wide ea mandate. This was seen at the acitated from doing thany of | | viding for a deputy but nothing the things a President has to do What part Mrs. Wilson played is still not quite clear. It seemed ated to say (though it has been said) that she ran the White House, made arfpointments, and worked out policy. But in all this necessary ther | | t time of President Eisenhower's illness. There was talk of pro came of it. If a President went raving mad (as once happened | in France) no doubt something would be done about. it. .Mean- while whosoever is best able must take over as best he— oF she—can. ~ ; over the Congo and a tentative fay shows through. Mr. Tshom- and unmade agreements with the ease of an off-again-on-again Finnegan, still finds 75 per cent of the bargain he signed at Kit- ona last month acceptable. He Half An Inch Onward - Christian Science Monitor - * once again the clouds part ; of the eight points’ be adopted, inchiding the Fundattiental Law | and (2)<to-ask for clarification be, who in the past has made | of the point regarding the UN resolution on mercenaries, Apparently, Mr. Tshombe does | not wish to reopen a war with | the UN, and other Katangas | leaders are even readier to talk in ‘his | ; the tape recorder, the radio | ing force to recover the lost ar- | cracker enclosin : a g Northern In- | changing threats of -war with | from bugsitis, tendonitis, h- | has told his Katangan Parilia- | Meee eetng ‘ation, it is aut diffi. | **% and check further eneroach- | dia. and their combined pres- | India and evidently seeking Pak- | ritis, or pressure on a ove by ment that only two of the eight | ‘heir way om toward il ae ments. pri sure — diplomatic or military— | istan as an ally. What has ne- | a muscle or tendon in the shoul- | points are doubtful. Congo unity. : ae | cult for the man who wishes he LONG STANDING oF would_probably be irresistible, | come-of the “monolithic unity” |‘der or a vertebra in the neck. A | In value these two poi‘nts , in the | hadn’t said it to craw! out of his Pakistan, for its part, has « | cabling both countries to ach- | of the Communist camp? thorough examination, including | equal, perhaps surpass, the oth- Maritime Cement present long - standing feud with India X-rays, will be needed to track | er six. One of them affirms the - Com : in life, | campaigning ae a [which began with the partition 7 Cc fid TODAY’S HEALTH HINT | the Congo received its independ- cruelly | , by and staying | of the old Indian Empire in Kenneay $ onriaence .| Be an optimist prepared for | ence. The other provides for im- overnight in the country seat,-it re- | 197, and now centres an the ~ By Joseph MacSween th bos lementing the United Nations : . question of Kashmir. “Te en- 7 je worst. plementing n at remain | calls, there was a chance for the oo aa is my friend” Canadian Press Staff Writer : ” resolution which demands ex- peace- | friendly reporter to go to the speaker is a ‘principle of international |. President Kennedy's stand, on ; the Senate and the House is it- OUR YESTERDAYS Scien” mercenaria = fre are | the next morning, when both were politics which sometimes trans- | civil rights and education legis- | self-deceptive since many Dem- From the Guardian Files It is possible to explain the needs to be restated and reaffirmed | onqj the: ' ng to the annals of the local | ‘ils coiuma te open to the disiussen | S4%ed as one of the worst “| Seats ae a ie An every age, but never more urgent- | family, read what had been written | Mcrwrnie ot guatioat wo | Blows tn his first yearef otice. | The Ag@ Old Story | town, where organization into | 4 but um the matter of mercen- ™ ) al Guardian does not neces | The items had been signific- 3 : aries Mr. Tshombe could expect J. D. REDFERN ly than at this time. Edwin Markham : down, looked down over his glasses sarily endorse the opinion of corre | antly missing from Kennedy's Be sober, be vigilant, Be Law Students Society was de little support outside Katanga : -attempted to do'this some years ago,.|’ 9+ the ter, and said, “Y, to odhing and’ tendearetion where | ist of goals as they gradually | cause your adversary the devil, = upon. The following is the.| and business circles with inter- |_ The appointment 6f J. ree of whih-have igatncbees OUNE | necessary, The Guardian ts weable to | Decame Known before the | asa roaring lion, walketh about | executive: President, Frederick | ests there. The UN resolution on | Redfern as“ Sales Manager ina y lines of verse mre | man, if I were you I would give up | enter into any correspondence regard | Thursday speech although the _gecking ‘wheen be-may devour, | A. Lares: vice - president, J. | this is clear as to import, if not | the Maritime Cement Compe haunted us since we first read them, | grinkin Certainly don’t ;| 3 1960 Democratic platform had : /| Pius Callaghan; secretary-trea-} detail, Limited has been announced, into which Schwel we g- : you want : pledged action to force a start INHABITANTS FLEE urer, Arthur McGuigan: | Op the hopeful side there are | Mr. Redfern replaces Mr. G, and ’ 5 tzer, imagine, to print that, it’s wrong.” THE BLACK WATCH ~. | % ation in every U.S, | .BELGRADE (AP) — Only 200 | council Messrs Trainor,. Mac | the recommendations of a Kata. | 00d who has been transf would warmly subscribe: Weremniiale-tor both Sir John ated SirThe Black Watch of school district by 196%, “~*~ | of the 4,000 inhabitants of Ma- | Leod, O'Donnell, and Bentley. | ngan parliamentary commis- | Wiaaimg. This appointment ‘He drew. a circle that shut me oul 4... we fee Lead Liberal Canada on the 8th, 9th and 10th | RISKS PRESTIGE ae oe ene po FB sy Bed sass ‘enki aie sion (1) that seven — not six ' ¥** lective Canuary % 962. - Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout, nt paper | June 1962 bePcelebrating | The religious implications of | following-&-series of destructive (Jan. 15, 1952) Und Love “~ I ty Og ey > — had not deigned to cover the meeting. = Feed . one ot * = . a sed ite eens carthquekes: ‘The ——. ~ Risieiatsties ond Training + drew circle. : : egimen : ong th ca as far ; officers with P.E.I. J ‘ 5 Canada. On those dates there | sh domestic i in s é “dealt the circle could be brondened | EDITORIAL NOTES - __ | ities number of ncton in| US""and Kenney u'taeng | Riv Pere micteag sotto | kena bere Soiay to melds all men of Sood | General Willam F. McKee, head | Mtetwa soe vat eter | ices pagsst hom % | Soah te gh deal FH | dal nd sdntatin cde | } L the U.S. air force logistics com- | Majesty Queen Elizabeth, the November voters: will elect | diminishing violence were rec- ee ‘MacDon- “peace on earth” to which our.| mand, has hit the news of late by re- | Queeti Mother, who. is the Col- W new House of Representatives, orded during the night. Only one for his new post. Capt. Mac . : , ald isa native of Toronto and as thoughts were directed so_| fusing to comment on the internation- SF ee re an etge ot 258 te nmocrats | death has been reported. _| was commissioned overseas. : , present new Colours to | with an edge of 258 ' i ae : recently and so reverently, in the | al crises America is facing. “That’s the two active and one reserve | third fhe seals in the. Senate, I picbuhra’ ine oaieee P.O. Irvin Platts has been a Grape! teadings and Joyous carols? | the job for the President,” he said. | Hers wil ie 6 Trechen ae ind | Minority of Of te 3 wine vo |-amount of sugar in the bl00d, 8 | sromoted to the rank of Petty ¢ aa at “Generals and admirals going around | Colour of the active Bat- i ae UP | caused by the body failing te : ee . he, See emis naar | cee | OF REFINANCE? rae a the country talking about Berlin and | (lions. There, will also be | a te ose ney | pc ___|() on HMCS Queen _Chartotte. sete ‘< are at southeast Asia usually do little but | events. aaa clea A Sane vars that President Kennedy. won't | confuse .” If all the brass hats We are most anxious to get.as og r ye : his program of tariff-changes | could ee tar bas r this way, it | Complete fist ax possthte of ail - Eastern Trust has ample funds h Congress for the purpose of | would help a lot. Te | panes the ile Wenn et co a Sa al oe enlarged world trade in | “8 © | | Redan order that _ available for First Mortgage Loans with the European Common Polio vaccine that can be taken | ‘rangements for the yi Ba asf : Be caneeys movement. The protests have | by mouth is a powerful weapon for | Sm send tickets to: © QSSEVE WeyEREsT Bees accurate, . Also recalled is an anecdote of a long time ago, when Sir John A. St. Thomas, Ontario, The reporter | for the local Conservative paper went to him the-next morning and asked. him if his, the reporter's, notes were - Conservative policy. Sir John, ac- sober, to learn if-the quotation was . Macdonald addressed a meeting in. cends ideological differences. lation indicates\ confidence—or just plain courage—in a United States congressional e1 ection year. Kennedy, delivering his State of the Union message Thursday, surprised many legislators by calling vigorously for multi-bil- lion-dollar federal- aid to public schools and for civil rights leg- islation. : “ Many had developed the idea that Kennedy would soft-pedal these issues this year after of Congress. Kennedy's failure on the education bill was re tl ocrats, particuarly -from- the south, are indistinguishable from Republicans on domestic issues, especially: civil rights. Against all this, Kennedy un- doubtedy would have ¢ disap- pointed his most ardent Liberal -followers had he adopted the go- slow civil rights policies prac- tised by former President Eisenhower. P af It is also thought Kennedy may have feared that a back- down would have been regarded 3 crusading" as a@ betrayal of his promises of a year ago. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO _ (Jan, 15, 1937) Unofficial support to the pro- posed Wood: Island — Caribou ferry was given at the annual meeting of the Charlottetown Board of Trade, last night. It has been tentatively suggested that the boat be financed by privaye business capital, and an opportuiity for lecal busi- ness men ‘to show. their faith in the province: “A meeting of the Students-at- Law, todk ‘place in the Law ES*MOT wi 58 cf re move to question the Funda- mental Law. This put the Congo er a strong central govern- ment pro . It was assumed a federal‘nation could emerge as leaders found their way to agréement. But the uses tne first Premier, the murdered s hea Bae: 4 rs , Ai 5 PRINCE EDWARD -& ay te of ‘ce Ries, timires MANAGER wssessseee, pte pate