: on ; : ; e ¢ “it . et gael : . ’ *y ‘ r ‘ ~ ~~ . ° s vs e i a 3 oe é ’ é 5 : s dq‘ * 5 with the volume of traffic—tut they - — et " Li E oe i are high. Outbreaks | Facing Grave Dilemma - To those who study the causes of |: ee By- Arch MacKenzie ¢ traffic accidents the phrase “inatten- Of TB » Canadian Press Staft, Washington tive driving” becomes so familiar that - ’ WASHINGTON (CP) — Amer- | power to stop northern supply it acquires a meaning not suggested a analysis of ae than a — a picture ye my bomb eee te Seon we nis ie by its innocent sound. Holidays seem Rented epidemics of tabeceet- come Setiot = _ tary aides. fe = : . 7 countries, it was se civilian 5. | Ori . bonibing often to increase the number of: inatten thet the outhreaks had ceria |arenft aed eee ‘in February, last tive drivers who stray momentarily circumstances in common. In| This is one result of the dis- | year,.it was justified oe Toronte 425 ols age over the-centre line or fail to notice - a place, a large number | patches by Harrison Salisbury | as punishment to be stopped Montes! 640 Cathcart Street Un | a car stopping ahead or a pedestrian | | | tacked immunity eines te: | Heath bob ewtary’ tb ten'l Cred tim pease ' Western Office 1030 West Georsle | stepping off a sidewalk. With its. Bative); secondly, the dissemin- | North. These have confirmed | Militarily, it would halt the ' Member Canadian Daily Newapaper Publier holiday atmosphere and heavy traffic, ee ia large a —_— aaa vious ~ a ee he = Pees ie a Guuled to the we tor wove | centennial Year promises to make | The concentration of germs | Ble from French, British, -Japa- | that has had to be drastically Ieation’ ef all mews dispatches in this paper |. the price of distraction on the high- spqwed into the air depends not | Rese and other journalists revised as it became evident @edited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters upon the. number But, while there has been the | that infiltration has risen stead- Ged sh the lacs!’ rem publuhed herein: aN. | WAY the dearest ever. arte in but upon the fiu- | inevitable revival of eriticism | fy right of republication of special dispatches here It’s something that can be avoid- idity of the discharge and the | from abroad for the bombings | NORTH in oe ‘Subscription rate: ed. But only at the cost of keeping wency and forcefulness of | and- fresh charges that Presi-| The Times dispatches indicate over 45¢ per week by carrier. coughing. Of equal importance is | dent Johnson and his officials | undiminished by dahoa'e s te gd og rural routes and the need for doing so in mind at whether the infected individual | ate less than ape wee 2 what | the North to gp on RNS SO serviced «8 '. , $16.00 « yeor off inlend and UX. $20.00 per | 21! times. eee St, PAGE Shes _ ove) SS oclbane: Ubeaett Lecseety & te oe bavieg SAU yoor in U-S..and elsewhere outside Britleh Com - Three that the U.S, intends to stop the | ican assaults on the North on a Honwetth Spuds And Rocks cette care a aston ab | eats nuclear seale telesales: Like Prince-Edward Island, the adults, rather. than youngsters | | The ‘opposite may be true, be-| | So far. the US. has lost mate . — were responsible. Teachers cause the president may think | than $1,000,000,000 worth of air- Eaten, «aiflemor ces oF oad State of Maine is famous for its Sir aan: tae son Sa eaaaee he hee ab alber chain, oe ee Se ed than the weakest in potatoes. Unlike this province, it is ies have been traced to a bus | Both Hanoi andthe port of | Sum compared with the cost PAGE 4 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1906. | also famous for its rocks. The rocks ‘driver, custodian, or “cook. Old- | Haiphong should be wiped out, | this third-largest war ix U.S ——— — er children and adolescents with | says Sout Carolina’s Mendel | history but one that has risen - Th Th ‘ h Id are great for scenery, as noted in the chronic pulmonary tuberculosis | Rivers, chairmai ‘of the armed | progressively more weary: -On The Thresho “current issue of a farm publication are responsible ‘occasionally. | Bervices-committee of the House | | The North's defences ave Po tek : of Representatives. been strengthened materially . This. New Year’s Eve promises | of the Federal Reserve Board of eee tae ce ee Tae and by experience and both the to be oné we'll be able to boast about | Boston which acclaims them in these tsberesieals win’ achat poor | Uhr nt cia ve ae ae ae bee Here one we'll b e t al age ef af toe 8 per- | ,U.S. planes should “flatten | developed pilot shortages, ' t© our grandchildren. Celebrations | terms: “Rocks ~-good stout New 7; ied eee ee ae, Hanol if necessary and .. . let | The limited alternatives re- will start early, and: will be nation- | England stones—universally acknow- player. It was believed that the | wert, cpinion go fly a kite,” | main up to Johnson. wide in scope, At Ottawa af 7,p.m., | ledged our soil’s crowning productive. } | disease spread rapidly: because Congts Senator Russell Long.| EXPECTS TO LOOK BACK : - thousands are expected to crowd | achievement, capable of spontaneous ’4, nee neat exhale a another militant Democrat ‘trom | enxonton (CP) — Mrs: Patliament Hill for the lighting of | Seneration ... appearing each spring os 7 with greater force. The alr com | timed "ines igene ‘thy ‘tee | A. E- Fablman ts organizing a the national Contennlal Flame and | Siger and heavier in fields ee WINTER'S RULE SETS IN singh ait gncemtclg ot | orth Vctames) leaves'us 20 | "C0 ‘Sa aye pound the half-hour ceremony accompany. | ‘lean the fall before . . .” . rr: teldemics. deveinp a Comerunists un. | Province should look ahead te =~ ing it. A giant scree meiban erect- Unfortunately, while fine in their | INTO THE PAST ae tae ee time, It is amt aut. | tl vse fait thelr aggression. | When the historical J ed to permit the of Queen | Place, rocks can be troublesdme to f———————- cult fa pinpoint the source if all | The presides, as the man | SL 294 0% isan teaches farmers at to-digging time. The ‘ I --—-— economics at an Edmon- Bilabeth delivering, her Contennal | ‘mcr fone seat dsinguisn | > Modern Quest For Abrahams World | ts serzaa ant cet | ae, "are ete “he | Sa stam? “Canada. The Prime Minister ‘will | # Stone from a potato and digs up ee re ae : Seeetcene eg eae |e emmaieer. Sotas08 ac ery ep PRACTIO broadcast his message to’the.nation. | both with equal diligence. Machinery PRB ae ny as dete Fr watered: Leay. | sons: one Ishmael, the first Re- | should wot deture to schoa! ustil |" The New: Yurt ‘Times. reports | Historieal: récords of the tay - Mixed choirs will sing “@-Canada.”™ specialists at the University of Maine | is the fou living expression of | back to Bethe! ieeders, Bayt, po peg edhe Bee Be io oe pees nae St nie a i ns ee . ae o. Here in Charlottetown, as the Cradle | %@ now seeking to cope with this eee era ee Ne woe. of his wife Sarai, then 90. God sus be Wied hem tikes A ig ‘of Confederation, we're puttin ing on “problem,-and their efforts get a -well- | At til. tone tor insta kent and. = Seem changed Abram’s name to Ab- | having nq symptoms can return . 4 grand show of our own, with Her’ | deserved boost from the Christian | Baghdad has rumbled away to | numercu. | epee tae a Wa te de) tesa caarvaaen eh se: ill Majesty's representative fighting the | Science Monitor. pe = lg Ry On 5 solitary hilltop in the | became the father of many na- | ceive isoniazid or PAS for at Centennial Flame on Confederation | Wisely, the specialists are not at- | desert silness. A nesting sock | Grits wregmscieit, felt cer | tons. Saral's name, wat allered | least a year. Square, and Mayor Cox receiving it | tempting to teach the digger to tell | clatters its beak. A donkey T had at any point along his After Sarah died, Abraham oe eon at Victoria Park to. start the biggest | the stones from the tubers, Too dif- | poet's sheer dar anwera. | alt” for the first time in hls le pur-.| easé the same as bone cancer? bonfire we've had for a tong time. | ficult at present. Nor would they | “The voices of the Mesopota | ARAB HOSPITALITY chased a piece of property—the REPLY mS : mian night have not changed There was another moment | *2¥¢ % Machpelah at Hebron No; Paget’s disease (osteitis But, the fireworks will be just | Wholly eliminate stones which do | since Ur began, more than 5,000 | when the past blended magically | (Present-day Al Khalil)— as & | setormans) is aehronle disor- a prelude to the impressiv event ‘their part to check runcff. What they | years ago,” sees Beste Wee etme. An Areb bay Ther te. Aah wat ot ratage peg nege se yr which Will take place at the Confed. | .*7¢ doing is to test a plan to dig up | Gomt ‘Geographic, in a Decem |Machaish and-« companion as | “tit., The#-iaae and Rebekah, | Torrey the skull’ Now and then eration Centre tomorrow, when and windrow the rocks, placing themn “ber*-articlé entitled, “Abraham, | they came down from the hill, tes cae ome Mr. Mie | bone, such as the thigh, opportunity of participating in a at Ur. Mr. Macleish. to act out the tradition of | p, Lg ng Foggia Med skull and several of the long Service at which we What future research may do for | and phot Dean. Conger natch Abeom _sisd ee na -- the eam | bones are affected. should all be present in spirit, and | the Maine potato grower ind his Sorlags of the Semitic hentoe wens: ern, this claim cannot be e 0 3 ie ie. Yan Deled cheda te = which should give rock problem The Monitor doesn’t at- called ‘A ied “to bel When Abram was old and fa- | firmed, but neither-need. it be | addressed to: Dr. Theodore ot ee et tempt to predict. But it ‘notes that a and forever | YoFed by God, be fathered two | doubted.” : Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- abiding sense—not only of our com- : A os heolioe T whe, Chicago, illinois.) mon heritage as Canadians—but of | ‘actor has recently been d at | roamed 3,700 years“ago with bets a the blessings we have enjoyed and | the University of Reading, England, | clan up the sun-ridden valley Down In Paradise the opportunity that is ours of | With @ compu “brain” thet | Seweens 2 aoe ae ! : hie. 2 building,. in faith and vision, stil! | Makes it.possible for.a farmer to’ Judean Nghia Sx To understand the election of | change and increasing problems mote firmly on the foundations laid | Program(his plowing and then take | Tete i eee a cught tani | Rotald Reagan as governor of | the people of California fled rea- rt) by our forebears a century ago. off for town. If this is possible, it | doom tale tas he er ad Smet tats of tat shots an lity. Instead, they indulged ina | es Baad cig : 3 hae sp sald that in a land ag | MeBeats, potato digger ores | ae cee ee ae | 5 Gus Seana No. 33491"! — Best of luck ln the year ahead! vast and relatively sparcely populat- enough to tell rocks from spuds is~ “In his wanderings across. Tice oe on, move there: from the | ©@mpalgned om the basis of be-}-—-—-~ - “ concent n ili lhtieicantiesl ed as Canada, and with regional and | rely. in the offing. r ancient rd” Mr, ‘MaeLelih | Okie migrations of the ‘30s to rbd caenicdisse es od i Macl & Son El i cultural rivalries to boot, ts not | Insurance Galore en. na and i the present the state has evar. | | Brows. whe campaigned °2 24 Hour Service ean ectric ‘ easy evelop a sense of national ae : idea: the idea of a ‘|, California has gi the | emphasize the very 4-6 : : purpose and objective. A national | , T wsed to be thought that the Got... | first auto - dominated city, Los | People held against’ him; d DIAL 561 | Kent st. Charlottetown *. flag will not achieve this: neither wil)-.| advent of social welfare schemes "Half-of the world now ‘eher- | Angeles; and even within. the | reminded them that they were fo nae: ' “ e this; neither wil} ishes that coneept: “old and settled” city of San | human, that they —— =e the spirit of our people, inspired and | °O™Panies. Happily this was not the cornet © et era aa But mae guided by imaginative leadership, | “S%6- Tndest, the age Life In- | sien of the old e's dream” hoy Ss mais et ‘thinking, esnbab Surely the whole purpose of our | Surface Association, a year-end ‘Abram and his trav- | Californians are strongly moti- | is no need for government Centennial Year is to spur us te |. Statement, predicts that Canadians— Sot bee deka ae vated. to escape — from the cold | led by an innocent, already the most heavily insured | “®t beet domesticated. The vil | blasts of the Midwest or the | mians can look forward greater effort in this direction. lages they visited in the “problems of the South, or lack | nities of joy, while In his New Year’s message which people in the world—will buy another | doubtless looked similar te ‘of opportunity, or whatever. America,-<in_ the os we rivilesed $11,000 million worth ofvlife insur- of today: thick-walled mud Thus, when an election came | (East of Eden) must continue to re privileged to publish yester- : ses, almost windowless, up during a time of rapid social * struggle and sweat. day, His Honour Lieutenant-Governor | ce 1” 1967. This would be $700 mil- | ing into an enclosed court and rf MacDonald lion more than they bought in 1966. ae See noe At the same time, benefit payments || ¥ during th ' in the new year will probably exceed | way. Ten a a ae ban bigee 3 $1,000 million for the first time When Abram passed and you the province will , : Mesopota’ be encouraged to participate as much As has been the pattern in prev- | walled city of Babylon was ; ‘ious years, states President A. T. = possible. It is important indeed | [us Yous d lent, B that they should do so. His Honour will Sean, . os ens ; not exit ul 200 years ago. and also suggested, as an ideal way of bres Acapellas pope © | perthan tbee = ericans deny that they ed éelebrating our national birthday, a | £'™ Of dividends on policies, ma- | {ow mounds an madirick fem | ing the species any harm. next couple of Canines “greater concentration, in both a tured endowments, disability pay- | dations evoke no picture of the | Canada is interested because | scientific data o m the and if oft Hi The Bear Facts r Torente Daily Siar Canada has found itself caught | the Soviet Union, the U.S., Nor. “ : eed Gut Se ; | see 8 : f a E fs : 8 : | § 3 E z : public and private way by all_our | Ments: cash valuesyhealth insurance dae Be enna a te ee Seer teats ~~ Lae an totarenine ttt wil i e010; . citizens, on eliminating poverty ‘and payments and annuity payments. Of | es have been found tienes ‘ine | yond our own territorial limits eee — — its accompanying evil social conse- | the total. it is estimated that death | cluding 2,000 clay iablets in| and within range of the guns of | national SSpecsista® sony for quences. Here is a problem that is peor ay —_ * “FEELING OF ANTIQUITY" inant the animals trom te ate r as | the blue whale of the Asie. et = 4a on. The trend towa Armed with the kn ; three miles to If the survey shows e right at our doors, and of deep con- . ee ian phony "| dence that trigger- happy bunt cern to our national welfare. In what | iCTe@se-group insurance coverage is | the documeste sey sakes it the documents needed {o little is known about the | ¢ endangering the species better way, indeed, could we prepare | **Pectedto.continue in 1967, ~ | eros x ill «dozen ee eee morn shel Sh | 8 “inernationa ae ; as ontiers, Mr MacLeish contit- |enone of the five tries claim-*| agreement. should - for tomorrow's solemn service of EDITORIAL NOTES ued to seek out place sonia ing haa Te Sotien feast signed. thanksgiving than by giving thought to this challenge? ed with Abr mong | ; - - former Premier Shaw remind- Haran, sill existing as a oe = : ‘ G A TN. i vi \ The D z ed former Premien Lesage on one | tpn ene nf ait; tase t | Gowernor-General’s Pension e Dearest Ever? Hes a eee ae bilingual- ies Damascus, Syria's capital, | Ottawa Journal | _ has may good, but trilingualism st continyously - tmhabit- It is not only the New -Year’s would be better. Atid so, to all our ed_city in the wold Not one Canadian in a thous- ;pension on his retirement ; “For all its. t would that only rich | which we hope is far off. a weekend that Canadian traffic author- | readers: Bliadhna Mhath Ur! Bonne | and clsimoreny frefiie: oe ~ ! on ssful Governors- General ities face with some concern. The of antiquity"erVades this . | of. Governor-General. are in the pattern of the last Ottawa Journal cites, in this con- | Yeart Sn” A Happy New | ling, sipe- climbing ety of tll] ‘But unless provision te made. three Alexander, Mastey and. ection, the prediction ofa Gan |" lw ww Y fects x mana” ecaies | siete ees in | shat the coum Maser flew su adian Good Roads Association of-| - Schoolchildren in the London | Mocteth et: srucures," ie | Goverment mien Hal wil be Rorih Pole and have perform ficial to the effect that the celebra- borough of Newham can borrow Abram Sues Jerusalem as — of the very well | ed their duties, including long | tion of Canada’s Centennial will gen- | small pets from the 4 Uru Salem, then a little walled.| — pistin and arduous tours, with zest. ‘ : : - i wished soldiers, diplo- etate “more road traffic than any | Edwards Museum The | tiles i Toes = three ca his sou: | anal, businessmen; doctors and. | This calls for energy. tere Other event—or 12-month period—in establish . m has The a ough Canaan. professor are among those to Canadian history.” - the From atte system of “learn- |- passed through the ind “sau | be coudered fr 2 rt ' & from life” to supplement natural | the place of Sichem ( h ae oe how many of them q estim ; . hem), os ated-that“85 per cent | history and biology lessons. The cur- | Umt0 the slain Of Mare an must ae “it the offer oa of Canadians and visitors will do | rent lending li ; would have pitched his ¢ ; g list, which is to be ex- | the Pitched his tent in their centennial travelling by car. | panded, already includes hedgehogs, | his atte "= _ — & 5 : 4 . : ' ing?" ~ off than # a : . Trips oe to the aon will | toads, shrews, mice, guinea-pigs, rab- Scenes te So barat wild: | ‘Think of étent Governors- | haps in he cxlgeed, i, an estimated 2.5 billion’ | ‘bits, fish, tortoise and terrapins—all. | by Jordan and Israel, perheps a ws 1 cicaats sae Tee least we can Go ia atnare and the total of miles travelled bred. at the museum. They are lent in Sbechem (modern Nabulus), ties 3 Vincent leaner that when Governor. General w reach 70 billion, ‘almost double | out to children for not more than a | Abram found wher tan scrtae | who had the-private means. . | Coming t) his career aed tndnes 37 billion of a decade ago. Be- few days at a time, after the museum His revelation was the concept Probably they did not need | ative of the ‘country’s apprecia- , ; a of “ me 6,000 “but ould pause there are more’and better roads | has been satisfied that the animals soliesent pehwone Get One bs guess that Ge Vanier “who had ie 3. the chances of being involved in an | will have adequate space and be look- In Egypt, where Abram went | small Chance to make his fo r- SHOWS AT EXPO tecident have not necessarily doubled | ed-after pro te escape drought, he probably | tune as a soldier and diplomat, | There are 672 properly, i : t } lived ia Tanis—- an area siill would live more easily with a events at Expo 67. PEL: Canada Packers Ltd. Summnaiede t : ‘ ae a es 0 e < ew : - « . a : - ‘ ° 2 ss : ¥ . arent. + — arene tet oo tates . n ant amet - i a ee 2 titi ial aerate ce i eae i tr ee i EOE ge ete eS c.f se i ae a we ~~ aes enti as —_ |