al" Department. 0 . . 0 been a most suooesb mweir in all the activities of the ),)ejjar-taunt of Health". stated lloo.. l;.,-L. Bonnell. M.D., Minister 01' gaalth. in a recent interview. 2 ' programme uppermost in the public mind during the early ng of the year was tbepadminis-, t; ion of Salk Vaccine Idlinsti. nuteiitla lnlections for Prom- up;-against the-cripplliil effects otthls diseasetat regional clinics ma throughout the province be- ginning in March 1965. A total of almost 6.000 children received vac- cine, and it is lrlllfylnl 00 Ml! that none of the cases of polio- mynlltta reported this year occurr- eai among those children. Plans are already being made to extend this vaccination programme to a much larger group of children as more vaccine becomes available. next spring. or great importance also has been the further development of our Mental Health Services. Dur- ing the year the staff of psychia- trists working under the direction of this division was increased to four. one of those having , ' ' lion. M. . Donnell M. l). ”.,mng in child psychtu,-y, This tlon of the Active Treatment Cen- additional staff has allowed an im- in 901' Pillenls Wml mmm d”' proved consultation and out-pati- Orders l! 8lm0!l Cvmlllelvedv ind out treatment service to be given steps 8"? belng liken W lgovldg to patients referred to the Men- the "ecessary "um"? "3 "'1 tal Health Clinic in Charlottetown, equipment for this modern howli- as well as the setting up of a - clinic one day each week at the DENTAL HEI-'57" Public Health Centre in Summer- The Division of Dental Public side serving patients from the west- Health has continued to expand its ern part of the province. Construc- services both in the educational school children and children of ,rtl?.eporie'd In City and fHeallh and preventive fields. Almost a thousand children in Grades I and ii in rural areas received dental treatmenb through this Division dur- ing the year. In addition, applica- tion of sodium fluoride for the pre- rdntion of tooth decay were pro- vided to a large number of pre- school age who had completed all necessary treatment. either through the facilities of the Division or Garough their private dentist. In the spring of 1955 a section of the Provincial Sanatorium was in - on under the administration of the Dept. of Health as an Orthopedic Centre. This has provided approxi- Hillel)! l-lllfly beds for the treat- Rogers also a short musical pro- gram Hearts Hall Jim 4311 C P-31- sponsored by The Kings Daughters. New series begins 2'3'3";3'L:-Qyghg AJl.e:'"l:& A token of love and remembrance. Thursl;iag6u.'Ian. 5. 33956 at we p; m. ( PIP" "9 ' 9 His loss a lifetime regret. gltlieiilelsll l-5'3 lg1:1l:h”ci;"g:- A: remembered by wife. lar- ther information. Child and Ma- ternal Health Division. Depart- ment of Health. ment of patients suffering from the crippling effects of pollomyeliiia as well as for patients under treat- ment for tuberculosis of the bones and loiuts. Extensive renovations of the space on the ground floor of this area have been almost com- pleted. and this will provide great. ly improved facilities for the treat- ment of out-patients. commiaslon finds three Russian spy rings operating in Australia. And friends from day to day; is-Government of Argentine dlc- put the memory or , 4", .u, tator Juan Peron falls. 23--Mair wtu never fade away. Gen..Eduando Lonandie, 59, be comes Argentina's Provisional Pl'9l' IN" Em" ldeni. 24 - President Eisenhower and grandchildren Bernard and suffers helart attack. 25 - Peron Ellen. Comparable expansion and im- provement in services have taken Control, Laborltories. al Statistics and in the Child and Maternal Health Programme. It may be truly stated that the played a most important role in safeguardi g the health of our peo- ple during the year. Highways Depl. . Entering 1956 With Extensive Plans "1955 has been a most success- ful year in the Department of High- ways", states the Hon. George Mac- Kay, Minister of Highways for the Province. Our Road building pro- gram, which consists of widening, raising and generally improving ax- istlng roads, went forward in all Districts so well that we have equalled the progress made in 1954, a record year up to that time. '"In all. 249 miles were complete- ly subgraded and 36 miles were heavily ditched. "Fills on the above program re- quired lhe placing of nearly half a million cubic yards of earth by means of tractor-scraper units. "In preparation for next year. over 50 miles of road were clear- ed of trees. . "Standard Hot Asphalt Pavement was laid on 27 miles of road, while is miles were paved with Light Pavement. 2.3 miles were paved in Concrete. This makes a total of i5.3 miles paved in 1955. the large- at paving program in many years. a. lion. George Maciiay in addition. 85 miles of old pave- er Bridge. but piling penetrated to program of roadbulldiug. we would ments were resurfaced with stone a greater depth than anticipated humbly ask for their continued icon- and, as a result. the job was sus- sideration and co-operation. The in- pende to permit the design to be convenience is temporary, but the MHDGE3 5”” CAUSEWAYS rechc ed in the light of the new improvement, to a very great ex-l "'1' (Zbi - i t.lti tdtht ,i . .. ., here were rdges recon requ remen s s expec e a tentl wsupgrmzmintakc this opmdu-jsell Israel a significant quantity doumedly Wm hem. me in person chips and asphalt. siructed during the year. and the work will be completed in the rauseways were built at Vernon Spring. River. Black Pond and Bracklcy. have a paved road from Charlotte- town to Borden by way of Bon- show. "On the eastern section. about 15 miles of grading and 25 miles of pavement remain to be done. but it is expected this work will be done in 1956. ”Snow clearing in the early mon- ths of 1955 was confined largely to the northern half of Prince Coun- ty while the remainder of the Pro- vince enjoyed a comparatively open Winter. During the last half of the year. however. snow has been heavy throughout tthe Province and gives every indication of being what is generally described as an "old fashioned" Winter. "A great deal of trouble and in- convenience is caused to people living along routes where highways are being widened and standarlz- ed. I would like to thank the people of this Province for their patience and consideration during the past construction season. and as we enter 1956 with a very extensive leaves Argentina for exile in Para- -- Iguay. Z6-Alfred Tate and Doug- place in the Division of Cancerl 135 Cmllk Ol T0F0lll0 Dilly 51!? ley who posed away Jan. 1. H54. pubucllust on hurricane-hunter plane With Gone is the face we loved so dear Health Nurslg, Tuberculosis Con-Eseven crew off CiIbl- ?7-EEYW 30 5116!" ll ihe Voice we loved 10 trol, Venereal Disease Control, vat..exchanse cotton for arms from he-r Department of Public -Health has, tzlcbaic North African question. in London. l6- Floods Merit on Dr. Albert Schweitzer. 21-Queen unveils London statue of George VI. 23-South Viet Nam ends 23-year rule of Ban Dal. names Premier Ngo Dinh Diem head of state; Saarlanders vote against Western European Union control. 25-President Eisenhower walks for first time since heart at- tack.26-Special British cuts government spending, in- creases sales and dividend taxes. May 27-Nobel literature prize awarded ' ' ' Iceland novelist l-lalldor Laxmrss; YISI5 gig Four foreign ministers open f . 28 -- hti , ..3I2f.Zf ".i22.3iE"”c......z'Jin?5: the New sinner who was even commercm newsprint made in a Stalin peace prize in 1952. was New Zealand. 31-Princess Mar- quilted Mlmd" ” ”;V,"'3 l" w".', 38,91 announces she Wm not visit the Soviet Union very soon. marry Townsend. Tl” Central ; wsnaartuuwma. ANNIVIHHY Gig.gey's Pharmacy. 09- I a.m. cert. January zs..x. pa-has d to pan. Wales Auditorium. nveinnatowte as tans m.aNoonn.l., mus mustbepaklishlbebecsm-dialwblervin soulsa bet-slat. dlnnon lbecialialsg chiasss TRAVILDGUI by Mrs. Keith I. ll MEMOIIIAH m-mm :.-..:-'.':: .:::. l.i':'.'..: vv 0 - 2 ary 2,195. Of one we win never forgat;' lils memory to u. I. . u-guurs. .....g..,(gggg in having memory" of our dur lather. Elisha Doyle, Savage liar- bgli who passed away January 3. relations. 14 - Royal 1-5. ,n,,,.",, my chm” 3.... year to year Lovingly remembred by his dan- son-in-law. Frances In loving memory of Betty Cur- Czcchoslovakia. 29 -- Eisenhower Too far away for sight or speech trcsumcs signing documents.30- But not to llll for memory to French delegates walk out of UN Mach wlwn General Assembly votes to sweet to remember her who once was here And though absent in just so dear Sadly missed by mother and dad Emma and Louis. October , i-- Moroccan tribes revolt. sultan flies tum exile. 3-Liquor rationing ends In Sweden after 36 years. 4- llrooklyn Dodgers win world ser- ies four names to three over New zork Ytmkt-cs: Tamplco. Mexico. arri int hv floods. il-Mass return of Gm'm.'sn war prisoners from Dlonnes R l . ...”.?'S.-.I."..”J'l?...l&E'Zli.f32fmclii NORTH BAY. on m-A-o1d- and ,3 helm, 55 minutes. 13 g fashioned family talk around the Group Capt Peter Townsend vialts gllnng, table l'?5(.blrl0”lEihl P9”-i9 l” pl . n.1,-.;.t my 1 e tonnes o a an er. r Megs 1”' Ne w e on ea" Three of the four surviving quin- tuplets sat down uuh their parents to talk over a squabble aired for the last four days Ill public. After their talk the parents and the quints said in a statement their differences were lhc result of a misunderstanding Wlllcli now ”has been ironed out." The statement added: "Every- in north- east U.S. leave 42 dead. 19 - Queen confers Order of ciliation. " budget MOSCOW (AP)-Paul Robeson, controversial singer has been denied a passport by the U. 5. state department to travel abroad. But Ogonyek, a weekly November ascras:.ne.Ibopslo as visit body feels happy about the recon- nlty of wishing the people of thist "Progress on Trans-Canada High- Province a happy and prosperous western "Work was begun on West l'tlv- way has been good. and we now New Year." vering arms to Egypt. 7-U.S. will of arms. 8-Russia's Molotov at tforeign ministers' parley scorns proposals for German unity. it-south Africa leaves U! u 5 Diary Of World nls During 1955 By THE CANADIAN PRESS January I zgpanaml Prendem Jose Amihlextcn: 300 killed. 5-Sir Winston tnnlo Ramon. G6. assassinated.'Ch"”h'"'30-.”5l5"5 "5 ZOTCMMSE Communists capture Prime Minlsier.6-Sir Anthonyl 200. (lead, 100 missing.3--lioly . . g:Eden takes over prime minister- gylvg 1., m3 beau K R J3 I British spcedboat pacer Donald I-lsg:"(':'a:'::n d.2:mN?c5:::::'aiship. 7-Harold Macmillan NCWldi-Brllltigh -doc; W0,-133,-5 :3 Campbell sets world record 216 week strike. 5-Antonio Scgni suc-ll" ”-l'-- "1 N9V1'd8- agree 10 um"! mm In" rebellriilsh foreign secretary. 12-Salkl (b k. ' I tanti-polio vaccine declared to bed :.':se:f:":es”:3: gagfdggt Rgtleffecllve, in report from Michigan senhower power to defend For- Unilzmmyi m1TE'"sMn' 78' dies mp” "Id offshore mmdl: Ruuh at rlnceton. .J. 19-British bud- mds te or W" WM Gemmm get reduces income tax to lowest 30-NA 0 estimates Russia and1 In 15 yeusim-smke of gamma: have agooomo undertmalntenance .men which halted arms.” gg Commonwealth pmnelnewspapersl-since March 25 ends ministers open London conference. at L0"d”"' England" u - Mr" February '”P”"c955 M"ll"'9l l"'lV93 ll'i-less attempts suicide in Berlin 80W- 7-3 - Arlenllne Hblnel T9" study racial conflict. signs. Peron Week holiday train wrecked in jet; u-uh Into h1113jde'e13mpi1ogstPresident Lonardi, Maj.- Gen. Brllllllllumbla rowing crew loses English Bill Fill" Wield" mlnl-'tl9l'5' C0"- Gcncral Assembly after vote to remains president; 11 .. 31,, d; g . t 0510- ””Br"9l" "Wiles Greece Brazil replatztcsegjiclliiitrgy P(l'::l,delllll and Tl”'k9Y l0 C0"l9""199 0" CY- Carlos Coimbra da Luz by Nerew Pl'"5- Ramos: Eisenhower returns to July twashington from Denver. 13-Ar- 1 ... Eight Portuguese mimm-y:gentinc Army ousts Provisional killed. 1--University of British colpfdm Arnmburn in 5unceed- 15- lienley final to University of Penn- -797903 9"d3 Wlllmul -5-9017191197 I -- External Affairs Minister nmgazlne devoted 1,, me”,-y, Pe"'5”" 999'” 93"3d9 dam 1'' artistic and political matters, twest Bengal. India. 4-U.S. state quoted mm M. department says Soviet bloc dell- ,phone interview from New york; Port of Spain for month's tour of West lndies.L-Prime Mohammed All tells Comman- wealth conference Pakistan to be- come republic within Common- wealth. 5-Premier Pierre Men- det - France defeated in French Chamber. 6-Chinese Nationalists evacuate Tachen islands. us. 7th Fleet stands by. 8--Nikolai Bulga- nin replaces Georgi Malenkov as Soviet premier. is-Frances Dafoe mg Norris Bowden of Toronto re- ta world pair figure skating title nttvienna. 29-Hung Kong memm-. is unveiled to Ctlnmonwealth and A led troops. victims of surprise stick by Japanese in tail. II- B tish Commons approves treaty is ociating British with European Steel and Coal Community, as. 3" Flu?! lets assembly ap- it val as French prernlq-.25.. First SEATO conference end; ate Bangkok with pledges to ll, nllben common defence. rs. Week v Ions floods leave 4o.ooo hmaeless. 30 dead in New South Wales. Australia. ferenc or on Esm- '3”..”.".:"- 3 a Communist states for-Inisltus ll &i!t In 0 - military unity if Germany Minister . Saigon. Viel Nam. l military U-Russia: by aaatt prison. 29-Civil war breaks out at May 2-Britain to spend l20.000.0tll five years to improve colonial living standards. 5--West Germany regains sovereignty. 'l - West European military alliance organ- ized: Rex Ellsworth's Swaps wins Kentucky Derby. I - West Ger- many inducted into NATO at Paris. 1: - Communist V1 t ' t troops occupy North Viet Nam. 16-- Heavyweight c h a m p l o a Rocky Marciano knocks out Britain's Don Cockell in 9th round. I3-Longsl1oremen's strike crip- plea four British ports. as-French bred colt Phil Drake wins Eng- llsh Derby. It-Conservatives win increased majority in British gen- eral election. rl-Indonesian gov- ernment flnds time-bomb caused crash of airliner taking Chinese Communist officials to Bandung: 73 dead in tornado at Udall. Rae. so - British railway engineers strike. Si-British government do- c ares slate of natio emergency in sea and rail Jane I-Premier Bulganin and ,Yu- Bnslavla President Tito at Moscow lien declaration calling for end to blocs. I .- Ford Motors and UAW at Detroit agree on cash for laid-off work- ers. I-'l'weniy- seamen dead in, fire aboard Swedish tanker Johan- Gucci ceeds Mario Scelba as Italian pre- mier. is-U.S. health service an- nounced 209 polio cases among persons given Salk vaccine. 14- Moroccan terrorists set off three days of anti-French riots, 63 dead. 16 - Hungarian Cardinal Mind- zenty. 63. jailed in 1949. reported released: Leslie Fenwick. Eng- land, wins Queen's Prize at Bis- ley. 2i - Eisenhowe. at Geneva "summit" talks proposes. Russia and US. exchange military blue- prints. 23 - Geneva conference ends: Cordell Hull,83. one of architects of UN, dies at Bethesda. MD. !lwAustrlan independence ef- fective. .29-U.S. announces plans to launch earth-circling satellite by 1051-58. ll-Marilyn Bell. 17, Tor- onto. swims English channel. August 3-rBuIgarla admits two of its fighters shot down Israeli airliner July 27. killing 58. 4-Eleven U.S. airmen. released after 216 years in Communist China-prison. reach Hong Kong. '7 - Demonstrators clash with U.S. military police at Seoul. 7-Mohammed All resigns as Pakistan prime ministers- lnternational conference on peace- ful uses of atomic energy opens at Geneva. ll-Two U.S. troop-carry- lng planes collide in Gennany. iI6 dead. 12-Russians announce plans to reduce armed forces by 640.000. it-Hurricane Connie blunted by Lake Eric. 44 dead in U.S. it-Riots in India protest shoot- ing of 15 Indians during "peaceful . invasion" of Goa. Portuguese hr- nitory. ll - Cahle shin Monnrch completes laying l..'i0tl-mile - deep section of first transatlantic tele- phone cable. it-Floods from hur- ricanes Connie and Diane take es- timated liil lives in northeast U.S. ll-North African nationalist reb- elllotl against French spreads to Tunisia. I8-Canberra let bomber files London-New York and return in 14 hours. 21 minutes. :4--Native 12 --Five former colleagues of vedlyl uprisinl in southern Sudan. ss- re- on; In-In-n lls;liameat a . U3. N is .ia mi" C de- XI lalllcllell CPR I Mimi. rtner of arms: at our West ' Barber tribssmen surrender arms 20--Rebel terrorists strike at British Army camps on Cyprus. Bcria executed, two given life terms; Turkey, lraq. lran. Pakis- fan and Britain form permanent Middle East treaty organization at Baghdad. 25 -- UN General As- sembly drops Algerian question from agenda: French delegation returns. 26 - Edmonton Eskimos win Grey Cup from Montrcal' Al- ouettes at Vancouver. 28 - Jerry Leiske. iii. Beiseker. Alta.. wins world wheat crown at Chicago. 8! -Premier Fnure beaten in French A sembly. 30-Sir Winston Church- ill marks Blsi birthday. Peronlsia party dissolved at Buenos Alres. French government dissolves Par- liament. December , 3-Seven killed in RCAF crash in France. 4-British jet Comet sets England-Australia record. 5- First Joint convention of AFL and Clo unions at New York. '1-At- tlee'resigns leadership of British .- Labor party: Churchill awarded first Williamsburg lU.S.l award for outstanding achievemenits to- ward liberty and justice. lo-Men- sins government re-elected in Aus- tralia. lt-UN General Assembly approves 16 new members after Outcr Mongolia and Japan deleted from Canada-sponsored ll-nation bloc proposal in council. Hugh Gaitskeli. 49. succeeds Atilee as British Labor party head. is-NATO Council at 'ParIs ap- proves building air warning screen across Europe. in - Saar elects Parliament dominated by procee- man groups: Bulranin and Khrush- chev at Kabul ms): Russia nounced ll00.000. If - ghanlstan deveiopmentfg-tititlall cabinet slIui”le: Lloyd M foreign office, Macmillan banana chan- cellor of excltcquer. Idlk lord privy seal. rt.-cue attiin-eat in French Algiers leaves 110 dead. I0-Pope calls for outlawln gt nuclear weapons and ll experimental atomic , . raell mhn clash as around ”g.".ou mm, 4,. E. in Morena. II-Egyptian and in ;II Gaza strip. and Nevada; Cl Itleaabs o9aB'l'3..:..., damage 81 I - lost. an lsraal ac.-cg u..u.l an leaders a wreck I. seller ' and East Pakis- start peace talks: Comet labs between Brit- from Montreal to lxutdol , Greece break son-stop Atlantic rrosslnl , . II-Rania at sensor lat airliner. "me Ill ll llllil1l0' V. J. i visit the countries of I democracies." Robeson. who visited the Soviet Hy will be do Union in 1936 and 1949 and had a lavas-ably. maybe in a mat-lmountain months. and that I soon wlillhlm, was in Russia named for quoted as saying "1 love :lhe Soviet Union very much, Pm! your friend. your real friend." freighter Panaghiotis Tuesday. Jail 3. 19565 The Guardian Page 3 WHEAT CAIGO sailed for here. A DREAM COMES TRUE FOR CANADA'S HARD-OF-HEARING... Ever since the miraculous discovery of tiny but expensive transistors. Zenith and its dealers have shared a dream with Canada-1's hard-of-hearing. It seemed an impossible dream. A vision of superlative hearing aid efficiency, clar- ity, convcnierice, operating economy- and all at a price so very low that these bent-tits could be enjoyed by every hard-ofnhearlng peruon, in every walk of life. Today, this "impossible" dream has he- come a. reality! Just imagine . . . a highly eihciem. full-powered 4-transistor hearing aid so small it can be worn in a woman's hair. as a brooch, or under a man's necktie. Yet it does not sell for 850 or 3300, as do many other makes, but for only h50 oom- Your Zenith hearing aid dealer also has four other suporb new Zenith transistor models for you to choose from! Please refer this announcement to a hard-of-hearing friend or relative-it may be the most important news in his life. Moppts -can punch the pillows, scramble the sheets and hunch the blankets, but when the war is over Tex-made is the winner. Long wearing beautiful Tex-made sheets are the choice of Canadian homemaker; S to 1. Plain. titted, coloured or striped, in qualities to it every budget. Every bedroom in your home. a showroom, with Tex-made sheets-yours for years. Sold of boiler stones everywhere. plefc. This. thanks in Zenithls 36 years of electronic expcriencc and ”know-how" plus the willingness of Zenith dealers to accept less profit per sale. in order to bring the security, happiness and opportunities of better hearing within easy reach of all. Operating costs. too. arr amazingly low. Just one tiny dry-cell battery, available everywhere, operates the "50-X” for about lilo a week instead of 31.00 to 32.00 a week for vacuum-tube instruments. These sav- ings alone can pay the entire cost of the 050-X" in less than a year! But that's not all! The Zenith "50-X" is sold with a 10-Day Money-Back Guaran- tee. If you are not completely satisfied . . . it you do not find that it equals or excels SO SMALL it can hide under a man's naclrtiol HIAQING AIDS ly the Makers of World-Famous Zenith TV and Radio Sets A FlNEsT'QUALlTV. 4-TRANSISTOR ZENITH Amazingly small, compact, efficient . . . backed by on ironclad guarantee at fol saiisiodion . . . yet selling for less than one-fourth the price of many comparable brands! IO MGM! it me be worn III a woman's holri the performance of competitive makes sell- ing for 5200 or more. simply return it for full refund. And remember, the 350 price includes everything: High-performancn air-conduction earphone, cord. stock ears mold. One-Yr Warranty and Five-Year Service Plan. Time payments, if you wish. Act now! A hearing aid today is a symbol of progress and intelligence . . . a victory over false pride! Owing to heavy demand. orders for the Zenith "50-X”tf)1'l-l be hlled is the sequence received. See your Zauitll. Denier now! His name is listed in the classtyied telephone directory. Or simply send. coupon below jorireelifnrutuvelldloealdca-lorliat. ----- HAIL COUPON TODAY! I----1 lanith lssdio Corporation of Canada, Dd. Hearing Aid Division, Dept. D5AA H65 Yeeusnsolt load. East, Windsor, Ontario Please mail me free literahire on the new Zenith ”50-X” and local dealer list Name. a .u g l-gt City Q..- -G.'.'?PPd-&- lJ-nan with mono bushels M; 3 3,315 a "TIC! m VANCOUVER (CF)-The Greek cargo of bulraegnpain ever loaded :33 .. -..-1 l 1;. l l l. l .' gggumuuuumnm