lhflllt’IESIIECSTIiiltt Coven Prince Edward Island Like The De- w. J. Hancox. Publishv Burton Lewis Frank Walker Executive Editfl Editor Published every week day morning (except Sun- days and statutory holidays) at MS Prince Street. Charlottetown, P.E.I.. by Thonuon Newspapers Ltd at Summerside. Managua. Albee Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services Toronto. 425 University Ave. Empire 3—8894; Montreal. 640 Cathcart Street. UNiversity 66942; Western office, 1030 Wed Georgie Street. Vancouver (MA 7037). Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and Ilse Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub Iication of all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or Io The Associated Press or Rev- tars, and also to the local news published here In. All rights on republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not ever 35¢ per wael: by carrier. “.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier. “4.00 a year off island and U.K. $20.00 per year in us. and elsewhere outside British Cera- monwealth. Not over 7: per single copy. I Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. We.“ memory as weaker than the weakest ink” REE a sum. Yesterday's Results At the time of writing it was ev- ident that the Liberals had gained enough seats in yesterday’s feder- al election to carry them into pow- er, though it was doubtful whether they would succeed in getting an overall majority. In that case, all that can be said is that the voters will not tolerate a repetition of the tactics which brought on this un- timely contest. They will expect, on both sides, a greater measure of responsibility in carrying on the country’s business. Mr. Pearson is pledged to summon Parliament on May 16 and bring down a budget implementing his program during its first month. In defence he would honor what he claims to be the nation’s commit- ments to NATO and NORAD by equipping the armed forces with nu- clear warheads. In the field of soc- ial security he would bring in a national contributory pension plan, paid for by individual contributors and not financed out of general rev- enue. Later, if the economy has ex- panded sufficiently to afford it, he would bring in a national health insurance plan. If Mr. Pearson succeeds in gaining an overall majority he will of course have no difficulty in getting all his measures through Parliament. But if there is enough opposition to de- feat him on the floor of the House, what then? Would he be entitled to dissolution? According to Dr. Eu- gene Forsey, an authoritative in- terpreter of ou :- parliamentary rules, if this defeat involved some great issue of public policy, yes; otherwise only if all possible alter- native'Prime Ministers had either declined office or made it plain be- forehand that they would decline if asked. That would leave some margin for stability, at least. While congratulating the victors on this occasion, we think it is Mr. Diefenbaker who merits our final salute. He fought the greatest bat- tle of his life, against odds that no other government leader in this country ever faced. His party will still have strong representation in the next Parliament. Let us hope that in defeat it will get rid of the dissensions that caused it to come to grief. Significant Gesture It is of more than passing inter- . est that the German town of Aachen is awarding its Charles the Great prize this year to Edward Heath, British Lord Privy Seal and Min- ister of European Affairs. This ' prize, established in 1949 by a group k. of Aachen citizens, is given annually in recognition of the "most notable Eachievement in encouraging inter- national understanding and co-oper- : ation in the European sphere." Mr. Heath will be the second Briton to receive the award. The first was . Winston Churchill in 1955. While previous awards were in appreciation of contributions the I recipients have made to European understanding, this time it will be i: for something attempted but not yet done. For Mr. Heath has so far failed to achieve what he attempt- l ed, namely to bring Britain into i Europe through membership in the u ilEur-opean Common Market. “L1 l-Iis ~r’l failure was due. as the world gener- ,.—,— u ....— V,va 3:7“ significant development supporting the idea of a greater European unp ity extending far beyond the nar- row concept of French President de Gaulle and other “little Europeans.” It is of interest, too, that this comes f r o m Aachen (Aix-Ie-Chappelle), once the capital of the Holy Roman Empire and crowning place of Ger- man emperors. Charlemagne (Char- les the Great) died there. President de Gaulle professes to want a. return to the political Europe of Charlemagne, but the people of Aachen evidently have a different idea of what present-day European unity involves. Most of the German press is using the occasion to ex- press support for this wider Europe, including Britain, as an essential development. Good News Indeed The future of the Maritime coal industry is a matter of concern to all of us in this area. It is pleas- ing therefore to note that the pros- pects are not so bleak as we were led to suppose a few years ago. The big question mark is how fast nu- clear power will be generated in this country. But for the forseeabla future, its industries are going to need plenty of coal because it uses plenty of electricity. This was brought strikingly to the attention of the Ontario Leg- islature the other day by Energy Resources Minister Macaulay in in- troducing his department’s esti- mates. Not only was more coal used last year in Ontario, he said, but the consumption is expected to rise for at least until 1970. Last year the province consumed 13,146,- 000 tons. An estimated 16,000,000 tons will be needed in seven years’ time. The explanation for more coal in this era of electricity, oil, na- tural gas and nuclear power is On- tario Hydro. The more electricity Ontario uses, the more coal Hydro needs to buy. The demand for ther- mal power was higher in 1962 be- cause low water levels affected the generation of hydraulic power. But even with more water available, Hydro will still need more thermal power. And it will continue to use Nova Scotia coal. Nova Scotia. said the minister, will supply Ontario with $28,000,000 worth of coal in the next five years, an average of 14 per cent of all that province’s coal production during that time. The coal must be shipped to Ontario, and that means a. hugh shipping contract. One special ship, an ocean-going type which will be among the largest to use the St. Lawrence Seaway, is being started at once. Another is probable. Precarious Stability It would seem now that the Un- ited States has reached a. tacit agreement, or perhaps a secret formal understanding, with Premier Khrushchev and his government which has produced a momentary stability in Cuba. The Russians have voluntarily removed some of their troops and it is hoped they will with- draw more. They are also refraining from turning their Soviet-manned antiairicraft missiles on the Amer- ican reconnaissance aircraft which are taking photographs of Cuba. The United States, for its part, has refrained from a blockade. It has now taken active steps in Miami and on the high seas, and with the help of Great Britain. to put limits on refugee raiders. Analyzing this curious setup, the Christian Science Monitor de- fines it as “a form of cooperation which comes after an extension of Soviet power and serves to perpet- uate it.” The United States accepts it for the present because the alter- native—driving the Soviet Union out of Cuba and making way for tightening an inter-American cordon around the island—is presently too dangerous. The Soviet guarantee of the Castro regime against counter- measures is working, but cold war rules—the mechanics of stalemate- have been successfully brought into the Western Hemisphere by Khrushchev and the United States has to observe them in order to gain certain concessions. This is justified as long as the ' concessions keep coming from the Kremlin. But the history of this ‘lrind of close-in coexistence Is not mm At sane point the Kremlin has .ueually knocked misses-terse. ‘ I w. .a... .3». when...“ Baum» JACK BE NIMBLE---JACK BE QUICK OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson "Black Muslims” Movement In The U.SA. The Separatist movement in Quebec has a wealthy and well- organized parallel in the "Black Muslims" in U.S.A. This sect is not interested in mere desegregation; it wants to set up an independent state within the territory now com- prising the U.S.A. And now it has announced its intention to Seek its aims through political action. The Black Muslims in a se- cret organization. No White man has ever been admitted to a meeting in one of its temples. No revelation of its numerical strength has ever been made, although it is considered to be the fastest-growing association among U.S.A.’s population of 20,000,000 coloured citizens. Unlike the French-Canadian race. U.S.A.'s coloured race has no specific territorial base regarded as its homeland, as the province of Quebec "home" to Canada’s Baptiste". So the Black Mus- lims are formulating a vague demand that Washington should cede a huge tract of rich fertile land, somewhere in the United States, which could be estab- lished as n homeland for the coloured people of U.S.A. Wa- shington would be expected to subsidise this new independent coloured republic for one gen- eration, to enable it to grow in- to economic stability. While this project echoes the ambitions of the more extreme nationalists in Quebec. it also has overtones and echoes of re- cent developments in other parts of the world. Like Isreal, it would be created as an arti- ficial homeland for a certain ethnic group. to which the faithful would be expected to migrate. Like South Africa, it would constitute a self-contain- ed independent country for a segment of the present popula- tion. copying the project of Bantustan which is the practi- cal application of South Af- rica's “apartheid”. The Black Muslims, as their implies, also has very important religious aspects. Arab Moslems question the ba- sic doctrine of these new co-re- ligionists: they argue that the faith of Islam is all-embracing, and does not countenance ra- cism such as the Black Mus- lim separatist movement seeks. 0n the other hand, the Black Muslims strictly enforce upon their members such basic teaching among the “Thou shalt nots" as drinking alcohol. smoking. using nalcotics, steal- ing. eating pig, getting into debt and — most important ~— showing disrespect towards wo- en. EMERGING NATIONS LEAD Like French-Canada, colour- ed-U.S.A. has watched, with In- t e r e st and with a certain amount of envy, the emergence of the new nations in Africa in- .s. (I PUBLIC FORUM his column Ie open In Ina ateausaioe Gua tan is enable it .ter into any i-orr-pendeaea run“ he lettan submitted. m UNTIMELY TOOTING Sir;— I would like to ask the mayor and council of Montague If something can’t be done with at all hours Saturday .snd Sun- day. when they keep it up until the early hours the morning, 0 to independence. If the former French colonies in Africa can now be fully self-governing. with their own flag and their own ambassadors around the world, why cannot we? they ask. Among the black Muslims there is an extra envy reserved for the achievement of inde- pendence by those former col- onies in Africa, whence their forefathers were carried off in- to slavery. Their African home~ lands may lack the automatic dishwashers and self-propelled jalopies which coloured famil- ies in U,S.A. now enjoy; but they do have their own national flags! This movement in USA. has one very important parallel with the more extreme move- ment in French-Canada. They no longer seek the equality which is their constitutional right under the laws 0 .A. They don’t want any conde- scending and overdue “hand- outs" from the descendants of the slave-owners who first sub- jugated their race. No: wha they Seek now is complete in- dependence — to be their own masters in their own newly- created homeland. The Black Muslims have only recently come to the forefront. But with their numbers comes a substantial war chest. Their leader. the 65-year old Chicago “Prophet”, known as “The Honourable Elijah Mohamet", has the nude to buy time weekly on 34 radio stations for his talks. to public several weekly newspapers, and to build a sparkling new $200000 temple in Washington. re Hong Kong’s New Industries National Geographic Society “blade in Hong Kong" means: preserved ginger and canned tried rice; drip-dry shirts and steel bars; yachts and plastic flowers; firecrackers and flash- light bulbs; cotton cloth and rubber swim fins. And movies. Bong King stud- ies turn out 240 pictures a year, giving the British Crown col- ony fourth rank among world producers mums—after Ja- pan. India, and the United States. Hong Kong is a 398-squane- rnile oasis of seething free enterprise on the southeast coast of Communist China. The main cities, Victoria and Kow- loon, hum wi new industries to support the 3.172.000 moments of the Colony. Energetic Ctuniese make in- stant coffee from Indonesian beans, shoes from British lea- ther, padlocks from Australian zinc alloy. Fanatics use the precision machinery of Japan, may, and the United States. SOME REFUGEES RICH Refugees China contribute labor and skill. Some to mug enormous weelm. Capital pours in from Italy, England, and Japan. Texas investors helped finance the Mommy Boris Kong Hilton. appropriately claimed to be the his ' Asia. Tin Texas 3 r i grilling. I {fir E .1” at a {5:2 I. It who will be irritated at having to move to a new location. Hang ong means “Fragrant Harbour” in Chinese, the name applies not only to the principal island but also to the ricninwla or "New Territories" jutting from the coast of Red China across the way. Like a scene from old Chute, men pa- tiently follow teams of water buffaloes outside walled vil- lages. Neainby, refugees oper- ate modern chicken farms and till lawn-sine fields which supply nearly half the vegetables re quired by the Colony's growing population. GETS FELLOWSHIP CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (CF)— Rene P, Andre of Quebec City was among 45 winners of Alfred P. Sloan fellowships in execu- tive development at Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, announced Monday by Hownrd W. Johnson, dean of the MIT School of Industrial Manage- ment. The fellowships. for 1963- 64, provide a one-year course in management 'end are granted to young business executives. The course opens in June. WANT MORE PHONES Norway’s state telecommuni- cations sdministration has dif- ficulty keeping up with the demand for telephones. Norway has 21.33 telephones per 1,000 population. . Artery Block Causes 50% Of All Strokes A MIDDLE - aged carpenter had several spells In which he and out. His wife witnessed one of these episodes and said it ryeelnbled a faint and. lasted less than three minutes. There were no twitches or convulsive the muscles of the work use as atra hurting himself or others. What caused his blackouts? Many X- rays and other tests ruled out epilepsy and brain tumor. The clue came when the physician heard a buzzing sound as he put the stethoscope over the carotid artery in the man's neck. Blo makes this type of humming noise when it passes through a narrowed segment of the artery. A special solution was inject- ed into this artery while X-rays were taken. The resulting films demonstrated the partial ob- struction. and surgery was sug- gested. The narrowed part was bridged with a small plastic blood vessel and normal circu- lation to the brain was restored. He is well and works every day. . Brain cells are extremely sen- sitive to any disturbance in cir- culation. Fifty per cent strokes are caused by a com- plete obstruction in one or more of the arteries thrit carry blood to the brain. Many of these ves- sels are inaccessible to the sur- geon. The location of those that are accessible is demonstrated by feeling for certain pulsations, listening for humming sounds in the neck. and utilizing spe- cial eye tests. There is no need for X-rays of the arteries when surgery is not required. 0n the other hand, operation may be advised when the obstruction is found in the neck or chest. But, to be helpful. it must he done at the beginning of the stroke. The purpose of the X-rays is to locate the plugged segment. Brain hemorrhage in a person with high blood pressure also causes stroke but the outlook is not as good as in an obstructed carotid artery and surgery sel- , dam is recommended. The ex- ception is when a small dilated artery (aneurysm) starts bleed- ing. Here surgical treatment may be life - saving. NOSE BUBBLES M. D. writes: .What would cause a bubbly nose in a child after taking her bottle? The discharge is milkinn color. E PI. The milk may regurgitate through nose, especially when the child nurses vigorously and receives more milk at one time than can be swallowed. This youngster deserves an examina- tion, however, because of the outside chance that a cleft pal- ate exists. MANY CAUSES OF , JAUNDICE R. P. writes: Is a person 1m- munc to hepatitis if he has had jaundice? PLY One attack of viral hepatitis will confer immunity to this disease but there are many other causes of jaundice. Send stamped, self - addressed en- velope for leaflet on jaundice. MEDICINE vs. DIET A. . writes: Do you agree with the statement made by a specialist in arthritis that gout victims caneat everything so long as they take their medi' cine? REPLY Yes, but there is no need to go overboard. DON'T NEGLECT TREATMENT H. G. writes: Should all forms of Insanity be attended to Immediately? REPLY Yes. The longer the abnor- mality is allowed to continue, the more difficult it may be to treat. Today's Health Hint— Chllllng and overheating wea- en resistance to colds. Notes BY- THE WAY‘fi After several years at merrl. age a man can look right at a women without seeing her—end a woman can see right through a man without looking at him.— Galt Reporter. M. ’e'eatflla nae: with younger generator: that be. ' mm”. cure. -I Dodge City Glove. use can live a fair menses without air. a few days without water. a few months without food. or an entire lifetime with- out an original thought, -— Ham. llton Spectator. The face at the officer 3 frequently nan srthe "face ,0! Canada" by immi- grants and visitors to this coun- try. Three cheers and a tiger for the tmnugretien department's classes at Windsor where 1m. migration officers are taking a course in e courteous and un- derstanding treatment of th a public. — Sudbury Star. Nubian Imlight It Is now nearly three years since Uneaco organized the in- ternational campaign to safe- guand the archaeological trea- sures of Noble. What has been done in Nubi over this period is described in a. book. "Nubian Twilight." just published. The author, Rex Keating, is a member of Unesco's secretariat and knows well the area under excavation. Nubia, the ancient Kush, w to any millenia both a gateway and a barrier. between Egypt and the African heartland and the book gives an account of its develop- ment through the ages. Men have lived along this 300-mlle stretch of the Nile Val- ley from the remote Palaeolithic era to the present day but; its end is imminent for_when, in the early summer of 1964. the flood waters start to rise behind will be transformed into an A5- wan’s High Dam, Nubia imm- ense’l'a'ke and incompambly rich record of the past will be lost lrretrievably. Expiditrions from many coun tries are working against time in an effort to salvage the traces of lost or little known cultures of the past and already much that is new is merging from the sands of Nubia. All this the author explain born first-hand lanwledge gain- ed in recent visits to expedition in thefield,andhelhomhmr archaeologists from like ular discoveries are beusg made particularly in Sudanese Nun... until recently term hicognite so far as archaeology and entro- pology were concerned. The book also casts light on the many exceptional personal- ities who have shaped the his- tory of this austerer beautiful land. The two great temples of Abu Simbel are examined at length and a character is da- voted to the vast though little- known fortresses of the Second Cataract with the fortifications as sophisticated and ingenious as any devised by the Saracens and Crusaders, 3,000 years later. Attention is drawn, too, to the remarkable early Christian remains. in particular the fres- coes now being dug from the ruins of Fares. The book con- tains‘ 75 photographs by the au- thor and three maps. Kenya And Somalia Christian Science Monitor Another African problem for the United Nations may be in the making as Britain and the two major rival African parties in Kenya move together toward in- dependence for that colonial ar- ea. On constitutional questions British policy is generally ac- ceptable to the inhabitants of the state-to-be. But along the north- ern frontier there are about 280,- 000 Somalis whose only interest in the creation of a new, inde- Our Yesterday’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO April 9, 1938 Alfred Doucette, choir leader at the Holy Redeemer parish and graduate of the class of ’31 St. Dunstan's, has been appointed leader of the Tenebrae Choir from the college. This choir will take part in the devotions at the Basilica during Holy Week. London. April 9 ~ Honorable Unity Freeman ~ Mitford. dau- ghter of Lord Redesdale, w a s rescued by police today from a crowd angered by her appear- ance at 8 Labor rally wearing a swastika badge. The action tak so her an- nounced intention to adopt Ger- man citizenship. TEN YEARS AGO 9, 1953 The special Easter dance of the P. E. 1. Social Club of Hall- fax was held Saturday evening at the Seagull Club, where 100 couples were in attendance, be sides officials. coach and play- ers of the Is] era hockey “38:1, who were guests the c u . The Kiwanis Club appointed a committee at their weekly meeting held at “Old Spain" yesterday. to look into the mat- ter of children's playground fac- ilities at Victoria Park durlnl the summer months. A Charlottetown to: Sackville, $2.10 Moncton, $2.80 Truro, $3.80 Saint John, $4.80 Halifax, $5.20 Antigonish, $5.60 I'I 9y, Quebec, $11.25 Montreal, $12.50 pendent Kenya is that it shall not include them. They want to join the Somali Republic whose territory their land borders, and they have not been satisfied by the latest Bri- tish move toward assuring them freedom of choice in the future. The Somali Republic itself has just broken diplomatic relations with Britain over the issue. And there have been disorders in So- malia threatening the security of British residents. Neighboring Ethopia. not wishing to see So- malia strengthened is opposing e Somali movement in Kenya. But the outbreaks cannot dis- c r e d i t British motives in. till! case, except perhaps among a few Africans with special inter- ests. To have granted the North- ern Frontier District is right to secede would probably it ave made agreement with the big KANU and KADU patrles over constitutional matters much har- der to reach. To have denied the Northern Frontier District any choice in future would have been to perpetuate old "colonial" bon- ders which are at many points in Africa in conflict with national atspirations and tr l b all actual- xcs. By making the area a seventh region of K e n y a. the British ‘rlntend to leave its disposition to a later date. when African ' opin- ion can exert influence on it with- out delaying Kenya independ- lnce. If the good will of Britian in this case cannot be ackno' — lodged by .Somall leaders, per- haps thefuture ofthe area should be made a question for the UN w on se dia- tinct from “white” opinion all- ready has shown power to share events. ' The I FLYIIIB IIIITGIIMAI RESTAURANT “Your Island Steak r House” AAAAAAAAAA vvvvvvvvvv AAA A A A A A A AAA A A A A A AA vvvvvvvvv ii‘la‘f' '!;‘i“:""- u 'A L___ ' A‘ Tm’bTT‘l—lIT-TIIIIY'II>rrTIIIT1III?IIIIII?IIIIFFII"II4.T