~The Guardian | “Advettising Services mn Empire ire 38894. Montreal 640 -Catirart street ‘ent “cation ~ i PAGE 4 > Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew W. J. Hancox, Publisher Wallace Watd Frank Walker Managing Editor Editor Pudlished every week an morning (except Sun- day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.1., b» Thomson Newspapers Ud. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris Represented nationally by Thomson New spapers Teronto 425 University Ave- versity 65942; Western Office 1030: West. Georgia, j Street Vancouver MA 7037. | Member Canadian. Daily-— Newspaper Publishers | Association and The Canadian‘ Press. The “Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- | of all news dispatches this oaper credited to it\ or to the Associated Press or Revters and alse the local news published herein All night or republication of special dismatches here- in also reserved Subscription ‘rate:~ Not over 40c per week by carrier. _* $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas nof serviced by carrier 6 , $15.00 a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Come monweailth. Aine in over 7 single copy. Aermber Audit Bureay. of Circulation -MONDAY, , APRIL 25, , 1966. “AL For Our Sake! “We have been studving.. over. the ~ weekend, our April 19 copy of the —- _necessity_for_the govern : defer a number of them, : og on “to. say. that in all the “poste ~ dated explanations and . equivoca- _‘delayed”-in-any way. The reschedul- “employment. This work activity will _ isterial veracity. ~ Hansard report of the House of Com- ~ mons proceedings, wherein is set “forth; -verbatim--Works-—Minister-Mc-- Ilraith’s latest assurance about our causeway project._Itwas_given_in reply to Mr. Macquarrie’s complaint about the difficulty of comprehend- -ing.’ from the semantic i exercises | which have been carried on, whether “rescheduling” of~the—project—.; “§meant. or means, a “deferment,” as it would appear to mean in the budget | speech. That speech dealt with the ernment to re-. view its construction projects’ and — including the next phase@ of the causeway. At this point. Hansard quotes Mr. Mcliraith as interrupting with the cor- rection: “Deferment-or rescheduling; read the whole thing out.” He would not, he added, “allow Hansard to be. misfead.”” Whereupon Mr. Macquarrie obligingly read out, from the Hansard report of the finance minister's speech after he had listed the five | projects concerned: “I regret, and am sure everyone in this House regrets, that it is necessary to a Hee Been tions” he had not been. able to find an economic reason for deferment in our -ease._He -urged-the-government _to__ admit that it had made a mistake, and push forward the work as an essential development in our area to help the economy of the Atlantic provinces, rather than hinder it. Mr. Mcliraith had nothing more to say about misreading Hansard, but he insisted that the project was not being ing had only to do with the “maximum- work load” in the area and it was being done—guess for whose_bene- fit?—“‘‘for the benefit of the Maritime provinces, in particular for the wonderful province from which the hon. member comes.” _ Waxing eloquent on this point, the minister proceeded: “As a result of this new timetable we are assured of a significant volume of winter work in ‘the late 1966° and~early 1967; which ‘is exactly the time of the year that the hon. member has, complained about when . giving statistics of winter come at a time of the year when work is normally needed in the hon. mem- ber’s province. It will be a positive factor in the economy of the prov- ince.’ But in his concern for our interests, ° is the minister really sure that—he understands what they are? He was equally convinced last. Nov. 2, just | before fhe federal-election; that “be-- cause of the clay soil, work could not ~ be started on the P.E.I. side until the spring.” : Which still leaves us’ wondering - about what Mr. Macquarrie calls the “semantic exercises’ involved, and what they add up to in terms of min- | | | No End In Sight — In January,-1950, when our then External Affairs Minister Lester B. . Pearson sat down with Common- wealth foreign ministers in Ceylon to set in motion our first bilateral aid | program, the Canadian government viewed this hopefully as a ‘‘temporary supplement” to the United Nations | technical assistance programs in - which it was already involved. By September, 1960, the Diefenbaker government recognized the temporary was going to be permanent and estab- . lished a special External Aid Office to co-ordinate the aid effort. - | Later that year, Canada joined with othér members in the United Nations’ | “decade of development” program, | under which members were to make a special effort to raise the level of | ficiat last_year after his Indian’ ex- | of OECD (Organization for Economic — its sixteenth year in the foreign aid - the way is now open for some of the . east and west. che said: ‘Although we are always on. economic ‘growth in ane poor ‘nations Se eheenaesn by trying to devote one per cent of their respective gross products to aid. < and by trying to ease the terms of | edit between: rich and poor coun- tries. ’- We are now half-way through that ‘UN development decade and. as Escott Reid, former Canadian oe commissioner to India, said in a re- ~cent-speech;-the-gross-flow-of--finan-—— cial resources from the rich to the poor now is ‘‘about the same as it was in 1961.” The starving peasant a India or the ragged native in an African shanty town,,he said, is going to find by the.end of this century that, even ‘if Western aid is at present levels, his income will~only have gone up $4 a month, to provide him on the average with the sum of $170 -- “a year. By the year 2035 these peas- ants migh be making $200-a vear, compared to Western standards—un- © less more money and effort is put into _ aid. And this doesn’t count the multiple effect of the poruishee ex- ~Plosion: “Fronrthis- ‘it-would-appear that-de-—— velopment assistance is turning into ~a_very long term _ proposition. Mr. Reid, who retired as a world bank of- perience, says: “We must have patience not-for a decade of dévelop- ment but for a generation of develop- ment. Patience not till 1970 but till 1999.” we Latest~ word on: ‘the subject. came _ from a two-day meeting last week of the development assistance -council Cooperation and Development). which reached the conclusion that the “food: gap” is actually widening. A working | _group from-14 OECD member coun- | “ties plus the Common Market Com- | mission and Australia, has been set | up to study means of increasing world food: production, especially in under, . developed countries. The group will | report to a full ministerial meeting to be held in Paris in June. That’s the word with Canada now in field—the end is nowhere in sight. ‘ Moving Closer From Madrid comes the report. Soe eS ee | crat Meningiti eningltis By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Outbreaks of meningitis are | most common. during the winter and subside with the onset of spring and better weather. Most of the publicity about the disease stems from military | installa- tions where. men: live in close ‘contact and-the~condition~iseas- 7 tpidennie=— . tis is recognized earlier in camps and for this reason the outcome is better than among civilians, Many bacteria are capable of infecting the meninges, a thin membrane covering the hrain. Meningococci are the most common offenders and the story of the disease involves | three stages. The first takes placell when the organism enters th® body through the nosé and . throat leading ‘to a mild infection re- | sembling a ‘cold. The bacteria multiply and in time invade the -bloodstream from where they travel all over the body. This leads to the second stage which | is associated with fever, chills, malaise, and blotchy-or_spotted rash all over the body. Tiny hemorrhages teeming with occi, ‘also develop.in the skin. : Some victims ‘are critically ill “fat t this time but the majority | | pass into the third” ‘stage when | | the microbes localize in the tis- -sues_of their-choice— the menin- “EUROPEAN UFO _ - OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Poses Racial Question For Candcicns “Demo- Green- Parlia- Andrew Brewin; New : MP for Toronto- ‘wood, recently asked in ment for, the assurance of the | government that Canada_ ‘‘will | lend all necessary support, dip- | lomatic and otherwise, even in- cluding the use of force” to the ft | economic sanctions against Rho- | desia. “We pay higher wages than the black African states too. The average African wage in Rhod- ‘esia is $375 a year; in Kenya it is $96, in Tanzania $54 and in Malawi $51. Of course many Af- ricans earn more than $375. This figure is only .an average and many of them earn well over | $3,000. Africans who are em- Do Canadians wish to become | ployed—by_the Government re- -involved-in a-war in—Africa? Be- | cause war is what is meant by | “the use of force.” Would we | be‘ sure of the rightness of our —eause in such’a-war2 ~ « W®& hear a lot about the wic “that Franco “Spain and- Communist. | ~ Russia, for many ~-years-the-bitterest= of enemies, today.are quietly edging toward peaceful coexistence. They have no diplomatic ties but the way things are going it’s just a matter of time before this lack is remedied. ~—-Arrangements-are_being-made- for Soviet tourists_to visit Spain and for Spanish tourists to visit the Soviet Union. This month two ranking Rus- ’ sian travel experts were in Madrid and were wined and dined in the . Spanish capital. The visit is expected to result in the exchange next year ‘of some 25,000 Spanish and Soviet tourists. On the cultural front, too, | best talent of. both countires to head The wish for_a better understand- ing with Moscow was recently stres- sed by Foreign Minister Fernando Maria Castiella. In a statement pre- pared for a West Berlin television, guard against the enemies who at- tacked our country savagely we also. understand that situations evolve.° Our _ anti- Communism . is a shield which protects us from Communism’s aims of using subversion as an inter- | national political weapon and inter- fering in the internal affairs of other states. But it goes no further than that, for the Spaniard is aware of the new winds of history and: welcomes every sincere effort for coexisterice.” Spain is nota’: member“of NATO, and has insisted that she has no wish “to belong to it. In anv case, North European members of the alliance are hostile to the idea -of Spdnish participation. because of General Franco’s wartime association with Nazi Germany and Fascist.Jtaly. But that is being forgotten now at Mos- cow. Spain's prohibition of flights over her territory to and.from Gibral- ter by military planes of “NATO ” powers have certainly helped things along so far as Soviet-Spanish rela- . tions. are concerned. It is suggested;: too. that the cur- rent trend toward friendlier relations explains why the Russians have not raised more of a stir over the a¢- | ~ — cidental dropping of four American. | unarmed H-bombs on the Spanish coast last January. The-treatment of | the incident by Communist broad- casts to Spain is judged by observers; to have been surprisingly restrained. | EDITORIAL NOTE __ | Sweden has‘announced that Sept. “3, 1967, will be “H-day’’-—the day on which traffic will start travelling. on. the right side instead of the left side- of the road. ‘‘H” stands. for “hoger,” which in Swedish means “right.” Le _wearily ‘van and ‘horsedrawn carts, edness of the white" Rhodesian just'as from the same sort of | pleaders we hear a lot about the - wickedness of the whites in Mis- sissippi and of the Yarikees in ceive exactlythe same pay-as | Europeans with the same jobs yand qualifications. African wag- 'es here are rising three times as ;our health facilities for Afric- | ans. We have one hospital bed for every 330-people; Ghana has |one for every. 1,100, Liberia one |for every 4,000. We have one |doctor for every 7,300 * people; ‘| Ghana has one for every 18,172 and Liberia one’for every 25,700. | “If you have an open mind, | you. will agree that we have done |a great deal for our African peo- ple. We intend to continue living | ini Rhodesia, and we know that. we-can only~do- this if-we-take«| the African people along with | ges. This triggers an intense headache along with signs of meningeal irritation. There is stiffness of the neck and a spin- al tap produces fluid that is tur- | bid, bloody, and under consid- . erable._pressure..One—in.-10_.suce.| cumb but the remainder” usually | recover. Sulfadiazine is the ‘eu rem- | edy. Penicillin is used when the | attacking strain is resistant to re~sulfa- drugs, Drug resistance’ | is occurring more often than we {like to, admit. Five per cent of the popula: ; tion harbor meningococci in the | nose and throat. The number of | carriers: increases” in military | | bases.and may reach 90 per ; cent. When the organisms are | rife, a certain percentage of the peoplé are bound to develop. | meningitis. HER BONES. BURN Mrs. G: E. writes: What | causes burning bones? The bon- Les all over my body, particular- i ily in the skull, around the nose, | | and in the legs, burn and pain. REPLY This is too hot for me to han- dle: Distress ofthis - type - may | result from parasthesia, which is ; fast as those of- Europeans: ‘Our. lus. But we willnot be-bullied by + of-nervous—origin: —Paget’s--dis--} | neighbours know this: we h 500,000> “foreign Africans 18 “Sean to“try to-stop: this-madness-- ‘eighth of the total African pop- | sanctions. Please do what. you | One question poses itself Dur-- ease produces discomfort of thi +kind-oecasionally~ ae “IMPAIRED HEARING F surely ‘wouldn’t be~ here unless bing the past -75-years; have white-— D> F> writes: Cana “person — | Vietnam. The white Canadians | have not got such.a good “name | among ~-the --would-be---coloured- | immigrants, or even among our own Indians. Can we be sure about Rhodesia? I don’t know, . ed in my mind by 4 letter just received from that _ troubled country. Without comment, I quote parts: : “It is a great pity that people seem to know very little, where the African is concerned, of what is being done. And yet we - are doing so much. People tend to forget, for example, that in | only 75 years, through educa- tion, medicine and the mainten- ance of law and order, Euro- peans_have: raised —the-..African: population in Rhodesia from 300,000 to 4,000,000. They forget ‘that there are countries among our critics which wiped out their own coloured population. If we had: done the -sam2, we would have no problems now. It seems so unfair that we should be pun- ished for our humanity. : AFRICAN WELFARE STATE “Europeans here pay over 90 per cent of the general taxes, and it is ‘this money which pays for African schools, hospitals and so on. 230,000 Europeans thus provide. not only for them- selves, but for 4,000,000 Afric- | ans. Everything the African has today in Rhodesia today is due to the European. For example, his education is far better than es. Rhodesia has one in six of its total population at school; by contrast, Liberia has 1 in ~40, Mali 1 in 61, and Ethiopia 1 in 108. Our Yesterdays: (From_The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO i (April 25, 1941) German panzer divisions lost 23 tanks and retreated after a battle with a New Zealand anti- tank unit near Mountoea, Greece, directly west of the Vics of Tere A long trek started out from | heavily bombed Plymouth, Eng- land, as- homeless: women, chil- drén and aged men trudged along roads __ eeking shelter. It was one of the south- west, England's blackest days— for many vehicles in the- long convoy of cars, buses, also leaving, turned a cold shoulder to their pleas for lifts. TEN YEARS AGO : (April 25, 1956) A mural designed by Mrs. P. ,A. Creelman and Miss Eleanor but the question has been rais- — they preferred it. “We are particularly proud of Canadians enabled our Indian ‘population to. grow thirteenfold? | ‘Where Eden Bloomed- 4 National Geographic Society. den of Eden bloom again. ~Traq Hopes to make the Gar- |” Iraq’s great central plain be- tween the Tigris and Euphrates | ~An~old Arab tradition holds | remains productive; here much that present-day Al. Qurnah, town in southeastern Iraq on’the | right bank of the Tigris River, is the approximate site of the Bib- lical Garden: of Eden. Here the | Tigris: joins the Euphrates to -form the majestic Shatt al Arab ‘that channels the waters of ‘both great rivers into the Persian Gulf. This area was a corner of Mesopotamia, the ancient world’s foremost granary. In| ia was a “forest of verdure from | end to end,’’ but the centuries | since Babylon emerged there in | ment’ as Padan-aram - NGeneait, about-2200.B.C.-haus cass eset sands blow over fertile fields; | lonia, and clogged canals+ have. . turned farmlands into swamps and. ‘marshes. RICE TO BE PLANTED Since 1950; oil-rich: Iraq “has _turned over a large portion of , oil revenues—now 50 percent—to -an Economic Planning Board for land use, irrigation. and flood- |control projects, public health, education, communications, ‘ and industry. Among the current ag- ricultural projects is one to plant ‘rice in the Al Qurnah region: to _in-any_of-the black African stat- tty to restore its productivity. Whatever Al Qurnah’s ancient past may have been, it is no Eden now. All around Al Qur- nah lies a strange region that few Iraqis and visitors pene- trate — the brooding marsh- \lands. This is the stronghold of the little-known Ma’dan people _from the reed beds, mud_ flats, | $e | single “spy, ‘lorries, - Lowe was on display at the Civ- | ic Centre. Cinderella, glass slippers, coach, postillions and all was. the central figure i later to be placed in the P.E.I. Protestant Orphange. With the sanction of the réctor, Rt. Rev. R.V. MacKenzie, the students at St. Dunstan's Uni- versity conducted a drive for what they hoped. would be ‘a record- beating drive for blood donors under the leadership of George Mullally and ‘Dick Wedge ik | ; Mother Goose mural-.which was | other day who earn a precarious existence and waterways. Farther south, the. flat and featureless delta country chang- es. Near Basra, the southern port city, grow millions of date- palm trees. Iraq produces about | 80 percent of the world’s date supply, and the southeastern end of the count rylko solike one en- ormous palm grove. Without having to employ al the western allies have. been learning all about a new Russian supersonic fighter-~ bomber capable of carrying at- omic bombs. The Russians pr tically handed them the plané. As they have done frequently | in the’ past—last spring in‘ Ber- lin they spoiled many an early morning ‘sleep — the Russians have recently been flying over West Berlin and causing “sonic booms in an effort to keep the population uneasy. They have ‘made low passes as well, as | part of their scare tactics. The one of their highly secret planes crashed in muddy Lake . Stoessensee...in..the. British sector. of ‘Berlin. The Russians tried immediat- ely to take over the recovery work, The British and Ameri- cans wouldn’t let them. Instead our frogmen recovered the bod- ies of two fliers “and returned ' ~ Spying | Made Easy . oo Journal a |'of the country’s grain is grown. \It was of this area that Herodo- tus wrote: ‘‘The blade of the wheat-plant and barley-plant is often four fingers in breadth. As for the millet ahd sesame, I shall not say to what height they grow . for stam not ignorant that what I ve already written concerning? the fruitfulness of Babylonia must seem incredible | to those who have never visited | | the country.” | Herodotus’s words, Mesopotam- | CONJURES UP PICTURES The land between the two riv- ‘ers was known in the Old Testa- | , 25:20), to the Greeks.as. Baby-*| ofter time as Mesopotamia. It has been peopled by various races. | | The background of today’s ma’- | dan include Sumerian, Babylon- ian,and.-Persian-strains: The name Mesopotamia still _conjures up misty pictures _of the Garden of Eden, the Tower of Babel, and the Great Flood. The oldest religious onicles of Mesopotamia tell that the | earth was created from a wat- | ery chaos. These chronicles as- cribe the “‘fall_of man’’ to eat- ing a forbidden fruit. In ancient | tradition, a deluge covered ‘the family, ij inhabited earth: one forewarned, survived by building a bitumen-smeared ark that car- ried the family members and. ‘animals. As the flood subsided, the Sumerian ‘‘Noah’’ sent out a “dove, swallow, and raven to look | for land. The ark landed on a mountaintop. Present-day visitors to Al Qur- Nah are shown a thorn tree, sur- rounded by a palisade, which is described as the tree of knowl- | edge. Several years ago, the old | tree fell down. The townspeople | were reluctant to lose such a | | fascinating” attraction, so they promptly planted. another that works just as well. them to the Russians, And they | have been recovering the plane | and its instruments, which also will be returned but not until we know all about them. This has had a further good result for our side. The western | allies ‘had charged the Russians with reckless, flying. The charg- ° es were disregarded. Now even the Russians seem to feel it was reckless; they have quit the har- assing flights—they proved too costly BELL BETRAYS BANDIT... OXFORD, ioe (CP)— Telephone and p think they have solved the prob- lem of vandalism against new telephone booths. “Silent alarms which alert the nearest police station when a_ telephone is damaged have proved suc- cessfut te Oxford and are to be | installed throughout Britain. Allexander’s | lice- officials | have’ otosclerosis without deaf: | | ness? j _..REPLY There always is some impair- ment-of hearing ~in hardening of the ear bones. But in the early stages it may not be great enough..to_.interfere_with_practi-_|— | cal hearing. Now ‘and then head noises co-exist ‘and. mask the deafness. NORMAL REACTION - ¥.-L. writes: My eyesight is good but: when I awaken at night and turn on the lamp, I can hardly see for a few minutes. Does this mean anything? REPLY No. It is a natural’reaction as a few moments are needed for | | the eyes to adjust to light.” DANDRUFF ‘REMEDY~ Mrs. J. writes: Is there any. | better treatment for seborrheic | hermatitis than sulfur? : REPLY — Selenium sulfide is said to be | equally, if not more, effective. | TODAY’S- HEALTH HINT— Fun is important to emotional | | well-being. - (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be | addressed. to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen; co Chicago” Trib- une, Chicago, lin Illinois.) | | LET’S GET IT STRAIGHT MANCHESTER, England, (CP)—A British officer never lies to his commander, not even. on television. Defence ministry | officials asked the producers of | fs play to emphasize that the ly- ing incident in the plot was fic- | titious. jobs. e ily spread. In addition, meningi- | a generalized” ” NOTES BY THE iE WAY “Did you give the penny te the monkey, dear?’’ ‘Yes, ma- ma.” “And what did the mon- key do with it?” ‘‘H& gave it to his father, who played the or- gan.’ — Edmonton Journal. Orchestral’ musicians should get at least $7,500 a year, says ‘the Canadian Music Council. For. ithe non-mathematical, that’s a- bout $145 a week or 12 cents a toot on the tuba. Windsor Star. : _ The rich man wins the $1,000 inside the |and the poor man gets a traf- fe ticket while he goes in for |matches. It always happens, By 'a similar process of natural law | the $50,000 - a - year baseball | player is given two new cars by ; the fans, while the guy who had }to go into hock to buy a 1949 model smashes: it: up the first. time out. So we're not at all surprised to learn that a family with an income of: $12 a week | has been blessed .with™ quinttp- | ‘Jets.. — Brandon Sun. cigarette . package, | he ’ ynusual. .centennial- pro. | ject for many people. would be to save sore money, Cal- gary Herald. \ | The principal of a Brooklyn high school, has sent in this no- mination for the best student excuse of the year: “T didn’t ‘do well on my’ test“bécause the glue on my false eyelashes,m. {- ed because it was warm. ‘and I couldn't see what I was doing, My eyes were stuck together’, — Ottawa Journal. “Vou heave .been ‘on 19 counts, and you are here- by committed to the peniten- tiary upon a cumulative sen- . tence of 99 years. Have v-ou anything to say?” “Nothing, | judge,.except you're pretty free with another man’s time.” Toronto Globe and Mail. t t “Tam sorry’, said the den- ,tist, ~‘but ‘you can not have an appointment with me this after ° /noon. I have eighteen cavitie- to fill.” And he picked up hic golfbag and went out. — Finan- {cial Post: convicted U.S. Economists Worried By Arch MacKenzie “WASHINGTON (CP) — When | Canadian cabinet ministers met | their American counterparts | here early last month to talk /economic turkey, the United | States side said it would watch | ‘Canadian } 1 with deep _ interest measures to handle inflationary | bressures. : ~Subsequently;—- Finance Minis- ter Sharl’s budget, with its in- ‘come-tax increase and appeals | for restraint in investment, was | carefully noted as a useful ba- rometer. from a_ similar and | -tightly- allied economy. ~~ However, President so far has managed to stave off a decision to increase U.S. taxes, a step unpalatable polit- ically__at any time -and _espe- | ‘cially so ~ with congressional © | elections coming in November. i Johnson has talked a good - / game, © urging housewives to | | boycott “food items on which | there have been especially high | | price increase, and industrial | leaders to discourage — capital | investment where possible. But Thursday's cost-of-living | figures for March, showing that | prices march upward still, seem ' to make it a lot tougher for the | president to:keep on doing noth-' | ing. _This is the second bad month }in a row. February and March | ..Show__ the _ sharpest__ two-month price increases since 1958 and. — on sovernment _ ‘economists .s.ay_ | aon. will “Mikely continue _the ni Americans had to sper $112 Johnson T Canadian’ Press’ Staff, Washington in “March tox buy “what. “$100 would- have boug “1957-59. | While. Johnson and. his offi. | cials have been applying the psychological coolant of talking prices down, such a technique can only be temporary. February’s prices were ex | plained away as reflecting tem- | porary_and. unustial influences, | at work on meats, vegetables and other commodities close to the female. voter’s keari and pocketbook. Agriculture Secretary Orville “[Freeman angered the farm. belt™ by predicting farm produce prices would, and perhaps should, ease. No such lowering is noted in the March _ figures. Some - sig- nificant increases appeared “in other sectors. : There are two other signs Johnson may have to raise | taxes to curb spending. One is the indication an in- (crease this year in the social security tax doesn’t appear to have held ‘the consumer back at all. Instead, savings have been raided to carry on the spending spree. The other is while -Johnson has beeen asking business: to curb capital “investment, ernment spending for the first three months ran at~a record’ annual rate of $1333,000,000,000. ‘Half the increase of $6,000,-~ 000,000 was for defence—Viet -Nam—but even —so, it doesn't strengthen the presiderft’s ap- gov-~ 4 ‘peals to business for restraint. Christian Unity Christian - ‘Science Monitor th a four-way, television collo- | quy, the four most influential re- | ligious figures of Christendom have recognized that there are still deep-going™ “doctrinal differ- | ences dividing them. Speaking “an a program with the Archbis- hop of Canterbury, the secretary”! | of the World Council of Church- 'es and the senior Patriarch of | the Orthodox Churches, Pope | Paul VI has called-for—a-contin- | | uation of the effort to ‘achieve | Christian unity, but made it plain--that- the -difficulties-in the | path of such. an’effort were of a ‘| mature “as to not. let one fore- | see a sudden and satisfactory | , solution.” The Pope made it clear that “the Catholic Church was not ([ | Prepared to surrender those doc- | trinal points which separated it | from: Protestantism and. Ortho- | ony. Speaking for the Council, Dr. Visser .’t Hooft also stressed | the “Jong road” ahead. It is well that these difficul’ ties. be realized. it is equally which lay | well that there is no disposition | to make sacrifices or adjust- | | ments which violatesmen’s reli- gious conscience. Indeed, broth- | erhood and cooperation can best be achieved when each man follows his religious conviction | - JUSTA NOTICE Spring is a busy time of the year for everyone. The men at Maritime Electric are busy too .... . they have summer cot- tages to turn on. .. new services to run... and many other \ Avoid inconvenience and dle by onplying fer service at least 48 hours before it is sree ~ REMINDER FOLKS! 48 HOURS MINIMUM FOR ALL CONNECTIONS - and is iepared ts “permit his brother to do likewise. The founder of this newspaper } |Mary Baker Eddy, wrote that - “unity: is spiritual cooperation.” We believe that only through an increasingly higher and more spiritual sé@éise of religion can | true and lasting unity be achiev- jed. For mankind’s .growth in eliminate all that separates men jand give them a common reco- | gnition of the divine source of ; all spiritual truth. ‘Only at aD os yz an@ites - AT 25% SAVINGS. “DURING OUR BIG -APRIL DIAMOND SALE! FRIENDLY REQUIRED this. direction ..must eventually.