ey Si treatment than has been - to us ‘for a long time.-That, however, _ does “not imply that they voted for PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1959 Out Of The Wilderness oe _ present 70 American military men administering the military aid pro- ent ikke Old Man History erties _“finis” to a chapter, turns over the ‘page and begins anew. Such a mom- ent has arrived in our Political his- ory. A quarter century of Li rule has ended and the Conservatives have been returned under their en- ergetic leader, Mr. Walter R. Shaw, with a handsome majority and an unquéstioned mandate to implement their policies for the betterment of _ this Province, in harmony and co- ‘ operation with the Diefenbaker Goveg ernment at Ottawa. ’ In one sense, this election was much more vital to the Conservatives than to, the Liberals, for defeat at this time would have been crushing indeed. For the Liberals of this gen- eration, a spell in Opposition should have a salutary effect. Certainly it, wilk give them experience of which all politicians stand in need—of see- ing. the Promised. Land from the other side of Jordan, -viewing it as sojourners in the wilderness rather than as favored sons of . fortune, basking under its palm trees and en- joying its sustenance. Nor have we any doubt that they will prove a : strong and virile. Opposition, what ever their numbers of which we only Hazard a ‘guess at the ti writing. ’ While ratylating the Conser- vatives on-their magnificent victory, we trust that they will bear constant- ly in mind the “~veaknesses which they allege to/have been evident ih ts’ administration, and conscientiously. The peo- e of em. Particularly, it appears, the “people wanted an end to any partisan _ bickering with Ottawa at this stage ” of affairs, when there is every~pro- spect of receiving more sympathetic accorded a subservient government in this Province. We still have many claims upon. Ottawa that have not been dealt with, and others will arise from time to time that will require aggressive “action by our provincial spokesmen. . Harmony aad co-operation are -all very well up to a point, but only so ‘long as our provincial] interests are being served. We trust, .too, that in other mat- ters party politics will now be rel- —ggated to a back seat. We have every | Xeonfidence in Mr. Shaw’s sense ,of . fairness and responsibility to the el- ectors at large, andsbelieve that he will frown on any partisan exploita- tion, either of the spoils of office -« or of the ‘authority vested in it. * “Afrogance, we recall, was one of the sins of commission he laid against- the. Matheson Government> He and his followers will have the opportun- ity-of showing their constant aware- - hess that they are the servants, not the masters, of the electorate; and we can recommend no wetter - policy to their attention at this time. Laos And The U.S: In Washington, State Secretary © Herter Has said the United’ Nations « . . may take some part in Laotian af- But .since. Communist: China} fairs: supports one side of the struggle. a settlement may have to be reach- ed outside the U.N., as it was in Geneva, in 1954 when the Indo- Chinese agreements were negotiat- ed. The U.N. influence) has refused to admit Communist China to its member- ship. — is Yet the United States has a” treaty obligation toward this: re- mote Asjam kingdom and its 2,000,- 000 people—It is set forth ‘in the Southeast Asia _ collective defense treaty. signed by the late Secretary: Dulles in 1954. Other signers were representatives of Australia, France, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philip- pines, Thailand and the <ined6m—fhe-treAty is not as. ab- solute or immediate in its effective- ness as the NAT( ) agreement, which says that an armed attack against one member shall be considered as an attack against all. Bat it does “provitie ‘that “if the inviolability or bi Antegrity of Serritory, or, sovereignty (largely through US. - United- gram in Laos and nearly 100 civil- ian technicians instructing the soldiery in the use of weapons. It is not surprising, therefore, that Secretary Hertér is concerned about the situation. This month appea crucial one in maintaining this Indo- Chinese. state’s indepen ence. In addition to the U-N., SEATO (the Southéast Asia Treaty — Organiza- - tion) is meeting in the United States, and so are President Eisen- howef’ and Premier -Khrushcheyv— all on Sept. 15. Distinguished Visitors . Welcome visitors to the Proyiace to be the ive portfolios. erans r pitals and establishments, had distinguished record overseas e served as Major in the 26th Bat- talion, Later he commanded the 16th Infantry Brigade, and was overseas” on two occasions during World War Two. He made his mark also,as an educationist and as organizer of the Conservative Party in New Bruns- wick before entering federal- politics. .First elected to the House of Com- mons in. 1935, he took over his pre- sent office in the Diefenbaker Gov- ernment on June 21, 1957. Always a strong champion of war veterans’ in-~ terests, his appointment .was hailed with approval by members of all parties in the House. : Mr: Hamilton, who- is conducting an inspectional tour of postal install- vinces, has represented the.Montreal constituency ef Notre-Dame’de Grace in Parliament since 1953, and like Mr. Brooks, has held his cabinet post for the past two years. He will con- fer with local department official8 - during brief stay, and will also view the extensive postal facilities in, this city. * Both ministers will find sme. ent and thoroughly-trained staffs in their departments here, and we have 20 doubt their impressions will be favorable. It is to be hoped that, ati. a later period, they will find time te a more extended -visit, combin- EDITORIAL NOTES. Young people from more than twenty countries have just attend- ed a three-week seminar on ways of combatting prejudice and discri> |-mination, organized by the World Veteran’s Federation at the Univer- sity of Arhus, in Denmark. It is an_ encouraging sign of the times. * * * S The Canadizn’ Labor Congress has voiced the views of many Can- adians in its concern’ over the treatment of natives in South Africa. The CLC leader, Mr. Jodoin, has called on the Canadian Govern- ment to “speak up boldly and un- equivocaly on this issue.” Should this effort fail,he says the Cop- South Africa from the Common- weath of Nations,. Le » - * About 10 million people pro- tected from: malaria, over 16 mil- lion: young people tested for tuber- culosis, 10 million examined for yaws and 2,400,000 mothers and children given'-a glass of milk each day: these aré-some | of the achievements tions Children’s Fund (UNICEF). activities in Asian countries for the first half of 1959. In addition, 623 new health centres in this region were equipped and_ supplied with -drugs and diet supplements, bring- ing the total-number of such céntres being aided by UNICEF to. 10,700. Can we doubt that these humanitar- ian activities, and others which the organization is carrying on through- out the world, are of. immeasurable: “value in promoting goodwill and understanding? — e First World War, during which | ations throughout the Atlantie Pro- , ing pleasure with business if that’) be possible. gress will call for the exclusion of § noted ip’ ‘a survey of the United Na- * 1A OTTAWA REPORT S Many >an experienced journal- | ist has commented upon the death of, a king. But seldom does the occasion arise when ome can write the obituary of one of the great newspaper empires, while coronation ‘of perhaps the world’s greatest newspaper emperor -of all time. This rare occasion, to proclaim: “The King is dead, long live the King,” will occur‘: next month, when the name of the great Brit- ish chain of Kemsley Newspaper will be changed. to ‘Thomson : Newspapers Limited”’. ‘ The creation of Kemsley News- dramatic achievement by a humb- came a great newepaper editor, wielding ummense influence,in the life of his country. The building up of Thomson Newspapers in Canada, in the United States, m Scotland. arid now in England, is the terrific success story of an ordinary Canadian who has play ed a solo hand every inch of the way. Roy Thomson's achieve ment not merely exemplifies the opportunity open to hard work and ambition in North America; it also shows~the Old Country that the opportunity which it en- vies in the New World also. exists right in its own backyard. MULTI-MILLION READERSHIP It was about fifteen years ago when Roy Thomson, the roly-poly ealesman from northern Ontario, began-to peer through bis weak eyes into the rarified heights of , national success and imternation- al recognition. [It has not been un- til his sixties that, by pulling Two important conferences in, London at the end of August, 1959, will _be—concerned_with_plans-for space research amd space tra- vel. The first, starting on ‘August 27, is the ‘special. Commonwealth Spaceflight Symposium , bringing together scientists from Britain, Australia, .Canada, India and South Africh. This will be fol- lowed, on August 31, by the tenth Congress of tHe International As- tronautical Federation, which will _ be attended by scientists from all over the world. The lines of Britain’ S space re- search programme were made ~known by the Prime Minister, Mr Harold ._Macmillam, in a state - ment in the House of Commons, London, on ‘May 12, Initially, it will take the form of a pro gramme—work on which has al- ready begun—for the design ‘and “construction of instrument‘. Mean while, design studies for the ad- aption ofritieh military rockets now under development are be- ing put in hand, Research activities: are conduc- ted by the Steering «Group on * Space’ Research, which was ap- pointed by the Lord President of the Council, Lord Hailssham, and which includes representatives of Britain’s Royal Society, the Air Ministry and the Ministry of Sup- ply...The supervision of the pro- gh e is being undertaken by the British National Committee on Space Research, which works in conjunction with. the’ Internation- ‘COSPAR). set up by the Inter- national Council, of Scientific Un- ions at a meeting” in London in "October, 1958, to “arrange! inter- fic experiments conducted in space, The chairman of the British Na _S.W. Massey, Quain Professor. of * Physics at the University of Lon- don, and the. Chairman of _ the Steering Group is Sir Edward hHuitard, a Fellow of the” Royal Society, arid: ‘a former difector of Britain's National Physical La- boratory. Private industry is also e a the same time ‘heralding the. papers in Great Britain was a Y—ty-born —Weish—genius, who be “gives his editors ‘| torial policy on public affairs. | the | that several vehiCtes, a) .Committee on Space Research> | phere research ‘under the 2: Modern Success Story — By Patrick Nicholson himself up bv bis - own ‘boat.’ straps from a beginning of less than average opportunity: in Tor- omo, he has emerged as this success bestriding the Atlantic. sane As Roy Thomson cantered eas- y past Canada’s previous great- on ‘his rival's 65th birthday that “tis vitakity and success confirm the middletaged man’s hopes, that life’s latest sands are _its sands of gold.’* While Mr. ‘Thomson's newspa- pers are‘read’ in homes from’ Prince Edward Island to Vancou- ver Isl Florida, in Britain he now has a readership of over 8,000,000 each weekday, and nearly doubie that on Sundays. This, one might imagine, means power behind the scenes, and a great influence on the daily lives and subconscious rreactions of many millions of families in three countries. But Roy Thomson does not fit into the established patiern of English newspaper, baron or the North. American tycoon. He does not .see his mewspapers as wea- pons. for personal power, so he a .completely free hand, never dictating edi- THE COMMUNITY FIRST . The new boss of what will soon be called the Thomson Newspa- Paers in Britain recently sent out tis first-order to his edi “At all times serve and m the best interests of your commun- ity. If that- community's’ interests Britain’s Space Research - United Kingdom Information Services ere at the ences. IN US. SATELLITES aaa confer- ‘In the first stages of the Bri- | tish programme. advantage is be- / ing taken of- the offer made by to fly other. United States countries’ scientific equipment in United States satellites. A_ Brit- ish in National Aeronautics and Space Administration (N.A.S.A.)° there. As a result, ‘space research ex- periments devised by, and with instruments designed by, Britieh scientists will be carried out us- ing satellites devel« into orbit by the United ‘States. The rocket to be died will be the ‘Scout’ now under develop- ment by N.A.S.A. It is a multé stage, solid fuel satéllite which would weight about 150 pounds and measure 20 inches; it would orbit« at about 300 mile. altitude. It is due to be ready im about two years, and it is expected each de voted to three or four experi- ments by British scientists, will be fired. The instruments to be prepared would be-used for a variety of re- search, including such matters ‘as the electrical properties of the upper atmosphere, ultra-violet ra- diation from the sun,-the Earth's magnetism and \gravitation micrometeorites. Professor Mas- sey stated recently that the range r scientific work which can be carried out ‘once it is possible to obserye from outside the Earth's atmosphere, is so great that there is no possibility of its being ex- national collaboration’ iat scienti- +hausted in the foreseeable future, This is so even if the work is carried out-from satellites. which do not travel to distances more (ional Commitiee is Professor H. | than 1,000 miles or so from the Earth's surface. . Experimesits into upper atmos- “Skye lark” ‘high ‘altitude programme were starfed in 1958 by the Gas- siot Committee of the Royal So ciety and the United ~Kingdom Ministry of Supply, and aré now | working on space flight research,\ |-the responsibility of he British J ond is Contributing several pap- | National Commitiee on pee Re it rua a aheod ‘of, their thinking. . generously . commented |! team headed by Professor’ | Magsey spent sevefal weeks | the U.S.-in discussions with the ont pt. ching” vehicle could and ; bung in ser ene of- fice... Yet “the unbelievable thing is t ‘Roy Thomson certainly means that. As a free-lance jour- nalist, I have been writing this daily calumn for tis . Canadian newspapers for over seven years. Many people may find it hard to believe that, that I should write this or should not write thus, on amy topic in the realm of public affairs. Even at the time when he was him- se standing as a candidate at a general election, he never lif- ted i camplete freedom of: expression which I have always enjoyed. Nor has he at any time pterfered with the freedom of fis editors | contains. tannin which, by its Ts Conibat ean Constipation Should avoid tea. The beverage astringent action, may counter- act the desired effect of the con- sumption of a larger quantity of liquid. Buttermilk is a good drink for @ constipated person. Generally, it is a good idea to to usé their own discretion whe- ther to publish or to discard any column written-by me, or any other piece offered to their news- papers. It ts by this editorial freedom -| that Roy Thomson's newspapers, in Canada, in the States and now in Britain. are setting a desir- able new pattern. As a former Kemsley writer; I recall in con- trast the charge bya British Ca- binet Minister that editorials were written to the chairman's order-| lin the head office, to be used by the various newspapers making up what that Minister called ‘‘The Kemsley Gramophone’’. er or not that charge was true. sincere praise is due to Roy Thomson _for-restormg to_modern newspaper editors the desirable Position, of vigorous independence. search. Research departments of | @! Wednesday | Britain's universities have heen ponsible for designing much of o instrumentation carried by ihe ‘‘Skylark”’ rockets, one “of which was fired on the occasron of the ‘International Geopysical Year World Rocket Interval. “BLUE STREAK” The adaptation of United King- dem military rockets mentioned earlier wi be based on the “Blue Stwéak’’ launching system. “Blue Streak"’ is a longer-range ballistic missile using liquid ‘pro pellant fuels. Principal contrac- tors are de Havilland. Propellers | Ltd., with Rolls-Royce Ltd., pro- viding the rocket’ motors and the Sperry gyroscope Gompany Litd., the inert guidance and control system. © It is believed. that Such a laun- utilise the “Black Knight’, high-altitude re | search rockét as a second stage Rocket, and a smaller. rocket for | the third stage. This. would, per- mit the launching of payloads of the order of 1,000 pounds at a few hundred miles or correspon- dingly smaller payloads at great er distances. For the present, work ig being limited to design studies only. TRACKING = Radio-physicists in Britan have beek participating im ,satellite }. work for some time. excep tionally powerful-radio telescopes. at the Universities of Manches- ter (Jodrell Bank) and Cam- bridge, and the Radio Research Station at Slough, apart from be- ing employed in tracking the Un- | ited States and Russian sate lites, have’ been using the radio and radar signals from these ob jécts to study a whole range of radio effects in the almosphere. The recent success in transmit- ting messages for the first time by way of.the moon, from Bri- tain to: the’ U.S.. using the 250 feet aerial at JodreH Bank, giv- @s: an indicatibn of the possibili- ties.-of using outer space for in- ternational Co bar sano on “MAXIMS All great discoveries are made by men whose ee Wheth- | a. NOTES BY THE WAY. icans through his control of French airfields, to increase France's hold on American pol- | iey—not. only in this hemisphere | but in Asia, too. The-small fact that Mr, Eisenhower will not be meeting his Western allies all to- gether: at a ‘Western summit’, but will call on them individual- ly, before the exchange of visits with Mr. Khrushchev, may be a polite indication that he will not submit his policy wholly te their committee control, By Bundesen, M.D. ae " ; gen- | ' At last the heat’s on for tit-; We think of our cavemen am orety calle for & good overbaul | tenbugs. Atter August 15 the law cestors as being a rather crude basic diet. Certain items which - forbids throwing rubbish | 2% ‘silly lot. They entertained en ee oe , , themselves in the evening. by sit- dropped. . on streets, in lanes and vacant | ting around a fire and chanting ener mew ve the prob- | lots, in any public place or high- eam OS A a ate ot ee temporarily, but you can't | way, will be emforced. By the | sense. But what do we. do keep taking them day in and day | police. The li'terbug when seen turn on- the radio of tdlevision out | without running into real | wilt be served’ with a ‘summons. and listen to moronic singing ce (routle . ih | His mean or even dangerous | mercials? Maybe we haven't ad* FLUIDS anti-social act will cost tim pro- vanced so far, after all—Brant . yr yore : hould in- | D@bly $5 or $10 a “throw”. B | ford Expositor constipated person may .be only a wrapper— care See Setaeee ot Reh WW S| sme sk _ About the only piece of real _| considerable soggy retin only pad : a _ only pu | estate picked a by Ese a Be seen” oaks. tee 96 from cigarettes—$5 . - shrinking empire since od. Te "| This will help replace the water | ; Admiralty announced that a eo ee ae al plague ignving Bale ‘ae ; -) nexa tiny and Just how much water = you Gow of the North Atlantic four years ago should drink depends upon your | 29d the Soviet Union are yo has disappeared. Rockall, an um» habits and the condition of your | change visits is good The inhabited pile of rocks 200 miles | Gireulation. Naturally, if you | strictions-of “alliance ‘ean i viatted ee, ane See lead .a sedentary life you won't have .been pointed but by Mr y by i oy" - | er Devonport. The landing party ‘searched in vain for the plaque which was bolted and cemented into hard rock in September, 1955, In the name of Queen Elizabeth Il, the sailors rehdisted: the um ion jack and fixed a temporary - tablet on the site. An Admiralty spokesman said: “‘It is _a-mys* “tery. We do not know what has happened to the plaque. It was .bolted down securely above the “high-water mark”. —Fort William Times-Journal : The Age Old Sto Whose offereth praise glorifieth me: and to him that ordereth his the salvation of God. . conversation aright will I shew _ ° ae 7 émcrease the consumption of vege- D d A T 7 tables which contain a lot of cel- lamon Ss ttract Ourists ‘ | lulose. Now, don’t. carry this to ‘ By Ed Martin, Canadian Press the extreme by eating a lot of | Beneath a churned substitutes which are indigestible. | ture near this aan laa oe = ae ee se: ; They may add bulk and aid evac’ | town lies a treasure trove some | The remarkable pasture is one uation, but the over-all effect is geologists. believe may hold $1,- | of two sites in the world where unfavorable. 000,000,000 in diamonds. diamonds are found in their nat- Fruits, except astringent fruits But this possible rival to the | ural matrix. The otffer is in South should be eaten_freely. -| Kimberley fame in South Af- | Africa’s Kimberley district. : ; mca is only a tourist attraction = ieee eas consid- | —©¥ery attempt at commercial MUCH SK ERY ered useful in chronic constipa- | ing has failed. ~~ | Although skullduggery and com bias: iaiieda cabhin : Mismanagement, sabotage, le- | fusion loomed large in the his- ge, cauliflow- : : tore of the a a er, aSparagus,” sdlads, s,"cetery, gal brawling and high operating | ry iamonds, and ale = | ions, and tomatoes. 1 OF | costs stymied promoters. A dec- |. though land title disputes grew so. | Helpful cereals include oat- ade ago the property owners gave hot that bullets whizzed, the oniy | meal and cornmeal, and the best | UP all hopes of mining and turned oe here fere dreams of _ aa breads are graham, whole wheat, | € 32-acre tract into a happy Git af the deo | rye and bran. . CaS Oe er ieee tae cas aimed dee Wadlan Other foods usually of help in a | Now some 40,000 persons a year m Wesleg pay. a small fee to pry through | Huddleston, who turned up a cou conte an are apples, Dears | the multicolored soil of this vol- | Pie of diamonds in 1906. A banker Fee rama me cai freak known as th Grater |i Muresboro offered im 0 ° iamonds. . - ar L —Some strike it tich. The rule is | But canny John sent his trink- GUESTION AND ANSWER. finders - keepers for stones under | ¢t6 to a Little Rock jeweler, who Mrs_C.G-: Is there anything 1 | five carats, but a reyaity-must |i" turn dispatched them to an can take to induce normal sleep? | be paid to the management on |€xpert in New York. any medicinal valde in | larger gems. The expert electrified the world itidney? Can it help me sleep at | WAS WORTH $25,000 + /-with an announcement that Hud night? Several years ago a housewife | dleston’s stones were high-grade Answer: Normal sleep is help- | from Texas picked up a shiny | diamonds. A diamond rush a ed by proper environmemtal con- | Chunk which proved to-be a 15 brought thousands of prospectors, a ditions such as a proper bed, | carat beauty, worth $25,000 after | Con men and promoters to soullr quiet, ventilation without a draft | cutting. Tourists have stumbled west Arkansas, but no one made and the avoidancéyf exciting ex- | en hundreds of sparklers ranging | @n0ther strike. periences just before retiring.| up to three carats, &. _ | WENT ON SPREE. - S Often a warm drink such as milk | In the years of abortive miming {| And Huddleston? _He sold out or ovaltine, or 4 warm_bat various promoters, | for $36,000 — a fortune in those eips to relax the mind | thousands of first-quality stones | days — then went on a huge and body and induce sleep. were taken from the—old pas | spree and ended a- pauper. Honey has no $pecial virtue in | ture. One, a .40 - carat dazzler, |; One of the present owners of this regard, but could be added to | was the biggest diamond ever | the craterHoward A. Millar, and a warm drink if desired. found in North America: his late father set up a mining x After tests revealed the Arkan- | company in 1908: They tried for OUR YESTERDAYS sas diamonds were 28 per-cent | 11 years to operate—but so much ; yt harder than any others known, | litigation beset the-firm that little +—+tFrom the Guardian Files) industrialists toyed with the idea time could be devoted to actual ; os iecleiias area tea of mining the crater. | working. _ TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO |""rye tate Glenn L. Martin, air-| Nowadays, Millar and his fel’ “ (Sept, 2, 1934) ; | ] ; a : craft designer, was among the |low owners keep the crate? eet ee - aoe backers of the fal mining | plowed in order to give paying Ss taken UP. TESIMence | <cheme in the 1940s. a chance at fresh ma-- at St. Paul's” Rectory, “Summer | $799,000 into the venture, which | terial. side, and will assist Rev., GJ. oad: SS = MacLellan, D.D., V.G. as curate. |», ; Father —_O'Hanley—suéceeds Rev. | i : es s Bennett--MacDonaid _wha—leaves—— t : ee i for Grand River Hilt where he will assist Rev. John \)) pe . A... MacDonald. 1h, ; - Miss Gertrude May @bra who FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS for many years has been employ- ; Att y be : — | ed wiih Milligan and Morrison at a : Northam, has resigned her posi hii Consult ‘~ tion and leaves this morning fog ; io New York where she intends t : ‘ st HYNDMAN & CO: LTD e 4 TEN YEARS AGO a 2 (Sept. 2, 194995 z | Insurance Since 1872 — Dr. William E_ Dudley, pastor Hil ou experience ef ever:9 years ; of Trimty United Chu:ch bere for lel ticatiane< te ah the past year and Mts. Dudley, j ror : are leaving next week for.Holy J Wi yeur dispesal™ — | oke, Mass., where he will be the ‘ HA OFFICES: interkm pastor in the Second Coa | gregational Church. He will begin | @ Charlottetows . a _Sumnierside his work on Sepiember [Sth | @ Moatague e Alberton’ what is regarded as one a the i largest and. most outstanding Hl Agents Throughout the Province | churches in New Enland Will wy Se b | Musié and songs by Ray Little — = — =e and his- orchesirra provi iget © an ey es : A afternoon's entertainment ‘for pa : : tients in the Provincial Sanator- (F YOUR GUARDIAN “ ium Wednesda?. The show was ‘ j ‘put on in the entertainmert room : i : and carried: throughout the bund oe oN ing by the public address system 1S LATE OR MISSED Dr. Cyril O'Reilly thanked the ot - eee half of the. pat ients. chestrg ‘on behalf of th J ‘ - _ Jocks Cowier |] 1 and's paper will be delivered right, to your door. =o Special delivery service ‘available between 8:30 GOLDEN THE STARS a.m. to 9:00 a.m. if your paper is we — oF , | Gold as ‘the gold-glittering missed. Fleece of Colehis,« , Golden the stars, littering - In Myriad fields‘ of sky, 23 : : Golden the starseof Argus>~ For the Fastest Service in Town, call : Golden the ficT >) Wheel here Cassiopeia, The Lady in her Chair i , Combs in the deeps of night Her bright. gold-glitier.ng iaix and where The far, gold-glowimg siar, , : ‘ Monoceros, i ‘ ~o% , g ‘ Hid at Me heart as Unicor n, DIAL 6561 . Blazes and breaks the tight : , ee Nets pf time and_wakes All the sentient air In that. far Otherwhere. Kal herine’ Kennedy in te Christian es Monitor s = ~ 193 Great George St. Ed's Slogan: serve “To maintain the goodwill - the goal for which we strive!”