l l i I l as cum.-luau (levers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew ? W. J. Hancox, Publisher ‘ lifters Lewis Frank Walker Egcutlve ’Edltor Editor _ bllshed every week day morning (except Sun- and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street. rlottetown, P.E.t., Drench offices 98 and Souris. ‘Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Aflvartlslng Services Toronto. 425 University Ave. Entpire 3-8894; Montreal, 640 Cathcart Street, UNlyersity 6-5942; Western office, I030 West Georgia 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- lication of all news .dispatches in this Dept! credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reu- ters, and also to the local news published here in. All rights on republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 35: per week by carrier. $ll.0O a year by mail or rural routes and areas not serviced by carrier- Sl-t.OO a year off Island and U.K. $20.00 per V“, in us. gnd elsewhere outside British Com monwe . ‘Not over 7c per single copy. - Mamba Audit Bureau of Circulation. EnAl'. snpramuna 1. 1262- Another Labor Day It has been said, truly enough. that many of us are heirs by accid- ent to the idle joys of Labor Day. When the crusade began, back in the last century, for an annual holi- day to honor those who toil it was the toilers that had to do the crus- ading-—-in their spare time, after putting in an average of 12 hours’ backbreaking work a da.V- T0fla.V. thanks to them, all of us who earn —-or like to think we earn—out' living in urban pursuits can lay aside our labors and enjoy our leis- ure on this holiday with an easy mind. Organized labor has come a long way since those early days in achieving recognition of the rights for which it stands. The story of the movement has in the main been a. heartening record of the steady growth of human dignity. Much of the power that the plant and factory and mine owners once enjoyed has been transferred now to the unions and their leaders. And their success has been in direct relation to their recognition of the fact that with this transference of power has gone transference of re- sponsibility. The wisest leaders are those who freely concede ‘that the relationship is based not on the shifting ground of special interests but on the general good. Ianada has a good record in this respect, and perhaps nowhere in Canada is the record more credit- able than in Prince Edward Island. A tribute is due here to the parent organization in Charlottetown, the Laborers Protective Union, which has set an example in which not only its own members, but all our citizens. can take pride. It is to be hoped that Monday's holiday will not be marred by seri- ous traffic accidents, as has been the case too frequently in the past. The police have urged, in this re- gard, that special care be exercised on our highways over the weekend. It. is a warning that all should heed. “The Needs Of Our Day" Describing itself as "an inde- etructible believer in the virtue and need of political parties, and par- ticularly in the need and virtue of a Conservative party, rightly under- stood,” the Ottawa Journal under- takes to sum up its impressions of the Tory powwow in the federal capital this week. Mr. Diefenbaker, it notes, says he had seldom seen such enthusiasm. But The Journal has some qualifications on this point, and these are what make its com- mentary interesting. ' What. actually, was the enthus- iasm about? Did it mean, asks The Jiournal, that the party had rec- dgnized its possible mistakes and sbfeolved to profit by them? Or was this only something generated by fervid oratory-—“cheers which, like team. dry up and leave no trace?" The Party, sighs The Journal, "is terribly afflicted by romanticism. It can become completely emotional over wherasir John Macdonald stood in 1878 or 1891; it too seldom trou- ble: to ask itself where Sir John would likely be standing in 1962.” The result of this handicap is .. that "people. specially young people. auerledtothinkofiteespartyof ’ past, chained by tradition. un- Imrilllng to adapt itself ‘ neeflof our day. And add- by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. at Summerside, Montague. Alber- \ Can It be that these are the ones who were doing the enthusing at this week's party gatherings? Our Ottawa contemporary doesn't say so, but it reminds all and sundry that Lord Hailsham warned British Con- servatives that it is often only by change that conservation may be achieved—that they are "the ten- ders of a garden, not the curators of a museum." And it suggests that in Canada the party “might well consider chucking a lot of the airy, fleeting and insubstantial stuff of TV, get back to telling its story through the more solid, enduring way of the printed and spoken word~—stop assuming that the pub- lic are a lot of juveniles whose men- talities do not rise above Westerns.” Good advice. and tendered in the right spirit. Indeed, it could be of advantage to all the parties if they pondered its implications. The Wrong Reason In announcing that the federal hog bonus is being reduced from $3 to $2 per head, effective im- mediately, Agriculture M i n i s t. e 1' Hamilton said the market is now very firm and grade A prices in Toronto are about $33 per hundred pounds ‘compared with less than $29 last. year at this time. It is too bad that he didn't leave it at that. He went on to say. how- ever. that. the change was “related to the necessity of reducing govern- ment expenditures.” The saving would amount to approximately $1,500,000 in the current fiscal year. Since the hog premium was given to stimulate quality product- ion in a. basic farm commodity, ob- viously it was justifiable on eco- nomic grounds, and it would be false economy to pare it down to suit the exigencies of the treasury. The government would be much better occupied in plugging the leaks in its bureaucratic expenditures in other departments. If the premtum was unnecessar- ily high because of the strengthening market, that of course is another matter. But since Mr. Hamilton seems to attach equal importance to the conflicting reasons he gave for the reduction, the suspicion re- mains that the government's con- cern has been chiefly with its budgetary problems. As President Hannam of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture points out, the $3 premium has done much to encourage production of high-quality hogs, and this is important for Canadian agriculture as a whole. It would be as unwise to tamper with i-t for “austerity” rea- sons as to put the hogs on short rations and expect to save money thereby. Mr. Hamilton knows this, of course, which is why we are dis- appointed with his Janus-faced ex- plan-ation. EDITORIAL NOTES Mr. Fleming has been ousted from his post as Finance Minister but we note that he still remains Canada's representative on the Or- ganization for Economic Co-opera- tion and Development, where he will end his term as president late this year. He also remains Can- ada's representative on the board of governors of the International Bank, and on the International Monetary Fund, Finance Corporation and Development Agency. II II It! France has liberalized imports of most fish products, especially those of interest to Canadian exporters, eaye Foreign Trade magazine. Sales prospects are best for frozen sal- mon, groundfish fillets, fresh or frozen lobsters, and scallops. Al- though the number of French buyers" with facilities to handle and store shipments of live lobsters is limited, these facilities ‘are increasing and it is predicted that the market will continue to expand. a as is Among the 17 nations at the Geneva disarmament conference are eight non-aligned powers-—Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Sweden and the United Arab Republic. The West will have scored a substantial gain if they become convinced, and spread the word to their fellow neutrallete, that it is the Soviet Union ‘and not tho West which is standing in the way of disarmament. Every effort should be made to bring the facts to light in this connection. ‘ PRE-HOLIDAY REMlNDER OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Business Tycoons As Cabinet Ministers In the faraway days when the Caesars ruled the Roman Em- pire, it was said that Caesar‘: wife must be not only pure. but above suspicion. So today it is widely and pro- perly felt that a Cabinet Minis- ter must be like Caesar's wife -—- at least in matters which ef- fect the taxpayers‘ money. It is an unflattering sidelight upon the quality of patriotic self- lessness displayed by our big business tycoons and czars of industry that we very seldom hear talk about a Cabinet Minis- ter’s “conflict of interests." But the recent appointment of Sena- tor Wally McCutcheon to our federal cabinet has now arous- ed such . In private life, Mr. McCutch- eon was privately considered to be one of the “four horsemen" who really made Canadian in- dustry tick. As a person of such prominence. he inevitably held directorships of many important companies: so too did he inev- ltably own stock interests in such business undertakings. CONFLICT “OF INTEREST But the lay Mr. Mccutcheon, business I:-fin, became Hon. Wal- ter McCu eon. Cabinet Minis- ter, there immediately arose the possibility that he would have to take part in government de- cisions which might affect one or other of his business interests adversely or favourably. This is the possibility of "conflict of interests" which faces every in- dustrial tycoon entering politics. ' Hon. H. H. Asquith, a former prime minister of B11- tain, set oul certain "rules of obligation" covering this situa- tion in Britain: in general, they have been accepted as valid for Canada too. More than half a century ago, Mr. Asquith said; “The first and the most obvious rule is that ministers ought r. to enter into any transaction whereby their private pecuni- ary interests might. even con- ceivably, come into couflict with their public duty." Other rules outline a mints- ter’s obligation to refrain f r o m using official information for his own private profit or for that of his friends: and his obligation to refuse any kind of flavour from persons holding or seeking government contracts. Then fol- lowed the “rules of prudence", which might be described as the Caesar's wlfe" admonition -not only to be right, but to be above suspicion of unrighteousness. PRUDENT In line with these obligations and this prudence, Mr. McCutch- eon followed the accepted course of resigning from'a1l his direc- torships. This has not always been done, even in post-war Ca- nadian history. Should a minister also sell his shareholdings in business? That is a more difficult question. If, in his official capacity, he has deal- ings with those companies —yes. If. in his official capacity, he makes decisions which might affect those companies or their competitive trading position — yes. The former Liberal govern- ment repeatedly came un d e 1- heavy criticism, especially from the then CCF member from Win- nipeg. Stanley Knowles. one the charge that certain ministers in- Iringed the rules of obligation. The kind of question in Mr. Knowles‘ mind, and in the mind of many others in and out of Parliament, concerned the fact that certain ministers seemed to have acquired inexplicable or abnormal wealth. Mr. Macken- zle King himself, for example, the child of unwealthy parents, left a fortune approximating to every nickel he had drawn from the public treasury through the years as M.P. and minister. The most vivid resentment of Mr. Knowles’ queries was shown by Mr. C owe, who died an extremely wealthy man. On parliament's last day, his last remarks before his defeat con- cerned this topic and himself. One was a terse “Nuta!" (Han- sard, page 3503): then be pro- tested “Why hould I answer?", to which Mr. Knowles replied “Because I happen to be a mem- ber of parliament." By which Mr. Knowles inferr- ed: “On behalf of all Canadians. I seek to know If you are llk e Caesar’: wife." That is why Senator McCutch- eon is no longer a director of any company. A Threat To Leisure Hartford Course! The president of the British Medical Society has taken a long look at human illness, and it leaves him melancholy. Ian Fraser is a leading surgeon, but It is not so much the troubles of the flesh that disturb him. PUBLIC FORUM MORE TRAFFIC IDEAS Sir, — Your report of the City Council meeting on traffic re- form reminded me of a verse I learned as a boy in grade so cal: “The king was sick, and the king -should know, And doctors came by the score; If they did not cure him he cut off their heads, And sent to the ichools for or ." According to this principle. the City Council is probably in the market for a new traffic expert right about now, and I believe I have the man for them. He has guarantc-rd to provide a permanent traffic solution not only for the busy season whic the Mayor assures us is now pest and beyond concern. but another for the chaotic situation we have on rainy days and Tuesdays and Fridays. and yet another for the stormy days tn winter. His plan is still in the development stage. but It calls for the Mayor to pro- claim March and April as the busy season, so that the worst traffic conditions will be concen- trated in the months when there are fewest cars In the city. My man does agree that an Independent traffic commis- slon is necessary. e proposes to solve this problem by extend in: the term of office for city Council to four years, so that Council will have three year! out ofeveryfourlnwhlchtolgnore the wishes of the people, which is about par for mother ‘ ly not far removed from It. He has also shown nse'lils recom- mendations drallng with one-way streets. Re to permit In each direc- ebletogo e. driving pattern of Prince Ed- ward Islanders. He figures that by installing a middle lane most Island drivers will be accom- modated, and after a few weeks the normal casualty rite will reduce the travelling public to manageable proportions. My expert's parking solution is a little tricky, as I understand that It requires each of us to leave his car home every sec- ond dny, a step which he says will -cut the parking problem in half. This will admittedly re- quire negotiation. He does not a ree that uncll is re- sponsible for a solution to the parking problem. but says they just think they are because they put a tax on It. (He would like to turn the parking meters over to the Junior League so nobody would mind glvlng. but I think ltlhei is) not really serious a b o ut e. There are a few additional de- tails which are not yet complet- ed. For example he thinks that the traffic problem at the cor- ner of Great George and Graf- ovins not cause him any misgivings whatever. He does not think we should concern ours ves with {heist signs and signposts, as is I 5 5'2 as s: 3 5' one , d. ten to a movable base. and thus can be moved from , p place as traffic conditions change. ‘ . Unfortunately. any still in occupational is E: g, 5., Speaking at a conference of his colleagues, he was able to re- cite a heartening list of advanc- es in medicine e brought cures for once diseases. Where Mr. Fraser finds man sicklied o'er la in moral health. Though physicians study how to add to the of man’: lives, men's ethics and manners are pushing them to earlier graves. LONG A PROBLEM Much of what Mr. Fraser de- plores has burdened the cure of so s lo :1 g ago. selfishness. carelessness, Indulgence, a host of disloyalties between men and against their Creator, are ancient slcknesses. The glamous of living danger- ously for exhibitionism, delin- quency, broken homes. disdain of religious beliefs. per- haps h eve a more modern sound as Mr. Fraser ticks them off. But an ailment even newer, in th at it will affect more peo- ple than eves-’before, is » the black plague of '~elsure. T h e steltlldlly shrinking work week h a v dread the. lnlsureatricken, and it al- frlghts him. The British doctor is not so Heart Attacks Occur Only After Long Buildup: "i:ii'i':'i:I-"‘.°.'x'i° 'l'..‘I."ll. ”.f.'.'.‘§.'5 bar of hunters die of coronary . Hunting Is blamed, E are never would have happened had the victim remained home or vaca- tioned In Europe with his fem- _ The truth of the matter is that the heart attack was in the m - be- set when the coronary arteries became hardened and par- rowed. The Inner wall of these‘ vessels may have contained pla- ques of calcium and other ar- terloeclerotlc changes for 10 or years. Like the partially clogged drain of a sink. it was just a matter of time before complete obstruction took place. Hunting w a 3 held responsible e v c u though the heart attack came on while the man ‘was alt g quiet- ly on a stump or sleeping in a motel en route to the hunting 9 groun s. [ Moat heart a t t a c k s occur when the individual is asleep or resting. Approximately two per cent follow severe exertion. This is mentioned because th e ' widow is likely to blame the 3 sad ending on sloughing .~ through the marshes. walking over hills. crawling under fenc- es. or inclement weather. In all probability, the exertion was coincidental. On the other hand. a person who has a heart attack while hunting is at a disadvantage. He may be alone or miles from help. He may not recognize that the distress is coming from the old ticker. This is true when ‘ the chest pain is associated with .‘ a feeling that gas has accumu- lated or there is upper abdomi- nal discomfort. Every hunter should suspect the heart whenever pain, pres- sure, or a burning sensation develops beneath the brestbone or radiates into the neck and e left arm. The same . applies when there are signs of ,‘ shock such as p lor, profuse n, and a thready; pulse. Sit down and call for . help. It is the exertion during or after the heart attack that endangers life. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics if stamped, self-addressed enve- lope accompanies request.) STRAIGHT AHEAD ‘ writes: What is tunnel REPLY Most of us can see over a wide area when looking ‘ straight ahead. The person with tunnel vision sees only O. O SEES J. T. vision what is directly in front, as if - ls 3 looking through an open lube l or a pipe. His vision is limited, I like that of a horse wearing l blinders. ; VIRAL IIEPATITIS ' L. M. writes: How can a per- son avoid coming down Wltll viral hepatitis? I understand there is an epidemic. l REPLY ' There la no epidemic but the condition is more prevalent than usual. Send a stamped. self - addressed envelope for leaflet on viral hepatitis. PETITE WOMAN N. S. writes: I'm 47 years old and less than five feet tall. Can I be made taller by in jectione? REPLY This is doubtful unless your shortness is caused by a glan- dular disorder. Forget It if you are otherwise healthy. BASEMENT BEDROOM L. S. writes: Are there any health hazards in sleeping in a bedroom in a finished base- ment? l REPLY No. provided it is not too damp and there is no leakage of carbon monoxide from the furnace or the water heater. Today's Health Hint-— Blcyole riders should obey traffic signals. our vesrenoms (From the Guel-dial! Wiles) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (September 1. I031) Tomorrow morning Douglas Henderson, executive secretary th outs Association 3. is ' the news from St. NOTES av THE WAT‘ "Thanks very much for the beautiful necktie." said Jua- tor, kissing Grandma dutifully on the cheek. "Oh. that's noth- ing to me 1'," mur- mured. "That’s what I thought. but Ma weld I had to." - Mon- treal Star. _ The bride of a few weeks noticed that her husband was depressed. “Gerald. dearest." she said, ‘.‘I know something ls troubling you. and I want you to tell me what it ls; your wor- rles are not your worries now. say are your worries" “Oh. very well," he said. “We've just had a letter ffom a girl ln« New York, and she's suing us for breach of promise." Montreal Star‘. Who could be employed In a second attempt to re. sign his seat In Parliament must be the envy of those whosé unsuccessful attempts have an been in the other dlrection.——ot. we Journal. Karl Peltref committed by presenting himself to his vic. time In the uniform of a police- man. He was caught when he dressed as a preacher and tried to get money for a charity from an old woman. He commented that crooks can play the part of a policeman more easily than the role of a cleric. — Rundg. chow, Cologne. A young lady set In her stall. ed auto awaiting help when two young men walked pp and vol. cause more In hana per- son picking blueberries? But blueberry pickers can be dan- gerous; the evidence of It is In John’: that a ban on lighting fires outdoors in Newfoundland is unlikely of lag lifted before September 15th. that time a blue picking season will have passed. Blueberry pickers were blamed for some of Newfoundland’; for- un red their aid. I'm out or gas." she explained. “Could you push me to a gas station?" They re p elr muscles to the rear of the car and rolled It several blocks. one fellow looked up exhausted. to see that they had just passed a filling station. “I never So to 'hat station," the girl shouted back, _._:_t§ d"'sE'||nk. 25 . successful awlndles in Hfllnburg est fires last year. — Cape ton Post. re- "They don't give trading stamps." — Galt Reporter. The Threat To Leisure Hartford Cour-ant The president of the British Medical Society has taken a long look at human illness, and it leaves him melancholy. Ian Fraser is a leading surgeon, but it is not so much the troubes of the flesh that disturb him. Speaking at a conference of his colleagues he was able to recite a heartening list of advances in medicine that have brought cur- es for once d r e a d diseases. r find SI Though physicians study how to add to the span of men's lives, me s ethics and manners are pushing them to earlier graves. Much of what Mr. Fraser de- plores has burdened the cure of souls long ago. selfishness. carelessness, indulgence. a host of disloyalties between men and against their Creator, are an- cient sicknesses. The glamor of living dangerously for exhibi- tionism. delinquency. broken homes. disdain of religious be- llefs, perhaps have a more mod- em sound as Mr. Fraser tlcke them off. But an ailment ever newer, in that it will affe rt more people than ever before, is the black plague of leisure. The steadily shrinking w o r k week will mightily contribute to what Mr. Fraser calls the number of the leisure - stricken, and it affrights him. The British doctor is not so worried about the professional executive, o r management classes, or the philosophers, belstniks, and tramps. It is the compulsive worker who faces neuroses leading to breakdown. There is a peculiar sadness in such prophecy. The compulsion to work is not always rooted in material it o e d or desire. Throughout mankind the urge to work can often seen as a mystique, emboided in the old tag. To workls to pray. It re- quites. rewards.“s'e1olces. It is a man can glvefand all he need take. It is the Indestructi- ble meaning in lifeaggud as Mr. Fraser sees. leisure ”‘%ill pull the house down about the head of such a man. I i—. U—o Old As Antiquity National Geographic Society The safety hat —— emblem of ‘ In about 2.300 yeari ago —— when the famed philosopher lived there in an unfurnished barrel. spurned even a food bowl as an unnecessary encumberance. and parried silly questions — are among the oldest known. But. some anthropologists believe the protective hat outdates the fig leaf as mankind‘: earlles hab- erdashery. The safety hat came into be- g, more than likely. when an Ice Ager slapped a large tor- toise shell on his head to deflect ‘an enemy's sticks and stones or c Use of the hard hat in construc- tion dates at least to Imperial Rome. During the reign of Con- stantine the Great (A.D. 306- 377), when the huge Egyptian obelisk was enected in the Cir cus Maximus, the foreman put his men into metal battle hel- mets to shield them from fall- infl masonry. Metal helmets went out with the fall of Rome. In Europe, boiled - leather models were In vogue until mechanized warfare of light-weight steel helmet worn by I‘s has been widely adopted throughout in- dustry. It is indispensable equip- ment in eteelwork, mining, util- ltlcs, construction, otl, logging, and missile - s. On mlsslle bases. helmets are something of a status symbol. These hard hats form'a rainbow of colors — chosen to go with the man's job, not his comple- x on. ' The white helmet is reserved can price .:Mr. He de r nu been succeeded by "cor'.i3: llil..lll§.i'.""d°" ;:dIb:|.ll"l.lIl:l'l: HYUC. Charlottetown Who ‘Is I grim bu g In .ppfopfl‘uly well-quallfled instructor In both on-nnou; huduu-,_pu.1 Cubblng and scouting. men wear orange helmets; are. (rebn: tor lrersonaal. lbs-owsr matntenea ernment specifications. The plas- tlc hat weighs less than a pound, for instance, and it must with- ; stand the impact of a five-pound hammer falling eight feet. with typical plthlness, "A hel--I et." : hats at The helmets worn in Corinth ‘ As a reminder for workmen to keep their beads by wearing all mes. an Interna- tional Turtle Club h m mets from death or critical in- "FY Safety hats can be made of steel, plastic, glass fiber or any other hard material appropriate to the menace- falling objects. heat. electri swinging, head- cracking as- saults on bank and payroll mes- sengers. It‘ would have en un- thlnkable to deprive these gen- tlemen of conventional head- dress. So their derbles were converted quite simply Into safe- ty hats by lining the crown and brim: with leather shock absor- 7?:ed‘&v-t sraarnavnu REVISITED Oasis In a troubled worl This quiet valley rests sublime Between the Island’: .hlghest And gently mocks the march of time. A liliputlan lily pond In which the slender rushes grow Lies near a cool and shallow P00 Whereln the fish dart to and fro. Upon a rise the dwelling stands, Red-shuttered fort where flow- ers abound. Mock oranze and purple lupin rm . A fragile fence to stave of! sound. What beauty hate is calmly view- ‘ad Out ‘Tin-o th Lo 1:- m‘.‘l."ugh e Magic 0 across the many colored greens minty. rnoesy. emerald tzrasa. grass. The music of creative man Vles ~. softly with the native orntlcluin arts and nature blend In one. a holy mystic theme? But here the twilight hour W0 V. . The bed. and know we always greatest llory'| on ...a.. th MI- I 1 sun beyond gm!“ Charlottetown Sn-sthsven's H.R.DOANE Al;lD commit . wtusrrsn. Hieemslllrevsuson s posse C artercd Accountants I34 RICHMOND ST.. CHARLOTTETOV/N Saint John. Halifax. St. John's. . Montreal. _Toront‘o. \Vlnnipe_g._ Eltreonton. leclad aid t of th - " - _ IV: :I mebers" conventlo: sfiudyfigta y.n"¢,m.' V‘ which met In annual eeaalon red dlgglgngug . m.¢g¢_ on Prince of Wain College addl- 1. ¢‘.,].,, Ronald w e s um tn¢l:.?:-lteztee all “um”. 099“ V such a United States dual “"3"” (1 NOPHI coursg:keynseutowear.wht' River. was made secretary. 3. $3 5, gun, mu“ (TIN 1:3!!!) nos“ “cancel a l’ um um» oi Charlotte me. ""p:..-m.,°""'°"”"" "‘ "‘"' ‘WI return that the workers’ hard hats are hon I“ muutseturat to M N00! II the Arts. has bah awarded a scholarship. Int Phillips stud- ied vtoltn under the ngtelege of Professor Clayton , while was the summer school as nun ..m'''''‘‘''- ’'‘'''.l- c.."°"“..l. and fie United . Brindle: General Milton F. Gffl. d labor. 3 ¢OlI!IIl|ed_ . w -lmsh , _ a hall- gousws-sh '.~ 1' . ‘HUN 0%! hi! . t .. . 5‘ .\._. ‘ «xx -7 n'n"3!‘.'.' HQ?! :2!!! 3392 23' SW3? sAu—s-.n..—_4-_..-o. ._.._.._.-._._-._._.__ 1."_U'G£:"§'6>-l".:OP!ID >122: 5.-tmm my ruin-1 ::t=.'u-:n I-nu te:r<m stays: SQEHEQ: 83 9399 so was 292 539:: :22 In