= * i — & tyres \ a 8 : y ‘ ‘ ; ay + { te eae ats ' ae c ; * j a mh He cy iN Ghana! $ Economic Aaie i. : By Arch MacKenzie Canfidian Press Staff, Washington” t. the Treaty a The ecom- | munity has faitet™ achieve simifar / success in. agriculture maiiily because Che Guardian Creeping — _ Covers Prince “Edward laland Like The Dew : = W. Jd. Hancox, Publisher . Frank Walker Wallace. Ward | Editor | Managing Editer @ 5 Published every week day morning (except Sun- day. and statutory holidays) at. 165 Prince Street, + by Thomson Newspapers Lid. of the enormous differences: in farm— structure, agricultural productivity | and,.patterns of food consumption, Italians, for instance, consume on the Eruption ‘By Dr. Theodore R. Vai’ Dellen Few physicians encounter all the diseases mentioned in text- Lbooks. Some of. the rarer: dis: aes ord: to undo the economie-h WASHINGTON (CP) hard slow climb hack to sol: ~veney has-hegun in Ghana. But ho one imagines it will be easy The ;Fund has agreed to provide - standby. credits of $36,400,000% is help -meet payments on t f / debt and then. the next step’ wi “il avoc im- | he refinancing :the commercial _ Charlottetown, P.E.L., | : 7 : | Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton ° average 50 per cent. more Brain: than ers are so obvious that they | posed on the firat’ newly-inde-, debt. and Souris. the average person in Germany or the ‘would he* recognized the first pendent African state by the There is some hittersena haw - _ Empire 3.8894, Montreal 640 Cathcart: Street Uni- -:. and alsothe loca! news published. herein. | | Represented nationally by Thomson Newspasers | Advertising Services: Torento “425 University Ave. be vers! ty, "6-5947; Western Office. 1030. Mest. Georgie - Street. Vancouver MA 2037., : “Member Canadian” Daity— Newspaper- a blishers Association. and The ‘Canadian Press. The Canadian ressis exclusively entitled to the use-for-repub- licafipn. of all news. dispatches in this paper eredited to. it or to the Aisociated Press or ala All “right or republication of special disoatches here- * Subscription rate: af In also reserved . Not over 40c per week by carrier. ~ $12.00 # year by mail on rural routes and areas nol serviced by carrier. ~ 315.00 9 year offtsland and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British. Com monwealth s Notcver 72 single Copy: <I + eae | Netherlands, - “whereas Italy's” per “eapita consumption of potatoes: is only half that of Germany. Meat consump- ~ tion shows similar differences.” — The new policy would not sv ‘nchiren ize all of these differences: At best, It Is an imperfect compromise r reach- "ed, fo some extent, at the expense of “outside countries... Byt at least, once the Common, Market can bargain as a - single unit there will be scope for wider negotiations:. Some. optimists even, predict that it may.rescue the | 0. —Wor. time. Cutaneous larva migrans is one of these, The cause is the larva of a hookworm that enters “| the skin and migrates beneath | They +ensuing-irritdtion ig visible and, — the surface like a mole. to my knowledge, nothing else leaves ta mark as do these par- asites. ‘erew<complainedto-Capt. les E. Fuller, Veterinary corps, United States air force, -that: sef- en of nine men refused to work | in a three-foot high crawl space - ‘}under a new hospital in Floria. They had developed an extreme- ly irritating dermatitis after inthis. The foreman of a construction | W Char-— : ss ‘king are_and threat. ened to walk off the job ufiless | ousted Kwame Nkrumah. Talks here with the Jnterna- ‘tional Monetary Fund, whieh | the new: Ghanatan regime” agreed will have a watch-dog | (role, have Impress” participants anew with the talents of the gen- | eral run of Ghanaian. officials: E. N.- Omabee, leader,-ie regarded as brilliant | ~-so much so that, not even former prime minister Nkru- /mah dared fire him despite his | | anti:Nkrumah attitude. Bit. these conversations have | | also revealed: the necessity =| | taking such: harsh steps that the Ghanaian revolutionary - regime- “tras Wear trermany among Canadian and other oh- — _gervers at what-they feel-is a “egative attitude — py Britain, a, Seiid-Utaly- All these countries, they say, make a_ point of offering -eonst- - mer-goods loans at six- “percent. . - feloping countries - delegation. | and list these commercial eper- ations. “ part _ of their aid Pro grams. CREDIT Was EXTENDER : In Ghana's case, it is eon tended, °this credit was extended _. ‘to the Nkrumah regime long ~ after it was evidence that the country was facing bankruptcy Land. now that the erash has: . + Audi 1 af Circulation. r d politically | eome, little or no “concern 1s ex- ma - Bat at 28, 1966, fousaeni yon ie stile the situation was remedied. te mevives pressed’ ponitica'y | hibited about the part played in . ’ The origin Lp gee me a me ae | this bythe jending sounieias, : gravely hampered by the Common recogn m y and a | SQUANDERED FU \N° | Canada at one ime thoug , ‘Do physician prescribed an ethyl | Nkrumah squandered the nest’ was. among the Ghanaian eredit- _. “Down The. Homestretch | Market's haggling ‘over agriculture. _ |Enlerida aptay once 0 day to lege loft tine soung bation when|ore te the tune of- $8,000,000 bit “One. thing we may be thankful for |..Our farmers-in* ‘both Canada — and freeze-and thus kill the-larvae. it” became independent from’ | re-examination shows thia is not “ds that, the election campaign, now in. * the United States would stand to gain- ~ {ts Jast-hours,-+has-been conducted for __the_ most part on a reasonably | high | if this result-were to. accrue. “| Meanwhile-the crawl spacd was | examined and found to. be cov- | 9 ered with a light, moist,. one? |loam, eompletely shaded. b Britain, He ran up a public debt of $1,100,000,000. .Of - this, more | than $800,000,000 is in commer- | | ela} debt obligations spent. on the-case and the debt amounts d Lonly to about $35,000. Hence Canada is not_ineluding [itself among the creditor na- “evel Both parties are’ to be com: Security Restrictions: nile inotaling pipess cman [aueh-seheeneeo¢- Jot attpeets ont sre teeta anor eae oF i irlipgs,. or” hu orking ou metided for exercising ‘restraint in- | Prime—Minister Pearson and Op- cre IA cm Ciel AEN OF Ne buildin io | hedule “of mammoth lonna: $9 this regard. After.the stormy manner | position Leader Diefenbaker have The larvae come from hook- | The — International ° Monetary | be faced by the. new regime. a agreed that it wouldvbe istake ‘to worms expelled by cats and | oe . ' Ts in which the last legislafive session | agre t wouldvbe a mist eo war eee : : _on this latter assumption, credit ended; the chances. for such an achievement. didn’t look too: good. Perhaps the session acted as a safety. ‘the kind of campaign-that could have degenerated into a mudslinging af- fair was _fourid to be defective. Even_ is” due fo all concerned — for giving ecandal-mongering, and scuttlebutting a wide berth. eptitude” in failing totake on more | building. “Those seeking to observe | my sincere dente. 2 facilitate =¢ — ss r 2 8 —ecommunieations ween Si oa i : programs on a shared cost basis with +e Comimons are directed fo wait in | { and other parts of the Em-. Com mah: Sense Needed : Ottawa, and promised all kinds of ad-~ lineups or in chairs around the foyer.” |-pire.’ Montreal Star ditional handouts from both provin- | In practice, this could be avoided by | ,,7he project challenged Bie ak oe : cial and federal sources. Not. a word requiring everyone, without excep- | ers? Skilled labor was in such Lpeuaiere cota great Behe pad redlhnin ate | | ; about the exhausted state of the “tion, to eheck in’ with the security - one a eee ee ee | advantages to mankind, but, | for-tat retaliation, would do ra _freasury,, _or -where-our share of. the _| guard, Even this, concedes ‘the -Tor- and tatle. ‘Construction ‘machin: ae ee a ar Woe like | to remember it. Théy look for all | RBS ES, ‘Gxpenditure was to come from. ‘onto paper, would not. stop all mad |_ery was in short supply.“A large | Sabet ase the ee ee a a e was to com : ( boulder raised by rope and pul- @d and ‘controlled. wisely with |ing their tongues out at each - oie Roth parties, a thin : have ean “bombers. For that matter, it is not ley. served-ha a bile ativer: on thought for the future, these | other. There could be no fish — saltcas ty hakieg eneir iba of . likely anything short of a a complete ‘one section af the road. | same technological develop- left worth. harvesting if they. search Id d Nature proved a crue] adver--. ments can perhaps bes too effic. | keep it up. is kind. But at least they come with Che COUM C0: 805. sary,. Frozen -subseil bounced et 30 iat he ace could Today, _ all mayitime countries 3 ‘ ‘ : _ In any Case, o fai i . | off picks like rubber balls. In seriously depleted or at least “are: neighhors, and if Canada - = ore consistency from the govern: even a, seeemionitble, a over Oa of Siberia not a single tie | Teduced td the ‘point where it is and the United States can lead ent side, which maintains that the y severe security restrictions on visi- | could be laid until the so-called |" longer advantageous to .at- | the way in showing badly need-— royince is already on the march and | tors tp the Parliament buildings | ‘arctic sone vat planted with rernp to ees i cP ve -|¢d. common senise,s 90 ae Bod ( . dynmaite. 8 smashed em-. quotation is om a eries. afte ~ “manag and |, able to take these new expenditures might'be, there seems no doubt that hankments, overturned rolling mpeoch by a onc mee | controlled wisely and with thot | minister, J. Angus MacLean; e We did.find it surprising, “however, * - that the Liberals glossed over so light- “ly the two main issues on which they _- battled when the House was in ses- _ sion, These were the alleged extra- _¥agance and mismanagement of the overdo security precautions because of the recent’ bizarre bombing i _ cident on Parliament: “Hill. That was a tragic affair, and it could have. re- sulted in something much worse. But as Mr. Diefenbaker well said, history: has shown: that too stringent. _protec- | tive measures. are often themselves _ an iricitement to violence. Both: lead of new measures which might result from Speaker Lamoureaux’s announc- ed review of-security procedures. -— One approach that is likely to be suggested is the British system of re- quiring visitors to have passes trom. their MPs. In a chamber as large as - a ' The Soviet Union is building a some °5,000—miles across “Wild East’ to the Pacifie. The massive undertaking “will: bring~industrial development, to remote regions of Siberia rich in coal, iron; and copper. The mew Op EXTENDS, 000 MILES New Trans: Siberian Line To The Pacific: "FLOWERS THAT BLOOM. IN THE oe ‘National Geoareeive News ‘Bulletin Earlier, at the 1901 Paris Ex- | |zled_ foreigners with the luxor- | jous decor-of its new railroad State express-eoaches oncdisplay | suggested that travelers would | | speed over dreary expanses of The ppulant coaches: displayed it-s (position, the Russians had daz-_ | at the Paris Exposition never =! crossed a Siberian trestle. a wood-burning locomotive haul- led one first- class car-and-two- ‘second-class sleepers, a diner, and a baggage car. seen in the work area, The. san- dy soil plus moisture, and shade made the erawl space ideal for the development of larvae from the hookworm egga. Capt. Fuller solved the problem ‘| by sereening in the entrances to the erawl space to exclude all _|through avheavy gauge hard- ware-cloth_trapdoor. A ‘reliable pesticiding concern aioli -sodium_borate tothe soil during a two or three day | ‘nonworking period. The employ- | es were told to wear longsleev- | ed shirts buttoned at the wrists, a: ' to secure their trousers at | jgiven a heavy plastic sheeting on which to lie. while working. And finally they were encourag- ed to. shower immediately after work.to remove all_oil from. the skin. GLAUCOMA. AND VISION the ankles. In addition they were | | Britain’ has been hit by a ser- | |Jous crime wave which shows no | | signs of abating. To combat it, | |police have suggested. that all paaulta in Britain be fingerprint- oar has, aroused considerable | Feontroversy: The---British,.who| printing procedure. _ lare sensitive about every aspect ‘of. human liberty, and most sus- | picious of anything that eould. ismack of apolice. state, have been divided over the proposal. } After the war Britain swiftly | did away.-with identity cards, which. have _remained ae sory Im many European coun- tries;-and the idea-of compulsory. | fingerprinting still offends a large number of Britons. This may be partly explained at > Winnipeg Free Preas gerprints; w all male tababitante’ | and almost’ immediately people — were lining up outside the var. fous mobile police headquarters to offer. their fingerprints. The: need to catch the killer over- rode. the distaste of the fingers: There are other signs of @, ‘changing attitude towards the ~ often necessary police measures. to combat new social evils. The British draft bill on—drunkes | driving that. provides for ran- ' dom .roadside tests with breath- alyzer has given rise to fewer | objections than would haw bees. expected. People in Britain. re _beginn- “| ing to_realize how high is the toll in life taken by-- drunken. government's industrial program, Canada’s ‘this would prove cumber- ‘| line will take 15 to 20 years to | Siberia in high style. A foreign passenger found the | ‘by the unpléasant connotations | grivi Se ean a with _ chiefly in the Georgetown area, and | some on popular occasions such build,and_it will run_ porth_ of. Each “palace. of luxury” was. gymnasium “just big enough for ioat th roush glaucoma, ever ‘ye. (ot fingerprinting, which in Eur- miter Castle, Britain's — the, ful fi ial t its int hi h budges ight. It a ti the —present trans-Siberian line |te offer a restaurant salon, and-;a stationary cycle. "A solitary : ope has: rémained ‘the “badge of: ter-of transport, that -the only”. woe nancial stra nto whic © night. would also be of fit- | into wild areas previously eon- ia lounge car im Louis XVI dec- bathtub in the baggae car, he gained? aecriminal, and a mark of way of reducing the. drawer’ they claim the Conservatives had plunged the province. We had now, they alleged, the highest per capita _debt of-any-province in Canada, and were heading for bankruptcy if we , continued to carry on at such a rate. . Ue use in stopping a determined as- sassin. A’ more acceptable method, suggests the Toronto Star, would be to tighten security at the entrance to ‘the centre block. In theory, every _ Visitor is supposed to stop at . the sidered impassable, The old road is the longest “continuous railway in the world; it stretches 5,787 miles from Moscow to the port of Viadives- tok-on the Sea of Japan. S ISAR ORDERED “RAILROAD An imperial decree signed by jor, An adjacent smoking room would be “in i style.” Religiously inclined _Passeng- ers could worship and_meditate jin a chureh ear described as an {‘‘ambulatory basilica. * For ‘the ‘less religious, there was a /gymnasium equipped with exer- vivid Chinese observed, ice, vegetables; and meat.” The present-day: transGiber- ian offers ‘‘soft’ (luxury) or | hard" coaches._For-many vis- | itors, he soft coaches’ elaborate | furnishings to evoke the glam- | large amounts * proteins cause | iad to ‘be -fingerprinted if the y orous promise of the Paris Ex- “was: used mainly as | a receptacle for the- storage , of | heme REPLY The otitcome is poor ff blind. |ness has persisted, because this | means that the optic nerve has ‘been damaged permanently. «= ROTEINS AND CANCER « Mrs. M. writes; Does eating | cancer?. shame, despite the fact that dur- | ling the war it was’ widely used jin the army. Nothing offended Britons (and other Europeans) in the 1952 MeCarran- Walter United States immigration. act as much as the fact that they | wished to obtain _ a visa for the drunken drivers te other road users is by roadside tests car-' ried out at random by police. _ Thus ‘many of the shibboleths that surround the undoubtedly important concept of freedom at the subject are falling victim te - | the ‘complexities of modern s¢ Instead of getting away to a re ‘ security. desk. If he wants to see a | Tsar Alexander III signaled the | iciser, dumbbells, and a statidn- 7 position. An English Journatist |; REPLY United States. See 2 Ss : Se i ning of the first trans-Sib- | a | ciety. As a British daily put it, sounding start on these issues when | Membér, the guard phones to. the™ -erh—in 1891. ‘Alexander direct- | lary bieycle. In summer, the sa-. said, ‘For anyone who values | Despite the fact that the cause | However, attitudes are chang- |-with crime cpntinuing te mount, ‘the election was called, the ot “_eomptained of the government’s | its stride, than from its opponents 0 maintain that we have been in- ulging in an orgy of 6verspending. The impression. they now seek to give _ds that all the new spending they pro- pose will come. from a benevolent federal administration. Our past ex- © perience with governments of both party. stripe. at Ottawa makes non- ‘sense of this ‘claim:” erea What the Liberals are up against, really, is that the Shaw government, ‘despite some mistakes, has an unex- celled record. of. concrete achieve- member's office. Only if the MP. is free. is the visitor ‘allowed into the the system is due for an overhauling, Still A Living Force’ Under the impact of modern science, mastery of the. classical languages is becoming a more and more difficult task. Even iri Italy, Latin has been dropped from courses offered to first year students in sec- “ondary schools; Fae | Studies in. Rome: only 100 Italian scholars turned up. It was regarded: | as gratifying, however, when 200 At a Conference re “eently of the Institute of Roman © ed his son Nicholas to lay the | first foundation stone in Vlad- ivostok ‘‘as fresh ‘evidence of | stock, and unleashed landslides onto newly laid atretches track. Siberia's dreaded tatgas, coniferous spawned hoards of mosquitoes to plague construction workers. A ‘British naturalist commented that if Siberia ever needed a na- tional emblem, ‘she cannot do of or SANG : “6 FAIREST JEWEL Despite these obstacles, ‘‘the fairest jewel in the crown of the Tsars’’ was completed just aft- ~er the turn of the century, Seof- ‘fers had jeered the railroad as |. “rusty. streaks of iron through marshland forests, ~ | better than to quarter her arms | Ao With a cloud of mosquitoes. ram- |\lon cars would be cooled by el- jectrie fans wafting air from ice- | boxes under the door. ‘true magnificence, _ the fuxury- | of cancer: is unknown there is no | ing. After a recent brutal slay- ‘including too-| ing in the British town of Read- {much protein, plays a role. | class carriages are sis ones to proof that diet, | ing, the ‘police agked for the fin- -the danger is no longér of a pol- ice state but of a crime state. and the, Canadian and American | politicians who are” waging a go for.” vp ht for the future,’ "perhaps othe | ér nations will follow our lead,.. \before it is: too late. Talk Builds On Saturday we remarked, in of housing. | The same subject has heen worrying Industry Minister Drury. In a speech last week he noted that the Economic Coun- cil of Canada had estimated that by 1970 expenditures on res- jdental construction alone will increase by 50 per cent over the this space, on the soaring costs | No Houses. Ottawa Journal | period 1950-63. So.a difficulty of interest te countless thousands of Canad- i Jans. _is delineated. Poor .produa- | fivity increases the cost. of hous- |es for rich and poor,’ great ine dustry and‘ small farmer. And. what do those having au- | thority: propose to do about it? 'Mr.. Drury talks of educational. | programs, management training ment to its credit, that its forward- foreign Latin experts. arrived fom | the vastness of nothing to the | {963 level. The council was con- | courses and. building codes. To | 4 looking policies are based logically on places.as diverse as Britain, America, ‘ extremities of nowhere.” But | cerned Sociers need to im- people of — means. who |. : , he Russia. G the trans-Siberian 2a instru- |.prove productivity-to meet this | want to, build’ a home it sounds | ,: the foundation it has already laid for sermany, Ireland, France mental in. settling vast. stretch- | demand. iii the eainw aid ul Govern) them, and that-the electors gérierally | Brazil, Poland and Africa. es, of Siberia, Nearly 759,000 | Mr. Drury. shared’ the coun: | ments and ministers. have @ | are aware of this fact. That may not The fact.of the matter, as noted in Laer we ae \the arowth fn peodictiviey of ine | way of: making,” problem ap- ‘ . e * ic 1 instire-its return to power—we have the Vancouver Sun, is that despite an : | manufacturing industries was POAT *olved when. they. ‘have, * been mistaken so often_in_our elec- ~ tion. prognostications that we have apparent_dechne—in Latin in. schools, interest in # as a possible the. Our Yeste rds more than double that of the atated: it. But ministertat: tikes construction industry during the | what might be bullds no houses, | give over making them—but it does; | universal langiage h h en eee eee m 3 them— | does, age has shown a re- ca ‘x , . we believe, oe in--this_{+—vival.-A-new-international federation, a ae Leave The Door On direction. ~ “€ A Una ‘Voce, has .been formed .with Fighting on the bloody battle- 5 Guelph Mercury : pecsse = singiilar achievemen t i . Yifty “yi ; td onenenuintty: mn t for the six na; en ed million units of elee- ge Seer df ie ei Cee raat Nad torae tor: took the door té his bathroom e W & CILY ave y Jeu 9 ae aeDona a ) : : bate In its ei ht vears. the «€ le : : : = generated uy. by Charlottetown, | yy proper relaxation, It should also | Tight off! “He had a thing on | hat. else that costs so little. gets. ‘ - g y ommon | nuclear power In Britain—much ; : include a seat, they suggest. about bathrooms and the. false | you together again so fast . salt ‘In Accord At last re more than a year of: inces- wrangling, the EBuropean | headquarters” in Switzerland and with” chapters in several’ European coun- tries, whose~definite aim is to con- serve the language. ground of Crete between con- stantly- reinforeed Germans und*weary British and Anzac .|. Soldiers becatiie a grim, stand- | up slogging - -smatch. 3 - Cornell University researchers | have ripped t jocial and ..psy-. | chological taboos .off. the — bath- | | the furnishings and equipment in | our homes and offices, we put up with antiquated facilities in our © British | room and made some ‘useful sug- “| bathrooms. It is all, as the. re. troops were forced.to give new | gestions for_improving—this_im- searchers point out, part of the od « Common Market seems to have reach- - Even in Japan, as the hid of the | stound. jporem room. a ee home. After tahoo eS ee on i s ed: agreement o icul- : aa five-year study the research- | hathroom and its functions. We “> £ e€ n a common agricul Rome institute observed, there are Ms; Gytus thing, hoin In | @t8 eoneluded: that the average put up with inconveniences be- _-»tfmonths ahead of ‘the timetable set tural-policy. The accord aims at free trade within the community in all | today scholars engaged in. translat- | ing Cicero, Virgil and Lucretius. This farm: products. It calls fér uniform | price supports, a common level of tariff protection against imports, and establishment of a $1.6 billion: fund which will be used to modernize ‘farm- ing to. pay the subsidy cost of export- ing high priced farm surpluses. The agreement; if realized, will he a Market has ‘made substantial progress, an Jowering: internal industrial tariffs. These are now at 20 per cent of their : together. Furthermore, about. 2,000 in itself may not guarantee the future of Latin as a vehicle of communcia- fiqn, save among scholars, but it: testifies to the living force, after 20. centuries, of one of the Western world's great founding cultures. EDITORIAL NOTE) more than the rest- of the world put million.kilowatt. hours are now. being See Bes tt eine eee “King's County, About six miles National Board. TEN. YEARS AGO (May 28, 1956) ‘Lieut Lewis MacD.onald, BA, was presented by Lieut. Col, L.T. Lowther at the Armouries “with the Legion Educational Scholarship> Dominion Command | s Rev. Clare MacDonald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew MaeDon- ald, Cardigan, who Was ordain ed-to the Holy Priesthood at St. American. bathroom is little ‘from. Souris, vite- president of “| Changed from half a century ago | the U.S. Rubber Company, was | when indoor plumbing was in- appointed to the United State# troduced. ae were particularly interest: , ways felt the average baghtub | was second cousin to a medie- | val torture ‘chamber, It is a | Piece of equipment that diseour- | ages cleanliness and is a hazard to life and limb. The researchers “agree” and - recommend: longer ANTIQUATED ees , Wé will certainly go “along. with that and look forward to some improvements in the near cause -we are ton embarrassed, apparently, to complain. . : We say it's, high time someone opened the door improvements. Perhaps now that ed--in-what-the-team—had-to—say—-it-is-out-in +he-open,—we—vwill-get—— z ‘| abotit the bathtub. We. have al- | some action. Better bathtubs ought to sell like hot cakes. WENT TOO FAR. : | And as far-'as a fellow we know jis concerned it's an im. | provefnent Just to open. the -door. In fact, he not only opened it; he and members of. his own family. feat made him feel hetter to get to » bathroom | modesty displayed by friends: + - Make Sunday’ — -. ° your ‘Long Distance a ace together day’ “LOW! RATES are in effect ALL DAY SUNDAY and every night aftet 6 p.m. (Charlottetown to Ottawa, station- : to- station $1.45) THE ISLAND TELEPHONE . original level and are scheduled ‘to be - | Senerated each month, nearly-14 per--|-Dunstan's Rasilica,and__cele-., future--It-ia strange. when you oe wwf, ‘Phe ee et COMPANY, LIMITED wiped out. ‘entirely by mid-1968, a ful!—* cent. of. the total monthly electricity. brated hissfirst Solemn Hi an think ‘of it; that white most of us i i teva sé ee M t All: Saints Chire \ isit him anymore. en production in Britain. - ai ve o Aemand and -a high : -/ Cardigan ee jstandare of utifRarian design ‘in = they do, “they don't way tong. &