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U5. and almw‘nera outside British Corn- monwei'm.’ ' Not Nov-7c ainggla copy. ‘Mrnbor Audit Bureau of Ctvc-rlatiom “The strongest memory is weaker than the weakest ink" FRIDA\ _ "w The Great Man's Exit Sir Winston Churchill‘s final bow to the House of Commons he loved so well came in the must mattor-of- fact way this week. The Manchester Guardian calls it "one of the great anticlimaxes of British history"; and the London puritanicntary cor- respondent of the ("hrrztian Science Monitor says that in the incident the British “hawa shown themselves once again as of under- statement. eccentricity and anti- drama." On Tuesday the House paid glow- ing tribute to Sir Winston for his “services to Parliamcnt. to the na- tion. and to the world." But the great man was not there to hear the acclaim. A delegation of the Com- mons leaders attended hint later at his home to convey the message of grateful thanks. His own final bow came on the preceding day, in the most casual manner. The (lav he took hi: leave of the scene of his greatest. triumphs was gay‘and sunny outside in the streets. Crowds of holidaymakers in sum- mcr‘frorks and shirtsleoves cheer- ed "Winnie" through the gateway into the Parliament buildings. They shouted their delight as his fingers made his famous V-t‘or-victory sign. But once inside the precincts every- one seemed to lw trying to make it as ordinary a day as could be. BUSINESS AS WSUAL—Soon af- ter three o'clock Sir Winston enter- ed the Commons chamber on the supporting arms of two fellow (lon- servative MPs. They sat him down in the prominent seat he has oc- cupied siucc resigning from the premiership in 1955. Foreign Sec- retary R. A. Butler was answering questions at the time about his im- minent. visit to Moscow. There was not a cheer for Sir Winston. not a hand wave. He gavel; passing smile to some familiar friends. There was not even a momentary in- terruption of the proceedings. Sir Winston was as usual im- maculately dressed in black jacket, striped trousers. waistcoat. featur- ing a large gold watch chain. and a neat bow tie. He was alert. and absorbed in the scene of which he first became a part: 64 years ago. Then it seemed he settled into a mood of deep rumination as a debate on the family doctor service got. un- derway. After about an hour he rose to leave with the aid of two MP5. He took a last long lingering look at the chamber, bowed to th e Speaker, and was gone through the swing doors at the end of the cham- ber. There was still not a. cheer. HELD IN CHECK—JR was hard to explain this antidrama to one’a colleagues from overseas,” says The Monitor correspondent. "But it didn't seem unnatural to those who know Westminster. One of Sir Whfipm’s sayings was, ‘I am a child of House of Commons. I was up in my father‘s home to masters - in the way hé wanted to. 'i on those who believe spokes— ' all u a lesson to the new lesson not to neglect. quliament he so nobly ” on the Quality of . by a public life. .and radio and TV this great English- the Com- “! m MW . .v 3|. 155—4. feelings of wonderful gratitude and admiration." ‘ A truly revealing incident, all the more touching for its studied disre- gard of pomp and ceremony. Shaky Prospect According to an Ottawa corres- pondent. the Canadian Government doubts that. it will be necessary for United Nations troops to stay in Cyprus beyond September. While the situation could changefor the worse. requiring a third three- month mandate for the UN Cyprus force. current Government thinking is based on a first glimmerof a pol- itical solution for the divided island and on the still shaky prospect of military stability without armed conflict. Shaky is the right. word. The t'yprus situation has been worsen- ing. if anything. in recent weeks, with the influx of Greek and Turkish troops and arms. A special broad- cast this week by the Cyprus gov- ernment radio advised Cypriots to dig trenches in their gardens and take other necessary precautions in the cvent of air raids by Turkey. And yesterday Cypriot President Makarios told a press conference that the Greek government had re- joctcd suggestions on the Cyprus crisis made by Dean Acheson. Presi- dent Johnson's special envoy. If there is a large-scale conflict. between Greek-Cypriot and Turkish- (‘ypriot forces—or between Greek and Turkish forces—Canadian au- thorities stress that UN troops will not interpose themselves between the opposing sides. They will remove themselves from the danger area though not from the island of Cyprus itself. However. it is said that “unreported developments" have led to the belief that political and mil- itary settlements are coming within sight. UN troops went into Cyprus in March and had their mandate ex- tended by the Security Council in .luneyfor another three months. Their withdrawal in September Would be justified only by a very marked change indeed in the situ- ation as currently reported. New Limit Proclaimed Canada’s new l2-mile fishing limit has now been proclaimed. Em- phasis is placed on the fact that it only applies to countries that do not have historic rights in Canadian waters. This would primarily af- feet. Russian fleets off the coast, leaving United States fishermen un- affected pending the completion of negotiations with Washington. Still to Come is a 1.2-mile limit. based on a new headland-to-head- land principle. Therein could lie the source of a good deal of friction with our American neighbors. If comments by some US. congressmen are to be taken seriously. Under this plan. straight base lines will be drawn. along the tips of coastal projections. The limit will then be measured 12 miles out from this line. which in many cases will push the fishing limit more than 50 miles from shore. The move is for the protection of our Canadian fishermen, and will be welcomed on this ground. But there is doubt yet. as to how it. will be accepted by other powers, and what. retaliatory action, if any. may be taken that would be injurious to Canadian interests. Some pointed questions on this score were asked when the measure was debated in the House of Commons. They weren't all answered to the satis- faction of Opposition members, but. the Government seemed confident that its policy will justify itself. We can only hope that this will prove to be the case. EDITORIAL NOTE A US. patroleum company now has a weapon that it. says will cause nuisance birds to scare themselves away from public buildings. crops and airfields where they keep foul- ing propellers and plugging jet in- takes. The weapon is a chemical plac- ed in a suitable bait but not. in suffic- Ient quantity to be toxic to the bird. Instead, it apparently causes acute indigestion and prompts the birds to utter cries of distress. This causes all the other birds to fly off to regions offering less racket and a more digestible cuisine. According to the National Wildlife Federation, the technique has been tested on apart-owe .t Oklahoma airports, pig- eons in Oklahoma City. starlings on an Illinois farm and blackbinda in Text. rieo fields. NOT WITHOUT HISTORIC PRECEDENT OTTAWA REPORT Sudbury Centennial Memorial Dispute Patrick NichoLson's guest columnist today Is D. Rodger Mitchell. Liberal MP for Sud- bury. While the rest of Canada tus— . sles with the flag issue and Bi- lingualism and Biculturalism. my city of Sudbury is involved with a hassle peculiarly its own. Like the selection of a new Ca- nadian flag. and the alignments of two separate cultures within our one country. Sudbury‘s pro- blem must be settled with a view to the future. and the issue once decided must be lived Wlll'l harmoniously by all our Sudbury citizens. ' Residents of the Nickel Capi- tal of the World are divided in their choice of a Centennial Me- morial. One segment of the pop- ulation prefers something utili- tarian. namely. a police Station. Another segment would go even farther in what they call “practical considerations", and would forego a Memorta en- tirely in the interest of munici- pal thrift. Bu: 3 third segment of our po- pulation is struggling heart and ‘ fact that the project has not yet ' soul and fighting tooth and hall I for a Centennial project which has won much admiration and endorsement from Centennial authorities on the federal and provincial levels. despite the received a - ahead from E our Sudbury City Council. THIRD PROJECT . . This third project calls for a Carillon. Bell Museum. and Historical Museum. to stalled on the campus of our new nondenominaiional Lau~ rentian University of Sudbury. This seat of higher learning will evolve within the next ten years into a 330.000.000 education al complex: and as of now. 310.000.- 000 is being spent for the initial buildings. which are located on a high scenic stretch of ground. elevated hove three of our beautiful mid — north lakes. Sudbury's interest In a (Ten- tennlal project. was activated more than a year ago. Last year's City Council appointed a ; representative Citizens' Com- ', mittee to make a choice from among 30 or more ideas which Ten Shirts For The Reds Sarnia Observer If we believe what we bear? out of Russia the time has come when we can stop feeling sorry t for the poor menial: of the So- viet slave system Up to now we have been given to understand that Comrade IV- ; I anoff was compelled to go I through life wearing a suit of poor quality. varied colors andf the original material long lost: under an array of patches upon . patches. He slurped his cabbage 1 soup on Sundays and cuddl up under threes When it rained. L as he waited for his long-prom- Ised and never - realized living f quarters to materialize. It. seems it isn‘t, like that at. all. According to Alexi I. Ad- I zhubei. a Russian who got: ahead by the orthodox and Am- eriean method of marrying the daughter of the boss. prosper- Ity is getting out of hand. According to Alexei. Russian children. having loo m a n y t things are being spoiled. "Furl t t l some years we have brought them up' like Americans with the result they are unbearable." If Russians have. become 30" brain— wdshed by the American . way of life that they have taken l to sparing the rod and lettingl tfheir kids rup wild. amneone ‘ NATO Now If Charlie Chaplin In looking for one great story line to wind. up his satirical commentary of this peculiar world. he co hardly expect to find anything better than the multilateral nu- clear fleet which West G e r- many and the United States are attempting to foist on NATO. The first experimental vessel of the odd navy sailed into New York harbor last week to begin a year of trials. This guided-missile destroyer has the bland name Biddle. II! ironic touch one might expect of the late Neville Shula In depict- tfie and of the mid. Soot of = .n 3. nothing spectacular. Aboard the Biddle If in very much “Aye. Aye. Sir." for it has been agreed that English. ought to be the last word spoken for any thermonuclear valedicfory. of "So long. it‘s been good know you." Omnmarida of the Diode a an American. his chlef engine- er is a German. and Ma combat officer is Britiah. Four other nationalities are rationed off to various chores. Ecol: man "an ‘blouses in traditional costume. t with that many clothes one must else will have to be sorry for them. Most people in the deca- dent West have too much trou- ‘ ble keeping their own brat-s un- it der something like control to; worry about what happens to. he I Russia's under- privileged and destitute people are not 00 ‘ much to be pitied. Nikita Khru- ‘ shchev. the boas-man the place. has laid down what he; considers the ideal wardrobe for I the Soviet man and woman. He wants the men to own at least. three suits. three pairs of shoes. 10 shirts and 10 pairs of socks. To be Russian woman should have two } winter dresses or suits. three ‘ spring and summer dresses and five pairs of ahoea and I0 pairs of stockings. If the Russian men and wo- men have wardrobes stuffed assume that Moscow has. some- how and without the John Birch Society‘s knowledge. been get- ting some of flieb‘llvlionc being thrown around by Washington. These billions are collected in faxes' from Americans. whose tax bills preclude them such luxuries as 10 shirts and 10 pairs of socks every year. ’s New Look tive. uniform of his own coun- try's navy. Chaplin or Peter Sellers sure- ly would have difficulty Improv- Ing on the comedy already .pro- vided by multilateral mesa call aboard the Biddle. Just listen to the captain be- ing Interviewed at New York: “We require dishes from all the countrieson our table. Maybe one day we'll have a Gree eal. Tho 0 don't like it will just have to wait for th e xt!" I‘ So much for aalt beef. tar: of England, And no apple pie for you. Yank. Tomorrow It's the 'I‘urka' In the galley. and that it won't be on the poopdeck much um. 1 Napoleon might have an I d that an army marches on its stomach. but: Erom now on anti- m’must call on a gastronomic tour de force never equalled alnce nu Sixth Ontario. The small matter of My was the fire! problem aboard H! e Biddle. . This waa waived by paying: the entire crew In American dol- lan at ca. levy um tum oat .- O D. , tacked by had been submitted. To this committee c an” a dramatic and unique offer from one North America's celebrated carillon e u r s. . Percival Price, of the University of Mic- .higan. at Ann Arbor. Behind the offer lay a tra gi c story. Dr. Price has assembled one of the world’s finest collections of antique and historical bells. He would donate this collection to the people of Sudbury and the entire mid - north. in memory of a son who was lost in our wilderness anon. The bell offer was to be coup- led with a carillon. and the committee rounded out the pro- jecr with the addition of an his- torical museum. After consid~ eration of all jecca not aev- O r» .eral months. it was this Caril- Inn with museums that our Citi- zens‘ Committee voted to en- BA'I‘TLE LINES DRAWN Immediawa thereafter the battle line 3 were drawn. A group of our citizens dubbed - the choice impractical. It was even ridiculed. and coarsely at.- some who were im- ervious to the effect such an in- stallation might have in impro- ving the public Image of Sud- bury. which the rest of Canada tends to think of still as a “mi- ning camp". I think .1 helped to dispel this feeling by the visit a few weeks ago of a group of Parliamentarians from all parts of Canada. 'Made apprehensive by the outcry fr 0 m dissidents. Sud- bury City Council hastily set up a Centennial sub - commit- tee wi thin the Council. This .1 five - man g roup promptly scrapped the Bells —— as the project has come to be called — in favour of a new station. But the project. may act rest there. Bell proponents are talking about taking out an In- junction to prevent the Coun- cil from proc 'i with a mundane a Memorial to Cana- da's 100th Birthday. : Iendants probably stem from air l tine. Journal picked up the story and v unborn but i drawn. the first ‘breath of life' t0 the 1819 Pope John In a 80!- ‘ frequently being used as a sym— . ture heralding some modifica- police ‘ Varied View: On Uterine Cries Dr. More R. Van Dalla- Itory about an expectant moth- er who heard her baby cry be- fore birth. Around me aa me into. time Lancet a British medi- cal journal. published a review of more than 00 such cases covering a period of yeara. An- other English physician describ- ed a current case of.a baby who also T h e membra the infant was turned manually to make ddh any 9881C- Al result. air entered the uterus. ich may explain the phenom- enon. The subject seems to Intrigue British physicians and th e y continue to bring it up from time to time. A recent Issue _of the British Medical join-ml car- ried an Item about the Intraut- ’ erlne cry. The mother had tox- I I l emla of pregnancy and the o atetrician decided to induce lab- or by rupturing the bag of wat~ era Aa he was withdrawing the ‘ Instrument. the baby we two were The , delivery had did not take place until hours later. This story was disbelieved by Oamb ' man wth contends . a o . that human vocal cords cannot t. function unless air p a s a e s | through them. He doubts that crying could occur when there i Is no air in the lungs of the un- born babe. He says the "voices" ' heard by patients and their at- a in the pregnant womans intes- New England medical NOTES in THE. WAT Pra bubon- aI attack onSan. collimator. M ana- mlel like that who noodl Manda.—- OttawaJ m lrlfllk have defined a completer «tripped, prefabri- cated bathroom. It ll lealod. delivered. and Inland on the site. The new homeowner proud- ly open: the door and finds: a bath, a hand-bulb. idm, towel rails, min-era. and toilet tluua and—of courae— II - 380 daughtarl— Peterbomugh Ex- amlner. J“ is... liked the rear of the ball.— Montreal Star. A car that crashed with in. Royal car In England bu been put up for sale by a "collector’s" item at mic. the old price. It’s certainly a better fate than ending up with a junk collector's Item at one- Weat Germany'a dune-tic pol- Itics provide a clue as to why Soviet Premier Khrushchev has apparently decided. to visit an. Penhapa the mere fact that an election In coming in Waat Ger- many next year waa. enough to set the peripatetic Mr. Khruah. chev thinking about hitting the road once again. Khrushchev may simply want to make a dramatic response to the European policies being followed by Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder against for- midable opposition. It. is seen as a good omen that the proposed visit waa ar- ranged by Alexei Adzhubel. Khrushchev's son-In-law, whose name has become associated with moves for relaxation of tensions. U a “The line between, newborn. The editor- I concluded : bol of entrance into the world at l large." In other words. if real sounds occur. the baby is not_ unborn but newborn_ Theedltor-g lal continues. “intrauterine vol- t ces are stimulated by the shrill ,r winds in the pregnant abdom-l en .. . The May 16 issue of the Brit- ttsh Medical journal has a fol— ; lowup letter from an Oxford ob- ‘ atetrician who says the phenom- enon has been known for more than 2.000 years. In Livy‘s His- tory of Rome. "he records a case which occurred in Italy during the critical days of the second'Punic war in 214 BC. On this occasion. the Romans were encouraged by a fetal cry 'urmphe—to preserve and ultimately overcome the fears and trials of their time. It is to I be regretted that the fetal cries i of today contain no encoutmge- 1 ment for us to pres- ent hardships." DROOPING STOMACH rs. H.B. writes: Can a wom- an with a dropped stomach do all her housework? Yes It Is normal for the stom- acthe to song or drop wthen stand- ing. especially after a h e a v‘y meal. A gain in weight will help keep the stomach In place by providing tflatt depots in the W. B. wri es: Can lupus ery- thematosus affect the kidneys? EPLY Yes. This bizarre disease of connective tissue may involve all organs of the body. The skin and Joints are afflicted most often. RHEUMATIC FEVER r. ER. writes: Does rheu- matic fever In an adult from the childhood type? REPLY No. except that the In I n f. s are less bothersome In children than in adults. F STOMACII POLYPS In the stomach mean cancer? REPLY Not necessarily. as only per cent of these. lesions are malignant. Larger polyps are more likely to be cancerous. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— A vacation is good medicine. (NOTE: All correspondence to Dr Van Dellen should be ad'- dressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen. co Ch ic a go Tribune, Chicago. Illinois.) Factory Forms Peterborough Examiner SO-CALLED . are finding increasing- favor in Ontario. These' are large windowless buildings in which c owe. or her: are kept In sterile individual pens. They see only arrtific l a I light. T h e y have no exercise. They are fed body -' building but unnatural diets. They build no muscle and. n In y, their phyalv cal condition Is usually lower than that of conventionally- treated livestock though h might be M. According to Ontario Hydro. which supplies but and light- Ing for than a farm favorites, there are now about 150 of them in I _ t me. one much mom profltdile than con- tinual a _ animals yield more mil: or eggs or meat the ani- mals on conventional fat-ma. x mean t I o n a' are taken to keep the animal: dia- eau - free. Boga for bleeding factory boy are delivered by Caesar-In auction quire they cam nothing from other hoga. OPWON DIVIDBD — Opinion is divided on whe- ther treating anlmala in this way Ia cruel. In any can. Cu- ada'a in Code on for dealing with cruelty to aaI« male could hardly applied to factory animala- that. an well fed and sheltered. Bm In the produce from auch anlmdls he” to out? an. .54.. a . (mama-tum: , “mm” is: eggfrom a battery- huneveraecndayllm— Mam-am“ mount. It“? 555: beef or bacon fro m a "free" animal more nutritious th 8 n that .f rom animals penned, drugged and band-fed all their short lives? . People who have been able to make comparisons any that the prod u c e from fact 0 ry farms la tasteless. but the fac- to f have an answer to that complaint. They are de- w «omelet flavor-Inga much can in t ey ‘aIaugbter anima-Ia shortly before their death. IN m UNITED KINGDOM Experiments In Britain have ahown that farm factory ani- If male or. uaua not suffering from some actual disc I a é. Their poor physical condition is blamed on the de nial of most of tbelr Inatincta. The young animal ll unable to turn to la mother. The anlmala are not able to select their own food tealvaa In Britain have bee it found gnawing the wood to their pen- for Wings and sucking V In ‘ cl to them oven tho urine from their pen all“). Battery Irena, denied exercise. sometime: become tulcai hya . The Jutlflcatlon for all dcoumJapa-ofltnlaa this, any nu verbal manna by an concerned with the we I I-being of either abdomen. SMANY ORGANS INVOLVED; M. writes; Do many polyps i Adzhu-bel. for Instance. car- ried a letter from Khrushchev tion in relations between Mos- cow and the Roman Catholic Church. POSITION STRONGER Erhard seems to have emerged with ncreased strength from the recent chal- lenge to his policies by a group led by Franz - Josef Strauss. former defence minister. and Konrad Adenauer. former chan. cellar, within his own party. Erhard, the economic wonder- worker. is an acknowledged vote-getter not likely to be de- posed before an election. Often derided' as a paper tiger. he has shown teeth by stipulating that he and he alone is respon- sible for policy under West Germany's basic 1 w. Yet Khrushchev may think it wise to show recognition of Er- hard'a moves to the east. par- ticularly in trade. and Erhard’s liberal attitude toward Euro- pean union. No one is expecting any de- velopments in the great ques- _tion of German reunification. IKhrushchev has just guaran- teed the Communist East Ger- i 1 man state for 20 years. imply- I l Atlantic Drywall 46 Valley St. O ROOFING MAN THIS IS IT! . DRYWAllS TAPING (also 2" solid pafifionn, no sfudding noodtd, Sound proof.) . PERMANENT SIDINO (fir-proof. applied over In- sulation backer 11 Beautiful Colon h Choou Front All Work Guaranteed '0!!!“ Avail-bl. I ' an IsrtMAm 094-6175 ans: nouns an-mr out or TOWN can. coma Seen'As A Good Omen- By Joesph ' Canadian Prue Macaroon Staff Writer _ In: the whole matter could be mxamin then. Khruah venturing into what he has ao often termed a den of war-mouse“, ta cure to try to discourage Waat Ger- me ' many States ..Inapi.red NATO multi- national force—and just as sure to be turned down. UNIFICATION UNLIKELY Although no progress on re- unification seema possible. Er- hard may try for smaller con- cessions web as Increased free- dom for East Germans. who live in the most rigid of all the satellites. There could be some arrangement made mow» ment through the Berlln Wall, erhapa Erhard’s biggest bargaining weapon is the oifor more trade and the credits the Communists badly lack. West Germany‘s trade with tho Soviet Union and the satellites now peaches only 4.5 per cent of its total. In any case the Erhard. Khrushchev meeting is seen as potentially m 0 re significant than that of Adenauer and former Russian premier Bul- ganin In Moscow In I955. Adenauer's trip had the im- mediate aim of obtaining the release of German prisonersmf- war. 10.000 of whom were re- patriated within a few months. At the same time. the two coun- tries resumed diplomatic rela- tions after a lapse of 14 years. Don't Miss Gigantic lobster Supper St. Anne's Parish Hope River EVERY SATURDAY “This just Isn't any Lobster Supper". Ask those who have been there. 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