iter assroom done, the chM. about it." which the ma taken up with easure because t the machine vpewriter were t in the activity sc cess _ which h3 help of the : w@oneral mental d them _ more nfident. _ Many a classroo.n 13 a for effective ifluence, thereâ€" night exert on ild be of basic the most .trikâ€" strength and ~‘s interest in udy in the a â€" typewriter ation, wheu regular Casg ust been conâ€" esting results, writers . were 6,125 pupils, vas compared is in 14 "conâ€" y farms. AACC‘Y nt â€" enough may speriment has form by Dr. mbia Univer. Freeman of Ailment _ Sulphur Dip id lowing stateâ€" the teachers‘ mite hag been from its habit o akim with its ma, â€" which i# nation of vesiâ€" is beneath the 16 mange mite mon sarcoptle ssfully treated )« that are of & by the use of Yee â€"bulletin ent of A"k." espread among is causing un farmse â€" LittW® early to use o stay after ired kinderâ€" the Experiâ€" e than two ol â€" schools. ho had a¢ : more than ipte to write i1 to depend s a mediunt herd of 173 t had given rades comâ€" t during & iental chile : cent, of a han did the ty pewriter carâ€"cut face ty and unâ€" ; were rub= Yome were mad most of Some were rubbing at t the itchy ocate. onto a digest the Typeâ€" h Bureau _ children lition the ed a supâ€" t original ntage in illy markâ€" do of the t written in total iring the ntal chil convinced 1 to readâ€" ; the use e case of a feeling This prob= ase â€" with ite letters eading is ; maching c to read 1 stories." ntit o a plec® c. _ Thes® irts of the ined, with o be very rey mites, sarcoptie ilo« â€" form more ob y pupils hich the imental given of the h neral effect + of N w : MA«~ tical v@« CANADA How Canada Came Through Canada has come successfully through ten serious depressions in less than half a century. Considering population and resources some of the earlier depressions _ were perhaps graver than the one through which we are now passing. In many respects that of 1837 was the most severe in our history. But Canada survived them all and passed on to greater heights of prosperity. ‘The present depression seeoms to be lifting, and there is every reason to believe that economically our future will follow the history of the past. This depression requires to be looked at in its proper perspective. _ Our previous experiâ€" ences are described in a pamphlet enâ€" titled: "Canada Comes Through," by Mr. Floyd S. Chalmers, editor of the Financial Post, Toronto. These artiâ€" cles are an antidote to pessimism and give reason for confidence in the fuâ€" ture.â€"Toronto Mail and Empire. Weeds Are Expensive I Just how serious is the loss occaâ€" sioned to Canada agriculture by the weed nuisance is shown by the report of the Associate Committee on Weed Controtl of the Canadian Research Council. This body which has been investigating the more important quesâ€" tion with particular attention to the western provinces. The report deâ€" clares that 18 per cent. is a very conâ€" servative estimate of the crop loss due to weeds and taking the average wheat yield on the prairies to be three hundred million bushels, the oats yield at two hundred million bushels and the barley yield at one hundred milâ€" lion bushels the committee considers that at current prices weeds mean a loss of $40,000,000 a year to agriculâ€" ture in three provinces apparently causes little concern. â€" Peterborough Examiner. Dangerous Holiday There is no more foolish vacation than an automobile trip that requires too fast or too long driving; it is much more comfortable, as well as much safer, to plan an easy driving scheâ€" dule.â€"Petorborough Examiner. Britishâ€"Made Cars Excelled A terrific contest for automobiles was conducted recently when the Inâ€" ternational â€"Alpine trials were held. There were contests for four grades of: cars, which had to drive over a long, steep and tortuous course through the‘ Alps, a gruelling trial of speed and mechanical â€" efficiency. Competitors were not permitted to put fresh water in their radiators, the ability to negoâ€" tiate the hills without a "boil out" be ing one of the factors considered in the race. Britishâ€"made care were one, two, three in every class, and someâ€" times four, five and six as well,. There were cars from France, Germany, Italy and other countries in the competition and they were simply "blotted out." British workmanship is rarely surâ€" passed by that of other nations.â€"St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. Because â€" Americans, Englishmen, Germans, Dutchmen, Swedes, Lithuanâ€" jans, Poles, Danes, Armenians, Serâ€" bians, Greeks, Estonians, Syrians, Lotts, Icelanders, Norwegians and esâ€" ecially the Japanese think it is effemâ€" inate, many modern Frenchmen have abandoned the ancient and honorable Gallic custom of greeting friends with a resounding kiss on the cheek or jaw, "Time" says. So widespread has beâ€" come the custom of shaking hands in France that the august L‘Academie de Medecine was asked recently for an opinion. Weightily the academie conâ€" sidered, then over the voluble opposiâ€" tion of a youthful minority delivered these decisions: (1) the country man‘s hands carry fower gorms than the city man‘s, but (2) more germs change carriers during a handclasp than durâ€" ing a perfunctory peck of the lips; hence (3) the handshake is more danâ€" gerous than the kiss.â€"Border Cities Star. In Brant County, a farmer was disâ€" gusted with the prices paid for strawâ€" berries, and ho ploughed up his plants and put in something else. In Niagara district, the fruit growers preâ€"cooled Celerouely EOesS mm ie e t dg and refrigerated their strawberries and opened up a new market in Winniâ€" peg. There‘s a difference,. The viewâ€" point of one was pessimistic and desâ€" tructive, whilst the other fruit growers were optimistic and constructive. The optimists â€" were quick thinkers . with initiative, while the pessimist was the "man with the hoe.‘"â€"Sherbrooke Reâ€" cord Conversation Thero are few accomplishments to\ be desired above the art of a skflled‘ a n d interesting conversationalist. Judged by the multiplicity of examples the term is disconcertingly misunderâ€" stood. So many folks seem to think that wind and words make conversaâ€" tion. They blather about inconsequenâ€" tial things. Their victims are given no opportunity to drop a suggestion nor to express an opinion. That is one reason why so many intelligent and highly educated people talk so little.â€" tion. They bli tial things. â€"" no opportunit nor to express reason why 8 highly educate Brandon Sun. Tooa Quick With the Plow Handshake Dangerous Centenarians ( The census returns account for 163 centenarians in Ontario. We have no details of the ages, but probably sevâ€" eral of them are well beyond the cenâ€" tury. There are 74 men and 89 women in the list indicating that women are the most tenacious. The return shows that about one person in 18,000 has a chance to become a centenarian in the province.â€"Hamilton Herald. A notable fact is that diet plays a most important part in combating tuberculosis. After the German occuâ€" pation of Warsaw there was an alarmâ€" ing increase in tuberculosis, because the Germans removed as much fat of all kinds as they could with which to make high explosives. When the peoâ€" ple of Warsaw were able to return '.oi a diet containing sufficient fat, the tuberculosis declined rapidly. It is generally accepted that a diet rich in fats constitutes a definite protection against tuberculosis. Efforts made to reduce dust in factories are also cited as a contributory cause of the decline, as well as sanitation, water supply, and personal hygiene.â€"Montreal Star. Toâ€"day we have a tale of the new Restlessness that has come over the Pitcairn Islanders, culminating in the departure of two Pitcairn maidens to seek careers in New Zealand. No longer are they content, like their forâ€" bears, "In the hollow Lotusâ€"land to live and lie reclined, ‘ On the hills like gods together, care less of mankind." j but are fled away to that world of acâ€" tion over which the gods smile in seeâ€" ret. So it is and has always been. The men of the Bounty found their Lotusâ€" land; their descendants weary of it, for the heart of man is never satisfied since he came out of Eden. Another generatio. will come that has "had enough of action and of motion" and longs for rest and ease and forgetfulâ€" ness and the influence of mildâ€"minded melancholy. But alas! Lotusâ€"lands grow ever more difficult to find. There is no escape from the ant heap and the hive.â€"London Evening Nows. Loans to Austria i During the weokâ€"end it was anâ€" nounced that the League of Nations had granted Austria a loan of £9,000,-I 000. One third of this amount will be furnished by Great Britain. _ This money is being diverted from our own needs and interests in the Empire to boister up a country that no longer maintains independent national existâ€" enco, but whose products thus subsiâ€" dized will directly compete with ours. Every one knows that Austria must eventually be taken into a Customs Union with Germany. Berlin intends to absorb her. To continue to lend money to Austria is only to add to the benelovent golden stream which has its source here and its outlet in the bottomless sea of German finance.â€" London Daily Express. Australia‘s Recovery ' During the eight years to June, 1930,‘ the net excess of imports over exports was sixtyâ€"two millions. That is to say, during these years we not only did not pay anything towards our overseas interest; we slipped sixtyâ€"two millions still further back. That we should this year be able not only to pay all our interest, but put by eight or nine millions as well is a performance to which we are surely entitled to, at least, call the world‘s attention.â€"Sydâ€" ney Bulletin. Pineapple Market \| As it is, the Canadaâ€"British West Inâ€", dies Trade Agreement gives a preter-‘ ence of two cents per lb. on canned‘ pineapplo from any of these colouies,| but where, may we ask, is the preâ€" served pineapple? Jamaica, the colony from which some American investors obtained three thousand pine suckers‘ in 1882, which they shipped to the Hawnaiian Islands, and upon which an enormous industry, one that provides fruits for fifteen canning factories in that American dependency, has been built up, has not taken advantage of Canada‘s generous offer to assist hor to establish an industry which should be worth a considerable sum to island producers. The valuo of pineapple culture and canning to Hawail is ap proximately 50,000,000 dollars per anâ€" num.â€"Kingston Gleaner (Jamaica). The constitution is silent on the subject of the death penalty, which is left to the civil and military penal codes, The military code will con. tinue to includeo the death penalty although the fact that the sentence imposed recently on Gen. Jose San Jurjo, leader of the Royalist revolt, was commuted to life imprisonment, indicates that a new code eventualâ€" ly will abolish execution, New Penal Code in Spain Madrid.â€"A new civil penai code which includes a clause abolishing the death penalty was adopted by the Spanish Parliameni recently, "Our generation is too drunk and infatuated . with formulas."â€"Andre Abolishes Death Penalty Value of Fats The Empire By Frank Morrison, Secretary Am>orâ€" ican Federation of Labor. The important question in our coun try is an understanding by citizens of the forces that are bringing econâ€" omic changes. . . . The same forces are driving indusâ€" try to a fiveday week basis and a shorter workday. _ The tendency is irresistible, and labor is daily securâ€" ing recruits from citizens outside of our ranks to its demand for a shorter workday and a shorter workweek. The present business depression with 11,000,000 idle workmen is the best defence of our shorter workweek deâ€" mand. While the fiveâ€"day week is nocesâ€" sary, labor has no illusions that this will be voluntarily grantad by the great majority of employers. The wcckers expoect to go over the same grond they traveled when they attackâ€" ed the ton, nine and eight hour workâ€" days, when they urged workmen‘s compensation, safety in mill, mine and factory, free public schools and other advances that are now accepted as part of our social life, Machinery in Society By William N. Doak, United States Secretary of Labor, in an Address at the Syracuse State Fair. Machinery hag been a boon to emâ€" ployer, to worker and consumer; but its real purposes must never be lost sight of, for when they are, machinâ€" ery becomes the destroyer and not the builder of the hopes of every worker to carn the wherewithal not only of the necessities for himself and his family, but as well such luxuries as will keep him and them up to the standards of normal American life. The continuation and extension of this modern giant must be accompanâ€" ied with a wellâ€"balanced humanitarâ€" ian and ecconomic program to prevent us from reaching a state of social danger. The income received through the source of salaries and wages must be so balanced that all may have the means of a livelihood. Such a plan will prevent the collapse of our social fabric which would otherwise destroy our advanced civilization which the machine ago has made possible. This can best be safeguarded by increased vages, shorter workdays and shorter workweeks, thereby equitably distriâ€" buting the fruits of mechanization. This plan has my unqualified endorseâ€" ment. Here we see Joseph V. McKee, successor to New York‘s playboy mayor, Jimmy Walker. No trouble at all, he was president of the board of aldermen and just moved up a peg and automatically filled the post. A Shorter Workweek The Barrymore clan had an informal gathering for the christening of John Blyth Barrymore, son of John and Dolores. Father O‘Shea, Baby Ethel Dolores, Dolores Costello Barrymore, John Barrymore, Helene Costello (with Baby John) and Lionel Barry more pose for the cameraâ€"man. Jimmy Walker‘s Successor "I know nothing worse than letting your wife find a letter you‘ve forgotâ€" ton to post," said Wilson hastily turning out his various pockets, Hayes grimaced. "I do," he replied, "What‘s that?" asked Wilson, "Letting her find one you‘ve forâ€" gotten to burn," replied Hayes. NEW TO HIM The company director shook his head. ts Two young married men were oxâ€" changing confidences. f "My dear man," he said, "there are hundreds of ways of making. money, but only one that‘s honest." The éompany promoter looked puzâ€" zled. "What‘s that?" he asked. "Ahb," smiled the other, "I thought you wouldn‘t know!" Barrymore Christening Party A millionaire who wrote a dreadâ€" fully illegible fist took a shoot in the North of Scotland. One night before retiring he sent the hcad keeper detailed written inâ€" structions for the morrow. Next morning he was awakened very early by the persistent skirling of bagpipes beneath his window. Summoning his manservant, he said testily: "What‘s that fearful ra_g:ket'.'" TRUTH Truth is the ground beneath heayâ€" en and earth. _ The part we mortals see we call Wisdom, and the other part, underlying heaven, we _ call Faith. * “Oil," said the man, "that‘s Dona‘!d the keeper playing that wee bit tune ye sent him last night." "He‘s an unlucky fellow." "Yes, he is always Johnny on the wrong spot." ’i E w SS3 Wrong Tune wORSE British Board of Trade To Extend Credits to Russia New Yorkeâ€"A special cable to the _ SOVIET TOURS ATTRACT. New York Times from London meedl Summer is high tourist that the Board of Trade has authorizâ€" Moscow; and groups of llulxlurlil ed exterding Soviet trade credits in American motorcars, which Intour the United Kingdom from twelve to tho Soviet state travel agency, eighteen months. purchased for the conveyance of Proceeding, the cable says: patrons, are to be seon in front of "This is the first gesture the GOYâ€"| {hree or four hotels which are lars ernment has made to the Russi@n3 reseryed for the accomodation of : since the Ottawa Conference, and it%elgnen. English is overwhelmit indicates that manufacturers @Are ip, predominant language in the . about to make a determined drive ul ridors and restaurant: of these hot push their exports into the Russian | pecause the majority of foreign t markets. lists in Russia are Americans, 1 "The twelveâ€"morth credit limit had been a severe obstacle to British exâ€" porters, particularly man ifacturers of machinery and heavy engineering goods. The Russians have always inâ€" sisted on an eighteenâ€"month period, asserting that they are always able to cbtain credits for this length of time from Continental countries. Sevâ€" eral months ago the Lancashire enginâ€" e ring industry lost thousands of pounds‘ worth of orders to Germany because the twelveâ€"month limit was in force." a new type of cafetcria car, unique in design and equipment. The introâ€" duction of this type of vehicle, on which the passenger can spend as litâ€" te or as much as may be desired, has been engendered by the company‘s wish to provide railway catcring faâ€" c.lities in accordance with presentâ€" day economic conditions. British Railway Instalis New Style Cafeteria London. â€" The London Midland Scottish Railway has put into service The cars are run on strictly cafc-l toria principles, customers serving themselves, while the traveling barâ€" maid also makes her debut. There are no licensing restrictions on trains, and_ the traveler can make merry from Euston to Aberdsen if he likes, though the refreshment rooms of the stations he :1des through are bolted and barred. To insure rapid service the car is divided longitudinally by a barrier which provides a corridor alongside tke seating accommodations. Passenâ€" Lers pass along this corridor to the bar, where they select their food and put it on trays that work along a sl:ding rack. At the end »f the bar the cost of the trayful is computed and the customers pass on to the tables by walking arcund the end of the barrier. Thus is completed a oneâ€" way circuit which insures the service of refreshments without delay. Trace Found of New Particle of Matter New Yorkâ€"Identification of what may be a new ultimate pariicle of matter was announced recently by Dr. Carl D. Anderson, associate of Dr. Robort A. Millikan of California Inâ€" stitute of Technicology. It is an exâ€" tremely light positive charge of elecâ€" tricity, seemingly about 1,800 times less in mass than previously observed positive charges. Beyond Him The cyclist had lost his way and haud inadvertently entered a private road. Suddenly he was confronted by a very stout and irate bailiff. "Look here, young man," shouted th» bailiff, "you go back! You‘ll not proceed except over my dead body!" 5 "Very gooci," replied the cyclist. "If it‘s like that I‘ll go back. I‘ve done quite enough hillâ€"climbing for one day The mathematiecs master noticed that one of his pupils was dayâ€"dreamâ€" ing, and not following his work on the blackboard. To recall his attenâ€" tion he said, sharply: "Brown, Brown, board!" The boy, startled, looked up. "Yes, sir, very," came the reply. 199 AGREED Moscow; and groups of luxurious American motorcars, which Intouri:t.‘ the Soviet state travel agency, has purchased for the conveyance of its patrons, are to be seen in front of the three or four hotels which are luply‘ reserved for the accomodation of forâ€"| eigners. English is overwhelmingly , the predominant language in the corâ€" ridors and restaurant: of these hotels, because the majority of foreign tourâ€" ists in Russia are Americans, with British in second place. Despite wor‘d ‘economic conditions, the flow of visiâ€". tors has been well maintained this year. The Soviet Union attracts the' serious student rather than the casual vocationist or sightâ€"scer. Tours are of varied length, ranging from a few days in Moscow to a month or more, with extensive travel throughout the !country. A familiar route of the itourists with more time at their disâ€" | posal includes a boat voyage down the Volga, from Nizhni Novgored to Stalâ€" ingrad, visits to some of the large new factorics and state farms in southeastern Russia, an automobile trip over the famous Georgian Miliâ€" |tary Road, which cuts through the ‘centre of the main Caucasus range, and a voyage on the Black Sca from the Caucasian port of Batum to one of Russia‘s favorite summer resorts, the Crimea. NEW RULING FOR PEASANTS. Rules defining the conditions under which a peasant may be expelled from membership in a collective farm and indicating his rights of appeal against a sentence have just been published by the Commissariat for Agriculture. Henceforward a peasant may only be excluded by a twoâ€"thirds majority vote at a mecting of the collective irm members. The reason for the action must be set down in writing. If the excluded member feels that he has been treated unjustly he has a right of appeal to two organizations, first to the district and then to the râ€"sional commisâ€"ion which exists for the purpose of hearing complaints. The decision of the regional commisâ€" sion is final. One of the largest libraries in the world is now under construction inl Moscow. When completed in 1933 or| 1934 it will have housing space for‘ 8,000,000 volumes. The new building,| «1 rather group of building:, is being , constructed on the site of the present Lenine (formorly Rumyantsev) Lih-| rary, which has now been outgrown, as a result of the accumulation of beoks. The main building of the new , library will be a threeâ€"stoâ€"ey buildâ€" i.g with seats to accommodate 3,009 readers. The face of the building willf le constructed out of marble and granite, the inside walls will be of aricolored marble, the woodwork and furniture of redwood. | The Soviet State Publishing Comâ€" pany has been comm‘ssioned to preâ€" pare a limited edition of 1,500 copies of Tolstoy‘s novel, "Anna Karenina,‘" in the English language, in two volâ€" umes, on espccially fine paper. A New York firm, "Limited Editions Club," originated the plan of publishâ€" ing the best literary work of every ecintry in English for Russia in limâ€" ited editions of especially high qualâ€" ity. The somewhat debatable point of what constitutes Russia‘s greatest literary work was decided in favor of "Anna Karenina." A feature of the new publication will be illustrations by N. I. Piskarev, a prominent etcher, â€"The Christian Science Monitor. Plans Already Forming For Regina World Fair Torontoâ€"Ontario will be adequateâ€" ly and appropriately represented at the World‘s Grain Show and Conferâ€" ence which takes place in Regina, July 24 to Aug. 5, 1933, stated Colâ€" onel the Hon, Thomas L Kennedy, Minister of Agriculture for Ontario, at a meeting of the Ontario Comâ€" mittee of the World‘s Grain Show. Col. Kennedy advised the commitâ€" tee that Ontario should be repre-’ sented in the intercollege and junior grain judging competitions. Plana! are being completed for lxolding1 grain judging competitions at soveu!‘ strategic points throughout the proâ€" vince, The winners in each reglon.‘ al competition will, in all probabâ€" ility, be brought to Guelph and a final provincial seed judging competition will be held in which three young men will be selected to represent Ontario at the World‘s Grain Show junior judging competition. Some consideration was given to the preparation of an educational exâ€" hibit at the show representing the natural resources of the province of Ontario, including agriculture, forâ€" ests, mines and tourist possibilities. A bookmaker, who was ill, sent his | small son to ask a certain doctor tA)1 call, _ A different physician luvlng‘ I:rlved, the bookmaker afterwards | ked his son to explain. "Woll, | you see, dad," he said, "there woro. a lot of brass plates on the doors, | and when I got to the number you , gave me I saw ‘Consultations, 11 w| 12‘ The chap next door was offerâ€" ing "Consultations, 10 to 1, and I knew you‘d like the one that gave the boest odds." | NEW LIBRARY UNDER WAY Moscow Notes TRANSLATING TOLSTOY. season in home you will .ot have it abroad." Invurions â€"Mrs. Stanley Baldwin. TORONTO »rt "In one motion picture studio they y quit producing comedies and are ;,| working on a financial statement im x cight reels; they think it‘ll be much "The world cannot find stability and peace without America."â€"Jean Carâ€" dinal Verdier. "More and more the basic industries are finding that the most economical p oduction requires largeâ€"scale organâ€" ‘»~tion.â€"Sir Arthur Saiter. "I cannot help thinking that we have marked a turning point toward botter _ things."â€"Nicholas _ Murray Butler. "All I ask from life is a loaf of bread, some onions and a bottle of beer."â€"Olga Petrova. "People should be warned that the loss from sweating cannot be replaced by fresh water alone."â€"George Berâ€" nard Shaw. "Psychology is a rubber stamp pressed upon a slippery dodging ghost."â€"Maxwell Bodenheim. | "Money has never yet formed an ‘environment for anything; only genâ€" ‘ius or talent, or whatever .ies withia | you can do that."â€"Mary Garden, "The science of one generation, however abstruse ‘t may seem, be comes the mere ‘common sense‘ of the next."â€"Lord Rayleigh, "It is never safe to assume that the human community differs very greatly from an ant heap."â€"Rebecca West. "These times are the best times that the world has seen in many years â€"they are teaching us something."â€" Henry Ford. "Criminals today are not illiterate." â€"Lewis E. Lawes. "The soil is the source of wealthâ€" not the banks."â€"Henry Ford, "Many a creamâ€"puff personality goes as a hero, and heroes are writâ€" ten down as fools."â€"Richard Washâ€" burn Child. funnier."â€"Eddie Cantor. "National confidence will return as soon as we are able to think again in terms of what we have and what we are rather than what we have lost." â€"Andrew W. Melion. "Bad times, it is said, are always good times for superstition."â€"Aldous Huxley. "The more properly managed clubs and playgrounds we have the less poâ€" lice stations we shall need.â€"Lewis E. Lawes. "We face the stark insanity that we starve because we have produced too much food, go urclothed because we produce too much cotton, and in general suffer want in the midst of plenty."â€"MHarry Emerson Fosdick. "We are living in a world not of three dimensions, but of four, and the fourth is movement."â€"Sir Harold Bowden. "If all the mopetary gold in the world were collected, it would pay only about oneâ€"third of the British national debt."â€"Lord Desborough. "The ultimate goal is the Kingdom of Heaven on earth."â€"Stanley Baldâ€" win. "It is not the function of the Govâ€" ernment to relieve individuals of their responsibilities to their neighbors."â€" Herbert Hoover. "We live in the richest world that has ever existed. Still, hundreds of millions of people are nearly starvâ€" ing."â€"Gustavy Cassel, "Moral disapproval, when it beâ€" comes the disapproval of the whole world, takes on a significance hitherâ€" to unknown in international law."â€" Henry L. Stimson. Porry, N.Y.â€"A student of the Colâ€" lege of Agriculture at Cornell, named Eric Mader, finds that an effective way to combat potato bugs is to dust the vinos with dry powder and that this can be applied most effecâ€" tively at night when they are coverâ€" ed with dew. In this region, however, dew does not form every night, and keeping awake to watch for it is imâ€" practicable for a hardâ€"pressed farmâ€" or. Young Mader, therefore, has ie vented an electric detoctor to wake him when the potato patch is in conâ€" dition to receive attention. The formâ€" ing dew releases a switch which starls for general use without the restric tion of patents, was demonstrated at a recent field day of the Empire State Potato Club. Alarm Clock For Potatoes The contrivance, which is offored bell at the head of the sleeper‘s So They Say |f wÂ¥ 4@ Â¥3% +4