FEBRUARY 5. 1948 \ T , . 1 The safety factor today is perhaps being omphasized more- than in any time in the past. Forthe past few years one week is set apart as "Health Week." Thisisa special occasion when we should take "stock" and try and ascertain if we are doing as" much as we individually and collectively can to nsake this Dominion, this Province, this City of ours as i safe _as we can from disease, which is our common enemy. consensus of modern opinion in the-field of public health in Canada, in the United States and in Great lritain is that a single vaccination against smallpox is, in too many cases, not sufficient for a life time of protection. lnprrler to play "safe“, it is desirable and necessary to repeat this vac- cination peliodically. Every six years is considered an opti- mum time to seek this protection .by a re-vaccination.‘ It is the one and only way to banish this enemy and all school chil- ‘dren from Grade Vll upwards should avail themselves of this protection. ~ "Health Week" this year is observed during the first‘ week of February and the Department of Health ls making preparations for clinics in each of the City Schools the fol- lowing week for this purpose. Any school child, who has never been vaccinated and any who has t ten vaccinated six years a o tion to those im Grades Vil, Vlll, IX andgX attending the City Schools are eligible for these Clinics, which will be conduct- ed by the City HealthOfficer, assisted by the City Public _Health Nurse. lt should be pointed out that it is required by law that a child must be vaccinated before he or she can attend a public school, but the revaccinations are voluntary. Intelli- gent parents do not require compulsion when the health ef their children is at stake. The time and place will be later advertised in the press. w/yrcn FOR rr. B.’ C. KEEPING, M.D., D.l‘.l-l., Chief Health Officer. or longer, in -addi- . Truman liankets Alter Balcony Atiilhlte ilouse By an. shown Canadian Press Stat! Writes- WASHINGTON. Illeb. 4 --(CP)— Wineu President Truman wants a morning plunge (he dives into the purified waters of a gleaming priv- ate pool; when Washington cor- respondents get inquisitive they crowd into t-he president's office. and tire questions at hizn. ' and Truman took time all from more serious matters to tell the reporters about it the other day when they resumed queries about that controversial balcony he wentsto hang on the south porfloo ' a! llbe executive mansion. ‘It started when ‘fireman derided any extensive travelling plans this presidential election year - and someone suggested perhaps he plan- ned a “back porch calmpaign" from thebaloonyttiaiineaxts co ‘- eionere don't want hhs to put on the White l-louse. That wasn't a back porch, the president reminded the newspaper Isen.,It was the front porch in reality because the soutih pos-tico once was the main entraince to the White House. It had a lawn as it hse now and at the loot of it was tlhe old Chesapeake and Ohio canal, the president said. John Quincy Adams. when he was president 083-29) used to. go down to llhe canal every morning for a swim. the president said. . Warming to the historical sub- ject he recalled that there was a woman reporter those days wlho had tried in vain to get an interview with Adams. MY LAUNDRY PROBLEMS ARE TAKEN CARE or, THANK VOU/ These will he your e:- act words . . . when Y" get the wise washday habit of sending‘ diIlY clothes and linens to us. Save moflfir "lb will‘ our extra-clean. W" cost service. PHONE 110° I ‘KENT STRICT She Got He: 80.00 One morning aha went down to the canal bank while the president was having hi; before-breakfast , sat on his clothes and an- nounced ahe would stay there until he gave liar an interview. Ere got iher story. Now the south portleo looks over g, tree-shaped. enclosed lawn. with avenues and onuments and park- land; beyond stretching half a mile to liha Potmnac. The canal is gone. ‘litre former back door is now the front entrance facing on Pennsyl- vania Avenue. The president had more to say about that balcony he is determin- ed to build on the south portico as a place to cool ot! in private during rh- heet of summer. Everybody protests when a. W8- gestion is made to diange anythirv! in the‘ White House. he ccmplained. It was the sense when they decided to put in a cooking range. ‘Fonda long time the servants refused to use a range and went on preparinfl meals at an open fire-place. ‘It was the same again when its lights, tihen electricity and lat-Bl‘ a bqthmcm were installed. Coma rnitteee viewed with alarm these newiangled alterations to the his- toric mansion now about 150 Y?!" old. Last year the president. had a rather elaborate plan to extend the executive wing and Prim" mm“ any“ mug. Thg .-lS|i0l'l 0f tine arts won that W" “d "l" lam dropped. p Bu; the wgaldanyt i3 determined to have his balcony Jllimiiway which is estimated to cost 815.000 “a will be virtually invisible tothe general public. ' . S Vi Ill Faclns Sgllsossol-‘ood Problem Olrmo, Feb.2-—( )—Bir John 301d Orr. chai n d‘ thI United Nations Food and Agricul- tural Council, today warn that the increase in the world's popul- ‘atlon and the decrease ir fertile land were "as great a threat to human society as the atomic "More: cosrrrss ronnv "than in 1939 ermznh@rlrcrmc . rants flare is s household necessity that hasn't gene up in price. During the was-mad post-was- yeers of rising ‘prices the cost oi‘ popular types ofG-E Lamps has been reduced by 20 to 25 per cent. _ I Not only have prices been greatly" reduced but, quality has been improved. The light outpu‘ watt is aow greater. You a... be nlideat that r" wlreniyoa buy Ggli Lamps ro- - l 60s l“, Nb" J11": In: nrevseyprbnr-In 1939. rasseaeao insist rnome isms #5" f ‘ - ‘f boenb." He told the 1".A.O. confer- ence of Near Eastern countries that the world population had in- creased by more than 1001100000 since the beginning of the Wu‘. new oaoantzarron ~DAR E BALAAM. Tenranrih — (OP) —‘ Early this year the new Inter-Territorial G. animation tor lilast Airlca came into operation. It comprises Uganda, Kenya and Tanganyika and will be governed by a high commission of three governors. ‘. \,. . .. ltstaassfassssrrst ' ‘ I . . ‘m But it was not always thatwaf ‘ - worl . v tact his“ the Dakotas would “my was: GUARDIAN. British Spirit ill Iolerance ters) - A German journalist who has returned to the American sane ,- after spending three weeks tour- lng the British Isles believes that only British type "tolerance" ap- plied to Europe cal save the con- tinent from sinking into a auag- . mire of inhumanity. The journalist. Fritz Von Woedt- lte, who is rwell known' for his theatrical writing, stated in a re- port published in the "wlesbaden- or Kurler" that during his trip he discovered the spirit ot England was beet epitomized in Voltalre's saying; "I may disagree with your opinion; but I will fight to the death tor your right to exprose lt." Von Woedtke said that he was unable to discover wbathnr the average Englishman's love of tnl- erance sprang from sell-discipline. lack of passion, the influence of the damp climate. or was simply OCNCI. able to visit nrgland trann Germ- the mull island with one price- less commodity — the spirit of England. it you transtee it to your children. it is Lke medicine. It has calories and the formula o; the drug is-Joleratiofl." Von Woedtke declared that dur- ing his brief visit to the “cloud and crisls-curtained" island, he lound people living with g, mixture of self-discipline and liberty, which resolved itself into the spirit of British tolerance. Through the hungry eyes of a German accustomed to gazing at the bomb-Jagged ruins of hie country's cities and its discouraged inhabitants, London becune a ma- gic kaleidoscope. Drove Through Insulin _ Describing his arrival at Liver- pool Street station. Von Woedtlre said: "Mist and fog cloak us as we drive through the city of ‘t.- 000.000. We. a group of Germans riding in a taxi through the, town. drive fast on the ‘shiny asphalt of the main streets. Hllge double-deck monsters (London buses) congre- gate nightly in front of the red traffic lights like herds of hurry- ing, heavily-breathing metal azs- knais." When he arrived at his ‘hotel in Kensington and found a hot bath Whiting. Von Wocdtke decided: “It rnust be a dream. I think of my poor hmne in Germany and I am sure that it is all g dream. But. there I am in a huge, still-shining brilliant cosmopolitan city and I am happy at being in the world again and at home in it." During a trip to a post office, Von Woedtke was surprised at. "the good left in the world" -- as typ- ified by two persons altruistically sending glttlparcels to needy per- .sona abroad. “There are two persons ahead a! 4M in line who want to dispatch parcels, A woman and an Engllgj workman with a pipe and .ea1t.hy. colored akin. I catch a gllmpgg or the, addressee on the parcels. ‘The “mm i! 11°F"!!! l lift to Hung- ary. containing used cloths. The workman ls sending his to a wom. 8h who has a German address which I cannot read. 1 gag m, good left in the wold. Strangers: A workman and a woman sending clothes.” . Von Woedtke co . lcle with the lt§t2r‘r‘l‘:s't:h¥fi?n London the invesiomwas planned "*1 the w" mes ahdwron. 1t a here that men are trying to pugflg hi" "l! enlsme ‘of Germany and it is from here that they wqng go win the peace." Norman Am nacoao m rAcrrrc sanvscg- ' By nnsma BRDDIE Canadian Press Correspondent SYDNEY. Australia, Jan. s-rhe Japan Courier Service-the longest alt- route la the world operated with twin-ensued . aircraft-has been discontinued by the Rpygl Australian Air Force, Qantas Empire Airways have taken over the ‘LOOO-rnlle route un- der charter to the menus. and felllsced the C4’! with l‘ - . ed Iiancastrlana.‘ our cum Diirlns ‘the W0 rem the nAn. 1"- Qliersted the service from Aus- tralia to Janna over 4.000.000 miles were flown over desert, junglu, milllniilim. and some o! the most hazardous stretches o! the Pacific without a single accident. “It Diane back to _Australia was ilrfgwgnbty Bgdnh 1dr. J. D. Baits. o w o th fir w Tokyo. cw a at plane Belle told reporters that the best tribute to the service came from "nittdetstes troops at Okinawa. Because of their punctuality in gelitiw in and out of Oklnawg m all kinds of weather the Americana gave them the same service prior- itr u they did Pan-American Air- WIYI. whiohnzse higher than um;- ovm army a navy planes , Hallo said that all ail-mar in Japan. Americans and British. a- ereea that the.n.A.A.r'. courier serviovhad abetrter record than ens givil or military airline in the Reason loathe government's de- cision ‘to discontinue the service was stated to be the smellmooet 0f operatic: tlaneastria-u under charter- tor the lone run; and the ulllv be banned from the tong ocean norm. Apart, from that it is believed tab eeramant wants ea Operate a oi route to Japan and sees this as an opportunity u; “g in on the ground floor before oth. eta bills to operate,‘ - -~——'---..__. narnba an. maven! The Danish lreshi-wgsgig 5...... corvoervseo Feraer llasagst 0i lloranda HELIOS Fab. I _ (OP) - ‘IORONIO. the consequence of a boo-old dern- 50L gm"; flllybgrt, Q, retired 1 manager of Noranda Gold "Anyone fortunate enough to be hum d!“ many, Ke was known as "').T." — a any in these times." ha. wrote, "no nickngme gained in France in 1015 matter whet the ostansible pur- wk,“ h; became known among pose o! his trip, could only leave 1mm- Qfflgggl, moat ot whom "were younger than he. es."°ld timer." Born in England. he worked on mining properties in Peru. 3119"!’ Italy and finally in Canada. He was general superintendent of the old British American Nickel Cor- poration's mine in Sudbuflr 0M" 4t‘ Former llew York Financier liies i.’ NIW YORK, Feb. I —(AP) — ‘mamas W. lAsnont, ‘l7, a country elergymarfa eon wlho became head or Wall Street's famed “House of Morgan," died last night at his winter home in Florida. Death o! the board chairman ol JP. Morgan and Coavpany was an- nounced in New York early today by R.G. Wesson, a vice-president o! the. banking tism. “Hip heart finally gave wt." Wasson said. ‘llhe financier and philanthropist had been in poor health for more than a year. He had been in Florida since early January. Wesson said the sliaht. genial ‘ died Y in his sleep; at his bedside were his wife and two of their loisr dbildreu. Laurent’; almost. legendary role in the financial world began in 1903. Then~33 years old, he became secretary e/nd treasurer of the new- ly-organized Bankara Tnsat Com- pany. Hiareputetioin sea. shrewd or- ganizer andeatute financier spread rapidly and eight years later, J. Pier-pant Morgan invited lhkss 0e become a partner in J. P. Morgan and Company . For two decades before the dearth or the younges- JP. Morgan. in 1943, he was second only to Morgan himself in guiding the destinies of the international banking house. With Morgan's passing, Lamont succeeded him as ohaimran o! the board and senior officer of the 47h“; he enlisted in the Firs! World War. " firm. ca 5457/1 hled nun Do your bands look red, feel ravr and rough from wintry weather? Then smooth ors i" and see how quickly thismadicaradforraul-helpe heal the soreness, and whit- ena reel, rough akin. Professional people, whose hospi- tal work is hard o‘n hands, have 1cm] relied an this L‘: , greaeelesa cream. They know the Nouema You can feel it heall It's an excellenl protective powder baaa and night cream, too. Get your trial jar of Noraama now -—at any drug or department aeoro—‘ while you save on this lirnifed- _ aler. Prove ea yourself vrlfl I 1 do for winter skin troubles. ' 25¢ an: m4 Yesfes relln:d_ lee produce about lso baa; u u]; "In"? las- toad. . . l a ezernz/Z/ es the mosllldelieele tissue ,' A _ hendierchlef. The new silky-soil Female the l ultimate lnlbeihroera llauee . . . welcoled by discemlns women. ' Yet, this superior tissue is super-laugh agd ultra-absorbent. when it eeea so little, why not bring the luxury of New Pyrex to yell bathroom . .~. novel WESTMINSTER PAPER CO. L1D., NEW WESTMINSTER, EC. medication brings relief-ohm oveei ‘ night — to chapped, irritated akin.‘ i WJQf/l/fl , Iictllasrllhlsofferlorafisiledflossbq