& Prtve te eka TES =a 3-8894; Street. Canedian Daily N@wangper Publishers jon and The Canedién Press. The Le Press le eicliWively entitled to the use for 65942; é Montreal, Vancouver (MA nationally by Thomson Newspapers Services, Toronto, 425 University Ave 640° Western Offices 1030 West — Cathcart Street 7037). Hcation of all news dispatches in this péper | credited to or to the Associeted Press or | right or republication of special dispetches in also reserved. Subscription rates: | Not over 40c per week by carrier, $12.00 « year bp.gail or rural routes adil ‘areas | not serviced by cérrier. $15.00 « year off Island end U.K. $20.00 per | year In U.S. and elsewhere outside. British Com | monweealth. Not over 7c Member single copy- Audit Bureau of | Circulation. PAGE 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1965. Civic Nominations | Congratulations are due to Mayor- elect Walter J. Cox on his election by acclamation in the City Hall yester- | day. His isthe only office falling | vacant at this time for which there | will not be keen competition at the polls next Wednesday, and it is- well that public interest should be dis- | played in this manner in the running of civic affairs. Mr. Cox has been fortunate in hav- | | been unapposed even when run- ning as: councillor on two occasions previously,-but we have no doubt that he would have made a good He has dem- showing in ” as outlined in the report of a American committee sum- in our issue of yesterday, quite unofficial, and are set forth merely for the purpose of sparking fit. Al a> \ 7 any case. i at board, and there is every reason t6 | expect that he will fill the role of chief magistrate satisfactorily. .This will mark the retirement of | His Worship Mayor Gaudet from civic potitics; but certainly not from the professional and business life of the community in which he has taken a prominent part for several years. His service as Mayor has coincided with one of the most progressive per- ccessor, whoever he may ioake s.. , ; the Council a s I 39.8 g& a , = reef * ever, it is stressed that the partners in the agreement would be commit- ted, under the plan, to “the eventual goal of maximum possible. coverage, pending an agreed-upon policy.” In a footnote to the report David Kirk, - executive secretary of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, makes it clear that in his view it is ¢ both certain and desirable that some | | degree of intervention in the “free | market” through agricultural price -; | and marketing policies shall exist. | Thereforexfree trade in the purest “sense cagnbt exist agriculturally. The closest approximation to agricul- | and also to the loca! news published here ine A | tural free trade objectives could best | achieved by recognizing that some | | special rules, principles and agree- ments will have to be worked out, on a commodity basis, as required. . This is not a transitional problem, but one of more or less permanency. With this provisio, Mr. Kirk ap- pears to be in full accord with the committee proposals; but again it must be emphasized that the whole | hypothetical basis. ada-wide discussion. it will be all to | matter has been put forward on a | Ifit creates Can- | the good. And if it leads, eventually, | to a general lowering of trade bar- riers between the two. countries, it will be better still. About It And About Whether or not the Conservatives | will hold a leadership convention, as demanded by Mr. Balcer with the declared intention of ousting Mr. Diefenbaker, will likely be determin- | | ed w tawa Mr. order. sirable. lic statement. hen on Saturday. Macquarrie, on party loyalty altogether. © In any case, a staff writer of the the 137-member national executive of the party meets at Ot- They will meet }-at<-the -calt -of- the ~party- president, Mr. Camp, and it can be predicted that a lively time will be had by-all. How do Prince Conservatives feel about this issue? junior MP for | Queens, has intiinated that he re- gards Mr. Balcer as an examplar of Conservative tradition and that a leadership convention would be in | He hasn't said that he’s against Mr. Diefenbaker, simply that a showdown on the question is de- His senior colleague, Mr. MacLean, MP., hasn’t made any pub- Edward Island It could well be that he disapproves of adding fuel to the controversy, and has different views | MT ii | jl ih | | I ey | Us H f | i | | | ! | pith UM LT | leiden js) yy A real | | ) { | i ne it LISTENING FOR AN ECHO The risk of being caught in | bankruptcies has become so great for those providing goods concern to the Association, | that 20 per cent of all Canadian in the con- | such a or services that it is now very doubtful whether amendments to the present Bankruptcy Act (: by the Minister of | Justice during the summer) will THE BANKRUPTCY ACT “Need For New tegislation Emphasized Winnipeg Free Press Canadian Construction Associa- | fraud is suspected, then tion. The matter is of particular bankruptcies are the | Crown should initiate and carry through all legal action. There would be nothing, under Bankruptcy Act, that struction . The Associa- , would give any cause for appre- tion believes that this is too high | hension on the part of a busi- | a percentage to be genuine; the ever be enough to meet the pro- president of the Association blem. More likely, an entirely new Bankruptcy Act will have to be written. And it will have to be based on a wholly new ap- proach. The fundamental change will the obligation to launch prose- cutions. Fraudulent bankruptcy, being a crime and not merely a civic matter, should be prosecut- | | ec by the Crown, ee pales | Toronto Globe and Mail has been | been down here lately, sounding out | that most burglars or hold-up | the party stalwarts on their senti- | ments. He finds that in the four Atlantic Provinces a majority of Con- change is desirable, but that when -+-John_Diefenbaker goes, it will be at promise to build our causeway was | cited The firmest of all conclusions about Conservative affairs in this area, says the Toronto writer, is that Mr. Diefenbaker is much more wide- ‘here. Mr. * in this connection. might appear as simple vere ¢ Sa } ae, : te i | 5 f _ - way that a burglary, or hold-up case is prosecuted. In fact, fraudulent bankrup- tey is theft, and theft on a scale men would never dream of car- | rying off. It ought no longer to The false bankrupt has still another advantage he may, by his trickery, have rob bed many of those who ha him with goods or ser- cSEER? fice li (From the Guardian Files) i ~“ 8 - « a y ‘A 1: g ? I f : : is a ™ FE i i. | thinks that “rather a lot are fraudulent.” What the Association propos- es is that a Superintendent of | ditors have divided the residue Bankruptcy, with the rank of a | of his business assets. | deputy minister, be set up, with | would still relive a person who ‘a staff that would investigate | each and every bankruptcy to detect any element of fraud. If | nessman who has honestly fail- ed. A new Bankruptcy Act | would still grant him the great adyantage he now enjoys; that lof an absolute discharge from his business debts, after his cre- This fails in business from having debtors pursuing him for rest of his days. The Teenage Doll and curiosity we asking for cuddly baby- dolls | Do they no longer intend to | grow up and be mothers? Do Are little girls rejecting the possibility of growing up to the hood, looking now towards only a cntinuous teenage, a perpe- tual colthes-change, an eternal variation of hairdos, a youth through the whole of life untram- melled by the responsibility of | marriage, home, children? Will some sociologist please the kind of dolls they ask Santa for these days? West German Example Brantford Expositor | Hh ‘it i i #e 58 e * ce i ly f ¢ 3 ate Unesco F lites sf = . Y ae efi sf E ‘figures are for a country with electors. | But that is not all. The parties promise to open their books to a certified accountant so that he may check on the actual amount of campaign spending, and by June next year he is to declare icly whether or not the lim- for instance, -deduct from the r From Sea [ ii eis tt f a5 i ut 8. | i ti 3 i it i H i | ! | ; | the \ they not want to simulate their | trials. and_rewards_ of mother- . | come forward and explain what | is happening to little girls and | over twice Canada’s number of | Any violations of the agree- ~ ment are to be brought before | an arbitration court. It might. | é Tetanus Easy To Prevent By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen Tetanus (lockjaw) is easy to prevent but difficult to treat aft- er it occurs. We rely upon pro- phy’ because the few who contract the disease go from painful spasms of the mus- cles of the neck, face, and jaw. One out of five afflicted children die and the rate is much higher in adults. e United ites T public health “bervice re more than 250 cases last year. Wise parents keep track of their offspring’s immunity stat- us because booster doses are necessary from time totim e. Most children ané_younger adults are partially protected because of the tetanus toxoid munization. All they need when injured is another booster dose to bring their immunity to fight- ing strength. 4 The causative agent (Clostri- dium tetani) looks like a micro- scopic drumstick or squash racket. It is a normal inhabitant of the intestine of ruminants, horses, many domestic animals, | and occasionally in .an. Tetanus spores remain alive | es best ir an oxygen-free envir- onment such ae at the base of a | | puncture wound. They multiply | that attacks nerves and muscles. Those who have received the the torments of hell. They pi | shots given along with other im- |. NOTES BY THE WAY « Operater—“It costs | seventy-five cents to talk to Bloomfield.” Caller—“‘Can't you tening I want to call my wife.” —Montreal Star. The Ontario Education De- partment is right to deplore gob- bledegook (in students’ essays). But note the way it does so “Students who show a tendency to unleash a vocabulary far be- their depth need as much as the illiterates."" How can students “unleash” a vocabul- ary which is ‘far beyond their depth’ With educationists mix- ing their metaphors in this way, should hide behind a hyperbole. —Financial Post. A University of Chicago socio- logist took four years and inter- viewed thousands of people to make a spécial rate for just lis- | they it is not surprising that students | Teacher: “If you're always kind and polite to your little friends, do you know what "MH think of you” Tommy: they :can lick "Vancouver Sun. | The director of ‘the fish re- | search station at Nanaimo, Dr. P.A. Larkin, is quoted by the Vancouver Sun as stating: “Sport fishing takes virtually no skill... the fellow with least expensive tackle can catch the best fish.” Dr. Larkin is a brave icthyologist. He can now expect to be marinated and vacuum packed by fishermen across the country for daring to speak his mind in this fashion. — Winnipeg Tribune. . “They'll think me. Fire hazards are no laughing matter, but one is reported from Gananoque which rather tickles our jaded fancy. According to a | learn that the happiest man is | newspaper account. a consulting | young, wealthy,healthy, mar- | ried and at the height of his suc- | cess. The unhappiest man is | poor, unhealthy, elderly and un- | successful, the study found. So what's new—Milwaukee Jour- nal. for years in soil and even in | | housedust. The organism thriv- | engineer reported that, in some places, the roof of a 164-year-old building in that town was sup- ported only by the electrical wiring. He was referring to the fire hall.—Ontario Hydro News. U.S. Aid To Egypt By Arch MacKenzie Some powerful incentives in- | and manufacture a lethal poison | Canadian Press Staff Writer In other words. in the Middle toxoid within a year should not , cluding American oil interests Fast and other trouble spots, | be-concerned about tetanus fol- lie behind President Johnson's the president wants all the el- lowing a serious or contaminat- | determination to prevent rela- bow room he can get unham- ed wound. A booster dose is re- tions with President Nasser of pered ‘by rigid congressional quired when the toxoid was ad- | Egypt from sliding any farther | curbs and edicts ministered within five years. On a serious injury who have not received toxoid for five years | (but previously were immuniz- | , ed) usually get along on a large | prophlyactic dose of penicillin | or tetracyline. The antibiotics are capable of controling or pre- venting tetanus under these cir- cumstances. Tetanus antitoxin is n takes time to develop antibod- ‘fe and is not used as a prophy- lactic, once an injury has oc- curred. The antitoxin contains horse serum to which many in- dividuals are allergic. This is a serious drawback and ins why the toxoid is pre . HEADACHE AFTER CON- CUSSION H. 6. writes: It is unusual to conti suffering from head- ache ‘and pain in different parts of the head and other weird manifestations eight months aft- er a serious concussion? An el- ectroencephalogram taken two months later showed no brain damage. REPLY It is not unusual to have head | ache and odd sensations after a concussion. We don’t know whe- TODAY’S HEALTH HINT— te Dr. Van Dellen should be addressed to: Dr une, Chicago, Iinois.) 4 from | they are aves tants sent preeblhag ante cattle the offier hand, those sustaining~ Building, up to and including 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. daily. | down hill—for the time being at Jeast, | Hence the “determined efforts —so far successful—to head off a U.S. congressional revolt on maintaining surplus food aid | for the United Arab Republic A Senate committee has agreed to let the president de- | cide..whether to send a final He does not want to worsen a-situation whieh has such an important bearing on The Congo specifically and on the extent of Communist subversion and other stresses throuchout that continent HUGE OIL STAKE At the dollars-and-cents level, American of! interests continue eéded | $37,000,000 ete the sander to have a huge stake in being. -per~ + farm _ produce. . ERY Pt : eee > ableto-pump.-.out...Middle. ment. | Barlier, the House of Reore- . | sentatives had voted to block | this aid as a sign of displeas- ure at recent Egyptian acts in- cluding aid to the Congolese rebels, burning of an American | | library and Nasser’s angry in- | vitation to the U.S. to jump into | the Mediterranean with its for- eign aid. CAUGHT OFF GUARD The action caught the US | government off guard and in- | tensive persuasion was becun— | Vice - President Hubert Hum- | phrey in the forefront—to get the Senate committee to soften the decision. Nasser in turn has been con- tributing to an easing of ten- sions and tempers | told that while relations with | poses a volatile and dangerous great presidential flexibility. PUBLIC NOTICE CIVIC ELECTION Voter's Lists have been prepared for the Civic Election to | be held on Wednesday, February 10th, 1965, and will be || posted for inspection of all electors at the City Court, City Monday, February 8th, 1965, QUALIFICATIONS OF __ ELECTORS All persons, especially wives or husbands qualified to vote under (b) below, and non tax payers such as men aged over 60 voting on rental only, should see that they are registered with the order to haye their names on the Voter’s List. All voters qualified as below must be 21 years of age, residents of the City for one year, (except non-residents occupying business premises), Canadian citizens, and not in arrears of taxes at December 31st, last. MULTIPLE VOTING voting on (0) b) (¢) (d) or (f) above may vote in each Ward in on (@) above may vote in the Ward of which they are a son. The tetanus toxoid vaccine | #9 expiring three-vear agree- 9) an4q move through the Suez Canal. Further. {tn the eyes of the U.S. ‘state department. there not seem to be much prop- aganda value in cutting off sur- plus food to a country whose expanding population som e- times is hard-pressed to find an adequate diet But at the same time, the president's message has had to be couched in language leaving the door epen to cut off this fi- na! piece of aid as well as any new longer - term arrangement that might be contemplated The odds now appear to be against such harsh action However, the pressures re- main strong within Congress to signify in a real way the dis- content in the U.S. abdut con- ther these symptoms stem from | tinuing aid to less-than-friendly the inj or f ae The Senate committee was beneficiaries. In the case of Nasser and the A stepladder should be sturdy. | Egypt have been “anything but United Arab Republic, this lat- (NOTE: All correspondence | satisfactory,” the Middle East | est episode also reflects the strong pockets of anti-Arab sen- Van Eeller, co Chicago Trib- Situation which wil! require timent arising from Arab an- tipathy for Israel alifications Electoral Officer in another Ward within vote in the former