important legislation untfl afters: “ 3 a ee ee oes ‘% Christmas. Prime Minister * a : Malaria : On The March Again? turned this warning aside; with the A T | aan — Staff Writer ibe remark that “these days any govern- raveier ment proposal may result in pro- By Theodore R. Van Delles® on. _— AB erm couuiens be the Nerth Atlantic jaa an tracted debate.” © There malar Hesse elections has | the European Common Market, But this is not just “ jovern- a ; iain the ‘Uaited. States. during ahaken Bonn apd seat e shiver: | would have been soundly label bespooh'* tictae, Pasion wal Dit - stn er eee | ke es ee ewe ’ . , | | : . wa: ; saa oe provides, among -other ‘ le for 140 cases of which 100 were ‘One. British tabloid warned: |. Some West Germans are in- ine ’ ee " ; military personnel and 49 civil- | “Die-hard Nazis are on the | furiated by Chancellor Ludwig . things, that servicemen in the army, ians. The majority ‘came from | march again.” Erhard’s weak leadership, his navy and air force will be compulsori/ ty oe a ceere wigs: 7 The fave ietewsd the oe. cnet sans ee, — Be greet cee te: : Be be from home were two children “dubbed neo-Nazis by many of military power and the ~ prefix “ - » Our concern : of the 96 seats finance more arms’ purchases... .... prefix” royal’ ‘will be dropped where anita nae wae ee | oe a aaa. from American factories. ; it has been used for the RCN and om 4 of the victims and pass along | This was thé first time the ex- | Adding to the -frustration is RCAF—something which the govern- thé =malarious condition: This |-tremists . . 4 the lack of progress, oa: German ment has no mandate from the elec- | Regd aot be tne & cur own mes, | say” of feat" Germanys 8 yy torate to do, and which is strongly inedots are found in sireratt fe, | predicted, i ssid’ ta’ Sallowed | Outcome invelved pretest, with opposed by the majority of senior of- “Sioa oe CE ee | batts nguinet Ro’ exited po ficers. It. is the testimony of these | School of USAF The Social Democrat moder- | litical hierarchy rather than in ~ . officers, and of those who. have been - repenily” reported that, nests ates still retain control over | direct support of the extremists. transmit filari-sis, tick | Hesse, but the .rise of the ex- Nevertheless, there is anxiety fired for being too outspoken. on the | borné typhus,. malata, tremists, with their cries for | that more is involved than a subject, that the defense committee |: cnchocerciasis, East African | West German independence and | prottst. 3 magapinbap bone fonnn. = | ag ee eekse riometet pproval should fue, and four other tropical im | Hans about the 1 ts aneRnayenry when search entary appt fections have been found : be voted, in- principle or otherwise. - these planes: Infect coined. » ew oe & oe ae po aga aut Sreeere leat "It was inevitable that such action - Aerosol spraying ‘and vapor ia, | Hm against reunification of | The alternative may be an- rn ; would provoke bitter controversy, secticides dispersed within the | East and West Germany. ee When asked in the H +9 aircraft are most helpful - | Bistory involving : ; ouse of Com- | and thus throw the government’s ‘ Mdeaik tan te 6 seat |g ee ree, Someereny mons the other day-about the insist- | whole legislative program into con- stubbera Soe especially’ -Seste | 6p "eases tea ae eee | ad omens ve ence of postal workers on a pay | fusion. And this at a time when there _ Nach end =o : — hoist in line with the “Pearson | is urgeft need for giving priority to ed resistance to: chloroquine Th Idi formula,” Revenue Minister Benson | measures of . real importance— our number one drug for treat- eO est tory » gald he ‘knew nothing about it. The | measures to which the government is Stipa Dae Oe Torente Dally Star a other members of the government, | committed in its election promises, ineffective but not quinine. In At' first sight, those are pretty ome eating were, eomement * too, looked vague, as though it was a | and on which it is pledged to prompt respec-+ quinine is— Setting heres Som: Pane Senet vee a . fiddle to which they-had no possible | action. No doubt it will seek to Poriance in the treatinent ofc soln aenet Geek Be Lick coder aaa ae ae clue. Yet the term was used last Sun- | blame, as it has done before, the Op- types of malaria. om, ’ as ine of Hesnen Waenens and tho __ day by the president of the Cana- | position for the fime now being wast- . oe ae ee manded UN peacekeeping for- | Everyone knows, too, what hap- - Gian Union of Postal Workers, in an- |. ed on-Mr. Hellyer’s pet project; but _ . such-as-cycloguanil and. combin- ee eee merges ater P yrange nouncing that the office em- | it puts a low estimate on the intel- ations of the older drugs. Early o alleges adminis- unfortuna Egypt. Ployees would eon nothing less esens of the public if it- expects “WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE MODEL WE HAVE?” = — “a Pape noe nization is riddled” wine carrey: ing ee ge isi ma than the formula applied by the gov- | this alibi to be swallowed. Whatever ee six months and in some cases, 10 | '!®- ‘have felt their martial virtues ernment in settling other wage dis- | the reason behind this blitzkrieg to FOOD PRICES PROBE ; ' ~~ __..__ pultes—a_36.per_cent.wage increase, ;—get-the--unification—bill--through,— it~ a ee — ; : a ee with half of it payable immediately | smacks strongly of the kind of ar- ‘Enquiry Leaves Lots To Be Explained -- while negotiations are in progress. | rogance that brought the St. Laurent bs Moutreal Star pe sk -~Another— union __spokesman hag |-. government into disrepute: << —“Siaee ts aes MGM Tao | io Gomeda® © the ccuseniat ts ithe coummiticc bee wet Sound this as “the week of the ; et ee the answer to, and which must says wi tiati fails, as they The ministers. of agriculture for ale eek fe cee ae a | This is the type of question | to be resolved. - seem likely to do at any moment, “we | the Organization. for Economic Co- | can of beans. . % “will take ¢ction within a few hours” | operation and Development (OECD) | 4,."<,40%, the road tem te Hair To Spare ' "This threatened strike, if it oc | met recently in Paris and reported, | farmer who planted the crop Christian Science Monitor curs, will be far more serious than after full discussions, that there was Sitting the sonermarct Bea | Tadies fair are free to wear innocency in this behalfe) doe the wildcat. strike of 1965, in which | | only one solution to the basic | is the price out of line, and who'| eit locks of hair howsoe'er | declare and manifest our dislike * not all unions participated and which | Probldms of Tagging farm incomes | ' the irae? We frankly dont | {iy cheoe or cere. Youné men Land detestation agsioet » thing _ was limited to a few metropolitan | and hunger in a world of surpluses. | "O™ ting the’ testimony does | 4aF¢ to cause the crowd to stare | men. doe deforme themselves, ____-greas.-This-time, the strike -would-be—|They.did ither could be | seem. to be showing. For some} #are. -_ “modest~) as - overcome solely by present national | Teason or other we pay consid-| We hasten to assure our read- | men, and doe corrupt good man- general. : oe a... |. erably more in Canada than they | ers. that we have no desire to Meanwhile the government is also | #24 international policies. Subsidies |" do in the United States for pro- | write either copy for roadside | That~ the controversy contin- threatened with a strike by the Inter- | ‘don’t remove them, necessary .as | ducts which one might expect to | advertisements or | books for | ues today is news to no one. i national Association of Machinists, ma . Frice suppo! on: i expert — | the sentiment we express (if not | youths, supported by the Ameri- which would tie casa Canada. The | Temove them. Common agricultural a” diction — seems | the’ style) will ecmmneed itself | can Civil iertiss ‘Union, have sgninioe Policies and free trade areas don’t hard to. credit.. Still, the. com- | to countless adults. now as_in_| won: the-recent..rounds-in-—the-|-; strike in’ this instance has been {| mittee was given chapter and.| ages past. schools of. New York. We su- tentatively set for Nov. 14. Negotia- | Temove a — Seen On Some OAS We are reminded that in 1649 Se ; ; : : , too, i . the Harvard fol- | cases was clean, tions are stil in progress, but, as in | they, recy eet |, “Wat entd in chant Seek | rela ke tes tied ak, oo. ok aetna. bok ton tak tine caseof the postal workers, the expansion : trade. : in Canada cost 15 cents a five- | doubt as, to--ite-position:..“‘For- | fuente on the decision of high- huge gap between the machinists’ What ‘is‘needed most, the OECD | pound bag more than in the Uni-| asmuch as the wearing of long < Cmatty ratte stom demands, and the company’s offer, | maintains, is simply a constant fe eee in tar of Saske cf Ge Gai tasers tome Some will call it a victory for has not been narrowed substantially. | thought for others when countries | fee cost 96 cents ‘: Washington | hath begun to invade new Eng- | liberty, others an invitation to lin sates tae tale been demanding ~are formulating their- own ‘policies. | ~and ee eee sane ae Wee the magistrates license. “We withhold our. own wage increases and additional fringe | They didn’t say so, but it must have | ‘cents in Washing and 47 mre ft on ole aitimuiaens benefits_based. on the-so-called Pear--|}~been the Golden Rule they had in oF he pall ee son formula. ©. ®P* mind. The rule that world econo- —_— Se the lee ‘Pp: 2 It is not enought’ sas'Yor the gov. | mists thought they had thrown into’ | by'a U. 8 food chain and 23 A Bit Of A Shock 7 ernment to repudiate this formula— | the discard long ago, as inapplicable or eo oe ae pee to the new order of things which There be good and suf. | _Dr. M. A. MacGregor of the ee Se ns eee were governed by-“‘the law of supply ficient reasons. Perhaps i is hot | Cee oeeonee eae ar that it involved wage settlements, by direct government imposition, which were eT te eee Its duty now is o ‘the mischief it ~“the lead in encouraging both labor } and industry to accept the respons- ibility of maturity in wage disputes. __In fields where strike action can be_ detrimental to many sectors of the economy, it should have a consistent policy on which it is prepared to act, and not leave the country at.a loss to know what to expect. : , Hamstringing Parliament Our senior MP for Queens, Mr. MacLean, was among those appealin, in the Commons to thé -governmen to give higher priority to legislation dealing with old age and veterans pensions and medical care. But ap- - -parently Defense Minister Hellyer’s bill for unification of the armed ser- vices is of greater urgency, and it is being forced through second reading —which ‘is tantamount to approval in principle—before being sent to the defense . committee ‘where the ~-evidence for and against “its éx-"" —___-pediency_could be adequately-weigh-—|that-further distortions are added in ed and considered. It is this committee inquiry which should, properly. form the basis of * the discussion .the bill receives in the committee of the whole House on second reading But Mr. Hellyer” is] determined that “approval in prin- _ciple”_must come: first. When_ that has been given, and regardless of what. testimony come out at the defense committee hearing, the Op- position will in the position of fight- ‘hg a rearguard action in protesting its provisions. _ As NDP Leader Douglas has warned, this attempt at railroading ‘through a highly controversial measure could turn into a repetition. ' af the flag debate and could delay and demand”! , As a conference bulletin phrased it, “the ministers expressed the wish | that the interests of other countries ““ghiotild be taken into consideration in | «developing, modifying, and applying agricultural policies.” More food aid _ will have to be given, it said. But just _| to give food is not of itself enough. . That aid “should be oriented towded the requirements of receiving coun- tries and their efforts to raise produc- tion.” A proposal is now being ex- amined to set up a special study es and high profits.” Det EP wens et Oe ._ This country. is an ensive | year; was the aver- spn te tales in be- | age ee years cause what we do must be done over great distances for small numbers of people. Nonetheless, ‘before_the committee, | one is left with feeling that somehng is wrorg. : The chains have presented their case With skill and .one would bé. stupid to dismiss the arguments they have put for- ward as mere excuses. They are ngt. : prospects for production and the most. . appropriate ways of “adapting avail- ability to needs.” Not as.easy as it sounds. The European Economic Community, for instance, has triumphantly conclud- ed agreement on its common agricul- tural policy. But the system it has adopted is based on levies on imports, high prices for home production, and subsidized: exports. The economies of _some other countries are being hit by this policy. Denmark is one ex- ‘ample: And some ¢ritics overseas feel this way to the world balance of sup- ply and. demand. In general the main trouble is that subsidies and protection appear to be necessary to reduce the rate at which incomes and factories. Yet, OECD notes, time has. shown. that they give. little actual help to those wh@ need them most—sm all ‘farmers—and “they encourage the use in agricyl- | ‘ture of more resources than would be economitally desirable.” «© © * What ‘is really needed is mote “togetherness” —more of the “ability to see the world as one,” Which again adds up to a pretty good defini- tion of the Golden Rule, as. econ- omists are beginning to see it. 4 All housewives, it is true also, do not shop with price in mind. A study’ by the Consumer As- sociation has shown that*a fam- ily of four can be fed for far less — $18.62 compared with $34.87 — by buying wisely in- , Stead of, to quote Maga- zine, pluckjig straight from the shelves. : But why are food prices: ris- ing at three per cent a year Our Yesterdays @rom The Guardian Files) (November 9, 1941) a ~<Under the guns of “a~ héavier Italian force, a British naval patrol struck a crippling blow at the supply of Axis armies in North Africa when it “annihilat- ed’’ two convoys, sinking 10 transport vessels and one des- troyer and seriously damaging at least one other. “fhe gap is increasing between farm | After 15 years in private life | and in the comparative quiet of the Senate, Rt. Hon. ‘Arthur Met. lead the Natfonal Conservative party in wartime. TEN YEARS AGO (November 9, 1956) The government picked the. ist | Battalion, Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, as the major compon- ent of the Canadian contribution to the United Nations - police force for the Middle East. ~ e : 7 The Middle East's unstable cease-fire up through its second day despite a border raid im Israel. - ~ hard as it is to follow the | in Canada will While it’s therefore safe-to pre- dict that total food requirements » Canada expand at about the same rate as the population, changes in ‘‘consymer prefer- ences” can have a great effect from cereal products. Fruit and vegetables remain relatively stable; terms of milk equival- ‘ents. The trend is toward in- creasming amounts of vegetable fats in the diet. with decreasing amounts of animal fats ... .”” important than changes in “demand for ag- ricultural resources.” For in- stance, to produce a pound of beef requires “five time the resources” needed to produce a pound of cereals, he said. The result is higher costs for farm- ers. tables, from the less intensive products such as rolled oats and potatoes, the farmer is call- ed upon to provide a greater UNITED NATIONS (CP) — United i 4 eral r Monday that the UN General Assembly. spend $14,304,000 for the maintenance of the ‘UN emergency force in 1967—the lowest amount since the Middle East peace force was estab- lished ‘in 1956. The six-country force, which _ includes _ several the United Arab Republic. It had about 6,000 men when set up in November, 1956, but has U_ Thant recommended DOW'S Restaurant Moore & McLeod Ltd. For this week only... MOORE & McLEOD LTD. will be Open Thursday evening ‘til 9 p.m. _—> Friday, Remembrance Day —_ meray MOORE & M‘LEOD LID been reduced gradually to -its present level of, 4,000 men. ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee pa chy om Reo, tom, PM slice titan