(159) Wording In Verification or Declaration of Trademark Application Applicants and attorneys are requested to use the following wording in the part of the verification or declaration of the trademark application which indicates the signer's belief that the mark applied for does not resemble another person's mark: --that no other person, firm, corporation, or association, to the best of his knowledge and belief, has the right to use such mark in commerce either in the identical form thereof or in such near resemblance thereto as to be likely when applied to the goods of such other person, to cause confusion, or cause likely, mistake, or to deceive: -- The wording emphasized conforms to the language of both Sections 1(a)(1) and 2(d) of the Trademark Act of 1946. Some applicants and attorneys, instead of using the wording emphasized above, are still using the now obsolete wording "as might be calculated to deceive" which was promulgated in the forms under the Trademark Act of 1905 and inadvertently continued by the Act of 1946 up to October 1962 in Section 1(a)(1) and in the forms connected with the Act. Section 1(a)(1) of the 1946 Act was amended by Act of October 9, 1962 (Public Law 772, 87th Congress, 76 Stat. 769) to conform it to the language of Section 2(d) of the 1946 Act, since the language of Section 2(d) reflects the thinking at the time the 1946 Act was written. The wording of the trademark forms for the 1946 Act has also been amended appropriately. It is desirable that proper wording be used. However, since the differences in wording referred to above are considered to be differences of form rather than of substance. Examiners will not require new verifications or declarations. When the obsolete wording is observed and a letter is to be written for other reasons, Examiners will at that time call attention to the fact that the wording is obsolete and should be modified in applications in the future. Mar. 25, 1974 RENE D. TEGTMEYER Assistant Commissioner for Trademarks [921 TMOG 186]