sh ee as ’ : ti t 6 « ' OR SL Re ee ee PONE Quen, — ae af ie vy Pode Pe vy ¥ ¢ Pek eS ee ee . Pop Pee Pee Te ee PC CCC aR 2 1 . An independent newspaper devoted to the upbuilding St of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia, A member of the Canadian Press — Audit Bureau of Circulation Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited John F,. Magor President papw Authorized as Second Class Mall by the’ Post Office Department, Ottawa ween ae Qe Ge UE ye Sk ue PRINCE RUPERT DAILY NEWS — 1962 ; FRIDAY, OCTOBER: 19, 1962 Another pioneer lost to city ith the passing of Herbert F. Glassey, the thinning ranks of those wonderful old pioneers whose ‘mark is indelible on this city is re- ‘duced again. It is an inevitable process that we ‘watch with sadness. No matter what “new avenues of episode may lie ahead ‘for the city, nor with what diligence _ others may serve it, no place in local history will quite match that of the old-timers who formed the character -and fabric with which Prince Rupert ‘ started. 1. Coming from Quesnel in 1918, Bert Glassey did not arrive .as early as -gome, and later for several years part of his pioneer’s life was spent on the still more distant frontier of Atlin, but Shis identity with Prince Rupert was to become an enduring one. As busi- Ae. ” es Freedom « Norman St. John-Stevas, an Englishman "who drafted Britain’s Obscene Publications Act the one that made Lady Chatterly’s Lauer legal in the United Kingdom | — should © Mr. St. John- Stevas, political editor of the .Economist, is a Catholic who hopes to see his. «Church’s Index of forbidden books abolished. — ‘He algo ‘hopes to see the works of Henry Miller ° “published in England soon. He said this in an ;interview at St. Mark’s College where he spoke “Friday, The reason why we wish Mr. St. John-Stevas «would stay in Canada is that he might talk to cur department of national revenue, which, by ; reason of its having conttol over the’ customs, *makes itself an effective censor for books enter- ain i Canada. from abroad. | ~: ‘ Pis agency. is responsible: for the fact that SHenkty ‘Miller’s best- known, -if. not” his best,’ *works'— Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of. Capri- The sun tan, already losing the status fight swith the “pale, medieval look, ” has received ‘another blow — this time from the medical pro- wfession, + A Vancouver skin specialist has warned that "light-skinned people who trek to places like «Hawaii and Bermuda to fry themselves in the *sun dre risking skin cancer and sundry lesser sskin'-disorders, More fun in ow e@ SF . vas An astounding spectacle is available on the rsuburban streets of Auckland, New Zealand. ‘Middle-aged gentlemen, many of them far re- moved from their best years, are to be seen tperforming an exercise which we thought had "passed into limbo, They are using their legs. *They ‘are running. *. The trotters, joggers, and runners of Auck- ° land have discovered they feel much better after "100 miles a week of this strange form of loco- ¢ motion, * They have even abandoned the ancient ex- Py “(T'S YOUR BUSINESS ’ see An ugly word Is rearing its hoad again for tthe first time in a generation. The word is , “ deflation, » It smacks of the dirty Thirties, Of soup kit- *chens and breadlines, Of entrepeneurs being “squeezed out of existence, Of tumbling prices sand a vast contraction in world trade. s * Now the word is being used by no less dis- r(inguished an economist than Per Jacomsson, * the managing director of the International * Monetary Fund, » By next year, he feels, the nations of the 'West must act to fight the threat of deflation eo Possibly world-wide Jn. scope, Q * ‘Me signs? Specifically, he mentioned de- sclines in raw material pricos and intense com~ "petition in’ steel, aluminum, paper products, stimber and many lines of manufactured. goods, ; ._ When you go through the list, you,..can see why doflation and Canada alron y are’ nod- * ding acquaintances, . Truth Js, world pricos for amnany of the Industrial and strategic raw’ ma- * terials this country produces. — petroleum, ‘uranium, Jron ore, copper, Jead, zine, nickel, to ‘name some of them — have fallen well below , thelr post-war peaks.: « ‘The problem is oven more critical in areas’ ylike Latin America, Africa or Asia, which de- «pend on fewer ataples, (Last week's coffoc “price cuts were aymptomatic of over-production “or under- consumption, call it what you will.) “ + ¥ y. -« Does this mean that the Sixties will 800 9 * ropoat of the Thirties — of coffee crops burned, tiene cropa dumped fy the ocean and tho a? - a Not necoasarily, as long as wa yemember the ‘lownona of the Thirties and make sure we don't: worsen existing conditions through wrong. headed policies, One trap we should be able to avoid Is that nessman, civil servant, magistrate and member of the city council, he had a varied andidistinguished role in the city’s affairs. | But those of his many friends who may forget some of the biographical details, will never forget Bert Glassey as a man. Tall, erect and always with a smiling word of greeting, he was a person to be remembered and liked. He was active until age and declining health permitted no more, and then came nearly four years in bed, empha- sizing how full and vigorous had been his contribution.. | This fine, warmly respected citizen will be missed. To his wife, herself a pioneer of many rich memories, we extend sincere sympathy for this grievous loss. to decide corn — are not available in Canada. Mr, St. John-Stevas insists that nobody was ever corrupted by a four-letter word. This the ‘English courts decided when they let Lady Chatterley’s Lover off the censorship hook. ada, Henry Miller’s Tropics are not. It’s not be- Lady Chatterley’s Lover is available in Can- cause the Tropics contain more four-letter words than Chatterley. Maybe it’s: that while ‘DH. Lawrence’s great opus is somewhat dull reading, Miller’s works have a lot of fun with | sex, despite their essential seriousness. The way of a censor, like the way of a ser- pent on the rocks, is difficult to fathom. Or- dinary. men and women have to presume the . censors: ‘motives are for -their good. . But ordinary. men ‘and women — not. alone: the . so-called intellectuals - resent having. Other people decide what ‘is is good for them.* They’d prefer freedom to decide for themselvés.. — The Vancouver Sun the shade. This is one of those warnings which, no doubt, will be ignored by many, especially pro- prietors in deserts and on sunny islands. But it is welcome news for. those of us who: have - believed all along that there’s plenty. of fun in| the shade:' And isn’t it gratifying to realize what a healthy summer we've had? — The Vancouver Province — New use for legs cuse of the non-exercising businessman, that doctors consider there is danger in violent: ex- ercise at a certain age, The doctors say just the opposite, in New Zealand, 4 We doubt very much whether we shall ever see Stanley Park regularly used as a track by ‘tycoons in sneakers. and singlets. But we would feel much better if .we saw only ‘one or two runners, perhaps. completing only. five mines, “We might believe legs were for.running. — The Vancouver Province be ne a -# Ugly word rears its head again By DAVID GRENIER Toronto Telegram News Service of walling in whole economies “behind higher and higher tariffs. The Kennedy Trade Expan- sion Act and some of the developments in Europe are evidence we may. have Jearned from the past, Another trap we can .avold is depressing prices to the point where markets. dry ‘up for lack of earings with en to fipanas Amporta. + cA sposalhle: angwor to: this: problem Js through. - -commodity’. price’ stabilization schemes (along? | the lines. recently: agreed: on for coffee, under. ‘the auapices of the: U-N), Depressed, prices are: only ‘ane: aymptom of ‘deflation. You also have to consider the effect, . on both tho domeatic and international scone of credit squeeze policies, Between tha mid-1050s and the early 1000s, Canada. wont through what was in offect a poriod’ of: deflation — with Glaaatrous conse- quences, » Tho..lesson, of that clearly haan't! ‘boon loat on Ottawa, And St shouldn't be lost'6n foroign: central banks, either. 4 + + wt. As Per Jacobsson sald in Washington ro- cently, businesg expansion does not go on for- ever, That meana crediter nations will have to take great caution in thelr dealinga with debtor nations, or olag run the risk of @ collapse of the Weatern order, A Bibl Dhoug ht for Today Weay O Heavens, and Fre eay 0 Barth, for the Lord hath snokon, Tanah U8." 8: There are sermons. in stones and books in. ‘punning brooks, but'the mossage of the Rocks, | of the starry heavona |s by no means exhausted , Wo are juat beginning to understand those mene sages, moi boa a i er ’ eee ’ yee eee eh ew FT Pv gee CE Nee 72 ~ ~ * vy ah, te ye Fe eR PTE Poet gang Mea tye Theaeatgeap age pat gene sts VAboa eae , . BECO We Pag Ne BIE tae whe vr yyee MEDIEVAL SWITZERLAND — Remnants. of. the past 1 remain like historical treasures in the midst of the beauty of the present. This medieval village Gruyeres, Switzerland, provides an inter- esting setting for tourists looking for off beat places to visit. Oil industry causes concern. By GREG MacDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer The Canadian oil industry, its reserves and production in the next few years, has been quote, unquote W. H. Hutt, Dean of the Fa- culty of Commerce, University of Cape Town, in Fortune: “The accumulation of pro- ductive capacity through’ the plowing back of profits, whe+ ther by the individual or::the corporation, has been essen- tial for‘ the emergence of the modern: world -with its rising. living standards.” . oe , os BR KR, “Eaton, former “assistt! ane deputy minister. of * fi- nance, speaking for ‘the Ca-. nadian Consumer Loan Asso~ ciation before the. Banking Commission: - ’ “Not long: past. in Canada we have listened in some be- wilderment to the Governor of the Bank of Canada and the Minister of Finance wailing in harmony over the dangers of inflation under a buyers’ mar- ket, mounting unemployment, with not a scarcity in sight, “Surely we have reached the point of need for re-assess- ment of the forces we are faced with. The facts and tra- ditional theory of how to cope with them no longer scem to make good sense.” : - warns that unless more oil is © the cause. for some. concern lately. . Imperial Oil Ltd., ‘this | coun- try’s biggest. oil. company, found soon, domestic and for- eign markets .by 1970 will be taking just about all the oil’ Canada can produce. - . An in the same vein, the Toronto-Dominion Bank says that unless the search for new fields begins to. rise soon and continues to expand, the Can- adian petroleum industry. will find it increasingly difficult to take care of post 1966 markets. Imperial, in the October is- sue of its Imperial Oil Review, | -gays-exploration is. being. in- tensified this year after a tem- ‘porary. oversupply slowed ex- ploration. following the ravid oil discoveries of the 1940s and 1950s. The company says the oil industry in Canada now is pro- ducing at 53 per cent of its potential. “At the present, rate of dis-. covery, it will be producing 80 per cent of its potential by 1970. “Forecast for Canadian produced oil in eight years is 1,000,000 barrels a.day, while the forecast for production is only 1,260,000 barrels a day It says that because it usu- ally takes six to 10 years be- fore exploration work results in new oil production “it isn’t a moment too soon to begin building up reserves for 1970.” THAT. PART OF. THe RIVER OAM ‘whieh: flows hind tv of . the main colleges is. knawn an. the Backs,..A puntbn in sald: to pass through the finest atrotch of Acanery: MneBelinin,f: ‘Yurthor down. the river, the famous Ma. place, May ts the chiof month in Cambri "Bump race talor ge for “rags” end balta aa it heralds both the end of examinations tnd the beginning of tho Jong vacation in June, v = BTA: Photo -. feeling -—ermwrererrrcomfort while making he: Backs: Doghouse: with hi- fi By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK u—Things a. colmunist. might never know if he didn't open his mail: Proud new parents who don’t want their baby to grow up underprivileged. can surprise him with: a lopard- skin diaper... . They’re now on the market. | Also available for owners who like to keep. their. pets happy: A new doghouse cquip- ped with hi-fi music—suitable for both lowbrow. and long- hair poocches. And, for someone who really wants. to astound his neigh- bors, a fellow in the bronx here has built an intricate alun- inum. bird home four storeys high containing five entrances and several private baths... The only one of its kind in the world, it has: a price tag of -, $6,000. The birds come extra. TRAVEL NOTE: Because of the Japanese penchant fer ‘stripping down for greater train journeys, some rail lines: now vost signs saying: “Honorable passengers are kindly request- ed to- refrain from displaying honorable underwear.” have a summer tan... om nah music QUOTABLE NOTABLES: “A lifetime of happiness: No.man alive could bear it; hell on -earth.’— nard: Shaw. HOW TIMES CHANGE: Half a. century ago young — girls thought it unfashionable. “to . they kept their complexion fair by avoiding the sun and anoint- ing their faces with rosewater and table cream. Did you know: that nobody who works for a US. distillery can have a key to its front door? ... Only a federal agent George’ Ber- from the alcohol and tobacco. tax division of the U.S. trea-. sury enn onen or lock ub... HUMAN BODY ODDITIES: Your heart normally. pumps three quarters of blood a min-~ ute. . . Ii“takes more energy to carry 50 pounds of excess fat than to carry..50 pounds. of. lead—the Jead doesn’t" ‘require’ mt _ blood vessels. FOREST . ARITHMETIC: Rabbits had to learn to multi-, ply in order to survive Because of many natural enc- mies, only one of | every: 20 ceottontail bunnies lives to cele- prate its first birthday. a KER vi it would be = ee eetenee reer eee ‘vat we wu) vg vant ‘wee! The PAC KSACK Of Gregory Clark na a Copyright: Canada Widow Two or three years ago, the Packsack reported that Eskiffjo carvings ° were being. repro- duced. in . “Brazil. -That- fake carvings were being producdd in Canada was ga ' known... _to, auth orities;: “but: ~ the’ story of ‘the ‘Bra- zilian activity had fairly” wide circu- lation on the strength of — re- ports brought home by Cana- * fate dian tourists. Mr. R. qed Phillips, assistant director. the Northeran administration branch of the Department ‘of Northern Affairs. and National Resources was recently down in Brazil and looked into the matter. ns For centuries, - Brazilians have been. carving in a soap- stone that is not unlike the soapstone, found in northern Canada. It has been widely used in churches and for re- ligious figures. “There is some ‘superficial resemblance,” writes Mr, Phil- :lips, ‘between these ‘figures and those done by the Eskimos. I. examined a number done some time’ ago as well as those being carved today. I do not think there is much likelihood of there being any confusion , between this work and that done in the north.” '. Mr. Phillips has some ex- amples to demonstrate the point. He recommends that purchasers of Eskimo carvings buy only those. to which are attached the official Canadian Eskimo art registration mark with the picture of the igloo. Fakers. daren’t temper with that. The autumn wind Through. the grasses, through the curling Queen-Anne’s-lace and rose vines; shivering the web of the red and golden spider, comes the wind, the autumn wind. The asters are faded.’A jet and amber bee kneads a pink . Zinnia, turning round and- round, gathering pollen, , Magnificent, is. the. bronze light,- : with gold shards ‘of apple leaves drifting through: I hear the autumn wind in the leaves, like the rustle of: broc ade. —Wilhis ‘Eberman. 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