! Prince Rupert Daily News Monday, September 29, 1952 .0 independent daily mewspaper devct i Nor entral 1 bia, Member of © ress — A rea Circulations Ca Daily Nev r Published by “he Prince R J. PF. MAGOR, President Subscription Rates Post Office Department, Ottawa. SS : Tricky Campaign Manoeuvre | HE strange case of Richard Nixon in his Re- ' publican campaign for the U.S.A. vice-presid- ney seems to be fooling the experts, Instead of osing ground for aecepting as Senator large finan- ‘ial contributions from private interests, he appears o have gained. When the transaction first became known, it looked for a while us though the Republican drive had struck rocky ground and might have to jettison ; } Di tace+? \ ) ft nn ‘ one ¥ wiriont . ixor to get roiling again mViGenuy, { * however, those wko were alarmed had seriously underesti- mated the pubHe antagonism against Communists, tf whom N Af s been a particularly outspoken foe. So stro ; this sentiment seem to be tha will condone aimost any kind of move that will the battle. Again, too, the psychology by which the public o often favors the underdog appears to have been a factor. Not taking ta into account the special fund that was establis ied for him, Nixon is far from a wealthy man which somehow puts his crusade against the Communists in a still more heroic light. Then when the storm broke his plight took on a certain brave appeal which, judging from the thous- ands of encouraging messages he has received, may preve an asset to the Republican cause when election day finally comes around. Nevertheless the whole incident threw a bad scare into the G.O.P. forces and does not represent a manoeuvre which could normally be recommended for a presidential campaign. What You Said, Helena! i may have been that Helena Rubinstein, high | priestess of glamor, was merely drumming up business in saying so, but she must not be allowed to get away with her aceusation that “Canadian women are a little under-done in matters of make- ip and beauty, and they are slower than the women ’ other nations.” it is hardly credible that Miss Rubinstein means that Canadian women are homelier than the aver- ge but, if this is the correct interpretation, we iggest without any attempt at gallantry that the nigh priestess must have rubbed a little cold cream in her eyes. Those who know about such things maintain hat a good mixture of national blood strains is apt to produce a better physical specimen than is found in countries where there is only a small foreign element. If this is true, Canadian women are done to a nice turn, Miss Rubinstein notwithstanding, and a walk down any busy street will usually prove it, + It is noticeable, too, that Canadian complex- ions are a blush above average. Perhaps this is an inheritance from the British, or maybe it has some- thing to do with a fresh northern climate, but in any case it is hardly calculated to please Miss Rubin- stein to whom poor skin means money in the bank. She does, in fact, admit to hiring girls with deficient complexions so that, after using her prep- arations fo hile, they will become delighted and Joyal staif members. Far be it from our thoughts to do Miss Rubin- stein out of any business, but for her own good she should not go around saying things like that about Canadian women. There is so much contradictory evidence for all to see that it makes her judgment look unsound. Scripture P. assage for Today “Michael and his angels fought against the dragon.” —Rev. 12:7. "Mr. Pickwick’ Goes on Broadway theatrical season on Broadway | duction for Broadway. took on a brighter and more humorous reflection at Plymouth Theatre with premiere of Stanley Young's “Mr. Pickwick.” This colorful story based on| sion. incidents in Charles Dickens’ | “The Pickwick Papers” should | , For the role of Mr. Pickwick, |sonants and sounds of high f Prince Rupers , ception that the playwrights NEW YORK (AP)— The new| company decided upon the pro- | Although Dickens used 98 the| characters to relate the mis- the | adventures of the Pickwickians, | that number has been con- | densed to 25 for the stage ver- | As I See It Os Clmore | But Listen, Lady WHEN I first heard the Los Angeles controver- sy about banning the Un- esco program from the schools I thought I must be dreaming. At first I simply could not be- ! that people in U.S.A. would deliberately, frontally challenge the One World hope } I knew f course, that the Russian g nt had banned the U am from all TS + OLD MAN TIME and th mighty Atlantic have both | been made to look very smaii by a two-engined British jet bomber, which crossed twice between Al- dergrove Northern Island and Gander, Newfound- land, in a total flying time of 7 hours 59 minutes Top: The record breaker the English Electric Can- berra Left The crew deft to right) Second Pilot Peter Hillwood, Chief Pilot Ronald Beamont and Navigator Denis Watson. The British have already turned over the Canberra Comnrunist territories, But I did not expect to find the same ar- t ; is taking hold in L.A dream city of - for US. manufacture “he geen sam oy ot Eyence of Ancient Indian Civilization cauisinie june toe case FOUNG in Tweedsmuir Park by UBC Party lal VANCOUVER (@ — Prehis + + + villages, huntgng and fishing > LIBERTY Belles. Veterans Camps, have shown that an a: Foreign Wars, and Daugh-j|cient Indian civilization existed of the American Revolution|in northern British Columbi groups which glorify the | centuries ago past. They look back on the Dr. Charles E. Borden, profe good old days” when nobody in | ©T of archeology at the Universit the U.S.A had te bother much of British Coiumbia, retur about old-world wars—for those | With his 15-man party today to ‘were part of what every Amer- | report ican escapee from Europe had eagerly ileft behind Bi But by a process which they BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT do mot unmclerstarid the US. el Oa t into the First World War) woosse soon evar see’s Dollar Parity Essential For Now U.S. troops literally girdle} Ne have driven an important | Company ef Canada wedge into the hitherto un- It will be a year before the known archeology of the north- complete story of the ancient ern interior of British Columbia. civilization is known. Dr. Borden In a race against time, Dr. | must classify and analyze some Borden and his assOciates made 3,000-antifacts, piles of maps and a search of Indian village sites volumes of notes ne collected on in Tweedsmuir Park, 450 miles the three-month expedition nerth of Vancouver. Soon the You might liken the arche- villages will be under water, ological problem to a gigantic flooded by a 120-mile lake be- | jJig-saw puzzie of which we have hind a dam of the Aluminum | placed 10 pieces,” he said. “There are huge gaps to fill before we know the whole story.’ His research has already dis- closed that the now lonely area around Euchu and Natalkuz Lakes housed a bustling Indian civilization more than 300 years ago, and that other men pre- the earth and may be plunged | R | . S KR k ceed d them pernaps by thous- Ne ea a ay ioe Detter Relations Says Banker 2:2 ands Of miles from home + + + VANCOUVER (CP) There is a possibility he will eee i wane te | find clues to the first Americans — L. Stuart Mackersy is... mlarated to Adis nérées the I LISTENED to one of the Lib- one banker dissatisfied with the present high dis-' Bering Straits after the ice age erty Belles on the radio. It was enough to make even the most | COunt rate on the American dollar. hard-boiled go misty eyed—for Mr. Mackersy, general mana-® the eracked-yoiced old girl was'ger of the Imperial Bank of so Obviously sincere—but O God, | Canada, now on a tour of British how muddied. , Columbia, said here Canadian Her son was im the Korean |©xporters are suffering because War and the whole inference of |Of the high discount her talk was that this sinister And, he has found that Amer- UN had dragged the Americans |icans’ feelings have been hurt into that dead-end. Unesco was because of the discount on their part of UN and hence she dollar wanted no part of it. You felt It is not so much a matter of like grabbing a taxi, hunting | the dimes and nickels that it is out the dear lady and trying to costing the Americans, but tell her: rather that their pride is hurt.” “Don’t you see that the whole, Mr. Mackersy believes Cana- Unesco program is based on the dian and American dollars knowledge that ‘wars begin in ™ust be brought back to equal the minds of men’? Don’t you, Value or within one cent “one see that the whole UN is but| Way or the other.” the first clumsy, crude attempt Parity, or near parity, is ab- by mankind to establish the rule | S0lutely essential,” he said which will make it illegal and| Exporters of pulp and paper,| impossible for your boy or any lumber, metals and agricultural other mother’s boy in all the | Products are the losers under earth ever again to go to ANY the present high discount foreign war? He hoped parity could be * ¢ + brought about through natural AS A Canadian, proud of our |™arket forces British past, I don’t blame any| “It will be a good thing if American for having a burning /|it does occur and a bad thing sense of patriotism and for long- | 0f it doesn’t.” ing, heart and soul, I feel that! Mr. Mackersy is against an way about the sailing smacks . ‘ . of happy boyhood. But the Amer- a ee a ee Lawyer Fails beloved lreutenant who will not ° obey the dying king’s command n j to ' to throw the mighty sword Ex- | j calibur, inte the lake. But finally the dying king has his way and Bar New ' fas Tennyson puts it, says: smen | “The Old order changeth, VANCOUVER ®—A lawyer's yielding place to new, attempt to bar newspaper re- | And God fulfils himself in | Porters from a@ narcotics hearing | many ways, failed today in city police court. Lest one good custom should| |“! See no reason why the press corrupt the world.” should not stay,” said Magistrate | S Mackenzie Matheson after T. G.| There, I think, you have oné€ | McClelland, defence lawyer, ar-} of the greatest political and SO-|gued that the press should not| cial truths ever uttered. The) report juvenile hearings. now-deal days for which the| oe tried to bar the press from | Daughters of the American Rev-| the opening of the preliminary | olution yearn in vain, were great | hearing of Shirley Taylor, 18- days when nations were com-| year-oiq baby-sitter, and Irvine pelled to try to live alone. But} Anderson, 19, charged with eon- ied to have taken narcoties as Pilot Deafness |rules governing publicity about Bevin median) euperiatendent took drugs in her presence, bombardment of the pilot’s ears ‘beeen the world must learn to live and | tributing to the delinquency of | work together, or perish. | young children, They are alleg- the children watched Magistrate Matheson said he trusted the press and knew that | ane they would not overstep the | | Hits Left Ear | children. : mee The press stayed by the public soa pte af a a was barred as a nine-yeRealia ays more dea € ©.’ \girl gave evidence that the pair ear than the right, says Dr. K. G. ¥ “They put white powder into ene oat. Py gen on |, spoon and they heated it with | SyRMon conénens 6) & Swe o | matches,” the little girl testified the British association, Dr. Ber- | «mp, ¢ ot 6 Haig i. : |gin said it is caused by constant | y p 1eedie in their : Mrs, Glenna Simister, a house- by noise of the aircraft __| keeper who had hired the baby- First noticeable symptoms is| sitter to look after the children the inability to distinguish con- | was sentenced to five months in | Daily News: ended in Canada The Indians lived in huts about 30 feet in diameter and carried arbitrary return to parity by on trade for giant mussel shells agreement between the govern- &nd for volcanic glass ments of Canada and the United Remains of arrow heads, States stone adzes, awls and other Such an agreement, he said, Working tools appeared to be would be “disastrous.” It would, ®emturies old. The expedition put government back into the also found that trade existed field of foreign exchange con- Detween the Indians and early tuo! white fur traders, This was Parity can be attained with- — by ey 9 * myetel out “artificial” props, he said, a ements shaped in the same by a slowing of U.S. invest- wine a Sak k no ie ians mus ave car- ments in Canada and a reduc- ” “re — aoe wee on 2 ion a i or rade with the riv tion of municipal borrowings ¢ on Mae . = ; in the United States white as native metal is not The Edinburgh-born banker !0U?d in this area,” Dr. Borden started his Canadian career 40 , years ago. as a bank clerk in A semi-cireular earth lodge Cranbrook 8C : “is “was found. The charred rafters, ranobd! c 3 ‘ , 15 feet long, were buried about feet below ground lieve! Centred in the iodge was a rec- LETTERBOX tan r fire pit, about six by nine feet iad a an Fire strikers, sewing needles of - CNIB TAKES STAND stone and antlers, and cooking Editor, utensils were found by the ex- plorers : New York-born Dr. Borden had with him on the expedition Mr and Mrs. Paul Tolstoy, Columbia University, New York; Kenneth MacPherson and Douglas S8te- vens of the University of Toron- ; to, and Robert Theodore Apu», oe sonar yin wet Roy Carlson and Natalie Burt of , ld which Nas been ithe University of Washington. sipported so generously by citi ¥ moe re ne party ABO zens of this city in the past UBC students, two Boy Scouts It is unfortunate that a clash and Jack Sewell of Vanderhoof, ing of interests should occu It has come to our atten that solicitations are bein; for advertising in a public ! sponsored by the Canadian Fe eration of the Blind. We would like to emphasize that this Ped eration has no connection wit particularly at this time wher B.C, an expert in the art of the CNIB is making its nationa et yt — sina appeal for funds, The executive ° of the Prince Rupert Branch of First Alberta st CNIB wish to draw the fol < . owing facts to the attention o 0, / SA d your readers 1 Ippe to 1. No permit. to solicit adve1 ° tising has been granted by the BC Refinery city authorities to the Canadian + karan ‘ irst Federation of the Blind, or to| , VANCOUVER (h—ine firs any person representing that Alberta crude oil ever shipped | organization to British Columbia will leave stitute for the Blind is recog-|® 27-car train for Imperial O1's | nized by the federal, provincial |'efinery at loco, near Vancou-| and municipal governments by | Y®: : annual grants: the Canadian, The shipment of about 5,400) Federation of the Blind is not so | Patrels is expected to reach the} recognized. | coast Oct. 1. Within a few weeks | 3. Permission for a tag day, to gasoline, fuel oil and other pet-| be held Oct. 4, has been granted |Toleum products refined from by the city council to the loval | this Canadian crude will be branch of the CNIB. | available to West Coast con-| 4. The local branch of the | SUmers. CNIB has not authorized a per-| Similar rail shipments of sonal appeal canvass, nor has it | Alberta oi] will be made daily any connection whatsoever with | Until completion of the trans any advertising in this city, jmountain pipe line late next | The CNIB carries on a won-\SUmmer. California has been derful work among the blind,|the normal source of crude oil | teaching them to do much for| for B.C. and up until now the| themselves, to earn money, to be | loco refinery has been running | in a great degree independent.|0M crude oil shipped in by | But it takes money to carry on|tanker. Since Korea, however, | this work, and the help of the | California’s exportable supplies Prince Rupert branch is valued, | have been shrinking, while the fre Jail on simi Y la be a joy to Dickensian societies | he play has a perfect character | pitch. The left ear is more vul- | : ~ j.| 2ctor in George Howe, who has|nerable than the right because i! as we — oe re Sees distinguished himself in many | normally the pilot — on the |¢ i esd gt ander ‘gid | ences who enjoy e Sphere | Shakespearean roles. The cast|left side of the craft. | includes Estelle Winwood as . i i icGdih Cesme seemcielidtl ated tos imental ae ettaees on doctor said there {s no! come in while this dramatization seven years} hostess who thinks everyone is| ¢y]t of English life in the 1830s. ago but couldn’t find a Broad-| a celebrity who attends her|ably be remedied with improved way producer. He took the play | parties, and Nydia Westman as | insulation of fuselages she pro-| as a housekeeper b 1’ the spinsterish lady frantic for| vision of suitable helmets and. 4 Bees to London last spring and it| received such an ebullient re-'a husband. week. ourt today: “I thought the ehild only saw us once. One day she we Were t ediate cure for this diffi- ‘fix’ I had thought eeacain y but in time it will prob-| was locked.” Mrs. Simister had been hired father while he was working in ear plugs. ‘northern British Columbia. For that reason the present fin- | B.C. demand has grown steadily. | a@ncial campaign is presented to| Alberta will provide more | the people of Prince Rupert with | than half of Ioco’s daily crude the earnest hope that it will be | requirements and the rest will | well supported, and certainly | continue to come from Califor- | with the hope that it will not be | nia. | confused with the effort of the When trans mountain pipe | | Canadian Federation, should a |line goes into operation next) canvasser from that organiza- year, Alberta will supply all of | tion eall. Imperial’s crude oil require- F, ST. JOHN MADELEY, ments in B.C. Ioco’s capacity Chairman Prince Rupert jis being enlarged to 22,500 bar- | Branch, C.N.LB, rels a day. | RETIRED? REFLECTS Ray There is good hunting, of | The chay course, in Africa. And we can citeulatig 8 say there is also pretty fair | ly conced hunting of animals from Africa. spends ‘“ . just now, way back in the moun- he refers tains of British Columbia easiest yay soul fumble around To say you've retired is not and REMiN« tween pages tena , always absolute truth. Perhaps CHARLIp'< Pian it’s a polite way of saying there will be no hurry at breakfas; hour, and not quite so many duties, so called. We become ac- | turn to the « customed to the feeling after Chaplin, p half a century or longer, that came an sumething or somebody needs he you. An empty day has no place in the business of living Charlie Chan . COuld not and fame an. Coming one NOTHING THERE Next to a doorknob coming off in your hand, the emptiest feeling is to continue a con- versation with a woman who | to how he ga Si stopped three stores back to tion js someti look in the window—Stratford isn't it, ™ Beacon-Herald, dential Candidg Nixon give an ¢ It is sald of the ‘ Elizabeth that led, couriers Lest the ule such thing a The Manchester Guardian will in future put mews on the front page instead of filling every inch with classified advertisements News, no matter how hot, ha always wandered around inside, Caution is reg and might or might not be seen unnecessary SUPPORT AIR CADET LEAG CAMPAIGN for Fl OCT. Ist -3 Air Cadets .. . Trained Men of Ty COMPARE THESE FEATURES @ Fibregiass Insulation @ Thermostatic Control @ Giass Lined (fased to metal) @ Can't Rust or Corrode Gives you sparkling, clear, hot water, pure as the source itself. GUARANTEED FOR 10 YEARS. 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