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Sivu 4 Torstaina, lokaV-uun 6 p, — Thursday, Oct. 6,1955 Exercise Doesn't Cause Heart Attacics ! TJiere cän be DO doubtv tbat Jn! to a; healthy clrctUatory system. A i But for: tiie person ,wit3iout BtJje- 1 recent years people have Ijecomemore I heart attaclJ, with rare excepuons, j rosclerosis. exercise is s benejicia . . , ! heaith conscjous. Through newfi-1 niust be years In the maiimg. i ! papers and magazjnes. radio and T V . i What m u s t happen before most! Remind Canadians .Of Own Heroes ^ ^_ A Canadian born authornow living » i n the United State» chidedCana- ' cianslor ignoring their ov/n historlcal heroes. - Merill Denison toid the Toronto ; cnapter of the Canadian Public Re-r Ijltiops Society that Canadian youth - is falling too reaKlily into ivorshlp - of such American .figures as fron- " trersman Davy Crockett, " "There are; plenty of full-blooded ' Canadian heroes head and should-i ders above the American versions" 1 h«*5aid. * ' '"Klondike Mike Mahoney of Ot-tawa is a shining example, lie said. ' Mahoney clajmed to have carried a > piano over the Yukon's Chllkoot pass axk his back during the Klondlke gold - rush. ; Anothcr was Joe Lagmoniere, v/ho ti-ekked from Fort Garry, now WIn- , .nlpeg, to Montreal, on snowslioes in ' • 60 days. ' :Mr. Denison listed-^Angus Macas- ; blll *• the Cape Breton giant, explor- I eis Radlsson, Groseiliers and Fraser as men v/orthy of attention. A COURAGEOUS HERO HONORED The Gallows Did Not Daunt Him Don Hall Gym Classes Every Thursday Night Gym classes on Thursdaynights-häve commenced for the season at the Don Hall. The gymclasscs for the smaller boys and giris '^start at 7 p.m., whlle thfj^ classes for men and women start at 8 p.m. Capable instructors are in charge of ali classes and it te , hoped that a large number of gymnasts will take advantage of these classes. | By PHILIP BOLSOVEB V (Julius Fucllf didn't live to »ee his homeland free. But he fcnew it vrould be. And because he did^ ' he is hzln% honored In ali Cze-cboslovakia this month.) ,V/hen Julius Fucik vios takenby the cxecutioners frorn^is celi years ago this month, he sang as he :walk-ed to hte'death. The .song he sang was the Internationale.. After a minute or two the S.S. men, who were liis cxecutioners, sprang at him and gag-gcd him. They were toö late. Other pris-oners tiad heard the voice and iheir voices took up Che song be-lore Fucjk's was smothered. Then more jolned in. And more. Until the whole grim jail was ioud v/ith the words of that battlesong, a song of pnde ahd defiance. It was sung in pnde and defiance. For the prlsoners knew well v/nat -vvas happening. They . knew that this man was to be murdered. They sang with him and to him, their message of support, their pride" in him and their defiance of ali that Hitler could do against tliem. They were still: singmg ivhen Fucik died. Julius Fucik is now a national hcro of Czechoslovakla. His activ-itles have come to summarize and represent the efforts of many thous-ands of men and women who form-ed the Reslstance to the Nazis and Jater built up a Socialist state. The Dodgers W i n First Tllle I .jBrooklyn's Dodgers of destiny per- ;^gnged the 'impossible" today when •^Hard-Iiuck Johnny'* Podres - pitched them to their long-awaited flrst World champlonship by beatlng New York Yankees, .2-0, in the now-or-never seventh series game. Beaten in seven previous heart-breakin^ attempts to wm the World Series, the determined Dodgers ended 55 years of baseball bitterness to the roaring acclaim of 62,465 frenzied fans as their 23-year-old southpaw shut out the mighty Yankees with eight scattered hits. ' It was a puLsating performance by the kid from Witherbee, N.Y., as he scored his second ^ctory of the classic and pinned the defeat on favored Tommy Byrne. He had ali kmds of bad breaks but gamely he tlghtened hts *lips and mowed those; Yankees down the hard way — m the yawning vastness of a Yankee Stadium where the Bombers seldom are beaten in a big one. There were many heroes to side with him. Rangy G i l Hodges, a patsy in the past when he went hltless for 21 trips in4952, drove in those two runs that t h ^ oft-achmg Johnny needed. Little Sandy Amoros made a despe-ratiön running catch In the threaten- Ing Yankee slxth and turned i t into n double play that derricked Johnny out of trouble. Carl Furlllo, the " A r m " of Brooklyn, raced in for a seventh-inning catch and then — on the threat of his throwing reputation and. a rifle-llke heave to the plate, held a potential run on third. Young Johnny took it from there. He fanned the menacing Hank Bauer to close out. the eighth and then, with pressure ndlng hlgh on every pitch, sent those Bombers in order i n the heart-Choking fmal^nn-mg to give the hilarious Dodgers their first series— and their fIrst win over a Yankee team, whlch had beaten them five times previously in the classic. The Dodger triiunph marked the first tlme in World Series history that a club which had lost the first two games of a seven-game series ever came back to wm the championship. It also represeftted the f irst time the National League has won the classic two consecutive years. smce 1933 and 1934 when the Giants and Cardlnals did it. Johnny was in trouble often this warm and sunny day, but never did he lese that buUdog courage which finally carried the Dodgers to the end of a long trial of heart-break. THAT'S SOMETHING • Father; "Isn't there anything else you can do better than anyone else?" Son:: "Yes, Dad.' Read my own hand'.vnting." anniversary of his death is com-memorated . in every part of the country. , The son of a Prague metal work-er, and a seamstress, P\icik early showed a talent for wnting; At 12 he was producing a magazine writ-ten in- a school notebook. A year later he had a new and better mag- .i-zlne which he called "Cheerful Mlnd," döing ali the writing , and drawing for it himself. His father worked in the Skoda arms factory and-Juhus Pucik knew the s-truggles of the workers there mtimately. So it vizs not remark-able that on May Day 1917 he took the pupils in his school d a s s to march with the workers. An ex-perlence a few months later, when he saw starving cluldren shot down by troops as they tried to take biead from a truck, strengthened his views. At 18 he was a member of the newly formed Communist Party, v/riting for its, newspaper, Rude Pra^o, particularly about books and the theater. Later; he said: . ' A person who wa& 12 years old at the beginning of the war saw events at. its end still with the eyes of a child, but with the ex-penence of a 25-year-old. "Therefore I had to see that not ali was right with a World i n which people killed each other agairiSt their will and full of-yeaming for Lfe. 1 began, as ib were, to criticize it." A l i through the years between the two World wars Fucik worked as a political journalist, editmg Communist papers and magazmes, including Rude Pravo, . reporting strikes and writing literary critic-ums. By 1932, when he was called up for military Service, he was,so well feared: by the authonties as a pro-pagandist that they separated him from his fellowsoldiers. He.wrote: ."I am forbidden to nieet several soldiers at one time, forbidden to taik with any com-rades. wfcatever m civilian clothes. When Czechoslovakia was be-trayed and invaded by -the Nazis, Fucik went into hiding. continuing his work. The Gestapo sent a Czech police-nian to arrest him in June 1940. Fucik persuaded the officer that one Czech should not an-est anobher for the Gestapo, and thus escaped. • A year later, when the underground Central Committee of the Communist party, the center of the Resistance movement, was ar-rested, Fucik. became the leader of the new committee and editor of the underground. Rude Pravo. The Resistance • movement . was powerfui and effective. Thousands of Communists and other Czech pat-riots worked m it. In April 1943 Fucik and the other leaders were arrested. The Gestapo tortured and questioned Fucik for 3 year, but kept him alive in the hope that he would betray the Resistance movement. They were disappomted. What Fucik did mstead whlle he was a prLsoner.was to write his fa-mous "Notes From the Gallows," the last testäment of a Communist and a man who loved life, He could hot have known as he wrot€ it secertly and had it carried cut of prison page by page by a friendly warden, that - his words, wbuld later be xead m 56 languages. In 1934 Fucik went to the Soviet Union as correspondent for sRude Pravo and stayed there for- two j-ears. This Ls one of the things he wrote after seemg the huge construc-tion pröjects of the First Pive-Year Pian—and it provides a vivid insight into his character: • "Man. In the name of Man, for Man, the Industrial giants were built. Now Man is becommg a giant, a giant problem i n ali the buildmg of Social-ism . . . M a n , whose relation to human Society is becommgdear, "See how we are growing," they sald four years ago,. and showed us new factories. "Se how we are grow-. Ing," they saynow, and show us the Man from the factory." . . Later, after months of torture and auestiomng he said: "I know that I am going to my deäth. A*miracle would have to happen to get me out of this. But mira-cles do not happen. Nevertheless, be-lieve me, I db not thmk of death at a l i " He did not think of death. He look-ed forward to the day when Czecho- Slovakia wouldbe free not only of the Nazis but älso of those who before Hitler had oppressed the working people. . He said his. first task as art' u n derground leader ;was to drive out the Nazis. Butvthat was not enough. The people who had ruled Czechoslovakia before 1939 must go also— and a Socialist state must come. He knew it would come, . So the man who had loved hfe, who had laughed and written: funny; Stones, who was fascinated by poetry and the.theater, who had mnumer-able frlends — t h i s man sang as he walked to his death. . And the people for whom he had v/orked sang with hlrs. And the song they ali sang was the Internationale. . ! they have learned an increasmg a-j mount about the Jlls .wbich are Jikejjr I t j beset them. and something about i what can be done to prevent them. j In ;;ome ways this is a good thing, i.but in another sense, it has made us a nation of worrjers. Men and women go around wondering whether this pam or ache is one of the seven dan-ger signals or sjx waming slgns.. USELESg EABS I n no area is this kind of needless worTy more prevalent than the fear of heart attack. Millions are aware that heart attacks are iparticularly common in the years just following the 40th birthday, especially for men. SO they go around worrying that such an attack may come at almost any time. They cut down to the point of aepriving themselves of recreatlons Vhich may, in reahty be their great-est guarantors of continued. good health, and which at least are hn-. portant i n relieving the strains. When this; happens,. i t is a d e ar case of a httle knowledge being a oangerous thing; I f persons who have these worries understood the mecha-nism whlch produces heart attacks, then more of ten than not, their wor-nes would fade. YEARS I N M A K I NG A heart attack occurs when a blood elot or thrombus lodges itself m the circulatory System so that the blood supply vitally needed by the heart is cut off. This-most often happens in one of the coronary arteries, the two large blood vessels which directly supply the heart muscles. But coronary thrombosis almost never occurs heart attacks can occur is the ad-. v&nce of a dlsease called atheroscle-rosis, a form of artenoschlerosis or hardening of the arteries. .WhUe medical science does not know wbat causes Etberosclerosis ,they do Jjnow what happens m the disease; A fatty sub-stance, cholesterol, starts to deposjt in the artery linlng. The inner artery wall Ijecomes roughened and narrow-ed, much m the same manner as a rusting pipe. The artery now can pass a.smalleramount of blood through its narrowed passage. In addition, the roughened wall develops jagged f i n - gers which can 'hook" blood clots, causing a complete shutting off of blood flow, and bringing on the heart attack. Incidentally, this can also happsn m the blood vessels which supply the brain causing a cerebral thrombosis or stroke. NOT LIKELY The important thing to. remember IS that this usually happens m a person only. af ter a long, although not always detectable illness. If your circulatory system IS healthy, and it usually IS, then a heart attack is not likely whether you're 20, 30, 40 or 70. From this fact flows a general u n - oerstandmg that exertion exercise or tension does not cause heart attack. A large number of attacks actually occur when the victim is resting or sleepmg, and when an attack does occur to someone exertmg himself it is probably just a coincidence. Of course, persons who do suffer heart disease have to take it easy i n order t" mmimize the work that must be done by the damaged heart muscle.I ir.ing. bTILL STUDVIVO If you do suffer from atheros clerosis, what can the doctor do? In complete honesty, it. must be pointed c u i that medicine is still seeking an ef f ective cure for the disease. I i i fact doctors stjll must discover whai causes an^atherosclerotic conditlon to affect anyone,' for without Jaxowing the causes, it is almost impossible to f:nd the cures. However, a great deal has been learned about' what doctors call "managing" atherosclerosis. A number of drugs have shown some success, particularly the hormone derlvatives like ACTH. cortisone or metrlcdTtin. Other drugs, known as anti-coagu lants,' are used to break . up blood clots. Other drugs are being used v/ith effectiveness to reduce high blood pressure, which so often ac companies hardemng öf the arteries. The relation of diet to atherosclerosis i =5 also being carefullystudied, especially m -vie.w of the fact that substances closely a k i n t o the cholesterol. which narrows the arteries are found in fat foods, and most Studies indicate a greater tendency to heart attacks among groups who mdulge m richer diets. WILL LEARN Untll ali of these hnes of research come up with more defmite answers, we cannot say for sure .why one person will suffer a heart attack and another will escape. But we can.remember that the conaition whlch leads to heart attacks takes years to develop and worrymg or being over cautious IS not gomg to do any good CALGARY HONORS FAMOUS INDIAN BY STAN LINKOVICH MISDIBECTED An excited customer phoned rn appliance store serving a fast-fjrovv-ing Minneapohs suburb where waole blocks. of houses are almost indsnri-cal. "You'll: have to send somo one cut; to move our range," sai4 the man. ''It was mstalled at the wrong cddress." ' B u t you were there yourself" pro-tested the manager, "and your fa-mily ,was there." 'Yes, yes, I know", replied the customer. "We moved into the wrung hoiise.".; GONE TO THE DOGS For years a young actor played up to his rich aunt by forcing himself to be especially mce to her five adored Pekmese, though he hated them heartily. Sure enough, whenshe died she remembered him m her will. Left h im a l i the dogs. Now that the Dodgers have settled the baseball issue attention \vill be focussed on football. After trying out for the Argonauts b'ut found wanting, J ; C. Caroline returned to haunt his former teamrtiates but in än Alouette uniform. The highly publicized import is shown left, eluding Argo's Sopinka and AI Pfeifer, 70, during Montrears recent 30-28 victory in Toronto. Caroline set up the winning touchdown and throttled an Argo scoring threat with three minutes left by intercepting a pass. However, Corky Tharp, Argo's choice when they fired Caroline, scored one TD and made impressive ground gains. Shades of bigotry, ,they're at it agami When the School Board in Calgary recently proposed naming a new school in the St. Aiidrews Heights Community after the famous Black-feet Indian Chief Crowfoot, a small but noisy group of citizens, apparently suffering under the.delusion that in some mysterious way they were supe-nor, tried to get the name changed because they were afraid their child-ren might be called Indians, A s m Winnipeg last spring, this group was steamrolled by public opi-, aion. (In Wiimipeg, a similar greup of citizens objected to calling a school there after Canadian .war hero A n drew Minarski because the name wasn't Canadian enough). One thing IS now certam; the vast majority of both Indian and white in Alberta ho-nor the name Crowfoot and. this kind of pressure was certainly felt by the School Board when it finally. decided to uphold "Chief Crowfoot School" for a name. Crowfoot, born about 1830, is often described as the last great Indian chief of the West. Although he ar-dently desired peace ("Peace hath her victoriesno less Tenowned than war,") he was not a pacifist. A s a youngster he SO proved his skill as-a scout in the battles between the Indian nations that the elders soon cömpletely trust-ed his ability m war. When still a youth, he began to lead his own war parties. •'*•:•• . * ; ' • * ; • "• Among the first white men to come to the West were those who came from the south. They brought Vfire-water" and the Robinson rifle. With. these, they terrorized the Indians and reduced them to poverty and deg«i-eracy. They also created a situation of grave unrest.. In 1874, the govemment of Canada decided to bring law into the West. A force was led hy Lt.rCol. J. F. Mac-' leod, chief. of the North West Mounted Police. Macleod, as the Crown's re-presentative, signed the Blackfeet T r e a t y w i t h the Indians. In effect, this treaty placed the Indians on a reservation. In the pre-signmg dis-cussion, Macleod promised always to keep the Blackfeet informed of the plans of the Crown towards them and to respect the full rights of the Blackfeet as an Independent nation. He assured them that the ROMP had not come to take away their lands. Durmg this parley, the Blackfeet described their plight. They told how they were bemg robbed and ruined by the whiskey trade; how their wives, horses and robes were being taken away from them; how their young men were engaged in drunken brawls and how many were shot; how tiheir horses were getting fewer.in number so that they would soon find it hard to get food. Now, they believed, ali this was to be changed., With honest hope, and no doubt with some mlsgivmg, Crowfoot made a sensitive appeal for understanding from the white man, and agreed to sign the treaty. *'While I speak, be kmd and patient. I have to speak for my people, who are numorous and who rely upon me to follow that course which in future wiir tend to their good. Theplains are large and Wide; we are the children of the plains; it has been our home and the buffalo have been our food always. I hope you will look upon the Blackfeet, Bloods, - Pelgans and^ the Sarcecs as your children aow and tbat yoU will be indulgent and charitable to them . . . If the police had not come to this country, where should we ali be now Bad men and whiske3r were indeed killing us so fast that few of us indeed would have been left today . . ." • • Mislead by the R C M P as to the true nature of the rebellion of 1870, m Saskatchewan, Crowfoot remained neutral. At furst, he showed some sympathy to the rebellion and treated one of Riers men as an honored guest. During this time, about half the Blackfeet were m favor of supportmg the Metis. Then the R C M P invaded Crowfoot's teepee and arrested Riers man. Crowfoot was invited to watch the trial. The charge against Riers man was dismissed and he was freed. This' facti along with further discus-sions with the RCMP agents finally persuaded Crowfoot to remam neutral, and even to pacify. those warriors favoring (the rebellion. Most historians consider Crowfoot as a man who contributed much to the development of Canada. Many claim that it was his peaceful policy that aliowed the openmg and development of the West as part of Canada rather than as part of the United States. Crowfoot hoped and believed i n the white man. Whiskey traders and other- degenerate elements, he was convinced, did not reflect the real character of the white man. He hoped that the white man and Indian could learn to live together in peace and equality. He seemed to grasp the vast changes that were lx)und to come. Huge steam engmes churning along gleaming rails did not frighten him as they did most Indians. Hesaw that the buffalo were beginning to.disap-pear, and he hoped that his people would learn tn toke u p faxgiing. The upshot of ali this is that the school was fmally named after Crow-foot. Although there could be a lot of debate o n the pros and cons of Crowfoot's contribution to the West, there could l>e no debate about what was involved at Calgary. The Calgary Herald placed it rather nicely: "The fundamental: issue is whether the Indian people are to be rightiy honored or whether. they are to be discrimmated against because of an indefensible feelmg, consciously or not, of superiority on the part of some white people." Maaottelutarjous Suomesta N L : le Helsinki. — Suomen VoimisteMiit- ^to on lähettänyt kirjeen Neuvostoliiton voimistelujaostolle, missä ehdotetaan maaottelua suoritettavaksi H e l singissa ensi helmikuun 17.—18. päivinä. Tämä maaottelu suoritettaisiin sekä mies- että naisjoukkuein. Kurjee-seen el Neuvostoliitto ole viela v i r a l l i sesti vastannut, mutta ennakkoilmoituksena kuitenkin hyväksynyt maa-ottelutarjouksen. -Voimisteluliitto on varannut Helsingin Messuhallin näiksi päiviksi. Dun^anov ja Nikitin tekivät ennätyksiä Moskova. — Venäläiset painonnostajat ovat tehneet Neuvostoliiton uutistoimiston Tassin kertoman mukaaji lr.aksi painonnoston uutta maailmanennätystä. Keskisarjassa loi J. D u - ganov oman maailmanerinätyksea'^ kahden käden tempauksessa kahdella kilolla saa"vuttaen tuloksen 133 kiloa. Kevyessä sahjassa nosti F. Nikitm kahden käden punnerruksella 120.5 kiloa, mikä on kolme kiloa parempi icuin hänen maailmanennatyksensä. ENNÄTYS ALALLAAN S5^sk. 24 pnä pantiin Baltimoressa luultavasti ennatysmies alallaan 60 päiväksi vankilaan. Anthony Ritchie, joka on 57 vuotias, on poliisien antamien tietojen mukaan ollut viimeksi 'kuluneiden neljän vuoden aikana 144 kertaa vankeudessa juopumisesta ja rauhan häiritsemisestä. Hänen sanotaan olleen neljästä vuodesta vankiloissa kaikkiaan noin kolme vuotta. PALJON HAUSKEMPI KUIN " M E TULEMME TAAS" ANNELI SAULI, OLAVI VIRTA jä OSSI ELSTELÄ SF: n i riemukkaassa "moternissa"tukkilaiselokuvass!a ; "KAKSI VANHAA TUKKIJÄTKÄÄ" Käsikirjoitus: Reino Helismaa — Musiikki: Toivo Kärki ESITETÄÄN ONTARIOSSA: S P R U C E D A I E , Ladys Hall, perjantaina, lokakuun 7 p. kello 8 111. PORT ARTHUR, Tydn Temppelissä, maanantaina, lokakuun 10 p. kello 7 ja 9 illalla. SOUTH GILLIES.Community Centre, tiistaina, lokakuunll p. klo 8 IIL MOKOMON. Union Hall, keskiviikkona, lokakuun l2 p. kto 8 111. NOLALU, Finnish Hall, torstaina, lokakuun 13 p. klo 8 ill. PORT ARTHUR, Polish Hall, perjantaina, lokakuun 14 p. klo 8 ilL KAMINISTIQUIA, Pohjolan Hall, lauantaina, lokakuun 15 p. klo 8 UI. TARMOLA, Finnish Hall, sunnuntaina, lokakuun 16 p. klo 8 ill. NIPIGON,, Elk's Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 17 p. klo 8 UI. —- GERALDTON, Ukrainian Hall, tiistaina, lokakuun 18 p. klo 8 UI. HEARST, koulun alakerta, keskiviikkona, Tokakuun 19 p. klo 8 UI. KAPUSKASING, Orange Hall, (alakerta), torstaina, lokakuun 20 p. kello 8 illalla. SOUTH PORCUPINE, Finnish Hall, perjantaina, lokak. 21 p. klo 8 UL COCHRANE, Orange HaU. lauantaina, lokakuun 22 p: klo 8 lU. TIMMINS. Harmony Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 24 p. klo 8 III. KIRKLAND LAKE, Ukrainian Hall, 54 McCamus Ave., tiistaina. / lokakuun 25 p: klo 8 illalla. COBALT, Finnish HaU, kesklviikkona#lokakuun 26 p, klo 8 lU. SUDBURY, Sampo Hall, torstaina, lokakuun 27 p: klo 8 UI. WANUP, UadeUa haalilla, perjantaina, lokakuun 28 p. klo 8 iU. SUDBURY. Finnish Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 31 p. klo 7 ja 9 HL L O N G L A K E , Snomiranta, tiistaina, marraskuun 1 p. klo 8 ilL SISÄÄNPÄÄSY $1.00 — L . \ P S E T 25c HUOM! SUOMESTA SAAPUI JUURI KYSYTYIMPIÄ Ä Ä N I L E V Y JÄ C A N A D I A N F I N N I S H M O V I ES Tass «äna; lebtUUkfeecm lalkalfB "#01 valaanaan i vää Jonlnlok sanomaista että neidäi; avustavat nnlstelmlUa Täten pyj nailan suom, myosUn raj^ tämaän an "Jonlun" toi tcrvetnUeita nUlta monfli etmetnmlnklj neet, samoin Ita nyt ensii joittavat "J< Kynät käf omaa pidettj "Joulua"! K perillä viime päivään men pl Jos aikals :$1.0G AJA» ROM. on nyt kii suuri Agatha Cliristi Idän pika Romaani — 21( Florence Barcli Ruk Romaani — 30^ Seldon Truss: Kadonnui Romaani — 23( Berta Ruck: Kevättä Romaani — 2G( Mika Waltari: Jättiläisel 327 sivua, Kristmann Gu( Myrsk Romaani -r- 3i: Kristmann G u i Kauks Romaani — 28f Katri Ingman: Rohke Romaani — 23^ Katrilngman: Viri Romaani — 246 Esti Heiniö: Vii Romaani — 212 Esti Heiniö: Ojai Romaani — 21i^ Elsa Heporauta Si Romaani — 336 Elsa Heporauta Saarer Somaani — 267 Ronald Fangen Kaks Romaani — 402 Toivo Pekkanen KSauppii Romaani — 370 Toivo Pekkanen Tie Romaani — 269 Toivo Pekkanen Ne men Romaani — 366 (6-8) Tyyne Maija Sa - Eläit] Romaani — 241 Tyyne Maija Sa Kolmeu Romaani — 176 Hans Fallada: Oli meilläb Romaani — 586 Hans Fallada: Lapsuu( Romaani — 340 Ernst Wiechert: Uskoliir Romaani — 266 Ernst Wiechert: Maju Kertomus —268 Jo van Ammers- Naai Romaani — 313 Martti Mereruna Laiva c Romaani — 227 R. C. Shemff; Vihre Romaani—318 Artturi Leinonei Keväästi Romaani — 328 i Artturi Leinonec 1 Romaani — 268: Tilatkaa V AI PUBLISHI Box 69
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, October 6, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-10-06 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | Vapaus551006 |
Description
Title | 1955-10-06-06 |
OCR text | Sivu 4 Torstaina, lokaV-uun 6 p, — Thursday, Oct. 6,1955 Exercise Doesn't Cause Heart Attacics ! TJiere cän be DO doubtv tbat Jn! to a; healthy clrctUatory system. A i But for: tiie person ,wit3iout BtJje- 1 recent years people have Ijecomemore I heart attaclJ, with rare excepuons, j rosclerosis. exercise is s benejicia . . , ! heaith conscjous. Through newfi-1 niust be years In the maiimg. i ! papers and magazjnes. radio and T V . i What m u s t happen before most! Remind Canadians .Of Own Heroes ^ ^_ A Canadian born authornow living » i n the United State» chidedCana- ' cianslor ignoring their ov/n historlcal heroes. - Merill Denison toid the Toronto ; cnapter of the Canadian Public Re-r Ijltiops Society that Canadian youth - is falling too reaKlily into ivorshlp - of such American .figures as fron- " trersman Davy Crockett, " "There are; plenty of full-blooded ' Canadian heroes head and should-i ders above the American versions" 1 h«*5aid. * ' '"Klondike Mike Mahoney of Ot-tawa is a shining example, lie said. ' Mahoney clajmed to have carried a > piano over the Yukon's Chllkoot pass axk his back during the Klondlke gold - rush. ; Anothcr was Joe Lagmoniere, v/ho ti-ekked from Fort Garry, now WIn- , .nlpeg, to Montreal, on snowslioes in ' • 60 days. ' :Mr. Denison listed-^Angus Macas- ; blll *• the Cape Breton giant, explor- I eis Radlsson, Groseiliers and Fraser as men v/orthy of attention. A COURAGEOUS HERO HONORED The Gallows Did Not Daunt Him Don Hall Gym Classes Every Thursday Night Gym classes on Thursdaynights-häve commenced for the season at the Don Hall. The gymclasscs for the smaller boys and giris '^start at 7 p.m., whlle thfj^ classes for men and women start at 8 p.m. Capable instructors are in charge of ali classes and it te , hoped that a large number of gymnasts will take advantage of these classes. | By PHILIP BOLSOVEB V (Julius Fucllf didn't live to »ee his homeland free. But he fcnew it vrould be. And because he did^ ' he is hzln% honored In ali Cze-cboslovakia this month.) ,V/hen Julius Fucik vios takenby the cxecutioners frorn^is celi years ago this month, he sang as he :walk-ed to hte'death. The .song he sang was the Internationale.. After a minute or two the S.S. men, who were liis cxecutioners, sprang at him and gag-gcd him. They were toö late. Other pris-oners tiad heard the voice and iheir voices took up Che song be-lore Fucjk's was smothered. Then more jolned in. And more. Until the whole grim jail was ioud v/ith the words of that battlesong, a song of pnde ahd defiance. It was sung in pnde and defiance. For the prlsoners knew well v/nat -vvas happening. They . knew that this man was to be murdered. They sang with him and to him, their message of support, their pride" in him and their defiance of ali that Hitler could do against tliem. They were still: singmg ivhen Fucik died. Julius Fucik is now a national hcro of Czechoslovakla. His activ-itles have come to summarize and represent the efforts of many thous-ands of men and women who form-ed the Reslstance to the Nazis and Jater built up a Socialist state. The Dodgers W i n First Tllle I .jBrooklyn's Dodgers of destiny per- ;^gnged the 'impossible" today when •^Hard-Iiuck Johnny'* Podres - pitched them to their long-awaited flrst World champlonship by beatlng New York Yankees, .2-0, in the now-or-never seventh series game. Beaten in seven previous heart-breakin^ attempts to wm the World Series, the determined Dodgers ended 55 years of baseball bitterness to the roaring acclaim of 62,465 frenzied fans as their 23-year-old southpaw shut out the mighty Yankees with eight scattered hits. ' It was a puLsating performance by the kid from Witherbee, N.Y., as he scored his second ^ctory of the classic and pinned the defeat on favored Tommy Byrne. He had ali kmds of bad breaks but gamely he tlghtened hts *lips and mowed those; Yankees down the hard way — m the yawning vastness of a Yankee Stadium where the Bombers seldom are beaten in a big one. There were many heroes to side with him. Rangy G i l Hodges, a patsy in the past when he went hltless for 21 trips in4952, drove in those two runs that t h ^ oft-achmg Johnny needed. Little Sandy Amoros made a despe-ratiön running catch In the threaten- Ing Yankee slxth and turned i t into n double play that derricked Johnny out of trouble. Carl Furlllo, the " A r m " of Brooklyn, raced in for a seventh-inning catch and then — on the threat of his throwing reputation and. a rifle-llke heave to the plate, held a potential run on third. Young Johnny took it from there. He fanned the menacing Hank Bauer to close out. the eighth and then, with pressure ndlng hlgh on every pitch, sent those Bombers in order i n the heart-Choking fmal^nn-mg to give the hilarious Dodgers their first series— and their fIrst win over a Yankee team, whlch had beaten them five times previously in the classic. The Dodger triiunph marked the first tlme in World Series history that a club which had lost the first two games of a seven-game series ever came back to wm the championship. It also represeftted the f irst time the National League has won the classic two consecutive years. smce 1933 and 1934 when the Giants and Cardlnals did it. Johnny was in trouble often this warm and sunny day, but never did he lese that buUdog courage which finally carried the Dodgers to the end of a long trial of heart-break. THAT'S SOMETHING • Father; "Isn't there anything else you can do better than anyone else?" Son:: "Yes, Dad.' Read my own hand'.vnting." anniversary of his death is com-memorated . in every part of the country. , The son of a Prague metal work-er, and a seamstress, P\icik early showed a talent for wnting; At 12 he was producing a magazine writ-ten in- a school notebook. A year later he had a new and better mag- .i-zlne which he called "Cheerful Mlnd," döing ali the writing , and drawing for it himself. His father worked in the Skoda arms factory and-Juhus Pucik knew the s-truggles of the workers there mtimately. So it vizs not remark-able that on May Day 1917 he took the pupils in his school d a s s to march with the workers. An ex-perlence a few months later, when he saw starving cluldren shot down by troops as they tried to take biead from a truck, strengthened his views. At 18 he was a member of the newly formed Communist Party, v/riting for its, newspaper, Rude Pra^o, particularly about books and the theater. Later; he said: . ' A person who wa& 12 years old at the beginning of the war saw events at. its end still with the eyes of a child, but with the ex-penence of a 25-year-old. "Therefore I had to see that not ali was right with a World i n which people killed each other agairiSt their will and full of-yeaming for Lfe. 1 began, as ib were, to criticize it." A l i through the years between the two World wars Fucik worked as a political journalist, editmg Communist papers and magazmes, including Rude Pravo, . reporting strikes and writing literary critic-ums. By 1932, when he was called up for military Service, he was,so well feared: by the authonties as a pro-pagandist that they separated him from his fellowsoldiers. He.wrote: ."I am forbidden to nieet several soldiers at one time, forbidden to taik with any com-rades. wfcatever m civilian clothes. When Czechoslovakia was be-trayed and invaded by -the Nazis, Fucik went into hiding. continuing his work. The Gestapo sent a Czech police-nian to arrest him in June 1940. Fucik persuaded the officer that one Czech should not an-est anobher for the Gestapo, and thus escaped. • A year later, when the underground Central Committee of the Communist party, the center of the Resistance movement, was ar-rested, Fucik. became the leader of the new committee and editor of the underground. Rude Pravo. The Resistance • movement . was powerfui and effective. Thousands of Communists and other Czech pat-riots worked m it. In April 1943 Fucik and the other leaders were arrested. The Gestapo tortured and questioned Fucik for 3 year, but kept him alive in the hope that he would betray the Resistance movement. They were disappomted. What Fucik did mstead whlle he was a prLsoner.was to write his fa-mous "Notes From the Gallows," the last testäment of a Communist and a man who loved life, He could hot have known as he wrot€ it secertly and had it carried cut of prison page by page by a friendly warden, that - his words, wbuld later be xead m 56 languages. In 1934 Fucik went to the Soviet Union as correspondent for sRude Pravo and stayed there for- two j-ears. This Ls one of the things he wrote after seemg the huge construc-tion pröjects of the First Pive-Year Pian—and it provides a vivid insight into his character: • "Man. In the name of Man, for Man, the Industrial giants were built. Now Man is becommg a giant, a giant problem i n ali the buildmg of Social-ism . . . M a n , whose relation to human Society is becommgdear, "See how we are growing," they sald four years ago,. and showed us new factories. "Se how we are grow-. Ing," they saynow, and show us the Man from the factory." . . Later, after months of torture and auestiomng he said: "I know that I am going to my deäth. A*miracle would have to happen to get me out of this. But mira-cles do not happen. Nevertheless, be-lieve me, I db not thmk of death at a l i " He did not think of death. He look-ed forward to the day when Czecho- Slovakia wouldbe free not only of the Nazis but älso of those who before Hitler had oppressed the working people. . He said his. first task as art' u n derground leader ;was to drive out the Nazis. Butvthat was not enough. The people who had ruled Czechoslovakia before 1939 must go also— and a Socialist state must come. He knew it would come, . So the man who had loved hfe, who had laughed and written: funny; Stones, who was fascinated by poetry and the.theater, who had mnumer-able frlends — t h i s man sang as he walked to his death. . And the people for whom he had v/orked sang with hlrs. And the song they ali sang was the Internationale. . ! they have learned an increasmg a-j mount about the Jlls .wbich are Jikejjr I t j beset them. and something about i what can be done to prevent them. j In ;;ome ways this is a good thing, i.but in another sense, it has made us a nation of worrjers. Men and women go around wondering whether this pam or ache is one of the seven dan-ger signals or sjx waming slgns.. USELESg EABS I n no area is this kind of needless worTy more prevalent than the fear of heart attack. Millions are aware that heart attacks are iparticularly common in the years just following the 40th birthday, especially for men. SO they go around worrying that such an attack may come at almost any time. They cut down to the point of aepriving themselves of recreatlons Vhich may, in reahty be their great-est guarantors of continued. good health, and which at least are hn-. portant i n relieving the strains. When this; happens,. i t is a d e ar case of a httle knowledge being a oangerous thing; I f persons who have these worries understood the mecha-nism whlch produces heart attacks, then more of ten than not, their wor-nes would fade. YEARS I N M A K I NG A heart attack occurs when a blood elot or thrombus lodges itself m the circulatory System so that the blood supply vitally needed by the heart is cut off. This-most often happens in one of the coronary arteries, the two large blood vessels which directly supply the heart muscles. But coronary thrombosis almost never occurs heart attacks can occur is the ad-. v&nce of a dlsease called atheroscle-rosis, a form of artenoschlerosis or hardening of the arteries. .WhUe medical science does not know wbat causes Etberosclerosis ,they do Jjnow what happens m the disease; A fatty sub-stance, cholesterol, starts to deposjt in the artery linlng. The inner artery wall Ijecomes roughened and narrow-ed, much m the same manner as a rusting pipe. The artery now can pass a.smalleramount of blood through its narrowed passage. In addition, the roughened wall develops jagged f i n - gers which can 'hook" blood clots, causing a complete shutting off of blood flow, and bringing on the heart attack. Incidentally, this can also happsn m the blood vessels which supply the brain causing a cerebral thrombosis or stroke. NOT LIKELY The important thing to. remember IS that this usually happens m a person only. af ter a long, although not always detectable illness. If your circulatory system IS healthy, and it usually IS, then a heart attack is not likely whether you're 20, 30, 40 or 70. From this fact flows a general u n - oerstandmg that exertion exercise or tension does not cause heart attack. A large number of attacks actually occur when the victim is resting or sleepmg, and when an attack does occur to someone exertmg himself it is probably just a coincidence. Of course, persons who do suffer heart disease have to take it easy i n order t" mmimize the work that must be done by the damaged heart muscle.I ir.ing. bTILL STUDVIVO If you do suffer from atheros clerosis, what can the doctor do? In complete honesty, it. must be pointed c u i that medicine is still seeking an ef f ective cure for the disease. I i i fact doctors stjll must discover whai causes an^atherosclerotic conditlon to affect anyone,' for without Jaxowing the causes, it is almost impossible to f:nd the cures. However, a great deal has been learned about' what doctors call "managing" atherosclerosis. A number of drugs have shown some success, particularly the hormone derlvatives like ACTH. cortisone or metrlcdTtin. Other drugs, known as anti-coagu lants,' are used to break . up blood clots. Other drugs are being used v/ith effectiveness to reduce high blood pressure, which so often ac companies hardemng öf the arteries. The relation of diet to atherosclerosis i =5 also being carefullystudied, especially m -vie.w of the fact that substances closely a k i n t o the cholesterol. which narrows the arteries are found in fat foods, and most Studies indicate a greater tendency to heart attacks among groups who mdulge m richer diets. WILL LEARN Untll ali of these hnes of research come up with more defmite answers, we cannot say for sure .why one person will suffer a heart attack and another will escape. But we can.remember that the conaition whlch leads to heart attacks takes years to develop and worrymg or being over cautious IS not gomg to do any good CALGARY HONORS FAMOUS INDIAN BY STAN LINKOVICH MISDIBECTED An excited customer phoned rn appliance store serving a fast-fjrovv-ing Minneapohs suburb where waole blocks. of houses are almost indsnri-cal. "You'll: have to send somo one cut; to move our range," sai4 the man. ''It was mstalled at the wrong cddress." ' B u t you were there yourself" pro-tested the manager, "and your fa-mily ,was there." 'Yes, yes, I know", replied the customer. "We moved into the wrung hoiise.".; GONE TO THE DOGS For years a young actor played up to his rich aunt by forcing himself to be especially mce to her five adored Pekmese, though he hated them heartily. Sure enough, whenshe died she remembered him m her will. Left h im a l i the dogs. Now that the Dodgers have settled the baseball issue attention \vill be focussed on football. After trying out for the Argonauts b'ut found wanting, J ; C. Caroline returned to haunt his former teamrtiates but in än Alouette uniform. The highly publicized import is shown left, eluding Argo's Sopinka and AI Pfeifer, 70, during Montrears recent 30-28 victory in Toronto. Caroline set up the winning touchdown and throttled an Argo scoring threat with three minutes left by intercepting a pass. However, Corky Tharp, Argo's choice when they fired Caroline, scored one TD and made impressive ground gains. Shades of bigotry, ,they're at it agami When the School Board in Calgary recently proposed naming a new school in the St. Aiidrews Heights Community after the famous Black-feet Indian Chief Crowfoot, a small but noisy group of citizens, apparently suffering under the.delusion that in some mysterious way they were supe-nor, tried to get the name changed because they were afraid their child-ren might be called Indians, A s m Winnipeg last spring, this group was steamrolled by public opi-, aion. (In Wiimipeg, a similar greup of citizens objected to calling a school there after Canadian .war hero A n drew Minarski because the name wasn't Canadian enough). One thing IS now certam; the vast majority of both Indian and white in Alberta ho-nor the name Crowfoot and. this kind of pressure was certainly felt by the School Board when it finally. decided to uphold "Chief Crowfoot School" for a name. Crowfoot, born about 1830, is often described as the last great Indian chief of the West. Although he ar-dently desired peace ("Peace hath her victoriesno less Tenowned than war,") he was not a pacifist. A s a youngster he SO proved his skill as-a scout in the battles between the Indian nations that the elders soon cömpletely trust-ed his ability m war. When still a youth, he began to lead his own war parties. •'*•:•• . * ; ' • * ; • "• Among the first white men to come to the West were those who came from the south. They brought Vfire-water" and the Robinson rifle. With. these, they terrorized the Indians and reduced them to poverty and deg«i-eracy. They also created a situation of grave unrest.. In 1874, the govemment of Canada decided to bring law into the West. A force was led hy Lt.rCol. J. F. Mac-' leod, chief. of the North West Mounted Police. Macleod, as the Crown's re-presentative, signed the Blackfeet T r e a t y w i t h the Indians. In effect, this treaty placed the Indians on a reservation. In the pre-signmg dis-cussion, Macleod promised always to keep the Blackfeet informed of the plans of the Crown towards them and to respect the full rights of the Blackfeet as an Independent nation. He assured them that the ROMP had not come to take away their lands. Durmg this parley, the Blackfeet described their plight. They told how they were bemg robbed and ruined by the whiskey trade; how their wives, horses and robes were being taken away from them; how their young men were engaged in drunken brawls and how many were shot; how tiheir horses were getting fewer.in number so that they would soon find it hard to get food. Now, they believed, ali this was to be changed., With honest hope, and no doubt with some mlsgivmg, Crowfoot made a sensitive appeal for understanding from the white man, and agreed to sign the treaty. *'While I speak, be kmd and patient. I have to speak for my people, who are numorous and who rely upon me to follow that course which in future wiir tend to their good. Theplains are large and Wide; we are the children of the plains; it has been our home and the buffalo have been our food always. I hope you will look upon the Blackfeet, Bloods, - Pelgans and^ the Sarcecs as your children aow and tbat yoU will be indulgent and charitable to them . . . If the police had not come to this country, where should we ali be now Bad men and whiske3r were indeed killing us so fast that few of us indeed would have been left today . . ." • • Mislead by the R C M P as to the true nature of the rebellion of 1870, m Saskatchewan, Crowfoot remained neutral. At furst, he showed some sympathy to the rebellion and treated one of Riers men as an honored guest. During this time, about half the Blackfeet were m favor of supportmg the Metis. Then the R C M P invaded Crowfoot's teepee and arrested Riers man. Crowfoot was invited to watch the trial. The charge against Riers man was dismissed and he was freed. This' facti along with further discus-sions with the RCMP agents finally persuaded Crowfoot to remam neutral, and even to pacify. those warriors favoring (the rebellion. Most historians consider Crowfoot as a man who contributed much to the development of Canada. Many claim that it was his peaceful policy that aliowed the openmg and development of the West as part of Canada rather than as part of the United States. Crowfoot hoped and believed i n the white man. Whiskey traders and other- degenerate elements, he was convinced, did not reflect the real character of the white man. He hoped that the white man and Indian could learn to live together in peace and equality. He seemed to grasp the vast changes that were lx)und to come. Huge steam engmes churning along gleaming rails did not frighten him as they did most Indians. Hesaw that the buffalo were beginning to.disap-pear, and he hoped that his people would learn tn toke u p faxgiing. The upshot of ali this is that the school was fmally named after Crow-foot. Although there could be a lot of debate o n the pros and cons of Crowfoot's contribution to the West, there could l>e no debate about what was involved at Calgary. The Calgary Herald placed it rather nicely: "The fundamental: issue is whether the Indian people are to be rightiy honored or whether. they are to be discrimmated against because of an indefensible feelmg, consciously or not, of superiority on the part of some white people." Maaottelutarjous Suomesta N L : le Helsinki. — Suomen VoimisteMiit- ^to on lähettänyt kirjeen Neuvostoliiton voimistelujaostolle, missä ehdotetaan maaottelua suoritettavaksi H e l singissa ensi helmikuun 17.—18. päivinä. Tämä maaottelu suoritettaisiin sekä mies- että naisjoukkuein. Kurjee-seen el Neuvostoliitto ole viela v i r a l l i sesti vastannut, mutta ennakkoilmoituksena kuitenkin hyväksynyt maa-ottelutarjouksen. -Voimisteluliitto on varannut Helsingin Messuhallin näiksi päiviksi. Dun^anov ja Nikitin tekivät ennätyksiä Moskova. — Venäläiset painonnostajat ovat tehneet Neuvostoliiton uutistoimiston Tassin kertoman mukaaji lr.aksi painonnoston uutta maailmanennätystä. Keskisarjassa loi J. D u - ganov oman maailmanerinätyksea'^ kahden käden tempauksessa kahdella kilolla saa"vuttaen tuloksen 133 kiloa. Kevyessä sahjassa nosti F. Nikitm kahden käden punnerruksella 120.5 kiloa, mikä on kolme kiloa parempi icuin hänen maailmanennatyksensä. ENNÄTYS ALALLAAN S5^sk. 24 pnä pantiin Baltimoressa luultavasti ennatysmies alallaan 60 päiväksi vankilaan. Anthony Ritchie, joka on 57 vuotias, on poliisien antamien tietojen mukaan ollut viimeksi 'kuluneiden neljän vuoden aikana 144 kertaa vankeudessa juopumisesta ja rauhan häiritsemisestä. Hänen sanotaan olleen neljästä vuodesta vankiloissa kaikkiaan noin kolme vuotta. PALJON HAUSKEMPI KUIN " M E TULEMME TAAS" ANNELI SAULI, OLAVI VIRTA jä OSSI ELSTELÄ SF: n i riemukkaassa "moternissa"tukkilaiselokuvass!a ; "KAKSI VANHAA TUKKIJÄTKÄÄ" Käsikirjoitus: Reino Helismaa — Musiikki: Toivo Kärki ESITETÄÄN ONTARIOSSA: S P R U C E D A I E , Ladys Hall, perjantaina, lokakuun 7 p. kello 8 111. PORT ARTHUR, Tydn Temppelissä, maanantaina, lokakuun 10 p. kello 7 ja 9 illalla. SOUTH GILLIES.Community Centre, tiistaina, lokakuunll p. klo 8 IIL MOKOMON. Union Hall, keskiviikkona, lokakuun l2 p. kto 8 111. NOLALU, Finnish Hall, torstaina, lokakuun 13 p. klo 8 ill. PORT ARTHUR, Polish Hall, perjantaina, lokakuun 14 p. klo 8 ilL KAMINISTIQUIA, Pohjolan Hall, lauantaina, lokakuun 15 p. klo 8 UI. TARMOLA, Finnish Hall, sunnuntaina, lokakuun 16 p. klo 8 ill. NIPIGON,, Elk's Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 17 p. klo 8 UI. —- GERALDTON, Ukrainian Hall, tiistaina, lokakuun 18 p. klo 8 UI. HEARST, koulun alakerta, keskiviikkona, Tokakuun 19 p. klo 8 UI. KAPUSKASING, Orange Hall, (alakerta), torstaina, lokakuun 20 p. kello 8 illalla. SOUTH PORCUPINE, Finnish Hall, perjantaina, lokak. 21 p. klo 8 UL COCHRANE, Orange HaU. lauantaina, lokakuun 22 p: klo 8 lU. TIMMINS. Harmony Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 24 p. klo 8 III. KIRKLAND LAKE, Ukrainian Hall, 54 McCamus Ave., tiistaina. / lokakuun 25 p: klo 8 illalla. COBALT, Finnish HaU, kesklviikkona#lokakuun 26 p, klo 8 lU. SUDBURY, Sampo Hall, torstaina, lokakuun 27 p: klo 8 UI. WANUP, UadeUa haalilla, perjantaina, lokakuun 28 p. klo 8 iU. SUDBURY. Finnish Hall, maanantaina, lokakuun 31 p. klo 7 ja 9 HL L O N G L A K E , Snomiranta, tiistaina, marraskuun 1 p. klo 8 ilL SISÄÄNPÄÄSY $1.00 — L . \ P S E T 25c HUOM! SUOMESTA SAAPUI JUURI KYSYTYIMPIÄ Ä Ä N I L E V Y JÄ C A N A D I A N F I N N I S H M O V I ES Tass «äna; lebtUUkfeecm lalkalfB "#01 valaanaan i vää Jonlnlok sanomaista että neidäi; avustavat nnlstelmlUa Täten pyj nailan suom, myosUn raj^ tämaän an "Jonlun" toi tcrvetnUeita nUlta monfli etmetnmlnklj neet, samoin Ita nyt ensii joittavat "J< Kynät käf omaa pidettj "Joulua"! K perillä viime päivään men pl Jos aikals :$1.0G AJA» ROM. on nyt kii suuri Agatha Cliristi Idän pika Romaani — 21( Florence Barcli Ruk Romaani — 30^ Seldon Truss: Kadonnui Romaani — 23( Berta Ruck: Kevättä Romaani — 2G( Mika Waltari: Jättiläisel 327 sivua, Kristmann Gu( Myrsk Romaani -r- 3i: Kristmann G u i Kauks Romaani — 28f Katri Ingman: Rohke Romaani — 23^ Katrilngman: Viri Romaani — 246 Esti Heiniö: Vii Romaani — 212 Esti Heiniö: Ojai Romaani — 21i^ Elsa Heporauta Si Romaani — 336 Elsa Heporauta Saarer Somaani — 267 Ronald Fangen Kaks Romaani — 402 Toivo Pekkanen KSauppii Romaani — 370 Toivo Pekkanen Tie Romaani — 269 Toivo Pekkanen Ne men Romaani — 366 (6-8) Tyyne Maija Sa - Eläit] Romaani — 241 Tyyne Maija Sa Kolmeu Romaani — 176 Hans Fallada: Oli meilläb Romaani — 586 Hans Fallada: Lapsuu( Romaani — 340 Ernst Wiechert: Uskoliir Romaani — 266 Ernst Wiechert: Maju Kertomus —268 Jo van Ammers- Naai Romaani — 313 Martti Mereruna Laiva c Romaani — 227 R. C. Shemff; Vihre Romaani—318 Artturi Leinonei Keväästi Romaani — 328 i Artturi Leinonec 1 Romaani — 268: Tilatkaa V AI PUBLISHI Box 69 |
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