1955-09-15-06 |
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mm Sivu 4 V Torstaina, syyskuun 1$ p. —- Tbufeday, Sept. 15,195S •lar la i i i m ml fis*- »sv»; •m m 'lm mä mm, mmm m mmi » 1^ wbo were pulled oat of Lake Ontario durlng the 32-miIe a jPNE spbnsored marathon swim ali blamed the cöld water .foi*their defeat. f l^öme^hadspent only an hour in (he ivater bnt ali were suffering from severe tvramvsinearihesa and limbs paralyzed by the 56-degree water. When Hained , Muta<ä öf Egypt « a oiit, only one swlnuner was left In pursnlt of the «5,000 prize money.: CUff Lunuden of New Toronto, seen above belng tpngnitulated by Marilyn Bell, scored another victory for Canada by beihg iie poly one tocpmplete the^^s^^ Marilyn Bell and Cliff Lumsden have ith 1>eeh cbached by Gos Byden Lumsden for mahy years has been in the 'ze money at the CNE swims. •'"<;.: lin-f tet Dad Be^^ D mi mm (i^^^,; • iisstart liffe as (pärent^: in. ; ^ a \ State of hopeful Ignprance about : Il the taak before us, and long beforie our tmJy has arrived klnd friends who nXave been thrdugh it ali begin to teli "tls-^OTv to brlng hlm, up. j*r:ft^e baby haa no powers vhatever. ^ when he is born. He did not ohoose I hls pärents and qannot shange them i: later If he doesn't llke them. He has j no, say in making any rules they • may Impose. . It is up to us, therefore, to impose ' deAiocracy upon ourselves, and guard r rgalnst beconiing autocrats, aiming to brlng piir- children into a democ- ;: racy, not an [ absplute monarchy, as ; fast as we can. ~ ; This is important for our happintss ' EE well as theifs. Just äs lack of de- • mocracy i n a trade union provokcs re- * voit, SO does the family which relies ' up6n.;"po it because I teli ypuV.arid ' 'Don't answer back!" m K'. ' The second f act • to be faced is that ; I i n trjrlrig to create a democratic family unit, ,we shall cöme up against many • difflculties because of the system of ; Society we live i n. The idea; that Dad is the absolute • ruler pf the family and mother his lieiitenant, dies .very hafd; parti-cularly as small children are some- . tJmes obstinate, obstreperous, noisy, destructive ahd unreasonable enöugh • to make parental fingers just tlhgle . for a smack, If ve recognlze our pwn shortcom- ; ing and ignorance, however, instead • ct trying- to justify any failures in cur h a h d l i n g ö f our children, we have at least a hasis for attempting to or-ganize eur life as a self-disctplined •; group: '•'[:, Discipline comes from our ex-periences pf living together and i n a group In. whicih the. grov,Tl-ups are self-restained and friehdly, share ' problems and look for just sölutlons. self-dlscipline Is most eiaslly learnt^ It is reyeallng to watch hpw child- .ren in a niu«ery cläss learn self-discipline vithput any autheritarian rule at ali. •' • • I They will line-up oheerfully for ttieir turn on the see-säw or serv- ' ing hl the "shop", obviously recog- , Kizing the justice of everyone hav-ing a share. .: I When there are threatspf a bat- ; tie, the teacher, betag experlenced. i ftverts them .by dlstracting öne pf ' the cpmbatants and finding him ' something else to do. • It Is eaisier to do this in a. class ' thah in a family — whlch is one ( leason why nurseries and nursery' be. tchppls are so hadly heeded by children.' But the Jsame attitude can be aim-ed at in the family by pareiits whö live by the tules bf give and take that they propose for.their children. STveets,' treats, cholce of what game to play, and jobs about the house should ali be ^ ä i - e d pUt fairiy from the start. ' ;. :• - • . . ; • , • * ' : • • Some: parents. : having fäiled ; to establish any regular habits of help-ing, try to make children do as they wish; by a .system of rewärds and pUnLshiments 10 cehts to do the Shopping 5 cents to make your bed, and no pocket nioney this week, you've been so naughty. I do not bielieve we should pay children to do as they öught. Nor should pöcket money get mix-ed up with discipUne — except perhaps v;hen a ohlld is expected to cöntri-bute. something toward the cost of Eome deliberate piece of wrecking. His money, !however little, £hould be regarded ais his dwn and paid re-gularly, withPut argumelht. Other parents "believe"* or ''do not believe" in corporal punishment. 'Quite often those who do riot believe i n it will use their tongues to hurt and J:umiliate their children i n ways ttiät can l)e more painful than ä slap. Of coiirse there will be tlmes in every family when slaps and scold- Ings fly. Children scream and kick, and grannies start talking äbout how this would never have happened in tneir young days and blame us for sppiling our children. ^Perhaps fear kept children quieter and more pollte to the grown-ups in the past, but today we want tb be friends u-ith them instead. yre can firovide a .framework that will help us ali toward the self-dlscipline of ecjuality and give .and take. An orderly existence, -with regular meals and bed tlmes, Jand a de-gree of tldiness as their daily ex-perience helps everj-bedy to take I egularity and orderiiness for grant-ed. And children as a matter of fact like an orderly existence,. If father cheerfully helps with the chores, this will teaoh the children that theh: mother is not tbe family slave. .• And the more children are drawn irtto, ali famll}' decisions, . whether planning a holiday or considering vhether mother should get a job to lielp solye a financial crisis, the greater theh; sense of respon^Uity and of unity wlth their parents>wlU anaqians ^^^^^ By ANITA HOBRICK , Anita Horrick from Toronto, whp was chpsen to represent FInnlsb.Canadian youth at the Wprld Youth iF^Ival In Warsaw, after attehdihg (he! festival about whlch f he wrote in ? an earlier article, Joumeyed to the, Söviet Union. In today's article she tells pf hertravels there. Anita Is hbw in Helsinki ahd;wlll be jour-. . neying: back home to Canada in the near future. : A Ipt of excitement was created at the World Federation of Democratic Youth Couhcil Meeting when i t was annöunced that the next Wprld Youth Festival Avpuld be held in Moscöw. But you can imiagihe our excitement when we heard that following the festival a part pf the Canadian delegä-tipn wpuld be going to the Soviet Union, i was one bf the fortiinate onesi- • ON THE WAY We boäriled a t r a i n i n Warsaw a^ng with delegates from many other coun-tries,;; Spaln. Portugal, USA, Austraha, Itäly, and varioiis Latiri American cöuntries. Öui- fhst stop vas Brest where we changed from the Pblish train to a Soyiet train^ We were met by a brass hand; hundreäs pf youth and ibäds of flpwei"s. In the statien square we danced, exchanged greet-ings and souyenirs. We were serveid a delicious meal i h the statiOn dining rbom, whieh incidentälly looks lilce the main dining room i n the Royal York Hotel. On the train it ^seemed we spent most of our time walkihg to and from the dining car. . A t first we protested against ali the eating, hoHreVSr, i t can grow pni you, — which j t did, pcunds and pounds.' •' t • „ . When''we arrived next moming in Mosoow we were met by pioneei;? .and yputh. TSie chiMren showered us wlth flowers,:pinned pipneer scarves.arpund our necks and gave Us their pipneer pins. It was really wonderful,to see SO many happy little faces. I Just couldh't resist: them and gave away ail the rest of my pins, pennies and anything else I could find, They chattered «nerrily in Russian and I tried slgn language. I must have nodded my head at the vrong qu^tion because they begari sweeping rae away. ' A very nice American chap who was on his way to China rescued me as the ptherdelegates were aheady i n the cars. We were takeri to our new home which tiirned out to be the Moscow Hotel facihg the Red Square. They apbiogized profusely for having tp put three people in a twb-persoa suite. Incidentälly, yours truly gpt Ipst coun-tlng the number bf rooms — only f ive including bäth ahd f ive large closets. i t was perplexing trying to decide inr tb which closet I should hang ihy two skirts and three blouses. This was to be pui- • "paidanvaihtopaikka',* and t h ä f s abput ali we had timb fbr bet.; ween oiir visits to Leningrad and the Ukraihe. Moscovir was the stopover point.'.. V LENINGRAD ; Lenihgräd corisisting of Ipl islands is situäted on the estuary bf tiie Neva River. . The f Irst stone of the Ö of Peter and Paul was laid i n 17Ö3, which is cbnsidered the birth of Leningrad; TTie cästie. was cbmpleted in 1733. The spire rises tb the height pf 122 metres and is only one metre in diaineter.. It was Used as a beacon iight. for ships. The f irst ^t)uildings bf the city were biiilt: on the right bank. The first i^land wäs buiit as a fort calied Small Arrow, which was later nioved to tlie Gulf pf Finland. Further down the river pn the;right bank was built the stockexchange building ;yhich still stands. In li825 twp large bevons vvere built i n fiont of it. These are large circuiar co-lumns: decorated wiih the prows. bf ships ali the way lip. In oldeh times wheh foreigh ships vere captured the figurhies from the prows of. the ships were removed an<} displayed at home tb proye the naval might bf the country, ph the left bank in December Square stands the Bronze Horseman, Peter the Great i n Roman robes. This s t ä t u e was carved from.one large slab of granite that .was found i n . Peters-faurgh, which was the name öf the city before. the revolution. We visi-ted Sfö Isaac's Cathedral whlch .waS started i n 1817 and completed in, 1857. It is the secpndtaliest building'in L e ningrad. • ' . ' V\; •We alsp visited the Central Square or Square of Palaces., . I n the centre of this square stands the; Alexander Columri, which was erected i n ' 1834 to commemorate the yictbry of Russia over Napoleon. I t is composed a&>bhe block of granite and stands 47.5 metres high. We visited the Winter Palace bf the Czars and the liermitage: ; The Hermitage has one of the most prized and largest art cqllectibhs i n the World D a . Vinci briginals "Madonna Liitä" and "Madona and Öhild", 41 of-Ru-b6n's original; paintings, 25.orjghial Rembrants including the "Retum of the Prodigal Son" which was painted i n the year of Rembranfs death. Priceless gold and jewelled ornaments lare on display i n the Gold Hall of the Hermitage. Some date back six or seven centuries before our calender when the Skiff people lived in the Crimea and southem parts of the Ukräine. These have been fbund in the hills ahd tombs during excava-tions. V Some tombs of Siberian noble men from the time of Peter the Great have been uncovered. The display includes large brooch watches covered, with preqious Stones, v/atches with wooden mechanisms. One Clock was particularly fascinating. Itwas built as a house with little ani_ mals,. miashrooms frogs which moved «continuoiisly as the clpck ticked away. A l i tiiese things were made long before optical lenses were discovered. Intri-cate costume jewellery and other ornaments were made for coUectioh pur-poses only; The Hermitage was open only to the Czar's immediate family and Special guests. In the huge Throne Rppm where formeriy sat the Czar is a huge map of the USSR 27 meteres square. It is made up pf inarble and precious stohes from the mountainJs. A HISTÖRIC FACTOBY In Stalirigradwe visited the Lomo-nosov Factory which wäs founded by Elizabeth 210 years ago. Up to the time of the Revolution i t produced china for court purposes only. Here we followed the various stages of pro-ductipn, from the artist designing the moulding to the ha.nd painting of the china to ensure its permaheace. Everthing i n the factory was done by händ. ^' THE MOSCOW UNIVERSITY The •Moscow tTniversity stands m ä - jestically facing thhe Moscow River. It is 240 metres high with 32 stories. There are 2,000 lectuire halls,. labora-torjes and auditoriums and s^x floors of libraries. 22,000 students attend and over 5,000 are enrolled i n correspon-dence courses, 1,800 of the students are postgraduates. 59 nationalities are represented. K I E V AND THE U K R A I NE Kiev i n the 7th century became the centre of sbate of three national groups, the Ukraniahs, Byelorussians and Russians. It was f ormeriy calied the Cradle of Russia. It is now the capitol of the lUkrainiän SSR. Much bf the city w a s damaged iduring the war. We visited the Shevchenko Museum where we saw the exact duplicate of the Shevchenko Statue . ä t Palermo, Ontario.. • . We became more acquainted with the "Bard of the Ukraihe", who vias exiled for. his revolutionary poetry c aL ling the people to overthrpw the Czar. His poetry .was bänned until after the great October Revolution. He was not only a.great poet but an outstanding artist and sculptor as well. A COLLECTIVE F A RM We had an opportunity tp visit a Kolkhoz and to study their living con-ditions. Besides their collective work. each peasänt family has a plot of land and their own cottage. At one such cottage we met a peasant woman who was a grandmbther. Her little cottage wasspotlessly clean and tidy with Hbw to WMp Up^^^^^^^^^ By M I K E QUIN • ; Mike Quin, satirist, died eight years ago (Aug. 14, 1947) of cancer at |iis home in Marin County, aeross the bay from San Francisco. The 44-yeär.old writer, whose stories and poems have en-tertained and instructed thou-sands of readers of the labbr press for 15 years, lost a race wlth death to complete another book. The followIng is reprinted from Quln's 1941 bpok, More Dangerous Thoughts. One of the greatest fallacies foster-ed by women is the contention that copking is difficult and requires skill. As a matter of fact there is prac- Ically nothing to it, Take breakfast, What is there . to fixing breakfast? Suppose you find yourself alone i n the house on a Sun-day morning and wander out i n the kitchen in robe and slippers? You want breakfast, Ali right, here's ali you have to do, Open the copler and take twp eggs eut pf the cardbeard box. Set them pn the sink temporarily, Now, what next? Poke around in the cupboards under the sink and you will find a fryhig pan. Put it on the stove. So much for that. Now go back to the cooler and find some bacon. Take it out, lay it next to the eggs on the sink and rub your hands together. Everything is going fine. G P back to the stpve and.look at the frying pan. which is still sitting there. Light a fire under it. then ret um to the sink and get the eggs, carrying one i n each hand. and brlng them over to the stove. No, bring them back again and put them down. You forgot the buttcr. Open the cooler. ftad a dish. Then t um tp the drawer i n the sink, get a knife, out a piece of hutter. No. Wait a minute. . Come to thinl;. of it, i f ybu f ry. the bacon first,: you can use the bacon grease. Scrape the piece of butter back to the dish, return to the sink, pick up the bacon and go back tb the stove. Here hesitate a minute. If you almost made a mistake on the butter you might be making a mistake on the t»acon. Think carefully. If you can't think of anything wrong, put the ba-. con in the pan and watch it curl up. Try to straighten it up with your fingers. Then rush back to the sink, open the drawer and look for the turner. ltwon*t be there, The turner is in another drawer under the dish cupboard. Get your hands bn it and return to the stove as soon as possible. By this time the bacon is cooked to a crisp. Drop the turner and rush for a dish, then back to the stove. Shovel the bacon onto the dish. Ifs a little burned, but Jsome people like it that w a y . . ; .y..';. •' • ' Now go back to the sink and get the eggs, one in each hand.. Crack them on the edge of the pan and ease them intb the bacon grease. Put the shells on the shelf bver the stove and wipe your hands on your robe, Everything is going fine,. Run to the btead hoK. take out the loaf. slice off a few pieces for toast-ing. T P light tlie oven, get down on your hands and knees and peek i n the little hole in the tin. You; won't see anything. ; . Light a match. stick it in the hole. and turn the gas valve, Then wält. Just wait. Suddenly the match will burn tp your finger and you will realize you tumed the wrong valve, thus imperiling yourself with the danger of 'explcsion. Tum off the valve i n a hurry. Find the right valve. Two or three matches should be enough to get the oven Iit, Meanwhile the eggs are cooking furlously. Dash for the sink and find a sauce-pan, F i l l with water and try to brinjg it back to the stove without spillhig. If you will put your tongue between your teeth and balance yoiurself like a tightrope Walker your chances are good, Get it on the stove and'light a fire under it, Thafs fbr' the coffee, Gräb the eggs quickly because they are getting brown at the edges, Dump them onto the plate and you will smell tbast bummg. Plop open the oven and burn your fhigers trying to puli it out. ; • Just then the phone will ring. T um off the oven and run to answer it. You have wasted too much time and the party on the other endl^as hung up. ''^:\..:. . Return quickly, for the bacon is now cold ^ n d the eggs are cooling. The watcr for the coffee is bbiling. Find the coffee pot. Grab a pot holder and lift the pani Wait a minute, Y o u havent put the coffee i n yet. . Drop everything and go get the coffee, •Put the coffee in the pot, pour i n the water a§ä clamp down the l i d . . • Now rusii the bacon and eggs to the table and sit down. You've for-gotten knives and forks, RuSh for the knives and forks, go back. f pr a cup and saucer. WhM:e's the sait and pepper? Get up and find them. Go back and sit down. .Where's the sugar? You forgot to t um off the gas under the pan,. Get some cream from the cooler. The phone rings agahi. The kitchen whirls around and around. You grab onto the edge of the table trying to steady yeurself. The doorbeU rings. The ceiling falls h l . The earth shakes. The fiery hali of the sun comes galloplng at the earth in a hot blaze of destmcticn. And the World colläpses In a mad con-fusion of cold eggs, burned bacon, forks, knives, sugar, cups, saucers and ringlng bells. apples drying over the oven. She wäs a very healthy pleastant woman. Having served us delicious yelloW peärs from her garden,. she told uJs about herself and her family. ' She" was a widow, havhig lost her husbahd i n the .war. She had twp daughters, one married with children and the other was studying medicine at the University of Kiev. This was ijot an exceptional case as i t yfas quite common to have children studyhig in various faculties. We were served a lunch of home-grown. itenis i n the orchard pf the kolkhoz. Just outside of Kiev is the Agricul-turla Biologioal Station which ac-quaints young .pupils with agriculture, experiments .. with plants, crossing; species, etc. Youngsters frpm the second gradeup.spend their summers here studying botany, zeology, dar-winism, plant growing and cattle breedlhg. The a im of this station is not only to teach these youngsters but to be of help i n every way to the surroundihg kolkhpzes.! A little girl pf nhie years pf age had won the prize f pr growing the hest tpmatoes with the highest cphtent pf vitamih C. Every year the best preducts of ypung na_ turalists are exhtbited. The station supplies seed to near-by kelkhpzes. The ciiildren also go tb work b n the farms to exterminate weeds and bugs and to help wi'th the härvest, ' . A GLIMPSE O F MOSCÖW Tn Moscow we visited the Red Square whbre St. Basil's Chiurch istcnds. This church was built during the time of Ivan the Terrible and looks like something out pf the Arabian Nlghts, The first walls of the Kremlin were built i n 1495 and the turrets were added i n the ISth century. l i i frorit of the K r ä n i i n i n the Red Square stands the Mausoleum where the bodies of Lenin and Stalhi lie i n State, Thousands of people visit the Mausoleum ;daily. ' ' r J):;'"• •• r ' When ohe sees iriis large and beau-' tiful country, the work that has been done i n building it, the progress the people are making i n reconstruction and education of young and old, one begins to imderstand the feelings they have towards two bf the greatest men of our time. Lenin and Stalin, I have only dealt-with a small por-tiori of the things we saw during pur visit tp the Spviet.Unien, Some pf it may be fprgbtten i n time, but the hos-pitaUty,; warmth and friendliness .of the Soviet people will live ui our hearts ferever. •••• ' By BOB UTABO Wben one f irst nieets Dr. Fiiasey one dpesn't get the impression tbat be could ever be author of sucb a S e - port, But he is. Hisreport. the result öf mmyye&XB pf painstakihg research, .will soon be i n prlnt, Then for tbe first time, bas-ed on first-hand reportage, a long waitlng public. w i l l be able to get be. hind the scehes and get a true ac-counting of the cash-ual behavior of thb male Canadian boss. •Up iihtil now mauy of Dr. Flimsey's disclosures have been things whlch have Just been whiq?ered i n the loc-kers ä t swänk country clubs, or behind potted' plants i n the lobbies of the better night clubs, • Now it can be told! Now some bf the real f acts are avall-able fpr ali to read and tP ppnder. V Dr. Flimsey tbuchies pn such topics as "are happy mergers made i n hea-veh," "is tickering aroimd with your partner's tape ethical," and "does the stock really bring babies to the rich?" ; The Dr. is well-equippied for the work which he has been / toiling at these past dozen years. Prior to öiis he had been engaged for many years i n studying the incidence of porifc i n pork and beans. Earlier i n his career he had pondered over that old conun-drum 'what came furst the sedimeht or the keg?" We met the Doctor i n his hideaway bn the sixteenth floor of a well-known downtown hotel. . Our own .acouriting pf the meeting, Jptted down on an old shirt cuff, is a scoop of the scooplest order,-. "Bosses," said the doctor at one stage, "are just Uke other pepple, pnly richer." -^^-f And he had equally hemely ebserva-tipns pn other suhject matter ta his upcoming book "Old bahkers never die," he opined, "they just ibse tote. rest." The doctor observed that the heha-- vior pattern of bosses to\yärds cash was something that developed early i n life, "Where most dhildiven like to play house," he said, the boss-type as a child is "the pne whp hplds the mbrtgäge on the 'house' that other children are playing," "Then too", he said, "when the c h i l dren play cowboys and mdians, cops and robbers, or space-men, the boss-type is the orie who sells.the 'gims and ammunition*, usually to" both sides. This, of course. is what business people later refer to as sound diplomatlc business practice." Contrary to widely held beliefs, the Dr, has come up with the iiiformatipn that i t is at f ive and a half that boss-, type children" discover-tiiat they we-ren't brought by the s t o c l c A t seven the idea.of happy mergers being made i n heaven gets kicked into a cöcked tophafc. "Ifs a lot of hpoey," one young- boss to-be-said, "happy mergers are made at daddys Club," '.'The right attitude to cash", said the Doctor, "is something that deve-lopes early In life," Like Ivpry Spap, 99.99^per cent pf the bpss-types he had iaterviewed had picked the right kind pf home to be bom into — a bosses' home. "Beihg a son of a boss was bet- REP( ter than being ctbiex Cbing im cemei." vas t sussmed i t up. ContlDulng i of "attitude''; "vhereas naost! ter thaa to wa the boss-type i ence for wateri "Another Utt titude." said th. The average c: on a watch as time irith; but a watch as so people with." Attitudes' of bom ih the pro by Doc Flimsey servations on hi to the behavior towards cash. . 'Take the bh said. "Everyone heard about th But with boss-t: about the buUs .The Dr.'s boc on old Qenerals rally speaking < and mpre indul relations. "Old Dr., "are a l i en of Directors o And said the Dc litUe joke, this i of them have scores of years,' The Dr. was s self as we left h joke. " A great man selves as we wai T h e n we pon we could break bf • the .cash-ua Quite fränkly ta You can be killed by Atomicbomb rays, or horribly injured,;but Soviet niedical science has proved conclusive-ly that atomic rays can also cure people. • , On July 10, Associated Press 'had a gtory from'. Texas. Arthritis victims are flocking to a Texas farm. There, for a two-dollar f^te, a farmer lets them sit on his ' Uranium Mud." Many peopl^» find r e l i e f B u t doc-tors attack this as nonsense, Ap-parently they don't know that i n the USSR, medical scientists have used atomic muds and waters for twenty-fiye years with outstanding success. Not'for cancer, but for ailments like arthritis. •'-:••,';;./.•: Over. there, people don't "just sit", They get Cxactly controUed atomic treatments, Great numbers of Soviet people, suffering from arthritis, have been completely relieved of their sj-mptoms by meahs of atomic baths, •Thjese baths äre also given to people who have certain forms of heart disease. The baths are not "psy-chological treatments," as some doc-tors here claim. You can see and instanly measure the prof ound effect they. have on the bpdy. I n three cities i n the Soviet Union, "atomic mud" is beihg delivrared to treatmeht clinics, from raiiway tank cars. They ship It thousands of miles, SO artiiritis victims can get treatment witiiout travelling long distances from home. ; '" • : ••••.;••,•', ~\ ^, wiierever these special muds are found, people have used them for ages, But they had no idea what the muds did to them. Or what the dangers were.. U n t i l about 30 years r.go, Soviet scientists began finding exactly how these atomic,materials affect the human body. Most commonly Used atomic muds, and waters, have the gas radon in. them. This gas steadHy "disinte-grates", forming other active siihs-tances. When this liappens, three atomic rays (alpha, beta and gamma) are produced. It is these rays which cause changes In the cells of the body. •;, From a medical report prepaired by 12 leading Soviet doctors, here is a brief, non-technical summary bf '•how v^nd why" atomic baths are used over there. ; • When you take an "atomic bath", the radon gas swiftly. penetrates your skin. It gets right into your blbod-sti- eam. Thus it goes to every part cf your body. At the same time, the air you breathe; (it circulates over surface of bath) takes radon into yoiu: lungs. ; Inside of a mhiute, after you get into an atomic bath,, countless tiny "atomic explosiöns" are taking place inside your bbdy cells. Your J^kln quickly turns pale; atomic radiation makea some blood vessels cbntract. TJiere is a marked change ta the muscle and nerve cells, and that accounts for the relief nbted by arth-ritic patients. . I f s not SP simple as it spunds, Amount of radon i n the mud (pr wa-ter) must be very caref ully adjusted. Depehding pn the patient, the bath .may be stirred, pr left quiet. Time of treatment is highly important. So is the humber of baths. Soviet clinics have many Instruments and tests, used with these treatments. . Db the baths work? Soviet medical men, i n widely separated centres, emphatica.lly declare, that subh "atomic baths" are highly effective. especially for arthritis. # In Tall 1 V. V. Matske' agriculture of • of the deiegat experts that vi! dian farms recei of humour, When the Texas, he prov tb the -tali taie Texans brag ab dbmäih, .he firs have heard of Worth, then in ation that his twice the size ' America togethe Beaten at th Texans withdrei fact that in j with the USSR, rantee that It i n any field. • NICE A girl boughl Christmas lotte: having the ticl tumed but to be ahd she received Ä. reporter a asked: "Why did ticketSl?" "Weil", she sai I dreamed of n sevens are 51, so .S>IA Mike: "Is you Pete: "Is he s have to teli- hi don't come here, and he always oi THIS MODERN .WORLD ; Mother and Dad eavesdropped on four-year-old Kenny's nightly prayer. The fact that Kenny is an ardeht te-leviCTver was evident ta the snap en-ding to his prayer, Said Kenny: "See •you tomorrow. Same thrte. Same station." A N IMPRESSIVE HISTORT "See this jeweUery?" said the young man. "It once belonged to a mlllion-ah- e." • '.'Gosh,'' gsöped his impressed siijter. "What was his name?" "Woolworth," the young fdUow xe-pUed. ;;;. REF fThe St. Louis cently set aside a due book3 could out ftaes. Among ta that day wa3 33 years. A t two < wou}d have been HEUABIE S •.„TVIE GUY ' . . . . T HE C ; - THE GU^ •\i','>i«l*,
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, September 15, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-09-15 |
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 | Vapaus550915 |
Description
Title | 1955-09-15-06 |
OCR text | mm Sivu 4 V Torstaina, syyskuun 1$ p. —- Tbufeday, Sept. 15,195S •lar la i i i m ml fis*- »sv»; •m m 'lm mä mm, mmm m mmi » 1^ wbo were pulled oat of Lake Ontario durlng the 32-miIe a jPNE spbnsored marathon swim ali blamed the cöld water .foi*their defeat. f l^öme^hadspent only an hour in (he ivater bnt ali were suffering from severe tvramvsinearihesa and limbs paralyzed by the 56-degree water. When Hained , Muta<ä öf Egypt « a oiit, only one swlnuner was left In pursnlt of the «5,000 prize money.: CUff Lunuden of New Toronto, seen above belng tpngnitulated by Marilyn Bell, scored another victory for Canada by beihg iie poly one tocpmplete the^^s^^ Marilyn Bell and Cliff Lumsden have ith 1>eeh cbached by Gos Byden Lumsden for mahy years has been in the 'ze money at the CNE swims. •'"<;.: lin-f tet Dad Be^^ D mi mm (i^^^,; • iisstart liffe as (pärent^: in. ; ^ a \ State of hopeful Ignprance about : Il the taak before us, and long beforie our tmJy has arrived klnd friends who nXave been thrdugh it ali begin to teli "tls-^OTv to brlng hlm, up. j*r:ft^e baby haa no powers vhatever. ^ when he is born. He did not ohoose I hls pärents and qannot shange them i: later If he doesn't llke them. He has j no, say in making any rules they • may Impose. . It is up to us, therefore, to impose ' deAiocracy upon ourselves, and guard r rgalnst beconiing autocrats, aiming to brlng piir- children into a democ- ;: racy, not an [ absplute monarchy, as ; fast as we can. ~ ; This is important for our happintss ' EE well as theifs. Just äs lack of de- • mocracy i n a trade union provokcs re- * voit, SO does the family which relies ' up6n.;"po it because I teli ypuV.arid ' 'Don't answer back!" m K'. ' The second f act • to be faced is that ; I i n trjrlrig to create a democratic family unit, ,we shall cöme up against many • difflculties because of the system of ; Society we live i n. The idea; that Dad is the absolute • ruler pf the family and mother his lieiitenant, dies .very hafd; parti-cularly as small children are some- . tJmes obstinate, obstreperous, noisy, destructive ahd unreasonable enöugh • to make parental fingers just tlhgle . for a smack, If ve recognlze our pwn shortcom- ; ing and ignorance, however, instead • ct trying- to justify any failures in cur h a h d l i n g ö f our children, we have at least a hasis for attempting to or-ganize eur life as a self-disctplined •; group: '•'[:, Discipline comes from our ex-periences pf living together and i n a group In. whicih the. grov,Tl-ups are self-restained and friehdly, share ' problems and look for just sölutlons. self-dlscipline Is most eiaslly learnt^ It is reyeallng to watch hpw child- .ren in a niu«ery cläss learn self-discipline vithput any autheritarian rule at ali. •' • • I They will line-up oheerfully for ttieir turn on the see-säw or serv- ' ing hl the "shop", obviously recog- , Kizing the justice of everyone hav-ing a share. .: I When there are threatspf a bat- ; tie, the teacher, betag experlenced. i ftverts them .by dlstracting öne pf ' the cpmbatants and finding him ' something else to do. • It Is eaisier to do this in a. class ' thah in a family — whlch is one ( leason why nurseries and nursery' be. tchppls are so hadly heeded by children.' But the Jsame attitude can be aim-ed at in the family by pareiits whö live by the tules bf give and take that they propose for.their children. STveets,' treats, cholce of what game to play, and jobs about the house should ali be ^ ä i - e d pUt fairiy from the start. ' ;. :• - • . . ; • , • * ' : • • Some: parents. : having fäiled ; to establish any regular habits of help-ing, try to make children do as they wish; by a .system of rewärds and pUnLshiments 10 cehts to do the Shopping 5 cents to make your bed, and no pocket nioney this week, you've been so naughty. I do not bielieve we should pay children to do as they öught. Nor should pöcket money get mix-ed up with discipUne — except perhaps v;hen a ohlld is expected to cöntri-bute. something toward the cost of Eome deliberate piece of wrecking. His money, !however little, £hould be regarded ais his dwn and paid re-gularly, withPut argumelht. Other parents "believe"* or ''do not believe" in corporal punishment. 'Quite often those who do riot believe i n it will use their tongues to hurt and J:umiliate their children i n ways ttiät can l)e more painful than ä slap. Of coiirse there will be tlmes in every family when slaps and scold- Ings fly. Children scream and kick, and grannies start talking äbout how this would never have happened in tneir young days and blame us for sppiling our children. ^Perhaps fear kept children quieter and more pollte to the grown-ups in the past, but today we want tb be friends u-ith them instead. yre can firovide a .framework that will help us ali toward the self-dlscipline of ecjuality and give .and take. An orderly existence, -with regular meals and bed tlmes, Jand a de-gree of tldiness as their daily ex-perience helps everj-bedy to take I egularity and orderiiness for grant-ed. And children as a matter of fact like an orderly existence,. If father cheerfully helps with the chores, this will teaoh the children that theh: mother is not tbe family slave. .• And the more children are drawn irtto, ali famll}' decisions, . whether planning a holiday or considering vhether mother should get a job to lielp solye a financial crisis, the greater theh; sense of respon^Uity and of unity wlth their parents>wlU anaqians ^^^^^ By ANITA HOBRICK , Anita Horrick from Toronto, whp was chpsen to represent FInnlsb.Canadian youth at the Wprld Youth iF^Ival In Warsaw, after attehdihg (he! festival about whlch f he wrote in ? an earlier article, Joumeyed to the, Söviet Union. In today's article she tells pf hertravels there. Anita Is hbw in Helsinki ahd;wlll be jour-. . neying: back home to Canada in the near future. : A Ipt of excitement was created at the World Federation of Democratic Youth Couhcil Meeting when i t was annöunced that the next Wprld Youth Festival Avpuld be held in Moscöw. But you can imiagihe our excitement when we heard that following the festival a part pf the Canadian delegä-tipn wpuld be going to the Soviet Union, i was one bf the fortiinate onesi- • ON THE WAY We boäriled a t r a i n i n Warsaw a^ng with delegates from many other coun-tries,;; Spaln. Portugal, USA, Austraha, Itäly, and varioiis Latiri American cöuntries. Öui- fhst stop vas Brest where we changed from the Pblish train to a Soyiet train^ We were met by a brass hand; hundreäs pf youth and ibäds of flpwei"s. In the statien square we danced, exchanged greet-ings and souyenirs. We were serveid a delicious meal i h the statiOn dining rbom, whieh incidentälly looks lilce the main dining room i n the Royal York Hotel. On the train it ^seemed we spent most of our time walkihg to and from the dining car. . A t first we protested against ali the eating, hoHreVSr, i t can grow pni you, — which j t did, pcunds and pounds.' •' t • „ . When''we arrived next moming in Mosoow we were met by pioneei;? .and yputh. TSie chiMren showered us wlth flowers,:pinned pipneer scarves.arpund our necks and gave Us their pipneer pins. It was really wonderful,to see SO many happy little faces. I Just couldh't resist: them and gave away ail the rest of my pins, pennies and anything else I could find, They chattered «nerrily in Russian and I tried slgn language. I must have nodded my head at the vrong qu^tion because they begari sweeping rae away. ' A very nice American chap who was on his way to China rescued me as the ptherdelegates were aheady i n the cars. We were takeri to our new home which tiirned out to be the Moscow Hotel facihg the Red Square. They apbiogized profusely for having tp put three people in a twb-persoa suite. Incidentälly, yours truly gpt Ipst coun-tlng the number bf rooms — only f ive including bäth ahd f ive large closets. i t was perplexing trying to decide inr tb which closet I should hang ihy two skirts and three blouses. This was to be pui- • "paidanvaihtopaikka',* and t h ä f s abput ali we had timb fbr bet.; ween oiir visits to Leningrad and the Ukraihe. Moscovir was the stopover point.'.. V LENINGRAD ; Lenihgräd corisisting of Ipl islands is situäted on the estuary bf tiie Neva River. . The f Irst stone of the Ö of Peter and Paul was laid i n 17Ö3, which is cbnsidered the birth of Leningrad; TTie cästie. was cbmpleted in 1733. The spire rises tb the height pf 122 metres and is only one metre in diaineter.. It was Used as a beacon iight. for ships. The f irst ^t)uildings bf the city were biiilt: on the right bank. The first i^land wäs buiit as a fort calied Small Arrow, which was later nioved to tlie Gulf pf Finland. Further down the river pn the;right bank was built the stockexchange building ;yhich still stands. In li825 twp large bevons vvere built i n fiont of it. These are large circuiar co-lumns: decorated wiih the prows. bf ships ali the way lip. In oldeh times wheh foreigh ships vere captured the figurhies from the prows of. the ships were removed an<} displayed at home tb proye the naval might bf the country, ph the left bank in December Square stands the Bronze Horseman, Peter the Great i n Roman robes. This s t ä t u e was carved from.one large slab of granite that .was found i n . Peters-faurgh, which was the name öf the city before. the revolution. We visi-ted Sfö Isaac's Cathedral whlch .waS started i n 1817 and completed in, 1857. It is the secpndtaliest building'in L e ningrad. • ' . ' V\; •We alsp visited the Central Square or Square of Palaces., . I n the centre of this square stands the; Alexander Columri, which was erected i n ' 1834 to commemorate the yictbry of Russia over Napoleon. I t is composed a&>bhe block of granite and stands 47.5 metres high. We visited the Winter Palace bf the Czars and the liermitage: ; The Hermitage has one of the most prized and largest art cqllectibhs i n the World D a . Vinci briginals "Madonna Liitä" and "Madona and Öhild", 41 of-Ru-b6n's original; paintings, 25.orjghial Rembrants including the "Retum of the Prodigal Son" which was painted i n the year of Rembranfs death. Priceless gold and jewelled ornaments lare on display i n the Gold Hall of the Hermitage. Some date back six or seven centuries before our calender when the Skiff people lived in the Crimea and southem parts of the Ukräine. These have been fbund in the hills ahd tombs during excava-tions. V Some tombs of Siberian noble men from the time of Peter the Great have been uncovered. The display includes large brooch watches covered, with preqious Stones, v/atches with wooden mechanisms. One Clock was particularly fascinating. Itwas built as a house with little ani_ mals,. miashrooms frogs which moved «continuoiisly as the clpck ticked away. A l i tiiese things were made long before optical lenses were discovered. Intri-cate costume jewellery and other ornaments were made for coUectioh pur-poses only; The Hermitage was open only to the Czar's immediate family and Special guests. In the huge Throne Rppm where formeriy sat the Czar is a huge map of the USSR 27 meteres square. It is made up pf inarble and precious stohes from the mountainJs. A HISTÖRIC FACTOBY In Stalirigradwe visited the Lomo-nosov Factory which wäs founded by Elizabeth 210 years ago. Up to the time of the Revolution i t produced china for court purposes only. Here we followed the various stages of pro-ductipn, from the artist designing the moulding to the ha.nd painting of the china to ensure its permaheace. Everthing i n the factory was done by händ. ^' THE MOSCOW UNIVERSITY The •Moscow tTniversity stands m ä - jestically facing thhe Moscow River. It is 240 metres high with 32 stories. There are 2,000 lectuire halls,. labora-torjes and auditoriums and s^x floors of libraries. 22,000 students attend and over 5,000 are enrolled i n correspon-dence courses, 1,800 of the students are postgraduates. 59 nationalities are represented. K I E V AND THE U K R A I NE Kiev i n the 7th century became the centre of sbate of three national groups, the Ukraniahs, Byelorussians and Russians. It was f ormeriy calied the Cradle of Russia. It is now the capitol of the lUkrainiän SSR. Much bf the city w a s damaged iduring the war. We visited the Shevchenko Museum where we saw the exact duplicate of the Shevchenko Statue . ä t Palermo, Ontario.. • . We became more acquainted with the "Bard of the Ukraihe", who vias exiled for. his revolutionary poetry c aL ling the people to overthrpw the Czar. His poetry .was bänned until after the great October Revolution. He was not only a.great poet but an outstanding artist and sculptor as well. A COLLECTIVE F A RM We had an opportunity tp visit a Kolkhoz and to study their living con-ditions. Besides their collective work. each peasänt family has a plot of land and their own cottage. At one such cottage we met a peasant woman who was a grandmbther. Her little cottage wasspotlessly clean and tidy with Hbw to WMp Up^^^^^^^^^ By M I K E QUIN • ; Mike Quin, satirist, died eight years ago (Aug. 14, 1947) of cancer at |iis home in Marin County, aeross the bay from San Francisco. The 44-yeär.old writer, whose stories and poems have en-tertained and instructed thou-sands of readers of the labbr press for 15 years, lost a race wlth death to complete another book. The followIng is reprinted from Quln's 1941 bpok, More Dangerous Thoughts. One of the greatest fallacies foster-ed by women is the contention that copking is difficult and requires skill. As a matter of fact there is prac- Ically nothing to it, Take breakfast, What is there . to fixing breakfast? Suppose you find yourself alone i n the house on a Sun-day morning and wander out i n the kitchen in robe and slippers? You want breakfast, Ali right, here's ali you have to do, Open the copler and take twp eggs eut pf the cardbeard box. Set them pn the sink temporarily, Now, what next? Poke around in the cupboards under the sink and you will find a fryhig pan. Put it on the stove. So much for that. Now go back to the cooler and find some bacon. Take it out, lay it next to the eggs on the sink and rub your hands together. Everything is going fine. G P back to the stpve and.look at the frying pan. which is still sitting there. Light a fire under it. then ret um to the sink and get the eggs, carrying one i n each hand. and brlng them over to the stove. No, bring them back again and put them down. You forgot the buttcr. Open the cooler. ftad a dish. Then t um tp the drawer i n the sink, get a knife, out a piece of hutter. No. Wait a minute. . Come to thinl;. of it, i f ybu f ry. the bacon first,: you can use the bacon grease. Scrape the piece of butter back to the dish, return to the sink, pick up the bacon and go back tb the stove. Here hesitate a minute. If you almost made a mistake on the butter you might be making a mistake on the t»acon. Think carefully. If you can't think of anything wrong, put the ba-. con in the pan and watch it curl up. Try to straighten it up with your fingers. Then rush back to the sink, open the drawer and look for the turner. ltwon*t be there, The turner is in another drawer under the dish cupboard. Get your hands bn it and return to the stove as soon as possible. By this time the bacon is cooked to a crisp. Drop the turner and rush for a dish, then back to the stove. Shovel the bacon onto the dish. Ifs a little burned, but Jsome people like it that w a y . . ; .y..';. •' • ' Now go back to the sink and get the eggs, one in each hand.. Crack them on the edge of the pan and ease them intb the bacon grease. Put the shells on the shelf bver the stove and wipe your hands on your robe, Everything is going fine,. Run to the btead hoK. take out the loaf. slice off a few pieces for toast-ing. T P light tlie oven, get down on your hands and knees and peek i n the little hole in the tin. You; won't see anything. ; . Light a match. stick it in the hole. and turn the gas valve, Then wält. Just wait. Suddenly the match will burn tp your finger and you will realize you tumed the wrong valve, thus imperiling yourself with the danger of 'explcsion. Tum off the valve i n a hurry. Find the right valve. Two or three matches should be enough to get the oven Iit, Meanwhile the eggs are cooking furlously. Dash for the sink and find a sauce-pan, F i l l with water and try to brinjg it back to the stove without spillhig. If you will put your tongue between your teeth and balance yoiurself like a tightrope Walker your chances are good, Get it on the stove and'light a fire under it, Thafs fbr' the coffee, Gräb the eggs quickly because they are getting brown at the edges, Dump them onto the plate and you will smell tbast bummg. Plop open the oven and burn your fhigers trying to puli it out. ; • Just then the phone will ring. T um off the oven and run to answer it. You have wasted too much time and the party on the other endl^as hung up. ''^:\..:. . Return quickly, for the bacon is now cold ^ n d the eggs are cooling. The watcr for the coffee is bbiling. Find the coffee pot. Grab a pot holder and lift the pani Wait a minute, Y o u havent put the coffee i n yet. . Drop everything and go get the coffee, •Put the coffee in the pot, pour i n the water a§ä clamp down the l i d . . • Now rusii the bacon and eggs to the table and sit down. You've for-gotten knives and forks, RuSh for the knives and forks, go back. f pr a cup and saucer. WhM:e's the sait and pepper? Get up and find them. Go back and sit down. .Where's the sugar? You forgot to t um off the gas under the pan,. Get some cream from the cooler. The phone rings agahi. The kitchen whirls around and around. You grab onto the edge of the table trying to steady yeurself. The doorbeU rings. The ceiling falls h l . The earth shakes. The fiery hali of the sun comes galloplng at the earth in a hot blaze of destmcticn. And the World colläpses In a mad con-fusion of cold eggs, burned bacon, forks, knives, sugar, cups, saucers and ringlng bells. apples drying over the oven. She wäs a very healthy pleastant woman. Having served us delicious yelloW peärs from her garden,. she told uJs about herself and her family. ' She" was a widow, havhig lost her husbahd i n the .war. She had twp daughters, one married with children and the other was studying medicine at the University of Kiev. This was ijot an exceptional case as i t yfas quite common to have children studyhig in various faculties. We were served a lunch of home-grown. itenis i n the orchard pf the kolkhoz. Just outside of Kiev is the Agricul-turla Biologioal Station which ac-quaints young .pupils with agriculture, experiments .. with plants, crossing; species, etc. Youngsters frpm the second gradeup.spend their summers here studying botany, zeology, dar-winism, plant growing and cattle breedlhg. The a im of this station is not only to teach these youngsters but to be of help i n every way to the surroundihg kolkhpzes.! A little girl pf nhie years pf age had won the prize f pr growing the hest tpmatoes with the highest cphtent pf vitamih C. Every year the best preducts of ypung na_ turalists are exhtbited. The station supplies seed to near-by kelkhpzes. The ciiildren also go tb work b n the farms to exterminate weeds and bugs and to help wi'th the härvest, ' . A GLIMPSE O F MOSCÖW Tn Moscow we visited the Red Square whbre St. Basil's Chiurch istcnds. This church was built during the time of Ivan the Terrible and looks like something out pf the Arabian Nlghts, The first walls of the Kremlin were built i n 1495 and the turrets were added i n the ISth century. l i i frorit of the K r ä n i i n i n the Red Square stands the Mausoleum where the bodies of Lenin and Stalhi lie i n State, Thousands of people visit the Mausoleum ;daily. ' ' r J):;'"• •• r ' When ohe sees iriis large and beau-' tiful country, the work that has been done i n building it, the progress the people are making i n reconstruction and education of young and old, one begins to imderstand the feelings they have towards two bf the greatest men of our time. Lenin and Stalin, I have only dealt-with a small por-tiori of the things we saw during pur visit tp the Spviet.Unien, Some pf it may be fprgbtten i n time, but the hos-pitaUty,; warmth and friendliness .of the Soviet people will live ui our hearts ferever. •••• ' By BOB UTABO Wben one f irst nieets Dr. Fiiasey one dpesn't get the impression tbat be could ever be author of sucb a S e - port, But he is. Hisreport. the result öf mmyye&XB pf painstakihg research, .will soon be i n prlnt, Then for tbe first time, bas-ed on first-hand reportage, a long waitlng public. w i l l be able to get be. hind the scehes and get a true ac-counting of the cash-ual behavior of thb male Canadian boss. •Up iihtil now mauy of Dr. Flimsey's disclosures have been things whlch have Just been whiq?ered i n the loc-kers ä t swänk country clubs, or behind potted' plants i n the lobbies of the better night clubs, • Now it can be told! Now some bf the real f acts are avall-able fpr ali to read and tP ppnder. V Dr. Flimsey tbuchies pn such topics as "are happy mergers made i n hea-veh," "is tickering aroimd with your partner's tape ethical," and "does the stock really bring babies to the rich?" ; The Dr. is well-equippied for the work which he has been / toiling at these past dozen years. Prior to öiis he had been engaged for many years i n studying the incidence of porifc i n pork and beans. Earlier i n his career he had pondered over that old conun-drum 'what came furst the sedimeht or the keg?" We met the Doctor i n his hideaway bn the sixteenth floor of a well-known downtown hotel. . Our own .acouriting pf the meeting, Jptted down on an old shirt cuff, is a scoop of the scooplest order,-. "Bosses," said the doctor at one stage, "are just Uke other pepple, pnly richer." -^^-f And he had equally hemely ebserva-tipns pn other suhject matter ta his upcoming book "Old bahkers never die," he opined, "they just ibse tote. rest." The doctor observed that the heha-- vior pattern of bosses to\yärds cash was something that developed early i n life, "Where most dhildiven like to play house," he said, the boss-type as a child is "the pne whp hplds the mbrtgäge on the 'house' that other children are playing," "Then too", he said, "when the c h i l dren play cowboys and mdians, cops and robbers, or space-men, the boss-type is the orie who sells.the 'gims and ammunition*, usually to" both sides. This, of course. is what business people later refer to as sound diplomatlc business practice." Contrary to widely held beliefs, the Dr, has come up with the iiiformatipn that i t is at f ive and a half that boss-, type children" discover-tiiat they we-ren't brought by the s t o c l c A t seven the idea.of happy mergers being made i n heaven gets kicked into a cöcked tophafc. "Ifs a lot of hpoey," one young- boss to-be-said, "happy mergers are made at daddys Club," '.'The right attitude to cash", said the Doctor, "is something that deve-lopes early In life," Like Ivpry Spap, 99.99^per cent pf the bpss-types he had iaterviewed had picked the right kind pf home to be bom into — a bosses' home. "Beihg a son of a boss was bet- REP( ter than being ctbiex Cbing im cemei." vas t sussmed i t up. ContlDulng i of "attitude''; "vhereas naost! ter thaa to wa the boss-type i ence for wateri "Another Utt titude." said th. The average c: on a watch as time irith; but a watch as so people with." Attitudes' of bom ih the pro by Doc Flimsey servations on hi to the behavior towards cash. . 'Take the bh said. "Everyone heard about th But with boss-t: about the buUs .The Dr.'s boc on old Qenerals rally speaking < and mpre indul relations. "Old Dr., "are a l i en of Directors o And said the Dc litUe joke, this i of them have scores of years,' The Dr. was s self as we left h joke. " A great man selves as we wai T h e n we pon we could break bf • the .cash-ua Quite fränkly ta You can be killed by Atomicbomb rays, or horribly injured,;but Soviet niedical science has proved conclusive-ly that atomic rays can also cure people. • , On July 10, Associated Press 'had a gtory from'. Texas. Arthritis victims are flocking to a Texas farm. There, for a two-dollar f^te, a farmer lets them sit on his ' Uranium Mud." Many peopl^» find r e l i e f B u t doc-tors attack this as nonsense, Ap-parently they don't know that i n the USSR, medical scientists have used atomic muds and waters for twenty-fiye years with outstanding success. Not'for cancer, but for ailments like arthritis. •'-:••,';;./.•: Over. there, people don't "just sit", They get Cxactly controUed atomic treatments, Great numbers of Soviet people, suffering from arthritis, have been completely relieved of their sj-mptoms by meahs of atomic baths, •Thjese baths äre also given to people who have certain forms of heart disease. The baths are not "psy-chological treatments," as some doc-tors here claim. You can see and instanly measure the prof ound effect they. have on the bpdy. I n three cities i n the Soviet Union, "atomic mud" is beihg delivrared to treatmeht clinics, from raiiway tank cars. They ship It thousands of miles, SO artiiritis victims can get treatment witiiout travelling long distances from home. ; '" • : ••••.;••,•', ~\ ^, wiierever these special muds are found, people have used them for ages, But they had no idea what the muds did to them. Or what the dangers were.. U n t i l about 30 years r.go, Soviet scientists began finding exactly how these atomic,materials affect the human body. Most commonly Used atomic muds, and waters, have the gas radon in. them. This gas steadHy "disinte-grates", forming other active siihs-tances. When this liappens, three atomic rays (alpha, beta and gamma) are produced. It is these rays which cause changes In the cells of the body. •;, From a medical report prepaired by 12 leading Soviet doctors, here is a brief, non-technical summary bf '•how v^nd why" atomic baths are used over there. ; • When you take an "atomic bath", the radon gas swiftly. penetrates your skin. It gets right into your blbod-sti- eam. Thus it goes to every part cf your body. At the same time, the air you breathe; (it circulates over surface of bath) takes radon into yoiu: lungs. ; Inside of a mhiute, after you get into an atomic bath,, countless tiny "atomic explosiöns" are taking place inside your bbdy cells. Your J^kln quickly turns pale; atomic radiation makea some blood vessels cbntract. TJiere is a marked change ta the muscle and nerve cells, and that accounts for the relief nbted by arth-ritic patients. . I f s not SP simple as it spunds, Amount of radon i n the mud (pr wa-ter) must be very caref ully adjusted. Depehding pn the patient, the bath .may be stirred, pr left quiet. Time of treatment is highly important. So is the humber of baths. Soviet clinics have many Instruments and tests, used with these treatments. . Db the baths work? Soviet medical men, i n widely separated centres, emphatica.lly declare, that subh "atomic baths" are highly effective. especially for arthritis. # In Tall 1 V. V. Matske' agriculture of • of the deiegat experts that vi! dian farms recei of humour, When the Texas, he prov tb the -tali taie Texans brag ab dbmäih, .he firs have heard of Worth, then in ation that his twice the size ' America togethe Beaten at th Texans withdrei fact that in j with the USSR, rantee that It i n any field. • NICE A girl boughl Christmas lotte: having the ticl tumed but to be ahd she received Ä. reporter a asked: "Why did ticketSl?" "Weil", she sai I dreamed of n sevens are 51, so .S>IA Mike: "Is you Pete: "Is he s have to teli- hi don't come here, and he always oi THIS MODERN .WORLD ; Mother and Dad eavesdropped on four-year-old Kenny's nightly prayer. The fact that Kenny is an ardeht te-leviCTver was evident ta the snap en-ding to his prayer, Said Kenny: "See •you tomorrow. Same thrte. Same station." A N IMPRESSIVE HISTORT "See this jeweUery?" said the young man. "It once belonged to a mlllion-ah- e." • '.'Gosh,'' gsöped his impressed siijter. "What was his name?" "Woolworth," the young fdUow xe-pUed. ;;;. REF fThe St. Louis cently set aside a due book3 could out ftaes. Among ta that day wa3 33 years. A t two < wou}d have been HEUABIE S •.„TVIE GUY ' . . . . T HE C ; - THE GU^ •\i','>i«l*, |
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