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Sivu 4 Torstaina, jouluTcuun 1 p. — Thurs<3ay, .Dc-c, ^, iUoTj
W o w s y Defends H i s Ideals
»y MIKi: UVIS
(Any rescmbtance brtween tba,'
•• racter» In this j.lory atid «ome
characlers silli v/alklojr *he
«treets Is r-ur-Jy 'ntentlonai-l
"W?,> a_-'-et' r^-n^o "Must v,e
fitick bones m ci:r ilor^is and slit our j
carÄ? Jast t ve .'ne or.ö gcod reason.
Thafs ali I '. ••.
V;cwsy hai; s;;i:ied 23 If he dldxi't
'/.nciw whether to t?.l:e hLs friend s e -
r.ously, "W: it 1 .i. I rf c a7.ne.--s are
you talkntg"»' 1-» «vs^td ' Do you
want us 10 :'ui:n!ng around In
froiit of ever-osi;; vathautany bones
In our nasf >? J3:>r t be vulgar.
Ecoietimss I thinr y3u'v3 Kot the.
lllthiest mlnd m tne tribe,"
They were slti-nt' m the afternoon
Bun by the eclge of t,jr,rm:r. Wowsy
f anyone ha<i crverheard
"Havc you gone crazy?" he .askcd, j
' a little out of patlence. 'Dt» you
i want to get both cf ur, stafced to an
•• ant hali?"
( "I can'i:h£]p it", «aid Bongo."!
cant go on Jivjng ]ike this, I don't
v/ant to kiU men. I don't want to
eat the-ni. I don't want to sacnfice
every third chUd to: the alta? of
Gof^ey Gov.-,"
"Alien ideas from the other side
of the river". accused Wowsy. . "V/e
w'on't have anything to do with any-th:
n« that wasn't thought of on th;s
side of the river. We don't like
forelgn isms"
"What2ver you say, we should stop
kllhng and eatingeach other."
Wowsy shcok his head tolerantly.
A haJf amu.sed smile came over his
OPINIONS C
ALL
POUTK
AREC
v/as sharpenmg \vu br..crd.r j l:nife., ^^^^j^, Y ^ ^ . U
Bpngo wa5 dipping 2 n c w ; in. poison.
B^hind them the villase nestled in a
jypgle clearing, Modern huts of
jnpd and stlcks Uned the street.
Beautiful sun-bleached human skulls
on sticks decorated every dwell-i
i ^ testifylng to .the prosperity of
t l ^ community. The temple of the
Gpod Gocey Gow was resplendent
vlth more than a thousand skulLs
in'rows and tiers until Itshone in the
stOT like the ;snow on the highest
mpixntam, its sheer beauty dominat-in;
B the Jvillage. •
On this day most of. the people
cf Soggy Mop were in: their huts
sleeptng of f the effects of the pre-vipua
nlghfs feastlng.
. " I don't know." said Bongo. "Scme-tioies
it won-les me. Take last night.
for instance. It doesn*t seem right
to me that hunian belngs should cat
each other."
Wow.sy spat in dlsgust. "What's
the matteja w:'th you lately? Are you
losing your appetlte? I watöhed you
last night, you hardlytoyed wath your
fcod."
"Think what you please, but it lsn't
right," said Bongo. "Human beings
should noteat each other."
"Good Gooey Gow!" exclaimed iWo-wgy.
"You can't dlctate to people
wl>at they're gojng to eat. Men have
ali^ays «aten each other and always
wi|l. ifs natural. You can't change
human natur^."
*rWell.',;theiJ^ed 'Boljjhosjdon-t eart
ea^h othiH" ' \\ \
i!R''owsy started ds if someone, had
jabbed h-m vvith a ipear. His'head
eiikcd from ^ side to side tq see if
live to see it. Why don'tyou knuckl»
dov/n and make something of your-
.self? There was a time when you
vi^ere aS' upright and promising as
any voung man in the village; . If
you had devoted half as much time
to: making a success of yourself as
you have to sneaking off m the
jungle to iLsten to ths Red Bolshos.
you would have over a hundred
skulls decoratingr^our front yard by
this trne
vi'ive#-w>-rr3Ti
You could have "as many
XSieased."
"I Icve my fellow men," said Bongo
.stufabornly.
•'So da l " , ägreed Wowsy. With
gravy on them/'
) " l want a bettJer world", said
Bongor- " I .\von't' go on hvmg like
th.s "
Somshovv; Wowsy's hcart went out
to the b3y. He laid aside his be-heading
knife and put one hand on
his shoulder.. "Son, l don't like to
hcar you talking thLs way. You have
a mother. She's gettmg old. Pretty
socn she won*t ba: able to chop wood
any morc and we'll b2 drovvnmg her.
Do yoii. \vant her to go to Gocey
Gow fseling her boy was a failure?
Two measly llttle ..skulls m your
yard. Thafs ali you'.ve got. People
are beginning to taik. You're not
getbmg any younger, you know. The
sooner you get this radical foolish-ness
out of you, the sooner you are
going: to liave ä hundred skulls and
le'?U)}söit. upotft MhOfntenfet you
(AU| vzTa4ih^t^M°^^ you; fe^ ' l once" had ideals my-
'se!f. • We 'ah did. But we get over
•them. Oi.vdlzp.tion Is too. ;ol(J. yifeVe
Timely Quotes
HOVV CAX TlfEV BE SUBE7
. Wa»bmgton. — The Army is faced
vith a .Security problem i h reverse,
says Army Secretary Brucker,
.Some. men are avoidmg military
ser/ice by cla-iming: they. are Com-mumits,
althöugh the Arrny is pretty
.sure they are not,.Brucker disclosed.
•.—. N. Y. Post.
L E T ' S INVITE T H E M OVER
WnO .SAID IT?
"Although the employer directs his
.vPi' forces agamst any ilnd of union
aoLivity. he cloaks his hostility under
the pretext that he is defending him-self
and the counti-y against Com-mun-
sm."
The quotation was made by a Se-nate
Gommittee of the USA Government
— the LaFollette Committee —•
v.'i:ic.T mvestigated the major corpo-rations
of the country. The Committee
di£clo.-;ed that almo.st every big company
spent miilions of doUars each
year on the cmployment of labor
spies and .stool-pjgeons. The purpase
of these hirelmgs was to seek to
smash unioas. — UE. News.
STUDY WAR NO MORE
Inc Paios Le Monde recently made
the follovving appropnate comment
on the U.S. Army's traming course
to .simulate "torture" of prisoners of
v/ar at the hands of the enemy;
."Unlcs.s they decide to shoot their
scldiens in order to teach -them
.how to dic, one can .scarcely see how
the Americans can further extend
their experrmentai studies in mifitary
trainmg." .
Czechs Have Hopes of Winning
piympic Hockey Title This Year
advanced too far for you to change
ani>-ch:ng .now. Ifs the fellow who
geLs the skulls wJio amounts to
eometning^ You can't change that.
^Vhat: inoent^ve ;would there be- for
inen jtq: go :.on Jöllmg? • .Civilizatloti
\vould coUapse.. ;Opme mDWil WhB6
eay we forget allabout it.. Lef s you
md me go and hävö'a•ljtttelfi<imeohe
o cat. and sä,y iiö "rtio^e'aliout' Ihis^
led • Bolfeho radicälism.*'
The Medical P
VEat plenty: Qf..jQnions and you'il
keep healUiy l"i ^V^Tftatis aij ^Id sayH
ln«f but.there:'^ avfiurprlslng äinaunti
of„,truth in It.
Por thousandsof years, onions and
gaylic have been used as medlcincs
ln>many different parts of the -»orld.
The slaves who bmlt the Pyramids
In^-Ancient Egypt, more than 4,000
years ago, didn't have a very exciting
diet. But their meals ahvays con-talned
garlic or onions.
The F.jyptians, indeed, used onions
mcifche treatment of manv disea^es —
as'did Chlnese and Hindu medicme,
and the carly Slav.s.
Onicn and garlic were used for
cuiins warts, for stoppmg haemorr-ha*
g"es, for anthrax and certam other
diseases.
I>r*REALITY
So much for histoi-y. What, really.
are. the powers of Dr. Onion? Has
. hosany genuine medicmal quahties?
- Before answermg the question, let
us remembfr the sensatuon we ali ex-perlence
when peeling onions. Even
when we tiy to keep them at arms
leiigth, \ve stiU just can't help burst-mg^
mto tears.
The doctor explams thiis mdre pro-saically,
by savmg that the onion
gives off volatile substances which
irritate tne mucous membrane of the
cye — suostanccs called phytoncides.
Other plants have similar qualities,
some more, some less. The bu-ch
the juiuper and the oak pepper and
mnstard. cheriy and blackcurrant
leaves are examples. So are citrus
plants.
A well-known Sovict biologist, Pro-fessor
B. P. Topkin. has studied the
elfect of these substances on miax)-
crganisms.
He found that if they were placed
close to drops of waXer teeming witli
micrcbss, ali the mxrobes perished
\vith;n a quartcr of an hour.
'When he used a crushed clove of
garhc, he found that thej- ali died
veli \vithin a.mmute. .
owers or uoc^^,
EXPERI>IENT^ ,
In his loiipt&U3n^}\}W^^_ ^
His experimentei«dirfi?raedi*hat gar^
He. omon,- pepper ;^nd > s^vet^t Lother,
plants possesaed the mo$t .^iiow{erfiä?
anti-mi i iici uriovbuee 'pp ri voppte- Trti iiet »s.. . , . V ; , ' .
He establshed, for instance, that
if you chew only a small clove of
garlic your mouth becomes complete^
ly sterile. For ali the microbes in
the mouth immediately.die.
EFFECTIVE IVIETIIOD
For a long time, Dr. P. Protopopov
•had baen workmg on the use of onion
and garlic in the treatment of tuber-iculosis.'
Tt has been establislied irre-futably,"
he said, "that onion and
garlic phytoncides kili the tubercular
baciUus outside the organism.
"In the opinion of many scicntists"
he goes on, "one of the niost ef-fective
methods of combating tuber-culosLs
13 the admmistration of phytoncides
directly into the trachea.'
.,By means of special tubes a measured
quant-.ty of liquid phytoncide prepa-ration
is Introduced into the patienfs
windpipe. so that ali the tissues of
the lung are bathed with phytoncides.
Individual patients have been cured
of tubeiculosis by this mcthod by
some doctors mcluding Dr. Protopopov
hlmsel f.
A vast amount of research has bcsn
carned out, but Dr. Protpopov insists.
it IS "only a begmning".
FIRST RESULTS
• Tuberculosis specialists, biologists.
and chemists have still to cari'>' out
a great deal of basic research and
the practical details of the treatment
have to bc wofked out.
The Chemical composition of these
health-givmg substances have to' be
studied together witli their action and
effect on the tissues of the lung.
heart. etc. :
"But even the fu-st . results" he
says, "appear to vis to be exceedingly
out good prospects."
Of course ifs no good for thereader
kitcheh and
OTtions
in«Sightlj; . \ " fj -5. %X
In some instances the Immo- .
derate use of onion and garlic
may be harmful. For this reason .
you should alwaysconsult a doctor
ffrst.
AVherevor these '•pytoncideV plants
grc!\v — m ficld. in.iorest, m steppe
m nvers. :n ponds — eveiywhere they
exude m a .day as muci as 80 Ib.
oi volatile substances .— enough to
rid a big tcvn of bactena!
Tms ni another reason: why the
plaiitnifi cl srreenery m populated
areas is so 'impjrtant. Plants are
our tireics and reliable dcfenders
agaiMst microbes. : ...
Or.ion p.nd garhc retain tnese pro-cei-
ties f?r a very long time.
In Prcfsssor Topsm's laboratorj',
a pu'.p made of garlic was kept.on a
saucei- .l:u- 200 hours before it com-
.pletclv dned cut.
B'.it Xhvn. as soon as it was dam-penod
wuh \vater, it once again-be-.
gan vigorously giving off "phytoncides."
AGAINST DISEASE
So today. as they did in the past,
doctors are usmg tne onion m the
battle against d:sease. .
Garlic IS used frequently with success
in tne. treatment of gastric-in-testmal
diseases and fungoid and
uicerous diseases of tne siin.
It IS used to treat pneumonia m
children heart diseases, uicerous sto-nmtit;
s.and other complaints. . »
; Many cxperiments liave confirmed
that garhc .-cills off the microbes of
typhoid. cysentery and cholera. • It
ip very effcctive m treatlng purulent
prcce-=ses m the lungs and_purulent
s.-iin wounds.
The National Hockey Lcague
season is already seven weeks old,
and with the Olympic Winter
Games not far off, some international
hockey news «rould not
be out of place. John Stetrart, on
a recent visit to Prague, has the .
foUowing to say about the hockey-mad
city of Prague:
I was able to take in a game the
other night and had an opportunity
afterof chattmg witn two of Czecho-slovakia's
players — Vladimir^ Za-brodsky,
who rates next to Zatopek
in popularity nere, and Charles Gut,
who will captain , Czechoslovakias
national team m the Olimpic Winter
Games m Italy next Pebruary.
Hemember ali that wordage about
how "rough" the Canadian Penticton
V:'3 were when they played here last
year? I asked Messrs. Zabrodsky and
Gut about it as my lead-off question.
They don't agree. They don't tliink
the Canadians were rough (not even
the Warwick brothers, who are known
to more people in Prague than Louis
St. Laurent or the capital of Can-ada).
• .
"They played hard and handed out
hard bodychecks — but thafs something
we need to learn too," Zabrodsky
told. me: is English. Gut
nodded his head when the question
was translated: f or him.
"As a matter of fact," the star
centre of ,the Prague Spartak team
contmued, "we could use two or
three good Canadian coacnes to teach
• us S^our hard game."
: The Spartaks made monkeys of
the SWISS team in the game here. The
•scote was 12-T-l and should have been
,twice that. The Prague players are
'still a "bit weak m shootmg, tend to'
look loät' around the goal, mediocve
ia goal and mdulge In too much pas-sm
©LYou'd'ofteri'see a player (against
a widö Open' Swiss defense) well 'in
from the blue-line and m a position
ito-drive right i n on goaLTnstead, he
Ijvould.pass, often blindly.
li:^ I" mentioned. these ci'iticisms to
[fcabrodsky and he not only heartily
agreed, he even quöted me m the
&iext-morning's Prague sports paper!
}| But don't let me overstress the
^Weaknesses. They're a smart team,
good skaters and playmakers, good
backcheckers and strong defensively
even without the bodycheck. And Zabrodsky,
Gut and one or two others
can also handle their sticks-with-.
puckas good as most Canadian players
these days.. If the Czechoslovak
Olympic team is made up of such
players, they'llbe a mighty hard
team to beat.
We also discussed.that controversy
over ' professionalis.Ti". Here's the
answer: Ali the players ihave steady
jobs and are only permitted to play
'Durmg the war Soviet scientists
successfuUy used onion pulp m'treat-mg
purulent wounds, which refused
to heal after amputations of the leg
at the hip. . . :
With the help of onion, horse-
Tac;sh ana jumper puIp, thousands of
wcnien have been cured to trichomo-nad
colpitis.
IN FOODSTUFFS '
Tnese plants are also of import-ance
for the food industrj'.
Onion and garlic.added to various
foodstuffs make it possible to pre-serve
them for considerably ionger
periods.
If fresh fjsh be surrounded with
grated horse-radlsh omon or garlic
— or.better still, surrounded vvith
mustard paste — the fish will keep
far Ionger than in ordinary condi-tions.
,
Meat placed in the atmosphere gi-ven
off by cherry-laurel leaves and
mustard keeps f or many months.
In a glass vessel in Professor Top-kin's
laboratory a hard-boiled egg Is
suspended. At the bottom of the
vessel is a small quantity of mustard.
The egg is quite iresh, there are
hockey if their job performance is up^.
to standard- Zabrodsky is a salesman;
Gut IS a bookkeeper. Others work m
factories. They usually practise from
7 to 9 m the morning. but their job
pay contmues for the time thsy must i
take off for travellmg. Some even
put in Sunday work to make it up.
Czechoslovakia has more than 50,-
000 hockey players today and 17 ar-tificial
ice rin-cs. ID is becoming a
national.sport — even more popular
than football (largely, l suppose, be-caiise
the Czechoslovak football team
IS vei-y weak).
And they are deadly serious about.
wmning the Olympic Games at Cort-ina.
d'Ampezzo in Italy. The news-paper
Czecholovak Sport says: "We
are not modest. Even if we were con-tent
.with; third place in the 6th
Olympic Games in Oslo. m 1952 . .•:.
this year we believe our reprensenta-tives
will achieve a n even better re-sult
. . . We expect both fair play:
and good behavior on.the par.t of
our players as well as success . . ."
Vladimir Bouzek, . coach of the
national team, will' chose his team
and take i t to the High Tatra moun-tains
for trainmg onnatural ice, such
as they expect i n Italy. Before that;
visits to France, Britain and Sweden.
As for the. games, Zabrodsky sizes
i t up this way: "Not only.is Canada
now fightlng for the title of. Olympic
champions, but another f our as well
— the U.S.S.R., Swed^n, the U.S. and
Czechoslovakia.. The participation of
the U.S.S.R. has ; introduced new
elements into Ice hockey and toge-ther
-vith. better performances by
Sweden and Czechoslovakia it' can be
assumed that' the' Canadians will
have to send their really best team
to Euiope." • : •.' •
He admitted, however,- that European
ihockey, did' not yets measur^.
•up itp|id!ajiöd|an, espöc|al|y. Uirl^^o^yr}
checkmg and goal-tendmg. He be-lieves
players-|iere must aisp learJi to
master-man^. dlfferervt pcisitidris,yaiiä
used the Penticton V s as his example,
explaining how coach Grant "VVanvick
had constantly cbanged his Iines
at last year's World. Championshlp
games. • • •
Ämateur Santee
Wins Reinstatement
After Suspension
The suspension and subsequent reinstatement
of Wes Santee, by the
U.S.'s Amateur Athletic Union, has
attracted a considerable atlention
and mterest m track and field circles
on this cont4nent.
Santee, a top mile-runner, losfc his
amateur status for acceptmg. $1,127.85
m expense money for three track
meets m California between May 14
and May 22. (Tlie A.A.U. permits
payment. to an amateur athlete of
$15.00 a. day for livmg expenses plus
travellmg. f are.)
Since this. was not the first time
Santee received more than the stipu-lated
amount pubhc. opimon was
aroused to such an extent that the
AJi..U. was swamped with proteits.
The result — Santee's suspension.
Sant«e claims that the A.A.U. expense
quota isn't enough for him
and does not aeny that he has received
extra money. He states that
smce he IS a "top-fhght athlete",
who IS known almost everyvvhere,
he IS m constant demand for. pubhc
appearances of ali kmds, mcluding
TV and radio shows. An athlete of
his stature, Santee says, "simply can-not
live in good hotels, eat in decent
restaurants fulfill ius obligations",
and stay w'ithin the A-A.U. expense
rulmg.
One thlng that can be said about
this chap Santee, you can always
rely on him to teli you how good he
is plus what he expects to accomplish.
Ä Great Future
Predicted For
Sara BarEara
A certain Dr. T. K. Cureton, of
Chicago, USA, specializes in testmg
athletes; to determine what part oi
their anatomy or their nerves needs
exercismg. Many world leadmg sports
figures, such as Ezzard .Charles, Roger
Bannister, Jessie Owens and
others, have made the trip to the
Doctor's physical research laboratory
m Chicago.
One of -the. latestvisitors to the
laboratory is a Canadian swimming
Star Sara Barbara of Brantford, Ont.
As a result of her vlSit to Or. Cureton,
Sara Barbara of Brantford, Ont.,.
Sara has been nick-named an Viron
athlete". This 14-J'ear-old . girl's
physical tests registered a. better
score than that of .Ezzard Charles
and her endurance can be matched
with that of Roger Bannister.
Dr. Cureton- has predicted that
some day,Sara Barbara will become:
the world's best backstroke swmimer
and that at the next Olympics* she
should become the second youngest
Olympic Champion m history. (The
lirst was a 14-year-old Holland swim-mer
who broke records at the 1936
Olympics). .
Today, Miss Barbara holds every
Canadian backstroke record and last
£ummer made a fme showing at the
Pan-American Games m Mexico City
by ' commg fifth after competmg
agairtst some -of the- world's gi-eatest
swiihmers..
GiOVER
WHYVOTt?\
|V«T»SALL 7=^1
The Phony
WWEN I4ESMELLS
FLOYVERS V4E LOOKS
jAROUND FOR A
COPtK>e,UTE.D: AAEOfc;'
Adolfo Gonzolini
heitti EE:n 57,28
Milano. — Pian 40 vuotta täyttävä
A-dolfo Conzolini paransi sunnimtai-na,
marraskun 20 pna kiekonheiton
Euroopan ennätyksen 57;28. Tähänastinen
.ennätys on ollut tshekkiläisellä
• Mertalla, mika oli 56.47. '•
' We(.bet.thattour Canadian Olympic
Committee could- f md many more
"ironj athletes!' - that would ring up.
'an. impressive score . m Melbourne
'next. summer;if g;,ven assistance now.•
aqd tnan achance to.go 35 Canadian
: Olvmpic representatives.
Auto Manufacturers
Are The Criminals
Many häve wondered how long
the.rising accident toll through ex-cessive.
speeding could be blamed on
everything under the .sun without
the least hint or .whisper : that the
auto manufacturers' irresponsible
race to develop higher and higher
horsepower had something to do
with the case.. .
The newspapers. of course, can't
offend the big advertizmg auto
nioguls with sudhi notions. But it
wa= good -.to note that the Automobile
Association . has finally of-fered
a mild cnticism. • . -.i
New we have. the strongest and
clearest public indictment yet, by a
Rhode Island judge.
• A clippmg . from^. the Providence
Journal bears the hep,dline "Car
builders taken to task-whenj judge
fines speeders." He really toltl them
t"3t). Here is the start of the- etory;
"Automobile manufacturers : competmg
, in the • horsepower race;.were
branded as crmiinals yesterday by
Judge Guillaume Myette m .dlstrict
court in Central Palls" (Rhode :Isr
land» _ ;
The judge told one of the speed-.
ers up. before. him.,for: sentencmg that
MECHANIC.4LL1
. Jimmy was' the s
mobile mechanic. j
home asked, "'And.l:
tmg along, in your s
. "Oh, line," the 1:
have just begun to
of six cylinders."
Bully (to small bo
away? I Chought yoi
licc me- with one h
your back?" . .
• Smsfll ;boy — "I'm
to get some string."
"Does your band
'•Why certainly, v
like us to play?"
• " Gm rummy."
it was an infraction
speed. not a crime.
" I t i s the autom
turers who are the
said. "They want to
lot of money. They j
radio and television
nice cars," beautiful
with. tremendous hoi
haven't. :heard one o:
Word about savmg li
ing iti a.reasonable a
ner for the protectior
A wpman who pleac
charge "of speedmg
sbe was 'driving a nev
realize how fast she
Judge Myette: .
^Ty^i huiulred an
horsepWer . . anä
ai-6 arr^ted' for spee
mlke sense."
• 9ear, hear! (We'll r
Motors advertismg ;
this editorialized comi
ULYSSES' H E L P F U L SUGGESTIONS
no signs of it going off. ' Tlie egg
however, was boiled about five years
ago! :
Thousands of tons of fruit are
ruined every year by mould and fungoid
growths. Here, too, the "phytoncides"
can lend a hand.
Apples, before being. boxed, vere
sprayed with a solution made from
dried omon leaves.
Within a few weeks the smell of
onion had comlpetely disappeared,
and the number of apples lost through
going bad was cut by more than half.
Potatoes, carrots and other vege-tableshave
also been preserved by
m^ans of .omon and garlic.
By BOB WARD
Ulysses I. (for Idea) Doakes was
.a worker with many ideas, proposals,
suggestions and sohemes.
So it was that'Ulysses welcomed the
news that his company was going to
install a Suggestion Box Pian. True
to his second iiame, Ulysses greeted
the news by statmg. "now thafs an
Idea." •
Thecompany m their bulletins and
speeches to the employees said that
Mf business was to remain free and
enterpnsing everyone had to do his
bit m t.ae battle of ideas."
"•We/' said the company, ''are look-mg
for the Better Way." And one "has
to admit that puttmg it in capitals
the may the company did certainly
looked fme. Ulysses thought (also m
capitals) that the company had a
Good Idea.
Now not only did Ulysses think it.
he also told his co-workers "the
company's search for the Better Way
was a Good Idea."
Of course the company said many,
many more thmgs about their. pian;
And you have to hand it to them.
Never Once did they ever say that
anywsere m the back: of their little
minds was there even the Foggiest
Notion of making any. Extra Profit.
They were consistent, that they were,
in repeating that they were looking
for the Better Way.
Ulysses . listened. to ali, of "the
speeches and very, very carefully read
ali of the editorials and special arti-cles,
noting just what it was that
the company required in order to
achieve the Better Way.
Now it might be pomted out here
for Clarity's Sake that just because
the company paid for, pnnted, edited,
proof read and distributed tneir company
paper that this didn't mean
that they had. any Ultenor Motives.
Heavens to Betsy, no! There were
some cads in the shop who told Ulysses
that the company mainly want-ed
Ideas and Suggestions tnat would !
make more profit. i
. But Ul.vsses paid no heed to the-e \
Agitators and Ingrates. no,t to forget {
Reds, Bolsheviks, Anarchists and
Ag^nts.
It was durmg the particularly hot
weather thah; the company introduced
their Pian to achieve the Better Way.
And it was hot, humld, sticky, swealy,
nasty." smelly and fumey in tlie
plant. • • • . .
. So right off the bat Ulysses hit
pn a-Suggestion. His Idea was that
tne company should install au* con-ditiomng.
His reasonmg, based, of
course, on the Better Way, was that
tne company claimed it was mterest-.
ed m the vorkers' health, that health
15 very^ badly affected. by extreme
heat. and that the Company made the
air conaitioning units anyway so
they'd be able to get them wholesale,
as it were. •
. Ulysses- wrote out his Suggestion
and spelled Air Conditionmg, Employees'
Health and Extreme Heat
ali with capit4l letters. ."I^hen quite
proudly he placed his Suggestion In
tne Red- Suggestion Box. Red, mmd
you, was so. the box would stand out
and 'had- nothing whatsoever to do
with the political . thinking of the
company officials.
A. while later, it still being hot,
sticky, etc, Ulysses hit on another
happy Idea. So he suggested that
tn s company should build a Swim-mingPool
for the employees and that
children in the commumty could use
it durmg the daytime.
. Ta-j3 Idea, Ulysses reckoned, was
a good siep towards the Better Way.
The next. Idea that Ulysses sub-mitted
was that the company should
Cut its Prices on things and Raise
air of the Workers' Wages by 15c
an hour. His Suggestion read: — "as
the company IS looking for the Better
Way this would make it possible for
u.=; to Buy -More of the Better Things
and this would mean a Better Way
of Life for the employees."
Ulysses, as we remarked earlier,
was indeed a Man of Ideas.
Thus it was that m rapid succes-sion
he suggested Ideas for a Cafeteria
to be installed sellmg Food at
Co-t Price; that Women in the shop
should. be paid Equal Pay as they
wanted to enjoy the I
that formen should bi
the Woi^kers; and tha
should . wnte to the i
than the once or twi
the Top Boss wrote
Associates. Ulysses <
last Suggestion that
wrong time for the
write anyway as the. 1
were ali too busy figi
and Means to nego
ments.
lUlysses just - kept c
Ideas.
He suggested that;
Men should be done
proposed that. Motioi
be applied to Top 1
themselves back. froi
table. He came up w
Idea that Better L::
stalled.
Here agam he pointc
company made Fluo
that a worker.'s eyes V
most Precious Assets ;
Lightmg would cu t d o
and Accidents.
Yes, Ulysses was a
The Strangest Thing (
the company never a(
them.
And this' fact ultimt
ses to Believe that, ei
were No Good; or that
Idea of the Better Wa:
different from his.
TÄLs, of course, resi
ses making his Fmal i
proposed that tne Si
be put in the main oL
Safe. This, wrote Ulys.s
mit the company to ]
.Overflow Profits they'(
away.
The Company didn
Idea either!
A A A A
-k - SU O M I - F I L M I N E I / P K U V A ic
SYSMÄLÄINEN
Pääosissa: Olavi Reimas ja Sirkka San
Ohjaus: Valentine Vaala
Esitetään seoraaTilla paikkakunnilla:
COBALT, Finnish Hall. lauantaina, jouluk. 3 p. klo 8 illalla
SUDBURY, Finnish, Hall, maanantaina, Joulok. 5 p. klo 7
Sisäänpääsy: aikuiset 75c—lapset 25c
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Vapaus, December 1, 1955 |
| Language | fi |
| Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
| Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
| Date | 1955-12-01 |
| 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 | Vapaus551201 |
Description
| Title | 1955-12-01-06 |
| OCR text |
Sivu 4 Torstaina, jouluTcuun 1 p. — Thurs<3ay, .Dc-c, ^, iUoTj
W o w s y Defends H i s Ideals
»y MIKi: UVIS
(Any rescmbtance brtween tba,'
•• racter» In this j.lory atid «ome
characlers silli v/alklojr *he
«treets Is r-ur-Jy 'ntentlonai-l
"W?,> a_-'-et' r^-n^o "Must v,e
fitick bones m ci:r ilor^is and slit our j
carÄ? Jast t ve .'ne or.ö gcod reason.
Thafs ali I '. ••.
V;cwsy hai; s;;i:ied 23 If he dldxi't
'/.nciw whether to t?.l:e hLs friend s e -
r.ously, "W: it 1 .i. I rf c a7.ne.--s are
you talkntg"»' 1-» «vs^td ' Do you
want us 10 :'ui:n!ng around In
froiit of ever-osi;; vathautany bones
In our nasf >? J3:>r t be vulgar.
Ecoietimss I thinr y3u'v3 Kot the.
lllthiest mlnd m tne tribe,"
They were slti-nt' m the afternoon
Bun by the eclge of t,jr,rm:r. Wowsy
f anyone haat they're gojng to eat. Men have
ali^ays «aten each other and always
wi|l. ifs natural. You can't change
human natur^."
*rWell.',;theiJ^ed 'Boljjhosjdon-t eart
ea^h othiH" ' \\ \
i!R''owsy started ds if someone, had
jabbed h-m vvith a ipear. His'head
eiikcd from ^ side to side tq see if
live to see it. Why don'tyou knuckl»
dov/n and make something of your-
.self? There was a time when you
vi^ere aS' upright and promising as
any voung man in the village; . If
you had devoted half as much time
to: making a success of yourself as
you have to sneaking off m the
jungle to iLsten to ths Red Bolshos.
you would have over a hundred
skulls decoratingr^our front yard by
this trne
vi'ive#-w>-rr3Ti
You could have "as many
XSieased."
"I Icve my fellow men," said Bongo
.stufabornly.
•'So da l " , ägreed Wowsy. With
gravy on them/'
) " l want a bettJer world", said
Bongor- " I .\von't' go on hvmg like
th.s "
Somshovv; Wowsy's hcart went out
to the b3y. He laid aside his be-heading
knife and put one hand on
his shoulder.. "Son, l don't like to
hcar you talking thLs way. You have
a mother. She's gettmg old. Pretty
socn she won*t ba: able to chop wood
any morc and we'll b2 drovvnmg her.
Do yoii. \vant her to go to Gocey
Gow fseling her boy was a failure?
Two measly llttle ..skulls m your
yard. Thafs ali you'.ve got. People
are beginning to taik. You're not
getbmg any younger, you know. The
sooner you get this radical foolish-ness
out of you, the sooner you are
going: to liave ä hundred skulls and
le'?U)}söit. upotft MhOfntenfet you
(AU| vzTa4ih^t^M°^^ you; fe^ ' l once" had ideals my-
'se!f. • We 'ah did. But we get over
•them. Oi.vdlzp.tion Is too. ;ol(J. yifeVe
Timely Quotes
HOVV CAX TlfEV BE SUBE7
. Wa»bmgton. — The Army is faced
vith a .Security problem i h reverse,
says Army Secretary Brucker,
.Some. men are avoidmg military
ser/ice by cla-iming: they. are Com-mumits,
althöugh the Arrny is pretty
.sure they are not,.Brucker disclosed.
•.—. N. Y. Post.
L E T ' S INVITE T H E M OVER
WnO .SAID IT?
"Although the employer directs his
.vPi' forces agamst any ilnd of union
aoLivity. he cloaks his hostility under
the pretext that he is defending him-self
and the counti-y against Com-mun-
sm."
The quotation was made by a Se-nate
Gommittee of the USA Government
— the LaFollette Committee —•
v.'i:ic.T mvestigated the major corpo-rations
of the country. The Committee
di£clo.-;ed that almo.st every big company
spent miilions of doUars each
year on the cmployment of labor
spies and .stool-pjgeons. The purpase
of these hirelmgs was to seek to
smash unioas. — UE. News.
STUDY WAR NO MORE
Inc Paios Le Monde recently made
the follovving appropnate comment
on the U.S. Army's traming course
to .simulate "torture" of prisoners of
v/ar at the hands of the enemy;
."Unlcs.s they decide to shoot their
scldiens in order to teach -them
.how to dic, one can .scarcely see how
the Americans can further extend
their experrmentai studies in mifitary
trainmg." .
Czechs Have Hopes of Winning
piympic Hockey Title This Year
advanced too far for you to change
ani>-ch:ng .now. Ifs the fellow who
geLs the skulls wJio amounts to
eometning^ You can't change that.
^Vhat: inoent^ve ;would there be- for
inen jtq: go :.on Jöllmg? • .Civilizatloti
\vould coUapse.. ;Opme mDWil WhB6
eay we forget allabout it.. Lef s you
md me go and hävö'a•ljtttelfi |
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