1955-08-18-03 |
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ef#1l i i e i i rl inevestä. ällymisvaiheessa I TÄ JA TÄT; - . E n tiennytkään, että »a tanssia Jitterbuigia. — Ei hän osaalcaan. Aiui m lensi hänen housun lahkee * • * — Vai oli isännänkin pojista teilija. — Juu, ja muut olivat ihan noii a. usia kouluja ikennetaan Buyosto-Karjalaan fctroskoi. _ Karjalais-Siio m tasavaltaan rakennetaan 1 i5 aficana 27 koulurakennusta, Joil i rakentamiseen käycetään läliesl Ijoonaa ruplaa,, eh lähes 3 milje 3, ruplaa enemmän, kuin TOBI jnna Icäytettim koulurakcn ntaan. raiiTvallan oppikoulujen määrä! intyy, silla 13 seitsenvuotiseeni n avataan kahdeksannet ja :£annet luokat. Kouluihin oni ;etty yli SCO uutta opettajaa, i-t juuri päättäneet tasavallan las-| usopillisen korkeakoulun tai • iuurta huomiota kiinnitetään ta-l ;n rakentamiseen metsatyökylt cuvuoden: alkuun menneitia itaan 10 uutta koulua. Mqtsät; illa on nykyisin 136 koulua. ivostoliitto voitti kaksi nyrickeDjrj tamital:a S2ka Romania ja Ei npikm yhden. KLVEN JA VIITALA LKLXNOLLE hta ylivoimainen kuin Pliola yssä oh Neuvostohitto kre malaise:i>a painissa.. jossa sen isl voittcsljaa. Kaksi jäljelle jäi VQitoa menivät Egyptiin ja.M iaan. Suom.älnisuta menestjTii haiten Viitala Ja Mäkinen, joisi linen väänsi pronssia ja Jäto nen hopeaa. esipalloilussa ka-uvat pasasial-paremmuu. Vtanippailun Unkanyj ivostoiiitto, joista edellinen tui paremmaksi Pyöräilijäin •kohtaisessa 180 km. Kcrtslia, :I ykköseksi Saksan Demoknai Tasavallan Schur ajalla ..iHBi raavma olivat Puolan HadasS^j jian Robeet. Kaikkiaan, 10 iän miejiä sai saman ..ajan. aisista sijoittui parhaiten Eii»| , joka oli 21 :s ajalla 5.02,10. jusiammunnassa pan nais; ta .voiton Helsingissa maa, ;taruudcn saavuttanut piioi [iiowsta. Miesten, osalta oli imien ampuja ruotsalainen The 55 young Ganadans i n the photograph knew how tö spell "Canada", but at the time the phöto was taken they wcre marching i n the opening parade of the 5th World Youth Festival which recently con-tluded in Warsaw, and to make sure that spectators identified them correctly they spelled the name of tlieir homeland in the European manner. Some 30.000 youth fromeverycorher of the World partlci-pated in the festival and among the delegates Is a representative of Fhinlsh-Canadian youth who we will iiave an opportunlty to meet later after the dele^ation has retumed.' y First Fishing Pole tnautti silmien valun" — )8 • ia tarkika-ampujia .on kuii!ö| lupissa ja tämän seudun fa. lilla, miltei joka toisessa m ö ^ Iin, että' suotta on majavajiT^ ;en ja sudburylaiaten eti*"'" istella sUtä, kuka heistä on . isä ampumakilpailuissa, likka nämä ampumakilpailu*- :fn uutuutensa vuoksi huom^ suurta osaa suomalaisten t ia-,a ensi sunnuntaina, ni^^ ssa ne edustavat vain mu"*"' •esta kokonaisuudesta;. uten on aikaisemmin tiedoi/JI at aloitetaan suurilla jubu" ä;'läuantai-iltana Beaver^ • nalaisella haalilla, minä ' alkintoinakln: $70. arvoinf • ien tai naisen rannekello.^! i "kynäsetti".' Vt innuntai-aamuna • on JRmjDJ imät - railakkaat i i r h e U i^ Itapäiväliä varsinainen uIW I a. Lopuksi sunnuntai-UlaÖ^I iri Beaver Laken suoma^ lila hurjan hauska P e l ^ j l u - - •'Vihtorin harha-ass^'' l i erittäin hyvän vastaari^D^ keväänä Sudburyn suo-° illa;' ',' ' ivintolasta huolehtivat iri;.Whitefiihin;ja Sudbarjo^ t emännät, joten rar' " lattu. <, omalaisten hauskoilla alij? is tavataan Beaver Laiei^ | itäina ja sunnuntaina! mikäli on puhe siitä »^1 iim paras mlea voittaiooa" n. — Känsäkour. By JUHANI AIIO Juliani Aho (1861—1921), spn cf a pastor, was a consiunmate master of two arts: story-telling and fly-fishing '^In ihy deepest being," he once said, "I am tnily more a fisherman than a writer. My literary passion dies when the northem pike rises to spawn in April and it does not revive untU the salmon. have held their wed-ding and no longer take a f ly." "My First Fishing Pdle," the flrst of Aho's famed fishing sketches which he fervently hop- : ed would someday be translated into English, is presented here as an adaptation prepared by Pro-feisor John L Kolehmainen, Tlf-fin, Oliio. Ifsa turning point in a young lad's !e when he catches his first fish. Nö .iiger IS he a chald but a man—in his fcimon at any rate. It is a day W'hen in awaken:ng selfresteem swells enor-lously. [A cnild mimics the most important Icuyities of adult life. For example, re piayed at bapBism and aon-ation. courtship and marriage, |v,en death and bunal. We pretended plow and harvest; we iiad our. naginary horses and cows. And of ourse we engaged m make-believe *jng. Equipped -nritih bean stalks, 1'eces of stringi and forked stioks, ve aught large quantities of perchi, pach and bleak • (wood shavings in ality) from the floor in front of the treplace.' . I öne day a neighbor boy about our «.Pekka, came along selltng real «rchhehad caught vvith 'honest-to-loodness fishing gear. Immediately jtie magic cf pretense dlsappears. The Lild bursts out of Ws cocöon and nges into a youth who must catoh |tal fish from a real lake with a reaJ [ook, Ime, and pole. uBut where could I obtaln them? ''no wouia gei me a pole and a line, J'id abo-.-e ali, a 'hook? I dldn't 'have "6 slightest notion of how they •were ade..-: Yetthere IS father — my all-know-f- g.and al!-proficient father—i- who [•'-id ..repair or reproduce -.even the r^^t cornphcated article. .He is ä -n^nter and a. tinsmith; he paints l-id glue.v; he fixes spinning-vvheels N watcnes. ; Father i t w ä s . w ho lined cjr v,'ODden horses, water mllls Fd »-hirligigs,; skiis. and sleds. Hdw föescribably pleasant to wätch him at. F«ii. • S.Tiiling ' half-surreptitiously or r^^iiig slyly, he-departs for his '••^rsshop wiih his saws, planes, and P-^-iet^. A bevy: of children fluttcr f-'«" i-im, £ettlihgjdown on a hench Me a :row of' liouse-martins on an ^•6. t« s'are and wait; "You dpn't J'""'- no you don't, what this is go- ^•2 16. be!';: Tather., liums; an^ the p''ifapt'jred chcrus echoes an • ac-fipaniment. -Don-t know . , i don't •, .-/never wiU know.": : I must get falher to help 'me. A F-«t request v;oh*t.äo.-so r U try a f':"f '^inr.. At the supper tablethe ^•Snbcr Ls praised: "That lad really iF-^ 'yih though he's not very big." 1%$^ and break in, "Others could pvä IiiN^ y.-ith a pole. i f there were pie one, lWe v,'ho knew how to put togetheK^' Father replies- with Mi3ii£takable (^mphasis: "OI course ''Oas in our houae can manage that." Patiher has understood my plea; to-niorrow ihe -vvill fulfill my Wish. The next morning doesn't begin auspiciously. I follovv father like a puppy. He goes . to the storehouse, tiikes out a bag of seed to sow a nearby field. I offer to carry th.e vooden sovving box. iPather steps lolsurely from, one furrow to another: I step courageously in his tracks even though clods and stubble hurt my bare feet. The field slopes toward a •lake; lt's a tranquil morning and the fish are splashing among the reeds. When father refiils the seed contain-er. I remark: ".'yi, how the fish are gambtoling there." Father admits that they appear to be doing just that. V/hen we reach the head of another fuiTow I climb on a fence and observe, "Pekka's fishing agam by the bridge." Father begins. to \vhittle, paring off the bark. •'Whatis father whittlmg?" "Oh, I'm just a-whittling." "May I have it?" It*s a sort of wooden ball the size of my thumb-tip with a' slender stick though the center. Father iinished his sowing and we retum to the yard. He sits down and is about to smoke but can't find his matches. I dart off to fetch some and light his pipe. He looks at me along the pipe's stem, squintmg one eye, but saying not a word. This a good omen, I recall, for he always does this vvhpn a pleasant thought crosses his mind. But vhen Matti, the hired hand, takes a sliarp-toothed harrow to the field, father calls after him, •Don't pasture the gelding : when you're through.". My throat tightens. Father apparently isn't going to make my fishing pole today. No doubt he has forgotten ali aljout it. Perhaps he doesn*t even know how. Nonetheless I follovv. him to his study. He seats himself at his desk, vvhich has a curtain-enclosed book-shelf on one end and.tool chests on the other. On the former are hLs Bibles, Testaments, and manuscnpts, v-hich one dares not touch. In the Baskeibali Developing In China Npw,weknow that China has a bas-ketbäll team, and apparently a pretty good one. Thanks to a tiny wire Service.item iri fiie r\mes, datelined London and reporting that. "Commu-nist China defeated Egypt, 72—50, in a' basketball game at the War£äw youth sports festival today . This is the international Youth Games, an annual cvent vvhich in-cludes topnotch : participation from mdst of the countries of the vorld, but from where, unfortunately, ..we chests are his secular tools: hammers, chisels, pliers, drills. bits, and knives of every description. , Father reflects. He draws a long puff on his pipe, puts it on a shelf, and ojiens the plier drawer. He selects the two smallest ones. Prom a second drawer come a small brass anvil and a tiny hammer; from other recept-r. cles emerge a sharp-pointed knife' and a file as thln as a spring. He al-ways uses these tools in repalring v/all clocks. What's he up to now? He finds a roll of brass wire, and having fixed his glasses on his nose (something he does only when fix- Ing the finest clocks-, he cllps off a piece. He lays ^ it on the anvil and tappmg with his hammer flattens one or.d. What wonder is in the making? Father"s fashioning a hook, thafs what! He tests the point and the barb \vith his fingertip. He.lets me try too: the barb is really Sharp, hke the point cf a needle. Father frowns over his glasses and asks: "Bo you pian to catch roach or perch?" "Roach and perch!" I res-ponded eagerly. ''Yes, but slnce the roach has a small mouth/ the hook should be small, on the other hand, the perch has a large mouth, so the hook should be large — vhat about that?" 'Father will make it exactly ar. he thinks best." I was overjoyed at being asked for guidance. "Shall We make it in between, not too large, not too small?" "Lefsdo it that way." I replied, and my pride again mount-ed. With his pliers father bends the wire into the shape of a hook. He forms an eyelet. Then holding it Ih Lont of his nose, he asks: "WiU this do?" I nod my head approvingly. Excellent, it shines like gold. Father" .meditates a momcnt, then prepares to refill his pipe. He knocks out the cold ashes, puts fresh t^bacco into' the bowl, lights it, draws long puff s which he sends whirling toward the ceiling and at my request at me He now places the hook into. the bowl, pressing firmly around itwith his thumbnail. "Ahaa," I say though I have no idea why this is belng done. : hope fcr the best, fear the worst. After a while father removes the red-hot hook, dunks it in a basin of wat€r v/here it sizzles and turns bT0wnlsh-green. An Involuntary laugh escapes me, and father smiles too as he com-ments, '-Look, my little rogue, vhafs ha.ppened to its color." The hook was now fiiiLshed: A.mäd haste 8wept oyer me to get it at once into a lake. into the vveiting mputh pf a roaoh or perch.' Now för a pole and some v/orms.'- . 'No doubt a good line would. l« useful," father interrupted. "Yes, of course." I try to clam myself but it's not eäsy. F^äther reaches for a ball of thread from a dresser drawer. He zäiis me to hold it>hile he begin» tp Rain is Welcome Except on Sundays "Called because of rain." tosi Summer that would have been a famlliar saying but this summer rain has been SO scarce i n the Sudburjr district that mcst people have taken advan-tage of the few showers during the course of the season to cool off, clothes and' ali. after fiweatlng through veeks of aknost utibearably hot weather. Such:was not the case last Sunday, however. when a steady drizzle made it impossUile to compl^te the track and field meet which had been sche-duled to take place at the Alertstleld as part bf the Labor Festival. Des-plte the rain \vhlch started early In the moiuiiiig a good number of athletes had braved the nreather. The meet wiU be re-scheduled for a later date. • This coming Sunday local track and field men wiU be competing at: the Jehu field, Beaver Lake. The events Include a 3-event for open and under .17 boys (100 m., shotput and broadjump) and also for women. Children under 12 will have a 60 m. race and a novel event wlU be the iveteran's relay, v h l c h is open to members of the FCASP or PO of C who are 40 or over. The following weekend the Jehu field will be the site of a Speed spon-sored. meet. This meet wm feature the semi-annual competltion for the Sundholm Trophy vvnich was won by Jehu last Winter in Winter sports. Y ^ e ' i ^ ^ o ^ tidbits of änform- 1 trnwind.: /•D.n-t Jet go/' he, wan|8. aSon in L pairiful fashion mention- ; But of course I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ed above | srart over again. Clunisy me — will Ifeypt,whlle not a basketball poweri 1 ever get to fish? ^ ,^ V in t ^ t Olymplcs. does have a tra. "Now shaH we.get a Tole?v I ask ditionof i n t e S o n a l competltion in f ^ ^ " l ^ ^ ^ ^ i l ^^ the game and had some pretty fair | ready and ^»^^ f ^^J**^ j ^ , ^ " ! scores. 80 the 22 point margin of as we make a float^nd a welght, victory over them at least indicates - A «oat and welght! They aren't nec-that the Chinese team at War6aw is not of the PÄ. 14 va-'Iety. manage to get one into my palm v/ithout spilling the rest over the floor, With his penknife father splits the shot haU-way through, f its the iine i n the openlng, then bites it to-gether.: 'And now the lloat?" I f s in my mouth! I've been bitlng and sucking at it ever since father — that playful parent of mine! — gave i ^ to unsuspecting me earlier this morning. AU set except a pole. A bean stalk which I could snatch on the way, wouId be good enough. But father pretends not to hear. 'Wlthout a word he walks swlftly, even runs downhill, to a distant grove. I f ly behind as though tied to him; I repeat his every action — the same steps. the Identlcal Icaps over ditches and windfalls. Tm determined to keep up with him, take the pole from his 'hands the moment i f s ready — not a second later. . Father trims the sprigs of a moun-tain ash cuttlng and strips the bark from the thicker end. He ties the line t.) the tip and winds it around. No longer can I restrain n^yself. Im-patlence conquers, I Jump and plead: "Give It to me now — i f s good enough — please dear father, let me have If' I f s In my hands, I turn to flee. "What do you say?" " T - h - a - n . . , And again I turn. "What?" "Thank you, dear f-a . . . " Nothing more is father able to elicit from me and more than this he apparently does not expect. Through the g a r d e n ^ over the fence — along a rldge — across the meädow — my headlong flight ends by the bridge. On fours to the ground to seize a chunk of earth, tear and puli It to tatters In search of a vorm; in my fingers a wiggling fargment that I manage 8omehow, puffing and trembling, to put on the fcook and east into the shallow water. No one around except me and the big bridge v i t h its greylng foundations; no sound save the gentle lapping of the siow-movlng current. Torstaina, elokuun 18 p. — Thursday, Aug. 18.1955 Sivu 3 CO-OP PICNIC DREW THRONGS OF PEOPLE Ilolder of the Canadian Womcn^s closed golf championship for the past five ycars.21-year-oid Marlene .Stewart, retalned her women's open title at Victoria, B . C , with a victory over Mary Gay. She now has her sights tralned on the U. S. Open to be held August 22. • TV VyRESTLERS PUT ON AN ELABORATE SHOW By TOM MCEWEN By virtue of the labors of my son Normie, the McEwcn houseiiold recently acquired a TV. On the. install-ment pian of course, which is pro-b^ ly one of the greatest sportlng features of this age. Wlth the aid of tliis TV I have been brought closer to the .sportlng World, or to be more precise I should say sport has been brought closer to me. Either way, I find I am becomlng a confirmed addict of one purlicular TV weekly feature, wrestling; At lejist tl:at's what they call it; Each Staurday night I find myself .seated and awaiting "The Main Evpnt' of "Wrestling in Hollywood." The Mlssus heads for the kilchen or somewhere out of TV range, whJle the rest of the family move coutlously around as if in fear of running foul of one of Ali Pasha's deadIy"cobras"! The Hollywcod 'grunt . - and - groan" boys l-ut on a superlatlve fadistic show at murdermg each other. Gouging, ear pullmg, hair pul- Img, kicks in the stomachi or other fulnerable areas of the human ana-tomy, head-butt!ng hke mountain rams at rutung. time, everything goes. In fact nothiiig of a mayhem natui-e ."ieems to be barred, allhough tourhey of ningnificeht streiigth and sklll in- the: art of putting ari op-poneiifs shoulders öh the mat. In Holiywo6d it would seem. that Wrestling, ;Uke the Vlrtues; is nöt restricted by conventionäl rules, and If thero are rules they go through the lopes with the flrst; "flylng back-breaker." . T h e elabbrate robes, 'halr-dos, scbwis and other essehtialsworn by the Hollywood "prbfessioiial" wre8tl ers indicate that tlie . roughhöuse i;how teciinique is much more; In de-mänd than ari up-and-upi contest bf strength and skill. The characters themMlves and the names they have. adopted underllne the main purppse of their profession — to put on a show räther than a Avrestling bout, and to make it ap-pear sufficlentiy brutäl and blbod thirsty sb that the fans ;Wlll feel they'vq had their money's wbrth. «Sometlmes ons gets,a close-up look at some of the audicnce whlle the "Bbnecrusher from Texas'' sie*"'* ^ be having Tiis rieck dislbcated, wlth ä • stput lady: shbuting abpve the dln tp "mplder.the bum." It ali adds aplce tb this Hollywood version of wre»tl|ng At bther times a contestant and porhon of the audlence howl at eajrfi o;her iikc wltches over ä cauldron oi at times the refree doe» hand out a dcvirs brew wMle the referee help-decision on "a foul" while he nimbly lessly look» on. It ali adds up to « skips around his grappling opponenUs. In my youthfyl days when the Russian .Hackenschmldt u.sed to vislt Scotland for a bout or two wlth the finest in the Govan and Aberdeen, po-lice (Cumberland stylei, one saw a nolsy rough-and-tumble 8how label-led "wrestling". Dcspite ali that, if the TV hasn't b]own*a tube comu Saturday. I'll b( i;ack rooti(ig for Ali Pa^ia and Bo- .r.ecrusher MatfDonuldl Bootie Legging By BOB WAill> bootic-legglng. But they^aled the ( hoy» into cuatody anyway. «tout fell- We see by (he paper.s whcrc thrce ^^^^^ ^^^^ Wlndsor boys, ali under eight years 01 age. had sevtral citlzens virlually fi-othing at the mouth recently. 'Ihia boys in qucstlon started out on a hot day tb .sell Pre-shie. They .set up their .stjind and accord-ing to the nev/.s llem business was as poor as most bas-se.s.say they are a limes of negotiationrj. Indced, indeed the soft drink was ju.st too liard to sell. Our new;i itcm gave no further Information on the case of the mlssing ca.se. Whether the boys are «tili bot-tled up was no3 disclosed. . Ako not .knowaj wa« how. tlie boy'« }:op reacted when he arrived home on that hot day and went to look for a cool one. As one father we have an laea of how wc would react, But In these enllghlened days of chlld psy-chologj' many parents never etrlke But were these boy.sdpwnhe:irted?Jti:(;ir. children except in self defense, Did they pop off and. quit? 'Ihey^'' o id not. We werc 5omewhat «urprised that t;cwspaper edltorlals failed to hali the enter);rl.se and rugged individuality o* the youn^fitcrs. For it dld seem to Öne of the boy.H jUiJt happeued to recall that his pop dldn't care much for Freshie either. His father, he re- ; u;; that here was a good example of How long I «tood herestaring at thej fjected. had a taste which ran more j l-.ov; red-blooded and aggresslve action float and how it ali happened, I do not recollect, Did the float move or dld I feel ä tug and jeric upward? I only knew that something llew i n the air above my head, I crawl in the to stuff whlch came in green lyjttles,|Khowed that under ''freeenterprlse" Mattef of fact, it occurred to hirn.ahy Canadian bby could get started it Just SO happened that the truck | on the way to his fifst milllon. ; vir-lch brought the driiiTc whlcli »o j Perhaps the newB that broke about pleased his dad had Ijeen. aU their j the .'.ame time.regardlng the E, P, grass. holding an<J squeezlng a Hving: j,fj^g ^^^a-t ivej-y morning, ! Taylor monopoly on Canadian ale thbig that wrlggled and. kicked. I blte ^nd, mused the lads. if that stuff! had «omethlng to do with the mat-i n the neck and ruöh for home; T've v.as so pleasing to dad, j t inight Ju.st j tfr, Po.4^ it wa5 felt by the cdl-caught a roach. I-ve caught a roach!" | bf tiiat other <lads v/buld have a bit 1 tonal wrltcr» that, It wa«n't »ome- _ Äcream M thpugjl» a knlfe had j ci a taste f or it too. . | thing that they felt they should get plerced nay throat. I burst Into the:, before yoii; <^^^^ "Heyi at jager-hfeads wlth the Baron of kitchen denaandtog that my fiah be I Mj^bel" the la^^^ scaled at once and frled In butter. j ».^ ^he iccbox, and v/ere back again at! Mayhap it wäs that there Is real- No öne responds tp my comniandB V3U:ac same o\A .sund; but not, it ap-j ly ho true drive among the itphoiders pears. selllrig the sarrie old drink. i of competltion to «park any real com- Thi» time ih» story va^ differeril. 1 petltiori. At least we have seen no Ti'enew drink was an immediat/: .<iuc- i foiiow-up in the pres» yrhlch /alea <f.<vs, It Kold. And ät thiriy-flve ctntsibootle-Iegglng as a sure method for I clumsily clean it myeelf; no one cffers me ia frylng pan or butter, so I slap the f Uh on the »tbrve-top where It scorchies and sticks fast. My first catch; in the end, dldn't even please bpttJe, too. our cat, \ , j Canadian.youth to get on l ap of the D ^ . by the^tv/o dozeri came up,; keg. Whether »uch a sltution brew5 Bu my latfr catches have «atlsfied j pjopped down their money, and naii- *.v/ell^or not k something whlchwe both cats and humah beings, j ^cl an ale. The etook dl^appeared as j ju^t cari't figure out, —— , \, .——— ; culck as a frce lunch in Aberdeen, | Aii far as we are per«>nally con- ^ » » c , . , » » < n i 7 ' ' it was at about thi."J .'itJigfj of j^ro-. | cern'd v/s got quite a klcjt out of the essar;-; even Pekka dldn'fc liave them on his pole, But these thought» don't The game devised by Dr. Nai^mith get beyond father's back. and he »ays, up at Springfleld. Mass. is sure get-tlng around, isn't It? "Get me a buckshPt from that leath-er pouch hanglng on the wall." I •Have you anythlng to «ay i n your defencei before sentence is pronounced agalnst you?" asked the judge, "Only one thing," aaid the convlct-ed burglar. "Tht only iöiing I ohjeet to in this trial wa4 being identified by a man that kept his bead under the bed-clothes the whole Ume X was i a tbe room." c':e<lings that the long arm of the | nev,'»cf the case being cleanedup, lav/ noticed tp* line-up at ,the boys'j a? it were; But then It wa»n.'t our itahd,.. And apparently figurlng that | caiie. was a plcket line the cop.% natural- j Öne of our youngster» ha» been »el-ly ambled over to «ee that lav/ a.ruJ ling Fre.ifhie, too, Salc» haive bicen bad order and the rlght of .scabs v/ould in our diÄtrlct, But we've put a pad be upheld. What they found on arrival «-'irt of dlsturbed them as there is ap-l- arently no city ordlnance agalnst lock on the frlg and advised him that it he c'iri't sell the »ttiff to drink it himself. We don't care for Preshle c-lther. The Annual Co-operAtors Plcnlc «ponsored by International Co>oper-uUve Stores Ltd.. the Thunder Bay CopoperaUve Dalty, the AVestfort Co-opcrative Trading Oo., and the Far-mers Mercantile Association of Ko-lalu. drew throngs of people to Isku Park Sunday; where an active pro-sram of varied activities was carried on throughout the day. • Highllghting the event was the performance of Alex Tlcknovlch, T.V, and radio star of Toronto. wbo gave brilliant rendltlons'of such songs as — "Aln*t Gonna Study War No More". 'Oh, Lovely Land", "Roads". ''Dance Cossack" from the opera May Night, "Last Night I Had the Strangest Di-eam". "Come Back to Sorrento". "Tirltomba". an Italian folk song and a niuiber of other folk songs. The track and field events got under way at 10 A l M . wlth the Thunder Bay Co-op Dalry trophy golng to Ed. Doherty in the openclass ftve-event (discus, Javelln. broadjump, 200 m. and 400 m.) Doherty came flrst wlth 273.45 polnts, K . Kaarela second with 269.28 polnts and A. Widgren with 265.34 polnts came thlrd. The three-event (100 m., shotput and broadjump) for boys 18 änd under saw <Paul Cotter come flrst wlth 177.13 polnts. Tony Papich second wlth 15L13 polrits and Bob Tuominen, thlrd wlth 123.04 pointd. The three-event for boys 15 and under was won by Pairi Lemplala wlih 107.83 polnts and the same event for giris under flfteen 8aw Adeline.Ory-niak place flrst wlth 139.09 polnts and Aili Kaarela second wUh 117.57 polnts. The three-event for boys 12 and under went to Kaarlo Kaarela Jr., wlth 122.58 polnts and second was Walter Niemi wlth 76.00 polnts. •Winner of the blcycle raco was George Jarva wlth Billy Tolkko In second place. The hor8e''shoe tourna-ment drew 20 entrles and Winner of the singles was Carl Stcvenson of Vancouver. A cash prlze was award-ed. The plcnlc offlclally ended the Co-op Camp; ahd the stage program put on by ttie campers won vtrarm ap-plause. The. program, M C d by Mlc-key Straford, dlrcctor of the camp, who in her Introductory rcmarks thanked ali thosc who asslsted in making the camp a success, featured .luch Items as the Shoe Fly Dance by a group of junior campers, a German Folk Dance by tho Junior staff members, a group of 3 songs — 'Everything l.? Hlghed","Jack Wa8 Svery Inch a Sallor", and "The Hammer Song". The children gave a dlsplay of 'calisthenics and:cxerclses whlch they had practlced daily at camp under the guidance of Paavo Youtllalnen. They wound up their 'jrogi-am wlth a 15 minute sktt on •jo-operatlon , called Goollbah Tree, jascd on a story by the same name Arrlttcn by Gunterman, The handicraft dLsplay, shpwlng many items made by the campers during the 2 weeks at camp, drew nany vlsltors and many compli- :nents. The Northshore öingers favored the large crowd by singing 2 numbers and.. Paavo Voutilainen and Aili Kaarela, of Kaministlquia, äxecuted some difflcult acrobatlcal feats to the dellght of ali. AU chlld* ren 13 and under wereglven free treats. The trophy offered. annually for .Tiarksmanshlp wa8 won by Eino Pudas, while E. Lammi" won the pole juessing contest and C. Virta was twarded the chcniUe doll. Miss Betty Anne Vaudrin, of Ge-raldton, was awarded the red ribbbon M Co-op Camp Booster. of 1055. She came flrst In the camp booster contest and close runner up was Miss 3ylvia Tuomi, candldatc for the P i n - nlBh Organlzatlon, Miroslav Papich tepresentlng the Co-op : Cultural Group came thlrd and close beJUod» \yere M . Niemi f or the KaminlstWäIa* Co-op and A. Otyniak, coxitestmgr for the local Slav co-op » u p p o r ^{ The splendld campaign conducted; toTe the 5 young candidateq and Ihelr porters contrlbuted much to the' fl> nanclal success of the camp ^attd they weye 'wannly congrattdäteÄby the camp commlltee. Mr. Peuramäki. Preslde^nt of the Board of Dlrectors of the Xnta Coriip and A. Wldgren, »peaking /or^-the Co-op Dairy, In their weIco!BlnK,Ve•^ marks stressed the importance of working together. of tmity betn^e&i the farmer and the city worker land the advantages of «o-operatlon. :: The plcnlc was i n a ld of ihe Co^op Cliildren's Camp. and the sports pro- 5 gram was M C d by A^ Vesterback; with W. Sloboda acting as general ' MG for the day. In charge of Y^' freshments was F . Pamega: whUe E. Norstrom was general plcnlc c^alr-man. Athletes Frieridty Despite Stories Of Sports Hacics So rapldly are the old artiflclal barrlers coming down In sports corn- ; petltlon that It wasn't even new8- worthy when the American, track team currently touring Europei-h^ad-cd by the sensatlonal Tom Courtney of Fordham. stoppea off i n Prigue for a friendly meet v l t h the Czeohs. When the Oanadlan eight oars: crew tipset -the Sovlec crew In• the Henley Regatta at London lastmonth, Sports. lUustrated Magazine begafi its: Comment wlth "This means Slberlat' Back to the Salt Mlnes" as the alleg-v ed reaction of the British fans.. This Is the old, tlre^ cold-,war cUcheklnd of sports wriUng wtl|e)i ought to be outdatcd i n a magazine like S.I; because, if for no more i m - plrlng reason. i t is so palpably phony; that it lower8 the Professional 8^IT(1<> Irig of the magazine. One wi8e guy in the entire c r o ^ could have yelled this sllly thlng^i^bd whoever reported the cvent for "6.^1, had his "Story," I have iknown/ B i -; milar cases where a reporter dedl-cated enough to findlng what he wantcd would mumble the pl)ra8e himself and i l i e n dutlfully whl)^"tfut his pcncll and. report that it^^iäd ' bec;i said. • ^ (Anyhow, it is salutory to se a d i g » ' nlfled letter by a Canadian iniSp^ifta Illustrated, teaohlng tae magazine a few facts of life. The letter vifiter, from Grand Forks, British CoiumtMa,'\ the home of the wlnnlng crisvir'» stroke, refers. to the "This MeanS' Slberial Back to the Salt M ^ ^ s " quoto and says: "It is unfortunatc that yöu dl<l"iiot Ecc fit to mention also that the/twa tcams "mlnglcd freely and thati,.the: fli-st words of: the Vancouver;^cox; Carl Ogawa, after the race were "I^e ' got to go and shoke hands wlth-those ' Bu.<5sians!" "As the stroke of the crew, )Olen Smith, ls'from Grand Forks, wei;take prIde In VRC'8 (Vancouver Rowing Club) eportsmanshlp and Its efforts to make frlends wlth Russian att^lefes and ali others at Henley, "They did not make It a 'cöld victory; they saw it as one .'good team beatlng another. Intematjx^nal sports »hould provlde a place to make frlends, riot an opportunlty to report the trite and^ovenvorked phrase» you «aw fit to prlnt . . . Milton Orrls; Grand Forks, BC., Canada." TOOLING UP Jenny: I want to buy a pencil.,: Clcrk; Hard or ODft?' *.' Jenny: Hard, Ifs for a stiff cxam. PASI JÄÄSKELÄISEN LAULUNÄYTELMÄ LAIVAN KANNELLA ESITETÄÄN SEURAAVILLA PAIKKAKUNNILLA: NOLALU, Flnniah Hall, lauantaina elokuun 20 p. klo 8.30 Illalla. TARMOLA, Finnish Hall, sunnuntaina elokuUn 21 p, klo 8.30 illalla.', NIPIGON. Elk's Hall maanantaina elokuun 22 p. klo 8.00 illalla. GERALDTON, Uicrainlan Hall, tiistaina elokuun 23 p. klo 8X)0 Illalla. I1EAR8T, Koululla keskiviikkona, elokuun 24 p. klo. 8.30 illalla. Sisäänpääsy $1. •Lapset 25c • CANADIAN FINNISH MO VIES. VÄLITÄMME RAHAA SUOMEEN MAKSAMME PAI VAN KORKEIMMAN KURSSIN. Plealn «umma 5,000 SmlL $17.50 ynnä laheiyakulut $1.15 Jokainen Muraava 1,000 markkaa $3.50 • Rahal&hetyksenne toimltetaoan vastaanottajalle 10—14 ptUvftnv sisällä. Jokaiselle lähettäjälle lähetetään vastaanottajan aUeklrJolt-yjl unu kuitti. VAPAUS TRAVEL AGENCY i4>y p. O. BOX et .1^''.. '. SUDBURT. ONTABIO.V''.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, August 18, 1955 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1955-08-18 |
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 | Vapaus550818 |
Description
Title | 1955-08-18-03 |
OCR text |
ef#1l i i e i i rl
inevestä.
ällymisvaiheessa
I TÄ
JA
TÄT;
- . E n tiennytkään, että
»a tanssia Jitterbuigia.
— Ei hän osaalcaan. Aiui
m lensi hänen housun lahkee
* • *
— Vai oli isännänkin pojista
teilija.
— Juu, ja muut olivat ihan noii
a.
usia kouluja
ikennetaan
Buyosto-Karjalaan
fctroskoi. _ Karjalais-Siio
m tasavaltaan rakennetaan 1
i5 aficana 27 koulurakennusta, Joil
i rakentamiseen käycetään läliesl
Ijoonaa ruplaa,, eh lähes 3 milje
3, ruplaa enemmän, kuin TOBI
jnna Icäytettim koulurakcn
ntaan.
raiiTvallan oppikoulujen määrä!
intyy, silla 13 seitsenvuotiseeni
n avataan kahdeksannet ja
:£annet luokat. Kouluihin oni
;etty yli SCO uutta opettajaa,
i-t juuri päättäneet tasavallan las-|
usopillisen korkeakoulun tai •
iuurta huomiota kiinnitetään ta-l
;n rakentamiseen metsatyökylt
cuvuoden: alkuun menneitia
itaan 10 uutta koulua. Mqtsät;
illa on nykyisin 136 koulua.
ivostoliitto voitti kaksi nyrickeDjrj
tamital:a S2ka Romania ja Ei
npikm yhden.
KLVEN JA VIITALA
LKLXNOLLE
hta ylivoimainen kuin Pliola
yssä oh Neuvostohitto kre
malaise:i>a painissa.. jossa sen
isl voittcsljaa. Kaksi jäljelle jäi
VQitoa menivät Egyptiin ja.M
iaan. Suom.älnisuta menestjTii
haiten Viitala Ja Mäkinen, joisi
linen väänsi pronssia ja Jäto
nen hopeaa.
esipalloilussa ka-uvat pasasial-paremmuu.
Vtanippailun Unkanyj
ivostoiiitto, joista edellinen
tui paremmaksi Pyöräilijäin
•kohtaisessa 180 km. Kcrtslia,
:I ykköseksi Saksan Demoknai
Tasavallan Schur ajalla ..iHBi
raavma olivat Puolan HadasS^j
jian Robeet. Kaikkiaan, 10
iän miejiä sai saman ..ajan.
aisista sijoittui parhaiten Eii»|
, joka oli 21 :s ajalla 5.02,10.
jusiammunnassa pan nais;
ta .voiton Helsingissa maa,
;taruudcn saavuttanut piioi
[iiowsta. Miesten, osalta oli
imien ampuja ruotsalainen
The 55 young Ganadans i n the photograph knew how tö spell "Canada", but at the time the phöto was
taken they wcre marching i n the opening parade of the 5th World Youth Festival which recently con-tluded
in Warsaw, and to make sure that spectators identified them correctly they spelled the name of
tlieir homeland in the European manner. Some 30.000 youth fromeverycorher of the World partlci-pated
in the festival and among the delegates Is a representative of Fhinlsh-Canadian youth who we
will iiave an opportunlty to meet later after the dele^ation has retumed.'
y First Fishing Pole
tnautti silmien valun" — )8 •
ia tarkika-ampujia .on kuii!ö|
lupissa ja tämän seudun fa.
lilla, miltei joka toisessa m ö ^
Iin, että' suotta on majavajiT^
;en ja sudburylaiaten eti*"'"
istella sUtä, kuka heistä on .
isä ampumakilpailuissa,
likka nämä ampumakilpailu*-
:fn uutuutensa vuoksi huom^
suurta osaa suomalaisten t
ia-,a ensi sunnuntaina, ni^^
ssa ne edustavat vain mu"*"'
•esta kokonaisuudesta;.
uten on aikaisemmin tiedoi/JI
at aloitetaan suurilla jubu"
ä;'läuantai-iltana Beaver^ •
nalaisella haalilla, minä '
alkintoinakln: $70. arvoinf •
ien tai naisen rannekello.^!
i "kynäsetti".' Vt
innuntai-aamuna • on JRmjDJ
imät - railakkaat i i r h e U i^
Itapäiväliä varsinainen uIW I
a. Lopuksi sunnuntai-UlaÖ^I
iri Beaver Laken suoma^
lila hurjan hauska P e l ^ j
l u - - •'Vihtorin harha-ass^''
l i erittäin hyvän vastaari^D^
keväänä Sudburyn suo-°
illa;' ',' '
ivintolasta huolehtivat
iri;.Whitefiihin;ja Sudbarjo^
t emännät, joten rar' "
lattu. <,
omalaisten hauskoilla alij?
is tavataan Beaver Laiei^ |
itäina ja sunnuntaina!
mikäli on puhe siitä »^1
iim paras mlea voittaiooa"
n. — Känsäkour.
By JUHANI AIIO
Juliani Aho (1861—1921), spn
cf a pastor, was a consiunmate
master of two arts: story-telling
and fly-fishing '^In ihy deepest
being," he once said, "I am tnily
more a fisherman than a writer.
My literary passion dies when the
northem pike rises to spawn in
April and it does not revive untU
the salmon. have held their wed-ding
and no longer take a f ly."
"My First Fishing Pdle," the
flrst of Aho's famed fishing
sketches which he fervently hop- :
ed would someday be translated
into English, is presented here as
an adaptation prepared by Pro-feisor
John L Kolehmainen, Tlf-fin,
Oliio.
Ifsa turning point in a young lad's
!e when he catches his first fish. Nö
.iiger IS he a chald but a man—in his
fcimon at any rate. It is a day W'hen
in awaken:ng selfresteem swells enor-lously.
[A cnild mimics the most important
Icuyities of adult life. For example,
re piayed at bapBism and aon-ation.
courtship and marriage,
|v,en death and bunal. We pretended
plow and harvest; we iiad our.
naginary horses and cows. And of
ourse we engaged m make-believe
*jng. Equipped -nritih bean stalks,
1'eces of stringi and forked stioks, ve
aught large quantities of perchi,
pach and bleak • (wood shavings in
ality) from the floor in front of the
treplace.' .
I öne day a neighbor boy about our
«.Pekka, came along selltng real
«rchhehad caught vvith 'honest-to-loodness
fishing gear. Immediately
jtie magic cf pretense dlsappears. The
Lild bursts out of Ws cocöon and
nges into a youth who must catoh
|tal fish from a real lake with a reaJ
[ook, Ime, and pole.
uBut where could I obtaln them?
''no wouia gei me a pole and a line,
J'id abo-.-e ali, a 'hook? I dldn't 'have
"6 slightest notion of how they •were
ade..-:
Yetthere IS father — my all-know-f-
g.and al!-proficient father—i- who
[•'-id ..repair or reproduce -.even the
r^^t cornphcated article. .He is ä
-n^nter and a. tinsmith; he paints
l-id glue.v; he fixes spinning-vvheels
N watcnes. ; Father i t w ä s . w ho
lined cjr v,'ODden horses, water mllls
Fd »-hirligigs,; skiis. and sleds. Hdw
föescribably pleasant to wätch him at.
F«ii. • S.Tiiling ' half-surreptitiously or
r^^iiig slyly, he-departs for his
'••^rsshop wiih his saws, planes, and
P-^-iet^. A bevy: of children fluttcr
f-'«" i-im, £ettlihgjdown on a hench
Me a :row of' liouse-martins on an
^•6. t« s'are and wait; "You dpn't J'""'- no you don't, what this is go-
^•2 16. be!';: Tather., liums; an^ the
p''ifapt'jred chcrus echoes an • ac-fipaniment.
-Don-t know . , i don't
•, .-/never wiU know.": :
I must get falher to help 'me. A
F-«t request v;oh*t.äo.-so r U try a
f':"f '^inr.. At the supper tablethe
^•Snbcr Ls praised: "That lad really
iF-^ 'yih though he's not very big."
1%$^ and break in, "Others could
pvä IiiN^ y.-ith a pole. i f there were
pie one, lWe v,'ho knew how to put
togetheK^' Father replies- with
Mi3ii£takable (^mphasis: "OI course
''Oas in our houae can manage that."
Patiher has understood my plea; to-niorrow
ihe -vvill fulfill my Wish.
The next morning doesn't begin
auspiciously. I follovv father like a
puppy. He goes . to the storehouse,
tiikes out a bag of seed to sow a
nearby field. I offer to carry th.e
vooden sovving box. iPather steps
lolsurely from, one furrow to another:
I step courageously in his tracks even
though clods and stubble hurt my
bare feet. The field slopes toward a
•lake; lt's a tranquil morning and the
fish are splashing among the reeds.
When father refiils the seed contain-er.
I remark: ".'yi, how the fish are
gambtoling there." Father admits that
they appear to be doing just that.
V/hen we reach the head of another
fuiTow I climb on a fence and observe,
"Pekka's fishing agam by the bridge."
Father begins. to \vhittle, paring off
the bark. •'Whatis father whittlmg?"
"Oh, I'm just a-whittling." "May I
have it?" It*s a sort of wooden ball
the size of my thumb-tip with a'
slender stick though the center.
Father iinished his sowing and we
retum to the yard. He sits down and
is about to smoke but can't find his
matches. I dart off to fetch some and
light his pipe. He looks at me along
the pipe's stem, squintmg one eye,
but saying not a word. This a good
omen, I recall, for he always does
this vvhpn a pleasant thought crosses
his mind. But vhen Matti, the hired
hand, takes a sliarp-toothed harrow
to the field, father calls after him,
•Don't pasture the gelding : when
you're through.". My throat tightens.
Father apparently isn't going to make
my fishing pole today. No doubt he
has forgotten ali aljout it. Perhaps
he doesn*t even know how.
Nonetheless I follovv. him to his
study. He seats himself at his desk,
vvhich has a curtain-enclosed book-shelf
on one end and.tool chests on
the other. On the former are hLs
Bibles, Testaments, and manuscnpts,
v-hich one dares not touch. In the
Baskeibali
Developing
In China
Npw,weknow that China has a bas-ketbäll
team, and apparently a pretty
good one. Thanks to a tiny wire
Service.item iri fiie r\mes, datelined
London and reporting that. "Commu-nist
China defeated Egypt, 72—50, in
a' basketball game at the War£äw
youth sports festival today .
This is the international Youth
Games, an annual cvent vvhich in-cludes
topnotch : participation from
mdst of the countries of the vorld,
but from where, unfortunately, ..we
chests are his secular tools: hammers,
chisels, pliers, drills. bits, and knives
of every description. ,
Father reflects. He draws a long
puff on his pipe, puts it on a shelf,
and ojiens the plier drawer. He selects
the two smallest ones. Prom a second
drawer come a small brass anvil and
a tiny hammer; from other recept-r.
cles emerge a sharp-pointed knife'
and a file as thln as a spring. He al-ways
uses these tools in repalring
v/all clocks. What's he up to now?
He finds a roll of brass wire, and
having fixed his glasses on his nose
(something he does only when fix-
Ing the finest clocks-, he cllps off a
piece. He lays ^ it on the anvil and
tappmg with his hammer flattens one
or.d. What wonder is in the making?
Father"s fashioning a hook, thafs
what! He tests the point and the barb
\vith his fingertip. He.lets me try too:
the barb is really Sharp, hke the point
cf a needle.
Father frowns over his glasses and
asks: "Bo you pian to catch roach or
perch?" "Roach and perch!" I res-ponded
eagerly. ''Yes, but slnce the
roach has a small mouth/ the hook
should be small, on the other hand,
the perch has a large mouth, so the
hook should be large — vhat about
that?" 'Father will make it exactly
ar. he thinks best." I was overjoyed
at being asked for guidance. "Shall
We make it in between, not too large,
not too small?" "Lefsdo it that way."
I replied, and my pride again mount-ed.
With his pliers father bends the
wire into the shape of a hook. He
forms an eyelet. Then holding it Ih
Lont of his nose, he asks: "WiU this
do?" I nod my head approvingly.
Excellent, it shines like gold.
Father" .meditates a momcnt, then
prepares to refill his pipe. He knocks
out the cold ashes, puts fresh t^bacco
into' the bowl, lights it, draws long
puff s which he sends whirling toward
the ceiling and at my request at me
He now places the hook into. the
bowl, pressing firmly around itwith
his thumbnail. "Ahaa," I say though
I have no idea why this is belng done.
: hope fcr the best, fear the worst.
After a while father removes the red-hot
hook, dunks it in a basin of wat€r
v/here it sizzles and turns bT0wnlsh-green.
An Involuntary laugh escapes
me, and father smiles too as he com-ments,
'-Look, my little rogue, vhafs
ha.ppened to its color." The hook was
now fiiiLshed: A.mäd haste 8wept oyer
me to get it at once into a lake. into
the vveiting mputh pf a roaoh or
perch.' Now för a pole and some
v/orms.'- .
'No doubt a good line would. l«
useful," father interrupted. "Yes, of
course." I try to clam myself but it's
not eäsy. F^äther reaches for a ball
of thread from a dresser drawer. He
zäiis me to hold it>hile he begin» tp
Rain is Welcome
Except on Sundays
"Called because of rain." tosi Summer
that would have been a famlliar
saying but this summer rain has
been SO scarce i n the Sudburjr district
that mcst people have taken advan-tage
of the few showers during the
course of the season to cool off,
clothes and' ali. after fiweatlng
through veeks of aknost utibearably
hot weather.
Such:was not the case last Sunday,
however. when a steady drizzle made
it impossUile to compl^te the track
and field meet which had been sche-duled
to take place at the Alertstleld
as part bf the Labor Festival. Des-plte
the rain \vhlch started early In
the moiuiiiig a good number of
athletes had braved the nreather.
The meet wiU be re-scheduled for a
later date. •
This coming Sunday local track and
field men wiU be competing at: the
Jehu field, Beaver Lake.
The events Include a 3-event for
open and under .17 boys (100 m.,
shotput and broadjump) and also for
women. Children under 12 will have
a 60 m. race and a novel event wlU
be the iveteran's relay, v h l c h is open
to members of the FCASP or PO of
C who are 40 or over.
The following weekend the Jehu
field will be the site of a Speed spon-sored.
meet. This meet wm feature
the semi-annual competltion for the
Sundholm Trophy vvnich was won
by Jehu last Winter in Winter sports.
Y ^ e ' i ^ ^ o ^ tidbits of änform- 1 trnwind.: /•D.n-t Jet go/' he, wan|8.
aSon in L pairiful fashion mention- ; But of course I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
ed above | srart over again. Clunisy me — will
Ifeypt,whlle not a basketball poweri 1 ever get to fish? ^ ,^ V
in t ^ t Olymplcs. does have a tra. "Now shaH we.get a Tole?v I ask
ditionof i n t e S o n a l competltion in f ^ ^ " l ^ ^ ^ ^ i l ^^
the game and had some pretty fair | ready and ^»^^ f ^^J**^ j ^ , ^ " !
scores. 80 the 22 point margin of as we make a float^nd a welght,
victory over them at least indicates - A «oat and welght! They aren't nec-that
the Chinese team at War6aw is
not of the PÄ. 14 va-'Iety.
manage to get one into my palm
v/ithout spilling the rest over the
floor, With his penknife father splits
the shot haU-way through, f its the
iine i n the openlng, then bites it to-gether.:
'And now the lloat?" I f s in
my mouth! I've been bitlng and
sucking at it ever since father —
that playful parent of mine! — gave
i ^ to unsuspecting me earlier this
morning.
AU set except a pole. A bean stalk
which I could snatch on the way,
wouId be good enough. But father
pretends not to hear. 'Wlthout a word
he walks swlftly, even runs downhill,
to a distant grove. I f ly behind as
though tied to him; I repeat his every
action — the same steps. the Identlcal
Icaps over ditches and windfalls. Tm
determined to keep up with him, take
the pole from his 'hands the moment
i f s ready — not a second later.
. Father trims the sprigs of a moun-tain
ash cuttlng and strips the bark
from the thicker end. He ties the line
t.) the tip and winds it around. No
longer can I restrain n^yself. Im-patlence
conquers, I Jump and plead:
"Give It to me now — i f s good
enough — please dear father, let me
have If' I f s In my hands, I turn to
flee. "What do you say?" " T - h - a - n . . ,
And again I turn. "What?" "Thank
you, dear f-a . . . " Nothing more is
father able to elicit from me and
more than this he apparently does
not expect.
Through the g a r d e n ^ over the fence
— along a rldge — across the
meädow — my headlong flight ends
by the bridge. On fours to the ground
to seize a chunk of earth, tear and
puli It to tatters In search of a vorm;
in my fingers a wiggling fargment
that I manage 8omehow, puffing and
trembling, to put on the fcook and
east into the shallow water. No one
around except me and the big bridge
v i t h its greylng foundations; no
sound save the gentle lapping of the
siow-movlng current.
Torstaina, elokuun 18 p. — Thursday, Aug. 18.1955 Sivu 3
CO-OP PICNIC DREW
THRONGS OF PEOPLE
Ilolder of the Canadian Womcn^s closed golf championship
for the past five ycars.21-year-oid Marlene .Stewart, retalned
her women's open title at Victoria, B . C , with a victory over
Mary Gay. She now has her sights tralned on the U. S. Open
to be held August 22. •
TV VyRESTLERS PUT ON
AN ELABORATE SHOW
By TOM MCEWEN
By virtue of the labors of my son
Normie, the McEwcn houseiiold recently
acquired a TV. On the. install-ment
pian of course, which is pro-b^
ly one of the greatest sportlng
features of this age.
Wlth the aid of tliis TV I have been
brought closer to the .sportlng World,
or to be more precise I should say
sport has been brought closer to me.
Either way, I find I am becomlng a
confirmed addict of one purlicular
TV weekly feature, wrestling; At lejist
tl:at's what they call it;
Each Staurday night I find myself
.seated and awaiting "The Main
Evpnt' of "Wrestling in Hollywood."
The Mlssus heads for the kilchen or
somewhere out of TV range, whJle the
rest of the family move coutlously
around as if in fear of running foul
of one of Ali Pasha's deadIy"cobras"!
The Hollywcod 'grunt . - and -
groan" boys l-ut on a superlatlve
fadistic show at murdermg each
other. Gouging, ear pullmg, hair pul-
Img, kicks in the stomachi or other
fulnerable areas of the human ana-tomy,
head-butt!ng hke mountain
rams at rutung. time, everything
goes. In fact nothiiig of a mayhem
natui-e ."ieems to be barred, allhough
tourhey of ningnificeht streiigth and
sklll in- the: art of putting ari op-poneiifs
shoulders öh the mat.
In Holiywo6d it would seem. that
Wrestling, ;Uke the Vlrtues; is nöt
restricted by conventionäl rules, and
If thero are rules they go through the
lopes with the flrst; "flylng back-breaker."
. T h e elabbrate robes, 'halr-dos,
scbwis and other essehtialsworn by
the Hollywood "prbfessioiial" wre8tl
ers indicate that tlie . roughhöuse
i;how teciinique is much more; In de-mänd
than ari up-and-upi contest bf
strength and skill.
The characters themMlves and the
names they have. adopted underllne
the main purppse of their profession
— to put on a show räther than a
Avrestling bout, and to make it ap-pear
sufficlentiy brutäl and blbod
thirsty sb that the fans ;Wlll feel
they'vq had their money's wbrth.
«Sometlmes ons gets,a close-up look
at some of the audicnce whlle the
"Bbnecrusher from Texas'' sie*"'* ^
be having Tiis rieck dislbcated, wlth
ä • stput lady: shbuting abpve the dln
tp "mplder.the bum." It ali adds aplce
tb this Hollywood version of wre»tl|ng
At bther times a contestant and
porhon of the audlence howl at eajrfi
o;her iikc wltches over ä cauldron oi
at times the refree doe» hand out a dcvirs brew wMle the referee help-decision
on "a foul" while he nimbly lessly look» on. It ali adds up to «
skips around his grappling opponenUs.
In my youthfyl days when the Russian
.Hackenschmldt u.sed to vislt
Scotland for a bout or two wlth the
finest in the Govan and Aberdeen, po-lice
(Cumberland stylei, one saw a
nolsy rough-and-tumble 8how label-led
"wrestling".
Dcspite ali that, if the TV hasn't
b]own*a tube comu Saturday. I'll b(
i;ack rooti(ig for Ali Pa^ia and Bo-
.r.ecrusher MatfDonuldl
Bootie Legging
By BOB WAill> bootic-legglng. But they^aled the
( hoy» into cuatody anyway. «tout fell-
We see by (he paper.s whcrc thrce ^^^^^ ^^^^
Wlndsor boys, ali under eight years
01 age. had sevtral citlzens virlually
fi-othing at the mouth recently. 'Ihia
boys in qucstlon started out on a hot
day tb .sell Pre-shie.
They .set up their .stjind and accord-ing
to the nev/.s llem business was as
poor as most bas-se.s.say they are a
limes of negotiationrj. Indced, indeed
the soft drink was ju.st too liard to
sell.
Our new;i itcm gave no further Information
on the case of the mlssing
ca.se. Whether the boys are «tili bot-tled
up was no3 disclosed. .
Ako not .knowaj wa« how. tlie boy'«
}:op reacted when he arrived home
on that hot day and went to look for a
cool one. As one father we have an
laea of how wc would react, But In
these enllghlened days of chlld psy-chologj'
many parents never etrlke
But were these boy.sdpwnhe:irted?Jti:(;ir. children except in self defense,
Did they pop off and. quit? 'Ihey^''
o id not.
We werc 5omewhat «urprised that
t;cwspaper edltorlals failed to hali the
enter);rl.se and rugged individuality
o* the youn^fitcrs. For it dld seem to
Öne of the boy.H jUiJt happeued to
recall that his pop dldn't care much
for Freshie either. His father, he re- ; u;; that here was a good example of
How long I «tood herestaring at thej fjected. had a taste which ran more j l-.ov; red-blooded and aggresslve action
float and how it ali happened, I do
not recollect, Did the float move or
dld I feel ä tug and jeric upward? I
only knew that something llew i n the
air above my head, I crawl in the
to stuff whlch came in green lyjttles,|Khowed that under ''freeenterprlse"
Mattef of fact, it occurred to hirn.ahy Canadian bby could get started
it Just SO happened that the truck | on the way to his fifst milllon. ;
vir-lch brought the driiiTc whlcli »o j Perhaps the newB that broke about
pleased his dad had Ijeen. aU their j the .'.ame time.regardlng the E, P,
grass. holding an |
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