1949-12-20-37 |
Previous | 37 of 62 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
|
SEGTION VII Tiistaina, joulukuun 20 päivänä—Tuesday, December 20 C L U B N E W S ARE YOU A TEEN-AGE SMOKER? Have you gct the smolcing habit? T ^ e thoiisands of other teen-agers acros; the country, do you feel that tf i i ihe smart t h i n g to do, and that vou are being modern and hep, while TCU: parents \vhö protest are being *j,;d-ra£hloned and backward? Weil, 5:cp fcoling yourself. You are being •aken i n by a wide-open advertising campaign to draw the teen-age h i gh sch<jol.yoii:i\ i n t o the smoking market. How is this being done? Tiae average human-being is a hero- «•orshipper. Who - are his heroes? Peop:e in the public eye, and these are paid great sums by manufacturers to "Ä^ll the goods", and the millions ;n profits that the manufacturers ac. qi;:re i n using this methcd i n advertising has made them avid for more. Tobacco companies are not back-ward i n this respect either. Testimo-n: al advertising has l i n e d their pockets to the extent that one of the biggest mor.npolies, the Imperial Tobacco Company makes over $6.000,000 a year i n profits. Tliat, of course, is not enough. Smoking at one time 'vvas considered to be s t r i c t l y for men. In fact, it took a lot of advertising to make most of them believe that it was not a disgraceful habit. Advertisements convincing them t h a t it was right and proper included pictures of older men in smoking jackets, pipe i n hand, or a business man i n conferehc(e~with his colleau-gues — a l i with cigars or cigarettes — i m p l y i n g i n this fashion that it was relaxing and at the same time s t i m u l a t i n g to ihe intellect to smoke. T h i s was for the businessman. To get the workingman's market, a miner was shown taking it easy d u r i n g his l u n c h hour, pulling at the weed,'and t h e n in a close-up, he beamingly tells a l i of how much easier it is for h i m to work after his smoke. This applied to the workers at the lathe. steam-shovei, the iumbenhah, the r a i l w a y worker and others. It prac-t i c a l l y became a challenge to their masculinity. Narrowing its market to the male smoker became very cramping to the tobacco manufacturers. Over half the population was s t i l l going around without the cigarette. This h a d to be changed, and so a new advertising campaign vas bom. F o r the women of course! The f i r st World war brought them into heavy Industry, and so into the advertising arena for smoking. This campaign i m p l i e d that a part of a woman's emancipation and freedon lay i n her t a k i n g up smoking immediately. In this way she would prove to the over. bearing male t h a t she wasevery bit as good as he was. T h i s campaign continues to this day, o n l y now i n a more subtle fashion. Now we have the old hero-worsh:pping cliche that worked SO well w i t h the men. The actress, the opera star, the fashion illustrator. the career g i r l , the athlete, are ali being drawn i n to show the woman that it is r i g h t and fashionable for her to smoke. Women's magazines carry full-page spreads e x t o l l i n g the virtues of the cigarette. Now that smoking has become a habit w i t h most of the worId s adulLs c o n t r i b u t i n g to the profits of the tobacco Industry, that $6,000,000 profit has become ioo cramping. Surely there was something they had over-looked. —What was ieft* The great h i g h scliool market, of cotirse! Sure encugh, that is the target of the advertisers now, and there is a fortune to be made in convincing you, the teen-ager, to smoke. i n the U . S . one of the big tobacco firms furnishes free fcotball programs for high school games. beautifully illustrated, with action photos, high school crests, and of course, large beautifully l a i d out advertisements on - m i l d " cigarettes. L i n k i n g the athletic idols of the teens ali over the ccntinent with the tobacco habit is another methpd, the Old one. Önly this time it is aimed d i r e c t l y at the youngest crowd, the teens are the target. Have you f a l l e n for this' advertising? Here are some statistics fhat will make you t h i n k twice. O n every package of Canadian cigarettes that you buy at 35 cents a package. 24 cents goes to Ottawa in taxes. The average one-pack-a-day smoker, therefore, pays i n direct tax-ä t i o n 24 cents x ä65 days — $8"i0 a y e ä r . If two i n t h e f a m i l y smoke they pay in taxation to the aipount of $175.00 a year. .'Vdd to this a teen-agers contribution, a n d ' w h a t do you have? The actual r e t a i l price of 20 cigarettes is 11 cents plus tax. The tax on cigarettes is hidden .so l i i a t the worker is p a y i n g the taxes of the tobacco Industry. The S50.0C0 a year bu.<:inessman and the $35.00 a week worker both buy 35 o em cigarettes. T a k e n in proportion to what they earn, who pays the most money? The workers, of course. I n the meantime, the Imperial Tobacco company, the biggest in the f i e l d , is w o r t h over $97,000,000. It reaps over $6,000.000 a year f r om its present market, and is seeking to increase its profits by drawirig you, the teenager i n t o its midst. So befcre you start smoking because its the smart t h i n g to do (according to the advertise.'-s> — teen-ager, t h l i ik twice! BAN THE CRIME 'GOMrC BOOKS Two months ago E . D . F u l t o n . T o r y , M P for Kamloops. introduced i n the i House of Common» a private b i l l to j amend the c r i m i n a l code to ban the sale, i m p o r t a t i o n a n d publication of crime bcoks i n Canada. This bill has been given second reading. and i n response to widespread support, Justic€ M i n i s t e r G a r s o n has promtsed to take the matter under • ' a d v i s e m e nf a n d is asking the •provinces for suggesiions. In the meantime, publ i c agitation on this question is con-t i n u i n g . O n November 14 for instance a large delegation representing the M a n i t o b a Home ahd School Clubs a nd the M a n i t o b a C o u n c i l of Women v i s i t - ed the provinclal attorney-genera! and demunded that he support the proposal to ban this literaturo. It is to be regretted that the pro-gre- s-^ive movement did not take the i n i t i a t i v e on this matier. or that it has not yet entered the discussion to any appreciable extent lalthough the T r i b u n e has commented a number of times). As a result. i n the con-siderable di.scussion aroused, the nvain issues have been ignored. Last year, the French Communist Party waged a vigorous campaign on the same subject and scored a big victory i n having l e g i s l a t i c n passed banning a l i crime comics. Needless to say the campaign i t waged was quite different f r om the cne being currently con-ducted i n Canada. Q u o t i n g from a survey made by expert.s in the U. S., Mr. F u l t on Khcwod that, whilc i n 193C iherc was not one coinic book publi.'(hed i n the Units-d. State.s, there are now no lcs.s t h a n 720 m i l l i o n per year! This .survey goe.s on to point out: "If there i;; c n l y one vioJent picture evory page — and there are usually more — evey city c h i l d who was six years Old in 1938 has by now absorbed a n ' absolute m i n i m um of eighteen t h o u - ' sand pictorial beatings, shootings, stranglings, blood puddles, and tor-turings to death from comic books. alone. The f c r t i f i c a t i o n of this Visual violence w i t h s i m i l a r a u r a l v i o - lencc over the radio d a i l y , a n d both togelher in the movies on Saturday must al;o be counted i n . " (The Psychcpathology of C o m i c Books, by Prederic Werthan). VVhat M r . F u l t o n failed to poInt out is that this gigantic output o£ • l i l e r a t u r e " , glorifying brutality is no accident — that it is i n fact d i r e c t l y rclated to the m ö n s t r o u s war aims of American imperiali-sm,. The war American i m p e r i a l i sm is pUuming would be a war of uv.preced-entcd horror and violence directed (Continued on next page) The new Memorial Students' Union Buildintr ai Quecn's University was opened recently by General Alexander. It M'as erected as a memorial t o ' Q u c « n V University men who fought and died in two World IVars and replaces a smaller buildingr which was destroyed by fire in 1947. cCONNELL & SON PrXKlTUSTA JA L.^MMITVSLAIXfEITA 67 Beech St. E. Sudbury Olkoon Joulunne Iloinen — ja Uusivuosi menestyksellinen CARLOAD GROCERY Itsetarjoilu liha- ja ruokatavarakauppa 35ELMST.WEST SHDBUBy OIKEIN HAUSKAA JOULUA JA ONNELLISTA UUTTA VUOTTA Kiitämme asiakkaitamme h e idän arvokkaasia kannatuksesta Furniture Co. Oomer NOTRE DAME & BOND Phonc 3-3621 Espanolassa haaraliike ' R. S t . G E R M A I N E , l i i k k e e n h o i t a ja ESPANOLA HARDWARE 30 SECOND ST. Once, again, at the close of another year we are mindfuFof the-irhpörtance of your good wi 11 and friendship, With the holiday season at _ . _hand we are most anxious to wish everyone the Merriest Christmas ever and a New Year filled with happiness and success. Sudbury Brevving & Malting Company Ltd. LORNE STREET SOUTH SUDBURY, OI^fTÄRIO
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, December 20, 1949 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1949-12-20 |
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 | Vapaus491220 |
Description
Title | 1949-12-20-37 |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
OCR text |
SEGTION VII
Tiistaina, joulukuun 20 päivänä—Tuesday, December 20
C L U B N E W S
ARE YOU A TEEN-AGE SMOKER?
Have you gct the smolcing habit?
T ^ e thoiisands of other teen-agers
acros; the country, do you feel that
tf i i ihe smart t h i n g to do, and that
vou are being modern and hep, while
TCU: parents \vhö protest are being
*j,;d-ra£hloned and backward? Weil,
5:cp fcoling yourself. You are being
•aken i n by a wide-open advertising
campaign to draw the teen-age h i gh
sch |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for 1949-12-20-37