1956-03-08-03 |
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se ien aiB-' Juo oi '7. inrtlnsulin jbe fOBgmHy tbat 4iabet)cs tnay , tbe oesr lotoze be jrelievt^ of tbe i of JaniUD t t o s p y js nised by. mtitixi^. Tkiese TtpoTis dti-' bigtair ;«ueeessfta u^^^ oxai drugs to nduee blobd sugaf le» of dlabeta paöentB. V ; jbjyone «Itb 'fint-band eii?erjbbio> diabetes koovs of the burden bn-by tbe need for «Udljr tojet^dns bisnlbi in orttt fto bäiance sogar metäbblism. w ^ mi}, of xnen aiul women bave had ins to be thanUtd for the life^^ iving quailties of ixisulia. ttie^ haye had abapst as <^peUihg' zea. to be'resentful at the dlarupttön diseomfbrt resultibg from the .eed im tbedrug. Koff come: prelfminary reports on 's-jjii>miinieal experiments ttrlth two nev - ^'1^ sotfonamide drugs (described in Me- • '«ii ucal New8,Uie newspap€r for pbysi- ' -ies äans) whi(di Indicate "asionlshing" tuccess i n reducing blood-sugar levels - '-^k rfter ohly a f e* days of therapy. One ' 55 )f the newicompounds, BZ-55, was gi-ceim^ fiää jrcn to 82 diabetes patients. Within a oopflli*» few days, blood sugar levels were l&ajj^i tarought wIthin:.the:normal range in iioisistajf Biese expetlmental cases. In; some väestöä ^4 u these patlents.«BZ-S5 could be dis-irk «ii^'« continued aftcras littie as 10 days puuvi]£:u aiid the blood sugar levels continued 2 hiili« lobe normal if proper limitatlon of putAa^u sugar in the dietffas continued. sikiilu:T- It should be-emphasized that the [na:''-<ii!^'i two sulfa >compounds> are. taken by narjojä^? mouth, while insulin is generally ad-itnei^;!< i: minlstered by Intramuscular injection. The^effectlveness of :B2-55 was nöt unifonn ajnong ali •patients.lt apv peared to be most effective on adult patients previously treatedby insulin and dietary' limltations. It did not •••</,izt 5sa AI-= • itu iiii : hert*'" a ka on ; .'U istosss'"' • ^ - iSftr J sent^ enpabr barnaiif-5 amma^H*^*" to be,as effective with younger patients -oramongvthose in the upper: age brackets.' In te$tsthusfar of BZ-55 and of tbe secbnd oral sulfa drug used in treatment> of':diabetics, D-860, there were no indicatlbns of serioiis side-elfects wM(äi'mlght niiIMy'the iise-iulness of the drugs. Oiltiandish Names Are Not Limited To Foreign Couniries (Mflwakee Jonrtal) - • ^ The boy located Zylks, La.,' i n the atlas and had a good laugh over i t After ali. a boy brought up i n a state with perfectly understandable, and simple names like Oshkoshi^iNekoosa, Wauzeka, Mukwonago and Poy Sippi does haye hls funnybone tickled when he runs into an öutlandisli name for a town. Bo he looked further and came up with a la^rge assortment, including Dneprodzevzhinsk in Russian Zywiec in Poland, and Jyväskylä-in Finland. He wonder,ed: Where do such names come from? •Weil, there's a meaning behind most ali of them if you know the- löcal language or the occasion for. the town's settelement. Even a name like Mllwaukee has a meaning i — and you can g B t in great arguments over whe-ther it means "a great counoil place", a/'good,or pleasant land" or stinklng river." And it recalled how grandpa ended a discussion o f place names once apon a tlme quoting a favorite bit of dog-gerel afaout "The Siegeof DJklxpnv-bz". As the verse had it, DJklxprvvbz, a town in Turkey, once had a longer name-but the Russians attacked it and "rained f at bombshells down and blew o u t every vrfwel in the town." You can't find Djklxprtvbz on the map? Probably noti You see "the Turks, becoming somewhat sad"; l a - ter "surrendered every consonant they had.» A PrizeWmnin9 Essay O n Juriiör Hockey in Canada » ^ y FLOYD vnULISTON : Recentiy, the Winnipeff Flree. Press sponsored a contesi for the' best letter.dealing vith the qaes-: tion "What*s wrong witb Jnnior hockey?'' Floyd Wfiliston, a re- , : gnlar contributor to the: yoaUi v paper "Champion", wonseeond prize (SIO) with. the foUoiriog letten ; Other mnners were A.' C. Masson, first,' and M. N. 3Iacr PhaU, thfa^ Äs a young person who Has played junior hockey as well as otherorga-nized hockey in Nova Scotia and Ontario, I would. like to present m y opinion on "Whät is ailing Junior hockey today and how the situation can be remedled.". The first thing that comes to my mind; is "Is jimior hockey really of junior calibre?'.' L i most team sports there are midget, jqveni]e,'Junior, i n termedia te and senior classifications. In hockey, much more than any other sport, the Junior class is more or less the stepping stone to. Professional hockey (NHL). Senior hockey is mostly made up of players who are continually shuffling back and forth to the NHL, or else players like Moslenko, Doug Bentley. and othersvvvho are slowing -up and no longer are of Professional (NHL) 6allbre. Because ot the near-professional status of the junior teams,-a great number. of our young hockey players are left out of organlzed hockey after they pass the age for-juvenlle. This, to my ttiind, is ^because of the almost apah'*''? pälÄ ^' ai-afJ^-^ useita'<-'i virasi-istl>;;^ j itaina,^.] tavasL-jj ime irfn'"" Imä f . i.r. •H. • vätiP»'! »n- — . maar-'*»! ikaatf "tai-/3j liiav-' ne—- äCt, se-! siä CANADIAN WÖMEN HAVE ACHIEVED AStOUNDING RESULTS IN SPORTS .Itt otir Society, few chances ;are available- to von^en, although; much lip servlcevis constantly paid to equa- 11^. However, in the field of sport where';participation haä been on & more or less equal hasis, the so^icälled "we^er srai"; has.achieved resotmding successes. Canada's lOth place in last month's Winter OJ>ymplcswas mainly due to efforts of our female athletes.. Of the 16 points «ön by the Canadian teami (unoficially), the wömen were respön-sible for 12. Lucille Wheeler, skier, Frances Dafoe^ Carol Wagner and Ca-: rol Pachlj figure-skaters, saved our representetion from finishing way down the list. Ihe 1955 -. Pan-American Oames. held to Mexico City, 7,000 feet äbove sea level, were aiso noteworthy for the flne showtog of our women swimmers; viho WQn several medals against top US athldtes. The todividual. Star of the games was Montrears Beth With-all with two f irsts and a second — an amazing performance, conslderlng the con^tition and the altitode. Uliss Withall, tocidentally. wa8 avarded tbe Lou Marsh MemorialTrophy. es Canada's AtUete of the Yeanfor-lSSS. * • • 'Although our record In intematio- I nai competitions since the war has jnot been too bright, without the gals it would bave been a lot duller. In |fact Canada's standing at Melbourne next NoveiidKr, -»111 hinge mainly on jour ffomen:swimmers and track and field stors, who faave the best chance to win some Olympic medals or certi- [ficates. Led by Beth Withall, Virginia and ISusan Grant of Toronto, Hele£ 'fete\v- I art of Vancouver;and Brantford's Sa-j ra Barber,:>Coach Tommy Walker's I group: of; pqpl artists can be classed among the worId's best. With some" government subsidy, there's no telling , athlate of the- half-century, Bobby how good they'd be. Outstanding/ among the current crop o f track and fielders i s Toronto's Jackie MacDonald school ; teacher tumed "discus thrower. Her showing In the 1954 British >Empire Games at Vancouver bodeswell for our points; brigade at the '56 Olympics. ' Perhaps one of the best bets for Olympic honors is I7-year-old Emes-tine Russell o f Windsor, North Ameri-; can gymnastic C h a m p i o n . This young lass, at 16. defeated the best gymnasts in; the USA and was the first person to win ali three events at the national US championship meet hi Rochester, last spring. • • .„ < Before Emestine, this country pro-duced other world-nenowned athletes whose exploits are not t o o well known today, Twenty-eight years • ago,; the spoits W o r l d was stärtled by a young lady from Saskatchewan.:, Ethel Ca-therw6od left her native Saskatoon and burst mpon the Olympic scene i n Amsterdam by defeathig the wor!d's best in the high ump- Her record i n 1928 was five feet, three inches. Four years later. the Winter Games at Lake Placid, N; Y.; was the scene of another Canadian triumph. - To-ronto- born Jean Wilson, holder, at 21; Of Canadian and US speed-skating championships, won the -SOO-metre race with a time of 58 seconds. • ' The year the first World War began a :group o f Edmonton high school girls döcided to play basketball and asked theh: teacher to coach them. From this inauspicious beginning, the Ed-: monton Grads went o n to become the wfarld's best. Led by coach Percy Page, t h e Grads defeated all comers for 25 years, w i n n ^ g world artd Olympic championships. Rosenfeld began her amazing career almost as soon as she arrived in this country as a youngster about 26 years ago. Bobby hit champlonsliip stride •in any sport in which she competed. Track and field, basketball, ice hockey and sof tball all succumbed to.herpror wess, Joint holder öf the 100-yard wor:d record at 11; seconds. Miss Rosenfeld alsowon World honors in the 1928 Olympics when she helped set an Olympic record in the 400-metre re-lay. Other members of \^that great team were Myrtle Cook, Florence Bell and-Ethel Smith. • * I» No article on athletic achlevements, male or female, would be: complete w?lhout msntioning "Cd!nada's Sweet-heart," Marilyn Bell,; fh-st and only conqueror of l.ake Ontario (29 others tneä and faUed) and the youngest woman to swun the Engllsh Channel. Like the sport heroes of yester-year, Marilyn today, represents the goal of all young. athletes who want to win honors and galn iprestlge for thelr country. AU they need is the opportunity. To paraphrase Mr. Churchill's. famous World War n call, ^"Give thenj the tools:' (and gyms) and they 11 do- a Job!" complete Unk-upbetweenJanlorclubs and Professional organizaUons, vbicfa promotes the ideai— only ^eyelop the few naturals ^ tostead of mass par-ticipation, and developing large num-bers. i'; '••Vi '•--•"'V.-*.^::-."vV:.'' However. those whb agree witii such Control and subsidizing, argue that if: it wasn't f or the Professional dubs and ipieirsupport. there would be no Junior bockey today. However, I feel that Junior hockey would be much better and players would take much more toterest in the game if there wa5nt this link-up be-tween Junior and professional dubs. It is true that «hese sports dubs, no matter what sport it is, must bave. money to order to f unction. , I feel that there Should be government grants to provide such facUit^es and funds. If the PhysiQ^ Pitness program' were rdnitlated in the form of a $100.000.000 <one bundred m i l - lion) yearly grant from the federal government (or a national sports anid recreationscheme.then Junior hockey as well as a l l other sports; wou'd be able to iunctlon. more young: ^people could' participato and the number ef high . calibre sportsmen would; be greatly tocreased.Then sports wouId be played for tlie sake of the game and'to wto rather than for the sake of themoneyand to mutilate. ' Junior hockey shpu^d be 'what it statls-T- the class.in which all yoimg. people between the äges,of 18-21. bave the opportunity to develop their playing sMllsstill further. v - A ^ far as attendance: is' concemed,: it is true that TV affect&it somewhat,. but. my main. concem in . this regard - is that people stey away because' they feel that it isn't~hockeybetog played as hockey should be played—to a sports-manlike manner.' ^ .(This is more the case Inljockey as played to Toronto but is also ref lected here as to games between Fort vWil-liam and St. Bonlface.)-: V- ' A^so, A retum tothe style of hockey to .which skiU outshone bra))i^n, would also be helpful to regaining public support for our national game. Yours f or a more sane approacb to sport. ' Canadian Premiere Of A Famous Play By Tlie Play-Actors : Ttoronto. — The Canadian premiere of a play acclaimed In Paris, London «nd New York will toke place at Hart House Theatre for three nights be-giiming March 22nd. ' «rrhe Good Hope" is probably the most famous of Herman HeiJermans^ plays, though the noted playwrlght is also well-known in IBurope for several other plays. as well as many short stories. It is cönsidered a classic in HeUennans* native Netherlands and is regularly performed and studled in schools there. -Set in a Outch fishing village at the tom of the century, "The Good Hope" tells the S t o r y of the ,women, the chili dren and the old men left behind ;;when unseaworthy. ships g o to sea. Because it revealed the shocking con-ditions under which: these sea-faring folh; had to live and work,its first performance to 1902 resulted In government legislatlon to improve the Ship's Act. Dutch seamen were SO gratefui to Heijermans, t h e / took up a coUection f or, his f amily upon hls death in 1924. ..The play is betog performed by the Play-Actors under the direction of Toby Gordon and Walter Balay.; New Canadian Postage Stamp Honors Hockey 'Canada has honore(( its national sport by Issulng the first "hockey stamp." The five-cent stamp, shows a' goalkeeper and two other : players wearing unlforms wlth "Canada" ,ac-ross the front. It's ;the first stamp in this country to honor-a sport. ' MATTEB ÖF OPINION ;BI11 and his girl were walking out to., the country one Satiirday and the girl8aw some, beautiful flovcrs be-htod a fence. She persuaded Bill to climb over..and pick some forher.and qf course, he agreed. - > , : ' ^ter he struggled over, he noticed EV -btill ' S t a n d t o g quietly some way of f. He-ioalled' to a farmer in' the ^next field; "Hey! IB this buU over here safe?". The farmer never looked. up. f'Weil,": i said, "he'6 a heck öf a lot safcr than you are." Ui. CM te SovieTliiPileHer nnn NHL Teams Ck>Acb 4d}n Mariuccl «r tbe Vtd" ted Stotes Olympic tiock^ stoted upon hi« arrivaS home atter a series of post^^Iymple gamess Jn Europe tbe the Russian team 4fcan outpass anytblng to (he National Hockey League." The fonner Chicago Black Saxta Stor said the Olympic hockey cham> pions"c3n skato as weU aa any team in the professlonals and tbere's no telling hDw good tbeyu pe in a couple of years," The team flew to theUS from 6cot> land following a post-OIymple round of exhibition games to Europe. "You've ,got to see the Russians to believe just how much class they*ve got." Mariucci sald^ " ^ e only tbtog they lack rtght now is ingenulty. Some times they can't seem to come up with that.!itolshing punch. But glve them time, theyll get It. *'You never 6aw such fierce Interest to conditlon. Tbe momtog after they won the Olympics the R\issianswere out on tlie ice practislng. "It's thelr legs and tostlncts that get the Job done." he said. "They leam It from soccer." , ALWA¥S A IVAY "I hear you're wrttlng a book on '*How to Rear Your 'Baby?M>oii't you find writlng It an awful Job, with yomr own baby to look after?".:: "Oh. no, Baby's at his grand» mother'8 so's I can get on with the book!" iittiiiiiiiÄ This ve^,instead of dolng »' rcvlew I thought ,X'd pass on to you some commeots on *'miy Europe OK'S Mo-vle Nudes But Bans US Film 'Hor-ror." as expressed to one of those poc-ket- sised jn%B^;Elnes called People To. day, It seems that European movic oensor» have been tclUng Hollywood to "cut out the violence.'r People Today reports that In a rccent Icttcr to the HoUywood Production Code Au- Ihority the secretory of the Britsh Boatd of Pllm Censors wrotc:f "Any-one prolonglng scenes of vlolcnc; is only dolng it to titillate a smal! un-healthy section of the audlcnce. Wc wlU cut ruthlessly orrefuse ccrtifi-cates to f l l m sm whlch sadism and brutallty ore unnecccssarllyhcxplolt-ed." According to the story this policy has meant a loss in profit of about $2 mllllon and one official of the Mo-tlon Picture Export Association* is quoted as saying "what worrles us Is that the rejectlon of US plctures seems to be on the increasc," Appa-rcntly it is not the vlolence in the f Ilms that vorries hlm—just the f act ot thehr rejectlon." The Story also notcs the act that "the axe overseas falls most heavily on plctures 8howing pfhyslcal mlshand ling of women." Among. the tilms cut to Norway was The Long Wait, from 5|: m -.-.pf which a c^ose-up of a girl «ba*J5iAi^ < been tortyred was baoned, f^l»^Tsi^': j day says that one BrttUti ftjaor-n^^J, markcd thai "We never take tbfo|)Q ; out of a film because tbe fiUngoi^ i ehouldn't «te tbem —I bato tbat «ofH' " shoudn't. We.take out onJy , the normal, respoxuOble peiso^,«di>'t ^ wont to see anybow " , ' The artlde esys that sex is ali rigblt^ with European censon as long a s ' l t' depicts life and is not dlstortfML Hovr*. evcr they do not go for aueh «torien, as Wicked Woman. whlch wa8 described as " a sorld story wlth sustoin-edemphasis on sek, and the complete'V absence of any mora! vatoe." iiiiililiiSillii It is one bf thecharacterlstt» of^ Hollywood fibns that sex. although' playing a major part to many of theml is almost never (I would probably bef safe In saying never) treated^bonest- • ly. For tostonceaghrlmayappearto^ a scanty suggestive and vtHgar eb$>'> tume but never to her booest under* wear. In one scene to Carmen Jones^ I was surprised to see Carmen dressed only to the briefest of zeal underwear„ I am 8tu>c that this scene j|<rouId'b<>t' have been permltted lf< ibe roIe^was^ played by a wblte glrL But sInce abo ^ was a Negrp gtrl in a World wblch Aö-r. cording to the movie was peopled ejt*, clusively by Ncgroes. It wa8,&IrliKi by HoIlywoodrstandard«^'^ m i PEOPLE CAN T A K E IT BUT Neurotic Dogs Cause Grave Co^ncern BY BOB WABD ' - The old "free'pres8*^'axIom; Vman bite dog—^ new8; dog blte man ~ no news," has been broughttip to twen-tieth century stondards.. For It seems in Los Angeles the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Anlmals has dlscovered L:>A.'s dogs-have, to fact been leadhig a dog'6 life and 250XKH> of 700,000 dogs In that dty are "neurotic". The SPCA Is rightly disturbed about the d^ggone' situation and have en-gaged a-canine;psychologist to sniff toto the matter.' Early dognosis bas led to the bellef that <L. A:B dogs are «'spo.iledlandi that» nolses^fect them, and, iii^reby^4>rinK;ön fe^Kf a ^ ner-vous conditlons." Special ti^eatment^ Is noFbelng! of-f ered^snd 'the 'dogologist 'feelsxtbat this ti^atment wlli guarantee that curled'cur8-will not^go around barklng up wrong trees. We have tried to ylsuallze what a dogologisfs cpnsulting room would be A n Interestiiig Study oi Children The Yritys Girls' Been Äctive yi ssä. rs-)- m» . i l - ro-J • i k - i I S - • v T o r o n t O . . E v e n thijugai^sry littie has been said about them, toe Yritys gjrmn girls have not been idle this wfater, We tiave been working hard learning a new program for our ;com-: . „ ^ . ini'50thAimlversaiy,'This, of course. Chosen Canada s aU-round woman ^.^^^^ Our other activities include perform-ing for the Ukranians at one of their "concerts Sunday evening, March 4. ' Although the da te hJasn't been deci-ded, vre have also been asked to per-förm at the Annuzl Chamjp;,Cphcert to' be held at the U . J . p ; Ö. hali sometime to ApriL This is the third year that we have lieen asked to help but by both of these groups. After Vuosijuhla is over, we wii be-gin a. big drive on our competltion gymn and the mass gyfim for .Liitto-juh'at, Now you know — we have a c - tualy faeen working hard s6 you bet-ter Just watch out for us. Don't forget the bigday — Mardi 25,1955 — the date of our 50th Anni-verssry. The program Is gotog to be terrific and vOl have quite a fewsur-prises for you, — V. M , •/^- ' l i i 1 ^ THE DESCBnmON FITS "What do you mean. your husband leads a äog's life? I thought he trcat-ed- you badly?" rrhafs just IL He's aSway8 growI-iog,; tracks his mud across the carr pet. W a i t s to-be fed, and<is ahvays snappii^ at mc," These Studies ot children are^ by Ln^vlk Askenazy, < one of Uie; yonnger generacion of. :Czeeh vriters, itbo has made a name for htoiself irith hto afaort etorles. and sketehes, three; volomes of whlch have appearedfir book form; ^ Top-Itae PoUtIcs, Germaa Spring and A Hondered Flres. - Hls eharmtog ChUd Stodlesi pre-sented 'on. this page, 8how the llgbter side .of hls work.. My littie, son and I.w^e playing ät Fire Brigades. My Job wa8 to ring up and say where tbe flre wa8. He took the'telephone calls ^^ecause he was on duty; Then he sounded the alarm, put on his fire man'8 helmet and drove out' of the Fire Stetion boottog for all he was wortb. It wa8 one of thöse long games whlcb Jooked as though It would never end.' "Is that the Fire Stätlon?" I en-" quired. ' , • "Yes", answered the man on duty, "what doyou ivant?" " T h e gingerbread work8 to Fardu-blce is on fbe," I said.* HOiey^re to an awful stew." He asked whether the sugar factory' had caught as well, ^en be drove of f to Pardubice and, l'^8at and walted. He rang up from Pardubice to say everytbtog -was all right and: he was on his way backi Then tbe game started all-over again. I said tbe fruit Juice factory to Cbrudim was on fire, he Jumped on his fire engtoe and rushed of f, It got a bit monotonous. I bad run through ali the towns I knew and storted repeating myself. : There'd been three flres to Cbrudim one af' ter toe otber and as many as six to Pardubice, .butftbere.was no vearing the Fire Brigade out. 8o I tried to liven toings a bit. Itlalled-a number to the a ^ wltb my ftoger. The man on' ^duty 'answered the' phone as usual, "HUIlo, this is th Fire Btation., Wbatdojrou vant?" ^Are you the people «ho clIp'dog8??' I asked. - N o . - b e sald^-this Is the Fire 'Covld jou d lp m g r BeoMefl went on, "and leave hbn a okfi Uttle frlll?" The tnan-on duty {>^n torreseint äie tum thtogs:were taktog, , "Tfais 18 «tbe Fire Station," be.sald: 'If you're on £fre say so quiddy and if not. tben doot come botbertog us.*! "That'8 very good of you," I an- 8wered/ "Vm glad you can come and clip blm but do be careful whcn you do uie frlU, won't you. he's dreadfully tickllsh.^ Would you like to stoy to dinner aftenvards? We're going to have semolina pudding." The voice at the other end of the phone got angry. "Don't you know. mister that fire-men don't<eat semolina pudding?" "We!l, what do they eat?" t asked. There was an embarrassed sllence. Then the voice went on hopefully and almost pleadtog- - "This Is the Fire Statlon. You don't happen to be on firfe, do you? Because If you are there's still time for us to come and rescue you." But the heartless voice on the telephone. vent on cynically: " I am so glad I.managed to get through to you about cllpptog my Scottie after all," Thelireman on duty hesitated for a moment and then put an end to the conversation in declslve tones. "Don't ring us up unless you're on flre. ThafsaU." Then he put down the invislblc telephone and declared indignantly: "Just: imagtoe. Ifeiddy, some fool ran? up a mh)ute ago and kepfc on talklng about cllpping dogs. As it he didn't kbow this was the Fire Statlon!" I confess my faults to myself. in toe secrcQr. of my own soul, After all, paternal authority is one of the fun-damentol principles to be adhered to in bringing up children. V/e vrete out for a walk whcn wc saw a bearse. There was a coffto in it, "Daddy", said he, "thafs a dellvery van i8n'fc it?" "Thafs right," I said, "a dellvery van." "Virbafs It delivering?««— ' "The dear departed," was my answer. "The dear departed",? "A dead person." "YOU mean somebody who's died?" he asked, "Thafs right, sonny.". He grew thoughtful After looktog at the hearse for 3 while he said: "Daddy, where's he lying?" "Wbere's,who lytog?" "Theldear draarted?" he whispered. -At tbe ttacK" I told him. " B i g h t a t t h e back?" The bearse looked black and gloo-my. and the littie felIow8Uddenly began to feel afrald of deatoi He looked at me to ä scared .way ^and asked: "Must everybody die?" "Everybody," said I, "everybody, sonny. Thafs the lot of us mortols." "But you'll die before me, won't you?" he askdd in' a hopeful voice," I comforted him wlth this assuran-ce. - ' - "Come on," I-said, "Lcfs go to the left here. Therc's a field where we can pick buttercups and dalsles." "Daddy," he asked, ''will the daisies dies too?" "Come on," I said, "we'll buy an ice cream. And don'tbother about the van, lt's such an ugly black one," "Daddy, must the dear departed He at the back?" "Yes," said I. "What sort of ice cream do you Want — vanilla?" He stood still and seemed on tbe verge of tcars. ' "Daddy," he said, "when I die couldn't I slt by the driver?" "Of course yop can," I said, "thafs easlly arranged/'' But you wouldn't be ällowed to tolk to him, i f s agatost the traffic .regulatlons." He promlsed he wouIdn't say a Word, bu6 he was so glad he even storted skipping. ' "Come on," he said, "lefs go and pick daisies and make a bunch. Wbllie we're still aliv«.' Perhaps. we1I catcb a grasshopper.'^' ' He's never been : afraid of death since then. I'm not afraid, eltoer. After all, we're gotog to «It by the driver... we made a huge bunch of tlowen buttercups and daisies and one hare-bell. And the ice cream was 8trawberry. 80I;ND AllVICE "Jack makcs me tired." "Ifs your own fault, dear. You should stop running after him," RIGHT COAT, WBONG M AN A meek littie nu^n to,a restourant thnidly went up ti anotbeT man who was putttog on a coat. "Exeuse me," he ventured, "but do you iMtppea to be Mr. Smith of maeolz?" "Why no, I'm not", said tbe other man. , ^ "Oh," said the timid soul, ''VTen-er-youjxelatx/ andi^ you're putting on.*' like, and how .250.000 dogs could be hounded togcther for Fido-anatysls, Qulto frankly we'ro to too woo^s on toe matter, and can rely only on good old american know-how getting Its teeth Into the thing. Of f hand, thoV it would seem that the hydrant buildcnt ot-the natipn might wc!l become so busy that they won't cur whethor they're pointing or settlng. Stoce W6 fir^t read the tcrrierable L. A. dog itory, we'vc been hounded wlth the thought that senators like MeCarthy ,aren't golng to be litterly spoofed by. thp^ dognosis,, our obser-vations of some'Senators in USA bas led us to believe tt\cy'll discover that L, A.Vt/dogsarercally subcur-sivc and the Un>Dogg(o-ActivItIc8*Commlttce Bhould get Its cold nose Into the situation, , J . Edgar 'woofcr wlll llkely be as-signed the Job and we'C8n be surq he won't dogress from it until every dirty dog has been paw-printed and asked if It has ever been a mcmbcr of red-blooded dogs of Amerlea. Oogmatlc^l-ly refusing to ans^ver "ylp" or "yäp'^ to this question wi!l, of course. provc guilt Baslng oursel ves on how VUn" CÖm-mittees act In US., we imagtoe that It wlll be rapidly adduced that L. A. dogs have been observcd to bave the pee-cUllar habit of always sniffing at lef t-ovcrs. Some of them, it will be found have been known to be asso-, ciated with dogs who once had taken" a drink from the kcg of a St, Bcr-' nard who had a puppy love who, was 4 Russian WoIfhound/ It might be brought out that many dogs. hadn't barked when Chaplin wa8 playing at theatre. J, Edgar will show that careful "poling" has producd a wlt-ness proparcd to point a tali at the sub-cur-sives! ia?*!! Cliarlie the local Stories about former Pres.^Boo8e-velfs dog Fala wlU be revived^^di' - all ,of the reactionary Eventog.Curlers^ 4 <Momlhg, too) WIU emit yelp? df «lee ' asthe dogs of the nation are drivcn from plllar to poat. " * ' The Smith-McOur-ran Act wiu, «e^ l to It that all allens like Oreat Xf^nea, | British Bulldogs; Mexlcan < Ifalrtest», ~ ' Newfoundlandcrs, ^ Labrador Betrlei' | vcrs. and Aussian Wolfbound8 are Jn-our- ccrated At the 8ing 81ng for dogs I Bark,Bark.' Oernum dochshUhds v l l| be excludcd If they can pröve they ate^ owned by an old .CNsrman Oenerat^; munltlons makerl -Pro^pjranco.Bi»'»» nlels wlll be consldcred O. K., as «;c^ as Bloodhounds, if they can Pttml thelr blood i8n't "toat" color! Yup, citlzcns, as we, eald in ster^feg • | this column, "new8" Is a funny,thto0^'^' ' f' 1 That one-thlrd of'the dogs of L . ' A . j^j are "neurotic" Is new8. Thk condltioV \ of the people bf L . A. l8'a|>DBtent}y^, not noW8. .'" ' ' 'A' "Neurotic dogs bothcred hy n o ^ " are golng to be offered-cure; A'SO*;= clety for th9'Prcventlotf<d|^ Cnielty to^§ Animals, is providlng this attentldn, -1 Now mihd you we're not agto'~the SPCAi We'ro AMtotAt: But'we d(> | thihk that a Society for the Frevfti^^ tlon of Crudty to,Fcopte isalsa^Jlstl much needed organizatibn. PeppIe/lK seems to u?, deservo at Icast ea;M^ conoldcratlon wlth dogs, ,'-"\nL " But ten bucks wlll get you an^JlflJ* : 194$ dog liccnse that If .we viere to"^ start an SPCA for humans' andfibil: \ out how many,iiicople arebetog drlvenr "neurotic" by lbw wäge* poor w/55r^-', i ing condiitnos, poor houstog. war hys^^ teriö, witcbhunttog, speedup andaÖi of the other ills of'soclety^.it ^öuld') be immedlately labelled as a "cmrl munlst plot," , ': i, That, ciiHeta, \a the doggone sltiia-. tioo,we're confronted with and it sure. needs cur-recttog. ' r " \'''' § m i i i m m r SYDÄMELLISET ONNITTELUMME.SINIJLLE O L 6 Ä iULA öO-vuotissyntymäpäiväsi' johdosta ja paljon l Vuosia lisää toivottavat aUaniainftut ystävät ja toverit; , ' ; f-, . Rauha Ja Aimo Mäki ttilda Ja John Raivo June/Selma Ja Dave Ritari Ltonea Lind Esther Ja Toby Hakala , Aitoa Ja Vili Eklund Hilja Ja Anton Kaisla Hibna ja Ensio Wuori Mary Ja Percy Coombs Atoo j a Vkm Anttila ' BU>rttu Ja Tai{>to Länsi Siiri Ja Arvo Vuori Impi Ja ^ r o Poutanen Ida Ja Oscar Männistö Irja Ja Aatu fCoivula Arvo Kaikkonen Aune Ja Uno Koski Senja Ja Edwto Suksi Impi Ja Frank Tommila Mary Kaven Hilda Kauppila Eila Ja Viljo Vhtanen Hilja Smith Paavo Suomala Emil Johnson Laila Ja Eugene Tammi Martta Ja yjii Mäki' Julia Sutinen Mary Huhtola, Aarne Koivu , Tilda Ja Jack BCännlstd Hilma Ja Riku Valli . Aino Ja Olga Pirskanen- Tyyne Ja Kaarlo Harju Finnish-haalilla Sudbuiryssa, Ont.,'helmikuun 22 p. 1956.' K I I T O S Sydämellinen kiitokseni Sävel-kuorolle minulle Järjestetystä yllä-'^ tyksesto syntymäpäiväni Johdosta sekA kaikl?Ie niille tovereille,,/, ystäville Ja sukulaisilleni. Jotka siilien osallistuivat, Ja Ulan emänr^ nllle kaikesto touhusto Ja vaivasto, , < ^ > OUn nito hämmästynyt Ja liikutettu osakseni tuUeesto huomiosto " — vielä kaikkien kiireiden Ja lynlÄystouhuJcn keskellä. ^ Juhlahetki se oli minulle elämäni arjessa harmaassa, säilyen ikulj <' ^ t l muistojeni tarhassa parhaassa, ^ 7 " i Kiitos rahalahjastonnc, "Happy Bhihday"-laulu8ta, )caunil8te,„ kahvipöydästä syntymäpäiväkaakkutoeen Ja ihanisto kukkasista.' Kiito» E, Sukselle puheesto, Irjalle Ja SofiUe puheen valmlstuk-^r sesto. Jonka Scfi aikoi pitää, ' > . KUtos Kallion Ja Vistto perheille radio-onnitielusto. KUtollisuudella. OLGA SULA 425 Burton Avenue Sudbury,^OntorIo^;, ?m mm. m] ••Mm m mmi
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Vapaus, March 8, 1956 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finnish--Canadians--Newspapers |
Publisher | Vapaus Publishing Co |
Date | 1956-03-08 |
Type | text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | Some rights reserved |
Identifier | Vapaus560308 |
Description
Title | 1956-03-08-03 |
OCR text |
se
ien aiB-'
Juo
oi
'7.
inrtlnsulin
jbe fOBgmHy tbat 4iabet)cs tnay
, tbe oesr lotoze be jrelievt^ of tbe
i of JaniUD t t o s p y js nised by.
mtitixi^. Tkiese TtpoTis dti-'
bigtair ;«ueeessfta u^^^ oxai
drugs to nduee blobd sugaf le»
of dlabeta paöentB. V ;
jbjyone «Itb 'fint-band eii?erjbbio>
diabetes koovs of the burden bn-by
tbe need for «Udljr tojet^dns
bisnlbi in orttt fto bäiance
sogar metäbblism. w ^ mi},
of xnen aiul women bave had
ins to be thanUtd for the life^^
iving quailties of ixisulia. ttie^ haye
had abapst as <^peUihg' zea.
to be'resentful at the dlarupttön
diseomfbrt resultibg from the
.eed im tbedrug.
Koff come: prelfminary reports on
's-jjii>miinieal experiments ttrlth two nev
- ^'1^ sotfonamide drugs (described in Me-
• '«ii ucal New8,Uie newspap€r for pbysi-
' -ies äans) whi(di Indicate "asionlshing"
tuccess i n reducing blood-sugar levels
- '-^k rfter ohly a f e* days of therapy. One
' 55 )f the newicompounds, BZ-55, was gi-ceim^
fiää jrcn to 82 diabetes patients. Within a
oopflli*» few days, blood sugar levels were
l&ajj^i tarought wIthin:.the:normal range in
iioisistajf Biese expetlmental cases. In; some
väestöä ^4 u these patlents.«BZ-S5 could be dis-irk
«ii^'« continued aftcras littie as 10 days
puuvi]£:u aiid the blood sugar levels continued
2 hiili« lobe normal if proper limitatlon of
putAa^u sugar in the dietffas continued.
sikiilu:T- It should be-emphasized that the
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