Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 1 Oct 1954, p. 2

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"), Editorial Comment God wants to turn us around. to forget that we are brothers of the beast. and remember that we luck little of being divine. A BIBLE THOUGHT rot TODAY he luv of the [All h period. "any!“ the -1.--6. "t The "power-hungry union dictators" of which labor critics talk, nine cases out of ten, come into whatever dictatorial power they may have, not so much through some strong-arm coup, as through abdica- tion by the members of their democratic responsibilities. They don't want to be bothered. They "let George do it". And the "George" who is standing handy by, oh, so ready to lake over, can just as easily be a self-seeking sharper lor for that mane: a trained Com- munist) as a Sincere unionist willing to serve his fellow workers. And is this tendcncy to ahdivate trade unions? 'Other Editors Say The Clo has been turbulent and aggressive. But, perhaps, be- cause it is still youthful, it has been less plagued by intrenched otBciaidoms and their unsupervised acts than has the older APL. The New York diclosures should alert the younger organization to the fact that it is not automatically immune. (From The Christian Science Monitor) A state insurance commission inquiry has done a useful job in uncovering abuses in the handling of union welfare funds, and one of the two great organizations of labor has moved promptly to "clean house". But how did union otBcials ever get into the tree-wheeling position where they could lift lush salaries, vacation trips, and per- sonal automobiles out of funds contributed to help members in trou- ble? The state is New York; the union, highly embarassed to say the least, the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Stores Workers Union; and the organization which swiftly pushed that union into suspendr ing the heads of its ottending locals, the CIO. Government intervention on such a positive basin should have come sooner and might now be applied to all industries. Union lead- ers have evidently overlooked that they are not dealing with only businas management, but with the general public. There is bound to come an end to public tolerance, and when it does come, the gov- ernment will have to take a more positive stand on all strike and labor issues. Canadians generally do not want a welfare state in any shape or form. but they do want a government which will stand up for what they know is right. Myst believe that every other person has the right to earn an hontgf living his own way, but not at the expense of the general publicj Canada has grown great for one reason only, that enterprising individuals Were willing to work hard and set up their own business with the hope of making a profit. The unions are now doing their heat to exterminate these businesses by insisting upon short hours and big pay for their members. In the case of the railways alone, the union spokesmen have intimated that the workers are going to get their demands even if it drives the railways into bankruptcy. Only government intervention prevented the unions trom going ahead and organizing tor another strike which would have paralyzed rail transportation across the en- tire country. No doubt unple precautions have been taken that em: no vaat I number will be taken care of. Yet there is always the possibility that some stranger will need your help. It such a thing should happen, go out of your way to help prove the reputation of this county in. it anything. underrated. There is always the ponihility *mnednrrouwikitseintttesectionottheeountrvtheatraneer hails from. when the hospitality you have shown him will no doubt be returned may times over. With wags higher and hours shorter than at any time in this country's history, present high prices are a natural result. An article cannot he nude at high prices and sold at low. Yet, despite better working conditions, more money, more leisure time, lame union leaders are edging certain groups to go on strike for more money and less time. _ l Famous acres the country for in food Ind haw-nu. Wimbo County will have an excellent opportunity to back up its reqtutatims 'htaeiiheeomiztgutermrtioetat mowing Mnteh,oetober um 15. o_ofthematehexveettretweeo momma totetpemoas to attend. This number will naturally not he in attendance at one, time, but even I transient type of “lender mm have food and 6Nedmganbehnockeddowo "rtoe.sraseassomefigbte" oetxtuHetnme.Thisuimpor- um to (In Gard-n. with in oaW<hrrtgesdtraNofapoets oval-Joann boxingIol-nula- w ”by” Who-Minn ”was!“ don-gum Th-w-Orin-tty “Macmillan: 'rrteu.Aa.rs,rHmr-rort4 “mm-3ft: any. am. we or ligttG ANrathtqmkeat-mtetrrtrrh- ".etts".."tA-tra"t. I ,'t1'dt,TNgfr'lffl'Pd'g'l'll'l'fnNt a; m tmaarStt WW- nan-nun" 't-thareethrthee'ieWqAtrMm-aa-- arHaethsttrrgarirr-4haett_-aa-hi_ . Mumumrnnqgm THE BEAN mm.- woman-as co. vThere’ll Come an End me wanna: um: ‘LET GEORGE DO IT" Let's Prove it tep Fifty countries now have ntt- lions] Plant Quarantine Services operating under legislation gov- erning the imports of plant 3nd plant products. A list of these countries and the address of their Plant Protection Headquarters in given in a recent issue of the Plant Products Bulletin published by the World Food and Agricul- tural Organization (FAQ). at the United Nations, The bulletin is Issued monthly as a medium tor supplying information received by the World Reporting Service on Plant Diseases and Pets, sponsored by the Irtternationnt Plant Protection Convention in JMU. QUARAN'I‘INI'I SERVICES “MW” Pursuant to the provisions of City of Waterloo by-lows numbered 565 and 22t - a permit M be obtained from the Building lmpoctor bier. com- mencing construction, alterations or wait: to any building, “dually driveway, "from, both.) Uetce, drain pipes and MM will. to "George" limited only to ,5, BUILDING ' PERMITS annual-15.x! tmt or WAIERlOO your back door. very quickly. You may say, why not wait until the danger is imminent and then vu- cinatet The answer to this in that mull children react better to vaccination, and subsequent vnotlnltions in the face of immin- ent danfer Ire more likely to be uncomp heated and fully e4teetMrq if the subject has been "coin-ted There are many are” of the world where mllpox is still prevalent. Some day your chil- dren or anyone's children m be obliged to travel to one of time areas. Also, with modern air lranspoyt. pepple Irom than urea I "it seems to me we put our 'chlldren through enough, without adding unnecessary unpleasant- nesses onto it. I suppose it ia all right to immunize them spins! diphtheria and whooping cough, since there are still a few chil- dren dying ot those diseases ev- ery year. ut why on earth make such a fuss nbuut tetanus and smallpox, I don't remember that there ever was a case of tetanus in this neighborhood, From all I hear it's very rare anywhere, And as for smallpox, we've got it licked; so why not admit " and forget about it. There hasn’t been a smile case of smallpox in Can- ada or years. How can anyone no smallpox when there's no one‘ to catch It from?" The diseases preventable by immunization have continued to decrease in Canada, thanks to continuous public education. Ev- ery year the Health League ot Canada sponsors a nation-wide Immunization Week (Sept. 26 through Oct. g, this year) in co- operation with public health de- partments. Through such promo- tional activities as this the public is not permitted to become apa~ thetic, and diseases such as diph- theria and whooping cough come actually closer to the vanishing‘ point. Smallpox has already‘ reached that point in Canada. However it is conceivable that ill the League were to relax its acti- vities in that direction for just one year, the incidence of these diseases could jump up to the le- vel of ten or twenty years ago, One of the main troubles with a successful preventive medicine campaign is that after it has near- ly achieved iNr,'gg','.'e of wiping out a certain been. the public becomes complacent and the dis- ease begins to regain lost ground. This seems to be happening with syphilis in the United States, for example. People began to Bunnie that the disease was (a) Practic- ally non-existent. and (b) easily curable; so they ceased worrying about it. As a result. the disease is on the increase, and it was never as easily curable in all stages as some people seem to have thought. ,. RARE DANCERS ............ Are-u-rr-sro-str-as--- tyne-bun atthorraeduai'odtsherrheaedee '.se'sé'sdtrrk.tsoa$-et$toEAtnetaaqttltk dummd “I! HEALTH “A00! 0' CANADA III A"... loud; to"... I; ho.q.-'-t'h-- _ if your child were dying at it. Immunization against t id a lin- ple mater now. Man “this combine tetanus. who?!“ erttra% and diphtheria toxod: into a single injection. As for tetanus. it is not an ex- tremely common disease by my means. but it is one of the mt vicious of all killers. Its germ: are widely distributed in the toil. The child who has the bad luck to get it undergoes 'revere no- nies and often ies. It would be small consolation to you to be grid "This. if , very at; ding-g" were 2ttft short". The epide- mic woul have been worse if more people had been indlll'er- em to mallpox on the mistaken anumplion that "we've got " licked '. your: ago. a smell retid,t','t', ot smallpox ftared up in ew York. as the result of the visit of In in- fected person trom another coun- try. A number of people who were _indifterert te vItreinatims 't, 1arty tttudhood...NotAoo [lung "iirriiLiilTiciiTiai"-'- 'fd'2t.N',at'."""-" Q L-ik'"" lulu-HJudI-d-W iiiittti. W In”? Mid tit 'tit)'. 2,LLts'l,,i.,,,,,, . torthi-rott-aana-temsrt “on”. IL~,~ 2AM.“.M~-mlou. Ham. (I'll. CANADA POST OFFICE “mm“...lhumm ounce-nu own-mum unmo- 0'."qu 0-3.“- mon. u. I'll. I'll. YOU. “Ill m’uuuy admiring} bout-balm 'hllhTldt'lu'.' '"mhatoth-ud-ditueutuereu. Han Punk WW " PM 06-»: " 'u-. yon'n-mol-huyu pm tho Alway- Give 'tusa, You Gonna Ad. “ Get It. in“! cl w. you "up "e" on_ top loft some: of uncle’s-Ind” Way A! Paul- Stanly: tle Add". You “all Con-oath: Writ. My and but. mrtqht..ahe... [adult !'rut You. Ennis hiQu-bnc. Ottawa. Montreal. Toronto, Vanna": and nu- voun In". our or fill In» um- ulna simple precautions work Ind re", lick after kid: out of what . doe. nnd gen raid for the doinl “on In at null The person who is I round pen in I round hole my have to ten big-clauswhny tgr his was“? . p. t e um: . Happy e non] who has fawn into his work, upd (at: " alter kick tion in escape. Since he in doing thetohtokuasprip-ititietii reasonably well-ted body, the escape must be in no way nort- dize the regular remittance o his pay envelope. But escape he must. To another job? Perhaps. P/ it» this i: not poring. 1:“ nestoulis ny.good at p y, 'ii'i1'i'i,?yt'l5'l'ili?is'i't,'tCbt'iti'i brain but very much a body. . boredom will disappear, even if only until the next day. There is many a lowly dell: clerk who's 1 ml tit, that in volley bail. The balance a complete. Tuke the brain worker, end let's make noutpotogr tor identi- fying him with the fruity he use. most at hi; work. If he's a routine brain-worker, doing a thing that ia too complicated for a machine but by no mean. intri- cate after you've hornet} the pro- cess, hetroonttndrtttat tifeeaistre '.nrttying but beam”: The 'oiu- (a: the 66in Y%GCiGGi GTi three reasons why he mm! tear rennin physical exercise consists of elbow-bending " a local nab. Planar-able and mmeeniat though thismeybe. itis the myotleut resistance and therefore rob. them at the desirable pity-{cal and mm results ot active phy. bodtti - 2itife?,ie at"; 917:: rial mqtivitr and in “I! M I" who I. a: “bum. "'7 Pft" who“ on ml M inatMirtl at has" ,ryehyrttteSttmdgi-attois who down very - work tur.WettdarooAina.K.utu tetttttt.therurFsrthtii- - ,_,_ L?XzazzSCCl afloat.” II 'atit Minted, who treat: his we like pl. ' not putting h1- nou to the 'l'llu't,',d when du- tr. is the counter-cull to any. wtttaoorttindtttathehaano - Pit" play with. tt has hap- The idle. the lazy the pompous, the super-saintly. the shower, all must play even if only to relieve the boredom of their role. Even the professional - player must ptay--at something el--- often at being business men. any "to NEW) it hi mi 1"N,e,,,h'2ts-. All! undo marten." Bantam]: sot-tubal: ArtrelrTJllWSlt%ll'trg 93290098 pal-.1- Marbe. But it an Ind 59?in iiiaara". --. :..:z ",td,'l 'ttIn',?.",,',,',,',):?,' mm. But so do. PP! lid. 3.; E5535 S'l.vlt1tpltl,u'; ' you to n poiniiffUiiiiGiif Viol rou'lt rumba.“ Qt straight any 'Cto M with it Jul'.' uluua. ‘ ”no may win you tte, Ari? was cog lad. W "all. --. 31.. “m M m“ can't b. m after not: tdttitst'gt'g1prittg: bour- ot cannon-Ion. - ..Ahqh an " m about them rather than .mnkzng id, " ' LIU....', ‘ w; mum..- inuaWt'liu. qNerystttasrtt In, the exnn-d a7rritit about MbuWMdh- “mama-mum: ecu-av. ttt6gthttq whlrult Mun-s.” , aeer1H, in: 91.1w- -n-u . 2ttfe.tttrt “291.929:- . "ttte F, “W“Waelhé new pupil-Uh. It: -3 ii" WW- . ,'tl'hi IT h. tPtttttt -rr".'$t"'m"M'B'"_'it"o-tqrrwea.aeaAeirttttera'atBo.saorartux 'hlB006"NW'Mt-tWBt$idmBet'-trtretaBttttapttItsAat-trr,aMgratmrttottq mumum.wm. . -r'"e"-"mqtoe--.oeatate-te-.atat.e_sao--.ott= "o-et-o-tooo-ta-mr-a-k-oe-a-a-tsi "0ttrt_0-rrit'B--tt-ggem-aattarotm$'sat".aA'em-, limbo" than painting- was ;..noth and south ofthe -e..-. onbod: siduohhc Atlantic...“ ,ro-fruoditttivoramueom.. m foe Canada. In line.- cilia “on. I 30.00am“. 1oterantgoant route through islordgnhndm-outhno Stockholm'l "Marble Hulk". It m here that tho Seagull: Coll-cum: of Painting. of Canadian Cities In. visited by more than 31.000 Swedish citizens who can: to In this colou- kl Cnmdhn exhibition. Thuskmchbrthereoath-ts_ "nutatu"Pttstrasotit"attoa. . . ",r= *2";- h-.-..-....,..' Che House of Seagram w Plut- Pe.0y"Ptomn"aBtr'exmte. aio' 'GGltrur.tottymuettodevratss0iiiti than: mmcuudvu'mouvho [iiiaa"a'.ieaprt.otr-oe um“ ttettteetttejminkiit"a-i Cittridthetr" cannot develop his inner faith. f,'lrtt','rti fllg,d."ggt thnif"g the , aw m. Ptd,"1'ATiii'i; mhhmm aUow Idl. In than a 30.000411]. roam through do. no" this a tiuositgeer The youngat children are the most vulnerable to disease. warm the Health We of Canada. 2ftgt att,', be i,'lg',rtitt,8 nouns w In; con: ' 1p - that, lockjaw and smallpox by t1tetirtqthiryare3togiisGti7, old. And been" doses would be administered during preachool and school years in order to keep their (and up against these no- torious child kitters. tackle it "asjFiiGa'ie Guiie sible to fail. You 1113 be wr- prised at the wonder! results! mum irEiGie.iaiiirGita"tii"i; have for, they have " but the legacy! Raving done weighed. t','lti't,re1o,ttgg.i'ucsii onthedoie,emu . On ttseotheettamt,ttte-wtu, 1etotetiir'tuziioar, venture without wry or appre- tPetioet. My com in la, the exnmiiGii ___ Ji"rrititGiiiiit h. which tum u- m “In" toward an” Ft,'."totillttgr2gintltt on t,,tg to: at our. 'ii"r'fi?iii beta-o anAkgI an: " I 't'ihtit.2iltfti'i'?!!Nt?it.i I” airf_rea"rhAiftikii'isFtr7ift but. That's-mun» 1PrnfrwtiitiikGkiiiiiidTi"'i Th "W" . . . oh" M: I”. Calla!»- wu than eritt, 99W. 'du Collection of Punting: earned for Canada ihouundl of columnl of “up”: repom, editotinls, re- vim and pictures; mag-zine ankles; mdio and television broadens"; mud Sims-nit commenting on than pour-yd: of our thriv- ‘ tag chin. and att urving to ra-uhbh achievement. During in year obtoud. the Seagull! q"."" of a million people came to '0‘ than original canvases of " of our cities. and from then gain a new anoding at Canada and her nah Cut-d- “lied about thwaddom. mantel-ow. In Wlmholehkam Innuhenerhch.lM PSP-km-ie-r-tim.. h6irrrro.ndituedttr-... w you: My th. Hmdm-vi-pgd mimdiohdoumhid -ugit.Aakttreranie_d &eeexereersPborAkt- 'rearestNnkdNit-Sexrei+ Mum 4imaitoN 'ho-hoe $33133! a:

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