Undertow.pdf

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Part of The Guard

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18 GU A R D Ojto'r.er, 1937 A. Fortüna, EpiTOR 0. Ba/, Ai). Manager KEEP IT UNDER YOUR HAT I by ----------------------Taga-KOTTA Jr. —------------------- ' 6 s ÍJ N B £ E T C W ” The Oct. 11, numbej of the Bisaya runs /the picture of one Monica among the beau­ ties in the Bjctorial Section of said monthly. It said among other things that she was a queen in one of the barrios of Leyte, but of all things we know is that she is a “cabaret dancer” of no mean ability, as alleged. You may cross legs with her at the cabaret in Cebu tonight with al] your money’s worth. But before going we may impart into that coco o f yours that the place is where we are treated best and grum­ bled the most. Did I say she is a bailarina! Tsk, Tsk, Tsk. don’t tell me. Social Note A handsome young but mar­ ried^ man is always seen going with skirts (not his wife) in his car. The car bears the ensigna of the Manila Trading and we suspect that he is working in said firm. The beautiful thing who is going with him is probably working in the sime company. We suspect, however, it’s no more than an auto-riding. We hope we are allowed to think we were born yesterday. Private 'tens bun Chief Vergara of the City Police Dept is some guy all right The trouble with us is that we developed a strange liking for the Chief. But we are told that the missus would try the rolling pen if he comes back home late is it then, any wonder that we would be forever chasing the Chief for news? The Fien Lost Not so long ago when we were idling at Eden in com­ pany with an army officer, a physician came in and I had ask^d the officer who that doctor was and he replied that he was an alienist. “Let him examine you,” I muttered, “you think as any other army officer do, you are Quezon”. But all humors ended in a glass of beer. Tit for a Tat The burglar, sensing that his power of committing crime is little less slim on the establishment of the Barben Detective Agency, took occa­ sion in displaying his wares in the heart of the City. In this connection, we hope to say whether it was a case of a man bites a dog and not a dog bites a man in which case constitute a news. Don’t tell me. Talk about detection. Very Pond. VVe are looking forward to seeing Chief Vergara in the Front Page Faces in a Manila weekly. Oh, this strange feeling, this striking admiration for hipa equal to our hatred of the Castor Oil. My nerve, my nerve! Front Page Faces When Mayor Jacinto was pointed out in this column to have become a meniature Kandolph Hearst of this side of the globe on account of the fact that he became the pub­ lisher of the “Timog” another budding writer crop up in the person of Chief Vergara. But we shall not forget that Vergara is still a poor writer and like a poor athlete, he is celebrated for his stamina at mealtimes. And when he writes on things aside from police training, it’s just like listening t » Jack Dempsey lecturing on compa­ ny of matters -a case away from pugilism. We add that on reading Chief Vergara’s, I felt I was listening to prea­ cher talking on matters of fi­ nance. Breast Up We do not harbor any fond feeling for Segundo Abellanosa but just the same we put our hat off to him for his celebrated evasion from con­ viction of the crime in con­ nection with his former posi­ tion in the government service. There are people who still brush elbows with the Cebu’s 400-seemingly unaware of the past. But the people know where they stand and S. AbeL lanosa’* presence keeps on reminding them of the City Hall’s scandal greater than the Engineer Island could ever sto mach. Life of the Party She is Meding by the name. Never mind the full name Let it go at that. She belong® FRAGV1 AT1SVI Current history points out oft-trodden maiu-rut*ub to poweT. O e ia direct- the other, subtle. Only the peculiar temparament of the particular nation being broken for the yoke and harness determines the choice as to which road is going to be followed. What­ ever means is followed, the suc­ cess attained will be no posi­ tive: for Politics is the one game where “the end justifies the means”, obviously. The direct method to poli­ tical power is founded on the psychology of fear. It is at­ tained by the unhesitating use of military power and devious trickery, often under the guise of intense nationalism. The subtle method is a slo­ wer process, but it is more insidious and often leads to a more absolute dictatorship than is possible in the direct method. It is founded on class feeling, op the basis of intensely awakened hatred of one class for another, kt is, above all, founded on the suc­ cessful winning of the confi­ dence of a large sector of the public, often at the expense of the right of the others, and of truth. Both are different raods that lead to the same end; they both result in the complete route of democracy. Which method would any one desiring to the social cream, so she thinks. She would cut short some too ambitious young men in search for her favor, ehy, a dance. The impostors, she thinks. Not of my kind, she would add. She goes to the “cozy corner.”- She is seen together with the boys of her kind, with the same dress on for always, yet she has the nerve to cut short these am­ bitious young men. She has decided to put on new dresses but she is of limited income. A practising attorney steps in the scene. But the 1-wyer knows his onions Climax: She’s heading for the column of Rafael Bautista in the Daily Gossips, A D VERTIS ER. Curtain falls down. Deaf ening applaus Incore, Incore IN POLITICS to reach that end use in our country? The year of Spanish domination would suggest the direct method: those years have left behind a people well broken to the yoke. But the presence of American sove­ reignty changes the picture entirely. Ooviously, no raw direct method would be suf­ fered to go unmolested and abetted by American acquiesence. Hence the subtle, the insidious method is the only one left available. Those who believe in demo­ cracy, therefore, must be on the watch, constantly and aler­ tly, for the shadow that creeps in the night. They must be taught to fear the poisoned sugar as well ns the whip. — o — Cebu 1938... (Continued from page /) —o — admissions to the carnival ground and so many sideshows that are coming so as to par­ ticipate the carnival which is intended for the Rizal Me­ morial, it is believed by many Cebuanos that the carnival will be the most successful of all the carnivals held the Em­ pire Province of Cebu. Cebu Road.. (Continued, from page /) —o— and decided to proceed to the City Theatre when the drama colled LUNO will be staged on November 16, 19^7. The Fopukr... (Continued from page 17) ment It opposes the use of firmed forces against nationals in strike and conflicts between 1 r. bi^r aid ca pi tn 1. As it is seen, the Popular Front is for freedom and pro­ gress in a true and real demo­ cracy and, therefore, it de­ serves the support of all those who want “a government of the people, by the people and for the people.”
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