“PRETTY
CATTY”
The People’s
Paper
Canada
March 16,
1949
John Fisher
Scans:
“Pretty
Catty”
These men
are rough and tough, They Boss the
rivers. They run the rapids and shout
defiance at the world’s biggest fresh
water lake. They know the Sleeping
Giant, too. He-men these , and yet the
finest compliment you can pay them is to say “Pretty Catty”.
ANNOUNCER’S
INTRODUCTION: Extra! The People’s Paper,
a radio edition for your entertainment
. The People’s Paper headlining John
Fisher, your favourite story teller, with true tales about you and your
friends.
Tonight John
Fisher takes giant strides from Lake Nipigon to Port Arthur and has a story
which will give the Sleeping Giant pleasant dreams…he talks about men who are proud to be called “Catty”.
And these
men are part of Canada’s largest family , the pulp and newsprint family
…325,000 wage- earners in mill and bush. This great industry has an
investment of over a billion dollars in
mills and power plants that cannot be
moved…they cannot operate without pulpwood…Therefore conservation of the
forests is of vital interest to the industry.
Every Canadian pulp and paper mill is pledges to a 10 point plan of
forest conservation to bring about perpetual harvests from our greatest natural
asset…our forests. Canada’s pulp and
newsprint leaders jointly sponsor this program.
Abitibi Power and Paper,,, Great Lakes
Paper… Ontario Paper…Ontario-Minnesota Pulp and Paper and Spruce Falls
Power and Paper.
Well in our
bushlands John Fisher has found some mighty unusual men… Extra!! PRETTY CATTY!
JOH FISHER:
We were peering out the window. We
looked straight into the silver fingertip of Lake Superior. Through the haze of winter we sought the
Sleeping Giant. I had seen him from the
air when the steel green waters slapped at his feet in summer.
Now I wanted to see him in winter
dress. But Jack Frost beat me to it. He had thrown
a protective haze around this sleeping giant… this great rock promontory
… resembling a slumbering giant whose bulky frame guards the gateway to the
boundless plains of the West.
In Port
Arthur, Ontario, they scarcely ever sell a postcard without this dormant guardian in the background. He is a symbol of the majesty of Lake
Superior. The silhouette of this rock is
the signal to water born commerce that the world’s greatest inland waterway is
about to stop. Here is a part of Canada
where Nature went on a rampage and
scattered and tossed her rocky children …here the Sleeping Giant stands as the
dean of mighty Superior.
It was from
a window in Thunder Bay that I tried to see the Sleeping Giant… instead there
in the spotless, modern mill of the Abitibi Power and Paper I heard these
ancient tales and superstitions. We could not see him… for an hour though, I
listened to these Thunder Bay
Papermakers rave about the beauties and legends of our Lakehead country.
I had been filled with the charm and bigness of
Northwest Ontario. I kept nodding
approval … “yes, this is magnificent country , alright, “I commented on the sunshine again which beats down summer and winter on the twin cities of Fort
William and Port Arthur, which both stand more than 600 feet above sea
level. All of a sudden as I was talking,
one of the men from the Thunder Bay Paper Mill pulled me up short. He said “ You’re a Maritimer, aren’t you…well
you’ve got nothing like this down there"...
to be continued as Rough Burly Magnificent