Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 2 Dec 1948, 1, p. 4

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. A_A_ 46. t 4 "It would be," said Mr. Bartleman, onetime mayor OI "‘a good education for the electorate and for the youth of the town 4f these running for mayor and council would do more campaignâ€" -..,;111 the past they have always gathered in oné particular place and j.-bhe evening was filled with poor speeches and few questions were \ : ".-r;:‘I-WOuld like to see," said the irrepressible Jimmig, "The nominâ€" â€" ated candidates go Hefore the people in theâ€"variousâ€"areas of the «+ town and tell them what is going on in public affairs. A small _ gathering in a local school is of far more vailue to the voters than a "/Targe meeting up town. . When the candidate is in the voter‘s terâ€" . "’fiory he will have to answer some embarrassing questions and have to answer them well. I am not out to put the prospective counâ€" _ cillors on the spot, but to show them that it isn‘t easy to run for "*council. â€" The voters should know what type of men are representâ€" ing them in council. "In council there should be mature men. The only way the elâ€" ectorate will know whether or nct the men they are voting for are fit for the job is to ask qusetions. _ Too often not enough people turn out to the election campaign speeches anda not enough of them ask questions. . They should ask questions about what is going on." 3 U ts CiAnx a n Iinle«ses the candidates get Not satisfied with merely smaghing the windows and wrecking the sofas in the Timmins Ski Club last summer, vandals broke again returned to the scene of their crime and really tore the place apart. â€" After the ski clubmembers had cleaned up following the Xirst breakâ€"in during the summer, the vandals entered and finishâ€" ed the job they had started. s 5 m‘ 1 L i ME T6: + us e uks Mflloflud as second class matter by the Post Office Department, Ottawa x*»*Timmins, Ontario, Thursd Canada $2.00 Per Year No NA wiaiaky _ j x * o t aff nafect .c ... 3A Indications show that it is a group of larger boys rather than youngsters, The windows were not only smashed this time but the frames were torn out and broken. The whole club house was thorâ€" cughly gone over. . The stove lids and the frames which hold the lids were thrown outside or taken away somewhere. Three cords of wood were carried off. The piano which had been badly damaged the first time this year was smashed almost beyond recognition. Every key and every string was torn from the frame of the piano. Th eides were carved in and the pedals torn loose. Safas which had been brought out to the Club this fall had their covers ripped and the stuffing thrown around. 7. Li 6 4 oA hn es o. . k sn 8 i "flgl‘v dn .Qnmpâ€" Apparently the vandals decided that they muSt IC4lly UV oUGiHLHL! thing drastic. They dumped the soot out of the stove pipes and swabbed the floor with it, using a mop and broom. The whole floor wii . ave to be scrubkbed thoroughly and new furniture brought in. More wozsd will have to be delivered and stove parks will be hard to get as stoves of that type are getting rare even in the North. Th‘s type of vandalism makes the club members blood boil beâ€" cause they have no recourse, The police shrug their shoulders, there is little they can do. The ski club is a community affair, kept up by the fees paid by the youngs e.s and youth of tne community. Few of the members are rich and none of them can stand the strain on the pocke‘t book which this type of vandalism brings. The various groups around town wish their children to be taught to ski by the club but when they hear that the <lub is in trouble they shy aWway, feeling that he club can take care of itself. the club will run into hundreds of dollars. <yv.:â€"yone s ould do what he can to help this organization to repair o hx 3 s club house. Anyone wno knows of any clues micht lead to the arrest of any of the vandals should get in o o U in ces ie Nee ds np It was Jimmie Bartleman that said V paigns in this town. He deplored the auditor.ums and large rooms were going time and no one bothered to use them. vand bv---o eP ER CC Mr. Bartleman has a point there. . Uniess %Zamong the peiple how will the people know chosen the right man for the job or not? _ It is time to choose men for a certain job but at ele ers may have to take what they get and be tha haz. The only way we Can eliminate much of ‘t‘)','y thaking the candidates.come L0 LNC YUOLCOL LclLLuLiL L (LesEMid .1 CCCE eome to the candidate. ~‘The cost to the candidate would be less in several ways. Inâ€" stead of making one speech and spending considerakle money On p:d‘i*‘ertismg, the candidate would make many speeches and wouldn‘t have to advertise quite so much. He would advertise himself so much more in his personal contacts with the voters. His handâ€" shake and "How are yau?" would be worth more to him in morale and his future work in council than any expensive advertising campaign. i n ooo Aa tAr intoarr«t an +A good lively municipal campaign Call the part of the voters if the candidates ijions to simmer into their work. They people of Timmins to not only carry on t] year but they are also elected to represer meetings and represent them well. A po f.ects on himself but on the town when h ga.he.ings. | : A lively election camp must come up to it or ti himself sincere at least being represented by a s: ample of this democral when they see him on a speech and fumbling ov bezan aiked anyway. Seated in a schcol ro{ mo e likely to get into lLke.y ack some que min‘strction of the toy Wha NM: made public : By having open campai of the various areas are t the candidates have to u*’ comfort,able groove for questions to answer : they have the ability Let‘s have livelier debs ‘goumncil job more interest! Bu. there are a boc.leggers and 1 the betterment 0 really believe tha fore they are at PHONE 26 TIMMIN®, ONTARIO Members Canadian Weekly Nowspaper Association; Ontarioâ€"Quebec Newspaper Association wivn the police m _i @ny ETbe PDorcupine Adbance Published every Thursday by Merton W. Lake 10 1 For A Livelier Election Vandals Strike Again P NP VE No ds Oe SCs W w CCC said Mr. Bartleman, onetime mayor of Timmins, n for the electorate and for the youth of the town for mayor and council would do more campaignâ€" nave always gathered in oné particular place and filled with poor speeches and few questions were least WA should be mature men. . The only way the elâ€" vhether or not the men they are voting for are ask qusetions. _ Too often not enough people ction campaign speeches anda not enough of They should ask questions about what is N > d W the vot 1 l Subscription Rate A A, J ko A # ub will run into hundreds of dollars. he can to help this organization to repair house. Anyone wno knows of any clues arrest of any of the vandals should get in + once. There should be no condoning of if oint there. Unless the candidates get will the people know whether they have the job or not? _ It is a tough job at any certain job but at election time, the votâ€" t they get and be thankful. â€" It is a grab an eliminate much of this uncertainty is _come to the voter rather than the voter can‘t be beat for interest on > candidates allow a little public relatâ€" work. They are being elected by the ily carry on the work of the town for a ed to represent the town at all of sown m well. A poor councillor not only reâ€" town when he is attending out of town i has another effect too. The candidate oters don‘t want him. He must show he isn‘t brilliant. People don‘t mind re man. (President Truman is an exâ€" principle.) But they are never sure itform for a few minutes reading off a a few questions which shouldn‘t have cided ‘that they must really do someâ€" the soot out of the stove pipes and ng a mop and broom. The whole floor oughly and new furniture brought in. elivered and stove parks will be hard are getting rare even in the North. ikes the club members blood boil beâ€" e. The police shrug their shoulders, 1¢ and campalginis «i United States: $3.00 Per Year s around the town the people : to attend and find out what 10t having them, we slide into tes who haven‘t any embarrasâ€" ue to represent the town wheâ€" uol avrditorium the voters are »are of the election and more ive been bearing on the adâ€" , the largest town in Canada. ns would like to see is proper roper representation doesn‘t rain trusters who sprout brilâ€" t the people of Timmins wi.l ‘er their interests. The only on is by showing the electorâ€" nromises that they make are on. There are sincere crooks, you that what they do is for are sincere stupid men who re he must be stupid thereâ€" od men. December 2nd, 1948 e needed snapp‘er camâ€" fact that all the school to waste around election will make the When the Porcupine was young It was some twentyâ€"odd year on a Wednesday afternoâ€"n in +t week of January. There hac some brilliant cldâ€"t me hockey | during the previous week b« Timmins and Iroquois Falls, and mins and New L skeard. And | the week of the great Burns ar sary supper in the days when the riins Caledonian Society was height of its glory! helestes} w# es +* ## #* w .. ## #* *, # c:“ y *# *# # etss #4 w _ _ ®@ .... w# Cad # _ _ ® .... *# 4. #. #. #. # # .0 % ..0.‘ .“. ..“ # # .“ .“ .. w# w . @ .‘.. w# * # te« eajuateatesteatectest " As for tre war, it oversnadows everything e‘se. Although the peopl here in 1917 prided .themselves 0 carrying on "business as usual," as th best help in he war effort, the trut is that the war kept intruding itse at any and every occasion. Concert: sporting events, and all other enter were sure to be connecte in some way or another with recruit ing or other war effort. Every Sunday evening there was big recruiting meceting in the Empire theatre, and there were liable to bs cwo or three other recrui during the week. These recruiting meetings provi both entertainment and inspirati Mu.scal numbers were always a 16 ure, among the genercus artists 1917 being Mr. and Mrs. Clare Appel, Mrs. J. W. Faithful, H. Mar Jas. Geils, J. Ladbrooke, ‘Gene bo, Mrs.; J. K. Moore, to mention |] a few of the many. W abeats ate l "L’Clas l)oung -@-\'-.\'.NMM(“(“ + The special speakers at these meetâ€" ings included many whose names were world â€" known at the time. For inâ€" stance, one of the popular figures on the recruiting nlatform here was Jack Munroe, one of the heroes of the Frincess Pats‘ famous regiment. Hon. T. W. McGarry, one of Ontario‘s mosdt eloquent sons, spoke here more than once. Hon. Hugh Guthrie, Hon. Findâ€" lay McDiarmid and Major Gordon were cthers who were outstanding as speakers. Major Gordon had phrases that stick in the memory. "Honor and glory to the men in the ranks!" "It would make your heart swell with vride to see the Canadians going into a bayâ€" onet charge!" "In my experience of thireen w ic ke d months in the trenches, I never saw the Canadians defeated, cor driven back one inch." Lientenant J. Maxwell Allen, who had previously been the student in charge of Byrnes Presbyterian Church, Timmins, was another outstanding at these recruiting meetings. Plain speaking won him many recruits. ‘"Why are some others so little pointed question; casion. O hers takin ing meetings i Cochrane; Capt. Maglade Liskgard;. Sgt. â€"P. K. CGra Major Russell, Pte. Wm. 8 Wm. Widdifield, Mayor Laughlin, Dr. J. A. MciInn MacDonald of Byrnes Church. Dr:, Otfon, L s ockwell, Matt. Boivin, Conald, Councillor Charle Poitras, Dr. H. H. Moore. Labour meetin turned out to be affa‘rs. For exar (later mavor of the leading laboi tne course of ar Porcupins Miner the labour attitu through human made," he sa‘d. worth fighting f Tesyonsibility res TEs}C wom peopic. Af cneâ€". ProrCui Union here in 1917, Presic Feu referred to difficull ered by the union in the months. Cne of the the: was the unfair attitude papers. "We ars asking and exvecting nmne, but are entitled {6 a square C Me continued to the> eff Porcupine Advance was ti paper in the North that | men a square deal. He c ‘nstances of this. For c newspapers had thrown gestion tha‘> thie unist lacking in lsyaity, and members of the union publish the fact that overseas in France. The ty of .r_ Trivett, «Mrs. Capt. Mazlac ) be mork( example. patil in 191 ar, it Ooversnadowed Although the people ided .themselves on nress as usual," as the doin K. Gallas W m. Sam mucn luded dav our nundareau Advance, on 9t 1T pPI of the t. Hon. ‘s mosd ‘e than . Findâ€" Gordon 9L Bat thi Tin 11 16 O New elU ind the elf l it t1 1€ THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Full of 1e other hand, had featured the fact that the union had four hundred men overesas before the union had asked for such mention. When other newsâ€" neglected to publish the item as a refutat.on of the sugges ion of disâ€" loyalty, The Advance printed it again and called on the outside press to play fair in this matter. Of course, The Advance was full to ‘he brim those days of war and weather â€" and though the weather was clioser, it was the war that got the bgg end of attention. Le ters frim the frontwere given unilmited space, some of them being unusually able and illu. minating. had to be remedied before they could be used to the bes‘ advantage. The veter‘nary experts were called in, and after a little experimentation they discovered that a slight opera ion on tne nostri‘s had the desired effect, and all mules sent to the front thereâ€" after were made mu‘e by the process. Comment cn this brayless mule item was the earnest hope that this scienâ€" tific discovery might be usged on some of the braying mules left on the home front. If all mules could thus be silâ€" enced, it would not only facilitate the war effort, but it would ailso be a com. fort and a blessing to all men of good wi‘ll when peace arrived. WAaAIt items pulished 11 stam>e, there was the case of tne "Brayless Mule." Desnattches solemnâ€" ly averred that the brayless mule was one of the developments of the war. Large numbers of mules had been impor .ed from America to France for use at the front, but their habit of braying at inconvenient moments iC fOme of in€ T‘h )1 the Canadian By G, A. Macdonald vyeart much [ â€"a philosopher, °1 Kn{w Canâ€" id the Canadians well," he said. lived in the Dominion for sevâ€" ears. Canadians anc} Germans uch ~d fferent. We‘ Germans is a duty, and because we have hink vou Canadians are in the r fun, and for souvenirs to send 1‘?j Png.ish, and Was [ a philosopher. "I kn id the Canadians well,‘ lived in the Dominion Much more important in meeting the exchange crisis than these signtfficant shifts in imports has been the great rise in our exports to the United States. Increased prices for paper and base metals and the removal of the embargo on cattle exports have all played their parts in bringing about the change. The striking result has been that in September we achieved a moderate credit balance in our merâ€" chandise trade with the United States. were of great importance tfor some ol our manulacturing industrjes, Whatever the future of the British preference, it is unlikely that our preâ€"war overseas markets for manulactured products will be mainâ€" tainced, without serious modification. Jt is vital therefore, that we should try to enlarge our markets in the United States, as well as in other countries, not only for food and materials but for manufactured goods as well. Efforts in that direction have already produced encouraging results. surpluses have appeared in a number of consumers‘ lines, plrlu ularly in the United States,. World crops of better than nnlnml size have brought a few realized or prospective declines in agricultural prices. So far such wlll‘)lll\l s have soon been (]Isl)llw d and there has been no contagious price decline.â€" Some slight casing of food prices has taken place .m<| it may extend farther,. lt would be welcome relief to the consumer. Tt is to be hoped that the Government, im the present cireumstances, will not continue longer than absolutely necesâ€" sary the restrictions on imports which are limiting the supply of soods. P n\ P e P P ET TCP C EPy In all With th Nothing but War and Weather ill there was the â€" Mule."" Desva 1 that the bray mnest Canadiliat d fferent dutyv, and 111 IMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA wiaich our Cherpsint be.replaced by a fo to contemplate, many Anumorous Louchue. _ made to some of th about the.war. For in U T un try iblyv U 1 Vt nt said in part: s again comple rent. > Prices =; ross. productic 1948 Year of Great Business Activity and Accomplishment humorou SO M tI 1 Cl app Stat tunmeâ€"4n ‘The c COMMONWEALTH MARKETS vity, the incomes our tariffs o SOME ACHIEVEMENTS mo hnn ut the y ed in a years there pening of intages and stantial imada i GENERATI, CONSIDERATIQNS form o Ww touches of the chartered ind busin« Month | nuine savi nt signs that v are byv nodgd 1 in 1948. that immigration here have been substantial dist of the Leduc and Redwater : ind early results in our foreign An d u on cut signs that the ire by no mean: umber of crops of better spective decline n been disperse > slight casing W do his utmost to uphold that system necessary if we are to keep faith with s of any other form of government ts of individual freedom and liberty or dictatorship are too inada Comment cn this brayless mule itoem was the earnest hope that this scienâ€" ktific discovery might be used on some of the braying mules left on the home front. If all mules could thus be silâ€" enced, it would not only facilitate the war effort, but it would ailso be a com. fort and a blessing to all men of good will when peace arrived. Seven men in town resented the comment, claiming that it was aimed at them. This was an unfair inference, only ‘hree of the seven having been i1 mind. the comment was made. ments to Ollawa and vice proved by The Financial menting on the move Garscn of Manitoba to the> federal cabinet The Post declares: "Public life in th‘s country is not and should not be divided into narrow and air tight segments. Polit.cal recognition at Ot«â€" tawa should not be reserved for candiâ€" dates who have served solely in the federal field. In the past, governâ€" ments at Ottawa and the provincial cap.tals have strengthened themselves by drawing freely on each other‘s graduates and the country has bene« fited as welli." versa is apâ€" Post. Coms of Premier UCA _ YUUL CAILL «91211 So long as the lefties reso‘lutions which praise the ray is will:ng to let them warns he‘ll throw them to Murray‘s tactic is to split In the pas‘s few days hc PExtzgeorald, president of the is a chance that "Fitz" m; atomic and War weapons ut strategy. If this won‘t work ing out (which they won‘t) the lefties. FPor cnance the Com‘es don‘t They want to forget abtcu "Thaw tanmnt tA ctas in the billi Th« M re than 100,000 C a Wt ich 111 at t+} Dusiness ntinued Igiadnm 15 pf 2 bnom which firms have capital. This iess activity and d _ their upward valued at $1344 p 111¢ reign 1 DrICCGSs may a pital rojects firms c c highe â€"risks ith practical ns with our nost of them lence rather en fiowing immigrants addition to which has ver known overies of ilfields in exchange orty a I mt than t the nateo tical Portland, Oregon â€"â€" The Horse" is in town. And before you think I‘ve turned raceâ€"track tout, permit me to report that "horse" is short for "Horseface." which is short for Roy Hudson,/ the Comâ€" munist Party‘s secret agent operating here behind the scenes of the CIO‘s policyâ€"making convention. You won‘t see him in the lobbies of this city‘s neat little hotels, filled with the headlineâ€"makng CIO chiefsâ€"â€"like hatless armâ€"inâ€"sling Walter Reuther; or sailor Joe Turran, with his towâ€"haired fiveâ€"yearâ€"old son yelling "Hey, Big Joc" at him, or all the other CIO leaders bent on making this "Unkindâ€"toâ€" the headlineâ€"mak: sailor Joe Surran Joc" at him, or a Communists week Instead, Roy "The Horse" hudson, who has been the Communist Party‘s agent in Pittsourgh these past few years, is meeting secretly with the CIO‘s Proâ€"Communis® leaders in little hotel rooms off Broadway, the main stem here. His job is to keep the proâ€"Communists from being kicked «of the CTO so they can salvage some power out of the fiasco of their recent attacks oi‘ the CIO leadership for not going along with Wallace. And L can report that "The Horse" will succeed. CIO chief Phil Murray wan‘s no purge at this time. There will be none despite a fight the wounded Walter Reuther and stocky Textile Workers chief Emil Rieve, are making to throw the Coimâ€" munists cut of the CIO this week. Reuther and Rieve feel strongly that this is the moment to rid the CIO iorever of the abject, cowed Communists, who will sit silently by while they are being flailed from the convention platform and floor. The Communist Party orders, relayed from abroad via Communist Pax'ty labor chief John Williamson in New York to "The Horse" here, are to take it and like it. The proâ€"Communists will wbey these orders,. Favourite story of the convention is the wheeze which says that when the comrades are unâ€" der such orders you can spit in their face and they‘ll say it‘s raining. For cnee the Com‘es don‘t want to be martyrized. They want to forget abeut Henry Wallace and.the third party. They want to stay in the CIO and with it seep into the Demacra‘tic Party again. . Which means, of course, that there will not be a third labor federaâ€" tion â€" â€" and John L. Lewis, who has been nego‘iating with the lefty lads to coms into h‘s union and start a new labor coalition, will be left at the altar. So long as the lefties are willing to make only a sham battle against a few reso‘lutions which praise the Marshall Plan and President Phil Murâ€" ray is will:ing to let them stay in the CIO ‘"if they behave.:" ~If not, he warns he‘ll throw them to Reuther and Rieve. Murray‘s tactic is to split the Communists wide open. e may succeed. In the pass few days hce has been talking secretly to cherubic Albert J. Fitzgeorald, president of the proâ€"Communist Electrical Workers Union. There is a chance that "Fitz" may break with the proâ€"Stalinis‘s and takg the atomic and War weapsns union away from them. At least that‘s Murray‘s strategy. If this won‘t work, Murray‘d rather needle the Commies into walkâ€" ing out (which they won‘t) than make martyrs out of them by dumpihg the lefties. M C Actualy Phil Murray is more het up over national politics than he 4s cver the Commies, who never before have been so helpless. Murray is susy plann‘ng to finance the Poiltical Action Committee with a $1,000,000 a year budge®, to force President Truman to deliver everything he promised, to launch a fourth round of wage increases if prices aren‘t rolled back (I predict there‘ll be a fourth round even if prices slip off sqa don‘t take this policy tco seriously); to send word to Europe tha‘y, tth Marsha.l Plan is not "a Wall St. plot", and to start a new organizing drive. One thing the CIO‘s agreed on â€" â€" when the left and right wings stop hisâ€" ing each other they‘ll start on business men everywhere. That‘ll keep everybody here happy from the redâ€"haired Reuther to tl{ hnarried red ‘"Horse". In one hotel, occupied by delegates to the CIO convention here, a band of tense men and women trained in Moscow‘s Lenin institute of sabotage welcomed back Communist Party labor strategists they hadn‘t seen in years. Three blocks away ancther group of union men, led by the almpst transâ€" parently pale, armâ€"crippled Walter Reuther, argued futilely with CIO Chief Phil Murray to drive the Communist band out of the CIO. In search of the secret of the secret parleys at which the real decisichs are made, I‘ve covered more hotels in the past few hours than an itinerant house detective. T discovered there were two such smokeâ€"filled room sesâ€" sions which should have been wired for sound and broadcast‘". â€" because they add up to real labor pains, political too, for this country.‘ First let me tell you of the conspi‘ratorial crowd which met in the Ccmâ€" mies‘ room. It was made up of official Communist agents who, in the early thirties, successfully built party espionage cells in the Government and took cver vast sections of the OIO. These secret Commies agents were fabulously successful. So much so that they wandered in and out of the White House, and were on intimate, terms with several Supreme Tourt justices and at least one Attorney General of the D.S. * But a few years ago their big chief Earl Browder was dumped by Moscow because the Russians were going real revolutionary the world over and Browder was identified with peaceful instead of viglent infiltration of our government and unions. Along with Browder of the agents were dropped from the Communi Party or exiled to areas such as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan: and Oaliâ€" fornia where they were under orders to keep themselves in trim by stirring up trouble in the electric power, precision instrument, auto and shipping industries. Only swift expulsion from the CIO could stall the comrades. That‘s what the politically sophisticated Walter Reuther, and another chap you should know frem ncw on, the slim, bespectacled, dark, machineâ€" cunâ€"tongued Gcorge Baldanzi, Textile Union viceâ€"president, argued for with Phil Murray in the other secret hotel session. Murray bluntly said he didn‘t think th‘s was the time. Reuther and his supporters then tried to talk their chief into duinping he viceâ€"president‘s board plumpish Albert Fitzgerald, head of the pro Communist Electrical Workers (UE) Union, which has been ordered barred from atomic plants. Reuther and Baldanzi wanted "Fitz" replaced by Wilâ€" lard Townsend, Negro leader of the CIO‘s transportation union. Phil kept saving no. q : t 4 {i.ing Easy On sSweet sumerâ€"buyving shuifle dim‘n‘shing dcellar furtl And that‘s the wavy it will stay â€" â€" despite Murray‘s pwublic emcL.Jnal attack n a lmxwdful of dismal proâ€"Communist leaders. That hbhlest was significant only because, for the first time in CIO hisâ€" tory, Murray \xem in for public self criticism. He revealed that out Oof a potential 15, 0060,000 white collar and Government workers the CIO lefty outfi‘s had unicn‘zed less than 100,000 in 11 years. But, of course the proâ€"C:mmies didn‘t go after mass membcrship. They unianized only strategic departments in the Government Segvice. It‘s ro coirciderce that this proâ€"Communist union has 17,000 members in and around the Panama Canal Zone area while its national membership in the US. is less than ancther 15,000. 'Vlunays- atlack on the proâ€" Communists’ failure "to organize the unorâ€" ganized," and his ,uhg(stmn that they "resign" may mean a new series ol CIO drives â€" â€" but it doesn‘t meat that a single Commie will be deposed. The Financial Post Saysâ€"â€" Removal, high excisc could chan On a 9Cz. I takes 13.177 Now, I t the :C Facts, Not Alibus Wantedâ€"The preéâ€" sent bower breakdown is the greatest irdustr.al calamity that has ever hit Ontario, asserts The Financial Post. Over wide areas of the most highly developed nart of Canada, factories are shut down for hours daily, busiâ€" ay:ing They unionize ‘s rno coincidetr d around the the ‘:US. is Murray‘s mized," and h 1| 11 the 9( diszcover they O convention ige the m:ctu box of choco )kin iL Inside Labour have beon recalled from exile. Just as obviously . â€" and with un‘on chiefs here who are the nation‘s top experts on this means that Moscow‘s new line will be to keep control unions as pcssible and revert flashâ€"like to the old tactic asters, of quietly infiltrating Mr. Truman‘s New Deal and sale the 0 t11 by Victor Riesel 1D t‘he Horse" will succeed. Communists from CIO this trip. retain an iron hand on communisations, telivision and aircraft equipment workers in superâ€"4ecAt operating right here in Portland on the fringe guided, incidently, by some of their best legal 11 4T ch th hC A Bright Questicnâ€"PDorcthvy Thompâ€" son lectured in Toronto the other night. Napier Moore in his Financial Post "EScratchpad," was vastly impressi ed by her reasoning and her selfâ€"con} trol during the question pericd. In her address she had at some length discussed the Berlin situation, exâ€" plaining that it was merely a symptom of a much bigger and graver clash beâ€" tween the Communist and Western worlds. One of the first questions handed up was "What do you think cf the Berlin situation?"~ ts‘ failure "to organize the unorâ€" resizn" may mean a new series of ingle Commie will be deposed. is d‘srupted, workers‘ inccome is housewlives are . sgeriously inconâ€" need and nroperty is endangerâ€" Produvction is being lost and emâ€" ment is being sacrificed, And as there has been ro adegquate or incing exvlanation of this colosâ€" s public emc4./.nal

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