en e ; TIMMINS, ONTARIO Members Cunsdian Weekly Newspaner Association; C1 ~This work was commenced in the summer of 1947 and is still continuing. + To date there have been over two thousand Indian trapper;: registered on their traditional hunting grounds, and thereby secured against enrcachment by nonâ€"resident trappers. ‘There are possibly another thousand Indian trappers yet to be registered and it is hoped this work will be completed by the enc ol next summer. y - time mceasurement by <z:n‘s whoch yoverns waiches anc clacks and thercâ€" fore the daily live: of peop‘e throughâ€" out the world, is a Canadian "invinâ€" share in the 1949 March appeal for $5,003,00) which opens nX Monday, you become an active partrer in one of ‘he greatest huâ€" x.mnnarlgn forces working icr good in the workd today. SYSTEM OF "STANDARD TIME" the adigress to ail gove nmnents. The ‘"Standard" Time, the system of Czzy o. Russic called ar Intcynational time mceasurement by zinss whch Time Convention wzich met at Rome. yoverns waiches anc cloacks and thereâ€" Italy, in the yesr This meeting fore the daily live: of people throughâ€" was adjcurfitd and mt at Washingâ€" ‘A a good neightor, as a responsible human beinz, each on> of u: wants to aid distress wherever we may find it and to preven‘, if possitle, its occurrence. In the complex?% ies of the modern world, one man‘s hand is not enough. Only the coâ€"cperative effort of a preat society, geared to work efficiently, quickly and humanely, can hope to stem the flood of misfortune, 0@ accident and emergencies that can cvertake any one . Only a grest Society, int>rnaâ€" tonal in scope, can bring hope to millions of our fellowmen in other portions of the warâ€"scarred g obe. The highest of human idealsâ€"â€"â€"c®ncern with the woellare of others â€" is the motivating force of Red Cross. To translate This itical into action; Red Cross and its thousands of yolunteer workers nerd the help of every person in Canada. By contributing your know to their sorrow. After considerabe talk a01 they were convinced that the registering. of their grounds would be to their advanfage and protect them againsi the unfortunate situation that their neighbors to the south had found themselves in. t sï¬ . \ ; i 93 To al‘eviate these sufferings, to prevent to promote the health and welfare of the people of Canadaâ€"that is the task o. the Canadian Red Cross Society, the task of its workers and its meimbers â€" everâ€"renewed, everâ€"necessary. There are between two and three thousand Indian trappers in that part of Ontario lying north of the northern most line of the Canadian National Railway, running between the Quebec and Manâ€" itoba provincial boundaries. Up unti the opening of the trapping sceason Of 1947â€"48 very few of these people had ever had a tragping licence nor had they ever made a return of the fur they had trapâ€" ped during the winter.. All this was left to the traders in the disâ€" trict and the Indian trapper himself had very little of what game regulations meant or how they concerned him.. In the area south of the main transcontinental line of[ the Canaâ€" dian National Raillway, both white trappers and Indias have trap lines. Human suffering takes marly forms. It may srtike as illness and pain, as misfortupe and natural catastrophe, as bewildermont ind hoplessness against overwhelming odds. 4 - y i t Sn i ts Sn ie 1 u0) 00 hx t t hA u2t S lt +4 on m ~Tor the most part the Indian trappers in that part oï¬ Ontario confined their hunting and trapping operations to the ground that their fathers had trapped before them.. .They.are divided into groups and bands and each band has its own traditional hunting ground. _ However, in recent years there had been some enroachâ€" imenk by white trappers into Indian trapping territory north of the Canadian National Railway and in order to prevent a reâ€"occurence the conditions that obtained in the district south of the Canaâ€" cdian National Railway where the white trapper had taken over most of the traditional trapping grounds of the Indians, the Deâ€" partment of Lands and Forests decided to revlstcr the grounds of all Indian trappers. | , During the present tlappmg season the registered Indian trapâ€" pers in the Patricia District have a quota of over 30,000 beaver which at today‘s prices, represen‘ts close ot a million dollars. This quota is based on one beaver being trapped from each colony so that an increase for the following year will be assured. ‘he Inâ€" dian trappers are becoming increasingly interested in the fur and game regulations and showing more inclination to coâ€"operate with the department of Lands and Forests and its field officers who are working with them. ; , P" Lo $ zus The spores have been sown and unless some antidote is found, results: may have farâ€"reaching consequences. â€" This thing can not be stamped out by oppression or brute force. That has been tried unsuccessfully many times in the past. â€" If, however, people can be brought to realize t he immense superiority of British democracy. ir they can be shown by clear thinking individuals, the futility of a scheme that would make Canadian citizens and British subjects mere cogs in a great heartless piece of machinery, then will Comâ€" munism‘s brilliant panorama flash hefore blind eyes and the oraâ€" tions of her stupendous advantages will be spumed as from the deaf. % The Indians at first did not take kindly to the idea of becomin licensed trappers as the majority of them believed the terms oi the treaties signed ky their forebears and the government of the day secured them in the right to pursue Their avocation of hunting and trapping forever. In actual practice it has not worked out that way is most of <the Indian trappers south of the, Canadians Natâ€" Those who have lost everything in the past few years of turmoil and strife in Europe and Asia are in need of encouragement and guidance. Can none but Communists offer them what they want? The great democratic countries of the world have more to offer, but they must do an adequate "selling‘" job to counteract the spread of Communism. . And it is a world job worth takmg with vigor, sinâ€" certty and determination. 1kXkany yeop e are supporters of Communism, notwonly beause they nsider it to be the on!y way out of their difficulties but it is the om} solution which has been shown to them", so writes a columnist in the New York Times recently. C VIIGC AAUW AVIDRDR AUCUUUiAAUVLA J . To us there is a great deal of truth in that statement, and that truth throws out a challenge to every rightâ€"thinking man and woâ€" man who realizes that there can never be any ‘asting success tmâ€" erge from the system advogated by this body. ‘ There is no doubt that Communism during the past few years has gained some ground. Their agents are constantly at work, some of them very loudly and openly and others using brute force to instil their dirty doctrines, others merely watching silently waiting.to put into force words coupled with actions when the occasion seems ripe. $2.00 Per Year Timmins, Ontario, Thursday, February 24th, 1949 Pubtished every Thursday by Merton W. Lake Subscription Rates: Protect Indian Trappers The Red Cross and You Must Find A Solutiqn ton, CLC, in 1383. At the Washington conterenea StanJard Time was adopâ€" ted by most countries: of the wirid. United States: $3.00 Per Year of Standard It used to be cne of the boasts of ‘the Porcupine in the carly days that Fhore wire ns rais hereâ€"that is, of ‘uu- fourâ€"legzed varicty. To be perâ€" iectly frank, there were qnly a very of the other bhand or rats. It w.s good coyniry or climats ivs rats. Even thirty odd years ago, ‘ats were recognized as among whe most danzerous ofi, maraudingy be_aqts, s the EPo:supin:s folt itse‘f in luck, .A. as rats were concerned. Onr sevc=~al cccasigons the town also suilere? an Pfnvasion of rabvits, these pests much damage in gardens and lawn.s. The old tswn‘ of Timmins did not sufler as much as might be expected from the varicus kinds of flies. The msjority of thes2 pests seemed #%9 stay cut in the bush, along tho River Road, ang in some of the restaurants in town. Ferhaps, they wished to be near thsir fellow friends, tho shad flles ~The latter, by the way, invaded yh> tewr cr cseveral occasions, and what they to the store windows, and the morals of the owners and clerks, may well be covered with the kindly forgetful ness. It w:uld be a mistake to imagine that even, the towns of the Porcupine wers free of nature‘s pests. If there were no rats, or potato bugs, there were mice, hduse fles, horse flies, dcoor flies, shad fliss, blackflies, sand ‘he", <nd mosquitges. The mice used to got into the flour kept at ‘the printing office for makâ€" ing pastc, and little villains would grag tho flour all algng and into the iype cascs, tempting Scotty, the prinâ€" into new h: ights of fervent porâ€" ty. Onee the towns of the Porcupine were established the bears and wolves to be careful to circle thau communitics when on their maraudâ€" ing trips. There was, however, a .big bear who fed reaularly at the Tisdals Township dump. That oldâ€"t mer, Haâ€" ppy W:eds. onee took a photograph oftf this bear at his lunchson at the duimp. Happy hid behind a stump to get a front, fullâ€"face picture of the bear The bear had his mouth full when the camera clicked. Happy‘s kcart was in his mouth:. But Happy got sately ‘away with his unusual picture. a "Nothing to breathe tut air, Quick as a flash ‘tis gone: Nowhere to fall but off, Nownere to stand but on." > ¢ /14 so it was that on many a night mother, after reciting to u~ thoze sparkling lines of Ben King‘s, wow d rock us off to sicep with a length of rubber hose. Wonderful moments as _â€"vo hozily recall. â€" Beautifu) years; lucid as the poetry of the time, and the handâ€"meâ€"downs we wore. s . Bong! Unti‘ recently we had thought these times of simple compreâ€" hencicn defunct.. We had believed poetry strangled beyond conse by the profusion.of metrica‘ confusicn of the modernists ond the surrealists. We had thought. . .Ah, but why. Why indeed! <â€"â€"Life magazine recently parted the curtains on the workings of the surrealist poetâ€"mind. We think no more. . . liow w2 know. ‘Snakes were few, and harmless, and th«» larger wild beasts, such as the bear; and wolves, seld.m invaded th: towns, though the prospectors, trapâ€" pers and lumbermen had fair occasion to speak ill of them. To bears had cons derablce talent in breaking int» prcspectors‘ shacks and rilling the goods thersin. It was not so much what they atse that annoycdl the oldâ€" t.me:s, as the unnecessary damagt they caused. Any curicus bear. would make a shembles of a neat shack in on nigh‘‘s visit. Realoale«! 5.3}0?53%%%%% pyeuopory °y n ig s Bongl ; Harry., cocme and see us when y’our time is up. Your niche has keen found. ‘ Bong! Life, and Jean Coctzsau! â€" We kiss you on koth checks. . We are overjoved; we bow from the ankles as a symbol oï¬ deep gratâ€" You may not realize it but you Rave given us fresh hnope for the saivation of our dear friend Harry. A man misâ€" vnders‘c>d by society for a number of years., _ Bong! You ses, Harry, though we have been in ignorance of the fact io. year‘s, is a potential surrea ist post; a regular world shaker. â€" An intellectual whose only error has been a telief that salon is spelled with t«#o Q‘s. But aside from that, Harry has as rruch an the tball as half a Gozen Cocteau‘s, and he doetn‘t have to walt arcund for a photogranmer before cutting loose. Whi, if HMHarry believed he was the empcror of China he would simp y dash cnto Pine street and say so in no uncertain terms. If be wanted to satisfy anything he would yell for a bartender. As for falling asleep in mythical gardens. . .Pshaw! Anybody‘s front garden was gcood enough for Harry. > ‘ *‘ Bong! ‘ â€"Yes, Hearry has missed great things.. He has been before his time. |â€" But no more. ‘ * Bong! Credi® for this enlightment must also be extended to the French poet Jean Cocteau. For it was this gentleman who alâ€" Icwed the innermost parts of his mind to be spread over two pages of Life magazine. He _posed with doves, pythons and anatomical models. He posed blindfolded, asleep and a lowed the merging of his left and right profile to give sides to his inâ€" tellectual character. He has done much for this generation. He also wrote the captions to the photazgraphs. t Bong! ® That ccmpleted the explanation. Mr.Cocteau thus made it clear that.â€"in these photographs his mind alternate‘y conceivâ€" caâ€"his body as aslcep in the Garden of Eden: as the emperor of Chins and that it was indeed "hard. to satisfy one‘s guardian ensei." . What we ask, could be more simple? We had been given the light that would lead us down a pathway to a sepâ€" zcrate world. 3 No. 88. L used â€" to be cne of the boasts of Another sign of the time is Lï¬'x J Thursday Whim! PORCUPINE ADVANCE T!IMMINS, ONTARIU By Friend Edward‘s defence is that thoy ere not his cockroaches; they belong t2 the houss he has rented; if anyâ€" body resporsible for thése cockâ€" ‘roaches, it must be the Russan who . owns .the propemtty. Friend Bdward cursss the cockreach armies as fervâ€" ently as Lloyd ‘Gecrge. Frisnd Torrance, the legal goutleâ€" Was the town ever plagued with beâ€"ougs? Now, why bring that up? were rumours by roomers, but kotel and boaraingâ€"h:use keepexs alâ€" was denied the s:ft impreachment. But there is no gainsaying the {act tlizt there ‘were cockrpaches in this town. Th.sgwas l.gauy proven, and ntt dencl.... At least,â€"one property ecwner in town scught legal help to su; h‘s neightour for the cockroaches that wardered frcm the qne propc-.ty tu ‘the other. 7 Frisgnd Tm;“;wc‘ the legal geutleâ€" man, refused, absolutely, _ to «have Abcut Friends and Cockroaches ‘Friend 1‘ H. Simms Mhas asked for an article, an editorigl, or an esâ€" say with a subject strik ngly out 6of the ordinary, lively beyond the usâ€" ual, and with a universality, of touch. He wants â€"ncthing about the war; t3 much has ‘szeen said about the war, and ttco liitle done, hs holds. He does nct wish cny to the gallant Americans, and their glorious victories in the last few days; they speak fcr themselv:cs, he thinks. But sommeth ng lively, sameth*ng universal, scmefhmg out of the rut!. And we aim to pl:ase â€" tkough wo nearly alâ€" ways fail. anything to do ywith the cockroach case, in a legal, or any other way. "I had of them before J moved my cflice!" he said. "I che:k on the cockroaches!" < Friccad Albert just now is secking lawful redress from Friend Edward, becarse <there are standing armies of cockroaches on Friend Edward‘s premâ€" isos, and, after the manner of milâ€" itaryâ€"mad Germany, those armies perâ€" sistâ€"in invad nz Friend Aivert‘s home. Friend Albert, like King Albeft, will not allsw his.kingdom to bo a roadâ€" way for any cockroach army. Friend Albert puts his foot down hard, and that makes a mess like there was in BelSium. * .. In cockrcaches at tho preâ€" sent moment have genuire news value n Timmins, be ng the possible basis for psossible basis for action at law. As a last resort, Chief Wilson was ecled in. and wor:iiea with the proâ€" blem. ~VWrat are a marp‘s rights; in Corkroaches seem to fill that bill. They sre not an crainary suJject of everyday editorials; they aro lively in al!l conscience; and several in town can vouch for their univerâ€" sality of touch. This maiter was so important t:at The Fcrcipin: Advance dealt with it, a3 follows, in gnâ€" clitorial: Marauding Beasts in the Early Days. That pceint cf view made the Chief loseâ€" interest. "I intend toâ€" treat all alien emenies just tns same as whit2 ‘peop.c." he said. "Your only hupc is to call in Boa Allen." The 23 car train wlich is beinz mod* up represents the biggest singlo chipment ever to leavo Hillâ€" Clackâ€"Francis rlint.o The matorizl, mo‘ t oi it preâ€"cut ty permit rapid <s ocmbl‘a~,. :s desizned for 309 houseos 10 t p»_zm:lnenl staif at the big Arriorco depot. In the section devoted to Canadian aliairc,. the editors of _ Time quoted Ontarin _ Iralt‘h â€" Minister _ Kelley‘s "eight points for health" whichkh he bod qutlined at the opening of the new Memurial Hospital. % NIPIGON ,’ Nipigon was given a "plug‘ in last week‘s issue of . the internationa‘lyâ€" read Time Magazinc, published in New York. NEW HLSEKEARD Fifty hovsts will move out of New tsis week en route to the R.CA.F. depot "8t Centralia, Ontarin. Rizcs has born planted successfully from in Cl fornia. out of ‘every five of Denmark‘s churches are over 700 years old. Now experiments in extracting sugar frcom wocd may confirm a new source of foz:d fcr tarmer animals. Then somecne suggesled that the cockroachco; were immigrants to this courtry without naturalization papers, they were aliens; and, being hated ‘>y all, tney were enemcs; and sy, coul we‘ll be classed as alien enâ€" emicto. â€" The cockroaches in Timmins, like their European counterparts a short t me ag:, have thinss their own, way by for:e of numbetrs. But just as the black beeiles of Germany were driven back and will be smashed, and crushâ€" ed, and destroyed by the forces of[ gcocd cleanliness, so the optherous inâ€" sects in Timmins wiil als> bre climâ€" inated. That‘s all! Prophecics Fulfilled! As an 1949 note to that editaorial of \Lhirt,y odd years ago, it may be mentioned «that the prophozriecs conâ€" taincsd in the edit:r al have been comâ€" pletely fulfilled in the days that have passed. â€" The ccckroath armies that invaded Belg‘umâ€" and troubled King Albert were hatrdledl with. TN.T. and similar explosives in successful manâ€" ne, men frem Porcupine doing their ful)l part in the operation. If it had tom ncecessary to use T.N.T on the c:ckroashes that invaded Friend Alâ€" bert‘s eralm, then they, would have bsen â€"T.N.T.â€"ed to death. But in the meantims science has come along to help where law and the. gospel seecm powerless. â€" B.D.T. has sounded the death kneil of cockroach armies® here. Tha caréful use of D.D.T. makes it unecessary to resort to law, or other trouble, to avoid the cockroach â€"armâ€" les cI nsighbsurs. There is not enâ€" ough space Ic‘t in this article to give the full name of D.D.T.: But ask your druggist! Hs is more than a merâ€" chant! He knows the long and awlul. word for which DB.D.T. stands. V atning ed out 0o It can the con in spes‘ {i12‘a. Wit" o1 to play : ©C, wWi iato a fr At thi: spcc.cl 1 They 1 r.:csuits pitcshed : Incit e cove e l any in t a C row paign is p:ogram Anoth series Ard 5C ragsing C actors to wnes soc. Anyth Fo: y: Damon ]1 man to t nags abc the on y to thn.w The ! C {.1m3 bac mest. of HACLEYBURY M2as Narrow Escapce Omer Pe®ron of Temagami was brought to Miscericordia Hospital here receontly, suffering from the effects of 2 ducking he received Wwhen a car he was driving, broke through the ice on Lake Temagami.. He narrowly esâ€" Growning in the submerged ve‘ricle, which sank in water more than 75 feet deep, a man from Temâ€" agami stated. He managed to break out of the car and reach surface in a couple of minutes, it was stated. Thére the matter rests! Or, rathc;, there is ns rest, on acccunt of the mattes. That is the trouble with coskroaches! Th petition, which had been, handâ€" ca to the Tcown Clerk for readingz to counce‘l. previouvs to the mgeting had no kaciterr present Monday night to speak on behalf the signners. The petition as read by the clerk, asked tha‘ in view of the for ezâ€"wors and a now scanool to which counc‘‘â€"is committed, a new plebiscits be keid on the qusstion ‘of the hall. rcgard to cockrtaches in a democratic B:itish country? Are cit.zens expeocted to fence their places against their ncighbour‘s cockroaches? Is thtce a town byâ€"law whereby cockroaches are not allowed to run at large, except on eash? Is there an open seascn .v: cockragachss? "Ii 1 were sure. that cockroaches were contagious," said the Chief, "I wsuld have toth partics charged unâ€" der the Medical Mealth Act for not reporting." LISKEARD Hall To Go Aheai A. peot‘tion asking for a new on .the proposed Memorial Hall was reai at Monday night‘s meeting of Town Council but i‘ ferei to recgivz a majority waen voteod upon. H!GHGRADE PAMPLE C O S The Ccmmunist. And just at a mo propaganda machi: l e wins, then tne public gets its fir 1 post war break when it finds it can sp.ad its |: 1sur‘, hours l2ss expenswely B # V hat Fe‘riFo and t is mu#cians‘ fedcratun â€"â€" s9u0n to be joined by the pow! 408,00( in:mb»» and Re tavzsant Workers Unionâ€"â€"are fu,nnnu Va‘cusih.es new labby, is' a slathback ol the 20 per cent amuseâ€" men‘ to the me. war p per cont. "‘They‘ll "spare no exponse," Petrillo . ays I‘s‘.plâ€"asant to report that so closely are labor and management working t ~ saivyr thrcin industry that the musicians‘ federation already has donaleid £5,9CC with to come, to help members of the American Hotol A‘sn. 1 a £ milar fight on the tReavy tax. 'fh"l’f. s more re‘e than just watching Petri‘lo in aâ€"tion This is the second year of the entertainment field depression. The .;ublic'- sendipg mortc carefullyâ€"â€"or hasn‘t got the folding green to shove at a waile: oâ€" u;der a box cffice grill:~ From eosst to coast New York‘s Broadway jitters sare mi rorad.© If thing are. ough here in the muclcal mecea, they‘re rougher ele:where. J 30R In v.ceat mom‘u. the: ':witeh has been Hed steadily to darken such naâ€" tiona‘ly»ballyho3d s _'_f_,;'“ug ugmmque, s Harem, Nicky Carnival, f*who m‘ mad th¢ world‘s most famous restaurants An: now ju 4 a F:w after be pic‘ted up the tab for Mr.Prmman‘s highâ€" 1; musical imnauguraticn, he‘s batllingy the Demccratis Centre Tliere was the time Petrillo took on a goon by the nams of Benito Mussolini, whose we‘e hiring nonâ€" unicon hands. â€" Jimmic esw a brushed vith wartim=~ guar(ds patrolling the White Héduse whcn in error, ~they arrested h‘ im on his w.y in to see the President. E..\. axds, mtlmate friend of Reuther, now is pxe ident of the Dâ€"troit City Co nc and still a member of the auto unicn‘s Local 174. He won‘t amnouncs his for s:veral months, but its â€"~an open secret that he‘l run Menwhi!l©, the suto union, which nas rnot demobilized its po‘liticalâ€"action proâ€" c nc machmer) oi las November, when Neuther and his aides threw 1,000â€" raznrn squacs ‘n‘o the streets night after night just before cloction, is preparing to g.t th>, vote out To: Edwards. The auto union slone now can pitch 5.00) There wies the a Chicago Zoo monkey heaved cold stora» ouss out o tFis cogo it Jimmicâ€"â€"who insists somecone had tipped off the e / ature 4 3 % + tha‘ Pe‘ril‘o as Park Commissioner refused to Okay a bill for fresh egygs on the cium"‘s diâ€"t. % Aft>r this comes the big show in November. _ If the auto union elocts ts mz»yora‘ty canlida‘e ow»r the min backed by the Democrats:and Republicans, Recuthe‘s unicn w ll be thc rit to have tzken over a major cily. S‘râ€"p>y Jimmnic I‘ctri lo, the musician chaie!, has tangled with some strangeo characters. Thac CIO‘# Michigan political machine wi‘ll have a dress rehsarsal when it gt: some 2,00C political agents operating in about hall‘th» state‘s precinets, now and the statewide election for the minor offices in April. At that, it thy,.CIO grabs off the April election from the Republicans, it won‘t. pstty larceny. â€"Supreme Court justice; and stat> sc‘:iool superinâ€" le idents will b2e elzc‘ecd. ‘{ hbe wirs, Petrillo cluiirs â€"he can make jobs for thousands cooks, waiters mus can», entaortzine‘s, ball players and prize fightors, and keep hotels movic‘kouses and nicht club* in pro‘itable business throug"out the country _E nd in impoartant part of tke consolidation of this vast union is a campaizn {o: pol:tical power inits headquartars city, Detroit, and its stats, ‘Michigan, whi h will make 1l«2 big political news of the Fall election. . f men, as an independent political force, then hope to'elec‘ one oi cwn members, Gco:ge Eawards, mayor of Detroit and so put him in a pos t or to capture the U.S. Senatorial spot Sen. Vandenberg plans to leave vacaint in 1952.1 > 2 $ cki l doâ€"blsck workâ€"rs into"an election. â€" Other unions are expected to help cszec l y the ‘â€"staurant pacple and phone workers. Al‘ this I‘ve just checkedâ€"â€"becara> of the talk in circles that Murray mi_ht ke {orced toâ€"quit and that there would be_a row over who him.. Ba rirg eny late complications, Phil I\)Iurray stays on as presi t nt of CLIO. _ All oi which\ l:ads directly to one of the key political stories of che :ear. a Murray‘s illness has started everybody s;culating about the 4%â€"yearâ€"old autoâ€"i n on chie{, Waitsr Reuther, succeeding Phil. â€" That is. everybody‘s been taakicg abcut it but H‘euther. ~He is reported giving the CIO presidency little conrsiderat on. _ R;:uther, {jor the moment, is too wrapped up in consolidating si~ ow * huge unicn, too cecupied with major political, national and interâ€" nat ¢cna‘ grojec‘s io ke mo.e than casually interest‘d in heading CIO now. The Communist party‘s sucker lists aren‘t paying off And just at a moment, too. when the party needs some $3,000,000 to keep ‘ts propaganda machinery well oil*4 and its agents hopping around the country. Because the comrades Hope to keep the trial of their national leaders going for t lea:t a ysar so they can squeeze every bit of martyr propaganda out of it for worldwidle use, the party needs $1,000,000 in cash for this project alone. an idea of the regl size of modern unionism when you become awa:‘ trat Reuther‘s auto outiit has 1,100 locals and is now such a big busine‘s that wh n its new ui dizg is eze"ted on the former of Edsel Ford, the unâ€" io ~‘s naâ€"ional cfficas will fill 75,000 square feet of flsor space. It can :sa ely be pi+pAicted that Mr. Murray will Grder an intense %\ssault on the con.cntration of Communist labor strength in New York City and will send in spezg "white collar" organizers to drive the comrades‘ unions out of the fi2‘@. Trat‘s vhe %yport the party chiefs have from their "inspectors" â€"â€" a tight litâ€" t‘e band of roving agents who, like bank examiners, swoop‘down on a district, inrve_tigate party activity and strength and then report back for action to tough l itla Ja k Slachel, the party‘s organizationadl @amius now on trial for conspirâ€" acy. Wit" out a ‘ator kase the party has to do some fast footwork to find a ‘field to play in. instead, he‘s tâ€"inkinz o‘ reorganizing his unicnizing chcck troops and lavnehâ€"irg new drives to recruit muchâ€"needed millions into CIO the moment h> c:9 mstor to Washington.. Th:sa inspectors report that the party‘s task is to keep alive as a national outtit. Trey repo:t that ther#: is little chance of reâ€"winning any influence among uniors <nd that when Phil Murtayâ€"â€"now well rested and fully recovered from his recent heart ailmentâ€"â€"opens the special CIO high command parley in Washingtcn this March 2nd, the party will find itself being permanently bootâ€" ed out of tzsat labor federation. > At this very minute they‘re going over their special listsâ€"â€"some dormant in spoc.¢l filesâ€"â€"to find new faces, new names and new money suckers, Anothe=~ drive wiil pivot®on their leaders'f trial. They‘ll launch, with a series i‘ damonstratiors, a new "Committee to preserve the jury sy:tem". Ard so desperate are they for a new front with which they can cover up {und rassing campaigns, they are even exploiting the sensitive yearnings of actors to make gocd on Broadway. â€" The Commie stars now promise the young unes social advice snd training. ' \ They plan to exploit this weekâ€"â€"negro history woeekâ€"â€"with a special drive for r.cuits among the negroes who relected them last fall when the Commies pitcshed speg_ial pAoliti_cal woo at them through the Progressive Party. Incicenrtally, i‘ve just driven 3,000 miles through the South and di~â€" cove (_l that Co nmumsts hav. no mfluence in any negro community nor in any tvn on coverirg t atecgic industry. But I‘m tolb réï¬ably that party agsents a c row cn th.ir way Souta for a recruiting drive. / First move in this camâ€" paxgn 1s to put â€"one of the Commie negro. commentators on a radio hcoxup C uV Py C Unless they can set up th¢ise new groups, the Commies will have little out thei: own discredited and uncamouflaged are their current litt e front outfits. Ha‘f this sum, I learn from unimpeachable sources, will go to those great levers of the working man, the defense lawyers, who cost the Communist deâ€" fense outfits a minimum of $10,000 a week. â€"And the case hasn‘t yet begun. But th:y‘re discovering they‘ve. been digging their own rutâ€"â€"and most unions Pa k Ave. thrill seekers, Hollywood swimming pool "proletariat", and good naâ€" tun,1 10‘k whko were always ready with a buck for the underdog, have closed t icir dcors and checkbooks to the party‘s agents. o take it from the men whose duty it is to know what‘s happening daily inâ€" side th2 Communist party inner sanctumâ€"â€"the party‘s big job now is to launch a new set of front organizations through which to operate. _ Its baâ€" me as,ignment from international headquarters abroad is to set up series of ‘peacs" ironts immediately and then try to win se‘@aral million followers with an ant‘â€"war appeal. â€" Let them deny that one! These comrades may hate capitalist folding money but they lo\ * to ;:()ï¬':-é't' ti¢e stufiâ€"â€"as J notice from plans they‘ve just made to raise $650,000 in New York State alone. Anything to a buck and a sucker list Foc yoer U _ _ Inside Labour * 1 by Victor Riesel vitch has been puli Ule Martinique, t the o llave sarved the 1 larp‘> ‘number aré THURSDPAY, FEBRUARY %ith 134 world‘s most famous restaurants : working 2 days a week wiile earn a living," I‘m informed by