Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 19 May 1949, 1, p. 4

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ht oo ts idns The seletcion of the starting point for the campaign is just one of those things that add interest to political affairs. | It is unlikely cither léeader will ever confess his reason for choosing Charletteâ€" town ‘or Compton. Maybe they have no particular reason. Psychologists may find an answer, but in the meantime we are willing to go along with our own sunrise. CtaAr With the dissolution of Farliament and the calling of a federal election, all the political fronts have blazed into activity. The parâ€" ty deaders are starting the traditional series of campaign tours. And the air is filled wih charges and counter charges aimed at deâ€" veloping "an election issue". In many constituencies candidates have already been chosen. From here in we shall be deluged with platform oratory, good, bad and indifferent. We are now condemned to gaze upon portraits of candidates (who have been variously advised to look sincere, to look resolute to appear friendly, to resemble the common man etc., etc.) in street cars, on posters and billboards, in newspapetrs and clsewhere. We shall be able to hear them on our radios at almost all hours of the day or night. In short, we, the lectorate, will be sought after and the pursued until we shall have performed our allâ€"important duty on election day. Anda â€"now, while there is yet time, would seem to be the propitious moment to advise our candiâ€" dates what we would like them to say and how we would like them to act. + _ No MR M M OW Oe m Ee . e C CCC The '.unplicationvv:ve find, is that Mr. Drew, as shown in his words and actions, thinks on a national scale and confederation was naâ€" tional in scope. : L t e 2 e ies 3 5 a s SS CSE w es Do Here are some of the things that most Canadians wOuuIiug IInc Mr. Political Candidate, to keep in mind. es 1. Don‘t consider us all complete fcols. We are thinking now of political promises. If you stand for increased social servicesâ€"inâ€" creased old age pensions, increased family allowances, increased subsidies, guaranteed prices, and the restâ€"by all means say so. [:ut please do not insult our intelligence by indicating that you will provide all these things and lower taxes too. 2 Don‘t drive wedges between various section of our economy. If you are talking to labour, don‘t run down the farmer, the investor and the businessman. Do your best to make each group aware that only through partnership can we develop as we should. 3. Don‘t akove all make political capital out of sectional, racial or religious differences. 4. Do point out that you will act to the best of your ability in the interests of Canada and Canadians as a whole. W ecould not fail to cbserve implication in the places chosen by tho leaders of Canada‘s two major political parties as the starting place of the federal election campaign. ";George Drew, national leader of the Progressive party, accomâ€" panied by Mrs. Drew, will launch the campalgn at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. is city in the Maritimes claims the distinction of being the birthplace of confederation which resulted in the union of Canada into one great dominion. Louis St. Laurent, national leader of the Liberal party, accomâ€" panied by Mrs. St. Laurent, will launch the campaign at Compton, Quebec. The little town of Compton, a few miles from Sherbrooke, is Mr. 8t. Laurent‘s birthplace, where he startea his career by serving beâ€" hind the counter of his father‘s general store. # s ho t s s s oo Oe o ts Mr St; Laurent, in words and actions, has demonstrated strong persenal tles and one s birthplace is strictly personal. EmsW 9T TWSR D. bo 'firbin'ise to do your best to see that government is run on sound business lines, with a minimum of waste. > Election arguments are beginning to be ‘heard. ~Up to the preâ€" sent, there seems to be little chance of any serious discussions on the hystings of any of the major questions which face this country. Election prospects are not unfavorable for the Government, which might actually have th elargest group in the new House. On its record for the past two decades, the Liberal Party deserves to go into oblivion, aithough that is not a suggestion that anything betâ€" ter has been in sight during that time. (’- '-â€"I-)"o"fil:or_r{iéé to use your influence to see that the function of government is restricpe_d to t_r}at of governing. # _ _ # 0 4) T P i e T E: _ _There are a lot of details that could be filled in, but a candidate who campaigned on a platform such as that outlined be surprised to find how much support would be forthcoming. _ oA * Fatal weakness of Canadian politics, which tends increasingly to aflect politics in all the democracies, is that every party now tries to get a.plat{orm which will be a catchâ€"all for every sort of appeal to ignorance, greed and malice. Every party leads with the public that it would take more of the public‘s money away to give the pubâ€" lic more money; that it would be able to spend the public‘s money more wisely than the public could spend it; that, in the process. those who are poor would become much richer, without the need of any extra effort; that the party has its eye on a lot of imaginary malefactors who ought to be put in jail, but who can never be found when they are looked for. VC se d ) . c it ofi ies S d sn If honest men can be persuaded to run in each Canadian constiâ€" tuency, then other things being equal, the voters can depend upâ€" on to:relect them. News Letter Liberals consist of roughly 60% fairly good Liberals, whose conâ€" can swallow Socialism, if 1t is not called Socialism, and 40% who can swallow Liberalism, provided it is not Liberalism, but is tmly given the name. CCF contanis one third Lemst-mberals one tmrd believes in the D on n 2 uP c ds oA ts _ ---‘ Naturally with two major parties and one halfâ€"baked party seekâ€" ing votes on what is, after all, an identical platform, it is extraorâ€" dinarily difficult to see how anyone can possibly form a stable gov â€" ernment in Canada after the next election. ~Proâ€"Cons protably come closest to having a sort of philosophy, and it is not a bad one; encouragement of enterprise. . However, when challenged to this effect, most Proâ€"Cons run quickly to the tall timbers, possibility of having the totalitarian state and freedom at the same time, and one third Communists, without the courage to admit tha they are Communists. ' s c All this may sound cynical, but it is the sober truth. seems Alo be likely to be the sort of political situation which exists in Canâ€" ada until some major disaster frightens the people into taking an interest in politicat and economic questions. j \. /That disaster apparently has to be a very desperate one. At preâ€" kent there are two dangers, of inflation or deflation, either carried 0 ettremes ' Letter Review Canada $2.00 Per Year Members Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association; Newspaper Association Published every Thursday by Merton W. Subscription Rates: Timmins,' Ontario, Thursday, May 19th, 1949 National and Personal Memo For Candidates Election Arguments United States: $3.00 Per Year matter by the Post Office Department, Ottawa Sudbury Star t 4t s t .A s n ic tss that this gratitication has been give~ by the‘office:s and men of the Timâ€" mins Lions‘ Sea Cadets. it may well be that t.ae splendid .showing o. the Sea Cadets has beon in some measure responsiblo for the special interest shown in recont years of the navy and the sailors of tho armored vessels and merchant marine. It is a fact, however, that thirty odd yoars ago there was very decided interest shown in Timmins in the men of tlie navy. This was accentuated by the visit :»:ere in the summor of 1918 of Rev. 8. Boal, formrly a chaplain in pcsal of the mayots of Cobalt, Halleyâ€" bury and New Laskeard ts:at the Govâ€" ernment place a ship on Lake Temisâ€" kaming for the training of #oys for the naval and merchant marine so‘v ices. It is not .ikely that Capt. Boal is still in the l1nd of the living, because he was not a young man thirty years ago, but if he is sthl alive, it will do his genial heart gccd to know of the work being carried on in Timmins toâ€"day by the Sea Cadets. ~As he po‘nted out while here, training such as this tends to the bui‘ding cf better and more uso‘ul and effective citizensh.p. Rev. Capt. Boal suggested the organ"® ization of a_branch of the Navy League in Timmins.. He pointed out that at tie time the Government had pensions and services for the soldiers and the airmen, but the saflors .were left on their own.. This was particularly true of the men of the merchant marines. Patriotic Funds and the Red Cross did not apply to the sailors. During the war of 1914â€"1918, there were 20,000 reâ€" cruits given to the navy and merchant marines by Canada. Capt. Boal emâ€" phasized the fact that the Navy Leagu? was the only organization that looked after the men who risked their lives on the seas. Te Navy League had Jnstitutes at different sea ports for the sailors, comforts were supplied to the men on ships and help was given to the wives and children of sailors. At public meeting, hurriedly calleéd, Capt. Boal, in his forthright way, stated: . "All cur prosperity, all our sw cty, our very lives and freedom we owe to the great work of the Britâ€" ish Navy!" He was cherred to the ecano. -' Rev. 8. Boal, formrly a chaplain in His Majesty‘s Navy and at the time acting as field secretary or the Navy: Leaguo of Canada. Captain the Rev. 8. Boal was a colâ€" ourful personality. He had stirred inâ€" terest in the work of the Navy League all throug:: Canada, but he expected that Timmins being so far from the sea would not show as much enthusâ€" iasm as some centres nearer the ocean. Ho was agreeably surprised at the interest inâ€" Timmins in the matters that were closo to is heart. . "Well, what are we going to do about it? "he asked. ‘‘*What can be done? : What should be done?" was the answer. Oldt.mers will remember Captain the Rev. S. Boal on account of his breezy geniality and Irish eloquence and wit: He had succceded in organizing branches of the Navy League in Coâ€" balt, Haileybury and New Liskeard, and, of course, he had no difficulty in instituting a branch here. One Sunâ€" day evening he spoke at the Byrnes Presbyterian Church, and during the â€"ollowing week he addressed a big rally at the New Empire theatre, as well as visiting all the schools in town, where he made a big hit with t‘ie youngsters through his witty exâ€" McLaughlin, Mr. J. A. Mclnnis, Coun cillorC G. Willlams, Mrs. McIinnis Mr Robbins, Dr. H.‘H. Moocre, Councillo! A. R. Globe, Councillor A. Brazeau, Mrs A. Brazeau. Dr. J. A. MciInnis was the unanimou choice for president. There was th same unanimity in choosing F. C. H Simms as secretary , and J. P. Taillot (manaze~ of the Timmins branch o the Bank of Commerce) as treasurer The executive committee included: Ma; or McLaughlin. Gouncillor Fire Chief A. Rcrland, G. A. Macdonal{ D. A. Hoggarth (principal of Timmin planations and his happy way of telling public schocl), all the clergymen of the Why do radio people from virtually every part of Canaad migrate to Monâ€" treal or The answer to that seems to be becaus: salarics are h.gher in those cities, for the reason that a majority of the national nc.work proâ€" stams origzinate there. Former residents of alimest every Canadian province are now among topâ€" ranking radio personalities; the fact had to â€"leav: tl.o‘r home towns to aâ€" "Kilocycling with Mike" _ Sober One Will Drive! THE PORUUPINE ADVANCE, T it is .nterestin "to rmflgfl Rt Capt. posal of the mayors of Cobalt, Hailleyâ€" bury and New Laskeard ts:at the Govâ€" ernment place a ship on Lake Temisâ€" kaming for the training of #oys for the naval and merchant soâ€"‘v ices. It is not .ikely that Capt. Boal is still in the l2nd of the living, because on July 4th, 1918, a public meeting was called to organize a branch of the Navy Lesgue for this area. Capt. Boal presided, and briefly cuil ned what the new branch cculd do in helping the war effort of the time, and planning or betterment in tx:s days of peace to c.mS. The chief project was the raising of funds to provide for sailers‘ institutes, help for the welfare of seamen and their dependents, the providing of comâ€" forts for ‘the sailors, etcs. He added that an edlucational campain was necâ€" essaiy to fully acquaint the publ.C with the advantages and the notable work of the Empire‘s navy. In referring to the number of intercsted ladles presâ€" ent, Capt. Boal said the ladies would "have their work cut cut for them" in the making of socks, sa.rts and ‘underâ€" clothing for the seamen. ‘He added that they would have to "cut out" their own material, ‘but he knew ‘they were quite up to this. At tre sameâ€"time he begged them never to "cut cut"= their interest in the good work. <It is only fair to add that the ladies not only apâ€" plauded Capt. Boal, but they dollowed his advice thrzrough the years. w \_a .0 dh _A A_4 After some enthusiastic discussions at the organization meeting, a»formal motion was moved by Councillor Dr. J. A. McGinnis, and seccnded by Councilâ€" lor Charles Pisrce, that a branch of the Navy League be organized here; : On motion of Mrs. Digby Grimston, secondâ€" ed by Mrs. Dr. McInn‘s, t‘ie new branch was named "The Admiral: Beresford Branch." was given in honour cf the late admiral of the Brit~ ish navy who was a relative of Mr Digâ€" by Grimston. The ciiarter members of Admiral Berâ€" esfora, Chapter of the Navy League 0. Canada were as follows: Mayor J. P. McLaughlin, Mr. J. A. McInnis, Counâ€" cillorC G. Willlams, Mrs. McIinnis Mrs Robbins, Dr. H.‘H. Moocre, Councillor A. R. Globe, Councillor A. Brazeau, Mrs. A. Brazeau. Dr. J. A. MciInnis was the unanimous choice for president. There was the same unanimity in choosing F. C. H. Simms as secretary , and J. P. Taillon (manaze~ of the Timmins branch of the Bank of Commerce) as treasurer. The executive committee included: May or McLaughlin. Gouncillor Fire Chief A. Rcrland, G. A. Macdonald D. A. Hoggarth (principal of Timmins bec â€" and they, tco, send their finest aird best to t»â€"e larger centres â€" it secomes cbvizsus that a sizeable group of ormer Winniper; artists is now ‘o be found in T:ronto. These include such perfcrmers on dramatic shows as Beth Lockerbic znd4d Monty. Hall, as wel‘ as producer Esse Ljwa#h; John Scott, cn a show whicâ€". features the Lcâ€"clie Bell singers; singers Mary and George Starting with expatriate Maritimers, ‘here are the Willis brothcrs,; Austin and Frank,, crom Halifax, as well as J:hn Fisher from Sackville, N.B.. to menticn a trio of wellâ€"known air fayâ€" crites.. Passing over Ontario and Queâ€" cliieve the success and renown they have won in the larger eastern cities. ‘to recall : district, Mrs. M. A. Ellis, Mrs. MciIinu:s, Mrs. Braseau, Mrs. W. F. Richardson,. Mrs. Digby G:imston, Mrs. Thos. Lawâ€" lor, Mrs.. A. F. Brigham, Mrs. A. Borâ€" land, Mrs. Cockburn, Mrs. Muskett, Mrs. Geo, Murphy (Schumacher). ‘__Commencing with forty members, the Adm.ral Beresford Branch of the Navy League soon had literaliy {undreds on rolls, while funds came in liberally, despite al the other patâ€" riotic calls of those days The town of T.mmins started the contributions with a grant of $500.00, while Tisdale township was equally generous. The first week in September, 1918, was declared and proclaimed as ‘"Sailors Week" for Northern Ontario, with A. D. Myles, of the Internat.onal Nickel Co., Sudjury as chairman, and Capt. Bcal as organizer. For Timmins, Dr. MciInnis was chairman, with G. A. Macâ€" dcnald, secretary. â€" Mrs. Cockburn and Mrs. Muskett were in charge of the event in Schumacher, and Rev. Mr. Armcs and C. B. Morgan in South Porcupine. " Sailors‘ Week" did much to inform the peope in general cof the great service being performed by the navy and the merchant marine, and the need fcr more attention to the needs of the men of the sea. Ts ladies did notable work in providing comforts for the sailors. The record shows that the Admiral Beresford Branch of the Navy League fully justified its existence du:ring the clcsing year 0. the first world war. Ti:is branch of the Navy League must also be credited with bringing to Timmins one of the most colourful characters in Britain in the early part of the century. This was Peter who spcke here in the interest cf the Navy Lceague. â€"Peter Wright was widâ€" ely known as the head of the powerâ€" ful seaman‘s union of Britain. «. Peter Wr.ght was the bold fellow who "Aad defied governments and was unawed by threats of prison. His fight for the seamen won world attention. But when the war of 1914â€"1918 started, it was at cncee cyident that Peter Wright was a loy@l‘ Englis:man. The Govâ€" ernment readily dropped its feud aâ€" gainst him, and he was called to the secerct service, doing remarkable work inâ€"that dangerous calling. Peter Wright showed the type of man he was when he was on l:is way to Timâ€" mins. It was in the days o tho Ontâ€" ario Temperance Act, and an officious Pcrvincial policeman wanted to search Peter‘s grip for suspected liquor. _ "I was born a free British subject!‘" Petâ€" er told the officer, "and T stand on my rights. â€"When you sk:ow the proper papers for searching my baggage, or if you place me under arrest, you can do your searching in the proper place and at the proper time, but just touch that grip of mine, and I‘ll drive you half through yonder seat.‘"‘ Looking at the Â¥Kcughâ€"lcoking Peter Wright, the officer decided that discretion was the betteor part of valor, and none seeing the same Peter Wright would doubt the policeâ€" man‘s good judgement. Several former Saskatchewan ~residâ€" cats are active in the executive side of eastern ; radio, while Jack Dennett, rormerly of Caligary, is only one of many former Albertans in the Toronto radio limclight. British Columbia has »on‘ributed the talent of Bernie Braâ€" den, Judy Richards and Hugh Bartlett, to mention only a few, so it is clearly sr-m that each part 0; the Dominion ‘‘as ecntributed its share of headliners al worthy of inclusicn in any groupâ€" ing of Canadian radio‘s "Who‘s Who". Murray; apiring opera star Louise Roy:; and the man who probably was the first Winnipegger to come cast and find success waiting for him, Bert Pearl of the Happy Gang. By the time I‘m through revealing plans for secret strategy sesions scheâ€" duled by the Communists® newlyâ€"organized high command here, the comradeos undercover crowd will discover they‘ve been able to hids fower detaiis than does a Riviera safety pin bathing suit. x1 QOut of the night, a few hours before this was written, came telegrams from Communist Trads Union Commission headquarters in lower Manhattan, They alerted every Tommunist union official in the nation. In crypti¢e,«crackling language the messages summoned the comrades to a special and secretive mectâ€" ing at New York‘s Hotsl Diplomat, later this month. These specialists in revolutionary labor action will be briefed on just what the national high Communist command (which met here secretly,over the weekend of April 23â€"24) expects of its labor leaders. It will be revealed that others whom the U.S. Immigration Service long has ;ox;gh(ti to deport, have been assigned to special work in Czechoslovakia and olan It will be revealed that at least one of them has gone to Shanghai, now awaitâ€" ing a final Red Army occupation. It will be disclosed in the long, wearing, twoâ€"hour monotone. speeches, so characteristic of these Communist briefing sessions, that the party‘s national committee expects every one of its labor men to devote himself immediately to a new "program of struggle." At that time Phil Murray is expected to unburden himself of some long pentâ€" up bitterness provoked by Communist attacks. Murray will be very, very tough. H2 will try to discipline the CIO Communists who have been roving=all over the U.S. and France with international Communist labor commandexs, pledgâ€" ing Russia the support of "American labor*. Phil Murray will make it publicly clear that it‘s only a paper moon the Comâ€" munists are selling abroad, because they lead paper unions in the U.S... What iurther action Murray plans is his to reveal. . This has all been worked out. . Federal counterâ€"espionage agencies have for zbout a year traced movement of special Communist operators as they fanned out of the big cities to areas where they were unknown. â€" From New York, for example, some operators suddenly disappeared and cropped up in Detroit, Pittsâ€" burgh and Cleveland. But the Communists are taking no chances on having their paper unions taken from them next week. â€"If CIO attempts to remove them ftom office, but to retain these unions under Murrray‘s control, the Commumsts will bolt and launch their own indepsndent labor federation. But whether they stay in or leave CIO, Communist tactics will be the sameâ€"â€" ncise, demonstration, strikes, parades and assaults on big business (monopolies, they‘l1 call it). At the right moment during a strike crisis, the cell leader is expected to start an outcry against the company or the nonâ€"Communist leaders of reasonable unions. There the lefty agents have assiducusly stayed away from all Communist acâ€" tivityâ€"â€"spending their time instead, building rankâ€"andâ€"file nonpolitical cells. Some members of these tiny units are unaware that the militant worker in their midst is a trained party operator. This technique, of course, is aimed at inflaming workers with grievances inâ€" to wildceat strikes or violent picketâ€"line action. There are such ceéllswaiting to exploit the Singer Sewing Machine Strike, for exampleâ€"â€"and, of course, in Deâ€" troit and other cities. " # M Where‘s the ecmergency? _ Where‘s the crisis which‘ impelied the Tocal laga= brious ones to call for a 62,000â€"man strike affecting plants in 40 cities. Where‘s the emergency which calls for labor action cutting men oq frOm a $6,250,000â€"aâ€"weekâ€"payrol!"? Nor is it incidental, except to the Ford union militants, that 1 osts $1,000, 000 a day to keep the hug° Ford plant going whether .cars arefig ced or not. This million bucks is exclusive of the profits lost on cam gld beâ€" czuse they weren‘t completed and customers went elsewhere. And customers are beginning to do that these days. 3 P UA Ne td P M o m e NE uP But before Mézev could complete his study, and while he and hig colleagues were conferring with company executives, the hotâ€"lipped local at Ford yelled strike. a # # 0 The timing was unstrategic even for the national United Afato';’#'orkcrs master plan to win pensions from the auto manufacturers. Action now over speedâ€"up charges would prevent a strike for the more basic gain~+pensionsâ€"â€" later this summer. But the local crowd at Ford had become strikeâ€"happy. â€" Thereig) a naâ€" tional auto union convention coming up and they‘d like to enter it as herocs. They wanted to be the showdown stars at Ford. . They‘ve got their showdown â€"â€"it‘ll be interesting to watch what that gets them. There‘s really no nced in some cities to give "keys" to distinguished vi~itâ€" The cities are wide open. * P _4 u. Behind the blitz strike call at Ford is a clique of local men with polftical inâ€" feriority complexes and an almost neurotic drive to become big shots. That‘s why they‘ve developed strikeâ€"itchy fingers holding a gun td me hesart of the country. 1. Despite the noise at Ford‘s there‘s been no emergency. _ All the creaming from the Ford union, the world‘s largest local, flared out ‘of the company‘s deâ€" cision to make 11 more Fords a day over what it was turning out exactly a month ago. 7 g;“fl But the costly political whimsy of the Ford union leaders provoked the laâ€" bor officials to yell "speedup". _ Yet on April 8th the assembly lines moved at a rate which completed 340 glistening Fords daily, compared with the 351 cars a day which the Ford schedule calls for now. fuse. fA health expert contcnas that two apples a day are better t.han onc Why of cores. uP T CA NP A 6 CR B nndrattinatfizad ho â€"datth.diceitirettcends Nothmg could be more sleazy. _ Cynically this cellâ€"network exploits the worâ€" ries of the average working Joe. y D94 © Py on ’-_ sibility. The timing was bad for the nation because the country now is labdrâ€"-nttc"v Thousands of contracts are expiring each mont,h from now on. . d . 23. B dn Abrd As a result, workers arp Jumpy in huge electrical equipment factories, oil refineries, intricate steel machine plants, truck companies, atom bomb â€"towns, alummum mills, rubber firms, shipyards, telephone systems, evWSheds And all in less than 60 days. Strikes are catching. Detroit the heart af tha mnuntrv _ There‘s no nredicting what may blow at the end of the slow @iuilliiliUGiLL LiA ho P ue i iA AAAMy i5445 pé ;J C Nok M y _ i e C 0 O NC 2 hy on En C ue C Psn Et Pn And all in less than 60 days. Strikes are catchmg Detroit?%t the of the country. _ There‘s no predicting what may blow at the eng .of the UVIIC _ CV 4 _ Je . 3 Wl 6 Mazey himself had led a small group of probers right into the:}' il plant to check the speed of the assembly lines after the hotheads had said they didn‘t even have time to sneeze before the unfininshed autos went by them. An Omaha woman has cremated her fourth husband. _ So some ?iuj't get a mate and others get husbands to lzurn. iA A \..4 a% Ds A {inancial leader says that doing without money is a great lesson. , . Verily, esson dces. o ipie And the timing was unstrategic even for the Ford labor leaderÂ¥ »pwn naâ€" tional union. . Réuther and his second in command, Emil Masey,, neither of whom can be accused of shadowâ€"boxing on an issue, were in the thidst of inâ€" osti 1 he complaints at Ford. V Stlgatlng‘t ‘S‘p‘eequ‘p p H t (fliu o se t ie q l e on 5_ ty e‘ 1 o â€" / 4 I\n a:m; blah-t 'issem-bly line worker must complete his particufil, jg" moving belt within two or three feet. He moves with it. The‘me they had to move too fast. So the national office investigated. w\ $45.4 1 WylL F4 Je ki o EC Damasacus, the world‘s oldest city, has, according to latest reporis a popâ€" ulation of less than 200,000. _ It certainly didn‘t make much use of the greal start it had on New York nd London. In a troubled world it is“fitting â€"â€" there should be such days as Sunday when the strident voice of industry is hushed, y fi J oo( ie Knowinr thyself is easyâ€"â€"â€"the hard part is convince others. * J it The French Revolution did, at least, give the world ideals of Liberty, Equalâ€" ity and Fraternity.. The slogan of the Labour revolution appears to be Utility., Priority and Austgrity. This timing and this shotâ€"gun strike call were sheer, callousédflrxcspon- Y ou can cal) a lady a kitten and get away_with it-_:but don‘t call a man a pup. Knowing thyself is easy-;-thc ha:rd part :l's convi:ncc others, A Bit O0° This and That Inside Labour SMALL CHILD IN â€"A DAISY FIELD To one aged three, a daisy has an cyce large as the midday sun; stalks sway beyond the stem beside her, tall, aloo{ and purposeful Like a millet seed, she knows thirst for growing: here isâ€"insltant *4 proof h a» # .2 that is her gauge of immortality. , Less small she seems, breathless on tiptoc § there, than age that seeks to conquer earth and air. Marguerite Janvrin Adams before her candid glance; diminutive as a fly. she has no fear, since gossamer thoughts can by Victor Riesel partxcul The *

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