es it _ Don‘t be curprised if the Immigration Department fails to make a case aâ€" gainst R#K Robinson, eastern viceâ€" presiaent of tre International: Union of Mine, Mill and Smeiter Workers, whose caté Is being heard today at Torâ€" ns 2l 2 in id sw t n Bc n t omo Wmï¬ was arrested last pâ€"_der that: mï¬on of the Immigratioh Act which bars persons from Canada who advécate: m overthrow <of â€" the govemmeni by The am loameï¬ at talmc ol going to press ths Ppepartment dies not fecl it has all the evidence it would like sgainst to export him from Canada fmder the terms of the act" Firet the Department must prove act, that that Robinson is a secciad that as a Cl vocates the overthro ment. mem.. tp* A weakméss in the procedm'e under which Roblnson is being chargéd beâ€" came apparent since his arrest, the Advance has learned. ‘This weakness is t.be irability of the Immigraï¬on De- other words, amy. person who. takes the stand to testify against. Robinson will do so on a voluntary basis, except in the case of Roval Canadian Mounâ€" ted Police bles and Imsmégra.tion officials. © Due to this fact, the Department has beon unable to chiain the type of witâ€" nesses it seeks and it appears that a case may not be made against Robinson. . Pew if any Canadian witnesses will against the union leader. and meost of the Dopartment‘s evidence will be based on reports from the United States. This wil be gocumentary evâ€" partment to subpeona witnesses to testlfy in a hearing of this -vv'vv NWVR ideme to <how Robinson was a sponâ€" sor of t.hc Coxnmun.‘st-f ront Civil Rights ‘Ceny y Oe beheif of eomnnmists Earl Browderi and Hserm‘v Bridges: a signer of a stateâ€" Haa‘y Bridges; ; .hgnerol‘a.state- ion have their‘ stooges and ‘hirelings. ment defending the unist Party Such a one is Don Cameron, who sees on Maron 18, Tm “ï¬d a supporter | ted every mmutefceverywhere. even of an mumber of other Communisti;in his sleep. He was Nown North to fronts 0‘ which t.he fdflm arg : check Oommumbts and finds them 20Ve‘ | every e.;;e m in the bu.,h camps *2*~ | which : e%r seen. -."»i ‘Whether this type of evidence will be sufficient to bar Robinson is a matâ€" ter of doubt in a Canadian court, where ‘every effort will be made to give the s us o# #42 .un!on~ leader a fair trial, It is likely that Rcebinâ€"on will argue Rbat thousands of other persens supported tife aforeâ€" mentioned Red causes and that this does not constitute prqcl he is a Comâ€" se l ds3 Commergial flyvers at South Porcuâ€" pine airport have had one of their best Winter seasons in years. There. has been much activity in flying both pros.â€" pectors and trappers. >‘ Now they are getting ready foxv thc breakâ€"up. . year winter flying ec atinï¬edaww May 1, but if the Commercial Flyers Enjoy:> Excellent Winter Season_ pueée"x}?;ze-mr conditonsâ€"continue it should wind up here within the next Can‘t Speak English â€" H ow Abusweâ€â€™ Cadi Asks Two l:oal miners isnussed . On aehmeof theft of 4 17nvomml'h- toulanâ€"â€" cmx the mwf; ’Show Man not Drunk , blond 20â€"yearâ€"old c‘I' t‘he goverjâ€" ed on * *\ Tongueâ€"Twisters Beaver Trappers Late; They‘ll Lose Money As Price Drops Racketti Attacks Antiâ€"Red Newsman _‘ His. voice shaking with emotion, Raketti Cameron to â€" "tk griminal madman, Adolph Hitler‘. ‘and inferred that the Star ‘writer should hc’e Tue:dey night Hepnry Raketti, secretary of local 2995, Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union, bitterly deâ€" nounced Don Cameron, Windsor Star feature writer, as a stooge and hireâ€" ling of big business. ‘ every e.} m in ‘the bush camps Whiéh e%r seen * ) ‘?ï¬? bé pleggér R-..‘1 “AAAM tu s :ï¬g*ï¬Ã©{ t i"%{liféï¬fa{l madman had |p{fi¢editin W @finatic asylum milâ€" lions of people would still be living today. No doubt Don Cameron and his kind ‘are suffering from some simâ€" ilar mental disorder. They repeat their lies and slander in the interests of the same kind of reactionary eleâ€" ments". Raketti followed the Communist line faithfully through his 15â€"minute address. In addition to the attack on ‘the ~Star writer he ter med Prem-_ ier: George Drew a fascist. He de-' nounced the King government for arâ€" resting Reid Robinson. He defended ‘Madelaine . Parent and Aurel Beauâ€" cage, who were recently sentenced to _Beaver Lrappers in this district arc late in bringing in their skins for sale and as result it appears t_.hey are > going t9 lose‘_ mol‘t‘gy. gue. i)r.ison in Quebec for subversive acâ€" tivities. He boosted the Communistâ€" backed Housewives Consumers‘ Leaâ€" Prime <kins sold at the opening of the season for $60, whereas toduy they are in the neighbor- hood : of: $40. HoWevet‘ a good numebr of Skins have alrcady been presented for HMe announced that the annual con» vention of the bush union: would be held in Sudbury April 10, 11, 12. He claimed that the union,had a paidâ€"up membership of 25,000 bushworkers in the North. stamping at the local office of the Department of Lands and Forâ€" ests,. But trappers have not obâ€" tained their quotas of one beaver to a house and many more skins are expected by the time the seaâ€" son closes May 15. In the Voice of the Bush program too, ‘how are iou at aaymg “Brmsh emwwuonâ€? Well u youcanmy bot.h these phm,-j [ongueâ€" Iwisters how Man not Drunk | x3 gling, 1 Can: you. siy‘. "Methodist ‘Episcopal" o s OB + v'-â€"vrâ€"râ€"â€" 6y â€"f fou can p. / You‘re Jucky," nid on i0 T9 MBX 12 a B u'mtod by police on nummetmds.meundergrmmdw chmmnon of 1946â€"47 and t.he dmpa' Lk SA i 5 i -g.\ SRA Â¥e... 4 t â€" D s s h ',,.\ s 5 w4 ie se $ § x l h 5 £~ »l-i. WB y 4 i ty ce ce it K tÂ¥ $ ; a A h i0 i0 n dn s un ies ~/ y h ieb( 4 l The g‘flvernment’s inquiry into the acuvittes or Reid Robinson as an alâ€". lgge Communisf takes ~place, today '_‘Qmo- ‘Robinson is ploturefl gbo,ve as he: pasqed 'fln'ough North !' é ‘M "Ã©ï¬ It W announced ï¬ï¬‚sv" J. Ennis tmanmgers bine Gold Mines Li pinge Gold Mines Limiteéd, "WHL one of Candda‘s:outstgnding, a%vards gn A“n PW1 the minmng industr}. . The veteran mine manager will receive the Internaâ€" tional Nicke!l medal of the Canadian Institute of Mining ard Metallhrgy next week. at Vancouver. The high.yâ€"prized medal is an iAllâ€" nual award inaugurated ten years Ago "for: meritorious and practical contrniâ€" butians of outstanding importance to the mining and metallurgical industry of CGanada." The medai will be preâ€" ‘sentéd to Mr. Ennis at a banguet next Puesday evening. _ _ M "The~medal goes to Mr. Ennis .aftetr‘ beirg@ nonwipated for the awardâ€"by every mine mapager of the Porcupinge, as well as the district‘s leading engineers. Mr. Ennis has, had A remarkable reâ€" cord in the gold mining industry. He has lod the McIntyre organization for the past 36 years and has: the continuous record of min*t: manager | known in Canada. â€" He has supervised the producticn of:more than $173,000,000 in gold up to the end of 1947, _ a _ "te e I;e:' ;amre to the Porcupine to build and operate a mill in the Summer of 1911,,< In that year the gold â€" produc¢â€" 1 /2 %" 2o an n P mE tion of al Ontario was only $42,637. He became assistant manager in 1912 and manager soon after. He has been viceâ€"president and general manâ€" gger of Melntyre since 1941. The réccmmendation through which My. Ennis is to receive the award states: "His rame is coupled with all Mc Intyre achievements such as: "(a) The development of: a ~great, worldâ€"famous gold mine from a strugâ€" gling pr.spect in the Northern Ontgrio ""@f) Milling developments from the introducticn of ball millirg to a comâ€" plete new 1981 mill treating: gold . or by tfinating . and cyanidation ofthe in# ling, research and addition of more. finecrushing and tankage equipment problems of deve‘opment, preduction and financing which m‘}y struggling concern of today encounters. . The recommendation pBYs tribute to the role played by Mr; Ennis during this difficult. period, selecting the year 1916 as an example. .. â€" S ie ) g* commendation says! 0 "With only $10,000 cash to pay about $112,000 current accounts and payroll will be seen that trade creditâ€" ‘dire"‘ it Bay on ‘the. traln last \?eek‘ after beâ€" ing taken into custody'by a,p lmmi- -gration flfflfll ml AwD memhqrs of nnfent. df the ROMP. safety, health and general wellâ€"bing of the employges. _ has bheen eXxâ€" préssed in the miners‘ change rooms, the community building, the SAfety inâ€" spection system by whici,.for over 20 years a safety inspection has made daily report to the general manager Cn the safety conditions of the mine and by his promotion of every method: of silicosis prevention." n ie p, . P x# L n i. Toh ...Aï¬ s d * n ind E Although MclItyre today is one of the world‘s giants cf gold production, the mine in its early days faced theâ€"saime problems of deveoptnent, preduction and fMnancing which ax‘}y struggling ~"With only $10,000 cash to pay about $112,000 current aecounts and payroll due, it will be seen that trade creditâ€" ors ‘and Mr. Ennis personality were still carrying the mine. _ Many stories are toli and many. verified by the Pearce Lumber Company, the Taylor s d 4 Hardware,. tbeexglostvecm:pam mammmdimch- toenumothergwtm ] s of the *mtmmmmnmmmmxu- ivg and mining.". matitfial Nickel Medat was avmded to a mmm_enm be«= Hardware,. the expi0siv? 277 | 0. ~ and / 8 All . district â€"mines gill ‘hire. exper=:, J3 ouncli ~â€" _ . |tenced miners. at the present, .Ceorge | JNCOGOLN 4 Gnarron, dh'ecwrolthdmw Emt- man wflh ’his tm:ï¬t oghe ctmcra 15 the lmmigration ‘officer} who: escorâ€" ted theunion leader to‘ M South. mctui'es were: supposed to ‘be . ‘!orbld- but noâ€"one objected‘ whenas cam leraman ofâ€"the Notth Bay: Nugget snap (ped theâ€"above photo. y Samantans ' Come To Aid Of: Il Newsboy Local Band Member Leaves For South â€" Ken Cambridge, who has been landâ€" scape gardener at the Mointyre for some time past, left this week to take a milar posit‘cn on a Burlington esâ€" tate near Hamilton. Previous to his departure, he was "called on the carâ€" pet" by the Timmins Citizen‘s. Band, and presented with a fountain pen and an address to mark the appreciation of C .: .. . n y ; ~ _ . |Aubry Wants Second Story Above Market For TCAC the band members for his ‘valuable and faithful services dm‘lrg ‘the past fifteen years. ~Bandmaster F. J. Wolno read the address and made the presentation, and Bandsman Cambridge was showâ€" ered with good wishes for his~ tuture ~â€" The cheapest way to provide quarâ€" ters for the TCAC..to ocenduct its acâ€" tivitles in boxing, weightâ€"lifting and cther sports would be to. bulld a secâ€" ‘ondâ€"storey on the Timmins~Farmer‘s ‘Market at the corner of MountJjoy Bt. ~The day of the Good Samaritml is not over. . Late last. week when loca.l newsboy became: m,m ‘A wwn hotel while seling papei's group of : local bmsinésan@l eame from all members of the band. S, ~and Second avenue, . accm‘mng ‘ urgnd that the town be asked. to issue $15.000 in ‘debenbures pay for. the additim msmggesuon recéived: the to "his "reseue.~ While LWO tended â€" the iad and cailled ‘a~ doc- tor, a third man took the bOy’s pan- ers aid sold them., throughaw hobel He sold sixteen comecu papers in the one room with only ‘one refusal. “Operators respecbively,s were up bol I déterngne the: cauge, and to resommend |. ~ might . «prevent mrther {= @iox'ty after the Paymaster hoisting @isaster three years ago, sepa.tate comâ€" ce Pn sns 3. Te i l t â€" . nc accidents. : The cause was found to be. corrbsion ‘of the inter nal wires, which ,gould not be: t,he surface, _A 1eo*‘rt on preventive measures will be made next week to the Canadian Institute of Mining asd. Metallurgy:‘ at its Jubilee Meeting in Vancouver by R E Dve manager of Dome Mine, R. D. Parker and R, L. Healy, the comâ€" mittee appointed by b‘ne mine opera- tm's in a paper entitled "Hoisting Rope: Research in Ontario Mines." “Since then (the Paymaster accident) great deal of research into hoisting problems has been ‘dene, not only by the inveâ€"tigating committees but by individual mzinmg companies mining equipment r¢pe manulfacturers, and enâ€" gineerirg companies. â€" The »work is not yet oompleted but great advances have been made and hoisting practices are steadily . being improvod" the reâ€" poit states e Particular emphasis has been placed on the cauge and> prevention . of corâ€" | nesion, which has been found the chief | culprit‘in the detert>ration of the ropes ‘The corrosion is caused by electrolytic reactions in the interior of the rope, after moisture has penetrated beneath the surfacg. Two ‘ways of forestalling this corrosion are pointed out in the paper. One is to keep dripping water and moist air out of the hoisting comâ€" cartments, so that wetting of the ropes may be reduced. The other way is to use lubricants and additions to the: ljubricants within the rope will prevent the electroiptic reactions responsible for consuming the steel wires. It i# exâ€" pected that the adoption of these two means will be effective in forestalling damege frcin corrosion. ‘The report gives a good deal of deâ€" "tailed information, and it will he stuâ€" died carefully by hundreds of mining men in this and other countries., Latest t.angat. at wh;ch the e 00 00 >( s on P o. 2. t d i -I“"“ ‘_ ’AM‘__. it -.'..“. Latest farga@ al. WOA UAC. .. and. gawmdill Worl un»ton is â€" m~ },;' ling its +guns is â€" e 20 pewent am~-“ uséement tax: The following wires . . were : sent yesterday" by: iocal mg .- *aséf»z Premier George A. Drcw; Parliament Buildings, .. > Queen‘s Park, $3 > ';_ Toronto. ° ‘ o se In the name of thousands of Jmohe workers we wish to registey . found :opposition to your pj of a whick wobld w . tinue . under. provincial . jJur the percent Amus( for we believe is against ‘terests of our prolece 56 . ® ‘LUMBER AND SAWMILL ERS UNION, LOCAL, 2098. : Mr. ‘Wm;. Grimmett, M.P.P. ; Parliameéent Buildlw - mt hx link Vie Toronto. Mr. J. A. Habel, M.PP., A pee #@ # . .2 Parliament. B ‘Toronto.