Migher rents â€"â€" Government thinking generally has been that controls should remain as long as housing shortage reâ€" mains acute, reports The Financial Post‘s Ottawa correspondent. The date generally it mind for relaxing control has so far been the fall of 1949 Any immediate move likely will be in the form of some slight increase in If the Canadian government would adopt a like policy they would probably increase production overnight. If 80 per cent of the gold about because the workers united themselves together to fight inâ€" justices, in wages nad working conditions. Today in many facâ€" aut?9 }1 qNnG ‘U}IM ULIOG Uadq aaAtBU S1aUMO LIOj0BIJ PUB S.19.dEUEUW aUlitUH production had to be sold to the Canadian government at $35 an ounce but the remaining 20 per cent of production could be sold anywhere then the mines would really tear the gold out of the ground. India, South American countries and Mexico are paying high money for gold. Perhaps the government may do something about it with an election coming on? Anyway its a nice thought for Labour Day in the Porcupine! Although citizens heard the blast and wondered about it none of them were interested enough to investigate. "People mind their own business around this town," one citzen stated. Fine, but then they shouldn‘t complain when there is no cooperation. The same thing happened during the murder of Frank DelLuca. Several neighbors heard Frank‘s screams for help and some saw being assailed yet they didn‘t call the police or even yell at the assaillants, , "The screams kept up for some time," one witness said in court, Yet this witness didn‘t feel a twinge of conscience at the fact that she didn‘t call the police but watched a man being murdered. It is only through citizens cooperating with the police in a demâ€" oeratic way that we will keep this country from becoming ruled by the police state, with cynical heavyâ€"handed cops. ‘It has become a habit of modern people to try and get away with as much as they can. . This type of thinking leads them to treat the police as interlopers in their private lives. The average man should feel that the policeman is there on the corner and riding around in the squad car for his protection and to assist him with many difâ€" ficulities, The average citizen thinks otherwise. Unless he wants a cop to report a straying wife or vice versa, something lost or stolen or the fact that someone is beating his brain out, they don‘t waint the policeman to be even standing on the corner. SR TeE NT This beligerent attitude on the part of citizens has built up a like beligerent attitude in policemen. Policemen begin to feel that their little acts of consideration are looked upon with a glassy stare and they hesitate to lend the helping hand again unless it is reâ€" quested. Today there has been increased emphasis on the paycheck beâ€" cause of the high cost of living. The high cost is because of high wages say some wouldâ€"be economists, but the labour man looks at his pay check with all the markings on the attached tab and wonâ€" ders what the government does with all the money. Many comâ€" panies are not worried about the high costs of living because they can afford to do so because they just tab the cost on the cars as they roll off the assembly line to the impatiently waiting citizens. . But the great majority of the companies must keep their selling price within limitations and none more so than the mines. They must sell their gold to the Dominion government at a set price per ounce. And, despite what the miners may think about ability to pay, the mines working on low grade ore, cannot possibly increase their payâ€" roll. . If the big mines increase the payroll then they put the small operators out of business. All we can hope for in this area is a little cooperation from the government. The police left to their own devices withiout the aid of the public can do a fair job and often do a good job despite the criticism and carping with which they are bombarded incessantly. t a strange paradox. The people who depend most on the police to protect their property and lives are the least likely to complain. By that we mean that those in high places and those who have considâ€" erable property to protect are the least likely to blow their top when the police make a mistake. The fast work of the police last week when two men tried to blast their way into the Caisse Populaire was commendable. But what impressed the police was the unhesitating cooperation of the bank manager and they remarked on his coolness in the situation. Instead of running the men off the place by calling the police from the bank or going out to see what was going on, the manager ran across the road to the Taxi office to make the call. The South African mine owners looked down their noses when the Canadians admtited that they couldn‘t sell their product to other than the Canadian government. In South Africa, they chuckled, they sold only 80 per cent of their production to the United Kingdom and they could sell the 20 per cent where they wished and at any price they could get. ® This good feeling for the workers hasn‘t been something which tories it is almost silly to what lengths management has gone to keep the worker on the job. It is a direct change from the nineâ€" teenth century labour practices. When anything happens, like a burglary or a murder, the police are expected to clear up the whole situation within a very short time.. John FPublic is a hard task master. He doesn‘t consider that his help in the matter might assist the police in clearing up the job faster. â€"In South Africa they still use virtual slave labour in the mines and factories and the pay is pitifully small. Yet despite the aâ€" mounts of slave labour their production of gold is down. A reâ€" cent junket to Canada and the United States by some South Afriâ€" can~mmine managers was revealing to both the visitors and their hosts. They hadn‘t seen many of the machines used here and they were surprised at the manâ€"day figures. But what surprised their hosts was their utter disregard for the human element. The visitors seemed surprised that any mine would pay big wages just because they felt that the men couldn‘t live on less. The only reason they could say why they were in Canada and the U.S. to look over machninery was that they wanted to increase production. Askâ€" ed if the union had put up the wages, they answered that they had unions for the workers, but they didn‘t interfere too much with wages and things like that. It is only pay which the workers want but recognition as imâ€" portant cogs in the job which requires a large part of their wakâ€" ing hours. This is a good time to survey what labour and labour organizâ€" ation has done for the nation. Too much has been said about the disruption labour unions and labour men have caused by strikes and wage demands. But let us glance kack a bit and see whether or not the labour union hasn‘t given as much as it has asked. â€" Authorized as second class matter by the Post Office Department, Ottawa Canada $2.00 Per Year Timmins, Ontario, Thursday, September 2nd, 1948 t PHONE 26 TIMMINS, ONTARIO Members Canadian Weekly Newspaper Association; Ontarioâ€"Quebec Newspaper Association The PBorcupine Adtance Published every Thursday by Merton W. Lake Help The Police Labour Day Subscription Rates + mymme s mer.~ â€" present ceiling, by way of pacifying owners who base their case on the fact that whereas rental ceilings have advanced but 20% over 1939, general costs are up 60 %. _ So far no decision has been taken although the whole question is under s.udy with the proâ€" perty owners. United States: $3.00 Per Year ....The millionâ€"word obituaries of Babe Ruth, even as that shamefully slobberâ€" ous movie about him, generally manâ€" age to offer an impression that the old Bam was a kind of thyroid Faun:â€" leroy, perpetually aâ€"sweat mith milk of human kindness. It is an inaccurâ€" ate presentation, and one wkhich Ruth would resent. Ruth was never mean and he often was purposefully kind â€"when he thought about it. But like a ifrolicking puppy, he frequently chewâ€" ed the Qrapes, together with the hand hand that fed him. He was a great big kid, thoughtless as a child is and sometimes cruel as a child is. Theé piece I‘ve liked best about thne Babe was written by old Granny R:ce, who knew him for 30 years and loved him well, In addition to the usual eulogies â€" you know, master athlete, Though closely related to severat politicians, Miss Hugh poured vitriol (parabolically) on all politicians. t the same time, she was careful to emphasize the fact that she thougtit all workingmen were pure as snow, and clever as lightning. It was hard for those who knew her uncle to believe that she could class him outâ€" side the working class, for no iman in Canada was more of an active and unspar.ng worker than Col. Sam Hughs. In any line of activity, he was the first to arrive in the morning, and the last to retire at night, and everyâ€" thing had to move on the doubie quick in the busy hours of, Col. Sam‘s labours, with the gallant coloncl himâ€" self always well in the lead. Perhaps, thke part of Miss Hughes address in 1917 in Timmins that wiil remain the longest in memory will be her scorching reply to the supposec suggestion that workingmen were not intelligent enough to sit in parliamen:. She said that after the election of 1011 she had expected to be compâ€" letely overawed by tke ibrilliance of the parliamenrtarians .gathered at a big social function at Ottawa. Inâ€" stead, she found them very dull, »1â€" deed. One member of: parliament sme met could not talk intelligently even abcut his own province., Eventually, she attemprited to sympathize with him because he lived in such a small town when ke was at home. Then, said Miss Hughes, he gave her tns longest answer of the evening. Miss Laura had the disiinction (and it was definitely a distinction) of veâ€" ing a daughter of Dr. James L. Hug::â€" es, Toronto‘s most outstanding public school inspector, and a niece of Hon. Sir Sam Hughes, Canada‘s talenled Minister of Militia during World War No. 1. In addition, Miss Hughes was a ‘brilliant character in her own right. Babe Ruth No Sinner No Saint â€" Says Ruark In here Miss Hugunes did not, perhaps, paint as flattering a picture of the ladies as implied py Article No. 65 in this series, but ske did expose mere man as so stupid and backward that women appear>d wonderful in comparison. . The men but they liked her snappy generalities, several of these women visitors w‘il be among those long remembered in thke Porcupine. One of them was Miss Laura Hughes, of Toronto, who visitâ€" ed Timmiins when the town was no more than a fiveâ€"yearâ€"old. She came to speak on behalf of the Porcupime Miners‘ Union. Why, even the women whno came to the Porcupine as visitors in the cariy days were outstanding. Readers of No. 65 might well be tempted to believe that it was intended to suggest that women are a superior brand of humanity, and that the pioneer women of were a superâ€"special selection of tha: superlative breed of kumankind. That was the idea! The record supâ€" ports such a theory! It is not necâ€" essary to prove it; it will be admiited by every pioneerirg Porcupine . man who isn‘t an old woman, Why, even the women whno came to thoo Pearenm mne ats visitare in the curiv in this series‘ ‘"Well," he sa‘id, "a man can live =.â€" most anywhere, if he has his woman with him." Anotktr woman speaker who mace the fur fly in an address nere was Mrs. Harriect Prenter, of Hami‘tsn, where tradition says there is a smaill hll visible to the naked eye. Clue spoke in the interests of A, W. Roeb cld ‘hen the ed@ror of a newspaper at New Liskeard, and who was referrec t3 by another newspsper in the North, as "the Liberalâ€"Laurierâ€"Labpurâ€"Conâ€" scription â€" anything â€" to . win â€" a 1l n The Days The Porcupine $ Tas Noung en e se ate t sn c3 20 eB ol a 2e atn e aBn aBn in en aBn aBe sB a t a 20 02 n 20 0t Pn t a h s o e a C a 7 o a on 02 a a on a t a n a To a To a To a 0 To a 2o ns a Te dn n 2. + , No. 66. Some Other Women in the Porcupine ‘‘You‘re on the verge of a nervous breakdown, Mrs. Foot â€" You‘ll have to listen to just the COMMERCIALS ‘till ti heroes geot out of trouble." THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO There are dozens of ancedotes about Ruth which have not been written, and which are fascinating keys to his skiil and personality. One I like concerns the fact that he always toted two dimes in his pocket when he was an childâ€"lover, idol of millions and natâ€" ional symbolâ€"Rice gave a round2d picture of the man. He tells about.tne winter Ruth dropped $100,000 playing the nags in Havana. He tells how Ruth cursed and how he sluggedc a cop. He tells how, in a fit of unbridlec gaiety, Babe once dangled little Miller Huggins from a speeding train. He also relates how he and the Babe drove 60 miles to see a sick kid, with Ruth promising to belt him loose form nis brains if he wrote a word of it. Wha:s comes out is Ruth the man, not Ruth the manufactured mollycoddle. In a few weeks, other towns trom North Bay to Hearst were howlhing trkeir heads off, claiming the young lady had defrauded them â€" that the company she claimed to represent was nonâ€"existent â€" that even her smlie was a false one. They set the poi.ce on her trail,. But they received no help in this from Timmins or tare Porcupine. The maycr of Timmins at Years after, in commenting on these addresses, Neh Faulkenham, a shrewd and thkhoughtful Porcupine prospector, chuckled, and said:;: "Women had tonâ€" gues before they had the vote!" There was one young lady who visited the Porcupine in the early days who had no harsh words for men in general, nor did ske divide them into workers and nonâ€"wirkers. She workâ€" ed them all. She had a clever line of patter, but her chief asset was a glamorous smile. Her eyes were a deâ€" lightful dark brown. And cou‘d sne roll them! Oh, boy! for the Union Government candiqaie in this riding had a very comfortable majority. Rapidly, but charmingly, she would explair that shke represented a laige concern‘that offered cut rates on any magazine or newspaper published anyâ€" where on the contirent. There was no arzument. The young lady juss turned on that gorgeous smille. It was only a question of how maiy magaz nes the man thought ke could afford. One citizen subscribed for tsun magazines. He received twolve devaâ€" stating smiles. That was all he ever got for his money. It was the samec, in more or less dezree, with literaly hundreds of others. â€" vote cand date." Thke meeting at which spoks was certauinly a rousing rally. It aroused a little enthusiacm for the cand‘da‘e, and it rousea a lot of fury in those in dfavour of Union â€" Government. "Crooks," ers," "shysters," wer, some cof the terms that flowed freely that evenimg from ihe speake m Mrs. FEJfkenter cloaked her references w.th so muc:: humour, and a small coating of polâ€" iteness, tha; she was not difficu.t to lhsten to, cleverly, but vEKh 1lq;‘3 that kept trippirng over its own the lady set mere man in h‘s p:.wâ€"â€". that place apparently, was none Qther than the longâ€"famous doghkouse. The burden of her thought (if "thc:ugnt" is the right word) was tkat, nct only the election, but the war itself, was a battle between democracy and spceâ€" cial privilege. "Vote for your ciass!" she urged, again and again. The people d‘d, though not as she expected, By . A. Macdonald By Howle Hunt Although he drank prodigiouslv, never seemed to aifect his vulturc eyesight. Ballplayers have told im that at least half of Ruth‘s battin 6kill was due to a pair of eves whic could perceive the nit on the neck ;« a gnat at 100 yards. Our Larry Ro: inson who knew Ruth for yvear swears to this story: Larry and Ruth were playin Larry hit a 150â€"vard shot to the and Babs squinted at it. He . ‘"There‘s a speck of something 0o ball, kid. I hope it‘s mud, becai louse up your putt." Larry say when they avproached th, ba speck got off and flew away. a fly. It was the Babe who, when a young reporter bourced in to announce tha:s the Yanks were leading the leagu: in everything from homers to stoien bases, pointed to his lightâ€"fingered teammate. "Yeah," said the Babe, Ard th:isâ€" is also leading the league in stolen watches." I offer these little stories in no a:; empt to disparag, the Babe. Rui was all man, with a heavy share 0 man‘s foibles, and he himsel! neve made an effort to hide his shortcom ings. It is unfair rnow the Babec i gone, to present him as a saint, be CMise saint h. never was, Ruth threatened to disembowel hm with his bare hands, and to preven bloodshed, the thief was traded,. Rui still fumed. He wasn‘t nearly so sor about the theft as he was irked abou a footnote to the crime. *"*The stupld soâ€"andâ€"so hocked it fo a lousy hunnert buck:}" the Ba} roared. could of just as easy go five Cs for it. How do you like ; cheap guy like that?" Once Rutth recéived a thousandâ€"dolâ€" lar watch, a gaudy testimonial, freekâ€" led with diamonds, Playing for vrac Yanks at the time was a ballplayer, a sterling athlete who had a deplorable habit; he stole. He stole Ruth‘s watch and pawned it. active ‘ballplayer. These dimes we carried expressly to supplement ti nickel tip Lou Gehrig invariably le A nice gent, Lou was shy with a bu« and when he dropped th, nickel, Ba:« got up the extra 20 cents. Miss Marsh was brovucht thr the efforts of a number of the women ¢f Timmins <40o lecture on life‘s hobby â€" bird lifs. Not did she delight adult audienges | but she enthused the school chil into learn‘ng more about the birc this part of the North, and lovinz feathered beauties. After long cussions with the youngsters, shs icited <he information that there d stincet species of birds native to North. It is probably that the most y ular lady speaker to vis!it the Por ping in its early days was Mrs. P sons. She was conscripted more 1J once for return visits hers dur World War No. 1. Wt and kum fightered all her addresses. IM Parsons made a spesialty not only advocating conversaticn of food, also of showing hcw it cesould be d without lowering the standard of | ing. In urg ng more use O0f oatim to save flour for use coverscas, N Parsons gave recivnes for delici dishes that used caimeal instsad flour. She also quoted the defin‘ticn "Oats," used by Dr. Samuel John in his first English dictionary. "Oats â€" tke food of horses in E. land, and of men inâ€"Seotland." It may secm cdd, but it‘s the fact, trat the women ol othe: Porgw,"ae particuary delighted .n any of ths womon visitors menilione .: so far. thore woere some cthor ladies vis ting here who did make a deci‘ded hit with the women 9i tne Porcupine. Amors them may ye tior:2d Mrs. Soames, ecf Chapleau, Miss Marsk, of ncear Collingwoâ€"d, and Mrs. Parsons, of Cochrane. Mtrs. Socames was the Diocesan pres!â€" dent of the Women‘s Auxilary of the Arglican Church, and gave most inâ€" teresting reviews here of th, work of the Auxilary, explaining that it supâ€" ported missionarits in China and Japan, cconducted a large hospital in China, and also looked after the child. ren of parerts serving in the mission ‘"‘There is an answer to that! "cor mented Mrs. Parsons. "Where und Heaven‘s blue canopy Will you 1ï¬ SsUCH horses, and SUCH men?" the time, with a solemn face, quesâ€" ioned <he Provincial Police aos to whether or not it was the same y_ung lady, When pressod for a diseription of the young lady who visited kors all he could say was: "Woell, she had beautiful, big, brown cyes!" ~Even ths chief of police (another subscribor â€", the extent of four s m»Jeong} and five smiles) would go no further tnin the mayor. It is true that n> one FEere evo: received any magazines, But thne; had alrcady had the smilles! 30. what. The only fault of the men of porcupine was gullibiity in veâ€" lieving "that ycoung lady had to wori her way through sollege, as sho claimâ€" ed.. Their comm n sonse should have told them that that young lady coui smile h<r way into a Rhodcs Scht:urâ€" ed. Their comm n © told them that that smile hr way into a sh p. a*>s*s the Porcu Mrs. Par me g030 ‘ on her iot only es here, chilaren birds of vinz the Ga2Uneali Oll e wer to thi bu The split in the Wallace party is spreading. Rosyâ€"checked Albert Fitzâ€" gerald, the only proâ€"Wallace CIO viceâ€"president, reported to the CIO strategy meeting here tnat he had told Progressive Party Leaders that he was opposed to nominating candidates against such people as Helen Gahagan Douglas. Jolhin Lewis, now travelling by himself out west, will return to â€"learh that the Progressive Party has invaded the mine workers union and is ca,lliqg;.a na~â€" tional conference of Coaldiggers for Wallace in Pittsburgh Sept 19, ,A;n Emâ€" eryville, Calif., employer has signed a contract giving working mo'.héx%.;:-a day oil each week to care for their children. Mothers who don‘t take the time will get a bonus instead. . . . Radio‘s Cisco Kid (Jackson Beck) will be riding herd on a new kind of round upâ€"â€"a union covention.. He was hired to do the commen.ary on the first actual recording of a union convention, Emil Rieve‘s workers transcribed their recent national parley, edited it down to 30 minutes, tied it together with Becks narration, and when it is finshed recordings of tne final transcripion will be shipped to local unions to be played over radio stations so the public will learn what happens at a union convention. . Reuthner has few other problems, wages are set, there‘ll be no strikes; conâ€" {racts are signed up to about 1950 so he‘s set to devote himself to poli.ics. His iirst move will be joining President Truman, whom he dislikes â€"on the Labour Day platform in Detroit‘s Cadillac Square. . ‘This will be Reuther‘s first mass meeting speech since he was shot. .. . iss M( les act n Gov. Dewey has succeeded in lining up some labor support from active camâ€" paigningâ€"â€"and the first to announce tor him probably will be the building serâ€" vice union whose people can do some unique electioncering in apartment houses and loft buildings in big cities. lHitter criticism of Feuther‘s poli.ical plans was blurte dout by one of CIO‘s mo:. powerful leaders at the closed strategy session here Thursday morning. . B1 cmeis are worried lest the current spy hearings tip off the carefullyâ€"built nelwork they allegedly have inside the Communist Party, detailsW®f Awhich are known only to Giman director J. Edgar Hoover himself, now mysteriously on some special mission out of Washington. President Truman really has convinced himself the labor vote will win for himâ€"â€"and the top Labor Dept. officials will be out s.umping the country on Labor Day. â€" The New Labor Secretary Maurice Tobin will be‘talking to rubber workers in Akron, Ohio; the lanky, handsome young ass‘t.. secretary John Gibson will be in and about Duluth speech making to iron ore miners among others while the President tackles the auto centers. Mr. Truman orâ€" iginally considered talking in Pittsburgh but passed the steel center up for the more doubtful state of Michigan. This campaign labor will be using radio more than everâ€"â€"the AF L’.s political league, which may be spending some $2,000,000, has asked George Heller‘s American Federation of Radio Artists to make a series of spot radio political announcements to be broadcast nationally. HEARD ON THIS BEAT IN WASHINGTON: When Waiter Reuther launches his fourth party--as he will lateâ€"this winter according to present plansâ€"â€"he‘ll be in a position to spend millions on it if *Â¥ action and ua‘lly is ca Incidentally, it is the Socialist Party whnich has the real unionâ€"labhel presiâ€" dential ticket. Its candidate, tall, genial, whiteâ€"haired Norman Thomas, is a CIO newspaper guildsman, and its v.p. nominee, Tucker Smith, is president of the AFL‘s Techers‘ Local 1000. . . .Detroi)s street cars and buses are being; cquipped with FM radio receiving equipment, and the auto union educational peopie hope to reach the city‘s millions daily as they go to worn thm fall. rhe union is building a powerful 50,000â€"wat FM station. It meant, too, that whoever was running the mobs had to set up*sa new ground hLoor organizauitn, Opposition Reuher, the theory here is, wuuld have cost ie lorpedoes millions of dollars a week so vast is the racaet. ‘The FKFBI reckons that it was then decided to get Reuther out of the wWAaSy. weu J 442.E Jb L. 2s | had condemned the rackets in the past And when any stewaiu Was caugh., nhandling numbers money and tired, the union, under Reutncx 8 v.uers, reiused to tight it as a grievance. was Lneir enemyâ€"â€"and the mobs handled him in traditional style. i a.t tnis the B1 ana the Detroi; Police Dept. are certain alter mulilos Of tuorough investigation, . They‘re positive they could have caugnt me kilers it it were a poil.ical assassination attempt. â€" i‘BI contacts are unâ€" beiievamy wide. . YWe Detroit police, specialists at intricate politics 10r the past s3Uv years, feel the same way. a Both agencies have li tle hope of ever catching the goon who hand’led the yuir _ hNo ciues have turned up in 120 days of careful scientific stalkingâ€"and no clues are expected... ‘The Detroit police officially still have two men on the case, But they‘re up a blind alley, 11n iC Gov. Dewey has paigningyâ€"â€"and the vice umnion whos the most part, the country has forgotten the shootingâ€"but Reuther‘s pain still is intense. And every day the doctors work at his knuckles and muscles, inflicting gruesome pain for two hours in every 24 to keep his arm and hand from stiffening. icanwhile Reuther‘s home is well protected and he now has two, bodyâ€" guards. For So now you can close the dosier on the case of The Little Red llead Whose Number w T‘wo weeks ago, shortly after Joe Curran cleaned the Communists out of he C1O sailors union, leitist Harry Bridges dropped in to visit him and try to utter up Big Jot. Curran gave him the cold treatment and Bridges left disâ€" ppointed. The next morning Curran got a telegram from Bridges‘ west oast headquarters threatening ito expose Curran‘s alleged "ties with the FBI", a other words calling him a stool pigeon. Curran laughed and told the ridges outfit to do its worst. Nothing happened. 1} DN whose ® That‘s Pivader not politics paid off for the imported professional ki o gun slugs ncarly tore Walter Reuther apart four months ag e theory of the EB.1L.‘s most scientific crime chasers here. That plunder came from mobsters controlling Detroit‘s mul iâ€"million dolâ€" * number racket which reaches into every big plant. In one Ford factory me the take is reportedly $20,000 a day. ' Knowing little abou> union politics and caring less, the mysterious rackâ€" ‘ers wanted Walter Reuther out of the way because he was known to hate c numbers gameâ€"not because he had set himself up as a holierâ€"thanâ€" hou usader against gambling but because he had found out that the mobsters »re corrupling the plant stewards, lowest echelon of union officials. Fhere are scores of thousands of these stewards who operateo right on the int flcor and deal directly with the 590,000 auto workers in and around Doâ€" i .. _ some stewards without consciously wanting to aid the mobs, make easy buck handling the dough in the factories. imney then turn the money over to the hignerâ€"ups, and it disappears in the mpiex, darkened maze of wellâ€"organized rackets, the leaders of which are known. _ But in the factories, in past years, much of the syndicate‘s take pended on good organiztion among the shop stewards. Y\ w wasn‘t crusading against the gamblers when he was shot down. it tuey knew his reputation well enough to be sure he‘d buck them if tne awdown came. He had already crippled their lootâ€"taking in the factories ien his lieutenants and followers nad swept all elections in January and Tle ESTATEâ€"INSURANCEâ€"MORTGAGES Koom 3 Gordon Block, Pine St., N. _i weep meant that from the highest local union president to the dowest waru, tue old crowd had been pushed out by Reuthers nem*powm- ‘s of the mammoth auto union are overwhelmingly for such political id it would not surprise the experts if nearly a million dollars eventâ€" earmarked from the union treasury to get a militant mid=â€"west party Bu} {irst efforts will be made to take over chuaks of the Democraâ€" Y . sR #)2°»m% y;..-!...ï¬M] >rs will be saddened ey lost its conductor the same time. Ed ayv, NK., trolley th. J V. Money To Loan Almost Up National Housing Act Loans 4* Commercial Loans 5 to 6 You‘ll Like Our Efficient Service Inside Labour by Victor Riesel ed to know that when the famed original Woonerâ€" or not long ago, the CIO bubway union 4o duesâ€" Eddie Glaser, for 37 years "Skipper"‘ of Lhc 1144!e that was the original of the cartoon Toonervilly er of the transport union. Bonhomme Phone 2250