Newspaper Assoeciation every Thursday by Mertonâ€"W. Lake and t cident downâ€" puplis d mM oA C 1 i1649Â¥ _Peclal treatment? Do you remember "way back when" the subst!tutes for sllk flrst;-; 3e came on the market? â€" They were just substitutes, tbut when they â€" """cdarried new terms, for themselvesâ€"â€""rayon," “celanese " etc., they found their own place in the market. sls ‘"If margarine is a good food product, as it now appear§,. all ‘the . ‘‘l@ws in the land will not stop its progress. They may delay the process and hold up the new product for a time in this country,. If the fight is going to be in the realm of color, and color !s good the sale of butter, as it is, why shouldn‘t the same color be: OK in margarine for the saime buyers? ‘.__ (Wff{."Color Makes the World Go Buy"â€"â€" then the lack of good color o OS P S L "Between the opening of school last September and the closing for the Easter holidays, 149 children were victims of traffic accidents in‘ Toronto. In 95 of these acciGents, children of from 5 to 9 yearc of age were involved; in 39 the children were ketween the ages> of 9. and 12. In 71 of the cases, the children were on their .wgay to or from school. More than a quarter of the accidents were to children running out from between parked cars. ese figures emphasize once more the absolute necessity of all t ffic, whether motor, cyclist or horseâ€"drawn, exercising constant ikgence to avert danger, specially when school is going in or comâ€" 1 out, when children are at play along the streets and where piHUtked cars hide the view. â€" They illustrate, too, the necessity for little children to awareness of the dangers of the streets. mer‘"‘ the Safety Elephant, introduced into the schools in l‘a‘lember 1947, by The Telegram in conjunction with the Torâ€" G 4-,, Traffic Safety Council, has helped to make school children Each school which experiences an accidentâ€" free month is awarded a sixâ€"foot green pennant bearing "Elmer" and the inscription, "An Elephant Never Forgets.‘" If a single acâ€" cident mars the record of any school flying the flag, it is taken down by a police officer and a short tolk is given to the assembled pyupils. The flag is not returned until the school has maintained an accidentâ€"free record for another month. ‘School spirit has the loss of the flag a major incident in the school life. Durâ€" ing the first year of operation the green pennant program reduced childâ€"accidents by 44 per cent. Although 195 children were inâ€" jured in 1947â€"48, 35 schools were able to keep their flag flying all year without a single accident. The North is no place for "softies" who come into the country with eyes filled with glamor in anticipation of work in the mines or the bush. ~The logging drives are just getting under way in the rivers in the Timmins district but there is no room for the inexperienced youngâ€" sters. whose only knowledge of river driving has been gleaned from romantic novels of the northern hinterlands. I‘tltl u}e present time the driving is confined to the rivers, as most â€" o 6 of the lakes are st‘ll iceâ€"locked. Experienced bushmen are filling Resa O f cading of some of the activitiesâ€"of the Timmins Community Activities the positions as rapidly as they become upen. These men, who Committee, and supposing the cost of them, we are givenmto ruminations as recognize hemlock from pine, are mostly men who have completed . to the possibilities of their financial outlay, to date, being comparable to a "winter‘s operation in the bush and are taking a brief respite in â€" tht cost of erecting the Community Building turned down by the people of * Timmins some years ago. the city between the end of the cutting period and the time _pf Present opérations can go on for years, perhaps. . But, realizsing the , 3 - river dr‘ving. lack of utoper accomodation, we do not think that"Timmins Community ‘!3. Inspect other parts of the house which might have been harmed by winter weather. Pay special attention to roofs, reâ€" placing old. wooden shingle roofing with fireâ€"resistant asphalt shingles, asbestos, slate or metal roofing. 5. Don‘t use flammable cleaning fluids Nonâ€"explosive cleanâ€" ers are available. It is unfortunate that the spring urge to travel gets into the w.ins of the youth and young men in Southern Ontario and turns their steps to the North. Fire Chief William Stanley, defining the Spring Cleanâ€"Up drive as "an allâ€"round job of spring cleaning with emphasis on removâ€" ing fire hazards," today recommended a sevenâ€"point Spring Cleanâ€" Up program. ~ - | / He: asked that Spring Cleanâ€"Up not be confined to homes but be .extended to garages, sheds, stores and industr‘al â€"buildings. All yards and grounds should cleaned up, he said.. He warned that ‘ubbish, leaves, and dried vegitation should be burned in an inâ€" }nerator and only on windâ€"free days. In the spring, conditions are ideal for conflagrations, he explained, because roofs are dry and winds are fresh. Wind can quickly whip sparks from a "harmless‘" trash fire to flammable roof tops or to tinderâ€"dry fields and woodlands. ‘‘Chief Stanley outlined this sevenâ€"point program of the National Fire Protection Association, Spring Cleanâ€"Up sponsor: 4. Check all electrical equipment. â€" Repair defective equipâ€" ment. â€"Replace frayed cords. 6.â€" Keep olly rags in covered metal containers to forestall sponâ€" taneous ignition. â€"". Never smoke in bed. Keep matches away from small childâ€" ren. Have plenty of ash trays available and always see that a cigarette or match is extinguished before discarding. _ these seven recommendations were adopted by every person in Timmins, we would have only a small percentage of our present mnumber of fires. Records of the National Fire Prevention Assoâ€" cilation show that about 90 percent of all fires can be blamed on common fire hazards," the chief said. _ 1. Get rid of combustible debrisâ€"â€"old magaz‘ines, old newspapâ€" ers, discarded furniture, boxes, and similar material. â€" Rubbish can catch fire from a stray spark and can ignite spontaneously. 2. Heating plants and chimneys are dirtyâ€"after. months of conâ€" tinuous use during the winter. They should be cleaned and reâ€" paired if necessary. : is se nty U o n dR it es e 1 e io ob tmï¬ ++ _ t A _ . L 2# 2 *# L L e# D d Wc l o 2o * k cA .E ‘Employment office reports show the usual turnover of transient eallers looking for work. They are disappointed when they canâ€" not find work and too often are compelied to "ride the rods" when their funds are exhausted. Northern hospitality does not like to see men in search of work Foing: hunm but there is a limit to the extent to which hospitality ‘An be strained. It becomes an. hnposmon to . expect municipal pIJUUCUE IVDULAIL IGUGVRIIlp A01 piSUl_ VJV O AALG We came across another bird of the species last Saturday She was b a nest. “":?e mt watched her working for very lonx before she was joined by her mate wno also turned out to be a most dexterous carpenter. . They made alternate trips to and from their nest situated in what seemed, to 1 buman béing, a very low tree. . They came to the nest with their beaks leaded with long strips of grass and wove and shaped the nest with a bebâ€" bing of the head and a movement of the bo@y that resembled the antics of a fanatic erator. We waiched them from a distance for the better part of an hou[ and reâ€" turned to watch again toward > They were still working, ‘quickâ€" y ani and the nest had assumed the shape of a fiat bowl. We dearly loveâ€"to watch other people work. . . . 'i ; 1E ana Rccenuy I visited one ot the new hosp.tals to can oï¬ u sick friend. . 1 was vety much impressed with the modern furni was excellent in design and color of wood."> I took a eloser look, however, the furniture wasâ€"all steel finshed. to look like ¢ weod.. If the lumber people were on their toes, they should« :10%, appeal to the governmentâ€"(anyone will do) to "pass a law" to pre-@ Â¥vent such obvious deception. Why .should makers get . lets the sale go by. Seven Point Cleanâ€"Up Program Recommended For Fire Saféty Color In Butter vs Margarimne §3.00 Per Year United States: $3.00 Per Year umdmmunwm‘moam:mc. Otlawe io cz No. 97. Wâ€"â€"_ nmins, Ontario, Thursday, May 12th, 1949 hn ago ‘nad qome aimouny i2 Children Traffic Victims Emphasize Need For Care No Place For "Softies" Canada Ink Sometimes the police were the heroes. cor the villians, «.‘ the anecdotes. Usâ€" ually, a reflection on the police would be more or less popular. This, 10wâ€" ever, was more the fauit of the neâ€" cessary enforcement of such measures as thc Ontario Temperance Act. and not because of any particular failing of the police. The story of the day when the police "saw snakes‘ was a popular oldâ€"time anecdote. Wher. the Chief of Police Saw Snakes daysa were ‘n3t. is‘ qo\ptm t mCy in this particular up to the present time. In < any event the teacher of ‘1918 continued to teach "anecdotes" until s.:e had patiently pounded the ht ideas ‘into the chilaren‘s minds. It is not many weeks ago that one of her pupils quoted with re:lish one of her remarks in reference to anecâ€" dotes. This pupil, now with schoolâ€" age chiildren of his own, says that the teacher‘s idea has stayed in his mind through the years, and that he has «lways had a fancy for anecdctes. It is a ccmmon enough event in an ordinary town for the police to â€"pickup a man for being intoxicated, and then for the drunken man to begin to "see snakcs," after he is locked up. But Timmins is no ordinary town! People and events here are different. In Timmins in 1918, it was the police who saw snakes after a drunken man had locked up. And the snakes were in a bottle at t:at. The gentleman recalls that the teachâ€" er emphasized the thought that an anecdote is a little story that gives a bettes idea of characters and life than many more pretentious and exâ€" tended narratives. On a Friday, Off.cer Norman Burke picked â€" up a drunken .man on the street and had the inebriated :.ellow safely locked up. It appeared that the spiflicated genleman had been drinkâ€" ing a patent medicine that was patâ€" ently bad medicine for a white man. A bottle of this medicine was found in one of his cutside pockets and it was suspected that. "he had several Of course, Timmins in the early days ::ad its anecdotes â€" scores of them â€" grave and gay â€" though chiefly gay. â€"~_Now, three years later, New Liberty allows you to read "The Heartâ€" breaker" again for the sum of ten cents. ts _8 WB im Sz SE . SP t buch. th d en e mm adlic nds mt bout. _4 â€"-Pn;gâ€";zt_ gpér;tlin can go on for years, perhaps. .. But, realizing the lack of ptoper accomodation, we do not think that‘Timmins Community Activities are community activities at all.. o t d - We are apparently too easily impressed. . Last week we wrote a short piece about a robin looking for a place to build a nest. 1*s # Last week‘s issue of the magazine carried a shortâ€"short story by Faith Baldwin entitled "The Heartbreaker." The story was billed as a New Liberty shortâ€"short. For anybody‘s information "The Heartbreaker" was published on July 13, 1946 by the old Liberty magazine. â€" The story was brand new then and you read it and other writings of interest for the sum of five f_cntg.‘ . It is reported that this week a man was seen walking down Third Aveâ€" nue in the following ensemble. . Maroon slacks, black and whlte plaid shirt, blue and yellow windbreaker, bright yellow shoes and a black bowler hpt This department would like to know just how new New Liberty magaâ€" zine is. The enumerators of eligible votérs for the forthcoming elections have brought to the members of our household a question that is causing us great ‘cuneasiness. The male part is a naval pensioner. ' «s \~â€"The enumerators debated as to whether or not he was to be listed as "srentleman".or "retired‘". The Pop, since the day of the debate, has been subjected to searching stares and comments of dual interpretation. Monday came and things remained relatively unchanged,. The;kids came home from school, played swatâ€"theâ€"can and had ten more fights. The males came home from. work and began digging in the back garden. One of the mothers, and after all it was Monday, said that radio annduncers were nothing more than cotton battinged tonsilled propagandists. This same mother, is now, by the way, being treated with the respect acco:dcd a piece of Woolworth crockery. â€" From where we sit we can see all the back gardens in the neighborhood. Men.are digging them up. The neighborhood of Bedlamâ€"onâ€"theâ€"swamp has survived Mother‘sâ€"day very well, thank you. Practically every male in the place spent the day digging in the back garden. The children played swatâ€"theâ€"can,, jn:. the front street and, one of the leading staticians on the doings of, ï¬he offâ€" sprouts, came forward with the information of there being no less than ten fights among the youngsters. One of the mothers, and after all it was their day, spent most ‘Of the time seated beside the radio listening to a radio announcer eulogizing her station in life. In between eulogies she was treated with the respec¢t acâ€" corded a piece of Dresden china. Most of the males continued digging in the back garden. 4 3 ;’W,e' no ‘longer doubt that this year men are going in for more colorful Oh well. . . . . ‘The Thursday Whim‘ Tbe: Porcupine | | _ Inside Labour _ No. 97. Some Anecdotes of the Karly Days By J ‘.-L. W.= TWlas cther bouttles sto:ed am m withâ€" m the supporter of ‘Sir Wilfred cu; the bottles. y . als B\lt m can‘t take away, evon from o linut the, a woimman. what she never nad!" thunâ€" ~meqicineâ€" man~ gat d:. hin that qered tie Umoh Goveâ€"nment: supâ€" e mo to be up on jre. °> pot "There are inakes there all right.‘" Gib said, "but you‘re not seeing snakes just the same! D‘ye get me? You see tacee snakes little grten; fellows, and they have no sky b:.ue purple yelâ€" cw horns, nor green fire scarlet eyes, nor red black golden streaks acrcss their backs, as bottle =nakes always Aave, bolieve me! These are just orâ€" dinary honest â€" to â€" goodnes gree n snakes!" "It would be perfectly safe to take another drink after seeing them," Gib concluded. "In fact, I think a grink wou‘d do us all gcod after the fright we‘ve had. That is, of course, if you happen to have any but.t.ermilk or. cocaâ€"cola handy!" The Donalion was Anonymous Then, there is the anecdote of the arguement in a Timmins jewelry store. Two impo:tant and respected citizens were concerned in this heated contest. """ Everybddy saw the snakes b.nd there was some alarm in somée‘ q@uarters. Then who shou.d come along,, but Gib McIinnis. Gib was ua.led as, an expert and he scocn calmed all, Ie_ars The cnoe man blurted out something about Sir Robert Borden disfranchisâ€" ing part of the women of Canada. "I‘ll bet you fi ty doilars he did nothing cf the sort!‘" flared the other "I‘ll take that bet!" roared the first speaker. ’fl}zé jeweller was‘ called to hcld the stakes. But 3e ifnsisted that the: stakes should be only fnve dollars against five. "But ae sh.,uld have given it . t.o all women. and so he rcbbed the women who "were. nst, given: the â€" fnanchise!" Ths arguement waxed "fierce, fiercâ€" er, fiercest!" It fairly sizzled. He couldn‘t take away the franchise from any women when nonéeâ€"of them had it befcre!" roared the : )U»nich Gcovernment man. By G. *Institute For Blind ALaunches Appeal ’1 The Timmins and district advisory boord of the Canadian National Inâ€" ‘Astitute for the Blind held its semiâ€"anâ€" nual meceting recently, at the home Oof athe chairman, Mrs. C. Pozzelti, 18 Toke street. Interesting reports were given by the various officers testiâ€" {ying . to the splendid work being done by the board among the blind of the district. .A The report of Mrs. Ed Robinson, ‘welfare convener, showed that over 75 calls had been made on the blind j during the last six months, attending .to their needs,. distributing articles *of clothing, bedding, food and other : reauirements. i Mrs. Robinzon told of how many ‘have had eye examinations and obâ€" taired glasses, of pensions being arâ€" and in general that everyâ€" thing possible had been done to enâ€" Zable them to live happier, ‘rand more useful lives. i Arrangements were made for the annual tag day to be held in June. â€"â€" Letters will be mailed out shortly for the annual 1ppeal for donations for the C.N.LB. to aid them in their wonderful work among over 15,000 bllnd persons in Canada, over 4,000 of them are in Ontario. .:The ambitious program of the Inâ€" "I dcn‘t wish to do s>," said the chairman. "but the engineering comâ€" pany of whose management you comâ€" plain is holding its general mecting on the floor above. T:iis is a meeting o. the Philatelists‘® Scociety." â€"Montâ€" One summer‘s night the express company‘s man was coming down the railway track cn his way to the office. suddenly® and unexpected‘iy, he was attacked by a woman who seemed to spring from nowhere. It was quite evident that the lady had been in waiting. and in ‘fldmg She had a gocdâ€"sized club., and showed polishec skill in using it. Before the expressâ€" man fully realized what had happened he had his hat smashed in, and e also received an unpleasant tap on the head. He asked no questions. started no arâ€" gument, said not a word, but "Ouch!" He simply made tracks down the tricks, never stopping unm he reached the _safety of the officee: If the old T. N. O. Railway Had travelled as fast cach. day as that young man did that .night the trains would never ‘1ave been late. â€"> The newccmer‘s speech was fiery and pungent. At length, after threeâ€" quarters of an :;our, he came to a stop. "Have you quite fmished?†askel the chairman. "Yes," declared the orator. "and I defy you to contradict a slngle word I said." . Wrong Meeting An excited man got on to the platâ€" form and began a passionate gpeec.l The chairman made repeated éfforts to stop him, but to no. purpose,. In the end he had to let him carry on. Those days, the police had the habit ¢f turning up at such: moment.s ‘They knew it was no use chasing the rupning man, so they centred n catcning the lady in the case. TheY got their womâ€" an." Her explanation was that she Wiien the police suggested that the express man lay a charge of assault against the woman, he promptly reâ€" fused. As soon as he learned the facts ocf the case, he said: "It was no doubt an innocent and natural mistake! I wiil be no party to prosecution of a woman for doing her duty!"‘ An Anecdcte with a<â€"Moral. The story of the woman who atâ€" tacked onc of the express company‘s staff at Timm.ns shows how careful a woman sAould be in such cases. .--' P ht it n t c n ced n LV n o ue l t o n onsA hP PR sW on 4e 1 B man s0 they centred in catcning the lady in the case. They got theirâ€"womâ€" an. . Her explanation waq tlzat she thought the express man. Was: her husâ€" band, but he wasn‘t. . he was sorry for the mistake. “Aft.er Tâ€"hit him the third time," she said, "I began to susâ€" pect that it wasn‘t my husband, for he made no cffc:t toâ€"kick me in the face." The moral of the anecdote is that wives sz:ould be careful always to choose single falows to mistake for their Marfied men are liable to be clanmsh and might welcome the chance to have a married woman punâ€" ished for weilding a cl ‘The Bright Side chasing the running red jon catcning the eo got theirâ€"womâ€" ation was that she ss man was her husâ€" <Bxne was sorry “After T. hit him the The threat to silence the mileâ€"long, flameâ€"belching, redâ€"hotâ€"cakeâ€"ovened steel mills came in a sweltering Pittsburgh hotel room this wsee en 210 â€"steel chief Phil Murray angrily told his 30 key lieutenants m%may pe _ an unscheduled,ste>l stoppage after all. j Aldt# stitute covers Canada from coast to coast and from Southern border to the Arctic where it is trying to preâ€" vent blindness among the Indians and the E:â€"kimos. . Broadâ€"minded people can‘t undecrstand how narrowâ€"minded people "gct that way. j Pelting isn‘t done in England, says a Britisher. . Wonder, what they over there. $ Romano got atop a union sound truck outside the worldâ€"famous River Rouge plant . started the walkout by shouting among other things.,. ,. To Hell ‘with Henry Ford, . ." As the men came out they were handed ptéKétâ€"instrucâ€" tions on orangeâ€"colored paper.: .Overpasses leadingâ€"from the street to the plant, were blocked so no men could reâ€"enter. .. Nor was the fact overlooked that the Dodge company was rushing to put out a $1,600 light car to compete with Ford. . .Union strategists figured that Ford‘s eagerness to.get.its cars n the road before Dodge releases its new model. would bring. a qgick surrender. Incidentally, there is an AFL auto union and to win members itinvites foreign correspondents to speak at its me_etings. h4 2% % * Â¥ nouncerâ€"engineerâ€"sound manâ€"â€"without his having to worry about Teferceing a CIO civil war right in his own studio. Mn So we‘ll never know just how many blows were struck on the night of April 20th in Ressemer, Ala.. station WoJ‘LD. Our own private investigation shows that the announcer left his post in the control room just long enough to "pot t+a husky CIO rival leaders swinging. call the police and dasa back to :\~ contmlcl so the good pecple of Bessemer would not be suddenly plunged ‘nto radio ~ilence. Today Travis is in a hospital bed, half blindedâ€"â€"the victim of tite tefise hysâ€" teria now swseping certain CIO circles, an hysteria and atmospher® of vioâ€" lence which the leftists have deliberately and methodically developed. vvvvvvv sea, pink shirts for men are bemg referred to as coral. 613 $X g The police rushed up just as the CIO‘s own little Fort Sumter ‘had â€"seen the blow fall which will be heard round the CIO‘s workd!, if you‘ll permit me to mix a few wars. A Lying bleeding on the floor, one eye horribly damaged, was proâ€"Communist V.aurice Travis, boss of the rapidly disappearing CIO Mine, Mill‘ khd Smeltâ€" er Workers Unionâ€"â€"an outfit through which the comrades of ds oo o e Pm PE ENee o9 l ced Travis‘ union has since charged that he was struck over theâ€"head with a chair, then kicked in the face repeatedly as he lay on the radio station floor. He and several cther leftists were waiting to make a late evening broadcast to some 5,000 iron ore miners. Trais‘ group had bought time for a sjgeech urgâ€" ing the diggers not to bolt to Phil Murray‘s steel union. i oo «hsM J CE EOm 0. OE t The Mine, Mill officials arrogantly said they were holding Murray personâ€" ally responsible â€"â€" and began waving the bloody eye in an effort to start‘anâ€" other hysterical campaign against the CIO chief. _ Telegrams froj leftists grew wilder and weirder â€"â€" including charges that the Tra§£§}:‘mp was threatened with murder. iA PPML w ceA e n d e e e Lon T The words have been put on recordâ€"â€"w6sds«immimpugning the trade union honesty of the CIO‘s chief. And he‘s not theâ€"guyâ€"to forget. Which is what the lefties will lsarn when they get that nationgt; CIO high command parley they‘ve been asking for. It‘ll probably be h y 16 to allis May 18. And that does it. . Obvicusly the fist that smashed Travis‘ eye fired the shot hea Excuse the mixed metaphor. What I mean is that the CIO civ er is a ccld one. And it will end only with the purge of the Running an army of 62,000 auto strikers is a massive project but the auto unions leaders were ready. Signal for the stoppage was bellbyfg «by the local viceâ€"president Lee Romano, a newcomer to the national labor. scene. Romano got aton a union sound truck outside the worldâ€"famous iver Rouge Un t ons( L S 2 M Oe e s eA ce Eit â€" Sn B we Mew oo C Ee To Travis and his proâ€"Communists it was a matter of desperation that the 5,000 miners stay with the leftist Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers. ‘For the Bessemer duespayers were the final bulwark of real strength left to‘!‘this agiâ€" tating unicn anywhere in the country. Without those 5.000 the: Mine, Miil crowd would be a shell of a lefty union. And now Travis was about to lose them to Phil Murray‘s steel outfit because they were weary over following the Party line: â€" And the steel union was fighting to win over the ,rï¬i.n‘gfg. 4 # € + A .Of course, this strike talk flared up after: snarp disappointment @Wer what happened in Congress to labor‘s efforts to repéal Taftâ€"Hartley outright. â€" But the intent was plain. â€" Mr. Murray feels so strongly that he‘ll call out 1,000, 000 steelworkers if the old labor law keeps him from getting wage increases, health benefitrs and insurance policies for his followers. . . . . The confirmedâ€"Timmins bachelor maintains a woman likes to marry who was born to command. . .just to prove that he wasn‘t. Then the telegrams demanded that Mr. Murray call a special mgeting of the CIO executive board "to afford this union (Mine, Mill). . . .and other CIO at(â€" filiates who are victims of raiding attacks, an opportunity to pFesent this case and others in an attempt to return sanity to the CIO before thest suicidal raidâ€" ‘ng tactics of your organization, other CIO affiliates and now "the CIO itsellf bring complete destruction to the CIO." * : ~ardt $ + % L d o Never beforse has anyone in any section of American labor ever so arrogantâ€" ly or: brashly spoken to Phil Murrayâ€"â€"who truly is regarded as tgf('Frcat whita father‘‘ eveq_in_s_t_zrioqs__g:_onversations among honest CIO chie . ut 4 ts l2 en y sn 0. in And then the Mine, Mill union speni thousands of dollars 'shooï¬iné | threeâ€"page telegrams around to all CIO unions in an attempt to needle them into putiing ‘the heat on Murray for a special high command session in Washington. ; Washingtonâ€"â€"This summer may find the country paralyzed as beforeâ€"â€" with 1,000,000 steel workers on the picket line; the coal diggersâ€"onâ€"qig extendâ€" ed "vacation," and the Ford strike crisis running almost two S\W as auto union chiefs now believe it will, . . _ o er Workers Unionâ€"â€"an outfit through which the comrades controlling all strategic ore mining, including the atom bomb‘s uranium. In the course of this intente fsuding, the lefties had called_.;ï¬[;g‘. Murray‘s lieutenants Ku Klu Klansmen. This was the background as lhg.:;e'_ liecutenâ€" ants, who also bought.time over the same station, walked into the Studio and came across Travis and company. f There were wordsâ€"â€"enough to turn the smelters and the steel Wworkers sulâ€" phurous. And then the two factions fused into one mass. Travis® eye was the casualty. d918 4t In the words. of one high Washington CIO officialâ€"â€"three page telegrams from Commie CIO unions as far away as Hawaiiâ€"began arriving ip _Phil Murâ€" ray‘s national CIO headquarters private office even before Travis hit the floor. HEARD ON THIS BEAT: Running a small radio station is a tough enough job for one combination anâ€" Rob some men of their conceit and there would be nothing . D. B,. Lawly. national counâ€" Mist silvered was the moonlight And silver were the leaves And silver sloped the huddled roofs Above the village eaves. All silver was the starlight As oul the doour I crept And hurried through the empty stree Where wiser people slept. | For in that silvery sweet light My ftrue love watched for me, And all the sleeping world was lost Beneath a silver tree. But dreary arched the tired sky Above my troubled head, And‘dull the lane and dark the door, 1 , As I crept back to bed. Arthur Stringer In Saturday Night Cillor for field services for thic C.N. I.B. md well known locally, having nized the local Advisory Board, hu j’ust returned from the West Inâ€" dies where he has been setting up similar institutions. /A 1t ind CIO. no longâ€" call it a man