Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 17 Nov 1949, 1, p. 4

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h. o â€"â€" wâ€"-â€"â€"â€"°. a Do you see that little word affiliate? From fifteen affiliated hospitals and nurses’ training schools in Ontario, from Lindsay, Barrie, Stratford, fifteen cities and towns all over the province, 110? nurses are taking their training in children’s diseases and surgery. as against the 109 in training as prospective graduates of “the Sick Kids.” In addition, the nursing staff includes post- graduate students of nursing from Europe, Asia and South America. Ladies and gentlemen, it is not a Toronto hospital; it is not an Ontario hospital; it,is a world hospital. Not your chil- dren, not our children, but just children are its eternal vigilant care. When the new hospital is opened (and paid for! "Come all ye!) its bed capacity will be doubled. its training capacity will be more than doubled. its product of young physicians and surgeons dedicated to childhood will be many times increased; its 1esearch labs, its travelling clinicsâ€"everything will be expanded. This little 200- mile zone around Toronto, already the safest for child- hood in all the world, will be that much safer still But the zone will expand, too, and the quality of mercy that has been emanat- ing from that old red brick building on College street will warm farther and wider, wider and farther. * our secondary school curriculum adequate to equip stult’s with a sense of responsibility and an appreciation of the ,‘gresswe thinkers have argued for some years that our higl fa: hools should not be merely college preparatory institutions A 1:», .. ‘fj have good reason to think this way very few high ‘ my 22 out of every 100 attending high school ever finish, an 3- .1 three ever end up with a college degree. Wously, since the big majority of young Canadians have onmrtial high school education when they enter the wage earning world, the main objective of the proper authorities would seem to be to persuade young people to remain longer in high schoglmii at all possible. fie’i‘hext step would be reorientation of the curriculum to give them fewer courses which are of value only to those students whose objective is university. This curriculum would aim at in- stilling in them a sense of responsibility,a astrength of character and a willingness to honestly learn their job when they do start work. It would also aim at.sharpening their abilities to think clearly and independently. ’ Some employers think that these essentials might result from improving the standard of general education fundamentals The development of manual and mechanical skill is important. but there is a danger of confusing training with education. This is a subject which cannot possibly be disposed of in a few hundred, or even a few thousand, words. It is also a problem which ‘will not be solved in a short time. But it is something that» we must all think about. It is a problem for not just the odd scattered community but one that affects the whole of Canada. Husbands may well mourn the passing of attics as modern architecture tends towards Low roofs and the use of every avail- able inch ofspace. Wives who have liVed in attic-equipped houses, and suffered the agonies of house-cleaning, shed not a tear. The fishing gear, discarded goif equipment, broken furniture and old trunks find their way into the basement of the modern house. Yet attics have had their place in the sun, whether they were reached by narrow stairs or a ladder through a small opening in the ceiling Many adults have childish recollections of rain beating on the roof, impromptu “treasure hunts" and a hide away £19m parental wrath. " We suspect that heating engineers whispered words of advice intro the ears of modern architecture to abolish the attic, because of; the loss of heat through a n-on insulated roof. -â€"--... u-vwv vunvfiooo v- ..vo. abut-VUBOQQUVM .VVAo Not so many years ago there was a flush of enthusiasm for “rumpus rooms" or “recreation rooms” in the basement, fostered no doubt by the lack of other space. ‘,However the older houses have not been overlooked in the fad for rumpus and recreation, and under the roof finds a place in plans for this type of home Innovation. 5b: ‘ florcupim PHONE 26 ,gmssviqe. (ammoâ€"â€" special, __ : y the Sons of the late Jack Miner while making a catch of Wild canon. Geese a: the Jack Miner Sanctuary to hand them and study their route of migration. caught a d8 Goose which the late Jack who; had handed in the fan of 1932, ..- Long-forgotten treasures have not discovered in attics and a place found in literature for them. No such recognition is given to: basements of houses. ;. It is a changing“ world in construction and the attics seem doomed to disappear with the verandahs. .,. 1’56”" mes Sanctuary ‘0 their route : Cp'nndn C3300s Canada $2.00 Per Year mw Godee Re Caught VI ‘V ~., ' PHONE 28 . We. ONTARIO cm Weekly mum mun»: ruum every Thursday In lied.“ '- Ontario, Thifisday, November 17th, 1949 Is Overhaul Needed Passing Attics Unlud States: $3.50 Per Year by the Post 0310: Department Ottawa '1“ is means the bird had carried the: band nineteen years and had made thirty-eight flights north and soutn‘ across the continent It is not u commm to make recatc‘ncs of birds that have carried the famous Miami bands six eight or ten years. but! 2t is only about once a year that thes make a catch of a goose handy] u}? re teen years previous. When Mervyn SJlly wa: Acting Chief of Police in Timmms during the first. world war. as many as our hun drcd men on‘an average of those cla .- sed m" alien enemies reported each month at the police statiOn here. as required by the easy law of the times. So long as an alien behaved himself. he had no restricsien placed up.n him other than the duty of reporting reg- ularly. He wa; allowed to stay at his job, make any money he cauld legally. and save. it. or spend it. as he wished. so long as he kept within the law. or even so long as he wasn't caught in any illegality. In the first World war. no man was interned except for ope: 1211 and serious reason. Chief of Police John Clark in 1918 kept up the record set by Acting Chie Salley, and he also followed the same plan of Ming penalties imposed on those who evaded the duty of report- ing The latter plan, of course, mean: money for the Town, and the Town needed money tho e days. so the. police were not displeased about that, but at the same time the chief thtmght in the minds of these two police officers was that while alien enemies were treat 18d with the. greatest leniency, they should at least be careful to observe the new rule imposed upon them. So long as the alien enemies- reported .regu'arly, .airw close \vgtch could be kept on them. Accordingly. tho‘ police here centred on enforcing the law regarding reporting. The aliens had not been noti'ied about every single man in the group either had the necessary five- dollars xwith him. or could borrow it from his nearcrt fellow ccuntryman. Before the day for reporting some one had suggested that the aliens be notified so that they would be sure to have the, money with them. Officer Sally re- plied to that suggestion by saying that if notice were given the. aliens might W, S. Macpherson, who was assessor and tax collector for the town. bel- ieved that the duty of paying poll tax to the town was as important as the duty of reporting each month. In- deed. he would not have worried any about men reporting if they paid that poll tax. Naturally, he recognized the advantage of reparting. as it affor- ded a good way to collect poll tax. Tax Collector Macpherscn sought. and obtained, the co-operation of the pol- ice in seeing that the aliens paid their poll tax. When the four hundred- odd aliens went to the police station in "Januarv. 1918 to report, they .‘ound .the tax collector seated behind a tabla near the c: itrance of the hall. Pound- ing the table he would call cut in a loud voice, “Pav hem! Pay here!” This was a new thing for the aliens. but they soon undergtood. and the. tax collector that day gathered in some $1800.00 in poll taxes for that year. while he also collected another $160.00 from some Who had failed to pay their 1917 poll tax. Some forty of the a- liens escaped the tax colleCtor for the moment. as they Owned property in town. and accordingly were used the as othér property owner?- who were not subject to poll tax. “But I’ll get: you later!” the tax collector told these; A BIT 0 THIS 'N THAT People don't mind politician’s hand-shaking and back-slapping asimuch as his leg-pulling. O O O 0 Success and fai'zure are just the difference. between turning up, your. sleeves at work and turning up your nose. \\ n Headaches are now bi'amed on the condition cf the to be going to extremes. - - A A “Running a business ii'ithout advertising is like making love i in the dark," says an advertising agency .official. .-There’s a man talking himself out of a jgb. A n n The hcx‘se, it seems. unlike so man); other cveatures we could name, started with the bow-wows insteagl of going to them. A These are the days when 'life'is a ruâ€"sh in the narrowing gap between dawn and dusk _ 131513” - - A We wilt fail in changing human affairs until human beings v â€"â€""â€"' ' v Research reveals that hays prize; cornufor its color rather than taste. The white man seems t favor the kick. right In the long view. spring is jgst five‘months away. A square deal can break theAmost vicious ctrcle. You can’t give out to :he natigm whai you Mven‘t lived out at home. Some men .know wha: is ringt to <16. Othérs do what they know is A Bit 0’ This and That m roncumn wvmcs. mm§,_ou'rm_n_9_ '"""""V'vv""""vV' be tempted to hide that money. “They all have money." he said. He knov. I was a common practice {31; the ali- e115 t3 cany evm large sum: 0. money in money-belt... strapped around their waists. It was a common thin? for the police to find only a {tow dollars in the p-oakets of a prisoner Heinz soaiched. out littrally hundreds Of dollars in the m nay-belt around his waist. The record find by the pblicu was the money-belt 'of an alien urn-.- ud for breach 0: the Ontario Temp- czance Act. Tazat gentleman had nearly $1500.00 m that belt. Previtus to the war most of the-39 authorities here felt the bonds wero aliens had been earning good money. worthle s. even if they were genuine. and some of them were thriftymand and ther was a suspicion that same :aving. The war itself indirectfifjin- 0., them at least did not originate in; creased their money on hand. "j‘Many Russia. One Rus ian who had spent of them had been regularly sending his guod Canadian money for the dis- money to their relatives in their nat- credited Russian bonds brought his ive land '. In the case of the- allen troubles. and his philosophy. to The enemies no more was allowed to gay Porcupine Advance. He am: “If I to enemy lands during the war, 'so'they had spent my money fsr Canada Vic- .‘zad that 'much mzre cn handi, Furâ€" t-ry bonds. I coud say. ‘Wco‘l. there it ther, the police believed that some of l'!’ But now all I can say is. ‘Where the alien; made extra money b’yW’vays the heck i; it‘?’ " that were not open to the light 0 I day But it Was. DCPEfiDS. in the DUI'ChaiSB In any case, there is no doubt pp§_.that cf Russian roubles that the money- 1-_‘. LL- “A-L A +uyn3nol In any case, there is no doubt pug _,_that there was money in tho 6 mane? belts. ‘. ‘J‘_‘ ‘L- o ,u ‘l It 'seemed ea'sxer, howeverffiir the anms to make m-ney than it was for them to keep in. A few of them Vera rcally clever and inve:ted all they could spaxe in town property [01' in Victoxy Bonds. S: me of these men axe Lo-day loyal and rcspecteg citiz- ens of Canada. a they shoud he. The majmity, how,ever facozl many diffi- culties, Many of them were a ‘raid of bank-rt fearing :onfiscaticzn. They knew what wculd happen in their own countzy. and they did not know ‘en- cug'h about Canada to realize the British way. They hid, their saving“; in jars trunks" beds, closets, atticm cellais. out- houses and what- not, with disastrous result , The police had many calls abcut hidden money stolen and there is reason to believe that not half of these thefts were reported. Had the aliens here only realized it, the police were their be -t friends those days. The police always urgd the a- ..iens to use the banks to protect their money. fin that way the money would be safe .rsm fire. theft, or other loss. If any alien sought in- vestmen-t~ for his spare money, the police pointed out that Victory bonds were safe, :ure and profitable. It was made plain that money in the bank was a1“ ays there when wanted and al- ways accessible. To the suggestion that banks might not be :afe, the police re- ply was that this. was not the case in this country. ‘ Here the banks were safe as the rock of Gibraltar, or more so. Finally, it was :hown conclusively that in the most desperate event the bank-3 were better than keeping the cash on hand, for if the bank did prove unstablethe‘bills also would be equally va '.)1e1ess De pite the good advice given so persistently and pat- iently by the police, howeve, there were many here who continued to depend on the money-belts, and thee fellows found themselves the losers before the" war was over As soon as it wag known that there was mqney in “them thar money-belts,” there" were :mart folks of different nationalities succeed in changing feet. which sgems Dubious ‘0 a girl Tne highly paid baseball playe1 had ‘ who is wound up a poor season and had lost. the crucial game of the series by muf- fing a fly in ccnterfield. In the locker 11A nomn who found ways and means cm. the money. ’ While the majomy of these re it- ered as ”alien enemie" were popularly classed as Au trlan the fact was that the greater part of them were 0 Pollsh, Ukrainian. Roumaman or Bal- ken descent. whq would w-day be roughly classed as Ru stun. That fact. {erupted high p'ressure salesmen to raid the. money-belts to di pose of Russian bonds. A number here bought these bondz, only to find the-y had woxthless paper when Ru sia col- lapsed Even befoxo that th ug..1 authorities here felt the bonds were worthle 5. even if they were genuine. and ther was a suspicion that 5 me vunv c-vw-â€" -â€" . But it Was. perhaps in the purchase of Russian roubles that the money- ’Jelts here lo:t the mat, A typical case was that of a Russian who had been a particularly thrifty and indus- trious citizen of Timmins -or several 3ears. He had managed to :crape to- gether the neat um of four thcvsand dollars. To do this he. had as he said himself. “to work like a horse. and live like 3 deg.” All he found in his way of life here. was hard work and very economical living. Tempted by pro ‘it, he was high-presi'urozl int) putting all his savings into Russian roubles. The order went through New York, but before he received the; New, York acknowledgement of the transfer , it was evidont that he had tort fully half his money through the depreciation of the Ruszian currency following the. lesheviki troubles in Russia. Each succeeding day saw -urtlher drops in the price of the rouble until in a weak or so it was evident that the currency was wsrth- 1e 5. There. were Russians here who bought roubles with the plan of go- :ng back to Russia after the war, and being rich men there. If they bought enough of the roubles. they found out they couldn’t go The ' Bright Side It would be unfair to be to scorn rul of. those who bought Russian rou-‘olen There. were a number who invested in German marks in 1918, and they were n’t all mony-belt follods either. A few Australians here tried that game, finding in the end that they had made. as serious a miscalculation as their Rus ian brothers Most of tie few buys 5 here of German marks weie old- time Canadians who should have known better. Indeed, they were. so a'hamed of their purchases that they accepted the loss without a public word. They found they couldn’t evm buy a. Russian rouble with a German mark. "Darling," cried the recent bride." you know that li.t of 1.100 employees and addresses you had on your desk?" “That‘s it.” cCoe-zi the happy houseâ€" keeper. “An aluminumware “specialist gave me a whole kitcfien o-utlfit for i-t.. Said he had' a hobby of collecting odd names.” “Personnel Where I work?’ inquired the man. a bit apprehensive. “The funny thing is. said the official. “that. I have 'ortv name-3 here. and yen are the rnly one who want; to play ,the coronat. All the ethos ham 'asked for the biz drum." room he approached the manager and asked permission to catch an early train. To which the manager coldly replied: “Its OK. with meâ€"if you think you can!" The factory welfare committee- had decided to found a band and those whhing to join were. instructed to. complete a form’ giving name. depart- ment, and instrument pre card and deposit in a box in the lodge. In due course the welfare official collected the forms and. after classifying them, went to interview the blacksmith. w “I see- that you prefer the comet." he said. “Have you any particular qualifications?” ' “No.” said the back with, "but. could put in a g’oad bit of- practice." H “Well. don‘t spoil your "and f 1' ma.” said the backrmi‘th. “Give me a drum as well!” -â€"Tld Bit: order." “I don't. believe it." “It’s true,- I can show you the can:ellation."â€"â€"Tid Bits. “How’s business. 31d man?" “Picking up a little. I'm glad to ray. A': a m'attrr Cd fact. one of our sale - men ram-e in yesterday with a $300 Canada in 1948 expotred full-lash- ioned h“sr-‘ry to 34 foreian market and due to the shortage of dollars in many countries has Int yet recaptured ccmplf-‘ely. prewar overrca; trade. > Quick Canadian Facts. Fair Exchange Actual Proof Obliging to seek 'n rul For some reason the FBI is obsessed with the idea that it isn't pnllitc 101' members of John L. Lewis’ miners union to blow up rail-rcadbridges. 'Lie loo-stick dynamite bombs to coal car brake-beams, and blast windows of the homes of the Great Mane’s critics. 1-!“ So the other day, when an explosion wrecked a 14-11001 span of mm: Illinois Centials lines in Kentucky, J. Edgar Hoover's local agents moved in to lean just who was interfering with interstate commerce gfi‘tofal- carrying railroad \ , Guess who they- picked up'. Two tough ‘dymgspayers in John L.s organ- ization. ' _ " - ' “ 'I"hese miners,‘ who ordina1ily found themselves so physically uncom- 101tab1e and ill while at work that they haven't dug coal in abel', ta year soon discovered that Living on the United Mine Workers’ rtJund checks was just the thing for a couple of Kentucky sports. Om afithiese lads appears to have made a hobby of dropping dynamite but more about that later. Washingtonâ€"it's cold outsideâ€"and a lot of President Truman‘s political lieutenants across country burned up the long distance wires to tell nim they might as well not campaign for election it he didn’t crack down in John Lewis. They said bluntly there might be less Democratic voileaelhan there were chunks of coal around it the White House didn“t promiserlne move to end the iuelr crisisâ€"«which has been stalling a steel peace. ‘ r J The President has an exceptiinal understanding of politigaF leaders struggling out in the field around ballot box time. and althoughgh‘ was set 10 wait another two weeks for John L. to begin a strategic fig g;- Mu. 'lruman soon had his White House people on two missions. Ob], ' ve num- ber oneâ€"get out word through the regular pipe lines that the W, e; House would not permit Lewis to keep his coal-diggers idle more tltfii another So the really unsung hero of these crises. Cy Chlng. rushed back to Washington from New York. squeezed himself into one of Union Depot. corniortable. swivel chair phone booths and called John Lewis. late last week Ching OflEl‘Cd.tC come over. but John said: Let‘s beep it secret and men over at the Statlerâ€"and the camera kicking episode you all know. except lor this: While Lewis was playing cloak and dagger with the newsmen. Ching sat alone in an empty hotel room, like a bride waiting a tardy groom. Finally. in slid an emissary from John L., mutteringâ€"Let's sneak over to another room where the chief_ sits. _ week But meanwhile-”objective number twoâ€"put all the heat yqfii‘un whip up on Lewis and the coal operators to speed that peace they both want u. make so the President doesn't have to step in anq useAt‘he Tafttflerttey‘law. w--- â€"â€"â€" After all this E. Phillips Oppenheim maneuvering. Lewis sat there majestically affableâ€"and refused to tell Ching exactly what he wants for the coaldiggers. although Ching indicated that the operators were willing to make a reasonable deal to get their pits open. Lewis then reportedly said-â€" Wait until I meet the boys in Chicago. Meanwhile, zChing had been delayed 50‘ long Mr. Ching and his aides fearfully began phoning around town. not. knowing that the ace conciliator had promised to stay in that empty room while the newsmen silently followed Lewis out 'of the Statler lobby. ‘. -._ And in some circles. 'the mine owners point to a letter sent by cxmbl- tare trustee Ezra Van Horn. which asked John Lewis for an accounting of like names. addresses and employers of the miners to whom these millions of dollars are going. This note was sent to the massively silent Bromrr Lewis on Oct er. Van Horn's bid for information was ignoredâ€"â€"just like that. They claim they're willing to grant another dime on the welfare tax. making it 30 cents a tonâ€"if John Lewis agrees to some check on the millions he has been spending without satisfactory explanation to anyone. Fur- thermore, they say.they know that Lewis wants to increase the benefits paid by the welfare fond. - _ l Then Ching began making the rounds of the mine operators just as no did. with the steel ccmpanies. They are saying in effect. that John Lewis can't split them wide opehmas Phil Muxjray so adroitly did to steel. Here we get beyond a labor dispute. Just look at what's beginning to .smell bad. Van Horn has charged that “There are large sums of 'monq/ being paid out of this fund to peisons not entitie’d thereto peisons not in need 01 financial assistance and peisons not otherwise qualified to receive the same . . And Mr Van Horn now in Cleveland where he can be reached for specifics. was one of three t1ustees of the fundâ€"which Lewis lron Curtained. His is a blunt chaige that honest and deserving coaldiggers. entitled to 1elief unde1 the fu-,nd found their “’welfare‘ going to outsiders. “The result is that peisons who are entitled to the benefits of said fund and (are) qualified to receive them and are in need of financial aid are not receiving payment . ” So the mine bperators Want to know before they sign again exacily what will happen to the additional $50,001! 000 a year they 1e 1eady to giwe Lewis’ fund Why shouldnt John L be willing to explain . . .‘.’ . The coaldiggers themselves cannot see why they should be kept just this side of hunger because of their leader's passion for playing statesman. and effort to save face. Certainly they want a better welfare fund. But more than that they waht to go back to work and a tum “dinner “table. new. And that‘s what Ching counts on to fulfill his half of the White House missions. Both men are now in Davies County jail over in erensboro. lobk-ing hearty enough for “ailing" miners charged with “dynamiting >1§,,.*.:.;.\15£L$1roacl bridge,” Deputy Warden Taylor tells me ‘1 “Apparently they lived well off the money they collected from J‘Jhn Lewis"welfare fund. One of the jailbirds is a fellow by name ovaan “Pup" Riley, a real handy chap with dynamite I discovered, especiallrwhen thrown from airplanes. Undoubtedly he should find a niche in the'his- tory of aerial precision bombing, as you'll soon see. Well. “Pup" told GB] men operating under Fred Hal-lford, agent in charge of Kentucky, that the controversial welfare fund paid him $80 a month “relief" money. And his colleague in arms, Howard Dortch of Dalton, picked up $100 every thirty days from Brother Lewis' multi-million dollar gadget. Wonder how a couple of dollar-starved striking miners feel about that? Upon arrest by the Bureau men, called in after a series of sabotage incidents were reported. “Pup” Riley confessed that he had donea.,aistroetch of 14 months in a Federal pen, back in the early thirties, for a mere bagaz- telleâ€"seems that “Pup" went up in an airplane with an armful of; home» grown dynamite bombs and made air history by unloading the explosive” near the Diamond and Luton coal properties, close by Providence, Kentucky. during what‘s emphatically called a “labor dispute" sometimes on this beat. And all through those 1930 records runs “Pup‘s" name He made the mistake of forgetting that we’ve come out of the jungle. Now he gets picked up by the FBI on charges of blasting the-Illinois Central bridge on the main Providence to Blackford tKy.) lineâ€" and delaying traffic for hours jams up the line. There had been other explosions and the loo-stick dyna- mite bomb was tied to a coal-car bottom so that it would go off inathalf hour and destroy mine tipplcs What if that bomb went off near a road crossing and some farmer and his gurgling, laughing kids were waiting patiently for fast freight to Clear; (mtg _'A _ , There was no Federal law covering much bizarre picketing in thedays before Lewis became the Bountiful for the oddest characters. but Rilpy and his pilot (ad confessed and had to be sent somewhere on some-charge â€"â€"so they went up for only 14 months for violating a statute that said you can't transport explosives across a state line without a federal permit. There were some other miners. but I for one amnot dragging their names up at this late dateâ€"although it was a fascinating era then of ambushes. dynamiting of homes dynamiting of utility lines, firing upon minerSâ€"and the tiny airfare-.3 of course. \' But theres one link in all this which makes these arrests a nationui storyâ€"so dont leave yet. Puppy-boy was sentenced back in the thirties by a Federal Judge. Charles I. Dawsonâ€"who has since retired. The Judge knows every inch of the coal country. He knows every gimmick. And he knows “Pup"; fingy and his kind. The other day. ex-Judge Dawson Was named a Trustee of John Lewis‘ welfare fundâ€"â€"and he's going to see that the honest toilera among the miners get their just share. But he‘s also going to wipe the Pups off the list if he has to drag Lewis into court every hour on the hour. So when" the eoaldiggers go down the shaftsagain in a week (3‘ 50â€"- So when" the coaldigggrs go down the shafts.again in a week after Mr. Truman uses Taft-Hartley or calls the boys in for a (lo-cit) John L. will no longer find his welfare fund trusteeship. shall we me of (PUP) Riley. It's about time Lewis answered to some one. Meanwhile. from the highest CIO sources here. I can pass on this behind-the-scenes story of the cracking of the steel strike: Last week, the government's number one conciliator, Cy Ching, after talking to both Phil Murray and Joe Larkin. Bethlehem Steel VP" believed he cculd' break the steel. industry front. So China and hlvs two swlrlltz aidee. Pete Seitz and Bill Margolis. convinced the pessimistic Mr. Larkin to come to a room in Washington's Hotel Carlton last Tuesday. There. for five hours. they pcunded at him. Finally Larktn agreed he might makl some headway with the steel strike leaders and went back to New York on Thursday. where he and Phil agreed to meet secretlyâ€"«and if unsuca csssiul, to call Ching back in. r Then Ching and Co. blew the bugles on their sessions with the US. Steel. While everybody wts watching the big in big steel. the CIO chief went secretly by taxi to the wank Drake Hotel in New York's Murray Hil‘. section where Joe Larkin staysâ€"and it was turned into Phil Murray 1-1.1'. . Ching stayed away. He didn’t even phone. The LarkinaMur I./ parley was so secret that even the steel industrialists didn't learn 0! it. Previously. Ching had said to Murrayâ€"ldéiâ€"Efltié”)Tet-rindizii; Ray-.4 report which you support. It says that pensions should be paid for by the ampanies, true. But it also says that social insurance could be shared by both sides. And that was it. ' It was thereyall the time. Peace. it’s wonderful. search when they run across a few clues mat hard work .5” aunclhlufl W do with it. Same people who set out to learn the secret n! sucmss a‘gr'ion Inside Labour AI. by Victor Riesel WY. mm "fly no.) in a week z 30â€"- u for a QD-diyfl Cuâ€" ». shall we §ay. {he 330-56g“: move r. ling}; lpraders igh “h was set 1C n k MP. >ij ' v0 num- e W_ 9’ House mg; another ‘3‘“ th 1‘

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