THE B.C. LUMBER WOR KER Page Three LSE oS FS Without Apology - - - By TEREDO I NOTICED AT THE COUNCIL MEETING ... at Pritchett aa the old pelle sees he ee Morgan lo all tl cing at ire gone a snauee*s Aare i on his ie ae some other union member. ing pec ers in the IWA and wl just Hae to have ische yery popular with Cana one why would he bury himself in story we presume, Don. . that doer tagprite asin of a certain sieahee of our union is Victory growth is destroyed soon. Singh. ~ Although it e aes: on all but nine (sta g up the sport. The certain member? Darshan rted from Soe reliable sources ‘p'and be count es) at the meeting are a ics weeding, boys: STOP ME IF YOU’VE HEARD THIS ONE... .a CCF ees Papua in the coming eesti and also a a member 0 , running in Comox-Alberni inst Nigel Morgan, « tay ‘ne Tabor candidate of ours and other unions in the very perturbed about circulating rumors. He Se that he is splitting the labor vote, a cee’ ceuodies in a riding Bay ai contested by an official representative of labor; that he serv- ice trade unio: prevent in S ly been a meml the union for one election committee, ber year. His el we hear, wishes to refute this false information. Their candid- has b ie member of the union for two years. Sincere apologies, T.S 4 S$ ata cent as they | te pate idan 2. To: ‘stabilize the rate full eae Citizenship FROM CITIZEN TRADE UNIONIST EL, WILSON, M.A. WEA Research Director ade unions would, t particular attention emplo; end ment cone even if it re- Is. 3. La- * ae must also made secu er eee re dan- Tr: ina ee of secret evelopment, edtiectet Gieit deniveratic thei in defending and extending democracy, mi AND HE HUFFED, AND HE PUFFE the house was ma bricks and so the big bad wolf but ae are oie of ae a cou! ( uldn’t blow it down. There is-a mo ay this all but there isn’t room here to draw the diagra ee HE'S PROBABLY A PERSONAL oes ert Johnson's safety class"is coming in for a lot of pub- licity. these GuGEL Mow does Hata tetiiieVesrtratattenitont yy a can funetion on a day-to-day basis in modern canoe At the ed! was ee 000 im 1938, ‘The te ans alm employed ae in val industries except agriculture. en as mbership there has ¢ reasons for giving special consideration to nom very rapi sy in Sona a “influence an taking a much n e part in community a: |, Tite eae aaa id they are themselves affairs. to the war the highest membership figure ever reacted latest official membership total, te us 30, 1944, was 690,000, which me ost one out of eve’ infong vith e in mei hip there ome an iner le recognized ae esmen for cates i loyment. Gontestive : i bar; is now firmly established in praca all the bas in Heohdas and there is no question now about Tetieraite stag ere eer ighgeteacine kecopaition of trate uni one nintEbe part of industry, government, and the public, is not just a wartime growth. e time, one of t most important in mani if possible for us to fight effectively. a pain movement trad eapetats See es now grows ine kes the of this of the labor movement itself. Until nie recently been struggling for the ae ht es exist at all. With ‘ord to scatter their trade unions have their limited errs they could not aff te 0) in hours, fon low wa; cea ag ow, ship and influence, ith as ation in aa Pina istry every part of the country, they c: ak for the Workers asa eer and they are concernii themselves with every kind of pro oben em peich e it work or at hom as the cies, wage cuts, and falling prices for the farm- ‘There are many other things n futu Grade hea is even ore more ii es Birice control, housing, health services, public investment, and on our e iy optay ees y fin mere evi hi st B00 nity. iGUhsequentig: phen tsbare ecepting more res} Sy nsibility. Ter" gabe hehe ae locally Lae pationally policies Ee pee in the gene eed it thos h ay pid inerease in ae i States, well prove Mf el the Paes of a new stage in nite cratic evelopment in which the struggles to extend politi dustrial grec ih will be more closely integrated anit fal ran ~—Continued Next Issue, don’t an ‘All we know is that a three weeks’ run is a pretty good ai e. How about that, Albert? The Man From Mars as ‘THE Man from le was disturbed. dq made another mi oes he “I a bus and one of your war veterans, all awit medals, got om He had one leg, using ¢ tiches, and I gave him my The driver one “Must have misunderstod him,” I sugested. “No, Negroes had to stand in the back.” He went on: XI don’t understand this Negro business. hile I was waiting for the bus, I saw a fellow reading the Astrophysical i K Journal. Had a Phi Beta ‘Kappa. seraped an acquaintance. He said he was SEER) TeeePnaES avs Mic Genre inne IGE apes arn ly re was i a hat in his hand, it is wrong; but it’s all right if he has a tray. He can’t live in a room next to you in a hotel, but the black cook can live ack room in your house. If he paints youy bi Spinoza, that Livi the street a Negro ‘lates eAGiBons, wnless the ipewekee line for the Negr le sectio is down the middl of | the Street. To ¢: a Negro “Mise t iety, il him a “doctor” or ee sree if you write to a d call, im fae sir” and later learn that he is a Negro, al Sr you oi oi is to hang yourself.” ) “We 5 southerners have to preserve white supremacy,” I said. aly ee to anything which will tend to promote race equallity.” ene set it tlearer,” he said, “but where do the mulattoes come from?” , \