BC. LUMBER WORKER ena Issue, Dec., 1959 ABOUT $30 to $50 million of ieee ae Seer ele spent Reaction across the country t6.the Price Spreads Com- for health insurance of al illion_steelwor! with | mission report is varied. The chain s a s T t ca ts, is being used pehcrny o ineffectively, SGOT) eh cee co ¢ chain stores acted as if they| | @QUMSUEFS ye a Sea @ United | Ba Xe ed they were from a public Steolworktrs ‘of America, “The main faults,” he ssw ‘ie with relations angle. Consumers groups of all varieties tended to ‘urbr pene apes of ee ‘evalent patterns of aa semen yetsn and insur gr the report with a n, “I-told-you-so” attitude. pate beer Feet sedate One Yet spite the aimee of| change in th: ‘i ti ith a 60-day trusteeship in order to ith gi at te ‘em . have = s di and thousands of Ses the food cies that seeped}signed (the report.)” hold new elections of officers. Stat “ne cluded was @ Series of six 1,000 Hine ads, one runnin througl official commission, 500-member truck drivers’ im was p the manner in which the report is Te: = oduc! local, which extends to all 578,820. 0 written leayes little to frighten| It wouldn’t have ae much|and Ottawa on t nd Cont of of ts alone was adel aoe at $ ae One ote a the outs or gladden the imation fo for fhe commission to| Sault Ste. Marie in the north, has bees in he coun (L751) and in eno gh weeles to hearts of c r consumers. ‘ouncil| been plagued by dissension for pe ray ee RE a oon: ear oe the ad i ailie! Pe eae job Fs woul a ane ae test | three we sats alone was about $123, Meet ectitce added st least $250,000 Suspicion ducts and the| Les: nt of the Th anti-consumer tactics big food ee voted on theta ie ge er eOre indicate * a deep susp onion thom clivesice industries. In ‘thes of mis-|ship proposiign The vote fol- F deadlia rad verlishny. a lecoasatall owen aieteo evenness beagle. ITE the changes in economic affairs “ ‘the business cycle food poe ucns ik they x P t been rep nna pen istetelis’ ai‘‘prospect of another re. |dor’t the Padtnenientions mest fore Consumed advice right at| meeting of the locals key Toronto ania in 1961, oe a vice sees ios ape ae ae 2 Seoal Bank told | server confidence that | ‘©, S20PPing centre unit by International President of the Ai in Petri things will ee Certainly the conTMIRSION might | James R. Hoffa. SPIT ARE ee I is a fact one commision, who have come up with more concrete|” The - focal’s current president, wi tio’ 2 : A SPECIAL Senate committee said December 8 that unemploy- |had no trouble backing ali the|operatives strength ce MeDougally tas (pen tam ment has reached disaster proportions in some sections of the |Tecom Bestatiens addei id his own} By the commission’ g_|tepeated fire from one wing of i own? a bership demanding his ringing defence of the system to the membership ig United Stat n y mission, price spreads were re-| cq the commission’s report. duced#uheiit eeooseneree ine die | one nes HeDouren! bes: i. TRUCK LOGGERS’ As ittion’s 17% Ann mal Convention will | |The. system is eeaiy coud ee Pah ee ne sup: fused’ and-announce Sane tre) Hotel Vancouver, January 13, Theme of the convention |said Commissioner Couvrette and| port for co-ops should be Sts Oneal a is: pata SeeIORGEuel Home Pay?” Programme in. ’|“since'I find nothing specific in| first step dn fighting Sates tustes Trile. cuthorie Some cludes a panel plscoeston on Bill 43 and legislation and Lab the report that suggests any|and price sprea ae ptt author an aa Management relation: RANKING labour 5] Peccec ae criticized the idea of a royal commission to study provincial labour unrest. Pat O’Neal, secret of Lal aa pe believed the Proposal that man a ‘clear ‘indication t io) ce pore “management’s Be Adives Far re , Well {| Price i Report Mine-Mill Re-elects | Mixed Reaction Greets Trusteeship Taken By Don Gillis’ Slate d rT Ss cal cause of communist dlearvauter Mine, Mill and Smelter Worker: a now Gillis a won a strong On F Pronged Fork siete, Don Gis snd | ord nana ees at n Four g or with him, his fll slate of union | i0804, ational leadership ot of smart executive today has a they're worth about $38 a share psec Soe yLopneada the: locals Fe sore gad! fork to feed: him, | tod. s bs s in the coming year. sa coun inte) fon ; ‘The first prong is his salary. The ale ieee Mr. Gillis, who last year turned ready, the national executiv: BR eee! stack option pos ne jeeane Ford,|out the local old guard in a sur-|0f Mine-Mill has set the wheels Serta! The ea eee t $93, 3.750. ne salary and peepns prise vi , defeated fine. |in motion to reduce the voice of rer nt ated as 4500 shares at $32.5 Mill president Nels Thibault. In| /-ocal_5P8 in national union af : ax-free n plan, The fourth| vice-president 1 so Gillis captured 55 per | airs: “he executive nas propose’ || Thanks and Best wishes is svted “tates which carry we plus (oe i Fevimousinedarecorde vole. Me. that prc tintisy es EEE Ge eet ie at roi Thibault 1 and western divisions, with eac (i a . Se plus options liematis eae enped down fron focal reduced to equal represent-|| t0 our many friends in hi ‘sti SL 59 (rene ‘tow $22,750) plus | \fi11 t ation. Local 598, with 16,000 mem- Z ; : ly Distillers : Buerotootsynient on care20.000 «| in an attempt to cut the anti bers fas long. iomina ted the || the Logging and Lumber fis Hiram Walker - Good- Communist Gillis down to size. Pee eae aan oot Bension at 65. ,000 member ut : aur and friends of the werk |_.2Dreasurer H. E. Harmon got a inal Count There may aes an a move in|] Industry. We appreciate . The president is Howard salary of $45, 000 ie options on} The final couneugave the near future to split sections of Bowelts iptiiciho lives iaiMichigan, 600 sare at $2. 275 (profit now} margin Hiaishove: é 598 away from the main local.|| your loyal support. Here is.what his fork dipped into OTRO 20 pate ment On} ponent. lections were BOG Gillis, by winning every evens: 2 $20,000 pension aS of the hardest-fought in recent n in the recent elections, 5 _ Shar hist the union and were aay have forestalled the move. Sc ma heated arguments and $12. aan to live on, Me atch owns ee bar-room fist fights. Commins osition strong The Stock Opti 50,000 shares of company ss A a er ereiea Potential profit $186,000 tax| paying him dividends of (i Goren 2t-|| Watson Glove ee ci mere to the Mine-Mill “old ree, Boe densacres. Walton rn a opposition strength in People ‘i bout 24,000 shares pay’ ers: Bbont 24,000 res paving rt 598 fs, still strong. More P $29,480. es a $20,000 a year _ worked actively for ie Thibault Tee a per cent of the steward These eae are sees tol gt pension at 65, a 20% income tax rebate. With slate. Bae ped oe for Thibault VANCOUVER, B.C. ee ‘Dividends fine-Mill was thrown out of|@ former president polled 4 © be taken care of, how can he rhe Canadian Congress of Labour]a Pei 5,900. ete in Pike elections. — pa exercised an option on 12,000 shares at $22.50 and rash m afford i living wage tee for the tal we the St. Lawrence Seaway Author- ity and ane Canadian Brotherhood 1 We Sailor’ Hits 1 ployees he Brity of the CLRB and further spree ‘izes: for he use of “these” Port econ of the Seafa I aoe . atonal ie wlan ar. |First Seaway Agreement Sage on the front page was its a ibe first collective cai Canada Labour @ agreement nh paper was late =i Seaw: Authority recht ie aaa customers,| was submitted to negotiations that its reticence recently. ler by CLRB Nearly 900 Seaway, employees, ral Worker: eS . " re ages tie-boatd Sees ens of ieee ae aud Gen Make saving a_ habit with a SAVINGS - ACCOUNT at THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE 800 Branches in Canada h wide-ranging fringe benefits.