ns at any | ithe of: year: | r may hold. no fear,. , rol Canadian | Tor bravery: dt will be ant, the accident and1 rescue points up rd cold facts concerning, this aity. week: cours se that will turn out go, strong swim- -loggin, ind . - oficaulk -boots'to work: on ods; are now w being ged -to!wear ie sackets ‘Therefore wherever pee Human Wastage Reduced oe oO" the 150, 000 people beirig: treated for sickness in “Canadian hospitals,’ almost. hal: show no visible ce signs, of ill-health. But these are, sick just the same, seh iously sick... They are:merjtal. patients, —; There areinore ha 10 pat fits in Canadian -nGhtal hospitals and: an’ averhge of, 20,000 new cases an admitted: each: ‘year. “But. reeettly, thanks to‘new tr datment ¢ and'a.new public. understanding of their | prbblem, there is. good reason to believe that the peak ag heen reached and from, how onthis terrible wast. : of human resources. wil be dvaatically reduced, gn the United States: for: the’ first. time,’ there was fhitean drop in the number of mental patients he treated, last, year’, That trend is expected to he . Nocted soon in ‘Canada, oY og Thirty 3 year's ago most riontal {lines was consid oS, ork practically hopeless, Its, victims, were written of permanently as useful members of'soclety, Today, s “BE peopl a tering 5 tom menial dlsonders CAN eX : pagtrecovany, 7 h 4 ce ’ Hy ith Assoclation is nekinee a new drive, weal inj:to Canadian. citizong to, ‘give move financial. sup- | lt t for research, ‘Tt dg 9 eamipalg that deserves a Be e and sympathetle reepon m Tt Pinal Post, | Nor man-case,. ton, hu the pa Moat of it {s “full of sound and fury, signifying. nothing, " Mr, Lester. Pearson is-not min- ning for re-election ‘against. the Amerivan: columnist; Drew. Pear-, son; nor. against: Robert Morris}. of the notorious conintiltee of ‘the: nh against Pat No. political ‘party. in Canada has erititized. olin own govern= ment’s handling. of this niatter):: ‘on any other round’ than that renough, goon enotigh, to the pow=|: ,ers-that-be. in Washington, But out of all: the noise ‘and i confusion,-there. is emerging one. elear conglision: © - In one. senses” the: treatment Canada is getting from her next door neighbor serves lis-right. “We asked: for: th and: how! vomwa DIARY. By Norman M. MacLeod PAPAS Although. a” lot is ‘being: said in Parliament, Hill circles these cays about the, likelihood | ofthe Norman case. becoming : a. major. genera) election issue, “the prog- Nnosticators of such. a develop- ment are almost uniformly yaeue ! as te how it JS going fo come jabout. a d ast fei weeks about Ne now. Suns We Inid ourselves wide open 10, oh the very kind of trentment whieh] “- literally. houndedione of ourmost| ~~ S canada, did. nok talle tough | to: his death. and.” saboteurs... tind: vile ofthe :totalitarlan. “Ree- rel- “pollee. technique, » CONSIDER only, ‘those three facta a - On, “Octoher : “1960, . in kecbing ‘With. otir. treaty, the RC MP ‘forwarded: to the-. security forces in the U.S.A..a secret pre- liminary. report on. Herbert Nor-. man; who for ten yeats:had been one: of our “most. capable. diplo- (mats; arid who was then, Serving! ba “tina key-.post, tin Japan, Th: so. preliminary. report, the “showed. that.as. early. AS: 1940; the ‘ROMP: had known, and’ ‘reported to’ the: ‘government : of: “Canada, that’ Norman, had had_ ‘Commui- nist: associations in: his: student days, in the 80s. .0 0) 2." On. December: 1, 1950, ‘ihe RCMP forwarded to the U.S. sec- ret. police a further full report| which” made. it quite clear that Norman had~ been thoroughly ‘checked, re-checked and double checked. Apart from’ the’ well- known fact, which Norman him- self had never in any way con- leeated, that he had openly asso- The tromiile with sr iy, ‘eazied with Communists «in . his brilliant: and: trusted Aiplomats of All this happened because, in our zeal lo guard: against’ spies we. ourselves adopted some of {he most: vicious, ble: to pedinit an axtensive, every-day : 5 )now mating gunn casa oy srocent days, the RCMP had lot the aninife af the ames ‘found nothing to indicaie in any Yl Camadien digimmea Hes Sn dhe! Why Shape or form that Nornian 2 Ena inet Liberals: Fi, ang FES DOL a completely honest and (Cokass ine ah wiinnies anp-. vmononnide public servant. mrpinity dhe same xrnyni) Bal ine RCMP had quite con- “wilt oeagnent dp the 2 Nnrmen ens: itiusively esigblished that some “Whey frowe aeereedt de tthe dnjz Ol the accusations and: insinua- _Anituessedior was Indies ip his tons given by the “sources”:in teat thy gersemtian by a! ithe preliminary report were not | loudest is going to' wind up ‘with: ., Eitiet Stases Congre sssonel sub- | ‘emimines Shoe te only dif-! igenee in the +iews expressed iy the three parties has been pica competition amongst them :46 voice anti-Washington: indig- nation, They have accepted’ the assumption that the party which makes the Eagle . scream the the “greatest number of |votes| out of the tragic. affair. © ee political circles now. size up the in the. Commons. moved too im- pulsively to the defence of Nor- man to change their tactics in the light of the later disclosures ‘from Washington and admis- Sion from External Affairs ‘Minister Lester Pearson. If they had been less. anxlous to climb. up with the government on the anti-Washington bandwaggon, they. could have made the Nor- man case the springboard for a demand for a housecleaning in the External Affairs department that would eliminate any Intel- munism, ‘That is where govern- ment strategists..consider that thith opposition—PO's and CCF-. cry allke--missed the. boat hadly, AS Ib: js the. Opposition. ‘partis |: ANOs: ie In ae Casta Hanges Haiisard :av thio ‘echoes “of” as hina pH Fahiw uf ment's own re- “action to the sorry’ affaly, That isn’t the way {political issues, are made, All this doosn't mean that the Liberal Government is at all satisfied with the way the Nor- man case Has worked out, Even: although they do not ‘anticipate that. jt will heeome f. cruclal issue of the campaign In Ithelf, they, recognize the danger—-por- haps oven the certainty—of It. serlously affecting the ‘govern- ment's offensive alrongth, For ag. things have turned out, the Norman case clearly means ‘that External Affalrs Minister Pearson will be on. the defensive throughout the olection cam: palgn, But the Liberals had beon counting upon the brilliant Ca+ nadinn foreign minister as one of tholr mosh effective pintform porformers, Als loay from that Yolo Ip. viewed as dofinitoly «o, wenrkeoning blow, The PO's In. other - ‘words, | as Capital! situation, the. Opposition parties | - Jectual sympathizers with Com- |- only false but downright ridi¢u- ‘lous. For instance one -“source” had described Norman as a Mc- Master University professor. An- other item, given by a German Communist renegade, was . that Norman-had attended a Commu- nist study group at Cape Cod: ‘The. RCMP: conclusively estab- , been connected with. McMaster: and had never been at Cape’ Céd; for any reason whatsoever, | fn, his ;-“ whole life. wake WHERE the e events in, the USA. ‘serve us right 1§ this: “ - From’ 1931 till 1957 the: false: first report which had been sent. along by the RCMP was used as “evidence” by various U.S. witch- hunting, publicity seeking com- mittees, and by ex-Communists who were cashing in ina big way on. their own Red past. Never once did these ex-spies and continuing mongers of lies take any notice of the fact that there were two RCMP -reports— not just the one exposed as false. SURELY the lesson in all this {s that the secret poliee tech niques which we have thought- fully adopted over the past few Wwe had all always considered as ‘the most,-fundaniental. principle of Brilish justice—that: ‘no man May he cuccueed) of: any, crime, has the chance to face his nc- qusers, and be found ‘Innocent or guilty. In the eyes of all men, Industrialist | Hits New Law - ;* a Austin C, Taylor says dictatorial provincial legislation is killin ‘mining. In British Columbia, Mr, Taylor, president of Bra+ lorne Mines Ltd,, told the annual Wednesday: {4 doing to mining in this. prove, Inco $8 a vory sevlous matter, have killed, the optimistically share tho view. oR lished that Norman had’ never. touches. wor ks away ab a RY fo scene painted: with: shoe: ‘polish, Although art has been his hobby for 35 years, Lanimey stumbled: onto. the: technique: of using shoe pollsh instead ‘ “of, ‘paint a few months: ago, while: shining: his, After buying all the various colored: wax polish he. could: find, he turnedi out his; first. work, and: has, kept: at, it ever since, ‘He. “Applies the Wax Lo the. canvas with, a. i halott knite, ajdt uses a biush ‘only” for finishing “REVIVES. MEMORIES. vd ‘9 TOKYO: (f. _Pitchblende con: taining one per. cent wranin lig ybeen discovered’ In Ninkyp nase 50 miles northeast of Horo-* shima,. where “the: first. atemle bomb was dropped. in 1945, Hy , Ing” 78,150 Peryons. hg we te , 1g 4 é try Daily: News Classifieds yy 7 For, Fine Nee "Craftsmanship “And. Lasting, cutadae ~~ Beauty. ©!" “Let ‘Your Jeweller ei i Be Your: Guide Ble 3 ef fy ag ae TORN eo ‘Topcoats © Slacks, ' ALTIERATION. SPECIALISTS}. QUICK SERVICE | bing The Tal, | vat Mae: soe sman, “Olis Lammey, as “he vo, mevierymesere ttewammnmmetne te “By GEORGE KVECHEN ‘Canadian Press Staft Writer WASHINGTON. () — Support for a ban on the union shop ap- pears to be growing in many parts of the United States, The union shop, which permits management to hire a non-un- ion employee provided he. joins the union within 30 days, already is banned in 18 states and the movement ‘now is gaining strength in more than a dozen others. The: Taft-Hartiey ‘Act, which serves as. the U.S: federal labor code, forbids the closed shop contract, which requires that ali covered employees be union members ‘at the time of hiring, but it does permit the union shop as part of labor contracts. GAINING: MOMENTUM Right-to-work laws, which | prohibit union membership as. a condition of employment, wate ‘adopted, by 2 number of states /in ‘the. early. post- war period but‘ap- peared to be on the wane a vdar ago. Louisiana. had repealed its right- to-work laws and: three other «states, by referendum, turned down proposals for simi; lar legislation. -iism passed last fall sby Palm Fight Against Union Shop Growing In Many U.S. States, Municipalities Inbor rackets and hy two widely- publicized cases of strike violence in Indiana, which — recently adopted its. first right-to-work legislation. FEDERAL ACTION | Labor leaders now fear Con- gress may pass a national right- to-work law. outlawing all-union ‘employment contracts in any state. Senator Barry Goldwater; Republican from Arizona, has in- troduced an amendment to the |. administration’s Civil Rights Bill which would protect what -he calis the right to work for union and non-union members alike, Labor men also are concerned about a third possibility-—local right-to-work laws. A city ordi- nance against compulsory union- Springs, Calif., now is belng test- ed-in the courts. “The 18 states:with such legisia- tion now én ‘their books are Ala- bania,. Arizona, Arkansas, Flor- Ida,.Gebrgia; Indiana, Towa, Mis-' sissippl; Nebraska, Nevada, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennes- sec, Texas, Utah and Virginia. FAILED IN THREE . Bills are pending in Maryland, | Delaware, Kansas, Connecticut, “Bul this year the right: to- -work, New Hampshire and Ohio and "islatures rejected. ritht-to- work: ED i St. Phone 208 nae Washington. - Atlempts to pass such liws have failed in at least three states. In ‘Idaho, tegislation missed by four votes in the Sen- jate. . Wyoming and Colorado leg- riders to civil rights legislation. Efforts to repeal right-to-work laws are being made [n North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Alabama, Tennessee and Towa. ~ LINDSAY'S - Cartage & Storage movement is gaining momentum | pressures for right-to-work laws again, undoubtedly nourished. hy' are building - up in Uinois, Wiss disclosures coming out. of the! consin, Minnesota, Vermont, Ok- | decades ire undermining what}. jeNevoe* it iepenesourtauduresne| } i i, VANCOUVER o—Industrialtst| at meeting of shureholdors hong): "How far thia follow (Promlor W. A, ©, Bonnett) thinks he's "vt: dictator, I don't know, but whit]. tho British Columbia government "ET don't know whether thoy | golden gooxe, byt! > thoy Ate certainly enting the OAPT, Wellington B, sphents ‘| of Windsor, Ont,, who apont a ‘ Rusy life as seaman, captain and cleop-sen diver, celebrates his 108th birthday, April 4, We siya he can't gob around the way ho used too, but ho flguros he sll! has 12 yonrs ahand: of ‘him before he finally “drops ‘anelor,” Confined to ‘hed, most ‘of tha: time, Capt. Sphenrs Hti Igves cigar. and onte wo. aquare moala” a -day,. ' (OP Photo) OF VCs Attend Funeral of 9th current US. Senate inquiry me lahoma, New Mexico, Oregon and Eight Winners | MELBOURNE, Australla @) — Seven Victoria’ Cross winners of the First World War and the oitly surviving Australlan VC winner of the Boer War attended @ the funeral of Wiliam Dun- stan, himself a holder of the Commonwealth's highest award m. for gnilantry, | Mr, Dunstan, 61, was a diree- tor and former general manuger ; a of .the, Melbourne Herald and |: a “Weikly.. TMmes’. Ltdy: He | March 2 afler a heart attack, James Rogers, 82, was the Boer War veteran: at the fu- wee eral, Mr, Dunstan, then a lieu- tenant, won his Victorian Cross nt Gallipoli in 1916 when Aus- tralians were committed In a major campalan for the first first time In history, ' STRICT ‘PRECAUTION VICTORIA W—_Under British Columbin's new traffla net the victim of n cnr theft can he taken to court, ns well ns the thief, If he failed to ‘turn off the motor, lock the ignition and romova tho koy, GO MOTO ON } fori d Pacifie'ip in very: poor con ond ‘soft, spot We wauld advice ofthe ighvay between: due to frost hota nett yavel this see» weeny rane absolutely necensary, USALh fi p inaey), tt ~ FRIDAY @ OUR OWN? | Co- OP. 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