fay FRE eu | Pay / i Woia ! Sela =\\I atl 4 Pr he Ue Rees baa s Feral jt helo eid! oft iy i Mri hi ey rik: Her, yung SiO VEC ESA py ve y / Bae sots,, aarp ae Hes ceh EAA CMC ALOT LA TANS Hise VOL. 13 No. 36 etc German army: the plot and the alternative Page 3 { ———eenes Canadian firsts by Lyman B. Jackes ¢ Fe oy QuEMOY ° : : PESCADORES — ho Soe x FORMOSA Page 9 = Rexts Ching Sex Koshun Chi 195: ag lifebuoys. Return of Taiwan (Formosa) . ia, stated her opinion to a tor oa Said that it was essential Dlers orld relations that the Peo- take Republic of China should tions \ts place in the United Na- The island of Taiwan, she Should Was part of China and Unit be represented in the ble, Nations through the Peo- Republic of China. } four foreign ministers er UN seat for China REYKJAVIK ae legal right of the People’s Seat blic of China to occupy its ee the United Nations should Slajg Stored in the near future, here» the communique issued Rea last week from the confer- iStepg of the four foreign min- Mark of Sweden, Norway, Den- and Iceland. 9 50 ae SEATUTE MES fo fan ee bay Guns of the Chinese People’s Army were re a shelled Quemoy Island off the Fukien coast, ae he islands which have been used by Chiang this ase from which to harass shipping. A dispate Week disclosed that 152 Chiang soldiers nese People’s Army since the battle of Tings by swimming to the mainland, using boar in Ple's Republic of China would help to ease in “Prin, CPinion of Madame V. L. Pandit. Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India, ported this week to one of a group of Kai-shek’s troops h from Foochow have deserted to the han Island in July, ds and basketballs World support grows to seat China in UN DJAKARTA to its rightful place as part of the ternational tension The Indian leader, sister of who has been touring recent press conference at Surabaya. Scant British support for US Formosa stand — LONDON “The United States is clearly in a weak position international- lv” on the issue of Formosa ob- serves the influential British weekly, the Economist. — “Phe American protection for the island was given unilaterally; it has never had either the sup- port of British or any kind of en- dorsement from the UN,” the paper points out. The Economist notes that “Brit- ish opinion is almost entirely sympathetic to Peking’s case on this question,” and adds: “Indeed, there is no issue on ‘yhich America might be involved in a war crisis with less moral or political support from London.” DEMA INCREASE DRISES Hopping-mad bus riders are demanding that Premier W. A. C. Bennett fire Chairman Percy George and the two other members of the Public Utilities Commis sion following the PUC’s action in giving the B.C. Electric a two and a half cent fare hike in Vancouver and an eight percent service cut in Victoria. +The Bennett government faces a real test of its popularity on the issue of PUC giveaways to the power monopol- ists, an issue that helped bring down the Coalition government. Appeal from the PUC decision can only be made to the prov- incial cabinet and .a number of organizations and municipalities are going to carry the fight to Victoria. On all sides there are volleys of outraged cries, urging the Socred government to repudiate City the Public Utilities Commission and fescind the fare boost. Coupled with this is substantial and growing opinion that the B.C. Electric should be taken over and operated as a publicly-owned utility. Effie Jones, leading’ opponent of BCER policies for more than a decade, has requested Vancou- ver City Council to take the lead in-appealing the PUC decision to the cabinet. Mrs. Jones: appeared at the head of a delegation before Act- ing Mayor Birt Showler to place her position before him. Showler declined to call a special meet- ing of council to consider the problem, stating that he was Continued on back page See INCREASE protest conference calls for rescinding of fare boost First in a series of protest actions against higher fares was a lively, well-attended conference called by Senior Citizens’ Associa- tion and attended by some 100 people representing 15 organiza- tions on Wednesday this week. The conference sent a resolu- tion to Premier Bennett asking that the fare increase be rescind- ed and decided to ‘call a meeting in the near future to register public protest. Another decision of the meet- ing was to send a delegation to next Monday’s meeting of the Utilities Committee of the city council to ask the council to ap- peal the decision to the proy- incial cabinet. Among the organizations pre- sent were the Superannuated Civil Servants, Grandview Rate- payers, Pulp and Sulphite Work- ers, Civic, Reform Association, Citizens Gas Protest Committee, Busines$’ and Professional Wo- men’s Club. FIRE PUC, RESCIND FARE