September 30, 1938 Page Five J-B COFFEE FRESHLY ROASTED Ground While U Wait Standard Importing ; co. LTD. 327 Main Street Seymour 1403 NEW AGE BOOK SHOP 50a East Hastings St. Vancouver — Hours — » Daily —___10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Thurs. ____._10 a.m. to 6 p.m. e Booksellers to the Labor Movement The BARGAIN of the YEAR! Lenin’s Collected Works, $8 vols. _. 5.95 50c extra for out-of-town. This set formerly sold for $15 and the supply is limited at this price. IDEAL FOR THE STUDENT! Ten Classics of Marxism = bss 20c extra out-of-town. : Mathematics for the Million, by Lancelot Hegben ____ 3.75 Postage 20ce Mathematics made human and exciting. War in Europe—Tim Buck —-5¢ Fascism Over Canada— Fred Rose SE What Is the Padlock Law?— , Dube sé Why You Should Be a Socialist — Strachey 106 A Manual of Industrial - Uniocnism—Foster ——--—-—10¢ What Are We To Do— Strachey : 3.00 Pestarce i5e¢ The Fallacy of Technocracy 5¢ Communists at Woerk—Sam Carr 5¢ Handbook of Marxism— Burns 1.75 Postage 20 Just Arrived — CI_No. 8 (Aug.) ___...._ —id¢ Buy Your Stationery From Labor’s Bookshop = _ : — Recreational Centre Planned For Grandview Initiatory..Commiitee Launches Campaign A campaign to provide a youth recreational centre for Grandview community has been launched by &n initiative committee headed by ‘Phil Shaffer. Response to appeals for assist. ance has been very encouragine= and the first class ~to get eoing will be the sports Sroup under the direction of a competent instructor. Opening date for the class will be announced shortly. The committee intends to estah- lish elasses for badminton, music, art and hobbies and has issued an appeal for donations of chairs, tables for table-tennis, or any in- door sports equipment and cash. Polders outlining the plans of the campaign have been distributed in Grandview district. Further infor- mation can be obtained from P. Shaffer, 906 Commercial Drive, phone High. 974R, to which ad- dress donations in kind or cash should be sent. Parker, Boston Kid Draw At ¥VSC Cliff Parker of Edmonton and the Boston Kid provided the main attraction at the Vancouver Sports Club’s show last Saturday night, when Parker's speed gave the Kid Some uneasy moments. The match was a one-fall draw. In the opener, the Wild Joker and Walter Daniels mixed in a fast three 5-minute rounds before Dan- iels took the honors with a body slam. The semi-final brought together Johnny Lambchuck and Scotty Jackson. Both put everything they had into four 5-minute rounds, Lambchuck getting the only fall. ORANGE HALL BOXING and WRESTLING EXHIBITIONS Vane’ver Sports Ciub TUNE IN... LABOR NEWS HIGHLIGHTS this FRIDAY at 5:45 P.M. over CKMO - Sponsored by the People’s Advocate cooperation Dr. Douglas MiID-WEEK BROADCAST EVERY TUESDAY AT 5:45 P.M. SPECIAL! While You Wait... Men’s Half Soles and Rubber $1.00 , 5e Heels - - = = Ladies’ Half-Soles - G MAIN EVENT Clift. Parker, Edmonton SS ps Tarzan, Kirkland Lake Saturday, 3:30 p.m. Admission 10 Cents. Cs ce Loggers’ Cigar Stand For Everything in Smokes, Supplies and Soft Drinks. MAG and 15 WEST JOE CORDOVA ST. PARIS CAFE Saves You Money ..: .« This Week’s Breakfast Special: Little Pig Sausage and 2 Eggs Eried Calf’s Liver and 2 Eggs Toast, Potatoes, Coffee ZOE 438 W. Pender St, Vancouver “CRISIS IN EUROPE.”’ A MASS MEETING will be held in the ROYAL THEATRE SUNDAY, OCT. 2nd Ss PM. Speakers: Maurice Rush Phil Gibbens Auspices Young Communist League Empire Shoe Repairs 66 East Hastings Street Only Shee Repair Store in Vancouver with a Signed Agreement with the Union NEW METHOD SHOE - - 337 Carrall St. New York Sonny Jones Scores Win NEW YORK.—WMike (Kid) Frattini of Italy, ranked second after Ceferino Garcia in NBA ratings of challenges for Henry Armstrong’s welterweight’ title, went down to defeat before Sonny Jones, nesro fighter from Vancouver, at Rockland Palace. The Vancouver boy scored a six-round technical knockout victory over the Italian. Scheduled to go ten rounds as the main event on a Rockland Palace card, the fight was stopped by the referee after 1 minute and 47 seconds of the sixth. Fraittini’s eye was bleedins badly where Jones’ left had got in its deadly work. = =, DLL DE Y OUNGER members of the Wancouver Sports Club are throwing a lot of well-aimed leather these days, with more than one eye fixed on the amateur championships. Efficient training methods are bringing fighting trim to rough and ready material and it wouldn't Surprise us in the least if at least one of these lads—no names—found a spot for himself in the local fistic limelight this winter. Half a dozen of these youngsters displayed their wares at the elub’s regular Saturday night show, stag- ing some pretty fair exhibition bouts. = = = PEHEABING of the Vancouver Sports Club reminds us that the club is swinging in behind the Provincial Recreation Centres movement, which now counts its deyotees in thousands. The WSC boys and Tan Wisenhardt’s squad of instructors have always got along pretty well and now, it Seems, we'll be writing about the VSC girls. Three weeks ago the club start- ed a gym class for women and girls and even in this short time a good membership has been built up. This week we dropped in at the Orange Hall to find the instruc- tor, Mrs. G. Henderson, putting the Sirls through their paces. “This should be a good centre,” She told us. “The classes are held in the morning and this gives many of the girls a chance to ex ereise before going to work. The classes, which include paltet and tap dancing, are open to both Single and married women and provide an inexpensive way of keepine fit. “We don’t exercise severely, of course,” Mrs. Henderson said, “but it's one way, and a very good way, of keeping weight down.’’ Mrs. Henderson told us some- thing of the tremendous popular- ity of the Pro-Ree centres and, having seen some of their crack troupes perform, we were only too inclined to agree with her that they are a force in maintaining health for thousands whose exercise might otherwise be confined to the morning dash for the streetcar. Continued Combine Continued Czechs A suggestion advanced by one member that if the investigation were not commenced at once resig— nation of the BC Fruit Board should be demanded was not voted upon, although it met with unani- mous support. Another resolution adopted by the meeting called for an immedi- ate 20 cent increase in the price of Macs. PORT LANGLEY, BC, Sept. 29. —Langley Farmers Institute at its last meeting unanimously endorsed @ resolution demanding an investi- gation under the Combines Inves- tigation Act of charges made by Godfrey Isaacs and other prowers. Announcing a meeting of pri- mary producers to be held under auspices of the institute next Wea- nesday, October 5, at Athletic Hall, Langley Prairie, W. LL. WDence, president of the BC Hothouse To- matoe Growers’ Association, said he had in his possession certain documents to support the startling disclosures he intended to make at the meeting. The documents, it was stated, re- ferred to illegal methods used in the marketing of farm products. Dence charged that indifference on the part of provincial and Do- minion governments to alleged malpractices of produce broker eombines which, he said, were strangling the primary producer. He declared that the Nash inter- ests of the United States, driven out of Canada a decade ago fol- lowing the government inquiry and Duncan report of that time, were back in Canada under another name and perpetrating worse in- jury on the producer than before. Announcement! SATURDAY, 12:30 NOON LUNCHEON in aid of the Press Sponsored by West End Press Committee Tickets - - 25 Gents Harvest Benefit Dance PALOMAR BALLROOM Burrard and Georgia Sts. THURSDAY, OCTOBER Gth 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. ‘France Will Pay Dearly’ MOSCOW, Sept. 20.—In a des- patch from Geneva, Izvestia, organ of the Soviet government, declared that “British concessions to Hitler have been torm from the living fiesh of Czechoslovakia. At this conference of four, France will in- evitably pay for her friendship with England.” Condemning the addition of an- other aggressor, Mussolini, in the circle of negotiators, the despatch Stated it was “easy to imagine the role of France in this partnership of four in which two aggressors wall dictate their will, while a thira participant (Chamberlain) will seek in every way to satisfy the first tyro.’ Welcoming the suggestion from President Roosevelt for an interna- tional confernce to settle the Czech crisis, the newspaper denounced the present conference as ‘“‘mon- strour.” Conferences should be for the purpose of uniting peaceful nations against aggressors, not an attempt on the part of ‘bourgeois imperial- ist statesmen” to strike a bargain with aggressors at the expense of Smaller countries, Izvestia com- mented. The despatch emphatically con- demned Chamberiain’s third visit to Hitler as “strengthening the Fuehrer’s position by adding an- other aggressor.’”” CALCUTTA, India, Sept. 29-— indian newspapers described the British-Prench proposals to Czechoslovakia as a ‘‘shameful be— trayal” by Britain this week. at THE HUDSON’S BAY $50 in Cash Prizes — REFRESHMENTS —_ DREVOR PAGE AND HIS SWING TIME BAND We have the ¥& Style ¥& Color ¥& Pattern and most important thins—the ¥%& Fit You can get all four at the Regent Tailors at a price to suit your pocket. .. A tailor- made suit or coat that you will be proud te wear and show your friends. The Union-Made Label, of Course. QC se) Regent Tailors 324 West Hastings St. Vancouver, B.C. Phone Sey. 5614 In Vancouver News Of The City In Brief MP’s Leave For East Angus MacInnis, MP, and M. J. Coldwell, MP, CCF national chair— man, left Yancouver for Ottawa on Tuesday. MacInnis will go with David Lewis, CE national secre tary, to Halifax, to complete ar- rangements for affiliation of Dis- trict 26, United Mine Workers Union, to the CCF. E. E. Winch To Speak Progressive CCF club hold regu- lar whist drives every Tuesday and Saturday, 8 pm, at its hall, corner wth and Commercial. On open for um is also being held this Sunday at the same address; speaker, E. E. Wineh, MiLA. “A special holiday trip to Belling— ham is being arranged by the club on Thankszivinge Day, Monday, Oc-- tober 10. Further information can be obtained by phoning Pairmont 2284-T.. Raffle Winner Announced Winner of the two Ghinese vases, raffled by the Medical Aid for China committee, 615 West Hast ings street, was Mrs. Sue York, $4815 East Georgia Street, with ticket INo. 47. Jobless Plan Dance A social and dance in aid of the Clarion Weekly—-People’s Advocate press drive will be held Thursday, October 6, 8:30 pm, at Orange Hall, Gore and Hastings, under auspices of Branch i, Single Unemployed press committee. Admission vill be 15 cents and 10 cents for ladies. German To Address Meeting A special meeting on the Puro- pean crisis is being held by the Ginger Goodwin Club of the Young Communist League, this Friday, 8 pm, at 1353 Hast 12th avenue. One of the speakers will be CGarl Schwartz, who will tell of condi- tions in Germany. Youth League Calls Meet A mass Meeting, called by the Young Communist League, will be held this Sunday, at 8 pm, in the Royal Theatre. Maurice Rush, provincial secretary of the YCL, and Phil Gibbens, secretary, Van- couver City Committee of the Communist Party, will speak on the European erisis. Editor Is Speaker A dramatizaition of the Czecho- slovakia crisis has been arranged by Walliam Lyon Mackenzie Branch of the YCL, to be given at a meeting on Tuesday, October 4, 8 pm, at 906 Commercial Drive. A. G Holmes, editor of the High- land Echo, will speak. West End YC Meet Liberty YCL Club is holding a meeting this Friday at 8 pm in the West End Community centre, English Bay. Subject will be “How the war crisis affects youth.’ Too Late To Classify BARBERS WHITE SPOT, GRANVILLE AT 66th, for a style haircut. Regis-— tered masseur. SS EY , READ ‘THE FISHERMAN’ The Only Trade Union Paper in the Fishing Industry Published every other Tuesday by Salmon Purse Seiners Union and Pacific Coast Fishermen’s Union. Eates: $1.00 Year — 60c Six Mos. 164 East Hasiings Sirect ? Garfield A. King BARRISTER, ETC. 553 Granville St. Seymour 1324 Vancouver, Bc GLOBE HOTEL #ront Street, NANAIMO GNext to Gov’t Court Hiouse) Fully Modern, with detached baths: $1.00 Single, $1.50 Double. With bath: $2 Single, $2.50 Dbl. NAT BEVIS, Prop. TOWN HALL Ballroom Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday OLD-TIME DANCE Wednesday, MODERN DANCE The most beautiful ballroom in Yancouver. Excellent Music Admission 25e y a fa > Leo Smuntam’s Band now at the | ALEXANDRA BALLROOM. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, GLED-TIME DANCE Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday MODERN DANCE For a good time be sure to visit these dances. Best music and the finest floor in Ganada. S ADMASSION 25c (except Sat.) Z PHONE - - 130 W. Hastmes St. SEYMOUR 241 HASTINGS BAKERY High. 3244 716 East Hastings Street 4068 East Hastings Street 1708 Commercial Drive 2& Quality Preducts at Piioderate Prices We Deliver to Kast End and Grandview Homes s | “Thrifty Housewives | Shop at Hastings Bakery!” 100% UNIONIZED tz