pe . My, il Hi Wine 5 i tiaras aD 4 } : pn ish sed Cali’ fin visitas psa ey, et he PAIL sett é Te Pst yg ae VOL. Il. No. 27. Vancouver, British TCAD Ti ® 1952 = "PRICE FIVE CENTS iz | ‘Irrefutable Toe resented to World Peace Council meeting ’ LONDON “The American germ waihentels in the Far East has now passed the experimental stage and has been stepped up to the dimensions of a full-scale onslaught. “It is being directed wholesale against the Chinese : THE TELEGRAM if 40 Wed, April 16, 1952 : (Typhoid is raging in North Korea q | | mainland as well as against Korea. Attacks are being launch- | | ' | | { | | ‘y : RS ces iniaiinhigvaupiaueioutiiGununsndevensiiiunnugnelieiel EOL Tn UL SLL tatiatrettarre | ed constantly from vessels, operating mostly at night, as well as from aircraft.” This charge, which has already created a tremendous stir in Britain, was made by the London Daily Worker in its June 28 issue. At the same time the paper revealed that this information, “accompanied by irrefutable facts,” would | be presented to the meeting of the World Peace. Council, which opened in Berlin this week. Continued on back page — See CHINESE we the south ‘is comparatively fred of it, a source of great em-_ .; barrassment to Russia, said Dr. Solandt, who earlier this year was in Korea. ” Photo (TOP) shows a germ bomb container of the type ' described in the story on this page. Photostat quotes Dr, O. Solandt as telling the Toronto Telegram on his return from | Korea that typhoid is raging in North Korea. Three years ago ! a feature story in the Montreal Standard described Solandt as a man “who knows more about ways of killing people than any- body else in Canada” and quoted him as saying that ‘tthe future of death on a mass Scale is very bright.” 36 O00 ik lid in third I By BERT WHYTE 1951 wage line. ‘ ~ (and to date fish companies have from port to port, ete. that it accepted “with modifica- i Hag i IWA ident Stewart Als- tions” ti 1 ny oe’ than 36,000. striking International Woodworkers of made no move to negotiate) presiden Ww ions” the latest LRB proposa i ; and bury said this week that the to end the strike. Forest In- Dain Orkers, carpenters and of America, whose 32,000 Coast seiners from Vancouver ury Ss e s tine th ag will proceed to any ‘united front’ scheme of the dustrial Relations, representing i uck June 14, opens other areas 5, okie raestalihes (. mrterioe’ wane talks at Prince one of the ‘following points: bosses will be discussed at the the employers, rejected the LRB : hirg ase ia are Week on picket lines, Interior Prince Rupert, Butedale, Klem- next meeting of the Canadian plan to reopen negotiations with- r Ay I Saturday. Some te Men e ee ie nt hd pice are involved. tu, Namu, Alert Bay, Quathiaski Congress of Labor executive in out the strikers going back to lah: is Yapidly developing as Preparations for the coastwide Cove or Vancouver. On arrival Ottawa. ee < ao ; Gee E . Stren Ban this province merges its salmon strike on July 19 began, at these ports, boat delegates The strike, in the woods an Z crac 2ppeare in the last week at a special meeting will meet to elect strike com- mills remains absolutely solid, haere united front last week “uni the employers’ vaunted of the Vancouver strike commit- mittees, which will be in charge with 24-hour picket lines oper- when contractors representa- Rigs ted front” which came into tee with many boat delegates of patrol of fishing areas, picket ating. The union leadership Continued on back page "ence in an effort to hola the sitting iy. If the strike iscalled duty, food supplies, movements wrote Labor Relations Board See STRIKERS : & ag Bs for a showdown battle