: ; _ Surely not ‘Who can forget ? ~ Who can forget ? ___ Who can forget that Friday six years ago— June 19, 1953—a day of tragedy and anguish, one of those fateful days in human affairs when he social conflicts and political passions of an era reach a horrible climax in which the issue of life “Who can forget the base- ess of the new executioners, the high priests of a new ereed—the Cold War is God and the Atom Bomb is its Prophet and the heretics must _ be burned to death? Who can forget the noble ignity, the great love, the ining integrity of the man id woman who went to their death because they would not betray mankind, because they would not bow to this stra- ange new creed and bear false vitness’ in its behalf? Who can forget? the millions, who singly or with others joined in a worldwide vigil 6n that day, and from whom Came a great outcry, voicing all the mixed emotions of that day. Nor should those other mil- lions, who sensed what was happening, who were trou: | bled, and yet tried to turn away and deny what was in their hearts, forget now. To remember is to remem- ber most immediately Mor- ton Sobell, who sits in the ving tomb of Atlanta Pris- on. The hands that switched ‘on the current of death for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg also turned the key in the : Sive door for Morton So- Six years have gone by / PATRONIZE CEDAR FUEL & TRANSFER Phone: 566-R-3 Cedar, B.C. “this Province for over | ORTY YEARS the Dental objection to my meth- of conducting my prac- R. Llewellyn Douglas obson St. Vancouver 1, B.C. e: MUtual 1-4022 mer of Granville) since June 19, 1953, six long years for Sobell, and before him stretch, more years, all the years of his life, which the executioners af the Rose- nbergs say he must spend behind the steel bars. 4 \ MORTON SOBELL, Many do not forget. New voices speak up for Sobell’s freedom. More voices must speak if that freedom is to be won, as it can be.. To seek out, encourage and in- spire those voices should be our dedication on this anni- versary. Who can forget? We cannot. We must not. © Reprinted from People’s World A Parkland Party Saturday Evening July 4 ’ Barbecue Croquet Badminton Volley Ball Horseshoes Refreshments 5538 Chaffey St. South Burnaby George Gee G & B HEATING LTD. “Gas — Oil — Electric — Plumbing — Sheet Metal INSTALLATIONS — SERVICING No Down Payment — 6% Simple Interest First Payment October 1, 1959 4415 Hastings Street Evenki children in the Kamchatka Region, USSR are seen preparing their homework (left) while hunter and trapper Innokenti Gilkanov (right) shows a fox taken out of a trap te deer-breeders Yegor Mandiatov and Yegor Indanov. Socialism aids northern hunters in Kamchatka Region of USSR KAMCHATKA REGION, USSR—The village of Anagvai, Bystrinsky national district, is located in the very centre of the Kamchatka peninsula. The Evenki collective farm named after the 20th CPSU Congress is located here. Its territory covers an area bigger than that of some European states. Under tsarism the penniless and downtrodden Evenki had to roam from place to place with their herds of deer. But the life of this small northern nationality under- went Soviet power. Now the Even- ki have settled down. From their smokey yurtas. they have moved into wooden houses. The collective farm builds ever increasing num- bers of comfortable homes for its members every year. * There is a school and a creche at the collective farm, where the Evenki children are being educated at the state’s expense. The first year of the Seven Year Plan per- iod will see the construction of a holiday home and a new club. Hot springs located at the very village will serve for heating the hot-houses to. be built presently. The millionaire collective farm’s chief fortune is in its deer herds with many thou- sands of animals. ‘For ages the Evenki have been hunters. Hundreds of polar fox, ermine and fox furs obtained by the hunters are shipped to international fur sales. . CY 9-4919 radical changes under. Fur breeding of caged an- imals is a new branch of the collective farm’s economy. The farm for silver fox rais- ing will be considerably en- larged in 1965. ; The photogs above show two children, .Valia Paderina and - Natasha Rykova, - preparing their home work at the col- lective farm boarding school; before the Revolution the Evenki people were illiterate, today children study at State APE SEP TEE Se Ukrainska Knyha 652 Kingsway Vancouver 10, B.C. TRinity 9-3118 PARCEL DIVISION guitars Hours: 9:00 — 5:30 p.m. U.S.S.R. periodicals, newpapers and books Exclusive dealership in all Czechoslovakian and Soviet cameras . ’ expense. The photo on the right is of Innokenti Gilkanov, hunt- er and trapper of the 20th Party Congress Collective Farm showing a fox to two friends, both deer-breeders, Gilkanov, who has been en- gaged in hunting and trapping for 60 years now, is famed throughout Kamchatka. He has fulfilled his seasonal pro- gram for fur delivery by two and a half times. - Closed Monday We are licensed by Intourist to ship your gift parcels to the Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and every part of the U.S.S.R. Our many years of experience in the handling and shipping of gift parcels is your guarantee of reliable, efficient and prompt service. IMPORTERS AND DISTRIBUTORS OF — @ U.S.S.R. long play records Czechoslovakian hand cut crystal and pressed glassware Polish cottons, linens and woollens Chinese piano accordians violins and June 26, 1959 — PACIFIC TRIBUNE—PAGE 3