: | ee a 1660 in e SPEED THE DRIVE e SEND YOUR DONATION NOW DRIVE QUOTAS Benevolent Assn. Of Canada Progressive Fraternal Society Caters to all your needs in the Life Insurance field LIFE INSURANCE ENDOWMENTS PENSION PLANS WEEKLY BENEFITS Apply to: B.C. office at _ 805 East Pender St. or National Office at 595 Pritchard Ave. Winipeg 4, Manitoba > ome oe ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee --------4 We are at MU 3-3942 Club Quotas Achieved Club Quotas Achieved GREATER VANCOUVER VANCOUVER ISLAND Bill Bennett 650 23 Alberni 325 os Broadway 500 55 Campbell River 175 — Frank Rogers 450 255 Cumberland 100 =a Kingsway 800 25 Cowichan 250 a Niilo Makela 100 = Nanaimo ; 650 146 Olgin 400 62 Victoria 400 6 Point Grey 225 2 ‘Totals 1900 152 Vancouver East 1000 243 South Vancouver 660 = DEWDNEY New Club 400 ____ Haney Map. Ridge 300 5 Victory Square 650 40 Mission Le 2 Students 100 = Totals merae ibe North Burnaby 750 60 OKANAGAN Edmonds 150 22 Kamloops 125 me North Shore 1000 112 Notch Hill 150 — City Unpledged 1315. Ss “Vernon 275 pes City Total 9150 905 Totals ©3550 med PROVINCIAL DELTA GENERAL Ft. Langley 200 10 Fernie Nichel £250 =: am New West. #975 _ Powell River 175 15. White Rock Delta 600 340 Sointula 75 2 Surrey 575 10 Trail Rossland 300 — Coquitlam 300 100 Rupert 100 — Chilliwack 275 a Correspondence 325 15 Totals 2225 460 Tom Mc. Col. 175 35 Prov. Misc. 1500 — GRAND TOTALS Totals 2700 67 17,000 1660 - ’ or We buy and sell Workers Fer Used Furniture Sporting Goods We are Reasonable 573 E. HASTINGS ST. Beaver Transfer | DUNDAS B-A for All Makes V. W. SPECIALIST SERVICE (WALL & DUNDAS ST.) Complete Auto Repair and Service Government Certified Mechanic and Ph. 255-6828 Special TOUR I: TOUR Il: Take Your Choice — Only INCLUDES EVERYTHING! GLOBE TOURS 2679 E. Hastings St.. Summer Offer! 21 Days in the U.S.S.R. 22 Days in Romania, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, German Democratic Republic $989.00 Appeal from Bob Towle Bob. Towle, and outstanding supporter of this paper, sent the following letter-to-the-editor which we are happy to publish. Despite his advanced age and illness, as was the case last year, Bob managed to raise $500 for the sustaining fund of the PT. This year Bob hopes, with the help of his friends, to do as well or even better: The goal of Socialism embraces all the activity of the working class. Activity is generated by the needs of the working class. Marxian Socialism is the solution, but to obtain this entails effort and education by the militant section in the form of getting the workers to take part in the day to day struggle — “to make this country a better place to live in.” Such struggles include housing, education, medicare, old age assistance, and above all the struggle for peace. The best media to unite us and assist us to working along these lines is the PACIFIC TRIBUNE. And with the tremendous opposition of the capitalist system, with all its forces of propaganda (Capitalist press, etc.) the CIA and the Canadian equivalent (RCMP), we have to fight diligently to beat back the forces of reaction to achieve some of our immediate objectives and to teach the workers how to achieve socialism, which would mean a full life for everyone. This requires a great effort in financing! Therefore we have to raise $17,000 to keep OUR paper in circulation. The price of printing is going up every year with all other costs. The only source of this money is the understanding members and readers of YOUR paper, the Pacific Tribune. Therefore, I am asking a personal appeal for each and everyone to assist us to achieve our fairly large quota. You can do this in two ways: 1. Donations of cash, or better still; - 2. New subs to the paper. The paper will grow and you will have the satisfaction of having helped it to grow, and we shall be all ever grateful for our great effort. helped it to grow, and we shall all be “ever grateful for our great effort. Yours in the fight, Bob Towle. Gold Crisis L. A. Vancouver, writes: I found the article giving the background of the gold crisis of interest. Reading it one gets the idea that there are actually two bases for the judging of solvency, concerning a country; — whereas such a double standard does not apply elsewhere in business. Thus it seems that, following the early days when payments of balance of payments were actually made in gold, has come a situation in which a country could be perfectly solvent based on her ability to pay because having the assets to do so. But this same country could be and was penalised in the payment of her debts, because she had not the one commodity, gold, required (theoretically) to back every unit of that currency. And one is led to surmise that any . such country has thus had to endure an added penalty imposed upon the assumed value of her currency when paying her debts merely because this situation suited the bankers rather than that there is no other system of payment possible; — even with a debt payment currency backed partially or fully by gold — though probably less profitable to the bankers. The evidence. of injustice in balance of payments seem to be proved when one notices that the U.S., which for years had evidently been unable to pay in gold, has had her curency accepted as “‘good as gold’’ because of her evident ability to meet her debts in productive capacity. But Canada, with a similar capacity has been penalized because she may happen to be a ‘debtor’. But as most of us know, or should know, rules could be altered when it suited the Establishment to alter them — as now. ~annual DR. JAMES ENDICOTT, Chairman of the Canadian Peace Congress, who recently returned from an emergency meeting on the Vietnam war in Stockholm, will speak at a public meeting in Vancouver on Thur., April 18 at 8 p.m. in the Peretz School, 6184 Ash St. The meeting is under the auspices of the B.C. Peace Council. New foreign policy urged The B.C. Peace Council at its meeting March 31 unanimously passed a resolution calling on the newly-elected Prime Minister at the Liberal convention to take steps to formulate an independent foreign policy for Canada. The resolution urged that such a foreign policy should result in greater pressure on the U.S. to stop the bombing of Vietnam unconditionally; to cancel the U.S.-— Canada 1959 arms agreement until the war in Vietnam is over: to withdraw Canada from NATO and reverse the recent decision to extend NORAD for another five years. Chairman of the Council, J. Beeching, told the meeting in his annual report that there was a greater awareness of the danger of war on the part of the Canadian people and that “these forces are capable of pushing Canada over the brink — not the brink of war but the ~ brink of peace.”’ The Council decided to embark on — a campaign to collect school supplies ‘to be sent to the bombed out schools of Vietnam. Classified Advertising NOTICES COMING EVENTS COPY — DEADLINE FOR ALL- ADVERTISING. All copy must be in the offices of the PACIFIC TRIBUNE not later than 12 Noon on MONDAY. BUSINESS PERSONALS BIG 7 FURNITURE — 1656 East Broadway & NEW STORE at 406 JACKSON AVE. — 3/4 TRANS- FER. Call Nick 874-5410. REGENT TAILORS LTD.—Cus- tom Tailors Wear. 324 W. Hastings St. MU 1-8456 or 4441 E. Has- tings — CY 8-2030. See Henry Rankin for personal service. WEST END RADIO — Special- izing in TV Repairs. Latest precision equipment used. (Formerly OK Radio Service). Now at 1721 Robson Street. MU 3-2618. READ THE PACIFIC TRIBUNE 253-1221 Vancouver 6, B.C. 254-2313 01S “5 As is - Jac aff) WoiVNOS Sensirt Jo ag 5a ete eae f oe, BESta fikGgS bs eid vive aw) tet, Gin “HEI to Diegiul A gaat ee hy and Ready-to- | APRIL 20 — WHITE ELEPHANT & RUMMAGE SALE will be held at the STRY HALL — 144 EAST 7th Ave. on SAT. APRIL 20 — from 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.. Donors may phone the following depots: 738-8416: 299-2788: 872-5989; 327- 3140; 224-6481. Enjoy an EVENING with LES & MARY WALKER. Interesting COLOURED FILM of _ EU- ROPE. Hear RUTH DOHERTY speak on her recent visit to the GERMAN DEMOCRATIC RE- PUBLIC. SATURDAY — APRIL 27th at 8 P.M. 2883 WEST llth AVE. Adm. $1.00. Proceeds to the Press Drive. AUSP: Broadway Press Club. IT PAYS to sell the Pacific Tribune — Call E. Crist Circulation 685-5288 — } 2 we we t ’ cco ne em wee OL a MAY 5 — KEEP THIS DATE OPEN for a DINNER & FILM SHOWING in North Vancouver. HALLS FOR RENT CLINTON HALL, 2605 E. Pender, Available for banquets, meet- ings, weddings. etc. Phone 253-7414. RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME — Available for meetings, ban-. quets and weddings at reason- able rates. 600 Campbell Ave. 254-3430. = ‘UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CUL-- TURAL CENTRE — 805 East Pender St., Vancouver 4. Available for Banquets, Wed- dings, Meetings. Phone: 254- 3436 or 876-9693. PENDER Auditorium (Marine Workers) 339 West Pender Phone MU 1-9481 Large and Small Halls | for Rentals "<5 APRIL 13, 1968—PACIFIC TRIBUNE —Page W ‘ AT urd spe =ee ee ee eee eee ee , - erated “ACS e 2 21 999F--Sb URE DG AS--5A9p ay che