I INTO HOODLUM ATTACKS ON ONT. MEETINGS SOUGHT ’ : JEAN'S cies on Page 6 ii " f, h a let ave Vancouver, British Columbia, May 19, 1950 ose 28 aan ADP / lift a Reatry ett A eeei be ee acta Titvacad tba viivned taeustavnenon TA Price Five Cents Peace Week Evenks 1- Dean of Canterbury - Exhibition Gardens Sunday, May 21, 8 p.m. 2- Dr. J. G. Endicott - Pender Auditorium © ' Friday, May 26, 8 p.m. 3- Chinese Banquet - W. K. Chop Suey House Sunday, May 28, 7 p.m. COCKES for first three events obtainable at Modern Music Ltd., 536 Seymour Street) 4-B.C. Peace Conference - Pender Auditorium From 10 a.m., Saturday, May 27-28 5 - Youth Peace Arch Rally - Peace Arch Sunday, June 4, 2 p.m. IWA, WIU back strike of 8,500 US woodworkers Strike of 8,500 United States woodworkers against the Washing- ton-Oregon operations of the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company this week won immediate support from Canadian lumber workers in both the International Woodworkers of America and the Woodworkers Indus- tnal Union of Canada. “We're backing our brothers below the border 100 percent,” district IWA president Stewart Alsbury told the Pacific Tribune. “Assisting American woodworkers to obtain from the Weyer- haeuser Company the gains all other employers in the U.S. Northwest ° have granted will greatly strengthen and build support for the much- needed | 7-cent wage hoist and union shop demanded by woodworkers in B.C.,”’ said WIUC president Harold Pritchett. ‘“‘In addition, it Continued on page 7—See LUMBER Neslect _ charged in ‘Peg floods STORIES ON BACK PAGE @® Weary youth boistering dykes in Winnipeg “mug-up” on the fly. While a couple of young- sters snatch time out for a cup of coffee, the sandbag crew keeps plugging* ' away, trying to prevent flood waters from winning the “battle of Glenwood Crescent.” | In: the ‘foregiround Olga Doiney and Sally Komar of the Associa- tion of United Ukrainian Ca- nadians fill sandbags.