Alcan smelter nears production . The huge Alcan smelter at K 's shown unloading semi-processed © concrete dock which was floated into place, fas Umped on the tidal flats to create a site for the «plant. itimat is rapidly nearing alumina from Jamaica the Start of*production. Here a freighter where the British Guiana bauxite is treated. lies along the edge of the big earth fill which was Garbage plan shelved union raiders to help Vancouver City Council shelved for three tion Methods which could hav Part of their help to union raiders trying to take over ee: Ucn. Ou wee of a recent survey by U.S. efficiency experts he This was brought to lig rene by the council. The report the mmended the same changes in € city scavenging department that been put forward in a 1950 Proposal by the city engineer. Outside Workers’ leaders charge b at the report was not adopted “cause the main base of the rival Loon) Unions, Local 407 and then col al 487, was among the garbage lection crews. eee Significant that the planned wees Were not revived until the Splinter union which had promised bee Scavenging crews everything out Ne moon, was practically wiped. .~ ln that department,’ an Out- fie Orkers official told the Paci- © Tribune. des the same ‘time, he made it Supp, that the uniom would not nee any new plan for garbage of ction unless it had the right Babtor consultation and protest. HUB HUMOR ane WOULD YOU CARE TO STEP INSIDE to help in. an experiment the British Empire presented to their annu mental Pathology and C mokes at abo veath about the same temperatures have been prep rats and mice No tumors have ye the report. : that even when in a cigarette Is aC spot, the radiation 1s thousandth of be able to cause a tumor. e saved taxpayers $ t as a resu years improvements in garbage collec 100,000 annually. This move was from the independent Vancouver Se emer Robot smo research on cancer | e 36 cigarettes at once has been built ee Oh ne awear and smoking. Members of Cancer Campaign learned of it in the 1953 report al meeting at the House of of Leeds University’s Department of Experi- ancer Research, built the machine, which A. machine tha’ Dr. D. B. Clayson, ut the same rate as of cigarette smoke ared, and tested on for seven months. { appeared, says Two extracts “The fact that natural potassium i i i he potassium is radioactive makes t content of tobacco smoke a factor which calls : relation to lung cancer, for consideration: in ’ it goes on. earchers have shown Dee all the potassium deposited at one only one ten- the dose known to. ZENITH CAFE 105 E. Hastings Street Vancouver, B.C. UNION HOUSE bee SSS PPTL “Everything in Flowers” FROM ..- EARL SYKES i PA. 3855 56 E. Hastings St. VANCOUVER, B.C. ' Fad ROU a etnias Ae, Top in and learn about THE™) earner ° B's convenient payment plan ip, Suits and men’s furnishings. yo, (REE CREDIT and it saves 9. UP to 12%. Special sale on 7Pant suits $55. C G “4TO° TO REAL ESTATE BUY SELL EXCHANGE all ce MARSHALL JOHNSON Len. 1891-R EM. 2167 CAMBIE REALTY LTD. Member Co-op Listing Bureau Vancouver Real Estate Board ker assists ‘LONDON Lords. a human being, and the cigarettes at the hottest parts. The Cheshire and North Wales branch started a survey in 1952 and they say tobacco habits “do not go far toward accounting for the observed pattern of death rates in the region.” . Of the great increase in atmos- pheric pollution caused by the Industrial Revolution, the report says that this factor alone could not account for a sudden increase in lung cancer, a century later, when pollution was declining. The report mentions the value of comparative studies with uch countries as Iceland, where lung cancer is tare, tobacco consump- tion small and atmospheric pollu- tion quite unlike Britain’s. government, is the same man Army.” He is Maj-Gen. Bernard L. Robinson, deputy chief of the U.S. Corps. of Engineers. Press despatches from the can- ference between the U.S. and Can- adian Seaway authorities indicate that the St. Laurent government is prepared to sell out Canadian sovereignty over the St. Lawrence States and repudiate the 1952 Canadian system. Reports the Canadian Press July 5: : “Tt has been generally conceded here that Canada now will fall in line with that (U.S. Wiley Bill) plan.” The Wiley Bill calls for con- struction of three kev locks at the 4Z-mile International Section of the river at a cost of $105 million. It provides that the U.S. secretary of defense shall have full control; that the U.S. will set the toll charges and fix other shipping regulations. In Ottawa last week; the Cana- dian team of negotiators was head- ed by Lionel Chevrier, just re- signed from his cabinet post as minister of transport to become president of the St. Lawrence Sea- way Authority. ‘ Charging an “absolutely scanda- lous sell-out’ of the Seaway by the federal government, a spokesman for the national office of the Labor- Progressive party called for a re- newed barrage of protests to Prime Minister St. Laurent. “We must tell him in no uncer- tain terms that we want no Pana- ma Canal business in this coun- try,” he said. “The Seaway must, be built as an all-Canadian pro- ject. “The St. Laurent government must not be permitted to insult our national pride by this abject surrender of sovereignty over our great river to the United States Army — as was done with the Panama Canal.’ “The LPP has many time warn- ed parliament and the people of Canada of this danger. “But not a single MP has spoken up in parliament despite the over- whelming public demand that the Seaway be kept Canadian. “Protests to the government now are a matter of great urgency if waterways system to the United |! Canada-U.S. agreement for an all-|, we are to prevent one of the must! Sellout on Seaway seen TORONTO The U.S. Army general who was in Ottawa July 6 to negotiate the St. Lawrence Seaway with the federal who on February 3 last said: “I regard the Seaway as analagous to the Panama Canal ‘which is under the control of the Secretary of the U.S. | ‘ scandalous sell-outs of our national honor and sovereignty in our his- tory.” Selling the PT Three clubs top targets Dear Keader: During June 168 subs reached our office. Not nearly good enough; our press clubs will real- ly have to step on the gas if they want to overshoot their 1954 tar- gets. “Clubs Maple _ Ridge, West End, city. Book awards have been mailed out. Other pro- vincial points which did good press work in June include South Langley, Victoria, Nan- of the, Month” provincial, were and aimo, Ladner, New Westminster and North Vancouver. Greater Vancouver clubs which deserve congratulations for their work on subs and sales during the past month include Kitsilano, Dry Dock, Point Grey, Victory Square, Sorest Products and South Burn- eby. = Three press clubs have already achieved their 1954 objectives for subs: Cumberland, Ladner and Little Mountain. Now they are out to set records and show the rest’ of us how the job ought to be done. Rita Whyte \ S. H. BROWN PLUMBING & HEATING 371 Johnson Road R.R.1 White Rock - Phone 5661 ! i i | li ’ SUPPORT YOUR POPULARITY CANDIDATE 24-Hour Service Business: PA. 1532 Night: HA. 8071 Jones’ Market Z LIMITED Boat and Restaurant Supplies 217 Main St. - Vancouver 4, B.C.= HOUSES PACIFIC ROOFING . Company Limited CE. 2733 2509 West Broadway N. Bitz B. Kostyk 12th ANNUAL UNI the TED LABOR PICNIC Sat., July Admission. 75c | 7 DANCE AUUC Hall, 805 E. Pender Street 31-8 p.m. Good Orchestra 45 EAST HASTINGS. ° SSSsaSseSs SSS SS SS Saar} SSS SS ST PACIFIC TRIBUNE — JULY 9, 1954 — PAGE 7