WM y a, CEE Wy hi fy igt Witt if ul th hy Sali | “i al 4 i Witter | F eee Tee sas neni’ MN itsecal tdanneenveed Measastcnneneantens ’ eRe EET EC ERATE EE weer ti lf he! ‘ asia at sata a : Z Vol. 10, No. 28 Vancouver, British Columbia, July 13, 195] ax Re PRICE FIVE CENTS ee U Md ENDICOTT URGES KOREA PARLEY: ‘END SHOOTING’ TORONTO “We pray and hope your deliberations “Our National Peace Council is meet- Not: & . d American Will bring an end to the shooting, and _ ing today to advance the cause of peace by oo as Cor nae Korea, to. peace in Korea. All the world awaits peace an appeal for a meeting of the five great lators meeting fn : . : out of your meeting.” powers. ' We are meeting on a day when . ae ee ears te Ga. The cable was sent by the national se first See eee laps is 9 La gan adian Peace Congress on behalf of all Can- council meeting of the ‘Peace Congress last ease 6 aes PR ot as pt adians for peace Sunday. At the same time a wire was de- tia P Bere Is cratoet spatched to Prime Minister St. Laurent: Continued on back vage—See PEACE Seamen pul i : ‘on beach’ by ell strikers in Burnaby US screening Canadian seamen who have spent the greater part of their lives at sea, and young men of the Merchant Marine who ran the Nazi blockade to carry sup- plies to Canada’s armies in the Second World War, are being “screened’’ and “‘heached” by U.S. immigration authorities. Labor, community solidly backs 230- By BETTY GRIFFIN “The boys: are solid,” the young picket captain remarked confi- Y as we stood with a dozen. pickets at the gates of Shell Oil’s ~unaby plant. It was around midnight and the graveyard shift had st come on duty. Silhouetted against brilliant spot lights that picked Out every gleaming stack and storage tank they stood around exchanging - v8 With the pickets going off shift before settling down to the long sil Lights were all ablaze in the manger’s spacious home too, just 1