ANNUAL > eG “HOW'D | KNOW IT WASN’T O66ERC BALL q A PX ee VIALE YOU ... YA BOTH GOT THE SAME OUTFIT ON!” BIG STAKES PORTLAND, Ore. — Dis- missal by the U.S. National” Labor Relations Board of un- fair labor practice charges in the massive lockout of Paci- fic Northwest woodworkers in 1963 will be appealed to US. Circuit Court in Wash- ington, D.C. The appeal is being carried out by IWA Western States Regional Council No. 3 and the Western Council of Lum- ber and Sawmill Workers, whose members were forced off their jobs when four giant A seat belt can do no good sitting on the seat of the car. Give it a chance to protect you from severe injury, even death. xa * Every motorist, every pe- destrian has a moral responsi- bility to prevent traffic ac- cidents. * * * Accidents happen one at a time, and can only be pre- vented one at a time. BROADWAY PRINTERS printers and lithographers since 1911 E> 115 EAST 8th AVENUE VANCOUVER 10, B.C. Telephone 876-2101 employers of the so-called Big Six Association closed down their plants during contract negotiations. At stake in the case is an estimated $15,000,000 or more in pay lost by IWA and LSW members during the shut- down. The charges were filed in 1963, after contract bargain- ing with the Big Six reached an impasse and the two un- ions went on strike against U.S. Plywood and St. Regis Paper. The other four asso- ciation members — Weyer- haeuser, Crown Zellerbach, International Paper and Ray- onier — then locked out their employees. BODIE’S Quick Action Service COLLISION REPAIRS Free Estimates and Terms ae ag ce ALIGNMENT — gs PAINTING Factory Finish Mobile Infra-Red Bake Oven PHONE | 681-9267 | Night Calls 266-7414 BODIE COLLISIONS LTD. 1150 Seymour, near Davie Spccialists for over 33 years pca 'FLY B.C. AIR LINES‘ THE WESTERN CANADIAN LUMBER WORKER IWA TORONTO (CPA) — The 11,000 members of the East- ern Canadian region of the International Woodworkers of America will hold a referen- dum on financing of a broad- ened education program. BONUS DETROIT General Motors Corp. workers will divide a $14 million bonus Dec. 17 under terms of the GM contract with the Auto Workers negotiated in 1964. That averages $40 apiece. The money will be taken from the supplemental unemploy- ment benefit (SUB) fund to which GM contributes 5 cents an hour for each covered em- ployee. The money goes into Christmas bonuses as a “spill- over” from the SUB fund. SESE Ready for robust refreshment at the end ofa hard night's ride? Something to me melt the frost off your beard and put back the twinkle in your eye? Coming ~— up with a cheery wish and a hearty Ho! Ho! Ho! A merry old Old Style beer. __ Old Style BREWED AND BOTTLED BY MOLSON'S CAPILANO BREWERY LTD. \ THIS ADVERTISEMENT 1S NOT PUBLISHED OR DISPLAYED BY THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD OR BY THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUM! NEW PROGRAM Region 2’s annual conven- tion approved a referendum on the program which would be financed by an increase in per capita tax of 25 cents per member a month. President Harvey Ladd de- scribed the program as just as vital to the welfare of the region as wage talks. He re- minded the delegates that the international union had sub- sidized the region at a rate of $5,000 a month, later cut to $2,500. But this subsidy had been eliminated in favor of a policy of organizational ai on a project basis. ; In other action, the regional convention established a com- pulsory retirement age of 65 for staff and elected officers. The region also called for elimination of the referendum vote at the regional level ex- cept for election of officers. “his styles BEER BEN THOMPSON a ELECTED a Ben Thompson, First Vice-— President of IWA Local 1-71, has been elected to a two- year term on the board of directors of the Medical Serv- - ices Association. = - Thompson, who had been , . appointed last summer to fill — out the umexpired term of IWA’s Fred Fieber who had — resigned, is one of four em- — ployee directors on the MSA — board.