e Inion-busting plot bared STORY ON PAGE 2 Secret Document EXCL USIVE —e if Hal Hy al Hlth 4 DDN Posies MR A ee | f ralcennnenn Wenn ee he Vancouver, British Columbia, November 13, 19 LLY OR 7 : Ul 5S 2 : : <> * PRICE TEN CENTS a Halt lumber layoffs! < od iil ba Sel medal aalhd J ialemel 5 Fe all i J fe Dai bee; i... Kite net Bh icles ha hemeethiiileled d nant i baen cts. i ome nN WRT PTE * Seat China in UN * Justice in Guiana the Warning of the dan : gers of depending on the U.S. market when Te Ton Is already “Halle j : l Clark k in the U.S. of placing a tariff on B.C. lumber,” ar n e, | tha: leaflet, “nN ‘the g Ment em Omest eq, 7] arks A ; er ialonen at Canadian White Pine, declares ic market as and Save Our Jobs,” issued this week ©n a plan ¢ b also be expanded if the federal govern- © build the 750,000 housing units now need- this. ike a » initj rmament : al expenditures, homes are lasting assets and Cost js self-liqu id : ”“ ating,” he says. (See story on page 7.) og candidate Pens campaign Mr VIC Btessiy Doris Bla ICTORIA, B.C. Comin e candidate. hevas th Ictoria byelectio “ompe| e@ : legislature mes Bo ;° halt the adopt measu - ker. Mdustrie. © Lavo. j oe ts for pes a in many “ . provid ® tol Products, Duaiiston: Yam aN elect; S Buia: econ ; a ings nn Wi the “ed by’ the growin Tiday @ gov, Shrink} § crisis i Yernmenp. 8. Markets and Us £ fe re allure ¢ hood gt Ds, threatens the live in ty, Of th ou his Provinces S of workers Situation in C 0 tak hee on, Serious,” Victoria . ant of Victoria Es de- : 0 . laid 9 Forest Prosua © mills , °S Staveya ee tin and shi td shift ; Shipyards are Tut. fish erm . €n’s In- comes have fallen sharply this year, “Lower incomes tor wage earn: ers inevitably hits the business and professional man, and if it Continued on back page See BYELECTION Vancouver Plywoods lays off 400 men This week 400 workers at Van- couver Plywoods—some with sen- iority going back to September, 1950—were laid off, bringing the total number of men let out in the past six weeks to 540, out of a total labor force of 1,050. Management indicated that more layoffs are due in the fu- ture, and told the men that there would be no rehiring before Feb- ruary, 1954, SASK, CCF GALLS F WORLD TRA SASKATOON Lifting of all embargoes on trade with Asia and freer trade with e among the demands chewan section of the convention here last the countries of all countries wer voiced by the Saskat COP: atic annual weekend. pted by delegates Other resolutions ado mbers of parlia- and urged upon CCF me ment included: @ Demand for immediate withdrawal of British troops from British Guiana and r reinstatement of the colony's con’ ded by the British gow nth after the demo- cratically-elected People’s Progressive rnment headed by Dr. Cheddi oved from office on ges of plotting 4 d'etat.’ fo stitution, suspen ernment last mo gove Jagan had been rem atently false char; “Communist coup E (The convention called. for “‘support to the legitimate aspirations of colonial peoples to achieve independence and to determine their own form of gov- ernment.’ ) Demand for immediate seating of the “actual’’ government of China in the United Nations as soon as a Korean truce is signed. Proposal for holding a plebiscite in For- mosa, now held by the remnants of Chiang Kai-shek’s forces, maintained only by U.S. arms. Condemnation of the white supremacy policies of the Malan government of South Africa. (The convention re- affirmed strenuous opposition to Ma- lan’s policies in a special resolution.) | PT een sae eT eT shel ehh ll el seen e aaiis = sal lin MILI ellie "y rare AT Ten linet “‘Bibieion