Mddhatbutidiiididsdisiidididditsdsddildhidsdiliddidillissilsislilsliiiuslc daca LLL THE WESTERN CANADIAN LUMBER WORKER At Fort Macleod, Alberta 2 \ N N NY N N N NY N N N Fort Plywood IWA Workers Poised For Strike Action. FORT MACLEOD, Alber- ta, The employees of Fort Plywood and Lumber Co. Ltd. here are poised to take strike action if denied the opportunity to discuss a satis- factory settlement with man- agement. In a government- supervised strike vote, a deci- sive majority favored strike action following the rejection of a Conciliation Board’s rec- ommendations by the com- pany. Regional Ist Vice- President, Jack MacKenzie, reports that the strike dead- line has been deferred pend- ing possible mediation. In a radio broadcast over the Lethbridge stations, Mac- Kenzie disclosed that ply- wood workers here are finish- ing plywood products at $1.40 an hour from sheets peeled from logs in the Southern Interior of B.C., at a base rate of $1.89 an hour. Share- holders of the local company are also shareholders of B.C. firms at Cranbrook, Creston and Canal Flats and are thus able to ship the peeled sheets to Fort Macleod for the finishing processes. A survey conducted ‘by the Union comparing commod- ity -prices in‘chain stores operating in Southern Alber- ta points and Vancouver has revealed that living costs for the Alberta lumber workers are considerably higher than for Vancouver lumber work- ers The IWA Regional Office is utilizing the media of press and radio to place the facts before the Alberta public. Said MacKenzie in his radio statement, “The entire Union is resolved that Southern Al- berta workers shall not be starved into submission to the wage exploitation im- posed by the Alberta lumber operators. Conditions are in- tolerable, and if generally known, will not be counten- anced by the Alberta public. Southern Alberta lumber workers are being viciously exploited to provide their em- ployers an unfair profit ad- vantage in the same market supplied by the B.C. produc- tion workers at higher wage rates, Radio Sales Up Canadian radio sales rose faster in 1963 than television sets — radios climbing nearly 16 per cent to 788,862 units against 451,290 TV units or a rise of 7.4 per cent on 1962. Store your valuables in a... SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX This way you know where your important papers are. Why not coll in and arrange for one... now! CANADIAN at IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE MORE THAN 1260 BRANCHES TO SERVE YOU 1st Issue April, 1964 It’s the easy way to order an old favorite eaeee CX ee PoC doee Ee ae Ses Everywhere in British Columbia, from south of the Fraser to North of the Peace it’s *‘Pil’? for people who enjoy a truly fine beer, a beer with a distinctive flavor — fresh, natural, satisfying. Say ‘‘Pil’’ please, for CARLING PILSENER beer, enjoyed by British Colum- bians for four decades. The B.C. Beer with the Fresh Natural Flavor 9679-5 free home delivery MU 4-1121 WA 2-7530 YU 8-2636 LA 2-0343 This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. °