7 pm. to get the election turns and give shoppers an ant porturity to lock over the ba- zaar Stalls. _ dm addition to the Many bar- gains available at the LPP ba- Zaar, hourly prizes on Thursday and Friday of shortening, raisins canned goods, etc., will be given to bazaar shoppers. Here is how it works: When sales slips show purchases have been made @r more, a ticket will be and each hour some lucky one will get the precious food ‘items. This should interest even the most timid of shoppers as it is not every day that one has an op- portunity of seeing such goods let alone getting them. Shopping bags by the dozens will give a variety for shoppers, and are of the best of materials with a price that is right. The goods that are in hand at this date will Surprise and please the fussiest buyers. Children’s ‘-wool- jen and tweed clothing, aprons and cloths, high grade pillow- slips and gift items, to mention only a few of the dozens of ar- ticles that you €an’t go wrong on. The baking contest will be on Thursday aiterncon at 3.00 p.m. and the committee announces that this will be for chocolate cakes only, iced or otherwise. Geod prizes are being offered that Of $1 given urged to be on hand 4 half hour cr more prior to the juds- img with their entries. It would ASSist if those entering the con- eb ae cal PAc. 1455 any day Gress fete (yo 6 eee ara ce Game prizes are being lined up and this year the trend is toward items of real value and not SO much of an ornamental nature. This applies in general toe the whole of the bazaar as the com- mittee has set the thenie of value for your dollar with first class geeds. -Ana@ to mention the ‘ba- zaar to your friends is really do- ing them a favor aside from giv- ing it publicity. Candy will be on sale for a Period of each day to give all a chance to get it, for though there iS a goodly quantity it is not limitless as anyone who gets in the many lines these days can testify. Wndershirts for children are available but on this there are just a few dozen and means limiting them to each Shopper. Ehe committee asks that the clubs with articles and goods ior the bazaar please get them in 2s Soon as possible and not leave it to the last minute, This also applies to the ticket sales returns, and giving an eleventh hour push on unsold tickets will guarantee the ~success of WVancouvers premier bazaar. and the IlIadies (or men) 2re } Dominion marketing act sought by B.C. farmers Meeting in the Hotel Vancouver, the 13th annual con- vention of the B.C. Federation of Agriculture is making a strong bid for legislation which will ensure to farmers a larger share of the national wealth. They demand the enact- ment of a Dominion Marketing Act, similar to the present pro- vinelal statute, which will pro- vide a parity with other indus- tries in return for their produc- tive power. The convention passed a strong resolution opposing the proposed boost of 30 percent in freight rates and the discrimination in rail charges practiced against the West Another resolution spon- sered by the North Okanagan Farmers’ Institute took issue with the 121 to 25 percent increase in farm machinery, a gift handed the machinery manufcturers by the WPTB without a public hear- ing or consultation with farmers’ organizations. Other resolutions dealt with extension of power lines in rural areas, removal of the three-cent gasoline tax for farmers, upward revision~ of ceil- ing prices on hay and other pro- duce, to allow the farmer a fair margin of returns above cost. A resolution also urged that the export regulations on glucose be lifted to enable the marketing of large surpluses of cull potatoes in the Fraser Valley, which un- der present marketing regulations, are almost a dead loss to the growers. : Mosley praises Byrnes LONDON —The U-S: govern- ment’s refusal to share atom se- erets with the Soviet Union has drawn high praise from Sir Os- wald Mosley, former head of the British Union of Fascists who was jailed during the war for his pro- Nazi activities. The praise is con- tained in the first issue of Mos- ley’s new monthly newsletter, im which he calls for “firm united action now” against Russia. 63- West Cordova Street - ~- HIGH QUALITY LOGGERS AND WORE BOOTS HAND - JOHNSON’ MADE S BOOTS Ss 5 Phone MArine 7612 Gora Goed. . come Suit or Overcoat REGENT TAILORS 324 West Hastings Street to the EVERY GARM PACIFIC TRIBUNE — PAGE 7 ENT STRICTLY UNION MADE -risdale-Shaughnessy areas. Can die together but not play MIAMT, Hla —Recent cancella- | tion of a football. game between the University of Miami and Penn State College because the north- ern team included two Negro players was vigorously protested by the Dade County Civil Rights Council and the American Veter- ans Committee. in a message to President Bow- man EF. Ashe of the University of Miami, the €RC declared: “Negro and white soldiers fought together during World War Hf and many of them died together. They certainly should be good enough to play foot- ball together anywhere in these United States.” Quebec unions support Noranda MONTREAL, Que.—Voic- ing CCL support to the strik- ing Rouyon-Norandga miners, Jean Marie Bedard, Regional Di- rector of the C@L declared here that “the shipping of provincial police into the Rouyn-Noranda area is a strong attempt to in- timidate the workers there.” “This action,” Mr. Bedard continued, “follows clesely on the heels of the anti-working class activity unleashed by the Quebec provincial government against the CCL unions.” - The CCL Regional Director ex- pressed his conviction that the WNoranda strikers would not be impressed by the show of force as expressed by the provincial police but would stand firm until their strike was won. ‘Another bus tour scheduled As a result of the keen inter- est shown by citizens whg@ have availed themselves of the Civic Reform Committee bus tours to inspect first-hand the deplorable neglect in civic administration under the CNPA, another tour is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 7. The bus will leave Hastings and Nanaimo intersection Saturday at 2.30 p.m., and will pick up addi- tional people enroute at Camp- bell and Hastings. The tour will be in the city area east of Main St., thence to the ‘Nob Hill’ Ker- In the latter area all utilities, streets, sewage, lighting, are rated tops, while in the eastern section of the city, similar utilities are in a state of disrepair or non-existent. Almost all of the GCNPA candi- dates and incumbents reside in the “Nob Hill area. Civic Reform candidates Rud- dell, Turner and Jones, will ac- company the sight-seeing tour. Mounting interest in the election indicates that this will be the biggest tour so far. BOOK OF THE WEEK ODYSSEY THROUGH HELL Raymond Arthur Davies $3.00 For Any Book In Print Write or Call ; People’s Cooperative Bookstore 337 WYest Pender St. Vancouver, B.C. AAA Another pair of ‘supermen’ reach the road’s end: Col.-Gen. Eberhart von Mlackensen (left), and lLieut.-Gen. Kurt Meizner (right) at the opening of their trial in Rome, Italy. Whey are charged with the bmital massacre of 335 Italian hostages. Youth conference marks step for national b By BOB ody LAXER | A two-day conference held in the Chateau Laurier, Ot- tawa, may Open the door to an all-inclusive National Pedera- tion of Youth Organizations in Canada. Called by the Can- adian Youth Commission the gates representing Major “youth- serving agencies” and many na- tional youth bodies was convened to consider how to put into life the conclusions of the Youth Commission. Four years of “research and-4 fact-finding” by the commission has produced six volumes already in print and four more to come on the main aspects of youth en- deavor and interest. Chief among these are jobs, heaith, recreation and citizenship. Delegates agreed that the commission had done a job in digging up facts. Getting action from the government was to be a much tougher assignment. Important feature of the con- ference was the presence of over eighty French-Canadian delegates. The Y’s, Protestant and Catholic Youth Groups, Social Service Ag- Several spokesmen pointed to the absence of trade union represen- tatives among the best “youth serving agencies,” aS a serious weakness in the conference. Sharp exchanges in the panels centred on the important prin- ciple of the independence of the youth movement. The preponder- vance of “grey-haired’” youth lead- ers and of persons over 30 years of age weakened but didn’t drown the voice of the younger people who insisted that they wanted a national youth movement in which they would run their own show. Delegates of the National Feder- ation of Tabor Youth, of some of the Catholic youth groups from Quebec, the Labor-Progressive Party and others fought for the right of the young people to in- dependence. They called for the establishment of federations, na- tional and provincial, where the youth could meet to plan joint action. No final decisions were > We Specialize in ; TOM BINNIE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE 1541 Pacific Highway, R.R. No. 4, New Westminster Phone N.W. 2669-E-2 the Fraser Valley UNIVERSAL NEWS STAND 112 EAST HASTINGS ... features... Language and Home Yown Newspapers and Progressive Literature IF WE DON’T STOCK IT, WE CAN GET IT x 3 Bs encies as well as political youth | organizations were in attendance. conference of -over 200 dele- taken at the conference on the future of youth collaboration in Canada, d 3 Labor representatives in’ sum- Marizing their views of the con- ference emphasized that there is bound to be a struggle between tory elements like Dr. Sidney Smith, president of the Univers—_ ity of Toronto, one time contend-. er for leadership of the tories and chairman of the Youth Com- Mission and others of a pro- gressive outlook. The outcome, it — is felt here by impartial observ-_ ers, will depend on the strength of the independent activities of - young people in the unions and of labor youth. : : — Get Your XMAS | CARDS” Now $1.50 | a dezen from the | LPP Provincial Office 209 - 10 Shelly Bidg. ; Vancouver B.C. FRIGAY, DECEMBER 6, 1946