— > Page 6 THE TRIBUNE, Ww WLIAMS LAKE, B.C. Thursday, June La A95 1. Buttons were first put on men’s coat sleeves by Frederick the Great, to keep his soldiers from wiping their noses on their sleeves, GOODZYEAR MARATHON Now wallble in2 tread, designs See us today for this Good- year mileage bargain! LOOK FoR THis “HIGH SIGN’ OF QUALITY Central Service Ltd. *AUTHORIZED. GOOD, T SUPREME GASOLINE Skinny men, women ie army corporal, was sent East — HORSEFLY NEWS KEN ROBERTSON of Miocene, ow) census enumerator has been busy about the d for severai | --- WITH IRENE T was looking for a mislaid book|“2YS this past week. the other evening and in my search- ~, BARTON from Longview, ings I delved into the bottom drawer Washington, with F.C. Hooker, ar- of the bureau which is almost com-|tived in town Monday night. Dr. Bar. pletely full of snapshots and pictures, | 0" is hunting with a camera, He has Needless to say, I got no further with | @/"eady taxen some good shots of beur. my searchings and spent the remain-| GLEN WALTERS left for Langley der of the evening chortling over for-| Prairie Wednesday morning on a pusi- gotten incidents, laughing at out-|2ess trip. Mr. Walters imtones to go dated styles, and feeling very nostail-| on to Vancouver to see his daughter gic for by-gone days. Lorine and to visit his mother Mrs, T have said a hundred times that! 4. B. Campbell before returning home if we are ever unfortunate enough to] MR. and MRS. FRED JONISS and be wiped out by fire, I hope I have|Daby Linda were visiters at Williams the presence of mind to save that| Lake Tuesday. bottom drawer full of pictures. But) GARTH WALTERS, who has been Till probably be like the majority of] working at Boston Bu since April, people, and either try and move some-| arr ived in Horsefly Vhursday night. thing unwieldy lke the piano or re-| He spent a few days at home with frigerator — or grab some actos [ails family and returned to Boston Bar ornament in my wild dash out the| Sunday. door. MRS. BEN-GRUHS was hostess at Our clothes and most of our fur-|the June tea of the month. Guest o1 nishings can be replaced and in time| honor was Mrs. Gruhs’ mother, Mrs. We get over the sentimental attach-| Larson, Other guests were Mrs. Geo. ment of many lost articles. But pie-| Hockley, Mrs, Joe tures can never be replaced, and Bessie Lowry and Mrs. Stan Barrett. they tell, of the places you went, the | while practicing on Friday afternoo: People you knew, of loved ones dead tor the high jump. Fréd Jones and H. and gone and small incidents both Clarke took him out to Dr. Miller, humorous and sad in our life, who set the arm immediately, Almost ten years of married life and a few years of “going together” are recorded in the contents of our bottom drawer, and it would break my heart to lose them. Medieval Customs Our wedding pictures bring back In Weddings memories of the terrific rush of ar-| aitough June is indisputably the ranging a fairly large wedding in the] most Popular month for weddings, Scant two weeks before Clive, then neither the Romans who started thc Practice, nor the generations at pres. ‘and my horrible unexplained fear ent observing it can explain with com that the best man would drop the ring] plete satisfaction the reason for the during the ceremony. season's popularity. | Tote Mee literally “thousands"| oS Popularity of army pictures) taken at the various from a reaction to the dim view held camps across Carlada where Clive was - stationed. Then pictures of us both in| °" May marriages, because the itso Nova Scotia — there is.the “dragon,”|V@5 SuPPosed to be under the influ- my landlady, and her husband who | °UCe Of spirits adverse to a happy was exactly the opposite, a quiet, | #0usehold ae : even-tempered man; pictures of our ‘hough the Superstition, of “some- one little tom rented at a fabulous! ‘MIRE old, something new” is still ob- sum in a war-packed town; and hap. Se!¥ed in the modern weddings, there my outings with Clive and his soldier #"€ shappily, many others which have aie, long been discarded. For instance, Then coming home alone, stopping theFe no longer seems to be any dan. im Saskatchewan to visit relatives on €¥ of the clergy forbidding a mar- the farm, the new experience of help- "88° after sunset because the crowd ing with a harvest, and pictures of 1S likely to carry off the party by Meccuaeonneee force to the nearest alehouse. Our first home when Clive returned from overseas, and the magnificent plum tree in full bloom in the front| Well. But modern emancipated woman yeard, Hundreds of pictures of ani.| Would frown at the allowances ge mals — Mac, when he first arrived|@S once given. Three blows with a asa small lovable handful of Scoten| !0omstick were on any part of his tur with drooping ears; aristocratic| Wife's person except the head, was Diane, the great grandmother of aji|uite legitimate behavior, according: our cats owned by Clive's parents | ‘0 an ancient Welsh law, providing the (she always managed to be around| stick was no longer than the hus- when pictures were being taken);|band’s arm and no thicker than the Suzanne, our first cat, a beautiful | middle finger—Prince George Citizen, Persian tortoiseshell, whom we lost ee BIRTHS when we moved to Chilliwack; and finally Mamie and Mickey as two balls of fluff that 1 couldn't make up At War Memorial Hospital my mind over which one I wanted and| HARRY — To Mr. and Mrs, Alfred ended up by taking both. : Harry of Alkali Lake, a daughter Scenes at Chilliwack ané our cute born June 9th. home with the concrete bathtub. Our PAUL — To Mr. and Mrs. Walter first car, an Austin, and my Dad with Paul of Alkali Lake, a daughter One legitimate reason might come Long ago, as. now, the husbang was’ bound by oath to treat his new wite his big new Buick which he lovingly| born June 13th, called “Helen” parked alongside mak- ing a ridiculous contrast. LS a See ee Then tragedy, and pictures of my|ranged from downright plump to father's grave, banked with flowers. | quite slim. Our boat “Clirene” is pictured from| There are pictures of fishing the laying of the keel to the final| “catches” of course, and fishing trips; launching; Dad Stangoe is seen in| of picnics, boat trips and car trips, almost every one, putting a “labor of| scenes of winter and icicles hanging love” into every board and every nail.| several feet long from the house, and But he never lived to see it completed. |hot weather trips to the beach. Clive's appearance seems to have| So many memories, caught for a changed little over the past ten years,|second on a roll of lm and Suspend- but my dresses have been long, short|ed in time as almost living reminders and long again — and my hair has|of the past, It is no wonder we treas- been long, upswept and short, I have| ure them so, Cook’s Nook | Well, this corner is still manging to stagger along for another week, puc Just-by the skin of iis zeeth, My sole respunse t} feom Mrs. M.