Phursday, April 10, 1952. * THE TRIBUNE, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. | cieays Black and son Jack and Don Petrie of Twin Lake Roe Lake News KENNETH HIGGINS of Canim Lake has been in the Roe Lake Com- munity for the past two weeks help-| GORDON THORSTPENSON a trip to 100 Mile one ay this we ing his brother, Marion Higgins at at his sawmill. Kenneth returned to, w Canim Lake this week. AL HULE h his family ERT, who is emptoyed| peay sir: As a School ‘Trustee in La Mache spent the ®eek-end | py iti at Roe Lake. | THE SNOW PLOW plowed most A LARGE CROWD attended the! a1) the side roads last Legion dance at the Double T hail last Saturday night. It was an ama- teur night dance, and a lot of local| Thig is the worst, time of year for/are not more accidents when youj the h talent was displayed. Music was by | setting around. the Egan Lake orchestra. Everyone Teported a good time. MR. ahd MRS. LEE ROBERTS and Donald visited Sunday with Mrs. ! go first. . week. The| main road is quite muddy at present writing, due to melting snow banks. A LOT OF HAY PILES are dis- appearing With the snow. much consternation over which will causing Blac: Raneh. de | A WORD OF APPRECIATION | naitor, The Tribune, is not h Columbia 1 would like to say a word or two of appreciation to the School Bus Driver — one of the | cedure emyloy. It is surprising to me that there] carety were last y FISHERMEN! DON'T THROW AWAY BROKEN PENN REELS Have Them Repaired We now carry a full stock of genuine PENN reel parts your Penn recl for servicing ... Fly or trolling rod guides, tips and ferrules also replaced. so before opening day rolls around bring in one fatality. train I would like to say, “Well done, | papits. Bus Drivers, but let's make our] —pyo record even better. With a little thought on your part you can be- come as-important a teacher as the actual teacher in the classrvom. It is from you the pupil can learn good sportsmanship, discipline and cour- tesy.”” The pupils learn safety habits during their early\ years. Their atti- tudes in later life can often be trac- ed to the habits they learned while riding the school bus. The driver |. has a tremendous influence in shap-! , The stances CARIBOO RADIO SALES and SERVICE the highway and will quickly notice “Ob, ner of all d practice of the h but this unsafe driving Eetter to. thesEditopees Grae, ons ise mm Bridge Lake News ST of Bridge Lake will | Resort Owners be eight-one years of age on April born in Ontario and and is the common hway. The driver the pupils, | s also teach-} 11. Mr. ers HARRY Cs only endange itig them to follow his example. should explain his pro-| Served hi and unloading,|@*maker and pr in loading most important groups of pcople we|@nd give his reasons for th cedures. In this manner he ing pupils an responsibility drivers has grown so tremendously | vented and built a very efficient in recent years that their status is| clothes washing machine, and last the same as a teacher’ . Again I say, ‘Thank you for a job well-done. Frank Venables, B.C. School Trustee butcher was ing the thinking of the children who| roast recently when ride with him. Pupils are quick to| observed: | notice any lack of sportsmanship on| lot of bone aren’t you?” ve no, I'm not,” any deficiencies which the driver) butcher. ‘You're paying 99 cents a may have in handling the bus. If the] pound for it.” important lesson in A pupil who learns to cross zhway correctly when leaving consider the over-ambitious, -over-| i}, hus will follow the same practice impetuous group of young people | when he is alone in traffic. The d they have to transport. I do not know | o¥ shonla xactly how many accidents there|to pedestrians who are not walking year, but I know uf only} properly on the ull the attention of pupils highway and thus pupils in correct walking|has a flare fur mechauical invention. “gay, you're giving me a] Apzil 2nd when the thirty-fifth anni- s schooling there, he thon de ese pro-| While a young man in various parts teach-|f Canada and the United States. his Mr. Cast served in France during the first Great War as a sergeant witha Canadian regiment of engin- 's, Was cited for bravery. in a di: patch from the front and was lau invalided home severely woundec. e . Cast is still very active, and He has built much of the furniture of schooi bus] in his cosy little bome, he also in- in most in- | Christmas, built and presented to his grandchildren a bobsled which has been the envy of every boy and girl in the neighborhood. NINIAN DOUGALL Jr., eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Ninian Dougall, cele- brated his sixth birthday on Mareh 31st. MR. and MRS. E. W HODGES weighing up a] Were supper guests at the home of his customer] their daughter, Mrs Joyce Ross, on President, ry of their marriage was mark- answered the|ed, and the 11th birthday of John, est son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross, was celebrated. blowouts, punctures and dangerous skids It’s here .. . the revolutionary B. F. Good- rich Tubeless Tire that needs no inner tube. The air-retaining lining is actually a part of the tire itself. A DREAM COME TRUE Ever since B. F. Goodrich built tires for the first automobile manufactured on this continent, the dream of tire engineers has been a pneumatic tire that would need no inner tube. During World War II, B. F. Goodrich research made such a tire pos- sible. It was used on combat vehicles under the most difficult driving conditions. Later the Tubeless Tire was perfected for use on automobiles. In 1946 tests were made on police cars and taxi fleets. It was a complete success ... a dream come true ... the B. F. Goodrich Tubeless Tire that protects against punctures, blowouts and dangerous skids. PROVEN ON THE ROAD The B. F. Goodrich Tubeless Tire has been used for over four years in the U.S.A. by thousands of motorists. Their acceptance and exceptional mileage reports are your guarantee that this is the finest tire you can buy. B. F. Goodrich Tubeless Tires fit your present rims. No special fittings are needed. The scientifically designed rim- seal ridges form an air-tight pressure lock against the rim. It can’t come off ... doesn’t lose air. See this revolutionary tire now at your neighbourhood B. F. Gvuodrich dealer. The only tire that protects you from all three driving hazards... blow out. blocks’’. tread, giv PROTECTS AGAINST PU NOTU RES A layer of sealant rubber, under the tread, sticks to any puncturing object preventing loss of air. When the object is removed, the puncture seals itself instantly and permanently, PROTECTS AGAINST BLOWOUTS Most blowouts start when a tire is bruised. The damaged casing pinches and chafes the inner tube until it blows. The B.F.G. Tubeless Tire has no inner tube to pinhole leaks that lose air so slowly you have miles in which to make a safe, easy stop. A S PROTECTS AGAINST DANGEROUS Oui The Tubeless Tire he with thousands of flexible rubber “grip- tional tires... up to - up to 100% more o this new tread increas Damage to the tire can only cause an amazing new tread These tiny ing greater t locks grip like a tank action than conven- % more on wet roads ice. The flexibility of s tire mileage 10 to 15%. WHERE YOU SEE THIS SICN...SEE THE B.F.G. TUBELESS TIRE Available In Williams Lake At PAT’S TIRE SERVICE 1 LONE BUTTE Prepare Fer Summe t week started the return trek of resort owners to get ready for the summer season. Those returning were Mr. and Mrs. Parent of Holiday Lodge, Sulphurous Lake; the Chas. Womacks, Deka Lake Lodge, and Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Nordgren, Lone Butte Auto Court On Thursday, Apri] 3, Canim Lake Sawmills had a crew of twelve men in Lone Butte, loading three car- loads of U.K. ties. MRS. FRED SAKREWZKY left here on Thursday morning's train for Williams Lake hospital. The Sak- rewzkys expect an increase in the family. THE Optimist Club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bat- kin Saturday evening. MRS. WEBB JOHNSTON is now convalescing at the Batkins home in Lone Butte. Mrs. Johnston is pro- gressing nicely. THERE WAS QUITE some excite- ment in.Lone Butte at noon on Mon- day when the chimney ot the teach- erage caught fire, with the nearest water at the Hospital avout 150 yards ;away. However thanks to Mr. Chas. Hayes’ quick action, there was ‘no damage done. - MRS. JEAN HAINES, nurse at the Outpost Hospital, has her son Billy, age 6 years, up from Vernon for the Easter Holidays. ON SATURDAY it looked like spring with the thermometer regis- tering above 60 degrees but on Sun- day it was winter again with snow and freezing weather. MRS. CHRISTINE SMITH was in Ashcroft on Sunday for the badmin- ton tournament. JACK DEVRIES, section foreman got a hurry-up call for patrol duty when a freight train jumped the track.at Mile 224 Monday morning. THE Saddle Lads of New West- minster played a return engagement at a Saturday night dance. There was a nice crowd. SOME of F. Benard’s sawmill crew are setting up a new mill about a mile out of Lone Butte on the Horse Lake road. F. BENARD has closed his mill on Fawn Creek until such time as the roads are open again. MRS. CHAS. FABSSLER of North Bridge Lake has gone to Vancouver for a while. BILL.TURNER, who has been working for Steve Levick has return- ed to the Chilcotin. Viewpoint... (Continued from Page 2) grow more intense. Premier Johnson of British Col- umbia loses a great strategic advan- tage in not announcing now the con- struction of a railway north from Prince George. Before the summer is over every indication is that a new rail line will go north from Grimshaw to hook in the Northwest Territories with 1n- terior North America. Southern Indian, a little heard or lake, is the fourth largest in Mani- toba. ye a q ml Sraer wit Emon : 7 AS This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columb