ANSE TT Thursday, October 22, 1953.- ii THE TRIBUS E, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. Page 3 Niquidet Transport Williams Lake - Horsefly R. M. Blair's office, Wms. Lake, phone K66 Horsetly Phone, 3 short 1 long $50,000.00 FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTION Qealer’s Clearance) Monday, October 26, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. HUNDREDS OF ITEMS New - Used - And Demonstrators @ TRACTORS ®@ PLOWS @ BARN EQUIPMENT © IMPLEMENTS ALL AT YOUR OWN PRICES! ABBOTSFORD AUCTION MARKET Abbotsford, B.C. Royal Canadian Air Force “CAREER COUNSELLOR” Will be at the - RANCH HOTEL Williams Lake from 12 noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday, 27th October, 1993 Lone Butte News THE D, W. Bentleys have moved from this district to the North Thompson. THERE will be a school meeting at the school November 7th at § p.m. THE Bert Browns and family have moved to Vancouver for the winter. THE junior grades at the school will enjoy having Thursday and Friday off while Miss M. Frazer at- tends the teachers convention at{ Prince George, October 23 and 24. TUESDAY MORNING Mike Zo- mar had a crew with a trim saw saw- ing tie-ends at the siding in Lone Butte when the motor caught fire. and was totally destroyed. Mike suf- fered a scorched face and a badly burned hand. THE Dunean McLeans spent the weekend at the coast. MRS. JAN VANDYK and son and Mrs. Hood and son took a trip to Williams Lake with Mr. and Mrs. Bric Watts on Monday, THE PUBLIC WORKS are busy in Lone Butte building new streets. Two on the north side of the railway. and one on the west side of town. THE Lone Butte and South Cari- boo Hospital Auxiliary held a meet- ing in the Outpost Hospital Sunday afternoon. Members present wer Mrs. Sig. Larum, president; Mrs. J. A. McMillan, — secretary-treasure: Mr, and Mrs. Perey Willard, Mrs. Horace Woodrow, Mrs. Len Couck~ cll,, Mrs. Ray Flaherty, sr., and Miss M. Frazer. The ladies were busy be-! fore the meeting, hemming and hang- ing curtains. At the meeting Mrs. H! Woodrow suggested that a bazaar be held by the auxiliary as a means of raising money to help pay off our share of the cost of building the hos- pital. This plan was adopted and it was decided to have a Bazaar and chicken supper in the hall on No- vember 28th. Price of the chicken supper will be adults seventy-five cents, children thirty-five cents. There will be whist and other games after supper. It was decided to have the, Annual Meeting at the hospital on November 15th at 2 p.m, Membership fees are 50c and everyone is wel- come. Directors have been issued membership receipt books. HORSEFLY Residents Remember RCAF Crash Victim Horsefiy is saddened by the news of the death of F/O Robert Alex- ander Pegues in a plane accident at Greenwood, N.S. on October 9. in his 31st year. He leaves to mourn his loss his loving wife and two sons, David Michael and Donald Alexander, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pegues, Quesnel and brother, Joe, Powell River. “Bobby,” as we knew him, attended elementary school here, was at all times pleasant and agreeable, liked by old and young. Funeral service with full military honors took place on October 19 at Burrard Chapel, North Vancouver, Squadron Leader, Rev. BE. W. S. Gilbert officiating. Interment was in the Soldiers Plot, Capilano View Cemetery. Friends here extend deep- est sympathy to the bereaved family. MR. and MRS. G. H. WALTERS are happy over the birth of their first granddaughter to Ron and Lorine Huffman, Vancouver, on the 11th. THE ANNOUNCEMENT has been made by Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Hooker of the forthcoming marriage of their only daughter, Margaret Donella to Mr. John Patrick Corrigan Novem- ber 14, Horsefly Community Hall. MARVIN WALTERS and two friends, E. Eckert~and Clare John- son, are up from Taft for a hunt. Marvin is also visiting relatives jhere. B. GRUHS, Public Works foreman at Williams Lake, is home for two weeks holidays. MRS. T. MaecDOUGALL spent a week at the ranch of her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrg. E. Jen- ner. UP from Kamloops are Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Carfrae, visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Brown, FIND OUT TODAY HOW TO BECOME A RADIO or RADAR TECHNICIAN Tatlayoko Lake News THE ANNUAL Cattle Show and Sale was well attended by the valley folk. Trucks loaded with cattle had been leaving the valley regularry for several days previously. Hodgsons loaded the Circle X cattle at Tatla Lake after their two day drive from home. The two registered Hereford bulls: Tatlayoko Ace and Tatlayoko Colonel, raised and shown by Joe Schuk looked very well in the ring, we thought. We experienced a glow of civic pride also, in his group of five steers winning second place in their class. KATIE SCHUK is out of the War Memorial Hospital after spending three days in bed due to a dislocated shoulder. She was rounding up a few beef steers on October 4th, to have them ready for trucking out, when her horse vented his mean streak and bucked like a stampede circuit brone. Katie afterwards explained: “They say you're supposed to ride them to a standstill. I didn't.” She was rushed to the Williams Lake hospital by Will and Carm Purjue, |meeting her husband Joe on his re- turn trip from taking in a load of beef. She may be able to return home in another week. MISS BLEANOR SCHUK returned RCAF Pilot Escapes Using Ejection Seai —Centra) Press Canadian Pilot Officer G. W Hunter, 30, of Hamilton, bailed out of his CF-100 jet fighter before the air- craft crashed and burned near North Bay, Ont. The pilot was able to clear the aircraft by the use of his ejector seat. The jet crashed near McQuaby Lake, 25 miles southwest of North Bay. F.O. Hunter is married and has a son, Ian, five. and Ken Haynes lost a mess of Clear- to Williams Lake October 3rd with) water lake trout to a marauding | her brother Joe, after spending, a) cougar. The loss of the meat is only short holiday visiting with her mo-| ther, Mrs. Sara Schuk, our local a part of such an attack. In both cases the meat safe screening was storekeeper. Don and Dolly went out jert in shreds. at the same time for a short visit at the ‘Lake.’ seen at close range in George Rett- burg’s hayfield last week. They be- jcame a bit too sociable with Don !Gagne’s mare and colt, pasturing there. The terrified horses jumped the fence and took off to a safer dis- tance. A further report on the hears’ sociability was brought in this week. They ‘snuck’ up on Johnny Hender- son’s meat safe one dark nite, and with no regard for the needs of the family, ‘cleaned’ it. Meat safes don’t seem to be what the term implies, these days. Mary Annual Meeting War Memorial Arena’ Society will be held in MUNICIPAL HALL FRIDAY, NOV. 6 8:30 p.m. During 1952 hourly earnings in TWO yearling grizzly bear were Canadian manufacturing rose by 10.6 per cent over 1951. Manufacture of/merchandise and shipping tags is a $17,250,000 busi- ness each year in Canada. International TRUCKS 100 MILE HOUSE GARAGE ¢ OFFERS YOU LE.L. & McCulloch CHAIN SAWS AND FIRE PUMPS ALSO Austin CARS AND TRUCKS “I didn’t have any previous training at all. The Air Force taught me all I know about radio.” says Cpl. Bob Sibbert, Communications Technician who works on the newest radio-radar equipment of Sabre Jet Fighters and other RCAF aircraft. You, too, can train as a qualified aircraft technician— enjoy service life in the RCAF - — Serve Canada and help keep ’em flying safely. If you are between 17 and 40, are physically fit and have Grade 8 education or better, there’s a place for you in Canada’s expanding Air Force. Investigate today! RADAR COMMUNICATIONS AERO-ENGINE INSTRUMENT ARMAMENT ELECTRICAL For complete information on pay, trade training and other benefits, see the Career Counsellor at the nearest RCAF Recruiting Unit—or mail the coupon today! Royal Canadian Air Force Director of Personnel Manning, R.C.A.F. Headquarters, Ottawa. Please mail to me, without obligation, full particulars regarding enrolment requirements and openings now available in the CALE. NAME (Please Print) STREET ADDRESS Osy.4 PROVINCE. EDUCATION (by grade and province) CAF-29-52WS Used Cars and Trucks Stoves - Washing Machines Water Pressure Systems Atlas and Goodyear Tires Light Plants - Fire Extinguishers GOOD STOCK OF AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AND ACCESSORIES