EO: eT) Thursday, April 15, 1954, THE TRIBUNE, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. BELSAW NC compact light Nez SN From all rat the wor ‘Belsaw users, telling of their success. For fall information rezarding Beleaw portable sawmills.” \y* Can Put Money in Your Pocket _ You can make big profits with a Beleaw portable sawmi ical to operate; it ean be power uructor, or automobile ‘engine, “or power t apa yasizes oply one/man operation; a Belsaw ee sawmill will pay for tecif ia a shore bt-weight steel construction, the Belaaw portable and quickly eet up. ‘orld have come letters from satinGied rite, wire or pl EXCLUSIVE B.C. DISTRIBUTOR: HEAPS WATEROUS LIMITED NEW WESTMINSTER BRITISH COLUMBIA Niquidet Transport Williams’ Laké - Horsefly RM. Blai *s office, Wms. Lake, phone R66 ~ Horsetly Phone, 3 short 1 long: HEAR HON. RALPH CHETWYND OVER STATION CBU 10:15 p.m. Monday, April 19 LG: Man Suffers Stroke But Drives To Lone Butte For Aid On Friday evening Mr. William Chiupan suffered a stroke which completely paralzed the right side of his body. Mr. Chiupan was rushed to Ashcroft Hospital. According to Mrs. Chiupan her husband’s stroke occurred just prior to leaving the house to go to a picture show at Lone Butte. Mr. Chiupan got the family truci out and when his wife joined him he could not speak to her. The stricken man managed to drive the truck three and a quarter miles into Lone Butte. BUTTE NEWS MARCH went out with a deep Freeze at Lone Butte, the thermo- meter registered ten below zero. THURSDAY EVENING the Lone Butte P-TA held their monthly meeting at the school. Mr. Oscien- ny of the 100 Mile P-TA was the guest speaker and also officiated at the installation of officers. It was decided to do nothing further until the next meeting which will be on the first Thursday of May. SATURDAY the _ temperature reached a high of fifty-one degrees. HARVY POWELL spent a few days in the Outpost Hospital with a heavy, chest cold. STEVE LEVICK is talking treat- ments at the Outpost Hospital for a poisoned hand. Fly Vancouver 2144 Hours $ $9.) 5 09 ONE WAY Phone 93 Secs Canadian Pacific AIRLINES 100 Mile News A MEETING was held at 100 Mile School on Mareh 31st for the pur- pose of organizing the South Cariboo District Track Meet. About fifteen persons were pre- sent, J. Phillipson, Williams Lake, was chairman and A. Halleran, also of Williams Lake, acting secretary. It, was decided to have the same program as last year with the addi- ton of a Tug-of-War which was pro- posed by E. A. Morrow of Forest Grove and met with instant appro- val. After a discussion regarding the hurdle racing, it was decided that a competitor knocking over more than half the hurdles will be disqualified. Keith Maltman, sports instructor, Quesnel, gave an interesting talk on hurdle racing. Inspector W. J. Mouat promised to requisition a stop watch for timing the races and a starting pistol for 100 Mile House where it is planned to hold the next, May 29, Track Meet, and it is plan- ned to hold all succeeding Track Meets at 100 Mile as it is more cen- tral. When the meeting adjourned Mr. Oscienny invited all present to his home for coffee and sandwiches. ALL WHO KNEW Lady Martin Cecil will he very sorry to hear of her death on March 30. Quite a H-BOMB’S AWE-INSPIRING BEAUTY : —Central Press Canadian This photo of the 1952 hydrogen bomb blasts in the Pacific shows the mushroom effect forming two minutes after the blast. The photo was taken 50 miles from the detonation site at a height of 12,000 feet and caught the mushroom before it spread out to cover 100 miles of ocean. Ten minutes after this pattern was formed, the cloud stem had pushed upward abou: 25 miles into the stratosphere, mumber here will r Lady Martin, when she arrived from Eng- land as a bride, and her sweet per- sonality and many kindnesses to us all at 100 Mile. THE P.W.D. have snowploughed the road, and are keeping it sanded. The 100 Mile Garage wrecker pulled out a car that had slewed over the embankment north of the railway crossing, the car was badly damaged but no one seemed hurt. Around the corner from the 98 Mile a trailer skidded across the road, holding up a line of cars till it got straightened out and on its way again. MR. HOWELL of Stevenson, was here last week making arrange- ments with C. Pelkey to have the site of the new pool hall bulldozed, ready to start the erection of the poo) hall as soon as weather permits. Mr. Howell plans to have a barber shop also. 5 Take notice that the Liquor Control Board of British Columbia, with the approval of the Lieutenant-Governor in Council, has designated the following area as a licensing area for the issuance of licences under the “Government 4 Liquor Act, 1953”:— Licensing Area No. 69. in the (N (d) Are p licence for consumption w: ‘THE GOVERNMENT OF THE PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Description: Village of Williams Lake. licensing area are as follows:— consumption on licensed premises? ot with m on licensed premis (Note:—Dining-lounge licences will be is: as cabarets, and to clubs.) you is favour of the sale of liquor under a lounge licence for consumption on licensed And further take notice that the Board will receive applications for licences within that area until the Ist day of June) 1954. And further take notice that the Board will, at a meeting to be held at the Board’s office, 525 Fort Street, in the City of Victoria, on the 2nd day of June, 1954, commencing at the hour of ten o’¢lock in the forenoon, proceed to deal with the applications for licences received prior to the Ist day of June, 1954, unless in the meantime:. (a) te Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Village of Williams Lake requests the tcnant-Governor-in Council to submit to a vote of the electors of the polling divi isions ae iin the licensing area any or all of the questions hereinafter set out; or (b) The Licitenank-Govelnor receives a petition in the form prescribed by these regulations or to a like effect signed by thirty-five per centum of the electors of the polling divisions within the licensing area requesting that any or all of the questions hereinafter set out be submitted to a vote of the electors of the polling divisions within the licensing area. The questions that shall upon request as aforesaid be submitted to a vote of the electors (a) Are you in favour of the sale of beer, ale, and stout only under a public-house licence for A public-house licence will be similar to the present beer-parlour licence.) (b) Are you in favour of the sale of beer, ale, stout, and wine only under a dining-room h meals on licensed premises? Dining-room licences will be granted to hotels, restaurants, clubs, railway-cars, steamships, and resorts.) (c) Are you in favour of the sale of liquor under a dining-lounge licence for consumption sued principally to what are commonly known Note ee licences will be issued to cocktail-bars. They will be granted only to clubs, hotels, resorts, railway-cars, and steamships.) . LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA D. McGuean, Chairman Tatlayoko Lake News THE ANNUAL Tatlayoko Snow Survey was conducted March 29th by Bracewell and G. MeNeil. Snow- shoeing to the top of Potato moun tain was easier this year owing to a recent fall of fresh snow coating the frozen drifts. The ten ‘stations’ av- eraged out ata depth.of 44.6 inches; density 11.1 inches, as compared with last year’s depth of 44.7 inches, density 7.9 inches. These Snow Sur- vey stations are set up on various water-sheds throughout B.C. and the subsequent information collect- ed by the Water Resources Invest!-} gation Division of the Department of Lands and Forests. THE FIRST FIVE DAYS of April were anything but Springlike, with snow amounting to eleven inches al- together, coming down, accompanied by a north wind. A reprieve came on the Sth with-eleer skies-end-a south wind taking the snow down fast. Temperatures remain unseasonably low however, with 47 being the warm- est April day so far. PARTS of our Road (?) have dis- ppeared under a squalor of discor ant ruts and water-logged bog holes, reducing traffic to nil or night ariv- ing. The Moore children and Bill Berwin from the ‘south end of the valley go the six miles to school by tractor. What makes a pioneer? .. . with conditions like these a fellow can’t leave the country ... and by the time the road is in shape he doesn’t want to... DON GAGNE returned to the val- ley for a visit last week, after spend- ing three months in the vicinity of Williams Lake and Quesnel. JOHNNY HENDERSON made a hurried trip to the doctor last Wea- nesday when a sliver wound in his wrist developed blood poisoning. Will Purjue drove him out. MR. and MRS. PETE BAPTISTE drove to Williams Lake Sunday. Mrs. Baptiste went out for r medical treat- ment. Famous Horse Dies A news report from Loomis, Wash- ington, records the death March 13 of Badger Mountain, one of the orneierst cayuses ever to resent a saddle and rider. The 29-year-old horse died at the ranch of Tim Ber- nard, three years after his retire- ment. Badger Mountain was successfully ridden by only one man in his 20- year career on the rodeo circuit from Pendleton, Ore., to Forth Worth, Texas, Bernard said. The man who stayed aboard on three different oc- casions was Barl Knight. The equine veteran's heart gave out as he was put in a chute so a veterinarian could work on his teeth. “BEAUTY I8.,, RESTEUL | Healthful rest comes naturally in surroundings of comfort and beauty. B-H “Fresco-Tone” is easy to apply, dries quickly, is odourless. And its pastel colours really bring cheerful restfulness. Lake Hardware Ltd. First Avenue T. P. TRADERS Williams Lake Leather Goods MANUFACTURED A ND REPAIRED AT OUR WILLIAMS LAKE SHOP. Hobby Craft Supplies LEATHERWORK, A FOR THOSE WHO MAKE A HOBBY OF FULL LINE OF PATTERNS, TOOLS AND ACCESSORIES Sporting Goods : C.C.M. PARTS AND CYCLES