Thursday, February 24, 1955. ~ THE TRIBUNE, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. . Page 3 a fair sized house of sorts, but it! FORCED INTO OVERTIME WITH MISSION Abbey, wife of the owner of the Stresses Need etl looked like a shack; it leaked in Frontier Hotel at Clinton, donors o For Regional — [Planning Board! A suggestion that consideration be given to formation of a regional 5 5 planning board to assist in control phe of the building growth outside tae : Pir village limits was made by Social La 5 aS ia re district supervisor Nigel Nixon when he addressed a recent luncheon meeting of the Kiwanis elub, ‘You get more—by Greyhound Package Express! More coovenieace la trequent daly whedsee at | _,, TO illustrate his point, of the ad- Serving rate ln came Gay arpa deste: ventage of controlled growth, i tons up to 300 miles away, at heart-of-town terminals. TYPICAL SHIPMENTS =- ‘THEY RIDE RELAXED, Toot Nixon used thé example of a mythical ‘Joe,’ who built a sail) L wasn’t mich to look at good enough for his simple © Automotive Parts O2di5 bachelor wants. Then Joe took biu- © Flowers self a wife and added a small addi- SS 5 <6: Medical/ Supplies tion, Along came a family and more sero pic listelics rooms were added. Finally Joe had © Veterinary Supplies Ask for REVELSTOKE RICE-BEER This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. Oi Faeye Eypten : ee FREE TACKAGE eae ir tee Gre Rocky Mountain Saddlery 256 Lansdowne Street Kamloops, B.C, MAKERS OF FINE LEATHER GOODS LEADING SADDLE MAKES ALL LEATHER REPAIRS e Wrangler, Levi's, Lee e MAIL ORDERS FILLED SAME DAY Coats, Shirts, Pants spots. and it.took a fortune in coal to heat it. That type of growth can all too easily occur in an expanding com- snunity, Mr. Nixon pointed out, and the way is open to prevent it by the provisions of the Town Planning Act. Under this act it is possible to set up a board that will control nearby un- organized areas. Problem previously has been tiiat a village or municipality could or: hope to control building within ifs immediate boundaries, with the re- sult that nothing could be done to prevent ‘shack towns’ from springing up on the outskirts. Then when na- tural growth forced the organized area to expands its boundaries, the section in question heeame a part of the town, but a part that would prop- ably have the appearance of oe 5 It is not a new problem, Mr. Nixon said, but has been encountered by, every centre at some time or other. The time to cope with the problem is while the community is in its first growth period. Lone Butte News MR. and MRS. LUTE EDALL and family spent a long weekend at the coast on business. GLEN McMILLAN have moved into town. BILL COOK has returned trom a spell in Shaughnessy Military Hos- pital. THURSDAY was cold with a raw north wind. Friday, Feburary 18th, 6 a.m. the Thermometer registered 10° below zero. WE HAD OUR north wind all through the weekend but the wea- ther was quite mild. ON SUNDAY the Lone Butte Ground Observer Corps were on duty spotting airplanes. MONDAY’S WEATHER was ail snow flurries, yery much like March weather. and family Early Staffordshire-ware Pipe (com England Created in the past... . for your pleasure today. Adams Antique CANADIAN WHISKY Phonuas Hdams Distillers Lid. D.1485 AMHERSTBURG, ONT VANCOUVER. BC. This advertisement 15 not published or disployed by the Liquor Control Boord or by the Government of British Columbo and EDGERS SKF Coutts Sawmills SAWDUST BLOWERS PILLOW BLOCKS DODGE Morse Roller Chain and Sprockets wish for, of the Frontier Cariboo championship. And the boys who just missed up- setting the locals were the hustling lads from St. Joseph's Mission, Lack- in a little in weight and the ability to finish off their attacking plays in front of the opposition net, the los- ers showed superiority in playmak- ing throughout the serie Actually the clubs splil the week- end games, the Pontiacs winnin Saturday 5-4 and the Mission win- ning Sunday's scheduled 60 minutes of play But the series was on total points, so with 10 apiece the clubs had to play two more five- minute periods, with the ‘lake club picking up the lone counter in the first. overtime frame. Eddi Kozuki hit the high scoring brackets for the Pontiacs, scoring two goals Saturday and four Sunday, including the big one in overtime. Not a particulally flashy player on the ice, Kozuki makes up for it by bulldog determination when he gets possession over the blueline and has the abilty to carry a couple of op- possing defencemen along with him if necessary. For the Mission it was Lloyd Sellars whe showed the neces- sery fiinsh in Sunday's thriller. A hard man to catch on a break-away, Sellars scored five of the Mission goals in the game. Mucli of the credit for breaking up possible scoring plays against the ‘lake goes to Al Demeoe, who has shown a marked improvement in the past two sea- sons. Alongside him Bobby Overton is proving a solid player. Tough break for the locals came in the third period of Sunday’s game when Bernard Dick Slapped home a rebound. Going down in his attemnt at the save, goalie Al McIntosh caught a skate on his forehead and received a deep gash that required four stitches to close. Fowler was taken off the forward line-to fill in and turned in an outstanding job for the remaider of a hard fought amie... In Saturday's game the Mission sion took a 2-1 lead in the first period, wth Lloyd Sellars and Fred Chelsea sagging the twine to Fow- ler's one tally. The second period went the full time with only one goat being scored to knot the count with Demeoe rifling home McDonald's pass. The third period was a hard fought battle as both clubs opened up. Al- 6-5. Pontiacs Take Trophy In Tight Puck Series In as tight a spectator-tingling series as anyone could the Williams Lake Pontiacs were forced into over- time in Sunday’s game before they could claim possession Hotel trophy, emblematic of the Southern though the locals outscored the Mis- sion 3-2 to take the period and the game, it was the losers who carried the play most of the way. The Kozuki brothers scored the three ‘lake tallies with Eddie getting two and Dick one. TT s went to Felker, For the Gordon Sellars who shots with Chel- WO a Mission it got the two pay-oll sea gelling one assist. wa NDAY Sunday's game opened fast with Lloyd Sellars starting his big count in the first twenty seconds of pla: Kozuk’knotted the score on a break- away. and then figured on the next scoring play right off the face-off when he sank speedy Buchholtz's pass. Rankin put the Pontiacs two up when he scored on Smith’s pass and the visitors looked like they were in trouble. The Mission boys got back into a threatening position in the second period with Sellars sinking a pas from Sampson and then knotting up the score at the 6:40 mark on a beau- tiful solo effort. Neither club man- aged to break into a scoring play for the remainder of the period. In the final canto the locals again went into the lead when Smith scored en a power play, but the game was tied up by Sellars’ long shot from in- side the blueline that had McIntosh beat all the way. Less than a minute later Dick slapped home the puck on the play that resulted in McIntosh being taken out of the game. There was only five minutes remaining when the speedy Dog Creek boy Sel- lars fired a long shot on goal’ and came in to take the rebound and put the Mission in command of the seriés. The minutes were running out when the ‘lake club forced the series into overtime. Kozuki figured on the build-up play. bringing the puck in and shooting on goal only to have his shot turned aside, hut Buchholtz was johnny-on-the-spot and swooped up the rebound to pass over to Eddie for a second try that didn’t give goal teuder Archie a chance. The big et- fort came at the 18:05 mark. Two minutes of the first overtime period went by when Kozuzki slapped home a goal mouth pass from Wood- ruff. = Following the game the hotel tro- phy was presented to Pontiac cap- tain Terry Buchholtz by Mrs. Gordon of the cup. The silverware has been up for competition for three seasons now, with Clinton holding it for the first two years. The southern centre was knocked out in regular league play between the three clubs. Just prior to the opening whistle the crowd was entertained by the figure skating routines of Lynne Abbey and Joan Simpson, aged 11 and 12. Both girls are from Clinton and although they have had no for mal training, they put on a good show. Prior to the juvenile game, the high flying local midgets almost go* clipped by a visiting Clinton clv’ The home youngsters were ontsco in the second period and copped i winning counter in the final frame. Up in the stands watching his team mates in the juvenile game was Dennis Graham, just’ back from the coast where he had a smashed knee- cap repaired. Opportunity FOR A CAREER IN “FREEDOM” INSURANCE In the trained skill and co peace . . . against aggression. 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