Page 2 Second Section

THE TRIBUNE, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C.

New Industry
For Peace River

Ancther new industry will
come into being in the Peace
River area next month with

completion of an asphalt produc-
tion unit at Dawson Creek, B.C
The unit is being built by X.
Refineries Limited, a sub
of Pacific Petroleums Ltd.
duction is estimated at ap i
mately 350 barrels per day, and
Tost of the first year’s outpu
will be utilized in the paving o:
the Alaska Highway from Daw-
son Creek to Fort St. John,
whieh is slated for the summer
of this year.

Pro-

Labor department authorities
Teport that more than 30,000
new jobs were created in the
construction industry in Canada
during 1957.

Go fo Church
on Sunday

LISTED BELOW ARE

PLACES OF WORSHIP

IN WILLIAMS LAKE
ST. PETER'S (ANGLICAN)

CHURCH
5th Avenue at Carson Drive

Family Cirele, § p.m.,
every second and fourth Fri-
day of each month.

March 23, visit of the Lord
Bishop of. the Diocese of
Cariboo. 10 a.m., Morning
Prayer and Litany, speaker,
the Lord Bishop. 2 p.m.,
Special Service in the Com-
munity Hall, Horsefily, In-
formal reception to follow this
service. A hearty invitation
is extended -to all to join
with the Bishop in this Pil-
grimage to Horsefly. Will
those who poss cars kindly
arrange to take others who
have not. It is suggested that
a start should be made soon-
after 12-noon.  ~

ST. ANDREW'S UNITED
CHURCH

3rd Avenue at Cameron Street

Rev. ©. H. Lee

Sunday, March 16, 11 a.m.,

Sunday School; 7:30 p.m.,

Evening Worship, speaker,
Rev. A. M. McNeil.

SACRED REART OHURCH
4th Avenue at Yorston Street

-edemptorist hers,
Sunday Masses, 9 and
10:30 a.

m.
First Fridays and Holiday:
of Obligation, Mass at 7

p.m.
Benediction Saturday even-
ing, 7:30.
CALVARY P!
TABERN?
2nd Avenue North

Pastor: Rey. E. P. Funk

11 am., Service. Subject:
“Great and Precious Prom-
ises.”"

Week nights: Tuesday, 8
p.m., Bible Study and Prayer
Meeting. Friday, 8 p.m.,
Young Peoples.

KINGDOM HALL OF
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
4th Avenue South

Sunday, 7:30 p.m., Regular
Bible Study using the Watch-

LE

tower. Friday, 7:30 p.m.,
Theocrati¢ Ministry School.
8:30, Service Meeting. Wed-

nesday, March 19, at Williams
Lake, and Thursday, March
20 at Horsefly, 7:30 p.m,
“ Happiness of the New World
Society,” color film.

t ci t
The Tribune will be pleased
to imelude any religious
notices in this column. such as
tigle of servi yme of
pfeacher, ete. nformation
sheuld be available by noon,

jitiding in

Monda:

lpia oF

School Visited
During Week.

DURING Education Week,
parents and visitors were privi-
ed Lo sit in at the school one
afternoon and listen as
pupils went through tests
mental’ arithmetic and read
‘loud from their readers a piece
of their own choosing. Later,
tea was served in the teacherage
by Mrs. Selman,

JOUN ‘SIEBERT has been
putting the new aeroplane to use
flying over the far reaches of
the snow-covered _ rangeland,
looking for stray cattle. A few
have been found,» but ofteney
animals spotted in the distance
prove on closer inspection to be
moose. These animals, accord-
ing. to, the men who have been
the. sky, sre
numerous in the back country
this year, due, no doubt, to the
mild winter.

very

MR. AND MRS. Duane Witte
entertained family and friends
) last Sunday to a delicious turkey
| dinner.

| WE WERE pleased to see A.
(M. Piltz back in his home ‘is-
|triet again after a winter spent
jat coastal points and various
|places of interest in south-west
|US.A. Hitting the Big Creek
road on a mild day, he had to
put on chains, and came in
| thoroughly. re-initiated in Chil
}cotin mud, Gus has

| guest Henry's for the past
|tew a :
| RENE AND BILL BLISS, of
Redstone, visited relatives here
before driving to Tretheway-
Wells logging camp early Mon-
day Morning to take up new
positions there.

| EXPERIENCING some diff
|culty with the spring roads while
|delivering fuel to Tretheway-
Wells logging tamp last week,
Neville Blenkinsop, who was
once well acquainted with bad
spots along the Big Creek by-
way, no doubt had his memory
jogged sharply:

been a

from the
means

derived
vale

Carnival,
Latin ‘carne

Class, to this group

Moore’s Cove school at Cobalt, Ont., is a

tugged trip into the woods
claims.
Hermiston, right, mining cla
the Temiskaming and

divisions, and Paul Svekers,

The class’ is supervised by Paul

Dent./ Mines
ee

Oni.

of children of started the class when children showed great
inlerest in a film turned out by the depart-
ment of mines. The youngsters. ages 10 to
14, are taken to a typical bush mining claim,
where they do: their owh staking with the
aid of @ compass. At first the class was only
for boys, but girls protested they were being
left out of things and now it is co-educational

to stake mining

ims inspector for
ontreal river
Jeft. Hermiston

t-

Wednesday, March 12°

LETTERS 10

[COLUMNIST MisiINFORMED

Dear Sir—After reading the
Cracker Barrel Forum in your
issue during Education Week,
I am truly amazed at one of the
Statements made by the gentle-
man who prides himself on being
so well informed.

May I say, if he is a taxpayer,
and if he ‘cised his right to
vete May 23, 1967, he would
Know that with the support of
the taxpayers the School Board
did raise the monies for the
gymnasium he mentions”in our
ireferendum of that date,

This gymnasium, I hope, will
be the pride of the Cariboo,
Scme may query the time in-
volved. When you have the
government as a working part-
ner, many will understand the
yards, shall I say, of red tape
involved.

Even so, we are only about
three weeks behind a very tight
schedule. The working pfans of
the new High School should at
a very near date finally meet
-the approval of the Department
of Education.

They are as interested in get-
ting the New High School in
School District No. 27 ag we all
* are. ie

All peoples interested have
tried, through visits to as many
new high schools and educa-
tional buildings that could pos-
sibly be managed to, shall, T

Panel Decides Schools Falling

Down On Job For

“The schools
do their
reasons, according to a summary

job” tor two Ddasie

of opinion expressed by
on the topiv at last Wedne:
public meeting at 150
House school.

pane]

Mile

The two reasons, summarized
by moderator Don Watt, princi
pal of the school, were: 1, lack
of funds, resulting in poorly
equipped schools and low sala-
ries for teachers; 2, poor or little
motivation for students to raise
their academic standards and so

complete high school or continue|

advanced studies.

With r d fo ihe low sala-
ries for teachers, it was pointed

MRS. MEL.
Edson, Alberta,

Financial Reasons

for

are failing tojout that this condition held no| Will visit with cousins for a

attraction for peopie who might |Short time.

consider entering the teaching
profession. motored to. Shuswap

| Panel members were Mrs. c.| 2% 02 business.

Forest Grove News

JEWEL has left
where she

MR. AND MRS. RF. Sellars
February

say, separate the wheat from the
chal. The good points to be
strived for, the undesirable to
be avoided.
been set
The individual teachers have
had full opportunity -to expr
any point that makes a particu-
lar type of classroom more ad-
yantageous to both teacher and
pupil. All ide’s have heen in-
corporated in the final working

THE EDITOR

drawings with said gymnasium
an integral part of the whole.

When construction commences
you can,rest assured that the
building will be completed
according to the original draw-
ing. Nothing will be deleted.
If tenders are too high, steps
will have to be taken to raise
additional funds.

Many individuals have just
not been interested “heretofore
to realize the referendum they
supported has already produced.
in this district: :

1—Our first six-room elemen-
tary school with activity room,
which is actually a modern gym
on the elementary scale with
stage, light and other up to date
featurés;

2—Wour new teacherages.

3—Two combination teacher-
age and school.

4—Six new schools.

5—Modern additions to two
other’ schools.

The building program is still
continuing. Driving about our
district one can see the children
and teachers are getting new,
bright, cheerful buildings to
work in, electricity and modern

‘conveniences wherever possible.

I hope the date of the little
log school house with three or
four windows for light and the
fact “that it is good enough”
is gone. Personally, I feel
nothing is too good for our
children and their teachers.

. PAT MALESKU.
Williams Lake, B.C.

Farm experts estimate a
45,000,000-bushel loss to Canada
im wheat sales in the current
crop year as a result of Ameri-
can wheat “ dumping” in export
markets: where Canada hereto-

fore has sold.

| 4rnhelt, Len Simon and Huston
Dunawa:

Following the panel, a fine
display of children’s work was
"shown by teachers, Mrs. Gaustin.
Miss C. Uchida and Mr. Watt.

The program closed with the
showing of a film depicting the
modern approach to better edu-
cation. i

ee:
A social period was then, en-
joved ny the-goodi number of
|parents attending.

iF meat.”
i

The HALF

The B.C. Power Commission’

gram, begun in 1945, is keeping up with the huge *

expansion programs going on

number of customers now served by the Commi
now exceeds 75,000 families in nearly 200 communities.

POWER MEANS PROGRESS!

Jack and
Benny
Abbott

The TWO

Restoc

's rural electrification pro-

: your door.
all over the province. The

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‘Home Owned
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Renae a