Wednesday, May 6, 1959 THE WILLIAMS LAKE TRIBUNE Page HORSEFLY EWS Women’s Institute after the, served at the en dof the meeting. Vancouver combining business 5 rocting cowmonrry executives mei |Camimahood News v2... e — Sunday evening to put the finish- ALTHOUGH the weather has 40 attend Farmer Institute THE monthly meeting of the|i@& touches to the program for| MRS. EDWARD HIGGINS was|been chilly, spring ig advancing, Women’s. Service Club, which|Ma@¥ 18. _The scheduled pro-|taken suddenly ill at her home|trees leafing out and dandelions e . s held at the home of Mrs.|8t#™ is being drawn up by Mrs.|at Roe Lake last Wednesday and|and some early flowering plants and Livestock meetin R. MacLeod and will be ready|was rushed to Royal Inland|in bloom. Many deer and some g attended with two new members| VeT¥ Soon for the public. Hospital where she is making|moose are seen and frog music The first meeting of the year beef sales this year starting injPTesent. Mrs. Shirley Whitmer tones cu pemnleh visited. | satisfactory progress towards 6-/stls the twiltene of the Horsefly Farmers Insti-|early summer. and Mrs. Dorothy Warner, both 'y homes in the district, | covery. BORN to Mr. and Mrs. Ed- tute and Livestock Association wives of our new forest ranger was held in the Hall April 29,| Also present was Mr. Whit-|and ° assistant “forest ranger. mer, new local forest ranger| rs. Whitmer and Mrs. Warner seems to be on the way out. Ww Mahood Falls a ‘ay out. MR. AND MRS. Dé. a ard Banman of M With a good attendance of|rrom Blue River a Jand in tive members of the eens il 2 land son of Windermere, accompanied a wee as aa aes BCPC transfers by Mrs. Anderson’s father, | #°SPital, CODE a eANs : Joseph Auld of gout do members and guests,| spector Jack Rsler. H. G.|community club at Blue River, F. E. Jones opened the meeting | Jukes, forest agrologist, trom SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK wa: Velma Hembrough, was well JE oF magune’s no oN iAfure’s Most Peaittan istina Ann, a sister for Vancouver, (ee Two former local district man-| motored into the Cariboo to visit | P24!- agers of the B.C. Power Com-|old friends over the weekend. to the business on hand, land lease, application for purchase and grazing. An important point was a showing of a sub- stantial increase of cattle on a permit. One speaker, Elmer Derrick, field man for the B.C. Live Kamloops attended for the pur- pose .of grazing interest. These meetings which are held twice a year, one in the early spring and one in fall, are of great interest and help|of Quesnel, is very appropriate to the district's ranchers and farmers. Three important business mat- ters were settled. The most in- teresting, the drama club, which has chosen all comedy for the theme of their plays, one which was written by Mrs. Sue Speare for our district and enthusiastic- ally taken up by the women. mission are involved in Interior transfers. ‘ Jack Dobie, who moved to Quesnel from Williams Lake and then on to Prince George, leaves that centre for the BCPC Okan- They are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Wood of 100 Mile C. R. UHRIG and A. C. Erick- son motored to Vancouver Sun- agan headquarters at Vernon. His place at Prince will be materials, RADIO STATION Application is being made for installation of a 1000-watt radio station at Fort St. John. The North Peace Broadcasting Company which has been formed day to truck home building] ror this purpose, will present its brief to the Canadian Broad- MR. AND MRS. B. Spencer|casting Commission by the end McNeil are spending a week in]of May. Stock Co-op from Williams Lake figures there will be nine taken by Basil Gale. Moves are luncheon was| effective in June. Lunch was served by the A delicious _ Squamish residents feel deep sea port dream gone 3 The Squamish Times, in a recent edition devoted its entire front page to open criticism of Premier Bennett, on the part of Squamish businessmen, fol- lowing the recent announcement the PGE plans to establish terminal facilities in North Vancouver in- stead of Squamish as had been promised. banner headlines in the Van- 1957, “B.C. Plans Millions for|government’s plans for a multi- A large si couver Province of March 30, A T Squamish City,” is featured.|million dollar development of | Premier’s alleged assurances at nt switch in plans is a pret shabby deal for the people of Written their personal reactions | this community.’ ’ A ~~Such headlines followed the | Squamish as a major seaport and that time. Y 0) U R to the recent announcement. aA. B. Mackenzie of the depart- INTRODUCTORY OFFER Buyone pound -column cut of “After, Premier Bennett an- nounced two years ago of his industrial centre, this pres: Squamish businessmen have B. H. Brown, president of the / ment store under his name says: Squamish Board of Trade, made] TURN THEM OUT” this comment: “What a wonderful dream it DEEP DISAPPOINTMENT was while it lasted, but like all “T have talked to many mem-| dreams, they eventually come to bers of our board and all express|an end and this one ended very deep disappointment over the|suddenly with Mr. Gunderson’s 40° Tailway’s decision to use North|announcement that deep sea om li Na Extra Special FT Vancouver for its deep-sea dock-| docks were ta be built in North LYNN VALLEY } ing, particularly when the Pro-| Vancouver. * PEARS 15 2 FOR 43c ES vincial Government had for so| “‘As far back as 1912 Squam- — "02. ane . long claimed that Squamish was|ish was to become a port when : BUY ONE POUND AT REGULAR PRICE OF 75c to be a major seaport. the PGE reached the Peace LYNN VALLEY AND A SECOND SPECIAL “TRY-IT” POUND FOR ONLY 49c BOTH FOR 124 “Squamish has lost nearly a|River district, now they are hundred PGE workers to other|there and Squamish is further ‘points, with more to follow.|away than ever from the deep % PEACHES — 15-02. ceccsscnesnenssusueennn 2 FOR 43 Local business has suffered a|sea dock. I think the provincial major- depression as a result./government should be forced to RECORD i 4 FOR 5 This latest action certainly|live it to their promises. If PEAS A t d ° 15 7 m_epves the government’s indiff-| they do not, then turn them out * oraase Ssor e Sizes, re hese es eeerenees er€hce to the fate of our vil-jat the next election.” ees lage.” The foregoing are j ex- LIBBY «| Under a heading ‘‘Shabby|amples, there are about five 4 f acy, rata ears neh? |emnlente are snom * TOMATO JUICE — 48-07. 2 FOR 65c a MALKIN’S. MALKIN’S + CENSUS-TAKERS WILL DELVE - DEEPER INTO LIVES OF CITIZENS GOOD LUCK OTTAWA — Canada’s census-)or play?” This is to give the takers are planning to dig a|authorities a rough idea of the little deeper into the intimacies|state of Canadian health. * MARGARINE ou. of your family life. But don't] And there will be a flock of worry. It will be hush-hush;|questions, based on changing * PREM ' 12-02 just something between you and |social conditions ,innovations in the head-hunter. housing and the rise in living The barrage of questions to be|standards. Instead of asking E IN 5 | i 32 J asked when the big decennial| whether you have a radio, they * — Sala bowl, 02. Jar census rolls around in 1961 have} will ask whether you have one already been drafted. They'll be|or more television sets. And in- - , tried out for reaction in trial|stead of just asking whether BRODER'S rn es aut quence [eae wheter sox own one ar|M—* CORN — Cream style, 15-02 on -ecccccsssssenn 4 FOR 63¢ Ontario, and Joliette, Quebec,|ask whether you own one or and neighboring farms. more. SELECTED SPECIALS FROM OUR MEAT COUNTER cesseussustustussneeneenes 2 FOR 57 .. 2 FOR 63c . 2 FOR 83c . 59c + MARGARINE Plum Jam 24-0z. Tin 42 Orange Marm'lade 24-0z, Tin 39c OGILVIE’S Cake Mixes Assorted, 15;0z. Pkt. 3 for 89c PAT'S Biscuits Assorted 3 for 1.00 wives—who usually answer the/ing, the men and women at your * CUT GREEN BEANS —15-07 doorbell—show any signs of} door will ask such things as the eee hesitancy or embarrassment at/number of bedrooms in the questions posed, it is conceivable | nome, toilet facilities, kind of “4 that some of the questions may|sewage disposal, value of your be revised. hame, and the number of utili- PERSONAL QUESTIONS ties, including home freezers, Census takers will want to]ana garages. something about the : ethers fertility, her marriage |RACE REMAINS | c+ age and the number of babies] Perhaps a little touchier may she’s had, and not only the/be the question of racial and 5 wages but all of the earnings|national origin—the origin of HEINZ * KETCHUP — 11-07. bottle ........ THE MOST FABULOUS RECORD OFFER OF ALL TIME ! 20 SUPERB ALBUMS HEFL 12”, 331, RPM, LONG PLAY of the breadwinner. your family and your forbears. DENIS They'll also ‘pose such other|Prime Minister Diefenbaker has GENUINE PURE VINYL TURKEYS , DEVON new questions as: ‘Were you|peen critical of this census prac- nN ill or injured yesterday and did|tice, repeatedly saying he would : FREE COURSE WHOLE this interfere with your work] like to do away with the descrip- IN MUSIC SIDE ia tion of “hyphenated” Cana- APPRECIATION Grade “A” - Eviscerated - dians. STEEL PRODUCTION INCLUDED CHICKEN 12 to 16 Ib. To get an idea of population Some comparative world steel| movements, the doorbell-ringers BACON Pkt. 59¢ ee Prices Effective Thursday, Friday, Saturday, May, 7-8-9 ALBUM 1 ONLY | ALBUMS 2 T~ 20 ction: figures for 1958:|will ask where you lived on 314-1b. Tin P Ib 39 tenete produced $4,359,000|June 1, 1956, the time of the u er Ib. 39c capacity 6.3|quintennial census, a pocketsize 69c a tons aximum : saillion tous} U.S. produced | edition of the traditional 10-year ity 140} count each 5 count. duhtton. tenes UK. produced And of the breadwinners ALBUM 11 NOW ON 18,902,000 tons (capacity 23|they’ll ask not only the kind of , SALE ; million tons); West Germany|work they now do but a descrip- Earlier albums still produced 23,000,000 tons (capa-|tion of the various jobs they available city 24.5 million tons); U-S.S.R.|may have had during the year. Produced 60,000,000 million tons] Local MPs nominate persons (her full capacity). for census-taking and out of these, final selections are made by the bureau of statistics. We reserve the right to limit quantities 119 —_—_ s . AND TLTIONS FOR poe ex-| Training of selectees is to star pected to go into oil and gas/a week before they go on the ; next five | road. years im the *orthvrest Terri-| _Census-takers will be paid tories’ mainland and archipelago, $1.40 an hour, with those takin g according to Northern Affairs|the count in neighboring a Minister Alvin Hamilton. getting an extra automobile al- Estimate ig based on explora-|lowance of nine cents a mile, tion permits already granted or/The count is expected to be com- applied for. pleted by mid-June.