Wednesday, June 3, 1959 THE WILLIAMS LAKE TRIBUNE SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK MIG House OF HE WHE ANAS, Ais Sfructine., MORE THAN, 20 FEET TALL, HOLDS A MILLION IMES MORE INHABITANTS THAN Ate LARGEST HUMAN KABICATION, NA} ELY, ‘A SKYSCRAPER. Beef: imports for alarm cattlemen told Consi; New Zealand and Australia lan have not Retiring president W. T. Bul- man of Kelowna, told the meet- ing that the British Columbia beef. cattle industry benefits from an active export trade and therefore should not Protest a limited volume of imports. Principal speaker at the two- day meeting, attended by more than 150 B.C. cattlemen, was A. H. Turner of Ottawa, vice- chairman of the Agricultural Prices Stabilization Board. Commenting on New Zealand and Australian beef shipments, Mr. Turner noted that frozen beef has not been popular in either the U.S. or Canada. He said that chilled beef has been acceptable to the trade but there Brian Thomes, 10, is the centre of his parent’s religious battle. Philip John Thomas, the boy’s father and an Angli- can, charged in a writ that his wife left him in 1956 taking the boy with her. He alleged that in 1958 his wife became a Roman Catholic and now in- tended to convert their son to the same faith. Mr. Thomas prevented the baptism and said s ton, - he wanted his son to be given |14. association for the coming an opportunity of deciding | oo; Mr. Dorrell for many, which religion he will follow when he grows up. Have a GOOD RUM. for your r IN DEMERARA This advertisement is not published Liquor Control Board or meeting, D. C. Dorrell of Clin- years has been secretary of the Clinton Cattlemen’s Association. By RJ. SCOT: OFFICES of A SAuf MINE At SeemoR, NEW YORK, 1,073 FEET UXDER GROUND, HEWN FROM SOLID SALT. SKATE, Beas Sevetoes old « ped RECREPI? rr ALL RADIOACTIVE. MATERIALS FOUND: WW MEXICO 2 ANE. MEXICAN GOVERNMENT. ho cause has been less than 200,000 Ib. imported thus far in 1959. SUPPORTS NoT FACTOR Discussing agricultural Price supports, Mr. Turner noted that Canadian cattlemen have not yet been affected because the market price for beef has al- Ways been higher than the sup- Port price. He cautioned that on the horizon for cattlemen are some ‘‘ bumps and shocks,” al- though he did not expect to see beef prices drop sharply in the foreseeable future. He told the meeting: “You are in a fortunate position be- cause beef has always been pop- ular and this continent's grow- ing population will ensure that demand is maintained in both Canada and the U.S.” In his president’s report, Mr. Bulman drew attention to the| current swing towards auction | selling of cattle in British Col-| umbia | For some time the tendency | has been to market cattle as! much as possible where they are produced, Mr. Bulman said. He told cattlemen the Vancouver market in the past had not been an accurate barometer of cattle prices and he felt local price levels throughout the province| would be more clearly estab- lished by the new auction method. On the grounds that the cur- rent tax on live cattle moving either way across the Canada- U.S. border reduces the price re- reived by cattlement, the meet- ing passed a resolution calli for a free movement of live| cattle between the two coun- tries. ; _ At the directors’ mecti: fol- lowing the association’s annual was elected president of or displayed by the Operator suffers burns in saving burning machine Hans England, 43, of Riske Creek, was badly burned when the forklift which he operates for West Fraser Timber Com- Pany caught fire last Sunday afternoon. England was refuelling the machine when a spark set it ablaze. He managed to smother the flames with some rags, sav- ing the $6,000 forklift from damage. Burns suffered on the Tight leg from the knee to the ankle and on both hands will keep Mr. England in War Memorial Hospital for two weeks. ee, Branch of ACCRA formed in area Formation of a local branch of the Auto Courts and Resorts Association of British Columbia was undertaken by 15 operators who met last Thursday at Drum- mond Lodge. Ken Phillips of Drummond Lodge and G. Bouchie of Lac La Hache Guest Ranch were named president and vice-presi- dent pro-tem, pending the next branch meeting to be held at Lac La Hache Guest Ranch on June 15.. At that time com- mittee chairmen, will also be named. Last Thursdays’ meeting was addressed by Miss Leah Shaw of Shaw Springs, provincial vice- president of ACCRA. Miss Shaw said that organization of opera- jtors is important because “there is a need for a complete new {look into the tourist industry of British Columbia.” Attending the meeting were Mr. and Mrs, Bouche, Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. A. Drummond of Drummond Lodge; Mrs. N. Palmer of Rose Lake; Mr. and Mrs. C. Zirnhelt of 150 Mile Auto Court; Sam Mitchell of Chimney Lake Lodge; Fred Kozuki of Lakeside Motel; Mr. and Mrs. John Zirul of Fir Crest Lodge; and Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Reeder of Happy’s Motel. a BREAKS ANKLE Richard Wainwright, 22, of Likely, who is a canter for Lig- num’s mill, suffered a broken right ankle Monday afternoon. Wainwright was turning a log on the \carriage when the cant hook shifted. Local golfers drop club match at Quesnel It was a turn-about for local golfers when they travelled to Quesnel last Sunday for their Second inter-club game of the season with Quesnel. Last time the two clubs met, the ‘Lake golfers took the match, but this time the host players downed the visitors 20 to 16. Top individual performer of the day was Mel Kahl,-who set a blistering pace in nine holes for a 33, slipped a little on the second round for a 38 but was still one. under par with his score is now a course record, since the Quesnel layout has just been changed this spring result- the first 71 total. This ing in two holes being length- ened. Here are the point results, with the first two named part. ners being from Quesnel: Griffith and Tennant 3 Huck- vale and Abercrombie 0; Har- per and Hughes 2, Khal and Latin 1; Lazzarin and Fast %, Knull and R. Blair 214; Chevins and Oliver 2, Carson and Mar- getts 1; Snushall and Tennant 4%, Giesbrecht and Fourt 2%; Powell and Hillborn 3, Arnold and R. Smith 0; Hobbs and Fiest 3, Wale and Ulveland 0; Keen and Pacholok 0, Kerley and Robinson 3; Fenell, and Brown 1, Rife and A. Blair 2; Copeland and Jones 3, Kelt and Hume 0; Laidlaw and McLellan 2, Hutchinson and Walberg 1. Counting in the total score was the one junior game of Thomas and Brown 0, Rife and Fowler 3. Child killed at Lone Butte A 2%-year-old boy was Killed near Lone Butte Sunday when he was crushed beneath a tractor driven by his father. John Lonnie Drake, son of J. MacDonald Drake of Lone Butte, fell from the tractor while his father was clearing brush. The Dutch port of Rotterdam, badly bombed during the war, has been completely reconstruc- ted. Tire Trouble ? C&S Tire Service Smart Sho SOLO TOMATO JUICE 20-02. Tin { for 59 KRAFT DINNER . CLARITA MARGARINE . 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