8 B.C. LUMBER WORKER be Md ic, sponsored by the Ladies’ Auxiliary in conjunction with the PICNIC COMMITTEE responsible for the day’s success are from left, Stan Patterson, Axel en Park, Ladysmith, June 24th, sow these Local Officials and Anderson, Karin Anderson, Isabel Peterson, Frank Wilson, Iris Milmore, Mrs. Samuelson, chat. Group are from left, front row, Mrs. A. L. Smith, Mr. A. L. George Smythe, Mrs. George Smythe. ad MESACHIE LAKE Sub-Local Secretary, George Wilson enjoys Locol 1-80's Picnic in com- FREE ICE CREAM and pop drew this enthusiastic line-up of children eager to get their pany with his wife, father-in-law and friends. share and return to the aames arranged for them by the Picnic Committee. Legendary Loggers ~—> @ tribute to te men in B.C.’s (4) “MOONLIGHT JOE” No. 1 Industry Wildest Foreman on the Coast When Moonlight Joe was foreman, the Humbird Camps were reputed to be the quietest spots on the coast. In fact, the only how! to be heard was Moonlight Joe himself, howl- ing for more logs — a sound so terrifying that any other flesh or fowl had long since given up trying to compete. Some old timers say that, if you listen carefully on a still, moonlight night, you can still hear Joe’s howl down the corridors of time. (Quoted from STEWART HOLBROOK’S “Holy Old Mackinaw’) ... And as the men of TODAY shape TOMORROW’S LEGENDS, Pierre Paris & Sons are proud to continue making logging boots of legendary quality, backed by fifty years of family craftsmanship, and the No. 1 choice of successive generations of B.C. loggers. 4 rents bores Dionne Paris & Sons £0. in B.C. Since 1907. 5) w. HASTINGS ST. VANCOUVER, B.C.