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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Frmrinaial Library,  3.   C.  DANNY'S  DINING ROOM  Phone GIBSONS 140  JUST FINE FOOD  E^^^^s^^^^^^m^^^^^^^mMi  SERVING THE  GROWING SUNSHINE COAST  Published in Gibsons, B.C. Volume 11, Number 44, November 12,   1959.  A Complete Line  of Men's Clothing  Marine Men's Wear  Ltd.  Phone 2 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Gibsons,  B.C.  First concert Friday night  Depicted above are Susana y Jose, famed Spanish dancers who will appear in Gibsons at the Elphinstone High School  auditorium Friday night starting at 8 p.m.  This is the first of Overture Concerts events for this season and it i$ regarded as a feather in the cap of the Gibsons com  mittee which books the artists for the season's concerts.  This jjs the last call for those who have not joined the Concerts association. Those desiring to join can do so by phoning  Mrs. Wynne Stewart, the secretary at Gibsons 190 or Mrs. Parker at Sechelt 51. There will be those who will join on the night  of the concert where season tickets can be obtained but. if you  desire to avoid fuss and bother season tickets can be obtained  beforehand via the phone numbers listed above. The coming of  these famed Spanish dancers is looked forward to hyj more and  more people as the date of their performance approaches.  Fisherman flees fire  Thomas Hansen, elderly fisherman of Pender Harbour narrowly escaped death when his  gill-net vessel caught fire on  Monday last week.  The boat was on the grid for  repairs at Art Duncan's Marine Way's at Madeira Park,  when at about 8:30 in the  evening, it listed suddenly, and  flooded the oil stove, which ignited gasoline from a disconnected fuel line. \\  Flames enveloped the cabin,  which Hansen vainly endeavoured to fight with a fire extinguisher. The boat listed  again,   causing   another burst  Annual meeting  of Scouts Friday  The annual meeting of the  Sunshine Coast Boy Scouts association will be held Friday,  Nov. 20 starting at 8 p.m. in  Wilson Creek Community hall.  To reach that hall one takes  the turn after crossing Mission  Creek bridge in Wilson Creek  area and then takes the first  road turn to the right.  . At this meeting annual reports will be given byi Scout  representatives from the various districts in the Sunshine  Coast area. Folowing the meet-  ing refreshments will be served. All Scouters and their,  wives are invited to the meeting, also any of the public interested in what has occurred  in Scouting during the past  year.  Auxilary for  Sechelt Scouts  President of the Sechelt Women's Auxiliary to Cubs and  Scouts is Mrs. Dorothy Stock- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  well with Mrs. Gordon Reeves  as secretary. Social convenors  are Mrs. Lawson and Mrs. McDowell.  A new association has been  formed to assist Scout and Cub  leaders and the next meeting  will be held in Sechelt Elementary School, Nov. 16, starting  at! 8 p.m. AH mothers and  others interested are urged to  attend this meeting. ...  Phones increase  For merchants and others  who wonder how many telephones are in use on the Sunshine Coast here is the Sept. 1  total as tabulated by Telephone  Talk, the. B.C. Telephone company magazine. Here ar? the  figures: Port Mellon, 104 telephones; Gibsons exchange, 901;  Sechelt 586 and Pender Harbour 263 making a combined  total of 1,854 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a long cry  from the 80 odd telephones  including all the islands nearby! listed in the 1947 telephone  directory.  of fire. It was with the greatest difficulty that Hansen battled his way out of the flaming cabin, sustaining severe  burns to his hands and face.  Meantime, with Art Duncan  and others fighting the fire, a  call was put through to the lo.  cal Ranger station, which responded with foamite extinguishers. The foresters held  the fire in check until the arrival of the Garden Bay Volunteer Fire Brigade as result of  a call from Mrs^Duncan. The,  prompt and efficient woik -ttiS'  the volunteer group, equipped  with the pump loaned by Canon Greene of Columbia Coast  Mission, saved the vessel from  total destruction, and prevented the flames from spreading  to the Duncan net shed and  residence.  Extent of Hansen's burns  necessitated his removal to St..  Mary's Hospital.  teenagers on  safety panel  A youth conference oh safety  featuring teenage panelists  from various parts of British  Columbia, will feature the  1959 British Columbia Safety  Conference.  The three-day conference will  open Nov. 19 and continue  Nov. 20 at Hotel Vancouver,  then move to UBC for the  youth conference on Sat., Nov.  21. Theme of the conference  is \"The Economic Cost of Accidents.\"  The youth conference will  be open to all interested young  people. A; luncheon, sponsored  by Imperial Oil, is included in  the registration fee of one dollar.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..  A second innovation of the  1959 conference is that section  discussions on water safety,  home safety, traffic safety and  occupational safety, will be  open to the public at no charge  The water safety section  will conduct its session at  Crystal Pool and demonstrations of artificial respiration,  skin and lung diving will be  presented. It is also hoped to  have a water skiing demonstration in the pool.  ' Speakers include W.H. Evans  president of the Canadian Manufacturers Association, Dean  E.D. McPhee of UBC, Joe Morris of the IWA and Rear Admiral AUen Winbeck of the  United States Coast Guard.  OAP MEETING  The next meeting of the Old  Age Pensioners Organization  will take place on Mon., Nov.  16. As this is one of the most  important meetings of the year ,  for the winding up of the business accomplished by this organization, a large attendance  is expected.  Residents of Pender Harbour  and District were shocked to  learn of the death in Shaughnessy Hospital last Saturday  .of Mr. Ian Woodburn, of Gunboat Bay.  He had been admitted to  Shaughnessy Hospital a week  or so previously, and was transferred to the George Derby  Centre for special therapy.  About a week before his death  Mrs. Mary Woodburn had gone  to Vancouver to be near her  husbaind. An unexpected decline in his condition necessitated Mr. Woodburn's re-admittance to Shaughnessy- where  he passed away.  Mr. Woodburn was well  known throughout the harbour  area where he had resided fo::  about seven years. He was president of the Pender Harbour  Board of Trade and aj member  of the Pender Harbour branch  of the Canadian Legion. An accountant by profession, he had  been .employed for several  years with the Workmen's  Compensation Board c'oming to  Pender Harbour to take over  the post of administrator to  St. Mary's Hospital.  During the Second World  War, he joined he Seaforth  Highlanders of Canada, and  served overseas in the Northwest Europe theatre, attaining  the rank of Major. Prior to his  service in the war, Mr. Wood-  burn lived for some years in  Australia.  MSI plan  for over 65  B.C. Medical Services Incorporated  (MSI)   is planning  to  ? offerf pre-paid \"Ihedical coverage to persons over 65 for a f  short test period next spring.  Dr. D.S. Munroe, president  of MSI said that the grdup  plans to open its enrollment for  a limited period and accept.  over-65 applications.  \"On the basis of experience  with this limited group, we can  decide if it is practical to handle all over-65 applications,\"  he explained later.  Dr. Munro said that in MSI's  five short years of offering  pre-paid medical coverage to  persons ineligible for larger  group plans, the organization  has achieved more than 40,000  members and is now in the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"million dollar corporation\"  class.  St. Mary's hospital requires  funds for the completion of the  heating system, Harvey Hubbs,  campaign organizer for the hospital announces.  He urges that all who desire  to donate to give generously  because the hospital patients  require proper heating facilities in their wards.  Donations received to date  are:  Pender Harbour $746.00  Halfmoon  Bayj 46.00  Sechelt 88.60  Selma  Park 62.50  Wilson Creek 118.00  Gibsons 5.25  Special Names 626.00  Undistributed 283.55  Total $1,875.30  Committee  to 30 ahead  The special meeting of St.  Mary's Hospital society Nov. 6  in Madeira Park Hall decided  by motion to urge the committee appointed to study the hospital problem on the Sunshine  Coast to continue its work and  hasten the time when the committee would have an agreement in principle.  The meeting also voted to  -continue the committee as it  was now constituted. This work  ing committee was appointed  some months ago to work on a  projected hospital for the Sunshine Coast area site of same  to be left until the need for  such an institution had been  established.  There were about 30 persons  present from Port Mellon Gibsons, Sechelt, Selma 'Park and  Pender Harbour and points in  between.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; \/CHECK FIRE HAZARDS  .' Port Mellon Volunteer Firemen have checked homes in  Port Mellon for fire hazards  and protection. The firemen  did their job on two Tuesday  nights.  BINOCULAR CASE FOUND  A leather binocular case was  found on School Road Monday  afternoon and the owner can  claim it after identifying it at  the Coast News office.  The problem of fire calls  when the Gibsons phone service goes automatic in July of  1960 was raised by a letter to  Gibsons' Village Council at  Tuesday night's meeting.  At present a fire alarm is  sounded when a switchboard  operator in the phone office  presses a button to sound the  siren. When phones are on the  automatic system there will not  be any human element at the  phone exchange to sound an  alarm.  Council has discussed this  problem previously and had already begun to check on fire  alarm systems. The letter from  B.C. Telephones which officially stated the position of the  phone company pushed council  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffda little further into the fire  alarm picture of the future.  Council discussed various  systems which could be used  involving a pushbutton alarm  system to be operated from  more than one point.  On motion it was decided at  this time to purchase a new  siren to replace the one on  loan now in use and continue  the present system with the  phone    office     sounding    the  Nomination  Day coming  Nominations will be sought  for a chairman of the Village  Commission in Gibsons and  two commissioners as well as a  member for the school board  in this year's municipal elections.  Two commissioners will be  retired automatically, Harold  Wilson who was finance committee chairman and Reg Adams who held the fire and  health posts. Chairman A.E.  Ritchey hils ended ^his two-  year stint and his place on  council will be open.  Mrs. A.E. Ritchey who was  appointed by! provincial authorities as Gibsons school board  member also vacates her seal  as she was appointed for a one  3*-ear term.  Nomination day will be Dec.  7 at the Municipal Hall and  election day if necessary would  be Dec. 17.  alarm. When time came te  move from the phone office,  push-button points will be established.  Pink Elephant Coin Laundries which plan to open in the  Bal Block sought information:  on the business tax that wouli.  have to be paid. Council decided the tax would be $1.5E  per machine. It is planned t&  install 16 washers and six dryers. There are now four such,  plants in Vancouver area, twa  in Victoria and one in Duncan-  Accounts totalling $248.93  were passed, $118.42 for roaS  work, $62.85 for fire protection, $40.02 for general purpose; $5 for parks and beaches  and $12.64 for water.  Council expessed its thanks  for the help volunteer firemen*,  offered in keeping down Hallowe'en disturbances. Two village street, signs were reporte-f  to have been broken off.  Crib Tourney  to b  e arran  ged  THE LEADING PRODUCER  In the value of its production  the pulp and paper industry has  headed\" the list of Canadian  peace-time manufacturing industries for a quarter of a century.  WOOD-WORKING    CLASSES  Wood-working classes resumed on Nov. 9 at Port Mellon  with Roy Johnson as instructor. All ages from 10 years old  and up are invited to take part  in this class.  The first cribbage event by  Roberts Creek Canadian Legion branch on Oct. 30 in the  Legion hall was described as  heartening and it was arranged that games would be recorded with the idea of arranging  a tournament at the end of  the winter season.  A good turnout attended the  Oct. 13 meeting when the president, W. Gilbert, accepted a  plaque from Ike Mason, president of Gibsons branch, taking the place of Ron Haig, zone  commander. This plaque was  presented to Roberts Creek Legion by the zone command executive for its good work during the past year in maintaining membership at a high level. Mr? Haig wasunable to attend owing to illness.  Along with the plaque, there  now rests beside it a picture of  Vimy Ridge donated bv Mrs.  G. Mortimer.  The next meeting, Nov. 13,  will discuss sponsoring a teenage square dancing. The auxiliary at its Nov. 2 meeting arranged for their bazaar on Dec_  4. The annual meeting will beheld Dec. 7 when new officers  will be elected.  The auxiliary decided on s.  donation to the fund to transport retarded children to-  school classes. There will be e  whist drive Nov. 27 and Santo  Claus will hand out gifts t\ufffd\ufffd  children at the hall on Dec. 2*  between 2 and 4 p.m.  PENDER HBR CHURCH  St. Mary's Anglican church  at Pender Harbour will celebrate Holy Communion Sunday morning at 8 o'clock with  Morning Prayer at 11 o'clock.  There will be an afternoon service at 3 o'clock at Welcome  Beach Community Hall.  Year - round Christmas present  Some bright  bits of wit  Men who are loud and noisy  seldom are a howling success.  * * *    *  Drinking to another man's  health isn't going to improve  your own.  * '*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  It takes a  raft of friends to  keep some people afloat.  -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd***\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* .*-  To most; of us money is no object. It's a myth.  <T\" -J*\" -J-  Money doesn't talk today. It  just goes without saying.  * ^    *  While some men battle their  way ... to the top, others bottle  their way to the bottom.  * *    *  Failure demonstrates the fact  there is also plenty of room at  the bottom.  ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.*'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Usually, it's the silent partner  who has the most to say.  *  It takes wise parents to know  that their own child was as much  at fault as the neighbors'  There are no misconceptions  about the seriousness of the  tuberculosis problem in B.C.  among the members of the B.C.  Tuberculosis Society as they  prepare for the amnual Christmas Seal sale which opens Nov.  16.  \"Tuberculosis is still a dangerous health problem in B.C.,\"  said Mr. L.A. Atkinson, chairman of the board of directors.  \"The success of modern drugs  in reducing the death rate and  the length of stay in hospital  represent\ufffd\ufffd great progress m  the continuing fight against  the disease. But. the fight is by  no means over.\"  Mr. Atkinson said there were  presently more than 21,500  known cases of TB in the province. There were 610 new active cases found in B.C. last  yiear \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd more than  50  every  month.  \"Although   the   number   of  WHO OWNS THIS CAT?  A young grey cat has taken  up its abode at the home in  Sechelt of Mrs. T.A. Lamb and  Mrs. Lamb would like to find  its owner as it has been well  trained and is a nice clean cat.  As the Lamb family already  has its own cat, one is regarded  as being sufficient, so the owner please see Mrs. Lamb.  ANNOUNCE BAKE SALE  To help church furnishings  fund the W.A. of Port Mellon  Community church will hold a  bake sale Friday, Nov. 13 in  he cafeteria starting at 10:30  a.m.  deaths is down, the number of  new cases found continues to  be very high.\"  Mr. Atkinson said B.C. TB  Society officials count on the  Christmas Seals to support a  year 'round program of research, public education, free  chest X-ray and tuberculin  testing services.  Money   raised  by the   seals  also ha\ufffd\ufffd enabled the society to  stimulate the building oS  health units throughout th*e-  province by contributing IB  percent of the construction  costs. During the past three  years the society has granted  more than $300,000 to this end,  Mr. Atkinson said.  j  Blondie  By Chic Young S   Coast News, Nov. 12, 1959.  An ABC Weekly  Published by Sechelt Peninsula News Ltd.,  every Thursday, at Gibsons, B.C.  Box 128, Gibsons, B.C., Phone 45Q  FRED CRUICE, Editor and Publisher  Member B.C. Weekly Newspapers Advertising Bureau  Vancouver office, 508 Hornby St., Phone MUtual 3-4742  Member Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association  and the B.C. division of C.W.N.A.  Authorized Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.  Kates of Subscription: 12 mos., 2.50; 6 mos., $1.50; 3 mos., $1.00  Uaited States and Foreign, $3.00 per year. 5c per copy.  Rampaging buck fever  From what our department of entomology can discover  the words buck-fever can be applied to a nervous hunter, but. as  a result of what is occurring in the United States there is a new  type of fast buck-fever rampant.  If rigged quiz shows and bribed disk jockeys are not a  serious symptom of fast buck-fever perhaps someone can find  a better illustration.  The desire to be successful does contain the germ which  \ufffd\ufffdan produce fast buck-fever but the antidote appearss to be congressional investigation south of the border. It is a pity the greed  iSor \"prestige\" which seems to be the basis for buck-fever should  Slave to reach such proportions before it is uncovered.  Earl W. Kintne, chairman of the U.S. Federal Trade com-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmission, addressing the Audit Bureau of Circulations in Chicago  recently spoke on \"Self-Discipline at the Cross-Roads.\" Here is  \"what he said and the majority of Coast News readers will more  than likely agree with him.  \"I am quite aware that cynics ridicule the idea of self-  discipline by businessmen. And while I concede there is evidence  aplenty to support their cynicism, I know that without such vol.  tantary compliance with law, this nation would be confronted  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith two unacceptable alternatives: becoming a police state or  surrendering to commercial chaos.  \"Granted that both alternatives seem remote at this time,  I think it is tremendously important that we realize that self-  discipline by businessmen can deteriorate \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and that decay hastens decay. The capacity of business to police itself can be sapped  by indifference, by ignorance, by) avarice. It also can be under,  mined by the surrender of moral responsibilities to government  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hie demanding of new laws to fill the vacated bastions of self-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdzeliance.  - LETTERS  to editor  Editor: Last week a young  lad of 15 came into my house  with his suitcase and made him  self at home. He didn't ask if  he could stay but after he told  me he had no place to stay I  didn't have ihe heart to put  him  out.  So I gave him a bed to sleep  in and his meals at my house.  After a week's time he got up  one morning in the wee hours  and took leave without saying  as much as goodbye or thank  you and he also took the box  we made to put change in for  the Christmas turkey. We had  a little over $10 in the box  saved up towards the Christmas turkey and trimmings. I  am not giving this lad's name  but he is well known in Gibsons. J.K. Galley.  Picket wrong place  There are people in this world who take a rather narrow  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdview of the application cf the Sixth Commandment which reads  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThou shalt not kill.\"  During the hanging the other day of a man in England  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwho was found guilty of killing a member of the police force  while he was doing his duty, there was quite a demonstration  outside the prison by opponents of hanging.  The TV views on the demonstration outside the prison at  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdShe time of the hanging showed demonstrators carrying sign*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich read \"Thou shalt not kill.\"  Based on the actions of the demonstrators who are oppos.  ed to hanging it would appear that bullets which kill a policeman, a third man in a triangle or a victim of robbery are not subject to any of the commandments by which authorities are supposed to live.  True, these people must start somewhere to do away with  1he practice of hanging. Maybe picketing criminal hangouts with  \"Thou shalt not kill\" signs would be more logical. It would not  leach all who find it necessary to kill but it would reach a good  many potential killers.  QUOTABLE QUOTES  The effort by magistrates here and on the Peninsula to  2iave a fuU-time probationary officer appointed by the provincial  government is understandably meeting with full approval of  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPTA and other civic groups, and is one which we believe every  citizen would endorse.  In communities such as those between Lund and Gibsons  (the area which would be served by the proposed probationary  officer) many sentences imposed by magistrates carry a probationary qualification. Young offenders, getting their first taste  .of out-of-bound mischief, are often more suitably corrected in  their outlook by a probationary sentence than they would be by  a stiffer sentence which might bring them into association with  experienced criminals. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Powell River News.  *    *    *  A father in WHdwood is quite sure his pride and joy is  Steading for a successful career as a prosecuting attorney. One  evening father was trying to persuade his young son to finish up  his plate. \"Come on, now, Tony,\" daddy urged, \"think of the  thousands and thousands of children in India who'd be so happy  to have a chance at a plate like this that they'd do anything to get  it.\"  Tony surveyed his plate resentfully) for a moment, looked  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdup and said \"Name two.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Powell River News.  *    *    *  \"I am pleased to be able to say that both departments with  which I have been, associated in this government, namely, educa.  Son and lands and forests, sjre major wood-users in any of their  construction projects.  \"The department of education, through the 50-50 cost  sharing financing plan with school boards has become one of the  province's biggest builders. That department is one of the most  powerful promoters you can find for the use of wood in construction.  \"All their school plans specify the major material as wood  products if the locdl boards want to benefit by the 50-50 plan.  \"Where a school board, by choice only, not by by-law, insists on  -concrete construction, the department will only contribute the  equivalent of the cost of a frame building of the same capacity.  Where local by-laws require use of materials other than wood,  the department is required to pay? half tiie costs.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hon. Ray  Williston, addressing the first annual meeting of the Canadian  Wood Development council.  Editor: I am currently engaged in writing a book, \"Pioneers of The Canadian West,\"  which will help popularize the  history of your part of Canada  I would like to hear from any  of your readers who have memories of how they or their parents or grandparents helped  settle our Canadian Prairies  and mountain country.  Frank Rasky,  Editor,  Liberty Magazine.  Editor: Our annual brochure  tells of the diversity of the  work now being done at Central City Mission in Vancouver  The past year has been one of  challenge and expansion. No  organization can stand still in  these changing times and effectively  meet  the  challenge.  The very fine support which  the mission has received from  Vancouver and other parts of  the province has made it possible for us to expand the work  of the mission in two very important fields. In each case it  has been the realization of a  long standing hope, but a hope  which had to be deferred until  the right person could be found  for the job and funds made  available  to carry it out.  In May of this year Rev. L.  McFerran   joined the   mission  as a full time padre. We feel  very fortunate in having been  able to secure the services of  a young man dedicated to this ?  type of Christian work. Again, -  in  January   of   this  ytear our ?  first boys moved into our Ha-^  ney   ranch,   and   we   are   aU*?  greatly pleased with the reha- .  bilitation job being done there  under    the    sympathetic    and  wise   direction   of   the   house  parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kagger-  ty.  As our province and city  grow in population, so the demands on the mission are increased. Our. beds are filled  to capacity all year. Some  6,000 men were given free clothing. A free breakfast and  lunch were provided for six  months in the year to an average of some 600 men each day.  Any help you can give us in  publicity for our annual appeal commencing Nov. 16  would be greatly appreciated.  CF. Daly, Manager.  A uniform base for property* taxation throughout British  Columpia is being sought by  the Union of B.C. Municipalities.  Recognizing that assessment  inequalities which exist because of the three present acts,  the UBCM's annual convention this year instructed its incoming executive to seek a correction.  The executive proposes to  ask the government to form a  commitee to review the entire  question. This committee  would recommend such amendments to the Taxation Act. Assessment Equalization Act, and  Municipal Act as are necessary  to attain \"true equalization\"  throughout the province.  The government will be asked to form a committee comprising representatives from  the B.C. Association of Assessors, UBCM, the Assessment Advisory board, plus* technical experts from government departments concerned.  Anomalies between the three  acts, the convention found, are  the chief stumbling block to  uniform assessment. Thus, although the legislature has introduced the principle of equalized assessment, these anomalies make the legislation difficult, if not impossible, to interpret.  The Equalization Act, for  example, directs assessors to  use certain base years when  valuing property for school  purposes. But these years, and  also the percentage of actual  value which assessors must  work to, are set by order-in-  council. They can be changed  at any time by the cabinet.  For general purpose taxes,  on the other hand, assessors  must go by the Municipal Act,  which calls for assessment at  actual value.  Strict compliance with both  acts would mean municipal assessors must draw up two separate tax rolls, one for schools  and another for everything  else. This would be impractical, very costly, could result in  much disagreeable litigation  and the utmost confusion to  property; owners.  The cabinet has promised to  do something about the anom-  Chnrch Services  ANGLICAN  St. Bartholomew's,    Gibson*  11:15  a.m.   Matins  11:15 a.m.  Sunday School  St. Aidan's, Roberts Creek  3:00 p.m. Evensong  Sunday School  11.00 A.M.  St. Hilda's    Secheli  7.30 p.m. Evensong  11.00 a.m. Sunday School  UNITED  Gibsons  9.45 a.m. Sunday School  11 ajn. Divine Service  Roberts Creek, 2 p.m.  Wilson   Creek  3:30 p.m. Divine Service  Sunday School 11 a.m.  PORT MELLON  The Community Chuscb  7:30 p.m. Evensong  __ ST. VINCENT'S  Holy Family, Sechelt,    9 ajn.  St. Mary's, Gibsons, 10.30 a.m.  Port Mellon,   first  Sunday  oi  each month at 11.35 a.m.  PENTECOSTAL  9.45 ajn. Sunday School  11 a.m. Devotional  7:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service  Mid-week services as  announced  CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Church service and Sunday  School, 11 a.m. in Roberts  Creek United Church  Bethel Baptist Church  7730  P.M.,  Wed.,  Prayer  11:15 A.M., Worship Service  Pender Harbour Tabernad*  12:00 a.m. Morning  Service  7:30 p,m, Wednesday    Prayer Meeting  alies at the next legislature session. However this is only one  of several instances where confusion could be remedied by  revised legislation.  The Taxation Act, which lays  down assessment procedure for  unorganized or provincial territories outside municipal  boundaries, is so different from  the other two acts that it actually subsidizes rural taxpayers in many instances. Municipal councils, moreover, are  not sure that assessments in  areas under provincial jurisdiction really live up to the  true  principles of assessment.  Particularly aggravating are  the discrepancies created under the Taxation Act in school  districts which lie partly in an  unorganized area and partly in  a municipality. There are many-  such districts in the province.  In them, municipal property  owners bear the full cost of  many facilities while their  neighbors in unorganized areas  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd often just across  the road  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd contribute little if anything  through their tax bills.  The ridiculousness of the  present laws is realized even  more so when one notes that  courts of revision are appointed by the government for complete school districts.  One day the court sits with  powers and rules of the Municipal Act as law, and the next  judges  assessments under the  different law of the Taxation  Act Yet it is all supposed to  be for equalization purposes.  Should the assessor and governing authorities of a municipal area wish to appeal a decision of the court of revision,  they find a' situation in which  no appeal can be launched.  What is incorrect under tiie  Municipal Act is correct under  the Taxation Act.  TREE FROM RUSSIA  The planting of a Siberian  crab apple tree at Central Experimental Farm Ottawa, recently, was the occasion for expressions of goodwill towards  Canada by Soviet ambassador,  A.A. Aroutunian. The envoy  donated the tree, flown in from  Moscow, as a replacement for  the famous berried crab, malus  baccata, which stood for approximately 60 years in front  of the administration block  now known as the Saunders  Building.  NATIONAL WEALTH  The four great sources of Canadian wealth are forests, farms,  minerals, and water power. The  pulp and paper industry uses- the  water power to convert the forest  crop into dollars of national income chiefly obtained from  abroad through exports and  chiefly paid out in wages.  NOTICE  R. S. Rhodes  Doctor of Optometry  204 Vancouver Block  Vancouver, B.C.  Announces he will be in Sechelt  NOVEMBER   16  For an appointment for eye examination phone  Mrs. Evelyn Hayes, Sechelt 95.  If anyone desires any adjustment or repair to their  present glasses I will be pleased to be of service.  COOKlNG-Gos cooking  moan* faster, cheaper heat  > -with no waste in warm-up. Gas  heat meant smokeless Broiling  end a clean ovenl Cooking*  the gas way give* wnJimiferf  settings for cooK'mg speeds, j  HOY WATER~-Aga!\ufffd\ufffd gas  saves money! Instant heat  meani more hot water, faster  . . . less fuel used and more  hot water in reserve.  MOM! MATING-Your gas  heating starts with the flame!  With dependable metered gas  you get mere heat for your  dollar ottd hove \ufffd\ufffd cleaner  CLOTHES DRYING-Me?*r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi  gas permits you to enjoy drying- your clothes Indoors . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  laiter ... in wonderful, aw  fomatfc, money saving gas  tjryersl  ftKRIOIRATE-Sifenf, tow  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdest operation h yours with  a ga4 -operated refrigerator.  NO WONDER MORE Q*Ci HOMES  ARE USINO GAS APFUANCESB  convenience  Our metered service gives you all the advantages of \"city type\" gas service . . . continuous supply, no worry over tank level, and  payment after vse.only* Regardless of  when we fill, you pay only \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for what goes  through ihe meter each month \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd this means  you don't have to be home for deliveries,  sign delivery slips, or pay any cash.  service  Metering is entirely automatic. We mail you  a bill based on the exact meter reading and  you can check your own reading against ths  bill. Your monthly bill will be a smaller bill  and far easier to pay than cash on delivery.  City-type service will also permit you to  enjoy those additional gas appliances you  have always wanted.  accuracy  The meter oa your tank will b\ufffd\ufffd a tested  and sealed precision instrument. City utilities have proven it to be the most equitably  way to charge for gas. If proves to our  metered customers that they pay for only  the gas they actually use.  It's easy and fast  to convert... so call  us TODAY for details  on modern, metered  _LP GAS SERVICE  tttiiiiiiffii  C  &  S SALES  Phone SECHELT 3  L A. LS-OYB, Garden Bay  Phone  TU 3\ufffd\ufffd3  ~*f~y.*r\ufffd\ufffd*!W\\mi-\"^'  Phone GIBSONS 33 rA,Ay;,Ay'%4m&?  COMEDIENNE   PAM   HYATT  hopes her hero, Argo halfback!  Dick Shatto, will be talked about  on CBC television and radio coverage of the Grey Cup game  this year.  George Retzlaff, CBC super,  vising producer of TV sports,  must second-guess those \"masters of deceit\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd football quarterbacks \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and most of the  time he's right.  When a football game is tele,  vised Retzlaff remains outside  the stadium in a mobile unit  loaded with TV equipment. Before him are several monitors  (TV screens), each carrying a  different picture of what is  happening on the gridiron.  Retzlaff tells the \"switcher\"  which of the pictures to transmit to the network.  To do this he must decide  which of the four cameramen  he believes is in the best position to cover the next play,  and tell him to be prepared to  follow the man with the ball.  Here's an example of what  might happen during a game.  The team forms a huddle to  determine the next plsfy. Retzlaff advises camera one, a mobile camera on the sidelines  at ground level, to cover the  huddle. The switcher sends this  picture to the network.  Meanwhile, Retzlaff tries to  anticipate whether the quarterback will call a pass or running playj atod which player  will carry the ball. The score,  time remaining in the game  and the position of the ball on  the field are some of the factors that he must consider.  The actions of some players  are  also helpful to him.  \"Players have  certain man-  WANT ADS ARE REAL SALESMEN  Sechelt Beauty Salon  UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT  OPEN TUESDAY \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THRU \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SATURDAY  HAIR STYLING A SPECIALTY  Evelyn Hayes, Prop.  Phone SECHELT 95  nerisms which can tip off the  type of play coming up,\" says  Retzlaff. \"A man might have a  habit of rubbing his hands over  his sweater whenever he is to  be the intended pass receiver.'  Quickly he decides that the  team will pass. He informs  camera three, high atop the  stadium, to be ready to follow  the play.  There's an art to following  the play, too. The camera must  cover the passer until he  throws and then, keeping the  ball near the top of the picture  follow it until it is caught (or  missed).  \"You can't use one camera  to cover the passer and then  switch to another showing the  receiver,\" saiys Retzlaff. \"That  tends to confuse the viewer  and distort his sense of direction.\"  \"The viewer watching at  home can see only what is on  his screen and too many quick  transitions detract from hi?  enjoyment of the game,\" he  continues.  CBC's supervising producer  of TV sports is a busy man. On  some Saturday afternoons he  has to produce a football telecast and then hurry to another  part of the city to prepare for  an NHL hockey telecast in the  evening.  Perhaps Retzlaff's greatest  problem is technical break,  downs. On one occasion he was  forced to cover the last half of  a football game with one camera instead of the usual four.  On Saturday, Nov. 28, he  will produce the telecast of  Canadian football's yearly classic, the Grey Cup game, for  viewers from St. John's Nfld.,  to Victoria, B.C.  The game, to be played in  Toronto, will be carried on all  connected stations of the CBC  English and French TV networks.  Last year, 4,525,000 Canadians saw the Grey Cup telecast.  Retzlaff's greatest satisfaction came after his first Grey  Cup program in 1953. In hisi  calling of the plays he had an  average of 100 percent.  You can't do better than that  SOURCES  OF   PAPERBOARD  Some paperboard is- made of  wood pulp andi some is made,, in  whole or in part, from straw, or  from re-pulped paper.  GRAND OPENING!  Thursday, Nov. 12  Now in Larger Quarters in the BAL Block  OPENING SPECIAL  FIRST QUALITY NYLONS      ^gc pr  NYLONS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a pair plus a spare \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfirst quality 3 to pkg.      <gj  Some of the new lines that we have  added are: Flannelette sheets, wool  and viscose blankets, chesterfield  throws, 'Coutts greeting cards, tropical plants, canaries and cages, goldfish and a good selection of gift  items.  Make that new dress, apron, pyjamas, or nightie and choose your  material from our new selection of  yr#!dage remnants. It will be made  so easy for you with the help of the  SIMPLICITY PATTERNS.  FREE  TO THE FIRST 150 CUSTOMERS WE ARE GIV  ING A CUP AND SAUCER WITH YOUR PUR-  CHASE.  We have appreciated \"your patronage during the past year and we  look forward to these 'continued pleasant relationships in our new  quarters where we hope to be able to serve you better.  Coast News, Nov. 12, 1959.    3  Sechelt News  BY MRS. A.A. FRENCH  Mr. and Mrs. Harry Billings-  ley and children Jatiet and  Dick were in Sechelt from  Vancouver for the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. Bill-  ingsley's parents, Mr. and Mrs.  W. Birstall Billingsley, at the  home of Mr. and Mrs. L.W.  Billingsley. They received  many old friends, many letters  and cards and wonderful presents.  Mr. and Mrs. Graham Strachan of Vancouver and Mrs.  Strachan sr. of Courtenay visited Mr. and Mrs. James Stra.  chan over the weekend.  Mrs. W. McKee is on a visit  in Edmonton.  Mrs. E. Hogfoss of North Dakota is staying with her daughter Mrs. Agnes Engen.  Percy Root of Vancouver is  a guest of Mr. and Mrs. W.J.  Mayne.  The L.A. to the Sechelt Legion branch will hold its annual bazaar Dec. 8. The W.A.  to the Anglican church will  hold its bazaar on Nov. 19.  Port Mellon news notes  Hear missionary  Miss Winifred Harris speaking at thej-hank-offering meeting of the Gibson Memorial  United Church told of the five  distinct groups of Chinese people with whom she works to  educate in our language and  ways of life.  The first group is the Canadian born Chinese, then their  parents; the Chinese women  who came to Canada before  China was overcome by1 Communist rule and those who left  after the change, and lastly  young men entering Canada  now.  Miss Harris went to China  in 1921 and was there for 30  years. In 1957 she was appointed by the Women's Missionary  Society to the Chinese mission  in Ottawa. She is now on a  year furlough before retiring  after 38 years of service.  By Mrs. J. Macey  Mr. and Mrs. C.B. Davies  have returned from spending  the week end at Port Alberni  where they were guests of  their daughter and family, Mr.  and Mrs. Doug Rae and Joanie  Mr. and Mrs. J. Munro and  son Grant spent several days  in Vancouver during last week  Mrs. Norman Stacey spent  the week end in Port Mellon  visiting her parents, Mr. and  Mrs. N. Marleau. Mrs. Stacey,  before her marriage Oct. 31  at Courtenay, B.C. was formerly Anette Marleau, a graduate of Elphinstone High school  The couple now reside at  Campbell River.  Ss\/lurday) afternoon, Nov. 7,  Mrs. P. Quarry and Mrs. G.  Taylor assisted by Denise  Quarry and Karen Johnson,  entertained at a surprise shower for Mrs. Stacey. Both guests  and the guest of honor were  surprised when Mrs. Stacey  missed the ferry and arrived  several hours late. Gifts Were  opened later and many friends  dropped in at the Marleau  home during the weekend to  wish Annette the best of luck.  Mrs. Stacey left to return to  Campbell River Monday morning.  Mr. Arnold Puchalski is at  home convalescing after a recent automobile accident while  on a hunting trip. The truck he-  was in skidded on an icy road  and sent Mr. Puchalski and hi*  hunting companions to the hospital at Ashcroft. It will be a  few weeks before he will b&  able to return to work.  Mrs. J. Legh reports Kindergarten this year is well attended and no more children cajj.  be accommodated this yeer.  ALWAYS A CONTRIBUTOR  Tlie pulp and paper industry  has made its own way against  world competition without subsidies, price floors, guarantees,  or similar help. In war or peace,  it has always been a contributor  to the public treasury.  Guaranteed Watch &  Jewelry Repairs  Chris* Jewelers  Mail Orders Given Prompt  Attention  Work done on the Premises  Phone Sechelt 96  Power Outage  Electric power will be interrupted in the following area as follows:  Monday, Nov. 16, from approximately 1.30 p.m. to  approximately 2.30 p.m., Gower Point \/area \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Honeymoon Lane, Ocean Beach Esplanade, Pratt  Road, GoWer Point.  The outage is neccessary to permit B.C. Electric line crews to  carry out maintenance and construction work for the improvement to service.  B.C. ELECTRIC Co. Ltd.  Win a Month's FREE Living  5TDRE  SUNSET HARDWARE STORE  SLOGAN CONTEST  FOOD eiuu  BABY SITTER  Percy and Marion Lee  WIN ONE OF 3 GRAND PRIZES  A Month's Free Living  A prize for the best slogan from each area  LOWER MAINLAND \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd INTERIOR \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd VANCOUVER ISLAND  For the winner of our contest and his or her family the Sunset Group  of Hardware Stores will pay all the following bills for month of  December, 1959.  RENT OR MORTGAGE  $ 75 per month  FOOD     $100 per month  HEATING FUEL  $ 25 per month  ELECTRICITY      $ 10 per month  TELEPHONE      $ 10 per month  MOVIES      $ 10 per month  BARBER & BEAUTY SHOP   ...  ($ 10 per month  BABY SITTER     $ 10 per month  LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING     $ 10 per month  Get your entry form at  Hardware & Appliances  Phone GIBSONS 32  NOTHING TO BUY \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ENTER AS OFTEN AS YOU LIKE  WATCH  FOR OUR BB6 SUNSET SALE FLYER  on Darkest Moment  A WEBSttS CLASSIC  By PAT WELSH  Branches of evergreens and  gay colored balloons were used  to decorate Surtees Hall Nov. ?  when Halfmoon Bay Auxiliary  to St. Mary's Hospital held its  annual fall bazaar. Mrs. E.  Smith, president, in a few well  chosen words declared the bazaar open.  The sewing stall did a brisk  Susuiess and looked attractive  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith its array of colored aprons  Ifcnitted goods, towels and dressed dolls. Smart girls bought  lavishly of doll clothes at the  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdatoll and stuffed animal booth.  \"Sue fish pond was popular, the  moppets proudly exhibiting  ifcheir catches' The home baking  stall was soon depleted of its  array of pies, cakes, cookies,  and home made fudge. The  white elephant stall offered  some remarkable bargains in  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdisric a brae. Bingo was included  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand during refreshments raffle  tickets and door prizes were  &rswn.  vThe  Christian  Science  Monitor  AN   INTERNATIONAL  DAILY   NEWSPAPER  Good Reading  for the  Whole Family  a  News  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Facts  Family Features  \"She Christian Science Monitor  One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.  '     Send your newspaper for the timo  checked.   Enclosed find my check or  money order.    1 year $20 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  <t months $10 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      3 months $5 Q  Name  Address  \"CitT  Zone  State  PB-I*  Winner of the knitted car  coat was a Mrs. Gorrie of Vancouver and Mrs. Ed Curran  second.  Ladies' door prize, Mrs. B.  Graves; men's, Mr. E. Surtees.  Mrs. M. Tinkley won a beautifully dressed doll. The oil  painting by* Mrs. E. Brooks sr.  was purchased by Mrs. Lloyd  Cameron.  In charge of sewing were  Mrs, M. Meuse and Mrs. G. Jorgensen; dressed dolls and doll  clothes, Mrs. E. Smith; fish  pond, Mrs. G. Rutherford;  white elephant, Mrs. E. Curran; home baking, Mrs. P.  Welsh; raffles, Mrs. G. Rutherford and Mrs. E. Curran; door  prizes and tickets, Mrs. R.  Stone; accounting, Mrs. B. Robinson; refreshments, Mrs. Q.  Burrows and Mrs. B. Graves:  bingo Mr. J. Burrows assisted  by Mrs. Q. Burrows and Mrs.  G. Rutherford.  Mr. Milligan administrator  of St. Mary's Hospital donated  several boxes of bound books  to the auxiliary. They will be  sorted and sold  Mrs. Olga Hynek of Cortez  Island spent the past week as  the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C.  Tinkley. She returned home  Sunday.  The Welcome Beach Community Society held a Hallowe'en party Oct. 31. Three witches concocted a Witches Brew  with incantations as they stirred with owls' feathers, chicken bones and what have you.  They turned out to be Mrs. E.  Klusendorf, Mrs. P. White and  Mrs. A. Grundy. Dancing and  games were enjoyed and a gay  party sat down to enjoy re-  freshment*3'  Miss Marilyn Cooper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Cooper  of Redroofs left on an extended trip through the U.S.A. Accompanied by Miss Heather  Walpole they will spend sever,  al weeks visiting points of interest to the south, with a side  trip to Mexico. They will visit  San Francisco, Los Angeles,  Arizona, Las Vegas, Texas and  New York before proceeding  to Montreal where they will  spend Christmas with Mr. and  Mrs. P. Russell. Mrs. Russell is  the former MaJrilyn Lyons, of  Redroofs.  Mrs. W. Aberhart has arrived in Redroofs to spend the  winter months with her daughter Mrs. J. Cooper.  Variety store doubles size  Howe Sound 5 and 10 Cent  Store in the Bal Block, Marine  Drive, Gibsons, has doubled  its size and has added a number of lines of products generally unobtainable in Gibsons  previously.  The lines which have been  added include dry goods, yard-,  age materials, blankets, canaries and cages, goldfish and turtles, also numerous other items  There will be a line of Coutts;  greeting cards and other novelty items.  \"We have expanded our business because we have confidence in the future of this  area,\" said Percy Lee who with  his wife Marion took over thef  variety store from Mr. and Mrs.  J.P. Stewart.  Tlie business was expanded..  slightly then and after more  than one year's operation in  Gibsons Mr. and Mrs. Lee decided it would be worth their  while   to   expand   into   other  lines connected with variety  stores.  Mr. Lee has been in the variety store business for -the last  30 yiears and at one time was  employed by the Woolworth 5  and 10 cent store organization.  At one time he operated three  stores   in Vancouver.  Since coming to Gibsons Mr.  Lee has been studying the  needs of the community as far  as a variety store can serve the  people. The result, of his studies  was to double the size of his  store into the present two window front in the Bal Block.  4   Coast News, Noy. 12, 1959.  CFA VICE-PRESIDENT  Elmer Palmer, president of  the Jennis Bay Logging Co.  Ltd., was elected vice-president  of the Canadian Forestry Association of B.C. following the  quarterly* meeting of directors.  Ian Cameron, district forester,  Vancouver Forest District, wais  named a director. CFA is currently expanding its forest pro.  tection program throughout  British Columbia.  POPE JOHN ON TV  Pulitzer prize-winner Paul  Horgan narrates tlie new tele  vision series Rome Eternal, a  series of half-hour films on the  CBC-TV network as part of the  Good Life Theatre series, Sundays, from 12:30 to 1 p.m. The  series includes film programs  produced by various religious  denominations. Although there  are four episodes in the original series, CBC will insert a  special film entitled A Day in  the Life of Pope John, on Nov.  15.  Select and consult  an independent  insurance agent or broker  as you would  your doctor or lawyer  Look for this symbol when you buy fire, auto, or  general insurance  THE INSURANCE AGENTS' ASSOCIATION  OF BRITISH COLUMBIA  I  CALL  GIBSONS 31  Budd Kiewitz - DISTRIBUTOR SHELL OIL PRODUCTS  SELMA PARK \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GIBSONS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd PORT MELLON  LOOK AROUND YOU....  Need some printing before  the coming Christmas rush?  Phone GIBSONS 45Q  quality printing is produced  ESB^S3\ufffd\ufffdffi2E2\ufffd\ufffdE3     fB^npsazBEBm     W^MXBlmam  EE^ssaa'assEa'    $\ufffd\ufffdmsx&&Biimta Coast Nev\/s, Nov. 12, 1959.    5  COMING EVENTS  Nov. 13, Roberts Creek Legion  meeting,  8  p.m., Social,  9:30.  Nov. 13 2 p.m. St. Aidan's W.  A. Bazaar, Parish Hall, Roberts Creek. Home Cooking,  Sewing and Tea.  Nov. 19, St. Hilda's W.A. Christ  mas Bazaar and Tea, Parish  Hall, Sechelt, Thurs., 2:30 p.m.  BINGO, Gibsons Legion Hall,  Monday nights, 8 p.m. Everybody welcome.  DEATH  NOTICE ~  SATHER \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Passed away Nov.  8, 1959, Julius Martinson Sa-  ther, aged 79, of Redroofs,  Halfmoon Bay, B.C. Survived  by his partner Isabelle; 1 sister, Ida, Everett, Wash.; 1 brother, Ivar, Vancouver. Funeral service Wednesday, Nov. 11,  at 2 p.m. from St. Hilda's Anglican Church, Sechelt; Rev.  Denis F. Harris officiating. Interment Seaview Cemetery.  Graham Funeral Home direct  ors.  CARD OF THANKS  We wish to express our sincere  thanks to our friends and  neighbors for their kindness,  sympathy, cards and floral of.  ferings in our recent bereavement in the loss of a dear husband and father, Colin Cameron. Special thanks to Dr. McKee of Sechelt.  Mrs. Colin Cameron and family, Roberts Creek.  HELP WANTED  Be a success! Earn a good income close to home. Represent.  Avon Cosmetics. Friendly,  pleasant and profitable work  puts $ $ $ in your pocket. Write  Mrs. J. Mulligan, Westsyde,  Kamloops, B.C.  ^^  Carpenter, to contract to frame  2 storey no basement house.  Apply Box 91, Port Mellon,  Phone TU 4-5267.   AVON Calling Women to service Gibsons. Experience not;  necessary. We train you. Write  today. Mrs. J J. Mulligan, Westsyde,   Kamloops.  WANTED  Hand wound gramophones, and  records. Gib Gibson, Roberts  Creek Post Office.  Used furniture, or what have  you? Al's Used Furniture, Gibsons Phone 243.  ANNOUNCEMENT  Old country bricklayer, Port  Mellon to Pender Harbour. Do  anything, try anything. Gibsons 177W.         tfn  Sanded ready to paint furniture: 5 drawer chests, $25.95:  4 drawer, $22.95; 3 drawer.  $20.95. 6 drawer Mr. and Mrs.  $38.95; six drawer desk, arbor-  ite top and stool, $39; 4 drawer  student desk $26.95; 2 step  folding stools $6. Kitchen cabinets and furniture custom  built to order. Galley's Woodworking Shop. Phoiie Gibsons  212W.   TIMBER CRUISING  K.M. Bell, 2572 Birch St., Vancouver 9, Phone REgent 3-0683  We will rough in your plumbing for $250 on the average  bungalow. All copper installation, or 5 fixture complete  ready for service including No.  30 Electric tank, $550. Rogers  Plumbing, Gibsons, B.C.   Tree falling, topping, or removing lower limbs for view.  Insured work from Port Mellon to Pender Harbour. Phone  Gibsons 33 7F.  Marvin  Volen.  tfn  \" NEED A WELL DUG  Wells dug, cribbing put in,  pumps installed  Phone Gibsons 157  \"ROGERS PLUMBING Gibsons  Store 339, Residence 105Y.  I will come and lay out your  plumbing job for you, all the  rough in measurements, lend  you the tools free.. The all-  copper job costs you no more.  AH the tools you need are a  hacksaw and torch. Do it your  .self?   Sewing machine and small appliance repairs. Speedy service. Bill Sheridan, Selma  Park. Phone Sechelt 69X or  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGibsons 130. 2-12-c  Painting, interior and exterior,  paper hanging, hourly or contract. Reasonable rates. Estimates free. Ron Orchard, Se  Painting, interior and exterior,  chelt 69X. tfn  Deal with   Confidence  with  TOM   DUFFY  SECHELT REALTY  AND  INSURANCE  Member of  Vancouver Real Estate Board  & Multiple Listing Service  Canadian Association of  Real Estate Boards  B.C. Association of  Real Estate Boards  & Multiple Listing Service  Insurance Agents Assoc of B.C.  Waterfront \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Good Anchorage  Lots \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Acreage \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Farm land  Dwellings  Write: Box 155, Sechelt, B.C.  Phone Sechelt 22, 158 or 248  or better still call at our office  We will be pleased to serve  you  DRUMMOND REALTY  We  have buyers, and require  listings  Always has good buys  Notary Public  Gibsons Phone 39  PROPERTY FOR SALE  LOTS  FOR   SALE  Pratt Rd. full price $275.  Modern cottage constructed for  $3500 on lot of your choice.  Charles English Ltd.,  103-1718 Marine Dr.  West  Vancouver  WA 2-9145        Evg. AM 6-7317  5.73 acres on North Rd, 4 roomed house and other building  and fruit, trees. Mile and a half  past School Hall.  3 bedroom house at Davis Bay,  1 year old, small down payment. Phone Sechelt 16.  Seaview, 4 rooms, bath and  utility, approx 1 acre. 'Phone  Gibsons 20R. 1 mile east Roberts Creek Lower   Road.  PROPERTY WANTED  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  HAVE CLIENT WITH HORSE  Arceage wanted  Also buyers for vacant land on  Highway and  waterfront.  City buyers waiting  Charles English Ltd.,  103-1718 Marine Dr.  West Vancouver  WA 2-9145        Evg. AM 6-7317  Wanted \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Listings of small  properties with or without  buildings. Have clients waiting  for same. If you want to sell,  phone us and we will come out  and see your property. Totem  Realty, Phone 44, Gibsons, B.C.  ^     FOR RENT  'Spray and brush i>u1uAj.u0, h~j-  paper hanging. J. Melhus. Phone  Gibsons 33. 4-6-1  PRINTING  Your   printer   is   as near as  -your telephone at 45-Q.  Warm, furnished, 3 rooms, Davis Bay, near P.O. Free wood  on beach. Low rent for winter.  D. Erickson. Ph. Sechelt 225G.  4  Waterfront bungalow, modern,  oil stove. Phone Gibsons 353Y.  2 bedroom unfurnished cottage  in Selma Park, 1 block from  General Store. Phone Sechelt  25G or 196.  WANTED TO RENT  House wanted for couple with  3 children, Gibsons or Sechelt.  Care of house guaranteed. Sechelt 151W.  FOUND  A place to get take out service  We suggest local grown fried  half chicken with French fried  potatoes from DANNY'S. Ph.  Gibsons 140.  WATCH REPAIRS  For Guaranteed Watch and  Jewelry Repairs, see Chris's  Jewelers, Sechelt. Work done on  the premises. tfn  MISC. FOR SALE  Girl's bicycle, carrier, light,  lock, good condition, $20; Swedish, saw, $3. daytank for oil  stove,  $3. Gibsons 420M.  1952 Austin Sedan, 5 good  tires, $425. Phone Sechelt 33  evenings.  Four wheel drive jeep. Phone  Gibsons 223F, after 5 p.m.  IVz outboard; 10 ft. cartop; .22  automatic.   Ph. Gibsons 377K.  Wood and coal stove. $10. Ph.  Gibsons   171K.  Used electric and gas ranges, also oil ranges. C & S Sales, Phone  Sechelt 3.  Service Fuels. Large loads, good  alder, some fir. Phone Gibsons  173Q.  Boy Scout uniform, complete,  large size. Very god condition.  Reasonable price. Phone TU 4-  5361.  Signs? Showcards?  Telephone Gibsons 171*K  Stone Villa  Coleman oil heater with meter  and floor board. Like new.  Glassheat portable room heater, model P.R. 1, like new.  Fhone Gibsons 296Y.  FOR SALE (Continued)  ROGERS PLUMBING, phones,  store, Gibsons 339, house 105.  Beach  4   ring   electric  range,  like new, $59; Electric heater,  $8.50; Coffield Automatic dryer   with  timer  and  heat  control,  $119; stainless steel sink  $12.90;   new   Pembroke   bath  S45;   garbage   burner,   $37.50;  double    stainless    steel   sinks  special    $34.50;     Combination  wood and Rockgas stove $59:  white   enamel   oil   stove  $69  (needs some cleaning); Kemac  oil burner, $42.50; cast iron 5  sectional hot water boiler and  1 12 section radiator, suitable  for 6 or 7 room house, all in  good condition and guaranteed,  $100; new electric, saw, \\XA hp.  only $49.50; \"W industrial electric    drills,   $29.50;   No.   30  glass lined electric boilers $75;.  (10 years usual guarantee); No.-  40 glass lined electric boilers  $85;  used doors and windows  $2.50. Free delivery anywhere  on the peninsula.  Langley Glass Shop, Trans-  Canada Highway, Langley,  B.C. Telephone 483. You caitf  save $$ here. We will cut to  size, deliver and install those  large picture windows for you.  Sample prices of new glass:  5x8' $40; 5' x 10' $50; 16\"  x 24\" mirrors $2.65. We are up  this way several times a month  and can deliver to you.       tfn  Top soil, cement gravel, washed and screened, road grave\/  and fill. Delivered and spread.  Phone Gibsons 148M or Sechelt  22. tfn  WANTED  A boat trailer capable of transporting a heavy 18 foot boat.  Phone Sechelt 101 or 240.  DIRECTORY (Coniinued)  DIRECTORY   (Coniinued)  DIRECTORY  PENINSULA     CLEANERS  Cleaners for the Sechelt  Peninsula  Phone  GIBSONS 100 \\  .HILL'S MACHINE SHOP i  Cold Weld Process   \"-        !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Engine Block Repairs  Arc, Acy. Welding  Precision Machinists  Phone 54 Residence 152  PENINSULA TV  Sales and Service  Headquarters for  FLEETWOOD  RCA VICTOR  HALLICRAFTERS  TV \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Radio \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hi-Fi  Phone Gibsons 303  See us for all your knitting:  requirements. Agents for Mary  Maxim Wool.  GIBSONS   VARIETIES  Phone Gibsons 34R  TRADER'S ACCOUNTING  SYNDICATE :]  \" ' Public accountants : j  Stationery supplies \\  Box 258,   Gibsons ?  Phones: Gibsons (office) 251. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  (res) 285 ]  Hours, 8:30 to 5, Mon. to Fri|  or by appointment  L. GORDON BRYANT  NOTARY PUBLIC  at  Jay-Bee Furniture and  Appliance Store  Office Phone,  Gibsons 99  House Phone. Gibsons 119  PENINSULA  ACCOUNTING SERVICE  All Types of Accounting  Problems Expertly Attended  Village . Enterprises Bldg.  Sechelt  Office Open 9 a.m. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 5 p.m.  Daily  Phone Sechelt 37  GIBSONS PLUMBING  Heating.  Plumbing,  Quick,  efficient service  Phone Gibsons 401R  CLYDE  PARNWELL        j*  TV SERVICE  Radio  and   Electrical   Repairs ^  Evening   calls a  specialty  Phone Gibsons 93R  A. M. CAMPBELL  REFRIGERATION  SALES AND SERVICE  Commercial Dome-tie    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:  West Sechelt Ph. 212R        i  SAND \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GRAVEL  CEMENT  BUILDING MATERIALS  TRUCK & LOADER RENTAL\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  FOR DRIVEWAYS, FILL. etc.  SECHELT  BUILDING   SUPPLIES  Phone Sechelt 60  Evenings, 173  or 234  Home and Industrial Wiring  Electrical Heating .;  Radios.   Appliances.. TV Service >  GIBSONS ELECTRIC  Phone 130  Authorized GE Dealer  PENINSULA  FUELS  W.  FUHRMANN, prop.  Wood, coal, Prest-o-logs  Phone Gibsons 95M  FOR ANYTHING.ELECTRICAL  call  Sun-Co Electric Co. Ltd.  WIRING and HEATING  We  Serve  the  Peninsula  Bob Little \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Phone Gibsons 162  Marine   Men's   Wear  We carry a full line of men's  clothing and accessories  Suits Tailored to  Measure  Branded line of Work Clothe*  Footwear and Luggage  Jewellery \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Watches  Clocks, Electric Shavers  Watch Repairs  Phone 2, Gibsons, B.C.  THRIFTEE DRESS  SHOP  \"Personalized  Service\"  Agents  Brown Bros. Florists  Anne's Flower  Shop  Phone Gibsons 34X  C and S SALES, SERVICE  Agents for  Propane Gas  Combination Gas Ranges  Sales and Installations  Free Estimates  Electric and Gas Hot Plates  FURNITURE  LINOLEUMS  Phone 3 Sechelt  WIRING  See Dave Gregerson for your  wiring and electric heating.  Pender Harbour  Phone TU 3-2384  C. E. SICOTTE  BULLDOZING SERVICE  Land  Clearing  Road Building  Logging \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Landscaping  FREE ESTIMATES  Phone 232 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Gibsons  TELEVISION  SALES AND  SERVICE  Dependable Service  RICHTER'S  RADIO  -  TV  Fine Home Furnishings  Major Appliances  Record Bar  Phone Sechelt 6  MARSHALL'S   PLUMBING  HEATING  &  SUPPLIES  Phone Gibsons 134, 329 or 33  AT YOUR  SERVICE  Dump trucks for hire  Building  Gravel,   Crush rock,  Bulldozing,, Backhoe and  Loader.  Basements and Culverts  Ditch digging, etc.  ROY  GREGGS  Halfmoon Bay       Sechelt 183G  D. J. ROY, P. Eng., B.C.L.S-  LAND.  ENGINEERING  SURVEYS  P.O. Box 37,  Gibsons  1334 West Pender St.,  Vancouver 5       Ph MU 3-7477  MISS BEVERLY GREVELING  Your AVON representative  Phone Sechelt 228M  SMITH'S KEATING  CHIMNEY & OIL STOVES  SERVICED  Phone Gibsons 22B  GIBSONS  BUILDING SUPPLIES  LTD.  \"WE CARRY THE STOCK\"  Phone Gibsons 53  LET  US HELP YOU  PLAN NOW  ~ TRADESMAN  Painting, Decorating  Rolling, Paperhanging  - ....   Clean, dependable work  guaranteed  VICTOR  DAOUST  R.R. 1, Gibsons. Ph. 263G.  WANT AD RATES  Condensed style 3 cents word,  minimaim 55 cents. Figures in  groups of five or less, initials,  etc. count as one word. Additional insertions at half rate.  Minimum 30c.  Cards of Thanks, Engagements,  In Memoriams, Deaths and Births  up to 40 words $1 per insertion,  3c per word over 40.  Box numbers 25c extra.  Cash with order. A 25c charge  is made when billed.  All advertising deviating from  regular classified style becomes  classified display and is charged  by the measured agate line at  6c per line\/minimum of 14 agate  lines.  CLASSIFIED DISPLAY  Legals \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 17 cents per count  line for first insertion then 13c  per count line for consecutive  insertions.  Classified advertisements deadline 5 p.m. Tuesday.  AGREEMENT  It is agreed by any advertiser  requesting space that liability of  the Coast News in event of  failure to publish an advertisement or in event that errors occur in publishing of an advertisement shall be limited to the  amount paid by the advertiser  fsjr. that portion of the advertising soace occupied bv \\\\>. incorrect item only, and that there  shall be no liability in any event  beyond amount paid for such  advertisement. No responsibility  is accepted by the newsoaper  when copy is not submitted in  writing   or   verified  in  writing.  A.  E.   RITCHEY  TRACTOR  WORK  Clearing,   Grading,   Excavating  Bulldozing, Clearing Teeth  FOR RENTAL  Arches, Jacks, Pumps  Air Compressor,  Rock Drill  Phone Gibsons 176  SIM ELECTRIC LTD.  all types  ELFCTR1CAL  WORK  Phone Sechelt  161  Evenings   130.  Gravel Hauling and Topsoil  Ditch Digging and Culverts  Bulldozing  Phone FRANK WHITE  TUrner  3-2392  Police Court  During the past two weeks  12 speeders appeared in Magistrate Andrew Johnston's court  paying a total of $300 in fines.  The speeders were: Klaas De-  Vieres, Vancouver; Gordon  Macintosh, Halfmoon Bay;  John Jonas, Selma Park; Dave  Hamilton, Hopkins Landing;  Norman Dhooghe, Vancouver;  James Greenwood, Hope; Laurie Sabolainen, Pender Harbour;  Maurice Delavere, Burnaby;  Colin Wingrave, Gibsons; Lionel Jones, Vancouver; George  Miller, Sechelt and Ross Lay-  cock, Sechelt.  Kenneth Newcombe of Se.  chelt was fined $20 for passing  on solid white line on highway  101.  Kenneth Lyall of West Sechelt paid a $20 fine for trespassing on the Indian Reserve  at Sechelt.  Norman Edwardson of Sechelt failed to stop the vehicle  he was driving at a stop sign  and was fined $10.  Because he operated a car  without proper headlights, David Kinne of Hopkins Landing  was fined $15.  James Jeffries of Sechelt  was fined $15 for an infraction  of his driver's license.  Ivan Skidmore of Port. Mellon was fined $35 for being  found guilty of driving without  due care and attention.  Dennis Spence of Sechelt  paid a $10 fine for operati-> a  car without a tail light.  Louis Levigne of Gibsons  was fined $10 for having an  over-length load on the truck  he was driving.  Gillium Yatklowitz of Pender Harbour was fined $20 for  driving without a driver's license. He paid a further $10  for failing to stop his car at a  stop sign.  Where was the first ladies  college in Canada?  In Sackville, N.B., as part of  what was to become Mount Allison University. The university  is named in honor of Charles  Frederick Allison who, in 1939,  provided a gift of money and  land for the foundation of Mount  Allison Wesleyan Academy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd a  residential institution for young  men of the Wesleyan Methodist  faith \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd from which the university developed. In 1843 the academy was opened. In 1854, with  further assistance from Mr. Allison, a similar institution was  started for young women \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the  first ladies' college in Canada.  Degree-granting powers; were  conferred on Mount Allison College in 1858 and the first college  class graduated in 1863. Mount  Allison has the distinction of  being the first university in Canada (and possibly in the commonwealth) to confer degrees on  women. Grace Anne Lockhart  was awarded the B.Sc. degree in  1875 andi Harriet Starr Stewart  was granted a B.A. in 1882.  Mount Allison is now a United  Church of Canada school, conducted on non-denominational  lines.  Who was first intendant of  New France?  Jean Talon (1625-1694),. who  was appointed to the position in  March 1665 after having been intendant of the province of Hain-  ait in France The intendant,  governor and bishop formed the  triumvirate that guided the progress of New France and it was  the intendant who shouldered  most of the administrative responsibilities.  With the advice and support  of Colbert ,one of the King's  ministers in France, Talon in  three years achieved a remarkable expansion of the infant  colony. He literally re-created  New France on a sound economic  basis before returning to France  in 1668. He again served as intendant from 1670 to 1672.  PERPETUAL YIELD  There is virtue in having a continuing organization like a corporation managing a continuing  resource such as a forest. Continuity of management is an essential cf perpetual yield.  Ships at  Port Mellon  SS Archandros, Greek manned, loaded pulp Sept. 29 along  with a cargo mainly of copper  for the Atlantic seaboard. She  is registered at Monrovia. Liberia, 10,900 dw tons \" and  cruises at 10 knots.  MS Norden, from Copenhagen loaded pulp Sent. 30 to  Oct. 3 for United Kingdom.  Other cargo was lumber, plywood and shingles. She is 8,325  dw tons and cruises at 12 knots  JUftufe* \\VWeoftfcWj  764 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd EASY PILLOW PETS turn bedtime into fun-time for little  children.  Easy  to  make of remnants. Transfer of 3 faces; pattern  for ears; directions for BV2 x 18-inch pillows.  566 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GAY   SWEDISH   WEAVING   DESIGNS add bright color to*  anything made of huck \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd towels, potholders, mats,, cloths, scarves,  aprons. Charts, directions for four easy, smart designs.  756 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SNOWFLAKE CHAIR SET protects and beautifies at same  time. Large pineapple medallion forms center of back. Chair back  12xl5V2, armrest 7x13 inches in No. 30 cotton.  Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for eaah pattern to Coast News, Needlecraft Dept., 60 Front St.  West, Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME  and ADDRESS.  New! New! New! Our 1960 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book ia  ready NOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular designs to  crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt weave \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd fashions, home furnishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits. In the book FREE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 3 quilt patterns.  Hurry, send 25 cents for your copy. This week's  6    Coast News, Nov. 12,  1959  Chilled Vegetable Juice   _...  Macaroni with, Cheese  Pan-Fried  Sausage   Cakes  Carrots with Green Onions  Spanish Apricot Cream  Hot or Iced Coffee or Tea  All Measurements are level  Recipes Proportioned to  Serve 4 or 6  Pan - Fried  Sausage   Cakes:  Shape 1% lbs. pork sausage mear  into patties about 1\" thick. Dust  with a mixture of % c. fine-nunc-  ed   parsley,    1   tsp.    powdered  marjoram,   Vs  tsp.  nutmeg   ana  1 tbsp. cornmeal or flour. Pan-  fry slowly  about 15 min. Turn  once.  To serve, arrange around tne  macaroni and cheese.  If the macaroni is baked in a  go-to-table casserole, set it on a  platter or small tray and surround it with the sausage cakes,  tomato wedges and sprigs of  fresh parsley.  Spanish Apricot Cream: in a  double-boiler top, combine the  contents 1 (12 oz.) can aprieot  nectar, 2 tbsp. lemon juice and  % c water. Add1 1 envelope un-  . flavored gelatin, Vz c- sugar and  Vb tsp. salt.Heat and stir until  the gelatin melts.  Next, separate 2 eggs. Beat the  yolks until creamy. Slowly stir  in Vz c. of the hot mixture. Return to the double boiler. Cook-  stir until the mixture coats the  spoon.  Then beat the egg whites stiff.  Fold in the apricot mixture.  Rinse 6 good-sized individual  moulds with cold water and dust  with granulated sugar.  Spoon in the gelatin. Chill 4  hrs., or until firm. Unmould and  serve with whipped cream or any  whipped topping. Or garnish with  halved, sugared, fresh apricots  and commercial sour cream.  Guaranteed Watch &  Jewelry Repairs  Chris* Jewelers  Mail Orders Given Prompt  Attention  Work done on the Premises  Phone Sechelt 96  ---\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       SIZES  9386 12-20; 40  Choose the skirt that best becomes YOU \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd softly flared or  shadow-slim. This casual shirr-  dress is simple to sew yet smart  all year 'round. Make it in winter  cotton, faille.  Printed Pattern 9386: Misses'  Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size  16 (full skirt) 4y2 yards 35-inch.  \"Printed directions on each  pattern part. Easier, Accurate.  Send FIFTY CENTS (50c) in  coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Please print  plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,  STYLE NUMBER.  Send your order to MARIAN  MARTIN, care of the Coast  News, Pattern Dept., 60 Front  St. West, Toronto, Ont  Rogers Plumbing  PRICES LOWER THAN THE CATALOGUES  SOME LESS THAN WHOLESALE  3\/4\" Copper       32c foot  Chromium Plated Traps    2.10  Range Boilers     $19.50  New Close-Coupled English Toilets        $29.50  White Bathroom Set, everything complete .... $129.50  Stainless Steel Sinks    $12.90  4\" Soil Pipe    $4.90 per 5 ft. length  Pembroke Baths, white enamelled       $55.00  4\" Vitrified Tees for Septic Tank $2.50  200 gal. Septic Tanks, Delivered  ;    $48.50  3\" Copper Tubing in 12 ft. lengths $1.39 per foot  1\/2\" Hard Copper Tubing, 12 ft. lengths \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 20c per foot  1\/2\" Elbow, copper    10c  1\/2\" Tee, copper      13c  No Corrode Pipe, 8 ft. lengths       $4.00  also 2 in. Perforated  8 ft. lengths 3V2 in -.   $3.15  also Crosses for Septic Drains  WE NOW SELL PLASTIC PIPE & FITTINGS  1\/2\" to I1\/2\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd S & S Catalogue Prices  No. 40 GLASSLINED ELECTRIC TANK  2 Elements \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 3,000 Watts \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I# Years Guarantee  ONLY  $86  No. 30 GLASSLINED ELECTRIC TANK  1 Element \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 10 Years Guarantee  ONLY $77  SAVE AT LEAST $10  JACUZZI PUMPS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd we sell them for less  also DURO PUMPS  MODERN PLUMBING ROUGHED IN  Average House -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd $250  ANYTHING YOU DON'T WANT WE  REFUND YOUR MONEY  GIBSONS  BOX 197  Phones  STORE 339 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RESIDENCE 105Y  Unnoticed by most people, a  new educational system has been  established in B.C. in the past  four years.  More than 40 schools or classes  for mentally retarded children,  including one in Gibsons, have  been established by the chapters  of the Association for Retarded  Children of B.C.  Retarded Children's Week  from Nov. 15 to 26 will be marked across Canada and the U.S.  draw public attention to the  problems of children handicapped by mental retardation.  This year the Association assisted by local chapters will also  conduct a province-wide campaign for $200,000 to provide additional services for the children.  Until the B.C. Association was  formed, there were no educational    facilities    for    retarded  children. They were not permitted to attend public school and  so the gap between them and  society  was  made   wider.  But now 42 special classes for  these children are operated by  a-xociation chapters throughout  B.C. including the one here.  Backed by grants from the B.C.  Government and supported by  public opinion, the association  is proving that mentally retarded children can benefit from  education.  Albert Lynn, local campaign  chairman said, \"They can learn  the simple things so essential to  modern living \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd how to care  for themselves, how to carry out  simple, manual jobs and how, in  some cases, to read and write.  \"Children once doomed to useless lives are being made into  potentially useful people.\"  The association estimates that  there are about 9000 mentally  retarded children of school age  in B.C.  \"Because of this, expanded facilities and services are serious)  community needs,\" Mr. Lynn  saidi, \"and that is why we have  decided to conduct a fund drive  tihis year.\"  mwmmm Bammsmm  Same Night \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Same Time \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Same Place  Robert D. Wright, N.D.  NATUROPATHIC    PHYSICIAN  Graduate of  Cal. Chiropractic College, etc.  During November \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mondays  only j\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1 to 7 p.m.  Resinning regular schedule  December 2      ,  To the General Public...  Anyone interested is invited to attend the Annual Meeting of the Sunshine Coast Boy Scout  Association which wiU be held in the, Wilson  Creek Community Hall at 8 p.m. on November 20.  Refreshments will be served after the business  meeting. All Scouters and their wives in particular are invited to attend.  I  Thurs., Nov. 12  GIBSONS SCHOOL  HALL\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd8 p.m. SHARP |  SG CASH PRIZES  1  I  Don't Miss first Game $10 I  SUNSHINE GOAST WELFARE FUND  \ufffd\ufffd i   ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' \"  \ufffd\ufffd  t.  less time to dry, fewer clothes to buy  WITH  AN   AUTOMATIC   CLOTHES   DRYER  You save time, save money,  save work, save steps\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwith  an automatic clothes dryer.  See the new models now  at your appliance dealer's.  You'll save precious hours for family activities the  year 'round with an automatic clothes dryer. Loaded in  seconds, the wash is dry in minutes. Compare that with the  time-wasting; weather-waiting clothesline routine! You'll  save money, too. Many clothes, (especially children's)  can be worn, washed, dried and wornagain> all in the same day.  So you don't need to \"buy as many changes of clothing \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  and your dryer's gentle action saves costly wear and tear, as well.  B.C.EIiECTRIC  For Best Deal In Electrical Appliances Call  RICHTER'S  RADIO  &  TV  CENTRE JOHN   WOOD   HARDWARE   &   APPLIANCES  Phone Sechelt 6 Phone GIBSONS 32  PARKER'S  HARDWARE.  Sechett  Phone Sechelt 51  SECHELT   1S1W Grade level entrance house  PLAN  NO. (182-8  AREA: 1182.5 SQ.FT.  THE   BUILDING   CENTRE  (B.C.)   LTD.,  PLAN    SERVICE-  VANCOUVER,     B. 0*.  PLAN No. 1182B  (Copyright  Here is another version of the  ever popular upper living\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgrade  level entrance type of house.  These houses are excellent for  view lots that cannot be excavated, so that the basement area or  lower level can be used to its  fullest extent. This \"house is designed for all living at the fronf,  kitcjien dining and living room  right across the front of the  house, and accessable to the sun-  deck at the front which extends  No. 117093)  around and over the carport. The  lowerlevel of this hous* also features a large recreation room,  laundry and furnace room, etc.  Designed for N.H.A. approval  working drawings are available  from the Building Centre, 116 E.  Broadway, Vancouver 10. This  house is also available with 1050  square feet, featuring an outside  wall fireplace.  Send 25c to cover mailing and  handling of our new plan book,  Select Home Designs.  Roberts Creek items  By Mrs. M. Newman  Mr. and Mrs. Norman Efwart.  have returned from the East  where they visited relatives in  Toronto. They spent a few days  in New York before flying  home.  Mrs. J. Leatherdale was in  Vancouver last week visiting  her mother, Mrs. Saddler.  The T. Woodleys and the W.  Woodleys were up for tlie  weekend    putting    things    in  Fishing Tackle  Commercial and Sports  Hardware\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOry  Goods  BAPCO   PAINT  Interior & Marine  HASSANS STORE  PENDER HARBOUR 182  ship-shape order for the  winter.  Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Heaslip  and Mrs. Roy Bennet have returned to their home in Victoria after spending two weeks  with friends here.  En route from Bellingham  to Powell River, Mr. and Mrs.  T. Wright with Mary ana  Bruce, stopped in to visit with  the Thompson family at their  camp.  Reporting good response, to  the Poppy Day Funds were collectors Mesdames J. Thyer, G.  Mould, J. Matthews, F. Skinner, J. Monrufet, B. Cope, B.  Davidson and R.  Ellis.  S. Jefferson spent a few days  iii Vancouver during the week.  By Archer Wallace  Nearly four centuries ago  the Elhglish musician, William  Byrd, although a Roman Catholic in religion, played the organ in the Anglican cathedral  at Lincoln and held the position as organist there during  most of his long life. He was  one of tlie 'best known composers and wrote many notable  compositions.  Byrd remained loyal to his  own   church   during his   long  life   but   was   also   happy  to  make  his  contribution to the  Protestant   Church,   a service  which he said, made him very  happy. It is an interesting and  inspiring lesson  in toleration.  What did the  musician think  about during the sermons? Was  he critical or  scornful?  I  do  not   think   so.  From   all    we  know about him he was a deeply religious and charitable man,  quick to recognize the sincerity of others and eailger to do  good whenever the opportunity  presented itself. And this in a  time  of much bitterness   and  intolerance.  *    sp    *  I have frequently seen this  admirable quality in musicians;  scores of times, at. the close of  a service, soloists, organists  and others have calmly told  me of their church affiliation  which frequently was that of  a different viewpoint. Yet they  entered into the spirit of the  service with reverence and apparent enjoyment. They had  no sense of being disloyal to  their own church; they had a  feeling of being one in basic  purpose.  When the famous missionary  and musician, Albert Schweitzer was a lad living in Lorraine, where his father was  pastor of the local evangelical  congregation at Gunsbach, the  same building was used by.  Catholics and Protestants at  different hours, a practice  which prevailed in Alsace-Lorraine in many districts for a  long time. Schweitzer felt that  this custom had a salutary effect upon both groups and in  his \"Memoirs of Childhood and  Youth,\" he has this to say about  it:  '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*  \"One thing more I have taken with me into life from this  little church, that the Protestant and Catholic at the same  time, I mean religious tolerance. These Catholic-Protestant  churches, which had their origin in the irresponsible edicfr  of a ruler, are for me something more than a historical  nhe*norn*^\ufffd\ufffdo*n. Tflipv arp a  is>vm-  2fs the unit at. tbgUftl The modem styling of a  Rockgas Propane heater blends with any  interior. And dependable warmth heats every  corner of the room J  Rockgas Propane  Starting \/an. 1  Coast News Subscription Rates  will increase to $3 per year  instead of $2.50.  Copies purchased at stores wi  increase to 7c instead of 5c  bol to show that the differences  which separate churches today  are things which are destined  ultimately to disappear. When  I was still merely  a  child,  I  felt it to be something beautiful that in our village Catholics and  Protestants   worshipped in the same kluilding, and  my heart fills with joy today  whenever I set foot inside it.  I should like all the churches  in Alsace which are still used  by both confessions to remain  so, as a prophecy of, and an  exhortation to, a future of religious unity, upon which we  must ever  keep  our thoughts  fixed if we are really and truly Christians.\"  *    *    *  There seems to be a lot of  intolerance in the world today  yet I believe it is on the wane  in spite of appearance. Several  years ago a friend of mine asked me what I liked best in peo-  FIGHT CARD  Dec. 12-8 p.m.  GIBSONS   SCHOOL   HALL  10 BOUTS  Featuring  Z bouts   from Vancouver  pie. I was not prepared for the  question but if I were-asked  now I would have on answer  picture of the Roman Catholic,  ready. I like toleration. The  William Byrd, playing the organ in Lincoln cathedral and  those different groups using  the same buildings in Alsace-  Lorraine, make delightful read  ing.  Coast News, Nov. 12, 1959.   7  A complete Optical Service  Every Canadian has a very direct interest   in the woodlands.  OPTOMETRIST  Palmer  Apt.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGibsons, B.C  Office Hours  10 a.m. io 5 p.m.  or by  appointment  Phone GIBSONS 334  ILL WOOD  ALDER  FIR  DUFF'S      FUEL  WILSON CREEK SECHELT 78F  DELICIOUS  HOME MADE STYLE BREAD  CAKES - PIES \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd PASTRIES  PRODUCTS FRESH \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd PRICES RIGHT  VILLAGE BAKERY  Phone SECHELT 49  Go Anywhere!!  with  Dominion Royal  Quietest Tires  You Never Heard!  Carve Out Their  Own Traction  GOOD TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE  Medium Price  Phone GIBSONS 113 ,1959  TQftOtfTO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLONDON \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  11 HOURS 55 MINUTES  MONTREAL-PAWS  U HOURS 20 MINUTES  VANCOUVER-MONTREAL  8 HOURS 25 MINUTES  VANCOUVER-MONTREAL  17 HOURS  1960-  TORONTO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd LONDON  7 HOURS 15 MINUTES  MONTREAL-PARIS  7 HOURS  VAHCQUVER-fdONTREAL-  5 HOURS  \\C enro  Enrolment'at the University  of British Columbia for the  ; 1959-60 session has increased  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd6.5 percent, figures released  by Registrar Jack Parnall  show.  A  total   of  10,570   students  merit stii! rising  8    Coast News, Nov. 12, 1959,  Eastern and Western Canada  will be less than five hours apart  early next year when Trans-  Canada Air Lines takes delivery  of the first of six ordered 127-  passenger, 550-mile-an-hour Douglas DC-8 Jetliners. The aircraft  will go into service on trans-  Atlantic routes, cutting present  flying times by more than one-  third. The first of the Rolls-  Royce-powered DG-8s, pictured  here, flew at Long Beach, Calif.,  on July 23. Inset is a photograph  r  Taseiia Shoppe  I  Just In  LADIES SLIMS and SWEATER SETS  JACKETS for MEN and BOYS  GENERAL MERCHANDISE  Phone SECHELT 54  Now is the Time  For Inside Work  INSULATE YOUR ATTIC  WITH ZONOLITE      sheet  $1.50  LINO TILE YOUR FLOORS  QDCftllll      \"A\" GAUGE LINO TILE at 1D\ufffd\ufffd  OrE-VlAL    per tile \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd in several colors        lut  CERAMIC & PLASTIC TILE for bathroom ,walls  KITCHEN CABINET WORK  Plywood \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Peg Board \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Alrborite \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Aluminum Trim  LUMBER  1 x 8 No. 2 Cedar Boards S4S    2x4 No. 2 Cedar S4S  1x10 No. 3 & BTR Spruce S4S    2x4 No. 4 Fir    S4S  Gibsons Building Supplies Ltd.  Phone GIBSONS 53  DOCTORS' - SPECIALISTS'  SUGEONS' - OSTEOPATHS'  ANAESTHETISTS'  FEES PAID  \"The British Columbia Hospital Insurance Plan offers protection against (the cost of essential Hospital  care. IT DOES NOT cover medical-surgical fees.\"  The Continental Casualty Company now offers to  thie residents of British Columbia a Physician and  Surgeon coverage thait pays doctor's bills at HOME,  CLINIC, OFFICE AND\/OR HOSPITAL.  HIGHLIGHTS:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIndividual and Family Coverage.  2\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEnrollment to ANY AGE.  3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo medical examination required.  4\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCoverage extends coast-to-coast including United States.  5\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLoss of income due to disability up to $300.00 monthly  for life.  6\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSpecial   wage   benefit  plan  for  Loggers   and',  Sawmill  workers.  5,000.00 FAMILY POLIO COVERAGE  HEART ATTACK\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDIABETES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdARTHRITIS  Past health no longer means you must do without this  protection. Special plans are now available which COVER  EVEN A RECURRENCE OF YOUR CONDITION.  .  For Further Information  Please Fill Out Coupon and Mail to  Your Local Representative  ALEX BODROGI, BOX 558, COAST NEWS  Name     ___   t  Address          Phone    __ ____ Age  Martial Status  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  of T.CA's first passenger aircraft, a 10-passenger, 200-mile-  an-hoiir Lockheed Electra, purchased in 1937 and used on transcontinental air service. The  Electra was only 50 feet in  length, while the DC-8 stretches  149 feet from nose to tail. The  two are shown here in comparative size. The DC-8 devours more  fuel in taxi-ing and take-off  than the Electra was capable of  carrying. (TCA PHOTO)  Peacetime  job for CD  Civil Defence has two functions.   Its   wartime   duties   include   the   safety   of civilians  during  a nuclear   attack,  and  ss one phase of this duty, the  provincial   Civil   Defence   Co.  ordinator is  at present distributing survival information to  every British  Columbia home  outside   the   Greater  Vancouver and  Greater Victoria districts.  There is also a great need  for an active peace-time Civil  Defence organization in every  community. In the past month  when two boys were reported  missing on a fishing trip on  the Capilano River in North  Vancouver, Civil Defence was  one of the first groups called  out for the search.  A flood, a serious fire, an  earthquake, an explosion, or  any one of a number of other  possible peacetime disasters  all indicate the need for a  strong Civil Defence disaster  organization at the community  level.  Personnel are trained in  first aid and in the removal of  residents from a stricken area  and for their care elsewhere.  They can assist the regular  fire and police organizations,  they can spread the warning  of approaching danger.  The need for Civil Defence  is greater in the smaller communities rather than in the  large metropolitan areas.  Peacetime disasters rarely  destroy or disrupt more thap. a  small segment of a city with  a population of several hundred thousand, and a citv is  more able to contend with such  a disaster through its regular  municipal employees.  A similar disaster in a town  of 15,000 or less, however, can  wipe out a large portion of that  community, and regular police,  fire and other emergency units  are too small to meet the demands that are suddenly thrust  on them.  It is here that the functions  of Civil Defence are most important. An active, fully trained disaster organization will  meet this challenge and avoid  unnecessary inconvenience \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  if not downright discomfort  and injury, as was the case in  Lanark, Ont., fire in June 1959  As the provincial Civil Defence co-ordinator puts it: \"Tho  training we give our people  prepares them for dealing with  the major catastrophe of a nuclear explosion. If they are  able to handle that kind of a  disaster, they, are capable of  coping with any peacetime disaster that may arise.\"  mmmmmmMaammamtaaaasaaammmmBBUtmmmBmamm  Guaranteed Watch &  Jewelry Repairs  Chris* Jewelers  Mail Orders Given Prompt  Attention  Work done on the Premises  Phone Sechelt 96  By  Bill Nicholls  The date has been set for  the initial card of the 1959-60  boxing season. The Peninsula  Boxing Club will kick off festivities on Saturday, Dec. 12  with a ten bout card including  two or three Vancouver fighters.  Three hundred tickets have  been printed and may be purchased from any one of the following: Frank Zantolas, Dan  Bergnach, Bud McLean, Bill  Swartz, Al Bergnach, or Bill  Nicholls.  For four of the boys it will  be a tune up for the Bronze  Gloves in Vancouver. A good  guess, at this stage, who the  quartet might be would be  Morris and Henry Levine, Dennis \"Mugs\" Mulligan, and Gene  Pearl, aU of whom are showing real promise.  Another brother act, Ricky  and David Swartz are improving steadily after a jittery start  Ditto little Lloyd Sherman..  A very unfortunate accident  occurred at the last work-out  when a couple of the boys became a little exuberant around  the water fountain. Steve  Macklam suffered a chipped  front tooth while taking a  drink.  Two other casualties, although of a different nature,  were Kurt Day who had his  appendix removed and young  Stewart Carey who came down  with the mumps. Both are well  on the way to recovery.  registered for the current session compared to 9918 the previous year. Only one faculty  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd engineering \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd has shown a  significant drop in enrolment  from 1416 to 1351.  Registrations in the faculty  of arts and science increased  by 267 from 4907 to 5172. En.  rolment in first year arts increased by only one student to  2136.  The faculty with the largest  increase is education where  1819* students registeren as  compared to 1442 last year \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  a gain of 377.  The student population is  made up of 7553 (71.45%) men  and 3017 (28.55%) women.  Enrolments in other faculties are as follows with 1958-  59 figures shown in brackets:  Agriculture \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 171 (155);  forestry \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 143 (137); law \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  245 (246); pharmaicy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 142  (124); medicine \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 212. (213);  commerce \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 654 (590); graduate studies \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 616 (559).  If you think women never do  anything on time, you've never  gone shopping with them.  YOUR   NEW  Watkins Dealer  Mr. T. Sinclair  Phone SECHELT 7ST  BUY IN BULK & SAVE  25 lb. Beef Pack  Roasts - Stew  & Minced Beef  39c lb.  Sides of Pork  Average weight 60 lbs.  39c lb.  Cut wtrjapped & frozen  The Store of Quality  PhonQ SECHELT 1  More fatalities  | A sharp increase in fatal accidents is occurring in some  sections of B.C. industry this  year reports the Workmen's  Compensation Board. Up to the  end of September 187 fatalities  had been reported, while the  figure for all 1958 was 208. It  would appear the 1959 total  will be above this figure.  :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hard hit is the logging industry with 55 men killed, even  with a two-month, shutdown:  In 1958 the toll for the entire  year was 45 loggers, killed.  Twelve men have been killed  in other operations of the forest products industry, up over  the toll of 1958.  Mining has been hard hit too  with. 14 fatalities reported for  the first nine months of 1959.  Three miners lost their lives  last year. Fatal accident trends  are also up in other B.C. industries.  * Time-loss injuries in all industry have not increased proportionately to fatal accidents.  They are occurring* at a rate  comparable to 1958, which was  the lowest year for time-loss  cases in more than a decade.  NOTICE  Doris Beauty Shop will  be closed from Nov. 25  Will  re-open again in  January.  rnmniiiHiiiHiimmii hi  154  1382  495  16  These are the four lucky numbers of the July 1 draw  still outstanding. The prize, a movie camera, if not  claimed by Nov. 19 will be raffled on a date to be announced.  L  iminnmm  PENINSULA HOTEL  Dinners Served Daily  6 p.m. to 8 p.m.  Banquet Room  Available at all times  SUNDAYS  5.30 p.m. to 8 p.m.  MAKE   RESERVATIONS  EARLY FOR YOUR XMAS PARTIES  New phone for reservations \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GIBSONS 404 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mrs. Korda  Watch our window for our  FREE  DELIVERY  HOME    FREEZER  SPECIALISTS  OPEN  FRIDAY  NIGHTS   TILL  9   p.m        Phone GIBSONS  52","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Gibsons (B.C.); Sechelt (B.C.); Halfmoon Bay (B.C.); Davis Bay (B.C.); Madeira Park (B.C); Pender Harbour (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Coast_News_1959-11-12","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0174304","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.4002778","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-123.508889","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled \"The Coast News\" from 1945-07-11 to 1957-03-28 and 1992-03-19 to 1995-01-09<br><br>\"Coast News\" from 1957-04-04 to 1970-10-28; and \"Sunshine Coast News\" from 1970-11-04 to 1992-03-02.<br><br> Published by Coast News Limited (1945-1952), Sechelt Peninsula News Limited (1953-1976), and Glassford Press Limited (1977-1995).","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver: University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Gibsons, B.C. : Fred Cruice; Sechelt Peninsula News Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Copyright remains with the publishers. This material is made available for research and private study only. For other uses please contact Glassford Press  Ltd. P.O. Box 989, Golden, BC, V0A 1H0","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1959-11-12 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. 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Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Sunshine Coast Museum and Archives","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. 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