@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "d6d7e4bd-8e7c-43c0-95d9-aec2e15db11b"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:alternative "[Sunshine Coast News]"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2012-07-25"@en, "1948-09-24"@en ; dcterms:description "Serving a Progressive and Growing Area on B.C's Southern Coast. Covers Sechelt, Gibson's Landing, Port Mellon, Woodfibre, Squamish, Irvine's Landing, Half Moon Bay, Hardy Island, Pender Harbour, Wilson Creek, Roberts Creek, Grantham's Landing, Egmont, Hopkin's Landing, Brackendale, Cheekeye, etc."@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xcoastnews/items/1.0173172/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " It Serving a Progressive and Growing Area on B. C.'s Southern Coast. Covers Sechelt, Gibsons, Port Mellon, Woodfibre, Squamish, Irvines Landing, Half Moon Bay, Hardy Island, Pender Harbour, Wilson Creek, Roberts Creek, Granthams Landing, Egmont, Hopkins Landing. Brackendale, Cheekeye, etc. Vol. Ill ���No. 11 \"Lots of Mai ��� Bui No Boats ^Editor, Coast News, Dear Editor: What are we of the Peninsula going to do this fall, winter and spring for mail service, to and from Vancouver, if we are go- ^ifig to be reduced in our boat service, as we are now, until the Summer trade begins next year. At least we, your Sechelt Peninsula Board bf Trade have called a special Council meeting to discuss the lack of mail service, which seems willbe our fare for this coming winter. Do the \"powers that be\" expect us %&**��&. _fd.oywrU CHRISTOPHER Columbus _e PTJBLISK_ED BTT THE COAST NEWS, LIMITED Business Office: Sechelt, B.C. National Advertising Office, Powell River, B.C. Sechelt, B. C. Friday, Sept. 24, 1948 5c per copy, $2.50 per year, by mail og o mitation olumbus roun / roressor \"^ony express?\" . If -so we will ��������+ T�� C���X C ���uT���r l Tjaye to, \"cross breed\" horses and day at tht bo.tor��o_the 2��lnt��_ \"??��.** ^V^ 1?gUa*e Crude PamtS Used ducks to^ ensure prompt effici- Jy oonom oi ine Atlantic 0f 1492,\" said Dr. Meisnest. e'nt service. We, of the Penin- ^n* X-, ��� ,,' ,, Columbus was actually unable 200.000 Y&rrr SPanish and couver has released some of its tackle and such, when he visits The thing for everyone to do JJLof �����S��n, wS ���H^tfS Po^tugues.e- ,' secrets for the perfection of its the Peninsula the latter part of is. to ioin \"Your ���Pen.���,,.,. ?ne o�� perhaps hundreds printed Dr. Meisr~*' ��� ** ��� ��� -���- * Bill Morrison Opens Real Estate Office A MAN* WHO can count 11 fish- \" ing rods and three huge boxes of tackle in an attic packed with outdoor equipment; who was nominated the \"Outdoor Man of the Month\" by the Forset and\" Outdoors monthly sports magazine; and who holds the position of Producer-Director for the National Film Board of Ottawa, will indeed be besieged Meisnest's opinion corrob- paints which we home-builders this month is to ]om \"Your Peninsula hv ��� nPrZn lihn^nw ^ UTm Meisnests opinion corrob- paints which we home- Board of Trade\" immediately, as ?5qna uerman ^nograpner in orates the opinion offered earlier are keenly interested in. This man, whose history reads *ET_lT ��-_ft? T-ry' m?n> \"����� answer to the mystery of Dr G^G'Etedewick ��f EngllSh' Home-makers, builders, the ^�� X**��rati�� A}se* sto��� is Woman and child on this pemn- tu~ COQ XXTao^s ^-m,**!* u^i, ' **' Kjr' &eagwicK. shoemaker the barber thp baker Bl11 MacDonald, brother-in-law -!.���,��_ _.___. ��� w, s=Sks?s,1I -.^r-'^is^is r^^lS^fl &s^rs&x^rs^ :=��__���.., jutuss SSwvSSS S-tT-2 #vszS?ss% \"���--'ft sssjs , Bv joining the \"Sechelt Pen- seattleto^ comnle M? WH? *?? hth?8���Pter who made the some factf about paints which Bill> arriving ^ Vancouver at insula Board of 'Trade\" now, book with X^t^'co^tf &1 ^inscription is the ^^ ^^^^ the young age of three started r.-Ca/ .2?* ��% Un !ed Strength a bogus bookdSSv^^the bv Smfth ��Py f��Und released te us to think about. ?n bis career of fishin' at Eng- behmd \"Our Board\" and work Us in 1938 Qlscoverea m tne by Smitb\\ ��� . ^ u . , They say, that some archaeolo- llsh Bay- He loved it and has together as a whole, for the On each of the 22 thick naroh r MojIYatJpn foJ *?e .hoax * be- gists estimate that the crude virtually lived with a rod in his good progress..of our Peninsula. mS'we? Wt^^^S\" Trf*. %F*?t^F10??\\ a P^tings on the walls of thl band ever since. Out of school, Interested Member, the infrifate ink drawing and ��. \\ 9\\ th% ^ld ce ebrated Altamira caves were done by the Bil1 took a Job with the Van- the commentary of Columbus't ^r^^^1 armiver���y Cro-Magnon Reindeer Men, only ������ev Province. Through the d^v^^e^aDSto of Columbus's discovery, and in- a scant 20,000 years ago. Others^ late twenties and early thirties, aE^Wk SSSnS-.-SSi_S. adventurer equaUy ^^ sayg that thJ he busied himself successively lish\", were found to be identical estimate, is, wrong by at least?8 telegraph messenger, clerk, with the copies of the volume SOUVENIRS !800 centuries and the paintings Journalism student, free-lance discovered earlier in the U.S. A London book seller Elliot ?ould not have been done a da^ I ��� ' adver-tlsinS CGPy writer, 'SLIPS' REVEAT HOAV Stock/eUhS ^covered the or- lesS than 200'000 years a^��' So> iT' 1free-lance wrlter and SLIPS REVEAL HOAX * ��c*�� euner disevered the or- paint maki wag e_historic wholesale grocery salesman. But ...... ��� -- r _ Jp!! hJ if Lt^J J n f T \" art- Today (since the 19th cen- flshmg was his line and while t BILL MORRISON, president of itus from U. of W. believes there J^1800 he ?ent th? m^SSSS. tur^ that is> new colors' brighter travelling he would fish in ev- { Th*_ viiij-cro _r*.+_,r.��^c��_, T4-A are identical volumps in _-n��,t*.rr.x\" J-\"���' t1^ ^nh .me..manuscript colors, prettier colors���colors that ery nook and cranny of |i never existed before are made by stream,.and while thus employ- the paint chemist���who makes ed be worked out a plan, pres- __i_ *��_ .. ��� .._ .- j____>-�� 4* _r��<-3 4+- +*-�� ���<.!__. ^. T~> /^i rt a s Outdoor Man Of the Month n.ii on ��� ,, \"���A iginal bogus loe or had it writ pamt makm_ was a pre-historic ���. ^ ��� - The 80-year-old professor emer- ^^a^JD��Jf studfnt of Coi���r^_�� art Today (since the 19th cen- flshmf was his line and while xs from U. of W. believes there t�� t_S_n v. stude+nt,uof Columbus. tljrv thai .^ ntim nrtlrtvo KT..tfll+ay. travelli e identical volumes in eastern ^! i?f ?6r2anil8TI!J ��� .._.. _MWXMi xwwx. S. libraries and museums. �� Duesseldorf to be lithog-aphed I wood Lodge has entered yet a Dr. Meisnest admits that the %*�� f^L^Tf\" 'L?f the fes\" -- ��� ��_co ,_, _w .St.aw. fi^-ir.- -r^i Ttt.f^ o��^i t^ storv of Columbus's hictnrv ,mv_ \"v ..r De n?_.a m every coun- them from the ingredients that ented it to the B.C. Government _l' _ _ _ t 1 1 - _ T^caTr_____! DiiYiAn.. ��.t1.h J���___.\"__ 1_ ��� The and owner Anew field; Real Estate and In- story of Columbus's history voy- trv0f the world ��� ��� -x_5xC_,_Cx_.��� ui��t m !surance Agency, associated with a^e contained in the book is ac- n-ho aottml stArv nf ti.^ rwi��. nature could have never combin- Travel Bureau who took him up \\ :E.\\ J. Harris and Co., established curate to a high degree of detail, nat i0^ bnnV whinh w k^ ed���and he has the means to sci- on bis suggstion of taking photos Mover 28 years in Vancouver. Wlth only several slips branding��� \"sought bvh^tori��� tor .JSw^ entifically control each ingredient aiJd ^writing tourist publicity, XMr. Morrison's new office is * as a hoax. ��� 7 is w\"ell Lbstantiated bv known throughout every stage of manu- which resulted in showing B.C. * i%������ ��� -������ - One error is contained in XJol- ��Jx suDStanuated by known facture# films to potential tourists of ^Sfii_rafe;si��i]_at^ ...���_,,.������_.;..��� ..- . . '__ ���-U.S.A. K: . Mr. Morrison's new office is ^^sglifully^ ajR^ii^ecJ and ideally ik,.,,,..,,,,,, ���...,...*_ ., C5ver# 77:- caught ma storm off.the Azores tremendous advances that the \"Breeze\") WiU take hi tlife siir- 6n the return trip from America chemical engineer would bring to vey Qf the^^'fish-fuS T^nn^I ,-��� TT'^u-.. m_aq . th*i i_aint in... .of��� ��r��_. T?.n������;��� v ~X:J . xu Xlbli XUI1 J-ZOOnie la/' fev^e_;,;:t^a^ ^taxi service, thus enabling the Three periods are omitted .\"~��\"V _.\":7vv�� __���_+ j���j-_-,��. t- -w tx vc->' ujl W1C xisn-xun xzoonie f out-of-town client a good mea- from the pyramid of letters, and m February of 1493,^ GUdden w t wasqnFrancls Kv River, at the head of Narrows sure of time to survey the area the letter \"z\" is incorrectly added F?armS that mTship would be Glldd^.^ r^nr18f.O su^ess- Arm, which may well become he is interested in purchasing. after a word in the strange de- s\"* carrying with it the 8^*^^^^^ ^ heayenl adise f h ^ :Mr. Morrison ha&een a ?esi- sign. 7 * of an entire continent and untold ^^^^^ S^^TJnd sportsman's dream. ^dent for a year and a half only, Furthermore the aging scholar riche^ Columbus wrote a note on ~_J�����ft��l?^ as Ja*alac -fes- Sfbut in that time lias shown his declares that Columbus never **?&* ^ho, of parchinent.ex- tmed to become a household _-.��� . faith and belief in the\\unending used this cipher until two years P^nmg the location ef the dis- word throughout the world KlUhher B&V IWail possibiUties in expansion for sl a��er his return from the dis- covered land and requesting that Agam ml 1906 the science of JJIUWWC1 JjajT mail chelt, \"The Hub of the Peninsu- coyery voyage. ^ information be forwarded to ?a?f n/i^try ^��^^ , ' \" Suchxintricate indentifications the sovereigns of Spam. pi-^f^T,. ^ethods - w?en JJlGS Oil JjOnr^tPri were used by Spanish noblemen He wrapped the brief sum- g*ldd^n ^^r��du^d a n%w ext!f.\" ^^ UU JJUU1^1��P and gentlemen of the period, he niary of his voyage in waxed wniI Tf^.^l ��n_Tu^g 9l1 MIKE KISLUK emplovee of th^ ~ , ��� ���. explains, to prove to Spanish^ in- cloth, sealed it in a wooden cask, ������� has since become the ac- Paciftc Lime Snt ,.! Gordon CollinSOn qyUtai tha? the holder was a and as the tiny ship pitched on C^e�����Zl h^g\"^^ ^nT'dead^ nSSSTsauS GORDON James, youngest son of Christian. the storm-whipped Atlantic v��^fs;or a11 high grade Spar outside ^ fe - ^ Mr and Mrs Graham Collison \"Spam was swept with a strong threw it into the sea, hoping that v^\"sn^s; home at Blubber Bav Kisluk ^heirLf SchStte_ on^uS *!*?*.��**��_���*��_ M^_ ^ S��S^L ^1^ W0Uld ��� * t^^Z^Jr?* & ^d apparently X$5_ St�� tainable throughout Canada. On _���\" ^ w y c0\"?psea ��\" ���s the Peninsula8Gildden Products f��%^ *^Jts ^^W��^ are available at Parker's Hard- i^T .^orker, .Leo De Heck, ware, Sechelt, Gibson Electric ^ho.^1e\"t ^ ^reh of him when Gibsons; and Falconet Oene\" 1 ^J*^t0 appear for grave\" Intant Christened Florence Nelson Gibsons; and Falconer's General Store, Pender Harbour i-wi-it, was cnnstenea on ��un- T _ Lt ���.. ���.��� ��� -m- t_ r_ay in St. Hilda's Church,.by.the JewS at the ^ and these sig- No one ever has. fRev. R. W. Bidden. Gordon was ^tures contained secret code re- fbornv April i6, 1948, at St. Mary's fences to ^Scripture as a^pro- iHospital, Pender Harbour. tection to Christians,\" he said, r -Hisfchristening robe, made by Columbus & true cipher contain- p^^^^&^f^^^''^ Mary and Weds W. Malakoff |gy^botli: Jbrothersr~-Alfred . and LANGUAGE CLUE fcpbbieXC^ The language used in the book A LIGHT grey dressmaker suit piolrbyd and godmothers are is also a give-away . Wlth brown hat ahd accessor- - -^ Prs. Wm. Holroyd and Miss M. \"It is clearly a not too con- les ���as the ^ri,dal costume worn Ar R(\\Rt KlimC* Allen. vi������ Q+ft���+ ii; ��� ?2?n by Florence Nelson, third daueh- AO-.JJUCll ^UIll-_�� Fisherman Hurt vincing attempt by an 1890 ?y F1^?Ce N?S??'thSd J^f1.\" Mrs. L. Powell Named rto Head Sechelt PTA Powell River police were notified and Constables N. Winegar- den and W. Dornan brought the body here by police boat early Sunday morning. An autopsy showed that Kisluk had died of ter of Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Nel- . coronary obstruction. son of Sechelt, B.C., for her THRUE Storme, Vancouver fish- resident\" of Blubber lav lo? 20 wedding on Saturday, Sept. 2 erman, is in hosnital hero t 4- i. Jt t^. y t!�� i ? in the rhanel of Christ rhiiw.1, ��,itt, ��J/��+ T nospiial _ nere years. His brother, John Kisluk, J?l j V-P rr cnrist Church with first and second degree lives in Nelson BC Cathedral m Vancouver to Wal- burns to his hands and face re- JNeison, ��5.u. ter Lloyd Malakoff, only son of ceived when his gillnetter burst SECHELT���Annual election of ?��S- -^J^S3^ ^and.^t!ie la*e ^to ^e&*about &5p?m.�� Sunday\" TJllIOTl SSI TriTlS! :r ��� _ xx : ~ ,, , *\", tixw ���*���*���������������� -uuui a p.m. ounaay. Mr. Malakoff of Coaldale, Al- The blaze broke out when the berta. Rev. S. E. Higgs perform- gasboat was off Salmon\" Bay, ��� ^ vv- , ed the ceremony. Miss Phyllis about 40 miles north of Lund. NnW OllS 3 WSGlC PTAiStS of^^^^ ��f Ott^and-did^iiot omit to Nelson attended her sister and storme attempted to put out ������\" ��� ~ \" ��� ��>wing to th! mcreasel^^mb^ ^^^^ flames with his net, but UNION Steamships Ltd. has an- | snip arid growing interest it was w^^^Jf^fK011- S��d ^^^,2^ S1S Pau^ht fire also> burning nounced that, effective imme- ! \"decided to enlarge the executive ^rJSL n K* *l����* T^ S InJn^l^K��^��J? nl the victim's bands. His face was diately, passenger service to this ^nd thus have more working S^V^iT^*^^'^?\"5 tr\\t' S �� ^f ?\"p^ scorched as he broke through area wiU be reduced to one trip : -members. Election results are? Sl'^J0^^-^- .0nly for ^L���LL ���*T !L IZ^ the sheet of flame and a severe a week.. The Lady Cynthia will President, Mrs..Lilian Powell; m^^ bm? to his le^ \"suited when be withdrawn until further no- rvi^PrP^^i-Mr, Whitew: ballot pessary. - maod? corsage jas of pink car- part 0f his clothing ignited. tice, and the SS.Chelhosin will Vice-President,\" Mrs/ Whitaker; Vice-Jr-resiaent, mrs. wniiaKer; \\ . natinn3ay; f11 w^ld ha^e.^ ^ep on their ?o pulled alongside to extinguish Heretofore, there have been -Social Con^ ^he high standard��������� S-^^S8^^^ ii?ft n?r^ the fire- By this time, the cabin three trips each way per week7 :^fe^ to the Se- ���%.3 r|?ldp a\"138 Burna- was destroyed and heavy dam- SS. Chelhosin will now leave Sip Simnin^: Membershiti Con- chelt PTA. . oy .oweei, vdutuuvex. age done to ^he superstructure. Vancouver at 5 p.m. Friday, ar-^ The rescue ship towed the \"ving. here at 1_ a.m. Saturday/ iConverior, Mr ^enor, Mrs. Doyle; Programme An enjoyable social hour fol- The rescue ship towed the rivin�� nere at 1 a.m. Saturday -\" x^Bpb 7Co6ke7 ahd J?wed, during -which seyeral SECHELT���Ernest Luthjie, fish- gillnetter to Lund, from where andrreturning wiU leave West- ^^imWfir ���Mr. Tiathr T1PW WiPTnhprS WPTA WeAr-mTM^fi y.~.w.nr> Ti/Top>._��_T.p_. T3f_T.\"b- r.la��^__. Qtrttpmn tirqo U^p-.. .�����!,*. U��� A J _._ VieW at 12 nOOTl SUTldaV. amV- .W^illlamS. , o -��� ��� ~.. ���-_-__.-,.-_���__ ��-,__.___ guni,y iu ct taaigc v��jl csicamig * uwcu mivci i-usj^ixtcti. JLllt; m- Mr. Ellis (Honorary Presi- er, Miss Joan Krausent who 200 fathoms of lead line, 200 jured man was employed by , -dent) madie an excellent Bl- comes from Alberta and is here fathoms of cork line and web. B.C^Packers Ltd. It is believed Section Chairman, he very pat- in place of Miss Marchant. He was given a year's suspend- that -a\" gas lamp may have brgk^^ggg iently read .out .aU'./rules,,:and We look forward to an inter- ed sentence by Magistrnte S. en and sprayed gasoline on the regulations concerning election esting year. McKay. . ^uiivcnui, JYJ.J..P;?.uvu.;;vwyi-c, at_,W' \"' ��������� \"' ~_w_--.-__&. ��� .._.__.v_._.. ^^.vv-_-i- ���_,_x_iv^i_L_-i__ix xliaxjlcoi. j_._ii.ij.jic:, j.x_.xi- gnmcuci iu JUUIXU, -JUOIIl W^nere .���'-��� ~y~~----.o \"--- --v- Publicity Convenor, Mrs. Betty new members were welcomed erman, Madeira Park, pleaded Storme was brought by taxi to view:.atv12 noon Sunda Williams. . including our new school teach- guilty to a charge of stealing Powell River hospital. The in- mg^ancouver 7:30 p.m. ���n/r��� -Gin..- /tt����_ _---_, ^-- t_�����_^~: p>r TV/Tics .Tnon Tfroinpan. TTrl.__ ar\\n _b__-.t_._- __^_. i l__-_ nnn .,.-.^.^1 -��^���-_. - i .. i ._.._- V. vessel's exhaust pipe. ���i3-'H \"v iH?Hem ivi^^ii^ti Page Two THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C._ Friday, Sept. 24, 1948 Workshop for Discussion Leaders i Hi THE YOUTH Training Centre at U.B.C.'s Acadia Camp will ^be the scene of a three day Workshop in Discussion Group Techniques October 6, 7, 8. The Workshop is designed to assist leaders of discussion groups to. improve their leadership methods. Lectures will cover following topics: Procedure an Group Thinking, The Chairman-* ship of Group Thinking, Methods of Securing .Group Discussion, The Place of Emotion in Group Thinking, What the Discussion Leader Expects from the Groups���% Write or phone the University | of B.C., Department of Extension. |j for more details. * ft i \"Oh, Moscow was nice, comrades . wouldn't live there if they gave me the place // . . . and the results of this conference give us reason to believe that war has been abolished forever, again.\" The Royal Humane Society \"I was founded in England in 1774* by two doctors���William HaweslJ .and Thomas Cogan���to save by | artificial means persons appar-1 entlydrowned/ EGMONT By JEAN JEFFRIES By J. K. NESBITT Anscomb, as B.C, Tory chief, will be an important figure at the convention. It will be up to him to swing B.C. delegates solidly behind one man ���Diefenbaker or Drew���and it might be sus- MISS KAY Beamish is spending - pected Mr. Anscomb is .a Drew a few weeks here visiting f VICTORIA���The capital has man. In Mr. Anscomb's absence ner parents, Mr. and Mrs. Imer. been rocked in the last week from the capital, Health and Beamish. ' \"~ ' by an argument over Govern- Welfare Minister-Provincial Sec- 7 . ment House. There are those who retary Pearson will be acting Back from town and a trip to say the cabinet will have to take for the acting Premier, for he the exhibition are Mr. and Mrs. some action. The cabinet, of is senior member of the cabinet. Ernie Silvey and sons Leonard course, won't like tampering With all the big-wigs scurrying and Bruce and Miss Grace Sil- with so ancient and dignified an around far corners Government vey. institution as Government House, business here is in the doldrums ��� rv,nt,w RDa1o Storm started early in the ���which is rather amazing, what Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beal^ summer when the Lieut-Gov- with two upcoming by-elections, $*d as- their guests for a week erhor closed the grounds to the a session expected to start in Mr. and Mrs. E. Rush of West public. Promptly the newspapers mid-January and a provincial Vancouver. took the matter up. There was general election by this time ^Mrs j, Murray V arid -babi^ feritic-sf--.* Hoi*reves,<* ^uniformed next year, .'There; are those who/ daughter Jeanne, arrived : home commissioners remained at the think cabinet ministers should via \"jerv:js Express on Friday, gates all summer, keeping the stick closer to their desks���-un- mobs away. less they are up-country in their My two young sons had their This storm had just about ab- own province. first trip to Vancouver by * ated when a second burst forth. Government economists are plane last Tuesday. They didn't It leaked out the Lieut.-Gov- warning that B.C.'s liquor prof- miss a thing either. I could have ernor, before his departure for its���$1,000,000 a month in rec- used two sets of eyes to see all England, had left strict instruc- ent years���may be starting a the things they pointed out. tions there was to be no enter- downward skid. Liquor Commis- . . taining, in his absence, at Gov- sioner W. F. Kennedy is the Harry Page made a quick trip ernment House. He turned down only man who actually knows��� to town by plane on Saturday a cabinet application to give a and when it comes to talking and back Sunday. . party there for members of the about monthly liquor returns Walter Neufelt^of the L. M. American Bar Association. Mr. Kennedy is as silent and cold and N. Logging Co. aboard the So the Government gave the as a Yukon glacier the day after tug New Delta, lost the battle party in the legislative chamber Christmas. Mr. Kennedy just against the tide in the Skeok- and Provincial Library. This won't talk period. But U.S. ec- umchuck and missed the Jervis only made matters worse���be-' .oriomists have recently noted Express last Wednesday. cause, for some reason still un- l^or sales in U.S. are dropping ��� - ��� ~ explained, all the guests had to because of the high cost of liv- manager, succeeding W. H, drink coffee from cardboard mS- Liquor, though some people Tobey. Mr. Hart intimated this mugs, the kind provided at look on Jt. as a necessity, is a change is going to give poor old, hotdog picnics. fri11 to most- B.C., in its general costly P.G.E.���sneeringly caUed The coast dailies ran full ac- economy, usually follows the over the years a political foot- counts of the cardboard mug! U'S* Pattern. So it would be ex- ball and white elephant���a shot party and Government House traordmary if liquor sales here m the arm. Mr. Hart, while pay- closure. One or two editorially ?re n��t slowly dropping. This |ng tribute to Mr. Tobey, thought suggested perhaps the time has lsJ>ad .neuws for fbe government, the change would mean \"that come to do away with the office w ���ch 1(? hungry for a11 the liquor the affairs of the government- of Lieut.-Governor and let the dollars xt can get. However, there, owned railroad should prosper Chief Justice^ do the job, which }s n��w the three per cent sales and impr0ve on the foundations only amounts\" to signing orders- .*; .s?me statisticians say it iaid down by Mr. Tobey.\" in-council, reading the Sneech ���11 bring m $2.0,000,000 a year from the Throne at the House atv���st-__\" , _ , x _ opening and giving pink teas and J0��� Har*'. who used to be state dinners, entertaining dist- Master of Finance and Premier inguished visitors and holding \\sT.s}ll\\ an important man around \"open house\" to thousands at a Vlctona. Hes president of the Christmas Party, a New Year's controversial government-owned Day reception and a summer Paciflc G^at Eastern, subject of garden party. This costs the ma?y Political promises on el- Lieut-Governor, out of his own e?^ ev*s m days gone by and J pocket, about $40,000 a year and stlll good, apparently, for a lot it costs the taxpayers of B.C. ��* ^*��undl*g ��fflcial talk' more than $50,000 a year to Mr Hart the other day announc- maintain the official residence. f�� ^ A' ^nedyXrec/n^^eX Premier Byron Johnson went *ired. superintendent of C.p.R's off to England.in mid-September Esquimalt and Nanaimo Rail- to attend Empire * Parliamentary way has become. P.G.E. general Association convention, leaving all sorts of important questions unanswered. He couldn't say when the two by-elections��� Rossland-Trail arid South Okanagan���will be held. He said he didn't know whe+her dates for them would be set while he was away. Now the acting Premier, Finance Minister Anscomb is clearing his desk and getting ready to depart for Ottawa on political business that's mighty important to him���Conservative convention to pick John Brae-, ken's successor as leader. xMr. v-xC-.. The independence movement began in Chile in 1910, with the ousting of the Spanish ruler Captain General Antonio Harcia Carrasco. GIBSONS MARINE SALES Gibsons, B.C. Agents Briggs-Stratton Motors. Evinrude Outboards New low prices i <_. USHER'S YARD GOODS SHOP GIBSONS, B.C. ��� UPHOLSTERING ��� SLIP COVERS ��� DRAPES I ���'��� \"- \"��� Free Estimates Given TURKISH TYPE TOWELS ���-_-_______-- ~\\ $i-o��J S& V'-^/^jpJ . Prices Reasonable Estimates. H. C Watchmaker and Jeweller Ski I Fed Workmanship and Satisfaction Given You are invited to inspect the precision watch cleaning machine. 50 Years Experience Gibsons, B.C. .^ i ���71 ]yy^ -x& CI I p -1 t v .{eAcolIL 7DRUG5 _. I YOU'RE OUR HONORED GUEST When- you dine at the Eng- list Tea Rooms, your slightest wish is our concern. The menu and the service are planned to make your meal an occasion to be remembered with pleasure. ENGLISH TEA ROOMS Gibsons, B.C. lc Sale LANG'S DRUGS GIBSONS - Two Stores �� SECHELT SELMA PARK STORE \"WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE // M Marshall Wells Paints DELNOR FROZEN FOODS Fresh Fruits and September 29 and 30 - October 1 and 2 MAIL AND BUS ORDERS WELCOME Please enclose, costs, plus postage charges. m | Friday/Sept.\" 24, 1948 THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. MORE ABOUT ormern (Continued from Page 9) 7The ship had just arrived from Ketchikan, Alaska. The Union s Steamships operated the Chil- , cotin as a luxury Alaska cruiser ^through the summer this year. She was even more comfortably -��� appointed than the -Camosun, which had appeared to us as being about the last word in passenger ships. The passengers and officers mingled in the dining room, and in the lounge above, cleared as a dance floor, our ship had used its lounge as a theatre coming up the coast. The Union fiS.S. had another sister ship of \\ Jthe Chilcotin in the next berth, i^alsp loaded with luxury cruise f-passengers. (.WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1 f.We left Prince Rupert at nine Wm. McFadden Optometrist GIBSONS Office Hours: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Evenings by Appointment Every day except Thursday J and travelled in dry weather, having lunch at Terrace. At Terrace we diverted for half an hour to see the famous one-and- a-half-million dollar unused airport. A magnificent road took us to the plateau where we found an airport similar in style to Sea Island port, concrete runways. 100 feet wide and extending a mile out from us. Unfortunately the airforce officials sent out to open the place didn't like the wind currents, and condemned it instead. Only small private planes have used it. From Terrace to Smithers, next objective of our trip was 135 miles, in addition to the 95 we had already travelled. This turned out to be the worst part of our entire trip. The road narrowed down to one and half lanes wide. It twisted, jerked, went up and down, crept around mountain sides, and featured rock, sand, gravel, mud and gumbo surfaces in different parts. The scenery was marvelous, but there was such a terrifying interest in keeping your eyes glued to the road that much scenery was passed unobserved. Rock, gravel and shale slide areas were encountered frequently and passed over gingerly. Washout repairs were also frequent hairpin turns tested the steering of any car. Similar thrills and rides in Happyland would have cost a small fortune. Some day maybe this will be one of the best in Make Sure You Receive 1943 and 1944 mmmmmmmwmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmamami^^m^^mmi^mmmmmmmmimmmmummm REFUNDABLE SAVINGS By MRS. J. H. RENNIE THOUGH this is still September, when we should be enjoying the best part of the season, \"the weather man\" is evidently hurrying on the Fall. With a sou'wester blowing and a rough sea running today and no Union Steamship boat calling until Thursday, Granthams has suddenly taken on its winter appearance. But in spite of all that there are still visitors coming and going. One visitor who enjoyed being at Granthams was Ralph Fisher. He spent the last month at his home here with his mother Mrs. Fisher enjoying a well earned rest. For almost a year he was studying electrical aerial work. He spent nine months at H.M.S. \"Airier\" Navy Electrical England. Also three weeks at College, North Warrington, Culdrose Airiel Station England, and three weeks at an Airiel Station in Northern Ireland. He is now on his way to Halifax to take up his position as Electrical Air Officer on the new aircraft carrier \"Magnificent.\" Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Horn from Winnipeg were visiting Mr_s. Docker at \"Bonnie Doune\" last week. This week she is entertaining her son Jack from Powell River. hump, (the highway is almost the same shape as the famous Big Bend highway), we passed without stopping, so anxious were we to reach refuge at Smithers, Apparently Hazelton itself is an Indian reservation on the North or railway side of the river canyon, and New Hazel- ton is struggling to life on the road, or south side of the canyon. New Hazelton consists of gas station, post office, and a couple of stores, from aU we saw of it. We reached Smithers about 6 p.m. after leaving Prince Rupert, 230 miles,west .about 9 a.m., and included an Hour for lunch at Terrace. This was considered very good travelling time, and it required continued pushing of driving ability to maintain a respectable average over the stretch from Terrace to Smithers. Traffic on the highways of the North was fairly light, thank goodness. Otherwise time would have been hard to keep on the narrow stretches, which required almost a full stop for two cars to get by. ed on it first. l Hazelton at the top of the Canada, but much work is need- Mr. and Mrs. Wales and family we&re weekend visitors at their summer home here. Miss Patter spent the weekend at her cottage at Soames Point. Mr. and Mrs. Barron spent the weekend at their place in Granthams. They enjoy being here as long as possible. Mrs. Chapman,, who recently Monica, California spent a few days last week with her friend Mrs. Chpman,. who recently came to live at Granthams Landing. Mr. and Mrs. Glover from West Vancouver had their first visit to Granthams Landing last weekend as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Seymore- Johnston. They were delighted with the lot of blackberries they had gathered to take home and \"made a date\" to come back next year for more. -Mr. and Mrs. Blackmore from Port Alberni were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin at Seaview ��� Farm for a week. Mr. Blackburn is an Evangelist and conducted a series of special meetings each evening in the Pentecostal Tabernacle. The meetings were much appreciated and njoyed by the large congre- tions who attended. The first meeting for the sea-2 son of the A.O.T.S. was held in Gibsons Memorial United Church Hall on Friday evening Sept. 17th. Twenty-five members and friends were present. / ���*\" - Page Three After supper the usual business session was held. Mr. G. Marshall was appointed sec-treasurer, in place of the late.Mr. G. H. Rennie. Rev. Frank Bushfield gave a talk on South Africa, and a resume of his experiences in the South African War. The residents of Soames Point and Granthams Landing extend sincere sympathy to Dr. and Mrs. Lang in the passing of Miss Howard sister of Mrs. Lang. Miss Howard was well known and esteemed by the residents here for many years. On Monday afternoon Sept. 20th Mrs. L. Steadman entertained the local members of the V.O.N, to tea. Mrs. Eric Cooper was guest of honor and was presented with two pretty photo frames for the pictures of her two little sons. Mr. and Mrs. G. Mathieson and their friend Mrs. W. Coll Smith have just arrived to spend some time at their summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Dann, are spending their vacation in the Donalds summer home. Mrs. R. Parkinson is visiting in Vancouver for a few days. Staying at the \"Guest House\" this week are Mr. and Mrs. G. Clark and Mr. and Mrs. Cor- nett of Vancouver. During the 17th century, clergymen were not authorized to perform marriage ceremonies in the American colonies. Magistrate's, judges or town clerks officiated. Cosy Homes and Home Sites FOR SALE WATERFRONT LOTS Listings of ideally situated waterfront properties from. Pender Harbour to Hopkins Landing. CALL OR WRITE CONSOLIDATED BROKERS Gulf Coast Offices ��� Sechelt or Gibsons, B.C. Phone Sechelt 37 ��� Gibsons 2A HEAD OFFICE CONSOLIDATED BROKERS LTD. 942 W. Pender St., Vancouver, B.C. (To be mailed by 31 st March, 1949) TF your name or address has changed jince 1943���fill out the special \"Change of Address\" Card available at all Post Offices and Income Tax Cilices. Mail the \"Change of Address\" Card before October 31st, 1948. Mail this card even if you completed one last year. You should not fill out a \"Change of Address\" Card if both your name and address are still the same as in 1943. _^ &&*. o* #&* &$& *&&& p^^;p^slo�� -_rtT4i MOO JSCg^Stf^ *tt*##* no! Educational Guidance Services For the benefit of your son or daughter, the British Columbia Department of Education: 1. Maintains a Division of Educational and Vocational Guidance which assists��� �����in the training of school counsellors, secondary schools. ���in the training of school consellors. -���in bringing up-to-date Occupational Information to all guidance classes and counsellors through direct co-operation with B.C. industry, ���in organizing a programme of pupil analysis for abilities, interests and aptitudes. 2. Provides special grants for school counsellors in secondary schools, who assist parents and children alike in course selection, vocational choice and preparation, and in all matters affecting school progress and personal adjustment. 3. Prescribes in its Programme of Studies a complete course in Occupational Information and Vocational Guidance��� To the end that British Columbia will prosper through the development and wise use of the talents of her young people. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, VICTORIA, B. C. Hon. W. T. Straith, Minister 142 Page Four THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C, Friday, Sept. 24, 1948 Pele- Parnwell; Another new pupil is Dennis St^l^ Lawson. Dennis is in grade nine otewari- - and was working a garage all summer. For COMMERCIAL or PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY... C. G. BALLENTYNE Bol's Block ��� Gibsons Res., phone Granthams, 10Q or contact agent in your District. Roberts Creek, Carola Forst, 22L An old-timer returned is GlbSOnS School NeWS Marilyn Foley. Marilyn who is By MALDY THOMAS ��nf h^e.61^ ^ *** ^^ NONE~OF \"the\"toal school popT *�� meetinf of the elementary ___ ulation could catch those ext?a school pupils was held in the 40 winks on Tuesday, Sept. 7. schooj hall and prizes were To the little children who were %\"****. to the WinnerS at the starting for the first time it *al1 *air- THE HOUSEWIVES of today was a great day. Even the re- Q ^atf a meting of the High are aU faced with the problem nowned \"school-haters\" seemed S^01 Af em.blJ Yias hfd ^ of giving their families well- glad to be back and see their ^ a returning officer for the ^ nutritious meals, and old friends again. 3,�����^ h^_ sc^��.?f1 $%��%��' at the same time work some sort Elected was Wilf Nestman. f ic ^ order that they may Our staff has been changed Brought up m the meeting was k within their budgets. If you considerably this year; Miss M. the question of re-paintmg the are serving a small amount of Barclay has replaced Miss Ef. basketball lines on the gym meat be gure and see that mi^ js Stephenson who is now teaching floor, and the sending of an a-SQ ��ncxUcled. in the same menu, in the Fraser Valley. Miss D. athletic delegate to meet Mir. either in soup Gr dessert. Milk Dobbin is teaching in Mrs. Sue Ellis of Sechelt School to dis- win ada\"t0 the body-building Elliotts place, and Mrs. C. Day cuss a sports program for this paging that your family need has replaced Mrs. B. Rankin coming winter. Awards, of crests gVPry day Bread also, and fresh as an assistant High School in black and yellow were given tr^s or a saiad should be in- teacher. to last year's scholastic, sports- clude(i ���n, q irir ff- +' __��� mansh*P> and. citizenship win- ^D PORK LOAF Mrs. Sue Elliott is teaching a ners. Also prizes were given to *\"^iw ^. * +-. i ��������� o-p ���rAr special class in the old high the Fall Fair winners. X T^T lllv K^ZLn^ school building ' Product, l egg, 2Yz cups cooked scnooi Dunamg. SEPTEMBER 19 tomatoes, 1 tbsp. brown sugar, A look at our school grounds The basketball lines have % CUP chopped onion, Yz cup shows us they too, have changed, been re-painted and the boys chopped green * pepper, Yz tss. The school grounds on Farnhems made a swell -job of it. Instigator dry mustard, a* tsp. sage, A tsp. side have been widened by 0f this was Bill Pye. The work sal*> 1 cup stock, 1 tsp. white a good many feet. This work is Gf Bill and his helpers is going sugar, Ya, tsp. basil, 2 tbsp. Hour, not finished yet, but when it is to be appreciated for years to 2 tbsP- water. Cook and mash it will make our playing field come by future basketball play- the potato. Crumble up the pork much larger. ers# Everything was done so in little P^ces. Beat up the egg. Th* H^h qnv.nr.1 w ._____._ quickly that we started playing Mix up the potato and pork, The High School has been gasket��all on Thursdav 3 davs then mix in thoroughly Yz cup moved to the old Legion Hall ^ it was stated tomatoes, brown sugar, onion, and School Hall annex. It is atter ll was started- green pepper, mustard, sage and much larger this year, caused Election of a council for salt. * Finally, the egg. Put into by so many new grade nines, the school year 1948-49 was a loaf pan and bake in slow ov- We have a new girl in grade held on Friday last week. Of- en, 300F. about an hour. While ten, and as all the local wolves ficers elected were; president, loaf is baking, mix up remain- know her name is Franky Chap- Bill Pye; vice-president, Ted ing tomatoes, stock, white sugar secretary, Frances and basil. Simmer this half an treasurer, Dofotihy hour. Make a smooth paste of flour and water and stir into and was working at Thorburn's With all the bulldozing going fa^: 2S�� J^^e lo^tot saraee __ I. s,_���_ on, the Elementary School hasn't ��g�� ylTser7e\\t%rv!i 5 APPLE SLAW Pare, core and halve three apples for six servings. Bring to boil, Yz cupful sugar, 1 cupful water and Va tsp. cinnamon; color bright red with food coloring if you wteh. Add the apples a few at a time and cook gently until tender but not soft. Remove from the syrup and chill. Slice two or three apple halves for; a garnish and toss the rest, cut in cubes, with 4 cupfuls of shredded cabbage, 1 cupful diced celery and % cupful of mayonnaise Season to taste. MUFFINS For a very versatile muffin try the following���2 cups flour, 3 tsps. baking powder, 3 tbsps. sugar, 1 tsp. salt, 4 tbsp. shortening, 1 egg, 1V4 cups milk. If you have Biscuit^ Mix, make muffins according to recipes given on package. Sift flour, then measure, add dry ingredients. Cut shortening in with a fork. Beat egg well and add milk, stir until combined. Pour into flour mixture and stir only enough to dampen all the flour. Batter will be lumpy. Fill greased muffin pans % full. Bake iri hot (400 deg. F.) oven 25 minutes. Before adding egg and milk, any of the following combinations may be mixed with the flour mixture. % cup grated chees: dates, figs, raisins, Yz cup. Yz cup cooked bacon, chopped. % cup raw cranberries, plus V4. cup sugar, or thawed, quick-frozen blueberries, 1 cup plus 1 tbsp. sugar. I go for the blueberry muffins myself and make them often. WELSH CAKES A friend of mine has been making these delicious cakes for years. However, only recently the recipe for same appeared in one of our leading magazines under another name. I prefer the above name myself, and here is the recipe. 1 eggf Yz cup milk, 1V4 cups raisins, ZYz cups all-purpose Work lard irito flour mixture _ . ��� ��� . got much space for sports. The only softball field available is the one behind Miss Barclay's room. So, everyone who wants to play softball has to crowd on that tiny xJi'amond until they look like a swarm of ants. The high school has to confine its practising to the hail grounds, and the close shaves those windows have had is terrifying. So if some of the windows get broken one of these days it will be no news. Instead of the pupils walking from room to room this year, the teachers get air the exercise. Kitchen Kapers By JANE DRURY flour, 1 cup sugar, 2 tsps. nutmeg, lYz tsps. baking powder, 1V4 tsps. salt, Yz tsp. baking soda, 1 cup lard or shortening. Beat egg with milk, add raisins. Sift all dry ingredients together once, with your hands, couple of knives or pastry blender until mix ture is of a mealy consistency. Pour milk and raisins over flour all \"at once and mix well. Wrap in waxed paper and chill at least an.hour. Roll out on slightly-...__ floured board to a thickness of % of an inch. Cut out with cookie cutter. Heat griddle or iron pan until a few drops of. water dance on it, then grease lightly. As the under surface of cookies brown, top will - get puffy, then turn. STUFFED POTATOES Scoop out baked potato center, mash, season, add milk and grated cheese. Beat fluffy, re- Continued on Page 7 Just Arrived! A FULL LINE OF BRITISH WOOLS for YOUR WINTER NEEDS GIBSONS 5-10-16* STORE Follow the Sign ��� Just Left of the P.O. Sandy flrmiiniond Says: /# IF you DON'T like PERSONAL SERVICE . . .and you DON'T want to SAVE MONEY . DON'T stop at JUST HOWE SOUND TRADING CO. LTD. GIBSONS, B.C. \"Personalized, Friendly Service\" WITH ACTIVITY ^:1 for men with some time to spare,.. GIBSONS ELECTRIC Gibsons 45 Gibsons, B.C. It's a centre oi activity--yourlocal armoury, just humming with activity for men with a few evenings to spare. ' In the wide list of activities offered by the Canadian Army Reserve Force, you'll find things to turn those odd free evenings into interesting and even exciting ones. You'll enjoy the full programme of social and sports events. You'll be ' 'one of the gang\"���witli other Reserve Force men who' are finding, that the armoury is their personal ''clubhouse'^ , All the latest equipment and weapons are now being used for Reserve Force training. The summer camp sessions give you the opportunity to get away and out into the open: To top it all, you will recHve full Active Force pay for all time spent in training and camp, -x XXXX- \"SEE FOR YOURSELF\" by visiting your iocal\"Reserve Force unit's open house,.-,' - ��� parades ox demonstrations during Army Week, 20-26 September. Call at the armoury of the regiment of your choice, Nowr ''-on \"P/e/j Wre^nof Pbi^. oty{ ��\"rj( *��o. ton or. \"tent oCQl Or9>ol on Bn. \"ry. WMM&iio^ Friday, Sept. 24, 1948. THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. Page Five By ROBBIE REMINESCENT of bygone days ���were the sounds of a couple of battle-wagons at Wilsons Creek last week. Target practice and gunnery drill were the order of the day and several of the old sweats were on hand to give the neighbours the low- down. Directly in front of my place, and with a powerful pair of submarine glasses, we could distinguish the hits and misses of two powerful Canadian destroyers. Further up the road, one neighbour stated her windows rattled and dishes banged together. But fortunately no casualties were reported. Miss Lillian Nydska who works at the \"Estimates Dept.\" of Civil Service, New Westminster,, spent two weeks at her'parents summer home returning to town on Sunday. Mr. Jack Baird came up from the city to break up camp for the season, taking his wife and two sons back to Vancouver. Mrs. J. L. Renton of Vancouver spent a happy week at the home of her son Jimmy and his wife. Incidentally Jimmy has taken possession of his new home \"The Cottage\" at Davis Bay. If a< job is- worth doing, do it yourself. I received the full force of that old saying last week, when the envelope containing last week's \"Wilsons- Creek\" column, was returned to me several days after deadline. However I'm sorry folks, but that won't happen again. Ed. Note: (We have been wondering what happened too). I also regret the fact that up to the��� present Ttime I have not received any names for the dramatic club. Well opportunity only knocks once. __ Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Maywood with their daughter have left Roberts Creek to live at Davis Bay, and are now staying at \"Trails End.\" Mr. Maywood has purchased some land in the adjacent vicinity and expects to build a new home and settle permanently at Wilsons Creek. Mr. and Mrs. A. Matheson of Vancouver are spending a pleasant holiday at the home of Mrs. G. Reid of Davis Bay. Also at the Reid residence for a few days are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kirkham, of West Sechelt.' Mrs. J. Marvin spent a week at the home of her parents at Marpole, and returned with her mother Mrs. M. Sevigny, who is taking a holiday here at Davis Bay. Also.in the party for the weekend was Miss Marion Griffin. Miss Griffin is the secretary and accountant at Murray Plywood Company. Welcome hands were extended to Mrs. R. L. Jackson, who returned home from P��nder Harbour this week bringing with her, Pamela Joan, her baby, daughter, who was born at St. Marys Hospital on August 26th. Pam weighed 6 pounds 13 ounces and at the time of writing both Leslie and Pam were in the pink of condition. Mr. and Mrs. Voice with their two children Darlene and Ricky, are spending a few days at \"Coolshannon\" with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Brookman. Mrs. Bogart has returned from a visit with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mason of ^ Vancouver. I suppose the steamship companies sometimes think along the same lines as the writer. \"You can't just please everybody.\" However the President of the Board of Trade' thinks something should be done about the new mail and passenger service, schedule. So, on the agenda of the next board meeting and heading the list of discussions will be���The winter schedule of mail and passenger service. Mrs. Clifford Thomson of By SUE ELLA MR. KEN Whittacker paid a visit to the Harbour Sunday, travelling via Gulf from Sechelt at noon and returning to Vancouver in the evening. Mr. Mac. McCallum combining pleasure with business made the rounds of the stores last weekend checking on stocks, and then visited at the home of his parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Williamson. Mrs. Finlayson, a patient in St. Mary's Hospital for some time has moved to the Marpole district. Gil Hascamp the Harbour at their place formerly call- They have _ DELUXE FISHING GUIDE SERVICE Just 10 minutes to Salmon Rock where the fish really bite. BOAT RENTALS ��� BAIT SUPPLY TACKLE FOR RENT ��� GUIDE SERVICE WATER TAXI AIR TAXI Fresh water fishing trips by air arranged. XPhone Gibsons, 2J, for full information. Mr. and Mrs. have returned to after a short stay on Hornby Island, ed Camp Manito. sold the property. Mr. and. Mrs. Jack Little paid a short visit to the Harbour, en route to Vancouver, where they are planning to spend their vacations. Mrs. Donnelly has returned home after visiting with her Chilliwack, who with her husband was reported in this column for their splendid work during the flood season recently, is spending three weeks holidaying with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Norburn of Davis Bay. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Jones of Vancouver, and Ron Eric have closed camp and returned home to the city. Comes a time when we must say goodbye to the best of friends and neighbours, as happens in the case of Harry Morley and his wife. Within a few days after this publication, they will be boarding the boat for Vancouver and a new home. Harry's jovial personality will be missed along the waterfront by many.of his friends. The reason for his sudden and surprising decision is the health of Mrs. Morley, who by the way lias just returned from a week's visit to her daughter in the city, May we take this opportunity of sincerely wishing the Mor- leys, good luck and \"bon voyage.\" family in Nanaimo. Mrs. John Daly and two sons are home again after a visit to Alert Bay and Vancouver. Mrs. E. Blake of Vancouver whose daughter-in-law, Mrs. A. Blake was a patient in St. Mary's Hospital visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. Dickerson. Mx. and Mrs. D. Dickerson and son, are recent arrivals in the Harbour. They are building an attractive home North and on the east side of Gun Boat pass. Their property fronts on the water and also to the highway. Mr. and Mrs. Gibson, Silver Sands, were visitors to Vancouver the first part of the week. Mr. BiH Sinclair, arrived home the first of the week, after a 4 months sojourn in the fishing waters of B.C. Mrs. Don Cameron has returned to the Harbour after a short stay in Vancouver. Don is expected home in about three weeks. In Pender Harbour are located four general stores. Falconers, Murdocks, Hassens, and A. Lloyds. Most everyone travels by water to get to one or another of the stores. It was a clever idea that p one young mother devised for the safety of her baby in an open boat. It ws a stationary play pen in the boat. Support Your Board of Trade \"CUItlSIA\" on OKWX �� HASSAN'S STORE harbour, b.c. Tfie old-established General Store for Families, Fishermen and Camps. FISH BUYERS ��� BAPCO PAINTS HOME GAS STATION QUALITY��� SERVICE ��� VALUE At HASSAN'S LANDING ��� Midway South Shore <-_ Bring Your Repair Jobs to Us! Boat Tanks, Warm Air Heating Furnaces Repaired Range and Heater Repairs CHICKEN FARM EQUIPMENT GUTTERS AND DOWNPIPE AIR CONDITIONING Sheet Metal Works Laurie Speck, Gibsons Phone Gibsons 8R The very wide circle of friends of Mr. Stewart Henderson of the post office at Wilsons Creek, will be sorry to learn that he was stricken with a serious illness at his home last week, and was ordered to Shaughnessy Hospital. Up to the time of going to press it was not learned how he fared on the journey, or of his condition on arrival at the hospital, for it will be remembered that an unfortunate mishap occurred to the boat on which he was to have travelled, and hurried preparations had to be made for him to travel by Grahams coach to Gibsons. It is to be hoped that Stewart will make a speedy recovery. . HOW IS YOUR CAR RUNNING? Good? ��� Ii Not Bring It 1o Wilson Creek Garage Your General Motors Dealer WILSON CREEK, B.C. PHONE SECHELT 5S This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. ; ~ A. L. BRUYNEEL Selma Park, B.C. ACCOUNTING INCOME TAX REPRODUCTIONS BUSINESS FORMS Direct Mail Advertising Here's Katharine Bard, talented and vivacious radio actress who wat picked from over more than 65 aspirants to star in the comedy-romance radio serial, \"Claudia.\" The famoo3 story of Claudia and her marriage to David is broadcast from 11:15 to 11:30 a.m., Monday through Friday, over CKWX. The series is presented by Coca-Cola Ltd. WHERE YOU GET MORE FOOD PER DOLLAR! For Groceries It's its * GRAYSONS AT GIBSONS A GOVERNMENT ANNUITY is your safeguard against dependency in your old age. Prepare for your future now -���then you will never need to look back and-say regretfully, \"If Only ....�� ��� A low-cost Canadian Government Annuity guarantees you as much as $1200 a year for life. ��� No Medical Examination is required; ��� Your Annuity cannot be seized under any law. You cannot lose your money even if your payments fall into arrears. �� Anyone, from 5 to .85, is eligible; Annuities Branch DEPARTMENT OF LABOUR HUMPHREY MITCHELL Minister A. MacNAMARA Deputy Minister Mail this Coupon today POSTAGE FREE Annuities Branch, Department of Labour, Ottawa. Please send me COMPLETE INFORMATION about Canadian Government Annuities. NAME.... ADDRESS (PRINT CLEARLY-} P/-i/_/a..C/-\\i _��* Page S IX THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. Friday, Sept. 24/1948 By \"SLIM' there might have been a news- reel short of the year 1913 or 1938. And all across the nation oth- er little groups of Canadians like HI FOLKS:, McGregor who was 7. Both had ^eSe��>,W��re /enously gomg Sept. 21st and its our 12th a loveiy party and thank good- through the farce of army wedding anniversary. Yes, 12 ness I live right. I was lucky training the formalized non- years ago today at the Townsite enough to have a fine day. 12 . sense. of Prehistoric soldiering, there was plenty excitement. were invited, but 20 arrived. kite- Sa?TI instrumeilts^ _of war We were married up there and May as weU send birthday by Jack Scott that today are as lethal as a had 190 at the reception and greetings to my neighbor today, water pistol. Noel Fraser and his orchestra but we're celebrating it on TIN SOLDIERS The instructor's voice droned played for a big dance open to Saturday. AT A CERTAIN armouries the on and on- \"The Predictor is an all, and believe it or not they Saturday.' week in the fourth year of anti-aircraft data computing still talk about it. the Atomic Age, a little group of instrument utilizing the cartesian WeU lagt Saturda the Beach Well folks I'm off ��� for. an- men in well-pressed khaki uni- ground plan and rate of change Cilub. had a Community Social other Teek* So .cheeri�� folks and T. Wills for a few days. Insects cost the United States Well its birthday greetings to an estimated $2,000,000,000 a my daughter Barbara Ann who year m crop losses. Fas 6 on Saturday and to Dale : ~~ forms stood in one corner of the ��* co-ordinates . . . . vu anu. evening and what a night. Fran lofty, barn^like drill hall and on, while the men shuffled and Downie and seVeral radio en- ��\"-��*�� Cilub-had a Community Social UU1C1 ^ ' \"u \"1Ccx\" e On and _-.���,,���.:--,,-. ^ ���_i_���_. __ ^JL*. t_.��� remember Christmas is around the corner. m ��� | ��� yu III f\" Z-B I It I ^ifr\"* \\/ f���\" I \"*H I I \"^-1 f | I I I ffi ri ^a _ looked up at a big, ugly anti- tried to look interested. tertainers were also up, such �� SLIM aircraft gun. Nobody was around, it seem- as Fred Bass. We were well en- \" The gun was a 3.7 heavy ack- ed, to read the words of Dr. C. tertained all evening. Several Greeks and Romans ate with ack piece. The men were learn- Harold Urey, Nobel prize-win- were down from the * Townsite their fingers aftefr their food ing to operate it. They seemed ning scientist, who was not and more would have come ^ad been cut into small pieces, a little bored. But no one, offi- talking about the 3.7 heavy down only there was no ship, cers and men, seemed to find anti-aircraft gun when he said: ��� any grim humor in the situation. \"There is no defense against the bybl1_ and -Blgndie Hanson No one seemed aware that they atomic bomb and there never wer.e dowf and /^nt the might as well have been learning will be a defense. Not a single ^���end a\\x_Mr' and 1fCrs; *?\" how to operate a cross-bow. V2 rocket bomb was intercepted ^nisholm. We were all at the The voice of the instructor in the Second Great War. . .\" sanie table. Somehow Blondie droned on with the out-dated They were nice-looking young g��\\laHAed fr��T Sybl*and even gibberish of complicated, obso- ki^^y looked up at tL^ong! g^/^sale wk^ S? lete instruction. The echo of'his green steel barrel of gun. They �� h T^f nSAl^i sure, calm voice and the shuf- did not look like men who had H' H' Lee and ^self, andall fling feet of the young men in ever hearS of Lt.-Gen. Sir Fran- ^vCQL^^^in^\"JT khaki was undisturbed by any cis j s Tuker commander-in- rea11? made an evening of it, echoes of the explosion that, as chief'in India, who said: \"Before ^l^����e '��?_. h^l�����re ��f th��Se the Association of Oak Ridge us lies a period of warfare in evenings this winter. Scientists put it, \"slammed a which the atomic bomb is to be Our Grace and Jack Kennedy door shut on the past.\" hurled far up in the stratosphere are forsaking the \"Trail\" to live ' VOICE OF THE PAST by very swift rockets, predicted at the beach in Bob Heron's For this WAS the past. The ?r��� radio-controlled and is to house. Good luck. scene on the drill hall floor out ^df^ Several from the beach were They were concentrating on a down to see Spike Jones and by Predictor, A.A. No. 5, Mark Two, all accounts everyone more than a counterpart of which was av- enjoyed him. ail,Sle alSOa *S- the rejidents, of Flo Verdisio is going down There had been a day when Wednesd to seeS ouf Bing this was a thing of meaning. Crosby ��� ���\" \"5 and purpose, when the emergency did, indeed, . come and Shirley Craig was up last young men in Canada were week. Its a long time since he's ready for it. But that was a been up. day before a man such as Maj.- . Gen. Anthony McAuliffe, offi- Would like to send wedding cial United States Army observ- congratulations to a former er at Bikini, had said: \"The new feacg Sirl> who was married weapon could force any country, last Saturday, Emma Ackers, even the United States, to quit 0ur Jane Adeg hag left to fly a^_fTr- 0 T-.Am* back to Winnipeg to visit her ENDLEbb DAiA ^ . son Ken and his wife Olive. \"The mechanism is contain- She expectg to be away a month ed m an aluminum alloy^frame or two. She is7 waiting the-^ and when in use, mounted on a rival of her first grandchild, so rigid stand,\" the instructor went ig really �� in the air\" more on, standing professionally be^ wayg than fl in We wigh ^ side an instrument that became and oliye od luck a useless toy on the morning of h landing to Jane. August 5, 1945. ��� - �� Since that day the statesmen Mrs. Jeary and friend were and scientists of the world had up visiting her daughter, Mrs. said that the atomic bomb is -���: ; ��� a weapon against .which there is no defense, which, if not already known to potential enemies, will most certainly be known in the future. (\"If an atomic bomb armament race GET A TRIM ��� �� CUT AT COLLISON'S BARBER SHOP f-Bn FOR SAFE, COURTEOUS TAXI SERVICE PHONE PENINSULA CABS Formerly Jack's Taxi and Blowers Taxi Phone Sechelt 5C2 when you serve our Bread, Pies, Cakes or Cookies Dur Years' of Service Is Our Guarantee ELPHINSTONE BAKERY Gibsons, B.C. Don't Waste Precious Hours in Slow Travel! Fly There! Safe Economical Seaplanes ��� Experienced Pilots Air Express ��� Charter ���- Sightseeing Timbercruising TRY US ON THAT NEXT TRIP TO TOWN For Rates and Information call Associated Air Taxi Limited] RICHMOND 1551 PARR PEARSON AGENCY Phone Sechelt 37 p. a Mcpherson, gibsons Phone Gibsons 2-A _ BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME by __ Reupholstering Your __ Occasional Chair at USHER'S Yard Goods Shop Gibsons, B.C. develops, Russia will produce its first atomic bomb in about three years and possibly accumulate them faster than the United States,\" said Dr. Irving Lang- muir, associate research director of General Electric.) But in those armouries this week a little group of men lived a myth, apparently unaware of the date on the calendar. Botanists have identified 545 species of flowering plants in California's Death Valley. EMPLOYERS and EMPLOYEES! New contribution rates for Unemployment Insurance Are effective October 4, 1948 Support Your Board of Trade We Have Listed Some of the Finest Up-To-The-Minute HOMES WATERFRONT PROPERTIES In Selma Park, Sechelt, West Sechelt Enquire for Listings of Better Homes G. H. Clay A. C. Hill Representatives H. A. ROBERTS LTD. Real Estate ��� Insurance Gibsons, B.C. Phon�� Gibsons 8H The new contribution rates are:��� Value of ni ���'���,-���'_.���_-. . __ __ WEEKLY RATE Weekly Class Class of Employed Persons - Employer Employee Stamp 0 While earning less than 90 cents a day or Cents Cents Cents while under 16 years of age . 9 *9 18 (*Paid on his behalf by the employer) ; 1 Earnings in a week: $5.40 to $ 7.49 18 12 30 2 Earnings in a week: $ 7.50 to $ 9.59 24 15 39 3 Earnings in a week: $ 9.60 to $11.99 ... 24 18 42 4 Earnings in a week: $12.00 to $14.99... .���... 24 21 45 5 Earnings in a week: $15.00 to $19.99 24 24 48 6 Earnings in a week: $20.00 to $25.99 .. 30 30 60 7 Earnings in a week: $26.00 to $33.99. . y 36 . 36 72 8 Earnings ih a week: $34.00 or more.}: 42 42 84 ^Weekly and monthly rated employees earning $3,120.00 or more a year are not insured. On; and after September 20, 1948, new denominations of UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE STAMPS will be on sale at POST OFFICES. Surplus stamps of old denominations may be exchanged at Post Offices _ # any time prior to October 31, 1948. EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 4, 1948, INCREASED BENEFITS ARE PAYABLE TO CLAIMANTS WITH DEPENDENTS. THERE ARE OTHER CHANGES AFFECTING BOTH EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES. y For full particulars, apply to the nearest office of ^ THE UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE COMMISSION R. J. TALLON Commissioner J. G. BISSON Chief Commissioner C. A. L. MURCHISON Commissioner mpmur��� Friday, Sept. 24, 1948��� THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. Page Sever} MORE ABOUT Kitchen Capers (Continued from Page 4) fill shells, brown in hot oven. You don't like cheese? Oh, well brush with egg and toast under broiler. If you wish, a few bologna, or weiner slices may be tucked in the potato mixture. STUFFED BAKED PEARS 4 firm ripe winter pears, V* cup raisins, 2 tbsp. chopped walnut meats, 1 tbsp. lemon juice, 2 tbsp. water, Yz cup light corn syrup. Pare and core pears, leading stems intact. Combine raisins, nut meats and lemon juice. Mix; stuff into pear cavities. Arrange in deep baking dish. Pour over water,and syrup. Cover. Bake in 350F. oven 45 minutes. Sprinkle pears lightly with sugar. Place in broiler and brown slowly. Serves 4. For the boys.and girls: What is the 'difference between a spendthrift and a feather bed? One is hard up and the other is soft down. SECHELT By \"ARIES\" THE SECHELT United P.-T.A. was off to a good start at the first meeting of the season which by the way was the annual meeting. The following were elected to office. Honorary President, School Principal Mr. John Ellis. President, Mrs. Lilian Powell; First Vice-President, Mrs. K. Whitaker; Recording Secretary, Mrs. Dorothy Morrison; Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. .Alice French; Treasurer, Mr. Fred Archer; Liorary, Mrs. R. Jay; Health Convenor, Mrs, B. Simning; Membership, Mrs. D. Doyle; Publicity, Mrs. B. Williams; Social Convenor, .Mrs. M. Newcom- en. We hope that these meetings which are so vitally important to the school and the children will be fully attended during the winter months. Many social evenings will be planned later on and some bf the executive will be attending the Annual meeting of Sechelt District Teachers at Pender Harbour on September 25th including .Mr. Ellis,- Miss E. Turner, Miss N. Melvin, Miss Krausert, Mrs. R. Jay, Mrs.\" Powell, Mrs. K. Whittaker, Mrs. D. Morrison and Mrs. A. Freeh. They will be addressed by Mr. A. Spragge, Geographical Representative of the executive of B.C.T.F. Miss Joan Simning has returned to Sechelt after a long vacation in .the U.S. where she visited Portland, and Vancouver, and Camas, Wash., where she was. the guest of her aunt Mrs. Alvia Gilmer. On a visit to her Grandfather Weak, Tired, Nervous, Pepless Men, Women Get New Vim, Vigor, Vitality Say goodbye to these weak, always tired feelings, depression and nervousness due to weak, thin blood. Get up feeling fresh, be peppy all day, have plenty of vitality left over by evening. Take Ostrex. Contains iron, vitamin Bi, calcium, phosphorus for blood building, body strengthening, stimulation. Invigorates-system; Improves appetite, digestive powers. Costs little. New \"get acquainted\" size only 50c. Try Ostrex Tonic Tablets for new, nor- malpep. vim, vigor, this very day. At all druggists. By SARAH WITH THE schools in full swing again���P.-T.A. of Pender Harbour held their Sept. meeting in the Superior School Sept. 16. Our new president Mrs. Jennie Reiter was in the chair, and there were 16 members present. Miss Denise Critoph, teacher in the junior room, was introduced to the ladies. New members welcomed were Mrs. Alice Haddock and Miss D. Critoph. We were very happy to see Mrs. McKay back as our principal and senior room teacher. We had a full meeting. Among the subjects discussed were the coming \"Fall Bazaar\" to be held in November and the combined meetings of the School. Board and P.-T.A.'s from Gibsons Landing to Pender Harbour, at the Superior School on Sept. 25. This promises to be both informative and enjoyable. Let's hope ''Old Sol\" smiles on us that day. Mrs. Lynn Davis left Pender Harbour on Friday's \"Gulf . j ��� ' ��� ��� - ���_ ��� ��� ��� ������ '������ Mr. Thos. J. Cooke, was Miss Helen Dawe. Miss Dawe has recently been on the staff of the Provincial Library, Victoria, axis* is now preparing to take the course in agriculture at U.B.C. She is the daughter of Captain and Mrs. S. Dawe. Mrs. N. J. Nelson entertained a few friends recently in honor of her daughter, Florence, now Mrs. W. Malakoff of Vancouver. Besides the three Nelson sisters, Esther, Alice and Phyllis were Mrs. A. Nelson and Mrs. Harold Nelson daughters- in-law, and Mrs. Phyllis Parker, Mrs. Louis Hansen, Miss Norma Melvin and Mrs. Alice A. French. We are sorry to learn that Mrs. Ethyl Frederickson, hostess at Sechelt Inn, is in hospital recovering from an * operation. We send her our best wishes and, hope that it won't be long now before she is fully recovered and back with us once more. - Saw a young lady who I was very fond of in the early days of Sechelt's history, Maidie Yel- lowlees. She is now married and has a dear little boy, she is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Yellowlees who are real old timers here, and with her brother Louis stayed in the old Sechelt hotel every year for many y^grs during my time tiiere.' They now have a cottage on the waterfront. ^ Ed. Note: It has been brought to our attention that the orch^ estra .leader mentioned in this column Sept. 10th should be \"Gale\" not Gay. Our mistake, sorry. ' The Sechelt section of the Sechelt Peninsula% Board held an Executive Council meeting here on the 20th. The special subject for discussion was the sudden and drastic cut in mailing services for the area< Also discussed was the necessary transportation to Pender Harbour for the General Meeting; to be held there Sept. 2?th. Get in touch with Graham Collison, member-' ship chairman for details. Wing\" for Vancouver en route to Namu, where she will meet her \"hubby\" and after giving the \"North\" the once-over will return to us, with him, sometime in October. Good weather, kids! Miss Usteen Fodchuck returned to the\" Harbour, we are happy to report, and she is teaching the three \"R's\" to the \"small fry\" : at the newly opened Madeira Park school. The Canadian Legion, Post 112 are holding their Sept. meeting at Irvine's. Landing Hall, Sept. 19. ... The Women's'Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion are holding their Sept. meeting on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Norris Phillips. Mrs. R. Carlson has returned to the Creek after .spending a few days in Vancouver. Mts. Carlson's mother, Mrs. J. Cal- verley visited at the Creek prior to school opening. The latest gloom to descend on the Creek is our new mail and boat schedule . . . what with the telephone curfew set at 10 p.m. and the mail and boat service down to twice a week���it has been suggested that we rename our place of abode Roberts Creek Seminary! Fastest living thing in the world is the little Alhenomyia fly of New Mexico, -which travels at a speed of 8181 miles an hour���faster than its own buzz. Support Your Board of Trade Bulldogs were originally bred for bullfighting and dog fights. Machine Work Welding General Repairs Marine Engines Water Cooled, Air Cooled Gas or Diesel PENDER HARBOUR ���H SELMA PARK By H. I. L. CONGRATULATIONS to Mr. and Mrs. A. Home on the birth of a sori on Sept. 14th. The baby is to be named Albert Alexander. Miss Ruth Finlayson spen)t her vacation here with her parents Mr. and Mrs. J. Finlayson. Ruth will be rememberejd as having been one of our local telephone operators. A very pleasant reunion took place this week when Miss Violet Robinson arrived from England to .make her home here with her mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Prince. Mr. Prince went to Vancouver to .meet her and both will stay there until Mrs. Prince, who is recovering_ from a, recent operation in the Vancouver General Hospital, is ready to come home. Mr. Eric Nickson is having some alterations done to his lower cottage, and when finished' it will be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Gowan and family. Mr. Gowan is with the B.C. Fir Products mill at Porpoise Bay. Mr. A. McDonald of Ottawa, General Superintendent of the Government Telegraph and Telephone Seryice, accompanied by Mr. R. G. Bishop of Vancouver, who is the. Divisional Superintendent, paid a visit to the Peninsula on Sept. 18 to look over the construction of the past year and inspect the new offices. x Mrs. E. House of West Vancouver, is spending a few days here with her daughter, Mrs. R. Liste. Mr. and Mrs.- R. Clarke . are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son. ROBERTS CREEK . By \"CAROLA\" Buy Meat With Confidence H. KENNETT BUTCHER Gibsons, B.C. Wanted To Buy Livestock and Live Poultry FOR YOUR WgNTER'S ENJOYMENT! 1 YOUR CHOICE . . . �� Maybe A PURE WOOL GOLD PLAID 1 with deep brown accessories���or | AN ULTRA SMART BLACK AND WHITE PLAID H enhanced by Black Accessories ... at Tasselia Shoppe | \"That Smart Shop at Sechelt\" \" ......H�����...MondaXs Phone Sechelt 43 t(;i m w :���.:. %$&�� \"Prompt Attention to Mail Orders!\" * RESTMORE FURNITURE: Beds, Springs, Mattresses it GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES: Radios, Refrigerators and Washing Machines it FURNITURE: Occasional Tables, Cedar Chests, Lamps, Etc. DOR AN S FURNITURE WESTVIEW, B. C. ��� Phone 230 // \"BITS OF WIT AND WISDOM\" When the pleasant orchard closes God bless all our gains, say we, But God bless our losses, Better suits with our degree���\" ���E. B. Browning IT PAYS TO KEEP CLEAN LLOYDS CLEANERS Gibsons, B.C. Agency af- Bus Depot, Sechelt F.DREWE PRATT Barrister at Law-���Solicitor Announces the opening of a law office at Gibsons, B.C. (Open Saturdays) Offices Now Located At: 602 West Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. The \"Holme\", Gibsons, B.C. XX-y (Located across from the Telephone Office) CONTRACTORS Glen.*0463F Phone Mar. 3439 BULLDOZING, ROAD CONSTRUCTION, LAND CLEARING, EXCAVATING, ETC.; Large Machines. HD10 at Sechelt���HD14C at Gibsons SEE ED BAMFORD Clay Chamberlin's GIBSONS, B.C. : *''.���; MRS. A. TODD of Vancouver, formerly a .resident of long standing at the Creek, is visiting Mrs. J. Saddler, who is_con- valescing after 7 an operation. Mrs. E. J. Shaw accompanied her daughter Eleanor to Vancouver jvhere she enrolled at U.B.C. And it's rag curlers, green fingernails and skirts above the knee for Eleanor during her Freshman initiation. Good Luck! Mrs. G. Johnston has left to winter in Florida with relations. Mrs: T. Gerrand of Tom's Coffee Shop,-received a surprise in the mail the other day. A prize of $2.50 for guessing the weight of a cake made with a special brand of baking powder, at the PNE. Tommy Chrismus flew into town to take in the Spike Jones show. ' 7 New residents welcomed at the Creek. Mr. arid Mrs. F. Letain from Sudbury Ontario, will reside on Beach Ave. Mrs. J. Hillary of Vancouver has purchased Crowe's property, Upper Road, and will be a permanent resident/together with her. three children. Mrs. J. Newman paid a recent trip to Vancouver. Mrs. Alex.. Anderson is. visiting in Vancouver for a few days. (_ AIRTITE HEATERS ��� ALLADIN LAMPS COLEMAN STOVES AND LAMPS ROYAL CREST RANGES ��� OIL HEATERS STOVE PIPES ��� STOVE BOARDS REXOLEUM RUGS AND LINOLEUM FISHING AND HUNTING SUPPLIES BUILDERS' SUPPLIES ��� GLIDDEN PAINTS FOR ECONOMY AND SATISFACTION . . . BUY AT Parker's Hardware In Village Centre, Sechelt GENERAL MEETING Sechelt Peninsula Board of Trade 27-8 p.m. at IRVINES HALL, PENDER HARBOUR For Discussion: Recent curtailment of mail service and many essential local problems. For transportation phone Sechelt 37. JOIN YOUR BOARD OF TRADE : I-* Page Eight THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. T~ Friday, Sept. 24, 1943 By E. NESTMAN BOARD OF TRADE NOTES At the monthly meeting of the Board of Trade at Gibsons, the coming winter schedule of the USS Co., was taken under discussion. The question of mail, a very pertinent subject, occupied most of the debate. It was felt that there might be other ways and means of getting the mail to and from Gibsons, daily. Trades and Industry, headed by chairman Doctor Anderson will take the matter up and report at next meeting in October. A very favorable report was given on the float entered in the PNE, by business men of Gibsons - - very good advertising for the village. Mr. F. French of Gibsons was the winner in the flood relief draw sponsored by the Board. COUNCIL NOTES At a meeting of the Council further discussion on the setting of trucking rates for the village was again the main subject on the agenda. Information is to be procured on the question of whether the village has any jurisdiction over the government wharf, from which the greater bulk of freight and baggage for the village is hauled. Until this information is in hand, village council is unable to set any rates for the village. Question of obtaining pipe for the cannery road replacement job is also under discussion. It is to be hoped that by next meeting something definite may be obtained re this pipe. Mr. Cook of B.C. Power is being interviewed this week re new lights for the village, to be installed before winter. Trouble in the Headlands over the Labor Day weekend was due to corrosion in part of the water pipe in the bay. This was remedied, and water was once more available. W.A. TO CANADIAN LEGION First meeting of the Women's Auxiliary was held Friday evening with a very good turn out - - about 25, and 7 prospective members who will be initiated _. at the next meeting. Our meetings are held the third Friday evening at 8 p.m., in each month. Any one interested in the veteran, and his problems, is eligible to join this women's organization. It is to be.hoped the next meeting may be held in our (Eflie (Boast $tos CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 3 Lines (15 Words) for 35c 3 Insertion (same ad) 60c Extra words, above 15-word .min., 2c each. Cash with order. Notices, Engagements, Marriages, Deaths, etc., 75c Insertion LITTLE ADS ... . BIG RESULTS (i WpfcNTED��� WORKING girl to share cottage with teacher in Sechelt. Apply Joan Krausent, Sechellty B.C. . 12 FOR SALE��� v,. ,- r~7 -vt: '���u.c f Jf~ * tr : 193J7 LINCOLN Zephyr in good running condition, with heater, $850. R. D. Brewis, Halfmoon Bay. X 18 FOR SALE��� ������ SPECIAL: Almost new bicycles for sale. English, make. Lew Reid's Automotive Service, Gibsons, B.C. X 12 FOR S.ALE��� \"'.'% 3 PIECE bedroom suite. Qiie Gurney range. Apply in writing to Mrs. E. Q. Bl^ke,, Lamb Lqg- ging Co., Sechelt, B.C. 11 FOR RENT-- : FURNISHED cottage for the winter months. Adults only. Located on the fill. Apply Mrs. Tillptsori, Selma Park. 12 FOB SALE��� MEN, DON'T take risks. Be safe. Guard your health. Hygienic supplies (rubber goods), mailed in strong envelopes sealed- with staples. Absolute secrecy without embarrassment. First-class merchandise. Price $1.00 per dozen, .mailed one hour after receiving order. The Greb Trading Cof, 1275 Queen St. sW4.st, Toronto, Canada. 16 ^SCELLANEOUS��� LPT US rebuild and upholster your favorite chair. Usher's Yard Goods Shop, Gibsons, B.C. tfn PERSONAL��� CALL AND say \"Hello\" at the Wakefield Coffee Shop. Samples of, lovely boxed and personal greeting cards for your inspection. Bus stqpp at the door. Op-, enyi2 noon*'on. Cheerio. Mrs.; Dorothy Erickson. 11 FR SALE��� 12 FT. CLINKER built boat, with 2% h.p. Briggs and Stratton engine. Like new. Purchased last year, price $275. Apply P. C. Nicholson, Kuchinka's Camp, Jervis Inlet, B.C. 18 FOR SALE��� A ROOM house. Space for bathroom; on Government road near school. Apply Mrs. Norman Klein, Pender Harbour. 11 FOR SALE- DUO THERM oil burner, white enamel kitchen range almost new. Apply Merry Ern Cafe), Gibsons, B.C. 12 FOR SALE��� FAWCETT Beaverbrook enamelled stove, silver and red trim. First class condition, reasonable. Apply Mrs. Edwin Husby, Gibsons, B.C. 11 FOR RENT��� SEA-FRONT cottage, furnished, light, water. Close in. Adults only. Peninsula Realty, Roberts Creek. 18 FOR SALE SHIP BY Gulf Lines Express to or from Vancouver. Low rates. Fast service. Careful handling. Specify Gulf Lines Express, tf new Legion Hall. Work held up due to inclement weather. A tea is to be held on Sept. 24 in United Church, proceeds to help with the furnishings of a new kitchen in our hall. Gordon MacPherson is. taking an extended vacation before starting his. new job in Vancouver. N. R. McKibbon is taking over Gordons business. We will miss Gordon's services in the village. He is an indefatigable worker in the interests of the village, really interested in the growth of the area. Due to circumstances, necessitating this... change, he is taking .up residence in Vancouver. Good luck Mac. Miss Baines, is the guest of Granny McEwen - - found out something very interesting concerning Granny this week. She had sent to England for her birth certificate, and received quite a surprise, instead of be- , ing the young oldster she thought she was, she found that she was 84,.not 82. Quite aishoCk; I'll say. Anyway Granny you don't look it at all. Rev. Father Reidy, Pastor of the Catholic Church at Gibsons, has been -transferred to Agassiz and the Pastor from Agassiz is coming to Gibsons, Rev. T. Obrien. We will be sorry to see Father. Reidy leave, he took a great deal of interest in children's sports, and will be sorely missed by them- We wish him God speed in his new Mission, and hope to ,see him again. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Milligan are,back from an extended holiday in the Okanagan. They had lovely weather. Mr. Sid Holland ;is also back on the job, looking rested and ready for another year. Noticed Jim and Bea, our butcher from Co-op, and his wife, coming home from vtheir vacation. Mrs. MacDougall ,and family back home from up coast where they spent the .summer. ^tfinx and''\"'Alice- -'Veitch, ��� ..bur- Sunset Hardware man and his, wife have gone for two weeks holiday to the Island and w_ay , points. Our fishermen are returri^g after their summer away, noticed George Friend back, Dave McKay, and several others. Herb Winn has ,gone up Woodfibre way on the B.C. Packers barge, where he will be manager on this floating store. Herby reially gets around. Fishing is nearly over, and now the hunters have taken oyer, got our first venison today, and ,it was really good , we've been very .fortunate up /t��hese> parts last few season^, that is for accidents, lets hope' we can >keep it that way, little caution and common sense and we can. So lots of luck fellas, but be careful. p��^���<^MM\"l-.yl��l\"U�����M. II the .Peninsula\" Phone Gibson 33 Gibsons see our in two sizes. $75.80 and $1 ��9.50 SALES AND SERVICE r* j\".P.g-'lW|l> *>qm**m^^m*mm+m Soy You Sow It In The \"News\" mtmmtmfmm anil Professional ^���j**\"^1**^'\" RUBBER STAMPS RUBBER STAMPS STENCILS���BADGES >APS-^INKS-tBp^^BS P0W^ NEWS BEER BOTTLES CLEANERS AMD DYERS <*It Pays to Keep Clean\" LLOYD'S CLEANERS ;.;.: GIBSONS, B.C. Agency, at Bus Depot, Sechelt INSURANCE Will call and buy for cash* \"beer .bottles, scrap metal, etc. Calls made at intervals from Hopkins to .Irvines landing.. R. H. STROSHEIN Wilson Creek Parr Pearson Agencies General Insurance Phone Sechelt 37 ���Night Ring LSL TAXI REAL ESTATE PENINSULA CABS 24-Hour Service WILSON CREEK and SEI^I^IC Seahelt J5C2 Specialist in Coast ��� Property Gpn^olidated Brokers Ltd. Qulf Qoast Office X\" Sechelt' X'?x-'lv:y^y'y. PLUMBiNG^HARDWARE Hardware, plumbing Supplies Heating Necessities 'Serving the -Berdnpula? Marshall's Hardware Phone .Gibson--33 4��< RADSO SERVICE STEELE'S RADIO AND ELECTRIC Radio;Sales and Service Phone, Sechelt 33 Send by Bus ABLETTS Plumbing and heating installations^ repairs. .Hot water heating/Contracts. ' North Road Gibsons TRANSFER-TRUCKERS Plumbing and Heating JACK'S TRANSFER Log Hauling Contractors General Freight Hauling Sand and Gravel Phone Sechelt 1.5U and 21Y Well that's it for tonite, with this thought: 'Tt.takes-a woman to make a fool out, of a man, ' ���. ��������������� and another woman to make a WOOD man out of a fool.\" iBye now. Installation ��� Repairs ,A>Spejq_felty by Registered Plumber Ticknpr's Plumbing Porpoise Bay Road JS^cjieit, ;B42. LUMBER AND FUEL BURNS and JACKSON SAWMILL Producer of Choice Lumber In AU Wood and Sawdust Phone Sechelt 15tM-27 Flower shows. were ^origin^ted by the London Horticultural Society,, founded by Thomas ,An-v drew Knight, in 1804. Support Your Board of Trade JTO;SLAB WOOD ' Now Available BLAIR CARTAGE' Granthams and Hopkins Contact Usher's Dry Goods at ^Gibsjojis Transfer - Truckers FRANK YATES Home Oil Agent for Peninsula GrayeL and Freight Carrying Service calls day or night- Days, Wilson Creek���5S Nights, Roberts Creek-���24L AGENT ���GIBSONS R. M. (Eric) INSMS Phone Gibsons, 50 Phones: 1075 MAIN STREET, VANCOUVER; B.C. PA; 6539 f A. 9171-2 VAN.^V^ Scows leave 1075 Main ISf^Vfcnc^ Schedule E$fecti.vifrJtepteinber .13* LV. VANCOUVER AR. iGlBSONSx LV. GIBSONS AR. VANCOUVER Monday Afternoon 1st Trip Tuesday Morning Afternoon Evening Wednesday No Scheduled Thursday Afternoon 2nd Trip Afternoon Morning Evening \"NOTE: All arrivals and departures ore subject to fide conditions* Special Trips by Arrangement __B____t_-_> ���-_-_-___���_-_-_��� Friday, Sept. 24, 1948. THE COAST NEWS, SECHELT, B. C. Page Nine IN THE following account, Jim lanes wide���but was not in good Tuesday afternoon in Prince destroyers visiting the city had condition���though we made the Rupert was a bright sunny day disgorged their crews upon the 95-mile trip in three hours and with only two small quick show- place to add to the thickly pack- ten minutes. There are no stops ers, and the sun peeping through ed streets. between Terrace and Pfrince again before you could put your After our meeting Tuesday Rupert, other than the occasional rubbers on. night, we managed to get down railway flag stop. Railway and Sunday night we noticed that to the wharf about midnight to roadway construction crews were all the restaurants were run by see my uncle, George Craigen, in abundance along the route, Chinese serving mostly Indians, chief engineer on the Union S.S. DO I KNOW THE VALUE OF TREESr Craigen of Powell River gives -first two or three storage rooms and there was lots of work to Tuesday we found that most of Chilcotin, sister ship of the Cam a description of several north- we entered. They had just -been be done. The road is basically a the restaurants were still run osun on which we had travelled ern B.C. towns which he visited cleaned and were being prepar- gravelled road, but bad with by Chinese, but most of the In- to Prince Rupert, recently with his parents, Mr. ed for new stock. As a result washboard and potholes hidden dians were back on the fishing LUXURY SHIP and Mrs. E. G. Craigen. their temperatures were as high in our trip by puddles and grounds and things weren't so We had to pass through the SUNDAY, AUG. 29 as zero degrees fahrenheit. Fin-ponds. crowded as they had been. Sun- customs' officers as we went As we came into picturesque ally however he found One for Nevertheless the people who day nigkt practically everything aboard as guests of my uncle. Prince Rupert harbour the sun me that was 'fairly cold*���23 use ^ are proud of it and feel was ��Pen> and three American (Continued on page 3) and wind cleared the skies , for degrees below on the thermom- at last they are in connection \"~ ~i ~ us for the first time .all day. eter. Regular storage tempera ith civilizatioIi. throughout the The ship docked, we established ture is 30 below. My light can- regt of BC The road was put our contacts, and were registered vass shoes, and thin summer throu<,h from Terrace by the in the Prince Rupert Hotel by shirt suggested we get out again ar * &nd .g n made * with 8 p.m. A slightly longer evening into the warm freezing working ��� g6bd foundation* but still lacks than we are used to in Powell room, and mere temperatures ~ d surface Thirty mile an River was quite noticeable, since did feel quite warm for a few h average is easily maintain- Prince Rupert is about 170 miles mmutes. ed west of this district. When fish are brought out of LOGGING TOWN We were taken by our hosts these storages they are as brittle Terrace is a logging town in for a quick drive ^through the us chalk, and as fragile if drop- a flat valley It too ig booming> city, and; had pointed out to us ped. He smashed one; for us and though boomtown evidence is the necklace of islands of which pieces of icicle like fish scatter- ladking. The buiidings are dii_ Prince Rupert is a part. Statis- ed mall directions. ^ apidated looking, and only in- tically the city has a population Prince Rupert itself has had vestigation reveals that the of about 10,000 and lives on fish, several expansions and depres- town is experiencing a new lumber and trade, of which fish sions, and the scar of each one grQwth and stabilization which is most important. is embedded in the foundations it hasn't seen for a long time. MONDAY, Aug. 30 of the city. Apparently it was for some Monday morning dawned a Narrow winding and wander- years almost a ghost town, and beautiful day. We spent the ing roads ramble throughout the some evidence of that condition morning looking the place over, upper reaches and lead aimlessly still exists. The empty builflfcngs By accident we stumbled into the throughout the rocky hills and are now nearly full again, and cold storage plant, largest of its knolls that make up the residen- retail businesses are starting to kind in the world, and after a tial part of the city. This is com- take up the old stands, with a trip through the place, I feel posed mostly of old houses, in- shortage of retail buildings al- confident it is also the coldest eluding many good ones, and the ready existing. The town itself of its kind in the world. occasional remodelled one. Also has been so busy filling up the Mr. Bodie,. superintendent, scattered around are a few new old buildings that it has, not yet kindly offered to take us houses, part of the current ex- had to start new construction-^ through, and was not satisfied pansion going on in the area. thus giving the apparent dead till we were as thoroughly froz- These asphalted _ roads are town effect. An incorporated en as the fish. Basically the busi- barely wide enough^for two cars village, it shows many signs of ness is to take a fisherman's to pass, and are tediously built a surge such as it has not seen catch and store it Warehouse round and over small hills, and before. style at freezing temperatures other obstructions. Terracites claim the road to till it is require^ elsewhere. Mil- Through the business section Prince Rupert has opened up lions of pounds of Vfish, are are straight wide roads, one the area more than any other handled here, anci they are ship- block of which is paved with factor. ped direct m refrigerated rail- good street lights and sidewalks, Hotel accommodation was not way cars. Certain^ types of other and the next block a nightmare good, but did the job till next kinds of preserving and pro- in wet weather. . day. Meals are comparable in cessmg are carried out like fil- Very old buildings, Only mod- price to this district���gasoline letmg and smokmg^but no can- erately old buildings, and a few ���49 cents. ZLT ^-^ 7 ^^eTnod^yhmdhm^ *lt We woke; early ^Tuesday mfitn- co?ff'tl, 7, . . J Wetty-resting side^ T hactindubious^ourage to ound the- business area^bottt.three places available and: i^t at accept Mr Bodie s challenge to three blocks wide byfive blocks nine a.m; to have lunch with go into a cold room. The work- long. Business lots come in three mother in Prince Rupert at ing room WeXwere, in, in our conditions: (a) on a level with noon We survived a terrific light summer clothing, was a the road��� (b) deep iri agully rainstorm on the way back. The mere freezing temperature, beside a road-r-or (c) oni top of rain poured so heavily for a fif maintained at 32 degrees. Mr. a rocky cliff high above a road, teen minute period that the Bodie was disappointed at thf giving of cotirse a nice? view of windshield wipers at top speed the surrounding landscape. could not clear the raiff from the Prince Rupentes deny that giasSt but rather a sheet of water the^ towering mountain forming poured, down the glass again a full length backdrop to tiifr iess than half an inch from the city causes a daily rainfall. This wiper. The Wipers were about summer- for instance they had a~as effective as in a fish bowl. record six weeks without rain���viability at the height of the 3~Li��fp2w we amved- downpour was almost non-ex- TERRACE ��� instent In the afternoon, Dad and I When the rai slackened en_ started for Terrace 95 miles; dugh -to see~we were greeted east on the Skeena River. SmCe -^:iV. ��__. ��_,��.*��� w-:��_!L-_.x _!_.__!-: \"That question is a little off my beat, but as a citizen of British Columbia I've made it my business to know the answer. Trees are the backbone of our industry. They account for 42 cents in every dollar we earn. That meant you and me and everyone in British Columbia. Trees art mighty big business.** iG FOREST INDUSTRY PULP AND PAPER -.$*���.��; ?l<:i ..-> ��������� MURDOCH'S MARINE SUPPLY Compare Our PrieesI Del nor Frozen Foods Ice Cream Groceries Fresh Meats and Vegetables Hardware Drygoods Shell Oil Fish Camp We now have increased refrigeration for handling of perishables. Pender Harbour, B.C. .,.�� __!__����,___ +__ uwir ��� ��,_tt ^ith the most magnificent show we planned to be back on Tues- or streams and rivulets that one day, we^left mother at the hotels ^iild imagine. One of the members of the lodgei *_,; . . ., who was making the trip also The mountainside on the far with some relatives offered to:^e of ,the \"ver seemedJo be be a guiding light for us, to i�����x���f waterfall with the oc- make sure we wouldn't get Sft?11^?^11??6 ��l ?*retch- of lost. Once off Kaien Island, we ^k iu\"^ through the water found you couldn't get lost- n�����f��� ������J*^ +1, x there is only one road .in the ��n ��uf Sldt the sl��Pes \"*** area, and it goes directly to ^Jij^. T *w*V?eam a^ Terrace or Prince Rupert. te-r ..an<^er. tumbling down out The nine mills engaged in the production of pulp and paper in B.C. have a total investment exceeding $110,000,000 in plant and equipment. Each of these mills is expanding its plant facilities . . . indicating the faith of the industry in the future of British Columbia. FOR THE SAKE OF THE FUTURE BE KIND TO LITTLE TREES PULP �� P in BRlllS m HS! Our guide set a 30 mile aft of the sky. IMWWMW When Passing Through Selma Park STOP AT Refreshments - Ice Cream Soft Drinks - Pies - Cakes, Homecooked Cold Meats Everything Baked on Premises Special Attention Given To Orders Ample Parking Spacf for Cars * hour pace by previous agreement, g J A sharp mountainous road about g two lanes and gravelled, with 5 narrow government bridges B crossing mountain creeks, led us g to the end of Kaien Island, on | which Prince Rupert is built. II Prom ��� Prince Rupert to the-,: p mainland is nine miles by mouh- gj tain road; From the, maiiiland; g end of the bridge we diverted \" along a sea inlet that turned in- ��� to a beautiful canyon-like valley. Jg The;;:;.roadX^however'.' weftt7ii|) y;ili- g stead; of along, \"and> in ^ort-lor- B 7der we lia^^emihiseencej^of'__ome |�� of the milder stretches of the g Cariboo highway. g Finally the road burst out on- 5 to the shore of the Skeena^ J i River ���\"shore\" being a much 1 \\ more apt description than- g \"bank.\" We calculated the I Skeena esttiary here to be about ��� three-quarters of a mile wide. | For 50 miles of the 95 We found g that we had the river,\" and along 1 the shores or bank went the J highway, then- the railway, then- ��j the sky high mountain cliffs. g The road itself is Eaaintaiined = most of the way about three iMlfli I % CHUCK YOUR CAR CHECK ACCIDENTS A Minor adjustment that is overlooked can cause a major accident. Have your car thoroughly checked frequently by trained experts. Let us give your brakes, tires, lights, and other mechanisms a complete inspection. Our prices are low . ��� . our service the best. Stop in today . . . remember, a safety cheek may save your neck. DON'T DELAY ��� SEE US NOW SILVER GRILLE SERVICE STHTIOM One of the Best Equipped Service Departments on the Peninsula ��^ .IllifSlilliSlili Friday, Sept. 24, 1948_ THE COAST NEWS. SECHELT, B.C.. Page Ten By KAREN STOCKWELL ���_iiiiinri;'MfifT\"iiiii: '(\"���it*\"*1'\"'\" oi-um-ip- ���' _-��_-. ^^jr jSi Be onservative HELLO Guides! Sorry I haven't been writing the news lately. FOR THE first time at a Nation- ��� ������ ��� Well, first I'll tell you about al political Convention, Res- ences between the Liberal Concur lovely week-end at Roberts de-la-Madeleme (Magdalen Is- vention recently held, and the Creek Guide Camp. The girls lands) will be /represented. Progressive Conservative Con- that went were Mary Parker, These islands, previously part vention, is that the representa- Lorna Van Kleek, Helen Der- 0f the Gaspe riding, were creat- tion at the Progressive Conser- by, Kathleen Rouse and Karen ed a separate constituency in the Vative Convention is based on Stockwell. Harry Sawyer took us 1947 redistribution. Located in the new redistribution whereas down and we waited till about the Gulf of St. Lawrence, closer the Liberal Convention* was hasten o'clock for them to come to Newfoundland than to the ed on ^he 0jd Representation'\" (the other Guides). We had Quebec coast, the islands' main- Act. Under the new redistribu- something to drink, then went stay is fishing. Delegates will tion, there are ten additional to bed in our cabins. We got up be: Gregoire Gaudet, Oscar Del- ridings. Thus^ the Progressive at 7 o'clock and from then on we aney and W. Langlais. Conservative Convention will be had colours, breakfast work!, Fifteen men in all have con- the largest of the three political swimming,-games, and did many tested the p&rt leadership at conventions held this year. The other interesting things. There ^ tbree previous Conventions.CCF. Convention, according to were four leaders, and Id like to At the winnipeg Convention in press reports, had fewer than thank the mothers and Miss Mc- lg42 the six candidates were: 300 delegates, whereas the Prog- Taggart for letting us go, paying Lor(J Bennett Hugh Guthrie, ressive Conservative Conven- our way and arranging it. c H Cahan, Dr. R. J. Manion, tion will total 1313. ���nr u a ^..^ *w r...rq�� rv.^Af Robert Rogers and Sir Henry Nearly 500 French-speaking '��� ��wJL^.^+S ���rk Drayton. Of these, only Sir delegates will attend the Con ing on Thursday in^ the.par*, Drayton survives. At the vention. These delegates come and sang and discussed things Qttawa Convention in 1938 the from all provinces of the Dom- to do. Across the park the candidates were: Dr. R. J. inion, .and included amongst Brownies had a nice little meet- Maniori} M A MacPherson, J. H. them will be a number of Ac- mg too. Harris, Denton Massey and. J. adian descent. On ��.pnt 1 the Guides and Earl Lawson. At the Winnipeg Well over 300 newspapermen, Brownies went to .Derly's farm Convention of 1942 the five radio station personnel an# .r. -w^t qpohplt I didn't eo as candidates were: John Bracken, cameramen, both still and mot-. Tv^^hallZl^JA^ ^ MacPherson, John G. ion picture are expected to th7tthev had a nice time Joy Diefenbaker, Howard C. Green coyer the Convention, qpott was sick after it but is and H. H. Stevens. It is expected .*he Resolutions and Policy wSi r.��� contenders for the leadership Committee of the Convention, wen now. will all attend the Convention, consisting of 193 members, will We're continuing our sewing r>res.dine officers of meet two days in advance of classes on Friday night after *��F p^esiamg ,. ��fn^.��i the Convention at 10 a.m., on cidbbtb un .ciiuct^ ingiit ��_. previous Conservative National cor.toTV1x.eT. oo^ ���������rPVlo r>T.__.T.rv_oW school and everyone try to go gonventions will attend the ^^XL? ttee^s Frederick lf y��U Can' Convention. They a*e: Senator ^^^rSner KG of Torontt We would like to thank the C. P. Beaubien, joint Chapman and ^ g^ etary'is Robert. L. women who sponsor our associa- with the late Hon. *_. N Kttoaes stanfield of Halifax. Seven sub- tion and also the Union Steam- of the 1927 Convention; John R. Committees wm''. consider reso- ship for the use of the Pavilion MacNicol, M.P.|, joint Chairman-^��� falling ^ their special\\; Hall to have our meetings in. with the late Hon Maurice fieldg The Extefnal Affairs sub__ That includes both Guides and Dupre at the 1938 Convention, committee has 25 members; Ag- Brownies. Thank you again. and H. K. Miiner, ^.u. ana lvan riculture 33. Labour, 29; Natural w 11 +w>c ���n W .h.�� wpek Sf\\^V^A?n'' ^ GhairmenResources, 30; Social Security, Well that s all for this week, of the 1942 Convention. 26; Veterans, 25 members, as haJ so till later keep smiling. Back in the saddle at this th4 TaxatioA sub-committee. Sechelt Guides are planning Convention will be .a- veteran Youth Delegates-at-Large and 7 a General Social Evening on organization official. The Chair- University Delegates-at-Largfc October 1st, in the Legion Hall, mem of the Entertainment Com- have the distinction of being the mittee���Redmond Code, K.C., of most prompt in returning their im> , BAX Ottawa���was General Secretary compieted Credentials. The staff (Sechelt) of the Party and principal as-in charge-Gf Credentials have Bv ARIES sitant to General A. D. McRae made ciuite a game of checking Y during the 1930 election cam- on this, and proudly report that paign. Youth is in the lead for prompt WEST SECHELT is losing one General J. A. Clark, Leon J. replies. of its popular families. Dick Ladner, John A. Fraser, Hon. and Patty Kline and the child- H. H. Stevens, of British Col- FORTY thousand B. C. lumber workers are in line for a pay boost of 13 cents an hour, or 11 percent, whichever is greater. This was the unanimous recommendation of a conciliation board, which has been on the case since April. Operators had offered 11 cents and the IWA asked 35. Both are calling meetings to discuss the verdict. 171 Operators are affected. The increases are to be retroactive to 75 days from date of acceptance by the workers. The boost would bring the basic minimum pay for labor in the industry to $1.08 per hour. Trained men get an additionl 5 to 10 cents. Hours of work remain the same. A night shift differential was increased 5 to 6 bents per hour* Hairdressing Shop A Complete Hairdressing Service ���x.,'-*- DOLLY JONAS Phone for Appointments ��� EAST IS EAST and WEST IS WEST SO IF YOU WANT MEAT VILLAGE MARKET HAS THE BEST Village Meat Market and Delicatessen Phone Sechelt 56 Bus Service Rough Local Orders Filled Promptly Random Widths Random Lengths Fir ��� Cedar Hemlock B.C. FIR SECHEI^Bfe PHONE 42 ���_ and U.S. Professor Will ren are leaving us at the end umbia; Dr. G. D. Stanley of the month. First for a long General J. A. Stewart, of Alber- Qnt^n PrrTGftte' awaited holiday (Mexico is it?) ta, are among former Members \"/*u*\"1,l��\" and then will'be: settling down of Parliament who will attend Institute in West Vancouver. the Convention. . - * : , . rw._> /vf +*.__,' ^.^.o.t.oi /q.��or- DR-- E- G- OLSEN, Director of Wally Berry will be taking Q��� of the principal differ- Schools and Community Rela- over as \"Mine Host\" at Wake- .. ��� tions for the State of Washing- field for Dick and Alex Gray Jacksons in Wally's place. Mr. t0n, will address the annual two- will no longer pilot the big bus Al White is to be bus driver. day seSsion of the'. Parents' Instil for Cecil Lawrence as he will All in all quite a game of check- tute for U.B.C. His opening ad- be timekeeper at Burns and ers for our community. dresS on October 4* at 8:00 p.m. in the Mayfair Room of the Hotel; Vancouver is entitled \"Let's Vitalize Our Schools\". On October 5 at 1:30 he will speak at the University of B.C.'s Acadia Camp on the theme \"What it Means to Grow Up\". ��� The two day Parents' Institute, program is of vital interest to all parents and an invitation to attend is\\ extended to all inter-s ested members of the public. The ,.. University Department of Extension will supply further details upon request.\" '���'rf RELIABLE 24- HOUR SERVICE BILL'S HALFMOON BAY, B.C. Halfmoon Bay 7-U (. ���.) Bill Mervyn I SOMETHING DIFFERENT ... Befter Than All Known Wallboards M BRAND Manufactured by the Makers of Weldtex ';:V/7LISf>RICE:; '9'i ioot AT GIBSONS Have Your Roof Reshi BEFORE THE WET WEATHER STARTS Duroid Shingles ALL TYPES OF MASONITE AND CHROME TRIM ��� MILL WORK FLOOR SANDER FOR RENT Your Local Complete Marine Towing Service LOG TOWING ~r- YARDING ��� SCOWS - PILE DRIVING ��� SALVAGE DREDGING )UQM ; \"Everything For The Builder\" Gibsons, B.C. Phone Gibsons 53 Special Facilities for Quick Moyement of Cats, Logging Trucks and ���General Camp Equipment PHONE US COLLECT SECHELT ��� Parr Pearson Agency, Tel. 54 or 37 PENDER HARBOOR^B'iii^ Tel. 6 U NANA]AAO--~The Nanaimo Towing Co. Ltd. GIBSONS���M. P. GtMePhe^ Area Agent���Mr. H. Spalding/ Pender Harbour, Tel. 6C3"@en, "Titled \"The Coast News\" from 1945-07-11 to 1957-03-28 and 1992-03-19 to 1995-01-09

\"Coast News\" from 1957-04-04 to 1970-10-28; and \"Sunshine Coast News\" from 1970-11-04 to 1992-03-02.

Published by Coast News Limited (1945-1952), Sechelt Peninsula News Limited (1953-1976), and Glassford Press Limited (1977-1995)."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Gibsons (B.C.); Sechelt (B.C.); Halfmoon Bay (B.C.); Davis Bay (B.C.); Madeira Park (B.C); Pender Harbour (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Coast_News_1948-09-24"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0173172"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.4002778"@en ; geo:long "-123.508889"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver: University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Gibsons, B.C. : The Coast News Limited"@en ; dcterms:rights "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"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Sunshine Coast Museum and Archives"@en ; dcterms:title "The Coast News"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .