‘Wednesday, August 26, 1959 TRE WILLIAMS LAKE TRIBU : Page 3 DEPARTING RESIDENT REMINISCES °) e eS Sos | Lone Butte will | Horse thief hard man to catch Dog Creek news ® h i i li PRINCE GEORGE—William) Police say they didn’t try to MR. AND MRS. LEO Weber,ment over the store. Visiting qd more COMMUN! ave S ree Ig is Kraft pleaded guilty in district take him off the horse earlier motored over from 100 Mile] them are Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey > court to theft of an Arabian} as it is a very difficult task for House for a Sunday visit to] Lee and son of Port Mellon, saddle horse August 9 from|a man on foot and they thought Dog Creek. B.C. in mear future [jis mrs ave nom) ann ol sad toy Gone FATHER LEO CASEY, 0.M.I. paid a farewell visit to his par- ishioners over the weekend. He leaves for Saskatoon Friday. During his sojourn in the Cari- ROGER DICKSON OF the Indian Affairs branch was in the valley Monday and Tuesday on departmental business. off the animal. Finally, how- ever, they were forced to grab Kraft and take him from the orse, | Kraft told court that he was Highway and was sentenced to three months in jail. LONE BUTTE—This Cariboo community is going to have its first street lighting installed soon. The B.C. Power Commission spirit i d old d Williams Lake will be a bit duller for many people after Saturday, for that is the day that Mrs. Kraft was arrested in Prince George by RCMP following @ chase around the city in ‘hree- PLACE’S “Dog- . in View et " ; boo Father Casey has greatly] HILARY T. Mart leaves to make her home in Victoria. has authorized the installation| quarter time after he had rid- aa apreer One and had been endeared himself to his widely|patchers” staged a well-attended When she came to the Cari- villiams|°f Seven 200-watt incandescent} den into the city from the Tee en, TRS. Walking scattered flock and one hears|dance in the community hall ee 28 years ago as the bride en she came to Williams luminaires in Lone Butte, south 4 ee aes numerous expressions of sincere|Saturday which attratced pat- of Tommy Mart, “Alice” as she|Lake in » Mrs. Mart lived) qe addition of Lone Butte i burners sstrate George Stewart _ i irport and log- with her husbana ioe awed Constables in gas FLT. pr. F7emte_teeseam regret at his departure. rons from the Airp said he presumed Kraft didn’t think he was going to “start a is known to so many brought b to the Power Commission’s with her an infectious gaiety, street lighting contracts brings chased Kraft on the oat burner, J. Kerr, Sabre cornered him several times and garage and lean-to which is ging community. Jet pilot of the RCAF’s @ ready wit and a love of music which has in return brought her a host of friends wherever she went. And even though she nursed her daughter Edna while she was bed-ridden for many years until her death, endured the shock of her son Terry’s death by accident at Whitehorse six years ago, then her husband’s just a year and a halt ago, Mrs. Mart has maintained an air of bright cheerfulness and a Teady smile. | But inside she admits to “feeling lonely” and perhaps a little weary of our cold winters, and so she will join her sisters on the Island, where she will be fairly close to her son, Stanley, and his family in Vancouver} too. DIFFERENT NOW There is no doubt too that Mrs. Mart is going to miss Wil- liams Lake especially when she Tecalls ‘‘the good old days and the wonderful times.” “It’s so different now,” she says, “It has grown so much and people just don’t get together the > there isn’t the same com- munity spirit.” She remembers when all the churches got together and had one big Christmas tree in the old Elks Hall and all the child- now the house sitting well back behind the Tom-Boy store. Ex- cept for the house at the front the number of street lightin: units in operation by the pub- ranch with one horse.” 32 eS ‘| talked to him but couldn't per- suade him to get off the animal. Hely-owned utility to almost} He walked the horse away| Wash mirrors and windows of the property, the street 9,000. from the Mounties several] With a chamois which has been leading up to the hospital was ee |times and they finally stopped|dipped in soapy water. Wring devoid of building. They were] Drive carefully—an accident! the rider near the softball/out the cloth and rub briskly literally living on the edge of town then. . manent. “When I went to visit Mrs. Western's mother and father, could make your vacation per- diamond where he was taken|until all water has been ab- from the animal. sorbed. MRS. C.R. PLACE has ac- quired the business of her son famed Golden Hawks acro- batic team, was killed near Calgary when his plane col- lided during landing with a private plane from Phila- Hilary, which will henceforth be operated in conjunction with the ranch. adelphia. also died. Two Americans MR. AND MRS. TERRENCE Thompson, Vancouver, have Tire Trouble ? C&S Tire Service taken up residence in the apart- Mr. and Mrs. Moore who were living next to Rosary Hall, it was considered to be out-of- town up there,” Mrs. Mart re- calls. And Mr. Mart helped with the town's growth, by building| house after house up the hill,| and then two more across) Oliver Street. | Tn the early days, Mrs. Mart was a member of the Hospital Auxilary, taught in the United Church Sunday School - and helped Mrs. Crysdale, the min- ister’s wife, with CGIT. She} the past few years, she has en- Joyed making articles in the Pottery Club and being a mem- ber of this gay group. LOVES MUSIC One of her main pleasures though has been music, and with her violin she has belonged | to. several small orchestras | which have organized and dis-| banded over the years. She| rerembers playing’ with Bob | Kelt’s group, then with another | SANTA CLAU Irs CHRISTMAS « AUGUST § comes to Shop-Easy Tom-Boy Prices effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday - August 27 - 28 - 29 Ten got a gift; and how 30 or 40 of them would get together at Christmas, go visiting and singing from house to house, then walk across the “flats” (behind Medical Clinic) to the Catholic Church for midnight Mass. ‘We weren't all Cath- Olics,” she laughed, “but it didn’t seem to matter.” made up of Thelma Rife, rok | Willie Hannah, Mrs. John Borkowski and Jack Donaghue. of years ago. she Amy Wilson, Betty £ e Dewkist Corn. is. 21. 29e Wrightson, Thelma Rife and Ivan Spears and they had a . cw ging ef lot M ARG ARIN Gem 1's .......... 2 for 53c Tulip 1's ........ 2 for 55c ft IT’S CANNING TIME! HEINZ WHITE VINEGAR Gallon — $1.09 66-02. — 59c Betty moved away and the orch- estra disbanded. “I enjoy playing so much,” she sa: pol wonderful ch one Fopghi just ley There were masquerade dan- ces, concerts and variety shows, nd the whole town went and * R= play for dances, until Amy and et times ge eee OE g and grow,” said Mart| hospital hill, but : philosophically, “‘but it just|‘Who knows,” she said looking 1 S 2 for 65c ] doesn't seem the same any|out at the Cariboo hills which eageeee sees ae , uf she loves, “I might be back.” 3 lb ° i 1 03 Ueno more. id, Cannister ........ 1. e Tomato Juice =... 29¢ PRAY om BRUNSWICK 5 FOR FORT GARRY 100's Sardines 49c MEAT BARGAINS Tea Bags (leaner JIM DANDY 32-02. bottle Ze TV STAR Joyce Davidson gets an authentic Eskimo noserub from Kiawak, 25, at the Stratford Festival in Stratford, Ont. He and other Baffin Island natives are demonstrating Eskimo carvings at the Festival. : P Caches 2. von Schedule Loin Pork Chops ; PACIFIC GREAT EASTERN RAILWAY Cente 688, ye sn DDE Pineapple >... Passenger Train Schedule Effective August 9, 1959 No. 1 DAILY Pacifie Daylight Time No. 2 DAILY ; NORTHBOUND SOUTHBOUND pare R ik S READ DOWN READ UP 10:30 a.m. Ly. North Vancouver Ar am. bh ; c 10:50 a.m. | Horseshoe Bay — a.m. an 11:55 am. Squamish a.m. 4:15 p.m. Ly. Lillooet a.m. . 5:40 pm. Clinton _ p.m. N 8:55 p.m. Lv. Williams Lake p.m. ] 10:50 p.m. Quesnel _ p.m. 1:05 am. Ly. Prince George _ Lv p.m. a . 6:00 am. Ly. Chetwynd — am. DEVON, 1-Ib. pkt. 8:00 am. Ar. Fort St. John . a.m. Ma al _ 0 ™ “ 1.59 No. 4 DAILY No. 8 DAILY ar. % 6:00 a.m. Ly. Chetwynd —— Ar. 10:20 a.m. 8:00 a.m. Ar. Dawson Creek Ly. 8:20 a.m. Reclining Lounge Seats — View Windows Reserved Seats Available with Steward Service and Complimentary Meals FOR RESERVATIONS AND TICKETS PHONE P.G.E. RAILWAY AGENT, WILLIAMS LAKE 28 PACIFIC GREAT EASTERN RAILWAY