5 Phussday, January 18, 1956 â€" _ ORRY WE HAD to miss th last couple of weeks, but ciccumstances beyond gur couâ€" trol necessitated a smallér pa~ per and there just wasn‘t space eoluman. However, we do not anticiâ€" pate having to miss any other issues, so lets get together from now on. In the column I wrote last week but which I couldn‘t pubâ€" ;;'ruia:n had lost one of their closest associates. Bill Strack of the Wilmot Club died of a heart attack, just a week ago. As usual, Bill had been out Fox hunting on Saturday with his friends from the club, when chest. He was rushed to a doctor who immediately orderâ€" ed him to the Kâ€"W hospital. Bill died early the following sunday morning. He was only 49â€"yearsâ€"old. kA 4 â€" 6 DUKE ST. Refrigerators â€" Ranges â€" to the car, he & Refrigerators * $229. "ï¬mn†,".' by Herb Smith A very keen and experience hunter, he had been a mem» ber of the party we went deer bwhcvigtyon.'l'ofd- low Bill in bush or to watch his numerous activities, no one could have gained the impression but that he would live until he was at leu%. hundred. _ While delayed, we would like to extend our sincerest symâ€" pathy to his wife and family. NO DOUBT YOU have often heard of how tough some of the indians get. Of their imâ€" munity to flies and heat in summer and cold in winter. This little tale, supposedly true, comes to us from the Deâ€" partment of Lands and Forests in Cochrane. s t-l;y";;to able to reach the shelter of a snug but uninâ€" Seems a couple of the boys from the department were on a moose hunting trip. When darkness came the first night, ‘®amn*" SAVE AT KARGES IN JANUARBY As he ‘was not carrying any bedroll and as the cabin was unequipped with bedding, they were a little perpleted as to where he would spend the night. After all, they had only two sleeping bags and the adâ€" dition of a full grown indiaun to either one of them would have been one man too many. Just as they were preparing to get some sleep, a pounding on-d:::. .“.:n*fl asked the of staying -n"ï¬rï¬:‘:" below, but the cabâ€" in was stocked with food und wood and they had good Nothing daunted the indian lay:down beside the stove withâ€" out even a blagket around him. The two department men watched this move with conâ€" siderable s a tisf a ction. \t thirtyâ€"below a stove takes conâ€" siderable ‘stoking during the night to keep out the cold . .. even with a sleeping bag:. There was a lot of stoking of the stove that night, but the indian didn‘t do it. The two department men, almost exhausted from their numerous trips from the shelter of their sleeping bags to the woodpile during the night, were serenaly told the next morning that the indian hadn‘t wakened at all. dropped to #| sovering (of any kind, he â€" Washers â€" Woodstock Warriors ~| Waterloo Siskins For an evening of top flight, fast moving hockey don‘t miss this game "1055 Junior O.H.A. Champs" Ope\n'l'lun.mdl'rihy Untd 9 pm. Time 8:30 P.M. 36 geylh For PHONE SH. §4737 (Continued on Page T9 *