Page 4 would, of course, be of importance. (A very large, old, T.V. might be close to its last pictures.) You might think of other items, but here are some suggestions: cutlery, china, glassware, porcelain, small items of furniture, compu- ters (some of the early "Macs" are prized by some, discarded by others), pottery (crafts, especially home crafts, are always welcome), musical instruments, paintings and etchings, small electrical appliances, basketry, old posters and signs, lamps and lighting fixtures, scatter rugs, valises and travelling cases, clocks and watches, mirrors, jewellery, sheet music, file cabinets, hand and electrical tools, hi-fi components, (loudspeakers, amplifiers, etc.), radios, collectibles (old bottles, etc.), WOODEN coat hangers, optical equipment (binoculars, telescopes), jig saw puzzles and games, sewing patterns, Christmas decorations, table linens (but CLOTHING, please), garden tools (incl. lawn seed/fertilizer spreaders), tarpaulins, lawn furniture -- the list goes on. If you have any of these or other items you'd be willing to donate to the sale, give us a call. We'll arrange to have them picked up. Please let one of us know of any GARAGE SALE IDEAS you may have. Someone has mentioned the possibility of a silent auction or even a Dutch auction (appropriate sale items plus an auctioneer would both be required here). Also possible is a snack/ coffee stall. Space will be a limiting factor, so likely the allotting of stalls to travelling professionals who turn over a percentage of their sales to the sponser will be out of the question. Singers and musicians would add a nice touch to the event. Do you have any ideas here? If you do about this, or any other aspect of the garage sale please give us a call. We're open to any and all ideas and if you can contribute your services so much the better. Please call us. Tom Taylor Director - Fund-raising - Photo courtesy Bas Collins Dora (Ellis) Scott, younger than brother Frank by ten years, sits at the controls of a re-built Curtiss pusher-type biplane at Bowness, Alberta in 1914. The plane, often affectionately referred to as "the Old Girl" or "the Old Bus" was neither that spring day as an ebullient, tonsle-haired Dora proudly posed for her picture in the aptly named WEST WIND. Some 30 years later, the then manager of the West Vancouver Municipal Transportation Company would haul Frank on the carpet through the following memo: "I am sorry to have to tell you that several complaints have come into this office during the past few days. They have to do with the noise created when the motor is raced and pushed hard before changing gears. The garage has a plan to install more efficient mufflers on the two Superiors, but if you could get the habit of taking life a little easier it would help a lot." There's no way of knowing if, or how, Frank answered the criticism but "Pshaw! You oughta've heard the roar of "the Old Girl's" 45 h.p. four cylinder Maximotor" would've been just the ticket!