\ v = A6 CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 8, 1981 _CCROSSWORD srs ii: nie A7 CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 8, 1981 Recommends F agate WIS It's shrubby. . . answer in Wednesday's paper The “Gieamy 11D allan snusngs M6 Siyty Geritre "TMs athe mind Leave out 2 Aims gen mor 4 Hangman's n 22 Famous jockey with Faunus ‘$1 Sandarac tree bi children’s restraints TORONTO (CP) — The Ontario government should make it mandatory for chil- dren under age five to wear modified seatbelts, says the Toronto board of health. The board has unanimous- Gasp SS Oak trap 16 Haws leat $7 Degree 58 Observe fe Harem rooms 88 Artifical gems 111 Insipld one: @ In advance slang queen at of the gods 118 One, ‘T@Debatable 120 Thing, in law STAAX MTAX SITAVJ HVWD QJTHHTWQ SVDAVIW VHTMD Salmon industry could see loss VANCOUVER (CP) — B.C.’s salmon industry could find itself short about 40,000 fish in two years because of the heavy rains and flooding in north Vancouver last ‘weekend. Salmon fry and eggs in Lynn Creek and the Indian and Seymour Rivers suffered heavy damage from the rush of water and gravel down the ” river bed. “The massive amount of gravel movement would have destroyed any eggs in that gravel because they're in the really formative stages,” Rick Grindrod of the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans said Tuesday. He said Lynn Creek and the Seymour River suffered the heaviest damage. “We've pretty well ac- cepted a 100-per-cent loss there. What it means is that two years down the road it will be surprising if we get any fish back at all.” Pulpit & Pew by Ministers in the West Kootenay. Conseerated Cabbages by George James Calvary Baptist Church There was a money order. in the letter and already my eyes were growing misty as I read the first page. We had known the young mother as a girl while we were on the prairie as assis- tants to her pastor. It was just after the second world war, she had lived on a farm and her father also worked out when he could but em- ployment was scarce. The family was poor — desper- ately so at times — but they were faithfully at church Sunday after Sunday and hospitality made their home a pleasant place to visit. Eventually better times fell upon them. The family grew into their teen years, (there were about half-a- dozen of them), the boys and girls took themselves part- ners and one by one like a clutch of young owls left their aa ighbori: farm lad sold my cabbages,” she had written. “It isn't much but . . “That's where my eyes had blurred and now, after so many years, I've forgotten what else she had written. At this time my wife and I were on furlough with our young family from the mission field. It was the policy of our Mission Society to discuss our financial needs with our Lord, our board and occas- ionally with our fellow mis- sionaries only. God had used various means to meet the special shortages. And now cabbages. Ah no, the Lord didn't need a full basket to feed the hungry followers on the des- ert place of Bethsaida. A young boy’s lunch would do. Oil wells go dry and gold mines peter out. Rothchilds and Rockefellers blossom and die. Blue chip stocks rise and fall at a whim and hoarded fortunes are just a flimsy gilded ladder into a coffin. But there will always be a dicated cabbage patch. isa married the eldest girl and together they went farm- ing on their own. The be- ginning years had been marked by slow progress as grain crops did not always meet the standard of fair to middlin’. It had been nip- and-tuck for the young couple in the early years and the profit, if any, had to be plowed back into maintaining the farm. Pocket money often was acquired by selling a sideline. Then came the letter. She had thanked us for helping her as a young Christian. “I Cold sit GROCETERIA & LAUNDROMAT & SHAKE SHOPPE ly app the dations of a report calling for immediate introduction of provincial legislation making child restraint devices man- datory. The report says that from 1977 to 1980, 65 children four years and yodnger were killed in traffic accidents and 6,805 were injured. So far in Canada, only h has legisl: Specialized headache clinics BY DAN HALL GREENWICH® Conn. (AP) —. For most people, a h- eadache is only a temporary discomfort. But for others, it can be a chronic pain that causes blackouts, physical illness or even suicide. Yet the small number of specialized headache clinics, such as the New England Centre for Headache in G- reenwhich, find that such simple things as smoking, taking aspirin and drinking coffee can be the root of the endless throbbing. Nance Heavin, a nurse, suffered migraine headaches for more than eight years when she went to the centre. “You had to leave work and go to bed,” she said. “With one, I remember holding my head but can't remember actually going home.” Dental work costing more than $2,000 didn’t help. Medi- cation seemed ineffective. Ordered to pay lost wages RED DEER, ALTA. (CP) — A department store that demoted a 63-year-old woman 16 months before her retirement has agreed to pay her $6,616 in lost wages and benefits. " The woman ‘was demoted to part-time work after 17 years with the company, the Alberta Human Rights Com- mission said Tuesday in an- noucing the settlement. The commission ruled the complainant had been dis- criminated against because of her age. It did not identify the woman, the department store or the city in which the incident occurred. Specialists at the clinic told her to stop drinking coffee and took her off medication. She said a shift to vitamin B6 and amitriptyline ended her severe headaches after four visits. “For the first time in four years, there came a day when there was no headache at all,” she recalled. STARTS CLINIC Dr. Fred Sheftell, a psych- iatrist, and Dr. Alan Rapo- port, a neurologist, started the clinic two years ago with can bring about incapaci- tation or vomiting and us- ually runs in a family. —The cluster, or suicide h- eadache. More painful than the typical migraine, it o- ccurs in groups and often is described as feeling as if a poker is being thrust through the eye. —The disease-related h- eadache, arising from a growth in the brain, disease of the eye, ear, nose, or requiring child restraint de- vices in cars. The report says it has been shown such de- vices can “reduce fatlities by 80 to 90 per cent and serious injuries by 64 to 70 per cent.” “We don’t cure too many people. We make them feel better,” Sheftell said. “We help them to contend with the headache when it's coming.” FOR MAYOR VOTE Audrey Moore ‘throat, or infec- the idea that headach at- ment should be directed at the cause. “People in desperation have undergone drastic - surgery. . . facial nerves severed, without any ulti- -mate relief from the excru- ciating pain that drove them from one docotor to another,” Sheftell said. Research and treatment is more advanced in Europe, but it still is “low status,” said Dr. Ottar Sji the regular pace aod gat ranoier one Limit six snecks/eustomer, ‘Gtnoextracharge. .. Nophone orders: 400 Columbia Ave. tlegar 365-6353 2016 Columbia Ave. pleste. Castlegar 368-8908 « PS PHARMASAVE Let us not forget those who gave their lives. In their honour Pharmasave will be open Wednesday, November 11. chairman of neurology at Norway's Trondhein Univ- ersity and an authority on headaches. “Most doctors couldn't go beyond 5, ” Sjaastad said. “I experience a 10 for a second or two and it was un- believable. You can't think. You can’t do anythings.” LISTS CATEGORIES There are four general kinds of headaches’ —The tension headache, ° caused by scalp-muscle con- tractions. Medication gener- ally is not effective against it. —The vascular headache, which includes migraine. It MacKINNON, Douglas D. ALDERMAN You could Save *1,000’s of dollars on PROPERTY COSTS’ PLUS GREATLY REDUCED MORTGAGE PAYMENTS IF YOU BUY AND BUILD IN SALMO Robinson's First Pre-Christmas FAMILY Thurs. Nov. 12 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. AL Yo OFF All Regular Priced Merchandise Katimavik ‘Canada’s domestic peace corp VANCOUVER (CP) — More than 6,000 young peo- ple have :so far taken the opportunity to travel, live in The two Katimavik volun- teers were part of a group of nine teenagers who will work until December on this island P or be billeted with local residents and do hard phsyical work for virtually no pay. They have been part of Katimavik, a sort of domestic Peace Corps for Canadians, * Sylvie Beaumier, a 19- year-old from the small Que- bec mining community of Rouyn-Noranda, put on a pair of hip waders and spent a re- cent afternoon heaving rocks in a Bowen Island creek. She and Alice Bennet- Alder, 18, of Toronto, also debarked several trees to be used in an adventure play- ground. off south B.C. for $1 a day. ‘The program was founded in 1977 by then defence minister Barney Danson. A Year later, it came under criticism when two partici- pants were expelled because of thing for the media to latch on to,” she said. FOUR AIMS Katimavik — an Inuit word for meeting place —has four aims, Altow explained: to serve Canadian communities, to ald in p ” per- A three-month roller option offers p: A former teacher and , ifdeseriby chance to learn first ald and wilderness survival techni- ques, fire-fighting and rifle- handling. Participants are selected sonal development, to in- crease environmental aware- ness and to provide a greater understanding of Canada. l d Ci be- and 10 project leaders were fired for incompetence. Katimavik has since stayed out of the headlines, says tween the ages of 17 and 21 can apply for'a nine-month stint, divided into three- month sessions in three dif- Debbie Altow, the pi assistant regional. director. for B.C, and 'the Yukon. “Once the program got going, and it was running smoothly, there wasn’t any- ferent The Bowen Island crew, for ex- ample, will move to Val Cartier, Que. in December, and then on to Ste. Anne-St. Pierre Jolys, Man. PRE-CHRISTMAS BLOW-OUT - In Thursday's ~ Castlegar News bya on the basis of age, language, sex, province of origin, family income and town population, to reflect a cross-section of Canada’s pop-’ ulation. On Bowen, Katimavik par- ticipants, six young women, three youths, bunk at the Canadian National Institute for the Blind camp, where they cook their own meals and do their own laundry under the supervision of leader Paul Barham. Barhan, 29, is on duty 24 hours a day, six days a week with a weekend off opce a month, Besides playing mother hen, Barham works closely with community . sponsors such as the local community school: where two Katimav- ikers volunteer, doing every- Treated through diet VANCOUVER (CP) — hen Dean Christiansen was seven he was as tall as the average four-year-old and weighed only 10.8 kilograms. One month after he was diagnosed as suffering from celiac disease and put on a gluten-free diet, he had grown an inch. without knowing the cause of their illness. Symptoms can include bloated and sore ab- domens, anemia, weight loss even with a good appetite, chronic foul-smelling diarr- hea, swollen limbs, fatigue Celiac disease, known as sprue, is a condi- tion in which the absorptive ofthe small bowel is destroyed by the gluten in wheat, oats, berley and rye. This prevents the body from ‘ Evenings are spent study- ing French ‘or English, do- pending on the participant's mother tongue; and taking part in community events and evening classes. ATHLETES OF THE MONTH in a deci and'Celina coptalts wee the Stanii phi rea and Celina were instrumental In leading the team : ANDREA BELCZYK — CELINA SOOKACHOFF For the first time in nearly two years, the dass fe for Athlete of The Month were deadlocked th, therefore Andrea Balczyk The The oils) ‘Were ca; ey team. Ani to ie hint West lets, of The, Mon re thet for. Re with-a 7. They now go on to com; Y ntti naby. Congratulations eee and good | Nek inthe fourncment: h record. rovincial dharmplonships in Bur- : other such as fat, protein or car- from the diet. When that is done children start to grow normally and both adults and children start.to feel better, ight and energy. 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WTO OASERVE REMsuuBANcE ony NOVEMBER ATHLETE OF THE MONTH We Are Open 364 Days a Year Monday - Saturday 8:30 - 10:30 p.m. Sunday & Holidays 9- 10:30 p.m. L 1038 Columbia 365-6534 *% CALLUSTODAY x and inquire into the many additional advantages to buying and building in Salmo. nm LTD. 357-9761 357-2042 i a Le 142% FULL TERM FINANCING AVAILABLE NOW ON ANY NEW 1981 CAR OR TRUCK IN OUR INVENTORY! MALONEY PONTIAC BUICK DLR #5058 Castlegar Don’ t forget to inquire how you can f the J Boys “20 Pounder Club! MJONES BOYS 365-2155 L EXO The Castlegar News would like you to send your nomination to us at: Athlete of . Box 3007 Castlegar, B.C. The person must be of amateur status end, reside in the West Kootenays. jour nomination please Include past He eeu and major accomplishments for the month. Deadline for entry must be postmarked no q later than ie 1,.1981.