Sei a 400 CHEQUE has been presented Castlegar’s Senior Citizens Association from the Federal Health and Welfare deparement in response to the association's request for specific inp made at their Centre on Eleventh Street. Fresenting the cheque was Mrs. Davie Fulton, regional representative of rizons program who, enroute to New Denver, rovements to be je Federal New was met at the air- ort Monda lund. Ph y by a number of local dir. hed at the Castl * rectors of the New Horizons grap! port are, in front, left to right, Jessie Donnan, Mrs. Fulton, Francis Hunter and Helen Peddie. Back, left to right, Gunner Selvig and Jean Stone. Missing from photo is Ernie Newman. Legion hosts tea for area senior citizens Members of the Royal Canadian Legion hosted a tea for all senior citizens of the area, in the Legion Hall. A festive air prevailed in the hall with vases of flowers on each tea table. Branch members, adorned in colorful aprons, served delicious re- freshments to their guests. During the afterncon a surprise visit was made by Kootenay-West MP Lyle Kristiansen and his wife. They greeted the seniors and joined them at tea. Others on Saturday afternoon j CHECK AND COM ARE THESE VALUES WHOLE FRYING CHICKEN making a visit and having tea were Miss Castl Miss Leona Sorenson, first princes Leanne Smalley, second prin- cess Colleen Dascher, along with their chaperone Mar- garet Holuboff. Supervising in the kitchen were Mrs. Helen Leduc, L.A. president; Mrs. Doreen Moore, branch secretary; and Mary Kennedy, Pat Verzuh, Gwen Holden and Phyllis ickeri ding to the A .99 . | PREMIUM =~ WIENERS P many tea tables were Gordon Laycock, Steve Gallo, John Lishman, Jim Moore, Sam Brown, Steve Melnick and Bill Johnson. The seniors thanked the Legion for a relaxing afternoon and the food. delici ‘New line of jeans carry Lady Di label HAMILTON (CP) — The slogan is ‘Jeans fit for a jueen,’ and although the ady Di designer jeans to be marketed by two Hamilton éntrepreneurs won't be avail- ble in time for the royal wedding today, the pair are Banking they'll make a for- fane on them. = “We decided on blue jeans because everybody in blue j6ans is making money,” said George Montani, who has embarked on the project with partner Tim Logan. “As for the name, well, we wanted a famous name for our jeans, like Wayne Gret- sky — but he would have wanted so much money. Then the engagement was an- ipunced (last February) and ithit me. We would call them Lady Di designer jeans.” The pair consulted a trade mark agent and the namo was theirs. : We felt sure someone else would have beaten us to it,” said Logan. Their quick ac- tion has given them exclusive use of the name Lady Di on Females offered better conditions SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) — A i2-celi section of the new Saint John Regional Correc- tions Centre has been pro- vided for women prisoners who recently were housed temporarily in the centre's s@gregation areas. 3William Connor, Director of Prisons for the Provincial Justice Department, said ‘women should never have been housed in the segre- gation area, called the hole by prisoners. ¢ Connor said the $7-million institution was never in- tended for male prisoners only. He said the women’s =12-cell section, one of 10 in the 120-bed facility, could be used for men when there are any item of women's clothing — more than 600 items — in the U.S. and Canada. Any hopes of getting Lady Di jeans into the shops before the wedding have long been dashed. Their new target date is September. Montani and Logan are not new to the fashion field. A year ago they burst on the scene with their surgeon shirts and pants, the green hospital garments students had been lifting from hos- pitals at an alarming rate. Figuring that any item worth stealing must be sal- able, the pair went into bus.,....,. iness producing them for re- tail stores. “Our surgeon shirts and pants are across Canada and even into the United States, now, but we've a lot of money tied up in stock,” Logan said. “We decided to operate our Help your carrier Your Castlegar News carrier will be collecting for the paper during the next lew days. The job of your carrier is made easier if he or she doesn't have to make a second or even a third call. Please consider your carrier. He or she is an independent business person and they don't earn their rofit until you've paid lor your paper. That's why they'll appreciate it if you're ready the first time they cal ‘Would give Indians free TV service WINNIPEG (CP) — A local would like. to a bit diff ” To this end, the pair ap- proached Jack Spratt in Montreal, the largest man- ufacturer of blue jeans. His customers include many fa- mous designer names, de- partment stores and even Levi Strauss when its plant is over-run. “Spratt does everything,” said Montani. “They buy the material, print the label, even package them, for sev- eral dollars less than we could do it ourselves.” Ex-prisoners - to discourage students EDMONTON (CP) — A $30,000 grant to the Seventh Step Society will help hire two ex-prisoners to tell ju- nior and senior high school students in Edmonton and Calgary about the realities of prison life. The Alberta Law Founda- tion grant, along with $10,000 from the City of Edmonton, will fund the speakers to no women Mark Palmer, acting jail superintendent, said some male prisoners had to be moved to other institutions to make the 12-cell section di prison is not glamorous, The Calgary branch of the society last year dealt with more than 1,500 prisoners and ex-prisoners at various stages of release from jail. take advantage of the special status of Indian reserves and set satellite receiving dishes on Indian land to re-broad- cast American satellite tele- vision signals to off-reserve customers. Lloyd McSorley, owner of Satellite Reflections, said he plans to set up receiving dishes and transmitting tow- ers on a number of reserves in Manitoba, offer the ser- vice free to the Indian bands and re-transmit the signal to customers willing to pay $10 2 month. He said the reserves are exempt from Canadian Ra- dio-television and Telecom- munications Commission reg- ulations if the dishes are for use only on the reserve. Three fall victim to grizzly WHITEHORSE (CP) —_ One woman is in serious con- dition in hospital after three people were mauled by a, grizzly bear in an apparently unprovoked attack at a Yu- kon fishing camp. Faye Smith of Circle, Al- aska, is listed in very serious condition. Her husband Rich- ard, 23, was in serious. con- dition and James Taylor, 26, of Dawson, Yukon, was in stable condition. Police said the Smiths were attacked at about 3 a.m. Monday while sleeping out- side under a tarpaulin strung between two tents at a sal- mon fishing camp on the Yukon River, 37 kilometres downstream from Dawson. The camp is run by Billy Borisenko of Dawson. Smith said he woke up when being tossed about by the bear, said Constable Ralph Jolley of the Dawson RCMP. Jolley said that Tayler, who was sleeping in one of the tents, heard the com- motion, looked outside and threw something at the bear to distract it. The bear then mauled Taylor before returning to the Smiths, then left the camp. Three other adults and four children sleeping in the tents were not involved. ESCAPED BY BOAT Jolley said the group got in a boat and went to Dawson where the Smiths and Taylor were treated before being flown to hospital in White- horse. There was no apparent motive for the attack, district conservation officer Ed Rus- sell of Dawson said yester- day. The camp was clean, with no food or fish remains around, and the people were sleeping, he’ ‘said. Officials do not know. if more than one bear was, in- volved, he said, because the area is dry and dusty and there are no tracks left. “About two weeks ago, the people hed seen = sow and two yearling cubs,” Russell said. “We're not sure, be- cause they had seen that bear, whether it was that bear or it was a single bear.” CLEAN COTTO! WANTED RAGS Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. He said leghold traps have been set in the area, and the area is being searched for PLEASE PAY ON TIME If payday is Friday and the boss says to come back on Wednesday, how do you feel? The same way a carrier feels if he is not. paid on time Your Castlegar News éarrier is running his own business, and he deserves to be paid promptl: Calners or Swift's. 5 ¢ ‘Save $1.01 fais. ib. BOTTOM ROUND ROAST . ) [ca WA? Aa | NALLEY ‘S __POTATO CHIPS Bll Oe SNOW STAR ICE CREAM — an? 2°9 -SKYLARK HOT DOG BUNS Plain or ©60% Whole Wheat. 5 or Hamburger Buss, ¢Piain 60% Whele C Wheat or oSesame. Save 31¢. Package Gf 12 .......cseceeeeee If you're late with your payment, your carrier will have to dig into his own pocket to pay for your paper until you do. Keep him in business and he'll keep you in papers. Remember your Castiegar News carrier likes that secure payday feeling as well as you do. Piease pay him when he comes to collect. CASTLEGAR NEWS For Your Carsier LW.A..; FOREST INDUSTRY PENSION PLAN Taye tion Pensioners Due to Postal Service disruptions, pension cheques from the I.W.A. - Forest Industry Pension PLan may be picked up AFTER July 28th, at the following locations: NELSON, TRAIL & CASTELGAR AREA: I.W.A, Local 1-405 101 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C. TOWN HOUSE APPLE JUICE . . Arr (1.36 Mire)Ta.....eeeeeee eee OF Oe ’ REG. OR KING SIZE a CORN on the COB #89 ¢ Wo. 1Grade.......... CIGARETTES WASHINGTON GROWN WHOLE FCRDMIS EIN, MRI oper MOSCOW, IDAHO (AP) — Match-making and ‘in- ternational “baby-swapp- ing” have fallen short in attempts’ to bolster the whqoping crane ranks. rg ‘whooping foster. par- ent p in wild sandhill crane nests, but only five hatched. “If we got a bird or two flying in the fall out of those five chicks, that’s the very best we can expect,” sald:Elwood Bizeau, an 1976 had its worst hatch Idaho profe of wildlife record ever this spring, say scientists at the uh i; iversity of Idaho, But the: still hold hopes of gettin; ‘onc cr two new whoopers to fly south this fall. , : The, university, under ‘contract with the U.S, Fish and Wildlife: Service, has been raising whooping cranes in the wild at Grays Lake National Wildlife Re- fuge, using sandhill cranes ‘as foster parents. This spring, the Can- adian Wildlife Service sent 12 whooping crane eggs found in Wood Buffalo Na- tional Park in the National Territories to Grays Lake in southeastern Idaho, The eggs were placed in { and ~ Ipader of the foster parent (program, t Tho it years about 70 . Zin it of the eggs from uffato have hatched —and about 40 per cent of the chicks have survived to flying age, about 90 days, Bizeau said. Adverse wea- ther and predators cut the birds’ survival rate. “Once they fly, their chances of enjoying a long life are much better,” Biz- eau said, About 75 per cent of those that migrate make it to the wintering grounds at Bosque del Apache Na- tional Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico. And still more are lost on the re- turn flight, he says. Whooping crane success low: Because most of the whooping cranes returning to Grays Lake have been males, a female crane, raised for two years in captivity, was released in the area this year to see if she would join the mi- gration of the wild birds, said project coordinator, Dr. Roderick Dre vien. ‘The female whooper was brought a few months ago from the Patuxent Na- tional Wildife. Research Centre in Maryland. She was taken to an area whore ‘ 1 blossomed. “After many hours of observing the two birds, the conclusion of our biologists in the field is that there is no love-at- first-sight going on,“Bizeau said. The female occasionally feeds with nearby sandhill cranes and sometimes as- sociates with the male whooper, but spends most of her time alone near her roost site, he said. The “unison” call given off by paired females has yet to be heard, but an agg i v male has been defending a breeding territory without a mate for the past three summers. The captive-reared fe- male is old enough to pair, but will not reach potential breeding age until next year. “Cranes pair for life. There is no divorce except death,” Bizeau said. But romance has not ists still hope the two wil get together for mi- gration, “If that happens, a solid pair bond might be formed on the wintering ground,” Bizeau said. “If she does not pair at Grays Lake or associate with him on the route south, the chances of her arriving at all on the wintering area are not very good.” Suffer blood vessel spasms TORONTO (CP) — The same kind of blood vessel in a blood vessel in the heart, says a Hamilton doctor. Dr. Edward Genton, pro- fessor of medicine at mec- Master University, said the typical migraine sufferer first has a problem with vision. This occurs when a blood vessel goes into spasm, temporarily shutting down blood flow. “They get the h a heart artery, he said. It's one of the topics being discussed by about 2,000 sci- entists from all over the world at a conference on when the spasm breaks,” he sai id. Similarly, it appears some heart patients get chest pain — angina — after a spasm in and h held in Toronto. Thrombosis is a blood: clotting disorder. Haemosta- be is a reduction of blood iow. Eat fat, feel thin! Sounds illogical? HAMILTON (CP) — Eat fat, feel thin. It sounds illogical, even ridiculous. But it’s only one of. the topsy-turvy ideas people accept when they join Dr. Arnie Cott’s eating control jumorous ot eo hi new, ito orion for his hi Yedu- program~mskes - per- catjon fect sense to Cott, director of the behavioral medicine unit at St. Joseph’s Hospital. He believes people can change how they think by changing what they do. He shows. them how to lose weight by using that strat- egy: . Started last’ January as part of a health awareness program, Cotf’s eating con- trol classes combine lectures in’ behavioral psychology with small group problem- solving sessions to help over- weight people gain control of their eating habits. If people want control, though, they have to accept some atrange i For in- stance, they learn that their eating may have little to do with hunger, that weight is not their problem and, por- haps hardest to accept, that they can eat any food they want and still lose weight. STILL LOSE WEIGHT “Nobody believes that, so we say fine, just give ita shot and see what happens,” said Cott. “We tell them that and, lo and behold, they lose ht.” In the first week of the course, Cott gives his pati- ents a counter. With it, they click off their-mouthfuls and write down what they ate, where they ate it and what mood they were in at the time. They can eat anything but aren't allowed to weigh themselves. Cott said that at the end of cone. week, they probably ‘weigh less — no matter what they’ve eaten. Soon they begin to slowly reduce the “The counting is not a magic formula. The counting is only a vehicle for getting people to look at their be- havior ofjectively and it's a vehicle for getting them to identify relationships between their. behavior and . ‘At home, ~clicking~ them face-to-face with rea- lity, said Cott. They realize just how much they're eat- ing. One person notices he always snacks in front of the TV. Another discovers she binges when she's depressed. Making these connections is ‘the first step in the year-long process toward looking and feeling thin. Back at class, Cott delivers a.crash behavioral course on how habits are learned, what Service factors affect behavior, and what makes it change. He asks the class to assume they have a broken “appestat” — a catch-word for the intricate mechanisms that make them feel hungry or full. m People with broken apper-, Rats have only, habita ta.con,. ~-trol their eating, he said, so they should forget about hunger and satiety and con- centrate on changing their behavior to change their weight. “Almost by definition when something becomes a habit, it no longer requires a consciousness, a conscious kind of control or great ef- fort. It becomes fairly auto- matic. Most people don't de- sign the habits they get into, We're saying design them.” held for Ch ae Avila Raimunda Prayer service began Tuesday evening from ‘St. Rita’s Catholic Church and Mass of Christian burial took place this morning for Rai- munda Condeicao Avila, of Castlegar, who died Sunday at the age of 36. Mr. Avila was born Dec. 1, came with her husband .Jto Canada in 1970. Shd. Wawa member of St. Rita's‘ Catholid Church. . Reb Surviving is her husband, John; one son, John; ‘and three daughters, Linda, Eli- zabeth and Anna Maria, all at home; and a sister, Maria Aarts of Cache Creek, B.C. Celebrant was Rev. Fr. Michael Guinan. Sister Chris- tina Marie was organist. ; Interment cies in Park ‘Memorial Cemetery, with fu- feral arrangements under ithe direction of Castlegar Funeral Chapel. Genton said blood vessel spasms also occur in a con- dition called Raynaud's dis- ease in which the fingers or toes turn cold, looking white or blue, followed by painful throbbing as they turn red or purple. : : “It's when the spasm breaks ‘(lets go) they get painful purple,” he said. He said doctors have be- gun to suspect the three condition may be linked. “When' we look at people who have spasm angina, we find a higher-than-average number also suffer migrains or Raynaud's disease.” About a quarter of those with the headaches or the cold-finger syndrome also have chest pains, he said: Something may predispose them to have ‘arteries throughout their. bodies that go into spasms. For 200 years, it has been known people with atheros- clersis — hardening of the arteries — are prone,to suffer... chest pains and eoet at tacks. A:blood ‘ciot,“piugging the diseased artery in the heart, shuts off the blood ” supply, Genton said. NOBLOOD CLOTS attacks had blood clots or hardening of the arteries. Such people: didn’t: have typical. symptoms of angina § — pair when they exercised , or exerted themselves. “They had - pain \at: rest,. often early in the morning.:_ They'd awaken from sleep with the pain.” Within that past 10 years, it’s been found that these patients have blood vessel spasms. Genton said smoking ag- gravates the tendency for spasm and may explain the connection between heart disease and cigarette smok- ing. It’s known that smokers _ commonly suffer spasms in arteries and coldness of hands or feet, he said. © It’s possible a spasm may ightly damage the inner wall of a blood vessel and set off a chain of events to plug the vessel. If it's a heart artery it could mean sudden death, Genton said. CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 29, 1981 pet For excellent: power boating, fishing and sailing. We are located 2% miles. north of the Hugh Keenleyside Dam. SCOTTIES MARINA IS... Being below the narrows this location has the ad- vantage of being protec- ted from high winds and rough water. This location is ideal for boat house, boat and_ - float plane moorage. PRESENTSERVICES INCLUDE © Space for Boat Houses ' © Marine Gas & O e Float Plane Moorage — © Stalls’ ® Boat Rentals PROSPECTIVE PLANS ARE Camping Supplies Covered Moorage Power Boat Service & Repair: :: Dry Dock Moorage. t e FishingEquipment ° Gas ¢ Oil ¢ Mcorage pet re number of mouthfuls they ‘consume without noticing the | difference. te i Behind all the clicking ant charting is a very serious - purpose, Cott said. a Wedding Invitations e Ratfle Tickets CASTLEGAR NEWS Pensioners living in other areas should contact their Local LW.A. office. R.R. 1, Site 33, Comp. 7, CASTLEGAR Castlegar 365-3267 SAVINGS CREDIT IMPORTANT: Se With a Good Identification Is required. An authorized representative may Peay C oiieataentces pick up a pensioner’s cheque, but must supply pensioner's int ; and sup Zl hes: . Delle Num who ; and regular sizes. Watch for our Expansion during the upcoming months. K.C. PET MART 1458 Columbia Ave. Castlegar available for women. UNION gy CLOSED Saturday, August 1 for the B.C. Day Holiday Castlegar & Slocan Park Branches name, address and Social | ber. F fae Some. Ib. ive their cheq hrough a BANK will continue to receive Savas p ete saseiiea them in the usual manner. Those who receive them through a Credit Union or Trust Company, should pick up thelr cheque at the specified location above. The distribution method outlined above will be in effect for the of the p t pti in postal services. Prices Effective July 29, 30, Aug. 1 IN THE CASTLEGAR STORE |.W.A. - FOREST INDUSTRY PENSION PLAN SALES IN RETAIL QUANTITIES ONLY