January.5, 1991 Seecectinges Ne ACTION ADS DOWNTOWN SHELL REPAIR & mah OUR POLICY: We try sincrely to handle oll vervice work honestly. afficiently «and at a fair price! work tous Family reveals battle VANCOUVER (CP) — When Parents read or hear about children with life ilinesses, they 365-5210 5 erorauenreanves often feel a brief stab of fear. What if it was my child? Fortunately, the feeling doesn’t usually last long, and life goes on. But not for Katie Ekroth of T a suburb. book about a personal expression of grief. The simple, moving account of their search for a hospital to perform the’ difficult transplant — ahd the trials-of other children and their Parents at the hese on the Ontakints of Lond London Bev their organs. ts are more routinely * fered now than in Matthew's time, yet many people still die aiting for an operation because the id for organs outstrips supply. ~ 116 $12.95. L Matthew's Story, by Kem) Ekroth. Published by Orca Py WORK WANTED MATURE WOMAN available to babysit in het home. Reasonable rates, references available. Phone 365-664: _tin/6s HANDYMAN: Siding, roofing, drywall on corpentey. general home repairs Steve. 399-4148. 26/100 HANDYMAN — Light corpentry, | fences, patio decks, painting, inside and out — reasonable rates (senior discounts), 365- 2267 Lor: amar Cleaning Servi tment call Pau! 365-71. noon, 7 days/week, WILL BABYSIT in my home. Reasonable rates. References available, 365-7343. 3/01 “That's your organic shampoo.” s Import Auto Repair Specialist Home of the Maloney “Gold Card" We Offer 1. Guaranteed Genuine rts & Accessories 2. Competitive Door Rates 4. Courtesy Vehicle or Return Transportation 5, Free Repair Estimates 3. Quality Workmanship FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL CARL JOHNSON ~ COLLECT AT 365-7241 NOTICES ANNOUNCEMENTS GIVEAWAY 2-MONTH-OLD block and white pup- pigs; 3 moles, 1 female (small dogs), 365-6849. PROVINCE-WIDE CLASSIFIED $195 ALASKAN Husky puppies — it or brown/white. 365-2751 103 Lost $20 FOR CASH! Callus for details! Classified Ads 365-2212 acre Castlegar News WINNER of the Alpha Phi Sorority Christmas Homper ol te wos Mary Hun- Co-op Playschool s 2-5, Morag? 9-11:30 a.m. uae Location South Castlegar. 365-2 3/2 GROSVENOR/FOREST Road, orange ey cat with white flea collar. 365. _3/01 FOUND A FISHING tockle box found Thursday morning near ferry dock. 365-3749 Ask for Andy. CROSS COUNTRY ski shoes, left next to car by Highway. Owner may identity by phoning 365-7805 ask for Len SHARE A RIDE WORK. School Trips, Weekly Shopping. Cut expenses and save money. together with a neighbour in our FREE Share-A-Ride column. We'll run your ad 3 issues free of charge. Phone our Ac- tion Ad number 365-2212 1 PERSONAL FOUND items are not charged for. It you've found something, phone our Ac tion Ad no. 365-2212 during regular business hours and we'll run your ad for 3 issues free of charge. 1#n/67 LOOSE WEIGHT NOW! Get paid to loose it 38 pounds in 8 weeks. Call 1-978-9023 toll CARD OF THANKS WE WOULD L to thank is and family for the support, flowers and memorial donations made on behalf of our Dod, Peter Murphy. Special thanks to Dr. Walton for the years of care and to the nurses at Castlegar Hospital for their indness to Dad while he was in the hospital. Eleine ond Clarence Higgins Murray end Lourel Murphy ond families T WOULD like to thonk oll of my workers and all of my long who attended my recent retirement pa: ty. A special heartfelt thanks to Jerry Antignani who worked so hard to organize an unforgettable evening. | will always be proud of my association with not only the Westar Bunch, but also my good neighbours for 30 years at Celgar Pulp. It is my sincere wish that both companies and all of their people have a bright future ahead. | remain ever so grateful for the recognition you have bestowed upon me. Sincerely Corey 2/01 For the 44-year-old former British nurse, the fear became reality as she her son die from a rare Four hard years later, she has moulded daily notes in a diary into a sad but inspiring book called Lionheart: Matthew's Story. Released by Orca Book Publishers of Vancouver, Lionheart is Ekroth’s intensely personal account of Mat- thew’s four-year battle and its impact on his family. His struggle ended suddenly in a British hospital on Aug. 21, 1986 — ‘one day after his seventh birthday and one week after he had received a new heart and new lungs. The transplants were a bid to combat his incurable illness — pulmonary haemangiomatosis — in which abnormal growth of blood vessels gradually destroys vital organs. But the wait for suitable donated organs — during which time the disease continued to advance — cut Matthew’s chances for survival. Sitting in a Vancouver office, -his mother talks freely of the ordeal. She wasn’t always able to-do-sé. “It was unspeakable at ‘the time,’’ said Ekroth, a well-groomed woman in a royal blue suit. “It was indecent — I find myself using that word to describe the pain.”” Keeping a diary — her husband, Don, also kept one — was initially a form of ‘‘therapy writing,’’ a way of withstanding the unrelenting problems her son encountered. But she wanted to do more than that. She took creative writing classes at Simon Fraser University to develop the skills to write a book. “‘One of the things I wanted to do with the book,” says Ekroth, ‘‘was to get the reader to feel something of what the roller-coaster was like when you have a child diagnosed with a catastrophic illness.”” Another goal was to persuade people to donate their organs when they die so that others may live. It’s that theme that eventually lifts the INVITATION TO TENDER Construct New Office Building, Invermere, B.C: » Sealed Tenders marked 190-06 “Con- struct New Office "on tee day of and those available at ALCOHOLICS and Al-Anon. BUSINESS OPPOR. Phone 365-3663. eam 1 WAS born in Castlegar April 20, 1968 ‘and was adopted. Anyone having any in: please call (604) 782-3594. ee @ ease FOR <5 MALL BUSINESS ‘ederal loan funds available to new | a een ara DIAPER . sentative of Jenvary 19. FOR AN APPOINTMENT Or for more information call. KREDA 352-1933 ask for Jackie. ‘01 Nelson, 8.C. VIL IN2 Plans and other ten- IN MEMORIAM CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY. In ANNOUNCEMENTS x 3292, Castlegar, B.C 365 Ste? 104/24 CANADIAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION In SERVICE Delivery to your doo: & Powtoring pn folded flannelette di thon disposables NOTICES CASTLEGAR Grief Support meetings — Home Support Office, 7 p.m. on the 3rd 365- Monday monthly. 365-2148, bs Protessionally cleaned ond tested A great gift idea ONLY $12-$16 PER WEEK Trail Nelson 364-2299 (365-2262 352-2223 TEDDY BEAR DIAPER SERVICE Because We Core! Memoriam Donations, Box ped Rossland, B.C. VOG 1Y0. 104 “Yoor Charity of Choice’ 1 coring gis in Honeus or in Inder. Please help ue lagi oneda's No. Kier B.C. AND YUKON HEART FOUNDATION coticgee ac. Your Donation is tox "Deductible Kees eee IRM. seh AUTOMOTIVE DIRECTORY "77 FORD short-box, 4x4 newisngion, | : tires, $4,000. 365-3207. CANOPY for Jeep pickup, $150 ake 965-3948. 3/2 1977 GMC 4-1. 4x4, good condition, $2,200, possible trade. 365-3948. 3/2 RBI meshdicy Rideny pars KARA TIRES LTD. 1507 Columbia Ave., Castlegar, 8.C. Fresh, new ods eppear in the closs- ified section every issue. Whether you just ne little sips of classifieds or down it all it bi i} Find clovaitied hit te ot ee Ca! 365-221 2 ering documents moy be obtained contractors ors only ‘on or af- ee hen niet dee at December, 1990 at the we noted address upon the receipt of a refundable deposit of o certified in the amount of $100 payable to British Columbia Bulidings = the time of award and cessful bidders upon satisfactory Feturn of tender documents within one month of tender closing date. Plans and specifications examined at the ont tion Association off giso be true 401-1418 — Court we ¥63-5100 Fax 860-0872 Tendering documents must be fied jorms provided, in sealed, p Barns marked envelopes Project enquiries related to project plons, Socuraatte shall he directed ts areal Warne, Project Superinentont « | 354-6190. The lowest or any tender will not ily be accepted. Business Opportunity 1981 Kenworth C-500 pod ah 13-speed, 46’ Steal bax cw Jed Pore tees Steel box, $80 000. Call 385-2955 clog plea-to—people-to- * We provide a competiti _PART-TIME SALES / MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE An exciting, changing os of the packaged goods market requires a very energetic and creative part-time soles representative for the Kootenays The candidate we require will be a highly motivated self-starter with the following qualifications: '* 34 years sales/merchandise experience #-contidence cence -ompensation package If you are looking for on exciting, challenging Sepoliynty, please forward your resume to: Box 3007N, Castlegor, B.C. VIN 3H4 e All replies handled in confidence. Proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. “‘Letmehelp you with your financial needs. Financial Planning Life Insurance Disability income Annuities and RRIFs . . . . e RRSP; . . . . 9 GICs and Saving Plans Jack L. Parkin irvesatment Fi unds Bus. 365-6664 Res. 365-2694 Employee Benefits Ri The Mutual Group Facing Tomorrow Licensed wan Mutual Lite ot Canada/Mutual Together Invesico Inc,*, two of The Mutua! Group. COUNTER SALES REPRESENTATIVE We are an aggressive, fast growing Car Rental Company, soon to open in Castlegar. Our people deal with clientelle who demand the finest service, and receive it. Requirements: Sales/service minded — Self-motivated, energetic — Valid driver's license — Available for shift work Only those with a degree in initiative, enthusiasm and imagination, who like hard but satisfying work need apply by resume to Thrify Car Rental, Box 3007P, "Car Rental Castlegar News. B.C. Buildings Corporation PHONE BLAIR, 358-2360 OR 358-7979. ZX CRAZY DAVE SEZ BEAT THE GST! WE PAY THE est! — THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL — TRACKLESS $5,995 mz. =o , 58 5-10 BLAZER -6, Auto,, immaculate, 38,000 io Bolance Factory Warranty $13,995 ATTENTION LOGGERS "83 SHELBY Dodge, Se $-Spd.. Ee sewrnice, "85 CHEV %4-TON 4x4, V8, Auto., "85 poy A. SHORTBOX $7,995 LIFESTYLES Workers share worst fears Imagine you're a waiter juggling trays ata fancy French restaurant and, oops, a plate of escargots ends up on some silk-suited customer. Or you're a hairdresser noted for precision cuts and a-choo! A badly timed sneeze causes an unflattering slip of No matter how hard they work, most people are fearful of mishaps on the job. And if their worst job nightmares me reality, the consequences may range from losing face to losing cash. The latter was the case for Quebec pollster Jean-Marc Leger — although his nightrhare wasn’t in the clumsy- “The worst thing that can happen during a poll is an event which skews the results," he says. Tips toa fears on By The Canadian Press how to deal with fears on the job. doubt, go with what clients want. instance — and do them at home — If your job is causing serious treated in six months to a year. better performance. , Tips from industrial psychologist Clarence Sequeira of Toronto on * — Get feedback from clients about how they felt about your per- formance and what can be done to improve it or please them. When in — Learn from your own mistakés or experience. — Learn relaxation exercises — get involved in voga or t’ai chi, for visualize the situations that cause you pain or problems. frequently, see a behavior therapist. — A certain amount of stress on the job is OK. It usually helps lleviate the job every day. While relaxing, try te stress and mistakes are happening Fears or phobias can usually be Safety inspector risks life to protect kids MONTREAL (CP) — What do you call a guy who suspends 20- pound weights from the eyes and noses of plush puppy dogs? Daniel Laporte calls himself a Product-safety inspector for _the federal Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs. His specialty is toys and anything else that could be hazardous to kids. And he’s talking toys, thousands of toys and maybe even millions of toys — from trains, planes and plush puppies to plump-cheeked dolls and plastic rabbits. There are also joke gifts like can- dies that automatically relight unless they are thoroughly doused with water and lighters with flames that shoot up high enough to singe the eyebrows. He’s also talking his own par- ticular ‘bugbear: Secondhand cribs that were built before 1986, with slats more than 2 3/8 inches apart. That’s wide enough for a child to slip his body through, then hang himself by trapping his neck. “‘Every time a child dies because his neck was caught between the slats of an illegal crib, I feel a little responsible,’’ Laporte said. ‘‘I get a twinge, a feeling of guilt that somehow, somehow, I could have stopped that death.’’ Laporte once risked his life to get two illegal cribs off the market. He found them while combing through a flea market in Lachute, near Mon- treal, in 1981. Hé identified himself and told the seller he wanted the cribs destroyed. “The guy was smoking a big cigar and he spat at my feet, then went to his truck and came back with a 12- gauge shotgun that he shoved into my stomach,’’ Laporte recalled. “‘He said I had five seconds to get out of there but I froze, I really froze. But then I found the strength to say, ‘Oh yeah, that will solve all your problems.’ “He put the shotgun down and destroyed the cribs. I couldn’t work for three days, though. Oh, I was shaking.” tered on the desk in front of him, Laporte, 40, sounds more like a lat- terday Safety Santa than your hum- drum public servant. “I love kids,” he says, spreading his large hands. ‘Everybody in this office, my Colleagues, everybody, we all have kids. “And we're concerned that they not be placed in cribs where they can get caught between the slats and choke to death or be given toys and stuff that are dangerous — stuff you would never even dream would be the brightly colored blocks from China whose paint was more than 0.059 per cent lead. Or the balloon paste from France that kids were supposed to suck into their mouths through a straw, then blow out to make huge, colored balloons. “The catch there,"’ Laporte says drily, ‘tis that the main ingredient of this paste is acetone. You know acetone? That's the same ingredient you get high on when you sniff glue. You know, you swallow that balloon stuff and you will see all sorts of dif- ferent colors, I guarantee that.” Dark, of middling height, with greying hair, Laporte is indignant — affronted — as he talks about the acetone balloons, but he’s quick to add that few, if any stores in Canada would wilfully carry such a product. It’s up to Laporte and six colleagues — five in Montreal and one in Quebec City — to enforce the federal government’s Hazardous Products Act throughout Quebec: “A cour of years ago in Sher- brooke, right in the middle of poll on. whether voters were satisfied with the municipal gover- nment, the city’s credit rating went from A to AA,” says Leger. “So respondents went from raid mment to saying they were very satisfied. “The whole thing went into the that costs us tens of thousands of dollars.’’ Dropping a tray of food on a patron isn’t the main concern of Chris Schewaga, a cafeteria manager in Winnipeg. “My biggest fear is that they (customers) find something in the food, like eggshells or a hair,’’ she says. Staff wear hairnets, but Schewaga says she has had the odd hair get in- to a sandwich over the years. Never an eggshell in the egg salad, though, because ‘‘we break each one separately and check.”’ It’s not unusual for people to have fears on the job, says Clarence Sequeira, a Toronto industrial psycholo; who specializes in behavior modification. “The majority of people can cope with it with some amount of discom- fort, but not enough to really in- terrupt their jobs,’’ says Sequeira, a professor of psychiatry at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. “They may make a goof, but usually learn that their experience and it helps them better their perfo- rmance, “But for that small number of people who t cope with it, and whose fears or phobias make them a wreck and practically useless on the job, they can be treated in a short period of time by a therapist.”” Sometimes an embarrassing moment on the job is easy to shrug off. But in the case of a television per- sonality, like Norma Lee MacLeod of Halifax, that’s easier said than done when you’re facing thousands of viewers. ‘ MacLeod, the 26-year-old co- anchor of CBC-TV’s supper hour news show, says her worst fear is (CasNews |) Printing Brochures Business Forms Invitations Any Printing Don't forget our Web Printing Service. . For details, call us. |_ Castlegar News |) T-BILL ACCOUNT CASTLEG. 600-101 St 368-7292 Laporte’s boss, Jean-Louis Caya, CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION “Your Fpl Financial Centre Long ig eh Meg er Hwy. 6. The Premium Savings Account High Yield With Flexibility! 5 says no inspector does a flea market . “Usually, people are ressive verbally but sometimes, they get really carried away. So the inspectors pair up. It’s Seated in Caya’s office in a down- town federal government complex, with all sorts of defective toys scat- Planning a Wedding? | We Sell Distinctive Help us Celebrate the Start of 1991 . WITHA ‘1 991" BARREL SALE! * 20-Pces. of Golden Delicious Chicken Reg. $24.99 SAVE $5.08 ....... ONLY 19.91 DON'T FORGET THE SALADS & FRIES! SALE EFFECTIVE ALL THE MONTH OF JANUARY! \ Cominco, Westar, Celgar Vouchers Accepted 365-5304 ANYTIME IS CHICKEN TIME! “‘sneezing on the air, as odd as that may sound,'’ Another Halifax worker, 19-year- old Rachelle MacSween, who sells lottery tickets at an information booth in a downtown mall, says dealing with ‘something out of her THANKS From the ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION HAMPER FUND ary VOLUNTEER a DEPARTMENT AND R LADIES SUPPORT TEAM FOR ALL THEIR HELP CASTLEGAR VOLU! FIRE DEPARTMENT FOR THEIR TOY ECTION Control would bring the oie grief. “One of my worst fears is (the lot- tery computer) breaking down,”’ says MacSween. and Country Club in Vancouver, pro Dan Lantin isn’t just thinking about collecting hefty retainers from doc- tors and lawyers for golf ‘lessons. “Getting clubbed on the head during a lesson is something I worry about,’’ says the 28-year-old. Fellow Vancouverite Dave Wright says his work life is not cut-and- dried, though he’s the owner of a large car-wash facility. “I worry about’ b driving LOR THEIR HAMPER TELETHON LOCAL SCHOOLS OF DISTRICT 9 CASTLEGAR HOSPITAL ANYONE WHO HELPED IN ANY WAY AND NOT LEAST, THE GENERAL PUBLIC WHO GAVE SO GENEROUSLY The Hamper Fund Committee and others who have been in- volved have been overwhelmed by the generosity of the com- munity for those less fortunate. With this Castlegar will always be a good place to live, cores about neighbour. through the car wash, bouncing through, instead of letting the machine take them through.”* Facing angry passengers is a prime concern of Ian Lampal, a 17-year bus driver for Transit Windsor in southwestern Ontario. “I used to work most weekends and nights with many drunks and druggies getting on,”’ says Lampal, 43. “And you don’t know how someone like that is going to react when you ask them for their fare and they don’t have it.” For Edi Jon For Your Convenience We're OPEN MONDAY Charles, there are few fears left after 35 years of performing. But plenty of things can still go wrong during a show. During one performance, Charles recalls, he took two children from the audience to help him with a pain- ting trick involving ‘‘invisible magic water. “One of the kids was quite young, about three or so, and I didn’t realize this until he got up to the stage,’ says the 54-year-old Charles. “So I gave him an easy job and got him to hold the painting book and went about doing the trick. “*A couple of minutes later, the lit- tle guy was wiggling about and the next thing I knew there was a puddle of water forming around his feet. The other kid thought it was the in- visible water!"” CASTLEGAR © TEs KAA Fires Lid. 1507 Cot Ave 365-2955 621 Columbia A: Holeworth, No. 32205 Columba 365-7702 “atutecey” Phone 365-5210 january Wife alle The Castlegar News has a lot of white space left over from 1990 which must be cleared out to make room for new 199) space which i is already starting to arrive. A limited amount of display advertising space is being offered at fabulous clear-out prices! Get a page for the price of a half-page; : halt-page fer the price of a quarter- pous quarter-page for the price of an eighth of page! But act now, while surplus 1990 white space is still available. Phone the Display Ad- brig pes rl of the Cas: ir News at tt ‘ll supply you with full details.