' A6 CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 7, 1981 Walter Wanjoff passes away jg} Former Robson resident, Walter Peter Wanjoff, 54, of Vancouver, died Oct. 1. Mr. Wanjoff was bor. Dee. 27, 1926 in Castlegar and grew up in this area, He served in the Merchant Mar- ines for 20 years and was working as a longshoreman in Vancouver at the time of his death. He is survived by his mother, Mary Wanjoff, of Photo In Mountain Light, an exhibition by Banff photo- grapher Byron Harmon (1906-1934), will be on view in the Kootenay School of Art Gallery afternoons from Oct. 12 to 23, Harmon has left a photo- graphic record of the coming of the Canadian Pacific Rail- Robson; one brother, George, of Robson; a sister, Mary McGowin, of Terrace; and several nieces and nephews. Funeral service was held Monday evening and con- cluded Tuesday afternoon from the Castlegar Funeral Chapel, with interment in the Brilliant Cemetery. Funeral arrangements were under the direction of the Castlegar Funeral Chapel. exhibit Photographs of pack trains appear beside those of rail- road and highway constuc- tion, teepees beside grand hotels, Curator Anne F. Ewen of the Peter Whyte Gallery in Banff, and granddaughter of Harmon, obtained funding to restore and preserve the way and into the mountain wilderness. In his 60 photograph ex- hibition, Harmon captures the conflicting elements of "s aging collec- tion in 1975. Many of the photographs in this exhibition are included in Great Days in the Rockies: OL so ea Si BOUNTIFUL harvest is being experienced by many area residents in spite of the rain that inued into the bet- For B.C. in '80s Job boom forecast OTTAWA (CP) — Work- 700,000 new jobs are expec: ers in B.C., the North and the ted to be created in the West Prairies face astounding job this decade. Of the total opportunities inthe next nine 206,000 are forecast for Brit: years as the West rides the wave of its resources boom, interviews and government documents forecast. They say 660,000 to Man jailed for stabbing wife KAMLOOPS (CP) — A man who came within an inch of stabbing his wife in the heart during a domestic dispute Feb. 18 was sen- tenced Tuesday to two years in prison. Paul Ross, 29, of Kamloops pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of assult causing bodily harm and of a di ter part of the summer, Here Ellen Popoff, 13, of Slocan Park shows off a Hungarian Mammoth Squash which the family started from seed. The squash, which weighs in at 107 pounds, took first prize in last month's Slocan Park Fall Fair. his time. He has chronicled the coming of the railroad, the establishment and ex- pansion of Canada's first na- tional parks, and: the disap- pearance of trapping and prospecting as a way of life. The Photographs of Byron Harmon, 1906-1934, ub- lished by Oxford University Press in1978. The gallery is open Mon- day to Friday from noon to 4 p.m. To tackle major issues Ottawa announces pension reform paper ig weapon. Mr. Justice Samuel Toy recommended that Ross be sent to the regional psychiatric centre for treat- ment during his sentence. Smith wants tax relief VICTORIA (CP) — Edu- cation Minister Brian Smith said Tuesday he will recom- mend cabinet give priority to major short-term recommen- dations by a committee inves- tigating school taxes. Smith said there must be immediate relief this year for homeowners and the burden must be equitably distribu- ted. Major short-term recom- mendations are: — A three-year phase-in of in edi i KELOWNA (CP) — After adnan Pension C months of di the Last-minute travel diffi- federal government has de- culties prevented the minis- cided to issue a discussion ter from attending the meet- paper on pensions this fall in ing, but the speech was read hopes of getting major re- by Bob Allen, one of her top forms under way within the pension advisers. i taxes, to be established on a district basis if necessary; — A revision of the home- owners’ grants to target an additional amount to home- owners who actually pay school taxes; G next year. s The paper is being billed as Plans for the paper were’ the most definiti announced Tuesday in a_ by the federal government to speech prepared for Health: date on the major issues Minister Monique Begin for a involved in pension reform. It regional meeting of the Can- is_alsq seen as a prelude toa final round of consultations : with the provinces and other interested parties. No end A text of Begin’s speech ° ° ' released in Ottawa said the in Ss | ght time for study has ended and the time for decisions on VANCOUVER (CP) — The future pension arrangements British Columbia forest in- is close at hand. dustry will be forced to Begin’s speech suggested implement cuts in every seg- Ottawa has not yet decided ment because of the continu- whether to simply encourage ing downturn in all foreign employers to set up or im- markets, the chairman of prove their own pensicu forestry giant MacMillan plans or to guarantee ade- Bloedel Ltd. said Tuesday. quate coverage for all work- “We are going through a ers. dramatic and extended de- It also sidestepped the re- cline for all our wood prod- lated question of whether ucts and there is no end in mandatory employer pension sight to the decline,” Calvert plans are the best avenue for Knudsen told a business reform or whether improve- audience. ments should come through “The industry in B.C. will expansion of the Canada be forced to implement cut- Pension Plan and its sister backs in logging — over and plan in Quebec. above the usual seasonal cur- Ottawa's over-all goals for tailments — during the com- pension reform are shared by ing months, and those cut- most experts in the field, backs can be expected to although the means for continue for longer than nor- reaching those goals are far mal into next spring.” from unanimous, PACIFIC TRUSS Operating as... INTERIOR PREFABS HOMES Yes ... We Build Custom Packages. TRUSS —A ded tax notices to accurately reflect what peo- ple are paying. Smith said a phased-in system is necessary only if assessments rise rapidly in one region of the province, because if all areas are uni- formly hit by rapid increases, then assessments go up and the basic levy should go .down. In addition, he said, tar- He said he also will ask cabinet to give priority to a longterm recommendation in- cluded in the report: re- vamping the financial | for- mula so it guarantees funding for a province-wide cor cur- riculum. Funding for such a cur- riculum could come from general revenue and a special tax levy on everyone, he said, and any additional programs would be paid by local prop- erty taxes in each school district. Smith said that, plus ‘amending tax notices, would provide taxpayers with the knowledge of where their money is going. The minister doesn't know when the report will be re- viewed by cabinet. Feds will return satellite dish VANCOUVER (CP) — The federal government will return a satellite receiving dish seized last year from an apartment block, but if it is used again, more charges will be laid, said a Crown Pros- U.S. ecutor Tuesday. Prosecutor Bud Halprin said he is willing to return the equipment to the owner after losing two court de- cisions against Lougheed Vil- lage Holdings Ltd. of Bur- naby. . if it is used geting h ” grants depends on next year's rev- enue picture, which govern- ment, officials are not opti- mistic about. again, the charges of illegally operating a dish will be relaid and the equipment seized again, he said. THANK YOU Martha & Gerry Corbett wish to thank all their customers and friends for their patronage and support over the years. quality of service that HAS BECOME ASSOCIATED WITH. We have all types of This time, Halprin said, the Crown will make sure it won't lose on a technicality. The ap owner used ish Columbia before 1986. The figures come from stud- ies prepared for the federal department of employment and immigration, Although , the studies ,Promise vast job opportun. ; ities they also warn that the, federal government must pave the way by altering and increasing training programs and changing educational at- titudes. Among the highlights: — Seventy percent of the growth in the labor force will be women, — There will be a sharp increase in the number of native workers. . — There will be increase: migration of workers to the West from eastern Canada, — Up to 250,000 skilled foreign immigrants could be needed. Recommended changes in- clude increased efforts to get women, natives and the dis- abled into the work force; tailoring training programs to meet demands of ex- panding areas of the econ- omy; and creating work in areas of low employment while ensuring high develop- ment areas have enough manpower to take available jobs. The punch for all those new jobs is mainly resource- oriented. Gillies cites uran- ium in northern Saskatche- wan, petrochemicals and fer- tilizers in Alberta and B.C, smaller pipeline projects like the Norman Wells job in the Northwest Territories and the mega-projects like the northern pipeline and the tar sands jobs. CAMERON TO SPEAK AT CHAMBER MEETING Castlegar Chamber of fommerce is holding a gen- eral meeting this Thursday at 12 noon at the Hi Arrow Arms Motor Hotel. Michael Cameron, assist- ant to the regional manmager of the Kootenay Boundary Visitors’ Association will be present as the guest speaker. Cameron will be showing a film entitled “Here to Share,” which depicts highlights a visitor can expect to find in the Kootenay-Boundary re- gion. Footage includes Syr- inga Creek, Doukhobor Vil- Freed under supervision OTTAWA (CP) — A 21- year-old man, sentenced to life in prison in 1976 for killing his stepfather who had raped his sister, has been freed under strict super- lage and some of the acti- vities of SunFest 80. The film was produced by Norman Keziere, film pro- duction manager for Tourism British Columbia. Keziere has won international recog: nition for his outstanding films of the province. KIRO MANOR PRESENTS The World Renowned vision, the solicitor-general’s department announced Tues- day. Ross Davis was released from prison at Matsqui, B.C., following a cabinet order Sept. 17. Davis was 16 when he was sentenced to life in prison for the second-degree murder of Frank Koble, his stepfather who had raped Davis's teen- aged sister. The killing oc- curred in Stony Plain, Alta. 7:30 p.m. J. Lloyd Crow S.S. Gymnasium TICKETS: $10 & $12, Students & Senlors $7.50, 12 Yrs. & Under ” A Fund Raising Event. Banquet Featuring BUZZ GOERTZEN Internationally known country gospel singer, yodeller and evangelist. Fireside Place Oct. 16 - 6:30 p.m. TICKETS $8.00 Phone 365-2374 or 367-6346 Sponsored by the Full Gospel Assembly Frultvale EVERYONE WELCOME @& JUL 4L72 DIRECTORY) the dish to receive satellite television signals from ‘the S., but | provincial / and! county courts ruled there was insufficient evidence to prosecute as the satellite signals were not covered by the Radio and Broadcast Acts. fe Apartment owner. Lougheed said he has written federal Communications Min- ister Francis Fox, asking for the equipment to be re- turned. If he gets it back, he said he will use it again. We wish Michael Heard “All the Best” knowing that he will continue with the same PLAZA CLEANERS THANK YOU ALL EVENGELICAL ~ FREE CHURCH — Fellowship —Worship — Bible Study Worship Service Sunday 11:00a.m. Legion Hall Bible Study & Prayer Tues. 7:30 p.m. at 1201 - 1 Street Phone: 365-2605 i 713 - 4th Street Worship Service 11 a.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. “Vacancy - Pastor" Ph, 365-7502 or 365-8354 Listen to the Lutheran Hour Sunday, 11:30a.m. on Radio CKQR ~ ANGLICAN CHURCH 1400 Block, Columbia Ave. APOSTOLIC CHUR OF PENTECOST. | Sunday Services: 8a.m. and 10a.m. Sunday School: 10 a.m. jRobson Community Church, 2nd and 4th Sunday of month: 10. a.m. Rectory: Ph. 365-2271 Rev. Desmond Carroll Sunday School Reopens Sun., 13th of Sept. 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail = 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Dirk Zinner: | _ UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA 2224 - 6th Ave. 1% blocks south of Community Complex 9:40 a.m. Sing-Song 10.a.m. Worship and Sunday School Robson: Ist Sunday, 7 p.m. 3rd Sunday, 10.a.m. Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 365-7814 SS below Castleaird Plaza * Ph, 365-6317 9:50 a.m. Sunday School 11 a.m. Worship Service 7 p.m. Fellowship Service Tuesday, 7 p.m. Cottage Bible Studies Friday, 7 p.m. Youth and Family Night Rev. Ed. Wegner, Pastor h. 365-2374 AFULL GOSPEL CHURCH 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship llam. Pastor Ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 GRACE PRESBYTERIAN. CALVARY BAPTIST 5) *) MOT Gene 809 Merry Creek Road Next to Cloverleaf Motel Castleaird Plaza Family Bible Hour 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00. a.m. Evening Praise WED. NIGHT - Bible Study & Prayer Service 7 p.m. Church Office 365-3430 PENTECOST, TABERNACLE | 767 - 11th Ave., North Pastor Roy Hubbeard Church: Ph, 365-5212 Christian Education Hour 9:45 a.m, Morning Worship 8:30. a.m. & 11 a.m. Evening Service 7 p.m, Tuesday: Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Saturday: Young People 7:30 p.m. ST. RITA’S CATHOLIC 2605 Columbia Ave. Sundays: 9:45 a.m. Sunday School llam. WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 a.m. — Junior Congregation & Nursery Rev. Harvey Self Phone 365-3816 Rev. Michael Gui; Ph. 365-7143 ont Saturday Night Mass 7 p.m P.m, Sunday Masses at 8 a.m. and 10.a.m United way kickoff ea ‘ST. MARIA Goren | Genelle — 12 Noon Windows, Doors and Patio Doors. INTERIOR PREFAB 4x2 One Span Floor Joists — And We Build Them. 72H) eon: 23 COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION was the key word Saturday as United Way kicked off its annual fund raising campaign to raise $55,000. Top photo: Mayor Audrey Moore signs official proclamation hand. printed by Betty Leitner while United Way secretary-treasurer Marjorie Mac- Bain looks on. Middle Photo: Castlegar one of several softball games play: Kinsmen Park. Bottom knock down target in fastest time. volunteer firemen took on United Way in a hoto: Hose coupling competition was fun (and wet) as Robson Fire Department ladies’ team members show here. Goal was to con- nect three section of hose to hydrant and By JUDY WEARMOUTH Head Librarian 5 September was a very busy month at the Castlegar Library with 124 new mem- * bers joining. Pre-school story hours re- sumed with high registration in both branches. Raffle tickets for an afghan are selling well and proceeds are going to the United Way. The. library cooperated with the United Way's kick- off day last Saturday fea- turing three separate shows for children during the morn- ing. Sandy Reilly and friends donated. their considerable talents to giving the packed audience a great morning of puppets, songs and skits, The library will stage a grand .Library Week, in conjunction with our local Young Canada Book Week, Nov. 2-7. As usual, the schools will be invited to bring their students to visit ;. the library and prizes are of- fered for a bookmark compe- tition in which the winning bookmark will be printed. The librarians will hold a fines amnesty during the week and a book sale of dis- carded and donated books will be held in the Castleaird Plaza on Nov. 7. During the book sale, the proposed new - regional library plans and in- formation packages will be on | Membership increases display and public. input is invited as to the location and type of building proposed. Public meetings are to be held in Castlegar and the surrounding areas in Novem- ber and December and peo- ple will again have the opportunity to give their opinions on the library site. Telidon videotex has gon OTTAWA (CP) — The federal government's Telidon videotex system went public Tuesday with the inaugur- ation of 30 installations ac- ross the country. Communications Minister Francis Fox and Supply Min- ister Jean-Jacques Blais par- ticipated in a news confer- ence and demonstration of the system at a downtown Ottawa shopping mall, where one of the Telidon corrals has been installed. (Police Briets Local RCMP investigated 33 complaints over the week- end resulting in one driver having his. driver's licence suspended for 24 hours, one being charged with impaired driving and one minor being found in possession of liquor. *. . * A Williams Lake woman, Elizabeth Goyette, has been charged with driving too fast for road conditions after a 1979 Honda Civic she was driving left the road Friday and rolled on Highway 3 and 3A overpass. Goyette was taken to hos- pital suffering head injuries. Damage to the vehicle has been estimated at $3,000. A South Slocan man, Rob- ert McGall, 33, escaped in- jury this morning after the vehicle he was driving failed to negotiate a curve from Highway 3A onto Highway 3. Police estimate damage at $1,500. McGall has been charged with travelling too fast for road i e public Blais said the information- retrieval systems have been placed in 10 post offices and “about 20 of them in centres very much like this one, where there's a great amount of (public) traffic.” The idea is that anyone, with the aid of a directory attached to the union, can simply by pressing one but- ton, call up all publicly- available information on any government function. Blais said there are 33,000 pages of information in the” system in English and French, but more will be added as they become avail- able. : Fox and Roger August, chairman of the group res- ponsible for establishing the public-access corrals, said the Canadian videotex system is considered the best in the world. Blais said later in an inter- view that the government had initially put $80 million into development of Telidon, and another $12 million later. He said establishing the 30 demonstration sites cost the DON'T SAVE TIME Hawaii and Alaska are the only two states in the U.S. without daylight saving time. ge another $1.2 mil- lion. d Telidon is being consumer tested in several Canadian and U.S. centres, including Los Angeles, New York and Washington. ~~ f CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 7, 1981 AZ Cranbrook woman sues PWA CRANBROOK (CP) — A suit against Pacific Western Airlines by the wife of one of 43 people killed in a 1978 plane crash in this Kootenay community was delayed Mon- day when Justice W.J. Train- or of B.C, Supreme Court declared a mistrial. Mary Arlene Martin of Kimberley, is seeking com- pensation for loss and dam- ages she and her family suf- fered following the death of her husband Clarence, who died when a PWA Boeing 737 crashed at the Cranbrook airport Feb. 11, 1978. The suit, which began Monday. before an_ eight- member jury, was adjourned after opening remarks by Martin's lawyer Don Nieder- mayer. Cooper Agencies (1979) Ltd. is pleased to an- nounce that Joy, Me- Nabb has transferred from the Nelson office to our Castlegar office. Please feel free to call Joy at her home, '365- 6695, or at the office, 365-: ° Custom Draperies fom Riseborough Original Give Grace toa —oom Gor an Appointment to View our Decorator Gabries ‘ én° your Home: Phone 229-4608 RARH3 Nelson ORIGINAL ‘ROBI NSON'S| ALL MEN'S, LADIES’, * CHILDREN'S, BOY'S & GIRL'S WINTER JACKETS, SNOW SUITS, COATS, VESTS, *& SKI PANTS PHENTEX ELITE YA 80z., R NOT $ 2 4a NBULKY KNIT YA 100% Ole Fin 3-ply, Reg. 3.79 now #04: bn The Chain saw SAVE $30.00 WORK. JEANS % OFF ALL WOMEN'S, MEN'S, CHILD! GIRLS & BOY'S WINTER BOOTS REG. PRICE PRE-WINTER SALE : 1 5 ort REG. PRICE 3-Plece eg. 3.79 + Ww: Boot Cut Sizes 30-44 Reg. 28.95 jow SELECTED LADIES’ GWG GWG Scrubbie Jeans Men's Selected Styles Sizes 28-40. LUGGAGE ‘SETS Reg. 59.99 “SS NOWs: $ 3497 SELECTED COMFORTERS Double Bed Size Reg. 45.99 SPECIAL $9 497 Reg. 29.95 GIRL'S GWG : LJRNISHERS | Cords & Jeans Sizes 7 - 14 slim & reg. fit. Reg. to 21.99. NOW . . Jeans & Cords dunior & Misses Sizes. King Homelite — chain saws that XL-1AO — $1997 PACIFIC TRUSS Operating as... INTERIOR DN PREFABS geeemetret! “anessees It’s wise to buy from an established firm where guarantees are important! STERLING F STE R 11" Anniversary October Sale — 10-50% OFF EVERYTHING E WILL RUN FOR THE aE ONTH OF OCTOBER Em 1474 Bay Ave., Trail 368-3885 441 Baker St., Nelson 352-7711 etthe jobdone! * jomelite has great features like the Safe-T-Tip whi re eliminates kickback, plus a sturdy fi hand guard as standard equipment on al models. See the complete line of Homelite chain saws at your nearest participating dealer. This offer terminates October 31. © Textron Canada Limited Registered User. Reg. $269.95 $239.°° SXL-MINI AO $269." 160 Reg. $299.95 YOU GET SAVINGS AND SERVICE AT BUCK HAVEN wi dquarters — We Fix and Sharpen All Brands” eves feud at bocve. Creek (South of Trail) — Phone 367-7822 2 Reg. to 30.00. NOW $y 9°7| Castleaird Plaza Store Only Mon.-Sat. 9- Friday 9-9