, A2 CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 5, 1962 J. BALFOUR AND SONS LIMITED 1151 Cedar Avenue Trail, B.C. Thinking of converting from oil to gas? 18QW is the time to SAVE UP TO $800 with the Gov't. C.O.S.P. program. ; ‘ We now have a good supply of Lennox gas furnaces including the Lennox “Pulse” 96% efficient with no chimney. ; Also in stock Can. General Electric heat pumps, the No. 1 energy and cost saver in North America. COME IN AND SEE US OR GIVE JACK A CALL 964-1258 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ‘Mon, thru Fri. Asthma? Breathing Problems TRY OUR BIONAIRE AIR- - PURIFIER [ONIZER most powertul BIONAIRE unit for the home, the attractive BIONAIRE 1000 is the only sir cleaner/ionizer tor domestic it features o ONE WEEK FREE TRIAL p fil unique to Biotech alone wth quiet, trouble-free operation, using minimum power. Invest ina “lifetime of fresh, air” — with o BIONAIRE 1000, Units available for office, home & car. RUMFORD PLACE . 1406 Columbia Av L “You'll breath the difference”’ CARWASH. isis at United Way Hearing here on cutbacks ” By CasNews Staff The travelling Public Com- mission on Social and Com- munity ‘Services Cutbacks will hold its West Kootenay public hearings in Castlegar this afternoon and tonight (Wednesday). The hearings are sched- - uled from 1-5:30 p.m. and 7-9 {car wash had good time soaping Y down both cars and themselves, The event was to thank Castlegar United Way sup- porters, and about 50 cars were washed, {Photo submitted by Al Blessin) PEACE PLAN continued from page Al tal, in tho morning and re- turned safely to its base. The Argenti i Both airstrips were attacked by British planes Saturday in the first major strike of the air-sea offensive launched by que said the second attack was made in the afternoon by three Harrier jets on a dirt runway at Goose Green, 65 kilometres west of Stanlsy. Hyndman Britain to recapture the is- land colony Argentina seized April 2. Meanwhile,: Argentina re- ported the rescue of at least arranged anniversary gift VANCOUVER (CP) — A $5,000 photo copying ma- chine given to a charity or- ganization by the provincial government as a 50th anni- versary gift last year came as a total surprise, the organ- Consumer Affairs Minister That is not good for either * Peter Hyndman arranged for the gift to be presented to the league at its anni 680 survivors from the crui- ser General Belgrano, which a British submarine torpe- doed and sank Sunday. The navy said it was “optimistic” that more will be found. Shocked Britons reacted to the loss of the Sheffield with appeals for an end to the bloodshed and angry de- mands for; retaliation that echoed those heard in the streets of Buenos Aires fol- lowing the Belgrano sinking. “Once blood is spilled, more. blood ‘is: spilled,” ob- served a Buenos Aires man. side.” TV CREW FREED hile, an A + p.m. at the Hi-Arrow Arms Hotel, i The commission, _ which was formed to gauge public opinion of recent government cutbacks in social and com- munity services, will hear briefs from a number of area organizations, including the Selkirk College Faculty As- sociation and hospital work- ers. As well, the general public is invited to attend and make their views known on the cutbacks. The commission is headed by chairperson Tom Alsbury, former Vancouver mayor. Joy Langan is vice-chair: person, while Gordon Mc- Pherson of the Hospital Em- ployees Union and Tom Hut- chison of the B.C, Teachers’ Federation’ are the other members of the four-person commission. Castlegar is part of the. group's 11-city tour of the province, which started April’ ball in March, 1981. Hyndman’s |. wife became he fs ization’s vice-pr * said Tuesday. . Alison Morse, Junior League of Vancouver vice- f . r) of tl in June, 1981. Hyndman’s 1981 minister- ial expense accounts are be- a! said her did not Bay Cc Phone 365-6141 ask the g for the ing’ by Auditor General Erma Morrison after judge acquitted a producer and three other members of a Canadian television crew held in southern Argentina as suspected spies, the of- ficial Argentine news agency TELAM reported. 0 The men had been confined to the city of Comodoro gift. Showcase of Values! From May 1 to May 31 SAVE 30% Biggest selection ever of Noritake Formal China, Casual Dinnerware "Save Now on Open Stock, an in- vestigation. davia last month after taking pictures of military installations. The CBC said it expects three of the men — John Axelson, 30, and David Wil- son, 42, of Toronto, and Lem- a uel Hillman, 34, of Chicago — Huda: to return to Toronto by Fri- day. Their Argentine driver-in- terpreter,..Horacio. Rivarola, “87, was also 29 in Kel ‘and ends May 20 in Vancouver. ©” Emergency debate not over yet OTTAWA (CP) — Op- position MPs, invigorated rather than exhausted by an all-night emergency Com- mons debate, increased their attacks on g en- aR hich Lads. pipiteablea sees 3 - because it was base the Magna Carta whic provides for'citizéns’ Fighi Hy sjarned, ‘Your freedom and your property right fee gone” under the new and Bill of Rights. eae Conedion are now living under French Civil Law, which means you are “guilty until you're proven nt!” ase oharaed that Bill Bennett “has bartered our freedoms away.” “The premiers are not for us... they're against us,” Reilly added, pointing out that the WCC is the only political party willing to fight for property rights eedom. a eae nile Clark called independence “a good and noble thing to have.” He said the country is already divided because of the federal Liberal party, and pointed out that in Western provinces only two Liberal MPs were elected — both in southern Manitoba. ‘The country is divided both physically and politically from the rest of Canada, Clark said, and should take that one step further to divide economically. He said the west is already somewhat divided along economic lines, noting Western Canada is resource-based, while the rest of Canada is industrially-based. . Clark also added that the country is divided along “moral” lines, with Western Canada having “very high morals," while the rest of Canada “want to rip us off." He stressed he would like to preserve Canada as one nation, but doesn’t see that as a possibility. Turning to the WCC's election platform, Clark said the party believes in democracy, freedom, liberty and equality. He said the WCC would return Canada toa single official language and charged that bilingualism costs the country $1 billion a year — or roughly $160 a year for every taxpayer. ‘The WCC would hold a referendum on the form of government —such as a republic of monarchy, Clark said. As well, it would have an elected Senate instead of a government-appointed Senate. The elected Senate would have the responsibilities of the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commis- sion, the National Harbors Board and other national bodies, but it wouldn't be a “political plum.” Clark said the WCC stands for free enterprise. “We have to get back to the basics of free enterprise.” He said government interference in the economy cannot be limited, because it eventually must “go all the way .. - and you know what all the way is —communism.” Clark said the WCC would also do away with tariffs and institute complete free, trade with the world, which he predicted would mean a drop in prices for Canadian consumers. He added the WCC would also have the electors’ right to hold a referendum on non-political subjects such as abortion, the metric system, gun control and _bilin- gualism. As well, electors would have the right to recall their ergy and ecnomic policies to- day amid indications the de- bate could last another 24 hours. * More than 40 MPs had spoken by ..8...a.m.,..PDT,.. Three: British journalists’ ‘are--still- held« in: jail--near -: Comodoro Rivadavia on spy charges. : External Affairs Minister - Mark MacGuigan said some Latin A are it mem- bers who hurled a torrent of abuse at.:the. government's national energy program and called for everything from an election to a new industrial strategy. telling Ottawa that Canada may have a role to play in settling the Falkland dispute. MacGuigan teld reporters in Ottawa these countries say they see a place for Canada in helping reach a settlement “under the right conditions." But he refused to spell out what these conditions are _and what Canada might do. The Prog Conserva- tives and New Democrats have at least another 85 speakers anxious to parti- cipate and prolong the debate until Thursday. The Liberals also have an ample number of speakers who are “not going to sit back and let things go unan- swered,” said a party strat- egist. [control P to discuss issues and if they weren't satisfied with the performance they would be able to fire am. He said the right of recall is democracy in action. “Until you're doing that you're just whistling Dixie.” Clark said Western separation would mean keeping western capital in.the west and.not giving. it away to eastern and central Canada and Third World countries. ‘Clark also listed a number of WCC promises, including: @ a lower-cost: of living’ -- e less government interference ea halt to the compulsory metric system @ a pension scheme for Western Canada that could mean a $27,000 a year pension for every pensioner e penal and justice system reform. Clark added in a question and answer session that the WCC supports abolishing gun control. He called federal gun contro] legislation “gun confiscation, not gun (SEPARATISTS | REMEMBER MITZIE DUPREE? Regulars to the Street talk | Marlane Hotel will hove a hard time forgetting her, but * . she was the stripper who packed the place just a few weeks back. Her real name is Michelle Pradia, a 22-year-old from Los Angeles. Well, it scems she is free to ply her trade anywhere in B.C. Just to jog your memory once’ again, Mitzi was charged last year in Kamloops for basically doing what she did at her gold out appearances in the Marlane Hotel. She used ping pong balls, cigarettes and a flute (among other assorted paraphenalia) as props and was charged with committing an indecent act after Kamloops police took in her performance. But county court Judge George Lamperson ruled recently that it isn't up to the courts to determine the community's moral standards, He said Dupree's act did not go beyond the level of moral tolerance in Kamloops (or Castlegar for that matter). Dupree was contacted in Victoria, where she has taken her act, and says since the case began her weekly fee has increased by $400 a week. And for those wondering about her marital status, she says she plans to marry a landed immigrant from Britain who works on oil rigs in the Northwest Territories, She says they won't marry until next year when she plans on going back to school to take a course in fashion merchandizing in Los Angeles. “I've got enough rug burns,” she is reported to have said of her career as a dancer. On another note, during her three-week stay in Castlegar, you couldn't buy a ping pong ball anywhere. THE NDP's defeat in the recent Saskatchewan election may have surprised many, but Kootenay West MP Lyle Kristiansen said he wasn't taken aback; ‘though Kristiansen said he was surprised at the strength of the Tories’ victory. s ‘. Kristiansen says that in fact many federal members were telling of their impressions of general public restlessness soon after Premier Allan Blakeney called the election. Kristiansen’s own remarks on the outcome were that the NDP government had a basically good product, but a poor campaign. He suggested they may have been a little too cocky. And he referred to the patient who goes in for minor surgery and dies on the operating table. In medicine, as in politics, there is no such thing as “minor surgery.” SUN 'N SAIL '82 concluded last weekend at Waneta Plaza in Trail. In the centre court mall there was a display of sailboats by the West Kootenay Sailing Club, the Jones Boys Marina of Kaslo, and by McGregor Boats of Evans, ~ Wash. The Castlegar Power Squadron also had a.display promoting boating and water safety. Mall manager Rob " Sailboats on display. Davis said he was pleased with response to the display, and remarked that the event is now “almost certainly assured of being held annually.” ACATHOLIC PRIEST who served St. Rita’s Parish in Castlegar from 1972 to 1977, Rev. Wm. Harrison, retired recently after 45 years in the priesthood. Father Harrison was moved to Sacred Heart Parish in Kimberley, from where he retired. He now resides in Cranbrook. While in Castlegar Father Harrison was very active with the Kootenay Society for the Handicapped. HERMAN KEMPERMAN, a parishoner of St. Rita's Catholic Church and a member of the Community of Hope Prayer Group, has returned from a 4%/:-week lay missionary tour of India, Thailand and Hong Kong, with a day in Mainland China and Tokyo. As a very special privilege, Herman shared for an hour with Mother Teresa in Calcutta, India. : MVE GIFT. HER WITH GREAT. FOOD VALUES. CHUCK STEA peeroie = A959 i BEEF ROAST CROSSRIB CANADA GRADE ae || ay 19 W. IDEAL FOR SWEET-N-SOUR. .. SAUSAGE PURE PORK FLETCHER'S .......0esevescoceseenperees ees IDs SAUSAGES...» DELI SPECIALS LIVER SAUSAGE . VANCOUVER FANCY. FINE...... PT age CORNED BEEF LOAF $429 BOSTON. 6 OZ. TIN ....--seeeeereee ————— SUMMER SAUSAGE VANCOUVER FANCY. DRY OR BEEF SALAM! .. FLAKES OF CHICKEN $4 59 BONUS. 170 GRAMTIN......+-++-++ SHRIMP SEA HAUL, SMALL OR COCKTAIL. 402. TIN...+++ SOCKEYE SALMON $7499 CATELLI. 500 GRAM... -eee coer eee LASAGNE S19 GOLD SEAL. 7% OZ. TIN. oe TOMATOES $409 | ) wpabelets 225 y, Poland Unrest continues Mother's Day is May 9 Make her day really special. Give Mom all your love . ... and the FTD BIG HUG Bouquet WARSAW (AP) — Police clashed with youths who -destroyed buildings and erected i in the opposition tothe government since martial law was de- clared last Dec. 13 and the northwest Baltic port of Szc- zecin for the second night ina row, it was reported today. Published reports gave few details of the unrest, which followed clashes Mon- day in more than a dozen Polish cities. The rioting was the most violent show of union suspended. Official reports said the authorities clamped a curfew back on Warsaw and Gliwice. In a surprise move, tele- phone lines in the capital and other cities were reopened after being cut Monday night. The East German news agency ADN said restrictions also were imposed in Szzecin -_, KERNEL CORN ¢ DELMONTE. 12 FL. OZ. TIN.......++- 69 AYLMER. 28 FL. OZ. TIN . oe PINEAPPLE DELMONTE. SLICED, CRUSHED, TIDBITS. 14 FL. OZ. TIN....-.- ee eeeeeee eoeecee OTTAWA (CP) — No prov ince will escape the recession unbloodied, - but..some. will suffer more than others; says the Conférence Board of Canada. The economies of five provinces will shrink this year and three will show only fractional growth, the board said today in the latest of a seemingly unending string of cheerless forecasts. Manitoba and Alberta will see the greatest growth, but their performances will be worse than last year and worse than predicted three months ago, says the non- profit independent research organization. “The decline in economic activity which began midway shrough 1981 and is forecast continue well into this year ‘epresents the most severe vetback suffered by Canada's xeonomy in decades,” says che board, reiterating com- nents from its national fore- sast last month, es Production will decline. in Newfoundland, Prince Ed- vard Island, New Brunswick, Quebec and Ontario, Growth in Nova Scotia, 3askatchewan and British Jolumbia will be less than Recession No province to escape toba’s economy will expand by only 1.4 per cent. - Production in Alberta ‘will rise the most — 3.8 per cent — but at the slowest pace'in more than a‘ decade. + The board: has ‘lowered projections for all provinces since the end of last year. It is the most dismal pro- vincial forecast since the board began preparing them in 1976, said Peter Gusen, the board's director of regional economic forecasting. Until the end of 1979, it was always a question of which province was “leading the pack,” he said. Now it is just the opposite. REVERSAL ‘ACUTE’ The reversal for Quebec and Ontario will be the “most acute” since 1961, when pro- vincial economic activity re- cords were begun, says the board. “New Brunswick's decline will rival any recorded pre- viously by the province. “British Columbia will also fare badly-in 1982. Its prob- ~ lems started earlier’than in other provinces due to last summer's crippling forestry” strike and, asa result, it does not have as far to fall in 1982, “Nevertheless, taking the two years together, the ero- sion of economic activity in British Columbia is the most serious experienced by the province in the last two dec- ades. “Alberta’s economy will continue to expand quickly in comparison with other prov- inces this year. But its fore- cast 3.8-per-cent rate of ad- vance is well below its accus- tomed. pace, lower than in any year since 1970.” Newfoundland, Prince Ed- ward Island and Saskatche- wan also will suffer setbacks but within the range of set- backs they have suffered during the last 20 years, says the board. am Unemployment also will be higher this year than last in all provinces, with the jobless rate raching 14.3 per cent in Newfoundland. = Forecast percentage growth for each province this year compared with last year is: Newfoundland, -1.5 this year and 1.8 last year; Prince Edward Island, -1.4 and 0.6; Nova Scotia, 0.8 and 2.2; New Brunswick, -0.6 and 1.4; Que- bec, -0.9 and 1.0, Ontario, -2.1 and 2.2; Manitoba, 1.4 and 8.6; Saskatchewan, 0.3 and 4.8; Alberta, 3.8' and 5.1 and British Columbia, 0.9 and 3.2. NAMED FOR CHILD Austrian Emil Jelinek commissioned a car from the Daimler Automotive works and named it Mercedes after his daughter. When Daimler and Benz merged, they re- tained the name. GOOD HOST ICED TEA MIX 780 $499 Gram KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP PARKAY MARGARINE 3 23929 PALM 2 a Tso 79° i PACIFIC MILK ec): Mee TAKEMIX BETTY GROCKER. ANGEL FOOD ..Ea. $189 INSTANT PUDDING 2 ; 99° PURE CORN OIL ST. LAWRENCE. 3 LITRE .....-.--20-- $549 JELLY POWDERS 2 .89° WHITE LABEL- APPLE JUICE SUNRIPE. 1 LITRECARTON ...... 89 SLICES KRAFT PROCESSED. 500 GRAM... We Will Double Your Coupon Value on Manufacturers Coupons. BLECTROHOME SPAGHETTI SAUCE CATELLI, MEAT OR ~ MUSHROOM. 14 FL. OZ. TIN ...... SPAGHETTI SAUCE CATELLI. TOMATO Of MARINARA. 14 FL. OZ. TIN .. GARBAGE BAGS KITCHEN CATCHERS. PACKAGE OF 24... GARBAGE BAGS 30x 48 INCH, PKG. OF 5 ... ANGE STRIP REG. FLAVOR. 750 ML ..... oe . HEAVY DUTY FOIL $479. CHOCOLATE BAR ¢ NEILSON'S FAMILY SIZE ....-.---+ 99 CAT FOOD seeeee 2 19° COUNTRY CRISP BARS NEILSON'S. 9 OZ. PKG.....- ia Nay SHAMPOO $339 AGREE. REG. OR EX. GENTLE. 350 ML. OSCILLATING FANS © - POPPING.CORN $4.29 FABRIC SOFTENER $189 FLEECY. U.8 LITRE .......eeeceeceeee LAUNDRY 'S. 15 OZ. JAR and Gdansk, the Baltic port ORVILLE REDENBACHER ome per cent, while Mani- where Solidarity was FurnitureVillage ‘At Last Year's Sale Prices ue Model #7609 Place Settings and Sets! For yourself. and. for gift giving, choose now froma tremendous séldétion seldom offered. You can SAVE on famous Noritake Formal China and Casual Dinnerware. * Save Now on Gifts for Bridal, Wedding, Annivergary Carl’s Drug Mart axel sping into Action NOW! wusn6c2SE: AND RECEIVE A FREE BALE OF HAY WITH ANY RENTAL FROM TROWELEX *. Post Hole Augers © Lawn Mowers @ Pruning Equipment * Spreaders ® Tillers founded in August, 1980, and site of big anti-government demonstrations “Saturday and Monday. % Meetings of student clubs and all public entertainment, including discotheques, were banned again. Gen. Cieslaw Kiszczak, the interior minister in the martial-law government, re- “GRILLTIME ~ CHARCOAL 20 LB. BAG .........- ORANGES CALIFORNIA SUNKIST.....- 4 w.$ 1 . 9 $h79 FRESH PRODUCE DETERGENT A.B.C. . 0006 6 3 2 ae : AVOCADOES 3.219 CALIFORNIA GROWN .......09) for CARROTS : 5 tb. $189 BROCCOLI. we 49° CALIFORNIA GROWN .......+++--LB. CALIFORNIA GROWN NO. 1. Bag ported a second day of unrest Castleaird Plaza 365-7269 OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12 noon - 1 p.m. & 6-7 p.m. Meet our Noritake representative who will be at our store to help you select your Nontake and to answer your questions. Tuesday in Szczecin, the pro- vincial capital 25 kilometres from the East German bor- der, He gave no details, Kiszezak told Poland's par- liament, the Sejm, the 1,372 people were detained Mon- Wearenowa GREEN LEAF PLANT CARE CENTRE. least 13 other cities. He re- ported at least 72 policemen injured. a NOT THE BIG ONE A mushroom-shaped cloud, We have everything & anything for spring gi including an tue "Gard Library". TROWELEX RENTALS 4450 Columbia Ave., Castlegar 365-3315 usually associated with a nu- clear explosion, will result from any large blast above ground in calm air. SEED STARTERS Plastic wallpaper trays make lightweight, inexpen- sive trays to start seedlings in. day in riots in Warsaw and at_ “BRIAN VERIGIN ... graduates By CasNews Staff Castlegar's Brian Verigin was awarded a bachelor of science degree in manage- ment for Northern Michigan University Saturday in Mar- quette. Degrees were awarded to 722 graduates at NMU's spring commencement. Verigin played for NMU's hockey Wildcats while in Michigan. Model #F7612 Gay G00 1114 - 3rd St., Castlegar — Phone 365-2101 PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 6,7 &8.. CENTRAL FOODS “Community Owned and Operated" Deli — Cheeses — Meats Produce — In-Store Bake Shop Quality Food at Low Prices DEL! FOOD va Sot., Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 9.a.m.-6p.m. Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. — Closed Sundays We Reserve the Right te Limit Quentities