‘ , 5 ’ CASTLEGAR NEWS, September 7, 1983 BS i Mm TE ee AT OMNIA LIFESTYLES BEEF BLADE CHUCK ROAST ay EE 5940/5] 09 BONELESS STEWING BEEF Save $1.74/kg (79¢Mm.).... kg $4399] 99 EMPRESS PEANUT BUTTER * pemaies or U5 kg Tin... .....ce cece eee $389 IMPERIAL MARGARINE Save $1.10 $199 Gh focags ose eeeeeseees __ OVENIOY WHITE BREAD | = 2 id he STAR KIST CHUNK LIGHT TUNA © See $129}; KELLOGG’S RAISIN BRAN ee Save 58¢ VALENCIA ORANGES 55 Sunkist, California Grows. Size 138's..... FRESH BROCCOLI Safeway Store Castlegar Fall & Winter Store Hours EFFECTIVE MONDAY, SEPT. 12, 1983 Mon., Tues., Wed., 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Thurs., Fri., 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat., 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Prices Effective Sept. 8, 9 and 10 IN THE CASTLEGAR STORE ADA SAFaWwaAY LIMITED SALES IN RETAIL QUANTITIES ONLY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING THE APPLICATION Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd. ("inland") applied June 27, 1983, pursuant to the applicable provisions of Sections 67 and 106 of the UiIlitiés Com- mission Act to amend the Tarlif Rate Schedules in its Gas Tariff cover- charged for natural gas service in its service area. lerim rate increase of approximately 1.56% appli- f service, effective with consumption on and after Say 1, 3089, nda staies theta afullrate application will be completed and filed not later than September 15, 1 1e Commission authorized the requested interim inerneee eltective July 1, 1983 subject to'refund with interest at the average prime rate of the bank with which {nland con- ducts its business. Other matters to be addressed at the public hearing are as follows: 1. an tatand’s July 15, 1983 emendments fo} male , Scheaiies and 11 arising from consideration of a Dacem! port on ‘Rate Design Considerations” submited by ‘lana sity Sensation Engineer: Inland's “Main: Policy’ t whether of not achange in policy ‘is appropriate. THE PUBLIC HEARING The Commission has set down the Application for public hearing com- mencing at 10:00 a.m., local time, Tuesday, pened 18, 1983 at the Capri Hotel, 471 Harvey ‘Avenue, Kelowna, B.C. V1Y 6E! PUBLIC INSPECTION OF THE APPLICATION The Applications and supporting material will be available for inspec: tion on or about Thursday, September 15, 1983 at the Head Office of In- land, Vancouver, B.C. and at each of its Regional Offices located at Kam- joops, Kelowna, Nelson, Penticton, Prince George, Trall and Vernon. A copy of the Applications and supporting material will also be avail- able for inspection on‘and after Thursday, September 15, 1983 at the Lib- rary of the British Columbia Utilities Commission, 20th Floor, Board of Trade Tower, 1177 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, B.c. INTERVENTIONS . , ny person intending to attend the hearing ou Provide written notice not later than Monday, September 19, 1983 to the Commission Secretary, and to the Applicant. Those persons intending to give evi- dence or cross-examine witnesses should, in addition, provide a brief written statement of the nature of their interest in the proceedings. SUBMISSIONS BY INTERESTED PERSONS Any person intending to file a written submission must file not later than Monday, October 5, 1983, one copy of the submission to the Com- mission Secretary, and to the Applicant. CLARIFICATION Persons intending to participate in the public hearing who are un- certain as to the manner in which to proceed should contact the Com- mission Secretary by telephone (689-1831), or in writing. BY ORDER A.C. Michelson, Commission Secretary TWENTY FIRST FLOOR, 4177, WEST HASTINGS STREET. NANCOUVER. B.C. CANADA VEE 217 :LEPHONE (604) 680-1831 TELEX 04- Stee NEW IN TOWN? LET US PUT _ OUT THE MAT FOR YOU! he est ameet Boiet a the men Joyce 365-3091 Deborah 365-3015 Zuckerberg Island Park opening — CasNews “Photos, by Diane Strandberg AANA HOW TO CUT DOWN ON NOISE QUEBEC (CP) — R by the Quebec Environment Department has led to the rather startling discovery that noise pollution can be reduced by turning off the radio, getting closer to the person you're talking to and having candlelit dinners. Quebecers can read all about it in a -16-page pam- phlet being distributed in li- braries, government offices and medical waiting rooms across the province. Entitled Noise in the Home, the pamphlet: lists suggestions for cutting down and preventing noise. They include: e Moving back from sources of loud noise; © Speaking softly to chil- dren — “If parents yell in the house, the children will also yell to talk to themselves or to answer their: parents;” Creating “an atmosphere of rest and relaxation at ihe, aus ee e " Learning to appreciate silence — “Point out to each family member that they are calm and relaxed when the noise level is low.” e Moving closer to the per- son you're talking to; Turning off the radio, the television and the record player when no one is listen- ing to them; e Not running all the elec- trical appliances at once. Personal health is a top concern in the pamphlet, which evokes dire physical and emotional consequences for those running their blender and dishwasher sim- ultaneously, “Noise aggression often leads to real aggression — an escalation of noise and a war of decibels — and sometimes even violence,” the pamphlet warns. valley landscape nursery SALE STARTS AUG. 21 TO SEPT. 21 30 to 50% EF ENTIRE STOCK — Thousands of Iunipers | & Emerald Hedge Cedar No. 1 container. hh | NURSERY — 226.7270 HWY. 6 WINLAW, B.C. ' "Excellence in quality & service" CAREERS DETERMINE MOVES ss—«—w Letting the wife choose By JENNIFER GAVIN Press Writer DENVER (AP) — Across the United States working couples are putting their relationships toa test unheard of a few. years ago: letting women's careers determine where ' they live, For some, egos and economics balance out. For others, separate careers can lead in different directions. “Relocation is really the neme rm of two-career. couples now, ‘because there's no guarahtee will be able to find work in the other place, place, the snoslee who follows ys Jacqueline Fields, who co-authored a study for Wolletey College on effects of relocation on couples, “It's job advancement for one, \lisraption for the other,” , People in the employ and job job reli fields describ: the men-following-women trend as small but perceptible, It is likely.to become more common; women are earning more money in better jobs, for one thing. And, ‘the number of working women is expected to climb, from 49 per. cent this year to 59.6 per cent by 1990, says the’ Bureau of Labor Statistics. The number is significant, considering, it is. “coming from Practically nowhere five years ago,” says Cris Collie, « of the E veh Corba: wd hd site bad boon ft bale eo witha steel company. in Pueblo. When her company transferred her to St. Louis a year and a half later, Cara followed and found work with Western Electric, They then went, back to‘ Colorado. ‘After four months of unemployment, Cara recently got a job with the Rocky Mountain Bank Note Co. NEED TO ADAPT. “It takes people a while to realize that ‘another system does work,” Kathy Cara says. But she adds being able to adapt to it has made her, one of the higher-ranked women in. the steel industry. Daniel Adams, ei at Faith:United Presbyterian Church in Colorado Springs, has decided to move'to Denver where his wife works.as chief economist for United Banks of Colorado. The move will end five years of commuting —“a crazy way to live,” Adams Adams, 48, who the XN governing body of the United Presbyterian Chureh before the church's national govering council,’ is ‘looking ‘for part-time work at a church in the Denver area. + He says ‘career-move reciprocity can work, but not. for all ores ae scone factors have to be there — and one is an Council, a Washington-based research “group with 1,000 corporate members. Some couples who have made such arrangements work say adaptability is the key. Jim and Kathy Cara, both 27, graduated with business degrees from Purdue University inl977. Cara turned down job offers in New York and Detroit, because he preferred to More moms work away from home WINNIPEG (CP) — Many Canadian adults have fond memories of Mom greeting them at the kitchen door * every afternoon after school, cookies in hand. Things are bound to be different for today's children. In. Canada in 1983, nearly 60 per cent of women over the age of 15 have jobs out- side-the home, and federal ‘Labor Department projec- tions indicate that figure will rise to 70 per cent by 1990. Among those heading off to work eer, morning are and timate there are more than five million such children in the U.S., but there has been © no specific research on the subject in Canada. Latchkey children are, in part, the product of tough economic times but studies show that even professional people — professors, doctors, lawyers — are going the same route. Some of the kids ‘are what Rita Bartell, a University of Manitoba educational psy- chologist, calls “disadvantag- ed privileged children — kids who live in well-to-do en- Eechoolaged: sehildrens . Dubbed “latchkey chil- but"an It doesn't have to be a dren” by two A au- thors who have written on the subject, youngsters who ‘return to an empty home. every day after school can usually be picked out in the classroom by an observant teacher, says Linda Asper, president of the Manitoba Teachers’ Society. Asper ssid she recently ‘spoke ‘to several teachers about the phenomenon and heard a number of stories. “In the south end of Win- nipeg, in an area that con- tains both middle-class sub- urban and ‘lower-income row housing, an elementary tea- * cher told me of several cases of children whose parents work shift work, on the 4 p.m, to midnight shift,” As- per said. LUNCH AT SCHOOL “These kids usually stay at school for lunch and go home to a house that's empty until midnight. “In a_small town outside the city, I know of children who are alone all summer, and of one little girl in par- ticular — a nine-year-old — who is responsible for her younger brother and sister, who are seven and five. All day long — all summer. “And I was told about a Winnipeg boy whose mother works in a bar. He goes home every night to an empty house until after midnight. _ He's six.” The American authors es- rs says Bartell. LOOK AT MEANING “We have to look at the personal meaning of the eveht for each child and each family," she says. “A’ sit- uation which causes stress for one person might be easily handled by another. One child might see self-care as very positive, a recog- nition of being grown up. Another interprets it as a lack of caring and feels neg- lected.” One important factor is the way in which parents of such children use the time they do _ spend with their youngsters, she said. “It's critical to keep in touch with these kids, but just being alone is not nec- essarily a bad thing. It can be very. positive.” Lila Goodspeed, a Univer- sity of Manitoba education lecturer and executive sec- — retary of a local committee on maternal and child care, said programs in which high school students taking hu- man development courses go into elementary schools for on-site experience could be expanded. “Why couldn't high school students already interacting with much younger children do it when it's most needed — say from 7:80 to nine in the morning and from 3:80 to six in the evening?” Former Castlegar resident dies Lillian Mae Lanphear, aged 93, passed away at the Overlander Extended Care Hospital in Kaml on one Lanphear of Coquit- She is also survived by five Aug. 25. Predeceased by her hus- band, Victor Jay Lanphear, in 1973, Mrs. Lanphear is survived by her son, Joseph Victor Lanphear of Chase and daughter-in-law Phyllis; three grandchildren, Keith Lanphear of Cassiar, Sharon Johnston of Kelowna and and one sister, Cora Eckler of Dolge- ville, New York. Mrs. Lanphear was a pi- oneer resident of Castlegar, and moved to Chase, B.C. in 1970. Funeral arrangements in care of Macleod’s Funeral Chapel. Cremation followed. and Some fees face such choices — and chodee ‘not to Bo as far. One Denver counselor, who asked: his: used, says he was willing to leave another: moving out of state without a job and-relyiiig. om his wife to support him and his children by a previous’ marriage. r marriages are making corporations ‘aware working couples are not as free to move as families with one male breadwinner. Attempts to meet caréex and’ marital demands also have led to long-distance marriages — some with partners living on opposite coasts. fs “The dual-career couple is an economic’ unit — both . people have to:work to make a living today,” ae, Sharon of Inc. of San Fr consulting firm. “It’s an issue companies have to deal witty in conerete ways.” New diabetes discovery BOSTON (REUTER) — Doctors in Florida and Swit- zerland say they may have found a way to predict whe- ther a diabetic will develop eyesight problems as a result of the disease. The three acer re- ported in this week's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine diabetics suffering from retinopathy, a condition that causes eyesight to deter- forate rapidly, have signifi- cantly higher levels of a hor- mone called IGF I in their blood. The three doctors led by Thomas Merimee of the Uni- versity of Florida at Gaines- ville, said the discovery “at the minimum ... .. would appear to aid in identifying diabetic patients with an ex- tremely poor prognosis for vision.” - Ripple. Chi amore, ‘There's alot of scoops of severy B SS in a carton of Dairyl: Dairyland ice cream. Come pick your flavourite at.” zypur favourite store. < ‘1. Best ofall, its Daliyland d rs creamy ON 5 OV OOS MINIMUM i20 DAYS | $1,000 CERTIFICATES Jr. Members (under age 19) min. $500 GUARANTEED FOR THE TERM OF THE DEPOSIT | Per Annum Interest NOTICE A SUPER RATE OF INTEREST PHONE US FOR DETAILS... Kootenay Savings : Credit Union UE TRAIL FRUITVALE CASTLEGAR SALMO SOUTH SLOCAN NAKUSP NEW DENVER WANETA PLAZA