A4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 9, 1982 PC support up MONTREAL (CP) — A Gallup Poll conducted in May suggests that support for the federal F ive: Conser- per cent, down from 38 per cent in April, In Quebec, however, 35 per cent of res- Br vative party increased five per cent over April. The poll, published today, says 44 per cent of decided respondents would vote Tory in a federal election — the party's best Gallup showing since November, 1978, Thirty-three per cent of decided respondents chose the Liberal party, a decline of one percentage point from last month. The New Demo- cratic party fell three points to 21 per cent. Nationally, the level of un- decided respondents was 28 were Gallup said the Conser- vatives gained in all regions except the Atlantic prov- inces, The Liberals. main- tained a lead in Quebec that matched the Tory lead in the four Western provinces. Results were based on 1,032 personal, in-home inter- views with eligible voters conducted between May 6 and 8 Gallup says a sample of this size should not err by more than four percentage points in 19 cases out of 20. / Police Briefs Lyle Rolls of Castlegar has béen identified as the driver of a 1981 pickup which left Broadwater Road near Keen- leyside Dam and discovered Saturday morning. The vehicle, which sus- tained an estimated $10,000 damage, had struck a tree “COUNTDOWN VERYTHING* 20% OFF OR BETTER dept but only while quant Je Scour & Guide Shep and rolled. Rolls suffered arm injuries and was driven to hospital by a friend, * * Local RCMP investigated 87 complaints over the weck- end resulting in one liquor seizure. ya'> UO sq ft Street talk ‘. THERE WILL BE SOME BIG names showing up for the annual Nelson mid-summer hockey fundraiser this year, not the least of whom will be National Hockey League referee Andy van Hellemond. Others who will be joining in the fun July 10 include New York Ranger goalic John of Steve Tambellini of Trail, who plays for the Colorado Rockies, and Hockey Night in Canada play-by-play man Jim Robson, who will emcee a “roast” of BCTV sportscaster John McKeachie. The roast will take place July 9, with a golf tourney ; and hockey game the f ig day. O: 1860s, and from which Trail derives its name. Edgar Dewdney, who died in 1916, was Peter's grandfather's brother. More than 270 people attended the retirement banquet in the Tadanac Hall. CASTLEGAR IS beginning to make a name for itself. First it was betv covering our January economic’ forum and now it's The Province giving front page (lead story yet) coverage to our struggle with the economy. Province reporter Ell Sopow detailed how Castlegar. residents have begun to fight back with “cooperation that hasn't been seen for years.” Sopow outlined a number of. our local efforts to reduce our 20 per cent unemployment rate, including the first co-op housing project in the West Kootenays, the farmer's market, the "buy Canadian buy union” g two car dealerships and the 1 union, and various individual job. schemes are hoping the Gare brothers — Danny, Morey and Ernie Jr. — will form one line this year, along with the Lefley brothers — Chuek, Dale, a defencemen for the Nelson Jr. Leafs, and Brian, formerly with Colorado and now playing in Europe. Organizers are also approaching Pat Price of Nelson, who plays for the Pittsburgh Penguins; New York Ranger Mike Rogers and various members of the Stanley Cup finalist Vancouver Canucks. Word is that organizers were thinking of inviting Boston Bruin forward Terry O'Reilly, but decided instead on van Hellemond. Street Talk readers will recall that O'Reilly was suspended for 10 games last week after striking van Hellemond in the final seconds of the Nordiques. It was wise to invite either O'Reilly or van Hellemond — but not both! GOT A BARN? Then you may have something of interest to Bob Hainstock. Bob is writing a book on barns, and is looking for residents who can provide local knowledge and suggestions for his book on barns —which he says are one of Western Canada’s “vanishing landmarks.” ; ‘ or The book will be published in 1983 and Bob will be travelling throughout Western Canada at different times this year — following leads from local residents. The book itself will highlight existing examples of. ically or ily i barns — barns that show ethnic influence, unusual building material, unusual building methods or locations, or unusual size and shape. zi along with di be sent to Bob k, 11 Chi - Manitoba, R2J 4E3. IT WAS nice to see so many friends turn out to honor longtime Cominco regional counsel F.H. “Peter” Dewdney, who retired after 36 years of service. Born in New Denver in 1917, Peter went through schools in Rossland, Trail and Nelson and graduated from the University of Alberta in 1989 with a BA degree and later a Bachelor of Laws in 1941. Peter joined Cominco in 1946 and became regional counsel in 1972, He was the Progressive Conservative candidate in the 1958, 1962 and 1968 elections, finishing ' second each time to longtime MP Bert Herridge in the Kootenay West riding. : to the barn should Bay, Wi Peg, deciding playoff game between Boston and the Quebec ” such as a raft riding business and outdoor guiding service, It's great to see our area finally get the recognition we all know it deserves, and it’s even better to see residents pull together when times are tough. THE WEST KOOTENAY has a new: Good Show. He's Steve of Nelson, An education student, Steve will spend the summer visiting hospitality industry bers in the Ki Boundary Visitors’ Association region to explain the Good Show program and provide necessary display materials. Steve will work out of the KBA’s Nelson office and can be reached at 354-4831 for more information. For those unfamiliar with the Good Show program, it is igned in the Castlegar and District Hos- pital Society will hold its annual meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow (Thursday) in the + Does your friend, relative or neighbor have a yard that’s worth seeing? Then enter the yard in the Castle- gar Chamber of Comfner¢e's Yard Beautification Contest! . Simply contact the cham- ber office or Helen's Flowers. Winners will be announces during SunFest ‘82, July 17-25. . Another new contest this year is the Canoe Rally d by Jensenex Can- hospitality industry. When a visitor or customer is particularly pleased with someone's service, he or. she can nominate that person for a Good Show award. FILED UNDER “BELIEVE IT OR NOT . . . Street Talk received notice this week from the post office that since it was turned into a Crown corporation last October, service has actually gotten better. “National First.class mail for April showed on-time delivery of 88 per cent compared with a figure of about 80 per cent for the Brevious year,” the post office tells us. And all because it's a Crown corporation now — or so they would have us believe. WE KNOW THE city would love to. see the provincial forestry service move from its longtime location next to the RCMP detachment out to the new. industrial park. In fact, Mayor Audrey Moore, Rossland-Trail MLA Chris D'Arcy and Kootenay MLA Terry Segarty all sat down to discuss just that after the opening of the industrial park earlier this year. The move would mean the city would have another much-needed resident in its industrial park — where prospective tenants haven't been beating the doors down to get in. At the same time the move would free up valuable land right on Columbia Ave. But what would replace the forestry service? A good bet — sometime down the road — could be a new municipal hall, or some other sort of government building. Anyone have any other ideas? WE'RE SORRY TO SEE IT, but another Castlegar business is closing its doors. Castlegar Toy Village at 1436 Columbia Ave. is in the midst of a closing out sale. Its departure will mean two vacant storefronts in the The name Dewdney is famous in B.C, as a result of the Deweney Trail engi db: which y {inked the Lower Mainland with the Kootenays in the 1, Al-x-al and The Jean Team next door folded up oe and Kayak sales. It goes July 25 at 12:30 p.m, at Pass Creek Park. The rally will feature four events: e The Hand Paddle Race: two persons to each canoe who use hands to paddle to a marker and return to finish. e The Full Water Canoe Race: one or two persons to each canoe which in turn is full of water. The canoeists must paddle to a marker and return to the finish line. e In and Out Contest: two persons to each canoe who paddle to a marker. Cano- eists then jump into the water, climb back into the canoe and paddle back to the finish line. * Teresa Berg was named Candy Striper of the year and presented with a Candy Striper doll at an Awards shop last month. _/ Plans no major changes OTTAWA (CP) — No N E E major changes are planned for the government's basic that crisp, refreshing 3Almt NCE YOU'VE HAD ATASTE of. the Kootenays, nothing else really compares. It’s the same with our beer. Kokanee Glacier Pilsener. Once you've tried taste, no other beer will do. Crack a Kokanee. It’s brewed for you. BEER-BIERE Stay ADE spIUMBIA BREWING COMPANY TO CRESTON ac, unngy economic policies, Finance Minister Allan MacEachen A 45-year-old Krestova woman Monday was re- manded to June 15 for sen~ tencing after pleading guilty home over the weekend. Elaine Koftinoff, a member of the Sons of Freedom sect, indicated in Nelson provincial court that she committed the arson because she wanted to join other Freedomite wom- en presently serving jail ma: eerie Ry t “4 said Tuesday, stressing that mons for the first time since high wage di ds are to blame for some current econ- omic difficulties. “ MacEachen, in the Com- Woman seeks jail sentence terms at the Lower Mainland Regional Correctional Centre (Oakalla). RCMP say the fire was to arson at a Crescent Valley; started ata nearby home and reported to police around 10. a.m, Saturday. F The building destroyed in the incident was owned by Krestova resident | Mick Kootnikoff and. occupied by Nick Lebedoff. There were no injuries reported. For Attention Men & Boys! D Bonnett’ suet vce: 233 Columbia ‘All Seasons t's 365-6761 Remember 10% OFF for Cash a econ- omic summit in France, said the government will continue polices aimed at fighting in- flation. But he repeated a promise to bring in an updated ec- onomic review with an ac- companying financial state- ment outlining any fiscal measures required. MacEachen said the fight against inflation cannot be won unless wage and other income’expectations are low- ered. Opposition spokesmen in- sisted there should be action now on rising unemployment, inflation, high interest rates and a weak dollar. New Democrat Leader Ed Broadbent wanted the minis- ter to present policy ideas for debate next week and Pro- gressive Conservative Lead- er Joe Clark asked for a new budget or economic state- ment within at least six weeks . The finance minister, who insisted before the Versailles conference that little could be done about the Canadian economy unless U.S. interest rates came down and that country’s deficit was re- duced, said there are mea- sures that can be taken here. Night held June 3. This was reported at the South Slocan Hospital Auxil- iary's June meeting held at’ the WKPL Plant No. 3 Hall. Auxiliary members attend- ing the banquet were Mary. Axworthy, Sadie Hammond, Vera Dudlyke and Betty McRae with Hammond giv- ing out the awards for 100 hour service. Diane Strader, who will no longer have her job due. to government cutbacks, was presented with a gift from the Candy Stripers in which emotions were high and dry eyes not seen. Strader stated the Candy Stripers have volunteered 2,700 hours from September *B1 to May ‘82 and thanked Hospital Society meeting Thursday community complex. . . The: meeting will include hospitah board; elections and annual reports, Canoe rally added to SunFest ‘82 e The Sabotage Race: three people to a team — two paddles and one person from an opposing team. Persons fot paddling bale water into cance while paddlers race to finish before the cance fills with water. Deadline date for SunFest *g2 event forms is Friday, June 11, Another organi- zational meeting is set for to- morrow (Thursday) at 7 p.m. in the Hi-Arrow Motor Hotel. More petty theft Continuation of petty theft from local residences have prompted the RCMP to again aak everyone to secure their belongings. | > The latest items reported missing are four bikes, one lawnmower, a gas tank a hose from a boat and a battery from a truck. South Slocan Top Candy Striper the auxiliary whose com- bined efforts resulted in $22,000 to the Kootenay Lake District Hospital. The 16 members, which in- sluded_a_new__enrollment, ‘were told the treasurer's re- port “is looking better all ‘the time.” The Baby Case rea- lized over $180 for the month of May and a successful gar- age sale was held. Any members who wanted to take part in summer proj- ects to raise money on their own for the auxiliary: were asked to contact the trea- surer for the initial money. Members agreed year’s Christmas raffle will be for two food hampers, one with a turkey and one with a ham. ‘The auxiliary now recesses for the summer and will re- sume in September. Bodies recovered oh mountain peak FORTALEZA, BRAZIL {AP) — Dense forest ham- pered rescue workers trying to recover the bodies’ of 137 people killed in the crash of a Brazilian airliner on a moun- tain peak in northeast Brazil. The Boeing 727, owned by VASP, a domestic airliner, was carrying 128 passengers atid nine crew members when it crashed Tuesday morning 50 kilometres from Fortaleza. It hit a mountain peak in the remote Pacatuba area while on a flight ‘from Sao Paulo to Rio de Janeiro and Fortaleza. . PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 3 TO JUNE 15 (Saale! There were no survivors, It was the second crash of a VSP jetliner in two weeks. On May 24, a Boeing 737 carrying 112 passengers eracked up while landing in ALL NURSERY’ STOCK -BEDDING PLANTS. weal OP has PEAT MOSS " HYDRATED LIME Complete Landscaping Service Commercial, Residential Free Estimates bad weather in Brasilia, the Brazilian capital, killing two people and injuring 15. Helicopters were unable to land Tuesday in the heavily wooded area on the moun- tainside where pieces of the plane and badly mutilated bodies were strewn about. They hovered as bodies were loaded. Firefighters planned to cut a clearing today for air force helicopters. The force of the impact left few pieces of the plane larger - than one metre across, peo- ple at the scene said Iden- tification of the bodies is ex- pected to be untisually diffi- cult because of this. VASP director Jose Rod- rigues da Silva said heavy rain and fog may have con- tributed to the accident, The Brazilian Air Ministry said it will hold a 30-day inquiry into the cause of the accident, The plane last contacted the control tower in For- taleza $8 minutes before it was scheduled to land. The plane was at an al- titude of 27,500 feet and was authorized to descent to 4,500 feet, HOMEGOODS _ FURNITURE WAREHOUSE Tues. - Sat., 9:30 - 5:30 China Creek “Drive a Little to Save alot" Great Gifts That Say To Them... Graduation Fri., June 18 Father’s Day Sun., June 20 CS AE karerens shen BS oN ek .__ REMEMBER FATHER’S DAY Congratulations And I Love You! 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