-, Iwas ina fitting room the other day trying to decide on my ‘Annual dress, The salesperson zipped me up the back (she has signed an agreement never to publish) and commanded, “Now turn around.” AsI did, something weird appeared between the hemline and the torso, The skirt flapped open and out camfe a thing that looked like an urn, “What's that?" I gasped, “It's your leg,” she said dryly. “Both of them?" I asked. “One,” she said softly, If it isn't one part of my body that is being exploited by news 3 ‘fashions, it's another. Took me three months to get my arms ready “© for short sleeves, 'd lie flat on my back, put on a record of Lawrence Welk playing “Winchester Cathedral” and cross my arms vigorously. It hadn't occurred to me that while I was reducing my upper arms, my knees were growing together, Texplained to the salesperson that those of us who carried our babies low had this problem. She said dresses this year all had the disco influence with slits and slashes and that I had better get my knees in shape for them. “The easiest way,” she said, “Is the old doorknob exercise where you balance yourself on a doorknob, squat down to the floor and pull yourself up again 10 times.” ot Its going to be wonderful walking across a room without making a noise like you're being followed. It’s going to be wonderful ‘running with the dog and not _ Sounding like a gym shoe with a loose sole, To be able to cross your legs when all about you have prickly heat and can only make attempts at the knee and have to settle for the ankle, The joy of slipping off your pantyhose and not having the sensation that the dyke just broke. The exhilaration of standing up and having your knees join you instead of just sitting there. To wear boots and not have your legs look like two nuclear bombs. It's going to be wonderful when I can pull myself up by this doorknob and do nine more of these knee bends, On second thought, maybe someone will do me a favor, open the door, and knock me unconscious, | fh Job File Details of these and other A Live-in Housekeeper is job opportunities are available required in the Nelson area. att Salary is wage plus room and Nelson Canada Employment ard, Centre, s he) he 514 Vernon St. Trail Canada Employment Phone 352-3155. s © 4 An experienced Tire Re- pair Person is wanted in + Nelson. Salary is depending on experience. Large employer in Trail has openings for 3rd class oe Stationary Steam Engineer. An experienced Chainman Present-wage rate under nego- ‘swith technical school back- tiation. (Order nbr. 272.) + ‘ground is required. * _ 8 * a A Certified Instrument Re- pairer is required in Trail. Wages $9.60/hr. (Order nbr. Anexperienced Parts Per- 359.) SES Det son is wanted. Salary is depend- Dental office in ‘Trail re- Say Ce pete te ‘quires a B.C. certified Dental Waiters/Waitressesarere- Hygienist on a part-time basis. quired for full and part-time Wage $84/day. (Order nbr. 90.) work. i. - *. se * 98 «8 An Occupational Therapist is needed. Salary is HSA rate. . 6 Large hospital in the West. . A journeyman Motor Me- Kootenays has openings for a :', chanie with experience in gene- Head Nurse for its operating ‘ val maintenance and repair of a room. Salary. $15,000 - $17,000 “variety of equipment, ineluding per year. diesel, is required in the + * eeped . Castlegar area. a Head Psychiatric Nurse is A qualified Hairdresser is Met fe teat be wanted for pact time work. must be fully experienced with 5 A journeyman Heavy Duty supervisor capability. (Order * “Mechanic with Caterpillar ex- "br. 164.) ‘perience is needed in the Harrop area. _ Test to Detect Marijuana *. Now Available - +. A test that can detect , marijuana in the bloodstream is + now being offered for use to law “-'enforcement agencies in Illi- ." nois, a state health department official said.’ 2 The test, which detects the _ Presence of marijuana's active _c chemical, was developed at the :"IMinois Department of Public | Wateh this * Health toxicology lab in Chi- - CAgO. Dr. John Spikes, chief toxi- 2 *cologist for the department, “said it will enable police and coroners to determine whether , & Person was under the in- * {fluence of marijuana at the time the blood sample was taken. Join us this week as Bouillion Soup entertain all week. “Best Entertainment In The West Kootenays”’ fT ADORN HAIRSPRAY Regular or hard to hold, 400 ml. each: SOFT & DRI ANTI- PERSPIRANT All types. 250 ml, Your Choice, each: ULTRA BRITE TOOTHPASTE 150 ml. each: is Pandamaqyessemee “Siitouite eal Repacemest & Rehan Progeamine - WOOLCO ™ SHAMPOO OR ~NEW! SILHOUETTE * Meal replacement & reducing programme. Chocolate flavour. 225 g. each: $327 TAME CREME RINSE 450 ml. each: Your Choice: BUBBLE BATH LoTi 1.5 litre jug. Your choice, each: 32% more. each: SOFT & ‘DRI ANTI-PER- SPIRANT ROLL-ON 50 ml plus BONUS OF 50% more. “ § 1 19 LOTION 450 ml, each; . NEW! JOHNSON'S REACH ‘ TOOTHBRUSH Soft or medium bristle. 2.5179: VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE 500 ml plus BONUS of BONNE BELL 10-0-6 $495 . anon. al COMFORT INSOLES “miracle activated charcoal destroys-— foot odor, absorbs Serspiration | Ie H I H | i i J/MONTH RELIEF GUARANTEEO IMPORTANT: MANY UNADVERTISED GILLETTE FOAMY SHAVE | CREAM * 400 mil. each: ENO SPARKLING ANTACID Regulor or lemon flavour. 198 g. Your Choice. each: $37 pe oe ~anmnee periaiy 2ND DEBUT WITH CEF1200 120 ml, each: Legist ative ‘iT partiamant Bldgs. victoria, B VaVv. 1X4 G Eisen Library. + 50h vice : Published Bright and Early Every Thursday Morning at “The Crossroads of ine Kootenays” 80 Cents CASTLEGAR, : BRITISH COLUMBIA? THURSDAY, ‘APRIL 26, 1979' Var 82, No. 1 By RYON GUEDES CASNEWS EDITOR As Don Watson and Roy eure tell Ny Canadian in tl Cellulose’s' only 1 governing: the terms of eat te tle-! in with the ‘company's 's' Lower Arrow Lake Pipeline are honorable ones. In a récent interview with ¢ ; CanCel’s president, and. Murphy,:the senior CanCel vice- ; e Castlegar News Watson, president who has supervised most of. the negotiations with the city over the new water supply, defended both the company's motives and its terms in the pact which in’ its d t ‘tinal form Is égar 10, gallons of soft water pers minute for 25 years, Watson, who stressed in a speech at a joint service club ‘dinner here last week that his company had no goal “other than trying to cotlld have ‘misinterpreted _ do the right thing” in the he sereomient agreed that local residenta | E CanCel's motives, *Ifitis—and ‘tw wouldn't surprise me — it's our fault,” not the tale of the: people who misinterpreted it,” the CanCel president . “Becalise: ‘we haven't had an opportunity to really lay it out.” a : \. INHERITED PROBLEM ‘Tracing his own invelvemsut in Cistlegat’s ‘3 ‘struggle for a nave ief water supply, Watso} officer in March 1918, 8 said he inherited the Haein “shortly after T came aboard.” “Roy (Murphy) mentioned to me that he was going over to talk to the people of Castlegar about the water situation,” he hoe - Three Days Next Year The Castlegar Sens Lions’ West Kootenay Trade Fair wil offer an extra day ‘of attractions in ie, a club spokesman zannounced yesterday: Frank Stasila, Lions’ chair- - * Z Sta sald club mae bers ‘started: idiscussion at~ their. . the * ttractions from noon to 10 nae eran Sai = ‘alreidy been. booked, he said, sand although ‘about 89 spaces were available this year the club is planning to make more ~- “available in 1980, He said attendance at this * year’s trade fair surpassed the. 1978 show, although he de- year's estimated attendance ‘of i 15,000, concern to. the club this year was crowd control, Stasila said, * ‘He said the Lisa pay wih e problem: Pen a ence Y tempt to avoid bottlenecks. by, attracting ‘them to otter’ in the: complex: with new pet vities. +": “An old-time fiddling com- ‘petition running for the’ dura- * tion of the 1980 fair is among the ‘new activities under con- sideration,” he said. ° ~ Drown Becomes Third Despite : insufficient sup- ‘port‘at his nomination meeting last week, local radio newsman Dale Drown filed nomination papers, Monday as the Pro- gtessive Conservative candi- date ‘for Rossland-Trail in the May .10 provincial election.‘ Contacted this week Drown — who attracted only eight out’ of the quorum of 10 party members he needed for the nomination last. Thursday = told-the Castlegar’ News he was appointed to represent the - PCs by B.C. Tory leader Vic “Stephens in Vancouver Sunday and had compiled more than the “60 Rossland-Trail voters’ sig-' natures he required to qualify 33.8 candidate. He: said his success in gathering the 50 signatures eonvinced him that a con- ‘siderable number of voters in the riding were reluctant to cast their votes either for New Democrat Chris D'Arcy, the incumbent. MLA, and Social Credit, challenger Phil Brooks. “There's no. doubt in my. mind that those 60 represent a ~_.Rossland-Trail: Hopeful _ A plas of. particular *. *L asked how long it had been a problem and he explained the situation to me. I'd been in Castlegar lots and lots of times, but how could I appreciate the water problems checking into a hotel?” ° News coverage of the water problems, coinciding with ‘meetings between the city and CanCel, “was corroborated by the stories; Roy was telling me.” He asked Murphy to di “T'm not suggesting he wasn't working hard at {t and I'm not being critical‘of my predecessor,” he sald” “But I don't think my predecessor had an appreciation of the problem here.” “I was afflicted with the problem,” he continued. “That béing the case, Roy had a new set of rules to work with.” after “beyond any reasonable doubt" the. pipeline’s water capacity, present’consumption of the mill and the company’s requirements in the event it doubled the size of the local pulp operation. “Murphy's findings indicated the company was “pump-limited «before we were pipeline-limited,” he sald “It seemed to me that we had water capacity there,” the CanCel presiient said. “Why couldn't we help the municipality to develop some kind of a series of negotiations with senior governments to get the funds to tie into that (intake) by the mill and bring water to the city? Roy had all the drawings ana showed them tome and ‘it appeared some modification of the over-simplistic approach I -was taking would have been appropriate.” NEW SET OF RULES The real turning point, according to Watson, was ie he gave Murphy anew “set of rules" — replacing those laid out by -Ron Gross, the previous CanCel Bresient: —‘under ‘which’ to; operate jn the affair. in Rossland-Trail who are dis-- satisfied with the right and the left,” the Tory candidate said. “They want that more moder- | ate party.” i Asked why he decided to run after his nomination meet- ing at the Portuguese Society . Hall failed to draw a quorum, he said “a great wrong” would be done to voters in the riding if a third name did not go on the ballot sheet May 10, Speaking informally at last week's nomination meeting, Drown said the ; incumbent MLA had done little for the More on Page Al0 Bylaws “Don't Allow’ Highrise - Existing’ city height re- strictions do not allow for con- struction of a proposed 16- hoto,' divers approach the now artis raved vehicle in ein daach of the last "en i Higher Density N leeded Downtown — Calderbank Ald, Albert Calderbank told the Castlegar News coun- storey ffice-shop- ping Mompler at the foot of Sherbiko Hill, city council's planning committee chairman said Tuesday. cil’s ‘approval of Scott Project D 2.5- the height of buildings to three stories. . “There's no provision for Itiest ings,” Cal- to-$3:million highrise, “still at the discussion stage,” would require a specific development Permit or modification limiting derbank said, “We can, go up to three and that's it. It’s a very limited height.” large segment of the population . Mayor's Tie-Breakin iting company counsel Roger Duncan, “we were all caught up in the same’ determination that we were going to find water for the people of Castlegar.” The only precautions taken nt the compe, the ;CanCel was to pr from overcommitment of thes press at the expenso of the local pulp operation's capacity. for growth, he said, “The principle, really, of the mill receiving priority was accepted by the. city and the company right off the bat,” said Murphy, who along with Duncan laid down the basic terms of the tie-in agreement in a meeting with Mayor Audrey Moore and other “, council members at'a Union of B.C. Municipalities conference in “Penticton several months ago. “There was no question about that. It was. question of saying * under the terms of our Present operation and potential expansion what our needs are and relating that to the capacity of the : CANCEL DONWATSON bac misreading of motives ‘wouldn't surpie me A nine-per-cent annual wage increase and intro- duction of a dental plan highlight a recently-ratified two-year , settlement be- tween the City of Castlegar and its outside workers, according to city administra. tor Bill Krug. Although Clarence. La- combe'— who as a specially- appointed administrator re- presented spout 20 Canadian Still-Unsigned Contract Gives City Workers 9% Annual Hike members in’ negotiations with the city — has yet to sign the agreement both the union local and city council © have voted to ratify it, Krug told the Castlegar News. The city and the local will pay equal shares in the cost of the new dental:plan . . this year, the city, adminis. trator said, and the city will assume 80 per cent of the . 1 — is signed it will repte-. ‘first contract settlement as“ ‘sent the outside. workers’: CUPE Local 2262. Its pre- vious designation, Local 848, was “an old hangover” from the days when a single local represented employées of six area municipalities, said, and the new designa- tion would not tle them to ipalities. "An Ottawa-based engineer- ing firm's, takeover of the Castlegar Airport function from the city is now complete, a senior official of the firm an- nounced this week. -A press release issued-by Ken Simpson, vice-president of Adga Systems — which has supplied manpower under an interim agreement for opera- tion of the airport since April 1 while awaiting federal cabinet confirmation of its proposed management of the airport over three years for $801,100 — indicated the firm has operated. the airport under the long-term contract with the federal trans- /MirrorFotos by Lois Hugh port ministry since Sunday: Contacted Tuesday in Van- couver, a senior transport ‘ministry . official involved *in . auditing procedures before the city's March 31 the, loan‘ of equipaient to the tractor.” ‘ We had a little trouble finding enough -people jin Ot- tawa tosign an order-in-council : from the airport operation con- firmed that the final obstacle to the contract with Adga had been resdlved. James Westover, manager of airport operations in. the ministry's Pacific’ region, told the Castlegar News the pro- posed three-year contract had been approved in time for the changeover “but there was an order-in-counell required for said." “There just wasn't time to allow Adga to get their bonding and their. insurance : arfange- ments in place and also'to hire their employees 20 we went into a temporary arrangement until they could arrange that, and that took until April 22.” He said the transition from the interim agreement to the long-term contract was smooth. “The big Moreca Page AiO was of School District No. 9 Hearing Slated May 10- 11 in Castlegar West Koot schools for six _ School District No. 9 = its non teaching employees will be conducted in Castlegar instead of Vancouver, local trustees learned Monday night. District secretary-treasur- er John Dascher said the May 10 to 11 hearing — part of a series of proceedings conducted by provincial government arbi- The planning chairmansaid trator Noel Hall to resolve a his committee was in the pro- contract dispute which resulted cess of altering the building in a atrike-lockout deadlock height bylaws to increase the paralyzing Sells College and density of Castlegar's down- town core and improve the =) A ly city's tax base. weeks late last year — will be’ held here at thé request of local Canadian Union of Publie-Em- ployees” members concerned about the expense of sending Tepresentatives to Vancouver .to present their case. Dascher said trustees are entitled to attend the hearings, which will be closed to the public. Responding to reports early this month that Hall had requested that the four. dis- © tricts be represented by trust- ees as well as by’B.C. School Trustees Association negotia- tors in the hearings, the sec- retary-treasurer said Hall made no / official request of that -nature to the District No. 9 ‘board. : Asked about plans for the attendance of local trustees oy the ane beaten “We don't want any build- ings put in if they're at storey,” he said. “I personally BIG SALE SPECIALS ALSO AVAILABLE “OUR IN-STORE § SPECIALS EVERY WEEK _ Prices in Effect through April 21st This Week... Audio Five Piece Band From Vancouver BEVITS SEA \p ORG RAE? Downstairs at the Marlane Hotel! Open tuesday thru Saturday 9:00 p.m, till 2;00. a.m. favor better use. of our land. Going to multi-storey use would be better use of it.” EXPOSITION Bl4 Everything from ‘rabbits to robots at the third annual West Kootenoy Trade Fair. EXPANSION ct the people who bring you She Castlegar News. set their sights for the future. JOHNSON'S ODOR-EATERS. - Regular, brown leather or super tuff Your choice, exch: $] 29 ~WATCH-FO Win ..slon Tuesday evening when Mayor Merle Hanson broke DEPARTMENT STORES Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 6 00 p.m., +» Friday 9:30 a.m, to 9:00 p.m. a tle ‘to cast the deciding Wednesday is Ladies’ Night : vote. : (Free Admission) = 2 . RAEN ‘Council Backing Salmo Bypaie. highway now under ‘ con- struction, MacNeill pointed . out a building pale had already been issued after council gave the applicant the assurance that it was located on the then proposed -highway. Calderbank said the city has “little land left" in the downtown area and must en- sure the remaining land is used “to the best possible advan- tage.” quenées, received ‘council's full support as well as ap- plause from several obser- vers attending the meeting. “In favor were Ald. GE. ’ MacNeill and, Ald. ai Any action to have thie — Pictin, while: Ald. Ran “cation. ofa now under-. Bakkenand Ald, Mel Eberts "construction highway ’con- 4 4 recorded thele negative vote. nection for Highway 3 and A’ further Gea to “Highway 6 changed will not 4 coals the support of Salmo send a telegram immediately y Village council. That was council's ‘deci. By LOIS HUGHES: MANAGING EDITOR - | During the discussion - . there; nts from We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities \eré, were comme: f “What we're saying is that ge Page i 3 jn certain specific areas we are pissed Ads Real i 1 council _mem-, going to insist they go no less state and Automotive. . . panera en than two stories,” he explained, Pages A10-B3-B9-B10- bers suggested any route “There's never been anything z B11-B12-B13 changes could result in legal that stipulates in any specific Community Closeup. . . pe . ion agains area of town whether it should en att gel be two stories or three stories.” WANETA PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE he 8:1 vi that purpose and it was now HWY. 3 TRAIL tet to take a stand. Prior to council passing its motion to not reroute the on the highway until a a study” can be made on the social ‘and environmental. conse-