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E ,,/SYNVA,, UI $940] Ou) WO ue ej118q OU) woul Robe fir yeu west Soak € Brood eamoueh song oue lua) cio pees OT YI OPNIT., Haw SIAON GD arqnpipay 110349 4O ANI yunos.y Buinbays e010) 8} J01¥e enieindwor Blee-92e yw uDI0|5 2C26-59E IPBoy0> pod y.njosouNg auLy NOINND 110324) sBuians snBajysp5 ‘oe 7 Guniyeyd 918 pjrom oul Ie. ; tno Ulzv-soe sito aavutvep 0} mui SPY pelj}ss0/5 spuesd “ery sueIyOR) £09 SMANGRAII8v0 "wou Ht} skpauines 40 Uosecieer anu cum epuoia cutee yo sotid ,poo}ree), © Si nomen oy soubue im vores “ogheid @° amy oun ‘ofora UM sexo de1uteep 6, aT shoulny eM 10 @B48I0A05 woubod aul © BNTUHOR SHON OEY GB 209 pus iveyg inueoe dn ys ‘Guysn use sey ouM iy veo, Outedquew w Iey) senoonip eeaizeiep eUL 4 ue Pr are kuru Aa, ‘Sewd edunee 0} eoumy © y vocinguenis Robert Sanderson... one of the earliest lake captains. “Yes, I remember Captain Sanderson,” said Gilbert Fowler. “He was a tall, severe-looking old man with a gray beard, and I was ‘scared of him." Gilbert had been kind enough to call and tell me of'some of the places and people he remembered in the early days on the Arrow Lake and had mentioned one of the earliest lake captains, Robert Sanderson. “I was just a kid when my father took our boat for repair to the machine shop which the captain had built on the hull of the old 8.8. Kootenay. While the work was proceeding, I had obtained permission to use his rowboat, but while rowing about, I had the misfortune to break an oarlock. “Now I was really scared, but went nonetheless, in fear and trembling, to report the damage. When I had told my tale, he smiled, much to my surprise, and said, ‘You have dene the right thing in telling me — we'll say no more about’ t coptitn Robert Sanderson was one of those people who, almost absent-mindedly, leave their mark on ‘a. country's history. ious and ic, he had been a farm boy, railway and bridge pullders Mississippi riverboat mate and had built and operated some of the earliest freight boats in the Kootenays; fought Indians for the right-of-way; discovered and opened the first spa at Halcyon Hot Springs; organized an early shipping company on Arrow Lake; built the! first lime kiln in the area and ‘invented a radically new steam engine. “My father,” said Marion Sanderson ‘Sutherland, “ never really finished anything — once he had got some project well started and working, he got restless and he would leave it ,and go to something new and challénging.” If I ‘recall correctly, Leonardo da: Vinci had the same problem, but is not thought the less for it. Robert Sanderson was born in Kingston, Ont. in 1849 and came from historic pioneer stock. His father, Nathan Sanderson, was a Scot who, as a youngster, had moved to Ireland with his family in the early 1800's but when they found religious and political feelings running high there even at that early date, had moved to Ontario and settled’ as farmers. Work related. cancer on rise" WINNIPEG (CP) — The: - He. said ‘although it. is incidence of cancer will in- known that more. non-sm (0 xUOMIBN ALD 19 oA eh Od -puaqeny $008 eID 910285 *hA8] -vog UsHa (900H “9961) PueuDTy UePewoo =s}EeND vO. Ad PLL IO 08ND. HER . HLA LHOIN BLY © : “wot seyeg seonpord “e1 thos JOP] PET aN FLEW v4 “Sis y suotunqueeig Ast enmeya Wien meysoI UY “ciel «tos MoD. me * ANDPINEVLEEBING @ 06:9 Aor . BMH “puspiiR® ey pus AUaLIMD IM WeOMIEG C0049 03 {) “eon weauIA aEeRD AgvaUaA0 @B : “pay Ayoay aysoy ° fs seresee “T1HOM Wad ( a ) ts ‘Thursday, April 15 through to Wednesday, April 21, 1982 oonday wa weanesaey ; MORNING 3 ie a g sainig an tome rreeded i Ble forthe unit (ran 2) Roger Eber Siskel review * achool re then = ‘REALTY WORLD. **?7 Castle Realty Ltd. a cover it all ma) Ja o, MAKING THE GRADE A young. ~ pe ATS Te : ome Krista Erickson (right) Quest stars as a student who TESTIMONY ity, Jacob's 1800 retuin ‘Auschwitz where she Out history an thay as imprisoned. Is ferwoven with docum ‘“000-mia tong tres. from the Mediterranean, (Pat he ‘a Latka'e spt personatiien Guest: Jim Bymes. ; rompl Eleine and Alex to .7:30@9 TIC TACOOUGH ake hin oa aychia- tista ttc. ‘The detectives of the 12th TOO CLOSE FOR discover the sta- 182. tlon house tuned upside fe chided by hla evtional taations of two Henry tarnily saot ‘a1 going after a ‘Benerations before him, down by an van Grae dal who leaves a maseage The stodenta Blan 9 bene: that he's out.to get Bar- fil ony. opm. Hawall’s triathalon, an in oe ‘vente; schoolchildren Al that litera ts Mort's who sre gold when the Orken OAs how to QIGARNEY MLLER) @ STARS ON KE SGuente: Sandy Lens, Etyn Tia and Banan Byers, “toa dettcott and make metal trom ied 10 jump off @ Banalecge Colt and Howie puraue an oo pation: 5 arsonist to a strange lown BKK ca y the. fupitive's Great: Sonn Cleves. (Part BRET MAVERICK the Yader ‘at's onl, the leader of a utopl SOURNAL BARNEY MRLER ow has fleeced — 30:9088 Haris becomes outraged Soestentet anrers orto when he. Is fired thelr land bite a snag. MACHER / LEHRER frlaked and (Pani 2) two. zealous uniformed belleve REALTY. WORLD. 532% Castle Realty Ltd. Meilfeynar ital ‘Second Time Around” An graaced couple, "both itempt to come to terme with ther oun axpectations and hesite- tions about @ shared then déesn's saturn {0 plk up tha a. 8 Edge” @ AD MOOH RISING land, Anthor ‘TV joumaliat Stephen Tal- ma ooks at the disturbing 12208 @ Movie Hk “Trackdown” ( Drama) Jamon Mitchum 12:90 LATE nice wir 200 {he vctine ot sack blgo toa ‘Beth with: her pla me plana to 12 Dead Dore Di Dis esnlaeds (lore advent oe 8:30) BAKER'S DOZEN a8) MOVE fey va * CasNews Printing Dreyfuss fala victin to an jth gated by ateling sudeat =ACTS OF | ‘On hla way home’ from , Shannon's sca se6s the aftermath of & fa which a police: For * tovitations Any Printing! CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia, 65-7266 iver’ ter, Drama Ray Mit crease dramatically in the next three to four decades, an ri A ers are getting cancer, it’ is not known how many of the smokers health authority predicts. “Cancer is today the only major killer disease whose rate continues on the in- crease,” said Dr. Samuel Ep- stein, a University of Iinois who die of lung cancer have actually died of occupational © cancers un-related, to their smoking. ‘ ". Epstein said workers who” smoke should not''be auto- = Jy _. disqualified _ for and workers’ ion when “Whatever we see in can- cer rates today is nothing compared with what we're going to see 20 to 80 years from now.” He predicted much of the. cancer increase will be re- lated to the workplace. The professor said in the past 40 years, North Amer- ican industries have in- creased their use of chemi- cals 400 times and the more chemicals used, the higher the cancer rate will be. Epstein said that between 1969 and 1977, the rate of diagnosed cancers increased by one to two per cent a year. He added one-quarter of all | Americans now face the prospect of having cancer during their lives, adding + that one-fifth of all Ameri- cans will likely die from it. 100,000 A YEAR Epstein said although to- bacco is a serious health threat, it is an exaggerated one. He said 100,000 Ameri- cans annually die of lung can- cer but 20,000 of these are non-smokers, lung cancer_is diagnosed. _ He cited the case of an” American worker who died of lung cancer two years ago. Occupational health author- Young William grew up, becamea soldier. and was a posted at Kingston, then the British military re he CASTLEGAR NEWS, April 14,1982 B7 JOHN CHARTERS’ Reflections & Recollections fled religious persecution in Holland and settled in survived .a smallpox epidemic ‘and ‘lived to marry ‘Sara Powley, a descondent ofa group of Dutch colonists, who had ities eventually proved there , : were metal" particles in: the’, . worker's lung tissue and the . death was: due’ to working rather than smoking. : PUBLISHER * The Castlegar ise is published by.Costle News Ltd. Mall. subscrintion fate to the CASTLEGAR NEWS Is $20 pe year ($28. In communities where the Post, ter Carri naeels “the ‘orl on newsstands is 35¢ for each The price delivered na sartier:: for ‘bot jonas’ ts. only 50¢ a week (collected monthly). Second. ~. 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