~ Cane October 14, 1967 CASH BINGO ir Areria Complex. 60% ROBSON RIVER OTTERS Saturday, October 17 at Coat ets. E.B. 6:00 p.m. Regular 7:00 2/68) payouts. No advance tick p.m. Admission $9.00. TTLE ORIVE Robson Scouts, Cubs and Beavers, “saturday October 17, 9:00 a.m. - noon. FALL YEA AND BAKE SAL Sponsored by Home Guild, Saturday, October 17, 00 oo 9:00 p.m. Castlegar Legion Hall. Welcome (one, Gents Too 2/8) ts hodting a pottee meeting to introduce Parents Helping hie way h support smoaing rents of special needs children. The imeeting will be held on Friday, October 16. 1987 at 9:30 a.m. at Castlegar United Church, 2224 - 6th venus, Castlegar, B.C. For mare information, please call Mary Davie 6 365-2609, 2/8) GARAGE 5. Proceeds to it oe Boy Saturday, October 17, 10.m. - 4 p.m. at Scout allo on: ead Street (just one block peat Kinemen Perk) RUMMAGE SALE Costlegar ond District Hospital Auxiliary Fol] Rummage held in the Kinnaird Hall on Friday, October 16, oer "5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. and Saturday, October 17. 1987' 10:00 a.m: noon. For rummage pick-up please phone: 365- 2737, 368 '3852, 965-8902 Coming organizations ma $2575 and additional words ore 15¢ each. Boldtaced wor ds (which must be used for headings) count as two words There is no extra charge for @ second insertion while the jon is percent ond the consecutive, insertion hat price. Minimum charge is $3.75 (whether od-is tor one, two or three filmes), Deadlines are'S pm. Thursdays tor Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's paper Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board NOTICE OF FOUNDING CONVENTION ke New D: FREDERICTON (QP) — Premier Richard Hatfield's 17-year-old government was swept from office Tuesday b/s Liberal tide that was elk See be 3% 2 Conservatives 7 638 New Democrats i... +5. ssh se dere O 1 Ld *Hiser” 90 1978 by took of 35 sey e oue of Unt ning sean reinee Ie Canadian history. Hatfield's past finally aught: up.jrith him “T'm very sorry as leader of the party and I accept full reepocetiltiy fpr she algnifioans eats « ~ but I'm sure the people of this provines wanted change and they. have change,” Hatfield said, Sieiting here wah back CO peers, The Liberal steamroller that flattened the presence in New Brunswick up 60 per cout of the popaler vote, the Conservittyes 20 per cent and the NDP 11. There's no elected opposition left in New “I think. we're going to have to be very creative and very disciplined,” a euphoric McKenna told his hometown supporters in Chatham. “We're going to have to self-dis- cipline ourselves and I intend to be very tough on that.” NDP leader George Little predicted his party will be the real opposition because it's used to working outside the legislature. PICKS UP PIECES 4 “Conservatives aren't used to being in opposition, they're not used to being decimated. They'll be the next several years trying to pick up the pieces.” The only other provincial sweep on Canadian record | books occurred in 1936 in Prince Edward Island when the Liberals captured all 30 seats in the legislature. Hatfield, currently Canada’s longest-serving premier, was soundly defeated in Carleton Centre by Liberal Allison DeLong,:a 46-year-old teacher. The premier received 1,858 votes, 934 fewer than DeLong. The province-wide Liberal victory was so decisive that only one riding was won by fewer than 100 votes. In Restigouche West, the Liberals won by only 25 votes. FREDERICTON (CP) ~— Sunday, October 18 usp Senior's Hall, Rsersmg B.C. Dinner at 5 p.m. with guest Ray Skelly M.P. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 365-3874 ES ALS Annual Cook Book, Frank McKenna had rolled up his shirt-sleeves and was in full voice, encouraging Liberals along northern New Brunswick's Miramichi River to work, work, work until a Liberal-red tide flooded New Brunswick. “Drive ‘er, Francis,” some- one called out. The old Miramichi saying harks back to a step-dancer named Francis Taylor who Deadline for Receipt of Recipes is 12 Noon on Wed., Oct. 28 Send in the old family favorite recipe or your newest creation. Send us your recipes for: Main Dishes, Breads, Biscuits, Rolls, Meats, Soups, Stews, Casseroles, Salads, Vegetables, Pickles, Relishes, Send your typed or neatly written recipes to: or deliver to: paneanee: Include your name, address and telephone DEADLINE: 12 noon, Wed., Oct. 28 Feel welcome to submit os many recipes os you wish, Desserts, Squares, Cdbkies, Cakes, Candy Fudge, Canning, Freezing, Wine, Wild Game, Microwave, of any ‘other recipe ideas or General Cooking Hints. Cook , Castlegar News Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 Cook Book, Castlegar News 197 Columbia Avenve, Castlegar Liberals partied all night from one end of the provitice to the other. DeLong supporters tore up and down the street ir front iHartland, honking of Hatfield’s boyhood home their horns, waving McKenna posters and making obscene gestures as. ban fe ray ei inside the handsome, old mansion where he grew up, Yistehd soalecved Uh feadhy GRE Wises eked aeane curtains, During his 17 years in office, he left the field littered with dashed Liberal hopes — four Grit leadets were wiped out by him. By McKenna, combined with the diffiev}t circumstances of Hatfield's last three years in office, proved too tough. ‘The Conservative premier could not make people forget the bad publicity that dogged those years — the drug controversies, the mini-rebellion in his own party about his the ig about his large expense accounts and his globet LOSER GRACIOUS But he was gracious in defeat. “I simply want to say how much I have loved the last 17 years of serving the people of New Brunswick and that is really what fills my heart tonight,” he told reporters, his voice trembling with emotion. Hatfield telephoned McKenna and said he wants the transfer of power to take place as quickly as possible. The 39-year-old Liberal leader, a relative newcomer to politics, was generous to the defeated veteran premier. “Mr. Hatfield has, devoted 17 years of his life to this province. For that, he deserves our respect and our grati- tude.” McKenna has been Liberal leader for only two and a half years. used to dance until he dropped. But it fits well on the hard-driving lawyer who became Canada's youngest premier in Tues- day's New Brunswick elec- tion. McKenna, 39, who was christened Francis, preaches the work ethic as if it were religion, | McKenna tended to run, not walk, on to campaign stages and often broke dance steps to the rocking tune of his theme song, Walk of Life. He is only five-foot-eight but carries the stocky muscles of a lifelong athlete. Under the well- tailored suits of the smooth-talking politician are the strong arms of a farm boy who grew up hand-milking his father's cows. Always competitive, he boasts he can milk a cow ce Now For_ Frank McKenna told Liberals to work hard faster than the minister of ure. His law practice and his amichi but his roots are in the south, near Sussex, in the heart of New Brunswick's straight-living Bible Belt. The oldest of eight children ina Roman Catholic family ® B. (CP) — The collapse of Richare | world was the stuff of a Grade B movie: Diseo Dick's Last Waltz. ‘The setting was the old Hatfield homestead in Hart- land — the home where his first dreams of public life riding Hatfield represented in the legislature’ for 26 poses; the let 17 0h premier < was Oe TS, It was sad, beaten man who finally appeared on the doeaeten to ate Cae He looked all of his 66 years and pol just simiply, went tb say I have loved the last 17 years of serving the people of New Brunswick,” he said, hit voice with emotion. “I can only say that as leader of the party, I accept full responsibility for the significant defeat of our party.” The Tory loss wasn't a surprise, although the extent of the rout was stunning. TRAILS IN POLLS Hatfield and his party have been trailing in the polls for the past two years and nothing happened during the six-week campaign to change voters’ minds. But the Hatfield mystique was such that no one was quite ready to write off the old campaigner. A whole generation of New Brunswickers grew up during the 17 years Hatfield was premier. It’s hard to imagine what New Brunswick and national polities will be like without him. It probably won't be as interesting. “It's almost hard not to like Richard Hatfield despite his faults and the trip-ups of the government, of which there were many,” says Gus MacDonald who cévered Hatfield's political career from start to finish for the Moncton Times-Transcript. A heavy-set, shambling man, Hatfield can be, on the one hand, engagingly eloquent and quick and, on the other, stuttering and slow. He has dramatic mood swings: one day he's friendly and impish, stopping to talk and joke with people; the next he walks by the same people with nary a nod. Always unconventional, his lifestyle doesn’t fit his background. The child of a wealthy and privileged family, he grew up in New Brunswick's Bible Belt and was educated ina private school. He matured into a politician who pre- served a colorful individuality. He collects dolls and stuffed toys and yet he's a devoted patron of serious art and a great champion of New Brunswick crafts. , the Pr region, he was raised in the tiny village of Apohaqui — it rhymes with tomahawk — on a combined dairy and hog farm that has been owned by the McKennas for more than a century. During the campaign, Mc- Kenna played big on his farm-taught respect for hard work and thriftiness. “The values we accumulate in politics are very much a product of the values you get in growing up,” he said. SELECTED WATCHES By Seiko, Bulova, Pulsar, Citizen, Lorus SAVINGS FROM SELECTED DIAMOND RINGS WEDDING RINGS | BIRTHSTONE RINGS 20% .. 50% Tee cerned oer pr Prince tends to injured eagle VICTORIA (CP) — Prince The prince, who is pres- Philip banded an injured bald ident of the World Wildlife eagle Tuesday when he vis- Fund, wrapped a ited the British Columbia band around the leg of the 11- capital to officially rename inch-long bird, which had a the provincial museum as the hood over its beak and. was Royal British Columbia Mus- held by a conservation offi- eum. cer. The full-grown eagle, found near Nanaimo on Van- couver Island, will be re- turned to the wild soon and the band will help con- servationists keep track of it. Security was light and royal watchers were able to get within a few metres of Philip after he disembarked from the 40-metre schooner Robertson II at the Victoria waterfront. With Premier Bill Vander Zalm at his side and a handful of plainclothes RCMP officers around him, Philip led a crowd of spectators across the causeway in front of the Empress Hotel to the Parlia- ment As spectators and report- ers crowded along behind the prince and the premier, others lining the street were able to get a close look at him. One young man lounging in the sunshine in a T-shirt and jeans yelled at Philip: “How ya’ doin’, prince?” WAVED FLAGS Outside the museum, GIFTWARE, GOLD AND SILVER ° CHARMS AND CHAINS we 20%.50% | F Wibos ta bases ockor 4, 198: LIMITED QUANTITIES — WHILE pts