REG. PRICE 1.05 J SAVE .42 PER TIN LIMIT: 6 TINS PER . 48 FAMILY ORDER. . FL OZ TIN REG. PRICE 1.15 SAVE 7 LIMIT: 3 PKGSPER FAMILY ORDER -REG. PRICE 4 SAVE 17%’ PER PACKAGE SALE PRICES | ARE INEFFECT FROM TUESDAY,OCT:14 THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1980. YOUR NEW OVERWAITEA FOOD CENTRE IS IN THE: CHAH 1200 LAKESIDE DRIVE STORE HOURS: MON., TUES., WED. & SAT. 9-68 THURS. & FRI. 9-9 B.C.S VERY-OWN FOOD PEOPLE rwaitea Secon zaretoes tants! iWietords, : -norauilitt: “LAE KAMLOOPS (cP) om James Eric Price, 24, of Ashcroft, has been found not ° guilty by reason of inganity in the murder of 19-year-old Sheila Schmitz, also from ‘Ashcroft, ABC Supreme Court jury deliberated about two hours before reaching . its verdict, Price was charged" with second-degree murder in the slaying last March 24, He will be committed to the provincial Forensic Insti- tute at Port Coquitlam until a medical board rules on his mental state. Testimony during the’ four-day trial indicated Price hit the woman four times on the head with a steel pot, tied her up, then strangled her in “his mobile home. He also tried to kill himself. ROAD DEATHS OTTAWA (CP) — Be- tween 49 and 64 persons will die in ‘traffic accidents on the Thanksgiving ‘weekend, the Canada Safety Council pre- dicts. Last year 56 persons died in traffic accidents dur- ing the 78-hour weekend which began at 6 p.m. Friday and ends at midnight Monday night, The worst Thanksgiving weekend on record was 1966 when 109 persons died. f . * : TAKEOVER SET : TORONTO (CP) — Last- minute changes to a series of agreements made in con- junction with a multi-million- dollar offer for control of Kaiser Resources Ltd. have paved the way for the con- troversial takeover by Brit- ish Columbia Resources In- vestment Corp. David Helliwell, presi- the com- CASTLEGAR NEWS, October 12, 1980 AS way is: opened i jtaaell,: hikers mountain, ‘clirnber ‘and fish erman, wants a eo the Falls Lake, headwaters ‘the Coldwater, River ani Bog Sterling, a worker: Ro for better'-educational. fa- 4 cilities for native people, is concerned about the impact a dividen, four-lane highway will have on hillsides where families have:“come from the Nicola Valley to pick berries: since. beyond mem- ory. “\¢ ARETIRESHIPS "| VANCOUVER (CP) — The quality of West Coast,” 3, weather ‘reporting will de-'. & cline when two. Canadian -ships are taken out of ser- vice, says ‘Jack Matheson, Pacific regional director of the atmospheric environment service,” “A ‘few more floating buoys and the existing sat; wincialic ellite system cannot be con- park for the area to” rl sidered,an adequate replace- ment for the weather ships,” he Heer ronment Canada an- d,last week that the be ‘withdrawn in SMOKIN ‘VICTORIA (CP) — A riother. ‘of five who feels it is better for her ‘children to have “marijuana available at home Hany i get it on the ‘street:, ‘recelved an absolute } discharge on a charge of pos- session of marijuana, (Els Barly, 49, made the comment in provincial court after pleading guilty to pos- ‘session. of 28 marijuana plants. : - Defence flawyer Stoven Kelliher seid the -children initially came in contact with street drugs, prompting his - client to do a Children’s Hospi, wi open an out-patients clinle | for teenagers, the firat such ‘ cllity in B.C. geared to young ‘people's health care needs, says a spok < Bennett also said in an interview. that while’ he is disappointed by the contro- . versy surrounding the at- tempted takeover of Kaiser The clinic is expected to begin operation Nov. 4, said Dr. Roger Tonkin, medical director of the hospital's ado- lescent unit, ~ Medics staff will, pends Investment Corp., he does not plan to reconvene the ‘legislature. and set up a special house committee to investigate.’ ° That, request. was made by study. It was after her investi- gation she decided to make the marijuana available to her. children. Early has. used mari- juana for 10 years but her children have quit, Kelliher “SShe uses it like others might use a martini or a glass’. of sherry in the evenings,” h hs ¢ said. ; * . . TEEN CLINIC, " VANCOUVER (CP) — DATELINE CANADA necology, growth and’ ‘deneral adolescent health majority of teenage: pected to be referrt doctors and other. ‘profes: sionals, Tonkin sald tt : REVISE AGT fon i VICTORIA (CR) — provincial government an introduce a ;revised Aecurl- . ties ‘Act during ‘ the; next session of the legislature to ;tdughen regulatiofisi and * standardize related statutes, Premier Bill Bennett said. y Leader Dave arent who said it is inexplicable and embarrassing that Ontario is . dealing wits, “the province's. business while we stand im- potent here in B.C. to try to get some answers out of this deal.” s * . IN TROUBLE PENTICTON (CP) — “Two RCMP officers here face “remedial action" for. leaving a man who appeared drunk in a cell for 22 hours ‘ when he wes suffering from brain damage, a "RCMP spokesman said, The spokesman said Peter Paul, 65, of Penticton, was taken to the lockup early May 24. Two watch com- manders, whose names were not disclosed, left him in the cell for almost a full ‘day. , without medical care, ROMP Inapecot T.. J. Col- lins said thé two were'guilty of “very grave errors in judgement.” , When,-Paul eventually was taken ta. hospjtal,. doc: tors’ found a head? injury’ WIND HELPS . * VANCOUVER (CP) — Mail delivery resumed along several residential streets on the city’s west side after high: winds blew away millions of oak-ribbed casemaker cater- pillars that had made side-' awalks hazardous for post- "men, “Now we are getting © calls from other areas to have postal deliveries suspended so the caterpillars can be sprayed,” said’ postal official Sawyer. | Residents in the area =: & BAR Satins sald“appeared, ‘now are circulating a petition @ reaulted from a’ fall inside the cell. The winspector” * donisal any sugges ation that Paul was beaten byt by'police,: ‘But he says there was no valid‘exeuse for the wateh commanders not to have become: ‘auspicious about the length‘of: his ap- parent intoxication. aNtt ~to have the parks board re- place the oak trees with cherry trees, Mail service was ‘sus- pended temporarily | last week when the insects in- fested serveral streets. A spraying program using an insecticide soap was inef- fective. re ficer of je! , also said he: thiaka the * guit-can- be regoWed ‘before -BCRIC is obliged: fits shares Tuesday. INQUIRY ENDS ‘phe: bylaw banning Company spokesiuen say e from ‘two countries will hunt moking in: public and stores’ was imposed by he Newcastle town council, vhich; incorporated the old town of Bowmanville under «the province's regional gov- TORONTO (CP) — lt perament setup. about seven per cent of te duction. at the company’s Carol project, will not result in layoffs. However, they say. about 55 jobs in various de- partments will be allowed to began in a blaze of pi sparked: by one of: wer sensational accidents Hn ( Gan? adian history, but-the 10- month federal inquiry into the Mississauga train de-}, which al railment ground to’ almost unnoticed. ‘ After 99 days of mony from 159 witnesses a 27 days of by tw are pai about the new law - and despite threats of $1,000 «.fines,-many: are refusing to comply with regulations require that they ip,” said meat. store F Dan Allin, a former town councillor, dozen lawyers, Mr. Justi Samuel Grange of the On- tario Supreme Court has until Dec. 4 to make his recommendations. Those recommendations, while not legally binding, will be designed to prevent a repeat of the disastrous de- crallmen which freed more ississauga SG Cees to fice thei ae homes., before Tuesday. rae a daed that he is confident the last hurdle — a $100-million law- suit between Kaiser and Dome Petroleum Ltd. of Cal- gary — will be overcome. Edgar Kaiser, now chair- man and chief executive of- By Frank Mackey LONDON (CP) — In terms ° of the Quebec-Ottawa Skir- mish, it seems, London is ‘what Paris was. There has been a capital shift, so to speak, in the wake of the Quebec referendum and the federal g' carries BOWMANVILLE, ONT. (CP) — There's been a. lot of smoke, but no fire since resi- dents of this town of 32,000 near Toronto was slapped with an anti-smoking bylaw in July. municipality is telling Hie what I can or can't do on my own property. Pretty soon they'll be coming into my home telling me not to smoke.” Meanwhile, officials are’ moving cautiously on .the issue. Town Clerk Joe Me- Tlroy said the.bylaw will be enforced only if complaints are received. So far the * haven't been any, he said’ * . *. NOLAYOFFS LABRADOR CITY (CP) — Bleak market conditions have forced the Iron Ore Co. of Canada Ltd, to reduce iron | ore concentrate production by 300,000 tons. * size. as Camrose. . Pp through attrition. Spokesman Derek Rance said -the company doesn't ‘expect market conditions to improve until late 1981. _ 8 & , LEDUC, ALTA. (CP) — C commmittee will recom- mend before the end of the year -whether Leduc should become Alberta's 13th city. Maurice ‘Fitzpatrick, a town councillor on the review committee, said the possi- - for its this weekend near the international bor- der. * ‘The Pumpkin Liberation Front is the name of a group of mythical terrorists in a Canadian-American military exercise to be held this weekend south of Regina. The reservists will be: tested ‘in battle procedure, route sector and zone rec- onnaissance and the occu- pation and defence of strong points. . * . , DOCTORS CRITICIZE WINNIPEG (CP) .— Rural doctors and hospitag administrators - have criti- cized a suggestion that ob- niettleat services be dropped that bility has been since the population passed 10,000 and the town became eligible to apply. Leduc, just south of Ed- _monton, has a population of ° 11,700, more than the cities f ‘Driimheller ‘and “Wet * PUMPKIM CAPER REGINA (CP) — The Pumpkin Liberation Move- ment has come to Saskat-.’ chewan, And military reservists Interpreting the deliver fewer than 25 babies a year, An advisory committee, worried about the rate of newborn deaths in rural Manttobs. ide the sugges-, ; t4s,....tlon ta the Mayitoba’ Hobith Kiwin and about the same Services C is If ad- He said the Gimli hospital transfers high-risk patients to Winnipeg. 3 Py WHEW! OTTAWA (CP) — Terry Fox and the strike by 40,000 federal ‘government clerks had local United Way fund - raisers worried for a while, but no more. “People were saying we would be really affected by the Fox cancer marathon and the strike, but it doesn't look that way,” campaign spokes- man John Owens.-said. $4.65-million local target an the drive is only half over. ‘ . e * . SOME PUMP! WINDSOR, N.S: (CP).— Peter, Peter, pumpkin-eater, let's see you tackle this one. Howard_Dill’s. pumpkin weighed in at 201.6 kilograms (448 pounds) at the Atlantic inter Fair and fs on its way defend ‘Dil's 1979 Wi opted, ‘it would affect 16 hospitals. ' Ken Pearce, executive director of Johnson Memorial Hospital in Gimli, said the proposal infringes on the right of a woman to have her child in her own community. * at Philadel phia. 3 : Dill,,. a ° Windsor-area farmer, surpassed his 1979 record pumpkin by (2.7 kilo- grams. * * . MORE JOBLESS TORONTO (CP) — Un- employment ise; clitgb} ne set Canada’ hi try aqw the! Gi rhe year but creat ‘a stigh ber; 0) fation as measured by the e“sumer price index to 10.5 per cent in 1981 from 10 per cent this: year. s * HELP COMES TORONTO (CP) — Can- adian “businesses will save about $200 million a year in ernment erulitlona: : Senator H.A. (Bud) Ol- son, minister of state for economic development, told a news conference the changes will be of primary benefit to the more than 640,000 small businesses across Canada. says ,-Tonr *; Maxw économist | for ; annual cost to businesses of 1G , About $100 million’ will be saved by reducing and ~ simplifying the government's zeanlrements relating to re- Su This amounts to half the these requirements. © . . ;W ELECTIONS WINNIPEG (CP) — coast ln ‘and school board ; elections in rural Manitoba: _ officials say this year 3 th igs won't be any different. A survey of the prov-° in many’ cases,- when the: electrorate goes to the polls Oct. 22 there won't be .any- body to vote for. * s 6 DISEASE LICKED OTTAWA (CP) — Agricul- ture department officials say About: 6,200 exotic birds have been ordered destroyed because they were suspected carriers of Neweastle dise- ase, the officials said, and a ban on the importation of exotic birds may be lifted Oct. 10. news. drawn by commentators be- fore the referendum, has been overshadowed by a new triangle with London as the European tip. . That was evident this week during the visit of External Affairs Minister Mark igan and Envir- announcement of plans to patriate the constitution. The Quebec-Ottawa-Paris triancle, that figure of polit- fcal‘geometry that contained so many diplomaic pins and needles and that was so often nment Minister John Rob- erts, who came to explain the Trudeau . government's ‘pat- riation ‘plan to British polit- ical Iéaders, “ Atte, Primeg ‘aM Bd Thatcher and Opposition Leader James Callaghan, the two Canadian envoys declard themselves sure that Britain will comply with the patria- tion request. They spoke with the same kind of confidence diplayed by Premier Rene Levesque on-his trip to Paris in 1977 when he entertained mem- bers of the French National Assembly with a picture of “A new country that will soon show up on the map.” Reminiscent of the cat-and- mouse game so often played by Quebec and Ottawa in relations with Paris, Roberts and MacGuigan went on their appointed rounds here while in the background, Quebec's agent general continued lob- bying British MPs against patriation. . While the federal repre- sentatives met Labor party Leader Callaghan at. the House of Commons, Gilles Loiselle, Quebec's agent, -wooed MP Joan Lestor, a former chairman of the Labor party whois a senior member of the party's 's national exec- The heady days before the referendum, when words of utive and chair- man of its international com- ‘mittee. Loiselle said he has ap- roached representatives of all the major parties here, in- cluding cabinet members. It's a well known fact, both here and in Quebec, that he has long been pressing for a visit to London by Levesque. It appears that Levesque is loping to come in D and support from French politicians really counted for Quebec, a jaunt to London would have been just a side trip for Levesque. But with Ottawa on the offensive and the crucial role to be played by British politicians in the patriation ‘phase of the constitutional debate, London has become what Paris once was — the on his way to or from Paris. centre of Pp activity. Some implications are clear. z No British politician, for in- stance, ever cried: “Vive le” Quebec libre” from the bal- cony of the Montreal city hall © as France's president Charles de Gaulle did in July, 1967. In other words, there are no strong cultural bonds between French Quebec and Britain such as the ones. that serve as the foundation of the “privileged” relationship bet- ween Quebec and France. Winning friends and in- fluencing people with enough clout to make a debt in the pa- triation game are likely to be an uphill battle for Quebec, the only province that appe- ars to be engaging in active opposition to federal plans here. As London eclipses Paris, so.fades the memory of de Gaulle, the ‘statesman who gave such impetus to Que-- bees hopes for a new deal. In France, some will be - marking the 10th anniver- oat, of his death Nov. 9. TURONTO (CP) — Geni- tal herpes has been called a nightmare that makes sexual lepers of its victims, ‘Unlike’ the ‘better- known, sexually-transmitted diseases — gonorrhea, .chal- -mydia‘and syphillis — genital herpes cannot be cured, The symptoms are small, liquid-filled’ and extremely painful sores on the genitals, sometimes accompanied by fevér and swollen glands.- It's cased by herpes- virus 2, which doesn’t res- pond to antibiotics and can flare up continually. About 10 to 20 cases in “100 are caused by herpes- virus 1, the culprit respon- sible for cold sores in ‘the mouth, The oral herpes is transmitted. to the genitals _ by oral sex and is also ‘in- curable. Both viruses retreat into nerve cells during dormant periods and emerge in new sores from time to.time. Herpes causes .severe birth defects, is linked to a higher risk of cancer of the cervix and appears.to be spreading rapidly in Canada. By nobody knows how many Cartadians have it be- cause it’s.not compulsory for health professionals to report herpes: patients to public health officials. OUT OF CLOSET Some men and women who suffer from _ genital herpes ‘have taken the first tentative steps out of the- closet of shame and secrecy. Melinda Cuthbert, a counsellor at a veneral dis- ease information centre has taken the initiative to forma self-help group. She found many herpes sufferers don’t know much about it and react with “con- fusion, grief and surprise” to the facts, she said. About 20 herpetics have been meeting twice a month +and “many who come to the group sessions have never spoken openly about herpes before with anybody.” ‘The more sexually active a person is and the more partners he or she has, the greater the chances of catch- ing genital herpes — either . as a heterosexual or homo- sexual. “It's easier to detect in men,” said-Cuthbert, “be-~ cause the lesions are on the outside of the penis. “In women, if the sores are on the curvix or the upper two-thirds of the vag- ina they may be mistaken for other conditions like a yeast infection. There's a lot of. misdiagnosis.” The sores usually heal spontaneously in about three weeks, no matter what treat- ment is used. Cuthbert said many her- petics have been told simply there's no treatment and left to cope on their own. “Most centres of diag- nosis are not equipped for counselling.” Some herpetics don't re- disease. Women with. genital herpes have a higher chance of. spontaneous abortions, stillbirths and defective ‘babies. ““Most doctors would elect to do a Caesarean if you id herpes,” she said. “A + child who comes through the birth canal has less than a 40 Foreign investment rises BY THE CANADIAN = PRESS The value of foreign dir- ect investment in Canada rose eight per cent to $46.9 billion at the end of 1877 from ° a year earlier, Statistics Canada reports, Direct investment by U.S. concerns rose by eight per cent to $37.6 billion, or 80° per cent of the total. Investment’ by United Kingdom Investors grew by five per cént to $4.2 billion, equal to nine per cent of the total. West Germany is the third-largest investor, with holdings up 14 per cent to $918 million in 1977. France was fourth-largest with in- vestments of $816 million, of which $74 million was in fi- nancial, pétroleum. and nat- ural gas industries. -In another major de- velopment, World Bank and Canadian government offi- cials chided the Canadian petroleum industry for not becoming fully involved in world oil development. Speaking at an Edmon- ton conference on energy projects in developing coun- tries, officials said the Wash- ington-based World Bank is putting heavy emphasis on helping such countries esca: the burden’ of oil import prices. per cent chance of being normal.” However, a U.S. study released last week shows that babies with previously untreatable and often fatal infection as a result of being exposed to neonatal herpes viral infections can be: treated with the drug vi- darabine. REDUCES MORTABLITY The study, conducted at 18 medieal centres and co- edical nightmare has no cure alize the implications of the - agnosis of herpes leaves the worry of spreading the dis- ease to sexual partners. “People have to weigh the risks of disease versus the benefits of a relation- ship,” said Cuthbert. Once the implications of the disease sink in, she said, people need counselling and must realize it may mean a change in their lifestyle. z Tonight, the CTV public affairs program WS will include a on vener- dinated by the U of Alabama Medical School, found that vidarabine “sig- nificantly reduced mortality” in severe infections to 38 per cent from 74 per cent. - As well, herpetic women run a higher risk of cervical cancer, although this doesn't mean herpes causes cancer. It does mean they should “have regular PAP smears to pe-Zidetect’ early cell changes \eading to cervical cancer. For both sexes, a di- eal herpes. ¢ The show is to include close-ups of infected male and female genitalia but ample warning will ‘be given that some viewers may find these medical pictures offensive. Lionel Lumb, the show's producer, said: “How else can we help people identify. a disease that many are suf- fering from and exposed to if they do not have the proper knowledge.”