ier 6-H. | STARCRAFT | cag Be in/or — 1982 YAMAHA HERITAGE SPECIAL. 400 cc. tairing, roc low mileage. Excellent condition Must sell - leaving the country 65:52 s “One of your finest .crea- tions: would be the making of a friend out of an enemy.” 1980 RM 80 SUZUKI Dirtbike Mint condition. $400 365-7070 Appro: ~ Call 1365-6753 | FOR MORE INFO. Shermak Const. Co. Ltd. © House Framing * Form work * Rooting ¢ Siding * Finishing * Arborite Work * Additions * Renovations A! L TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY 365-2932 © 359-7252 * 359-7191 1982 YAMAHA Heritage, Special 400 cc. Fairing, rack, low Excellent condition. leaving the countr 36 1979 YAMAHA 400 cc. Enduro $500. 365-6024 7 61 QUALIBED "io teach Esso Swim Canada Progra Storting wy Phone Jason 194 PROFESSIONAL moving to, ‘Avauel 6.Phone Jeson 965-5794 Castlegar would like to rent. a 3-4 bedroom enh in Sou: CARD READINGS 365-5958 Ask for Dixie MR. and MRS. JOHN PLOT NIKOFF and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Soukocholt of Pass Creek are pleased to announce the ment of | their children Cheryl and Bill, which took June 24, 1984 and marriage which will ‘take tember 15,1984 /63 The B.C. Heart Foundation ac helps promote Heart Cards sent to next-of-kin. a Soz3 Castlegar, 8.C 2/29 B.C. Canadian Cancer Society donations sup- port research, educa tionand patient service x BOX 3292. CASTLEGAR 365-5167 MATURE, 5 ible, male university student, willing to do odd jobs. Reasonable rates. 365. 3727 3/62 WILL DO odd jobs and babysit ting. 365-3637 3/60 WILL DO odd jobs and babysit ting. 365-7624 3/60 WIL WASH ond wax vehicles mow lawns. Call 365-7497 tin/59 jeed 0 job? High school and college students may offer their services under this category Clean Cotton | were se “ieee R Eri ere ecg loge erode ags pighical or 3 issues at FOUR kittens orange, and ‘and white and one calico 126 5439 6122 and leave WANTED Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. TFLUFFY kittens. 365-6642 362 YOUNG Mock ie lab cross too good home. 365: PUREBRED putt MASTIFF dog to country home. Phone 365.3034 2/62 THREE lorge fluffy kittens 365. 2720 2/62 Hf you have an item you'd like te give away, please drop us a line or phone 365-2212. We'll run your ad for two issues free of charge tin/24 R. required. 365-6727 361 HELP WANTED: Community Complex Concession. Appl Complex before August 15 8 NEED A A CARPENTER? Will work jour or contract, Free siierotes Also concrete forms tor rent, 365-6120 tinal ike) SELKIRK COLLEGEin Nelson Weekdoy 37.300 } WORK. school shopping, Cut WAYNE PEPPARD Licenced plumber and gasfitter Call 359-7137 sove money Ge your neighbor in our onde column. Well run your od 2 rssues tree of chor our action line 365-221 (Collect WILL DO TYPING rates. Phone 365.3803 Al's Plumbing Alex Negreiff Reovonable idle ot LOST. Capilano kayak r offered 2/62 Syriny . Rewor: 365-6047 of 365-2375 TWO-TONE brown love at Kinnaird Park 4 during Little League Tournament. 365-2319 2/62 365-8223 lost or found items are not business hours. We'll run the o two issues free chorge Installction & Repoirs 0/23 TREE CUTTING AND TOPPING. seomless Ph eovestroughs and viny! siding in *® Quality Work ‘ " toll e © Fair Prices Denn Cooke, "693-2962 tn 7/62 © 30 Years in Business JAMES SWANSON ANDSONS . Ph. 367-7680 WILL BABYSIT in Robson oreo Col Linda of 365-6541. Experien ce with babres 9 SAVE 10% on all 5 Cool business since 1977 CASTLEGAR NEWS office hours ore as follows: Mondoy and Tuesday 830 a.m. to 5 Pm Wednesday 8 300.m. to 12 noon Deportment phone number i: 365-3517 tao? DANCE BANDS ond Mobile Discc available tor peo engogement 112. 368 73h" PAINTING CONTRACTORS Commercial industrial Residential Falcon Pointing Ph. 365-3563 \ BOBCAT ‘Sex SERVICES ALCOHOLIC ANONYMOUS od Al Anon. 365-3663 HOBBITT HILL CHILDRENS coerek otters complete quality daycore nursery school, special needs ond out-of-school services. 368. 7280 t#n/23 EMOTIONS ANONYMOUS Member is 365-2212 365-3015 NOTICE is hereby giver, that on application will be made to the Director of Vital Statistics for o change of name, pursuant to the provisions of the "Name Act” by me: Heather Olive Smecher, of 418-10th Ave. Castlegar, B.C. To trom Smecher to. Washburn Heather Olive. Dated this 1st day of August, A.D. 1984 “T think it's going to be the problem of the "60s — at least the late "80s and early “90s,” with the University of Wa- terloo's sports assessment centre. “I have become extremely concerned,” said Coghlin, who was seeing a number of patients with neck pain in his own practice but became even more conscious of the problem after attending a spinal disorders course re- cently in Sweden. He said he finds many of his patients are students and are both extremely busy. “They're lined’ up at the- door in the morning when I open.” Neck pain has to some ex- tent always plagued secre- taries, truck drivers, farm- ers, students or anyone who must look in a particular dir- ection for long, uninterrup- ted periods of time.- But the burgeoning use of computers means it is not only becoming more common but it affecting a wider cross-section of peo- ple, he’ said. “We know that in the thé population at one time’ or another, he said. “This is a relatively new problem. We've always been so concerned with low backs we've forgotten about necks.” Coghlin, who studied chi- ropractie — which uses spinal mahipulation and muscle re- laxant techniques to treat spinal-related problems — said it's important for people with neck pain to see a doctor to determine what the cause Trail girl at seminar for child amputees Fifteen-year-old Jennifer Watson of Trail, joined 46 other children at The War Amputations of Canada’s first. B.C. Child Amputee (CHAMP) Seminar held re. cently in Vancouver. Watson, who was missing her left arm below the elbow at birth, is ap active member of the CHAMP Program As well as riding on a CHAMP’s Playsafe float in several parades, she attend ed the CHAMP annual sem. inar in Burlington, Ontario last year which involved young amputees from across Canada. She is also a Junior Counsellor. The War Amps has cov ered over $8,000 in costs for Watson, including the full Couple went back to land ST. MARTIN, MAN. (CP) — At an age when most people are thinking about preparing for reitrement, John and Margaret Lute sold their comfortable home in Meaford, Ont., and headed for the wilds of Manitoba to carve out a life from a patch of remote bush. That was back in 1977 and they've learned that what they lost in modern conven iences they've gained in peace of mind The Lutes have had to clear dense brush, build their own cabin and grow and pre- serve their own food with a only a small amount of sa. vings to fall back on. But memories of the less-arduous lifestyle they had back in Meaford leave no regrets. “I could hardly talk to him because he was glued to the TV,” recalls 59-year-old Mar garet of her husband. “His life was so empty and bored More liquor came into the house and I said ‘Dad, we have to put a stop to this.’ ” John, 62, quit his job as a supervisor at a kitchen cab. inet hardware plant and bought 82 hectares of land near the east shore of Lake Manitoba, about 260 kilom etres north of Winnipeg. UG WELL The first thing they did was dig a well, whieh, be cause it didn't strike water until it was 34 metres down, proved so expensive it drain. ed their savings. “We were cleaned out,” said Margaret. “We were out of money and we had to do something.” They found temporary jobs at fishing camps, a trailer park and a mine and toughed out their first winter in a rough-built log cabin with no electricity, running water or telephone. Since then things have im. proved. John, who had no training in carpentry, built a roomier log cabin. Electricity was added in 1980, as was a television, which is rarely turned on. Goats, chickens and a gar den provide them with much of their food. They do not hunt but others who do pro vide them with bear meat. Soap is made from bear fat Days are filled with hard work and nights with simple entertainment. WATCHED SKY “Every night we sat out side till bedtime and watched the satellites go over,” Mar garet says, recalling the days before electricity. Now the custom is to sit around the evening campfire and watch the northern lights and listen to far-off coyotes. SSSSS SPECTURM M VINYL REPAIR & UPHOLSTERY Yiry 8 Lothar WERE AS CLOSE AS YOUR TELEPHONE Cronos home othice end restau: Ph. 365-8336 116-4 Be. Open $$. Sot. 10-1 ANYWHERE FOR THE BICYCLE NEEDS? THE BEST DEALS ARE HERE .. . cost of a myo-electric arm provided by the Ontario €rippled Children’s Centre, and travelling expenses. The three-day seminar pro- vided an opportunity for the youngsters to talk to other children facing unique prob- lems in adapting to the loss of a limb or limbs. They dis- cussed their prostheses and exchanged information on coping in school and playing with friends. It was also a chance for parents of CHAMP younsters to meet other parents who share similar experiences. Two counselling sessions — one dealing with pros thetices and the other de signed for parents — were conducted by Mr. H. Clifford Chadderton, Chief Executive Officer of the ‘ Association, and Mr. Rob Larman, a 19-year-old graduate of the CHAMP Program. Karl Hilzinger, a former CFL all-star who is himself an amputee, also participated in the counselling sessions. Hilzinger lost both legs above the knee and most of the use of his right arm in a car ac cident in the early 1960s. As The War Amps’ Sports Consultant, Hilzinger joined with the members of the junior counselling team to in- struct young amputees how to take full advantage of their artificial) limbs so they can enjoy sports and everyday activities. For the children, the coun- sellors were living proof of The War Amps’ philosophy that, “It's what's left that counts.” rs °82 Suzuki «« °80 Plymout "80 GMC Van *80 Honda Civic 77 Pinto automatic CANDIDATE ADA DEMOS TIN RE-ELECT Election Sale Continues Our Platform Conservative «. Liberal “*" N. Dow | ent- "83 Suzukl 4x4 narctop "81 GMC pickup & canopy Ih 4-d00r °80 Citation 4<00,, auto *79 Caravelle 40: son, air "79 Chevette 100°, speed "78 Plymouth voierg, 2-d00r °78 Ford Pinto ¢speca ’76 Ram Charger «. °74 Courter pickup with canopy Dennis JN yor card © CONCRETE WORK © SEPTIC TANKS ° EXCAVATING Box 188 Slocan, B.c. VOG 2C0 LANDCLEARING © TRUCK SERVICES Ph. 355-2473 THE KITCHEN CORNER * For Every Kitchen Need * Ideal Gift Items FULL LINE OF WILTON PRODUCTS LOCATED AT WANETA WICKER 1506 Cedar Ave. - Trait 368-8512 CREATIVE RAPER 1434 Columbia Ave. Bus: 365-3515 [Far | PAINTING & | DECORATING 2649 FOURTH CASTLEGAR \ VIN 281 GWEN KISSOCK Castlegar, BC, VIN-3K3 Res 693-5563 aT CON AVENUE c 366 3563 Corol Magow Dianna Kootnikoft ADVERTISING SALES OFFICE 365.5210 Insomething of a psf 38 hess Green Party will not run a candidate in Kootenay’ W. Only the three traditional tedral politieal parties met Tuesday's nomination deadline in, this riding, according to returning officer Helen Fairbank, Bob Brisco will carry the ive Conservative banner, while Jean Turnbull will run under the Liberal label and incumbent Lyle Kristiansen will try to retain the seat for the New Democratic, Party. The Green Party's failure to field a candidate in Kootenay West is a surprise because party president Adrianne Carr told the Castlegar News just last month that sh wobla ros. hile Ane bes yalty Sigaaball irs interested. The Castlegar News tried to contact Carr today) for » comment on the decision, but was told sht has taken s holiday and won't be returning until late’ this “She's decided not to run in the West Kootenay,” party spokesman said. Seymour Trieger, in charge of communications at the party's Vancouver office, said in a telephone interview that Carr won't be running anywhere in B.C. He added he does not know why the party isn't fielding = candidate in Kootenay West. However, he said the fledging party will be fielding 60 candidates across the country. Trieger said Cart has been overworked from election \WA war News CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1984 't run F planting and had planned her holiday with her family before the federal! election was called She couldn't change her hotiday plans, he added. One Green Party candidate has said that the party decided not to run candidates in certain NDP ridings and he ¢ited Svend Robinson's Burnaby riding as an example (see story page A7). Meanwhile, Kristiansen went on the attack this week, criticizing Tory candidate Brisco for failing to “make up his mind” about where he stands on several issues. “First he denounced federal aid programs in the riding, then he says they're okay,” Kristiansen said in a press release. “Now he has changed his mind and says he would be satisfied with a reduced Castlegar Airport terminal expan sion, while previously he objected to that et. ot * “He not only harms our area's chances to make progress with a united position on these goals, but makes himself look silly saying he will represent Kootenay West,” Kristiansen said. “Brisco should make up his mind before he speaks, so we know from day to day where he stands. Right now if you miss one news report you're out of date because he may have reversed himself again.” Kristiansen was particularly critical of his opponent for having belittled the federal aid programs. “Brisco first made it sound as if undeserving layabouts were the only people benefitting from the various ams we've brought into Kootenay West,” Kristiansen said in the release. continued on poge A2 WEATHERCAST Sunny Thursday and Friday with highs in the low 30s and overnight lows of 11-13. Outlook for Satur day is widely scattered showers 3 Sections (A, B&C) SANDCASTLE FUN .. . Pair of local youngsters take care in constructing sandcastle as part of the first annual B.C. Day sandcastle contest at couver Quadra Eleven people British Columbia's 28 ridings contest the seat, B.C., were exp: represented in the last Parliament by Conservative Bill Clarke who is seeking re-election. Turner and popular party president Iona Campagnolo, a former MP from d to be Turner faces challenge for Quadra seat VANCOUVER (CP) — John Turner may have had trouble attracting high profile Liberal candidates to join his crusade to rekindle Liberal support in British Columbia but the prime min- B.C ister has drawn a crowd opponents in his chosen riding of Van into challenging Conservative Pat Car ney in Vancouver Centre, but as nom inations for the Sept. 4 federal election closed Tuesday, the Liberal roster in was dotted with relative un knowns. Among those wooed unsuccessfully by Turner was prominent labor leader Jack Munro. A total of 170 candidates filed nom ination papers, with only the three major parties fielding full slates in British Columbia. GREENS STRONG The Green Party, its dedication to of fringe the most in any of — will in pulling hibernating Liberals, dis enchanted with Pierre Trudeau's aban donment of the West, spotlight. Their efforts, tide washing away their creation Syringa Creek. Unline their counterparts on the Lower Mainland and 1,447 seek 282 seats Vancouver Island, these youthful builders don't have to worry about the B.C. CosNewsPhato by Ryan Wilson Provincial parks fire year seekers however, met little success. Paul Manning, a former Place vice-president, was coaxed be the ly the serving as a natural tie in environmentally-conscious B.C., will field 18 candidates, nearly a third of the party's national total. Its biggest name is Paul Watson, who has at tracted international notoriety for his back into the with continued on poge A2 inside MEGAPROJECT: $600 million CP Rail project near Golden is at- tracting hundreds of job The A four- ghilo PAVIN ‘ator St LTD. * Commercial VIL SHY * Industrial * Residentia/ Bus. 352-7333 492902 - Mobile a Se Nelson Bc Good Stock of Lighting Bath Accessories Upstairs in Tra! Phon & Waterbeds i's Towne Squore Mall ne 368-5302 By The Canadian Press In polities, like sports, it seems everybody wants to beat the champ With the close of n Tues- ents, will have to overcome the 7,000 vote margin that Tory Bill Clarke gar nered in his 1980 win c ition Leader Brian Mulroney is 4 federal election, the British Columbia riding that at tracted Prime Minister Turner also lured 10 other candidates, giving Van- couver Quadra one of the biggest fields im Canada. day for the Sept seeking a similarly difficult and sym bolie seat, but faces only four com petitors im the Quebec riding of Mani couagan, won by Liberal Andre Maltais by almoat 17,000 votes in 1980 ED SHOULD HOLD A total of 1,447 luding full slates fielded by the Liberals Progressive Conservatives and New Democratic Party, are after the 282 Commons seats — as well as the perks, indexed pensions and $52,815-a-year salary that go along with them At dissolution, the Liberals had 139 seats, the Tories 100, the NDP 31 There was one independent and 11 vacancies. Turner, whose tenuous ties with Vancouver Quadra include four years at the University of British Columbia and occasional visits to his grandpar. The prize for NDP Leader Ed Broadbent, desperately trying to save his party's 31 seats, is that he has the best chance of personal victory in his Ontario riding of Oshawa, where he won four years ago by more than 12,000 votes. Of the 846 candidates from the three major parties, 131 are women. A hand. ful of women are also running as inde pendents or for one of the nine other officially-recognized fringe parties. Seventy women ran in 1980, but only 14 were elected, two each by the Tories and NDP and 10 by the Liberals. New Democrat Lynn McDonald and Tory Jennifer Cossitt later won byelections The NDP has consistently had the highest number of female candidates across the country. This year, women are running under the New Democratic banner in 65 ridings — up from 33 in 1980. Ali three female NDP incumbents Pauline Jewett, Margaret Mitchell and McDonald — will seek re-election At dissolution, the Liberals had nine women MPs and all but Health Min ister Monique Begin and Ursula Ap polloni will run again. TORY WOMEN Meanwhile, the Tories nominated 23 women candidates — up from 14 in 1980. Incumbents Flora MacDonald. Pat Carney and Cossitt are seeking re-election. However, most women candidates are in ridings not considered winnable by their party. ban lifted By CasNews Staff project, which includes construc- tion of the longest railway tunnel in North America, is providing employment tor PQALSESPAS Chohko-Mike Mell CHEMICA AT MALLA - Castlegor 1496 Columbia BLE & sPorT 365-5588 t ‘The: ‘ben’ on: open’ fires: in: West | Ovt-of-work Kootenay provincial parks has been lifted. A spokesman for the local parks office said the ban was lifted effective 9 a.m. Tuesday, but warned “it could go back on any time.” The spokesman said the branch is monitoring the situation daily. However, he said if the recent bout of cool weather continues, a ban on fires will not be in effect The ban was put in place July 31 after the area became an “extreme fire hazard. The removal of the ban affects the following provincial parks in the Castlegar area: Syringa Creek, Cham pion Lakes, Nancy Greene Lake and Recreation Area and Stagieap. organization BEER BREAK: parks tradition MILWAUKEE to the coffee break and brewers at Pabst Brewing Co. and Miller Brewing Co. are not going to stand for a break with the age-old Richard Presser, machinists at the two breweries, says his members have accepted o new contract in which each gets three free cases a month to take home instead of quatting from the company cooler on their breaks. But George Hilbert, president of the Brewery Workers Union, soys his members rejected a similar provision in their new contracts. Hilbert said his union agrees with disciplining a worker who drinks on the job, but “there is a cooler in the lunch room and people can consume as much as they want “How do you break a tradition like that?” he said. construction workers... B6 NEW GROUP: Participants ot o weekend Slocon Valley have decided to er ae co @ in the form a provincial watershed A2 The beer break is a brewery’s answer president of a union local representing