August 12, 1967- When they stay in rooms for the price of With this ad, you can have the comfort and privacy of two rooms for the regular price of one — Just $80* a night. Or one room for our low weekend special rate of $51.00° We're Lots of Fun! Indoor pool, whirlpool, sauna and exercise room. Comfortable guest rooms and suites. Three excellent restaurants - formal, casual and authentic Italian-style dine and dance. Children’s menu. Home of Jimmy Dean’s Nightclub - Canada’s top night spot for non-stop bop, featuring ‘50s and ‘60s music Fun nearby! Surrounded by large shopping malls, theatres and restaurants. On rapid transit to the Zoo, downtown, Stampede Park. Minutes from Cannons baseball, Stampeders football, city On n the Trans-Canada Highway, an hour from , Reserve Now. Bring this Ad for Special Room Rate No extra change for children under 19 in parents’ room, one rollaway provided. Ofer not valid during Calgary Stampede. expires Dec. 15, 1987, We're more than just a place to stay! Marlborough Inn 1316 - 33 St. N.E., Calgary, Albert Toll-free: 1-800-661-1464; information: (403) 248-8888 Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 Recreation news Instructors Are you cteative? Do you have lots of new ideas and spare time? Why not — arecreation tor. You can earn a few extra dollars and enjoy working with children or adults. The Recreation Department is al- ways looking for new in- structors and new sugges- tions for activities. So give us a call or drop by the office. Office hours are Monday to Friday 8:30 - 4:30 p.m. Rent lee If the. heat of the day is getting you down why not stop by the Arena-Complex where it is always cool. The ice is in and if you would like to rent it for an hour or two give us a call. Summer ice is instrue- available during August and September. Classes Fitness classes are still going strong this summer. You can exercise five days a Week with us. We run aerobic Me Med/Fri more: ening s Mon/Wed/Thurs from 7-8 p.m. and Aqua Fit classes Tuesday and Thurs- day from 8:80 - 9:30 a.m. The. evening Aqua Fit class has been egncelled. Stray whale disappears UCLUELET (CP) — A whale that strayed well out of its home waters to this isolated area on Vancouver Island nearly two weeks ago has disappeared. Jim Darling, a marine bi- ologist who has been tracking the false killer whale, said Monday the young whale has not been spotted since Sat- urday. “The only question is whe- ther it’s dead or just swam away,” Darling said. “We really don't know.” Darling was organizing a capture of the three-metre whale to give it medical at- tention and possibly a new home in an aquarium. A cap- ture permit authorized by Fisheries Minister Tom Sid- don arrived Saturday. Experts believe the whale was probably ill, since it was separated from its family grouping and had beached it- self on mud flats at the end of the harbor nearly two weeks ago. Darling said it had a slim chance of survival alone and in unfamiliar waters. The false killer whale is not usually seen this far noth although there have been a number of sightings and beachings in recent months. JOIN THE MANAGEMENT TEAM a c CONVENTION . . . The 92nd annual convention of The United Amateur Press was held in Castlegar last weekend. Nine guests came from as far away UNITED AMATEUR PRESS as Alabama, North Carolina, lowa and Alberta. Story below. Photo submitted By GEORGE JAMES The 92nd annual convention of The United Amateur Press had been beset with troubles from the beginning, but the blot of day one had turned into a pearl by the third day. Two ladies journeying from Alabama and Iowa arrived on schedule by bus to Trail, but the president's plane from North Carolina was delayed. She arrived a day late after phone calls to commission certain of us to carry out her duties. When we learned that a special deliveyr parcel, insured and sent air mail special delivery from Marshalltown Iowa on July, 31, had not yet arrived on ae 8we oye that certain business matters could not or no pi until’ the pda eosnae “had arrived. To date phone calls and inquiries to the P.O. have yielded no result. A tour of Le Roi mine at Rossland had been planned, a Tilden Mini Bus chartered for the day. Since the bus was involved in an accident and unavailable, Tilden graciously offered to supply cars for the same price. We Annual convention declined the offer since the late arriving president had come from Spokane by car instead of bus. This gave us enough transportation between us for the picnic and mine tour at Rossland. Saturday night we held our banquet for 12 at the Monte Carlo Motor Inn. Carolynne Mason added a touch of finesse in the singing of He Touched Me and Unfailing Love. An auction sale of crafts, members books and small items ended the evening. Several attended church the next day and a short meeting that night tied up the loose ends of the Convention business. The Convention was hosted by two local writers Lucy Eaton and George James. This was the first UAP convention held in Canada and by some their most enjoyable. The small town setting with its history and surrounding scnery was the leading attraction of the few days spent here. To our friends from South of the border we say “Yo" all come back again.” If you write or aspire to write and want information regarding UAP you may contact George James at 365-5447. Syringa Park In business today, effective management teams are composed of team players who provide and contribute select specialized skills. One crucial role is that of the Management Accountant. Management Accountancy now represents two-thirds of all accounting- related positions, and continues to be the fastest growing segment of the profession in Canada. Only the RIA* designation specifically identifies professionals trained as Management Accountants. Some local RIA's include Hana Carbert, Controller, Murchie’s Tea and Coffee Ltd.; George hartmann, Senior Vice- President and Secretary, Loomis Canada; and Alan Barnard, Deputy The Society of Management P.O. Box 11548, 1575 ~ 650 West Georgia St. vancguyege. C. V6B 4W7 800-663-9646. Controller General, Ministry of Finance, Province of British Columbia. Management Accountants are employed as Accountants, Controllers, Vice- Presidents of Finance and Chief Executive Officers. To earn the RIA Management Accountant designation, candidates must complete the academic requirements of the Society's Professional Program and have at least Ewe oyrers of senior financial experience. fessional Program consists of savariod management and accounting courses specifically designed to train “Chief Financial Officers” in industry, commerce and government. For information on the admission requirements into the Professional Program, contact the Director of Education prior to August 28; 1987. 687-5891 Toll Free: 1~ Registered members of The Society of Management Accountants of British Columbia presenti herr wes jesignation RIA. Hed Management in the Legislation to change it itish Columbi. Accountant) received rons oaureiniee, Currently the CMA proces jenation is used by ail of our colleagues in the rest of Canada. By BRIAN SPREADBURY Park Naturalist This week's interpretive program at Syringa Creek includes a program on cougars, films on grizzlies, deer, and caribou, and the opportunity to try your luck at baking bannock. Make Syringa your destination this week. Thursday, Aug. 13 9 p.m. — High Wild and Remote. Come see this slide presentation on some of the remote high country areas of the Kootenays. : Friday, Aug. 14 10:30 a.m. — Edible Plants Walk. Meet at the change house at the public beach. Be sure to wear hiking footwear. 9 p.m. — Film Night. Tonight's films are Above the Timberline and Autumn with Grizzlies. Saturday, Aug. 15 10:30 a.m. — Bannock Baking. Come try your hand at cooking bannock bread, the bread that trappers and fur trades used. Meet at the change house at the public beach. 9 p.m. — Cougar! Come see this slide show on the lives of these large and elusive cats. Aunday, Aug. 16 10:30 a.m. — Kids Games. Children’s nature games at the adventure playground. 9 p.m. — Film Night. Tonight's films are Deer Family and Selkirk Caribou. Monday, Aug. 17 10:30 a.m. — Skins and Skulls. Come see this display of birds, animals, skulls and tracks found in the Kootenays. At the adventure playground. 7:30 p.m. — Evening Hike. Come for a leisurely evening hike to the lookout on the Yellow Pine trail. Meet at the bulletin board near the entrance to the campground and be sure to wear hiking footwear. Note: All evening programs are at the A re (at Clara Saunders passes away Clara Anna Louise Saun: ders, a Castlegar resident since 1942, passed away peacefully in the Extended Care Unit of the Trail and District Hospital on Aug. 5 at the age of/92 years. She wad born in Yakima, Wash. on July 7, 1895, and came to Trail at the age of two by paddlewheeler from Northport, Wash. Mrs. Saunders, as a young woman, assisted her parents, who owned and operated the first Trail bakery. She was also one of the first telephone operators and was a Prin cess, representing the City of Trail in the Chahko Mika Pageant in Nelson in 1914 She has contributed in many ways to local and area organizations such as being the promotor of the Castle. gar and District Hospital, later becoming a member of the original board repre- senting the City of Castle gar, and was the originator of the Castlegar Cancer Soci. ety. Mrs. Saunders was a life member of the Castlegar Py. thian Sisters and the first Worthy Matron of the Order the west end of the campground) unless otherwise noted. GET’EM IN LINE. CE) NeED To KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR NEW COMMUNITY ? of Eastern Star. She was also a member of the hospital auxiliary and the United Church W.A. She was predeceased in Oct. 1933 by her husband Alfred and in 1932 by her father William Leinss and in April, 1948 by her mother Anna Leinss. She is survived by her son Brick (Joy) of Castlegar; daughters Hazel (John) Buick of Duncan and Ora (James) Blackmer of Delta; six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Cremation has taken place. A memorial service was held on Monday, Aug. 10 at 2 p.m. .at the Castlegar Funeral Chapel. Rev. James Ferrier officiated. Flowers are gratefully de clined. Donations would be appreciated in memory of Mrs. Saunders to the equip- ment fund of the Castlegar and District Hospital c/o Ken Talarico. Honorary pallbearers were her four grandsons, Alf Saun. ders of Calgary, Barry Buick of Coquitlam, Brian Blackmer of Delta and Ross Saunders of Calgary and granddaugh- ters Arlene Huxtable of Victoria and Brenda Black mer of Delta. you haven't HIRED A STUDENT VANCOUVER (CP) — As visitors enter the 8.F. ‘Strong Rehabilitation Centre, they are struck by the ‘institution's casual atmosphere. Beneath all the hubbub is the persistent whine of electric wheelchairs. The centre, a four-storey building in the city’s affluent Shaughnessy area, is not a hospital, and patients usually stay from one to four months. Since 1949, when it opened with nine beds, the centre has provided care for the severely disabled. ‘Today, it has 150 beds. Patients have many ailments, including spinal cord injuries, arthritis, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis and amputations. With those ailments, particularly the ones that occur with the suddenness and finality of paralysis, come anguish, depression and a drastic change in lifestyle. “You have to start learning how to live again,” says centre spokesman Judith Larsen. “You have to learn personal hygiene, how to dress yourself, how to shave and how to move.” TAKES REFERRALS The centre, funded 90 per cent by the British Columbia Health Ministry and 10 per cont through a private fe ion, takes ref from ph “The people here help you take back your life,” Larsen says. “The paralysed person is no longer the tall stud walking down the street, and that hurts. You have to adjust your heart and mind and your social skills. You have to learn how to relate to people again.” _ Each patient is assigned to a team of professionals, pists, social workers, wok therapists and remedial gymnasts. Team ii include the pi it — and the patient's family. “The injury is as stressful to the family as it is for the patient,” Larsen says. Dr. Alexander (Sandy) Pinkerton has worked at the’ centre since he arrived in Canada in 1953 and likes the contribution made by the gymnasts. “The remiedial gymnasts help with the group exercises,” he explains. “Many things they do are the same as physiotherapists. They help with stretching, resistence exercises and the group games.” Wheelchair athlete Rick Hansen has attended the centre. the patient HANSEN HELPS “Rick has been an ambassador at large for the disabled for a long time,” said Pinkerton. “This isn’t something new that has come out of his tour.” Long before the Man-in-Motion tour began Hansen would visit the centre and recruit people for wheelchair sports. Pinkerton said Hansen's visits had a tremendous; impact’ on the patient’ and sevéral went “on togain prominence as athletes. He also talked of the Man in Motion's steely determination. “He and his former coach, Tim Frick, who's able-bodied, used to play volleyball against school teams; — just the two of them — and beat them,” he says with a laugh. Pinkerton says he has learned a lot about what the human body is capable of as a result of Hansen's effort. Regular or Diet Coke or Sprite Royale Bathroom Tissue Or Coca Cola Classic or Canada Dry Ginger Ale * Regular or Sugar Free 1 Litre Bottle © Plus Deposit Inside Round Steak d 2-Ply © 8 Roll Package Fresh © Whole Pink Salmon *1. Head on. AD ho. orev Veneral disease resists drugs BOSTON (AP) — Bacteria that cause gonorrhea are quickly to another ibiotic, and the world may be running out of drugs to cure this common venereal disease, U.S. army doctors say. The researchers found eight per cent of U.S. servicemen infected with gonorrhea in South Korea had strains of the germ that could withstand spectinomycin, a relatively new drug for treating the disease. Experts expect this resistance will eventually spread to the United States, mere gonorrhea germs are already icillin and tetracycline. “We are beiing to run out of drugs,” said Dr. John Boslego. “What's available currently is being diminished faster than we are replenishing it with new drugs.” Boslego, a researcher at Walter Reed Army Institute of in W blished the findings in the New England Journal of Medicine. At the U.S. Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta, Dr. Jonathan Zenilman said the army research is important because it shows a direct link between increased antibiotic use and the emergence of bacteria strains that are resistant to the medicines. LACKED DATA “This has been hypothesized for a long time but there has been a lack of good data to show it,” he said. The incidence of antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea has increased 30 times since 1980, said the Centres for Disease Control. Zenilman said there is currently no shortage of drugs to treat gonorrhea. Besides spectinomycin, U.S. physicians can treat gonorrhea with ceftriaxone and a new class of drugs called carboxyquinolones. However, the newer drugs are several times more expensive than penicillin or tetracycline, and some of them are given by injection instead of as pills. Cut from Canade = 93.29 Y Fy 1) ES a Fresh B.C. Mushrooms 91.98 Or Washington Grow: : 969 Package... -.-+,:5+04+- 341 mi Tin. ban YET Wetame Wagon 27! What are you waiting for?? Phone Collect 368-9126 Canad Connie 365-7601 Joyce 365-3091 Our hostess will bring gifts and greetings, along with helpful community information. HOMEGOODS FURNITURE WAREHOUSE -Sat., 9:30-5:30 China Creek “Drive a Little to Save a Lot” Snow Star Ice Cream Assorted Flavours 4 Litre Pail . 53.97 — IN-S Prices effective through Saturday, August 15 in your friendly, courteous Castlegar Safeway Store. Mon. to Wed. and Saturday 9a.m. toé6 p.m. Thursday and Friday Sunday 9.a.m. to 9 p.m. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. We reserve the right to limi soles to retorl quantities. Prices effective while stock losts CANADA BAFEWAY LIMITED