CASTLEGAR NEWS, June 28, 1981 Off to Canadian Jamboree ‘ ‘There will be 38 Scouts and aders from the Castlegar, obson and Blueberry Creek rea attending the largest t youth gathering ever held in Canada, It’a the Canadian Jam- oree 1981, (CJ '81) to be held July 1 to July 10 at Kananaskis Park located south-east of Banff, These ., leaving from here ‘board “a chartered bus it 54 am. Wednesday arriving. eaiy | that evening at the CJ ‘81 , site. The jamboree, héld‘tn & 300 acre camp site, will be attended by 20,000 boys and leaders and marks the larg- est movement of people in 36 hours to be moved by Air Canada, CJ ‘81° will be using 360 buses for various activities each day and has arranged for 4,000 Scouts/Ventirers/ Leaders per day to visit the Calgary Stampede. The Jamboree budget is approximately $5, million, swith 83 program activities Zinvolving close. to 1,200 vol- junteers to assist in its oper- ation not including the hike program, the stampede, Banff Tour, ceremony day or tfree time. j * What does it take to oper- gate CJ 81 in its day-to-day needs? Millfons of gallons of water will be used with three [retract loads of pop, 76,000 hotdogs, 70,000 choco- _Blate‘bars and 60,000 bags of | i i i I z Eight tables took part in play June 22 at the Joy Keil- lor Bridge Club, with the following results: The average score was 84, North-South Finishing first, with a score of 98/2, was the team of ‘Bev MacDonald and Inez ‘Walker; finishing second, swith a score of 881%, was the /t Erma PRE-CANADIAN AMBOREE *81 was held recently at Syringa Creek Park. Taking part were, left to right, Darren Bankert, Glen Sorenson, Ryan Wilson, Gordon Babaeff, Phillip Marken, Don Livingstone, Darren Berg, Jason Kendall and Assistant Scouter Les Allen, The chips, to name a few of the goodies. During the 10-day event 10,000 rolls of toilet paper will be used and for the 33 Program activities scheduled one requires 60,000 plastic bear claws, Other equipment includes 67,000 turkey feathers, 75 canoes, 140 kayaks, 24 bi- cycles, 70 bows and 1,000 arrows, 10,000 batteries, branding irons and many other items. Results from Joy Keillor Bridge Club team of Joy Keillor and Judy Sheppard; and Rita Perrier and Hubert Hunchak came in third, with 87%. East-West Myrna Baulne and Ben Gaboury came in first with 941; Stan and Libby Green- wood were second, with 93, and third fell to Norm and Les Gallie, with 89%. o Bombeck ; Everytime | make a have to fight the impulse to speak tol commencement speech, | dismiss the graduates and @ parents. | want to say: * Dear parents of the class of 1981: You're on the horizon of a new world foo . trying to shift gears into the next phase of your lives . " ‘ . alittle scared, a little cpprehensive, a lot indebt, You have brought to full term oa human being who, for’all purposes, is educated, responsible, and ready to assume his or her place in the world. Are you ready to assume yours? How many times has your chitd said, "When are you going to stop treating me as a child?” And you answered, “When you stop acting like one.” It was a glib, stick answer and you knew it, . Have you been so busy talking for the-last 16 years that you haven't listened to what you were saying? “1 WANT YOU TO GROW UP.” hat’s your big hurry to get married? You're stilla fit “) *YOU HAVE TO LEARN TO LIVE WITH YOUR OWN MISTAKES.” (“Look, Daddy and 1 repaired and you can pay us will pay to have your car back later, “S TIME YOU WERE RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR- SELF.” » ("I’ve made a dental appointement ige you Tuesday and picked up your cleaning. Put your libr books cut and I'll return them.” “BE INDEPENDENT.”.., z i ("You can live. at home, It’s rent free. Just remember. dinner is a: ‘MAKE 1 6.") YOUR OWN DECISIONS. - (“What do you mean you're not going to Gran- dma’s? You haven‘t been there in two weeks. Get in the car.” “WILL YOU STOP ACTING LIKE A cuitoe* (“Give me that shirt and 1'Il iron it right.”) “TAKE CHARGE OF YOUR LIFE.” (“This is the time for you to geta job and not use your savings to travel ground the country.” tn their way your children have been trying to be Deal VANCOUVER (CP} — The ad ran in the For Rent section of the newspaper: One-bedroom apartment, pets, kids, ok. Carport, large yard, $300 a month. To Larry Thompson, who was living in a condominium and had given his month’s notice, it read like a good deal. Rent was relatively cheap, and he'd have a place for his dog. He phoned, and on June 17 drove out to nearby Surrey, where he was shown a nice apartment on the ground floor of a fourplex by a couple who told him they lived in the apartment upstairs and wanted. to rent out the downstairs suite. . He said he would take it and the woman asked him for ~ a $150 cash downpayment, which he paid immediately to ensure they would hold it for him until July 1. Elated at getting an apart- ment at a relatively cheap price, he roturned to his - condominium —and-. made arrangements for the move. He felt elated — until he phoned B.C, Tel to order a phone for his new address. They told him two other parties had already ordered phones for that suite. “I thought about it for a bit, and then I put two and two together,” he said. “I jumped in my car (this was now Monday morning, June 22) and sure enough, these people had left, And left in a hurry. They left clothes behind and personal articles like they had just got up and run. I figure I missed them by about two hours.” ALONE ‘Thompson, however, was not the only apartment hunter swindled out of a downpayment. More and more people kept dropping by the apartment wondering why so many phones had been ordered for the same address. Their numbers started. at three, Hanging Pictures? Before you drive nails into your walls, mark the spot-with an ‘*X”’ made of cellophane tape.. This “handy “trick will keep ‘the; .plaster from cracking a when you hammer in the nail . winning patrol from this three-day compatition « camp, which included boys from the entire Kootenay Colum-- bia-area who are to attend C.J. ‘81, resulted in the Robson Rustlers being declared winners. with the Castlegar Patro! placing second, - Scout Movement Photo just too good soon grew to five, then to eight, and, at last count, totalled in the neighborhood of a dozen. Some of them, Thompson said, paid $450 in cash as a downpayment. “I figure the he cure got away with $2,000 or $3,000, maybe more All of this has distressed the apartment’s real land- lord, 67-year-old Anton Berger, who is retired and really does live above the apartment, Berger said he rented out the lower apart- ment 3%: months ago (for $425) to a couple who said Off on they were from the Edmonton area.’ Berger and his wife were in Saskatchewan all last week when the ad ran. When all’ these people started coming around Monday asking about the trouble with the apartment for rent down- stairs, Berger didn't know what they were talking about. The Bergers, by the way,. also got burned by the couple, The last rent cheque bounced at the bank, However, they found another lodger among the dozen or so who were ripped off. French - immersion. trip Six graduates from the Stanley Humphreys Second- ary School are participating sina French. Immersion gram. in Quebec Brunswick. The students are Sandy Belezyk, Donna Hadi- kin, Colleen Konkin, Amanda Plant, Jeff Smoorkoff and Caroline Zaitsoff. Plant, Zaitsoff and Hadikin will go to Montreal uni- versity and Belezyke to one in Quebec City. Konkin will ‘study at the University, in Trois Rivieres and Smoorkoff at one in New Brunswick. Each student participated in the school's French pro- gram and ‘earned board as well as some enter- tainment. To cover some of the travel expenses the school board gave a grant of $100 to each student. A special thanks has been extended to Colin Manuel, the French teacher of SHSS for organizing the program and to the school board for its assistance. For An Evening Out 3 Come To The Che Badd Manor CABARET ‘Located under the Fireside Dining Room, Castlegar “-Open from 8 p.m, -2a.m, The "Night Spot of the Kootenays" Come and Enjoy OFF SEASON RATES IN SPOKANE . Conscience ‘CALGARY (GP) — Can- adians plagued ‘with guilty consciences * secretly | re- turned’ almost $10,000 of ““conacience ‘ money”: to the federal government last year in an effort to make amends. Vera | Collier,’ who. look after some of the' receivable for Canada’s receiver-gener- al, said in ‘an interview the money Is from “people who feel they've cheated us and their conselence:: bothers: them.” Sometimes money, arrives. "unidentified, For example, a money order from Calgary for $47.70 “recently arrived without a * return address‘ and without any note of explanation. Col- lier and her-colleauges have no way of knowing what was on that guiltridden Calgar- ian's mind, Other examples of anony- mous repayments include $3 in pennies in a sock from St. John's, Nfld., and 800 crisp $1 bills sent in a shoe box from peg. ; LETTERS EXPLAIN ‘Sometimes payments come with unsigned” letters. de- tailing the thorns of cons- cience which drove the sen- ders to make amends for debts, ‘sometimes incurred decades ago, Collier said many. ‘of the letters are from government employees or former employ- ees who feel bad about per- sonal phone calls they made on the’ public dime or per- sonal photocopies they made: ‘| on a government machine, Other conscience ‘money comes from people who en- gaged in smuggling ventures at the border, small-scale in: come tax evasion or pile. fering a pen from the post + office. The money goes to. the federal supply and services department and is deposited Wisi A thea _AUnique Restaurant aint 1895, featu: Rng! aan ‘antiqie” cobine torn ae the.century:, Eng! and a talned glass, ‘and | much mor ‘Dinne , lunch & breakfast... Surround yourself with To Advertise Your Live | | Entertainment, pity Music; Dance,, know there. are: still ‘Cana: dians capable of feeling guilt but'added there are others who ‘aren't. 2. etnies Tanck -Smorg. on Wi EASTGATE GARDENS 932 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph, 365-7414 “Mon-Fri. HW a.m: An aie FOR LUNCH With a New and Interesting Luncheon Menu Tues. - Sat. 5-10 pm. - Sunday 4:30 -9 p.m. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CASTLEGAR LITTLE LASSIES Wiil be holding their annua! wind-up Banquet and Presen: .: jotiens on Mor June 29 at 6 p.m. ‘or girls. and 199; 7:30 p.m for ll Parents All parents are worged focttend the presentation, é LADIES B.C. AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP: GOLF TOURNAMENT Golt tournament to be held in Castlegar, B,C. For mse eee Phone Marg Carkner at 965-7603 0 correat al SLOCAN VALLEY ouTRIDERS Horsestow Fourth annual horse show on June 27 & 28. Concession . with home baking and cooking. Location: Passmore hors grounds, Everyone In welcome. i Coming.-veats,. at nCartiega A sroonzations cre J fed hoe Frosty he courtesy, profit Canadian -Cellu bs Celgar Pulp’ and Celgar Lumbe . Fleas submat natices os dlrectly to the Castlegar “: A Public Service of Celgar Pulp’ Division -- Celgar Lumber Division | BC Timber Lid. . 2 history. 1399 Bay Ave. Trail P. > PARAD! ‘Prizes Feo $50. to $300. Children s From $10. to $20.” Our Parade Committee extends to yw a porsonal invitation to. participate in our Parade, which will e hel July 18,1981. Would-you please advise on or before duly 2, 1981 if you can su; ply anentry. Position in the Parade is at the discretion of the Parade Marshall. : “We look forward to your participation. WELCOME DONATION of: ‘$800. to’ eds, program: ‘the: special:.n Children was rec EG. ( Ripeg . dentist Dr. ian Tan. Ste- ‘phen is :resigned “to one ot “ society's more‘ uriusual oc i hazards: own pressure, “ineeten machine whieh 2 terally drives Stephen ‘says he tries : ‘talic his patients ; throught the Stephen to work-without the’ benefit of anaesthetic. : ‘Patients. who refuse.» to have. their mouths “frozen”. ers may, not receive the most: thorough dental treatment, + Stephen. says. the fainting. problem has been reduced by, office reriovations, including “higher ceilings,.to make an- xious patients feel less Sue. kn light offshoot of fee I think. You could: call it the eee professor Jim Nickels works with siedleal tI soothe ; and ; relax patients, who are ‘bout to > eeeive eed pear imminent to help people eath ‘high anciely. levels. ‘and: iy % “There: is nothing on’: the Horizon” that “is. going - to”. revolutionize « the’ introduc: » "se tion of medicine to the body,” says Rick‘Carson of Stevens and .Son:Ltd.,'a. Winnipeg hospital ‘supply company... Carson aya the only pracy ‘tes peo} have'-been’, conuitioned as L children by’ constant ‘admini- 5: ‘the - most.” beautiful $60,000 :" to, $100,000, ':has': world, Young said.” Th shocked. Canadian atamp < f dent, of the” Ceadin g Stam Investors: Corp:;:. sald“ h couldn't believe it when Scott: ‘ - Auction’ Galleries’ of New’ York told ‘him’ they hada sheet of the famous issue... : The 50-cent: stamp with et rich,’ dark’ blue: col > intricate © graphié: is.¢ considered by collectors to be the. best designed Canadian’. dded. .stainp in history: and one _of ent for "ladies ai Stet sie Centre for,” rm ofa’ sh ana ie ‘Child Care Society Ick Foundation: which- dollar for dollar by mid-July. arp objec "the clty's, “public health nursé; director, Mabel "Hyk-, away,’ says a routine ‘paper. cut. cut probably hurta more than ving 2 ‘routine inocula- people’ turn: their heads: as oon’ as they see:the needle and wait for an onslaught. of + pain.’ ‘Then, they. turn: and. ask, “is that all:there is?” WA : textile industry,’ O edi from" ‘the government's declaration ‘Fri {itiwill restrict The Canadian Textiles “stitute, which represents the 2 £0,000:employeo. industry, tol R about ‘90 per.“ cent’ of the | “country’s. ‘textile’. imports “aren't. subject to’ any quota nd ‘the «quota - restrictions | clothing try. The quotas, apply to it ports’ from such: cheap-la as South Korea and combat ate xiliary* tot Ingo of. the ‘Ladies Ro dian Legion | alae No: 170: The Koote oy, Colum iy a 312. S00 grat pei the: var is ‘conditional to: matching The city ‘will spend $2,700 r to 4 new -sdecer: fleld. Pil “no-poat guardrail ing :.'bought :.. from! the f highways’ at" a and recreation committee.’ He added that the commit tee’? mémbers \. feel it's. is. committee, *: “meeting. ‘ He. vaald ‘the most, recent progress 'réport, from . the engineers. says‘: compl ted contracts’ are ‘slight ‘pe product here at a price lower '- warned. + may be getting dre than its : fair. % Save on. Famou dage & Ft dress ag gucore 7 drapery pand snyts uphdister ces: your cooling sysiem, has ‘to. During: the hottes times: of ihe ‘Inimize . what you want them to be. For all of you, it’s clumsy. It's painful. It's cwsleward. When are they, going tq grow up? When you glfow them t te + “tlonar. will ‘automatically maintain’ the’ portan comfort level by cycling on and off as ©‘: ef, required. Most units_are avallable with > A Tradition Of Elegance At “| e Pose PARADE ENTRY FORM™= ~ Dvenp HOTEL a Name of Eniry. | Addvaag eek City. ‘Name of person in charge of entry Address__- City, Telephone. Numer of persons in entry____ DELEGATES. Do you require a cai Ibs. each of “T-Bone Steaks, Sirloin Stea! ‘Steaks, Blade- Steaks, . Beginning’ at $29.00 and up 2’ Canadian Currency at Par for Room Rates : Free Room Guest Parking ¢ Entertainment Nightly © Summer Dinner Theater © Festive Dining in Louis D's.& the Waffle Foundry * Q's Restaurant & your own signs. Game Lounge ® Heated Rooftop Swimming Pool Category of Events: (Check one) © Friday Tea Dancing to the Big Band Sound : Fraternal * © Bountiful Sunday Grand! Lobby Brunch gomerctal o 1 b } or soccer sf i * Call Collect, 809-624-2121 For Reservations or your as tings snd hom wa in eis Travel’Agent. Ask About our Summer Dinner Youth serve Decorated i evsles§) “eS § Sepiie or Theater & Getaway Retreat Packages. Selkirk Ave. Judging will take place at 10:00 Lt eGaieanrratawaty ‘take place at Tri ple. D: Mea ts : ; D Your-Hosts. .',"....+ cess +. Thomas Terrell Yap, pamian Park, Entry fee ie fre, Direct replies tas Parode Commitfee, Box sad, Canyon 420-8613 es : it pete = . : Warren Anderson ‘(near Creston) °° 2 4 8:30pm. Lo ee “ § lbs. each oft Sirloin wes ‘steake, Pork Spai . . . R iRO 2 es K no aun outa! f : ; Ribs. No. Trim, No Was ony eee : . i “ : oy ma fi i : é : s : ‘ : This simple; meas : J 5 “or open: the: bathfoom window ‘alt mi wy -bathing. Be sure the bathroom door| r th t : a international Cuisine in a Dutch Setting Mon, « Sat. 5 Fin to Mid, Sunday 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. 2 Below the Nelson Bridge yes__-__no. Please supply ‘ODDS 'N ENDS | remnant. shop 1801 2nd Ave., East Trail "368-5122 Pa tied begins et 11:00 a.m. sharp. Entries to ass ih 00%.m. on Monashee Ave. and: