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Tedawn yu "aERD dastime ‘Toosdey and bien MORNING QNDE STORY CTU) (WevPER PAY CARDS: { AFTERNOON S20 SO DAY ATA TEES RONAN, e Women Cope exceed ther Scaanae STREET. me 8 cea WEBSTER, 15 eB EwTTZEmCOMPANY ALICE singer and Journeys to Africa In search 10-00 @) NURSE ot his roote. (GB MORK AND MaNDY Mork end Merth aceidental- ty transfer minds Just batore Mork | land) and his newty arrived melt-order bride (Barbara Gordon), bead dos C4} MALT OsSHEY ‘The 10th anniversary of the gration Oo wat ieee EALTY WORLD. = 365.3336 Castle Realty Lid. We'll cover itall... ‘and Merth accidental ly teanafar ‘minds lust tt h a tor tries to get take Sight tip wih loepect @ famous haunted Inapectora, id of tor sou. TAS 1 A. pretty new cabbie attempts to roma: surveve TV rating in Peg and Jack sham ihe. factors ra hat, cause anger. A terminally lil, octogenar+ an neighbor of Man's ‘. insiais on Uvieg out femalolog days in her hes Barbera Waters taps wih Sadat in tha first ‘TOMGHT Country. star Tammy "ences to thelr feet ‘in Las Alte ways plant Me overcame the difficult problem of migration from sea to land. @ NE EFFERSONS Having to tolerate a wesk- a dog sitter for a the key toa proftable bust 7908 PAMY FEUD (@B BARNEY MLLER ‘Wojo 1s hit with a patemity sult and then gets even news, et oe convinces his distant Soutien eager resis heading REALTY WORLD. Castle Realty Ltd. Wellleaver itall.tae sent. Fe rf Guest host: Jozn Rivers.. Gueata: John Ritter, Charo, Making @ commitment to settling down with one gid blogs Wolo tothe edge of 1 ‘CASTLEGAR NEWS ‘197 Cohumbie, 365-7246 Jo5 1336 panic. (Part PEERLESS _DENTAL LAB aN of New American Play ‘Loulaville, Kentucky Is highlight am gor A magazine ind Relines by 1° ‘ Repals ane walt: faim ° + Eenadian arene at par Orval Burgner, D.M.D. ah MacKay — Technician 11:30 GB ALL MY CHILORL @ Ne Doctors ~ Castlegar 365-7232 Castlegar Savings.- CREDIT UNION Slocan Pork 226-7212 cs 7 30:DAY TERM DEPOSIT over $2 Gus t 7204 Sp ween * and @ four mili! la England TYEAR - TERM DEPOSIT _Castlegar Savings CREDIT UNION | Costlegor 365-7232 Slocan Park 226-7212 Tony tas a tove with ade ‘young beauty. 90085 2 100 Gidea FOR COMFORT, “* Bos SPOKANE, Wathington 8509) 928-9997 J By STEVIE CAMERON OTTAWA (CP) — The other women call her The Queen. Canada’s oldest. senator, _ Florence Elsie Inman, 91, is as independent as hell. Not only did she go against her own Liberal party to vote against the constitution res- olution, but she refuses to Six-week ‘course aimed at smokers A quit smoking course will -begin in Castlegar ‘in Feb- ruary, says Martin Thomp- son of The E: As- Elizabeth Residence Where the elderly live royally share a, table with: anyone else at meals.’ Inman, the doughty sen- ator from. Montague, .P.E.L., arid tho ‘second oldest mem- ber ‘of the, Elizabeth Resi: dence in Ottawa, prefers to eat ‘alone every day’ at’ a damask covered table in the elegant dining room, while her neighbors chatter away’ to each other at nearby ta- bles, : That's what the Elizabeth Residence is all about — let- ting elderly women continue to live the independent lives they have always enjoyed, in an atmosphere of ' privacy and: gentility. In this day and age, the ; Elzabott House’ seems like sociation: He said the six- week evening course is being ;, . “twelve elderly women live comfort in a peration with Selkirk College starting Feb. 10 at 7 p.m. Thompson claims the num- ber, of cigarette smokers wanting to quit has increased dramatically in the past few years. He points to the suc cess of his program — from on experimental group two years ago, to over 50 groups province-wide as of January, 1982. “We can't keep up with the demand,” he says. . The Ex-Smokers' Associ- ation was founded two years ago. “Its purpose is to pre- pare'and make available low cost quit smoking programs everywhere in the province. Since its formation the asso- elation has’ helped nearly 1,000 individuals stop smok- ing,” Thompson said. ae register for this. pro- see the Continuing Badueation Brochure for Sel- kirk College. sisudla ‘Old house, ‘once the home of. Sir Charles Tupper. In fact, it was his home in 1867, the year “of Confed- eration, ‘ He sold the house to Rich- ard Scott in 1874 — Scott was the secretary of state 'in/ both - the Mackenzie and Laurier governments — and the house has been known in Ot- tawa as. the Scott. House singe. In 1920, the family sold the house and it became the Elizabeth: Residence. TRADITIONS REMAIN Things haven't: changed much since the Scotts lived such graceful lives in this ~ house. Nobody is: forced:to squaredanee or join in: sing- ° songs-or play cribbage or be entertained by: children’s choirs. Every morning at 11 they have sherry served in the li- ’ The survival business not really booming VANCOUVER (CP) — The. destination: a nuclear bomb shelter built under a house in the Vancouver area by Inter- national Survival Systems Inc. Visitors were blindfolded during the drive to the shel- ter. é For Greg Cooper and others who ‘call themselves survivalists, it is an inflexible role that .blast shelter lo- cations should not be dis- closed. Otherwise, it might be invaded by neighbors in centimetres ‘thick and walls and floor 80 centimetres thick. HEAVY DOOR The main door, steel frame: made in d, lined brary. Every afternoon at 8:80 they go to the drawing room for tea, served from a silver tea service. Every evening at 8:30 they have another cup of tea, and, this is all on top of three large meals a Blerina Workman. Her ecred- ‘entials are perfect -for this | place — she’ was the cook at “the Chelsea Club, at the May Court home and at: Earns- clifte, the home of the British, high commissioner. Even the jams and pickles here are home made, done by registered nurse and house- keeper Dorothy Jeffrey,' who -also maintains a kitchen gar- | den so that the women can have fresh vegetables ‘all summer, j HAVE OWN BOOMS - ‘The dozen residents live in their own bedsitters, sur- rounded by their own furni- ture, photographs, momen- toes and books. Many of the day. prepared :by’ rooms open. on to an upstairs ‘ baleony ‘where they can sit and enjoy summer days, looking .out over the large ‘garden which ‘is: edged with old Ilacs. : There .is a library down- stairs, with‘ books’ changed once 8’ week by | Ottawa Public Library staff, and this is where the women have their sherry in the mornings. A large, comfortable living room’ is on the fight of the hall; it boasts ‘a marble fire- place,,.antique, furniture, overstuffed sofas and french doors opening to the garden. “It seems; like a-dream. sit- uation for}Women: who can’t -manage ..their,.: homes: any longer, Sand the costs are rea- sonable: $425 a ‘month | for room: and ‘ board ‘now, and going up to.$500 a month within’ the next few. weeks. ‘There are .no private bath- rooms and they pay,extra for laundry, But Inman and the other fiercely self-reliant. women who have made this old house heir home are in danger of losing it, “We're afraid we might go. under,” aaid Lee Smith, president of the board of dir- ectors which runs the home. “Weare a non-profit organ- ization and we have a number of vacancies, We just ‘can't keep going if we don't fill these rooms.” One reason the'rooms are empty is that the board of directors have never adver- . tised the home; the very idea is. abhorrent to them. It's downright unladylike, “One resident, Florence ‘Tuttle, was a journalist in Montreal; most of the others are elderly widows who couldn't cope with their own houses and CASTLEGAR NEWS, January 20, 1982 Breakbulk cargo sought MONTREAL (CP): — Port of Montreal nat te take alm this year at tradi- tlonal breakbulk cargo rather than containers, port man- sger Nick Beshwatty says, The lucrative container traffic now accounts for two- thirds of the port's cargo and in the last 10 years has made Montreal the fourth-ranking. container port on the eastern seaboard, il But Beshwaty says annual growth rates of 10 per cent in + the container trade now ap- pear assured and -the: port now will have the time to de- vote to breakbulk — tradi- tional, labor-intensive cargo such as bagged flour or tim- ber. ‘ “We've got to put more ef- forts into breakbulk cargo to offset. what -is* being con- tainerized,” Beshwaty said, “Our objective is to protect our general cargo.” . ' would mean more job secur- ity for Montreal's 1,300 long- shoremen. ‘From’ 1976 to "1980, a 35-per-cent increase in cargo tonnage ‘resulted in a three- per-cent decline in man hours in eight Eastern Canadian because containers re- quire fewer stevedores. “Conventional (breakbulkj cargo is the kind of cargo that creates more -manhours,” said Arnold Masters, presi- dent of the Maritimes Em- ployers Association, the or- Today, of the remaining 1,800, 600 are guaranteed a 40-hour work week all year while the rest are fully em- ployed for 40 weeks a year. It remains to be seen whe- ther the new breakbulk strat- egy will pay off, but in any case, port officials say, con- talners will continue to keep the port solvent. The port, under the juris- diction ‘of. the federal Na- tional Harbors Board, posted anew profit of $5.5 million on Pr ig ship- _Ping companies in Inbor nego- tiations. WORK HOURS DROP “Mechanization has de- creased the number of hours worked, which is why we haven't hired a longshoreman since 1965.” Between 1978 and 1974, the employer group offered “retirembnt” pay of $12,000 to any who “This is the closest thing to home,” said one woman. which’ now .is: expected to Jevel off or even decline, also would ‘leave’ the industry. About 900 accepted the offer. of $44 million, Fig- ures for 1981 have not yet been released. . Beshwaty says.a recession sean actually help a port be- - cause when interest rates soar and stles are sluggish," stores ‘avoid ' stockpiling’ in- ventories. Instead they prefer torely on- smaller“ but’ ‘more - fre- quent, ‘and faster, merchan- dise deiiveries as the need arises. i Dealer Licence Number oo DS4 List $9, 1980 Caprice Demonstrator, Sin. Wan. $8550 | 51 Moto 223 ROBBIE BURNS. 1 98 I ee aay ‘$13, 540 1981 Cadillac De Ville, New, 2dr., loaded, Includes sun roof. ist's24) 922.25 : $21,060. New, 2 ar Sit No. CTO-59. eg. $10,844 1981 Citation a ust$t0.105 1 981 ‘Camaro. $8898 1981 ro 98 ? Eri ie rie iatgizate rr 05 $15, 095 1981 Malibu — Classic, Demonstrator. $8990 List $11,136.40 ALL TRADES ACCEPTED AT WHOLESALE with concrete, is ponderously ° heavy in closing. It locks” from the inside with sliding steel lugs. At the other end, a smaller ateel and concrete hatch also opens into the basement..The - doors cost $800 each. Tt has what Cooper des- the panic after a Ducloar, c holocaust. International Survival is a sideline for Cooper to his work as manager for two apartment blocks and a room- ing house. Cooper, who has & bachelor * of science degree, says he's aware of only four. other privately ewned blast shel- er Steal engineer Dan Puzisk,. another shelter builder, puts the figure at 15 for B.C. —all but one of them his projects. The car backed up for a short distance and Cooper got out to'lead the visitors through a ground level door, one step down and blindfolds off in the basement of a house. For $20,000, the survival- ists got an underground room with ‘12.5 square metres of floor space, about the size of achild’s bedroom, a ceiling of steel-reinforced concrete 36 Tot's chronic diarrhea puzzles doctors TORONTO (CP) — Doc- tors at the Hospital for Sick Children are puzzled over Reuven .Mualen, . a. three- year-old-Israeli boy, who has spent most of his life in a Jerusalem hospital, receiving intravenous feeding because severe diarrhea robs his body of fluids and salts he needs to stay healthy, . Referred to Sick Children’ ‘3° in November, Reuven has been found -to ‘have con- tamination of his small bowel —_a. place where - bacteria does not normally exist. But pediatrician Kevin . Gaskin says it.is not known whether this is the reason for his also made in Switzerland. The .$800 system has -a three-stage radiation filter- ing:system and a hand crank to drive the air pump. ~ An exercise bicycle hooked up to the generator keeps the battery charged for lighting. ‘There is a hand pump in case of water There is a chemical. toilet near the smaller door, table with ‘Monopoly and back- gammon. games, a wood frame for the bunks’. two queensized’ mattresses, two 80-litre plastic water tanks,’ both empty, and what Cooper. says is a month’s supply: of” dehydrated food: for. four. There's standing room for : a dozen but a limit of seven imposed by the capacity of the air intake unit. ‘What happens if the house _ collapses or.catches fire ina” nuclear blast? Federal au- thorities say these survival: ' ists would be cooked under- ground by a one-megaton nu- + clear warhead . anywhere within eight kilometres. If the house burns, so does * the shelter’s air source, said Cooper, unsure about how long the air in the room* would keep four people alive. “If it collapses, they should have a chain saw to cut their way out. It’s one of the dis- | advantages of balding 3 under a house-as opposed to the backyard.” Cooper says he can’t un- derstand why International Survival has had‘ only one’ client after a year in’ busi- ness. “I think it’s really sensible and prudent to havea’ place like that,” he said..“I guess people don’t want to think about nuclear war or they tell themselves they wouldn't want to live. “But that's not the way it would be. They'd be fighting tooth and nail to survive.” 1980 FORD * Courter Pall with eano Acyl. 4 16,000 k. “List $4,595. Approved Credit. =ai0ol 71 Plymouth Fury. ROG. STIS. .cesseeeeeerees HEAP of the WEEK *495. * ded on * ir salesman New & Used Vehicles. for details.