» AA Castlégar News July 27, 1968 SEWING MACHINE SPECI. Free Arm * Built-In Buttonhole * 8 Popular Stitches LACE Reg. 95 trim ws, °289 " 50¢ im Carter’s Sewin ng Centre \ 623 Columbie“Ave., Castlegar 365-3810 — Towne Square Mall, Trail 364-1744 IMPORTANT NOTICE Effective Friday, July 29, Speedy Auto Glass will be relocating to 191 Baker St., Nelson. We will continue to provide service to the Castlegar area from our Nelson location. Our phone number will remain the same: 365-2195. SPEEDY AUTOGLASS see” oneal ourseies So a Calgary Getaway Port O’Call Inn - Calgary’s Romantic Hotel joe SG, ts Special price until Sept. 11, 1988 Mini-vacations are great at the Port O’Call 18 QuESE FoOMS, some equipped with mini 4 jacuzzis: In-room movies, health club, team rooms, racquetball, indoor pool. Scoreboard Tavern, Branders lounge and dining room, Many Ports restaurant © Convenient location five minutes from Inter national Airport, Village Square Leisure Centre alls port limousine, park-and-fly srogran) available . Ranguet and meeting, rooms, executive suites sk about our honeymoon packages CLIP THIS AD, SHOW IT TO YOUR FAVORITE PERSON, AND BOOK NOW FOR A GREAT GETAWAY. # MOS McKnight Bled NOE Calgary P21 ea TOL -FREE RESERVATIONS: 1-800-661-1161 INFORMATION: (403) 291-4600 Trade view leaked By The A Liberal government would seek free-trade deals with several countries as well as the United States, the Toronto Globe and Mail says. Ina report from Ottawa today, the Globe quotes Montreal MP Jean-Claude Malepart as saying the proposal is part of a Liberal pre-election strategy. Liberal leader John Turner announced last week he will use the Liberal dominated Senate to stall the Conservative government's free-trade deal with the United States until an election is called on the issue. That is part of the Liberals’ strategy, Malepart si He said the Liberals will tell Canadians that if they form the government: “We won't negotiate one deal with the U.S., but several deals with other countries. We won't put all your eggs in one basket.” But any trade deal would be negotiated on, principles that would protect Canadian sovereignty, water resources and policies on social programs, culture and agriculture, the Globe quoted several other unidentified Liberal MPs as saying. In Toronto on Tuesday, Ontario Premier David Peterson said an overwhelming election victory by Mulroney would force the province to end its opposition to the free-trade deal. Peterson, a dogged opponent of free trade, said he would campaign against the deal when a federal election is called, but admitted he would accept the will of the people should Mulruney win a majority. “If the people of this country speak on an important issue, I have to accept the results of that,” the Liberal premier told reporters at Queen's Park. BILLS TO STAY? However, Peterson refused to promise to withdraw bills introduced by his government in recent weeks that apparently violate the deal. Legislation proposed by his government would control energy exports and large-scale transfers of water from Ontario and would also allow the province to give preferential treatment to Canadian firms that apply to set up health clinics in the province. Another bill sets the stage for Ontario to phase out disciminatory price markups on imported wines over 12 years, instead of the seven-year period proposed in the deal. The federal Tories’ schedule for passing their free-trade legislation was given some breathing space Tuesday with an announcement by a U.S. trade official that the Jan. 1 deadline could be extended if necessary. Alan Holmer, deputy U.S. trade representative, said the final legislative package sent to Congress this week leaves room for “slippage” of the pact's effective date if the agreement isn't ratified on time by the Canadian government. In Ottawa, Trade Minister John Crosbie said the proposed Canadian legislation also doesn't lock the government into the Jan. 1 effective date. But he said the government is still aiming to have its legislation approved in time for the agreement to take effect by that date. * Crosbie said the government plans to get final approval by the Commons for its free-trade bill and send it to the Senate by the middle of next month. “The question is going to be, if they (the Senate) continue this suicidal course, who governs Canada?” he told reporters outside the Commons. IEEKS SUPPORT Meanwhile, Turner left Ottawa on Tuesday for a three-day western tour during which he is expected to try to boost public support for his use of the Senate. His strategy earned“ antendorsement from Peterson, who described it as “a very gutsy move - a bold move” that violates no constitutional principles. But the ploy was unanimously condemned at a meeting in Vancouver of the trade ministers for the four Western provinces. Financial analysts have also offered their two cents, crediting the Liberal leader with causing an uncertainty over free trade that resulted in a one-cent drop Monday in the value of the Canadian dollar. In Wahsington, U.S. government and congres- sional leaders said they expect the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives to approve the free-trade agreement within the next three months. A final round of hearings on the U.S. free-trade legislation could begin in Washington as early as next week. However, hopes of a final vote by the Senate and House before the mid-August summer recess have all but vanished because of a congressional calendar jammed with Dap cient issues. The pi would elimi: all tariffs and many non- tariff barriers to two-way trade over a 10-year period. Crosbie said he was generally pleased with the U.S. free-trade legislation, but added the two countries still disagree over a provision in the deal covering plywood standards. U.S. officials say Canada hasn't seriously- considered revising its construction quality stan- dards to allow increased imports of American plywood. In retaliation, they say they will refuse to cut the U.S. tariff on Canadian plywood as planned. Big Bear’s descendant runs to retrieve relic EDMONTON (CP) — The great, to retrieve a sacred relic. Bear, grand chief of the Cree. great grandson of Big Bear, one of the West's most revered Indian lead. ers, is planning to run from Edmon ton to New York City in an attempt Jim Thunder, 38, hopes to. per- suade the American Museum of Nat: ural History to hand over a sacred medicine bundle assembled by Big ONLY ONE ACCOUNTING BODY PROGRAMS YOU The bundle, in a tattered canvas sack wrapped with binder twine, contains the claws and tanned paw of a grizzly bear. Big Bear wore the bundle into battle in 1885 when the plains Cree joined Louis Riel and the Metis of central Saskatchewan trying to de- fend their land from being over run by settlers. Legend has it that the bundle helped Big Bear and his people escape from attacking police. Thunder will leave Edmonton on Sept. 1 and will run about 160 kilometres a week. He plans to reach New York in February. It's hoped the museum will bow to growing public pressure and hand over the bundle, Thunder said. “The spirit of Big Bear longs for the bundle to be brought home to his people. Bit Bear told me so,” said Thunder in a letter sent Tuesday to museum trustees. “Whether or not the bundle was given to the museum or sold, it's my DEAN HOUGHTON . new Deacon Houghton ordained as Deacon Former Castlegar resident, Dean Houghton, was ordained Deacon in the Anglican Church at the Cathedral Church of St. Michael and All Angels in Kelowna on June 26, 1988. He completed his Bachelor of Theology at the College of Emmanuel and St. Chad, Saskatoon in April. He graduated from Stanley Hum phries secondary school in 1969 and irk College in 1977 and has worked mostly in the recreation field since then, particularly with the B.C. Forest Service. Houghton, with his wife Anne (nee Partridge) and son Adrian now re- side in Invermere. There he is pastor for the Shared Ministries of the An glican and United Churches for the Windermere Valley. KEITH HOUGHTON . gets degree Local man graduates in Alberta On June 18, 1988, former Castlegar resident Keith Houghton graduated as a Respiratory Therapist with the University Hospitals (Edmonton) and Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. He graduated from Stanley Humphries secondary school in 1975 an lkirk College in 1981 and worked as a Forestry Technol ogist. Houghton, with his wife Marlene (nee Kowalko), and infant daughter, July 27, 1988 as SIZZLING SAVINGS! Aenean eee ee 2 ID" am... Ub, Old Dutch CHIPS Assorted 200 G. 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