WILL-BABYSIT in Robson o: Call Linda at 365-6541 txperien My, : n/9 ca a) ce with babies. PAINTING CONTRACTORS Commercial Industrial R BOBCAT ‘0. SERVICES aie pl 365-3015 ‘inshing * Arborite Work * Additions * Renovations ALL TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY 365-2932 © 369-7252 * 359-719) AUTO REPAIR Reasonable Rate 365-8121 dog. SP 3_KITTENS to good home. 36s. 7886 UNIVERSITY student will do yard work, house work, baby: WILL ROTOTILL gardens ond yard work, was! hepa ws, any jobs. 365-7. ING ee student Need o job? High school ond college students may services ui Drop us a line oF phone the tion Ad number at 365-2212 We will run your ad for 3 issues at | SVEAWAT SSSaajqSea MALE SAMOYED, pure white , 365-3085 2/40 T-month old kitt Pi Rupp months oth "Good with chil en 365-5230 after 4 p.m. SPRINGER/SPANIEL cross 7 — sitting. ths old. Spayed, 3/40 5230 atter 5 p.m. 2/39 If you have an item you'd like to offer their jer this category ternoon shift. 365-7¢ WORK, schoo SPCA Also one 2 ~ ed, all shots. 365. students over the summer who lems in reading ‘and math, 365-8365 3/3 WILL DO babysitting, odd jobs, cleaning windows lawns and other yard work 365-5358 evenings. Ask for Emily. 3/38 CITY OF CASTLEGAR FOR SALE BY TENDER Miller Fall D.C. Welder Model D250WE 250 Amp. As is where is. SUBMIT BIDS TO PETER OZEROFF 460 Columbia Avenue, Castiega 00 p.m., May 18, 1984. By 3: J.C. Penney Co. House of Music Fonk’s Variety Two Swabbies Kelly’s Office Supply Lad “‘N’’ Lassie House of Yardage Clark’s All Sport Mode “0” Day Empire Auto Parts Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 ore as follows: r, B.C. i SI -6103 oF 365-584 “PAR” DAY in Colville May 19 & 21 On Regular Price Merchandise In Stock. LaPlant Jewellery Happy’s Hallmark Cherry Tree Egger Furniture E.Z. Knit Ivar’s Western Ranch Mosby’s Mens Wear Sandra Kay Fashions Goodwill Jack “‘N” Jill SEE YOU IN COLVILLE Watch for the Maple Leaf in participating stores! BRIAN al JUNE RRPATRRR, ed shopping. Cut expenses save money. Get 1 yout neig hbor in our jumn, We'll run your ad = tree of our action line 365-221 FOUND; Red ‘tricyle in Foun dation Homes in 2748 BIG BROTHERS ot hare a moment brother. It will last io —beo a Wounieers, ore on Saturday; Moy q9 terween 20 00 and 4:00 p.m. to Fg aed the occasion of their vedding ‘Anniversary. No {@ ‘ore WANTED: A ride \ oN Nelson. Af. 2/40 ether with REE Share. Phone ttn/37 365. 2/39 Lost or found items are not charged for. if ‘ something or fou: lost something paint or p,% Y Tine phone the Action Ad number 3/40 ne aorchs Well run 365-2212 anytim jurin your od for two issues tree. of business hours, We'll run the © roe n/24 WO issues free charge. 10/23 0 workshop -on lawn installation and core. 2 p.m. Valley dscape Nursery across Gabriel's Restaurant. CASTLEGAR NEWS office hours Lan- gontlegar needed. 52/93 SHRINE CIRCUS Wednesday, June 13 IDS ond Mobile Disco able or type of 12. 368-7386 _ tin/93 ALCOHOLIC ANONYMOUS ond Al Anon. 365-3663 HOBBITT HILL CHILDRENS case 7280 ttn/23 GRANDNK who | bought $10 crib, Sat., 1 underneath sup- ports. writs 418 100m Ave 365-7136 ACCENT your beauty with the Coloring to seasons bye ppointment. 693-2261 7/39 i NICK and STAFF at Trowelex yehatt gel Volunteer Fire Department, we wish to thank them for ‘ihe use of the Community Volunteer Fire Department. ./40 WE, THE FAMILY of Mike M. Stretoett, would like to extend ‘our thanks and gratitude to Dr's. Trail ater Hospital tor the care and attention given to pi husbar fa: dtather ‘ond Great-grandiather, riends and Revere baking, singers, ‘and | Michael beaded o Geor; The 8.C. Heart Foundation ac with gratitude ‘in donations which helps promote Heart Research. Cards sent to next-of-kin. Box 3023, Castlegar, B.C. B.C. Canadian Cancer Society supports cancer research, education and patient service. Mail "in Memoriam” or “Cam- paign 84” donations to Box 3292, Castlegar, VIN 3H6. ts in our ng. Thoughts of him are alwoys Day of sadness will come o'er Frlenidy may think the mound. ts Se “Seay Setty mined by wite, tote Helen saary of Forests REGENERATION SURVEY CONTRACTS Sealed tenders for the following r contracts will be r the District Manages O Forests, 1002-3rd. Street, Costlegor, B.C. on the dates shown below 1, Contract: Location: area to be surveyed, 993 ha NOTE: Viewing of survey site maps and photos prior to submitting a tender for this contract is mandatory Deadline for receipt of ten ders is 10:00 a.m., May 25, 1984 2. Contract: '$84NO05001 Location: Salmo —_ Forest. District: Arrow. Approximate area to be surveyed, 829 ha Viewing date May 18, 1964 12:00 hrs. at 801 Colum: bio Avenue, Castlegar, 8.C. NOTE: Viewing of survey site maps and photos prior to submitting a tender tor this contract is mandatory. Deadline for receipt of ten: ders is 10:00 a.m., May: 25. 1984 Bids will only be considered from persons 0 have ‘established their eligibility with the District Manager. All persons conducting surveys must meet the training and experience requirements established by the District Manager. Tenders must be submitted on ticulars, may District, Manager, 1002-3rd Street, Castlegar, B.C. The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Dorothy E. Keating oko Dorothy Ellen Smith Keating. Deceased CREDITORS ANDO OTHERS having claims against the Estate of Dorothy E. Keating aka Dorothy Ellen Smith Keating, late of Castlegar, in the Province of British Colum bia, are hereby required to send them to the undersigned solicitor for the Executors, ROYAL TRUST CORPORATION OF CANADA, on or before the 27th day of June, 1984, after which date the assets of the said estate will be distributed having regard only to the claims that have been received. ROYAL TRUST CORPORATION OF CANADA, Executors HARDER, , HANNAH & COMPANY & Solicitors Third Floor, 1475 Ellis Street Kelowna, British Columbia, VY 2A3 Attention: DALE B. HARDER UP TO Lik DEPOSITS Va %o per annum Kootemay Savings Credit Union ate to find his natural parents ‘80 that a bone-marrow trans- plant might be arranged. But Ontario laws shield the identity of those involved in adoptions, and Clough and his adoptive mother, Mary- Lou, have encountered a maze of ‘bureaucratic red tape frustrating their search. It ‘took a month before provincial officials - would agree to bypass some of the rules of confidentiality and delve into government ree ords, but a spokesman for Social Services Minister Frank Drea said the search now is under way and given top priority. Dr. Bernard Chan, one of several cancer specialists treating the Waterloo man, said even if his biological parents are found, the chance of finding an ideal, identical bone-marrow match is ex. tremely remote. The best donor would be a sibling, he said. But even then, there would be only a one-in-four chance the match would be identical. Clough’s natural mother was unmarried when she gave him up for adoption, and Chan said she may not have had a second child y the same Pair survive burns TORONTO (CP) — By rights, Antoine Hookimawen- inew and Tersea Iahatail should be dead. For five days, their bodies covered in burns, the 64- year-old trapper and his 38 year-old friend survived on snow as they searched in the Northern Ontario bush for a rescuer. Their brush with death started April 15, when their tent caught fire in the middle of the night in the James Bay bush about 400 kilometres north of Ont. i ait : If eho hid other chil. aon y 4 + Che t would be atleast a otherapy “half mateh” from natural parent, half brother or half GETS TREATMENT Clough has been receiving chemotherapy treatment since the leukemia was de- tected in January. The ean. cer has been..in remission since March, but Chan said there's “no telling how long this (remission) will last. “It ,could be a week, a month or a year. They can only talk about giving transplant during remission, so the sooner the govern ment traces these people (parents), the better I will like it.” Chan said many cancer specialists believe chemo- therapy can achieve better results than bone-marrow transplants involving donors who are not matched per: feetly. “Eventually chemotherapy will’ kill him. Only a trans plant can give him a chance and 1 know it’s a very small chance.” Clough said he can under- stand why natural parents might not want jo face a child they gave up for adoption, but it shouldn't stop them in his case. “T hold nothing against them,” he said. “I just want to surviv And his adoptive mother, who has seven other adopted children and a child by birth, said she's willing to “pay or do anything” to get in touch with Clough's natural mother. “I'm confident his mother will come forward and I'm willing to meet her any where. I'm game for any thing.” Mon. - 920 Farwell, Trail ART’S 4® AUTO PARTS Fri. 8a.m. - 5:30 p.m.; Sat. 8a.m. - 5 p.m. AUTO BODY & REPAIR WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA Complete Car and Truck Repairs AUTO BODY & PAINTING Bear Creek Road, Trail AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLIES 364-2588 368-8245 & MITCHELL AUTO PARTS For All Your Auto Needs 707 - 13th St., 365-7248 Castlegar ®& Despite losing their clothes and blankets in the fire and suffering second- and third- degree burns, the pair man- aged to crawl to safety in freezing temperatures. Hook imaweninew was covered only in a parka and Iahatail was wrapped in canvas. Their only food was a loaf of bread that had been left out- side the tent. As they made their way by snowmobile to a deserted hunting camp, their burns became infected. And despite his right hand being burned toa stump, Hookimaweninew managed to cut firewood with a chainsaw. On the fifth day, they were found by another Cree trap- per coming for his ‘canoe. They are recovering in the burn unit of Toronto General Hospital. “He's very lucky; he’s a strong man,” said Dr. Fawzi Enani. COURTESY USED AUTO PARTS © We Buy Cars & Trucks * Auto Wrecking® Towing * Race Cars & Speed Equipment Alex Miller 693-2224 Hwy. 22, Genelle Ed Wales Wide selection - wellas Columbie Gds. Rd., Trail 367-9717 COLUMBIA AUTO t WRECKERS & SERVICE GM, Ford, Mopar & AMC Parts As many import Parts. OPEN MONDAY TO SATURDAY Rivervale 364-2591 (f=) BUMPER To BUMPER. Fighting Inflation For Motoring Needs Now Under New management 365-7787 1507 Columbia Ave. DEALERSHIPS WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA Bear Creek Road, Trail CASTLEGAR CHEVRON 425 Columbia, Castlega 365-2912 {) BEAVER AUTO CENTRE Wj RENAULT Soles Service Ports Leasing ame 367-7355 or 367-7722 MAIN ST. MUFFLER Located at Castlegar Turbo 1335 Columbia Ave. Ph. 365-5411 CAR & TRUCK RENTALS CASTLEGAR CHEVRON WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA 364-2588 365-2912 CASTLE TIRE (1977) LTD. See Us for Used Automotive Parts Ae ‘pnt _ The $500,000 winning number in Friday’s » Provincial Lottery is 5210003. The six winning numbers in Saturday's Lotto 6- | 949 draw are 1, 4, 14, 17, 21, and 26, The bonus number is 31. ¥, Page Cl Barrett retires WEATHERCAST Cloudy with showers and/or af: ternoon thundershowers todey with snow at higher elevations. Highs near 13° and lows near 4°. Chance of precipitation is 50 per cent today and 50 per cent Mon- 50 Cents — VOL. 37 No. 41 CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1984 3 Sections (A, B& C) gr EL ECTION-STYLE’ VISIT ™ y West Tory di Bob Brisco and oon Mulroney's finger while ears By RON NORMAN Editor swing through the West I. Conservative leader Brian Mulroney hammered away at a favorite theme: the “unholy alliance” betWeen Liberals and New Democtatig, Party. “They eloped on us,” he told about 25 party workers at the Kootenay West constituency office on Columbia Ave. Thursday afternoon. “We've been paying for it ever since.” Outside the office he told reporters, “The NDP are going to pay heavily for their intimate association” with the Liberals. And that night at a Tory rally in the Fireside Inn ballroom he told about 350 party faithful, “When you vote for the NDP ., . you're going to get the Liberal Party of ‘Canada 10 times out of 10." Mulroney contiued the theme Friday morning in a breakfast speech in Trail before he toured Cominco’s new electrolytic and smelting plant. Speech, A2 Late in the morning he met with 15 West Kootenay mayors and regional representatives to listen to their eoncerns, before’departing for Cranbrook and more speechmaking that afternoon. Mulroney was well received everywhere he went on jhis two-day visit. About 75 well-wishers greeted he and wife Mila at Castlegar Airport Thursday Six-year-old Elizabeth and, five-year-old Michelle Anderson of C: Pp ‘the ys with flowers, while Holly skof!, d vative teoder y's wife Mila look on, —castews Photo by Ron Normon raps NDP Mulroney told workers that his connection to the Kootenay West riding is not as “tenuous” as'some may think because his brother-in-law’s brother and wife live in the area. He noted that he holds former Kootenay West MP and Tory candidate Bob Brisco “in the highest regard.” Mulroney added that the Conservatives are on the verge of forming a large majority government. “I want Bob Brisco sititng right there with me,” he He touched on another common theme — that of bringing Western Canada back inte the federal govern ment decision-making process. He said he made his first trip west in 1962 as private secretary to Alvin Hamilton, then Minister of Agriculture in the John Diefenbaker government. “In those days Western Canada had a voice that was heard in Ottawa.” That is no longer thé case, he said. “I will not rest until sueb time as Western Canada... is brought back into-the decision-making process in Ottawa.” Mulroney also scoffed at the recent opinion polls which show: the Tories trailing Liberals in voter popularity. “We're ‘doing very, very. well in the polls,” he said, adding that a true indication of how well the Liberals are doing willbe when Liberal Party president and former cabinet minister Iona Campagnolo returns to B.C. and runs as a Liberal. Mulroney made himself freély available to the media outside party headquarters, byt refused to be pinned down on 4 couple of issues, Bebed ati witht hond-carved Rumsian ale on bebaf of Doukhobor residents. rreay ee gent about 50 minutes shdking hands and — inehuding the Stanley LOST OVERNIGHT Trail man found safe and sound By ADRIAN CHAMBERLAIN Staff Writer A= -87-year-old. B.C. Assessment Authority employee who was lost overnight Thursday in the Deer Park area was found Friday morning in good condition. Rod Mosby of Trail was reported missing Thursday evening after he “Photo, A2_ failed to return home from reassessing Jand in Deer Park — about 32 kilome- tres south of Castlegar. About 15 Castlegar RCMP and volunteers from Castlegar Search and Rescue were told at 8:35 a.m. that Mosby had been found by four men ona fishing trip in the area, according to police. “This is mostly embarrassing,” said Changes to surriculum attacked the provin- ‘paper on high school graduation requirements Thursday, calling the proposed changes “nothing more than a tinkering” of the cur- riculum. Principal Lae Farrell, making a presentation on behalf of the Castlegar sehool district at a public bearing on the controversial.“white paper,” sug- gested that a Royal Commission. be established to examine high school education in B.C. on a comprehensive level. “What passes for education today in our colleges and schools is a hopeless anachronism,” he said. The public hearing, held at the J.L. Crowe school in Trail, attracted about 60 people, including speakers from area school districts who commented on the discussion paper. Two Ministry of Education repre- sentatives sat on a panel to receive briefs and hear comments. In his presentation, Farrell criticized the proposed language requirement for high school students, calling it “ludi- crous” and “ridiculous,” He said he recently asked Glen Wall, assistant deputy minister of education, why the language ment is there, and was told’ it's a university requirement. “I don't think that’s a valid reason to have it in our secondary schools,” said Farrell. “French, German, Japanese — I don't care what it is — eliminate it.” Farrell also attacked the “stream- ing” of students into three hi, programs: arts and science, applied arts and science, ation, calling it “ Instead he suggested that high school students be required to take four Grade 12 subjects (with Grade 11 prerequisites) — with two of these Grade 12 courses in “speciality areas.” As an example, Farrell ‘said a stu- dent might take Grade 12 algebra, computer studies, drafting, and-elec- tronics. “That gives him a double major — one in academic math, and‘one in in- dustrial education, and leaves & great deal of flexibility. in his curriculam.” Ministry representative Ian Gamer- on said at the beginning of the bearing that the three high school programe. are not inflexible, and that students in the applied arts and science and career Pp would be eligible for uni- Mosby in an interview after he was driven by one of the fishermen to Scot. tie’s Marina on Broadwater Road Fri. day morning. Mosby explained that the four-wheel drive company truck he'd been driving got stuck about 2 p.m. Thursday “near Two-Bit Creek, beyond Broadwater.” “I got down a hill, and I couldn't get back up again,” said Mosby. “I tried for a couple of hours to get out. I just about rebuilt that entire road.” Mosby said he walked down to Arrow Lake, where he met some fishermen who tried to help Mosby free his vehicle from about 6 to 10:30 p.m. without success. “I didn’t think I was in trouble, but I thought I was in for a cold night,” said Mosby. But he added that the fishermen — who were camping out — “had an extra sleeping bag for me.” Not only did he spend a warm night — Mosby found three of the fishermen were old buddies from Trail. “Three friends of, mine actually,” he said. “Guys I graduated with.” RCMP and the Search and Rescue crews started the search Thursday night, and called it off at midnight. They resumed the search Friday morning until it was reported that the missing man had been located, ac. cording to police. Ken Miscavitch, chief of the search and rescue crew, said they had six ve- hicles and one boat looking for Mosby. He said Search and Rescue members have been called to Deer Park in the past, adding that it's a “pretty popular” area for people to get lost. UP IT GOES . » » Members of the 44th Field Ei . work on the new Zuckerberg Island Park sus officially opened today at 3 p.m. Public is > CEREMONY TODAY ‘WILL OPEN BRIDGE By CasNews Staff The Zuckerberg Island Park suspen- sion bridge will be officially opened in a formal ceremony at 3 p.m. today. The pedestrian suspension bridge, which measures 100 metres long by one metre wide, connects the island park with the mainland. Members of the 44th Field Engineer Squadron of Trail were putting the fin- ishing touches on the bridge this mor- ning in preparation for the opening eremonies, after more than two months work. ‘The bridge was built with help from local di industry and spearheaded by John Charters and the Castlegar Rotary Club. é The public is invited to attend the opening and then walk across the bridge and tour the island park — Work continues on clearing paths and brush on the island and restoration work on the chapel house is also on- In the official opening today, Char- ee ee: to: Mayor Audrey who will secept it on behalf of the City of Castlegar.