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Il's all in a day's work for the SCRD work crew  al work last week on Norwest Bay Road in Sechelt. -Knt shtitdu photo  The Sunshine Coast Regional  District board has postponed  making a demand for a  moratorium on logging in the  Chapman and Grey Creek  watersheds until it hears industry's side of the matter.  Sandy Gibb, the logging contractor for International Forest  Products (IFP), appeared  before the board Thursday  night, asking that it delay sending a moratorium demand to  the Ministry of Forests.  \"All we'd like is a chance to  meet with the board and look at  specifically what the problems  are,\" Gibb said. IFP, which  owns Jackson Brothers, has logging rights in the Chapman\/Grey Creek areas and  crews are scheduled to begin  work on Tuesday, although the  30 hectare watershed section  which is under dispute will not  be immediately logged because  it is still snow covered.  Gibb said that IFP feels  \"caught in the middle\", since  the Ministry of Forests says they  can cut, but the SCRD doesn't  want them to. He likened the  'situation to confrontations on  Meares Island where individuals  set up blockades against the loggers.  \"We're not here just to screw  up the water system,\" said  Gibb. \"We live here too. We  buy' our groceries here. We  don't want to be facing possible  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ;& of civil ditobedieucehy our  neighbours.\"  Gibb said that IFP is a local,  family-run business which has  invested more than a half  million dollars in equipment  that makes logging practices as  low impact as possible. \"The  company is not New Zealand  owned, with little care to local  concerns,\" Gibb said, but ad  ded that IFP has an obligation  to meet its cutting rights. \"The  road is already in, we have the  legal right to log, but we don't  want to get stuck in the  middle,\" stressed Gibb.  Area E Director Jim Gurney,  who drafted the moratorium  demand, said that he in no way  advocates civil disobedience to  halt logging. The moratorium  motion not only petitions for a  halt to any logging until an Integrated Watershed Management Plan (IWMP) is complete,  but also asks that the ministry  provide equal cutting rights outside the watersheds to the logging companies affected.  A March 1 letter to the SCRD  from the Ministry of Forests  states that immediate development within the Chapman  Creek watershed will be limited  to the two blocks which total 30  hectares since the plans have  \"been modified in order to address visual concerns and...  should hot compromise the integrity of the watershed or the  recreation values.\" Since further development will be halted  until an IWMP is established,  \"this should help to alleviate the  concern raised regarding a  moratorium,\" the letter concluded.  \"Our argument is not with  the loggers,\" Gurney said. \"It is  with the Ministry of Forests and  the provincial government for  their process in deciding on  issues such as this.\" Gurney  said that the Ministry of Forests  has a mandate to cut down  trees, not to protect the environment; but the Ministry of Environment only has the power to  make recommendations, which  the Ministry of Forests can  choose to disregard.  \"The problem is that while  Please turn to page 4  Will address safety concerns, but...  SCRD will not oppose barging  by Caryl Worden  The SCRD will not draft a  by-law that defines the  allowable value of houses moved onto the Coast, but will address safety concerns raised by  opponents to barged houses.  \"A value by-law would not  have stopped houses coming in  anyway,\" explained Director  Gordon Wilson, who along  with Director Jim Gurney met  recently with a group of  residents concerned that barged  in houses were lowering their  property values.  The group asked for a by-law  similar to other municipalities  stating that moved-in houses  would have to be one and a  quarter times the value of other  homes in the area.  Wilson told the board Thursday that in the opinion of  SCRD legal advisers, such a bylaw could be successfully  challenged in court.  \"Although we're not proceeding with a by-law limiting  the value, there are concerns to  be moved on,\" Wilson said.  The board voted in favour of  updating an existing by-law  which requires owners of  moved-in houses to put up a  bond that guarantees completion within six months. The  bond amount will be increased  to $2000 from the present  $1000.  \"This was a difficult exercise  since we were presented with a  solution, and we then had to  determine exactly what the problem was,\" said Gurney. \"I  believe $2000 is enough of an incentive without making it so  high that it's prohibitive.\"  Wilson also said that there  would also be better communication in notifying  emergency response groups  such as fire departments and  ambulances so that they could  plan alternative access routes at  times when the houses are being  trucked along the highway.  \"The building department  has also been instructed to  check on safety standards that  apply at any construction site,\"  Wilson added, referring to complaints of ditches around lot  sites that are a hazard to  neighbourhood children.  Gurney said he was upset at  some actions taken by the opponents of moved-in houses, as  when they created a blockade of  cars that stopped Supreme  Housemovers from moving the  buildings once they were loaded  on shore.  On the inside  French Immeraiort  another perspective P. 2  Lettera to the Editor P.3&20  Seniors suffering P. 4  Community Futures P. 4  Drug Awareness Week P. 7  Duffy bounces back P. 14  White NPP winner  Book publisher Howard White of Harbour Publishing in  Pender Harbour has won the nomination lo contest the next  provincial election on behalf of the NDP party.  In voting tabulated in Powell River on the weekend, White  won 957 of the 1598 votes cast to defeat Brenda DeGraag of  Powell River by a margin of 316 votes.  Student fares?  BC Ferries should offer a reduced rate for students believes  the Sunshine Coast Regional Distract.  Director Gordon Wilson brought the matter before the  board last week after being approached by the Chatelech Student Society. Wilson said that the Marine Workers Union  had already given support for establishing a student rate.  The board will send a letter to the provincial government  requesting consideration of the proposal.  Cancer Drive  In April more than 40 men and women volunteers with the  Sunshine Coast Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society win be  calling on residents and businesses for support In raising their  goal of $20,000 for 1990.  The Society will also hold Daffodil Days on April 6 and 7.  Look for these special daffodils in your favourite shopping  areas.  Sargeant Bay Park dedicated  by Caryl Worden  Sunshine Coast residents  ushered in the first day of spring  with a double celebration, as  Sargeant Bay was dedicated as  BC's newest provincial park on,  March 20.  \"This is truly a remarkable  piece of property,\" said  Minister of Parks Ivan  Messmer, as more than SO local  residents and government officials gathered at the head of  the bay for the dedications.  Messmer thanked the Angell  family, who owned the  57-hectare property, for their  dedication to seeing the area  turned into parkland. In a later  interview with the Coast News,  Norm Angell said he was pleased about the bay being BC's  388th park.  \"It's been over 20 years of  struggle and now I can feel that  all the trauma and battles I've  had with my family were worth  it,\" said Angell who has occupancy rights until the end of  May in the property's waterfront cabin where he grew up.  Angell's father had owned  the land since the 1950s and at  various times development pro  jects for the area had been considered. Although Angell Sr.  sold the land in 1982, he retained living rights on the property.  None of the rest of the family  expressed an interest in the  natural beauty of the property  which includes 1300 feet of  gently graded foreshore and a  marsh that is home to many  animal and bird species.  Split by Redrooffs Road, the  park also includes forested  uplands complete with creeks  and meadow. This is the area  that the province hopes to  develop for camping, with 100  sites proposed according to  Messmer.  Appreciation for the work of  the Sargeant Bay Society was  also given at the dedication.  \"We're very happy to see this  happen, finally,\" said society  member Joop Burgerjon. The  society was formed by area  residents in 1978 to preserve the  marsh's natural habitat when a  marina project was planned.  Parks officer Drew Car-  michael said that the next step  for the Sargeant Bay Park is to  develop a five-year plan. The  process will include a public  forum later this summer when  all interested parties can put forward suggestions for the area's  development.  \"There is the capability for a  campground and a day-use  area,\" Carmichael said, \"but it  is most important for the plans  to specifically fit the needs of all  the people in this regional  district.\"  (Left to right) MLA Harold Long, Minister of Provincial Parks Ivan Messmer, SCRD Chairman  Petty Connor, aad Sechelt Mayor Ton Meredith took part ia the official dedication of Sargeant  Bay as a provincial park on Tuesday, March 20. _c\ufffd\ufffdrri WorSn pkoto  Serving the Sunshine Coast since 1945 Coast News, March 26,1990  comment  A reputation  Even coworkers are grumbling about the parents  upset over the cancellation of French Immersion. The  Sunshine Coast is getting a brand new reputation for  bigotry and the parents supporting French Immersion  are getting the blame. Here we go again, punishing the  victims.  As has been said this week elsewhere on this page, it  seems from the vantage point that the provincial  government is playing politics with education and, as a  consequence and facing a $700,000 referendum this  year, the school board is playing politics with French  Immersion.  The groundswell of anti-French feeling in this country, the direct result of a French-Canadian language bill  that infuriated everyone and yet no leader anywhere has  spoken up against it, makes the French Immersion program and its supporters a natural target and it would appear that opinion on the Coast is swinging hard against  them.  If we are labelled bigots, they are to be blamed. How  English-speaking parents who wish their children well-  educated in the country's official second language can  be labelled bigots is not at all understandable.  Last week our local fence sitter extraordinaire had a  difficult time throwing his threadbare blanket of  liberalism over the warring factions on the Coast. Let us  negotiate, he cried, after an arbitrary decision had  already been taken.  Our position is clear. If the Coast is developing a  reputation for racial bigotry it has to do with the  Alliance for Preservation of English in Canada, an  organization our liberal's publisher helped to form.  The name is a transparent veil for anti-French  bigotry, in our view. The letters and press releases of its  indefatigable spokesman, being faxed all over the country, are the cause of our growing reputation for bigotry.  The support of the general public is justification of  the reputation.  Waf  BlW  ^0^aW^*a*aw \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*   w^HaW^rW^ar  5 YEARS AGO  Salmon are reported in Increasing numbers in the  creeks of the Sunshine Coast and local salmon  enhancement efforts are being given much of the credit.  CBC's The Journal is on hand on the Sunshine Coast to  film the ribbon-cutting ceremony which launches Norb  and Yvonne Kraft's floating salmon farm in Hotham  Sound.  In an interview with the Coast News, Seaspeed President Jim Yates says that a hovercraft service between  Gibsons and Vancouver will be implemented this summer.  Sunshine iCoast Teachers' Association President  Brian Butcher urges the local school board to stand firm  in its submitted budget requirements for 1985-86. Local  trustees are facing a shortfall in their budget of  $477,993 because of provincial restrictions.  10 YEARS AQO  Adrian Belshaw wins the Coast News Challenge Cup for  the second time in the three-year history of the April Fools'  Day Run. All but three of 31 starters finished the run with  Arne Pettersen, Gibsons Chamber of Commerce president, winning the Golden Oldy Award.  The old pool hall on Marine Drive in Gibsons goes  under the wrecking ball. Condominiums are planned on  the site.  20 YEARS AQO  Port Mellon Local 297 of the IBPS and PMW has protested to the provincial government about the 'totally inadequate' and inconvenient scheduling of ferries in this  area.  The minimum wage in the province of BC Is raised to  $1.50 per hour.  Residents of Gower Point voted overwhelmingly not  to oppose the Gibsons sewer system because the  system calls for a sewage treatment plant.  30 YEARS AQO  The normally quiet little Backwater of Gunboat Bay in  Pender Harbour has seen a rash of chimney fires recently.  Jen Monrufet of Roberts Creek urges the editor of the  Coast News to raise his voice against the testing of  nuclear weapons.  40 YEARS AGO  It may not be long before a swimming pool is completed  at Pender Harbour. Committee Chairman S. Anderson  reports that plans are almost complete.  Letters to the editor object to the suggestion that  Pender Harbour students attend high school In Gibsons.  Jackson Brothers Logging have offered Gibsons five  acres of land to be used as a memorial park.  The Sunshine  mst itfi  p\ufffd\ufffdbti.h.d by GLASSFORD PRESS LTD.  Office Mgr: Anne Thomsen  Dee Grant  Editor: John Burnside  Caryl Worden  Kent Sheridan  Production Mgr: Jane Stuart Advertising Mgr: Fran Burnside  Sherrl Payne John Gilbert  Bev Cramton jean Broccoli  Bonnie McHeffey  Brian McAndrew  Bill Rogers  Tht SUNSHINE COAST NEWS is a locally owned newspaper,  published on the Sunshine Coast, BC every Monday by Glmlord  Press Ltd., Box 460, Gibsons, BC VON 1V0. Gibsons Tel. 686-2622 or  886-7617; Sechelt Tel. 865-3930; Pender Harbour Tel. 663-9099; Gibsons Fax Tel. 686-7725. Second Class Mall Registration No. 4702.  The Sunshine COAST NEWS is protected by copyright and reproduction ol any part ol it by any means is prohibited unless permission in  writing is first secured from Olittford Press Ltd., holders of the  copyright. SUBSCRIPTION RATES  i: 1 year S3S; 6 months 120; Foreign; 1 year 140  Once more  into the breach  That there is nothing new  under the sun is a truism as old  as consciousness. Recognizing  and learning from that which  has gone before, however,  seems an exercise that is beyond  us.  I may or may not get back to  explain that observation before  I'm finished this piece.  1 am being assured by my coworkers even, pressure groups  are everywhere, that everyone is  sick and tired of the parents in  favour of French Immersion  and their passionate concerns. I  tell them that somebody has to  be swimming upstream just so  that we don't all become a flock  of sheep bleating in the same  direction at an imagined  danger. Reluctantly I adopt that  role.  As I have said before, the  problem with education in this .  province is that the money collected for it is too heavily apportioned on the residential  homeowner. Industry does not  pay its share. It is also true that  every election in the past 30  years has seen our governing  party, realizing that there are a  lot of voters who leave school  with no high regard for  teachers, make education a  political football.  The school board has cancell  ed a program that children,  parents and teachers have all  found to be highly successful.  They have done so a scant couple of years after implementing  it. They have done so without  the suggested year of prior advice that the Ministry of Education recommends.  Implementing a program that  cannot be sustained is shortsighted. Stopping a program as  popular as French Immersion  without adequate forewarning  is at least discourteous. Nor, as  far as I can determine, is there  yet in the public domain any  clear and concise reason given.  I am led to the speculation  that French Immersion is a  sacrificial cow to prepare the  way for the $700,000 referendum that local property owners  are going to be asked to vote on  this year.    It is a tactic that may well  work, again.  Let's step back if we can and  consider the larger picture. A  couple of years ago the provincial government announced an  end to confrontation and a  reliance on consultation with  local school boards. This year,  without consultation, we have  the imposition of education  referenda.  The   BC   School   Trustees  Association have released a  document that has some very  important information. I have  not seen that information widely reported. Here are a few facts  from the release: The information comes from Statisics  Canada.  The BC government will provide $5259 per pupil in 1990-91  while the Canadian average for  1989-90 is $5514. Assuming a  five per cent inflation, BC will  be about $531 per pupil behind  the national average this year.  BC spent $776 per capita on  public schools in 1988-89 while  the Canadian average was $958  per capita.  BC expended 3.5 per cent of  its Gross Domestic Product on  public education in 1988-89,  while the Canadian average was  4.1 percent.  BC's pupil\/teacher ratio in  1989-90 was 20.4 compared to  the Canadian average of 18.3.  Expenditures on public  education in BC, as a percen  tage of the provincial budget,  have gone down from 25.2 per  cent in 1981 to 17.5 per cent in  1989-90.  Spending on public education  over the past five years is up only 14 per cent while overall  government spending is up 22  percent.  The Trustees Association says  that school spending in this province is efficient and responsible  and the facts seem to support  that claim. Why the referenda,  then?  At the end of Henry IV, Part  II, Shakespeare has the dying  king, worn out with civil strife,  advise his son to wage war on  the French to ensure domestic  peace.  Finding a foreign enemy, a  common foe, to take the  pressure off the people's  dissatisfaction with their  government is an old and very  successful ploy. I think we are  falling for it again in the much-  embattled field of public education.  Western  Wind  Western wind, when will thou blow,  The small rain down can rain?  Christ, If my love were In my arms  And I In my bed again!  Anonymous  Slings and arrows  A very historic canal  by George Matthews  A couple of months ago I  came back to BC after spending  the best part of a year working  in Washington, LX. Washington is a wonderful city, filled  with the kinds of historical architectural and cultural landmarks thru give the inhabitants  of cities like that the illusion of  being somewhere very important.  That sojourn was, in part, a  search for an environment more  historically and culturally interesting than what I was used  to. In fact, had I been able to  convince my wife to move there  with me and were the American  economic system more generous  in rewarding educators, and if  Washington was not one of the  half dozen most expensive cities  in North America, I would have  stayed a lot longer.  But the main reason for moving to Washington in the first  place was to spend time in an interesting city. Ironically, one of  my first discoveries was a  remarkable piece of cultural  geography that links the city to  the countryside. It may come as  a surprise to those who think of  Washington as just a southern  spur of the great northeastern  megalopolis, but the Maryland  and northern Virginia forests  and outdoors areas are some of  the finest in North America and  much more accessible than the  wilderness of British Columbia.  My introduction to the countryside surrounding Washington, DC, was a short but  vigorous Saturday morning hike  along the C&O Canal, and it is  the canal that introduced me to  some features of American  history and culture that I didn't  expect to find.  The canal starts in the heart  of Washington, DC, and travels  inland from the Atlantic  tidewater into the backwoods of  West Virginia and Maryland. It  also transcends American  history and society, so that a  journey up the canal, up river,  is at the same time, a metaphysical journey through time and  culture - a sort of Heart of  Darkness, only in reverse.  The canal, first of all, has a  social and economic history;  then it has its own political  history, including a role in the  American Civil War. It also has  its own special meaning in terms  of the space it occupies, a  special beauty and physical link  between a sophisticated, urban  country, and a simpler rural,  pastoral one.  These links through time and  space are worth a closer look  for both what they are and what  they might represent in terms of  the North American experience.  The Chesapeake and Ohio  Canal is one of the finest  historical and recreational  heritages in North America. It  was built by Irish and German  immigrants between 1828 and  1840. Its purpose was to open a  way of transporting coal, iron  ore and farm produce from  western Virginia, Maryland,  Pennsylvania and Ohio down to  the seacoast of Maryland and  Virginia.  Interestingly, the canal never  amounted to much as a mode of  transport. By the time the C&O  Canal was finished, the railroad  had developed to the point that  it was almost as cheap and  much faster to transport goods  by rail.  In fact, in one of those 'only  in North America' scenarios, at  the same time that President  John Quincy Adams was turning soil in Georgetown for  opening canal construction,  Charles Carroll, of the founding Maryland family, was  shovelling sod in Baltimore to  begin the building of the  Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.  Even so, the canal was kept in  commercial operation until  1926 and there are still some  oldtimers around who grew up  as children of canal boat  families.  The canal, or what's left of it,  is 184 miles long and runs along  the Potomac River from the  Georgetown district of  Washington, northeast to  Cumberland, Maryland. The  C&O was a part of the canal  construction era that saw the  development of the huge network of canals that form much  of the inland waterway of the  northeastern US and Ontario  and Quebec.  In fact, many of the same  labourers who worked on the  C&O ended up in Ottawa working on the canal system in  Canada. There is even evidence  to suggest that some of these  labourers took part in various  political activities and rebellions  that took place in Upper and  Lower Canada in the late 1830s  and early 1840s.  In terms of significance, the  canal is as important as any  historic site in Washington. In  fact, when it was built, it was  probably the greatest construction project ever attempted on  the North American continent.  Compare its history with some  of the better known sites in the  US capital.  The Washington Monument,  for example, wasn't even finished until 1878, the Lincoln  Memorial, 1922, or the Jefferson Memorial, 1943. The fact is  that Washington itself is, even  by North American standards,  comparatively young, having  not even been incorporated until 1802  The story of the canal has  more chapters and reveals not  only what the canal is but what  it means, its connection with  Presidents from Washington to  Nixon, its dozen aqueducts, 74  locks and its 1000 meter tunnel  drilled through solid rock, but  those chapters are for another  day.  Your community's  AWARD-WINNINC  newspaper  X  \".\"      \"' v\"  ,   --r    -  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUiTliMtfWW Coast News, March 26,1990  Letters to the Editor  APEC's racism must be challenged  Editor's Note: The following  was received for publication.  Editor, The Press  Sechelt, BC  Dear Mr. Price,  In your editorial on French  Immersion (Fl) (March 20,  1990), you suggest Mr. Knaus is  being unfairly categorized as a  \"redneck (sic) Nazi bigot\" and  that members of the public are  afraid to speak out for fear of  being subjected to personal  abuse.  It seems that every time there  is an emotional issue in the community, your paper trots out  this old saw about people being  afraid to speak out for fear of  reprisals yet you never give any  examples to back up your inflammatory statments. If there  have been any personal attacks  they deserve condemnation.  However, in this issue, I know  of only one such incident, a personal attack on a Fl teacher.  While unnerving, it has not  made him afraid to speak out.  There is a big difference between heated debate and personal abuse. Persons in public  office have a responsibility to  justify the decisions they make  on the public's behalf. Until the  meeting with Mr. Geoff Mills of  the Ministry of Education there  was no indication that the board  was prepared to properly explain the reasons for its decision, let alone look at creative  solutions, in spite of countless  meetings that were supposedly  arranged to do so.  Clifford Smith, acting as the  spokesman for the board,  fostered the impression that he  was running the show. It is  therefore not surprising that  emotions have run high. It is  also not surprising that the  board has taken a great deal of  flak, as it would if any other  highly successful program were  cancelled without a proper explanation. However, that professional criticism is not personal abuse.  To suggest that people are  afraid to speak out says more  about the threat to the individual's arguments than the  threat to the individual. If one's  arguments are valid why would  one not be prepared to debate  any issue on its own merit?  Secondly, when you characterize Mr. Knaus as a man unjustly treated, you ignore the  fact that he is being challenged  as a spokesman for an organization, not as an individual. He is  given an audience by the news;  media not as Mr. Knaus but as a  spokesman for APEC. He may  be the \"most reasonable of people\" one on one, but that is not  at issue. He has chosen to act as  the   representative   for   an  organization which has publicly  stated that we need francophones about as much as we  need AIDS. That, in any  language, is racist and reprehensible. It deserves public condemnation. We are known by  the company we keep and if Mr.  Knaus chooses to belong to such  a small minded group, I can only quote Jack Munro who said,  \"If it looks like a duck, walks  like a duck and quacks like a  duck, it's probably a duck\".  Unfortunately organizations  such as APEC have turned the  Fl debate into a French vs  English issue. The fact that this  is a program of study for  primarily English speaking  children has been overlooked in  the smear campaign that is  making francophones the  scapegoat for Canada's problems. Anti-French bias has  made it impossible to assess this  program on its merits alone,  unlike evaluating the merits of  auto mechanics, special education or physics.  When APEC's \"outrageous  statements\" are published unsubstantiated, they feed this  anti-francophone racism. The  supposed high cost of Fl and  the creation of functionally illiterate students become accepted \"facts\", in spite of the  countless times this misinformation is refuted. They are convenient rationales for eliminating  the program.  Similarly, instead of creating  the climate for the negotiated  solution you profess to desire,  your paper publishes a column  by Mr. Proctor guaranteed to  inflame the situation. This is  hardly the action of an editor  concerned that this situation  \"can't be allowed to escalate\".  To achieve the kind of  negotiations you profess to seek  will require creative solutions of  the kind offered by Dr. Mills, in  an atmosphere unpoisoned by  the sentiments expressed by  APEC. However, if that group  insists on being part of the immersion debate you can hardly  expect its proponents' comments and racist remarks to go  unchallenged.  Rob Bennie  CHAMBERS PLANNING SERVICES  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRetirement Planning \ufffd\ufffdLife Insurance  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdInvestment Planning \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEmployee Benefit Plans  'Serving the Sunshine Coast for over 8 Years'  LAWRENCE K. CHAMBERS  LIFE UNDERWRITER  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMutual runoa ricanca ajrM Aacor Financial Sarvicaa uo  TELEPHONE: IM-9111  FAX: MM121  TOLL FREE:    l-SOOASMOSI  AfexiCO auwrAOKAana   byBestaWfest  A\ufffd\ufffd*A        but not airport departure  #aOV cdn.   taxes  \"ESSE10!*..,.   -M-Ht|htr  Callnda $449 cm. oh*rgee k 16* hotel tax  Ut only, 1 wk.  MAXATLAH ibr. ai  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd wk,: Holiday ma $679  HP SuKcottt Agencies trum^cS!!^  Sunnycrest Mall, Gibsons TrmttJ Dept. 886*9255  Letter seen ridiculous  Editor:  In the many years that I have  been concerned with the matter  I have seen and heard many  people express their opinions  opposing the use of drugs, but  the letter 'Drug view causes  strong response' from K.L.  distance, Coast News, March  19,1990, takes the cake for being the most ridiculous.  The letter takes issue with  another person's letter published a few weeks previous.  All the distance letter does is  personally attack the other  writer. It refers to the writer's  appearance, compares the  writer to Robert Noyes and  Charles Manson and even  makes an apparent reference to  children born out of wedlock. M  The distance letter uses one  sentence to make the apparent  point about 'permanent brain  damaging effects of children ingesting poisons.'  I'm sure the previous letter  wasn't from an ugly Noyes-  Manson type saying poisonous  drugs are good for single parent  children.  The writer, in all likelihood,  only suggested that adults be  allowed to make their own decisions about whether or not to  'use drugs.  It's amazing how just a mention of marijuana can cause  severe reactions in some people.  Incidentally, the thing that  Manson and Noyes have in  common is a lack of consideration for the rights of others (to  an extreme, of course).  R. Burke  Howe Sound discharge view  Editor:  I wish to place in a more  realistic perspective, the informative statistic on C102  (Chlorine Dioxide) discharge  presently going into Howe  Sound (this statistic given by  W.l. Hughes, president of  Howe Sound Pulp and Paper  (HSPP) in his 'letter to the  Editor, Short on Facts', March  12, 1990).  We can all have serious  reasons now to suspect the  worst scenario possible for the  existence of healthy life forms  beneath the surface of the  waters of Howe Sound, especially after realizing that the top  executive of that corporate industry (HSPP) has been either  misinformed or has chosen to  ignore the realities of Chlorine  Dioxide leaving this industry's  bleaching system.  His statistic of 99.3 per cent  water discharge for every .7 per  cent C102 contaminate is in  reality seven gallons of C102 for  every 993 gallons of water.  The statistical comparison to  the chlorination of Gibsons'  Province of  British Columbia  NOTICE OF INTENT  Gibsons Highway District  NOTICE is given, pursuant to Section 9(4) of the Highway  Act, that the Ministry has received an application to  discontinue and close a portion of road allowance in the  Secret Cove area adjacent to Lot 'A', (except parts in Plans  13497,14539 & 17666) District Lot 4537, Plan 10783, Group  1, N.W.D.  And that such closed road allowance be vested, pursuant  to Section 9(2)(a) of the Highway Act.  A plan showing the proposed road closure may be viewed  at the Sunshine Coast Highways Office, 1016 Seamount  Way, Seamount Industrial Park, Gibsons, B.C., during office hours. Any person having objection to this application  for road closure should state same in writing not later than  April 19, 1990 to this Ministry at Box 740, Gibsons, B.C.  VON 1V0.  District Highways Manuger for:  MINISTRY OF TRANSPORTATION  AND HIGHWAYS  swimming pool is completely irrelevant and also drastically incorrect, with regards to proportions and percentages Chlorine  quantities. It is 10 gallons of  commercial chlorination fluid  mixed into a SO gallon drum  (10\/40~'\/a) which is then placed  into a 65,000 gallon swimming  pool. This is approximately one  gallon Chlorine solution to 6300  gallons water in the pool.  The Gibsons pool percentages are on a contained and  controlled situation and the  volume of the pool is known.'  But with respect to Howe  Sound, the only relevant  statistic is that HSPP's toxic  discharge has been at a continual rate for several decades  and has permanently altered the  A good  process  Editor:  We would like to take this  opportunity to thank the  RCMP Public Complaints  Commission (PCC): the panel  -Allan Williams, QC, former  Attorney General of BC, Ms  Rosemary Trehearne, Director  of Native Court Works, and  lawyer John U. Bayly, QC;  lawyer Don Sorochan who  represented the (PCC); Member  of Parliament Ray Skelly; and  the Ombudsman of BC who  directed us to the PCC.  The PCC system we found  very helpful and we hope that  other people who are not  satisfied when they complain to  the RCMP will also take advantage of the PCC. This is an excellent body and we highly  recommend them.  The Farewell & Robinson  Families, Sechelt, BC  Thanks  Editor:  The Gibsons Chamber of  Commerce would like to thank  the many people of Gibsons,  Sechelt and Regina Beach,  Saskatchewan who helped to  make the first annual Ugly Tie  Contest a great success.  There were several people  who helped to put this fun event  together. There was Art  Giesbrecht who was in charge of  the event; Darcy Burk who  thought it up; Sunnycrest Mall  for giving us the space;  Richard's for donating the  prize; the judges Shirley, Micki  and Suzanne; the Coast News;  and most importantly, the  models who dared to be seen in  public wearing those ugly ties!  Congratulations go out to Irwin Lengert who won the individual category; to the C1BC  in the business category; and a  huge congratulations to the  shoppers in the mall who contributed dose to $500. The proceeds will' be donated to the  Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.  Thank you, one and all.  Gibsons & District  Chamber of Commerce  overall solution detrimentally  for the re-growth possibilities of  those indigenous species, both  plant and animal, which have  all but disappeared.  That is the fact that the narrow profit-minded top executive  director of HSPP is short of  recognizing and admitting to  himself.  But still, please, Mr. Hughes,  inform us further with a few  more of your facts.  K. Receveur  More letters  page 20  Show Piece Gallery  Is pleased to announce the arrival of  ED HILL'S latest edition serigraph  'MOON OVER KEATS'  With only 100 prints available  We are now reserving certain numbered prints for you  Call today to be sure your number is held  Phone 886-9213  Show Piece Gallery  280 Gower Pt. Road., Gibsons Landing  SHOP LOCALLY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Motorcraftn Coast News, March 26,1990  S* l$k>^:r>': W$  l&^ftii\/  -im'f  flvVa     ;  y Fresh shoots of spring grass are welcomed by these three friends  \ufffd\ufffd: In West Sechelt. -Kent Sfceridu photo  B  | Community Futures  | has Impact on  Coast economy  fl\"  K   ',<        by Rose Nicholson  tfm *   ;1: Community Futures is mak-  Aing a difference to the Sunshine  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjtCoast. At the March 19 meeting  i;\"of the Economic Development  ^Commission (EDC), members  It-were brought up to date by  '\"Sharon Sawchuk, manager of  ^Community Futures, Denise  ^Quarry, ating manager of the  I Business Development Centre  >(BCD), and Lynda Olson,  -'chairperson of Community  Futures.  B High unemployment rates  qualified the Sunshine Coast for  \ufffd\ufffd* $4,344,000. federal Com-  jrnunity Futures grant. Primary  ?:aim of the grant was to boost  J employment levels by providing  \\ assistance to businesses and individuals to create more jobs  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthrough expansion of small  'business activities; to help  'unemployed people to get  ; started in their own home based  \\ businesses; to encourage community groups to initiate projects that would provide jobs;  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and to help individuals to  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrelocate to other areas where  'their job skills were more in de-  EmandL  * In the past year Community  Futures has put on three Home  ; Based Business workshops and  ;one Marketing Your Home  Based Business workshop.  About 90 people attended these  workshops, \"and that means,\"  : said Sawchuck, \"that there's 90  ; new ideas for businesses on the  Coast.\"  j The Business Development  Centre was opened in August of  1989. \"We're getting 40 to 50  enquiries a month,\" said  Quarry. \"So far we've had 25  clients who have received some  kind of assistance, with 70 more  on the files.\"  The BDC helps businesses  and individuals to prepare  business plans and guides them  through the intricacies of bank  financing. Though it has an investment fund of $1.5 million,  clients are encouraged to obtain  financing from regular lending  institutions.  \"We're a lender of last  resort,\" explained Quarry.  \"We're not in conflict with  banks. We look at high risk  business which can't get financing from other sources. Our interest rates are competitive, we  take the regular security and do  the regular risk analysis. Qur intent is to be repaid for the loan,  but our primary objective is to  create jobs.\"  \"Because loans are repaid to  the BDC the fund should never  run out. The hope is that in five  years, with interest and  payments back to the fund, we  will be self-sustaining.\"  Logging  Continued from page 1  we're doing planning for watershed management, trees are still  coming down,\" said Gurney.  Area A Director Gordon  Wilson agreed, but added: \"I  think it's important that all parties be heard. All we're saying is  don't stan cutting in that region  until everyone is clear on what  the impact will be,\" said  Wilson.  IFP will make a presentation  to the board on Thursday,  March 29 at 11 am.  WEST HOWE SOUND FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT  GIBSONS FIRE DEPARTMENT  PUBLIC NOTICE  OUTDOOR BURNING  WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES OF SAID DISTRICT  Under the provisions of the Forest Act and with cooperation ol  the Forestry Service, the West Howe Sound Fire Protection  Dibtrlct, and serviced by the Gibsons Volunteer Fire Department,  will Issue Burning Permits In the following manner:  FROM APRIL 1ST TO OCTOBER 31ST, 1990  Step No. 1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn application form obtainable at the Gibsons  Municipal Hall, South Fletcher Rd., Gibsons, will  be filled out by applicant and deposited there.  Step No. 2 -Twice a week or as required a duly appointed  Fire Prevention Officer will take these application  forms, personally inspect the proposed burning  site, and if approved will upon the receipt of  $5.00 issue a burning permit.  NOTE: No permit Is required for a screen covered incinerator.  MEL BUCKMASTER, FIRE CHIEF  Seniors miss their  home support  \"It's not just the physical  help that we miss, but the  psychological aspect too. Our  Home Support Workers are  very often the only contact with  the outside world for many who  are completely house-bound.  They are our friends as well as  our helpers and sometimes the  only people we see all week.\"  These are views expressed by  some of our elderly citizens who  rely on this essential service  which allows them to remain in  their own homes rather than be  hospitalized.  \"Not only is this service saving the government millions of  dollars in care for the elderly,  but we continue to pay our taxes  and to buy our supplies and  groceries locally with the help of  our support workers.  \"It's a disgrace that they are  paid such low wages for the  work they do. Some of them  earn only around $5 an hour,  and, if they are lucky, they may  reach just over $8 after about 10  years.\"  Both Irene Strand and Rene  Jardine are among those who  depend on their support  workers and who are in full  agreement with the reason for  the strike. The workers are asking for wage increases that  would bring top-of-the-scale  rates up to just over $10 per  hour. An offer of wage in  creases that would amount to a  31 per cent increase over three  years and three months and an  adjusted health and insurance  plan package was not accepted.  No date has yet been set to reopen negotiations according to  Executive Director Martha  Scales.  Workers and management  are still providing essential services and trying to fit in as best  they can, but people like Mrs.  Jardine, who is crippled with arthritis and completely wheel  chair bound, sorely miss their  regular help and realize that it is  impossible for the back-up help  to do it all.  \"If those pen-pushers in Victoria had to actually go out and  do what our support workers do  they would realize just how  underpaid they are. They give  us basic nursing and personal  care, do household chores, take  us shopping, even cut our  toenails when we can't do this  for ourselves.\"  Jack ft Jill  Pre-school  Open  House  April 7 - 10am-lpm  For information 886-3164  or 886-3418  For September  Registration _  Member of  ALLIED...  The Careful Movers  ST0R  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 10,000 sq. ft. of heated, gov't approved storage.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dust-free storage in closed wooden pallets.  LEI WMY'S TRANSFER LTD.  Custom Packing, Storage, Local & Long Distance Moving  Pender Harbour Customers  HWY. 101, GIBSONS       Please CALL COLLECT  II6-2K4  Now through April 7th  ft9UFinanaMor*l()00ia  On some of B.C.tBest Sellers*  'Based on Reported Retail Registration CY 1989  Best Selling Full-size  FoidF-Series.   9.9% FinancingorHOOO Cash Back  on Regular Cab F-Series.  '> iWtimr1  Best Selling Compact  Ford Ranger.  9.9% Financing or H000 Cash Back  on Regular Cab Rangers.  *5'*^       Ltala  t   !!!!!L  ^TfTiafirJ  .a&njB..  sks  j inn unit  s3fci  \ufffd\ufffd$\"%*,*A  '  i  Best Selling Compact  Ford Ranger.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>W  9.9% Financing or H000 Cash Back  on Ranger SuperCabs.  Ford Aerostar Wagons.  9.9% Financing or $1000 Cash Back  on all Ford Aerostar Wagons.  9.9%l2tr, 24mnnth; 10.9% 25 m S6 month: 11 9% 37 t<.48mo.financinr( availiablr O.A.C. frtrm Knrrl Credit rrfCanada on nc\ufffd\ufffd K-Srrin Rrr; ( .1, Ranaw. .\ufffd\ufffdA s.     .1. ..     j  from dealer .lock prior lo April 7,1990.\ufffd\ufffd. SIO.000 financed over 24 monlha at 9.9* APR,,he monthly payment la $46099  he\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoffim-im?I.\ufffd\ufffdKmkK2 L\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd K'^a\"^  C.,hB.c.orothe,nn.nceoHffen.C.,h adoption iaonn..^^  The Perimeter  Dealers  Abbottfbrd  M.S.A. Ford Sain Ltd.  AbboU.oni\/CI\ufffd\ufffdArook  Lou IifcM Lincoln\/Mercury  Sauimish  Squimijh ford Silei  ChilliwKk  Cherry font Sale* (1981) Ltd.  White Rock  Orein Pirt Ford  Sechelt  South Cout ford Salts Ltd,       -:  -   ..-, ._. . PULL OUT ft KEEP    Coast News, March 26,1990  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMMMIa  afMMMMMtMM Coast News, March 26,1990  C0  irtoi  kg. 6.1!  \" at*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd            mmma   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \"Si   !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  CD     I  -  e?     srl:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    o \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  5    EI s  5      fttf i  CD  |  :  mS?I  CDS1}  eao>  ***  V  V   5 :  s    o IE  e    Sr SE  '   el  tt a|  \ufffd\ufffd ?!    eft  9  3  CJI  -^--a, ^~.^^i^Mi*,L4r,?aia\\itdrafts. Coast News, March 26,1990  7.  In Gibsons  Drug Awareness Week plan  by Chris Ferguson  The Drug Task Force convened in the Gibsons municipal  chambers on Wednesday evening, March 21, to discuss 'Drug  Awareness' and to introduce  Jim Doyle. Doyle was hired to  organize and to work with the  Task Force and also with the  kids in both elementary and  secondary schools.  Doyle's position is funded by  the Ministry of Social Services  and Housing and also by the  municipality under the CAP  grant.  Doyle says his primary function is to serve the youth of Gibsons and feels that a school and  family oriented awareness  should be focussed.  One of his first orders of  business as head of the Task  Force is to organize 'Drug  Awareness Week' scheduled for  May 6 to 13, which will be  targeted to all age groups.  Events slated for this week include an art contest for elementary students, a rap contest for  high school students, communi  ty television programming,  panel discussions, guest lecturers, a mall display showcasing different help groups and  numerous other events still to be  confirmed.  The Gibsons Outreach group  will be hosting a dry dance on  Saturday, May 12 and on Sunday May 13 (Mothers' Day), a  picnic is planned with the focus  being 'family'.  \"It is felt that there is an ignorance in the community  regarding the drug situation and  therefore the focus of Drug  Awareness Week will be to  educate the public,\" said Doyle.  Following his presentation,  the floor was opened to discussion. Concerns were raised by  committee members as to the  adherence of the Drug Task  Force to the original focus of  the group, which was the community's concern with the issue  of illegal street drugs.  Opinion was voiced that the  Task Force was proposing to  preach abstinence and temperance.  Doyle responded that the  TERM LOANS  Meet with DICK ESTEY on  Wednesday March 28,1990  at the COMMUNITY FUTURES OFFICE  205 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 5710 Teredo St., Sechelt  Tel.: 885-2639  to discuss your need for a TERM LOAN, to expand,  buy or start a business. Other services Include  CASE counselling, training and venture loans.  To arrange in appointment, call:  668-7703 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd North Vancouver     La Banque otlre ses services      dans les deux langues ollicielles.  BACKING INDEPENDENT BUSINESS  e>  Federal Business  Development Bank  Banque fadrirale  de developpement  Canada  program was not to damn those  who smoke and drink and use  marijuana and the law existed  to take care of drug users and  drunk drivers.  Two local pub owners in attendance expressed their willingness to forward the cause  and yet felt they must express  their concerns of being placed in  an equal equation with drug  traffickers.  Doyle said that he was not  picking on pub owners and that  his purpose was to heighten  public awareness to enable them  to make responsible decisions.  \"Cocaine, marijuana, cigarettes, alcohol, pharmaceuticals,  are ail drugs, and the public  needs to be conscious of what  they are doing,\" said Doyle.  The pub owners said that  they had no problem with a  week to show awareness, their  concerns were about the forced  curtailing of alcohol consumption. They felt that they were  responsible pub owners and  'whiskey purveyors', not 'drug  dealers* and didn't like their  names being associated wiUi 'illegal drugs'.  Jim stated that the intent of  the Task Force was to focus on  illicit drug use and not to preach  temperance. It was emphasized  that Drug Awareness was the  focus of the week.  The pub owners said that it  was good to see awareness  generated and that this education will help the bar owners 10  years from now deal with  responsible bar patrons.  Mayor Diane Strom said that  the committee is seeking a  chairperson and looking for  volunteers to assist in the  organization of Drug Awareness Week.  Gibsons Auxiliary  Some of the services rendered  by our auxiliary are helping  with Bingo at Totem Lodge,  visiting and helping to feed the  elderly, nail care and hairdress-  ing at the hospital and Totem  Lodge.  All the auxiliaries take their  turn to work at the thrift shop  in Sechelt - this is a big money  maker as well as providing  good, inexpensive clothing or  toys and other miscellaneous  items.  We will all be assisting in raising money for the mammogram  machine which the hospital has  purchased.  The auxiliary provides a  library service for the patients,  also our ladies operate the  hospital gift shop.  We will be holding a Friendship Tea next month, on the  first Wednesday, right after the  meeting, which takes place  April 4 at 1:30 pm.  All people wishing to join us,  we need you!  Any ujql) you Slice it  the Classifieds bring results  0j     \ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd     *     0     \ufffd\ufffd  Mountain Coast Hobbies  announces  Effective Immediately  Their New Business Hours Will Be:  Tues-Fri 12 pm \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd S pm  Saturday 10 am-Spot  Sun & Mon - Closed  Hdqtrs. for S.C. Strategic Games Club  Hdqtrs. tor S.C. Modelers  (Radio Control Aircraft)  Hdqtrs. for S.C.  Model Railroad Club  Hdqtrs. for Blood, Sweat and Gears  (Radio Control Race Car Club)  5648 Dolphin Street, Sechelt  (Across From The R.C.M.P.)  885-7122  ROBERTS CREEK FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT  ROBERTS CREEK FIRE DEPARTMENT  PUBLIC NOTICE  OUTDOOR BURNING  WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES OF SAID DISTRICT  Under the provisions of the Forest Act and with the  co-operation of the Forestry Service, the Roberts  Creek Fire Protection District, and serviced by the  Roberts Creek Volunteer Fire Department, will issue  Burning Permits in the following manner:  FROM APRIL 1 TO OCTOBER 31,1990  To Obtain a Permit  Call 886-9347  Tuesdays or Thursdays  NOTE: No permit Is required for a screen-covered Incinerator.  D. MULLIGAN, FIRE CHIEF  Continuing Education  (SUNSHINE COAST) SCHOOL DISTRICT \"46  SPRING '90 PROGRAM  Registration Information 885-2991  Pre-registration is required for all courses.  Prepayment is required one week in advance of start date. If courses are  cancelled due to lack of registration, fees will be refunded  Office Hours:  8:30-4:30'pm Monday to Thursday, 8:30-4:00 pm on Friday  Facilities Booking and Information  11:00-4:30 pm Monday to Thursday, 10:30-4:00 pm on Friday  NEW FOR SPRING  Starttaf Vow Ganlaa   8oB Praaaralioa  Bruno Reznlk  Instructor's home, Sat., Apr. 21; l:00-4:00pm  Fee: 124  This course Is an introduction to soli preparation, soil analysis  and identification oi the requirements for fertile soil. Participants wiit study the plant as a living species, its environment  and how to make it flourish and fulfil] Its life cycle in Nature.  Amaffaaf a Laadacap* - Bruno Reznlk  Instructor's home, Sat., May 5; l:00-4:00pm  Fee: 124  This course will assist participants with the planning and design  of residential, commercial and park settings. Choosing plants  for the various designs and maintenance of established designs  will be discussed.  Laadacapa AickMacian - Ruby Bulck  Elphinstone Secondary Classroom 11  6 Tues. beginning Apr. 10; 7:30-9:00 pm  Fee: $75 plus 18 lor material.  This course Is an Introduction to landscape design. Topics Include site planning, landscape materials and modelling. Participants will be able to develop a landscape plan to meet their  own needs. A materials list will be given out at the first class.  Baak Scaba Dhrtafl - Steve Acdaroll  Chatelech Secondary Room 102\/Gibsons Swimming Pool  Starts Mon., Apr. 16: 7:00-10:00 pm  Call Continuing Education for schedule.  Fee: 1198 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Equipment rental available through  Instructor > Dive into adventure - B.C.'s west coast waters,  rated third in the world. Completion of this course will give  participants a Professional Association of Diving Instructors  certificate which allows diving anywhere. Basic swimming skills  required.  Capiat with Food Alulae - Caroline Sutherland  Chatelech Performing Arts Room - Sat. May 5: 9-12 noon  Fee: 121 plus 12 for material.  This course will help motivate you to stay on track with your  food allergies (sensitivities). Learn how to cook the alternative  grains, how to avoid dairy products and offending foods and  how to cook for family and friends. Share recipes, nibbles and  kitchen coping Ideas.  M.dHlHoa tl CtMttv. VaMsaltaalloa  TachalquM - Caroline Sutherland  Chatelech Performing Arts Room, Sat. May 5, l-4pm  Fee: 121 ptiw 12 material.  A practical afternoon of simple stress-coping techniques. Relax  and enjoy guided visualizations Learn now to work with  positive affirmations, relaxation tapes and mental Imagery. For  beginners as well as advanced meditators.  Eatantai ths Wot* Francs - D'arcy Burk  Elphinstone cafeteria, Wed. Apr. 18, 7:00-10:00 pm  I Fee: 112  The new employees' survival kit! This course will provide new  or reluming employees with tips for getting the |ob, keeping  the |ob and moving up In the company, Ideal for high school  summer employees and anyone entering or re-entering the  work force.  \"Mop h Voa TWo\" - Kathy Lynn  Elphinstone Secondary Room 109,  Sat. Apr. 28, 9:00- noon, 1:004:00 pm.  Fee: 125  Living with children who are constantly quarrelling and bickering can drive you to distraction. This workshop will take a look  at why children fight and what parents can do about It. Parents  of toddlers, preschoolers and elementary school age children  are welcome.  Cadar Caaoa CoaetracfJoa - Larry Westlake  Elphinstone Woodwork shop  '8 Sun. begins April 29 -10:00-4:00 pm  Fes: 1161 plus 12 foe malarial.  This course Is Ideal for those who want to build their own  canoe (dinghy, rowboat or kayaks). Students will work as a  team to complete one canoe using modem wood and epoxy  construction techniques. This workshop will provide ths  necessary experience to tackle canoe (boat) construction tn-  dependency Previous experience not essential.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstale CeaaUca - Graham Wragg  Chatelech Room 202     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  8 Tues. starting Apr. 10; 7:00-10:00 pm  Fee: 168 pais ttphutocspil\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Ever wonder why you read certain signs, look at some posters  andnotothm?Thrfsthems*ofr\/aphWO)meandlsani  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Graham Wragg  Chatelech Room 202  8 Wed. starting Apr. 11; 7:00-10:00 pm  Fee: 168 plus 12 photocopying  Walercolour painting made easy enough for anyone regardless  of age or ability.  Draurtag For Ftus - Graham Wragg  Chatelech Room 202  8 Mon. starting Apr. 9; 7:00-10:00 pm  Fee: 168 plus 12 photocopying  So who wants you to draw a straight line? Drawing can be a  LOT more fun. All abilities welcome.  CONTINUING PROGRAMS  fust aid:  CPI LEVEL A (Haaitaavar) - Dana Lamb  Continuing Education Classroom, Mon. May 7; 6-10 pm  Fee: 134  Cm LEVEL D (Babvaaver) - Dana Lamb  Continuing Education Classroom. Mon. Mar. 14; 6*10 pm  Fee: (34  tadastslal First AM - Dana Lamb  Continuing Education Classroom  Full time day course starting Apr. 23; 8:30-4:30 pm  Fee: I860 (Includes examination foe)  This course Is designed specifically to comply with WCB requirements for first aid attendants In industry. (60 hours).  Pro Coasrsa (Ba-Cart.) - Dana Lamb  B Ticket required. Continuing Education Classroom  June 4-8, 8:30-4:30 pm  Fee: 1260 (Includes rumination fas)  WCB SarrlvaJ First AM -Dana Lamb  Continuing Education Classroom, Sat. Apr. 7 or  Sat. May 5; 8:30-4:00 pm  Fee: 148  This course provides training in basic first aid and Includes CPR  training. A WCB certificate will be Issued upon successful completion of the course.  era LEVEL C  (Health Fvntsselnasas) - Dana Lamb  Continuing Education Classroom, Sat. May 12, 9-4 pm  Feet Ml  This course Is designed for Hearth Care Professionals and  those persons dealing with emergency situations. Successful  completion of Level A or B Is suggested.  Garhaaa to OoM - Andrea Miller  Elphinstone cafeteria, Sat. May 19, 1:004:00 pm  Fee: 112  Learn how to help your family and others cut down on their  household garbage to half a bag per week! Andrea Miller Initiated the unique concept of environmental coffee parties, and  has been dedicated to supporting Individual household's recyl-  Ing efforts. She has spoken nationally on her project, and Is  now training others who wish to be able to teach the simple  techniques she endorses. Come and meet Andrea and be Inspired to action!  LA Jan - Hope Clearllght  Secheh Elem. gym  8 Tues. starting Apr. 10; 7:00-8:30 pm  Fee: 144  \"LA. Style Jazz\" Is an Introduction to this dynamic, aggressive  and sensual style of dance for those with little or no dance  training. Hope Is an enthusiastic and playful teacher who  believes everyone can dance. The emphasis In this class Is on  fun and self expression.  ntaass \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A HsEsMi Appsoach - Jacqule Allan  First Session - 6 Mon.\/Wed.\/Thurs. begins Mar. 26.  6:30-7:30 pm; Second Session - 6 Mon.\/Wed.\/Thurs.  begins May 7, 6:30-7:30 pm  Fee: ISS or IS drop In  These self-paced classes have the fun of fitness' and the  rewards of feeling physically, emotionally and spiritualty  refreshed. This Is a holistic approach to fitness.  Bsflsnloajp. Janice Letghton  Roberts Creek Community Use Room  2 Mon, - Apr. 23 & 30, 7:30-9:30 pm  FasitliUMHaW \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwlili  A being of heatng and wal being can be achieved by  mantpiilattng reflex points located on both feet. This class will  teach you the reflex pc*xs and th. corresponding body part affected as Wei as the methods of manipulating these points.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPWtaMff HlllHI  For Relaxation - Carol Brophy (885-4133)  Chatelech Sec. Room 101, Sat. Apr. 14; 9:30-4:00 pm  Fee: $28 mid \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 5 materials payable to Instructor  Relaxation methods and fundamental massage techniques will  be taught by Carol, a registered massage therapist. Call instructor for more information.  Computer For Tho  Abeolute Novice - Luinda Bleackley  Chatelech Sec. Computer Lab  Sat, Apr. 21 & 28; 9-12 noon plus practice sessions  Fee: 184 and $5 for materials  For the computer innocent. This course will orient you with  hands-on experience to a range of uses for the Macintosh  computer including word processing, graphics and spreadsheet. Two half day workshops with access to computer lab in  between - get a taste of word processing and drawing on the  Macintosh.  Introduction to Word  Processing on tho MAC - Luinda Bleackley  Chatelech Sec. computer lab  Sat. May 5 and 12; 9-noon, plus practice sessions  Fee: $84 and $5 materials  Learn the basics of word processing using Mac Write. Topic include: creating letters, character and ruler formatting, printing  and page layout. Prerequisite is Intro Mac course or experience on Ihe Macintosh using the mouse and pull down  menus. Two half day workshops with access to computer lab  in between - get a taste of word processing and drawing on the  Macintosh.  Getting Started With MS DOS -  Level 1 - Bill McGraw  Elphinstone Sec. Computer Lab  8 Tues.. starting April 17; 7:30-9:30 pm  Fee: $74 and $10 for manual  This hands-on course is an introduction to the IBM PC  microcomputer. You will learn to use it and its MS DOS  operating system, as well as become familiar with computer  terminology, hardware, keyboard, directories and the basic  DOS commands to manage disks and files. This course will not  cover applications software.  WordPerfect 5.0 An InhonatUua   Michael Hamer  Elphinstone Sec. Computer Lab  8 Wed. starting Apr. 11; 7:30-9:30pm  Fee: $68 and $10 for manual  WORDPERFECT 5.0 Is a popular, full lunrti^ word processing, program for IBM (and) compatibles. It's powerful \\ pt simple and has graphics capabilities. This Is an introductory kvtl  course for people with some computer experience  Learn to Type  (On a Macintosh Cooipnter) - Carolyn Boyes  Chatelech Sec Computer Lab  5 Mon. & Wed starting Apr. 9; 7 - 9 pm  Fee: $48 and $2 for materials  Experience the difference!! by learning on a Macintosh  keyboard. This is a typing course for beginners as well as accomplished typists, who want to brush up their speed and  keyboard skills. Please Indicate whether you have any  keyboard experience when registering.  Traditional Wood Caning - Roy Lewis  Elphinstone Sec. Room 112  7 Mon. starting Apr. 9; 7-10 pm  Fee: $68  This course is meant to help those who wish to learn the  rudimentary carving skills and to experience the enjoyable  satisfaction of creatively shaping wood, This course will introduce exercises and projects which will enable the student to  develop a carving ability. Students will need tools and will  need to buy suitable wood for carving.  GEO \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ofodo II E\ufffd\ufffdnJealency Eaam  Adults who did not complete grade 12 can acquire a Ministry of  Education Grade 12 Equivalency certificate. For application  forms, sbgibity requirements and texts, call the Continuing  Education office (885-2991). Exam date: May 4.  ' Lewi t - Phyllis Richmond  Roberts Creek Elem. Csssroom  6 Mon. starting Apr. 9; 7-9:00 pm  Fee: 141 and $3 for materials  Continues vocabulary development with fluency In expression  and understanding. Will address content needs of participants.  Must have Level 1.  Wo rUag with Six to Nino Yew Olds -  (SETA) - Batyah Fremes  Elphinstone Sec. Room 114  6 Wed. start, Apr. 11; 7:00-10:00 pm  and Sat. April 28 10:00-4:30 pm  Fee: $75 plus $5 for materials  This course follows the growth and development of the child  from 6-9 years of age and examines how program planning and  guidance strategies promote positive self-esteem.  Babysitting - Gloria Adams  Davis Bay Elem. Classroom, 3 Sat. starting Apr. 7, 9-12  Fee: $28 and $5 materials  This course was developed by the Canadian Red Cross with the  aim of making young people who will be babysitting, more  responsible and safer babysitters. Special attention is given to  First Aid.  Pottery - Ron Pollock  Pottery Studio, Gibsons \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 10 Tues. starting Apr. 10; 7-9 pm  Fee: $92 (Includes clay) Firing $25  This course is for beginners and experienced potters. Wedging,  centering and forming to the finished glazed pot will be covered.  as well as decorating techniques.  Writers Workshop \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd James Dunn  Chatelech Sec. Room 114  Sat. & Sun. May 26-27; 11:00 am - 4:00 pm  Fee: $38  For people with some experience In creative writing, this Intensive workshop will allow students to look at creating longer  pieces of writing, ie: short stories or chapters of novels. Students  should bring examples of their own writing to this informative  weekend.  Baak Acting and Scene Stndy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Jay Hamburger  8 Wed. begins Apr. 11; 7:00-10:00 pm Chatelech Sec.  Performing Arts Room  8 Thurs. begins Apr. 12, 7:00-10:00 pm  Madeira Park gym - Activity Room .  Fee: $68 and $3 materials  \"Oh for a muse folks!\" You too can be creative on stage. This  course Is for anyone from teens to seniors, Interested in exploring themselves using actions and words. Within 8 weeks  you will be doing improvisations, monologues, acting, directing and possibly writing your own dramatic sketches Come  and ftijoy the fun. entering and exeunting! Advanced scene  study, acting and directing available for experienced  students  Mafic ol OS Palatfag - Magda Hompo (886-3177)  Elphinstone Sec Rjjm 116  6 Tues. starring Apr  17, 7:00-10:00  Fee $62 plus $2 for material.  This course will teach you the skills of painting landscapes,  seascapes, flowers and still-life even though you have no former  training. You will have a completed work from each class, good  enough to frame. Magda has taught many people the foy of  painting; some are even selling their art from Florida to the Sunshine Coast. Contact Instructor regarding materials and cost.  Conesneational  Ertka Davis  Elphinstone Sec. Room 109  8 Mon. starting Apr 9; 7:30-9:30 pm  Fee: $46 plus $5 photocopying  Basic conversational skills will be learned in an entertaining, Informal, environment.  Dog Obedience   Jo Reeves  Sechelt Elem. Gym - 9 Wed. starting Apr. 10, 7-8 pm  Fee: $58  Dogs must be at least 6 months old; trainers must be adults (or  over 12 years). More information upon registration. Limited  enrollment.  Ah Bmhee \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Donald Turenne  Elphinstone Sec. Auto Shop  Apr. 27\/28\/29; Fri. 6-10; Sat. & Sun. 8:304:30 pm  Fee; $75 (includes manual)  This weekend course prepares drivers for an examination to obtain endorsement for operation of air equipped vehicles.  Coohhnj for ChMton-LuOzey  Elphinstone Sec. Room 117 - Sat. May 5; 14 pm  Fee: $14 plus metoriafe payabfa to Instructor  A workshop designed for parents and their children aged 4 to 7,  that looks at ways to make cooking enjoyable, educational and  most importantly, manageable. You will learn a few tricks to  help make those cooking activities work for you and your little  one, and how to create appropriate expectations for each  player. This workshop involves actual \"hands on\" cooking ex- Coast News, March 26,1990  The work on the renovation of Ihe liquor store la Sunnycrest  Mall Is well underway. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd KeatstwiMaapkoto  George    in    Gibsons  On Alzheimer's  by George Cooper, 886-8520  She'd had a way with a song  in those distant times of radio  that   our   older   generation  We'd  Rattier  Sell It  Than  Count It  STOCK-TAKING  SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I Week Only  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdk Price  Wicker Baskets.  Novelty Mugs;  Acrylic Pepper Grinders  \ufffd\ufffd ir<t\ufffd\ufffd SALE $775.  Plain Stove Top Covers  \ufffd\ufffd.(, im. SALE $3.99;  Bakeze Cake Pans  (9x13. 9x9, 8x8).  40% Oil  ALL TABLE CLOTHS  ALL VACUUM FLASKS  20 pee. Dinner Ware Sets  arc \ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd SALE $29.99;  Wok Sets - Copper Bottoms  m \ufffd\ufffd..! SALE $26.99.  Spring Form Pans - Various  Sizes; Selected Glasses  30% Oil  Salad Spinners \ufffd\ufffdc \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  SALE $6.29; Fondue Sets  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdre u\/\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSALE $23.09  All Aspen Dinner & Glass  Ware  All Octime Dinner &  Glass Ware  English  Pudding Basins  25% Oil  ALL VISIONS COOKWARE  Woven Place Mais Irom  \ufffd\ufffd,, t.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SALE $2.25  Everything Else  not already on Sale al least  10% oil. We repeal  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Everything! including our  lamous Canlerbury Collee  and introducing New Loose  Tea. Keemun Black Leaf, #1  Pekoe Supreme. Lapsong  Souchong. Darjeeling  BOP, English Breakfast  Irish Breakfast. Earl Grey.  Gourmet Decal.  Oneida Venelia service lor  I? mi, w.. Less than V?  price S299  All Oneida Flatware  ordered and paid lor by  April 10th - a Massive  50% OH tut, mn  WM  qUTCHEN  GflRMVflL  Cowrie Street  Sechell  885-361!  remembered. Now we were  hearing her voice doing the narration for a set of slides depicting the difficulties that beset victims of a destructive disease.  Juliette, singer and entertainer in her own folksy style on  CBC Radio in the 1950s and 60s  and then on TV to 1975, had a  reason to do this simple narration. Both she and her husband  were victims of Alzheimers  disease; she as the caregiver,  and he the one with the dementia.  Where the one with the  disease slips slowly through a  sequence - first a memory loss,  then inability to do calculation,  orientation loss, communication skills gone, to states of anxiety and fear (burglars who  aren't there), the caregiver,  often the spouse, faces deepening anguish, new responsibilities  and exhaustion.  The caregiver can be overwhelmed by the 24-hour care  the patient requires. Support for  the caregiver is essential - emotional support as well as  assistance in the physical care of  the one afflicted.  \"It's heart breaking,\" says  an Alzheimer Society leaflet,  \"to watch a responsible, intelligent person deteriorate.  \"You are, in fact, watching  somebody die slowly right  before your eyes - somebody  you love.\"  Caregivers need guidance to  adapt to the circumstances and  to accept them. They need a  break from time to time from  their home care duties. And  when the disease progresses to  its most difficult stages, early  help in finding institutional care  for the one with Alzheimers  disease.  The Alzheimer Society of BC  has a family information  brochure that tells about the  Alzheimer Clinic at UBC, legal  issues such as power of attorney, coping strategies, and  how to deal with the stress of  caregiving.  Be informed about Alzheimers, the fourth leading cause of  death in Canada, after heart  disease, cancer and strokes.  SCHOOL DISTRICT  A news report last week of  our trustees giving themselves  another $3000 each for the coming school year appeared within  days of two box ads in the Province, one for a Director of Instruction and the other for a  Director of Facilities. Both the  advertised positions are new to  the district.  One of the ads noted that the  district has 3016 pupils or  students, and that the operating  budget for the district is $18.6  million.  Payments to suppliers, it is  noted elsewhere, are a little over  $7 million (1988\/89), and all  salaries add up to nearly $11  million.  Some older residents  remember the gasps in the community in the mid-sixties when  the school district budget edged  over $1 million for some 2000  pupils. And from North Vancouver came the news that the  salary of an elementary school  principal had just exceeded  $10,000 for the year.  Roberts    Creek  Animal neighbours  are all around  by Bev CnuMtoa, 8M-2215  This is a continuation from a  few issues ago on the adventures  of cute and not so cute wild  pests in Roberts Creek. Already  mentioned were rats, rabbits  and civy cats.  When living in one of those  Roberts Creek cottages without  a proper foundation, 1 had  many experiences with cute  pests. I really didn't mind. One  of these was a family or two of  squirrels that used to knaw and  rage around in the attic. The only problem was they did it at  night. When I'd bang on the  ceiling with something, they  would be silent for a few  minutes, but then away they'd  go again - chew, chew, chew.  In the morning when I'd be  going out, they would be peeking their tiny heads out from  their little nests in the insulation  in the unsoffitted rafters. I used  to feed them little bits of bread.  They were really cute.  A not so cute pest that you  probably will never even notice  unless you happen to be sitting  outside at dusk on a warm summer night, is the much misunderstood, hated and feared Little Brown Bat. They are the  most common bat in North  America. There are a lot of  them around.  Check your rafters and sof-  fitts some time and you will probably never see one, but they  still could be there. Bats leave  their droppings just like any  other animal or bird. These  pint-sized creatures are very,  very timid, hide from any light  and are extremely quiet.  Every summer there is at least  one, probably two who move  into the rafters of my house. In  the evening you can just glimpse  them swooping in a dive like a  swallow. They are on the wing  catching flying insects, just like  a swallow does. Never curse or  harm one of these little  creatures. They are excellent  bug controllers and they will  never bother to fly into your  hair as a lot of people seem to  think. i o  I have witnessed grown adults  over the age of 40 freak and run  inside at the sight of a quick'  flyby of a mouse-sized bat,  screaming, \"It'll get in my  hair.\"  Davis Bay  News \ufffd\ufffdt Views  Playground  bouquets  by Lauralee SoDI, 885-5212  The playground, the joint  venture between the community  association and Teddy Bear Day  Care, is now pretty well completed with the slide, cargo net  and pea-stone gravel. There is a  minor job to the swings which  will complete the job.  One last bouquet to everyone  who worked so hard to get  everything done. It's there for  the whole community to enjoy.  SOFTBALL REGISTRATION  You can still sign up your  children for Minor Softball on  Saturday, March 31 at Trail Bay  Mall from 10 to 2 pm.  FLEA MARKET  Saturday, March 31 from 9  am to 12 noon at the Wilson  Creek Hall will be a Flea  Market. No early birds please.  Our flea markets are more  than just sales, they are also  social events. After finding that  long sought after bargain, you  can have a seat and enjoy a coffee and muffin plate while you  have a chat with a neighbour or  friend. There should be 12  tables of bargains.  READING CENTRE  The Wilson Creek Reading  Centre will be holding its Annual Spring Tea and Book Sale  on April 22 from 2 to 4 pm.  More about this in future columns.  UNITED CHURCH  The construction is coming  along. It looks like the footings  will be poured soon.  NEEDED  It would be nice to get some  news and gossip about Davis  Bay. I have put my business  phone number above. Please  don't hesitate to give me a call.  You can also drop things off at  the Coast News office in Sechelt  or mail to me at Box 14S4,  Sechelt.  Believe me, bats know where  they are going with their  perfected radar technique of  sending out a very high-pitched  squeak, about 50,000 cycles per  second. They would definitely  not want to fly into a clump of  hair on a human head. Can you  imagine such a fate for a little  creature?  LEGION NEWS  Frank Zantolas has resigned  as president of the Roberts  Creek Legion and his wife, Kay,  is no longer in charge of entertainment.  Lots of rumours have been  flying around the Creek about  the reasons for this happening,  but regardless, it has happened  and the very capable and  popular Margaret Duvall is now  the acting president until further  elections are held.  Next weekend, March 30 and  31 will see 'WW 2' entertaining.  Don't forget Friday and Saturday night dinners for only $6.  JOE ROAD  You can now drive through  on Joe Road, but be careful as it  is very squishy sand at the top,  near the highway.  Please, folks, watch out for  the kids going to and from  school on their bikes. There are  a lot of them out there and  many are riding new bikes,  sometimes which are a little big  and take getting used to. So  please slow down and give them  room.  PRESCHOOL  Rainbow Preschool is once  again going to be losing its  home. There are several alternatives, but none are definite as  yet. A meeting to discuss this  problem will be called soon, so  parents if you care about your  school please attend.  RCCA MEETING  The Roberts Creek Community Association will be having an  important meeting regarding  'Restructuring'. This will take  place April 4 at 8 pm at the  community hall.  ST. AVIAN'S  The Anglican Church Women of St. Aidan's area meeting  and tea will be April 17, not  April 3 as previously printed.  Davis Bay Roofing  Residential\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCommercial  \"All Roofing Applications\"  Re-Rooling                Repairs  Renovations              Skylights  24-hr. Emergency Service  888-8788  FREE ESTIMATES  Complete Liability Coverage W.C.B.  NOTICE OF  REFERENDUM RESULTS  Application for a Class \"G\" Liquor Licence  to operate a  Licensee Retail (Cold Beer & Wine) Store at  QILLIQAN'S  PUB  5770 Teredo Street, Sechelt, BC  In accordance with Liquor Control and Licensing Branch  guidelines, a referendum was conducted between  December 4,1989 and January 2,1990.  For the application to proceed, a minimum of 60 per cent  of those voting must vote in lavour of granting the licence.  A 60 per cent majority was achieved in the referendum. The  application will proceed on this basis.  5540 Inlet Ave., Sechelt  RENT-IT!  CANADA INC.  HI     885^2848  TOOLS & EQUIPMENT  OPEN SUNDAYS  EFFECTIVE APRIL 1ST, 1990\/10-5 PM  Serving YOUR Community Better   CONVENIENT HOURS:   Monday-Friday  Saturday  Sunday  7:30am-5pm  8:30am-5pm  10am-5pm  Any way vou Slice it  the Classifieds bring results  \ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     i    o    *j     k  POLAR  m FLEECE  vackets  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vz zip front styling  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 2 side pockets  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 100% polyester  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Wide range of colours  to choose from  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd SIZES: S-M-L-XL  Regular29.99  Now Open Sundays  Sale enda Sunday, April 1  EACH  FROM WORK TO PLAY!      I  Q.W.Q. Boot Cut  Scrubbies  *22\"  Men's Calvin Klein  Jeans  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd29*-  Men's Short Sleeve  100% Cotton  Shirts  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd24\"  Men's 8\" & 6\" Soft &  Steel Toe Work  Boots  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd39\"  Men's 100% Cotton  Pleated Front  Slacks  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd29\"  Women's Assorted Styles  Slacks  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd19\"  BLACKBERRIES ]  O WORK WEN?  \/IK WORLD  m-noki Coast News, March 26,1990  Sechelt Seniors  Jamie MoUoy demonstrates Us  at Trail Bay Mall la Sechelt.  hovercraft (II works)  -CarjrlWorinskoto  Jamie's hovercraft  by Rose Nicholson _  Twelve year old Jamie  Molloy's hovercraft successfully completed its test run last  week at the beach in Sechelt  when it travelled several feet out  on to the water and then returned in response to the electronic  impulses sent to it by a hand  held control.  The radio controlled model  boasts a miniature computer  which controls two multidirectional propellers which control  direction, and another that  provides lift, The computer  holds 97 different commands,  the control has 17 functions and  the whole thing is powered by  one nine volt and 10 AA batteries.  The housing is made of  plywood and pieces of inner  tube and the electronic parts  were adapted from a kit Jamie  got at Christmas.  Jamie, a Grade 7 student at  Sechelt Elementary School, has  been making models for quite a  few years now. The unique  projects started out as ingenious creations, made out of  cardboard and drinking straws  and elastic bands, that moved  or lifted things or flew, and  each one was a well thought  out and original design.  The hovercraft, the latest of  Jamie's projects, is his most  ambitious yet, but it will probably be followed by many  more. Ten years from now it  may well be that he will have  graduated from models to real  crafts, and knowing Jamie, it  will be unique, and it will work!  Sechelt    Scenario  Folk concert  by Margaret Watt, 885-3364  Rousing, foot-stomping  music may be heard at Davis  Bay Hall on Saturday, April 7  when Watersyde Folke present  'First Draft', a group from  Calgary. The concert starts at 8  pm, tickets are $8 each and  must be bought in advance.  They can be obtained from  Talewind Books and Books 'n  Stuff in Sechelt, Seaview  Market in Roberts Creek and  Davis Bay Store.  ANNIVERSARY  Congratulations to Ed and  Margo Matthews of West  Sechelt who celebrated their  50th wedding anniversary on  March 22. A party was held in  their honour at their son's  house in Victoria. May you  have many more, Margo and  Ed.  HOSPITAL AUXILIARY  St. Mary's Hospital Auxiliary, Sechelt Branch, will hold  their regular monthly meeting  on April 5 in St. Hilda's Church  Hall. New members and guests  are welcome.  SCRAPS  This is one we should all pay  Creekside plant  still a dilemma  attention to: Sunshine Coast  Recycling and Processing Society (SCRAPS) will hold their annual general meeting on March  28 at 7:30 pm in the Community  Use Room at Roberts Creek  Elementary.  SCHIZOPHRENICS  First regular meeting to be  held March 30 at 7:30 pm at  Coast Garibaldi Health Clinic,  Sechelt. For more information  call 885-1927.  SECHELT CHAMBER  The Sechelt Chamber of  Commerce will be holding a  meeting on Tuesday, March 27  at 7:30 pm at the Rockwood  Centre in the north wing.  The theme will be 'Goals and  Objectives for 1990'.  SHORNCUFFE AUXILIARY  The Shorncliffe Auxiliary  had excellent results from a  Bake Sale on St. Patrick's Day,  March 17 at the Trail Bay Mall.  We wish to thank all auxiliary  members for all special items  donated. It all quickly disappeared.  Our thanks to all members  who helped make this sale a sue-  Since Sechelt District refuses  to accept transfer of the waste  management permit for the  Creekside plant, the SCRD will  go to the Ministry of Municipal  Affairs for assistance in resolving the matter.  The board received a letter at  Thursday's meeting stating  Sechelt Council's decision not  to accept transfer of the permit.  \"Council is coming to grips  with the problems at  Creekside,\" said Sechelt SCRD  representative Bob Wilson.  \"Personally, 1 believe permits  will be accepted (by council)  further down the road. I can see  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd remedy to the situation in a  year's time.\"  Wilson said that the cost to  bring Creekside back to oper  ating standards is expected to be  $40,000. Operations at the  treatment plant were transferred  from the SCRD to Sechelt on  January 1. As a result of testing  the plant was shut down shortly  after, and since then the  municipality has been trucking  effluent from there to the main  sewage treatment plant at a cost  of $165 a day.  \"Although we might have inherited a lemon, but it smells a  good deal worse than that,  something beneficial has come  of it,\" said Wilson, explaining  that it make the municipality  eligible for preferred financing  as it is an emergency situation.  \"It's a bitter pill, but we're  getting used to it,\" Wilson added.  Senior delegates  by Larry Grafton  Delegates who were appointed at the March general  meeting to attend the Annual  Convention of the Senior  Citizens' Association of BC in  Salmon Arm on May 15, 16,  and 17 should prepare to attend  the executive meeting on April 3  in our hall at 10 am at which  time the resolutions to be  presented at the convention will  be discussed and voting procedure established.  PLANT SALE  Our branch Spring Plant Sale  has always been a popular event  in the past. With the assistance  of our members, this year  should be no exception.  A few weeks ago this column  contained a reference to starting  plants for the sale at home in  order that they should be ready  for the main event which takes  place this year on April 14 in  our hall at 11 am. Cuttings and  transplants from the garden  should be nicely established for  the sale if taken now. Your participation is requested.  REPEAT REMINDER  Your activities sheet lists  \"Dinner and Entertainment\"  on Saturday, March 31.  Members are again reminded  that this get-together has been  cancelled in favour of a square  dance activity which will take  place in the hall at that time.  As of press time, the dinner  and entertainment scheduled  for April 28 will go ahead as  planned. Tickets will be on sale  in April.  NAME TAGS  The story goes around of the  grandson who accuses grandma  of not knowing who she is when  she goes out to a seniors'  meeting because she wears a  name tag.  In spite of the hazard of being labelled, it's a very good  thing in an organization such as  ours. Some of us have been attending so long we forget that  new members may feel more at  home if older members wear  name tags.  Ruby and Owen Gamble  have again volunteered their expertise and are again manufac  turing these tags for our  members at $1.50 each. The  funds generated are donated to  the branch. Len Herder  (885-2878) has agreed to take  names of those requiring tags  and assist in handling distribution.  CARPET BOWLING  With the demise of \"Darts\"  on Friday afternoons there is a  possibility as of press time, but  so far unconfirmed, that carpet  bowling will replace darts in  that spot. That will give the  branch two afternoons a week  to enjoy the wide carpets and  weighted bowls.  There is still room for more  bowlers on Mondays at 1:30  pm, so don't be backward  about joining we novices. A  pick-up team will be going to  Gibsons on April 4 to accept  their challenge.  Water  use query  Sechelt Aggregates will have  to show that it employs water  conservation methods before  the Sunshine Coast Regional  District (SCRD) will consider a  request of increased water supplies by the gravel company.  In planning for the next 10  years, Sechelt Aggregates  foresees expanding the gravel  facility to meet market  demands. The company has applied to the SCRD to increase  the water supply volume to 1.75  million gallons per day (gpd),  the equivalent of 3500  households. The current agreement allows for one million  gpd.  A report from the SCRD's  consulting engineers Dayton  and Knight Limited stated that  improvements required to meet  the increased volumes would  cost at least $500,000. Their  recommendation was that any  such costs be made a responsibility of Sechelt Aggregates  and that authority for the water  supplies must remain under the  control of the district's works  'superintendent.  Deposit VOX tor one year in a Pender Harbour  Credit Union Term Deposit to quality lor a...  2-WEEK HAWAIIAN HOLIDAY FOR 2'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Some Limitation* May Apply  NO LIMIT ON NUMBER OF ENTRIES  PENDER HARBOUR CREDIT UNION  Serving Its membets lor 43 years  Madeira Perk Centre  Dividend  Business Hours  Mon. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thurs., 10 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 4  Friday 10 - 6  44 CO\/  Ulvldenrj  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Z.5 \/o p^und  Call 883-9531  Pax 883-8475  Compare our Rates  Term Dep.  11%%  RRSP  11%%  KIDS  Trail Bay Cenlre Mall, Sechelt  Hate You Seen Our  Dinosaur, Mouse a Duck  Raincoats?  885-5255  PASTIMES  $SALE  MARCH 29, 30, 31  CRAFT SUPPLIES - 20% OFF  MODELS - 2056 OFF  50% OFF TABLE   A TOY STORE r  Next to Talewind Books _ 885-930?  Family  Sports Store  (Lilian  Market  The Sunshine  GLASSFORD PRESS LTD.  ENTRY FEE - before March 15th  *22.00 - Includes T-Shirt  \ufffd\ufffd 8.00 -  No Shirt  *26.00 - Late Registration (after Mar. 15 and on Race Day)  Refreshments & Prizes!  VIE FOR THE COAST NEWS CHAILENCE CUP  Sunday, April 1st  9:30 am  ddidas^  w Agencto  RJ's Exercise  BttPlbf CnoliBt)  Soiigtmut jfehoppc  I ENTRY FORMS - 12th Annual APRIL FOOLS' RUN, Sunday, April 1\/90 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Make cheques payable lo: R.l.'s Exercise  Mail entry form before March 15th to: R.l.'s Excercise, Box 1448, Gibsons, B.C. VON 1V0  or drop off at: Family Sports, Sunnycrest Mall, Gibsons  Name:.  Address:.  Phone:_  _MD   FD  Age:.  Individual Runner D  FEE ENCLOSED  \ufffd\ufffd 8.00 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd No T-Shirt  Relay Team MemberG  Team Name:   No. in Team:   \ufffd\ufffd22.00 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd T-Shirt    Size: DS  DM   DL   OXL  ATHUTI'SWAIVH  In confederation ol your accepting Itii, entry, I hereby for  myself, my hern, esecutors and administrators waive and  release any and all rights io claim, lor damages I may have  against theorganiiers ol this event, agent,, representatives.  tucceuon and assigns, and the race sponsors, for all and  any injuries I may sustain during the course of the event.  SIGNATURE Ot ATHLETE  PAHNr\/llCM SKNArum  (Must be signed it athlete under 19 years of age), I, the legal  parent\/guardian of Ihe above competitor, hereby certify  that I have read and agree to be bound by the terms of the  above waiver on behalf of the said competitor.  SIGNATURE Of PARENT\/LEGAL GUARDIAN  PACKET PICK-UP  Family Sports,  Sunnycrest Mall, Gibsons  Fri., March 30 - 4-8pm  Sat., March 31 - 9-5pm  Sun., April 1 - 8:30-9:20am  Start:  9:30 am, Sunnycrest Mall  Finish:  Sechelt Indian Band Hall  sir Gibsons Bus meets each ferry  For info: Rieta 8864305 Coast News, March 26,1990  H.ilfiiiooit B.ly H.  Officials of Weldwood Lotting held aa open house recently to explain their lofglag plant In (he  Stch'lt Inlet area - bul few showed any Interest. (See stories below). -Dm Frmr pkoto  Logging plans unveiled\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  but no one Interested  by Dave Fraser  A sign at the front desk  directs you into the conference  room of Sechelt's Pebbles  Restaurant. Awaiting eagerly  with an impressive display of  maps, photographs and a television video are foresters Dan  Paul and Rod Beaumont. They  are eager to explain their  employer's (Weldwood of  Canada) five-year logging plan  for its Clowholm Lake operations.  There's only one problem.  No one seems interested enough  to show up. Such public view-  ings were brought in a couple of  years ago by the forest service to  keep the public informed about  forestry operations on Crown  Land, land which belongs to  every taxpayer in this province.  In spite of such viewings being advertised in two successive  issues of the local newspapers,  the public makes little effort to  go, at least to Weldwood's  viewings, says staff forester  Beaumont.  \"In time people will take interest, I guess,\" says Beaumont.  Weldwood has been logging at  Clowholm Lake, located at the  end of Salmon Inlet, since 1971,  when a permanent camp was set  up.  PIANO TUNING  Ken Dalgleish        886-2843  _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   NOTICE OF  [SjSf   PUBLIC  HEARING  Zoning Amendment Bylaws  No. 555-39,1990 and Official  Community Plan Amendment Bylaw  No. 600-4,1990  Pursuant to Sections 9S6 and 957 of the Municipal Act, a  PUBLIC HEARING will be held at the Municipal Hall at 474  South Fletcher Road at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 5,1990  to consider Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 555-39, 1990  and Official Community Plan Amendment Bylaw No. 600-4,  1990 which are proposed to amend the Town of Gibsons  Zoning Bylaw No. 555,1986, and the Town of Gibsons Official Community Plan Bylaw No. 600,1988.  The intent of the amending bylaws are as follows:  1. Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 555-39,1990  To rezone that certain parcel or parcels of land in the  Town of Gibsons as shown on the map outlined below  and marked as Appendix \"A\" to Zoning Amendment  Bylaw No. 555-39,1990 from the existing Single-Family  and Two-Family Residential Zone 3 (R.3) to the proposed  Multi-Family Residential Zone 2 (Rm.2).  2. Official Community Plan Amendment Bylaw No.  6004,1990  That Map 1 of Schedule \"A\" of the Town of Gibsons Official Community Plan Bylaw No. 600,1988 be amended  to include that parcel or parcels of land as shown on the  map below In the Urban-Residential Land Use designation.  A copy of the amending bylaws will be available for inspection at the Gibsons Municipal Office, 474 South Fletcher  Road, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday.  Rob Buchan  MUNICIPAL PLANNER * APPROVING OFFICER  The five-year plan affects between 10,000 to 15,000 hectares  of fir, cedar, hemlock, balsam  and cypress forest. Most of the  trees are second growth, the  result of an enormous forest fire  that ravaged the area 140 years  ago. Some old growth yellow  cedar, hemlock and cypress, up  to 350 years old, survived at  moister, higher elevations.  About 185,000 cubic metres  of wood will be cut under this  year's license. Between 85 to 90  per cent of clearcut areas will be  replanted with almost 350,000  trees, almost 100,000 more than  was planted last year. Logged  areas at higher elevations will be  allowed to regenerate naturally.  Clowholm Lake has few  recreational users, which may  account for some of the  disinterest about Weldwood's  logging plans. A few fishermen  fly into a lodge owned by an  American millionaire, and an  abundant deer population attracts a few hunters.  Beaumont says the turn-out is  better at public viewings in areas  like the upper Squamish River,  which has a higher recreational  value because it can be reached- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  byroad. ,, i\"  \"Few people realize how big  an employer we are around  Sechelt,\" says forester-engineer  Paul, who adds that 60 loggers  make their way by boat to the  company's camp every day.  Dan Paul invites anyone interested in the Clowholm Lake  logging operation to contact  him through the forest district  field office at 885-5174.  Public  apathetic  by Rose Nicholson  If attendance is any indication, the public is not very interested in the plans of logging  companies in this area. It is a  statutory requirement that the  companies make available to  the public their five year logging  plans, but very few people turned up recently at a well advertised information session put on  by Fletcher Challenge, currently  logging at the head of Narrows  Inlet.  The matter was brought up  by Art Giroux at the March 19  meeting of the Economic  Development Commission  (EDQ.  \"They were very informative  when I met with them,\" said  Giroux, \"but it was a poor turnout.  \"I would have thought that  the Forest Advisory Committee  (FAQ would have made sure  someone was there. That's the  reason we have these committees,\" commented Peggy Connor.  \"It's detailed information  and would only be significant to  someone who has special questions,\" replied Tun Clements,  Chairman of the FAC. \"We  will have all the companies  together at the National Forests  Week and there will be people  there to answer questions.\"  Clements went on to say that  although the companies are interested in public input and will  sometimes review their plans in  light of public response, they  are not actually required to do  so and the opportunity is lost  once the statutory period is up.  Fletcher Challenge has disclosed that in five years they will  be pulling their whole operation  out of Narrows Inlet and moving to Vancouver Bay in Jervis  Inlet.  \"I don't think the public is  aware of that,\" said Giroux. \"It  will have an impact on Sechelt.  Talk of Country Fair  by Ruth Forrester, W5-1418  It's actually not too early to  start talk of the Halfmoon Bay  Country Fair, as there is so  much planning involved. Recently the executive met to begin  plans for this year's events  which will be on July 13,14 and  15.  Groups joining the fair committee are the Halfmoon Bay  Recreation and Welcome Beach  Community Associations, the  Volunteer Fire Department and  the school Parents Advisory  Council.  Lots of volunteer help is  needed, so if you are willing to  lend a hand in any way, please  call Harry Johnson at 885-5740.  For booth rental information  call Fiona West at 885-3483.  OFFICERS  At a recent annual general  meeting of the Halfmoon Bay  Recreation Association, the  following officers were elected  by acclamation: Jane Woods,  president; Sylvia Bisbee, vice-  president; Joan Merrick,  treasurer; Maggie Marsh,  secretary; directors are Sue  Lamb, Heather Skytte and Bill  Watson.  The next event will be the  Easter Egg Hunt in Connor  Park on April 15.  Gibsons  Wildlife  Club  by Mary Marcroft  Gibsons Wildlife Club has  not become extinct. It still has  dedicated members who keep  their eyes and ears tuned into  wildlife issues, preservation of  natural habitat for waterfowl,  salmon enhancement and  fishing concerns such as the  hazards of drift nets and overfishing by factory ships.  Years before cleaning up the  environment was prominent in  the public eye, members spent  several weekends cleaning the  spawning channel at Sakinaw  Lake that had become clogged  with debris from logging. One  very enthusiastic member has  for the past 10 years monitored  the Wilson Creek Salmon  Enhancement Project.  The Gibsons Wildlife Club  provides CORE programs and  examinations. If the interest is  present in the community, it  would like to expand its scope  and target in on some other outdoor interests.  The club meets the last  Wednesday of each month at  7:30 pm at their clubhouse. The  new executive for this year are  Stan Jones, Joan Newsham, Bill  Walkey, Mary Marcroft, Ken  Skytte, Fred Gazely, Karl Haer-  the and Chuck Weatherill.  BRIDGE  Bridge players please take  note that the last day of Friday  bridge at Welcome Beach Hall  will be March 30 at 1 pm. Sessions will start again in the fall.  MEXICO  The Chuckreys of Welcome  Woods have returned from having spent several weeks touring  Mexico in their camper.  Mildred reports that they had  a wonderful trip and that they  found nothing but warmth and  friendship from the local people  wherever they went. It's always  nice to hear such good positive  reports like that about another  country, particularly one which  is so often maligned.  KEEP FIT  There is still room for any of  you Halfmoon Bay gab who  would like to come along to  Coopers Green Hall on Tuesday  or Thursday evenings for a  good workout. It's fun and it  makes you feel good. You go at  your own pace so there is no  such thing as competing. Time  is 7:30 pm.  SPRING  Evelyn Harrison of Redrooffs welcomed her first hummingbird on March 22. Time to  get the feeders out as there  aren't many flowers in bloom  yet for our wee friends.  A special birthday wish from  the many friends of Irene Duff.  May you have many more.  Sunshine Coast  PEST CONTROL LTD   Qreavea Bd     mygat Harbour. BC   VON WO   UNMARKED VEHICLES  LOCALLY OPERATED GOVERNMENT LICENSED  For control ol carpantar ants, rodants i other paata  Our Perimeter Treatment  Cuts down on the Invasion  ol crawling Insects  For Confidential _  Advice & Estimates  883-2531  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Pretreatment of houses under construction!  tructionl    ><       |  FfiY YOURSELF  FIRST  But what about the mortgage or the  rent, the car payment, the credit cards,  and so on? Of course, you must meet  your financial obligations. Bul if you're  going to save money and build toward  a better tomorrow, you must keep  some of what you earn for yourself.  We can show you how to do it - and how  to make your savings grow. Call us  today.  r1investors  Owup  PROFIT FROM OUR EXPERIENCE  Your resident Investors Planning Team  J.N.W.(Jlm)BUDDSr.  885-3397  DEBORAH MEALIA  886-8771  J.H.(Jim) BUDD Jr.  886-8771  HANS OUNPUU CONSTRUCTION  Invites you to visit M\ufffd\ufffd0  ft* ftw j? *2\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.  m vanvw See yQu a< BoQth #427  where we will be promoting Gibsons  as a good place to live, retire and invest  Builders of  Twin Oaks Village y^.  838 North Rd., Gibsons |fW'  Adult oriented, single level townhomes  ONLY 2 LEFT \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd From '82,900  Sfflinj  Q  Sunshine Ridge  765 School Rd., Gibsons  Phase 1 & 2 SOLD OUT  Phase 3 STARTING SOON  Reed Wood  Reed & North Road  6 New 1 Level Townhomes  Now Under Construction  Ready for Summer '90 occupancy  North Oaks  North Rd. at Kiwanis Way  Watch for our proposed new adult\/seniors  community  HANS OUNPUU CONSTRUCTION  A Division of Twin Oaks Realty Ltd.       886*4680  KMAMfc*  ^k**)mtm%imtn\\immi*9) utM4MmsM\ufffd\ufffdmte3*mmm-^ n\\tmti Pender Patter  Coast News, March 26,1990  11.  Pool tournament  VI and Gene Berntzen were guests of honour al a farewell dinner  In the Egmont Community Hall last week. (See Egmont News  \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -Aaa Cook pkoto  Pender Community  Club news  by Myrtle Winchester 883-9099  The Legion's first pool tournament Friday night was a great  success, and by the end of the  evening Sterling Fowler was  declared winner of the A Section of finalists.  The playoffs were as much  fun for spectators as players,  and the most entertaining match  was between Doug Reid and  Mark Nuyns (Reid won).  AQUATIC ANNIVERSARY  A limited number of tickets  are now on sale for the Pender  Harbour Aquatic Society's 10th  Anniversary Party on April 14  at the community hall. Tickets  are on sale for $12.50 each at  The Paper Mill and the Aquatic  Centre.  TEACHER WANTED  If you would like to teach  children the Maypole Dance,  please call Cindy Cameron at  883-9IS3.  MOTORCYCLE RACES  The Pender Harbour Motorcycle Club is planning cross  country enduro races for April  22. Anyone wanting to register  in the Enduro, Motocross,  School Boys, or Junior Boys  category should call Andy Ross  at 883-9971.  HIGH(WAY) HOPES  As the current Secret Cove  -Wood Bay highway improvement project winds down, local  contractors are awaiting confirmation of an extension to the  project that would complete  another one kilometre section  of the new Highway 101.  Last week the Department of  Highways had a scout in Pender  Harbour looking for accommodations for a six-man crew  coming up this summer to resurface the highway between  Madeira Park and Earl's Cove.  This project is a replay of the  work done on the same road  two years ago. A single piece of  equipment (Japanese-made)  peels up existing pavement, processes it, and lays it down again  as it drives along the road, albeit  very slowly.  CENTRE HARDWARE  -_   YOUR LOTTO STORE  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**   .J J-  $1.69  Madeira  Park  Shopping  Centre  883-9914  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdXPR\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5S  SERVING  PENDER  HARBOUR &  EGMONT  HAPPY  26TH  JumnmsMY  Jim & Pauline  Foglietta  by Muriel Cameron  This is the final week for  clearance of winter coats and  boots at the Bargain Barn.  Thursday, March 29 and  Saturday, March 31 are Dollar  Bag Days.  Help is desperately needed  for the days the Bargain Barn is  open, a commitment of only  two or three hours a month. Is  there no one willing to help?  In 1989 there was about  $5100 earned, all proceeds go to  the Pender Harbour Health  Clinic Auxiliary. 110 boxes of  surplus clothing was given to  charities, the Pentecostal  Church, and the mentally handicapped in Vancouver.  COMMUNITY CLUB  We were very sorry to hear of  the passing away of Mrs. Reta  Berwick. She had been a  faithful worker for the past five  years, knitting many lovely  sweaters and baby sets for the  annual Spring Bazaar. Our condolences to her family.  Plans for the annual Spring  Bazaar, to be held May 12, are  well underway and raffle tickets  are now being circulated.  First prize, crocheted  tablecloth; second prize, half  Women's  bursary  award  by Connie Grainger  A key mandate of the Canadian Federation of University  Women of the Sunshine Coast  (CFUW) is to promote higher  education.  The Sunshine Coast University Women's Gub is now able to  offer a $500 bursary every year.  The bursary will be granted to a  mature female resident of the  Sunshine Coast who plans to  enter or re-enter a degree-  granting institution.  The candidate must be accepted at the institution and  enroll within the calendar year  of application. As well, the recipient must carry at least a SO per  cent load of course credits. This  stipulation indicates the club's  recognition that in some cases  mature women have family  responsibilities which prevent  them from participating in full  time studies. The deadline for  application is May 1.  For more information call  885-9589 or 885-2605. The bursary committee is pleased with  the response it has received  from earlier announcements of  the bursary and welcomes all  applications.  At the club reception for new  members in October, Pamela  Earle and Mildred Cormack  discussed the advantages of being members of this organization. Mildred Cormack, whose  residence changed a number of  times, said she enjoyed being a  member of CFUW in four  Canadian cities.  She also pointed out that our  34 members are graduates of 16  different universities in seven  Canadian provinces and three  states in the US. This diversity  enriches the club.  All university women graduates are invited to join the  CFUW of the Sunshine Coast.  Phone 885-9589 for more information.  Ponder HirtMW Uoni ana  ANNUAL AUCTION  April 28,1990   CAW YMJIXWATE AUCTIMI ITtMST  883-2392 sr 883-9992  case of Sockeye salmon; third  prize, $50 cash.  Tickets are available at local  businesses, from the Community Club executive, and some  youngsters are helping.  To all gardeners: when you  are planting and thinning  plants, please keep any surplus  for the Spring Bazaar.  To anyone who does handicrafts or makes novelty items:  these items are needed at the  bazaar.  For more information on this  year's Pender Harbour Community Club Spring Bazaar, call  Muriel Cameron at 883-2609.  Oops  The Coast News apologizes  that the names of the communities of Garden Bay and Ir-  vine's Landing were inadvertently left out of the  heading of last week's IGA ad.  Just an honest mistake - no offense intended, folks!  Egmont News  Berntzens move  by Ann Cook, 883-9907  Vi and Gene Berntzen are  making the move after more  than 30 years from right  downtown Egmont to downtown Madeira Park.  What can 1 say? Thank you  for being such good neighbours  and community-involved folks.  Vi's been our 'tea' lady since  'If it wasn't in a china tea cup it  wasn't tea' days.  Vi has passed her Convenors  Log Book onto me. Here is her  last entry: \"We are moving to  Madeira Park but our hearts are  still in Egmont. I only hope the  next Convenor will keep up the  bits of news from the teas. We  wish everyone health and happiness. We will come up for Egmont teas and dinners.\"  THRIFT STORE  Doris is having a Wednesday  Special. For $2 you get a big  green plastic bag of clothing.  There's lots to choose from:  racks of sweaters, skirts and  coats to bins of childrens'  clothing.  Come between 9 am and 4  pm for this special sale that will  remind you of the good old  days when you needed two arms  to carry out two dollars' worth  of merchandise.  THUMP ON THE HEAD  To all the drivers that go over  the yellow line, especially on the  curves while travelling the Egmont road.  PAT ON THE BACK  To the drivers who have their  headlights on, especially on dull  rainy days.  Sunday is April Fools Day, so  watch out. Also the 12th Annual April Fools Run from Gibsons to Sechelt.  Re-opening April 1,1990  under  New Management  Join Us For Our  OPENING SPECIALS  &  Our New Menu  &  Daily Luncheon and Dinner Specials  Hours: 11am to 11pm, 7 Days a MfMk  By water, conveniently located al the Chevron dock  at the mouth ol Pender Harbour.  Boaters: Moorage available while you visit with us.  \"y road, follow the 'Irvines Landing' signs. 12.  Coast News, March 26,1990  LEISURE  King off Safmcraolw  Dubious fame  by Peter Trower  After a brief visit to New  Zealand, Herb Wilson heads  north and embarks on a leisurely cruise among the islands.  There are no regular routes to  follow so he plays it by ear, drifting from place to place on  whatever small ship is available.  At last, Wilson is able to see  first hand, the romantic places  he had fervently read and  dreamed about down the long  jail-house years. It is like a fantasy come true.  On Suva, in the Fijis, Wilson  stays at a hotel where Jack London once weathered a serious illness in his last years. The  woman who owns the hotel,  knew London well and provides  Wilson with some fresh anecdotes about the famous author.  On the island of Samoa,  Wilson meets several aged  natives who had sung and danced for Robert Louis Stevenson  when they were children.  Wilson visits Stevenson's hilltop  grave and copies the famous inscription on the tubercular  writer's headstone.  By sheer luck Wilson chances  upon a ship that is making a  rare visit to remote Pitcairn.  Here he makes the difficult landing on the tiny harbourless  island and talks with the  isolated descendants of the  Bounty mutineers.  Herb Wilson's haphazard  route leads him eventually back  Spring sunshine brings out the picnickers on the Sunshine Coast.  , This happy group is pictured at Cooper's Green in Halfmoon  ! Bay. -Rytk Forrester photo  Entertainer a crowd  Who is Webster and Company? Frank Webster is a  singer, no, an impersonator,  no, a comedian. He's all those  things. He's off the wall.  He's a bald, over forty guy  who quit teaching theatre so he  could have some fun in life by  pretending to be not just one,  but all the stars you see on  MTV.  Sometimes he looks and  sounds just like them, sometimes he just sounds like them,  sometimes he just looks like  them and sometimes he just  makes fun about them.  He'doesn't really do them all,  but he sure does a lot of them:  Frank Sinatra, Tina Turner,  Roger Whittaker, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Jones, Boy Georee,  John Cougar, Elton John and  about 30 others.  Webster does the changes  right there on stage, with wigs,  hats and costumes, and never  stops entertaining the audience.  He does country, pop, rock and  ballads. He does top forty,  heavy metal, the fifties and old  standards. He makes you want  to dance, sing and clap your  hands.  And Company! What or who  is the Company? Company  stands for all the characters  Webster does, all the people in  the audience and most of all,  for Terry Henry, Webster's  musical director, keyboardist  and backup vocalist.  Terry Henry has spent his  whole life as a musician with a  music degree from UBC, half a  dozen bands of all varieties, and  two years with Webster. Terry  usually has three or four  keyboards around him and can  make as much music as three or  four regular musicians.  Terry also reads minds. Well,  he can read Webster's mind  because Terry always seems to  know what Webster is going to  do next and is ready with the  music so that the show keeps  rolling along.  Webster and Company has  performed as a cabaret act, pub  band and dance band throughout the Pacific Northwest, and  this weekend you can catch the  whole troupe at the Cedars Pub  in Gibsons.  Model craft show  This is the last week you can  see the Arts Centre's \"Model  Craft\" Exhibition. These boat  models include an arctic kayak,  a Salish racing canoe, a west  coast combination boat, the  first \"diesel\" powered (well, actually a semi-diesel) tug on the  west coast, a Gaspe boat of the  late 19th or early 20th century  and many more.  If you're a conscientious  boatophile or a lover of all fine  objects, visit this show before it  One of the Cedars'  Leading Entertainers  always fills the Pub  worth while - come early  \"Had 'em falling off their seats\"  ^ Thurs., Mar. 29 &. Fri., Mar. 30 J^,  Always..Great Food..Full Service Bar  CEDARS  RUB  to Suva. Here, he receives a  telegram from a San Francisco  journalist named Dean Jennings. Jennings has run across  Wilson's original legend in the  old newspaper files. CoWers  Magazine is interested in running a five-part serial based on  the King of the Safecracker's  memoirs. Would Wilson care to  discuss such a project? Jennings  stresses that there will be considerable cash in it for both of  them.  Wilson finds Jennings' offer  much too tempting to resist.  Apart from the money, it might  serve to kindle interest in his  own manuscripts. Wilson cuts  his island-hopping short and  catches a sugar boat back to  Vancouver.  In the summer of 1948, Herb  Wilson arrives on the West  Coast once more. He rents a  small apartment and makes  contact with Dean Jennings.  Jennings is winding up another  assignment but expresses  pleasure that Wilson has decided to go along with the project.  Since Wilson is unable to enter  the United States, they agree to  meet in Vancouver that fall.  During the interim, Herb  Wilson learns that a short article  about him had been published  in Liberty, the previous year.  Curious, he manages to track  down a copy of the magazine.  The piece, credited to a writer  named Thomas P. Kelley, is a  mass of inaccuracies claiming,  among other things, that the  King of the Safecrackers has a  serious drinking problem.  The tee-totalling Wilson is  outraged. He dashes off an  angry letter to Liberty, debunking the error-ridden article  and questioning Kelley's  credentials. The letter is  published in the magazine's  next issue.  Shortly after, Wilson receives  an apologetic letter from  Thomas P. Kelley, claiming that  he had been misinformed. He  accepts the apology and the two  men begin a sporadic correspondence. Wilson senses that  the Toronto writer might be of  use to him in the future.  Any way you Slice it  the Classifieds bring results  ,k rtiss irom Sunnyirc  886-8171  closes on Sunday, April I. Art  Centre hours are 11 to 4  Wednesday to Saturday, 1 to 4  on Sundays.  Cable 11  Tuesday, March 27  7:00 PM  Literacy - A Matter of  Personal Right  Dianne   Evans   talks   with  Richard Curll about the Adult  Basic   Literacy   Education  (ABLE) Program being offered  on the Sunshine Coast.  8:00 PM  John Burnside Reads  Poetry by Robert Frost  8:20 PM  Trade SHow  Gibsons is hosting a Trade  Show on April 27 and 28.  Chamber of Commerce vice-  president John Clark and director   of   special   events   Art  Giesbrecht   join   Marlene  Lowden in the studio to discuss  their plans for the event.  8:30 PM  Coast Interfalth  James   McCullum   who  teaches at the Vancouver School  of Theology joins Maryanne  West in the studio to discuss the  Christian season of Lent.  Thursday, March 29  7:00 PM  C.A.P.E. Live Phone-In  Harold  Fletcher joins  the  Cable 11 team as the host of this  hour long program that looks at  the events planned for the Sunshine Coast on International  Earth Day April 22. Joining  Harold are Pam Robbins, Pat  Ridgway, Val Silver and Laurel  Sukkau.  8:00 PM  Coast Interfalth  Brian   Butcher  introduces  Pastor Dan McCauley, the new  minister   of   the   Gibsons  Pentecostal Church.  8:30 PM  School Board Speaks Out  Live Phone-In  Join members of your school  system via the phone lines for a  discussion on the new budget  for school district 46.  SOUTH COAST FORD  885-3281   XkuuUk  NURSERY  Lawn Seed,  Bulbs, ^ m  Shrubs, Fruit Trees, Roses, W\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf  Strawberry Plants, Onion Sets, Seed Potatoes'  Quality Gardening Tools & Hoses,  Dolomite Lime (it's time), r^  Pesticides,  Lots of Pots & Hanging Baskets,       tW  Potting Soil, Peat, Vermiculite, Perlite,  Fertilizers of all Types, r\ufffd\ufffd&) Y  Manure (chicken, steer, mushroom),  Bird Feeders & Food,  And much, much more!  '   OPEN EVERY DAY  9:30 AM - 6 PM ^'^  Rhythms  of Life  Coast News, March 26,1990  13.  Avoiding stress  by Penny Fuller  Margaret Viiser delighted her  week. (See story below).  al Ike Arts Centre lsst  -Ruth Forrester photo  Visser delights  by Ruth Forrester  The Arts Centre in Sechelt  was filled to capacity on March  17 to hear Margaret Visser read  from her book Much Depends  on Dinner.  Margaret is known nation  wide for her appearances on  Peter Gzowski's Morningside  Show on CBC radio. She's the  lady with the delightfully 'la-de-  dah' accent. She hails from  Zambia and is known for her  wonderful sense of humour.  Margaret teaches Ancient  Greek at York University in  Toronto.  If you want to know the  origins and hundreds of uses for  such ordinary items as corn or  lettuce, read the book.  Margaret's presentation of  articles on such subjects as the  growing of beards and the  history of high-heeled shoes, to  name but a few, had the audience laughing for the whole  evening.  This was one of the most  delightful speakers to appear on  the Coast for a long time and  our thanks are due to the arts  council and to Canada Council  for making such evenings  available for our enjoyment.  Birdwatch  There was a saying in the  60s, \"If you need something  done, give it to the busiest person you know.\"  In the 70s we heard a lot  about 'burnout' - could there be  a connection?  1980 brought forth the  decade of 'stress management'.  It would seem the newer models  of over-achievers just weren't  made of the same stuff as those  in the 60s. Or perhaps the  glamour of being indestructible  was wearing thin.  Whatever the reason, more  and more people are choosing  not to be 'the person who takes  on everything'. Priorities are being set and adhered to. All in  all, it is a much healthier attitude than we saw three  decades ago.  People born when the Sun  was in Aries (March 21 - April  22) can stop feeling inadequate  because they can't juggle five or  six different demands at the  same time. The fact is, you were  never meant to.  The Aries Sun is very 'one  track'. You tend to get your  energy flowing on one thing and  if something demands you  switch your attention before  you've completed the task, it  really puts you off balance. The  chances are good, then, that the  first thing will never get completed, and you gain a reputation amongst friends and family  for never finishing projects.  UNFAIR!!  The trouble is, you just can't  handle being pulled in too many  directions (more than one) at  once. It totally drains your  energy.   It's   important   to  understand this and organize  your life accordingly.  Some Aries, when there is  something they really want to  accomplish, simply exclude  everything else from their lives.  Families may as well not exist.  Social commitments are totally  ignored, and by the time the  project is completed, a lot of  fence-mending is required to  clean up the other life areas.  There is another way. Try  organizing your life into time  compartments. If you work a  regular work week, allot exactly  as much time as is reasonable to  work, including overtime, and  let your employer and coworkers know you are unavailable outside of those times.  Also let family and friends  know you are unavailable during those times. Social phone  calls, etc. will have to wait until  you get home.  Do the same thing with projects at home, time spent with  friends, spouses, children etc.  Be very clear about where your  energy is directed during any  given time and insist those who  share your life respect your way  of being.  At first you're liable to have a  lot of negative response. People  may not understand your need  to focus on one thing at a time.  But they will soon find you give  a lot more of yourself and accomplish a lot more - at work,  at home and with people - when  you are allowed your 'eccentricity'.  This is where the supposedly  selfish Arian energy is a  strength. By taking care of your  needs in this way, you will be  able to give and be generous in  other ways.  ^GIBSONS  LEGION  Branch 109  Coastline  Mobile  Music  Happy Holidays  Motorhome Rentals, Sales, &. Service Ltd,  T\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd  9' Northern Lite Camper, Molded Fibregla:  Fits Long Box and Midsize Truck.  9,495.  ) Motorhome 20', 22' and 24', Low Km.  1978 .Security 24*. 56,000 Miles, 460 Ford,  Ruf'Aire, Cruise & Tilt.  18,500.  1977 Vanguard 23', 46,000 Milts, 440 Ford,  Ruf-Aire <k Awning  17,500.  Wt also rent Moromomej & Campers  Phone 886-9025 or 886-8481  by Tony Greenfield  Spring comes early to the  Sunshine Coast, and March is  the month when our first  migrant birds return from  points south and other species  that winter with us become  more vocal and active in  preparation for the breeding  season.  Birds in this latter group include the red-winged blackbirds  that take up breeding territory  at the Sechelt Marsh. We also  hear the vibrant song of the purple finch from atop the tallest  trees. Robins are much in  evidence as they filter back into  our area from their winter  quarters in the Fraser Delta and  the US.  Two species that look almost  exactly alike, but are from completely different families, ruby  crowned kinglet and Hutton's  vireo, are very vocal. The  kinglet with its exuberant warble and the vireo with its  monotonous 'zu-weep' call  from high in a conifer. This  species is rarely seen, but frequently heard.  March is a good time to visit  Mission Point at the mouth of  Chapman Creek in Davis Bay to  see the winter resident  shorebirds. It is best to visit at  low tide. The easiest birds to  spot will be the black oystercat-  chers, a spectacular and noisy  bird with a bright orange-red  bill and black plumage.  Scavenging at the tideline,  you should see mixed flocks of  black turnstones, surfbirds and  rock sandpipers. These species  leave in late April to breed further north. While at Mission  Point also look for the beautiful  and bizarre plumaged male  Harlequin ducks.  The real test for spring time  on the Sunshine Coast is the arrival of three families of birds:  the hummingbirds, the swallows  and the warblers. All three  families winter in southern  climates and begin to re-appear  in our area in late March.  The species involved are  Rufous hummingbirds, either  tree or violet-green swallows  and yellow-ramped warblers.  The earliest date that Rufous  hummers have been reported  was March 19, 1983.  Interesting sightings in the  last two weeks are a male wood  duck at the Sechelt Marsh, a  Brant goose at Roberts Creek  (Stan Jones), and 48 swans  (species not known) reported  over Sechelt by Arnold Skei.  If you have any interesting  sightings to report, call Tony  Greenfield at 885-3971 days or  885-5539 evenings.  Tues  Wed  Thurs.  Sat.  J^ORVTIME  12 30'8pm  '2?C  9f 5 pm  m %  Open: Wed. thru Sat. t H pm - 1 am.  Your guide to  the finest in  area dining  mm  A listing of  restaurants  and pubs  V  Teittt  tkeCoMt  There were three of us that day who decided we had  enough work to do that we'd eat lunch at our desks. And it  took no time at all to reach a consensus that we'd order  take-out food from Ernie & Gwen's. We keep a copy of  their menu in the office, and our mouths were watering in  anticipation even before the order had been phoned in.  While the vast pizza selections were tempting, it was the  fish and chips, chicken strips with onion rings, and hamburger deluxe with chips and gravy that won out. And no  one was sorry.  Except maybe our colleague who hadn't ordered. Once  the savoury smells began wafting through the office, he  began to hover. He begged a chip or two here (\"I can never  resist a good chip!\") and an onion ring there  (\"Excellent!\"). Finally he could stand it not longer and  went out to get some of his own.  The fish and chip lover was thoroughly pleased with her  crispy, golden lunch, and the portion was more than she  could finish. The hamburger and chips with gravy combo  was deemed to be just as it should be, and a rave was heard  declaring the tender strips of chicken breast meat \"really  good\".  The surprise item was dessert - smooth, cool Dole Whip,  a non-dairy, soft ice cream-like concoction made with fruit  juice in the flavour of the day, lime. \"Excellent! It's like a  mild-flavoured sherbert,\" came the description, along  with a pledge to eat more of it in the future.  With spring's arrival, Ernie & Gwen's provides the  perfect opportunity to take-out food and eat in the park or  on the beach. Don't forget, there's free delivery after 4 pm  within 5 miles on minimum $10 orders.  Andy's Restaurant. Every Wednesday nighl is Prime Rib Night. House  specialties include veal dishes, steaks,  seafood, pasta, pizza, Thai food, and lots  of NEW dishes. Don't miss Andy's great  Brunch Buffet every Sunday from  llam-2:30. Hwy 101. Gibsons, 886-3388.  Creek House - Intimate dining and  European cuisine in a sophisticated yet  casual atmosphere. We serve rack ol  lamb, duck, crab, clams, scallops, steaks,  also daily specials. Reservations recommended. Roberts Creek Road and Beach  Avenue - 885-9321. Open 6 pm. Closed  Mondays tk Tuesdays. V. MC. 40 seats.  Mariners' Restaurant - On the  waterfront with one of the mosl spectacular views in Gibsons, the Manners'  specializes in ftesh and live seafood, and  also offers a lull tange of lunch and din-  net entrees. Both menus change daily,  with delicious daily specials. Marine  Drive, Gibsons Landing, 886-2334. Monday to Saturday: Lunch 11-3, Monday to  Saturday.- Dinner 5-10 and Sunday 5-9,  Sunday Brunch 11-3. 100 seats. V. M.C.  The Omega Pizza, Steak And  Lobster House - with a perfect view  of Gibsons marina, and a good rime at*  mosphere. the Omega is a people-  watcher's paradise. Cast members of The  Beachcombers can usually be found din-  MM\/.>  DIMM,  ing here, Menu includes pizza, pasta,  steaks and seafood. Steaks and seafood  are their specialties. Banquet facilities  available. Very special children's menu.  Average dinner for two: $20. Reservations recommended. Located in Gibsons  Landing at 1538 Gower Point Rd.  886-2268. Open Sun-Thurs, 11:30 am -10  pm, Fri and Sat 11:30 am \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 10:30 pm.  Seats 145.  Pronto's Restaurants Two locations  to serve you. Both serve an extensive  variety of pizza, steak, pasta, lasagne,  ribs, souvlaki in a delightful family atmosphere. Children's menu available. All  dinner entrees include garlic bread and a  choice of soup or salad. Average family  meal for four about JI5-S20. Located at  wharf Rd., Sechell, 885-1919: and on  Highway 101, across from Gibsons  Medical Conic, Gibsons, 8864138.  The Pailhenon Greek Taventa  Located on Ihe esplanade in downtown  Sechelt. We specialize in Greek Cuisine,  fresh seafood, steaks, pasta, and pizza.  Open 6 days a week - Tues. through  Thurs., from II am -10 pm and Fri. &  Sal., II asm - II pm. We are open for  lunch - try our daily luncheon specials.  Lunch is served from II am - 3 pm.  Reservations rerommended. We also  have take-out - pizza, ribs, pasta, Greek  food and much morel 885-1995 or  885-2833. Kalherina - Hostess.  The Wharf - Open for breakfast,  lunch and dinner seven days a week.  Breathtaking ocean view and sunsets  from aery table. Continental cuisine and  seafood al ils best. Sunday Brunch from  II am - 2 pm. Fully licensed and air-  conditioned. Dinner reservations recommended. Hwy. 101, Davis Bay. 885-7285.  Cedar's Inn - Appetizers all day till 11  pm. Dans every Tues. Everyone  welcome. Cedar Plaza, Gibsons 8864171.  Open II am - midnight, Sun-Thurs: II  am - I am, Iri-Sai. 100 seals. V., MC.  Regular menu 11 ant lo 8:30 pm.  Ml,HI ()\\   IHI   H)W  Ruby Lake Resort - Picturesque  lakeside setting, post-and-beam dining  room, children's play area and tame  swam are part of Ruby Lake Resort's  charm. Sunday smorgasbord features  baron of beef and other hot meat dishes,  a beautiful salad bar and home-made  desserts. Absolutely superb prime rib on  Friday. Breakfast from 6:30 am, lunch  from II am and dinner from 4:30 to 8  pm. Daily specials, licenced, reasonable  prices, menus have something for  everyone, on- and off-premises catering.  Hwy 101 just north of Pender Harbour,  good highway acorn and parking for  vehicles of all sizes. 883-2269.  Chk'ken Shack - Deep fried chicken,  pizza, hamburgers, salads. All to go.  Cowrie Si., Sechelt -885-7414. Video Rentals. Open 11 am - 9 pm, Mon-Thur; 11  am - 10 pm, Fri-Sat: noon - 9 pm, Sun.  Home delivery within 5 miles of store  after 4 p.m.  Ernie & Gwen's Drive In- Take  out, or dcliveiy. Pizza, dinners, salads,  burgers, chicken, desserts, drinks, ice  cream. Free home delivery within 4 miles,  after 6 pm only, on S10 minimum orders.  (Small charge for orders under SI0. Open  'tale every night. Hwy. 101, Gibsons.  886-7813.  Average meal prices  do not include liquor  P\ufffd\ufffdJD ADVHtTtSHVlEHTS 14.  Coast News, March 26,1990  m  i \ufffd\ufffdm it     i i  SPOR  The spring weather brings out the Sunshine Coast's tennis  .players.  -Keel Sheridan photo  ! Duffy stops champ  I in Golden Gloves  by Rufus Cohen  I Tony Duffy re-established his  i boxing credentials Saturday  ! night by earning his sixth Vancouver Golden Glove title by  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd defeating current BC Welter-  ; weight Champion Allan Bayne  ;of Prince George.  ; Bayne dethroned 1988 Olympian Manny Sobrel last fall but  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfell ill just prior to the 1990  jCommonwealth Games.  \\ The Duffy-Bayne main event  Jvas tactful and scientific. Bayne  attempted to overpower, maul  and intimidate. Duffy used his  ring savvy and slick movement  to pick away pile-up points and  earn the nod to the roar of rows  of Sunshine Coast fans and the  Alibi Wahoo fan club.  It was a significant step for  Duffy who begins a long climb  to represent Canada in the  Madrid 1992 Olympics following an 18-month lay off.  Duffy is currently a business  management student at  Capilano College and looks forward to a Gibsons Boxing Card  on May 18.  A  YOU CAN BE A  SCUBA DIVER  \\  BE1  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''ff>SE  \\ he*ISns  M.1*.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAAf  \"$V  SEASPORT SCUBA  ADVENTURE THRU EDUCATION  8 AM \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 6 PM  7 DAYS\/WK.  5567 Dolphin  Sechelt  885-9830  -M-  StmshineCtMist  Credit Union  NOTICE OF  ANNUAL  GENERAL  MEETING  \ufffd\ufffd  The 49th Annual General Meeting  of the Sunshine Coast  Credit Union  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GREENE COURT HALL  5811 Medusa St., Sechelt, B.C.  on  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28,1990  at 7:30 p.m.  Sechelt Branch  Box 375, Teredo Square  Sechelt, BC. V0N3A0  Telephone 885-3255  Gibsons Branch  Box 715, Kern's Plata  Gibsons, RC. VON 1V0  Telephone 8868121  Wakefield In finale  by Mark  League Play Champions,  Wakefield, advanced to the  finals by squeaking by the pesky  Gibsons Kings 7 to 6 in Men's  Hockey semi-finals last week.  Wakefield built up a lead of 4  to 2 by the end of the first and  led 5 to 3 by the end of the second period.  Wakefield was ahead by as  much as 7 to 3 in the third  thanks to a hat trick by Dave  Crosby, a pair by Kelly  Cousins, plus singles by Billy  Stockwell and Teddy Brackett.  The Kings mounted a valiant  comeback with a pair of goals  by Jimmy Brackett plus single  goals by Steve Carey, Murrey  Brown, Clay Munson, and  Dave Brackett. The Kings got  within a goal in the last four  minutes but even with the goalie  pulled for an extra attacker,  they could not put the game into  overtime.  Wakefield wins best of three  2 to 0 with Dave Crosby ending  up with the eventual game winner.  In the winner takes all third  game, Gilligans jumped into a 3  to 1 lead by the end of the first  period. The Hawks popped a  couple of quick ones at the  beginning of the second and  held a 4 to 3 advantage by the  end of that period.  In the final period, the lead  changed hands a couple of times  but was deadlocked at 5 to 5  and overtime loomed large.  Gilligans' Kenny Robinson put  the Fryers up 6 to 5 late in the  game, then Shawn Thurold go  an insurance goal and the  Hawks were out of the finals for  the first time inyears. Gord  Clayton notched a pair while  Randy Benner, Rob Stockwell,  and Bill Trowsdell also scored.  Hawks goals were scored by  Dareen Dixon, Adrian Dixon,  Trent Dixon, Frankie Dixon,  and Jordan Belrose.  NEXT WEEK'S GAMES  Finals Tuesday, March 27 at  8:30 pm, Wakefield vs  Gilligans; Wednesday, March  28 at 8:30, Gilligans vs  Wakefield; Thursday, March 29  at 8:30, Wakefield vs Gilligans.  Finals best of five. All games at  Sechelt Arena. Come out and  cheer on your favourite team!  TERMINAL  forestProductsLtd.  LOG  BUYING  STATION  Competitive Prices  Cramp Run  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd CEDAR \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd FIR \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd HEMLOCK \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  886-7033  Seven-a-elde hockey  This weekend will see the Second Annual Suncoast Breakers  Seven Aside Tournament. Last  year's inaugural event proved to  be an extremely successful affair. While 16 teams took part  last season, it is anticipated that.  a full tournament of 20 teams  will be involved this year.  Two divisions of 10 teams  each will vie for the championship trophies in the two divisions - the Oldtimers and the  Open Divisions. All of the  hockey is played under the umbrella of the COHA, which includes no body contact, no slap  shots and an emphasis on fun.  Seven aside hockey is just  what it says - seven players per  team, six skaters and a goalie,  but a shortened game of two  10-minute periods. The emphasis is on good puck control,  endurance and having a goalie  who can shoot like Ron Hextall.  This year the Wakefield Stars  will be back to defend last  season's championship in the  Open Division. The Wakefield  team beat its counterparts, the  Wakefield Whalers, in an ex  citing final last season, but will  be hard pressed to repeat this  year with four new teams, one  team coming from UBC.  Last year's Oldtimers  Champs were the local Midget  Team, representing our Minor  Hockey Organization. They  have since disbanded and are  playing in the Men's League,  but their place will be taken by a  very competitive Bantam Team,  whose young legs will give the  real Oldtimers fits!  The lounge at the arena will  be open all weekend for the  spectators and there will be  food available upstairs after the  games for players and fans  alike. If it's a rainy and  miserable weekend, come out  and watch a different style of  hockey and join in turning out  the lights to the arena for  another winter.  Games begin Friday evening  around 5 pm, continue all day  and into Saturday evening, continuing Sunday morning with  the Playoffs scheduled for  around 3 pm Sunday afternoon.  See you at the rink I        i   -  Reference: Point Atkinson \ufffd\ufffdtrtf\ufffd\ufffdWKf \"  IPacillc Standard Time and r mm tor aacti h ot tan  Boats In-Stock  TIDELINE  MARINE  5637 Wharf Rd.,  Sechelt  885-4141        ^  Strikes and Spares  We held the zone round of  the National Gassified Tournament here last Sunday. The winning ladies team is Mavis  Wilson, Gail Sangster, Lottie  Campbell, Dariene Humbird  and Sue Whiting.  The winning men's team is  Garry Wyton, Larry Wan-  namaker, Grant Gill, Jerry  Mielke and Walter Kohuch.  These teams will bowl in the  Regional Finals at Varsity Ridge  Lanes on April 1.  The Province Team Bowl  Tournament has been going on  all month and the winning  teams are the Rebels: Isabel and  John Hart, Janet Meldrum,  Bernie Lindsay and Sue  Whiting; The Hot Shots: Mel  and Dariene Golnick, Eve and  Rob Corlett and Mick Furness;  The Five Funnies: Lynne Pike,  Phyllis Handford, Vera Sum-  merfelt, Jan Hoskins and Irene  Harvey. These teams will bowl  in the finals for trips to Reno.  The Kids and Coaches Tournament was held Friday night  and the winning team is Bill  Cook, Jennifer McHeffey, Tori  Tucker and Lisa Kincaid who  rolled 338 pins over their  average. They will bowl in' the  Regional Finals on April 22.  NATIONAL CLASSIFIED:  (SGaaM)  PuiLaUMd*. 274-ltM  JmeiMcker 24O-10M  rVUcMeWhtdiai 2*7-1 If*  WrtffKolNck 1611114  Jerry Mldke 319-1190  JlmH.mNrd              313-3*1-1214  CLASSIC:  UtUnta 2994S4  ataMfeMcCoanel 290411  RiyCoala 2*0-927  TomCotaatasMe 267-954  Roy BnaMrorn 277-997  TUESDAY COFFEE:  MtfU Thotaaioai 213474  fewM* 2T94I4  GHWONS'A':  lfcvI>raasboasi 2K4C1  HaraMAIn 291477  FrKtmat Reywleai 272-7(2  WEDNESDAY COFFEE:  DMkMHaasssMri 229424  Wtflasslllll 245424  SLOUGH-OFFS:  PMGatwa 234441  BALL* CHAIN:  Hark Raw* 230427  raa-.LMa.tJl. 330465  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhlj-atatj 279-731  PHIMTAST.QUE:  Rob Corlett 22*433  JfaGlcMt 2244(1  NIGHT OWLS:  MicMtWIattatat 294444  SECHELT CA.'k  MCajM iBOaatajOai 29*443  DaaWiMsr 209-TH  Y.B.C. PEEWEES:  JrMiUferWUkiori 132-235  Jorsic. Sangster 124-235  BANTAMS:  SherivTiHood 204-491  MufcEWol 149423  BUICook 151-445  KriitotfR.Todd 239462  Gibsons  Swimming Pool  Call 886-9415 for futhar Information  We are taking  ^^mp^*am  Now For  BRONZE  MEDALLION  Tuesdays & Thursdays  7:30 - 9:30 pm  April 3 - May 3  *^ras**^BSS***asasS**^\ufffd\ufffda^^B*^^Bf*>^Ba**  Publication ol this schedule  sponsored by  Super Valu  SHOP LOCALLY  HOT DEAL  When your aging electric water heater  packs it in, B.C. Hydro will help you  tohawitteplacedtyamoreeneigy-  efficientone.  Convert to a natural gas water  heater and B.C. Hydro along with  your gas company will, through an  authtxiaed installer, give you an  immediate discount of $150.  If gas is not available in your  ara, the purt\ufffd\ufffdasec>f an energy-  saving electric water healer will earn  you a $20 rebate.\"  Itlt a move that will save you  cash. Up front. And on your  monthly electric bill, year after year.  Rus, it will help slow the evergrowing demand on our valuable  hydroelectric resource.  Heres your chance to be Rwer  Smart. To enjoy cash savings now.  And the gc<>d life electricity brings,  for years to come.  Clip Uleapprespriate reminder  and tape it to your aging water heater  and when the lime comes, take ad-  vanuge of these hot cash back deals.  BG hydro Q  r~GAS HEATER (X)NVERSK\ufffd\ufffd4~I  $150 DISCOUNT REMINDER  Convert your present electric mm  hearer lo gas and enjoy an immediiie  saving of $150.  Your installer has the details.  ELECTRIC WATER HEATER  $20 REBATE REMINDER  hirchaie an energy-atving electric  water healer and get a $20 rebate (rem  B.C. Hydra  Your installer has Ihe details.  - tlSOdractairaapplrtsriiilytoCnOaMritai  offer. Ofler valid on purchases mark Jans I,  IM9 Ihnrurjh rVlrry .a|, 1990.  \"lMy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrlKa*nv\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdha\"IWrsman,'asr\ufffd\ufffdl  affixed by manufacturers qualify. Offer valid  on rairdtasts mark Jut* I, l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ihroujr.  l^fiXM^eMSW  iz S C   GOLF  AND COUNTRY CLUB  Holes-in-one  Coast News, March 26,1990  15.  Action la fast and furious in Ike floor hockey games played at  Gibsons Pentecostal Church on School Road on Thursday even-  'n\ufffd\ufffd>- -KeilShctMaipkoio  Pender Golf  by Jerry Holmes  The weather for the seniors  session on Tuesday was something else. The early morning  was brisk, to say the least, it  rained like you-know-what  around noon, and then, those  of us who did the afternoon  shift had to shed clothing down  to our shirt sleeves to duck the  heat.  So, because of, or in spite of,  whichever is most accurate, two  tigers tied for low gross with a  sparkling 40. One was George  Langham and the other Jim  Menzies, who must have evened  the score with a tormentor who,  probably unjustly, accused him  of \"snivelling and whining\"  about the calibre of his game  before teeing off.  First low net at 31 was Neil  Reeder, a tie for second saw Ernie Holloway and Dave Dakin  with net 33's and 33.5 gave Jim  Buntain third place.  The K.P. on 3 was won by  Dave Dakin who must have  made the putt to net 33 and on  number 6 was George Reid and  we'll never know if he made the  putt or not.  The ladies weren't quite as  lucky with the weather on  Thursday, but it was good  enough to attract a good group.  Their game selection was 'pick  your own score' which is a  tough game in any league.  The two first place competitors were Marcia Keim and  Jacquie Hooper. Four second  place winners were Marj  Cumbers, Joan Willcock, Shirley Dumma and Moni  Langham.  It was fitting that Marj  Cumbers was a winner, as  following the game, a luncheon  and wine and cheese party was  held for Marj and Roy to say  farewell and Bon Voyage to  these long time and highly  respected members on their  move to Vernon.  If you haven't looked into the  pro shop in the last while, you  should. Most of the spring stock  is in. Lots of neat new T-shirts  and sweaters, new golf shoes  and, for a limited time, a two  for one sale on golf gloves.  And, if Mac McFarlane is  tending the store ask him if he  knows any jokes about sky  writing pilots.  For the occasional golfers  and guests, a whole gaggle of  shiny new rental clubs are  displayed along with crates of  experienced balls, courtesy of  Jim Menzies.  Everyone knows that Jim  finds more balls on the weekend  than most people do in a  lifetime, but did you know that  he discovered the whereabouts  of somewhere around 1400  wayward balls in the closing  months of last fall? Incredible!  JOHN  GONZAGA  as the newest member to our Sales Team.  John and his family have been active members In  the community of Gibsons for over 9 years.  He has a strong background in the medical field,  specially medical sales and lab work.  NOW HE IS READY TO QO TO WORK FOR YOU!  For his support In all your Real Estate needs  call John at 686-7712  by Celia Meda  The Number 8\/17 Green  must be the noisiest place on the  course these days with all the  holes-in-one being played there.  Congratulations to three of our  members who had aces this past  week: Bernice Bader, Bill Gibbons and Jack Knaus. I understand that this is number three  for Jack!  Anyone passing near the club  house on Thursday knew that  the senior men were again on  track by the wonderful smells  emanating from the kitchen  -trays of our 'world famous'  cheese scones, fresh from the  oven - with some 62 seniors to  eat them, too.  Winners of the low net play  were: Ray Phillips and Bill Gibbons tied for net 30; Vic  Vaughan at net 30.5; Lyall Nan-  son at net 31; Tom Milsted at  net 31.5; Bill McKinnon at net  32 and Owen Hooper, Bill  Sutherland and Bob Mackenzie  all tied at net 32.5.  Our lady 'tuners' played for a  hidden hole on Tuesday with  Lorna   Huggins   and   Marg  Bevan tied in the under 50 handicap category, and Pearl Cheal  winning in the over 50 handicap  range.  The 18-hole ladies counted  par 3's and 5's only with the  winners as follows. First flight:  A. Giroux, net 31; V. Douglas,  net 32.5 (B.C.9); and M.  Reeves, net 32.5.  Second flight: C. Skytte, net  33.5; A. Mackenzie, net 35  (B.B.9); and E. Woodman, net  35.  Third flight: V. Gibbons, net  35.5; K, Sonntag, net 37; and  N. Nanson, net 37.5 (B.B.9).  The Men's First Annual  Stableford Tournament was  held last Sunday. Gord Cook  was the winner in this event  which saw 43 players endure  driving rain on the front nine  and brilliant sunshine on the  back. Typical spring weather in  Roberts Creek.  With heavy play beginning  now, the board of directors is  regretably compelled to limit  public play until after 1 pm on  weekdays and after 3 pm on  weekends and holidays.  This will take effect April 1.  Onee-ln-a-IIMim*  \\w  Safari * Beech HOLIDAY  One whole month ot luxurious sun, sand and  spectacular wildlife In beautilul Bast African  Qame Lodges, the vibrant city ot Nairobi, and  the pristine white beaches ol lovely Mombasa.  31 day* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd departing July 1st  Just $3900 Canadian  Includes:  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Round-trip airfare from Canada  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Luxury accommodation throughout your stay  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Breakfast, lunch and dinner dally  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Local tours with friendly guide  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Transfers to and Irom all the various destinations  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd And Much Moral  Coast Soccer  PENDER HARBOUR CREDIT UNION  NOTICE  43rd Annual General Meeting  to be held on  April 20th, 1990  at the  Pender Harbour Community Hall  Dinner: 7pm  Meeting: 8pm  Tickets available at the Credit Union  Board ol Directors  The Sunshine Coast Youth  Soccer had the year end tournament on Saturday, March 17. It  was originally planned for  March 10, but the weather  didn't cooperate. (We made  snow sculptures instead).  In previous years the tournament was competitive in all age  groups. This year we decided to  make the 6 and 7-year-olds noncompetitive. All the teams in  this age group played two games  and after they were finished the  coaches handed out soccer  crests. This way no one feels  hurt that they didn't get a  trophy. Hopefully everyone had  a good time and will return to  play next season.  In the other age groups (8 and  9,  10 and 11, and 12 and  13-year-olds) points were kept'  and trophies as well as crest*-  were handed out. Players,, i\/_  you didn't get a crest, please r,  phone your coach. Thene were  i  enough  crests  for  everyone.  There was a slight mix-up at  Brothers Park and the coaches  didn't get the crests handed to  them until the end of the tournament.  So here are the winners of the  tournament as well as the  league:  In the 8 and 9-year-old division, the league winner was the  Cedar Grove Team coached by  Bob Crosby; the tournament  winner was Ken's Lucky Dollar  coached by Kevin Ryan. In the  10 and 11-year-old division, the  tournament winner as well as  league winner was Gibsons  Blues coached by Alex Skytte.  In the 12 and 13-year-old  division the tournament winner  was Gibsons Blues coached by  John Morris and John Lowden  and the league winners were the  COLD CASH  When your aging fridge finally  quits, B.C. Hydro will rebate you  $50 on the purchase of an enenjy-  savingone.  Its a move that will save you  cash. Up front. And down the  road, with significant savings on  your monthly electric bill. (Statistics show that the new enetrgy-  saving models can represent a  lypical saving of $300 or more over  the life of the fridge compared to  less efficient models.)  Plus, your purchase will help  slow the tner-growing demand  on our valuable Itydroeleciric  resource.  Here^ycrur chance to be  Power Sman. To enjoy cash savings  now. And the good life electricity  brings, for years to come.  BG hydro Q  [\"energy-saving fridge i  I  $50 rebate reminder  I Clip arid save this reminder '  I to ask your appliance dealer        I  | which fridges qualify for the      |  I $50 rebate. Or call B.C. Hydro   |  , toll-free 1-800-663-0431.            |  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOtfev.M.\ufffd\ufffd[\ufffd\ufffdrctvssnmi*|rJr\ufffd\ufffd !.!!>\ufffd\ufffd      O  |   \ufffd\ufffdrtsa|hrilarrdiJI.I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlll*rttrrai\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffdrar^VH  arasravrtErttrtjirtcfcnvmit\ufffd\ufffdrt,rualir> Jts\\  Sechelt  Yellows  coached  by  Gary r.a.Miaw.  Congr?\"Jations to all the  winners ot the league and tournament games.  Parents please make sure the  uniforms get back to the  coaches as soon as possible.  Each jersey costs about 12  dollars and in past years we only  got about 12 out of 16 jerseys  returned that we hand out. It  gets a little expensive to bring  the uniforms back up to the  numbers you need for September.  Speaking of September, mark  on your calendar the first  weekend after school starts in  September. This is when soccer  registration takes place. If we all  get signed up, then we can get  me games started earlier in the  season.  re'U see you next soccer  m and now for softball...  Geolt Hodgkinson  Sieve Brining  Geoff Hodgkinson is pleased to introduce Steve Brining as  an associate representative of The Mutual Life of Canada  for the Sunshine Coast.  As an agent of the Mutual Group, Steve brings with him  experience and knowledge, and looks forward to being of  service to the people on the Coast.  m  The Mutual Group  Call G\ufffd\ufffdoIf or Sieve la Gibsons at HtS-Mll lor yow  insurance and financial planning needs  For  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Competitive Prices  . Reliable Delivery  Selection  Come to  GBS for your  Trusses  Garage 0oors  Windows  Bring us your plans  GIBSONS  lM-ipai  tl tai - 4 am  BUILDING SUPPLIES!!!  flbMM     ImMI VlMMMf (TMrnM) MWB14  MM141 m-71!1   TWO LOCATIONS   Sunahlna Coast Highway \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd QlbeoM - Wharf * DolpMn - Sachet! Coast News, March 26,1990  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd APPLIANCE SERVICES*  SERVICE & REPAIR  Ta All Major Appllaneaa  ajajftil Quality Reconditioned Major Appliances For Sale  B\ufffd\ufffdl GUARANTEED & DELIVERED  Will Buy Nica. Non-Working Major Appliances  Norsimin - Bjorn  SSS-7897  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  AUTOMOTIVE  Industrial      AUTOMOTIVE        Marine  PARTS & SUPPLIES  A101 SUPPLY ltd.  1061 Hwy. 101, Gibsons, B.C. 886-8101  Mon.Fri.6-a Sat 8-6, Sun  10-3  ~SECHELT RADIATORS\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Complele Cooling System Sarvica Centre  We Repair & Replace Rads. Heater Cores & Gas Tanks  AUTOS TRUCKS TRACTORS INDUSTRIAL MARINE  New, Used & Rebuilt  5SS0 Whirl   *s*\/\"01\" WcrV-UpJ Delivery Mon . jjt.  (Old Fatality Rulldlnnsl     CfflB 885-79861\/  YOUR \"COMPLETE\"  TRANSMISSION CENTRE  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd FRONT AND REAR WHEEL DRIVE  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAUTOMOTIVE * MARINE 'CLUTCHES  p.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAUTOMATIC \ufffd\ufffd STANDARD  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  \/ Come see the Specialists at  ~ EAGLE TRANSMISSIONS  %\ufffd\ufffd  The Coast's first Trantmlnlon only shop.  Phone Kerry at  886-2111  677  Payne Rd.  TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS FOR 1B YEARS .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd BUILDING CONTRACTORS  Hallmark  Custom Homes  & Renovations  Enquiries 886-3344  886*3364 J  \/*-DJL\ufffd\ufffdOrAT\ufffd\ufffd Glass ta Door Ltd.N  Bllolds \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Screens \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Garage Doors  Prehung Doors \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Aluminum Windows  874S Young Street S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Chilliwack, B.C. V2P 4P3  BUI Allan Sales Bus. 792-0088  Res: 853-4101 Fax 792-3475  \"We service the entire Sunshine Coast\"  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT *  AL VANCE  883-9046  SEA m HORSE  (F    CONSTRUCTION  COMMERCIAL\/RESIDENTIAL DUALITY FINISHING  t L-Q BUILDING >  CONTRACTORS  Surveying, Foundations, Framing Siding, Patios, Stairs  \"Custom Building\"  COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL  \"We Build 'Em From The Bottom Up!\"  sffarc Quiriun    \ufffd\ufffd FREE ESTIMATES \ufffd\ufffd 885-9201\/  ALPINE TRUSSES LID.  886-8801  A  88  vRoof Trusses, Residential, Commercial^  ROOFING  Specializing in all types of  FREE      commercial & residential roofing  ESTIMATES 886-2087 eves,   guImS  Need this space?  Call The COAST NEWS  .it  886 ?6?? (ir 88b 3930  D.R. CLAFP  &  ASSOCIATES  BUILDING & DESIGN  Post tt Beam New Homes- Renovations 886-3811  Pegascis's  ConatHuc.tkm  #20 Evans Road, R.R.K1  Halfmoon Bay, B.C. VON 1Y0  Marten Carmen    885-2052  ^U  CLEANING SERVICES  SUNSHINE COAST  DISPOSAL SERVICES  Port Mellon to Ole's Cove  Commercial Containers Available  886-2938  CONCRETE SERVICES*  (R  Ready Mix Concrete  C Sand t Oratret  Nf*    CONCRETE  ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  -'-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sisvmcmisuNSMmicoAsrl  GIBSONS PLANT |  o  SECHELT PLANT  MS-7180  CONCRETE SERVICES*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  EXCAVATING  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  HEATING  T6t\ufffd\ufffd Line Concrete  Curbs,'Retaining Walls  'We build 'em, We pour 'em'  Free Estimates 885-9203  r   TURBNNE  CONCRETE\"^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPUMP TRUCKS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCONCRETE WORK  Placing t, Finishing ol:  Batsman) Slabs, Patios. Driveways,  Sidewalks, Exposed Aggregate  FOR QUALITY WORK, CALL US! 686-7022  FUTURE  xcavating & Developments  5esi(,ential, Underground Installations  Commercial , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"...  industrial * *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Land Clearing \"\ufffd\ufffd* & Driveways  Satisfaction Guaranteed  CALL MIKE OR MIKE  686-2182  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd simc fields  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd DRA1NAGIOITCHIS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IICAVAnONS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd WATUtUNIS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd CLIAIUNG  PAUL'S CHIMNEY CLEANING  886-7116  Competitive Rates  IC8 LIQUID US  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Auto Propane  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Appliances  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Quality B.B. O's  885-2380  Hwy 101, across St.  Irom Big Mac's. Sechelt  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdro\ufffd\ufffd hit \ufffd\ufffdest or sEtmcc\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Swanson's  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffds   sb \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - can*,...-Ready-Mix Ltd.  a\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jtMOuaciNtaai w watch-.     .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      ... accounts .  1885*96661 I88S-5333I  3 Batch Plant! on th\ufffd\ufffd Sunihin* Coat  Glbaoni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sechelt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Pindar Harbour  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ELECTRICAL CONTR  MARINE SERVICES  Steve Jones    886-8269  &.  CAN-DO EXCAVATIN  Septic Fields, Landscaping,  Hauling ol sand, gravel & topsoil  Bobcat 743 Diesel  . George 885-7663 Emery  uccaneer  Marina ty Resort Ltd  Located In Secret Cove M3-7SSI  MARINE SPECIALISTS 21 years  PARTS - SALES - SERVICES-REPAIRS  ^ggOKlCThirmoglis. ft  Cobra Beats now  In-Stock  Q & D Contracting  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSand & Gravel Deliveries,, jjb)fe  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStump Removal  Gary Davles 886-9585  Dan Zuefl    886-8070  P.O. Box 1389  Gibsons, BCj  [a  rastn?  OUTBOARDS  \/      Olson Electric      N  General Electrical Contractor  Fft Estrrrrataa Irtctrrtt\/rrg B.C. Hfdto Eftclrfe Plus  Residential \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Commercial 885-1939  DENNIS OLSON Box 2271, Sechelt  JVIIDWAY-P0WER\"LINE  ^SERVICES LTD;  Private a Industrial Electrical Contractor  High & Low Voltage Power Lines  Reg, no. 16135       A83.9483  '' J  m  actoA I  no  '\ufffd\ufffd  j  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd GEN. CONTRACTORS*  t^Ayf lor the Professional     k*..  a IteWtL and the Homeowner    lm!a\\\\  RENT-IT!  CAN\/ID\/I INC.  HI    TOOLS & EQUIPMENT     W  v.5540 Inlet Ave.. Sechelt       885-2848.  U*>  Marine Diesel Repair  DAVE COLES  Mobile Service \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Repairs e Overhauls  Injector Service Special Month  886-2875  Need this space?  EXCAVATING  Ernie Fallis  Contracting  TV Complete Backhoe Service  n  886-9192  m-mti    Cottrell's Marine Service1  VKll        SERVICE TO Al 1. MAKES  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI     HUB      Specializing in Merc. Outboard  rmrTr^^\"^kfc'     * *'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"> *'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rebuilding  DIVER W~ Located at  BOAT *V        Smitty's Marina, Gibsons  HAULING SHOP 986.7711     RES. 885-5840  ^ggT...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tj MARINE WAYS  : j Jf\ufffd\ufffdOTV0utb0ar(ls      W POWER WASHING [  W     AB HADDOCK MMINE ltd.  Garden Bay. BC.     \"*\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV|S,IRS_    883-2811^  -Residential-  .Commercial.  .InduttriaL  PAINTING  30 Years Experience     Fully Equipped  Free Estimates       j        ,  M.B. Painting    SU  Mrarool rssarrnnvar RHflf\ufffd\ufffdfl2fl     T'lXJ  Marcel Beaunoyer 886-8626  886-332?.  I  r Sail Water Licences J^i.. j  s> Motel & Campsites * Water Taxi ^K^mtr-  * Marine Repairs      * Ice and Tackle    083-2266  MISC SERVICES \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  COAST BOBCAT SERVICE,  Small In Size - Big In Production^  Post Holes - Trenching  Spreading\/Levelling  Light Hauling  1885-7061  8ECHELT \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<V^  CENTURY ROCK  SK      885-5910  DO  A.D. LANDSCAPE GROUP ^  OVER 20 YEARS ^_^  DESIGN  STONEWORK  LANDSCAPING & GARDENING  886-2226  Mackenzie Excavating Ltd.  Land Clearing & Development  Cam Mackenzie  885-2447  886-3558  We dig the aunehlnm Cornell  as       T,     RENOVATIONS WITH >  iXhtlUR * TOUCH OF CUSS  WW Me   COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL  IMPROVER \"^  LTD IMLTMOON BAY.  'COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERVICE        6,7 & 8' OOLDEli'N  o..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn,nrJ.Tu,...,e HEOQING EVERGHEENt-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd3\"\/tt  Free Eitimatis  BARK MULCH \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i5,d. d.t,\ufffd\ufffdr.dinsech.i. K70 coasr's laeGtsr (.t)\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr  MURRAY'S NURSERY \"'\"^T  Located 1 mila north ol Hwy 101 on Mason Rd     MS-2074  Pbc ferries Schedule  Land Clearing  Excavations  Septic Tanks  885-3924  885-7487  VANCOUVER   SECHELT P\ufffd\ufffdNINSUU>  HORSESHOE BAT  l0trvN9?Ahi  JERVIS INLET  EARLS COVE  SALTERY BAY  Lv. Langdale  6:20 am      2:30 pm  8:30 M'       4:30  10:30 6:30  12:25 pm M 8:20 M  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdMai MitrrarrcTi laa  Lv. Horsashoa Bay  7:30 am      3:30 pm M  9:30 M        5:30  11:30 7:25 M  1:15 pm     9:15  Lv. Earlt Cove  6:40 am      4:30 pm  8:20 6:30  10:30 8:30  12:25 pm M 10:20 M  Lv. Saltery Bay  5:45 M      3:30 pm  7:35        5:30 M  9:25 M     7:30  11:30       9:30  DAL ENTERPRISES  1989 416 4WD Caterpillar  Backhoe Loader  Septic Systems, Ditching Etc.  Call Nick  Jor all your Backhoe Naada     886-7146  Will Buy Timber  or will do Excavating  For Timber  Big or Small Amount  or will Rent 518 Cat Skidder  by the hour with operator  Will Go Anywhere  Louis & D. LePage Logging        886-3821  *Nott ihtra will be no  \"First Ferry\" fun on  Saturdays Sundays & Holidays  Ivn Park ft MM. Mirth fid ft Sliest Gmir PI ft Funklin Ltwir lui Stta)  Gibsons Bus Schedule  Ellecme March 1. 1989  Dtpirt  Mall        9:45  7:45  9:45  11:45  1:45  3:45  5:45  7:49  Arrlva  lirtgdili 9:10  2:10  Firry Tir. 9:10  4:10  10:10  9:10  12:10  9:10  Ivia Manna. FranhHn. Firahni. Park I Raad ltd I  Arrlvi  Mill        5:30  9:30  Oipirt  Lomir     9:15  Bus Slop 9:15  10:15  12:15  2:15  4:15  5:15  9:15  10:30  12:30  2:30  4:30  9:30  9:30  rlalgltls. laaatairaat Hirgkis,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdart Sctrrrriurat  FARES Adults Smlori ChHdran (6-12) Cemm. Tlckitl  Out ll Town   51.50    51.00 .75       J125\/rldl |  In Town .75       .75 .75  These transportiition schedules sponsored hy  SuNesMi Agencies  INSURANCE       orxTRAVEL  CwNptan  Notary  A Member |TD|  886*2000 886-9255  Had Carpet aerriea From Friendly Protesslonels In Sunnycrest Hell, Qibaona.  Travel I  a*rofenlonabj Book review  Coast News, March 26,1990  17.  Poet's wife tells all  by Montague Royil  There have been several  biographies and countless  reminiscences written about  Dylan Thomas, the bibulous  Welsh poet whose genius with  words was counterbalanced by  the absolute chaos of his personal life.  People who knew him only  slightly have published anecdotes   about   his   alcoholic  escapades. One point of view  was always missing, however,  that of his long-suffering wife,  Caitlin. Now after more than 30  years, the one person in the  world who knew Thomas best  has elected to break her silence.  The sad story that Caitlin  Thomas tells in Caitlin\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA  Waning Absence (Pavanne),  pulls no punches and spares no  feelings. It is the warts-and-all  account of a turbulent relation-  SOFTWARE SALE  25%  OFF  Learning  Company &  Davidson  Children's Educational Games  IBM or Apple II E Versions  D.O.S. & Bedford start week of March 26  Phone  8854489  atlas  OFFICE SOLUTIONS  Fax  8854696  5511 Wharf Street, Sechelt  ship that was definitely not  made in heaven.  Caitlin McNamara was born  near London in 1913 of Prates  tant Irish parents. Statuesque  and pretty in her youth, she  drifted early into a bohemian  lifestyle, studied dance under  Isadora Duncan's brother in  Paris and had an affair with the  painter, Augustus John. When  the dancer met the diminutive  Welsh poet in 1936, it was instant chemistry. They plunged  into a steamy relationship and  were married a year later.  On the surface it looked like *  genuine love match but there  were serious problems from the  very beginning. While Caitlin  was fully aware of Thomas'  poetic genius, she soon came to  realize that she had saddled  herself with one of the most  contrary and irresponsible of  men.  He was a dedicated alcoholic  with no sense of the value of  money and small talent for  making any in those initial  years. They lived on handouts,  credit and loans that were never  repaid. It was, to say the least, a  shaky existence.  Fortunately, Thomas' erratic  and self-indulgent behaviour  did not extend to his writing.  Here he was the consumate professional, isolating himself for  several hours each day,  painstakingly crafting the  remarkable poems that would  make him famous.  In Caitlin's eyes, her husband  was like two people - the  feckless drunken manchild and  the fiercely-inspired poet.  Almost in self-defence, she  began drinking too. When she  discovered that Thomas was  having affairs on the side, she  retaliated by seeing other men.  It was a totally chaotic situation.  Nonetheless,  the  marriage  Sunshine Coast  Services  Directory  MISC SERVICES  MISC SERVICES \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ikaas  ii  886-7359  Conversion   Windows,  Glass,  Auto & Marine Glass, Aluminum Windows  & Screens   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     ,.,_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.   Mirrors  Hwy 101 & Pratt Rd.  -     GIBSONS TAX SERVICE   N  Avt. frlM $18.00  Income Tax Preparation  all business strictly confidential  635 Martin Rd., Gibsons  A. Jack  886-7272 J  MINI  STORAGE  885-2081  For successful  BUSINESS MEETINGS  Urge or Small  CEDARS INN  895 Hwy. 101, Gibsons  Fax 886-3046    886-3008  PENINSULA INDUSTRIAL  & LOGGING SUPPLIES  PORT  MELLON  & GIBSONS  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Wire Rope & Rigging  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Welding Supplies  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hydraulic Hose & Fittings  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Misc. Industrial Products  Van. Direct 689-7387  Gibsons 886-2480  Port Mellon 884-5303  1042 Hwy. 101, Gibsons (across from Kenmac)  Need this space?  JACOBSEN FEEDS        *  6452 Norwest Bay Road  888*9369        Your Authorized Dealer  We carry a complete line of  Animal Feeds & Supplies  'the growing people'  18ALI8 * INSTALLATION  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Commercial & Residential*  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Carpet & Resilient Flooring*  ****** * * *   Phone  *******  '88*6 886-8868  shoppy   SHOWROOMat  5601 Hwy. 101, Sechelt  Tues.Frl., 12:30-5 All day Sat.  .THE FLOOD STORE AT VOUR OOOR .  CHAINSAWS  SALES & SERVICE  KELLY'S LAWNMOWER ft  CHAIN8AW LTD  i   731 NORTH ROAD   6862912j  ^ JON JAREMA  DESIGN CONSULTANT  PRELIMINARY DEVM.OPMF.NT CONCEPTS  CUSTOM HOME DESICN  RENOVATIONS OK ADDITIONS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd REVISION OF EXISTING PLANS  DRAWINGS AND RENDERINGS  CAM. 886-8930 ix> discuss vour home environment  VMlCHISTIRHHil  VANI miVIR. i.e.  fYJA     *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-  V        JlM'S  FUEL INJECTION SERVICE  15 Vvars Of Experience At Your Service  The fuel Injection system is the heart of the diesel  engine, have your fuel injection equipment serviced  for maximum engine performance  By |IM BANKS   Dependable .Service At A HeasnnMe Price  324-1715  f GIBSONS MOBILE SAW SERVICE  Custom Cutting \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Planing  Bevel Siding \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Posts & Beams  Chris Nappar IM-346S  R.R.M, S6, C76,  lOlblont, B.C. VON 1V0  f     Complete, Conjioentiil, & Professional     A  BUSINESS a PERSONAL OFFICE SERVICES  HCIlc gaper HUH       883-9911 'j  FREDERICK G0ERTZ LTD. ^  Complete Binocular Repairs  Repair Facilities  From Experienced Technicians  For any Inquiries tor old t new olnoculars  Phona 684-8377 (Vm)  SUNSHINK HITCH**  . CAaVNKT*-  886-9411  ISftowraom Kern's Hata,Hwy ft  Opart Tuaadar to Saturday 104 pm^  somehow survived, in part  perhaps because of the three  children who were born to the  couple over the yean. Also,  their financial situation began  to improve. During World War  II, Thomas found work as a  script writer and began drawing  a regular paycheck. In addition  he began giving regular broadcasts on the BBC.  Thomas' literary star was in  the ascendence. His poetry was  beginning to bring him international fame. In 1950 he embarked on the first of four American  reading tours. He was well paid  but most of the money got frittered away.  The stress of the travel  schedule and the constant partying that followed the readings,  began to make serious inroads  on his health. Caitlin accompanied him on his second tour  but they were constantly bickering and twice as much money  got squandered.  In October 1953, Thomas  embarked on a fourth tour. It  was to be his last. On November  5 he collapsed at New York's  Chelsea Hotel and went into a  deep coma. He died four days  later.  Caitlin flew to New York and  went hysterical with grief.  Despite Thomas' flagrant shortcomings, the love between them  had never quite died. When she  had composed herself she took  the poet's body back to  Laugharne, Wales to be buried.  Then she emigrated to Italy,  where after a long battle with  alcoholism, she eventually  remarried.  This is a savagely honest  book that sheds much new light  on the stormy legend of Dylan  Thomas and the only woman he  truly loved.  Police  news  GIBSONS RCMP  A woman was sexually  assaulted on Friday, March II  between 3 and 5 am. The offence occurred in a pickup truck  parked near the S-bend on  North Road.  The woman attempted to flag  down a large truck after the incident.  The RCMP appeal to the  driver of this passing truck or  anyone else with him to call  them at the Gibsons detachment. Anyone who may have  other information of this incident is asked to call the Gibsons  RCMP or 886-TIPS.  There have been complaints  of children throwing rocks  down the slopes of Georgia  Heights, or the Bluff, just missing houses and vehicles.  Parents, please remind your  children to respect property  while they play in this area.  On the night of March 22\/23  a motorcycle was stolen from a  residence on O'Shea Road.  Break-ins of residences in the  vicinity of Pratt and Chaster  have occurred while the occupants were home asleep.  Purses and wallets were stolen.  Another like incident occurred  in the 1200 block of Gower. Still  another break-in in the early  morning occurred March 21 in  Langdale.  How secure are your doors  and windows?  Car windows have been  smashed on a number of occasions in the parking lots of the  mall and neighbouring businesses. The perpetrators were  looking for cash.  Someone during the evening  and night of March 15\/16 used  spray paint on road signs,  buildings and cars. Along with  random spraying were the initials JAD frequently repeated.  Call 886-TIPS.  On March 17 at night a basement window of the Mariners'  Restaurant was broken in an attempt to break in, and also the  window of a house on Marine  Drive.  On Saturday, March 17, a  Caucasian male, blond hair,  driving a dark coloured pickup  approached a very young girl  near Pratt and Highway 101  with the story that he had a  photo studio and would like to  take her picture. The girl fled.  Parents take note.  Dim REFRAIN  1   FROM USE OF  EXHAUST BRAKES  IN RESIDENTIAL  AREAS.   JJlW'jjU.  W     SStT Of SfCSHHT  1      Guess Where       \\  The asaal prtat of $8 wM be awarded the flnt cornet entry drawn  which locates the above. Send your entries to reach the Coast  News, Box 460, Gibsons by Saturday of this week. Last week's  winner was George Stubbs of Gibsons who correctly Identified  Salmon Rock on the southern tip of Keats Island.  Satentfto 3vM  Saturday, April 7th at 8 pm  Davis Bay Wilson Creek Hall  Tickets: $8 advance at Talewind Books, Coast Book Store,  Seaview Market, Davis Bay Store  Licensed - No Minors  \"...Wall Toe-rapping Music\".  LIVING FAITH  LUTHERAN CHURCH  Whiltaker Road & Coast Highway  Davis Bay   885-2202  Rev. Frank W. Schmitt, Pastor  Sunday Church School      9:30 am  (in home al 4862 Coasl Highway)  For information call 885-5792  Sunday Worship 11:00 am  Come Grow With Us  THE UNITED CHURCH  OF CANADA  Sunday Worship Services  GIBSONS  Glassford Road 11:15am  SundaySchool It :15 am  ST. JOHN'S    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Davis Bay 9:30 am  Sunday School 9:30 am  Rev. Stan Sears  Church Telephone 886-2333  -a* a* .US-  GRACE REFORMED  PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH  Morning Worship 11:30 am  St. Hilda's Anglican Church  Evening Worship    7 pm in homes  Wednesday  Bible Study 7:30 in homes  |. Cameron Fraser, Pastor  885-7488 Office 885-9707   mm*   ANGLICAN CATHOLIC  CHURCH OF CANADA  St. Columlta of lona Palish  8835 Redrooffs Rd., Halfmoon Bay  The Rev. E.S. Gale: 1-525-6760  Information; 885-7088  \"Ptayvr Book Anglican\"   mmm  CALVARY  BAPTIST CHURCH  711 Park Road  Telephone: 886-2611  SundaySchool 9:30 am  Worship Service 11:00 am  Hour of Inspiration 7:00 pm  Cai Mclver, Pasior  Arlys Peters, Music Minister  \"The Bible as it is...  ior People as tltey are.\"  -W**aV-  GIBSONS COMMUNITY  FELLOWSHIP  Welcomes you to join us  in Sunday Worship  Children's Progress 9:45 am  Prayer 10:00 am  Morning  Worship Service 10:45 am  Wednesday 7:00 pm  599 Gower Point Road  Pastor Monty McLean  886-7049  NEW LIFE FELLOWSHIP  New Testament Church  5531 Wharf Rd., Sechell  Sun. Worship Service      10:30am  Wed. Bible Study 7:30 pm  Morning Prayer        6:30-7:45 am  Tues.-Sat.  New Life Christian Academy  Enroling Kindergarten - Grade 12  Pasior Ivan Fox  Principal, David Cliff  Phone B85-4775 or B85-2672  _s\ufffd\ufffdVS.\ufffd\ufffd_  ANGLICAN  CHURCH OF CANADA  Sunday 10:30 am  Parish Family Eucharist  St. Bartholomew's, Gibsons  Wednesday 10:30 am  Worship and Bible Study  St. Aidan's, Roberts Creek  Rev. Esther North 886-7410  The Anglican Parish or  St. Aitlan 8, Si. Bartholomew   \ufffd\ufffdJa- w Vs   PENDER HARBOUR  PENTECOSTAL CHURCH  Lagoon Road, Madeira Park  Morning Worship 11:00 am  Sunday School \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd all ages    9:45 am  Ptayer & Bible Sludy  Wednesday 7:30 pm  883-2374 S, 883-9441  Pasior Mike Klassen  Affiliated with the Penlecost.il  Assemblies of Canada  -a* .*>.\ufffd\ufffd-  GIBSONS  PENTECOSTAL CHURCH  School Rd   0|)|Kisile KC Ml'  SundaySchool 9:45 ant  Morning Worship II ilO.mi  Iventng Fellowship 7:00 pm  Phone: Church Oflice 886-7107  Pastor Dan Mac Aulay 886-7107  Youth P.tsliir |. Mom- 886-3499  Affiliated with tl\ufffd\ufffd'  Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada   fa- *' *   A THE  ANGLICAN CHURCH  OF CANADA  St. Hilda's - Sechelt  Sunday Services 8 & 9:30 am  Nursery & Sunday School 9:30 am  St. Andrew's \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Pender Harbour  Regular Sunday Worships 11:30 am  885-5019 Rev. lune Maffm  \"We extend a Warm Welcome  to all\"  ROMAN* CATHOLIC CHURCH MASS SCHEDULE  Saturday  500 pm, St. Mary's, Gibsons  Sunday  9:00 am, Indian District  10:00 am, Holy Family, Sechelt  12:00 noon, St. Mary's, Gibsons  CONFESSIONS  1st & 3rd Sat. 4:0U4:30 pm Holy Familv, Sechelt  2nd & 4th Sat. 4:30-5:00 pm St. Mary's, Gibsons  885.9526  ^  I 18. Coast News, March 26,1990  \/\\f^t>  <L COAST NEWS CLASSIFIEDS^  Homes  8. Propertv  Homes    I    *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  8. fropertv   II       In Memoriam   II   Announcements  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmmWmmmMU  ANDERSON REALTY  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Rtlk.mant  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Relocation  FBEE CATALOGUE  5686 Cowrie St.. Box 1219  Sechelt. B.C. VON 3A0  SaS-3211 FAX 185-2899  Van Toll Free 684-S016  4 bdrm. home In Central Gibsons,  $105,900. Call 886-8510 eves.  #15  ii.*amat  1982 14x70. fully lenced, landscaped lot, upper Gibsons.  $75,000 886-2809. #13ss  Pender Harbour, 2 bdrm. mobile  on private lot, $40,000.  276-2338. #17sr  Hendy John Arthur, Mar. 26\/88,  loved, missed & remembered.  Phyllis Mae. #13  Gone but not forgotten: In loving  memory of my husband, Hugh  Elwood, who passed away March  28.1988. Love, Alice, Hugh Jr.,  Ruth and families. #13  Drop  off your  COAST NEWS  Classifieds  at any of our convenient  Friendly People  Places  -IN PENDER HARBOUR\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  The Coast News  (Madeira Park Shopping Centre) 883-9099  Marina Pharmacy 883-2888  AC Building Supplies 883-9551  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIN HALFMOON BAY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  B&J Store 885-9435   IN SECHELT   The Coast News  (Cowrie Street) 885-3930   IN DAVIS BAY   Lot, 60\ufffd\ufffd120   #50 Creekside.  $28.000.483-4833. #!4sr  Peninsula Market 885-9721  -IN WILSON CREEK-  Wilson Creek Campground 885-5937  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIN ROBERTS CREEK\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Seaview Market 885-3400   IN GIBSONS   The Coast News  (behind Dockside Pharmacy) 886-2622  DEADLINE IS NOON SATURDAY  FOR MONDAV PUBLICATION  3 PM AT COAST NEWS OFFICES  SECHELT & GIBSONS  yout  cliHlllad it Marina Pharmacy, our \"Friendly People Plan\" In Madeira Park.  Sechell. 5 yr. old 3 bedroom  home, 1886 sq. ft., 2 baths,  basement with cold room,  greenhouse, garage, level lot.  landscaped, wood and electric  heat. 5 appliances, many extras,  close to all amenities, $169,000  885-5128. #15sr  Cleared lot on cul-de-sac. Field  Rd. area, potential view, services  available. $26,900. 885-5661.  #14sr  View lot above hwy. opposite  hotel overlooking Pender Harbour. $28,000 OBO. 885-9778.  #15s  For sale by owner, 'k acre lot on  Gibsons Bluff, fantastic viewl Fully serviced, top access, to view  call 886-8757. #165  Three bdrm. home. Sargent Rd.,  fantastic 180\ufffd\ufffd view, exc. retirement home wilh on grade enlrance, carport & drive, 1'A  balhs. 2500 sq. tt. up & down.  No agents please. 886-9370.  #13  Double wide 24x32', 2 bdrm.. 1  bath. 886-7141. #14,  5 bdrm. home with up & down  fireplace. Downstairs could be  used as suile. plus 2 bdrm. second home on this view property,  $179,000. 886-8327. No agents  please. #14  By Owner: Gibsons, view of  mountains & water, older home,  2 bdrm., fireplace, workshop,  garage. Sunny landscaped yard.  886-9202. #14  1981 14x72' deluxe moduline  mobile home on private lot on  Creekside. West Sechelt. 2  bdrms., 2 baths.. 5 appls.,  healilator fireplace, $67,900.  885-4421. #14  Commercial Lot  50x120' North Rd. in Gibsons.  886-8866 or 886-9111.       #14  Floating home, architecturally  designed, quality construclion,  concrete barge. Could be adapted  to use on land. 684-2648.    #16  Daniel Sully-McCourt is pleased  to announce the arrival ot his new  sister. Justyne Danielle Lee,  weighing 6 lbs., 12 02s. Proud  parents are Larry McCourt and  Sharlene Sully. Proud grandparents are Rose & Gerald Martin. Bryant & Donna Ball and Ron  & Joyce McCourt We would just  like to thank Nanny Martin and  Auntie Geraldine lor all your support. We couldn't have done it  without you. Also a special  thanks lo Dr. Burlin tor all the exceptional care before, during and  alter. #13  Andrea Nicholson is thrilled to announce the arrival ol her brother  Trevor Ronald, born March 11,  1990 at St. Mary's Hospital,  weighing 7 lbs.. 8 ozs. Proud  parents are Mike and Denise;  grandparents are Ron and Donna  Remmen and Rose Nicholson and  W.J.P. Nicholson. Hugs and  isses to Auntie Elspeth for ail her  wonderful help. #13  3 bdrm. rancher, Sechelt village,  walking distance to all amenities,  $119,900. No Agents please.  885-7590. #13  Lot 16, Creekside subdivision on  mountainview drive In Gibsons.  Large lot on Park ravine side,  $29,500.886-8698.        #16ss  Fircresl Rd., lol size 63'x150',  flat, all services. Lynn pager  686-5858. #15  Lisa and Brandon are excited to  announce a new baby brother,  Jeremy Jason, born March 18,  1990 at 2:30 am, weighing 5  lbs., 7 ozs. Proud parents Doug  and Debbie Fielding wish to thank  Drs Amiel, Pendleton, Kaye and  nurses at Grace Hospital lor taking such oood care ol us.     #13  Obituaries  OEM  n*o>-  The LOWEST  lassified Ad Rate  -itf.-*  $400  (minimum) for 10 words  ^'e* Do*''' 2 5^ (or e\"ch addi,ior'\"1 word  Cs\ufffd\ufffdsS' Births, Lost S, Found FREtl  Pay for 2 weeks, Get the 3rd week FREE  When paid by CASH, CHEQUE  or MONEY OKDEK  \"SlUte SfiCTcLASSIFIEDS  They run until your item is sold!  I J      lot up to 10 words     I       per additional word  Your ad, featuring one item only, will run for four consecutive  weeks and will then be cancelled unless you instruct us to renew it  for another four, by Saturday. 3 pm.  NO CHARGE FOR RENEWAL for as long as you want!  INrrr,,,,,,Lil,Ir In i ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnmi'f, i.il advt-nisr'rsl  ALL CLASSIFIED ADS must be PRE-PAID before insertion.  For your convenience, use your MASTERCARD or VISA!  CLASSIFIED DEADLINE  At \"Friendly People Places\"  and at COAST NEWS Office  Pender Harbour  FRIDAY 4:30 PM  At COAST NEWS Offices,  sechelt & Gibsons    Saturday, 3 PM  COAST NEWS Classifieds  The LOWEST Price!  The HIGHEST Circulation!  The FIRST on the street!  Cowrie St.. Sechelt 885*3930 Crulce Lane, Gibsons 886*2682  Madeira Park Shopping Center, Pender Harbour 883*9099  FAX: 886-7725  LANG: Passed away March 18.  1990. after a lengthy Illness,  Benjamin James Lang, late of  Sechelt In his 72nd year. Survived by his loving wife Louise: one  son Howard and wife Milynne ol  Gibsons; two daughters, Anne  Garry ol Quesnel and Heathei  Marshall and husband Allan,)!)  North Vancouver; four grahd-  daughters; four grandsons; one  brother. Rev. George W. Lang  and wile Edith of Nanalmo;  several nieces and nephews. Mr.  Lang was a former mayor of  Sechell. Service Mon., Mar. 26  at 3 pm in St. Hilda's Anglican  Church, Sechelt. Reverend June  Maffin officiating. Cremation.  Devlin Funeral Home, directors,  in lieu ol flowers, remembrance  donations to the Sechelt Stroke  Club. Box 2615, Sechelt or the  Cancer Society. #13  FOX: Passed away March 21,  1990 Alwyn Ford Fox, late ol  Haltmoon Bay in his 86th year.  Survived by his loving wile,  Astrid; one daughter, Arline  James and husband Bob ol Edmonton; five granddaughters,  Alison, Margo, Heather, Cheryl  and Maureen; one niece Evelyn  Rintala and husband George of  Nanalmo. Member ol Harbour  Lodge, AF & AM. Memorial service was held Sat., Mar. 24 In St.  Andrew's Anglican Church  Madeira Park. Cremation. Arrangements through Devlin  Funeral Home. Remembrance  donations to charity of choice.  #13  WRIGHT: Passed away suddenly  on March 21,1990. Jack Coutts  Wright, late ot Sechelt. Survived  by his loving wife Dorothy; one  son Leroy ol Sechell; two  daughters, Lorna and Shelagh of  Vancouver; Iwo autns, Hazel Hod  and Nina Maxtield. Funeral service Mon.. Mar. 26al 1 pm in the  chapel ol Devlin Funeral Home,  Gibsons. Reverend Jim Vance officiating. Interment Seaview  Cemetery. Remembrance donations may be made to Chlldrens'  Hospital. #13  FISK: John Robert, passed away  al home in Pender Harbour March  16, 1990, age 74 years. He is  survived by his loving wife  Dorothy and three daughters,  Marilyn (Dennis) Burnham,  Susan (Don) Goodrich and Kathy  (Dan) Kowarski; grandchildren  David (Cathy), Michael Caron and  Christopher Burnha, Sherl, Lori  and Ken Goodrich, John and Paul  Kowarski, and great-grandson  Ryan Burnham, brother Sid,  sister Kitty Alblnson and many  other relatives and friends. John  was a member of the Vancouver  Kiwanis Club, Pender Harbour  Lions Club and the Pender Harbour Golf Club. John was Chief  Constable ot the Vancouver Police  Department before retiring to  Pender Harbour in 1974. In lieu  of flower donations to the Heart  Fund would be appreciated.  Memorial service was held  Thurs., Mar. 22 it the Boal  Chapel of First Memorial Funeral  Services, 1505 Llllooet Road.  #13  Special  TMlkS  To the following businesses  for their support ot  \"Give Love A Dance\"  Fund Raiser - March 17\/90  al Roberts Creek  Community Centre.  Intra World Class Travel,  Talewind Bookstore, Gallan-  no Market, Coast Massage  Therapy  Clinic,   Sechell  Massage Therapy  Clinic,  Sechelt; Coast Bookstore,  WestWInd Mechanical, Andy's Restaurant, Gibsons  Bradley Hunt, Dianne Salles.  A special thanks also to all  those who lent a hand to  make this dance all possible.  Yours truly,  Ian Gibson  The Silvey family ol Egmont  would like to sincerely thank the  Sechelt Indian Band lor their concerned love and help arranging  for the final rest ol our beloved  mother, Sarah. #13  A great big thank you lo all our  Iriends in Egmont for such a great  'going away' dinner lor us, and  also cards, flowers and tree. We  will buy something for our new  home that will remind us of all our  Egmont friends. We'll be in trailer  15 at Madeira Park. Please drop  in. Vi&Gene. #13  Full-colour thanks to Kelly at  Sunnycrest Photo lor your super  work on our unexpected last  minute \"rush job\". Your service  was fantastic - and the prints are  great!  - Glassford Press  \"Soundings\" magazine  #13  Are you in'an unhappy relationship? Call the Transition House  for free confidential counselling.  (85-2944. TFN  Do you need some Information to  deal with your legal problem? Call  the Legal Information Service  885-5881; Mondays and  Wednesdays 9-4. TFN  LAST CHANCE  to secure  GOSPEL  ROCK PARK  Monday, March 26  at 7:00 pm  Gibsons  Council Chambers  COUPLES COUNSELLING  Call Eleanor Mae 885-9018  #15  Reliable Canadian and Oriental  ladles, all ages, desire  housekeeping arrangement, exchange for accommodation.  1-547-2020anytime. #15  Attractive educated widow, late  50s, recent to peninsula seeks  companionship - interests,  classical music, ballet, opera,  dancing, photography, open air,  experimental cooking & wine,  N\/S, Reply to: c\/o Box 334,  Coasl News, Box 460, Gibsons,  B.C. VONIVO. #13  Lonely, 67. wilh minor handicap,  good pension, would like to meet  lady companion. Please call  885-4064. #13  Wanted - audience lor  Busybody' presented by the  Driftwood Players, Roberts Creek  Hall, Mar. 29,30,31 and Apr. 5,  6, and 7 at 8 pm. #13  Announcements  Adult children ol Alcoholics or  disfunctronal families please call  885-5281 or 888-8165 lor help.  TFN  Psychic healer and counsellor  Gloria Yates Is again offering  psychic trss**Jepfna>*t ctenet.  Level 1 learn how to meditate, increase and clear your energy,  create your reality, understand  auras, chakras, etc. Many usaful  tools for quality ol We. Phone for  more InfotTOtlw 886-4929. #13  Lyco Designs 'Coming I Going'  Sales, temporarily, please contact  886-3808. Thanks for your support. Jocelyn Dtether. #13  ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS  885-2896, 886-7272. 886-2954.   TFN  Does someone in your family have  a drinking problem? Call Al-Anon  886-9903, 885-7484. Al-Ateen  886-2565. TFN  Income Tax Service, Douglas  Baird, 886-3955, 1255 Carmen  Road. Complete tax return $15.  Seniors $10. #16  Phone us today about our selection ol beautiful personalized  wedding  invitations,   napkins,  matches, stationery and more.  Jeannies Gilts & Gems  886-2023  TFN  Tax Clinic lor Seniors, Mar. 30 &  Apr. 6,1210 4pm at Com. Serv.  For Inlo call Volunteer Action  Centre 885-5881. #13  To all those concerned about the  disappearing trees in our area,  please attend a coffee letter  writing gathering, Mar. 29 at  7:30. Call 886-7955 to confirm.  #13  Wish to join (or start) conversational Spanish group? Call Tom at  885-3158exceptSat.\/Sun. #15  SPCA Great Cat House Raffle, in  Trail Bay Mall, Sechelt. Sat.. Apr.  7. #14  SeHiral Salrsat  al Rutty lake Resort Fri., March 30ta  Han. April!.  ChanV Dance' Ueditale' Celebrate'  Vou in tune wilh Ihe Earth and Ihe  Universe Facilitator. Mikhaila Alonah  190\/3 Minis: Fun till drag, tin  mere who camel Inlo: Janine  6S8-3ZI4 Between 9 30am 7 30pm  1990 CORE PROGRAM  (first time hunter training)  Tues.. Apr. 3,7pm In the Sechelt  Rod & Gun Club, $50 pre-  registralion is requested. Call  886-7842, 886-9171 or  885-2577. #13  G.O. would like to extend their  apologies to anyone who interpreted our comments in the Coast  News Mar. 5, 1990 as Twilight  Theatre being too expensive. It Is  our opinion that given theatre  prices province wide, Twilight  Theatre is quite Inexpensive. We  consider them an asset to our  community. #13  The Board of the Gibsons Public  Library announces a change in  hours. Starting Apr. 17 the  library will be open from 9:30 am  to 5 pm Tues., Wed. & Sat. and  from 12:30 to 8 pm Thurs. only.  #13  Mr. & Mrs. Leon Arthur will be  observing their 50th wedding anniversary Sat., Mar. 31. Reception from 2 to 5pm in their home  at 714 Crucll Rd., Gibsons.  #13  Call for submissions. Craftspeople wanting to enter 3rd Annual  Craft Fair, Aug. 4 & 5 please pick  up your submission format Art  Centre In Sechelt or Hunter  Gallery in Gibsons. For submitting  your work May 15. For more information call Elaine Futterman at  885-2395. #15  Reiki ind Rebtrttilng  sessions available - powerful  non-verbal healing of conditions  at  a  deep  level.   Michael  886-7589. #18  Angora Crafts\ufffd\ufffd Himrira  are coming to the Trail Bay Mall,  Sat., Apr. 7, 10-4, featuring:  sheepswool, angora, furs, silks  and more. Leslie 885-7083,  Karen 885-4657. #14  8-       Weddings  8. Engagements  Mr. and Mrs. Edward Burkart ol  Pitt Meadows, BC announce the  engagement of their daughter  Carrie-Ann Catherine to Peter A.  Jones, the son of Mr. Ralph and  Mrs. Margaret Jones of Gibsons  The wedding will lake place May  25,1991. #13  One gold necklace with rose  charm. 886-9481. #13  Ladles'  gold watch, Sechelt,  Mon., Mar. 19. 885-9285.  #13  Blue budgie, Roberts Creek area.  888-9885. #13  Single key on black leather tag  (220) at the Pender Harbour  Paper Mill. #13  Urge assortment of keys, ill  kinds, pick up at Coast News,  Gibsons. #13  Sweater, Mir. 11 in Dougal Park,  pick up at Coast News, Gibsons.  #13  Found, ghetto blaster at Cap College. 885-9310. #13  Ladies watch, near PHSS, Mar.  21.883-9438. #13  Tets  8. Livestock  IJfcr rM\\(.is  Basic & Advanced  Dog Training  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Bright clean dog  & cat boarding  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dog grooming  \"SCIENCE DIEV  NUTRITION CENTRE  Open 8 am \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 6:30 pm  *v\ufffd\ufffdryd\ufffd\ufffdy,    *t6-\ufffd\ufffd561  PETFOOD  SCIENCE DIET. IAMS.  TECHNI-CAL, NUTRO-MAX.  PURINA, WAYNE.  Also lull line of bird seed  And much more.  Quality Firm Ir Garden  Supply Ltd.  Pratt Rd. 886-7527  TFN  SPCA SPAYING PROGRAM  Contact Christine's Gilts. Sunnycrest Mall or Marlee Fashions.  TFN  Kerry blue Terrier, male pup,  $550, health, temperment  guaranteed. 886-2505.     #12ss  Adorable spayed fern, white Persian cat, needs a loving home.  886-8070. #13  Free to good home, spayed fern.  Springer Spaniel, great with kids.  Phone 885-2650. #13  Used Western saddle, $250.  886-7038. #14  Reg. American quarter horse. 11  yr. old. Bay Gelding, exc. beginners horse, road safe and very  gentle. $1500. Chris 886-3093.  #15ss  Large dog looking for new home.  Mlkel 879-5721. #13  Free, 6 mos. old spayed lem. Lab  Shep. X to good home.  886-8611. #13  SPCA ADOPTION  Young med. Border Collie X.  spayed lem.; also adorable cats  and kittens. 886-7313.        #13  (ASTUROCK  KENNELS  Highweiy nil  Roiieris Crwtt  885-9840  Boarding It Grooming  No animals will be ,u t rprti-il without  ciment Vrtainjlmn records.  SPCA, Box 2094, Sechelt, BC  Making a memorial contribution  to the SPCA Is a special way to  remember the passing ot a loved  pet or the animal lover in your  family or circle of Iriends. The gift  will serve as a living memorial to  care for all animals in need.  Please Include this Information:  The name of the deceased, the  name and address of the person  to whom acknowledgement  should be sent and Ihe name and  address ol the donor for Income  tax purposes. #15  Free to good home, large Lab X  male dog. Karen 885-4657.   #15  Piano Tuning  repairs, appraisals  *  Ken DalgleUh  886-2843  Leslie rotating speaker sound  small package, Roland Revo 30,  $250.885-7232. #14  Willard upright piano for sale.  Phone 886-2855 any time.   #14  Keyboard player wanted lor working rack band, vocals an asset.  886-2468. #15  PIANO TUNING  Repairs & Rebuilding. Technician  D. Clunles-Ross. 885-3168 eves.  #14  9-piece set maple Grelsch studio  recording drums, sacrifice at  $2500.886-4599. #14ss  Vrefci ir BddH NttfwS  Michelle Bruce  885-9224  #13  Shake blocks, any amount,  wanted to buy. 886-4517.    #13  Ladies old style dress form.  886-3100. #13  Room and board required Immed.  lor quiet N\/S single man. Will  pay up to $600\/mo. Call  884-5378, 8-4 & Iv. mess.  #15  Free chesterfield, you pick up.  886-3056 #13  Garage Sales  Moving: lurniture. drapes,  lamps, dishes, garden tools, old  upright enamel heater, pictures,  6' camper awning elc. Mon,-Fri.,  1-4pm, Sat., Sun. 9-3pm.  885-9032, 7555 Eureka oft  Redrooffs. #13  1123 Malaview, Gibsons, Sal.,  Mar. 31,9-noon. #13  Moving sale Mar. 26, 27, 28  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhousehold furniture, 7770 Lohn  Rd., Halfmoon Bay. 885-4016.  #13  Multi-family garage sale, Sat.,  Mar. 31. 10-4, Ikelon Trailer  Court, Flume Rd., Roberts Creek.  #13  Barter 8. Trade  77 impala SW, cruise control,  P\/S, P\/B. P\/rear window, 2-way  rear door, 350 V8, $1400 or offers. 886-2728 days. #14  Huge ravine lot In Creekside on  Mtn. View Drive, fully serviced,  $30.000.886-8698 or 583-3234.  #128  14 ft. alum, boat, 20 HP eng.. 2  gas tanks, 2 oars, on taller -value  S800-S1000. Trade for short box  Iruck canopy or small 4-cyl. car  or W.H.Y. 886-2728 days.   #14  T 4 S SOIL  Mushroom Manure-Bark Mulch  Topsoil mixed-Hog Fuel  By Ihe yard or truck full. Top  quality products at reasonable  prices. You pickup or we deliver.  Phone anytime 885-5669.    TFN  Inglis auto, washer, exc. cond.,  guaranteed & delivered, $325.  883-2648. TFN  Older fridge In gd. work, order,  $150,886-3841. #13s  IBM compatible computer w\/30  meg hard drive, keyboard and  amber monitor, brand new, Just  $1199. 886-8356 days or eves.  #15s  THUJA  PYRANIDALIS  2' to 3' Only ,3\" m.  ftcerVenl  EVERGREENS  lor hedging - ORDER NOW  Sunihlne Coast  Nuritry  Open Dally until 6pm  886-2796  %\\maa*m  Renovating kitchen, 17 cu. ft.  fridge; dishwasher; stove  lop\/wall oven; microwave\/-  convec., combo; teak cabinets &  counters. 886-9992 aft. 5pm.#13  Full cords ol spill & delivered  firewood, $90 Gibsons, $100  Sechelt. 886-3360. #13  New mtn. bike, SIS, 18 sp.,  value $430. sell $380; dance  shoes, size 8'AM; mini speaker  boxes lor Walkman; headphones;  copper pendant lamp. 886-3983  aft. 6pm.  #13  Smoked glass bathtub doors,  54\"x58\" 3 panel, $100; oval  arb. kitchen table w\/leaf & 4  swivel chairs, $100. 886-2491  eves. #14  1000 gal. clean water tank,  $300; Karcher power washer,  850 PSI, $350; Shindalwa weed  eater (blade or wire) used once,  $350; 1 HP Sears above ground  water pump, $150. Ph.  886-9470. #14  HORSE MM.UM  Nature's Fertilizer  $20 par pickup  885-9969   TFN  Carseat, crib - mattress, toys,  clothes \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd newborn to age 4, double bed. 886-7908. #14 Coast News, March 26,1990  Finders   ft  Keepers J  Antiques  *\ufffd\ufffd.    & '  r  Collectibles  MMM tnt CnCvrOfl  It the Sunnycreit Mad  W4581  78 Camperette; '76 Terajet 4X4;  complete water pump' harvest  gold elec. range. 886-4517.  #13  Kenmore washer, Westinghouse  dryer, both In gd. working order  886-9202. #14  Hlde-a-bed couch in exc. cond.  needs mattress. $250 OBO  886-7355.879-0987. #14  Quantity ol sleel Vi\" plate, to \" C  Channel, sleel tanks, 26' dia.  suitable for swimming pool, lish  farming, etc. 886-7064.      #14  30 gal. hot water tank, gd  cond.. 885-1939aft. 6pm.  #14  New chesterlield & swivel chair  886-7031 eves. #14  Boy's 10 sp. bike, $50 OBO.  885-4704. #14  Misc. furniture side table  chairs, beds, dressers, Chester  fields, etc. 883-9110. #14  7 tt. burl coffee table, beautilul  883-9110. #15ss  12 sq. 18\" tapersawn, $83 per  sq.; 12 sq. 18\" barns, $67 per  sq. Evenings 883-2250.      #14  Slate pool tables, sold, serviced &  installed. 886-3730 or mobile toll  Iree 1-240-1044. #14  Moffat heavy duty original 500, 3  eye. 2 sp. washer. $359 OBO:  Kenmore 5 prog, portable  dishwasher, coppertone. new  motor & pump, $259 OBO; Inglis  Normandie 5 eye. 2 spd. washer,  white, new bearings & seals.  $357 OBO: Roy 30\" white nice  stove, $339 OBO: McClary buffet  200. 30\" h. gold, $367 OBO;  Kenmore washer & dryer, white,  $616 pair; Speed Oueen h.d.  dryer, almond. $269 OBO; 30\"  h. gold stove, auto., $349 OBO.  and more. All recond. appliances.  Corner Cupboard 885-4434 or  Bjorn 885-7897. Will buy nice  , non-working or used appliances.  ,--3e-^ #14  Waterbeds. single extra long.  $60; super slnrjle padded valour.  $150; queen, 1125: Homelite gas  powered weed eater, $100.  886-3559. #13  30\" almond elec. stove, gd.  cond.. $150.885-2194.  #13  Single bed couch, $25  2 seat  sola bed. $125; 3 seat chester  field,   arm  chair,  $150.  885-9597.  #15  12' orchard ladder,  pruning.  picking,  $100 OBO:  2 steel  folding  cots  &  mat  .   $40.  886-9461.  #13  Now grey water treatment  system. This could be your  answer lor a complele disposal  system. Your enquiries are  welcome. 536-8467. #15  1.5 HP rototlller. $250 OBO.  886-3126. #15  Tops 'N Trends  Ladles casual wear, spring and  summer line now available.  886-7789. #15  Tool box lor pickup, suitable lor  5th wheel, $195.883-2433. #15  Forest green couch and loveseat,  gd. cond., $375 pair. 885-2190.  #13  Wood shed. 16x8. 1 yr. old.  holds 4 cords, you transport.  asking $250 OBO. 886-8626 aft.  5:30pm. #15  tVedding and engagement rings  for It appraised value.  886-7819. #16sr  Collector's camera. Lelca D.L.  with 40mm Summtcron lens,  $750 OBO. 885-9232. #13  Old and antique radios restored  and repaired. Gordon Oliver,  885-9800. #13  Complete kitchen cabinets & appliances (apt. size). 886-2924  aft. 6 pm. #14ss  3 year dd cedar and lir trees,  suitable lor hedges. 45' ea.  Orders taken 886-2198       #13  All steel bush box lor S.W.B.  Iruck, $700.886-2198.       #13  Temporary power pole, $150.  Wanted - used kitchen cabinets.  886-3457. #13  Won pickup load,  split & delivered, stock up for  next winter. 885-5032.       #13  Plan to include 2 beautilul cedar  double entrance doors. Pre-hung  with frame and all hardware,  $595080.886-3845. #13  Box springs I mattresses. $20  ea. 883-9110. #'3  Giant screen TV, RCA. replacement $5000; $850,883-9110.   #13  Fischer baby bear wood stove,  $150,883-9110. #14ss  5 any day Blackcomb ski tickets.  $30 ea. 886-6008. #13  IBM clone 640K, 40 mgb. hd,  built-in modem, MS - DOS asst'd  software. $1500 OBO. 883-2284.    #14  Older exec, style oak desk 34x66  - stubby legs \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pre WW2, $500.  885-3335. #14  Commercial washer, dryer and  Ireezer. All reconditioned, $800  or sell separate. 886-9408.   #14  Two cast iron tubs. 350' triplex,  1\/0 8,2. $1 00 a loot 886-9196  #15  Chesterfield, 3 seater. small &  Boyes, all down cushions, brown  velvet, gd cond., $275 OBO.  886-9165 #13  Modern 30\"x58\" solid oak ex-  eculive desk & tiller chair. $950.  885-9665 #16ss  3 yr. old Kenmore washer &  dryer, some household lurniture.  885-7675 #13  Sale or hire: 850 case crawler,  six way hydraulic blade J, bush  blade, carco winch, spare parts,  exc. cond.. completely overhauled 1989. W-10-C case backhoe  drill machine combination, gd.  cond., 4 wheel drive, spare  parts. 885-3630 all. 6pm.  #15  Sears metal garden shed. 8x9'  c\/with wooden floor, you move,  $75.886-3468. #13  Sleel iruck deck, 11'6\"x7'6\"  c\/wilh beavertail, suit 1 ton etc.  needs slighl attention, $300.  886-3468. #13  Rabbits - many sizes, many  varieties, order now. Karen  885-4657. #15  Insulated 'A ton short box truck  canopy, $75; 11' Klepper row  boal w\/hand trailer, $450.  686-4535.  #13  Husky chainsaw, 40\" bar\/28\"  bar. new chain, great firewood or  shake block saw, $395.  885-7177 days 885-7874. #15sr  6 YDS. DELIVERED  $40.00  LYLE FORBES  883-9907  Firewood. Pender Harbour area,  call Gary at 883-2948.        #13  1979 GMC * ton, PS\/PB, 350.  $2500 OBO. 883 9907.       #15  Stainless built-in range top, exc.  cond.. $100.886-8525.      #15  Moving sale: 3-39\" beds, complele. like new, $100 ea.; chest  ol drawers, $50; couch 4 chair,  $350; kilchen table & chairs.  $50; medical bath chair, $30. All  besl oilers. 885-3485 or  986-8458. #14  Angoci Crafts a Houseware  are coming lo Ihe Trail Bay Mall,  Sat., Apr. 7, 10-4 featuring:  sheepswool, angora, lurs, silks  and more. Leslie 885-7083,  Karen 885-4657. #13  Chesterlield. colonial, 3 seater.  earth tones, very gd. cond.,  $125,866-4863. #15  Shop air compressor, best oiler.  865-3655. #13  D6-44A cat, R.O.P.S. winch,  $1800.885-9312. #15  i  !  !  COAST FORD SOUTH COAST FORD w  THE COAST'S LARGEST SELECTION c   USED CARS   1989 TOPAZ 4 cylinder, automatic  1989 COUGAR LS ve, automatic  1989 THUNDERBIRD V6, automatic  1989 ESCORT 2 door, 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1989 ESCORT LX 2 door, 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1989 MUSTANG LX 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1989 ARIES K 4 DOOR 4 cylinder, automatic  1989 ELDORADO V8. automatic  1989 FESTIVA 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1988 MUSTANG GTve, 5 speed  1987 FIERO GT V6,5 speed  1987 BONNEVILLE 6 cylinder, automatic  1987 TRACER GS HTBK 4 cylinder, automatic  1987 CAVALIER SW 4 cylinder, automatic  1986 ESCORT L 4 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1986 LYNX OS 4 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1986 CAMARO Z28 V8. automatic  1986 CELEBRITY 4 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1984 ESCORT 4 door, diesel, 5 speed  1984 CHARGER 2 door. 4 cylinder, automatic  1983 OLDS FIRENZA 4 cylinder, automatic  1982 EXP 2 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1981 ACADIAN 4 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed  1981 GLC 2 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed  1981 310 2 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed  1980 COUGAR XR7V8, automatic  1980 MUSTANG 2 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1980 GRANADA 2 door, 6 cylinder, automatic  1980 GRANADA 2 door. 6 cylinder, automatic  1980 CHEVETTE 4 door, 4 cylinder, automatic  1979 ZEPHYR 2 door, 6 cylinder, automatic  1979 COUGAR 4 door, V8, automatic  1979 T-BIRD V8, automatic  1978 BOBCAT SW 4 cylinder, automatic  1978 LTD II4 door, V8, automatic  1978 510 4 cylinder, 4 speed  1977 PARISIENNE 2 door, V8. automatic  1977 PLY VOLARE 6 cylinder, automatic  1976 SEDAN DEVILLE VS. automatic  1975 VENTURA 2 door. V8. automatic  1975 T0R0NAD0 2 DOOR vs. automatic  1975 MONTEQO vs, automatic  1969 FAIRLANE 2 door, V8, automatic    -   USED TRUCKS   11%' CAMPER  1989 F-150 PICKUP V8.5 speed  1989 F-150 PICKUP V8,5 speed  1969 F-150 4X4 V8,5 speed  1989 RANGER V6, automatic  1989 BRONCO IIV6. automatic  1988 RANGER 4 cylinder. 5 speed  1988 RANGER V6. automatic  1988 RANGER S 4 cylinder. 5 speed  1988 AEROSTAR V6, automatic  1988 F-150 PICKUP V8.4 speed  1988 RANGER 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1987 F-250 6 cylinder, 4 speed  1986 RANGER PICKUP V6, automatic  1986 FORD 1 TON VAN V8,4 speed  1985 F-250 4X4 V8. automatic  1985 GMC S15 4 cylinder, 5 speed  1985 FORD F-250 4X4 diesel, V8, automatic  1984 BRONCO II 4X4 V6,4 speed  1982 NIVA 4X4 4 cylinder, 4 speed  1982 GMC CARGO VAN 8 cylinder, automatic  1981 RAMCHAROER PICKUP ve, 4 speed  1978 WAG0NEERSWV8, automatic  1977 FORD ECONO-CAMPER vs. automatic  1974 DODGE <\/t TON V8, automatic  1974 DODGE Vi TON V8, automatic  1973 VW VAN 4 cylinder, standard     \"JJ  SOUTH COASTFORD  rORI) \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd IINCOIN  Older white 30\" stove, Brown  dryer. 1-spd., both work tine,  $l25\/ea.; pedal foot ftiptop garbage can, $5; kitchen tap &  faucet set, $15; double steel sink  (later) $25: pendant almond  metal lamp, 25' cord, $20. New  double sink, $75; new moan  faucet with spray, $75.886-3983  aft. 6 pm. #14  SATELLITE SALES  Green Onion Earth Station  885-5644  TFN  Rhododendrens a A21MS  $3.25 - $10, large selection.  Roberts Creek Nursery,  2569  Lower Rd. 886-2062. #15  New, Used * Rebuilt  AUTO PARIS  Prniurt Wuhan  From M695\"  aioi rarrLT l*\ufffd\ufffd.  886*8101  Sola, love seat, beige. $200:  hideabed. gold, $200; pingpong  lable. $100; men's bike, $100;  ladle's bike, $90; piano, $1000;  12' alum, dinghy, $400.  885-7693. #15  CJ5. 4 spd. & transfer case &  front end, $400. CJ2A frame &  run. gear with PTO winch, $600.  885-9312. #15  Bathroom vanity & sink, $75.  Tabletop oven, $60; small dog  house. Iree. 886-8872.       #15  CASH PAID  For Some Cars and Trucks  Bead Car Removal  Abei Used Auto Parti  1*6-2020  TFN  1982 Volvo SW. AM\/FM Cass.,  5-spd 0\/0., snows, etc. Great  shape. 886-3030. #15sr  '76 Pontiac LeMans, rel. trans.,  $500,885-7113. #16s  '79 Thunderblrd, low mil.,  sunrool, air, exc. cond., $2800  OBO. 885-1912. #16s  '80 GMC short Vandura 305.  P\/S, P\/B. $3500 OBO.  886-2169. #16s  1975 Ford PU, gd. work truck,  $750,883-9110. #13  1979 Chev Monza. V6. P\/S,  P\/B. exc. shape. 883-9110. #13  '80 Mustang lastback. 4-cyl.,  4-spd.. low mil., economical.  $2350 Trades OK. 885-2079.  #13  1980 Ford 250 4x4, 6 cyl. standard, steel construction box,  $5000 886-3921 eves.      #16s  '87 Jetta. 2ft yr. warr. remaining. 55.000 km., std. 5-spd.,  snows, $9995.885-4794. #14sr  1978 Olds Delta 88. 2 dr., load-  ed. 100,000 plus kms., gd.  shape. 886-2442 or 886-8075  ask for Larry. #13  '77 Comet, family 4-dr. runs  exc., just moved here must sell,  $14500130.885-2079.       #13  '75 Dodge Is ton Super Cab,  77.500 mil, power train gd.,  some rust. $850.885-7331. #13  '79 Monarc. mid-size, 4-dr. gd.  lamlly car. 51.300 mi., $2200.  885-7167. #13  1976 GMC Sprint, (car-truck),  swivel buckets, mag wheels,  cass. tape deck, $1500.  886-4599. #14ss  1976 GMC 1 ton, gd. lor parts,  $500,886-4599. #14ss  1974 LTD Squire Wagon, new  tires, bait., gd. cond. best otter.  886-3567. #13  '85 Ford club van XLT F150, fully  loaded, tinted windows, gd.  cond. 886-2723. #13  '86 Dodge Ram. 350. max!  custom, V8. auto., factory propane. P\/S, P\/B, P\/W, AM\/FM  cass., new radials, battery,  paint, $13,500. 863-9526 days.  #14  '87 Dodge Aries, like new. 2.2 it,  4 cyl.. auto.. $6800 OBO  #15  '77 Volkswagon Van for parts.  886-3331. #15ss  '85 F150 Ford Supercab. 4X4,  I lariat pkg . 300 CI. 6 cyl . 4 sp .  I lots of extras, $14,500 exc.  shape. 886-7163. #14  75 Volvo S.W.. 4 spd., runs  greal, looks OK. $350.  885-3968. #15  1973 Mustang Legrande. 302  auto., gd. rubber, solid body,  $1400.885-2207. #16ss  1977 Chevy deluxe Nomad van,  captains seats, needs work,  $950.885-2207. #16ss  1988 Blazer SI, tilt steer., air.  cond, 4X4. Bernie 885-2772.  #13  1977 Toyota Corolla, white 2-dr.,  4-spd.. very clean, $1100 OBO.  886-2185. #13  '85 Dodge PU. w\/canopy, exc.  cond.. $7900 OBO. 885-3655.  #13  1977 Black Transam 455, $5000  Firm. 885-9312. #15  STEWART RD. AUTOWRECKERJ  Used Auto Parts  We install Windshields  1178 Stewart Rd  886-7626  #15  '77 Toyota Cekca. fair cond.,  75.000 ml.. $2200 OBO.  886-4994 #15  1982 GMC window van, 65,000  mi.. 2-tone. rally wheels, P\/win-  dows & locks & mech. perfect,  $6200.883-9050. #15  EXPECTING A  TAX REFUND?  Lille tl Mat \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 12 monthly  payments and the car is  yours. '81 Chrysler K car  $550 down $182 mo '80  Ford Fairmont $600 down  $199 mo. '84 Pontiac Parl-  stenne $1000 down $324  mo. 12 mo\/20,000 km  power train warranty OAC.  Jimteiiri Autl 886-7919  DL5848  75 Mercury Monarch. 81.000  mil., gd tires, runs well; 75  Audi Fox, 4-dr., SW, 8700 ml.,  on rebuilt eng., 4-cyl. aulo..  $1900 886-8525 #15  78 Dalsun 510, $1100.  886-2826 #13ss  76 302 motor, $200 886-2826  #13ss  '69 Plymouth Valiant, $500.  886-2826 #t3ss  1975 Ford Vi ton, new rotors,  muffler, some rust. $2000  883-9483. #13ss  1981 * ton Chev, auto, 360,  55.000 miles, $4500 OBO.  883-9211. #13ss  BLANKET CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING  These Ads appear in the more than 90 Newspapers ot the B.C. and Yukon Community  Newspapers Association and reach more lhan 1.400.000 homes and a potential Iwo million readers  $165 tor 25 words $3.15 per additional word       Call the Coast News at 885-3930  ANNOUNCEMENTS  The Courtenay Recrrutlonil Association Is holding a Grand Reunion on July id, 1990. Everyone Involved In tfn C.R.A. from  IMtottepmnlklnvlM. Cat  (604)338-1000 or write: Courtenay RocrMllonal Association,  411 Anderton Avenue, Courtenay, B.C., V9N 606.  AUTOMOTIVE  FULL CIRCLE LEASING. CARS,  TRUCKSANDVANS. New 1900  Ford, GMC, Chrysler Impairs.  Early hiss returns. Whokaavaka  teeslng and purchase, cash lor  trades. $0 Down, Iree delivery.  Aak 1130111 our 24 Mo. option  tearw. Callcoled: (604)273-  7778.  BU8WE8\ufffd\ufffdOWH5s8TOMaTE\ufffd\ufffd>  START YOUR OWN IMPORT\/  EXPORT business, even spire  lime. No money or experlenoe.  Since 1946. Free brochure:  Wade World Trade, c\/o Cdn.  Smal Business Inst., Dept. VVT,  1140 Bellamy Road N. ft, Scarborough, Ortario,M1H1H4.  VENDING ROUTES. Earn hugs  profits. Prime locations In your  ares. All nsw guaranteed equipment. Food, cigarettes, pop and  cotlras machines. Investments  from 82,800. Call for details:  Eagle Vending, (604)5\ufffd\ufffd7-3532.  A SALES DREAM. Mulr-milkm  dollar nalonal lirm neks 2 rsprs-  esntatrvss In your srea. Candidates selected can earn up to  $2,000 weekly. Irsdivkfcialsspply-  Ing should be available Immediately for placement. Call  (416)766-2111 or (416)796-7796  for your conhdenlial Interview.  RAISE CHINCHILLAS lor extra  Income. We otter graded breeding stock, cages, feed, rMvtry.  Instruction. Full time income po-  tsntlal. Gusrantssd marks), guar-  sntsed production. Canadian  Chlnehlla, Box 1684, St. Marys,  Ontario, NOM 2V0, (519)229-  6117.  ProlHabls horns businssassl Be  Ifmndally indspsndsnt. Free  details: #407,430 Wsstvtew St.,  C^oullem. B.C., V3K 3W4. Inducts SAS.E.  BUSINESS OPPORTUMTIES  CARVERS In wood, storvs or  bone Intoreated In retailing  f ugh a Chemalnus outlet  should contact: REALITREE  CREATIONS, Box 317, Chemalnus, BC, VOR 1KO. Or  phone: (6M)246-26S3.  PANAGOPOULOS 2 FOR 1  PIZZA FRANCHISES. 'PLua  'Pasta 'Chicken 'Ribs. B.C.'s  largest pizza franchise. 'Proven  Mula. 'FtJlralrvsng ind support.  'Simple lo operate. 'Excelent  sites sHllavdlabK. CsllNOWl 1  851X621 or 1-530-6618.  BUSINESS PERSONALS  LOVE NEST. \"ORDER BY  MAI'. - Lovers' Toys. Sexy  Novastiiss. -$4 colour catalogue.  fcwNssI, 161 East 1st St., North  Vancouvsr, B.C., V7L 1B2.  (804)987-1176. See this ad every  otherweek.  Body? Mind? Spirit? Who are  you really? Cai: DIANETICS  Hotline 1-800-367-8788.  Buying? Selling? or Trading?  Use a Blanket Classified Ad lor  the \"BEST RESULTS-I Call your  local community newspaper for  further inlormation. Call today!  COMMO EVENTS  Auditions: SKSttodctPwferrn-  lrxiArts,AprH21-22lortr\ufffd\ufffd1990-  91 IsMnter term. Dance,  drum,v*>Im,piano. Residential  School, Grade 7 lo 12. Saska-  toon, (306)3734777.  EDUCATION  HOW TO PUsY POPULAR PIANO. Nsw hone study course.  Fast, easy method. Guaranteed!  Also organ and dsdronlc key-  board courses. For FREE Inlormation, writs: Popular Music  Sytatems, SturJo 53,3284 Boudv  erls Road, Kelowna, B.C., VIZ  2H2.  Busy fast food restaurant wlh  bsksry. Quest equipped. Con-  fsctionovsn. Only In-mal restaurant In sunny Llloost. For fid  details contact (604)256-4734.  After6:00p.m. (604)256-7620.  Clip newspsptr items for CASHI  Home buslnsss, unlimited asm-  ingsl Stan ImmadisMly. Free  detail: Box 124, 1609 Blin-  shard, Victoria, B.C., VOW 2J5,  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUMMM Os-awtTUNfTaM  Fun  apocUzlngrri Junior OrsidEspto-  ratlonCoaivsnlss. Phone: Barry  T.Wartsn,C.M.CsSVw snd Company Ltd. Invsstmsnls sines  1907. 1400-683-1942. CoUd  (604)6664003  FuHy sqixppsd bsauty salon (or  lease or rsnt In Csrtboo. Also,  a*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd for shoe repair shop or etc.  MijafhaweamrMukxMrit. Rss-  r\ufffd\ufffdm. (604)7914717.  Stiit > iml onttf hotn> budn\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.  Easy.prollsble. SalWormdlon  by mil.   Books, mwsMara,  Quant, Box 2895WT, Thunder  Bay, Ontario, P7B 503.  Atterflron HstrvlYlists modem  Mta - \ufffd\ufffdaM SMaVMastMarga ct-  snMe ki (he bsauMii Creston  Valsy. Wrjrniavtlon: Phone after  hours (604)4264917, wrtt: AA,  Box 2734, Crsaton, B.C., VOB  too.  Store prassrafy Hand for tMOO  psr\/mo. utpkindwlm 26 months  rrHtsrsWflp. LsssiM has option to  purchass for 8160,000. Press\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ownsrwanta to sal Issas, option,  land and buildings. FTR  1130,000. Potanllsl rstum of  M6,\ufffd\ufffd00. Sdkflsaas. Owners*!  Qr3nilriirrsaiv*\/iQji^tflwrlatida,  or ether tracts, as part down  paymsnl. Cai Ron Havrdsr  (604)392-7611 day*, (604)243-  HOME STUDY DIPLOMA PROGRAMS. Prepare for a better  career at horns, In your spars  llmel Lowiukrontsesl Payment  paw. Job search asslstanca.  Msny courses svallable. FREE  BROCHURE, CCTS, 1-800-668-  1213.  DIPLOMA CORRESPONDENCE. Free calendsr. High  school upgrading, English, Book-  kssping, Accounting, Computers,  Dullness ArMntstrstlon, Smal  Business Mansgernsrt, Lsgal  Sscrstary, Taxation, Msrkstlng,  Panonml, Hdst\/RMaurant,  TrawOTourtam....Nallrsnal Coi-  Isgs. Vancouvsr, (604)666-4916,  ToU-tra*: 1-600-367-1281. (24  hours\/7 dsysTwetk).  -Tax Frss' sctidsrehlp funding  frxyowcMd's rutin com sscon-  daryasducsllon. FsdsralGovem-  ment guaranteed 'Rsglstsrsd  Eduarrionsl Saving. Pkrf. CALL  NOWI Hsrllags Scholarship  Trust Plan 1-800-663-6O37.  Mataspkta Cokogs, Powel River  Canspus,lrscasjsdonths|sasutitul  Sontaravw Coast, oKsrs ful lima  prrsgrams In AittorMlrins mechanics, Cook training and Unf-  vsrsly trsnsfsr. Small druses,  sxcalajrllrisaruclionsndrsssori-  attka acconsinoclatlon. For mora  Infarrralawcsl: (604)468-2876.  Ra>teh1.5m\ufffd\ufffdlronhonwi  torjuit  $165.00  atClUPMNT I MACHINERY  GOOSENECK Stock TrtakH Saat  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Wder ttixMS-H, 10,000 LB.  axles, ataxy war door, centre  gam, sscaps door, 4 whssl  bratoa, 66,466. Trslarlsnd Sales  4 Sarvtcs (4031291-3767.  1990 catalogue snd pries last  .  \ufffd\ufffdP oualty outside  st-Mdtamsndialsrta*. Euro-  at pries  Idonre-  OUMf. Ncdhdv, 101, 2931  OWtsn Am, Rfchmond, B.C..  V8X2R3. (804)270-1933.  Lighting fixtures. Western Canada's largest display. Whdssals  and retail. Free catalogue available. Norburn Lighting Centre,  4600 East Hastings St., Burnaby,  B.C., V5C 2K5. Phone:  (604)20*0666.  ORDER YOUR XOVE STUFF-  BY MAIL FROM OUR NEW  LOVERS LANE CATALOGUE!  You're assured privacy and security Irom our sdaMshed Mors!  Check us out with the BBS IN  HOME SHOPPINGI BEST SELECTION! GREAT SERVICE!  tWcatalogue: LOVERS LANE  BOUTIQUE, 1074 SHOPPERS  ROW, CAMPBELL RIVER, B.C.,  V9W2C6. Phone: (604)286-1010.  D-BUG LIGHT. Portable electronic bug killer. Ideal tor camping, fishing, picnics. ZAPS flying  Insects, IMS Itourescenl lantern,  salety blinker. Usas 2-6rVoli batteries (not rndudsd). Adapts to  csr, R.V., boat. RrKBSawd oonlrol  switch, lotding handle, high Impact plastic. 699.95 plus 65 P 6  H. Cheque,M.O.orMasterCard  accaptsd: Promotions West,  P.O. Box 1433, Station T, Cel-  gavy, Aberta T2H2H7.  MARSHMALLOW EASTER  EGGS. Whip up a batch ol  msrshmallow. Ths children csn  rmks thek own Esster Eggs.  Ra>dpaV$3. SAS.E. to: Cdtags  Industries, Box 163, Klmbertey,  B.C..V1A2Y6.  OARDENtM  Aluminum\/Glass Grssnhousss  andSOtarlums. Singas and dourxa)  glazed, straight and curved save  units. Phone or write lor FREE  BROCHURE: B.C. Grsenhouss  Builders Ltd., 7425 Hedlsy Ave.  Burnaby, B.C., V5E2RI.  HEALTH  VITAMIN DISCOUNTS. Sines  1973, ottering high qusHty-lowsst  Prioss on Vitamins, Mlnareai,  Herbs, Body Bulldingand Weight  Loss, Supplements, Hair Treit-  menl. Skin Can snd Mora. FREE  CATALOGUE. Writs: VITAMIN  DISCOUNTS, Dspt.BC1S, 260  S.W. Marina Drive, Vanoouver,  B.CV5X2R5.1-800-663-0747.  In Vancouvsr, 321-7000.  AVOID CANCER! Learn about  certain food additives ind how  Ihey endanger your health. $5:  Food-tacts, Box 1147,242 Mary  Street, Victoria, B.C., VBA3V9.  HELP WANTED  Singles\/Couples. Complete gov-  emment-approved Building Managers Cofrespondence Certificate course lor apts\/oondosV  rhses\/mlni-storage. Guaranteed  Placement Assistance. RMTI,  1120-786 W. Pender, Vancouver,  B.C., V6C1H2. (604)681-5456  Arthritlcpain? Achlngback? Stiff  loints? Steeping hands? -BauWi  OThstai!! $2rtjrrx*ursr1n(orrna-  lion: Betiah Land, Box 1086,  Pottage La Prairie, Manitoba,  R1N3C5.  NMsrater>snspax|ilsQirran. No  oorrvasnatsneeded. 42gameson  1 rartrldga\/$199.95 er 31 on 1\/  6119.95. Mal order: certlled  ctMoue, M.O., C.O.D. Dealer  Inquiries welcome. F 6 I Enterprises (Bonded), Bex 20026,206-  6th Avenue S.W., Calgary, Alberta, T2P4H3. (403)246-6376.  PERSONAL COMPUTERS it  unbeatable price, 386SX, 40  m*g hard-drive, VGA color monitor, 3.1\/2 and 5.1\/4 HD disc  drives. 2 year warranty. $2,899.  (403)239-2168.  WIG CLUB. Join thousands ol  satisfiedwstorrrari. Buywigsst  wholesale prioss. From 639.96.  Shop by catalogue and save,  FREE catalogue CALL TOLL  FREE 1400-268-2242.  Cieirance: wool from Francs,  Samples of colours ind type\/  $1.75. Write to: Nells Creations  Ltd., #303, 2162 W. 2nd Avs.,  Vsnoouvsr,B.C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV6K1H6.  FOR SALE MHO  Used NICOR Marina Iransmis-  slonsnd\/orparts. CalBobool-  Hd: (800628-8313  SOFT BATH TUBS. Start up  ssmplss, most near psrlsd. \ufffd\ufffd  not Irom Kelowna lactory.  *4rx6tr, 3TX60- and 4Tx72-.  Modaisrsdas^or>tou\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,a>oms|s|.  |a>d,lractiendrrormalr\ufffd\ufffd4a*oissi.  Phons: (604)7664111. FIBRE-  GLASS POWER BOAT  MOULDS. 15' to 1\ufffd\ufffd and trade  namatorsale. TovfawcalChir-  11(604)765-6111.  \"NEW STEEL BUILDINGS\"  40\ufffd\ufffdC-5<rx6O'-60,x100'-ln deck,  quick Hli, wll end inywhers.  Otttsrilzas. Cai (604)922-1442\/  SwasjmrsslerB. One of ths tasrgsd  krvsnloriss d new and used  srtownsoMs parts In B.C. Ws  wreck mschlnss, al makaa. Wl-  kma Oudoor Rsaradlon, Lao La  Hictis, B.C. (604)396-7638.  OARDENtM  THE ULTIMATE GARDENERS  STORE, 1,0001 d products,  Urenlnjiesi. Iiyttii ajannlrasj. hugs  bodtidsclion. Mtorcalalogu*  ful d money saving oeupons.  W*satm Wdsr Farina, 1103,  20120-64lh Ave., LangHy, B.C.,  VSA4P7.  Ead snd FOOD CO-OP In Vancouvsr, B.C. requires a Relal  Manager. The successful appt-  cad m be raaprsrdbfe for inrud  salss d SI -2M ransitating d leod  and household hardware. Applicant should have drong retail  background in grocery snd natural lood management. Excellent  Interpersonal\/communicslion  skills required. Aoompstillve salary, comprehensive bensfls  package and co-operative work  environment are ottered. Allap-  pfcdlrsrttadriTowiidoadasndridd  In conlidence. Apply In writing  gMngdelairso(qisa\ufffd\ufffdrcalronsand  salary requiwm*nts by March 30  to: Paul C. Newman (Preskfeni),  1034 Commercial Drive, V5L  3W9.  CvsratMSpositions. Hurvdrsosol  lop-paying positions. Aloocupi-  tlons. Attractive barwIHa. Free  ddsls: Overseas Employmenl  Services, Dept. CA, Box 460,  Mourt Roysl, Ousbsc, H3P 3C7.  WANTED '60 OVERWEIGHT  PEOPLE'Ws pay you to low 10  lo29bs. Thismonh.revolutton-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdry new dist disc program. Call  lol Iree: Bob (604)978-3004.  HELP WANTED  WORKATHOME. Bsllnancialy  HTC^pandertt. Earn highsr then  avsrags income taking phons  ordsralorpUxWw. Ptsoplscral  you. Falreeiriforrutlcn writs to  STATION \"A\", Box 1124, AL-  TONA, MANITOBA, ROGOBO.  live-in Narm\/Houn-  ksspsr required. Sunaheia  Cead. Twochikirsn(sgas5,7).  Mud swim, ncavsmoksr. Above  avseags wags oflsred. To dart  ASAP. References required.  Mrs. Gsdsby, RRI \"  Bay.VONtYO.  Et^rsars^ShdwislManagsr,  mud bs lamaisr wth M 1 H  bandsaw sqttpmad. Havssx-  odM wood supply snd good  marksl. Salary nsgotWs. Sand  resums: Cadsr Hsvsn, 3621  Ontario Annus, Powtl Rivsr,  B.CV8A5C7.  MtSICELLANEOUS  MONTHLY NEWSLETTER  about bi-gons days snd tits d  ordinary people. FREE DETAILS.    Sand ssl-sddresssd  damped envelops and copy d  this ad to Box 962. WMtW, MB,  R6W4B1.  >>EmONAL*  LOVETOUCH. Adult lingsris or  produd - calaloguss 63 each.  Minded wlh order. P.O.Box  6\ufffd\ufffd6,Winnlpsg.M8,R3L2P7.  Adul Movies. Caistoguss 65  each. Price dcdslogue will bs  deduded Irom lira! order.  NigNTims Salss, S-22-C-51,i  R.R.6, Vernon, B.C., V1T 6Y6.  (604)545-3167. I  PETS * LIVESTOCK  Viatnamess pd4>slisd pigs.  Srral Wondar Ranch Is liking  ordare lor March llttsrs. Aldock  H ragWared (PBPRS-IN) and  gusrantssd hsakhy. Ons bred  sow ind orst mtniturt jack donkey also lor aala. Exotic ind  unusual s nan si trades welcome.  Doug Passes (604)498-2126.  Houss raised, litter trainsd PU-  BsBad Pigs. 6400 and up.  (604)462-9136.  SPRING'S ARRIVED!! Ski Ires  to May 21. Sursshtns Viags requires friendly oashisrs, oooks,  drshwavshare, dmcara, houss-  kssping, etstmBas oparelors.  Apply: (403)7624646, Box  1510, Band, AB.TOLOCO.  Rtaddert C^dasxsstatMalOSr, U-  leod, B.C. Ths B.C. Housing  Masnagsmsrt Comrdtaiim Is Isn-  dstlri3lorlhdposlaonlors21 urtl  seniors dsvslopiTlsnt. Tsndsr  docurnadi an avalabls from  BCHMC, 290 Nsnstno Ave. W.  P*rtlden,B.C.,V2A1N5. Tde-  phone: (604)493-0301. Mandatory Ms vieastng d Red Reck  Manor, 1011 Murray Sired, LI-  lood (in Ihsloungs) en April 12th.  I960, M12 noon.  REAL ESTATE  Wil trade or sdl large \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdxscutivs  home on 6 seres. Nicely treed,  good sol, walsr, tocatedOussnal.  Forfarm, resort orpartlsly developed property. (604)992-2343.  RENTALS  Expsrisnosd Log Mere I a Log  heuw butting yard supervisor  required. Topwsgssirulbsrst-  lits. Also log psdsre,pasos rat*,  fcp8. FAX resumes la (604)932-  6077. PHONE: (604)932-6000.  Blanks! dssdllsd ads are ths  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBad Buy  Ful Hfw umWmI oofnUntd T#ch*  drxsn(ljrbrx-aray)aiefdred. Pbsi-  tionlrivclvssdhsr duHss. Smal  uiisiHjrUty sJtas, ssss\/tng suxuaj.  matsly 1,000. Sslsry aorXe  HLRA gulrJdkM; fid bsnsflts.  to; Mrs. V#nw Maclmo,  X'  Community HmJHi Ctnkt, Box  219, Granisls, B.C., VOJ IWO.  (604)697-2261.  ATTCNIIONI Mdia63O0\ufffd\ufffdpsr  morthdhoms. TumTRASHHo  CASH. FJscoms a Rdundsr.  S\ufffd\ufffdnd ssl-addreassd darnpsd  106.Horsslly.B.C..V0L1L0.  WHITE ROCK-mdspsndsnl resort Irving lor tadrvessntors. Ds-  kixs 1 bedroom snd den states,  gas F\/P, 2 baths, 5 appkncM,  Lasses Irom 81,66CVmo. MudM  diressr\/lighl housskssping, hydro  sndmorel Psnthousssisosvall-  sbH. Psckrc Csrtton (604)531.  1160.  RrlmsoflloBorrdalapsts. 7,610  arimri tsst. Dowdown Houdon,  B.C., comer 10th Sired Pouton  Avanus. Avsllsbkt April 1,1990.  Lsass Mrrne nsgdlabls. Cai.  (6M)646-2617(Heudon).  Place your ad haral  SERVICES  Ms|or ICBC ind ir^ury dalms.  Jod A. Wansr, trtd lawyer lor 21  ware. Cai ookd, (604)736-  5500, Vavsoouvsr. Hnoreoovsry,  no fast. No Yukon snquirlsa.  \"ICBC otfamd ma 63,600. Cany  Unds gd ms 6190,000.' G.N.,  Abbdderd. UwofliossdCamy  Unds, Vancouvsr 684-7796.  Serving dsnts Irtreughod B.C.  for 18 yean.  TRAVEL  GETAWAY VACATION. Unkgus  relred high In lha Rockies raw  Badl. AorsorrriisOHralkxri, snisr-  lainmsnt, dd Issaona, oaynre, M  tlcksts. Three rslghOs tram 1264.  pp,quad.CaH1-800-6B1-1363. 20.  Coast News, March 26,1990  74 LTD S.W.. new brakes, tires,  bat., body in gd. shape, runs  gd . must sell. $680. 886-9749.   #14  '81 Honda Civic 2 dr., hatchback, exc. run cond , S2000  OBO. 886-8407. #14  1980 Ford Supervan. 6 stand..  PS\/PB, large 3-way Iridge, porta  potty, sink, plus extras. J4500.  885-9771. #14  '79 Monte Carlo. V6, 2 dr., AC.  PS, PB, good condition.  885-3383. #l3ss  1986 Sprint, standard, good  stereo, good cond., J5000 OBO.  886-9843. #13  SECHELT MARINE  SURVEYS LTD.  Captain BN Murray  M.C.MM.C    M.N.A.MS.I  M.A.B.V.C.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Marine   .  Surveyors and Consultants  665-3643  22 ft. Reinell I\/O new paint on  hull, no power, heavy duty trailer,  $3500.883-9483. #14sr  tarnagi mid* Gibsons Harbour, power il required. Phone  886-9011. TFN  45' cement schooner, needs  work. Gd. value. $7500.  885-5448. #15s  New, Used & Rebuilt  AUTO PARTS  OPEN IVF9.Y DAY  A101 SV\ufffd\ufffdLT in.  886-8101  '87 Honda Accord LX. Exc.  cond.. t owner, P\/S. P\/B,  stereo. 5-spd.. sunrool. 58,000  kms.. warranty, $12,000.  886-9095. #14  1976 Volvo. $1000. 886-2911.  886-2106. #14  1960 VW PU, collector's item.  Mechanic's special, best offer.  885-3692. #14  1970 Chevy Nova. 250 6-cyl..  $300 OBO: 1977 Mercury Bobcat. 4-cyl.. gd. cond., $750 OBO.  885-4704. #14  79 Ford van, raised root, part,  camperlzed. $3500. 886-4804.  #14  Idle Brock 4 BBL alum, inlake for  351m - 400 engine. $100.  885-5840. #14  1984 Camaro Z28. high output  VI. cruise, tilt, 4-spd., stereo,  great car lor the summer, $9699  OBO. 885-2399. #15  1981 GMCPU, $1750 OBO. Call  886-8771. #15  1987 S10 PU w\/canopy.  885-5711. #15  '78 Toyota Celica. runs well,  $900.886-3936. #15  '83 Ford Escort, front wheel dr.,  4-dr., auto., asking $3000.  886-9708. #13  Campers  Motorhomes  21' Kustom Koach trailer, tub &  shower. Gd. cond.. $5800.  885-2777 eves. #16s  28' Prowler 5th wheel, excellent  shape, air conditioning, TV aerial,  $11,500 OBO. 885-5861.   #15s  1987 deluxe motor home. 24',  perfectly clean and A1 condition.  866-8481. #13ss  '73 Econoline motorhome, good  shape. $3900 OBO. 886-2924  alt. 6 pm. #l4ss  1977 Ford namper, no rust, new  tires, furnace, flush toilet, stove,  2-way fridge, exc. cond., $7850.  886-2062. #13  LET'S TALK  MONEY  Lei's get together and sell  your RV unit, it we can't sell  it we'll buy It. Free Appraisal  and pickup anywhere.  LANTZVILLE RECREATION  COMPANY LTD.  ion ir.. 1-800-663-4234  D7363  1959 Mercury 17' travel trailer,  S1200OBO. 885-4704.        #14  8V camper, older model, clean  & well kept, $1750. 886-3845.  #14  RV excellent condition. Vanguard  20' Iravel trailer, sleeps 6  885-7626.865-7855. #14  1977 Dodge 440 LaPama by Exct.  Class A, 26' motorhome, 58,000  ml., 6000 KWKohler gen., dash  4 roof air, sleeps 6, rear bdrm.  bath., shower, front dinette, Irg  fridge., oven, 2 fuel tanks, CB  asking $21,950. Ph. 886-8487.  #15  OUTBOARDS FOR SALE  9.9-20-30-40-50-70 HP  1988-1989 Evinrudes. Excellent  condition. Lowes Resort,  883-2456. TFN  Cal25, fully equipped, moorage  Included, $11,500. 886-8706.  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'     #13sr  Ves! There Is a reliable local pro-  pellor repair service. 885-5278.  TFN  16' K&C Thnrmalglass boat, 85  HP Evin, new canvas, new leg,  trailer, $3,000 OBO. 885-5858 or  886-9078. TFN  22' Sangster 168 HP, 888 leg,  sleeps four, head, slove, ice box,  extras. 886-8443. #14sr  19 ft. F\/G cabin, 60 HP 0\/B, 4  HP 0\/B, sounder, tanks, trailer,  extras. 883-9080.  2 Mustang survival suits,  $300 ea. 883-9133.  new,  #13  MVTrlna Marie-34'gillnetter, A  licence, wood, Ford diesel.  $95.000.883-9133. #13  28' Silverton Sportsfisher,  350's. too much to  886-8315.  Homemade single fibreglass  Kayak with rudder & spray skirt,  very stable. $800 886-9760.  #13  Totally rebuilt 318 cu. In. left 6  tight with gears 883-9110.  #14ss  7000 Ib. Easyload boat trailer,  tandem axle, surge brakes, up to  30'boat, $4500.886-3589. #14  6 HP Johnson 0\/B, exc. end.  with tank, $475. 886-2500.   #16ss  BROOKS & MILLER  FLOOR COVERINGS ltd.  Benjamin Moore & International  Pslnta  Marina  Flnlihei  Commsrclsl  Pricing  Bill Wood  SECHELT  A Bus. 885-2923  Res 885-5058  Moton st. le'  1160 Sank. SS 1000 S. 12.00  km.,  |d.  cud.,   $1500.  SOS-TOM. #16sr  1962 Yamaha 650  helmets, good cond..  665-2206.  w\/two  $800  #13  1982 VZ490J Yamaha, only 30  hrs. since new. Mint cond..  $1500.8864599. #14ss  Pender Harbour Motorcycle Club  X-country enduro races, Apr. 22.  Classes: Enduro, motocross.  school boys. Jr. school boys. In-  formation Andy 883-9971,    #16  79  Yamaha  883-9230.  650.  $1200.  #15  Help Wanted  Experienced Pizza cook. Andy's  Restaurant 886-3388 apply to  Kharn. TFN  Secret Cove Manna requires student summer stall. Please call  Cash Whelan or Hayden at  885-3533 or leave mess      TFN  must be experienced in layout and all  aspects ol linishing. Please send  resume to B.B. Construclion,  R.R. 1, Bay Rd. Site, Sechelt,  B.C.V0N3A0. #14  Flagging personnel needed. Send  full resume to R.R. Traffic Control, Box 17. Silver Sands. Hall-  moon Bay. B.C. VON IVO.  Deadline March 27.1990.    #13  Wanted to Rent  Married couple with children,  clean resp., financially secure,  require 3-4 bdrm. home lor rent  or lease. 1 yr. lo 18 mos. commencing July 1.886-3376.   #14  Couple with inlant, 2-3 bdrm.,  Langdale to Egmont, needed by  April 1.686-9140. #13  Just arrived Irom Sweden, clean,  professional N\/S couple with  small dog seek short term rental,  not lussy, can pay in advance.  885-7513. #13  Sell employed N\/S human with  impeccable rels., will caretake.  pet sit, rent or lease self contained living space. 885-4432.   #13  2 or 3 bdrm. house, 1 or 2 yrs..  prefer furn., leave mess, at  Bayside Lumber, attn. Al  884-5355. #14  Middle ape lady currently working as nurses aide requires a live-  in homemaker position, relerences. 940-0032. #13  Driftwood Inn and Pebbles  Restaurant require clerk\/receptionist hostess and trained kitchen staff, cook, prep cook  Phone for interview 885-5811.  #13  Room 8 board or suite in Gibsons  area, needed immed. by quiet  NS\/ND man. will pay up to  $600\/mo. Please call collect or  Iv. mess. 583-2962. #13  OB  22 V boat, gd. shape, Volvo  no motor. 883-9278.        #14sr  17' fibreglass boat, 50 HP  Johnson, trailer, ski bar, anchor.  886-7064. #14  12V Hourslon F\/G, 9.5 HP  Johnson. Best offer. 885-3692.  #14  BARGAIN  Glen L 21' CB sailboat, sails,  mosl fittings, needs finishing, HD  Galkins trailer, $5000 Firm, view  886-9382. #14  Pacllica 20 1988 20' centre consol boat, complete w\/power.  $8500.883-9110. #15ss  Two Merc cruiser Alpha legs,  1.5:1, near new, $2000 w\/core;  1.84:1 rebuilt. $1500 w\/core.  863-1119  #13  24'Blue Water Sloop, lulled rigged, sitka mast, a must seel  $15,000.886-4535. #13  18' Hourston Glasscraft, hard  top. 90 HP Mercury 0\/B,  sounder, VHF, covered, $7150.  885-9665. #16ss  12' Fibreglass boat. $50; 14'  fibreglass boat, 50 HP 0\/B  w\/controis. 886-2431.       #13  Mobile Homes  1976 12x48, 4 appl., $10,000.  883-9133. #13  Responsible man looking for 1  bdrm. apart., contact Joe at Promos Rest. Gibsons. 886-8)38.  #14  Wanled 2-3 bdrm. apartment or  house by quiet resp. family of 4.  Central location prel. Sharon  885-7919. #14  Wanted to rent or buy. home or  cottage In Roberts Creek area. No  recent renovations or indoor use  ol pesticides. 885-3295,  885-3790 (Sheila), #13  Married N\/S couple with one  child seek 2 bdrm. home, clean &  resp. rels. 885-5864 eves.   #15  Home on North Sunshine  Coast\/Desolation Sound, Aug.  17-26, can provide deposit &  refs. 1-206-840-5078.        #15  Burned out Vancouver teacher  wilh 2 kids needs reas. summer  get-a-way, rets. Phone 879-4382  collect or write V. Ohm, 1585 E.  15th, Vancouver, V5N 2C9.  #15  Responsible young couple with 2  children wish to rent 3 bdrm.  house, pref. May 1. Call collect  988-6054.  73 Monarch 24x36, 3 bdrm.,  12x12 addition, work shop &  decks. 883-9230. #15  10'x45' mobile home, fully furn.,  In sechelt, local park. Asking  $15,500. 885-7626, 885-7855.  #15  CUSTOM  BUILD  YOUR OWN  MANUFACTURED  HOME  Up to 1848 sq. ft. Pick one  of our plans & modify to suit  Pricing starting at approx.  $44 per sq. II.  580-4321  1974 12'x68, 3 bdrm., exc.  cond., raised living rm., set-up  o.n pad, covere 8'xl2' deck. No  dogs,$25,500: 3bdrm, 12x68'  1972 utility rm separate, Irg.  new dick, plus covered porch,  very private yard. No dogs,  $21,500; 12'x60', 1972, 2  bdrm., exc. cond., elec. forced  air furnace, 10'x12' shed at  back, set-up on pad, $21,500.  Nodogs. 886-9581. #15  Motore vr les  1969 Honda 250; 1975 Kawasaki  350.885-1939aft.6pm.     #14  1200 Yamaha touring bike, 1  owner, mint. 883-9110.   #15ss  Honda blue 200cc Twlnstar,  perfect cond., w\/helmet, asking  $725.886-7626,885-7855. #14  Roberts Creek Hall avail.,  dances, parties, weddings,  equipment rental. Yvonne  885-4610. TF'I  Davis Bay\/Wilson Creek Hall  available. Wheelchair facilities.  885-2752 or 885-9486.       #13  Egmont house on 'A acre waterfront, main floor - 3 bdrm. un-  furn. (with appls.) - $525; basement - 1 bdrm., fum., - $375;  ullls. incl. for both, avail. Apr. 1,  mature resp. people only, rels.  req., call 522-8460. #14  F\ufffd\ufffdGARDEN  BAY  HOTEL  Is now hiring for summer  -Chel-Cooks, Bartenders,  Waiters-Wailresses, Bus  People, Dishwashers, Cleaning Stall, and Marina and  Grounds Stall. Please apply  in person. 883-2674  The Ministry ol Social Services  and Housing requires loster  homes lor children 12 to 16  years. Please contacl Judy Walls  or Ihe intake social worker;  weekdays at 885-7101.       #14  Hair Stylist\/Hairdresser  Apply J's Unisex, Sunnycrest  Mall, Gibsons. 886-7616.  TFN  Waitresses  Bartenders  & Cooks  Full or Part-Time  Peninsula Motor Inn   8862804  Part time retail sales clerk, apply  in person with resume and refs.  Landing Home Hardware, Sunnycrest Mall. #14  F\/T & P\/T kitchen staff required  Ruby Lake Resort 883-2269.  #15  Coordinator for 3rd Annual Craft  Fair. Aug. 4 & 5. Honorarium or  per cent of profits. Organizational  skills and ability to work wilh  volunteers needed. For more inlormation call T. Egan 885-2986.  Apply to Cralt Fair'90, Box 1565,  Sechelt. BC. before April 12. #13  1 bdrm. in house, $400 with  hydro incl., w\/d. central Gibsons, must like dogs. 886-8254  #13  Heated mini storage. 886-8101.  TFN  '81 RM 80 $300 OBO  parts. Ph. aft., 6 pm  extra  TFN  Roommate needed, envlronmen  tally concious, non-sexist only  need apply. 885-3692.        #14  Comfortable accom. avail, in  private lodge. Weekly rates. Call  883-9579. #14  600 sq. tt. boat shop, 883-1122.  #14  3 bdrm. house, Gibsons Bluff  area, 2'A baths, rec room, laundry room, fireplace, wood stove,  elec. plus heat, deck, carport,  $800 May 1.886-2932.       #13  House to share In Davis Bay,  $350 plus half util. 885-7191  Tues.-Fit, 6:30 am \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 2:30 pm for  more info., avail, immed.     #13  Room for rent. All amenities Incl.,  $350 plus deposit. 885-9035.   #13  For day or week, mobile home,  central Sechelt location.  885-7626,885-7855. #15  Responsible mature person to  share view home In Davis Bay,  own bathroom, $350 plus heat 8,  damage dep. Ruth 885-7233  wknds. 734-6607 ms.      #13  VOLUNTEERS  NEEDED  Public  Relations:  and  Marketing Skills are needed  to help advertise and promote events lor the Boy  Scout Association on the  Coast.  Ploneir Munum is looking  for people Interested in helping with various events and  demonstrations.  Compmlon Nnttsd to Read -  and converse with aphasic  stroke victim in Gibsons. 1  -2 hours per week.  Enwgiricy Program needs  volunteers. A one day  workshop and availability In  the event of an emergency Is  the only commitment.  For these and more opportunities please call Volunteer  Action Center 885-5881  Difficulties of police work  Is it time to update your resume?  Arbutus Office Services  885-5212  #15  Reliel Driver - Sunshine Coasl  Paratransit System. Experienced  driver, musl have valid Class 2  license and clear driving record.  Valid basic first aid and CPR certificates. Submit resumes to:  Sunshine Coast Community Services Society, Box 1069, Sechelt,  BC, VON 3A0. Attention:  Transportation Manager.     #14  Experienced waitress for morning  shut, 4 days on, 4 days off, at  Sechelt Inn. 885-9344,  885-2700 for Interview.       #13  OVERSEAS JOBS  High Demand in Australia, U.K..  Francs plus u different court-  tries. Nwd persons willing 10  work overseas on contncti. All  Irioei. Supervisory position,  also evaiiabK. Can smart international Incorporated.   MltW-MM   I  Reasonable estimates lor cabin  renovations Including carpentry,  plumbing, electrical, foundation.  Ph. 866-4584. #13  Free room and board in exchange  (or housekeeping, N\/S, N\/d,  single. 886-7419. #15  Editor:  The combination of drunk  and cop is seldom a pleasant  one. This is something I know  first hand because I ran a  cabaret on Granville Street in  Vancouver 10 years ago.  Unless things have changed  drastically, most drinking  establishments have a baseball  bat (or the equivalent) behind  the bar, and a capable doorman, formerly called bouncers.  That is how disruptive and  often dangerous drunks are  considered to be.  I don't condone violence, cer  tainly not from the RCMP or  other authority figures, but  every walk of life has its misfits  and burnouts and anyone  breaking the rules should be investigated and dealt with accordingly.  But on the other hand,  drunks, when behind the wheel  of a vehicle, can maim or kill,  and within a family usually  destroy those around them.  Perhaps if there were stiffer  drinking laws the authorities  would be less frustrated.  Because of my business dealings with the police, 1 have  often wondered why anyone  would want to become a cop.  Their job is usually thankless  and frustrating. But also  because of my business, I know  that most drunks are only  befriended by other drunks.  Perhaps if we took the time  to walk in the shoes of the  RCMP, we would realize that  the few who are not fit to wear  the uniform should not blacken  the whole force.  Janet Calder  Port Mellon  P.S. I thought your cartoon to  be racist.  Dump road a disgrace  Editor:  1 would like to draw  everyones attention to the  Sechelt Municipal Dump. If you  were not from Sechelt, it would  be very easy to find it. All one  needs to do is follow the trail of  garbage, trash, and refuse along  East Porpoise Bay Road and it  will lead them to the dump.  Living on this road has  enlightened me to the attitudes  of some of the people that use  this route. This is supposed to  be the age of an environment-  concious society but you  wouldn't know it while driving  this way.  People are concerned about  air and water quality but for  some reason some people seem  to think that it's okay to throw  cigarette packages, styrofoam  cups, paper, and various forms  of refuse from their vehicles.  Maybe someone can explain  why it is necessary to put up a  fence at the dump. First of all,  the garbage will not escape, second of all I have noticed new  piles of garbage on the side  roads probably due to closure  hours, and thirdly the people  have lost their right to pick  through this trash to utilize  whatever they find there to recycle it. I find this kind of mentality a backwards step towards  Tourist backlash  Editor:  We are writing this letter to  express our opposition to the  decisions that have been taken  lately in relation to the cancellation of Early French Immersion  classes on the Sunshine Coast.  We are an Italian Tourist  Agency that has brought many  Italians to the Sunshine Coast  over the last 10 years and have  noted with pleasure the advancement of the education of  the French language as a second  language in the area. Seeing as  many Italians speak French as a  second language it was an advantage for us to find an area so  open to this, so you can imagine  our surprise to find that the  whole   program   has   been  cancelled.  Maybe the people living in  your area don't have a concrete  idea of the advantages of speaking more than one language but  we can assure you that the advantages are many and varied,  especially in a country that has  two official languages.  In this day and age a person  who speaks only one language  finds himself extremely handicapped when doing business  in other countries. In light of  your decisions we would like to  inform you that we cannot  justify sending or recommending tourists to your area.  Marino De Santa  P.O. protest  Editor:  Those petitions asking for  changes in post office operations and procedures collecting  almost 2000 signatures along  the Sunshine Coast were faxed  to Ottawa early this month.  The principal complaint  seems to be closure of rural post  offices, which is being done all  over the country, not only inconveniencing users, but terminating a community function, a local centre, a way of life  for many.  This part of the petition was  strongly endorsed at the recent  meeting of the Union of BC  Municipalities   (UBCM)   so  I  perhaps they can generate some  action in Ottawa.  Sorting done in main centres  like Vancouver leads to  undeliverable mail, the computers there don't know Bill  Smith on Third Avenue, but the  local post master does and can  get his mail to him.  If the postal service has to be  made financially viable surely  there are other ways to cut  costs. Maybe another increase  in charges would help. Personally, I'd accept that, rather  than lose our post master.  J.E. White  Granthams Landing, BC  the betterment of this part of  paradise we call the Sunshine  Coast.  Is there anyone out there who  has a solution to this disgusting  problem?  Robert Pickles  Sechelt  Thanks  Editor:  On behalf of the Catholic  Women's League, I wish to  thank the owners and management of Shop Easy for  establishing a recycling depot in  Sechelt.  We are indeed very fortunate  to have this valuable environmental service provided on  the Coast.  So, thank you Shop Easy!  Peggy Jardine,  Secretary, C.W.L.  Response  Editor:  Hello Mr. Y. This is Mr. X.  I'll not answer your letter  because you didn't answer  mine. God bless!  P.S. Want to get together for  a chat over a cup of coffee?  Peter Light  Gibsons.  Yes, but..  Editor:  Firstly, thank you for printing the letters from B. Cat-  tanach and K. Distance with  reference to the effects of marijuana.  We would, however, protest  at the cartoon on page two. It is  not funny and is offensive  -catering to bigotry.  Thank you for your consideration.  Rosemary Whittey  Objects  Editor:  RE: Cartoon in Coast News,  March 19, 1990 issue.  Albeit somewhat humorous,  it's unpleasant to see this contribution to the intolerance and  denigration of ethnic minorities  in your paper.  Karin Jordan  Roberts Creek, BC  29.  Business 8.  Home Services  REMODELLING?  HFN0VATI0NS  885-3479  SM TREE SERVICE  Topping, trimming, pruning,  danger tree removal, bonded and  Insured, 20 years experience.  685-3897. #15  McMdVi numbing I Htg. ltd.  3rd generation plumbing company, specializing In New  Homes. 1-525-4466. #13  Why pay more for  Trn SmdcM  Call Ihe  Uirdrarcunmlor Iree estimates 8,  consultation.  Dangerous tree  removal our specialty.  My insund, guaranteed work.  885-5096 or 883-9587 alt. 6.  #14  Roofing,   Re-Roofing,  Reasonable and guaranteed.  865-4190. #17  Designed and built by  destruction  now available,  phone Rob 888-8143. #15  PEERLESS TREE  SERVICE LTD.  Topping - Limbing - Dinger Tree  Removal,  Insured, Guaranteed  Work. Free estimates. 885-2109.  TFN  19.  Business 8.  Home Services  Coast Construction 886-4160  Roofing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRepairs\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRemodalllng  Quality custom homes. Materials  and workmanship guaranteed.  Free estimates. 885-4190.   #14  Housikiepir  Only Tin But  I N\/S, bonded, experienced, hard  worker, with low rates, would  like to clean your home, refs.  avail. Guaranteed the cleanest  results on the Coasl. 885-5545.  #15  Are your papers in a shoebox and  lhal deadline looming? Let me get  you organized. Also manual &  computerized bookkeeping. Arbutus Office Services. 865-5212.  #13  Work Wanted  Work Wanted  \" H0me PROFESSIONAL  '\" STEAM CLEANING  Carpels  POWERFUL TRUCK-MOUNTED  EQUIPMENT  BEST POSSIBLE RESULTS  CHERISHED  CARPET CARE  886-3823  > ovt<\ufffd\ufffd, t\ufffd\ufffd ras con, a rjs, turaieasmaasi  Framing crew  equipped. Ph.  886-7830.  TREE TOPPING  Danger tree removal, limbing and  falling, fully insured, tree  estimates. Jefl Collins,  886-8225. #13  Will do lawn mowing, weed  eating, etc. 886-7306.       #15  Mobile licensed HD mechanic,  welder, air, arc & wire feed.  885-7336. #13  MT PLACE OR TOURS  Professional auto body mechanic  will contract your work. Autos,  trucks, Industrial, marine hulls.  Fibreglass, plastic & exotic  finishes, welding. For appointment 885-7659 aft. 6pm.    #13  Handyman carpentry, electrical,  drywall, painting, eavestrough  cleaning. No job too small. Alan  886-8741. #13  DO VOU NEE0  Brush cutting, rototilllng, rubbish  removal, carpet\/upholstery  cleaning, window cleaning,  mobile home washing,  housecleanlng. Skip's  Maintenance Service. 685-2373.  #14  Child Care  Molly Mouse has spaces available  for 18 months to school age. Call  886-3913. #19  Middle age lady requires live-in  nanny position (experience)  references. 940-0032.        #13  Reliable babysitter wanted  weekdays, Pender Harbour.  883-2544. #13  Reliable babysitter tor 16 mos.  old, weekdays, lowsr Gibsons,  N\/S, Rels., my home. 886-6649.   #14  Wanted: child care lor 2 children,  2 & 5 yrs. My home, 1-2  days\/week. 865-7008.       #15  Will do yard work, shoveling, digging, raking lawns, etc.  886-8370. #14  Reliable man\/men available lor  day jobs. Painting, yard  maintenance, etc. Robert  886-3822. #15  income Tax Returns. Special rate  for multiple lamlly returns. Arbutus Oflice Services, 217  Teredo Sq. 885-5212.        #15  Renovations, vinyl siding, windows, painting, cement, roofing,  fences, etc. Quality workmanship. 886-3078. #13  Hard working motel managers  (couple) ot 42-unlt motel and pool  in Otanagan seek managing position of mow (my sin) or campground en Sunshine Coast.  Please call John or Linda  865-2534. #14  Repo carpet cleaning van, diesel  cleaning machine, all equipment  necessary to start business.  Just rebuilt, bids, financing  available. 883-9110. #13  Successful US company expanding Into area, dislributots required part time, commitments  welcomed. Call 1-250-9400.  #14  Notice is hereby given that an application will be made to the  Director of Vital Statistics for a  change of name, pursuant to the  provisions of the 'Name Act' by  me, Teresa Louise Bites ot Gibsons, B.C. from Teresa Louise  Bates to Teresa Louise Hansen.  Dated this 22 day ot March,  1990. #13  - '-*-*-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd---aJTii^r #T_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--\" -Rett! Forrester photo  Land Ahoy, shouts ihe boatman beached at Ihe Cooper'i Green Boat Ramp  Coast Health Clinics  Child Health Clinks  Coast Garibaldi Health Unit,  494 South Fletcher Road, Gibsons, Sechelt Health Clinic,  5571 Inlet Avenue, Sechelt  (across from the post office).  Child Health Clinics will be  held in Gibsons on April 10,17  and 24. Extra clinics are  scheduled in Gibsons on April 9  and 23 from 4:30 to 5:45 for  parents who find the regularly  scheduled times inconvenient.  Phone 886-8131 to book appointments.  Sechelt Child Health Clinics  will be held April 4, II, 18 and  25. Extra clinics in Sechelt are  scheduled for April 3 and 24  from 3:45 to 5:45. Phone  885-5164.  Pender Harbour Clinics will  be April 5 and 19 from 1 to 3  pm. Phone 883-2764.  Tuberculin Skin Testing  & Travellers' Clinic  This clinic will be held on  Mondays from 3 to 4 pm, April  2, 9, 23 and 30 and the  Travellers' Clinic only from 3 to  4 pm on April 5, 12, 19 and 26  in the Gibsons Health Unit.  In Sechelt the date is April 9,  23 and 30 from 3:30 to 4:15 and  on April 5, 12, 19 and 26 at the  Sechelt Health Centre. The  Pender Harbour Clinic can be  arranged upon request.  Please make appointments  for clinics for Gibsons at  886-8131, Sechelt 885-5164 and  Pender Harbour 883-2764.  S.T.O. (Sexually Transmitted  Disease) Clinic  This clinic will be held  Wednesday, April 11 and 25 at  the Coast Garibaldi Health  Unit, Gibsons from 4 to 4:30  and at the Sechelt Health Centre, April 3 and 24 from 4:30 to  5:30. Information, counselling  and testing (including AIDS)  will be given. No appointment  necessary.  Prenatal Classes  The next Early Class is April  10 from 7 to 9 pm and will be  held at the Sechelt Health Centre. The next Late Classes will  be on March 27, April 3 and 9  from 7 to 9 pm at the Gibsons  Health Unit.  The above classes are taught  by Wendy Burlin, RN and  Jeanette McBain, RN. To  register call the Health Unit at  886-8131.  The next Post Partum Class  is unscheduled at present. To  register for this class, call Wendy Burlin at 885-7132.  Single and Pregnant?  Phone the Health Unit at  886-8131.  The next Hospital Tour will  be April 25. Please phone St.  Mary's switchboard to arrange  for a tour at 885-2224.  The Parent and Baby Drop-  in gives parents an opportunity  to meet other parents and  discuss common concerns. The  group gathers every Tuesday  SCRD demands  creek clean-up  The Sunshine Coast Regional  District is demanding that the  Minister of Forests clean up  Chapman Creek valley.  Reporting at Thursday's  meeting, Director Jim Gurney  said that during a recent flight  over the area gouges created  during previous logging work  were plainly visible on the west  banks of the creek.  \"There is discoloured water  pouring in from these,\" Gurney  said. \"The creek is coffee-  coloured in these area, but the  rest of the creek is crystal  clear.\"  Gurney stressed that so far  the turbidity has not reached  dangerous levels. \"The water is  still safe to drink, but we're  having increasing difficulty in  guaranteeing that we meet acceptable standards,\" he said.  Notice Board  4BBM*>*aMH^^MMaMHB*a-\ufffd\ufffd->-\ufffd\ufffd-|-^^B^BHaaTaBBB-*sTJ  Adutt Children ol Alcohollci meeting Monday nights. 7:30 pm at St. Mary's Church  Hall, Gibsons. For info Anna 885-5281 or Linda 886-8165.  The Sunshlni Cont Recycling ind frowning Society annual general meeting will  lake place Mar. 28 al 7:30 pm in the Community Use Room at Roberts Creek Elementary. Everyone welcome to bring questions and ideas about recycling.  Emotions Anonymous - a confidential support group lor people wanting to improve  their emotional health, Sun. 7pm St. Mary's Church, Gibsons. Contact Hops  886-2730.  BC Frtudi M ScMnphrMici meeting Fri., Mir. 30 at 7:30pm at Garibaldi Health  Clinic, Sechelt. Newcomers welcome, for Inlo 885-1927.  Cmadlin Federation if Unlwtilty Women Sunshine Coast meeting Mon., Mar. 26 al  11:30 am at Kirkland Centre. Richard Curll will speak aboul thi Sunshine Coat  Literacy Program.  lemrn Incline Tu Asilitinct free Mon., Mar. 26,1-3pm it thi Kin Hut, Dougal  Park.  M.S. Sill HUp Group Mar. 30 at 1pm, Kirkland Centre. For Info 886-3438.  Sprang Sid sponsored by the ladles of the Sunshine Coast Gospel Church, Sat., Apr.  7, 9:30-12noon, Davis Bay\/Wilson Creek Community Hall.  St. Mary's Heipftat AuxWiry SkImK Srinch meeting Thurs., Apr. 5 at St. Hilda's  Church. We welcome all members ind friends.  Fm Tai CUtJc lor seniors Mar. 30 & Apr. 6 at S.C. Community Services, Inlet Ave.,  12-4pm. Appointments call 885-5881.  BHimuHl Pln\/iri present 'Susybtdy' Roberts Creek Hall, Mar. 29,30,31 and Apr.  6,6,7 at 8pm. Doors open at 7:30 pm.  CattMHe Whims League Development Day Sit., Apr. 7,10:30anr-3pm. Bring a bag  lunch to Holy Family Hall - for Info 885-2658.  MMIC muling - we med your view points 1 comments. Please come ind add your  voice to our professional association, Apr. 5 at 7:30pm at St. Mary's board room.  Tin next organizational meeting of the Blbsmi Otitmch ((.0.) program is slated tor  Mar. 28 In rm. 108 Elphinstone at 7pm.  SmM Chimbir if Cwmmtm muting Tun. Mar. 27 at 7:30 pm Rockwood Cnntri,  north wing. Theme: Goals & Objectives tor 1990.  Ym) Sad at St. Hny'i Church, Hwy. 101, Gibsons, Sit., Mar. 3110am to 3pm.  Plants, housihold Items, coif*.  Cent M*s' BuM present sculptor Roy Liwls is guest speak*- Mon., Apr. 2 at  7:30 pm, St. Bartholomews Hill, Gibsons. Non-membsrs wMcrxM. For Into  8*6-4711.  from 1:15 to 3:30 pm in the  Coast Garibaldi Health Unit  and in the Sechelt Health Centre  Wednesdays from 1:15 to 3:30.  There is no fee for any of  these services.  Threat to  Chapman  trail  by Rose Nicholson  A subdivision application in  the Wilson Creek, Davis Bay  area is a threat to parts of the  Chapman Creek trail.  The trail that starts at the  north end of Brookman Park in  Wilson Creek runs along Chapman Creek and then enters  private land for about 400  metres above Davis Bay.  Beyond this the remainder of  the trail runs through Crown  Land within the boundaries of  Sechelt and is administered by  the Ministry of Lands and the  Ministry of Forests.  A report of the Outdoor  Recreation Advisory Committee (ORAC) recommends that  the District of Sechelt acquire  the portions adjacent to the  creek for park purposes; that  the portions of the trail that go  through the proposed subdivision be dedicated as park land;  and that the forest service  designate as a forest service trail  the section of the trail north of  the power line that runs through  the provinical forest.  Coast News, March 26,1990  21.  The  SYLVIA  Hotel  Make the Sylvia part  of your Vancouver adventure...  Single from $42 Double from $50  Featuring \"Sylvia's Restaurant & Bistro\"  h Bring in this ad and receive a  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd}M\ufffd\ufffd   FREE CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST  C during your slay with us!  ...Overlooking Vancouver's English Bay  On the Bench at llMOllford  681-9321  \ufffd\ufffdl\"-~\"'-\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .. j  TOURIST AND RECREATION GUIDE  Our fishermen are  in good hands...  \ufffd\ufffd-&>&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd#  ...their own.  No one knows marine navigation better than  commercial fishermen. You're not about to take  unnecessary risks if it means you might not  make it home.  Because most accidents at sea are caused  iTy human error, the Canadian Coast Guard urges  all mariners to use common sense  Carry adequate lifesaving equipment,  never overload the boat and be cautious at sill times.  U't's make sure we all get home tonight.  Someone is waiting  for you at home. uoast News, March 26,1\ufffd\ufffd90  i  President of Ike BC Chamber of Commerce, Leslie Abramson, on Ike far right and Wendy Klein of  the Ministry of Regional and Economic Development present an award won recently by Bill and  Kale McQuaid of Roberto Creek. (See story below).  Tuwanek Ratepayers seek  wilderness designation  by Rose Nicholson  The Tuwanek Ratepayers  Association has set the wheels in  motion to preserve a one square  kilometer area of Mount  Richardson and the shores of  Sechelt Inlet as a 'wilderness  area'.  The area, just north of  Tuwanek, includes the north  and west faces of Mount  Richardson and a section of  shoreline on the inlet in the  vicinity of Tuwanek Point.  In the past the steepness of  much of the area made logging  too difficult and costly so a  large part of the area consists of  the original old growth timber.  A natural forest fire on the  south face of the mountain  about 75 years ago destroyed  some of the old growth but  natural regeneration in the intervening years has resulted in  vigorous stands of second  growth.  The whole area now supports  a complex ecosystem of unusual  and rare plant and animal  species not commonly found  locally, including many medicinal plants that were once used  by the local Sechelt people.  It is a watershed for Grey and  Irvine Creeks that supply  domestic water for much of  Sechelt, and as well provides the  fresh water necessary for the  ecology of the inlet.  The forest cover provides  protection for the thin soil from  the heavy rain washing down  the slopes, making the water in  the inlet so clear and full of life  that it has become one of the  favourite year round diving  destinations in BC.  At present there are no roads  in the area. Jackson Brothers  Logging, currently logging  nearby, has not included that  area in its most recent five year  plan.  The area was not designated  for industrial use in the Sechelt  Inlet plan and the Canadian  MICROSOFT WORD  LOTUS 123  Registration.'  Course starts  2nd week of April  Phone lor more inlo  or registtation  Coming Soon!  IBM FOR KIDS  Phone lot information or registration  Small classes with individual  instruction, modern computers,  professional instructors  atlas  OFFICE SOLUTIONS LTD.  5511 Wharf St. Sechelt  Phone 885-4489 Fax 885-4696  Organization of Forest Industries (COFI) refused to sign  that document until the issue  was settled.  The Tuwanek ratepayers see  their proposal as a compromise  that would provide an alternate  solution.  In August of 1989, the provincial Forest Act was amended  to recognize wilderness as a  resource in provincial forests,  with the Forest Service having  the responsibility of managing  the wilderness areas. The  amended act prohibits logging  in wilderness areas, but does not  exclude mineral and petroleum  exploration and development,  though these must meet specific  regulations to ensure preservation of the wilderness.  Guidelines on managing the  newly formed wilderness  category are so far incomplete  and a bulletin put out by the  Forest Service in December  1989, asks for public input on  \"interpreting the new wilderness mandate and deciding how  to manage values in provincial  forests,\" and invites \"comments that can help in adapting  and updating this current  policy.\"  Wilderness, as presently  defined in Forest Service policy,  specifies an area that has never  been logged or otherwise used.  Strictly speaking, the Mount  Robinson area does not qualify  because of the fire that occurred  there many years ago and a  small area that was  about 50 years ago.  With only 1860 square  kilometres of the original forest'  permanently protected in BC  and none of it on the Sunshine  Coast, the Tuwanek residents  argue that because the Mount  Robinson site has almost completely regenerated itself, it  should be considered.  \"We feel that when all factors are considered,\" Tuwanek  resident Linda Williams told the  Coast News, \"it will be apparent that the best 'use' for the  area is to leave it as it is, a  wilderness area, for all residents  of the Sunshine Coast.\"  limit  iiJiiijjrrzzzz  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiijirni  I  ^ The Sunshine Coast Ballet School  fife*  \ufffd\ufffd* is now officially  THE COAST ACADEMY OF DANCE & FINE ARTS  and is accepting registration  in Gibsons and Sechelt for the Spring Term, 1990  The gifts of grace, elegance & poise  are die rewards of every dedicated  classical ballet dancer.  Nicola Stewart  Director  FOR DETi-JLS PLEASE CALL:  885-7202  UI1III  \"\"\"1  Locals win  provincial  award  by Chris Ferfuson  Tilly's Galley, a local home-  based business run by Kate and  Bill McQuaid out of their home  in Roberts Creek, won the Best  Booth Award at the recent BC  Creative Arts Show held at BC  Place Stadium on March 11,12,  and 13.  Tilly's Galley is a line of  specialty dried food products,  with an emphasis on seafood  and designed for boaters and  busy families.  Kate and Bill grew up in West  Vancouver, were married in  1981, and moved to Roberts  Creek in 1982. After the birth of  their 16-month old son Cody,  Kate wanted to start a home-  based business. With a love for  cooking and an interest in sales  and marketing, the idea for Tilly's Galley was conceived.  Kate and Bill started experimenting with recipies, until  the final Tilly's Galley line was  ready to package. Kate does all  her packaging and distribution  out of her home and hires high  school kids in the neighbourhood to help with the workload.  Kate says she is \"very busy\"  but enjoys getting out and  meeting people and being able  to stay home with Cody. \"I had  no idea it would be so successful. 1 simply felt that it was  a good idea, something different that wasn't being done  and it simply tastes good.\"  The Home-Based Business  Creative Arts Show, sponsored  by the Ministry of Regional and  Economic Development and  Southex Exhibition offered Tilly's Galley the opportunity to  showcase their products. Over  6S00 retail buyers attended the  show and this exposure  generated Kate and Bill accounts from across Canada.  Their booth display which  won them Best Booth Award  was a recreation of the Tilly's  Galley logo depicting a wooden  boat filled with food.  In summation of her experiences owning and operating  Tilly's Galley, Kate states, \"It  has been heartening how supportive people have been to help  a small person get their business  started.\"  EVERYTHING HALF PRICE  (EXCEPT BOOKS)  ALL THIS WEEK  ym THRIFTY'S  HOP THE  GIBSONS  ..    ., IM-24tt\ufffd\ufffd|rjlSM  jgjjgMn, tarn Hsu's iwtrf otmt.  DRIFTWOOD PLAYERS  Jgfi  -<d^C  8 p.m.  Doors Open  7:30 p.m.  Roberts Creek  Community Hall  March 29,30,31  April 5,6,7  Ticket. ivHUbk It:  Talewind Books. Sechelt  Seaview Market, Roberts Creek  Linnadlne's Shoes t.  ist Bookstore, Gibsons  IF CREMATION IS  YOUR CHOICE  WHY NOT PREPLAN  YOUR  FUNERAL NEEDS?  Does your family know whal your personal feelings are about  your funeral needs? Of course, it's natural everyone wants to  avoid talking aboul his or her funeral arrangements before their  lime. However, people's attitudes are refreshingly more open to  Healing with these matters as we quickly approach the 1990's.  Today, people are preplanning their personal funeral preference  for the benefit of their loved ones. Show your family and loved  ones how much you care by preplanning your wishes now.  Devlin Funeral Home and the Sunshine Coast Crematorium  both provide this service free of charge, so don't put off this important task. Call us today for further informalion.  WE HAVE ALL THE OPTIONS AVAILABLE  FOR YOUR NEEDS  Contacl Dan Devlin al 886-9551 today regarding PREPLANNING.  Ik  Funeral  Anoclollon  579 Seaview Rd.,  Box 648  Gibsons, B.C.  886-9551  WEAR-DATED* CARPET WITH STAINBL0CKER  HREALLYTAKES  THE CAKE  And the   blueberry piiJ,he   hot coffee*!16   French mustard\"01to mention a  hundred other problem stains.  Because when it comes to fighting stains, a Wear-Dated\ufffd\ufffd Carpet can really take  it. We make sure of that with every tuft we weave. And then we test it further for  crushing, matting, fatlinf?'\"'    bleaching0 make 8Ure y\ufffd\ufffdur \ufffd\ufffd\"P\ufffd\ufffdt \"toys better  looking longer. For a guaranteed Ave years.  Wear-Dated Carpet with StainBlocker, your best protection against stains and  wear. Take it from us and get it at DeVRIES tor these special savings  SAVE ON THESE  INTRODUCTORY OFFERS  Burlington EXPRESSIONS  For the design conscious homeowner  SEE OUR MIX & MATCH COLLECTION  3 different textures In 30 different colours  taamftt j 100% Monsanto WEAR  WW       Sq. yd. DATED* Nylon Pile  J.P. Stevens SPOTLIGHT  100% Monsanto WEAR DATED* Nylon Pile '  Low Maintenance for casual living  *22M sq. yd.  [TteVRIES  \ufffd\ufffdVssst\ufffd\ufffdrja\ufffd\ufffdsalraeiaa>aliil<liarll\ufffd\ufffdarla'Mamr\ufffd\ufffdsi<>Ca\ufffd\ufffdha<\ufffd\ufffd>  Making Homes Beautiful For 32 Years J,  886*7112  709 Hwy. 101, Gibsons  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi. \"s-BS.'.-fa'.-*:.,*^--'  -vj-j.rtrT-","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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