@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "9107a4ba-c870-46f0-97b9-2b689e495cea"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:alternative "[Coast News]"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2014-02-14"@en, "1981-03-31"@en ; dcterms:description "Serving the Sunshine Coast since 1945"@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xcoastnews/items/1.0176152/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " Victoria / Sunshine Coast since 1945 i The Sunshine LEGISLATIVE LIBRARY 82.1 Parliament Buildings, VICTORIA, B.C is, B.C. V8V 1X4 (vs stands Delivered to every address on the Coast March 31,1981 Volume 35, Number 13 Threatens resignation Harrison objects to pool budget . The final 1981 budget ofthe Sunshine Coast Regional District passed with little comment or opposition last Thursday night until a tax requisition item of $50,500 for the Pender Harbour Pool was read. . \"That's far too high,\" said Area A Director Joe Harrison. Harrison said that though he is aware that the specified area referendum for the pool is \"open-ended\", he felt that the people of Pender Harbour had a commitment from himself and from the board to keep to the 2.2 mill ceiling originally estimated. The 150,550 requisition represents about 2.8 mills. \"I will resign tonight rather than break that commitment,\" Harrison stated. ,. Finance committee chairman Brian Stelck pointed out that the budget for the pool was not balanced and that approximately $13,000 in revenues had been lost during the seven week closure of the pool that resulted from the controversial \"$5,000 misunderstanding\" with the School Board. \"It was the decision of the Aquatic Society to close the pool,\" Harrison said, pointing out that he and Pender Harbour Secondary Principal Tom Rothney had asked the Society not to Revelation in the Legislature Last week Rae Ellingham, Coast News astrologer, predicted \"mysterious sea-related incidents,\" and such was the case over the weekend. Hugh Mowatt, a Gibsons resident, decided to go fishing Saturday afternoon, March 28. He drove his pick-up truck towing his boat and trailer to the bottom of Gower Point Road to the boat launch. The tide was up and Mowatt backed his boat and trailer into the water which was about three feet deep. According tn Mowatt, his trailer romehnw gotunbitchrd. He drove into the water, believing it to be shallow, the water coming up to below his door. \"I swung around and was going back to get the trailer and all of a sudden I was underwater! I didn't know they'd dredged down there.\" Mowatt had driven his truck around a scow that was moored in the bay and fallen into a drop off. \"I couldn't get the door open or the windowdown but I found a wrench and smashed out the back window. I don't remember much after that.\" Mowatt was rescued by two passers-by on a scow from the Keats Island Baptist Summer Camp, Caretaker Dave Andrews and his assistant for the day, Alf Glenesk who has a summer home on Keats Island. ��� John Moora Photo This apparent tragedy had a happy ending last Saturday when Gibsons man Hugh Mowatt was revived after a near drowning. (See story below.) Tragedy and near tragedy Gibsons man saved from drowning They rushed Mowatt to the Gibsons Government wharf where an ambulance driver administered first aid and sped him to the hospital where he was treated for hypothermia and spent the night in intensive care. Mowatt was minutes from death, \"I'm pretty lucky, I figure\", Mowatt told the Coast News on Sunday after his release from St. Mary's Hospital, \"I don't think 111 be going fishing for a while.\" Another in the series of \"sea-related incidents\" was the reported cries for help anditohinilightiin Halfmoon Bay Friday evsning, ��� March 27. The SOS came from a boat adrift between the mainland and Merry Island. Roily Dean of Redrooffs Road spotted the boat and heard the cries. He phoned the Sechelt RCMP, who contacted Art McPhee ofthe Provincial Emergency Program on the Coast who in turn tried to contact members ofthe Volunteer Rescue Team. After the eighth try, (\"It was Friday night, everybody was out. It's understandable,\" said McPhee) he contacted Air-Sea Rescue on Vancouver Island. The Hovercraft came to the rescue of the four people adrift in their boat that had incurred engine trouble. They were brought ashore safely. It was not known at press time who the occupants of the boat were. The most unfortunate incident of the weekend by far was the death of 47 year old, Lennart Johnson of Burnaby. He was found in Plumpers Cove off Keats Island on March 24 drowned. There were no direct witnesses to say how he entered the water. RCMP are doing an extensive search to answer the questions surrounding Johnson's death. Coroner Dan Devlin believes there is no reason to expect any other verdict but accidental death. Riparian rights pose problems by John Moore The Marina Committee of Gibsons municipal council held an in camera \"strategy meeting\" on the afternoon of Monday March 23 and the first order of business was the knotty question of riparian rights in the Gibsons bay area. At the outset of the meeting Municipal Clerk Jack Copland noted that, earlier the same day, a waterfront property owner had expressed concern at the possibility of having to sign over in perpetuity his riparian rights to complement the proposed municipal marina. Chiefly at issue is the common law riparian \"right of access\" which, in this province, prohibits anyone from obtaining a foreshore lease or placing any erection in the water without the consent of the \"upland owner\" whose waterfront property faces the site. Council faces the possibility of having to obtain the written consent of each and every waterfront property owner in the bay area before a foreshore lease for the new marina could be obtained. Council has obtained a sample copy of such a \"consent form\" used by the Municipality of West Vancouver which, according to Municipal Clerk Jack Copland, waives the riparian rights of an owners' \"heirs and successors in perpetuity\", but council intends to contact the Ministry of Lands, Parks and Housing seeking clarification of the wording of the form. - Meanwhile, a group of about twenty bay area waterfront property owners met two Sundays ago to discuss the question and resolved to seek legal counsel. Frank Braithwaite, spokesman for the group, told the Coast News, \"The question is not whether or not we're going to have a marina, but whether or not we have to sign away our riparian rights, because once we sign they're gone forever.\" Council appears to have as little relish for the task of obtaining the consent of the waterfront owners as the owners have for giving up their riparian rights. Mayor Goddard has raised the question of whether or not the whole exercise is necessary, since the proposed marina should not interfere with the right of \"access to navigable waters\" of any of the residents concerned. Lands Branch Regional Manager Larry Sorken commented cautiously on the situation when contacted by the Coast News last week. Sorken confirmed that, though riparian rights extend only to the high tide line, the riparian right of access does require the upland owner's or owners' consent before a foreshore lease can be granted or any erection placed in the water in front of that Please turn to Page Twenty Natural gas The Sunshine Coast may get natural gas by 1984, according to B.C. Hydro's Vancouver Island natural gas pipeline Project Manager R.G. Blakely, but Mackenzie MLA Don Lockstead, who met with Blakely last Wednesday in Vancouver, remains skeptical. According to Lockstead, Blakely revealed at the meeting that Hydro is considering running spur lines from its southern route for the proposed pipeline up to Squamish, Woodfibre, Port Mellon and the Sunshine Coast. Powell River would be served by \"looping back\" the line from Comox on Vancouver Island. Blakely suggested that the project might be complete within three years. However, Lockstead said, Blakely admitted that no decision on the spur lines has been made by the board of directors of B.C. Hydro. Blakely also revealed that the cost of such spur lines was not included in Hydro's estimated cost for the pipeline project to Vancouver Island via the southern route. \"The added cost of these spur lines will make the price higher than the Westcoast Transmission proposal,\" Lockstead said, \"I'm not optimistic that we will ever see this project materialize.\" Cooper's Green zooms in price Historic Cooper's Green is for sale: the price for three acres, $1,500,000; the suggested usage, according to last week's Vancouver Sun advertisement by Century 21, \"an 80-room hotel\". Cooper's Green, for years has been sought and fought for by Halfmoon Bay residents and the regional board for use as a regional park. Now, since the provincial order in council that finalized the sale ofthe road allowance to the Cooper's for $11,200 in August 1980 joining the Cooper's property into one piece the market value of the land has soared from the previously assessed value (for park purposes) of $150,000 to $1,500,000. At the time of the road allowance sale, residents of Halfmoon Bay protested to the provincial government claiming that turning over the road allowance (thus uniting two segments of the green) would facilitate development by real estate interests and would work against a regional board program to open up access trails to the beaches in the area. \"We already have interested buyers,\" Larry Reardon, a local real estate agent for Century 21, told the Coast ^ News. act hastily and close the pool. \"The big increase is not the school board's fault. The responsibility for the loss lies with the Society. They'll have to live within their budget.\" Harrison did not resign, and later stated he would consider an increased tax requisition, \"only if the community is willing to fund it, but they must be consulted.\" Finance committee chairman Brian Stelck suggested a possible solution for this year, at least. Stelck pointed out that two items in the pool budget, a recreation/weight-training room that would cost approximately $6,000 to complete, and a $2,000 \"thermal blanket\" that would retain heat in the pool facility and cut power costs, are both revenue-producing or cost-saving and both are essentially capital expenditures. Stelck recommended that a maximum of $42,750 be raised from taxes and that the difference be made up from Joint Use of School Facilities funds towards those capital expenditures. The board accepted Stelck's recommendation, which will be put to a meeting ofthe Joint Use of School Facilities committee scheduled for 4:00 pm. Monday, March 30 in the regional board offices. Land swap deal not appraised Pressure from Opposition MLAs in the Legislature and a surprise phone call to CPR last week forced Minister of Forests Tom Waterland to release documents revealing that the provincial government's land swap deal with CPR for 5,000 acres in the Skookumchuck area was concluded without an appraisal of the land involved. Despite repeated questions from Opposition MLAs Don Lockstead, Bill King, Alex MacDonald and Opposition leader Dave Barrett, Waterland initially refused to release details ofthe agreement on the grounds that all parties involved had not been notified of a public disclosure. j While Lockstead continued to question the Minister, Barrett ���tepped out and telephoned CPR's Pacific Logging Division. Returning to the House, Barrett informed the Minister he had just ipoken with Mr. Sloan of Pacific Logging and been told that there was \"no problem\" and that the company had no objection to the disclosure of details of the agreement. \"The Minister then tabled the document,\" Lockstead told the Coast News, \"and we could immediately see why he was reluctant to do so. No appraisal ofthe value ofthe land had been done prior to conclusion ofthe deal. The government didn't even know what they were trading away.\" Lockstead said the agreement does allow for a third party to do assessments of the land value now that the deal is complete, but said that the deal \"looks even worse than we thought.\" Lockstead said that, to his knowledge, no assessment of the. land values, other than the estimate he originally obtained from an independent professional forester, has ever been made. That estimate indicated that timber and real estate values could amount to as much as 100 million dollars. \"I'm appalled at the whole transaction,\" Lockstead said. - John Moora Photo They're off! Sixty-three hardy entrants answer the sound of the starter's pistol. Sunday's Fourth Annual April Fool's Day Run saw a record number of entrants and a new record time. (More pictures on Page Twelve.) Despite the weather Records set in Fool's Day Run Despite the inclement weather of a cold and rainy March day sixty-three entrants started off from Elphinstone Secondary School in Gibsons on Sunday, March 29, on the Fourth Annual April Fool's Day Run between Gibsons and Sechelt. The run has attracted more entrants every year since its inception. ��� The first finisher this year was Steven Brindle of Vancouver who covered the run in one hour and thirteen minutes, almost fifteen minutes faster than the previous best time set by two-time winner Adrian Belshaw. Besides the Coast News Cup, winner Brindle received a Nike club bag. Local man Raul Poole finished a close second in one hour and fifteen minutes followed by James Oostenbrink of Vancouver who came in one minute behind Poole. Poole was rewarded with Adidas TRX Trainers and Oostenbrink collected a Nike club bag. The run this year featured recognition of various categories and Chris Craigen of Vancouver was the first woman to finish. She ran into Sechelt only one hour and thirty-four minutes after the start. Local businessman Arne Tveit-Pettersen was the first finisher in the Men's Master Class for men over forty. Arne finished in one hour forty-six minutes. Stephen Christian was the first finisher in the under fourteen category with a finishing time of one hour, forty minutes. These winners all received Nike T-shirts and jogging socks courtesy of Trail Bay Sports. At least 10 of the sixty-three starters were from Vancouver and they were unanimous in their praise of the course and how much fun the event was, despite the rain. The Vancouver runners thought the event well-organized and found all the people associated with it most friendly and helpful. In future, plans are for the April Fool's Day Run to be listed in the magazine B.C. Runner so more non-local runners will know about it. If it becomes a registered course, those wishing to participate in such runs as the Vancouver Marathon will be able to use their performance here as an official qualifying time. A near dark spot in an otherwise pleasant event occurred just outside Sechelt when one runner was knocked into the ditch by a passing car. Wayne Newport recovered and was able to finish in fourth place. It is thought lhat Newport, despite race instructions, was cutting the corner on the wrong side of the road at the time of the incident. Finishers after the first three in order of completion were: Wayne Newport, Bill Morrison, Lonnie Brock, Chad Craigen, Dave Estergaard, Mike Pearson, Leith Skinner, Allen Whittleton, Chris Craigen, Brian Rooner, David MacLeod, Roger Douglas, Stephen Christian, Garry Gray, Chuck Belong, Jack Pope, Lyn Christian, Clifford De Schcpper, Kim Graf, Arne Tveit-Pettersen, Michael Read, Sean Whalen, Lawrence Stoochnoff, Barb Nelson, Brian De Schepper, Robert Makwood, Steve lllingworth, Stuart Frizzell, Ricki Ferguson, Darcie Young, James McLachlan, Rieta Hanson, Brandan Whalen, Mary Dcgnan, Harvey Bist, Steven Horvath, Heidi Brongers; Jane Degnan, Lynette Willoughby, Lisa Matthaus, Gerd Kuer, Dona'ld Maedel, Shaun Thorold, Danny Hemstalk, Roberta Esau, Leif Mjanes, Manuane Joe, Bear, the first and only canine entry, Susan McKibbin, Ken Birkin, Kelly Quinn, Greg Sylte. The Coast News regrets that it did not receive finishing times for Bruce Pedersen, Brent Berry, Trevor Chambers and Freddy Williams. Besides the record entry, the April Fool's Day Run this year featured a five-mile run starting at Browning Road. Taking part in this modified effort were Steven McLeod, Renee Fountain and Aron Bjornson. k*Mi The .Sunshine Coast News, March 31 A LOCALLY OWNED NEWSPAPER Published at Gibsons, B.C. every Tuesday, by Glaistord Pratt Ltd. Box 460, Glbtont, VON 1V0 Pender Harbour enqulrlet, and all othert, it Phone 886-2622 or 886-7617 (���CM* Accounts Department: MM Joe _. Editorial Department: I John Burnside John Moore Fran Bourassa Advertising Department: Bradley Benson Fran Berger Jane McOuat SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Canada S24.00 per year, $15.00 for six months United States $25.00 per year, Foreign $28.00 per year Distributed Iree to all addresses on the Sunshine Coast. Second Class Mail Registration No, 4702 Come off it, Joe Residents of Pender Harbour might be forgiven for asking just who their regional director is representing these days. Harrison took a strange position at the regional board meeting held last Thursday when he objected to the budgetary item dealing with the Pender Harbour pool because the loss of revenue incurred during the closure was 'the fault of the Pender Harbour Aquatic Society'. Let it be said that the Aquatic Society took the action it did after its efforts to obtain a hearing were stymied by the inattention of our local governing bodies. Harrison's surprise outburst against the Aquatic Society and in defence of the school board, which no one present was attacking, is doubly surprising in that he . had absented himself from all consideration of the matter since a meeting held at Chatelech in February between Regional Board and School Board representatives. Having excused himself from representing his electorate because of What he apparently saw as an awkward situation since he is a school teacher in the employ of the school board, Harrison would have been well advised to stay out of it. The question could be asked as to why a school teacher is unable to deal with issues which come up in the regional area which he has been elected to represent because one of the parties is his employer. Whose interests is Harrison protecting by removing himself from such an issue and could it be that silence just wasn't enough in this case? April Fool's Day Run The April Fool's Day Run first engendered in the pages of the Coast News in a jocular exchange between George Matthews and Fran Berger has taken root. Any event which took place in the kind of weather prevalent last Sunday and attracted a record number of entrants is here to stay. Special thanks are due John Denham and Steve Clayton of Trail Bay Sports for their organization of the event. Assistance also came from Charlene McCallum, Rieta and Lex Hanson, and Fran Berger. The Sunshine Coast Fitness Group manned the aid stations, the Coast News provided oranges and lemonade and Lil Degnan provided the baked goodies. The Coast News- Cup was accompanied this year by '1 Made It!' ribbons for all finishers. Trail Bay Sports provided T-shirts and jogging socks; the Nike and Adidas companies provided prizes for the first three finishers; Dr. John Farrer and Mike Vaughan patrolled the highway to offer aid if needed and all deserve thanks. Perhaps most of all, the hardy runners who braved the elements and rose to the challenge of the Fourth Annual April Fool's Day Run deserve bur thanks and our congratulations. ...from the flies of the COAST NEWS FIVE YEARS AGO boat launching ramp at the end of Residents of Halfmoon Bay, Egmont Headlands Road by Ernie Cartwright. and Pender Harbour are protesting the Council is in favour of the proposal but intentions of the Provincial Emergency thinks locals will have their objections. Health Services Commission which is Sechelt District School Board has planning to move the ambulance decided to purchase land in the West service from its present site in Sechelt area on Mason Road near Halfmoon Bay to St. Mary's Hospital in Northwest Bay Road for school Seohelt. purposes. The SCRD has approved the purchase of a new $63,000 fire engine for TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO the Roberts Creek Volunteer Fire Tne Provincial government will pay Department. approximately $296,800 towards a new The SCRD has announced that there school construction in Sechelt School will be no increase in taxation for the District. Ratepayers will have to 197g fjSca| year provide the other $296,800. The school vote will be April 17. TEN YEARS AGO The glamourous grand opening of Roberts Creek Fire Chief Stan Parkers Hardware as a Marshall-Wells Rowland quits because of dissension store drew great numbers in Sechelt Glen Kraus is appointed lothe position this week, of Fire Chief. Driftwood Players are on their way to THIRTY YEARS AGO Powell River to perform \"What Shall Tne neroic and ,ast thinking of 14- We Tell Caroline\" by John Mortimer. Vear old Jack Cresswell resulted in the The cast includes last year's Provincial savin9 of the life of 8-year old Wendell Festival winners. Colleen Johnston Hunler when ,he la,,er ,e\" ��\" hls (now Elson) and John Burnside. bicycle and tumbled into the water off A $600 subsidy to maintain an Gibsons Wharf. Jack ran to the nearest ambulance service for Gibsons this row boat and fished out Wendell. W.C. year has been approved by council. Boucher gave Wendell artificial res- Usersoftheambulanceservicewillstill piration aided by storekeeper Eric have to pay for trips to the hospital. Cooper. Gibsons Village Commission has FIFTEEN YEARS AGO given authority to Commissioner A house built in 1912bythefounder William Skellet to purchase a $4,217 of Gibsons Landing, George Gibson, GMC dump truck. situated next to the Coast News Office, Construction of a 30-room hotel by was put to the torch on advice from Vancouver businessmen was backed council for the practice of fire fighting by 22 Gibsons and District Board of by local volunteer firemen. Trade members. It is felt that a hotel The school board will terminate was essential for the growth of water transportation to Pender Har- Gibsons. tbrac.r exCp ��e��sS \"*\"' ^ Pr6Sent ^ THIRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO The possible and eventual closing of F��od BuVs at ,he Sechelt Service Store the reserve school at Sechelt was Sockeye salmon: 1/2 s 3 for 95' discussed at the district board meet- Tomato soup: Campbell's .. .6 for 69�� ing. Pupils from the reserve school will Peanut but,er: 16 oz 44 be absorbed into the public schools. Co,,ee: Nabob 1 lb 44 Laundry soap: Oxydol 27* TWENTY YEARS AGO Marmalade: Orange 2 lbs. 25' A proposition was placed before Black figs: 1 Ib 23' Gibsons Council for the placing of a Canned Peaches: 20 oz. ... 2 tins 49' Vancouver Harbour, 1909. The wooden steamer \"Joan\" had been built at Victoria family's Terminal Steam Navigation Company fleet, renamed the \"Ballena\". Ted. in 1892 for the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway, to provide a link between Winegarden saw the \"Bellena\" at Gibson's Landing, where it occasionally called on Vancouver Island and the mainland. Ada Dawe recalls the \"Joan\" while it sailed its Howe Sound run, along with the \"Defiance\", the \"Britannia\", and the under the Canadian Pacific flag prior to World War I, Captain Bill Higgs says that, \"Bowena\". In this 1909 scene, masts of sailing ships are the tallest features along the as a lad living on Mayne Island, he once salvaged the steamer's wooden keel after it city skyline. Photo courtesy Coast News and Elphinstone Pioneer Museum, had been knocked loose on a reef. In 1914, the vessel became part of the Cates L.R. Peterson Musings John Burnside Slings & Arrows ��* George Matthews The social and fashion pages of our newspapers bravely keep showering us with breathless details of the forthcoming nuptials between the Queen's eldest son and Lady Di. I say bravely because while we are digesting news about the choice of the designers for the young lady's wedding dress - it may be pink - the front pages of the newspapers are daily revealing more and more sordid spy scandals involving upper- crust Englishmen and dating back to the years before the Second World War. Most of the scandals were born in the Thirties because there were in the Thirties two equal and opposing evils disturbing the rest of those favoured few at the centre of Britain's privileged power structure. From the perspective of the English ruling classes the growth of Soviet communism was as much of a threat, or more, than the madman in power in Germany. It may be worth remembering that there is an old man still in prison in Spandau Castle who is living testimony that the German High Command was convinced that the ruling classes of Britain could be persuaded to side with the Nazis. Rudolf Hess, Hitler's right-hand man, was parachuted into Britain in the proclivities spawned by the the support of the landed aristocracy on the side of the Germans against the Soviet menace which surely threatened their infinitely privileged lives. As it turned out, badly for Rudolf Hess and Adolf Hitler, there was not the co-ordinated support for the German cause that they had hoped for. Hess was thrown in prison, Britain fought in support of the Russians, the Germans were fighting a two-front war and the rest is history. Some of the villainous spies presently being unmasked in Britain were originally entangled with the world of Soviet intelligence in the Thirties. Their anti-fascist sympathies combined with many of the furtive sexual proclivities spawned by the English public school system kept many of them as pawns of the Communists for up to forty years and revelations lately have ranged from the art advisor to Queen Elizabeth to Sir Roger Hollis who was for years head of M1.5, the British Intelligence Service. The gushing and fulsome preparations for 'the wedding of the century' in London this summer take on an even more gossamer quality with the allegations made recently in Britain that the Communist- infiltrated MI.5 thwarted an undoubtedly right wing coup against the Labour government of Harold Wilson in 1968 led, it is said, by none other than the late Lord Mount- batten, cousin of the Queen. Now, goodness knows, I have no wish to offend those for whom the gigantic and expensive and frivolous carnival of a royal wedding is sacrosanct, but surely the vision of the mother of parliaments being rescued from Britain's aristocracy by an intelligence service riddled with homosexuals being blackmailed into the service of the Soviet Union is enough to make all but the most dedicated of monarchists choke on their morning toast and tea. For my part, I cannot even say that I am unduly surprised. A constitutional monarchy to withhold the titular head of state from the bear-pit of politics is one thing, but the enormous load of free-loaders attached to the skirts of the queen - many of them drawing enormous salaries for doing very little from an impoverished country and many of them through privilege gaining positions of power and prestige that nothing in their makeup equips them to handle - is entirely a different matter. It is my conviction that many of the troubles which bedevil Britain today, which have seen it slide from a position of prominence in the world of commerce to a point where it is almost everybody's poor cousin is traceable directly to its class system of which the monarchy is the keystone or the linch-pin. The much maligned British working man has known intuitively for generations that he lives in a world of 'us and them'. 'Us', to the working man is the ill-educated masses who even when Britain was the richest country in the world eked out a desperate sub- v..������������������ ������v.-.-.-.-.v.'.y; sistence living; 'them' refers to the ruling classes of whom the poet Siegfried Sassoon said: \"Those infinitely privileged ones/ Whose lives are so padded, petrified and pleasant\" and the resentment born of the perception of that social dichotomy has brought a once-proud country to its present place as the chronic invalid of Europe. None of this matters to the social arid fashion columnists. They will continue to gush and coo about the marriage of a singularly unimpressive young man and his young lady as though it were the love story of the century or a significant something in the history of man. It may be unfortunate for Charlie and his darling that so much of the corruption which habitually surrounds British blue- bloods is percolating to the surface just when we are all suupposed to be oohing and ahing about the possibility of the royal bride wearing a gown of pink. easy or successful. [ MBS gXSBC ggggglg I sometimes wonder how Secondly, I happened to be long people have been passing reading a piece of historical off their own incompetence on literature recently that sug- the \"permissive society\". I gested that even in the past, was talking to some parents sin, decadence and permis- recently about how they siveness were a part of every- couldn't control their children day life. This book referred to because society was now so such things as stealing, lying, soft and permissive that no covetting, murdering and ad: one would take responsibility, ultery. among others. Some A few days ago 1 saw a references were even made to similar account in the Van- sodomy and buggery and a couver Sun. They complained few other practices I am about how schools were a unfamiliar with, breeding ground for sin and There was even an interest; decadence, how courts let ing little story about how this kids get away with everything ungrateful kid ran away froro from petty theft to mass home and spent a saclj fyll murder and how social work- of his dad's money. When the ers treated children as though rotten little swine came back they were people too. home broke, the old man The comments of these didn't even bawl him out. parents held a particular Instead the lily-livered father interest for me for a couple of threw a party for the wayward reasons. First, because I teach lad and welcomed him back school and I know that being as though he hadn't done a charged with the daily respon- thing wrong. If you think sibility of getting 150, 13 or 14 society is permissive towards year old people to do some- children now, you would have thing they don't consider been appalled by the way folks particularly important (at least carried on in those days, compared to certain hormonal Many, and probably most, imperatives) is not always of the parents who are complaining that they just can't control their children really do care about them. You can tell by the way they get upset, often to the point of tears, that they feel frustrated, angry, guilty, helpless and defeated. The first inclination is to blame somebody else. Among those accused of being in the vanguard of permissiveness are: western civilization, the government, the church, the school, the police, the legal system and late night ice cream parlours. The simple truth of the matter may be that parents have never learned how to control their children. There's no reason to blame parents for such a gap in their education. It's one thing to love and care for a child; it's quite another to have been trained in the art of being a good and effective parent. In many larger centres, courses are offered in training parents in how to raise children. The most difficult thing, so I'm told, is to convince people that rearing children is not a natural horn talent. Often parents feel very guilty that they don't know the skills required to bring their children up in an effective way and therefore they often refuse to seek advice; rather they will retire into blaming others, pretending to 6e understanding, trying to become youthful enough (o tolerate the excesses pf children, or just simply drinking too much. - There are books written on the subject of raising children. One of the better ones, Parent Effectiveness Training, suggests behaviour modification techniques that may be offensive to some people, but the point is that there do exist Please turn to Page Fourteen. To His Coy Mistress Had we but world enough, and time This coyness, Lady, were no crime. We would sit down, and think which way To walk, and pass our long love's day. Thou by the Indian Ganges' side Should'st rubles find: I by the tide 0/ Humber would complain. I would Love you ten years before the Flood: And you should if you please refuse Till the conversion of the Jews. My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow. An hundred years should go to praise Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze. Two hundred to adore each breast: But thirty thousand to the rest. A n age at least to every part, And the last age should show your heart. For, Lady, you deserve this state; Nor would I love at lower rate. But at my back I always hear Time's winged chariot hurrying near: And yonder all before us lie Deserts of vast eternity. Thy beauty shall no more be found, Nor, in thy marble vault, shall sound My echoing song: then worms shall try That long preserved virginity: And your quaint honour turn to dust; And into ashes all my lust. The grave's a fine and private place, But none, I think, do there embrace. Now therefore, while the youthful hue Sits on thy skin like morning dew, And while thy willing soul transpires At every pore with instant fires, Now let us sport us while we may! And now, like am'rous birds of prey. Rather at once our time devour, Than languish in his slow-chapt pow'r. Let us roll all our strength, and all Our sweetness, up into one ball: And tear our pleasures with rough strife, Through the iron gates of life. Thus, though we cannot make our sun Stand still, yet we will make him run. Andrew Marvell ��*��*��*����*-**.*.*. ***��**-*>*��������*^�����-��.��*^.**^Zi .-L ���aaMataa Letters to the Editor Coast News, March 31, 1981 Harrison a \"star witness\" too Editor: My conscience bit me last week as I read your front page interview with me. It wasn't your paper's fault. You reported what I said, faithfully. Only, some of it didn't come out the way I meant it. (For readers who tuned in late, the interview was about a Supreme Court case recently ended. The case followed a protest over B.C. Hydro power line construction). In the interview I wrongly implied that all the defendants came from Powell River except myself. Many are really from Texada Island. I mention this because objection to the power line is quite widespread, and in fact protesters came from points in B.C. as far as the Peace River. That wai bad enough, but conscience really gave me a nip when I read how I'd described our \"expert witnesses\" to your reporter. Three authorities were allowed to speak on our behalf: an economist, a molecular geneticist and our own Joe Harrison, director for Area \"A\". All three did excellent jobs. 1 was proud of Joe: he told how. our Regional District lost the battle with B.C. Hydro, so that Pender Harbour's drinking water got sprayed with herbicide. He outlined the SCRD's unsuccessful efforts to get a public hearing or in some way bring out the facts on the 500,000 volt line. Joe was first class. Yet I see in my interview I said \"the star witness\" was the geneticist, Dr. Shearer. Why? I guess she told us things most of us didnt know. \" Maybe I was doubly impressed from hearing Dr. Shearer twice - once at lunch before the court appearance and again in court. And, here's a tip: If yon are ever going to listen to a scientist (ell about poisons, don't sit In front of a plate of liver and onions. Joe Harrison, being an Area Representative is such a thankless job that I just had to write and say - you were a \"star witness\" tool P.S. To supporters interested in \"what comes next.\" We'll pay the $800 in fines, the lawyers' fees and sundries. Then if there is no more litigation we'll channel our efforts and whatever money into an organization which is forming. It promises to be useful - a \"watchdog\" body. It will work with existing organizations to study energy in B.C., hiring good lawyers at the beginnings of projects instead of the middle. We realize we should have done that with the Cheekye-Dunsmuir. We would like first-hand information on the progress of Cheekye-Dunsmuir construction anywhere along its length. If you wish to help, call 883-2434. Sincerely, Iris Griffith Cooper's Green for sale Editor: Who needs III I wonder how many people noticed the ad in the Vancouver Sun which offered for sale a piece of land known locally as Coopers Green. The piece of property was described in full detail and the suggested usage for the property was that it would be an ideal location for an eighty- room hotel I Not only that - the agent who recommended this usage actually is a resident of the area I Not actually located close enough to the green to be personally affected by such a happening, but still a local resident. And the asking price? A mere million and a halfbucksl It wasn't many months ago that the value of that property was somewhere in the region of just over a hundred thousand, but when the Lieutenant Governor in his wisdom decided that the public piece of road should be sold to the owners for eleven thousand dollars it then became automatic'that the value would jump sky high. Well - we can't say we didn't warn you I I guess a special word of thanks is due to Mr. Lee who went to bat for the owners in this matter. Thanks a lot Mr. L. Redrooffs Ratepayer Foreshore lease protested Ed. note:- A copy of this letter was given to the Coast News for publication. Hon. James Chabot, Minister of Lands, Parks and Housing, Province of British Columbia, Victoria, B.C. Re: T.D.C. Bulger and Mae G. Bulger, Foreshore of Subdivision C, Block 9, of Lot 1316, Group 1, Plan 6630 N.W.D. Roberts Creek B.C. (copy attached) Dear Sir: I would like to draw your attention to the above noted application for a foreshore lease asking for: (1) .42 hectares or approximately 1.25 Acres water lot in the Gulf of Georgia (2) for their privacy and (3) to launch a boat, and set a mooring buoy. I feel when private individuals and/or corporations start applying for foreshore leases aimed at denying the rights of other citizens to walk on and use beaches in this Province some action needs to be taken. This is a total disregard of rights and feelings of other private citizens in the areas concerned and can only lead to serious confrontations in the future. This is not the first time that this type of grievance has had to be brought to your attention. It is about time the government and your department came out with a policy statement that will guard against this type of erosion of our and our children's rights to the enjoyment of all the beaches in this Province. Yours truly, B. Mulligan New name for festival suggested Editor: . The days of Ihe Sunshine Coast Music Festival are approaching, so now is the time to consider changes in the name, ajudicators and awards. Shouldn't ihe festival's name encompass all the participating classes'.' ��� A few suggestions: \"The Sunshine Coast Performing Arts Festival\"; \"The Sunshine Coast Fine Arts Festival\"; \"Sunshine Coast Performance Festival\" or even \"Sunshine Coast Festival\". As a drama participant, it is annoying to fill out entry forms that read \"Sunshine Coast Music Festival\". Even more annoying is receiving awards that are engraved with \"Sunshine Coast Music Festival\". A name with wider scope would be more appropriate. This year's Drama ajudi- cator will have served 4 consecutive years. Gay Scriver was fine, but receiving the same advice each year doesn't allow for growth. A different ajudi- cator's view would aid this year's drama class. There are many qualified people to choose from here in B.C. Although of lesser impor tance, a final change for this 8th Annual Fine Arts Festival, might be a new style of award certificate. As a participant in each of the 8 years (and I've got the same old certificates as proof) what I've written is valid. I ask the committee to consider these changes for the 8th annual \"Sunshine Coast Fine Arts Festival\". Your very sincerely, Donard Mac Kenzie 6,000 daffodils sold EUTC TRAVEL NcwNunker . ���tt-issa F.ditor; 1 would like on behalf of the local Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society lo express our gratitude lo all who participated in our annual Daffodil Sale on March 13th. We thank the Coast News for its assistance in publicizing this event, and the ladies of the Eastern Star for the indispensible part they played by running the stalls in the shopping centres, and other people who helped in various ways. We are grateful to the management of the shopping malls in Gibsons, Sechelt and Madeira Park for their ready cooperation, and to the business people of the area who supported this event by their generous purchases of flowers. In less than two hours 6000 daffodils were sold, and we regret that there were none left for sale, in the afternoon. Next year we hope to provide more. Over $600 were obtained to send to the head office in Vancouver to promote the work of the Canadian Cancer Society. We thank all who helped us to do this, and the general public for their support. N.J. Godkin Special on Fresh Frozen SHRIMP MEAT ���3.4* Valb. Gibsons Fish Market 886-7888 BUILDING? For the best pricing and quickest service on your Window Order, give Permaseal ��� cell. Now Open Saturday! lor Pricing Permaseal Alanlnnaa Mlf. Ltd. neM M., Wtlsea Creek 885-3538 SuperAfclu SUNNYCREST CENTRE Thanks, Mr. Maxwell Editor: Msny thanks to Mr. Haig Maxwell, who assisted us in applying to the Kinsmen Rehabilitation Foundation of B.C. for help with the transportation expenses in taking our daughter Carlalea to Powell River two days a week for speech therapy. Without this help, Carlalea would not have been able to continue with her therapy. Gratefully appreciated. Clark and Corey-Anne Dougall Williams shafted Editor: At long last our Honourable Attorney-General Allan Williams has received a well- deserved shafting. The editorial printed in the Vancouver Sun, March 20, 1981, entitled 'Speedy Gonzales, is the source of this shafting'. For many months 1 and many other B.C. citizens watched with disgust the antics of the Socred leaders and their minions trying to cover up the Forged Letters���Dirty Trick. We witnessed their phoney 'attempts' to track down the culprits. This went on for five months, but note: \"The dazzling speed with which the Attorney- General dispatched the latest forged letter caper���why, the story had barely broken before it was game over and Mr. Williams was able to stamp \"case solved\" on the file.\" Has there ever been a more blatant case of discrimination! But as the editorial continues: \"Maybe we're comparing apples and oranges. The original forged letters were aimed at the NDP. But the latest letter, bearing the forged signature of Finance Minister Hugh Curtis and provincial coal czar Ron Basford, appeared to be aimed at the (Socred) government.\" So this is Justice? It seems we have a special kind in B.C. The 'dirty tricks' scandal, plus many more like it just won't stay hurried. The smell will always linger on. Sincerely. W.J. MacDonald P.O. Box 297, Madeira Park, B.C. Better���You Bet 100% Locally Owned & Operated More letters on Page 18 pixxoch ELECTRONICS ��� Typewriters OFFICE ��� Photocopiers ��� Cash Registers ��� Calculators ��� Office Supplies Furniture & Stationery Wharl Rd. Sechell 885-3735 THINKOFUSASA MATCHMAKER BUYWGDRSf.UING.THt COAff Iltl HJBSMDSIMMrWYDll! yhatlk I/OU, to all our Customers who have made our 1st Anniversary a Great Success! Denise, Allan & Grant frrdi A. r.u,lonl Landing *���. .-, Ill*** GOVT. INSPECTED ��� FRESH OR SMOKED pork picnic 1 Whoto or ShefTk Portion CANADA GRADE A BEEF '��� #���� #**��% chuck blade steak*��* ��*1.39 PREVIOUSLY FROZEN - SIDE spa re ribs M.48 BULK SLICED side bacon �� M.39 cross rib roaster �� 98* Fresh Produce California oranges A R $ Mineola Tangelos Multiplier California head lettuce...... ea ea Oven Fresh Bakery Oven-Fresh Oven-Fresh - 3 Varieties aSSOTtGC] breadieozloaves 2/$1.49 cookies Nature Plus, Honey Wheat, Great Grains Oven-Fresh Weston's cft* chop suey hollywood breadieoz 69 $1.59 $1.49 Grocery Value Foremost Family Style ice crearri4 utre cm All Flavours $0 Oft Powder **�������� detergent $7.69 Super-Valu - Fancy Frozen vegetables 2 id. bag Peas, Corn or Mixed Veg. Home Care - Utility light bulbs 40, 60, 100 watt $ I Lynn Valley - Standard tf\\f\\[ bartlettpearsi4oz 2/99 Canada Dry 98 ginger ale /somi 2/99 Deposit Del Monte - Fancy ._ . _ _ * I Quick As A Wink x ... 1 /Q(M I _. ��� ... vegetablesi4oztins cl Cream Corn or Assorted Peas 2/89 cake mixeseoz Pk92/99 Super-Valu salad dressing *l .49 1 Litre Jar 3 Varieties Colgate toothpaste $1.19 . ���... ._^ ^-^ tMMiarin mtm m Coast News, March 31, 1981 RUNAWAY JILL Were it not for Bart Clapperton. the schism would be almost complete. The rest of the crew are local men who couldn't care less about my Vancouver associations but (he big hooktender exhibits considerable curiosity. Since we have become quite good friends, I confide in him to a certain extent He nods sagely and allows how he wouldn't mind to meet some of \"these beatnik characters.\" I figure he'd scare hell out ofthe rather timid subterraneans who inhabit Skeet's Castle and don't rise lo the bait. Ihe eround on Goatfoot Mountain grows progressively worse as we tough out way across it. We are working the far Mile of an enormous gully and the yarding cables are strung out over fifteen hundred feet. At the back end of this sprawling setting, the last shoulder of the mountain rears sheerly and there is an enormous rockslide. At one point, there are no stumps whatsoever on which to hang our roadline Pages from a Life-Log Peter Trower block. We are forced to reach a hundred feet back up the slide and make our tailhold on a big .standing cedar that either withstood Ihe avalanche or burrowed up through il. The resultant hook-up gives us an unusual amount of lift and the chokers sail back freely. Bul that rock-rooted cedar is not as solid as it looks. One fateful turn, my electric belt-whistle fails to blow the stop-signal. Unchecked, the heavy rigging goes rattling past us and crashes into the block. I'crhaps the tree has been weakened by the rockfall. In any event, the strain Is too much for it and it comes toppling slowly and horrifyingly over, kicking free several big boulders as it falls. We run like hell as it comes whistling down, hits the ground with an earthquaking thump and shatters into several pieces. In our haste to get out of the tree's V FRIDAY DINNER SPECIAL Shrimp a la King 0 Teredo Square, Sechelt Reservations Advised 885-9962 Gibsons Legion Branch \"109 k Presents ��� \"Bernie & Red\" Fri. & Sat. April 3rd & 4th A Members & Guests Only *k DANCE TO VALDY JFriday and Saturday L April 10 and 11 Roberts Creek [Community Hall Tickets: *7.*�� at Seaview Market No Minors ^ Sponsored by Ihe Roberts Creek Community Association - Ways and Means Committee sunshine coast women's program presents the conference the changing !vorld of yomen and - !vork PURPOSE To meet with representatives of the Ministry of Labour - Canada Employment and Immigration - Capilano College and local Educators who will bring information regarding job skill training to women of the Peninsula. To focus on job training needs of the women of this particular community, for recommendations to Government Agencies and Ministries. - To offer free, professional, individual counselling on career choice and skill training, later in April, by appointment. TO REGISTER call Deborah Mcllrath Pre-regislratlon a must lor child care 885-2391 St hiIda'S hall bornacle st,sechelt friday opril 0. 7:00-9.00 p.m. soturdoy opril 4, ftPO-P-OP path, we almost forget about the boulders. They come can- nonballing down and one huge rock almosts clobbers Big Bart. \"Dammit. I make too good a target!\" he declares, seemingly unruffled. We set about the knotty lask of cleaning up the mess and getting the show operational again. Thus it goes on dangerous Goatfoot Mountain. That weekend, I throw on my street-clothes and head for the city to pursue my other life. There is a delapidated school- bus parked outside Skeet's unconventional premises. It bears Ontario license-plates. Apparently, there are new arrivals. A party is in progress. There is a plethora of wine and beer and a scattering of less- orthodox intoxicants. Donovan is chanting the cryptic words of Sunny Goodge Street on the stereo. All the regulars are present and there are several new faces. Skeet introduces me to this latest clutch of wanderers. There are six of them; two girls and a guy from Montreal and two guys and a girl from Toronto. The last mentioned is a small blonde girl with soft brown eyes. Her name is Jill Craigmont and she is not especially pretty but something about her stirs more than a passing interest in me. It is part physical attraction and part something else. I just have an overwhelming urge to know her. But I assume one of the other bus-people must be her old man so I keep my distance at first. Then, unbelievably, she comes over to me. \"Skeet was telling me you write poetry,\" she says. She has the breathless, guileless voice of a little girl. Her big eyes gaze frankly into mine. It is like the answer to an unspoken wish and I am taken aback for a second. \"Well, yeah, I fool around with it,\" 1 mutter in a confusion of embarrassment and joy. \"Me too,\" she says magically and suddenly, we are sitting together on a couch, nattering away like old friends. Jill is a dropped-out English major, the youngest daughter of a wealthy Toronto family. She is an authentic runaway, on the lam from a strict and overly possessive mother. \"Hell, she used to follow me down to Yorkville to find out what I was up to. RealU freaked all my friends. I just couldn't hack her paranoia anymore.\" Jill is nineteen and looks younger but she has already gone through several lovers and a string of wild adventures \"I ran away once before. Madi it across the line and went down to Greenwich Village. I met Phil Ochs, the folk-singer and we lived together for a couple of months. He introduced me to all kinds of heavy people: Dave Van Ronk, Fred Neil even Bobby Dylan. He's a really neat guy, Phil. He set a couple of my poems to music. Then my damn mother put a skip-tracer on me and got me shipped back to Canada. It was really a downer. She started watching me like a hawk after that.\" She rambles on breathlessly about her underground experiences. \"One time when the Beatles were in Toronto, my girl-friend and 1 sneaked backstage and hid in their dressing- room. 1 even got to say a few words to John Lennon before they threw us out. I was a real groupie in those days.\" Jill talks as though she is years older than she is but I find her utterly bewitching. I finally manage to steer the talk around to her present romantic status. \"I'm not with anybody right now,\" she declares, amazingly. \"I started out with Carl over there\" ��� she indicates a thin, dark kid - \"but we had a big hassle in Alberta and we're not together anymore.\" It is all too good to be true. 1 am insanely falling in love with her and we have only just met. The almost seventeen years that separate us don't seem to matter in the first flood of infatuation. Maybe the wine is clouding my judgement but the age-gap seems of trifling significance. Hell, we're both poets. What more do we need? Later, I essay a couple of noisy songs with the Fallons. Turns out that Jill is a devout blues-fan too. By theend ofthe evening. I have talked her into coming back to Sully's Cove with me, stressing that it is a great place to write. 1 can barely believe this unscheduled turn of events. To be continued. Gubenko film at the Arts Centre Those wishing to see good adult films close to home should consider joining the Pender Harbour film series which meets every second Thursday at Madeira Park gym at 7:30 p.m. The Russian production Orphans, 1976, was directed and written by Nikolai Gubenko. It was considered one of the best of the 1978 Toronto Festival of Festivals. It will be shown April 2. This highly autobiographical film, using present day orphans in the childrens' roles, balances nostalgia and maturing wisdom as it depicts the learning experiences of Alexei Bertenev. On April 16, the final film of the series, The Wages of Fear, directed in France/Italy by Henri-Georges Clouzot, will be seen. This Grand Prix winner at the Cannes Festival is Clouzot's most powerful and mostcontroversial film. The plot, a parable of man's position in the modern world, involves the desperate attempt of four European workers to escape the South American town, owned by an American oil company. The same series of films will be shown Wednesday evenings at 8:00 p.m. at the Sunshine Coast Arts Centre, Sechelt, B.C. rim ri ii ii i mi Ellinfihum '$ �� Astrology Veteran of many Ingmar Bergman films, actor Max Von Sydow gets into a different role as Ming the Merciless in \"Flash Gordon\", al the Twilight Theatre. At the Twilight Twilight Theatre this week will feature a science fiction fantasy and a thriller starring two of the screen's most notable actors. The science fiction fantasy is Flash Gordon, starring Sam J. Jones and Melody Anderson as the embattled hero and heroine and Max von Sydow as the evil galactic dictator Ming the Merciless. The fast-moving tale of good versus evil will keep the audience enthralled. Flash Gordon will be shown Wednesday through Saturday, April 1-4. The week's thriller is The Formula starring Marlon Brando and George C. Scott. The Formula will have only three showings, Sunday through Tuesday, April 5-7. Community Forum Channel Ten GIBSONS CHANNEL TEN MARCH 31 SECHELT CHANNEL TEN APRIL 2 6:00 p.m. \"Suncoast Happenings\" This week's update is a first for the Community Broadcasting class at Elphinstone with a brand- new format. Our two hosts, Brian Beard and Kathleen Hall have five headlines written in cooperation with several students in the class. \"Spring has Arrived\", written by Kim Schachte is the first of these, which gives tips on planting and informs us about the weather. Dianne Parry wrote the script on the two Cadet boats that recently visited Gibsons and Jo-Ann Hanson wrote the Ocean Pearl story. Coast 10 also took to the sky and shot some footage up the coast. A story to accompany this was written by our host, Brian. Finally, an update on the school's vandalism, written by Peter Goodwin, concludes our headlines. Two feature interviews are also presented this *$ CRAD VARIETY J* k\\�� Saturday April 4th *\" 7:00 pm Music & Comedy & Dance *tm week. The first of these is introduced by Peter, who is the host as well. He interviews Dr. Mike MacNeil, a psychologist, along with Deirdre Dempster and Kim Schachte. The second feature is introduced by Anne Watt, who interviews Susan Frizzell, a long-term care worker residing in Wilson Creek. The technical crew are Mark Boothroyd; camera and David Atlee, sound. The program was edited by Kenna Marshall. SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUR SECHELT VIEWERS Thursday April 2, 7:00 on Channel 10 Our producer, host, Vene Parnell, will be hosting a live phone-in show in the Sechelt station. The topic is the B.C. Hydro gas pipeline. With Vene will be MLA Don Lockstead and Ron Blakely, manager of B.C. Hydro's Gas Engineering division. This is our first live show in Sechelt and we hope you participate. The phone number is 885- 3224. Technical crew will be made up of Elphi students Kenna Marshall, Peter Austin and Anne Watt. Please join us! Gibsons' viewers will see the show on Tuesday, April 7. We are: Coast 10 Television c/o Elphinstone Secondary, Box 770, Gibsons. by Rae Ellingham Week Commencing: March 30 General Notes: The New Moon conjoins Venus and Mars bringing highly romantic conditions. More people fall in love this week than at any other time of the year. It's a favourable time lo launch a new partnership or business arrangements, especially those requiring courage and hard work. Persons getting married next weekend will he glad they did. Babies born end of this week will be energetic, impulsive, passionate and extremely attractive to members of the opposite sex. ARIES (March 21 - April 19) The New Moon. Venus and Mars in your sign highlight your irresistible personality. Others now find you vivacious and romantic. Your sexual energy shifts into top gear. More Aries persons fall in love this week than any other sign. Those born April I - 6 attract admiring glances, compliments, special attention. Meanwhile continue to analyse longdistance messages. TAURUS (April 20 - May 20) New Moon brings chance of an irresponsible involvement. Looks like secret meetings with neglected or confined person will have to become more discreet. Try to resist charming advances of nurse, doctor or associate linked to local institution. Scrutinize facts and figures guaranteed by acquaintance. GEMINI (May 21 - June 21) New Moon says you'll want to pursue fascinating person introduced at local get-together. Looks like casual acquaintance may soon become intimate ally. Happiness is result of sharing your ideas with less talented associate. It's the right time to resume negotiations with community group or committee regarding your summer plan. Meanwhile the boss's partnership proposal still looks confusing. CANCER (June 22 - July 22) New Moon warns boss or superior will be feeling a- morous. flirtatious, a little naughty. You can now charm or manipulate long-awaited promotion or assignment You'll be pleased with results of upcoming interviews. Expect to receive gift from supervisor who appreciates your rare skills. Long-distance phone call is puzzling on Sunday. Persons born July 6 - 8 are attracted to older, sophisticated colleagues. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22) New Moon announces happy news from a distance. Prepare to receive loving or romantic messages by phone or mail. It's a favourable time to start long journey or fresh educational pursuits. Many Leo students now become infatuated with favourite teacher or expert. Partner's gamble means sad loss next weekend. Aug. 6-8 birthdays arc attracted to passing strangers. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22) New Moon emphasises need for fresh attitude towards other people's money and possessions. Partner or business associate is ready lo discuss details of shared financial arrangements. Banker or advisor will give go-ahead to your latest. cash-making scheme. Loved one is lucky recipient of surprise gift or bonus next weekend. Misunderstanding where you live is result of innocent slip-of-the-tongue. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - Oct. 23) '���: New Moon spotlights happier partnership agreements. It's the right time to discuss fairer ground rules with competitor or enemy. Meanwhile you'll find loved one in highly demonstrative or passionate mood. Single l.ibrans are bound to meet that longed-for companion at next weekend's' social event. Love-match ofthe year occurs when Oct. 8 Libra smiles at April 5 Aries. SCORPIO (Oct. 24 - Nov, 22) New Moon brings plcasantcr conditions al jobsitc or place of regular duties. You'll be suddenly attracted to co-worker who's usually ignored. Say yes to off-duty invitation. Passing health upset is result of over indulgence. Have a doctor cheek out recurring head ache. ' Child in your life need special guidance regarding money, possessions, true value of luxury item. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 - Dec. 21) New Moon promises a romantic weekend you'll never' forget. Social activities bring several opportunities for lasting companionship. Creative energy reaches spectacular high. Ihe time is ripe for Sagittarians longing for child-' ren of their own. More Sagittarians score bingo or lottery' wins than any other sign. Persons born Dec. 7 should seek out pleasure-loving Aries ��� born April 5. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) New Moon coincides with' happier domestic arrange-' nienls. There's much love and ' ��� understanding amongst household members. It's the perfect' week to end time-wasting'' family ,1'eud. If possible, arrange surprise reunion where'-' you live. Your place is the best ��� place for wild weekend get- together. Put aside important : correspondence till later. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) New Moon coincides with'' flirtatious interchanges on the ��� phone or during short jour1 '��� neys. It's time to smile and- ��� speak lo that person who rides- '������ the same daily bus. ferry, train or plane. Decision to hitch-hike ' may introduce love-of-a-life- ��� time next weekend. Hesitate no ��� longer to send love note to the- neighbour you're crazy about.' Don't leave purse or valuables unattended at Friday's group meeting. PISCES (Feb. 19 - Mar. 20) New Moon spotlights your ', money and possessions. Advice ! is be aware of your true financial situation. Temptation j soon is to overspend on luxury ; or prestige item. Leave charge J cards and cheque book at home next weekend. You'll be re- j ceiving surprise gifts and j packages Sunday. Mercury in ; your sign squaring Neptune says watch out for slippery . surfaces during local trips. \"DANCE*\" to the beat of 42nd STREET (Music tor any age) Saturday April 18th Sechelt Legion Hall 9 pm -1 am Tickets: S5.\"�� ea. Available at: Book Store. Sechelt Seaview Market. R.C Tunle Muisle, Glbsom warn A good related job\"? ff the shelf by John Moore A Statistics Canada report released last week indicates that a large number of this country's college and university graduates wind up in jobs unrelated to their educational studies. The report states that most students regret their choice of subjects and want studies directly related to the labour market. According to an account of the report in last Wednesday's Vancouver Sun, \"the days of education for education's sake are over as far as students are concerned\". Oddly enough, the account carried in the Sun, a Canadian Press wire service story out of Ottawa, mentions only two actual statistics; that women earn approximately 9% less than men over all and that a 25% disparity exists between the wages of male and female employees of the federal government. Maybe it's only me. I realize that reading a report,, or even a report of a report, studded with statistics is about as exciting as settling into your favourite chair with a plumbing catalogue. Still, it does seem a little weird for Statistics Canada to collect and prepare five years worth of essentially mathematical data then have it reduced to less than a dozen paragraphs that are truly stunning in their vagueness and generality. What follows is. only one of dozens of possible pearls: \"Generally, they want to study fields that will help them land a good related job with decent wages and a fair level of personal day-to-day satisfaction\". 1 think I love that one because the mercifully anonymous reporter even began the sentence with the word \"generally\". He and his editor may now be washing dishes for a living. Let's hope it's for \"decent wages and a fair level of personal day-to-day satisfaction\". Alright, enough quibbling. Aside from the fact that the sentence quoted is so loaded with undefined, and possibly undefinable, terms as to be completely meaningless, we somehow feel that we know what the reporter is getting at and, in fact, we do, A few RDPBoohsrore Fine Booka See our ad aa the Community hours spent in any university cafeteria will confirm the impression conveyed, however ineptly, by the hapless reporter. It may also give rise to an even more alarming impression; that the reporter may not be so hapless after all and that the vacuous cliche-ridden sentence quoted above is a perfectly accurate reflection, not of the mind of the reporter, but of the minds of most university students and graduates at the present time. In a short four years, two at Cap College and two at the University of British Columbia, I was repeatedly astounded by the number of my fellow students who had not the slightest idea what they wanted to do but who studiously forged ahead, jumping through one academic hoop after another, with an absolute faith that when they graduated Bachelor of Somethingor- other they would be assured of \"a good related job with decent wages and a fair level of personal day-to-day satisfaction\". By that they appeared to mean a job that was interesting to them personally, not routine or tedious, at which you could wear the clothing of your choice, with a salary starting between $20,000 and $30,000 per year and from which you could come home and be assured of a carefree night's sleep. The painful truth is that most students regard a college certificate or university degree like a \"Chance\" card in Monopoly that allows you to Get Out of Jail Free. Most of them are killing time, at the expense of their parents or of a government that is all too willing to lend them money to stay in the educational system and off the unemployment rolls. If 75% of the first year college and university students in this country went straight into the labour force instead of onto campus the shock wave would probably . bring down the government. Certainly it may be argued that the structure of the educational system from high school on up, with its emphasis on specialization and constant pressure to narrow the field of studies, \"declare Gibsons Gibsons Public library Tuesday .2 - 4 pm Wednesday 2 - 4 pm Thursday 2-4 & 7-9 pm Saturday 2 - 4 pm 886-2130 ^��� v a major\" etc., fosters the assumption by students that all this work is \"directed\" to some end. But the desire for a job \"related\" to their studies somehow fails to jibe with their constant complaints that the course material at institutions of higher learning consists of little more than a series of tedious academic hoops to be jumped through. If you find your studies dull and unprofitable, maybe you are in the wrong classroom. The argument that a course of studies at university doesn 't prepare you for life is full of holes, on still another level. The Statistics Canada report says that \"many graduates still find in searching for their jobs that it's not what you know, but who you know \" Any student who has four years at a university and failed to notice the enormous game of interdepartmental power politics, the promotion of excellent teachers into positions as inefficient bureaucrats, the jockeying for important chairmanships and deanships, and the importance of cultivating the \"right\" professors as faculty and thesis advisors, has been in a coma. It's sad to say, but a four to six year course of studies at university is perfect preparation for life as a junior executive for a large corporation. Where was I? Oh yes, books. There may be a lesson in the fact that four years of college or university will give you one thing, a large collection of really marvellous books that you'll have plenty of time to read after you graduate. All for now. library New books for adults at the Gibsons Public Library this month include, in the non- fiction shelves, Terror in the Starboard Seat by Dave Mcintosh, Measure of the Year by Roderick L. Haig- Brown, and Again Calls the Owl by Margaret Craven. On the fiction shelves, look for The Ghosts of Africa by Williarh Stevenson, Sea Fever by Antony Trew, and The Mad Trapper by Rudy Wiebe. Garden Bay Dining Lounge Please Phone , For Reservations Friday Night Dinner lor at Special: *14.*> Dinner Roll. Soup or Salad 6 oz. Sirloin Baked Potato, Vegetable Coflee OURS: THURS., FRI., SAT. 6 PM - 10:30 PM SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 AM - 2:30 PM Coast News, March 31, 1981 Grads present variety show You are cordially invited to attend an oldtime vaudeville variety show to be held at Elphinstone, Saturday, April 4th, 7:00 p.m. Mr. Madoc-Jones hosts this grad show that includes music, mime, dance and features a piano performance by festival winner Tony English. The show has been produced by the Elphinstone graduates of 1981. We hope to see you there I In a gesture of good will and best wishes, the Gibsons Fish Market business is symbolically handed over from the old owners, the sisters Jane Graham and Ann Pinsonnault, to the new owners, Doug and Mary Solomon. From the left: Ann, Doug, Mary and Jane, Emaaana NEW RELEASES Charles, Prince of Wales ��� Anthony Holden Guinness Book of Wold Records ��� Norris McWhirler Will, The Autobiography of G.Gordon Liddy The Old Patagonian Express ��� Paul Theroux The Emperor's Virgin - Sylvia Fraser Duncton Wood William Horwood S Timber Days yiUm CaMette craft fair planned We are now selecting participants for our Timber Days Craft Fair to be held in the Arts Centre, May 17. We are . planning a festive day with live music, a homemade bagel booth, and a display of interesting local crafts located indoors and out. Participants will be chosen based on variety and the quality of their work. All items must be handmade. There will be a $5.00 registration fee and 10% commission on sales up to $50. Since there is limited space please get in touch with Evi Blueth at 886-7139 or 885-2687 as soon as possible. Book Look by Murrie Redman Flight Deck: Memoirs of an Airline Pilot by George Lothian, McGraw-Hill Ryerson c 1979, $16.95 I know nothing about flying airplanes despite many hours of flight time as a passenger. George Lothian's account of the early days of Trans-Canada Airlines makes for fascinating reading. The man puts life into a history which is full of close calls, good fellowship and an interest in the best of service. All good tales begin at the beginning and, fortunately, George was there in the early days of commercial flight. He started out green as a kid who wanted to graduate from the wooden World War One fighter plane in his back yard, to the real thing. Even the disaster which took the life of his flying teacher in mid-training did not stop him. He went on to become one of the first pilots in the growing national airline. Furthermore, he married one of its first stewardesses. Lothian's book drops more names than paratroopers, and many of those connected with the fledgling Aero Club of B.C. will know them. TCA, as it was called in those days, had an honourable list of war heroes on its roster. To these people, flying was second nature, not to mention, instinctive. George describes the sixth sense that top pilots have which often causes them to anticipate a problem or find their way out of one. Contents are arranged in chronological order. There is a nice historical record in the back of the book. My only criticism, and it is one which can be remedied in future editions, is the lack of an index. Perhaps Lothian did not consider that his book was reference material. Would that more informational records were as interesting to read! A mid-section of photographs calls up romantic visions of camaraderie and tale-telling sessions around the bar with the Wiffenpoof song in the background. There are 1929 biplanes, pictures of the honourable and now venerable crews. It is hard to believe that it was not that many decades ago that passengers had to wear oxygen masks during flights, and ominously stewardesses were nurses. For truly readable history about one of the forces that shaped the country, try this delightful book by George Lothian. Entertainment Scene Pender Harbour to Sechelt Garden Bay Hotel Art & Jim, Fri. only Lord Jim's Lodge Reg Dickson, Sat. only Jolly Roger Inn Lee Taylor, Fri. & Sat. Wakefield Inn Bob Gleason, Thurs., Fri. & Sat. The, Parthenon Helen Sinclair, Fri. & Sat. Sechelt Legion '.. Russ Clark, Fri. & Sat. Gibsons Peninsula Hotel \"The House Rockers\", Fri. & Sat. The Cedars Stephen Hubert, Wed. & Thurs. Stephen Hubert & Lome Jones, Fri. & Sat. Gibsons Legion Bernie & Red, Fri. & Sat. ���������������������������������eMBBaa Swanson's Swanson's Concrete Products Ltd. Manufacture & Sale of Septic TanKs wall cribbing curds, ner nocks, etc. 985-9666 Box 172 Sechelt, B.C. V0N3A0 885-5333 RENTALS Over 100 Programs In Inventory Travelogues Movies Local Events VHS or Beta Format 885-3666 J.BaM.'S design Signs Professional Sign Painting & Truck Lettering Call John 886-7350 PEOPLE COME FIRST AT PRICES EFFECTIVE: WED. - SAT. APRIL 1 - 4 IER gtX%WmtS\\0k��Pmmmm\\)M \"IHMrSlft ��� Campbells ��� Cream of MUSHROOM SOUP io�� 39* Pacific Instant SKIM MILK POWDER is* *5.69 COFFEE WHITENER 375��. ' 1.49 I.G.A. - Reconstituted APPLE JUICE 48oz 99* Motts CLAMAT0 JUICE ��.: 4.69 I.G.A. - All Purpose FLOUR 10**5.99 Kellofg's BRAN FLAKES ��oo,m 89* K,I,0B'S <����� A A SPECIAL K 475*��� '1.99 I.G.A. - Random Weight CHEESE R^u,. 10% MARGARINE 11.. 53' Can.da Dry GINGER ALE 750m, 2/$1.25 Blue Ribbon COFFEE i.b $2.89 PINEAPPLE JUICE ��oz 99' Scottiei Sunkist LEMONS FACIAL TISSUES 200, 79' Tide LAUNDRY DETERGENT mitr. '7.49 LIQUID BLEACH mm. $1.09 ��� Come to iMadm - uflf Qmii Canada Grade A Tiblerite Beel , #.��.��.% BONELESS ROUND STEAK.. '2.99 Whole Government Inspected, Frozen PORK SIDE RIBS '1.59 Previously Frozen SLICED BEEF LIVER ib. 99' Tablerite SIDE BACON 5oo.mPk, '1.79 Fresh. Pacific COD FILLETS ��, '1.89 Westvale - Deluxe or Gourmet VEGETABLE MIX .ooz 75' Carnation < HASH BROWNS 2ib, 59' Rupert Brand FISH CAKES 11. 89' California HI FRESH BROCCOLI �� 59' Size 115 O/0.7 California CAULIFLOWER �������. 4.99 PENDER HARBOUR POOL SCHEDULE Look for Now Spring Schadula April 3rd In your mall box. Until than, rtftr lo this rtgular Wlnttr Schadula. For apodal claiaaa and olhtr Information, tttaphono U3-2612. Early Itrd twHn MuHNoontwtm PuMIc Noon Swim M, W. F, 7.30 - 0 im TA Th.. 1230- 1.30 pm. M*F, 12:30-1:30 pm. I M. T. W. 6 30 -8 30 pm TH 6:30-8 00 pm Su , 2 ��� 4 pm. AMI Inning S��rlm M. T. W 8 30 - 10 pm Th 0-10 pm Totn Only Swim Su 7 30 pm -9 30 pm UdtttSwIm T &Th. 1 30 - 2 30 pm PWMtATot M. IF.1.30-230 PuMk WMktnd Swim Su.. 2 - 4 pm Su.. 6 - 10 pm PENDER HARBOUR CENTRE Madeira Park.883-9100 We reaerve Iht right to limit quantiilti jtwrn m Coast News, March 31, 1981 Valdy plays next week by Norton 886-9609 i\\ l.ai>i><-nni<>s Family program offered by Roth Forrester 885-2418 Gymnaatlca for the family. The Halfmoon Bay Recreation Commission has come up with what should prove to be a very popular activity in which the whole family can participate. Starting on the Thursday of April 23rd at the Welcome Beach Hall, the class will be open to children up to and including grade three. The children must be accompanied by an adult and it is hoped that those adults will join in the gymnastics. Exercise is good, no matter what age you are. The time will be from 2:45 till 3:45 p.m., the fee is ten dollars per family for ten sessions. The children will be dropped off the school bus at the hall straight after school, provided that the driver be given a note each week to this effect. Those who wish to register for this very promising program should call Diana Gruner at 885-2978. Because ofthe spring break the next Recreation meeting will be held a week earlier than usual, April 6th at the Wickwire home 7:30 p.m. Phone 885-9750. A good turnout is hoped for as it is coming along towards time when discussions will be taking place regarding the summer Country Fair. This Fair is a joint effort between the Recreation Commission and the Welcome Beach Community Association. The suggestion was made that for this year the Recreation group may like to do it alone, but they decided that as it is always a joint effort they would prefer it to continue as such. It is actually the one occasion of the year when the two groups get together, and it is usually lots of fun for everyone. It would be nice if we could get some new ideas for booths and events for this summer's fair. Get the thinking caps on folks I Happy St. Patrick's night: A good night was had by all at the Welcome Beach Community Hall last Saturday when the occasion was duly celebrated in the traditional manner with dancing and singing. The music for the evening was a variety of Irish and you name itl Some local musicians presented a program of traditional Irish airs played on violin, concertina and tin whistle. Katie Anger- meyer of Redrooffs on violin was accompanied by Dan Bowman in the playing of some good toe-tapping jigs along with some of the more nostalgic sad airs. The twosome played well together and the audience was most appreciative of these good people giving of their time and talents to entertain. The evening continued with dancing to records which ranged from the thirties right up to date, as well as a few vocal solos from some of the talented folks in the group. Highlights of the vocal part of the evening was a solo sung in Norwegian by the mother of Tor Orre of Redrooffs who, in her 87th year can still carry a tune to perfection. She was the star of the evening in more ways than one. You should have seen her do the polka! Paul Hansen played the accordion as a change from the organ for this evening and joining him was his friend Joe Hampton who was visiting from Vancouver and who played a marvellous banjo. In all, it was a really happy evening. There was another most enjoyable evening at the Hall on Thursday when some forty people were treated to a showing of slides of the Lawsons' travels. Hospital Auilllary: A reminder to members and to those of you who would care to join this group of ladies who keep busy doing work towards patient comfort, that the regular monthly meeting will be on Monday, April 6th at Welcome Beach Hall at 8 p.m. A reminder too about getting your plants in containers for the plant sale on April 18th. If you wish any advice or help in deciding what you should be transplanting or thinning out you could give Jean Scott a call and she would be happy to advise. The Humming Birds. There have been several calls following last week's mention of the first humming bird of the season. One man called to say that he had been feeding one all winter long. I wonder how many people keep on feeding them all summer long. This is really not a good idea because they should really be heading south with all the rest of the birds in late summer. One should really take in their feeders in early July so that the humming birds can fend for themselves because there are plenty of pollens around by then. If they are not encouraged to the feeders they will then follow their natural instinct and go where they should be going. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - Joan Huestis Fosler photo By-law Enforcement Officer A.E. Pollock looks efficient in his handsome new uniform. At the moment the tickets he gives out are only courtesy warnings and involve no money but soon overtime and incorrect parking will hit Sechelt motorists and visitors in the pocketbook. Alas...the old ways ebb. Arthritis van visits Angela Fairleigh, occupational therapist with The Arthritis Society B.C. Division will be making her first trip this year up the Sunshine Coast with the mobile occupational therapy van. Mrs. Fairleigh will be treating arthritis patients on referral from ihe family doctors at Gibsons on Monday. April 6; Tuesday. April 7; Thursday, April 9 and Friday, April 10. Stic will be at Madeira Park on Wednesday. April 8 and Thursday morning, April 9. At Gibsons, Mrs. Fairleigh will he working in conjunction wiih Joanne Rottluff of Gibsons Health Unit and al Madeira Park with Dr. R.H. Eastey of the I'ender Harbour and District Community Health Centre. The van makes two trips a year into the Sunshine Coast communities, one in the Spring, the other in the fall. f. worm, warmer, warmest daniadown CMK it-'- t I Ojnuflaitn CI IH tnirn, , dDfi guirinttt al MNffl se-rCjo- \"���'���I(!���,'��� TH iKonWfl post - . Miictung dip* JtfWtt J.iiiiWf ftMse eocuct u: Ctnti i\" leindc I M daniadown quilts ltd. SUNSHItW INTERIORS NO IT H ID. a KIWANIS WAV OIUOH��. M6-8187 J Valdy The rumours have been confirmed - after the success of last year's double-header, \"Valdy\" is returning to Roberts Creek for another two-night engagement. He'll be at the Roberts Creek Community Hall next weekend, April 10 and 11. Tickets are a rare bargain at S7.50 each and they should be available at Seaview Market this week. Both dances were quick sell-outs last time so be sure to get your tickets early. You don't want to miss it. Help the Daze. There's no problem getting support for Roberts Creek Daze when the time comes - the Daze is one of the most popular of the local celebrations. It's a real community effort and everybody joins in on the fun. But it takes a lot of planning to make it a success and tKat usually falls on the shoulders of a few, who are consequently burned out after one Daze and reluctant to take on the responsibility of the next one. That's why we need lots of people to help organize the activities, share the workload and make it fun for everyone concerned. So don't wait until the last minute to ask if you can help. Come to the Daze meeting at the Hall tomorrow (Wednesday) at 7:30 with your ideas and sign up for a job. On the agenda. In an attempt to keep meetings short and to the point, the Community Association is introducing a new procedure: all matters to be discussed must be entered on an agenda before the meeting. Matters not on the agenda will be discussed only if the open meeting votes to discuss them. If you wish to have an item added to the agenda phone Gail Cromie at 885-3469 or Dennis Davison at 885-2101 before the monthly meeting. The next meeting is Wednesday, April 15. Play Ball. The Roberts Creek Ladies Softball Team has had several Sunday practices but if anyone's interested, there's still time to join them. Phone 886-9609 for practice time. New Horizons ExecotJve. A general meeting of the Elphinstone New Horizons was held on Monday, March 23, at the Community Hall for the express purpose of electing a new committee, all other business being suspended. After a few remarks outlining the election procedure, the president called on Mrs. Minnie Kirkland, chairperson of the Nominating Committee to read the list of offices to be filled with the names of the nominees. When nominations from the floor produced no further candidates, nominations were closed and the following officers were elected by acclamation with duties becoming effective at the end of March: President, Mrs. Marion Cupit; Secretary, Mr. Len Hornet; Treasurer, Mrs. Dorothy Bruce; Hall Manager, Mr. Bill Grose; Social Convenor, Mrs. Minnie Kirkland; Ways and Means (raffles, bingo, etc.), Mrs. Olive Provencal; Librarian, Mrs. Lillian Thomas; Publicity, Mrs. Madelene' Grose; Historic (photos, scrapbook, etc.), Mrs. Betty Merrick. Notice of the Regular Council Meeting to be held on Wednesday, April 1.1981 at the Village Office at 7:30 pm. AGENDA Mlnulei: Minutes of Ihe Regular Council meeting ot March 18.1981 Minutes of the Management Committee Meeting ol March 18, 1981 Matter. Arising From Minul.i: Accounts: Accounts Payable lo March 31. 1981 Committee Reports: Alderman Brown - Arena, Public Works Alderman Kolibas - Planning, Library and Health Alderman Stelck - Finance, S.C.R.C. Parks and Recreation Alderman Lee - Management. Airport. Tourism Correspondence: 1. Cameo Industries Lid - Zoning Certificate - Lol J U B C M - re 1981 Provincial Budget U B.C M - Financial Administration Act A V I M - re Conlerence on Juvenile Crime Prevention Sunshine Coasi Arts Council - 1980 Financial Statement Timber Days Committee - grant and use of Hackett Park 6 C Assessment Authority - 1981 Mill Rate Sunshine Coast Community Service Society By-Laws: ,�� . -. , ��� ���,. _ , J.M.A. Shanks Any Other Business: Cl.rt.-Tr.a.Ur.r Ad|ournment: This Public Notice is Sponsored by 2 SECHELT ESSO j MAXWELL'S PHARMACY YOUR COMPLETE HEALTH CARE CENTRE * Fast Prescription Service * Health Care Accessories * Almay Hypoallergenic Cosmetics * Patient Aids (Sales & Rentals) crutches, comodes, bed pans, canes, etc. 107 cedar Plaza. Gibsons 886-8158 OPEN SUNDAYS Noon to a pm. WTCHEN Grill'N Oven Brush $2.50 Industrial strength steel bristles strip away burnt-on grease and grime...working hard so you don't have to! Clean your barbeque grill or oven rack quickly, easily, thoroughly! Rust-proof steel \"neck\", styrene handle, hang-up slot, 7V4\". The Social Convenor delegated the weekly refreshments and kitchen duties to Mrs. Emily Horner and Mrs. Margaret Crawford respectively. A vote of thanks was extended to Mrs. Kirkland and Mrs. Cupit for their efforts on the nominating committee which was the contributing factor in keeping the business meeting to within a 15-minute period. Miss Ena Harrold rose to thank the members for their \"get well\" cards and good wishes sent to her while she was in hospital recently. Crib Ends. Thursday night crib at the Legion closed the season last week with a party and extra prizes. Marcel McNabb had the highest total for the night, Lil Flumerfelt won first high total game score, Vi Kluserits second, and Tom Des Lauriers third. Ernie Kluserits won for best attendance. Slow down. Roberts Creek is becoming much more populated and, accordingly, the Highways Department is posting lower speed limits. The limit throughout most of the Creek is now 30 m.p.h. (50 km.p.h.) so watch it and slow down. Still Some '\"SPECIALS\" Dresses Tops 1/2 Price Items Lots of Spring Cf Summer Styles SHICMS owrie St., Sechelt 885-29161 CURTAINS Ready to Hang Assorted Sizes Now available at TRAIL BAY CENTRE CO ^ ft'Wtf Const Community ,sCa. Adult Day Care Homemaker Service Meals on Wheels ^ s, p( V/,. Tuesday - 31 March 1981 at 7:30 p.m. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Room 101 - Elphinstone Secondary School Gibsons SPEAKER: JIM BUDD Snr. Members and friends welcome Minibus Volunteer Bureau Special Services to Children and Alternate Education i*w Free Openers to the 1st 50 Customers TAYLOR'S GARDEN BAV STORE Jfh'*��'���;��� ������ '.? ''til' 24-10 oz. bottles Your choice of flavours $3. PER CASE PLUS DEPOSIT I ShopiM Sold by the case only (Only 15$ per bottle. Regular price $5.00 per case) Mix & Match with 17 flavours Mix and Match all you want. (A case of 24 big 10 ounce returnables only $3.60 plus deposit). It's fast, convenient and the best way to get lots of high quality, great tasting soft drinks without paying lots. It's at The Pop Shoppe. Pop out and get some. It's at the Pop Shoppe*. And it's easy to get. Just drive up. Park free. Come in. At the door you'll see our carts. Put a red case on one. Then, stroll around choosing from 17 different Pop flavours plus Diet Drinks. Load up with your favourites. The PoP Shoppe TAYLOR'S GARDEN BAV STORE GARDEN BAY, B.C. PHONE: 883-2253 Hours: 9:00 till 6:00 7 Days a Week ^Trademark Registered/PoP Shoppes of Canada Limited MSMMHIi ���MMMMHMM.1 Children enjoy Ihe sunshine on the porch of what is reputed to be the first porch on Jervis Inlet. (See Jon Van Arsdell's column below.) Kiiinonl News The first store in Jervis Inlet byJonVanAndeD Vera came by with some of that local history that brings back memories for old-timers and interests most newcomers. The accompanying picture is 1925 or 1926 and depicts the first store in Jervis Inlet at the Malibu Rapids on the left hand side going in. It was built and owned by Charlie Wise and the child- rens' names were Donald, Richard, Gene and Sissy. They were raised mostly on Eagle Brand Milk at 8* for a tall tin, because it was a \"good keeper\". Demerara RDP Bookstore Books for This Place Edible Wild Fruits & Nuts of Canada - Walker & Turner The Gibson's Landing Story Lester R. Peterson Chevy/GMC Pickup Repair Remembering Roberts Creek 1889 -1955 From a Coastal Kitchen - Lee Reid Along the No. 20 Line ��� Roll Knight The West Howe Sound Story F.J. Van Den Wyngaert .Gibsons Landing 886-7744 2Inrb ifitn'0 ANNOUNCING our GRAND OPENING April 4th for our 1981 SEASON Special Dinner PRIME RIB ���IS.** Enjoy the Music of Ref Dickson From 8:00 to Midnight Reservations Please 885-2232 Open for Dinner at 6:00 pm. \"We at Lord Jlm'e Look Forward to Seeing Yon\" Local group to produce rock opera Coast News, March 31, 1981 by Alan Kamuzyn On Saturday evening, May 30th, the Gibsons Soundwaves Society will present its premier performance of the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar. \"Soundwaves\", a local organization formed this year for the purpose of performing musical theatre and concerts, consists of 32 singers and 16 instrumentalists. The group was put together by Gibsons' own Lyn Vernon who is also the show's producer. The director of the show is no stranger to Gibsons either. Lloyd Burritt was raised here and has blossomed into a rather well-known B.C. composer. He presently teaches music at Argyle High School in North Vancouver and produces various musicals annually. The conductor is alio a music teacher who has conducted with the North Shore Light Opera Society, the Theatre Guild in Bellingham and numerous high school musicals. His hame is Joe Berarducci. Susan Ross will be coming over to handle the technical aspects of the show. This very talented woman was stage manager for the Vancouver Opera and the Canadian Opera Company; general manager of the Regina Dance Theatre and is presently employed by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. Another very talented woman is costume designer Margaret Ryan, Miss Ryan has spent four years with the Vancouver Opera and seven years with the Vancouver Playhouse Theatre. She also designed costumes for the BCTV series \"Story Theatre\". If you think that's talent, wait until you see the cast I! Don't be surprised if you notice a few familiar faces up there on the stage. There is still room, however, for a few male singers. Anyone interested may call me at 886-9145. Rehearsals are now underway. Residents of the area are invited to a semi-sneak preview on Saturday, April 11th. at the Gibsons Mall.The choir will be doing a fund raising performance and will sing a number or two from the production. Tickets for the actual show are five dollars and will be on sale soon. There will be four showings in all, Saturday, May 30, Sunday May 31st (matinee), Friday and Saturday, June Sth and 6th. The show is being presented at the Twilight Theatre.... See you therel TRAVEL 884-2S22 Oxygen tanks dangerous Public Warning - Defective Oxygen Tanks The Federal Health Department has issued the following public warning against use of portable oxygen kits manufactured by Green Cross Solid State Oxygen Inc., of Dania, Florida, USA. Tests have shown defects in nineteen of twenty units exa mined. This manufacturer is now out of business. If a Green Cross Solid State oxygen unit is found, the oxygen should be released, and the Staff Development and Safety Programs Division, Public Service Commission, at 387-1561, will advise on safe disposal of the unit. YOU'LL NEVER RUN OUT! Audrey's coffee Service Office & Restaurant Coffee Supplies & Equipment 885-3716 HELP! The Crew of the \"Beachcombers\" are still looking tor furnished houses between April 1,1981 & Sept. 30,1981. Please contact Bob Frederick 886-7811 Norn woeh! The 2nd Annual Grant stouepipe i insulated Chimney sale...20% oni all stovepipe, chimney and accessories. ��� prices will be effective April 6 - April 11 only .JfiC ELECTRONICS In the Trail Bay Centre, Sechelt 885-2568 sugar was 25* per pound and eggs were 15* a dozen, Keep in mind that these were the prices at the top of Jervis Iqlet. Abe Jeffries and his family lived in Princess Louisa Inlet on the Indian Camp Grounds, which is now the Malibu golf course. In those days people travelled from Sechelt to this area and Deserted Bay to raise vegetables in the summer; potatoes, cabbage, carrots and corn, which sold for a dollar per hundred pounds. They sun-dried blueberries, salal and blackberries, apples, prunes, fish and venison. They cold-smoked all the species of salmon except humpies and collected these fish from \"the Skawika\" and Deserted River. The gardeners were \"Captain\" Joe Dixon, John Wilson and a lady named Agnes, who also served as midwife. The nearest doctor was in Vancouver, so tobacco was the cure for most mishaps and snuff was used for toothaches. The Egmont smorgasbord is coming up on April 11. One of the prizes for the raffle is a lovely nightgown donated by Myrtle Dalton of Sechelt, who was one of our convenors for several years. We should have had an \"Early Spring on the Coast Contest\" this year. Maybe Egmont didn't have wild strawberries in February, as Robi Peters says Dave Stig- litz did, but my neighbour Gene said he heard someone talking about seeing a hummingbird on March 17 on Redrooffs Road, then added that he saw one in his yard on the 16th. So there! Indash AM-FM and auto Reverse Cassette give you super fidelity and outstanding tuner section and the ultimatae convenience of Auto-Reverse operatlonsl No more tumbling around trying to flip the cassette over to hear the other side���this one does It for you. HCC1100 feature.; ��� 12 station pre-set ��� Automatic seek conlrol ��� 4 Way balance control a LED display panel ��� Quartz clock D- - - Modular electronic tuning bi-amp AM-FM- Stereo auto-reverse Cassette with quartz clock & hi-fi design control panel. M PIONEER Pioneer SX-3400 \"Certified Performance\" Receiver Is Individually tested and Inspected to maximize sonic capacity���a solid, no nonsense unit that sounds like It costs much morel Pioneer PL-200 Direct Drive turntable with auto shutoft and damped cueing will gently care for your records. Complete system CL-70s Bookshelf Speaker 3 Way Bass Reflex which produce Deep Bass and exhilarating highs. CiD PIONEER Pioneer Bookshelf Speakers Top rated CL-70s Bookshelf Loudspeakers. The ones you've seen top rated lor value musical accuracy. Unlike many \"Bookshelf\" speakers, these CL-70s really fit a bookshelf but you'd never guess by the size of the Basal Bonzo Price Cd PIONEER Pioneer PL-200 Direct Drive, semi-automatic turntable with speed ad|ustment and accurate reproduction. Price Includes Magnetic Cartridge. p HIComp Equalizer features: ��� 7 Bond graphic ��� LED Power meters ��� 30 watts RMS per channel Pioneer SK-31 Stereo Radio-Cassette Portable with song finder, chrome tape selection. The SK-31 combines the sophistication and features ofa home component audio system in a beautiful go anywhere package. Complete System Pioneer SX-3600 Receiver The 80 watt RMS Receiver offers an overall level of performance previously unobtainable at this low price Pioneer's \"Guaranteed Certified Performance' assures you of lasting performance and reliability PL-300 Quartz-Drive Turntable Features Auto Return with low 0 025 wow & flutter Comes with SHURE Cartridge CL-100 Loudspeaker 3 Way. Bass Reflex with 12\" woofer to produce deep bass and 1\" cone tweeter for crystal clear highs General Electric Appliances Dealer Cost + 10% Best Price on Ihe Coast! ESTWURLD SOUND (Next to Bank of Montreal) 885-3313 Sechelt ; v mmm Coast News, March 31, 1981 YOUR AUTOPLAN CENTRE Taking care of all your Real Estate Needs Seaside Plaza Evenings Call 886-2000 Norm Peterson Dennis Suveges 886-9121 886-2607(Res )or 866-7264 (Res.) Fleming on education Poverty the root problem /&* Notice Board Sponsored as a Public Service 886-2622 by the Coast News 886-7817 NOTE: Early announcements will be run once, Ihen must be re-submltted to run again, no more than one month prior to Ihe evunt. Coming Events Fllne8i tn Motion: Exercise to Music Roberts Creek Community Hall. Mon . Wed . Fri. - 9:30 am - 10:30 am. Also St. Hilda's Church Hall, Sechelt Tues & Thurs.- 12:15 pm- 12:45 pm . commencing April 7th. SlO'mo For info call Rieta, 885-2875 TFN Evening ot Bridge at Wilson Creek Hall. Wednesday April 1. 1981 at 7 30 pm Partners not necessary Refreshment and prizes For info. - 885-9726 Wilson Creek Community Association Monthly Meeting Monday April 13 - 8:00 pm Feature - Slide presentation by Sylvia Roberts titled \"Holiday in a Greek Village\" Sunihlne Coast Women's Program presents the Conference \"The Changing World of Women and Work\" at St. Hilda's Hall, Sechelt, Fri. & Sat April 3 & 4 Free child care for those pre-registered. 885-2391 General Meeting Legion Branch #112, Madeira Park Monday April 20th at 8 pm #15 Robert! Creek Daze Meeting Wednesday April 1st at Roberts Creek Community Hall al 7:30 pm. Regular Events Elphinstone Pioneer Museum The Elphinstone Pioneer Museum in Gibsons will be closed until further notice. Monday Roberts Creek Hospital Auxiliary Second Monday of each month -11 am. St. Aidan's Hall. Sunshine Pottery Guild meets every 2nd Monday of the month at the 'Studio' corner of North Road and Highway 101 at 7 pm. TFN O.A.P.O. #38 Regular Meeting. First Monday ol each month - 2 pm Social Bingo. 2nd & 3rd Mondays 2 pm at Harmony Hall, Gibsons. Tuesday Women's Aglow Fellowship Meets every third Tuesday of the month at Harmony Hall Gibsons. Transportation and babysitting available 886- 7426. Duplicate Bridge 7 30 sharp at Sunshine Coast Golf Club, 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month For further information contact Phyllis Hoops. 886-2575 Sunshine Coast Arts Council Regular meeting 4th Tuesday of every month at 7 30 pm at the Arts Cenlre in Sechelt. Al-Anon Meetings Al-Anon Meetings every Tuesday night Roberts Creek For information call 886-9059 or 886-9041 Sunshine Coast Navy League ot Canada Cadets and Wrenettes, ages 10 to 13 will again meet Tuesday nights. 7-9pm . United Church Hall. Gibsons New mcruits welcomed Wednesday Tops Club Gibsons Tops meets every Wed evening al 6 45 in Ihe Armour's Beach Athletic Hall New members and leen members welcome Phone 886-9765 eves. Sunshine Lapidary & CraH Club Meets 1st Wed every monlh at 7 30 pm For mformaiion 886-2873 or 886-9204 Pender Harbour Hospital Auilllary. Second Wednesday of each month. 1 30 pm. St. Andrews Church-New members always welcome Wilson Creek Community Reading Centre 7 30 - 8 30 p m 885-2709 Sechelt Garden Club. 7 30 p m , St Hildas Hall First Wednesdays except January. July. August O.A.P.O. #38 Carpet Bowling Every Wednesday 1 pm al Harmony Hall Gibsons Sunshine Coast Sports Club will be having a irack and-tieid organizational meeting al Elphinstone School, Wednesdays 5pm Women's Luncheons 12 ��� 1 pm Starting Thursday Feb 'j .it rhfl Moron in Gibsons Rescr.ahons recommended ��� BBfi WM Fiijoy good load Rnd the company ol olher women v��ho work Sporihoied by the Sunshine Coast Women s Program Thursday The Bargain Barn oi the Pender Harbour Honllh Clinic Auxiliary is open on Hiuriday afternoons from too until 3 30 Al-Anon Meeting Evjry Thursday tn Gibsons al 8 prn l-oi mformaiion call 886 9569 or 886-^037 Western Weight Controllers Every Thursday al I pm in Ihe Armours Beach AtMohc Hall Gibsons and in the Sechell Elomentary School. Thursdays at 7pm New members welcome 885-3795 O.A.P.O. #38 Public Bingo Every Thursday 7 45 prn sharp at Harmony Hall. Gibsons Friday Square Dancing The Country Stars Square Dancers Gibsons United Church every Friday 8 to 11 pm Beginners Classes for more information 886-8027 or 886-9540 Gibsons Tot Lot Every Fri. 9 30- 11 30 am in Gibsons United Church Hall Parents with children 0-3yrs are welcome For further irrto call Shawn 886-8036 Thrift Shop Every Friday. 1 -3pm Thrift Shop. Gibsons United Church basement Wilson Creek Community Reading Centra Noon ��� 4 00 pm 885-2709 Women's Floor (eoalm) Hockey. Friday nights, 730 - 9.30 pm. Gibsons Elementary Gym, sticks available. O.A.P.O. #38 Fun Nlte Every Friday at 7 30 pm Pot Luck Supper last Friday ol every monlh al 6 pm at Harmony Hall, Gibsons Suncoast Challenge Every Friday In Elphie lunch Room and Gym April 3 - Paul Johnson - Negro singer - Folk & Rock a 14 Saturday Wilson Creek Community Reading Centre 11 30 - 1 p m 885-2709 The Bargain Barn of the Ponder Harbour Heallh Clinic Auxiliary is open on Saturday allerrtoons from 1 - 4 pm Sunday Bingo Sechelt Reserve Hall every Sunday Early birds 7 pm $'00 Prize Proceeds to assist under privileged families by Frances Fleming The United Nations has designated 1981 the International Year of Disabled Persons. Five aims have been accepted. The first is the education of the public and a change in attitude toward the disabled. The second is the prevention of disabilities. The third is the improvement of the quality of life of the disabled through special measures such as better access to transportation and , public buildings. The fourth is direct help to the disabled to assist their social and personal adjustment. The fifth is expansion of employment opportunities for disabled persons. What is a disability? The Oxford Dictionary defines it as a thing or lack that prevents one's doing something, legal disqualification; physical incapacity caused by injury or disease. A person who has lost his sight, or hearing, or lost a limb, or who is wracked I Al Wagner Al Wagner Invites you to join Big Brothers A service of friendship freely given by men, to boys without fathers. For Information 886-2615 885-5664 with arthritis or incapacitated by such a condition as multiple sclerosis is disabled. Traditionally, a disabled person has been regarded as one who once was normal physically, and now is not. Modern usage has broadened the term. The government of British Columbia has moved in to help make the provincial program a success by allocating $3,000,000 for the cause. Douglas L. Mowatt of Vancouver, executive director of the B.C. Division of the Canadian Paraplegic Association, has been named B.C. Director of the IYDP. A committee will be named soon to include representatives of disabled groups and of government ministries concerned with social services. Wayne Desharnais, program. superintendent of special education for the B.C. Ministry of Education is the liaison officer between the new committee and his Ministry. Anyone wanting information on the International Year of Disabled Persons in British Columbia should contact the IYDP office, Ministry of Education, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C., V8V 1X4. It is highly unlikely that children will directly benefit from this new program. There is a feeling abroad that our children are being very well cared for, in schools, with the support of the Ministries of Human Resources and Health. Are they? What is the evidence? The Year of the Child came and went. What was accomplished? What were the visible and lasting gains? Did governments institute hot-lunch programs to assist in the improvement of young Canada's nutrition? Was a school free milk program even discussed? Did pregnant mothers receive prenatal family allowance in order to eat adequately for two? Did child abuse lessen? Was child pornography stopped? Was there a media campaign to stress the importance of our children to the future of our country? The disability that the Year of the Child did not deal with, and one the Year of the Disabled will not is the root cause of mental and physical illnesses, much juvenile delinquency, and school failure. It has been reported that, in B.C. alone, there are 22,000 single parents on social assistance, with some 60,000 children in Care. Counting the \"working poor\" who never have sufficient money for their basic needs, there are some 110,000 poor- children in British Columbia. These children are being housed, fed and clothed minimally and meanly. Serious malnutrition may be occurring among this population through the escalating cost of good food, especially proteins such as milk, eggs, fish and meat. The malnourished child is educationally disabled. He has trouble paying attention; he cannot remember; he may be irritable and restless; he may yawn a lot or fall asleep in class. He probably doesn't laugh much, and may be indifferent to his teacher's efforts to interest him. He may weep when provoked; he may be aggressive. All the food he may eat at a later date will not build the brain and brawn that society should have supplied him with through good nutrition when he was very young. Canada lags far behind most civilized countries in overseeing the nutrition of its growing children. Great Britain instituted hot lunch programs following World War II. American schools serve hot lunches. We leave our kids to the pop and chip machines, let them fill up on junk foods which do not satisfy their body hunger for real food. A prevention of disability program could only begin with the infant set, and would make sense. The IYDP plan will only dispense charity to some needy persons and brighten up many lives for a brief period of time. It will distract attention from the root problem, man-made poverty in the midst of plenty and shortsighted neglect of the basic needs of children. Mayor Bud Koch of Sechelt draws tht winning ticket in the draw held last week on behalf of Elphie grads. The prize was a Chevette Scooter donated by Koch's Sunshine GM Motors. The winning ticket was held by Chris Taylor of Gibsons. The grads thank all who participated. Careers Day at Elphie On Thursday, April 2nd, 1981, a Careers Fair will be held at Elphinstone Secondary School in Gibsons. The Careers Fair will start at 9:15 am. and end at 12:15 pm. Linda Giza. counsellor at Elphinstone has arranged a wide range of presentations so that students and interested members of the community can explore vocational, technical and professional occupations. In recognition of the guest speakers' contributions and involvement, the School District is providing a luncheon at which Mr. John Denley, District Superintendent of Schools, will speak. For more information about the Careers Fair, please telephone Elphinstone School at 886-2204. The donation is time \"It's not donations we need the most,\" says Al Wagner for. the Big Brothers organization on the coast. \"It's something money can't buy, something more special, your time.\" \"We have a waiting list of boys who need someone to fill the gap of the missing male figure. Someone to do things with, someone to call when they need to talk and, especially, a man to look up to as an example instead of the tough guy out on the street,\" explains Wagner. Most of the boys come from broken homes and single parent families. Big Brothers won't compete with the boy's father, though. \"We are selective that way, we only choose those who have had no male influence for some time,\" said Wagner. Potential Big Brothers are carefully screened and placed with care by Drew McKee of the school board, who is the main work-horse ofthe organization. Another active member is the principal of Roberts Creek school, Bob Wetmore. \"There is a shortage of Big Brothers,\" explains Wagner, \"we receive requests from mothers in trauma and in great need of the male figure. But the screening process takes time and unfortunately we don't have volunteers lined up and just waiting.\" Wagner says that a \"re lationship\" between a Big Brother and a little brother can be a deterrent to crime as well as possibly leading to lifelong friendship. Wagner, who himself has been a Big Brother until his boy moved away, says he still is in contact with him. \"It's just a matter of a few hours a week donated to those who are less fortunate than those of us who have had a good deal out of life. It's a giving thing.\" For a boy or adolescent, a Big Brother is someone to spend an afternoon with, someone to call when you need to talk and it's hard to talk to mother, a man to look up to for guidance. And sometimes, it's as easy and uncomplicated as sharing a silence, just fishing. For more information, call Al Wagner, 886-2615 or 885-5664. Poster contest ATTENTION! AH Students - Grades 1-12 in School District #46 - POSTER CONTEST SECHELT VILLAGE is officially 25 years old and will make a big 'Bang' about it during its MAY DAY / TIMBER DAYS Celebrations on May 16, 17 and 18,1981. $25.00 will be offered for the best poster entered in our Poster Contest and there will be prizes for the best entry from each grade. The competition will be keen, so ask your teacher for 18\" x 24\" poster paper or cardboard; use the art materials of your choice and your own wonderful Imagination and talent and make a bright, eye-catching poster to help advertise the event. Be sure to show (A) the Place (Sechelt, Hackett Park), (B) the Dates (May 16, 17 and 18) and (C) a picture which suggests one or more of the \"happenings\". Do your neatest-work - not too much clutter. Check your spelling!! Your Name, Age, School, Grade and Phone No. (if any) must be on the back of your poster or it may be disqualified. The winners will be judged and displayed at Trail Bay Shopping Centre, Sechelt - so please leave your entries at \"Books 'nStuff\" by Saturday, May 2nd. Judges will be Fran Ovens and Lillian Peters (local artists) and prizes compliments ofthe Royal Bank and Shop Easy in Sechelt. MSSL NEW SCHEDULE Mmt\\//i ^SPRING AND SUMMER MMlfMJL 885-2214 TO NANAIMO TO VANCOUVER FLIGHT NO. TIME FLIGHT NO. TIME 201 07:45 101 07:25 203 11:45 103 09:35 205 15:15 105 11:45 207 18:00 107 14:15 FROM NANAIMO 109 15:15 111 18:00 FROM VANCOUVER FLIGHT NO. TIME 102 08:00 104 10:30 106 12:30 ma ia�� FLIGHT NO. TIME 202 08:15 204 12:30 206 16:00 208 18:30 TO POWELL RIVER FLIGHT NO. 903 905 907 TIME 08:30 13:15 16:30 108 110 112 14:45 16:00 18:30 Further Schedules to Jervis Inlet. Salmon Inlet, Narrows Inlet, Pender Harbour Now 3 Flights Daily Except Sunday. Ellectlve March 30th. 1981 Women and work conference All the women of the Sunshine Coast are invited to attend this very important Women's Conference. The key speaker will be Diana M. Davidson, lawyer from Vancouver with several guest panel participants. The Changing World of Women and Work Conference will address the two most topical aspects of the problem confronting many of the women who work, or who wish to work. First making available information pertaining to present job skill training and, second, obtaining an accurate picture of the particular education and job training needs of the women of this community for presentation tdthe Ministry of Labour and Canada Em- Mothers9 March 1981' The Kinsmen Mathers' March, conducted on the Sunshine Coast Jan. 28th to Feb. 3rd, 1981, has collected a total of $6,541.00. This money in its entirety will go lo the disabled of B.C. as all administration costs are raised by other means. The Kinsmen Rehabilitation Foundation, is a B.C. Foundation only and all funds will therefore stay in B.C. It is with great thanks, that the disabled of B.C., the Kinsmen Rehabilitation Foundation of B.C., and Ihe Kinsmen Club of Gibsons, thank all those that guve either time, money or both, lo Ihis worthy cause, with special thanks to the following \"Mothers\" who made our campaign possible. Pat Dickenson Linda Smid Eileen Greaves Lauralee Sulli l.i/ Gibbons Sonya Miller Naomi Cousins Billy Hollis Lillian Finnie Martina Dubois Nancy Denham D. Flummcrfelt Val Michaud Vicki Rhcaume F.Ida Finlay Margaret Buchanan Ruth Hogberg Penny Oullon Jan Johnson Mrs. E. Miller Katimavik Volunteers Marilyn Ranniger Margaret Jones Margaret Dyck Maureen Zueff Avril Maddern Joan Graham ' Pam Helem Vona Clayton Gail Wilson Judy Flett Helen Weinhandl Yvonne Hardy Maureen Bentley Cathy Wormold Brenda Montgomery Janice Edmonds Jan Milks Jean Gray Gail Cavalier Dorlhy Miles Phyllis Hoops June Frizzell Ellen Whaites Gwen Nimmo , Shelley Biddle Bonnie Semutiuk Denise Walts Kim Benner Marlene Blakeman Debra Peterson Peggy Wray Barb Powers Wendy Allen Chris Moore Mrs. Morrow Mrs. Terry Delong Dar Vignal Teresa Lucas Margrit Billingsley Gay Shanks Olga Johnson Pam Gregorchuk Judy Bothwell Donna Forsyth Dorlhy Hurren Rose Stevens Debbie Johnson Helen Main Wendy Warman Nancy Lawson Barb Grinuey Linda Phillips Joan Peers We would also like to thank the CoasI News lor not only the support we have received for Mothers' March but also for the help given all year long. We are also pleased to announce that Rick Wray has been elected Rehabilitation Director for the Lower Mainland Zone. The Association of Kinsmen Clubs Kinsmen Club of Gibsons ployment and Immigration Council; also to Capilano College and to local educators. Many women not only wish to be employed, but must work to support, or to implement the support of their families. Women from native communities, sole support mothers, senior high school girls as well as women wanting to change careers, because of limited skills, are often obliged to remain at minimal wages with little, or no hope of advancement. The purpose of the conference is to bring together those women who wish to enter, re-enter or grow within the work force, who need increased skills, and those women who. recognizing ihis need, arc committed to the task of improving conditions for women in the job market. In both the Ministry of Labour and Canada Employment women head the Departments of Women's affairs. It is their responsibility to press for Ihe changes which will create more, and better, opportunities for women who work outside the home. But it is the responsibility of the women of this community to provide solid evidence of the specific needs of the women of this community. It is expecled thai the subject matter will encourage a large number of women to attend this two day conference. Every woman will have the opportunity to express her views when, during the most vital session, small groups will be able to pin-point essential concerns. Summaries, from which the recommendations will evolve, will be sent lo the various ministries, educational institutions and lo each participant. Individual counselling about work and career options available later, in April. Friday Fvening...April 3, at 7:30 til 9:30 pm. Saturday all day...April 4, from 9:00 am to 3:30 pm. Registration fee $2.00 includes Saturday lunch and Saturday child-minding. Prc- regisiration requested because of lunch. Pre-registration necessary lor those who need child-minding. Call Deborah: Mcllrath at 885-2391 to register. St. Hilda's Church Hall. Sechelt. JtowgoMMil..r^3 Jlowgott.toji'lf i t Thal'ihin laMarlaulnnl mbiii nl M,irk��! 11,-ar mil imtanlnl arilrtVit ami makr mime, |,Hi! Contractors Start Off Spring on the Right Footing with TOMOR FORMS & FOUNDATIONS' Fast, Accurate Service for Residential & Commercial Foundation Work Contractor Rates Available for Volume Work Call John Morgan or Floriano Tomasi 886-5279 Coast News, March 31,1981 April 3rd & 4th ��������������� ��������������������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� . ��������������� ��������� ��������������� ������������������ ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ������ > ��������� ��������������� :::���::: III III ��������������������� ��������������� ������������������ ��������������������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ������������������ ������������������ ��������������� ��������������� ������������������ ������������������ ������������������ ��������� ��������������������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� *:: ������ ��������� ii�� ��������� ��������� ii* ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ������������������ ��� ������ ������? !������ ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� ��������� Come & See our Kitchens international III We are the Exclusive Dealers on the Sunshine Coast for UENN-AIR rSlSfUrOOD ^���^ KITCHEN8 LTD. RESTWOOD KITCHENS LTD. r direct from the Home Show Installed by Knut Solli, Master Craftsman Carrying a complete line Of: Ceramic Tiles Butcher Blocks Counter Tops National Draperies to come g��9W%W!tmf%'m! k\\. V CI Live Demonstrations ^ Starting at 11:30 am 20% Off LITTON MOFFRT JE^i,R AH Carpet Microwave J^TiTr Grill Range Appliances & Microwaves .��� \"*�� aflL Scott Rivers, Sates & Installation David Jones, Sales & Installation - Pender Harbour ��� Sechelt Bill Willgress, Sales Dianne Benner, Bookkeeper, Sales M .<* LITTON MOFFRT G* Model # 1010 Microwave NOT EXACTLY AS ILLUSTRATED Draw To Be Held April 18 OPENING f**cQr��h Carpets Q. RLESS CELANESE ugs Carpets Congoleum Rolained Hent Wall Ovens UlasteHing Sample Books Washer & Dryer Model #'s MWG1100W & MDG1120W *699. LITTON MOFFRT Model # ioio Microwave Stainless Steel Dishwashers The Steam Machine Trash Compactors Panasonic. CHARGEX fk VISA *479. Vacuum Cleaners Built-in Vacuum Systems Teredo Square 885*2601 Hours: 9:30 am - 5:30 pm 10 Coast News, March 31,1981 WWK W\"W\\\\\\\\\\\\ LLC Kf DOLLAR fCCDS OVERLOC UN6 BEAUTIFUL GIBSONS HARBOUR PECDLCC- ������m\\W ' W\\ mm-- uw B.C. Grown Spartan *$j&. M /ft Ah APPLES \" 4.BS/88g California BA^ BROCCOLI .59v California (jiB CAULIFLOWER 9's ea. V I ���\"ill F hl R k d ��� eianee? ��� Freshly Baked Pumpkin Pie ,: M.99 National Bakeries' Dutch Ouen Bread �����. 65c ofu I was overjoyed recently to find packages of tofu sitting in my favourite supermarket amongst the beansprouts and bok choy. I'm soon going to have to dream up a whole new set of-excuses for visiting Chinatown. Tofu is ever so good for you and is very versatile. It can be added to salads ��� try it with some peanuts ��� or sliced into any kind of soup, or chopped and cooked in with Chinese style vegetables ��� or you can try the two following recipes. BF.AN CURD SOUP BEAN CURD FISH /��g| *���� % pkt. bean curd 1 tablespoon oil 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, chopped 1 cup sliced raw chicken 3 pints chicken stock 1 teaspoon orange skin, chopped 1 cup sliced mushrooms salt & pepper I tablespoon soy sauce I teaspoon green onions, chopped l.Cut the bean curd in small cubes. Heat the oil in a deep pot until smoking. Add ginger and chicken and stir for half a minute. Add the broth and bring it to a boil. Add the orange skin, mushrooms, bean curd & simmer on a low heat for 20 minutes. Add salt, pepper & soy sauce to taste. Sprinkle green onions on top and serve with sesame seed crackers. 2 cups raw white fish 1 garlic clove 1 teaspoon fresh ginger 2 green onions 1 pkt. tofu 2 tablespoons oil 2 tablespoons oyster sauce I teaspoon sugar pepper 1 cup chicken broth 2 teaspoon cornstarch dissolved in % cup water 1. Cut the fish into bite size pieces. 2. Chop the garlic clove and ginger finely. 3. Slice the green onions lengthwise and cut into 2\" lengths. 4. Cut the tofu into 1\" cubes. 5. Heat the oil in a skillet or wok and fry the fish on a low heat until just brown on both sides. 6. Stir in garlic, ginger and green onion. 7. Add soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar, pepper and % cup chicken broth. Cover and simmer for 10 minutes. 8. Remove fish onto serving dish and keep warm. 9. Put tofu in skillet and turn heat up to high for 3 minutes. 10. Add cornstarch mixture and remaining broth and stir until thickened. Pour over fish and serve with Chinese style vegetables and rice. Happy eating, Nest Lewis (former home economics teacher) lay by day* item by Item, we do mora ? r Providian variety, duality and friendly service. 'Ule reserve me right to limit Quantities' Gower Point Rd., Gibsons Free Delivery to the Wharf 886-225 Sealord pink salmon ��8m��1.M Fortune ��m��mt\\ smoked oysters .... 00�� Campbell's chicken noodle M ,*, AA 3/M.00 apple pie tiller ��.00( McCormick's - Whole Wheat ^ _ cookies J1.59 Assorted Varieties Betty Crocker - Super Moist ^ cake mixes ....tl.19 Assorted Varieties ���y*.!i,i& $.a3&&^.'�� Cleanser comet Twin Pack Cala 'MO 2/600 gm liquid bleach Arctic Power . ^^ pwd. detergent $2.29 3.6 litre ���Diicy- Better Buy margarine Palm ice cream Assorted Flavours 1 lb. Parchment Ll * I ���UU 2 Litre Paper ^��aUtf Fraser Vale fish ft chips J1.99 890 Snowcap - Choice peas . 907 gm ������ The PoP Shoppe *5.N/case 24-284mi Plus '4 .����� deposit *5.M/CaSe 12 850 mil #���������� pius M.<^ ��� Jicrgori\\ If ��� S! I MENS WEAR 885-8330 cowrie sl. sechelt I- ran Herder congratulates Steven Hrindle Ihis year's winner ofthe ( nasi News (up awarded to Ihe first finisher in Ihe April Fool's Dai Kun, Konegades in Hawaii The Renegades are obviously up against stiff competition in the Hawaii Soccer Tournament they are attending. Although they have lost Iwo games, however, and tied one they have been competitive. The local team lost by a score of 2-0 to Hawaii; 1-0 to an Australian side; and tied the San Francisco Swedes 1-1. A respectable showing in what is obviously stiff company. The Sechelt Minor Hockey Association will be hosting a Jamboree this weekend at the Sechelt arena. Local Minor Hockey teams (ages 5-15) will play seven visiting teams from the Saanich area on Vancouver Island. A contingent of seventy adults is expected to accompany the Saanich teams and a good local turnout is anticipated. I he first ever canine contestant Gam��s in tne ,w0 day in Ihe April Fool's Daj Kun, tourngment will be played Bear, made il to Scchelf, from 6 a.m'. to midnight on accompanied In his friend Saturday and from 6 a.m. to MM. Joe, 9 p.m. on Sunday. As an added attraction the South Delta Juvenile team will play two games against the Sunshine Coast Juvenile team. The first game will be played at 10:30 p.m. Saturday and the second at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. The bar will be open for adults on Saturday evening and on Sunday morning a Pancake breakfast will be available from 7:30 a.m. until noon. % WORKWEfvR /IK WORLD CONVENIENT K-WAY JACKETS When the sun comes out, these jackets can be folded into their own pouch and strapped around your waist. Reg. $16.98 sale '11.\" GREAT CANADIAN BLUE JEANS Reg. $19.99 Sale *12.\" SOFT TOE SHOES g�� *27-99 1 #C-l.-^.7fl\" I;I/' Reg. $37.98 J Q# I ��^ $27.\" I Cariadas fun boots Jl Be Sure to Check Out Our Supply of SAFETY EQUIPMENT What We Don't Have We Can Order For You O WORKWErXR Cowrie SI. \"������'\"\" Chimney Cleaning, & Maintenance Phone 886-8187 1������ ���.��������*.*�����*�� :-������.���*���-.. APRIL FOOL'S DAY RUN We are proud to have joined with the Coast News in helping to sponsor the Gibsons to Sechelt April Fool's Day Run and wish to acknowledge the willing co-operation of Nike and Adidas who have assisted with prizes and race materials. 7 our of the first 10 runners across the finish line were wearing Nike or Adidas. TRAIL BAY SPORTS adidas' Trail Ave. Sunnycrest i Cowrie Centre Sechelt Gibsons 88S-9828 886-8020 t<^ttt'.W^''T��^**t^ asss OCEANSIDE POOLS VINYL LINED SWIMMING POOLS ALUMINUM & STEEL WALLS HOT TUBS a SPAS Sales, Service, Installations Fully Guaranteed Ten Years Experience FREE ESTIMATES Phone Bob Green Box 1184 Box 1184, Sechelt, B.C. aaBai.a^a��a.ja*atta*aM Outward Bound course by John Hind-Smith Some two years ago the Gibsons Wildlife Club instituted an idea to set aside an evening a month, excluding the summer months, to present a series of films, slides and speakers related to the activities of the Club and its objectives. II nder the able chairmanship of Fred Holland, the Entertainment Committee has decided this popular programme should be resurrected. One of the best evenings and certainly considered by many js the best presentation ofthe last series was that given by Kay Preece of the Canadian Outward Bound Mountain School in Keremeos and we are delighted to be able to bring the new Associate Director, Mr. John Binsted back again and we can guarantee an interesting and thought-provoking evening suitable for young and old alike. Ihe Outward Bound Mountain School is not what you would consider the ordinary run of the mill school. For one thing it is open to all ages. If someone thinks they can do what is asked of them then go ahead and do it. In a nutshell this represents the policy ofthe school. Students are put in all kinds of situations designed to test themselves physically and their ability to work with others. They are tested mentally too because there are occasions when they have to put complete trust in the other fellow in order to survive. Courses are run throughout the year and are for the most part co-ed. Certain of the courses are designed for the younger generation 14-16, and some go to the other extreme, 25 years and older but most of them are standard courses taking people from 17 and up. In length they range from eight days for a special course such as ski mountaineering to three weeks for a regular summer course. Last year over 600 students experienced Outward Bound and over the years quite a number of Sunshine Coast residents have taken part in these courses. I doubt whether any of them would have any words of regret and more than likely look back on it as one of the highlights of their lives. Come to think, it would be nice if some of these ex-students could make it to this meeting. These words of a 18 year old student sum up things pretty well, \"I expected to overcome fear, but didn't���I just knew how to handle it better. I know now that part of me that says 'go for it' is capable and needs to be given the chance because I can trust in my own ability.'' We are looking forward to having Mr. Binsted come along and tell us what O.B. is all about and will bring along slides and/ or film to illustrate his talk. ��� The date is Wednesday April 8 at 7:00 pm. at the Gibsons Wildlife Club on Highway 101 right opposite the cemetery. We are sure you will not be disappointed. Bring along the youngsters too. This is very much a family programme and, best of all, it's free. Sechelt Marsh Society Birding Section Thursday, April 2, will be the last meeting of the winter season. The guest speaker will be the local Fish and Wildlife Conservation Officer, Jamie Stephen\". The subject of his presentation will be \"Pollution on the Sunshine Coast\". The place, Chatelech School, the time 7:30 p.m. Pioneer Emeritus ' MARA BEAUMONT 80B GRANT' I M6-7213 J ftlRCfMK SUNNYCREST Mill WESTERU DRUG IllflRT wtmiAT rout/cur by Richard F. Kennett If there was anyone in this world who did nothing but good, one of those chosen would, have to be Ellen Cook, almost an eternal resident of the family acreage on the North Road outside Gibsons. An only daughter of Finnish parents, Ellen Kayto was born on the North Road stump ranch about the turn of the century as were others of the same heritage; the Wirens, the Kullanders, the Willanders, the Heinos, the Hentsas.the Lattas and so on. Indeed, they were all spirited and hard working people who could put their hands to anything agricultural as well as building and using their wondrous workings with old growth cedar. As a boy entering my teens my uppermost recollection of Mrs. Cook was that she was ever at her kitchen door- begging us kids who knocked around with her son Clarence to come and get fresh buns or bread or whatever happened to be coming from her oven at the time. In those hungry thirties for boys in our teens, food was paramount in our minds, so we required little coaxing. On other occasions it would be packing a lunch for a trip up the mountain above the old cemetery to the first camp of the shingle bolt era when flumes laced much of Mount Elphinstone for carrying cedar n0mm*m*m*wm*W*M*��m PENINSULA MARKET 885-9721 Davis Bay, B.C. tide tables Referencei I'oinl Atkinson Wed. April I 0120 0925 141! 2109 Ihurs. April 2 0.155 0955 1520 2145 Pacific n Standard Time Fri. April 3 14.1 0430 9.0 1040 12.1 1615 1 4.1 2235 Sal. April 4 14.3 0500 1 7.9 II10 I2H 1720 1 4..1 2320 Sun. April 5 0535 I ISO 1815 Mon. April 6 0005 0610 12.15 1905 Tun. April 7 010* 0640 1320 2003 14.7 43 14.4 6.5 14.7 3.4 14.6 7.6 14,5 2.9 14.6 GROCERIES SUNDRIES Open 9���9 FISHING TACKLE TIMEX WATCHES 7 Days a Week bolts to tidewater, one of which passed back of the Kayto property, near the old Coleman chicken farm, carrying its cargo of cedar bolts on down to the salt chuck just north of the ferry dock. Invariably, on a hot summer Sunday, Mrs. Cook would gather us kids together and with a large picnic basket we would pile into their milk truck and head down to Lucy Smith's beach beside that proverbial rock of ages that sits miraculously alone next to an overflowing fresh spring on that fine beach just north of the ferry dock. , At corn husking time us North Road kids would fire up the little stove in Mrs. Cook's childhood playhouse which her father had built for her and stuff ourselves with fresh corn on the cob liberally painted in fresh churned butter. Throughout her years, Ellen Cook has never seemed to have anything but happiness written all over her face, has never had second thoughts about taking less fortunates under her wing where others might shy away. In my eyes, Ellen Cook was and is someone special. Some years ago when her father died, Mrs. Cook came and asked me if 1 would be a pallbearer at her father's funeral, and without hesitation I replied, \"Mrs. Cook, 1 will be very proud\". And so it was, we laid him to rest at the foot of the mountain thus then leaving his daughter Ellen and her son Clarence to carry on the Finlander's tradition of sharing and caring so evident in her lifestyle. Just two years ago, up north on the fishing grounds near Bella Bella, 1 asked Clarence how his mother was and he said, \"Just fine and approaching her eighties\". 1 asked him what he was going to do with that fine North Road property in the years ahead and re replied simply, \"Probably leave it to the grandchildren\".' Ellen Cook's title to the North Road property chains back many years, causing an old lawyer friend of mine to comment that it was one of the oldest he had ever seen since Lands Registry records began seriously in 1905 in British Columbia. I could only comment that I also agreed but had seen another of similar vintage in the name of Margaret Trot- man, who us oldtimers knew later as the legendary Maggie LeFavre when she married Blackie on the Reed Road. But that is another tale., Gibsons Ready Mix 886-8174 ���Drainrock 'Washed Rock |*Sand *Road Mulch rFill 'Concrete Anchors |Mon.��� Friday 8a.m.���5p.m. Coast News, March .31, 1981 13 Peggy Connor photo ��� Peggy uonnor pnoio A simulated air rescue exercise was held recently involving members of PEP and PEAS. (Sec Carl Chrismas' report below.) Air Rescue exercise RETAIL SALES Specializing in Thermal and Moisture Protection - IW, 2\". Ot\" Rigid Insulation - Rolled Roofing - Shakes and Shake Supplies - Duroid Shingles - Brown Pre-painted ( Galvanized Flashings Plus All Types of Roofing Supplies FOR SALE AT Peninsula Roofing ft insulation Ltd. 1356 Wharf Rd. Sechelt 885-3744 by Carl Chrismas By approval of Rescue Coordination Centre in Esquimalt, and Search and Rescue, Comox, an Air-Ground exercise was programmed for the Sunshine Coast by Provincial Emergency Program Area Coordinator Arthur McPhee, and Air Service Co-ordinator Vera McAllister, for Saturday, March 21st, 1981. The exercise emerged as follows: Report from R.C.C. Overdue: Aircraft Cessna 172 (registration unknown). L.K.P: At 19:30 hours, March 20/ 81, the aircraft was reported inbound to Vancouver International Airport. E.T.A. 20:15 hours. There were two POB. Course was 140 degrees via Sechelt Inlet. Weather was clear. There were no further transmissions. Aircraft colour was White with Red trim lines. At 6:38 hours of March 21st a full blown air-ground search was put into operation. One hour and thirty 'phone calls later, Elphinstone Aero Clubhouse had been established as Search Headquarters; Vera. McAllister had changed hats and become Searchmaster; her Deputy Chrismas had become Crew Chief; and backup staff of June Mellis and Margaret Connor had taken over telephone and radio duties. Arthur McPhee was coordinating his ground search crew with Fred Gazeley and John Hind-Smith ofthe Wildlife Club, who are in charge of rescue equipment. Doc John Farrer had been dispatched to Pitt Meadows in his swift little Grumman two place to pick up special radio equipment for homing in on the E.L.T. signal, if and when located. By 0930 hours the crash site had been located by Doc John and his navigator Audry Brou- ghton; the information passed on to Arthur McPhee and his party; and the ground crew were on their way into the Carlson Lake area. But the exercise was far from over. None of this information was passed on to other search crews who were waiting to be briefed by McAllister. The object was to get as many crews into the air as possible, to assign them to a search area, then correlate all the information turned in at the debriefing. In all, seven flights were sent out to assigned areas, which included five pilots, seven navigators, and twelve spotters. Although some technical problems were encountered in locating the 'cone of silence' which would indicate the exact location of the crash site, all crews were found to have centred on the \"hot spot' which would have put the ground search party to within a few hundred yards of the site. The exercise was deemed as being 'highly successful' from an organizational and operational point of view, with lessons learned that will save much time and energy (not to mention frayed nerves) in the event of a real, live situation. One of the reasons given by Vera McAllister for the success, and the degree of autonomy, allowed the Sunshine Coast area of PEP and PEAS by RCC and Comox, is in having an area co-ordinator with the background experience is invaluable. The same can be said for Vera McAllister. As a highly skilled Flying Instructor and pilot, she has taught many of our local pilots to fly. Her knowledge of the area and years of experience of flying among the rock-filled clouds of our B.C. coast, is also invaluable! And last but not least, much credit goes to the pilots who h>>X<%wXv.v>>:v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.' KtfW����*Kv����w%��wv��S: Chimney Cleaning & Maintenance Phone 886-8187 provide their own aircraft in searches for kindred spirits who share their love of the sky in that very special flying community. And to fellow pilots who share duties as navigators; to navigators who share duties as spotters; and to every one who has an interest or future in aviation and offer themselves as spotters. The thought which must be shared by all as a search and resue is going on, from Air Chief to Spotter, can only be; \"There, but for the Grace of God, wait I\"! The Only Way To Qol Bookings lor All your Travel Needs at No Batra Cost to Yea! ���Tickets ���Hotels ��� Tours ��� Charters 'Insurance New Number 886-2522 In th* Heart ol Caear Pltwa Lee Taylor Friday & Saturday April 3rd & 4th 8 pm - midnight Luxury Accommodation Licensed Dining Lounge Reservatic eservations Please ImEmT 885-5888 R.R. *1, Halfmoon Bay Full Marina Facilities Marine Pub Van. Direct 684-3S41 \"For Your Home\" A Full Line of Carpets, Linoleum & Pre-Finished Hardwoods AT VANCOUVER PRICES In Stock LINO SPECIAL *6#** ���* y��. ��� No Wax ��� Good Selection of Colours In Stock * PRE-FINISHED HARDWOOD ��� Teak ��� Ironwood ��� Rosewood $3��'^ �������� **��� In Stock * CONTRACTORS' SPECIALS * Lots of Stock in All Locations * INSTALLATIONS GUARANTEED * 18 Years Experience North Road & Kiwanis Way, Gibsons Edgemont Blvd. North Vancouver 8864187 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver mmtm il 14 Coast News, March 31, 1981 Budding cooks and battling bulls Ramblings of a Rover by Dee Cee It wasn't until after the Depression years were ended and I had time to think things over that I discovered how lucky I had been in having a little log cabin to return to ship preferable to the hellish existence in the stokehold and 1 was glad of the change. Wc spent three days in Montreal getting the grain off and were all set to sail when 1 was transferred to another Ihe SS Glandochart, when the going got tough, this time in the capacity of With the approach of winter cook. What I didn't know all seasonal work in the about cooking at the time Eastern Provinces came to a would have filled not one book sudden halt and it was well- but several volumes but, nigh impossible tofindajob of apart from bacon and eggs, any description. Unlike my the odd roast and mashed contemporaries, who were potatoes, there was very little battered from pillar to post, cooking lo be done. All the hounded by the police and baked goods, bread, pies, sleeping and freezing in cakes, etc. were bought boxcars and barns, at least I ashore. The main thing I had shelter and a warm fire to found out was to keep a filled come back to, even although coffee pot on the stove 24 having little or no cash at all was an ever present problem, I was extremely fortunate, far more than I possibly realized at the time. 1 have described how I hours a day, the rest was unimportant as the crew ate very little. They all seemed to be cither half drunk, completely drunk or suffering from hangovers, I rather en- ended my last summer at Lake joyed life on the lakes and Dechene and how I rode a freight back to Montreal when my pitiful stake had been squandered away in riotous living in the \"sin-bins\" of Hull. Quebec. On arriving in the city, which 1 knew well, I was in possession of only a dollar or two so I headed for the Seamen's Institute down on the waterfront where I knew I could get not only cheap meals but a bed for the night. I had only stayed there a couple of days when I was fortunate in finding a job on one of the Canadian Steamship Line's boats, the SS Glen- burnie, a grain carrier which had just finished discharging its cargo into the Montreal elevators and was now heading back to Port Arthur or Fort William for another load. I was hired as a deckhand at $40 per month, but not knowing a \"hawser\" from a \"hatch cover\" I only lasted a day or so in that capacity when I was ordered to report to the engine room. I discovered I was now a \"coal passer\" or \"trimmer\". My duties were to assist the firemen (I stayed the hell out of their way) and, at the change of shifts when the fires had been trimmed, I had to shovel the mountains of hot ashes into a steam chute to be blown overboard. This was a frenzied operation accompanied by much cursing from my \"superiors\" if I took too long and the steam gauges dropped several points. It was Hades down there and it was a welcome relief when the bunkers got low, at least I could escape some of the heat in them, although there was no let-up in the shovelling of the coal to keep the furnaces going. I was all set to \"jump\" ship at the next port of call when, once again, I was shunted to another job. The cook's helper had failed to show up when we left Buffalo. He had been seen roaring drunk in one of the numerous \"cathouses\" in that city and was probably still there when wc sailed. The cook was a cranky old s.o.b. but working in the galley was definitely stayed with it till freeze up. Back to the cabin in the late fall of 1934. Montreal had been an even harder place to leave than my other Nemesis, Hull, so once again I faced the winter with very little money in reserve, but I got by somehow. I helped a farmer butcher a pig, for which I received some of the front quarter and all of the entrail meat and my friend Mogens donated a sack of potatoes, some beans and onions. I still had my rifle and it provided many a dinner. That winter we had one of the worst blizzards ever known in that part of Ontario and there was no way I could make it to the store, even although I had snow- shoes. At the time I was extremely low on provisions so I lived on potatoes for three days. I had a little lard so I fried them, baked them and boiled them. When eventually the storm blew itself out and 1 could get to the village, I recall buying a tin of sardines and eating them right in the store, I was so hungry for something other than a spud! I might as well admit it right now that the lonely winters in the cabin were beginning to pall on me. After all I was in the prime of life - the twenties and, although the spring, summer and fall months were exciting enough, I began to find the winter days and nights monotonous in the extreme. While I had not as yet developed \"cabin fever\", I looked forward to the coming of spring when I could once more hit the road and explore other places, meet my own kind and, even if times were tough, at least there was something different to look forward to and encounter each passing day. In the spring of 1935 I found myself working for a farmer out at Stirtsville, a small village near Ottawa and it was here I had another adventure, one that could well have proved my last. Herding the cows home one evening after a hard day at the haying, 1 found that one of them was missing. Having located her in a thicket, I was thumping her along with the aid of a stick when I sensed something coming behind me at the speed of an express train. I turned but was too late. The neighbour's Holstein bull had broken down the fence and joined our herd, mainly on account of the missing cow I was driving being in heat. He hit me somewhere between the shoulder blades and knocked me on my face. Time after time I struggled to my feet only to be knocked flat and, what was even worse, he was goring me while I was prostrate. Somehow or other I managed to make it to the fence where I found a hardwood stake and, fool that I was, attempted to emulate Montes the Matador or assume the role of another El Cordoba I When finally I was forced to give up the unequal contest and roll under the fence I don't know who was in worse shape, the bull or I. INVESTMENTS WANTED We are a Western Canadian corporation with International affiliations Interested In prime Investments In the following categories: ' farms & ranches * recreational land ' development land * large motels * large businesses Joint venture proposals, partnerships and other equity funding considered. Cryden Investment Corporation 502 ��� 455 Granville Street Vancouver, B.C. (604)6692223 - John Moore Photo These two guests of the SPCA are looking for good homes. Keno, on the left, is a nine month old male Samoyed-Husky cross. On the right, Patsy is a very quiet three year old spayed female. Both are good with children, so if you want a dog give the SPCA a call at 886-7713. On the Seafood Platter oomiiyi PLACING & FINISHING PATIOS -DRIVEWAYS FLOORS ��� FOUNDATIONS SIDEWALKS Call Any Time 885-2125 886-8511 SERVING PENDER HARBOUR TO PORT MELLON Alt Types of Concrete Finishes including Coloured or Exposed by Chak-Chak Here we are at the end of the month of March; officially it is now spring. Harbingers of spring on the coast are the skunk cabbage, salmon berry blossoms and, to early residents, the oolichan. Each spring, since prehistoric times, the oolichan, the \"break-fast\" fish, has come into certain rivers and beaches to spawn. These runs have meant a renewal of food, in abundance, for birds, animals, and man, along the coast of British Columbia. The Bella Coola Indians have looked to the oolichan for the end of a winter diet of dried salmon and clams. Most importantly, the runs have meant a renewed supply of oolichan oil, a very important item in their diet, and a very valuable currency of trade with the tribes in the interior of the country. This oolichan oil because, unlike most fish oils, it is solid at room temperatures, was called grease. This grease was carried in cedar boxes by the \"Carrier Indians\" along the \"grease trails\" to the more remote tribes of the interior. The pale yellow grease was used as we use butter or margarine, it helped to make the dried fish, meat and berries more palatable. It was also a good spring tonic because of its laxative qualities. The oolichan, quite often spelled \"eulachon\", was also called \"candle fish\" because, when dried, the fish were used by the Indians as torches or candles. This species is a large member of the smelt family \"Osmeridae\" and is, to my mind, the most tasty of the smelts, when freshly pan-fried or broiled over a grill or open fire. While non-natives never seemed to develop a taste for ooolichan grease it has never ceased to be an important item in the Indian community and many families still set up oil rendering sites on the river bank as soon as the female ooolichan arrive in their area; late March or early April. At Bella Coola, the smell of rotting fish always mingles with the fragrances of the spring flowers. The production of grease is a lengthy process which begins with decomposition of the fish, cooking the fish, skimming off the oil, boiling the oil (this second cooking prevents the oil from becoming rancid) and sealing in glass jugs or cans for sale in Vancouver. If you see any fresh oolichan for sale in the fish market, try them, they are delicious. Sea you. Professional Repair & Service to your Heating Equipment 1 General Sheet Metal 1 Installation of Heat Pumps. Air Conditioners, Wood-Oil, Wood-Electric, Wood, Electric and Oil Furnaces THOMAS HEATING Call Now 886-7111 17 Years Experience. Serving Ihe Sunshine Coast since 1967 THINKOFUSASA MATCHMAKER BUYHGORHUIf*.TH[ COAIf HffC CUISSIfKOSWORK FMYOU! Anyway I went to hospital with four broken ribs, more black and blue patches all oyer SHllgS & AITOWS fCOlltM.) my body than white and the w v ����� bull was in such a grim shape, with one eye dangling and his nose smashed to a pulp, he later had to be destroyed. I still have nightmares about that experience! % & 9K dndatLtiatxA CARPET, TILE & SHEET VINYL .O. Box 1092 Sechelt, B.C. VON We sell & install carpet, lino & hardwood. 17 YEARS EXPERIENCE Roberts Creek Daze \"The Beachcombers\" must be worried about this year's Roberts Creek Daze game against the Roberts Creek Ladies Softball Team. Last week they imported a \"championship\" women's team to give them a few tips. You may have seen them filming the \"practice\" sessions at Dou- gall Park. The Roberts Creek lovelies, however, don't feel threatened. They have a whole playing season ahead of them to get into shape. Right now they're more concerned about what they're going to wear. The Daze is a real community effort and the more people involved the better. But participation starts now, at the planning stage. Get in on the ground floor, find out how things get done. The first Daze meeting is Wednesday, April 1st, at 7:30 at the Roberts Creek Community Hall. All those interested in helping with the Daze are asked to attend. Continued from Page Three skills which can be learned and used to keep children under control while allowing them to become happy and productive human beings. I think most of us have great sympathy for parents who have lost control of their children. We probably have a little less sympathy for those same parents when they start to attach the responsibility to others. The parents I refer to are at this latter stage and blaming others makes it easier for them to deal with their sense of inadequacy. Were they to reassume the responsibility for their kids, then there are things that could be done to help them learn the skills of parenting. Until they are willing to do that, however, there will continue to be a small group of helpless, unhappy parents, raising hopeless and unhappy children. Chinlney Cleaning & Maintenance Phone 886-8187 ELITE TRAVEL New Number 886-2$12 yjXVHTTEN MMm REALTY LTD. is pleased to ANNOUNCE that it will be opening its Lower Gibsons Office During the First Week of April, 1981 Can FBDB help you? Financial assistance Management counselling Management training Information on government programs for business On Wednesday, April 8th one of our representatives will be at the offices of MCKIBBIN & BEECHAM, C.A.S. Tel: 885-2254 If you require financing to start, modernize or expand your business and are unable to obtain it elsewhere on reasonable terms and conditions or if you are interested in the FBDB management services of counselling and training or wish information on government programs available for your business, talk to our representative. ANNOUNCING BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEW EMPLOYMENT STANDARDS ACT. MATERNITY LEAVE IS SOMETHING YOU'RE ENTITLED TO. C FEDERAL BUSINESS 145 West 15th Street, North Vancouver, V7M 1R9 980-6571 Opening new doors to small business. British Columbia's new Employment Standards Act (1981) protects your rights as an employee better than ever before. Employees who become pregnant have a legal right to take maternity leave, with job protection. You are entitled to a leave of absence of 18 weeks, without pay. The Act states when you may begin the leave, and when it expires, although you may take a shorter time if you wish. During your absence, all benefit plans continue. And on your return, you must be The New Employment Standards Act IT MAKES B.C ABETTER PLACE TO WORK reinstated in the same job, or a comparable one. Maternity leave with job protection is one of the many ways in which employment standards have been improved under the new Act. For further information, .and a leaflet dealing with Maternity Leave, contact your nearest provincial Ministry of Labour office. Province ol Ministry ol British Columbia Labour EMPLOYMENT STANDARDS BRANCH Hon Jack Heinnch Minister Coast News, March 31, 1981 15 In Christ's service by Rev. George W. Inglis Anyone who joins a Chris- lian congregation expecting to I ind a collection of saints is liable to be sadly disappointed! What is more, the critic who looks at the congregation and decides, in his or her wisdom. that Ihe congregation is not Christian because it is composed of fractions, fractured and fragmented people, is not only showing an abysmal ignorance of the reality of the life of the church, but is also tunning perilously close to being guilty of opposing God himself - Ihe one in whose name Christ calls upon believers to meet in fellowship as Christian ���families and worship together ���lol strength and comfort. Vet. none other than the late, great Mahatma Gandhi him- ���sclf, history records, once went into a Christian church when he was a young man in South ���Africa, and decided on the [basis of what he saw. that [Christians were vain, empty, hypocritical and unworthy of his alliance. ll is said that Gandhi was ^arching for his own identity at the time, and was attracted to Christianity by the pictures he received from the gospels of the humble, gentle, loving, healing Jesus of Nazareth, the \"guru\" of this Christian religion. Many ministers, including 'myself, have used this picture as a way of showing their own congregation how important it is to he lovingand hospitable to all strangers who come through the church doors, lest they get ihe wrong idea, like Gandhi, and never enter a church door again. On the other hand, if Gand- .hi, and the millions of other 'people who judge Christianity b\\ the bulk of Christian church-goers' behaviour, were 'to go a little deeper in their survey, they would find that the Christian church does not make any claim lo be a body of \"saints. I rue. there are today, and there have been through the -ages, individual church members, or even groups of mem- . hers, who have been fatuous, ;\". sell-righteous and pious - more A collection of saints? like the scribes and Pharisees than Jesus' disciples - who have laid claim to wondrous stature in God's eyes as the result ot their church identity, but, as Gamaliel once warned those who were opposing Peter and some other disciples in Jerusalem, \"you might even be found opposing God,\" (Acts 5:34), so those boasts were made from man's devising, not from God's. Far from being possessed ol \"instant virtue\" or automatic sainthood, as the result of being church members, those who inhabit Christian congregations are actually those who have had the courage to admit that they are sinners! It is because they acknowledge the fact they are sinners, and badly in need of some help that they turn to the same source for help in their weakness and sinfulness - Jesus of Nazareth, the one of whom it was written: \"God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them,\" (II Corinthians 5:19). And because these Christians who band together in churches to study God's word, to praise God, and to worship him in such fashion that they witness to him, are told in scriptures that they are sons and daughters of God, that they consider themselves to be families. They consider themselves to be blood families, just like the worldly families, only in the case of Christian families, they believe that their blood tie is a spiritual tie with the blood of that same Jesus of Nazareth, the Lord and Saviour of mankind, which was shed on a cross on a hill outside Jerusalem, 2,000 years ago. Beside this common bond of the blood of Jesus, Christians also believe that they have a common mission which not only binds them together, but gives them a mutual target in life, and a mutual hope for an eternal life after death. This mission was given to all those who would believe in Christ (and thus become Christians), by the resurrected Jesus Christ himself, when he said to a group of his disciples (the first fct Christians): \"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and ofthe Son and of the Hoi/ Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age.\" (Matthew 28:19,20). But every person who responds to this call to union as a family of Christians, and this \"Great Commission\" to teach and proclaim, does not become superhuman, any more than the disciples who walked in Jesus' footsteps did. Jesus' close followers, the disciples who walked with him, were of humble origin, and they possessed all the human frailties of pride, envy, jealousy, anger, uncertainty, fear and doubt, as the gospel record tells us. And it was into these hands lhat Jesus committed the awesome task of carrying on his ministry after his death and resurrection, the \"earthen vessels,\" which the apostle Paul called them, capable of being crushed, or crumbling in their frail humanity, but upheld and strengthened by the common bond and mission assigned to all of Christ's followers (Christians). These are the people who make up the Christian church families in the world - not a group of saints, but a group of sinners! But they are sinners who have had the courage and wisdom to acknowledge their sin, and are seeking to reform. And the membership price fits any purse! AblilDRb CEDRR HOIRES Product ol British Columbia QUALITY LIVING WITH CEDAR Every detail in a Lindal Cedar Home radiates gracious, yet sensible living. And every Lindal floor plan permits almost unlimited design flexibility. Over 60 original plans are available. Each can be modified to fit your particular needs and tastes. Or we can help you design your very own plan. Sales Office and Display Home in Horseshoe Bay independently M.D. Mackenzie Limited distributed by 6342 Biy strtel, Horwiho* Bay Weit Vancouver, B.C. V7W 2G9 CN3-31 Phone (604) 921-8010 921-9268 - Sandy Loam Photo Relax and enjoy the spring bulbs. These tulips are prepared for a necessary spring rain. Carefree gardening by Sandy Loam So far this growing year has been early and sunny which means that most gardeners have already done their annual spring chores which a cold and wet March would preclude. This has left the gardener with an uncomfortable lack of ease and a restless feeling that lie should be doing something, an uncomfortable conscience being the earmark of every good gardener. Relax chaps, we are a little ahead of the game. Enjoy the spring bulbs and admire the primroses but don't rush the season and harangue the plant shops for Geraniums, Giant Marigolds and other tender annuals as a nip of frost can set these back or even kill them. If you just M THE UNITED CHURCH M OK CANADA Sunday Worship Services ST. JOHN'S Davis Bay - 9:30 am. GIBSONS Glassford Rd. - 11.IS am. Sunday School - ��:.10 am. Rev. Bob Scales Church Telephone 886-2333 CALVARY \\ BAPTIST CHURCH �� Park Rd., Gibsons * Pastor: Harold Andrews 1 Res: 886-9163, Church: 886-2611 Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Service 11:00 a.m. Gospel Service 7 p.m. Prayer & Bible Study Thursday 7 p.m. GIBSONS PENTECOSTAL CHURCH Cedar Grove School Chaster Rd., Gibsons Senior Pastor: Ted Boodle Youth Pastor: Jack Moch Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. Evening Fellowship 7 p.m. Home Bible Study Phone 886-7268 or 886-9482 Affiliated with Ihe Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada ST. BARTHOLOMEW & ST. AIDAN ANGLICAN CHURCHES Combined Services 2nd &4th Sundays I I:l5a m. in St. Bartholomew's Gibsons All other Sunday! Roberts Creek 930 a.m. Family Holy Eucharist Gibsons ll:IS a.m. Family Holy Eucharist Rector: Rev. John E. Robinson ROMAN CATHOLIC SERVICES Rev. Angelo De Pompa Parish Priest Times of Masses Saturday 5:00 p.m. St. Mary's, Gibsons Regular Sunday Maiaes 9:00a.m. Our Lady, of Lourdes Church Sechelt Indian Reserve 10:00 a.m. Holy Family Church, Sechelt 12:00 noon St. Mary's Church Gibsons Confessions before Mass Phone: 885-9526 or 885-5201 SEVENTH-DAV ADVENTIST CHURCH Sabbath School Sat. 10 a.m. Hour of Worship Sat. 11a.m. St. John's United Church Davis Bay Pastor: C. Drieberg Everyone Welcome For information phone: 885-9750 or 883-2736 GLAD TIDINGS TABERNACLE Gower Point Road Phone 886-2660 Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Evening Fellowship 6 p.m. Bible Study Wed. 7:30 p.m. Pastor: Nancy Dykes REFORMED CHRISTIAN GATHERING Sechelt 885-5635 !(| Church Servicesl - John Moore PtlOlO Dennis Cray of Coast Cycle in Sechelt presents a $35.00 cheque to Dale Maedel who won the 2S0 Junior event in the first Sunshine Coast Motocross two weeks ago. The firm offers bonuses and parts discounts to winning riders who purchase their machines from the firm. THINKOFUSASA MATCHMAKER \"~ BUYINGORSELUNGTHE COAIf lift OMStTOWOMtfOllrWI! must be out there and your garden is all cleaned, fertilized and ready to go remember that the plant shops have many gorgeous perennials (plants that come back year after year and get bigger and bigger which makes them an awfully good buy). One favoured perennial is Leopard's Bane and if you can't wait for flowers Ihis bright yellow daisy is the earliest to bloom of the entire Daisy family. It offsets the spring bulbs and gives your garden an early summer flavour. The small button or cushion Chrysanthemums are available and all the plant shops seem to have new hybridized perennials each year. Why not start some of those gorgeous tropical Begonias in the house, to be placed on the patio when they are ready to bloom and the weather is much warmer. Pick up some perennial Lupine and Delphinium spires as a backdrop for the annuals you intend to put in at the right time. Start some seed boxes on a sunny window sill to be planted out when the warm weather arrives. Tuck those sweet peas in for later cutting and colour. Get your Geraniums, if you must, and give them a rousing start in the house but your efforts will be more rewarding if you allow the very knowledgeable plant shops to harden and toughen, these goodies for later use. There is one exception: Marguerites may be placed in the ground now. Marguerites are those tough little instant garden plants that grow into a huge bush of cuttable bright yellow daisies which will fill any hole and cover any area and are in my opinion an absolute must for those of you who want constant bloom until next Christmas. They are also a great filler for those blankish times that come along each year. The empty period between bulbs and perennials and between perennials and autumn bloom and I consider Marguerites one of the best buys on the market year after year. Nasturtium seeds come next on the list for fill-in areas and around stumps, gates and sheds. Visit your favourite plant shop anyway as they are always so inspiring and optimistic this time of year and they do get you moving and thinking. You have \"Quality Farm\" on Pratt Road in Gibsons, Mack's Nursery on the highway in Robert's Creek, \"Casey's Country Garden\" in Sechelt and the lovely \"Milore\" Nursery on Redrooffs. At Madeira Park you can visit Plant 'n Garden Centre at Frances Peninsula Place. Enjoy the Tulips while they're here and Happy Gardening. Is your wife insured ? Your wife should have life insurance for pretty well the same reasons you do. And lor some reasons that are all her own. Get in touch and let's talk it over. Geoff Hodgkinson Box 957, , Glbtont, B.C. 886-8018 Mutual Life of Canada SUNSHINE COAST PEST CONTROL & HEALTH SERVICES LTD. LOCALLY OPERATED GOVT INSPECTED For Control of Carpenter Ants, Rodents and Other Pests OUR SPECIALTY: Pre-Treatment ol Houses Under Conduction For Confidential Advlct and Estimate Call 883-2531 Pender Harbour THINKOFUSASA MATCHMAKER BUVHEORSELUNG.THf C0AIT Ilffl CUISSKDSWORK WRYOO! NATURE'S OWN 100% NATURAL HENNA NOW AVAILABLE FOR HOME HAIR CARE ��� IT IS COMPLETELY NATURAL IN COLOUR ��� IT CLOSES THE CUTICLE. CONDITIONS i HIGHLIGHTS THE HAIR ��� ADDS BODY AND TEXTURE TO HAIR ��� LASTS A LONG TIME. FADES AWAY GENTLY Available at: Western Drug Mart Sunnycrest Centre, Gibsons Maxwell's Pharmacy R.R. #2, Cedar Plaza, Gibsons Western Drug Mart Trail Bay Mall. Sechelt The following colour, are available: Neutral, buttercup blonde, wheat blonde, golden apricot, light brown, brown, ash brown, chestnut, mahogany, red. burgundy, black Neutral Henna can be used by everyone to shine and condition hair. Try it. Your hair will love you for it. APRIL FOOLS DOLLAR DAY$ ^Wednesday April 1st Grilled Cheese* Sandwich with Chicken Noodle Soup $1,00 ���Thursday= April 2nd SHOPPERS BUS SPECIAL Farmer*! Cheese, Tomato, Alfalfa Sprouts on a Whole Wheat Bun Coffee or Tea $1#���� =Friday= April 3rd Egg Salad Sandwich with Vegetable Soup $1.00 All Three Days FRESH BAKED PIES SCOOP APPLE RAISIN PUMPKIN $l.oo per slice COWRIE STREET, SECHELT 885-3628 Coast News, March 31, 1981 Busnarda. Michael and Susan are proud to announce the birth of their daughter, Michele, a sister tor Stephanie. Many thanks to the wonderful staff at St. Mary's Hospital. #13 Molly has a baby sister! Kather- ine ' 'Katie'' Lynne Howard arrived March 21. Proud parents are Harry and Janet. Thanks Dr. Lubin and St. Mary's staff. #13 Obituaries l harhoneau. Passed away March 2\\. Mervin John (Jack) Char- boneau, late of Madeira Park in his o5th year. Survived by his loving wife. Hazel, two sons Mervin and Jack, four grandchildren, one brother Bill, two sisters, Aida and Eileen, one step-brother Dick, two stepsisters Kay and Pat and his step-father T.L. Kenny. Funeral service was held Tuesday, March 24 in the chapel of Devlin Funeral Home, Gibsons. Cremation. #13 Damherger. Passed away March 2.1. Barbara Damberger, late of Gibsons in her 90th year. Survived by one daughter, Ruth Harrop of Gibsons, three grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral mass was celebrated on Thursday, March 26 at St. Mary's Catholic Church, Gibsons. Interment Valleyview Cemetery, Surrey. Devlin Funeral Home, directors. #13 tozer. Passed away March 28, 1981. Rosanna Tozer late of Sechelt at the age of 89 years. Survived by her family, son peorge, and wife Alice, daughter Kathleen and husband Geoff Dixon, daughter Cherry and husband Jack Cooper, three granddaughters and one great grandson. Funeral service Tuesday, March 31, with interment following at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Burnaby. In lieu of Mowers donations appreciated to St. Mary's Hospital. Arrangements through Devlin Funeral Home, Gibsons. #13 In Memorial!. In memory of-Len Coates, passed away April 3, 1980. A thoughtful, kind, loving husband, father,' grandfather, great-grandfather and friend, loved by all who knew him. Sadly missed, he lives in our memories. Wife Gladys, children, brothers, sisters and friends. #13 Personal CARNATION CORN CAPS Why suffer agony? Relief is now yours from England. Carnation Corn Caps have been sold for over a century with effective results, a medicated pad that really does the job I Corn caps or Callous Caps ��� available at Pacifica Pharmacy, Sechelt. #13 Tartaroff ��� for gleaming white teeth. New improved formula powder form, removes Tartar and stains of nicotine, quickly. Also effectively removes stains from dentures. New 3 oz. shaker-pack. Available at Pacifica Pharmacy, Sechelt. #13 Save on gas. Share cost with commuter fr. Lower Gibsons. Need ride to Sechelt/P.H. on regular basis. Ph. Marianne at 886-8086 #14 Quick relief for discomfort of mouth sores, white canker spots, dental plate sores, tender gums, with Fletcher's Sore-Mouth Medicine. At Pacifica Pharmacy, Sechelt. #13 Announcements worn Wanted! Worn wanted I Help Wanted! wanted to Rent UniPERMS | Gibson Girl S Guys 886-2120 Salon Thanhs We wish to thank the nurses and staff of St. Mary's Hospital and especially Dr. Lubin. Also to our friends for their concern during Jack's illness. His loving wife and family. Hazel Charboneau #13 Personal LINES AND WRINKLES Leave lines and wrinkles of dry skin behind you! Use Cocrema for 7 days and see the difference. Cocrema products have as the active ingredient, Cocoa Butter, which has been used for many years as a skin food and moisturizer. Cocrema products are now available at Pacifica Pharmacy. Sechell. #13 SECHELT TOTEM CLUB BINGO Every Sunday. Place: Sechelt Legion Hall. Times: Doors open 5:30. Early Birds 7:00. Bonanza 7:30. Regular Bingo 8:00. 100% payout on Bonanza end of each month. Everyone Welcome. TFN If someone in your family has a drinking problem you can see what it's doing to them. Can you see what it is doing to you? Al Anon can help. Phone 6-9037 or 6-8228 TFN DANCE students, teachers and others requiring information on Tap, Ballet, Aero, Modern and Spanish Dance. Please phone 886-2989. TFN The Hunter Gallery, Gibsons. Exhibition of oil paintings by Hazel Coxall April 6-30. Artist will demonstrate palette knife technique during exhibit. Gallery open 11-4 p.m. every day. #13 LEASE OPPORTUNITY Beautiful Ruby Lake Restaurant is now available for lease. Superbly equipped, with outdoor patio and take-out window. Breathtaking waterfront settingl Catch trout from front door. $25,000 for business, equipment and furnishings. Phone owner 883-9453 or (112) 487-9225 #14 A.A. MEETINGS MONDAY: 6 30 PM Open Meetings Gibsons Athletic Hall Ph 886-2596 Don 886-9208 Dudley TUESDAY: 8 30 PM Young People Rear ol Si Mary's Catholic Church. Gibsons Ph 886-9783 Lorna WEDNESDAY: 8 00 PM Closed Discussion Meeting Rear of St. Mary's Catholic Church. Gibsons Ph 885-3436 Catherine 885-3394 Herb WEDNESDAY: 8:30 PM Open Meeting St Andrew's Church Madeira Park Ph 883-9978 John THURSDAY: 8 30 PM. Open Meeting Wilson Creek Community Hall Davis Bay Ph 885-2896 Ed SATURDAY: 8:00 PM Al-Anon - A.A. Meeting Rear ol St. Mary's Catholic Church. Gibsons Ph. 886-7358 Linda or Bob A Full Line ol ��W Plumbing Supplies NEW HOURS Tues. - Sat. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Glbtont Hwy 101 & Pratt Rd. u EIXINGHAM J& STABLES gVram&a ��� Boarding WfW ��� Training IPLr ��� Lessons T f 885-9969 CASTLEROCK KENNELS fci i ��� Boarding ��� Grooming ��� Puppies occasionally Roberts Creek, opposite Goll Course 885-2505 To give away a neutered purebred black Lab 6 yrs. old, trained for hunting; good with children; must be a country home. Ph. 885-2783 after Mon. \"15 SPCA SPAY Clinic and information 886-7938 Box .Kl.-i Gibsons, B.C. Cat: White with gray tabby spots. Very friendly. 886-9318 #13 P.B. Golden Retriever X Labrador Ret. Pups born Feb. 1st. Ready April 1st. Dam excel, retriever, pups wormed & w/shots. $65 each. 886-2108 #13 Kerry Blue Terriers 886-2505 ~ Magus��� Kennels ��� Dog Boarding & Training ��� CKC Champion & Obedience Great Danes ��� Best Care on Peninsula 886-8568 S.P.C.A. For Adoption: Dogs: White Terrier Maltese cross, 2 year male neutered; black poodle cross male adult; black & tan mixed breed male 10 months; terrier cross female spayed 3 years; Sheepdog/Husky cross male 10 months. Cats: Female fortoiseshell 4 months; Female Torbie 4 months; tabby male 4 months; fluffy spayed female 3 years; black male 1 year; grey & white female 1 year; black & white female 4 mo; fluffy tortoiseshell female 1 year. To view - Peninsula Boarding Kennels Open 9-11 a.m. - 2-4 p.m. 7 days a week or phone 886-7713 #13 Uuestoch HORSES ii good riding horses & 2 ponies for sale to good homes only. N86.7377or886.9409 TFN HAY. $2.00 a bale. Phone evenings 885-9357 TFN TB gelding 12 yrs.. 16 hands. English trained. 886-7880 #14 Hunter jumper clinic with Sue Mills (qualified judge) at Filing- ham stables April 4th, Sth. $25. Beginning jumpers welcome. For more info, call Jeanine 885-9969 #14 MULCH HAY $1.50 bale. Phone evening 885-9357 TFN PENINSULA Open for Boarding all types of dogs & cats. Excellent care given. Now S.P.C.A. Shelter Open 9-11 am & 2-4 pm for viewing adoptive animals or drop-off of unwanted animals. Phone 886-7713 Gibsons Assorted BOOKKEEFIM SERVICES PHONE BETWEEN 8:00 am. -11:00 am. 5:00 pm. - 6:00 pm. 888-8877 MR FOR J ��� Gen, Bookkeeping ��� Income Tax PENINSULA R00FINB ft INSULATION LTD. All Types of Roofing & Re-Roofing Henry Rodriguez Sechelt 885-9585 Reward, Ladies Watch, Cardinel, Bulova. black strap, small face. Ph. 885-3325 #14 Last week: Lost on Bal's Lane, set of keys. 886-9952 #13 Mesa, a small orange and white female cat, wearing a white flea collar, was lost between North Road and Chamberlin to Grantham's Landing. Please call 886-9515. Urgent. #13 ELECTROSTATIC ANNOUNCEMENT ONLY WAV CARPET CARE $59.95 special Rccommended hy Canada Leading Carpet Manufacturers For Information 886-2853 Sechelt TAX SERVICE BRICKWORK Richard Saunders. 886-8586, 886- 8456 #13 For Explosive Requirement. Dynamite, electric or regular caps B line E cord and safety fuse. Contact Gwen Nlmmo, Cemetery Road, Gibsons. Phone 886-7778. Howe Sound Farmer Institute. TFN NEED TUNE-UP? Experienced mechanic will come to your est ��� any nuke. Ren. rates call Dominique 885-3317 anytime TFN Qualified Painter. Reasonable rates. Work guaranteed. 886-9749 TFN 2 EXPERIENCED CARPENTERS Quality craftsmanship, references reasonable rates, no job too small. 885-3319'til 9 p.m. TFN Carpentry and Construction, Renovations and Repairs, Deck, and Patios, Framing and Foundations. Call Jim or Brent at 885-5643 TFN Carpenter ��� new and renovations. Reasonable rates and references. 886-7280 TFN Lawn and garden care. Clean-up, painting, no job too small. 885-5349 #14 Experienced Bookkeeper avail, for small businesses. Please write Fran de Grood at RR#4 Gibsons VON 1VO, with your phone no. and 1 will call you. #15 TREE SERVICE We make it our business to provide satisfaction Our speciality: ��� Topping ��� Limbing ��� Danger Tree Removal Insured guaranteed services Peerless Tree Ltd. Call for free estimates 885-2109 TFN Serving the Sunshine Coast Since 1975 TAX RETURNS FROM $15.00 Look for our Sign on Cowrie St. Across from \"The Dock\" HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 9:00 - 5:00 Sat. 10:00 - 3:00 ACADEMIC TUTORIALS Paleontologist or Geologist with University degree Zoologist or Botanist with University degree These part time positions (weekends and summer holidays) will be added to the Science, Mathematics and English sections of the Academic Tutorial Program. The underlying purpose heing to affect an attitudinal change in the student in favour of academic excellence by providing positive academic experience. Bach teaching unit is composed of two formal lessons, one local field trip and sometimes an extended field trip. Some of the students may visit the Canadian Arctic and Stanford University, however most field trips will take place on the Lower Mainland. Primary and Secondary age groups are represented and each student is doing average to far above average work in school. Their parents are well motivated and there are no major behaviour problems. The student teacher ratio will not exceed 5; I. Please direct inquiries and salary requirements to: ACADEMIC TUTORIALS, Attn: John G. Beuger, Box 1015, Sechelt. B.C. VON 3AO. #15 Branch Manager for truck parts & industrial supply branch in Gibsons. Previous experience in the logging supply business a definite asset. Excellent remuneration program for the right person. Please call Reetline Parts & Equip, at 294-8601 in Burnaby. #13 Experienced diesel mechanic, must also be able to weld. Call after 6 p.m. 885-2657 #14 Sunshine Coast Arts Centre immediately requires part-time creative publicity person with writing and graphic abilities. Position to pay $200 monthly to start. Apply in writing Box 1568 Sechelt. B.C. #13 Volunteer SPCA Animal Shelter help needed. If you are willing to donate 2 or more hours per week, please phone Sandy at 886*9265 #15 2nd Cook. Lord Jim's Lodge. Apply in person or telephone 885-2232 #15 Design Drafting 886-7442 Yard and Basement clean-ups, rubbish removal. Also young man seeks steady employment. 886- 9503 #14 Licenced dependable Plumber repairs, service, new installations Free estimates. Bruce 885-5072. #14 HOUSECLEANING Fast, efficient, reliable and very reasonable. 886-2758 evenings please. #14 YOU WANT IT DONE WE'LL DO IT Landscaping, build fences, chim- ney sweep and moss spraying etc. etc. 886-7540 TFN 2 experienced carpenters for new structures, renovations, plumbing and electrical. Call eves. 885-3387 #14 YOU WANT IT DONE? WE'LL DO IT Build fences, chimney sweep and moss spraying etc. etc. 886-7540 TFN rototilling, gardens dug, landscaping, fencing, light hand clearing. 886-9526 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. 886-2547 after 6 p.m. #14 J. LEPORETILE Quality Installations Ceramic. Mosaic or Quarry All work guaranteed Free estimates Phone Anytime 886-8097 Hardwood Floors resanded and finished, work guaranteed. Free est. Phone 885-5072 TFN Harbour Chimney Cleaning. Serving the Sunshine Coast. Fireplaces, furnaces, oil stoves, 883- 9171. Customers from the 886 ex change call Collect. #14 WEST COAST Ptinnn r��<��- -^ 886-2683 Free Estimates ALL WORK GUARANTEED Help wanted We are looking for a mature responsible person to serve as a live-in babysitter for two children. If you love children and are looking for a permanent position please call 886-9351 #13 CARPENTERS Only experienced need apply. Please phone 885-3307 #14 Local doctor and family require unfurnished 2 or 3 bedroom house to rent from July for extended period prefer Sechelt-Roberts Creek. 885-3328 #14 May-June only furnished 2-3 bedroom house mobile home cottage or ? In Gibsons area will pay top dollar for suitable accommodation. Leave message at 886- 2228 or call Powell River 485-9484 after 4:30 p.m. #13 I'imherjack Skidder with operator. Wire splicer available, SK6- 2451. IIA Chimney Cleaning and maintenance. Ph. 886-7411 or 886-8023 TFN Electrical Contractor wants work anywhere on the coast, own boat for island work. 886-9316 TFN HELP WANTED Experienced Waitresses, bar tending experience necessary. Also dishwashers. Apply in person to: Seaview Garden 886-9219 MUSIC westwurid sound Centres Audio VOX HI COIN Fender Marshall vamaha Appliances DEALER COST plot 10% Next to Ihe Bank of Montreal Building Sechelt 885-3313 W For Rent Duplex, one bedroom, adults only in Gibsons. Range, fridge, drapes, newly decorated $350.00. 522-6559 #14 Highest quality office space available in new professional building in Gibsons. 625 sq. ft. Location is on Farnham Road behind Gibsons Medical Clinic. For details call 886-7020 or 886-7574 TFN 19 in. Colour F.V. $25. per mo.. 3 mo. min. 26 in. consoles $30. per mo. J &C Electronic. 885-2568 #TFN Community Hall for rent in Roberts Creek. Phone Bill Grose 885-9237 TFN SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES Peninsula Hotel 886-9334 TFN Avail. May 1. Gibsons waterfront home, 2 bd. basement, aut. oil heat. $425 per month. 886-9849 #13 Wanted, men singers, violist and electric bass player for production of Jesus Christ Super Star. 886-9409 #13 2 working men need place to rent, Roberts Creek to Gibsons. Good references available. Leave messages. Mark pr Wayne at 886- 8533 or 886-7395 #13 2 or 3 bedroom needed April or May 1. Gibsons area. Family with 2 kids, will do repairs or renovations 886-9579 #13 Cple. wants apt., suite or house to rent in Gibsons area. Up to $400 mo. Ph. 886-7661 (Noreen) #13 OFFICE OR RETAIL SPACE AVAILABLE 888-2417 886-2703 822-2017 wanted WANTED Pocket Books and Rummage tor S.P.C.A. Pocket Book Sale & Garage Sale. Donations can be dropped oft at Peninsula Boarding Kennels, Reed Rd.. Gibsons, Quality Farm Supplies, Pratt Rd. or Phone 886-7713 or 886-7839 for pick-up. THERMAX WELD-ALL IND. Beat the High Cost ol Heating Custom Made Wood Stoves PHONE 886-8466 CASH FOR LOOS top Prices Free Estimates D & 0 LOG SORTING LTD. 886-7896 886-7700 Want to buy small 2 wheel bike and one 3-speed bike. Reasonable. 886-2098 #13 Inexpensive but nice carpet and shelf. 886-7139 dr 885-2687. #14 Wanted to Buy: Logs or Timber. Fir, Hemlock, Cedar - Porpoise Bay Logging Ltd. 885-940\" or 885-2032 TFN The Coast News is looking for back copies to complete their Files. Issues missing are from June to December in 1976. Anyone wishing to donate, please phone 886-2622 and we will pick up. Thank youl TFN Older furniture, china etc. bought or sold on consignment. Harbour Antiques, 1585 Marine Dr., Gibsons. 886-7800 TFN Strap-in type baby seat for car (infant). Call 886-7636 #14 Wanted - single or three speed ladies bike. Prefer older large framed bike (28 in. wheels) any condition. 886-9234 #13 For Sale Starcraft hard top tent trailer, furnace, sink, propane stove, cooler, sleeps 8, privacy curtains, spare, excellent condition, $2,000 OBO.886-9810afterSp,m, #13 22 cu. ft. Viking freezer, excellent condition, will deliver. $250.00. Ph. 885-5416 #15 Inglis multi-cycle auto washer, excellent condition. Guaranteed & delivered. $225. Phone 883- 2648 TFN 2 68 MGB's. One runs really well and one is for parts. 2 hd.tps, good wheels���great deal at $2,500. These are classics now! Jane 883- 9342 Sun. - Tues. or write R.R. HI, Garden Bay, VON ISO TFN HOTTUB? Do it yourself. Fiberglass, redwood and vinyl. Solar collectors, H&S Contracting. 885-3825 TFN TUPPERWARE - your guarantee of quality - keeps food at peak of freshness - pretty and practical. Phone Louise Palmer 886-9363#15 Save $1,000 on reconditioned CA 5E chromoglass sewage treatment plant. New controls, ready to transport from Roberts Creek. $1500. 885-5595 or 922- 7362 #13 Appliances, Furniture, TV's, Stereos etc. DISCOUNT PRICES) Kern's Home Furnishings, Seaview Place, Gibsons. 886-9733. TFN Babysitter wanted pref. older person to come into my home for 2 month old. Days, permanent, part-time. Must be dependable and loving. If interested please call 886-8245 in Gibsons area. #14 Wanted 8' or 10' x 30' to 50' Mobile Home or Trailer. Good condition. 112-298-7698 #14 SEEDS Harden supplies Sheds Lawn fsom Mowers ��99.�� MACLEODS SECHELT 885-2171 Datsun B2I0 body or body parts -in good shape. 885-5998 #15 Older style propane cook stove. Phone 885-5328 after 6 p.m. #14 Strap-in type baby seat for car (infant) Call 886-7636 #14 ATTENTION PHOTOGRAPHERS Gossen Profisix ��� top quality hand-held exposure meter w/ silicon blue cells $225. Pat 885-5998 #15 White elec. Fireplace w/Dutch tile $40. 2 beige Venetian blinds, 6' $3 ea. 2 5' room divider screens $50. Antique steamer trunk $35. Home intercom $50. Large 4' x 5' alum, frame window $45. Danish teak sofa and chair $135. English chimney pot $45. 886- 9077.886-9851 eves. #14 GilTnet corks & full length leadline. Good cond. Phone 883-992S. #14 Used one winter black and brass fire screen and glass doors, also grate with two speed fan. 885-5676 #14 r'titl^l^f\"8 mMm ?��\"����' '52 Chain saw, ,00 cc, (like new) 886-7943 ,0 np mo(or Uke Mw Va,ue Delivered sawdust, shavings, for $700. Asking $500.885-5059 #13 stable. 885-9969 TFN urgently Needed FOSTER HOME mine PENDER HARBOUR AHA 005-2288 Mrs. Roy JtWfttiM jy swnr DECKS * & . SEPTIC k TANKS I > 885-5703 / For Sale TONY'S UNIQUE RESTORATIONS BRASS & ANTIQUES Pedal stools. Sinks. Leaded glass. French Doors. Demolition. Brass Taps. Chandeliers. Wall Sconces. Red Brick. Oak Floors. Beautiful accessories 50 years & older. 36624th Ave., Vancouver TFN Seed 'Potatoes FRUIT TREES ��� PERENNIALS ��� SPRING BULBS Fine i Selection of FLOWERING SHRUBS Fertilizers Steer Manure Peat Moss Potting Soil Lime SEEDS Quality Farm & Garden Supply Ltd. Pratt Road 886-7527 1980 MGB Mark IV-11,000 km. excellent cond. w/accessories. Phone 886-7804 #13 Kitchen Table, 4 chairs, ex. cond. $60 back pack to carry child $15. Like new umbroller $20 or best offers. Tel. 886-9332 #13 FRESHLY BAKED BREAD Whole Wheat, every day. For poppy seed, rye, oatmeal, white, raisin, french etc. please order in advance. Cafe Pierrot, Teredo Sq.. Sechelt. 885-9962 #13 French Provincial, solid wood, coffee table & 2 end tables. $550 OBO. Call 886-7085 after 6. #13 ELECTROHOME SALES & SERVICE J Ypar Warranty on Parts & Labour ��SUNSHINE COAST T.V. Atter Ihe Sale It s the Service thiVI Counts HOT WATER TANKS All Sizes Best Puces on the Peninsula MACLEODS SECHELT 885-2171 New men's racing bike CCM l0-speed, yellow. 886-2951 after 6p.m.$100OBO #14 Queen size Water Bed - eicellent condition - with liner, heater & bookcase headboard. $275. 885-5416 #14 Black free standing 360 degree fireplace. $200. Ph. 885-9362 #14 Ice Machine $125.00 and 450 sq. ft. stainless steel cooler $800.00 OBO. Bus. Ph. 886-7921 #14 1 set tandem trailer axles 5 ton cap., tires like new plus 6' channel hitch. Phone 885-5512*14 Moffat 30\" stove $75. Hoover washer-spin dryer $25. Both for $90.886-8310 #14 Cedar Planters, hanging baskets made to order by local handicapped at Sunshine Achievement Centre. Call 886-9325 or drop in. #15 3 wheel, 5-sp. English made, good condition, all new tires $150. 886-9952 #15 10\" B&D radial arm saw 886-8441 #13 Cabinet Stereo AM/FM radio/ record player. Baycrest $75.00. Cabinet stereo record player only Motorola $50.00.886-9197 #15 Used windows, wood sash, many sizes. Also screens made. 885- 2693 #15 Ten speed bike 21 inch frame $40 Phone 886-9715 after 4. #15 80-gallon fish tank complete with cabinet, filters, heaters, gravel etc. $400. Phone 886-7848 #15 1964 Case 530 diesel Backhoe very good cond. c/w new 5th wheel trailer. $10,000. 885-9334 #15 Westinghouse Stove electric $75. Twin size bed, box spring & headboard included. $85. Phone 886-2184 #13 Fiberglass resin & catalyst $16 gal. 886-9252 #13 White cast iron tub 5'6\" $50. Toilet $25.886-8398 #13 CAMpbell'* FAMILY SHOES and LEATHER GOODS \"IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN SECHELT\" 12:00 Noon Saturday. PRESCRIPTION*' SERVICE MADEIRA PARK PHARMACY rPENDER HARBOUR CENTER MADEIRA PARK 883-9414 Deadline 12:00 Noon Fridays [Classifieds should be prepaid and pre-written Your friendly neighbourhood drop-off points for COAST I ItfS Classified Ads Copyright and Advertising Regulations The Sunshine Const News reserves the right lo classify advertisements under appropriate headings and determine page location. The Sunshine Coast News also reserves the riuht to revise or reject any advertising which in Ihe opinion of the Publisher is in questionable taste. In the event that any advertisement is rejected, the sum paid for the advertisement will be refunded. ED ADVERTISING Minimum $2.50 per 4 line Insertion. Each additional line 50$, or use our economical 3 weeks for the price of 2 rate. This offer is made available for private individuals. THE FOLLOWING CLASSIFICATIONS ARE FREE Birth Announcements, Lost and Found No billing or telephone orders are accepted except from customers who have accounts with us or who live outside the Sunshine Coast. Cash, cheques or money orders must accompany all classified advertising. CLASSIFIED DEADLINE NOON SATURDAY ALL FEES PAYABLE PRIOR TO INSERTION. Please mail to Coast News, Classllleds, Box 460, Gibsons, B.C. VON 1V0. Or bring In person to the Coast News Office In Gibsons. CLASSIFICATION: Eg. For Sale, For Rent, etc. ��� : : _\" i : : :~: r \"��� t : J_ I \" _. X I LTTT ._ Z I For Sale 2-3'8\" x 6'8\" new solid core, lire-rated doors. $20 each, older style black underwood typewriter SS0. Bathtub enclosure $50. Call 886-7289 #14 MOVING SALE Large discounts on most furniture We must sell some of our larger furniture to make room for new stock at our future location. Come in and see. Harbour Antiques & Gifts, 1S8S Marine, Gibsons Landing. 886-7800 Wed. through Sat. #14 1977 17' Skagit w/85 hp Merc O/B 200 hrs. on motor complete with road runner trailer $3,600 OBO. Ph. 886-9287 #15 Near new oil furnace, Duomatic 98000 BTU. 115 v. Comes/w 250 gal. tank. $400 OBO. Phone 886- 9169 #14 Fop sale Coast News, March 31,1981 17 Automotlue 884-5240 CAM PRENTIS Prop. DUNHAM RD.. PORT MELLON VON 2SO i I GARAGE SALE SPRING CLEANING SALE! NOON SUN. Coracle Dr. & Shrimp Way, Sandy Hook. Furn., 3-spd. bike, clothes, typwrtr., books, Ithr. jackt., TV, Sofabds 1 with chr. 885-9677 after 6 #13 Esso Hot Air Furnace complete with controls, oil burner, fan and 250 gal. tank $150. Phone 885- 3142 #14 Good cond. Oil stove incl. oil tank (130 gal.) convertible to woodburning. Best offer takes. Phone 885-9646 or 885-2746 weekends only #15 New 8x7 redwood panel garage door w/hardware $350. Olsen oil furnace 100,000 BTU, 5 yrs. old, plus 225 gal. oil tank $300 OBO, various building materials 886- 7889 after 6 p.m. #13 4 ft. chest freezer (16 cu. ft.) Ph. Cafe Pierrot 885-9962 #13 10' Beamy 'glaspar' cartopper. Excellent condition. $375.00. 886-9049 #13 Nikon FE, F2, 35mm and 50mm lenses w/filter and carrying case. Like new $500.886-8583 #15 Utility Trailer. Small 4'x6' just built. $400. firm. 886-2105 #15 Apple Trees in rare old varieties. 885-5459 #13 5-speed ladies bike. Best offer. Been used only 1 month. Call after 6:00.886-8283 #15 20 gal. fish tank complete with fish. 886-9770. $100, #15 Nutone built-in food centre has blender,, mixer, knife, sharp. New-neverused $175.4 bar stools chrome & vinyl $200.19\" Electra- home port, colour TV $200. 1977 - 750 Triumph Bonneville, recently rebuilt, eng. receipts to prove + 2 helmets. Asking $1450.886-2706 #13 8080 DB Sansui stereo receiver, Technics direct-drive turntable SL 1700, 2 Bose 501 speakers matched set like new $1700. 6x12 National billiard table, anniversary slate with new felt and all accessories. $2000. 886-2706 #13 MACK'S NURSERY PHONE 886-2684 Hwy. 101, Roberta Creek Spring Clean Up Sale. Many kinds shrubs, ornamental & shade trees, hedges etc. 10 to 20% discount. Open March 21 Saturday-till stocks last. #13 GARAGE SALEi Saturday, Apr. 4 10-4, YMCA' Rd., Langdale, kitchen cabs., mirrored medicine cab., kitchen table & chain, shades, curtains, bifold doors, lots of others, watch for signs. #13 ��� Bugzapwrs ��� Summer Tins ��� Fertilizers ��� Pesticides ��� ess Bar-Muss AT MACLEODS SECHELT 685-2171 '72 Mazda Pick-up, ex. shape $1300. .'65 Mustang 200 cu.. 6 cyl.,A classic with good gas mileage, interior like new, runs excellent $1700.886-7342 #13 1973 Toyota Celica 72,000 mi. Mech. V-. good body excel. $2200. 1975 GMC Van camperized and loaded 37,000 mi. Stored indoors $3950.885-2839 #13 1974 Chevy station wagon 9 pass., PS/PB/PW. 454 cu. In. Good condition. Ph. 886-7801 #13 1979 Bronco XLT 351. Mag. wheels, eic. cond. $8500 firm. 886-8516 TFN '67 Pontiac Grande Parisienne auto trans PS/PB. Phone 886- 7980 eves. $400 OBO #15 Wanted: Datsun B210 body or body parts - in good shape. 885-5998 #15 '71 Datsun \"510\" parts for sale Phone 886-7334 #14 Camoers ft RV's Wanted to rent for Easter Break April 10-20th a camper, mutt have heater. Ph. 886-7392 #13 1975 Dodge Maxi-Van fully: camperized, 3-way fridge, fur-; nace, 4 burner stove with oven; sink & porta-potti. Phone 886-' 9882 #13 SMALL CAR SERVICE No problem for us - Ford has been building and importing cars and trucks from Germany, Japan and England as far back as 1949. So if you have a problem with your small car we've got the Houra ot Stnlct 7:30am.-5pm. 885-3281 SttTM CMIT FftRft MU�� LT�� Trade Your APPLIANCE on ��� new HOT POINT at MACLEODS SECHELT 885-2171 Trauel 1975 Dodge Maxi Van 318 auto, V, ton, PS & PB, 52,000 miles. $2500. 886-9198 after 6 p.m. or 886-2765 #13 Chev 350 turbo rebuilt engine. Also 350 tran. G.M. turbo 400. Parts for 128 Fiat. Various alternators, starter and used parts. 883-9923 #13 Ford Engine 240 3-spd. rebuilt '78. 14,000 mi. $200. 886-9252 #13 '66 Beaumont 6-cyl. stand, trans. New clutch, gd. rubber, Craig cassette Heck. $850. Runs well. 886-9851 #13 1972 Hornet 4 door sedan, 49,000 mis. Good condition. $950. Phone 886-7909 #13 Discover the world's greatest vacation land - Canada - Disneyland - a treat for all ages. Short on time & money - take in Reno or Vegas. Take a summer cruise to Alaska. Merry Xmas? Aloha Paradise! Get-a-way Holidays. 885-3265 #13 Automotlue Has vour Rabbit Lett its HOD? Come in and see Herman Vandebcrg, 20 years Volkswagen Specialist - Factory trained. SMTN CMIT PtKi ulbi in Houra ot tenia* 7:30 am. - s pm. 885-3281 VW. lift DO StOCN niwiw parts 1976 Ford F-100 short box step side p.u. 302 V-8 with 22,000 original miles; mags, radial TA's, canopy, undercoated. Excellent condition throughout. $5500 OBO Will consider older truck in trade. 886-7873 #12 '76 Dodge Adventurer SE club cab. 400 auto V-8, PS/PB, AM/ fM radio, trailer pkg, canopy radials, 36,000 orig. mi. $6500. OBO. Ph. 883-9427 after 5:30 pm. #13 1969 Dodge Super Bee 2-dr. hardtop very fine cond. Fully equipped, bargain at $3,500. 885-9602 #12 1978 GMC Rally Van, only 7,000 miles. Excellent cond. 886-2410 #12 1971 Fargo 1-ton truck with box rolltop door, new tires, dual rears 75,000 miles, auto. $3,500. Phone 886-8201 #14 ��� I would like a subscription to that lively, informative COAST NEWS. ��� 1 would like to tend a subscription to my kith or kin. Kindly print or type the name and address of the person to receive this fine salty coastal epistle, and please enclose your cheque for $24 for one year or, $15 per half The Coast News, Circulation Dept., Box 460, Gibsons, B.C. VON 1V0. Mail to: NAME. FIRM. ADDRESS. CITY PROVINCE. .CODE 1964 Acadian. Great basic transportation, six cylinder, automatic $450. 886-2127. It's got everything. Even radio works! #14 1979 Jeep \"Golden Eagle\" good condition. $9500. 886-7579 #14 1974 Dodge Charger Brougham S.E. 440, new paint job, yellow, PB/PS/PW, air conditioning, good condition. Phone 886- 2454 after 6. #14 Old Milk Truck, Mercury, As is. $300.885-2468 #14 1979 Celica Supra, driven for 7 mo., 24,000 km, 6 tires, radar detector, 3 year extended warranty. $10,000 firm. Apply to Box 21, c/o Coast News, Box 460, Gibsons, B.C. VON 1VO #14 '72 VW Super beatle, rusted body but running well. $500 OBO. 886-2098 #13 75 VANGUARD ���'���\" - with Hydraulic Jacks and Tit Downs orBtttOlltf 883-9496 885-5802 DIESEL 37 MPG PICKUP 1980 CHEVY CHEYENNE pick-up, diesel 350 C.I.D., air cond., P.S., P.B., AM- FM tape deck, 7,000 miles $10,900 O.B.O. 886-9363. Motorcycles Cross country motor bike 100 cc seldom used. $600 OBO. Ph. 886- 7476. #14 1972 750 cc BMW R75/5 15,500 hwy. miles, mint, with extras. 886-7891 eves. #13 Mobile Homes 35 ft. Sth wheel trailer c/w stove, fan, oven, fridge, furnace, stereo, bar stools, canape french glass doors and 1974 Chev rebuilt 454 heavy duty 'A ton radio, auto, trans. $20,000. firm. Call 886-9351 #13 CHAPMAN CREEK MOBILE NOME MLB MID SERVICE 8854513 at Big Maple Motel Davis Bay , 1976 Honda Civic hatchback. Phone after 6,886-2886 #13 1964 Volvo 122 Canadian B18 4 door 4 sp. new brakes, clutch, exhaust, rear shocks $1200 OBO 885-9285 TFN 1972 Volkswagen 7 passenger bus rebuilt engine - very clean - all records. Asking $3,200. Ph.' 885-3498 #15 '71IHC '/. ton; new tires; power tailgate. Cab in poor shape, but it runs. V-8, 4-spd. $400. Phone 883-2457 #13 '74 Dodge Van. Y. ton. $1200. Ph. 886-2708 after 5 #14 SUMMER CARS 1977 Datsun 280Z, green with gold stripes, new tires, exhaust, fuel injected, 5-speed, sunroof, 170 h.p. a real beauty $9,000 OBO 886-9826or 886-8064 #15 1967 Cougar GT, 390 c.i. four barrel, dual exhaust, new paint, blue with white vinyl top, new T.A.'s all around, a real cruiser, must see $2500 firm. 886-9826 or 886-8064 #15 '67 Chev station wgn. $250. 885-2642 #13 Valiant, '65 Signet 2 dr. hardtop slant '6', rebuilt 2 yrs. ago, good body, excellent interior, auto, trans, 4 summer, 2 snow tires all good, radio etc. some parts go too. $600 OBO. 885-5998 #15 1966 Volkswagen Beetle, new muffler, rebuilt 1500 engine, good brakes and tires. Runs great! $650. Mike 886-2339 eves. #15 4-14\" new radial tires 50% tread left. $75.885-5998 #15 2 650x16 general light truck tires, about 50% tread left $25.885-5998 #15 1979 Ford Bronco, 4 w.d��� PS/PB. 11,000 miles. Immaculate. 886- 2779 #13 Will buy or pick up unwanted cars 883-9923 #13 1972 Pinto, 52,000 miles, good tires. Just tuned up, runs excellent. $875.00 or best offer. Phone after 5 p.m. 886-7804 #15 Coast mobile Homes Ltd. GOOD SELECTION OF DOUBLE WIDES u��e take trades or Consign your Mobile Home to us for Quick sale WHARF ST. SECHELT 885-9979 mdl mm Marine '70 Kawasaki 500. As is. 886-7843 $300. #13 1979 19' Thermoglass, V, H.top, sleeper seats. 120 OMC, 25 hrs. on engine. Price: $7200.00. Ph. 886-9198 #13 AIT Haddock Boat moving, licensed and fully insured. Hydraulic equipment. Phone 883- 2722 days. 883-2682 eves TPft 1 HIGGS MARINE SURVEYS LTD Insurance claims, condition and valuation surveys. Serving the, Sunshine Coast and B.C. Coastal' Waters. Phone: 885-9425, 885- 9747,885-3643.886-9546 TFN Fiberglass resin & catalyst $!6gal. 886-9252 #13 14' Enterprise Sailboat with towing trailer, dacron sails in good shape. $1000. 886-9851 #13 32 Doublender Diesel Power Dickinson, heater, propane stove, 2-way fridge, head. Sips. 4, could be lived aboard. Asking $13,000. Phone 883-2363 #15 12 foot aluminum boat and Johnson motor $1200 OBO. 886-7877 #15 IAN MORROW* CO. LTD Marine Surveyors, condition and detail surveys for Evaluation. Surveys for insurance claims.! Phone 886-2433. TFK 1975 Chrysler. J8\\ 105 hp complete with canvas & trailer; Exc. cond. $6500. 886-8516 TFN, Trailer C Licence M.V. Scooter J yrs. old, hyd. gurdies, sink, fridge, stove, Volvo 145 new 1980. Many extras. Ph. 885-5602 aft. 6 p.m. #14 IS'/j' glass over wood inc. 50 hp Merc, trailer, anchor, twin tanks etc. $1400.886-7843 #13 16 ft. Starcraft aluminum, 40 hp Merc elec. start. 1500 ft. E-Z loader trailer all almost new, condition. $3,400 firm. Center steering. 886-8516 #13 Daysailor complete 15'x37\" car- toppable, fun, fast, well-built $980.00.886-7891 eves. #13 1980 17' Silverline canvas top 150 hp Merc outboard, new; galv. trailer, many extras, exc. fish or ski boat. $10,000. Ph.' 883-2248 #13 Coast News, March 31, 1981 Legal TENDERS Sealed tenders are invited for the replacement of drapery and tracks for St. Mary's Hospital Second Floor area. The Tenders are for all drapery material and sewing, pleating and hanging of drapes, and the replacement of track complete with brackets. Specifications and conditions of tender may be obtained from N. Vucurevich, Administrator, St. Mary's Hospital, Sechelt, between the hours of 0800 and 1600 Monday to Friday. Tenders will close on Thursday. 16 April 1981 at 11:30 hours. Commencement of public tender opening will begin at 11:30 hours in the Administrator's Office. The lowest, or any, tender will not necessarily be accepted. Inspection of site and on-site measuring will be arranged by contacting the undersigned, by appointment only: N. Vucurevich Administrator St. Mary's Hospital Sechelt, B.C. B.C. Vuhon Bianhet Classifieds 25 Words for $99. NOTICE Application has been made to the Motor Carrier Commission, on behalf of the undernamed carrier, to increase rates and charges for the transportation of freight between the Vancouverarea and points on the Sechelt Peninsula, and between points situated on the Sechelt Peninsula. Subject to the consent of the Commission the proposed increases will become effective on May 11th, 1981. Details of proposed changes may be obtained from the office of the carrier. Any representation respecting this application may be made to the Superintendent, Motor Carrier Branch, 4240 Manor Street, Burnaby, B.C. V5G 3X5 up to April 24th, 1981. Pacific Tariff Service Ltd. Tariff Agent for: Peninsula Transport Ltd. APPLICATION FOR RESIDENTIAL PURPOSES IN SECHELT INLET REGIONAL FILE 2400509 An application is pending for residential purposes on part of Lot 6310, starting at post 300 ft. west of water line heading North-N- E 300 ft. due west 100 ft. S-S-W300ft.backto first post. Water line is approx. 300 ft. west of the NW corner of Lot 6310, containing approx. 3/4 acre. Purpose: Residence for Oyster Culture and other Mollusc. Robert R. Miller Box 468 Brackendale, B.C. VON 1H0 Contractor APPLICATION FOR * FORESHORE RIGHTS In Sechelt Inlet Regional file 2400509. An application is pending for the foreshore rights for the portion of Sea surveyed as UF- 6310.GP1 and being in the Land Recording District of Vancouver. Containing approximately nineteen hectares. Purpose - Oyster and other Mollusc Culture. March 8, 1981 Robert R. Miller John T, Howe Contractors 1075 sq. ft. House to be moved from lot In North Vancouver, hxt'cllcnt condition and offer.. 988-3873 #13 Buying Selling Moving or Just Dreaming The Sunshine Coast REALTOR will help you do it. Available at Realty offices. VANCOUVER ISLAND ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES invite you to attend their 4th Annual Spring Faire. Western Canada's largest and most successful Antique Show and Sale includes over 85 display booths. Admission $1.50 April 10, 11, 12, Esquimalt Sports Centre, 1151 Esquimalt Road. Victoria, B.C. Enquiries telephone Julene Roe 478-0922. Don Cal 595-0805 #13 WOOD WINDOWS AND DOORSI B.C.'s lowest prices! Huge selection. Now stocking pine double glazed windows. Walker door: Vancouver 112- 2661101. 1366 S.W. Marine Drive V6P 5Z9 or North Vancouver, (112-985-9714), 1589 Garden Ave. V7P3A5 TFN ATTENTION HAIRSTYLISTS I Just walk in and take over this \"busy\" long established five station salon. Ideal location and ample parking. Good equipment and congenial surroundings. Excellent lease available. Priced to sell at $26,500.00. (Plus stock of approximately $2,500.00). Phone Saltspring Lands Ltd., Sylvia Gale 537-5515 or 537-5618 or Dick Trory 537-5515 or 537- 2236 #13 PHEASANTS. Breeders eggs, chicks. April-July. Game farm licence required to confine. Minimum sale 50 chicks. $1.75 each F.O.B. Hatcheiy. Contact Prairie Pheasant Farm, Dids- bury, Alberta. TOM OWO. Phone (403)335-4500. #13 GLASSMAN. Working Foreman of six men. Must be stable, well motivated, co-operative. Relocation assistance. G. Moore, Polar Industries, 117 Copper Road, Whitehorse, Yukon. Y1A 2Z7. Phone (403) 667-7332 #13 YOUR NAME, ADDRESS, POS- TAL CODE. 300 gummed labels. (Made by handicapped people)., $2.95. Mail cheque to: Handicapped Labels, Box 1315, Station \"A\", Surrey, B.C. V3S4Y5. #13 WE REQUIRE: Unique shows, Crafts, Arts, Wood carvers etc. - Bookkeepers, Cashiers, Hosts/Hostesses: or what have you to offer? Hells Gate Airtram, Box 129, Hope, B.C. VOX 1LO. Phone 867-9277, (Mr. Capstick). #13 MAUI CONDO, waterfront, luxury. Maalaea Bay. Fully appointed, pool, Jacuzzi, barbecue. Bargain off-season rates ($240 weekly, $850 monthly U.S.) Winter rates ($350 weekly, $1200 monthly). Phone 921-8401 or 936-7317 #13 1974 INTERNATIONAL FLEET- STAR, tandem dump, Nahanni rock gravel, box 6-71 Detroit, Jacob's brake, 16 speed transmission, new suspension front and rear. Phone 632-6429, Kiti- mat, B.C. #13 COMMERCIAL REVENUE PROPERTY .73 acre in the periphery of the village of Ganges, close to hospital and other commercial activity. Beauty Salon and 3- bedroom modern mobile home with excellent potential for rental revenue or owner/operator salon. Access from 2 roads and plenty of paved parking. $139,000.00. Phone Saltspring Lands Ltd., Sylvia Gale 537-5515 or 537- 5618 or Dick Trory 537-5515 or 537-2236. #13 Property PRIM B BUILDING LOT Selectively cleared level lot on Sechell sewer system for sale by owner. Phone 885.5254 '#13 Exclusive subdivision near Gibsons, lot 66x168. Fully serviced. #13 886-2523 '. acre view Lol, Bonniebrook Place. Gower Point. 886-7403 #13 Fantastic view home in central Gibsons on 76 ft. by 150 ft. landscaped lot. 1500 sq. ft. featuring Jenn-air built-in kitchen, rec. room, .1 bedroom, living-dining room combo, large covered .sundeck. Asking $139,000. No ' agents, please. 886-7661 #13 [ HARBEL HOLDINGS LTD. Mo- I bile homes located in parks on pads. Listings and sales. We welcome all enquiries concerning Wheel Estate. Listings wanted. Phone 585-3622 (collect). 13647- 100th Ave., Surrey, B.C. V3T IH9. The Wheel Estate People TFN HIGHF1ELD STOCK FARMS Simmental Bull sale, April 13. I p.m. 65 bulls, sell on the farm 17 miles south of Calgary. Phone (403) 652-7717. Box 1080, Oko- toks, Alta. TOL 1TO. #13 WICKER I Sales people required immediately to represent wicker products on party plan basis. Excellent commission. Must be neat in appearance and own car. No investment necessary. Please call 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Thursday. Armac Sales Ltd.. 8417 Main St., Vancouver V5X 3M2. Phone 327-8361 #13 INCREASE GAS MILEAGE^jTto 30% with VAPOR-JET. Money back guarantee. Dealers wanted. $39.95 f.o.b. Box 122, 108, 100 Mile House, B.C. VOK 2EO #13 CREW CAB 4 x 4 CHEV: 1-ton. auto; 350 PS/PB, 36,000 miles, very good condition all around $6,500.00 OBO. Phone 791-54.18 #13 EVERGREEN, REGISTERED HEREFORD SALE of Select Females, show 9:00 a.m. Sale 1:30 p.m. at the Cloverdale Fairgrounds Saturday, May 2. 1981. For catalogue contact West Coast Hereford Club, 190 Short Road, RR#5, Abbotsford. B.C. Phone 853-3983 #13 MARCH CAMPERS SPECIALS: 1979 Okanagan 8 foot from $3,200.00. 1979 Okanagan 8 foot 9 inches from $3,900.00. 1979 Okanagan 9'/i foot from $4900.00. All equipped with 3-way fridge: furnace. One only New Caveman 9'/i foot Camper, fridge, furnace, toilet, Hy-Jacks, $6,210.00. Holiday Rentals and Sales, 17840. 56 Avenue, Surrey. B.C. V3S 1E2. Phone574-5tl5 #13 ASSISTANT EDITOR Wanted Immediately for progressive Central Interior Bi-weekly. Position demands lay-out and staff Management. Broad reporting experience and editing knowledge essential. Must have car. Send resume to Editor, Quesnel Cariboo Observer, Box 4460, Quesnel, B.C. V2J 3J4. phone 992-2121 #13 GENERAL DUTY REGISTERED NURSE Required. R.N.A.B.C. Contract. Accommodation available. Write or phone Director df Nursing, St. Bartholomew's Hospital, Lytton, B.C. VOK lZO-or phone 455-2221 4�� 60 FULLBLOOD SIMMENTAL BULLS, yearlings and 2 year olds, 1,000-1,400 pounds. Price $1,500- $2,500.00. Contact Fraser Valley Simmental Ranch, Sardis, B.C. VOX 1YO. Phone 823-4575 #13 HOME VIDEO EXCHANGE offers a choice of 2,000 uncensored video cassette movies (example 9 to 5, Stuntman etc.) Purchase first movie for $99.95 OR submit for our acceptance two of your movies. Exchange if and when you want for only $10.95 (plus $4.00 shipping). Additional benefits. Dealers' enquiries welcome. Call collect 687-8905 or write Home Video Exchange, 1280 Robsons Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6E1C1 #13 1975 KENWORTH DUMP RE- BUILT 350 Cummins engine, 15 speed transmission. 44,000 rear end, 12 yard knight steel box, air conditioning. Phone 923- 5104 Campbell River, B.C. #13 HOLSTEIN HEIFERS freshening within 4 weeks. Can deliver. I'honc (40.1) 6527.171 High River, Alberta. #13 COLLEGE COURSES AT HOMEI Speedwriting, shorthand, bookkeeping, business math. Full time courses also available. Contact Duffus College, 543 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3H6. Phone 681-7567 #13 UPHOLSTERY BUSINESS: Going concern proven market in furniture/automotive. $10,000.00 investment. Fully equipped. Serious enquiries only. Phone days 4423035, evenings 442-8187. Good living in Kootenays. #13 MUST CLEAR HAY SHEDS for new crops. 80 tons Alfalfa orchard grass hay. $70.00 per ton. 36 miles north of Williams Lake. Highway 97. Phone 993-4397 #13 HOLSTEIN HEIFERS, grades and nip, freshening April, May, June, We also have open heifers *ami calves. Registered stock and grades. Can deliver. Phone (403)652-7371 #14 REGISTERED ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIELS Liver and White Sire and Dam imported from U.K. Excellent bird dogs and pets. Many field trial champions in pedigree. Phone 593- 4387. #13 ACCOUNTANT FOR FORD DEALERSHIP FORT NELSON, B.C. Knowledge of dealership accounting preferred. Salary negotiable. Phone 774-6316 or 774- 6310 office, 774-2416 home. #14 WANTED FULLY QUALIFIED WATER TREATMENT PLANT OPERATOR, for newly constructed fully automatic modern water treatment plant. Apply in writing only to: Town of Valley- view, Box 270 Valleyview, Alberta TOH3NO. #13 FOREPERSON REQUIRED CHILLIWACK WHOLESALE NURSERY minimum five yers practical experience field growing landscape plants. Must know effective weed control. Starting $17,500.00 year plus benefits. Phone 533-1666 #13 DIRECTOR OF RESIDENT CARE. Applications are invited for a Director of Resident Care at Coquihalla House, a 30-unit Intermediate Care Facility to be 'opened on or about August 1, 1981. Reporting to the Administrator, this senior manager will have direct responsibility for the organization and management of the facility and will promote and develop recreational and occupational therapy for the residents. Applicants must have proven administrative ability in the long term field, be a graduate from an accredited School of Nursing and should be registered with the B.C. Registered Nurses' Association or the Registered Psychiatric Nurses Association of B.C. A diploma in Nursing Unit Administration or other Health Administration Course preferred. Position will be open as of April 1, 1981. Please send complete resume to: Mr. T. Kampa, Chairman, Coquihalla Community Care Society, Box 220, Merritt, B.C. VOK 2BO. #13 PUREBRED LABRADOR PUPPIES OF IMPORTED Champion British Sire and Dam. Ideal temperament for field, show, or pet stock. Registered with CKC, AKC and EKC. $280.00. Phone 985-9231 #13 WOODSTOVES UNLIMITED has Western Canada's largest selection of quality wood heaters and accessories. Two stores - 3715 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver or 2104 Cliffe Avenue, Courtenay, B.C. #13 ATTENTION FORMER STU- DENTS OF PRINCETON SENIOR SECONDARY. Grand Home Coming May 15 and 16. Last opportunity to reminisce in old school. For information write to Box 500 Princeton, B.C. VOX IWO. #13 NEED HELP. Dependable and easy to grasp. Learn to understand your friends, relatives, business associates. Order \"How to Choose Your People\". Send $14.00 to Serafina Enterprises, 204 Jardine Street, New Westminster, B.C. V3M 5M3 #13 20 INDOOR-OUTDOOR RUNS. 15 indoor cubicles also 9 brood kennels. Hot and cold running water, electric heat, grooming parlour and office. 1360 square foot 2 bedroom home with 2-car garage. Drilled well on 4.6 acres of land. A beautiful spot right on Highway 16 only 18 miles from nearest town. Home has oil furnace, wall-to-wall carpet. Has beautiful built-in hearth for wood-burning heater. Kennel is a going concern and has great potential: For further information write Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Galloway, Box 4, RR#1 Burns Lake, B.C. VOJ 1EO or phone 692-3657 #13 FREE VACATIONS?? Hardly, but we have the closest thing to it. Buy an Ownership Time Share in Whiski Jack Condominiums at Whistler Mountain and guarantee FREE vacation accommodation FOREVER in any of 500 luxury resorts in 30 different countries. That's incredible I For information write: Universal Time Share, c/o General Delivery, Whistler. B.C. VON 1BO. Phone 932-4242 #13 EXPERIENCED PARTS PERSON (Basically G.M.) has Managerial experience, looking for change. Presently employed. For more information please contact Box G, Interior News, Box 2560, Smithers, B.C. VOJ 2NO. #13 HAVE YOU always wanted to get into REAL ESTATE? Mobile Home sales is the answer. We train. We require sales people to represent your area. Full or part time. Call collect. H&R Mobile Homes Ltd. 588-6588, Surrey or 478-8354, Victoria. #13 EXPERIENCED ADVERTISING SALES PERSON wanted immediately for Lower Mainland community newspaper. Good salary, benefits. Valid drivers licence and own vehicle mandatory. Phone the publisher, 574-4191 #13 Property Unique custom-built yellow cedar home on double lot, mature trees, village of Gibsons, close to beach, 3 bedrooms, large sundeck, separate guesthouse with 3 piece bathroom, log cabin, workshop. $125,000,886-8480 #13 Two bedroom house, full basemenl, rec./spa room. Forced air oil heal plus Fisher and Franklin wood stoves. Approx. Vi acre, landscaped, magnificent view. Very private. $87,900. Phone 886-9851,886-9077 #13 WANTED - WATERFRONT LOT Secluded, sunny - by couple for own use. Call John or Maureen 926-6571 #14 Completely landscaped view lot in Gibsons 50 x 100 approximately for further information phone 886-7389 #15 Spectacular view from this 2 bedroom Selma Park home. Under construction, 1300 sq. ft., full basement, double garage, fireplace, still time to choose interior. Call builder 885-9861 tfn View Lots Garden Bay '/a acre southern exposure, near stores and marina. $38,500 & $28,500. 886-7955,886-9720 #13 SURREY HOME 3 bedroom home on large corner lot. Lots of room for pool. Two fireplaces, finished basement. Beautiful view. Will trade for house and property on the Sunshine Coast of comparable value. ($160,000). Phone 5889380 #14 PRIVATE SALE This well maintained 3 bedroom home fealures Sundeck, Rock Fire Place and economical Fisher stove in basement. Large living room, good size bedrooms, dining room, and eating area in sunny kitchen. All this on nicely landscaped lot in good family area on Fircrest. Assumable mortage available. $115,000. To View, Call 886-7588 ^ 3 Bedroom Home 1100 sq. ft. with Carport $46,900. Built on your lot, including Fridge, Stove, Dishwasher and Light Fixtures WEKO Construction Ltd. Box 888, Sechelt 885-2525 (eves.) 886-2344 (days) FOR LEASE Seamount Industrial Park 1,500 sq. ft., available now. 3,000+ sq. ft. available soon. caii 886-2311 after 6pm. More Letters to the Editor Joint Use not working Ed. note: We have received ��� copy of the following letter addressed to: The Chairman, Joint Use of Schools, Sunshine Coast Regional District, Sechelt, B.C. Dear Sir: I have been on the \"Area A\" Joint Use Committee for three years and did believe in its original concept in 1976. I am sorry to say it is not working in our area. It was a new and exciting idea which became loaded down with bureaucratic paper work and inflexible rules. And so our community school stands a- lone and empty on most nights and all weekends. I hope you will permit me to state a few reasons more clearly and maybe we can come up with a few answers. 1). In renting the facility a three-week request in writing to Continuing Education is required. This is too restrictive to many organizations and people in the area, especially if it is an emergency meeting. 2). Janitors - On the weekend where a sports event of, say, a fitness program in the gym (two to two-and-a-half hour program) is scheduled, a janitor hired by the school board with union pay is then required to put in a full shift 3:30-11 p.m. or 7:30-3:30 p.m. Most important, local school board janitors do not wish to have days off interrupted (for which I don't blame them) but it does seem rather ludicrous to have a person from Gibsons travel all the way to Pender Harbour for a two hour program. In a recent two weekend workshop, a lecture room and the pool were involved in conducting an Instructor School workshop. The hours were from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 in the evening, splitting the time between the lecture room and the pool. I would like to say this worked well and produced Red Cross Swim instructors for Gibsons, Powell River and our own area. The instructor of the course was well pleased to have both facilities available. I hope we can utilize the same situation again. Now the point I wish to make. If pool personnel were not entrusted with the keys and told how to dispose of the fire alarms, who would have opened the school? Local janitors were not B.C. Vuhon Bianhet Classifieds 2700 ACRES IN ALBERTA, 1600 acres deeded, balance grazing lease, 1200 acres cleared, two sets buildings. Can be bought with machinery. Phone 403-843- 6434 #14 $$$$ $100 weekly can be yours in your spare time. For details write Fuller Brush Co., c/o T.G. Diamond, 5501-47A Ave., Delta, B.C. V4K3P2 #13 SINGLE? Excellent computerized and personalized Dating Service in your area. Request free information from main office: Human Contact B4 818-16th Ave., N.W. Calgary, Alta. T2M OKI #13 TRANSICOLD FREEZER MO- DEL 655, Perkins Diesel Power $2,900.00, Terex 8240 Crawler Tractor 16'/i foot blade, tilt, CCU, Canopy $29,000. Also 8230. Phone (403) 963-7536. Write Box 55, Edmonton, Alberta. T5S 2G9 #13 Opportunities Opportunity Knocks Pets and Plants Well established and growing, this unique business offers a full line pet store combined with tropical house plants. Excellent location in the heart of Sechelt, with room for expansion. Owners will train. Serious enquiries only. After 6 pm. 886-8029 interested in coming up and opening and closing the school. To pay janitors from other areas for two shifts, would not be good manage-: ment. '. 3). The washrooms, showers. and cooking facilities in the mezzanine which were to have' been made available during sports events were only available when the games were played after 3:30 p.m. Most of the games were scheduled earlier in the day. The reason the janitor was not called in for the early shift was that a fitness program was sche-. duled for 8 p.m. Sunday: evenings. This of course did cause friction with soccer' clubs etc. who would have paid to use the facility at 12 p.m. 4). The use of equipment such as badminton and volleyball nets (not badminton birds) also basketballs and volley- balls, should be available to reliable persons in charge, who would then be responsible to report excessive damage or breakage to Continuing Education. Damage from general use and repairs should be- expected. Both school boards and regional board should be glad to see the facility used, instead of a million dollar facility sitting locked up tight like a giant warehouse. I realize school property must be protected. But at the same time the Joint Use agreement states \"And whereas in the common desire to avoid duplication it is the intention of the board and the district to develop facilities which may be used for educational, recreational and other community uses and thus provide a benefit to the entire community.\" As a member of the Facility Committee which was established for the Pender Harbour Joint Use Faciljty.my function is to establish community priorities and goals for the Joint Use Facility and resolve any conflict as to the use of the Joint Use Facility. This I am trying to do. At a meeting ofthe regional board, February 12th, I heard Mr. Brian Stelck, Director; make a remark which to me was a bright light in the Joint Use situation, to use the 1 mil collected from Joint Use funds and support existing; joint use projects. Before building further capital expenditures monies collected from each area should be given back to each area to be used for maintenance, operation and equipment etc. I see the above four items which have plagued me for. some time, could possibly find a solution. If a person could be found in the community to act as booking agent for the regional board, who then contacted a fully qualified janitor and caretaker to undertake the responsibilities (at the pleasure of the school board) for our area. This would relieve the school board of booking and availability of the facility. 1 am sure there are lots of qualified people who would be excellent at the job. The problem of equipment would be solved; teachers I must admit do not like community people to use any equipment. I say this from first hand knowledge, being the fitness programmer for three years. The community could then purchase standard equipment - such as nets ind balls. I realize I can only speak with knowledge of my ow(i area, but would like to put forth a strong voice towards the support by 1 mil from tht Joint Use funds, for the maintaining and operation of Joint Use facilities. ; In no way am I criticising Continuing Education or school board janitors etc. most of whom have bent over backwards to accommodate. The rules and restrictions they have to live with do not make for good community relations. Let's hope this can change. Yours truly, Robi Peters Coast News, March 31, 1981 19 Sunshine Coast Business Directory I ELECTRICAL I HEATING Tom Flieger Phone 886-7868 LECTRICAL ONTRACTING Box 214. Gibsons, B.C. VON 1VO It's Holland Electric Ltd. Bill Achterberg 886-9232 R. & J. SERVICES LTD. JAY CEE AIR CONDITIONING a REFRIGERATION LIMITED Heat Pumps ��� Central Air Conditioning Salt* ti Sanricf Corner ot Dolphin & Wharf. Sechelt 886-2689 ICG CANADIAN PROPANE LTD. Hwy. 101 Sechell between SI. Mary E I���IT ICANAE . L_iL CANADIAN Repairs & Rebuilding of ��� Alternators ��� Starters ��� Generators^ V Payne Rd.. Gibsons * Electrical Contracting ��� Industrial ��� Commercial 886-9963J I EXCAVATING I Hospital and Form Ranger's Hut. 885-2360 V^Mon.-Frl. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. - S p.m. THOMAS HEATING ��� General Sheet Metal OOC \"7111 ��� Installation ot Heating 8 OOU\" /ill An Conditioning Equipment CR. Excavating Hourly or Randy Contract 1 y������ axcavator 9M-8721 . rough road work > land clearing ' J.F.UI. EXCAUATINB LTD. ' ��� septic Flams ��� Excavations ��� Clearing ��� HitiI Hil. 686-8071 (iihsons / F & L CONTRACTORS ^ Landclearing, road building, logging, tree removal, excavations & gravel 886-7833 886-9872 ^ PACIFIC GADCO CONSTRUCTION Land Clearing, light or heavy Road Construction ��� Excavation ��� Logging Bulldozer ��� Backhoe ��� Grader ��� Front End Loader Gravel Truck - Skidder 886-7287 886-7951 886-7142 SECHELT METAL PRODUCTS LTD. Forced Air Heating Oil, Wood, Electric, Gas and Heat Pumps Air Conditioning 885*2466 General Sheet Metal I CABINETS I SUNSHINE KITCHENS CABINETS - REMODELLING Showroom in Twilight TheatreBldg. 886-9411 K^OPENSAT. 10-5 OR BY APPOINTMENT , CARPET-CABINET-CERAMIC CENTRE Open Thun. ��� Sat. 10 a.m. ��� 5 p.m. Howe Sound Distributors Ltd. North Road, Gibsons, B.C. 886-2765 J. B. EXCAVATING 886-9031 Water, sewer, drainage installation ��� Dump Truck * Backhoe ��� Cat ��� Land Clearing ��� Free Estimate. ��� Septic Fields FLOOR COVERING I Bin installations 17 Years Experience Commercial And Residential Floor Coverings ^,S; n RUFUS BULLDOZING ��� Land Clearing ��� Excavating Daryll ' Drain Fields 886-9739 f : ^ Carpet Steam Cleaning 885-5851 V jleed Road, Glbtont Marcel's ���������-���102 BacKhoe serulce Sewer - Septic - Field Water and Drain Pipe J SEAVIEW CARPETS - CABINETS SHOWROOM OPEN Open 10-6, Tues. to Sat. Friday to 9 Phone 886-2743 and 886-2417 Hidden industries BULLDOZING JD 350 ��� Road Building ���Excavations ��� Clearing 886*7251 KEN DE VRIES & SON LTD FLOOR COVERINGS I APPLIANCES I HARRISON'S APPLIANCE SALES Parts and Service Carpets ��� Tiles- Linoleums - Drapee Hwy. 101, Gibsons Cowrie St., Sechelt 886-7112 865-3424 MISC. SERVICES I Tuesday ��� Saturday 9 ��� 5 886-9959 Pratt Rd, Gibsons JOHN HIND-SMITH REFRIGERATIONS MAJOR APPLIANCE SERVICE Porl Mellon lo Pender Harbour Res. 886-9949 I AUTOMOTIVE! Your Specialty Shop: Mufflers, Brakes, Tune-Dps ClbMN* ILMKE A TUB Hwy. 101, Gibsons 886-8213 Superior Muffler NEED TIRES? Come in to COASTAL TIRES at the S-BENDS on Highway 101 Phone 886-2700 MUSIC LESSONS YOU ENJOY Pl.no & Organ Jggg(e Begin at age 4 and older C/ 1614 Marine Drive, Gibsons 886.9030 (_/\\A0/t/liS0H UPHOLSTERY ' ALL REUPHOLSTEhVNG DONE Boat Tops & Seats 1339 Wharf Road. Sechelt. B.C. , 885-5216^ SUNSHINE COAST ' DISPOSAL SERVICES 885-9973 Port Mellon to Ole's Cove 886-2938 ��� Commercial Containers Available MW0M GIBSONS LANES Hw>,01i OPEN BOWLING SUMMER HOURS Saturday - 7:00 -11:00 p.m. n Sunday - 2:00 - 5:00 p.m. PACIFIC-O-FIBERGLASS FIBERGLASS LAMINATING - REPAIRS BOATS-SUNDECKS, ETC. 14 years experience 885-2981 Economy AUTO PARTS bid. Automobile. Industrial and Body Shop Supplies Sechelt 8BS-SI8I <** Upholsterers Serving Sunshine Coast and Vancouver 883-9901 All Furniture - Marine - Boat Tops We specialize in Volkswagen Repairs ^5^ lEjirnprait MatatB Darts 885-9466 *h��nda* YOl^L NEVER RUN OUT! Audrey's coffee serulce Office & Restaurant Coffee Supplies & Equipment 885-3716 R. & J. SERVICES LTD. Repair & Rebuilding of: ALTERNATORS ��� STARTERS ��� GENERATORS Paine Rd., Gibsons 886-9963 Conversion Windows, Glass, Auto & Marine Class, Aluminum Windows & Screens, Mirrors Hwy 101 & Pratt Rd, The Flittermouse Natuic Note by Vicki deBoer The Bat was in ancient times called Flittermouse. This name arose from the characteristic jerky, erratic flight of these tiny creatures and it doesn't have the same menacing sound as the name 'Bat'. The fear of Bats flying onto one's hair and getting caught there is an old wives tale as they are very good fliers even though their eyesight is poor. Bats rely mainly upon echo-location to find their way around and to capture their prey. They have greatly enlarged ears which pick up the echoes from a steady stream of high-pitched sounds they emit. Using this system they are very accurate hunters of many types of bugs including those as small as mosquitoes and gnats. Much of their hunting is done at dusk and early evening which is also when they are most often seen. Whereas birds catch bugs in their bills, Bats use a different method. They scoop their prey into the flight membrane (wing) which they fold temporarily into a pouch, then they seize the bugs with their teeth. The insect food of Bats is captured while in flight so this unusual method of capturing their prey accounts for their typical erratic flight. Not all Bats eat bugs, some feed solely on fruit and some eat both. Bats are true mammals, giving birth to live young I MISC. SERVICES! A Bella's 8cf>8sa Pplaliag ft ��rg ustom T-Shtrii A Sportswear /Iny-l Dtcali: Clear <��� Coloured Real Ettate Slgni i. Standi Magnetic Slgni: Poiteri Wood t Plexlglon Slgni Phone 886-9169 for C-S.P. UPBIGSAMGS! ���40- BuymriS* ThnughClattifhdAth FREE ESTIMATES Look for in In the Yellow Paget, DIAL-A-BOTTLE Bottles ��� Party lee ��� Mixes ��� pop 886-J77S *qg* Quality Farm 6 Garden Supply Ltd.��� 886-7527 Pratt Rd. Gibsons * Feed * Pet Food * Fencing * Fertilizer MOVING AND STORAGE LEN WRAY'S TRANSFER LTD. Household Moving & Storage Complete Packing Packing Materials for Sale Phone M6-2M4 Member Allied Van Lines R.R. 1, QlbsonsV Village Tile Co. CERAMIC TILE SALES AND INSTALLATIONS Box 65 Sechelt Joe Jacques Phone 885-3611 Harbour Chimney Cleaning SERVING THE SUNSHINE COAST Fireplaces Furnaces t Oil Stoves ^_ 883*9171 Customers Irom Ihe 686 exchange call colled j :s & Service /% If. s a Service HtyflP Mercury Sales HondaSalesi �������#--- ^_ ^^~*~~~~4L/ MARINA ��� SllverlTne, Campion & Lund boats RESORT %.Q. BOX 1��0, MADEIRA PARK, B.C. VON \"HO 883-2248 j Glbtont Tax Service Income Tax Preparations All Business Strictly Confidential A. JACK 1767 Martin Rd., Gibsons 886-7272 Anytime 24 HR. SECURITY ' I'atrolling - Commercial Sites, Industrial Sites & Private Residences 885-2122 *\" u\"y Bonded Ss>TQ4�� Bo�� Igg*. Sechelt J I PAINTING I Professional Work At Reasonable Cost ���fk JOE DAVIS (��j PAINTER & DECORATOR R.R. 2 Lower Rd., Gibsons 886-8291 All Work Guaranteed COAST Estimates MMiL) Terry Connor 886-7040 PAINTING CONTRACT Box 540, Gibsons, B.C. HARTLEY PAINTIM ftDEC0RATINB Brush, Roller & Spray which the females nurse. There is one peculiarity in some Bats in that they have a delayed conception. They mate shortly before going into hibernation (some hibernate and some migrate) but fertilization is delayed until the following spring. The single young is born between June and July after a gestation of 35 to 44 days. It has been noted that a colony of female Bats will all give birth within a few hours of each other, possibly because they -woke each other up from hibernation at the same time, thus triggering conception all at the same time. The young can fly at about four or five weeks and they are mature by fall. Bats are the only mammals to have mastered true flight and they have been flying for thousands of years. Fossils have been found of bats that indicate they have not changed through time. Their unique- flying ability plus their, use of sonar sets them apart from other mammals. The.' best part is they use these features in a good way by eating thousands upon thousands of insects. So the next time you see a Flittermouse don't cringe, instead be thank- ful he is out there doing a better job than a can of Raid' could do any day. This column is to share; Nature Lore, so if you have; information to share or questions you would like answered,' please write or call 886-8029. I RESTAURANTS Chinese 4 Western Food Licensed Premises Tuesday to Sunday Lunch: 11:30 - 3 pm Dinner: 4:30 - 9 pm Sat. a Sun. Lunch: 12 noon - 9 pm ' Lower Gibsons 886-92! 9 Take Qui Ava'labie I CONTRACTING I ROLAND'S HOME IMPROVEMENTS\" * Built-in Vacuum Systems ��� Continuous Aluminum Gutters ��� See our Solar Systems ��� Aluminum Soflits and Fasciae R.R. #1, Ntstman Rd. 885-3562 Sechelt, B.C. J KRAMAK CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD. ��� Foundations ��� Framing ��� Custom On your lot or ours Homes ��� Norb Kraft 885-3432 Sechelt ^lUESTSI HOME C0H3TMJCTI0H ��� Quality Construction ��� Retaining Wills ��� Framing ( Finishing ��� Concrete Foundations ' FREE ESTIMATES Paul . \\-M BOBCAT SERVICE HISCOIfTMCTIM ��� Hot Tubs > Swimming Pool. ��� Solar Inal.llatldn. .Framing WHEELER CONTRACTING General and Sub-Contracting Framing, Cedar Shakes & Specialize in Cedar Siding, Also all types of Renovations CALL ROY WHEELER MS-SIM Ext. e>4 SUNCOAST TRUSS LTD. ��,7mt�� (Gibsons) 886-7318 Industrial Way. Seamount Industrial Park p q ��� , .��� Residential & Commercial Roof Trusses Gibsons, B.Cj PERMASEAL ALUMINUM MANUFACTURING LTD. COMPLETE ALUMINUM WINDOW PRODUCTS ���Ol ,- DOUBLE PANE WINDOWS FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION vT.*.\" %>^f Saturday April ^\"-' ArWTi *\" 7:00 pm Music & Comedy & Dance ��5��@6��@����@�� Introducing Twrnono m /wtnontM RADARAHGES ��� Exclusive ROTAWAVE Cooking System cooks more evenly & (asler than ever before. ��� 700 watls of full energy-saving cooking power ���Easy to clean stainless steel interior with over 1 cu. ft. capacity ���Pull-down door allows full access & is zinc die cast with lewel-like chrome-plated finish for lasting beauty. The Ultimate! 3 Door Side by Side rwfnono REFRIGERATOR rRCCZcR 25 cu. ft. ��� Ice & water dispenser in door ��� Textured front. Many Energy Saving Features ��� Extra thick insulation ��� Three position Energy Saver Control. ^'Engineered for power efficiency. Independent* Testing Laboratory proves the Amana Radarange�� outperforms all other leading brands of microwave ovens tested! ALL YOU NEED! Family-sized Luxury, Style & Energy Efficiency tJi A ��� HOME FURNISHINGS Open Mon. - Sat., 9 am. - 5 pm. GibSOriS (Next to Mr. Mikes) 5 �� & 0 �� 36 & ��������.�� , 1' IB 1 MfW** >--���-*.&��> �� ��*m Sisr ���38 .2S lia\"s cd cd -s g=�� 2>ie Og cd ��� ���-�� cd m ����� cd sr SI ==; = CO ^* CD m. 3g (54 mpg. Hwy.) ESCORT ��� ��� Most Significant Domestic Car -1981 - Car & Driver Magazine's Leader's Choice Poll ��� ��� Car of the Year 1981 - Road Test Magazine ��� ��� Europe's Prestigious Car of the Year-1981 (And It's Built in North America) PARTS PARTS PARTS For All Makes And Models come in s ask About The (low Mustang - Capri - Fairmont - zoohor Feature core SAVE HUNDREDS SERVICE SERVICE SERVICE Friendly & Fair For All Makes And Models 0/ % HIE REALLY DO TRY HARDER AT SMITH COAST FORD SALES LTD ��<��5-32��H 1326 Wharf Road, Sechelt, B.C. Vancouver Direct: 684-2911 885-3281 ������ * AvANCOUVKR ISLAND Sunshine CoasI Realtor, March 27, 1981 COLLI *���;. <.. .:��� Locally Owned Published every Friday by Qlaaalord Pre.. Lid., Publl.her. ol Ihe Sunihlne Coa.l Newt Boi 460 (604) Glbtont, B.C: 686-2622 VON 1V0 866-7817 MANAGER/ ADVERTISING PRODUCTION Bradley J Benson Nancy Conway CIRCULATION COPVSETTING Michael Nonnshi Lise Sheridan ACCOUNTS M M Joe DISTRIBUTION: Distributed on the Sunshine Coast from Port Mellon to Egmont. Copies are available at all Sunshine Coast Realty offices and on major ferries running between Horseshoe Bay and Langdale. CIRCULATION: 8.000 - 10.000 ADVERTISING: Only real estate related advertising will be accepted. SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION 3 months $10.00 6 months $18.00 12 months $30.00 U.S. & Foreign $35.00 per year SUBSCRIPTION FORM Name. Address. City Prov. (State) Postal Code ��� 3 mos. D 6 mos. D12 mos. PENDER HARBOUR REALTY LTD. Highway 101 at Francis Peninsula Rd. 883-2794 New Low Rates On HOUSE INSURANCE LOTS ��� LOTS ��� LOTS We have three side by side lots for sale. All three are on a paved road, have water and power and only steps from government dock and launching ramp. LOT C: .75 acre is a corner lot and has potential view of water. F.P. $40,000. LOT B: .5 acre has a pleasant view of mountains and a small livable cabin. F.P. $35,000. LOT A: .5 acre has an unfinished cabin and a possible view of the water. F.P. $35,000. The foregoing properties, all in the Egmont area are well worth investigating. KLEINDALE: Very attractive 2 acre lot on blacktop road. Full price $32,000 with terms. John Breen 883-9978 Jock Hermon 883-2745 REALTY LTD FREE CATALOGUE [A.E.UPAGE Coast to Coast Real Estate Service Madeira Park P.O. Box 98 VON 2H0 883-9525 Vancouver Toll Free 684-8016 HOMES Road. Features include modern kitchen with Jenn-Air and all appliances, 2 lireplaces, 3 bedrooms upstairs, \\xk baths, living room, dining room, and large sundeck with carport. Accompanying this fine home is a recently built enclosed 2 car garage. This home is situated on a landscaped lot in a quiet neighborhood. Tn view call Bill Hunsche 683 2637 or 883 9525. BARGAIN HARBOUR: Discover and enjoy Bargain Harbour with the view Irom this well built and maintained home on Cris Way. Features include 2 heatilator fireplaces, large covered sundeck, and carport, rec. room wiih lireplace and wet bar, 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room and kitchen with nook. Along with the view come all appliances, drapes and carpelmg. To view call Bill Hunsche 883 2637 or 883 %25. ���*�����- *S6 m ;sb HJ��< WATERFKUN'l: txcellent waterfront investment. 2 bedroom home on 1.2 acres with 205'�� of W/F. This property is situated at the entrance to Gunboat Bay. Zoning permits ',4 acre lots. $249,500. For more information call Bill Hunsche 883-9525 or 883-2637, LAKEFRONT: 1.7 acres on Sakinaw Lake of Government Recreational Lease Land. Approx. 175 feet of westerly-facing waterfront. Boat access only. F.P. $9,500. Call Bob 883- 9525 or 883-3531. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PENDER HARBOUR: Boatworks with waterfront and 1800 sq. ft. contemporary home situated on 2(4 acres at the head ol Pender Harbour. This is an excellent business opportunity along with a lovely home for the right individual, For more information call Bill Hunsche 883-9525 or 883-2637. PENDER HARBOUR ON HWY 101: Plant and Garden Shop in the 101 Plaza in Madeira Park. Going into its second year of business, it shows excellent potential. This is an ideal opportunity. The business is being sold for a reasonable price which includes fixtures and inventories. For more information call Bill Hunsche 883-2637 or 883-9525. LOTS AND ACREAGE **&***<> v- mtffSanh. LOTS AND ACREAGE: Lot 30 on Lee Bay Road in Irvines Landing. 1.85 acres of fantastic view property in new subdivision priced at $82,500. To view call Bill Hunsche 883-9525 or B83-2637. Lot 29 on Lee Bay Road in Irvines Landing. 1.6 acres of fantastic view property in new subdivision. $79,900. Call Bob Beaupre at 883-9525 or 885-3531. Good building lot on Wesjac Road. Close to all amenities. Listed at $26,500. To view call Bill Hunsche 883-9525 or 883-2637. LOT IN WELCOME WOODS: 100' x 175' Hat selectively cleared and beautiful trees. All services at lot line. F.P. $43,000. Call Bob Beaupre 885-3531. Bill Bob Bob Hunsche Bull Beaupre 883-2637 885-2503 885-3531 Stan Anderson | 885-2385 Sunshine Coast Realtor, March 27, 1981 iderson REALTY LTD Sechelt 8853211 Vancouvtr Toll Frt�� P.O. Box 1219 684-8016 FREE CATALOGUE HOMES (HflZaj Coast to Coast Real Estate Service WATERFRONT WEST SECHELT ��� UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Drive by Mills Road to view this quality home presently under construction. This home is loaded! 3 bedrooms with shower in ensuite, Jacuzzi and bidet, 3 piece bathroom, skylight and games room upstairs. Large kitchen with built-in range anc dishwasher, jennaire and laundry room. Family room with air tight. Sunken living room with fireplace and bay window Double garage and brick Barb-que. For floor plan and viewinj contact Bob Bull 885 2503 or Frank Ingham 885-5336. SECHELT VILLAGE: 3 bedroom home presently under :onstruction within walking distance of town. Large deck, masonry fireplace, bay window and roughed in basement. A Fjord design and construction insures the best of quality. F.P. $98,900. DAVIS BAY ��� WHITTAKER ROAD: Enjoy fantastic sunsets and walks on the beach from this lovely home in a quiet residential area. This 2 bedroom home is situated on a % acre of landscapped property and has a park almost in the back yard. Fridge, stove, washer & dryer included. $125,000 firm. Call Frank Ingham at 885-5336 for an appointment to view. SECHELT VILLAGE - REVENUE PLUS: Two storey home with self contained suite on the lowe^MvLI 175+ square feet of 3 bedrooms, ensuite, firepla^MlundV rAm on the upper level. Downstairs are 1 firu^dPen*IWV booth. Small store. 1 excellent access. L\"��j^^I*��Mer Harbour Road. F.P $129000. Call Stan ��Wwior details. Frank Ingham 885-5336 Don Hadden 885-95041 ���'SdnsKnre-'Coast' fteaftaf;' Mirih'H; l'98t '��� JAM MMm ITTEN REALTY LTD. Conveniently located in Sechelt's Trail Bay Shopping Centre Open to 9:Q0 Fri. Night WATERFRONT HALFMOON BAY $275,000 This old house is facinating! It is located on a quiet cove with approximately 250' of sheltered waterfront enhanced by great moss-covered rocks and arbutus trees. The main floor with approximately 1,512 sq. ft. has an open-fired living room, library, bedroom, bathroom and sunny family sized kitchen. The use of handcrafted cedar panelling and oak floors is reminiscent of days gone by. The approximate 630 sq. ft. second floor has an enormous master bedroom and room for more. The whole house is loaded with storage space. There is a huge 10' high basement housing laundry, workshop etc. If you have imagination and flair and love the unsual, don't miss seeing this old home with Corry Ross by appointment only 885-9250. #549 SECRET COVE WATERFRONT $159,000 Located next to the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club. This property has a 56' x 12' mobile home on a permanent foundation and a large sundeck. The moorage facilities, complimenting the 120 feet of waterfront, are in excellent condition. The property is fully serviced and could legally accommodate two dwellings. For more information call Klaus Roepke at 885- 2314 or Henry Hall at 885-2520. #513 GOWER PONT ROAD $136,000 200 feet of waterfront. Two 100 x 217 foot lots on Swallow Road, Gower Point - one lot with charming old home - creek on property - good beach access - expansive vista - landscaped and all with subdivision potential. Don or Rene Sutherland 885-9362. #574 TUWANEK $208,000 Crown Jewel ��� Level Waterfront 106 feet of sheltered waterfront at beautiful Tuwanek. Tastefully decorated home. Guest cabin, dock and float, small stream, fully landscaped. A superb view from this sunny lot. Call Don or Rene Sutherland for details at 885-9362. #567 SELMA PARK One bedroom house on low bank waterfront located behind sheltering breakwater. This house is ideal for summer occupation or as a starter home for the newlyweds. Lease on land has years to run. Please call Don Lock at 885- 3730 for appointment to view. #542 GOWER POINT $136,000 This older two bedroom full basement home is set in a park-like lot. Nicely landscaped, needs stairs for access to the lovely beach. Call Rene or Don Sutherland for details at 885-9362.#534 ACREAGE REDROOFFS ROAD Almost 5 treed acres in popular Redrooffs Road area. Good southerly exposure within walking distance to Sargeants Bay. Water and Hydro at road. Call Brent Strad 8839382 for details. ��580 ROBERTS CREEK $46,000 Approximately 100 feet of highway frontage and a little over a half acre. Nicely treed and with a slight westerly slope. It is located just west of the Masonic Hall. Contact Syd or Frances Heal at 8855693. #573 ROBERTS CREEK ��^N $75,000 Large very priy^lte^K2.75BcjJs in Roberts Creek. HaifltyMo al ���atgfJKr all details call Bryce Lcis$Sj\\^M'Jr ��558 Egmont - 6.0 acres with 380 feet of waterfront and older home. Excellent holding property lor only $139,900. For viewing call Klaus Roepke at 885 2314 or Henry Hall at 885-2520. #541 KLEINDALE $82,000 One bedroom basement home with fireplace on 3.2 treed acres. Excellent garden site. Sunny exposure and mountain view. Small guest cabin included. Call Bronia to view this very appealing property at 885-9033. #518 LIFESTYLE $396,000 For the price of a west side house on this 40 acres of level treed land. Home, barn, partly fenced and cleared. Don & Rene Sutherland 8859362. #503 DAVIS BAY $350,000 Three plus acres of view land located in Davis Bay. This property holds future subdivision potential. Excellent home with some view. Call Don or Rene Sutherland for details at 885-9362.. -_ #568 HALFMOON BAY - \\\\ $94,900 Halfmoon Bav /*!���** - \\wd acres ln Halfmoon ^lfcn��V'*^cre1ots. Good holding prSeaJ^erview call Bryce Leigh at 886-8229. *538 HOMES DAVIS BAY $159,900 View home - Contemporary large family home in popular Davis Bay. Three bedrooms, elevated living room, dining room, lamily room and large kitchen with all modern appliances. This home has three sundecks and a full basemenl. For viewing call Henry Hall at 885- 2520 or Klaus Roepke at 885-2314. #521 VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! PENDER HARBOUR $139,900 This chalet type, new construction just needs your own personal touch to make this home warm and inviting. 3 large bedrooms, 2yj baths, spacious living room wit h fireplace, All this and a panoramic view of Pender Harbour. Call Gayle Adams 883 9364 for details. \"478 HOMES WEsVsECHELT \" $109,500 Must be sold ��� Six months old home situated in exclusive Sechelt West Subdivision. 1340 sq. ft. plus full basement with roughed m plumbing. Three large bedrooms, master ensuite double garage. Assumable mortgage at 13%. Call Emilie Henderson at 885-5225. #517 SELMA PARK $149,900 Brand new three bedroom home. Owner has just begun construction. This home features three bedrooms and bath on top level, Kitchen, family room and living room on main level. Plus large unfinished basement. Now is the time to look at the plans and choose your cabinets, carpets etc. The ocean is superb. Good neighbourhood. Call Terry Brackett 885-9865. #526 DOWNTOWN SECHELT Warm, comfortable, low-cost living in a two bedroom plus basement Bungalow. While you hold this Prime Commercial Land as an investment. Won't last long. For details call Klaus at 885-2314 or Henry at 885-2520. #530 WELCOME WOODS CHARMER Three bedroom rancher on large lot, southern exposure, over 800 feet of patk), professional landscaping for those extras. Only $95,000. For further details call'Gayle Adams at 883-9364. #544 WEST SECHELT $260,000 Split level contemporary home. The ocean view is outstanding overlooking Trail and Vancouver Islands. Three levels with two and a half baths, solarium, rec. room and heatilator fireplace. Outside there is a bird aviary and 24 foot circular pool. The property has been meticulously landscaped. Very private setting on almost one acre lot. Call Terry Brackett at 885- 9865 or Don & Rene Sutherland at 885-9362. #563 DAVIS BAY $155,000 A view and privacy - This owner-builder has created a superbly built 2,000 sq. ft. home on one level. Three bedrooms, two bathrooms, large living room, den/family room, both with fireplaces. Well designed kitchen with adjoining separate dining room. Separate laundry. Large landscaped lot where the Dogwoods grow. A useful feature for retirees - no stairs to cope with. Don't miss this delightful home. Call now for appointment with Syd or Frances Heal al 885-5693. 8546 DUNHAM ROAD $52,900 Two bedrooms and 1,080 sq. ft, on a 70' x 173' lot all add up to opportunity for a lucky buyer. This is a substantial older home, sonic remodelling and decorating could work wonders - and look at Ihe price!! To view call Syd or Frances Heal at 885 5225 (temp, phone). #547 SECHELT VILLAGE $99,0 This home looks out to Sechelt Inlet. Features a very exciting and pleasing layout. Master bedroom features a view and sundeck. The'full basement is near completion with lots of room for the growing family. Call Don or Rene Sutherland at 885-9865. #550 $225,000 Beautiful view home located in sunny Selma Park. This home features sunken family room and living room, three and a half baths, parquet flooring and large stone fireplace. This home consists of a total of almost four thousand square feet on three levels. Upstairs there are four spacious bedrooms with ensuite off master. Also large sunken tub. The basement has two more bedrooms and plenty of room to develop to suit ones needs. Must Be Seen! Call Terry Brackett at 885-9865. #507 PENDER HARBOUR $129,000 Three bedrooms (possibly four) with one ensuite, living room with rock fireplace, kitchen, dining room on upper floor. Rec. room with wet bar and fireplace, storage, utility, workshop etc. on lower floor. Double carport with covered deck over and wrap-around sundecks. Beautifully landscaped with rock wall, shrubs and, lawn. Back in natural state. Call Don Lock at 885-3730 (or appointment to view. #543 PENDER HARBOUR $145,000 Are you looking for privacy? An unbeatable view? Quiet surroundings? This fine home offers all this and more. Look at the features, a sunken living room, sunken tub, hand painted murals, vaulted ceilings, ensuite off master bedroom. Three levels of gracious living plus large patio atop for viewing the harbour. The ultimate in fine living. Call Terry Brackett for all details on this fine home at 885-9865. #389 ST SECHELT $1497500 The Rain in Spain can't possibly fall on this spacious West Sechelt Hacienda. Three bedrooms, sunken living room with feature. Heatilator fireplace, separate dining room, a kitchen to delight the most discriminating Senora, plus large sunken rec. room with second heatilator fireplace, fourth bedroom \"den\" office, plumbing in for second kitchen and large finished utility (could be divided to create 5th bedroom providing a large separate second home for inlaws at only $74,750 each. All on landscaped lot. Large double carport plus loads of parking. To view please call Syd or Frances Heal at 885-5693. Gracias! #349 Ihrdeutschsprechendergrundstuecksmaklerin Sechelt ist Klaus Roepke - privat tel 885-2314. Free Catalogue Call or Drop in for your copy Sechelt 885-3295 Vancouver Toll Free 681-7931 Member Sunshine Coast Real Estate Association Ray Bernie Sales Mgr. Henry Hall 885-2520 Dal Grauer 885-3808 Gayle Adams 883-9364 Terry Brackett 885-9865 Suzanne Dunkerton 886-8317 Syd & Frances Heal 885-5633 Bryce Peter Leigh Davidson 886-8229 886-8400 6 other offices lo serve you POWELL RIVER WEST VANCOUVER NORTH VANCOUVER VANC/BURNABY SURREY LANGLEY Sunshine Coast Realtor, March 27, 1981 AAM MM* i ITTEN REALTY LTD. Conveniently located in Sechelt's Trail Bay Shopping Centre Open to 9:00 Fri. Night HOMES SECHELT VILLAGE $87,500 Immaculate three bedroom home located in the village. Short level walk to schools and shops. Shake roof, separate dining room, rear patio and many nice features. Call Rene at 885-9362 or Terry at 885 9865 to view this fine home. #548 SECHELT VILLAGE $89,000 Corner lot - view ��� Charming family home - underground wiring - landscaped. Value buy. Don or Rene Sutherland 885-9362. #579 WEST SECHELT This charming ranch stylt completed. Features and walk in closet, vaulted c��'il utility area Three skyligl $85,900 home_is almost nbing room. Also dining room. starter home. Must be seen! Call today. Terry Brackett at 885 9865. t*533 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ATTENTION WOODWORKERS $225,000 Don't bother to call unless you aim to be a millionaire. This business includes a modem concrete block building with heavy duly power, olfice area, a (ull inventory of woodworking machinery and an established product line capable ol extension or expansion into other woodworking lines. There are many angles to this business including some excellent assumable finance. To us they all look good so get together right away with Syd or Frances Heal at 885-5693 and let's have a heart to heart discussion. \"516 POOL HALL Ideal owner operator business opportunity. This business includes six slate tables, nineteen electric andpinball machines, plus various other items of stock. Lots ol potential with plenty ol room to expand. Terry Brackett has all details on lease and financial statement. 885-9865. #540 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! consolidate this CI property with adjoining lots and create the best commercial corner in Sechell. The comfortable reconditioned twu bedroom basement home is a bonus which provides good income during holding period. Call Henry Hall at 885-5711 or Klaus Roepke at 885-2314. ��530 SECHELT Sechelt - Light industrial Just listed MLS. 2400 sq. ft. concrete block building, Presently leased on both sides. Also other lease. Showing very good return. Terry Brackett has all details. 885 9865. SECHELT COMMERCIAL Sechelt Commercial - Jusl listed MLS. Large commercial building located on two lots, Ideal holding situation. Owner will consider carrying i large down payment. Call fur all details c WEST SECHELT $146,500 Unobstructed view - Fussy buyers should see this immaculate West Sechelt home. Three bedrooms, two bathrooms (one with sauna), family room, step-saving kitchen, a super workshop. Large area on ground level could be further developed. The owners are perfectionists and an inspection of their home will prove this. Beautiful garden with fenced play area for children and a large vegetable garden. Loads of parking for rec. vehicle or boat. This is an easy care home that the new owner will have lots of time to enjoy the area's recreational facilities. Call Syd or Frances Heal at 885-5693. #531 TUWANEK $110,000 Remodelled view home on Lamb's Bay. This charming home features sheltered water, open plan living area, large master bedroom and view. Call Don or Rene Sutherland at 885-9362. #539 GRANTHAMS LANDING VIEW HOME $74,500 Good starter or retirement home or perhaps summer cottage with excellent view, close to beach, ferry and Gibsons. For more information please call Bryce Leigh at 886-8229. JUST LISTED - WONT LAST $69,500 Immaculate 2 bedroom Bendix mobile on nicely landscaped large level lot. Patio, vegetable garden. Located on Marlene Road. For details call Don or Rene Sutherland 885-9362. #578 window Call Terry' ROBERTS CREEK $75,000 Chalet style house in desirable Roberts Creek. Two bedrooms, one upstairs in the loft and one down. Cosy living room with an acorn fireplace. Lot is landscaped and provides a fair amount of privacy. Just minutes to the beach and close to the schools. Call Suzanne at 886-8317. #537 $146,500 Unobstructed View - Fussy buyers should see this immaculate West Sechelt home. Three bedrooms, two bathrooms (one with sauna) family room, step-saving kitchen, a super workshop, large area on ground level could be further developed. The owners are perfectionists and an inspection of their home will prove this. Beautiful garden with fenced-in play area for children and a large vegetable garden, loads of parking for recreational vehicle or boat. This is such an easy care home that the new owners will have lots of time to enjoy the area's recreational facilities, To view please call Syd or HOMES SUPER Vi��W, SANDY HOOK $125,000 Quality is prominent through this architect designed home. Excellent use of skylights and decking give a contemporary touch. Spiral staircase to loft and master suite with its own dressing room, 5 pee bathroom and sundeck. Many extras include sunken conversation pit in ceramic tile, vaulted ceilings expertly crafted in yellow cedar, large sauna and shower. See this beautiful 2500 sq. ft, home by appointment only with Emilie Henderson at 885-5225. #494 CAROLE PLACE ��� GIBSONS This 3 bedroom cedar rancher is in the process of being built. It is situated on a quiet cul-de-sac in an area of new homes and is close to schools and shopping. Some of the features include 2x6 construction, above standard insulation, fireplace, skylight etc. etc. For more details please call Bronia Robins at 885-9033. $89,500. #552 WILSON CREEK $119,500 Split level view home in sunny Wilson Creek. Three bedrooms with ensuite off master, large living room and dining room. Large sundeck plus part basement for further expansion. Fully fenced lot and enclosed garage. A great family home. Call Terry 885-9865 or Don or Rene Sutherland 885-9362. #577 CEDAR RANCHER Well built, tastefully designed home of over 1500 sq. ft. in a rural setting. Close to school, shopping and beach in Roberts Creek. Many interesting features in this newly constructed home. Assumable mortgage. For more details call Don or Rene Sutherland at 885-9362 or Bronia Robins 885-9033. #524 DAVIS BAY $149,900 If a view is what you are looking for, look no further. Absolute Panoramic view from this immaculate three bedroom home. Added features are a finished rec. room with four and a half by nine foot Pool table, two fireplaces, wet bar, plus potential for in-law suite in basement. At the back there is a 16' x 32' pool. The lot is fully landscaped. Great neighbourhood. Call Terry Brackett at 885-9865 for more information. ��520 POPLAR LANE $95,000 This 1285 sq. ft. home in Gibsons Village is under construction and shaping up to be a beauty. Three bedrooms, double glaze windows cement patios, cedar siding and soffits, heatilator fireplace, heated storage room with entrance off carport, and paved driveway make this an attractive buy. Make an offer and start choosing your colours. Call Dal Grauer at 885- 3808. #564 LOTS- SEAMOUNT INDUSTRIAL PARK $38,000 each Two side by side 52'5 light industrial lots, nicely located close by but not on the highway. This would be a great site for some rental warehousing. Call Syd or Frances Heal at 885- 5693 ITemporary Phonel. #555 TILLICUM BAV $34,900 Only 350 yards to Tillicum Bay Marina. This 50 x 180 foot lot has a 14 foot trailer and two cabins on the property. A perfect retreat (or only $34,900. Call Klaus Roepke al 885-2314. #536 PENDER HARBOUR $27,000 Half acre lot overlooking Pender Harbour with perc. test already approved, some improve- ment to lot. Private road near shopping centre, marina, boat launching. Please call Don Lock 8853730 for more details. 0551 IRVINES LANDING $35,000 Privacy and some view on this six tenths of an acre plus position roughly between Hotel Lake and Lees Bay make this an attractive buy. Call Syd or Frances Heal at 8855693. ��553 HALFMOON BAY LOT GARDEN BAY $35,000 \\ acre view lot in Halfmoon Bay $45,000. Has a Large size lot, nicely treed, short walking choice of building sites. Bryce Leigh 886-8229. distance to stores & marina. Call Gayle Adams #569 883-9364 to view. #576 SHOAL ROAD $29,500 Two nicely treed building lots ready to go and both perc. tested. Contact Syd or Frances Heal al 8855693. SECHELT $35,000 View Lot ��� MLS. Good level building lot close to Sechell. Call Bronia at 8859033. #565 GIBSONS $38,500 One third acre building lot, level and treed, quiet dead-end street with services at roadside. Call Rosemary Young for details at 8868359. #570 WILSON CREEK $31,400 Level building lot off Field Road. Call Dal Grauer for details at 8853808. #566 lease and building. Terry Bracketl 8859865. Frances Heal. #531 Ihrdeutschsprechendergrundstuecksmakler in Sechelt ist Klaus Roepke - privat tel. 885-2314. Free Catalogue Call or Drop in for your copy Sechelt 885-3295 Vancouver Toll Free 681-7931 Member Sunshine Coast Real Estate Association Emilie Klaus Bronia Rene Corry Donald Con Brent Eric Rosemary Sylvia Hendersnn Roepke Robins Sutherland Ross Sutherland Lock Strad JMMM fount ]���\"���l 885-5225 885-2314 885-9033 885-9362 885-9250 885-9362 885-3730 883-9382 885-9857 886-8359 883-9963 6 other offices lo serve you POWELL RIVER WEST VANCOUVER NORTH VANCOUVER VANC/BURNABY SURREY LANGLEY Sunshine Coast Realtor, March 27, 1981 A/ & B0X 149��- && WHARF ROAD S\\V SECHELT, B.C. ���V VON-3A0 TEnZjrTafil, PHONE 885-2235 VANCOUVER 689-5838 (Toll Free) HOMES CENTURY WEST REAL ESTATE HOMES ON THE LEVEL -- WATERFRONT!! No. 671 88 feet of superb waterfront, complete wiih good beach and summer boating. A neat two bedroom home with plenty of room for expansion all on a well landscaped lot. Priced for the wise buyer now at only $220,000. Larry or Ruth Moore 885-9213. WEST SECHELT No. 503 Over 2000 sq. ft. of finished home. This beautiful Lindal cedar home has all the features you could ask for. Four bedrooms plus 2'? baths, formal dining room, living room and family room with connecling brick fireplace. For more information call Leslie Fitch al 885-9057. CONTEMPORARY ELEGANCE! No. 668 An eleganl life style awaits you in this prestigious West Sechelt view home. The property is completely landscaped with easy care grounds and features private garage. Vaulted, beamed ceilings accent the spacious warm interior, Quality carpeting and finishing throughout. Affordable elegance in this 3 bedroom conlem- porary home priced at $137,900. To view call Lynn Wilson at 885-5755. DUNHAM ROAD ��� $54,900 No. 628 Immediate possession in this 1500 sq, ft. older 3 bedroom home on 100 x 173 lot. Large family kitchen, separate dining room, heatilator fireplace, 2-pc ensuite. All appliances included. To view call Eva Carsky at 886-8194 or 886-7126. AS BRIGHT AS MORNING SUNSHINE No. 704 1248 sq. ft., 3 bedroom full basement home, located in West Porpoise Bay, just minutes past the ice-arena. Some features to mention, besides the obvious spectacular view, are a Squamish rock feature wall, ensuite off master bedroom, wrap around sundeck and double pane windows. This home must be seen if you're in the market for a fine home. Asking $125,000. Call George Longman 8868548 for all the details. RELAX IN ROBERTS CREEK No. 710 This cosy, 2 bedroom 1152 sq. ft. home in Roberts Creek is just the place for to relax. Quiet, private, and at the end of the road. If you are looking for a tranquil place to hang your hat, take a look at this home. Workshop is heated and insulated and the green house produces all kinds of flowers for the beautifully landscaped garden. Call Bill at 885- 5327 and discuss an offer to $89,900. WEST SECHELT WATERFRONT ESTATE No. 722 A long private drive wanders through this 1+ acre treed waterfront estate. The eye is drawn to stalely Douglas Fir trees, rock oulcroppings carpeted in moss, natural \"bonsai\" Arbutus trees, and - the ocean beyond! The home is situated for privacy and view of Trail Islands. Angled picture windows take maximum advantage of sunny southerly view and the cosy fireplace highlights living room. Spacious master bedroom has spectacular ocean view as has wood panelled den which features bull-in book shelves. This is an exceptionally rare waterfront property. Asking $350,000. For your appointment to view call George Longman 886 8548. VIEW WEST SECHELT No. 673 View! View! View! Capture forever the view of the Trail Islands Irom this immaculate iwo storey home in West Sechelt. Purchase price includes stove, dishwasher and living and dining room drapes. For your personal tour call Leslie Fitch at 885 9057. Only $132,500. OFFERS MORE THAN JUST LOCATION No. 688 Spacious living room, dining room with sliding doors to covered deck. 3 bedrooms, master bedroom with lull 4 piece ensuite. Large recreation room with Franklin fireplace, great place for fun and games. 2 piece bathroom and extra bedroom downstairs. See this family home priced at $ 105,000 with Lynn Wilson at 885-5755. OCEAN VIEW & QUALITY No. 713 Large 3 bedroom basement on just under % acre. Solid brick fireplace. Visualize breakfast on your sundeck with total privacy. Modern *U' shaped kitchen. Large ground level entrance makes receiving guests a pleasure. Asking $119,500. Call Chuck Dowman 885-9374. 2 ACRE WATERFRONT NEW HOME WITH AN UNSURPASSED VIEW No. 698 Brand new 3 bedroom (master ensuite) featuring a view that is unsurpassed. Home has lots of glass, high ceilings, oak cabinets throughout. Lindal home with 2 Shaw fireplaces. This is a treat lo see. Asking just $229,500. Call Larry Reardon at 885-9320. ENJOY YOUR VIEW AND SAVE OVER $100 PER MONTH No. 643 When you take possession of this 3 bedroom (ull basement view home in Gibsons. An existing mortgage at 10% is jusl one of the money saving features this home has to offer. $107,000. Call Lynda 886-7352. IN THE HEART OF SECHELT No. 631 2 bedroom ��� 750 sq. ft. home with attached carport. Neat and tidy inside and nicely landscaped outside. Ideal retirement home. Don't miss the chance to invest in uptown Sechelt. Asking price $79,500. For details call George Longman 886-8548. NEW! NEW! NEW! \" No. 689 View corner location of Field Road and Gun Club Road. New Marina being proposed only 1 mile away. Easy drive to Sechelt. Good space in back yard for your patio or swimming pool. Double sealed windows & heatilator fireplace with glass doors will keep you cozy. $83,500. Chuck Dowman 885-9374. HIGHEST & BEST USE? No. 692 Almost % acre of properly, prime for re zoning located next to new Dental building. Older home currently rented. $125,000. For further details call Lynda Hickman 886 7352 or Eva Carsky 886 7126. 18 KARAT QUALITY No. 644 Exciting contemporary home, over 2700 sq. ft. of living space. Gower Pt. Rd. overlooking the Straight of Georgia. To mention some features, tinted skylites, indirect & track lighting, area controlled electric heating, double pane windows, sauna and hot tub, plus an attractive assumable mortgage of $44,000 at 11 %% due October 1982. Asking price $180,000. For more details call George Longman 886-8548. Out on MLS Qualified purchasers only please. WEEKEND APPOINTMENTS ONLY SEEING IS BELIEVING!! No. 712 And that is the only way to appreciate all of ihe features of this gold medallion home. Prestige home on landscaped hall acre in desirable West Sechelt. Quality conslruciion and finish throughout, extra features include sunken tub in main bathroom, teak kitchen cabinets with sunlight ceiling in the kitchen, three large bedrooms, a den/games room specially designed. A super large workshop, gorgeous fireplace and much more. You will believe the excellenceof this home when you have seen it. To view call Larry or Ruth Moore at 885-9213 for your appointment. OFFERS MORE THAN JUST LOCATION No. 700 This West Sechelt winner has an incredible view from all living areas plus the 20' x 30' covered sundeck ��� what a place to BBQH Extra large custom kitchen with plenty of storage and work area, heatilator fireplace with glass doors and cedar trim enhances the living room. Three extra size bedrooms and den, plenty of plumbing and a large recreation room with airtight heater, double carport and more. Priced at only $160,000 with a good assumable $50,000 mortgage. To view call Larry or Ruth Moore at 8859213. ITS NOT IMPOSSIBLE! No. 629 To own a 3 bedroom home for less than $55,000 We have over 1300 sq. ft. of living accommodation available in these view strata units. For appointment to view call Eva 886 7126 or Lynda 886 7352. THAT'S INCREDIBLE No. 663 This neat two bedroom home in the heart of Sechelt for only $89,900. Less than one year old and has a good assumable mortgage. Partially finished downstairs and ready to carpet. Other extras include fridge, stove, washer, dryer and drapes. To view call Larry or Ruth Moore 885- 9213. WARM & INVITING No. 687 This great family home in West Sechelt is on a large level lot, mostly fenced and landscaped. A great place for a family near school and lots of young people in the neighborhood. Three bedrooms, den and a cosy lamily room with wood stove, formal dining and private patio add up to good family living. Just $119,500 with $49,000 assumable mortgage at only 13%% financing. Call Larry or Ruth Moore 885 9213. HALF ACRE WATERFRONT No. 726 Watch the sunsel over the Trail Islands from this beautiful Lindal Cedar home. Features include 1100 sq. f I. of living area, a generous sundeck and an incredible view. This lease property is only a short distance from the amenities of Sechelt. Call Pat Parker for your appointment to view, then place your offer on the $72,500 asking price. CHUCK DOWMAN BOB KENT 885-9374 885-9461 BERT WALKER 885-3746 MEMBER SUNSHINE COAST \"TWO OFFICES TO SERVE YOU\" LARRY MOORE 885-9213 PAT PARKER 885-5615 BILL WALKEY 885-5327 RUTH MOORF 885-9213 LARRY REARDON 885-9320 Sunshine Coast Realtor, March 27, 1981 PHONE 886-8194 VANCOUVER 689-5838 (Toll Free) Ceniugc. im DENTAL CENTRE GIBSONS Vi *> HOMES ���CENTURY WEST REAL ESTATE L ,1A DAVIS BAY VIEW HOME No. 697 Here's a superb view home of 3 large bedrooms (ensuite off master) large living room with panoramic view, dining area, kitchen with nook. Full basement with self-contained in-law suite including kitchen. To complete this attractive package Ihe property is beautifully landscaped including a green house waiting to grow. More information or appointment to view call Bert Walker at 885 3746. ONE OF THE VERY FEW!! No. 635 Five acre parcels complele with home on the markel now. Well located near Gibsons. The land is lovely, near level, cleared and lenced. The home is live bedroom, plenty of space family room and separate living room. The outbuildings plus carport. All this tor only $145,000. Call Ruth Moore 885-9213. LOOK OUT TO SEA No. 457 Y< iu'II be surprised what you see from this warm, 3 bedroom, 1100 sq. ft. home in Selma Park. The lease is set for five years, and the asking price is only $47,000. Bill Walkey 885 5327. WATERFRONT EXCELLENCE No. 693 Located on six-tenths of an acre in prestigious Caletta Estates, this modern home is truly one of a kind. Featuring three bedrooms (master ensuite), den, generously sized living and dining rooms, ceramic tile floors in foyer, kitchen and family room the home has over 1800 sq. ft. of gracious living on one floor. For the energy conscious we offer wood framed double glazed windows, an insulating brick finish, heatilator fireplace and a hot water radiant heating system in the floor. The home is presently under construction, buy now while you have the opportunity for personal input that makes a house a home. Call Pat Parker at 885-5615or 885- 2235 for an opportunity to view this unique home. Priced at only $265,000. WEST SECHELT No. 694 New 1300 sq. ft, rancher located on Bligh Road. This home features three bedrooms, two bathrooms and a heatilator fireplace that is open to the family/dining room and the living room. The ideal location leaves you only a few minutes drive Irom shopping and schools and a very short walk to a secluded beach. The lot is level, one quarter acre in size and the southern exposure makes ideal for you gardeners. The home is offered for $135,000completely finished. Call Pat Parker for more details 885-5615 or 885-2235. JUST ARRIVED! No. 724 Gibsons Three bedroom home in a quiet cul-de- sac, lor children's safety. Shake roof is an added attraction lo this new home. Only $79,800. Call Eva or Lynda to view at 8868194. ACREAGE ROBERTS CREEK ACREAGE No. 702 Priced lots lately? Well here's five acres, located In the Fairway Estates with a drilled well, hydro at properties edge, roughly K mile to school, store md beach. Needless to say just steps away fromlhe Goll course. Asking $89,000. Call George Longman 886 8548. PRETTY AS A POSTCARD No. 686 Acres and acres of pastoral charm facing the sun with a quaint older home and modern second home offering privacy, a selection of fruit trees all nestled in an idyllic country setting. Explore the meandering creek (lowing through this once in a lifetime dream. Asking only $192,000. For more information call Leslie Fitch at 885-9057 or 885- 2235. 2% ACRES No. 917 2'j acres of treed seclusion, nice level property wiih selective clearing would give you your own estate overlooking the golf course. Asking $ 110,000. For further information call Ed Baker 885 2641. COOPERS GREEN - A UNIQUE & HISTORICAL PROPERTY 3ACRES ZONED C2L No. 723 This type of property is unique even in British Columbia. Good beach in front, deep water moorage. Can be developed commercially or could be of great asset in company's portfolio. For viewing call Larry Reardon 885-9320. Priced at $1,500,000. ACREAGE GARDEN BAY ROAD No. 716 Your own country estate of 3.78 acres with stream flowing through the property. Some high ground slopes toward the rear of the property. Priced right at only $45,000. To view call Leslie Fitch at 885 9057. ACTUALLY, ITS A PRETTY GOOD BUY No. 660 This treed sloping live acre parcel has good view and in an area close to Sechelt bound to be developed in the future. The price is just $60,000. Call Larry Moore for more information at 885- 9213. $45,000 LAKEFRONT RETREAT No. 595 Just 5 minutes by boat from the launching and you can be on your own, comfortable and quiet with ample land to roam in. There's 6 acres of nicely treed property with an attractive home, all furnished with accommodation for up to 9 with dock, sundeck and boat storage to mention just a few features. More information on this rare property at just $77,900. Call Chuck at 885-9374 or Bert at 885-3746. LOTS PLAN \\S/S7 I ? 5 6 Pl\\Ah ROBERTS CREEK WATERFRONT n0. 675 192' of fantastic level waterfront, gently sloping back 606\" to Beach Avenue. Chance of a lifetime to purchase lifetime estate or as a proud investment for the future. Property presently allows for two permanent homes. Asking $275,000. For details call George Longman 886-8548. DEERHORN VIEW No. 717 This spectacular lot was formerly cleared and culverted ready for building. The driveway is in and ready for your home. At $34,000 it's a lot you shouldn't miss. Bill Walkey 885-5327 or Pat Parker 885-5615. CORACLE VIEW No. 718 Beautiful treed lot on Coracle Drive. Water connected and temporary electricity for resident travel trailer. Driveway's in and the view is there for the taking. Situated among nice homes, yours for $31,500. Bill Walkey 8855327,or Pat Parker 885-5615. ROBERTS CREEK BUILDING LOT No. 707 Size 66 x 198 nicely cleared lot on quiet road. Hydro, water and cablevision at properties edge. Asking price $35,000. Call George Longman 886- 8548. SOME OF THESE DAYS No. 727 There's gonna be a honey of a view! Large lot in Selma Park once removed from Hwy. 101 x 140 ft., $47,500. Tiny Bob 885-9461. LAST CHANCE... No. 625 For Sandy Hook property. Move quickly, the lots are disappearing while you took. This is the last lot on Sandy Hook Road. $31,500 firm. Call Pat Parker 885-5615 or Bill Walkey 885-5327. Q 1 1 1 0,n | r I t '**' 1 - ! ���* ?,1 JM 1 * ..j�� ' ��.��<. ' Q *l Q it i Q \"LAN 1832 1 3 i n5 ! r. ��� to* 9, !��� f^y \"��� t*i 1 ,\\J* K * mum ��� ��� 682-1513 k^AND LAND DEVELOPMENT LTD. �� �� R.R. #2, Gibsons, B.C. VON 1V0 HOMES HOMES DUNHAM RD - PORT MELLON: Ideal starler home (ot the family who cando some fix-up work. Large landscaped 70 x 173 lot, Extra large living room with fireplace and 2 generous sized bedrooms. 1250 square (eet. Appliances included In the unusual price of $44,900. . ****** CREEKSIDE PARK: Luge ranch Fome on corner lot in Creekside. Exira large living room has floor to ceiling antique brick fireplace with glass doors. Three bedrooms, Extra large bathroom with jacuzzi Enclosed carport, workshop and extra rni for study, storage or Ith bedroom. SI 15.000. n SOUTH FLETCHER: A great view and close ir ication make ihis newly listed three bedroom ful basement home worthy ol your consideration. Tile mansard rool and brick work in front give this home that Spanish flavour. Year round creek flows hy Ihe green house atid through Ihe fish pond. If you're a keen gardener you'll not likely find belter soil for growing. Ensuile plumbing in master bedroom, huge rec. room, 440 wiring lor workshop and two water heaters, Why wait? Call to view this home. Newly listed lor $139,500. SCHOOL RD: Executive home nearing completion In excellent Gibsons location. Features include sunken living room, 2ty bathrooms, double attached garage, paved driveway. 2x6 construction, shake roof, master bedroom with lireplace and ensuile. LAUREL RD: Davis Bay. This custom horn. features 2 fireplaces, sunken bathtub, maste tisuiie. large finished rec room wilhbarand wiiu ellar. Three bedrooms Up, Iwo bedrooms down. BVauliful view ol straits from dining room and kitchen. Large lol with excellent garden are; House is five years old and was custom built by mer builder. $129,500. SUNSHINE COAST HWY: Selma Park. View and Revenue. Older home and separate self contained one bedroom cottage on large parcel in Selma Park. Centrally located, this piece l�� within easy walking distance from Sechelt. Comfortable redecorated main home features two bedrooms, a large sundeck and a dark room for the photographer. Nicely landscaped but still very private. Starter, Investment or Retirement, this one Qualifies. $99,500. HOMES ON ACREAGE HALFMOON BAY: Waterfront home. Level waterfront with good garden soil. Large family kitchen, living room has fireplace and hardwood iloors. Two large bedrooms, master has ensuite. Fully finished ground level full basement is rented uite. Total finished living area equals over 2700 square feet. $159,900. // you are thinking of selling your home or property have one of our professional people give you today's market value. Call 886-2277 NORWEST BAY RD: Spacious cedar will shake roof home on 4 cleared, level acres. Three bedrooms, separate dining room. Large pantry off kitchen. Electric and economical wood heat, Also included are 20 x 20 barn, chicken coop, pig run with feeders and 8 x 14 storage shed. Rural living and only minutes from Sechelt. $137,500, OCEAN BEACH ESPLANADE - GOWEF PT RD: Semi waterfront. Million dollar view ant i belter sunsets from this completely icnovaled and enlarged 1120 square feet, three bedroom home Abundance of cedar compli ments the 'antique1 brick fireplace and th�� spacious living room. French doors open to a veri private patio. Sauna adjoining bath. Sliding doon to a full length sundeck and across the quiet dead end street: swimming, boating and fishing. Enjoy the waterfronl but avoid its high price tag and taxes with this 'one of a kind' home. $169,900 GOWER POINT & CLARK: View, sub dividable 1;; acres. This new home has plenty of potential. 3000 square feet on 2 levels fealures fireplaces, deluxe fixtures, garbage compactor dishwasher, ceramic tile kitchen floors and 8 oedrooms, 3 bathrooms. A 24' x 28' garage with storage area and office also included. $193,000. NORTH RD: At Cemeiary Road. Foui bedrooms, believe it or not. This cozy little cedat home has awood burning parlor stove In the living room. Ideal for ihe young lamily, close to schools and shopping. $69,500. LOWER ROBERTS CREEK RD: near Met calfe Road. Gorgeous 2.2 acre property zoned RU. Property is on regional water and has dedicated road at the back of the property. The older 3 bedroom home is surrounded with nicely treed landscaping, has 18 foot diameter by 4 foot deep swimming pool. Winding paved driveway. The home is 960 sq. ft. with solid foundation. Excellent privacy. $159,500. NORTH ROAD: Gentleman Farmer. 5 acres with barn, chicken coop, etc. % cleared, partia view with potential of panoramic view of Howt Sound. Close to ferry on North Road yet very private. Heatilator stone fireplace. Exterior needs minor fix-up and stain. Adjacent to R2L zoning $200,000 INVESTMENT - COMMERCIAL - REVENUE IR jH MARINE DR: Waterfronl triplex, Refurbished tn 1976. 100 feet of waleriront in Village. Good holding property for future townhouse develop ment. Income currently $945 month. Adjacent property to be developed $252,400 r^.-**.-.CS$3Ji errific Spanish home on one o uur best view lots. Four bedrooms, 2'; sat h rooms. Fireplaces, intercom, wet bar .oaded with extras. $159,900. ELSON GLASS: Exciting business opportunity In growing community. Excellent location jusl off highway. Year end statistics available to qualified purchaser. $180,000. GIBSONS AUTOMOTIVE BUSINESS: A going concern business situated on Highway 101 in a busy section. Owner operated with 1 employee has been operating for 1 year. Building is 50 x 50, has 4 doors, room' for 7 cars. Rented at $1,400 per monlh on a 5 year lease. Pay your own utilities. Full price is $90,000. ($75,000 * inventory of approximately $15,000). Price includes equipment worlh $50,000. GIBSONS VILLAGE: Extremely well buill concrete block building with bend beams and rebar, Two areas easily separated 1304 square feet and 1109square feet 360square leet covered carport area. Heating is lorced hot water (oil fired). Established commercial area. Gorgeous view of Howe Sound and Gibsons Harbour. $269,500. CREEKSIDE CRESCENT: New house now being constructed. Chalet type fits right in with its surroundings on a lol close lo schools, shopping, etc. Has large living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, 2 bedrooms downstairs and 2 more bedrooms and a bathroom upstairs with open ch $89,900 LOTS CHERYL ANNE PARK RD: Partial ocean view from this excellent building lot on quiet cul-de-sac m Roberts Creek. This % acre lot should be viewed by all serious lot seekers, $42,000. SUNNYSIDE DRIVE: This 100 x 150 lot is ideally situated at the end of a no thru road. Area is fast building up with new quality homes. A 2 storey home on this lot would have a view of Georgia St rait. Tins lot must be seen to appreciate the value of the 100 fool widths of the surrounding lots. $52,500. NORTH RD: Double wide (24 x 60) on 5 acres. Barn, 16x16,1 year old ,2 corrals, chicken coops. Sundeck 12 x 24. Two full baths, built-in china cabinet. Two bedrooms and family room. On good well. Permission for second dwelling. $189,000 NORTH ROAD: 5 acres, secluded, timbered with lovely 7 year 1460 sq, ft. home with built-in China cabinet, huge sundeck, 2 full baths. Great hobby farm with barn, chicken coop and corrals. On good well but regional water available. Owner ' has permission for 2nd dwelling on property. 300' of highway frontage. Owner says sell. Make an appointment to view today. $165,000. ACREAGE HWY 101 SOAMES POINT: 12iacresof prime view acreage on Highway 101 at Soames Poinl. i Zoned for sub division, or use the two separate I parcels for exclusive residence. Lot B has678feet of frontage and Lot C has 999 feet of frontage. Adjacent to beautiful Soames Park. $325,000. HWY 101: Panoramic view of Howe Sound and I the bonus of nice trees couple to make this 5 acre parcel a unique find. Approximately one mile from ferry terminal with almost 1000 feet of highway frontage, Choose your favourite building | sites, Zoned R2L. $165,000. * (MEMBER SUNSHINE COAST REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION^ STEVE ANNE JOHN TERRI GREG SAWYER GURNEY HANSON HANSON GRANT GARY DAVE JON LORRIE PUCKETT ROBERTS MCRAE GIRARD 886-7678 886-2164 886-8295 886-8295 886-7204 886-9508 886-8040 885-3670 886-7760 Sunshine Coast Realtor, March 27, 1981 W -Waterfront H -Homes A - Acreage R -Recreational F - Farms Bus. 885-5171 Box 1188, Sechelt, B.C. VON 3A0 \"Your Real Estate Hosts on the Sunshine Coast\" THE INN ON A GOLDEN ACRE Updated character building by the sea. Business nicely started ��� now awaits owner with ideas, interesl and energy. A nice full service Inn and has potential for a unique Pub or Lounge. Located on a Golden Acre stratigically sitting in the path of future commercial condominium development at ihe hub of a fast growing, popular center. R3L zoning fully conforming. Exceptional revenue potential from operations or lease-out. High depreciation plus land value potential makes this most attractive to operator or investor. $375,000 cash. SOLID RESTAURANT BUSINESS Long established and still growing - high volume sales. Excellent town center location with long term lowcost lease. Licensed premises, nicely kept. A pleasant place to work and a profitable business to own. This is a solid no nonsense business growing with the town. $140,000 some terms. MAJOR MARINA COMPLEX Sheltered deep water location in busy harbour center. Rare, large water lot lease plus 2.5 acres view waterfront property with development potential. 3 BR house, 2 rental mobiles, a beautifully equipped shop, and laundromat service building. .Aircraft facilities, dock side phone, water, electric service. Optional lease back of all or part of the operations. This is an excellent terms investment. Fairly priced with good terms. $580,000 WEST SECHELT L 243 Do you want to rela x in a quiet area - if you do this 3 bedroom full basement home on Norvan Road could be what you are looking for. Features: large lot 75' x 150', two fireplaces, 1 full bathroom and master bedroom has 2 piece ensuite, roughed in plumbing in basement, carport. House has lovely brickwork to enhance the appearance. F.P. $115,000. Call Pat Murphy 885 5171 or Deirdre 885 5971 15 ACRESi HALFMOON BAY L 248 Fifteen acrest located on main highway 101 near Secret Cove. Possible subdivision lo 3 five acre parcels. For more information call Pat Murphy at 885-5171. F.P. $150,000. TRY THIS ON FOR SIZE 2 bdrm, 60' x 12' spacious mobile home. This home has a very spacious layout with abright living room - highlighted by the beautiful black leather wet bar with leather swag accent light. For furlher information call Deirdre 885-5171. F.P. $22,000. Act now. SECHELT VILLAGE L 242 This 3 bedroom furnished mobile home is in mint condition and now on the market. Situated in the Village of Sechelt within walking distance to all stores, hospital, and beach. Range. Fridge, washer & dryer are included with sale. Call now while it's still available. F.P. $22,000. Further information and details are available lo qualifiable parties only. Contact Patrick T. Dahle 112-885-5692 MEMBER SUNSHINE COAST REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION \"P.T NOW IS YOUR CHANCE L 245 This 3000 sq. tt. 3 level home awaits your finishing touches The lower level could be a rec. room, a great entertaining area or a suite. Let your imagination decorate it for you. The middle level houses a large bright kitchen, open dining area and living room with a sliding glass door toa sundeck, where you can enjoy the view of the harbour and Howe Sound, also on the main floor are two bedrooms and one bathroom. Then up to the penthouse to the master bedroom and its Jacuzzi. Ease into this house for $140,000. Call 885-5171 for appointment to view. COMMERCIAL - SECHELT L 249 Two {2) lots zoned commercial I, Ideal location for professional . Lots'size frontage lOOx 132. At present there are three residential units (all need repairs & renovations). Can be income producing with just a little elbow grease and paint. Good potential holding property. F.P. $165,000. Call Pat Dahle 885-5692 or Pat Murphy 885 5171. Sails in the sunset... will be your view when you look up the Georgia Strait and across to Vancouver Island from these 4 ��� 2 bedroom stes each approx. 900 sq. ft., located in West Sechelt. All with view. Plus owner's 1300 sq. ft. \"A\" Frame home with l1 baths - lovely cedar finish inside. Large living room, single car enclosed garage - all this on approx. 1 acre of land. Gentle slope, southern exposure. Great potential. Call Pat Murphy to arrange appointment to view and for more details. $275,000. Make an otter. Dahle 885-5692 Deirdre 885-5971 Pat 885-5171 sumnTcoAST h.b. GORDON AGENCIES ltd. I REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION 31 Years At Cowrie St., Sechelt ACREAGE ORANGE ROAD The Land - 9.4 acres of sunny privacy The House - Just 4 years old, beautifully built! Vaulted Mahogany ceiling in the step- down living room. Separate dining room, huge family room, 2 bedrooms, both ensuite. Oak parquet floors - fireplace & Fisher stove & huge cement patio - all thermopane windows ��� built-in vacuum system. It's very, very nice! $265,000. Pat Lindsay. WANTED!! VIEW LOT - SANDY HOOK Buyer waiting ! Pat Lindsay 885-2591 ROBERTS CREEK WATERFRONT A pebble beach and an atmospheric, 2 level 3 bedroom house right on the water! - PLUS - A new 2 bedroom, 2 level house up at the road with a gorgeous view! Terrific family or group investment. $295,000. Pat Lindsay for details. SAKINAW LAKEFRONT! Rustic Retreat right at the water's edge! Wonderful warm swimming - cabins sleep 2-8. 150' on the water with docks. 1.7 acres Gov't Lease Land. Water access only. Price includes boat, engine & furnishings $29,500. Pat Lindsay. PHONE 885-2013 Box 123, Sechelt, B.C. HOMES JUST STEPS TO EVERYTHING! One level 2(3) bedroom house in need of T.L.C.! Big living room - fisher slove. Sunny back garden ��� fenced on lane. Perfect starter or retirement home. Large assumable 11% mortgage. Low 70's. Call Pat Lindsay for details. LOTS Two adjoining lot^ Narrows & jf^m Harbour. Jacl^M^kjafl,]? J same time, 8,500 Pender -CARD AND GIFT SHOP - Retail Business for a family or couple. Fully stocked. Renewable 5 year lease. Excellent location In the hearl of Sechell. Loads of parking. Pat Lindsay. WAYNE SALTER 885-5986 .H49-0994 Mobile PATRICIA LINDSAY 885-2591 H.B. GORDON 885-2013 JACK NOBLE 883-2701 JOHN WILSON 885-9365 MIKE BALDIGARA 885-5645"@en, "Titled \"The Coast News\" from 1945-07-11 to 1957-03-28 and 1992-03-19 to 1995-01-09

\"Coast News\" from 1957-04-04 to 1970-10-28; and \"Sunshine Coast News\" from 1970-11-04 to 1992-03-02.

Published by Coast News Limited (1945-1952), Sechelt Peninsula News Limited (1953-1976), and Glassford Press Limited (1977-1995)."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Gibsons (B.C.); Sechelt (B.C.); Halfmoon Bay (B.C.); Davis Bay (B.C.); Madeira Park (B.C); Pender Harbour (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Coast_News_1981-03-31"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0176152"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.4002778"@en ; geo:long "-123.508889"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver: University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Gibsons, B.C. : Glassford Press Limited"@en ; dcterms:rights "Copyright remains with the publishers. This material is made available for research and private study only. For other uses please contact Glassford Press Ltd. P.O. Box 989, Golden, BC, V0A 1H0"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Sunshine Coast Museum and Archives"@en ; dcterms:title "Sunshine Coast News"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .