@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "1eaf630c-1fe4-40e0-84c9-ec499113c208"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:issued "2015-01-09"@en, "1976-06-09"@en ; dcterms:description "Serving the Sunshine Coast."@en, ""@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/xpentimes/items/1.0186282/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note " A .? ) -\"��� A. \\ tfest'Canad-ian Graphic Industries! liUt4 '.Vest bth Avo. , Vancouver 10, u. 0. W/'iKS 20-7. ~tf Serving the Sunshine Coast, (Howe Sound .to Jervis Inlet),'including Port Mellon, Hopkins landing, Granthams- Landing, Gibsons, Roberts Creek, ^ Wilson Creek, Selma Park, Sechelt, Halfmoon Bay, Secret Cove, Pender Hrb.'. Madeira Park; Garden Bay. Irvine's Landing', Earls Cove, Egmont / ��� / Phone 885-3231 2nd Class Mail Registration No. 1142 Union '^SaJJIgsg*5 Label, - This Issue 16 pages���15c LARGEST READERSHIP OF ANY PAPER ON THE SUNSHINE COAST. Volume 13��� No. 28 _u- Wednesday, June 9,1976 A great deal is riding on a meeting scheduled for yesterday in Victoria. At press time, the results of a meeting between Transport Minister Jack Davis and Premier BUI Bennett were not known. The. two government leaders were to discuss the ferry situation on the Sunshine Coast and in particular the demand for return of the half- price resident's fare. The meeting followed work by MLA Don Lockstead, elected representatives from the Sunshine Coast and Powell River area and some pressure from a citizen's group threatening to blockade the ferry,system at Langdale terminal, a threat they say they, will carry out this Sunday if the area does not get the resident's half-fare rate. MLA Don Lockstead met with Premier Bill Bennett June 2 regarding the resident fares. The MLA said the premier was receptive to the idea that if the commuter ticket books were to be of any use to residents on the Sunshine Coast and Powell River area, they would be valid for a time longer than one month as presently proposed and they should be transferable. \"The premier agreed to review the ticket conditions with Minister of Transport Jack Davis,\" Lockstead said. He added that the transport minister earlier agreed to meet with representatives of the Sunshine Coast and Powell River area for a second time regarding the resident commuter ticket proposal. That meeting took place June 4 when Gibsons Mayor Larry Labonte, Sechelt Mayor Harold Nelson, Powell River Mayor Dave Hart, Sechelt Indian Band Councillor Ted Dixon, Sunshine Coast Regional District Chairman John McNevin and Powell River Regional District Chairman Harold Lennox met with Davis in Victoria. At that meeting, according to Chairman McNevin, the group presented a more united front than at their first meeting with the minister. \"This committee was good,\" he said, \"we met and talked before we went into the. minister's, office. We were determined we weren't going to get side-tracked. We told him what we wanted, what was logical and what we were proposed to administer. We mentioned the Peninsula Combined Community Orgnizations and how they were unanimously against the commuter books. We mentioned the protest and how it showed what kind of frustrations the area was feeling.\" McNevin said that Davis felt the ferry protest was damaging to the cause because only a few cabinet ministers knew or cared about the ferry situation and such demonstrations-only strengthened negative reaction in the cabinet. \"The minister wouldn't commit himself on what he was going to say to the premier. I suggested that it would be a good idea for our group to meet with the premier. His reaction was that that was perhaps not a bad idea; but again there was not commitment,\" McNevin said. He speculated, \"If the minister takes any action at all, it will be an either-or situation. He will either institute the half-fare system as originally proposed or^he will keep the commuter books and make them transferable and lengthen the time limit.\" McNevin, however, did not rule out the possibility that no action would be taken. . \\ts i JM--1 -��� ��� nn I r 0$ ' ���: '-������mk :N I*. ���{. .- -4* '. t- ���\"a ������ i ��� - ����� i - ? : ask the village of Gibsons about expansion. Last week the Area E Ratepayers presented a brief for the consideration of the Gibsons Council and requested a meeting to discuss the brief. Ratepayers secretary Gladys Sluis sent a letter to the council requesting the meeting. The council voted June 1 to refer the letter to the June 15 meeting so Alderman Metcalfe; who was not at the June 1 meeting, could be present. In their brief, the ratepayers association stated, \"Before we can discuss intelligently any questions of feasibility we have first to learn from council what they intend to 3 B Q W 10.OG PVUH ��� u.U'J AuUT fc.CK. ACU 113,0, TuTL 10.Ul- CATQ .11 j CRuG 1593 7006 .i/'Jn/7(i achieve with forming a district municipality -and-.why. they-believe a district municipality offers better government for the electoral areas than the present form of administration.\" The brief said the ratepayers in Area E were satisfied with the present regional government, \"and are reasonably happy about the region's planning for future development. So we find it difficult to imagine any other services we could ask for and which could only be supplied by a district municipality, governed and directed from the Gibsons village offices.\" The brief asks four questions: \"What are council's objectives for changing their status from a village to a district municipality and what are the services, which can be provided by a district municipality, but not by a village? \"What would be the additional benefits of the change for the taxpayers in the village? \"What would be the additional benefits to the voters in the annexed areas, which could hot be provided by the regional district on demand, or if provided by the Region would be more expensive than \"the same services provided by a district municipality?\" The brief continues, \"Only after the full information is available and after we know all the implications connected with giving up our present form of local government, can we,. decide ��� at least In principle ��� whether we could approve of the concept of a district municipality for us and whether council's offer to Join this municipality holds any promises of Improving our present circumstances.\" It adds, \"The voters in the annexed areas have to assess, whether after joining the^new district municipality they can feasohat^J expect to.be treated as fully equal citizens and not merely a revenue producing appendage to the present village.\" The brief concludes, \"We are convinced that once permitted to discuss all the facts openly, knowledgeably and to the fullest extent, the voters will come to a proper decision of what would provide the most advantageous form of municipal government to achieve their civic aspirations and cover their needs.\" .. Ratepayers chairman Frank West emphasized the importance of getting the answers to the group's questions. He told the Times, \"we have submitted the brief in writing and we are sure the village will provide the answers in due course either to us in writing or to our delegation at a council-meeting. We have told them there is no hurry as long as all the answers come before we have to make a decision. People complain about being short changed In stores nil the time; but Georgo Mlntz Is particularly upset about the way was sliort-cliangcd by B.C. Ferries. Mlntz, nn Instructor nt Vancouver Community College's Ijwgnrn Cnmpus in Vancouver, wns travelling up the Sunshine Const to Sechelt June 4. When he stopped nt the Uuigdnlo ferry terminal booth to catch the 10 a.m. sailing, the terminal attendant told htm it would be $22, $10 for the car nnd $1 for each of the three people ln the ear. Mint/, had only $11) on him and borrowed the other $3 from one of his two passengers. He took the receipt and put It In his pocket. ,When ho got to Sechelt, Mlntz produced tho receipt In order to havo the money refunded hy the people ho had come to do business with. The receipt said he lind been clmrged for a ear and two passengers --- $1(1. \"I was having my expenses paid to como here,\" he said, \"otherwise I never would have looked at tho receipt.\" Meanwhile Mlntz Is out $4 and pjans to lake the matter up with B.C. Ferries. Wlverc, he wonders, did the other $4 go? \"DEMONSTRATION POSTPONED. Davis agreed to meeting\" said the ad- dendums to ferry protest posters placed all over the Sunshine Coast. After Transport Minister Jack Davis agreed to review the ferry fares with Premier Bill Bennett, the committee which was organizing a~ferry blockade for June 6 recommended the action be postponed until the outcome of the meeting is announced. That meeting was scheduled for yesterday. If the area did not get its commuter rates for all residents, the blockade goes ahead Sunday morning. ��� Timesphoto Voters in area F are buying themselves a park. In a referendum Saturday, residents of the regional electoral area which includes Granthams Landing, Hopkings Landing, Langdale, Port Mellon and Gambier Island voted to set up a specific taxation area for the purpose of purchasing Soames Hill as parkland. The residents of the electoral, area voted: 168 to 47 in favor of buying the 27 acres of Soames Hill for $70,000. The park is to be purchased from Regional IB Director Ed Johnson. Negotiations for the park were completed before Johnson took office in January. According to Regional Board Chairman John McNevin, the next step is to set up interim financing for the purchase_so it can be completed even before the taxes are levied on the area. He said he hoped to have a financial proposal to set before\" thdregional board at their June 30 meeting. jMcNevin is the director for Area F as well as being board chairman. . There were about 700 elegible voters in the area. ��y��SEH usage urges loney Sunshine Coast Lions Club have received a $100 grant from the village of Sechelt to help finance swim classes. The Lions had written for financial assistance ln the program and after a discussion about the benefits of such a program, the councU voted for the $100 donation. The village of Sechelt are getting their say in the B.C. Rail dispute. At last week's council meeting, the village voted to send a telegram to Labour Minister Allan Williams stating the village's concern over the plight of residents of the Interior of the province and asking the minister to, \"see what could be done to solve the problem,\" and get the railway running. The action was prompted by a letter from the mayor of Quesnel who was asking municipal support for his campaign to have the labour minister legislate the striking rail workers back to the job. After a discussion, the aldermen decided that while having the rail workers back on the job was desirable, they were not sure if legislation was the way to do it. Tom Haigh's recycling proposal got the village government support it required; but not before some fireworks at the Sechelt council meeting. Both Gibsons and Sechelt villages voted to give Haigh's recycling proposal $100 a month for two months; but in Sechelt two aldermen met head-on over the concept. Haigh had been operating Peninsula Recycling on an LIP grant which ran out in May. The regional board earlier promised to support an extension and now the village governments have added their support. Sechelt gave its support without the blessing of Alderman Frank Leitner. At last Thursday's^meeting, Leitner and Alderman Morgan Thompson had a heated exchange over the recycling idea. \"These people have spent $23,000 In seven months,\" Leitner said, \"If that's not enough of a project; two more months won't make much difference. Recycling Is just not practical in this area.\" \"I think we should give them the money for two months and give recycling a proper trial. At the end of that time we should have a proper breakdown of expenses and revenue,\" Alderman Thompson said. When asked about the discrepancy between the cost and the income from recycling, the alderman said, \"We are all talking about what we should be doing; but it seems no one is going to take the first step. This $200 is a pretty cheap first step. They showed more returns in the past six weeks than they did in the first five and a half months of the project. Another two months would tell more.\" Alderman Dennis Shuttleworth, the deciding vote among the three alderman present said, \"Itappears that the project will not be self-supporting and that the income to date has been about 10 per cent of expenses. I think they should make their costs on recovery and it must be profitable. I also think they should have a proper trial to see if it can be. We should have a good look at it.\" The motion passed with Alderman Leitner opposed. At the Gibsons council meeting last week, the project received unanimous support of the aldermen. Sechelt Council was told Inst week that the Sechelt sewer system would cost an additional $3,000 because of cost increases over original estimates. Norm Wutson, Sechelt's sewer advisor, told the council he had a $2,300 cushion in the commercial fees. He said the difference, uboutn quarter of a mill, \"was so minlsciilc, so Infinitesimal that (the regional district) agreed that it was not worth tampering with the rate structure at this point.\" Watson added tliat the work would he done hy regional crew and their work In the past Imd been 25 to 30 per cent under cost estimates. He said the regional letters patent had come through from Victoria and he anticipated a referendum could be held In June. The municipal clerk pointed out that tho Municipal Act had been amended giving voting privileges lo any owner of real property in an area. I le said lie did not know If this change had been proclaimed and was to phone Victoria to find out. This change would mean that owners of commercial property In the affected sewer area would Ihi able to vote. Under (.lie present act, only residents can vote. I By TOM PERRY \"Wouldn't it be nice If. . Wouldn't It be nice if statements starting with tlmt phrase could come true more often? We have nn Idea that started tliat way several weeks ago, and now we need help In making It fully operational. It's about a summer program for a group of kids who receive special help of somo kind during tho regular school year. The children I'm speaking of need this help for n wide variety of reasons. Somo of the difficulties result from well- understood medical causes, like a genetic accident or nn Illness that damages the nervous system. Some result from poorly understood causes, like the stormy, behaviour of a hyperactive child. Still others, like Dyslexia, are difficult to diagnose in their cluttered context of private assumptions nnd social expectation. Much Is Iwlng done to help these young people. The school board lias dramatically ��� Increased the quality of available services during the last year. Just recently, for example, Hon Breadner reported an 05 per cent Improvement In tho attendance rate of Pender'Harbour students participating in his tutorial program. Still more could be done, however. As ��� Sow l'ngc A-3 GROUP MET lust week In Modelrn Park to talk about a possible summer progrnm Tor young students with learning disabilities. They nre discussing the possibility of n group In the North Peninsula area and another in the South. Members are, from left, Pat Luscombe, Maureen Renous, Jessie l'tcltz, Tom Perry, Lillian Brooks, Kvans Hermon and Kay'Dombroski. The group is presently formulating a proposal. Timesphoto i ) ... ��� ! >������-'. ���i^'- ���|*'.r '' s l ^ Page A-2 The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1976 recommended Garbage disposal was discussed at the meeting of the Regional' Public Utilities Committee on May 25. Martin Dayton of Dayton and Knight Ltd. recommended a central sanitary landfill site be established and the existing dumps fazed' out, leaving transfer stations at the site to accommodate local residents. He said the cost,of running and building a sanitary landfill is roughly twice the cost of maintaining present garbage sites, and an incinerator costs roughly three times what the sanitary landfill operation would be. About-recycling, Dayton advised that it will never be economically feasible. He felt the key to recycling is household sorting which can be encouraged but can't be enforced. The committee recommended to the board that the contract with Sunshine Coast Disposal Services Ltd. be extended from July 15,1976 to March 1,1977 at the quoted price of $3,300 per month and that tenders be called for by January 15,1977. BY GUY SYMONDS There is no doubt that, in this part of the world, people are getting very interested indeed in growing their own vegetables. The sales of seeds and plants in the garden stores is proof of that. In point of fact, we are thoroughly spoiled. All winter long the produce shelves in the supermarkets are loaded with the best the earth has to offer, fresh and wholesome. Our proximity to the heavy producing areas of Mexica and California is one of the reasons this is possible. The catch is that it puts us entirely at the mercy of an outside source over which we have no control. ������ Which rather lengthy preamble brings this Corner to the subject of growing leeks. This is one of the easiest, hardiest as well as one of the most delicious winter vegetables available to the west coast gardener.Along with curly kale, late broccoli and cauliflower they go far to keeping the dinner table well supplied throughout most of the winter. Leeks are easy to grow. The seed is sown in the usual way and allowed to develop until the plants are ready for setting out. The recommended way to bring leeks to maturity is in a trench like celery. This of course is not essential and they can be grown just like any other vegetable. The trench system makes the blanching process easier. But whichever way it is done, the growing medium must be pretty rich. Good manure compost with the usual attention to soil structure are prime requisites, as they are wherever good vegetables are grown. The little plants should be set out in a single row about 12 inches apart and watered, rather than pushed or pressed. This washes the soil in around the roots. s , These by the way should be shortened by about half their length and the tops also cut back by about one third at the time of planting. This will encourage good root growth, and since it is the root that you are going to eat, that is what you want. This practice also helps to prevent white-tip, the disease that can attack the leaves. Regular hoeing is a must in leek culture. This of course is not only to keep the weeds under control but also to preserve the moisture in the ground and to complete the blanching process. After about six weeks of growing in their permanent location, the earth should be drawn up around the stems with a hoe if they are planted on the flat ground, or the trench filled In If that Is the way they are being grown. Start the harvest gradually as the leeks can stay where they are for many weeks without becoming woody. In the darkest days of winter they will not only give you a succulent reward, but, according to the ancients, will help to keep you healthy till the sun shines again. Happenings around the Harbour OFFICIATING at the annual installation of officers of the Sunshine Coast Lions Club Saturday night was Past District Governor Ed Porter of North Vancouver. Here he installs Herb Mitchell as president of the club for the 1976-77 year. Behind the two are other Lion Tamer Barry McDonald, members of the Lions executive who Treasurer Dave Austin, vice-presidents include directors Bob Darney, Larry Robert Allen and Brian Haslett, Fradette, Carl Bobart and Gerry secretary Bob Haley and past president Freeborn, Tail Twister Colin McKinney, Wes Klause. ��� Timesphoto RUBY LAKE STORE AND RESTAURANT Dave and Carol Allan, son Tim and Jack Bumby, Dave's brother, are the new owners of the Ruby Lake Restaurant. They are in the process of putting up shelves in one part of it, painting, and then when this is all finished, they wUl have a long needed grocery store, coffee bar and dining room. They expect to be opeping the premises next week. Dave and Jack's mother Mrs. Melva Allan is also there. They all hail from the Ladner Tsawwassen District where they have a' Texaco Station. The Grocery Store and Restaurant will be open 7 days a week and the hours will be from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. They will be managing the Ruby Lake Motel too. PENDER HARBOUR LIONS The Pender Harbour Lions Club are going tcrsend two handicapped persons to summer camp. This is made possible by proceeds from their Casino Night, and they will be chosen from the Pender Harbour and Egmont area. BONNY AND LEE LEAVING Everyone will be sorry to hear that Bonny Dubois and Lee Hartley will be leaving the Pender Harbour Hotel Dining Room and Cafe. Bonny is leaving because her daughter Linda has been quite ill and wishes to be with her when she comes home. Lee is going to reside at Williams Lake with her husband Bill. Linda Dubois is still in the Lions Gate Hospital and is getting better. Only relatives 'are allowed to visit her, but she can have flowers now. HOSPITALIZED Last week, Mrs. Gladys Devaney, mother of Mrs. Marisha Wiley and Mrs. Charlotte Fulton of Maderia Park, was taken to St. Paul's Hospital suffering from a ruptured artery in her neck. She is recovering nicely and will be home soon. MRS. HATCHER GRATEFUL. Mrs. A. J. Hatcher of Madeira has been collecting for the Cancer Society on the Sechelt Peninsula for some time now and says the 1976 campaign is just coming to a close. She said the response from the people of the Peninsula has been wonderful and to Doris Edwardson 883-2308 date she has collected oyer $2,100.00 (apart from In Memoriam money which comes in, during the entire year. ^ ��� \"., She would like to thank the1 people of Madeira Park and the Peninsula for. their wonderful support as it is only by cooperation of this sort that cancer will be beaten. All In Memoriam money goes solely to research; about 9 per cent of the campaign money is used to offset administration costs; the balance is used for medical aid for cancer patients (where necessary) and for research. 'Medical Aid' usually means assisting those on low incomes who live in outlying parts of the Province to get to centres for their regular check-ups following an operation for cancer. If cancer patients are not checked regularly, in many cases the operation would have been in vain. So it is with a clear conscience that Mrs. Hatcher collects for the Cancer Society knowing that over 90c of every $1.00 she collects will be used to fight this dreaded disease. Administration costs are kept to an absolute minimum; they cover a small staff in Vancouver, and postage. All canvassing is done on voluntary basis. PENDER HARBOUR COMMUNITY CLUB Mrs. Muriel Cameron would like to see more people come out and support the Community Club on Bingo nights as more help is really needed. Also, if anyone has old saucers they do not need any more, they would be appreciated by the Club as they are used for ash trays. THANK YOU The Pender Harbour May Day Committee would like to express their thanks to Mrs. Pat Hoff for getting this past May Day organized and also to. Mrs. Diane Gough who was assistant Chairman. Are you part of the human race or just a spectator? pamiapacnon Fitness. In your heart you know it's right ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. C. Gardner & Dr. J. Eialnarick wish to announce they will soon be open for the practice of dentistry in Pender Harbour. Opening announcement will follow shortly. sewer costs A recent letter from engineers Dayton and Knight Ltd. advising that there will be an increased cost estimate for the Sechelt sewer system due to the lapse of time to construction date will result in a slight rise in sewer costs to residents in Sechelt. Contrary to what some people have thought there will not be a 25 percent increase in sewer rates says Norm Watson. He said the worst that could happen is a one quarter mill increase, but there will be no change in the rate structure. �� There is already a cushion of $2,400 and If the village's share of the $3000 cost cannot be raised, the increase to the residents will be approximately one or two dollars says Watson. He estimated residents will pay approximately $89 for sewers In Sechelt. SPECIAL AWARD was presented by retiring Sunshine Coast Lions Club president Wes Klause, right, to club member Hayden Killam. The award was for special service to the local club. The presentation was made at the Lions installation dinner June 5. rr~: GETTING THE BIRD, Lion past district governor Ed Porter won a 'dressed chicken' in one of the night's draws at 'the Sunshine Coast Lions Club draw. The much annoyed rooster looked splendid in ros dress. There were rumors the draw was fixed. i \"*r * ii*����r <��������%���. ���Hawaii ��� Disney land ��Spain ^Europe # Alaska # Tahiti ��Ai^ ., .- ' ��� *���\" -��� ��� ' . ���.'���-.���������-- Mvi'?,i'.\".��H*ilil.J...i4x ,H,l. .H-L'^,'... ��� ' - f ,.- -' t-- - I- Gi��E YOUR HOiE A i Suji Ltd. RINGS 006-7112 005-2923 if so, do it properly! With a forced- air electric heating system from SEA COAST SHEET METAL ADVANTAGES: 1. Filtered air - for a healthier homo atmosphere. 2. Circulation - for a cooler homo in the summer months. 3. Maintenance - -practically freo. OPTIONAL LUXWHY EQUIPMENT: 1. Air conditioning - easy to Install colls lor total comfort. 2. Electronic air fibres - for a total removal oj airborne dust, pollen and fabric particles - even odor and smokol 3. Night set back thermostat complete with clock - economically, automatically keeps your homo at your doslrod tomporaturo night and day - saving you money! HUMIDIFIERS: If your homo is too dry, chooso spray or ovaporating typo. DE-HUHIDIFIEftS: ll you find your homo too damp. THE ABOVE EQUIPMENT CAN ONLY BE INSTALLED OH A f OUCED-AIH BEATING SYSTEM. for Information on any of tho abovo, call (''L'tl'!1' ' ' >'���' 'XiX X , > ,\"> i\"''Ak^f*tA'i< ^^ . f * ' .4 . ill .r, *<..'. 0 tues day thru Saturday 9:30 am to 5:30 pm Closed Mondays 1212 Cowrie St 885-3265 (ocroii from Troll Bay Sport*| Box 1400 Sechelt A Wednesday, June 9, 1976 The Peninsula Times Page A-3 _.- ��� ���**��� *��� '* �� . ' ������\"��� * - - ���- * a.�� A- gJrVr .%��� fc . '^i^ COMMITTEE of Concerned Citizens who was chairman for most of the public member Peter Reid reads the group's meeting which voted to postpone the manifesto during the public meeting at Roberts Creek. At right is Herb Richter MORE ABOUT . . . blockade terminal, of the ferries at Langdale ��� From Page A-l mentioned elsewhere, kids are in school for only thirty hours of a one hundred and sixty eight hour week. Now summer is upon us, and our learning assistance teachers are off for more university study; but not before extending a warm welcome and giving much encouragement to anyone willing to carry on with many valuable contributions that we could make in their absence. What they suggest is an exciting change of pace that confers a whole pack of advantages in fun-filled way. That's a real windfall for kids are fighting their way through the slings and arrows of our outrageous academic demands all year. Six more weeks of the three Rs would invite revolution, riot and rebellion! It turns out that there are factors more basic than 'the basics', as they'e called. To begin with, academic success is based on important developments of a physiological and neurological nature. Ed Nicholson or the school's LA teacher will gladly explain how this is so, and relate how various arts and crafts develop a child's fine-motor control; how outdoor games and sports help to establish a reliable sense of spatial relationships; how gymnastics and related exercises develop coordination; how music is an important means of practise in auditory sequencing. So during the summer kids can have their cake and cat it too; they can be well nourished by vory appealing meals. Then there's the all-important psychological factor. We want these kids to pick, plan nnd oil joy n variety of successful soclal-recrcational-outdoor activities; to cooperate In fun-filled, henlthy ways that will enhance their feeling of basic well-being. These kids go through the regular school year with the constant nagging feeling thnt there's something wrong with who they are. During the summer, nt lenst, we wnnt them to feel ��� and to know ns n result of their own positive experiences ��� that they nre capable, well-liked, and worthwhile, A-OK human beings, Will you help us? Weneed your time, talents, faculties nnd financing to stuff nnd operate two pilot projects, one each for tho north nnd south peninsula. We intend to operate n five-day week and, we hope to get maximum parent Involvement nnd keep expenses aS low as |M>sslblc. In tho north peninsula area we already Imve the following tentative committments; Mark Moyoru linn approved a monopoly on tho mlnl-sohoolbus; Hobble 1'etcrs will conduct swimming lessons when her schedule liermits; and of course Vernn Wishlove, our Mndcirn Park principal, was tho first to bend over backwards to help us just us soon as he caught the drift of what we were up to. Who else? How about you? What can you do well that you'd like to share with a few children? We will be happy to introduce you to the kids and help you get started. (We'll also stayv around to keep a realistic adult-to- child ratio for the activity you're doing.) : In terms of facilities, we're very well off indeed.' The school board has offered rent- free use of buildings, equipment and grounds for the duration of our projects. But suppose we developed a need for other community facilities���a meeting hall, perhaps. Could we use it rent-free? Turning to the money question, public funds are on the lean side. (The Manpower- UIC program to promote social services would help a bit, but it hasn't even been announced yet.) Nor are we skilled fundraisers with time to spare for making extensive inquiries to foundations. Maybe you know where to find funds for us and will try, or give us strong leads. (Seems like such a long-shot, though!) To make a virtue of necessity, perhaps the main support for projects of this kind should come from the community they serve. This really is a community affair, after all. We don't live In an insulated vacuum. When our kids stop smiling, everyone loses. For the north peninsula, the magic number Is $3,000. This will finance a six-week program operating five days per week, like so: Salaries (based on $150 per week) on full . time, $900, on half time $450. Employers costs (UIC and Gov't Pension) $75. Transportation (minl-schoolbus for 75 miles per day at 30c per mile $075. Children's Allowances (15) ~ for light community service Jobs (five hours per week at $1 per hour) $450. Lunch money, special events and miscellaneous expenses $450 for a total of $3,000. Who and how many will this budget accommodate? The north peninsula group first considered nbout 15 elementary school children, But It became obvious that they could Integrate another 15 preschoolers ln the form of �� Play-Care Co-op. (Parents of preschoolers would volunteer rotating supervision time nnd provide much of their transportation.) So count on a core group of 30. How many others will be entrained Is unknown. School' kids have friends; Play-Care parents have friends with babies;,and wo nil have neighbors. These pilot program could contribute to one of our most memorable summers. Why not lie part of lt? Please tell ns, now, how you can help. On tho north peninsula call Tom Perry at B83-2373 (9 n.m. ��� 3 pin.); nnd on the'south peninsula call Maureen Kenotis IM15- 357(1 (fl a.m. to noon or eves, before 10). As you rend this wo havo exactly one month before our scheduled opening day on July 11, What we do this summer very much depends on us all. Just a reminder that we still do Gift Wrapping for you and there la no clinrgc for this service. ��� Miss Hoe's, Sechelt. THE ANGRY, the curious, the intense, the confused, the wondering; the determined all jammed Roberts Creek Hall Friday evening for a public meeting concerning the proposed ferry blockade. More than 500 people were on hand to listen and talk about the blocade. In the end, the 500 voted to postpone the demonstration until, after the transport minister's announcement following the scheduled Tuesday meeting with Premier Bennett. ���Timesphoto MORE ABOUT ... �� Protest Sunday ��� from page A-l come forward with an acceptable proposal.\" Richter explained that the group considered the bringing back of the resident's half-fare as ah acceptable proposal. Commmittee member Don Pearsall outlined the plans for Sunday's proposed demonstration, \"We will try to occupy both ferries. We will be arriving at the ferry terminal at 7:40 and allow that ferry to sail. We should be all prepared to board the next two ferries. We should need about 260 cars. \"We want all the people to get out of their cars and go upstairs on���the ferry and stay there. There will be a few people on the car deck to confront the ferry authorities and the group upstairs will be kept in communication at all times. We don't want a mass of people on the car deck. We want no ugliness and no fights. If there are going to be arrests, we want the spokesman to be arrested first. We want to give them no opportunity td call us irresponsible. Cameron added, \"There are a. number of possibilities as to what could happen. What we are proposing to do is serious and we are all doing it as individuals: Everyone should be willing to accept their responsibility.\" Another spokesman noted that everyone should know that what they will be doing is illegal and all should be willing to take the consequences.\" There was considerable debate about whether or not the demonstration should go ahead for June 6 or not. Many speakers said they had lost all faith in the transport minister and would not give him another chance. Regional Board chairman John McNevin, speaking from the floor, told the crowd, \"My feeling is that if there is a demonstration this Sunday (June 6) and it turns into a shemozzle, it will give the government the way out to tell us to go to hell.\" The committee outlined their proposal in a manifesto read out and distributed at the meeting. The manifesto however, referred to a June 6 date for the ferry protest. This was changed at the meeting. The crowd voted not to stage the protest until after the Tuesday meeting to see if there were any positive results and then voted to go ahead with the demonstration this Sunday if they did not get what they want from the transport minister. The manifesto read as follows: Stated position of the Concerned Citizens of the Sunshine Coast. WHEREAS the Government of the Province of British Columbia have Increased the rates of the ferries serving the Sur shine Coast to a level effectively tripling the previous resident rate and WHEREAS we, the Concerned Citizens of the Sunshine Coast, find these new rates to be irrational and unjust. BE IT THEREFORE KNOWN that the above mentioned citizens are demanding a half-price discount In fares for residents, (in the form of nn annually renewable picture identification card to be administered by our. local authorities In lieu of the proposed bulk purchase ticket, books on tho grounds tliat the book system aids daily commuters only, and is of no value to residents dependant on products and services available only on tho lower mainland), until such time as nn alternate connection with the essential services of the lower mainland Is provided and BE IT FURTHER KNOWN that It Is our Intention to procure snld.dlscounts by means of n public demonstration to be held on Sunday, June 0, 1070; nnd that the demonstration shall consist of Uie occupation of a ferry or ferries servicing tho Howe Sound crossing until such time as Transport Minister Jack Davis shall consent to a meeting with u representative committee of the Concerned Citizens of the Sunshlno Const nt a time to be not greater than seven days from the above mentioned demonstration, at which meeting the committee representing the Concerned Citizens of the Sunshine Const shall present their demands and justifications thereof. IN THE EVENT no such committment is forthcoming, the format for the abovo mentioned demonstration shall be repeated as often ns deemed necessary nnd without iMUioflt of forewarning. mfmmim ^rfV-1''\"51-*'\"\"-'' ..'in*iAA~';>XiXA:.'i.iAis'':'S\\ -j*.: ;<������... A'��� a xpi\\ac . ftp �� hi A<:yyyy^-'y,i����� ,.s ������$ !^l^Sp^lmAX$0f Ai^Af-^'^sy-yiA^-'C'y\" yA i^���?.\";^-A\\:'\".!.ry-,'ycA'.yA morM^^^^^^^^^^M^iM units Catelli in tomato sauce 14 oz. tin j Husky 25.5 oz. tin rx XJ Brentwood 14 oz. tins Habob Fancy �� Whole 12 oz. tins Haple Leaf V/z lb. tin Sunlight ETEReElT POWiER 80 oz. PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 10 THROUGH JUNE 12. We reserve the right to limit quantities L a: ��� More than the value is super and we're proving it every day SUNNYCREST PLAZA, QIBSONS W1IW��-WV ������ pii im,m'***t**mm'*i*-+Pmjrm*m**r**V*l ���N.MiJtVMi��M ~b*mM;Jm ���ilnnlifc'lMirllJIftlb- ��z / - ./ K / ..! :��� ��� / : \" < ���'. PageA-4 The Peninsula Times The Peninsula^^^ Wednesday, June 9,1976 Don Morberg, Managing Editor \"A free press is the unsleeping guardian of every other right that free men prize.\" ��� Winston Churchill - The fact that Transport Minister Jack Davis has refused on. numerous occasions to make public the balance sheets of the Horseshoe Bay Langdale run despite numerous requests from a number of local government leaders and groups tends to make one suspicious that perhaps all is not what it seems in the rninister's talk about the run losing money. We have never been shown in red and black what the Langdale ferry run's financial position is and really have no way of knowing if what the minister has been saying is accurate. It appears to us then that there is one way of solving the situation, distasteful as it is to us. We have for years been talking about a road connecting the Sunshine Coast with the Squamish area and North Vancouver. The thought is horrifying to those who believe that such a move will cause a boom the likes of which the Sunshine Coast has never seen and can only be detrimental to the area in all aspects. We are among those. Others believe that it would not have that much of an effect citing other areas where roads have been punched in with little or no effect. (Our argument is that a lot of areas are nowhere near as desirable a place to live as here.) But one argument we can't beat is that a road will end us being held up for political ransom at the whim of whomever happens to be in control of the ferry system. We would be free to come and go as we please undictated by. politics, economics, vindictiveness or any of the other things people are accusing the provincial government of being in this situation. A compliment \"We wanted Davis to meet with our representatives and we got it.\" With those words Committee of Concerned Citizens members Don Pearsall summed up the committee's feelings about calling off the ferry blockade proposed for this past Sunday. ,.; This was the committee's stated position and they are to be complimented in their responsibility in sticking with their original campaign and not being side-tracked and possibly jeopardizing the situation by listening to those few who are allowing their emotion to get the better of their judgement. In this case, a natural byproduct of the frustration everyone Ls feeling. ( We are faced with a serious situation and there is a possibility that serious action is necessary; but it must not be carried out without first exhausting all other avenues of accomplishing the end. Because of newspaper deadlines, it is not known at this writing what the outcome of the meeting between Premier Bill Bennett and the minister of Transport will be. We, naturally, hope that the provincial, cabinet will face the realities of what their arbitrary decision is doing and will do to the Sunshine Coast and will change their minds about the ferry rate increases. The committee said they would be satisfied with half-fares for residents. We feel that this is not enough to take any real crunch out of the impact the higher fares will have on the Sunshine Coast; but it's not a bad place to start either. We trust that the Committee of Concerned Citizens, should they deem it necessary to blockade the ferry Sunday, will demonstrate the same kind of responsibility they did at the Roberts Creek meeting. They are to be complimented for their concern, their action in putting pressure on the government and; as mentioned, their responsibility. As stated many times before, it is extremely unfortunate that local people and groups must take this kind of action to gain the attention of the minister and the rest of the cabinet. \"I mink,'' Alderman Frank Leitner' told Sechelt Council last week, \"that we should consider a roof for Hackett Park.\" He was referring, of course, to the monsoon which sent May Queen, princesses and everyone else scampering for cover or shivering in the open during the Timber Day Celebrations over me long weekend recently. It was a very sad occasion when the skies opened up following what many people: called the best Timber Days parade ever. Event after event were cancelled on the second day, a heartbreaking situation for Chairman Lil Fraser and all the other people who put so much into the organization of this year's events which were shaping up to make the best Timber Days ever. Interest was high in the Timber Days Festivities this year, a sharp contrast to this yearns Gibsons Sea Cavalcade activities. At this writing, it appears there will not be a Sea Cavalcade unless some people do some very quick moving and organizing. If it indeed transpires that there will not be a Sea Cavalcade this year, perhaps the Sechelt group might consider moving their festivities to July or August. It was even suggested they do it anyway. ' , July or August won't guarantee sunny skies and balmy weather; but the odds are better than in May. Before we leave the subject, there are not words of praise enough for the Timber Days committee and all those who worked with them in this year's festivities. ring pressure to Dear to stop CBC deterioration 53 . minute by Don Morberg 8 00 WELCOME BACK,DAVEYl HIJEMX START when one of the old crowd returns to his former haunts in the B.C. Legislature. . etter. DARYL HAHN is furious with me. Daryl is a.local Transcendental Meditation instructor and normally very even tempered; but I have done something to upset even him. Last Tuesday, like a week ago yesterday, Daryl was in Vancouver in conjunction with the, arrival of His Divine Enlightenship, the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Daryl had made all the arrangements and a press conference was: to be held with Maharishi at the Bayshore. Well, Maharishi was there, but I wasn't and that is why Daryl is annoyed. Where was I? I was in Nanaimo watching my bank account giye birth to a hew baby Volkswagen; but enough of that, I would like to talk about Ferries. Nanaimo is an interesting place to visit. I don't think Jack Davis, that's the unmovable minister of transportation and incommunicatable minister of communications, will ever forget it- Seems Davis, contrary to popular belief, does not walk to Vancouver Island, he takes the ferry. Last week he took the ferry from Horseshoe Bay to Nanaimo. Like all other ferry patrons, he parked, on the car deck, walked upstairs, ate in the restaurant and sat in the lounge. Unlike the other patrons, he decided to trot up to the Editor, The T|mes. Sir: We would like to request your cooperation In contacting individuals who in various ways are concerned with the nonperformance of the CBC. We���the B.C. Committee for CBC Reform ��� aro a group of 101 concerned citizens, representing the widespread dissatisfaction viewers and listeners In this region. In view of tho appalling deterioration of the CBC during the past few years we feel it is imperative tliat our demands for B.C. control of the programming for improved technical facilities and for renewed standards for quality should be heard. At the moment It la the Cznrs of Toronto who have the absolute control of whnt ls fed to us on television nnd radio. They control the funds, they for the major part decide on the programmes, and we, who contribute millions In our taxes to the CBC, have no choice but that of changing to another station. Why should we? We are Canadians who want to listen' ond view programmes for which we have paid I But II, ls clear from our recent meeting wltlj Mr. Johnson, the President of tho CBC, ,that wo have little hopo of achieving anything through this arid channel. Tho only way open to our Committee la to ask for tho support of all concerned citizens, so that political pressure can be applied, to change Uio ways of entrenched bureaucracy. For this reason, wo would request every citizen to write to us at Uie address below. Voice your objections I Join the protestl Speak out - WRITE NOWI Hilary BurslU-Hall Editor, The Times, . Sir: The following is a copy of a letter sent to Jack Davis, Minister of Transportation. Dear Mr. Davis; I have been watching with interest your proposals for ferry rate increases and find I can no longer contain myself. I realize your portfolio is new to you and it's obvious that you have much to learn about'the B.C. Ferries, its operations and problems, but don't try and fool the public. Senior citizens riding free ��� providing of course they can prove it ��� and we must ensure there is no ���joy-riding'. School children riding free providing they can prove etc., etc. Blind people and handicapped half fare? This was in effect during the Black Ball days and has been in effect ever since. Did you ever check to see how many blind people travel the ferries in one month? Commuter Booklets ��� When resident rates first came into being some years ago, commuter books were made available to the residents of this area, namely the Sunshine Coast. They were dropped shortly afterwards for a number of reasons. The main one being that most people, found the initial outlay of money too high. Now it will be three times that amount. The second attempt at commuter booklets will also be dropped shortly after its inception. Another waste of thousands of dollars to the taxpayer. I would like to make a few comments on your proposed ferry rate increases. Automobiles ��� Nobody likes increased costs but since it is very much a part of our life most people will eventually accept the 100 percent increase,. ,. v_ * '' GommercialTyehicles ��� Lhave not seen a revised tariff rate but I understand the rate increase will be approx. one third and most of them will accept it. Why not���the public ends up paying the shot anyway. Recreation Vehicles ��� I am advised that vehicles over a certain height (6' 6\") will be charged three times the rate. What garbage. This is a complete cop-out of the idiots in Victoria who make these decisions. How will you justify this when a camper travels in the middle of winter, late at night, when there are only fifteen or twenty vehicles on board? All major vessels are equipped wiih, overhead ramp decks with additional decks outside, these (usually referred to as flaps) which may be raised or lowered as the situation demands. These overhead decks can accommodate only automobiles and vehicles of comparable height. When the ships are loading maximum loads, these flaps should never to raised to accommodate one or two over-height vehicles at the expense of 15 or 20, automobiles. In other words, the ships can carry ex number of high vehicles and that's it. The rest simply wait for the next sailing. To charge a small truck three times the rate when he takes up no more room than tho average size car Is ridiculous. When the ferry system investigates the possibilities of charging vehicles by space, they will then advance towards a proper fare rate. Under the present system, the little V.W. Bug or M.G. pays the same rate as the big Cadillac or % ton truck. Passengers ~- Let's forget about commuter booklets, resident rates, identification cards, senior citizens rates, school children rates, etc., etc. Why not make all passengers free. Not far fetched. The vehicle Increases will more than make up for the loss in revenue. The advantages would be many. I can picture the poor ticket agent at Horseshoe Bay under your system. A car arrives at tho toll booth with five or six people and tho driver hands him four or five books of tlcketB, He runs around to check tho license numbor of tho velilcle, maybe it's a borrowed car or n new car ��� what then? Now ho proceeds to check tho Identification of tho othor passengers. One of them enn't find his wollot but the other ls O.K., he's a senior citizen, ho goes free; no wait, it's Friday ��� sorry, full faro. And Oh yes, thnt suitcase on your ThePeninsulaTW^ Scouts thanks Published Wednesdays nt Sechelt on B.C.'s Sunshine Const by The Penlusuln Times , for Weslprcs Publications Ltd. nl Sechelt, B.C. Ilox.110 ���Secho||,n.C. l��lioncHKS.32.1l Subscription Rntcs: (in advance) Local. M per year. Beyond 35 mllcsj $K U.S.A., $10, Overseas $11. B.C. Committee for CBC Reform, roofrack makes your vehicle six foot nlno. 0752 Duffcrln Avenue, West Vancouver, B.C. Triple fare please. Somcono might raise the question \"If wo don't chnrgo for passengers, how would wo know how many passengers wo liad on board? Havo wo exceeded the r.hlp's licence for passengers? Under the present ticketing system there Is no way of telling how many passengers have lieen sold tickets for n particular soiling. At Lnngdnlo Terminal no tickets are sold anyway. A system could lie adopted for counting passengers. No groat problem thnt can't be solved. When nre you going to get nt some of the real problem;)? Traffic ������ four, five ond six hours wall nt terminals, ond plonse, no moro flower pots nnd swings. Even n good cup of coffee would help some. How nbout n schedule with the Editor, Tho Times, Sir: Tho Group Committee for tho First Sechelt Scouts, Culra and Beavers would like to thank nil those who supported tho hoys in Uielr recent bottle drlvo. The boys are limited In their ways of raising funds for their camps, badges ond equipment, so public support during these lx)ttlo drives Is most appreciated. Roberta Foxall, Secretary, Sechelt Group Committee public in mind. The busy summer is fast approaching. I hope you have better things up your sleeve than you have shown so far. D. Sleep Hopkins Landing, B.C. Correction Editor, The Times, Sir: In your.paper of Wednesday, May 19, 1976, you were kind enough to carry an article on nuisance bears. It was a good article except for one sentence, and this sentence I wish to correct through this letter. The first part of the sentence I agree with, the second part I do not. Quote: \"He felt if people would clean up their garbage and the garbage men would do their job properly, Sechelt would not be bothered by bears every year\". It has not been, and is not now my policy to criticize the work of others. The garbage men in this area do a good job and I deny saying anything to the contrary. It might possibly have been a poor choice of words on my part during the interview, or a poor interpretation of what I said. In any event my humble apology to a.hard working group of men. H.D. Mulligan, Conservation Officer Bachop errors Editor, The Times, Sir: There is really no point to me detailing once again all the,inconveniences ��� and hardships that will befall the residents of louxarea because of the tremendous increase^ ;in ferry fares and freight rates. ButT would like to point out to Jock Bachop, whose column I enjoy, that when we did have a Socred government member as our M.L.A. it really made no difference. A lot of us can remember when Phil Gaglardi spoke in Selma Park on behalf of Isabel Dawson. He told us we could forget any improvements to the ferry service or roads unless we smartened up and returned a government member. So a lot of people paid heed and elected Mrs. Dawson, and what's more, she became a minister without portfolio/Subsequently, the bad corner at Granthams was filled in; before the next election a few miles of blacktop was laid down here and there and the toilet seats In the 'ladies room' on the ferry were painted white. It's obvious that most extensive roadwork was done under the N.D.P., not the Socreds. For those who protest the protests, I would agree that it is a shame to inconvenience Innocent ferry travellers, but in our society it seems the only way to attract attention is to make oneself nasty and loud. And remember, if we make our point and win a reduction in fares, all benefit, whether or not they took part in a protest. So support the protests and help end the discrimination against our area. B. Reid Thank-you Sir; I would like to congratulate the Sechelt Timber Days Committee and express my thanks to those of you who contributed many hours in making Timber Days a success again this year. I would like to express my appreciation and gratitude for your cooperation in working with me. My thanks go to: Betty Colli, Secretary-treasurer; Gordon Stemson, Publicity; Vona Clayton, Poster Contest; Jack Whitaker, Sound and PA Systems nnd Children's Sports; Bob Allen, Bavarian Gardens, Graham Craig, Loggers Sports. , Gwen Robinson, Ice Cream and Pop Stand; Bill Hughes, Hqmburgcr and Hot Dog Stand; Florence Talt, Cuke Walk; Rose Kettle, Variety Show; Mort Reid and Dorothy Gocson, May Queen Committee; Ed Nicholson, Parade. Mrs. Farrell, Fish Pond; Mr. Dana Bystedt and Peto Wnyment, Soap Box Derby; Ellen Berg, Decoration of Stage; Dennis Gray, Motor Cyclo Endnro; Dave dcKlcor, Car Rally; Bill Wilson, Horseshoe Pitch; Ewa Allen, White Elcpliant Stand, Warren McKibbin, Children's Mny Queen Dance; Pat Wing, Teen Dunce. Derek Nolson, War of Hoses nnd Stage Construction;' Alderman Morgan Thompson, Muster of Ceremonies for Sunday, May 23rd; Andy Gray, Master of Ceremonies for Monday, May 24th and Ken Nelson, Master of Ceremonies for loggers Sports. Lily Mao Eraser Chairman, Sechelt Timber Days Committee. Editor, The Times, Sir: Investigative reporting has been much in the news since two Washington reporters investigated and broke open the Watergate affair. One would expect that this type of informed reporting would be limited to the big cities, but no, your paper is right there with the best from the city. Some thirty odd years ago a mysterious and notorious figure of Vancouver's hectic night life, named Dan.Gough, dropped out of sight and was,never.more seen in his old haunts. Rumours flew, foul play, gambling debts, a woman, but Dan Gough's disap- , pearance was complete. Also some thirty odd years ago a man and his family came to Pender Harbour. He called himself Al Lloyd. He worked in a local store at first, then opened his own general store, built an auto court, developed his property and employed a good, many people. He also took an active part in community affairs, serving at various times on the board and as chairman of the local Community Club, May Day Committee, Hospital Board, Water Board and as a trusteee on the school board, Fire District and Chamber of Commerce. Truly a model citizen. His conduct was ordinary and no one connected the disappearance of the notorious and mysterious Dan Gough and the appearance, of the, ordinary and respectable Al Lloyd in Pender Harbour. No one that is until an alert reporter for the Peninsula .Times unmasked Al Lloyd as he officiated at Pender Harbour's recent crowning of the May Queen, putting his name and photograph in the paper, not as Al Uoyd, but as the notorious Dan Gough. So are the pretenses of this world exposed by the keen minds and merciless publicity of the press. With regret, I am yours Dan Gough, Alias: \"Al Uoyd\" Editor, The Times; Sir: This is a copy of a letter sent to Premier Bill Bennet. Dear Mr. Bennett, Three years ago we bought a small lot for our retirement house, near Sechelt. We also had plans made with a rearvlew facing the Sechelt Inlet. Every holiday since, we spent clearing and landscaping that lot. The two reasons for buying that lot were the low ferry rates with special passes for residents and the fact that five of our children are working and living in Vancouver. We Just retired on June 1. Now, with the increased sales taxes and the increased ferry rates, we will not be able to pursue our plans. We do not even see how we could sell out lot, so that we can buy another somewhere else. Please, turn the ferries over to the Dept. oi Highways since they are part of the Highway System, and delete the sales tax on all building materials, to improve tho shortage of housing In British Columbia. Barbara and Earl Hanke Kitlmnt. Congratulations Editor, The Times, Sir: Wo wish to congratulate tho winners who participated In the Sechelt Timber Dnys events nnd also to our May Queen, Lynn Creighton; her two attendants, Gloria Joo and Shcrrl Young; tho flower girls, Tina Clark, Trlcln Nolson, Radical Pinchbeck, and Becky Cavalier; and tho gift bearer, Ian Emery. We would also like to thank all the past Moy Queens and participants who braved the Inclement wenther nnd carried on with the crowning ceremonies. We very much appreciate the support from tho people who cume out to watch the parade ond tho ceremonies later. Wo also wish to express our tliahks and appreciation to the Individuals, merchants, Judges and sponsors, and to nil those who contributed to mako Sechelt's 4th Annunl Timber Days possible again Uils year. Because of thorn wo were able to rescue Timber Days and proceed with tho celebrations. Sechelt Timber Days Committee bridge and have a chat with the skipper. That was his third mistake (after taking the portfolio and increasing the fares.) Things were very amicable; but the ferry crew was now alerted that he was aboard. As he drove off the ferry, he heard a series of thumps on his car roof. Clearing traffic, he pulled over and took a look. It seems the ferry crew were cleaning out their fridges^and accidentally tossed some eggs off the upper. deck of the ferry and they landed on the minister's car. At least, I assumed they were ferry employees; they might have been seagulls. Took Eugene Whalen to top that one. Which brings me. to Falstaff, the Shakespeare character who gathered a motley army, I think it was in Richard lll. Asked what they would be good for, Falstaff said they would be \"fit for tossing.\" This, my English teacher explained to those of us who were awake, meant they would be sent to the front lines in order that their bodies would plug up the spearpoints of the bad guys, allowing the trained soldiers an in. * For this reason, my theory goes, those who have no roots with the Social Credit Party, the turncoats, the opportunists, whatever you call them, were set into the cabinet ,flack- catcher, positions. There was poor Pat McGeer who only opens his mouth to change feet. They gave him education and ICBC, a veritable bed of roses. He bad as much chance of coming out of that mess as King Kong did of climbing down the Empire State Building. Better him than a Socred, though. They took Bill Vander Shovel, the former Liberal, and put him ih the post of. Human Resources despite the fact he is as human as a backhoe and no where near as modern. They took Hugh Curtis and put him in municipal affairs. He appears to be capable - of handling^ (so far) and may turn out to be a surprise to the Premier. They put Garde, Gardom in charge of justice, so far so good; but no real test yet. They took the former federal minister of environment and made him minister of environment. No they didn't. They took Jack Davis who had years of political experience (even if it doesn't show) and made him minister of Transport. They put Jim Neilsen in charge of environment. (When the appointment was made Neilsen came out of the room shaking his head saying, \"I don't know why. I don't know anything about environment.\") The reason is this: Neilsen is a bright kid with a future. Let the expendable Socreds (the former's) take all the flack in the 'hot' cabinet positions for a year or so. Then have a major cabinet shuffle and take all the rookie Socreds (the real ones) and move them into the key positions after they have some, experience in cabinetting and resign the expendables to the back benches. The Socred. numbers are such that they don't need them anyway if they happen to find their way back across the floor. With them will go the blame as well. Makes you wonder what happened to Frank Calder, doesn't it?. When all this is done, you will have Some very sorry Liberals, Conservatives and what have you. It has to be Bill Bennett's greatest political move to date. Falstaff would be proud. BY THE WAY to transport me and ,my clockwork cockroach across Georgia Strait and then across Howe Sound cost me $28 not including the cheeseburger with no cheese or the 35 cent (used to be 25 cent) glass of milk. The prices have gone up not only on the toll gates; but in the cafeteria. As I parked my Peoplescar in the bowels of the mother ship, a huge American model car wheeled in beside me. Another from the same litter my car came from pulled in behind me. I realized that from my car's muzzle to the stern of the Volks behind me was just about exactly the same length as the Cadillac. It cost me $14 to park there, it cost the guy behind me $14 and it also cost the Cadillac $1,4 to take up exactly the same space. That was on the Queen of Burnaby, a nearly two-hour ocean voyage with a restaurant and a cafeteria and comfortable lounge chairs and things like that. I got off at Horseshoe Bay and paid another $14 for less of a ride on a smaller ship with no restaurant for a 45 minute trip. Is it not logical that it would cost less for the second trip? (Even If I wasn't a resident etc?) May 29-Junc 4 May 29 May 30 May 31 Junel '..... June2 JuncS, Juno4 Week's rainfall Lo 7 4 .'.....5 7 , 6 S 0 21.9 mm, Juno HI Prec. 11 10.2 nil 1.3 10.4 trace nil nil 12 12 15 15 14 10 10.4 mm, 1976 ��� 667.50 mm. May rainfall �����99.1 mm. 15 yeor average ��� 55.6 mm. In 1070 as little as 19.B mm and in 1974 a record 121.4 mm. Daytime high temperature 21 C on May 9. Overnight low temperature ��� 4 C on May 18. Don't ovornowor, Know how to oporato nnd control your craft. X X '). . /��� Inside y Straight by Jock Bachop . Reading today's newspapers is a pretty grim occupation. Wherever you look you will find reports that put together indicate that the world is in a pretty poor, state of health. Rising costs, strikes and slowdowns, shakey economies, wars and for many, extreme poverty and starvation are commonplace reports nowadays. It's a good job sports and comics are featured also or we'd go nuts. I guess we can't hide our heads and Hope the whole mess resolves itself but I'm damned if I know what can be done about it. Habitat no doubt has some ideas on the subject but I have the uncharitable feeling that after all the talk and ballyho is over and all the nation's emissarys return to their own lands the only satisfied people will be the hotel and motel owners who no doubt will have done a roaring business during their stay. This is one time I'll be happy to be wrong. Here's hoping. A few days ago the cenotaph on the Legion grounds was unveiled during the dedication ceremony held there. No doubt full coverage . of the event is elsewhere in these pages. Working as I do in the Legion, I was privileged to watch as a dedicated group of men, starting from scratch, put in countless hours,of hard labor as they built the cenotaph. They can be proud of themselves for they made a structure that is pleasing to the eye and will stand for years to come as a monument both to their labours and to the fact that 'they have not forgotten'. Did you have fun filling out your census form? I'm glad I don't have half a dozen kids. I was seeing spots before my eyes before I was finished. I noticed they asked for the date of birth in two different ways and why they want to know how or in what manner you enter your house escapes me. Oh. well, we must keep our civil servants busy. I imagine their lives would be intolerable if they didn't have lots of forms to bury themselves in. Incidentally, I hope you all did your duty, for I understand the Statistics Act provides for a fine or term of imprisonment for those failing or refusing to fill out the necessary information. THE CONTINUING saga of the govenh. ment versus Peninsula residents is unwinding drearily to it's inevitable end. Representatives of the underdogs will no doubt try to take their case to the cabinet after failing to get any concrete results through Davis. A friend of mine said you couldn't expect . anything else from a Liberal turned Social Credit. He has a point there. As far as the Peninsula is concerned Davis is as popular as the Bubonic Plague. Unless there is a complete change of heart (which is a strange word to use when talking about our brave leaders) it looks like we have lost our fight. The results of this will show up ,soon when tourism drops and the price of goods (already inflated) on the Peninsula will go up. Nothing for it fellow sufferers but to tighten the old belt and grin and bear it. For how long? Well, nothing is forever, it will just seem that way... AT THIS moment, as I write, I can hear C.J.O.R.'s gravel:voiced Webster going on about the problems Pacific Press, publishers of the Sun and Province are having. Seems there is the possibility of a strike coming up. I know what would happen if I told the Times I'd quit writing unless I got a raise in pay- After the laughing died down they would tell me to go ahead and see how their sales go up. Alas, no one is indispensable. It's a hard life, no? Even the weather is lousy for this time of year, on top of everything else. I'm not really as gloomy as this column sounds. I figure tilings can only get better, for surely they can't get much worse. In any case, we will weather the storm and adjust to any. change that occurs in the prevailing situation. People are remarkably resilient, and all the problems we are having at the present won't kill us. They will only make us tougher and that's not a bad thing. No set of circumstances is so bad that we can't learn a lesson from the experience. Perhaps some of us were getting a little soft , and complacent anyway. As someone once said: \"When the going gets tough, the tough get going\". Enough said ... Sechelt Council have supported Tyee Air's application for a license to make regularly scheduled flights between Sechelt and Victoria. , At last week's council meeting, the airline received a letter of support.from the council stating the airline should be granted the run. The letter was sent to the Air Transport . Commission. \"Besides,\" one alderman commented to Mayor Nelson, \"with all those trips you're making to Victoria to see Jack Davis, you should get a permanent reservation.\" Halfmoon Bay Happenings The drive to raise money for equipment and uniforms for Halfmoon Bay's baseball team is in full swing. On Saturday, June 12 at 1:30 p.m. sharp, at the Rutherford home, there will be a rummage and home-baking sale. Also, during the afternoon, the winner will be drawn of the macrame planter which the boys are raffling.' Donations for the rummage sale can be left with Bonnie Semotiuk, next door to the Urquhart home. The bottle drive on May 29 realized the sum of $223 for the baseball fund and the boys want to thank everybody who supported the drive, with special thanks to Jim Cooper for his generous co-operation and to Bruno Dombroski who organized the transportation Following a meeting held at the Rutherford home last week, fifteen people have expressed interest in forming an art group. An all-day workshop will be held at the Welcome Beach Hall on Sunday, June 13 under the direction of a talented and recognized artist, Jo Warn. Anybody interested in taking part in the workshop should telephone Peggy Connor at 885-9347, for further particulars.-. This summer Welcome Beach will be losing two of its well-known and popular families, in the interest of higher learning. Phillip Best who holds a teaching degree and a B.Sc. in Political Science is going to study for his Master's degree in Internatibnal Relations at the University of Ottawa. He and his wife Wanda expect to be spending a year or more in Ottawa and during their absence their waterfront home will be rented. Mr. and Mrs. Brian Stelck have sold their home to D.W. Lamont and will be moving to Edmonton. Brian will return to the University of Alberta where he obtained his B.Ed. degree to work for his Master's degree in Child Psychology. Though summer is late In reaching us this year, visitors have started to arrive from far off parts of the world. Among them are Bob Forrester's sister, Beatrice, with husband David Carruthers of Ersklne, Scotland, for whom this Is a first visit to Canada. They spent two interesting days In Vancouver visiting Habitat and arc looking forward to seeing something of our beautiful coast when the weather settles dpwn. It Is difficult to say whether It was tho higher cost of travelling the ferries or the threat of demonstrations which kept people at home last week-end, but certainly Halfmoon Boy wns unusually quiet for a June weekend. Among those who travelled across on Friday evening were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Urquharl's son, Bnrry, of Vancouver with his wife Vivien nnd their four daughters who were agreeably surprised to find no waiting time and a half- filled ferry. Mrs, Evn Lyon's guests were her grnnddnughtcr, Carol Dash with husband Ted, who circumvented ferry problems by coming up In their 18 ft. boat. They report a very comf ortnbln trip which took only one and a half hours from Kltslluno to Redrooffs. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Moore have l>ccn delighted to luivc as guests their daughter, Shelley, with husband Boh Scales and son Robert. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Duff, Who attended the Annual Convention of Senior Citizens, ���by Mary Tinkle? Association of B.C. from May 17 to 19 at Prince George, were surprised to find what a modern and progressive city it is. At the end of the convention, they drove by way of the Yellowhead Pass, Jasper and Banff to visit their son Gerald and his family in Calgary. Gerald decided to accompany them back to Welcome Beach to make some plans for the building of his retirement home on the lot next to the Duff's property. He hopes to start building this summer ready for retirement next year, when he will have completed 26 years, service with the Air Force and combined services. Gerald flew back to Calgary on May 29. There will be a general meeting of Area B. Ratepayers, Association at the Welcome Beach Hall on Monday, June 21 at 7:30 p.m. It'!�� (un to loEirn to Rwlni llui Rod Crorm Wntnr flnfoly wny. Whon ymi nwlm, nwlm wiin n buddy, novor nlnno, ��� BOOK LOOK ,_ by Murrie Redman WILD ROSES by Jacques Ferron, translated by Betty Bednarski, published by McClelland and Stewart, cl976,123 pages, $6.95. WILD ROSES is another of the important novels of the year. It has not had the attention of the mystic BEAR by Marian Engel but its message is much clearer. The afterword attributes the novel with \"concern for the fate of Canada's French speaking minorities.\" Certainly, Betty Bednarski has retained the Quebecois patois in the translation, but the book is much more universal in its statement. It presents the reader with two examples of the loneliness that pervades the lives of those alientated from society by their illness. Author, Jacques Ferron, also a psychiatrist, seeks the reader's compassion for those who hover daily between sanity and a silent madness. He exposes the distress of patients who have been institutionalized but who need only partial confinement and treatment to deal with their mental problems. Like the sweet scented, wild roses that grow over a window of the bungalow in the novel, human relationships attempt to avoid or ignore the thorns of life. The first and longest novelette, tells the story of the ideal married couple: she, a pretty, doting wife and he, an impeccable, brilliant, young husband, Baron. His conceit and her unhealthy adoration of him, coupled with their inability to cope with everyday reality pushes them both toward inevitable mental collapse and suicide. Their daughter Rose Aimee finally gains happiness but? only after working out the maladjustments which her parents left as their legacy. The second piece is the love letter of a deluded woman to her estranged husband whom she entreats to take her away from the sanitorium in which she is committed. We share the hopelessness that she suffers when she can find no-one who will support her pathetic illusions of love. The writer's style is wholly unsentimental although the violent scenes are vividly reported. The language is clinical and unsympathetic which leaves the entire burden of emotional responsibility to'the reader. WILD ROSES demands much of human conscience. Page A-6 The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1976 Poet's Corner ���Your contributions are invited SEARCHING Can someone please tell me What I am searching for? Is it the speck of light I see Through the crack of a half open door? Is it in the beauty of a tree . Or in the opening of a flower? Is it in the noise of the j ostling crowd, Or in the solitude of a forest bower? Is it in the laughter of happy folk Or in the tears of the sad, Is it in giving or getting ' Or is it something I've always had? Oh I must find this great unknown My whole being yearns for a part But tell me please, where can I look: Or is it already in my heart? HELP WANTED Administrator-Receptionist REQUIRED by the Pender Harbour and District Health Centre Society to work at Health Centre in Pender Harbour. Duties include: submit to the Board periodically a plan of organization of the personnel concerned \\with the services and facilities and coordinate the services of the professional persons using the facilities of the Society; prepare annual budgets; supervise business affairs and keep records of financial transactions, collection of accounts and purchase and issuance of supplies; be responsible for execution of the professional- policies of the Board; submit periodic reports to the Board on the state of the services and facilities; attend all meetings of the Society and the Board; any other duties assigned by the Board in connection with the management of the services and facilities. Applicants must possess above average shorthand and typing skills, be able to operate a PBAX system and keep records of patient appointments. Reply in writing to the Secretary,. Box 308, Madeira Park, B.C. .\"������-..'��� ���;\"/ '''\"-;HEtP' WANTED- Child Care Workers (2 positions: September 1,1976) QUALIFICATIONS: 1. Preferable co-secondary education or training in social services. 2. Work experience, with teenagers. 3. Preferable interest and knowledge in specialized areas, ie: crafts, hobbies, outdoors. DUTIES: 1. To work with teacher in alternate classroom setting. 2. Ability to relate to students in one to one and small group, environment. To promote home-school liaison involving parents. Innovate programs, ie: work experience and recreation to enhance academic component. Direct enquiries to DEPT. OF HUMAN RESOURCES, Box 090, Socholt, B.C. VON 3A0 3. A. Kitchen Cabinets from: ^r Citation ^r Cameo * Merit it International ir Monocrest * Tnppnn Inglis * Plnlay & Jcrin-AIr AppllanocH ~- Ceramic THc and Tub Splnshcs Floorcoverings from: is Burlington * W��hI MiIIh it ArniHiroiig ���Ar (IcIuncHO * Him ling * 0s(siw * (iAK- if Flinikolc ^Jwowe S^ound cJ-si&lribuh UiOtA Box 694, GIBSONS Located noxt to Windsor Plywood For appolntmont, phono 006-2765 Share 'ater testing office offered or testing Sechelt council have offered their village hall as a base for two university students who will be doing water testing on the Sunshine Coast in August. In a letter to the council, Ken Berry and Susan Wilson of Simon Fraser University asked for a location from which they could meet the public during their visit to the area August 9 to 13. They will be offering free water testing service for Sunshine Coast drinking water. The village of Gibsons is also investigating a location for the water-testing station when it comes to that area during the same dates. 10% to 25% off all month FULIY FLEXIBLE. STRONG & ATTRACTIVE, OUR AWNINGS WILL KEEP YOU COOL SUMMER AFTER SUMMER 6770 CRANBERRY ST., POWELL RIVER \"VACATION HOMES BUILT\" We build In those out of the way placet. * reasonable rates * 885-3805 Warren McNaughton JUNE IS THE MONTH TO Complete Awning Service, Residential or Commercial Call Collect Now for Your Free Estimate 483-3112 JJS^ggHrSi an 112, Royal Canadian Legion (Madeira Park) wish to thank the following local businesses for their help in the construction of the NEW WAR MEMORIAL. Seaside Rentals Ltd. Rod Webb Contracting Ltd. Trincomali Trucking Ted's Blasting & Contracting Francis Peninsula Esso' George Wolpert A.C. Rentals Ltd. and all others concerned. i i ! MMfflM^ iMW������^^ i memo to advertisers Advertising costs are not based on the number of eyes that see your message, the number of fingers turning these pages, or the number of hats a reader wears��� at least they shouldn't be. Some media projections leave you guessing, though. We figure It Is the nose that counts-one per customer. In fact, we feel accurate circulation figures are so Important to you that we have the Audit Bureau of Circulations do our nose counting for us. ABC sets the standards. Their specially-trained auditors do tho counting. And thoy publish a report on the facts as they found them to bo. Your assurance that you get full circulation valuo whon you advorliao in P HE JTENINSULA 1 E D tMfl��&> o Ao �� mombor of Iho Audit Diironu of Clrculnllonn, our olrculnllon rooords nnd prnc- tlcoa nro aubjoct to Iho oorullny of rorjulnr fiold oudlla nnd iho discipline of ABO- * dotormlnod ntondordo. hrMMwaia^MMMMMMMggOT in i +m- They believed tneonly way out was being ^^ shown by the one who could view the whole- ���-*> scene from above. They put their faith in hinvidu�� and were saved. >\\? The Bible, referring to Jesus Christ, says: -ii;; \"Salvation is found in no one else; for there is *- UL\\ no other name under heaven given to men byCT J ��� which we must be saved,\" For those menr��i{ trapped by the forest fire the were only one''ji way of escape. They had to trust and believe*- '-J' that the helicopter pilot was leading them toJ safety. And you must trust and believe that^' i Jesus Christ is the only way to eternal life. J/X Furthermore the pilot could see the whole ,\"' 1- scene from above. As finite humans we \",n_ cannot see too far down the road, although we r \"jr ��� would like to be above to view the total pic- ^\" ture. But Jesus Christ existed before anything ,*/'\"' was created. He came to this earth from,\". heaven to share eternal truths with us. He is \"'X,' the' alpha and omega, the beginning and the \"''\" end. \"^ If you do not have Christ living in your. X\" heart, you too, are lost. Why not put your faith in the One who can see the whole situation from above and KNOWS that His plan is the only way out? IOi �����. iO If your brakes appear to fail when you're '''���\"��� driving, the BCAA advises you to pump the ;*'iC foot brake, shift into a lower gear and use the *; handbrake if it is apparent it will help. ''���!\"-' CARPET CLEANING\" plus Retail Sales v-'ud ~\\V Tom Sinclair 885-932%/ ROBERT McCOURT tries for a basket at Sechelt Elementary's Primary Sports Day. v BMWfffMlWMflajSJIl SECHELT TOTEM CLUB Fridays - 8:00 p.m. RESERVE HALL 50 calls for $300.00 two $50 games EVERYONE WELCOME T Police have suspects following a major incident of vandalism in the Sechelt area. Sechelt RCMP said they had suspects in the incident which saw more than $400 worth of windows smashed at the Parthenon Theatre Restaurant on Boulevard in Sechelt. The windows were smashed after 4:30 a.m. Friday morning. In other police news, two juveniles were sentenced in Sechelt court on possession of stolen property charges arising from incidents in the Pender Harbour area. The first juvenile was placed on probation for one year after pleading guilty to possession of stolen property. The items were taken during a break-in at Holiday Market in Madeira Park. ESEEEBSESSE2S Sunshine Coast Regional District I0TICE ���';'���\"���'. CHANGE OF MEETING DATE The next regular meeting of the Sunshine Codst Regional District Board will be held as follows: Date: Thursday, June 17,1976 Time: 7:30 p.m. Place: Egmont Community Hail Mrs. A.G. Pressley Secretary-Treasurer W'i RANDV BENNER heads for a soft The second juven% was also placed on one landing during Sechelt Elementary's year probation after pleading guilty to Primary Sports Day. possession of stolen property. They say the answer to your problems is just around the corner. Why not take a walk and find out. paancipacnank Fitncuj.I^ your heart you know ll's right. ,,��,,-. ���*!,'��� >'|l i.t , i' ,'ii'''i M.'i ; ><���; i �� . ������. \"I THINK I'm going to make it.\" Louis VIgnal tries the high jump at Sechelt Elementary. 0W^^^^^��|MmswramMMMm��M^M%0MMMMl9 '*>���'�� li imvxxx/{r x xx^j .-. mm] kml .���wrwH* a' Ms- * �� X El Lf iX- &&X2 Round trip air fart from Vancouver. Stay 2 or 4 Weeks. ��.�� Financial assistance Management counselling Management training information on government programs for business on Wednesday. June 16th, one of our representatives will be at Bella Beach Hotel. Sechelt Tel: 885-9561 I p�� 'i )�� ***��*, ^ '* Renovations have been completed. Drop in & brows�� around in the pleasant surroundings of TBAIL BAY SPOUTS UNLIMITED Hawaii for $225. Anyone can go. Just book your flight 60 days in advance. And hurryl We've only got 11 flights. SunflightABC�� Cluster fllfthl* from Canadali Numlx* One I lo&Uynutorr. pen,mSl��KsS,?hcv 886-2855 Toll Free: 682-1513 T.*V'- l^l^^is^^^^pi^i^^^tf^il '\"^������fW*Hfl|*w^'WJ expand your business and iBDBimanalerrionllisorVlcesiof/; ndilralnlngiorvvlsli Irildrrnailor, dvornmom progrflml avallablol' VXl - : rTe-Vw ,'���1.1 i'..I.' [,-x 145 W��it 15th Stroot, North Vancouver, D.C. ���->^:-a '. \\ 980-6571 v '������'��� r A ���^ y: A A y - / y X A PageA-8 The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1976 v.v> Sr U I A ROOMFUL of hungry eaters enjoyed to St. Mary's Hospital luncheon last delicious lunch at the Sechelt Auxiliary week. COBISBi A TEMPTING tableful greeted guests at the Sechelt Auxiliary annual luncheon. Sechelt News Notes Sechelt Auxiliary to St. Mary's Hospital has put on a once a year lunch for the public for some 10 years now and this year was run through so smoothly one would think it was a daily operation. It was held at the Senior Citizens Hall, Sechelt, on June 3 starting at 11 a.m. From then until 2 p.m. a steady stream of tray- carrying eager eaters passed the cafeteria line. No long lineups, the hospital staff started arriving right at 11 a.m. supporting their auxiliary all the way. President Mrs. Betty Monk greeted the customers at the door,. Mrs. Ada Dawe counted 210 in attendance. Mrs. Margaret Humm and Mrs. Dorothy Carter convened, everyone had a job to do and all in high gear accomplishing the aim of the day. This was to provide a good lunch at a reasonable rate as a thank you to the public for supporting the auxiliary In their efforts to raise money for the added extras as well as purchasing needed equipment. The many comments heard on the quality of the meal certainly made the members feel their work was most worthwhile. To help identify those who served you, Lee Redman nnd Kay Rennet dished up tho homemade pen soup mady by Blllie Steele and the vegetable from that gourmet cook Uncle Mick, Ermlp Robertson sandwiches, Lynn Wilson fruit salad and cottage cheese, Blllie Steele and Marg Espley cold plate, Mary Orre tea and coffee, Marg Bevan homemade pics, Doris Houscly Cashier, and Jnnis .Wallln. Waitresses assisting were Jean Iieor, Kay Purdy and Bculah Lawson. Shopper Charlotte Jackson, bartender Orv Moscrip, assistant Eve Moscrip nnd servers Inn Grafo, Mablc McDcrmld, Peggy Connor nnd Mario Hoffar, Mary Redman was the musical lady on the piano, others mnde pies nnd, In other ways, supported, Tile convenors thank nil who participated nnd nil who attended. The Sechelt Crockett.es mny not be tho best In shape softball players but from all reports they arc the most entertaining. They played Inst week against Roberts Creek team, n team that they found delightful to play against, even If they did lose by twelve or so runs. The umpiring wns done hy o young lad who did nn excellent Job as did tho one who relieved him near the ond of tho gamo. Tuesday they meet the Trail Ccntercttes nt Wilson Creek bull park, 7 p.m. The following Tuesday the game Is nt Hnckett park. (Jond entertainment, girls softball, A farewell lunch to wish Dr. Alan Swan a good (milliner nnd change of pace, was held nt the Medical Clinic Monday, Mny 31. entering wns done hy Helen Robertson,, n most delectable mt.nl. U>u Duncan from Pender Harbour brought n cake she had decorated wllh waves and n big fish wllh ,good fishing, written on top, A couple of dozen people were there, nil PEGGY CONNOR 885-9347 the doctors and staff of the two clinics Sechelt and Gibsons, who could attend. This is just farewell and not goodbye as the good doctor will return to us eventually. In the meantime he will be missed but everyone, wishes him well, and that goes from so many people who have had the good fortune to do business with him. Home to Wilson Creek for a month's visit Tiny Hughes with Amber and Tony flew in .Saturday morning from their sunny home in Hawaii. Left Hawaii 9:30 p.m. with temperatures in the mid 80's on a crowded plane with young Tony sleeping all the way. An uncle met them at the airport to drive to Langley where a friend Gordy Hughes took them on board his small plane and flew them to the local airpoot to be picked up by Tiny's parents, Roy and Lenore Nygren. Husband Earl will follow later, as he flew south to New Zealand to do a TV show. Earl's first record has been released in the States and will be available in Canada come July. Watch for 'Lady, Lady' by Earl Hughes at your record stores. By LAURIE BEEMAN Last Thursday afternoon in Elphinstone lunchroom, Grade 11 students assembled to consider their future plans. Mrs. Goddard, Elphie counsellor, discussed areas students could consider when planning their future careers. Students who are interested in Government scholarships must have taken three grade 12 academic subjects. Students graduating next January must have passed four grade 12 subjects. Those interested in post secondary education were reminded mat applications have to be mailed before June, 1977. Applications for BCIT have to be mailed by February, 1977. BCIT has many courses, including hotel management and Communications. Students who are seriously thinking of entering post secondary education should consult the references in the school counsellors' office. \"Several forms and booklets on scholarship are provided,\" Mrs. Goddard said. Last Monday night, in Gibsons, girls Black team beat Gold 17-3 in baseball. Since the weather was cold and rainy, the black and gold teams only played five innings. On the following Wednesday in Gibsons, Black team again topped Wilson Creek Raiders 17-14. The game was very competitive and both teams played very well. Thursday night in Sechelt, Gold topped Wilson Creek Raiders 29-9. Gold made several runs in the first inning and kept their lead throughout the game. Men teachers challenged the girl students to a baseball game last Thursday afternoon, beating them 6-0. Since the men teachers were almost positive they'd defeat the girls they were surprised to find the competition was almost equal, Hopefully the students will soon drag out the women teachers to test their skill in sports. Chamber wants erry subsid; >eai cnairntan o convention Mrs. P. Murphy of Halfmoon Bay, Chairman of the Sunshine Const Christmas Seal Committee has been Invited to the 1976 Canadian Tuberculosis nnd Respiratory Disease Association Annual Meeting at tho Regency Hyatt Hotel in Vancouver on June 21 nnd 22. Since the meeting of the CTRDA will bo hold ln conjunction with the Annual Meeting of tho B.C. Tuberculosis-Christmas Seal Society, British Columbia Christmas Scnl Chairmen will hnvo an opportunity to observe nnd take part in seminars nnd meetings with some of Canada's foremost health professionals in the respiratory field. They will also jinrtlcipate in workshops designed to further familiarize them with the mechanics of operating a Christmas Seal Campaign, nnd will observe a session of Operation Kick It, the B.C. Society's freo smoking cessation program. Speakers at the meeting Include Dr. Hugh Keenleyside, Associate Commissioner General for Habitat; Dr. Wallace'Fox, ono of the world's lending authorities on UiInx* cnlosls; nnd Dr. Jcre Mcdc, an eminent physician whose specialty Is the mechanism of breathing, More tluin 60 abstracts dealing with the latest In research In respiratory medicine will be presented by the researchers who completed Uie studies. More than 300 delegates from the United .States and Canada are expected to attend the meetings, IrdgMirM sig.e4S's ��a.1 ��te? PEMTCTON ��� A resolution recommending the Incorporation of the ferry system Into the Department of Highways was passed by delegates to the 25th annual meeting of the B.C. Chambers of Commerce here. The delegates agreed that the ferry system should get the same subsidy as the provincial highway system and recommended Incorporation of the system into the department of highways. The chamber also recommended a review of tho existing rate structure on the ferries on the grounds that the existing structure discriminates against various types and sizes of vehicles. Ijdo night ferry service between Vancouver Island nnd the mainland' was also approved by the delegates. The resolutions on the ferry system will be combined into a presentation for the provincial government. Other resolutions nt the convention Included n decision to prepare an emergency state of the economy report focusing on the B.C, Rail labour disputes and plans for n major symposium on the travel Industry to lie held In Vancouver next November Christian Science Forgiveness ��� Whon we forgive someone, do we love enough to see tho offending ono ns completely free from whatever offended us? That Is the truest, way to forgive. This does , not mean condoning the offence, far from 111 But It does mean that wo eloar our own thought of any sense of blaming or condemning. That's how Jesus forgage. \"Jesus beheld In Science the perfect man, who appeared to him where sinning mortal man appears to mortals, ln tills perfect man the Saviour saw God's own likeness, and this correct view of nmn healed the sick. (Science mid Health with Key to the scriptures, by Mnry linker Eddy). Listerlno ORAL ANTISEPTIC NolUon's ICED 11 ll ft BAGS 26\" x 36\", 25V mrp ��^t��fnnw tjtrr ��� . ��� -_. H - lr Ruport Brand 'Cod' 20 ox, pkg Snowcop * Straight Cut 2 Ib. bag i lifcicr Dollar PRICES EFFECTIVE: Thursday, June 10 to Saturday. Jun�� 12 LUCKY DOLLAR FOODS Phone 886-2257 Gibsons/B.C. We reserve the right to limit quantities. RED & WHITE FOODS Seclielt/B.C. Phone 885-9416 4 - / V lis fo mom 885-3231 Real Estate Real Estate Real Estate Birth Announcements Help Wanted GIBSONS AND SECHELT WESTERN DRUGS ... are pleased to sponsor this Birth Announcement space, arid- extend Best Wishes to the happy parents. Coming Events GARAGE SALE ��� Saturday, June 12, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Samron Rd. off Mason Rd., W. Sechelt. Trk canopy, drill press, baby buggy, boat, car bed, Curtains, pictures, roll-away, books, clothes, hamper and misc. items. Ph. 885-3644. 1357-28 Personal j WHAT IS THE essential message of the Baha'i faith? Ph. 885- 9450,886-2078. 1362-28 COME IN TO J&C Electronics for your free Radio Shack catalogue. 1327-tfn ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS meetings 8:30 p.m. every Wednesday. Madeira Park Community Hall. Phone 883- , 9978. 12648-tm PHOTOGRAPHS published in The Peninsula Times can be ordered for your own use at The Times office. 1473-tf LIVE-IN help for elderly lady in Granthams area. Cooking, cleaning & personal help. Please write PO Box 48735, Bentall No. 3, 595 Burrard St., Vancouver, V7X 1A6, or telephone 886-2145.1312-29 PROVINCE Newspaper carriers wanted. Ph. 885-9893. 1320-27 WANTED: serious lead guitar player to back up singer. Powell River area, write Box 1304 c-o Peninsula Times, Box 310, Sechelt, B.C., VON 3A0. 1304- 29 EXP. MARINE mechanic. Good working facilities. Ph. 885- 2100. 1364-30 PageB-2 The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1976 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Phone 885-3231 Published Wednesdays by The Peninsula Times for Westftres Publications Ltd: at Sechelt, B.C. Established 1963 Legal or Reader advertising 60c per count line. Deaths, Card of Thanks, In Memoriam, Marriage and Engagement notices are $6.00 (up to 14 lines) and 60c per line after that. \" Four words per line. Work Wanted WHATDOYOUEXPECT FROM A TREE SERVICE? ��� Experienced, insured work? ��� Prompt, guaranteed service? ��� Fair, estimates? Then gives us a call: PEERLESS TREE SERVICES LTD., 885- 2109. 758-tfn 2 EXP. , HOUSEKEEPERS seeking work in Sechelt area. Will do small paint jobs. $4 per hr. contract. Mrs. R. Mayer 885- 3719. 1276-29 Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations March 31,1975 Gross Circulation 4925 Paid Circulation 3689 As filed with the Audit Bureau of Circulation, subject to audit. Classified Advertising Rates: 3-Line Ad-Briefs (12 words) One Insertion ���..,;.,. .$1.80 Three Insertions $3.60 Extra Lines (4 words) 60c (Display Ad-Brief s $3.60 per column inch) Box Numbers 60c extra Birth Notices, Coming Events regular classified rates. take 172'WATERFRONT 1.33 parklike acres. Panoramic view;. Pebble beach, cleared/ secluded honiesite. Driveway, fully serviced. Asking $53,500. Call Mrs.'Corry Ross, 885-9250. m.l.s: L.E.KYLE, REALTOR West Vancouver 922-1123 1382-29 WANTED: Serious buyer, with cash requires Redrooffs Rd. waterfront ��� lot-or home, preferably in general area of Welcome Beach. Owners or agents please call Vancouver collect 731-3821 evenings. 1261-28 LOOK $47,500. Selma Park view, 2 stories, 2 sundecks, 2 FP, 2 kitchens, 2 washrooms. 1260 ft. each floor. Too good to last! Half Gamble 274-5017 or Block Bros. Realty 321-6881. . 1387-30 \"ISLANDFORSALEV Williams Island located1 in Pender Harbour. Piped water for details. Phone 883-2341 or 921- 7517. 1367-30 BEAUT, level 75* waterfront lot Sechelt Village, septic tank, lanscaped, fenced. ��� ready to build. Ph. 9805919 or write Box 1358 co- Peninsula Times, Box 310, Sechelt. VON 3A0. ' 1348-30 SPANISH STYLE: 2200 sq. ft. all electric. Easy care grounds, fabulous view, three bdrm., master ensuite, lounge open fire, dining, family rms., top quality fully equipped kitchen, Fine carpets, exp. lighting & fixtures throughout. Large patio, encl. courtyard, 24x23 panelled rec .rm., large wet bar, three sets plbg. White stucco, red tile roof. Spanish ironwork. Dbl. enclosed garage. Replacement cost $95,500, bargain at $82,500. Ph. 885-2903 or 266-6671, Selma Park area. , \" ��� 1315-29 Use Times For Quick Adbrlefs Results For Sale or Rent *> i.,, I.,, ��� TRAILER HSE at Porpoise Bay campsite for sale or rent: $175 per mo. or $35,000. Ph. 885-. 3156. , 1296-29 VIEW OFFICE space for rent in lower Gibsons. Cptd, furn or unfurn. Ph. 886-2207 days or 886- 7995 eyes. , 1299-28 POWELL RIVER: side by side small 1 bdrm duplex. Full harbor view, cablevision.Call coUect, 264-5836. 1205-tfn MAPLE Crescent Apartments. 1662 School Rd. Gibsons. Suites, heat, '\" cable included. Reasonable, apply Apt. 103A. 11798-tfn Ad-Briefs must be paid ' for ' advance by Saturday, 5 p.m. In Subscription Rates: By Mall: Local Area $7.00 yr. Outside Local Area $8.00 yr. U.S.A $10.00 yr. Overseas $11.00 yr. Senior Citizens, ' Local Aroa $6.00 Single Copies 15c ea. Work Wanted NEED a carpenter. Call Bob Crichton. 883-2312. 1365-tm CARPENTER: Finishing. framing, concrete work. Free estimates. By contract or by hour. Ph. 885-2188. 1268-28 Phone us at 885-2235 for a copy of our FREE CATALOGUE of REAL ESTATE AGinciis ltd. Box 128 ���Phone: 885-2235 phone Vancouver 689-5838 (24 HOURS) N Don Hade 885-9504 len George Townsend 885-3345 Jim Wood 885-2571 Jack Warn Pat Murphy 886-2681 885-9487 Peter Smith 885-9463' / C.R. Gathercole 886-2785 Bob Kent 885-9461 Jack White 886-2935 BOAT OWNERS ' #3611 Here is 8/10 acre, almost level with view of Pende/ Harbour. Just 400' to water's edge, on paved road, with hydro, phone and water on road. Full price $22,000. DON HADDEN, 885-9504 eves. DAVIS BAY COMMERCIAL #3620 This is a motel duplex on a flat lot across the street from the finest beach on the coast. Westerly view recreation. Low down payment. See on our TV, DON HADDEN, 885-9504 eves. F.P. $55,000. LOW PRICED VIEW CORNER #3413 Real value today! Full price $6,000. Hydro, water system. Tuwanek. Triangle 150' x 123' x 173'. Only steps to sand, beach and boat access. Excellent for that R.V. or cabin trailer. BOB, 885-2235. 24 hrs. WATERFRONT ACREAGE #3604 Modern 1238 sq ft home on 82 ft waterfront acreage. View extraordinary! F.P. $69,500. Come and see on our TV screen. Call Mr. KENT or any of his 9 colleagues, 24 hrs., 885-2235. SUMMER FUN #3619 Waterfront lot in Sandy Hook, with 12 x 17 cabin, water installed, quite attractive. Lot size about 68 x 230', mostly uncleared, marvellous view to southwest. Full price $19,000, some terms. JACK WHITE, eves, 886-2935. SUPER DOOPER VIEW #3615 Rebuilt 2?bedroom home on Elphinstone Avenue, Granthams. Has rental suite lower floor, both parts presently rented, for good revenue. A very pretty place, with well developed garden. $42,500 full price. JACK WHITE, eves, 886-2935. WALK ON WATERFRONT #3407 Big waterfront lot In Tuwanek, one that has good beach access, size Is 110' RF by 200' deep. On Lamb's Bay, faces southerly. Price reduced to $29,500 to sell. JACK WHITE, eves. 886-2935. CORNER VIEW LOT #3509 View of water ��� superb, corner gives built In protection from a building next door. New home area, all local services. Lot fully cleared for building. Priced at $14,500, Terms. Peter Smith, 885-9463 eves. BEACH ENJOYMENT #3579 LOOK LOOK ��� Only $37,000 for 2 bedroom home & level lot, by finest sand beach In area. Older home, sound, with modern bathroom & fireplace, needs some updating, but very livable. Value Is good & location GREAT. PETER SMITH, 885-9463 eves. WATERFRONT ACREAGE #3551 YES ��� 12 acros fi, over 700 feet pebble beach, with protected moorage. All this, plus modest 2 bodroom home, Hydro, water & phone, Ownor says bring all offers to asking price of $ 145.Q00, terms. A natural for group purchase. PETER SMITH, 885-9463 eves. VIEW LOTS? #3495 Got our catalogue for full dotalls. Soo our special page A-3 and A-4. Low priced vlow at $12,800 and many others variably prlcod. 24 hrs, 885-2235. HELP I HELPI #3540 My vondor noods your cash I So for 2 wooks only, ho will tako $8,990 and suffer his loss. Your chance for a holding proporty. 152 x 98' In Selma Park. Low taxed, otc. details? Call BOB, 885-9461 ovos, or , 085-2235 24 hrs. SECRET COVE , *3,541 Good holding proporty. Lorgo building lot In growing recreational aroa. Invest now, value will In- croaso as aroa dovolops. Asking prlco $7,900. Offors welcomo. JIM WOOD, 885-2571 evos. 3,4 ACRES #3602 Sltuatod oh North Road, 3,4 acros with 540 ft road frontago, woll trood, In tho land freeze, Asking prlco $25,000 or 1/3 cash, balance at 10% payable 5 yoar form, JIM WOOD, 005-2571 evos, HALFMOON BAY Attractive largo throo bodroom homo on largo lot, double garago, roc room In basement, fireplace, sltuatod closo to boach, Roasonablo prlco. $59,500, JIM WOOD, 805-2571 ovos. SECHELT VILLAGE #3595 A potontlal vlow ol tho Inlot' yot closo to all vlllago facilities. A cornor lot with an attractive 2 bodroom, lull basomont homo plus (and it Is a big plus) an ad|olnlrig building jot. All this for $46,000, GEORGE TOWNSEND, 005-3345 ovos, WATERFRONT BUILDING LOT #3593 Tha wator of tho Straits' Is lapping at Its shore, From tho lightly tread building site ono can en|oy a commanding vlow ol tho soa with Vancouvor Island as a backdrop, The slto has boon approved for a soptlc lank and disposal flold, Tho roglonal walor lino has been laid along Ihe road allowance, Try your offors. Roducod to $18,500 F.P. GEORGE TOWNSEND, 005-3345 evos. LOWER ROAD, ROI1ERTS CREEK #3563 Only 600 loot to tho watorlront. This building lot has a aontlo southerly slopo wllh a potential vlow of tho Straits'. Sorvlcos aro al tho roodsldo. Asking $11,700. Try your ollor. GEORGE TOWNSEND, 005- 3345 evos. HOBBY FARM #3596 0.4 acros, lovol, with approx 3 acros cloarod, All yoar crook al roar of proporty. Modorn 2 bedroom homo, doublo carport, soparato workshop, lawn, garden and landscaping done, Fish pond, 300 fl of roodlrontogo, Rool country atmosphere, F.P. $75,000. Somo torms, PAT MURPHY, 005-9407. MODCRN 4 BEDROOM, SECHELT #3576 Modorn (omlly homo. Reduced from $47,500 to $41,000. 1 yoar old, 4 bodrooms, fireplace, All kltchon appllanrns stay, Snpaiata garage. Transfer requires quick salo. PAT MURPHY, 005-9407, COZY COUNTRY COTTAGE #3617 1 bodroom Undol cottage located on Rodroofls Rood on a lovel, trood 1 1/0 acre lot, 100 x 500', Electricity, regional water soon, pipe olreody In. Has its own well at present, Blotktopped road. Ideal country vocation or roliremnnt homo. F.P. $35,000 firm. PAT, 005-9407, QUIET RESIDENTIAL lnrgo lot wilh limited son view. Regional water, $12,000. JACK WARN, eves 886-2681. (V3542 COTTAGE IN THE COUNTRY Vlow, trooi and lots ol room on 70 x 200' WARN fivns, 006-26111, *3609 proporty, 1100' homo with many features. $42,000. JACK Work Wanted DUMP TRUCK and backhoe available. Ph. Phil Nicholson 885-2110 or 885-2515. 55tfn Real Estate LEVEL, CORNER, serviced lot, W. Porpoise Bay Rd., close to everything, $12,500. Ph. (112) 253- 2502. 1241-33 MOVING! Reduced to $29,900 full price. 66' mobile home with professionally built addition of 3rd bed. or family room, laundry room & carport, on a 56 x 158 cleared lot. 10 x 14 barnside shed, 6x8 utility shed. $1 per yr. taxes. Ph. 885- 9849 or 885-2416. 1293-28 CASH FOR your home or property. Call John Wilson, 885- 9365, Royal City Realty Ltd. Ph. 526-2888. 819-tfn % ACRE cleared view lot No. 32 Wakefield Rd., West Sechelt. Full services $15,000. Ph. 594- 2641. 1373-tfn WATERFRONT PENDER HARBOUR New 1973 j 3 bdrm 1200 plus sq. ft. post and beam. Cedar panelling. Harvest gold automatic dishwasher, self cleaning range, fridge. Good sheltered dock, deep moorage, beautiful view, nicely treed. Lot 30, Garden Bay Estates. $115,000. To view call 883-2709, 291-1642, 941-5451. 1153-tfn DAVIS BAY acreage. Superlative ocean view $85,000, cabin, fruit trees. Ph. 324-3371. 1237-31 ROBERTS Creek, Marlerie Road.' Fully serviced lots. Phone 836- 7896 or 886-7700. 12080-tfn BOX 100, MADEIRA PARK. B.C. PHONE: PENDER HARBOUR 883-2233 TOLL FREE FROM VANCOUVER 689-7623 Member of Multiple Listing Service HORSES \"ISLAND FOR SALE\" Williams Island located in A Pender Harbour. Piped water for details. Phone 883-2341 or 921- 7517. ��� ' 1367-30 SECHELT: Close to school and stores. Cathedral ent. 1040 sq. ft. on each fir. Fully finished. Ph. 883-2752. 1334-29 ROBERTS CREEK area. IVz acres with large year round creek. New 2 bdrm home. Ap- Erox. 3 acres cleared. With fruit rees. Ph. 885-3307. 1384-tfn. 172' WATERFRONT 1.33 parklike acres. Panoramic view. Pebble beach, cleared, secluded homesite. Driveway, fully serviced. Asking $53,500. Call Mrs. Corry Ross, 885-9250, M.L.S. L.E. KYLE REALTOR West Vancouver 922-1123 1382-29 LOT 31, LANGDALE Chines. $10,600. Write D. Murphy, Box 394, Pt. McNeil, B.C. VON 2R0. 1369-30 REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE Powell River side by side, small 1 bdrm duplex with full harbor view. Low down payment. $22,500. Ph. 254-5836 collect. ^^___ 1204-tfn $29,500 PERMANENT mobile homo. On large (209* x 90') landscaped lot In W. Sechelt. 2 bdrms, largo LR with FP, grcenlwe, worknhop, etc. Ph. 885- 2592. 1354-30 PENDER HARBOUR cholco serviced lots. 104 x 140, on black top. Level & treed. Moorage, terms avail. Asking $17,600 ea. 3 bdrm mobile home on pad in Modelrn Park within walking dlntancc to fihopM and murlnoH. Would mako good summer home. Ready to move In. Offers to $10,500. JACK NOBLE 803-2701 ROCHESTER REALTY (112)930-7292 1209-20 GARDEN BAY ESTATES ��� Beautiful 3 bdrm cedar ranch style home. 1,363 sq ft +_ built 1975. Landscaped, dbl garage, large sundeck & view over harbour. House is well constructed and nicely decorated. $79,000. RONDEVIEW ROAD, FRANCIS PENINSULA ��� brand new 3 bdrm family home. Master bdrm ensuite, stone faced fireplace, 1056 sq ft+ on both main and lower floors, partial basement, carport & sundeck. $58,000. EGMONT ��� 2 bdrm home, 790 sq ft��, enclosed porch. On 1/2 acre+ lot, close to Egmont Marina. $31,500. GARDEN BAY ESTATES ��� brand new cedar home with 2160 sq ft of living area on two levels. 2 bdrm on main level and 3rd bdrm in lower level. 2 fireplaces, rec room, sundeck, view of harbour. Electric heat, thermopane windows. $73,500. IRVINE'S LANDING ��� 2 bdrm home with an excellent view over Lee Bay. W/W carpets, sundeck. Range and fridge included. Close to marina and gov't wharf. $34,900. MADEIRA PARK ��� 3 bdrm home, built 1974, on' Harbour View Road. Approx. 1,176 sq ft, 2 full bathrooms, W/W, white marble fireplace in living room, dining room, dishwasher, countertop range, built-in oven in kitchen; carport, sundeck, 3/4 basement. Very nice home situated close to stores, marinas & post office. $55,000. 'MOBILE HOME ���MADEIRA PARK ��� beautifully finished 1974Glendall 12x68'..Very large living room with shag carpet. Stove, fridge & drapes included. Asking $13,500. CLAYDON ROAD, GARDEN BAY ��� well built 3 BR home, built 1975, 1434 sq. ft. �����full basement. Large living room attractively finished in teak panelling, 2 stone fireplaces, separate 2 car garage, master BR ensuite with walk-in clothes closet. Electric heat ahd many extras. Treed 1 /2 acre lot with view over Harbour. $88,000. GARDEN BAY ��� 1000 sq ft�� 2 bdrm home on landscaped lease lot overlooking Garden Bay. Close to stores & marinas. $37,000. MADEIRA PARK ��� 2 bdrm view home, built 1975, on large lot on Gulfview Rd. Full basement, 2 sundecks, fireplace,.electric heat. Includes all drapes, central vacuum, dishwasher, fridge, range, garbage compactor & garbage disposal unit. $55,000. RONDEV|EW ROAD, FRANCIS PENINSULA ��� 1.3 acres treed view property and very large 3 BR home - circular living room a feature, 2 fireplaces, whirlpool ,tub In master bath, partial basement with rec room and many extras in this fine and very private home. $170,000. GARDEN BAY ���1500 square foot home, built 1963. 4 bdrm, kitchen with built-in range and stove, large living room, dining room. Carport in partial basement. Oil furnace. Large lot ��� landscaped and In ^jrass. $41,500. ��� DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME*��� RUBY LAKE ��� 24 x 60' Safeway. 3 bdrm and family room, master bdrm ensuite. Located qt Ruby Lake Resort. Immaculate year-round or summer home at a reasonable prlco. $23,500. ; ������ '��� RONDEVIEW ROAD, FRANCIS PENINSULA ��� brand new and spacious, this 3 bdrm home also has a swimming pool. Immediate possession. $79,500. ACREAGE 1. RUBY LAKE ��� 2 1/4 acros + vlow property, drlvoway In, building site cleared. $19,000, 2. SILVER SANDS ��� 4 acros �� of Gulf view property with small cot- tcgo and 2 mobllo homos (12 x 60 a 10 x 50) creek. $58,500. 3. MIDDLE POINT ��� 18.96 acres with crook and 2 bdrm cottago. $40,000, 4. KLEINDALE ��� 32 acros rfc, on Hwy 101, $34,500. 5. KLEINDALE ��� Approx. 20 acros of fairly lovel land with opprox. 10 ocros cloarod. $42,000. 6. GARDEN BAY ROAD ��� 2.33 acros fairly lovol land with good gardon aroa, crook and 3 BR nowly docoratod homo wllh W/W and sundock. $43,900. 7. IRVINE'S LANDING ��� 2.07 acros lovol land ovorlooklng ontranco to Pondor Harbour, across road from public accoss to watorfront. $42,000, 0, RUBY LAKE ��� 7 acros �� on Hlway 101 noar Ruby Lako. $15,000. 9. KLEINDALE ��� 5 acros ;f fronting on Hwy 101. $25,000. 10. MADEIRA PARK ��� 3 1/2 acros of park-llko land on Splnnakor Road, noar Lllllos (Poq) Lako, $35,000. | UKEFROHT PROPERTIES f SAKINAW LAKE ���165 U�� lakofront, 6,3 acros�� with small cottago. Excollont trood proporty with sholtorod bay, $50,000, SAKINAW LAKE 107 It lakolront lot wllh comfortoblo summor cottago, Franklin flroplaco, largo sundock on 2 sldos, Rango, fridge, somo furnlturo, float & 16 U�� sailboat Includod. $30,000. HOTEL LAKE - 730 ff.dk cholco lakolront. 3 bdrm homo, full bnsomorit, roc room, 2 llroplacos, 2 full bathrooms, hot wator hoat, somo furniture, (loot 8 2 boats. Sltuatod on approx 2 1/2 acros of treed park-llko land, ��74,000. PAQ LAKE, MADEIRA PARK ��� 3.77 acros, wllh 406 ft dk lakofront, Possibility a| subdividing to approx 11 lots. Hydro ft wator avallablo. $65,000, ���������: RUBY LAKE 120 acros dh ol oxcollont land. 400' watorlront on Ruby lako, 2,600 It,-!- wotorlronl on lagoon. 2 houses, prosonlly rontod A trallor spacos, $160,000, SAKINAW LAKE Dl. 4696, containing 165 acres i, wllh approx 4040 ll ol oKCollont wntorfront, Accoss by |oop rood from Gardon Day Road, $390,000, , , , , SAKINAW LAKE ,- 3250 It�� cholco watorfront, 32+ acros wllh 2 summer homes, Hoat*. J20&.000. SAKINAW LAKE 57'5 ocros �� with 3,500 It �� sholtorod watorfront. 2 summor rottnnos wllh bathrooms, 2 docks, wator accost only, $200,000, DAN WILEY Ros, 003-9149 OLLI or JEAN SLADEY 003-2233 r- WATERFiOflT HOUSES 4 MILE POINT, SANDY HOOK ��� 111 ft�� waterfront with attractive, well constructed 3 bdrm home on 3 levels, built 1975. 3,392 sq ft of living area plus basement area with sauna and change room. Many extras including family room, rooftop patio, sundeck on all 3 levels. $132,000. : 1 SILVER SANDS ���185ft + waterfront lot, 1 acre, landscaped, fruit trees with well maintained 2 bdrm home, full basement with 3rd bdrm, rec room, etc. Creek and waterfall on property, beach and breakwater. This is a very nice property for $110,000. FRANCIS PENINSULA���.2 BR home with partial basement on 300 ft. �� waterfront. Sweeping view of Harbour entrance, islands & Gulf. Good garden area, no stairs to climb and privacy. $140,000. IRVINE'S LANDING ��� 3 BR home on 237 ft �� waterfront lot, approx 1/2 acre, with panoramic view of Straits and Harbour entrance. House is designed for outdoor living with 1744 sq ft��, of sundeck on 3 levels. Plus family room and office/den. $115.000 HALFMOON BAY ��� One BR furnished home, remodelled 1970, with fireplace, sundeck and a beautiful view on a small waterfront lot very close to Gov't wharf, store and P.O. $46,000. HALFMOON BAY ���' 61 ft choice beach waterfront with 2 bdrm quality built cedar home, 1017 sq ft, new 1975. 3/4 basement Step out trie door right onto the beach. An exceptionally good buy for $85,000. ' |WATEBIF8I0NT AC8IEA6E| EGMONT ��� 2100 ft+ excellent waterfront on Agammemnon Channel with road access from Egmont Road. Large bay, good gravel beach, approx. 32 acres, small creek, ramp, float, 2 BR furnished home (built 1974), furnished one BR guest cottage, light plant. $250,000. ST. VINCENTS BAY ��� 375 ft �� waterfront with southwesterly exposure. Approx 5 acres. Boat or plane access only. $24,000. ST. VINCENT'S BAY ��� 2 parcels, each with gn indlvided 1 /24th interest in D.L. 3839, 375 ft+ waterfront, 5 acres+, southwest exposure, boat or plane access. $24,000 & $26,000. WESTMERE BAY ��� NELSON ISLAND ��� A unique 40 acre property with both sea front'and lake front. 1500 ft�� good sheltered waterfront in Westmere Bay and 200 ft�� lakefront on West Lake. Improvements consist of a good 3 bdrm home, 2 summer cottages, floats and Jeep road to West Lake. Full.price $160,000. Adjoining 4.8 acres with 1200 ft.+ waterfront could be purchased in conjunction with the above property for $40,000. EARL COVE ��� 1800 ft. �� good waterfront on approx. 42 acres, furnished home, creek, access from Egmont Rd. $225,000. 3 BR EGMONT ������ 562 ftj�� good waterfront on 4 3/4 acres�� with nice 2 bdrm double wide mobile home & addition with 3rd bdrm, 2nd bathroom & utility room. Road access from Maple Road. $125,000. ' AGAMMEMNON BAY ��� 200 ft+ waterfront with 5.11 acres adjacent to Jervls View-Marina. Spectacular view up Jervis Inlet and fishing on your doorstep. $68,000. ��~ LOTS 1; NARROWS ROAD ���Good bldg lots, $9,000 & $9,500. 2. MADEIRA PARK ��� serviced lots, most with view, close to school, storos, P.O. & marinas. $10,000-$22,000. 3. FRANCIS PENINSULA ��� Nice bldg. lots, serviced with wator Ond hydro. $9,200 and $10,000. 4. BARGAIN HARBOUR ���1 l/2�� acres, nicely troed, secluded. Hydro, wator septic tank & drain field In. $25,000. 5. GARDEN BAY ��� serviced lots, some with excellent vlow. $12,000 to $18,500. 6. RUBY LAKE���: Lot 27, soml-watorfront vlow lot, rood accoss, hydro. $7,000. Owner anxious to sell, make an offor. 7: EARLS COVE ��� large corner lot, serviced with hydro, close to waterfront. $11,000. 8. HALFMOON BAY ��� Lot 43.on Truman Road, View lot with wator, hydro & sewer available. $14,900. 9. GARDEN BAY LAKE ��� good secluded lot at end of Elliot Rd, Hydro available. $0,500. , 10 RUBY LAKE ��� Lot 31, nlco building lot with a vlow of Ruby Lake. Driveway In, building site prepared. Road accoss. $13,000. IsiEVEIIUEraOPERTIEsi TRINCOMALI MARINA ��� 2.21 acres In Madeira Park with 100' good watorfront ������ good gravel beach, boat launching ramp, floats, boat shop with hoavy shop oqulpmont, marine ways. And a nlco 4 bdrm homo with partial basement, good view. $195,000. GRANTHAMS LANDING STORE ���on 50 ���� boach watorfront lot, Small grocery store, post office, owners 3 bdrm sulto, two 2 bdrm rental sultos, one 1 bdrm rental cottago, Purchaso prlco Includos storo sholvlng, furnishings, equipment and $8,000 stock in trado, Good business for a couple. $110,000. IRVINE'S LANDING MARINA ��� marina and trallor park, 40 soal calo with licenced dining room at the entrance to Pendor Harbour, Standard Oil agoncy, boat rentals, $225,000, TAYLOR'S GARDEN BAY ST^OruZ^T^ acros land, 650 ft�� sholtorod watorfront, large noneral store wllh butchor shop, offlco, slock rooms & post offlco. 370�� lineal floats, Standard Oil doalorshlp, ownors 2 BR homo. $240,000. plus Cash for stock In trado. | WATERFRONT LOTS �� 1. SUTTON ISLAND, EGMONT - beautifully trood small Island, | ,7 acros j__, located In front o| the Egmont Marina. $48,500. 2. GARDEN.BAY ��� 290 ft�� waterfront wllh sholtorod driveway In. Approx. 2 acros. $70,000. 3. GERRANS BAY��� 100 ft + watorfront with 100' frontago on Francis Ponlnsula Road, Driveway, septic tank, wator lino and electricity all In $34,000. 4. IRVINE'S LANDING ��� Lol 4, \\A0'�� watorlront. Nlcoly frtfod, driveway In, overlooks Loo flay, $30,000, 3, GARDEN BAY ESTATES Lot 31, approx 00' walorfront, southorn exposure. Deep sholtorod mooraQo. $39,000, 6, GUNBOAT BAY -- noar Madolra Park. Lot D has 75�� low bank waterfront, level A grassy. Sopllc tank & drain field In. $35,000. 7. SAKINAW LAKE ��� 120 ��t�� wotorlronl lot, fairly level, easy to build on, approx 2/3 ocre. Westerly exposure, good sholtorod mooroao. $18,000. moorage, DON LOCK Ron. 003-2526 PAT SLADEY Ros. 003-9019 y y y A ��� A REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE APPRAISALS Gibsons, B.C. 886-2481 PHONE TOLL FREE: 687-6445 HOPKINS LANDING: a really well kept abode close to ferry & beach. Featuring 2 bdrms, living room with picture window & modern bathroom. Large kitchen. Extra bedroom futility in bsmt. $34,500. 1 Here is a truly good investment. 4.6 acresjOf view property with year round creek. A 1330 sq ft home with 4 bdrms and 1-/2 bsmt. 3 large outbuildings can be used for animals and workshop. Also an excellent garden site. $56,000 only. WELCOME BEACH: Redrooffs Road. Prime waterfront. View of Merry & Thormanby Islands, sheltered beach. Older home with 3 bdrms & tudor style living room & fireplace, large garden & fruit trees. About 1 acre of land, 104 ft on waterfront & 135 ft on road. $72,000. Half acre view lot in Selma Park. This property is extensively landscaped with stone walled terraces, new fruit trees, garden site & other extras. The home has been maintained in top shape and is immaculately kept. This property is a pleasure to show & will be an ideal home for the hard to please. $53,500. ______ YMCA Road: half finished 3 bdrm split level home. Have it finished to your taste for $48,500. LOTS Longdate: The Ridge, large lots, some with view. Prices from $7,500 to $13,500. Wharf Rd: 65 x 193 lot, $14,750. Lower Road: 22,000 sq ft with road allowance on sides. $14,700. Gibsons: Glassford Rd. Fully serviced building lots, nicely treed. 63 x 160. $12,000 only. Don Sutherland 885-9362 George Cooper 886-9344 J.W. Visser 885-3300 Anne Gurney 886-2164 FoHRent . HALL FOR RENT, Wilson Creek . Community Hall. Contact Bonme Wigard, 885-9403.11121-tfn _ - ��� WORKSHOP, storage space now available in Sechelt. Ph. 885- 2062aft.6p.m. 1311-29 AVAIL. JUNE 1.1 bdrm new ctg. Ph. (112) 926-1024. 1347-28 AVAIL. JULY 1, 1976 Roberts Crk. Full bath, cabinet kit, 2 bdrm. Older cpl. Pensioners will be given preference. $250 mo. Ph. 886-7332. 1352-30 AVAIL IMMED. 3 bdrm waterfront home, in Garden Bay Ph. (112) 942-4574. 1355-28 MEN'S SINGLE rmwith kitchen. Facilities. WF, priv. ent. clean. All found. Ph. 885-9538. 1383-28 Wanted to Rent SINGLE GIRL wishes to rent furnished apartment in .Sechelt-Gibsons area. Rent $160 approx. Phone: 885-3231. 1297-tfn TEACHER at new Sechelt school needs 3 bdrm house for July 1: Ph. 883-9994. . 1165-28 PHYSICIAN wishes furnished hse-trailer-apt. for limited period. Ph. Vane. 681-5797 eves, or Administrator St. Mary's; Sechelt. 1356-29 SINGLE woman needs 2 bdrm hse. Davis Bay to Sechelt preferred. Ph. 8853847. 1358*30 Cars and Trucks '74 FORD Econoline. 10,000 miles. Tape deck, mag wheels, 6 cyl. Excl. cond. Will take older car or truck as part payment. $4,000. Ph. 883-9273. 1263-28 '59 MERC 1 ton van. $750: Ph. 885- 3887. 1360-30 WBTTTEN bids will be accepted on a 1970 MGB as is. Please reply, in writing to Royal Bank, Box 310. Gibsons, B.C. 1371-28 Cars and Trucks '68 VW 1500 Sedan. Excl. cond. Offers. Ph. 885-0364. 1343-29 '60 AUSTIN Cambridge for parts, i.e., almost new exhaust system. Ph. 886-9061. 1385-28 , '65 PLYMOUTH $150. Ph. 885- 9344. 1379-28 '72 GM FERENZA 28,000 nules $1450 o.b.o. Ph. S85-3421. 1375-30 '66 GALAXIE convert., ps, pb, . mags, tape deck. Ph. 883- 2732. 1376-30 '64 LANDROVER station wgn. New rubber. Good cond. Ph., eves. 886-2441. 1359-28 Motorcycles 125 HONDA trail bike $200. View at Dick's Motorcycle Shop, Gibsons; 1342-29 125 YAMAHA MX 1974 $500. Ph. 885-9741. 1324-29 '73 YAMAHA, 400 MX Good condition, $600. Ph. 885- 3849. 1388-28 Boats and Engines 15' SPORTS Valient, 60 HP Chrysler, EZ Loader trailer, $2100, extra gas tanks, anchor. Ph: 885-3897. 1317-29 14' SANGSTERCRAFT with 60 HP Johnson. '71 125 HP Johnson. Ph. 885-9328. 16' BOAT. 9.8 Merc warranty. $850 firm, 2531 eves, firm. Ph. 885-2531 eves. Mobile Homes Livestock Legal Notices Legal Notices SET UP in mobile park, 1971 3 bdrm, fridge and .stove incl. Ph. 886-9048. 1365-31 TRAILER SPACES avail. Selma Vista Mobile Park, Selma Park Rd., Sechelt, B.C. Ph. collect after 7 p.m. 521-2280. Peter Block, New Westminster. 1335-28 Campers and Trailers 12' TRAILER, toilet, furnace, electric brakes, $1200. Ph. 885-3897. 1318-29 Pets ��� ��������������� ��� ��� ������ ��������� ������!������ ������������-��� ���' ����������� ������\" QUALITY FARM SUPPLY All Buckerfield Feeds Hardware - Fencing Fertilizer - Purina Products Alfalfa-Hay-Straw Good Tack Selection- Case Garden Tractors - Rototillers - Toro Lawnmowers We are on Pratt Road, 1 mile south from Highway PHONE 886-7527 11548-tm CERTIFIED Farrier, Hans n Berger is coining to Coast. Contact Sunshine Farm. 898-3751. ' : 994-tm SHOEING, trimming, hauling. T. Bowe Ph. 886-9069. 1278-28 5 YR. OLD MARE bay gentle. great for older children. $350 with saddle. -Leave name. Ph. 886-2542. 1366-28 Machinery CAN-AM CRAWLER CORPORATION . ''THE BULLDOZER PEOPLE'' Genuine I.T.M. Undercarriage, Rollers, Tracks, Sprockets, Etc. Equipment Overhauls. New Tractor Parts For All Models ���- Bullgears, Pinions, Engine Parts, Track press & Rebuilding. A Complete Service \"YourBobcatDealerV 4623 Byrne Rd., Burnaby, B.C. 434-2651 Telex 04-354-652 607-tfn , ' NOTICE This is your notice that Pacific Tariff Service Ltd., has made application to the Motor Carrier Commission, on behalf of its motor carrier clients, to increase all tariff rates and charges respecting the transportation of freight, in accordance with each carrier's operating authority. For specific details regarding the application contact your local carrier, or Pacific Tariff Service Ltd., No. 103 - 7342 Winston Street, Burnaby, B.C., V5A2H1 or phone 299:3471., ���. - Subject to the consent of the Motor Carrier Commission, the proposed changes will become effective on July 5th, 1976. Any representation respecting the proposed changes may be made to the Superintendent, Motor Carrier . Branch, 4240 Manor Street, Burnaby\", B.C. V5G 3X5; up to June 21st, 1976. PACIFICTARRIF SERVICE LTD. TARIFF AGENT OFFICEOF PUBLIC TRUSTEE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of the deceased: SIMONSON, Viggo, late of Porpoise Bay, B.C. Creditors and others having claims against the said estate(s) are hereby required to send them duly verified to the Public Trustee, 635 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6C 3L7, before the 30th of June, 1976 after which date the assets of the said 'estate(s) will be distributed, having regard only to'claims that have been received. Clinton W.Foote PublicTrustee 1152-pub. May 19, 26, June 2, 9, 1976. For Quick Results Use Times Adbriefs! HOMES WATERFRONT: 1.76 acres of quiet seclusion. Has 2 bdrm, 3 yr old mobile home. Chromo glass tank & 189' waterfront. Zoned R2. Try your offer to $69,000. ' 1316-29 still on Ph. 885- NEW 1200 SQ FT: Sechelt Village 2 bdrm home. W/W carpets, large family kitchen with loads of cabinets, built in range & oven plus separate dining area. Large laundry & storage room plus pantry. Asking price $42,500. 1328-tfil REAL ESTATE APPRAISALS NOTARY PUBLIC AND LAND DEVELOPMENT LTD. DENTAL BLK., GIBSONS PHONE 886-2277 TOLL FREE 682-1513 Jon McRae 885-3670 Ken Crosby LOTS Lorrie Girard 886-7760, 2 LOTS AND A COnAGE Build on them, hold them, pay the taxes with the rentable cottage. This is an investment, better than banking your money. Size 80 x 150 ft. One block from city centre. A buy at $27,500. LANGDALE: Extra large corner lot with spectacular unobstructed view of Howe Sound. You won't find another like this one. ������������������' F.P. $18,000 GIBSONS: Double lot on the corner of South Fletcher and School Road. Potential for a duplex with a beautiful view. F.P. $29,000 SANDY HOOK: Semi-waterfront with pathway to a sand beach, build your dream house with this view lot. - ' ' F.P. $12,500 PRATT ROAD:. Near proposed site of new school, this lot Is cloarod and ready to build upon. F.P. $13,500 BAY ROAP:Seml-watorfront lots In Gibsons aro very rare. We have two avallablo. Your cholco F.P. $12,500 & F.P, $14,500 SARGENT ROAD: Tho uppor sldo provides a Suporb viow, closo to shopping, schools, otc. Offors from F.P. $16,900 CHASTER ROAD: Nostlo your homo In Iho troos, this is tho aroa of tho proposod now school, 67x1 ?3'. Only F.P. $11,500 EXTRA LARGE LOT: Whoro Pratt Road moots Grandvlow, this has to bo tho bost lot In this growing aroa. Only F.P. $14,000 GOWER POINT ROAD: Incredible privacy with Iho boach |ust tho othor sldo of tho road. Cloarod and roady to build on. Must soo F.P, $25,000 un- LANGDALE CHINES; Cornor lot wllh all dorgroiind sorvlcos, boautlful vlow of Howo Sound. F.P. $15,000 MALAVIEW ROAD: All now homos In this aroa noar proposed now school, 20' path allowanco to tho sldo of this 66 x 123' lol makes It ospaclally attractive. F,P, $12,500. HOPKINS: Supor vlow building lot, first time of- lorod, 50 x 150, woll prlcod at only F.P, $13,000 SCHOOL & WYNGART ROADS: 8 duplex zoned lots all beautiful view properties overlooking the Bay close to schools and shopping. All lots perfectly suited to side-by-side or up/down duplex construction. Any lot for F.P..$17,500. All for F.P. $139,000, try all offers I ABBS: one of the nicest building lots in Gibsons. Level building site with gully in front to protect privacy and panoramic view. Approx 66 x 128\". F.P. $18,500 CORNER LOT: Abbs and School Rd. Excellent extra-large building lot with view of Bay area and Howe Sound plus Georgia Strait. Approx 75 x 150. F.P. $19,000 SHAW ROAD: Already cleared and ready for building 2 1/2 blocks from the new shopping plaza. Lot size 66 x 120. F.P. $12,500 CEMETERY ROAD: approximately ono acre In rural Gibsons, all level and usable land. Vory prlvato with some vlow. F.P. $17,000 GOWER POINT ROAD1; at the corner of 14th ��� cleared building slto, excellent view from this largo 75 x 250'lot. F.P. $16,500 WATERFRONT PROPERTY; right at the ond of Gowor Point Road. Unllmltod vlow with Rl zoning, 100x217', F.P. $22,000 TUWANECK: 1/4 block to tho boach, full vlow of tho Inlet, Plpod community wator avallablo, 00x140. F.P. $12,300 SANDY HOOK: your choice of 2 partially cloarod, fully sorvlcod lots, building silos ovorlook all of Sandy Hook and unboatqblo vlow. Each lot 06x116. F.P. $11,900 LANGDALE: Boautlful, lovol, cloarod cornor lot In aroa of good homos. Right across from school. Vory woll prlcod at F.P. $13,500 FAIRVIEW ROAD: boautlful cornor lot at Pratt Road. This 75 x 160' lot Is cloarod and tho culvorts aro In, start building today. F.P. $13,500 CHASTER ROAD; good lot In growing aroa, only small aldof to door. Zoned for traitors. Maybo subdlvldo Intwolotslnfuturo, F.P. $15,600 SOUTH FLETCHER ROAD; oxtra largo lot with 04' Irontago, Boautilul vlow of wator and mountains, lano accoss and only 1 1 /2 blks from post offlco. F.P, $15,000 ACREAGE 5 ACRES; Excollont prospocls for tho ono who holds this potontlally commercial ��onod ncroago In Gibsons. Ollors from $60,000 5 ACRE5; divided by tho highway In Roborts Crook, this ploco of propoily hoi oxcollont potontlal, $30,000 5 ACRES; on Shaw Road In tho municipality of plhtons. This subdivldablo properly with houso won't last long at $50,000 2 1/2 ACRES; on Chostor Rood subdivldablo lots In oroa of proposod now school boosts a largo homo ond roal potential. Ollors $60,500 5 ACRES; privacy In tho troos, this proporty has 00 fl on tho highway for accoss wllh tho balance In comploto seclusion. $25,000 34 ACRES: with houso and barn In Roborts Crook nroa, Ihls proporty Is nil foncod and may bo subdivided Into 5 ocro parcels, $120,000 15 ACRES; 1(100 ft of frontago on Highway 101 v.llh beautiful vlsw ovorlooklng Secret Cove |u���� past tho Jolly Rodgor close to Marina and Store, $35,000 The coffee is always on���drop in for our free brochure SEALANDER 27' with Twin 165 Mercruisers. Only 45 hr. work, dive boat or cargo carrier. Built in '76 must sell. Save $2,500. Ph. 921-9381 or 883-2758. 1349-28 4 CYL GRAY marine motor $450. Ph. 885-3887. 1361-30 PALMER-BUICK > aluminum marine engine 150 h.p. as new $695. Ph. 886-2513. 1370-29 LOW PRICE hi quality 23' FG cruiser 215 h.p. Mercruiser i.o., head, sink, CB radio, only $12,000. Ph. 883-2406. 1380-33 '75 24 FT. REINELL HT 302,175 hp, OMC. Full canvas, full galley, head, new leg, CB, compass, DS only 40 hrs. $11,500 o.b.o. Ph. 883-9277. 1274-28 21' SANGSTER CUDDY cabin. 165 Merc. I-O, sounder, stove, sink, icebox. Full canopy. Excel, shape at Pender Harbour $8,500. Ph. 5344598 or 883-2753. 1281-28 \"LET'S GO FISHING\" 12' aluminum flotation seats 6 h.p. Viking (low hours), day tank, oars and tilt trailer $875 o.b.o. Ph. 885-9849. 1295-28 DAVIS BAY WATERFRONT: Clean 2 bdrm home on. level, landscaped property ��� nicely treed. S-W view of Trail Islands an ideal retirement spot. Fishing' at your door. $47,500 F.P. DAVIS BAY 3 BDRM: View home 1200 sq ft has 2 sets plbg, fireplace, large LR, w/w carpets, dbl carport, workshop PLUS storage. Paved driveway. Close to \"shops and beach. Terms to $49,500 F.P. PRICE REDUCED!; Sechelt Commercial Investment ��� 2 bdrm, full basement home. Approx 1200 sq ft. A/O heat, built in range & oven in large family kitchen. Full price $39,500. MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK: Reduced to $8,500 full price. Cozy 2 bdrm cottage on fully landscaped & fenced garden lot. Has fruit trees, carport & workshop. Garden is planted. Land lease $42 per mo. W/W carpets, Venetian blinds & drapes incl. in this sacrifice price! PRICE REDUCED: Davis Bay Duplex ideal for two families or revenue. Each unit is self contained, elec heat & fireplace. Situated on W/F view, treed lot, level to beach. $49,500 F.P. Was $53,500. SELMA PARK W/F: Huge 95 x 550' treed view property. 2 bdrm home with elec heat, 1/2 cement basement. Lots of room for 2nd home in private area near beach. Asking $49,500 F.P. Wanted to Buy CEMENT MIXER, wheel barrow and utility trailer. Ph. 885-2942, evenings. 1292-28 ACREAGE & LOTS SANDY HOOK: Spectacular view lot. all facilities. Priced to sell ' quickly at $10,500. $8,950 SEAVIEW LOT: In quiet Tuwanek. About .4 of an acre with' some trees. WATERFRONT!: Over 1 acre with 150' of shoreline. Arbutus trees, etc. F.P. $15,500. SELMA PARK VIEW LOT: 100 x 200' nicely treed. Try your offer to $16,000. $7,950: for a large building lot close to the arena. Good investment property. SECHELT VILLAGE: 3 acres, many trees & a year round creek. $9,000 down balance over 5 yrs. F.P. $19,900. \\ $9,500 FULL PRICE: Large R2 zoned lot on Nor West Bay Rd. 152' frontage with lane at back for private driveway. Treed & serviced. ROBERTS CREEK: An acre of land with a running stream. Heavily treed. F.P. $16,900. REAL EST AT LAND DIVE Vancouver Direct MORTGAGES MENTS NEW HOMES Une 685-5544 Office 885-2241 IG1IBSOIM Sf AIM PIAiR EWI BEAUTIFUL VIEW LOT ��� on the sunny side of Marine Drive at Soames Point. Nicely treed with an unobstructed view to Keats Island. Very close to excellent sandy beach access. FP $13,000. Call Sue Pate. DEVELOPMENT ACREAGE ��� 5 acres (give or take) in Iho village. Probable view of Sochelt Inlet after selective clearing. Roads to both ends; water and power to one end. Build 660' of road and create 20 lots (66' x 132' each). FP.$38,900, 25% down will handle, Call Davo Roberts. VIEW THIS ��� At cornor of Wyngoart and Martin Rds. Building lot with panoramic view, all sorvlcos at front. Salo prlco $13,900. Call Davo Roborts. iSE&ME IliKNPMREAI SELMA PARK VIEW ���- 4 bedrooms, 2 on main floor & 2 In good dry basomont. living S dining rooms have w/w, Attractive kitchen with dlshwashor, Panoramic vlow from largo sundock. Largo frontago tot wi��h garden ft fruit troos. Many othor foaturos Including cablevision. Sign on proporty (Bonnor Road). Call Ed Bakor. COME AND SEE THE VIEW ������ Several lots from $13,900 on Laurel and Groor Avenues, Call Lon Van Egmond, SARGEANT BAY ��� Largo watorfront (ot, approx. 1 aero, In Wost Socholt. Nlcoly treod, good fishing spot. Only $29,900. Call Suzanno Van Egmond. IN THE VILLAGE WITH A VIEW ���- Your cholco of 4 boautlful lots with a vlow of tho Gulf and Vancouvor Islands, southorn'oxposuro, Prlcod botweon $10,000 and $12,000. Call lon Van, Egmond. PORPOISE BAY VIEW LOTS��� Your cholco of 3 panoramic viow lots ovorlooklng the bay. Pavod roads and all services. Ready to build on. $10,950. Call Ed Bakor WATERFRONT COTTAGE ���20 lovel paces to tho beach. Modern 2 bedroom cottago, attractively landscapod lot within walking dlstanco of Socholt. F.P. $18,Q00for leasehold t|tlo. Call Dave Roberts. ' > DAVIS BAY VIEW HOME ��� Custom bullt'for owner. One yr old, 3 bdrms, full basomont, 2 baths, 2 sundecks, 2 fireplaces, largo carportt Panoramic vlow from sundocks, living room, mastor bdrm. Ff> $59,900. Call Davo Roborts. IN THE VILLAGE ��� Spanking now 3 bodroom, full basomonl homo on nlcoly' trood lot. 75% financing available'. For information call ono of our sales staff. WEST SECHELT ��� 85 x 150' building lot on Nor Wost Bay Road, Front cloarod for building. Nlcoly treod In roar. Prlcod for sale now at $12,500. Call Davo Roborts. SANDY HOOK ~ Boautlful vlow of Inlot, 3 bdrms, w/w throughout, full baaomont, 2 fireplaces, carport & sundock. Located on Doorhorn Drlvo. Asking $49,700; ownor will consider offors. Still tlmo to chooso your own colors, rugs, otc, Call Ed Bakor, , FAMIlV HOME ��� 4 bdrms, hugo roc room, flroplaco, ovor 1600 sq ft of living spaco. Locatod closo to school in Wost Socholt on a 75 x 150' lot. Soparato garage and workshop too. F.P. $47,500. Call Davo Roborts. iN THE VILLAGE ��� 2 bdrm. houso on largo lovol lot right In tho hoart of Socholt. Easy walking dlstanco to all amonltlos, Houso noods somoono handy with a hammor, Try your down paymont to $26,000. Call Suo Pato. LEVEL BUILDING LOT ������ Close to Socholi and now arona'. Sorvlcod and soptlc approvod. $12,500 or try your offor. Call Davo Roberts. SECHELT SIDGBYSIDE ��� Two largo 1/2 aero Vlllago lots on Hwy 101. Frontago 100 x 250'. Attractively trood with potontlal vlow, Vondor Is asking $12,500 each but will'consider torms. Call Suo Palo, DAVIS BAY VIEW HOME ��� on 1/2 aero, This largo custom family homo has everything Including a pool table In tho fully finished roc room. Two bdrms up and one down. Lovoly stono flroplaco. CoH Suo Pato. SNUGASA'BUG -- In friendly Sandy Hook, Cozy 2 bdrm post & beam across the road from watorfront. Franklin flroplaco In living room adds to tho charm of this Immaculate homo. FP $32,000, Your down paymont will do (ho trick. Call Suo Pnto. VERY ATTRACTIVE LEASE HOME ��� In Solma Park. Interiorfinished In oxcollont taste. Lots of room to' movo around, plus a covered workshop right next to the kitchen. Vendor will consldor your down paymont. Call Suo Pate, WEST SECHDlf'--��� Cutlo 1 bdrm startor or retirement homo locatod on cloared lot on Nor West Doy Rd. Four appliances Is a bonus for the full price of $26,000. Try your down paymont. Call Suo Pato. SANDY HOOK AREA ��� 2 sorvlcod vlow lots, Try your down paymont. Ownor will carry Agroemont For Sale. FP $10,500. Call Ed Bakor. lH=AIIE.IVimO NIBJAMAN��AB:EIA�� SERVICE STATION ft COFFEE SHOP IN HALFMOON BAY ��� A good buslnoss, Only $45,000 Includos buslnoss, equipment and proporty, 'Call Lon Van Egmond, SECRET COVE ������ Large lots now bolng oflorod, nlcoly trood, closo to boach ft marina. From only $7,900. Call Suzanno Van Egmond. ��� WATERFRONT ft VIEW LOTS '������ Don't miss this opportunity to got a boautlful walorfront lot -��� only a few to chooso from. Prlcod from $26,900. Also vlow lots. Sorvlcod. Coll Suzanno Van Egmond. SARGEANT BAY ��� Beautifully trood, olovatod watorlront lot ovorlooklng sparkling Sargeant Bay. This lot Is over 1/2 ocro, sorvlcod with hydro ft wator, and oaslly accosslblo from the road. Asking prlco $29,500. Call Suo Pato. ���SARGEANT BAY '��� Approximately 1 1?4 acros ovorlooklng tho Bay. Hydro K wator available, xonod R-2, trallors allowed, Vlow this Intorosllng property and inoko your ollor. Asking $17,500. Call Ed Dakoi1. EUREKA PLACE ���large cornor lot, partially cloarod, now wator mains coming soon. Partial view. Sign on property. Asking $ 11,00p. Call Ed Bakor. irlENDERlMABBmURlANDlAREA? 'MADEIRA PARK ������ Waterfront lot with moorage. 75' frontago, oasy accoss to watorlront, ,1.4 acres, treed, good, building sites. Hard to find ft priced to sail al $35,500, Call Dnvo Roborls. ���/������ / ��������� / ��� /-' -��� ,���> \"^ 6 > y V Legal Notices TRAVEL PageB-4 , The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1976 por Sale BRITISH COLUMBIA HYDRO AND POWER AUTHORITY Invites tenders for Clearing Distribution Line Right-of-Way along Brooks Road, Sechelt Peninsula. Reference No. Q6-3166 aosing Date: 29 June 1976 Sealed tenders clearly marked as above-referenced will be received in. Room 1026, B.C. Hydro and Power Authority BuUding, 970 Burrard Street. Vancouver, B.C. V6Z 1Y3 until 11:00 AM local time, 29 June 1976. details may be obtained from the office of the Purchasing Agent, 10th floor, 970 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6Z 1Y3, telephone 683-8711, Locals 2577, 2560. 1374-pub. June 9,1976. FOR ALL your travel services for tours and straight air flights. Peninsula Travel Agency, , graduate Canadian Travel College, Dental Block, Gibsons. Ph. 886-2855. ToU free 682-1513. 973-tfn VAN-TORONTO return. Save. $121- per person. Vane-Hawaii return, save $111 per person. Continental Travel 885-2910. 1381- 28 Lost 8' COLUMBIA dinghy \"Andrea\". Reward call collect (112) 588- 5107. 1302-28 Found PAIR CHILDREN'S suede oxfords. Ph. 8854049. 1351-28 Come and Get it PUREBRED shorthaired German Pointer. 5 nios. male. All shots. Good with children. Alec Simpkins. 885-2688. : 1350-28 For Sale SIDING both aluminum and , vinyl. Swimming pools, all types. All metal. heatalator circulating fireplaces, 886-7411. 8754fn WELL ROTTED horse manure and straw mix $10 per pick-up load, U-haul. Also pony for sale Pratt Rd. Ph. 886-2160. 1262-28 SCUBA-PRO Mark V regulator, excel, cond. Ph. 885-3231 Don. 1301-28 pender harbour realty ltd on highway 10l atfrancts peninsula road FRANCIS PENINSULA: First class waterfront home with 2 bedrooms and garage. Has one of the area's best views from a sunny situation in 'Malcolm' Harbour. A must see at $74,000. HARBOUR MOTORS ��� Here's a fine business for an experienced bodyman wishing to locate in this area. Facilities include gas station, service bays and body repair sho.p. A 3 bedroom house is included. Presently showing good return and steadily improving. Offered at $135,000. ,. SMALL ACREAGE ��� 1 1/2 acres on Francis Peninsula. Fully serviced. Full Price $19,900. MODERN HOME ���, Needs some finishing, 1150 sq ft, full basement with 3 roughed in bedrooms. Three bedrooms on main floor. Nice view of ocean. 1 acre lot. Asking $55,000. BRAND NEW ��� 2 bedroom, full basement home in Garden Bay. Within a stone's throw of marinas, shops, etc. Full price just $47,500. ACREAGE ��� 7 acres on Highway 101. Has potential commercial or subdivision possibilities. F.P. $35,000. BEAUTIFUL VIEW ��� Well maintained 3 bedroom home on large 144 x 200' landscaped lot overlooking the entrance to Pender Harbour. A first class property offered at $44,500. BARGAIN HARBOUR ��� Charming and well kept 840 sq ft house on approx 1/4 acre waterfront with undeveloped moorage. 2 bedrooms on main plus one in basement. This is a fine property at F.P. $59,000. PHONE 883-2794 John Breen Jock Hermon 883-9978 �� insurance �� 883-2745 For Sale SPACE HEATER good cond $25; washing machine $20. Ph. 886- 7332.- . 1353-28 3 DRAWER chest $10. Cinnamon sizal rug 12 x 12, $15. Bookcase $8; chrome shower set $10; chrome basin legs & towel bars $10; misc, light fixtures $2.50 ��� $5. Sheets of arborite 124\" x 18\" each $1. Ph. 885-3441. 1386-28 SUPER DELUXE swivel*wheel stroller with all accessories $35. Baby walker $10. Snugly carrier$35. Ph. 885-2926. 1372-30 PENTANGLE Plants Whitaker House. Hibiscus, \\ tropicals, baskets, '^.hangings, \\ pottery. Tues.-Sat. Open 10:304:30. 1377- 28 . YOUR AUTOPLAN CENTRE ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE Seaside Plaza 886-2000 Gibsons 886-9121 ROBERTS CREEK: Large semi-clear lot. Well located. Serviced. Only $11,000. GIBSONS: for the discriminating, buyer we have a brand new home ready for occupancy. Well situated in lower Gibsons, close to shops,,' beach and transportation. 2 lovely bedrooms, family size kitchen, spacious living room, modern bath, wall to wall carpet throughout. Full basement has unfinished rec rm with fireplace. Deck over carport. $59,900. \" Conveniently located, upper & lower duplex. 2 bedroom and 3 bedroom units. Panoramic view from both suites. On sewer. Terms on $32,500. Attractive 2 bedroom cottage on level landscaped lot. Close to beach, shops, PO & transportation. Elec heat. On sewer. W/W carpet in living rm and bdrms. Ideal for retirement or as a starter home for young couple. Situated in area of new and well maintained homes and lots. $39,000 full price with cash (approx $21,000) to existing 10% mtg. SEASIDE PLAZA Listings Wanted Norm Peterson 886-2607 MACHINISTS tools. Ph. 885- 3145. , 1333-29 Mortgages 'Cozy relations' between pollution board, polluters 1st, 2nd and 3rd MORTGAGES RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL FARM CONSTRUCTION TRYUS FOR THE BEST RATES CENTURY 21 MORTGAGE CORP. 2438 MARINE AVE. WEST VANCOUVER * 9203256. 949-tfn boosts camping tees A park preservation.surcharge of $2 per campsite per night is being added to the $2 camping fee in 23 provincial parks, announces Honourable Grace M. McCarthy, minister of Recreation and Travel Industry. The minister said the surcharge, to take effect June 1,1976, is being applied in parks that are subject to heavy camper use \"because they offer outstanding recreation opportunities and because they are near population centres.\" Mrs. McCarthy said also that costs of maintenance, patrol and security measures in these provincial parks and others is increasing because of vandalism and rowdy behaviour on the part of a minority of persons. \"Rather than have a blanket increase in all parks and campgrounds we have decided that the parks which involve the greatest costs should be subject to the highter fee,\" the minister said. Mrs. McCarthy- said. B.C. has 325 provincial parks of which 120 contain developed camping facilities. Seventy-five of these parks charge camping fees of $2 per night. Fitness. In your heart you know it's right. XI Walk a Mnck.Tmlay A cozy relationship exists between the Pollution Control Board and the polluters in the province; says Bob Skelly, M.L.A. for Alberni. > .-���.'.'. Speaking ih the Legislature during the debate on the Department of the. En- ' vironment budget estimates, Skelly said that in spite of regulations under the Pollution Control Act, the polluters meet with PCB personnel on an informal basis long before they make application for a permit In many cases, he said, contaminant levels are established before any application is made. Other agencies concerned with the pollution of the air, land and water in the province are not informed until it is virtually a \"fait accompli\" that an agreement in principle between PCB and the polluters, he stated. - Skelly also attacked the practice of polluters who submit letters of \"official notification\" to the Pollution Control Board whenever they are exceeding the permitted contaminant levels. All they have to do when they are exceeding these levels is to send a letter to PCB giving reasons why they are exceeding the levels and they are not prosecuted at all, he said. He called for imposition of penalties every time permit levels are exceeded. , A recent pollution prosecution in Minnesota was quoted by Skelly where Reserve Mines Ltd: was fined for dumping, mine tailings in Lake Superior. The company was fined $837,000. Penalties under the Pollution Control Act in Minnesota are $10,000 maximum per day for every day that the offence continues. Under our act, he said, the penalty is $1,000 maximum, three months imprisonment or $500 for every day that the offence continues. As a result of these very low penalties, polluters in B.C. virtually have a license to pollute in this province, Skelly charged. Hon. Jim Neilson, Minister of the Environment, .agreed with Skelly that the fines do seem \"somewhat permissive'' and said they should be increased. A further complaint of \"footdragging\" was levelled at the PCB by Skelly who told the Legislature, \"All you have to do in order to get the right to pollute a river in this province is to apply for a permit and while the branch is dealing with the permit over a three or four year period, you can dump effluent in the river to any extent you please' Y Skelly also requested the minister of the environment to take immediate steps. to impose a moratorium on all development in , the Fraser River estuary area until a comprehensive policy has been established. Tha Fraser River delta and estuary is one of the most important in the world in terms of the life! it creates and sustains, he said, yet -dumping of effluent, dredging and increasing urbanization are posing a formidable threat to the Fraser's role as the world's greatest salmpn-producing river: Sciosl houis iili~ oi,���onfse,ii stidjj B.C. School Trustees . Association President Rendina Hamilton announced* today that the BCSTA has received assurance from the deputy minister of education that school boards do have the right to approve courses of study over and above the core curriculum. - , - \"' ' She said that \"Dr. Hardwick also assured us that none of the recent statements made to the Surrey School Board is applicable to any other school district in the province.\" \" ��� Mrs. Hamilton reports that the deputy minister said he did not make any \"rulings\" on the decision of the Surrey School Board or the operation of the school district. Rather, he and members of his team were called in by the Surrey Board and Teachers Association to offer \"advice\" on the locally controversial value school situation. Mrs. Hamilton said that \"he believes, however, that the advice given to Surrey is appropriate because of problems specific to that school district\". He confirmed, that the Minister of Education's previously stated policy concerning local autonomy of boards remains unchanged. On May 18 McGeer said in the House with regard to value schools, \"School Boards have a right to do their own thing. We have said that we don't intend to interfere with that right\". \"Because of statements attributed to Dr. Hardwick in a Vancouver Province article\", Mrs. Hamilton continued, \"he felt it important to clarify to us his position on the role of elected and appointed people\". 1 1 * Put your message into 4,000 homes (15,000 rea'ders) in these economical spots. Your ad is always there for quick reference . . . anytime! * Here's an economical way to reach 4,000 homes (15,000 readers) every week. Your ad waits patiently for ready reference .' . . . anytime! �� i i AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE JAMIESON AUTOMOTIVE Parts, Sales & Service ��� ��� Rotor Lather Service for Disc Brakes ������ and Drum Brakes - Valve and Seat Grinding All Makes Serviced - Datsun Specialists Gibsons - Phone 886-7919 BANKS ROYAL BANK OF CANADA Sechelt Branch ��� Phone 885-2201 Gibsons Branch ��� Phone 886-2201 Madeira Park _ Phone 883-2711 HOURS Sechelt: Tuesday-Thursday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fri. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sot. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Gibsons & Pender: Monday-Thursday 10a.m. to 3 p.m.; Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. BLASTING TED'S BLASTINGS CONTRACTING LTD. AU WORK FULLY INSURED Basements ��� Driveways ��� Septic Tanks Stumps ��� Ditch Lines Call for a free estlmato anytime TED DONLEY Pender Harbour 883-2734 COAST BACKHOE and TRUCKING LTD. ��� Controlled Blasting -.-Septic Tanks Installed FULLY INSURED ��� FREE ESTIMATES 883-2274 BUILDERS 101 CONTRACTING CO. LTD. Gonoral Building Contractors All Work Guaranteed Phono 885-2622 Box 7 3, Socholt, B.C. PaP Developments Ltd. CUSTOM HOMES ��� CUSTOM FRAMING Ron Protockv, Box 487, Socholt 885-3583 ALL WORK GUARANTEED I BUILDING SUPPLIES A.C. RENTALS & BUILDING SUPPLY LTD. All Your Building Needs Madeira Park Phone 883-2585 MEL'S CONTRACTING LTD. * Residential and Commercial FULLY QUALIFIED IN ALL PHASES OF RENOVATIONS AND ADDITIONS * Work Guaranteed * Free Estimates Phono DON: 885-2926 BUILDING PLANS Building Plans for Rosldontlal Homos and Vacation Cotlagos VILLAGE PLAN SERVICE Darryl W. Rocovour Box 1352, Socholt, B.C, Phono 885-2952 1 G I BUILDING SUPPLIES WINDSOR PLYWOODS [the Plywood Pooplo] ALL PLYWOOD: Exotic and Construction Panelling - Doors-Mouldings Glues - Insulation Hwy. 101 ���Gibsons��� 886-9221 ������ ��� ������' *������ -^ GIBSONS BUILDING SUPPLIES [1971] LTD. \"ALL BUILDING MATERIALS\" ���READY-MIX\" \"CONCRETE-GRAVEL\" \"WESTWOOD HOMES\" \"GENERAL PAINT\" 886-2442 086-7833 Highway 101���Gibsons CABINETMAKERS Phone 885-2594 G. S. McGRADY LTD. CABINETMAKER Custom Built Furniture Kitchens - Vanities - Etc. Box 1129, Socholt . mmmmmimmmmammmmmammmmmmmmmmmimmmmmamm CONTRACTORS \"���\"������ �� III 11��� III I ��� m II ���HWWll.WWlH. I ImiMII HI I I Ml HI Ml ���II ���>��� l-HI��� II fl I ���WIU ��� -Ml II ��� III* EGMONT CONTRACTING v D7FCat* Backhoe Landclearlng * Road Building Wafer and Sewer Systems [883-90661 Dorhn J. Bosch J. B. EXCAVATING CO. LTD. 886-9031 Dump Truck ��� Backhoe - Cot Wator, Sowor, Dralnago Installation Lond Clearing FREE ESTIMATES DRILLING NEED A WATER WELL? Tri-K Drilling Ltd. Economical Rock Drilling a Specialty Phone our Gibsons agent at 886-9388 or call us direct at [112] 478-5064 ELECTRICIANS L a H SWANSON LTD. READY-MIX CONCRETE Sand and Gravol ��� Backhoe Ditching ��� Excavations PORPOISE BAY ROAD 805-9666, Box 172, Sochelt, B.C. DISPOSAL SERVICES SUNSHINE COAST DISPOSAL SERVICES LTD. PORT MELLON TO OLE'S COVE Tel. 806-2938 or 885-9973 Commercial Containers Available BE ELECTRIC LTD. Phone 886-7605 Box 860 '...���' Gibsons \"POWER TO THE PEOPLE\" SIM ELECTRIC LTD. INCE 1947 PHONE 885-2062 ��� ELECTRIC HEAT SPECIALISTS��� Pondor Harbour McCANN ELECTRIC WIRING OF ALL TYPES Residential ��� Industrial ��� Commercial All work guarantood ��� Froo estimates Joe McCann, Box 157, Madeira Pork Phone 883-9913 D.W. LAMONT Electrical Contractor HAIRDRESSERS SECHELT BEAUTY SALON-.. ��� - ��� Dianne Allen, Proprietor Expert Hair Styling Cowrie Street Phone Sechelt 885-2818 HOTELS Halfmoon Bay 885-3816 PENDER HARBOUR HOTEL Madeira Park ��� Phono 883-2377 Conventions,. Dinners, Group Meetings Weddings and Private Parties ��� Full Hotel Facilities ��� INDUSTRIAL SHANNON INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES LTD. Wholesale Steel ��� Fasteners���Cable Logging Rigging���Hydraulic Hose' Pipe and Fittings ��� Chain and Accessories Welding Supplies-r-Brake Lining Tools and Misc. 885-3813 Box 1388, Socholt LANDSCAPING STYRIA ELECTRIC LTD. ��� Electrical Contractors ��� MADEIRA PARK 883-9213 FLOORING-CABINETS Cablnots - Carpots - Linoleums HOWE SOUND DISTRIBUTORS LTD. P.O. Box 694, Gibsons, B.C. Blair Konnott, solos manager Phono 886-2765 GLASS ��� P.R. GLASS LTD. All your glass needs * Windows, prlmo and conversion Awnings, Storm Doors 8, Windows FREE ESTIMATES Phono Collect 483-3112 6770 Cranberry, Powoll River EVERGREEN LANDSCAPING Creative landscaping for an over-blooming garden. * garden maintenance * spoclal spring lawn care $10 per 1000 sqft FREE ESTIMATES 886-2087 MACHINE SHOPS At the Sign of the Chevron HILL'S MACHINE SHOP a MARINE SERVICE LTD. Mochlno Shop-Arc ond Acetylene Welding Steol Fabrlcatlng-MarlneWays Automotive ond Marino Repairs Standard Marine Station Phone 886-7721 Res. 886-9956, 866-9326 MOVING 6V STORAGE LEN WRAY'S TRANSFER Household Moving, Packing, Storage Packing Materials for salo MEMBER OF ALLIED VAN LINES Canada's No. 1 Movers Ph. 886-2664, R.R. 1 Gibsons PEST CONTROL PIED PIPER COMPANY LTD. * Bonded Pest Control Services call Paul M. Bulman at 434-6641 7061 Gilley Ave. Burnaby PLUMBING & HEATING SECHELT HEATING and INSTALLATION Gas, OH and Electric Furnaces Gutters, Flashing and Venting Jobs Ph. 885-2466 * Box 726 * Socholt, B.C. ROOFING TIDELINE PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS * residential * commercial ��� free estimates ��� Bernle ��� ,. Denis Mulligan 886-9414 Mulligan Bus: 886-9533 PENINSULA PLUMBING LTD. Contract and Renovation Work TOM SCOn RICK WRAY 886-7834 806-7838 RENTALS A.C. RENTALS LTD. TOOLS and EQUIPMENT ���RENTALS and SALES Easy Strip Concrete Forming Systems - Com pressors ��� Rototillers - Generators ��� Pumps Earth Tampers Sunshine Coast Hwy. S Francis Peninsula Road MADEIRA PARK PHONE 083-2585 II IIIIUllll || I Ill I ' I IIIIIIHIlllllM I ll'llllllllllillllllH RETAIL STORES C8S HARDWARE Sochelt, B.C, APPLIANCES ��� HARDWARE HOME FURNISHINGS Phone 885-9713 HOWE SOUND ROOFING ! & SEAMLESS'GUTTERS J tar & gravel, asphalt shingles, shakes and 5\" seamless gutters ��� 24 HOUR SERVICE��� [112] 898-9323 General Delivery Squamish SEWING MACHINES BERNINA Sales and Service to all makes RENTALS Fabric Houso, Gibsons - Ph. 886-7525 SURVEYORS ROBERT W.ALLEN B.C. LAND SURVEYOR Sechelt Lumber Building Wharf Street, Box 607 Sechelt. B.C. Office 885-2625 Home 885-9581 Roy andWagenaar B.C. LAND SURVEYORS CIVIL ENGINEERS Marino Building ��� Wharf Street Box 609. Socholt, B.C. 885-2332 TIRES ROOFING PAINTING& DECORATING ED'S CUSTOM PAINTING * Interior and Exterior Now or Old ��� Murals and Vinyl FREE ESTIMATES ��� All WORK GUARANTEED 885-3896 BILL BLACK ROOFING LTD. Durold Shingles ��� Tar & Gravol Now Roof or Re-Roof GUARANTEED WORKMANSHIP 8 YEARS EXPERIENCE Box 2 81, Gibsons 886-7320 RELIABLE ROOFING Tar ft Gravel Durold * Shakes FREE ESTIMATES Phono 0(15-3545 Box 30, R.R. HI, Sechelt COASTAL TIRES Sunshine Coast Highway Box 13, Gibsons. B.C. ��� Phone 886-2700 SALES AND SERVICE All Brands avallablo Monday to Saturday 0:30 a.m. to 5,30 p.m, Friday evening by appolntmont only 1 ���- TREE TOPPING PEERLESS TREE SERVICE , ��� Comploto Troo Sorvlco ~7 Prompt, Guaranteed, Insured Work ��� Prkes You Can Trust Phone J. RISBEY, 885-2109 T.V. and RADIO JaC ELECTRONICS PMUCO FORD SALES ft SERVICE wo service oil bronds 885-2668 across from Iho Rod a Whlto _________ SECHELT SUNSHINE COAST T.V. SALES 8 SERVICE LTD. ADMIRAL ��� ELECTROHOME and ZENITH DHALERS \"IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN SECHELT\" Box 799, Socholt Phono 005 91116 CL05ED ON MONDAYS U *3 v l i i i i A A A A By Maryanne West On the Evidence (CfiO-TV) is a crime show wittva difference, If you're a 'who-dun- it' buff or even if you hate, 'who-dun-its* you; may very well enjoy this show. . ;��� The crime has been committed, a suspect apprehended, the, charges laid and the' lawyers in formal, attire are, ready .and waiting for you to take your seat.in the front row at the trial. >0f necessity it's a streamlined, proceeding, .but it's an innovative idea which brings together the legal profession, the public and professional actors. Fictitious names are used and actors take the parts of accused and witnesses but the dramatization is based on a real life situation. \\ This week's trial took place before Mr. Justice M. Toy of the B.C. Court with Josiah Wood defending! a Gerald Mallinson on a charge of possession and trafficking in heroin. The Crown attorney ;was David Gibbons. Producer David Pears hopes the series which deals with the sort of crimes we read about daily in the newspapers,* will give an interesting insight into., the process of Canadian justice in action and convey an awareness of the harsh reality of being on trial or; for that matter, being the accuser of someone on trial. It is a learning experience for everyone ��� not so much in the academic sense, as increasing understanding of others, of the, difficulties by those who interpret our legal system, especially those who serve on juries in relation to such intangibles as the credibility of witnesses, I remember an interesting trial from last season ih which a young girl who had charged two aquaintenances with rape, found herself on trial instead. By a co-incidence one of these chosen from the audience to serve on the jury was the organiser of a rape clinic in Toronto. After the program she confessed that infuriated as she was by the manner in which the girl had been questioned she couldn't honestly bring herself to believe the accused - men were guilty \"beyond a reasonable doubt\". 7 It's a program which will involve you emotionally and most likely result in useful discussion if anyone feels a verdict is wrong! On the Evidence, Tuesdays at 8 p.m. on Channels 2 and 6. More than 100 representatives of the world's broadcasting organizations are meeting in Ottawa this week for a conference on Radio in the 80's. The purpose of the symposium is, \"to develop a series of statements to be of help in planning the future of radio in the 80's and to stimulate a greater awareness of radio's importance and potential.\" ' Some of the matters to be considered include how people will, useradio programs in the future? Can radio and television be complementary? The future of disks, cassettes and cartridges? What does the future hold for radio news programming? To whom is radio responsible? Wired and cabled systems and recorded information, potential developments in radio receivers, and the use of satellite systems such as ANIK. A daily report from the conference, including interviews with participants will be broadcast each night at 10:15 p.m. following the 10 p.m. news. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9 Vancouver Recital 1:30 p.m., Music Par Coeur, works by Paul Grant, John Fodi, Albert Mayr. Concern 8:03 p.m. The Popes: Oh Papa! a documentary drama on the history of the Popes from Peter to Paul VI. Five Nights 10:05 p.m. Report from the Radio in the 80's conference. Country Road 10:30 p.m> Kevin Head, THURSDAY, JUNE10 - Themes and Variations 8:03 p.m. Camerata���Suzanne Shulman, flute; James ��� Campbell, clarinet; Adele Armin, violin; Connraad Bloemendal, cello; Kathryn Root, Elyakim Taussig, piano* Etching;' Harry Somers;v Three Pieces for Clarinet, Stravinsky; Choros No; 2, Villa Lobos; Concerto Groosso,- Milton Barnes; Capriccio for Two Pianos, Michael Baker. Part ill ������ TonyThomas interviews Sir William Walton. Five Nights 10:15 p.m. Report from Radio in the 80's conference. : - ' Jazz Radio-Canada 10:30 p.m. Bob Hales ' Band and Dr. Music. FRIDAY, JUNE 11 Canadian Concert HaU 2:30 p.m. CBC Winnipeg Orchestra, Symphony No. 15 in G major, Mozart Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Mendelssohn., . , Between Ourselves 8:03 p.m. Royal Military College Centenary ��� a reflective, look at this famous Kingston institution, still very much a part of the Canadian establish\" ment, whose graduates go on to careers in politics and business. SATURDAY,-JUNE 12;,. /., Conversations with Scientists 5:03 p.m. Bert Nelson discusses changes in weather patterns with Dr. Hay who says we are in the trough of an approximately 15 year cycle. The effects of changing building patterns in the city and rural farming techniques are also discussed. Music de Chez Nous 7 p.m. from the International Conference of Horn Players ��� March of six horns, Lucas; Scherzo, Mendelssohn; songs for soprano and ^ght horns, Nelson; Themes and Variations, Harris; Ostiphony Pasticcio, McGovern; Sonata in F major, Beethoven; Sonata for horn and piano, Jane Vignery. CBC Stage 8:30 p.m. Maigret Hesitates by Georges Simenon ��� mystery. Anthology 10:03 p.m. Morley Calloghan ,, comments on books, short story, Twilight Time by Lauro Palominba ���- young Toronto writer born in Italy. SUNDAY, JUNE 13 Bush and the Salon 1:03 p.m. Dateline Fort Erie ��� the Fenian Invasion. Variety International 4:03 p.m. The Louis Armstrong story. The Royal Canadian Air Farce 7:03 p.m. comedy. The Entertainers 7:30 p.m. One More Time ��� music of 1943. Sounds Sixty music of 1963. CBC Playhouse 10:30 p.m. \"The name of the dog is\" by George Salverson. MONDAY, JUNE 14 ' Music of Our People 8:03 p.m. Joso is a program of songs from the Mediterranean arranged by Ricky Hyslop. The Great Canadian Gold Rush 10:30 p.m. Celebration, special musical extravaganza featuring top west coast musical talent. TUESDAY, JUNE 15 CBC Tuesday Night 8:03 p.m. Evening with John Cage including the broadcast premiere of 'A Liecture on the Weather', based on the writings of Thoreau and commissioned from this contemporary composer by the CBC in celebration of the U.S. bicentennial. Part TJ. Edith Wharton's short story Roman Fever dramatized for. radio by Henry Comor. , Touch the Earth 10:30 p.m. Music and poetry from Newfoundland. ^ Wednesday, June 9,1976 The Peninsula Times PageB-5 ^r RETURN ENGAGEMENT! Ivfel Brooks' A film by Lina Wertmuller SUN�� H90&9�� TUES JUM 13,14,15 at 8 p.m. THURS o FRI �� SAT IE 10,11,12 af 8 p.m. * RESTRICTED laWihe) ���-j-.Tyfir fiS b ���'' gft ���������Tbi- bTb9 el ������ <������ \"''������ Xm fl; oMi IS wv s�� YY >:.B'>r n s* aSSO tw, ���* ya .- v-.H^Hn.^ Gibsons 886-2827 MATURE Use 'Times' Adbrieis to Sell Bent Buy, Swap, etc. ���SWEPT AWAY' an Italian import acclaimed by many as one of the best productions of the year, opens Sunday at the Twilight Theatre ih Gibsons. Pictured above is Mariangelo Melato in her : role as an aristocrat suddenly dependant on one of her servants for survival. western Mel Brooks' 'Blazing Saddles', hailed by those in the know as the most ridiculous western every made returns to the Twilight Theatre. The film opens tomorrow and runs three nights, featuring the most absurd of sight gags and one-liners. It is guaranteed to entertain, and is of sufficient depth to allow for more than one viewing without wearing: thin. Following this is an Italian import from Europe's controversial director Una Wertmuller. The film is 'Swept Away', an unusual and interesting look at two human beings and how their well-established relationship is changed by circumstance. The acting is superb, and the camera work classed as 'first rate'. New Sterling Silver Charms for your bracelet including the \"B.C. Ferry\" such as had before. ��� Miss Bee's, Sechelt. If you like or don't like us here's your chance to say so and win yourself some money in the bargain. . Dominion Textile Company is awarding $400 and a gold medal to the first place winner in the Canadian Community Newspapers Association Hometown Newspaper contest. To enter you must write an essay of between 250 and 700 words on what the Peninsula Times means to you, your family and friends. Excessively high praise or a polished literary style will not win the contest; entries will be judged on an understanding and an accurate judgement of the function of the newspaper. Entries must be received by the Perinsula Times of fice by Saturday, June 26, They may be sent to Peninsula Times, Box 310, Sechelt B.C.VON3AO. The contest is not open to the paper's staff or to regular contributors to the paper. Squaringly yours BY MAURICE HEMSTREET Hello, dere! fellow square dancers. This past week has been one of great delight for many nice people and full of surprises for two of our nicest square dancers, like on Sunday evening, May 30. The Country Stars held a surprise shower for Mabel Wagmon and Dick Dooley at our house. Now Dick knew that he had to get Mable there but he didn't know that he was going to be on the receiving end of various gifts as well so when they arrived we were in full swing on the square dance floor and then they were taken into a large circle which parted at the right place to reveal two covered chairs surrounded by gifts for both. Tp make a long story short, they were surprised and very pleased to think that the square dancers would do this for them, however, I have told you before that square dancers are fantastic people. By the way, total count was 28. The guests of honour were Mable's mother Anne Drew and Etta and Walt Dooley, Dick's mother and father, who were in turn very pleased with the evening. On behalf of Mable and Dick, we thank the .ladies for the decorations and the great food that was served, .also that talented caller Harry Robertson-who as -usual* called up a real storm, he did mention that it was a real pleasure to use such a nice square dance like mine, chee! tanks, Harry. Well, must get along. Remember, for square dance information, call 885-3359, thank you for now. you ike HE JTENINSULA ...you will love winning $400. That's right ... $400. and a gold medal Is yours if you can write the best essay on what tho ( Name of Paper) means to you. ' \"This is a unique award made to tho reader of a CCNA member paper who best doscribos In his or her own words just what tho weekly paper means to him or her. It is not open to the paper's staff or regular contributors. Tho objective Is to oncourngo the roadors of weekly papers themselves to think about whnt their nowspnpor moans to thorn, tholr families, their llvos and their communities and to sot thoso thoughts down in straightforward language. Polishod litornry expression is not sought.\" This written expression of frank opinion should bo at lonst 250 words, and not more than 700. .Judges will not look for excessively high praise of tho weekly; they will study the judgement nnd understanding by readers of tho paper's function. This could como from a papor of any size - largo or small. This award is modo possible by tho generosity of dominion texti e teti All ontrlos must bo sent to: Tho Peninsula Timet, P.O. Box 310, Sechelt, B.C. Tho dtJftclllne im W#{ln��*doy, Jwr��e 23, }97& June 21 ��� Annual General Meeting of the Sunshine Coast Senior Citizen's Housing Society will take place at 8:00 p.m. at the St. Hilda's Church Hall, Sechelt. June 26 ��� Sechelt Garden Club Flower Show, Senior Citizens Hall, 2-! , June 12 ��� Pender Harbour Lions Club Installation Night. Dinner & pm to 1:30 am, Community Centre, Madeira Park. ilteliiiiiillli Rcirrneinmg (he Community Press m Cuninia 700-13 A78-13 E78-14 F78-14 F70-1B G78-15 SIZES TO FIT LARGE LUXURY CARS AND STATION WAGONS J78-1B' ����� L78-1B ^ J7B-14 Come In now and toko advantage of this spoclal ealo on Goodyoor'a Custom Power Cushion Polynias tire. This is tho tire that started Goodyear's baltod tire revolution. It's become North America's most popular bolted tiro ... ovor 60 million have boon sold, Now, until Juno 30th only, you can buy this groat Polyglas Whitflwoll tiro at vory spoclal salo prlcos and enjoy all tho banefits that mrfdo Polyolas tho favourite of so many car ownors. ��� Betted construction koops troad groovoa opon for good traction ana, handling .., provides a stable rldo. ��� Two tough fiborfjlnss bolts hold , tread firm, roduco woor-producing squirm to mako Polyglas tiros last and Inst, Polyester cord body piles provide strength and a smooth, no-thump rldo. Tho durablo troad has hundreds of anolod biting odgos for sure-footed grip. At thoso prices.. ,/ofn tho revolution Sate ends Juno 30 1 mile wost of Gibsons CHARGEX MASTERCHARGE 688-2700 / u !> O ' -if. v.;:/? ���* ���'<���' A PageB-6 The Peninsula Times Wednesday, June 9,1B76 ies golf tourneys sioi ���' Sunshine and fun were in order as two skipping race, monkey race, shoe and sock schools released their students from the race and a slow hike race. The students were classroom for sports day Friday, June 4. divided into tyke, peewee and bantam Roberts Creek Elementary School opened divisions. All first, second and third place their \"Fun Day\" with a decorated bicycle finishers were awarded ribbons, contest.. Sechelt Elementary held their primary The .primary students, aged five to nine, sports day on June 4. entered dashes, sack races, skipping races Events for the students included an 80 and an obstacle race. Other events included a metre dash, long jump, sackrace, ball throw,. medicine ball throw, bean bag toss, bean bag skipping race, obstacle course, tire race, throw, golf ball and spoon race, hockey standing broad jump, and wheel barrow race. dribbling and tire rolling contest. Ail par- Novelty events such as hdckeybaU, a block A ^ of tournaments have kept the Hidden-hole winner was Iva Peterson, ticipants in the dash, sack race and skipping and spoon race, a basketball toss and frisbee ^^ Qol{ club bl&y oVer the pagt m Edna Fishef wag ^ ^ hole hidden.hole race were awarded ribbons. In the other tosg> a ring and Dean bag target contest, a weeks. > winner. events all those who met their age standard shoe scramble and a fetch and carry race On Tuesday, May 25, the Canadian Ladies The Blind Partner Tournament saw Jessie were awarded ribbons. were j^o held. For the ambitious there was Golfers Association Pin Day Round was held. Pritchard and Iva Peterson place first in the Intermediate students at Roberts Creek an optional marathon run and high jump. m Bullied won the first division longest eighteen hole, entered the dash, three-legged race, crab First, second, third and fourth prize rib- drive-while Joey Johnson placed first in the The nine hole winners were Edna Fisher race, obstacle race, wheel barrow race, bons were awarded in all events. second division, longest drive. ***\" JF AAr ' F % ME. A meeting has been scheduled for June 14 locally would mean teams would no longer to discuss, formation of ,a senior soccer have to travel to-Vancouver for competition, association on the Sunshine Coast. ' \"Last year it cost a team about $1,500 for Stanley Joe, coach of Sechelt Pegasus, told travelling,\" he said, \"now with the ferry. The Times the meeting would be held in the fares going up, it will cost about $3,000 for a Sechelt Indian Band Office at 7:30. p.m. team to travel.\" M��j��ysaid there were more than enough ..Je \"j\"i*^,fffitLS'SiJ players on the Sunshine Coast to form the t^tSS^SSluM^iZ necessary teams for an assoctotio. *j�� Sdhas^rown to right \"This meeting will be for everyone in- & f terested in senior soccer on the Sunshine u We will go by the turnout at this meeting Coast,\" he said, \"that's players, coaches, ������r| or n0* *\" a8*5001811011 wU1 be for= managers. Once we have the people out, we m ' oe sald' can get an idea of how many are interested Sechelt Indian Band is presently clearing and we can discuss formation of the land for a second field. This one is located in association and the election of officers.\" the West Porpoise Bay area adjacent the B.C. Joe said the formation of an association Hydro right of way. t ��.1 I i j *������ % JS�� t��v yf '* r ft m, ����� t |��S^I *1'\" SA'Jf****\" **** '* . j^3*��Aa^ A BEVY of beautiful bicycles entered Creek Elementary's Fun Days. Winners Kuran, second, Debbie Arnold and third, and Jenny Tucker placed second in the the decorated bicycle contest at Roberts in the primary division were, first, Peter Terry Hodson. Lori Jovick placed first intermediate \"division. I t*fZ. -7>; ��i .It X V 3N?^ r rXB .- ^ n . %r' *w-*V. )i '\"*�� isrt t: * qf N' s' r- ���r ���r lorborg wins Don Morberg, Peninsula Times editor, is this year's Molson Swami. Don won the Molson Swami Award for guessing, in January that the Montreal Canadiens would win the Stanley Cup in five games. (They won it in four.) The Swami Award an annual event, is open to all media people in Western Canada. First prize of $200 and the Molson Swami Award Trophy was presented to Don at* a luncheon on June 7 in Vancouver. Two hundred dollars will also be awarded to the charity of Don's choice. Pat Karl, of CJVB Vancouver won $100 for predicting a Montreal Canadian win in six games. The annual contest is sponsored by Molson Brewery Ltd. ishing derby The Sechelt Peninsula Rod and Gun Club is sponsoring a fishing derby. The derby began May 1 and will continue until Labour Day. Prizes will be awarded for the largest fish and for the hidden weight fish every month. A season prize will be awarded for the largest fish. Tickets for the derby are available from Dan Currie, George Flay and Derek Nelson. . \"*��� ��� Fish can be weighed in at the Buccaneer GEORGE MOORE, Loren Procter and Kenny Dempster get off to a good start in race at Roberts Creek's Sports Day. Marina, Tillicum Marina, Big Maple Hotel, at Harold Nelson's on Mermaid Street and at SmWSS^SM^'- :^^^^it^^4^Sa^^^^^a^��lli' miM^^^^^^mB^u^i^m Budd Feamley's in West Sechelt, Fish should not be dressed when weighed. George Flay, Dan Currie and Walter Flay were awarded life memberships in the Rod and Gun Club at the Club's May meeting. The three have been members in the club since 1953. With Dow Styrofoam Super- Insulation you enjoy extra comfort all year 'round - and you save money on your home- heating bills for as long as you own your home. Super- Insulation literally builds you a wall against inflation in the cost of fuel aand energy. Featuring simplicity of installation for the builder and permanent cost- saving efficency for you, the homeowner. Also ideal for permanent floatation for your moorage or swimming floats. ��� ALSO ������ See us for fishing tackle of any kind, and have a look at the Killweil Portable Smoker ��� a conveniently carried smoker so you can custom smoke your catch - on the spot! Plus the \"WEED EATER\" is back. Curious about it? Drop in and we'll tell you all the details. 1/ * V i f Yi'tl t jpijYi1 \" /TO> f'TVA ' Vm' 7X^W #T��WiV1 ,'iH ��' *> \\#y y> fv; �����' ���4 vtmzk m MMl�� Gibson's \"Beachcombers\", volleyball team won the provincial championship at the n��� mnt_ , ���,,./, BCVA Bantam Girls Provincial Volleyball \"OH, TO be a snake . . .\" Kwin Grauer Championship. and Loren Procter squirm through the The tournament was held at Norkam obstacle course at Roberts Creek School, Kamloops, on May 29 and 30. Elementary Sports Day. \"The Beachcombers\" remained un-' . defeated throughout the tournament to win the championship. Efficient windshield wipers are essential Members of the team are Captain, Debbie to safe driving. When cleaning car windows McDonald, assistant captain Shannon always check wiper blades. A small in- O'Hcrn, Christie Campbell, Diane Campbell, vestment for regular replacements can be Shannon Macey and Marnle Jamieson. The major life insurance. team is coached by Ian Jacob. un�� y Ay x,X m ^aJLj\\< V��<*> mmWlmVlliStAmmmmtoiM > '�� ll<��l*�� I , X 4 ;4W\"��YYV^s*ff ��: .��' i. 'i,.i ���'B$M% xX^Xa'x tXf< *x< rfmT1 'X'\\o ' H m��<��)yS^X'i , /\"��t t W'f?jj j1 \"'��#���,' *���>�� ��� ' I v*f ��^y ���' '' DEiWtu; ARNOLD displays the prize in the decorated bicycle contest nt decorated bieycks that won her necond Roberts Creek Elementary. 3 SPEEE-5 SPEED-10 SPEED ��monashee ��eliminator o appolio o ccm - full rango of ��lxo�� and apoed* ��� plus accosaorloa & aofoty flags PUT IT ON HOLD ... WE WILL GLADLY STORE IT FOR YOU TILL GRADUATION DAY Cowrie St. 885-2512 Sechelt 0 a e . a father's day gift from ! fine men's wear we have a gift for that special man in your life��� (in tho heart of sechelt) 885-9330 IBB 3S3S SOB jMBagsaaaaas S.!Wf��'WW!fwy'!Mag^ag ^ * A > Y A ., . / / \\ in-, ) A / ... Y ���:X \\ ��� XX ���\\ . . X ' '<���' The way has'been cleared for Sunshine Coast Regional Board to introduce a firearms control bylaw. ��� A provincial order-in-council dated May 13 granted a change in the regional board's letters patent. The change allows the regional board to assume the function of firearms control. It is necessary for regional boards to gain a function before they can operate in that area and levy taxation. The board has proposed that a no-shooting area be,set up roughly between the B.C. Hydro right-of-way and the Strait of Georgia. . The plan has met with opposition from outdoor clubs on the Sunshine Coast. TRAIN GOING SO FAST Next time you have an urge to beat the oncoming train through a grade crossing, remember these words of advice from the BCAA: a train gives the illusion of going slower than it is actually travelling. BCAA says a train, travelling 60 mph requires at least 1 and one-half miles to make an emergency stop. 1 ��� > tonadians, on pur marks... If you've ever wanted to prove that your caterpillar-powered skateboard is the best form of transportation around, your chance has come. The Great Canadian Race will be held June 19 to 26, starting from the Canadian National Exhibition grounds in Toronto. The race includes thirty-six categories which are divided among three classes. Contestants may enter as many categories as they wish. Classes A and B are divided into six categories, ecology, comfort, ingenuity, silliness, hoodwinking and antique. Class A includes all non-motorized vehicles and class B includes all motorized vehicles. Classes A and B will also be divided into land, sea ahd air transportation. Class C includes the Tour des provinces bicycle race, the Sneaker foot race, the Voyageur canoe race and the Hot Air-balloon race. All contestants will start.in Toronto and proceed along the St. Lawrence River route to 1 Montreal. Contestants are expeqted to travel 40 to 45 miles per day. Arrangements are being made to pick up any who drop out. Prizes will be awarded in all categories. A Grand Champion will be chosen by a com bination of popular vote and a panel of judges. ^The public will be able to vote during a telethon by pledging one dollar for every vote. Proceeds will be turned over to charitable organizations and to the Canadian Olympic fund. * - Application forms can be obtained from The Great Canadian Race, 199 Richmond Street West, Toronto, Ontario. There is an entry fee;of $10 per category entered. Glenn Phillips of Sechelt was elected arena president by the arena directors at the monthly meeting May 27th. Phillips was active in the building of the arena and has served on the arena board for two years. He is also active in the curling club. At the same meeting Joe Fisher was elected Vice-president, Dana Kearney was elected secretary and Bev Morrishaw was elected treasurer.- r siio Wednesday, June 9,1976 The Peninsula Times PageB-7 set Juno Sechelt Garden Club had their -last . meeting before recessing for the summer on June 2. Visitors' Margaret Benin and Susan Dunkerton, were welcomed to the meeting. Eric Wilson reported that plans were . complete for the June 26 Flower Show.. The show will be competitive and will include special exhibits of flowers, pot plants and arrangements. A 'Wild Flowers Collection' category will be open to children aged 12 and under. On July 28 the. club will travel to Bellingham to present the Birchwood Garden Club with a Canadian Dogwood tree in honour of the U.S. Bi-centennial. The Dogwood tree will be planted in Memorial Park, Bellingham. Jo Postlethwaite and her committee were given a vote of thanks for their work on the Club's Timber Day Float. . A club picnic will be held at the home Of Mrs. Louise Belfour of Roberts Creek in late August. The next meeting will be held September 1 at 7:30 p.m. in St. Hilda's Hall. . The rezoning of the YMCA subdivision from R2 to Rl was approved at the Regional' Board meeting on, May 27 after much heated discussion. Director Peter Hoemberg voted against the rezoning of the. area because he felt it was discriminatory. He said if the residents did not want to allow trailers in the area they should apply for a restrictive covenant on the land. He'did not agree with the board making the decision to rezone. He called it 'economic segregation'. - . Director Jim Metzler said he agreed thai the board should not be discriminatory but he felt that Hoemberg's objection had nothing to do with the passing of .the bylaw as it was a separate matter. , , Residents of the subdivision have asked the board to change the zoning from R2 to Rl because they are upset about mobile homes being placed on the property. At present no single-wide mobile homes are allowed in an\" Rl zone although double wides are allowed under the bylaw because they are classified, ���as permanent residences. - Previously the position of the board was to try and remove the distinction between Rl and R2, or the distinction between single family dwellings and mobile homes. Hoemberg said, \"the board didn't feel it should impose such an aesthetic control in financially troubled times.\" In passing the changes Hoemberg, felt the board was entering into an area they should stay out of legislating aesthetics for mobile , homes and thereby discriminating against the people with lower incomes. The YMCA is paying $400 to cover the costs of amending regulations. A public hearing on June 7 will deal' with the rezoning changes as well as Bylaw 96 on land use regulations. If you walk to work, it won't be work sxj to walk. ^^ panTiciPacnant Fitness. In your heart you know it's right. ���*���*\" WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9 CHANNEL2 CHANNEL4 . CHANNEL 5 CHANNELS CHANNEL7' CHANNEL8 CHANNEL 12 00 15 30 45 00 15 30 ���45 00 15 30 45 00 15 30 45 00 1 15 30 45 8 00 15 30 45 00 15 30 45 -0 ' oo .15 30 45 11 00 15 30 45 12 All In The Family Edge Of Nfght $20,000 Pyramid One Life To Live Another Worid Another World Ironside Ironside Edae Of Nfght All In The Family Match Game '76 Pat Quinn Celebrity Dominoes All In , , The Family Match Game 76 Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks It's Your Choice Partridge Family Bob Switzer Hour Glass Hour Glass XXI ��� Olypiad Mayor Drapeau Mayor Drapeau Sense of Place Sense of Place Jubilay Jubilay Jubilay Jubilay News News Final Movie General Hospital\" Happy . Days Somerset Somerset Movie: \"Kidnapped Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks Tattletales Tattletales Dinah Dinah What's The Good Word Another World Tattletales Tattletales Diamond Head Game 00 Forest Merv P?d^X ,, That , Dinah Another Funorama 15 Rangers Griffin McDowall , Girl Dinah World Funorama 30 Mr. Merv Sue News Dinah Brady Fantastic 45 Dressup Griffin England News Dinah Bunch Four Merv Griffin Merv ��� Griffin Maiy Hartman News News News News News News News News News News The F.B.I. Merv Griffin Merv Griffin News News News News News News News News Montreal Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd News Hour Mike, Douglas News Hour News Hour Cont'd News Walter Cronkite To Tell The Truth Last of The Wild Truth or Consequences The Wild Kingdom Little House On The Prairie Mike Douglas New Price Is Right The War Years The War Years Hollywood Squares Doctor in The House Bionic Woman Bionic Woman Little House On The Prairie TBA TBA TBA TBA Tony Orlando And Dawn Bionic Woman Bionic Woman Tony Orlando And Dawn Baretta Baretta Baretta Baretta Sanford & Son Chico & The Man Sense of Place Sense of Place Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Movie: \"Salzburg Connection\" Barry Maude Maude - Toma Toma Starsky & Hutch Starsky & Hutch Hawk Hawk Hawk Hawk 'Jubilay Jubilay Jubilay Jubilay Blue Knight Blue\" Knight Newman Anna Karma Cont'd Toma Toma Bronk Bronk News News Movie: \"Matt News News Tonight Show News News News News News News Mod Squad News News News News Bronk Bronk Movie: \"Gum 00 \"The Killer 15 That 30 n Stalked 45^ New York Helm\" Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Tonight Show Tonight Show Movie: \"Deadlier Than The Male Mod Squad Movie: Cont'd Movie: \"It Takes All Kinds\" Shoe\" Albert Finny Cont'd THURSDAY, JUNE 10 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 CHANNELS CHANNELS CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 00 1.15 ,30 :45 All In . The Family EdaoOf Night $20,000 Pyramid One Life To Live Another Ironside All In World Ironside The Family __ _ Another EdoeOf Motch Celebrity World Night Game '76 Dominoes Patty Duke All In ��� The Family Match Game '76 00 :15 :30 45 Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks General Hospital Happy Days Somerset Somerset Movie: \"look Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks Tattletales Tattletales Dinah Dinah .What's The ��� Good Word Another World Tattletales Tattletales Diamond Head Game .00 :15 :30 ���45 Forest, Rangers .Mr. Dressup Merv Griffin Merv Griffin Homeward\" Robert Bray Cont'd The Flintstones It's Your Choice Dinah Dinah Dinah Dinah Another Worid Brady Bunch Funorama Funorama Aqua man Aqua man 00 15 30 .45 lt!s Your Choice - Partridge Family , Merv Griffin News News Ma ry Hartman News News That Girl Island News News News News News The F.B.I. The F.B.I. Merv Griffin Merv Griffin 6 .00 :15 ���30 45 Sportscene Sportscene Hour Glass News News News News News News News News News Hour News Hour Walter Cronkite Mike- Douglas News Hour News Hour Cont'd News Walter Cronkite ,00 '.15 :30 :45 8 00 ^15 :30 :45 00 :15 :30 :45 10 oo 15 30 :45 11 12 Hour Glass Where the Sky Begins To Tell The Truth World , of Animals Killer Whale Let's Make A Deal Lawrence Welk Lawrence Welk Mike Douglas For You Seattle Viva Valdez Excuse My French ?y��99e Space 1999 Carol Burnett Carol Burnett Kotter Kotter Barney Miller Mac Davis Mac Davis Carol Burnett Carol ' Burnett The Waltons The Waltons Streets of San Francisco The Waltons The Waltons Fellow Americans Points . West 'Streets of San , Francisco Movie: \"Winner Take All Police Woman Police Woman Hawaii Five-O Hawaii Five-O The Practise MacLear MacLear Not On Your Nellie Movie: \"The America America America America Harry-O Harry O Harry-O Harry-O Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Baretta Baretta Baretta Baretta Barnaby Jones. Barnaby Jones Harry-O Harry-O Harry-O Harry-O Magic' Christian\" Peter Sellers :00 News :15 News ���30 Final :45 Movie: News News Mannix &The News News Tonight Show News News News News News News Mod Squad News News News News Raquel Welch Movie: \"The :00 \"The :15 Guilt :30 of Janet :45 Ames\" Magician Mannix and the Magician Tonight Show Tonight Show Movie; \"Betrayal\" Cont'a7 Cont'd Mod Squad Movie: Cont'd Movie: \"Once Upon A Dead Man\" Last Grenade\" Stanley Baker FRIDAY, JUNE 11 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 CHANNEL 5 CHANNEL 6 CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 00 15 30 45 All In , The Family Edge Of Night $20,000 Pyramid One Life To Live Another World Another World Ironside Ironside Edge Of Night All In The Family Match Game '76 Gun\" Cont'd Celebrity Dominoes All In The Family Match Game '76 00 15 30 45 Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks General Hospital Happy Days - Somerset Somerset Movie: \"Kung ��� Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks Tattletales Tattletales Dinah Dinah What's The Good Word Another World Tattleta es Tattletales ��� Bewitched Bewitched 00 15 30 45 Forest Rangers Mon Ami Fr. Giant. 00 15 30 45 It's Your Choice Partridge Family 00 15 30 45 00 15 30 45 00 15 30 45 00 'Si ���45 10 00 ,15 ���30 45 11 00 .15 30 45 12 00 ,15 30 45 Bob NewJiart Hour Glass Hour Glass Mr. Chips Mary T. Moore MASH MASH Catch A Rising Star Police Story Police Story News News Night Final , Movin' On. Movin' On\" Merv Griffin Merv Griffin Fu\" David Carradine Cont'd The Flintstones It's Your Choice Dinah Dinah Dinah Dinah Another World Brady Bunch Funorama Funorama Journey To The Centre of Earth Merv Griffin News News Mary Hartman News News That Girl Island, News News News News News The F.B.I. The F.B.I. Merv Griffin Merv Griffin News News News News, News News News News News Hour News Hour Walter Walter Mike Douglas News Hour News Hour Cont'd News Walter Cronkite To Tell The Truth World Of Magic Truth Or Consequences Hollywood Squares Rockford Files Rockford Files Mike Douglas Candid Camera Sanford &Son Movie: McMillan Candid Camera Let's Make A Deal Donny & Marie Donny &. Marie Sanford' &Son The Practise Mary T. Moore MASH MASH Sara Sara Sara Sara &Wife \"Secrets For Sale\" Sara Sara Sara Sara Movie: \"The Honkers\" James Rockford Files Rockford Files Tommy Hunter Show Cont'd Movie: \"The Salzburg Connection\" Cont'd Cont'd . \" Grand Ol1 Country Movie: \"Mary, Mary\" Debbie Coburn Anne Archer Cont'd Police Story Police Story Ellery Queen Ellery Queen Barry Newman Anna Karina Kojak Koiak Kojak Kojak Reynolds Barry Nelson Cont'd News News The Rookies News News Tonight Show News News News News News News Mod Squad News News News News Cont'd Cont'd Movie: \"Arrow- The Rookies The Rookies Tonight Show Tonight Show ��� Movie ; \"House Of Usher\" Mod Squad Nightmare Theatre Movie: \"Premature Burial\" Cont'd head\" Charlton Heston Cont'd SATURDAY, JUNE 12 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 CHANNEL 5 CHANNEL 6 CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 00 r rTBA^ 15 TBA* 30 TBA 45 TBA 00 15 30 45 4 00 15 30 45 00 :15 30 45' 00 15 30 45 00 1:15 30 45 10 oo 15 30 45 11 ;00 :15 30 45 12 00 15 30 45 Untamed \"World Medix Medix French Tennis Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd The Kemper Open Golf Keith'Y McColl Show Biz CBC Saturday Sports Cont'd Impact impact Inner City Cont'd . Cont'd Movie: \"Along Sports Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Sportsman's Friend Movie: \"Gunfight Good Times Champion Tennis 00 TBA 15 TBA 30 Klondike 45 Stakes Medicine Men The - . . Fisherman' The Great Divide\" Cont'd Outdoor Sportsman CBC CBC At Red Sands\" Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd World Sports Lost Island Kotter Kotters Wide World of Sports Animal World News News Lost Island Kotter Kotter Cont'd Cont'd News News Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd News News Rainbow Country Primus Primus 32 Wis\" This Is Law Faulty Towers , David Copper- fleW Cont'd John Davidson Variety Show News News News Mdvl Final Odedlan Line, Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd News News ��� News News ���' ��� Supersonic Show News News Rainbow Country News News ���?BS\" All Star Wrestling All Star- Wrestling Lawrence Welk Lawrence Welk Cora Jung Cora Jung Hawaii '��� FIve-O Hawaii FIve-O Space 1999 Doc Doc Emergency Emergency Emergency Emergency Good, Heavens Movie: \"The Movie: , \"Invasion of Johnson This Is . The Law Faulty , Towers , The Jeffersons Screen Test The Jeffersons Harris . Family Nobody Wanted\" Cont'd County\" Cont'd Cont'd. Cont'd David Copper- ,field Cont'd Mary T. Moore Bob Nowhart ' Movie; \"The Invasion Of Bert D'Angelo Super Star Entertainment John '76 Davidson Cont'd Cont'd Variety Show Dinah Shore , Variety Show Johnson County Bill Blxby News News , News Movie: Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd News News Movie; \"Two Movie; \"Plonlc\" William Holden ' News Nowj ��� News News \"The True Story of Jessie J< The ' Kemper Open Golf r2ge Outlook Outlook Channel 12 Bewitched Bewitched Sports ��� Spectacular Sports Spectacular News News Channel ��� 12 Special Habitat Special Hollywood Squares Doc Doc Mary T. Moore Bob Newhart Movie: \"Call 1�� . Donger Peter Graves Movie: \"Never Funny Side People\" Kim Movie: Too of Peter Novak \"Puzzle of Late\" Eastern Fonda Cont'd a Dpwnfallen Paul James Canada Cont'd Cont'd Child\" Ford 2 oo 15 30 45 00 15 30' 45 SUNDAY, JUNE 13 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 . CHANNEL S CHANNEL 6 CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 4 00 15 ;30 45 6 00 :15 :30 45 ;00 :15 :30 45 8 :00 15 30 45 ,00 ';�� 45 10 00 15 30 45 Cont'd- Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Sailor\" Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Food For �����' Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Golf Tourn Cont'd Cont'd 8srT Toum Cont'd 12 00 :15 ;30 4,5 This Land Summer Canada Cont'd Cont'd World Tennis Movie: \"The Last Rebel\" This Land Country Canada Virgil Ward Movie: \"Five Star Trek Star Trek Music To See Speaking Classie Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd ., Evergreen Express, Learning Leisure Speaking Out Finger Excercise\" Rosalind Russell Horst; Koehler Question Period 500 Hyi ,15 Sin 30 Bla ng ack Beauty To Tell The Truth South by Northwest Meet the Press News News Hymn ��'\"9, / Student Forum Cont'd . Cont'd Winston Churchill Untamed ��� World Capital Comment , World of Disney World of Disney News News Viewpoint Viewpoint News News How Come? News News News News News News World At War News News. News News Beachcombers Irish Rovers Untamed World Cont'd Cont'd Wonderful World of Disney Beachcombers Irish Rovers 60 Minutes 60 Minutes Six Million Dollar Man The Waltons The , Waltons Six Minion Dollar Man Fall of Eagles CoTit'd The ' Waltons . The Waltons Sonny & Cher Sonny & Cher Sonny & Cher Sonny 8, Cher Upstairs Downstairs Upstairs Downstairs Movie; \"Love Among The Movie: McMJIIan \"Secrets Upstairs Downstairs Upstairs Downstairs Days Before Yesterday Ruins\" Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Sale\" Cont'd Cont'd Days Before Yesterday Bronk Bronk Bronk Bronk W-5 W-5 W-5 W-5 _ _ 00 News lis? H* Movie: News News W*wi* Movie: News Nows Movie: \"House News News Nowi Movie- News News ' The Champions Nows News News News \"Strange Bed Follows\" Cont'd \"Blood Hounds ���of Broadway\" of '. Wax\" Cont'd Cont'd \"Puzzle of a Dpwnfallen Child\" The Champloni Movlei Cont'd Open Golf Tourn Cont'd Old Time Gospel Hour Channel 12 Special Face the Nation Sonny &, Cher Sonny & Cher One Day At A Time News News 60 Minutes 60 Minutes Rhoda Rhoda Phyllis Phy Is Movie: \"Night' mare Alley\" Tyrone Powor BJondel1 News Movlei \"Frogs'1 Ray Mil land Sam Elliot Cont'd 00 15 30 '45 3 00 15 30 45 4 00 15 :30 45 00 15 30 45 MONDAY, JUNE 14 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 CHANNEL 5 CHANNEL 6 CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 6 ���oo .15 30 45 00 ;15 30 45 :00 ,15 ,30 :45 9 ;00 15 :30 45. 10 oo :15 30 45 11 ;00 15 30 45 Allln' , the Family Edge of Nfght $20,000 Pyramid One Life To Live Another' Worid Another World Ironside Ironside Edge of Night All In The Family Match Game '76 Tryon Cont'd Celebrity Dominoes All In the Family Match Game '76 00 8 A 30 45 Take Thirty Celebrity Cooks General Hospital Happy Days Somerset Somerset Movie: \"The Take Thirty Celebeity Cooks ' Tattletales Tattletales Dinah Dinah Whate'sThe Good Word Another World Tattletales Tattletales Bewitched Bewitched Forest Rangers Mr. Dressup Merv Griffin, Merv Griffin Oklahoman\" Joel ��� McCrea Cont'd The Flintstones It's Your Choice. Dinah Dinah Dinah Dinah Another World Brady Bunch Funorama Funorama Batman Batman It's Your C ho Ice Partridge Family Merv Griffin News , News Mary Hartman News . News That Girl Island News News News News News The F.B.I. The F.B.I. Merv Griffin Merv Griffin Water World Hour Glass News News News News News News News News News Hour News Hour Walter Cronkite Mike ' Douglas News Hour News Hour Merv News , Walter Cronkite Hour Glass Reach for The Top To Tell the Truth , Issues '76 Truth or Consequences Hollywood Squares The Doctors Tho Doctors Mike Douglas S25,000 . Pyramid Soccer '76 Headline Hunters Let's Make A Deal Billy , Graham ioda Rhodi Rhodi TBA TBA Viva Valdez John Davidson Variety Show Rhoda Rhoda Happy Days Rhoda Rhoda National Goographic Cont'd y Cont'd Billy Graham MASH MASH The Family Chico & , The Man Baseball Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Joe , Forrester Joe Forrester All In TheF Chico & The Man All In , The Family Maude' Maude Joo Forrester Joe Forrester Medical Centre Medical Centre Nature of Things Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Jigsaw JoTin Jigsaw \"Jonn V.I.P. v:i:p: Nature ��� of Things Medical Centre Medical Centre Pig and Whistle One Ddy At A Time Movie: ��� \"Seven In , Darkness' News News', Final Movlei' Nows News ��� Special: Getting News News Tonight Show News News News News News News Mod Squad Nows Nows News Nows Milton Berle Movie: \"Come \"Six Black Horses\" Cont'd Married\" Cont'd Cont'd Cont'd Tpnlght Show Tpnlght Show Movie; \"Hot Enough for June\" Mod Squad Movie: Cont'd Movie: \"Doctor ln ��� Love\" Fly With Cont (1 The Sunshine Coast Lions Cl.lib and The 1976 Timber Days Committee wish to thank the following businesses and groups for their support and assistance In making this year's and last year's Timber Days Bavarian Gardens a success: Tyee Bait Ltd., Sechelt Building Supplies (1971) Ltd., Molsons Breweries, Quest Electric, B.C. Hydro, Allen and Co.: Surveyors, Big Macs Superette, Campbells Variety, Royal Bank, Legion, Senior Citizens, Sechelt Indian Band, and St. Hilda's Church. Robert W. Allen Chairman, Bavaria^ Gordons '. . lym, sW\"f m pm _m ��#yw �����\"nsmiJgTjMu��wfi'w,'*a.' vu'Tw M't1 'j\" tf ���\"! ������ ��� ��'��� i \"u' itav\" ��������� ��� '-wff a,i!W\"����w*~ < ��� 1. . ��� - ... .. .... ��� *���_- -.. . ..-��� . m-- . j. -^....j. .. . .r|| f ��� | r rr ���-- , - - -��� -��� r - .[.-J.. ���-, -^ TeAMSCENDENT ,S''J* .�� '!\" f hursday, 8 p.m. > whitaker house' sechelt ��� for Information phone ��� Daryl or Carol 885-3342 7��� 00 I 15 ��� 32 .45 00 13 30 45 00 IS 30 4ft 00 15 30 4ft 6 00 05 30 45 TUESDAY, JUNE 15 CHANNEL 2 CHANNEL 4 CHANNEL 5 CHANNEL 6 CHANNEL 7 CHANNEL 8 CHANNEL 12 Allin .. the Family Edge of Night ' $20,000 Pyramid One Life To Live Another World Anothor World Ironside Ironside Edge of Nfoht Allln , the Family Match Game '76 Wisdom Cont'd Celebrity Dominoes All In , the Family Match Gamo '76 00 15 30 4ft 8 00 If) no 45 9 00 ��� ,1�� 30 45 10 11 on 15 30 12 Take Thlrtv Celebrity Cooks Gonoral Hospital Happy Days -Somorsot Somerset Movlei \"Rod Take Thirty Colobrlty Cooks Tatt eta ns Tattlatalei Dinah Dinah Whot's tho Good Word ra Tatt eta nt Tattletales Bewltahod Bewitched ' Forest , Rangers Mr. Dressup Morv Griffin Morv Griffin Tomg- llawk\" C ont 'd Cont'd Fl Intstonos U'sYour Choice Dinah Dinah Dinah Dlnali 'orflT Brady Bunch ���cc Funorama Funorama Doollttln It's Your Cholco Merv Griffin News, Nows Mary Madman Nowi News That Girl Island News News Nows News News in .11.1. Merv Griffin Merv Griffin Barney Miller Gil News News News Nows Nows Nowi Newi Newi Newi Hour Nowi Hour Walter Cronklto MlU, Douglai ^ttwi lour ^lowi lour Cont'd Nowi Walter Cronkite Hour et, tlon ;ira- H N p Toll he Truth xplorotlon ortliweit Truth nr Coniequencei Orlando Namo nnd That Tune Dawn Tony Jrla Mike, fee10' Pouglrii Bobby Vinton Hawaii- Flve-0 ���M.OVI,, Wore A tha I: vino no o On The Evidence Happy Dayi Lavqrna A Shirley Movln' On Movln' On pnTho Lvldanca On Tho tvldonco I've Got A Secret Good Timet Hawall- hvo-6 John Allen Cameron Yellow RlUon\" John Wayne flConcprt Look Who's Here S.W.A. 5.W.A. S.W.A. S.W.A. Complete Doro\" Soo To Ounelvnt The Rookloi Americana C Ity of Anrjeli Cltypf Ana* 11 C Ity nf Annols Summer cW Cont'd Olympiad Cont'd Cont'd All In , The Family Owen Manliall Newi Newi final Movlei Newi Nowi Moylpi \"Night News Nowi Tpnlght Show ^lowi ^Iflwi ^jewi NftWI Now! NtlWI Mod , Squad Nowi Newi Newi Newi Owon Manliall Movie i \"The \" lady Clio 45 Colli ten\" I'd It Th�� time For Kill Ino\" Ipnlfjht Mu��w Tpnlnht Show Movloi \"Sociret Worid'of Hurry Frloo\" Mod {iCJlltlfl Movlei Cont'd Movie i \"Baltlo of The Hlvor plate\" Poarlmi Vamplra KHUrt\" Cont'd SWAPiEET ��Sunday, June 13th ��10 a.m. to ? ��Roberts Creek Recreation Centre [noxtto Golf Courso] PROCEEDS TO ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND IN REC. SITE COME & BUY & SELL Coast Family Society NOTICE of MEETING SUNSHINE COAST SENIOR CITIZEN'S HOUSING SOCIETY Tho Annual Gonoral Mooting will tako placo on Monday, June 21. 1976 at 8:00 p.m. at tho ST. HILDA'S CHURCH HAU, SECHELT All mombm are roquo��1ed to attond COZY CORNER CAMERAS BESIDE BUS DEPOT camera and darkroom supplies * repairs * photoflnifthlng * passport pictures 886-7822 Gibsons V A yA ��- '���' // \"������> X. ���'���' / x -. /' ) ���>/ PageB-8 The Peninsula Times \\ U&u&\\ Wednesday, June 9,1976 I- ��� ������. - N '��fnl&&fe ��� 9*&r** NEXT YEAR'S executive was sworn in at the annual general meeting of the Sunshine Coast District Scouting Association June 1. Ena Harrold, left, was presented with her 25 year pin, commemorating a quarter century of service to the Scouting movement. The awarding of a twenty-five year service pin and the election of next year's executive were the highlights at the annual general meeting of the Sunshine Coast District Scouting Association, June 1st. Ena Harrold of Roberts Creek was presented with her twenty-five year service pin by association president Verne Wishlove. Maureen Partridge of Gibsons was awarded a five year service pin. Ivan Smith was elected to a second term as District Commissioner. He appointed Nora Robinson as assistant commissioner in charge of training and Dave Wilson as assistant commissioner in charge of Cubs and Beavers. Verne Wishlove and Norm Burley were elected as president and honorary president respectively. Secretary Marg Maedel and treasurer John Goodwin were re-elected. Lionel McCuaig was elected vice- president and Kurt Hoehne and Joan Quarry were elected as Members-at-large. The regional vice-presidents for the coming year are Jack Vanderpoll, Pender Harbour; Audrey Cobleigh, Sechelt; Jay Church, Wilson Creek; Ena Harrold, Roberts Creek; and Doug Honeybunn, Gibsons. Guests Ed O'Brien and the Reverend Tom Speed brought greetings from Scout House. Ed O'Brien congratulated the district on organizing their first Beaver colony and said he hoped to see many more colonies established in the district. aiaar set Sechelt Indian Band Homemakers Club will be having their annual bazaar on Saturday, June 19, at the Reserve Hall. The bazaar will include a bake sale, take- a-chance table and kiddies' fish pond. A man's Indian vest, size 40, will be raffled off. Second prize will be a child's sweater, size 5, and third prize will be a child's vest, size 5. The vests and sweater were made by Margaret Joe and Tillie August. The raffle prizes will be displayed at the Trail Bay Centre Mall. Tickets for the raffle will go on sale at the Mall starting Friday, June 11. Tickets may also be bought at the bazaar and in other locations in the area before the bazaar. B The information meeting of the mini-bus for this year didn't break any great attendance records; but those who did attend found it most informative and interesting. The meeting held in the Senior Citizens Hall, Wednesday, June 2 with chairman John Lewis and secretary Hugh Duff on the platform. Unable to attend were, directors Les English and George Hopkins. '\" A pleasant surprise came when the $20 paid for the use of the hall was refunded; an anonymous donor had kindly donated the funds. This was the second annual information meeting and a rundown was given on how it all got started. The realization that transportation was a major priority on the Sunshine Coast with a lot of people without cars or spouses who don't drive, so if illness strikes the driver in the family, there goes the transportation; Sechelt Motor Transport is geared to the ferries so times are not always convenient. Raising enough money to purchase a small bus, it was then advised by Human Resouces Minister Norm Levi to lease one. The government pays for the lease plus operating expenses, as they gave exactly the budget asked for. The lease expires in December at such time with the $12,000 raised previously, part will be taken to purchase the leased bus and balance turned over to the government. The powers that be will in turn pay for the lease of another bus. The original bus can then be used for wheelchair patients with the seats left out. A further donation of $2,700 which also included interest on money in the bank went to pay expenses; two sets of tires $300 each, modification of the bus, including grab rail and metal step, overhauling and general upkeep of a vehicle. The Mini-bus has travelled 43,000 miles carried 10,000 people and is now an important part of the communities it serves. John Lewis always an interesting speaker outlined the list of priorities, first, td the hospital, second to the Medical Center, then .chiropractor, optometrist and so on. The dispatcher, with 24 hours advance notice, is able to arrange the days trips to accommodate most conveniently for all. Passengers are requested to tell the hospital or the clinic they are travelling by the bus and they will arrange appointments to coincide with bus times. I Who rides the bus? This Is a public vehicle if you have to be treated' healthwlse or otherwise phone the dispatcher the number is 885-3251 and it will be up the dispatcher to decide. Money is not a factor, need is. ST. HILDA'S ANGUCAM CHURCH, Socholt SERVICES EVERY SUNDAY: 8:30 and 10 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL: 10 a.m. Madeira Park Legion Hall Services 1st and 3rd Sundays at 2 pm IHE REV. N. J. GODKIN, 883-2640 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Pastor C. Drloborg SABBATH SCHOOL-Sat, 2:30 pm HOUR OF WORSHIP- Sat, 4:00 pm ST. JOHN'S UNITED CHURCH DAVIS BAY Everyone Welcome For information Phone 885-9750 883-2736 SUNSHINE COAST GOSPEL CHURCH Davis Bay Road at Arbutus Davis Bay Sunday School............. 10:00 a.m, Morning Service ...., 11:15 a.m. Evening Service .7:00 p.m. Wed. Prayer and Bible Study Phone 885-2166 BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH 886-7449 Mermaid and Trail, Sechelt Sunday School - 9:45 am Morning Worship Service, ,11:15 a.m. Wed. Bible Study - 7:30 p.m. Evening Fellowship ~ 7 p.m. 2nd & 4th Sunday of every month. Pastor: F. Napora 885-9905 onfAe fft-OPEWIWG of their EW PLANT elding & Fabrication East Porpoise Bay Road ROiAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. T. Nicholson, Pasto.i TIMES OF SUNDAY MASS * 7:30 p.m. Sat. eve. at Our Lady of Lourdcs Church on the Sechelt Indian He serve * 9:00 a.m. at The Holy Family Church In Sechelt * 11:00 a.m. at St. Mary's Church In Gibsons Phono 885-9526 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services, and Sunday School nre held each Sundny 11:15 a.m. in St. John's United Church, Davis Bny. AU welcome. . WEDNESDAY EVENING TESTIMONY 7:30 p.m. Phono 005-3157 or 000-7082. united mmm Rov. Annette M. Rolnhardt 086-2333 9:30 a.m. ��� St. John's Wllaon Crook 11:1 5 a.m. - Glhnona ollktt houih lor appointments; Tiiov 1 ;00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m, 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m, Wocl, Fri. 9-.30 to 12;30 ��� meat specials ��� ib. New Zealand. rafcay....- . x -x fji. J, ���: ' SUPPLEMENT TO THE POWELL RIVER NEWS & SECHELT PENINSULA TIMES 1976. / /, ��� ���,���)���:. xcellent fishing in local waters Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 By TOM RIDDLE Powell River offers some of the best fishing on the coast, both salt and fresh water. Coho and Spring Salmon are the salt water sport fish. The Coho or Silver as it is sometimes known is considered to be one of the scrappiest game fish in the world. They range in size from two or three pounds in the spring to 12 pounds and more by late September. The Spring, also known under a variety of different names depending on his size, gets considerably bigger. Fish in excess of 30 pounds are not uncommon. Both of these fish can be caught by trolling, casting or mooching. Trolling is the more popular method, using a spoon, flashtail or herring behind a dodger and four ounces of lead. More weight can be used, and the dodger is not always necessary. Occasionally other fish such as Lingcod, Rockfish, or Dogfish are caught. The Dogfish, more properly called Pacific Coast Shark is best handled with care. Lingcod and Rockfish, in spite of their looks are edible and in fact quite tasty. Access to the water is possible through the use of small boat ramps at Saltery Bay, Powell River and Lund, and good fishing can be found close to all three. Scotsfir Point, Lang Bay and the hulks at Powell River are very good. Coho Point on' Texada Island, Harwood Island, Grants Reef and Mystery Reef are also within easy reach. LAKES Most of the lakes in the area have good trout fishing, although the smaller lakes are sometimes quite hard to get to. Powell Lake and Haslam Lake have both'got boat ramps, and although no ramps exist on other .lakes 10 or 12 foot boats can be used on some such as the Gordon Pasha chain and Dodd Lake. The smaller lakes are pretty much confined to casting from shore or fly fishing. Powell Lake is the best known and seems to produce the largest fish. As with salmon, trolling is the most popular form of fishing, in fact some people use the same tackle for both. Various types of gang trolls such as the willow leaf with worms are also used. Spin casting and fly fishing are also quite well used methods on even the larger lakes. Most of the larger fish taken are Cutthroat trout, but a lot of the smaller fish especially from Powell Lake will be Rainbow, a leftover from a stocking program of over 30 years ago. Occasionally someone fishing on Haslam Lake will catch a small silver fish looking very much like a miniature salmon, and that is exactly what it is. A landlocked salmon or Kokanee and they are excellent eating. Excellent map of lakes and access roads is available from MacMillan-Bloedel - Stillwater Division across from the Tourist Bureau on Wharf Street. y>�� ���.-���*������*�� * ��w - J- -**- ' >&? I- [ -*. FAVOURITE PASTTME of waters. Most fishermen Powell Riverites is trying ref use to release their secret their fishing skills out on the spots, but there are plenty of crafty trout that inhabit local lakes to explore. frwiJUtteA- fo 4&W6 y&u *ICE *BAlT * SHOWERS < * LAUNDROMAT * SNACK BAR * GROCERIES Located in Powell River at the Comox Ferry Dock King Koln Laundromat Corner of Wlllingdon & Wharf . 485-2023 AND BUILDING SUPPLIES at tho, corner of Hwy 101 and Francis Ponlnsula Road. Phone 883-2585 Sechelt SCHEDULED SERVICE between Powell River, Sechelt, Nanaimo, Vancouver Harbour and Airport ISLANDER AIRPORTER SERVIGE VANCOUVER AIRPORT DAILY EXCEPTSUNDA YS & HOLIDA YS Flight No. 601 603 605 607 Departs Sechelt 7:05 a.m. 9:45 a.m. 12:15 p.m. 3:30 p.m. Flight No. 602** 604 606** 608D Departs Van. Airport 7:45 a.m. 10:15 a.m. 12:45 p.m. 5:15 p.m. Flight No POWELL RIVER DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS 901 903 905 907 Departs Sechelt 8:15a.m. 10:45a.m. 1:15p.m. 5:45 p.m. Flight No. 900# 902 904 906 Departs Powell R. 6:30 a.m. 9:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 2:45 p.m. Connects with Sechelt & Jen/la $ Connects with Pender Harbour '��� Connects with Powell Rlvor D Connects with Pender & Thormanby only # Connects with Vancouver Hbr. CHARTER SERVICE Tyee fllos anywhere in tho Pacific Northwost * for further Information pleat* contact your total office ���jfi )r~~ '\"H* '*' 'fry Vancouver 689-8651 Powell River 485.9223 Nanaimo 753-2041 Sechelt 885-2214 ���--.������ *��� \\ i \\ I Peninsula Times - P.R; News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 Fd Oi IS Powell River and area is fast becoming what amounts to the northern version of a 'scuba diver's paradise1. It's not nearly as warm as the Bahamas or the South Pacific, but there's just as much to see in the district's underwater world ��� possibly more. And so far, it's relatively undisturbed. Powell River's diving activity has grown, too. Besides a healthy diving organization, the Mystery Reef Diving Club, the community is now attracting visiting divers from many parts of Canada and the U.S. Jim Price, manager, of the Beach Gardens Resort Hotel, estimates more than 100 out of town divers have passed through his establishment in the past year, and more are expected this year through arrangements made with a firm called International Diving Tours, based in Vancouver. This past year, many touring divers from the Canadian prairies and Washington . and 'Oregon states took advantage of the Easter and Christmas breaks to come here for a few days of diving. Water temperature in area waters varies little year- round, and visibility here is actually better during the colder winter months. What's to be seen? Plenty of marine life, including sponges, anemones, nudibranches; fish, ranging from large lumbering cod to brilliantly colored fish of all descriptions. Well-known shipwreck sites can be explored, some direct from the rocky shores, some via charter, or personal boat. Abalone and crab can be taken, although legal limits on both are strictly enforced, and rightfully so. A few notes for the visiting diver: The best source of com- ��� pressed air, rental gear, and local diving information is the cheerful operator of Powell River Divers Ltd., Bob Briggs. Briggs maintains a compressed air station in Westview, and has a charter boat available - for small-party tours. Several boats in the vicinity also feature on-board air compressors, and asking around the dock areas will get you more specific information. Divers wishing to try the Egmont area at the northeast end of the Sechelt Peninsula could try Skookum Scuba, operated by John Seabrook and Greg Kalyniuk. Several Powell River divers have instruction certificates, and are qualified to lead beginners through the strict program of instruction all divers should undergo, before attempting a look at these waters. Sonny Bailey of Marine Traders Ltd. has recently rejuvenated his stock of scuba gear, meaning a diver can get fully outfitted or replace a lost piece of gear, and thus, not spoil his'diving vacation. The.diving here is deep; experienced divers will note that while summer visibility in shallow depths often tends to be murky, visibility improves greatly past 90 to 100 feet. Divers from southern climates should keep in mind the quick effects of extra cold water, and plan their dives accordingly. For most divers, the standard quarter-inch wetsuit will suffice for short dives, although many local divers are investing in thicker, three-eighth inch suits, or even drysuits to keep away the cold Anemones cluster on the steering wheel of a mystery wreck, somewhere quite near Powell River. The wreck, a Discover the beautiful waters around Powell River by boat Take your cholco from the largest soloctlon of; small boats in town I canoes. howboats sail dinghies buy or rent ono! WE ALSO RENT MOTOR BOATS Sales & 4526 Marino Rentals _ Powoll Rlvor >.* i *f**M*4P��P , , tVr l.i.X -'..��.. \"^^\"TXT\" local secret, sits in about 130 feet of water. ��� Bob Briggs photo and make year-round diving more comfortable. For safety's sake; divers should mark their diving area with at least one^ojEYthe, in- temationaUy-recognteeffred>and ~< white diving flags, and should exercise caution when diving near congested boating areas. Never, never dive in the vicinity of ferry boat terminals. In case of accidents, there is a small recompression chamber located at the Powell River General Hospital. The chamber is the result of hard fund-raising work by the Mystery Reef Dive Club members, and is designed for emergency use only. Local divers who live ahd dive 'in this -area year round are rightfully concerned about an influx of visiting sport.diyers; there is some worry that, visitors will not treat the area with respect, and possibly ruin some good diving spots through carelessness or ignorance./The message seems to be.. \\ look around, enjoy the fantastic underwater scenery, but don't kill fish for the thrill, or spoil the ocean for-people who love its mysteries. Brighten your day at L HAIRBOUHQUE ��� Award Winning Stylist ��� MADEIRA PARK SHOPPING CENTRE 883-2715 .-^ THE FIRST DRIVE-IN TOTALLY OWNED & OPERATED ��� BY INDIANSl * * Your days will be full while vacationing on this beautiful Sunshine Coast- and to round out your evenings - entertainment (even/evening at dusk) \\ the Sunshine Coast's only outdoor theatre will be enjoyed by the whole family. Just 3 mtes north of Pnwell Rhier Pa \" j *%- SHOWTIME AT DUSK EVERY EVENBNI Adults: $2.50 Students: $2.00 Children under 12 FREE ,1 /. -\\ i ��� f Peninsula Times ��� P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 lifefpiiis if leoches parents, a pleasant environment for their children. Highly-qualified life guards will be patrolling municipal beaches this summer as ih past years. Duties commence with the July 1 holiday and continue through,until Labour Day on September 6. Willingdon Beach guarding is regulated by weather and tide conditions. If there is a prolonged hot spell and the tides are right Powell River Life guards took the number of guards is in- top honours at life guarding in creased. Poor weather dictates Vancouver Island and provincial that few guards are needed. competitions. , At Lindsay Beach, the wading pool for younger children, was completely dredged and refilled with clean fresh sand before new water was added. The playground and area give But the, Powell River Department of Parks and Recreation asks parents to \"Take your young children to the beach. Don't just send them on their own.\" LUND HANDCRAFT shop is carry a variety of Coastal now one-third larger; will crafts. . \\' ��� Newsphoto Graft shop intites tisit Visitors to Lund will be pleasantly surprised to discover the existence of one ef the area's only true handcraft outletsrjust a stone's throw from the Lund Breakwater Inn. s The Lund Handcrafts shop, a cooperative venture stocked and operated by regional craftspeople, is a comfortable cedar- and-shake structure, recently expanded to provide more room for both sale items and living displays of craft techniques. Inside the building, visitors will find a large variety of paintings, drawings, ceramics, weaving, clothing and toys ��� all created by quality craftsmen in the Lund- Powell River area. Plans this year include a series of weaving and other on- the-spot craft displays; the enlarged space will provide room for people to browse or buy. Sale items will constantly .change, with area craftspeople invited to place their work in the shop on a consignment basis. Lund Handcrafts will be open to the public daily, from June through early September. It's worth a trip, even if you're just looking. ly good swimmers learn, skin and scuba diving. uwes n?g5t monday^�� �����Wffi OM^@I fti��ii. f�� Mora. n��4fg9--��3331 ��331 MM IH TNI TOWUpifI| YS V. \\5.\\J�� v* />1 Opening Day��� Regular Race . Sunday First Day of Points ��� regular race g 12 Imperial Hell Drivers, 7:00 P.M. 13 Sunday Powder Putt 19 Sat Nlte races held at Oyster River 20 Sunday Mechanic Race JULY 1 Thursday 6:00 P.M. Backward Races 4 Sunday Powder Putt 11 Sunday Mechanics Race 18 Sunday Money Pot Race 24 Saturday 6:00 P.M. ��� Regular Race 25 Soa Fair ��� 40 Lap Race AUG. 1 Sunday Mechanic's Race 2 Monday Regular Race 8 Sunday Sponsor's Race 15 B & C 30 Lap Mains 21 Saturday Powdor Putt 22 Sunday Womon's Aux. Day 29 Sunday Mechanic's Race SEPT. 5 Sunday Powdor Putt 6 Monday Last Day for Points 12 Domolitlon Derby SCMEPUUE OF EVENTS Time Trials \"LV Fast Heat LV Trophy Dash *C Fast Heat 'C Trophy Dash B* Main Event 'B' Slow Heat C Main Event 'C Slow Heat THE TRAILS, RACING.... ADMISSION PRICES: Adults: $2.50 Students [with cards]: $2.00 Ages 6-12: $1.00 Pensioners: FREE Under 6, Froo with Parent Turn left on IMXON���RD. at Lang Ray on Highway 101 HIGHWAY 101 [APPROX.] 10 MILES -J \\'> / I -/ ��� ( s- Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 Lund is centre of boaters trailer tourists each, year V. - ���Hi > ��* I -��� >j . ����� ...���rnr\"*\" r-������'TS tf- ' -*��Fr=K%r-'l Vacationing drivers who get curious about what's at the very end of the road will find that in the case of Sunshine, Coast Highway 101, the road ends at the small harbour community of Lund. Lund, situated at a marine crossroads of small inlets and islands, is one of the oldest existing communities in this area. Settled in 1889 by Swedish brothers, Fred and Charles Thulin, Lund was soon the mail and supply centre for early homesteaders, hand-loggers and fishermen at the turn of the century. displaced by summer boaters and trailer tourists, one thing hasn't changed since the early 1900's... the Lund Hotel is still the centre of activity in town. The Breakwater Inn combines a post office, general store, telephones, cafe and dining room, and a. pub with a tremendous view of the ocean. Roy Pence, one of the three partners now operating the Lin, says improvements to the 70 year old structure are continually going on, and many of the facilities, including the dining room, have been recently updated. In 1889, the Thulin brothers The Breakwater Inn people contact the Inn by telephone (483- 9133) to reserve a camping area. This year will see little room for tenters, although Pence says that situation should be improved by next year. For the visitor who comes to Lund by water, inexpensive wharfage is available at the government dock, but on a first- come basis; fuel and other marine needs are available as well. For those who drive up but want to try their fishing luck, or just cruise the water, the Breakwater Inn will be providing rental boats this, summer; a public launching ramp is convenient to Historic Lund Breakwater Inn the main road. Lund offers central starting place for fishing, pleasure craft a convenient hunting or picnicking. ����� ! v * -: ,. ,'-.. ��� .' '-. i'*-\"- *^ifi -���--'^igTIf.} tsr��� r-,, *������--* ��3?-v FISHEMG BOATS tied up at the Lund wharf in readiness for the next big catch. built the first hotel, which was ultimately levelled by fire in 1918. A few years before that, though, a second hotel was already being built, and it stands to this day, now known as the Lund Breakwater Inn. Although settlers and old- timers have slowly been also provide trailer camp space for rent, and space for touring camper trucks, although the layout of Lund is such that available parking or camping space quickly gets taken up in the busy summer months. Wheeled visitors considering spending several days at Lund should we have a Little bit of everything ��� Ladies Wear ��� Flowers ^Plants Jewellery 'Giftwa're % *m��r\\ 1 fre(e&'4>fashions and FLOWERS ^ Gibsons 086-9941 Socholt 085-9222 is gettSng >��AlMW>*WMMM��M��fM��WMV<��|��|M Your grocery shopping can be done in two ways, You can, go to a crowded shopping centre, pqrk your car hundreds of yards away and fight off uptight shoppers for a few weekly specials, provided you can find them in tho confusion. Or, you can come to our store, where there's plenty of freo parking right by the door, and tako your time browsing through our spacious aisles while you decide what's best for your family. If you hate fighting your way through a crowd of pushy shoppers, you'll lovo shopping hero. an 883-9100 ,<' \\ \\/ ��� > ���. A / > ��������� ' \\ ��� ��� 'v. .-/��� / I ��� I I I i X ) ' s /- 1*J-^?Y y* '���'-''ft.'\"' --i.; Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 No matter what shape you're in, you can be ih shape panncipacnan lisllif club active ipiii By JIM FRASER Now in its tenth year, the Powell River Sailing Club is a very active organization with a full program of activities for the spring and summer months. This includes club races and cruises. The glamour event of the year is the Algerine Passage Race, an annual event, sponsored by the PR Sailing Club and the Comox Bay Sailing Club. The race runs from Powell River to Comox via Grant's Reef bouy and has drawn boats from Vancouver, Nanaimc and Campbell River. This year's race was held May 23. Contrary to popular belief a person does not have to own a sailboat to belong to the sailing club. In past years, the club in cooperation with the local night school program, provided a . dinghy building course. One year 22 eight-foot Sabot dinghys were built and due to the success of the course another 21 twelve- foot Signet dinghys were built the following year. The club has its own sailing dinghys available anytime for members use. In order to popularize the sport of sailing the club runs a sailing school every July with a recognized Canadian Yachting Association instructor in charge. The course is open to anyone 10 years old arid up with charges kept to a minimum as it is a nonprofit endeavour. If anyone is interested in this school or any other aspect of sailing they can contact Colin Payne at 485-2646 or Les Moss at 483-9273 for information. liiwood Park idttiiif spot Development of Harwood Park on Texada Island was assisted by two Centennial projects. Initiated in 1959, the park was enhanced in 1967 by a games area with shuffleboard, checkers, and horseshoe pitch. In 1970 a large cook out area was built by volunteers with funds provided for a Centennial project. The pork hos always been a local effort with park benches, swings and other items built by islanders. This Is the first year somcono lias been officially paid for the Job of carctaklng the park. The regional board hired a university student to ovoraco the park, do painting ond provide firewood for the campsites. The 18 campsites for visitors and residents alike, were, developed through STEP progrnm and the regional district. A charge of $2 n night is levied on campers with wdod'Ariri Water supplied;\" \"'\"'* ANNUAL SAILING SCHOOL is sponsored by the Powell River Sailing Club. Open to anyone from 10 years and up, the school provides basic tips on sailing. The club has an active season of races and cruises in both fresh and salt water locations. ��� Newsphoto ���* We offer a variety of specialities to complement your vacation season 6251 Yew St. Ph. 483-3226 X ���X -',��� r * . ��� i Peninsula Times ��� P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 ic nic king at lake or se< By the seashore or on the lakeshore, Powell River offers campsites for different tastes. Close proximity to town, and shopping appeals to some holidayers while others prefer to be far away from civilization. If.real privacy is what you want, boat ramps provide launching facilities for journeys up the coast or to the head of lakes where only the creatures of the wood will be around. WILLINGDON BEACH provides almost anything a camper will need and is especially convenient for those travelling with children. It is situated on Willingdon Beach, one of Powell River's most popular swimming and recreation areas. The campsite has 52 units for tents and campers, along with public washrooms, showers and some washers and dryers. Most units have a water outlet ''and some spots have electrical hookups. Newest addition to the campsite is a dumping station. This type of service has been made necessary by the advent of so many recreational vehicles in the last few years. Also adding to the camper's comfort will be ice machines. Improvements to the beach include seeding some areas and general clean-up. Long-lasting paint was applied to the bath house. The beach itself is sandy and lifeguards will be on duty after the end of June. Up off the sand, there are wide lawns and some shade trees for those who don't want too much sun. Swings, slides, monkey-bars and other playground facilities are up under the trees. Right on. the edge of the woods, the campsite is near three well-marked nature trails ��� one follows the shoreline and the other two start on the east side of Marine Drive and wind up through the bush, with benches and resting spots along the way. . Tennis players can bring their rackets and play oh the courts across the street. Downtown Westvlew is only a few minutes walk from Willingdon Beach and ferry service to Texada and Vancouver Island is just a mile down the road. Tenters pay a small charge of $2.50 per night. Campers without hook-up pay $4, while the hook-up charges are $4.50. The campsite is open seven days a week on a first-comej first-serve basis. Maximum staying time is 14 days. SALTERY BAY campsite, situated about one mile north of the Saltery Bay ferry, is open all year round. There are 40 camping spots, water, a sani-station and outside toilets. A picnic site with 12 tables is down on the beach, just a short walk through the woods from the campsite.* Campers are charged.$2 a night, and there is a 14-day limit on a visit. Another mile up the highway, there is a picnic site with lots of parking space, 27 tables and a boat-launching ramp. HASLAM LAKE campsite opened \"May 15. It is a camping and picnic area complete with a playground, two beaches, a boat ramp and sani-station. - There are flush toilets for the picnic area, outdoor near the camping grounds and water is available from one central-outlet. The gates are open from 6:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. and you will be charged $2 a night. No water- skiing is allowed near the park, and all animals must be on a leash. DODD AND N.ANTON LAKE campsites are good for those who want to rough it a bit. MacMillan Bloedel supplied materials for tables, B.C. Forest Service provided the labor and organization and equipment for clearing the land was courtesy of Weldwood of Canada. Each campsite has about 16 units, with two outdoor toilets. Water from nearby creeks can be used and there are boat launching spots for small boats. Access is by restricted logging roads; Dodd. Lake is at the 16 mile marker and Nanton Lake is at the 13 mile. Phone Weldwood to make sure the roads are open before heading up there. The campsites will close if fire hazard causes forest closure but otherwise they are open for a pleasant weekend. There is no charge for staying there, but it is up to the campers to keep it clean and orderly. GIBSONS BEACH just past Wildwood^ is not a campsite but promises to be a pleasant picnic site. More improvements are being made by the municipal parks crews. The road from the highway PICNIC AREA at Harwood Point Park offers seclusion' has been widened and improved. An enlarged parking area for boats and trailers adds to boaters enjoyment. A clearing of the beach area near the small groin set up allowed launching of small boats. Sand dumped on the beach makes it a good spot for small children to swim. PALM BEACH has long been a favorite picnic spot for locals and. visitors alike. Covering approximately two acres south of town, the picnic area features a large grass field for games and races. A change room has separate areas for men and women complete with running water. Picnic benches and tables are available. A covered tea area features hand-made burl tables donated to the parks commission by Mr. Stevenson. A concession is used by groups and organizations as a fund-raising opportunity on holidays. This is strictly a picnicking park, no camping is allowed. POWELL LAKE PARK is still under construction, a project of Powell River Kinsmen. Though it is not complete picnickers can come for * their afternoon or evening fun. LINDSAY BEACH on Cranberry Lake is a grassy area ideal for picnics. Young children can play in a pool enhanced by rocks painted to picture small animals. and a breathtaking view of the Strait . of Georgia, bounded by the mountains of Vancouver Island. Memorabilia and artifacts tracing Powell River's 65 year history will be on display at the new museum across from Willingdon Beach. The PR Historical and Museum Society stated the move from the cramped quarters in the Centennial Building to the former Youth Centre Building was aided by an LIP grant. Valuable items will be taken outjof storage and displayed when areas are completed. Smoke alarm and intrusion systems are a must for the building. Official opening of the new museum quarters was held June 3 with special guests from district clubs and organizations in attendance. Curator for the museum is Golden Stanley who has spent many years gathering and cataloguing articles. Summer hours for the museum have been set for 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. The building is also open on the weekends. Tours will be arranged for parties of 10 or iqore and can be set up by calling 483-9950. Powell River Museum boasts one of ��� the best telephone collections anywhere an if the building has been adequately secured it will likely be on display for visitors and residents to view. paao isiaea mm aiitug VIEW FROM GIBSONS BEACH , oyerjpokhig (,Hnr: wood Island. Indian legend .t^.fl��ttofc4;rt#g out $ . tho sea and that it will return some day. Hunting for rocks in the Powell River area is quite limited as far as quality for use in Lapidary work goes. There are plenty of rocks that will polish, because all rocks will polish if hard and dense enough. The liiiag lessons ow ailable leie Summer vacations sometimes seem long and at times children say there is nothing to do. What they really mean Is something different. Visitors and Powell Rlverites with young children can give them a real treat by taking them to McCormlcks on Padgett Road across from the Greengold Trailer Court. Ponies are available to rent for chaperoned rides along wooded trails. Horses can be rented by older riders on Saturdays. Cost is $5 for a longer ride a 1 p.m. or 7 p.m. and $3 for a shorter ride which begins at 3 p.m. A typical ride would follow trails to West Lake area and back. If asked for, trips to Duck lake can be arranged. Two chaperones accompany each trip. Riding lessons have proved very popular, booked solid on the days they are offered, Tuesday through Friday from 4 p.m. until 7 p.m. Beginner's lessons are very reasonable and more horses will be available this summer. No horses aro rented out on nn indlvlduul basis; ull must he on ��� organized, trips..... ,��,.,,,,,. is to find something with a pattern or design secret unique, in it. -This doesn't mean there aren't any good rocks for jewellery making in our area, as you never know what may turn lip���it's like the old saying \"gold is where you find it\". The most favorable rock for making jewellery in the area is the flower rock, and the most desirable comes from Texada Island, especially Gillies Bay. It can be found in other areas, but the small flowers and the dark background found on the island are much sought after by rockhourids. Some of the flower rock is a mass of flowers, and not suitable, although it does make nice book ends or pen cases. The mineral term for flower rock is Gabbro Porphyry with feldstar crystals scattered throughout. It has a hardness of approximately six on the \"Mohs scale\". Another rock to be found on some of the mine dumps is a yellow rock, identified as Ar- tlgullte and ls quite similar to Verde Antique from California. It Is a softer stone, with a hardness of approximately five, but polishes Up quite well Furthor south on Texada Island at Anderson Bay Is n marble which pollshca well, most suited for bookends or pen bases, but If found with n good pattern It con be used for , Jewellery making, This area la only accessible by boat or four wheel .drive vehicles on, logging roads. / ������' ��� /. ���I 1 < / ; (��� y X \\ q��r*UiBm��wa$fi����B��^. - ' Y ; v; �����'���-���' ./ . Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 \\ hot ever jou like doing* do if in Pender Harbour PENDER HARBOUR-If you are a salt or freshwater fisherman, hunting, swimming or hiking buff or just plain want to relax and enjoy beautiful scenery ��� this is the place to be. All roads in the area are well surfaced and meander through rolling forested land dotted with clear, sparkling lakes to the sea. The area, population-wise, is composed of several small communities each with its own charm and personality. As well known\" and popular one, inundated with tourists in the summertime is Madeira Park. Approximately 40 miles north of the Langdale Ferry Terminal, it is a reasonably easy drive of about one hour. Small though it is Madeira Park boasts a modern shopping centre which can cater to almost anything the visitor may wish, including groceries,, liquor, pharmacy goods, hairdressing, hardware, two banks and a credit union. Real estate offices and building supplies and several service stations supplying the usual service plus marine gas are also close by. Motels and marinas are nearby so accommodations, boat launching and service are easily arranged. Summers are busy so book well in advance. Pender Harbour Hotel and the Royal Canadian Legion No. 112 are at your service.,If strictly scenery is your bag pull off the highway just short of Madeira Park on to Frances Peninsula road. The road, true to its name, takes you to Frances Peninsula. Actually at high tide it becomes and island and is connected to the mainland by bridge. Take your camera along as some of'the views are spectacular. While driving the road around the coast take time out to visit an oldtime ships- chandlery. Look for, the sign saying 'Hassan's Store.' It is a friendly place where you can buy almost anything your heart desires, from fishing equipment to groceries, clothing to footwear, you name it they have it. Back on Highway 101 a few miles norm of Madeira Park you will find a secondary road cutting to the left. Clearly marked, it says five miles to Garden Bay , and Irvines Landing. A few miles along this scenic road branches out and you have a choice of the two communities by the sea.\" It matters not which you take first. Another road runs along the coastline Connecting them and is itself ah attractive trip, Garden Bay has a number of stores, a delightful pub and restaurant overlooking a bay dotted witii wharves and pleasure craft and a second restaurant set somewhat back from the shoreline. Accommodation and an excellent marina are available here, but again ��� book_early, > A few miles along the connecting coastline road lies Irvines Landing. A restaurant, government wharf and private marina are the features here, aside from the tremendous scenery. On a notice board close to the restaurant you can read the legend of Irvines Landing. All about the first settlers in the area. As in the other communities you can obtain bait, gas for the enjoyment of the excellent salmon fishing. North again on Highway 101 a scenic drive which takes you past fish filled Sakinaw and Ruby Lakes you will come to Egmont Road. The drive in is pleasant and easy passing North and Waugh Lakes. Famous for its ' salmonfishin,..Egmontisasmall close knit community which takes pride in itself and the surrounding beautiful scenery. ^Bathgate's store will, look after your needs. Boats and bait available to the tourist. Just a short drive and excellent food can be found in the restaurant. A few minutes drive north from the junction of Highway 101 and the Egmont will take the traveller to the Earls Cove Ferry Terminal. The car and passenger ferry shuttles between Earls Cove and Saltery Bay. A trip of about 45 minutes. This, for people wishing to go to Powell River and points north, with a Vancouver Island connection. A last reminder, take your camera with you wherever you go3in this area. You will get some unforgettable shots. For fishermen, depending on the time of year, you can expect to get coho or bluebacks, spring salmon, ling cod and other species in the sea. \"HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL TRAVELLERS\" Color Cable TV 5 Kitchen Units 6 Sleeping Units CLOSE TO ALL FACILITIES. SHOPPING, FERRIES. ETC. fattWotd 485-2851 Thunder Bay Street & Highway 101 PLEASURE BOATERS from far and wide visit Gibsons harbor during summer months. Sheltered moorage is a favorite stopping-off point for tourists sailing upcoast to Sechelt, Pender Harbour and Powell River. If you can't stop wave! MARINE MEN'S WEAR for all your summer needs from BATHING SUITS TO LEISURE SUITS suit up for fnn-in-t!ie-Hnn CHARGEX MASTERCHARGE Marine Dr. 886-2116 Gibsons NEW FIFTH HOLE at Powell River's Golf Club is causing scores to soar. Tight fairways and numerous trees provide golfers with a challenge. ��ii.d>��> mill 1.1 mUm PoweU River Golf Club, south of Marine Drive, west of Willingdon Beach, 9 hole par 70, has an irrigation system that ensures lush greens year round, a fairly difficult, hilly, well-treed course. Club rentals, carts, pro shop and snack bar. '^4$&%& ^Weic^-mt^ m^^tmMjj&sM&i^sssssmi ^i^itwiuan'j����waw.g.?i^'f^w��a�� c_ Y - ?t A- y \\ '. ...i���_: Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 *L .'*. J \"A* $��&*&��&* m i kv^'~ iE��^ -i m HUNTING? CAMPING? Tqw's is the |ilqce ' for a complete line of fishing, hunting - and camping gear. Come in and see our great selection. ��=&���\" \"T3S3: *55^ m Aim hllM ^^Tfo^ttSahE,.! 4597 Marine Ph.4S5-2555 New marina facilties, with will expand berth capacity to concrete floats in foreground, 450 by early summer. ��� Newsphoto nearly complete Powell River now boasts a newly expanded municipal marina faculty, incorporating Space for close to 450 boats by the time the new dock facilities are completed later this summer. Estimates call for completion of the new small boat harbour faculties by late June or early July. Dredging for the enlarged marina area began this past winter, with the first- new piles driven in the spring, and installation of the new.floats and fingers beginning just before summer. The floats are a new innovation ��� hollow concrete shells, filed with styrofoam to provide positive buoyancy and long service. The small boat marina is a municipally-operated facility, and as such is primarily reserved for local boaters who apply for and rent berthage. Indications are visiting boats this year will again be put up at the south commercial boat harbor, near the Department of Highways ferry terminal, with some overflow allowed into the new municipal marina if space permits. A convenient boat launching ramp is available for use at the municipal marina, with ample car and boat trailer parking available in the area. Visiting boaters should note that fuel is available, on the water, near the south commercial boat harbour. Associate Store MARINE ELECTRONICS SALES & SERVICE ��� CB RADIO *VHF-FM \\* SOUNDERS * RADAR * AUTOPILOTS 'we service what we sell\" ELECTRONICS APPLIANCES Cowrie St., Sechelt 885-2568. Sit in the first licensed saloon ever established on the mainland between Vancouver and the Yukon. The gulls wheel between you and the sun, and the tide is your only dock as it swirls about the pilings beneath your feet. The LUND BREAKWATER INN Is a donate hotel. We're so old-fashioned we still treat our patrons like we've known them all our lives. So ��� Whether you come by BOAT or CAM ��� get to know us this year! * M * \" .) ���' y X'^l, ,��( t'ffit_ >' ����� A i, . , . w ���,,\\ .����� *��' .'��� , ��� 1 1 \".'��� * > f**-*-T. ���--\"'T',: HOTEL STORE CAFE DINING LOUNGE HARDWARE LAUNDROMAT ICE BOAT LAUNCHING TRAILER PARK DON & MARY PENCE At the end of Hwy. 101 Ph. 483-9133 '��� Y ? Y ' . ^ \\ - , Don't blink when you pass through Sechelt on your way up the Sunshine Coast, the old joke goes, you will miss it. , , You'll miss, all the exciting ways to make your summer vacation the best yet. From a cool glass of beer at the Old Wakefield Inn overlooking the water to a trip up the east side of the inlet or just soaking up the special Sunshine Coast sun, there are things to be done and seen. The village itself is located at the hub of the Sunshine Coast. Sechelt has the most comprehensive selection of stores and shops in the entire area. A seaplane base is located there. Tyee Airways stops there on its Powell River to Vancouver run. There is also an airport ten minutes away from the village. Old Whitaker House built in. 1918 is a historical site which has '��� been converted into an interesting variety of shops. Downstairs, the gallery will be displaying the arts and crafts of local Peninsula residents. All year Granny's Attic sells second hand things and potted plants next door. .For access to private campsites ask the tourist bureau for a copy of the Government \"Green Book'.' of accommodation. There is a number of campsites listed in the Sechelt area. The tourist bureau in Sechelt will be open from June 1 to Sept. 30 and is located in Whitaker House. The Indian heritage of Sechelt has a prominent place in the community. The Indian Band office at the entrance to Sechelt is filled with Indian crafts from this Salish Band. The motto on the wall is \"Think Indian\". Older members of/ the band are attempting to preserve their heritage against the assimilating pressures of today's world. The reservation between Sechelt Inlet and the Strait of Georgia comprises some of the most beautiful waterfront on the coast. Old-timers such as Mary Jackson still weave cedar baskets although the art is fast dying out. However it is still possible to find good examples of local weaving, carving, and beadwork through-out the peninsula. If you haven't tried crab fishing, a trap can be picked up at any local marine supply store. There is some oyster picking in the area and also, a few butter clams but serious hunters of these delicious seafoods would do better to get a boat and search out more secluded areas for hunting. Government campsites on Highway 101 include Roberts Creek Park, seven miles south of Sechelt. There is boat launching, salt water fishing and hiking in the vicinity. There are 24 camp units and 20 picnic tables. The Porpoise Bay Park hi Sechelt Inlet three miles north of Sechelt has 89 campsites. Sechelt Inlet road goes five miles up the coast side of the Inlet. There are boat launching facilities here and two campsites, one private and one provincial, picnic sites, sani-stations and a modern marina with year-round facilities including a store, moorage, trailer camping, launching and boat rentals. The inlet's rich in fish and seafood - salmon, cod, crab, oysters and clams. With the right equipment prawns can be taken in abundance. The Sunshine Golf and Country. Club at Roberts.Creek has nine holes and 2,752 yards of rolling green. The club has a lounge and cafeteria facilities. For weekend reservations call ahead at 886- 2020. , Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 never hope to discover the maze want to enjoy an exciting sum- of peninsulas, lakes, islands and mer make Sechelt your jumping fjord-like waterways but if you off place. ORSE SHO July 17 and 18 Wilderness Park close ���* to Roberts Creek is the proposed site of the Sunshine Coast Recreational Centre. Local people with the help of government grants have laid out a natural park with hiking and walking trails and picnic tables in the area which includes more than 100. waterfalls on the spider's web of streams. Fishing is usually, best further north of Sechelt in Pender. Harbour but there is good trolling in August, particularly for Coho. All through the year Spring Salmon are on the move in and out of the area. Generally there's a good Spring run in the first two weeks of June for about 10 days. Not unusual are catches around the 40 pound mark. Visitors to B.C. boast line can For entry forms and programs contact:. ^ MRS. HOMES. 4248 FERNWOOD or phone 485-4396 Powell River Trailriders Paradise Exhibition Park Western Canada's Largest Recreation Complex ���iW'T^w^v XiA ' '\\ �� Ar%\" t < >, xx *--' ���� \" * -x^ '** , \"% ?* \" \"x\\A\" %,*��� i X \\-\\ '\\>>*Vi-. X\" X *mX ��� ��� 1 sXZ-fX* *} \">. ���>'<>,. ���� , v,i. ^ WYf> ->..-*'��,\"Y' SECHELT BEACH is quiet new, a great expanse of round rock and sand running off into the horizon. It's not so quiet or so bare in summer when it draws visitors to it like a magnet. This unique area offers a good place to get French fried in the sun by day, or soothed by the gentle lapping waves while strolling by in the evening. \"If You're Satisfied Tell Others If Not-Tell Me\" 485-4435 7180 Thunder Bay. Powell River 3 Miles South of Weltvlew Ferry Prop, ft Your Hostess OETTY LEVER * 11 fully oqulbpod kltchon unlti * 1 iloonlno units 1 family accommodations a specialty * Color cablo TV In all units * Qulot location * All oloctrlc heatlnn PROVIDING POWELL RIVER WITH \"RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES FOR ALL AGES\" FACILITY RENTALS Ice Rentals Pool Rentals Banquet & Meeting Areas ENTERTAINMENT Performing Visual Arts Wrestling Roadshows,. Y- POWELL RIVER DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AHD RECREATBOH^J Sunshine Coast Regional District Wharf St., Sechelt Phone 885-2261 For the information of our visitors and residents; the Sunshine Coast Regional District has within.its jurisdiction the following functions: 1. General Government Services 2. Elections 3. Fire Protection 4. Street Lighting 5. Garbage Sites 6. Garbage Collection 7. Community Planning 8. Building and Plumbing Inspection 9. Acquisition of Park and Green Belt Lands 10. Cemetary Operations 11. Emergency Programme 12. Water Supply arid Distribution 13. Regional Parks 14. Recreational Programmes 15. Sewage Collection, Treatment and Disposal Everyone is reminded that no person shall commence or continue any work related to building unless he has a valid and subsisting building permit. Applications for registration as an elector In tho Sunshlno Coast Regional District are available during regular office hours, OFFICE HOURS: Monday to Wodnosday ��� 8;30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Thursday and Friday ������ 8:30 a.m. to 5i4S p.m. Mrs. A.G. Prossloy, Socrotary-Troasuror / Y .������A. ss . sf��. :> ��� Y\" Y, / Local golf course a test to skills Peninsula Times - P.R. News Outdoor Supplement, June 1976 Powell River's golf course has been in constant use since 1925. Being one of the oldest nine-hole courses in B.C. it has seen many of B.C.'s best golfers playing on its sloping fairways. Although it is classed as a private club (administered by an executive committee \"that has been selected by members),' foriiitioe Located at the foot of Wharf Street, adjacent to the Westview ferry terminal, Powell River's Tourist Bureau provides information for newcomers to the area.- Ferries from Texada Island and Vancouver Island load at Westview and a waiting room for passengers is in the same building as the bureau quarters. The bureau opened in May for weekends only but beginning at the end of June, the office will be open from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. In the middle of August, hours are shortened to 9 a.m. ��� 5 p.m. The office closes on Labour Day but year-round information may be obtained by writing Tourist Information, 6807 Wharf Street, Powell River. Operated by the PR Tourist and Development Commission, the bureau can inform people of happenings in Powell River, tell them about campsites, ferry schedules and interesting sites to explore. Last season a total of 4,986 visitors signed the guest book. That was an increase of more than 1200 over the 1974 final total. The bureau also serves residents by supplying road maps on all provinces, and pamphlets of places to see across the country. Popular tourist spots are listed for travellers who like to plan ahead. Three students work under the direction of Joan Alexander to help Powell Riverites and visitors alike have a happier vacation. anyone may purchase a membership and belong to the Powell River Golf Club either as a playing member or social member. j , Genial Jim Anderson; manager of the pro shop, along with his gracious wife Dorothy look after catering and the lounge. People who wish to play only three or four times a year may do so by paying greens fees and if they don't own clubs, they may rent them from the pro shop. Purchasers of green fees are entitled to the same social privileges as the members but are not allowed to enter the major golf tournaments. The Powell River Golf Club has quite a few interesting competitions during the year. The season usually opens with the Spring Calcutta in early April, followed by the Scanlon Cup at Easter, the Malaspina Amateur Open on Victoria Day weekend, the Brodine Tournament in early June and a Unisex Tournament later in the same month. The Tunstall Tournament takes place July 1, the Seniors Tournament on August 21 and the Peacock on September 6. During the season there are usually several inter-club matches with Sechelt, Comox and Courtenay. On June 13, Sechelt was scheduled to bring 30 golfers to Powell River to compete with 30 locals, A return visit by Powell River will take place in September. The last tournament of the year will take place on Saturday, October 9 when the Fall Calcutta is held. Recent changes to the course have added three new holes to replace former holes No. 2, No. 3 and No. 4. Visitors and newcomers to the golf scene will get quite a surprise when they tackle the south end section of the course, because it is quite unique. Set in a beautifully wooded area, it will test the skill and poise of the most experiencedgolfer. i**' m 1* *�����*** * .v-,--\"^/Va*,'5i*' *%? .\\f*-.'. iJfc'i' : Vv��f' i y. ft, 5 ' Powell River Mill Charms Native Carvings Flower Bock Jewellery (local) Jade Jewellery (local) Pottery by Carol Bieber of P.R. linothead Facial Carvings Many Canadian Items (Browse at your leisure) Make |)'s your jewellery and gift shop GLACIER PLAZA 485-4469 vy Ikrx^Ai^A\" Manager D.K. Lien Madeira Park, 883-2711 .*; ROYAL BAN K Serving British Columbia Manager, Briico Gambia Gibsons, 886-2201 ( ��� ( X / ^_.1_ J-+- Peninsula Times ��� P.K. News Outdoor^Swl^ieM^���^:-J^lie:^M>��,^ ^���win ��� ill���������.^w^^^rW^^������mimm*m ^ . I . every weekday from now until LabourDay, tours of our Pulp arid Paper Complex in Powell River will be available, free, to everyone except children-under twelve. These tours are supervised, and for their own safety, youngsters between the ages of twelve and eighteen must be accompanied by an adult. We also ask that you wear comfortable walking shoes ��� no open-toed sandals, please. The tours will be scheduled between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., Mondays through Fridays, One of the many breathtaking views of the Powell River area. If it's the outdoors that interests you we invite you to use the logging roads in our Stillwater Division. All the division's logging roads are open evenings, weekends and holidays. ���> Branch Road 41 is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The roads provide access to beautiful country that's unique to British Columbia. Please note that all roads are closed during periods of extreme fire hazard. Maps and complete information are available at the Tourist Bureau as well as at our office at 4449 Marine Avenue at the head of the wharf. We feel sure that no matter what your recreational pleasure is, you'll find it here in Powell River. We hope you enjoy your visit. lac BloGde Eian limited Powell River Division Stillwater Division ��� ������ f,v-'*\" - , aw-i-r* ��� fl v * ' mmmmmmm>&y�� ��r . \" ���#������ ^ ,-\"�� fl '\"KSP��H^^S I, *,��r# ^ ������:^#,;.: ,v;Y H'- *-* '������ ' ^^X^hXXXX'lX4^m& j \"��� Xx)h.���?**'-*. \"���"@en, "Frequency: Weekly

Titled \"The Sechelt Peninsula Times\" from 1963-12-04 to 1967-03-01. Titled \"The Peninsula Times\" from 1967-03-08 to 1979-12-26.

Published by Sechelt Peninsula Times Ltd. from 1963-12-04 to 1968-12-24 and from 1970-11-04 to 1971-03-10; by The Peninsula Times Ltd. from 1969-01-08 to 1970-10-28; by Powell River News Town Crier Sechelt Times Ltd. from 1971-03-17 to 1975-11-05; and by Westpres Publications Ltd. from 1975-11-12 to 1979-12-26.

Dates of Publication: 1963 to 1980."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Sechelt (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "The_Peninsula_Times_1976_06_09"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0186282"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.4716667"@en ; geo:long "-123.763333"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Sechelt, B.C : Westpres Publications Ltd."@en ; dcterms:rights "Copyright remains with the publishers. This material is made available for research and private study only.
Please provide attribution. For uses other than research, private study and personal use (such as publication or distribution), permission must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Sechelt Community Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "The Peninsula Times"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en .