i ' Page 10 ~ Wedrieediy ‘August’ 40, 1967 Could save ‘$300 ' Skeena | offered by Frank Howard M.P. During the constituency visit in Houston last week Howard Accused the federal departments | | ; Lady, no | wonder you are tired’ The Ontario Medical Review reports that during a heat wave a lady kept showing up at the doctor’s officeasking plaintively, ‘Why am I so tired, doctor?’’ Finally the doctor gave her this answer: ** You've had a busy day, madam. *Your heart beat 103,389 times, your blood travelled 168 million miles, you breathed 23,- 040 times, you inhaled 433 cu- bic feet of air, ate 3,25 pounds of food, drank 2.9 pints of Liquid, perspired 1.43 pints, gave off 85.6 degrees of heat, gen- erated 450 tons of energy, spoke 4,800 words, moved 85 major muscles, grew .000046 inches of fingernails and ,01714 inches - ‘featherbedding’ : How to save $300 million on one easy cut is 4 lesson Government million MP raps for Skeena, of *featherbedding’’, He called for a cut in dep- artmental expenditures rather |f than a hike in taxes, the alt- ernative suggested by Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp, Howard sald a sure way to provide the taxpayer with full yalue for his tax dollar would be to cut all Government expendit- ures by 5 per cent across the board and demand the samelevel | of service from the various gov- ernment departments, he com- mented. “A great deal of featherbedding |i has taken place in the government |R service in recent years with the addition of new departments, with revised functions for old depart- ments and with a general lack of supervision by Cabinet Minis- |B ters,” : Howard sald;'"My suggestion |e for a 5 per cent reduction in|f appropriations coupled with an insistence upon the same level |i of service now provided would mean a saving to the public of approximately $300 million.”* There's a lot of talkthese days about LBJ asking Congress ta establish price ceilings. But price cellings are here with us HE ROAR OF THE POWER SAW will be a familiar sou of hair and exercised seven mil- lion brain cells, ' you hit the ceiling, no" wonder you're . now — when you hear the price Kalum Electric ® Television - Radio - Recorder Repairs % Major Appliance Sales and Service * Electrical Conutractor * Residential Commercial * Motor Winding Cor. Kalum & Park Phone 635-2752 OF G00 ) USED t the P.N.E. 67’s free festival of foresters’ log show in th hree acre feature attraction’s area at Exhibition Park ere, Squamish logger Thor Halvorson is seen warmin p for the obstacle pole bucking contest. That’s the conclusion reach- ed by Dr, Charles Gibbs of Ot- tawa’s National Research Coun- SPECIAL SALE - OUTBOARD MOTORS & BOATS” LOOK AT THESE EXAMPLES cil, ONLY $395 1965 MeCULLOCK 45 H.P, ELECTRIC AT CONDITION 12 FT, FIBREGLASS BOAT ONLY $125 BIG VALUE UNITS When did Niagara COME AND CHECK ON THESE AND OUR OTHER TERA EQUIPMENT SALES umn Logging Supplies - Jnain Saws - Wire Rope - Welding Supplies P.O. "Box 508. Terrace. B.C. - Phone 695-6384 come into the picture? “7 Amediéal iin: A clothing bill. A car repair blll: They all seamad to come at once, Jack ~ needed, money Inahurry. . Answer: A Niagara Loan. Jack talked It ovar ‘with the manager of the nearest Niagara “ Offlaa: Besides getting the money, hageta “lot of:good advice on budgeting. With av. =... ‘Niagara Loan, Jack was able to pay all hia... “bills at.one time, And repay the loan on easy ‘terms to sult his budget. Whan’ you need oxira.money for any good: -feason; you can expect the same courteous, an : “quick service atany one of 300. Niagara atfices, oo. _NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED” "” Member of the (a) Group of Coripanies oP _ into the first place as aproblem, Machine spots killer-drivers A small number of kiiler drivers ~ people with mar- ginal ability and a low tolerance to stress - cause most: of the accidents on Canadian roads, a | get lights, Bi align a needle against whichever I | record the effect ofa singledrink, ‘when the. wife quits work to AS increased debts may be only "/the twin peaks of a submerged 7 iceberg, ,., 4nd the familiar, pleasant rout- “| ine 1s upset, . sexual abstinence and worried -+.J about the welfare of his wife -~pand child. . _{vesentful of. the attention and | flowers ~.| mothers, - [phen they mpy hit. emotional ok is. mich" batter understood than A report in the September issue of Maclean’s magazine. tells how Dr. ‘Gibbs has invent- ed a stress-analyzer test that only takes two minutes to spot flaws in driving reactions, The test is conducted with a machine that might be found in any penny arcade, The subject sits in a driving seat facing a panel of five tar- A steering ‘wheel is used: to: light flashes on. Subjects have only a fraction of a second to react to move- dictable to the improbable. Dr, Gibhs says the test can a sleepless night or evenafamily quarrel, He is convinced that it can. spot marginal drivers before they get a chance to do any damage and that his' equipment will be- come a routine part of provin- cial driving tests. Present testing methods, he says, concentrate on speed and precision, They don’t eliminate the driver who may reactquickly but inaccurately | ~ and fatally. Dads often depressed by new tads A great many mothers suffer short periods of depression com- monly known as “baby blues’’, ‘third day blues" or ‘‘fifth day blues’, -but feelings of oppres- sion and depression among male parents, expecially, arefar more common than generally recogniz- ed, writes Audrey Riker, R.N, in Child and Family. Most young people do a superb job of adjusting to their first baby, They are responsive, lov- ing and flexible, However, the birth of a baby may strain the seams of the closest marriage, For example, the hushand's role as a bill payer is emphasized have a baby, Money often jumps But reduced income and . The new father is not certain what. is expected of him, He has ‘lost sleep, time at work He has gone through weeks of ‘Some husbands even become _ showered on new . Ag ‘young marrleds are ‘In creasing on the move, new mother's miss the support of thelr families and friends at a time wom. - The' physleal’ process of Isbor.| are the. human’ emotions which | tt “Postpartum -dypreasion gota, Hitle attention from medical re-| ‘searchers, .50 the exact Causes , . remaly obscure, = Who needs. protection, | grizzlies. or people? Conservationists are again concerned with the problem . of grizzly vs. tourist. Their concern js partly for tourists, who are. inno danger of extinction, but moatly for the grizzlies, which are, Few jpuriste ever see a grisly, It’s a sight reserved for the hiker and trademark of our high wilderness, and endangered species, 7 Probably 90 per cent of the surviving western grizzlies are within 100 miles of Kalispell, Montana, and less than 100 of these are within Glacier Park. . ; Grizzly attacks have almost all occurred when a hiker has surprised a bear with cubs, The last was in Glacier in September, 1965, when Robert Sellers and Charlos’ Lit- tlefield, both park service employees, were returning to their car after a hike in MacDonald Valley, | The grizzly ts 4 rare These experienced mounain men often wore bells on: their packs to warn bears of their presence, but on this trip they had not used them. Instead, they kept talking all the way down the trail until they were so near the car that “they felt this pre- caution was unnecessary, ' Near the car, they rounded a blind corner of the tral and surprised a female grizzly with two cubs. The bear charged and the men ran, but not fast enough, When they saw that they could nat escape, thuy fell ard played dead, hina slightly, but he remained limp and the grizzly soon In July, 1963, & Pennsylvania couple named Duvall were hiking near Bowman Lake in Glacier. The trail led through heavy vegetation, and the hikers came upon a big sow grizzly and her yearling cub, The bear ‘charged without hesitation, inflicting minor wounds on Duvall and mauling his wife “Garbage @ attracts bears, ‘wildlife, director warns. ‘Dy, James -Hattar, Direstor of the Fish and Wildlife Branch, has urged all tourist.-camp operators ‘to- prevent ‘garbage accumulation . in campsites in ‘order . ndt to -- Hot weather - and.a ‘shortage ‘of of natural’ food and water. at higher levels is believed. to be responsible for bears - attract black bears, frequenting lowland garbage dumyps more than usual this, _ year. ‘Dr, Hatter urges all camp operators to incinerate gar- age where possible. or otherwise dispose of it where it will not attract béars to areas frequented by people. back-packer in remote country andisa - The bear grabbed Littlefield, injured . This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquér Control Board or by the Government af British Columbia ” badiy. Ske was hospitalized a week, and her wounds re- quired a hundred stitches, Such incidens have caused concern that grizzlies may be removed from Glacier Park in the interest of public safety, Conservationisis oppose such a policy ~ and they are supported by most of the victims of the grizzly attacks. Sellers and Littlefield believe that the evizzly that at- tacked them was doing so in “self defense,’ and that they were the intruders and aggressers — noi the bear, Duvall — felt much the same way. He said that the grizzly that at- tacked him was “protecting her rights.” He asked park officlals not to dispose of the animal, . Hée even asked that the incident be played down because of the effect it might have on park visitors. There’s no reason why tourists and grizzlies can't share the same country - as long as the bears know where the people are’ and what they” re up to. This can be done ‘by wearing bells on packsacks in erizzly country, or rat- tling tin gans containing pebbles, or just talking it up while on the tra: Chances of grizzly trouble are incredibly remoterisks, and the privilege of entering unspoiled grizzly country is worth a few remote risks, We hope that Glacier Park always keeps fis grizzlies ~ and the splendid Wilderness that the big abvertips ¢ cannot live without, ments that range from the pre-| : surround childbirth, w ‘ VANCOUVER—PRINCE GEORGE......... 6. e.$435 The pleasure of ‘a: tong. distance call remains one. sof? : [NEW WESTMINSTER~CALGARY . :......+. » $1.50 today’s biggest bargains. Desplte rising ae and _ : “TOR : . Looe ving costs, many long distance ‘calls actually. cost less . VICTORIA, TORONTO watppeeee sees eecssgee “ indollars and pants than 10 yeays.aga.U Use Long Distance: ... ae (Evening, station-to-station initia wt, forallifswortht: ; a : 4 : ’ 2 ; “ tn TERRACE « coll vl ae2121:- avaTEMS © * BLECTAOWAITERG © OATAPHONES + ANBWERING AND D ALARM UNITB » OVEA 200 OTHER COMMUNICATION. AIDS FOR MODERN HOMES AND BUSINESS #8 It costs so little _tomakea photo talk — When.a family grows up and goes its several ways, when a job that has to be done separates you by thousands of miles from near and dear ones, there’s a gap left that photographs only partly fill. And yet, it takes only a minute—and costs so little—to pick up your phone and make that beloved photo talk. If you travel frequontly on business or have to. spend extended periods away from home, be sure to arm yourself with ,_ 4 B.C, TEL Long Distance Credit Card, It enables you to'call * tong distance from any phonei in the country to any other phone As the years pass by, the telephone becomes one-of the strongest links holding scattarad families together. On birth- days and other special anniversarias—on accasions like Eester, Mothar's Day, Father's: Day, Thanksgiving: and Christmas—. ‘a long distance call is “the next best thing to being there. me and charge the call to’ your personal or r buatness account. fon, distance, ask tha operator | ZEN) Wire 7000 oO fthere és no charge). * BE TEL @& o BRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY a “ “ha eal ; for “WORLD WICH TELUPHONE CONNEGTIONS =. inrbibiartG NAL: TWX! ‘AND TRLETYPE. SERVICE © . " namioTeesHONEE . ‘ctoaeo clear. Vv. . invaecom aNb pry