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Scottish- 82. color Gaelic LIAISIT REPIU (THRE IDIEIR 33. salutation 22. barn AIRIAIRMAICIABSRII|S|[E] 36. box 35. erase PJAIR|E BNSIUIMMMAINS|A} 87. large 27. lamb SILIAINITISMMEIASITIE|R] ,,, baskets 2%, furnace 40. degrade tender DIEIAIRBACIE 42. frisk 31. contrive CIOMIS REGIE (NIEIRIAIL IS! 43. cognizant i 34.Mohamme- [O]D/A EINE DIEJE| 44, slacken : dan noble [P/E/R{S|i SITISSETISIA/R|] 45. pro’a : Merit ‘ | IREBEITICiH 4s, coe gations 35. festivities [TIEIMIPIE|RAMILIAIRIDIE IR . meadows 37. hint OIPIATA AILTM EIA Sje] 48. printer's 34. European NERIOMMEINBIATIAIS measures river Ele INEAP IE IGMETIATU TT 48. building plot 38, common “2 50. exlat value Average time of solation: 22 minutes. 51. ribbon 41, blemish (© 1966, King Features Synd., Inc.) design CRYPTOQUIFS , PTYANQM KAHMTPY QHFSB BPW. WFAIJ NCIABM KFBMSC. ° Yesterday's Cryptoquip — WILD CALLIOPE WHEEZED HOT PIZZICATO. “Bowl Bowl Bowl Enter Your Team Now In The SPRING LEAGUE (LADIES AND MIXED TEAMS BARNEY'S BOWL 7.4807 Lozelle a HERALD CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS—TRY THEM! Phone 635-5911 § Phys-ed program for retarded ‘youngsters physical education program has been developed for retarded child. ref as a centennial project by the Canadian Association for Re- tarded Children, ‘ Main prupose of the program Is to -enable retarded children to 4 qualify for centennial athletic aw- ards as normal children do, Dr. PatrickA ustin, Alberta chairman of the project and a physical education professor at the University of Alberta, said that because retarded children cannot functlon at the same level as other youngsters the sameage, special courses had to be des- lgned for them, These courses were planned to develop the same type of phy- sleal skills that other children need to pass the tests, but scal- ed down to the ability of the } youngsters involved, Awards for the children will be the same as those received In regular competition -- rad crests for participation and bronze, silyer or gold awards for reaching increasingly higher jevels of achlevement, In creating the special program, members of the retarded child: ren’ s centennial athletic program development subcommittee also produced aid booklets which con: taln lesson plans, physical edu cation actlvities and recreation actl vities, The third phase of the project is the development of recreation activities, such as swimming and skating, which retarded children can enjoy independently, CBC extends service to Kootenays VANCOUVER-Improvement and extension of Canadian Broadcast. ing Corporation TV service inthe east and west Kootenays has been announced by Kenneth Caple, CBC Director for the Province of Brit. ish Columbia, Caple said some 3% of a mil- lion dollars will be spent on TV installations that will greatly im- prove CBC TV coverage In an area with a population of more than 60,000, Last week Caple visited the Koatenays and discussed CBC coverage plas Wwitn comimuniy leaders. The service will be fed from new, more powerful transmitters at Rossland-Trall and Nelson. Expansion from Rossland, Cham nel 11, wilt be west to a mic- rowave relay station at ‘Santa. Rosa, then to a TV rebroadeas' g\ting station at Crawford Bay on Channels 8 8 t oe This transmitter Wilt Yetye the EDMONTON cP) - A special dued. L ‘ YOU HAVE TO GO LOW when the fire’s beneath the building. Here “hard- pressed Terrace firemen move the week, Blaze, believed started by hose in under Doc's Cartgae warehouse last fly ash from a nearby mill, was quickly sub- —Gauthreau photo Two widely separated events led to the development of a revolutionary type of amphib- utors Ltd, of Vernon, B.C. into a deep water-hole, and had to be-retrieved by a giant Si- korski helicopter, Searching for a more suit- able machine, the engineering ciates contracted Alpine, B.C, Snowmobile Ltd. of Valcourt, Quebec — developer of the Bren gun carrier, Alpine was sure it had the answer. They started with a conven- tional Bombardier Muskeg trac- tor — a twin-tracked vehicle descendant from ‘the original Bombardier tractor of two dec- adegs ago which contributed largely. to the development of Canada’s northland. .-. . . Capable ‘of speeds up: to. 25 mjarea north towards Kaslo and south from Crawford Bay to Cre- ston where a TV rebroadeasting statlon will operate on Channel oe . These new TV services are ex- pected to be on the air by Oct ober of this year, Ask for this booklet. ft tells how you may obtain an IDB loan to help start, modernize or expand your business. AGLER nous trial DEVELOPMENT BANK TEAM FINANCING FOR CANADIAN BUSINESSES PRIRGE GEOAGE: 1320 Fl#th Avenue — Telephone: 563-0641 7 : . 7 . | to quench a BUG thirst -BEST! | » ee iw: & 6 ONREFE OLD:VIENHABREWING COMPANY (wc) bro.) home defrarye MU 4-1121, ¥U B-2880, WA. 8 78IO tA a.0ge8 «. ae This adVertiasmant fe not published cr diaplayed by the Liquor C roi Beard or by the Government of Brit Muskeg will plough through sloppy mud, and clamber over three-foot stumps, boulders or windialls. It will push down small trees and make its own road — it has become the workhorse of the Canadian backwoods. Al- pine proceeded to convert it lous tractor by Alphine Distrib- Up in a peat-bog on the Queen Charlotte Islands, a con- ventional tractor plunged through a skim-coat of. peat firm of G. E. Crippen & Asso- distributor for Bombardier ‘miles per hour;-rubber-tracked |' eraft in the mudflats which lie immediately west of Vancouver airport at low tide. Three peo- ple were Killed in the crash — tke second su¢h incident in re. cent years. The inquiry which followed observed that rescue work was hampered by the in- accessibility of the area from both land and sea, and by the fact that no agency was clearly charged with responsibility for rescue in this no-man's-land, It wag realized that survivors might well have drowned in the incoming tide, and that a search should be undertaken to find a vehicle which could ne- gotiate the flats, DEMONSTRATION . Meanwhile, up in Vernon, Al- Pine distributors was putting the finishing touches on Can- ada’s first truly - amphibious tractor for the peat operation. President Eldon Seymour and General Manager Jack Pass- more read of the crash inquiry, and offered to demonstrate their vehicle at the airport. Despite predictions that the modified Muskeg could never negotiate the treacherous mud- flats, it clambered aver a tri- angle of three-foot logs, skim- med across the mud, and iloat- ed over the water channels with ease, ; The Department of Transport was subsequently assigned re- Amphibious tractor rides through gumbo, over stumps sponsibility for rescue in’ the flats, and they commissioned Alpine to work with their own engineers in developing a pro- totype especially designed for the unusual rescue work. The two organizations exam- ined the special requirements: it must have a large, flat: deck atea to accommodate numerous stretchers in the event of a major crash; it must be able to operate in heavy seas ~~ the hull and deck must be- com- pletely sealed; waterproof hatches would be required for storage of rescue and firefight- ing equipment; a hydraulic winch and mast was a must and the vehicle must be highly maneuverable. Design and con- struction followed. SEALED | The whole machine wes com- pletely sealed to a point three. feet above the deck«waterproof- ing was simplified by the fact that the Muskeg his only two seal-points, pte ; Twin. hydraulic serews. pro vid speed and maneuverability: | the vehicle will turn in it own length, even in water, Radio |. communication was installed to provide communication and lo. cation under fower control. : The amphibious Muskeg, now completed, is undergoing its ‘shakedown cruise’ this week in 0 relaxed Relocating? “T, k wy , Yo gy: = 7 f you ask me there's such a thing as being, Let Us Help! . yey pele $ ose | Cartage & into a truly amphibious tractor equally at home on land, water or mud, , CRASH. The second- event ‘was the etash of.a Grumman Goose air- New schools keep minister on the move The volume of new school cone struction in British Columbia {is reflected in the Minister of Ed. ueation’s schedule for the week ahead, LR. Peterson will open two new elementary schools in the Birch Island School Déstrict.-- Duck Lake and Star Lake Elem- entaries, May 11, On May 12 he will open the A.E. Perry, K. Bingham and George Slater Elementary School in Kamloops, On May 24 Peterson will open the hew vocational wing of the Cowlehan Senior Secondary School at Duncan and on May 25 will go to Williams Lake for the opening of the Kwaleen Elem. entary and Columneeza Senior Secondary Schools. jah Columbia oa +4) "are part of the 176 percent {n- '/rinks to 90 but. it Jacks the This month's school opelnings crease in expenditures for school construction in the 4 year per- fod to the end of 1966. In 1963 $16.7 million worth of school construction was auths orized, In 1964 it was $23.4 million; in 1965 $39,3 million and last year $46.3 million, The 1966 figure represents ape| | proximately 1,150 classrooms, the highest number ever attain. ed, . . For the first four months of 1967 $17 million in school con struction has been authorized, more than the total for 1969, es Shovellers needed SAULT STE. : MARIE, Ont. (CP) — There will be more open-air skating rinks here next year, but children’ who want to usa them will have to. keep them, clear.af snow. The city hopes to. double the number of money to pay. for anow clear. vised that thoy want to skate, “| Gackt. the old community | °’ spirit of do-it-yourself, ing. Youngsters have been ad-|. °’ old savings ideas ae the Sea Island mudflats! ‘Phone 635-2728 ‘ gees Qo oe ‘ \ , Call. for Free Estimate! 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