CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, June a. 1979 Today is Thursday, June 21, the 172nd day of 1979, There are 193 days left tn _ the year, On, this date in 1945, U.S. forces captured Okinawa. section Thursday, June 21, 1979 CASTLEAIRD PLAZA WE CAN’ T UNDERSTAND why this lovely home Is still on the market. Call today for appointment to wlew: $71,800. MLS PEACE AND QUIET. Neat 2-bdrm. home In North Castlegar. $38,000, MLS Ba Sian ates THIS TOPS THEM ALL. Here's a lovely three-bdrm. home, located close to the high school in North Castle- gar. Upstairs fireplace, and finished bathroom, bed- “room, and rumpus room In the basement, are but a few of the many features of this NEW LISTING! THE GOOD OLD DAYS are still here In this... S-P-A-C-I-O-U-S and dis- tinctively styled home in. North Castlegar. $67,000. tee am home. Priced at only $55,900. Call us now on this super buy. ‘A great big house for a good price, in a strategic location. MLS CENTRAL AIR. COND!- TIONING Is just one of the many features of this well- maintained, 3-bedroom home, located in Woodland Park. Priced at only $61,- 500. Call us today on this super ey. a Terrific pales for com- mercial venture. Listed at $65,000. Call. the Cooper Team for detalls. Jackie McNabb 365-6695 Glen Witson 365-3407 ae, Betty Taylor Gort 365-2642 AGENCIES LTO 365-3347 © Three-bedroom ‘family home. Large living room, combination kitchen/dining area, 3-plece bathroom, all located, on main floor. Wall- to-wall carpet throughout, Two lots, fully-landscaped, and ‘close to schoot and * shopping area. NEW LISTING! | . COMMERCIAL PROPER- TY In downtown Castlegar. Older home and workshop on large lot zoned C-1, Phone today! __ NEW LISTING This excellent property Is just waiting to be snapped up. One of the fast of Its kind in the area. Huge lot 135x225 ft. Rental property In front — Industrial In rear. New Listing! A rare find. Only serlous enquirles, please, on this lovely home in .Crestview Subdivision. A Cooper ex: clusive. ahSS ion Gemmill Manager 365-7800. View of the lifetime. New” log home (4 bedrooms), 10 minutes from owt: Beauti- ‘NEW HOME WITH SU- PER VIEW. Three be rooms, sunken living room, 12x26 ft. sundeck and same size sunken patio below. Two full fireplaces (brick), roughed-In wet bar and bath downstairs. Private yard. This home will satisfy the. most careful buyer, guallty everywhere. $69,- oe 2 ene New home in high school area in North Castlegar. Fully landscaped lot. Jack Young 365-8117 KINBERRY HEIGHTS - — 1704 9th Ave., S. Modern, 3-bdrm. bungalow on a 65x110-ft. lot. Safe,dead-end street. Garage and carport. Water aoft- ener, range and dryer to stay. Full bsmt. with 4th bedroom. and 2nd bathroom. Only $49,000. 1305 - Sth AVENUE, SOUTH 100x150-ft. lot. Three-bedroom home on two levels, family kitchen, part-basement, and attached carport. $38,500. BENCHLAND — LOWER OOTISCHENIA 3% acres of level grassland at foot of hill to D-Bar-D. An Ideal solar location with trailer and addition. $40,000. MOBILE HOME — On Rental Pad 12x46-ft., 2-badroom Safeway, with an 8x20-ft., 2-room addition. Included are most appliances, furniture, and skirting. A very comfortable home. Only $10,700. Your property could be listed for sate In this spot, where the last one was sold. 11th AVENUE, SOUTH — Bullding Lot Shaded by native birch trees. Close to park and schools. $19,500. RURAL TRAILER LOT — Pass Creek Area 115x215 ft. facing two roads. Well casing Installed. Only $13,900. COMMERCIAL CORNER C-1 LOT Located at 2nd and Maple. 30x100 ‘ft. Business- man's Special! $19.900. ~ Rental Homes & Suites — WANTED HIPWELL REALTY PHONE 365-7514 J.F. Hipwall, F.R.1., Ful. (B.C.) “SERVING CASTLEGAR FOR 12 YEARS” IN SALMO LARGE YARD, CLOSE To SCHOOL. MLS NEW LISTING —.8th Ave., 8. yard, with’ privacy hedge, : Is the setting for this lovely 3-bdrm. home with finished rec. room. Good district. Priced at $69,000. RELAX ‘AND ENJOY: No need to toil over tandscaping. . This comtortable 3-bdrm, home has- Fireplace up and down,’ It all. ‘ensuite in master bdrm., cozy family room downstairs, and semi- finished rec. room. Situated on, 9th S. $72,000. : MOBILE HOME s Immaculate and cozy :2- to 3-bdrm. mobite home, situated on a ‘nicely wm. landscaped rented lot-in Brilliant. Includes fridge, range, washer, and dryer. Excelient starter or.ratire- ment home, Asking $12,500. THE EASY LIFE begins with a well-bullt, conven- lently located home, such as this. Marvelous, 3 bdrms., formal living and dining rooms, living rom with beautiful custom rock fireplace, and finished rec. room with bar. All on a. beautifully landscaped, and fenced, yard. $59,900. “IN QUIET RESIDENTIAL AREA Here is'a:1,140-8q.-ft. home aure to please any growing family. Three , PE bdrms.,-and a large utility room, are » 40 ‘acres, plus house, log ‘house, . located’ on’the maln floor. The full bsmt. could easily be: developed. There Is alao plenty of room on the large 100x150-ft. lot to park boate or . Motor homes, $54,900. MLS ST reteset cae FEATURE OMe OF THE BRAND-NEW HOME — = QUAL- ITY.CONSTRUCTION . * If you are considering lving In a new home then come and admire the excellent quallty and features of this truly modest family home. There are 1,288 sq. ft. of living area,” situated on’ a beautiful river. view: fot. This home is nearing the finishing stages, and you may choose carpets and colour schemes to your personal taste. For exact detalis’ please cail Neli Pereverzoff at 365-2337, Castle Realty Ltd. BIscOvER ‘REFRESHING INDI. VIDUALITY Make your move now to this residence of dignity. Tasteful rich- ness is apparent. Custom-designed - &bdrm. home. Master suite with full bath, plus much more. PASS CREEK VALLEY Minl-farm on 70 acres. If youl don't want to spend much, but get a lot, consider this carefully. 600-sq.-ft. house with bsmt., small: barn, chicken coop,. ‘several storage’ sheds, and.even a duck pone Only $23,500. MLS - Castle Realty Ltd. CASTLEGAR Lids ‘MAKE YOUR HOME A CASTLE” CENTURY 21 BIG ROCK REALTY IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THEY ARE NOW THE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR THE CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION LOTS, LOCATED IN THE CONNORS ROAD SUBDIVISION NEW LISTINGS & "BEAUTIFUL HOME BRAND NEW QUALITY FINISH 3 ACRES ON PASS CREEK PARTIALLY FURNISHED. MLS CORNER LOT. Ms * ‘IN WOODLAND PARK land.” aR Beautiful home in Wintaw on 1 acreot one landscaped SUPER-SIZED LOT 3 BEDROOMS EAL! MLS ar SUPER-VALUT . NEW LISTING! UNIQUE SU SLOCAN VALLEY PROP- barn, and: other ‘outbuildings, festled among beautiful big pine and cedar trees. Gravity-fed creek water. Very secluded .and private, yat close to everything. Investigate thia-find. Owner anxious. Asking $59,500. MLS NEW LISTING — INDUSTRIAL BUILDING * Very well bullt, with Insulation, ¢.c. . block, and.clear-span trussed roof. Four fully finished offices with central air conditioning. Three oil “heat gas furnaces. Good location on 6th Ave., 8. Excellent valuet » WILL LOOK AT TRADES The vendor is anxious to sell this Spanish-styled home, situated on- large ‘view lot close to Raspberry + Village. This near-new home has a lot te offer, and is priced -to sell at * NOT TOO BiG, NOT Too SMALL. JUST RIGHT! 1,042 aq. ft. of Ilving area, with 2 large bdrms. up, fireplace, separate ‘dining room. Downstairs has great © potential. Large -lot with garden area. Priced in the mid 50's. “RURAL BUILDING LOTS Located 30 minutes from Caatleg: are -two ‘large bullding lots. Hed acres each. They are mostly level, and easy to build on. Asking price S$ ach. MLS _ 000 ez “Blom A; Edbtad Ri (B. Greg We Nichvalodo if jent/Sales Manager * “Nell A. Pereverzolf. Resldencé 385-2397: Florence Safiken ..fiesidence 366-6048 CUSTOM BUILT ('N NEW SUBDIVISION REVENUE PLUS MLS 5 WE HAVE THE GREATEST SELECTION OF BRAND. NEW AND OLDER. HOMES Wallace Reid 365-7051 Carol Daniel 399-4101 Canty BIG ROCK REALTY Phone 365-2111 _ Walter Tymofievich 365-3250 Mary Wade Anderson 365-2111 Norm Werre 365-3703 - Kathy Plotnikoff Receptionist Stan Partridge, Agent. 365-7450 THE NEIGHBOURHOOD PROFESSIONALS _ Wider City Council Split _ Expected Over Planning ‘Castlegar can expect continued polarization of city council “for the next ’ few years” over land development here, ‘according to urban planning ex- pert Donald Gutstein. Gutstein, researching planning and land use trends in the area in : ‘preparation for a lecture and seminar here last week, said in an interview ‘with the Castlegar News that the pressure for growth, balanced against “a ‘growing awareness amongst the citizens” will probably ensure "very clear- :cut differences” in the positions of incumbent and would-be council mem- ‘bers on development. Citing the apparent existence of two factions on council, he said council's chances of making planning decisions as “one happy family” are “gone at least for the next few years.". “I think it’s going to be quite interesting: politically in this city in this coming election and in-the next couple of elections,” said‘ Gutstein, a .freelance writer who has a master’s degree in architecture and is a former teacher of urban “design at the University of B.C. “I think there are going to : be very clear-cut differences in the candidates who run in : terms of which side they're on.” Noting the extent of public ‘opposition to such’ proposed developments as a 116-room otel on Seventh Avenue South, hich won council approval in a lit. vote, and an up-to-80-unit of the apartments represented “a pretty clear message to council.” “Regardless .of who does get elected to council, council’s going to have to be a lot more careful with what kinds. of things they do,” he continued. * . “They're not going to be able to run roughshod over the com- munity, they're going to have to consult the people much partment complex on Third — treet, which was rejected una- nimously by council, he said : there is “a growing awareness” : of. individual members’ Posi. ‘ tions. “Just talking to people you seg,they're not too happy, from their point of view, with, the behavior of some of the alder- men,” Gutstein said. He said the signatures of : 85.out of about 93 nearby petition zoning of tne Third Street ‘DONALD GUTSTEI property to aed peters they do approve pro- see +e That's good in itself, re- gardiess of who's on’ council,” he said. “That's one important thing ‘that’s going to have repercussions over the next few years.” Gutstein said notifying residents at an earlier stage of the development process and public notices announcing the submission of development pro- posals — suggestions made at a planning seminar in which he took part at Selkirk College — as ways in which the city's planning process would be More open and polarization over land development could be avoided. : “T think a large part of the reason why people get very hostile and opposition-minded is that they're not told about it until it's so late in the process that it’s all they can do,” he explained. “But if they're brought in earlier and you can get a kind of dialog happening between coun- cil and the developer and local residents. I. think you get a >“ much’ better ‘process’ and ‘you ™! can get around that polarizing. kind of situation.” - Alcohol, Drug Use Rising . Among District No. 9 Students Despite the increasing use of alcohol by students and a general ignorance of the affects of drugs, there is no immediate plan to institute a learning program into the educational system, the vice-chairman of the School District No. 9 board of trusteés told the Castlegar News last week. . - “There is more alcohol Msage than ever, and the drug problem is difficult to guage,” said Anne Jones. _ Jones said a family life program is currently in effect to alert students about sexual problems and pregnancy, but no-one seems to be alarmed about the drug and alcohol problem. The issue came to light when a drug case involving a Castlegar student was discus- sed by trustees at the ‘last regular school board meet- ing. According to Jones, the student involved had previously been an above-average pupil, and had been unaware that his grades were declining or that care in his personal appearance had deteriorated. - She said the youth had been a marijuana user but was apprehended while using anoth- er drug. “This seems to support the theory that they start out on grass, and then go on to some- thing stronger,” she said at the’ meeting. “Nobody seems to be at all medical profession,” she said Tuesday. “The drug and alcohol problem is at a much more critical level, than the sexual question involving the stu- dents.” “I'm sure most parents would be supportive of such a program, but ‘first there is a need for qualified instruction,” Jones said. She added that the board is concerned, but has only re- ceived “the cold shoulder” when the possibility of imple- menting such a program was suggested. “We thought it might be possible to tie it in with the family life program, but those involved at the instructional. level did not seem at all the d.” she said. > 2,4D in the Arrow Lakes on “Eurasian milfoil weed “could * not be contemplated” if the cost of an alternate water . supply were prohibitive. That is the an ‘Use of the herbicide, tance” in control programs conducted in\the program. “The elaborate _pre- cautions taken routinely by the staff’ planning and exe- cuting the mechanical or and ;, environment ministry biolo- gist has given city council on control] procedures in the event- the weed spreads to » Castlegar's future water -» supply. Hespanding to an April + 19 letter indicating council's concern over the use of 24D in the lakes a May 31 letter from Peter Newroth, the ministry's aquatic plant management program pro- ject manager, said the appli- cation of the herbicide would * probably make provision of “an alternate water supply for city residents necessary until the chemical broke : down. The letter assured coun- «cil that safety “has always “been of paramount impor- the precautionary conditions included in permits issued by the Pesticide Control Branch are not always ap- preciated to the public,” Newroth said in the letter. “If a permit is granted and the decision is made to use 2,4D, a survey of local water intakes would be undertaken and alternate water supplies would be provided, if necessary, until 24D was non-detectable.” “This is a self-imposed safety factor of one‘hundred- fold over levels of 2,4D in drinking water considered safe. by international health authorities,” the letter con- tinued. “If a treatment was being considered. in the ; region of a large consump- “Prohibitive’ Alternate Source Would Rule Out 2,4D Use tion intake, as for the City of Castlegar, and costs of pro- viding alternate water were prohibitive, then 24D use could not be contemplated.” Newroth — who was quoted late last month as saying a search for a dif- ferent water supply might be necessary in the event the herbicide is used in the Arrow Lakes — said in the letter that the ministry has “incorporated many preven- tive measures® into the 1979 program in addition to the use of dredging and 2,4D to contro! established milfoil colonies. “This year the quaran- tine project will include a highway check station at Midway for vehicles trailer. ing boats,” the letter said. “This should help protect the Arrow Lakes from trans- port of Eurasian water mil- foil ‘fragments from the Okanagan Valley.” NEW FACILITIES of Public Frel, htways were put into service last week. ct, turning off the Castlegar-Christina Lake sheds, the new $300,000 building ig more efficient handling of in- coming and outgoing freight. West Kootenay branch manager Peter Picton told the Castlegar News the growth of business over the past 17 years has. located on Meadowbrook Roa $ at the | ighways D 9 made it necessary to provide facilities. The company begon serving the area in 1962 at its Sixth Avenue South location and has increased ite handling of freight from less than one million pounds to six million pounds per month. An official op ing, allowing both customers and the general public to view the new building firsthand, is to be announced ot a later date.—News/MirrorFotos by Lois Hughes Rack of Blouses & Tops Bel ALL . Electrohome and more Off regular price! Your LINK Hardware Store 21 Pine Street, Castlegar Spring & Summer ; Dresses 4 to VY, sii Air Travel Agents for ALL AIRLINES ‘¢ ACCOMMODATIONS © RESERVATIONS © TOURS / Telephone 365-7782 Department Store