= hy Castlegar News _0 SALES & SERVICE 365-7145 1050 Columbia, Castiegor K & ATIRES LID. We Specialize in Brakes & Shocks (SERVICE & SALES) Lorry Chernenkof!, Owner 1507 Columbia Ave. BMIDGESTONE con 365-2955 AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS LF. Auto Centre * Wheel Alignments & Front Ends RAE'S PLUMBING. Commercial or residential. ee SS tions. RAE ., 365- (6656. tin/38 NEED A CARPENTER? By hour or contract. Free estimates. - 6120. tin/es PLUMBING and HEATING DOCTOR Ges Contracting Commercial, Residentia! 24 Hour Emergency Service 399-4762 TREE CUTTING AND T Ph. 365-7980. ten/40 Shermak Co. Ltd. * House Framing * Form Work “Rocking » Siding * Finishing Work * Additions eet eneranona ALL TvP6S OF canna aée-z9aa » 959-7362 © 369-7191 18 YR. OLD Castlegar Rebel er needs employment. Ph 744) PIANO lessons, 359-7195. 3/85 STUDENTS willing to do yard work. Coll “evenings 365-3030. Ask for Daryl. 3/85 NEED A JOB? High school ond college students may offer their services under this category Drop us a line or phone hor Ad mumiser af 65°2212, We will run your ad for 3 issues at no ‘hor, ge. _ttn/34 WANTED Partner in Excavati COMMUNITY SUPPORT for “our Fall Rummage sale wos over. ing. A sincere thank-y to Bll who Participated: " and District Hospital bough: tickets on the $100 cash prize. THE LUCKY WINNER WAS Bill Nevokshonoff of Castlegar Who donated it beck to the Thank you ever so Bill for your generousity, greatly ap preciat HE L.A. OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY: In BUT DID YOU KNOW THAT WE'RE BRANCHING Out? Everything that you've heard @bout the Sandwich Tree is true. We ere one of Canado's intor mation Box 3292 Castl 365 5167. er THE B.C. HEART FOUNDATION accepts with gratitude “In 3023, Castlegar, 8.C ee fastest growing» Conod owned restourants with over 60 outlets nationwide, 23 in Vancouver's Lower Mainlond elone. It's also true that our sales have almost tripled those of lost year. And, we do Provide in-house, bi-monthly newsletters as well os various CHILDS white dewing covk cupboard with 2 shelve Sesaiat OP aa PART-SIAMESE mother cat and 2 kittens, one black, one grey. Ph. 5 365-5945. 3/86 ond Programs However, you may not have heard that we are looking for 3 ADORABLE 7 week old. pia ‘ona white Mifix kittens. Ph 2K ee Waly vy arey ond white Nutty eran 359 WORK, school trips shopping. Cut expenses anc t together with our neighbour in our FREE re-A-Ride column. We'll run our od 3 issues free of char hone our Action Line 365. zy in /84 RIDE to Vancouver for 2. penple Preter Fare pond to share drivis 365-5925 ng one er . Reshift FOR FURTHER Nt 1ON PLEASE CONTACT Secretary /Treasurer Suite 800 1140 West Pender St., Vencouver, B.C. V6E 4G1 (604) 682-5253 FOR SALE PUBLIC TENDER Tenders will be accepted up to noon, November 4. 1986 tor the following. IHC 66 Passenger 4 Bus, 392 we i rd 66 Passenger School Bus, 391 cu Board reserves the righ! to reyect ony oF all Tenders Envelopes mus! be marked Schoo! Bus Tender J. DASCHER, Secretory-Treosurer School District No. 9 Castleger,8.C. VIN3HS Yen 67 someone to shar _ Call 365-2375 1-YEAR-OLD femole. Beagle jeed: men ly house. tromed. 365-3215. — 2a FLUFFY calico kitten, about 6 s-old. Oct. 16 at sotowey parking lot. 365-7006 a Prosimately 80 permanent new jobs. Call KREDA investment C er St., Nelson. Ph. 3/86 COAST? Stoy accommodation and easy oc ouple per night 7 or 524 9937 CASTLEGAR Junior Rebels wish drown at garage and boke sale Oct. 18. Grocery Homper \r Thomy ake Mrs F Inks 10 all who sup 87 INTERESTED in home brewing? ome to mini-pub presentation Tuesday, Nov. 4. Sandman Inn at 2:87 NOTICE OF SUBSTANTIAL COMPLETION PROJECT: Ten-Unit Senior Citizens Housing, New Den. ver, B.C OWNER: New Denver Silver ton & Area Semors Housing Society CONTRACTOR: Construction Ltd Yellowridge ARCHITECT: Bowen Rose Killick Metz Vancouver The above-mentioned project hos been declored subston tially performed os of October 17, 1986 365-5051 DANCE BANDS and Mobile Disco evoilable any type of engagement. |-362-7356._1!n/93 WATERCOLOR and pottery by Doolee nell and Moraine October 16 15 Waneto Mol! Kennedy thee November 7/62 ANONYMOUS and AL ANON 965.2665 104/95 MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC. CHRIST MAS pannies AND DANCES. CALL GOOD TIME MUSIC 365, EMOTIONS anGoNT MOUS: 1403 Bay Ave order line 1800-663. RADIO Trail, B.C 4964 ttn /65 Help your carrier Your Castlegar News carrier will be collecting job of your carrier is je easier if he or she doesn't have to make a second or third call Please consider your carrier. He or she is an independent b:siness person and they don't earn their profit until you've paid for your paper. That's why al appreciate it if you ready the first time they coll ‘TH NOV. 14 Block Heater Fall Special on Pony, Stellar or Excel inchodes Parts, Labour ond os on eaten of host Meare: on DISTRIBUTOR required in Trail astiegor, Grand Forks feqeired. (600 28 mes ce wu betes gaareed 9472 CASTLEGAR HYUNDAI SALES University graduates work longer hours OTTAWA (CP) — The 40- who thinks a university edu- cation is the key to a life of ease. “Among employees who modest — to 9.9 per cent i 1985 from 8.4 per cent in 1976 — the author of the study, David Gower, said the trend is surprising in light of the fact that the number of long- term employed has doubled since the recession and there's been a steady growth in part-time employ- ment. Gower is unable to say just why more people are work- ing longer hours but it's a were y 18 per cent usually worked at least 50 hours per week in 1985, nearly double the over- all average of 10 per cent,” the study says. And the farm is no place for pastoral slackers either, says the study, which found that “36 per cent fof agri- culture workers iff 1985 usu- ally worked 50 or more hours per week.” But university grads and farm workers are not alone. With the exception of the 1981-82 recession, there has been a steady increase over the last decade in the pro portion of paid workers with long work-weeks, the federal agency said. Though the rise has been idespr trend. ARE DEDICATED Among university grad- uates, most likely to put in long hours are those in religious vocations who ap- proach their work with a passion with 65 per cent working 50 or more hours a week. Managers and adminis- trators follow with 22.3 per cent putting in long weeks. Teachers are next, followed by doctors and finally those employed in the natural and social sciences, where only 11.1 per cent work 50 or more hours a week. The study also found that, even when part-time workers are excluded, a greater pro- portion of men than women TARIFF NOT ENOUGH FOR U.S. WORKERS cent. That isn’t much, is it?” Clayeux and other impose a duty of 15 per ce: lumber. 30 per cent. Managers at Idaho Forest the fight for penalty duties, Richards said a decision sawmills. town would have had to shut “Everybody is worried,” operator, said as he nervou “We're not out of the woods The consensus: The duty i “It's been over three year “I can pay my bills right cuts, I'm not sure,” and single mother of two. Most agreed that althoug decision to penalize quality-control supervisor enough for me.” farming, timber and mining old Lyle Streeter as he loaded Ken O'Riley. a saw-main Canadian counterparts he feels sorry for them “But we've got to look al people.” COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (CP) — his eyes, shrugged, kept pushing buttons on his lumber trimming machine and concluded glumly: “Fifteen per sawmill picturesque lakeside timber town of Coeur d'Alene, 175 kilometres south of the B.C. appointed by a U.S. Commerce Department decision to close to a wage increase around here,” year veteran with Idaho Forest Industries. Wages and benefits were frozen in 1984 and 1985, and this year workers took a cut of $1.60 US an hour, to about $14, to avert major layoffs. said Linda Johnson, a wood grader “We're thankful for a job but we can't take more pay cuts.” Canadian psychological lift and eases the threat of layoffs “I take one day at a time,” “Keeping the job will be The“attitude reflects hard times in a state of one million people where the three major are all severely depreséed “The main thing is to have a job,” “have got to eat like we do” Bill Clayeux rolled workers in the border, are clearly dis: nt on Canadian softwood American producers had sought a duty of more than Industries, which operates two mills in the aréa and is among the companies leading were subdued as they gathered for celebratory drinks. “I'm smiling,” said president Tom Richards. “It’s not as high as we'd hoped but it’ 's better than nothing.” against a countervailing duty would have been “devastating.” He was hoping for at least 20 per cent, and anything less casts doubt on plans to spend as much as $5 million next year to upgrade one of the Idaho Forest Industries “If there wasn't a duty, we think that lumber prices would have plunged to where one-half of the mills in this down.” Tom Coleman, a lift-truck sly fingered his hardhat. yet . MIXED SIGNAL is enough to save their jobs for now but doesn’t guarantee a future and it doesn't translate into long-awaited pay increases. s and we haven't even got said Clayeux, a 14 now but if we have more h the duty is too low, the lumber provides a said Larry De industries + observed 57-year lumber on to a lift truck tenance worker, said his and fter our country and our WANTED CLEAN COTTON RAGS Castlégar News 197 Columbia Ave., Castlegar put in long weeks — 15.3 per businesses, professiona Practices and farms and show that close to half of tion, but the frequent acci- dents have caused major riots. “Murder on the road stalks and strikes through speed- ing, overloading, rash driv- ing, poor driving etiquette and hazardous road condi- tions,” an editorial in The Muslim newspaper said. It a after two overcrowded buses that were racing toward waiting pass- engers smashed into a train at a railway crossing in Karachi, killing 35 people. Buses are painted in glow. ing shades of yellow, green, red, blue and purple, dec- orated with pictures of movie stars, spaceships and war- planes. They roar along at more than 110 kilometres an hour even in crowded cities and towns. (Fa LCON *Your Ford Country Headquarters’ HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. p.m. Sat. 6-6 CHECK US OUT Large Inventory in stock Over 110 New and Used Vehicles. Volume Discounts. Top Dollar Paid for Trade-ins. * MUSTAN Professional People to Assist you. PHONE COLLECT 364-0202 Hy [yy Cag as * RANGER PAINTING & DECORATING FOURTH AVENUE ec 365-3563 2649 CASTLEGAR vin 2st Gary Flemi Dianna Kootnikoft ADVERTISING SALES GAR NEWS 0 Danwee 3007 Castugar ac ver me CASTLE! rrison pd th find it!” There’s only Reach 921,000 Homes for only $129! Blanket Classifieds of the B.C Newspaper Association allow you to place your classified ad in over 80 newspapers in nearly every suburban and rural market in B.C. and the Yukon, and we can also arrange the same thing for every other province in Canada For information call our classified advertising department Castles Classified Ads 365-2212 Or write: Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 one way to do it! and Yukon Community Sy égar News