Page 10B The Castlegar Sun Wednesday, June 10, 1992 Sun Classifieds 365-7848 1987 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVille A- 1 Y 1968 BLACK IROC CAMARO con- vertible, grey leather 5.0, | fully, loaded, alpine CD, 3-amps mint 1968 FIREBIRD t-roof, ps/pb, ster- eo cassette, excellent condition, 1991 GRAND AM loaded sport package, low mileage 365-2183 9 a.m, - 5 p.m 1991 TOYOTA Previa 4 WD, excel- lent condition, fully loaded, no GST, 965-6103, 000 302 FORD motor excellent condi- tion; 1973 Plymouth Grand Coupe, 400 hp motor, good shape, power seats VERY REASONABLE 365- 5310, CAR DOLLY FOR SALE, good con- dition, call 428-7959 — Creston, _ MOVING MUST SELL, 1975 Cadil- lac Seville, make me an offer! Also, COMM. RENTALS | 2500 29q.ft. air conditioned oftice space; 2000 sq.ft. retail or service area. very reasonable rent. Ad- journing Court House, in Castlegar 965-3966 or 365-2434, 0 DOWNTOWN OFFICE space, rea- sonable 365-2210 9:30 -- 5:30 p.m. PROPERTY FOR SALE 1.1 ACRE lot Crescent Valley es- tates, uncleared, well on property. Phone 368-9756, 0000 10 ACRES - 68 x 12 trailer, (Gold Creek) natural gas, $80,000 phone 426-4182 after 5 p.m, — Cranbrook 1500 SQ.FT. ranch style home on 1.4 acres, 3 bedrooms, up/2 down, fully landscaped, fruit trees 428- 9826 — Creston, floral pattern couch & $175 obo 10. MUST SEE ‘85 mint con- dition, runs excellent, new paint 19. MUST SELL: 1989 Toyota; 1987 Volkswagens. Phone 365-5669 for details. VOLVO 7 passenger wagon a/c, no rust, $7500. 362-9405, 229-4622 weekends. 1500 SQ.FT. Ranch style Home on 1.4 acres, 3 bedroom up & down. Fully landscaped, fruit trees. 428- 9826 — Creston, 2 BEDROOM HOUSE in Erickson on large lot; 2 out buildings; close to school. 428-2616 or 428-4012. — Creston. 2 BEDROOM modern home on lev- e/ lot in town, 2 car carport, 428- 4419 — Creston. TRUCKS FOR SALE 1957 & 1960 Land Rovers, running order call 428-7014 — Creston, _ 1976 DODGE Club cab 1 ton Tow truck c/w single line wrecker & string $4500 obo; 1979 GM 3/4 Ton pw 4x4 $3900 obo 428-2167.— Creston, 1977 CJ5 Jeep, new body, in good running condition $5700 obo 365- 3776. 1978 GMC 3 ton, 454 motor 14 ft reeter box. Asking $3500 Phone 1980 BRONCO, runs needs some work $1200 phone 428-5633. __ 1980 FORD Bronco 4x4 365-3958, 1980 GMC 44 Pass Bus. Phone 49.m. 1982 FORD camperized van. Ex- cellent condition throughout,no rust, 60,000 original miles, all service records kept. Many extras. $6395 19863 MAZDA regular box, am/fm fadio 365-8450 or 365-6708. 1985 GMC 515 p/u Fiberglass Ca- nopy, extended cab, loaded. No fust 368-6260 000000 1985 GMC S15 extended cab, ca- nopy, loaded. Good condition, no fust, 368-6260, _ ACREAGE LOTS fully serviced 965-6828, 0000 QUIET MOUNTAIN ac: in Creston, BC 7.32 acres, pure mountain air and water, rail fences, bam & shelters. 2 bedroom double- wide mobile home w/addition. Five miles from U.S. border. 1-604-428- $690 — Creston, RURAL LOT APPROXIMATELY 100 x 100 com, with ic tank & water, ideal for trailer set-up or 1 my VIEW LOT builder's dream. Close to city, mountain country living 365- 6381. FOR SALE Alex 365-5342 HOUSES FOR SALE 1986 SUZUKI SE Samurai 5 speed 4x4. Excellent condition. Very eco- I; 1979 Ford F250, 2 wd speed, Standard. Phone 1986 TOYOTA 4x4 extended cab 365-6559, 1 NEW 1400 sq.ft 3 bedroom full basement, close to hospital; 1 re- modeled 1500 sq.ft. 3 bedroom on large view lot in North Castlegar 1 3 BEDROOM wanes double car ga- rage, 2 1986 TOYOTA Pickup automatic; 1968 Landrover Jeep: 365-6119, _ 1988 FORD F250 4x4 good condi- tion 368-9187 monthly revenue over wor 61000 asking $69,900 365-5628, 00 BEAUTIFUL NEW 1 bedroom log home; view, 1988 JEEP Comanche $6595 4x4, red, 6 cyl., standard, ps/pb, tilt wheel, stereo. 357-2146 or 357- 9727. 1988 JEEP COMANCHE, $6595 4x4, red, 6 cyl., standard, ps/pb, tilt wheel, stereo. 357-2146 or 357- 9727, by. Leaving Canada — quick sale $4900 Ronde! 225-3448, FURNISHED 3 bedroom, Salmo 387-9790, 000 TRIPLEX 2 bedrooms each, kitch- en, 1 . living room, with . on double lot. Good rev- 1988 JEEP C $6595 4x4, red, 6 cyl., standard, ps/pb, tilt wheel, stereo 357-2146, 357-9727. 1989 FORD F150 air, tilt, cruise, trailer brake & electrical pkg. $8500 phone 428-9493 or 428-7722 — Creston. 19869 FORD XL Club Wagon 15 Pass van, 1 ton, 460, 4 speed, o/d,a/c. Phone 693-5528 after 4 am. 1990 MAZDA B2200 pickup with canopy, Call after 5 p.m. 365-0262. 1990 ‘MAZDA B2600 4x4, longbox, canopy, Pioneer stereo, warranty, red, $13,000. 368-0832 * 1980 Ford F250 3/4 ton 4x4 4 speed 11,638 km. C/W 10 351 m motor, $5400. * 1988 Ford F250 3/4 ton 4x4 5 243,000 km. Runs well, 351 fuel injected. + 1979 Blazer 4x4, 4 speed, c/w PTO Winch, nice shape $3600. * 1989 Ford F350 1 ton, au- tomatic, 4x4, new pairit $12,400. No deck PHONE 365-3315 | VANS FOR SALE | enue. 365-0094. RRS : National Real Estate Service ‘There's space to spare in this § bdim. home HOUSES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM +. Very quiet location, s/t/w/d. Garden spa vailable 3 BEDROOM close to down town, FAX: 365-7715 Castlegar Realty Ltd. 1761 Cotumibie Ave. Jordan Watson 3 BEDROOM, Blueberry Creek. eq . lease preferred. Available July 1 365-6276 or 1-584-3903, AFFORDABLE HOUSING for fa- milies. British Columbia Housing Management Commission is ac- cepting applications for three bed- room family rental units located at Castlegar. Tenants pay no more than 30% of their gross income for rent. For information on eligibility and applications please contact CABIN AT Christina Lake, Starting duly 365-2528, FOR RENT: Available May 1, 3 bedroom Home $600/month. No pets, No smokers please. Contact Peter Blackwell 365-2111. MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE 1974 12X68 good condition 3 bed- room, heat, 4 8, 8x10 addition, 8x30 partially covered sundeck & , 12x30 nice set up $16, 500 Phone 365- 0095 — C. 1974 12X68 Leader with addition 35' TRAILER on spot, Beach, Christina Lake Willow $7000. Avail- MOBILE 12HOMES — 1975 14x68 $15,000, 1976 14x70 $16,750 (2) NEW SHOW HOMES NOW ON DISPLAY. Excellent financing on OAC. We have the key to your new home. Belaire Home 1525 A Col- umbia Avenue, Castlegar, BC. Phone 365-8077. MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT 14X56 (2 bedroom) & 14x70 (3 bedroom) for rent or sale; all ap- pliances included 365-6725. APARTMENTS FOR RENT 1 BEDROOM SUITABLE for 1-2 people, downtown location, heat in- cluded $400/month, references re- quired, available now. Call 365-2624 of 365-7634, 00 IN ROSSLAND 1 bedroom apt. partly furnished, W & D, carport, utilities included 365-5003, LARGE 1 POSSIBLE 2 bedroom basement suite, semi furnished, utilities included, Available June 15 7, NEW LARGE 2 bedroom, fences & grassed yard, f/s & dishwasher, separate storage area, laundry on site, parking included 365-5070 an- swering CLASSIFIED DEADLINE IS 11:30 A.M. PRIOR TO PUBLICATION RENTALS WANTED HOUSE OR Cabin of Christina Lake atter July 20, will take for 1 week - 3 weeks Phone 364-2743, _ NON-SMOKING family require 3 bedroom home by July 10/92. Pre- ferably with finished basement, ref- erences available. Phone 365-3206 after 6:30 p.m WORKING COUPLE require 2 bed- room home June 15 - August 1 in South Slocan, Thrums, Shoreacres area. References available. Call The Mutual Group RA] recre Facing Tomorrow wy The senior Sun ZS Man’s greatest invention was the wheel... a close second.was the classified ad. The Castlegar Sun Classified Ads 365-7848 { \ I 1 { I af it I “UNITED Hu Manufacturers Volume Disc Passed on to > YOU! FP rauser ‘tee | No Commission Sales ny Huge Selection of Famous Brand Name Furniture « Mattresses for every room in your home at major savings. Furniture Warehouse y, Warehouse Operation Low Cost E{UNITED BUY ($) SELL ~ [Fumiture Warehouse #@S. No used furniture. Only famous brand name SPORTS GRADUATI her peg 9 og for B.C. Team set to defend last nok s 53 3 medals/9A Moving in the eight rr ction at a fast pace/4A ‘ ut Meet thas yweee ~~ Humphries graduates | See our supplement and meet the achievers/inside WEDNESDAY June 17, 1992 Ln ~ The Castlegar Su we MIXED Weather 3A Vol. 2- NO. 28 | A, ‘Leading the way in supporting local business’ 75 Cents + G.S.T. Regatta cancelled SHARLENE IMHOFF Sun Editor The Hydroplane Regatta, a high drawing card for spectators along the Columbia River, sched- uled to take place during the upcoming Sunfest weekend in Castlegar, has been cancelled. The announcement was made Tuesday morning, by officials from Western Pro Title Series, the supervising body of the now can- celled Castlegar race. Derm Jackman, president of the Festival Society in charge of Sunfest, received the devastating phone call after i from for generation reasons for Canada and the U.S.." As well, striking workers are blocking the entrance to the main Celgar parking lot, which was scheduled to be used not only as a parking lot for race fans, but a pit area for the boats and their crews. The spacious lot also allowed access to a viewing area down at the river front, and Sun- fest organizers planned to hold a concession stand nearby. The Festival Society, which has been planning Sunfest activi- ties and the Hydroplane Regatta See FESTIVAL 2A drowning JASON KEENAN the pro-title series decided that the uncertainty of high water lev- els combined with the current labour situation involving Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers at the Celgar Pulp Mill, would likely not be resolved by the time race day arrived June 27. Currently, all pit sites that were to be used at the race are under water, and cannot be guaranteed by B.C. Hydro. “It's something that is largely out of our control," said Peter McMullan, Manager of Corpo- rate Communications for B.C. Hydro. "This is a river that's run Sun staff British Columbia is now ing recreation values, heritage values, and environmental val- ues,” said Mayor Audrey Moore. “We're exporting these to the United States.” She said that Zuckerberg Island is being flooded and dam- aged because B,C. Hydro is ship- ping water to the U.S. as the Americans demand it. “This is highest water we've Officials livid over. causeway for the Americans under the Colustbia River Water Treaty this past weekend, “The treaty water in the cans were buying their power from the southem states. “They held it [the treaty water} back as long as they See FLOOD 3A Full blown strike expected to be lengthy Pulp industr. facin losses of close to $16 million a d. : a -s: 2 we NRE SHARLENEIMHOFF**"“~ Sun Editor More than 12,000 pulp and paper workers throughout the province are now walking picket lines after an 80-member joint- union bargaining caucus unani- mously rejected an industry offer Sunday afternoon. A previous offer, which included pay raises of about 15 cents an hour the first year and 85 cents the following year, was changed on Sunday, to 30 cents the first year and then 70 cents the second President of the pulp workers’ _Mountie bikes “union; Stati Shewape canéa Sait ~ day’s wage offer a joke, and says union members are feeling betrayed by the industry. “We were called back to the table on Sunday under false pre- tenses. We thought a real offer would be made, instead, they've Switched some numbers around.” Of the 80 delegates across the province, Shewaga said that not a single one voted in favour of the latest offer. “Not one person thought it was decent,” he said. Besides the wage offer, one of the major stumbling blocks for members of the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada and the SUN STAFF PHOTO / Brendan Halper Constables Stephan Hess (left) and Russel Sangster of the Castlegar RCMP detachment show off the detachment's new patrol vehicles. See story page 8A. an industry demand to give up one of four statutory holidays. , Because of the nature of pulp production, statutory holidays mean mills have to undergo a costly complete shutdown. “We're anticipating a long strike. We're digging in our heels,” She waga said. Officials from the Pulp and Paper Industrial Relations Bureau are also anticipating a lengthy strike. Dave Reed, from the bureau's staff, said it boils down to a waiting game—waiting to See STRIKE 3A _Up and away Members of a Ministry of Forests Initial Attack Crew are seen training for hover exits on top of Grassy Mountain, near Castlegar. A hover exit is a procedure used by initial attack crews to gain access to forest fires located on steep mountain slopes or in heavy timber where a full helicopter landing isn’t possible. ‘SUN STAFF PHOTO / Brendan Halper Construction workers returning to job site after IRC announces decision on new gate SHARLENE IMHOFF Sun Editor pulp paper and woodworkers, when the union jumped the gun Officials from the Celgar Modernization Project are hope- ful that more than 850 construc- tion workers from various unions will be returning to work this week. Construction workers, well into the busy stages of modern- ization to the pulp mill, refused to cross picket lines set up by on an impending strike last Wednesday. Project Manager for the mod- ernization project, Rod Meares, said contractors went to the Industrial Relations Council (IRC) and were granted a request to allow one gate into the Celgar site open and free of pickets, since construction workers have no part in the dispute. “The IRC rules that the (PPWC) pickets cannot legally interfere with construction work of the mill. The temporary gate which has been established also lar options with which to choose from, it chose the option, as pre- sented by PPWC union itself. “We have had excellent coop- eration with the individual work- ers. I guess they realize it's in Pope & Talbot employees hit hard—again Over 200 sawmill workers off the job SHARLENE IMHOFF Sun Editor Employees at the Pope & Tal- bot Sawmill in Castlegar have been back on the job for less than six weeks, and already they have been forced off the job due to the labour dispute next door. Because the sawmilling opera- tion is tied directly to the Celgar Pulp Mill, it is reeling from the effects of the PPWC strike. Bob Coutts, Castlegar sawmill manager, said that over 200 workers have received layoff notices. Currently, less than 60 employees are left on the site. “The only things we are run- ning here is our shipping and planing operations,” Coutts said, the individual They've already employees. been through so ‘The far bigger impact Is on the individual employees. They've been through so much.' — BOB COUTTS Sawmill manager their best. interest not to disrupt construction at the mill since that’s where their long-term future is,""Meares said. As well, the IRC stated the PPWC would be required to con- tact other workers to inform them that the gate will not be picketed. With the IRC decision made and the continued cooperation of PPWC's workers, the only prob- lem left is to ensure all construc- tion workers are made aware of the new gate. “I guess if we don’t have a our solution isn't working very well,” finished Meares. admitting he didn't want to specu- late what might happen if PPWC workers remain on the lines for a prolonged period of time. “It's a big hit for Pope & Tal- bot, but the company will sur- vive. The far bigger impact is on much.” Pope & Talbot purchased the mill from Westar Timber earlier this year, and sawmill workers were out-of-work until the lengthy transaction and ministerial were finally X 1964 PLYMOUTH Voyageur mini van. Auto, ps/pb, 7 passenger, ex- cellent condition. Phone 428-5507. furniture for every [oa Recten hd room In your home. $y So 428-7600 426-3922 _ = age deposit. Available July 1 365- 6653. For all the local news and sports the Castlegar Sun