“Hey, Man, There'sa ae ofa Lot of Fun to be Had in the Park!” Resolution fo. RDCK Calls for Changes In Regulations on Nelson Sewage Plant A former member. of gar, has presented a resol tion to the regional district Sewing Machines, . Typewriters, TV's rent by week or month Union Peters 1334 Cedar Ave., Trall calling for several changes B&W and Color TV's for |. Telephone 368-6331 \ Rental WANTED 0 RENT in the Nelson Sewage Haan ment Plant re, . Macal up stage for some pani and it is now obvious that a sesident downstream from e plant cannot assume th- at sewage being discharged into the Kootenay River is receiving sewage treatment at any given time. ‘Mr. Macalister’s resolu- tion iiled for the updating of the requirements of the Nelson Sewage Treatment Plant, the connecting. of all sewage outfalis originating within Nelson to sewage tr- eatment works for treat: 0 treatment centre _ indicatin ods are required for Cominco Employees, es % Please Phone the finishing touch. Accommodations include: Houses, jez, Ments, Housekeeping Suites and Rooms... 364-4304 Leo ATTENTION SLOCAN VALLEY RESIDENTS Mitchell Supply Ltd. is pleased to introduce CITATION KITCHEN CABINETS AND. VANITIES Apart. when raw sewage is being by-passed. directly into the Kootenay River. The resolution also re- commended that the Pollu- tion Control Permit No, PE- 291 not be renewed or ex- tended. Upon receipt of a copy of Mr. Macalister’s resolu- cannery very good points. I think the city of Trail cou- ia: also _ the same ques- ions.” Ald, ” Chuck Lakes sug- gested that ens se plant could be in the times". He said it fakes: it me: to work a plant into full © city manager Ben de Kieine said there is a ch- ance for failure at a sew- age treatment plant at any time and at any time there is a chance for raw sewage to be going into the river. He said: “You have to have some place for the sewage to go, even if it isn’t being treated.” sy + "ald. Frank Banton said Neleon. has. problems simil- because some of their storm sewers are hooked to their sanitary sewers. Performing Arts in Toronto Local Woman fo Have Wall Hangings Featured -“Twenty-seven-year-old Wendy Paone of Pass Cre- ek will have one of her macrame, woven wall kang- ings featured In a two-mon- th Oreo Co of crafts in the entre for the Per- of ate at Vancouver Free Two years ago she left Vancouver and bought 10% acres at Pass Creek and built her home, corral and sheep stable. At present she {is building a round * house as a studio, liss Paone received a $500 Canada council grant for materials to study nat- ural dyes, wools and clay bodies in the Kootenays and subsequently in of 1972 she received a "ys, 600 arts bursary from Canada council to. raise sheep to shear and spin their wool; raise to process the linen and to study natural- dyes and tests on clay bod- ies. Her activities have in- eluded demonstrating Sal- ish weaving for Kootenay Hand Weavers Guild and she has just purchased a Bix cubic foot Rectrie pot- Miss Paone has no wa- ter at her home so she must carry it by bucket from the creek a quarter of a mile away. Still she batiks and tle- dyes her fabrics and~ has taught her neighbours wea- ving, batik, tle-dying and-: croche Presently she is a re- lief worker for a neighbors 18-year-old emotionally dis- turbed girl; a counsellor for welfare department for teenaged girls and has been Reservations For CP Air _ Automated CP Air is taking one of the giant steps of today's airline industry: It will its SITS Wendy Paone accepted as a’ foster home for emotionally disturbed teenaged girls, although she has no permanent place- ments yel In September she will be crafts instructor at Val- lican Free School. Miss Paone is quoted as saying ‘There's always something to do in the untry.” With the judging com- Pleted, the winter exhibi- ion in the lobbies and _lo- sunges of the O'Keefe Cen- tre will feature 113 pieces of pottery, Jewellery, wood wood and. leather, with the jority of entrics accepted coming under the heading of textiles, which includes atitchery batik, live, of $200, and one o! will be presented in Rovember when the win- ners are announced at the O'Keefe Centre. The exhibition opens on Noy. 12 and will run thr- ough to Jan. 12 of 1974. It represents the work of ar- tists from coast to coast, and will be open to the pu- blic from noon to 5 p.m. and during regular theatre hours, 3 Provincial Government Mills Cause Greatest Damage Only three of B.C,'s 22 pulp and paper mills are in compti- ance with federal environmental needs of the area. If an area is particularly le, then pollution standards, an environ- mental protection service {EPS) official revealed recently The mills causing the greatest environmental dam- age are the three provi higher than the regulations called for may be required. Their recommendation will go to the regional director who will be open te any lobbies by government operations—one at Castlegar and two at Prince Rupert—owned: through Cana- dian Cellulose Co, and the Rayonier Canada (B.C.} opera- tion at Port Alice, he said. EPS estimates that pulp mills cause 50 per cent of the water pollution in B.C. The ratings relate only to - water pollution, Mr. McLaren the table ~ said that while illustrates pollution at each mill, it is not reliable for direct comparisons the severity of + of mills because of local water, land and condi- seeking delays based on econo- mic and social considerations. Final authority rests with the federal cabinet which must formalize each mill's timetable by order-in-council, - The first phase will be coordination with the provincial + pollution control branch’ on requirements for the pulp industry. He expects about half the mills will have timetables by the end of the year. McLaren said mills in the Interior cause the most concern because they are on rivers used tions, reservations facilities for Can- ada and the U.S., with a tie-in _ for its overseas offices. An TBM reservations com? ee will be installed at the airline's operations centre at’! Vancouver Airport this fall. : The mammoth task of installing : and testing the mind-boggling: complexities that comprise the |‘ Windsor Spicewood — one of eight styles and colours available from the Citation line of fine quality kitchen and bathroom cabinets. Windsor is a hardwood cabinet enriched with the warm glow of Spicewood and given Citation’s own special fine furniture finish, Antique brass: hardware adds Windsor Spicewood is available with lazy susan, roll out shelves, full length. storage cabinets, banks of 4 drawers, bread boards, metal drawer liners and many more features, Windsor bathroom vanities, with or without. legs, are available in white with antique brass hardware. Let us assist you with your kicthen and vanity needs. For your ‘convenience mail the enclosed coupon to: fara CHELL AUNLNEIT § ETD: PPLy CASTLEGAR'S HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTRE FRONT STREET — CASTLEGAR — PHONE 365-7252 A Mitchell Supply for the month of August. No obligation. prog along with the extensive training of employees, will follow. The - multi-million dollar: conversion, in the planning stage for some time, now is moving into high gear. But it will be the latter part of 1974 before the first cut-over from manual to. automated system takes place and about two years . before the entire switch is completed. “The . point has been reached where future volume of business warrants the change toa computerized system,” said G. E. Manning, the airline's, vice-president of customer ser- vice. “The need to year people The ofeach mill is only the initial step in a long process of reducing pollution, said.,Bernie,.Heskin,, regional . ithe.pollution_ manager.. of abatement: branch ‘of EPS. He said negotiations will begin shortly with each mill to establish a timetable for full compliance with regulations. . The mills in compliance were built since the effluent regulations were incorporated into the fisheries act Nov. 24, 1971, They are the Eurocan mill at Kitimat, the Crestbrook mill at ‘Skookumchuck andthe Weyerhaeuser mill at Kam- loops. . Other mills fall in between, being in compliance with one or two of the components of the standards. Criteria used in rating the mills were: Volume of suspended solids discharged; biochemical oxygen demand, and the toxicity of effluent to fish. The information was _re- leased by Bob McLaren, EPS. regional director, along with a supporting table of average and the so that we can ania a high- level of service to our cus- tomers. The excellent manual system developed over ' the years simply will not be capable of handling reservations traffic volume much longer.” daily duced at each mill during the first quarter of this year. The sole consideration by his staff, he said, will be the available. technology with which to eradicate the pollution, combined with the particular U.B.C. NURSING DEGREE ting). FEE: $100.00 REGISTRATION: Ad: NZ SELKIRK COLLEGE Selkirk College will be offering NURSING 253 — a requirement for the B.S.N. degree at U.B.C, NURSING 253: Behavioural ..Pattems in Illness and Health (The study of human develop- ment, behaviour, and communica- tion as they affect the interaction of nurses with individuals and their families in. the. pursuit of optimal health; focus on the ap- plication of concepts of the -be- havioural sciences to patient care in a hospital or community set- TIME: Ist Meeting Thursday, September 20, 7:00 P.M. (Subsequent class-times to be arranged during first meeting). ) =): PLACE: SELKIRK COLLEGE, PROGRAMME COURSE CASTLEGAR CAMPUS ‘Further information available from the Béx: 1200 Depariment of Continuing Education Selkirk 50 ese Castlegar, B.C. . and regisration forms Phone: 365-7292 by spi ig salmon. THINKING OF BUILDING?! For Assistance from Planning to aueeen , CALL PHIL, PHONE 365-3522 KO-VAL BUILDERS LID. WHY NOT GET. THE BEST? aH New, Super CHROMACOLOR @ RICHER COLOR @ SUPERIOR BRIGHTNESS @ GREATER CONTRAST @ SHARPER DETAIL; Also, B&W TVs, Radios and Stereos: MIKE‘S -T.V. SERVICE 270 Columbia Ave., Castlegar — Telephone 365-5112 nnouncement Your Singer Dealer for Castlegar and Area Is Now: : Sewing Centre & Vac Shop “Iohn Carter, Representative" 1198 Cedar Ave., Trail, B.C. — Phone 364-1744 @ SEWING MACHINES @ FABRICS @ SINGER VACUUM CLEANERS Wheel Align AND BALANCING Inapection covers these 8 points: tin We Have Purchased “The Famous 330” Balancer We Can Now Balance Trucks Up to 1 Ton us Ken's Aufo & Wheel Alignment “Tread Saver Center” | ee ae : A , Castlegar Soclal Notes Mrs. H, Johnion 365-8294 ‘Edmonton ard visi ‘aon-in-law- and daughter, Mr. pnd Be pra Bin Nelson a elson and ch- Haren accompanied ‘her par- ents to Jen Peg, re- Mrs, H. Johnson turned home sateniay after onet, the" fit weeks at the luring Surgical Technique Improved Surgery . cannot always eure cancer, but surgical techniques have improved more than people realize over the past few decades, In 1907, for example, a @ Baltimore surgeon reported a mm five-year seerall eee rate of $1 r cent for his breast 7 ‘ operation, called radical mas- tectomy. In 1946 the Mayo Clinic was obtaining 51 per cent and in 1980, a Boston surgeon reported a figure of 66 per cent. r, those who came to surgery within six months of first noticing the tumour were only half as likely to survive as those who came within one week, While the use of surgery as a treatment for cancer like! goes back at least to Biblical days, the use of radiation had to await the discovery of X-rays, In recent years more and more powerful X-ray machines have ‘been devised, together time she attended the wed- ding of her grandson, Ran- aylor. Tho second week she visited with her grand: gon and his wife, Mr. and Easteott in Vanco- uver, and her ‘ola, wife of Dr. Bertola and thelr fam- mpard and ‘8, Betly Price an returned home on the tila after spending two weeks Visit . Mr. and Mrs, T, Lam: ing pard in Gold River. Mr. and Mrs. ’A. Boro- dula of aa ‘Vancouver, formerly of Kinnaird, were the district for a few Bae during the past week. Members of Minto Cha- pter, O.E.S, who attended on honor night for ee Tomashewsky WGM in G and Forks on Saturdiy ev ev. ening were Mr. and Mrs. L. Buff Stier and Mrs. D. Cr Mr. Darrel Rourke, who ba: ‘gpent the the past six weeks returned es Mondey. We wish him continued improvement and a speedy recovery. Mrs, E. Batchelor and infant "aaughter Anita of Toronto, Ont, are present- Jy visitin: hee husband’ parents, 3 7 oben, at husband Mr, E. (Ted) Bat- hela will de joining g the ortly. on ere the Ted Batchelor will leave for Aust- ralia where Ted will be em- ployed for two years. Services Held for Well Known Kinnaird Resident Joseph Hardy Joseph Stuart Wilson was a member of the Smel- Hardy, 76, of Kinnaird died ter Social Club and of the suddenly Ae: 22 ‘at Castle- gar and District Hospital. eral service was held Friday from the chapel of Castl Funeral Home. ke) A rn John Goss hine) Riley and ) Kryski all Mrs, Ed (1 of Trail and Margaret at home. ‘Two sisters in Scotland retiring from the company’s also survive, service in 1965. : Rev. empio; He was also by the Town of Kinuaid th burial taking pl Mr. Har. who Mountainview Cemetery of ed all spot an children Trail, Reading and Study Skills Course To be Offered by Selkirk College . “If you are a medio- cre or slow reader, join the | Be pera; The average adult, ig mi reads about 200 to 250 er to read at an adult le- vel.” : DE Davison has had ex- tens in work- ing mat eae Before go- the University of Baus Columbia to do aduate work she was the director of continuing educ- a TE pomoeeiae CHUCK STEAK... STANDING RIB ROAST—~..*1.49 SMOKED PORK PICNICS ——-~.79 one appointed skill de- velpoment advisor at Sel- kirk College, “Some of our troubles atom from the past. For et of us, reading as a ub ject for ation at Mount St. Vincent University in Hallfax. " le I have empha- sized the need for reading improvement courses, ‘Dr. Davison adda, ‘the new dee ceas- d to be part of the school’s surriculum in the sixth gr- ade, While we have done a Jot of retdlng in i se in- rvening ye: poor swimmers ating a ‘cur Tent, many of us st ha- ve been drowned ‘in the sea of print! However, with oc- cupational requirements for reading and the necessity for continuous study to keep abreast of events, th- ere is greater need than ev- Move your — money to higher earnings re TERM (oy DEPOSITS COMPOUNDED. SEMI-ANNUALLY | s DEMAND DEPOSITS 712%, PLAN 24 8% And remember too, all your savings are totally protected nd i guaranteed by the Provincial Credit Union Share and Deposit Guarantee Fund. ~ Trail 368-6417 ~ Fruitvale 367-9223 Castlegar 365-3375 CREDIT a ae z= UNIO S20 3529553 S. Slocan 359-722) KOOTENAY SAVINGS Guests Monday of Mr. with altogether different mach- Mrs. D. Adshead ines built primarily for use by physicists in their research into : the fundamental composition of matter. CALL IN AT ERNIE’ S 4 WHEEL DRIVE _ PARTS AND jeeveates GAS AND DIESEL SALES . Shell Credit Cards and Chargex Accepted ERNIE'S SHELL 2 Miles Wes) of the Junction, No. 3 Highway Phone 365-5690 — Kinnaird, B.C. a 26 Funeral service was held Saturday from the ch- apel of the Castle; eral Home for rway, rs Boren to Canada at the age of - red for ia ob sh- “time” “in "fmter moving 2 Sooke, ac. remaining there until 1967 when she moved to'Robson to live with her daughter. Simonson was a member of the Sons of Nor- WV she is survived by her husband, Waldemar; three Harold of Surrey, Fr- : ed et Victoria and Roy Jo- Fall Clearance Sale Starts Thursday, August 30 THE LARGEST SELECTION OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS IN THE KOOTENAYS SHIRTS Short Sleeve + Price 4 S AVE! CASUAL: SLACKS Good Selection "" —_-¥ PRICE SOME SUITS AND SPORTS JACKETS AT 4 PRICE JEANS & WORK CLOTHES MEN‘S SHIRTS 10% OFF SUAL AI ‘CASUAL AND : DRESS PANTS BOYS’ SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS Half Price , 30% OFF : SAVE! CASUAL PANTS SAVE! 30% OFF SAVE! Everything in the Stere at Reduced Price. ‘SoComeand SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! - ALL SALES CASH ‘AND FINAL : otner vehicle. PETTITT; PHOTOS more comeecientiey! in 8c c+) setting up a skill “In development centre at Move: broad alm is Gane work deh out centre will be the im roves ment of all stu: eneral orientation ‘and ae justment to college progr- . ams. Robson Resident Mrs. ‘Agnes Simonson Dies in 75th Year hnson of Nanaimo and th- oe : fictated atthe series with Pa eae RCMP Report © Two Sunday Car Accidents lwo separate aceidenty : ROMP Sunday ith the dri- _ver of one vehicle reported astle; and . District Hospital Monday morning witha head Mike M. shen obitoff, 48, of . Raspberry ge was reported to have suffer-. ed a head injury after the eel model car: he was driv- ing went out of contro! crossed to the left side o: the road, going into a ditch. The vehicle was travel- ing north on the Robson Road near the Brilliant NO. 1 QUALITY WIENERS __ .79° NO. 1 QLTY. BOLOGNA ......... 79 HAMBURGER ........ BEEF BY THE SID CANADA GRADE “A”. FOR: YOUR FREEZER . tb, TOMATO SAUCE _ PREM LUNCHEON MEAT. 12 OZ. TIN TEA BAGS SALADA, BOX OF 60 SQUIRREL PEANUT BUTTER, 32 o7. "CLOVERLEAF Merah e rane PINK SALMON 2 FROM THE IN-STORE BAKE SHOP COFFEEMATE 18 OZ. JAR ........... 3 $1 | 4 KRAFT PIZZA 30 OZ. PKG. PARKAY MARGARINE 3 Ib. pack $1.19 SPAGHETTI =.= Q¢ IN SAUCE, LIBBYS, ow... KELLOGGS... .. ~ 998 HOT BREAD som y BUN WIENER OR 99° KERR LDS 2019 PALM ICE CREAM 99 3 PT. PLASTIC CONTAINER «. wv. 5loaves$! 1 doz. 1% oainal BARS, Box of .. . 6 for 29c LIQUID DETERGENT 79¢ JOY. 32 OZ. PANTY HOSE ONE SIZE FITS ALL ..................! School when: the which was reported at 10. 45 10. e “Damages we ere estimat- ed at $100. The in incident is still under investigation. o under investiga- tion is an accident reported at 3.40 p.m. on Columbia Avenue ner ieeet 68. can, “deren 1 by Andy. Ka Sank: ‘ 1 legar, w: ier? * sarth on Columbia Avenue when it pulled. out hicle travelin; At the it was then the '63 sedan swung the left hand side of the -road to avoid collision only ~ mn to strike a cement wall. No injuries were re- ported. Damages are estimated at: $400. PETTITT PHOTOS SEE THE NEW SANKYO LXL 250 Takes Movies by Candle Light SOLOHd Liit13d~ PETTITT PHOTOS $159.95 | SOLOHd LLILL3d PETTITT PHOTOS | » WESTONS. 11 LB. BOX NEW POTATOES ica oe LIGHT BULBS : - aI 60 WATT OR 100 WATT ........... 79¢ J CLOTHS GREEN CABBAGE 12.1 cro GREEN BELL PEPPERS JUMBO CANTALOUPE —...-. CHOCOLATE CREAMS CORN FLAKES, 16 ox, 2.02"... 75e ER? al «ater OE nel