NEED a job? High school and college students may offer their TWO double beds and oil heater 365-7014 3/2 CLEAN sand access Suitable for cement mortar. 368 8485 after 6 p.m. 3/29 CATS and kittens, some part Siamese, 365-5945. 3 MALE Terrier-X doy watch dog: Female Calico cat. 365-6412. If you have an item you'd like to of ttn/67 3-CRESCENTS-shaped earring tone: Downtown Sentimental value. 30 LADIES navy bive wallet vicinity of Plaza, Castlegar. 365-5265. 3/30 BOYS size 10 hockey jacket at Twin Rivers — School blue/yellow with “Nick” on arm, 365-3327 3 VICINITY oF Sandmah spayed female orange, white wearing white flea collar swers fo Smudge, 365-3374 or if no answer 226-7 3/29 CAMERA found ty Cottee Creek Sunday. 365-529 30 GOLD bracelet Tound near CPR bridge, downtown Castlegar Owner may identity at Castlegar News FULLY equipped garage and bus depot on Highway 3 assume mortgage 6565, nights 445-226) Get Your Message Across Fast! Classified Ads 365-2212 LOOKING For ride to and 2 eet THE 8.C” HEART FOUNDATION accepts with gratitude 9 wil ex Ca ine St I, DANCE BANDS and mobile disco available for ony type o. engagement. 1-362-7795. ttn/65 ALCOHOLICS CS | Anonyme mous and . 104/71 wes MA. in dividual ond family counsellin 352-562) ; in/28 (NOTICES PROFESSIONAL CAR CLEANING int lee shampoo Reasonable re rates. ‘365. m7 ratios 5 p.m 13 WOMEN'S SUPPORT GROUP meeting will be held starting March 7 at 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 a Castlegar Community Services, above West 9/8 A SPECIAL thank you to the members of the Castlegar Fire Dept. the RCMP, the neighbors and family members who cared the guards and all who helped ai the New Year's Eve fire on 10th Ave. Also thank-you to the caring friends than | realized Thank you for all your caring and your prayers ry. Bat Alex and Ang THANKS to my friends and family for the cards Most importantly, thank you for all your prayers. May God Bless You All, Mary Fomen. 2/29 ‘CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY. in memoriam donations. infor mation Box 3292, Castlegar. 365- 5167. 104/15 which help promote Heart Research Sords_sent to next-ot-kin Box jegor, B. 104 THE CITY OF TRAIL INVITATION TO TENDER The City of Trail invites tenders for the construction of the TRAIL MEMORIAL CENTRE HANDICAPPED WASHROOMS Instructions and tender e obtained le deposit of $25 from the City Office, 1394 Pine Avenve, Trail, B.C The work consists of modifications and the in. stallation of a new women's washroom washrooms tor the handicap ped Sealed tenders, submitted in accordance with the Contract Documents, marked ‘Trail Memorial Centre Handicap: ped Woshrooms”, will be received at the City Office up to 2:00 p.m., April 26, 19868 ot which time the tenders will be opened in public in the Council Chamber The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. Contractors must hold valid Public Liability Insurance and W.C.B. Coverage. ALL TENDER ENQUIRIES shall be directed to J.S. Newman Eng NEWMAN ENGINEERING LTIMITED, 664 Forrest Drive, Trail, B.C. VIR 2H6, Telephone (604) 368 6845, KEN WIESNER, City Manager NOTICE INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR TIMBER SALE LICENCE A31186 Pursuant to Section 16(3)(a) of the Forest Act, there will be ottered for sale at public auc tion by the District Manager, et 845 Columbia Avenue. Castlegar, B.C., at 11:00 a.m. (local time) on the 3rd day of 1988, a Timber Sale Licence to authorize the har ed approximately 1 kilometer Southwest of Nancy Greene Lake, Kootenay Land District, Arrow T.5.A Species: Lodgepole Pine and Other Species: 60%, Spruce 25% , Balsam: 7%, Fir: 4% and Larch: 4% Term: six (6) months Bidding is restricted to per sons registered under the Small Business Enterprise Program, Category One. Any person eligible to bid and unable to attend may submit a sealed tender Particulars may be obtained from the Regional Manager at 518 Lake Stre C Castlegor, B.C, VIN 1H3. WANTED Clean Cotton Rags Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. INVITATION Te To Tanger Lt TENDERS Ant, imran ron: GENERAL SITE UAPROVEME! Telephone. 365-2667 A depot of $50 canho manager /« Arrow Lahes Drive’ Castleger'8.€. « p.m. local time, Thursdoy. April 28, 1988 @nd publicly opened a! that ime. Tenders over $20,000 must be accom by @ bid bond, or. certihed amount of 10% (ten per der price The commission reserves the right 1 ight to | tenders and to accep any ten Th or tender 'moy not necensarily be accepied iveCrvicew chevrolet oldsmobile itd. ont tslative Library. sLiament Bldgs., Victoria, B. Cc. vev 1x4 501 Belleville St Feb. 28 Giant Sprinc Sate 1987 New Olds Firenza Tu-tone paint, fuel Injection, stereo, tlt steering, prbrakes, pleteering, 1% NOW ONLY 912,810 uit ron °15,967% iss Out on These Savings! | 1988 Cavalier S/W V4, tuel injection’ ‘one ‘air Cond., tilt, Stereo, power windows and door locks cyl., auto., Beauv raceene™ fully loaded egy ian snemie with blue Interior DOWT MISS Ths ONE! SALE po 22,1 746” 1987 New eee ppeuite 4 sos We, soy 1988 Chev Celebrity one V6, tue! inj, 4 » 4 dr. sedan, air, plw more. -epeed, aul and locks, tilt, onulons Stereo and 1988 Chevy 4x4 short box On-off road radials, 350, tue! weeeuen, S-apeed, stereo, tilt, mag wi now omy *18,87. Canada's ambassador to the UN, Stephen Lewis, will speak in Cas- tlegar next month -A2 tlegar has special events .. Municipal awareness Municipal Awareness week kicks off tomor- row and the City of Cas- lined up -A2 LOTTERY NUMBERS The winning numbers in Saturday's Lotto 30, 39, 40 and 49. The 6-49 draw were 18, 21, bonus number was 15. The winning numbers drawn Friday in The Pick lottery were 11, 16, 19, 22, 28, 32, 47 and 83. The $500,000 winning number in Friday's Provincial lottery draw is 5393826. For full lottery results see page B8 ge =Belczyk interview A Grade 2 class at Woodland Park elemen. tory school interviews downhill ski racer Felix Belczyk.. . BS 1988 Cutlass <_< 2 door coupe SL, V-6 automatic 22,554 ‘Supreme 1988 Chevy 4x4 %-Ton Silverado, fully Voaded, t tu-tone paint, 350, fue! injection, 4-speed, automatic at Fon *21,866°* z wal transmission, air conditioning, stereo, tilt steering "10,384.54 SALE price *16,964°° 1987 $-10 4x4 Pickup V6, fue! injection, 5-speed manual om. ne Benes v. transmission, power steering and brakes Rea. * nepucen To *13,072"* 1988 S-10 Blazer 4x4 6, fuel injection, 6-speed, tilt, stereo, tinted giass, sliding side windows & more white with blue interior aLt For *16,921"° now *18,992" Fully loaded, V-6, fuel injection, 5-speed, ‘Castlegar 60 Cents Vol. 41, No. 31 r News CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1988 WEATHERCAST Mainly sunny this morning with clouds and thundershowers in the atternoon. Highs near 18°. Mon. be cloudy with showers Chance of precipitation is 30 per cent today and 50 per cent Mon doy 2 Sections (A & B) Pre-Owned Vehicles 1987 CAMARO 228 18,995 1985 PONTIAC SUNBURST CHEV '2-TOM 4x4 seal 7 .. $5695 on aaa Free Courtesy Cars WITH ICBC CLAIMS 1986 CHEVY 1986 CHEVETTE TOW 4x4 SHORT BOX PICKUP 13,875 NEARLY ALL OUR USED VEHICLES ARE COVERED BY GENERAL MOTORS REMAINING NEW CAR WARRANTY OR 2-VEAR, 40,000 KM. USED CAR WARRANTY. ALL BACKED BY GENERAL MOTORS 1986 PLYMOUTH 1983 PONTIAC RELIANT LE 6000 "14,995 Mere M4558 YOUR FULL SERVICE DEALER SERVICE MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. — PARTS — BODY SHOP ICBC CLAIMS iVCvi chevrolet oldsmobile itd. 2800 Highway Drive §=©368-9134 Dealer Lic. #7683 THESE 6 CARS MUST GO BY A 4 Stellars 4-Dr. HYUNDA Cars That Make Sense Hyundai xcels Plus On 17 Other 1988 Excels Excel, 3-Drs., Stk. No. 6-2607-0 Priced From For As Little As Deliver! pril 30% YES models. 12%. to clear!!! to be exact, We do have a much better new car selection than 6 vehicles, 23 however, on these 6 YOU WILL NEVER Get a Better Deal! FOR 3 REASONS. 1. They dre the last brand new 1987 models that Castlegar Hyundai has. 2. Special Factory Authorized incentives to Castlegar Hyundai on these models end April 30, so prices will increase by as much as . We want these cars sold this month! Reduced Dave Denholm G.S.M. CALL TODAY Toll Free 1-800 332 7087 or Collect 365-7241 $7 295 =| Inventory Clearance PLUS Arrnig * 100% Financing Our Specialty * 90 Days No Payments 0.A.C. We Take Any thing In Trade B.C.’s No. 1 Service Department Premier given rough ride By BRENDAN NAGLE Staff Writer Premier Bill Vander Zalm's trip to the West Kootenay was not as simple as a tiptoe through the tulips. He was dogged by a small but vocal group of protesters, booed by a crowd of Castlegar high school stu dents and criticized at a demonstration outside the Cominco Arena where 150 people gathered to slam the premier and his policies. Just outside the front doors of the airport the premier was met by an ad-hoe-group of college students and single mothers protesting everything from Vander Zalm's stand on abortion to funding education in the province. The six protesters sang “for he's a shallow good fellow” to the tune of For He's a Jolly Good Fellow. Vander Zalm and his entourage side-stepped the/ group and got into a car which took hin to Stanley Humphries secondary school. The premier was showered with boos as he entered the gymnasium where 600 students were gathered to hear him speak. After delivering a brief speech to the students he answered some of their questions. He was asked about his party's recent budget and its effects on the school system. His reply: “I don’t think the taxpayers need to make any apologies for the education system in the province. I think the province has good education program.” He was also grilled by two students who pressed him on the abortion issue and his “imposing of his religious beliefs” on the province. Dam project ‘im By CasNews Staff Premier Bill Vander Zalm told a mayor's meeting in Trail Friday that the installation of generators in the Hugh Keenleyside dam is “imminent.” Vander Zalm met with area mayors at Trail City Hall and answered their questions on privatization, de. centralization, forest stumpage fees in the Interior and mega-projects. “I can't offer you any dates,” he PREMIER'S PROTESTERS . . . Small group of protesters greeted Premieg, Bill Vander Zatm when he arrived at Castlegar Airport Friday morning “If the question is: Should a leader in this province impose a particular standard or morals on the province, then the answer is no,” Vander Zalm said. “If the question is: Should we attempt to influence the morals of the province, the answer is yes. If we don't have committed leaders, we don't have political leaders. We have a bunch of wimps.” He added: things in society are the standards we hold dear.” After the brief question and answer session with the hich school students the premier left for the “The most important moral said of the Keenleyside project. “But we're working on it.” Last month B.C. Hydro chairman Larry Bell said the Keenleyside gener. ating project would not begin for at least another decade. The suggestion that the project was “imminent” prompted Castlegar Mayor Audrey Moore to say, “You've made me very happy Mr. Premier.” Vander Zalm said he was unaware Businessman wins court case with city By CasNews Staff A Castlegar businessman has won the first round of a court battle with the City of Castlegar over his land in the city’s industrial park. The city claims that Trowelex Rentals Ltd. owes $50,000 in service charges for nine lots the company owns at the industrial park. When Trowelex owner Nick Cher. noff refused to pay the charges, the city tacked the fees onto the company's property tax bill However, a Nelson county court judge ruled recently that the city cannot add the charges to the tax bill. Chernoff told the Castlegar News this week that the court battle was an amicable one. “We're not fighting.” he said. before and after mosity at all.” However, Chernoff said he went to court because he felt it was unfair for the city to attempt to collect the $50,000 by adding it to his taxes. arguing; we're not “We shook hands There was no ani “We felt we shouldn't pay it,” he said Chernoff maintains that he still shouldn’t have to pay the service charges, which are for things like water, sewer, roads and electricity. And he says he doesn't intend to pay the fee. “I'm going to fight it,” he said. “The industrial park didn't do what it was supposed to do,” he ex plained, adding later: “My lots have really gone down in price.” Chernoff claims the lots were once valued at $2 million, but have dropped drastically. He says one of the reasons is because the city is selling its lots at low prices. “They're really selling them too cheap,” he said, adding the city is in a “panic” to unload the property. He pointed to a recent example where the city sold a two-acre lot to Ernie's Towing for $20,000. City administrator Dave Gairns declined comment on the case. CasNews Photo by Brendén Nogie Castlegar and District Hospital where he met with hospital staff and adminis- trators to take part in a sod-turning ceremony for a $4.3 million extension to the building. “I am very pleased to announce the beginning of a new extension to this hospital,” Vander Zalm said of the 60-bed — 35 intermediate care and 25 extended care — project which-is ex pected to be completed in late 1989. The premier mixed briefly with the staff and patients who watched the ceremony before he was whisked off to the Castlegar Library. The same demonstrators who continued on poge A3 minent’ of Bell's suggestion that generators are a decade away. The premier said Jack Davis, Minister of Energy Mines and Resources, is also enthusiastic about the project. “It's been talked about a number of times now,” Vander Zalm said. “And I know there's several forces that would make it seem necessary sooner than later.” Vander Zalm said the project is desirable for the area because the construction of the generators will provide much-needed employment “We presently have too much unemployment in this area,” he said “We've got to get every project going we possibly can in order to get as many people working as quickly as possible.” Vander Zalm said an increasing demand for electricity both in B.C. and in the U.S. makes the generating project viable. “It’s a cheap way of generating power,” he said. “There's a market across the line for the power and if we can't use it here, we can export it.” He said the cost of installing gen erators in the dam will be made up in the long run with the sale of electricity to customers in the U.S. and B.C. “It all adds up and I intend to push Vander Zalm said. “I know the ister (energy minister Jack Davis) is very supportive of it.” The project is estimated to cost about $982 million but Vander Zalm said he wasn't aware of the cost “I don't know what the cost o1 « is,” he said. “I don't know the total cost.” When he was told that the construction cost might redich $982 million Vander Zalm shrugged and money isn't it.” va? . Premier Bill Vander Zalm was warmly received by residents of the Castlegar and WARM WELCOME . 4 District Hospital visited the hospital for a sod-turning ceremony Friday extended care section when he CasNews Photo by Brendon Nogie REDUCED REVENUE City facing squeeze By CasNews Staff The City of Castlegar is facing a budget squeeze because of drastically reduced revenue, the chairman of the administration and finance committee said this week. Ald. Len Embree said the city is looking at a lower provincial gover nment grant, reduced industrial taxes and shrinking franchise fees paid by Inland Natural Gas. “We're in a situation for a muni. cipality our size where our revenue has been drastically reduced,” he said Embree said the annual provincial revenue sharing grant is down $10,000 this year. Last year the province gave the city some $324,000. But this year Castlegar will get about $314,300. et, Embree said the provincial government's revenue is rising “to the tune of some $450 million being socked away in some election fund or what ever.” “I have some concern that our grants... are reduced $10,000 and they're saving $450 million bucks into a slush fund. That doesn't make sense to me.” Embree noted that at the same time local industry is appealing its tax assessments and winning reductions, which in turn increases residential taxes. “Every time the corpor: reduction in their assessment dential) taxes go up.” ddition, local industries are ions get a (resi the supplier instead of through Inland Natural Gas, resulting in a drop in the fee Inland pays the city. Council agreed with Embree's proposal to write to Municipal Affairs Minister Rita- Johnston about the reduced provincial grant. Mayor Audrey Moore noted that the Union of B.C. Municipalities plans to meet with the province this week to discuss the revenue sharing grants and the effect the recent provincial budget will have on municipalities. Moore said the budget contained five or six items that will end up “costing municipalities more money.” However, she pointed out that one of the reasons for Castlegar's reduced revenue sharins, rant is because of the drop in the ¢ity's population.