Celgar given safety awards By CasNews Staff a BC Timber's Celgar-Lumber Division in Castlegar has been awarded the president's safety awards for 1982. One award was given to the mill for the best overall ; ‘safety record, the other‘for the most improved safety record. as From November, 1981 to the end of March this year, ‘the mill went without’a single time loss accident, said Al Blessin, industrial relations manager. y Blessin added that the Interior Lumber Manufac- turer's Association records for the past 10 years confirm that ‘no sawmill which works more than 250,000. man hours per-year has accomplished ‘one accident: free record compares to past records which show 79'lostitime siceiderits-in 1980 and 49 in 1981.) - Blessin said BC: Timber decided to cancel the pres- entation of the awards this year due to economic a conditions in the industry. Johi y had second thoughts and’ thought: the Celgar mill should be reedg nized. : The plaques” ‘were " presented Thursday by ‘Mal SAFI Nomber is 365-22 2 ex Is Your Name in OPEN MONDAYS? LOOK NOW! Health and Safety Committee. FEY AWARDS . uh j Members! ot Cal f th trial, an’ ety committee with presiden: Al Thornton before members of the Indus alt Sow, Nick Barlsenkol, Nell Kenteay FOLIAGE ‘Castlegar ! resident dies Mrs. Katherine Kambitk, _ the widow of the late Joseph Kambick formerly of Castle- gar, passed away in Sum- merland on Sept. 8, 1988 at the age of 92 years. Mass of Christian burial willbe celebrated by Rev. Tickets Father Jim Lynch atl p.m., Monday, Sept. 12 in St. Rita's Catholic Church in Castlegar, ~: * followed -by ‘interment in °°, Park Memorial Cemetery. Prayers will be recited at’ 7:80 p.m. Sunday evening in the Penticton Funeral Chap- WW) Fnanager, Ron Ron Ceatnibett 1983 en eC cia —CasNews Photo, "Pulbit & pew iby Ministers. in the West Kootenay Henry Morgenthaler is in the news again. The abortion issue refuses to go away. People‘on ;both sides of the issue continue, to bring out the same old ‘arguments; jo play on valley landscape nursery "SALE STARTS AUG. 21 TO SEPT. 21 30 to 50% OFF ‘ENTIRE STOCK Thousands of Junipers & $2.99 Emerald Hedge Cedar ’ Excellence in quality & service” Mrs. cab was a mem- ber of the Catholic Women's League in Sumimerland, and a former member of St. Rita’s parish of Castlegar and St. Anne’s parish in Penticton. Funeral arrangements un- ,der the direction of the: Pen- “ticton Funeral Chapel No. 1 container, Only'./..:....s0cee08 Sear rast we United Way: Campaign KICK-OFF DAY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER v7 Kinsmen Park Area: - 8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. — Free Pancake piéuktest’ courtesy Castlegar Savings Credit Union, in parking lot next to Library. 8:30 a.m. — United Way Agency Displays open in parking lot area. 9:30 a.m. — First Puppet Show — Library Book Sale — near the Library White Elephant Sale — parking lot Bake Sale — parking lot Fish Pond arid Children’s Dress-up — in front of Library Boy Scout activities — park 10:00 a.m. — Opening Ceremonies for United Way Campaign. Proclamation signed by - Acting Mayor. 10:30 a.m. — Second Puppet Show — Library Coffee Concession — parking lot Children’s Paint-In — Park 11:00 a.m. — Bingo — parking lot Cake-Walk — Park : 12:00 Noon — Pet Parade — Park 1:00'p.m. — Kick-Off Day events close ~ Lbelieve it is time to look at the issue from a fresh per- ‘spective. ‘Women choose abortion for several reasons, For some, it is simply’: their’ right.. For ,others, it is retroactive birth control. For: atill others, it is to avoid an unwanted preg. nancy. Abortion may be seen asa eee! convenient way to Fall? cou rses Courses * ranging from trades and business to health and general interest, and credit and non-credit bashed are among the many BX throug Cont rs ses eilom etouputortatr tion. at Selkirk Col lege in + Moré ‘than 90 courses cov: ering ‘subjects, such as com- puters,” languages, coaching, women's programs, horticul- ture and office procedures are included in the line-up. , In .the academic area courses in Astronomy, Col- lege Composition, History, department. Human Services courses are also available. “Registration for all courses is'‘now underway. Some features in- workshop: on skill-building for women and a film series. Adult Basic Education of- ° ferings are also available. Most of the courses start the second week of Septem- ber with others scheduled for October and November. For more information about. courses, workshops | snd conferences, contact the and P are avajlable through the college's Distance Education office ry Selkirk College in Castle. end:an embarrassing situa- tion. It may be undertaken because of pressure from the male partner. Abortion is performed when people bow ‘to societal pressures of one kind of another. Eighty ‘per cent of abor- tions .are ‘performed on. un- married women from 16 to 25 years of age. As a Lutheran minister, I feel that the Christian church can help clarify some of the. ‘geny. issues ‘involved. I feel that knowledge of what the Church has to say about this issue can help individuals as they seek to decide what kind of action they ought to take. I believe that abortion is “not to be. seen divorced from the wider issue of human sexuality. The eall for abor- - ia ropa tastes” of irresponsible sexuality in our society. Abortion falls under the category of human sexuality and behavior. For me, and the church body I represent, irresponsible sexuality is the real issue. As long as in- dividuals believe that sexual behavior requires no respon- sibility on their part, abor- tion will continue to be nec- essary to deal with their em- barrassing “mistakes.” L_TELU LEE DIRECTORY Unborn children are the ultimate dependent. Because they have no voice, they are at the mercy of others. Be- cause they have no voice they need an advocate to speak for them. My hope and prayer is that the same people who march to protect baby seals and killer whales will put the same amount of effort into protecting our human pro- . May we never be guilty of punishing the innocent for our own sin! Aglow resumes meetings Castlegar Chapter of Wom- en's Aglow Fellowship will be resuming its monthly lun- cheon meetings beginning Sept. 14 at 10:80 a.m. at the Hi Arrow Arms Hotel. This month they will wel- come Dr. Fern Cooper of Slo- can City as featured speaker. Dr. Cooper, a PhD in clin- ical psychology, has been working with adults and chil- dren in the mental health field since 19569. For seven years, she was the director of the Nelson Distriet Child Care Society, and presently provides a Christian coun- selling service in the West =a EVAN — Fellowship — Worship — Bible Study Family Bible Hour 9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship Service 11.a.m., Legion Hall Bible Study & froyer Mon.7:30 p. at 1201 - Ist Street Pastor: Tom Mulder Phone: 365-2281 Al CAN CH 1401 Columbia Ave. Sunday Services *8:00 a.m. & 10;00 a.m. Bais Robson + Community Church 2nd & 4th Sundays,. 10a.m.. Rev. Charles Balfour. Ph. 365-2271 " SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 coe vee? Trail 364-0) TERLVARY BAPTIST_ CAL, ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713 - 4th Street Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11. a.m. Pastor Terry Defoe Office 365-3664 Residence 365-7622 Listen to the Lutheran Hour — Sunday, 9.a.m. on Radio CKQR ramnagrerenencrenierane easton APOSTOLIC CHURCH __OF PENTECOST below Castleaird Plaza Ph. 365-6317 Summer hours: 10:30 Service 6:30 Fellowship Rev. Victor Stobbee, HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY CHURCH OF GOD egular Sniedoy pati by aie Cliff 365-2649 2224-6th Ave. 1% Blocks South of 9:40 a.m. — Singing 10.a.m. — Worship and-Sunday School Robson: Ist Sun., 7 p.m. 3rd Sunday, 10.a.m. . Ted Bristow Q 965-8337 or 365-7814 UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Community Complex. | 2404 Columbia A Church School 345 a.m. Morning Worship Alam. Pastor Ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 2605 Columbia Ave. Rev. Harvey Self Phone 365-3816 Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11 a.m. Junior Congregation Home Bible Studies PENTECOSTAL ST-RITA'S CATHOLIC wa" 809 Merry Creek Road Past Fireside Motel Pastor: R.H. Duckworth ily Bible x 6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY NCH. Study & Prayer —7 p.m. a ently 365-3430 Pastor 365-2808 All interested women are invited to attend. Winning Western numbers - The winning numbers for the Sept. 7, Western Express draw for $100,000 were 1297769, 2528887, 2074616, 2417804, 1592816. The winning numbers for the $10,000 draw are 1787728, 8861088, 1287760, 8252014 and 2982833, Last six digits win $1,000, last five digits win $100, last four digits win $25 and the last three digits wins $5 worth of Express Tickets, TABERNACLE 767-11th Avenue Pastor Roy Hubbeard and Bruce Greenwood Church: Ph, 365-5212 Sunday Morning Worship 8:30.a.m. and 11. a.m. David DTUC-NELSON CHORAL SOCIETY Christian Edi Hour 9:45 a.m. Sunday. renee Worship Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer 7:30 p.m. Rev. heres Guinan PI Saturday Night ¥ Mass ecitday Waveer at 8a.m. and 10a.m. ST. MARIA GORETTI Genelle — 12 Noon D, all singers particularly , TENORS and BASSES HANDEL'S “MESSIAH” will be per- formed in the Spring with the DTUC Or. chestra, Weekly rehearsals: TUESDAYS 7 p.m. Lee Hall, LVR Sec. School FORINFORMATION: - Bruce Hunter 382-7843 : Develop a 1,200-hectare area i rail , yards, alr cargo facilities anda host of spinoff industries, and port. CASTLEGAR NEWS, September.11, 1963 "BUSINESS - Edmonton eyes inland port concept . EDMONTON (CP) — The overall concept | is simple: advocates admit an inland port would take 10 ) years to build. call it an inland If it proceeds it will make Edmonton the major. aeerituion| centre for all western Canada. ntainers filled with imported goods would be un- loaded from ships at West Coast ports, placed on rail cars and sent to Edmonton. There they would be opened; their shipments broken down and the goods sent to final destinations anywhere in » Canada by truck or rail. ‘The {dea has already been tried. At Sparks, Nev., near the gambling paradise of Reno, an inland container port; handles goods for corporate giants like General Motors and Tn Albert, t's a projet forthe 1900s, nven the Keeneet Planché fs interested and expects a report on the idea this month or next, » But he says the government isa long way from choosing a site and “we won't be doing it unless there is a coat benefit potential.” The private consulting firm Thorne Stevenson Kellogg . has‘ already concluded several container ports could be viable in ‘Alberta. “While the provincial, and Thorne Stevenson studies have ‘been low-key, the Ed: Chamber of Ci Canada are being rerouted to Seattle for processing. Can- adian jobs go with them. To the obvious benefits can be added | construction mage in building a port, And a city report says Edmonton is “the single most cost-effective location for warehousing and distribution in Canada.” Yet despite interest among businessmen and the ere is no the port will ever be built. SOME OPPOSE The idea has alrosiy. ‘drawn opposition from federal government agencies, ! unions, West Coast ports, some municipalities ae “pajor railways. Thi has mounted a highly visible campaign to bring this city Alberta's first and largest container port. ‘The chamber says is di load don't like ‘the idea of an inland it if it is built. naive” because it would duplicate aad about 40 por cant of the contalnersexrrently coming into offered by CN and CP Rail, said 1s . Ross Walker, CN’s tain region vice-president. cen ‘in Canada, and the Toronto, the first locomotive built on four newly issued Canadian stamps. . NEWISSUE... The major role steam locomotives played in building Canada Is recognized .Greenhills.coal mine: opens " ELKFORD (cP) = The $300-million Greenhills coal «mine officially opened this week in: southeastern B.C. near the Alberta boundary. The largest new Korean investment in Can- ada to date. The mine is 80-per-cent owned by Westar Mining Ltd.,-a B.C. Resources: In- project to open in B.C. this year, the mine has a capacity of 2.8 million tonnes of met- ’ allurgical coal a'year, and one million tonnes of thermal a year. It also is the largest Corp. ‘ y and 20-per-cent by Pohang Iron and Steel of Korea. Westar already is the country’s largest exporter of coal metallurgical coal, and the new mine will increase the No plan to reduce B.C. coal price VICTORIA (CP) — There is no room for price reduc- tions in the northeastern British Columbia. coal con- tracts and they cannot be renegotiated until 1989, B.C. " Industry Minister'Don Phil- lips says. Phillips said there is no doubt the Japanese steel in- * dustry will try to renegotiate the contracts in light of the depressed world coal market. “But, there is no room in the northeast contracts. for down-pricing,” the minister said in an interview. Phillips was upset at a published report quoting him as saying there will probably be changes to the contracts. He said the report has caused concern among mining com- David SMALL ENSEMBLES hasopeningsfor . players in these performing groups: * Brass ensemble * New Music ensemble * Jazzensembles" * Chamber Music * Early Music ensemble College/UT credit concerts, weekly rehearsals, FOR INFORMATION: contact the Music Department as soon as possible 352-2241 panies and he wanted to clar- aaa ‘eipaets oy 25 per cent this year and 60 per cent in 1984. The Greenhills operation, along with the nearby Bal- » mer mine, also owned by Westar, is at the other end of the CP Rail line which carries 10,000-tonne unit trains to the giant Roberts Bank coal terminal in Delta, south of Vancouver. : The 108car trains make the 2,000-kilometre round trip in about 96 hours. . And while a United Mine- workers strike at the nearby Fording mine drags on into its fifth week, a unique con- tract at Greenhills appears to ify his Speculation that the Jap- anese will ask for a reduction in the $94-a-tonne price set coal h for h bor peace. The key s a decision by the bulk of the mine's 440 em- ployees to set up a workers’ after the major in a form of par- De ebay decisions and has no sory date. Contract bargaining is conducted throughout: the year with a different part of the agreement being > dis- - cussed every four months. An advisory council, made up of.three company and three association representa- tives, has been established to handle day-to-day and rou- tine matters through recom- mendations to management and the association. The council meets on company time. “These new practices make it slightly more expensive to run Greenhills than a trad- itional operation,” says Jim Gravestock, company labor relations director. “But we'll gain in the long term with a happier, more involved work- force.” The also allows mined ‘in southeast B.C. — Balmer and Fording — agreed to cut their coal price to $70.a tonne. | - uni- que in the B.C. mining ‘in- dustry. The agreement gives em- ployees a say in day-to-day work for the implementation of an employee-incentive program. bt ape have yet to be SuperValu per valu Juice Grapes: (36 Ib. box) ZINFANDEL MUSCATEL ALICANTE PALAMINO CARRIGNE GRENACHE Most varieties available until January, 1984 24 litre pails 220 litre barrels JUICE AVAILABLE MUSCAT JUICE PALOMINO JUICE ALICANTE JUICE ZINFANDEL JUICE WHITE REISLING NAPPA GAMAY CABERNET SAUVINGNON CHENIN BLANC PINOT CHARDINE SAUVINGNON BLANC JUICE AND GRAPES AVAILABLE APPROX. SEPTEMBER 10, 1983. ORDER THROUGH YOUR LOCAL SUPERVALU STORE OR F&W WHOLESALE _ Canada. It will be featured on a 64-cent stamp, the rate Age of steam remembered * OTTAWA — The; major role steam locomotives played in bringing much of the country together, even prior to Confederation, will be marked Oct. 3 with the issue of a set of four train stamps. The stamps, designed by Montreal graphic artist Ernst Roch, will feature steam locomotives in service between 1886 and 1860. Stamps depicting locomotives of a later period (1860-1905) will be issued next year. - This first set will depict four wood and coal-burning ‘iron horses” named Dorchester, Toronto, Samson and Adam Brown.’ ‘The Dorchester, the first steam locomotive operated here, ‘will appear on 82-cent stamps in a se-tenant format (printed side by side)... The Samson, built in 1888 and now believed to be the rail locomotive on exhibit (near roduced on a 87-cent stamp, the ‘fo the United States and its ‘originally called Minos, was built ‘the Great Western Railway of ASUAUANOLEEASEOGAAENEGAEOCEGOUAMEOVELCAOEUUAOEOUEEGUOEESUUOAOGEETAECUAOEAGEUEGOECNUUAEUOCUOOOOEAU for first class mail to international destinations other than the U.S. Ashton-Potter Limited, Toronto, will print 18 million 82-cent stamps, 8.6 million 87-cent stamps, and 8.2 million = 64-cent stamps-in six-color lithography. Laan tsi emma SS Superval SATELLITE TV? FUTURE COMMUNICATIONS in area more 7 com Installed than all other area dealers combin © Longer in business than any other area satellite dealer © Best quality home systems CALL 352-2670 Going away fo college? Order Your CASTLEMEIKNEWS NOW TO BE MAILED TO YOUR ADDRESS FOR THE UNIVERSITY TERM. Only $15 for 8 months. “As Good os a Letter from Home!" _ Phone 365-7266 WANETA Ei WICKER NOW REOPENED after being closed for the past year. We Are NOT In Our Old Locations. eee We are NOW LOCATED directly across from the Trail Jr. High School in the Bink Building lar Ave: Wall We have expanded our line of Wicker and Rattan to include wicker from 39¢ baskets to top quality rattan bedroom suites, dining sets, Papson chairs, rockers, etc. 10% Discount to Senior Citizens INQUIRE ABOUT OUR WICKER FURNITURE TRADI ; U Our name is our promise We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. A : PRICES EFFECTIVE: ; Tuesday to Saturday, September 13th to 1 7th, 1983 at all SuperValu stores located in Trall, Waneta Plaza, Rossland, Castlegar, Nelson, Grand Forks, Creston, Cranbrook, Fernie and Elkford. Beef Round-Up hinds of beef Canada Grade A beef, cut and A3 ready for your freezer | 42718 sides of beef Canada grade A beef, cut and wrapped, ready for your freezer 4 1 8 ‘Toins of pork gone 4 3 1: 99 ea amt ea and wrapped er Sides of a eterarmeat ut and wi Cut and wrapped, ready for sce) Py 3719 your freezer... hips of beef CUT AND WRAPPED, 1 37/ OF: Canada grade A beef top round steak or roast bottom round steak or roast esirtoin tip steak or roast kg. rump roast lean ground beef estew meat prime rib of beef CUT AND WRAPPED, CONSISTS OF: cura AT “a kg. 5! 48 Ib. a lean ground beef - chucks of beef CUT AND WRAPPED, CONSISTS OF: Canada grade A beet 7 chuck steak cross rib roast 48 chuck roast estew meat lean ground beef b. a loins of beef CUT AND WRAPPED, CONSISTS OF: ==. 6)/o% thane sa peated owing steak esirloin steak elean ground ba WEIGHT LOSS DUE TO CUTTING AND TRIMMING WILL INCREASE THE PRICE PER POUND,