+t a4 Castlegar News April 15, 1967 aed iW Car Club. hosts display a Yicae Stes Spear oo Canada will be hosting a car display and an Easter Parade OT eh 5000 atiows you to OWN & OPERATE your own business. Call or write .. . 1401 Avenue hi ‘ . + a os 4 P| Sunday Services Pe i f ‘2 . ,) 8:00 a.m, & 10:00 a.m. ; ; $ \ > RgL Sunday School 10 a.m. a ; J 4 at ? 5 Rev. Charles Balfour gt : P ro 365-22: 713-4th Street Parish Purpose: ry Cr ood ‘To capi Cnt, and make Him known" Pant Fingelce Mate! fear] wie, OLD TIMER . . . This 1930 Ford will be the lead car in Chapter of the Vintage Cor Club will also be holding a Sunday School ri Castlegor's Easter Parade Sunday. The Columbia ar display the day the parade, —- Phioto by Katy Biche Bh a.m. 5 } Morning Worship NEW YORK (AP) — In. 11:00 a.m. Rev: Glen.T. Backus business it pays to be at the Evening Service 365-3085 top — especially when you 6:30 p.m. oe | See "Wee your fob: e wns rgan| wot iin ~«-1 Business better here Kindergarten to Grade 8 ASTOR: ceive few weeks’ pay or WEDNESDAY NIGHT Stuart Lourie Ph. 365-3278 moving exenses to cushion Study & Prayer 8 p.m Sunday School — 9:45 a.m. Ist Sunday, 7:00 p.m. their departure. Others: re- OTTAWA (CP) — Canadian business has been sector, ’which accounts for about 20 per cent of, all Church 365-3430 sonny Neen ern 2nd, 3rd and 4th ceive nothing. holding its;own and probably forming U.S. i duction, is i or 365-5052 pe eerie Sundays, 10a.m, But for chief ives of i ivi isti Apri 914 Columbia Ave. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Family Worship Service lla.m. Bible Study & Prayer Tuesday 7:00 p.m. Ladies’ Bible Study Thursday, 9:30 a.m. Youth Ministries Phone 365-3269 or 365-2605 FELLOWSHIP (A.C.O.P.) EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH FULL GOSPEL Prayer & Bible Study Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Satellite Video Seminars Accredited Home Bible Study Courses A Non-Denominational Fomily Church, Preaching the > Word of Faith GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 2605 Columbia Ave. , Rev. J. Ferrier Phone 365-3182 Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Into: 365-8292 or 365-3182 PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE Below Castleaird Plaza Phone 365-6317 Pastor: Barry Werner 767 - 11th Ave. Ph. 365-5212 | UNITED CHURCH No service 5th Sunday large corporations, losing a job can lead to multi-million- dollar 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship lla.m. Pastor ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 OF CANADA 2264-6th Ave. 1% Blocks South of Community Complex Good Friday — 10a.m. Easter 7:30 a.m. Sunrise Service Outside Regional that imes surpass their annual salaries, Case in point: Thomas Wyman, ousted as chairman and chief executive of CBS Inc. last September following a board-room struggle. In its recently released 1987 proxy statement, CBS said Wyman’s settlement to- tals more than $4.3 million U.S. in compensation. Among other things, Wy- man can receive $3.8 million over 10 years or a lump sum of $2.8 million next January. Canada figures suggest. P Ne xs He said there are indications there may a turn- around and increase this Canadian i ii its pr ivity by 2.8 per cent last year, although production per worker in the manufacturing industry posted a disappointing 0.5 per cent decline, agency figures show. NO LAYOFFS ; The decline was largely due to manufacturers not wanting to lay off experienced workers when there was a A historical comparison of various of business productivity increases in Canada with i in uring, he said. year in productivity in in the United States suggest Canada has done as well, if not better than, its southern neighbor over the last 12 years. Last year’s increase in productivity for business as a whole — measured as the “output per person-hour” worked and a key measure of a country's ability to pete internatii — is ing, f ing an inerease of only 0.6 per cent in 1985 and 2.4 per cent in 1984, said Paul Kovacs, an economist with Burns Fry Ltd. , Kovacs, a fi ing industry expert, said the decline in pi ivity in the fi it ployers are go when a slowdown begins, which results in a decline in productivity. By the same token, they're reluctant to hire new workers at the first sign of a recovery, resulting in an increase in productivity. Last year, unit labor costs in busisiness increased 1.5 per cent in manufacturing 3.8 per cent. While comparable figures from the United States, Canada’s major competitor, aren't available for 1986, a historical comparison shows the annual increase in productivity for business in Canada has outstripped that in the United States since 1973. to let workers sr of Wednesday Supplement to the Cast! 2. AGENCIES LTD. 365-2111 SUNDAY SERVICES — | Shtistion Education 9:20 a.m. Easter 100.m. relatives, fiends and neighbours of ‘Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. : ! Sunday School 9:45 a.m. "Evening Evangelistic = Family Service Paul and Laura Samsonoff MOUNTAINVIEW Phone 365-2374 # Old Church Recreation Complex e Al waim welcome is extended to T ra d e Tt h rea te ns bee r ANNIVERSARY April 1 to 10 BUICK GMC LTD. 1700 Columbia Ave., Cas Century Morning Worship 11:00 Evening Fellowship 6:30 Wednesday: Bible Study and Prayer 7:00 p.m. Friday Youth Meetings 6:30 p.m. HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-7818 6:00 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study Prayer at 7:00 p.m. Friday Youth at 7:30 p.m. Wee College * Women's Ministries ¢ Young Married Pastor: Ken Smith Assistant: Morley Soltys SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg 365-2649 to altend an Open TORONTO (CP) — When it comes to a freer-trade deal House between Canada and the Sat., Apr. 18, 10:30 am - 4:30 pm U.S., beer and liquor don't 733 - sth Ave., Castlegar mix. in honour of their Golden Wedding Anniversary g% rade, pect with the US. FA Canada’s brewing industry says that concluding a freer- would leave it as flat as a giass of day-old draft. But the compantes that make hard stuff say they don't much care; if anything, they lean in favor of a free trade pact. Because they have so much more to lose, it is the brewers who have made the most noise about the danger of a free trade deal. The Brewers Association of Canada says its members would be swamped by huge U.S. competitors. It claims Canada would wind up with just 12 brew- eries across the country in- stead of the current 39 and figures the number of jobs would be slashed to 12,000 from 19,600. Analyst Neil Wickham of Walwyn Stodgell Cochran Murray Ltd. in Toronto thinks the contraction of the Canadian industry — which had sales of $7 billion last year — could be even more dramatic.