ss Castlégar News ‘ October 12, 19868 Wool HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS DEPT. Toothpaste With fluoride 100 mL. Reg. Price 2.59. NOW New Freedom Maxi Pads 99 30 per pack Price. 5.99 NOW Deodorant. Reg. Thick Lash 2, foundation and plush “Lottery numbers The winning numbers in the Pacific Express draw Saturday night were: 428434, 895224 and 951072. The free play number was 8. The Lotto B.C. winning numbers were: 19, 23, 25, 26 and 30. The bonus number was 13. The Pick numbers were: 8; 14, 16, 32, 37, 41, 46 and 52. In the event of a discrepancy be- tween these numbers and the official winning numbers list, the latter shall apply. The winning numbers drawn Mon day in The Pick lottery were: 9, 20, 21, 31, 42, 44, 46 and 54, City buys equipment By CasNews Staff A Kamloops firm has won the right to sell the City of Castlegar a new loader. Milos Equipment Ltd. sub. mitted the lowest bid of $62,259.10 for a Case W20 loader. The bid in cludes a trade in for the city loader. As well, another Kamloops firm was the successful bidder to sell the city a salt-sand spreader. Williams Machinery of Kamloops submitted the lowest bid of $12,184.70. Both’ items were included in the city’s 1988 budget. Cover Girl Cosmetics S3Sof > (I\erip=™ / Cocoa Butter ‘ \ Skin Cream K- = s Merit Skin Cream Cocoa butter, aloe vera 2 1 9 Reg. Price 3.39. NOW: mr ae “Riviera Hair 33% _ off or jo joba. 500 mL chewab multiple vitamins Funtstones 8 Flintstones Vitamins Reg. Price 5.49. NOW Scope Mouthwash 750 mL Reg. Price 6.19. .NOW Chewable. 100 tablets 4° Clairesse per box Hair Colour .j The no-ammonia shampoo-in hair color lotion. Reg Price 7.69. NOW 569 Hydrogen oa §=Peroxide f Merit a 500 mL lydrogen Reg. Price reoxi 1.59. NOW ea .99 French Formula Hair Spray 400 mL. Reg super hold or hard to hold. Reg Price. 3.59. NOW: STB AN HIB ARS) Merit Wash ay Cloths LEG } Or baby wash Limarseoonsan! 4 cloths. 160 per Pack. Reg Price 3.69. NOW SIRAINS BAIN] Zest Bar Soap Deodorant bar 3 per pack. Reg. price 2.99. NOW. Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion Reg. or herbal 600 mL Reg. Price 5.69. Vaseline White petroleum jelly 500 Reg. Price 4.59. 2nd Debut Beauty Lotion Anti-perspirant 50 9 Reg. Price 3.49. NOW: Playtex Tampons 30 per 29 | =e Reg. Price 6.99. NOW: Waneta Plaza Chahko-Mika Mall STORE HOU! 529 Prices effective until Saturday, October 15, or while quantities U 219 PRICE IS JUST MR. and MRS. NORM JONES visiting California couple visit hometown Norm and Sylvia Jones (nee James) of Vista, Calif. are visiting parents and friends in the city. Sylvia spent 1963-1974 attending school in Castlegar and Mica Creek before moving to Vancouver with her parents. After graduating from Raw. hide Vocational College in Bonsall, Calif. majoring in horsemanship and Christian camping, she married Nor man Jones, also a student and horse. trainer from Arizona. After several appointments in camp service, Jones is now employed as horsemanship director in Green Oak Ranch near San Diego, owned and operated by the Union Rescue Mission of Los Angeles. Sylvia is employed in nearby Vista in a Christian book shop. They have two children, Cody Anne, six and Tyler, five. Recreation news Our fall programs are well under. way in Castlegar and the outlying areas, but there are still openings in some of our programs for fitness and children. It is not too late to register so either come down or call the rec reation office for more information on these programs. Volleyball League Would you like to spend a couple of evenings a week getting some exercise and having fun? Then grab a group of friends and sign up for Volleyball on Monday and Wednes day from 7:30 - J p.m. The cost is $30 per team or $5 per person. Poultry Cutting Course Starts tonight! Vern Dawes is con ducting this popular “how to cut up a chicken in two easy lessons!” It's not too late to sign up and learn the right and easy way to debone a chicken. This class is held at the complex tonight, Oct. 12 and Wed nesday, Oct. 19 from 7 - 8 p.m. and the cost is only $10 CPR Level A We will be holding a CPR Level A course here at the complex on Oct. 26 at 7p.m. Now is the time to learn how to save a life. If you have let your CPR lapse or have never taken it then please come down and register. If you are interested in coming as a through the woods. © Steant room ¢ Exercise Treat the family fe f, 1 il fi 1 or family fun! In the heart of Alberta's newest mountain resort area, midway between Calgary and Bantt Kananaskis — Great for Kids, Mom and Dad, too! Fishing, hiking, horseback riding Cycle paths Superb visitor facilities All-New Family-Style Hotel! © 9% rooms and suites, all with beautiful views, some with fireplaces and chenettes ¢ Suites for up to * Hot tubs indoors and pa pavaiels © Whirlpool room ® Underground park ing * Pub © Family dining at reasonable prices SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY RATES “$35 (Double occupancy, Canadian cur May Band after Oct 11 98a 1 Children under te tree! call now for reservations! "ANANASKI 1 I-N-N | group from your place of employ. ment, give us a call and we will fit you in. Ice Rental There is still the odd one-hour or so of ice time available, but it is going quite quickly so call now to book. Public Skating Public skating is as follows: Tuesday and Thursday 2:30 - 4:30 p.m., Friday 2 - 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 - 9 p.m. when there are no junior hockey games, Saturday 3 - 4:45 p.m. and Sunday 2 - 3:45 p.m. Admission is only 75 cents for children, $1 for students (13-18 years) and $1.25 for adults. Strip tickets are available at considerable savings, so come down with a group of friends or on your own for some fun and exercise. Come to the Community Complex and cheer on the Castlegar Rebels when they take on the Beaver Valley Night Hawks on Saturday. Game time is 8p.m. Aquatic Centre Referendum Don't forget that the proposed aquatic centre referendum happens this Saturday, Oct. 15 from 8 a.m. - 8 p.m. at the Community Complex. Please come down and vote. There is also an advanced poll at the complex for Area I and J on Friday, Oct. 14 from 2 - 8 p.m iapers whirlpool © Kit 2 persons ¢ Indoor pool Per person per night y. plus tay. te song weekends evchided) sik October 12, 1988 Slash burning studied On a small patch of harvested forest, about 24 kilometres west of Forest Service r hers in the Nelson forest region are studying slash burning and how the forest regenerates. They want better information for decision-making on slash burning in order to produce the best conditions for reforesting harvested areas. The study site, about a hectare in size, is on a south-facing slope at Murphy Creek, not far from Nancy Greene \Lake. It is just above 1,200 metres in elevation. The site was a residual patch of cedar and hemlock, left behind from earlier harvesting, operations. Before burning, some salvagable timber was taken out and the re- maining slash and brush was left to dry. It was burned early last fall, says Tom Braumandl, regional forest ecologist in Nelson. “The research project is being car. ried out under the Canada-British Columbia Forest Resource Develop. ment Agreement (FRDA), a $300 million commitment on spending, be tween 1985 and 1990, on accelerated reforestation, forest management and research throughout B.C.,” fed eral Forest Minister Gerry St. Ger. main said in a prepared release. “Both FRDA operations work and research projects focus on the back. log of not-satisfactorily restocked (NSR) lands,” said provincial Forests Minister Dave Parker. “Various fac- tors, such as excessive brush, animal or insect pests, and silvicultural practices, have kept these sites from returning to the province's inventory of productive forest lands.” “Sash burning is a common site preparation treatment used through: out the province,” says Braumandl. He noted that burning clears a harvested site of forest debris, removing a potential fire hazard and material which can harbor insects and animal pests. Burning also suppresses, for a time, the brush and weeds that can compete with and overtake com- mercially-valuable species, Braum- andl says, and it puts nutrients, necessary for growth, back into the soil relatively quickly. At the research site, intensive monitoring and analysis is helping to fine-tune the burning guidelines so as to create the best burn for the seed- lings which follow. “Basically, you decide to start a burn under certain indices and at a certain time of day,” says Braum andl. After a burn, there can be widely differing amounts of material left behind and the soil and forest-floor duff will be altered in varying ways. It all depends on the weather, humidity, and the dryness of the slash. Generally, burning provides seed lings with a strong start. However, the specific effects of burns of differ- ing intensity and the long-term, impact on young trees are not as well defined. Before a burn at the research site, soil nutrients are measured through soil sampling. After the burn, another sampling is taken and the seedlings are planted. The changes in the soil's chemistry is being tracked and related to the burn's differing intensities on the one-hectare site. After the seedlings are planted, researchers will also take foliar nu- trient samples, by grinding needle samples-and analyzing their con- tents. A vegetation regrowth study is another part of the project. It will monitor all the species that will regrow after the burn. The sampling intensity will de- crease drastically after the first few years. The soil’'s chemistry will be re-measured this year, then three years, 10 years and 20 years after the burn. 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