1989 A# Vehicles rust, $3,000 o.b.0. 399-4150. 3754 81 MACDA 5-spd.. no 40 miles to the gation ‘87 oe 4dr., 4cyl., auto: $ 67 9 87 4th Ae. dr...auto.. cassette Boats & Motors” OR TRADE; 21. Campion Sedan Crui 1975, excellent condition, 351 _cu.in. motor, totally rebuilt 1985. - rebuilt 1988; sink, stove, toilet, letories heater, CB, depth sounder, si 5. complete with Weary duty, vender: 62 19,500. Will take smaller trade or boek-hog in good con om MooredSt Christihd Loke, 447 6294 447-6116. 3/54 BOATS FOR SALE 1980-23 RED MOUNTAIN SKI AREA is accepting applications for an Excavator Operator leply to Box 670 Rossiond, 8.C. VOG YO. jos VACANCY « exists with the Kootenay Society for the Handicapped, Castlegar ws handicaps, re ment and home studying of coregivers. sommunitysminisiry Hoison, budge! ‘management. Applicant sheuld be ‘seit motivet ood public relalidns skills, and have a good gppreciation of jo: A Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3HS. PARCEL delivery driver — national com pany, union wage, part-time, send Fesume and pfint-out of Sriving récord trom motor vehicle branch. Reply to Box 3007V, Castlegar, B.C. VIN3H4. 3/55 FULL TIME licenced Moke-up Ar tist/Esthetician. Must be fashion con: enjoy working with the public 10 start work immediately, 365 3475 ask for Rachel. 5! Work Wanted Ba) Tax Service * income Tox * Bookkeeping BEV CALL 365-7033 1235-3rd Street, Castlegar SHERMAK OHNE ALL TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY Phone 365-2932 MIKE MAKORTOFF CONCRETE: PROJECT? Notices —— THE DOUKHQBOR BENEVALENT SOCIETY ts holding their annual meeting July 16. 00 p.m. sat Parkside Villa in Grand forks 3/53 rs PROVINCE-WIDE CLASSIFIED “9159 $10 DISCOUNT FOR CASH! Call us» for details! Classified Ads 365-2212 seve Castlégar News DANCE BANDS and mobile disco ‘available for dny type of engagement. | 362-7795. tin/65 CHAPEL HOUSE. Zuckerberg Island Heritage Par open 7 days CASTLEGAR RAIL STATION, Mon.-Sat., 8 @.m, p.m. For further information, phone 365-6440. tin/43 ALcOMOUCS CS enonymous ‘ond Al- “Anat 04/ THUNDER BAY PSYCHIC DON VOLKOS Will be in Castlegar From Wed.-Sun., July 12-16 Ye boolfan in-depth.» nial reading phone the SANDMAN INN 365-8444 ~ ELENA ond the lamily of the late Charlie Salekin extend to relatives and friends ‘our sincere thanks for the love and sup: port given us during recent trying tim ‘our special thank you to Dr. Johnson for his professional help and comtort and the home core nurses for their living care. We will be forever grateful to Phil VICTORIA (CP). — It’s ea’y to see why British Columbia~tain_-foresis~“are called nature's own cathedrals. Trée trunks thick as€olumns in the Gothic church rise intd adeafy canopy far,above. The green twilight below is broken only by shafts of sunlight that turn motes of dust into flecks of gold. 4t’s the mystical sort of scene the prévinc! aig gover nment recently put on a poster promising ‘‘a surprise’’ for tourists visiting rain forests. The real surprise, however, is the giant trees requisite for. such wondrots. images are rapidly becoming sun-bleached stumps “They are disappearing quickly,”’ says Jim Bullen, a retired assistant chief forester for British Columbia. “*The province needs a new master plan. I think more have to be saved." 100 years ago all along the coast inexhaustable A recent report commissioned by the provincial and federal governments, however, dispels that myth. A survey of 27 logging companies found some firms h Jess than 10 years of oldgrowth left. The bug adini are down to their last 20 to 30 years. None of this is a surprise to foresters of the lumber industry is planned around gar forests while waiting for seedlings planted a stumps to reach maturity. FUTURE PLANNED “Everything is in balance,”’ The supply seemed ao, says Tony Sauder, ‘Rain forests are the backbone of our tourist in dustry,”" says Ken Lay, a director. of the. Western Canada Wilderness Committee “They contain mysteries we are only beginning to understand," Tourists generated $3.5 billion last year in British Columbia and created 120,000 mostly seasonal jobs But that is only a quarter of the lumber industry’s $13.3 billion impact, And although only 86,000 people work in the forest sector, their jobs are higher-paying and full time “We believe our children’s grandchildren deserve a right to forestry jobs,"’ says Jack Munro, the¢Paul Bunyan-like president of the 38,000-member Inter national Woodworkers of America-Canada, ‘*Not gelling God-damned popcorn to tourists for four bits an hour."’ Columbia and is home to what may be Canada’s tallest tree, a 95-metre Sitka spruce known as wh& Carmanah Giant } Agreeing the site is special, forestry gian Mac Millan Bloedel plans to save the Carmagah. giant. and more than 200 other trees at least 70 m, mm they want the province's permission when of the valley Forests Minister Dave Parker has ygt to decide Whether to grant permission to log the vally Environmentalists, dissatisfied that nearly seven per cent of British Columbia is already parks, say saving - big trees isn’t enough Entire. ecosystems must be tain, everything from delicate that will replace decaying giapl *You have to save thé Avhole! valley,”” reserved, they main- hens to tiny seedlings says Lay There was a time nobody had to worry about SOCIAL PREGNANT? Plotaihott author of the government report. *‘There is no danger Such views fuel the battle raging over the Car ‘It’s the only way it will begelf-sustaining."” $5695 ‘85 BUICK SKYHAWK 4r., auto., radio, new paint $4995 SarererTt Castlegar 1988 PLYMOUTH Voyageur p.s., p.b auto 6, air, cruise, tinted w AJA FM running boards. H.D sion, $18,500 0.b.0. 226-7444 TREE. PLANTERS and hunters. reliable camperized van. hightop. 365-5447. 3.55 1986 HONDA Accord. LX, 4-dr.. 5-spd 29,000 miles. $12,995. 365-6466 atter 5:31 355 1980 HONDA ¢ 9 $1,400: Ford Thunderbird y good dition, 302 asking $1,600. 7 7/55 1980 PLYMOUTH Ho: 1c3 back. radio, excellent dows suspen 3/5 hatch $1200. 365-3634 Boats & Motors 15-FT. AQUA Johnson mot phone STAR Come In ond Ask About OMC Credit Financing Anette. its y __R.G. MARINE 365-1377"