AST .FAMILIAR SIGHT around the area are these twe missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon). They are Sister Kathleen M. Conn from Highland, Indiana, left, and Sister Carol Anne Anderson of Phoenix, Utah, majoring in home economies. Sister Conn was a therapist at the Utah State Training School for the retarded in American Fork, Utah. Both young women say they have found the people in Castlegar friendly and have enjoyed working with them and are looking forward to those they have yet to meet. FOR SAVAGE SHOES AND ALL YOUR FAMILY FOOTWEAR ! Welcome aan Phone 365-7025 — Pine St. — Castlegar Bald Tires” Caused $7,700 Damage A Castlegar man has been charged with having bald tires after his 1976 Pontiac sustained an estimated $7,800, Joseph Gerald Zebert was charged after his vehicle went into a ditch early Sunday morning 25 miles west of Castlegar. ' Reports indicate the vehi- cle went into the ditch after-it was over-corrected in an at- Summer ( Beauty starts here: With 8-Hour Make-Up ‘tempt 'to miss a deer. You Can Live In! © Maxi-Glow Blush © Maxi-Losh 24 hr. Mascara _ © Mani— Moist Lipstick © Maxi-Rich Stay Fresh Shadow a Tae aa) COCRE’MA e oe with Rich Cocoa Butter - © For a Tan of the Tropics © Tans Fast, Deep, Moisturizes & Protects © Will Not Wash Off In Pool or Sea Bonnie Bell for Beautiful Hair |. Moisture. babel % 16 fl.oz. Now ...... Moisture A Lotion 220 mi Now Shampoo 480 ml Now. Hair Conditioner 460 mi Now ... Tommy Biln Corner of Pine and Columbia Phone 365-7813 | ‘Open Mon. - Thurs. 9 a.m. to6p. m, Fri. a.m, ta9 p.m. Sat. 9.a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Open this Sunday Hours: 12 noon-1p.m. 6-7 p.m. Collectors Gral Discs Colectors Grabbing Antique Discs Old Record Treasures Twenty-five years . after rock music began to be heard on the North American music scene, thousands of the earliest recordings have become valu- able collectors’ items, Interest in old rock records is gaining popularity faster than a hit single. Riding on a! wave of nostalgia, collections now are reaching into the late *60s—a sore point with veteran collectors who say nostalgia buffs have descended on second-hand stores like locusts, draining supplies and inflating’ prices, Albums by Elvis and the Beatles and related memor- abilia are the most sought-after - items. ‘There also are many spec- lalized collections, concentrat- ing on the different directions Don Keele used to rin a junk shop but that changed the - day he put up a display of old rock records for sale and re- sponse was-more than he ex- pected. He moved into records completely. “If the record's not avail- able and people want it, then’. it's worth something,” he sald, Man Charged - With Failing - To Yield A two-vehicle accident Monday afternoon on Sth Av- enue, N. ‘and Green St. has resulted in an estimated $1,; 200 $ damage, Police said a 1960 Ford, which an taken by the many who have made the music business their path of fame, obscurity or tragedy. Steve, a Toronto collector who prefers a nickname to protect his identity and along with it @ valuable record col- lection, owns a copy of Chan- tilly Lace, the only album made by The Big Bopper, who died in 1959 with Buddy Holly and Rit- chie Valens ina plane crash. It's one of several records for which Steve has paid up to $50. Steve, 34, who works for a property management firm, said he went into record col- lecting on a serious scale three years ago when he redis- covered his old records in his mother's basement, His collection is .worth enough to make insurance too costly. He said he has spent up to two years tracking down an album. ri { Don Hargrove, a railway brakeman, said one of his most memorable finds was in a Cleveland junk store where he paid 36 cents for an album by . the Four Lovers. It turned out , to be the Four Seasons’ first which, Hargrove said, now is worth $100. Collectors prowling around second-hand stores inevitably are drawn to Don's Discs, a general haven and meeting place in downtown Toronto, Most Legwork Eliminated From Tours For the month of August most of the legwork will be taken out of the public tours at * Cominco's Trail Operations, due to various shutdowns dur- ing August. ‘The shutdown, the third in as. many years, will permit certain operating employees to take their regularly scheduled vacations and while the’ plants . are down, maintenance crews will perform repairs and over- haul certain, plant facilities and equipment.” :" ACominco spokesman said that conducting the regular _ tours under. shutdown condi- tions would be difficult. How: ~ ever, Trail area tourists will still be welcomed at the Tada- nacmain gate visitor's room. In lieu of a guided tour of the plants, an -audio-visual presentation will be shown in, :-the visitor's ‘room. A kind of ‘arm-chair travelogue’, the slide show will cover the plants which the visitor would normal- ly see on a guided tour, in addition to a look at Cominco’s other operations around the world. The show willbe presented | twice daily, Monday through Friday at 10 a.m, and again at 2 p.m. during August. Visitors who stop at the chemical and fertilizer.operations at Warfield will be directed to the Tadanac gate if they wish to view the slide show. ; The slide show was also - presented during last year's shutdown and many favorable comments were received from visitors, in particular from those who had gone out of their, way to take the tour. When visitors learned that the plants were shut down, ‘they expected to be turned away, and were Pleasantly « surprised when they were not.- Again this year, Cominco: would like to, assure area residents who are expecting + visitors during August that.a warm welcome awaits them at, the Tadanac main gate visitor's room, $600 damage, was south bound on Sth Avenue, N. when a 1975 compact pickup west bound on Green Street failed to yield the right of way, Police have identified the drivers as Shirley Ann Wanjoff and Alan Clifford Conroy. Both are of Castlegar, Wanjoff has been charged with failing to yield the right of way. _ relate. “The most costly collectibles are on ‘small labels whose owners are hard to trace. “Record companies are happy. The Hollies, the Yard- birds—you can't go out and buy them. Early disco records made for promos are selling for $40, $50, Early David Bowie, Iggy Pop, they're collectible.” Keele sald most of his stock is obtained in old record -companies and warehouses in the United States. - Two years ago - Michael Martin and Craig Coyle formed Paradise Records, a wholesale business of old rock, original and reissued, which Martin said he sells to small stores around Toronto, Martin said. more people are treasuring early rock be- cause it's better than today's’ music. 5 “Music ‘isn't captivating anymore, It doesn’t have the same closeness, something to identify with, like in the past. “Chuck Berry. did School Days and every kid’ could Teenagers’ problems never change—school,' ro- mance, home. Today's rock isn't touching them in the same way.” Beatitudes (Written by. a TS-year-old Alberta man) Flcseod are they who understand my faltering step aad palsted han catch the things they say; Blessed are they who seem to know that my eyes aro dim oa my wits are slow, - Blessed are they who looked away when the coffee ‘spilled be i the cloth today; rece as they who know that my ears today must strata fo ani Blessed are they who stopped to chat withacheery amile toby litdle while, Bleseed are they who never say, “You've told the story ‘le today"; i Blessed aro they who make it known that I'm loved, re and alone. Blessed are they wh the way to bring b carry my croso; and Blessed are they who ease the days on my journey Rome loving ways. wee Dress — ene Eremenko’s $ "th TN Quality § Shoes for the entire ‘family ork IT: ar 8 ORO SSeS E PRICES SLASHED 25 - 50 - 75% and more! Basic, Kondel & Pacifica Patterns Y : Price Page Bl; ‘CASTLEGAR NEWS" SECTION. Friday, August 5, 1977 YEP Employs Local Youths Establishing an archive stem for the City of Castlegar ind improving school’ playing ‘fields are among the types of .,work that young persons in i: pCastlegar will be involved in as fa result of this year’s Bhitish Columbia Government Youth Employment Program. .. YEP Field sunetvince + Greg Wood ‘says 67 students and F outh from high schools agand post-secondary institutions ““are being: employed in nae # ‘created positions on Jermyn increase of $7.5 million in allocations will raise the total number of jobs being created to more than 19,000. An additional $10 million is being provided by other gov- ernment ministries for employ- ment -within their ministries, Total funding for the program 500.000, Examples of the jobs cre- : ated for the program in Castle- gar, include the hiring of two students to correlate data re- lated to all aspects of, city s ganizations ae in projects by the city, regional districts and improvement districts, Selkirk .. College and Schoo! District No, 2. Approximately 15,800 Jobs have been’ created’ province- wide by the Ministry of Labour: Program, Arecently announced ion and set up a per- ~ manent filing index system. School District: No. 9 has hired three students to increase and improve the playing fields’ surrounding four schools in the Several other positions in other eligible sectors of the program are now under way. KOOTENAY SAVINGS REDIT- UNION SERVICE... COMPLETE FINANCIAL _ INCLUDING Low Cost Personal Loans CASTLEGAR 365-3375 — SOUTH SLOCAN 359-7221 - Home Delivery Price To Increase Sept. 1 Effective Sept. 1, 1977, -the. home delivery price of the astlegar News will increase to 25 cents from the present 22 cents. ‘The increase will be shared with your carrier, who will get * “one-third of the increase. Subscription price of the Castlegar News by mail ‘delivery will be increased at the same time from $9 a year to $11. ‘ In announcing the increase, publisher Burt Campbell said it was necessitated “by increases in all aspects of producing our. +: newspaper. .., from increased labor caste through, | Reweroom is anCel Cel Plans October Pulp Shutdown SPECIAL VISITOR to ‘the Castlegar |News r student Maria Lopez, 15,” of Mexico City, accompanied by local hosts John © Charters. On a Rotary-sponsored and Bonny + six-week sightseeing tour of the West Koote- mays and the B.C. coast, shé examines historical material used in this week's anniversary section. - —CasNewsFoto by Lois Hughes Moxican Student Enjoys Leisurely Pace Castlegar Not as Hectic ‘There are’ many: obvious differences to be found between life in Mexico and: in B.C., and : tnaterial costs, to increased postage cos _ = B.C.. Holiday. Weekend It was no holiday’ for | “RCMP. who’ during the long 7 weekend handled approximate- Ay 45 complaints of a varied ~hature, : Included in the complaints yare six persons arrested for “ {being drunk in a public place. Four person’ are tobe ‘charged with: possession of marijuana and one person to be charged with possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. Three. persons. have been charged for being minors in a licenced ‘premises. ANNOUNCING Summer Fabrics Reg. Value Up to *7.98 oi as low as 4 99 Remnants Galore Reduced a Further 25% OFF YOUR LINK: HARDWARE’ STORE 621 - 16th Ave., Genalle Bathing Suits & Cotton T-Shirts AIR TRAVEL AGENTS FOR ALL AIRLINES” * Reservations: %. Accommodation: 2) PINE ‘STREET, CASTLEGAR © PHONE. 365-7782 a NEW _ OWNERSHIP Rune P. Holmberg by Warm’ Welcome To. all Our Regular ‘Customers PLAZA TEXACO 630.5. 2nd St Contlegar ie 365-5573 Maria is enjoying the pi f experiencing those differences, Maria Eugenia Lopez Car- illo de Albornoz,':16, is an exchange student visiting the _ West, Kootenays _ through a; Rotary-sponsored’ program, . She has been staying with the -. John Charters family in ‘Castle- gar.and sightseeing with them, “both Iceally ‘and. at the: coast, _ She’ has. been. here for. about four weeks and is sched: uled to stay for a total of six” weeks, One of her. primary reasons for. coming is to im- prove her English, which she also studies at school, | She has one sister who is 14; Her father Samuel}, a Rotary member, is personnel manager ata department store in Mexico City. Charters explained that ‘when Maria's parents (Applied for their daughter to join the. . exchange program, they asked _ that she visit Canada’ rather than the U.S., which was ‘also: possible. “They felt that if she came to Canada it was less likely she would be exposed to the many dialects’ Americans are. known.’ ‘for and'that she would. have a ‘better chance to improve her Beets a explained Charters, : Mexico City.. isa. large tropolitan area Maria noted, Residents of the City of ner “To ‘those residents of the city who disregard sprinkling regulations — — after you have, beenwarned by the Water t your water will. be turned, off, without further. notice. Bylaw No: 109; Section 13 states: — and. you ‘The -City may, without: notice, dis- : connect.'the water service to any, premises for: any of the. following: reasons, and shall not be liable for damages by reason of discontinuing’ water. service 5 ~) for such reasons: * (a): Unnecessary or wasteful use: of water, or violation of regulations con- cerning watering or:sprinkling. (b) Failure to repair. or. replace defective p pipes, fittings, valves, ‘tanks or re appliances which are leaking or are’ otherwise’ not’ Ina. go od state of % repalr and which are’ or may become'a cause of waste, of, water.” Bylaw No. 109, Section 32 states — “Any person or persons. who violete %5 any of. the provisions of this By-Law, or who suffers or permits any act or thing to be done in contravention of or in: violation’ of the provisions ‘af. this By-Law ©. shall be deemed to be guilty of any infraction hereof and shall -be‘liable, on before a or Justice of, the ‘Peace having jurls- diction, to a fine fot exceeding $250. 00 ‘and -costs and: in’ default of payment,’ “Jo imprisonment for not: more’ than thirty days: in jall,: and | must Institute core rective measures forthwith.” Your cooperation to help keep our. water tanks at'a_ sufficient “water ‘lel at for fire protection, at ‘all times, is essential. After all, the house: that needs the; wiles during a fire might be ‘yours. CIty. OF CASTLEGAR and the pace. there is very hectip. She said she is enjoying the ‘slower’ approach .to. lifg which she has found so far in Trips to Victoria and Van- couver. illustrated: to her that B.C.'s major cities are much more relaxed than ‘her, home town.’ “Here you have” more access to the countryside,” was . her approving observation of” the West, Kootenay. ©: : ‘She has picnicked at Chris- tina ‘Lake, seen’ many: of the local landmarks‘ and took. her - first: trip underground when she: went to Rossland’s mine- “museum. Charters said Maria will be going to ‘Spokane’ after an ~ excursion to Lake Louise, Alta. Rotary ‘members ‘in the area are hoping to give her an idea of what Canadians do in their spare time and for this reason she has gone fishing and also flown in a small aeroplane. ‘While; it may not. ‘be necessary to say that there are differences between life-styles of Mexican and Canadian ‘peo- ple,” Maria * pointed . out that there are probably more sim- ilaritiés than'some North Am- ericans suspect. ‘There has been no drastic a change in diet for her'since she arrived at Vancouver. July 2. :'When queried about such foods as.corn products, hot peppers and beans, she said that the : traditional: Mexican foods are staples in the rural areas. “Living in a large city, the food eat is quite-similar to that of Canadians,” she said. “The things you: mention are more likely to “be, found in the “country.” * Marie is: going into grade “11 when ‘she returns home. ' While her favorite subjects are / “geography, Spanish and Eng- lish, she is undecided about her. future “plans. She: intends to attend university but isnot ‘sure (what field ‘she - might ° pursu * models.” Bullgears, ’ Pinions, Engine Parts, etc. New-and used attachments, | track ‘rebull Corner, ‘Phone Days 489-2711 - 489-3126 or 426-6494. As for the immediate fu- ture, she is relishing. the - leisirely pace which she has encountered here. It is the same pace. North Americans are. ihe to attributing toa CanCel will impose another pulp, mill shutdown locally. in October, a company official sald Tuesday. Wilf Sweeney, manager of the interior pulp division which employs about 400 people, said ,an anticipated wood pulp sur- plys in the mill inventory—simi- lar to the one which resulted in the current shutdown—will re- sult in a further closure for "10 to 14 days.” “It's normal for any busi- ness enterprise to end up witha surplus of material ‘in. the - inventory,” Sweeney sald. “You just have to stop producing and start selling out of your inven- tory to try to get some of-your money back.” Sweeney said the company decision to schedule a further shutdown in’ an ‘attempt to ofiset the plup surplus on the _ Canadian and world community was “based on the best judge- ment ‘we could exercise with the information we had.” . He said there is a chance that by October the shutdown will not be necessary. “But the world market is such that it just doesn't indicate * it's going to happen,” he said. Sweeney said no informa- tion is available on how many of the pulp mill employees, many. of whom ‘were encouraged to take their holidays during the’ shutdown, have been laid’ off this week. 4 He said the CanCel saw- mill, which ‘is not faced with as: critical a situation on world and Canadian markets, is still oper-.- ating. The company will take. of the sh to (exi- ca8 half "hidden under ‘a som- brero. do major maintenance on the . Wwoodroom and other jobs that. “wouldn't normally be done in’ « another year,” he‘ said. He said tradesmen em- ployed at the pulp mill are still working on maintenance. Sweeney said the mainte- nance projects reserved for the ‘mill's normal Labor Day main. tenance shutdown will be saved for the October shutdown, ‘ Besides Castlegar, further closures are planned at Cana- dian Cellulose operations at Prince Rupert, at Prince George Pulp and Paper, Tahsis at Gold River and Northwood .Pulp and Paper Ltd. in Prince George. About 3,100 out of 13,000 pulp workers will. be affected by the closures. Thousands of other pulp workers in the province are facing. temporary © layoffs ‘ through mill closures due to the record inventories of pulp on hand, The Canadian Pulp and Paper Association in Montreal revealed Wednesday that 800,- 000 metric tons of pulp are piled , up,in mills across the country, more than half of it in B.C. This compares to a 1976 Canadian ‘inventory of only 550,000 metric tons. The latest figures for BO. are not available but industry sources admit the figure has climbed considerably above a March ‘estimate | of 505,000: metric tons, | No end to an international pulp glut is in sight and five mills: out of 20° plan eae for varying periods in August and September to try to correct the situation, One estimate is that most B.C. mills have three months. plus production on hand... <. The CPPA said that as of the end of June there was a North American-Scandinavian (the major producera). inven- tory of 2.8 million metric tons: ‘A spokesman described it as “incredibly high.” - Normal worldwide inven tory is around one million tons but ‘world inventories - have spiralled spectacularly since 1974 when 600,000 metric fons were on hand, The Wizard's Palace Funteria.. “ts Coming To Castlegar: : WHERE WERE YOU ON MAY 23,1844? Canada Works is sour federal Job creation pragram in British Columbia, and ~ its ready to help your community organization or municipality serve your fel-. - low citizens. But Femmes the deadline for application is August 26. 3 Once again, you have the opportunity - * to create jobs and lasting benefits for your. community. lf Your.idea is good, and your group. has thewilland the expertisetoseeit. *.- through, Canada Works may be able to provide the necessary funding. Here's how to get things Under way. Agree ona project you can all support. Think it through: How many jobs will it create? How much for salaries and other. costs? Who willrun the project ona day- to-day basis? Then go to your local Canada Manpower Centre orJob Creation < °.: Branch Office and pick up a Canada Works application and “Guide to Applicants” * The application is not complicated, but please Supply full details and fill it out clearly and accurately... Please remember that your project, whatever it is, should make use of and add tothe skills of the unemployed in your area, helping them to re-enter the work force ona full-time basis. ©»: Canada Works is for your community. Your province. Your country, For all of us. So let's get working on some newideas. j +. Maln~donuvre |. et immigration - + Bud Cullen Minietre —_ _ Forall ofus.