~\/ 365-6632 HANDYMAN will do odd j Reasonable rates. 365-3114 Pr WAYNE PEPPARD Licenced plumber and gastitter Call 359-7137 GOOD HARD WORKER will tackle anything. Full or port time. Take responsibility. Weil experienced: cockto 5 7:30 p.m. Castlegar Senior Citizen's Hall. Everyone is it and preg tok fall classes. Cal id Mr DV Survey Super. Women set to march |. TORONTO (CP) — Women in cities across Canada will be rallies and march- PSORIASIS SUFFERERS oe. you finaity fee. nd ing through the streets this Friday night to mark the annual Take Back the Night campaign. This year's event will focus FOREST ACT — (Section 41) TAKE NOTICE, that eligible and qualified persons ofe in. cooking. a bartending raitr cos lumb youn ‘re using to © onto! 2 We can help 110% CALL our Hotline No. 1-814-231-1800 Shermak Const. Ce. Ltd. '* House Framing * Form work * Rooting * Siding * Finishing * Arborite Work * Additions * Renovations A‘L TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY 365-2932 © 359-7252 *.359-7191 ADVANCED MUSIC student will teach beginning piano students inder supervision of o registered music teacher. Coll 8192 for more intormation. 3/75 ELECTROLYSIS ALCOHOLIC ANONYMOUS ond AL ANON, 365-3663 104/74 TO FRIENDS of Gwilm and Eileen Hughes. A birthday and rd ‘olumbo Lodge, Rossland Ave. Trail. Ticket information at Cald- J set Store, 365-6534 or T. Lee 364-7216 3/74 DANCE BANDS and Mobile Disco available for any type of engogment. 112-362: tin/93 CASTLEGAR NEWS office hours are as fol yy through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur News Department only opens at | p.m. News Dey tment phone number is 365. tn/71 Permanent hair removal by quolitied operator Phone The Hole Annex. 465.3744 cAI FE===a_=a=a=_=a==SS_S"_O—ONqR00I04MsSHoSot_H>Hh_o > ]]s Shy, but lots of people oll they're nice. ‘ne Two KITTENS one male, one COLOR IS MAGIC. Fashion is color. To be well dressed is not just quolity of clothes, but the femole. 365-27; 2/75 matching of your skin tones to varvenes One ath ‘and gr the color 1. Well 190 black ond white, 359-7 dressed je today are now turning te color draping. We of Fou have on jer col by season Wyev hove on item yaaa vous af my, 8 Or phone 365-7212. We'll run CPPOintment. 673-2261 MF: your od tor two issues tree of charge. tin/24 school trips. with in our FREE Share nn. We'll run your od 2 issues free of charge. Phone our action line 365- 221 ttn/76 KEY ANO KEY RING on rood behind Costlegor Savings Credit Union. 365-3402 2775 found items ore not LOST. of the top of the hill of block leather ond brown bomber jacket leather wallet. 365-2427 2/74 FOUND: in Shoreacres, ap proximately one-year-old, tor toise shell and white, female cot. 399-7941 after 5 p.m. _ _ 2/76 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN ANYONE SEEING © person(s) Midnight ond 8 a.m pense call 268-358 or coll the vy Your assistonc ueoty appreciated on pr who organizers say are in a par- ticularly dangerous situation because they face harass- ment, rape and sometimes murder from pimps, police and passers-by. The marches are designed by women to speak out for basic safety and comfort on the street and in their homes, particularly at night. In a news release, organizers say that police advise women to stay home at night, avoid dark places or not to go out without a male companion. “While this may sound like safe advice, it deprrives women of their basic right to enjoy life, to comfortably accept jobs that involve night shift work and to generally have the freedom they are entitled by law.” the Creek dreinage peeedimecpeceott he 7 km. Weel ot Castlegar. Application must be received ’ u evaluation of the ap plications, the District Ma: approve the Woodlet licence for the end Application forms and further porticulors may be obtained rom the Regional Manager Ministry of Forests, 518 Lake Street, Nelson. Colum. bio VIL 4C6, or the District . Ministry of Forests Manager 1002-3rd | Street, Castlegar British Columbia VIN 3X6. Ovr Action Ad Phone Nomber is 365-2212 BOBBKATT yy EXCAVATING “= Septic Tank Installations Landscaping & Hauling Backhoe & Log Splitting CARD READINGS 365-5958 Snow Removal 1.C.B.C Auto Glass Repair 365-6107 Free estimates! satety Gloss J Ask for Dixie THE CLIENT SERVICES Program Multiple Scter ety of Canada — 8.C Kootenay Lake District Hospital in Nelson. Phone Physical Medical Department ot 112-352 aut an WORKSHOP A West Kootenay MS Family Workshop, presented by the Troil-Rossiand MS Support Group and the MS Society of Conede, 8.C. Division . sdey, 9:00 p.m. Neurologist i. University of British Columbia Friday, 28, 1:00 Bron- wheelchair access at reor), 208) Washington Str Phone Este COMPUTER INCOME TAX AND ACCOUNTING FRANCHISE Our Action Ad Phone Member is 365-2212 russett AUCTION house Hwy. 3A Thrums WATCH FOR Liquidati Sale of B Farm Equipment (From ent Forks) DATE Sun., Sept. 30 - Wed., Sept. 26 ] p.m. See this paper er details! RUSSELL AUCTION 399-4793 JANITORIAL premises. Those at 1016-4th St., INVITATION TO TENDER Kootenay Savings Credit Union invites interested parties to bid on the new cleaning contract for interest proach Kootenay Savings Credit Union Castlegar for details Closing date is October |, Consignments Welcome SERVICES its Castlegar may ap- 1984 D & D PAVING & SEAL COATING CONTINENTAL CARLISLE DOUGLAS INVESTORS Af C.C.D. we have @ comprehensive reseorch ‘tment with information on viable gold and sliver properties throughout North Americo. The VSE is the venture capital exchange of the world For intormotion call or write ARNIE FEHR OR KERRY BLACK Brian L. Brown Certitied General Accountant 270 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph. 365-2151 MOROSO, MARKIN & BLAIN Certitied General Acc it 241 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph. 365-7287 Soligo, Koide & John Chertered Accountants 615 Columbia Ave. (Upstairs Castlegar Phone 365-7745 Henry John, B.Sce., C.A Resident Partner qx HOME APPLIANCE REPAIR L @ Hotpoint @ Inglis @ Moffat @G.et @ Ke @ Admiral and other 365-5451 or 364-0411 nmor KOOTENAY'S BEST " Appliance Parts Service Dept. All Brand Names Serviced All Ports Stocked Rebuilt Timers Used Appliances & Consignments Coin-operated Machines Industrial Loundry WH ALSO SERVICE: + KENMORE 7 eGams = MOTPOMNT © ETC. CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING LTD. 1088 Cohembbie Ave. Russell Auctions 399-4793 Thrums Buy or Sell by Auction “| can't listen to you and him at the same time.”’ WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE 2237-6th Ave,, Castlegar Invite you to call them for o free moving estimate. Leg ad representative tell you the many services which hove made Williams the most respec: the moving Ph. 365-3328 Collect M L LeRoy B.S. 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 1012-4th St., Castl ASK CHES OR JOHN FOR BEAUMARK ES SERVICE OF THE MACHINE the APPLIANC ay WITH B.£.W.C. TO PROVIDE ALL PARTS AND ALL FoR THE LIFE TRAIL, B.C. WICKLUM ROOFING Box 525, Nelson Phone Lorne at 352-2917 Gov't Certified & Licenced CLOTHING, DRAPERIES, BEDSPREADS on consignment. NEARLY NEW SHOP 776 Rogsiend Ave., Trail LOW. LOW Prices Whether your name starts with A or M, or X, YorZ ROOSTER READY MIX CONCRETE Slocan Valley Also Supplying Drain Rock 355-2570 PETER FERGUSON F. PIRSH CONTRACTING 2045 Columbia Ave., Trail * Renovations © Custom-built kitchen cabinets © Residential & Commercial * Big jobs or small jobs Ph. 368-59 Nursery & Florist Ltd. 2601 - 9th Ave., Castlegar 365-7312 COLUMBIA SEALCOATING AND PAVING 365-5568 365-2913 You' Il find Busi Directory advertising pays. PHONE 365-5210 Phone 365-3361 Tues.-Fri. 9a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.-12 noon — 17. (TM) ALLAN optometrist 3466 Bok er St. Nelson, B.C. Ph. 352-5152 ——— Castlegar Plumbing & Heating Ltd. Quality Wholesale Plumbing & Heating Supplies Complete installations & Professional advice Commercial & industrial lees Ave. 365-3388 CARPETS - LINOLEUM TILES - CERAMICS i. ALL TYPES OF « 1AL P FLOOR INSTALLATIONS oo oirrheods = Enver R. 1) Winkew, B.C. * Brochures * Rottle Ti 226-7603 papas OFFSET & LETTERPRESS WEB PRESS FACILITIES CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbie Ave. 365-7266 CASTLEGAR FUNERAL CHAPEL Dedicated to kindly, thoughttul service. Granite, Marble and Phone 365-3222 Co. Ltd. Plumbing & H Supplies Industrial Piping ies 2317 - 6th Ave., Castlegar 365-7702 Peppercorn Dining Under the Poims TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN 100L Rossland Ave., Trail Reservations 364-2222 THE COLANDER SPAGHETTI HOUSE Specializing in Iyolion cuisine —_——— For Reservations Phone 364-1816 1476 Cedar Avenve Troll, B.C. COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tonk Pumping Phone 365-5013 3400 - 4th Avenue Castt Tranquill 5 letters Page A5 AES EO The six winning numbers in Saturday s 12, 16, 36 and bonus number is 30. The $500,000 winning number in Friday's Provincial lot- oto raw are 4, 11, tery draw is 2949899. York's Page B3 heritage Sunday WEATHERCAST The weather tor today will bs cloudy with isolated showers @ high of 15°. Humidity wail be tow at 43 per cent, and winds will be 15-20 bhemvetres: re pee hour untit the early atternoon. Monday will ywith some warm . and a high of 10° Tuesday and Wednesday will be mostly sunny 50 Cents _> VOL. 37, No. 77 lalate CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1964 hundreds of Castiégor < children who were fingerprin- ted Saturday as part of child identification program Gorcak was one of held at Kinnaird Elementary School by Selkirk Lody Lions. Another session is scheduled at Twin Rivers Elementary School next Saturday CashtewsPhote by Chery! Colderbonk GLADE STUDENT By ADRIAN CHAMBERLAIN Staff Writer The parents af a Glade kindergarten student say they're being treatéd as “second-class citizens” because of Castlegar school board's refusal to provide full busing service for their son. Five-year-old Caleb Retzlaff takes the morning school bus from Glade to kindergarten held at Tarrys Elem entary school in Thrums five days @ week for half-day classes. The youngster would normally return home at noon by school bus with the other kindergarten students, but the school board decided in an in-camerea meeting Sept. 17 to refuse the child busing privileges. The reason? According to the board secretary treasurer John Dascher, Retzlaff is the only kindergarten student returning to Glade from Tarrys at noon. This means a round trip of 10.6 kilometres to Glade from Shoreacres Elementary school where the bus is located at noon-time on week-days. E —“ When it comes down to running a large (66-passen ger) bus with one kid, you have to start looking at your costs,” said Dascher Thursday. He said the hasrd caleulated the cost of transporting Retzlaff home from kindergarten every day as $1,600 over 10 months. This includes the bus driver's $12.96-an- stinks es far as'T'm Busing service denied to and piek up their son from Tarrys each day. Dascher said this will give the family about $50-per-month for expenses. Retslaff says, however, that he will refuse the compensation, because he feels as a taxpayer he's entitled to full bus service for his son He says that his five-year-old son has to walk home 1.6 kilometres from the bus stop even when he is dropped off by the bus. “I don’t mind if my son has to walk home a mile per day,” Retalaff told.the Castlegar News. “I do not think it ié fair to discriminate against me because | live in Glade. I should be entitled to have my son bused home like every one else im the area.” According to Retslaff, picking up their child from school every day would mean his wife would have to take their one-year-old infant, and another three-year-old with ber on icy, dangerous roads during the winter, and return home with three children in a vehicle equipped with only two seat-belts. “I think that's 9 bit too much to ask,” he said. As well, Retzlaff insists that the school bus travels along Highway 3 from Tarrys with kindergarten children (other kindergarten students living in less out-of-the-way areas ate riven home at noon from school) past the turn-off to Glade. Thereforg, he says, the driver only has to drive'a 6:4 lometre round trip out of his way to drop off Retalaffs child at the bus-stop. Retzlaff said he alee dhjects to the manner in which the board made'the devision whether to bus his son. He said bie wife made & formal presentation on the situation contemend on page A? 2 Sections (A & B) meeneeeeeniinlil DEMAND DROPPING Hydro projects delayed further By RON NORMAN Editor B.C. Hydro plans to delay the Mur phy Creek dam and Keenleyside gen erating projects “indefinitely,” the Castlegar News learned this week Hydro had planned to begin work on the $858 million Keenleyside project in 1986 with completion in 1992 Construction on the $1.9 billion Mur phy Creek dam was scheduled to start in 1988 with completion in 1993. Now, the Crown corporation says no new dams will be completed before 1997. “That's the earliest possible date,” said Peter McMullen, Hydro's public affairs manager, in an interview from his Vancouver office. That would mean work on Keenley side would start in 1991 at the earliest — a delay of five years. McMullen added that “all indica. tions” are that now new damis will be needed before the end of this century or “very early in the next century.” McMullen said Hydro doesn't have any firm dates yet on when the next dams will be needed becayse it has not i 8 new systems plan. , he noted that the’ com » pany'’s new 10-year energy.forecast will be out in a week and it shows demand dropping over the next 10 years. “It's still going backwards,” Me Mullen said. “There is going to be a further re. duction in the work being done on those projects,” McMullen said, but he could not say just how much of a reduction. That won't be known until budget reports have been prepared, McMullen said However, he said work on reports would have on our unemployed people.” Maddocks said Keenleyside was never a major project in Hydro's eyes but, “would have meant a big differ ence to the area.” He said the committee hoped the project would have spurred other de- such as the mi pe ion and enhancement report, will be “wound down” and “shelved” until needed Letters will go out to all local resi. dents involved in the projects thanking them for their assistance and telling them the projects have been delayed “It'll be the next generation of councils that will be worrying about it,” he said. “There won't be an application for a water license,” added McMullen, be- cause Hydro has no definite in-service date. He said Hydro still views both proj- ects “as a An indieation of Hydro’s plans to shelve the two projects came a few months ago when it closed its infor mation office in Castlegar. Meanwhile, reaction from supporters of the Keénleyside project was philos- ophical. “What can you do?” asked Richard Maddocks, secretary of the Castlegar Pp projects. Maddocks also said he remains optimistic. “I haven't given up all hope. I don't think we can give up all hope.” He noted that Hydro is “renowned” for announcing a dam's delay one day and “three months later” announcing its go-ahead. “The Revelstoke dam was pretty well scrapped just before it was started. I honestly don’t know how seriously to take all this.” Maddocks said new federal energy minister Pat Carney signed the com mittee’s petition to start work early on Keenleyside and hopes to get her support. “We' re going to follow up on that one,” he said. As well, the committee wants to meet with Kootenay West MP Bob Brisco to see if the federal government can help out?” “Certainly we're going to keep on with Keenleyside,” Maddocks said. However, he also pointed out that Economie Dx the it will be looking at other “We are hoping that ee would see the other side of the coin, the impact it areas, such as developing Highway 3 as the southern Trans-Canada route. Celgar replaces management staff By CHERYL CALDERBANK Stafi Writer Westar Timber’s Celgar Lumber Operations in Castlegar has undergone a major shakeup of its management and supervisory staff, the Castlegar News has learned. Ray Senger, who was terminated on August 31, says Westar has replaced several of its management and super visory staff at the sawmill, apparently as part of a new policy decision. Senger, 39, who was in charge of processing and shipping had been with the company for 20 years. He said the majority of the people terminated had at least 20 years experience with the company. One had over 40 years of experience and was at the sawmill when it was owned by Waldie's Sawmill. The list of firings includes mill manager A] Thornton, who has been at the sawmill for 2'/ years. Bill Ford, manager of Plateau Operations near Vanderhoof, has been appointed to take over the plant temporarily. Ford has been at the local sawmill for a little over a month. When asked about the firing, Ford said there were some internal decisions but these were not open for Idiscussion, adding that the company feels these decisions shouldn't be discussed in the media. “There always will be people upset,” he said. “We can't do anything to change that.” Newly appointed Westar president Sandy Pulton ssid the company doesn’t “The market is in a depressed state,” he said. “We have to do we Ss its sawmill newsletter some organizational company, ean to continue operating.” “If anybody left the company, it is a personal issue between them and the company,” he said Fulton did confirm that Thornton had left the company. Fulton himself took over from John Montgomery in August Senger says the news of a reorganiz ation came on Aug. 21 when the assignments which saw mill manger Thornton being bumped to sawmill production. The newsletter stated that the company would make other organizational assignment changes as required. “By the end of the month, they were making assignment changes,” Senger said. continved on page A Mayor Moore sets tone of convention By BRENDA DALGLISH VANCOUVER (CP) — British Col umbia needs a vision for its future that is bigger and more encompassing than the one now being offered by its lead ers, says John Scherer, a conflict management specialist used by or. ganizations such as Boeing, GTE and the United States Army “What is needed is a goal, » mission, a transcendent vision for this prov ince,” Scherer told the 8ist annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention Friday. “One that’s big enough so that everyone can look at it and say: ‘Tm for that.’ ” Scherer was invited to address the convention — im a move that was a we have loat sight of our common goals, our community goals.” But Scherer said the answer does not lay with a single strong leader who will impose his vision; instead the answer is for the vision to start at the broad grassroots level and work up. “The ideal is a leader who simply ar clearly and the deep yearnings in the hearts of the constitutency,” he said. The Japanese could serve as role model, in the way they have developed a vision of their country and then worked collectively to make that vision happen, he said. “The Japanese have been wildly suc- coasful and they have worked from the —