aad ‘CANADIAN Conce e SOcHTY F iad Memoriam Moron Box S292, Ceaser. NOTICE OF POLL City of Castlegar Public Notice is given to the electors of the City of Castlegar that a poll has become necessary at the election now pending, and that the persons duly Get Lucky! Ab Roce Tracks, Lotto, Bingo, Lucky Key to the Future, tuck Card Pressed ond blessed in your own name. Forecast, etc or write 1E POWERS as J at the el for whom votes will be received are SURNAME OTHERNAMES OFFICE TERMOF OFF. RES. ADDRESS OCCUPATION EMBREE Len. G. Alderman Two (2)Yeor 2253-11th Ave. Carpenter HEARD Michoel Aldermon Two(2)Yeor 2528-10th Ave. Businessman MATHIESON Marilyn Alderman Two(2) Year 2533-9th Ave. PAKULA Robert C Alderman Two(2)Yeor 2218-10th Ave. Head Sawyer FINNEY Frank Schoo! Two (2) Year 3820 Southridge Supervisor Trustee Special Services JOHNSON Kay School Two (2) Year 7246 Ith Ave. Homemaker Trustee NIELSON Dale A Two (2) Yeor 644.9th Ave. Trustee PARTRIDGE Stonley School Two (2) Yeor 3016-IstAve. Retired ; Lourence Trustee : TURNER Or. Gordon Schoo! Two (2) Year 2319-1 1th Ave. College Teacher : Trustee The Katimavik group would like to express their thanks to all the bil families. We all enjoyed i and preclote “the. fect shored their home life with us R. J. SKILLINGS Returning Officer science are prevented from votin beyond their control they will not i Given under my hand at Castlegar, this 29th day of October, 1984 The poll will be opened at the CASTLEGAR COMMUNITY COMPLEX, 2101-6th Avenue, Castlegar, B.C. on the 17th day of November, hours of 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. A MOBILE POLL will be conducted at the Castlegar and District Hospital for hospital patients and staff confined to the Hospital, during the hours of 2:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. on polling day. An ADVANCE POLL will be open at the City Office on the 9th day of November, 1984, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. for those electors who: a) expect to be out of the City on November 17, 1984; b) for reasons of con- on polling day; c) through circumstances e able to attend the poll on polling day. 1984, between the to the following rsinott , nko. fortune! jal thanks to E Recreation ‘ew (slowpitch bell team), and Korl and Susan Zurek. We wish we cquid och and everyone of in one way or pnother but ‘would go on'ond on you for your . prayers and words of e May God bless you all Blaine, Martin end : 88 Our Action Ad Phone aes Cattinge! ana One ain SF. PAU, san. (AP) — ere, they one Peet So Sees teork.” Lawyer says LRB has lost reputation VANCOUVER (CP) — B.C. Labor Relations Board has lost its reputation for being an innovative and neutral legal body standing for the public interest, says a leading labor lawyer. Speaking Monday to dele- gates to the annual con- vention of the Industrial Relations Management Asso- ciation, Jim Dorsey, a former vice-chairman of the Canada Labor Relations Board, said the B.C. board has ceased to reflect the labor relations community. He cited B.C. and Yukon Buildihg Trades Council pres. ident Roy~Gautier's recent threat to support a,jabor boycott of the board 48 evi. dence the board is losing credibility as a representa tive body. Dorsey said most rulings are now made by vice-chair men on single-member panels rather than by three-member panels composed of a chair- man and representatives of labor and management. “You've to to ask yourself whether we still have a com mitment to (equal represen. tation of labor and manage- ment) in the provineial jur isdiction,” Dorsey said. The Board's inability to forge a consensus on key policy issues has meant it has not made a major policy de- cision in recent, years, he said. “Perhaps the best reflec- tion of this is that LRB de- cisions are rarely, if ever, cited or relied upon by labor relations decision-makers outside of B.C.” he said in an interview later. DUE TO TURNOVER Policy inertia at the labor board is partly due to the fast turnover of top officers, Dor- sey said. “It's now in its 10th year with its fourth chair- man, and I don't know how many board vice-chairmen.” The Ontario board had the same chairman for 20 years, he said, and the federal board has had the same chairman for 11 years. The B.C. board chairmen and vice-chairmen, said Dor. sey, don’t stay long enough to become attached to the board and its policies. The high turnover has been exacerbated by the provincial government's re- cent policy of unilaterally ap- pointing vice-chairmen, he added. Canada Savings Bonds Driven TERM DEPOSIT RATE For a limited time only, offers a Term Deposi Canada Savings Bonds ate | Savings Credit Union sed on the current guaranteed for 1 year Credit Union TRAIL FRUITVALE CASTLEGAR SALMO SOUTH Btocns NAKUSP NEW DENVER WANETA PLAZA We. ae pen ~ wih gn 5 Riel 9 on ts neesteg note that age alone appears to in- crease managerial productiv- ity by slightly lesa than one per cent per year,” said Tor Dahil. “This isn’t the first study showing that age in- creases productivity.” Dahl, of the University oi Minnesota, agers at a Farm Credit Ser- vices “When we measured how well individuals utilized their productivity potential, we found that smokers utilize slightly more than non- smokers,” he said. “That part of it irks me. [Tm a non- smoker. Smoking is our greatest health hazard. really would hate to try to explain this.” The study found smokers are 2.5 per cent more effec- tive at making the best use of their time, Dahl said, adding: “The possibility that that happened by chance alone is only seven per cent.” ADDICTED TO WORK Possible reasons for the finding, he said, are that smokers tend to have addic- work day for six weeks. JAt intervals that avera, about four times an hour, units asked the managers to respond to questions on how effectively they were using their time at that moment. is whether the managers were actually working or waiting to work, whether they were performing a task that could be done by a subordinate, whether the task should be done at all, whether they had planned what they were doing and now efficiently they felt they were doing the task. Dah! looked for correla tions of productivity with 11 variables: sex of the exe- cutive, age, managerial level, sleep, regular breakfast, eat- ing between meals, weight fn relationship to height, physical activity, alcoholic tive per “and may well be addicted to their work. and oy fact that rs and smoking. He said any study of pro has stimulating otoct.” “The most important thing we found is that regular ex- ercise has a positive effect on productivity,” he added. “What thay means is that companies don’t have to look at health improvement pro- grams as charity.” Dahl said sleeping between six and seven hours each night and refraining from be- contains an element of subjectivity, but said the Questions asked of the man- “People are harder on themselves than any outsider would dare to be,” he said. “You wouldn't accept an out- sider saying you could be 60 per cent more effective, but you would accept that criti cism from yourself.” Newspapers must change approach VANCOUVER (CP) — You — yes, you, reading this page — you're a diminishing breed. Surveys indicate newspaper readership has dropped to 66 per cent or less of the population from 79 per cent in 1961 and there's no indication where the slide will stop. If you fit the profile of the most regular reader, you are probably better educated, a li home and a long-term reside ttle older, living in your own nt of the community On the other hand, if you are younger, single and live in an apartment — the fastest-growing segment of the population — there aren't many of you reading this. And that's bad news for the newspaper industry, one that has tradiationally been highly profitable and not included to risky innovation. At least that was part of the message delivered recently by two market researchers to 250 financial executives from North American newspapers at the Institute of Newspaper Controllers and Finance Officers annual convention. The second, more optimistic part of the message, was that the industry, which has already adapted to major technological changes, has a bright future if newspapers can anticipate and respond to changes in readers, advertisers and competitors. _ CHANGE APPROACH “We believe the real challenge for you is to engage in a new form of marketing,” said Tom Holbein, executive vice-president of Belden Associates of Dallas, a marketing, media research and consulting firm that has advised, among others, the Chicago Tribune and both Vancouver dailies, The Sun and The Province. “The public must be sold on the value of investing its precious time in your product.” Research indicates adults spend three hours a day hi ision, two hours | ing to radio and half an our reading the newspaper. But when asked why they don't read the paper, the most frequent answer people give is that they don't have time. That includes two types of people: those who really don’t have time — a single mother with a full-time job or the man who moonlights at night — and a mueh larger group who have many other activities competing for their leisure time. Holbein said he was particularly struck by recent inter views with couples under 30 who do not subscribe to local papers. “They were not taking the papers to task for anything. They weren't complaining about the value of newspapers. They said: ‘The papers do a very good job, they're respon- sible, accurate in their reporting. It’s just that they're the company and we have an allelectrie home. We just really don’t find any place for them in what we're doing.” Then there's the phenomenon of what has been called the “blip generation,” young people who are the product of the electronic age. They inchide TV viewers who change channels several times an hour and, if they read a newspaper, flit through it while scanning a few paragraphs here and there. " “They like to pick, to sean, to jump around; they ofa seek inside-page alternatives,” Holbein said, explaining tie increasing popularity of placing indexes on the front page. USA Today, the national newspaper that has been so successful in the United States, is a classic example of ihe publications that appeal to these two types of readers. said Holbein. He cited one USA Today story, displayed in the spot traditional newspapers save for their most important report of the day, that ran under the headline: “Men, women: we're still different.” \ } } } $18 “euspq oon = “UMOP @POd, [IA ‘AuNxny —~ SHOWN ONVIHOEIE weeliar so man TTTS-BVE — [O41 “INI $Y3119S1S38 NYILSIM 006'6E: sauae ¢ ‘majanej soddq 000°S7; sause €°7 ‘yoelg sseq 007'8T: OETX.OTT Wwemg 006'27;-000'ETs saute Z BT ‘sy0] 078389 Kaye, yweoselg 9 00S'ETs 70] oped ‘seZORSED MLION 000'6$ SOI H8'T “BAG]SOuy 000°; $0198 GT ‘BAoysauy AINO GNV1 000'Lz$ e610) — puo 10 “seq1045 woseos £9% 10) ©6104 ‘210 youe> — waivd GNVIGOOM awo> ‘wpa Z — $05$ 01 “Aedoud jo}.0W NMOLNMOG (006' 19$ “@uoy josru 204 poss 11M — NAAOLNMOG PEHEO UI WOsperL ey uo $0120 0G'y — man (006' 698 — “enw Wis- 109 @onam 00s" 448 — en110 PuCTYBIH Lert 006’ 67S — “ery oIquimo> So “maria” | 111000 Be 191 4 0ZTX,00T "wesqoy ul awOY “ULIPG ¢ “HW 'bs 0OT'T 000's9$ 1 peonpey ‘enuery Aue Ol 006'61$ — e213d 1194 “28}!044 [pours YUM 40] “Hy SEL OZL Auuagdsva 006'81$ — e134 1194 *pupd| JO $8190 YG 33ND SSVd 005‘ 28 — “py s20UU0) 6081 006 12S — “env LE LUE ys 005'92$ — “ery Wis-v08 005'68$ — “eAv Wis-SO9t 00s 96 uorqoy — pooy se1ompoosg err (pepo poomuusy 6z2 -c0g-veg FIDNGTE 005'T4$ — eA120 PUDIYBIH GEL aaonass “yues uoy 009’ ors — “enw 401 -S0Zz Lvee-s9e — s06e}180> LLEZ-S9E OA WIS LICE 006'698, 4S YrOL-6zy — Aeqeng ‘OnUSN Man any WOE aIINISV MalANIVINNOW 7 *ON ADpseupem 01 YBno1y | “AON ‘AopEiny) 7 AON ‘Aopseupem 01 yBnouys | AON ADpEnyL SLIT UPPER EDGE WITH A KNIFE AND USE AS A 4-PAGE BOOKLET hursday, Nov. | through to Wednesday, Nov. 7 Cc COHOE INSURANCE Y KNOWS MORE wOSour INSURANCE 1127 4th Street ON THE RUN And let's tolk GS acc Insurance| SAVINGS SOR IMSORANCE AGENCIES LTD. (47-\0th Street, Castioger 365-3368 i {hi | 0! framework that quaran- tees freedom of the prees. ay e ‘Sem and Kate probe into the Me of a member of « royal tamity, Peter end Jeoniter investigate the goings-on at @ posh health ep8; an out-of-fevor public figure H ti PuRiss DENTAL LAB (Stefted ny Or. Dovid Cowen's employees New Dentures ahd ne nemner by appointment Kate Wyler (Kerrie Keane, love wn @ remy Wah the help of & €:00 @ LETS Mansa A DEAL buanesaman who = e's King Arther, ons Ewe and Mark try we famiy from 2 greedy MACE. / URHRER deveoper Ewen @ovunss (©20 @ OME DAY ATA TEE Charles. ha A very pregnant Jute controting ‘Aon he plane to give Binh to ‘= Eliot vate and veete her ter them fo & bounty of joni Conta oe gnet seat Wen OF ForTES @ mrs oF nes OxTERTARRAET ‘The Chinese wall painting Towant restoration project Foctered report oe the Toronto's Royet Westmont of semen! sub tote ety of the geaptysiont 7:90 @ Pacr.es Count inge beset the een on; 2 look at the sport Kinger, tecing © cout. sani, Crates eokend han et Ly — “ 202 (Wa 8 cartons bree LOVEROAT and © swrene-riddon oa sremnation of perenne “The Keapiy Of Taken soon Merker bes en evi S20@}OREAMD eprice Part LJ ) ¢ edentretion tor tnnuronce Cloim proceased 7 20@ wow H OMCROUT eee brother tures Tre Secret Service i» leslowey when wom 5 ine oo he om =SCOM DUSTY attesd @ See Sprogve Sra wane 6 bener for contret Ben vs introduces 19 epver-Carria 3 year-olé Gaecer Tine os | | Thursday, Nov. | through to Wednesday, Nov. 7 Supplement to the Castlegar News, Wednesday, October 31,1984 MALONEY PONTIAC PONTIAC BUICK TRUCKS MALONEY. BUICK GMC LTD fp Joan: Coline (1). pecteaye 0. 1¥ par: unawore thef her secretory (Dovid Hasselhoff: ‘ex-convict, in “The Cartier Affair,” on NBC movie airing Sunday, Nov 4. on An, ap aaa ce AND JACOBSEN SNOW Good Selection — Aftroctive Prices!