Thursday, October 1, 1953. “DON’T KEEP YOUR F HEAD IN A WHIRL Prepared GET YOUR a PROTECTION “Photo Studio FINEST QUALITY COUCHMAN ee FOWLER & COLLINSON ~ Castlegar Sash & Door PHONE 3211 WINDOWS — DOORS — SASH CABINET MAKING . “"EESTIVAL WINNER RECEIVES AWARD * TROPHY PRESENTATION for B.C. winner ‘pt Dominion Drama UBC Players Club ‘Alumni, Festjval is made’ to R. O: “Dick” Massey (right), past president of by, Brian Hopkins, representative of Calvert pistes Limited, donors of the distinctive carved trophy, honors is Mrs. Jessie Richardson r, well known as B.C, regional chairman of ‘Dominion "Drama Festi ival. wee “play was “Valpone”’, our economic welfare will most have trees as a source of’ raw mat haps not that both G New Forests --- Livelihood For Generations Yet Unborn By JAMES K. “NESBIFT There is no single issue of greater concern to the people of British Columbia than the state of our forests. In years to come, certainly depend on whether we erial, The general public has per- and Industry are working toward sustained yield forestry. ‘We present here a story by Jim Nesbitt, one of British Columbia's most competent on. reliable. .reporters, which sums up ‘the forest’ ‘Way back of beyond in the hills’ of Vancouver Island, new forests” are growing! be They can't be seen from the, main these magnifi- ° Next «i Trip Fly: When you gg by air you reach your ‘destt- nation faster and more conveniently. Fly- ing time from io ae to. Vacouver. , Let: the Canadian ‘Pacific Airlines agent help you plan your’ entire trip. He: will gladly-make all arrangements, ‘provide complete through ticket service no matter where a yon want to go, Phone 3011 for Canadias Pasilic AIRLINES. cent splashes of green, small trees. now, but a tremendous hope of: the future. © It’s only when you travel miles along logging roads that you sud- denly come. upon new ‘trees — and then you travel through acres of them: It’s a wonderful sight— : preserved forall: time, so that and when you see those lush new trees you-know that acres that were logged or burned’ are no Jonger left nude: and ugly, New timber is being grown, covering scars and much more important than. that, it’s timber that will be ready for cutting 80 to 100 years from now, . Thus this generation is looking after the interests and well-being of generations yet unborn. - BLOOD AND.SINEW... . Government:-and:: industry are now doing their‘best’to:see that B.C.'s rich forest.: resources are this province ‘will never lose its very backbone, its blood: and sinew. Without the forest industry. B.C. would amount ‘to very little, A few days ago I saw new for- ests’ springing. up in ‘the country that was laid bare by the great Campbell River i fire of 1938... a | travelling to use the article has been obtained ae ine BC. Lumber Manufacturers Association, Beneath an overcast sky and a handful. of fans, the Castlegar Cubs, minus some of. their. im- Bortant “players still had - oodles of power which they. were pot called upon to use as they roared through. the Juniors 11-4 in a nine inning fastball tilt at ‘the Castlegar Ball Park, Sunday aft- erncon. 4 The Juniors, who copped the Castlegar-Kinnaird Softball Lea- ‘]gue’ Championship in-whirlwind fashion, seemed to wilt at.times under the pressure of playing against the Kootenay Fastball Champions. The Seniors slipped in'a run in the first, two more in the second, three in the third and two in the fourth. Ken Grunerud took over from Brian Atcheson on the Junior ‘| mound at this point and held the ‘Cubs scoreless for the next ewe innings but they Cubs Coast To Easy | 1-4 Exhibition Rout Over Castlegar Juniors Hera Sunday. pe three, hits and one walk with: two strikeouts, Billy | Plotnikoft ‘and Rennie: Mitchell led the Cubs hitting on- slaught with two singles each. ‘triple bag’ clout’ and all the other players for Cubs, excepting Alan. Jacobson,’ gained ‘one hit, each, including Harry. Kanigan: and Fred’ Horcoff who were loaned to the Cubs by the, Juniors to make up‘a player shortage. Junior errors were a big. factor in .a ‘goodly number. of the Cub tallies with. a total of six chalked up. against them. Cubs mean- while made .one miscue‘in the game, George ‘Cleeve at: home: plate and,.Elwoed Grunerud, .bases, handled the umpiring chores. bang home another tally in the seventh and two a in the eighth, For Juniors, Ainy Stefoniuk was ‘walked in the fourth, and brought home by Ralph Eng- lund’s sizzling line drive over third base. In the eighth, Billy Kanigan singled, advanced to sec- ond on Walter Kereiff's sacrifice and came home on a two bag smash by Harry Plotnikoff. Then. Phil Sherstobitoff tagged one: in- to deep, deep left field just inside the third base: line, for.a home- run to round out the scoring for Juniors, Rennie Mitchell was the win- ning pitcher, He Held the Juniors hitless for the first three frames and then gave up two hits in the fourth’ and four in the eighth with six strikeouts’ and two walks. Brian Atcheson took the loss for the Juniorsj touched for eight hits and three walks with two strikeouts, Ken Grunerud, in, the last five innings, gave up “RADIO: SERVICE B HUBER. 25 years experience i Work Guaranteed Box 522 Phone. 4922 § °Gastlegar, BO.’ FOR | HEATING... «OR PLUMBING Drop us a Hue ado will ABS & (HEATING Kinnaird B.C. intentional incendiarism of our people while fishing and hunting, and... berry-picking,| Nature will grow’ forests :here continuously for all time to.come. ; Even. with. the, tremendous fire menace, the industry and the For- est Service are, doing. a pretty good job — but a lot of their ef- fort can, and will go up in smoke qver the next 50 years. s ta SCHOOL BOYS HELP: ‘Planting of. new trees is done by regular logging crews when deep snow at-higher Jevels makes logging ‘impossible. They are as- sisted from time to time by school boys. The men, most of them local loggers, take a keen inter- est in.the planting and do a much better job than casual labor ever would; this is an important fac- tor, as the care with which'seed- lings are handled determines, to a‘ large degree, the survival ‘rate, At present, survival is about. 85 percent; which is very high. Frost heave and other factors,-such as «nae often bring it down. ures supplied by Messrs. Sheas- green and~ Muholland;, a godd planter, .working favorable coun- try,:can plant from 750 to 1,000 trees'a day — enough to reforest little more than an acre. - Th rare forest serv- was stood? on Nalltops and. Tooked [1 down on those new forests, and wished that all the people could. know. they're growing. © . James Sheasgreen, manager of C BA Ben : BRANDED FOR YOUR PROTECTION “@ A. DEEPSEAM DRUMHELLER GOAL... For Solid: Comfort ‘Mitchell Supply. Lid. Successors to Anderson Feed Co, ‘and Mitchell “Transfer Lumber and his..chief forester, Fred Mulhol- land, ‘were standing: on the hill- tops-too, and fairly bursting with pride. These two, like most for- estry men; eat and sleep and talk trees, all the time, any time. A forest tree, to them, is what a ripe azalea is to a nurseryman. Messrs. Sheasgreen and Mulhol- (land supplied many of the sta- tistics ‘in this article. 92,000 TREES PLANTED From :1943 to 1948, Canadian Western Lumber for instance, planted 3,026,000 trees’ on 3,650 acres. of denuded land, mostly on the site of the Campbell River | © re, Total planting throughout the province since 1930 now amounts to 91,517,450 trees, on 110,647) acres. Industry has planted 15,- 587,100 trees on 19,235 acres while the government's forest service has planted 75,930,350 trees on 91,412 acres, UBC forestry dean George s. Allen was standing on those hill- tops looking down at new forests, and he said: “The forest will‘ re- new itself quickly if given half a chance. The menace of’ fire, however, ‘is always present. If we continue to have fires such as that which swept the Campbell River drea'in 1938, and the Mount Benson fire in 1951, then we shall have to plant in a big way. ° * all seedlings ‘with Planted experimentally, The seed- lings are supplied by the! govern- ment free’ of charge from Forest Service Nurseries at _ Duncan, pameebell: ‘River and. ‘Green Tim- ers, 90 PERCENT REGROWTH * Foresters . are, learning more about. planting“ each year, and they have found that -seeds. do best right on the spot where they tion, .water supply, soil condi- tions and other facts all affect “|the growth rate and vigor of the young trees, “At least 90 percent of all cut- over lands on the coast will re- stock . voluntarily if given a enance. . The - only, ‘fail. spots” dian Western are areas which suf- nad become established, but be- fore the trees were old enough to throw ‘seed.. This: eliminated’ the seed source and automatically necessitated ‘planting. % I came away.from the beautiful new, forests convinced ‘ that: ag fong‘as government and industry are determined to grow trees — either by encouraging Nature, or by planting.— the people ofthis province: have nothing to worry about. : However the public also has. its responsibility, and that is to help cut ‘down the fire hazard, and to alive’ to the Amportance of our animals eating the small trees, |. Here. are some surprising fig- |. were grown. Slope, shade, eleva- |. tound, so far, 6n lands of Cana-}' fered fires after the regeneration | - the ‘exception of exotics being|-~ during your Castlegar Branch. of pias 100,000? Betieve it or not, you'll: BH r first ely- earn m ing So the big qu How much of ah pills et Bank | OF Monrpear : “JAMES ELLIOTT, Manager ‘3f we:ean only. solve thet unz| forests, Ted Gergely was credited with a . ‘Thursday, October 1,1 953 CASTLE NEWS, Castlegar, B.C. - The News’ Classified. For Sale : Wanted to Buy GRAND | ASSORTMENT Of Dutch Flower Bulbs at com- petitive _ prices. Don't’ delay ‘planting “too” long. ' Nielsen's, » Kinnaird, 3-40 WE PAY. ‘CASH. FOR OLD Batterles, Radiators, Copper, Brass, Lead, .ete.. Hillcrest * Motors, Trail, Phone - 1555, tfe-39 ONE HARLEY DAVIDSON id one. ti ~ond one, aut rangette, almost new. Apply Mr.. ; Piquard, ba Bench, Kinnaird... , 1-40 1950 ONE TON DODGE TRUCK. | 13,000 ‘miles. Can: be’ ‘seen ‘at Skyline Auto Service, P3-40 1946 PONTIAC, days. to sell, $900.00, Apply Fred: Woodrow, Box 48, | 'P1-40 FOR QUICK SALE — MODEL A. Ford, Best ‘offer takes it, ' Phone? Castlegar ‘4036. heater, “$3000 - cash. or $3500 * terms. Albert. Geisler,: Dumont * Subdivision, Kinnaird; P1-39 CLEARED LOT 50'x100°. WRITE Box 581 or:Apply Castle Nove $ C3. FOR SALE — Large size GE. Hotpoint Range. Phone Pat CHOICE Lois JN THE Hei in Robson,, oan from $600 to $800, Half mile from ferry, Ap- ply W. R. Campbell, Fhons eS P4- FOR SALE — Boat house at Rob- |" sons-Phene 120, Trail -C3-33}~ 1952: CHEVROLET ‘ONLY 14,000 cash ie Kinnaird or Phone 2032, a! C3-39 GE Mm POTATOES. 4206, C 3-39 P3-38 | ©", or elae- Dated this 22nd. day of Sept- ember, ‘A. D., 1953, "Central Hotet Limited, Per: Peter Francis Soberlak, President, Anne Marie Soberlak, | Secretary. Ss That the people. of. Canada “ao, and will for a long time, labor under the serious handicap of a relatively, narrow market” is- the 3 BEDROOM HOUSE DUMONT Subdivision. Phone 2738. 1-40 of a study prepared by Economist Gilbert. E. Jackson on the. question of whether. .certain industrial workers in Canada can TWO HOUSES, ‘UNFUR- NISHED and the other fur- nished © .and equipped with expect: their. jobs: to pay: the same rates as do similar jobs in the United States. It is Mr. Jackson's opinion that the tof. the ‘and ‘dishes. Castlegar. FOUR ROOMED SELF CON- JTAINED . Suite next. to the High ‘School. ‘Phone 3327, Cas- tlégar. PlAl Apply Box 246, i P3-40 Steelworkers Union for sane par- ity with workers in basic, steel Plants in the ; United States is unrealistic-in view of the vast differences existing in the two countries in population totals and In Mr." 3 opinion, ‘only duction” per. man-hour, of: development’ of o natural.” u plus the: passing of time’ —' can bring Canadian workers’ closer, to equality, or parity with their US, coun’ terparta: | Cat Te Toa at Fri, - Sat.” Oct. 2-3 Carlton Heston: Rhonda Fleming ‘Pony Express” Color by Technicolor Shows at 7.and 9'p.m. Mon, - Tues, Oct. 5-6 John “ne Arlene’ Dahl * aribbean”? :. - cae by Technicolor ' Shows at 7.and 9 p.m, Wednesday Only October 7 Kirk Douglas | Virginia Mayo “Along the Great : Divide”. "$150 Pay Nite Wed, ” Shows at'7 and 9 p.m. — Friday — Saturday 3 ROOMED.” HOUSE WITH bath in Kinnaird, Upper Bench, Apply ‘W. M., Creight or. ‘Phone 2552, nw vs 1B MODERN? HOUSE |. IN KIN- NAIRD. Write Box ‘A, Castle News. |. 1-40 EOUR ROOMED ‘HOUSE:“IN = Kinnaird:::: Wired for ‘stove. "Grelghton's Apartments, Phone 3721. Rie 40 . Write ‘Box 316, C. ; Bert Sa P3-39 WINTER. PEARS AT. THE -,Castle Bar Ranch. ~ Pl-40 ‘COLEMAN om HEATER WITH built-in Electric Far. C FOR -RENT, — -Two room Awn- furnished house. Low’ rent. Ap- Ply ‘Box: 566;;Castlegar. . © *** 0} hourly rate up. tothe. higher .pay. + | Canada from taking the same full 7: advantage. of. mass have stated | that ‘they” would accept nothing Jess than an 8 1[2-cent-per hour wage increase to!bring theic level recently granted steelwork- ers in the United States, Algoma Steel. Corporation: and’ the Steel Company of ‘Canada -have ,stated that they‘are “unable to. meet this demand. CANADIANS GOOD WORKEES Mr. Jackson’s study points out lation “between Canada . and. th US. .résults: in a narrow market because ‘it‘prevents the people of that the great difference in popit: ‘ here:.that. isa. serious’ handicap | © October 8 - 9 - 10 ss Color by: ‘Technicolor Admission ‘Shows® at.7: and 95:10 P.m. - ~-, LOOK KIDS. -- Showing Sa Sat. i Matinee, Only. “Along the Great ni Divide” > PLUS ; Extra Cartoon and Shorts with pipes and draft regulator. : Very good condition. :Price: S10. Phone 3967. eo GOLD. TILLED WATCH: AND Village Offfice.: ‘APARTMENT: SIZE~ ELECTRIC Range. with ” oven.* Personal: ‘ less. sper working day. ved in the United States, ‘Thus the Canadian, whi is in no way. inferior as.a work- ing man to-his opposite number south of our. borders, Produces “It is the factor of lower pro- 4 condition: Apply 'W. a Bank: Zany 7th th. Ave, - 2 “HOUSE | FOR’ QUICK |. SALE. - Apply ‘Norman , Ball, Phone 3 ABOBL ery C840 -RUBBER. TIRED WHEELD BAR: *, ROW. Phone 3861... C1+40 ‘USED GUIDE AND) BROWNIE PAIN XILLER © FOR:” CORNS and Callouses.— Lloyd’s Corn Prompt”: relief. Salve 50c —. “Pads 25¢ — at Pitts’ Drag | Store." 1-40, —| Announcement :* Plan. now to attend the Var- i Concert featuring the Nel- _. Civic . Choir, Friday 2 night, Get 16, Tickets: now’ oi -45 | Legion “Band members:- 1-40 and Callous: Salve’ and Pads. | ¢; sale by.: » son's study: continued, is nothing :} which are denied. to Canada. be- |services that: nation produces - _ age workers in.the U. S. to live on a better. scale than do their ‘workers’ have’ per capita J more] here that. enables aver- | ; Mon. - Tues. Oct. 12 - 13 Rosemary. Clooney fume Maria “Fight Pictures” Regular Admission Prices ° : radios, more * more telephones, ‘more doctors, dentists, Jnusers. This is the ‘result: of the rat average. workers, al" terms, that -is in terms of goods and ‘services they. can buy, earn more than do average workers, in Canada. Any; nation’s income,. Mr. Jack- and uses:and consumes 7 within a given period. The | people of the United States are able to:buy and usé, more goods ‘and’ services per | D: person than are the people -of Canada .because:‘the “American Produces more.per head of popu- lation The Americans produce. .sub- stantially more. per man hour of lebor. because of the vastness of the market within ‘the ‘States; It is the tremendous domestic mark- et that creates their opportunities for mass Wed. :-.Thurs. Oct, 14 - 15 Van-Johnson © Kathryn Grayson Grounds for: ©.’ Marriage” = Shows at 7 and.9 p.m. Fri. - Sat. -Oct..16 - 17 aoc: Martin and. Lewis “The Stooge” Shows. at 7 and’9 p.m. Won Tues, anny ‘Kaye - “Hans Andersen”: ~ Color.by: Technicolor “Shows at.7.and 9 p.m. Wed. - Thurs. Oct. 21 - 22 Clark Gable _ Barbara Stanwyck “To Please A Lady” Shows at 7 and 9 p.m. cause.of the fact that the Cana- dian’ market’ is only about one- tenth the aie of the market wath in the U. Fri. - Sat. Oct, 23 - 24 Red ‘Skelton “The Clown’ “Shows at 7 and 9 p.m. vanes mass } iction:re- sults in’ lower, unit costs, but: al- ways the larger market is able to get unit costs lower. This: al- lows U. S. workers to earn some- *| Canadians in similar jobs. : INDIVIDUAL INCOME Since Canadians are not able .Jto “produce ’as much goods. and Services 5, per man hour! as are of goods | end services in Canada what more in “real” income than}. Mon. - ‘Tues. Oct. 26'- 27 Spencer Tracy. Gene Tierney “Plymouth ‘o.1. Adventure” Shows at 7 and 9 p.m... Wed.'- Thurs. Oct, 28 - 29 Mickey -Rooney - Sally Forrest “The Strip” Shows: at,7-and 9 p.m, earn somewhat more inj’ in. Canada, | official: Washington |’ the latters’ wages were’ compar: |" more population, increased, pro-|' are ‘controlled: by ‘the rate -atj..~; iLavcly Yai eeu Gamer is gest ae cee Tee! Foley peo duction, “Moulin: Rouge,” which, is slated to open Thursday October 8 at the Conte Theatre, through United Artists Felease, _Shuns a at.7 and. 9 pam Oct. 19:-20) ° ! Farley Granger |: Christian: _Avntancuns From TuETop oe Abveune Won! M8 WALTER: DOUGLS: MNO wR BRAN Jane Greer | -\ L-0-0-K KIDS! “ALONG. THE GREAT DIVIDE” Will be Shown: Saturday Matinee Oct. 16 with Extra Cartoons and Shorts Moulin Rouge Will Not Be Shown At The Matinee,