Castlégar News: September 25, 1985 _ ‘your advertising dollars do beater im. NOTICE - INVITING APPLICATIONS FOR TIMBER SALE LICENCE A25756 TAKE .NOTICE. pursuant to Section 16(1) of the Forest Act, there will be offered tor sale ‘at public auction at the office of the District, Manager. at Castlegar, B.C.. at 1:00 p.m. (local time) on the 15th day of October, 1985, a Timber Sale Licence number A25756 to ‘authorize the harvesting of 2912 cubic_metres—ot timber located 1.5 km North. along Ca: Creek Forest Service Road, Kootenay Land District for a term of one year Bids can be accepted: only from Small Business Enter- prises. as defined in the regulations. Provided any eligible bidder who 1s unable to.attend the auction in person may submit a sealed tender, to be opened at the hour of auction and treated as one Details of the proposed Tim- tained from the Regional District Manager at 1002.- 3rd St., Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3X6. This Licence will be awarded under the provisions ot Sec- tion 16(3)(a) of the Forest Act. which restricts bidding to per- sons registered in the Small business Enterprise Program: Category 1. and owning major logging equipment applicable to standard sawlog sales. Financial Brian L. Brown CERTIFIED GENERAL ACCOUNTANT 270 Columbia Ave. Castlegar “Ph. 365-2151 ‘SOLIGO, HAIR "ANNEX 365-3744 1241 - 3rd St.. Castlegar OGLOW NTS & WALLCOVERINGS _ 365-6214 Dealer for Planning 1 CAN HELP WITH: * Investment Funds * Guaranteed Investment Certificates Registered Relwement Savings Plans * Estate Plannin Life and Disability Insurance * Annuities Cameron A.R. Bond Call 352-1666 (Collect) 10. a.m. - 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Snvestows |_PROFITFROM OUR HERMAN® THE BUSINESS DIRECTORY Beauty Slog] | . 5-7 © 1005 unwersal Press Srnaicate tober. TELEPHONE 365-5210 Res ants . Peppercorn TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN ‘The Kootenays’ Leading Conventicn Hotel” * Shalls to serve your needs from 25 to 400 people: * 4kitchens catering to the largest variety of menus * 19 years catering experience in home, in hall, or wherever you desire LET.INE PROFESSIONALS IVE YOU THE BEST Phone 368-3355 Ask for Gary, Brian, RON’S CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY & INTERIORS COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL Complete Automotive Interiors Antiques Van Accessories Retail Fabrics & Supplies * Quality Craftmanship “Guarantee: + — CERTIFIED. * FREE ESTIMATES * FREE DELIVERY SERVICE CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 615 Columbia Ave. (Upstairs) -— Castlegar Phone 365-7745 —CASTLEGAR Henry John, B.Sc. C.A. Resident Partner NOTICE INVITING © APPLI FOR TIMBER SALE LICENCE A25751 TAKE NOTICE, pursuant ‘to Section 16(1) of the Forest Act, there will be offered for sale at public auction at the office Costlegar. 8.C., of (loc ) ° Cconce number A2s751" authorize the harvesting of 970 cubic metres of timber located at Trozzo Creek ap- proximately 1 mile off high- Kootenay mon -of- the District Manager, ar] H-way-on-Fern Road, Land District for a term of six] ths. 2 > + super Sweep Chimney Services Ltd. FUNERAE CHAPEL Dedicated to kindly, thoughtful service. COMPLETE FUNERAL SERVICE ‘Cremation, Traditional Surialend pto rist “ET. (TIM) ALLEN OPTOMETRIST No.2- aie olumia: Cesteaer EY 5-222 366 Baker St... Nelen 352-5152 -—MoROSO, MARKIN & " CERTIFIED Pre-Arrangement Plan Availabl Granite, Bronze Memorials, Cremation Urns and Plaques Phone 365-3222 Bie +——BLAIN | "as cetumis ave. SES Sees GENERAL ACCOUNTANTS 241 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph. 365-7287 Appliances WEST K CONCRETE LTD. PIPELINE PITT RD. je Customers 430. C & M HEATING Furnaces - General Metal Work Air Conditioning Humidifiers B.S.0.D. OPTOMETRIST 1012-4thst. Castlegar PHONE 365-3361 “Tues. - Fri. 9a.m.-5p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. 2 noon "She just polished the floor.’’ Medical & Surgical Treciment Adult and: Children 's E.L. Mollohan, D.P.M. D.T. Morton, D.P.M. Tuesday's by Appointment Colville Medical Clinic (509)-684-3701 ALL TYPES OF COMMERCIAL PRINTING ob Dione or Mary Terra Nova Motor Inn 1001 Rossland Ave., Trail _PEPPERCORN RESERVATIONS . Phone 364-2222 — WICKLUM .. “= reofing ‘Government Certified Box 525, Nelson, B.C. FREE ESTIMATES 15 Years canttied Roofing Speci ginShekes PHONE LORNE* - 352-2917 Roofing & Insulation # Commercial % Residential FREE ESTIMATES rotessional Call 365-2885 650 - 23rd St... Castlegar Video Recording VIDEO RECORDING SERVICE A BONDED—LICENSED: AL JOHNSON 788 Welding & Backhoe Tick Costlegar Flashing © Service Work— jp Bids con be accepted only En from ses asd regulations. eligible bidder who to attend the auction in person may submit a sealed tender, 1a be opened at the hour of auction and treated as one bid. oe Details of the proposed Tim- District Manager at 1002 - 3rd St., Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3X6- This Licence will be awarded under the provisions of Sec- tion 16(3)(a) of the Forest Act. which restricts bidding to per- sons registered in the Small Business Enterprise Program, Category A minimum of fifty (50) per- cent-of the-volume of timber harvested from this licence PLANT TOLL FREE Plumbing ‘FAST COURTEOUS SERVICE GENUINE MAYTAG Grits (OWE SERVICE ALL MAKE! — SPECIALIZE IN MNT ‘CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING LTD. 1008 Columbia Ave., Castlegar, B.C: 365-3388 must be in the-tim. ber processing facility owned or operated by the licensee as stated in his small business declaration to the Ministry of | Forests. ~ Round bacon not new DES MOINES, IOWA (AP) — The idea came to Robert Rust when the bacon strip fell out of his bacon cheeseburger and plopped onto- his lap. “I thought: ‘There has to be a better way to put bacon on a sandwich,’ ” recalled Rust, a 57-year-old meat specialist at Iowa State Uni- versity. Rust figured out that if you made the bacon round, it would fit snugly in the sand- wich and stay there through the last bite. His idea captured the at- tention of the nation’s largest hamburger chain, McDon- ald’s, which now.puts a round bacon patty instead of strips of bacon on its breakfast biscuits. “The idea of round bacon is not new,” Rust said. “The Italians have been making ~~ Russelt Auctions— 399-4793 Buy or Sell by Auction 112-800-332-2218 Consignmen CLOTHING, DRAPERIES BEDSPREADS Everything on consignment. NEARLY NEW SHOP _| 776 Rossland Ave., Trail 17 LOW, LOW PRICES Contractors KINNAIRD TRANSFER * Concrete Gravel * Road Gravel © Drain Rock ~~ * Bedding Sand-—_~ © Fill, Gr. or Sand © Topsoil Call 365-7124 “Call: 365-8138 Oo) Muscroft. = eee Ltd. Etc... Etc. — OFFSETS Serreeness HRETHE! AVING LTD. 352-7333— Industrial — Commercial Castle gar N 197 Columbia Ave. - 365-7266 © Gravel Supplies © Gradin, * Oll Spraying (Oust Control) Compacting * Trucking tttective Moy 19. 1 Tottryee a ie Antwerl 112-000-332-44 on patt tatiana Mabile Operetor HaVa?02 983 Lervice ROI PRINTING ROCK BLUFF DING & — BACKHOE SERVICE Wit con be welded — we Iiweid it! Working overseas CUSO health officer Lin- da Cobb spoke to health professionals in Castlegar this week... B4 Exchange e teacher [# An exchange teacher from Bath, England is teaching math at Stanley Humphries Secondary School . . . A7 The $500,000 winning number in Friday's Provincial lottery draw is 1821589. There are also subsidiary prizes. criticize _mment's di raise the wage... A2 Decision criticized MLA Chris D’Arcy has 1 minimum VOL. 38, No. CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1985 WEATHERCAST = . Monday sunny with morning fog. A little warmer with highs in the low 20s. 50 Cents ARNOTT SAYS AIDS hysteria 4 Sections (A, B, C&D) The hysteria surrounding AIDS is because the disease is rela- Rubber Stamps BROCHURES PRESS SERVICE FLYERS PHOTOCOPYING 800 Highway Dr. Ty Cree! RUBBER STAMPS Made to Order CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia Ave. Phone 365-7266 ‘Castlegar Roy S. Dickie Ph. 365-2565 . Commerical 4 z © Resident © Industrial The blowing of Energlas ... -—. ceilings and walls. FREE ESTIMATES SAVE TIME & MONEY Call 427-4648 Auto Rentals A VIS ‘9% ek DAY sonny ‘ond Sunday LOCATED AT Castlegar Airport Terminal Adastra Aviation — 365-2313 F. PIRSH CONTRACTING 2045 Columbia Ave., Trail $ Renovations © Cus uilt kitchen cabinets & Commercial bs nail jobs Ph. 368-5911 $9.95 PER DAY Friday te Monday wn 2 Goys) Plus ide te on compact cars- © Pickup truck available 50 FREE es Cc Airport f Ca mS or in which the (hog) hearst Lb rolled and tied,” whic said is “the traditional way at making bacon.” 1444 Columbia Ave. 365-7555 Florist” Ser Suit LANDSCAPING ICE Moving & Storage WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE 2337-6th Ave., Castlegar Invite you to call them fora free moving estimate. Let our representative tell you about the many services which have made Williams the most respec- ted nome in the moving business. Ph. 365-3328 Collect TRAIL S.P.C.A. Serving the entire West Kootenay area. PET BOARDING ‘ond ANIMAL GROOMING = By our Professionally Trained —and certified groomer |DANA HADATH Ph. 368-5910 Plants & Flowers THE Plant Annex 365-3744 1241 - 3rd. St. Castlegar TLE & GIBSON The P FREE ESTIMATES CHANG’S Nursery & Fore Ltd. Copier Systems CALL DAVE PLANT 112-800-642-1234 We dig bovemenis sephe—s wateriines we - REASONABLE RATES, 365-2383 Reiph Hs rey. $+, COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tank Recycling CASTLEGAR RECYCLING We buy oll kinds of bottles, metals ond batteries! 365-2656 Restaurants THE COLANDER SPAGHETTI HOUSE Specializing in Italian Cuisine “A Trail Tradition” For Reservations Phone 364-1816 1475 Cedar Avenue rail, B.C. Hearn’ cane For pli on rates and details of odvertising in the Business Directory PHONE : tandard . Valley Fibrebaths © Jacuzzi © Crone © Duro Pumps & Softeners © PVC Pipe Fittings © Septic Tanks 365-7705 ~ 365-5210 Whether your.name starts with A or M, or X, Y orZ You'll find Business Directory sevecaet pays. 365-52 10 Pumping PHONE 365-5013 3400 - 4th Avenue Castlegar WHtanonss tree Call todoy SPECIAL 6 weeks pre-paid tor 7 weeks 1 Center. 10% discount. weeks min). IET. Trenching & Backfill BOJEY ELECTRIC LTD. Winlaw 226-7685 /226-7869 TRENCHING & BACKFILL Hove Ditch-Witch will Travel. Hour or contract rat Underground pipes, wires. etc, 5° wide up to 6 deep. Typesetting Give your photocopied prin- ting (newletters, notices, etc.) @ professional image. CASTLEGAR NEWS Printing 365-7266 ————————— PROFESSIONAL . TYPESETTING JOURS: on. - Fri. 7a.m.- 1 p.m. Sot. — 8 a.m. -9a.m. Call 365-6256 B,C,D... or X,YorZ Yes, whether your business name starts with A or with Z, Business Directory advertising is for you! RATES ARE ATTRACTIVE, TOO! Phone 365-5210 for Full Details IN THE PEN... Brian Briscoe (lett), chairman of the Arrow Lakes fisheries committee and Fred Wachek, president of the Castlegar and District Project will replenish fish stock in lake By SIMON BIRCH Staff Writer This is a fish story. _ Actually, it's a story about 10,000 fish — Gerrard rainbow trout to be exact — trucked from the Kootenay trout hatchery in Wardner near Cranbrook. The trout are now living in a pen eight metres square submerged in about six metres of water at Scottie’s Marina on Lower Arrow Lake. It’s all part of a project undertaken by the Castlegar and District Wildlife Association in’co-operation with the fish and wildlife department of the provincial Ministry of Environment. The goal of the project is to replenish and upgrade the fish stock of Lower Arrow Lake. “It's a'very efficient means of enhancing fishing in the lake,” said Brian Briscoe, chairman of the Arrow Lakes Fisheries Committee, one of the many committees that make up the Castlegar association. Briscoe explained that the fish — now only five to seven centimetres long — will be kept in the pen for nine months, after which they will be released into the various creeks that feed Lower Arrow Lake. “About next June, these fish should be about 15 grams each and six to seven inches (15 to 18 centimetres) long. “They should stay in the creeks for one year,” Briscoe said. “At the end of one year, they move down Once in the lake, Briscoe said, the fish are fair game for sport fishermen. “= Four.or five years after that, those fish that escape the lure and hook, should return to spawn in the streams they were first released in, Briscoe said. Thus a natural cycle is created, he said. Briscoe said the jon has made ar with Selkirk College's wildlife recreation program, which includes fishery studies, to monitor the project. into the lake system where they live until they mature.” Wildlife Club, watch over the pen containing 10,000 Gerrard rainbow trout. The pen is part of a project designed to enhance fishing in Lower Arrow Lake. Castewsnoto “What we have done is made the facilities available to Selkirk College to monitor what happens. It’s a unique opportunity because other pens don't have a college nearby. “Information picked up here will be passed on to the (provincial) fisheries department.” Briscoe said the wildlife association is paying for the pen with its own funds and generous donations from local businesses and individuals. He named Westar Timber's Southern Wood Products and Celgar Pulp Division as contributors to lumber materials and Gary Maloney.of Maloney Pontiac Buick GMC, who donated $500 for an automatic feeder for the fish. Briscoe said the feeder is a special type built only in Texas. Kalesnikoff Lumber was also a major contributor to the project, Briscoe said. Other funds were raised through the association's “adopt a fish” program in which individuals donated from $1 to $50 to “adopt” one of the 10,000 trout. The fish and wildlife department is providing the trout and feed. The pen, which was built entirely by volunteer labor, is made of galvanized hexagonal mesh wire coated with polyvinyl chloride (PVC) so it won't rust,” Briscoe said. The Wire, like the feeder, is manufactured in Texas. The purpose of the cage is to keep out predators, Briscoe said. Suspended inside the cage is a fine mesh net to keep the fish in-and the whole structure is supported by ° styrofoal floatation devices, he said. Scottie Tait, owner of Scottie’s Marina, is supplying the space for the pen free of charge. He said he would like to see two more built, and volunteered additional free _ space for them. As a marina owner, he said he has an interest in keeping the lake well-stocked with fish. Look at Kootenay Lake, he said. “In Kootenay Lake, the fish are dying and the marinas will go with them. >“An awful lot of peole are just discovering (Lower Arrow) lake. You can't keep taking fish out without putting them back in.” Briscoe agrees, saying “people from the association have been catching but not putting back. “This is an opportunity to put something back.” Briscoe said the project is “designed to carry on into the future for many, many years.as long as people are willing to put in the time and labor.” tively hard to catch, the director of the -~Central--Kootenay—Union Board— of Health said Thursday. Dr. Monty Arnott, speaking at a meeting of the board in Castlegar, explained that the disease, which des- troys the body’s immune system, is transmitted by sexual contact, trans- fusion of infected blood, or to children “at birth by mothers infected with the disease. “It's a disease and the chances of getting the disease are minimal,” Ar- nott said. He said there has been one reported case of AIDS in the Kootenays. “I understand that a case has oc- . curred that was diagnosed in Vancou- ver. The person is a resident of the Kootenays,” Arnott confirmed in an in- terview Friday. He said he did not know whether the person was still being treated in Van- enays. Recent concerns about AIDS have focussed on whether children who have couver or has returned to the Koot- ~ nded the disease should be allowed to attend publie schools. Arnott said he has received guide- lines from the Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta, Ga. which recom- ~mend procedures to follow if a student is diagnosed as‘having AIDS. The Centers for Disease Control is one of the world’s leading authorities on the disease, Arnott said. But Arnott said he only recently re- ceived the guidelines and hasn't yet had an opportunity to study them. “However, Arnott emphasized that”) there is little danger of a child with AIDS infecting other children, and added that there is no reason to treat a child who has AIDS “like a leper.” “There's been a great deal of mis- reporting about AIDS,” he said. “Getting the disease from a child with a parent, who has the disease is non-existent.” _.At the meeting Thursday, board chairman Judith John told the board no children in B.C. are known to have AID: S. Castlegar school board chairman Doreen Smecher said Friday she has not studied or discussed the guidelines. “Gordon Turner is our Pp MONTY ARNOTT . hard to catch tative on the board (of health). I expect he'll have a report at the next (school board) meeting,” Smecher said. Meanwhile, Dr. John Blatherwick, Vancouver's medical ~ health officer, said last week he is recommending the -WATERSLIDE PARK ___By RON NORMAN Editor The Central Kootenay Regional Dis- trict’s planning department has rec- ommended that rezoning for a prop- osed waterslide park in Ootischenia not proceed. But the regiorial board agreed Sat- urday to hold off on a decision until after its planning committee has met with the park's developers. CETAC Developments Ltd, a Castlegar company headed’ by Alex Cheveldave, has proposed the water- slide for a six acre lot on Highway 3 near the Ootischenia Hall. But in a report to the board, the regional planning department says the park should not be allowed to go ahead because of “incompatibility... with the local character of the area and the lack of a.proven supply of water for its operation.” - The land is currently zoned rural Two Family and CETAC has applied to have it rezoned to Special Commercial. The property is not within the Agricultural Land Reserve, though it lies within the Ootischenia (Water) Im- provement District. The planning department's report By CasNews Staff Castlegar’s Highway 3 interchange will be getting a touch of the Expo 86 spirit. Ministry of Highways an- nounced this. week that a rock and flower display with the Expo 86 logo will be placed at the Trail approach to the interchange. There are only two such displays in B.C. — both on the Trans Canada Highway on the Lower Mainland. The display — which will measure 10 to 15 metres in diameter — will feature the Expo 86 logo until the world’s fair - RDCK dela also says the improvement district is opposed to the park. The district points out that it cannot supply the proposed waterslide with water other than a single three-quarter inch domestic connection which is sibject to restrictions. “The first priority of the district is to satisfy the domestic demand,” says the district. CETAC has suggested using water from the improvement district and supplementing it with its own well. The improvement district noted that it has “some reservations about a well” on the proposed park site since it is not far from the district’s No. 3 well. “The trustees feel that there could be interaction between the wells. This could reduce our capability to supply domestic water to the ratepayers,” the district said: The only other agency which com- mented on the proposal was the Min- istry of Environment's Water Manage- ment Branch. It the de- Az lecision aquifer utilized by the district has a limited capacity,” said the Ministry of Environment. “Hence, if a private well is developed to serve the waterslides, it may have an adverse impact on two neighboring wells operated by the district.” Meanwhile, the regional board agreed to send the Kootenay Columbia Cooperative Society's rezoning applica- tion to a public bearing. The society owns 5.3 acres next to the Ministry of Highways weigh scales on Highway 3. It wants to rezone it from Rural Two Family to Special Commercial for a co-op general store. The store would sell farm equipment and_supplies, feed. seed. fertilizers. pesticides, hardward, electrical appli- ances, local produce, groceries, gaso- line and building materials. ‘The planning department recom- mended the rezoning proceed because the proposal “would appear to be com- patible | with the general character of velopers confirm that their proposed water supply will not affect the Ootis- chenia Improvement District's supply before rezoning is approved. “It appears that the groundwater - Expo display for Castlegar three-day visit. The 100-seat movie theatre will be at the Castleaird Plaza Oct. 18, 19 and 20 showing an 18-minute film about Expo “It will be a ‘continuous show,” plained Anderson. As well, the Expo 86 committee is” looking for suggestions for an Expo legacy. ‘The provincial government has set aside $30 million for special legacy projects. Initially, the government planned to make E: xpo pavili to com- ex: 1 bias of the Ooti: 1 The Ootischenia Improvement Dis- trict has agreed to supply the store with a single domestic connection. is 1 to transport and vpeeoasteuct the pavi- lions. “It would be an enormous cost (for Castlegar),” explained Anderson. Instead, the province will provide legacy grants to communities which do not get one of the 40 Expo pavilions. The B.C Lotteries Foundation will fund the grants. Anderson says the local Expo committee plans to apply for one of the grants, but needs some ideas on how to use the funds. “We are so lucky,” said local Expo 86 committee chairman Mary Wade An- derson. “It will enhance that inter- section.” | Meanwhile, Anderson said that the Expo mobile pavilion will be in Castle- gar in the middle of next month for a igh .B.C. after the world’s fair as an Expo legacy. The pavilions were to be dismantled at the False Creek site, crated, and shipped to the-various already put. forward inelude a special Expo wing to be added to the Castlegar library, a Victorian- style bandstand for the summer con- cert in the park series, or a new where they were to be reconstructed. However, the Expo Legacy Commit- tee received more than 200 applications for the 40 pavilions. And for some tes office. To help decide, the Castlegar News will publish a special reader survey coupon in Wednesday's paper.