ca Castlegar News September 24, 1989 WANT YOUR AD TO STAND OUT But don't want to poy for a B-1-G od? Use Our ATTENTION GETTERS! e PHONE 365-2212 CLASSIFIED SHOWCASE This space available for CAMPERS * MOTORCYCLES * SNOWMOBILES ¢ TENTS * MOTOR HOMES * BOATS * SNOW BLOWERS * FURNACES ® CARS * TRUCKS * DINING ROOM SUITES © CHESTERFIELDS * ETC Bring a photo, or bring the item & we'll take the picture! 2x $26 Average $13 Each $47 Average $11.75 Each. $63 ‘Average $10.50 Each Average $9.13 Each Castlegar News PHONE 365-5210 Giveaway 3 MONTHS old Doby Lab female. Also 4's-year-old spayed lab: husky. Good with kids, 365.9269 3 CAT with 4 kittens (approx, 6 wks. old) part Siamese. 365-5075 377 lf YOU have on item youd like to giveaway please drop us a line or phone 365-2212. We'll run your ad tor free of charge 8 SEMI-FLUFFY kittens 399-4108 CUTE black floppy eared 8-month old rabbit, 365-775) 3/77 FIVE kittens to giveaway 3 issues tt 77 litter-tyained. 377 365-6839. 3.77 HALF Beagle S.week-old puppies to good homes. 365-536! 375 CUTE kittens, 1 male, | 7343 COLLIE-SHEPHERD cross puppies to good Alter 4 p.m, weekdays 375 365-3493 375 female. 365 37) KITTENS homes evenings good Share-a-Ride Work, school trips. weekly shopping. Cut expenses and save money. Get together with @ neighbour in our FREE Share-A Ride column. We'll run your ad 3 issues tree of charge. Phone our Action Ad no 365.2212 tin 77 Lost GOLD pendant in downtown area, lost Sept. 12. Réward offered. 365-7507. 6/75 LADIES Le diamonds, wide gold band Between § 365-5205, SACHS DOLMAR 330 weed-eater lost at Castlegar change, Sept. 18. Reward offered. 365 43.4 377 black face with Reward $25, Selkirk Monor and nard watct Sateway 677 Found STRAY cat with four kittens found in Nor th Castlegar. Owner may catt- 365-5075 377 Found grey with black stripes L-year-old, no found at Rob son near Lions Head Pub. 365-3421. 3/75 FOUND items o FEMALE cot cy not charged for, It thy 5 Business Oppor. CERAMIC BUSINESS for sale. Cress kiln molds, greenware, glazes, decals shelving, etc. 365-3828 after Sp.m. 7/75 90-YEAR‘OLD life insurance compony requires sales representatives for the Castlegar area. Excellent financing and training provided. Phone 837-3386, 7/73 Notices CASTLEGAR ARTS COUNCIL Annvol General Meeting and official opening of offices, Monday, September 25, ot the Castlegar Train Station. Open House 6-7 p.m., AGM 7-9 p.m. Members of the Ar ts Council, member groups and general public are invited to attend. Retresh ments will be served. For more intor mation 365-3553 a7 CONVENTION of the — Canadian Doukhobor Society will be held at Hi Arrow Hotel Banquet room, Castlegar Saturday. October 14, 1989 commencing at 10. a,m. Everybody welcome. 77 PROVINCE-WIDE CLASSIFIED $159 $10 DISCOUNT FOR CASH! Call us for details! Classified Ads 365-2212 acre > Castlegar News BRAND NEW CORSICA LIZ CALL ME NOW! Riverview Chev Olds 2880 Highway Drive — D.L. 7683 368-9134 or Home 368-5877 * Meet New People ® Work Your Own Hours © Earn Fabulous Prizes I WANT TO. TELL YOU MORE ABOUTIT! PLEASE CALL ME: JACQUIE 365-7753 IF YOU HEAT WITH OIL... CAL ESSO PETROLEUM We Provide More Than Just Fuel! You ll have the convenience of 9 payments, avoid large winter bills discount for full participation We can provide you with automatic tuel delivery with our Data Point 1560 computer Dependability at competitive prices We're convenient, with facilities near you! Provide you with top quality, name brand products All backed by our record of reliability in serving this area for over 30 years equal monthly plus get special ; r Denny’s Furnace Service COMPLETE FURNACE REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE! Phone: 352-7565 or Brilliant Resources Ltd. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL BRILLIANT RESOURCES LTD. 365-5185 or 352-3713 PRIME RIB DINNER AND DANCE, Sep. tember 30/89. @, 910 Portland Street Moe Sihota. Cocktails 6 p.m., Dinner 7 p.m For information or tickets 368-9120 5524, 364-0402 evenings DANCE BANDS ond available for any type of engagement 362-7795. tin 65 FREE introduction to Modern Square Dance, Sunningdale School, Sept. 18 7:30-9:30 p.m. Classes start Sept, 25 Beginners 7-8:30 p.m., Intermediate 8-10 p.m. Caller Horst, 367-9878 or Doris 365 6365, 3/75 362 376 mobile disco Castlegar Festivals Society AGM Wednesday September 27, 198' 7200 ptr Castlegar Chamber of Commence Boardroom CHAPEL HOUSE Heritage | Park open 7 CASTLEGAR RAIL STATION, Mon m. p.m. For further information phone 365-6440 thn 43 D. TOMPKINS SCHOOL OF DANCE Highland, Tap, Baton. 4-years to Adult Classes begin September 18. 365-2883 673 CO-OP PLAYGROUP. Ages 2-5 and Thursday — mornings Castlegor. 365-6869 Tuesday South 673 Personal ALCOHOLICS anonymous and Al-Anon. Phone 365-3663. 104/71 PROFESSIONAL male, new to area seeking attractive female (30-40 years for sincere relationship. Reply to Box 3007D, Castlegar, B.C. VIN3H4, 3. , a ort Your Lung Ass ociation FLU! Epidemic killed 50,000 Seventy years ago, a deadly influen- za swept through Canada and around the world. Phis flashback story looks at what happened when soldiers retui ning from First World War battlefields brought the Spanish Lady with them. By JOHN WARD The Canadian Press There's an old saying, “After war comes plague.” So it was in the dark months seven decades ago when the Spanish Lady stalked the world In the immediate aftermath of the First World War, when elation at vic tory mingled with grief over losses on the battlefield, Canadians faced another enemy influenza. It eventually to take a toll almost as high as that claimed by the 1914-1918 con: flict It was called Spanish Influenza or, in bitter irony, the Spanish Lady. The disease did noi originate in Spain historians think it arose in China in was Cord of Thanks WE WISH TO THANK our children relatives and triends for the wondertul party for us and the trip to Radium Philip and Liz 2 in Memoriam CANADIAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION In Memoriam Donations, Box 28 Rossland, B.C. VOG 10. 104/73 “Your Charity of Choice’ Your caring gifts in Honour or in Memoriam are a beoutitul and thoughtful reminder B.C AND YUKON HEART FOUNDATION Your Donation is Tax Deductible CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY. In memoriam donations. Information Bax 3292, Castlegar. 365-5167 104 T7 Legals SNOW REMOVAL Selkirk College invites offers tor snow semoval for the 198990 season ‘et Castlegar Campus: parking lots and roadways, as well as at the air port, College parking lot and taxiway Offer forms available trom the Pur chasing Department at 365-7292 toca! 284 CLOSING DATE: 3:00 p.m. October 2 1989 Seis & CASTLEGAR CAMPUS. Bor1200 Casttewar 8 Allee. NaN 3 NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS GEORGE PEREHUDOFF, also known as GEORGE S. PEREHUDOFF. also known ‘as GEORGE SAMUEL, PEREHUDOFF NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims Estate of George Perehudoff, also known as George S Perehudolf, also known as George Samuel Perehudoft, Deceased, who died on March 19, 1989, are hereby required to send them to the under signed Executor at 1115-3rd Street Castlegar, British Columbia, before the 15th day of November, 1989, at ter which date the Executor will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard to the claims of which it has notice ainst the ALEX PEREHUDOFF, Executor BY: Polonicoff, Jones & Perehudott Barristers and Solicitors 1115-3rd Street Castlegor, British Columbia, VIN 2A1 & Accessories Specialized Mazda Gary CASTLEGAR 713-17th Street, Castlegar mmazpa) WITH MAZDA SCOPE TUNE-UP Most Cars & Light Trucks 4-Cylinder 544.95 Labour Only 10 12-95 9.95 PARTS EXTRA. Free Safety Inspection 8-Cylinder Lebour Only Now FOR APPOINTMENTS CALL BOB McLACHLAN COLLECT AT 365-7241 THIS 1S THE MAZDA WAY!” # CALL NOW, CALL COLLECT 365-7241 early 1918 — but was given the name because neutral Spain's uncensored press.ran some of the first accounts of the epidemic in the final months of the war By the time it faded in 1920, it had killed 50,000 Canadians. Those deaths came on top of 60,000 soldiers, sailors and airmen killed at war. A cruel blow for a country of only eight million The great influenza pandemic killed as many as 20 million people around the world, With the war over, most countries had looked to. count. the dead, succor the wounded and com fort the grief-stricken. Instead, they faced pestilence and more death. There was no cure, no vaccine, no antibiotics, no way to stop the con tagion. In Alberta, the provincial government ordered people to wear gauze masks over mouth and face, to no avail. Tn Montreal, people were fined and jailed for spitting on the street. Some communities vainly tried quarantine. Schools, shops, theatres, dance halls, amusement parks were closed. It didn’t help FLU SPREADS During the dark winter of 1918-1919 and on into the spring and summer, in fluenza spread across the whole coun- try like a creeping fog. The soldiers coming home from Europe brought it with them as baggage. They sickened on the homeward bound troopships and in transit cam ps. As they rode the railways to their homes in the cities, towns, villages and farms, they unwittingly brought doom with them Influenza was everywhere. unwelcome In some isolated villages in the North and in Labrador, a quarter of the people died In others, everyone died. Perversely, the disease struck har dest at young adults, One doctor said at thé time that when he visited-homes with three generations in them, the grandparents and children would be fine. The parents were deathly ill. It began like an ordinary cold, with a cough, congestion and runny nose. The joints ached, a high fever set in and patients felt exhausted, unable to stir from their beds. At this point, many recovered. But in thousands of other cases, pneumonia set in, In the days before antibiotics, pneumonia patients were often doomed to drown as their lungs clogged with fluid It could belyirulent matter of hourS>@thers lingered for days. The country was already hard-hit by the strains of four years of war. The disease, by striking at the same age group already decimated in battle, hurt the postwar economy. Mines and fac tories closed or worked at capacity. Railways slowed toa crawl as thousands of trainmen fell ill Temporary hospitals were set up in schools and other public buildings Thousands of sick, some of them dying themselves 0 thedisease Children orphaned in almost every community. Families were left without a bread-winner Influenza, dwindled Within 20 years, viruses that cause flu were isolated and vaccines prepared Some died in a reduced volunteers tended the were left eventually Antibiotcs were developed to beat the deadly pneumonia. Today, the once deadly flu is usually no more than a miserable _winter_visitor treated with aspirin, liquids and bed rest Hormone may help burn victims TORONTO (CP) — When a person after being seriously burned, death usually results not from the burn itself but from an infection that sets in two or three days after the burning in died cident “In the old days, we used to think it was simply the loss of the protective barrier of the skin that let in the infec- tion,” says Dr. Watter Peters;-a plastic surgeon who heads the burn centre at Toronto's Wellesley Hospital Now, doctors know that when a per son has a burn covering more than 20 percent of the body the immune system begins to weaken, Peters said, adding that burn develop pneumonia or infection of the blood ‘The immune - system becomes overwhelmed because it can’t fight off patients often infection,” he said in an during a recent international surge conference in Toronto. Peters and other Wellesley burr specialists have been experimenting ir the lab with substances that may b« able to boost burn patients’ immune systems during that critical two-or three-week period when they're mo proneto infection interview One of terleukin-2, a produced by the immune which stimulates the growth of infe tion-fighting cells in the body those substances is ir normall syste hormone Peters said he would like to try in terleukin-2 on chers must first find a way to overcom: side effects associated with the foi mone. patients, but reseai Treatment shows promise TORONTO (CP) Traditionally, surgeons have used metal screws, rods and plates to help mend complicated then performed a second operation to remove the har dware once the break has healed: However, European doctors have begun setting fractures with the aid of biodegradable rods and screws that dissolve after several weeks, doing away with the need for further surgery Dr. Pentti Rokkanen, professor of and traumatology at Helsinki University Centre Hospital, says the protein-based polymer or thopedics break down and are absor bed harmlessly in the body three to 12 weeks after being implanted “The idea of using these products is bone fractures, orthopedics very simple,” he said. ‘*You fix a fra ture with the device and, bone is healed, it disappears.” Rokkanen is biodegradable rods and ankle, shoulder and elbow fractures but so far the polymer hasn't proved strong enough for breaks in weight bearing bones such as the shin and hip: About 5,000 patients in European hospitals have been treated with the dissolving orthopedics in the last five years, he said Rokkanen, who presented a paper at a recent international meeting of surgeons in Toronto, Canadian and U.S. hospitals are only using biodegradable orthopedics on ar experimental basis only when t using screws fo ahs september 24,1989 Castlegar News cs mh SR ce eg MED ge Sg at ey Lillian Hapala (seated) accepts the first membership in the newly formed Castlegar branch of the Canadian Arthritis Society from Jean Christensen, secretary of the branch. NDP leadership race a dull affair By CP News Analysis By STEVE MERTL VANCOUVER (CP) — The New Democratic Party's travelling leader ship show ig, heading east after six Western Canada appearances, with the momentum of a freight train resolutely climbing a Rocky-Mountain grade But observers inside the party are fed up with the mediocre reviews the six declared candidates, all but one sit- ting MPs, have received since the Hebates began in their favored western turf Deal Yourself In! FALL SPECIAL The Caribbean Series POOLS & SPAS BY HYTEC * Over 20 models to choose from ae B&J Pools & Spas We carry @ compl chemicals and acc for pools and spas. SALES & SERVICE BY 367-6119 New SINGLES Column The Castlegar News is pleased to introduce a new public service feature in our Classified Ads section. right person partner through divorce or death There are many men and women right here in the West Koptenay region. singles of all ages, from all types of backgrounds, who would like meet someone tor o meaningful relationship or marriage Bringing such people together is what this column is all about The cost is only $12 for three inser tions, for up to 50 words (additional words 25¢ each) Replies may go directly to you, or you can use our box number tor only $3 extra and we'll forward replies to So far, with nine public sessions left to go, relative newcomer Yukon MP Audrey McLaughlin is considered the front-runner. But the former social worker with only two years in the House is tops in a race that many news columnists — and some New ANALYSIS Democrats — dismiss ‘as boring because high-profile prospects stayed on the sidelines. “The media always like bad news and the bad news here is that the big shots aren’t running,” says Gerry Caplan, the NDP's former national secretary and now a freelance com- mentator. Steven Langdon from Windsor and lan Waddell, a Vancouver-area MP since 1979, have been cast as the prime challengers. But with the Winnipeg convention 2% months away, whatever rivalry there is looks ar- tificial The candidates have dutifully trot- ted out shared opposition to the Meech Lake accord, free trade and the proposed goods and services tax, for- cing observers to search almost in vain for differences in shading. When Langdon challenged his rivals during a poorly attended forum in Vic- toria over what he called their failure to debate more than generalities, he stirred the first date The lack of political sex appeal among the contenders, however, is ap- parently immaterial to the serious process of picking a successor to Ed Broadbent “One of these people is going to be the teader-and-all-are going to be han- dling themselves well,"’ Caplan main- tains Although they'll double back to Regina, the balance of the candidates’ forums will be in the Atlantic provin- ces and Central Canada. The swing through the West has been important the NDP holds 32 of its 43 Commons seats in the four western provinces Sessions in Vancouver, and Saskatoon drew overflow crowds Although they scored most of their points off the Tories, the rivals have started looking less like an ideological six-pack, mainly thanks to Langdon, a vocal, twice-elected MP Such splits are expected to grow as the Nov. 30-Dec. 2 convention draws closer, says Ron Johnson, the NDP’s chief organizer in British Columbia Bur there won't be the plotting that enlivens Liberal and Tory races, he predicts “I think it’s a sign that we don’t have the kind of divisions in the NDP that perhaps are evident in other parties and that we're going to doa serious job of picking a leader and carry on from tpere,”” Johnson said in an interview mild excitement to Dam called a disaster VANCOUVER (CP) The dam that bears his name was former B.C premier W.A.C, Bennett's pride and joy, vaulting British Columbia into the big leagues of hydroelectric power generation But for environmentalists, the dam and the enormous reservoir, it created in northeastern British Columbia stands as the province's worst écological disaster, a living testament of all that can go wrong when man ignores the environment Thousands of moose, caribou and deer -were killed. Also lost was a thriving sport fishery and potential farmland when 362 kilometres of Rocky Mountain Trench was flooded With that experience in mind, en vironmentalists scoffed at assurances by Transport Minister Benoit Bouchard recently that the en vironmental damage caused by the $125-million Rafferty-Alameda dam now being built in southeastern askatchewan can be almost entirely mitigated Bouchard allowed dam construction to proceed after a bitter fight between environmentalists and the Saskat chewan and federal governments over the risk to wildlife habitat and the quantity and quality of water flowing down the Souris River to North Dakota and Manitoba The W.A.C. Bennett dam, on the Peace River about 60 kilometres west of Fort St. John in northeast British Columbia, was started in 1962 and was officially opened in 1967 by the late Social Credit premier ENGINEERING WONDER It was considered an| engineering wonder, More than 4,800 men, using mammoth earthmoving machines and the world’s longest shuttle conveyor, dumped more than 43 million cubic metres of fill into a riverbed after the Peace was temporarily diverted through giant tunnels. Behind it stretches Williston Lake, which covers more than 177,000 hec tares — an area one quarter of the size of Prince Edward Island — making it the largest reservoir in British Colum- bia But just as impressive as the dam's engineering was the environmental havoc it wreaked, say critics. “Anyone who tells you that a dam doesn’t cause environmental damage is talking absolute nonsense,”” said Adrienne Peacock, an ecology instruc- tor at Douglas College in New West- minster, B.C Peacock spent years studying the damage done by the W.A.C. Bennett dam while working as a consultant for the Peace Valley Environmental Association. That group, and a down- turn in the provincial economy, suc- cessfully forced B.C. Hydro to post- pone plans in the early 1980s for Site C, yet another dam on the Peace. “There was a tremendous loss of some of the province's prime bottom valley land,"’ said Peacock. Also destroyed were vast populations of sport fish in rivers swallowed by the reservoir and forage land for moose, caribou, deer and sheep. WILDLIFE KILLED Provincial fish and wildlife biologists estimate more than 6,500 Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212! you Writers are encouraged to include @ second envelope to rantee privacy, although the paper will maintain strict confidentiality it the envelope is opened accidently The following are SAMPLE ods only. DO NOT REPLY TO THEM: SINGLE 51-year-old divorced male with excellent job would like to meet sincere (preferably slim) female from Nelson-Costlegor-Trail area who is interested in exploring possible long: term relationship ‘My hobbies include camping, exptoring—Hy fishing, gardening, good music, wat ching TV and relaxing with a good friend. Reply to: Castlegar News Box .3007-PP, Castlegar Vv 3H4 LATE 40's lady would like to meet a my interests. $/D, N/S. Enjoy sports music, good conversation, hiking and sense of humor plus. Reply to ews, Box 3007-XJe VIN 3H4 Castlegor_N Castlegar, B.C 42 YEAR old male looking tor an at tractive female. age between 30-40. for sharing togetherness, friendship ‘and romantic evenings. My interests travelling, walking and and phone B.C VIN 3H4 SENIOR LADY would like sénior live Reply to: Castlegar 1007-MM, Castlegar, B.C VIN 3H4 Castlegar News 197 Columbia Avenue Phone 365-2212 You're hiding Fast Cash in your basement, closets and garage. It’s not Real Cash yet, but with the help of a CasNews September Super Special .Classified Ad, it soon could be! So don’t save all that good stuff you're not using. Sell itwith a Classified Ad at Special Super Rates! Lee oo Ox for Regular 3X for 2X. SEPTEMBER SUPER SPECIAL . For complete details, see our September Super Special Ad in the Classifieds! sNews moose and countless other animals perished in the flooding, which created alake 200 metres deep in spots. Thousands of others later died of starvation, News reports at the time make little mention of any public protest “There was no organized - op position to the dam,"’ recalls Leo Rutledge, a 79-year-old rancher from nearby Hudson's Hope. That was largely because the environmental movement was in its infancy ‘anyone who tells you that a dam doesn't cause environmental damage is talking And even if boaters could make it to the lake, strong, unpredictable winds thar build up speed over long stretches of unobstructed water make venturing out on the lake tantamount to a game of Russian roulette, they say The damage was not restricted "to British Columbia's borders. The damming of the Peace River caused downstream water levéls to drop in Athabaska Lake, which strad- dies the Alberta-Saskatchewan bor- der A report by 13 respected scientists drawn from the University of Alberta and the public service predicted the death of the Athabaska Delta and urged governments to take action. Ironically, the Saskatchewan gover- nment, which has dismissed fears that the Rafferty dam project will cause en- absolute fs —ecology instructor Adrienne Peacock ““We woke up when we saw what the Williston impoundment (the reservoir) did,” said Rutledge, who fought plans for the nearby Site C dam some 15 years later. The B.C. government relentlessly promoted the Bennett dam, not only as a vast hydroelectric resource but also as a potential recreational paradise for ‘boarersand fishermen The reality today, say locals, makes amockery of that government pitch. Thousands of trees covered by the reservoir continue to surface as deadheads, posing a lethal hazards to boaters. Boat launches constructed af: vironm damage in and North Dakota, angrily joined Alberta and the federal government in seeking compensation | from the B.C. goverr nment for the damage done by the Bennett dam The Hot Box Up to 10 words for only $2.49 f ecutive issues. paid for at time of placement 1976 CORONA, _ruisty-good-motor-$100- 365-6169. 3/77 UTILITY trailer 1975 GMC parts. 365- 8038. 3/77 auto., $1,800 3/76 $3,000 3/76 67 MUSTANG, 6-cyi 0.b.0. 365-3669. 1970 CHRYSLER Crown Imperial 0.6.0. 365-3669, ter the valley was draw-down of water by Hydro. flooded are sometimes hundreds of metres from the—water—because—of- the seasonal HOT TUB 220V, 6 jets, 66° diameter $2,499. 365-2807 3/76 1970 9¥4-FT.. Vanguard camper, ex cellent shape, $1:499: 365-2807, 3776 MENS GOALIE equipment $300. For more information 365-2807 3/76 Miley iiac> MER. eplbeg | sro nobies. holds 2 SNOWMOBILE TRAILER — b.0. 365-3669. 3/76 DIRECTORY AUTOMOTIVE lent condition, reasonably priced. 365-3278 3/76 1975 22-11. DODGE Diplomat motorhome, asking $11,500. 365-2497 3. Call 365-2955 COMPUTERIZED ALIGNMENT: 2-Wheel & 4-Whee!l 1987 FIREFLY, 5-spd,, 34,500 kms. cellent condition, asking $6,000. 365- 2497. ae 3/74 VIKING electric range, smoked glass front, new condition, Almond. 365-8307. 3/74 BUNDY Clarinet $200; Getzen trumpet $225. Both with cases. 365-3700. 3/74 80 TERCEL, 5-speed hatchback Season Hires. 365-6006 alter 5 p.m. STEREO cabinet with record player and radio. 365-7005. BB 7 BRIDGESTONE 215 75-R15 sum tires, $300. 365-6807. 3. 1970-1973 PASSENGER Camaro. 365-6807 FOLIO PROPERTY ADDRESS 107-8th Ave. 612-2nd Street 117.025 132.000 134.000 602-2nd Street 219.075 314-3rd Avenve 227.020 320-2nd Avenue 555-6th Avenue 600-5th Street 515-5th Avenue 612 Yew Street 107 Ferry Avenue 167 Columbia Ave 667 Columbia Ave 789 Columbia Ave: 755 Columbia Ave 2704-4th Avenue 1117.000 3409-3rd Ave 1284.010 3409-8th Ave 1361.800 1002 Merrycreek Rd. 1376.000 1968-6th Avenue 1395.100 1944 Columbia Ave. 1453.020 1474.050 2238 Columbia Ave 600 602-23rd Street 2241 Columbia Ave 2620 Columbia Ave 651-18th Stree 1726.000 1810 1820- 8th Ave. 1731.010 1680 Columbia Ave. 72000.021 1509 Hunters Place 72100.212 CITY COLLECTOR 365-7227 CITY OF CASTLEGAR NOTICE OF TAX SALE NOTICE is hereby given that pursuant to the Municipal Act, the City of Castlegar will be conducting the Annual Tax Sale of lan- ds for delinquent taxes in the Council Chambers of the City Hall, 460 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar a.m. on Monday, October 2, 1989 The following is a list of properties within the City of Castlegar subject to Tax Sale as at September 15, 1989 1601A Columbia Ave B.C. commencing at 10:00 LEGAL DESCRIPTION Lot 3-4 Block 28 Plan 650 DL 181 LD 26 Kootenay Block 30 Plan 650 DL 181 PCL: A (SEE P26333) LD 26 Kootenay Block 30 Plan 650 Di 181 PCL: C (See P26335) LD 26 Kootenay Block 42 Plan 650 DL 181 PCL: A (See X621389) PID 011-821-621 MHR — B02904 LD 26 Kootenay Block 45 Plan 650 DL 181 PCL: A (See K11095) LD 26 Kootenay Lot 6 Plan 2623 DL 181 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 2 Plan 8051 DL 181 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 10 Block 1 Plan 2162 DL 181 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 12 Plan 4282 Di 4598 & W ‘2 Of 13 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 8 Plan 2037 Dj 7182 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 1 Plan 1981 DL 11974 Exc. a Five-toot pipe line reserv LD 26 Kootenay Lot 4 Plan 1452 DL 11975 Pt. Lot 4, DL 11975. Plan 1452 lying $ of S Bndy of Pt shown in red on ret. Plan 926121 LD 26 Kootenay Block 5 Plan 1452 DL 11975 PCk: A (See Ret PL 937131) LD 26 Kootenay torS Plan +452 Bt H1975-Ex<(1} PCL A (Ret PL 498251) (2) PCL A (Ref PL 717801) (3) PCL A (Ret PL 933191) (4) PCL A (Ret PL 937131) (5 PCL A (Ref PL 943921) (6) PL 16073 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 2 Block 2 Plan 2293 DL 4598 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 8 Plan 10561 Dl 4598 PID 010-175-831 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 1 Plan 15887 Di 7170 PID 009-054-871 LD 26 Kootenay DL 12364 Exc 26 Kootenay Lot 1 Plan 2494 DL 7173 Exc. Pcl A (See 123659) LD 26 Kootenay Block A.B Plan 2104 DL 7173 & Blk 4 Pi 2089 LD 26 Kootena Lot B Plan 12226 DL 7174 LD 26 Kootenay Lot A Plan 11134 DL 7174 PID 008-352-381 LD 26 Kootena Lot 1 Plon 13201 DL 7174 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 2 Plan 11991 DL 7175 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 3 Plan 91.48 DL 7198 PID 006-279-490 LD 26 Kootenay Plan 11353 DL 7198 PCL: A (See Q3459) PID 011-470-330 LD 26 Kootenay Lot 3 Plan 2697 Di 7198 PCL: A (See 1089161) PL. 6388 PID 006-41 1-584LD 2 Frances Hunter MHP 21-201 .00589.600 LD 26 Kootenay 22761 Bay No. 12 Silver Birches MHP 21-202-00589. 760 LD 26 Kootenay