CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, June 21, 1979
coe ttt ios
‘Pandocaplog for Everyone
Part 2018
, 3 By SANDRA FRASER
: # Last week we talked brief-
iy About the scope of landscap-
ing and what it means on
various levels. I would like to
stress again that like most
businesses, landscaping has its
Bood operators and its not so
} Make sure you ask for
qualifications, and remember
that affiliation with the B.C,
Nursery Trades Association, or
tie newly formed Kootenay
4 ndscape and Nursery Assoc-
jation is a positive indicator of
gualty work,
Once you have called in a
Eandscaper, or decided to con-
Sult a qualified nursery person,
2 is important to make sure you
®nderstand one another. Land-
qeaping has its own phras-
qology, and of course Latin
lant names, that may not be
miliar to you.
+ If you are not sure you
understand something, make
dure you stop and ask. This will
§reatly help to avoid confusion
Tater on. When you are speak-
hg of specific plants, make sure
Goth you and ‘the landscaper
Know exactly what is meant. If
there is any confusion, a good
landscaper should be able to
show you a picture of the plant.
When deciding where to
locate plants, especially basic
trees, make sure of the obvious
things like not blocking a view
or undermining a wall. The
landscaper can help you with
noua
@COLTO
459-1199
0,
Bp TERRA
less obvious things, like spacing
of trees, and combining shapes
and colors harmoniously. The
size and extent of tree root
syatems must be considered as
well, so be sure that you givo
the aclear pict: f
Once you have reached an
understanding about the work
to be done, the final drawing
and work contract are ready to
be done. What you are looking
for is a clear drawing that tells
tly what and where the
existing water pipes, septic
tanks, storm drains and so on,
The landscaper can also be
of help in selecting plants that
will enhance the basic features
of your home. Brick or rock
work, a well-placed boulder, or
a pleasing contour of roof line
can all be brought out by
skillful placement of appropri-
ate material. The opposite
effect can also be achieved. An
unattractive wall can be cover-
ed with an evergreen wine or
spreading shrub. The stump of
a tree can become a trellis for a
flowering vine, or serve as a
stand for annual flower boxes.
For bird fanciers, unwant-
ed trees can be cut to a height
appropriate for bird baths or
feeders, Rock outcrops so com-
mon in the Kootenays, can
often be planted with shrubs
and heathers to give the
appearance, but not the main-
tenance problem, of a rock
garden. iH
Another piece of informa-
tion important to a landscaper
is the amount of time in hours
you will have to work in your!
yard. No garden is maintenance
free, but the time you have can
be spent in such a way as.to
keep the garden tidy without
making you late for your golf
game,
CAMPERS
SPECIAL —
1% |b. Pork Chops
2 lbs. Ground Beef
2 \|bs. Sirloin Steak
TY, lbs. Spare Ribs
1 lb. Bacon
1 Dozen Eggs
2 ibs. Wieners
$25.00
Subsitution always available
Reserve Orders Accepted.
fs
price rise.
Phone us now with your freezer
heef enquires before the next
216 Anderson St.
y
plants are to be,
At this time, be sure that
you make color and shape
preferences clear,. Make sure
that both the Latin and com-
mon names of the plant appear
on the plan, or on an accom-
panying overlay. Finally, the
scale should indicate the size of
the plant at maturity, so that an
idea. of the final shape is
apparent, a
The work contract will
Pulpit & Pew
by Ministers In the West. Kootenay/ Boundary Area
By Rev. TED BRISTOW
United Church
A good friend of mine
dropped around and told me
about his, first. visit to the
Caribbean,
He was impressed with the
surroundings: large bushes red
with poinsettias, constant tem-
peratures in the high 70s and
low 80s (Fahrenheit of course),
high mountains and endless sea
in the same glance.
He was not so pleasantly
impressed with some of the
people. He was robbed soveral
times, until he learned to lock
‘ everything up tight and take
with him what he could absolu-
lutely not afford to have stolen.
He was constantly asked for
h i who
But the people want to be
The «
‘Fich (by their
Earl’s Private Pools.x.:
365-6774
Complete Line of Pools,
Chemicals & Accessories.
firat thing to get, he noticed,
are sunglasses, Next comes a
yy
almost demanded something
because, they told him, they
were poor. E
He felt the area wes so
ideal that people could, if they
wanted, manage to live very
happily without all our costly
civilized convenlences. Vege-
tables and fruits grow abun-
dantly, palm leaves can be
made intoa fantastic number of
J Job File
items, and so on.
vary from one to
another, but make sure that all
work to be done is stated
clearly. Be aware that rock or
woodwork will be an extra cost
in materials and labor, so make
sure that dimensions and mat-
erials to be used are what you
want.
It is wise to ask for a
breakdown of costs if one is not
provided. Amounts spent on
plants, soil, and labor should be
clearly stated. The number of
days the work will take should
be known to you if not stated in
the contract.
The length of guarantee on
plants and work should be
stated. If you feel, during the
guarantee period that anything
is amiss, your first step is to
contact the landscaper as soon
- as possible. Problems detected
early are easier to identify and
tosolve. Usually, an agreement
ean be reached between you
and the landscaper. If this is not
the case, the only existing
recourse is through the Better
Business Bureau, which serves
ore to protect the next person’
m
than to help you. The Kootenay
Landscape and-Nursery Assoc-
iation will be establishing an
arbitrator to deal with these
problems. Hopefully this ser-
vice will be available by next
summer.
Next week — the care and
feeding of a newly landscape
- test
MAJOR EXPENSE
The Canadian Bankers’
Association says the largest
operating cost of the char-
tered banks is interest paid
on deposits — $6.9 billion in
1977
PUBLISHER
* The Castlegar News and the
Mid-Week Mirror ore both
published by the Castle News Lid.
Mail subscription rate to the
Castlegar News is $13 per yeor.
The price by carrier is 28¢, and on
Newsstands it is 30¢ on issue.
Second-class mail registration
number 0019.
The Mid-Week” Mirror is a
controlled circulation newspoper
distributed by carriers and mail to
households and businesses]
located outside the normal cir.
culation crea of the Costlegor
News, With some content
changes, The Mirror is included
as a section
Friday 9:30 a.
WANETA PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE
HWY. 3 TRAIL
30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
3.t0 9:00 p.m.
ENJOY THE RED GRILLE
FROM LIGHT SNACKS
Bridge Beat ©
By JOY KEILLOR
Responding With No Trump
DO NOT ADD DISTRI.
‘BUTION POINTS WHEN BID-
DING NO TRUMP,
When your partner has
opened the bidding and you
hold. six high-card points or
more, you are expected to
respond if your righthand
opponent passes,
Ifyou can't assist and raise
your partner's opening auit bid
or if you have no four-card suit
above the suit your partner has
opened, your bid is No Trump,
You will give your partner
the full picture of how many
points you hold by your No
‘Trump response,
1, One No Trump (poor
hand) six to nine high-card
points, (Partner may pass.)
2. Two No Trump (strong)
18 to 16 high-eard points.
(Shows at least 26 points in the
combined hands and obligates
both partners to keep the
bidding going until a game is
reached.)
8, Three No Trump (super)
“16 to 18 high-card points;
balanced distribution. | (Slam’
suggestion; however, partner
may re
If your partner opens the
bidding in third-or-fourth-hand
position, this means you have
already passed and cannot hold
a mandatory opening of 14 or
more points. Under these con-
ditions, a jump bid on your part
will pinpoint the fact that your,
hand is just a shade under an
opening bid.
Your partner has opened
the bidding with 1 heart.
Your hand: -
M & Axxx
= 1 No Trump; 6 to 9 high-card
points, y
‘Erma.
Bombeck
Aman in Atlanta-called It the “Buthity Room."’
A group of gifted children In Ft. Lauderdale vowed they
would not be ‘‘de-fested
"* by the problem.
Apriest In Stanford wrote, ‘'We must assume God has a
mission for my singta green sock.’” .
These are only a few of the thousands of replies recelved
by this column from readers all over the country who. offered
@n answer as to why socks disappear In the washer.
- Some observations are significant,’
Disappearing socks make no distinction in sex, class,
religion, politics, geographic location, ‘smokers-va.-non-
smokers. (There were more reported theories from Min-
Neapolls than anywhere else, but it's been a long winter
which can cause sitting around staring at your washer and
other strangeness.)
Age was not a factor. The youngest theorlst was 8-1/2-
years old and the oldest was 8:
scientifically, ‘‘You lose socks because you’re a woman!’’)
All of the writers had one thing In common. Their socks
had entered the Wash and Spin Bermuda Triangle and they
had been lost. No one was ami
used
- Another elgnificant factor of the letters was that the
disappearance of socks was generally described In mystical
terms — as a phenomenon that defied reason or explanation.
(‘They're In constant contact with great cosmic forces who
demand a sock be sacrificed like ‘a maiden.'’) Another
Popular theory was that another planet was dropping weird
pairs of socks to spy on us and the missing one was returning
with the information. Sallors wrote saying the problem was
universal and was quite prevalent In Japan.
Posts wrote by the hundreds and ranged from: simple.
hysteria — “I! have arrived. at this conclusion/They’re
forming an Argyle revolution!" to a ‘'Gone-with-the-Wind’’
meter — ‘‘So next time your husband asks where | am/Tell
him, ‘Frankly, my dear, | don't glve adamn.'"
Three socks wrote. One signed his (?) first name and
sald he defected during the wash cycle because of the
‘pressures of living in Boston’ and he warned me to "stop
prying or you'll be sorry.’”
tam devoting the next two columns to this myth. The
first will deal with the theorles behind the disappearance; the
next one, the solution. Pray we do not become resigned like
the man In Phoenix who gathers up two dozen pairs of new
socks each year, tears them apart and throws out one of each
pair... to save his wife the trouble.
Trail Arts Council
Sponsors Recital -
Trail and District Commu-
nity Arts Council will be
sponsoring a recital Monday
evening at St. Andrew's Angli-
can Church in Trail by Miss
Jennifer Jestley (contralto) and
Miss Lisa Challans (piano).
These two outstanding.
performers from the University
of British Columbia are touring
the province in conjunction
with the B.C. Government
Youth Employment Program
and the department of music at
Their recital will include
material from the 17th to 20th
centuries, as well as selections
*, from the international folk-song
repertoire.
There is an admission fee -
to this recital with students and
- seniors at half price.
PETTITT PHOTOS
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Try Our Burg
VEAL
MAI-KAI
with salad & bun
Wednesday Evening Special:
952-9366
Crowds Gather for Visit
= 2 No Trump;
high-card points.
AIX
= 8 No Trump;
high-card points.
Questions? Any unusual.
hands? Write Joy Keillor, care
of Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C.
16 to 18
“It was boyond the expec-
-tations of anyone,” Bishop W.
Emmett Doyle, R.C Bishop of
Nelson Diocese, said about the
gathering of 1,200 people from
the Okanagan, East and Wost
Kootenays, at Nelson's Civic
Contre on June 3,
The occasion was a “Celeb-
ration of Faith" colnciding with
the commemoration of Pente-
edst and the welcome to the
Diocese of Archbishop Angelo
Palmas, the Apostolic Pro-Nun-
cio or representative of Pope -
‘John Paul II in Canada.
The gathering at the Civic
Life In The Suburbs
(A man who said quite «-
Centre was the key event of the
day. Assisted by Bishop Doyle,
Arch Palmas
Later that Sunday after-
noon, the Archbishop met with
of h
the Mass and gave an inspiring
talk on the spirit of unity and
charity that was so much part
of the Pentecost experience of
the first Christians,
Also concelebrating were
Rt. Rev. F. Monaghan, Rev. D.
Wilson, Rev. D. Benedet, CSsR,
Rev. F. Lane, CSsR, Rev. F.
Malone, CSsR, Rev. M. Guinan,
Rev. G. Schneider, OSB, Rev.
J. Ratcliffe, and Rev. J. Chee-
vers, y
, The bread, wine, monetary
and spiritual offerings of the
people were brought forward
on their behalf by a loca! Nelson
family, Mr, and Mra. Jim
Reiderer and their children.
The Knights of Columbus, ©
in addition to forming an Honor
Guard, efficiently organized the
ushering and other necessary
8. Quay
Six priests distributed the
Eucharist to the large crowd,
assisted by 12 Minsters of the
Cup.
Following the Mass, many
participants stayed to meet the
Archbishop at the reception
which followed, catered bythe
Catholic Womens’ League of
Nelson. Even Uttle children,
almost engulfed by the crowd,
received a personal greeting
from the Archbishop. Bishop
Doyle said that Archbishop
Paimas “gave a familiar touch
in the tradition of John Paul II.”
80 rep
councils of the Diocese and
spoke to them of their vital role.”
and contribution to church life,
Clergy and religious sis-
ters came from distant centres,
as well as from Nelson area, to
gather with the Archbishop and
Bishop Doyle, for an enjoyable
dinner later in the day. Bofore
leaving the following Monday
for Chicoutimi, Archbishop Pal-
mas visited briefly with tho
staff of the Chancery Office in
Nelson.
1979 Heart Fund
Heart disease costs Can-
ada’s economy over §2 billion
each year,
CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, June 21, 1979
Wood Craft
Solid Colour Stain
the Ideal wood finish for
siding, fences, trim.
© no primer needed. Can be
used on new wood or old.
© oll base‘or latex
$500 of Home Insulation FREE 1!!!
YOURS FOR THE ASKING.
Now, all homes in this area built before 1961 quality
for the Federal grant. é
For more information and a free inspection
Phone 365-5138 Castlegar
and ask for Jim Lamont.
‘SPECIAL PURCHASE
|of Men's Knit Shirts
Wolo |
4 Days Only Ai Great
Factory Clearance Prices
So stock up now. We're ready with an exceptional
selection of brand-name knit shirts in stripes & solids,
with fashionable tone-on-tone trims. Made of a cool
summertime blend of 65% Polyester/35% Cotton, knit for
~ asnug, body-hugging fit. Choose from shades of White,
Beige, Navy, Powder and Black. Sizes S-M-L-XL.
Prices Effective ‘til Saturday, June 23, Or While Quantities Last
WANETA PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE
HWY. 3 TRA!
IL
Woolco Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Friday 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
ENJOY THE RED GRILLE
FROM LIGHT SNACKS |
TO MEALS...