CASTLEGAR NEWS, September 7, 1983 Carlyle mayor in big time By JOE RALKO REGINA (CP) — Ted Brady is a small-town politician working in the big time. The mayor of Carlyle, Sask., a community of about 1,000 people, is president of the Federation of Canadian king for cities like Toronto and Vancouver. 5 It’s quite a change for the 57-year-old farmer and former hardware store owner. “I was at a conference in Toronto of the Emergency Measures Organization and there were over 1,200 Telephone 365-5210 Brian L. Brown Certified General Accountant 270 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph. 365-2151 THE WIZARD OF ID - ROCNEY SANS NE GANT MAKE THE UOUSTING MA Ws A CRAMP New Insertions PY cancellations pect "the Castlega News: teriness Directory, will be accepted up to 5 p. Sept. 27 for the mont October. PROFESSIONAL Tree Topping, Shoping Removol & Fruit ‘Tree Pricing 368-6114 delegates, which is larger than our cor if we were all home” he recounted in an interview. “It's quite a different ball game. “People always ask me what city I'm from. When I tell them I'm from a town of 1,100, they think I meant. 11,000. It is very surprising to a number of people.” MOROSO, MARKIN & BLAIN Certified General “We don't have urban transit problems in Carlyle,” he says. “There are many things in common. The magnitude of them is certainly different when you get into the major cities.” HAD REPUTATION In his 18 years on the Carlyle council, including six as mayor, and in a decade with the Sesbaichewan Urban Brady di asa hard-nosed political brawler who would fight hard for what he wanted. There were times during his tenure as president of the when cabinet asked him to stop “beating up the province.” Now, however, he stresses communication over confrontation. ASK CHES OR JOHN FOR BEAUMARK APPLIANCES WITH B.E.W.C, TO PROVIDE ALL PARTS AND ALL SERVICE FOR THE LIFE OF THE MACHINE. SSS J&N Upholstery Studio For all your. upholstery needs 241 Columbia Ave. Castlegar Ph. 365-7287 Soligo, Koide & John Chartered Accountants 615 Columbia Ave. SHELDON’S CARPET CLEANING PROFESSIONAL SERVICE For carpets and JERRY'S DRYWALL Boarding, taping & filling. ‘extures an ~ hand-stipple ceilings : FREE ESTIMATES 367-7756 614 Front St., Nelson 352-9419 For Personalized FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL 365-3260 UROR DRYWALL CONTRACTING LTD. (Upstairs) Castlegar Phone 365-7745 Henry John, B.Sc.,.C. A. Resident Partner “One of my priorities is a better line of cation with the provincial governments because, after all, we're serving the same people.” He has set out a list of concerns for his term as ing matters like crime prevention, property taxes and municipal rehabilitation. He says he is uncertain about seeking another one-year term in office. “Maybe I'll just come back and farm,” he says. “I'm getting close to retirement.” However he says he has also thought about seeking higher office at the federal or provincial level. “Like everyone in municipal polities, I wouldn't be honest if I said I hadn't,” he says. “It would depend on the if I was interested or whether I felt Ihada ‘contribution to make.” Appliances Sold tag — General Electric Meier Aid: — Jenn-Air REALTORS TAKE TO SWAPPING KELOWNA (CP) — A vineyard owner in central British Columbia wants to retire to Arizona, but has no buyer for his land. A property owner in Arizona is willing to trade his land in exchange for the vineyard, so the two change places. A logging truck owner trades three out-of-commission trucks to a commercial property owner as a down payment for his property. Such swaps are part of a new selling scheme being implemented for the first time in Canada by a group of Canadian realtors. After two years of planning, the B.C., chapter of Century 21's Canadian Investment Society sponsored its first session of commercial properties recently, at- tended by 40 realtors from B.C. and other parts of Canada. “It’s a way to create an environment where realtors can get together and present properties and facilitate sales by trades,” says Bob Hornback, a Penticton realtor who helped to organize the event in this Okanagan city. Realtors, each representing a number of clients, pre- sented revenue or investment properties on which other realtors, also eprosete clients, made offers in trade such land and cars. Much like an seein’ the offers are overseen by a moderator. REPRESENT BUYERS Hornback said the possibility of selling property is greatly enhanced by the concept because each realtor represents 10 possible buyers and because prospective land-buyers can use means other than cash to buy the property. “It's creative selling for the 80s,” said Hornback. “With interest rates as high as they have been and as high as they are going to be again, it’s a means of solving a vendor's problems. “Ifa vendor needs to sell a house, it may mean taking a car in trade which he can sell. If he takes a mortgage, he has some cash flow or he can sell the mortgage.” The scheme, started by Century 21 in the U.S. five years ago, has involved offers for trade of cars, logging trucks, office furniture, bars of gold and silver and even stamp collections, said Hornback. He said at least $10 million in proposals were written for" the $50 million in commercial real estate placed on the block last week. Properties presented included hotels, shopping malls, ih “THE BEST” JARRANTY SERVICE INSTALLATION SERVICE Castlegar Plumbing & Heating 1008 Columbia Ave. 365-3388 am RUMFORD PLACE: 4 Super Sweep Chimney Services Ltd. ° Complete Masonry Work © Chimney Lining © Certified 7] © Residential © Commercial © Drywall Call 365-3783 “The Hair Annex’’ 1241 - 3rd St. 365-3744 HIGHLAND LOG BUILDERS = \Hendcratted Homes * 428-9678 Box 2686 Creston — Sales & — Service Filter Q Stan Harding Jr. 5.7. (TIM): vase b.0. OPTOMETRIST 366 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. TRAIL HONDA We don't make a lot of noise but we service what we sell and our prices are right. Don't buy another Honda Inspections 1406 Columbia Ave 365 - 6141 oth Sat. 6:30-10:30 ra Sun. & Hols, 9-10:30 p.m. Groceries, Tobacco, Ce &G A Phone 365-6534 until you ‘check our price or you may be paying too much. Elliot Motors Ltd. DBA Trail Honda 368-3377 Deoler D6014 TOP. SUNY, COTHING, INFLATION FIGHTER P| NEARLY NEW SHOP 776 Rossland Ave., Trail 368-9517 Cloth HOME APPLIANCE REPAIR LTD. 412 Beresford Ave Castlegar 365-5451 or 364-0411 * Hotpoint * Inglis * Moffatt = GE. * and others * Fost * Courteous * Professional _ CHECK & COMPARE OUR RATES . EXPERT REPAIR SERVICE onall mojor any and lak Hornback said the realtors will now go back to their prospective clients with the proposals, How many proposals work out is not important, he said. “It's the exposure to the possibilities that would never have occurred otherwise.” OPEN SESSIONS The trading sessions are open to realtors from any company. “It’s not a closed shop,” said Ian Brown, a Richmond realtor. Hornback said agents are not pushing the new market- ing concept to increase their commissions, but rather to give the commercial real estate market a needed push. The five-year plan calls for a computer and telephone link-up with trading sessions in a large number of American cities as well as Ottawa and Vancouver to enlarge the circle of prospective vendors and buyers. by qualified t a ecnielans. Authorized ir Service large Stock ot Parts Ph, 365-3388 Castlegar Plumbing & Heating 1008 Columbia Ave. Whether your name starts with A,M,X or Z. You'll find Business Directory advertising pays 365-5210 - _F..PIRSH CONTRACTING 2045 Columbia Ave., Trail © Renovations © Custom-built kitchen cabinets © Residential & Commercial © Big jobs or small jobs Ph. 368-5911 DISCO Jezebel’s DISCO DISCO at the Terra Nova art! e & Gibson Co. Ltd. bi Phone 352-5152 a Niicrrty WATERBEDS & QUILTS 354-4858 636 Baker St., Nelson B.S. O.D.' OPTOMETRIST Nolan St., i st! li Phone 3659361 Tues.-Fri.9.a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday 9'd:m:-12 noon ML LeRoy == 1s Ses WICKER a THINGS QUALITY WICKER AT LOW PRICES, Mon. to Thurs. & Sat. 10-5:30, Fri. — 10-9 ‘Ave. Trail Whether your name starts with A or M, or X, VorZ You’ tl find CasNews Printing | Directory advertising pays. PHONE 365-5210 Industrial Piping Supplies _ 2317 - 6th Ave., Castlegar f 365-7702 Invitations Any Printing! PUBLISHER ( The Soatlegar News is astle News Lid, Mail subscription rate to the -CASTLEC r TLEGAR NEWS is $23 year mmuniiigs where the ter carrier service). ‘on newsstands is 4 ection. T price del CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia, 365-7266 paper carrier for bo! editions Is only 60¢ (collected monthly). Second: cna mail paca number: BOBCAT (Son SERVICES e Saqhael on ssestaliotion work 365-30) 5 e Savings e Loans © Mortgages © Insurance WICKLUM ROOFING Phone! ped Byiry 2917 Gov't Certified & Licenced = FULL TANDSCAPING SERVICE OR RESIDENTIAL REE ESTIMATES Nursery ANG'S Utd. eecstiay Ave., ir 365-7312 5” CONTINUOUS GUTTERS BOB THe GUTTER MAN 365 8009 Trail Fruitvale Castlegor Salmo CASTLEGAR Credit Union South Slocan Nakusp New Denver WATCHES BONE CHINA * Doulton © Wedgewood ¢ Royel Albert 1355 Cedar, L} reste will not le for any errors is tl es | advertiser 16 when it is first by the odver- tiser requesting specs, Le) the. Insertion. It ey ot} of the teod SELKIRK SERVICE TREE “ FREE ESTIMATES | "Peppercorn Dining Under the Pajms . ot Uncommonly Affordable Prices TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN 1001 Rossland Ave., ‘Trail Reservations 364-2232 condition that inf the event a ‘allure to ‘publish ‘any od: descrip- ton ‘or in the Tevent ‘that ; ecu n the publihing that por- peed not be offer to sell, The off anne be Design, installation ond maintenance services. PHONE DAVID ANYTIME 365-6810 Waneta Plaza FUNERAL CHAPEL: Dedicated to kindly, thoughtful service. Granite, Marble and Bronze Plaques Phone 365-3222 WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE 2237-6th Ave., Castlegar Invite you to call them for a free moving estimate. Let our representative tell you obout tl bara which have made Willioms the most respec- re) name in the moving ines: Ph. 365.3328 Collect THE COLANDER SPAGHETTI HOUSE Specializing in Italian cuisine. For Reservations Phone 364-1816 1475 Cedar Avenue Trail, B.C, “ ———— COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tank Pumping Phone 365-5013 3400 - 4th Avenue Castlegar ithdrawn at any time. NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT. Full, complete and sole cop Copyright in any peated mat: Costle News Ltd, is to Castle News tne Provided by the odvertiser shall ve etal aril aie the overs.” News Esicblihed Twice Weekly Ave 75.1900 MAGAW, Advertons 9 Mana Se ciRcuta ATION DEPART. em the. six regular: winning numbers: in ‘sat ese 's Lotto-649 draw are 23, $0, 32, 33,'35.and 44. T onus number is 25 “Breaking away WEATHERCAST Cloudy today with © dkawers, chance of teattered, showers, ‘between 14° er lows between 4° and 6°. eSutiook tor Monsey is continuing ‘unsettled 9 alone, paid’an angry. Audrey Moore in an quite. fe aitficult™ to:stop the interview. ° thefts because it isn't the Moore, obviously yeti “criminal element”. -whoare ,steaming about the latest flag theft, added, “I: think’ -’ SAsked if RCMP will, that’s the ultimate affront press charges- against to your country... It's anjthose caught, Stevens re- absolutely stupid thing . to Lscaeed “You beteha. It's | do.” eft.” Moore said the flags also He also suggested par- -eost “a fair.-amount: of | writs: whoee children have money” and the city. can't. recently brought a flag B13 Sections: (A, B&C) fal foe divertee roe Ee : sdearmerghyrtaeate summer. Daring the rad closure, trae healing cast and west Highway 8 — the only: thal ciel Bob Sanabary sll that about 160 Joly;:But August saw Tad eo abet 960. about the ‘same pe (ee last year),” Stansbury. said,. noting that: tourism this year was slow bechuse we ed beta Stee tenn oe any he This increase p special tourist information booth at the weigh scales on 8. ear hn by, volunteers, the booth served 1,060 tourists effect throughout the summer by encouraging tora ofa the SENSATIONAL SQUASH .:. . Lisa Fomenolf of Glode ses proudly with fhe bog- pound sa squash she grew in | ber garden. The squash t first prize at the Second Sonnu Women’s 's institu: afford to “put up flags ‘to®: home should'ask where it “have them paper people's was obtained. © me) “SHOPPERS LIKE FRIDAY Wen? 180. people ‘wanted shoppers who participated in said they would like stores’ ‘a survey conducted last Castlegar to stay open late month by the Downtown both Thursday, dnd; Friday. Businesémen’s Association. And another 28 had no pref- The results-of the survey erence at all,‘Blain said. how that shoppers prefer: “It was ely in. ate night shopping on Friday favor of tote rari _ father than Thursday by a because you're seeing the margin of three ‘to one. ‘rule, But ‘many° (who res- In an interview Saturday, ponded) came’ from outlying DBA president Joan Blain areas and they like Friday. He Nuclear horrors iaweiled TORONTO (CP) — More than 50/per cent of Canadians ; ~ would be killed immediately in an;all-out:nuclear war, and even a few dozen’ well-placed nuclear warheads could destroy the country’s economy, a:U.S. ‘atudy says. study says. Canada would also lose most of its electricity if hydroelectric dams were bombed since they account for 69 per cent of the country’s power supply. Attacks on “lynchpin” industries such as iron and steel ies and chemical Plants, would cripple most . The study, by the of n;! “that 150 warheads — gi than three per cent of the Soviet Union's - stockpile’ — could kill'22.5 million people or 65 per cent of Canada’s tion. “All of Canada's urban population is extremely concen- © trated,” said’ Anjali Sastry, a co-author of the paper, published in the journal Physics in Canada. {Even 26 weapons aimed at large cities could kill six million people, and about 14 small warheads dropped on Toronto . would destroy ‘it,, the, report says. ‘Blast * would be 80 high that reinforced conerete structures: ebay be levelled and immediate Fadiation and fallout would be at least 10 times higher. than DO» the level lethal to humans. PIPELINES TARGET *\’ Kosta Tsipis, a nuclear physicist ahd defence expert at the institute, said in-an interview it would be meaningless . for the Soviet ‘Union 'to attack U.S. border cities such as Buffalo, N.Y., and Detroit and leave Toronto and Windsor, Ont., intact... ‘A Soviet strike would try to cut off fuel eupplies, Teipis said. Bombs aimed at Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton, London, Ont., and) Winnipes ¢ could.destroy most of the ofl and gas pipelines in. the Southern Atkartatwe vould aled | be a target because moat of Canada’s oil and gas fields and processing plants are located there, he said, “With careful targetirig, the elimination of a few key 1 ld wreck the ” the other‘industries, the ‘report says. © - ‘As ‘well, boinb attacks on cities would destroy: rail transportation and telephone. and radio communication . because the services are based in urban centres. °° BOME WOULD SURVIVE If the Soviets ‘were to choose “dirty” targets — nuclear reactors ‘and mifsaile silos in the U.S. — radiation deaths in - Canada could push the death toll to 21 million, Tsipis said. Winds would carty high-level radioactivity over Quebec and the Maritimes. But no matter how devastating the nuclear strike, ‘Tsipis said he believes some people in Canada would survive. Robson) fall fair y seers by ake. Robson —CostiounPhote by He nila the road elowure not oaly kept tite ote fall for about 12 days, but it increased his hotel's summer occupancy " - Fate by, shout 10\to 16 per cent over last year; , “We had about a 12-day period when we were full, this had a lot to do with diverting the traffic down through the southern route,” Clifford said. 4 ~)“Qver and above that, the tourist traffic increased. It may be becatise word got around that the southern route wasn't such a bad route to take.” Tallio Esposito, owner and manager, of the Hi Arrow Motor Hotel reported a 76 per cent increase in business during the road closure. And another major hotel in the Se et ee tadaete ne to | Jojie Sideco: “Con- sidering the economy, the tourism iteelf wasn't that erty Seas Say raeea ex soma res bordune ofthe Epa peta Seta ech f saa da brisk overitns sominer; Bet National Echtiatice Centre director Bernie Bloom said the reason:the cefitre experienced an increase in tourist visits this summer compared to last was because of special exhibits that were featured. ‘An exhibit on ancient Egypt from the Royal Ontario Museum and another on needlework from Spokane drew haces Abierto lr dmitted that the Trans-Canada - “Some people will be outside the areas of "he said. “People in rural areas of central and Western ‘Canada will probably be able to recover by, going toa. cottage style of life.” However, recovery would be slow because‘ skilled workers, food and medical. supplies are ‘concentrated ‘in cities, the study says. Land and food would be contaminated: - and firestorms from nuclear blasts could rage over vast forest areas. ‘+S Social attitudes would also change as people began avoiding contact with those exposed to radiation, the'study says. Mental health would deteriorate as people tried to come ‘to grips with destruction and death. Anarchy would probably follow a nuclear holocaust and any governing agencies that did survive would have to impose strict controls to ensure equitable distribution of food and the study said that out of 234 survey - > a2 Highway shutdown could have had encouraged tourits 1 visit the NEC. The Doukhobor Historical Village, saw 14,000 visitors over the summer. But spokesman Christine Faminoff said Bh od mary that trasotd dy vlanragarvectaail ys ti the highway.road closure helped pull Castleger’s szvica lnditiey wat Os the dalirgna, bed weathaitvecs most of the summer: kept campers away from: loraliparks. The number of campers and day: visitors to Syringa Creek and Champion Lakes Provincial Pirks averse ol 10\pee cant (hs Yet over, lasts parks* Ron Routledge said the number of eampers visiting Syringa Creek was down 10.6 - per cent to 8,185 from 8,563 in 1982 and the number of day visitors rs dropped 16.8 per cent to 28,318 from 27,870. continued on poge A2