CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, Oct. 5, 1961 CASTLEGAR NEWS Hundred and Forty-Seven A VERY DISTURBING QUESTION A disturbing question posed to the deputy minister of forests recently con- cerned the possibility of mills cutting their timber sales limits in less time than that allowed by the Forest Service. The questioner envisioned a problem where the mill had a timber sale with a 10-year cutting limit and the equipment to cut the sale in three years, the problem being further accentuated by the fact that the mill, spreading its production over the 10 years, was operating under the “break- even” point financially. The solution sought, as far as industry.was concerned, was to have permission to cut this sale out in three years. The disturbing aspect of the question is that it shows a disregard on the part of one representative of industry at least, for the general economy of the district. Here is the prognosis of the spectacie of “boom and bust,” an operator suggest- the operation down. In order to cut at this rate he will need more men, they in turn will require more services. The men and services would, of ‘course, be supplied. ... Leesan ‘Buildings and graves but what happens for the seven years fol- in nistoric Ross Bay Cemetery. Some of our city fathers want Building, lowing this flurry of activity: The obvious answer is chaos for everyone concerned Bay ana be pines into a park: This hes horrified historians, who Industry has been warned before; but ener out much of this province’s — everyone, that is, but the operater. in the light of this question, it appears sori in Ross Bay. that it needs to be warned again. The theory of sustained yield is the only theory in forest production that will receive the solid backing of the people. Outside in- mark and fix up the graves of for- |. have in the mer Premiers and L past supported the industry locally to ‘Ob- Beatuatieg dity’s pan superintendent, tain a re-survey, by the Forest Services yw. o warren, can't bear to cut of the annual potential cut, but that was down a tree or a shrub, with the ; H result Ross Bay is rapidly becoming all that was implied by such support. If fr rates hus covced an menys pore it is not possible to reconcile the actual pie to protest that cut with that allowable within the frame- srudgingly cleared away 9 Uttle of and or; ion: work of ined yield, then the former ing in all seriousness that he be all to go his way at a merry financial clip to himself) for three years and then shut must be applied. — Tribune Williams Lake Leslsletive Buildings hes had your VICTORIA REPORT ~ History In Stones, Marble Restored By Grant heels, say it's While the go-| than the ceramic tiles, What's gding to. happen, of course, is that the spike heels will soon be gouging holes in the oil cloth. ae JAMES K, NESBITT smaller, but still] abide the new oil cloth. Why, the mighty battle ra-| floors In new Government Mquor Aging about tiles in| stores are better. So are the floors in'the clvil servants’ cafeteria, and In the privvles in the Douglas to remove all the stones from Ross ‘Premier Bennett didn’t Uke the idea, elther, so he fathered & $1,000 government grant to Victoria aa tion, BO, Historical Assoclation, to mired it, architect P. Leonard Ja~ mes cried out in anguish: act of utter desecration.” fun in the Battle of the Tombstones and the Battle of the Tiles. As long ag we don't take ourselves too ser- is preserve! in stone and | fously all will be well, and the right will prevall. easier on their feet (While some of the ladies ad- “It's an Speaking personally, I can’t ‘Well, we're all having. a lot ‘of DEATH TOLL UP 1899, Mr. H. H. the dense underbrush. capital clty rocking. ais “stepped off a trolley car in New York and turned to assist o woman to allght. horseless carriage came along and struck him down. Mr. Warren| velt Hospital the. next day, and achieved the tragic distinctlon of becoming the first person to be kll-. The Battle of the Tiles in the| led by an automobile, tal for Canada and the United |} Just then, & Mr, Bliss died in the Roose- Last year, the traffic death te. with 3,168,152 $500 Million Saved In Foreign Exchange George A, Lawrence of Toronto hos beén appointed deputy director of public relations for the Standard Oll Co, (New Jersey) In New York, it was announced today, Mr, Lawrence has been mana- ger of the public relations depart- ment of Imperial on: Lita, since 1947, capes See us for famous Beott Fyfe is: Mr, Lawrence's, successor as public ;: relations niana- ger for Imperial Oil, Formerly as- sistant manager of the public re- Igtions department, he has been Imperial's advertising manager for the past six years. ‘ Donald G. Twalts becomes Im- perlal's new advertising, manager. He has-been supervisor, retail ad- in i SUBURBANITE WINTER TIRES Kirkpatrick Heads ,,,..%; _ Canadian Chamber S, . Kirkpatrick, Montreal, ‘Quebec, who has been elected Pre- aldent of The Canadian Chamber of Commerce at the national business organization's 32nd. Annual Meeting at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on October %, 3 and 4, He was formerly Firat Look For Angry Young Men By. JACK SCOTT ‘Va::couver Sun Columnist officers of organ!: National — Vi ‘Widely known in Canadian business circles, Mr. Kirkpatrick, in business life, 1s President of The Consolidated Min. ing and Smelting Company of Ca- nada Limited, He was. born. in Kingston, Ontario, October 28, 1993, and was graduated from the Royal Military College and the University of Toronto as a metallurgical en- gineer. Following graduation, he Joined his present company, Long active in Chamber of Commerce work, he is a former chairman of the Canadian Chamber's Fixecutive Council, He takea over from Cap- taln Joseph Jeffery, former Presi- dent of The Canadian‘ Chamber of Commerce, your insurance agent . work for? If you are dealing with an independent insurance agent or broker, you can be sure that he's working for you . . acting in your best interests at a times. Because he represents ni number of tions, I understand, are ‘supposed to keep thelr traps shut on the target was hard to fathom, I found myself CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, Oct. 5, 1961 Engineers Meeting Here Tonight panied by the Assoclation’s Regia-{ 1s also to receive a life member- trar, J, A. Merchant, P, Eng. The Nelson man receiving life} is unable to attend the meeting. membership medallion is J. P. Contes, P. Eng., R.R. 1, Nelson. Mr. ship medallion, but unfortunateiy Among those receivirg their membership certificates will be K. One from |E. M. 8tiles, P, Eng., R.R. 1, Nelson,| W. Hall, Castlegar, B.C, the remark of a certain tronic Profeasor who opined, “We've a pretty school full of the best-be- active affairs of the but I am so new at this sori of thing that perhaps they'll forgive me. for horning in. When, to my surprise, I was the honorary haved who ever wor- shipped the status quo,” Xs it true, gentlemen of the university press?! Has the day gone when we could count _ the hot-blooded , the " of the Canadian U Press, I was sent a reassuring letter by the real president, Douglas Park- inson; of Ottawa, who let it be known that my duties would be less than onerous, “The constitution states that the honorary president shall act in an advisory capacity to encourage the improvement of ‘student jour- nalism in Canada,” Parkinson ex- plained. “Since we live a consid~ erable distance apart It is unlikely that I shall phone you at 3 a.m. for advice,” I'd have left it right pa col- lege kid ‘who was all for atheism and free love and the far off paa- tures of politics, the sworn enemy of dogma and conventions and re-~ action? Xs that the long shadow of Joe McCarthy, gentlemen, across those ivy-covered walls? T hope like the devil that I'm wrong, but of late I've been get- ting the feeling that the student has traded in his racoon coat and beanie for the tallored grey-flan_ nel sult, Nelson will receive a Life Member- ship Medallion and 13 West Koot- enay men will be eligible to recelve jocmbership certificates at a meet- ing of the West Kootenay Branch of the Association of Professional Engineers of B.C. at Twin Rivers Hall, Castlegar, Thursday, October 5 at 680 p.m. ‘The occasion is the annual visit of the West Kootenay Branch of the Assocation by Association Pre- sident, William Hall, P.’ Eng. of Victoria, Mr, 7Iall will be accom- HERE'S GOOD NEWS ‘Here's good news you'll read about in the Star Weekly, Weekend Magazine, Free Press Weekly, Fa- mily Herald, La Presse and Per- spectives, “Six" big days of “two for the price of one, plus only one cent” bargains, it’s the Rexall 1c Sale, Hundreds of items to choose from gifts, Vi. We're told of the waiting outside the since‘ seems to be ‘doing right well by itself, except that an ‘old friend of mine happened to give a talk out at UBC, the other day. ‘The reaction was so astonish- ing that I suddenly remembered my position and my duty to tell the chaps that here if they don’t already know it, is a story that hollers for special attention, The speaker was Tim Buck and the old Red got such a rough rido that there just has to be some significance in it, Significan- ce is what we youngsters in‘ the graduation hall with their fat con. tracts in thelr hands, offering the boys an instant threshold to suc- cess and membership in the Jun- jor Chamber of Ci tamins, Remedies, Cosmetics, First. ald supplles, Stationery, etc. Mon- day, Tuesdsy, Wednesday, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday, October 46th, 1th, 18th, 19th, 20th and 21s, at Pitts Rexall Drug Stores, Adv, Must one presume that an in- evitable step in this direction, through higher. learning, is to es- tablish reliability by taking aim at old Tim with the leftovers from lunch? And if this dreary picture is true then perhaps we ought to be greiving more for the vanishing Indian of the campus, the insur- Let. us bring your heating system up to date with a GAS OR OIL FURNACE. Have all the modern convenience and com- fort this winter. BE SAFE - BE SURE FREE ESTIMATES - INSURANGE For All Your INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE NEEDS WHILE YOUR AT IT let us give you an esti- mate on modernizing your plumbing. — DO IT TODAY. Phone 365-3441 Mr, Thomas Irwin, who used to| States was 41,273, be Mr, Speaker hereabouts, came | Persons injured. calling from his home. in -White Here are some other facts com- Rock and nearly exploded when he] Piled by the B.C, Automobile As- insurance man is in "a position to gents, groping toward maturit; ascertain the best policies suited to 4 with wonder and disrespect, the kind who would give a hearing to Canadian Univeraity Press are forever seeking, ANDERSON saw the shiny red oll cloth now in KEEP OUR TEEN-AGERS BUSY The mother of a teen-age student and a teacher at one of Spokane’s public b id tly in the the poor. And when you are through— and not too tired—read a book. “Your parents do not owe you enter- gers not iene anythin to do. Trail mothers . . . and fathers .. . and school teachers have undoutedly en- countered the same experience. Many times have we heard the plaintive cry of teen-agers: What can we do? Where can we go? The Spokane mother and teacher, un- like the rest of us, took cognizance of the situation and came up with the following advice to teen-agers, printed in several Washington papers: “Where can you go? What can you do? We can make some suggestions. GO HOME! “Hang storm windows, paint the ‘woodwork. Rake the leaves. Cut the lawn. -Clean the walk. Wash the car. Learn to cook. Scrub some floors. Repair the sink. Build a boat. Get a job. . “Help the minister. the Red Cross, the Salvation Army. Visit the sick. Assist “Your city does not owe you recrea- tional facilities. “The world does not owe you a liv- ing. “You owe the wotld something. “You owe it to your time and energy and your talents that no one will be at war or in poverty, or sick, or lonely again. “In plain, simple words: GROW UP; quit being a crybaby; get out of your dream world; develop a backbone not a wishbone. and start acting Tike aman or a lady. “We are parents. We’re tired of nurs- ing, protecting, helping, appealing, beg- ging, excusing, tolerating, denying our- selves needed comforts for- your every whim and fancy, just because your selfish ego instead of coraman sense dominates your p lity, thinking and r — Trail Times GOODWILL TOURS OF ONTARIO Among the most interesting Yesults of the: Goodwill Tours of Ontario staged annually by the province’s department of travel and publicity for 30 U.S, news- paper editors from as many States of the U.S.A. are the impressions subsequently published editorially in their homtown Hailies and weeklies. For instance, ‘Wheeler Mayo, editor- owner of the County Times, Sequoyah, Oklahoma, had this to say on his return home: “What impressed us most on this 1,200-mile trip were the people., Perhaps we had expected to find Ontario people different from those who live in the U.S.A. Instead, we found ambitious, hard- working people who are a combination of we Americans and something of their own. “They have the hospitality of the South; they offer the friendly comrade- ship of the great Southwest and they prac- tice the self reliance of the West. They enjoy and appreciate the utilization of natural resources as we did in our North- west; they employ the inventive spirit of our Atlantic seaboard and emphasize thrift as do our New Englanders. “It would do our nation well if our leaders would take a similar tour of this Canadian provincé, Ontario, because Can- ada is on the march. “Such is particularly the case in On- tario, where low cost power baAbaehag ty are playing a major role in bringing Am- erican industry to the Province. We were not told ‘this once, but many times, for every time we asked, the answer was the same. “t's more than a little hard for an “Okie” to take, who knows that we, too, should be enjoying. the same industrial gro “We are glad to be back. home—but we want you to know that Canada is “a great country—that Ontario is a wonder- ful Province—that the people like-all- of| | us,:love their great, free country and to} be friends. “Let's keep it that: way.” — Titlson- burg News, Ont. corridors, where once there had been. + oldres, 1s that today’s tire is vastly Mr, Speaker's historic, ceramic tiles, raged, red faced Mr, Irwin, puf- fing furiously on his pipe. “If T'd been here this vandalism wouldn't have happened.” Victoria section of B.C, Historl- val Associati etting on its high| eats occur in clear weather, on dry i shy Bett oe Be roads. Adverse weather seems to Ing that before the Parlia-|induce drivers and pedestrians to iia a eet : is exercise extra caution on the road, horse passed a unanimous resolu- ment Buildings and Government House can be altered in any way a Special legislative conimittee must give its approval. Some years ago someone painted; over the magnifi- cent Indian motif walls and. cellings in the Government Hoise ballroom. dignified | slaughter: from October through December, “somebody ought to have his| With coincidence of darkness and head examined,” shrieked the out-| hours of heavy travel. ths occur in night aceldents, the most dangerous hour. Speed too fast for conditions con- tinues as an important factor, but many other factors are involved... driver errors, drinking drivers, In- adequate roads and streets, _ Soclation in the mounting highway @ Most accidents happen More than halt of all dea Between 6 and 7 p.m. is Three out of four accid- Regarding causes of accidents, by GOODFVYEAR your needs, CANADA'S SUREST SAFEST WINTER TIRE. ‘Every winter more and more folks send their friends - to us for Suburbanites. Why don’t you be among them this winter to enjoy all-weather driving with Suburbanites by Goodyear..Drop in soon. ‘CASTLE TIRE SHOP PHONE BOX 511 — 365-4441 CASTLEGAR, B.C. REPAIRS = RETREAD & VULCANIZING ? That stiould never have been al- lowed. Mind you, the shiny new ollcloth. Some of the ladies wobbling slong in their spike _ Pay Alfention To Your Spare Tire A: spare tire, claims the Cana- |. dian Highway Safety Council, is an insurance policy, but the motor~ ist must keep up the premiums if it is to pay off in an emergency. The-premlum isa regular air pressure check, but it’s one insur- ence ae that doem’t cost a peni The Rubber Aszoctation of ‘Ca- nada has found motorists are not paying the attention to the spare tire as in. the days when a couple of extra tires were a necessity be- fore a venturesome trip on the highway. Main reason, the association de- more reliable, But both the associa- tlon and the Council remind drivers that nothing can be more incon- venient and exasperating than a spare gone soft when a. driver needs it, The best practice is to in- ‘elude the spare in a regular air]: pressure check of all tires. Inflation for the spare should be the. same as the mounted tires. SWEATERS for. this cooler weather — * get yours now for solid comfort ” SWEATERS CARDIGANS & CASTLEGAR NEWS ° 2 Published Every Thursday At « oe * stEO, “THE OF THE Castlegar, B.C. - @ 5 L. V. Campbell, Publisher Mail subsoription rate to the Castlegar News ls $3 per year, The price by delivery boy ts 35 cents a month, Single sue are 10 cents, e The Castlegar News is authorized am second: class mall, Bost Office Department, Ottawa, for Bay- ment of postage in cash, and is a member of the Audit Bureau of Cirewlntions: wry ‘Ausoclation, tha BG. divi division of te Conadion Weelly Newspapers Association, and the B.C. Weellx Newspapers Adi — Barf Campbell, Editor “Cyagt” All correspondence should be addressed to ‘The Editor, Castlegar News, Drawer 490, Castlegar, BC, Letters for publication must be accompanied oy the correct name and address of the writer. Pen names will be used on request, but the correct name must be submitted. The Castlegar News reserves the right to shorten letters in the interests PULLOVERS by JANTZEN & TONI-DAY LEITNER’S ALEX CHEVELDAVE B.O, land Surveyor _ 38 Pine Bt. Castlegar Phone 365-SH2 _NORA’S HAIR DRESSING PARLOR 4 Complete Beauty Service By Appouitavent 7 PHONE Castlegar 365-2521 FIALA’S FOR BEAUTY Custom Hair Styling . PHONE 365-5818 Above Bank of Montreal AET'S SERVICE AND aL LAUGHTON CASTLEGAR BUILDING SUPPLY STORE Box 240 — Phone 365-2161 DESMOND T. . LITTLEWOOD OPTO! ‘Wed, 230 to 8 pm. Phone 365-8232 M. E. McCORQUODALE B.C, Land Surveyor 2244 Bay Avenue, Trail scr attra ot osiee BUSINESS, Professional Directory. BEAUTY COUNSELLOR COSMETICS For Skin Analysis end Presentation M. Creighton Phone 365-4276 KINNAIRD CONSTRUCTION Dewis Contracting Castlegar YOUNG AGENCIES LID. Tasurance & Real Estate PHONE 385-4941 OASTLEAIRD PLAZA AUTO Kinnaird Phone 365-2056 Behind Castleaird Plas G. A. SUMNER Naturopathic Physician PHONE 365-2021 “TRAIL CARTAGE, Castiogie séezeer Trall S84-1818 Nelson’ 1471 UNITED, TRUCKING ‘ _NHA Homes a Speolalty ‘Write Hox 154, Brilliant, B.O, —_—. . GRAVEL EXCAVATING DITOHING. Phone 365-4223 or 365-4004 ELECTEOLUX (CANADA) LIMtrED Marlauna Crescent ‘Trail 364-1914 g THE INSURANCE AGENTS’ This personal service means your insurance is always placed to your best advantage. “You can see why it pays to deal with an independent insurane- agent or broker. Look for this emblem before you buy fire, auto or general insurance. ASSOCIATION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA EE mt Help to publicize: this . mew service by taking advantage of this Special. The coupon at the right Ordinarily the response of the UBC student audience would have delighted me, : ‘They threw lunch bags, bottle caps, paper planes, orange peels and apple cores, fam all for such vigor on the campus. ‘They jeered, hooteé and boo- |" ed, Since I have been worried of late that they’d gone mute, it was cheering to know that they're still vocal. Tim Buck as one rebel to another or just out of plain AGENCIES against the code that would pro- hibit them, Saat oF those vintage hot-heads . éventually cooled with age js read- ily apparent, but they bumbied through some wonderfully infor- mative country and nothing will convince me that the smooth new super-highway to respectability is half as g All this I could and praise if the speaker had been @ captain of industry or — say — @ member. of Mr, Diefenbaker’s cabinet or a highly-respected bi- shop or any other gent who, like the man in the bowler passing the snowball fight, ts traditionally fair game for the young folks, But that old Tim. a veritable symbol of the rebellious and here- tic spirit, should have been the So, as honorary president, gentlemen, my advice is to launch an immediate search for a alngle angry young man, okie soinething?:. 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