CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, December 14, 1978 NEW INDUSTRY, which is to occupy one building and three acres in the Graniste Industrial Estates Ltd. park in Genelle, ‘began to move In machinery Thursday. Spir-L-Ok which corrugated culvert pipe, manholes and - fittings, is shown here situating Its 12-ton ., culvert pipe machine—also manufactured Ready told the Castlegar News this Is the company’s fourth plant to open In British Columbia. The other three are located at Langley, Richmond and Dawson Creek. The plant will employ only two workers when it opens around the beginning of the new year, but the work force could double by spring. —CasNewsFoto by Lois Hughes Aglow Release The November Women : Aglow meeting, held at the + Regional Recreation Centre, was attended by some 50 - 60 women, seated in a horseshoe : formation about the head table. All three Castlegar Aglow ‘ counsellors and their wives “were present: Rev. Ed Wegner, : Rev. Ray Hubbeard and Ed + Barbin. Delegates to the Interna- : tional Aglow Convention, held : Vancouver in October, : brought glowing accounts of the event, at which some 1,600 to 1,700 women delegates from : around the world attended. % Elaine Hood, first speaker, commented on the three-hour : wait it took to obtain her key, tas she waited in line at her = hotel. “But no one grumbled,” : she remarked, “at the long : wait. Everyone seemed so + happy just to be there.” One person was heard to ‘remark as a bevy cares at , the elevator door, “Oh j another singing elevator!” For tit was no‘uncommon thing to : hear the women grouped in the ‘ elevators burst into some gay j chorus. Ruth Barbin led the + choruses, and also remarked on ithe first international Women ‘Aglow Conference, held in : Seattle, which she had attend- ted. “A beautiful prophecy was t given there, which is being ful- < filled," she said. It spoke of - candlesticks, the candle and the : flame, likening each member to