The best car rental deal in town Is Budget tentacar é A saa sia Licensee es ‘Owned in Canada by Canediane, 365-3300 CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, March 24, 1977 ASTLEGAR NEW ERTAINMENT ‘Man-Nature Museum; + An Imaginative Exhibit The Museum of Man and jature, in Winnipeg, Man, is a nique interpretive centre in hich man and his relationship ith nature and the universe re probed, examined in depth, ind exhibited with imagination. The Earth History Gallery sds one of several’ theme-based areas at the museum, Here, the creating of the niverse, the pre-historic era, he Iee Age, and the’ geologic “formation of Manitoba are ividly portrayed. The Grasslands Gallery of southern Mani- » including Indian life- les, the fur trading era, arly settlement, and the im- igrant boom of the late 1800s. Another portion of the janitoba Museum of Man and ature is the Urban Gallery, showing Winnipeg, past, pres- nt, and projected future. A treet scene of Winnipeg circa 31920 dominates the area and ‘reveals a typical urban centre f that period. One of the newer areas at e museum houses an authen- ic, full-size replica of the Non- uch, the famous Hudson's Bay ompany fur trading ship. The essel lies against a 17th ide, ready for loading. The newest gallery, the It is composed of nine ‘phases, each illustrated. by . three or four display units, and a workshop area for school children. The Boreal Forest Gallery, the museum's seventh major gallery is now in the construc- tion stage. It takes its name from Boreas, the Greek god of the North Wind. The local forest is Manitoba's most northerly forest, with only tree- less tundra extending beyond it to the North Pole, It covers some 65,000 square miles, The Boreal Forest Gallery will comprise 11 phases, each divided into separate units de- picling various human and natural environments of this vast area. Since it opened in 1970, the Manitoba Museum of Man‘ and Nature has proved a popular attraction, with an average of 1,500 visitors per day. pular to! attracti ir ihe 13th century; at top right Is toa Souris triangle of ‘Delhi Agra and Jalpur bas long been a ion. At top fet is Delbis Qutb Minar, built Jalpur’s Palace of the Winds; and at bottom is world famous Tal Mahal, located in Agra. Feeling of ‘Theatre’ Strongly Evident at WK Drama Festival By TED CROSFIELD For three nights last week, the Stanley Humphries Second- ary School gymnasium was transformed—the smell of sweat hidden by the smell of grease paint; the roar and stomp of the crowd changed to the sustained applause of an audience; and the shrill of the referee's whistle replaced by the considered words of two skilled and knowledgeable ad- judicators. In ‘short, the to Come to the Dolly BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEON - arene from 12 noon to 1 p.m. 61 Main St. : that the audience was there to be'“instructed” as to why they had enjoyed themselves; one does not analyse 4 sunset to see why it was beautiful. George Bernard Shaw once . remarked, “You use .a glass mirror to gee your face; you use works of art to see your soul.” There was much “soul” to be seen during this festival and I, for one, stand indebted to festival coordinator Teri Hallas and all the others who made became’a theatre in which the West Kootenay Drama Festival + was staged. + Everyone who attended this festival, whether as audience, actor, sponsoring teacher, backstage people or ” whatever, came away a winner. The audience won good live theatre, and those who worked to make it all-possible won that At Trail Junior High Hillbilly Musicomedy | Dogpatch, U.S.A. comes to Trail, B.C. Wednesday. Students at J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School will present L'il Abner, the 1950s musical comedy inspired by the hillbilly ch created by directing it,” he said. “They’ ve been working on it since January.” The play's plot involves Daisy Mae's courtship of Lil Abner, Dogpatch's threatened cartoonist Al Capp, 8 p.m.- March 28 to 26 at Trail Junior High School. Production publicist Joe Ranallo, q teacher at Lloyd Crowe, said this week the play represents the work of nearly 100 students. “The students are acting in itand putting it on and the staff members are. producing and, COMMUNITY Bulletin Board CAR WASH Weather permitting,-.Bethel No. 60, Job's Daughters will hold a car wash on March 26 at the Plaza Texaco from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 2FOR1SALE Don’t miss the Two for One Sale at St, David's Thrift Shop, today, and Friday starting at 10 a.m. each one free. Tickets are $8 for SPRING DANCE The Castlegar Lumberman's Social Club will be holding a Spring Dance on March 26, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Legion Hall. Music to be provided by “The New Company”. There will be a midnight snack. bers and $4 for. ib day. Buy one garment at the set price snd get another by nuclear tests and tycoon General Bullmoose's attempts to get the formula bee Mammy Yokum's secret tonic. + Admission is $2 for adults ° and $1.50 for students and. senior citizens. on opening night, Seats for the remaining performances will be $3 re- served and $2 at the door. Nude Polar Scientists Run in 100-Yard Dash Most of those who go south for the winter bask in the sun, play golf and tennis, or swim. . But there is a small coterie who. “go all the way (south), and for ‘them: the~ chief spares are tobogganing down a “geodesic dome and sprinting nude to the South Pole. . They are the group of , about 20 scientists and support-: ing personnel who winter at the station maintained by-the Unit- ed States ,within about 100 yards of the pole. Forthem it is 200 miles to the nearest real hill, and so for tobogganing they make use of the giant dome that covers the. clustered two-storey buildings of their lonely camp, The dome is partly drifted over with snow. To add zest. to their The Robson R Phone 365-6146 after 5 p.m. BOOK DONATIONS WELCOME Society would soon. Legion Hall. Everyone welcome. donations of books, in good condition, to build a book exchange in conjunction with .the present library. Books may be left at the Robson Library on Tuesdays or Thursdays, or at the Robson Store. If you would like them picked up, phone 365-5772, CLAY CASTLE For locally produced ceramic souvenirs and functional items, think of the Clay Castle. Opening BEEF RAFFLE WINNER The Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 170, Beef Raffle winner is ticket No. 1700, Ron McIntyre. ANNUAL SPRING TEA The Annual Spring Tea sponsored by the L.A. to Castlegar-Robson Branch No. 170, Royal Canadian Legion, will be held April 23 from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Door prize, baking, sewing, raffle. RUMMAGE SALE : The Women's Auxiliary to the Castlegar and District Hospital will be holding its Annual Spring Rummage Sale April 22 and 23. For pickup. phone 365-8302, 365-6647 or 365-5406 for Robson. U.S.S.R. SLIDE SHOW . There will be a slide show and talk on the USSR on March 27 at 7 p.m. in the Brilliant Cultural Centre. This will be a bi-lingual (Russian-English) presentation by local Union of Youth members who visited Moscow, Volgagrad, Sochi and Kiev last summer. Admission is free, but donations to the Brilliant Cultural Centre will be gratefully accepted. Everyone is welcome. r Operations, Please Suet notices Paineetly ‘on the londays. Castlegar News by 5 p.m. ca A Public Service of Interior Pulp and Interior Lumber Operations. ‘Canadian Cellulose. they have formed a very exclusive club limited to those who, when the tempera- ture first drops to minus 73 degrees Celsius, sprint nude 100 yards to “The Pole,” which is spirally striped like the emblem of a barbershop. Having run 100 yards there and 100 yatds back at MATURE ENTERTAINMENT OW ‘a ICHiLDRE MATINEES } [sATUROAY BVATINEE COLLEGE BUNDAY MATINGE AT 2:00 AM! se Samrranct ve metaet oo Coane & saqystive nrqunge thrmghew! RW MeDonald, BC. Be, minus 3 degrees, the Spriners special gleaned from a peak experience. Backstage could be seen faces, young and not so young, stretched by . incredulous smiles, trying to accommodate those magic words—“We did ity” That moment of realization of having tried and succeeded was the major prize at this festival, for it was non-com- petitive; there were no trophies or awards for best play or best actor, only certificates of merit awarded by adjudicators Buzz Bense and Nancy Harris, Five of the 13 plays were awarded these certificates in the Junior Secondary category, “Here We Are” from Nelson's Trafalgar Junior Second- ary School and “Stand and De- liver” from Kinnaird Junior y School were chosen becom Gib: entitled to a ite summer visitors are allowed to qualify for a lesser honor— -Membership -in the 200 Club (they:run the 200-yards round trip but not at minus 73). They did so recently in brilliant sunshine—the sun does hot set until autumn—having "emerged damp from the camp sauna, f It was a very different race to the pole from that of the heroic era of polar exploration 65 years ago, when Roald Amundsen and his Norwegian companions reached here a month before Robert Scott's team did so, doomed to perish on their return march. Today Antarctica is the theater of a multi-national, co-operative effort at research into climate change and other phenomena of mutual concern. Flags of the participants encir- cele the-symbolic “South Pole” that serves as the goal of the frigid dash, for Merit Awards, At the Senior Secondary level : plays were selected, “The a riage Proposal’, Stanley Hum- phries Secondary School; “Six Sketches”, Invermere's David Thompson Secondary School; and “The Rox", from Nelson's L. V. Rogers Secondary School. The awards were made at the workshops which followed the performances and it was during these workshops that the actual adjudication took place. There was a free flow of ideas and suggestions between the adjudicators and students as to how the quality of the presentations could be im- proved and the enjoyment of audiences and actors thereby increased. The adjudicators re- stricted their remarks during the, actual performances to general comments about theatre and the experience of the evening. They did not feel this Community TV Community Access-10 Schedule for Tonight €:30—Ecology of Mauntain Cariboo, produced by Sel- kirk College. 4:15—Trail Art Club 7:45—German Diary 8:15—Trail Skating Club Ice Carnival 9:45—Sign-off . Bangs Her Head, Ends Blindness A 82-year-old Yorkshire women banged her head against a wall during a romp at a birthday party—and saw again after five years of blind- ness. “It’s like being born again,” said Sheila Newman of Brad- ford, England. “I went to the holy shrine “at Lourdes in France last year and prayed for my health and sight, Now a miracle has happened.” Miss Newman, who also is * paralyzed from the waist down, explained how the. miracle happened. vt *We-were. having:a- noisy party and I+was-enjoying’ a glass..of lager beer." Somebody eracked a‘ ‘joke ‘and’ I leaned back laughing and banged my head onthe wall, - ’ “There was a flesh snd 2 terrible pain in my head. I cried. . with the pain and my nose starled bleeding. As my .eyes opened everything was blurred. But in a few minutes I could see perfectly, “I had been blind for five years because of a tumor pressing against an oplic nérve in my head,” A local doctor said Miss Newman had accidentally dis- placed the tumor that caused her blindness. But Rev. Leonard Jervis, a Roman Catholic priest, said: “Miracles take place in God's good time. She prayed to have her sight restored and the prayer was answered by what seemed an accident.” Canadian Playwright To Speak at College A Canadian playwright and former actress who won the DDF best actress award in 1966, Sharon Pollock will be visiting Selkirk College on Monday afternoon to discuss the writing and staging of plays. Born in New Brunswick and educated in Quebec, Shar- on Pollock has worked in amateur theatre in Ontario and the itil tary depicting Sitting Bull's exile in Canada after:the Little Big. Horn massacre. The play is a. study of the disillusionment of Super- intendent Walsh, who believes in his government's integrity and is betrayed by that govern- ment. As well, it examines the relationship between that man and Sitting Bull. - Sharon Pollock's visit is he pi ly writes for theatre, radio and television and has had her plays staged by the Vancouver Play- house, Theatre Calgary and Stratford Festiva! Theatre, among others. During her visit to Selkirk College, Pollock ‘will hold a two-hour discussion group on Monday afternoon for anyone interested in the writing and staging of plays. That evening the lecture discussion session will center around her -play, “Walsh”, a historical documen- Entertainment Pages News and Ads Deadline 5 p.m. Mondays jointly by Selkirk's English department and‘ the Canadian Writers’ Union, and her sessions are open to all interested persons, - ‘Perhaps if those who ex- BONANZA: SPECIAL! Canon TX SLR. only $199%> | happen. There is a certain sadness at the conclusion of such an event, for it will be another year before it will happen again. T,and the many others who appreciate live theatre, wonder when a viable centre for the performing arts will become a reality in'the West Kootenays,” PETTITT PHOTOS perienced and enjoyed the West Kootenay Drama Festival lend support to the Performing Arts Centre concept at NDU, there will, indeed, be a place where we can “see our soul”, PETTITT PHOTOS |. PETTILT.PHOTOS * SOLOHd L1NL13d-_ SQLONd LilL13d Deir Ann Landers: My husband's: Aunt Sarah is his only living relative, Sh come’ to visit twice a year, is no trouble, and I like her a lot... Aunt Sarah is in remarkable health for a woman 84, but she frequently falls asleep in the middle of a conversation. ‘I'd like to know the Proper way to wake her up. Or should I let her sleep? Ye —Montreal “Dear. jon't tet hor sleep. She might fall out of the chair and } break a hip. Jostle her lightly oe offer. a cup of coffee. . : Dear Ann Landers: Weapeak and rosa about all sorts of addictions dn this day and ago, but why isn't more said and written about the iggest addiction of all—television? “No effort is made to try to solve the ordinary problema that cur in every household because “the box” does ail the talking. If ‘an effort is made, the problem must be resolved in 20 minutes, ~ because “Laverne and Shirley” is coming on. \" ” Many adults seek instant gratification. Like : paperback book * - Niagara Falls and Falls. By Percy Rowe. Paper Jacks, Markham, Ont. 176 pp. Paper $1.95. Book Review by Perey Maddux The, full. and interesting story of Niagara Falls is to be found in. the pages of a small entitled “Niagara Falls and: Falls" by. Percy Rowe. This describes the 86-mile-long Niagara River and the two main falls—the 168-ft, high Canadian (or Horseshoe), and the 167-{t. high American (or Rainbow), plus the, smaller Luna Falls, sometimes called Bridal Veil, on the American aide. ' Niagara Falls and Falls The story opens with Jean Francois Gravelet, known as Blondin, walking a. tightrope over the falls in 1669, and then follows the history of the falls and the cities that started beside them—Niagara Falls in Ontario and Niagara Falls in New York. The falls have been a big attraction ever since the middle of the 19th century. : Other tightrope walkers and darc- devils followed Blondin, who performed there for years. This little book tells of the attraction to be found’ at the falls at different periods. of history. and gives a description and guide: for ‘the entire area. ere-and-now—like the alcoholic or drug addict, only their ddiction is TV! ° wife must stay up to catch the late, late show, and then falls into Hibed too, exhausted to give a spouse the attention she (or he) needs? How many families spend the entire evening together in’one room, yet each is alone to himself? In how many homes is the TV . wae SELKIRK N/) COLLEGE presents VIVIENNE ROWLEY & DON MITCHELL. piano and violin duo performing selections from telemann - Beethoven - Bartok - Brahms 8:00 p.m. - Main Lounge - Castlegar Campus: 2 No Admission a a a a Plan To Attend < “LIL ABNER” A musical performed and produced by the J. L. Crowe students and staff. March. 23, -24,. 25’ and:26 At the Trail Junior High Auditorium Trail 8 p.m. Nightly’ Tickets available at the L&J Nesestan Tall 3 Wednesday: Rush seats only, $2 aduits; students and senior citizens. (Thurs., Fri., reserved $3.00, rush $2. : : Soin i The West Kootenay Trade Fair ‘77. ~ April 15th and 16th (Watch for Details) : H Royal Canadian Legion Invites you to Participate in these Functions: BRANCH No. 170 Ist & rd Tuesdays 7:30 P.M, ‘Dancing etc} PoiKor A Dress Y Coane Must be “this Weekend | Every Sat. 1;30 p:m. CABARET Friday & Lond Bud “Mon, = Pris, ny ¥ it Saturday Fri. & Sat. after 7 pam. CRIBBAGE MISFITS Darts: Mon.-Thurs. ar Signed In ‘used as a baby sitter? How many families watch television during "the dinner hour, when the events of the day should be discussed? low many children retire to their bedrooms to look at a TV that ‘been’ put: there so there will be no conflict between the ‘programs they want to watch and the ones their parents prefer? The most common excuse’ for so much TV is “there isn't t, anything else to do.” What a sad commentary that life is so ompty | that the most constructive thing we can do is vegetate in front of a How much has-TV helped to create a society of people who ; care for nothing except their own self-indulgence?, How. can the ordinary problems which beset the average family even begin to be solved if we aren't willing to pry ourselves loose from the TV and give ourselves a chance to start thinking of solutions? Like alcohol and drugs, TV can be enormously destructive to personal relationships. Look at our society. Look’ at our crime rate—the beatings, robberies and killings, sometimes for only a few pennies! You do not need to be a psychiatrist to know that TV has played an important role in the increase of violent crimes in our country. - _ Many people will disagree with what I have written and point out that TV is a wonderful tool for education and does a superb job of. reporting the ‘news, and. they have a point. But the overwhelming percentage of TV hours are devoted to trivia and just plain garbage which includes smut, violence and offensive . commercials, I. aman ordinary, average housewife, a mother and a | grandmother. I have discussed this problem with relatives and “frlénds. My family is not the only one that is suffering, It's very difficult’ to tise the TV. wisely when the man of the house is'the biggest offender. How can you get your children away from the set when their father can find nothing better to do? It seems as if 1 have no control over my own environment because TV comes before everything. T implore those who share my problem to offer a solution. —Mrs. U.S.A, . pDear Mrs. Thank you for a perentrs letter. I'll Print the best jresponse, Karnie’s Ladies Wear . Ra - $50 GET CERTIFICATE: : For the winner of.qur dra durin BONANZA DAYS!. . Entering your name also makes you eligible for a grand prize of $308 ‘ RED-HOT DOOR OPENERS! Today: G Gatiuine Leather. Fant ‘oats jess $75 Store 20% saturday Squall ‘tackcais Casual int Coats, Maternit eveecee call fess 50% 2 for the price of 14 “KARNIE'S Ladies Wear 33° Maple ~ 365-7961 children, they ‘sit in front. of the boob tube escaping the . How many marriages are on the skids because elther husband’ The spinoff racket _ Blueberry: Creek Irrigation District ANNUAL MEETING Oe ‘Election ‘of Trustees e Presentation of Reports Thursday, March 31, 1977 “7: p.m, at ie Blueberry Creek Elementary School ——What's going on at THURSDAY, March 24'to WEDNESDAY, March 0. ! ‘e Phoné 265-2316 for this week's’ Dial-a-Tape subj ‘Y SATURDAY, March 26 and SUNDAY, March’ 27 ‘tes Selkirk College Hosts a Logger Spats Gossnetision q ; its tly constructed arena. at 10 a.m. the official opening of the arena (100 yd. from College, 40°" below the road). Bob Garnett from Revelstoke is the “master judge. Come out and enjoy this unique sport, | SUNDAY, March 27 o Selkirk College Film Festival presents: “Sundays and irected..by’ Serge Sree at the March 29. @ Tuesday Night at the Movies—Documentary Series featuring French . Underwater. Photography, the works of the brilliant Jean Painleve and others. Room -°K10, (Castlegar campus),"at 8 p.m. Msi Fo Ma re Informatio “Contact © SELKIRK COLLEGE” 365-7292 (Local; 283) Bill ae ONE of the ‘great rackets these days is the television series “‘spinoff."” When a TV producer has a popular show, and one of the secondary , characters is ‘even mildly amusing, first thing you know that character has a show of his or her own. ‘| This proliferates until you have spinoffs of spinoffs! Norman Lear was the first TV producers. to realize that people tike watching bigotry “and bathroom’ jokes even more than they like watching violence. Thus was born Allin the Family, one of the great *money-makers of all time.in TV lan : From this. was spun off Maude. The bigotry became phoney liberalism and the bathroom jokes became bed- room jokes, but it was. the same ‘slick: formula, and it worked, It was only a step from the slick to the sick, and brother Lear came up with Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, which, white not quite a spin- aff, is of the genre. Its favorite. refrain is’ “Oh, Gawd. Oh, -my . Gawd.” ExceJlent fare for the morbid , of diseased mind. : aa Another:... good original "Show, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, , spun, or spawned Phyllis and» Rhoda. There's nothing wrong with suppose, in a free e. system, and no-" body forces you to watch the garbage. But there is only so. much that the stomach will take be- fore it will spew. .. However, perhaps. I'm tushing my fences. bit. I'ma realist. If everybody else is getting into the spinoff busi: hess, maybe } should jump on the bandwaggon. There's “money in it, and’ besides, it might be one way of. putting, an.end to it. My record is : perfect... Just after the-war, | met an old buddy who'd become:a broker. He was investing in. gold stocks and hauling in ae loot. Gave. me a hot tip. 1 > plunged, with. some of.’the :,back pay I'd built up while in prison camp. Met the guy six months later. He'd lost’ his . home and his boat and was * selling ‘farm: machinery. |1 owned 300 shares of muskeg in Northern Ontario. © - After that I. stayed away from the market until mutuals were the thing. They were .Showing tremendous growth and potential. Once bitten, I hesitated, but’ then dived in with. my . $200, ‘savings. It seems I arrived just after the - mutuals had nibbled some of that biscuit Alice did so she could go through the rabbit hole, or whatever. daughter special Last November, in one last desperate effort to enjoy a luxurious ‘old ‘age, 1 bought wo ‘$100 Canada Savings Bonds. Two weeks later there was an.election in Quebec, and now we don’t even know whether there'll always be a Canada. i z «In January of this year, | bought a second-hand Ford. A week later I read in’ the paper: that the Ford Motor Company was making pay- ments for extraordinary: rust to owners of Fords in. my vintage. ‘Then I read the small print. The ‘payments had ended on Dec. 30, 1976. My *. ford has rust. . So, with a track record like that, maybe I can administer the kiss of death tothe spinoff business. Thought I'd start by producing ‘: some spinoffs. of. 3 my column. - : There’s'‘no Problem about ‘talent. My family is loaded with writers. Both my son and in pathos. ey: can: write) letters; so pathetic thit you are weeping allover the page and writing a cheque at ihe same time. ._ My. wife can. knock out.a grocery list as long as , your: at without ev spping he pen. ‘she. is: ti only talented’ as a writer. | She’san ing and out- BUT WE TRY TO GIVE MORE FOR YOUR FOOD DOLLAR! BE SURE TO ENTER THE MARCH 26 $50.00 FOOD —e DRAW ROUND STEAK RUMP ROASTS PORK STEA a 1, 39 BONELESS. GRAIN FED MATURE GRADE _A.71,59 DELICIOUS. “\GOVERN. APPROVED ee BABY BEEF LIVER. | CUBE STEAK | ‘QUICK FRY. Soticnon: oe Bul 99 BACON EMPIRE TOMATO IUICE LIBBYS 48 02. beeints ch MACKEREL | HEINZ STRAINED.. BABY FOODS a ‘KETCHUP. HEINZ 110Z. BOTTLE ...... FRENCH BREAD FROM THE IN- Dene Bge EELS STORE BAKE SHOP HOT BREAD WHITE ORBROWN.... W SNACK-N-CAKE BETTY CROCKER:...... “ance TY "INSTANT COFFEE Nescafe 6 oz. Jor o NESTLES PUDDINGS 1502. tins feesree COFFEE :CHASE-N-SANBORNE. a $9.79: CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP 59° STUART HOUSE. PKG. OF 4ENVELOPES..... YORK ORANGE « or PINK GRAPEFRUIT JUICE = 59° spoken critic, as well; She can tip up the punctuation and purpose, the style’and sub- stance of-one Of my columns with both hands tied behind her back. And there'll be no -diffi- culty. about _ content. My daughter is expert : Women's Lib, music, and _ mooching. My sonis fluent in English, French, Spanish, the Indian dialect of the natives of Para- guay, and mooching. » And the old: lady is an ex- pert. on everything, - and . admits it. She. has’: been bottling * up “this veritable fountain of knowledge for decades, except during break- fast, before and after dinner, and all weekend. * : In two’ or’ three’ years, I + might even get the grandboys into it. At the moment, they are: busily’ stuffing - their memory banks. As soon as they can write, you may’ ex- pect some sizzling stuff: Five. Years as a» Misunderstood Child; Daycare Centre .De-.. pression: the Insire Story on Sadistic Social Workers Who Make You Give Back a Toy You've Ripped Off From Some Other Kid. If my column ’ spinoffs don’t ‘put an end to: the “spinoff nonsense in about 30 days, I'll cat: every paper:in «+ which this one appears, with or without wetchup AAR ais (FLVUN THA AREO 27 02. TIN: : : ; Ave : 89° AYLMER TOMATO OR VEG. .. ‘SANI FLUSH | 3402... SOS Ie BEA SO AGHA cohen rn ¢ RAISI NS... SULTANA { Am $2, 29 WINDOW CLEANER EASY OFF 2002.7. - 00-0 see ee PREPARED. MUSTARD ‘HEINZ 16 OZ. 2.5000, KITCHEN CATCHERS. TDw 59 GLAD GARBAGE BAGS. PKG. OF .. * CAKE MIXES “MOIST-N-EASY DUNCAN HINES ..-..... CAT CHOW conins Ke +] 15 CREST TOOTHPASTE 100 ML. Al. 19 {DOG ow PURINA ... TS ka eosen SURF KING SIZE LAUNDRY DETERGENT . CELERY CRISP TENDER... ~- FRESH. PRODUCE . tb 25 STRAWBERRIES - . Bring Your” Family, Together Merriman Music Castlegar ‘CABBAGE ONION SETS BULK’... E MARCH 24, 25 & 26. KINNAIRD CENTRAL FOOD. MART LTD. - WITH IN-STORE BAKE SHOP. - __ THURS. AND FRIDAY. 9. A.M: TO 9 PLM.