ae YOICGs«“<- August 23, 1989 August 23, 1989 VOICE.“ c3 FINAL LIQUIDATION NOTICE Three Days Only! THURSDAY AUGUST 24 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. ing to’ purchase more receive no addi FRIDAY SATURDAY AUGUST 25] | AUGUST 26 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Maloney Pontiac Buick GMC Ltd. has engaged L. A. Gall & Associates, saies specialists, to conduct a final inventory liquidation sale . . . because 5 Maloney Pontiac Buick GMC Ltd has been sold! This sale did not include all assets and as a result we have remaining a fine selection of used vehicles available now for immediate delivery as well as various sundry inventory items. Due to the unusually LOW prices we have been requested not to advertise prices in the local newspapers, radio or T.V. as we would surely disrupt the retail prices of all other area dealers. Every windshield will be clearly marked with our special liquida- tion sale price so that you can immediately see your savings. Our prices are firm and those wish- than one vehicle will ional consideration. IMMED- IATE DELIVERY No one will be admitted Before Sales Times ~ No Phone Calls Please! ~ All Cars will be Clearly Marked NO CASH? allowance. available. ISS TH TRADE-INS: Authorized appraisers will be on duty to give you an immediate appraisal on your present vehicle at highest possible TERMS: On the spot Bank financing for immediate delivery will be FINAL REMINDERS: Sale prices apply to Sale Cars only. Our Sales Manager will not authorizes. these SPECIAL PRICES on any car not in stock. Ordered units will not be sold at these prices. SALE! It may be your last chance to out deal the Kootenay’s Biggest Dealer . . . Cifarelli continued from page C1 the earth, observing the small things that are often un- noticed my motorists. Out on Highway 6 in the Slocan Valley, Cifarellj must have startled many drivers: a small, thin man with grey, curly hair and a 14-kilogram pack of supplies on his back, crawling along as the cars and trucks whipped by at 90 kilometres an hour. **I think about turtles every day that I'm out here,’’ he said during a break north of Winlaw. ‘‘! feel like a turtle,"” He also thought about what he wanted to accom: plish with his crawl. People need to consider what is happening to the natural world, Cifarelli said. ‘We have to make changes and if everyone did something environmentally con- scious — even just for him- or herself — it would make a difference, he says. **Now is the time — we don’t have any more time.” He kept his action small and simple, he said, because people are more willing to listen to an ordinary person who is doing something extraordinary. “My walk is just a simple message from a humble But his choice of action was hard on his body as he forced muscles that have not been used this way since in- fancy to travel up to 10 kilometres per day. He was often in pain as he set up his tent for the night, he said, and his knees felt *‘red hot’’ after a few hours of crawling. , Cifarelli said his years of practising yoga and Chinese exercises helped him adjust his body to a new way of moving, He wore padding and thick rubber kneepads, such as carpenters wear when working on flooring, and double gloves — a soft, inner pair anda tougher, thicker outer pair. He went through a pair of gloves per day, he said. Cifarelli eased the pain in his wrists by walking on his palms, knuckles and finger tips in turn, he said, but Saturday he said his hands were still numb and his fingers weak after travelling as far as 10 kilometres per day The other problem was traffic. Cifarelli said he walked around the most dangerous curves and the RC- MP made him walk the single-lane area over the Cape Horn Bluffs. The police monitored his progress, he ad- ded. The support of his wife, Denyse, and his friends in Silverton helped keep him going, Cifarelli said. They brought him food and a local lumberyard sponsored him, keeping him supplied with kneepads and gloves, he said Cifarelli had no strict timetable for himself and that was probably good considering the amount of time he was willing to spend talking to those he met about his walk and his beliefs. “| don’t think any particular person is at fault for what is happening to the environment,” Cifarelli said. “Weare all at fault “If there is a demand (for forest products) there will always be a supply,”” he reasoned. “If we stop using things like disposable chopsticks (we will) stop the demand and then there won't bea need for a supply “I’m not here to stop people (loggers) from working,”’ he continued. *‘But there has to be more of a balance and harmony with nature.”" The creases in the tan skin around his eyes d and he apol d for bec: as he illustrated his point by reading a passage frdém Touch the Earth. The book, a gift from a friend, uses native people’s own words to explain their respect for and connection with the natural world. He feels a connection with the Indian way of life, he said quietly, and read from his book each night before going to sleep. Gifarelli has lived in Silverton for about six months and said he has owned property there for about 2 TOUGH ON THE KNEES... thick pads protected Nick Cifarelli’s knees during his recent crawl to Nelson. — casnews pnotody Claudette Sandecki years. Such natural surroundings are relatively new to him, however Cifarelli was born, grew up and lived most of his life on Staten Island, right next door to one of the most populated, polluted cities in the world — New York. His father and uncle were barbers and although Cifarelli vowed he would never cut hair for a living, he and his three brothers followed their father into the family business. Cifarelli openeda shop of his own In his 40s he moved to California and ‘‘received my "about the »hesaid Then a few years ago, he travelled up from Washington to B.C. and found the Slocan Valley, “This place just hit me,”” he said, his distinctive ac cent betraying his origins as he looked around at the stands of timber and dark-blue mountains. Today, Cifarelli said he ‘‘feels like a Canadian’’ and he and his wife of five years, who is Canadian, plan to “‘homestead”’ on their property and perhaps cultivate the wild blueberries growing there. Cifarelli dreams of someday being self-supporting by selling the fruit to the valley markets. He said he wants to ‘‘keep the spark’’ of what he is doing alive after he reached Nelson and he would like to see each person walk a mile on his or her hands and knees for the environment Cifarelli said Saturday he is waiting for environ mental groups to ask for his help in setting up such a campaign but he isn’t planning to limit his own in volvement in the issues. He will be getting more involved with what is hap- pening in his own community, he said, which is where any action on our destructive behavior toward the natural world must begin for anyone. NEW AND USED CAR DISTRIBUTION CENTRE FOR ELEGANCE CONSIDER PURCHASING 1989 DYNASTY L.E. 1989 NEW YORKER Ministry seeks help Fish and wildlife violators, polluters and those that litter the countryside cost everyone a lot of money and the public can help bring these criminals before the FOR ECONOMY CONSIDER PURCHASING > <, says. In addition, rewards up to 2288 Columbia Street PAU L S PLACE LTD $2,000 are offered by the National Bag 910 Ltd , s Audubon Society to those people Rossland, B.C. VOG 1Y0 WANETA JUNCTION, TRAIL Registrar of Voters NELSON TOYOTA LTD Ymir Road, Nelson 352-2235 N59 Ecp REMEMBER: Sale Conducted at Castlegar Mazda offering information leading to the Tel. 362-7324 arrest_and conviction of poachers Te . Solle killing rare and endangered species Tet: Conte (Eons) such as caribou (Selkirk herd) and grizzly bears. 368-829