CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, March 24, 1977 Rexall's Original 1¢ Sale Is back — and that means big savings for you. Savings you can't afford to miss. Save on Rexall’s own top-quality health and beauty aids. Just buy any one of Rexail’s special 1c Sale Items at our already low regular price, and you'll get a second of the same item for only Super Plenamins 36's Buy 1 at the regular price © and get the second for only -. All These Items Are in the 1° Sale! a Triple Action Anti-Cough Plus Vitamin Skin OW : _ Announcing a New Treasure Room | Arrival Noritake Fine China For generations a world leader in fine tableware featuring: Savannah, Desert Flowers, joe, Golden Dawn, Raleigh, Essence, All Na- turel and Bright Side. “PLUS Uy foreele - Hershey's Old Fashioned Chunk Chocolate all-less:. 10% Hershey’ ‘s INSTANT CHOCOLATE io Sb Bonus Buys Save even more onour specially-marked Bonus Items, like the name brand products 1.30 Sugg. retail ee 1.69 Secret Deodorant 150 ml. rat ly SIZO ..scsscsseceseneee 1 39 2.5 oz. Roll-On ..... 48c foes Sic BE enmennen BOC ae 95c fos oy, Envelopes 2 -49 ee .08 Rett game we 60c e Quick Bands 100’s Reg. 2.79 te Fee TT. eeeneeameinned «OO. 8.75 sia retail ual 39 1.29 tm “Suga. retal a ren 1.59 Sugg. retail price 1.19 Winder e Sugg. retall price 68¢ Kleenex Tissues 200's .. Sugg. retall price 1.09 Pe nian OOC BoE SOe unineme 150 ost our Note Pade .39c Best guy tater Pads TC Bd Pant Hose e9-9 BC sesssesearsesseasconsrsarsessceses Hot Water Bottles 2-yr. Reg. 3.99 Heatin Reg. 1 Pad 50 vesrceseesscernecreeenees one Quik Bands 60's Reg. 71.90 In the Heart of Castleaird Plaza Castlegar Rebels Perform Victory Skate Prior to Tuesday Evening’ Gi Against th Gg New ervice Previewed. A-year of continued: growth was reported to mem- bers attending Thursday’s an- nual meeting of the Castlegar Savings Credit Union, Assets increased by 22 per cent with a growth of $1.7 million. This reflects. the in- crease of loans to members by 24 per cent. Funds handled by the staff doubled from $42 million in 1976 to $109 millioh during the past year. A substantial increase is recorded in the credit union's membership which grew from 5,081 to 5,556. Planned implenientation of “on line” computer service, which is scheduled to be fully “on line” during 1978, is being introduced for even greater efficiency for counter services. Members were .told the directors are giving close study toth Assets Increased by 22 Per Cent the spring and its fifth Annual New Car Show last fall. The Castlegar Savings Credit Union also made its first investment, in the amount of $9,000, in share purchase of another credit union, the Elk Valley Credit. Union ~ which ‘serves members in the Spar- wood, Elkford and Fernie area. Election: of four directors took place. These are Karl Swanson, Russell Leamy, Dan Wack and Duane Davis,’ the latter two being new to the rd. “Retirement of directors Albert Richards and Mickey Padowinikoff ‘were acknowl edged. Padowinikoff has three years service with the Castle- gar‘ Savings Credit’ Union but also served with the ‘Slocan Credit Union prior. ‘ Richafds has numerous years of serVice and is the bearer of membér- ship book No. 7. Better Phone Connection | For Castlegar and Nelson — Local and long distance telephone services will be im- proved this year through a series of capital construction projects planned for the Castle- gar area by the B.C. Telephone Company.- District Customer Service Manager Norm Bowman said three major projects, all of the Credit Union’s property located next to the Castlegar office, which: they consider ;, prime,.commercial real., estate which continues to Ineqease in value.” <*. Looking aD the future, the directors are seriously studying the possible participa- tion of Castlegar Savings in - implementation of the Elec; tronic Funds Transfer System. A subsidary to the Castle- gar Savings Credit Union is Castlegar Savings Housing Ltd. At year end the officers of this company, which consists of four of the directors and the general manager, were actively negotiating the purchase of a prime residential property to be developed into a subdivision of single family dwelling. The Castlegar Savings Credit Union continues in its activities of community affairs. Ascholarship program was carried out ‘at Stanley Hum- phries and Selkirk College and expanded in 1976 to include & further scholarship at Mount Sentinel Secondary School at: South Slocan and an “award of ° merit” at W. E. Graham School at Slocan City. The Credit Union also sponsored its fourth Annual *. Boat, Bike and Trailer Show in FIRST AID TIP FROSTBITE @ A frostbitten area becomes waxy; white and numb @ Warm the area gradually with body heat ® Do not rub the area @ If your face or ear is ” affected, cover it with a gloved hand a until: normal colour. and feeling || sfaturn @ For frozen fingers or toes, | femove tight boots or gloves ® Where blisters occur, cover them lightly with a'sterile dressing and bandage carefully’ @ Blisters should not be broken @ If frostbite is severe seck immediate medical attention. Physiotherapist or combined dik required ‘for 60-bed acu! care accredited Hospliae 4 hours Monday - Friday. Salary In accordance with agreement, Apply: Phsio. i/c, Castle- gr &. District _ Hospital, astlegar, B.C. gi to bring about ser- community this year, and BC. Tel would also carry out a project to provide more long distance circuits linking Nelson and Castlegar. : Bowman said more than $28 million will be invested by B.C. Tel for ‘capital works within the company’s interior division of operations, which covers an area from Bella Coola to the Alberta border and centered in Kamloops. ©: ..:.!> He noted that Castlegar had nearly 5,200 telephones in service at the end of last. ys and that B.C. Tel expected: install about'200 more duri 1977 to bring to more ‘ 5,400 the number of telephot in service here before the e| of this year. S vice impr ) are planned or underway in Castle- inAGTT. Re 4 “The worksscheduled for . is area is part. of B.G,.Tel’s- + $280 million capita! construc:-* tion: program,” Bowman: said. “This includes hundreds of con- struction projects aimed at bringing better services to ali parts ‘of the Company's oper- ating area.” - The program covers. all capital construction ranging from new buildings or additions to central office switching equipment and outdoor tele- phone cables both aerial and “Here in Castlegar, B.C. Tel crews will install a major * underground. addition of central office switch- ing equipment required to route and process local and long: distance calls,” he said, He said a ‘series of. cable placing projects would provide more telephone lines within the aa cs . Effective today we are located at 326 - Ist Ave. North Adjoining the Columbia Apts. between , Maddocks Shoes and the ciquor Store “Look for Our Sign’ We Need Your Head to Run Our Business ED LEWIS: ROSSLAND. CREDIT - 35th ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING” & will be held < at 7:30, pm, MACLEAN SCHOOL ae _{Comer of Ist Ave. and Monte. Christo) Copies of the 1978 Annual! Financi Union, 2086 Washington St. during _ Annual’ General meeting. ja) Report are available at the Ri : normal office hours and will be we rH Dance and Social to follow in the Rossland Secondary school cuditoium : Members only who attend the: meeting no: charge: All others.$5 per:person REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE. Note: Use Queen St.. Entrance ROSSLAND CREDIT TNION 362-7393 : West Kootenay Canadian Ownors and Pilots Association, Flight No, 22, is 100 per cent behind the installing of any VOR (very’ high frequency omnidirectional radio range) in ” this area, A letter to this effect has been sent to Kootenay Wott MP., Bob « Brisco ‘light 22 West Kootenay COPA Private Pilots Back VOR Installation Association members ex: pressed the need for this aid because of its simplicity and § safety in navigation, i Provincial Emergency Pro- gram zone chief Dr. John Hall. # addressed the flight to explain the setting up of search and rescue and the procedure re- meeting of the association Feld on Wednesday of last week in the Castlegar Airport Terminal juilding. Harry Wins Battle for 1937 Bottle J.B. Todd has died, so Harry Fayonsky of Walhalla, S.C, gets to drink a bottle of 1987 California Tokay wine. The bottle had been wait- ing until there was only one survivor of Walhalla’s “last man club"—a -group of 18 First. __World War veterans organized in 1937 by the late Sam Pitch- — ford, 2 Now Todd, who had been thesonly other survivor, has died at the age of 86. Fayonsky, 79, is planning «to toast past members of the (club with the vintage wine. Fayonsky's grandson, Jeff Grant, ‘said his grandfather jqvisited Todd before he died. nyoo, “He. was glad to see him before he - passed. on,” Grant id, “They kept in touch pretty " through the years. Pitchford, who bought the wine, began the club by choos- ing another member, who in turn chose a friend to join the group. And so it went, until the 18th was chosen. Members paid 13-cent dues" and met for years on the 18th of each month. When the 13th fell on & Sunday, they al! went to church together. Names drawn feom a hat: determined which * wehurch they attended. quired in authorized searches, Present was the pilot of the four passenger Cessna 172 which crashed March 11 out of Nakusp after being caught ina mountain wave, Asked if he would recom- mend any new procedure other than that which resulted in the rescue of himself and his two passengers, pilot Albert Evers- field replied, “No, they got us out before dark”. All .three had only light clothing and footwear. Tho feeling had been expressed they could not have made it through the night. There were no serious in- juries. The pilot managed to lift the nose of the aircraft and_ mush it into the trees. The greatest aid to locating the crash had been the aircraft's emergency locator transmitter, ~ Claims That ‘Roots’ Caused His Rampage Roots, the televised eple - inspired by a black man's search for his ancestry, ted ‘to Jesse Coulter's rampage, says a i lawyer for the 42-year-old man accused of taking eight hostages in Cincinnati in an al- tempt to reunite his family. “This man sat on this for 20 years, and the dynamite was ey Roots,” said lawyer Bugene Smith, * During the siege that began at the Cutherine Basth home for unwed mothers, Coul- ®) ler demanded the relurn of a son born at the home 20 years earlier. The child had been pul up for adoption. . Smith said his client, who is black, had been frustrated over the loss for some time. “Jesse told. me when he fy saw Chicken George (a charac: ter in Roots) get his own family back together, he couldn't help himself,” Smith said. "He had to come back (o Cincinnati and get the kid.” E ‘As it turned oul, the effort was in vain. The siege ended when an undercover Cincinnali detective fooled Coulter and his former wife Rita Gibran into Following his p Hall announced the appoint: ments of Ron. Gemmill of Castlegar, Mike Horswill of Nelson and Reg Exner of Trail as area air coordinators in their respective cities. Flight No. 22 elected its directors for the year from which a captain, co-captain and navigator,are yet to be-named. Newly appointed directors are Jim Parrot, Rick Greene, Jean Dunlop, Bob Dale- Johnson, Denny Hughes, Harold Swartz and Geoff Lloyd. A.further two directors from Nelson and one from Grand Forks are yet to be named. Flight members have of- fered their assistance to the ‘Trail Flying Club when it holds a fly-in June 9, 4 and 5. aeipating ey rt) vegans kend Boys’ & Men’s Wear — 2 $5 Gift Certificates wellery — $175 Accutron Wate Drug — Coffee Maker, News — 0 a tow wal Accomm: “$150,000 Pilot and Two Passengers were Rescued from this Crash ~Adrian Dupuis Photo & Electric Can-Opener jodation In'Van. — Weel mmodation at Mayfair Hotel Fabrics — $20 rat Certificate Ic — Calculator roads Printin: Brit Cal calcu oe 01 Certificate - Tire Spinning Can be Dangerous. Spinning tires at high speeds. on ice, snow or mud is not only an ineffective way to free a stuck vehicle but it could be one of the most dangerous. The tires could explode, caus- ing bodily injury and in most cases inflicting considerable damuge to the vehicle. In all cases, these explo- sions are on a drive wheel. The tremendous centrifu- gal force produced by a rapidly spinning wheel may cause the components of the tire to separate, resulting in a drama- tic release of air. Tires would have to be rotating at revolutions equival- ent to 200 miles per hour for this to happen, a situation that could occur when one wheel on the driven axle of the vehicle is spinning freely on ice, snow or mud, while the other is not moving. Acar can be freed from ice or mud most effectively by-a ~ gentle backward-forward rock- ing. by a: shovelful of sand S$! Helen’s Flower Shop — Karnie's Ladies Klothes Kioset — ‘Tha Book SI under the slipping tire, or by a push from another person. These methods are much more likely to work than spinning the tires at high speeds. aun Rapid spinning of a tire might loosen a trapped rock or stone from the tread of the tire, hurling it in the direction of a passer-by or a person aiding the, driver, causing serious injury or death. - Therefore, take it easy— for the sake of your tires, your vehicle and other people. TOMORROW & SATURDAY The Following Merchants are Offering Prizes! Enter Your Name in the D hoes :—- $50 Gift Certificate An naan emant ¢ ot 1 Doz. Roses — $50 G wes Gift Certitlca Kootenay Buliders — Hair Curler. zs ‘Digital Thermometer Mc js Store —: Barbeque Mitchell Supply = Battery-Operated Radio op — “'Botween Friend Nutri-Health — 5-Cup Yogurt-Maker, .. Pete’s Radio & TV. — i n'a-Si mi Dor S) est’s Dept. Store Realized By Poster Queen Not since Marilyn Monroe, has America had such a wild, mad crush on a Starlet as they do for, Farrah Fawcett-Majors ‘and this love has made her the biggest selling poster queen of all times. Farrah is believed to have earned more than $160,000 in royalties so far from her pin-up poster. She has sold nearly three million posters, beating out pinup superstars such as the Fonz, John Travolta, Ra- quel Welch, Elton John—and even her own husband, : Six Million Dollar Man, Lee Majors. raw Boxes n Tek r Stores! plow, = $20 Glit Certificate P&G aullders — 12-pes. G iris — Tennis-Ri uet eatringng late Fashions — $50 a Rergue & Travel ven = Secorator Wall Clock *); CASTLEGAR NEWS, ‘Thursday, March 24, 1977 Mojor Appfionce Beara Repairs -e Refrigeration ¢ Dishwashers thinking he was their long-lost son and they surrendered, Coulter and Mrs, Gibran were arraigned in criminal court and ‘their cases were continued. Bail was set at $1 million each, The television program was based on a‘book in which author Alex Haley traced the history of his family from Africa through the days of slavery in the southern United States. Smith said, after the hear- ing, that the Utica, Mich., man saw similarities between his life and the serial. “He had seen how families were split up in slavery, and he -was bitter about his own family being split up,” Smith said. ¢ Lawnmower Repairs 25 Yoars Experience All Work Guaranteed Fully Qualified Valley Service 359-7542 Crescent Valley We Service ANYWHERE NOTICE As of April 1, 1977, East Robson Store will no longer take payments for - ‘COMMUNITY VIDEO LTD. 25th SILVER ANNIVERSARY ANNUALS: 1976 S.H.S.S. . These collectors’ items ore’in imited supply, so call Stanley Humphries now at 365-7735 ond order yours today for immediate delivery ‘The following are members of The Costleger Downtown Businésemen’ Ss. Association reational Sales, Dr. Don Ellis, Frama, res 's Beauty Salon, Furniture Vita je, creep a Electric, John Haacl omer: sn ren Hel Lite s Resterant es fee Woeahee’ Galecirs Hockey, Roy, A. bow Cleaners, Anderson has es ane 9: Wei Y § Printin, Shoes, HER we a & Wheel All mer Builders, Kootenay Savin Central Rentals, Ei johnson & sn “clothes Klose ra he, Etalen’s nie's Ladi f Sandolpe Motel; Simpsor pt. Store & Travel Ay Really, Stedman's, ‘Super De; ney, Ure Auto Paris & The Bottle Neck, |. Moroso, Northwest’ Mobile Homes, =) juilders, We Are Waiting. For. You!