Celebration Days at SAFEWAY . . . With ANTIPASTO HEINZ TOMATO Ketchup 909 ml. jug *1.68 SEA TRADER SOLID White Tuna 198 g. tin *1.69 TOWN HOUSE Tomato Sauce 13 ml. tin 3.89° . UNICO Sunflower Oil °4.99 TOWN HOUSE Tomato Paste 156 ml. tin 184 g. 2..79° | *1.29 TASTE TELLS Mushrooms Whole Button or Sliced, 10 fl. oz. tin 79° CLOVERLEAF CHUNK Light Tuna BICKS Pickled Onions 341 mi. jar *1.39 TOWN HOUSE LARGE Ripe Olives itted. 14 fl. oz. tin 89° B.C. GROWN SILVER Skin Onions 89° - RECIPE Boil cauliflower 3 minutes. Drain and set aside, peel p 9 cut bers. in slices and boil green beens until tender, set all these vegetables aside. In a large canning kettle, fry sliced mushrooms in the oil, add ketchup, cut up green and red peppers, simmer for 10 to 15 minutes. Add vinegar, cook 10 minutes longer. Add all the vegetables, olives and remaining ingredients (separate an- choves and break up tuna), si for her 12 mi Put into sterilized pint sealers and steam for 15 minutes. THIS RECIPE WILL MAKE APPROXIMATELY 20 PINTS 2 Ibs. cucumbers or 2 Ibs. red peppers (2—24 oz. tins dill pickles) 5—16 oz. tins ripe olives 2 Ibs. pickling onions or 5—8 oz. tins tuna fish (8—16 oz. jars pickling onions) 5—11 oz. bottles ketchup 3 Ibs. cauliflower 5—16 oz. pak stuffed olives 3 Ibs. mushrooms or 2—13 oz. large tins anchovies (5—10 oz. tins mushrooms) % cup olive oil 2 Ibs. green peppers % cup vinegar \N AN Yi \ CALIFORNIA GROWN Green Peppers ».49° B.C. OR CALIFORNIA GROWN NO. 2 GRADE Cauliflower 19S 4 Prices effective Aug. 10 to 15, only in your friendly Castlegar Safeway Store. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Sales in retail quantities only. ; Everything you want from a store and a little bit more CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED CASTLEGAR NEWS, August 9, 1981 Crawford leading VANCOUVER (CP) — There has been a chronic shortcoming in the secondary of the B.C. Lions over the years in the Canadian Foot- ball League — low intercep- tion totals. There are signs this is com- ing to an end, however, and the player who's showing the way is rookie Larry Crawford, who leads the CFL with five steals. Considering that Crawford has played only a handful of pro games for the 4-0 Lions, it has to be a surprise he’s at the front of a pack that in- cludes such established ball- hawks as Ed Jones of Edmon- ton Eskimos, Calgary Stam- peders’ Ray Odums and Dave Shaw of Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Crawford returned one of his two thefts in the season opener against Montreal 60 yards, the longest intercep- tion return so far this year. His fifth steal, late in last week's 52-29 win over Cal- gary, was run back for a touchdown. “I'm just trying to do my best,” the modest 21-year- old says. ‘There sure is a lot to learn. 2 “The bigger field up here is the toughest thing to adjust to.”” A native of Miami, Fla., Crawford started for three years at lowa State where he played in the tough Big Eight Conference against the likes of Oklahoma's Billy Sims and David Overstreet. He was all- conference his senior year as a comerback and capped his college career with three interceptions in the Blue- Gray Game. But when it came time for the National Football League draft, Cs 's talked to Rich and he said it was my decision, but he thought there was a opportunity for me in the CFL." It hasn't, of course, been all smooth sailing. Crawford has had his troubles on pass covereage and hes made the normal number of rookie mis- takes. Not the fastest defen- sive. back (that’s what re- portédly hurt his NFL draft hi }), he also has a some- ments apparently didn’t carry much weight. with the NFL scouts. He was by what awkward running style. The usual gait has earned him the “Ducky.” all 28 teams. “It was “Larry's biggest weakness is his ” said sure, but I guess not every- body can get picked,'’ said the 6-foot, 177-pounder. ‘‘At- lanta (Falcons) phoned me the morning of the draft and said they were going to take me.” Following the draft, Craw- ford did attract considerable attention from NFL teams who wanted him to sign as a free agent. But the Lions had been ‘showing a consistent in- terest and he decided to take their offer. ih “‘My agent, Joe Courrage, is also the agent for (B.C. defensive end) Richard Mur- ray,"’ said Ci “r head coach Vic Rapp. ‘He played well against. Montreal and not too badly against Ottawa. “*But he didn’t have a good * game in Toronto. And he really didn’t play well against Calgary despite the touch- down return. “He needs to improve his man-to-man coverage and his tackling sometimes is weak. But he breaks well on: the ball.” The Lions and Crawford, put their unbeaten record on the line today in Regina against the improved Saskat- chewan iders, 2-2. % e u i ‘Watch Your Money Grow With TERM DEPOSITS Paying Interest of up to ........ 19%% Kootenay Savings Credit Union 1016-4th St., Castlegar Ph. 365-3375 Roger Tremblay at Thunder Bay. Chicago Cubs. win exhibition game BLUE JAYS 9 METS 8 TORONTO (CP) - John Mayberry, who earlier had hit a two-run homer, deliver- eda run-scoring single.in. the. ninth inning Saturday to cap a three-run rally and give Toronto Blue Jays a 9-8 exhi- bition baseball victory over New York Mets before a sparse crowd of 4,671. The Mets took an 8-6 lead into the bottom of the ninth, but relief ace Neil Allen was unable to retire a batter. Alfredo Griffin led off with a single and scored on Lloyd Moseby’s triple. Otto Velez’s double drove in Moseby with the tying run and Mayberry followed with his game-winn- ing single. os The Mets opened the scor- ing in the first inning when Mookie Wilson walked, stole second, advanced to third on a sacrifice and scored on Lee Mazzilli’'s run-scoring single. New York added three runs in the second. John Stearns hit an infield single and scored on a double into the right-field corner by Hubie Brooks. Wilson drove in Brooks with a two-out double to left, stole third and scored on a single by Frank Taveras. Ellis Valentine, who hit his first homer ina Mets uniform Friday night in the Jays’ 7-3 vittory’ at Shea Stadium, - padded New York's lead to 6-0 with his home run to left after Kingman led off the third inning with a single. The Blue Jays scored four runs in the bottom of the third. Garth Iorg led off with a solo homer to left, Griffin’ singled, Velez hit a run- scoring double and Mayberry followed with his two-run homer. : Dave Kingman and Mike Cubbage hit solo homers for the mets in the fourth and fifth innings, respectively, while the Blue Jays’ other runs came on RBI singles by Griffin in the fourth and Moseby in the seventh. Mets pitcher Randy Jones injured his right ankle in the fifth inning when he stepped on the seam of the artificial turf. at the side of the pitcher's mound and was taken to a hospital for x-rays. CUBS 4 WHITE SOX 3 CHICAGO (AP) - Tim Blackwell raced home from second base with the winning’ run after an errant throw by shortstop Greg Pryor in the seventh inning, giving Chi- cago: Cubs a.4-3 exhibition baseball® victory Saturday over Chicago White'Sox. The Cubs took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first when Ivan DeJesus walked, ad- vanced to second on a wild pitch by White Sox starter Ross Baumgarten and scored on Bobby Bonds’s single. The Cubs got another run in the second on doubles by Mike Tyson and Jody Davis. The White Sox made it 2-1 in the sixth when - Mike Griffin hit Carlton Fisk on the wrist with a ptich and Lamar Johnson ripped a double to the wall’ in left- centre field. But Leon Dur- ham got the run back for the Cubs in the bottom of the sixth by homering off Dewey Robinson, the fourth of five White Sox pitchers. The White Sox tied the score 88 in the seventh. After.a one-out walk to Jim Morrison, Bill Almon hit his third single of the game and Mike Squres stroked a two- out double into the corner in right. Bill Caudill came on to Pitchers named CLEVELAND (AP) - Rookie sensation Fernando Valenzuela of Los Angeles Dodgers and veteran Jack Morris of Detroit Tigers were named Saturday as the starting pitchers for the 52nd all-star baseball game, de- layed nearly a month by the strike of major league play- ers. National League manager Dallas Green of Philadelphi: “When you start with Pete Rose, you're starting with the best,” said Green. Following Rose in the batting order will be: short- stop Dave Concepcion, of Cincinnati Reds; right fielder Dave Parker, Pittsburgh Pi- rates; third baseman Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia; - left fielder George Foster, Cin- cinnati; centre fielder Andre Dawson, J; catcher Yankees; -third baseman George Brfett, Kansas City; centre fielder Dave Winfield, New ‘York; left fielder Ken get. Toney Bernazard on a pop-up, ending the inning. ‘The Cubs got the winning run. in the seventh when “Gene Nelson and’ Henry Herrera, a) Bradenton pitcher :who was ‘| into’ ‘service’ for’ the Blackwell \beat out: a slow. -Y! ‘*spoller’ to short, ‘took’ second on a_ sacrifice by Jerry Morales and came home on Pryor's. wild throw on DeJesus's grounder. Caudill was the winner while Kevin Hickey was the loser. A crowd of 20,113, paying 35 each, turned out for the game, the bene- fitting the United Way. YANKEES 4 FARM CLUB 2 NEW YORK (AP) - Ron Guidry and four relief pit- chers combined on a six- hitter and Dave Winfield hit‘a home run to carry | New York Yankees to a 4-2 victory Saturday over their Bradenton, Fla., farm club ina final tune-up prior to the resumption of the major league baseball season. Guidry teamed with Rudy Mag, Rick Reuschel, pit- ¥ ABER ching hand, to hold the Bradenton team from the rookie Gulf Coast League to six singles while striking out 12. The Yankees, blanked 20 by the same team Friday ‘night,- stretched their post-strike string of scoreless innings to 12 before Winfield opened the fourth with a homer into the left-field seats off Paul Mitchell, a 30-year-old vet- eran of four major league seasons who is currently with the Yankees’ Col- umbus, Ohio, farm team in the International League. The Yankees added three runs in the sith inn- ing against Ed Olwine, who pitches for Greensboro of the Class A South Atlantic League, on singles by Lour Piniella, Bobby Murcer and . Graig Nettles, an error. and ‘a single by. Larry Mil- innings, Braden- © ton scored its runs.in the *: eighth: Tom Dodd walked, went to. second on a wild pitch and’ scored when Nelson; knocked ‘down George Gohde's smash with his bare hand and then threw wildly past first. s pace The Stramilano 22-kilo- metre run. around Milan, Italy, attracted over 50,000 — runners on April 16, 1978. In May 1971, the “Ramblin’ Raft: Race” on the Chatta- hoochee River at Atlanta, Georgia,. attracted 87, 683 competitors on 8,304 rafts. people are actively involved in 220,000 physical culture and sports groups in the US.S.R. Summer games open | By Ian MacLaine THUNDER BAY, ONT. (CP) — The 1981 Canada Summer Games, a proving' ground for Canada’s future top athletes, is also testing the ability of organizers to the d. Orioles; right fielder Reggie Jackson, New York; catcher Carlton Fisk, Chicago White Sox; shortstop Bucky Dent, New York, and Morris. Green said he looked for- ward to his first all-star Phillies and his American League counterpart, Jim Frey of Kansas City Royals, announced their starting pit- chers and opening lineups for tonight's game as the base- ball community gathered for a resumption of the season. Valenzuela and Morris had each won nine games before June 12, when the player= walked out in a dispute with management over free-agent compensation. Green said he would open with Phillies first baseman Pete Rose leading off. Rose tied Stan Musial’s National League career recopd-6f 3,620 hits the day befere the strike began. He wffl be shooting for the tecord when the regular season resumes Men- day night. Gary Carter, Montreal; se- cond baseman Davey Lopes, Los Angeles, and Valenzuela. CAREW LEADING OFF + Frey said the Al batting lineup would be: first base- man Rod Carew, California Angels; second basemand Willie Randolph, New York “For a guy who doesn't want to manage, a lot has happened in one year,” he said. “This is special. “It almost got away from me but we made it.” Green said. choosing his 30-man squad was difficult. “Ive made some mistakes but I back off to no one on this club,” ‘he said. “It’s a good one and I'm proud to be a part of it.” z ‘Frey said..the American League team "could be a 45-man roster as far as I'm concerned.” It was u numbers game. T've got a dining-room table full of statistics. I picked the team based on the perfor- mances in the first few months and I tried to do the best I could.” The fourth Summer Games are being held in Thunder Bay today through Aug. 22. The fourth Summer Games The fourth Summer Games are being held in Thunder Bay today through Aug. 22 with all the pomp and cer- emony of an Olympic Games. “Everything was going along smoothly, too smoothly a lot of people thought,’’ Debby Krupa, public rela- tions administrato for the Jeux Canada Games ’81, said during the countdown to op- ening ceremonies today . at Fort Williams Stadium. “We were just so far ahead of schedule with all our proj-- ects. It was just like sitting back and saying to ourselves, ‘Look, everything ‘is going swell.’ We couldn’t believe our good fortune.”’ Then came the crunch. “The CBC decided to strike, then ther was a city transit strike, them the mail strike. Can you imagine the thousands of dollars car- marked for Games tickets tied up in the mails?’’ Loss of national teleaision exposure has been a major setback for organizers. Cov- erage now will consist of day-old coverage of 15 to 30 minutes daily, plus wrapups of between 30 minutes and one hour on the Sports Week- each ing facilities, including the stadium where the opening and closing ceremonies wilt be held and where about 7,500 temporary seats have been added — bringing cap- acity to 10,000 seats — as well as an all-weather track. The capital costs for new an d Games facilities end and Sunday — tape culled from the local CBC station. The possibility of a pro- longed strike by the city- owned transit system sent Games organizaers scurry- ing. They set up possible transportation through two private firms. But the strike ended Thursday — the same day it started — after workers accepted. the ’ city’s latest contract offer. The mail strike forced Games organizers to arrange out-of-town ticket sales with the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce as an agent. Confederation College will become a village for about 3,000 competitors and coach- es from the 10 provinces and two territories. However, the showpiece. is a $7-million facility. housing an Olympic- size pool, racketball courts, health spas and a fieldhouse. STADI GED Another $2.5 million was earmarked to improve exist- were derived from several sources. The city, provincial and federal governments shared equally in $4.5 mil- lion, there was a $3-million Wintario grant and Friends of the Games added another $2 million. The estimated $3 million it is costing to hold the Games, in addition to the capital costs, is being borne primar- ily by the federal govern- ment. . The Yukon. will have the smallest contingent — one — middle-distance runner Mar- ion Cragi. Meg McCall, ministe rof recreation for the Yukon, said the territory was not sending an actual team because it was unable to compete at the same level as the provinces. Money that had been al- lotted to send Yukon athletes to the Summer Games would be funnelled into training programs for future summer competitions, she said. AA FNS PE AE ON ETI ~pgym-et' Kinmaitd Junior:S ondary School (KJSS). A reg istration ‘hour has: been © Taking a walk across Canada From Prince Rupert to Syd- ney, N.S. and walking for the he wears on his back and a jacket. has been asked and is 48-year-old Roger Tremblay of Nelson. a Tremblay, who has lived in Nelson since 1975, hitchhiked at the end of April from’ the queen city to Prince Rupert to start his long journey. from : there April 29. ieee) Walking down to Prince George, then taking # North- ern route across the country, averaging about 30 miles per pounds and five! feet-nine inches tall, he walked‘ about 80 km per week to and. from his home and town. His equipment includes: 30-pound pack which holds a small tent and a sleeping bag. He only carries the clothes on by motorists several times if. he wants a ride but has re- fused them in all and says he'll only stay in a motel every, two or three weeks when he needs 2 clean-up. By late September or early ‘October he plans to have reached Sydney where he'll take a: ferry to Port-aux Basques, Nfld.“ “I'll walk for a couple of. His)‘wife Barb says he'll walk‘ for a couple, of days * there just to say he’s done the whole distance. He's not sure , he'll get back — definitely nit by walking. He says he's not bothered by. the enormous distance ahead of him but takes one day at a time. $ 5“You have to,’’ he told the Princé' George Citizen when passing ‘through | there. “*That’s a pretty fair distance to think about.”” Forty register for Rockeites’ camp Forty girls are already reg- istered for the third annual’ Stanley: Humphries Second- ary School (SHSS) Rockettes’ Basketball Camp which be- ~ gins Mond. Aug. 17 and con- tinues for five days. e scheduled from 8 a.m. to.9 ling, and defense. There will be contests and competitions for individcals and small a.m. on the opening day of. é camp. Any girls who have not yet registered may do so at this time. - Each day’s activities be- gin at 9 a.m. and run until 4:30 each afternoon. Daily clinics will be offered in areas such as, shooting, passing, rebounding, dribb- Geoff Sturgeon, ketin Director of Apex Alpine near Penticton, bas ‘unveiled ‘de- tails of the ‘new. $16-million going inte the New investment into ski resort. Also being completed isa new administration and ticket for completion before the Fall 1981 season. — . A’ 4,700 foot-long Mueller Triple Chair lift, Sturgeon ex- plained, -will ‘raise the ‘skier ginner, intermediate and ex- pert runs, and a new ski shop, ski rental. building and. ski school together with a new novice area and surface lift, sports enthusiasts at Apex Alpine will be-served by the ‘most modern facilities avail- able. people, up from the previous 200, These: rental units. fea- panded, lodge is being turned into another restaurant/lounge and this complex will feature indoor and outdoor hot tubs. Another aspect of Apex Al- pine’s overall plan is the appointment ‘as of July 1 of Greg ‘Athans, world’s free- port, Apex Alpine is the first ski resort in the Okanagan. Win third gold : medai. at regatta ST. CATHARINES? Ont. (CP) - Grant Main and Dean Crawford won their third gold medals of the 99th Royal Canadian Henley Regatta on Saturday as the University of Victoria came from behind to win the junior heavy eights final and increase the ‘uni- versity’s championship. total to five. St. Catharines Rowing Club, Buffalo West Side and Victoria were neck and neck off the start of the 2,000- metre race on'a calm Henley course, but after 600 metres, , Victoria sat third behind St. Catharines and Buffalo. St. Catharines Rowing Club, Buffalo West Side and Victoria were neck .and neck off the start.of th 2,000 metre race ona calm Henley, course, but after 500 metres, Victoria: sat third behind St. Cathar-