ENTERTAINMENT OCTOBER SPECIAL Prawn Dinner... ...... 2 for 1 crcuam muogers Crcueneunces Ply, 365.3204 Locdyed | mile south of Weigh Scoles in Ootischenio GALA DINNER DANCE Saturday, Nov. 8 FIRESIDE BANQUET ROOM 6:30 cocktails 7:00 dinner 9:00 dance Amber Honour post Mayors and Alderpersons TICKETS AVAILABLE Chamber of Commerce * Bosse's Jewellery Madeleines ¢ of course Fireside Restourant $22.50 per person This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT . Oct. 27 to Nov. | HIGH RISE SANDMAN INN Si Castlegar ssa cotumbie ave Men’s Night Tuesday & Wednesday Oct. 28 and 29 SHOWTIME 9 P.M. COME EARLY! NIGHTLY PUB] Cover Charge $2.00 = th sy EXHIBIT OPENING Marjorie West (left) discusses airbrush technique with artist Maria Crossley during Thursday evening's display at A Taste of Art gallery on 3rd Street. Crossley’s sub- ject matter includes local stenes, such as barn right) in Ootischenia ashlews Photos by Ron Norma: Airbrush artist has first show By CAROL COUCH Maria Crossley of Trail has devoted two years to developing her creative work in air brush techniques. 1 how in this field took place at A Taste of Art Thursday evening Crossley works from her home in Tadanac where she has a studio, workshop and gallery Her husband is supportive of her art career. He takes full charge of mounting and framing her pictures Crossley has learned to use the air brush properly tool for her diversified creativity grows out of much experimentation und as a suitable Each creatior ind is based on strong composition Crossley is fascinated with the freedom of air brush Control of this freedom is so important Trail, Crossley’s painting has She has learned to bend to the Since m to undergone mgny changes Jikes-bf ber aks Moods affeét her extremely hard to deve >. worked and she has »p a beautiful movement in ail work her work and a good sense of perspective The scope of her art is broad, including realism, abstraction and compositional freestyle She stays clear of photographic times. Juxtaposition of shapes, forms. rendering at all lines and colors add a depth to her creations. Non-glare glass is used for most of her paintings Only the best of watercolor paper is used and the colors used are all permanent textile paint or inks. Crossley will be having an air brush show in Trail soon again, Her last show held in June in the downtown area was rewarding Crossley plans to continue with her new-found media for some time ANNOUNCEMENT Marlane Cabaret Now Open Come See our Newly Renovated Cabaret & Lounge. Hours are 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon. to Sat. Wotch for live Entertainment Coming Soc MARLANE 330 Columbie Ave Castlegar. 365-2626 There will be NO DANCERS downstairs in the Lounge Carmela's Spaghetti House Rivers recalls cheerleading days LOS ANGELES (AP) Joan Rivers says she was charging that she was turned down as a cheerleader be turned down when she tried her breasts were too out for her high school cheer cause large leading squad, but it wasn't School officials have denied the end of the world the charge Rivers invited 17 year old The Vicki Guest to appear on her asked to show is reason I have you on the Thursday because the girl sued the Huntington Beach, Calif high schoo! district recent! television show because when I was pretty Joan Molinsky in Larchmont (N.Y.), I tried out in the gym for cheerleader and I was very fat and I jumped up and I broke the gym floor, so they didn’t let me be cheerleader,” Rivers told Guest “So what I want to say is people succeed in life without Gothe injects personality in radio show TORONTO (CP) — Jurgen Gothe and the CBC couldn't have met at a better time. Just when the national FM radio network was trying to shed its stuffy, elitist image. along came this exuberant guy with a three-hour radio show so personal you'd think he was entertaining guests in his Vancouver Island home. Every weekday afternoon from 3 to 6 on his show Dise Drive, Gothe injects an eclectic mix of classical and contemporary music with off- the-cuff chatter about his favorite topies — food and wine and his two cats. “I don’t seript anything,” he said of the Vancouver-pro- duced program during an in. terview in Toronto, where he was attending CBC fall meet ings and signing his second contract for the show. “I just talk about anything that comes along.” RATING TOPS It's that laid back, one-to one spirit that, after just a year on air, has made Disc Drive the highest-rated show on CBC's FM network. Gothe said he chats about the varieties of cuisine and wine because “that’s what people are thinking about when they are driving home from work or rousting about the kitchen cooking supper. “Or maybe they're think ing of dining out and I'll mention Chinese food. I get letters from listeners as if they know me personally . . especially after I've railed on about my cats.” Gothe, who appears to be in his early 40s (he wouldn't reveal his age), is no stranger JUSTINE’S RESTAURANT On the Second Level at 402 Baker St., Nelson Otfers the finest in dining in ‘on elegant atmosphere at at fordable prices. As recom mended in the Where to ect in Canada Guide Please Call 352-7709 Lunch—Mon.-Sat. 11-3.p.m. Dinner —Nightly from 5 p.m. SUNDAY IS JAZZ NIGHT! to radio. After dropping out of Grade 10 in Medicine Hat, Alta. — “I was bored in school” — he got a job as a copy writer at the local radio station. From there, he went on to produce and host a number of classical music programs both on private stations and the CBC. But Dise Drive is the big one, the one with his own personal stamp, al- though he'd “sooner be rich than famous” as a result of all the exposure. WITH LISTENERS Gothe said he prefers to “talk with my listeners than at them. “People don't want to be educated in the logisties of day. They want to be enter- tained.” Gothe is a regular con. tributor to magazines and newspapers, writing about food and wine. He rises at 5 a.m. and writes for several hours — “to music, naturally” — be fore hitting the CBC Van couver studio at 11 a.m. At home at his waterfront log retreat, Gothe indulges his passion for cooking and writing — but it’s a rare indulgence these days since Dise Drive took over his life. “I think I'd like to try my hand at writing a cookbook but I haven't come up with an original angle yet,” he said. Hu i: H i For more information cal! pieces . ever US GEORGE & KATIE KOOCHIN From Your Loving Children Marisha and Curtis COMMUNITY DAVID THOMPSON may not have noticed the tiny seedling on Zuckerberg Island when he poddled but City workers Wednesday were Tonced to tell te old tree for safety reasons. Photo by Verna Keredt “Eagle tree” felled by city By JOHN CHARTERS The “eagle tree” came down today. The big, light ning-blasted ponderosa pine which for years has formed an essential part of the sil houette of Zuckerberg Island Heritage Park, as well as a roosting place for a family of bald eagles, was felled Wed nesday by the city main tenance crew. It was prob- ably a seedling when David Thompson sailed past the is land. The tree was killed more than a dozen years ago by a gigantic bolt of lightning and has been gradually falling to since. Almost PWA ups income CALGARY (CP) Pacific Western Airlines Corp. has announced nine-month net income of $19 million for the period ended Sept. 30, com pared with $18.5 million for the same period last year The company also reported the revenue passenger miles on scheduled services in the three months ended Sept. 30 were 18 per cent higher than in the third quarter of 1985, an increase it attributed both to Expo 86 in Vancouver and to improvement in general market trends. We’re Scaring Up A Great daily pieces of bark and branches, some small some large enough to do serious injury have been falling down the hillside beneath it and on the two paths below Each year it has leaned a little more toward the river and I have some steadily more apprehensive for the safety of visitors. I added a few more white hairs of worry every time we had a high wind. Earlier this year I had bore samples taken of the trunk in the vain hope that if the wood were reasonably sound that the tree might be held up a while longer with guy wires. The samples showed exten. sive rot. Then several cracks ap peared near the base. With great regret I recommended, for the general safety, that the tree be taken down. I felt as if I were con demning an old friend and even the members of the maintenance crew were un happy about doing what had to be done, but it was done skillfully Too remote for salvage, it will go into the river and like the Dragon Tree become a part of the island folklore The eagles, the woodpeckers and we who live by the river are going to miss its craggy and twisted outline but there are others in the vicinity and they in time will take its place. eC EN U.S. plans daylight time switch early You have to get up pretty early to keep up with the Americans — at least, you may have to next spring. The United States has decided to steal a march on Canada next April by going onto daylight time three weeks before we do. It might seem unusual to be worrying about going on DT next year when we're still on DT — until today — but it pays to plan ahead. To the Americans, switching on and off from daylight to standard time is a federal matter. To however, it’s a sort of local option on a provincial basis. In the interests of conformity, if not sanity, the parts of Canada that switch make the change on the last Sunday in April. Next year, Americans are making their move on the first Sunday in April. matched to that of the United States. phase by one hour with those in the U.S.” “Disruptions in trans-border services would arise from the fact that major U.S. airports under a sap catanlear abated shed car arr aaa c6s: What will be the impact of the U.S. Canadian bankers, for one, will be concerned. “Most international money market transactions occur at the end of the day,” one banking official says. “The last hour of the day is very active and, with this situation, Canadians would have to react an hour early. “We'd like Canada to conform.” To that end, bankers have written to the attorneys- general of the various provinces for a ruling. If the banks are concerned, however, Canadian airlines are downright worried. WANTS CONFORMITY The Air Transport Association of Canada has written all provincial premiers and to Prime Minister Mulroney requesting that the start of Canadian summer time be asa war EN. Lewis, Conservative member for the Ontazto riding of West Huron, introduced a daylight time bill in the House of Commons in 1905, but he didn't get any further with it than Franklin had. Even today, there is resistance to the whole idea. Lincoln Webster Burnham, 77, a New Hampshire farmer, has never gone along with daylight time. “I tried it, but it makes liars out of clocks and fools out of people,” he says. These days, daylight saving time is generally accepted across Canada except in Saskatchewan. Equally divided into two time zones — Central and Mountain 8 Saskatchewan remains on standard time except in the Alberta-border city of lloydminster. FISH & CHIPS ney. 35.25t0h 2 fOr To ita eeensees 365-8155 “ao ‘Sot 6.0.m_9.00 p.m under} bam ms eas a yea"! Open Sundays 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. along come Prices effective Sun. Mon.. Tues. 8 Wed. RD AM ee DILL F PICKLES mica 19 SMOKED OYSTERS & 1 19 SEA HAUL. 1046 Te ORANGE Jt JUICE mat a® ss We reserve the right to limit quantities. FORMER _ RESIDENT Loto numbers The following are the Lotto West numbers drawn Wed nesday night: The jackpot of $202,894.50 was carried over. The eight numbers drawn were six, 17, 21, 22, 26, 30, 35 and 45. . The bonus number was 15. The five-correct-plus- bonus-number category was carried over. The 45 winners of the five-correct category win $539.70 each The 1,585 winners of the four-correct category win $44.70 each. The 20,109 winners of the three-correct category win a prize of five dollars each. Next Wednesday's jackpot is estimated at $310,000 The winning numbers in Wednesday's Lotto 6-49 draw were three, 16, 34, 36, 45 and 48. The bonus number was 13 liday, recently of of 69. Memorial services were held at St. Andrew's United Church in Lacombe, Alta., Oct. 15. There was no winner of | todo with U-F-O.'s You are in kool vited to this amazing v jackpot pool of $1.762,790.90. | 3138 "Srtrantonion’ on In the event of a dis- | Maniscalco shores what he crepancy between these | hos baurepinghod in 20 yeors s numbers and the official | theworod. countries winning list, the official list ADMISSION — FREE shall prevail Resker Hall—Robson Fri., Oct. 31 Our Action Ad Phone 7 p.m. Joe Halliday passes away Joseph LaVerne (Joe) Hal- , in April of this year. passed away suddenly at the Red Deer Hospital at the age Mr. Halliday was pre- deceased by his parents, Clarence and Zetta Halliday, wife Audrey, sister Olive and wife, Betty, predeceased him He is survived by daughter Joanne of Regina; daughter Karen and grandson Greg of Winnipeg; daughter Janis, son-in-law Bill and grand- daughters Gina and Leah of Cranbrook; daughter Barb- ara, son-in-law Ed and grand- daughters Kim and Kerry of Winnipeg; sister Peg of Los Angeles; and stepchildren Herb and Mannie. YARD SALE All Yarn In Stock 15-25 oir THE CRAFT CORNER Next to Downtown SuperValu 365-8289 Number is 365-2212 Complaints about the NIGHTLINE KOOTENAY’ BROADCASTING SYSTEM RAFE MAIR A Province-wide RADIO NETWORK TALK SHOW Canada’s first ‘“‘satellite”’ open line show Monday through Friday 6:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Prices limited to stock on hand. CENTRAL FOODS Swor-kasy F on... with Postal Service? We understand your complaints — and we have a few of our own. (being a cheerleader).” and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Italian Spaghetti Dinner All the Spaghetti You Can Eat — $6.95 Bulletin Board Want to make in Private dining rooms at no extra charge We ore the Canadion workers who move the mail — 9 HOBBIT HILL CHILDREN'S CENTER DANCE Bunch of Deals Next Weekend te awa more than 7 billion pieces o yeor aot a right tor 368-9399 goa long way? por peresn: Masi by Dennis Krahn 4.86 We see longer line-ups and mail delays while Carodo Try Business ees Directory Advertising! OPEN EVERYDAY 10TO 10 fend you l tee our signe CASTLEGAR’S SMALLEST CRAFT AND GARAGE SALE Bake table and tea. Large collection of old salt and pep. . .. as We per shokers for sale. Nov. | ond 2 6th Avenue entrance . 5 only. 10.a.m. to 4 p.m 2 86 see more od: dresses being served by community boxes tee ac ts! ANNUAL FIDDLE CONTEST The Castlegar Oldtime Fiddlers will be hosting the annual B.C. Provincial Oldtime Fiddling Championships April 11, 1987. Thelma Ratcliff 1s the local contact person and she will be contacting previous donors. businesses ond anyone who would like to donate to t Trophies will be donated by the B.C. Provincia! more information call Thelma at 365-6127 fre & RIVERSIDE VIDE is celebrating it's 2nd ANNIVERSARY Saturday, November I " COUPON: COUPON-COUPON: — Bring this Coupon & Save oe Off any Movie or VCR Rental. Guaranteed 30 i ightl Winners Nightly eases ae arent mae: 240 . Ww kl Soturday. November 1 6:30 p.m. Fireside Place Banquet Room. Guest speaker: Ston Hall. Past President Winners Weekly Crdeons international Canada. Tickets $12 50, Roast Bet TO PLAY FOR OUR... fet. Tickets may de purchased at Carls or from the tollowing Gideon s. Richard Dodds. Harold Webber. Dove October's Winners Game. Cash Prize Mason 285 “ ts. This trend towords Played Oct. 20 and Oct. 28, all weekly cAsTiEGAR AQUAN. aves ae JAUT SIMA CLUB privatization attects a! winners qualify in our Grand Winners Is hoving on all paper cash Bil on Saturday. Nov. | at Canadians by increased Night for an all expense paid trip for the Castlegar Arena Complex. There will be a $1,000 costs, deterioration of 5 two to Reno. Remember you have to play to win Jackpot. EB. 6:00 p.m. Regular 7 00pm. Advance Iickers $10.00 ond avorlable at Woo! Wagon. Central Food Mor! ‘ond Macleods Py and you have to win to play in our winners game. A chance to win big for as little as $15 to play our entire pro FLZABETH CLARE PROPHET gram on regular nights. he ( Early Bird 6:30 p.m. ie Regular Bingo 7:00 p.m. Free Coffee and Popcorn “til 6:30 p.m. FREE DABBERS to the first 20 people Wednesday Night Phone 364-0933 RAFE MAIR Call: 1-685-0491 (COLLECT) or 1-800-663-9030 (TOLL FREE) Kootenays You're On The Air!! “It's Great To Be In The Kootenays” “ee We say the posto! Foe, Rap Reon Ag Me Watch For i Na So ort Sons be oneal tor headin tone Ree coe Details In Our It Is time to improve and expand postal services! There 1s no extra charge tor o second insertion while the Full Page Ad In HOS TO Lea Wednesday’s Castlegar oming Revolution ‘NOdN03-NOdNO third consecutive insertion 1s seventy tive percent ond the Watch for pamphlets in Castlegar crea. fourth consecutive insertion 1s half-price Minimum chorge 15 $3.50 (whether od 1s for one two or thee Deadlines are 5 p.m poper ond 5 pm Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News of 19 Columbia Ave COUPON-COUPON Limit | per rente Coupon expires Now 30 86 Tues Sales & Service Oct. 28/7: 30 p.m. Sandman Inn COMMI Bulictin Board PRIZES: \ST PRIZE — Telephone 2NO PRIZE — 10 Free Movie Rentals Towne Square Mall, Trail