CASTLEGAR NEWS, May 16, 1982 5.0: ; Mclivor Pete Kazakoll Bok Be0-7013 Phone 359-7263 ° Industrial | © Residential Commercial 23H Helton. Bec. a —— Check your plates = IF YOUR: DECAL SHOWS COHOE INSURANCE AGENCY LTD. A complete insurance Se st renew before dune 1, 1982 “The Asphalt Specialists" VINTAGE PAVING C0. LTD. 418 Gore St., Neison & driv ‘eways | * parking lots * quality work * itee estimates 352-6435 Out of Town — call Collect CONSTR RUCTION * tori & Pre-Fab Homes ~ * Spe jalizing in Preserved Wood Foundations HARRY MANNIE PAUL WILKINSON, Castlegor LINDA KOSITSIN CA’ _ SaoensBGAR, NEWS OFFICE 365.7265. &c HOME APPLIANCE REPAIR LTD. How in Castlegar. “AUTHORIZED SERVICE pet FOR OW PAGES: MAIO! Mobile H4-92282. READING... Members of the Castlegar Writers Guild will be presenting a reading of their works at the an- nual general meetin: of the Arts Council. Monday evening at 7:30 at the National Exhibition Centre. Presenting their readings will be (seated left to right) 1.35 million cars affected . ‘DETROIT. (AP) — General | » nnounced “Tuesday, it will offer free re- irs.’ on'as many, 05 1.95 million of its North American cars that can develop.o seal “leaks ‘and transmission pol, 8. The cars involved are a 1980 and some’ 1981, Che let Citation, Pontiac Pho- j ‘enix, Oldsmobile Omega and’ Gordon Tirior Vi Rilkoff, Vi iste and. ‘Kathy Armstrong.’ Back row (left to. right): Jim: Chapman, Mark Mealing, Linda Hall and Jack Charters. A. booklet of ‘their selected writings will .be for sale at. the meeting. = Church directory Signs going UP | ’ The Castlegar Christian Ministerial Association met March 11 and began with a time of personal. sharing by each pastor. It helped each to get to know the others a little better. ‘ Motel brochures were then the approach from Salmo and across from the. airport on Highway 3A from Nelson. . The first sign is to be« officially erected Tuesday in Ootischenia. Thanks was ex-. tended to the. Castlegar Royal Canadian Legion for its’. of $100 to the d in their completed form to be assessed. Thanks was expressed for the Kiw- _anis Club for covering the ponsible for distributing the’ brochures to the various mo- tels in the area. The new church directory highway signs have been completed. and will soon pe erected by thes ministry: of: Highway; Look for them by the “Wel- come:to Castlegar” sign on Highway 8 from the west, on the approach fro m Trail, ac- Toss from the weigh scales on project. : A card of appreciation was ent to Pastor Des Carroll of the Anglican Church, as he is leaving Castlegar in the near future to assume new res- ponsibilities in Vancouver. - “The Castlegar Christian Youth Fellowship executive meeting for. anyone. inter- Sed ‘will be today at 2:80 the pie Concern,» was -' expressed about the federal legislation that is ‘now in on ‘cKaR, “Heart- beats" is now aired at 8:80 am,” ‘The’ members. were “il strongly be infringed upon if this is allowed to be passed, ” sae ue feeling of pleased with this and ex- pressed ‘to radio ‘on the bill mab be sought for the churches, that the ‘ministerial radio It was officially announced: station “manager, Gordon rady. _ 3 (submitted by Roy Hubbeard) 2 Narrows Park's official opening Exactly one year from the park's. newly-constructed date of its establishment,‘ day-use facilities. These in- Grohman Narrows Provincial clude several picnic tables, a Park, on the western out- sceni¢™ "walking trail "and an Perea pene a.m. 2 . The public i is invited to at- tend. the which stage,: Bill C-10. “The, rights REALTY WORLD. Castle Realty Ltd ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES 264.2545 E_ 965-5451 ALCON. PAINTING & DECORATING ‘ CASTLEGAR VIN 2st 365-3563 HLOOKOFF. BULEYATING 1 din put "So Wetends John J. Hiookott ‘Owner-Operator feeling, apeclous fy “INTHE WOODLAND in Ai: nee ed ly step sving kitchen how that Sowiled ing room and a ; iit coom far the children to play. Call Britt Pdblad, 365- 3336 of 365-3423 = 809 BIRCHWOOD DR. suBDI' a vps mortgage at vere ti fart ‘65. Over ¢ airy basomer west of Nelson on Hiheae SA. 365-3336 1444 Columbia Ave., Castlegar marks completion of ‘the 1919 CONNORS ROAD ~ WOODLAND PARK. Over 1200 aq. ft., 3-BR home with fancy rock Nace, sliding doors from for: “ial dining area on large sun- Jock. Fintuhed downstairs with 2 BRs and rec room. There is more yet to learn about ery fectonably priced home 20 Isote ome ond sa for vennsll “ea A Gestn Guster 3518 SOUTHRIDGE ORIVE BIRCHLAND, HEIGHTS. BUILDER'S OSS :—. YOUR GAIN. This ex- teltent brand new home. has 3 spacious upstairs bedrooms with 2 full tothe, main floor family. room. with brick fireplace, formal dining room, sunken living groom, double gorage and much more. .Builder must. sell and will "oo ata reasonable offer, Call Susan ‘orrest, 365-3336 or 365-3857 Res. ‘ 569- STH AVE.,N. NEW, DIFFERENT, EXCITING is this -onargy-aiiclent, “home featuring pressure trea! asement, Eombinetion. waod/all. furnace, double glazed cedar: windows. There “ore. built-ins such as; mlcrawave oven}. dishwasher and _ ‘open house and discover for your VISION with assumabli yard pre provides privacy and oer evergreens in front and birches in back. look. for ‘| Woodland Drive, Call Walter T., 365-3336 0 : 440 uaa ‘AVE. VER’ oe awn beation: ation, ya the Ings fan recs! A special teture int sknow more? jo? Gall Bale Lektin, 266-3398, “Ask us ab out fina ancing. 1-4 p.m. salf olf the: nts sing. ideas. Call + Petes ell, 365-3336 or 365- ALL SEVEN ‘ LOCATIONS OPEN Buick. Skylark) models‘ that may, _ develop, sfront-axle ‘ oil- seal shifter fo ks, GM sald in pea in| Oshawa, Ou sHall'sald GM Canada will repair the oll-seal leaks" and transmissions for .up to: five years or. 80,000 ‘kilometres from the date the care Was. » originally, . put . in service, whichever, comes, iret * by Ministers th 8: ‘West Kootenay _ ‘any. vacten ‘wedded solglen and; four | will : jump |. over- board;, six, will stay! on deck without love or. fo i and “church; enjoy a happy marriage” Young people growing up observe this poor track rec- ord of modern-day marriages and many of them decide it is better just to live together with someone —'or even to change partners rather-fre-' quently. But is this really the answer? Is. marriage out- dated, or unworkable, or are we overlooking the resources that will make marriage rich and satisfying? |. Dr... Norman: Vincent Peale’s wife, Ruth was asked tospeak to a group of sophist icated young women at a cer- tain university. After Mrs. _ Peale had spoken a beautiful but scornful: young woman stood up and said: - “Mrs. Peale, in your re- marks you stated: that you thought that marriage was the’ greatest career for. a woman. In my opinion, mar- riage is almost finished, and most of us here feel the same way. We don't think it is nec- essary or even’ desirable to person for the'rest of ‘your, life. We think it’s ridiculous!” Every eye was rivited on the co-ed as she continued. “I am sleeping with a fellow that I like, I don’t want to marry. him and I don’t think” he intends to marry me. This is not my first love affair and probably won't be my last. I can't >see anything wrong -with this. Someday when I choose to have a child, I may be ‘forced by society ° to marry, If I ever choose to marry and the relationship goes bad, I shall not be trapped in it. Mrs. Peale, we -are~hardly blind. We see what: marriage has done to our parents and others and we'don't like what we see. Do + you ‘have a ready answer?” Each. bright: face in the room swung around toward Mrs. Peale, who took'a deep breath and replied: “Yes I have an answer, and I am living it. I consider myself + one.of the most fortunate women alive. I am_ totally married to a man in every sense of the word: physically, Hecate: intellectually and. spiritually. We're’ so_ close that you couldn't puta” knife blade between ; .us. “We're ‘not two lonely’ com- peting individuals..\We. are one, and nothing efs¢ in life ‘can’ compare to it. But you’ will never experience this. You'll never even come with- in shouting distance of it if you ‘maintain’ your ‘present attitudes and ‘code of con- duet." “] don’t see why not,” the girl. countered defensively, but with less. conviction. “Why can't a man-woman re- lationship be just.as mean- ingful outside of marriage as it is in it?” - “Because,” Mrs, Peale res: ponded, “It doesn't have the commitment. It doesn't have the permanence. It doesn’t have the depth that comes from total sharing year after year, working together, knowing you are playing the game for keeps. Do you think we, found happiness by wav- ing a magic wand? No, we fought for it and worked for it. To us marriage wasn't a trap, it is a privilege. And there is quite a differeiice.” As the class stared silently at Mrs. Peale she concluded: “This country is full of good marriages, but they have to. be made to happen. It takes: brains and determination, And the job is never finished. When you take the time and effort to make a marriage good, the rewards are? just enormous.”. Nancy Van Pelt, in her ex- cellent book “To Have And To Hold,” gives this advice: “Our romantic feeling may: fail us, but our genuine love ~ holds us. together when trou- bled times come. The.key to putting the principle of gen- uine love into practice is self- lessness. Fulfillment - in’ a total love relationship comes as one matures. out’ of self- centredness. into genuine love. The way to receive love is to give it. Jesus: said, “Give, and it shall be given to you” (Luke 6:38). And the | teaching he enunciates ap- plies equally to the area of marriage. If; you want a deeper love relationship, be- gin in giving more love. In- stead of waiting for your ‘mate to demonstrate affec- tion for you, take’ it: upon yourself to initiate the first actions. Discover your. mat’s needs and begin to fill them now! NOW.WEIGHT WATCHERS. ISTAKING 50% OFF ° FIRST MEETING FEES. Litt wonder lus when youre taking ofl your overcoat wee meeting and regisration fee. So you toking off 50% from our frst ‘can Join Weight: . 144d COLUMBIA AVE. OUR OFFICE — Come in and talk to ° SUNDAY MAY 16 amwer ony. questions you may have and even give you 3 p of e. And there ts a surprae for the kids 198, Gall! Selle 45-3336 oF 3465-65! Wa have a large selection of lots, THING nd monty hot-tub, LI itd ccres and homes as well os cém- ip tor to: curlotes Food Plons thar fearxe popcom, “peonut butter c ‘and more ote eres cn May oth And you won't feel halfas of your fovpies hoppy if you miss our holt price speci octal Uncrate ae * CALL OUR OFFICE _We'llcover it all...for you! ie i ctpah at heen a Os CASTLEGAR’ NORDIC HALL’. TUES.—7:00 P.M. Foe Further information Call Toll Free 112-800-663-3354 WEIGHT WATCHERS “© Weoigta Watchers bart ine 1882 wnat Weng Weichers of Brien Catenin Ue the wong Watchers Tagamark i cvoptersdcaae-Al ge Paar “henceforth every: Feprint augers CASET FINGERS le ‘Three Si lary’ Schoo! ing st ts. ney, Shelley Soff ond i tanlay: Humphries, Secon: m left) Ken|Rom-- to ernoff and tic hey Kalnins — qualifled for the annual provincial typing contest Saturday in Victoria. Kalnins is a grade-11 student, while Chernoff and Romney are in grade 9. Seniors must type 55 net words per minute and juniors. 45 words per minute to qualify. —CatNewsPhoto, “ANN ARBOR, Mich, (AP) +The disappearance of an ocean. which once may have covered the planet Venus suggests that Earth may face,; the same arid fate, research scientists say. Conclusions of the research by Thomas Donahue, a. Uni- versity of Michigan professor. of atmospheric and oceanic . science, and his’ colleagues, were published in the May 7 issue of Science magazine. The: scientists said. an ocean up to 2.4 kilometres deep may have dried up on Venus because of what is called the greenhouse effect, where solar heat is trapped in the fh the scien- “Venus studied Clues t to Earth’s fate sought | possibly by massive destruc- three other gcientista — John consequent production of a hot, dense carbon dioxide at- , tion of a ‘portion of’ the " the (Earth's plant life). of the University of Texas at wrote,” several billion years ago, could some form of life which might have d earlier in ee war.” Hoffman and Richard Hodges “Dallas and Andrew Watson Donahue was joined’ in of the Marine Biological reporting the’ findings by Association of the United VANCOUVER (CP) — It’s no joke to be named K. Fowler in Vancouver these days, Ask Ken Fowler the, ex- cop, or Ken Fowler | the ‘lawyer. Ever since the first’ man arrested’ under Vancouver's new anti-hooker. bylaw was identified only as K. Fowler, they've been the butt of jokes from friends and associates. Several Fowlers .whose names include the initial K. were asked recently whether the news stories detailing the tribulatioris of K. Fowler had * caused them problems. - City bylaw prosecutor Rol- and Bouwman allowed the man calling himself K. Fow- ler to escape any further identification in the news Kingdom —. after they re- examined measurements made by a malfunctioning instrument aboard the U.S. Pioneer space probe that studied Venus. media by appearing without being summonsed, pleading guilty to the ,charge and paying the $350 fine. Bouwman then refused to give Fowler's age, occupa- tion, address or. any other detail that might identify him. Bouwman was supported by Mayor Mike Harcourt, who said people charged under the bylaw will continue to enjoy anonymity as long as they plead guilty and pay the fine . without being sum- ‘i monsed, No joke these days to be named K. Fowler. GROCETERIA'& LAUNDRO! . Fowler saidhe by phone to the city hall Tegal department but got no satis- : faction. Lawyer Ken Fowler said he has experienced a number of jokes, mostly good- natured, but was unable to say whether he had lost business as a result. of the stories, “Every time I turn around someone is making a joke. From friends it's good- natured, but whether I've lost business is impossible to ‘We Are Open 364 Days a Year Monday - Saturday 8:30'- 10:30 p.m. Sunday & Holidays 9- 10:30 p.m. 1038 Columbia "365-6534 But to some © Fowlers, the practice is less than pleasing. .’ Ex-police officer .Ken Fowler of Richmond said he was in Mexico when. thé Fowler publicity began and knew nothing about it until he returned and was contact- ed by a television network. “It was pretty upsetting,” Fowler said. “It was also a'little embar- rassing to the degree that I was surprised so. many people read it.” Fowler, a partner in Swift Dispatch, said his courier service employes 67 drivers “and~ they -all know it.” Buy Your GRADUATION sur = _ at ‘ Alfonso'Apa’ Ladies’ & Men's Wear and receive a SHIRT & TIE Where Service Boglas’” Z Phone 368-5314 1364 Bay Ave., Trall : on. the. planets have been lost?” asked Donahue, chair- man-elect of the U.S. Nation- ‘al Academy ‘of Science's Space Science Board. , . FACES SAME FATE? “Could Earth, be. heading toward the same fate, becom- ing like today's Venus, which ° | has long been’ thought to be nearly Earth's identical twin when the planets were formed?” . \ The two planets evolved tists said. “Then, water:and carbon dioxide would have prevent- ed heat from escaping the planet, causing it to grow still warmer”. until the ‘cycle: caused a “runaway green- house, fetastrone and , th “Repeats ‘both col CHEROKEE, IOWA (AP) — Abigail Van Buren said recently. she has been re- cycling some letters in her Dear Abby columns without + labelling them as repeats, one week after her advice- columnist twin’ sister Ann Landers acknowledged’ she . had done the same. The Cherokee Daily Times says ina copyright story that Van Buren issued a state- ment acknowledging the re- printed letters. 2: s+ In “a statement, : issued but Donahue said researchers thinks man might inadvertently cause a runaway greenhouse effect. “We could increase signifi- cantly the amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere by burning fossil ‘fuels, by. re-. moying tropieal forgats apd used by umnists reprinting items without la- belling them as such, 1 “T've made an effort to la- bel reprints except for spec- ial holiday columns or sub- jects,” her statement said. “I didn’t think some of the re- prints on the special subjects : needed labelling.” Of the most recent 304 let- ters published or received by-] the ‘newspaper, 10 were la- helled as reprints, the news-* through. Universal Press, ( she promised that will. be labelled.” ‘A ‘syndicate . spokesman, who! asked ‘not to be iden- tified,. ‘told the: newspaper.~ ” that ‘officials had ‘not: been aware. that: Van. Buren was. “Landers bad been using 15-' year-old letters and answers in‘ nearly identical’ language. during the’ last 18 months without’ telling newspapers who subscribe to her column | or readers,” zu “ Pac-Man paying — off the “MORGANTOWN; (apy — If students at West Virginia University write the folks: for, more money, it may not be. for pizza and beer. It ‘could go ‘to feed Pac:Man. The 70 video games at the Mountainlair student centre and ‘Towers dormitories made $160,000 for the school this term. “We have ‘been" ‘told: that ‘WVU has the highest income per machine of: any: campus location in thé nation,” said Dan’ Adams, associate “dir- ector. of the: Mountainlatr, W.VA. * biggest | Proceeds from the games: —which took in more than a million quarters — were split between the, vendor that’ supplied and serviced them and the’ university, Adams said. Profits help pay ex- " penses at the student centre. Two years ago, ‘the uni- versity replaced Ping Pong .and pool tables at a game room with 49 video-games. Another -21 ‘were ‘placed in the Towers. ‘The: results were'so. im- ptessive; he says, that other universities. shave made in-., ching creck % “Drive alittle to Save.a Lot" Safeway - ~ Garden Supplies Banorieed and weed Free. salon organic for the Best Blooming Garden i in Town -Beddi ing . P. la n ts. Assorted flowers and Vegetables ina Basket.. Dutch Rose Bushes ¢ No. 1 Grade. Packed in B.C. Bush or Climbers. Jumbo. each Used fordeceration on of flower beds 2cu. Ht. bog .. irzr agaica LAWN FERTILIZER 12-4-8° tush, green $ 9 9 9 $49 suum egetal Food } B.C. Cilmate) 450 g bag: Lawn Seed (Developed for PEAT mone Improves s adding fume? Long lasting tt fet cu.ft. bate... Fortush green lawns apply year Voley aay ae S fall. otal vorrine ‘SOIL: Wrengpiantng Plant 18 tive bag.. - Prices Effective May 17 -.22, 1982 in.-your friendly neighborhood Castleaird: Plaza Safeway. store. _We'Reserve the Right to Limit Sale to. Retail Quantities. he