Castlégar News April 6, 1988 ENTERTAINMENT poBsop RIVER 33” OTTERS my Paper Cash © BREAKFAST * LUNCH * DINNER * WEFKEND SMORG Sat.,April 16 Early Bird 6 p.m. Reg. Bingo at 7 p.m. Tickets $9 at Door No Advance Tickets GREWMAN ACRES Castlegar, RIDING STABLES — Ope: “9:00 o.m. Will dusk daily. Enjoy scenic trails along the Columbia River HORSE DRAWN HAYRIDES — by appointment BOARDING FACILITIES — Phone tor more in: formation 3986 Wayne or Sandy LOCATION — 1 mile south of weigh scale in Ootischenia next to D-D Dining Lounge — follow the signs. Ko Saini? SSANDUIe SHOPPE ‘*Simply Good Food" Y BREAKFAST SPECIAL viens 2 segs, Foose $3.95. saa 2 sausage, 2 poncohes, 365-8312 ond colfee all tor Mon.-Fri. 5:30-5 p.m. Sat. 6:30 o.m.-5 p.m. WEEKEND DINNER SPECIALS VEAL CUTLETS $75 Cup of soup or salad, potato, veg. and gravey Or $795 CHICKEN TERIYAKI Friday, April 8 and Saturday, April 9 Cup of soup or salad, rice and veg FOR RESERVATIONS 646 Baker St, Nelson COMM Bulletin Board KOOTENAY ART CLUB Tea and Bake Sale and Showing of Art Work. Saturday April 16, 1-4 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Centre. $1.00 ad mission, door prize. Painting by Ruth Groepler CHRISTIAN WOMEN’S CLUB Thursday, April 14, 9:30 a.m. Sandman Inn. Reservations 365-8025 2/28 FEEL THE HEARTBEAT Watch “Feel the Heartbeat” on BCTV 8:00 p.m Tuesdoy. April PANCAKE BREAKFAST Slocan Park Community Hall. Sunday, April 10, 9a.m. - 2 2/28 BINGO Monday, April 11, Robson hall. Earlybird, 6 30. Regular 7:00. Hard cards $1.00 each. Everyone welcome, Spon sored by the Robson Recreation Society 3/27 2nd ANNUAL CLUB ACTIVITY DAY Saturday, April 16, Robison Hall. 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m Community Clubs will have displays of their activities Admission free. Everyone welcome. Sponsored by the Robson Recreation Society 4/27 FREE DANCE! For volunteers — April 22, Potluck supper 6:00 p.m., dan ce 8:00 p.m. Volunteer agencies. Call 365. 2104 for “oy "WE'LL MEET AGAIN’ Back by popular demand, the Rossland Light Opera Players production of the Royal Canadian Legion's show We'll Meet Again.” Friday, April 15 in Kinnaird Junior Secondary School ot 8:00 p.m. Tickets $5.00 from Sgstlegar Legion, Carl's Drugs, Kel Print or Bob 365-7702 s oF 365-6895 evenings 4/27 SENIOR CITIZENS ASSOCIATION Casjlegar hosts Regional Meeting April 5 at 1:00 p.m Regular business meeting, April 7 at 2:00 p.m 2 VOLUNTEER TRAINING April 18 June 27, Castlegar Community Services ommunication, problem solving and crisis intervention c skills. Call 365-2104 to register BRASS JAZZ BAND Concert Tuesday, April 5, 7:30 p.m. Stanley Humphries 23-piece Gerthan group — only 3 concerts in Canada.3/25 SPRING RUMMAGE SALE Castlegar & District Hospital Auxiliary, spring rummage sale to be held in the Kinnaird Hall, Friday, April 15, 1988 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, April 16, 1988, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. For rummage pickup phone: Ootischenia 365 6475, Blueberry 365-6587, Castlegar 365-5552, 365-5571, 365-2734 / Coming organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words are $3.75 and additional words are 20€ each. Boldtaced wor ds (which must be used for headings) count as two words fourth consecutive is holf-price charge is $3.75 (whether od is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sundays paper and 5 p.m. Mondays tor Wednesdays paper. Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board ‘UNCLE OSCAR' Statuette down to earth CHICAGO (AP) — The origins of the Oscar, a golden symbol of artistic triumph, are more down to earth than many of the glitzy stars who take home the cherished statuettes. Far from the studios, sun and sea ral the California coast Oscar was designed by Cedric Gibbons, then head of the MGM studi art department. He sketched the prototype on a table cloth in 1927, Seulptor George Stanley transformed the sketch into the coveted statuette. The trophy was named Oscar by longtime Academy is a cluster of brick il in ‘ial neighborhood of Chicago. Under a eiaak of security, this is where the trophy manufacturer R.S. Owens and Co. creates the Academy Award prizes. Winning the Oscar contract may not compare with winning the Oscar itself. However, it was a coup for Owens seven years ago and remains a source of company pride. The statuettes used to be made by Dodge, Inc., at a small manu facturing plant in Crystal Lake, Ill, about 40 kilometres northwest of Chicago. With 300 employees, Owens makes about 965 per cent of the country's top awards, including the television industry's Emmys, advertising Cleos, the Super Bowl trophy and the Miss America awards. But Oscar tops them all. Most people don't know the names of awards in other fields, much less what they look like, says Bernice Estka, who handles the Oscar account for Owens. Each model of the muscular knight, who holds a sword and stands impassively on a feel of film, is hand cast from a single steel mold. Don’t be stuck in the kitchen! Let Dixie Lee do the cooking. Dixie Lee can help! Phone ahead for super-fast takeout 365-5304 ““FRANTIC’ swirts with Hitchcockion thrilis ond spilis. Ford is phenominal.” ~oey Soom, GL08E MAN “Polanski’s ‘FRANTIC’ is the work of a master. His best movie since ‘Chinatown’. Ford’s every move is totally enjoyable.” A ROMAN POLANSKI FILM ROSSLAND LIGHT OPERA PLAYERS SROCUETION fp Castlegar Friday, April 15 Kinnaird Junior Secondary School p.m. Tickets, $5. Available from any Royal Canadian Legion Contact Wm T. (Bill) Kelley 365-6385 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM: Castlegar Legion, Carl's Drugs Kel Print, Bob 365-7702 days; 365-6895 evenings. Dinner, Town Hall Forum and Fun Night with PREMIER BILL VANDER ZALM Friday, April 15 Cominco Gymnasium Trail Traits L&J Books, DELUXE bey “pon DINNER $25 Per Happy Hour 6 p.m. "Dainer 7 p.m Bru Mart, pl Margaret Herrick, who took one look at\ the statuette and declared that it reminded her of her Uncle Oscar, Estk: id, The design has remained unchanged since 1927, and the mold, which wi kept in a vault, turned over to Owens with the contract, is Neither Owens nor the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, whose members decide the winners, would reveal the price tag on Oscar. “I like to say that they are worth a million dollars to the people who receive them,” said Owen R. Seigel, founder and YOU WILL LIKE THIS FOX MOVIE By INA WARREN Canadian Press “You are not the kind of guy who would be at a place like this at this time of the morning.” (The opening line of Bright Lights, Big City). And you are not the kind of guy who would be found at a movie starring Michael J. Fox. Nor, you may state with some pride, have you ever watched Family Ties — not an entire episode, anyway. But this movie comes with such heavy credentials that a cinephile like you must be here. First of all, it's based on a best-seller. A couple of years ago, Jay McInerney’s Bright Lights, Big City was > Aprilé, 1988 Castlegar News chief executive officer of the trophy company. “Once you have got an Oscar — you've made it.” “If we say it only costs a certain amount to make, what does that do to the image?” said Patrick Stockstill, the Academy historian who will hand the Oscars to presenters set.” the fast-track read — it was funny and had a lot of stuff about cocaine and New York discos. Playboy called it a “Catcher in the Rye for the MBA CAR BUFFS . . . Mike and Irene Gallo were mostly responsible for starting the Columbia Chapter of the Vintage Car Club. at the 60th-annual awards presentation April 11. “It is the most famous award and the most prestigious. It thrusts a person into the limelight and brings additional cash into their pockets,” EXCEEDS COST The Oscar's value as a symbol far exceeds the costs of the pewter form and electroplating of copper, nickel, silver and gold, Estka said. However, from 1943-47, because of war rationing, the statuettes were made of plaster. They were later replaced Early each year, nine or 10 Owens employees set aside the work of the moment, such as Little League trophies or bowling prizes, to make the Oscars. Each 34-centimetre, 3.75-kilogram statuette takes about five man hours to craft, Estka said. The academy usually needs about 100 Oscars, but this year's order was for 150 because the Academy is celebrating its 60th anniversary, Estka said. The Oscars are locked in a separate room each night. As each statuette is finished, it is packed in plastic foam. When all are ready, they're put ina sealed truck for the trip to Los Angeles. “We don't have an elaborate secret route, but only a few people actually know when they leave or how they go to Los Angeles,” said Scott Siegel, president of the company. Moody excited about TV role LOS ANGELES (AP) — Lynn Moody says the thing that excited her about joining the CBS series Knots Land ing was not the racial break- through but the opportunity to develop a character. “This is the first role I've had that I can develop and work on,” she said of her role as Patricia Williams on the prime-time soap opera. Though they are the only black regular characters on a prime-time soap, little is made of the fact that Moody and Larry Riley, who plays her husband, are black. The producers believe that makes a better statement than having race as an issue in the Roots. “I like the soap opera formula. I like the idea of building a character who's exciting and challenging.” The vacancy in the Lori- mar show came when Laura Avery, played by Constance McCashin, died in the 200th episode. Her bequest to Karen (Michele Lee) asked that her house be rented to a family “she'd love to have next door.” SECRET LIVES The new family, which joined the show in January, was rather mysterious, at times even obsessive, until it was revealed last month the family members were in a witness protection program Now, you may have only a BA and you may have read the book only last week, but you related to it because it was written in the second-person singular which made it all quite personal. It also had a lot of insider stuff about working at a big-city magazine, which you know is really the New Yorker. And you'd kill to work there. The book's unnamed narrator (in the movie, Fox plays him as Jamie Conway) is a young guy who blows his job at the magazine because of a long night — and day — with cocaine and alcohol. He's also a bit of a wise guy who, because he has literary aspirations, figures he’s too good to work as a fact-checker for the magazine. Still, he's not what you'd call a blind hedonist. The guy is using the fast-lane to try to forget that his model-wife Amanda (actually she’s a lousy wife but she makes good bucks modelling) has ditched him and that his wonderful mother, whom he liked better than his wife, has died of cancer. (Phoebe Cates, a former model, plays Amanda while Diane Wiest is mom.) As a movie-goer, you also like director James Bridges because he's from Arkansas and has done strong American movies like The China Syndrome, The Paper Chase and Urban Cowboy. You are also impressed by Bright Lights’ top-drawer fh cast of character actors: Jason Robards as the alcoholic writer Alex Hardy, John Houseman as the venerable magazine editor (known as The Druid) and Swoosie Kurtz as the concerned co-worker friend Megan. Best of all is Kiefer Sutherland, a Canadian actor, as that devil, Tad Allagash. Tad's the fun-loving ad exec who tries to shake Conway out of the doldrums by inviting him to snazzy bars and introducing him to gorgeous women who share his cocaine in the toilet. Fox, also Canadian, wears preppie jackets and jeans but he doesn’t have what it takes for the gay blade lifestyle. His voice sounds rough, especially when-he does those second-person singular narrations in the style of the book. After he loses his job, Conway really starts to lose it. He discovers his wife is in town and crashes an Oscar de La Renta show where he makes a fool of himself. You actually start to feel a little bit sorry for the guy. Than he has a big fight with his brother, and starts thinking about his mom's death and all the stuff he's been blocking out. You are not the kind of guy that usually cries at movies, but this time you could have used a handkerchief. You will have to go slowly with your newfound apprecia. tion of Michael J. Fox. For a start, you will have to learn what time Family Join us for dinner and bring your question. Hei opportunity to talk to the Premier! Tickets available at the following locations si ticket intormation Sponsored by the Rosslond-Trail Social Credit Party stories. “It's exciting, and it’s a role that suits me so well,” said Moody, who had previously starred in the sitcoms and living under assumed names. Moody's character had been the witness to a major crime and is actually a nev- rologist, not a bank teller. D...D DINING LOUNGE LICENCED DINING ROOM OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located | mile south of Weigh Scales in Ootischenia Ties is on TV. Cable 10 TV SHAW CABLE 10 TV April 6, 8 and 10 5:30 p.m. [Wed.] 9 a.m. [Fri.] 1 p.m. [Sun.] Oppo tion's reply to budget speech — Your host John Pifer will introduce MLA Dave Stu pich, Finance Critic for the NDP. Mr. Stupich will be re- i to the govern- SPECIAL 2 FOR 1 SPECIAL PORK CHOP DINNER $4.95 Eat in Only. Bring a Friend. We Accept Wester, Ceigar & Cominco Meal Tickets ment’s budget. This program was recorded March 25. 6:45 p.m. [Wed.] 10:15 p.m. (Fri.] 2:15 p.m. [Sun.] Who's driving you home? — This program presented by ICBC uses a musicial skit to demonstrate the danger of drinking and driving. 7:15 pam. (Wed.] 10:45 a.m. banquet — Daniel Izzard, volunteer representative for the B.C. Heart Fund, was guest speaker for the annual banquet of the Trail branch. 7:55 p.m. [Wed.] 12:05 p.m. {Fri.] 4:05 p.m. [Sun.] Bucket (Bou-quet}] — This program takes a comical look at the uncertainty about being able to maintain some kind of har. mony with what's going on around us: the getting out on the wrong side of the bed syndrome. 8:45 p.m. [Wed.] 12:15 p.m. (Fri.] 4:15 p.m. [Sun.) 1988 Miss Crowe Contest — Taped in late January the students of J.L. Crowe presented their turn-of-event version of the Miss Canada Pageant. Tune in to see who is Miss Crowe 1988. REGISTRATION 8 a.m. -9a.m. PLAYOFFS: 10 a.m., $2.00 your ‘ohoe Insurance. For ne 362 5187 oF 365-6553 365-2695 Castlegar * ‘OLDTIME FIDDLER’S CONTEST & DANCE Sat., April 9 CASTLEGAR ARENA COMPLEX FOR TICKETS OR INFORMATION PHONE 368-5901 Trail B.C. OLDTIME FIDDLERS SSOC. KOOTENAY No. 9 Presents Our Annual FINALS: 6:30 p.m., $3.00 DANCE: 9 p.m., $3.00 428-7329 Creston perth eal ‘ LEG BRANCH 170 DANCE SATURDAY 9:30-1:30 p.m. BAND: STRATO-CHIEF Guests mus! be signed in Proper dress after 9 p.m Open Monday to Thursday 11 @.m. - m. Vintage car club holds parade By JOHN CHARTERS The Columbia Chapter of the Vintage Car Club of Canada held its annual Eas- ter Sunday Gallo parade again this year For many years Mike Gallo and his late wife, Irene, were ardent vintage car buffs and were largely instrumental in the formation of the Colum bia club. Mike then decided that it was essential to “show the flag” by holding an annual Easter Sunday parade of cars He issued invitations for others to join him but was determined to hold a parade of one if there were no lakers. When Irene died several years ago after a long illness and Mike was confined to a wheelchair, the club decided to name the parade the Gallo Easter Parade. Mike no longer drives his antique, immaculate Ford but he was out on Sunday with the as sistance of his family, taking his lead place in the parade. The little cortege of five vintage ears and six modern automobiles paraded up Col umbia Avenue on Sunday afternoon to the Castlegar Railway Station where they were met by host John Char ters for a special viewing of the exhibits, They then drove over the Hugh Keenleyside Dam, through Robson down to Ootischenia, back to Castle gar for a visit to the Zuc kerberg Island chapel house and host Bruce Charters, and finally to south Castlegar for a reception at the home of tour wagon masters Al and Laura Richards. MacBlo accused of wasting wood VANCOUVER (CP) — Quick action is needed by Forests Minister Dave Park er on a detailed 50-page report on MacMillan Bloe. del's forestry practices on the Queen Charlotte Islands, says a senior ministry offi cial. The report, ordered by Parker and conducted by consulting firm T.M. Thom. son and Associates, is to ad dress allegations of high wood waste by the giant forest company on parts of three islands in the Char lottes. Forests Ministry are also to be examined to determine how local ministry representatives dealt with figures furnished by the records Lottery Numbers The winning numbers drawn Monday in The Pick lottery were 14, 25, 37, 38, 42, 44, 48 and 50. In the event of a discrep ancy between these numbers and the official winning num, bers list, the latter shall pre: vail. company showing wood waste levels exceeding pro- vincial standards by as much as 106 per cent. Ken Ingram, manager for the Vancouver Forest Reg- ion, said Parker should act quickly on the report when he gets in Friday. “I don't imagine we want it sitting around too long,” Ingram said Tuesday. “We wanted an indepen dent inquest because there were allegations we weren't conducting our business right,” Ingram said. “If you consider the nature of the allegations then you'd have to assume we weren't follow ing established procedures.” Jim Mitchell, a forestry manager for Thomson and Associates in charge of pre. paring the audit, said Tues day he will deliver his report to Parker on Friday. Among documents Mitch. ell studied were “residue by block” figures filed by the forestry company with the ministry. They indicate the company left 131,424 cubic metres of waed on Block 6 of Tree Farm Licence 39 in 1986. The wood, with less than 50-per. cent decay, is considered productive by the Forests Ministry. = FERRARO’S * fryitig * grade A Kraft* regular * light miracle whip Your satisfaction is our main concern gov't inspected poultry * whole fresh chicken .,.1.84.. .88 288 bathroom tissue. 2 8 Prices effective up to and including Sunday, April 10, 1988 PLAZA SUPER-VALU OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. -5 P.M. Jet goes missing in search for boat COMOX, B.C. (CP) — The search for a CF-18 fighter jet and its 27-year-old pilot resumed early today with a “maximum effort” aimed at two areas off the northwest coast of Vancouver Island, a spokesman at CFB Comox said. Maj. Dean Nelson said one Aurora, a Maritime patrol plane, would be used along with two Buffalo aireraft, which is the base's regular search aircraft. The searchers would also use three Laborador helicopters and possibly the large Sea King helicopters based at CFB Esquimalt, said Nelson. Capt. Michael Erickson and his plane disappeared less than an hour after two CF-18 jets took off at 2:17 a.m. PDT Tuesday from this Vancouver Island Canadian Forces base to search for a fishboat reported to be battling five-metre high seas. The 10-metre boat was later found safely anchored. “The weather looks a lot more promising today,” said Nelson, referring to storm-wracked weather that searchers faced on Tuesday. ‘It's going to be a maximum (search) effort today.” Nelson said the search would again concentrate on the Kquoquot Sound and Brooks Peninsula area off Vancouver Island. Erickson, who has been in the air force for seven years, was in charge of the two planes, said Maj. Jan Martinsen, of CFB Cold Lake, in Alberta. Cold Lake, northeast of Edmonton, is the home base of 441 Squadron, which has stationed four CF-18s at Comox since November for a North American Aerospace Defence command role. The single-seat, dart-shaped aircraft were flying a grid search pattern, but were not flying in formation when Erickson, who had not reported encountering any difficulty, disappeared Martinsen said the other aircraft,| which was flying through cloud at a higher altitude, was unable to reach Erickson by radio after 3 a.m She said it is not known whether he crashed over the rugged terrain or into the stormy seas, and no signals have been detected from Erickson's emergency locater trans mitter. “Obviously we will continue to hope he might have been able to eject and his ELT did not work," she said. “We'll keep looking and use all our resources to try. to find him.” Martinsen said Erickson was wearing a flotation device that pri 8 against hypothermia and a life raft in his seat pack would have gone with him had he ejected. Food supplies are also included. Capt. Rick Gelinas, of CFB Cold Lake, said the ejection seat shoots a pilot 120 metres above his plane and is equipped with a parachute. “It's the only way out of an F-18 have of getting out of it,” he said Military officials at National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa have convened a board of inquiry to determine what happened to the $25-million aircraft and Erickson. The board will consist of two pilots, a medical officer and a maintenance worker, Martinsen said, and will begin gathering information immediately. - She said Erickson had been flying Cf-5s before taking a six-month conversion course on CF-18s, and has been stationed at Cold Lake since June. The CF-18s have 27 computers on board and can reach speeds 1.8 times the speed of sound Martinsen said Erickson’s jet was armed with an M61 20-millimetre cannon, or double-barrelled Gatling gun, capable of firing 6,000 rounds a minute but was not carrying missiles, bombs or rockets. She said the rescue co-ordination centre in Victoria asked Norad regional headquarters at North Bay, Ont., early Tuesday to authorize two CF-18s to take part in the searc the only chance you vere weather prevented conventional aireraft from participating, she said, and the jets, which are equipped with air-to-surface radar, were requested to locate the fishboat. Dog unearths phoney bills VANCOUVER (CP) — Randy Jmaeff admits he had some doubts after he recently discovered millions in bogus American money “It crossed my mind for a split second,” the 24-year-old college stu dent, who aspires to be a chartered accountant, said Tuesday Jmaeff and his brother Darryl, 20, were walking their 10-year-old black lab Speedy in a vacant lot across from their home in the Vancouver suburb of _ paper.” Surrey when the dog started rooting The around. “He's got a pretty good nose,” Randy said. “He's a super dog,” added Darryl. Speedy unearthed a green plastic garbage bag containing uncut sheets of the area, beat them to it, counterfeit $100, $50 and $20 U.S. bills. Darryl! said the bag was covered Cpl. by brambles but close to the surface and didn’t take much work to uncover He first thought it was real money. NOTICES CHANGE “Then I noticed something didn't look right — all the bills ran horizontal on the sheets except for one row at the end, which ran the other way “I guess they didn't want to waste the brothers took the cash home and called RCMP, who decided to wait until daylight for a thorough search of Randy said. But the brothers and their dog finding another four bags of the bills the next day, said Randy Barry Danton of the Van couver RCMP commercial crime squad estimated the counterfeit cache tot alled $12 million to $14 million. Danton said U.S. treasury de partment agents and the RCMP had been looking for the money since 1976 when “quite a bit” of the bogus batch was seized A few’ $20 bills from the batch were circulated in downtown Van. couver about four months ago, but Danton said a recent circulation of counterfeit U bills in the Fraser Valley was unrelated. Police believed the money was buried by two male suspects, but no arrests have beer made. ” he said. SCHOOL DISTRICT No. 9 (CASTLEGAR) KINDERGARTEN AND GRADE ONE REGISTRATION * For the 88/89 School Year Parents wishing to enroll their child in either ENGLISH Kindergarten or RUSSIAN Kindergarten for September, 1988, are asked to register their child at the elementary school indicated below If the child is presently attending Kindergarten there is no need to register him/her in Grade One Please note that a birth or baptismal certificate must be shown before a child can be registered Kindergarten pupils must be five years old on or before December 31, 1988. Grade One pupils must be six years old on or before December 31 1988. Castlegar Primary — (Twin Rivers, Castlegar Primary, Ootischenia) Mon.-Wed., April 11, 12, 13. 7:30.a.m.-11:00a.m. Kinnaird Elementary — (Kinnaird Elementary, Valley Vista, Blueberry Creek) , Tues., Apr. 11, 12. 9:00-11:00 and 1-3 p.m entary Mon., Apr. 11 12°00-3:00 Tues., Apr. 12. 8:30-12 Woodland Park — (Woodland Park, Pass Creek) Tues., Apr. 12. 1:00-4:00. Wed., Apr. 13 9:00-12. BOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES School District No. 9 (Castlegar) PLUS MANY MORE LOW PRICES throughout our store * Downtown * Castleaird Plaza imported * Canada no. 1 * red ripe © limit 1 box with a tmily order strawberries approx. 5 Ib. box California grown * sweet Navel Oranges ow. v0 .99 SuperValu * white * brown sandwich bread 5704. 1001 » 89 The $.S. MOYIE Needs Your See The historic Kootenay Lake sternwheeler 5.5. MOYIE needs your help to save 11 from deterioration that threatens its very survival Parks Canada has promised $175,000 tor @ major preservation program, if the Kootenay Loke Historical Society can match the omount After serving nearly 60 years on Kootenay Lake, the S.S Moyie was pulled up on the shore at Kaslo in 1958 to become @ major tourist attraction with about 10,000 visitors o year The fund raising campaign has received excellent sup port from area media in the form of publicity and tree adver tising. Campaign expenses, mostly for postage and copying, are covered b Kootenay Lake Historical Society, $0 EVERY CENT OF EVERY DONATION IS DEPOSITED IN THE S.S. MOYIE PRESERVATION FUND! Please help save the Moyie. Send a donation as soon os possible to the $.S. Moyie Preservation Fund, Box 537, Kaslo, B.C. VOG IMO. Tax deductible receipts HISTORICAL SOCIETY KOOTENAY LAKE Registered Chority Tox Mo. 0713412-$2-26 An innovative beauty centre, complete with family hair styling, nail design, waxing, facials, our own line of cosmetics, and special fashion accessories. WE’RE LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING YOU! BEV ZELLA ZAYSTSOFF ozsaore ed Experience Esthetician Stylist BEAUTY — CENTRE | *~ 365-6000 © Castleaird Plaza ] GOAST-TO-COAST TIRE SALE APRIL 4 TO JUNE 4, 1988 ANY PAIR OF PASSENGER & LIGHT-TRUCK RADIALS COLUMBIA AUTO SERVICE 850 Columbia Ave., Castlegar * 365-5422 AUTOMOTIVE | 975 Columbia Ave., C