145 Crescent St. Castlegar FOR THE ‘84 - Send resume to Box 3309, 3H6, before August 24 or contact at 365-6101. Castlegar Jr. Rebels Hockey Receiving applications for TEAM MANAGER "85 SEASON B.C. VIN Wally P Peacock Fi ate nen tes AN entre i Soviet President Konstan- AUTOMOTIVE DIRECTORY tin Chernenko, on vacation for the past month, was not present. Soviet television, carrying the ceremonies live on national television and to other participating countries, showed Politburo members Bear Creek Road, Trail Mon. - Fri. 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.; Sat. 920 Farwell, Trail BB. «site ili Sine END. lis AUTO BODY & REPAIR WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA Complete Car and Truck Repairs AUTO BODY & PAINTING AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLIES ART’ 4® auto 364-2588 Ss PARTS B-ball With 50 girls registered already, the sixth annual Rockettes’ Basketball Camp opens Monday morning at the Selkirk College gym. It would appear that last year's registration figure of 43 girls will easily be sur- & 365-7248 MITCHELL AUTO PARTS For All Your Auto Needs 707 - 13th St., Castlegar (my The camp is open to all girls 11-15 years of age, who are interested in learning to play basketball. The junior division of the camp is for 11-12-year-olds and is more activity oriented. The senior Wide colestion - ; Gi, Ferd, Mopar & A Sateribig, Ode. Bde, Trett COLUMBIA AUTO WRECKERS & SERVICE SE AMC Ports es many import Parte. OPEN MONDAY TO SATURDAY Rivervale 364-2891 division for 13-15-year-olds is 1807 Columbia Ave. 368-3377 DEALERSHIPS KOOTENAY HONDA (formerly Trail Honda) Complete Honda Service & Sales (#23) BUMPER TO BUMPER. Fighting Inflation For Motoring Needs Now Under New management 365-7787 Beer Crowk Rd cross trom Wanete Piaxe Trait 1. 7734 FERNIE, B.C. (CP) — Ken Federko of Saskatoon has come to terms with Elk Valley Blazers of the West ern International Hockey League as playing coach. Federko, 26, is due to arrive in British Columbia on Aug. 27. Formal signing of the contract could take place Tu-Dor Creek Road, Trail WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA CASTLEGAR CHEVRON 425 Columbia, Castlegar 365-2912 Sports Castlegar Beaver Falls soles Service Ports Ivo Parts & Service Located at Costiegor 1335 Columbia Ave. 365-2912 SALES & SERVICE 365-71 pated 365-5690 24-HOURS Leosing CAR & TRUCK RENTALS CASTLEGAR CHEVRON WANETA PLAZA TOYOTA 364-2588 CASTLE TIRE (1977) LTD. ERNIE'S TOWING © BEAVER AUTO CENTRE W RENAUL AMC JEEP 367-7355 or 367-7722 MUFFLERS MAIN ST. MUFFLER Turbo Ph. 365-5411 See Us for Used Automotive Parts t Di t c # 7 UPHOLS AND SALES (1981 ¢ Automotive Corpeting & 650-23rd St. ) Upholstery 365-3055 Channel 13, 2:00 p.m. BASEBALL MAJOR Dodgers. Channel 9, 7:30 p.m Jays. Channel 13, 7:00 p.m 1-Dor Sport Castlegar SUNDAY GOLF: World Championship of Women's Golf tinal round from Shokeur Heights Country Club, Ohio. Channel 6, 12:00 0.m FOOTBALL—WNFL: Pre-season game, Miami Dolphins vs. Los Angeles Raiders. Chennel 6, 1:00 p.m. FOOTBALL—CFL: British Columbia Lions vs. HomiltoA Tiger Cats, TUESDAY LEAGUE: Montreal Expos vs. Los Angeles BASEBALL MAJOR LEAGUE: Cleveland Indians vs. Toronto Blue THE BIKE FOR YOUR SIZE AND YOUR NEEDS. The Olympic flame was lit from a torch carried into the stadium by Viktor Markin. camp opens Monday directed more towafd compe- tition. Activities begin each day at 9a.m. and conclude at 4:30 p.m. All participants will play two games each day, as well as participate in a competition, free-throw con- test, and dribbling compe- tition. In all the week-long camp offers 32 hours of ac- tivity. f Girls who have not yet registered should arrive at the Selkirk College gym be- tween 8 a.m. and 9 &.m. Mon- day. Federko coach for. Elk Valley team | at that time. Federko, who played jun ior hockey with Saskatoon Blades of the Western Hoc key League, previously coa ched North Battleford in the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League. He will replace Stu Tanton, who will remain with the Blazers as a player. AY NO HANDS NEEDED . . . Young participants in the Munchie Olympics organized by the Recreation Com- mission used straws to put candies into cups Friday Other food-related events were held at the games, which took place at Pass Creek Park — Coattews Phote by Adrian Ghambbertoin Bassett not in tourney MONTREAL (CP) — Mon- onucleosis has knocked Tor onto's Carling Bassett out of next week's! Player's Chal- lenge tennis tournament, or- ganizers say. Basset’s name was absent when organizing committee chairman Jean Richer pre- sided over the draw for the 56-player, $250,000 tourna ment. “We had hoped until the last minute that she was a good possibility.” said Rich er. “But her doctor has ad vised her not to play this week and probably next week, either, in the U.S. Open.” The illness has already kept Bassett out of the Can adian closed champions and the Olympic Games in Los Angeles where tennis was a demonstration sport. In Toronto, tournament director John Beddington said he learned Friday morn ing of Bassett’s withdrawal. He said Bassett and her Dispute over charity NEW YORK (AP) — Prod ded by a federal judge, New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner and star out- fielder Dave Winfield again have settled their dispute over funding for the ball player's charitable founda tion Steinbrenner has agreed to pay $375,000 owed to the David M. Winfield Founda tion for needy children. And Winfield gave Steinbrenner the right to look at the foun dation’s financial records so Until Fri., Sept. 28 Get the job done Now! Giess installation On Paint & Body Work MALONEY | 1700 Columbi settled he can keep track of haw his money is being spent. The settlement was ap proved at U.S. District Court in Manhattan by Judge Rob- ert J. Ward, who told both sides at an earlier hearing that while their lawyers fought, “the underprivileged children-remain just that.” mother decided she wasn't fit to play following a blood test Thursday. “Carling has been prac- tising every day this week and I don’t know if it was partly the humidity, but she had been losing strength,” said Beddington. Bassett's withdrawal left three Canadians in the draw, Marianne Groat of St. Cath. arines, Ont., Helene Pelletier of Quebec City, and Jill Hetherington of Peterbor- ough, Ont. All are wild-card entries, invited by the organ izers. TOP PLAYER OUT Martina Navratilova, the top-ranked woman player in the world and a three-time winner of the event, earlier told organizers she wouldn't play. Navratilova wants to prepare for the U.S. Open. Five of the top 10 players in the world are entered, though, including second. ranked Chris Evert Lloyd of the United States and Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslova kia, ranked third Kathy Jordan of the U.S., ranked fifth, Claudia Kohde- Kilsch of Germany, ranked seventh, and France’ Jo Durie, 10th, are the other top 10 entrants. The top eight seeds all get byes to the second-round of the tournament, which opens Monday at Jarry Park, and none of the three Canadians figures to have an easy time getting beyond Round 1. Groat, who won the Can- adian championship in Bas- sett's absence, plays Swe- den's Katarina Lindquist, ranked 60th in the world. Groat, ranked second in Canada behind Bassett, is rated 156th in the world. Pelletier, ranked 190th, faces Elizabeth Sayers of Australia, who is currently 53rd in the rankings. Hether ington, ranked 179th, plays Wendy White of the U.S., who is 38rd in the rankings. There are eight spots in the draw open for qualifiers. Qualifying rounds will be held aver the weekend Macdonald.” Ica pata the compen of voce ade of the northwest coast of Spotland knows as the Hebrides or the “Western Isles,” Seay cadet ar resaeied snd dramatically beaytiful groups of islands to be found anywhere in the world. Fur . for the there are stories and legends, pre-historic forts, tombs and struc- tures so ancient that no one knows their use; haunted houses and castles, lifestyles ‘still frozen in time, a thousand places immortalized in song. Since Saturday was the beginning of our “Hebrides Island tour — 1960s and ‘60s style,” we travelled with Alex and Jean up to Glasgow to spend the night at the Crest Hotel, a chain whieh I would have no hesitation in ding and whose fi ineluded in the rate are surely something to behold. Our bus picked up our small group (two Canadians, two English and six Americans) at 9:30 Saturday morning for the ferry at Oban. Throughout the five-hour ride there was a three-way conversation and drepartee, twothirds of it not always understood. “A lady told me she wanted to see something ancient so I sent her down to the railway cafeteria to look at the sandwiches.” We followed the inner Clyde, once one of the great est centres of shipbuilding now almost dead, to Helensburgh (the founder named it after his wife), Gareloch, Loch Lory, Arrochar, Glen Kinglas, Rest-and be-thankful (a long haul of at least a 60 degree incline) Loch Fyne, Inverary (an attractive small town where we stopped for lunch — soup, a roll and coffee. When in doubt over here order soup, it is always good and plentiful and often excellent. And we did a little shopping), Loch Aray, Loch Awe, Pass of Brouder, Loch Etive and finally to Oban — a small bustling seaport town and shipping centre in a long half-moon harbor dominated by “McCaig’s Folly,” a circle of granite recalling the Roman Coliseum. When we arrived, Peter got up and said, “You'll have a 45-minute trip on the Mull ferry to Craiginure on the MV Caledonia. It's now 2:30. You have an hour to shop and make your way down to the end of the left hand dock by 3:45. The ship is due at 4, but it comes in anywhere between 3:45 and 4:30. The company is a law unto itself. When it comes, just walk on — your baggage will be put aboard and David will meet you there. Three forty-five, mind, and David will meet you on board.” Sure enough, we arrived at the end of the dock at 3:45. The ship came in at 4:15 and the mysterious David, our driver-guide and mentor, met us in the saloon and we learned our first lesson — life in the Hebrides marches to the beat of a more casual, less fretful drum — but it gets there nonetheless. The Inner and Outer Hebrides are served by three larger, specially built ferryships, the MV Hebrides, the MV Caledonia, and the MV Claymore, as well as a number of smaller ones. In the course of our nine- day Grand Hebridean Tour with David Dean, owner of the tour company on the islands of Mull, Iona, Skye, Harris, Lewis, Benbecula, North and South Vist, Eriskay and Staffa, seven of these days included a seatrip on one of the ferries. It was the bargain adventure of a lifetime and the only way to get the “feel” of these still magical, relatively unspoiled islands. INVERARAY WATERFRONT . . . One of the.many stops on the Charters’ trip from Glasgow td But back to detail: David, the grey-hatted much-older-than-he-looks —- leader appeared”;out of nowhere about 10 minutes before the boat made port and said, “Mr. and Mrs. Charters” — more of.a statement than a question — then went on to the other eight travellers. I intended asking him how he identified us from among some 150 other passengers, then gave up when on another day, having left the ship for a walk ashore and returning started to tell the man on the gang- plank that I belonged on the tour, but was again sur- prised to have him say, “I know — I saw you get in.” The Hebrides is a small world and so little, I suspect, is missed. We got off the ship at Craiginure on the island of Mull and were shown to a 1960 Leyland diesel bus which I immediately named “The Ancient Mariner.” She was blue (but immaculate), had a separate small cabin forward with a small sliding window for the chauffeur, a great fin in the stern and made a noise like a truck. 1 wondered — as I think did the others — if she would last the day. On the other hand, Janice, (that was her name) was the apple of David's eye and he had immense confidence in her. As it turned out he was right and we were wrong. She had already done 1'/ million miles and carried us through the nine days over even narrower and twistier roads than we had ever dreamed of in comfort and without a murmur We arrived at the charming town of Tobermory at the northeast end of Mull and the resting place of one of the treasure ships of the Spanish Armada — wrecked while sailing for home around the north of Scotland. We were lodged at the hospitable Sraidhe (“cooking port” in Gallie) Hotel run by genial host Jim Scott and his wife Christine. . Here, after a hot bath a delicious dinner of Scotch broth, roast lamb with real mint sauce, vegetables, wine, several demi-tasses of strong coffee, biscuits and cheese, and across by ferry to Mull Island of the Hebrides the beginning we were ready to take on the world. Instead, we followed David's suggestion and walked up the hill behind the town, past the war memorial with its long lists of dead (they are scattered throughout these sparsely inhabited islands like cries of grief in stone) and up to the rugged golf course which my journal describes as “a beautiful location a view across the water (Sound of Mull) to the other islands is superb. Scotch mist just starting as we came down ia the gathering dusk.” FALL FAI Sat., Aug. 25 & Sun., Aug. 26 SATURDAY ‘Seco SUNDAY Amateur Pet Show + Porade * Tug-O-War Food & Exhibits ° Events Bavarian Garden ° Concession & Bingo Grenima 2 Grehge * Russian Food SUNDAY © Boverien Gorden © Bingo Free Poncoke Breaktast | * Food (Courtesy — Castlegar | * Cow-Dung Throwing Savings Credit Union) Contest Ke COX