CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, May 18, 1978 Riddles |. If cheese comes an top of mburger, what comes ir cheese? 2. Where did Abraham Lin. >” coln tive? ‘ . Where do tith keep thelr money? |. Whare do vampires keep + thelr money? . What is as round as the moon, at black as coal, and hat a hole in the + middt B. What hind of phone makes ‘ music? ‘auoydores y 9 “puooes ydesTouoyd y “¢ equeg pooig uy 'p ut z v SYSMSNYV Anglepuss The Triangular Cat gat How many can you find? 2 ompAuamy saaMbuy Fount the number of trsangles in the |. Hatchet |. Backpack . Maspessk Hike Wilderness weoOmaRedimzartmzE< PmMANOEP ee eH Z200 4 a Q € 8 Ly ' ° R H ‘ a z u s NRE x ELK F oce ° zve R EXE e wea s Kec T cuK Pp atu ‘ ser v PKA e acw A NXY € T v M Jd F N x v A x t P E a t c v x € P v t 8 kK c x ' BexrEmeener tanga BxcoroxveOxv—-a AmMUEPXPONZTyY—-DZNO RCECN eRe TERra- Beata emnszreamece Ww K H Hidden are 15 words to circle, Words go across, down, dlogonslly, up and backwerd. CAN YOU FIND THEM? Pulpit and Pew By Pastor DONALD W. REED {This week's contributer to the Family Month theme is Rev. Ed Wegner, pastor of the Apostolic Church of Pentecost in Castlegar.) A MAJOR KEY TO A successful marriage, as to a successful home, is co-opera- tion. : The Rose Bow) Stadium in Pasadena, Calif. holds over . 100,000 people. What could possibly hold the attention of so many ‘people gathered in one place at one time? What could bring a crowd like this to its feet in unanimous applause and jubilation? They are all watch- ing their favorite teams, as the members of each team co- operate together in order to win the game. THERE IS SOMETHING about :co-operation that we need in marriage and ina home. Co-operation is part of a good marriage relationship founda- tion. The Apostle Paul, writing in 1 Corinthians 1:10, says “I exhort you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you all agree and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be made complete in the same mind and in the same judgment.” When you think about your relationship with your spouse and your children, how does your relationship measure up to this standard? The kind of standard Paul calls for doesn't leave much room for “doing my own thing no matter what anyone else may think.” Back to the stadium. YOU CAN PREDICT what the football field will look like, and also what kind of ball will be used. Can you imagine a football team coming onto the field bouncing a basketball? “We had a ‘discussion be- fore the game and decided we didn't like the usual ball today,” the coach explains. “We don't want to frustrate anyone; we want people to be original; we are very broadminded. The team also did not feel like- wearing their uniforms today so we let them wear what they wanted.” That we would never ex- pect -to hear. ant THE e draws people to the stadium or tothe T.V. set during a football game is the thrill, the joy, the pleasure and the wonder of watching people co-operate. We all need co-operation. We are not made to go our own way; each to pull in his or her - own direction, The partners in a marriage and the members in a family are made to co-operate. THE OLD ADAGE, “THE family that wants to stay together will pray’ together” is true. They will also find a way to co-operate together. fC church directory ST. RITA'S CATHOLIC CHURCH. Rev. Michael Guinan 7143 Saturday Night Mass 7 p.m. Sunday Masses at 8 a.m. and10a.m. ST. MARIA GORETTI Genelle 12 Noon ST. PETER LUTHERAN, CHURCH 405 Maple St. GRACE PRESBYTERIAN ’ CHURCH 3 Castlegar 1 9:45 a.m. Minister H. M. Harvey h, 365-3816 CHURCH OF CHRIST No CREED but the CHAIS No WAY BUT HIS WAY; No CHURCH but HISCHURCHI Sunday Bible Classes and Worship m. 12 a.m. Minister — Jack Shock 365-2580 Ip Service 11:00 a.m. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail Saturday Services: Sabbath School: 9:30 a.m. Divine Service: 11:00 a.m. Pastor: O. Zinner, 385-2649 ANGLICAN AND UNITED CHURCHES St. David's Anglican — Sun.: 8 a.m. Communion 7:30 p.m. Fellowship/ Study Group (Joint) Castlegar United —— Sun.: 10:40. a.m. Sunday School 00 11 a.m. Sunday Worship Tues.: 7:30 p.m. Youth Group Wed.: 10a.m. Bible Study “Everyone Welcome” Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Rev. Richard Klein: Pastor 365-3662 or 365-3864 Listen to the Lutheran Hour, Sunday, 11:30 a.m. CKQR Robson Community Church Sun.: 9:45 a.m. Worship Castlegar — Church focated at 1401 Columbia Ave. MINISTERS Rev. Desmond Carroll ~ Home: 3 1 Rev. Ted Bristow (United) Office: 365-8337 Home: 365-7814 Calvary Baptist Church * APOSTOLIC CHURCH Phone 365-6317 Below the Castleaird Plaza hoot Service Service le ‘Rev. Ed Wegner, Pastor Phone 365-2374 Val Leiding, Youth Pastor Phone 399-4753 809 Merry Creek Road Next to Cloverleaf Motel, Castleaird Plaza CHURCH OF GOD 804-7th Avenue South “Learning” “Worshiping” “Serving” Sunday: 9:45 am, Class forall Ages. © 11 am, Family Worship Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. . Opportunities ‘to serve S ee "Ons coat Family Bible Hour 9:45 245 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Evening Praise 6:30 p.m. Wed., Bible Study p.m Church Office: 365-3430 Rev. Donald W. Reed, Pastor: 385-2630 PEt ECOSTAL TA ERNACLE 767 Fir. . Avenue, North Pastor: Rev. H. H. Graham Church: Ph. 385-5212 Sunday School 9:50 a.m. Morning Worship am. Evening Service Tuesday: B 7 ne on all makes & aS ons js "| HI “THING THAT ¥ Moving Parts to Make _ business direc C, C. LENFESTY & CO, Advertising Rates and Information Call 365-5210 B.G.’s CERARICS 601 - 20181 Avenut Fairview Subdivision, C Phone 3 28 — Hours Monday to Friday: 7-10p.m. Saturday: 10a.m. - 5 p. day: 125 p.m. “IVAN WICKLUM licenced Roofing Contractor All Types of Rooting We in Shakes Certified General Accountants te Auditors + Tax Consultants 609 Columbia Castlegar - 365-2118 See Us For APPLIANCE REPAIRS The Business | Directory Has Reasonable Rates and Good Results Wall and Celling Custom Texturing 365-3783 Nelson: 352-2917 + Guiseppe’s Masonry Grand Forks 442-8510 For free estimate 365-2303 CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING 1008 Columbia Ave. Phone 365-3388 Stock. ‘Je If we don't | have the part — you don't pay for 2 ser- vice calls. Dial 365-6141 CADMAC:.. RANGE REPAIR SERVICE, J. F. Hipwell F.R.I., R.I. (B.C.) Hipwell Realty For professional fee appraisals on all forms of real estate, call: 365-7514 355 Columbia Ave. — CASTLE TIRE LTD. SALES & SERVICE Commercial & Industrial Tire Specialists Passenger and Off Highway Tires WHEEL BALANCING 24 re * Hour Service Greep’s os For Electrical Contracting Sales & Service - 365-7075 FREE ESTIMATES Sam’s Nursery & Florist’ See Us for... Se SAM NURSERY & FLORIST 1001 - 9th Ave S. 365-7312 et vectra Contracting COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL RESIDENTIAL ELECTRIC HEAT L. HOOLAEFF ELECTRIC _ PHONE. 365-7191 “The Business Directory’’ A Smart Place To Advertise FILTEX Built-in Units Vacuums ¢ Music Intercoms ¢ Fire Systems 365-6512 ‘Inland Roofing & Sheet Metal Ltd. Formarly Interlor Sheet Metal (1965) Lid. oo Infand's Guarantee: Our company offers afticlent, guaranteed workmanship In all phages of-bullt-up tar and gravel rootingy-Insulating’ and~ sheet metal work; backed by our own (B-year} guarantea or by the Master Sheat Metal and Roofing Contractors Association of @ritish Columb Ken Denneus, Manager 725 - 6th Ave., South e Castlegar, B.C. Bus 365-7553 Res 365-5083 CASTLEGAR FUNERAL HOME Dedicated to Kindly Thoughtful Service Ambulance — Flowers Granite, Marble and Bronze Plaques Kootenay Furnace We Sell and Install Oil Furnaces, Electric Fur- haces and Mobile Home Fireplaces. All-Fuel Chimney Always in Stock Phone Now: 365-3644 Kootenay Furnace ory Santemonika _ UNION PAINTERS | Call Collect '. 226-7730 Box 51 Slocan’ Park PRINTING “Quality & Service Count”. CASTLEGAR NEWS 191 Columbia Ave. Car Rul Office Supplies Office Furniture School Sup; @ Sharp Calculators “The Difference In Quality & Service” #1, 401 Front St., C: gz \ We Sell & Use * VIDAL SASSOON products “The Hair Annex’’ 7 Pine St. 365-3744 COHOE 269 Columbia: Dial 365-3301 * Providing Complete Insurance Service © Yes, we have licence plates © Open six days a week to “serve you belter! - Fruitvale 365-7145 1050 Columbia Avenue It Takes a Lot of Your Car And to keep those parts operating smoothly, take your car to the people who really know how to taka care of Phil and Larry at Columbla Aut © Fully Certified and Guaranteed Tar and Gravel Roots © Kaiser Aluminum Shakes in 6 new colours. Aluminum patio roofs, 4 designs 4 new colours Lori or Bill Phone Genelle (collect) 693-5513 or Res. 693-2257 Columbia © Auto Service Columbia Avenue |FOUNDATIONS & FRAMING . * Quality Workmanship © Reasonably Priced * Firm Estimates © References on Request 365-5422 365-3794 ry ‘eet Doug or Marv Kragh solve your roofing problems © Shingles © Shakes © Aluminum © Roll Roofing Kragh Brothers Roofing Call 367-9261 GROCETERIA AND LAUNDRET 1038 Columbia Avenue {Bottom of Sherbiko Hill) OPEN Monday through Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Sunday and Holidays 9 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Groceries,.Tobacco | Confectionery and General PHONE 365-6534 . Arrow Laundry : Dry Cleaning. a. NOW OPEN. AT OUR NEW LOCATION 208 Maple, N. 365-6651 RHC INS. AGENCIES LTD. 601 Baker St., Nelson Ph. 352-7252 Fire © Auto. * Boat Trailer ¢ Life Call Peter Majesgey 365-5386 A.M.S. Building Maintenance Janitorial Service REFRIGERATION & CONTROLS SERVICING Refrigeration-Alr Conditioning - + Government Certified COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL Complete + Sales-Service-Installation © Refrigerated . Merchandl: © Walk-in, Reach-in Units © Cubers, Flakers, Ice Dispensers © Alr Conditioners, Heat Pumps MANUFACTURERS OF , QUALITY RUBBER STAMPS aaa nay CROSSROADS PRINTIS & STA aS LTD. 105 Main Street Cartlegn. BC, VIN Ite : 305.5925 COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tank Pumping . PHONE 365-5013 1800 - 4th Ave., South, Castlegar *¢ Call us now for professional window washing, carpet cleaning, and Office cleaning. A.M.S. _ 365-2326 Ray Plamondon . Office Supplies © Office Furniture . © Commercial Printing. CASTLEGAR, NEWS 191 Columbia Ave. DESMOND T. LITTLEWOOD D.0.S: OPTOMETRIST: * 366 Baker St., Nelson, B.C, Ph, 352-5152 Specializing in T.V. Repatrs . . . We Service All Makes. MARTIN'S TV REPAIRS Fairview Sub, 365-5349 Quasar . Sales & Service as Yes! Now you may also’ - purchase your Quasar Col- our TV. from Wayne's, Wayne's TV Service 362-7657 368-6110 CASTLEGAR CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY Furniture Recovering Carpet & Draperies Phone 365-3632 BURT CAMPBELL Publisher RYON GUEDES, Editur CASTLEGAR NEWS “Here let the press the people's rights maintain, unawed by influence and unbribed by gain” BT Thursday Morning, May 18, 1978 Providing the initiative Nearly 15 years ago Eric Martin, thon provincial health minister, marked In a ribbon-culting ceremony the official opening ot the $32,000 Rotary Health Centre at 305 . Spruce. : Three weeks ago Dr. Nick Schmitt, West Kootenay Health Unit director, de- scribed ina letter to health ministry officlals tlegar area and the Implamentation of naw public health pro- grams. He sald population In the city and outlying areas rose from 12,000 to 18,000 between 1972 and 1976 and School District No, 9 had predicted the addition of about 500 new families in the next year. tn the meantime, he sald, more than 12 full-time and part-time staff use the bullding, which includes a reception and home care office, & conference and waiting room as well as four offices on Its main floor, and a basement which Includes a prenatal room, homemaker office and storage rooms. Dr. Schmilt, who Is not known for exaggerated statements, said there Is a storage space shortage at the centre and every room In the building ‘‘is fully or doubly utillzed.’" Expansion of the bullding to include additional storage.space, another walting room and four more offices ‘‘is thie only answer,”’ he said. 3 It Is obvious that over a 15-year period such a facility should expand to accommo- date the greater extent and variety of public health services currently available to the community. Also clears the need for a facllity which will anticipate mental health, © home care and long-t care would pul oiher government agencies, currently renting office space in other paris of the city, In a single, convenient location. it might also serve as an Incentive for both senior levels of government to decentralize services which have traditionally been locked Into Trail and Nelson. But regardless of whether new public health facilities are put under the same roof as human. resources ministry offices, the Project would still require the kind of support which was provided by loce! Rotarlans for construction of the present centre, In addition to ralsing $6,433—no mean sum In 1963—the Rotary Club provided the leadership necessary to promote public interest and urge the federal and provincial governments to foot the rest of the bill. And although Iccation of the centre on hospital property might help keep the cost of expansion down, the project -would still require co-operation between the hospital board,. the Central. Kootenay Regional Hospital District board, all focal service clubs, city council and, most Importantly, private residents In winning the participa- _ tion of sentor governments. In seeking improvements to the centre, we should show the same Initiative that resulted in Its construction. Explanation A-rational explanation to anyone puz- zled by the provinclal corporate and con- sumer affairs minister's recently-announced | which will be available in the future. One proposal worth considering, as the WKHU director pointed out, is the construc- tion on .a_ multi-disciplinary government bullding either at the same hospital site or ; another location In the city. In addition to providing the necessary space for.health services, such a complex to place a on high-aicohol Products sold by the Liquor Administration. Board: : The minister is simply charging you extra for hard liquor so he can: afford advertisements telling you to stop drinking so much hard liquor. Got it? You're welcome. ... Kemember? Castlegar News headline stories one year ago.. |: Robson and District Ri re 5 District inform new residents of the contaminati . 8 approve a ion in the area's water supply. * that the Robson Irrigation B.C. Hydro has agreed to spend $7,500 studying the impact the Seven Mile Dam will have on Castlegar, Nelson and Salmo, * * Angry parents in the Slocan Valley area demand principal Alex Pereverzoff. * : the Nelson School Board re-instate former According’ to Needham: Sliding Back into 1937 By RICHARD J. NEEDHAM (From columns in the Toronto Globe and Mail.) Tran across an observation by Eugene O'Neill: “There is no agail present or future—only the past, happening over and over This is’ true. In the military sense, the Western world ‘is sliding into 1937 all over again; in the economic sense, it's sliding into 1932 all over again. As Bismarck said, “All we learn from history is that men learn nothing from - history.” * PALM DAIRIES LIMITED. Everyday goodness. Cottage Cheese. cae . Dwight Whalen advises from Missisauga: “Abe ‘Lincoln said you can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time. But Lincoln never lived in Ottawa,”, The young have every- thing you longed for when you were young—and they're just as mis as you were. @ beg Published Every Thursday Morning at “THE CROSSROADS OF THE KOOTENAYS” ¢ Founded on August 7, 1947 CASTLEGAR NEWS L.V. (LES) CAMPBELL, 1012-1077 Publisher fram Aug. 7. 1947 to Fab. 15, 1973 -AMPBELL, Publisher aur W. Hi. JONES, Advertising Manager RENE BRODMAN, Shop Foraman LOIS HUGHES, Managing Editor RAYON GUEDES, Editor LLEW MEYER, Office Manager Mail subscription rate to the Castlegar News is $11 per year. The price by carrler and on newsstands is 25 cents an issue. Second-class mail registration number 0019. Thi stiegar News is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the Canadian Community Neuron ‘Association, and the British Columbia and Yukon Community Newspapers Associallon. It is also a member of Weslern Regional Newspapers. and is nationally representad by ADREPS {Armsirong-Dagg Representatives Ltd.), 207 W. Hastings St., Vancouver. B.C. V6B 1J8, telephone (604) 684-5419. dence should be addressed to: The Editor, Castlegar News, Drawer 3007, Castlegar, 8 GavI ane Lalters for publication must be signed with the correct name and address of the writer. “Pen** names will be used on request, but the correct name must be submilted. The Castlegar News reserves the right to edit letters in the interests of brevity. good taste, etc. aller one insertion. tls The Castlegar News will nat b for any errors | verliser to read his ad when It is first published. oe ‘TRagreed by the advertiser requesting space that the advertisement is accepted on the condition that in the event of falture to publish any advertisement of any description, or in the event that errors occur in the publishing of an advertisement, that porlior. of the advertising space occupied by the erroneous item. together with reasonable allowance tor signature, will not be charged for but the balance of the advertisement will be paid for'at the applicable rate. In the event of an error, advertising goods or services at a wrong price. Ihe goods or services need not be sold. Advertising Is merely an offer to sell. The offer may be withdrawn at any time. By DICK GRIFFIN (From the Chicago Daily News.) I TOOK A TEST DESIGN- ed to reveal how honest I am, It's the same test administered to men and women applying for jobs with the state police, banks, insurance corporations, hotels, department stores and supermarkets. I flunked. Tt wasn't a Sie deiector examination -but a pencil and paper test, requiring yes and no answers to 90 questions, Tests like this are sold to industry and government by several concerns, which also grade the tests and report to the client company whether the person is recommended for employment. My performance meant I'd still be 90-Question Honesty Exam ~Screening Out Cheats— u “‘You mustn't feel your life Is pointless — the streets are much safer since they put you In here." ‘nant” recommendation would keep me on unemployment e p Written honesty tests are developed by polygraph ex- perts, whose years of expe- rience with lie detectors show- ed that basically honest persons usually responded the same way to certain questions, and basically dishonest ones have opposite responses, ~ AS. WORKERS HAVE been stealing their employers blind, detecting dishonest per- sons before they get onto the payroll and into the till has become vital to the survival of businesses both small and large. I am amazed to learn how many dishonest people there are in the United States, at least in the view of Dan Reid, executive vice-president of the Reid Report, which evaluates hundreds of thousands of job- seekers every year through such tests. “Four out of every 10 people will prove dishonest, given the need and the oppor- tunity,” said Reid, whose living depends on the basic dishon- esty of the American worker. The most dishonest. work- ers in American, said Reid, aren't cab drivers and wait- resses, who have super-bad repulations in the eyes of the average American. and the Internal Revenue Service. Nor are business’ execu- tives the worst crooks, despite ‘their bad image. Here’ are Reid's nominations for the country's biggest cheats: GAS STATION EMPLOYEES Said Reid: “Of all’ job categories, the majority of people we see who have had a history of working in service stations, whether pumping gas or working as mechanics or managers, turn out to be poor tisks. They possess dishonest attitudes relative to their own honesty and that of others, and they're also the largest group to make gross adverse admis- sions relative to their own dishonesty (meaning they con- fess more crimes to testers than anybody else does).” BARTENDERS “It's rare to find an honest. bartender. An officer of a big hotel chain we work for said the corporation knows every one of its bars is being ripped off by their bartenders, but he said. “We can’t run a bar without‘a bartender, so we let them steal~ and hope they don’t take too much. PHARMACISTS “The majority of pharma- cists we hve tested are very poor risks. They steal money, drugs, Kotex for their wives and vitamins for their kids. I have a theory that many of them are frustrated physicians who hate the world.” Reid’s test has 90 ques- tions, but 20 are ungraded. The latter are experimental or de- signed to deceive people trying to deceive the tester. Of the 70 graded questions, a score of at least 50 “right” is. needed to get a job recommen- dation from Reid Report. I scored a miserable 45, and I was afraid this would slam the door on any possible career for me-near money or valuable merchandise.” “Not necessarily so,” said Reid, carefully moving his gold desktop pen holder out of my reach.” He explained that he's “qualifiedly recommend” me to a potential employer. =~” ‘That sort of “slightly preg- Blacktopping Specialists ‘or -€all driveways & parking lots 226-7740 or 357-9397 for- months, I argued. “No,” he said. “Our test shows you're pretty honest yourself, (He wasn't clever enough to discover the pencil stubs.I regularly take home or the dental appointments made on the company phone.) Your, problem is your ee Pa have spent the 20 years secret- ly buying control of the busi- * ness, then dump the boss and his brats in one mass firing on Christmas Eve. A bank teller, 28 years on the job and too old to get a new one, was being paid only half what a 22-year-old teller was making. To survive, the man embezzled $500 a year ina way that the. losses were never P You answered 16 or 35 ques- tions in that category incor- rectly.” If I were his kind of guy, Reid explained, I would be willing to send my grandmoth- er to jail for stealing a $1 pair of laces for her fashion boots. Now I understand. WHAT CRUSHED MY chances for. a job over the holidays at K-Mart was how I answered questions like: Would you fire an em- ployee who stole $10 a week for . 20 years to support his wife and 10 children—after he admitted what he was doing and paid every penny back? I said hell no, he should have started stealing earlier and bought birth control pills. Do you think a company was wrong to fire an excellent employee who didn’t get a raise or a promotion in 20 years, and who never complain- ed even though the boss's kids regularly got big raises and promotions, then one day im- .petuously pocketed an $18 overpayment by a customer? There was no space to write that I thought he should Applied Science Course’s Fuse Fizzles Out Quebec city police inter- rupted an interesting experi- ment in applied science when they charged six chemistry teachers at a junior college for making bombs during class. This activity was part of a 10-day course on “the prepara- tion of explosives.” The police action may have saved the province from a new kind of educational boom.” —Toronto Star But his finally got to him and he admitted the thefts to the presi- dent. Did I think the man should be sent to jail? Only for stupidity. 1 answered all of them wrong, in Reid's view. He explained: "You'd be an honest employee, I can see, but, there'd be questions about your qualifications as a supervisor. We'd explain to prospective employers that if they wanted you to supervise others, they . should explain to you exactly what they consider stealing to be.” T asked him what kinds of answers would show a person was. honest and he said: “An- swer all questions about others” dishonesty with ‘Burn the bas- tard, if he stole, fry him.’ Be very hard on yourself, too. If you're asked, ‘Have you ever stolen anything?’ reply ‘Never!’ Peéple who are dishonest think everybody’s dishonest and that’s how we catch them. They admit to us that they steal and say, ‘Doesn't everybody? be-. cause they think we wouldn't believe them if they said they were honest. But if’ somebody gol a perfect score on the test, we wouldn't believe that either, because we don't ever find sainthood, just ordinary. hon- esty. REID AND THE OTHER testers say they have a high average of accuracy, but ob- viously not a perfect one. - They have a passing score of 60 to a young man who applied for a manger-trainee job in a supermarket. Later the employer learn- ed the man had a police record for burglary, larceny, forgery, unlawful flight to escape prose- cution and jail break. “We're not infallible,” shrugged Reid. HOMEPLAN MORTGAGES * For the purchase of exssting homes. * For renovations or additions * Uf you owna home, for consolidation of debts * Rates as low as 13.5% * No lock-in, no bonus You are dealing with the mortgage division of TRADERS GROUP LTD. Attention Men & Boys! For All Seasons. it’s Bi Bonnett’s Mere Wee WP) 233 Columbia 365-6761 Remember 10% ' OFF for Cash HOMEPLAN features first or second mortgages Fred: 365-2211 283 Martin St. Penticton Ph. 492-3841-{collect) Evenings or Weekends Call 493-1291 or 492-0750 (cotlect) f “N it Looked Like Batore you buy. the of this plan. All monies paid apply to purchase. Why tle up your cash or borrowing power. First and last month's rent — then drive away. Wood to Me! ; Lave Home Can Have the Beauty of Wood Without the Problems © Building a new home? © Tired of painting AGAIN this year? Give us a call—Free Estimates Vinyl & Aluminum Siding, Soffits & Facia A&l Exterior Siding Dealers for Kaiser Aluminum Marcel: 365-2616 FOR PRIVATE USE OR BUSINESS AUTOVEST—LEASE-TO OWN Based on Sé-Month Lease EXAMPLES "76 F-250 PICKUP $148 per mo. Lease-end price 2175 or simply return ‘78C-100 CHEV PU | '78 ECONO VAN $129 per mo. 3138 per mo. Loase-end price Lease-end price $1875 31975 or simply return orsimply return ‘78 ZEPHYR SEDAN $126 per mo. Lease-end price $1825 or simply return ‘78 CAMERO HT ‘78 DODGE VAN $139 per mo. $129 per mo. Lease-end price Lease-end price $2025 or simply return or simply return ‘78 FIESTA 3-OR $99 per mo. Leate-and price 31400 or simply return "78 F-150 4X4 ‘78 OLDS CUTLASS, $155 per mo. $139 per mo. Lease-end price Lease-end price $2025 $2275 or simply return or simply return, CALL LARRY HAYES-RICHARDS COLLECT 1160 Marine Orive, North Vancouver, B.C. D.00a70A ” 987-7111 BELMONT LEASING LTD. gives you an i 100 square feet. If your home is like 90% of Canadian homes, it's not properly insulated. This chart lea of how much you could save by bringing your home from the average level of insulation up to today's recommended standards. Of course, as energy costs go up, so will these savings. a IF YOU DON'T HAVE 10 INCHES OF INSULATION IN YOUR ATTIC, _ YOU'RE LOSING HEAT AND WASTING MONEY. NOW HOMES BUILT BEFORE 1946 ARE ELIGIBLE FOR A HOME INSULATION GRANT OF UP TO $350. Electric Heat $296 30 $120 These, savings are based on a typical 2-storey pre-war bore of . *Based on insulation matenal with R-3 value per inch (254 cm) If your home was built before 1946, is your principal residence, and is three storeys or less, you're eligible for a taxable grant of % of the cost of your insulation materials, up toa maximum of $350 (retroactive to materials purchased on or after September 1, 1977). For FREE and complete information about how to insulate your home and how to apply for a grant, sendin the © coupon bel low. We ieeouae Canadian Home Insulation Program Gouvernement uConada "Keeping the Heat In" m English Please print. NAME enfrancais: ADDRESS cmITy POSTAL CODE