as CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 31, 1983 Safeway’s SPECIAL Frozen, Limit 6 per family order Canada Grade Apple Juice Limit 1 case (12 cartons) per family order Lucerne, White A Canada Grade .... doz. Ovenjoy Bread *White or *60% Whole Wheat 570 g Sliced Loaf ................ g000 Orange Juice Minute Maid or *With More Pulp or en Ci Juice; Froz 355 mL (12% fi. oz) Container 99° Ice Cream Luceme Assorted Flavours S or *Soft Corn Oil or *Soft Unsalted Margarine 1 3 Fleischmann's *Soft Sunflower 2-227 9 $ 65 Sweet Margarine, 454 g Package . .yout YO. Vegetables ... *Sweetlet # Peas, *Summer Sweet Peas, *Cream corn, *Niblets Corn, *Cut Green Beans, *F son French Green Beons. Fancy, Min. 341 ml tin Green Beans or *: 1 ©000080 00008 Qn tay REVLON SPECIALS Shampoo or Conditioner SAVE me lex, Assorted aS (00 mL i California Grown * No. 1 Grade Limit 1 case (24 tins) per family order Stems & Pieces 5 Scotch Buy. 284 mL (10 fi. oz.) Tin LMAXimiIZERW.. F “‘A DAILY INTEREST ACCOUNT THAT HAS IT ALL” ; 1016 - 4th Street, across from the Post Office. Kootenay Savings Credit Union ions tame Tiger-Cats 34-20 HAMILTON (CP) — Sammy Greene returned a kickoff 112 yards to snap a fourth-quarter tie and Karry Parker added an insurance touchdown with a 66-yard pass interception Saturday night to quell a late Hamilton rally and give B.C. Lions a 84-20 Canadian Football League victory over the Tiger-Cats. Hamilton triled 20-6 late in the final quarter when b ignited a back bid Ben with a fumble recovery. B.C. running back John Henry White fumbled at his own 40 and Zambiasi faced to the B.C. 6. One play later, quarterback Tom Clements found Rufus Crawford in the end zone and kicker Bernie Ruoff’s convert shaved B.C. lead to 20-18 at 9:10. One minute later, defensive back Mark Streeter picked off B.C. quarterback Joe Paopao’s pass and raced 39 yards for the TD. Ruoff added the convert and the TiCats, who had looked hapless through the game, found themselves in a 20-20 tie. On the ensuing kickoff, Greene bobbled the ball momentarily and then took off on his startling end-to-end romp that hushed an Ivor Wynne Stadium crowd of 16,101 and put the Lions ahead 27-20 only 17 seconds after Streeter’s TD. END COMEBACK BID The Lions ended Hamilton's comeback bid when defensive back Parker intercepted a Clements pass and raced 65 yards down the sideline at 12:51. Passaglia completed the scoring with his third convert of the game. . Passaglia added field goals of 23 and 49 yards and booted a 29-yard single on an errant field goal try. Slotback John Pankratz caught two TD passes for the Lions. Darling Carling Ruoff gave Hamilton eight of its points with converts and field goals from 17 and 19 yards. The victory, B.C.’s second in a row after a season- opening 17-14 loss against Toronto Argonauts, moved the Lions into a first-place tie in the Western Division with Edmonton Eskimos and Winnipeg Blue Bombers. The Tiger-Cats, with one victory in four outings, remained in a last-place tie in the Eastern Division with Montreal Concordes and Ottawa Rough Riders.“ : Paopao relieved starting quarterback Roy Dewalt with eight minutes left to play in the third quarter and promptly masterminded a 59-yard drive that was capped with a 18-yard strike to Pankratz at 10 : 62 to put the Lions ahead 20-6. . ‘The fans barely settled into their seats when B.C. wide receiver Ned Armour fumbled Ruoff's opening kickoff and 6-5 IN 13 INNINGS. Toddler, Disposable For babies 23 Ibs. & over. Box of 48... many more In-Sto Tradition, “Regular, *Drip or *Extra Fine, 369 g Package Instant Coffee Flex Salon Formula 125 mL Bottle Maxwell House 283 glares. cece Peake. sess Nabob, Deluxe Tea Bags ¢A09 Orange Pekoe, 400 g Box of 120 Bags ... 000000000000 00008000009 @@ s Tomato Juice Town House Fancy, 1.36 L (48 fl. 02.) tin Prices effective Aug. 2-6, 1983 in your Friendly Castleaird Plaza Safeway Store. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. 360 mL Bottle rs Pepsi *Pepsi Free, Regular or Diet 750 mL Bottle Plus Bottle Deposit 008000000 SAFEWAY CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED” wins OTTAWA (CP) — Carling Bassett of Toronto, success- fully defended her Canadian Closed women’s tennis cham- pionship Saturday, defeating Marianne Groat of St. Cath- arines, Ont., 6-8, 6-2. The win was no surprise as the 15-year-old Bassett was not only the top-seeded wom- an in the event, but also is ranked 24th among women players in the world — the highest international ranking. ever a Canadian: - player. It was in effect the second’ match of the day for Bassett, who. earlier completed a. mifinal one she ted Jill Heatherington of’ Peter-" borough, Ont., 6-1, 7:6 with the ‘second set decided by a 1-4 tie-breaker. Finalists for today’s men’s singles also were decided earlier with 88-year-old Dale Power. of Ottawa defeating 19-year-old Hatem McDadi of Toronto 6-1, 6-2 and Derek Segal of Toronto beating Bill Cowan of Dorval, Que., 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. Bassett said the only time she felt threatened was in the second set when seventh-' seeded Groat won the first two games on a series of fine ground strokes, forcing Bas- sett into untypical errors. CAME ON STRONG “She really came on strong early in the second set and then my game settled down,” Bassett said. “She played really well when she came in on her opportunities.” The settling down for Bas- sett resulted in her taking the last six games of the match. ‘ She saw it as good prep- aration for the U.S. national clay courts championship starting Tuesday in Indian- apolis and the women’s Can- adian Open starting Aug. 13 in Toronto. But winning her second Canadian Closed still had its own charm, she said. Bojey captures golf title Alec Bojey was the winner the first annual seniors tour- nament held July 28 at Valley View Golf Club in Winlaw. Dave Love was the. overall low net winner. In the first flight, Gordon McBlaine was the low gross winner, Ken Henderson, low net and C. Grotsowski, second low net. The second flight saw Pete Stoopnikoff as the low gross winner, Hans Smedboll, low net and Bill Anderson, second low net. Noreen Avis was the low gross winner in the women's division. Low net winner was Edna ‘Brown, while second low net was Jane Rule. defensive tackle David Sauve recovered for the TiCats at the Lions’ 21-yard line. On second down, Clements found slotback Rocky DiPietro for a 17-yard gain and Hamilton was within four yards of paydirt. Wide receiver Keith Baker lost six yards yt on a running play and pass for DiPietro went incomplete. The TiCats, 29-18 losers to Winnipeg in their last outing, had to settle for a 8-0 lead on Ruoff’s 17-yard field goal with 2:27 elapsed in the first quarter. On its first offensive series, B.C. moved impressively from its own 86-yard line to Hamilton's 16 in six plays, but a pair of Dewalt passes went incomplete and Passaglia tied the score with a 26-yard field goal at 6:89, The ensuing Hamilton drive hit a snag on third-and-18 from the B.C. 68, but Ruoff went to the TiCats bag of tricks and completed a pass to DiPietro for a gain of 86 yards. Blue Jays nip Indians TORONTO (CP) — Pinch- hitter Ernie Whitt, swinging on the first pitch, singled up the middle with the bases loaded in the bottom of the 18th inning to give Toronto Blue Jays a 6-5 victory over Cleveland Indians in Ameri- can League baseball action Saturday. Bud Anderson, 0.2, the fourth Cleveland pitcher Damaso Garcia to start the 18th. Lloyd Moseby laid down a sacrifice bunt but Anderson fielded the ball and threw it wide of first, allow- ing Garcia to reach third and Moseby took second. Anderson struck out Rance Mulliniks and intentionally and scored on pinch-hitter Jorge Orta’s single up the middle. Johnson then singled to left to tie the game 56-5. Toronto got one run back in the bottom of the inning when Jesse Barfield walked — only his 10th of the season — and eventually scored on Alfredo Griffin's single up the middle. A leadoff single by Bonnell and a run-scoring double by Barfield in the sixth made it The Indians took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first when Hargrove led off with a double off the right centre field fence and scored one out later on a sacrifice fly by Perkins. _ The Jays tied the game in «the bottom of the first when, 1 games. Reliever Joey McLaughlin, 42, picked up the win when he came on in the 11th with one on and one out to get Mike Fischlin caught stealing on’a pitch-out and Mike Har- grove to pop out. He allowed only one hit, a two-out double by Andre Thorton in the a] 12th. HAVING FUN... . Sudden bout of warm weather has young swimmer at Bob Bran- son pook kicking up his heels. Weather should have other outdoor Sports en- —CosNews Photo by Chery! Colderbonk thusiasts kicking up their heels this weekend as well. SEVEN BACK OF LEADER Disco Dick top native son in Canadian Open OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP) — Disco Dick lost that lovely feeling and two strokes to par on the back nine Sat- urday but remained the top native son still in the running for the Canadian Open golf championship. Richard Zokol bogeyed Nos. 10 and 12 but managed his second straight 70 — one under par — on the swelter- ing 7,056-yard Glen Abbey course to remain a contender and a 64-hole score of 214. The leader after Satur- day's play was Ralph Lan- drum at 207. It marks the first time Zokol has survived the half- way cut in four tries at the national title, “I started like gangbusters but when I-got on the back nine I really got tired,” said Zokol, 24, of Vancouver. “It just wasn't the same feeling. “At the start I felt I could go right at the pin. Then I lost it. I got to feeling if I didn’t get that feeling back it wasn't going to be easy to make birdies.” It wasn't easy to post birdies on a day that left ball. many of the pros soaked in perspiration, especially in the steamy conditions that greeted the golfers in the valley holes — Nos. 11 through 15. But probably his best shot of the day came on the well-guarded 17th hole when. his second shot found a bunker — one of 22 on the penultimate hole — at the left front of the green. “It was a difficult shot be- cause the ball was plugged,” Zokol said. BUMPS TREVINO'S BALL He blasted out to within three feet of the cup, bump- ing playing ‘partner Lee Trevino's ball about five inches further from the hole. Trevino, who finished with ‘71 for 215, had the option of marking his ball but opted to leave it where it lay. “I could have asked him to move it, but he wanted to leave it there,” said Zokol. Rules called for Trevino to replace his ball at the point it made contact with Zokol's Zokol has won $17,037 on the tour so far this year — $8,000 at the recent Mil- waukee Open where he held the lead briefly in the third round and then was unable to nurse a two-stroke lead, fin- ishing two strokes behind Morris Hatalsky and George- Cable. Hatalsky won in a playoff. “I shot a 69 and finished only two strokes back, so I didn’t play all that badly,” he said. “All I've got to do is get that feeling. “When you get on a ride, you try to maintain it. You can find it on the practice tee. You can find it anywhere.” Zokol is one of three Can- adians — all from B.C. — to survive the cut. Fellow tourist Jim Welford of Burnaby carded his second consecutive even-par 71 for a three-day score of four-over 217 while 1982 Canadian amateur champion Doug Roxburgh of Vancouver had a 75 and was at 222. Rookie left-hander Neal Heaton went eight innings for Cleveland and handed over a 6-3 lead to reliever Dan Spillner to start the ninth. But Spillner couldn’t hold the lead. Domaso Garcia drew a one-out walk, went to second on Moseby’s single doubled to left, went to third on an infield single by John- son and scoted when Perkins dropped Bonnell’s fly ball to right field. Johnson was caught in a rundown between third and home to end the inning. CHICAGO 7 YANKEES 2 CHICAGO (AP) — Jerry Saturday and Dwight Evans smacked a two-run double and a solo homer as Boston Red Sox overcame a 3-0 deficit and pounded Milwau- kee Brewers 10-5 in an American League baseball contest. TIGERS 4,10 ROYAL 1,1 DETROIT (AP) — Larry Herndon belted a fourth- inning tworun homer and Juan Berenguer and Aurelio Lopez combined on a seven- hitter as Detroit Tigers downed Kansas City Royals 4-1 in an American League baseball game Saturday. GIANTS 8 DODGERS 0 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Mark Davis scattered seven hits and Bob Brenly’s three- run homer highlighted a Giants shut out Los Angeles Dodgers 80 in a National League baseball game. { Sam's 75 and | still shooting MAPLE RIDGE (CP) — The large, work-worn hands remain as steady as ever and the twinkling blue eyes still Provide 20-20 vision. But Sam Worobey downplays his chances in the smallbore rifle competition at this weekend's B.C. Summer Games. “After all,” he says, his grizzled face breaking into a wide grin, “I am 75 years old.” Seventy-five all right, but still a kid at heart. He wears new sneakers, a Snoopy T-shirt — “a gift from my a} and di f the day he can bag a rhino Koosman d his 199th career victory and Carlton Fisk hit his 19th home run of the season, leading the Chicago White Sox to a 7-2 victory over the New York Yankees Friday Yastrzemski and Glenn Hoff- man drilled th: homers on an African safari. His only concession to age is a hearing aid behind the right ear. His sport is a demanding test of mental and physical capabilities — 60 rounds fired from each of three position: standings, kneeling and prone. The necessary hand-eye co-ordination usually precludes a man of Worobey’s age. The eye must strain to lineup small cross hairs on the -22-calibre rifle to plug a target 60 metres away. The arms can tire and the trigger can lose its with the eye as the rifle is gently raised. Tania Berg wins big at B.C. Games A Castlegar girl captured three medals in swimming at the B.C. Summer Games Saturday in Maple Ridge. Tania Berg took the silver medal in the blind 100 metre individual medley, and two bronzes — one on the 100 metre freestyle and another in the 100 metre breast- stroke, West Kootenay athletes riding horse and pleasure categories. Nelson men's soccer team dropped a 4-1 decision to Burnaby, while the Nelson lacrosse team blanked Burn- aby 2-0. In rugby, Trail lost three games: 19-0 to Prince Geo- rge, 12-0 at the hands of Tsawwassen and 340 to North Vancouver. made a good showing inother / Friday's results saw Jackie areas Saturday. Jeannine De Biasio of Trail captured the gold medal -in the giris'’s slalom waterskiing at Whon- nock Lake. Leanne Pez of Trail picked up three waterskiing medals — a gold in the women’s slalom, a silver in the tricks and a bronze in the jumping. Elsewhere in waterskiing, Bruce McFarlane of Trail took the silver in the junior boys’ slalom, while Ross- land’s Greg Turner won the bronze. Don Merritt of Trail won the bronze in the boys’ tricks. In synchronized swimming, Heidi Mautner of Nelson placed second in the novice solo. In equestrian action, Kim Southwicke of Christina Lake took second spot in the dressing elementary, while Laura Joan Schaub of Bos- well placed third in both the Toews of Creston take third in the handicapped blind- partial 100 metres mixed. Toews also came in third in the women's blind-partial 400 metres. In the men’s blind partial, Bob Smith of Fruitvale came in second in the 100 metres and second in the 400 metres. Smith, also came in first in the men’s blind partial long jump. In trick Bruce Worobey’s competitors are generally between 20 and 40. “A man my age, I've been very, very lucky. I've never been sick a day in my life. My health is good. GOOD EYESIGHT “I had my eyes checked a year ago and I could read the bottom line at 16 feet. My vision, they said, is 20-20.” The 1957 provincial champion, Worobey, who wakes at sunrise to jog three miles a day after orange juice and morning exercises, keeps sharp by competing against younger club members at the Maple Ridge Gun Club he has belonged to for 26 years. He decided to enter the Games after winning the club's Sportsman award this spring. “I was shooting pretty good, so I thought what the hell, they're down here now at our gun club, I may as well try. So I came in second at our elimination. It sure would be nice to win a gold medal at my age.” Chances of that seemed remote after a disappointing day Friday when he scored only 991 out of a possible 1,200, putting him well back in the field of 19. “I was .” said long-t lub: Maurice: Rush. “But it was his first time in competition in quite while and its a little different shooting standing shoulder to shoulder with other guys. WILL BOUNCE BACK “But I'm pretty sure he'll bounce back and show us what's for (Saturday). “I've seen him do it before.” Worobey began shooting at age 11 on the family homestead in Battleford, Sask., bagging prairie chickens and grouse for food while his older brothers worked the land. “By the time I was 15 I used to win pretty near every turkey shoot before Christmas. I still hunt every year. T’ve only been skunked one winter since 1996. I gota McFarlane took second. Men's soccer saw Nelson dump Coquitlam 3-1 and its game with Kelowna andin a scoreless draw. In women’s soccer action, Kamloops shutout Nelson 20. Rossland ladies field hoc- key team had a tough day with a scoreless draw in a game with Vancouver and another later with Kelowna. In a third game, Coquitlam R 30. \ old.” buck when I went back to the old homestead last fall.” Four years ago, he made $3,600 in two months “just fooling around” trapping muskrat, beaver and mink in the Mission area. But he has his sights set on a bigger target. “Thad an African safari all rigged up a year and a half ago, but they have troubles there. The poachers hire people and if they catch big game hunters in there, they'll kill them! “So we decided we wouldn't go until things are more settled. But I'm going to try hard again next year. If I feel at good as I do today, I'm going to go on safari because I've wanted to go on one since I was 16 ven