Castleger 2286 oF 365-5543, Trail 367, |. Nelson 4%. | 2/22 RETIREMENT RECEPTION ‘are cordially invited eirend a tes in heneve of ie, Rudy Wall ter on April 1 from 1 - 3 p.m. at the Fireside Place. Advance tickets at Mountain Ski and Sports Hut and Pharmasave, 2/22 TOASTMASTERS The newly formed. Toastmasters Club meets every Wed- nesday, 7:30 p.m. at the Monte Carle. New members and guests welcome. More information call 365-6448 or 365- 3/22 PLAYSCHOOL TEACHER'S All previous students and parents ROBSON COMMUNITY MEMORIAL Annual Meeting Wednesday, March 26 at 7:30 p.m. Everyone welcome. 5/21 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL GARAGE SALE Garage and Bakesale, Satur March 31, 10:00 a.m., United Church. Donations grotetully received. Phone 365- 6448 tor pick up. e 2/23 ATTENTION DTUC Last day for loans March 30. Alter. May | Sel 1 Selkirk College (Costlegar) will be responsible tor receiving/retrieving outstanding OTUC Library moterials. a3 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit may be listed here. The tirst 10 words ore dditional words are 15€ each. Boldtaced words (which must be used tor headings) count as two words. There is no extra charge tor a second consecutive inser. tion while the third consecutive insertion is half-price. Minimym charge is $3 (whether ad is for one, two or three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sundey' s paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's pape: Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at'197 Columbia Ave. MMUNITY Bulletin Board Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 fl be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 31 at the National Exhibition Centre in Castlegar. ‘The workshop will be conducted by veteran fibre she. was Ulah or Mima or Caulfield, Betty Hutton Donahi Marama or Aloma. GIs voted, Lizabeth Scott. these ert Wortthae perticipeate will earn to select fibres and her the pinup they'd most “Those Road pictures are spin yarns for their intended use: weaving, knitting, like to trap in a foxhole. She my passport wherever I go,” items and gamboled with Hope and she says. Participants will need a notebook, pen, scissors, hand Crosby on the Road to Singa- WORKS HARD pore, Zanzibar, Morocco, Utopia, Bali and Hong Kong. And today? “Well, one of my sarongs is in the Smith~ Tisetatien out of to hows sonian Inrtitute, can you be lieve it?” laughs Dorothy Lamour, a grandmother. “A friend phoned me up and said he's spotted it right beside” The Spirit of St. Louis.” Lamour, still the jolly, kid- friend, Side By Side By Son- carders (curved back if possible) and a spinning wheel. There is a fee. Donahue is an award-winning artist, having won two first place ribbons for her habdapen yarns at the 1983 Pactifie She also won first prize for a handspun m, and cashmere shirt. Except for three workshops, Donahue is entirely self-taught. Books .purchased and borrowed from the library and plenty of practice have enabled her to develop Pag her skills. re ~~ ] Donahue began her career about eight years ago. Before graduating to the Tyrolean style wheel, for two lunches to. . ding brunett, is back in Tor- onto to star in a new dinner theatre production of Bare- foot In The Park. The still-handsome actress says she’s amazed people have been spotting her and stopping to chat. “It’s those Road pictures, I tell you. Even I watch them, because they're so crazy. We never had dialogue, we'd just ad-lib. It's the kind of comedy that holds up well — I hear they’re Woody Allen's favor- ites.” Being straight girl to Bob Hope and Bing Crosby has helped Lamour outlast her competitors on the old Para- A Magnificent Dining Experience awaits you . . . from light : full course meals . . . at these fine restaurants dheim, Hello, Dolly. I could work all the time, except I like to go home now and then and look at my kids.” Lamour says she had the original idea for the Road movies, but “] never thought we'd be at it for a decade.” At the time, she was the reigning sex symbol at Para- mount in a series of jungle girl epics. “Edith Head de- signed my sarongs. They go topless in the tropies but we couldn't get away with that. So Edith used crepe silk and draped it around me. The na- tives in Tahiti copied from us and now they all wear my kind of sarong.” HIA MOTOR HOTEL The Place Where Things Happen Happen Thursdays.” RROW ARMS DART TOURNAMENT IS OVER “Dorts still Salisbury Steak “Mon. ,;Maech 19-. Sot., March 24. Topped with fried onions and served with vegetable, potatoe & Salad Bar 11:30 a.m. - $45 2:30 p.m. WE SPECIALIZE IN CATERING LARGE OR SMALL. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 365-7282 We Are Proud To Be The Only Full Service Union Hote! In Costleger. Open 4 p.m. Fireside Dining Room & Cocktail Lounge - 10 p.m. For @ scrumptious dinner. Mon. to Sat DINNER SPECIALS SANDY.DONAHUE . . . workshop at the NEC March 31. @ veteran artist, will give a years she used a drop spindle she made herself. — Participants in the workshop must pre-register through the NEC by March 20, as enrolment is limited. KENNETH BIANCHI Film on Hillside Strangler LOS ANGELES (AP) — In 1977, Kennth Bianchi was a soft-spoken, handsome title company clerk who inspired one co-worker to remark when she first saw him: “Wow, look at that hunk!” “He was very sincere, kind and had a magnetism that drew all women to him,” recalls a former girlfriend. But in 1979, Bianchi was arrested and ultimately was unmasked as the infamous Hillside Strangler, who had raped, tortured and murdered at least seven young women ina murder spree that held Los Angeles in a grip of fear for months, ‘The person I knew couldn't have done that,” former girlfriend. In the months after his arrest, reports surfaced that Kenneth Bianchi was indeed two people — a multiple per- sonality who lived in two separate worlds — a male counter- part of Three Faces of Eve. The controversy surrounding this bizarre claim and the memories of those who knew Bianchi are at the heart of a re markable two-hour, two-part special edition of PBS's Frontline documentary series, which will be shown on suc cessive Monday nights (March 19 and March 26) on most PBS stations. It will also be broadcast in England as part of the BBC Horizon series. “It's probably the best program we have ever put on,” says the Frontline editor Bill Grant says. “It's so good, it almost should have been fiction.” a frtoabitteasiveting piece of theatre. Its impect is due nto the. use y police demonstrate the points that convinced a judge Bianchi was faking hypnosis and multiple personalities. But Bianchi’s behavior is so convincing that not all viewers will be certain whether he was hypnotized or not. The Mind of a Murderer was a project conceived by Michael Barnes, a British producer who brought the idea to PBS after seeing portions of the Bianchi tapes. He obtained access to all 65 hours, of videotaped interviews in an agreement with Washington State authorities and Superior Court Judge Ronald George, who stipulated they would not be broadcast until the trial of Bianchi’s cousin, Angelo Buono, an accomplice was concluded. COPIES TAPED “Barnes copied the tapes a year ago,” said Grant. He started editing and doing interviews, but we didn't know when we would be able to put the show on the air. “When the jury went out in the Buono case, our count: down began. Once the jury came back and they were sen- tenced, we were able to go forward.” Buono was found guilty of nine murders and sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole. Bianchi, who pleaded guilty to two killings in Bellingham and five in Los Angeles, was sentenced to life in prison as part of a plea bar- gain for testifying against his adoptive cousin. Frontline explores the Bianchi riddle as something of a detective story in which viewers must sort the clues and reach their own conclusions. Was Bianchi a multiple personality? We hear from made while ee hinricts were attempting to hypnotize Bianchi and get him to talk about the killings. SOME SHOWN Although bits and pieces of the tapes have been shown on TV newscasts and used in court, Frontline is the first to broadcast large chunks of the material in sequence. The tapes dramatically depict the gradual emergence of Bianchi's alter-ego “Steve” in talks with psychiatrists in Bellingham, Wash., where he was arrested. They also Jazzman cal NEW YORK (AP) — The jobs may come faster in Europe, but Art Farmer's heart is in the United States. stay there on an exclusive basis, you become a ‘local’ resident and there may not be the same allure . . . The ‘ists on both sides of the question. In an unexpected twist, one doctor changes his opinion toward the end of the show. We see Bianchi in court, polite, well-groomed, even tearful and contrite. Then we see him as “Steve,” callously confessing to gruesome murders, declaring: “Killing a broad doesn't make any difference to me.” The question finally arises whether Bianchi, multiple personality or not, was insane. The show indicates the producers suspect he was. Is U.S. home in Vienna at a time when jazz in the United States took a back seat to rock and pop. Farmer met other Americans trombone. Stewart later played with the late jazz leg- end Earl (Fatha) Hines. everyone in the party receives the discount. 1935 Columbia Ave., 365-2177 Salad Bar, Dessert, Tea & Coffee. Every Friday & Saturday Starting at *7.95 Our specials include The jazz trumpeter-flugel- hornist says that “In a way, there's more work in Europe because you have access to more countries. But if you Reservations appreciated 365-6000 G& sti lore » Cafe acafe j 2 DINING ROOMS Greek Specials | UNTIL MARCH 31 j Plus Regular Evening Menu TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY EVENINGS y SZ Dine Out Today! “A FAMILY PLACE” WED., MARCH 21 — SAT., MARCH 24 THE NEW FAMILY BUFFET SIRLOIN OF ROAST POTATOS E GREEN PEPPERS, DESSERT $7.25 Children Under 4 No Chorge 5 - 10 50¢ Per Year ANEW FAMILY FIRST . CARRIAGE CHOUSE com. (WE ACCEPT COMMINCO MABAL TICKETS. 646 Baker Street, Nelson MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL NEW! Take Your Car On A Cruise to Alaska Three or four day, one way trom us. © Soling begins mid. June trem Vancous © Crotee ship corries 150 core of R.V. mi dining ugh ci co, * Codes, Conatton, been cach APPOINTAAENTS APPRECIATED: Call ar] or Pesta MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Ltd. 365-6616 Open Tues. - Fri. 10.0.m. - 4:30 p.m. ‘Sat. 100.m.- 1 p.m CRESTAURANT PRIME RIB DINNER SPECIAL WED... THURS. FRI., SAT. 5P.M. TO 8P. SUN., MON., TUES — BY RESERVATION ‘Onuy Sem: private areas available for group dinners. Also open for private luncheons Phone 364-2616 for Reservations M LUNCH IN THE 1884 RESTAURANT Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. LUNCHEON SPECIAL $3.50 Next door to Konkin’s Irly Bird Store on the Waterfront Esplanade. Y. y and the new Wawm. -2 p.m. \ale/ Vales \abe/ MEALS TO BE REMEMBERED Gr riibitiirtt That's what you'll experience while TTT IT ase rd Patna dining in one of these fine restaurants. trail h.c. novelty wears off and you become homesick.” Farmer was nominated for a Grammy Award last year for the album LP A Work of Art. Last fall's Warm Valley, a lyrical blend of standards, received raves from critics at home and abroad. The 55-year-old Farmer, who was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and grew up in Arizona, left the ‘United States for Europe in 1968 to work with a radio jazz band Wizard's Palace ry to 9 to 48 bto 10:30 Sunday 1 to 5 1003-2nd St. who had fled to Europe, in- cluding saxophonists Ben Webster and Dexter Gordon and drummer Kenny Clarke. RETURN TO STATES But over the past decade, with a budding jazz renais- sance, these same musicians began to return to the United States to new audiences and record contracts. “The real American jazz audience is just as good as the European audience,” Farmer said. “The differenced is, in Europe, people don’t come into a club unless they really want to hear the music. In America, we get a lot of walk-in trade.” Music has been a part of Farmer's life since he was four. His mother played the piano and his cousin, Ken- neth Stewart, played the He played light classical music and a few years later, he found jazz. Dance company March 30 The Karen Jamieson Dan- ce Company from Vancouver will perform 8:30 p.m. March 30 at Mount Sentinel Sec- ondary school gym in South Slocan. The event is part of the 1983-84 Slocan Valley Con- cert series. Les Wyman of CBC Stereo Morning has said the Karen Jamieson Dance Company are “. . . one of the most exciting, ‘most promising dancemakers in the country!” Bartok No. 2 Haydn Opus 54/1 Bartok No. 1 FRIDAY, MARCH 23 820 - 10th St., DTUC proudly presents the World Renowned PURCELL STRING QUARTET IN THREE CONCERTS SATURDAY, Meyda boatted 54/2 No. 5 Bartok MARCH 24 STUDIO 80 AT 8 P.M. TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM DTUC OR QUIVVER'S BOOKS, NELSON giingle concert: bey eoneret ie students /seniors ‘seniors Selkirk College... 200 DAVID THOMPSON UNIVERSITY CENTRE Nelson, B.C. VIL 3C7 — 352-2241 SUNDAY, MARCH 25 Bartok No. 6 Haydn Opus 54/3 Bartok No. 4 > Twin sister sought husband and three children; two boys Editor, Castlegar News: I am trying to re-unite twin sisters who have been separated for more than 80 years and would be most grateful if you would make their story public. Eliza (on whose behalf I am writing) and Harriet Flynn were born Aug. 1, Hexham, Northumberland, England to Dorothy Ann wife of John Flynn, a plasterer. Shortly after birth, Eliza was adopted privately. Harriet and her mother came to Canada around 1912. Eighty-two-year- old Eliza, who still lives in Hexham is very anxious to find her long lost twin 1901 in and Canada and enger liners. IftfaPet or her family recognize themselves from this outline, or if anyone else has information about Harriet and/or Billy McGarity or their descendents please write to me at the sister Harriet or Harriet’s children. address below. Research in the U.K. has established Juliet Mannock that the last news of Harriet occurred 14 Gertrude Place in 1953 when she was reported to be Toronto, Ont. living in Toronto, Ont. with her M4J 1R3 Keep B.C. Editor, Castlegar News: It's nice to see an increase in fishing off the old Robson ferry landing, but is the mess that surrounds the fishermen really necessary? I'm talking about all the trash strewn on the ground when _ ful! there is a trash barrel right there. Someone has filled the barrel with Beautiful rocks which are very hard to burn. Now when you head for home with to- night's dinner, place your trash in the barrel or if it won't fit, take it home and throw it away. Let's keep B.C. beauti. K. McGivern Robson a girl. Unfortunately, the name of Harriet’s husband is not known. Eliza and Har- riet have an older half-brother, Billy McGarity is known to have lived in to have worked for Cartadian Pacific in the early 1939s, probably on the North Atlantic pass- FASHION SHOW . Ste ae-11th Ave Avenue, we, Catlege B.C. Ph. 366. EXPERIENCED, COMPETENT SERVICE! Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 UNIQUE KITCHEN DESIGNS OF CASTLEGAR . « St. Patrick's Day fashion show and tea Saturday afternoon at the Fireside Dining Room was a big hit. CasNewsPhot on Wilson presents Kitchen Cabinets and Vanities by OF KELOWNA. Sales and Showroom NOW OPEN 600 - 23rd Street, South Castlegar (next to G.L.S. Electronics) PHONE WALTER HOLUBOFF N AT 365-6911 for layouts and price quotations. Oe ~- a ee Reiioul Tactosy Pulpit & Pew PLEASURES tal. Gambling destroys moral By Pastor fibre and can become a physi- CLIFF DRIEBERG ological disease. Seventh-day Adventist Church When the world thinks of happiness, it tends to link the word with entertainment, amusements, and parties. But how fleeting are such pleasures. What about the man in the cigarette adver- tisement “enjoying” the taste, the flavor, the “pleas- ure” of a particular brand? Yet there can be little doubt now that cancer, em- «physema, heart disease, and nervous disorders are likely to put a premature end to his pleasure. Drug abuse can mean a fast trip to the mental hospi- Alcohol is a main cause for rapidly rising crime and ac- cident rates. It is a toss-up whether a decadent society calls for the increasingly im- moral tone of the movies, or whether the movies are set- ting the skids for society! All of these “pleasures” seem to have certain factors in common. They are debilita- ting to the nerves by provid- ing too much excitement; they weaken physical stam- ina in one way or another; they make one think more of self and less of others; and they demand more and more, stronger and stronger doses, in order to maintain the same degree of stimulation. They are pleasures, yes, but short-lived, “transient.” Eve no doubt enjoyed the fruit — for a few moments. Esau enjoyed his bow! of len- tils — until he realized he had lost his birthright. Have you ever sat in a train, or in a bus, with ano- ther train or bus standing alongside? Suddenly, it seems your bus is pulling out, until you discover it is the other one that is moving in the opposite direction. That can be applied to those who seek joy in the world’s amusements. They mustn't be surprised to awaken to the realization that it is not joy they are achieving — it is eternal life slipping out of their reach. Births & Funerals BOLTON — To Brian Bolton and Amy Ballantine of Kaslo, a girl born March 8 BOYKIN — To Mr ond Mrs Cyril Boykin of Castlegar, a girl, born March 9. CATTERMOLE — To Mr. and Mrs. Alt Cattermole of Argento, a girl, born March 10. COLETTI — To Mr. and Mrs. Lou Coletti, @ girl, born March 8. GANZINI — To Mr. and Mrs. Moses Ganzini of Winlaw, a girl born March 12. McCORMACK — To Mr. and Mrs. Mark McCormack of Rossland, o boy, born Feb. 25 MILES — To Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Miles, a girl, born Feb. 29. NEGREIFF — To Mr. and Mrs Peter Negreiff of Castlegar, o boy, born March 13. SAWATSKY — To Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sawatsky of Salmo, o boy. born March 13. SWETLISHOFF — To Mr. ond Mes Bill Swetlishott of South Slocan, o girl, born March 8 TAM — To Mr. ond Mra Stephen Tam, a girl, born Feb. 27 THOMPSON — To Mr. and Mi Len Thompson of Nelson, o boy born March 8. peaTis BLAIR — Lucelio May Blair of Trail died March 12 at the age of 90. was born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1893, ond came to Trail in 1942. TERM DEPOSITS Rates Guaranteed for the Term! 1 YEAR — 9% 2 - 4 YEARS — 972% 5 YEARS — 10% 1 Minimum CLARK — Former Nelson and Winlaw resident Clover irene Clark died March 10 in Cron: brook. She married Henry Burton Clark in 1926, ond lived in Nelson for 30 years, followed by 11 years in Cranbrook CONNOLLY — Gordon Theodore Connolly of Fruitvale died March 7 at the Trail Regional Hospital following o long illness. He was 63. He come to Trail in 1947, and worked for Cominco until he retired. HASKELL Former longtime Nelson resident Isabella Ander son Haskell died March 12 in Cranbrook, aged 78. Mrs Haskell was born in Scotland and came to Nelson as a young girl, attending schools there. She moved to Cranbrook many yeors ago. notice) (rates Castlegar 365-7232 rey Castlegar Savings Credit Union Slocan Park 226-7212 ON SALE NOW AT YOUR LOCAL GROCERY STORE! ATL North Amada ee ear vourlocal grocer! EE TO THE DEALER: A&W Food Services of Canada Ltd. will reimburse the face value of coupon plus our specified ae | ‘on your next purchase of a Liitre size bottle of | A&WW Root Beer ry date, Decemter 31st, 1985. handling fee provided you accept it from purchase of item ‘OF . Box 2140, Toronto, Enter e debit siip. your customer on applications constitute fraud. Herbert A. Watt Ontario MSW 141. No. 122 on coupon Limit: One coupon per purchase. 1304 eel Use this coupon purchase save 25’on ane Sa Roce Boke! your next