A2 CASTLEGAR NEWS, July 29, 1981 Local gift for royal couple Borsch ladles among presents Among the many gifts from nations, groups and individuals which will be on display at the royal wedding reception at Buckingham Pal- ace will be a boxed pair of dark gleaming Doukhobor borscht ladles. Crafted in ap- lewood by master carver Pete Oglow, and sent to London via Ottawa last week by special courier, they form a unique tribute to the royal couple from the Kootenay Oglow, who has been a director of the societys’ Doukhobor Museum since it was officially opened as the Castlegar Centennial project 10 years ago, has spent a year in the preparation of the The specially selected wood was first soaked in water for a long period of time to remove the sap and give it a rich dark brown color. The ladles were then carved and sanded to precise duplicates. Finally, they were given many coats of varnish, with each coat being sanded down with the finest sandpaper until they had achieved their present deep, rich shine. Accompanying the gift is a letter of greetings from the and di of Has small part in royal wedding VANCOUVER (CP) — the Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society, It was written by Dr. Mark Mealing, and prepared and printed by an anonymous Castlegar ar- tist on special paper. wasn’t invited to the royal wedding today but in his own small way he was taking part. As control operator of the Greater Vancouver Regional District's water department contro! centre, Houghton’s job was to monitor water lev- els during the televised cov- erage of the wedding. He was specifically waiting for commercial breaks when loyal monarchists in the Van- couver arca would troop en .masse to their lavatories. Houghton has to push but- tons to open and close valves so that municipal water mains don't burst from the com- munal flushing of toilets. Houghton’s boss, Hans Krause, superintendent of operations and maintenance for the district, sald workers at the control centre are cx- perts at rating television pro- grams and estimating the de- mand on the water supply. HA UCharle Rince of Wales and Ae Hareual I, ble Lndy-Hlinna § cer AG our oual Heh ass ond Ki the iy fie P a Sat Ae ost Hloutdobor ist6tical i” A. ic wall on rhe occasion of Nie mos a, wed, ae ye ing Kar you Jive ie ev in all Happiness and 7 20.ce-. ao oren aleur Warne wishes and those V ork Canadian ['t pl , We gency Ud? Awo borsciies ladles; o Familiar and « homely ring among rhe Toukhobov $n earlier ate Aiea ie shared Food by ol) cach “other Stone Commorl ae Ia So, peace and Aa e The spoots were cated 2h vitae Calo, of rgar, Pritt Columb Ia, anal bring wit a 1S gt wishes and Hose of orker diteeors of 7 She H(oténay I) oukChobor Wesverica| Socieg. Kom Ke Sit sincete home ’ Bid’, BET Rs SOfs a ee to le. livin communal iy 7 nee you live in, Preaterd— beet- ReaidenL Vier Lcscleif LETTER of greetings ied the Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society's gift to the royal couple of two hand carved borsch ladles. The gs were prepared and printed by an anonymous Castlegar artist on special paper. SPOON CARVER, Pete Opies: has tur- la ned out many ladles in his workshop. Here he hoids up two iadies, one of iis gest and one of his smollest. The smallest has been carved from an Olive branch from Gethsemane. OVS Fe NOTICE - ne: PROVINCIAL SOCIAL SERVICES TAX (Sales Tax) During current interruption of postal ser- vices, vendors’can. remit provincial social services tax (sdle$ tax) payments at the nearest office of the government agent. In case postal interruption continues beyond Aug. 10, forms for the remittances of July social services tax (sales tax) payments can be picked up at the respec- tive government agent’s office. Signed, Government of British cern: Ministry of Finance. IMPORTANT NOTICE West K y Power C s he In the event of an extended suspension of mail secvicest 1l following alternative mec: g token by the Cow to ensure the ovaltability MOF el se "eivice accounts to our customers, . Customers not receiving 1! jatlowl owe orn Trails Sale & Service heir bills may obtain them at the Power & Light Office jer your local West . Payment of accounts may Se elloctiet k Kootenay Power office or through any of eer ce operation will be oppreciated. | o-——- WOODEN SHOE RESTAURANT International Ceisine Mon. - Sat. 5 p.' am, to Md Sunday 5 p.m. to om. Belo the Nlaon Bridge on Nelson Avenue Telephone 352-9998 CLOSELOOK.... at the ; the yt Selkirk College is adding to its ist oF current of- ferings. ig. Elec- trical Entry and a Machinist program now join more than 10 different offerings in the trades, business and health field. 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Owned & Operated by Silvano Lachetta PISTON & ROD RESIZING HOT TANKING GLASS BEADING ROYAL WEDDING sy sigs continued from front ease than during the earlier, ceremonies, sparkled in a shiney pink short-sleeved suit trimmed with white silk, with a small tricorn hat trailing a pink ostrich feather, perched on her famous blonde hairdo, The prince, smiling. and waving to the crowds leftover. from the morning rituals was relaxed ina light gray lounge suit. Their two-coach special, train took them on an hour- longjourney south of London * to Broadlands, former home. ofthe date” Lord Mount- batten. From there they will fly to Gibralter to board the * royal yacht Britannia for a two-week Mediterranean ~ cruise, The entire Royal Family, the family of the bride and friends who attended: the palace wedding breakfast, swarmed into the palace forecourt to shower the de- parting couple with confetti and rose petals, then waved. them laughing on their way. In the age-old ceremony under St. Paul's soaring dome, the nervous heir to the british throne pronounced, “I Charles Philip Arthur George take thee Diana Frances to my wedded wife, to have and to hold from this day forward.” Diana, standing in a cloud of white, cast a sidelong- glance and smile at her groom. | Then she, speaking scarce- ly above a whisper, repeated the vow, but she slipped up, repeating Charles's full name in the wrong order, promi- sing to marry “Philip Charles Arthur George.” "The Prince of Wales then Canadians “attended. wedding LONDOV, (( el LosBay ae fingside seats in St. Ps Paul's Cathedral today for the wed- ding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer — Row 8, right on the centre aisle. Prime Minister Pierre Tru- deau, unescorted, sat one row behind the Schreyers, but away from the aisle. -Trudeau was among the last of the dignitaries to ar- tive for the ceremony. Sitting near Australian Prime Min- ister Malcolm Fraser and New Zealand’s Robert Mul- doon, he put on his glasses and seemed absorbed in réa- ding his program. But like many of the 2,500 guests, he craned his neck when the bride entered, and he listened intently as the Ar- chbisop of Canterbury, Dr. Robert Runcie, delivered his homily on the sanctity of mar- riage. * ‘ “I expected it to be fab- ulous and it was,’’ said the ‘wife of Brig. R.S. Malone, colonel of the ‘Royal Winnipeg Rifles’ of ‘Canada, on the steps of St. Paul's after the ceremony. “Quite magnificent,”” said Maj.-Gen. J.C. Gardner of Lord Strathcona’s Horse, the Calgary-based regiment. Those two commanding of- ficers and their wives, as well as Col. C.S. Frost of the Tor- ‘onto-based Royal Regiment of Canada and his wife, were invited to the wedding be- cause Prince Charles is col- onel-in-chief of all three regi- ments. .. Schreyer, Trudeau and Jean Cassellman Wadds, high commissioner in Britain, were the official Canadian party at the wedding. But beside the three mil- itary officers, there were other Canadians present. One was Henry Davis, a retired public servant and to- day the Queen's secretary in Canada, and his wife who were just as lucky as Trudeau ‘and Schreyer in their seating positions. They were at the front but off to one side. “Need you ask?”’ said Mrs. Davis when asked for her im- pressions of the ceremony as the last echoes died out. ‘We loved it,”’ Davis said, adding that it was impossible to single our any special part of the service as the whole af- fair was ‘‘one great symph- placed the band of Welsh gold on the bride's hand. MANY FLAGS WAVED As the glittering horse- drawn procession of 11 carriages, led by the queen , wended the 3.5 kilometres fromBuckingham Palace to the cathedral, a crowd of almost one million, many of whom had camped out for days, roared their good wishes and waved a sea of Union Jack flags. “I've never seen anything like it,” one veteran Bobby said earlier of the crowds. “We've got the whole of Britain camping out here.” At least 500 million others were believed to Be watching the ceremony, the first wedding of a future monarch since Elizabeth's own in 1947, was the bride. She left from Clarence House, the residence of the Queen . Mother Elizabeth, riding in the glass coach. Wearing a frilly wedding gown in ivory silk taffeta and old lace with a sweeping train, Lady Diana smiled radiantly from behind a lace _ veil. ‘Two bay horses, driven by a coachman in: blazing gold - and scarlet state livery, drew the carriage through - the streets of the capital. Two postillions stood at the rear Batty the elegant carriage. She around the world, The union of the 32-year- old Prince of Wales and Lady Diana, a 20-year-old kinder- garten teacher with a capti- vating smile, was the first time in three centuries that the heir to the British throne has married an English-born woman. The ‘queen, wearing light blue, rode in an open landau carriage to the cathedral, sitting beside her husband, me a adel Prince Charles, in his; brass-buttoned Royal Navy commander's uniform, appeared slightly jittery as his carriage rolled from Buckingham Palace. He waved and saltted the crowds, his brother Prince Andrew next to him. CROWD CHEERS “Hip, hip, hooray!” boomed the throng outside St. Paul's as the groom stepped down from his coach. To the organ processional trumpet tune by Henry Purcell, the 17th-cen- tury royal composer, Charles walked down the aisle with his brothers, Andrew and Edward, at his side and a half-step behind. Andrew, his’ “suppor- ter,” checked that he brought the ring. Last to arrive for the 80-minute Church of England by her Tather, the 8th Earl Spencer. When she arrived, she turned sweetly to wave toa wildly cheering crowd. Alighting from the glass coach onto the red- carpeted steps of St. Paul's, her lips lightly etched in deep pink, her beauty was set off by a bejewelled tiara. TAKES FATHER’S ARM A trumpet fanfare sounded to announce her arrival, and to the robust Trumpet Vol- followed by her youthful wedding party. In his sermon following the exchange of vows, the’ ar- chbishop,rt. Rev. _ Robert Runcie, told the congregation and the royal couple: “This is the stuff of which fairy tales’ ae made: the prince and princess on their wedding ay. ut fairy tales-usually end at this point with the simple phrase, ‘They lived happily ever after.’ This may be be- cause fairy stories regard marriage as an anticlimax after the romance of court- ship.$ “This is not the Christian view. Our faith sees the wed- ding day ‘not as the place or arrival but the place where the adventure really Earlier, as a glistening sun rose.over the dome of the fa- mous cathedral, Household Cavalry in red and blue - » tunics, silver breastplates and plumed helmets rode from their barracks with royal standards flying and drawn sabers. BANKS MARK ROUTE Pipe-arid-drum and other military bands marched more troops into position along the procession route. Repre- sonted among the procession route., Represented among the military guard were reg- iments, whose honorary col- onel is the groom, including Lord Strathcona’s Horse, the Royal Regiment of Canada and the Royal Winnipeg Rifles of Canada. ‘The mass of spectators was watched over by more sian 5,000 police and troops in what Scotland Yard called its biggest security operation. The security forces had the job of guarding kings and queens, princes and princes- ses and other notables from foreign. countries, including Gov.-Gen. Ed Schreyer and his wife and Prime Minister Trudeau of Along. with the revelry in London, there were grim re- minders of the strife and un- rest plaguing -the country. ‘Rioting erupted for the third night in the mostly black Toxteth district of Liverpool, 280 kilometres northwest of London. In Northern Ireland, British army experts defused 180-kilogram bomb found in a mobile home; military ‘sources said they believed the guerrillas of the Irish Republican Army planned to blow up an army patrol with it as a “wedding spectacular.” CELEDRATE: IN STREETS QUALITY YOU KNOW. . lat Prices you'll li : 7 + CASTLEGAR NEWS, July.29, 198) a BARON «BEEF _AS2” ROUND STEA BARBEQUE WIENERS..... RIBS « BEEF: FLETCHER’S BONELESS sHorT. ” BONELESS Top. CANADA GRADE HINDS «BEEF na... WEIGHT LOSS IN BONING, CUTTING & TRIMMING CORNED BEEF LOAF = $449 BOSTON. 170GRAMTIN .....5... SPAGHETTI. « LIBBY ’S, IN TOMATO SAUCE. 19 FL. OZ, TIN. ....5.22.0 iB LIGHT TUNA BYE THE SEA. FLAKED. 6’ OZ. TIN ..... $429 display set off a night of revelry in the streets. . At 2 am., nine hours before the start of the wed- ding ceremony, the sidewalks outside Buckingham . Palace and St. Paul’s were jammed. Among them was Ivy Hol- land, 78. “T'm no stranger to camp- ing out on pavements,” she . “I've been there for 1984 | ..Duke of Kent), King Geor; VI's coronation in 1987, the Queen's wedding in 1947, her coronation six years later, and, of course, Sir Winston Churchill's funeral.” The partyers stepped over sleepers in sleeping bags and blankets all along the side- walks. Most newspapers poured out greetings. “Diana, This Is Your. Day,” bannered The Daily . Express. Even the staid Financial Times, which normally displays major bus- iness news on its front page, carried the wedding as its main story of the day under - the headline, “A Right Royal Street Party.” The Communist party’s Morning Star devoted a page to wedding coverage, with the headline “For Richer and Richer.” “Furniture Village ‘DOWNTOWN CASTLEGAR =.) 51114-3rd St. (80 steps from lots of free parking) Phone 365-2101 TWo FULL DISPLAY FLOORS (Recently re-arranged to expand our Appliance Selection) — THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS — A Number of Appliances with Slight Scratches or Dents Priced to Clear! of Fans by Good Stock Electrohome ALOAF. DUT g PICKLING SALT ait 2KG.. 0. cee eceeee SUNFLOWER oll ‘FLO. PURE. 1 $2 PUDDINGS DELMONTE. 5 07 OZ. TINS. PK. OF. FROM CENTRAL BAKERY KRAFT JET PUFFED. 11 OZ. BA\ MARGARINE 3 2.5109 PAPER TOWELS 9-590 GRANULATED 10..58°° bd HASH BROWN POTATOES Ci Hi HILLS BROS. oGOFFEE | MIRACLE WHIP a i he INEX. 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