So poe o2_Castlégar News Jonvery, 12,1008 Jonvory 13,1988 Castlegar News os WILLING to do housework nces available, 365: Lar} 2 Tree CUTTING AND TOPPING HONE 365-7 ttn HERMAN” SHERMAK CONSTRUCTION co. LTD. House Froming _ Formwork — Rooling \dditions — Renovorions ALL TYPES OF GENERAL CARPENTRY Ph. 365-2932 MIKE MAKORTOFF WILLING to learn contemorary Russian? w ditional information call Karilio, 365-2380 after 5 p.m. 3/4 THE PLUMBING and HEATING DOCTOR * Gas Contracting * Repairs & Reno * Comm Plumbi sia 24 Hour Emergency Service 399-4762 HOME boking done in your home. 365-6847 : 4 DANIEL'S PAINTING & WINDOW WASHING Call 365-6971 CERAMIC TILE INSTALLATION Sample Available FREE ESTIMATE Call 693-5530 “And don't give me any of those local anesthetics. Get me the imported stuff.’ Jan. 11-16 ALL FABRIC Jan. 18-23 All Fabric .. Jar. 25-30 All Stock . WEEKLY SEWING SPECIALS SPRING FASHIONS ARRIVING SOON! CARTERS SEWING CENTRE DOING OUR BEST TO SERVE YOU. —_ SS 623 columbia Ave., Castlegar 365-3810 sae ...20-40% ore - 20-50% Off - 20-60% Off ELECTROLYSIS — Permanent hair removal by qualified operator AVENUES. 1480 Columbia. 365. 7616. n/ BS DANCE BANDS and mobile discc available for any type o engagement. 1-362-7795 tin/65 GOOD NEWS For V.1.P. No. 1 V.1.P. No. 2 Will Be NEED a job? High school and college students may offer their services under this category Drop us a line or phone the Ac tion Ad number at 365-2212. We will run your ad for 3 issues at no charge tn 83 1 SET wooden bunk beds mint mattresses. 365-2753 2 MULTI-COLORED cats plus one Siamese. 365-5945, 3 IF you have an item youd like to giveaway, please drop us a line or phone 365-2212. Well run your ad for 3 issues free of charge tin 67 Arriving in Castlegar Soon to Help You Manage Things! ALCOHOLICS Anos Al-Anon. Phone 365. INCOME PRODUCING OPPOR Y Complete health Calorie control rient seek correspondent with single gen tlemen. Box 5248, Station A Calgary Alberta, Canada. 12H 1X6. 1 Hair Salon and equipment, heat and water. 359. 7187 3/2 FOR RENT — | BUSINESS engagement daughter Amy to end son of Mr Briggeman ‘io toke place Feb, 27 oi 4 JOE and PATSY BEHAN of Rob toners pleased to announce the ment of their daughter Wend iy bee to Perry Lee Hor ning Jeannette and lace Horning of Castlegar Wedding to take place in Castlegar, June 25,1988. 3/4 asses WE WOULD Like to thank the Alpha Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi for collecting donations from the Castlegar merchants, all the merchants who contributed gifts our doctor, Dr. Ron Per: ses, Hospital Auxiliar our friends for making arrival of our new son so special We apprecia’ h ee Walk-in clinics Na MEMORY of 7 of bye A Siveleall Jr former! rmorty of legor, our father and grandtother © passed away January 23, Sodidiek iting tired, aye not to be, me ‘He closed His arms around And whispered ‘Come to Me You pen U aoe whet you Ando wohe: ve you God's nm must at beaut Koga tokes the be: we saw you s! dca re creer sen in We could not wish you bok. To suffer that again. lweys, remembered by you, fy children and g and: CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY tn memoriam donations. Into mation Box 3292 Castlegar. 365 167 THE B.C. HEART FOUND, accepts with gratitude Memoriam” donations which ent to next-of-kin Box 3 jegar, B 104/81 IN MEMORY of neon C. Rourke (Jan. 21, 1978) and Nancy Veronica (Vera) Rourke (July 16, 978) who's death shocked us ten ‘ago believe our souls live on after death, And | believe yours are together | believe you love and watch over As | believe you always did The pain of your loss Stayed with me over the years | still miss you bo! But the pain hos finally eased Joan, David and Veronica IN LOVING memory of Noro Drazdoft who passed away January 16, 1979 When thoughts go back as they often do We treasure the memories ve of you Gone-are the days we used to re, But in our hearts you are always there Forever loved and missed by m and Families. SHIPPER NOTICE The undersigned carrier hos made application to increase rates and charges in his filed tariffs Subject _to consent by the Motor Carrier Commission Proposed rates will become effective on or after the 15th day of February, 1988. Proposed rates b examined at the offices of the undersigned carrier Representation may be made to the Superintendent of Motor Carriers, Motor Carrier Branch, 4240 Mannor Street, Burnaby, B.C. V5G 3X5. up to the 4th day of February, 1988. LOOMIS COURIER SERVICES LTD. Exercise attitude fading KITCHENER, Ont. (CP) — Whether you're a fitness addict or a casual buff, the getting OTTAWA (CP) — When four-year-old Tommy Spence fell off a chair at kindergar- ten and needed stitches for a cut on his left ear, a neighbor took him to a clinic rather than the Children's Hospital. of Eastern Ontario. “I've taken my children into hospital (emergency) and it's ridiculous,” said Terese Cloutier. “You can wait two or three hour: Cloutier called the clinic from her home 10. minutes before she left with Tommy. A doctor was ready to see the boy as soon as she arrived. The clinic, in the Ottawa suburb of Orleans, opened in 1984 and is a proven success. It has five full-time doctors and handles up to 200 pat: ients a day. It's part of a new wave in emergency medical care — private clinics with service at fast-food speed to people who don’t want to wait for hours in a hospital emergency de- partment. Observers believe walk-in clinies open until 9 p.m. or 10 p.m. are the way of the future. They're a response to the growing number of two- career families and _ single Because doctors are for- bidden to advertise by the College of Physicians and Surgeons on Ontario, people popular have to learn about the clinies through word of mouth. parents who need medical care after the regular work day. The services of the clinic re fully covered by provin. cial health insurance, and the clinie operators receive a percentage of the fees their doctors charge. “I think-there’s a definite need,” said Alan Warren, executive director of Ottawa Carleton Regional District Health Council. “I've been out to Orleans and talked to people and there's no question this is the kind of centre they like. You cah go through there any time and it's thriving.” Earlier this year, a health council survey said 70 per cent of Ottawa-Carleton res idents who show up in hos. pital emergency rooms have minor health complaints like headaches and sore throats. The survey suggested that people go to hospital instead of their doctors because they want convenient, quick health care. Although many doctors provide off-hours and week end treatment, patients either don't like to bother them or don’t know how to find them. Female cops help male colleagues TORONTO (CP) — Female police officers are influencing their male colleagues to be come less aggressive on the streets, says Wendy Wilson, a constable in the Ontario Provincial Police. Women, who are seen as less threatening than men, have helped to “humanize” Canadian police forces in the last 15 years, Wilson said in a lecture on policing as a career for women. “And ‘criminals are more responsive if officers talk calmly to them,” she said. Wilson said the role of fe AUTOMO’ male police officers has changed” dramatically since the turn of the century, when they were usually employed to protect women and chil dren. Since the late 1960s, women have begun doing the same dangerous work as male officers, she said. Wilson said female officers are more accepted than they used to be, but people still stare at them in uniform, and some male officers’ wives are wary about letting their hus- bands work night shifts with women partners. _____ BUSINESS Buy/Lease any gas, diese! OPPORTUNITIES or truck, new or used Direct trom ‘volume factory dealer. Cail tor pre-approved credit. Cail collect 464-0271 Overweight? Ground Floor opportunity all Canadian products. Op. Coming Soon . . . See the Castlegar News of Sun., Jan. 17 WANTED CLEAN COTTON RAGS a. Castlégar News 197 Columbi Ave., C CASHIER The City of Castlegar invites applications for the position of Cashier in the Finance Department The duties of this position include moderately complex cashiering and clerical work. in receiving, recording and balancing various cash amounts. Cash handling constitutes the major tunction of the position with the volume of related 9 and accounting duties varying considerably during the year ot required and preterence will be given to applicants who have comple! Ot least one year of the Certilied, General Accountent Program or equivalent. Cashiering and accounting experien. ce are desirable The current_probation pay rate is $11.40 per hour with a comprehensive employee benetit package available upon Satistactory completion of the probation period Applications will be accepted up to Friday, January 15, 1988. PERSONNEL OFFICER of PARENTS LEARN TO COPE WITH SICK CHILDREN By JILL ST. LOUIS » Canadian Press VANCOUVER — Marilyn Dowsett cheerfully concedes she was ready to leave her husband and her only child before she became one of the first to enrol in a course for parents with chronically ill children. “I was contemplating buying an airline ticket and just buggering off,” she says in a crisp British accent. “I felt terribly guilty about how much I resented my son. I loved him, but I didn’t like him.” Coping with and caring for a sick child is akin to “handing a novice a pair of skis and telling him to ski down a hill,” observes Connie Canam, a nursing professor. “The children go to hospital, they're diagnosed, the parents are given the diagnosis and they're sent home. Except for contact with clinics every.few months, there really was nothing to help parents on an ongoing basis.” DESIGNS COURSE That prompted Canam, who teaches pediatric and family nursing at the University of British Columbia, to ‘How do you tella seven-year-old girl she could be deformed by the time she's an adult?’ design a course to help parents cope with “living on the edge.” Canam says it’s still just a research project, but she hopes that one day it will be available coast to coast for parents of chronically ill children, such as those with epilepsy, diabetes or spina bifida. There are support groups for parents of children with some specific ailments, but Canam, a nurse at a children’s hospital in Halifax before moving to Vancouver, is not aware of any other Canadian program like hers. Dowsett’s nine-year-old son, Gregory, has a con genital heart defect and was disabled by a series of strokes at 15 months. Not expected to live past 11, he was “terribly spoiled” until he was five or six, the Vancouver mother says. Gregory wears a brace on his left leg and has trouble with his left arm as well. He once spent 11 weeks in hospital and was close to death four or five times because of an infection. But “you can’t wrap him in cotton wool,” Dowsett says. “He walks with a limp. His balance is off. Sometimes his lips turn blue if he gets tired.” TALKING HELPS Dowsett says talking to other parents helped her deal with her feelings and understand it was OK to be angry. Canam, whose warmth is steeled with pragmatism, helps parents understand to what extent they can allow chronically ill children to live normally, and to be aware of the needs of other family members. Healthy children often feel neglected, and couples can have trouble communicating. Canam says there's a tendency for women, generally the primary care-givers, to want to talk about the child, while men may bury themselves in work, One couple in the course resolved to take a half hour every Friday to talk about their daughter. HAS DISORDER Another group member, who asked not to be named, is a 39-year-old mother of three daughters. Her middle daughter has a severe genetic metabolic disorder. It's a rare condition — occurring only when both parents are carriers — and causes multiple deformities, both skeletal and internal. As she grows older, she'll require surgery to “patch up” the skeletal deformations that develop. But there's no treatment or cure. Her mother, a tall blonde whose blue eyes are magnified by thick glasses, didn't even know about the disorder until her daughter was five. “I took her to the doctor because she was pigeon-toed. We had the feeling we walked in with a hangnail and came out with cancer.” LEARN TO ACCEPT Canam’s course is helping the mother learn accep tance. “You reject it and reject it and reject it . . . to accept it is incredibly helpful.” Doctors have advised her not to tell her daughter too much about her condition. “How do you tell a seven-year-old girl she could be deformed by the time she's an adult? There's no way a normal, intelligent seven-year-old can comprehend the enormity of this disease.” Canam, who's in her late 30s, reminds parents that children “are curious and they will have questions.” And anyone else in contact with the child should be aware of the condition. “A teacher needs to know what she's coping with and what she can do if a situation arises — if the child's a diabetic and might into insulin shock, or the child’s an epileptic and might have a seizure.” EASES STRESS For Canam’s research, the 27 parents who have taken the course far have been questioned about how they've coped, before and after. “There was quite a dramatic difference in the stress level,” Canam says. “While we don't call it a support program, parents say they get a tremendous amount of support from each other. “It helps to put it in perspective. It's so relieving to get in a group and have other people that are having the same kinds of difficulties you're having.” Canam also helps parents deal with the health-care system and tells them how to get information about their child's condition. Parents say doctors often seem to be in a rush, and may use terms parents can't understand. “I'm always humbled by the experience of talking to these families,” says Canam, “but they can do even better if they have the knowledge and the skills they need.” . Coming Rights head battles Honduran injustice Editor's Note: Despite threats against his life, a human-rights leader presses for reform in Honduras. This is part of a series on life in violence-riddled areas of Central America. By DANE LEGEN Canadian Press TEGUCIGALPA Ramon Custodio speaks simply, directly, in the flat tones of a fatalist who has seen much. He knows that his enemies think he has seen too much in Hon duras. “Iam not going to let them terrorize me,” response. “I will not be silenced.” Wiry, greying and dressed in a traditional short-sleeved guayabera shirt, Custodio sits in an outdoor cafe table in the stifling Honduran heat, sipping a soft drink. He is patient with a visitor and calm about the future. Custodio, 57, is president of the most credible rights organization in Honduras, the Committee for Defence of Human Rights. As such, he might be the greatest threat to the military bosses and secret- police gangs that many people believe really run this impoverished Central American country. A pathologist by profession, Custodio has been cam. paigning for seven years for the rights of ordinary Hondurans. “I've always been inclined this way, opposing injustice,” he says. “In 1981, I sensed that the situation in human rights in my country was deteriorating. But we never realized that our task was going to be so continuous and so demanding.” HAS 55 GROUPS His organization has a core of 55 committees spread throughout Honduras whose members monitor police and armed forces activities. Violations are reported to Custodio, who attempts to publicize them and bring the prepetrators to justice. Such justice is rarely meted out. “The situation, in one sense, is the same as it was when we started. From 1981 to 1984, the security forces used to make people disappear. That is, you would just never see them|again and they would be taken care of that way. “Now, the police simply walk up to people and shoot them in the street.” But there might be some hopeful signs. The Inter. American Court of Human Rights, based in Costa Rica, is investigating allegations of murder and abduction of four people by the Honduran security apparatus. EXPECTS ACTION Custodio is confident the court will rule against the government and that President Jose Azcona will have no choice but to respect its findings and take action against the guilty. That is a step in the right direction, Custodio says. At least 150 people have disappeared or been murdered since Custodio began tracking such crimes in 1981. He cites an example from September when two peasants were shot is his at Tela, a northern port on the Gulf of Honduras. ‘The police came to their house in the night and simply shot them. They said they were subversives. “In San Pedro Sula (an industrial city in northern Honduras), two university students were killed. The police said they were subversives who had caused a confrontation. We spoke to their neighbors. They didn't see anv con. frontation. “One of the students was found with 16 bullets in the back.” BLAMES UNIT Custodio says there is a secret group within the military, Battalion 316, trained by Americans and by Argentinian secret police advisers. It is this group, he says, that is behind much of the violence. Fears for Custodio's life were heightened in December when union, university and human-rights advo cates said they had evidence that a foreign-trained death squad had made him its No. 1 target. Twice during 1986, unknown assailants attempted to fire-bomb Custodio's medical office and pathology laboratory in downtown Tegucigalpa. Last August, committee member Mario Guitarro was kidnapped at gunpoint and held for 36 hours before being released with a warning to stop working for human rights, Guitarro remains active in the organization ¥ KEFUSES GUARDS Despite the threats, Custodio goes about his business unarmed, walking or driving alone around Tegucigalpa and shunning suggestions he hire bodyguards. “I won't ask someone to possibly give up their life to save mine,” he says. “I am not afraid of them. They are the cowards, not me.” Custodio says just stopping Battalion 316's murderous ways is not enough. Major reform of the Honduran military, political and judicial systems is needed to prevent judges from accepting evidence obtained from prisoners under torture. “In order to be innocent under Honduran justice, you must resist torture,” he says with grim simplicity. “If you can't you will sign’a confession.” APPLY PRESSURE Custodio suggest countries could use their aid programs as a club on Honduras to bring about reforms. The United States, for example, pumps millions of dollars into Honduras every year, but most of that aid goes to the military. The United States also helps to arm and finance Contra rebel forces fighting the Nicaraguan government from bases in Honduras. Custodio and other observers, including Amnesty International, have blamed these Contras for kidnappings and attacks on Honduran peasants living near the Nicaraguan frontier. Canada has a modest aid program in Honduras, worth about $8 million a year with extra money earmarked for electricty projects. But External Affairs Minister Joe Clark says Canadian aid is not used to achieve what he considers to be political goals. GARDENING HELP WANTED ase Operators. Positions inary Trainin en House sem: 05231 = inars in major centres across $1 Down leases ul & Program are equipment supplies & employed in the most presti. Les Available for Qualified Don’t Walk, RunTo... FORD'S Main Event PAYMENTS UNTIL no-pain-no-gain attitude to OPPORTUNITIES exercise should be laid to SHORT ORDER CAFE In Good rest, says the chief medical "Castlegar location 4 am: 4 You officer for Team Canada at mrondy aa fulipart time dew, oc Ves 48. 738-3188. — WHEEL ALIGNMENT SHOP ; ~ on C-3 Highway Frontage the Winter Olympics in Cal eautiful Eelskin Free calendar High School gary pers. Buses. Our Co goods ets. handbags. upgrading. accounting, man ty 1(416)332-5000 for times. available. Write or call for dates and places rochure:_ Pierre Dubrulle Call lease - = Culinary School, 1522 West Manager st (664)465-0001 8th Avenue. Vancouver 1.5584 Be your own boss. Earn B.C., V6J 4R8. 738-3155. 0.A.C. APRIL, ‘88 Purchase/Lease/Rent Live Editor Wanted. Simply i! LARGE LOG RESTAURANT put, we STUDENT looking for ride to UBC January 28 and returning Feb. 2 will share expenses. Phone 365. 8380 3 MALE- Siamese cat. lost in Thrums area. 399-4460. 3 one-year Ave. and 6th St. 365-5554. 3/102 SMALL battery operated football jame found on road near Pass feek School. 365-6427 34 LARGE black ond white greenish-yellow week ago. 365-3386 FEMALE Persian black cat with white collar with black hearts. Blueberry Creek area beginning of January. 365. dg: of Sema THE ROYAL SAL CREST MOTEL 11 Unit CANADIAN LEGION near ski hill, $89,000. BRANCH No. 170 HIPWELL REALTY Would like to thank esas all those who donated Salmo to the Community Christmas Hompers 357-2141 365-7514 (Eves.) OFFICE or small business space for rent. Reasonable rent. Phone Kathy at Tulips Floral, 365-519 Our Action Ad Phone No. 365-2212 “A better idea is that if you're having pain, you aren't going to get gain,” Dr. Robert Brock, an orthopedic surgeon, said in an interview “If every time you run, you have a lot of pain or swelling or something, then you need to back off.” The idea that if exercise hurtssit must be good for you is fa@ing, Brock said WESTCOAST SEAFOODS biemisincaunidacencisiemidncamitncamns Castlegar Mohawk January 15, 1988. 10:00 a.m rah ‘| AUTOMOTIVE DIRECTORY Get Your Message Across Fast! CALL Classified Ads 365-2212 AUCTION General Merchandise And Consignment Sale Location Russell Auction House 2067 Hwy. Sun., Jan. 17—1 p:m. Sharp Sale Consists of Furniture, Household Items and Antique Collectables! SSELL ICTION Hwy. 3A Thrums 399-4793 t ae ; Dealer No. 7724 3A Thrums FAME vices ieginey rmee~ F. crytecry DEALERSHIPS Kootenay Honda (across from Waneta Plaza) 368-3377 CASTLE TIRE (1977) LTD. SALES & SERVICE PD “a5 nal -7145 1050 Columbia, Castlegar 1507 Columbia Ave. == K & A TIRES LID. For all your tire needs | Also specializing in brakes and shocks. ZnwceEsTone cou 365-2955 ine Drive, North Vancouver 1.6066. Lease/Buy direct tory tet broker Start way 0431 0L5662 Trucks, Pickups, Subyrbans. ible trom order) to: Charis 08 p Midpark Way S.E., Calgary Alta. T2x 1M secretarial, computers ed want to publish an ressive, but hitting newspaper ‘964. National Co! AA21 205-259 Lighting Fix Canada's Today 10 innovative Ibson ver, 688-4913 toll free 1-800. 7-1281, 24 hour is rgest_ display he wk and res etail, Free Vancou- ‘ATE Telephone Answering Ser 000: A.V Western vice Surrey Hope, Mote! "Benticton 275,000 534- ng Centre, 4600 ox 220 058-0635, ‘NAS’ Block be CY. Bros Vey 287 D} North EDNL Is Seeking a distribu Talk tor in your area NOW for the hunting or fishing '2K5. Phone Okanagan lakeview property Dealer requires imme- diately Journey: Mech: anic. GM @: Craine USINESS OPPORTUNITIES Sash in Cash Out: Coke nz 3 with separate price setting Minimum $11,980 secur ply freight. stallined in $.1.R. will mail 4 free ito 194, 1863 Burrows Avenus SH itoba, R2X Otter expires Peorusry Summer resort 1988. Great Gifts =or_ Children! Must be ted. Pho: 378-9258 oF write to Murray Scolion., ox 1 Merritt, = Bent 8.C. VOK 280 ou money for ~ ene lobury? Vancouver er, Carey Linde since employment ) has Free into Jormation 7798. opportunity information. All phone Opinions Gladly Given Casey and Finnegan Now On Videos. $24.95. opportunity 200, Br Cer'iea Mr Malbot 1 (418) 761-5705. Weil seteblaned retell Bak Coffee mi "Gibsons y, Sales, over ing Prone 1288-9078 “after 1°00, Gustom Picture Framing Susiness For Sale - tor tne creative side train “call, (04h 74 273 evenings, Box Netson, B.C. VOC 1R0. 1400-1500 West aaeery ja ncou eRe bie Descrambier $279 fully Sctivated: Fully warran. 852-1 Box 310, Aldergrove, B.C. VOX 1PO. di Employment Box 940, Vernon, B.C Vit'ome. Dream. Multi-mil interview call (416)756-2111 or (416)756-7796. -1700. Effective throughout April 30/88. Shlere! Lake Louise, | Can 00 Position available, due to Bring Ti partner retirement. in estab- throughout Ag ished. practice in ‘Smithers. BC ica pp ust C.G.A. graduates with sev. oral years of public tence an trom $182 interested ‘0p- occupancy Se, Aen pan of packages ‘available. Call Plus n6 0 GO Cash Back ESSERIESSIRUECKS 1) \us UP TO IN SAVINGS ‘2000 - $600 Cash Back ON SELECTED NEW VEHICLES TenfGo 4-dr ail whee: drive 4x2 & On All New Cars and Trucks | LTS Ad. All New Vehicle Sales Include: FREE = RENO AIR FARE RETURN TO RENO Plus Accommodation at the Sands Hotel/Casino * Not applicable to factory orders or fleet sal Province-Wide Blanket B.C. Ads Reach over 920,000 fomes for only $129! Blanket Clossitied of the B.C. and Yukon Community Newspaper allow you to place your newspapers in near! Association ond rural market in B.C. ond the Yukon and we can also arrange the same thing for every other province in Ca Classified Ads 365-2212 Or write: Box 3007, Castiegor, B.C. VIN gHa (7 1978 PLYMOUTH ar good paint $2695 [bY 1984 MERCURY Topaz. 4 cylinder 5 speed. cassette $6995 ad 1981 PLYMOUTH Reliant 4 spc AM FM cassette $3495 [7 1986 MERC LYNX Balance of 3 yr untimited mileage warranty. 4 door, S-speed. cassette $7895 Cad 1981 TOYOTA SiW Automatic $3995 [A 1979 RANCHERO 2. auto. tet $3 95 ie 1985 HYUNDAI J00r, 60,000, auto $6995 ad 1979 FORD F250 47 OW Lad 24495 (AT 1980 CHEV 4x4 Auto., New Paint $6995 Vf 1981 BRONCO ‘ 4x4. 4 8p0 6 cyi. clean $7995 1980 MONZA H/B (A 2 door, 4-speed. — cassette, 60.000 kms $4495 (FF 1982 MAZDA RX7 Excetient condition. must be seen, $11,995 [7 1985 CHEV 4x4 ‘With deluxe Canopy, only 30,000 kms. $13,295 [A 1979 LINCOLN Loaded, sun root [A 1986 VAN Aerostar, V6, 5-speed EF very conamice ad 1980 F150 4x2 6-Cyl., 4-Spd., Nice Shape $5495 [A 1980 CITATION Automatic, radio $3495 1983 LADA 4 sod, AM/FM $2495 1980 PLYMOUTH Horizon, 4 cylinder 4-speed, good paint $3495 BUDGET VEHICLES See these vehicles if you need a second car for winter —1968 GMC 4x2 P/U —1977 MONARCH —1978 MERC ZEPHYR All Budget Priced MAKE AN OFFER [11980 FORD T-BIRD — 2-dr., auto $4395 1977 PLYMOUTH eth Poon nenehoeck $2795 1976 VOLVO Automatic, ar Aew paint Cay $3495 [AY 1979 F250 4x4 [A 1983 CHEV 4x4 % ton, automatic y 1977 F150 4x2 Aut tic $3495 (4 1977 FORD P fransaa’ v's aut Cas $2695 1979 FORD 8: xuT $6995 [FF 1981 MERC LYNX 1983 MERCURY con Spee Capri SL Oniy 58 006 “root pean ale kms 2c: 5:speed A» $3995 $11,995 [7 1986 DODGE RAM CARGO VAN Automatic very iow kms [4 (ad 1975 PONTIAC Firebwd. V-8. auto . pw $3995 1977 F150 4x2 Auto., 351, V-8, P.S., P.B. $3,495 [71978 DODGE CREW CAB & CAMPER Cas a TRAIL B.C. 2795 Highway Drive toca: 364-0202 Outot-town 1-800-663-4966 Toll Free DAN * DENNIS « FRED * JANICE + PAUL Oesie #7736 STAN * WENDY