“ A2_ Castlegar News July 3, 1991 aN 5 30" : a r | JUMB PRINT x7 BONUS PRINT BRING YOUR FILM IN FOR DEVELOPING AND RECEIVE A 5x7 BONUS PRINT 1-5 ( Minimum 24 Exposure Roll) Offer Expires Sept: 30/91 — SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF IMPORTED GIFTWARE ! - : P, ASSPC Frames — Giftware — Portraits / HOUR : The Es E PHOTO “Picture “Place CASTLEAIRD PLAZA + 365-2211 + NOW PROVIDING 4x6 PRINTS AT NO EXTRA COST WITHIN AN HOUR. + 3.5X5 PRINTS ARE STILL AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST. OF YOUR CHOICE! Province-Wide Blanket B.C. Ads __ FOR SALE Msc WELPWANTED« | _HELPWANTED Pickering, | | tial. Box: wood windows, . \, MORE! Call collect | S16.” (604) 743-5999. te WALKER DOOR and WIN- S DOW in Vancouver at | Newt bulla SPORTS CARDS SUP- | WHOLESALE FIRM since | WANTEDI! 85 impertect to | PLIES. Plage your ordernow | 1976 now seeks 2 versary Hockey Cards plus jerchan- | Ibs. in the next 30 days. the Cr Rogket LF ‘retail ac. | toll-free #09: 386: 5840 aay s (voice box Castlegar Weather Office was probably the most unpopular place to be last month with record winds, little sunshine and lots of rain to answer for. “This was due to a series of upper disturbances which con- tinued to track southwards along the coast and then across Washington,” the officéexplains in a news release. “The sunny, warm days which are typical of June were limited as the breaks between Pacific systems were very brief.” Ruling out picnics and the like was 44.2 mm of rain, less than the average of 64.3 mm but far more than the record of 12.7 mm set in 1974. June 12 was the coolest day on record at 3.4C, only slightly warmer than the low record of 2.2C set on June 41976. A more seasonal trend- d to be on its way June repre; | for 1992. Proset 75th Anni- | sentatives in your area. Dis- | they want and lose up to 29 new 1 ‘box 1112). mings potential $800+. (416)756-3174, 28 when the mercury hit the month’s high of 28€. The record high for the month was on June 30, 1987 at 35.7C. . | (416)756-2156. Optcal —— | Lake. Minimum 2 years ex- | NEED EXTRA $$$. C aM | Perience. Send resume with | Gits needs demonstrators to | Telerences to Box #261, o/0 | SSye's pits at home par. | Tribune, Wiliams Lake, B.C. | tes. No investment or expe. | V2GIY8. = nence tablished company. Call today z } 7908. + | i dhe Body, Mind, Spirit, find out who you really are. Call 1- . 6B. LS. | 800-F.0.. T.R.U.TH. 681.0318. M/Cand Visa eee te accepted. “ge ‘a newspaper! Do you | ———— nl ohaiy __ | think there is room tor n- | peters Bros. Paving and In | Disposing wood Aulomotve, . for: taxes. Crown Land Smithers, B.C., VOU | Sines Sa, Yeux a7. | avelablty. For inlormation | 90 nd Dept. CN, Box 5380, Sin. F, pS. | Ottawa, K2C 3/1. | Excavators, Pavers, | TRAIN TO Manage an Apart: — Elevator, Rollers, Dozers, | menvC Canada’ Graders, Jaws, 1213 Crush: | Goverment licensed home | Fletirement Development. ion 0 u |. Dealer and distributorships available ike ment on prime commercial property. Call Cindy (604)256-4335. | study certification course. | For in | Job pi chure write to: Shuswap Lake | Call’ for: tree brochure | Estates Lid., Box 150, Blind | 156 of 1-800-665- | Bay, B.C., VOE 1HO. (604)675-2523. Vie ¢ | (604)493-6791 8339. = ~ Province-Wide Blanket B.C. Ads Reach over 1,500,000 homes for only $195! Blanket Classifieds of the B.C. and Yukon Community Newspaper Association allow you to place your ad in nearly. 100 newspapers in Castlegar News nearly every suburban and rural market in B.C. and the Yukon, and we can also arrange the same thing for every other province in Canada CLASSIFIED ADS 365-2212 Or write: Box 3007, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3H4 West Ke y winds hit a record average last month, matching the standing record of 10.6 km/h set in 1976. All this added up to a month June 29 3, §, 10, 12, 13, 40 Bonus 43 June 26 July 1 ‘ 8, 10, 17, 26, 37, 41, Bonus 30 1, 5, 24, 34, 36, 45, 51, 54 EXTRA | 30 9, 21, 22, 34, 45, 53, 54, 56 1, 6, 10, 36, 46, 49, 51, 52 June 28 10, 25, 32, 33, 37, 44, 47, 55 June 29 June 27 1, 5, 6, 24, 36, 37 2, 13, 18, 25, 28, 30, 43, 45 \ "THE DAILY June July 1 12, 14, 25, 33, 37, 44, 47 Match 6: 900434, 702409, 078417. June 25 Match 5; 49484, 68088, 55664. 2, 3, 12, 15, 23, 26, 28, 47 Match 4: 8710, 2104, 9804. Match PROVINCIAL 8: 943, 274, 676. Match 2: 63, 50, 93. June 30 Match 6: 630975, 089983,292314. Match 5: 32753, 88722, 42159. Match 4: 6684, 8325, 9163. Match 3: 736, 525, 070. Match 2:75, 11, 02. June 29 Match 6: 195674, 768582, 261815. Match 5: 2822293, 11895, 00712. Match 4: 7506, 4484, 5710. Match 3: 908, 870, 607. Match 2: 58, 43, July 1 75. $5 Million — 3893176 June 28 $1 Million — 3051482, 3379147 Match 6:195674, 768879, 233601. $500,000 — 224884, 2381691, Match 5: 14763, 04841, 92546. 2623785, 2675177, 3959546 Match 4: 9126, 9607, 3061. Match ~ 7099 3: 194, 230, 223. Match 2: 45, 60, 70. June 27 Match-6: 272111, 541011, 677503. Match 5: 04326, 29123,57079. Match 4: 3940, 2134, 7900. Match 3: 016, 822, 041. Match 2: 08, 81, 2. $5,000 — 1342185, 1980318, * 2010502, 2278390, 2635826, 2753579, 2895341, 3066376, 3497533, 3566506, 3645311, 4076764, 4600288, 4734376, 4776942, 4941884, 4980454, SPECIAL EDITION GRAND PRIZE DRAW 1531768, 2350548, 2898720, 2977732, 2982999, 3456515, 9584313, 3975571. June 26 Match 6:952766, 088333, 001685. Match 5: 12633, 50932, 10797. Match 4: 0250, 4600, 3994. Match 3: 158, 113, 455. Match 2: 71, 51, winn 68. provided by the June 25 Lottery Corporation, the latter Match 6: 480581, 462081, 084835. shail prevail. Se TE considerably_short on — 191.9 hours compared to the average of 241.1 hours. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Environment reports in its Snow Survey Bulletin that flooding of lakes and rivers along the East and West Koote- nay basins remained a threat going into June. In May near-normal melting rates were reported in the West Kootenay but melting in the East Kootenay basin exceeded its normal rate. Snow. levels at higher elevations remained above normal for June 1 in the Kootenay basins. Temperatures and precipita- tion were close to normal in May but the total precipitation between November and May was 33 percent above normal. OUR ACTION AD PHONE NUMBER IS 365%2212 -- aes le PRINCE RUPERT Sane Furniture « Mattresses for less... A LOT LESS! @ ront st. son © DAWSON CREEK IN MEMORY Helen P. Niminiken Helen P. Niminiken of South Slocan passed away Friday, June 28, 1991 at Kootenay Lake District Hospital at age 85. Mrs. Niminiken was born Jan. 23, 1906 at Sheho, Sask. She moved to South Slocan in 1944. She loved to work with her hands making things for her family, and enjoyed their many visits. Mrs. Niminiken is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Polly (Alec) Mogjelsky of Glade and Mrs. Alice (Bill) Moojelsky of Crossfield, Alta.; daughter-in-law Winnie Niminiken of South Slocan, 11 Gi hild: 19 great: ild: sister Nora Verigin of Creston; two brothers, Ken Planiden of Edmonton, Alta. and Fred Planiden of N.W.T.; and many cousins, nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her husband, Mike, in 1941;.two sons, Paul in 1979 and John in 1989; and four brothers. Funeral services were held July 1 and July 2 at the Thomp- _ son Funeral Home. I lowed at Sh Ceme- te ry. Funeral arrangements were under the direction of Thomp- son Funeral Home. FACELIFT. - The Woodland Park Co-op, Castiegar's first and only housing co-op, long awaited STREET TALK KATRINE CONROY, administrator of the Kootenay Columbia: Child Care Society, picked up a cheque last week for $2,000 from the Aux- portation and safety committee for ending another school year accident free. Leo Plamondon, a 25-year veteran, iliaries of the British Columbia Auxiliary, Fra- ternal Order of Eagles. The money will be used to buy equipment for Hobbit Hill Children’s Centre, one of eight chil- dren’s facilities in the province to land on the receiving end of the auxiliaries’ fundraising efforts, Conroy said. During the past year, $24,784.95 was raised by the auxiliaries for the B.C. Children’s Fund. The local auxiliary is made up of women throughout the Castlegar and Trail area. WOODLAND PARK CO-OP is getting its first face-lift since becoming the first housing co-operative in the Kootenays eight years ago. New siding has already been installed and painting and general upgrading are in the works. ‘ “ Located on seven acres of land in south a} , the lex of ten si it suites was built in 1960 as a housing project for Cel- gar Pulp Co. while the mill was being built. Member managed and operated, it remains the only housing co-op in the area. _BUS DRIVERS for the Castlegar school dis- trict received awards Thursday from the trans- H a shoulder patch and $100 for a safe driving record over the past five years. Receiving shoulder patches were: Doug Richards, 16 years; Stan Jollimore, 16 years; Pete Plotnikoff, 11 years; Darlene Schultz, 11 years; Ray Plamondon, eight years (cur- rent and 11 previous); and Jay Hawkins, 6 years. Drivers Brenda Binnie, Toni MacAlpine, Susan Beresford and Judy Currie each picked up a shoulder patch and wings for safely completing their first year of driving for the district. e A FAMILY OF BANK SWALLOW: now calls the Castlegar Savings Credit Union home — but at the cost of clean windows. Daniel Pawlivsky of the Big Horn Janitori- al Service was just about to remove the family’s 15 nests last week when a passerby intervened: Turns out the bank’s managers also felt a soft spot for the birds’ nests, and decided they were more important than clean windows. The bank variety are one of the three most common species of the swallow. Summer Concerts tn the Park This Thursday, July 4 THE TRAVELLING MILLDOOIES . Classic rock and roll performed by 10 very talented Grade 7,and 8 students from Salmo Elementary and Secondary School. Directed by Ray Yule. ¢ Free lunchtime concerts every Thursday ¢ 12 noon to 1 p.m. at Kinsmen Park © Bring your family, lunch, and lawn chairs Sponsored by the Castlegar Arts Council with the co-operation of the Castlegar News.and CKQR Radio along with the City of Castlegar These concerts are made possible through the generous financial support of B.C. Tel, West's Department Store, Cohoe Insurance, Pharmasave and Moroso, Markin and Blain Conpretatons ADRIENNE t NEGREY For 6 years of continuous and academic f.) achievement. You » have every reason Ld 10 be proud! — WANTED — CLEAN COTTON RAGS Castlégar News oe FATAL Axe wae Thursday, July 11 + 9 p.m. a fom Afrca., LV. Rogers High School, 1004 Cottonwood, Nelson | Tickets available in Castlegar at Pete's T.V. Adults $14.95 & $1.05 GST = $16 Children Under 12 $9.35 & .65 GST = $10.00 "Oasis Productions & the Kootenay Weekly Express Present | LEGION wit¥ SERVICES “RIDE OF YOUR LIFE" Castlegar Ambulance Service would lik® to thank the following for their support of the 1991 Ride of Your Life Program: BRANCH 170 1991 G Monday to Thursday of Stanley Humphries Sec. School t Rentals -Thrifty Rentals Contiooer & District Aquatic & Recreation Centre 3 p.m.- 11 p.m. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 12 Noon to 1 a.m. (Except Band Nights & Special Occasions) 365-7017 Co-op Transp Society SuperValu Panagopoulos Pizza Municipal Emergency Program Gerry Rempel and Leo Sommers LADIES WEAR AND WWWWWW ee VWwWwwwwww www = GIGANTIC SUMMER MMMMMMMMM The Castlegar Arts Council gratetully acknowledges the tinanciol support of the Government of British Columbia through the Mimstry ot Tourism, Recreation and Culture In the event ot rain, the concert will be held in the Legion Hall through the generosity of Branch No. 170 Royal Canadian Legion. @ TERRACE FABRIC DEPARTMENT 20°50... * STARTS TUESDAY, —— AS LITTLE AS 3 t ce PRICES —ics aS Roe ns Wh if ‘bs loop @ QUESNEL cr ) i 4 2 *SuperValu will double the face value of any manufacturers coupon when applied to the purchase price of the coupon item available in our store. This offer is limited to one coupon per purchased item. Offer does not apply to mail-in coupon offers or free merchandise coupon offers. This offer does not include coupons offered by other stores. (Not to exceed total item's value). AMMMMMMMMMMMMMMA REGULAR STORES! Friday 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. . 1217.9RD ST., CASTLEGAR tee SALES FINAL! » 965-7782 Your satisfaction is our main concern wwww WV W WW CASTLEAIRD PLAZA |