8 casnecar NEWS, November 14, 1979 Barry Gibb reflects on the Bee Gees’ success New York, N.Y.—When historians chronicle ‘Rock and Roll of the ‘70s,’ they will undoubtedly reserve a pare raph or two for the remarkable comeback of the jee Gees, After competing with the likes of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the mid and late '60s, the Australian-bred trio broke up due to the enormous Pressures that come with success and fame. But in tate 1970, the Brothers Gibb decided to reunite and give it another chance. The result was the smash single ‘Lonely Oays.' The Bee Gees had indeed recaptured some of their_past glory. During the mid-'70s, though, the Bee Gees pxperiesiced a musical lull. The Vietnam War was at its helght and music began to take on a different complexion. As Barry Gibb tells it, the public usually’ dictates a change in music mode whenever a war is still fresh in their minds. ‘People wanted more fun and faster music. Glen Miller also changed the style of music right after World War Il," Barry related. Starting with the Hues Corporation mega-hit ‘Rock the Boat,’ disco, a more free-spirited version of rock, was spawned. But it took the Bee Gees to really bring disco to the forefront of the music industry with their Saturday Night Fever LP. @ Thus, the Brothers Gibb had once again cheat- ed the burn-out syndrome that pervades rock ‘n’ roll and gave them an almost & unheard of three decades of success. Disco also the career of CYour Stars —_/ LOOK WOKS HAPPENING AT THE BAY By STELLA WILDER Creativity is the key to success throughout the com- — Whatever you do.in grati- tude — even if you fail in your purpose — will be understood by your friends. ing week. Those who insist upon progressing along an already beaten path mai find themselves quite sud- denly behind the times, unable to offer much of real value in the way of method or operation. Job-hunting pays off well this week, especially for those seeking not more money but more time. Those interested in getting projects of their own off the ground should find favorable days ahead. Personal relationships may exhibit tension early in the week as loved ones and close friends vie for a limit- ed number of honors and awards. In the long run, however, the competition that brings about a case of nerves even in the most experienced of competitors serves to elicit compassion among people in general. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 7) — Troubled days early in the week give way to moments of real satisfaction as your work begins to develop. (Nov. 8-Nov. 21) — Your concern with your image may cause you to overlook more important matters. Be ready to deal with an enemy. SAGITTARIUS: (Nov. 22- Dec. 7) — Participate in family affairs before younger family members land an enterprise in ‘trou- ble, not after. (Dec. 8-Dec. 21) — The possibility that you may fail in a new phase of your work is slim. Even SO, prepare for it without delay. CAPRICORN: (Dec. 22- Jan. 6) — Take advantage of another’s “in” with a group of people you would like to influence. Play cards closely. (Jan. 7-Jan. 19) — Seek the help of one upon whom you know you can depend. A mutually excelu- sive duality of interests con- fuses you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb, 3) — Enjoy the benefits of special knowledge. You can get the jump on the competi- tion if you try. (Feb. 4-Feb. 18 )— A get-rich-quick scheme may land you in con- siderable hot water early in the week. Extricate yourself at once, PISCES: (Feb. 19-March Give it a try. ARIES (March 23-April 4) — Acircle of admirers may have a viper in its midst. Don't trust friends of friends; keep your own coun- sel. (April 5-April 19) — The wise will stay within an already tested budget even as they break out of an established activity mold. TAURUS: (April 20-May 5) — You will be happily surprised at the success of new efforts for gain early in the week. Don’t force issues. The Bay Invites you to mest Paul Leong. The delightful fragrance of Chinese food will permeate the Bay Trall from November 14th to November 17th when Mr. Paul Leong, demonstrator for Yan’s Variety Co. Ltd., shows you how to create Chinese specialty dishes ‘‘the Yan’s way”’. Let Paul put his culinary expertise to work to show you how Chinese g can be , easy & a lot of fun. . Wed., Nov. 14 DEMONSTRATIONS 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m., 1 p.m. 2p.m. & 3 p.m. 12:30 p.m., 2 Ponts @ Pelt Thurs., Nov. 15 Fri., Nov. 16 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. 3 p.m., 6:30 p.m. & Sat., Nov. 17 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m., 2 p.m., 3 p.m. Vegetable Cook Book by Stephen Yan. Make everything from asparagus to zucchin| more eye- appealing and nutritious. Sate 1.99 Chinese Cook Book by Stephen Yan. 146 page illustrated Chinese cookbook with over 80 tested recipes, in handsome coll-bound form 3.98 6 plece wok set. 14'' stainless steel wok with copper bottom, 13" aluminum lid, electric range ring, stalntess steel spatula, stalntess steel cleaver with a copy of Stephen Yan's Chinese cook book. Sale 48.99 6 plece wok set of spun steel 34.98 3 plece wok set includes wok, cover, ring. Sate 17.99 Wok rings. For electric range. Safe 2.99 Wok lIlds. 13"' for 14°" wok 7.88 Chinese cleaver, of carbon steel 7.98 Heavy Duty Chinese cleaver, of stalntess steel. Sale Oll container, so handy for wok cooking. 2.39 Bamboo chopsticks, set of 10 pr. 99c Bamboo tongs. 1.98 Wok lifter. 1.19 Wire ladie with long bamboo handle. 3.98 Chinese cooking Ingredients. roull find all the y jor Chinese cocking, including soy sauce, cooking wine, peanut oil and oyster sauce, plus many, many more. Baby Sweet Corn. Sate Price 98c (May 6-May 20) — = ships with members of the opposite sex improve rapid- ly as you take hold of a new philosophical idea. GEMINI: (May 21-June 6) — An invitation to attend a social event at week’s end may cause a great deal of trouble for days beforehand. (June 7-June 20) — Plan the week well and as early as possible. This is no time to take things as they come. Go after what you want. CANCER: (June 21-July 7) — Romantic prospects interrupt your progress by taking too much of your thought this week. Be uncon- cerned. (July 8-July 22) — A long-distance love affair col- ors your own actions this week. Take your time mak- ing up your mind — then move! LEO: (July 23-Aug. 7) — Take part in important dis- cussions about your own future early in the week. Changes occur quickly after that. (Aug. 8-Aug. 22) — Change is certain. If you fight against it you will sure- ly lessen your chances for any sort of gain. VIRGO: (Aug. 23-Sept. 7) — Take care that new proj- ects don't get out of hand, costing you more money than you can afford to spend. (Sept. 8-Sept. 22) — Part of the week's activities please you; part do not. Take your time discarding the ill or accepting the good. LIBRA: (Sept. 23-Oct. 7) — Don’t count your chickens until they’re hatched. Things are not quite what they seem early in the week. (Oct. Don’t miss the live interview on CJUAT Thursday, Nov. 15, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. Prices In effect until November 17 Through a Special Financing arrangement we are able-to offer first-year financing at. . . 1979 PONTIAC Parisienne Demo Stk. No. 1-0372-0 GM List $9467. Hudsons Bay Company, 0.A.C ona new or late-model used automobile, oele tinh anita a mess eee qenrin vee ae girs Years ago, when young unwed ladies found themselves pregnant, their pre- dicament was a source of more than a . little embarrassment. In some instances thelr delicate state became . the catalyst which led to tragedy. n this side of the Atlantic, the en 0 Chester Gillette case is considered th classic example. Chester's girlfriend informed him she was pregnant at pre- cisely the same time that a rich socialite fell in love with him. Chester could see a life of wealth, power, and glamor slip- Ping away. He killed the girlfriend and was executed for his trouble. The case was immortalized in Theodore Dreiser's best selling book, An American Tragedy. On the other alder the Atlantic’ the ty She was a domestic servant at a ram- hilng old gabled house known as Provi- dence House in Peasenhall, which was the home of Deacon and Mrs, Crisp: It can be said that Rose. didn’t run around, nor was she on intimate terms with half the village. Now that my con- ‘selence is clear, evidence exists which * {ndleated that the boredom of village ie life sometimes got the better of all t jood corpuscles which flowed so recklessly through Rose's pretty body. For selected, discreet lovers, Rose sometimes did it. : Having travelled through the villages of Suffolk, J have witnessed first hand the young ladies of the area. There is.a pink blush to their cheeks which exudes food health. No doubt their intake, ot ig legged, + classic of all suc! known as the Peasenhall Case. Let's get right down to it. The Pregnant lady was Rose Harsent and the accused impregnator was William Gardiner. It all began in 1902 in the, tiny village of Peasenhall, which lies just north of Ipswich in Suffolk, England, Bill Gar- ner was a respectable married man, having sired Gardiners. The famll leasant cottage on Main St. lown the road at the only industry village, The Peasenhall Drill Works, which manufactured farm implements. He was a carpenter and held the posi- tion of foreman. A big, dark, good-looking man, Bill’s main activity outside his regular employment was his involvement with the church. He belonged to the Primi- tive Methodist. Congregation and atterided church regularly the neigh- bot village of Sibton. AC did more than just attend. Ss acting steward, treasurer, Sunday schoo! superintendant, and, wouldn't you know it, choirmaster. . ‘Well respected Because of these ecclesiastical pur- suits, Bill was considered to be a pillar of the community. It is sad to relate, but devastingly accurate, that many wives of men accused of impregnating sundry ladies are not. themselves raving beauties. Mrs. Gardiner was not a- looker. She was a rather small woman, who for some reason seems to have develo a slight squint in both eyes. This distracting habit was coupled with an adolescent complexion which never did clear up, Mrs. Gardiner was deci- dedly pi : Rose Harsent was quite another story. airy lon, robust well-endowed females who know there just has to be something better on the other side of the woodpile. Rose was one of those. . : Rose sang in the choir, and it was here that she became acquainted with Bill Gardiner. Each evening after practice the choirmaster gave Rose a lift home to Peasenhall from Sibton, Village life being what it was in those ° days, it was only natural that rumours began to spread about Rose and Bill. There were those who said that each evening the choirmaster taught Rose more than singing. The vague rumours came to a head when two refe the locals as the Doctor's Chapel. The religious mores of the church couldn’t ignore such an accusation. An inquiry was held under the of was indeed a night waiting for a murder to happen. ‘ throat had been twice slashed from ear to ear, The body was dressed only in a nightgown and stockings. The lower portion of Rose's nightdress was urned, as were: her legs. Beside the dead girl was a broken lamp. The body Jey on a copy of The East Anglian Daily No weapon was found at the scene, but a broken bottle which had contained paraffin was lying close to the girl’s ead. The label on the broken bottle contained the words ‘‘Two to three tea- spoons, a sixth part to be taken every four, hours — Mrs. Gardiner’s chil- dren’’. i Investigating officers gathered a wealth‘of clues, all pointing to one man. The broken bottle, which had obviously een in the Gardiner home at one me, was of course strong evidence, but here was more. Rose’s brother not only delivered fresh linen, he swore he had Mr. John Guy, a big wheel d church. The two boys state had sneaked -up within listenin; tance of Bill and Rose and had heard them Siggling and, get this, they heard , oh.” . Rose say, *‘O! Both Bill and Rose denied any such meeting, claiming the whole story was made up by the two lads for excitement. The church investigation cleared the storm over Peasenhall, The heavens opened and heavy rains fell for hours. It That cup of tea agood one | _ Make it iks— he is the 9th complain’ that it's damned difficult to make a pot of tea as good as one gets in the Old Country. It must be the water, they reason. “Water makes a tremen- dous difference to a pot. of tea,” says Samuel Twinning. “In Canada, it’s the minerals and chemicals in the water. I sometimes think it depends on the chap whois adding the stuff to the water—maybe he drops two sacks in instead df one. I've noticed a difference at times in my own home. You'll find the.best pots’ . of tea in Scotland and Ireland because their water is purer but ‘it's safe to say in the same breath that good tea is not normally as affected as the ordinary." . Twinning knows of what generation of Twinnings, the tea company founded in 1708 as Tom's Coffee House in the - Strand in London. _ The major problem, he says, is that Most people . don't know how to make a pot, of tea. “An enamel pot is all right but if it chips the iron will quarrel with the tea—the tea literally picks up the flavor of the iron. An alumi- num teapot is the worst—it will put a bluish blush on the surface of the tea. China and porcelain are good and, oddly enough, so is stainless steel as long as you keep it clean, “But the finest way to make a pot of tea is in the: dear little old brown teapot.”. He debunks the old story that one. merely rinses out the teapot. "A coating of tannin builds up and gives a bitter or sour taste. The pot must be spotlessly clean.” We are lazy in making our pots of tea by drawing hot water from the tap for the kettle, he says. “Use cold water, it has good oxygen content which is lost in preheated water. Use a total- ly empty. kettle and don't wait for a rolling boil. And by all means, warm the pot so that all the heat goes to the tea instead of the pot and take the pot to the kettle.” A good rule of thumb is. to let small tea leaves steep for three minutes, medium leaves, five minutes and large, seven ‘minutes .and- then stir the tea just before~ ~serving. oy found under This young sleuth noticed footprints leading from Gardiner’s house to Providence House. He described the pattern made by the rubber soled shoes. A letter was found in Rose's room: out again. Don’t have a light in. your room at 12 as 1 will come around the ack. 32h 2 * An unusual habit It was established that Bill Gardiner had the unusual habit of capitalizing the first letter of words in the middle of sentences, On June 3, three days after the murder, Bill, protesting his innocence, was arrested and charged wih Rose Harsent's muder, During Bill’s trial the defense explained away most of the prosecu- tion’s case. Rose could have come into possession of Bill's newspaper in dozens of ways in the small village. Mrs. Gar- diner swore that her husband was at home the entire night of-the murder. Defense experts stated that the letter found in Rose’s room could well have been written by someone ‘other than Bill, Mrs. Gardiner explained how the incriminating medicine bottle found at the scene had come into Rose's pos- session. A few months prior to’ the . Gardiner had murder, Mrs. a prescrip- - tion filled for her children. The children had consumed the medicine and the empty bottle had remained in the family. medicine chest. Later, Rose had come to her complaining of a sore throat. Mrs. Gardiner had taken some camphorated oll and placed it into the bottle with the incriminating label and given it to Rose. In this way the bottle innocently came into Rose’s possession. Morris’ evidence came under scathing cross examination. Was it nat- ural for a man to memorize a footprint so that he could match it to a rubber soled shoe from memory? The defense thought not. since, th found on Bill Gardiner’s clothes. Every stitch he owned was examined, but no stains were every found. leliberate, but he court they were hopelessly deadiocked. A second trial was held in Jan. 1903. After deli- berating for two hours and twelve minutes the foreman of the jury reported that they were hopelessly deadlocked, Bill was released from cus- ly. ; No other person has ever been tried for Rose’s murder. While thunder lay of lay, 1902, the unborn child silenced her forever. i" A p r \ ut i ane ]} hae CASTLEGAK NEWS, November 14, 1979 El RS Rose's last midnight Enjoy your fireplace . but use it properly A fireplace should be warm and cheery, not dan- gerously hot or smoky. To get the most out of your fireplace: eCheck the flu for squirrels, birds’ nests or ac- cumulations of soot. Be sure to open the damper before starting a fire. x e@ Don't overload your fireplace.. A free-standing metal fireplace can accom- Exclusive at-Kootenay Savings modate only small logs. Place the logs toward the back of the fireplace. @ Always use a screen. © Take care not to scat- ter embers when rearranging burning logs. e Don't leave children alone with a fire. @ Don't close the damp- er until the fire is completely’ out. Even a smoldering fire can fill a room with deadly carbon monoxide. Rate Subject to Change Interest on Minimum Monthly Balance of $100.00 or More 1979 GR. LEMANS Station Wagon Demo Stk. No. 2-8959-0 GM List $9451 now °8188 1979 BUICK Skyhawk Stk. No, 6-8044-0 GM List $7328 5) — Spend time getting 8-Oct. 22) — If you will look back into the swim of things at the week’s events as they this week. Your recent expe- unfold rather than as you riences may leave you expect them to unfold, you worried. (March 6-March 20) will gain much. FALL CLEARANCE ON ALL STOCK RECREATIONAL VEHICLES — 10% OFF — WHILE THEY LAST 1979 BUICK “Better than Money in the Bank” Century Stk. No. 6-7678-0 GM List $9330 DISCOUNT : : ie NOW $3 1 88 Pa YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS THES FOR EXAMPLE ‘79 22'3' Motor Home ‘79 26' Fifth Wheel ‘79 9'6" Camper ‘79 8' Camper ‘79 15'%' Traile: ‘79 23' Trailer .. MOR i WE WILL ACCEPT pLAY ne HOMES ANY TRADE OR DOWN-PAYMENT SPECIAL ' FURNITURE REBATE Kootenay Savings SOUTH SLOCAN FRUITVALE NAKUSP NEW DENVER WANETA PLAZA Remember, WE ARE : 5 all THE HOME OF FRUIT 100% FINANCING SOUTH SLOCAN, B.C. D. 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