ons‘ ors — . “On HOL-TLE “HA 180% 006’ ses — 1S WALZ - 06 avwnssy FONvT ‘ONDA jOIDJ8Us “ woo esning ‘evne joey “104 "anaee ‘0120 10°9 puo s6U 2610) — wvOTUSV? HINOS % t " sas as 006‘ 678 — “1S 1ue>D885 ICL 1223 - 3rd St., Castlegar 365-6256 naird Hall the f. EAGER BEAVERS . . . Ina ceremony held Nov. 8 at Kin- b Beovers: (Front row, Kevin Hanham, Kelly NET EER SPECIAL THANKS (Secehd row, left to right) Jason Hanham, Darren Crockett, Chris’ Rempel, Brett Wright. (Back row, left to right) Joanne Whitnack, Paul Derosa, Murray Mcintosh, Robbie Campell. Church bazaar Conviction on such charges can lead to maximum prison terms of up to seven years. But even if given sequences of getting caught are great. Dozens of Japanese sing- ers, actors and other enter- tainers have been arrested for possessing pot. The of- fender is subject to weeks of publicity in the scandal- loving media and may en- counter problems getting work in TV, films and else- where for a year or more. After well-known actor Kenichi Hagiwara was ar- rested with 12 grams of mar- ijuana last year, the Toyota Motor Corp. and other firms sentences, as is the case with most first-time drug offend con- tracts worth an estimated $417,000. After more than 50 Apple Annie either let off with a warning or given suspended sen- tences. The National Police Agen- ey said that of 1,231 people arrested for possessing or selling marijuana last year, 819 were indicted. Officials said there were no records on how many actually served time in prison. CUPE SLAMS "MON “swoospeg © °006'69S — swnaHi Gvow 1401 ‘ONUST] aN fewoy Aion meu ‘swupge "rr D-ana'anen: = 4980108 0610, “tel | 006.698 — EVORUSY HINOS 4Pq © “006'6rs es onusn sasse G ‘matane iaddy OEIXOTT weniug $70) ayeys0 Kaye a yuorserg 7 10] s9p1e ‘seFORSED HYION $ase pQ'T ‘BAO}SOIy $as9e G'T ‘BAo}sauy tone on pre areenay eoce | erqownssy e607 VIM] easerg — mon ‘008'Se$ Nas Se SoM ‘Ajsedosd ws0y Aqqoy INyWNDeg “UBIs 1NO 404 YOO) Us0q pedis)s e6;eq pud UMOIg 10 448] WINE “}OOUDS 4OOs Ss0q 1s0d sey Y, | MOPOSW P2JD8}> ‘}ere} 4$© $8590 69'6 —, 000'0s$ — 92124 1/94 -kysedoud uo su01j2@uUU0> om 81d 009*,0SZ. YPSHOO ‘$8190 76°C 005 97S — “Orv WOL-LI9Z 006'61$ — ©2114 1194 “4041045 Ours YIM 10) SEL*OZL AWEIBdS VE SULIpq ¥ ‘310 jO4Ue> 14 GNVIGCOM 000'2£$ — wav. 000'szs — eed’ : upg » — 1g @Bpiyinos iZ¥E 100d 9E*.0% Yin WIS” LOS a LEE AT and tea Many thanks for supporting me for likes to bake NCC alderman at the polls on Nov. 17. ROBERT PAKULA ‘aa ee wines reeyees LUNCH IN THE 1884 RESTAURANT Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. -2 p.m. SALAD BAA Uonday through Seterdary )— 95 BREAKFAST (Mon. to Sat.) Starting at 60.m. LUNCHEON SPECIAL — $3.50 day, Tuesday & dnesday, 11 a.m. -2 p.m. the new \ele/ \ahe/ Vale elie non] mel TL] ee LITT { Piiihiiiititiniiiriivililied TO KEEP WARM, CHILLY BASEBALL PITCHER FROM KANSAS CITY trail b.c. The St. David's Anglican Church women held a Christ- mas tea and bazaar Saturday at the-Legion Hall. Rev. Charles Balfour opened the tea and welcomed those who attended. Jessie Donnan and Annie Worthing took tickets and Lillian Hap- ala greeted guests at the door. Cicely Marcellus, _ Betty Hostedder and Pearl Petts “while Margaret Reith, Louise Bate and Judy Balfour were in charge of the white ele- phant table. HOSEL IN. 4 Lorraine Deans and Lynne Beal looked after the sewing table. Colleen Be: Doris Braun, Sharon ‘aterson, Joan Crossley and Myrna Secret waited on tables un. der the direction of Helen Leduc. Three names were drawn for door prizes. Leslie Kil lough won first prize, Yvonne Pavlis second prize and Anne Popoff won the third prize. Proceeds from this tea will be donated to the Citizen Advoeacy program. orked at the bake table CALGARY (CP) — Annie Boyson, Calgary's own Apple Annie, rewards good home-make apple pies. During the last 36 years Boyson, 73, has given pies to the folks who work at her bank, the gas pany, her favorite department stores, cab companies, policemen, doctors and friends. “There's no charge for the boys who give me good service,” Boyson said. “They get out and open the doors and help you out of the car. That means a lot.” Boyson has been baking pies since 1948 — thousands of pies, most of them apple-filled. She delivered 54 recently to Co-op Taxi. “My pies have been all 6ver "bah Boye, « pensioner who lives alone in a 12th-floor apartment in southeast deeds by handing out OTTAWA (CP) — The Na- tional Citizens Coalition is more a “national corporate club” than an organization dedicated to the betterment dual Canad: She is not about to give out her secret recipe. “No way you're going to get that,” she said, while admitting egg whites and sugar are part of the trick, along with taking time “to do it right.” . “I have a good recipe, I won't part with ff,” said Boyson, who moved to Calgary in 1939 and worked as a cook and a baker in High River and Strathmore. Boyson starts from scratch on the kitchen table of her small apartment. She bakes a dozen pies a night, four in the oven at once. NIGHT OWL A night owl, she bakes through to the next morning, popping the pies into the freezer in her bedroom until they are ready to be delivered. When she's not baking pies Boyson likes to go out on of indi says the country’s largest union. “It's difficult to pick up a newspaper these days with- out coming across a full-page ad sponsored by the National Citizens Coalition,” the Can- adian Union of Public Er- ployees says in a publication ‘distributed to: ite~ 900;080 members. “Just who is behind the NCC?" the union asks. “Who does it really represent? “The NCC is an ultra-right- wing organization which is anti union and anti public sector. Its ads have attacked the indexing of government employees’ pensions, have promoted the sale of Petro- Canada and other Crown corporations and have called for more restrictions on union rights.” But the Toronto-based coalition, founded in 1967 by i Colin the town now and then — “maybe do some sh or just go for a walk if it's a nice day.” Brown of London, Ont., de- nies it is a thinly disguised front for conservative-mind. AINO GNV1 ‘ONLLSI Man TETSE-BIE — [1O4L “INI $43719S1S98 NYILSIM Lvee-s9e — 4PBe} 4805 00662 — WwuoN}9 Ruiz-soe "Gay WU nok roy + so RN NIDY MaIANIVANAOW) $20quieseg ‘Apseupem 01 yBnosy) 62 2OqUIeAON “ADPSINY | SLIT UPPER EDGE WITH A KNIFE AND USE AS A 4-PAGE BOOKLET Thursday 29 through to 5 HOE INSURANCE NOBODY KNOWS MORE ABOUT INSURANCE 1127 4th Street @ scAnECROW AMD ane KO ad TT Lvl Thursday, November 29 through to Wednesday, December 5 Supplement to the Castlegar News, Wednesday, November 28, 1964 PONTIAC BUICK and aavisors are available via toll free telephone I Certificate or hign schoo! diptoma cant collect to your nearest Open iad KIDS! With OU there are no classes Learning institute advising to attend Comprehensive course centre Or. clip and complete tne packages come in tne mail ‘ . ~ Containing al the materiats you 3 2 ed business leaders. A non-profit group that has grown into a million-dollar operation with regional of : fices in Calgary and Van Family, Friends, couver, the coalition has . 30,000 members nationwide, Neighbors and most of them “perfectly or. Relatives by dinary Canadians,” Brown having a story ay of t ~ published in the Castlegar News. MALONEY | Surprise your tie Ht i = 3 iT) HHH He surest Sdszasds ooo0cc0 ooo 2 TAREE BR PT t44 Perrer eri} SSRSASINSaSSSeR 82a 38 8382 All you have to do is enter the... Christmas Short Storg Contest Sponsored by the Castlegar Public Library and the Castlegar News PEELE WILL NOT BE KNOWINGLY UNDERSOLD BY ANYONE ANYWHERE ON A NEW 84 CAR OR TRUCK OF YOUR CHOICE S088 Saree? 83 HAAAEREAE isa Senses gase58a 8 88 83889988898S98 Bgsssgssssess Bggsssy sasssygsss -28 1a 21483 Hl 1 sd a: 5 caads avadeaceacnaecey ac CHEE Sas $383 VISITORS FROM BELFAST — An American couple (David Huttman and Julia Dutty. re left-to-right) welcome two lads from strife-torn Nor- thern ireland (Peter Gilroy and Jim Norris, bottom, left-to-right) into MALONEY PONTIAC BUICK GMC LTD. their home in “Children in the Crossfire,” an NBC movie airing Mon. hv tleg day, Dec. 3 on NBC. ; — NOW YOU CAN ” Sree, ‘a UPGRADE YOUR CHIMNEY. STAINLESS STEEL CHIMNEY LINERS Contain the hot, noxious gases thet might otherwise poss through cracks in the morior i oe euse rac oe aun ood ges ond/or electric heanng install yourself, or let us do it CEP CELLti@eiitrererey yee And let's tolk 888g 98 88 8 88998 Bgagegeggesegags 38 § G5 SSSSSESGRGUIN] TTRUTEERESEES GEEESS itis § 488 | Jo 0 9 9 GO GO GOG009 GoBoOOOo0KK \SaRseagadagaad Iosggs sagags PREECE EPR TMT TTT Hi 11's simple to enter: if + Just write 0 short story of up to 300 words beginning with the line: 11 wos snowing ond cold onthe night before Christmas” and ending with the line “Everyone agreed 1 was the best Christmos ever PEERLESS DENTAL LAB (Staffed by Dr. David Cowen's employees) New Dentures and Relines by oppointment i i + Mail or bring your story into the Costlegar Public Library (Kinnaird or main bronch) or to the Castlegar News by | p.m..om Wed., Dec. 12 * inchsde yout name, address, age and telephone number f | i it ud f is if Ht + The Christmas Short Story Contest hes been divided into 3 age categories Eight ond Under Conadion eat dedert ft Conedien Currency ot por — Ages 12. 1Dend 14 di jy tH ili! © The three stories in eoch group chosen by the judiges os the best in each group will be published in the Cantiegar News’ Christmas Greetings Tableid on Sunday, Dec. 23 t | ij 4 ‘Woad Stoves, Fireplace inserts, Wood or Wood/Electric Furnaces, 2100" Metal chenneys, Stovepipe. Cotalytic Combustor: — Just about onything to do with heating with 4 i i | seasunc Ames: sox e000, Richmond BC VEY 202 FUNDED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF i 1 © In edidition, $15. $10 ond $5 will be ewarded os first, second ond third prines in exch category