By KEVIN DOUGHERTY Annaghmakerrig, Ireland (CP) — It was here at his ancestral home in the sum- mer of 1952 that Tyronco Guthrie got word from the village postmistress, five kil- All the Fun ° of FAIRMONT at aFair Price © “mile from champronetup golf course and + year-round swimming in hot mineral pools © Great‘skding, both downhill and cross-country e Helicopter tours, horseback riding, fishing, sailing and tennis nearby @ Rustic mountain cabins nestled among mature fir trees. Modern motel units. Kitchenettes from $36 per night . FAIRMONT MOUNTAIN BUNGALOWS Box 100, Fairmont Hot Springs, B.C. VOB 1L0 (604)345-6365 COMMUNITY ~ Bulletin Board CASTLEGAR SINGLES vi be holding its monthly general ‘aaeng on Sept, Vat 30 p.m. ot the arena complex (Aris & Crafts room). All cigs are walcome to a! tend. For more information, call or . The Castl brows wil ill i fes i aot ¢ Castlegar bronch will celebrate its 25th onniversa which, wallbs eld Id at the Centre on 11th Ave., Castlegar, . For f . Bea Lundquist at fsisigs or Mrs. Curtis Water- man at 365-7646. , Coming events of Castlegar and District {immediate area) non-profit organizations oe listed here through the cour- bat ot cs cimber's i at Fulp ond Gelgar: lumber visions, Please submit notices directly to the Castle; News by 5 p.m. Thursdays, vie the Coneper A Public Service of Celgar Pul --Division and Celgar Lumber Division SHOWTIME MOVIES Canadian News and Sports Network Canadian Channel y request onl Ei tlonal .channel: = ADULT movies. ‘the latest i ¢ All Color TV © Queen Beds © Snack Bar © Direct Dial Phone Shamrock Motel E. 1629 Sprague Ave. Spekcne. , Wash deeb Telephone ( (503)! 535-1626 “ RESERVATIONS ARE RECOMMENDED * and most ometres away in Newbliss, that a Canadian named Tom Patterson was irying to tele- phone him. The large, grey. house overlooking ‘a lake is’ sur: rounded by woods, broken by. narrow country roads. and pasture, Last fall'it was re- christened the Tyrone Guth- rie Contre, a haven for artista from both the. north: and south of Ireland. - erage ny is lbetieen, two weeks and three months, Loughlin, who: lives: with his wife Mary and their two children “in \-an | adjoining ‘house, ‘said he’ would ‘like to have’ people’ from outside Ireland come toithe centre. ‘The only problem is finding money to pay their expenses, “I hope some: of the ‘ald Guthrie connections . will, come | through,””’:he ‘sald, P a Ont., businessman. with a love for the arts, persuaded Guthrie to fly to'Canada and Guthrie agreed to ‘become the first director. of the . Shakespearean festival . at Stratford. With advice from Guthrie, one of Britain’s best-known theatre “Then Canadi: icans could come’as well.” Those. staying in the (11 rooms set aside’ for:- guests recently - were ’ novelist Jim- my Brennan, ’\: poet. Harry Cliftort, painter : Fralle Kelle- her, playwright Bernard Par- rell and the nine members of South and one more addition to the ‘already Jong. list' of |; conseq oe bs, Dublin Hae Team The- directors, the round’ Eliza- bethan-style theatre with its stage thrust: out into ‘the audience was build and, per- forming under: a tent, Can- ada's Shakespearean theatre began its first season in 1953. Guthrie and his wife Judith. had ‘no children and when he ‘died in 1971 at* age 70, he’ willed the house tucked in the hills of ‘County, Mona- ghan, near the border with Northern Ireland, to the i , government of the Irish re- public, specifying that’ it should be an. international centre for ra of the R PLANES FOR SCHOOLS ‘The Team) .troupe, -spent their days in one of the. larger and Amer’ The deep South . | / Reflections & -- Recollections , Things are never, in feet; what one makes of them in imagination, and the Deep South isa‘ perfect example. In fact, it is so full of dictions so the o: that one can make about it is that ‘it is‘ flat, wet ‘and ' “Did you hear about the big smash-up last night? Two busloads of blacks were in a head-on collision.” “Were many killed?” "All dead, Some said they weren't, but you know hee incredibly rich in living organisms, I discovered this on the. these people Iie, ‘so’ we buried them anyway.” I quickly learned that a white person goes into ‘one-storey — on-a-concrete-slab cottage, across the lawn — . predominantly black areas at his peril, that pistol training a mixture of coarse grass, flowering herbs and mossos — to was offered to women and childron, as well as to men; and first day of our visit when I walked from’ the typical examine a.large evergreen tree. It was about 18 inches in diameter (big for these parts), looked like a cross between a fir and a pine, and was growing at the edge of the marsh at the bottom of the yard. I was just pulling off a piece of bark : to see if the resin had a turpentine smell when suddenly, I felt crawling sensations on one leg and a stinging bite on the other. 3 Fire antsl In a dozen frantic steps I had crossed the lawn to, the concrete plaza and was doing an enthusiastic war| dance to shake off my unwelcome Passengers, £ «\ TFife. ants vicious, stinging little ‘red’ visitors 1, Central America are now a. full-fledged pest in the Dee dangerous visitors. That cyprus swamp at our back yard; for instance, ts “home of snapping turtles with powerful jawa that off a man’s fingers like scissors. There are also rat water ‘moccasins, cottom:. mouths ‘and: other "poison “ reptiles’ that ‘make a beating-stick an essential part of swamp: f Farrell who will write them, up as.a play tobe put on.in achools ‘throughout Ireland. Kelicher. painted in-the art. studio Clifton; quiet their rooms. ‘There is also’a room with a piano in the back of the: house: for musicians and Loughlin wants to install a recording studio. BY NORTH AND SOUTH Ten years. later at a cere- mony attended by officials ‘from, both Dublin, 120. kil- meet’ ‘once a day. at ._ the evening meal where they chat and’ exchange ideas.” Dinner is prepared by Mary Loughlin in’ the «spacious, tyle kitchen. The ometres to the south and Belfast, 120 kilometres to the ‘northeast, the centre was opened, making it the only institution of any kind jointly - administered by the govern- ‘ ments of the Irish republic -, and Northern Ireland. “He : was) very'‘much in favor of the border being ig- nored,”. Bernard ‘Loughlin, resident diréctor of the cen- tre, said in an interview. An eight-member board, four each named ‘by the arts “councils of the ‘republic and “residents: make their: own breakfast, lunch and teas. Guthrie was born in Eng- land and began directing ra- dio drama for the BBC in Belfast after attending Cam- - bridge University: In.1929 he: came to Canada for the first .*: time to produce a series of historical plays by Merrill Dennison called. The Ro mance of Canada. That was before the. CBC existed, Guthrie worked for the Canadian: National Rail- “Guthrie asked’ ‘that ‘all the: rH In the more’ open’ marshes '(‘prairies’) and’ the bayous (long. finger-like ‘stretches. of ‘water), alligators lurk just beneath the surface pretending tobe - floating'logs, and 200-pound alligator-like garfish with jaws , ‘so strong that stainless steel leaders are needed tojcatch them, lurk in the many mud-holes. Sharks patrol the shallow .waters.of the nearby gulf and turkey. vultures float: across ‘the pale blue sky and feed on the litter ¢ of dead animals lying” along the The int: does - not “that these students are instructed that if they find someone in their house they are to shoot to kill -THEY MAY NOT’ GET A SECOND CHANCE. Bloody bar-room fights with 3 ‘pistols are not uncommon, ‘Then there is.the further problem of. ‘reverse diserim: is ination.’ Promotion at: the big’ Kaiser Aluminum ‘plant is made on the basis. of written examinations. However, according to a friend of mine who works :there, the law requires that promotions to supervisory. positions be made ‘on a percentage ratio basis for the two racial groups. This resulted, he said, in a number of unqualified blacks being promoted jn ord jtout ect ithe perseniaes, quota with he that their ancestors had been brought to this country as . | ‘and therefore the whites owed them a living. So much ate equality. My, informant, incidentally, nota aaitheraige but a Canadian supervisor at the plant. The; much’ ‘vaunted French Quarter. was a bit disappointing — a jungle “of narrow streets, rickity. ‘wrought-iron rails‘and porches,: wrought-iron gates closing “off narrow, passageways to inner courts, street vendors, sidewalk artists and an infinite variety of art-galleries, brass ‘goods stores, praline shops and seafood restaurants. The © outer parts of the city with its dykes, ancient fortifications .: and seawalls is more interesting. . ‘We. tried,cafe au lait and biegnets (a kind of sugar i remove dead animals but such ia the efficiency of the natural scavengers in this teeming land that no body, regardless of size, lies for long in public view. ° ' + Ina delta such as this, where much of the land is at. below’ sea-level, a 80-foot elevation is a mountain and the. slow moving ippi, its many trib and of bayous entertwine endless watery fingers with the ‘salt’ sea tides in 'a brackish embrace. There are also no rocks or even pebbles here, only ‘the sand and the rich clay, so that rocks aré imported from of miles away to d gardens. Highways are, therefore, congealed ribbons of mud and’ clamshell-fill topped with concrete or asphalt which ride inches above the swamps and bayous on either side and sink slowly back into. the primordial ooze. Man has changed this land so much for ttle time, 50 slightly, inthe long term. The beaches for example are beautiful new miles of white sind which stretches fiat and “shallow as far as the eyé can see. They were made during the Roosevelt New Deal period and consist entirely of dredgings from the gulf and are groomed Hunting and fishing — particularly fishing — is a passion here. Men will go out into the endless marshes doughnut) at'the famous Cafe du Monde. It ‘was a. mixed blessing. The biegnets were. good — fresh-made and savory. : — but I'do not like chicory coffee — a local favorite. The glum and abrupt waiters added little to the reputation of.» .gouthern hospitality, and the Vietnamese bus girl's efforts to * ipe off the sugar covered table with an unrinsed cloth only changed the sugary table to a sticky fly-trap. s “On the other. hand the-entire area is a living history ; book. The visit to the site of the disasterous (for the British) Battle of New Orleans (fought after the peace treaty had | been signed), and the adjacent museum with its scrupulously \ fair, young black student-guide was alone worth the trip. - ‘The whole country, moreover, is a biologist’s paradise. My notes, after a half-hour in my host's’ back yard read: “Chameleons — four to six inches long-live in the vents of the ever-present air-conditioner by the stucco wall. They are delicately jewell-like jet reptillian— dinosaurs in Lilliput and change color from dull, dark brown to bright emerald green as their background changes from the brown stem to .- green leaf on the flowering vine. The little male (slightly larger) has spotted a female chameleon and to show what a fine fellow he is, has puffed out a large pale cream and pink” pouch from beneath his throat. In spite of his best efforts, however, the lady is not impressed and slips over the side of Ceroiries) and cypress swamps in shallow boats for a day’s : the air conditioner into a vent, The cream and pink pouch °: ‘sport. Special arses ean he rented but fc one owns, the Ireland,’ i ters the centre. Dublin pays two-thirds of the costs, Bel- ‘fast the remainder. Loughlin said the artists pay what they can and the rest of their expenses are made up by grants. The av- RENO TOURS Totem Travel Sept, ft, 25, Goldmineret thn’... $219 Eldorado Hotel es $259 Goldminersi inn .. .$219 lov. 13 Geldminers inn ...$219 B OR CITIZEN SIscoUNT sI0 ‘Toren TRAVEL ‘365-8451 “ waya radi ri atits head office ‘in Montreal. TRAVELLED WIDELY He. returned to England where he directed stage pro- ductions in a career which eventually took him to such places 8s Denmark and Aust- He was knighted by the Queen in 1961 and made Chancellor of Queen's Uni- versity, Belfast, in 1968." At the formal opening. of the'centre last fall, Northern Irish playwright Brian Friel quoted from a letter:he re- ceived from Guthrie. just be- fore’ his death: “The days slip by and hour by hour seem’ full of occu- pation. But.you look back - a ‘week and: nothing seems to | have been ‘accomplished but flimflam,:? 0" “The ‘important thing, of course, is not achievement but. effort: And it seems to me ‘that the hardest effort consists of doing terribly : boring repetitive thingy, which pay no divident except thal they “weren't done, or i our’ talents carries a bamboo pole (a ‘nigger rod’) he pays no* licence and may ‘catch’ a dozen different’ fish in the. same brackish pool; net a meal of, crayfish (‘crawfish’) in its shallows; jig half’a dozen delicious blue crabs“among the mangrove roots and then send his dog into the tall grasses of the ‘prairie’to flush out a-brace of marsh-rabbits which he , then shoots from’ his’ boat. The following day he can go in a slightly larger boat out into the gulf and ina few hundred yards get oysters, shrimp, squid and fish of every description. As inticated before, it is aland teeming with life and redolent with the odor of decay.’ ‘The weather is equally variable. Yesterday in'a balmy 80 degree (F) temperature the ‘sun ‘fairly ‘danced on the bright blue‘sea.and:the waves, nudged by the gentlest of ° just patted’ the share, =. By 10 p.m., to the tune of a lunder and lightning, the rain came , ‘After a restless and raucous night 1 got up, expecting to find flood and desolation. Instead I found brilliant sunshine, fa symphony of bird-song and only a few, shallow puddles in” Discreet in juiries tothe neighbors got little more than - a raised eyebrow. Oh; they. admitted, a twister “whieiind) bad ripped the'roofs from a few houses about a “quarter mile away — but a storm? Hardly. “Now hurricane pointed with the pride of yeterans to the high-water mark on the wall of the front’room — a full seven-feet- above the’ floor, where the invading sea had stopped it's destructive , display, subsides as other-matters, such ‘as the still-noving | fly which Bunny has put. near him:-He eyes it first with one i independently moving eye, then the other, just to make sure that it is alive, points like a hunting dog, then out flicks his“ long tongue in an eye-blink and the fly is gone. Meanwhile a mockingbird in a nearby magnolia sings | “edgar, edgar, sweeta, sweeta;" a type of sow bug, on being touched, rolls up into a tight ball, a cardinal flits from cyprus to cyprus and a southern crow calls a mate across the swamp ° in a duck-like tenor while a bull-frog supplies the base accompaniment from a muddy pool. And go we are back to the beginning. The Deep South is not a group of states — Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama — ‘ but states of mind and varied cultures, ‘so that no matter what statement one makes it’ can be countered by its opposite. There is not a’ southern accent, but numerous ) southern aceents — I was able to detect half a dozen in an art class of a dozen women. The ‘youalls' and the ‘you-mind- nows' were all there but they were different, as was that of the bright sing-song: of the Acadians and the almost = incomprehensible patois of the Negro buggy driver. The © sullen hostility was there but on the other hand I met a.‘ remarkable number of people who started'as strangers and became warm friends, particularly the:‘Cajuns,’ of whom more later. My best ‘memory, however, is of the little negro school girl, who, walking by, firat looked hard at my hat, paused then, giving me the sunniest smilie I saw in the '*/ And what of the’southerners in general? One friend made ‘a fairly accurate surmise when he said: “The people ‘here have no idea where Canada is, Everything. beyond the northern boundaries of Louisiana between thi is equally fi if , pleasant. and amiling * people ‘here, Tisteed T found the fate ‘of the south —.the public face, at least to be dour, unsmiling and hostile, with little social intercourse between blacks and whites. There is a-strong feeling of resentment (on the white side, at least) _ which is : ih ie aa is ‘north.’ This is their world and they.are baer satisfied with it.as long as it remains between 75 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit. The only thing they fear is cold. If the..temperature falls below. 60 they start to shiver. Otherwise they. don’t get excited and move slowly, live casually.” Of course there are dramatic exceptions. °. Store e Full and partial hook-ups La nda “© Camping ‘® Boating © Swimiming!e.Fishit a ° iNaterskiing e Paddle boats © Euhinw (CP) — She's Tamara De © Preaux,'a 22-year-old actress who stands less than three: , feet high, weighs 40 pounds; Height freaked director seen her latest movie. De: Treaux, who has two other movies to her credit, played the in the children, A mechanical ver-; » sion was used in the closeups. She said director: Steven Spielberg hired her after he - Oveeatgntar Welcomel $ sings for a-living. : You may never have heard 1 wears blouses as dresses and, * quiring movement — of her, but you've ‘probably: movie E.T. in the scenes re- ing. the: spaceship, . fondling flowers ‘and talking to the saw her photo in a news-. board- ‘ p aper. : “My -height freaked him out.” ue i WNcourea | (CP) Criilse-ahip lines are" bol-* ‘ etpring’ advertising outlays, * offering ', end-of-season ., dis- counts ‘ ‘and Promising to bat- tle harder for business in‘ 1983: in’ an, attempt ‘to over- come market coolness to the Alaska, run.. : For, the first time in more than a decade, lines have had to struggle hard to fill. their ships. sailing, out ‘of Van: couver.or San Francisco on. seven- to 12-day cruises to Alaska... The. forecast is that customers. will be:, even tougher. to attract next year. This’ year, the | interna: tional fleet: plying to‘ Alaska has offered a record number of berths during a six-month season, with an increased av- erage size of ship more than compensating for a slighty: WCB calls for more attention ‘mind all the time. VANCOUVER (cP) — chairman ‘of ‘the Workers Compensation Board < called this .week for greater atten- tion‘to job safety following: ‘a rash ‘of ‘industrial - fatalities: around: the: province.::! Art Gibbons said he is at a- loss to explain the ‘sudden run ‘of ‘deaths’ in- the’ past week or.so. But whatever the: reason, he said he is. asking: all employers and workers to step, ‘up . their’ vigilance ve hazards ‘in the work- ray Pr Gibbons said in a‘news re- lease there'is no pattern to the. tragedies, but that. the abnormal level: of deaths at work should make ‘everyone | aware: that ‘gafety should be. at the front of everyone's Renta clunker CALGARY (CP) —. Rent- ing a clunekr may seem like a bargain n hut, it cquld,.cost, the. cugtomer a bundle, says Sgt, Jerry, Hand of Calgary police Sopartments trai divisio: People who rent cheap cars or trucks can be fined up to $20 ifthe: vehicle. doesn't measure up to the highway safety: standards, Hand said. “Under. the Highway Traf- _ fic Act in aieertn there are unsafe ronicen) the person operating the vehicle and the company owning .it.” A-recent visitor to Cal- gary, Paul Hunter of Willow- dale, Ont., found the pickup truck. from Rent-A-Cheap Machine was something less than expected. One headlamp anda brake light were burned out, there was no turn signal handle and he. said he: was given no registration papers, although he asked for them. The. truck's engine leaked fluid and an indicator light in the dashboard was smashed. “The tires were eo bald I could see the grain. «Basing in the total num- ber of voyages run by 18 ves- 78,197 berths ‘available on seven-day, or, eight-day crulses originating: in’ Van: The market is soft and the ‘people who do book wait until the last) Ge he’ sald. ‘pte to iat ene out of San Francisco’ to Al- > aska in’ "1988 ‘and’ subsidiary ding: $1.5 will market a Van- AL alflion us). on this year, up 50 per cent from 1981, “We will spend. consid- couver.' Westours: Inc. ' of ‘erably more on advertising in Seattlo is providing’ 55 per’ ' 1983, We are not convinced to be. performed i three ships. .- ‘Tho sole Canadian member of the seasonal cruise fleet, “the 84-year-old \Ex-CNR cent; of this that the y is going to using three sbips with a total {urn around in time to help us capacity |of 2,298 passengers. ; Holland America Cruises, ‘the parent of Westours, is in: ~ dependently” ‘marketing | its flagship -Rotterdam, ‘which is operating out’ of San’ Fran- ‘and we will just have to. work harder to keep our bookings up." Though the : season has not come up to the expectations of Westours, occupancy. has j.elsco to!Alaska, ‘“cwas killed) when he: was . crew, was hit. by a runaway sierrinine hoes boats averaged better than 90 por cent, P. and O-Princess Crulses, FARE DISCOUNTS Westoura « chairman Jack Musiel said that his company has'been heavily discounting Which operates three British- fares ~on: selected © sailings registered vessels offering a -Round-trip prices are being total of 1,812 berths, reports that the ‘season has “been good but not‘great,” with up to 10 per cent of berths going unfilled. In* previous years the company. has been ac- customed’‘to’ near 100+ -per- cent occupancy. Three September sailings by the Sun: Princess ‘are Me being offered.to Canadians at On Aug, 18.2 Grand Forks & discount. Fares denom- mechanic was crushed when inated in U.S. funds:can be & vehicle ‘he was working'on_ Paid for in’Canadian dollars, fell off its jacks. The next > which’ are’ being aecepted at 7 8 29-1 Nd tree faller | Pat. day, a 20-year-o as Holland America Cruises cut by,as much as $600, struck by a snag near Sica- mous... The; same day. 4: 93-year-old tree spacer’ was found dead in ‘the swoods on ind. : on’ starling him in Richmond. On Wed- :’ z nesday,'a member of a’ Toad ‘the y birds’ that’ mess truck near Revelstoke, a! to. people. fOMee 23-year-old landing" bucker karcd whois manager of was run over ‘near. Christina < parks Lake. : See was given the job’on “manager. Fritz Bowers, “I. don’t know ‘why he picked on me,” Browne said “The guy who rented it to this week. me wasn't going togive mea + But Bowers says the choice | “caso .one, of. the ,, WAS § sar: “The Problerd has a pare. tire. it ‘tires blow. It.teok 29 imines, ‘of; conversation and even. °harge of trees” ‘i then I had to drive to a gas Bowers said iy station o pick it up.” curring starling plague lasts The Motor. T: port from mid-June to October. bane pater ats ssh dit vorite spots are. (groves of old vehicles have safety inspec. Plane trees and spreading tions, The rental company, chestnut trees, needs only a $10 certificate’ “It’s a’ Hit cock kind of “from the board and a city’ phenomenon,” said Bowers. permit to operate . a rental. Bak come between business. : “It’s really a pedlar’s i cence,” said board vice-chair- man Keith Walker. “All they): have to do is file that they -have proper insurance and. show. that: the . premises {where ‘they play to operate) are set up.” » Rent-A-Cheap’ Machine. manager Leo Rosenstein said. the agency: ensures::all “ hicles are in workable condi. tion, that they drive forward .j and, backward ahd that’ all fluid levels are checked. But sometimes safety features: ‘such as seat belts, headlights or brake lights - may be missed in the check. A Great New Book! ~PLAKUN TRAVA _ THE DOUKHOBORS By Koozma J. Tarasoff AW -Store “A landmark work.” f C1. Nearly 300 Information Packed Pages the recommendation of city Merchandise .... hip ‘: Prince : . George (250 passengers, 5,812 ton- nes) will be’ back’ in Alaska service next year in her third year, of ‘operation ‘by Can- adian Cruise Lincs Ltd.. of Victoria. Robert Smith, sales. man- ager. with Candian : Cruise Lines, said the Prince George is averaging a’ load; of 200 passengers: Mechanical fail- ures which marred the 1981 season have apparently been overcome. : The Prince George offers ‘one-way seven-day sailings to or from’ Alaska’ with pass- . engers flying the other leg on chartered CP Air. 787, jets. Fares for. round. -trips by ‘air and: sea range :from. $760 (Canadian).. Smith “said. he could not say: whether the ‘season has “been profitable but noted that his company is negotiating with Maple Ship- ping to. \buy/ the CP. Rail cruise ship Princess Patricia, which has been Jaid up since 1981.9) galas enemy. and 8 at night by the tens of ling distress calls or clapping” blocks of wood. loesn't ‘work. Putting poison or, contra-. ceptive - “chemicals in’: ‘the birds’ food ° ‘would: work, he id, ‘except “we don’t know. come to the city to socialize.” Last Saturday, Bowers . took a porkiods plagued - “with ‘the the probl is year, the birds’ fa- “th city uneil and assorted elvle, officials. “However, don't park ‘your car’ there, clothes.” 0 USASTLEGAR NEWS, August'22, 1962. : + Alex Lutz. here they ‘feed. They only’ visit to the two neigh: and’ wear old. Summary reports « on the ” : Keenleyside-Murph: ay project | transmission corridors are DOW available. . B.C. Hydro i is ras around of: public meetings in August to tisclies ~ proposed transmission corridors for. the Keenleyside-Murphy project. Two other components of the Keenleyside-Murphy project, Murphy.Creek dam and Keenleyside generation, will be the'subjects of two Reparate rounds of meetings . Planned for September “ ‘Two summary reports on.the proposed transmission chirion are now “available for your review in adyance of the meetings: 1. Murphy Creek transmission corridor selection studies. 2. Keenleyside transmission corridor selection studies, - Both reports provide summary information on: «corridor alternatives studied by B.C. Hydro, indicating Hydro’s preferred routes. ‘> «preliminary Eisenia assessment studies bya consultant, indicating the consultant’s preferred routes. To receive these two summary reports and to o have your name added to a mailing list for future reports on the Reenleveude- Murphy, project, please contact’ one of the following people: A - “Paul Oglow Castlegar ‘Area Citizens? Committee. 365-3381 : ., Jim Switzer. se = Project im denbast C Committee, Trail area. ee 8070 5 Lawrence Flynn . B.C. Hydro Kootenay Canal Generating Station. i 359-7287 (collect) 5 “Bill Mykes -B.C. Hydro Community Relations, ; ~ Mancouver. B. Hydro Information Office, 663-2117 (collect) = Castle 365-8471, (collect) from - > : : “available at your local library the Koot B.C. Hydro. ne in. Castlenae: " Please watch this newspaper | for x meeting dates. INGLUDING ITEMS FROH OUR ENLARGED DRAPERY DEPT. CO 245 Rare Historic Photographs 2) Maps, Appendices, Chronotogy, ete. “We will not be andersold by anyone including those who sell at so-called ~ wholesale RriceS ‘Depart from Calgary (Other dates also available.) “If there were to be a course on~ _ Doukhobor History - this would be the + prescribed text.” . Large s size high quality format, fe cloth Bound hard cover, with full . ‘50 colour just’ jacket. 25005 "$39: f = (Bue tothe high Zar of prxkaction ond bated press rn, he rice wil be $45.00 per copy after August 3, 1982.) “Available at Local Bookstores Or From the Publisher: . =< Mit Publication Society ‘Box 730, Grand Forks, B BULL RIVER GUEST RANCH Near Cranbrook, B.C. WOODEN SHOE RESTAURANT {aternational Cuisine in a Dutch Sotti Mon. - Sat. 5 p.m. to Mid. : Sunday 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Tuesdays - Below the Nelson Bridge onNelson Avenue jephone 352-9998 4 INCLUDED IN YOUR COST... :® Round trip alr transportation * Accommodation in Nashville ot. the Quality Inn © Accommodation in Memphis atthe Quality Inn © Transfers between Memphis Airport and hotel, Memphis to Nashville, Nashville to Memphis ¢” Opryland Tour ¢ Musi City. Tour. ©,.Riverb Tour @ Elvis Tou rand, Ole Opry ‘Ticke! 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