A8 October 27, 1985 FERRARO'S U Super Tuesday Specials Castleaird Plaza Only Tues., Oct. 29 Only. While Stock Lasts. Quantities Limited on Some Items.: fresh glazed fruit “e whole red cherries ¢ whole green cherries © cut mixed fruit © cut mixed peel a choice Ee, yo 2.16.0 Ib. e Thompson seedless raisins e golden bleached raisins e Sultana raisins e currents e chocolate chippers {ce mn @ 2.1615 Ib. Pre-Christmas Bulk Baking Sale Grand Forks ‘unpasteurized honey nn DO 9:00 A.M. SPECIAL Crisco shortening 3 Ib. tin 2.98 1 LIMIT PER FAMILY PURCHASE 300 TINS TO STORE ONLY Ferrwood family bread loaves .......-- fresh sour cream fresh whipping cream Maxwell House ground coffee won DDS fresh ~ mushrooms 1.9 4. BG cu California no. 1 broccoli 108.60 2ece SUPER 98° TUESDAY Anni sary QKi & Save Sale 7th ADULT SKI PACKAGE — YOUTHS SKI PACKAGE — Dynastar Skis, Tyrolia Bindings, Kerma Poles, mounting & Hot wax . Dynastar Skis, Salomon Bindings .. Many more SKI PACKAGES Available, or build your own and SAVE! SUPER BUYS Dynastar Course GS or SL Skis Kazama Airflo Comp Skis Dynastar Omesoft Skis with round bone __ Shoulder roast bulk pepperoni « 298 October 27, 1985 EASY TERM DEPOSIT RENEWAL ATA * Coshable anytirne after 30 days without penalty CANADA SAVINGS BOND DRIVEN vaven e 8 YY % Per Annum * $1,000 —no maximum . Royals force seventh game | KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) — Kansas City, coming back when it seemed impossible, scored two runs in the ninth innihg on a one-out pinch single by Dane Iorg to beat St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 Saturday night and force a deciding seventh game of the World Series. 3 The Cardinals, seeking their 10th world championship, had gone ahead 1-0 on their own clutch pinch hit by Brian Harper in the top of the eighth, appearing to have spoiled yet another fine outing for Royals’ left-hander Charlie Leibrandt. But with Cardinals reliever-Todd-Worrell pitching the ninth and three duts from losing, the Royals fought back, just as they did from 3-1 deficits in games in the American League playoffs and the Series itself. The winning rally included a disputed play at first base, a muffed bunt attempt and a passed ball, and it resulted in two runs that extended the Royals’ season by one more game. Jorge Orta started the inning with an infield single to first base. Jack Clark fielded the ball and threw to Worrell covering, but first base umpire Don Denkinger ruled that Orta beat Worrell to the bag. The Cardinals argued briefly that Orta had missed the but he remained there as Steve Balboni came to bat. aria fouled the first pitch high in the air and it dropped untouched in front of the Royals’ dugout as Clark and catcher Darrell Porter converged on it. Balboni, the home run hitter who has yet to get an OFF TO PROVINCIALS . . . Stanley Humphries Secon- dary School swim team won West Kootenay regional high school championships in Nelson last weekend to qualify for the provincials. Members of the team are: (from left), Back. row, Jason Schuepfer, Rob McGregor, Jeff Schuepter, Ken Kinakin, Kerry Uchida, Wendy Pilla and Rishia McDowell. Front row, Tammy Sherstobitotf, Jason Ready, Curtis Ready, Jill Naydiuk and Helaine Oleski. Missing are Lisa Uchida and Jarrod Isteld. Concordes need to win at the Castleaird Plaza Tuesday, Oct. 29 1 DAY ONLY SALE ADUL me ne ae acca G) 8 . Ri ee HAMBURGER . CASTLEAIRD PLAZA DAIRY QUEEN STORE ONLY Ay THE PRICE IS SOLOW... WE DARE NOT ADVERTISE IT! STOP IN FOR THE BEST BUY OF THE SEASON! Salomon 747 or Tyrolia 390D Bindings Tyrolia 290D Bindings Sveeastst. 89295 Tyrolia 190 Bindings ...................874.95 X-COUNTRY SKI PACKAGES YOUTHS Complete. From ADULTS Complete. From ‘79 Salomon X-Country Ski Packages With Trak or Karhu Intermediate Skis SKI JACKETS Childrens STRETCH PANTS Mens and Ladies MOUNTAIN SKI & SPORTS HUT — 365-3525 RACING PANTS Childrens-with padded knee SKI TUNE Complete We Carry Raiche, Koflach & Trappeur Ski Boots. Many In-Store Specials on Boots! VISA® aa 365-5522 SUPER TUESDAY AT CARL'S! HALLOWE’EN SUPPLIES Napkins, Balloons & Streamers Costumes Hot Lemon Cold Formula. 10 Pouches ... Home Perm Quick. Gentle, Reg., Super - $] 98 $398 Toothpaste Close Up. Pie mt Baby Wash Cloths $] 68 Diaperene. CARL'S DRUGS DEVELOP & PRINT 12 Exp. ....... 9498 24 Exp. eed ie 36exp.......°10% WITCH’S BROOMS For Hallowe'en to First 20 Customers who bring in Film for Processing! , CDycture: ©Place - 365-2211 By The Canadian Press Joe Galat’s days as the commissar of football in Montreal may be at an end unless the Concordes can sal- vage some credibility over the final two weeks of the Canadian Football League season. The Concordes, who have seen their seemingly insur- mountable first-place stand- ing in the Eastern Division slide into a second-place tie with five straight losses, are on the brink of elimination from post-season play. Injuries and inability to get big plays from their offence left head coach-general man- ager Galat in the position of firing himself from the coach- ing job and elevating as- sistant Gary Durchik to shoulder the problems, at least for the last two games. What started as a prom- ising campaign, when all his strategy and recruiting of three years was to pay off with a trip to the Grey Cup, Galat now must face the in- evitable; that his position in Montreal is, tenative, to say the least. The Concordes are in Tor- onto today against a revit- alized Argonaut team that, despite an exasperating year of employing mainly inex- perienced: quarterbacks, ap- pears to have come alive with the return of veteran Con- dredge Holloway. Then it's back home next week — to what has become an unfriendly’environment — and a season-ending show- down with Edmonton Eski- mos, who are looking to stretch their win streak to eight games against B.C. Lions in another CFL contest today. A win for the Eskimos to- day will create'a logjam atop the Western Division with the possibility of Edmonton, B.C. and Winnipeg Blue Bombers finishing 1985 with 12-4 records. The Bombers completed their schedule Fri- day night, crushing Calgary Stampeders 47-4. . The Argos have been frus- trated much of the season sidelined for nine games with a knee injury. However, his return to the lineup ‘against Calgary last weekend with the injured knee harnessed in a brace, Holloway seemed to give the Argos renewed confidence. Going into the weekend, they were only two points behind Montreal and Hamilton with through inconsistent quarter: East Division-leading Ottawa backing after Holloway .wasi another two points in front. extra-base hit in the postseason, fouled off another pitch, then lined a single through the left side that sent Orta to second. After taking two balls and then fouling off two bunt attempts, Jim Sundberg laid down a bunt that Worrell fielded toward the third-base side. The Cardinals’ pitcher threw to third to force Orta for the first out. = Onix Concepcion ran for Balboni, who had taken second on the play, and a passed ball by Porter allowed both runners to advance one base. Pinchhitter Hal McRae was walked intentionally after the passed ball and Iorg came up. Torg took one pitch out of the strike zone before lining a single into right field. that scored both Concepcion and Sundberg, who just beat the throw from Andy Van Slyke. NHL LAST NIGHT Wings sti CALGARY (CP) — Carey Wilson got three goals as Calgary Flames beat Detroit 7-4 to push the Red Wings’ season-opening winless. streak in the National Hockey League to eight games Saturday night. Calgary was ahead by one goal entering the third period and Chris Cichoki had a chance to tie it up, but fanned onan open net. Then Lanny McDonald swung around-behind the Detroit net and pushed the puck by goalie Corrado Micalef. Wilson scored moments later, splitting the defencemen on a breakaway. Calgary also got goals from Gino Cavallini, Dan Quinn and Charlie Bourgeois while Detroit's scoring was by Petr Klima, Danny Gare, Reed Larson and Gerard Gallant. MONTREAL 5 HARTFORD 3 MONTREAL (CP) — Mats Naslund fired two goals and Ryan Walter added three assists to lead Montreal Canadiens to a 5-3 victory over Hartford Whalers. Stephane Richer, Mike McPhee and Kjell Pahlin each had a goal and an assist as Montreal won its second game after pping four in a row. Sylvain Turgeon had a pair of goals, while Ray Neufeld added one as Hartford closed to-within one goal early in the third period. Naslund upset any hopes the Whalers had of a comeback, when he scored his second goal of the night, and his 10th of the season, on the power play at 8:15 of the final period. z QUEBEC 4 PITTSBURGH 4 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Michel Goulet and Wilf Paiement scored third-period goals to give Quebec Nordiques a 4-4 tie with Pittsburgh Penguins. Goulet scored ‘on a power play with 7:25 left and Pittsburgh's Mike Blasidell off for holding. Goulet took a pass from Peter Stastny in the slot for his fourth goal of the season and second of the game. Paiement scored his first of the season with 2:59 remaining, tapping in Gilbert Delorme’s rebound at the side of the net. Pittsburgh took a 4-2 lead with second-period goals by Mario Lemieux and Mike Bullard. Lemieux scored his eighth at 8:16 and set up Bullard’s third of the year at 14:31. NEW JERSEY 5 LOS ANGELES 2 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — Kirk Muller, John MacLean and Dave Pichette scored in a 2:57 span in the first Game 7 tonight will match left-hander John Tudor of the Cardinals afd right-hander Bret Saberhagen of the Royals, two 20-game winners and the aces of their respective staffs. It will be the first matchup of 20-game winners in’ the seventh game of a World Series since the New York Yankees’ Ralph Terry faced Jack Sanford of San Francisco in 1962. The Royals’ was ial, it for the left-handed Leibrandt, who lost Game 2 after taking a two-hit shutout into the ninth, and manager Dick Howser. This time, he had retired the first 15 batters he faced and set the Cardinals down in order six of the first seven innings before Harper's pinch single with two out in the eighth. ll winless period and rookie goalie Craig Billington made the goals stand up in his National Hockey League debut as New Jersey Devils downed Los Angeles Kings 5-2. The victory snapped a four-game losing streak for the Devils, 4-4, and extended the Kings’ streak to five losses. Billington, the first goalie taken in the NHL amateur draft in 1984, stopped 23 of 25 shots. The 19-year-old goalie spent last season with Belleville Bulls of the Ontario Hockey League. Muller scored his fourth goal of the season on a power play. He stood about 15 feet in front of Los Angeles goalie Bob Janecyk and deflected a-pass by Mark Johnson into the net. MI ‘A 7TORONTO5 TORONTO (CP) — Centre Keith Acton scored one goal and set up two others as Minnesota North Stars defeated Toronto Maple Leafs 7-5. Four times, Toronto had taken the lead only to see the North Stars rebound each time to tie the game en route to evening their record to three wins, three losses and two ties. Toronto now is 1-7-0. ; Brian Bellows, Craig Levie, Kent Nilsson, Scott Bjugstad, Tom McCarthy and Tony McKegney also scored for the North Stars. Greg Terrion, Tom Fergus, rookie Dan Hodgson, Peter Ihnacak and captain Rick Vaive replied for the Maple Leafs. Rollie Melanson was in goal for.Minnesota, stopping 31 shots for the win, Leaf goalie Don Edwards made 22 saves. Toronto opened the scoring when Vaive sent Terrion in on a breakaway in a short-handed situation and the Leaf centre guided the puck past a sprawled Melanson into an empty net at 3:50. But Bellows tied the game at 4:11 when he was left standing alone to the side of the Toronto net and banged home a loose puck for a power-play goal. NEW YORK ISLANDERS 5 ST. LOUIS 2 ee ST. LOUIS (AP) — Right winger Duane Sutter scored one goal and assisted on another to lead New York Islanders to a 5-2 victory over St. Louis Blues. Sutter opened the scoring at 4:10 of the first period with a rising drive from 15-feet out that beat goalie Greg Millen on the stick side. Sutter let the shot go after receiving a perfect cross-ice pass from left winger Clark Gillies. Defenceman Tomas Jonsson scored New York's second goal of the period on a low shot from deep in the slot off a feed from Ari Haanpaa, a rookie right winger from Finland. Checkers Beats Playboys 6-3 By CasNews Staff Checkers Pub/Mallards Sports defeated Castlegar Playboys 6-3 Thursday night in a Castlegar Recreational Hoékey League game. Carl ing O'Keefe won by default Auss By CasNews Staff Senior field hockey teams from Castlegar, Nel- son, Trail and Rossland were given some expertise instruction at an_ invita- tional tournament in Castlegar last weekend. During their off times, the teams received instruc- tion from Jan McCloud, a former Australian national team player. McCloud has been living in Spokane for nearly a year with her husband Peter Dunlavy, who is ona teacher exchange there. McCloud, in an inter- view, cited the potential of the players of the West Kootenay teams. “They are really inter- esting kids, so receptive,” she said, noting.that by the end of the day some were actually making use of the techniques they had learn- ed_during the clinic. ie gives “There's a lot of poten- tial in the area,” McCloud commented. “It's a shame they don't get more con- tact with city teams.” McCloud hasn't played field hockey since the middle of 1984. A 1984 Olympic hopeful, McCloud had a serious in- jury before the Australian team was selected. Mc- Cloud ruptured a quad racept; it took her 12 months to recover from the injury. McCloud played on the national team in the World Cup at Argentina in 1980. Not being on the 1984 Olympic team was very disappointing for McCloud, although she says she doesn’t know whether she would have been selected to the team. * “It’s one of those things you sort of wonder,” she said. “I probably would JAN McCLOUD - +. potential have,” she added. McCloud, 30, has retired from national play, but when-she returns to Mel- bourne next month she says she will still play for Victoria, which is similar to playing for a provincial or state team. over Hi Arrow Tuesday night because the hotel team was unable to ice a team. In Thursday's game, the score was tied 1-1 after the first period when Greg Mor- oso, assisted by Gord Pace and Dave McKinnon, scored for Checkers and Terry Hali- sheff, assisted by George Roberts and Perry Samoyloff scored for the Playboys. In the second period, Checkers held the Playboys scoreless while scoring four ~ goals. Goalscorers were: Don Sav- inkoff, Gord Pace, Al Conroy, and Frank Costa. Getting the assists were Al Akselson with two, Pace, Savinkoff, Terry Sanders, and Conroy with singles. Dan Denisoff and Perry Samoyloff scored two goals for the Playboys in the final frame. Bill Nazaroff ‘picked up two assists, Bob Essaunce got one. Dale Donaldson scored the final goal for Checkers at 16:54. McKinnon got the assist. Recreational league action today sees the Playboys taking on Hi Arrow at noon at the Community Complex, Checkers plays Carling O'Keefe at 9:30 p.m. On Monday Sandman. Inn plays Checkers at 9 p.m. while on Tuesday Hi Arrow and Sand- man meets Sandman Inn at 10 p.m. By CHERYL CALDERBANK Staff Writer Athletes from Stanley Humphries Secondary-School will be out on the streets of Castlegar Tuesday selling tickets for the annual B.C. School Sports draw. The school is using a different approach in selling the tickets this year, says SHSS athletic co-ordinator Kevin Morris. In previous years, the school's athletes sold tickets on an extended period, but this year, athletes and coaches will canvass the town from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Stanley Humphries has over 250 students that take part in various team sports and Morris hopes that all will be out selling tickets on Tuesday. He said teams will be assigned to a particular area of the city to sell the’ tickets. The draw is being conducted by B.C. School Sports — the parent body of the province's high school athletics. Tickets are being sold at $2 each and $1 from, each ticket goes directly to SHSS sports, says Morris.” In addition to the money received from ticket sales, SHSS also benefits in that it receives extra funds when it sends teams to the provincials. Last year the school sent eight teams to the provincials, and so far this year the swim team has to go to the pi Morris says the money that the school receives from ticket sales goes directly to support the athletic program and helps meet its operating budget. Last year, total expenses for the athletic activities were $21,000. Major expenses included $2,100 for gasoline for the buses, $4,200 for maintenance and repairs to the buses, referees cost $2,400 and it cost $600 for teams attenting the provincials. The athletic program has three mini-buses which are separate from the district's school bus fleet. The athletic department is responsible for maintenance, repairs, gas and purchase of the vehicles. The athletic activities at SHSS are co-ordinated by three groups: the coaches involved, the student athletic council and Morris as athletic co-ordinator. Morris said the athletic budget usually operates at a break-even position, “very oman in the black” (about $500 surplus). SHSS raises funds School District No. 9 also contributes to the athletic program at SHSS. “The school district has been extremely supportive of the athletic program at SHSS,” says Morris. He said the school district assists by helping with teams travelling to the provincials, as well as letting the athletic department fill the buses with gas at the school district_bus_yard, whichis a-saving.. The school district also helped with major repairs to the buses, such as replacing motors. As well, when coaches or team sponsors are away from school, the district covers the cost of hiring substitute teachers. “They (the district) have supported us in every possible way, keeping in mind they have limited funds,” said Morris. But funding to the athletic activities, as in other areas, have been cut back by the school board, and the sports draw is one of the ways to make up for- the shortfall. The rest of the income for the athletic budget comes from student athletic fees ($14,300) the apple machine at the school, operated by the athletic council ($1,100), and the B.C. Lottery Foundation ($1,000). Some proceeds from the school cafeteria also go towards school sports. This year the Harlem Crowns basketball team will also be coming to SHSS. Their performance will also generate some income for the athletic activities. What is generated from the sports tickets is but a small portion of the athletic budget. Last year SHSS students sold 700 tickets, giving the school $700. The target this year is to sell 1,000 tickets in order to make $1,000. “In general the financial picture in terms of total dollars coming in and going out is quite stable,” says Morris. The sports ticket draw will take place Dec. 7. Kinnaird Junior Secondary School also sells sports draw tickets. But Morris says KJSS sold its tickets ini September and SHSS has deliberately waited between six and seven weeks so the two blitzes aren't too close together. “Both schools. offer-a very worthwhile athletic program,” says Morris. “I hope citizens of Castlegar will see fit to support them both.”