Castlegar News pi aly 1 YOU HAVE on giveaway, plea Shone 365-2212, We'll run your ad tor 3 issues tree of charge Hn/38 ONE box of cat food with each nice kit ten, 2 males, 2temales. 365-6163. 3/50 SINGLE BED-365-7014 3/50 FEMALE Persian kitten. 365-7014 3/50 KITTENS 7-weeks-old, all white, all black, calico and grey. 365-6017. 3/50 15-MONTH-OLD Shepherd Cross spayed female dog. 365-5842 iss AN A-2000 Wilson Bail Glove, L.H., Monday, June 13 at Inland Ball Field. Please phone 399-4790. us FEMALE CAT White with Sick markings. Arrow Lakes Trailer Pork 365-2131, 365-2244 3 FOUND items are not char tion Ad number 365-2212 anytime during business hours. Well run the ad 3 issues tree of charge tin/3) WORK, schoo! trips, weekly shopping. Cut expenses and save money. Get together with your neighbour in our FREE Share-A-Ride column. We'll run your ad 3 issues free of charge. Phone our Action Line 365-2212 tin/31 LOOKING for a building in the country to locate your business? For Sale or Rent 32'x72'-#1. Commercial Building with drive-in basement and 3-Phase power This attractive building with good access along Highway 6 has equipment for Food Processing in place, with a large walk-in freezer-cooler. Phone 359-7793 Exclusive Opportunity Join the successtul new concept in Real Estate Sales. Real estate ex perience an asset but not required os training is provided. Large protected territory with excellent income potential, minimal investment CALL NOW 861-1818 OR WRITE Can Do Home Owner Marketing 1517 Water St., Kelowna, B.C. VIY 138 WESTCOAST SEAFOODS at Castlegar Mohowk, Friday, July 1, 1988. 10:00 a.m to 7:00 p.m 52 FINANCIAL AID WORKSHOPS A must if you need financial assistance to attend Selkirk College next Septem! Single Applicants: July 5. o.m., Castlegar Campus Married or Single with Dependents: July 6, 1-2:30 p.m., Castlegar Cam 10-1130 s TO REGISTER IN ADVANCE CALL 365-7292 “ete Ie CASTLEGAR CAMPUS DANCE BANDS and mobile disco Available for any type of engagement 1-362-779: ttn, | WOULD Like to thank Dr. Yule and nur ses for my care during my stay in Castlegar Hospital. Thank you and God Bless You. Mike Plotnikoff. Here's My Card 'S LEGAR NEWS CA vo oeate TO All the Doctors and stall of the Castlegar Hospital whe cared for my husbend John. in his final illness thank you very much. A special thank you to the many friends who vated John and helped me in so many MAISIE DALZVEL 182 LIVEN COMPANIONS, HOUSEKEEPERS, ETC. Many reliable Canadian and Orien tal ladies (all ages) pteeking positions in exchange tor hom More intormation 1-547-2020 onytione 7 days/week (24 hours) ' ALCOHOLICS CS gnonymous ond Al- i Phone 365. yo4/71 RITA (SAVINKOFF) KOERBER possed away June 16, 1988 at the age of 37. Rita is sadly missed by her loving husband Karl and beloved children Shoun and Jessa of Kaslo; father Andy; brothers Don and Bill; a sister, Cathy, all from the Castlegar area. Rito was Cremation followed. Rita was involved numerous programs throughout her lite and loved working with children and always helping others. Rita lived each day to its fullest and was an inspiration to all who knew her. Her warm smile and loving, caring ways will be sadly missed, but always remembered. ‘What the heart hos once owned ond had, it shall never lose /352 IN LOVING MEMORY of Gloria Plotnikott who passed away July 3, 1979. No length of time will dim the past, Too many memories hold it fast Sadly missed, Mom and Dad, Joyce ond Steve IN LOVING MEMORY of W. Wishlott who passed away July There's o place in our hearts That's yours alone A piece of love no one can own For deep in our hearts Your memory is kept To love and to cherish and never forget No words we speak Could ever say How much we miss you every day. Sadly missed and ever remembered by Mom, Dad and tamily 52 Province of British Columbia Ministry of Transportation and Highways HIGHWAYS-TENDERS Electoral District: Nelson-Creston Highway District: New Denver District, No. 34 Project or Job Number: Project No 13 434 Project or Job Description: Asphalt Cold Mix in Stock piles ot Various Locations in the New Denver Highways District The tender sum for this project is to include applicable federal and provincial sales tox Tender Opening Date/Time: July 5 1988, 2.30 p.m Surety Bid Bond or Certified Cheque is not required Tender documents with envelope specifications and conditions are available tree of charge ONLY from New Denver Highways District Office. Box 159. New Denver, B.C. VOG 150 between the hours of 8:30 and 4:00 p.m. Mon: day to Friday, except Holidays Phone number of originating office (604) 358-2212 Tenders will be opened at New Den ver Highwoys District Office, Box 159, New Denver, B.C. VOG 150. **The lowest or any tender necessarily accepted W.A. McCARGAR A/District Highways Manager also place to meet HALIFAX (CP) — Red Herring Co-op Books owns a bull-horn which it lends to groups ‘for rallies and demonstrations. The cramped little store in down town Halifax is as much a meeting place it is a vendor of books, magazines, buttons, T-shirts, cass. ettes and records. “It really is a centre for several communities that overlap,” says long-time volunteer Barb Taylor: “This is the place to come and get the books on the subject you're inter. ested in and that support the work that you're doing. At Red Herring, it's not unusual to find customers between the stacks discussing what's ‘on the shelves. Taylor says that's part of the appeal of the place. “It's the people and the material both. They sort of complement each other.” The co-operative came together in late 1977 out of frustration with local bookstores. With office space and a i the Scouts lose members to changing times OTTAWA (CP) — The motto has always been “be prepared” but the many dramatic changes in its tradi. tional objectives, but leader say its Boy Scouts of Canada's has dropped by 40,000 and the organization admits it has been slow in catching on to changes in society. That five-year drop from a usual membership of about 350,000 has prompted the scouts to hire a Toronto advertising agency to decide. how to attract new members and keep those it has. Canada's falling birth rate is part of the reason for the decline but scouts spokesman John Rietveld says it’s also explained by the Canadians perceive the group. “We've been concerned about our image for a number of years,” Rietveld said in an interview. “It's great for the boy scouts as an organization to say ‘we want to offer ‘with Christi must be lessened and.it has to generate membership among the country's ethnic groups. “If we portray ourselves as ; Christian organization, it will be a hindrance, a barrier to people joining us. CHANGES IMAGES The scouts also want the ad agency to produce promotional material that will “show more ethnic faces and change our image as an organization mainly made up of white Anglo Saxon Protestants.” The initial advertising blitz won't be aimed at young people but at adults, in the hope that traditional values of a belief in God, but not necessarily a Christian God, respect large cities, and among those over 12 years old, etveld thinks this is because parents have less control over how their teenagers spend their time and because there is \more competition for their leisure time than in the past. Even though the membership loss is highest in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, it’s also been dropping in small towns and rural areas. Rietveld speculated that small-town youth now have adopted the big-city preference for hanging around in shopping malls. Leaders are considering changing the uniform, allowing girls to join and will be producing information in several languages. The scouts in Toronto publish information in six languages. a program with these things in it’ but if nobody wants to join then we have to philosophically say should the scouts still offer a program or not.” parents. Scouting will continue without too for human rights and the importance of goals still carries weight with Scout surveys indicate member- ship is falling off most rapidly in was told interested. the guides were large back room for store's second-floor downtown loca- tion quickly became a community meeting place. Now in its third location, a down- town storefront, it has discovered it can operate successfully as a legiti- mate bookstore. RUN SHOW One of the main reasons for that success is the army of volunteers that runs the cash, stocks the shelves, orders the books and even cleans. The staff list numbers 50 to 60, but as many as 150 people may give their time over a year. There's no question the bookstore is political, but exactly where it lies on the spectrum is hard to pin down. “Toa certain extent, a lot of people check their ideologies at the door,” says Ken Burke, one of the store's three paid co-ordinators. The shelves contain everything from feminist theory to health. There are books of gay and lesbian interest, on ecology, cultural theory, vegetar- ian cooking and cassettes of local music. For the well-dressed radical, the store stocks T-shirts and buttons bearing such slogans as Free Canada, Trade Mulroney. “There are people in the Tory party who can come in and buy a book on feminism,” says volunteer Valerie Mansour of the store's varied clientele. Decisions on what to put on the shelves are made by the paid staff and volunteers. While the store doesn't stock the high-volume best sellers that are the mainstay of most bookstores, the staff consider sales quite good. But sales don’t guarantee success, and finances have proven to be the bookstore's biggest problem. Losses after a flood in Red Herring's previous location a few years ago nearly drove the bookstore under. “We put out appeals in maga- zines,” says Burke. “We passed motions at our board meeting for everybody involved in Red Herring to only make Christmas purchases at Red Herring and we managed to scrape through.” IN MEMORY of Winnie Savinkoff who passed away July 1, 1984 As we love her, so we miss her. In our memory she is deo Loved, rememberd, longed for always Bringing many a silent tea! Sodly missed by husband Andy, children $2 CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY. In memoriam donations. Information Box 3292, Castlegar. 365-5167 104/15 THE B.C. HEART FOUNDATION accepts with gratitude “In Memoriam” donations ip promote Heart Research: sent to next-of-kin 8 PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 CASTLEGAR vin 2s! Gary Fleming Dianna Kootnikoft ADVERTISING SALES OFFICE 365-6210 FOURTH AVENUE ec 365-3563 Gretzky marriage our royal wedding EDMONTON (CP) — It's going to be the summer of love in Edmonton as hockey star Wayne Gretzky and movie actress Janet Jones prepare to exchange vows in what is being described as Canada's version of a royal wedding. Gretzky, the Edmonton Oilers’ record-smashing centre, and Jones, who starred in American Anthem and posed semi-nude for Playboy magazine, are to be married July 16 in a ceremony expected to attract celebrities from the worlds of hockey, show business and polities. The blonde, athletic couple have found them selves in the centre of as much excitement as surrounded the Oilers’ Stanley Cup victory last month. In a city that takes great pride in its hockey team, this wedding is turning into big news. While many of the details have been kept secret, some have started to leak out in lengthy newspaper stories that resemble old-fashioned society columns. Co-ordinating the entire extravaganza is Connie Duguid, an Edmonton businesswoman and close friend of Jones. While Gretzky and the Oilers were battling for the Stanley Cup, Duguid and Jones were planning menus, music, flowers and a hundred other details. CLASSIC THEME Duguid says the theme will be classic white and the ceremony will be traditional. Though Gretzky is an Anglican and Jones a Methodist, the ceremony will be held in St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Basilica in downtown Edmonton. Gretzky's first choice, All Saints’ Anglican Cathe dral, was too small for the wedding. The 1,200 seats at St. Joseph's — where Pope John Paul visited in 1984 — should easily accom: modate the 700 invited guests. Rev. John Monroe, of Brantford, Ont., an old friend of the Gretzky family, will conduct the ceremony. The bride and her 12 bridesmaids and flower girls will be wearing white gowns by Pari Malik, a Los Angeles designer. For the past seven months the dressmaker has been working exclusively on Jones's wedding dress. Reports say the gown is covered in streams of hand-sewn beads and the train will float five metres behind the bride. It is expected to cost more than $40,000 Cdn. Although the gown will come from Tinseltonw, Gretzky and Jones have put their faith in Edmonton firms for most of the wedding arrangements. WEAR SNEAKERS While Gretzky likes to joke that he, best man Eddie Mio, a former Oiler goaltender, and his 10 groomsmen will show up in sneakers and shorts, he has in fact ordered black tuxedos from a local tailor. One of Duguid’s major concerns is security, especially as the bride and groom move through downtown Edmonton from the church to the Westin hotel, where the reception will be held, in a rented white Rolls-Royce arrayed in flowers. With 22 attendnats and another 700 guests tailing along behind the Rolls, the trip could easily turn into an impromptu parade. Duguid says she has made subtle arrangements to keep the couple's peace and privacy intact and to keep gate-crashers out of the party. Gift-givers will have a tough time topping the groom's gift to the bride. “Do you want to know what he gave me?” Jones gushes. “It's a Corniche Rolls-Royce convertible, cream color with tan interior.” The value? A cool $250,000 or so. Despite all the hoopla surrounding their day, Gretzky and Jones both say they want to keep the wedding a personal affair, “They are not out to make it the social event of the season,” Duguid says firmly. “They want to have a celebration for family and friends, and that's pretty much who's on the guest list.” ® . N © FULL GOSPEL EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH baal BAPTIST FELLOWSHIP (A.C.0.P.) 914 Col A Below Castleaird Plaza Phone 365-6317 PASTOR: BARRY WERNER + 365-2374 — SUNDAY SERVICES — Sunday School 9:30 a.m Morning Worship — 10:30a.m Evening Fellowship 6:30 p.m Wednesday: Home Meetings 7 p.m Friday Youth Ministries 7 p.m HOME OF CASTLEGAR Family Worship Service 10:00a.m Youth Ministries Discipleship Ministries PASTOR: ED NEUFELD Phone: 365-6675 “A Church that Loves the Castlegar Area! 809 Merry Creek Road Past Fireside Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m, Evening Service 6:30 p.m. TUESDAY 6:00 p.m. AWANA WEDNESDAY NIGHT Study & Prayer 8 p.m. HURCH 365-3430 OR 365-7368 ROBERT C. LIVELY, PASTOR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-7818 PENTECOSTAL NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY 602-7th Street * 365-5212 Neor High Schoo! ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713-4th St. Office 365-3664 — SUNDAY SERVICE — Christian Education 9:45 a.m Morning Worship 11:00 o.m. Evening Service 6:30 p.m — WEDNESDAY — 7:00 p.m. Bible Study — Prayer Crosstire for Youth 7:00 p.m. Youth Meeting wet COLLEGE 4km. W. of Castlegar, Hwy. 3 towards Grand Forks Phone 365-5818 PASTOR STUART LAURIE * 265.3278 Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 a.m Nursery & Children's Church provided Week Servite & Study 9am Wednesdays 6:30-8:00 p.m Bible teaching for all ages A Non-Denominational Family Church. Preaching the Word of Faith! REV. GLEN BACKUS SUMMER SCHEDULE Worship Service Listen to the Lutheran Hour Sunday, m. on Radio GRACE PRESBYTERIAN ANGLICAN CHURCH 2605 Columbia Ave. UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Ta01 Columble Avene Sunday Services 8:00 a.m: and 10:00 a.m. Sunday Schoo! 10 a.m REV. CHARLES BALFOUR 366-2271 1 ARISH P To Know ¢ cat ‘ond Make Him Known’ REV. J. FERRIER © 365-3182 Morning Worship 00 a.m. 2224-6th Avenue 1% Blocks South of Community Complex 10 a.m. Worship & Sunday School Mid-Week Activities for all oges Phone for information Rev. Ted tow 365-6337 of 365-7814 SEVENTH-DA ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave.. Troll 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg 365-2649 CHURCH OF GOD 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 11 a.m. stor ira Johnson * 365-6762 The scouts approached the Can- adian Girl Guides about a possible merger of the two organizations but not