sais oe Secs aaa ares aia SW. s tlegar News July 31. 1985 ENTERTAINMENT LICENCED DINING ROOM . Open 4P.0A. Daily Reservations for Private Parties — 365-3294 Located.1 mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenia _ ed! FAMILY DINING = — KEEPING A ~ PRIVATE LIFE’ ' “HARD FOR _ J. CELEBRITIES — _ HOLLYWOOD (AP) — It was apparent for several months that something was terribly wrong with Rock Hudson. The once-broad shoulders were stooped, and The institute is known for research into the cause and treatment of AIDS, AIDS is an often-deadly ailment that depletes ‘the ly’s natural immune sys-. the face of the former leading tem and leaves it open to at- COMMUNITY Bulletin Board HIROSHIMA DAY Tuesday, August 6. Vigil at Castlegar Courthouse, 6 p.m., followed by walk to Zuckerberg Island for tree planting ceremony. All-welcome. 4/59 > ROBSON FALLFAIR September 7, Robson Hall. Entry forms available at John- -ny's Grocery, West's and Kel Print. Sponsored by Robson Women's Institute. =~ Coming events—of—Castlegar_and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words ore $3.15 and additional words are 15¢ each. Boldfaced wor- ds (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is no extra charge for a second consecutive inser- man was gaunt, his body ravaged. ; But reporters who asked about his condition were told tack by, other diseases. The highest ‘risk groups are homosexuals, abusers of in- jectable drugs and iacs. ONLY DISCUSSION ~Dale Olson, Hudson's pub- licist, said Thursday he never knew the star of such films as Giant and Pillow Talk was suffering from AIDS. “The only discussion of AIDS as far as I'm concerned was this morning,” he said. On Tuesday,—Olson said Hudson was being treated at the American Hospital in Paris and the Pasteur In- ,Stitute for. inoperable liver —eancer. But spokesman Yanou Col- lart told reporters Thursday that ,the actor who once played opposite Elizabeth Taylor and Doris Day had the > flu. Or wanted to lose weight. A few. knew better, and BACK IN LA. serious but stable condition was in good spirit Hudson in good spirits LOS ANGELES (AP)-— Screen star Rock Hudson, in ith the deadly disease AIDS, its-and-received cards and. flowers from well-wishers, hospital officials said. hom Although Hudson had been at University of California- Los Angeles Medical Centre- less than 24 hours after returning from Paris, numerous calls and gifts have. arrived, spokesman Richard Elbaum said Tuesday. Elbaum added that visitors were not allowed to see Hudson because he needed rest. The actor, an Academy Award nominee for his role in the 1956 movie Giant, was “in good spirits and pleased to be : r , “Mr. Hudson is being evaluated and treated for ‘ions of gq! d immune sy a said Gottlieb, who will be treating Hudson. The actor was in serious but stable condition. he said. Medical evaluation and therapy is planned at. the medical centre following Hudson's treatment ata Paris hospital last week, Gottlieb said. . ‘i € 'MAY EXPERIMENT “Mr Hudson returned to Los Angeles in order to be ina familiar environment and to physicians,” Gottlieb said. “Al cared for by his own he wished to recuperate * and gain strength before any further consideration of "said Dr. Michael Gottlieb, of "s School of at the ‘Names in the news LOS ANGELES (AP) — Rock star Michael Jackson was injured Tuesday, and may have fractured his hand, during filming of a science fiction ‘film for Walt Disney Productions, his publicity firm reported. Jackson's doctor, Steve Hoefflin, who treated the! singer when his hair caught fire during the filming of a Pepsi Cola commercial last year, was alerted, and Jackson was taken to Brotman Memorial Hospital. Jackson was filming Captain Eo, a short 3-D musical, in Hollywood. The production is directed by Francis Ford Coppola, with: George Lucas serving as executive producer. 1 z ROCK STAR MADONNA sued the producer-direc- P therapy.” i) In the last few years, th¢ medical centre has treated approximately 200 AIDS patiénts and is considerd one of the leading centres in the United States for AIDS research and treatment, Elbaum said. Gottlieb was one of the AIDS and report it in 1981. . Hudson, who starred in the McMillan and Wife TV first researchers to identify boycott planned OTTAWA (CP) — The Canadian Labor Congress is asking its two million mem- bers to boycott stores owned by S.S. Kresge Co., as well as the subsidiary K-Mart and Jupiter stores, because of a labor dispute at the chain's Thunder Bay,/Ont., outlet. Members of United Food and Commercial Workers lo- cal 409, employed at a Kresge store in Thunder Bay, have been on strike for more than three months. Wages and working conditions are in dispute. series in the 1970s and in six episodes of the current Dynasty series, arrived in Los Angeles early Tuesday and was flown by helicopter to the university hospital. Dale Olson, Hudson's Hollywood publicist who reported last week that Hudson had inoperable liver. cancer, said he still has some liver pi but it was no long: tain it was cancer. Hudson's Paris spokesman, Yanou Collart, said the actor left Paris because he was too weak to receive treatment. Hudson had been at the American Hospital in the - Paris suburb of Neuilly since July 21. She said in a’statement he was treated for six weeks HAPPY 40th ha From your Family and Friends! last year with HPA 23. Pay) OLD TIMER. =~ Canadian folklorist Guy Randall re-—_ the organziers of the re-enactment in 1967 of MacKen- enacted history of how Canada first developed at the zie’s cross-Canada canoe trip. Community Complex on Monday. Randall was one of ; that Hudson has AIDS, and _that-it-was-diagnosed-over a year ago. Celebrities usually find ru- Vie ile-the third consecutive insertion is half-price. Minimum charge (s $3.15 (whether ad is for one, two-or— three times). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's paper and 5 p.m. Mondays for Wednesday's paper. - Notices should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 Columbia Ave. t tor of a low-budget art movie Tuesday to keep him from using her name in connection with the film, A Certain Sacrifice. The singer got a show-cause order in Manhattan's Support Soviet RIBBON OF PEACE . . . Castlegar residents were among those who hand-sewed tapestry banners which will be part.of a huge ribbon of peace this weekend in commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Costiews file Photo Westcoast Seafoods. _ locatedat ~ . Castlegar Mohawk Fé CosNews Photo by Ryan Wilson COMMUNITY Bulictin Board NOW SHOWING! W {WED [THU] [FRI) “More things happen in this movie than in six ordinary action films! There’s not just a thrilla minute; there’s a thrill, FOR EVERYONE “*Cococn’ Is this summer's ‘E.T.’- _coming Castlegar... ... and you deserve it! Saturday Night. AUGUST 10 d __ "Live"... On Stage The biggest outdoor Rock Wars Show of ‘85! ‘Castle-Rock Concert : SA TURDAY, AUGUST 190 “Goonies mors follow a drop from public view, or.in Hudson's 4 case, a radical change in ap- when Daily Variety colum- pearance. But that doesn't nist Army Archerd received .keep stars from trying to the confirmation he needed, -avoid disclosure of intimate he decided to print in his details. column that. Hudson was e When actor Steve Mec- suffering from acquired im- Queen was admitted to a mune deficiency syndrome—— hospital in 1979 AIDS. lapsing at his Santa Paula Hudson's case is the latest ranch, he told friends in a in a long series of attempts raspy voice, “I had a little by celebrities to keep some ‘touch of pneumonia.” He died shred of a private life, an ef- of cancer the next year. fort that meets: with limited e In October 1983, Yul success, publicists agree.“ Brynner's publicists denied _ “The era of the brick wall any knowledge that the long- is over,” said Doug Taylor of time star of The King and I the PMK publicity agency in was being treated for lung ‘Los Angeles. ‘This is 1985. cancer. But two months later, y The ‘public is too sophisti: Brynner admitted the con- cated to believe puffery”'on dition, after doctors said the matters such as illness. disease was in remission. Archerd said he decided toe Rumors abounded that use the Hudson story be- comedian Andy | Kaufman cause he knew speculation was suffering from lung can- was sure to follow once it was cer. There was never any learned’the 59-year-old actor confirmation, but he died at was under treatment at the’ 36, shocking his fans who Pasteur Institute in Paris. were uncushioned by any of- ficial word .that he was ill. e As actor Peter Lawford lay, dying at’ Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, his wife or- dered hospital publicists to release no information about his condition, even though it was known that-Lawford was in a coma and in critical condition.” Ws ROCK HUDSON OPEN FOR BREA! the new after col-~ LUNCH IN THE 1695 RESTAURANT Open Monday thru Saturday 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. SALAD BAR (Monday through Saturday) . LUNCHEON SPECIAL — $3.50 Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, I1'a.m. - 2 p.m. \eley Vahey Vly FIRST IN_16 YEARS Newport festival revived | ~By MITCHELL ZUCKOFF “We're captive on the car- ousél of time. We can’t return, we can only look behind From where we came. And go round and round and round In the circle game. Sixteen springs and 16 summers gone now . ..” (The Circle Game, by Joni. Mit- chell) NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) — Like captives on the carousel of time, folk singers have come full circle with their ballads of love and songs of discontent. More than two dozen per- formers wilt fill this New England sea town Aug. 3-4 at the first Newport Folk Fes- tival in 16 years. Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Arlo Guthrie and others will sing the old songs, add some new ones and decide whether folk music can still draw crowds the way it once did. Producer George Wein, who founded the Newport + $3.95 KFAST AT9 A.M. Jazz Festival in~1954—and started the' folk festival five years later, is banking on just this revival. Without a cor- porate sponsor, Wein has personally bankrolled a $150,000-$200,000 budget. “There’s a _ tremendous nostalgia for the folk festival, and think we'll do well,” Wein said. ‘ “It feels like old times having both the Newport folk and jazz “festivals back again,” said Wein, who re- vived the jazz fest in 1982 after a nine-year absence. “One of the greatest thrills in my entire life was the New- port Folk Festival.” He's lined up more than two dozen performers, in- cluding Baez, Collins,. Guth- rie, Doc and Merle Watson, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Bill Morrissey, Bonnie Raitt, Sweet Honey in the Rock and Tom Paxton. The event is expected to draw at least 10,000 fans. At the first festival in 1959, an 18-year-old Joan Baez sang Virgin Mary Had’ One Son and We Are Crossing the Jordan River. She parlayed that first major appearance into world- wide fame. “I was just in sev- enth heaven,” she recalled. “I - was going from tent to tent, TETTTTTIIIT] [2 Ty Crown Poi Littiie LT eel hotel List trail bec. PER NOCHT PLUS TAX |.$qQoo*_ 8:00 p.m. SUNSET DRIVE-IN THEATRE Highway 3A, Castlegar $6.00 Per Person * Featuring Top Rock Bands from around the Kootenays Trail, Nelson, Creston, Grand Forks & Castlegar —~ GET YOUR TICKETS EARLY! Advance Ticket Sales Start Friday, Aug. 2 at Castlegar News: or your local For Reservations (800) 848-9600 Canadian Currency at Par for Room Sheraton- Spokane, Hotel i), pone ore 8 Remar ENJOY: Tropical all- Pool - Riverfront Pa Glant watersiides - “Shopping - Wineries. Playfali eather rk - e Track - eball - Golf =Cood June 10 through Sept 30, 1985. space avaiable includes Room. sngie or double occupancy. Os stay freet travel agent. to blues in bare feet and long hair.” Her memories of the early ‘Newport: festivals include Bob Dylan “going electric” in 1965, Arlo Guthrie intro- ducing Alice’s - Restaurant, Johnny Cash giving Dylan his guitar and leading an im- promptu civil rights march with a‘member of the Free- dom Singers through the centre of town. — “I don't think people should get their! hopes up that they could repeat 1960,” Baez said. “But there is still an-audience in the world for real music, not amplified mu- sic, I guess.” : Folk music is acoustic and usually does not rely on plification. It has its roots in UPLANDER American~ Indians, “black storytellilng, Appalachian mountain. songs and New England sea chanties. From the 1940s to the '60s, it was the’ Kingston Trio, Peter, Paul and Mary, the Brothers Four. Folk music peaked, “hootenanny” became a buzz word and the Newport Folk spearheaded by such artists” Festival reigned supreme. as Leadbelly, Pete Seeger, Jean Richie, Woody Guthrie, Josh White and Burl Ives. A younger crowd evolved in the ‘60s and made folk music commercial show biz: Folk songs may have in- spired a generation or two. But record company officials say those times have paid more dividends in memories ~ than in cash. ‘Cable 10 TV CABLE 10, Thursday, Aug. 1, _ 6:00—Sign-on and program information. 6:02—1985 Rossland Moun- tain Music Festival — Part 7 featuring: Ter- ry Marshall and Janet Nelson of Nelson with Bob Simmons of Coeur D'Alene, a com- bination of Celtic, folk and .60s favorites; part 7 ends’ with Steve Baal of Castle- gar on guitar. 7:00—Les. Weisbrich — and the Canadian Shore- line Series — Well known Kootenay watercolorist Les Weisbrich exlains the background of The Shoreline Series dur- ing an interview With Steven Ford of ‘the New rele HOLLYWOOD (AP) National Lampoon's Europ- ean-Vacation, starring Chevy Chase, debuted as the No. 1 movie at the American box office over the weekend, grossing $12.3 million to edge Universal's Back to the Fu- ture out of the top spot. European Vacation, from Warner Bros.,’ played on 1,546 screens for an average of $7,975 per screen. 362-7375 DINNER SPECIALS Mon.-Sun., July. 29-to-Aug- I CUCUMBER KABOBS INCLUDES: Soup or salad, mushroom rice or Duchess Potatoes. Fresh Vegetables, Fruif Garnish, Freshly baked buns. PE $8.95 or2 dinners for $15 Reservations Please! National Exhibition Centre. 7:30—No More Hiroshima — This NFB film deals with the story of the first nuclear attack in the history of man- kind. ‘The program, sponsored by the area peace action commit- tees, is being tele- vised to commemor- ate the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagas- aki on Aug. 6, 1945. 8:00—Second Annual Rob- son Fire Department Hose, Competition — Glen Bryson commen- tates during the hose lay, hose reel, beer barrel, and_ bucket brigade events. In- cluded are interviews with key participants. 10:30—Sign-off. ... ase No. 1 Back to the Future grossed $9.5 million, boosting its four- —week-total to-$66.7.million. Falling one notch to third was the rerelease of Steven Spielberg’s 1982 hit, E.T. the Extra Terrestrial. The Uni- versal film brought in $5 mil- lion over the weekend and raised its two-week total to $19.2 million. Disney's The Black Caul- dron debuted last week and the $4.2 million grossed over the weekend put it in fourth lace. Mad Max Beyond Thunder- dome was fifth over the weekend_with-$3:6"million, followed by Columbia's Sil- verado and 20th Century Fox's Cocoon, both with $3.2 * disarmament SUMMER HOURS. 1.6 DAYS A WEEK ES. & SUNDAY POINTMENT 365-2868 x © BYA Peace ribbon finished WASHINGTON (AP) — An enormous “ribbon of peace” — a tapestry hand- sewn by volunteers” from around the world, including Castlegar, — is to be stret- ched around the Pentagon, trailed across the “Potomac and twined about the Capitol this weekend.’ Finishing stitches were being put on the banners . Tuesday and arrangements were being'completed-for the demonstration, which will commemorate the 40th anni- versary of the atomic bomb- ing of Hiroshima, organizers said. | On Sunday, the 24,000. banners will be tied together and unforled, forming a ban- ner 21 kilometres long. The stitchers, ranging from elementary. school: chil- dren to church groups, were asked to create a scene an- swering this question: :‘What can, you not bear to think of as Idst forever in a nuclear war?” °DIASARAMENT The result was folk art. “I wanted to find a way for ordinary people to express their yearning for peace.” said Justine Merritt, a Den- ver grandmother of seven who came up with the idea three years ago after a visit to Hiroshima. _ Merritt said she hopes that 100,000 volunteers — some carrying the swatches they had sewn and some carrying other people's tapestries — would take part in the dem- onstration. - : ‘WHAT WAS WAR?" One banner with scenes of children at play, carries this quote: “I dream of giving’ birth to a child who will ask? ‘Mother, what was war?" Another shows a- child holding his parents’ hands. “We hpve everything from poison ivy to pizza,” Merritt said of the tapestries. “We have praying hands, chur- ches, basketball courts and supermarkets.” On Saturday morning, par- MEETING Canada supports plans UNITED NATIONS (CP) Two months after an- nouncing increases in defence spending and cuts in foreign aid, Canada has given its full support to plans to hold a global conference exploring the relationship between dis- armament and Third World development. In a speech to the con- ference’s preparatory com- mittee—Tuesday,—Canadian_ ambassador Douglas Roche endorsed a UN report linking growing military expenditures with lagging economic and Social development in Third World countries. “The earth's carrying cap- acity is well able to provide for the basic needs of the ‘world’s entire population,” but its resources are mis- directed, Roche told the committee. Developing countries now spend almost three times as much on military as on health While the Warsaw Pact-and NATO account for the largest portion of the VINYL SIDING Installed by Professionals Aluminum or Vinyl Soffits Facia Cover Aluminum Siding Wood or Aluminum; Windows and Patio Doors FREE ESTIMATES COLUMBIA VINYL Day or Night 365-3240 $800 billion spent annually on armed- forces; developing countries now account for a quarter of the total and their spending is increasing at double the rate of indus- trialized countries, he noted. ‘The United Nations’ 1981 Thorsson study, chaired by a former Swedish undersecre- tary of state, argued national security depends on develop- ment as much as military de- fences, Roche said: “Security is threatened by reduction in economic growth, ecological stresses and-resource scarcities,-and the morally unacceptable and politically hazardous polari- zation of wealth and pover- ty,” the ambassador said. The International Confer- ence on the Relationship be- tween Disarmament and De- velopment will likely take -place in Paris in June 1986. In an interview before his speech, Roche said he doesn't believe Ottawa's rising mil- itary expenditures and_for-_pushed_back five [Peppercorn ticipants will pray for peace at a service at the Wash- ington Cathedral. The following day, the demonstrators will gather at the Pentagon, the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol and unravel the tapestries and walk to their destinations. Police have agreed to stop traffic for two minutes at 2 p-m. EDT, Merritt said, so that all the sections can be linked into one 31-kilometre circle. The ribbon will stretch around the Pentagon and across the Potomac River into Washington, where it will wind its way around Capitol Hill and back to the Pentagon. In Hiroshima at the same time, a similar ribbon will be wrapped around the epicen- tre of the Aug. 6, 1945, atomic blast during the Sec- ond World, War that killed 120,000 and led to Japan's surrender within days. ~ eign aid cuts mean “a lésser role” for Canada in criticizing the trade-off between arma- ment and development. “We're playing as strong a role as our relative situation allows us to do,” he said. “It was: felt. we weren't cholding up our end suffici- ently in NATO, and that as a -result our voice wasn’t as great as it might be,” he said. “Now we can play a larger role in defence and disar- mament.” Canadian defence spending rose three per cent in real terms this year to $9.4 billion. and the Conservative govern- ment has promised six per State Supreme Court directing Stephen Lewicki to come to court Friday and explain why he should not be barred from using her name in “the sale, distribution, marketing, advertising or exhibition” of the movie. Madonna Ciccone was 19 when she co-starred as the female lead in the $20,000, hour-long production Lewicki describes it as a “new wave, Lower East Side, post-punk” film. y The singer said in court papers she believed’ her pr it 1-life would be d by any atic with the film, - PRINCE CHARLES, at the controls ;of a Queen's Flight Squadron helicopter, made a special delivery to a post office in suburban Bagshot on Tuesday to mark the 350th anniversary of the Royal Mail. Charles, after delivering 30,000 first-day covers, said: “I'm not sure that everyone . .. receives the mail as quickly as they would like to, or that those they have written to receive it exactly when they ought to. But, on the whole, the post office has done remarkably well in difficult circumstances.” The ceremony marked the proclamation issued at Bagshot in July 1635, when King Charles I ordered a courier series started and the Royal Mail was born. FORMER U.S. president Richard Nixon, 11 years after leaving office, will give up his government-financed U.S. Secret Service protection next month, his spokesman said Tuesday. “He just doesn’t feel it was justified for him to have this service paid for by the taxpayers,” John Taylor said from Nixon's New York office. Nixon, who lives in Saddle River, N.J., announced last March he would drop the Secret Service protection afforded former presidents. E POLICE CHIEF William J. Obanhein, whose face adorned Norman Rockwell's Saturday Evening Post magazine covers and whose stern approach to litterers was made famous by folksinger Arlo Guthrie, has called it quits. = “I feel sad about it, but I've about had it,” 60, said after z (elected town ial: letter on announcing his immediate retirement. He had maintained law and order in this small town in the Berkshire Hills for 33 years, 27 of them as chief. Obanhein's most celebrated arrest was on Thanks- giving Day in 1965 when he nabbed Guthrie, then an 18-year-old student at the Stockbridge School, for littering. Guthrie, who was subsequently deemed unsuit- able for military service because of his police record, ‘turned the incident into the ballad Alice's Restaurant, ‘and Officer Obie became a cult figure. = U.S. PRESIDENT Ronald Reagan's: family has the © television bug. Michael Reagan says favorable reaction to “his previous broadcast. assignments led him to sign for a ‘full-time job on a syndicated daily television news | program in Los Angeles. The president's eldest son, 40, will narrate and report on All About Us, a news show beginning in \ctober and featuring human-interest stories. Earlier this month, Ron Reagan Jr., the president's ther son, said he would become an on-camera reporter + for ABC Entertainment, while actress Patti Davis, the | president's younger daughter, said this week she will “appear in a televisi S ial for a Jap: florists’ association. : Obanhein, da cent real military growth. At the same time, Ottawa — after a-series of aid cut- backs last year totalling $236 million — cut a further $50 million for 1986-87, and an- nounced its commitment to raise total aid to 0.7 per cent of the country’s gross nation- al product by 1990 was being zm Monday to Sunday, July 29-Aug. 4 Surf and Turf New York Steak Stuffed with Crab geet $10° 00... 212” ‘egetable Gorn: — Potato or Pesta Gorlk Bread OR SALAD Reservations phone 364-2222 TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN | “Sunday School 10:15 a.m. plan | y OTTAWA (CP) — Canada will look preposterous if it doesn’t come out_in support FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 10.a.m. to7 p.m. er sce of the, Soviets’ plan to stop nuclear weapons testing for five ‘months beginning Aug. 6, Richard Caton, deputy dir- ector of the anti-nuclear group Operation Dismantle, said Tuesday. ‘The Soviets have said they would extend the morator- ium if the United States agreed to comply. ~ But Monday, the U.S. re- jected the Soviet proposal, FISHING “PONDS Kids Paradise Shade Trees 365-7144 Ferry with State Secretary George Shultz calling the morator- jum idea an unverifiable pub- licity ploy. “I would thoroughly expect the Canadian, government to urge the United States to go Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 along with this,” said Caton. “If they don't, I think they'll look preposterous.” Caton said the American refusal to resume talks on a test ban treaty, because of problems in verifying the agreement, is “absolute hog- wash.” OPEN Guests Must Be SIGNED In Friday & Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. AT 12NOON SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m.” ARET Playing Fri. & Sat. FRASER FREEWAY He said modern seismol- | ~’ ogical technology can verify a [ CHURCH DIRE TORY anywhere in the world. ANGLICAN CHURCH CALVARY BAPTIST 1401 Columbia Ave. Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Robson Church 2nd and 4th Sundays Oa.m. ZS vow 809 Merry Creek Road Past Fireside Motel . Pastors: R.H. Duckworth & Alan Simpson-- Family Bible Hour “9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Evening Praise Rev. Charles Balfour { 365-2271 ST. PETER LUTHERAN 713 - 4th Street Worship Service 9 a.m. 6:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY NIGHT Study & Prayer —7 p.m. Church 365-3430 Pastor 365-2808 Pastor Terry Defoe Office 365-3664 id 365-7622 UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA’ 2264 - 6th Ave. 1% Blocks South of Community Complex Summer Services 10 a.m. Except July 28 and August 25 When we worship at the Robson Church instead of Castlegar. Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 369-7814 CHURCH OF GOD 2404 Columbia Avenue Church School : 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship - lla.m. Pastor Ira Johnson Phone 365-6762 Listen to the Luth Hour —- Sunday, 9.a.m. PENTECOSTAL on Radio CKQR TABERNACLE APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF PENTECOST -ST_ RITA'S CATHOLIC, Rev. Herman Engberink (Ph. 365-7143 WEEKEND SERVICES Saturday 7 p.m. 767-11th Ave., Castlegar Pastor Rev. Ken Smith Assistont Rev. Morley Soltys Phone 365-5212 Sunday Morning Services at 8:150.rh. and 11-00... Christian Education WE FEATURE: © Kitchens * Courtesy Van © Heated Pool © Continental Breakfast Jefferson House provides enjoyable, quiet. secure, comfortable lodging within 3 minutes from city centre. Advanced reservations required. Subject to space availability. Call-for Reservations 112-509-624-4142 : Otter expires Dec. 21, 1985. Not yolk Sept: 25 10 Oct 10. 198: Jefferson Jtouse MOTORS INIA Clip Jefferson end Save! in Spokane Evening Service Below Castle - Phone 365-6317 Pastor: Victor Stobbe. Phone 365-2374 SUNDAY SERVICES July and August 10:30 a.m. Evening Fellowship 6:30 diead ni 9: Mm. * Wee College i Sonday 9°90.9:en ‘* Home Bible Study Group Midweek Study and Prayer esday of 7:30 p.m. EVANGELICAL - FREE CHURCH Heart & You in Mind : Bible Study ~—~and Prayer 7:00 t Zz HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 914 Columbia Ave. Family Bible Hour 5 9:45 a.m. Sunday Worship Service l1a.m. Bible Study & Prayer Tues. 7:30 p.m. GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 5 2605 Columbia Ave. Rev. J. Ferri Phone 365-3182 Sunday Morning Worship for July and August 10:00 a.m. 365-7818 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH pk 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg ,