‘ a2 Casth&garNews vows. 197 FREE-TRADE PACT Hitched to dying star ORILLILA, ONT, (CP) — ,A free-trade pact with the United States would hitch Canada's wagon to a dying star, analysts at a public af- fairs con! said Friday. John Holmes, a speaker at the 56th annual Couchiching Conference, and John Kirton, a conference director, said the powerful U.S. empire is in irreversible decline. Lod aot = trad So... you haven't Bre STUDENT YET 7 What are you waiting for?? Phone Collect 368-9126 3.9 Yo. Aa Available on most new cars and trucks in stock REBATES FROM ‘750 on most new cars and trucks "84 CHEV SILVERADO Fully loaded except ai $10,895 "85 LANCER 2.2 Turbo, automatic $11,195 "85 ARIES S.E. ‘auto , 4-door, 22.400 kms, $9195 3 "87 ARIES L.E. avto., 11,800 kms, balance of 7 year warranty 11,895 Financing 7.5% 36 month "81 CORDOBA Mediation model, 82,000 kms $6295 They said the reason isn't loss of moral fibre, but economic mismanagement that mas made the United States the world's greatest debtor nation. “The American empire is unlikely to last, as we have known it during this past half-century,” said Holmes, a foreign affairs analyst and former Canadian diplomat. Holm described the “empire” as “tired and a bit senile,” but said there has been so much good in it that he does not want to see it die. He suggested it should be transformed into something like the Commonwealth. Holmes said now is a poor time for Canada to be pur- suing a trade agreement with the United States. Though it will remain powerful, there is no chance the U.S. will ever regain the dominant position it once held, he said. SEES RISK If Canada is tied too closely to the United States, it risks international relations at the University of Toronto, pre- dicted Japan would surpass the United States as the space’research, leading economic power by the end of this century. He advised Canada to look to countries that are on the rise, such as Japan, South Korea, Malaysia and Bot- swana. Kirton said the decline of the United States as an industrial and economic power started with the Viet- nam war, when Washington to mass produce guns and bombs, he said. Not until the administra- tion of Ronald Reagan did the U.S. move back into high- technology weapons and he said. But by then it had been outstripped by countries like Japan. Moreover, he said, the U.S. has poured so much money into the Star Wars space- based missile defence pro- gram that it has left the field of high-technology consumer products wide open fore Japan. Random searches could stem drug flow EDMONTON (CP) — Staff and prisoners at the Fort Saskatchewan Correctional Institute should be randomly and tested to help .-. andall should be well! Yes, by 9. a.m. Sundays you should be enjoying your Sun day Castlegar News. It you're not, we want to correct the matter Hf you fail consistently to get ws Sundey C ostlogar News vs “ond ‘complain. Call desks and ask for cir- culation. 197 Columbia Ave. 3465-72664 curb the flow of drugs into the jail, an Alberta judge has recommend: Provincial court Judge Carl Rolf made the recom- mendations in a fatality it quiry report released Wed- nesday into the October 1986 death of prisoner Baljinder Singh Narag, 28, who died after contracting hepatitis B. “The entry of drugs must be curtailed, if not actually stopped,” wrote Rolf, who said it was obvious Narag d the fatal infecti mendation was negative. Criminal lawyer Mac Wal- ker said random drug testing of staff, and even of pris- oners, would violate the. un- reasonable search and sei- zure section of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Walker pointed to a recent Quebec superior court ruling that random testing of pris- oners was unconstituional. ‘OVER-REACTION’ Steve Nimchuk, a spokes- man for the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees, which represents jail staff, called the idea an “over-reaction.” i said the union is from participating in com- munal use of a needle and syringe. Rolf was critical of the way jail staff treated Narag. He said the prisoner should have been put into the jail in firmary after a nurse found him to have a high fever. Reaction to Rolf's recom- Rail Bridge 25.4 ther notice. NOTICE Effective Monday, Pedestrian Walkway attached to C.P. Castlegar will be CLOSED to the Public 08:00 to 15:00 Monday to Friday until fur- CP Rail K< June 22, the Boundary Sub at P.D. GILMORE Supt. C.P. Rail Nelson SRE ART SALE! 10% DISCOUNT On all Original Paintings By JANICE LIVESEY at Robert's Restaurant* Winlaw, on Highway 6 August | to 31 Open Tuesday to Saturday 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Also available “Land of Enchantment” Cards ® Books ® Prints At very Reasonable Prices! Show continues to mid-Oct. *Home of the best cuisine! opposed to the testing and searching of staff and would want to be consulted before any of Rolfs recommenda- tions were implemented. In addition to recommend- ing that staff and prisoners be randomly searched and tested for drugs, Rolf said the number of visitors to the jail should be restricted and a stricter form of visitor search instituted. Rolf said he expected op- position to the recommend. ations, but “if something is not done to curb the usage of drugs... we will run the risk of future deaths of inmates.” Howard Sapers, executive director of the John Howard Society of Alberta, said con. traband is smuggled into every jail in the world. He said Rolfs recommen. dations would create a tense maximum-security environ. ment at the medium-security Fort Saskatchewan jail and “it’s hard to run an insitution with that kind of tension.” Claire Sherwin, a spokes- man for the Solicitor Gen eral’s Department, said de- partment officials want to review the report before making any comment. “SEAT BELT MIRACLE’... . A Ver woman walked away from a crash with bruises only after the 1986 Hyundai Pony she was babii | left the road and plunged down a 50 metre emba: two kilimetres west of Castlegar on Hi; ment approximately yy 3 Thur- sday afternoon. According to Castlegar RCMP, Katherine Bjornson, 44, of Vernon, struck a rock before losing control. The car was totalled and RCMP are calling the accident “a seat belt miracle”. — Cosews Phote by Mike Kolesniko Ontario to Vancouver. “Wehad no money, Saskatoon. Greyhound CALGARY (CP) — A tentative agreement reached Friday ended a 16-hour strike that shut down strike ends Drivers, mechanics and depot workers returned to h the must still be ratified Lines of Canada Ltd. bus service from northwestern Service slowly resumed a few hours after the settlement was announced, but the travel plans of many had already been disrupted. The walkouts stopped buses on routes from Ontario to the west coast and as far north as the Yukon, leaving angry passengers stranded in several cities. Two young women who spent four hours at the Edmonton bus depot breathed a sigh of relief when word of the settlement came through at 4:15 p.m. we don’t know anyone in Edmonton,” said Ashley Smith, 18, who was travelling with a friend from Montreal to Cold Lake, Alberta. Smith said she had not inkling of the strike until the driver made an announcement after their bus left She said about 30 passengers were stranded in their jobs, alth rs by 1,200 members of the Amalgamated Transit Union. The ratification vote may take about 30 days to be completed, said company president James Knight. Details of the agreement won't be revealed until then. Knight said the Calgary-based company and the union both made concessions after a 19-hour bargaining session that began Thursday night. Knight said wages were the main stumbling block. Greyhound had asked the workers to take a minimum 18-per-cent wage cut in a three-year deal to compensate for drops in passenger volume because of stiff competition from airlines. The workers had asked for a four-per-cent increase. In Regina, about 30 travellers were stranded while about 20 were stuck in Saskatoon. NO WARNING Edmonton. Most cashed in their tickets and left, but a handful stayed at the depot. STAY ON BUS Germain Cardinal, another passenger dropped off iri Edmonton said police were called in when he and other passengers refused to leave the bus. “I stayed on the bus. . . and police came and picked me up like I was a criminal,” Cardinal said. Nanette Lawrence, an Edmonton nurse on her way home from Toronto who was stranded in Winnipeg, criticized Greyhound for not warning passengers of a possible strike although the workers had been without a contract for several months. “They should have made alternate arrangements for s,” she said. “Greyh didn’t notify us, but they were willing to take our money.” April fool sues station SALEM, Ore. (AP) — A man who became part of a radio station’s April Fools’ joke is suing the station for $1 million. William Whipple of Keizer, Ore., brought the lawsuit against station KXYQ, known as Q105, and its owner, Ronette Communica: tions of Oregon Inc. The lawsuit, filed in Mar ion Country Circuit Court, Whipple, 24, answered the question but when he called the station back 20 minutes later to ask for directions to the station, he was told it was all an April Fools’ joke. When Whipple demanded delivery of the prizes, twc disc jockeys made joking comments on the air ques: tioning Whipple's menta! abilities, the lawsuit said. said the station offered a new Porsche sports car and $10, 000 in cash to anyone who could correctly answer a JQ openings broadcast trivia question. at Great Prices * SUB COMPACTS * VANS * MID SIZE © FULL SIZE TRAIL -0211 GRAND FORKS 442-5200 NELSON 352-5122 5 COMPACTS UCKS ‘ROM The Canade Employment Cen. ° ¢ STATION WAGONS rent-a-wreck Details of these and other job opportunities are available at Renting Quality Cars A pili chr a 835 Spokane Street Phone: 368-5566 RATES Fi tre for students is located on the (Smeltkm. Charge) Hf 3,4 Floor of the Federal Building. Businesses and householders ore encouraged to hire students for an hour, a day, 0 week 6 do any job. Cal! 368. 9126. CASTLEGAR CO-OP GARAGE 365-2711 H rs are coguitea in the Trail area. (134 and 250) Take the Bus & Stop at Carl's For the Best | Back to School | ~*"*"": Prices! aa Certified pre-school program coordinator required in Trail red nurse for casual positios Contlegor. (262) An auto mechanic Is required In Castleger. Position is P/T on Wage is $13.00 per hour. Police file A Kootenay Bay woman suffered minor injuries on July 31 afternoon after the 1986 Dodge Caravan she was driving overturned on High way 3A near Thrums road. According to Castlegar RCMP, Janet Berketa lost control of the vehicle when braking on a wet, slippery road. The vehicle then went off the road and overturned, totalling the vehicle. A passenger also suffered some minor injuries. Charges will not be laid o 8 6 A 1984 Chevrolet hatch back sustained $5,000 in damages after its uniden tified driver lost control of the vehicle in Ootischenia near the sanitary landfill According to Castlegar RCMP, around 9:30 a.m. on July 29, the driver of the Chevrolet was going too fast around a corner and failed to negotiate a curve and lost control of the vehicle which rolled over into a ditch. Neither the driver nor his three passengers suffered any injuries. « 8 « Two people have been charged after a motor vehicle accident on July 29 at High: way 3 at the Highway 3A interchange. According to Castlegar RCMP, Leslie Robert Stil well, 29, of Nelson has been charged with crossing a double solid line while a Ms. Demelo, 22, of Brilliant, has been charged with disobey- ing a traffic control device. Demelo was east bound on Highway 3 at the Highway 3A interchange. She attemp- ted to turn left against the “no left turn” sign. As she started to turn, Stilwell at tempted to pass across a double solid line. The 1986 Honda Stilwell was driving sustained $1,000 damage while the 1986 Toy ota Demelo was driving sus. tained $800. . 8 « A Castlegar person has been charged with failing to yield after stopping. According to Castlegar RCMP, Lee Wha Sook pulled out from a stop sign entering onto the 1800 block Columbia Ave., on July 31 and struck the side of Castlegar resident Beatrice Goetting’s 1986 Subaru which sustained $1,000 damage. Sook's 1980 Mercury suf. fered $400 damage. No injur. eis were reported. 8 # Frank Kinakin, 35, of Castlegar has been charged with driving too fast for road conditions after a motor ve. hicle accident at 3:20 p.m. on July 31 in Castlegar. According to Castlegar RCMP, Kinakin rearended a 1985 Mercury driven by Castlegar resident Arnie Ak selson, 62, as Akselson was Vaan continued from front page States on Aug. 15, ending the Second World War. “I remember, when I was a kid, the Quakers went there (to Hiroshima) to help, and they brought film back,” John Voykin of the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary told the group. “Believe me, it wasn't a beautiful sight. “I just pray we never have to witness another such terrible incident that we are preparing for.” Voykin placed the blame for the nuclear build-up on both of the super powers. “Whether its from the U.S. or whether its from the Soviet Union,” he said. “The powerful nations are doing the same thing and it’s a crime. “It’s not necessary. The people don’t want it.” Others at the ceremony emphasized that the size of the demonstration is unimportant, but rather, the statement is meaningful. “We're raising our voices by being here,” said Peter Rilkoff of Castlegar. “Whoever the head of the country is should pay some respect to what people are doing who got them elected.” But Castlegar resident Mary Picton said the efforts HIROSHIMA - of the individuals will achieve permanent results. “I'm not concerned with the people in power,” she said. “I think every bit for peace helps. somehow. “It makes a small sound in the universe.” Joe Podovinikoff of South Slocan argues that peace is everyone's responsibility. “Everybody, those who are doing the bombing and these who are not but keeping silent, not doing anything to prevent it,” he said, “everybody is going to be at fault if this planet is going to be destroyed.” Podovinikoff believes that even in the after life, people will be made to justify their inaction. “When we come to Him, God will say, what did you do to stop this thing?” he said. “ ‘Oh, I didn’t do anything. Llet the scientists and the other people, the politicians. They knew what they were doing. I didn't feel we had anything to.do with it.’ " Podovinikoff shakes his head. “We're all respons- ible.” But Konkin, who left the Soviet Union shortly after the Chernobyl incident, speaks as someone who was once immersed temporarily in the fear of a nuclear disaster. “We can make the decision to work against it or not,” she said. “We have these warnings. It's up to us.” MAGAZINE REPORT Consumers test products MOUNT VERNON (CP) — In the testing laboratories of Consumer Reports magazine, drama can be found in the most mundane utensils of daily life. David Pittle, the magazine's technical director, was reminded of that when he struggled to cut a chicken with two different knives. Then he picked up a third. “It went shsst, right through the chicken — bones and everything!” he exclaimed. “My mouth just dropped open. It was kind of a religious experience. With equal devotion, testers at the shopworn factory that serves as the magazine's headquarters smudge plates with rice pudding, paint their backs with a checker board of sun lotions and examine how mattresses hold up to repeated “sittings” by a buttock-like contraption made of bowling balls. From such tests, simple truths repeatedly emerge: quality varies greatly even among rudimentary goods; value varies greatly even among products that consistently perform well. The American middle class, with dollars to spend but not to waste, is paying attention. Sales of Consumer Reports hit 3.8 million copies in June, a record for issues other than the always hot-selling annual auto review. NEEDS HELP Consumers need help in a marketplace that offers 1,200 models of electric and gas ranges alone, says executive director Rhoda Karpatkin. “It's a marketplace with the key facts hidden from consumers,” she said. “You're on the receiving end of a barrage of sales tactics that are designed to interfere with rational judgment. “One consequence of our 50 years of providing product information is that we've created a sense of expectation on the part of the consumer and a sense of inquiry.” Each month Canadians buy about 40,000 copies of Consumer Reports and 160,000 copies Fil Canadian Ce a blished by the C ion of Canada. Richard Garlick, spokesman for the Canadian associa- tion, said recent polls suggest a high level of satisfaction among Canadians with the products they buy. He said both magazines have contributed to that. At the offices of Consumer Reports in Mount Vernon, 20 minutes north of New York City, one room recently buzzed with the soundof food processors whirring on and off for 170 hours each to simulate six years of use. TESTS LIQUID In another, tableware was being stained with food with precise uniformity, then left out overnight before being stacked in dishwashers for a test of dishwashing liquids. Consumer Reports prepares a list of 60 product lines it wants to test each year, then has its market analysts select the most popular models and those with new or interesting features. Anonymous shoppers around the United States fan out to buy about 1,500 products at retail prices and send them to Mount Vernon for testing. In the 1936 premiere issue, the magazine criticized the producers of Alka-Seltzer for making inflated claims and reported that cheaper Grade B milk was virtually as good as Grade A. Since then, it has searched out shoddiness, hyperbole and deception in the marketplace. Yet, there is also an avpreciation of progress. “The first year steam irons came out, a couple of them melted,” Pittle said. “Today, a steam iron is a very mature product. In a lot of those mature markets, things have indeed gotten better for the consumer and, after a while, there’s very little to improve.” Similarly, the invention of video cassette recorders and digital audio equipment indicate “a lot of creativity is emerging,” Karpatkin added. LACK QUALITY. are still But safety, and good wor lacking in countless items, new and old, she said. Pe, Avguss9. 1967 | Castlegar News FIRST OF ITS KIND... Castlegar residents Andy and Marianne Cichowski seal their wedding ceremony with akiss Friday afternoon at the Chapel House on Zuckerberg Island. Although all weddings are special, this one was more so since it was the first wedding ever performed on Zuckerberg Island. Castlegar’s Heritage Committee acknowledged the fact by presenting the happy couple with a gift. Photo by Joe Fiet Even when a product approaches perfection, fi turers confound the shopper by adding “whistled and bells” to distinguish their product from the competition and raise the price. When microwave ovens were in their infancy, for example, the magazine revealed high levels of escaping radiation and thereby hastened safety improvements. Now that most microwaves work well, some have taken on dubious features such as automatic on-off timers. Such timers are useful for starting a roast in @ conventional oven when no one’s home, but almost comical in a microwave that cooks food in minutes. Testing equipment at Consumer Reports ranges from a $50,000 machine that analyses heat distribution in frying pans and ovens to a variety of invented devices. Among them is a network of sensors encased in rubber toilet floats and attached to computers which can tell how evenly air-conditioners cool. In a food analysis room, red lights wash out the appearance of food samples to enable employees to concentrate on taste. Testers are trair 1 to look for certain qualities and ignore their own prefercnces. TESTS PRODUCTS Whether the project is house paint or lawn-mowers, the product tests are often more rigorous and exacting than those done by manufacturers, Pittle said. “A lot of them don’t go out and buy all their competitors’ products and then see how they all work. They just fall in love with their own product and think it’s wonderful.” Consumer Reports accepts no advertising and is relentless in trying to stop manufacturers from using any of its findings in ads. Canadian Consumer accept non-product ads from government and other institutions. Both magazines suffer during recessions even though that's when buying decisions are the most critical. As well, they go largely unread by poor consumers — the people most in need of savings. Karpatkin said Consumer Reports is trying to become more relevant to the poor by writing about the issues of poverty. Canadian Consumer plans to pay more attention to the needs of the elderly. Thrums woman dies Polly Hoodicoff of Thrums passed away Thursday, Aug. 6 at the age of 70 years. Funeral service for the late Polly Hoodicoff will be -held at the Castlegar Funeral Chapel beginning Monday, Aug. 10, 1987 at 7 p.m. and continue at 10 a.m. with RATE continued from front page — Trois-Rivieres, Que., 9.0 (11.1) — Montreal, 10.8 (10.2) burial at 1 p.m. at Brilliant Cemetery. Mrs. Hoodicoff was born May 1, 1917 at Ootischenia and grew up there. She mar- ried William Hoodicoff at Thrums in 1946 and has lived there since. She was a member of the USCC and ford Co. by three brothers, Bill Popoff of Houston, Andrew Popoff of Slocan and Mike Popoff of Shoreacres; three daughters, Florence Rebalkin of Perry Siding, Vera Popoff of Cres- cent HANFORD continued from front page houses offices of Westingh was an avid gardener. Mrs. Hoodicoff is survived Soukeroff of Shoreacres; and step sister Mable Babakaieff of Crescent Valley. She was predeceased by her husband, brother John Popoff and step sister Mary Poznikoff. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of the Castlegar Funeral Chapel. Valley and Anne less, a U.S. Department of Energy Kk at Rich “It's increasing layers of security as you get closer and Han. Ucluelet helps whale UCLUELET (CP) — Marine, experts and the townspeople of this idyllic community on the west coast of Vancouver Island are providing a mixed welcome to a stranger swimming far from home. The visitor is a large, black mammal, known as a false killer whale. More at home in sub-tropical waters than in the icy North Pacific, the whale has somehow made its way into the Ucluelet harbor. Longer than three meters and weighing at least 250 kilograms, it was gasping for breath out of its blowhole and struggling in the mudflats when Luke Touchie spotted it more than a week ago from the window of his harborfront home. It wasn't like anything he had ever seen before. “It was about this big around” he said earlier this week, making a large circle with his arms. “It looked like a huge cucumber.” Touchie thought it might be a big porpoisde, but a closer look showed him it was a whale. But it was a whale not native of the B.C. coast. About 15 people braved the thrashings of a powerful tail, a mouth of wicked-looking teeth and the slimy mud of the harbor to aid the whale. “People say he’s small, but they should try wrestling with the thing in the mud,” said Touchie. Federal fisherries officers and marine, biologists eventually determined it was a false killer whale, so named because of a slight similarity to the well-known killer whales that frolic off the West Coast. Finally refloated by Touchie and others, the whale now swims in circles in the harbor. When a whale beaches itself, it always causes a stir and Ucluelet was no different. Tourists pulled out cameras and boaters filled the water. But the excitement petered and the interest of local citizens waned. In a marine-oriented village where businesses are named Moby Dick and Whale’s Tale and sightings of killer and grey whales are commonplace, the arrival of one small tropical visitor “hasn't captured the imagina- tion of people here,” said marine biologist Jim Darling. He likes it that way. He and other B.C. whale experts can now be alone with the whale. They believe its survivial, so far from its usual habitat, is in jeopardy. They plan soon to capture the whale and try to find a new home, perhaps in a Honolulu aquarium which already has a pair of false killer whales in its collection. Crossword New Beginnings . . . Answer in Wednesday's paper 72 Sharp, swin 19 Glut 20 Equilibrium rr 21 One type of 82 Exyptian co. 22 Swan genus 83 Lity plan 23 “Sum English = Check Your Back to School Supply List ~ Check Our Specials in thes Back to Schoo! Sale Flyer in Redeye 's Cas News » You'll Find More Items on Your Back To School fl \ Karl Hager Limb & Brace Ltd. ORTHOTIC & PROSTHETIC — MONTHLY CLINIC — © Foot Supports © Artificial Limbs * Orthopedic Shoes © Sports Injury * Body & Leg Bracing Bracing We Have All The School Lists — Ottawa-Hull, 6.4 (7.0) closer to the facilities. — Sudbury, Ont., 11.5 (10.4) — Oshawa, Ont., 6.8 (6.5) Two of the demonstrators were re- leased but seven more remained in jail after refusing to give their names. The 10 people arrested Thursday had pleas of innocent entered for them Friday by U.S. Magistrate James B. Hovis in Spokane. A bail hearing was set for Tuesday for the five men and five women charged with trespass under the federal Atomic Energy Act. Although they claimed to have “walked right up” to sensitive plu. tonium and uranium processing plants near the middle of the 1,470-square- sensitive,” he said. “They still would kilometre reservation, federal officials have had to get over two more chain said they had a long way to go. link fences with barbed wire on top and “We have an outstanding security an isolation zone in the middle, with system at Hanford,” said Karen Whee- alarms and video cameras.” making a left hand turn into the parking lot of Blue Top Burgers on Columbia Ave Although there were no — Toronto, 4.6 (5.2) injuries, Akselson's vehicle Hamilton, 6.1 (5.0) sustained $300 damage while — St. Catharines-Niagara, Ont., 6.9 Kinakin's vehicle sustained (6.1) $500 — London, Ont., 9.4 (7.9) NEXT CLINIC © = &© Windsor, Ont., 7.6 (9.4) TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, Yost A vandalism incident has — Kitchener-Waterloo, Ont., 4.9 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 been reported by Castlegar Thunder Bay, Ont., 7.6 (9.1) AT KOOTENAY LAKE DISTRIC HOSPITAL RCMP. A window was bro- — Winnipeg, 6.8 (7.7) Nelson, B.C. O/T Department ken at Kinnaird elementary — Regina, 7.8 (5.5) Ath Floor * Room 422 school. Local youths reported — Saskatoon, 11.0 (9.6) to a RCMP member on pat — Calgary, 9.0 (9.1) For appointment or information, call Kelowna rol. No suspects are known — Edmonton, 11.5 (10.4) Collect 861-1833 and an investigation is con — Vancouver, 12.0 (10.5) tinuing — Victoria, 11.4 (9.0 “Just because someone got past a fence designed to keep only animals The — Kid i 7 maT T out, doesn't mean they were anywhere a rey iia near a secure facility,” she said. “It’s definitely not a stroll.” Average solution time 67 minutes Assistant U.S. Attorney Frank Wil COE: son in Spokane said the demonstrators apparently breached two of four security levels between the plutonium production plants and the reservation boundary. “They weren't even close to anything Plus A Whole Lot More Our stoff will be happy to assist youl List on Special at Carl's ~ Save & Buy Good Quality Hilroy, Crayola, Crown Line & Laurentian Products (5.2) ' ri r yyw Tiatay 5 Cryptiagap stor bo rpiats H This Crossword Puzzle SCHNEIDER'S BUILDING SUPPLIES LTD. Wenete Junction TRAIL ed by the following busi _. PAUL’S PLACE LTD. 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