weSiaeg, HENNE S TOURS = 1410 Bay | Ave., Trail AUGUST 24th Camelot SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE SEPTEMBER 8th Harry Belafonte SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE SEPTEMBER 17th Oakridge Boys SPOKANE OPERA HOUSE Se Castlegar News _vgust 14. 1985 HOTEL DAYS” Riverside-Hotel-&-Casino Sundowner Hotel & Casino Riverside Hotel & Casino Sundowner Hotel & Casino Riverside Hotel & Casino Riverside Hotel & Casino Nov. 23 Riverside Hotel & Casino SENIORS DISCOUNT of $10.00 per person (MUST BE 65 OR OLDER) AND DON’T FORGET All your travel needs, * Airlines * Cruises x Package Tours * Hotel & Car Reservations. can be booked through Henne Travel. = ASK US ABOUT OUR NOV. HAWAII 2-WEEK HOLIDAY SPECIAL $749 CAN. PER PERSON INCLUDES AIR FARE, HOTEL & TRANSFERS HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 368-5595 BCAA TRAVEL AGEl oY 556 Baker, Nelson 52-3535 Our Action Ad Phone : Number is 365-2212 iteileg, HENNE = $s = TOURS @ 1410 Bay Ave., Trail ry FRANKLIN COUNTY * Harry Belafonte SEPTEMBER 17th bd Oakridge Boys ( STARTING SEPT. 28 , ASK US ABOUT OUR COMPLIMENTARY $100,000 AIR ACCIDENT INSURANCE WITH EVERY AIRLINE TICKET PURCHASE. _—-—-AND-DONT-FORGET———= All your travel needs * Airlines *- Cruises * Package Tours * Hotel & Car Reservations can be booked through CY Henne Travel. : [ Ji ASK US ABOUT OUR NOV. HAWAII 2-WEEK HOLIDAY SPECIAL $749 CAN. PER PERSON INCLUDES AIR FARE, HOTEL & TRANSFERS! * Opry star always prepared By JOEEDWARDS — NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Grand Ole Opry veteran Stonewall Jackson has - guitars scattered around his house. It's not- that he's messy, it's ‘ just_ that ‘he always wants to be prepared. “When I came to Nashville, I didn’t have a guitar and I got a complex about it. So I fill my house.up with guitars,” he said. For the past 29 years, he's put his guitars to good use, making such country, hits as Don't Be Angry and Water- loo. The 52-year-old baritone has had 20 No. 1 singles and-- 30 others that made the Top 10 of the country charts. He's put together 32 albums. “I've had enough No. 1 records to doa whole show of No. 1 hits,” he said in an interview. “Japan.is about the only place I've never been that has country music. Nobody has asked me there, I guess.” Nor did anyone ask him to leave his south Georgia home in 1956 and come to Nash- ville. However, he did. And he made Grand Ole Opry his- tory- by signing a contract with the famed — country music show without having.a hit record. Jackson had come here with the idea of getting some Opry singers to record one of his songs. But on his first day in Nashville, music publisher Wesley Rose listened to his songs and helped him get.an audition the next day with Opry official George Hay. “I was nervous — right off the street. And I told him so. I stood in a corner and sang like I would for the family,” Jackson said. Later that day, he singed a five-year Opry contract. Twenty-four hours later, he was singing on the Opry stage. “The audience and the band thought it was some kind of gag because I had patches on my khaki pants,” Jackson said. : “I was embarrassed and so scared that my knees were shakin’. It was the hardest thing that ever happened to me, © bi I encored four times.” Jackson’s Opry debut, marked by his performance of Don't Be Angry, came one week after his 24th birthday. ‘BAND ENTERTAINS .. . rock fans crowd the stage at the to catch a bigger earful of music at t! Sunset Drive-In last Saturday he Castle-Rock concert. About 2,400 ‘ans were on hand for the entertainment. CosNews Photo by Doug Horvey Goober has no regrets NASHVILLE, TENN. (AP) — George Lindsey, the jovial Goober of The Andy Griffith Show and now a regular on Hee Haw, figures hé has raised a generation of television viewers without growing up himself. -“There may be more Goober in me than I'm willing to admit,” says Lindsey. “I may be Goober disguised as -George Lindsey. “He and ‘I both missed adulthood. I've never worn a snap-brim felt hat.” Lindsey was on the Griffith show and its successor, May- berry RFD, from 1964 to 1971 and on Hee Haw ever since. “[ve been on TV every week for 21 years,” he says with a big Goober grin. “America has grown up with me. Goober is Everyman; everyone finds something to like about ol’ Goober.” There was a time, though, when Lindsey was sick of Goober — sick of his mother introducing him as Goober and his daughter calling him ENJOY A RELAXING DAY ON KOOTENAY LAKE! Witha RENTAL BOAT From SUNN YSLOPE RESORT Balfour Ph. for reservations 229-4777 Goober Daddy. Even now, it's an unwritten rule on the Hee Haw set that he's always called George and he signs autographs as just _ plain ‘George Lindsey. LOCKED IN Being. identified with one character “can be an alba- tross as far as your career growing,” he says. “You get locked into that charac- ter. Producers. won't hire you for other things. But I wouldn't have done it any other way.” Lindsey, who gives his age only as “ancient,” joined the four-year-old Andy Griffith Show in 1964 as Goober Pyle after Jim Nabors took his Gomer Pyle character to his own show. The Griffith show was popular, Lindsey says, be- cause “it was honest and simple.” “At that time, we were the best acting ensemble on TV. The scripts were terrific. Andy is the best script con- structionist I've ever been involved with. And you have to lift your acting level up. to his; he’s awfully good. ~ “The show's still as popular today as ever and this is its 25th year.” His favorite episode was The Talking Dog, in which Opie and his buddies put a tiny speaker under a dog's collar. “Goober thought he was a talking dog. It revealed Goo- ber's childlike qualities; it made. you laugh and cry.” Lindsey says Griffith has described Goober “as the kind of guy who would go into a restaurant and say, ‘Hey, this is great salt.’ ” Despite 21 years of steady TV work, he yearns to be the star of his own show. Or maybe land a juicy dramatic role in a movie. “There's a role out there for me that I can win an Aca demy award for, maybe about a retarded person or a pathos role,” he said. “I dream about that and what I would say in my acceptance speech.” SHOT DILLON He does have movie exper ience, having appeared in Cannonball Run II and Take This Job and Shove It. His voice was used in three ani mated Walt Disney features: The Aristocats, The Res cuers and Robin Hood. Early in his career, he often was a heavy and once shot Matt Dillon on Gun - smoke,, - A resident of Los Angeles, Lindsey makes about 200 personal appearances a year. He says he's visited 166 truck stops since 1984 and can sign 800 pictures an hour “if you don't look up.” In his current nightclub act, there's nothing too off- color, just some double en- tendres about fruit jar rub- bers and being gelded. He ends the show by tap- and break-dancing. TRLEASE KOTE: wow SHOWING! CRACKLES. Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 170 Guests Must Be SIGNED In ‘CABARET Friday & Saturday Dancing 9:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. OPEN AT 12 NOON SIX DAYS A WEEK. Proper Dress Fri. & Sat. after 9 p.m. Playing Fri. & Sat. “ASPHALT CANYON” BOOK ANALYZES KIDNAPPING By ROD CURRIE ‘The Canadian Press Minutes after police arrested Richard Hauptmann for questioning in the 1932 Lindbergh kidnapping, one officer told him: “You're going to burn, baby.” Hauptmann thought he'd been picked up for speeding. That night, crowds outside the police station cried, “Crucify him, crucify him.” The next day some newspapers rushed to convict him before he was even charged, with headlines screaming: Lindbergh Kidnapper Jailed. Aviator Charles Lindbergh was a public idol of the era, the man who had. etched his name in history. by making the first solo flight across the Atlantic in the flimsy Spirit of St. Louis. The kidnapping and murder of Lindbergh's golden-haired, blue-eyed baby son Charlie shook the world. WANTED REVENGE Police, press and the public wanted revenge. And three years after the crime, the man on the spot in “the trial of the century” .was Hauptmann, an_ illegal immigrant. British author Ludovic Kennedy has pieced together the story of Lindbergh and Hauptmann in The, Airman and The Carpenter, telling how they were tragically brought together by young Charlie's kidnapping and how, Kennedy believes, Hauptmann was framed. é Hauptmann’s trouble was that he had a fatal trust in the American justice system. He was far too co-operative with police for his own good, even voluntarily copying the handwriting in ransom notes. Handwriting experts who at first dismissed the idea Hauptmann had written the original notes later mysteriously changed their testimony. Police. and prosecutors were too keen to nail Hauptmann and they worked on the theory that if they could convince witnesses of his guilt then it would be all right for them to alter or bend their testimony to ensure his conviction. OFFERED $90,000 Almost four yéars after the crime, when the torturous round of appeals and reprieves had been exhausted, Hauptmann went to the electri€ Chair in New Jersey. He declared his innocence to the end, frustrating hopes by authorities of a last-minute confession that would vindicate them. ‘A newspaper even offered to pay his widow $90,000 if he would give it a full, confidential confession to the crime described as the “biggest. story since the resurrection.” Kennedy, well known for his earlier writings on miscarriages of justice, was in New York on a television assignment when he happened to see Hauptmann's widow, Anna, now in her 80s, declaring his innocence in a w. He said he was struck by her sincerity. The Airman and The Carpenter is a moving and deeply distressing book, covering not only the trial but the backgrounds of the two principals, their wives and — Calendar families. i) August 14,1985 A7 NT LONDON (REUTER) .—. Making money by making money is the aim of two British-based firms that are the world’s leading suppliers -of printed currency. ~ Central bankers around ‘the world are ‘courted by salesmen from’ De La Rue and ‘the . American-owned Bradbury Wilkinson, each with more than 100 years’ ‘experience. making cash and foiling counterfeiters. ‘The companies offer advice on the denominational struc- ture of currencies as diverse as Gambian dalasis and Van- uatuan vatus. Their experts design colorful engravings of potentates and presidents, flora and folklore. ‘Though a business with a licence to print money miglit sound ideal, it is not without risk. Both firms had to streamline in the early 1980s when many client govern- ments, hit by debt problems,~ lack of foreign exchange and recession, tried to make do with worn out and often filthy cash for as long as pos- sible. “A lot of Third. World countries with whom we deal got to the point where they were handing around dirty confetti as banknotes,” said Clive Bradly, deputy chair- man of Bradbury Wilkinson. “Countries have now start- Political instability can be another problem.-De La Rue refused to discuss specific clients, but financial analysts say the company did not re- ceive payment for banknotes printed for South Vietnam before the fall of Saigon. Michael O'Neill of brokers Hoare Govett said De La Rue also had a scare some three years ago when an African country, which he thinks was Ghana after its 1981 coup, appeared to renege on a debt of nine million sterling (now $11.3 million. U.S.) before eventually coughing up. On the other hand, said . analyst Michael Whittles of brokers L. Messel: “The fact is they do like revolutions.” “After Iran's Islamic revol- ution, De La Rue had a finan- cial coup of its own when it was asked to replace notes bearing the face of the Shah with ones depicting a fervent mullah-led crowd. Inflation would appear to work in the companies’ favor. In Bolivia, a Bradbury Wil- kinson client with inflation running at 8,200 per cent, porters stagger through the streets with sacks of notes on their backs. But Bradbury Wilkinson denies there is an increase in demand from countries: rid- den with hyperinflation. De La Rue says such countries __“demonetize” by knocking a few zeros off a note when in- flation gets too high. PROFITS RISE All the same, De La Rue recently reported a 50-per- cent rise in pre-tax profits for security printing in 1984, and analysts say it has consoli- dated its dominant market position. International Banknote, which does not provide fig- ures for its subsidiary, post- ed a loss of $8.5' million on + f i Whether Hauptmann was framed is still debated but Kennedy makes clear that he did not have a fair trial. He has documented proof that witnesses Feta ; ; were i — SPECIAL — MATINEES S470 — SUNDAY SSD Sobnane Weisbrich during August. d at the ... The N.E. C. is presenting o watercolor exhibit by Les =,» + Castleger’s Brion O'Hara's watercolor exhibit are She Council. an 0. during August. This is sponsored by the Castlegar Arts . . . The Open Learning Institute is offering a new on the oup ppe Art in Canada, at the N.E.C., 365- work. feginning Sept. 10. Call to find out more 3337. Items: for-this bi-monthly feature should-be telephoned to Lynda Carter of the Castlegar d._ that evidl on 's_ behalf disappeared —‘such as the records showing he worked in New York until 5 p.m. on the stormy night Charlie was kidnapped in New Jersey — and that evidence was -eemanulactured scream The Airman and The Carpenter by Ludovic Kennedy, Published by Collins; 438 pages; $22.95. Special August 12-18 SPENCER STEAK $109 million__in J 1984. But Bradbury Wilkin- son says better management and marketing will return it to profit this year. De La Rue, which like Bradbury Wilkinson also prints traveller's cheques and documents, announced ~pre-taxprofits for security ‘printing of $42 milliorrfor-the..J year to March 31, 1984, against $28.6 for 1983. Sec- urity printing sales in 1984 totalled $283 milljon. The Company (Represent |. Out of Five Persons Previously frozen $63% Kg : Sliced. 1 Litre Bottle 2kg Whole. Head-on. $35) feo. $439 1g 2.2... 1b. Pork, Baby Back Ribs_ $998 Fresh Half Pork Loins $199 California Town House Catsup | Sifto Pickling Salt Pink Salmon $159! Watermelon : / 33g be T 5¢ > $999 $18 kg... SERVES YOU QUALITY SAVES YOU MONEY Wylers “Drink Crystals Assorted 6829 Tim ccc ee cee eee ee Good Host Iced Tea Mix 750g Tin 2... eee eee eee eee California ' Honeydew Melons ow ADS B.C. Grown Peaches Red Haven 45*¢ L ] 97 | Sourdough Buns fF San Francisco - Sourdough Bread $989 2°" Box s eee 4 Litre Bottle oo Town House Vinegar a 9 289 For more savings see Flyer in last Sunday's paper. 6579. $475 Apple Crumb Pie $ 2 75 Caesar’ Ss Coolers = Assorted . ee : - : Flavors. $ 1 © 355 mL PLUS Tims .....---- DEPOSIT Southern Sun Orange Juice Sweetened or $ 9 9 o Unsweetened. 1.82 Litre Bottle .. ‘ Taste Tells Kidney Beans 719 398 mL Tim... eee eee eee Generic lice Cream Cones $ y 1 29 Freezer Bags Box of - Small, Medium, a Or Large. ....-------+-- Regular or Diet. 750 mL PLUS DEPOSIT HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave., Trail 368-5595 - WEST'S TRAVEL 1217-3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 WITH PEPPERCORN SAUCE * Soup or salad * Potato or pasta Sponsored by * Vegetable garni * Garlic Bread cs CASTLEGAR SAVINGSTH |] wm 9195 sere CREDIT UNION Reservations phone y, TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN Prices effective through Saturday, Aug. 17 in your friendly, courteous Castlegar Safeway store. Mon. to Wed. and Saturday Thursday and Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. We reserve the right fo limit sales to retail quantities. . Prices effective while stock lasts. Arts Council at 365-3226. Pa in Conodo. YouGeta Sense of Security When You De bouness With A Leader! KEN F. BABAKAIFF (Soles Representative) CALL 359-7495 Metro} Insurance 1. Matropoliton Really Stonds By You!