3 A ERR : 4 i with Sa 4 —_ 4s i : 499 : tea . : =r ¥ : From Per Porton yh § Poeneitite cir kom f__ LONDON (AP) — Graham ag yor ny ¥ j Toronto, 7 Nights 96 Greene says many bo | * 3 eae: Fae tronaters | books have been turned ae 4 107 46 om ; cirport - hotel. “very bad filins” — oven by 7 w F W908 at Verigin, Sask. and Seattle, Wash. (14 nights packogee ive great directors. ¥ : = q oe eaine to B.C. in 1912, settling She was trom $689) ‘The 79-year-old. Greene a. 30 .)2 ' ‘at Ootischenia, then lived for one son and one sister, Gloria For more information call © 8 Fall evening classes Hogg’s television film of Dr. Frits Lang, whe once came [i ~ a 3 Moxvepsourn §=122,:« 772298. rail Hoape Ex eee 8 1, Boo yao 3 away Sept. 7, age 65. She was Sparwood. k * Personal, professional instruction Fischer of Geneva, with Alan up to Greene in a Los joc: sustory : : 4}. Burton 8 7% «10—«9F. Trail East 8%. 2% 2. Nelson 26 1% 30 born July 5, 1919 at Michel, Mrs. DeAnna was pre- ‘ il Bates and in his last TV Angeles bar to for L HISTORY .. . Fire hydrant (left) is not justan —_ leather fire bucket from Barkerville, (right) are part of 22. -Sguquier 53. 41 4 —«(100. Trail Eost r) 7 3. Castlegar 1% «193 18 B.C. and grew up tlere. deceased by her husband in * Create fresh & silk arrangements a nce, the late James his 1943 scren version of °Yerydey hydrant. It's a 1903 nt used at nani exhibit on B.C.'s firefighting history on now at the ac 8,128 19101. Kiro Manor 7. 2 2 4. Nahuep "9 38 Shei married Ainetio De 1978. i i i ppeara b Robson Tr rail . (Including ppc ont Christmas Mason. Ministry of Fear. on display a ational Exhibition Centre. Itand the NEC. Cashews Photos 45. Gentre hoeon 3 % tea esol 3 or 81 z Wertield 2 “ 3 Anna on Mary 4, 1946, moved _ Prayers will be recited at 7 6. saya 104, Trail Eost %= ) 7s Rowe to Castlegar in 1965 and lived p.m. Monday at St. Rita's i b, ith Re 8. Mon o 2 7 : | © Beginners and Advanced Classes Speers 1 § I Cah Niewhodon 2st Pruttvole special 137, 107 26 here until her death. Catholic Church with mass of = For anare: lebotmatien| ef. register Writ r S a S 2. Gaver ay 1 3 1G. Glenmenry 3 Returning Ottice 247 267-35 Mr. ne was bho Christian burial to be cele- REGIONAL DIS TRICT OF CENTRAL KOOTENAY call 365-5' or in ot 2 3 Clot sonenerty ber of St. Rita's tholic brated at 10 a.m. Tuesday at 1125 - ath St.., r Cos re | Ss a oc tT oO r y St. Shoreocres 28-9 1109, Glenmerry 134 SF eGEND: 8 — Brisco: K—Kristionsen: 1 || Chureh, the Catholic Wo- 8t. Rita's with Father Her- THIS WILL S ERVE AS PUBLIC NOTICE that the —¢—__—_—_— . 52. Qotischenio 77191 «9 111. Rossland 150 83S — Turnbull men's League, Legion Aux- man celebrant. Beore oS aes or a Gylow to be k Seoret a | i aria : ootenay wi nown ‘s ‘ 7 V I S b | a n d iary, National Slovak Bo: B will be i Park Meme the “Regional Ciistrict of Central Kootenay, Elec- | LOS ANGELES*(CP)'—'Boy, that Bill Cosby sure carried in 1976, the same year Cosby earned a PhD for ciety and also enjoyed sew- orial Cemetery. In lieu of jorai avea ‘J’, Zoning Bylaw No. 422, 1984", ¢s has wild ideas about making a TV series. He wants — now his thesis on the educational use of TV. ing. flowers, donations may be 9 being a bylaw to regulate the location and use of get this — to portray a happily married man with four “He decided to get back into a series because “I have LONDON (AP) — British writer Johnny Speight says IN FEDERAL ELECTION She is survived by one son, ‘made to the Castlegar and eer — well-behaved children. B.C. REGISTERED MUSIC TEACHERS ASSOCIATION TRAIL BRANCH In order to ensure quality instruction, this the policy that music taken from registered music teachers (B.C.R.M.T.). Student teachers, at least Grode X level of the Royal Conservatory of Music or equivalent may give lessons only under the supervision of a registered music teacher. Registered music teachers in Castlegar area ore as follows: , Thank You Bob Brisco and campaign manager Jack Chernoff wish to thank all the supporters who contributed so much. That's it. Na, boardroom fights over oil wells or squabbles about this month's alimony payment; no five-year-olds doing a Vegas standup routine. Why, in the pilot episode, there wasn't even a deceent car chase. Instead, the half-hour comedy looks at mom and dad coping with life's everyday hassles, like trying to get a five-year-old to hurry up when you're late for an appointment. Or explaining to your 15-year-old son, who wants to quit sehool, that no, you can't really live very well on a $200-a-week job. Granted, most dads don't have Cosby's repertoire of one-liners. Still, the 47-year-old commedian says the key to the series is familiarity: “People watching it should be able to say, ‘Hey, that’s just like in our house.” PLAYS DOCTOR §*" A Cosby plays Cliff Brown, a man who is 4 little bit like Dagwood Bum stead — “he's always in search of the perfect nap.” Brown is an obstetrician married to a legal-aid lawyer (portrayed by Phylicia Ayers-Allen, who bears a strong resembjance to her sister Debbie Allen of TV's Fame). The couple lives with their four children — ranging in age from four to 16 years — above Cliff's office in a New York brownstone. A fifth child is away at college but might turn up on the doorstep one day. Cosby offers, unprompted: “This is a black American family and if you have a problem seeing a doctor and a lawyer in the same family, that's not our problem. That's a wherever-you-grew-up-and-were-told problem.” The NBC series is appropriately named The Bill Cosby Show, since the actor is centre stage throughout — and despite his protest that he is just an actor, nothing more, the show is a forum for Cosby to deliver mono logues from his hit records and nightelub act. The characters are clearly drawn from Cosby's own 20-year marriage and experience as the father of five — subjects he has milked for years. His last TV series was the children's show Cos, something to say and I'm just a little tired of what I see on TV. “If I see one more car go sideways for two blocks and then a man drop on his knees and pull out a .367 Magnum while a hooker walks by with a black pimp and then the end of the story comes. . . “We have about six TV sets in our house and I figured it's lees expensive for me to go ahead and do a series than to throw them all out.”’ Cosby has some pretty definite ideas about what he wants on his show. He won't stand for “somebody pulling down their pants and somebody else mugging and saying ‘Oh, my gawd, Oh my gawd’ for half an hour. We don't want the one-joke character, the dumb blonde or the klutz.” (Why do you get the impression he's:referring to Three's Company? ‘Ant since we're on the tople why Git’ the CBC, a public broadcaster, pick up Three's Compahy and its successor, the insipid Three's a Crowd, instead of a show like Cosby's that at least aims a little higher?). WANTS RESPECT ‘ Nor does Cosby want his TV brood to be the wise- cracking, eye-rolling “kids you see all the time on TV.” He demands respect from his own children and expects no less from his TV family. (He showed just what he means during a news if 5 ded by the young in the show. When a question was asked of Keshia Knight Pulliam, the five-year-old who plays the youngest daughter, she gave a cutesy answer in baby talk. Cosby shot her one of those unmistakable parent looks, calmly asked her “Why are you talking like that?” and she soon found her voice.) Cosby also says he's not interested in portraying parents who are never wrong, always wise; he's not doing an update of Father Knows Best. In the pilot, for example, Cliff acts a bit like a jerk — he threatens his son with what he'll to if the boy doesn't improve at school, and embarrasses his daughter in front of her boyfriend. today’s television is bland. As the creator of the outrageous character that became Archie Bunker across the Atlantic, Speight speaks with authority about what touches nerves and what doesn't. Those famous slurs against blacks, homesexuals and long-haired youth that became the stock-in-trade of actor Carroll O’Connor’s Archie Bunker have their origin in Speight’s British creation, Alf Garnett, the candidly bigoted boozer of the British Broadcasting Corp. series Till Death Us Do Party. American producer Norman Lear bought the idea for Archie Bunker from Speight, whose Garnett was called “Britain's most popular export since Scotch whisky” by a newspaper in 1974. “What Alf did and what I tried to do was bring politics, religion and philosphy down to the street level where the Average person understands it,” Speight said through puffs on his cigar Till Death Us Do Part ended a 10-year run in 1976, with the exception of a five-month reprise in 1961. It remains the highest-rated show in British television history — just as Alf has remained a part of his creator. “They'd have to put me down under before I retire Alf,’ said Speight of the series that starred Warren Mitchell as the lout Alt, and East Londoner living with Elsa, his “silly old moo” of a wife, and Rita and Mike, his daughter and son-in-law. Despite an average audience of 18 million viewers a week, the BBC has hesitated to air reruns of the show, a decision that angers Speight. Artisan’s alliance holds meeting The Kootenay Boundary Artisans's Alliance exhibit Exhibition Centre at p-m. Friday 7:30 Win 5 EXPRESS sicsc:: Is Your Name in OPEN MONDAYS LOOK NOW! LUNCH IN THE 1884 RESTAURANT 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. “SREAKFAST (Monto et) String o 6m BREAKF, \ 5 a.m. LUNCHEON SPECIAL 83. ; Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, 11 «.m. - 2 p.m. Nels \ah/ \he the new pet) TI See hotel Add fel | Liliiiitipis 4 trail bc. Rosert’'s Restaurant On Highway 6, Winlew FULLY LICENSED Phone 226-7718 tor Reservations 7 og met Aug. 29 at Carol Ladas-Gaskin’s home in Winlaw to conclude business for A Show of Hands, the ‘KBAA's first major exhibit which was shown in Castle- gar and Grand Forks this summer. As well, ideas for the group's next show to be created for 1966 were dis on the CABC meeting she cussed. A new exhibit commi-. attended in Vancouver Sept. ttee will bé drawn up at the 5. 3 next KBAA meeting, Visitors and new members to be held at the National The September general meeting will feature a slide presentation of A Show of Hands and an earlier show Kootenay Crafts 81; a report of the Craftsmen’s Associa tion of B.C. annual general meeting held in Nelson last May, and a report by regional director Carol Ladas-Gaskin are. welcome to attend. mateer 1s VISA S —¥ _—_— Jefferson Jtouse MOTOR /N/A/ CELEBRATING OUR /Oth YEAR OF SERVICE TO THE INLAND EMPIRE DOWNTOWN, A! ot ey — 4 QUIET DOWNTOWN LOCATION § 7) 10 MINUTES TO AIRPORT > Sane IRPORT, HOSPITALS W 1203 STM SPOKANE, WA 99204 ~ LAUNDRY SERVICE COURTESY FREE VAN SERVICE - COMPLIMENTARY NENTAL - AIR CONDITIONING * SUITES AVAILABLE BS 624-4142 PEI has best turnout OTTAWA (CP) — The smallest province displayed the most enthusiasm during the Sept. 4 election where 85.2 per cent of eligible vo ters in Prince Edward Island hit the polls, a preliminary survey by the federal elec- toral office indicates. Saskatchewan won second prite With 84.6 per cent of the electorate voting and British Columbia, where Prime Min- ister John Turner success- fully contested a seat, was third with 79.8 per cent, Christine Jackson said, a spokesman for the chief elec. toral officer. ‘The provinces that demon- strated the least interest in the 38rd general election were Newfoundland with 65.9 per cent turnout, Al- berta with 66.1 per cent and Manitoba with 72.9 per cent. The survey, which looked at 241 of the 282 federal ridings, shows 76 per cent of the 16.6 million voters regis- tered across the country cast ballots, about the same per- centage as in 1979 and higher than in 1960 when only 69 per cent voted. About 78 per cent of elei- gible voters in both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia: yent to the polls, 76 per cent of eligible voters in both New Brunswick and Nova Scotia went to the polls, 76 per cent in Ontario and 74 per cent in Quebec, where prime minister-designate Brian Mulroney won the Manicouagan riding. Voter turnout in Toronto was about 76.1 per cent, slightly more than in Mon- treal where 74.2 per cent of voters marked their ballots. The preliminary statistics are similar to those from the Births & Funerals emRTHS BEAUREGARD — To Mr. ond Mrs. Pierre Beauregard of Winlaw, a girl, born Aug. 19. FARRELL — To Mr. ond Mrs. Pot Farrell of Fruitvale, o girl, born Aug. 2) GRAYSON — To Mr. and Mrs Robert Grayson of Fruitvale, o girl born Aug. 20. McCARTHY — To Mr. and Mrs Wayne McCorthy of Costiegor, a fol boy, born Sep!. 5. SPOONER — To Mr. and Mrs Mex Spooner, o girl, born Aug 19. DEATHS BABAKAIFF — Som Babokoitt of Castlegor possed away Sept. | ct the O67 Funeral services Cemetery. STEELE — Karan Patricio Steele eday with her fomity morried Phillip W. Steele in 1965. — Shoron Strobel, 35, oe operator for T for a few years moved to Trail in 1970. Funeral distance phon: Seskatchewon She Jim Hillson officiating. Interment lowed at Mountain View Cemetery past 20 years, Jackson said. The largest voter turnout this century was in 1968, 1962 and 1963 when 79 per cent of the electorate visited the polls. The 1968 vote, which saw the Conservatives capture 208 of the 265 Commons seats, was similar to this year’s when, the Tories won 211 of the 282 seats. The smallest voter turnout was in 1925 when only 66 per cent of the eligible voters elected a minority Liberal government under William Lyon Mackenzie King. However, further complete figures on voting results are still not available and will continue to trickle into the expected before Sept. 17. valley landscape nursery ByUsly ByS Over 75 Varieties in Stock! SPECIAL Red, white pink & yellow While stock lasts! No. 1 TULIPS 25% 365-2262 Castlegar — Beside Mohawk Open Fri. — Mon. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Watch for our GRAND OPENING ot our new location Sat., Sept. 15 See our od In CasNews of Wednesday, Sept. 12 RUMFORD PLACE 735 Columbia, Castiegar 3 ° 693-2373 Ray of Cranbrook; one daughter, Mary Anne Am- brosone of Revelstoke; two grandchildren; mother, Mary Freestone Our Finest Variety PEACHES canning fameeteew 39 lb District Hospital. Funeral arrangement under the di ion of the buildings and structures and the usé of tand in- cluding the surface of water within Electoral Area ‘J’ of thre Regional District of Central K as di Castlegar Funeral Chapel. PEARS Bartlett APPLES 20 Lb Box. CORN 5 Doz. Minimum... GARLIC ONIONS ONIONS Pickling. .. 20 Lb Box..........- TOMATOES UNE M PR PLUM: 9 Ib Macs & Summer Red NECTARINES Okanagan 20 Lb Box.........-- ‘Grand Forks Super Sweet jNo DLereeS:....-- ‘POTATOES No. 1 Red or White 501b...7.90 No. 1 Grand Forks 50 Lb.. 1.75do 1.79 Ib 9.50 on Sheets 1 to 43 of Schedule ‘A’ «ot Bylaw No. 422, 1984, incor- porated in and forming part of this bylaw and for that purpose t> divide said area into zones pur- suant to the provisions of the Municipal Act. Bylaw No. 422, 1964, wos regard to the promotion venience, and welfare of the public ond preven- tion of overcrowding of lend, and preservation of the amenities peculiar to omy zone, the access, the having due health, safety, con- of edequate light, air the land ond securin: value nature of its present éhorac- property values. NOTICE Copies of the proposed Bylaw may be inspected at the office The Regional District of Central 601 Vernon Street, Nelsen B.C. between the hours of 8:30 @.m, to 12:00 noon and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. dolly except Sotur- days and holidays, from the date of this notice to the 17th day of September, 1984. The proposed Bylaw will also be available for viewing at the Cas’ and District Community Complex at 2101 -6th Avenue, Castlegar, B.C. in the Conf Room on b from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. And take notice that the Regional District of Cen- tral Kootenay will hold o PUBLIC HEARING thereon at: PLACE: DATE: TWAE: at which time ond place all persons who deem i¢ affected by the Dated at Nelson, 8.C. this 4th day of September, 1984. 8. BALDIGARA, SECRETARY REGIONAL DISTRICT OF CENTRAL KOOTENAY