by a a “7 Gee aa bs 1 I ikl cds Vcky GOES S140! Woks fw eaigbldne sales, he said. “He is trying to make the excuse that we (stopped —_Castlegar-Trail area. j 4 = the magazine supply) because to sell girlie PP 7" SsS—— we are trying girl ihe selva tssre eesnivings Ms sor vinn ON Sa wie . 2 about pornographic magazines, he said. Sel Franks said the stipulation of having to sell $150 roi pega i Coca Man ae OS OT en eee ee d him to relay slmil When these tacted by the Castlegar stores were cont He thinks other stores in Castlegar supplied by . rhe , ae Conacher News “are not under the assumption that they News the managers dee bal oe GROUND BEEF=:... 10. would have to sell $150 worth of magazines a week.” After making a telephone call to Conacher to complain about the magazines, Franks said he was Albert Calderbank, who runs Caldset Groceteria Ltd. in Castlegar, says he receives magazines twice weekly from Conacher News, and has ‘been dealing with P ; C N 1 C ce oes ad 89° accused of “being a censor” and “a poor businessperson.” them for over a decade. The pornographic magazines — which include Eros “I don’t have any (magazines) foisted on me that I Sexy Stars, Penthouse, Playboy, Hustler, Swank, Best of don't want,” said Calderbank. Eros, Club, Fling, Playgirl Cheeks and Buns, and 42 other “The ones we don't like, we send back.” titles — were “an embarrassment,” said Franks. Calderbank said his store just sells “a few” He said the customers that come to the Roadside magazines like Playboy and Penthouse. Place include “housewives, teachers and school children” He said Conacher has never specifically mentioned who aren't interested in the pornographic material. that at least $150 worth of magazines would have to be “This is a hell of a thing in this day and age. You hear _—-0ld for his delivery serviee to continue. so much about pornography, but this type of practice is But Caldset sells over $150 worth a week anyway, apparently happening.” Calderbank added. PORK LOINS#223:222". 0,91” OR ROASTS. SAVE $1.98 Kg. ...kg. Ib. CANADA GRADE A. 5g CHUCK STEAK #2"" 3.51 RO AST CROSS RIB BONELESS. GRADE A BEEF. SAVE $2.29 Kg. ......- FIRM REJECTS TERMS ae << "ics bi fp aM on SL | IES ST SALAM suceo. iad: “ah? 1 99 BACON SLICED. $ 2 49 SAVE 33:/100G............. SAVE $1.10 Pkg. 500 Gr. ...........-.---+ +++ SAUSAG E STIC KS crerascn 9 1 a9 FLAKED LIGHT TUNA QQ° | MUSTARD 98° BYE THE SEA. 6.5 OxTIN........--.-- FRENCH’'S PREPARED. 500 mi. ........ CRUSTY BUNS T BREAD BRAN MUFFINS continued trom front poge Williamson said Blackline would’ In this way, the level of the site may | the’ site and make it into asphalt, the operate the plant for five days in late be lowered enough to start work on the city would save $70,000 to $80,000. April and early. May. works yard buildings, Skillings said. Skillings said Williamson met with Skillings added that he has contacted = “Maybe our problem isn't as horren- his accountant and determined “the Richie Geronazzo, who plans to move dous as it would first appear,” said cost of removal and stockpiling the "to the works yard site to crush Mayor Audrey Moore. material. makes it not economically *TAvel for the city’s own use. Moore. said in an interview the feasible to crash 20,000 tonnes fromthe Skillings initially said removal of the “optimum way” would have been to site.” gravel necessary to start work on the crush the gravel and make asphalt He said Williamson is prepared to _ buildings “is highly unlikely this year.” right away, but that wasn't viable. operate the asphalt plant for the five However, he added that Geronazzo _— She indicated the city may ask the GIANT ORCHID . . . Safeway florist Joanne Scott 100 blooms, and it ‘ehaat seven years for its first shows off one of two huge orchids which recently flower to bloom. « arrived at the Castlegar store. This orchid contains days and remove the 6,000 tonnes of had agreed to remove as much gravel Ministry of Highways to use Highways ; WHITE OR WHOLEWHEAT $129 gravel still owed him under last year's as possible from the site and stockpile property bordering the works yard site And that, folks, is a lesson in how to make the news voz. 99 5 $949 contract. it on city property. for gravel storage. in major centres. No wonder we don't see anything but 16 oz. LOAVES for r ee a confrontations on BCTV. PACIFIC EVAPORATED SUNRYPE PAMPERS CASTLEGAR Taxi will be under new management M ILK DI APERS AIRPORT EXPANSION CJAT newscaster Joan Hillson is turning in her effective April 14 Gary St. Thomas is the new owner. H. JUICES © | = sere mere Se ae ns cece wasn ¢ == 51/22. 5939 PICKETS DOWN . . . Bob Brommeland, second vice- _mill, following union's decision to return to work. her athe el the: Teall vaio eeatian ana Bi hel te DO YOU know an outstanding farmer? Then the éi ac cronge, tm ABSORBENT 4o, oo re vo | ces co n ce r ale lent of Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Labor Relation Board imposed back-to-work order - dh Abbotsford Jaycees wants to hear from you. | BOUIN HOOD ALLPURPOSE 1 BLACK DIAMOND PROCESS] DE LAUNDAY 7 Cana ja Local 1 removes pickets from Celgar pulp Monday. ~ Ceshews Photo by Chery! Colderbank staying around home more now. The Jaycees are searching for the outstanding young POS! BLACK DI. IND WHAT A difference an Oscar makes — or in the case farmer for B.C. The search will end July 7 when a winner of Terms of Endearment, five Oscars. The movie cleaned will be selected. The winner will take part in the national up in the major Academy Award categories and the competition in Calgary in late October. result was immediate at the Castle Theatre where ‘The contest is in its fifth year and if you are parking spaces were at a premium Tuesday night. The interested in more information, call in at the Castlegar film continues there until Friday. News. FLOUR CHEESE SLICES DETERGENT 10 kg. FOR $498 yom $319 , 6... $469 By CasNews Staff She noted that the final However, Moore counter- need to be revamped since Mayor Audrey Moore design won't be completed ed that the airport advisory the expansion will also affect Tuesday voicecd concern that until next year, with con- committee thought the same it. the Castlegar Airport ter- struction next scheduled to thing of the present facility MacBain said the new ter- minal building expansion finish in 1987 — three years and it was obsolete the day it minal building will be slightly Pulp mills start up presently on the drawing down the road. opened. more than double the size of By GARY KINGSTON ‘The walkout followed the suspension of two workers UNDER THE stranger than truth category is the : - WE WILL DOUBLE YOUR COUPON VALUE ON MANUFACTURER'S board will be nearly obsolete = “S. ‘1 only have two = Transport Canada’s tit th t building. > 4 following. At the recent DTUC demonstration in Nelson A STREET TALK item of several weeks ago said by ,the time_it opens a panee Tefore the new build. table forthe expansian.calla oye beutee — ite Silko tag: pestuNages a! Br own ei isha ac ; mere pa pede! — kegs sdjus nbssipped to protest the removal of the DTUC library collection Parta Industries in Grand Forks is in receivership, but COUPONS WHEN APPLIED TO THE RSE OF PRODUCT. ' from the campus, protest organizer Rev. Bob Morris told still operating. That is no longer the case. the crowd that he had hoped BCTV would air film of the Parta — saddled with a $10 million debt — has closed demonstration shot by the local cable TV crew. its doors. A spokesman for the receiver said the working However, Morris said the network later indicated it capital could not be raised to make Parta viable. the nin drawings. es pre series at ies aa nd protipinery dovign ak located at the north end of». first. time in nearly 10 weeks as British Columbia pulp and operators of the boiler has been simmering for more than spirport expansior PAR, MOORS a, pati ey 'y SeP- the building, adjacent to the S ‘paper mills resumed operations Tuesday. a year. unveiled at the regional Ald. Bob MacBain, who at- tember. The Federal Treas’ pe esent weather office. How- The pungent smell of bleached pulp that signals the Labor Relations Board officials later negotiated a couneil meeting. tended a recent airport ad- ury Board must then approve 4... that wall will be an out- = economic lifeblood of forestry-dependent towns will drift return to work in meetings with the union and companies. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIALS, 6 P. TOMATOES q 9 ¢ TANG CRYSTALS CHEDDAR CHEESE Stewed, Cmusten” D590 ot wedivinecseinrernmeete Moore said she is con- visory committee meeting the design before working |; peleain ' "i would not be interested in the footage unless an angry Offers to purchase Parta will be accepted by the ONG GR Al TA 3) > Il, MacBai id. through the air today and will be wek lief for th B e P cerned that the proposed with Transport Canada, de- drawings can be manila: aon jacBain me be pertain rs A Deri Albert Rooel mivee pr REJECT CONTRACT clash took place between —— and college offi- Tpeoiver, Panmey ou fe oat April 20. The closure L an. 907°C, N R E $ 09 aoe $429 we 678 jy, $979 date Dak ie the next five : graeme "the Rags eeiinipighy iat: enact the. existing — Miver end others. Pics 7,200-member — Paperworkers Union cials attempting to move the books. employees ou z SUNSPUN. 907 Gr. .........------- oe it si gin next summer a , , “We'll probably start smelling them later in the nd the 5,500-member Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of CHEERIOS CATELLI SPAGHETT years. area for the next 10 years. earliest. Local officials had holding lounge and bags will = . 4» Prinee George businessman said of the town's Canada are still without a-contract after bargainers on $ 39 1 $] 19 hoped to start work this year travel from the airerafttothe 2 three mills. “But I don't think anybody will mind.” on the expansion. ; handling area on a conveyor The province's 12,700 pulp and paper workers The contract will be put to a membership vote later However, MacBain said belt. obeyed a labor board order Monday which required an this month — a move that leaves government imposition the expansion is “complex” The ticket counters and = inmediate return to work. of a contract, an option provided in the legislation, up in because it involves moving holding lounge will be located In‘Prince George, however, about 700 members of _ the air. With the government's primary objective — a . Longtime Introducing : resident | == Semel the pumphouse and the re- .at the south end of the build- 2 pulp, Paper and Woodworkers walked out only a few return to work — now in place, Labor Minister Bob fueling station. ing so that passengers will 2 hours after operations had resumed at Prince George McClelland said Tuesday the vote might have some effect a * a . He said the refueling sta- come in one door and exit 2 pylp and Paper and Intercontinental Pulp and Paper. on what action he will take. d les Monday rejected the industry's final offer. BREAKFAST CEREAL. 300 G. .......- OR READY CUT MACARONI. eee CORN FLAKES $189 TOMATO PASTE 2 89 KELLOGG'S. 657 Gr. .. CATELLI. 5’ OZ. 156 ML TINS . . $379| SPAGHETTI SAUCE $109 valley landscape nursery McLellan Supply Ltd. For All Your me FENCING NEEDS All Types of Metal SALADA. PKG OF 120..........---- RAGU. 4 FLAVORS. 14 Fil. Oz. JAR... 5 ° and Plastic Coated Woven Chain Link. iam) . INDUSTRIES LTD. WINLAW CASTLEGAR 226-7270 365-2262 tion will be moved “well down the (air) field” and an additional taxi strip will have to be constructed to provide access to the station. He said the parking lot will with a party . IT’S OUR 20* YEAR And we're kicking off our year iee celebration through a door at the oppo- site end of the building. A waiting room and res- taurant will be located in the centre. Construction will be in phases so that the airport will be able to continue op- erating, MacBain said. Soccer field to close in 1985 By CasNews Staff The Kiwanis soccer field will be closed all of next year to allow crews to repair and reseed: the field, Ald. Bob Police file Tues- day. MacBain, parks and rec- The Castlegar RCMP handed out five 24-hour road- side :“auspensions, arrested twa! itipaired drivers, and attended to 88 complaints over the weekend. reation i chairman, said the committee met with the field users and decided to operate the field this year. He said the users agreed that the field should be closed in 1985 to allow for repairs. “It will... give it a chance to recover,” he said. MacBain said the field is in poor shape and city works crews plan to place sand on the poor. areas this year. The city “can't do much about it” this year because user groups have already scheduled to use the field. However, he said the 1985 crews will put topsoil on the field in the fall and reseed it. Ald. Carl Henne said a soccer spokesman told him the soccer gropus are willing to pay for a ii en- the field and allow it to recover. “Tf it's not done, then we'll lose it.” He added that the field's drainage problem has been solved by drilling holes in the turf. Thé community is also going to look at installing artificial turf in the field. Ald. Albert Calderbank suggested it will only cost $800 to put the false turf in. “It has to be certainly gineer to recommend repairs. He said the groups feel “if we're going to do it, do it right.” MacBain said he would looked at,” said MacBain. In other recreation news, MacBain said rates at Robson and Bob Brandson pools will increase this year to bring them in line with rates charged in Trail, Warfield and Rossland. He said individual rates will rise 25 cents an hour in each category, swim club rentals will increase 70 cents an hour, private bookings will go up $2.50 an hour, while school rates will remain the same. Helen Popoff, 81, of Pass Creek passed away April 10 at Mt. St. Francis Hospital in Nelson. She was born Sept. 15, 1902 at Buchanan, Sask. and came to B.C. in 1910 with her parents, settling in Pass Creek where she met, mar- ried Alex Popoff in 1920 and lived there since. Mrs. Popoff was a life member of the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ and was an active member and leader of many Russian choirs. She also en- joyed gardening, especially flowers, crochetting and knit- ting. She is survived by two sons, Sam of Pass Creek, Bill of Raspberry; one daughter, Mabel Allan of Elkford; 12 grandchildren, three great- grandchildren; two brothers, ate freezer SOFT MARGARINE $929] $ KRAFT PARKAY. MAXI BOWL. 907 CHOCOLATES $59 MINUTE RICE DAD'S COOKIES $4.69 ie GREER GANT s] 19 | PAPER TOWELS VIVA ..........--4-------- FROZEN N JUICES $139 BATHROOM TISSUE Gaapernurr, wT wrt OFF OR rtivt TOOTHPASTE CLOSE UP. 100 mi TUBE $2 *10e PUREX. ASSORTED C FRESH PRODUCE N A GOLDEN RIPE FROM CENTRAL AMERICA. .......-----> eerreus APPLES . 3 ws 89° CELERY CALI. GROWN No. | is ni. Ibs. 99° ¢ Alex Fedosoff of Castlegar GENSAVE GENSAVE GENSAVE and Mike Fedosoff of On- sels ml cee ate “Acs | item creed: eee SPECIAL OFFER! Markin of Kimberley. Mrs. Popoff was prede- $399 $499 $599 Receive $15 at Regular Retail Price of Selected ceased by her husband Alex McCain's Frozen Food Products ‘ou Pur- in 1952 and one daughter, chase A Gensave Freezer. Mary Osmachenko in 1978. | Why GENSAVE is the best freezer on the market today Funeral services will begin contact the groups. Meanwhile, he said the cost for the repairs would be minimal. “The cost is not the ruling factor,” he explained, adding it's the time needed to close NEW IN TOWN? 2. Ib. BAG 89° SNACK SALE EFFECTIVE APRIL 12, 138 14 one tneck ‘ at 7 p.m. Th at Pass amir ‘idor glides, dusl-position baskets. oaateacte ANNOUNCEMENT _ || sum See Roy a: | gepemememsersin, Hae caeeeteran Rash ionack: contsine’:2, places: of fried TERRY S. BELL, R.1. (B.C.) . OUT THE MAT pork pi thal al Pew Grek Monitor lights include Power ‘On’, Waming and See oe we oo tans apchiage protection chicken and fries. and FOR YOU! Y cemetery. lives yiieret cb solid ‘one plan. (Complete details in warranty certificate.) “Community Owned. aid Operated ONE DAY ONLY Perris: AFFORD, tread R.1.(B.C.) a 1 kan, ~ "gist divetion ef Castiager from GENERAL FREEZER Deli — Cheeses — Meats Thursday, April 12 A Fuseral Chapel. ° Produce — In-Store Bake Shop AT YOUR LOCAL: BELL AND AFFORD APPRAISALS LTD. Shop your GENSAVE dealer now: Quality Food at Low Prices REAL ESTATE APPRAISERS fet, on. Tven_, Wed. 9e.m. 69. AND CONSULTANTS = =» poco ibs : on a Medical Arts building sclbogeptetedae so = v /Dot F 0 ) Suite 208-507 Baker Street 91048 b to 10:30 © Cash TAKS Downtown Castlegar LUCK. OLL AR WED CHICKEN & SEAFOOD Office Hours: Nelson, B ne a 2 Cheque ; on 365-2101 ae ceil 400 Cajumbia Ave. Availabe 2816 Columbia Ave. pact maple bred atl Vib 42 Ottice ¥ roas.tnd $1 * Monthly Payments ; ee Reverne the Right fo Ln GQuewien Caftlegor 365-6353 both locations: Castlegar 365-5304 tore Ce - OAC =k