S38), os Castlegar News pri! 16, 1999 Complete Electronic Publishing and Design + Public FAX Service tag 365-2124 ae business of personal advertising material annual reports catalogues portfolios manual slides ° CALL ‘Open Monday Fricke >» iy ‘above West's Dept Store Box 350. Castlegar. BC Strong & Associates 205 + 1215 34 FAX (60d) 365-2124 365-5626 BIRTHS BAYLEY — To Brenda and Pat Bayley of Beaver Falls, & boy, born March 31 BRAUN — To Margaret and Martin Braun of Winlew, a girl, born April 6 KOTYK — \To Nancy and Frank Kotyk, a boy, bormMarch 31 HAWKINS To Gwen and Melvin Hawkins, o'boy, born April 1 MILLER — To Carol and Mike Miller of Lethbridge, @ girl, born April 6. BENDIS — Elizabeth C. Bendis of Nelson died March,21. She was 59, Mrs. Bendis is survived by her daughters and-sons in-law Sharon and Wayne Negraett ond sy. april 16, 1999 Castlegar News Births & Funerals Berbera and Wayne Proctor; gran dchildren Tim, Tammy, Shauna and Negraett and Ryan the BUTLING Helen Deone Builing, =o litelong Kootenay resident, died April 5 BUSINESS DIRECTORY TELEPHONE 365-5210 New i i tar the ‘Cast ro » copy y will be th of May. and jor the Ne d up to 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 25 for the mon- Brian L. Brown CERTIFIED GENERAL ACCOUNTANT “270 Columbia Avenue Castlegar * 365-2151 Gordon A. Read & Co. Certified General Accountant Office 368-6471 Residence 365-2339 1250 Bay Ave. Trail Appliances ——— APPLIANCE PARTS AND “There's never a bus when you want one.”’ Mobile Wash SERVICE DEPT. Call 365-3388 CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING LTD. ‘enmore * Inglis * Hotpoint + Etc WEST K CONCRETE LTD. PIPELINE PITT ROAD CALL PLANT. siete 693-2430 CASTLEGAR 365-2430 1008 Columbia Avenue * 365-3388 BUY or SELL by AUCTION Rica: ~ Oveant? OPEN MON. SAT. 9.5 UCTION 206738 throm 399-4793 D & M Painting & Insulation * Blown Insulation © Batts & Poly DUNCAN MORRISON 650-5th Avenue 365-5255 Brick & Masonry Frank Lucarelli MASONRY CONTRACTOR « HEATILATOR FIREPLACES ® MOSS ROCK FIREPLACES ® MOSAIC Hike * BRICK BLOCK * STONE * CEMEN! Foot Care ON THE SPOT PRESSURE WASHER SERVICES * Cors ® Traslers * High Windows~ * Houses ® Fences * Driveways 365-6091 of 365-697) Propane Service a1 Vancouver General Hospital. She was 76, She ii three brothers, Richard and Timothy Deane; tour Sally Maclean, Pauline Butling Wah and Sylvia Horwood; 11 grandchildren and six-great-grandchildren DALGAS — John Dalgas; a long-time Nelson resident, died in Vernon April 2 He was 70. Mr. Dalgas is survived by his wite € Vernon; daughters Sharleen ai husband Stephen Briggeman of Vernon and Corinne of Vancouver; one Sabrina, He was predeceased by his father in 1945 and his mother in 1982 FERGUSON — Alla Ferguson of Nelson died April § at the age of 84 O'NEIL Margaret Grace (Peggy) O'Neil, a former Nelson resident, died April 7 at Cranbrook Regional Hospital She was 50. She is survived by her doughter Debbie Richards of Edmonton. sons Tom Katelnikotf of Montreal and Randy Kateinikott of Burnaby; three her mother Mabel O'Neil The Prépane People Complete Propane Services DOMESTIC INDUSTRIAL CONSTRUCTION HEATING CYLINDER FILL Auto Propane © Appliances 24 HOUR SERVICE Office 359-7373 * Eves. 365-3152 South Slocan Radiator Repair Mike’s Radiator Repair & Sales New Location 690 Rossland Ave., Trail Open 8.30 - 5 p.m. Monday-Friday 9:30:2. Saturday Doaly Pkup ond Delve Phone 364-1606 After Hours Emergency or Pickup Call Perry, 364-1506; Tim 359-7951; Mike 359-7058 Renovations of Creston; brothers Jack ot Riondel, Ar thur (and wite May) of Breton, Alta., and Kelly. (and_wite Sandy) ot Prince sisters Eviline (and husband Jerome of Cranbrook, Patsy Morrison of Dawson Creek, Norma (and husband Walt) Nelson of Creston and Shirley (and husband Ted) Planden ot Nelson; numerous nieces and nephews. She was predeceased by her-son Johrr anddoughter, , Kateinikoll (1968); tother Richard O'Neil (1977) and brothers George (1943) and Vernon (1940) PATERSON — Dorothy Margaret Pater son of Trail died April 7 at Kiro Manor at the age ot 74 POPOFF John Nicholas Popott of Nelson died April 4 in Kootenay Loke District Hospital. He was 67. Mr. Popott is sufvived by his stepmother Mable Popott and nieces and nephews. He wos predeceased by his mother, his sister in 1969, his brother in 1970 and his tather in 1978. SUTHERLAND Catherine Shearer Sutherland of Nelson died April 5 in Kootenay Lake District Hospital. She was Mrs. Sutherland is*survived by her son Alex of Cranbrook, daughters Kay Fargher of Cranbrook, Helen (and husband Art Choquette) and Jemima Prout, both of Nelson; 11 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband George in 1974 William Wilton, @ jent, died Feb, 20. Mr. Wilton is survived by wife Joanna; daughter Patricio of Kirkland, Wash.; sons Terry of Hope and Barry of Saanichton; sister Edith Fryling of Chilliwack: four grandsons: three granddaughters; one great-yrand ughter and many nieces and nephews. x Bid to control forest companies led to firing, Kempf says VANCOUVER (CP) — Jack Kem- pf, a former B.C. forests minister says his—aggressive—bid_io control—the province's large forest companies — and not spending irregularities — led to his March 1987 firing. who now sits in the an independent, said in an interview that just before he was fired by Premier Bill Vander Zalm he planned to put $0 per cent of the an- nual allowable cut in B.C.'s forests up for auction so smaller logging ‘com- panies could get a piece of the action That, he said, convinced the big © RENOVATIONS © Optometrist 8.C. O.D. OPTOMETRIST 1012 - 4th St., Castlegar PHONE 365-3361 Tuesday to Friday 9a.m. to 4:30 p.m Saturday 9a.m. to 12 Noon WORK # ITALIAN CERAMIC TILE \GLASS 2226-7th Ave Trail, B.C. vIR3C8 = Ph. 364-2346 Carpet Cleaning CLEAN-SCENE CARERT CLEANERS * Most Advanced System Gets more deep down soil than ‘any other cleaning method * Upholstery Cleaning Too SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Why not Call Us Today! FREE ESTIMATES PHONE 365-6969 HoRZON COMPUTERS AND ACCESSORIES GRANT DE WOLF 365-3760 KOOTENAY INFORMATICS Now Has a Full Line of LAZER XT AND LAZER 128s EX South Slocan Junction 359-7755 MODERN REFLEXOLOGY - ANDFOOTCARE ¢ 2808 Columbia Av $. Castlegar 365-5121 CASTLEGAR FUNERAL CHAPEL Dedicated to kindly thoughtful service COMPLETE FUNERAL SERVICE Cremation, Traditional Burial ond Pre- Arrangement Plon Availoble Granite, Bronze Memorvals Cremation Urns and Plaques PHONE 365-3222 ALL TYPES OF COMMERCIAL PRINTING * Letterheads * I Y= verhead Doors — Security Fencing — Bowser’s Services 365-5948 RENTAL APPLIANCES & TV "Rent fo Own Washers, Dryers, VCRs, TV, Stereos ca! 365-3388 1008 Columbia Ave., Castlegar * Brochures ® Raffle Tickets Castlegar News 197 Columbia Ave. — 365-7266 Plumbing & Heating Bartle & Gibson The Plumbing & Heating Centre * American Standard * Valley Fibrebath * Crane * Gult Stream Spas * Duro Pumps & Softeners © PVC Pipe Fittings * Septic Tanks * Electrical & G.E. Lighting Supplies 2317-6th Avenue, Cestlegar Phone 365-7702 Moving & Storage Williams Moving & Storage 2337-6th Avenue, Castl CASTLEGAR PLUMBING & HEATING For all your plumbing needs and supplies © FIXTURES * PARTS © SERVICE CALL 365-3388 TRAIL CUSTOMERS ONLY CALL 364-0343 Invite you-to call them for a free moving estimate. Let our representative tell you about _the many services_which_have made Williams the most respected name in the moving business. Ph. 365-3328 Collect SILVER CREST PLUMBING 713 Tamarack St., Castlegar Call 365-3044 KRAGH CONSTRUCTION ROOFING * ASPHALT SHINGLES * SAND & GRAVEL * CERTIFIED TRADESMAN 80x 123 FRUITVALE re DOUG KRAGH 347-9782 he was going to curb their power. “It was the straw that broke the camel's back,” said Kempf He said he was coming forward now because he has ‘ta moral duty’” to get the issue before the public ‘because this powerful industry has had its own way for five decades.”” Kempf said that in February 1987 he asked independent lumberman lan Sherwin to draft guidelines for a probe into the industry. But Kempf said he was fired before money was allocated to fund the investigation. Said Sherwin: “There is absolutely no question in my mind that'those big companies contributed to his demise. They were extremely hostile towards him.”* Vander Zalm, said he has no knowledge of Kempf's: probe and dismissed himasa ‘bitter’ man: Ten days before he was fired, Rempf said, he was “‘laying the lumber"? to Herb Doman, whose forest company, Doman Industries, was failing to com- ply with a 10-year-old contract to build a pulp mill in exchange for logging rights Kempf said he told Doman he was going to start removing his cutting rights. “To put it mildly, Doman was not really liking it, "she says. “What we're seeing with Doman is just the tip of the iceberg. There's waste, there’s underscaling, there's saw logs going to pulp mills.”” New Democrat Bob Williams spent much of last week's question period in the legislature making several allegations about Doman’s poor record_in_management-of its forest licence Doman, who is suing Williams for libel, was unavailable for comment. Vander Zalm says Kempf’s firing related solely to “his spending.” An investigation by comptroller-general Brian Marson confirhied some irregularities but noted that in most ways, Kempf had come up to standard. Club holds meeting The David Thompson Stamp Club held its monthly meeting on April 10 in St. Davids undercroft at 7:30 p.m The mémbers present designated May 8 as a show-and-tell evening. The members will be showing and com- menting on their favorite subjects on pages of stamps. The club’s large book of clippings of local events from the club's first banquet at the old Castlegar Hotel to the present day will be on display for browsing. Many of the West Kootenay mem- bers have closed their albums since the club’s first meeting in 1958. Club members hope to re-kindle the interest in stamp collecting by former members and younger folks to start on the fascinating and education ‘hobby of kings.”” ROOFING Guaranteed Work Fair Prices 30 Years in Business Free Estimates JAMES SWANSON AND SONS Ph. 367-7680 Seal Coating KOOTENAY SEALCOATING Serving the Kootenays — East & West! © HIGH PRESSURE SEAL COATING * ASHPALT DRIVEWAYS & PARKING AREAS * LINE PAINTING * PROTECT CONCRETE & BRICK WITH HI-PRESSURE WATER PROOFING PHONE 365-2635 or 825-4216 Septic Service COLEMAN COUNTRY BOY SERVICE Sump & Septic Tank Pumping Phone 365-5013 3400-4th Avenue Castlegar ——— DINNER DANCE Auctioneer J UJ PARTIAL LIST OF AUCTION A golf bag from Denny McArthurs Shop. Tennis racket tromlis Castlegar Bicycle Shop 4 Faucet sets from Castlegar Plumbing & Heating 4 Bar stools from West's Dept Store Radio advertising trom CKQR AUCTION ADVANCE TICKETS comodation at one of three condominium resorts on the Oregon-Washington Coast li Giant SPRING SPLASH. Fri., April 21 ONLY! BUY THEM NOW THEY WON'T LAST LONG! Door Prize $200 worth of ac- of the Castl. Accomodation at one of three resorts on the Or Washington Coast donated by the Castlegar News 6 mos. worth of SuperChannel Family Channel with remote converter trom Shaw Cable 1-Year single berth moorage trom| Scotties Marina 1 Case motor oil trom Woodland Park Shell Audio Technics headphones trom Pete's TV 2-Ten Speed bikes, } tread mill one stationary exercise bike trom Matlords Nights iva condominium at Fairmont trom Fairmont Vittas 6 p.m. Castlegar Arena Com. HAPPY HOUR 6:00 P.M. DINNER 7:00 P.M. AUCTION 8:30 P.M. DANCE 9:30 P.M. ENTERTAINMENT SHSS Stage Band & CKQR MUSIC MACHINE ick: a temporary measure, persoi permanent part of Canadian life. And despite attempts to Canadians’ tax burden growing Editor's note: Seventy years after being introduced as income tax has become a simplify the system and make it fairer, the tax bite is likely for taxpayer. By ERIC BEAUCHESNE The Canadian Press The Smiths were the quintessential Canadian family in 1961 — a couple of kids, a blue Chevy sedan and a black- and-whiteTV. Annual tax bill; $1,675, or about one-third of their an- nual income of $5,000 and less than the $2,671 spent on food, clothing and housing. A quarter-century later, the Smiths’ successors — let's call them the Jones family — have a more prosperous air: two kids, a second car, two color televisions and a VCR. But taxes take a much bigger bite of the Joneses’ paycheque: $17,393, or more than, half thé $33,500 they earned. And taxes overshadow the $12,377 spent on food, clothing and housing. Since 1961, the era of televisions’s Don Messer’s Jubilee and the six-team National Hockey League, the tax burden has been rising, a point often made by the Fraser In- stitute of Vancouver PUBLIC WILLING “We seem, up to this point, to have been willing to ac- cept very hefty increases,’ said Michael Walker, head of the research group. Yet, Canadians also get a wider range of goods and services from government, observes David Perry, a resear- cher with the Canadian Tax Foundation in Toronto. Among them:.a more sophisticated health system, in- cluding universal hospital insurance; a richer and broader range of support for the unemployed, the elderly and families; and an expanded education system. Income tax reformed, but now more complex Editor’s note: ‘‘Simplicity and fairness’’ could be the battle-cry of income tax reformers. But such ideals elude Canadians, in part because a fair system is not of- ten simple. i By ERIC BEAUCHESNE The Canadian Press The hardest thing in the world to undérstand is the income tax.’’ — Albert Einstein os : 8 When Catherine Lesk tried to prepare her income tax return, she got a headache. Undaunted, Lesk took another stab at it, but didn’t fare any better, prompting the soft-spoken Ojtawa woman to throw up her hands in frustration. “This is the first year that I felt incapable of doing is."* Lesk did what more than one in three tax filers do: she gothelp. - Indeed, business is brisk for the companies that prepare tax returns as Canadians grapple — and often stumble — over Finance Minister Michael Wilson's reforms, which went into effect last year. That wasn’t supposed to happen. Simplicity was one of the goals of Wilson’s sweeping changes. Yet, it didn’t turn out that way, argues tax lawyer Arthur Drache. “It’s much more complex than it ever was and every time these jackasses start playing around with it, it gets even worse.”’ . CALLED A ‘MESS’ What went wrong? Complexity was but one of the ills the reforms were supposed to address. And there’s the rub. In 1986, a year before the reforms were announced, the Commons finance committee concluded the coun- try’s tax laws and regulations were. ‘‘mess."” Wilson said his solutions would fall into three broad areas: © Simplifying the tax system. ©) Making it fairer © Promoting economic growth and creating more and better jobs. That’s a tall order, suggests David PeRty, a resear- cher with the Canadian Tax Foundation in Toronto. system, Tom Hockin, then junior finance minister and now small business minister, said last year. ‘Fairness does not always mean total simplicity.’” So much is being asked of the tax system — from incentives for investors’to protection for the poor — that it’s no wonder it’s so complex, says Perry: Consider the minimum income tax, for example, which is often lumped in with the tax reforms even though it was introduced in 1986, two years before the other changes went into effect. The minimum tax was meant to eliminate a source of anger among many taxpayers — the fact that hun- ‘dreds of wealthy Canadians failed to pay any income tax year after year. . Though done in the name of fairness, the move made the tax system a little more complex. And there are about its eff is In 1986, the first year of the minimum tax, 6,250 people with incomes of $50,000 or more paid no incdme tax, including 100 with incomes of a quarter of a million dollars or more. Still, a complex tax system doesn’t necessarily require a complex tax form — an area where Sweden has taken the léad, adds Perry How high are taxes? How fair? Families in Sweden, France, Britain and West Ger- many might envy the Joneses’ much lower tax bill. In Sweden, taxes swallow more than 60 per cent of income. By the same token, the Joneses might wish the tax- man’s bite was as light as in the United States or Japan, where taxes eat up just ovef 30 per cent of income. BURDEN GROWING One thing is clear — the tax burden in Canada has been growing. In 1961, total taxes ate up 33.5 per cent of the average family’s income, says the Fraser Institute. That rose to 52 per cent by 1986. Income taxes, which chewed up seven per cent of a family’s income in 1961, gobbled up 20.5 per cent in 1986, One reason for this trend has been the growth of cor- porate and personal tax breaks: Auditor General Ken Dye estimated in 1987 they’re worth a staggering $28 billion a year — nearly as much as the federal budgetary deficit While many tax breaks fill an important need, like helping a particular industry or region, some prove to be a major embarrassment — and thereby add to taxpayers’ woes. F Take the Scientific Research Tax Credit, which has been called.the worst tax scandal in Canadian history. As much as $2 billion of public money was’squandered by the time the program, announced in 1983, was killed two years later. FAIRNESS SOUG: Critics like author Linda McQuaig take the argument one step further. The rich and powerful don’t pay their fair share because they're protected by a variety of tax breaks like those for business lunches, says McQuaig, author of Behind Closed Doors, a reproachful commientary on the tax system. At the same time, much government spending, such as for universities, tends to benefit upper-income Canadians, she says. Fairness is a.common thread running through public concern in the histroy of taxation. The pressure to introduce an income tax in 1917 — asa temporary measure to-help-finance-the first World War — came from farmers and workers, who saw it as a fairer tax, notes McQuaig. Until then, government had relied on such things as customs and excise taxes and postal_rates — taxes hidden in the cost of many goods and services. ry “Income taxes, which generally have a progressive rate structure, impose a proportionately heavier burden on the rich — in theory at least,’’ says McQuaig. That is, the more you earn, the more tax you pay. Seven, decades later, fairness remains a busning, if ing, issue. Swedish graphic d and psy put together a basic tax form that the average person can easily grasp. “They’ ve put in cartoons and jokes and all sorts of things to make that six hours at the dining room table bearable,*’ he said. The result: a tax form spread offr two sides of a single pages, bolstered by an attractive 36-page guide. REDESIGN TRIED If Canada hasn’t come up with a really simple tax return, it’s not for lack of trying. In 1986, Revenue Canada had a form for those who were only filing a return to collect a tax credit. It had just one box to fill out. But fewer than four per cent of those who could use that form did so and it was dropped. Yet, there is one solution for those who don’t want to fill out their return — and don’t want to pay someone else to doit. They can put-their- name and other personal infor- mation on their return, chuck in their receipts and mail the envelope to Revenue Canada, which will do all the Simply put: The tax system can’t be simple as i as the government wants it to accomplish so much. SYSTEM DEFENDED ae True, the reforms did reduce the number of tax brackets to three from 10 and did eliminate or tighten some tax loopholes. But if simplifying the tax system was a goal, then the reforms failed, concluded a report by the country’s tax lawyers and accountants last year. The ensuing frustration, they warned, could lead to more and more Canadians ducking the taxman: ‘The prospect of non-compliance looms large.”” Complexity may be the price to pay for a fair tax However, that’s not encouraged. “This is a self-assessment ‘system,”” said Colette Gentes-Hawn, a spokesman for Revenue Canada. ‘We like to think the taxpayer has dong it himself or has had someone help him with it.”” Revenue Minister Otto Jelinek, for his part, dismissed reports that people were having more problems with their returns this year. “What the returns that are coming in indicated is that Canadians are not nearly as confused as the media and some of the tax return people would have us Harvey Perry is still scratching his head over it, after SO years of studying the tax system. Perry was the No. 2 man in the 1960s on the Carter Royal Commission, a wide-ranging study which concluded that the tax system ‘does not afford fair treatment for all €anadians.”” ‘ “The whole thing is very fluid,” he said in a recent in terview. But judging fairness is no easy task, he suggests. It means balancing what is taken in from taxpayers against what is paid out — and asseSsing who receives those benefits. MICHAEL WILSON ++» lowered tax rates As tax lawyer Arthur Drache sees it, the debate has a self-serving element; ‘‘Anytime I hear someone talking about a fair tax system I just cringe ... it really means, “Dol think I'm paying too much tax LICING THE To the Fraser Institute, the tax system is progressive The top 14 per cent of taxpayers — those with incomes Of more than $35,000 — pocketed about 39 per cent of total income, but paid about 54 per cent of the total tax bill, the institute argues. Leon Muszynski, a researcher with the Canadian Cen- tre for Policy Alternatives, sees it in a different light The poorest 20 per cent of Canadians get about four per cent of all income; the richest 20 per cent, about 43 per cent of the money. After taxes, the income share of the poorest edges up to five per cent. The share of the richest edges down to 40 percent The issues of fairness and the rising tax burden sparked two attempts at reform this decade. The first —by Allan MacEachen, then Liberal finance minister, in 1981 — was a dismal failure, Many of his proposals to take away tax breaks were torn to shreds by an angry business community. In 1987, it was Conservative Michael Wilson's turn. His reforms lowered tax rates and reduced the number of 1x brackets from 10 to three. MIDDLE SQUEEZED The verdict has been mixed. The burden on the very poor was eased by the income tax changes, including the reforms, announced since the Tories came to power in 1984, concludes Allan Maslove, a professor at Carleton University in Ottawa. But so was the burden on the very rich. Indeed, most families were worse off in 1988 than they were in ’84. “A large proportion of the losers were middle-income families,"’ said Maslove. 2 The Fraser Institute’s Walker is not surprised. ‘‘It’s basically the guys in the middle who will always end up carrying the can ... because there are so many of them.”” Witnesses to assemble Benefitting- from obedience to divine instruction will be the theme for a special assembly. of Jehovah's Wit- nesses from the East and West Kootenays The East Kootenay congregations will come to Trail's Cominco Gym Saturday April 15. The program will be duplicated for the West Kootenay congregations the following day, at the same location. Local residents of Trail and- surrounding area are invited to either day, Sautrday or Sunday. The overall program wilh highlight obedience in the many facets of a Christian’s life and will touch on mat- ters of importance to all, including obedience to authorities and obedience on secular jobs. Walter Trubyk from the Canadian Branch Headquarters of Jehovah's Witnesses will deliver the key public address on the subject ‘Learning Obedience as Christ Did.”” For the record An article in last Wednesday's Castlegar News about an upcoming three-day workshop on caring for the elderly contained incorrect dates The workshop, which will be held at Castlegar’s Sandman Inn, begins Thursday evening, April 20 and con- tinues Friday, April 21 from 8:30 a.m to 3:30 p.m. The workshop concludes Saturday, April 22 with a session from 9a.m.to3p.m The Castlegar News regrets the error. a To T% In Beautiful Waterton, Alberta Regular Room Rates Cut in Half (Suites excepted) At Waterton’s Only Lakeside Resort SUNDAYS THROUGH THURSDAYS, MAY Ist - JUNE 15th (May 19th - 21st excluded) * Spacious, luxurious rooms, some with baltbnies overlooking one of the world’s most beautiful lakes © Kootenai Brown Dining Room — fine cuisine, superb view « Fireside Lounge — Live entertainment and TV movies ® Dance and relax in the Thirsty Bear Saloon ® Snack bar, gift shop. convention centre The ideal place to stay amidst some of Canada’s finest scenery And Watertori has an 18-hole championship golf course. Lakes ctuises and private boating. Fishing. tennis. hiking. swimming. Abundant wildlife. Spectacular hiking trails Reserve Now to Avoid Disappointment Bamshons Inn LA Box-36,-Waterton takes Nationat Park, Alberta, Canada-TOK 2M0 Phone (403) 859-2211 Toll-free reservations from Western Canada and the Pacific Northwest after May Ist: 1-800-661-8080 Seasoned SALT SHAKE ‘n BAKE CORN PINEAPPLE POTATOES VINEGAR SAG STUFFING COFFEE FILTERS COFFEE FILTERS WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. 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