; Casthagat News _october7,1967 FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITY Join the largest Canadian owned tax preparation service and share its Success, Personal Tax Services provides: * Financing tor Capital Assets and Supplies * Capital for Tax Retund Buying * Tax Courses and Quality Control A Warm Welcome Awaits You at the EVANGELICAL False grapes watched ‘TORONTO (CP) — A year- People are dying Systems Systems: V2S 5A1 P * On-going Supervision to Aid in Your Success nd Advertising * Proven Management Information Explore this seasonal business op. portunity by contacting Personal Tax Services (8.C.) Limited Attention: Boris Styba 204, Seven Oaks Mall 32900 South Fraser Way Abbotsford, B.C. 1-(604)-852-4977 TAX SERVICES L° 713 - 4th Street Office 365-3664 Rev. Glen Bockus Worship Service 9.a Sunday School 10: isan m. Youth Group, Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Bible Study, Wed., 8 p.m. Lssten tothe Lutheran Hour Sundoy /o.m. on Radio CKOM Sunday Services 8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Sunday School 10 a.m. Rev. Charles Balfour -2271 Parish Purpose: “To know Christ and make Him known” 809 ay ei Road Past Fireside Motel Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Morsing Worship 11:00 a. Evening Service 6:30 p.m. TUES. 6:00 P.M. AWANA — Children's Program Kindergarten to Grade 8 WEDNESDAY NIGHT Study & Prayer 8 p.m. Church 365-3430 or 365-7368 CHURCH OF GOD Church School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship lla.m. Pastor Ira Johnson Robert C. Lively, Pastor hae eae 2404 Columbia Avenue Bible 7:00 p.m. Youth (Gr. 7-12) 0:30 o.m. — Men's: Time ANY QUESTIONS? CALL PASTOR 6D NEUFELD 166-6675, Our Action Ad Number is 365-2212 PENTECOSTAL NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY (02 - 7th St. © Ph. 365-5212 9:15. a.m. Sunday Schoo! (Ali Ages) 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship 6:20 p.m, Evening Service WEDNESDA' te say Prayer 7:00 p.m. Youth Meeting COLLEGE — WOMEN nas TOUNC MARRIEDS long investigation into sales of an expensive California grape shows that four and possibly seven wholesalers have been selling grapes of a lower quality failure, It is mostly quiet, conventional and inevitable. But, in the twilight area between Dryden's “Death in itself is nothing” and Kojak’s “Dead is dumb,” there are other causes. A man who stumbles during his morning walk, bites his tongue and dies of gangrene — as Allan Pinkerton, head of the U.S. detective agency bearing his name, did in 1884 — is a man who joins the Club of Odd Ends. home wine makers to make a heavy, almost black, smooth red wine. It is also used in an in the club sometimes requires assistance. In 1977, a 36-year-old San Diego woman decided to murder her 23-year-old husband, a U.S. Marine drill instructor, to collect his $20,000 in life insurance. First, she baked him a blackberry pie containing pro- cess to produce Blush wines or white Zinfandel wines. True Zinfandels cost be- tween $26 and $28 per lug — about 15 kilograms. Lesser quality grapes cost between $16 and $19 a lug, she said. Agriculture Canada bought grapes from seven Stuart Lourie Ph, 965-3278 Sunday Schoo! — 9:45 a.m Sunday Morning Worship 1:00 a. Prayer & Bible Study Wedi 7:30 p.m. Satellite Video Seminars d Home Bible “renal Atmosphere! Pastor: Ken Smith Assistant: Morley Soltys EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH 914 Columbia Ave. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Family Worship Service 11:00 a.m. Bible Study-Prayer Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. Ladies Bible Study Friday, 9:30 a.m. Youth Ministries PASTOR: Ed Neufeld Phone: 365-6675 ROBSON COMMUNITY MEMORIAL CHURCH Ist Sunday, 7:00 p.m. 2nd, 3rd and 4th Sundays, 10a.m. No service 5th Sunday _——————— GRACE PRESBYTERIAN 2605 Columbia Ave. Rev. J. Ferrier Phone 365-3182 Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Phone 365-6762 eee eee Study Courses A Non-Denominational Fomily Church, Preaching the Word of Faith ——__—_—_—_——- FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP (A.C.0.P.) Below Castleaird Plaza Phone 365-6317 Pastor: Barry Werner Phone 365-2374 — SUNDAY sravices _ Sunday School 9:30 a.m. ‘Morning Worship 10:30 Evening Fellowship 6:30 Wednesday: Home Meetings 7:00 Friday Yout! Ministries 7:00 p.m. HOME OF CASTLEGAR CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 365-7818 UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA 2224-6th Ave. 1% Blocks South of Community Complex 10 a.m. — Worship and Sunday School Mid-Week Activities for all ages. Phone for information: Rev. Ted Bristow 365-8337 or 365-7814 SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 1471 Columbia Ave., Trail 364-0117 Regular Saturday Services Pastor Cliff Drieberg last year and conducted lengthy tests to In four cases the depart- ment found the juice grapes were not what they claimed to be, Moore said. True Zinfandels are packed in boxes with the name of the variety burned into the wood or on a preprinted label. In ears instances, boxes ery la venom. But he ate only a few pieces. She then tried to electrocute him in the shower, poison him with lye, run him over with a car, make him hallucinate while driving by putting amphetamines in his beer, and inject an air bubble into his veins with a hypodermic needle. Finally, she and an accomplice, a 26-year-old woman, beat him over the head with a metal weight while he slept. That worked. USES CHEESE In 1978, a Parisian grocer stabbed his wife to death with a wedge of parmesan cheese. In 1984, a New Zealand man killed his wife by japping her repeatedly in the stomach with a frozen sausage. In April, 1984, a 41- Seared Pennsylvania man was asphyxiated after his 280-pound wife sat on his chest during an argument. Nine months later, a 41-year-old Indiana woman beat her male companion to death by repeatedly dropping a bowling ball on his head while he lay on the floor in front of a television set. In Prague, a woman jumped out of a third-storey window after learning her husband had been unfaithful. She landed on the husband, who was entering the building at that moment. He died instantly; she survived. to join this club A despondent Los Angeles man put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger. The bullet passed through his head, ricocheted off a water heater and struck his female companion between the eyes. Some people, of course, discover the Club of Odd Ends on their own. FALLS OFF CLIFF ‘An Italian man set himself on fire, apparently had second thoughts and died falling off a cliff trying to beat out the flames. Last fall, a 26-year-old computer specialist died near Bristol apparently after tying one end of a rope to a tree and the other around his neck, getting into his car and driving off. Some people become Odd Enders by accident. In 1947, an eccentric U.S. recluse, while carrying food to his equally reclusive brother, tripped a burglar trap in his house and was crushed to death under bundles of old newspapers, three breadboxes, a sewing machine and a suitcase filled with metal. His brother starved to death. In 1962, a 27-year-old man fired two shotgun blasts at a giant cactus in the desert near Phoenix. The shots caused a 23-foot section of the cactus to fall and crush him to death. TEST BACKFIRES In April, an award-winning astronomer at the University of Arizona was crushed to death between a door and a 150-tonne revolving telescope dome. In June, a man demonstrating electrical currents to his children in oad Ont., was electrocuted when an experiment back- ‘red Caltfornia women taking pictures of a glacier in Alaska was killed when a 1,000-pound chunk of ice broke free and fell on her. Some people, of course, are destined to become Odd Enders no matter what they do. In May, a Louisiana lawyer stood in the stern of his new boat, raised his hands skyward and said: “Here I ” He was killed by a bolt of lightning. od black varieties and bore stickers over the name of another type of grape. “We have no idea where the switching is taking place, in California or in Canada,” Moore said. “However, fed- eral law states that the seller of an imported product must represent it properly.” She said no charges were laid under the Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act last year because the testing methods were not proven at the time. More grapes are being bought this year from grape Wood scales peaks CALGARY (CP) — Most women Sharon Wood's age are climbing the corporate ladder or raising families. She scales mountains. Not just any mountains, either. Wood, 30, climbs the world’s highest and most demanding peaks as she struggles to test her potential. Shy and introverted as a teenager, she says the things she learns about herself as she masters summits such as Mount Everest have helped her conquer other challenges. “I feel comfortable now in a lot of different kinds of environments,” said Wood, who last year became the. first Canadian woman to reach the top of Everest, the world’s Jers and A Canada hopes the stream- lined testing procedures will determine if fraud is taking place. “We know that it was taking place widely last year, but once the offending whole- salers found out we were in- vestigating they got scared off,” she said. highest “I get dressed up in these (chic) clothes,” she says, gesturing at her olive-green suit and pumps, “and I don't feel uncomfortable any longer. I realize that I'm not as limited as I used to think I was.” CHANGES ROLES Wood lives in Canmore, a town nestled at the base of the Rockies outside Banff Dlational Park. She’s a moun- taineering instructor in the summer, a helicopter ski guide in the winter. She has also starting giving speeches to corporate groups across Canada on reaching goals and boosting moti MINOR SPORTS Sure, we're interested! Phone the Castlegar News for details on how to get reports of your organization onto the sports pages. 365-3517 An earnest, attractive woman, Wood searches for the right words to explain why she does what she does: “Climbing has provided a very special kind of outlet where I can best explore my potential.” Her potential is high. In May 1986, she and Dwayne Congdon, part of a 13-member Canadian team, struggled 8,848 metres to the top of Everest to join the elite company of fewer than 200 — ineluding only four other women — who have conquered the peak. Wood says climbing shows her how well she can perform. “Because the environment is one of such adversity and uncertainty, you're forced to think quickly and very, very well. There's not a lot of margin for error in that kind of activity, and commitment is a big fneiees She says to struggle, and “struggle is the place whore I tears and I grow and I expand.” Wood grew up in Vancouver and started climbing at 16. Feeling trapped by the constraints of high school, she took up climbing as an exciting hobby. “I was a really frustrated kid,” she says with a frown. “I was one of another 2,000 average students they were trying to squeeze through the same size hole and the challenges that they provided ‘in school . . . weren't stimulating me. “I had to seek out my own source of education and challenge. That's why I started climbing.” One of the things climbing has taught her is how to deal with fear. “When you're climbing and you're really scared — REALLY scared — you can’t afford to succumb to the fear because you end up squandering away a lot of ver valuable energy. “Tve learned that I can’t focus on the fear — instead, I have to focus on the main objective.” That attitude has helped Wood grapple with problems outside of mountain climbing. GAINS CONFIDENCE “Tve gained a lot of confidence through climbing and pulled myself out of a lot of compromising situations by manipulating my thinking, my focusing on the productive, as opposed to the destructive.” SURPRISED COUPLE . , . Helen.and Nick Shelfontivk admire the cake presented them at their 40th wed- ding anniversary surprise party. Shelfontiuks get surprise party A surprise dinner and dance for Helen and Nick Shelfontiuk was held Sept. 5 at the D-Bar-D to honor the occasion of their 40th wedding anniversary. The event, hosted by their five children and their families, was attended by 75 friends and relatives. Their initial attendants, Eileen Grad from North Battleford, Sask. and Matt Shelfontiuk from Castlegar, were present. Out-of-town guests included friends and family from Oliver, Lytton, Vancouver, Calgary and many from Regina, Sask. The master of ceremonies for the occasion was a close family friend, Fred Vigue, while grace before dinner was said by Fred's wife, Pat. Congratulatory letters from family and friends were read along with letters of congratulations from the Premier Bill Vander Zalm, Kootenay West MP Bob Briseo and Rossland-Trail MLA Chris D'Arcy. TOGETHER FOR 50 . . . John and Margar: 50th wedding anniversary. dinner, many other friends came to offer congratulations and gifts. Movies were shown from the couple's 25th anni- 50 years | Marrs TEE &. cxpinsnpinre Eastgate Gardens with chil. were received from all levels wedded A reception was given * Saturday to honor the occe- Hunters dren, granchildren and close of’ government. friends in attendance. Asked what advice they At an open house after would give to a newlywed Recreation news During the dinner, a photo album pictures of the couple before and during their marriage was passed among the guests. Speeches honoring Nick and Helen were given by several family friends and relatives. ‘A toast to Nick and Helen on their ruby anniversary was proposed by Keith Shelfontiuk on behalf of their children Holly, Andrea, Keith, Rhonda and Sharon. Nick and Helen were presented with round-trip airfare tickets to Toronto by Andrea on behalf of their children and their families. They were also presented with a money tree loaded with generous offerings from their friends and families to use as spending money on their second honeymoon. ‘At the conclusion of the dinner:a gift ‘was presented by Rhonda to Eileen Grad who travelled the furthest to attend. The dinner was followed with the cutting of the cake by the anniversary couple. The cake was baked and decorated by Sharon and is a copy of their original cake. Nick and Helen's children served the cake to the guests. A dance concluded the evening. With the introduction of the Fox, classic German engineering has never béen more atfordable From as litle as $8690, the Fox features o performance-proven 8! HP 1.8 litre fuel injected engine + Maintenonce-tree Lottery numbers The three $100,000 win- The winning numbers ning numbers drawn in the drawn in Lotto BC were: 9, Pacifie Express draw Satur- 14, 17, 20, 26. day night were: 919170, The bonus number was 19. 944559 and 554118. The The free play winning number was 3. Friday was 5136869. winning numbers in the Provincial lottery draw night they are back in action Print Making at the complex with their Print Making (912 yrs) ation centre. Pass Creek and opponents being the Cran- will be starting on Nov. 5 and Blueberry ‘Creek activities brook Colts. These two teams running to the 26, so you still got underway this week. If met in the playoff for the have time to register your you would like to participate Kootenay finals in the spring child for this fun, enevauire pick up a flyer for events with Cranbrook out’ class. The participants will happening in each area. If 90 top. This Saturday it’s learn how to make their own you would like to volunteer going to be a different story, personalized writing paper, your help to keep activities 9° come on down and cheer birthday cards and their own going in Pass Creek and your home town team on to ‘T-shirt designs. What better Blueberry give us a'tall, we vietory: Game time is 8 p.m. way to instill pride in your are dtways' looking: for en’~ °/Thamkegiving Holiday » ni vebild for something they have thusiastic help. Just 4 reminder that the done themselves? CPR Program recreation office and the Heme Our fall programs are keeping us busy at the recre- Hunter cut the cake at their couple, John and Margaret said the couple should build a relationship with Jesus Christ at the centre, use the Bible as a guide and iar. to trust God for e A relationship without Jesus Christ at the centre is like a floundering ship at sea, they said. Castlegar apprentice wins award By CasNews Staff A Castlegar electrician has won the Charles H.E. Wil- liams Award for excellence in apprentice training for inside wire men. Neil Austin, 39, won the award as top electri- cal apprentice in B.C. after completing his fourth year. of sehooling at Selkirk Austin is @ BCIT. graduate h Our C.P.R. program is Community Complex is Home Emergency Care is happening for sure tomorrow closed on Monday due to the coming up on Oct. 27 so come evening. We have enough Thanksgiving holiday. Bus- down to register. This one registered participants and iness as usual on Tuesday. evening class will teach you we still have room for you. Tennis Anyone? how to deal with most acci- ‘The class is happening at 6:30 As long as the weather dents that take place in the p.m. at Kinnaird Elementary. holds, the tennis courts at the home as well as how to treat The cost of the program is complex will be open and minor euts and burns. If you only $10, so register.during ready for use. For all October have children or elderly office hours at the recreation it’s still tennis weather.Grab people in your home this office 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. your racquet and come out class is a must. Don't miss Rebels Game and play. out. Junior hockey is back at Ballroom Dancing Phote Albums the arena complex for Ballroom Dance Classes A one-day class to teach another season. The Rebels got underway on Monday you how to make vetted in ‘gical technology and until recently worked for the City of Castlegar as an equipment operator. He won the award in competition with more than 100 graduating apprentices in the province. The award is sponsored by the Electrical Contractors Association in honor of the original owner of. Charles H.E. Williams Elec- trie Lid. ~ ih ALL TvPes OF got off to a good start, and evening, but there is still photo albums is hopefully will continue their room for you. Bring your Det. 19. This program is just successes until the end of the partner and have a swinging what you need to make that season in February and then good time. You won't regret special Christmas present for in playoffs, This Saturday it. that special person. © Letterheads Eivetaties © Brochures * Rolfe Tickets Su [Set eae PAINTING & DECORATING 2649 ce be 905-3563 Gary Flemi: Dianna Kootnilvott ADVERTISING SALES 9 O.punene 2007. Casmu@ae. TC wat mee CASTLEGAR OFFICE 365-6210 Ra ont r Account Regular soap the member who has limited requirements lor cheque writing, but arine a benefit of tiered peecbon rate on chequing.) Package (For members who utilize a chequing account ane where interest on funds is a con- cern. Golden (A great package ¢ account for age 55 and over that p , Savings and interest on all-in-one.) Business (Easy fo use, hard to match —“the simple cost- effective independent business money management account.) 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