oo FAMILY DINING Open 4P.M. Daily Reservations for Private Parties —.365-3294 ~ Located | mile south of weigh scales in Ootischenia 1-7 : $995 $995" Monday to Sunday; July STUFFED one CHOPS Vegetable gerne, gorke b GRILLED HALIBUT STEAK Wish parsley butter and lemon wedge, porajo Or porto, vegetable gorn, garlic breed * SOUP OR SALAD : Reservations phone 364-2222 / TERRA NOVA MOTOR INN Royal Canadian Com Branch No. 170 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. —Guests Myst ENTERTAINMENT Se = : U big star on Hee Haw NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — He's “tlie son-of a sharecropper who dropped. out of school at age 13 to haul produce and harvest crops. Years later, Buck Owens-has culled hi polished a talent for music, to becom superstar who has performed at the White House and on television for the past 16 years. He has written such hit songs as Act Naturally and Crying Time, has sold” millions of his_own recordings, including I've Got a Tiger by the Tail and has been the grinning co-host of-th y Hee Haw since 1969. Owens performed for President Lyndon Johnson in the White House and painted his ever-present guitar red, whité and blue as a symbol of his patriotism. Along the way, he resources and _ | ——became-a-prosperous- businessman: —— Joining Roy Clark as co-host of Hee Haw since its inception, Owens has-become-afamiliar-face on television. The country music-comedy show is going strong and Owens has no plans to leave. “It's an honest shaw. the 55-year-old. Owens _ said. “There's no social message — no crusade. It’s fun and simple. You can watch for a few minutes and come back in five minutes and you haven't missed nothin’. “You don’t have to. know what's goin‘ on; hell, we don't pa what's goin’ on ourselves.” A FINANCIAL PLEASURE Six years before Hee Haw began, he wrote and recorded Act Naturally which the Beatles later performed |—on an album. His reaction to the Beatles’ version was. “the same way they would probably have reacted if I. did Yesterday.” Be SIGNED In * SKIP FRASER L.A. CATERING & HALL RENTAL NOW SHOWING! WED THU)|FRI) “FLETCH™ IS CHEVY CHASE'S “FUNNIEST MOVIE “CHEVY CHASE Fetch A UVERSAL PICTURE wt. EXCLUSIVE STEREO STARTS SATURDAY ! 3-RAM BOo———— Fi rst Blood Part II STALLONE _& is back.-: ENGAGEMENT The-Beatles’ Act-Naturaily sold 3:5 million copies: and— his first royalty cheque as the songwriter was for about $100,000. “It.was a financial pleasure to say the least. Those guys were phenomenal: ay ill Street's NEW YORK (AP) — As tough cop Lucy. Bates on NBC's Hill Street Blues, Bet- *-.“I would like -to have a ty Thomas has.looked death romantic relationship. with in the eye and’ won. As just. my charatter,” she said. Betty Thomas, she has swum She'd also like to direct an with dolphins and will spend episode or two, “but so do 14 part of her summer with other people in the show.” orangutans. She «was ‘born. Betty The other part ofthe warm Thomas Nienhauser in St. months will be spent shoot- Louis but grew up in Will- ina drama series. for her portrayal of Lucy Bates. July 3, 1985. a Actress Bette Davis, subject _ of a-scathing attack inher daughter's. book, ° My Mother's Keeper, has broken_| a 15-year silence with ex: husband. Gary Merrill’. to thank him for defending her, he says. Merrill, who has called the. book “99 per cent crap,” told the Portland; -Eress: Herald that_Davi: MUSIC IN THE PARK . . . Local band En Route will perform in Kinsmen Park Thursday at noon as-part of the summer Concerts in the Park series spon: En_Route will kick off En route: blues to jazz. sored by the Castlegar Arts Council and the Down- town Business Association. soo abusive alcoholic. Since its this year's Concert in the Park’ series. with -a_ per- formance Thursday at «noon in-Kinsmen Park. Members of the band in- clude Rick Fry on drums and™ background _ vocals; Bill Novlan on lead guitar and vocals, Dave Scanlon on bass and percussion; Tim Terral on saxophone, flute; percussion and-back- ground vocals; and Don Whitely on rhythm guitar, trumpet am hand drums — tablas, congas, and dumbecks. These musicians live in the Kootenay Lake, Nelson, Slocan Valley and _ Robson areas. All have-had previous experience with other bands. _ “There is a co-operative spirit amongst them as they play. their original music —which ranges ffom rhythm and blues to jazz, with an orientation _ to- wards. reggae, ~while branching out into other genres. 3 They prefer to. perform music with a message and are interested in incor- porating ethnic flavors in their repetoire. The concert series is co- sponsored by the Down- town Business Association and. the Castlegar Arts Council. In case of rain the con- cert will be held upstairs at the Royal Canadian Legion — Branch No. 170 on Colum- = bia Avenue. production techniques. Ginrest ’85 PARADE EVERYONE WELCOME! ...-The Annual SunFest Parade will be held-on f¢| July 20, 1985 and our parade committee extends to you-a personal invitation to participate in our parade. Would you please have entries in by July 3, 1985..Position in the parade is at the discretion of the parade marshall:>—~ We look forward: to your participation. -PARADE ENTRY FORM Nome of Entry. Is your Entry a Float? If so. how long is it in total, including towing vehicle? How wide? Name of person in charge of entry: Address: Telephone How Hi igh? Number of persons in entry: — Name of Delegate _ Adress __ — Do you require a car? Yes __ PLEASE SUPPLY YOUR OWN SIGN! CATEGORY OF | EVENTS: Fraternal (.) Commercial( ) Equestrian Novelty (-) Band Youth Services ( ( ( ) ») ) Other ). Decorated Bicyle(_ ) Parade begins at 11 a.m. sharp. Entries to assemble at 9'a.m. on Monashee Ave. and Selkirk Ave. Judging to take place at 9:30-a.m. Prize presentations will take place at 12:30 at the Kinsmen Park. Entry fee is free. Direct replies to parade com- mittee, Castlegar Chamber of Commerce, Box. 30 3001, Castlegar, B.C. VIN 3K3. 604 - 365-6313. Remarks for T.V. commentary: pe ‘Entry forms available at all local Banks, Credit Unions and Drug Stores. Over $1400 in Prizes! See You There! ing new episodes of the. Emmy Award-winning police series that has won five years of praise for textured stories, well-defined characters and — Thomas has received four Emmy nominations as out- standing supporting actress: oughby, Ohio, New Jersey and Chicago. Her attraction to aninials began in child- ood “We hatched chickens at school and I brought them home,” she said. “We had huge chickens, roosters, a goat and a lamb.” Now’ she _has a dog and two cats. “E-love animals. Infact, -I* hoped an animal would do this interview,” the actress said with a laugh. Last year, Thomas worked at a research facility in Flor- ida helping to teach dolphins how to speak in response to language from humans. “I'd clean fish in the morn- ing, work with the compu- ters, clean out the pools and help feed therm,” she said. “I got in the water with them _because_I begged. CREATES MUSIC She also bought plastic musical instruments from a five and dime store and played them for the animals at night. SINGER HANK_SNOW | A country gentleman | NASHVILLE, TENN. (AP) —-Hank Snow has sold an estimated 70 million country. ic records, made.more than 100 albums and -perjormied:on the Grand | Ole Opry for 35 years. He's troubled that the iraditiohal: style of country music he popularized forshalf of a century is being swept aside by a slick’ Fifth Avenue charade. “I don't believe real country music will ever come back,” the 70-year-old Snow said somberly. “It'll stay around, but not like it was*in the ‘50s and ‘60s. “We've got a new generation, This young generation is not familiar with Roy Acuff (81), Hank Williams Sr. (who died in 1953) and Cowboy Copas (who died in 1963).” Snow still sings his hits, including I'm Movin’ On and I've Been Everywhere, just about every weekend on’ the Grand Ole Opry. However, the-1985-audiences: are merely: polite after— hearing his 25-year-old hits. “On the Opry 10 years ago, when I would sing Fool Such As I or one of my other hits, the people would tear the house “down. Now you get a little applause.” Snow, a singer-songwriter-guitarist elected to the Country Music Hall-of Fame in 1979, recorded for 45 years ‘Coucerte tu the Park Tomorrow, Thursday July 4 Nelson based argu p plays Reggoe ond Rhythm and Blues. EN ROUTE Drums, ° Free lunchtime concerts every Thursday *_ 12 noon to] p.m. at Kinsmen Park © Bring your family, lunch, and lawn chairs mpet. Co-sponsored bythe b. A 1 and & District Ce the _ The Castlegar News and CKQR Radio ~ y Asts Council with the co-operation of of for RCA/.a testament to_his devotion- and/lalents in a business _where ~label-hopping and label-dropping are common. Still, the last few years have not been easy. “It was such a job,” he said. “You've got to get new material and worry about arrangements and instrumen tation. And country music had changed : so much. I didn't -know what-to record: “The last two or three albums, we used m background and they didn't do (sell) anythin; ~He returned to the studio late last year and recorded a duet album with Willie Nelson. It will be released soon, but don't expect to see Snow in a video. - _ “From what I've seen, I don’t care for em. They distract thé audience from the music,” he said. “One guy jumps from ‘an airplane and then his house burns down. I'm glad my time. is done with recording. I got-out at the right time.”’ 7 ‘uptown’ thank-you note. “It was just a little note saying that she was very hurt by the book and thank- ing me for defending her,” Merrill, 89, said jn an inter- view. ‘> The book, by Barbara Hy- man, portrays Davis as an release last month, My Mother's Keeper has risetpjo ] No. 4 on the New York Times best seller list for non- fiction. New CBC program announced REGINA (CP) — A‘new half-hour CBC country music - television show_filmed in Re- gina will be shown across the country next January, Feb- ruary and March. = The host of the show is Deborah Lauren, the Regina singer who won the Academy of-Country Music Entertain- ment talent contest in Monc- ton, N.B., last year. “We'll’have the best Can- adian talent on the -show,” said. Steve Glassman, the show's ‘executive producer. . stars_on. the pilot episode include Murray Mc- Lauchlan .and Edmonton country-punk__singer K.D. Lang. “The significance of the show is there are not many regional variety shows,” said Glassman. “This show will be filmed in the Regina studio and the viewer will be aware of it.” Cable_10 TV. CABLE 10 TV Thursday, July 4 6:00—Sign-on and program information. 6:02—1984 Castlegar Sun-_ __ fest Parade — A look at last year’s parade with commentary by Marjorie MacBain and” -Jim Corbett. 6:30—B.C. Ski Hall of Fame- Induction — Dave Murray and Gerry - Sorensen, two well- Sun-' White Label. 1 Litre. Tetra Brik. .,..+.-- Bottom Round or Rump Roast Boneless Beef. Grade A. $2575 Bread Ovenjoy. — “White or 60% “ Whole Wheat.’ 570 g Sliced Loaf SF : / Olympic Vac Pak. Halves QUIN yyy, = Paver BAKERY SPECIALS Cc SOURDOUGH $ i= 7 5 San Francisco. 675 G. . 6 for 39° aa PLUS ROLLS V2 For... cceceeeeeees KAISER BUNS... NATURE PLUS $ ]’ 49 WiGLE WHEAT = BRE AD 450G...--+ New zs Potatoes 556 Ks S I oo “Ibs. for CYCLAMEN Snow Star _ Assorted Flavours Apple Juice > Rype. Detergent Snow left his Nova Scotia home at age 12 and went to sea to escape an abusive stepfather. As a teenager, he used $30 in earnings froma two-week stint unloading salt from a ship-to buy his first guitar: ~He moved to the United States in the mid 1-1940s and began singing on,the Grand Ole Opry in 1950.. In the mid-1950s he was a mentor to a flamboyant young singer named Elvis Presley. Snow's I'm Movin’ On was No. 1 on the country music chart Tor almost a-year in 1950.°-Emm§lou Harris recently “. recorded her version of the famous-country-song. In the past seven years, Snow has-cut back on his personal appearances in the States and devoted much of his time to efforts against child abuse, of which he was a victim himself. Snow still has a scar on his finger and one on his back to remind him of eight years of. abuse during his childhood. He has formed a { given annual concerts at the Grand Ole Opry House and has raised an estimated $250,000 for the cause. In_March,-he announced he is joining-forces with the National Exchange Club. which has ‘embraced the fight against child abuse as.a service project. 646 Boker St. Nelson In. wr Dinner § p.m.-9 p.m. Dally including Sunday that special evening — way Irom ita away ino cozy. vanalaered oe h and relax) 8 WESTAR MEAL TICKETS Reservations occ ted. Phone collect 352-5358 LONSH IN THE ESTAURANT —_— Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. SALAD. BAR (Monday through Say aaey)- — $3.95 ~ OPEN FOR BREAKFAST AT 9 A LUNCHEON § SPECIAL — $3. sO Mam. -2 p.m: the new VEIT TIT Tae iti BLine Litiitiinit Jiiiiiy Dec. _ trail known national skiers were recently induct- ed. into ‘the B.C. Ski Hall of Fame and mu: seum housed in Ross- land. The presenta] tion ceremony — was taped in its entirety, with Al Raine acting “as master of ceremon- ies. _8:15—Introduction to Swim Meet Officiating — This tape produced in conjunction with Swim B.C. outlines the various positions and responsibilities of swim meet officials. 8:30—1985 Rossland Moun- tain Music Festival Part 3, featuring: Legacy from Colville, Wash., a_ bluegrass and gospel music band. Also, Tom Lewis of Salmo, sing- ing old English folk songs, a cappella. 9:30—Rape Awareness — Terry Scarbo of the Trail RCMP discusses options available to women in preventing and coping with rape. ign-off. Have You - Entered Our _ 50 litre gas draw? Tiles rawr every Friday - CASTLEGAR MOHAWK 1415 Columbie Avenve Sunl Lau: 4.8 75 $s Castleger 365-7811 Safeway. Mock CI Fi or Bologna. Pickle and Pimento. Or Macaroni - |_and_Cheese._ Beef, Pork 9 Bian 5 Mon. to Wed. and Saturday 7 light. Powdered indry. kg Box... sees eee Dominion ° Wide Mouth Mason Jars 500 mL Jar — 100 mL Jar. CASE OF 12 © CASE OF 12 $579 $629 Luncheon Meats Lae ‘Fresh Sausage $459 Pkg. 7kg .3--+ For more savings see Flyer in-last Sunday's paper. _ Prices Effective through Saturday, July 6 in your — friendly, courteous Castlegar Safeway store. fhursday and-Friday— 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. We reserve the righf'to limit sales to retail quantities. — 18 2 2a B.C. Grown. Grade No.1 so | nw “ SAFEWAY CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED y yf