in town Is Budget 365-33 rentacar “Owned in Geneda by Canadians, The best car rental deal . Broadway Comedy Hit ‘Leet’ : To Appear Here on April 17 Joe Orton's wild comedy — 77-78, will open on April 17 at “LOOT”, the final production of the Stanley Humphries Second- the Playhouse New Series ary School Bulletin Board_ FOOD, HEALTH & YOU The Trail & District University Women’s Club is sponsoring a free Public Forum on Nutrition on Thurs., April 18, 8 p.m. at Selkirk College. Time will be allotted for questions. Any interested persons are welcome to attend. ARTS AND CRAFTS DISPLAY ‘The Trail Fiesta {in May) will be featuring an Arts and Crafts Display. Anyone interested and requiring information should call 362-5054. 2 _AQUANAUT SPEED SWIM CLUB REGISTRATION Registration for the Aquanaut Speed Swim Club will be held on Sat., Apri! 29 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and 2 to 4 p.m. in the Community Complex. New swimmers, please bring a copy of your birth certificate. TEA AND BAKE SALE Kinnaird W.1. will be holding a Tea and Sale of baking, crafts, plants, mystery parcels and white elephant on Sat., April 8 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Nordic * Hall in South Castlegar. There will be a door prize. Everyone is welcome. WOMEN’S AGLOW LUNCHEON MEETING Women's Agtow will hold a Luncheon Meeting on © Wed., April 12 at 11 a.m. in the Community Complex. LaVerne Holkeboer of Bellevue, Alta. will be the guest speaker. All ladies are invited to attend. For tickets, please phone 365-7330 or 365-5443. PYTHIAN SISTERS SEMI-MONTHLY MEETING The Pythian Sisters, Kootenay Temple #37, will hold their semi-monthly meeting Thurs., April 13 at 9:30 p.m. in the Masonic Hall. TUCSON BOYS CHOIR The Tucson Boys Choir will be performing at the final Overture Concert on Sun., April 9, 2 p.m., in the Nelson Civic Theatre. Admission is by membership ticket only. . + JUNIOR FOREST WARDENS MEETING The next regular meeting of the Junior Forest Wardens Club 4311 will be held on Wed., April 12 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 108 at Stanley Humphries Secondary School. Plans for the field trip the following week will be finalized. 5 ADULT CARD PARTY . An Adult Card Party will be held in the Robson Hall on Sat., April 8 beginning at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served and a silver collection taken. The games will be your choice. - “LOOT” Queen Elizabeth Playhouse Co. presents “Loot”, Mon., April 17 at Stanley Humphries Secondary ° School at 8 p.m. Tickets are available from Carl's Drugs, Castlegar Drug, West's or any Arts Council member. PLANT A TREE Blueberry and Fairview residents are asked to come and Plant a Tree in their park on Sat., April 8 from 1 p.m. on. There will also be a general park clean-up, so please bring shovels, rakes and gloves. Parents are asked to encourage the major users of the park, the young people of the community, to assist in this once-a-year effort. EVENING COFFEE PARTY St. David's A.C.W. will be sponsoring an Evening Coffee Party tonight (Thurs., April 6) from 7:30 to 10 p.ni. in the Undercroft of the Church. There will be a sale of home baking and a Bring 'n Buy table as well as ecard games to enjoy. Admission is 50 cents and everyone is welcome. SENIOR CITIZENS MEETING + The Castlegar and District Senior Citizens will: meet in the Centre, 1st Ave. N., tonight (Thurs., April 6) at 7:30 p.m. Mr. Jim Penman will be speaking on the proposed upgrading of Kinnaird Park. ‘TRANSITION HOUSE MEETING You are invited to attend an open public meeting on Tues,, April 11 at 7 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge at Selkirk College to discuss the possibility of a Transition House for women in crisis. For further details, call 365-3697 or 365-7509. BE SLIMMER FOR SUMMER You are cordially invited to attend open house being held by the Canadian Calorie Counters tonight (Thurs., April 6) at 7 p.m. at the Rotary Health Centre (basement). There will be a guest speaker. BLUEBERRY CREEK TENNIS MEETING All Blueberry Creek and Fairview tennis players and those interested in tennis are asked to attend a meeting in the Blueberry Creek School tonight (Thurs., April 6) at 7:30 p.m. in the Grade 6 classroom. Decisions have to be made as to establishing rules of court use, maintenance of the courts and other related problems. ‘Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit Sere ete are listed here through the courtesy of Canadian Cellulose's Interior |p_and Lumber Operations. Please submit notices directly to the Castlegar News by’& p.m. Mondays. : ‘A A Public Service of Interior Pulo and Interior Lumber Operations. . ° Canadian Cellulose _, Following the Vancouver production, "LOOT", produced with the generous assistance of Air Canada, will tour British Columbia and Alberta. Not iar removed for the Chaplinesque genre of theatre, . +. illogical logic, zany satire and questionable ethics . . . written by “the Oscar Wilde of the Welfare State gentility", “LOOT” is a wildly spirited bizarre upside-down comedy: Joe Orton's cockeyed, but insightful whirl at a murder mystery involves a. missing corpse, a coffin filled with, banknotes, a freshly-bereaved husband, a sinister son, an alarming undertaker, a fearless inspector of the water board and a constable, The satirical targets which include justice and honor, Cath- olicism, medicine and the sanc- _ tity of the dead, glitter with dark and unexpected lights! The production will be directed by Paul Reynolds, artistic co-ordinator of the New Series. Judith Lee has designed a set which must be adaptable toa variety of theatre spaces on tour. “LOOT, which has won many major awards, has been a long-running hit in London's West End and on Broadway. John Wayne Hospitalized - In Boston Actor John Wayne has checked into hospital for, what officials say are tests related to respiratory problems. The 70-year-old movie star, who arrived in Boston last week, has been under treat: « ment for chest pains and ‘a respiratory condition. He spend the last few nights at a hospital in Newport Beach, Calif. Hospital officials “did not say how serious Wayne's condi- tion was nor how long he would be staying. ss Wayne, in a telephone interview earlier this week - with a Boston radio station, had said he was not being treated for recurrence of cancer, which cost him most of a lung years ago. : CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, April 6, 1978 p Clip = «Clip = =Clip= al / ( ip ips = 'Clip'= Clip = =Clip = =Cl =Clip= =Clip= = Clips errr | p ==Clip= =Clip= =Clip= = Cl e= "Cli iClip. = Clip = eClipm “Just SOME STUFF TO HELP ME KEEP QUIET FOR A.WHOLE HOUR (N CHURCH." : Bring In This Cartoon for a Free Milkshake At the Castlealrd Plaza Dalry Queen Limit: One per Customer =Clipe = Clipam Clips ‘Arts Council Sponsors Family Month Contest Castlegar and District Community Arts Council dis- eussed, at their last meeting, final details for publicizing the Vancouver Playhouse produc- tion of Joe Orton's comedy ‘Loot’, which will play in the Stanley Humphries Secondary School gymnasium on April 17. + “The council will also spon- sor a performance by the Mubhlfeld Trio here next month. Doreen Knutsen repre- sented the arts council at the . * interim general meeting of the Kootenay Regional Arts Coun- cil (KRAC) in Creston, last month. Castlegar joined the majority voting against the proposed division of KRAC into separate bodies for the East and West Kootenays. Castlegar’s request for funding from KRAC to aid the Watergate’s Dean Takes Radio Job The most talked-about new radio journalist in Los Angeles is a disbarred lawyer with'a notorious past—John Dean. “['d much rather ask the questions than answer them; it's more. fun,” says. the one- time adviser to President Rich- ard Nixon who answered lots of questions at the Watergate ene —— April 6-12 GAUNTLET Starring - Clint Eastwood Thursday 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday 7 & 9 p.m. ‘J Sunday, Monday, Tuesday B8p.m. : CIVIC THEATRE 710 Vernon St. Nelson, B.C. hearing five years ago. For three minutes each day on his syndicated radio show, The Right.to Know, the 89-year-old Dean interviews a famous figure or comments on issues in the news. The once-conservative Dean has changed his style and politics. He is no longer a Republi- can. “I registered as an inde- pendent when I came out here,” he says, “which isn't that big a switch for me—I always split my ticket.” He tapes his shows in the book-lined study of the hillside home he and his wife Mo bought when they moved to Los Angeles from Washington. Watergate, the subject of his best-selling memoir Blind Ambition, has been a recurring theme in his radio show. . “I have an inside track,” Dean says. He spent four months in prison in 1974 for his role in the scandal. “It was a chance to take a harder look at myself and not exactly like what I saw,” he says. ests Must SesiaNeD In Royal Canadian Legion | Branch No. 170 & Saturday Erlang pam.- 1 jon. Saturday Sat. after 7 Pains Ing Tonight, Plage uray sounds of Country local touring theatrical group, Theatre Energy, was accepted ,anda further request for finan- cial support for the National Exhibition Centre will be con- sidered when NEC budget information is made available. The Trail, Nelson and Winlaw representatives at the KRAC meeting’ will request support for the NEC from their individual arts councils, also. The council is providing a potter's wheel for the craft room at the Regional Rec- reation Complex. Members agreed on the immediate pur- chase of the ‘Pacifica’ glide tongue model. e During Family Month in May, the arts council will spon- 1D, ww a bED om ell ED or BED ow A Do ww HD, we wl] wd fa the Place for a jete Line of Upholstery FURNITURE & AUTOMOTIVE . Upholstery FF 701-710 Ave. 8. 985-3055 Mystery Movie To Feature Canada’s Own Canadian actors Christo- pher Plummer and Donald Sutherland and actress Susan Clark have been signed to play in a $4.8-million Sherlock Holmes mystery movie. i Bob Clark, a Toronto film- maker who directed Breaking Point and Black Christmas, said in an interview he will direct the movie. Its working title is Sherlock Holmes: Murder by Decree. Plummer will play Holmes, he said. He also said financing for the film is completed and comes primarily from Canadian sources, The movie, based on a ‘B An evening’s high entertalnment for your presence at: Monday, April 17 8 p.m. Stanley Humphries Secondary School Sponsored by: Castlegar Arts Council Tickets Available at: Carl's Drug Mart, Castlegar Drug, West's, and Arts Council Members Adults: $3.50 Sr. Citizens & Students: $2.50 story Clark developed about a search for Jack the Ripper in Victorian London, is adapted for the screen by British writer John Hopkins. , “Community TV COMMUNITY ACCESS CH-10 Schedule for Tonight 6:00-Five-Day weather re- . port. 6:05—Castlegar Rebels vs, Quesnel Millionaires for the B.C. Junior Hockey Championship. 7:40—Puppet show at the Castlegar Library—Re- run. 310—Bob Brisco’s presenta- tion to the House of Commons on Unemploy- ment Insurance—Cana- dian railroad workers employed by United States railroads entitled to benefits. * 8:20—Full Gospel Business- men’s, banquet with guest speaker Bill Robinson. 10:00—Doug Barbour, Cana- dian Poet. 10:50-—Nelson Magazine: with Alderman Ernie Mc- Lachlin speaking on Nel- son's future. Ink Spots’ Bill Kenny Dies at Coast About 200 friends and fans sora People ‘Fun in the Family’ poster i hered at the Unit: for primary grade schoo) chil- dren. Giftbook token prizes will be awarded to the best poster from each grade from kinder- garten to Grade 7, and entries will be displayed in store win- dows and in the libraries. May 29 was set as the date for the Annual General Meeting to be held in the National Exhibition Centre. A commit. tee will arrange a special event and refreshments to round off the meeting. The annual art show will be held in the exhibition centre at the same time. This year, children will be invited to gi Church of Wednes- day of last week for funeral services for Bill Kenny, last of the Ink Spots singing group, who died at the age of 63. There were no clergymen, no formal prayers and no flow- ers, and while his widow Audrey asked that tributes be kept cheerful, there were tears from some.in the congregation and from some of the nine who shared the eulogy. Kenny, whose tenor voice helped to make classics of such 19403 and 1950s hits as You Always Hurt the One You Love and If ¥ Didn't Care, was well known in the Vancouver .area for his work with foster chil- on an basis. dren and i youngsters in general, tm \WINKLER FIELD HENRY SALLY Co-starring HARRISON FORD! A UNIVERSAL PICTURE: TECHSICOLORS Is This Where the Action 77 ia 797 Calendar April 6, 7, 8—"Little Mary Sunshine” performed- by the Rossland Light Opera Players in the Trail Jr. Secondary Auditorium at 8 p.m. e 8 8 April 7 to 21—“The Beaver", the first steamboat in the Pacific Northwest, showing at the National Exhibition Centre in Castlegar. The centre is open from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m, weekdays. . . * April 9—Overture Concert Series presents the : “Tucson Boys Choir" in the Nelson Civic Centre in Nelson. Admission by season ticket only. . *. * * April 10 to 16—Paintings by Dan Campbell at the Kootenay School of Art Gallery between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays. * 28 © April 17—“Loot” by Joe Orton, presented by the Vancouver Playhouse Company, in Castlegar at the Stanley Humphries Secondary School at 8 p.m. “Loot” is sponsored by Air Canada and locally by the Community Arts Council, A zany black .comedy everyone will enjoy. Tickets available from Arts Council members, at Carl's Drugs and at both libraries. * * * April 24—Castlegar & District Community Arts Council meeting to be held in the Kinnaird Library at 7:30 p.m. 4 se 8 __ April 27, 28, 29—Agatha Christie's “Mousetrap” will be performed by Theatre Unlimited at the Trail Jr. High School Auditorium. . * * The Castlegar Community Arts Council is again sponsoring a poster contest to assist in the promotion of Family Month in May by the local People Interaction group, Watch for further details of the “Family Month Poster Contest” to appear soon, ‘Ttems for this bicmonthly feature ahould be ‘elephioned to Mrs. D: Miller-Tait of the Casth Community Arts Counal at ‘057850 and \ Castlegar Savings’ Credit Union |G LANDERS ; Dear Ann Landers: My husband was transferred from Abilene, Kana,, to the Bronx a few months ago. It was my great good fortune to get a job in an office near our , 4partment, But—I have a problem, Several women I work with (all extremely pleasant and helpful) are of the Jewish faith and I often hear the expression “oy” or “oy vay.” These expressions are usually related to some stressful situation. ‘ A few years ago, 1 remember reading something in your column about “oy vay" and I do hope you are able to help me out with a translation, ‘ ~ BY 5 —A Transplanted Wasp Dear Transplant: After stumbling around with the translation of “oy vay” (learned at my mother's knee) I turned for’ assistance to the late Dr. Morris Fishbein, that dear man who for decades was editor of the Journal of the American Medica! Association, Dr. Fishbein wrote—“Dear Ann Landers: I checked with the - world’s best authority, Leo Rosten, who says in his book ‘Joys of Yiddish’ (pp. 278-274)—which incidentally is hilarious—'The best translation of “vay" is “woe” although “pain” is the common interpretation. “Oy vay” means “woe is me.” “Oy” is often used as a lead-off for “oy vay" which is an all-purpose explanation to express anything from trivial annoyance to abysmal woe. “Oy vay is the short form of “oy vay iz mir!” which is an omnibus phrase for everything from personal pain to emphatic condolences. “Vay” comes from the German “weh" meaning “woe.” ~ “Please set the record straight once and for all, Ann. This matter is, of course, of monumental significance. * . . —Morris Fishbein, M.D." T responded, “Dear Morris: That I should have stumbled on this one is a disgrace. All I can say is, oy vay iz mir.” . s od i Dear Ann Landers: Our son is 21 years old. From the day he entered high school he has been in trouble. At 16 he was busted for drugs. At 17, picked up for shoplifting. Later, he was kicked out of three colloges, totaled two cars. He has had counseling and “ psychiatric treatment (which did not help). This month we had to * make good three bum cheques. ‘ Our two other children are wonderful. We have never had any trouble with them. This boy is driving us crazy and ruining our , lives. We've shed a million téars over him and spent a fortune of money. Can you suggest something we haven't tried? —A Mother And Dad - Dear Mother and Dad: What I am about to suggest might sound heartless, but it may be the only thing that will work. Tell your son that from now on he is responsible for himself. Don’t give him any money. Let him live in the house as long as he behaves and abides by-your rules. If be doesn't—kick him out. If he breaks the law, let him suffer the consequences. If-it means jail, let him go. . » Parents who repeatedly intervene to “save” their children do . them no favor. This young man must be told that’ you have intervened in his behalf for the last time and if he gets into trouble again the only helping hand he will find is at the end of his sleeve. s # 8. Dear Ann Landers: I just read the results of a survey that said 95 per cent of the men in this country are lousy in bed. That's not all—the women who were asked their opinions declared, “Of the remaining five per cent, four per cent are not even ‘teachable.’ ” This means that only one man in a hundred is a good lover. The rest are totally inadequate or utterly hopeless. The women who participated in these studies were neither feminists nor traditionalists—they were just average women from 20 years of ‘age up to the middle 40s—most of them married. The bottom line was as follows: “Women are patient, tender, ‘nurturing and giving. Men are competitive, aggressive” and “assertive.” + ohe pigat 2 = vt, Will you kindly. state your. views? We-are\::" ‘ : . —Dying To Know In Miami Dear Miami: Please don't die. Here's my opinion for whatever it's worth. s *. The survey sounds like bullfeathers with a sprinkling of balderdash. Some men are patient, tender, nurturing and giving, ‘ “while some women are competitive, aggressive and assertive. To assign these qualities to one sex or the other is simply absurd. .,/ You didn't say how many women were interviewed, but I feel sorry for 95 per. cent of them. t * * * “Pear Ann Landers: My husband and I are atheists. This is not something we announce generally. Our close friends and relatives are aware of our convictions but some of our distant kin are not. Recently we were at a large family gathering and the host asked my husband to say grace. He was caught totally off guard but rather than offend everyone he said ‘a muddled’ prayer. Should we be caught this way again, please suggest a way we « can tactfully let it be known that we respect their beliefs, but do not wish to compromise our own. + i 3 —Puzzled % Dear Puzz: Simply say, “There are others present who are far 2 more articulate in offering thanks. I defer to Uncle John or Cousin ¢ George.” ie y “ 4 3 ‘We feature free delivery anywhere in the West seo ou may use your Chargex, Mastercharge, or use ient Budget Plan. our a ___ SOUND COUNTR puede) 7p SRS A few columns ago, | asked for your opinion on the question of whether count music should be kept ‘tradl- tlonal' or ‘madern country.’ The request was made in reference to Pete est Tubb was the first act signed to the new label. So far the mail has been 5944, . 75501. Al io come on—I want to hear from all of youl Jacky Ward has just con- cluded an appearance on the ‘Ralph Emery sarly morning TV show in Nashville. Ward is currently climbing up ‘the charts with the old standard of ‘Lovers Question’ but It's 2 very commercial country version, i Jacky Ward Tommy Jennings is prov- ing that brother Waylon didn’t get all the talent in the Jennings family. Tommy is fresh off the press with a new single for: Monument Records entitled ‘Don't You Think It's Time?’ (don’t think brother Waylon has anything to worry about as yet but the record does show some promise. Don Gibson In case you're not turned on by the current Don Gibson heard it! ‘Starting All Over Again’ is one of the best things Gibson has sunk -his © chops into in quite'a while... The: song was written: by Philip Mitchell and produced by Ronnie Gant... - Both the lyrics and Gib- son’s delivery are good but it's that welrd bass that really caps it alll According to ickory plugger mmy Holland, the fet bass licks were done Tommy Coghill. Mel Tillis. + Mumblin’ Mel Tillis recently sold out two shows in Gainesville, Ga. which resulted in a gross of $22,000. Not bad for an ole’ | country boy from Florida. It's been too long since anyone_ heard from Diana Trask. But she is presently in the studio recording for Foster and Rice Productions. The sessions are being done at Jack Clements Studio. CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, March 30, zi we y CANADAGRADE ......... Ib. Fee meer remem gg BONELESS = MATURE GRAIN FED BEEF IRUMP ROAST mas 30 HOCKLESS PICNICS 5¥2%,Po% 79% PORK BY THESIDEz=. 89% Weight loss in cutting, boning and trimming will increase the price per Ib. of edible meat portions. a A 2.1.39 | SCRE WINGS Beer tie 1 aoe SLICED 69° . rede lett ted SOUP %.8Qt CORNED BEEF TOMATO SOUP $9 LIGHT TUNA HEINZ . oe Ait, $] .00 FLAKE IG HOT BREAD GOLDSEAL60Z.TIN .. WHITE OR BROWN T5159 BY JOEY SASSO o CONFIDENTIAL REPORT: A famed TV star who once spoke proudly of being a prude is becoming one of Hollywood's wildest playgirls. Rumors of her having bizarre orgies with her co-star and her. beau have been circulating around tinseltown. So have reports about her. hot one-nighters and frequent flings with Hollywood studs. The evils of Hollywood seem to have changed her once angelic and wholesome ways. Friends claim for a while she was her co-star’s bitter rival as the two beauties vied for the top playgirl in Hollywood award. She has had a bevy of beaus. The feud fizzled at her 28th birthday party, where it is rumored that she, her co-star and her beau spent the night together .. «It's hardly new that Cloris Leachman and George Englund are getting a divorce as they've been apart more than three years. But it’s a shock to their friends that George, rather than Cloris, filed the papers. Seems he got fed up with her indecision. - TV BACKSTAGE: In the opposite direction, here are Sally - | Kellerman and Rick Edelstein planning to.remarry. They tried it for eight months in 1973 but both feel they've grown since then and are ready to give it another go... ‘The Blue Knight’ star George Kennedy could be having some blue nights over that $6,000 a month in alimony and child support he has to. pay, now that Norma, his wife of 18 years, has been given a divorce. They have two children.’ ~ INSIDE THE TUBE: Redhead Bonnle Franklin of ‘One Day : at a Time’ has done more for single women than Carrje Nation did for temperance. Her portrayal of Ann Romano, the divorcee trying to cope with two teenagers and a career, has hit the hearts of TV audiences nationwide. ** i i i is very much like Ann Romano. t sulk. I'm moody. | can't let_it out. It builds up and all of a sudden—boor Bonnie's booms can make life on her hit CBS-TV series something that must indeed be taken one day at a time. For she takes the character of Ann Romano, her. hit performance, very seriously. Once last: fall she battled - with 'One Day at a Time's’ producers for three days over a script. She tells it this way: “Ann wakes up on her 36th birthday angry and upset. She fears life is passing her by and there's nothing left. Five middle-aged men were telling me | didn't understand that script. They wanted to go for laughs instead of playing it for reality." After rehearsal, she recalls, she walked stiffly to her_car, climbed in and screamed at the top of her lungs. “Then | cried for 20 minutes,” she says. ‘If you'd asked me about the show then, | would have said | hoped it went _ ROBIN HOOD ALL PURPOSE 20 (bs. $9.79 TEA BAGS RED ROSE GAUZE. PKG. OF 60. MAYONNAISE FRESH EGGS - GRADE BEST FOODS. 24 FL. OZ. JAR HEINZ BEANS |, {N TOMATO SAUCE .. DAINTY DINNERS | ICE CREAM 4...59 49 ASSORTED FLAVORS .. pail 14 fll oz. ¢ Qe 89 FOR CATS. DR. BALLARDS 12 0Z. PKG. .. 69 DOG FOOD: 1S 0z. $] 00 DR. BALLARDS CHAMPION ..... tins e MARGARINE 4 51 99 PARKAY.. oe DOG FOOD ae 198 KETCHUP ATRA RAZORS GILLETTES .. HEINZ 32 FL. OZ. ..........¢ Sosesecees FABRIC SOFTENER APPLE JUICE SUNRIPE WHITE LABEL 48 FL. 02. TIN RAIN BARREL. 48FL. OZ. JUG ... MPOO RUG SHAMPOO = $9.19 WAGON WHEELS WESTONS 1202. PKG. ............. teecges | BATHROOM TISSUE 4... 99° CAPRI ee aes FRESH P CUCUMBERS LONG ENGLISH. GREEN HOUSE No. 1...¢a, 79 RODUCE STRAWBERRIES — 59¢ “FRESH. CAN. No. 1 BROCCOLI — GRAPEFRUIT 8 $1.00 IMPORTED .. PINK. SIZE56{MPORTED .. PRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL6, 7 &8 down the drain. | have tor ber it 's only a ) comedy and | have to stop taking these things so seriously." . i FAMILY SHOE REPAIR ue Next to Central Food Mart .: 11078 - 7th Ave. S. 365-3231 = an oe -= WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES KINNAIRD CENTRAL FOOD MART LTD. WITH IN-STORE BAKE SHOP FOR QUALITY FOOD AT LOW PRICES STORE HOURS SAT., SUN., MON., TUES., WED. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. THURS. AND FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.