a ey ee - eel , " aed Rye, Lica i i - ; ‘ = | 0 a . Y ‘ ‘Za a ‘ as Rat catcher NANAIMO (CP) — Nan- aimo has an ever-presént with rats whieh forces the city’s official rat ole o ; i iv 4 © Ue ee hy ef Web: little effect CORPUS CHRISTI, TEX, ies and the products shé ex- | (AP) — A spokesman for dorses will have little effect. Jane Fonda says the Amer- ican GI Forum's call‘for a boycott of the actress's mov- Texas directors of the * largely Hispanic veterans's © group voted last weekend to baycott Fonda's products be- éause of her anti-Vietnam high on charts MILL VALLEY, CALIF. (AP) — Mama was a beatnik. #0 she weaned baby Huey on Otis Redding, Big Brother and Womack and let’him cut his teeth on early Bob Dylan. the visiting author Gertrude | Story an enthusiastic recep- catcher to make house calls. Council was told this week that the rat catcher makes six or seven house calls a week and also baits the storm Incl. 2-yr. Fertilizer Tabs .... OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKI CASTLEGAR WINLAW 365-2262 226-7270 tion. Story entertained the group with witty anecdotes about her rural background anid read excerpts from her poetry and from her book of short stories, The Way to Al- ways Dance. After the reading, she autographed a number of her oa a \ 33|] DEPOSITS Ya % The following day, Story QOOK FESTIVAL . . . Prairie author G Sertruda Stacy-was in Castlegar this week as part fational Book perannum She fed him rhythm ‘n’ blues with his cereal when he was just a tiny, tow-headed tad in Marin County. So you might say that Huey Lewis was raised to rock ‘n’ roll, even PLE activism, especiall; «| war activism, ly a LEAF , ,| -trip, she made to Hanoi in TRAVEL’ j] ‘gra. “If people want to get at- MAZATLAN tention for Vietnam veter- Lost Minute Special ans, the focus ought to be on "299 mem | Meshing snd ie neers ROUND TRIP administration which is cutt- ‘Aw Only Dept. trom Vancouver sewers every Friday. though he's a pretty unlikely looking superstar. Lewis, whose hot album Sports, with his group The News is in the Top 10, is just a touch too normal: The eyes are a little too blue, the jaw a little too square, the hair a little too neat and brown. You've seen this guy before; you just can't remember where. But what Huey Lewis and The News lack in outrageous trappings, they more than make up for with humor, chutz pah and heart — qualities that put them a cut above the norm-in a world full of calculated, computerized musical monotony. “So much of what we see today is visually outrageous,” said the 33-year-old Lewis. “I have nothing against that. But it oceurs to me that creatively and artistically, some of these ly outrageous groups play it very safe. jomeone like Bob Dylan was much more outrageous in 1964. Randy Newman is more outrageous — creatively, artistically — even though he doesn't look outrageous. I prefer that sort of stuff.” HIGH ON CHARTS Sports has spent 21 weeks on the charts and was No. 5 as Lewis and The News left for a worldwide concert tour through September. Their videos of Heart and Soul and I Want a New Drug are among the most popular. “I get autographed everywhere,” Lewis said. I can't go into a 7-Eleven without signing autographs . . . It used to be, you could have 20 hits and people didn't know who you were. But now, with MTV, it's really immediate.” Lewis and keyboardist Sean Hopper played with a popular local band called Clover. The News — Lewis, Hopper, lead guitarist Chris Hays, bassist Mario Cipollina, saxophone player and guitarist Johnny Colla and drummer Bill Gibson — evolved five years ago out of the Monday night jam sessions at a local club and $6,000 in seed money Lewis received from a British record company for a disco version of Exodus. “In the same way that before, I didn’t have a chip on my shoulder because we were getting no recognition when we were good, I take this success with a grain of salt,” Lewis said. “I don’t think for a: moment that because I sell a million records and some young band starting out sells 5,000, that I'm 200 times better than they are.” ing back benefits for vet- said Stephen Rivers, Fonda's press secretary. In addition to her films, Fonda is the author of a best- selling physical fitness book, backs a line of sportswear, has produced a video and operates two health salons in California. May 12 & 26. June 98 23 for 2 weeks stay Woodland Park Elementary school where she spoke with students. Call 365-6616 UPTO... VW / Kootenay Savings / Credit Union visited Woodland Park Elem- Festival week. Story is shown above in her visit to Privatize hospitals? dents in the gifted program, giving them advice on writ- ing from their own experi- ence and on the most effec tive use of words. Students found her visit stimulating and responded eagerly to Story's questions. ; VANCOUVER (CP) Canadian hospitals, the Such a move, she said, removes the client's capacity to “bedrock” of the country's health-care system, are in real ii the ies through group action, danger of being caught up in a move to private-sector hamstrings an agency that gets the contract and leads to a provision of health services, a union official says. lower standard of working conditions for the professional An enormous chunk of provincial budgets — more than employees. $10 billion annually — is spent on hospitals and that is a “huge potential market for private corporations to cash in on,” said Randy Sykes, a senior research officer with the Canadian Union of Public Employees. Sykes was speaking to a Solidarity Coalition-sponsored entitled Pri ion: The C ity at Risk. The coalition is a collection of groups fighting government restraint and social policies, Sykes said multi-national U.S. health-care corporations, one of which has already won a long-term contract to manage a small Ontario hospital, have seen the “right-wing drift in Canada and are anxious to get in.” Canadian hospitals themselves, already facing budget ing more i ike by ishii profit services, including diet counselling, boutiques and programs for gourmet meals, said Sykes. The effect of that, he said, is a strengthening of the ideology that the “bottom line at the end of the year determines success and failure.” The opening will come for the private corporations, who Sykes said already control 43 per cent of long-term care beds and 62 per cent of residential nursing care in Canada, with the need to renovate the country’s aging hospitals. Hospitals are extremely costly to build, and with cash- strapped governments reluctant to finance reconstruction, the easy way out is to turn to the private multi-national pass to Expo 86, the $1.2- corporations, said Sykes. billion world’s fair being built CREATE TWO TIERS in downtown Vancouver, The union researcher said private sector involvement in Tourism Minister Claude Sty You can lose . SC 17 to 25 pounds NW in just 6 weeks! : . ré “ ’ DANCE PERFORMANCE Students of Lynette Light- at Stanley Humphries Secondary School. toot School of Dance give performance Thursday night CasNews Photo by Ryon Wilson Cancelled shows live on By TERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) — The experience of Fame has shown, once again, that there can be life for a television series after cancellation by an American network. We're not talking reruns. NBC dropped Fame last 1 spring, but MGM-UA picked it up and, this season, 24 new episodes are being broadcast worldwide on 166 stations. CBC is one of the broadcasters. Fame, which focuses on the students at New York's High School for the Performing Arts, followed a trail blazed by other shows. . Hee Haw became a phenomenal success in syndication after CBS yanked the country comedy in 1971. It’s still going strong. It was also in 1971 that ABC cancelled The Lawrence Welk Show. The musical continued in syndication with weekly original productions until February 1982, then went into reruns, which ended just recently. Welk will be back in the fall with three specials. _ PAY PICKED UP The Paper Chase died on CBS last year, but Showtime, a U.S. pay-TV network, picked it up. The former ABC comedy Too Close for Comfort made its syndicated debut in early April with 26-néw episédes. Lumber prices down PRINCE GEORGE (CP) — A decline in home con- struction in the United States has helped drop Brit ish Columbia lumber prices by more than 20 per cent, market analyst Dennis Maw- hinney says. Snowstorms and tornadoes in the U.S., the prime market for B.C. lumber, and fluc- tuating interest rates have created a negative impact, said Mawhinney, a market analyst with Widman Man- agement Ltd. in Vancouver. Mawhinney conceded there is an over-supply of lumber, but “I don't believe the market is in total retreat. During the past five weeks, the price of two-by- fours has dropped to $146 a and learn how to keep that excess weight off Call Today 365-6256 “The agencies are really bought by the funder, in this case the government,” she said. “The funder demands a high level of accountability . . . and wants the method of treat ment to be one the government supports.” $500 MINIMUM renew Fame last year, Lawrence E. Gershman, president of MGM-UA Television Group, made an initial pitch to key foreign stations at a TV conference in France. “When I finally got the word he weren't being picked up got on the phone and called about a dozen foreign broad casters,” he said. “I said ‘I need your help.’ Some increased their fees 100 per cent. Some 50 per cent, and in no case under 25 per cent. “Then I offered it to Metromedia and about six other groups and got 40 per cent of this country in about two days. Thad talked to HBO, but they were talking about eight to 10 shows. I felt we had to do a full season.” COST $19 million Gershman then went to the management at MGM-UA and said the whole package would cost $19 million, including production, distribution and satellite rental. That came out to more than $700,000 an episode. He also got a waiver from the Screen Actors Guild so that each episode could be played twice in a week by the stations (once in prime time). In return, he guaranteed to film 24 shows and pay full residuals. On NBC, Fame was up against CBS’s Magnum, P.I. and never got an audience in this country. But in Australia, for Martin said a Victoria single-parent agency that had wanted to institute a number of public information services was essentially restricted to one-on-one counselling by the government, fearing that its grant would be cut if it ventured away from Victoria's program. WORKERS SUFFER She said agency workers suffer in that they usually work for lower wages, have fewer opportunities for advancement and can’t control their own workload. $12tosee | WIN PRIZES FOR WATCHING T.V.? A Who Ever Heard Of Such A Thing! VICTORIA (CP) — British Watch the First Choice previews starting at Hee: 6:30 - 10:30 o.m. 3:30 Fei, — 6:20- 10:30. 7:30 - 6:30 p. _ y / ieee * SPA TUB SUITE READY FOR OCCUPANCY % KING BEDS ¢ QUEEN BEDS © FREE % CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST ¢ FREE % LOCAL CALLS .. . BONUS NITE! SHAMROCK MOTEL E. 1629 SPRAGUE AVENUE SPOKANE WASHINGTON 99202 Fijians tune in with rest of world SUVA, FIJI (AP) — Fi- jians are turning their backs Columbians will pay between (509) 535 $100 and $125 for a season's NEW T.V.’S AND QUEEN BEDS & WATER * BED... NEW SPA-TUB . ..NEW MOVIES EVERY WEEK... NO CHARGE FOR MOVIES The government has resis- ted the introduction of tele- ADUET MOVIES ON CLOSED CHANNEL When it became apparént that NBC“Was not going to FIRST CHOICE IN MAY IT PAYS TO WATCH FIRST CHOICE First Choice is taking the "pay" out of Pay TV May 6th and May 7th to show you how First Choice pays off with uncut and uninterrupted programming plus first class movies, special sports events and exclusive series. The First Choice preview Days are absolutely FREE* to present cable television subscribers. Take advantage of your FREE sample and see how First Choice pays off MAY 6 ‘“SNOOPY COME HOME” ‘“‘MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE GREAT SPACE CHASE” ‘TABLE FOR FIVE” Starring John Voight *‘EDDIE MACON’S RUN” Starring Kirk Douglas, John Schneider “BABY IT’S YOU” *‘LONE WOLF McQUADE”™ Starring Chuck Norris, David Carradine instance, its opposition was a local version of 60 Minutes, and Fame became one of the highest-rated shows on the 9 Network. In Canada, the show is carried only by 15 of the 38 CBC stations owned by the network. The viewing audience has averaged 950,000. which is a fairly respectable rating, says a CBC spokesman. THEME UNIVERSAL “Fame is popular in other countries because it deals with kids trying to make it,” said Gershman. “You have that same fear, anxiety and concern in every country. Kids have the same problems relating to adults around the world.” There is some talk of filming several shows next year in Italy. Producer William Blinn said the transition from network to syndication was made without any apparent changes, although the show now has a slightly smaller budget for each episode. “We made the same changes we would have. made if we'd stayed on the network,” said Blinn. “The network res- trictions were gone so we had to become our own censors. One of the cast members was diagnosed as having leukemia. The network wouldn't allow that. They would require that if you had a serious illness it had to be a guest star. Blinn, a veteran of the network wars, smiled and said: “It allows us to be a little more efficient. We don't have all those phone calls from the network telling us how to run the show.” He said he felt the show could still deliver full screen value with a smaller budget. “I don’t think you could do that with The A-Team or Starsky and Hutch, or a show with a lot of location work and stunts,” he said. “But with Fame, we can stay on our set and deliver the shows in time, looking as good as the fully budgeted shows from our first two years.” If Fame continues, and it appears that it will, you can look for some of the students to graduate. Blinn said he doubted that any of the actors, all in their 20s, would want to continue playing teenagers. COMMUNITY Bulletin Board on the sunny tranquility of their South Pacific islands and becoming addicted to the passion and greed of TV dramas, such as Dallas and Dynasty, despite the absence of broadcast television. Fiji is one of the few places left in the world without tel- evision transmission. But the arrival of video cassette re- corders in the last few years has presented Fijians with the chance to tune in with the rest of the world. “Things were just dead before we got this,” an is- lander said recently as he selected a cassette of the movie Tootsie at a rental shop. Stores renting video cas- settes dot the capital of Suva with bright signs proclaiming the latest arrivals. The craze vision, saying a small nation must develop its economy before indulging in luxuries. TV will also have to wait until the country is electri- fied so everyone can have it, otherwise there will be a major population drift to the towns just to watch tele vision officials say. The video craze is ruining business for Fiji’s cinemas, a few of which have been forced to close in the face of the challenge. Movie theatres are trying to fight back by enlarging their programs, offering up to nine films a week ranging from the ‘atest releases to 30-year-old reruns. Owning a VCR, which costs $1,000 or more, is beyond the hopes of many in a country where $50 a week has even pt Fiji Video, a monthly review of the lat- est releases. Viewers are particularly keen for recordings of Amer- ican television series, es- pecially Dynasty and Dallas, gobbling up 12 episodes at a time. Distributors take out prominent newspaper adver- tisements to announce the arrival of the two shows lat- est installments. is d a good wage. The theft of a recorder was the lead item on Fiji radio's national news recently. Clubs and bars that once dominated Fijian nightlife, along with the cinemas, have had to defend themselves by installing recorders. The chatter at the bar now com- petes with the loud dialogue of the latest program. The video craze has also the i of police forces in other nations on Fiji. Cheap pirated video tapes have taken a heavy toll against sales of the author thousand board feet from about $190. In that time, the U.S. prime interest rate has in- creased by one per cent and other interest rates, includ- hospital services will lead, as it has in the United States, to a two-tiered health care system, one that, will serve the wealthy in modern, well-equipped facilities and another that will handle the poor in decaying, government-funded hos. pitals. Marjorie Martin, a University of Victoria social worker, ing mortgages, have moved up correspondingly. A Magnificent Dining Experience awaits you . lunches to . . , full course meals . . . at these fine restaurants. HI ARROW ARMS MOTOR HOTEL The Place Where Things Happen OUR NEXT LADIES NIGHT 2 TUESDAY, MAY 8 ‘Tihaaie@ Featuring: Marty Walker PLEASE NOTE Our Coffee Shop will be closed for KITCHEN RENOVATIONS TILL May 9 WATCH FOR OUR NEW STYLE Band: CON COURSE In the Pub, May 7 to May 12 WE ARE NO! Tues. said the Social Credit government's shifting of social services to the private sector must be fought. Richmond said. Richmond said although ti- cket prices have not been set he thought a day pass for an adult “with no discount for family or anything like that probably will be about $12 to $15.” from light Fireside Dining Room & Cocktail Lounge Open 4 p.m. - 10 p.m. For © scrumptious dinner. Mon. to Sat. “OPEN” FOR MOTHER'S DAY, MAY 13 W OPEN FOR BREAKFAST }. — Sat., 6:45 a.m. DINNER SPECIALS Every Friday & Saturday Our specials include Salad Bor, Dessert, Tea & Coffee Reservations appreciated 345-6000 LUNCH IN THE 1884 RESTAURANT 2 p.m. Sun. & 4 p.m. Mon. AND YOU MAY! During the previews we will be giving away some great prizes. Lunch for two at Homestead Soup and Sandwich Shoppe Castlegar, Value $12.95 40 Big Macs from McDonald's in Trail to be given away during the previews Merle Norman Cosmetics, Waneta Plazo Gilt Certificate Junction Shell, Castlegar — $5.00 Git! Certificate Ye Old Flower Shoppe — $10.00 Gift Certificate China Creek Shell — $5.00 Git! Certificate Wicker and Things, Trail — $8.00 Gitt Certificate Seth Martin Sports — $10.00 Gitt Certiticate (Bears Health Foods, Trail — $5.00 Ott Purchose Lou's Specialty Bake Shoppe, Trail — 12” Hawanon Supreme Value $9.95 Waneta Plaza Toyota — All 4 tires and wheels balanced ‘on the new dynamic wheel balancer, Volue $24.00 Junction Shell Castlegar — Gitt Certificate $5.00 Lou's Speciality Bake Shoppe — 12° Lucio Special Pizzo. $11.10 value Alexander's House of Beauty, Troi! $10.00 Gitt Certificate Flowers, Waneta Plaza 2$5.00 $5.00 rail — 1 X-Large 15" Pizzo, value $17.40 Trail — $20.00 Gitt Certiticate $5.00 Gift Certificate Mother Goose, Waneta Plaza $10.00 Gitt Certificate McDonald's Big Macs — 40 to be given away OK Store, Rossland — 2 $5.00 Git! Certificates Lou's Speciality Bake Shoppe, Trail — 12° Hawaiian Supreme Pizza, value $9.95 Junction Shell, Castlegar — $5.00 Git! Certiticate Ms. Dee Fashions — $10.00 towards purchase L'Bears Health Foods, Trail — $5.00 off any purchase Toys and Wheels — $10.00 Gift Certificate China Creek Shell — $5.00 Gitt Certificate 40 Big Macs — to be given away during the previews Carter's Sewing Centre — $5.00 Gift Certificote Lou's Specialty Boke Shoppe — 12° Top Hat Pizzo $13.35 value A&W — 2Mozz0 Burgers, French Fries, Regular Root Beers. Value $7.60 Trail Plants and Flowers — 2 $5.00 Git! Certificates Castlegar Chevron — Free Oil & Filter change to @ Toyota ‘owner, value $32.00 Gerrick Cycle and Sports, Trail abike Trail Tire, Waneta Road ot $29.95 (parts extra) Hi Arrow Arms Motor Hotel, Castlegar $20.00 of the purchase of one free Wheel Alignment, value accommodations Second outlet for TV or FM trom Shaw Cable Mary L. Fashions, Waneto Plaza — $10.00 Gift Certiticate Sonja's China Cabinet $10.00 Gitt Certiticate Kit's Carhera — $8.00 off developing of 24 or 36 roll of Ultra Print Film Junction Shell, Castlegar — $5.00 Gitt Certificate Ms. Dee Fashions, $10.00 towards purchase Merle Norman Cosmetics, Waneta Plaza Certificate Noture’s Gateway — $5.00 towards purchase of cottee beans China Creek Shell — $5.00 Gitt Certificate A & W 2 Mozza Burgers, French Fries, and regular Root Beers, value $7.60 Noture’s Gateway — $5.00 towards beer and wine supplies Delich Jewellery and Gifts — $10.00 Git! Certificate Jock Fraser Men's Wear, Waneta Plaza — $10.00 Gitt ate , Trail — $10.00 Gitt Certificate OK Store, Rossland — 2 $5.00 Gitt Certificates Creative Cratts — 1 Silk Cyclamen plant arrangement, value $18.98 Town Fryer, Trail — 2 Y« Chicken Dinners, value $8.98 Head Shed, Waneta Plaza — $10.00 Gitt Certificate Sam the Record Man — Buy one record, get one tree. Value 0.00 $5.00 Gitt $1 Seth Martin Sports — $10.00 Gift Certificate Lou's Specialty Bake Shoppe — 12” Top Hat Pizzo, Value $13.35 Lou's Specialty Boke Shoppe — 12" Lucio Pizzo, $11.10 value Sonja's Chino Cabinet — $10.00 Git! Certiticate Mother Goose. Woneta Plaza — $10.00 Gitt Certiticate Junction Shell, Castlegar — $5.00 Gift Certificate Kit's Camera, Waneta Plaza — $8.00 off developing of 24 or 36 roll of Ultra Print Ms. Dee Fashions — $10.00 towards purchase Boston Pizza, Trail — | X-Lar; 15" Pizzo, valve of $17.40 Sonja's China Cabinet — $10.00 Gift Certificate Sam the Record Man — Buy one record get one tree, value ot $10.00 Trail Esso — $5.00 Git! Certificote ramic Bubble Vase trom Creative Crafts, Trai! — value $16.95 Installation of | extra outlet for TV or FM from Shaw Cable Trail Esso — $5.00 Gift Certiticote Peppercorn Restaurant, Trail — Dianer for 2, value of $20.00 Merle Norman Cosmetics, Waneta Plaza — $5.00 Gitt Certiticate Chino Creek Shell — $5.00 Gilt Certificate Town Fryer — 2, % Chicken Dinners, value $6.98 Ladytair Coiffure, Trail — $10.00 Gitt Certificate for 2 for I night Libra Music — $20.00 Gitt Certificate tor purchase or service Children’s Tickets tor Snow White and Her Seven Magical FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 365-7282 We Are Proud To Be The Only Full Service Union Hote! in Castlegar. Crown Point Hotel, 2 $5.00 Gitt Certificates Mary L. Fashions -— $10.00 towards purchase Trail Esso — Gilt Certificate Value, $5.00 Ye Old Flower Shoppe, Trail — $10.00 Git! Cer Heod Shed, Waneta Plaza — $10.00 Gitt Certi Fireside Place, Castlegar — $20.00 Gitt Certiticate Carter's Sewing Centre — $5.00 Gilt Certificate Delich Jewellery and Gitts, Rossiand — $10.00 Git! Certificate Chino Creek Shell — $5.00 Gitt Certiticate Canton Cate, Trail — Gitt Certificate, vatue $10.00 , ba ays a MAY 7 The IT PAYS TO WATCH “INSPECTOR GADGET’ Costlegar invites applications tor grant” purposes igibility gui nd application forms m SWEEPSTAKES ¥i0)-Don Adains . Upvat the Castlegar United Way Ottice, lesa Colombia First Choice pays off with great entertainment and “A BOY NAMED gonume 15, 1904 neon. Deadline for submineion, 2 prizes too! Subscribers can play along with the CHARLIE BROWN" $100,000.00 **It Pays To Watch" A _ Sweepstakes through their May and HANKY PANKY Starring Gene Wilder, Gilda Radner June program guides. Non “ESPN: MON. NIGHT subscribers can participate on Preview Days by obtaining a USFL FOOTBALL “ESPN: Sweepstakes brochure from SPORTCENTER"” their local participating cable + FREE Ws mon sumeribers omy company. It pays to watch First Choice! YOUR BEST HOME ENTERTAINMENT VALUE. SHAW CABLE 365-6510 Channel 5 Preview Phone Number Only. ized version, and American Open Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. film producers, the FBI and Interpol have taken out ads di coder aay edncede cacy m, - 2 p.m. and sent representatives to “ vend warn that such tapes are Nae \ale/ Veh pie ated pililitt prohibited under Lliiititt trail b.c. GRANT APPL for Dworts Luncheon for 2, value $12.95, Homestead Soup and Sandwich , Castlegar Chine Creek Shell — $5.00 Gitt Certificate Wicker and Things, Trail — $8.00 Gitt Certificate towards purchase Merle Norman Cosmetics, Waneto Plaza Certiticote McDonald's — 40 Big Macs to be given away throughou! the a Watch and Win! Trail, Ch. 9 — Castlegar, Ch. 5 . PREVIEW PHONE NUMBERS ONLY Trail, 364-1655 Castlegar, 365-6510 5 i W. the new interna- - & B | A RESTAURANT eau 1 MAY DAY FAMILY PICNIC tiopal conventions. ss.c0Gm Sunday, May 6 at Birchbenk trom 10:00 a.m. Pancake Brunch ond other food available or bring own. Games, talent show, music, sunshine. All welcome to celebrate Workers’ Day 3/35 F.G.B.M.F.1. BUSINESSMENS BANQUET OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Liditiiit RUSSIAN SMORG Every Fri. & Sat., 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. Playmor Junction on Hwy. No. 6 359-7855 CARRIAGE CHOUSE CRESTAURANT Seok sow for Meters Dey | = Prime Rib * Seatood * Charbrosied Steaks * sated Bas » Spemhtien At present he is a T.V. co:ordinetor in f » = at The Manger or 365-5443. 3/36 Flowers Say It Best! Tell your Mom how much you love her in a very special way. Call or visit our shop today to send love to your, Mom with the AFS" | LOVE YOU MOM! "Bouquet Edmonton. Are pleased to announce the birth of their daughter LARIE TIFFANY Sister to Scott Jomes (13 months) Born Tues., April 10 Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations may be listed here. The first 10 words ore $3 and additional words are 15¢€ each. Boldtaced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words Motor inn FAMILY RESTAURANT We otter Children's Menu and Senior Citizen Discount Bring @ Senior Citizen and everyone in the party receives the discount. Available in three sizes r $25.00, $30.00 and $35.00. jay's paper yet ts tor one, poper and § p.m. Mondays | * Wed Notices si brought to the Casth « News ot 197 — ke a. Set . 1125-4th $t., Castlegar Bulletin Board vc 1935 Columbia Ave, 365-2177 646 Baker Street, Nelson CASTLEGAR ’S ENCHANTED FLORISTS