‘Marmaduke’ artist owns very small dog Cartoonist Brad Ander- * Legislative Libtecy, ‘Parliament Bldgs., 501 ne Vbev Victoria, B.C. ; V8V 2X4 Kay Motors Ltd. .. MID-WEEK 368-3301 . Try turkey pieces in a zeaty sauce for a new taste Io varbersing thls summer. Tasty turkey makes barbecues sizzle arbecued turkey can mean a whole new approach to barbecuing. If you've been wondering about alternatives to some of the usual barbecue meals, try turkey this summer. Use turkey pieces for grilling, allowing % pound per person. Ask your butcher to cut up a small whole bird for you if the pieces are not available at the meat counter. Prepare.the pieces as you would chicken: brush liberally with vegetable oil or butter and then season with salt, pepper and paprika. Place the pieces skin side down on a greased grill raised 3” above the coals. Allow cach side to brown for about threes minutes and then raise the grill to 5” above the coals. Using tongs, turn the pieces often while cooking and continue to baste lightly: The sauce is used during the last half hour of cooking, unless it has a sugar base — in this case apply during the last ten minutes only. You may want to throw some additional herbs or spices on the coals at the same time; these could be fresh garlic or black pepper, rosemary, oregano, or basil. The meat is done when it is fork tender and pulls easily from the bone. Estimate 40 to 50 minutes for a thigh or drumstick and 1% to 1% hours for ahalf turkey. Try either of these sauce recipes for tasty barbecued turkey. Orange Blossom Glaze 1 (6-ounce) can frozen orange juice concentrate (thawed). % cup liquid honey. 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce. Combine these ingredients and mix thoroughly. Use to baste the turkey during the last ten minutes on the barbecue grill, Remaining glaze can nS heat and served as a sauce. Yield: 1% cups. Durango BBQ Sauce 2. tablespoons grated onion. 1 clove garlic, crushed. I tablespoon cooking oil. % cupcatsup. YM cup bottled chili sauce. 2 tablespoons brown sugar. 1 tablespoon mustard. Y% teaspoon celery seed. Y% teaspoon salt, 3 thinlemon slices. Sauté onion and garlic in a small saucepan until tender. Add catsup, chili sauce, brown sugar, mustard, celery seed, salt and lemon slices. Cover and simmer for five “ Yield: 1% cups, / Consumer _ /) An extra surprise waits for you inside each avocado you purchase. With a little care you'll have a new houseplant. After cutting open an avocado, remove the seed and wash it in lukewarm water to remove any pulp. Place the seed (pointed end up) about halfway down into a glass of water, inserting three toothpicks into the sides of the seed for support. Place the glass in a warm location, but not in direct sunlight. Add water when necessary to keep the seed about half immersed. Be patient, and within six weeks or less, roots will appear from the cracked seed, and a stem will sprout from the top. -When the main stem grows to be about six inches tall, cut it back midway. Don't be afraid to cut it back, it encourages the leaves to grow outward and will produce a stronger stem. After the cut stem has sprouted new growth, you are ready to plant the seed (leaving half exposed) in a rich potting mix. Corisumer Facts is a public service feature of CasNews/Mirror in conjunc- tion with Super Valu stores, son draws pictures of one of the world’s largest dogs but owns one of the amallest, Anderson created “Mar- maduke," the Great Dane who stars in’a cartoon ap- pearing in about 400 news- papers. He owns a Chihu- ahua-terrier mix, which is a)- most like Henry Ford driving a Chevrolet. “Maybe I figure that subconsciously, I couldn't handle it,", said Anderson, sounding a lot like Marma- duke’s bel d owner in his Yuma, Ariz., studio. He visited the San Joaquin Val- ley recently to spend time with a sister. He said he completes enough daily cartoons and Sunday comic strips to stay ahead of his deadlines. His syndicate requires him to say St least eight weeks ahead. Anderson cannot get any more ideas from Bruno. The dog stood on the railroad ’ tracks one day, barking at an the cartoon. Anderson, 65, said he has never owned a. Great Dane, but got ideas about a dog's life from Bruno, the family boxer. “My stepfather would dress Bruno in Army boots and an Army helmet, and he would walk around in them,” said Anderson, who has a picture of a G.I.-garbed Bru- no to prove it. “Bruno liked it.” Marmaduke, however, sometimes becomes impati- ent when his’ masters and mistresses put clothes on him. Maybe it is his gentility — Anderson said he “lifted” the dog’s name from a British duke. Marmaduke lets every- body know how he feels, Anderson said, because “he is a very expressive animal.” Anderson was a regular cartoonist with The Saturday Evening Post and Collier's when he took sketches of his canine comedian to a national newspaper syndicate in 1954. “Marmaduke” as been romp- ing through the comics ever since, and will appear in a _ television special in May. Anderson works on new cartoons almost every day in trail until it ran over and killed him. So “Anderson relies on his own imagination, ideas from friends or in some of the 1,000 letters he receives each . year from readers, May 21 Western Express numbers Check those May 21 Western Express tickets. Winning numbers for the $10,000 prizes are 3765227, 1952015, 1128255, 2614196 and 80265781. The five $100,000 win- ning numbers are 2261729, 2356707, 8688701, 9819180 and 2688762. _ For additional prizes:re- member the last six identical digits are worth $1,000; last five identical digits $100 and the last four identical digits $25. The last three identical digits will allow the ticket holder to redeem that ticket for five dollars worth of Western Express tickets. CHEVROLET 2880 Highway Drive, Glennierry OLDSMOBILE Dealer licence number D 5234 - CADILLAC Published ‘at ‘‘The Crossroads of thie Kootenays” VOL. 38, NO. 22 35 Cents TROUBLED BY HIGH PRICES ? STAY AND SAVE AT THE MAYFAIR HOTEL For brochure and reservations write: THE MAYFAIR HOTEL 845 Hornby St., Vancouver, B.C. V6Z 1V1 or Phone area 604-687-6751 still only from $22.00 up| Mostly with full kitchens — at no extra cost. Free parking Downtown location Weekly, monthly & family rates insulation These R-values are ratings of insulation materials according to their resistance to heat flow. R-Value 32 R-Vatue 20 SALES STAFF Psi GEO. SPARROW VINCE WATSON DAVE WILLIAMSON USED TRUCKS 79 GMC JIMMY 4x4 High Sierra, 350-auto, puree $3 Q4Q and much more f met. silver. V8-auto., p.! tadio, two-tone. 1976 CHEV % TON P.U. $5,350 1979 MONTE CARLO FORD ve SUIS PSs: p.b., Supercab, V8 auto, sunroof, buckets, pissy p.b>, rearseat - consol & much sliding rear window more. & much more. 6,980 Beer 1975 1976. . FORD %TON | TOYOTA 4x4, new pa «Corolla 1600 ce, V8, 4-spd., p.s., p.b., 4-spd:, Station Wgn., hubs, white spoke wood sides, wheels & new tires. radials, $4,830 BER EL) 1974 1978 “CHEV MALIBU. JEEP Classic 4-door, 4x4 Pickup, two-tone, new paint, with camper, V6auto., _ ~~~ Special P.s., P. Equipment. & canopy, -apd., only 30,000 miles .. & canopy, pas auto., 1976 Seoul. p.8., p.b., s lo, 1979 CHEVY VAN: $6,995 1974 DATSUN P.U. DATSUN 510 2-dr. 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Failure. ‘by householders affec- ted by Castlegar's street renumbering scheme to ‘post new address numbers by June 1 could mean a fine of up to $100. -° Under a bylaw given three readings by city council Tuesday, “it is the respon- sibility of the owner or oc- cupant to ‘place in .a con- spicuous position the number assigned to the subject build- ing” by the changebver dead-.. 2. ‘ ‘And every person who fails to meet those require- ments “and display the ap- propriate number so that it is visible to a mail carrier from the street shall be deemed to have committed an offence : + and shall be liable on conviction toa fine or penalty of not less than $25 or more" than $100. * Asked about the provi CASTLEGAR, BRITISH: COLUMBIA, MAY 28, 1980 City Fa interchan SIGNING PROCLAMATION presented by ‘Canada Employment Cen- tre officer Bonnie Periversolf, ‘right, is Mayor: Audrey Moore:. ee ear ae 40.30 Hire.a Student Week, the mayor urged "every ig to this P sion for fines in the street. renumbering bylaw, Mayor said it .is Closure bylaw. set aside by city council City. council left a. bylaw authorizing closure of 4 _ A motion ‘of sup- port by city’ council Tuesday for a letter advocating a Syringa Creek-Fauquier. high- way link followed the Ped it the Central of 11th Street at third reading Tuesday following numerous objections from local residents. Responding to a petition and other correspondence opposing the move, council referred the proposed clo- sure of the section of 11th . Street from Fifth Avenue South to the nearby CPRail tracks to its works and ser- vices committee for further study. _ Although the .section was originally dedicated as a road, council had decided, to close it because’ the align- ment of other roads in the area had changed. department has ignored the concerns - of local residents. Ald. Len Embree, who won support for his motion to send the letter from R.A. Fowler of Robson along with council's endorsement to the, regional district, said the planning departmént's rec- ommendation that a Pass- mere-Fauquier route be adopted instead failed to consider the needs of resi- dents owning or planning to resettle lakefront property. Although B.C. Hydro is obliged to earmark property for sale to former area resi- dents displaced from their osing ‘the route “residents have sought’ -in “order . to provide better access to the property ‘be excluded’ from the Lower Arrow Lake plan, Embree said. . The RDCK conducted public hearings on the Lower Arrow plan last year but : “what they're doing is asking people who are going to be ‘noaly affected and . then they're ignoring them,’ he said. ““If they took a position that they were going to be’ very restrictive in the) de- velopment I can see that as & positive move,” Embree said. “But the only thingI can see about a road-over the top is that it'll service the Power vy to a aive thoughtful support’ and ponder: lines’ and” "possibly * benefit some logging contractors.” Referring to the .prop- osed Passmore route Fow- ler's letter said “the only real that ‘route would serve would be to service the B.C.-Hydro lines. : “I-only Kope that’ your people can overcome the : Poort lobby and have the Impatience over sslavod plans for: modifications to the Kinnaird interchange ‘|sparked a move by city council’ Tuesday to meet, with Highways Minister Alex Fraser unless, rogress is made short!y. Sched eduled to meet here Thursday with a , Mayor ee ‘Moore pei Ald. Gerald Rust were also ‘instructed to seek an audience with the minister if.the issue is not resolved. <) The motions followed a recommendation by Rust, city works and services committee chairman, that council “press with, all. speed” for the final modification plans, still mpleted ‘after more than one year. ‘Adfacent land the ministry would have. to purchase in >order’ to modify the: interchange is currently for sale, and ~other than survey crews’ work in the area “literally no action has taken place” on the project, the, works - and services hairman said. core | believe there is also a conflict with the-views of the ‘Nelson d who have a plan “which is in accord with the city's point of view in respect to the interchange,” Rust continued. - . “In turn, the highways department in Victoria has got another plan’ which is in confifct.” . “I find it very non-productive to hear a group of design’ engineers in Nelson who know the layout and the problems here propositig one solution and it's going on to Victoria where . there's a group of people who perhaps don't know where Castlegar is on the map,” the mayor said. “I think the time has come for this municipality to stand very firm and say traffic is going to do nothing but increase in and around that ‘interchange’and if it's a matter. of the highways department acquiring more land and mofifying that .thing once and for all this-is the time to do it.” AIG. Albert -C: council's said the ii ly “has been sort of m ,. dropped from view" as.summer weather approaches. He noted the set of temporary traffic lights installed by the highways ministry at the interchange’s southwest section ; pute my mind were useless” because they did nothing to reduce .Moreon a page AG route up the lake,” the letter - continued.: “The. lake route would not bother the wildlife nearly as much as the Passmore route.. I have been over all that country in years gone by and have seen the herds of goats and caribou on top. Why climb a mountain when you can have a beautiful ‘New school. biggest expense . The cost of re- building Kinnaird Ele- mentary. School represents. most of the $2,527,086 capital expenses budget ap- roved for this. year by School District No. ° 9 trustees Monday. » Approved by a . BC. cabinet order-in-council,‘the figure adopted by the school. boar i the closure mainly Siletted objections to elimination of the access provided by the section. y tion of the Hugh Keenleyside dam in the 1960s, the RDCK planning department has ery.remiss” in prop- - P $1,334,200 to replace the school, which was destroyed by. fire Dee. 17, 1979. Dascher told’ ‘the Castle- RETIRING PRESIDENT of th Castlegar and District Community Arts Council, Jud: Wearmouth, is Presented a corsage at the ‘council's annual meeting gar News the capital expense budget also includes $104,770 for blacktopping and fencing at various schools in the dis- trict, $3,500 for tying in a fire alarm to the existing unit at "sistance rooms, $12,000 for a maintenance shop. storage shed, $82,000 for Kinnaird Elementary and SHSS equip- ment, and $23,000 for one new school bus. The remainder, the sec- retary-treasurer said, repre- sents fees and contingency funds. ‘lakeshore drive?" Ald. Albert Calderbank, who .as city planning com- mittee chairman won support for his motion to invite plan- ning director Floyd Dykeman to meet with council June 10 to discuss the proposed Ar- row Lakes subregional plan, said the choice of a highway link with Fauquier “seems to be beihg bulldozed through without taking into account what people want.” *_ “It’s up to us to see that people in the area are rep- + resented,” Calderbank said. Ald. Gerald Rust, coun- cil’s works and services com- mittee chairman, told council he favored the Arrow Lakes route “but we have to bear in Robson El ary and $668,000 for heating conver- sion and upgrading the fire- . intrusion alarms’ and electri- _cal-system at Sianley, Hum- phrjes Secon ” Also: provided i is $5,000 for Tarrys Elementary roof repair, $9,600. for Valley Vista Element roof re- pair, $18,400 for Woodland Park Elementary medical as- of Selkirk College and its 110 faculty members have reached a tentative agreement to re- place the contract which expired Mar- ch 31, the institu- tion’s personnel Representatives. Harold Kamikawaji, who said he planned to present the agreement with the Selkirk College Faculty Association for consideration. by the col- lege board Tuesday even-- ing, said both partiés have .still to secure, its ratifi- cation by their governing bodies. Faculty representa- tives hope. to put the College, faculty spokesmen seek pact's ratification tatification vote by the membership next week, he said. Ki ii declined mind it. wil strain our exist- ing road facilities." The Syringa-Fauquier link would provide shorter routes from Castlegar to Revelstoke and Nakusp and would service the largest population because it would also accommodate _ traffic from Trail, Rossland and Warfield. compared to the Passmore route, closer to the _ Nelson area, he said. Although Castlegar al- ready faces problems arising from increased motor vehicle traffic, implementation of the . highway plan prepared for the city by the highways ministry “would help ‘allevi- ate the problem,” he said. “While it’s one thing to say ‘let's go' this way,’ don't forget that down the road if. that’s the route chosen some- body's going to be scrambling to service. the area with proper roads, because it will * pose a tremendous strain on this area,” Ald. Charles Cohoe said the RDCK planning depart- Ment position on the prop- he said. to discuss details of the agreement, noting he and faculty representative Ron Smithers “stated we would not \release any infor- mation until it was rati- fied.” Smithers-was unavail- osed P link was “just another example” of its fail- ure to consider local con- cerns, He also pointed. out the Arrow Lakes now is the city's water supply and he stressed the importance of manager said Tues- protecting even if develop- ment of lakeside property is confined to recreational use. Monday evening by Sally . Willian’ This token ‘gift: In appreciation e@ enthusiasm aud i effort Wearmouth Hes given the arts council during her tenure in office. able for comment on the 1978 OLDS CUTLASS 1978 MERC. ZEPHRY. V6 auto., = + S/W., 302 auto., p.s., -P.8., p.b., p.b., radio, Villager Ealy 16,000 ra. Snip 23,000 Km. toa e PLAYMOR GRILL Featuring: Home Cooking Dance Floor Banquets ~ Catering You're Getting Closer