U A4 CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 1, 198) The Omega Theatre Com- pany production of The Mir- acle Worker will be per- formed Nov. 4, 6 and 6 at 7:30 in the Stanley Humphries Secondary School Theatre Room. The play centers on the touching and dramatic story of the relationship between Helen Keller and her teacher Ann Sullivan. The Miracle Worker stars Theresa An- derson and Leanne Smalley respectively. Theresa Anderson won critical acclaim in her recent role as Mary Giraud in the award-winning play per- formed last spring in the Kootenay Drama Festival. Theatre-going audiences in Castlegar will probably re- member, Leanne Smalley from her roles in Godspell, and her polished perfor- mance as the principle ac- tress in Joseph. The Omega Theatre Com- pany is fortunate in having the services of 2 number of professionally-trained direc- tors. On the technical scene, the company has the services of Gary Stamford, who is well-known in both Vancou- ver and Victoria for the technical design in over 100 festival and full-length plays. The artistic director of The Miracle Worker, Joe Beales, founded the Omega Theatre Company four years ago and was the director for Serew- tape, Dracula, Gospell and Joseph. The company is ably staffed with an experienced, well-disciplined cast and crew. Tickets for The Mir- acle Worker sre available at the door. ' Orson Wells given tribute By Bob Thomas HOLLYWOOD (AP) — They gave Orson Welles a tribute the other night and it was the real thing. No fat jokes. No wine-before-its- time jokes. Just a warm tribute to one of the great achievers of American film. “There has never been such a night as this for me,” said Welles, the famed bass voice rumbling with emotion. “I will cherish it to the last breath of my life.” Ever since Citizen Kane, Welles has operated outside — and often in defiance of — the Hollywood: Establish- ment. The tribute was ten- dered not by officialdom, but by his fellow artists of the film world.. The evening was organized by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association and was appropriately multi- national. France's Roger Vadim (and God Created Woman) said he wanted to kill the legend that the French love only Jerry Lewis — “We also love Orson Welles.” Italy's Bernardo Bertolucci (Last Tango in Paris) added his praise and remarked, “I have just heard that Orson is preparing a new movie; that is good news for everyone.” Peter O'Toole recalled Welles’ advice on acting as “one of the most liberating experiences of my life.” Wel- les simply referred the Irish actor to Hamlet's instruc- tions to the players. Discar- ding the microphone, O’roole delivered the soliloquy with an eloquence that mesmer- ted tle Beverly Hiltiu Grand Bai'room audierce. Welles’ felivws Americans also paid homage. Director- writer Richard Brooks: “There's no one here... who doesn't owe something to Orson Welles, and I'm one of them.” Director Mark Rydell: “He stands for things that are heroic for film-makers.” FILLED WITH DIRECTORS The ballroom was filled with Welles’ fellow direc- tors: Samuel Fuller, Peter Bogdanovich, Bob Rafelson, . George Shaefer, Jud Taylor and Sydney Pollack. Also such actors as Jack Nichol- son, Charles Grodin, Martin Landau, Barbara Bain and Deborah Raffin. The 66-year-old Welles seemed genuinely moved as he approached the podium, his ‘ample bulk supported with a cane. “Now I'm going to try to sound modest,” he said. Speaking only with a few notes that he said made no sense to him, Welles deliv- ered observations that evo- ked warm response from his listeners. Among them: “Directors are treated as though they were a separate breed. I take exception to that. Directors are all of them actors, just as writers are actors ... The director plays many roles, including loving mother and sergeant major. None of them is his real function. What is absent in the making of movies is the audience. It is the terrible burden of the director to fill tha yawning void... “Early in my career, I remarked that movies are the most expensive mistress a man ever had. I have been trying to support her ever since... “I think ‘movies’ are a better word than ‘film.’ Now- adays, directors are called film-makers, which is kind of tinism, but I actually prefer ‘picture maker’... . Picture makers suffer an incurable vice: we can’t stay out of movie theatres. We ought to. Going to the movies can produce too much nar- cissism. There is too much imitation in films — I mean movies’ — today, picture makers who copy other movies and add their own endings. If there is to be future picture making — and there had better be — picture makers had better spend more time looking at life.” Omega Theatre The Miracle Worker, Nov. THERESA ANDERSON in ‘The Miracle mother Kate, Worker’ as the deaf, and blind Helen Howes. Keller being held pensively by her 4,5and6_ By Jerry Buck LOS ANGELES (AP) — It’s possible that in ABC's Code Red fire-fighting series, Lorne Greene may have found his new Bonanza. The show has all the in- gredients that kept Bonanza on the air for 14 years, plus fire, sirens, fire engines and helicopters. i The tories may not have much sophistication, but pyrotechnics designed to keep youngsters huddled in front of the set are there in abundance. Greene plays Joe Rorchek, a battalion chief who's the head of a family of fire fighters. One son's a fireman, another is a fire helicopter pilot. A young waif he has taken in is in the fire de- partment’s Explorer Scout A series in the so-called chil- dren's hour at 7 p.m. Sunday. “As soon as they did that, we had to: start putting in things to educate children,” he says. On NBC's Bonanza, Greene starred as Ben Cartwright, a rugged rancher who soon evolved into one of the na- tion's leading father figures. The show was immensely’ popular and it turned Greene, a little-known Can- adian newscaster and actor, into one of television's big- gest stars. ¢ He followed the Western with a detective show for ABC called Griff, but it faded fast. And not too soon for Green, who quickly regreted signing for the series. His third series was ABC's Code Red could be -Greene’s new Bonanza Battlestar Galactica, in which he again was a ‘patriar This‘ time, tt’ ha theme — the concept centred on the search through space for a “lost tribe” that was believed to have migrated to earth. That series lasted a little longer, but went through constant changes. ROSE'S RESTAURANT PLAYMOR JUNCTION ON HWY. #6 Small Benquet Facilities Available Russian & Western Foods 359-7855 nd wel- comed into the bosom of the family is the city's first woman fire fighter. The only “civilian” among them is Rorchek's wife, who Piano Tuning Regulation & Repair Roncalio Piano Care has gone back to college to finish her education. : “I remember when the mudslides hit Mandeville Canyon in 1969,” Greene says. “My ighbor across the street got caught in a slide and the fire department came to rescue him. They got played by Eli CASTLEREXCNEWS ENTERTAINMENT _/ Claudette Colberi : charms audience * NEW YORK (AP) — “That was a sweet audience; I love it when they have a good time,” Claudette Colbert say's getting an interviewer to her dressing room after a performance of the Broad- way show in which she's starring, A Talent for Mur- der. « The actress, who was 78 in September, adds, “I think really the only advantage that comedians have over tragedians is the kick it is to hear people laugh. I can't tell you what a pleasure that is.” Colbert plays a successful mystery writer who may be- come a victim of somebody named in her will. Or she herself may be the murderer. There are laughs but the cr Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28 HENNE TRAVEL TOURS | Reno Bus Tour 7 Days DEPARTURES MOTEL Colonial Inn & Casino Colonial Inn & Casino Colonial Inn & Casino OR TW. October 22 December 4 Spokane Shows: TAMMY WYNETTE & GEORGE JONES STEVE ALLEN & XMAS SHOPPING NOW TAKING BOOKINGS FOR ROGER WHITTIKER NOV. 10th We will be having a Sheraton Hotel 69°° 9 ge a rope on him, but a side of the hill came down. He was killed and six firemen were injured. “You don't hear much about that. I think one of the values of Code Red will be to let people see these invisible fire fighters up close. We know they're there and we feel safe, but we don’t know who they are.” He says Code Red isn’t the show he set out to do when the pilot was filmed. His haracter originally was an arson investigator, and the both. They weren't merely stories were to be aimed charmed by seeing, live, a more toward adults. Then long-time famous performer. ABC decided to put the WOODEN SHOE | RESTAURANT International Cuisine in a Dutch Setting situation is going to be ser- ious for somebody. So, Col- bert has taken her bangs, which she her com- edy trademark, and brushed them a bit to one side, The critics didn’t like the play but did like the star. At - this performance, the audi- ence, one could tell, enjoyed Mon. - Sat. 5 p.m. to Mid. ° Aluminum Sunday 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Below the Nelson Bridge Sheets onNelson Avenue 24%" x 36" Telephone 352-9998 - 1 to 12 — 75¢ Each ft 13 to 24 — 606 Each 25 or More — 50¢ Each CASTLEGAR NEWS 197 Columbia Avenue ROYAL CITY ANTIQUES “ ANTIQUE SHOW & SALE" AUCTION | Waneta Plaza Mall PREVIEW AND SALE OF ANTIQUE MERCHANDISE NOV. 2 - NOV. 6. ALL GOODS NOT SOLD TO BE AUC- TIONED 1:00 P.M. NOV. 7/81. Royal City Antiques Ltd., one of Canada’s lergest antique i in with Plaza Mall invite you to preview the first antique show & sale presented to the City of Trail. We will be offering a selection of investment quality an- tiques as well as antique & collectable fine furnishings. NOTE: A partial list of items only: Signed L.C. Tiffany Aurene glass flower holder, 19th century chinese palace vases, Superb Victorian cabriole leg shaped mahogany library table, Victorian Circa 1 solid oak dining SALES AGENTS FOR: Cy Baldwin 365-3737 rorce om 2.937 7th Avenue COMMUNITY KOOTENAY NINE OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Will be having a Tea, Bake Sale and White Elephant table on Sat.,Nov. 7 from 2 - 4 p.m. at the Castlegar Senior Center. Admission: 75¢. Door prize.’ Everyone edt west KOOTENAY STRATEGY GAMES SOCIETY jeets every Sunday at 1} p.m. in jacu! Selkirk College. For more information call Besant 1ST KINNAIRD BEAVERS, CUBS & SCOUTS GROUP : Committee meeting will be held Tues., Nov. 10 at 7:30 Pam. ‘at the Kinnaird Elementary School. All parents ore welcome. USCC DOUKHOBOR LADIES Will be having a Bake Sale on Fri., Nov. 6 at 10.a.m. in the Castlegar Russian Hall, 1006 2nd St., Castlegar. SENIOR CITIZENS’ TON Will hold it's regular business meeting on Thurs., Nov. 5. Nominations for 1982 slate officers will be presented. All, members, please attend. Time —2 p.m. : 7 ~~ RNABC There will be a special meeting of the Castlegar, Nelson and Trall Chapters of the Registered Nurses Association of B.C. on Mon., Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. in Rm-M21, Selkirk College. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the proposed restructuring of the RNABC. All RN's ore urged toattend. ‘i CASTLEGAR & DISTRICT CANADIAN CANCER SOCII Will be having their annual general meeting on Wed., Nov. 4‘at 8 p.m. at Mrs. Moroso’s residence, 819 10th Ave. . Castlegar. Everyone is welcome — come and bring afriend, VISITOR You are invited to o public meeting on Wed., Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. at the Nordic Hall to hear Jose Lopex Ortiz, Worker's speak about “The New Nicaraguo”. WEST KOOTENAY SAILING CLUB Fall Dinner on Sat., Nov. 7. Please book before Nov. 4, Phone 368-6845, 367-7015 or 367-7751. : GOSPEL ROAD TRIO A singing group from Trail will present a sacred concert ot ‘Evangelical Free Church in the Legion Hall on Nov. 1, ot 11 a.m. The public is invited to attend this service. WOMEN'S AGLOW FELLOWSHIP The Nov. luncheon meeting will be held on Wed., Nov. 4 at 10:30 a.m. at fi i Arrow: Arms Hotel. Diane Holmquist, who has been a missionary in Zambia, will be quest speaker. Babysitting will be available. For further information, phone 365-2263 or 365-5443. All ladies ore cordially invited. KOOTENAY SOCIETY FOR THE HANDICAPPED General. meejing will be held on Wed., p.m. at the Castlegor United Church (: . Discussion to include New Vocational Services Policy. Society m rs and other interested persons are in- vited to attend. PUBLIC MEETING FOR AREA | (Thrums-Shoreacres) Subject: Fire Protection, on Sun., Nov. 1 at } p.m. — Tarrys Community Hall. All residents, please attend. ROBSON EVENING GROUP Keep Sat., Nov. 7 open for the Fall Tea and Bake Sale at the Robson Recreation Hall from 2 - 4 p.m... . Hope to see you there. TRAIL ART CLUB Fall Exhibition at the Cominco Arena Gym, Trail, on Nov. 6&7 from 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. daily. THE C. Invites you to a workshop on Sat., Nov. 7 at the Rotary Health Center. Film: “Foster Parenting in Adolescence’; questions ond answering period. Special speaker, Donna Mcintyre. Subject: Runaways, Communicating, etc. Registration deadline Oct. 30; $5 — or $10 per couple (in- cludes lunch). For more information, phone 365-6762, 365-6509, 365-3322, 359-7344 or 365-5402. Bulletin Board. Tampa, Florida Longest bayfront boulevard PP ath Af Py _ By Madeleine Hirciger Where arp the world's longest bayfront boulevard, a fifth-gengration Cuban her- itage, s,Jotpprt,that defies description, ‘priates and ze- bras? . Along with hand-rolled cig- ars, a busy shipping port and Moroccan architecture, the Sunshine State's second-larg est city, Tampa, is a com- posite of a picturesque vaca- tionland and a bustling in- dustrial center. Tampa is in- deed the axis of Florida's West Coast. : Within its city limits is the state’s second most popular attraction, The Dark Contin- ent at Busch Gardens. More than 1,000 wild animals roam within the park's 300 acres, Visitors will be able to see them up close when the re- sort hotel within the park is complete in 1982. Now, they can be viewed safely from an air-conditioned mororail, ca- ble car skyride, or turn-of- the-century steam train. Banada boats from Central and South America unload: cargos almost daily on the located near many other top Florida attractions. In addition to being easily accessible by car, Tampa claims one of the most sophisticated and well-de- signed airports in the U.S. Tampa is the home of the National Football League team, the Tampa Bay Buc- caneers, At the Tampa Sta- dium, which seats 72,000, you'll also find the North American Soccer League team, the Tampa Bay Row- waterfront at 18th Street. In* neighboring countries, phos- phate is the main product, and it too is shipped world- wide from the Port of Tampa. For the yacationer, Tampa is the ideal Florida head- quarters. There are hun- dreds of new rooms, down- town, near the airport or along the causeways which fea cross Tampa Bay. The city on #J the Bay has the state's lar- gest museum opening in 1980. The Museum for Sci. ence and Industry will be a haven for the curious who want to. know how things work. 2 Another new museum is located opposite the unique minaret-topped University of Tampa on the Hillsborough River. The Tampa Museum houses collections of art, in- cluding the Hennewein sculp- tures, and a collection of pre-Colombian artifacts. A relic of sorts is berthed ad- jaeent bringing ries of FLORIDA KEYS are a favori for scuba divers and dies. Nearby, at Al Lopez Field, the Cincinnati Reds hold their spring baseball training. From September through January, greyhounds run at Tampa Greyhound Track, and from January through March, thoroughbreds race at nearby Florida Downs. Jai Alai is played December through May. The city's charm is en- hanced by the “Free Bee,” a cable car system offering free transportation around the downtown shops and offices, Cable car riders are treated to live musical entertain- ment. From the intriguing archi- tecture of the minaret-cov- ered buildings at the Uni- versity of Tampa and the roar of the Dark Continent of Africa, to the creaking of loading cranes at the docks and the jingle of the cable jar, - Tampa is a cauldron of sophistication and vitality. Judge rules it a citizen BURLINGTON, ONT. (CP) — A couple who beat a man they caught vandalizing their home have been found not guilty of assault. Colin Gibson, counsel for Patrick and Susan Powell of Burlington, just north of Hamilton, argued in court the incident was a case of citi- zen's arrest. In acquitting the couple, provincial Judge Douglas Lattimer said he was not. convinced the force used by the couple was excessive. The Powells were charged with assaulting Jack Bonner; of Burlington, who already! has pleaded guilty and been fined $200 on a charge of ‘s arrest . mischief. He also made res- titution for the damage to the Powell home. The court ws told Mrs. Powell found Bonner spray- ing paint on cars belonging to her and her husband when she returned from a neigh- ber’s home in the early morning of March 22. The walls and windows of their home had already been sprayed. ‘ She ran back to the neigh- bor’s house to fetch her hus- band and they tackled Bon- ner, punched him and held him for police. Bonyer told the court he required hos- pital treatment and missed several days’ work asa result of his injuries. CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 1, 1981 A5 ™ CALICO CARPET CARE Serving the Castlegar - and Nelson Area. ° CARPET CLEANING 35-6766 Did You Know? You can contribute to United Way by... p pea eat Inion "Deduction 3. CashDonation 4. Mail in Contribution Recommended by Canada’s leading carpet manufacturers. . Mail Your Contribution By Gct. 31 Stop smoking plan gets started today Smokers who want to kick tha habit will soon have their chance. A special Five-Day Plan will be conducted this week by Drik Zinner and Ed Sharpe at Stanley Humph- ries Secondary School. The plan consists of regu- lar group therapy sessions, films, and a daily personal control program. The Five- Day Plan’ has ‘successfully helped many people quit smoking during the past 15 years. Conducting the program will be Dirk Zinner, pastor of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and Eid Sharpe, an accountant who has con- ducted Five-Day program, Zinner explains. There. will be a-$15 regis- tration fee to help cover the cost of materials. Held successfully in cities all across the United States and Canada and in most countries of the world, the’ Five-Day Plan to Stop Smo- king features such topics as the psychological and physi- cal aspects of the habit, how craving can be lessened, how willpower can be strenght ened, physical effects of smoking, organizations of a buddy system, and many other techniques designed to break the habit within a five-day period. A feature will be special and Plans across Canada. Group therapy sessions will be held at 7:80 each evening be- ginning Nov. 1, ‘at Stanley Humphries Secondary School. Sponsored by the Castle- ‘Trail Seventh-day Ad- lestination they are visible only a short distance un- in. ti r scu snorkelers. : derneath thewater's surf ventist Church in cooperation Florida's coral reefs are unique in that. BESS NES, ~ —Division of fourtem Photo. with Selkirk College! Com- World War If battles. The US Requin is an authentic submarine, and retired Navy personnel explain its func- tions and workings. The cigar industry was the catalyst that created Ybor City, the city-within-a-city, two miles from Tampa's downtown area. There's a special Cuban flavor, dotted with turn-of-the-century as well as ‘40s memorabilia. Ybor Square, a former cigar factory, now houses specialty shops and A Crash course working VANCOUVER (CP) — George Turner teaches a course unlike almost any other, because most of his 20 ‘students don’t understand a word he says. Turner co-ordinates and teaches the practical funda- mentals of industrial sewing. He takes 20 people at a time — most of them non-English former Cuban bakery has been turned into a state museum, depicting the ar- rival of the Cubans in the 19th century. Before the Cubans arrived, there were the Indians. The Spanish had experienced their fierce resistance and departed. Only Spanish pir- ates remained, using the bay as shelter. Each year, a’ pirate in- vasion is recreated during the Gasparilla Invasion fes- tivities in February. The Gas] Pirate Ship sails into Tampa loaded with cos- tumed businessmen-turned- pirates-for-a-day. The city’s defenses inevitably crumble ina mock battle that triggers a week of pirate revelry. Tampa, separated from the Gulf of Mexico by Clearwater and St. Petersburg, has ac- cess to ocean beaches via bridges. And if a visit to The Dark Continent whets: the appetite for more entertain- ment, Tampa visitors will women — and in a three-week crash course introduces them to the needlecraft trade. “At least 85 per cent of those completing the course find work immediately be- cause of the demand for seamstresses. “We take people who three week sago were unemploy- able, and hopefully, without the need for learning English, they'll be employ- able in three weeks,” says Turner. “It’s show and tell. I don't believe that you need to know a language to make a "munity als’a conti: munity service, the Five- Day Plan aims to help im- prove the health of the com- munity and to contribute to the national physical-fitness real-life films depicting the need ot to smoke and pointers on how to quit and stay quit. The first film to be shown will be to- night, the first evening of the therapy session. “All those wishing to at- tend the Five-Day Plan to Stop Smoking should plan now-an set. this week aside,” states Dirk Zinher. “We: will be glad to help everyone who of the: comes, length of time they've smoked and the level of addi- ction they might have. vatley landscape nursery | - GENUINE 6 Vall Wy Flow: ve 5 "Wn Soarndsetacs tow ORDER YOUR FRUIT TREES NOW. For Spring Planting NURSERY + 226-7270 Winlaw, B.C. Seeds]. DESIGN @ ESTIMATES William J. Dudiey, LA. 366-5702 ad Ladies FASHION BOOTS and WINTER BOOTS % OFF Western Styles, Cocktail Boots, “3 ‘PullsOns of With Zip EREMENKO FIT-RITE SHOES . 1224 - 3rd St., Castlegar yaa Turner gives his di handouts in their own lan- guage, and everyone nods understanding of his ground rules. The classroom oper- ates seven hours a day and there is little talk as the women buckle down. ~ For most, it is the only opportunity they will have to work in Canada without learning a new language. ATTRACTS WOMEN The sewing trade attracts mostly women — “most of the women here will be sup- plementing their husband's incomes.” The women are paid an average of $3.65 to $5 an our ° on the job for Vancouver companies like Modex, Jan- zen and Drapeshire. Turner says the course, which costs $50, is fully booked until January, and he'd like to see‘ more such courses at Vancouver schools now.that the demand for fast, work-oriented trade pro- is - established. A little early, you think? TERS AIR CANADA SUN CHARTERS. low Air Canada Sun while-to plan ahead. At iit to go fast, so‘call your travel r fares make it worth your,; ices, they're sure leht or Air Canada today. VANCOUVER TO + = SUN § CHARTER ; 45 CHARTER * REGULAR (RETURN) HONOLULU FROM AS $359” LOS ANGELES $179 goverment approvel. z ogea. Phoenit. and Los Angeles: CALGARY TO Or unt April 90,1982. 645 {Maxum stay tor Derive 60 days. BARBADOS $550 ess then 45, Travel © 28 to 44 days prior to must De TAMPA $365 | = $385 jor wos of the tare required not less ie cepetea tas LAS VEGAS g2i9_ | $239 is Roe eee PHOENIX $09 $249 Fiaenenessos $259 he advance Booking BOOK THROUGH YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR CALL AIR CANADA AIR CANADA @ TOURAM WEST'S TRAVEL AGENCY 1217-3rd St., Castlegar 365-7782 365-8451 1438 Columbia Ave. Castlegar New Years’ departure Please phone for more info CHRISTMAS AT DISNEYLAND 11-Day Tour be holding a Fashion Show, Cratt & Bake Sole on $149 . 24 will room suite, French ormulu mantle clock with Sevres hand pain- Wed., Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. at the W.K.P. &L. Co. Hall in South ted enamel panels, Vienna double weight regulator clock, pair of Slocan, Q Egyptian figures hand sculptured by E. Louis Picault. * find they are conveniently |} pounds, To avold New Year's resolutions about dieting, toke oc- fon now. SUELVHO NNIS VOVNVO UV SHELLEVHD NNS VaVNVO UV AIR CANADA SUN CHARTERS AIR CANADA SUN CH 5S DAY PLAN TO STOP SMOKING This popular and successful quit smoking program returns. to Castlegar on Noy. 5 at 7: phries Secondary Sch ds ). Men lose 44-1 pound per doy. Start now — Let Santa see you os a hoppy more of you than you would like. We have a super program for children toot, Come in now. Together, we can moke It hoppen. Give yourself . th hoppler YOU. 1E As well we will offer for sale and auction a good selection of thei sacr ifice Dining Room, Decorator items for Front Room decor and = Bedroom furnishings. DON’T MISS THIS IMPORTANT SALE AND AUCTION EVENT. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Contact Mr. Ken Floyd, Kelowna, at 860-8938. WE VISIT: a ee ere community service of Seventh Day porary co-operation with Selkirk College There is a $15 registration fee to help cover materials used at the 5 Day Plan. For further information phone 365-2649. healthi * Oregon * Reno * Anaheim/Disney- land (6 nights) * Sacramento. Departing December 1 9th Prices are based on dbl. or tw. accommodation sharing person, Cdn. funds, FOR MORE INFO Ph. 368-5595 HENNE TRAVEL 1410 Bay Ave. ” Tues.-Sat. Early Bird Holiday Special! Wests Nur answe Coming events of Castlegar and District non-profit organizations are listed here through the courtesy of BC Timber's Celgor Pulp and Celgar Lumber'Divisions. Please submit notices directly to the Castlegar News by 5 ‘ a a 2 TOTEM TRAAUEL eeensioes 8 i } y ia ed DD SERVICE CASTLEGAR LTD. A Trusted Neme in Travel For 23 Years << MAPLE LEAF TRAVEL Air, Land or Sea. Local, Domestic, International u “14 Trested Name ia Travel fer 32 Yeers"’ %* Catalogues available A Public Service of Celgar Pulp Division and Celgar Lumber Division BC Timber L d. Steakhouse Pizzas: Eat-in | orTake-Out | 602-18th St. 365-2421 @ SEE MARJ CULLEY AT" | CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION Tues., Thurs., Fri. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m] p.m. - % Master Charge ° Chargex Compliments of CASTLEGAR NEWS 7.a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon. - Fri. 8:30 - 9:30 a.m. Sat. or by Appointment Anytime — 365-6256 i 365-7232