The best car rental deal In town Is . Budget Owned in Consda by Canadians, 365-3300 fentacar: eta Licensee meer perpen | Weekend Heat Didn't Stop Bingo Enthusiests from Taking a Sponsored CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, July 28, 1977 on f So Nad he Event at Pass Creek Charlie’s Angels A Plug-In Massage Parlor CBS ‘news correspondent Morley Safer says Charlie's Angels, a top-rated ABC show, is “a massage parlor in the living room” and most tele- vision shows are “like chewing gum for the mind.” * Safer, one of the co-hosts of CBS News' highly rated news magazine program 60 Minutes, ~ attacked aspects of television before a group of West Virginia University students. “Most local television anchormen are chosen for their looks, rather than their re- porting ability,” said Safer, who . was speaking here as part of WVU's Journalism Week acti- vities. “... Barbara Walters has to decide if she's Barbara Walters or Rona Barrett,” he said, but added that he thinks the major networks are doing "“a damn good job” of keeping show business techniques out of 365-7155 . The following article ap- peared in “The Brooklyn News” July 23, 1898: “An amusing mining story comes from the Mocking Bird mine in the Warm Springs district .... L. J. Rowen, who owns and works the mine, also owns a pet cat. “This cat climbs up and down the shaft, through drifts, crosscuts, stopes and levels, and lives down there most of the time, being fed by the miners from the contents of their dinner pails. “A brilliant idea struck Rowen the other day. He took the cat into the ore house and washed the hair as clean to the skin as it could possibly be washed. Then he panned the dirty water to the highest percentage, and the entire cat assayed $18.31 on an assayer's | scales. their news Successful Candidates In Conservatory Exams The ing is a list of CIVIC successful candidates, in exam- THEATRE inations held recently by the Royal Conservatory of Music of Nelson One Show Only, 8 p.m. Toronto in Nelson, B.C. The names are arranged in Sunday through Thureday Two Shows, 7 and 9 p.m. Friday and y order of merit. Grade IV Theory Harmony and History First Class Honors—Dar- ren W. Bond. Harmony July 28 - 30 Honors—Marta L. Brock. MYSTERIES OF THE GODS William Shatner (general) July 30 — Matinee 2 p.m. JUMBO First Class Honors—Mary- Lee Naydiuk, Elizabeth A. Lanigan, Monna J. Brock. Grade lI Theory * ‘Harmony é |" Honiors—Monna J. Brock. Pass—Elaine Davis, Patri- cia L. Correale. a Doris Day- (general) - July 31 Sunday RETURN TO MACON COUNTY . % Grade (occasional nudity, First Class Honors—Selina violence and coarse E. Ireland. langui R) : Nick Nolte and Don First Class Honors—Rol Johnson ert B, Russell, Donna M. Riley, Aug. 1 & 2 Paula-Gene Sigalet, Mary E. CRIME & PASSION Johnson, Brian J. Kirkhope, Omer Sariff & Karen Craig M. Berg, Corinne Y. Black (Mature) Hotere Alison Slater, Mark Ball. Avg. 3 Pass—M A. Sloan. BLACK SUNDAY ae (Mature) Robert Shaw and Marthe | 1, % Kell Roberts. ler Pass—Karen M. Morrison. Prelimiaary First Class Honors—Kim COMMUNITY wt Bulletin Board ENVIRONMENTAL LAW WORKSHOP ‘The West Coast Environmental Law Association will be giving a public workshop on how the law can be used to solve environmental problems, on Tues., Aug. 2 at 7:00 p.m. in the Community Resources Board Room, 385 Baker St., Nelson and on Thurs., Aug. 4 at 7:00 p.m. in the Mcintyre Room, Cominco Arena, Trail. ‘ Public welcome. Craig Webber Takes First Class Honors The following is a list of suecessful candidates, in exam- inations held recently by the Royal Conservatory of Music of Toronto in Trail, B.C. The names are arranged in order of merit, Now there will be a God- father III. Paramount Pictures, which made millions with the first two versions of Mario Puzo's Mafia movies, announced that Alex- ander Jacobs will write’ the script for a third one. Another Godfather To Hit the Screen The film will take place in today's underworld, with the sons of Michae) Corleone in- volved in illegal doings. Jacob's previous film cred- its include The French Con- nection II, Enemy of the People and Point Blank. ‘Grade IV Theory Counterpoint Honors—G. Mark Fabbi. m yl L. Gobbett, Hugh A. Suther- land, Debbie S. Nobel, Chris- tian S, Sutherland. Honors—Jean E. Fergu- son-Davie. Grade First Class Honors—Leslie Glover, Margaret L. Evans. Opes FOR IT? - READY Honors—Rita Tambellini, warring Robert De Niro Tony Curtis Last Robert Mitchum Jeanne Moreau. ee ere ecm jana Andrew: Mary L. Hope. -Pass—Collzen Crossley, Delia St. Clarie Burills, Grade I Rudiments First Class Honors—Linda Lottanzio, Ann D. Purdy, Shel- ley D. Landis. Honors—Shelley J. Nixon. Pass—Danna L. Geron- azzo, Betty E. Hendrickson, Grace A. Bueckert. Rodiments First Class Honors—Ken A. Cormier, Brian Zaporosan, * Teresa M. Pryce, Estelle M. Cormier, Jean Sutherland. Honors—Lisa E. Brooks, Jeanne E. Campbell. Wedding Invites eo. Raffle Tickets CASTLEGAR NEWS Botile Neck Pop Shop Now Open Wizard's Palace Funteria ‘123 Main St., Castlegar 365-3237 Community TV Community Access-10 Schedule for Tonight 6:30—Southern Africa, Part 3: An interview with Abdul Minty, leader of the anti- apartheid movement and international expert on South Africa. | 7:45—Sunflower Fest Week- end, Part 1: Includes run, parade and bedrace. Cc ~NEW CONCEPT HOMES We have a good selection } \."-~ from which to choose your fnew 14'x70' Home. 906 sq. {t. of comfortable, madérn: llving space. Come’and ‘ . what.a. difference. 2..ft.. sad mak i Taina ot eta 1a Service People y Ii DL'# 01817 Yq Miner's Pet Cat Worth | -Ertertoomet His Weight in Gold ;Pages iw News and Ads. ar "Deadline; ® 5 p.m, Mondays ‘x eee “It is doubtful if any mine in the Rocky Mountains can assay better than $18.31 to the cat.” 7 Canoeing skills and Kinsmen Park Watermelon Eating Con- ° test. 9:30—Union of Spiritual Com- munities of Christ, Union of Youth Festival, Part 6. 10:30—German Diary. © Grandma Cooks Truly Memorable Chicken: © Mother Does Fantastic Chicken ete © And Dad Barbecues a Mean Leg Only D duly 28, 29 & 30 Starts at Dusk Chicken! May We Suggest Ann .. LANDERS ear Ann Landers: The attached appeared in’ The Helping Hand pwaletter of the Missouri Care Assoviation. Tons of books and articles have been written for parents to lp them bridge the generation gap. Now, at long last, Rev. John foquet of Neenah, Wisconsin, has come up with six wonderful uggestions for teenagers who want to establish a better hip ‘with: their parents. The key, he says, is understanding, Hopefully, his helpful hints will result in a little peace at home. If you decide to use the item, Ann, please start out with “Dear Teenager”: i 1, DON'T BY AFRAID TO SPEAK THEIR LANGUAGE. Try to use a few strange-sounding phrases like, “I'll help with the dishes,” and “Yes.” 2, TRY TO UNDERSTAND THEIR MUSIC. Play Glenn Miller's “Moonlight Serenade” on the stereo until you're accustomed to the sound. 8, BE PATIENT WITH THE UNDER-ACHIEVER. When u catch your dieting mom sneaking salted peanuts, don't show pproval, Tell her you like fat mothers! . ‘4, ENCOURAGE YOUR PARENTS TO TALK ABOUT ‘THEIR PROBLEMS. Try to keep in mind that to them, things like ebrning a living, paying off the mortgage and decent family moral landards are important. : 5, BE TOLERANT OF THEIR APPEARANCE, When your dad gets a haircut, don't feel personally humiliated. Remember, he nay want to look like his peers. 6, MOST. IMPORTANT OF ALL: If your parents do something you consider wrong, let them know it is their behavior you dislike, not them. Remember parents need to feel loved and no one can do it as well as you--their children. —J.J.L., K.C., Mo.” Dear J.J.L. ete.: Rev. Boquet is a very cool cat. ui e e e Dear Ann Landers: I have never written to you before but I can remain silent no longer. ['ve had it with those widows who write agd say we wives should be ful that our husbands are beside us—snoring up a storm. Tove my husband very much. He is a wonderful man, but his sI g is an abomination. Without adequate sleep, I am a nervous wreck. The only solution was an arrangement that would allow us, both to get a good night's rest. pring on the living room floor and a mattress thé living room and settle in for a good night's sleep. He doesn't feel rejected because we have plenty of togetherness and neither ong of us misses out on anything. No name, please, just —Utah Dear Utah: Makes sense to me. I recommend it. 7 e s ° Dear Aun Landers: I sent you a poem five years ago. I was only 13 then and so proud of myself because you let me contribute to your colgmn. The reason I sent it was because my mother was a heavy smoker and when I asked her to quit for my sake she said, “I'll try buf I can't promise.” 3 When my poem appeared in your column she quit. I think it my . Might help a lot of people who may not have seen it when it ran in 1972 and perhaps many who saw it may have forgotten it by now. So,Ann, please run it again. : —ABC Dear ABC: Corny or not, it’s still good. I've taken off the husks and here it is again. ‘( DID is a word of achievement € OUGHT is a word of duty, =: TRY is a word of each hour, # WILL is a word of beauty. Ae COME 3 AND ENJOY 2 1pm. THE MUSIC Dress: Fri. & Sat. after 7 p.m. Anonymous Buyer Pays “$300,000 for Tales An anonymous buyer in San Francisco has purchased one of the earliest copies of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales for $300,000. , The sale was revealed after the 12-pound, red-moroceo volume wrapped in red and white bath towels was brought into Howell Books Thursday by Robert Frey of New York. Owner John Howell guessed that the volume “is how probably the highest-, priced literary manuscript in history.” The manuscript was seript- ed on vellum—treated sheep skin—a generation before the printing press was invented. It is believed to have been a of about 40 Mi wedding present for the mother of Henry VIII in 1455 and is one copies of the book in jiddte English that survive. King Henry's mother pass. ed the book on to her chief minister and the volume re- malned in the hands of co!- lectors until bought by the Duke of Devonshire for 357 pounds in 1812. It remained in the family's castle library until sold lo Lew Feldman of New York three years ago for. $216,000. Although it is the most expensive book on record, Howell said ‘another scripted copy of the Canterbury Tales now in the Huntington Library in San Marino probably would sell for $500,000. ‘About weddings BillSmiley %° ‘Weddings are for women. During the entire ritual, as practised in our society, men. are inarticulate, inept, and in the way. women don’t have, when it. comes toa wedding. : However, I just shrugged this off. You can’t take it with you, Rot matter what This was my after attending the recent wedding of a niece. Not that it wasn't a lovely wedding. It was. She’s a grand and beautiful girl, Lynn Buell of Brockville, and with the aid of her young sister Pam, her temarkably calm mother, and her fairly distraught father, she came through the ceremorty with flying colors. She even ‘‘did fairly well for herself,” as we used to say. She hooked a doctor. ‘Well, at any rate, a medical student. All she has to do is support him for three or four years, and they'll be rolling in medicare. But he was practically un- . ‘Aiced, there was such a 4 weddings. 1 - think they are fine, and I'll go down to the church on‘a nice summer day with the best of them, and get a prickling at the nape of my neck, al over and hold the old lady's hand when the parson intones, “for better and for worse, in sickness and in health, for ticher and for 2” and all that stuff that makes your hair stand on end with hind- sight. " And I don’t mind the two or three hundred dollars it cost me to attend. Not at all. The last wedding | was at — my daughter's — cost five times that, and all I’ve got out of it is two grandbabies and the establishment of the Bill Smiley Benevolent Fund which caters to indigent daughters, their husbands, and any offspring they may have, Nor did it bother me in the slightest that I had to drive 600 miles, round trip, to see my niece given away. There was a torrential rain all the way there, and heat and a hangover from a magnificent reception all the way home, but that goes with the ter- titory. . What I did mind, just slightly, now, was the frenzy Family Dinners © Bucket No. 1 Great for a Family of 3 or 4. Twelve delicious pieces of Dixie Lee Fried Chicken, plus med. size of Fries and Gravy. © Bucket No. 2 Fourteen pieces of Tasty Chick- en ae © Barrel Twenty pieces of Tasty Chicken $9.89: with Tomato Sauce and Special Blended’ Cheese: $7,99:| o° sie °1.95 iz aie 93.25" of the following ingredients: * BACON * MUSHROOM * '® GHOPPED. ONIONS * PEPPERONI \* GRE Milkshakes. = Dor e t Forget | Every Saturday, only 7.9 % With All Due Respect to the Above Cooks , é ‘ PoeeRU a Open 11 a.m,-to/10 p.m.,:Sun., through Thurs, - 11 a.m, to. 12 p.m. Friday and Saturday _ Dave's Dixie Lee 7th’ Ave. S. Deliciously garnished with any or | UM ise Where the Action Boogie to the i Sound of a | “Sailer” Friday a Saturday j 9:30 p.m. of during the three weeks before the wed- ding. — Right from the beginning, IL was aware that I was going to be stuck for a wedding creations But little did 1 realize that my wife was going to’ do three things simultaneously: create own costume for the wedding; lose 10 pounds; and get a tan. Just try it, ladies, : She is one of those people who don't know their own limitations, Since she started sewing a year or so ago, she thinks she can tackle anything in the ahute couture line. I granted . that she could whip out a golf skirt or pair of smashing slacks in a day, and knock off T-shirts for the midgets in the family while the dishes were soaking, but I was leery about her tangling with a we dress. First week was sheer hell. 1 told her to knock out a “‘lit- _ lle, white dress’ for the wed- ding, and she came up with some old wives’ tale that you can’t wear white to a wed- ding — that’s reserved for the bride, week was a repeat. But she did make a panic trip to the city to buy material, and she lost a pound and a” half. Third week. The’ material she chose was raw Indian silk, Great’ stuff to work with. Look at it sideways and it resembles a newspaper that's bees left out in the . tain. But the sun shone. She stole a half-hour a day from her 10-hour sewing stint for ‘sun-bathing. And suddenly the scales began to work, in- stead of sticking, as they had been for two weeks. In the midst of it all, so wound up about weddings are women, she found time to dash out and buy mea pair of pants anda fine new white - shirt. [ was going to wear my old gray flannels that f bought three years ago for $18 and a clean golf shirt. The pants are a bit lumpy around the pockets from carrying keys, $6 in change, and golf balls, and the shirt has a cigarette burn in the collar, but otherwise ther're fine. Not only did she finish a real zappo of a skirt with a matching vest, but a polka- dot blouse to go under it. New shoes, of course, a tan, and — believe it or not — a air. She was a knock-out. * If We Don't Have It... We Will Get It for You. 4. NEWina Cardboard Box (Pianos Excepted) Merriman Music in the Plaza © : \Marlane. Hotel CASTLEGAR NEWS, Thursday, July 28, 1977 Happy B.C. Day! « & Monday, Aug. 1 2952 ¢ British Columbia CHUCK STEAK exxsxo- A. 67° SAUSAGE MEAT HOME-MADE FOR STUFFING .. LUNCHEON MEAT 8 PREM. 12OZ. TIN 2.2.2... eee ccc e cece ee ee | YOUNG TURKEYS ::-....... 75% POT ROASTS OF BEE 1BACON ENDS swirts sucen 5 = 33,89 1.19 aac. A.67° SWIFTS PREMIUM ........ 0.0 .0e0 500 ol 69 Sic A. 1.09 ¢| PREPARED MUSTARD FRENCHES. 18 02. JAR were AG SPAGHETTI & MEATBAL HOT BREAD WHITE OR BROWN .. KOOL AID DRINK MIX .......--2--cceeee CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE. 2402. TIN . 9% FROM THE IN-STORE BAKESHOP 72.51.59: nd 22 458 TOMATO JUICE LIBBYS. 48 FL. OZ. TIN = SF 2 02.99 6 1 89 NABOB. BOX OF 60-2 CUP eS | 39 Pada bait he ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX iscrecas.- DRINK tic.csrozmn.......... 6 9 WISTANT,COFFEE $4.69 NABOB. 1002. JAR 1.19 PACIFIC MILK 42°1.59 MARGARINE. 3271 59 seorbereregt apr DY : ICE CREAM ASSORTED FLAVORS. 4 LITRE PAIL.. $9.49 $202. JAR ....... 99° CLAIROL HERBAL ESSANCE. 360 ML see $2.39 APPLE JUICE SUNRIPE BLUELABEL. ..... AE BY FACIAL TISSUE KLEENEX. BOX OF 200-2 PLY.............+- 69 NOODLES couven vaun. - 2:2,998 PAPER TOWELS jE... DOC OD: ET BEANS with PORK LIBBYS DEEP BROWN. ......... 2:=89 QUID DETERGENT 7 39 LIBBYS. 28 FL. OZ. TIN ...... WATERMELON WHOLE IMPORTED’... A.B.C. LAUNDRY DETERGENT 60 62Z-B0X ... 1.89 PRODUCE : COIN on the COB 6 89S IMPORTED . CANTALOUPE IMPORTED .... SOCCOTOSCCCSODSO@OOOOESCCS PO Ceceocccccoccccecrccoveccove+eoensesouees WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. KINNAIRD CENTRAL FOOD MARTLTD. ~ FOR QUALITY FOOD AT LOW PRICES STORE HOURS SAT., SUN., MON., TUES., THURS. AND FRIDAY 9 A. WED. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. TO 9 P. MIRACLE WHIP $1,295 PEACHES 39° B.C. GROWN ........ cc ccc cee ee nee . Reavgerec are ccutcc tte Ces aaa wewenreeervesmsvesssesrbeces ses senn hee oS