September 4, 1968 ENTERTAINMENT Ae Castlégar News SAVE TUESDAYS FOR Us! The Trail Society for the forming Arts RESTAURANT “Food Done. . . Homestyle Way" 365-8155 1004 Columbia Ave. Castlegar D-sar-D pininc tounce OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY RESERVATIONS Te CONDITIONED — FOR PRIVATE PARTIES WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED 365-3294 Located | Mile South of Weigh Scale in Ootischenia ._— LICENCED DINING ROOM — famous for our... — Prime Rib! — Charbroiled Steak —Seafood — Poultry Caesar Salad — Specialties — LUNCH — Mon.-Sat. 11:15..m.-2 p.m — DINNER — 7 Days a Week from 5 p.m. RESERVATIONS 352-5358 a Across from Pharmasave 646 Baker St., Nelson Humourist, raconteur, traveller, naturalist, historian and social critic John Charters is all of these and now Over My Shoulder gathers, for the first time, the best of his pungent Castlegar News columns. Charters reflects on the peculiarities of the sexes, on freedom, education and life's wonders and horrors. He recollects memorable characters, the Kootenays of old, favourite journeys and the joys of childhood Over My Shoulder is an entertaining mix of perception ond observation from a journalist who alii, has been writing with wit and me & Recollections il compossion tor 50, yeors hectierapaner Cole oar Lae 200 Pages $14.95 John A. Charters was born in Vancouver in 1916 and spent his boyhood near Barnet on Burrard inlet. After attending the University of British Columbia, he-enlisted with the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada, attaining the rank of captain, and was decorated tor gallantry in action while serving in the iterranean Campaign of World War Il Charters moved to the Kootenays in 1947 to teach high school sciences id has remained in this beloved southest corner of British Columbia béeause, he says, “It’s a place that takes hold of you Alter retiring from teaching in 1978, he continued to pursue his enjoyment of people, places and ideas through travel and personal study and to live his faith by becoming an oblate with the Benedictine abbey of St Joseph of Westminster. But his first love remains writing. ‘I like the sound and the taste of words. Writing is a compulsion for me.” John Charters lives beside the Columbia River in Castlegar with his wife Bunny, three dogs, o cat and a collection of ceramic dragons ew books at library By JUDY WEARMOUTH Librarian While we're still in the mood for relaxed summer reading, here's a few of the library's latest new books to keep you in your deck chair (but please watch those sprinklers; some of our-books have been coming back crinkly!) In My Mother's House by Eliz 1976, Peking combines fascinating history with the moving story of two families, one English, one Chinese, whose lives are irrevocably marked by the Revolution. A young English missionary Jakob and his infant daughter, Abigail, are captured by the Red Army in 1934 and are forced to travel across six thousand miles of wild mountain terrain. A beautiful and idealistic Chinese rev: y abeth Winthrop, is a satisfying saga of three generations of strong New Englanders, inheritors of both the Puritan tradition and Italian passions that rage against the confines of respectability. The genteel lives of Lydia, Charlotte and Molly are inter- twined with those of the Delbiancos, immigrant Italians who work the land. In the early 1800's, Lydia is a powerless child, with a seductive uncle, James; her only daughter, Charlotte, is raised to defeat her mother’s demons; in the third gen- eration, Molly, an artist, takes refuge in the old family home with Agnes, the housekeeper and keeper also of the family secrets, learned from Lydia's diaries. The Delbianco pa. triarch, Frank, has frustrations which lead to violence; his son, Rudy, succeeds where his father failed and the present day generation finds redemption by daring to tell the truth. Anthony Greg, author of the best- selling Saigon, is still in his oriental mode with Peking. Beginning with the legendary Long March of the 1930's and ending with the cata- clysmic events surrounding the deaths of Mao Tse-tung and. the overthrow of the Gang of Four in Music Following \are the results of the Royal Consetvatory of Music, prac tical examinations earlier this sum- mer in Trail. ARCT performer piano = first class honors: Marjory Purdy. Grade 10 Piano — first class honors: Shannon Rhae Smithers; pass: Jeannie Andrea Duguay, Mar Nerdy, Nerdy, Look Who's 30! ‘Over My Shoulder is ‘lobl. Armstrong 365-6549). TRAIL: LAJ Books. discount: John Charters 365-5241. at the foll g | i CASTLEGAR: The Book Shop, Central Food Mart, Airport Gift Shop, National Exhibition Centre, Castlegar News, Bear Grass Press (Kathy NELSON: Oliver's Books, Nelson Museum CRESTON: Apple Tree Book Store. Personally inscribed copies and seniors ab © 666 lg “7 and ( Lu Mei-ling, saves Jakob's life an shelters Abigail. Years later, now a respected ‘China watcher’ ‘in Hong Kong, “he is invited by one of his former captors to the Peoples’ Re- public. There, he becomes the un- witting pawn in a deadly intrigue which threatens his beloved Mei-ling and the events of his own life echo the upheavals of the Cultural Rev- olution. Here's a timely laugh for us! John Buckley was deputy press secretary in the 1984 Reagan-Bush campaign so has a wealth of inside knowledge which he uses to great effect in Family Politics. He tells the story of a patrician ‘Hatfields and McCoys’ feud fought on the campaign trail, and in the tabloid newspapers, as two members of the infamous Daley dynasty become rival candidates in a senatorial eampaign. Charles Daley has tried to keep his distance from a peculiar bunch of relatives whose names are often touched by scandal but when his brother challénges their uncle, a Republican senator, he forgets his misgivings and marshalls the bleary-eyed, battle-scarred for- ces of uncles and cousins and aunts to wage battle on their side. They fling themselves into the fray, using state of the art mudslinging techniques which might even remind us of our own nightly TV news fare. + Ovear and Lucinda is a remarkable novel, set in mid 19th century Aus- tralia, by the young Australian writer Peter Carey. His bizarre characters interact in amazing ways and enchant the reader with their eccentricities. Oscar Hopkins is a de- frocked Anglican priest, an original mind in an age of theology, and.a compulsive gambler who regards his luck as a sign from God. His accomplice, Lucinda Leplastrier, owns a glass factory in Sydney because she's convinced industrial- ization will help to liberate women, Theophilus Hopkins is a‘ fanatical Methodist minister who is a famous marine biologist in his spare time. Along with many other wierd and wonderful people, they show the strange turns that love and com- merece, religion and colonialism took in the Victorian Age. We hardly need to promote the new Judith Krantz novel, Till We Meet Again, but it's the story of three women of matchless daring. Eve dared to bring scandal on herself when she ran away from home to live in sin, win stardom in the Paris Music Hall and risk her life at the front in World War 1. Freddy dared to defy her outraged parents and learnt to fly in secret, flying solo at age 16, and competing in the great air races of the 1930's. Delphine dared to live a secret life of wild night-clubbing and illegal gambling when Hollywood was in its heyday. Since Platoon, there's been a lot of interest in the ‘real’ Vietnam War and Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers is a testament to the thou- sands of young adults who fought and died in that war. It tells about one 17-year-old's tour of duty in Vietnam where he learned there's only two kinds of soldiers in Vietnam, those who are alert twenty-four ho day and those who are dead. Ritchie Perry hadn't given the army much thought. He couldn't afford college and thought at least he'd have something to do and three meals a day. Basic training wasn't bad but he wasn't told what things would really be like. He wasn’t told about Nam Rot, about napalm or the neat stacks of bodybags waiting for the next comrade to fall. Nor could he have realized what it felt like to shoot at Vietnamese as young end as afraid as himself. y, The renowned science fiction writer, Ray Bradbury, has a new collection of short stories called The Toynbee Convector. Most of the twenty-three tales begin in familiar rooms and landscapes and then take off to worlds unknown, charming and astonishing the reader as the unex pected and fantastic aspects of the realm are explored. In the title story, the world’s only time traveller re- veals his secret, one hundred years after his famous journey into the future. In ‘Love affair’, a last lonely Martian is prepared to face his doom in return for the sound of music and the hope of friendship. In ‘I suppose you're wondering why we are here?’, a man learns from his parents (dead for twenty years) the inescapable truth about himself. students pass exams tin L. Brown and Joanna Elise Wilson. Grade 9 Piano — first class henors: Todd Bonin, Maria Ciardullo, Mich. elle Holm, Colleen M. Ross; honors: Rachel Santesso, Dorothy Evelyn Gabana, Donna Kay Wolff; pass Sheri Lynn Wanjoff. Grade 8 Piano — honors: Amy Zanrosso, Debbie Shirley Chan, Van: essa Jill Dooley, Cleo Heitmann, Denise Smithers; pass: M.E. Michele Eaton, Margaret Lottie Evans. Grade 7 Piano — first class honors: Christine Profili, Elaine Chong, Linda Gallo; honors: Tina Margaret McMurdo, Amanda Romney, Carolyn F..Ross, Jennifer Leah Siddall, Brad Smithers; pass: Joanne Natline Dal. las. Grade 6 Piano — honors: Sharon Lang, Jennifer Shrubsole, Olivia GREWMAN ACRES Castlegar, B.C. Formerly D-Bar-D Riding Stables.) — UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT — Ss * ALLNI TABLES OPEN 9 A.M. DAILY IEW STOCK ® A HORSE FOR EVERY TYPE OF RIDER * GUIDE AVAILABLE * SCENIC TRAILS * RIDING LESSONS * BOARDING FACILITIES * HORSEDRAWN HAYRIDES (By Appointment) Phone 365-3986 LOCATION : 1 mile south of weigh scale in Ootischenia next to D-Bar-D Dining Lounge. Follow the Signs. Marie Vaal, Kyla Mae Huska, Rox anne Lee Callender, Sherry mak. ortoff; pass: Linda Chang, Jane Chang, Louise Pinckney. Grade 5 Piano — first class honors: Gina Chong; honors: Trudy M. Palmer, Rory Perrier, Shelagh Ross, Lesa Draper, Alana Barone, Greg Ehman. Grade 4 Piano — honors; Gerald Chow, Utako Kambara, Erin Lee, C. Acton, Coby Salmon, Heidi Smee, Tyler Matthew Thompson, Joseph Parrilla, M. Todd Sorenson; pass: Londa Marie Molitwenik, Rebecca Bree Smyth, Douglas Harvey. Grade 3 Piano — first class honors: James Peter Jmieff, Kaela Tomp- kins; honors: Matthew Arron Par. rilla, Lisa Dawn Rossi, Julie Anne Driutti, Stephanie LeRose, Laurel Dynasty Anne Acton, C.-Mansbridge, Angela Guglielmi, Laura Peterson, David Mirko Driutti, Catherine Horvath, Diane Carol Wolff, Rae Carter, Shelley Anne Miscavitch, Amber Read. Grade 2 Piano — honors: Vanessa Fawcett, Brad Zaytsoff, Shannon Carter, Ryan David Steck, Geoffrey John Higginson, Kathleen Nicole Parrilla, Shauna Renae Steck, Dawn Michelle McKee. Grade 1 Piano — first class honors: Bryan Chow,| Ryan A. Swedburg; honors: Ryan Patrick Martin, Le- canne Candice McLim, Paola Pia- sentin, Natalie Poirier, Kevin G. Swedburg, Ryan Kirfakin, Averil Sheppard. Grade 5 Violin — honors: Sarah Michele Smith. changes for new season NEW YORK (AP) — Dynasty isn't exactly turning into a bastion of high morality, but its new producer promises more meaningful relation- ships than affairs this season, and more gingerale than gin-and-tonics. David Paulsen, named executive producer of the show as it begins its ninth season, said he’s betting that more realism, more action and some new ch s will attract more Our Action Ad Phone Number is 365-2212 Dicken Bus Lines Ltd. . AVAILABLE FOR CHARTER Ready to Go When You Are! Take us into your home... FOR THE BEST CHICKEN IN TOWN, GO SOUTH TO SOUTH DIXIE LEE! CALL US TODAY 365-5304 2816 Columbia Ave., Castlegar Cominco & Westar Vouchers Accepted CHICKEN & SEAFOOD viewers — even as the characters clean up their acts. “I don't think people will be popping in and out of every bed,” he said. “In the age of herpes and AIDS, it's irresponsible to have flagrant bed hopping and I don’t think we ought to do it.” He promised that men and women would develop less ephemeral re- lationships, and there would be less ¢ : JOIN US & TRAVEL IN STYLE TO: ats FALL TOURS IN SPOKANE SEPTEMBER 28 OCTOBER 2 ..... OCTOBER 4 Madam Butterfly .... OCTOBER 15 Dream Girls NOVEMBER 5 WEST EDMONTON MALL TOUR — Oct. 16-20 $2 99 % 3 Nights Accommodation (Fantasyland Hotel) % I night Highlander in Calgary *# Edmonton city tour DBL/TWN ANNOUNCING... HENNE TOURS FALL RENOS! October 1to7............22006- 7 Days at the Comstock October 5to 11....... “Italian Festival”, 7 Days at the Sands October 8 to 15.. - 8 Days at the Sands October 22 to 29 . .. 8 Days at the Hilton November 5 to 12 - 8 Days at the Hilton PRICES START AT $279. Based on Double Occupancy. Senior Discount — $10.00. Anne Murray Reba McEntre 42nd Street Ross RESORT MOTEL * 1&2 bedroom units — queen-size beds * Luxury kitchens, cable TV & direct dial phones * Over-sized parking — beat ramp & beaches across street Near golf, tennis & spa poo 12 minutes from Minter Gardens Flintstones & waterslides For reservorions contac! resident managers May & Lance Murphy 684-7%62105, 460 Explonods Ave., P.O. Box 370, Harrison Hot Springs, 8.C. VOM IKO . WELCOME TO SUNDAY SCHOOL Kinnaird Church of God welcomes students from 2 to 102 to Sunday School Classes beginning September 11, 1988, with a Pancake Breakfast at 9:15 a.m. Regular classes every Sunday at 9:45 a.m. 2404 Columbia Avenue, Castlegar 27 CASTLEGAR FIGURE SKATING CLUB'S FALL SCHOOL Will run from 12 to 30 jorms are available at the Community Complex from Monday, August 29 until deadline date of Wednesday, September 6. Figure Skating and Power Skating offered. For in formation call Chris Datchkolf. 365-7446. 3/69 js of Castlagar and District non-profit organizations may be listed je first 10 words ore $3.75 and additional words are 20¢ each. Bold. faced words (which must be used for headings) count a8 two words. There is no extra charge for o second insertion while the third consecutive insertion is fi y percent and the fourth consecutive insertion is half-price. Minimum cher $3.75 (whether ad two or three times) days for Sundays paper ond 5 p.m, Mondays tor should be brought to the Castlegar News at 197 TY Bulletin Board and drinking on Dynasty. “We're going to cut that down, because I just don't think it's healthy,” Paulsen said, although he cautioned that any one show shouldn't be used as a barometer of societal changes. Paulsen, who was in New York auditioning actors and actresses for the show, is no stranger to glamorous prime-time soaps. He spent five years writing or directing more than 50 episodes of Dallas and was super. vising producer of Knots Landing for a year. Dynasty finished the 1987-88 tele- vision season ranked 37th out of 85 regularly scheduled séries. Although he's planning some new wrinkles for Dynasty, Paulsen said some of the strengths of the past will be revived. “We'll see the character of Blake (Carrington) be a driving force again,” he said. Announcement Margaret Kosiancic cordially invites friends and relatives to an open house on Sunday, September 11, 1988 from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. at $49-6th Avenue, Castlegar to celebrate the recent mera of her eldest son Bernard Kosiancic to Fawn Tyrell. BUSINESS September 4, 1908 CastlégarNews _a7 SEND OFF . . . Don Jones of Calvary Baptist Church Presents farewell gift to Bryan and Barbara Reid on behalf of th residents of Castlegar for the past 20 year: has been in the food bus: church. The Reids have bi Bryan ess during their entire stay here, the last 14 years at SuperValu and lately as manager of the Castleaird Plaza. The Reids are moving to North Vancouver where Bryan plans to enter into another business ven- ture. Photo for CasNews by George Jomes Countries resolve issues B.C. Hydro, Bonneville Power Ad. ministration (BPA) and the United Castlegar United Church SUNDAY SCHOOL For Children 3 Years and Up Starts Sunday, September 1! — 10 a.m. BABYSITTING SERVICE 2224-6th Avenue AVAILABLE. Castlegar nieenen States Army Corps of E: 8, have signed agreements on prinei- ples and procedures to clarify how the downstream benefits from the Columbia River Treaty should be calculated. Both U:S. and Canadian officials stressed the agreement is not a renegotiation of the treaty or a re- allocation of benefits. “It also is not part of any dis- cussion on a Canadian decision to retain or sell the Canadian entitle- ment to power benefits, which auto- matically return to Canada beginning in 1998 at the end of the sale period,” B.C. Hydro said in a prepared release. BPA administrator Jim Jura add- ed: “This is the conclusion of many months of cooperative studies and discussions between our respective staff and we believe the agreements represent a balanced and equitable resolution of the issues. Wine lovers flock to specialty shop TORONTO (CP) — Canadians’ love affair with fine wines has created a unique business opportunity for two young Montreal entrepreneurs who have set up shop in Toronto. Marc Nadeau, 31, and his brother, John 27, own a company specializing in wine accessories called the Wine Establishment. In October 1986, with an initial capital invest- ment of $100,000, they imported a container of free: i temper: wine cab- inets from France. Within a month they had sold the lot — 62 of thém — at prices of up to $5,000 a unit. Staggered by the demand, the brothers began to The majority of their business is done with wine clubs, hotels, restaurants and corporate clients and their largest selling item is a 230-bottle wine storage cabinet that protects vintages from the ravages of it ibrati and light sour- ces in the usual basement cellar. The Wine Establishment not only caters to what Marc Nadeau call ‘‘the pent-up demand by wine- literate Canadians, ‘‘but it's trying to create a new demand for its growing catalogue of wine-related hardware through education. HOLD CLASSES The company runs the Toronto chapter of l'Academie du vin, the Paris-basi fonat diversify into all the quii for the storage, service and understanding of the world’s great wines. “We knew there were serious wine lovers out there,” John Nadeau says, ‘‘but so many wine lovers?"’ The Nadeau brothers began to acquire rights for corkscrews, glasses, decanters, racking systems and aroma kits. They also put together comprehensive collections of wine books, maps, videos and wine art. This year the Wine Establishment will gross almost $1 million. WIDE CHOICE At the company’s showroom in Toronto, the self-indulgent oenophile can find a $7,000 oak Louis XIV 350-bottle wine cabinet with constant temper- ature, humidity control and air filtration or a $1.25 plastic gadget that lets you hang a wine glass from your plate so you have a free hand at cocktail parties. In less than two years the Wine Establishment has become Canada’s largest wine accessory bus- iness, with distributors in Montreal, Quebec City and Thunder Bay as well as Alberta and British Columbia. wine school. Local experts lead seminars for beginners and hold master classes for aficionados. “We feel that it’s through education that our client base will increase in future,’" Marc Nadeau says. Marc and John Nadeau gravitated toward the business through their mutual love of wine. Marc Nadeau studied commerce and finance in France and was asked in 1984 by an American company to look for new consumer products in Europe that might have a market in the United States. : He found the Caves Chateau wine storage units and helped develop a U.S. market for them through wine accessory stores and mail-order houses. But with the decline of the U.S. dollar against the franc, the U.S. company began to lose interest and Nadeau offered to take over their contract: with the French supplier He returned to France and negotiated world rights for the units. His’ brother had just returned to Toronto after working several years in the fotel business and the two of them set about creating the Wine Establishment of a number of techni- cal issues related to calculations required by the Columbia River Treaty were given highest priority by the parties involved.” Hydro chairman Larry Bell noted: “The study program we have com- pleted is the most thorough and complex examination of the technical aspects of the Columbia River Treaty since the ratification in 1964.” “Its successful conclusion will allow us to address other issues of importance to Hydro and BPA.” Col. James Fry.of the Corps of Engineers said, “What we have done is clarify the way in which the down- stream benefits will be calculated six years in advance, as specified in the Columbia River Treaty. It gives both countries the confidence they need to plan for electrical needs of customers in Canada and the United States.” Weekly stocks - TORONTO (CP) — The Toronto and New York stock markets lunged ahead dramatically Friday, bringing a strong conclusion to what had been a week of depressed trading. The Toronto Stock Exchange composite 300 index was up 26.81 points to close at 3290.0. The gain for the week was 24.68. In New York, the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was up 52.28 points to 2,054.59 for the biggest one-day jump since it rose 74.68 points May 31. U.S. government figures showing an increase in unemployment buoyed bond investors, who in-turn were Dealerships want woman OTTAWA (CP) — Would you buy a car from this woman? Chances are you would, and that’s why automobile dealerships across the country want tg add females to their sales staff. The only problem is, not many women are interested. Brian Francis, from J.B. Francis Consulting Ltd. of Ottawa, has been asked by about 40 car dealerships in Eastern Ontario to find saleswomen, He estimates that only five to 10 per cent of local auto salespeople are women. In the last five months, Francis has received about 120 applications — all from men. Prohibited by the Ontario Human Rights Code from specifying the desired gender, Francis will have to continue advertising as he has and hope more women apply. The last time a woman responded to one of his ads was last fall. George Petric, a Ford dealer who works in Hull, Que., and in Vernon and Kempitville, Ont., said he'd gladly hire more women. He now has three in a total sales staff of 21. Women, he said, inspire trust and they pay more attention to detail With an increasing number of women entering the workforce, more and more are buying cars, and many want to deal with another woman. Saleswomen don’t talk down to other women, the way some sales men do, he said. Robbi, Hay of Ottawa has been in car sales for three years. She said women have more patience and are better organized — qualities that help make a good auto salesperson. gies N You're hiding Fast Cash in your basement, closets and garage. It's not Real Cash yet, but with the help of a CasNews September Super Special Classified Ad, it soon could be! So don’t save all that good stuff you're not using. Sell it with a Classified Ad at Special Super Rates! Regular 3X for 2X. SEPTEMBER SUPER SPECIAL... ss we Bn for 2. For complete details, see our September Super Special Ad in the Classifieds | r le for giving the market the spark that began its surge, said stock analyst John Ing of Maison Place- ments Canada. “Investors have been looking for signs the economy is slowing down,” Ing said, noting fears of inflation were sparked by above average growth in the economy recently. “Bad news for the economy is good news for the market,” he said. In New York, the unemployment statistics — which show the jobless rate increased to 5.6 per cent in August from 5.4 per cent the month before — got a rousing welcome on the bond market. Prices of long-term government bonds, which move in the opposite direction from interest rates, climbed more than $20 for each $1,000 in face value. In Toronto on Friday, advancers outpaced decliners 351 to 281 with 874 unchanged on ‘a volume of 15,506,419 shares traded with a value of $206,312,307. Karl Hager Limb & Brace Ltd. Othotic & Prosthetic MONTHLY CLINIC * Artifical Limbs * Sports Injury Bracing * Foot Supports * Orthopedic Tues., Sept. 20 FOR APPOINTMENTS OR INFO CALL KELOWNA Collect 861-1833 BUDGET 6 HOTEL PATRICIA * Renovated in '86 * Porking/m yma * Gateway to Chinatown and Historical Gas Town * Show: * Community Pub/Homestyle Food * Compact, Clean & Affordable from $29 Reservations 1-255-4301 The Premium Savings Account High Yield With Flexibility! G CASTLEGAR SAVINGS CREDIT UNION “Your Community Financial Centre” CASTLEGAR SLOCAN PARK 601-18th St., 365-7232 Hwy. 6, Slocan Park Insurance 365-3368 226-7212 Insurance 226-7216 You are invited to an all day = a PRAISE CELEBRATION | J))\9 September 11 T=] if " Beginning at 9:45 a.m. withour """“*** FAMILY CHRISTIAN EDUCATION HOUR and ending at 6:30 p.m. with the Film "PATMOS" Special guest FRED ILYIN from VERNON will be with us to share on his recent trip to chur- ches in Russia. PLUS the music of NEW MANNA. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship — Fred Ilyin and New Manna 12:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m. Singspiration 6:30 p.m. Film — Patmos PENTECOSTAL NEW LIFE ASSEMBLY 602-7th Street, Castlegar Phone 365-5212 “Christ in Heart. . . . with You in Mind!" WEST KOOTENAY POWER has a new look Commencing on September 1, 1988 you will begin to see our new logo and colours on our stationery, signs and vehicles. Our new togo reflects-a-spirit-of -growth and participation as a member of a growing family of utilities eeross North America Also, effective he same date, our name was formally shortened from West Kootenay Power and Light Company, Limited to West Kootenay Power Ltd af @) stay healthy, pound after pound. é There's never been a better way lose weight faster. JOIN NOW! HALF PRICE OFFER! SAVE $11 Pay only $11 to join. Join before September 24 at CASTLEGAR Nordic Hall *Tue. 6:30pm Call Toll Free: 1-800-663-3354 THE NEW QUICK SUCCESS* PROGRAM