{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","Contributor":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"Contributor":[{"@value":"[unknown]","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-11-02","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1986-08-27","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/alderstar\/items\/1.0421751\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" COULD BENEFIT ALDERGROVE, SAYS COUNCILOR\nSavon a ra\nALDERGROVE - Many friendships\nwere made this past month as the\ncommunity hosted 26 Japanese\nstudents for a three-week study\nvisit.\n- The boys and girls varied in age\nfrom 16 to 27 years and stayed\nwith host families in the area. The\nlocal Lutheran Church acted as\ntheir study centre for morning\nEnglish lessons, and afternoons\nand weekends were spent on\ncultural pursuits.\nOrganizer Denise Turner said\nthe   students   visited   numerous\nAldergrove sites like Jackman\nManor, Countyline Antiques, Post\nOffice, Safeway, Alder Lanes,\nAldergrove Centre Mall, Stoel-\nting's Deli, among others.\nThey also spent time at Gastown, Lynn Valley, Stanley Park,\nthe Expo site and Victoria.\nA \"sayonara\" party, held\nAugust 19, at the church, was an\nemotional event as new-found\nfriends exchanged gifts and bade,\ntheir farewells. Turner says that\nprogram will be repeated next\nyear.\nRailbus support\nCLEARBROOK - People in\nLangley city - or at least their\npoliticians - would like to see the\nRailbus service between Abbotsford and New Westminster\ncontinued.\nLangly city fathers have sought\nthe support of their contemporaries here in trying to restore the\ncommuter train service by sending\na flood of letters to organizations\nwho also might support the idea\nBlood clinic,\nThursday\nALDERGROVE - A Red Cross\nblood donor clinic will be held in\nthe pensioners hall tomorrow,\nAugust 28, between 2 and 8 p.m.\nHall is located one block south\nof leaser Highway on 273 Street;\nand promote it with provincial\nauthorities.\nHowever, before Matsqui council make a commitment to this\neffect, Aid. Peter Dueck said, he\nand his colleagues should seek\nmore information on costs and\nbenefits of operating the commuter service which was discontinued earlier this month.\n\"It will be looked into,\" said\nMayor Harry DeJong. \"We will\nmake no commitment at this\ntime.\"\nThe Railbus was introduced\nshortly after Expo 86 opened and\npoliticians at the time said it would\nbe considered as an on-going\nservice even after the fair closed.\nTrain made six return trips a\nday on the old B.C. Hydro rail\nline, connecting with the Skytrain\nat thfe .ieW WeSMriS'ter terniihaV.\/\nby RUDY LANGMANN\nCLEARBROOK - About, 60 people\ncheered, seven Matsqui councilors\nwaved toe checkered flag, and a\nmotorsports complex came to a\nscreeching halt.\nMonday morning in Matsqui\ncouncil chambers. The mayor and\nhis six aldermen have had two\nweeks to consider and reconsider\nthe political fallout that could\nresult if a racetrack were to be\nbuilt in an abandoned gravel pit\noff LeFeuvre Road south.\nFirst to' speak against the\nproposed complex was Aid. Simon\nGibson.       .\n\"It would be a grave mistake to\ncontinue encouraging the provincial government,\" Gibson said.\nThe provincial government's\nindustry and small business department under former minister\nBob McClelland, paid the cost of a\nstudy encouraging the development in southeast Matsqui. Two\nweeks ago the councilors considered this report along with the\nrecommendation from the\ndistrict's industrial development\ncommissioner, Malcolm Harvey,\nendorsing municipal acceptance.\nCouncilors tested the waters at a\npublic meeting, on Monday night,\nAugust 11.\nBut, why were Gibson and his\nfellow council members against it\nthis week?\nWell, there were the usual\nreasons such as encroachment\nupon agricultural lands, foreseeable traffic problems and expected\npollution, but these disagreeable\nfactors did not seem to be the real\nreason why Gibson was urging his\ncollegues to drop the project like a\nhot potato. Neither did the\nopposition from people living in\n\"- - -\u2014\u2022-.,-\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0, \u2022\u2022      \u25a0 n\n \u25a0\n\\\n\u2014-__-\u00bb%___\u25ba-\t\n_sr\u2014~v \u25a0\u2014 \u25a0\nItlfz\u2014^\n''\u25a0'{\u25a0':.:^fl^g^^ ^^tW   St\nTS.   Wm\\\n^titter\n._ \u2014 :___ _ -   . _\u25a0--____.       b     ___a\n.\" m  _ .'_    m T \u25a0 _ w m \u20149\u2014\u2014mm      \u25a0HESS?       \u2014        *^T1\n: \u00a7 1 B B 1 Ml ^\u2014WV    ~ua~    jam         _m\nKiAM'-*m Mb. _i4B   _id\n___Lz.JP\n-T^y\"y;__,:_r:_._r_V-:y-^\"'';_ \"\u25a0'\n\"lllegitimus non carborundum\"\nVOL. 28 _______[    VtifeDNfeSpAY, AUGUST 27,1986   30 CENTS\nEstablished 1957 ' 3089-272 Street, Aldergrove, B.C.     Call 856-8303 or 856-5212\nPARAPLEGIC PILOT SHOWS\nAldermen flying high\nALDERGROVE - Local ultralight\nfan and organizer of last Saturday's \"ultralight rally, Fired\nGlasbergen is elated with the\nsuccess of the event.\n\"We broke the ice\", said\nGlasbergen, who took local\ncouncilor Carol Gran aloft from the\nWhalley airstrip to Langley airport. Mayor \u00a33 Nundal and Aid.\nMunGl Amason also took to the\nskies, while Aid. Len Fowler\nawaited his counterparts at the\nairport.\nGlasbergen said the flying\ncouncilors \"all really enjoyed\" the\ntrip, and seemed to have their\nfears about disturbance of farm\nlife alleviated, as they observed\nthat animals paid little attention to\nthe buzzing in the skies.\nTwenty-eight ultralight planes\nparticipated in the day-long flight\nup and down the Valley, and the\nwinner was White Rock pilot Alan\nDandal. His Falcon finished\nclosest to his estimated flight plan,\nout by only five minutes over the\nseven legs.\nAnother highlight was the appearance of paraplegic pilot Carl\nHiebert. In his 30s, he left\nHalifax, July 1 on a cross-Canada\nmarathon to raise funds for the\nnational paraplegic assn. The\nOntario native is scheduled to\n'4rfeWatr-_^.faa-tf.V,V.V.V,V\nGlasbergen says other events\nare planned including a fly-in to\nhis Glen Valley airstrip and the\nseaplane base. Seven of the rally\nparticipants were equipped with\nfloats.\nWin theatre\ntickets\nALDERGROVE - Congratulations\nto the four winners of pairs of\ntickets to the Broadway production\nof \"La Cage Aux Folles\".\nCatherine Flament, Roy Fairbairn,\nGladys Pettit and Joyce Douglas\nand their guests saw the show\nTuesday night as dress circle\nguests of The Aldergrove Star.\nThere is still time to enter the\ndraw for four pairs of tickets to\n\"Tango Argentino\", opening at\nQE Theatre in September. Seethe\nentry form inside this week's\nissue.\nthe vicinity of the gravel pit who\ncould see their lifestyles threatened and property values\ndeclining.\nThere was obviously something\naltogether different on Gibson's\nmind when he said, \"What would\nbe the impact on Matsqui's town\ncore (Clearbrook)?\"\n\"Are we to expect (the spectators at a racing event) to continue\non and patronize business in our\ntown core, or to turn around and\npatronize business somewhere\nelse?\" That somewhere else\ncould be Aldergrove or Langley,\nhe further indicated.\nOne by one, the other six\ncouncilors seemed to agree.\n\"It would be an imposition\nrather than a benefit\", said Aid.\nHarry Teichroeb. The gravel pit\nshould instead be restored for\nagricultural use, he added.\nAid. Harry Schmidt acknowledged that the racetrack could\nconceivably bring industry, and\nthereby money, into the community, and Aid. Jeff Granger\nproposed that Harvey be informed\nthat the complex was not wanted\nin Matsqui.\nAid. Dave Kandall said council's\nendorsation of the multi-million\ndollar racetrack in principle would\namount to the same thing as\n\"buying a pig in a poke\" because\nthe councilors knew nothing about\nmotorsports. \"I think there are no\nracing enthusiasts on council,\" he\ncomplained.\nAnd, finally, Mayor Harry\nDeJong said that five minutes\nbefore the start of the meeting he\nhad been handed a petition in\nfavor of the project from a representative of the Aldergrove\nchamber of commerce. \"They\nthink it is a tfreat ides \" he said.\n\"I realize we need business and\nindustry in the area,\" DeJong\ncontinued,\" but we must also be\ncognizant of other facts.\n\"I don't think we need it.\"\nAlthough a report from the\ndistrict's clerk-administrator had\nadvised council that 74 percent of\nthe names on an anti-racetrack\npetition earlier presented to\ncouncil had been from residents\noutside Matsqui, the councilor-\ngave the project the unanimous\nthumbs down.\nThe people in the audience,\nmainly hobby farmers from the\nsouth Aldergrove area, dearly did\nnot care about the reasons why.\nThey knew they had won, and that\nwas good enough for them.\nCouncilors were appropriately\napplauded.\nMeanwhile, a Langley alderman\nsays that what Matsqui council\nreally has the property earmarked\nfor is a major new garbage di_n_p:\nSecond Class Mail Registration No. 1270\n 1-  _i__-\u00bb.-\u00bb,,. a r V01__14Q\nVE    ... TFfA.-;.\ncvr j. .lament   Bui\n11\noria,   DC\n\u25a0VI'\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nPatrolmen\nPolice station \"appalling\" nab speeders\nMURRAYVILLE - Conditions at\nthe RCMP building here are\n\"appalling\", a local alderwoman\nsaid this week.\nAid. Carol Cran asked if it would\nbe too late for staff to draft a\nreferendum bylaw for the civic\nelections in November that would\nask the taxpayers to approve of the\nbuilding of a new police detach-\nmen headquarters.\n\"Well\", said municipal administrator Tim Godfrey. Theoretically, he said, it could be done,\nalthough the timing would be\n\"tight\". But, Godfrey said,\nperhaps a referendum wouldn't be\nnecessary, depending upon the\nsize of construction project councilors had in mind. Both the\nmunicipality and the city ' of\nLangley have put money into\ncontingency funds for this type of\nproject he said, and if the building\nwas not too grand could proceed\nwithout going to the voters for\napproval.\nCouncilors made no decision.\nDole rules relaxed\nVICTORIA - Welfare recipients\nwill be allowed to earn an additional 25 per cent in income\nbefore it will be deducted from\ntheir government cheques effective Sept. 1, new Social Services\nMinister Claude Richmond said\nlast week.\nAbout 68,000 recipients could\nbenefit from the change and retain\nup to $5.7-million per year in\nearned income, said Richmond.\nThe higher earning exemptions\nwill encourage people to earn as\nmuch as possible, and in the\nprocess improve work skills and\nchances for a steady job to get off\nwelfare, he said.\nNEW WESTMINSTER'S\nTEACHERS ARE\nGUARANTEED A SUBSTITUTE\nTEACHER\nIF THEY ARE ABSENT.\nLANGLEY'S TEACHERS AREN'T.\nWHY NOT IN LANGLEY?\nOLYMPIA, Wash. - State patrolmen are planning to make this\nLabor Day one of the safest in\nhistory.\n\"This year the Washington\nState Patrol will be focusing on\nspeeders and drinking drivers\nwhile encouraging motorists to\ncontinue the good start they have\nmade on buckling up all the time,\"\nsays Chief George B. Tellevik.\nLast September 1 saw four\nkilled, but there were 555 injured\nin 852 accidents.\n\"We are encouraged that fatalities were down, and we are\nworking on reducing injuries. We\nthink seat belt use is the main tool\nfor this purpose, combined with a\nsafe speed and staying sober,\"\nTellevik said.\nMan's death\naccidental\nFraser Valley coroner John\nUrquhart has ruled out an inquest\ninto the death of a 28-year old\nhandicapped man who got into\ntrouble while swimming at an\nAbbotsford pool last week.\n\"It was quite accidental,\"\nUrquhart said Monday.\nTne man, a resident of an\nAbbotsford-area group home, was\nfound unconscious in the pool a\nfew minutes after it was cleared by\npool staff at the end of a\nswimming session. He was taken\nto hospital where he later died,\nUrquhart said.\nFVC\nFRASER VALLEY\nCOLLEGE\nABBOTSFORD CAMPUS\n33844 King Road, Abbotslord, B.C.\nV2S4N2 853-7441\nMISSION CENTRE\n32335 Fletcher Avenue, Mission, B.C.\nV2V4N3 826-9544\nCHILLIWACK CAMPUS\n45600 Airport Road, Chilliwack, B.C.\nV2P6T4 792-0025\nHOPE CENTRE\nBox 1899,895 Third Ave., Hope, B.C.\nV0X1L0\nFALLC\nGENERAL INTEREST AND PART-TIME VOCATIONAL\nRegistrations start September 3.\nABBOTSFORD, CHILLIWACK, MISSION\nMon.-Thurs 9:00 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.\nFri 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nAdult Basic Education\nAgriculture\/Horticulture\nBusiness & Industry Services\nj Computers\nCooking & Sewing\nCrafts & Hobbies\nNight School In A Day\nHOPE\nMon.-Thurs 12:00 noon to 4:30 p.m.\nFri closed\nEmployment Upgrading & Trades Training\nFamily Life\nfine Arts\nHealth\nLanguages\nPersonal Development\nSports, Dance & fitness\nvisa-\nMore information is provided in the Fraser Valley College Fall Program Booklet delivered to\nyour door with other household advertising beginning August 23. If you have not received a\n| copy, pick one up at your closest Fraser Valley College Centre. 35-2246-23-1\nT^\u2122nTTr~ !    I    I I !  Ii IIIIIWiMillHWIII  I -\u2014-\u2014\u2014-a\nTown Talk\nby ANDREW HANON\nlitis week's question: What do you\nthink of the proposal to keep some\nof the Expo attractions going after\nthe world fair closes? Which ones\nwould you like to see maintained?\nNiltlti Kirincich: \"I think it's a\ngood idea. After all, it would keep\nmore people employed. - Expo\nTheatre and the Canada Pavilion\nwould be good ones to keep.\"\nRaymond VanBugnum: \"They\nspent all that money and it would\nbe a waste to tear it down. They\nshould move the PNE there. I'd\nlike to see the B.C. Pavilion and\nthe bars stay.\"\nn_-._. is....:**. <<T *_,;-.!, if ..._..i_< u_\na good idea since they put so much\nmoney into it. Given the present\nsocio-economic situation in the\nprovince, some sort of momento of\nthe Exposition would be beneficial.\nI'd like to see the bars kept.\"\nB     *     f\nP% m- .^aH___f-\n__!____-________W!\nBrenda Singbeil: \"You need the\nattractions in addition to the\nconvention centre. I think Expo\nCentre looks neat.\"\n...4,, ?!! '  *\nCm\nWKm\nPat Lodewijkx: \"I think it's a good\nidea, it seems like an awful lot of\nmoney to tear it down and it would\nenhance the beauty of the area. I'd\nlike to see the flag, the Omnimax\nTheatre and the Plaza of Nations\nkept intact.\"\nLarry Hine: \"Sure. I don't know\nwhy not. Vancouver needs more\nvariation in its entertainment. I\nhaven't seen enough of Expo to\nknow what to keep and what to get\nrid of.\"\n Artist's descendant\nwants $1 gallery\nMURRAYVILLE - \"You need a\ngood base for culture in this\ncommunity,\" a Richmond woman\ntold councilors here Monday night.\nElizabeth Dlsey said she would\nlike to open \"a second major art\ngallery\" in the village of Port\nLangley if councilors would help\nher obtain a building, at nominal\ncost, for the housing of the Legh\nMulhall Kilpin collection.\nnisey is a descendant of Kilpin,\nan artist who was bom on the Isle\nof Wight in 1853. Kilpin moved to\nMontreal in 1906 and painted\nportraits and landscapes from\nQuebec. Some of his works are\nowned by the National Gallery of\nCanada, but family members own\nsome 200 of his oils, pastels and\netchings.\nThese   paintings,   along   with\nsome   period   furniture   \"would\nmake a nice exhibit,\" IUsey said.\n\"A real asset to the community.\"\nIf the district would assist her in\nbuying a suitable building for $1,\nDlsey said, the paintings, although\nthe family would retain ownership,\ncould be held \"in trust\" by the\nmunicipality. She said she and her\nhusband could also live in the\nbuilding as caretakers of the\npermanent gallery.\nAid. Carol Gran questioned if\nthe gallery would then be a private\nbusiness, and Aid. John Rennie\nasked if the proposed gallery only\nwould contain the Kilpin collection\nand thus become stale with the\npublic.\nDlsey   said   details   could   be\nDoug Messmer\nrecovering\nNEW WESTMINSTER - Doug\nMessmer has returned to consciousness at Royal Columbian\nHospital, although he remains in\ntraction with a broken neck.\nThe eleven-year-old Aldergrove\nboy had been hit by a vehicle\noutside his 28B Avenue home,\nAug. 7, and had been in a coma\nor more than two weeks. His\nriend, Todd Cole, also 11,\nescaped serious injury when the\nwo boys were hit.\nnegotiated between the local politicians and the family.\n\"1 would like to know what the\n(Langley) arts council has to say\nabout it,\" said Gran. Other\naldermen agreed, and Dlsey's\nproposal was referred to the local\nsupporters of the visual arts.\nCheck Out These\nGreat Pre-Owned\nMotorcycle Deals\nAt\nVALLEY\nHONDA.\n1983 Honda VT500 Ascot\nExcellent cond. s1495\n1982 Honda V-45 Magna\nNever damaged s1995\n1982 Honda CB650 Knight-\nhawk, Very clean        s 1795\n1981 Honda Silverwing\n8000 km s1995\n1982 Honda CX650\nLady driven s2195\n1983 Yamaha Heritage\nSpecial - 8800 km       s 895\n1981 Honda CB650\nTop Condition s1295\n1984 Honda XR250R\nImmaculate s1495\n#101-20560\nLangley By-Pass\nLangley      Ph: 533-4345\n. -,-__       0PEN       o*\n7 DAYS A WEEK\nFor More\nInformation\n859-5019\n\/ TOWNS SlNEMM     4 j\n1518 McCallum Rd.,\nAbbotsford\nTOP GUN\nHELD OVER - AUG. 29-SEPT.4\n6:55 & 9:00 P.M.\nAUG. 31 MIDNITE SHOW 12:00 A.M.\n[All seats $2.50 for mldnlte show]\nB.C.   WARNING:    Occasional   . \u25a0\ncourse language and swearing.   VS_D__J\nMY LITTLE PONY\nAUG. 29 - SEPT. 4\n7:00 P.M. ONLY\nMATINEES AUG. 30, 31 at 1:30 P.M.\n[All seats $2.50 for matinee show)\n<\u00a7__S_D\nSHANGHAI SURPRISE\nAUG. 29 - SEPT. 4       7:00 & 9:00 P.M.\nAUG. 31 MIDNITE SHOW 12:00 A.M.\n[All seats $2.50 for mldnlte show]\nB.C. Warning: Some swearing,\nocaslonal suggestive scenes.\nFRIDAY THE 13th, Part 6\nAUG. 29 - SEPT. 4      9:00 P.M. ONLY\nAUG. 31 MIDNITE SHOW 12:00 A.M.\n[All seats $2.50 for mldnlte show]\nB.C. Warning: Frequent \u25a0\ngory violence. {\"Jfftffl&T?*\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nDAILY   DELIVERY   IN   YOUR   AREA\nUNDER THE CHERRY MOON 65555.\nMIDNITE SHOW ONLY Aug. 31 B.C.   Warning:   Occasional   coarse\n! - 12:00 A.M. TA1I seats $2:50]  \u2014 -WglFa'Sff SriB sugge.five scenes. ----- -J\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n\"\/I.'%\u00ab:--tor-\u00ab**<,TO\u00bb.      jJg\u00ab\u00a3T\n\"If these worms only had half of that wiggle, we'd be home eating a fish dinner by now)\nDon't outgrow\neach other\n\"We just outgrew one another,\"\nsaid the 45-year-old woman as she\nsipped her white wine and discussed\nwhy her 26-year marriage hit the\nrocks.\nIt's not an uncommon scenario,\noften based on differences in interests and expectations that were\npresent from the early days of the\nmarriage but overlooked for many\nyears, says psychiatrist Harvey\nRuben, author of a new book on\nmarital problems.\n\"As a couple goes through the\nmiddle years, especially from their\n30s into their 50s, their paths may\ndiverge.\n\"Because so many personal\npassages occur during this time \u2014\nsuch as menopause, mid-life crises,\ncareer disillusionment and the\nchanging relationships with our\nchildren \u2014 we may find we are\npursuing what seems to be disparate\npaths from our spouses.\"\nRuben counsels couples with\nmarital problems and runs a talk\nshow on mental health issues for the\nNBC Radio Network. The show is\nheard on more than 250 U.S.\nstations.\n\"Many people marry for the\nwrong reasons that don't become\nclear to them until they are older\nand wiser and have lived a good\nnumber of years with the 'wrong'\nmarriage partner,\" says Ruben,\nwhose new book is called Super'\nmarriage \u2014 Overcoming The\nPredictable Crises of Married Life\n(Bantam, $17.95).\n\"Unfortunately, it is in these\nmiddle years that a person realizes\nthis may be the last chance to\nchange directions, start a new life\nContinued on page 5\niters to thi\nj_iW.fJ_f%_*\nLacking compassion\nHere we go again!\nEditor, The Star, Sir,\nHere we go again! Monday\nmorning Matsqui council turned\ndown further discussion regarding\na proposed motorsport centre to be\nlocated adjacent to the Langley\nborder. You could best describe\nthe location as south Aldergrove.\nHowever, it would appear that\nAldergrove doesn't exist so let's\njust say it's near here.\nHere is another example of an\ninstance where referendum should\nhave been used.\nLangley and Matsqui quite often\n(we are told) have difficulty even\ntalking to each other, CFVRD notwithstanding. Neither has the\nright (legal or moral) to impose\nadverse decisions on the other -\nand yet - here's the rub - Matsqui\nhas just terminated further discussion on a project that just might\nhave given Aldergrove it's place in\nthe sun. And why?\nBecause they had an outstanding negative response from\nconcerned citizens. Who are these\nconcerned citizens? Where do\nthey come from? How come they\nhave the time to attend council\nwhile most other people are out\nworking for a living? Just curious.\nI have read the project proposal.\nIt is comprehensive and well\nworth the time taken to understand it. The only problem is that\nit hasn't had enough distribution.\nPerhaps the media could remedy\n.that? I would be happy to offer my\nefforts to help throw light on this\nvery important project.\nThere   is   always   a  cost   or\ntrade-off to progress.    A motor-\nsport centre may bring with it\n* some .inconveniences we would be\nbetter off without. On the other\nhand it could also bring with it\njobs and I believe that is worth\nlooking at as well. Part of the\nproposal is a training centre for\nemergency vehicle drivers -\nambulance, fire, police, - and a\ncomplete repair and maintenance\nfacility.\nPersonally I find it very sad that\na project is squashed - out of hand\n- without any meaningful discussion by a body of council reacting\n>)\nto what they perceive is public\nopinion.\nFirst let's discuss it. Then let's\nvote on it. In Langley that may\ntake another two years - but that's\nanother subject, isn't it. And the\nfinal thought: Which travels\nfurther - the noise of a racetrack of\nthe smell of a giant dump?\nPoliticus non carborundum.\nAldergrove.\nLarry Blackhall\nConcern appreciated\nEditor, The Star, Sir,\nOn behalf of the MacDonald\nfamily we would like to thank all\nthe people who have given such\nsupport with their well wishes,\nthoughtfulness and most generous\ndonations. The concern in the\nMacDonalds time of need is very\ntouching and much appreciated.\nTo see how many people set\naside their own problems to help\nfellow human beings gave the\nfamily a great lift.\nWe have heard from people as\nfar away as Hammond, Nanaimo,\nRichmond and as close by as\nSurrey and Langley and of course\nour local people.\nAt this time we would also like\nto express our thanks to the Thrift\nShop in Aldergrove for their recent\ndonation of $1000 and also the\nAldergrove Figure Skating Club\nprecision teams for their generous\ndonation. Also a special thanks to\nMr. Gould and his helpful staff at\nthe Aldergrove Credit Union for\nhandling the trust -fund and all the.\nextras they have done for us.\nThank-you to each and every\none of those wonderful people.\nJudy's edema is a little more\nunder control now, she has already\nlost 18 pounds of fluid and the\nhospital can now start to work on\nher protein deficiency. They have\nstarted her on a special diet and it\ndoes seem to be helping. Due to\nthe bursitis in her arm and the\ni*.\u00bbnnli_>*\u00ab        .v.        1%*...       _.1_._>... Jnnlnw.\nUUCl.ll_ll       UI       11 _1       C1UVW,        _ __-_!_\ndecided to place a draining tube to\nease the swelling and pain. Judy's\nmom, Anne Martin, is still at her\ndaughter's bedside helping out\nwherever she can. Please keep\nthe cards and letters coming, they\nare a definite highlight of Judy's\nday. By the way, thanks to the\nmany donations we have already\nstarted to help the family meet\nsome of the expenses they have\nincurred since Judy's stay in\nEdmonton.\nThankyou.\nIngrid Give\n.,.,__ and Helen Griffin\n-A. f_-r_MYVM\u00bb '\u25a0* **\u25a0.  \u00abS_*_**I_S* __\"_. -V1* Vt '\u25a0<*,\nEditor, The Star, Sir,\nThis is in reply to a letter in last\nweek's issue signed simply L.D.\nWhat amazes me is L.D.'s total\nlack of sympathy and compassion\nfor a boy who lies in a coma, a\nvictim of careless driving. And the\nexcuse it seems is it was only a\nmatter of time.\nThe trauma and agony that the\nMessmers are suffering could have\nbeen spared had the driver had\nrespect for the law (something also\ntaught by parents) and had obeyed\nthe speed limit in an area known to\nhave a lot of children playing. I\nwould like to know how LD.\nexpects children to ride their bikes\nor get from one friends house to\nanother in an area that has no\nsidewalks?\nYes, we do have adequately\nfenced yards, in fact my children\nhave a swimming pool and a fort,\nbut it does not guarantee that is\nwhere I will find them. Besides,\nthe last time I looked, we lived in\nCanada,    not   in    concentration\ncamps.\nWe as parents can tell our\nchildren ten times a day not to run\nout in traffic, but when they see\nsomething across the road all\nthoughts of looking go right out\nthe window. As drivers it is our\nresponsibility to watch out for\nchildren and other vehicles - it is\ncalled defensive driving. When\ndrivers decide to break the law and\nrush through a residential section\nat speeds recommended for freeways and drag strips, then they\nshould not be exonerated from\ntheir responsibility by trying to\nblame it on the parents.\nThank God for every unfeeling\nindividual there are 100 of us\npraying every day that Dougie will\nsooh be over this terrible ordeal\nand will once again be out playing\nwith his friends, where he should\nbe.\nNot afraid to sign my name.\nAldergrove.\nGloria Luypen,\nSimplistic motive\nEditor, The Star, Sir,\nIn answer to the letter to the\nEditor dated Aug. 20, signed L.D.,\nI take great exception to the\nstatements made by this writer.\nL.D. leaves the impression that if\nyou have a fenced yard, that is the\nboundary which your children\nmust notjrass. LD. would have\nus leave the road for cars and\nmaniac drivers, who show no\nregards whatsoever for the safety\nof the community and its children.\nAs for this particular accident, it\nwas not what happened that day.\nThe time it happened was the time\nadults start their evening stroll. It improvement,\ncould of happened to adults. The\ntwo. children were, hit on.. the\ni.ti|^iteB_*'ir_4te__^ib_kiich   Aldergrove.\nthe car was travelling.   The fault\nwas mainly caused by speed.\nI believe the writer had a motive\nwith a simplistic view. As human\nnature dictates one defends ones\nown shortcomings and does so by\npointing a finger at some one else.\nCondemnation of human frailty\nis an easy road. One has to be\nconcerned with the attitude that\nthe car has the right of the road\nand eveything else is secondary.\nAs far more police, better coordination of their real duties and\nspending less time with the\nconcerns of ICBC would be an\nGerald Cuthbert\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1968\nDoctor prescribes counselling Trophy awaits youngster\n~\u2014m\" _ - nnn\/tnAim rm   _r_\u00ab__\u25a0 \u25a0*<___*c\u00ab        _____\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0>     f-_n-v_o     nkmilJ      !___\nContinued from page 4\nand hope for a better marriage with\nsomeone else.\"\nHe adds that \"when a couple\nrealizes that they are outgrowing\neach other, serious steps must be\ntaken before the marriage is\nhopelessly lost.\n\"Early indications that the\nhusband end wife are marching out\nof step with each other are usually\nseen with one or both getting overly\ninvolved in jobs or careers.\"\nAnd today, as more women pursue\ncareers, many husbands feel\nthreatened by their success.\n\"Even in this so-called\nenlightened age we live in, many\nASK\nANNABELLE\nWhy don't you ever have any\njokes in your column? Life, as\nsomeone once said, is but a jest, a\ngiggle on the lips of time. Here's\none for you: \"A vote was taken at\nan optometrists convention and the\n'eyes' had it.\" How about this\none: \"The optometrists daughter\nwent to a party, had two glasses\nand made a spectacle of herself.\"\nGet it? One man, \"My wife's\ngone to the West Indies,\" second\nman, \"Oh, Jamaica\", first man,\n\"No, she wanted to go.\" Hee,\nhee. Man, \"My wife's going to\nAmerica.\" Second man, \"Oh,\nwhat part?\" First man, \"Idaho,\nAlaska.\" Get it, I don't know, I'll\nask her. Have you told your\nreaders about the floods in Delta,\nit was so bad even the Deas Island\ntunnel was under water! Here's to\nmore hee-hees and giggles.\nSigned: A faithful fan  and\nreader.\nDear Faithful,\nIf it's jokes you want, read\nErnest Culett's column every week\nin the Star. It's the first thing I\nturn to on Thursday morning, that\nDoris must be a million laughs.\nMy dear husband, a man of\nnegligible wealth but great wit was\npicking beet greens last night for\ndinner and came up with this one:\nAfter Snow White and the Prince\nhad left the seven dwarfs they fell\non hard times and . hired a\nhousekeeper who was very mean\nwith the groceries. Because of the\nlack of rations the dwarfs started\nto slack off in the mine. This\nmade her mad so she decided to\nteach them a lesson and only put\nthe most awful bits of meat on\ntheir lunch sandwiches. This led,\nof course to that famous old song:\nGristle while you shirk.\nAnd one for the horsey set;\nWhen a young horse is taken awy\nfrom its dam you could say, a foal\nand his mummy are soon parted.\nThen there is the one about the\ntravelling salesman and the Aldergrove farmer's daughter ... but\nmaybe I'll save that for another\nday. By the way, the beet greens\nwere delicious.        s. .\u00ab^_96!->    t\nmen are really not used to the fact\ntheir wife is pursuing a career\noutside the home.\"\nNEEDSHELP\nRuben suggests \"couple counselling\" for the outgrowing-each-\nother syndrome because \"it is incredibly difficult at this stage of\nyour marriage to step back alone\nand take an objective view of the\nproblem.\n\"Frequently, an outside observer,\ntrained in the intricacies of marital\nproblems, can really help you see\nwhat the problem is, where its roots\nlie, and what steps to take to rectify\nthe situation.\"\nHe says that the couple must\nconfront the fact that one or both are\ndissatisfied with the arrangement,\nmust express frankly any disappointment in the relationship's\ndirections and make a sincere\ncommitment to do what is necessary\nto renew the bonds.\nRuben says that more marriages\ngo on the rocks when people are in\ntheir mid-30s to late 40s than during\nany other period.\n\"Many couples who barely limped\nthrough their early years of\nmarriage become overwhelmed by\nthe pressures of the child-rearing\nphase.\nPROBLEMS HIT\n\"The more smoothly you handled\nthe issues of your early years, the\nbetter prepared you'll be to handle\nthe passages of your middle years.\"\nWhen partners haven't learned\nhow to support each other through\npersonal problems, a mid-life crisis\ncan overwhelm one of them and\ndrive   him   Or   her   from   the\n\"Ironically, the divorce often\ncomes as a surprise, because the\ncouple thought they were basically\nhappy.\"\nRuben says that dealing successfully with each issue that confronts the relationship\u2014\"no matter\nhow large or small\" \u2014 builds the\nexperience needed for the later\nyears of the marriage.\n\"Fairness\" wanted\nLANGLEY - Local teachers want\nfairness in bargaining, says LTA\npresident Barb Parrott. She says\nteachers will begin a \"RISE\" for\nRIGHTS\" campaign September. 2.\nThey will continue reporting, instruction, supervision, and\nevaluation but will not be volunteering for the unpaid services\nthey normally provide, such as\ncoaching teams, sponsoring clubs,\nand attending school dances.\n\"Teachers in Langley only want\nfair treatment,\" says Parrott.\n\"School boards in other districts\nhave negotiated working conditions with their teachers. Why not\nLangley?\"\n\"Teachers in B.C. already have\nfewer rights than most. Langley\nteachers have even fewer because\nof the school board's unwillingness\nto negotiate,\" Parrott says.\nThe teachers will be seeking an\nearly fall meeting to negotiate with\nthe school board.\nALDERGROVE - Ihe new and\nbeautiful Jeannette Oleniuk\nmemorial trophy will be presented\nat the Aldergrove fall fair to the\nyoungster with the best garden in\nthe 13 to 17 year old age group.\nWith the keen interest shown in\nour junior garden club this year,\nthe agricultural association\ndecided to open up the new age\ngroup as many wanted to keep on\nwith their gardens. The new\ngroup is called the Advanced\nJunior Gardener. Trophy was\ndonated in memeory of Micheal\nOleniuk.\nEntry forms are coming in by\nmail early this year and for that we\nare thankful as it spaces out the\npaper   work.       For   the   local\nWise to speak\nCHILLIWACK - Federal agriculture minister John Wise will speak\nThursday, Aug. 28, 8 p.m. at the\nBest Western Rainbow Country\nInn. Ihe public event is sponsored\nby the FYaser Valley East riding\nPC. association and is free of\ncharge.\nWE MATCH WITH\ncnsH!*t\nLangley Mazda will match your cash Down Payment up lo \"1000\nan your choice of any New .986 Mazda 626 OX or LX or RX 7\nin our large Metro B.C. inventory until Ihe 1987 Mazdas roll in On\nSept. 9,1986. Based on manufacturer's suggested retail.\n^____TA-_\n\u2022>_^j\u00a3}____^-\nMAZDA RX-7GXL\n*___4_k\\\n^_7___-\n_'AZDA626\nDELUXE SPORT COUPE\nMAZDA 323\nDELUXE HATCHBACK\nmOfsr_\nCAB PLUS SPORT\nMAZDA 323 DELUXE SEDAN \\\n-i__B-iT>-__-\nMAZDA 626\nLUXURY SPORT COUPE\nLease To Buv Plan\n1987 B2000 Pickups L.T.B.P. as low as $188,861\n1986 RX7s  L.T.B.P. as low as S365.79\n1986 323s  L.T.B.P. as low as $174.25\n11986 626s       L.T.B.P. as low as $285.75\nj,\u2014^      All payment based on 12% over 60 mo OAC     gF\nOPEN SUNDAYS 11 am - 4pm\n\"THE NEW DISCOUNTER\"\nLRNCLEY MRZDR\n533-4191\nHWY.. UWOLBY VW 4CB D.U 7CMB\nentrants, entry forms should be\nturned in at the mall in Aldergrove\non the following dates if you don't\nmail them in.\nWednesday, Sept. 3,10 a.m. to\n1 p.m.\nThursday, Sept, 4, 1 p.m. to 9\np.m.\nHie entry clerk appreciates\nforms turned in as early as\npossible. Raffle tickets are proving popular and moving fast.\nThey will be available at the above\ntimes as will the New Canadian\nFair cook book. The prizes for the\nraffle will be a first prize of $60\ngift certificate from Howelling's\nNursery, second prize of a box\neach of apples and oranges from\nHamiltonm farms, third prize of\n$20 gift certificate from Hall's\nQuality Meats, and fourth prize of\na New Canadian Fair cook book.\nDraw will take place at 6 p.m.\non Sept. 7 at the arena. The date\non the tickets is a printing error.\nFall Pair books are still available at\nmany local centres and there will\nbe a few at the mall with the entry\nforms.\nOlympic products available at this location:\nWILWAV\nLumber   Sales   inc.\n28728 Fraser Hwy., Aldergrove.\n856-5144 or 533-3477\nPaints and Sl_in\u201e\n\u00bb\nQmYJv.P\\\nWe have the insWeon outside protection\na.\n \u2014\u2014\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nGrowing older beats\ngrowing fatter\nby ERNEST CLUETT\nAIDERGROVE - Today I am\nfeeling very old for I must be\nlooking that way. Yesterday,\nMuriel and I headed for the first\ntime to Expo 86. On the Park &\nRide, jammed door-to-the-doors\nbus both going and coming, two\nsweet young ladies in their early\ntwenties gave up their seats for\nme. Perhaps I should ask Doris if\nI really do look that aged, but on\nsecond thought I'd better not.\nOn the opposite side was the\n\u2022 elderly gal who piled onto the Sky\nTrain. She was in her middle or\nlate sixties. The waist band of\nher slacks was extremely tight\nand there was a twelve inch or\nmore gap between that and her\nhalter. The twelve inches were\ncompressed into several spare\ntires of fat. Her face was well\ngucked up, but the hide in the\nmiddle looked like the hide of\nsomething caught off the coast of\nthe bland and left out in the sun\ntoo long. Thank goodness it was a\nlong time until it was time for\nlunch. I have never seen anything\nso grotesque on the streets of\nAldergrove but no doubt in Vancouver that would be called\nsophistication.\nIt is with regret I report that\nJake Giesbrecht has undergone an\noperation in the Vancouver\nGeneral hospital, however, is\nprogressing favorably. We all\nwish him a speedy recovery.\nThe church who rents our hall\neach Sunday has generously offered to replace the platform\ncarpet and fix the broken window.\nWe are very grateful for their kind\noffer.\nThe Red Cross blood donor\nclinic will be held in the hall on\nThursday, August 28 at 2 p.m.\nuntil 8 p.m. Elsie Wild, Edna\nMoffat, Slim Burrell, Evelyn\nAppleby, Betty and Bert Spencer,\nMuriel Cluett, Maudie McPherson\nand Audry Beland have volunteered their services to help make\nthe event a success.\nI cannot help but wonder why\nevery plane to Moscow is not\npacked with North American\nprotesters of the Chemoble disaster. It is projected that 8,800\npeople will die early because of\nradiation, but there is no account\nin the press of even the strong\nTeachers confer\nRussian group of protesters getting involved. At least I have been\ntold there is a strong Russian anti-\nnuclear movement. Perhaps the\nTV coverage is not up to par and\nthen again all protesters could\nland up in jig time, mining coal in\nSiberia at long hours with nonunion wages. A visit to the\nRussian pavilion at Expo 86 leaves\na strong impression that 80 percent of Russian energy is nuclear\nand growing, so I don't expect\nprotests from anyone would be\ntolerated.\nEven on of the Vancouver dailies is coming around separitism\nfor Alberta and B.C. Mulroney's\nriding of Manicougan, Quebec has\nreceived $161 millions to buy\n39,000 votes while B.C. and\nAlberta get a mere pittance. That\non top of the generous handouts to\nOntario and Quebec. Should we\nbe forever paying taxes to keep the\neast in their opulent way of life?\nAt the weekly dance visitors\nwere Tilley and Margo Hanes from\nAlberta and Rika Savoy. The door\nprizes went to frank and Mary\nSchroeder and the spot prizes to\nDoreen Mason and yours truly.\nDoris says she only sings in the\nbathtub. The neighbors think she\nis sadly out of practice.\nSquare dancers\nreturn next week\nMATSQUI - The Abbotsford\nSwinging Hubs will start their 23rd\nyear of dancing with square dance\nclasses for beginners starting on\nMonday, September 8 at 7:30 p.m.\nin the Matsqui hall, 33676 Olaf\nStreet, Matsqui Village.\nLast year's class of new dancers\nwill dance the mainstream level,\nstarting at 9 p.m. on the same\nnight.\nThe club's plus level dancers\nopen the season on Thursday,\nSeptember 4, at 8 p.m., in the\nsame location.\nThe Matsqui hall has a hardwood floor which is easy on the\nlegs, and the caller-teacher is\nSteve Edlund, who is known\naround and outside B.C. for the\nfun-filled dances he calls.\nThere is no charge for new\ndancers on the first night. Get\nfamily and friends together for an\nenjoyable evening on September 8.\nMURRAYVttLE - Two Langley\nteachers have spent a week of\ntheir summer break to attend a\nleadership conference at the Lester\nB. Pearson College on Vancouver\nIsland.\nAt the Academy of Principals,\nMary Wright and Derek Robinson\nattended seminars on leadership\nand school administration to develop their skills as administrators\nand ^professional educators.\nRobinson is Vice-principal at\nBlacklock elementary school and\nWright is presently Vice-principal\nat D.W. Poppy secondary school.\nTeachers and principals from\nacross Canada and the United\nStates participated in the conference. Dr. Carl Glickman, educational researcher and withor from\nthe University of Georgia, and Dr.\nkenneth Leithwood from the\nOntario Institute of Studies in\nEducation were the conference\nleaders. Emery Dosdall, Langley's\nsuperintendent of schools, chaired\nthe conference.\nConference was presented by\nEduServ with support from the\nministry of education's program\neffectiveness branch.\nKINDERGARTEN\nTo attend kindergarten children must have attained their fifth birthday on or before\nDecember 31, 1986. Proof of age must be provided when enrolling.\nParents of pupils who have not enrolled should contact the principal of the nearest\nelementary school. Parents will be advised of the time their children will attend.\nELEMENTARY\nStudents are required to be in attendance on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2nd for part of\nthe morning and full-time on each school day thereafter.\nSECONDARY\nStudents are required to be in attendance on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3rd all\nday.\nFor further Information regarding registration or attendance\ntimes contact your\nLOCAL SCHOOL.\nSCHOOL\nPRINCIPAL\nTELEPHONE                              j\nAldergrove Elementary\nMr. Gary Sasaki\n856-8763\nAlice Brown Elementary\nMr. Ron Sawatsky\n534-0744                                     1\nAnderson Elementary\nMr. Wayne Wiebe\n533-2997\nBelmont Elementary\nMr. Wayne Orser\n533-3641\nBlacklock Elementary\nMr. Charlie Fox\n.530-3188\nBradshaw Elementary\nMr. John Galvln\n530-7307\n'.Coghlan Elementary\nMr. John Balzer\n856-8539\nCounty Line Elementary\nMrs. Jean Hope\n856-2270\nDouglas Park Elementary\nMr. Peter Good\n533-4491\nFort Langley Elementary\nMr. Earl MoWllllams\n888-2111\nGlenwood Elementary\nMr. Gary Walker\n534-4644\nLangley Central\/Tillicum\nMr. Lorenz Wiebe\n534-5393                                     I\nLangley Elementary Fine Arts\nMr. Al Maclean\n888-3113\nLangley Meadows Elementary\nMr. Walter Krahn\n530-4101\nLangley Prairie Fundamental\nMr. John Greenwood\n534-4412\nMurrayville Elementary\nMr. Denny Ross\n534-3177\nNicomekl Elementary\nMr. George Main\n533-1468\nNoel Booth Elementary\nMr. Orvllle Cassidy\n530-9747\nNorth Otter Elementary\nMr. John Balzer\n856-3355\nOtter Elementary\nMr. Richard Anderson\n856-8426            %                       !\nParkside Centennial Elementary\nMr. Vic Ewert\n856-7775\nPeterson Road Elementary\nMr. Brian Thomasson\n534-7904\nShortreed Elementary\nMr. Leo Swoboda\n856-4167\nSimonds Elementary\nMr. Jack MacDonald\n530-2361\nSouth Carvolth Elementary\nMr. Gary Walker\n534-6824\nTopham Elementary\nMr. Irvin Redekopp\n888-6111\nUplands Elementary\nMr. George Jones\n533-1285\nWest Langley Elementary\nMr. Irvin Redekopp\n888-6444\nWilloughby Elementary\nMrs. Donna Williams\n888-6033\nWix-Brown Elementary\nMr. Rick Buck\n534-5633\nAldergrove Secondary\nMr. Mike Baker\n856-2521\nBrookswood Secondary\nMr. Dale Halcrow\n530-2141\nD.W. Poppy Secondary\nMr. Gene Macdonald\n530-2151\nFort Langley Junior Secondary\nMr. Al Maclean\n888-3113\nH.D. Stafford Junior Secondary\nMr. Dan Peebles\n534-9285\nLangley Secondary\nMr. Graham Leask\n534-4171\nMountain Secondary\nMr. Cam Gesy\nTRANSPORTATION\n888-3033\nBus transportation is provided for pupils living outside the walk limits set by the\nMinistry of Education and the Langley Board of School Trustees.\nThose walk limits -\nthe distance from home to school - are TWO miles for pupils in grades K-7 and\nTHREE miles for pupils in grades 8-12.\nTransportation is also provided for pupils enrolled In Special Education programs\nserving children from throughout ihe District.\nPupils should follow the timetable sent out to the schools In June\nParents new to the\nDistrict should contact the Transportation Office (534-7891) or\nyour local school for\ninformation.\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 35 (LANGLEY)\n22259-\n48th Avenue, Langley, B.C. V3A 3Z7\nPhone 534-7891\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nTeachers, board back to table    Expo jobs open up\nLANGLEY - It's back to the\nbargaining table for the school\ndistrict and the 757-member\nteachers association, with last\nweek's news that compensation\nstabilization commissioner Ed\nPeck has rejected an arbitrated\naward which totalled 4.8 per cent\nfor teachers in the coming school\nyear.\nArbitration board had awarded\nExpensive eggs\nVANCOUVER - Eggs sold for $35\neach at the PNE last week.\nPeter Brewer of Buckerfield's\nLtd. paid $1,050.00 for a flat of 30\neggs. This was the top bidding\nprice for prize winning eggs at the\nPNE egg auction. The proceeds, a\ntotal of $10,595.00, were donated\nto the Muscular Dystrophy\nAssociation of Canada.\nthe increase earlier this year,\nrejecting the school board's argument that the district was\nunable to pay any increase other\nthan the increments awarded each\nyear for teacher's first ten years of\nservice. The award was also\ngreater than that demanded by the\nLTA.\nDistrict secretary-treasurer Paul\nMakortoff had predicted earlier in\nthe year that Peck would reject the\naward, based on the precedent\nPeck had set in rejecting other\nawards above the three per cent,\nincluding increments, in other\nschool districts. Langley's increments will total about 1.4 per cent\nof budgeted salaries this coming\nyear.    -\nThe school board and LTA have\nbeen instructed to come up with a\nsettlement that falls within\nguidelines.\nVANCOUVER - A number of\nemployment opportunities at the\n1986 World Exposition are waiting\nto be filled by individuals who are\nfully available to work immediately\nthrough to October 13.   EXPO 86\nis recruiting new employees to\nreplace students .returning to\nschool.\nSeveral hundred positions in\nsuch areas as guest relations, ride\noperations, admissions, crowd\nPNE loses to Expo\nVANCOUVER - PNE president\nErwin Swangard is predicting the\nannual fair will run a deficit as\nhigh as $1.3-million this year,\nbecause of the competition across\ntown at the Expo site.\nThe fair had been operating in\nthe black in recent years, including last year's profit of $849,000.\nAttendance thus far has been\nabout 125,000 lower than last\nyear's level at this time.\nSwangard is seeking a meeting\nwith premier Bill Vander Zalm to\ntalk about provincial assistance to\nthe fair's finances. Swangard\nadded that he expects PNE to\nprofit next year because of Expo\nvisitors who will return to see the\nprovince.\nPNE vice-president Don Bellamy\nsaid they anticipated an attendance drop of 15 to 20 percent and\ncan budget accordingly. \"If we\ndrop $l-million, it creates a concern, but it's not a disaster. We\nwill survive.\"\ncontrol, security as well as food\nand merchandise operations are\ncurrently  available  at   Expo.\nApplicants should be prepared to\nwork at any time during the week.\n\"We presently employ some\n15,000 people, so this represents a\nrelatively small turnover and one\nthat we anticipated,\" said chairman Jim Pattison. \"Expo is providing a great opportunity for\npeople who want to be part of this\nfair - good job training and the\nchance to work with people from\naround the world.\"\nApplications for employment\nmust be made in person at Expo\nRecruitment Centres, located at\nLower Mainland Canada Employment and Immigration Commission offices. Hiring will begin\nimmediately.\nExpo has already welcomed\nmore than 12 million visitors from\nacross the globe. Only 62 days\nremain before the Exposition\nclosed its gates.\nGROUND BEEF\nSAFEWAY\nPREMIUM\nBREAD\nAsst'd. 675 9 Sliced loaf.\nWHOLE\nWATERMELON\nCalifornia or\nWashington.\nOLD DUTCH\nPOTATO\nCHiPS\nAsst'd. 200 g Box.\nJi>7R> WftfW1(-:+% ,T>->._. V^*+Tl-\u00ab \"V \u00ab+n\u00ab\u00ab * i_ _\u2022_. \u00ab * \u00bb \u2022 W+ikTt \u2022.\u00bb<, _ S _ - -_ffc>,\u00bb-.--TV-Pi-tt-.-\u00bbT\u00ab.Tk .. *__.i.l. _ -\n<\u2022' '.. \u00ab*-ti rvrrrt'ir\n 8\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nFour new ridings recommended\nOTTAWA \u2014   Four   new\nfederal electoral ridings should be\ncarved out of British Columbia's\nfast-growing Okanagan Valley,\nsouthern Vancouver Island and the\nmunicipalities surrounding Vancouver, an independent commission\nrecommends.\nThat would give the province a\ntotal of 32 MPs in a revamped House\nof Commons, says the commission\nheaded by Mr. Justice Montague\nTyrwhitt-Drake of Victoria.\nThe commission will hold public\nhearings in October and November .\non its proposals to redraw electoral\nboundaries to take account of\npopulation growth and shifts\nrecorded in the 1981 census. Similar\ncommissions are at work in all other\nprovinces in an effort to increase the\nCommons to 295 MPs from 282,\nhopefully in time for the next federal\nelection expected in 1988.\nThe commission calls for creation\nof a new riding to be known as\nOkanagan Centre, comprising most\nof the central Okanagan Valley.\nAnd it says three ridings should\nreplace the two existing ridings on\nsouthern Vancouver Island \u2014\nEsquimalt-Saanich, now held by\nConservative MP Pat Crofton and\nCowichan-Malahat-The Islands, now\nheld by New Democrat MP Jim\nManly.\nThose new ridings would be known\nas Esquimalt-Juan De Fuca,\nSaanch-Gulf Islands and Nanaimo-\nCowichan.\nThe municipality of Richmond \u2014\nnow part of the Richmond-South\nDelta riding beld by Fisheries\nMinister Tom Siddon \u2014 would\nbecome a new riding.\nNext door, the municipality of\nDelta would also become a separate\nriding along with a little bit of\nSurrey. It's now part of the huge\nSurrey-White P.Sck\u00bbNorth Delta\nriding represented by Conservative\nbackbencher Benno Friesen. The\nrest of the riding would be split into\nSurrey North and Surrey-White\nRock, which would include part of\nLangley District.\nIn other changes:\njobless next to nil\nBERNE - Switzerland's unemployment rate fell to 0.7 percent of\nthe work force in July from 0.8\npercent in June and 0.9 percent in\nJuly 1985, the federal office for\nindustry, trade and labor reported.\nThe number of people out of\nwork stood at 22,939 in July, a\ndecline of 3,843 on the level a year\nearlier. Switzerland has a population of 6.5 million.\nSoccer season starts\nALDERGROVE- The mini division\nof the Aldergrove Soccer Club will\nbegin its new season the first week\nof September. Boys and girls ages\n5 and 9 (born in 1980 and 1981)\nplay on Saturday mornings at\nNorth otter school, 248 Street and\n54 Avenue. More players are\nneedcd in most areas. For registration or information call Horst\nor Joyce Urbaniak at 856-6762.\n\u2014 Nanaimo-Albemi, how\nrepresented by Conservative Ted\nSchellenberg, and Comox-Powell\nRiver, home to New Democrat Ray\nSkelly, would disappear. In their\nplace would be the new ridings of\nComox-Alberni \u2014 all of the central\neast coast of Vancouver Island north\nfrom Lantzville, including Comox,\nCourtenay and Port Alberni \u2014 and\nNorth Island-Powell River, which\nwould include everything left over\nfrom the two existing ridings except\nfor the Sunshine Coast Regional\nDistrict.\n\u2014The Burnaby segment would be\nremoved from the North Vancouver-\nBurnaby riding now held by Conservative MP Chuck Cook. Two new\nelectoral districts would be created\nfrom North Vancouver-Bumaby and\nneighboring Capilano \u2014 North\nVancouver and Capilano-Howe\nSound. The latter would include the\nSunshine Coast and would pick up\nSquamish and Whistler from the\nexisting riding of Cariboo-Chilcotin.\n\u2014The Coquitlam segment of New\nWestminster-Coquitlam, now held\nby New Democrat Pauline Jewett,\nwould be removed. Two new ridings\nwould be formed from New West-\nminster-Coquitlam and Burnaby,\nnow held by New Democrat Svend\nRobinson \u2014 Burnaby and New\nWestminster-Burnaby. That would\nalso mean changes to the adjacent\nriding of Mission-Port Moody,\nrepresented by Conservative caucus\nchairman Gerry St. Germain. There\nwould be two new ridings known as\nMission-Coquitlam and Port Moody-\nCoquitlam.\n\u2014 As a result of forming the new\nriding of Okanagan Centre, changes\nwould be made to the northerly and\neasterly boundaries of Okanagan-\nSimilkameen. Conservative MP\nVinpG __arit_er'_ Okanagan \"North\nriding would be redefined'- as-\nOkanagan-Shuswap and would include Vernon and Shuswap Lake to\nthe north as well as Revelstoke and\nGolden to the east. Shuswap Lake\nwould be removed from the\nKamloops-Shuswap riding held by\nNew Democrat finance critic Nelson\nRiis. But the riding \u2014 renamed\nKamloops \u2014 would see its southern\nboundary extended to include\nMerritt and Brookmere.\n\u2014 Much of Kooteney-East\nRevelstoke and Kootenay West\nwould be combined to form the new\nelectoral district of Kootenay.\n\u2014 The community of Telkwa\nwould be added to the northern\nSkeena riding nw Democrat Jim\nFulton.\n\u2014 The boundary between Prince\nGeorge-Bulkley Valley and Prince\nGeorge-Peace River would be adjusted to take population balance\ninto account.\n\u2014There would be minor boundary\nchanges to Fraser Valley East and\nFraser Valley West.\nUnder a complex redistribution\nformula, the government wants to\ncreate 13 new ridings\u2014four each in\nBritish Columbia and Ontario and\nfive in Alberta.\nThe other provinces would retain\nthe same number of MPs although\nthe boundaries of their constituencies may change.\nFollowing public hearings, the\nindependent boundary commissions\nmust report to Parliament by next\nMay. Their reports will be\nautomaticially referred to the\nCommons committee on privileges\nand elections. MPs will have 30 days\nto file objections and another 30 days\nto examine the recommendations in\ncommittee.\nThe MPs' findings will be returned\nto the provincial commissions which\nwill have another 30 days to make\ntheir final reports, sometime in\nAugust 1987.\nThe 'law.f-.lls for-a 'oncfyear\nwaiting period between the time the\nnew boundaries are adopted and the\ntime they can be used in an election.\nFraser Valley West may grow\nThe electoral Boundaries Commission for B.C. is planning a\nre-alignment of Fraser Valley\nWest, federal riding which whould\nexpand the constituency considerably.\nThey propose to move the\neastern boundary further east to\ntake in most of Matsqui municipality, except for Matsqui Village\nand most of Matsqui Prairie.  The\ngoal is to have each constituency represent an ideal total of\n85,000 people.\nPublic meetings on the proposal\nwill be held Nov. 12 in Vancouver.\nThose who wish to acquire copies\nof maps and descriptions, or to\nspeak at the hearing are invited to\nwrite: The Secretary, Federal\nElectoral Boundaries Commission\nfor B.C., 55-200 Granville St.,\nVancouver, V6C 1S4.\nSoccer Coaches Required\nAldergrove Soccer is in need of coaches for\njuvenile boys soccer teams, including one\npremiere soccer team. Meet the challenge!\nPhone Ron Dougherty, President, 856-4659\nor Horst & Joyce Urbaniak, Registrars, 856-6762.\nHIGHLAND\nVILLAGE\nDRUGS\noffers a further\n20%\nSCHOOL\nSUPPLIES\nALSO UP ro\n5B fa m\\WWW\nON\n\u2022TOYS\n\u2022GIFTWARE\n\u2022CERAMICS\n\u2022ASSORTED\nCHOCOLATES\n20555 - 56th AVE., LANGLEY\nPrescriptions: 533-1661\nStore: 530-3464\n Shelly Harari [left] of Vancouver and Susan Trodd of\nRichmond share a relaxed\nmoment in front of one of the\nworld's most popular recreational crafts - - the Canadian-\ndesigned Laser. The sailboat\nis featured in the federal\ngovernment's Spirit of Enterprise exhibit at the Pacific\nNational Exhibition.\nMoving tips\n(NC) \u2014 Statistics! They tell us that\na typical Canadian family moves on\naverage every four years. They also\ntell us that the great majority of the\nmoves take place in the summer.\nIf your family is moving this\nsummer, you may be comparing the\ncosts of moving yourself to those of\na professional mover and, with the\nforesight to add up the hidden costs\nof a do-it-yourself move, spare\nyourself some costly hindsight.\nIf you opt for a no-frills move,\nmake sure you've accurately assessed your skill, stamina and physical condition and that of your assistants. Make sure also that you\nunderstand the responsibilities you\nWASH\nLAUNDRYMART\n27121 Fraser Hwy.\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nBIKE THEFT PROTECTION\nNew program foolproof\nface with a rented truck or trailer:\nthe confident and safe driving,\nparking and handling of a truck or\npulling of a heavy trailer with your\nown car some expertise\nand practice.\nIf, once all is reviewed, price remains a major factor, consider an\n\"in-between\" service, before closing the ledger on the costs of the\nmove. The TRANSAVE service offered by United Van Lines is such a\nservice. It offers the best of both\nworlds: safety and savings.\nYour own fully equipped container is brought to your door. You\nload it. Professionals haul it to your\ndestination address on an air-ride\nhighway unit under the control of a\ncentralized dispatch. You then unload it. Simple and effective!\nLANGLEY - Bie RCMFs bicycle\nanti-theft program has overseen\nthe stamping of more than 4000\nlocal bikes with LD. numbers, to\ndate.\nThe relatively new program\nshould dramatically, reduce incidences of theft in the area, as\nbikes are stamped in seven places\nwith the drivers licence number of\nany household member.   Driver's\n1\nGroup Bookings\nBirthday Packages\nPoolside Restaurant\nArcade\ni\u2014^55.Era.-rM'_hiN&^ Surrey\nWITH THIS COUPON\nHURRY!     \u00abt\n2 for 1      i\nLANGLEY INDOOR WATERSLIDES\nOFFER GOOD TILL SEPT. 30\/86\n6 Summer hours\n11:00 a.m. -9:30 p.m.\no Slide All Day\n$4.99 - $5.99\n.__\u00ab-___-_._-._,.,.   534-4111\nlicence numbers were chosen because they remain constant in a\nperson's lifetime and are easy for\npolice to trace.\nRCMP, along with volunteers\nfrom local Rotary, Rotoract and\nKiwanis clubs will attend at free\nstamping sessions for the public\non Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to\nnoon. The dates and locations for\nthe rest of the year are: Sept. 6 at\nCivic Centre, Oct. 4 at Aldergrove Legion, Nov. l at PL\nlangley Community Hall and Dec.\n6 at the Civic Centre.\nPolice say this program replaces\nthe RCMP bike registration program, so your bike should be\nstamped even if you do have a\ndecal.\n\"Please do your part by having\nyour family bikes stamped,\" says\nstaff sergeant P.M. Grabowski.\nWE WILL ACCEPT ANY\nREASONABLE OFFER\nLes Holms, Chuck Franson \u2022 Sales Managers\nLOU ISFELD LINCOLN MERCURY\nDealer License 6225\n533-2323 \"'\".\u00a3-35*' 853-0711\n 10\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nLocal roads\ncriticized\nMURRAYVILLE - Municipal roads\nwere criticized Monday night by a\nman who says he has 26 years\nexperience in building blacktop\nroads.\nBosko Begusich told district\ncouncilors that their road construction crews aren't doing such a\nhot job and that it it the taxpayer\nends up paying for this alleged\nsloppiness.\n\"As long as the road is black,\nit's good (seems to be the\nattitude),\" Begusich said as he\noffered councilors some \"constructive criticism\".\nBut, he said, not long after a\nnew road is built it starts to\ndeteriorate because of inferior\nconstruction methods employed.\nMunicipal roads are constantly\nfull of deep potholes, Begusich\nsaid, citing inadequate compaction\nof the underlying gravel as the\ncause.\nTeachers in school\nMURRAYVTLLE  -   100   teachers\nfrom Langley and  other lower\nmainland 'school   districts   are\nattending  the  Langley  Summer\nInstitute.       Located   at   Milner\nEducation    Centre,    institute\noffers workshops in a number of\nauricular   areas   including   art,\ndrama, computers and FVench. In\naddition, a classroom management\ncourse is being offered. '\n\"We're pleased that so many\nLangley teachers  are  attending\nthese workshops.   I'm sure that   r\\_%_*_*_\u00ab_   _\u00ab_   \u00ab___\u00ab     _*-_\u2022_-_______.___._\u00bb.\nthe children in our schools will be   UaflCQ   IS   CSltn   0XSTC-S3\nthe  ones   to   benefit   from   the ~ \"     \" '\nknowledge and skills gained,\" said\nsuperintendent Emery Dosdall.\nTala - Bellydahcer, coming to   Langley Sept. 10.\nSubdivision okayed\nMURRAYVILLE - The subdivision\nof a 10 - acre parcel in the Walnut\nGrove area was vehemently opposed by one staunch aldermanic\nsupporter of the agricultural land\nreserve when councilors sat here\nMonday night.\nBut three other aldermen outvoted Aid. Muriel Amason and\ngave Robert Galer permission to\nsplit his land at 19652-86 Avenue\ninto four lots.\n\"I strongly object,\" said\nArnason, but to no avail.\nShe said the land, which is\nzoned for urban use but inside the\nagricultural land reserve, was\nclass two, three and four, considered excellent for farming\npurposes.\nNew bylaw mooted\nMURRAYVMJ- - A soil removal\nbylaw is in place in Langley, and\nnow councilors will give consideration to a soil deposit bylaw.\nThey were spurred on by recent\ncomplaints from a Fort Langley\nman concerning the placement of\nfill on aneighboring lot.\nGeorge Holz, of 22166- 86A\nAvenue, said that the filling in of a\nravine next door was \"endanger-\ning and devaluing\" his.property.....\nLANGLEY - The dance is an art; it\nis a means of expression, a means\nof communication.\nAs centuries passed the dance\ndeveloped and gained in popularity with artists appearing in\nEgyptian tomb paintings as early\nas 500 B.C., and in ancient Greek\nsculpture. Probably the greatest\ninterest in the dance as a sculpture\nwas displayed in our own century\nduring the Art Nouveau period.\nThe undulating movements of\nthe abdomen, thighs, arms and all\nparts of the body have, for\ncenturies, been used by the native\ntribes of many countries in fertility\nrites, and was the first exercise\nregimen for natural childbirth.\nAn old but seldom seen method\nof physical conditioning is being\noffered at Michaud Inheritance\nHouse, 5202 - 204 Street. The\nancient are of bellydancing offers\nfun and enjoyment as well as\ngiving much wanted muscle and\nskin tone to the practioner of this\nancient skill. The graceful and\neyecatching dance offers confidence and poise, as well as an\nenjoyable way to maintain physical\nfitness. For further information in\nclasses, phone 888-7028.\nI\nI\nI\nI\ns\nI\nI\nI\n5\ni\nI\nm\nI\nI\nLU\u00a5\u00bb5T AOTOMOT1WE\n(1986} LTD.\nUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT\n*I7\n95\nLUBE, OIL &\nFILTER SPECIAL\nCoupon expires Sept. 10,1986        [Most cars. Pius iax.]\nPRICE 8F YOU BRING jjj THIS COUPON!\n530-8313    26930 FRASER HIGHWAY    856-8155\nI\n1\nI\n\u25a0\nI\nSettler family\ncelebrate 100\nLANGLEY - One of the area's\nmost celebrated families marked\nthe hundredth anniversary of their\nsettlement here last weekend.\nD.W. (Bill) Poppy, an easygoing man who served many years\nas mayor of the district retired\nfrom political life in the early '70s\nto tend the family farm on Otter\nRoad. He and brother, James and\nsister Elizabeth survive father,\nDavid W. Poppy, who first settled\non the 160 acres in 1886, and went\non to become reeve (mayor) of\nLangley. The two D.W. Poppys\nServed nearly half a century as\nreeves of the district.\nThe Poppys have been instrumental members and participants\nin the Otter Co-op and its predecessor, Otter Farmers' Institute,\nand their flock of sheep are\nrespected for their quality far and\nwide.\nALDER LANES\nJOIN A FALL LEAGUE\nSTARTS SEPT. 2nd\nLadies \u2014    Tues. 9:45 a.m.\nMens   \u2014    Thurs. 9:00 p.m.\nMixed \u2014    Mon. 6:45, Tues. 7:00,\nThurs. 6:45, Sun. 7:00\nGolden Agers\u2014 Wed. 12:30 p.m.\nYouth Bowling Starts\nSat., Sept. 6th\nUnder 12 -9:30 a.m.\n13 - 18 yrs. \u2014 11:00 a.m.\nCall 856-2034\n1. NORTH PACIFIC STEEL FABRICATORS LTD.\nDATE: Thursday, Sept. 11th - 10 a.m.\nPLACE: 7520 Conrad St., Burnaby, B.C.\nChicago 15'x 12 ga, 100 ton press brake \u2022 Cincinnati 1 2'xVt\"\nshear \u2022 2 ironworkers \u2022 Vert, milling machine \u2022\u2022 DoAII C-9V\nbandsaw \u2022 11 welders \u2022 Canox burning table \u2022 2-5 ton O.H.\ncranes \u2022 4 forklifts \u2022 compressor \u2022 shop press \u2022 tools, supplies, offices \u2022 flatdeck \u2022 steel inventory.\n1. CRAIGM0NT MINES LTD.\nDATE: Thursday, Sept. 18th \u2014 9 a.m.\nPLACE: Merritt, B.C.\n2-cone crushers \u2022 7 Wagner scooptrams \u2022 Locis \u2022 floatation\ncells \u2022 mag. separators \u2022 disc filters \u2022 2 hoists \u2022 cable belt\nconveyor \u2022 many belt conveyors \u2022 radial stocker \u2022 screen\nplant \u2022 4 jumbos \u2022 fans \u2022 excavator \u2022 grader \u2022 2 loaders \u2022 3\ntrucks \u2022 buildings \u2022 O.H. cranes \u2022 rail \u2022 2 forklifts 'supplies \u2022\nparts \u2022 stores inventory, etc.. etc.\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n11\nThe issues of the week are illiteracy and cocaine\nBy Denise Gorge\nCan you read this?\nIf so, find out how 20\nmillion adult Americans manage to get along\nwithout being able to read\neven traffic signs, let alone\nthe daily paper. \"X\" marks\nthe spot on Wednesday,\nSept. 3, as the ABC News\nCloseup unit and reporter\nPeter Jennings explore\nwhy Johnny (or his dad)\ncan't read, in At a Loss for\nWords: Illiterate in America. Not to be outdone by\nABC's issue-mongering\nthis summer, NBC\ncounters on Friday, Sept.\n5 with NBC News Special\nReport: Cocaine, a one-\nhour special report on cocaine and its deadly counterpart, crack. Anchor\nTom Brokaw reports and\nmediates a debate between drug experts, former users and law-enforcement officers.\nThese days, Greenpeace and No Nukes are\ntrying to save us from ourselves. Before that, it was\nSave the Whales and protests against cosmetics\ntests on bunnies. Nothing\nPersonal looks at a similar\ncause \u2014 the clubbing of\nbaby seals in Alaska. Suzanne Somers stars as an\nIvy League lawyer with a\nsocial conscience; Donald\nSutherland plays the college law professor.\nIf hard news isn't your\nbag, if you've overdosed\non Donahue's five-part\nvideo explanation of nature vs. nurture and if\nyou're fed up with Social\nIssues, you might want to\nsettle for some rehashed\ngossip on Wednesday,\nSept. 3. ABC's Barbara\nWalter's Summer Special\nfeatures   excerpts   from\nthree previously aired\nshows. Here, Cher, Cybill\nShepherd and Barbra\nStreisand propound that\nquintessential TV staple,\nthe non-issue.\nTaps, 1981's flick about\ncoming of age in dress\nblue, stars the notorious\nSean Penn, along with\nTimothy Hutton and Tom\nCruise. It blares onto the\nCBS screen on Saturday,\nSept. 6. George C. Scott is\nfine as the by-the-book\nmilitary theoretician who\ncan teach his cadets military  strategy   but  can't\nfend off land developers.\nHutton stars as Brian Mor-\neland, a freshly scrubbed\nmini-Rambo who leads the\ncadets' rebellion against\nthe real-estate crunch.\nAgatha Christie does it\nagain on Death on the\nNile, on ABC, Monday,\nSept. 1. A star-studded\nshipload of suspects include John Guillermin, David Niven, Mia Farrow, Angela Lansbury, Bette Davis\nand Jack Warren. Peter\nUstinov is the ubiquitious\nHercule Poirot. Whodunit?\nPeter Jennings\nMARQUEE - FILM REVIEW\nBy J.T. YURKO\nThe best Stephen\nKing movie yet\nSTAND BY ME (R-Columbia)\nStarring Wll Wheaton, River Phoenix,\nCorey Feldman. * * *    ___2_'_._\n'4d_r_ytiia.f?U-_^ ___\n\"Stand By Me\" is based on\na novella by Stephen King,\nbut this tale has little of King's\nusual ghoulish assortment of\nsupernatural spooks, Salem\nwitches or possessed cars.\nHere, King tells a semi-autobiographical story of four 12-\nyear-old boys coming of age.\nIt is a time of change for\neach of them. The summer is\nending, and a new fall term\nmeans junior high school.\nEach is headed for a different\nfuture, but for now they are\nbonded by a common event\n\u2014 the disappearance of another boy from the town.\nEventually, some young\nthugs from the town accidentally discover the boy's body,\nbut they are afraid to report it\nsince they happened to be riding in a stolen car at the time.\nWhen the boys overhear this\nstory, they set out on foot to\ncross the 20 miles or so to see\nthe \"dead body.\"\n\"Stand By Me\" has all the\nelements of a rights-of-pas-\nsage film. During their pre-ad-\nolescent odyssey, the boys\nare forced to confront the\ntruth about themselves. Each\nboy has his own strengths,\noverweight and simple, another has a father, now institutionalized, who once held\nthe boy's ear to the stove. Another is virtually blacklisted by\nthe community since his father is a drunk and his older\nbrother Is in and out of prison.\nThe fourth boy is a young\nwriter who makes up campfire\nstories while they are on their\njourney. Since the death of his\nolder snd very popular brother (obviously his parents' favorite), he has become the invisible boy in his household.\nFew films have been successful in translating King's\npowerful prose to the screen.\nEven a director as potent as\nStanley Kubrick could not\ntransfer the goose-bump essence of King's \"The Shining.\" But \"Stand by Me,\" under the helm of director Rob\nReiner and screenwriters\nReynold Gideon and Bruce A.\nEvans, may be the best cinematic realization of a King story yet.\nAnd the performances of\nthe four young boys are excellent, even In those few scenes\nthat call for excessive pre-ad-\nolescent angst.\n\u201e> & fc_fU%\u00abMg\u00a3\u00a3j ,.-\u25a0 ft\nAdventures offer theatre\nalternatives for Expo\nVANCOUVER - One of Canada\nPavilion's resident delights is the\nVancouver Theatresports League\nproduction, \"Adventures in the\nNth Dimension\", running six days\na week in the Amiga Studio\nTheatre until the close of Expo 86\non October 13.\nA specially commissioned work\nby Canada Pavilion, \"Adventures\nin the Nth Dimension\" actively\ndemonstrates the computer and\nvideo technology of the Amiga\nStudio Theatre while taking the\naudience on a journey through\ntime.\nIn an effort to save Canada from\nthe sinister clutches of Sarkon, the\nfive actors deputize the audience\nas Mounties and solicit their help\nin rescuing the pavilion and the\ncountry from the forces of evil.\nThe company's trademark improvisational skills give each performance a unique twist, allowing\naudience participation and suggestions to dictate the flow of\nevents.\nA unique feature adding to the\ntechnology of the Amiga Studio\nTheatre is a biofeedback system\ninstalled on each of the aisle seats.\nWrapped around two fingers,\nthese devices register audience\nresponse by displaying coloured\nbars on the screen on stage. The\nactors encourage thoughts of ex-\nWHAT'S ON\nAin't Misbehavin' - at Arts Club Granville\nIsland stage. Tickets VTC, call 687-1644.\nSex Tips for Modern Girls - musical comedy\na:  Ans Club Seymour Si.  slage. Tickets\nVTC,    call   687-1644.\nOnly In Vancouver - at Arts Club Revue\nstage, Granville Is. Tickets VTC, call\n687-1644.\nVatican Splendour - Baroque art masterpieces till Sept. 1 at Vancouver Art Gallery.\nTickets VTC & door.\nAldergrove Art Club - meel every Wednesday, 1:30 lo 3:30 at OAP Hall, 273 St.,\nAldergrove. All are welcome.\nManifold Destiny - Caravan Stage Co. at\nStrathcona Park, Aug. 21 to Sept. 6, 8 p.m.\n(Tues. to Sun.). Tickets at gate.\nLa Scala - opera. Aug. 24. 26, 28. 31 & Sept.\n2, 4 al Pacific Coliseum. 8 p.m. shows.\nTickeis $19 - $75 al VTC. Also Aug 30 &\nSept. 1 at Orpheum Theaire. Tickeis $t9 -\n$48 ai VTC.\nLa Cage aux Folles - Aug. 26-31 at QE\nTheatre, 8 p.m. & 2 p.m. matinees. Tickets\n$24 - $39.50 al VTC.\nGrand Kabuki of Japan - Aug. 26-30 at QE\nPlayhouse, 8 p.m. & 2 p.m. matinees.\nTickeis $17.50- $30 al VTC.\ncitement or tranquility depending\non the requirements of the show's\ntime machine. j '^'\nCast members Lori Dungey, Jim\nMcLarty, Colin Mochrie, Michael\nRobinson and David Cameron are\naccompanied through the performance by musician Richard\nSide, who is also the producer of\n\"Adventures in the Nth Dimension.\" The play is directed by Kim\nSelody and written collaboratively\nby the cast with Phil Savath.\nThe Vancouver Theatresports\nLeague has been operating successfully as a theatre co-operative\nfor over six years. As well as\npresenting pure improv, the company produces innovative work\nthat combines script with improvisation. A Theatresports Hamlet,\nSuspect and Destiny are all semi-\nscripted works that incorporate\naudience suggestions to help propel the plot. In 1984, the Vancouver Theatresports League was\nawarded the Golden Hog Award in\nToronto, the top prize in the first\nTheatresports National Tournament involving competing teams\nfrom across the country.\nThe performance schedule for\n\"Adventures in the Nth Dimension\" at the Amiga Studio Iheatre\nis as follows: Until October 13 -\nTuesday through Sunday at 11\na.m. and 12 noon every day.\nJohnny Cash - Aug. 28, 7:30 al Expo\nTheaire. Tickets VTC.\nBilly Ocean - Aug. 29, 7:30 at Expo Theatre.\nBilly Ocean - Aug. 29. 10:30 p.m a' Expo\nTnea re. Ticke s VTC.\nGeorge Thorogi.d - Sept. 1, 7:30 al Expo\nTheatre. Tickets VTC.\nThe Marriage of Figaro - Sept. 3, 5, 6, 8 al 8\np.m., at Vancouver Playhouse with Opera\nPiccola. Italian with English surtitles. Tickets VTC.\nThe Great Swing All-Stars - Sept. 5, 8 p.m.\nat Orpheum, with Louie Bellson, Hank\nJones, Milt Hlnton, Buddy de Franco, Terry\nGibbs and Remo Palmier. Tickets VTC.\nGeorge Benson - Sept. 6, 7:30 at Expo\nTheatre. Tickets VTC.\nTango Argentino - Sept. 9-14 at QE Theatre,\n8 p.m. & 2 p.m. matinees. Tickets $17.50 -\n$35. at VTC outlets.\nManhattan Transfer - Sep:. 9 x.  10. 7:30\np.m. a. Expo lnea:re. Ticke.s VTC\nUB .Q\/FIno Young Cannibals - Sept. 10 at\nUBC War Memorial Gym. Tickets VTC.\nNell  Diamond -' Sept.   12 at  BC  Place\nStadium. Tickets VTC.\nBeach Boys - Sep-. 12, 7:30 p m a Expo\nTnea.re. Ticke:s VTC.\nBeach Boys - (2nd show) Sept. 12,11 p.m. at\nExpo Theaire. Tickets VTC.\nHave A Good Time!\ncompliments of The Star\nENTER OUR DRAWS AS\nOFTEN AS YOUWSU^\nCLIP AND\nENTER\nWIN A PAIR OF TICKETS TO\nTANGO ARSENTUO\nTuesday, Sept. 9,8 p.m.,  Queen Elizabeth Theatre.\nName.\nPhone\nAddress.\nj Send or deliver to The Aldergrove Star before the draw at 1   |\n.y_-2_k^&__&__L.iL_   _^^_._i-_-.w____-_:__^_-.___:-__.    !\n 12 THE ALDERGROVE STAR. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nREGULAR DAYTIME PROGRAMMING\nMORNINQ\n6:00\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON (MON)\n6:30\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DY8TROPHY\nTELETHON (MON)\n\u00a9 O JIMMY SWAQQART\n6:46\n\u00a9A.M. WEATHER\n8:00\nO ABCNEWSg\nS NBC NEWS (TUE-FRI)\nOO ROMPER ROOM (R)\nB MORNINQ STRETCH\nO  HOOKED ON AEROBICS\n09 JIM AND TAMMY\n\u00a9SIZE SMALL (TUE-FRI)\n6:30\n0 NEWS (TUE-FRI)\nOO CANADA A.M.\nO CBS NEWS\nO  SECRET CITY (THU.\nFRI)\nO   POLKA  DOT  DOOR\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9GULFSTREAM(MON)\n\u00a9    HIDDEN   MOSAICS\n(TUE)\nm   MIDLAND  COUNTRY\n(WED)\n\u00a9 IT'S A NEW DAY (TUE-\nFRO\n7:00\nO    QOOD   MORNINQ\nAMERICA g\n\u00a9TODAY\nO CBS MORNINQ NEWS\n@ SESAME STREET (R)\nI CARTOONS\n\u00a9    ARCHEOLOQICAL\nDATING \/ BIQ DIG \/ PYGMIES   ITURI   FOREST\n(MON)\n\u00a9DYSTONIA (TUE)\n\u00a9 AIR IS FOR BREATH-\nMOWED)\n7:30\n\u00a9  SPIRIT OF THE RENAISSANCE (TUE)\n\u00a9 CHAUCER'S ENGLAND\n(WED)\n\u00a9 100 HUNTLEY STREET\n(TUE-FRI)\n6:00\n\u00a9MOVIE (MON)\n\u00a9   POLKA  DOT   DOOR\n(THU. FRI)\n\u00a9 CAPTAIN KANGAROO\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9SCOOBYDOO\n\u00a9   TODAY'S   8PECIAL\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON   CONTINUES\nw     8:16\n\u00a9MOVIE (TUE-FRI)\n8*30\n\u00a9 MISTER ROGERS (R)\n\u00a9 CARTOONS\n\u00a9   SIZE  SMALL   (MON-\nWED)\n\u00a9IT FIGURES (TUE-FRI)\n9:00\n\u00a9MERV GRIFFIN\n0    GOOD   COMPANY\n(TUE-FRI)\n8 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\n(MON)\nO MCGOWAN\n\u00a9626,000 PYRAMID\nO MCGOWAN (THU, FRI)\n\u00a9 T.J. HOOKER (MON-\nWED)\n\u00a9 SESAME STREET (R)\nDONAHUE\n_ POLKA DOT DOOR\n\u00a9 700 CLUB (TUE-FRI)\n0:30\n\u00a9VENTURE (MON)\n\u00a9KRESKIN\n\u00a9 LET'S MAKE A DEAL\n\u00a9KRESKIN CTHU, FRO\n\u00a9   CALLER'S   CHOICE\n(THU.FRI)\n\u00a9WITH IT (MON)\n\u00a9 READ ALONG\/ NORTH\nAMERICA: GROWTH OF A\nCONTINENT (TUE)\n\u00a9 READ ALONG \/ SELF,\nINC. (WED)\n10:00\n\u00a9    FRED   PENNER'S\nPUCE\n\u00a9 LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\n\u00a9 \u00a9 WHEEL OF FORTUNE (TUE-FRI)\nQ  \u00a9  JOYS OF COLLECTING\n\u00a9PRICE IS RIGHT\nQ READING RAINBOW\n\u00a9MOVIE\n\u00a9 READ ALONG \/ READ\nALL ABOUT IT (THU)\n\u00a9 CHALLENGE OF THE\nUNKNOWN   \/   EUREKA\n(FRI)\n\u00a9 COMMUNITIES WEST\n(MON)\n\u00a9 MONEY AND BANKING\nIN CANADA (TUg)\n\u00a9    SALUT   \/   EUREKA\n\u25a0\u00ab\"*\u00bb'    10:16\nO    CURIOU3   QEORQE\n(TUE. THU)\nO    FRIENDLY   QIANT\n(MON, WED, FRI)\n10:30\n\u00a9MR.DRESSUP\n\u00a9DOUBLE TALK\n\u00a9SCRABBLE (TUE-FRI)\nO BODY MOVES\n\u00a9WHAT'S COOKING (R)\n\u00a93-2-1 CONTACT g\n\u00a9 CHINA: LAND TRANSFORMED (THU)\n\u00a9 RIVER PLANET EARTH\n(MON)\n\u00a9GIVE AND TAKE (TUE)\n\u00a9 YUKON PLACER MINING (WED)\n\u00a9 GALLOPING GOURMET\n(TUE-FRI)\n11:00\n\u00a9SESAME STREET\n\u00a9RYAN'S HOPE\n\u00a9   SUPER   PASSWORD\n(TUE-FRI)\nQ \u00a9 YOUNQ AND THE\nRESTLESS (TUE-FRI)\nO O ANOTHER WORLD\n(MON)\n\u00a9    PEOPLE'S   COURT\n(MON)\nQ    GUESS   WHAT   (R)\n(TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9LIFE AROUND US\n\u00a9    CALLER'S   CHOICE\n(MON, WED, THU)\n\u00a9 OUR HOME 18 JAPAN\n(FRI)\n\u00a9 INDUSTRIAL SKIN DISEASE CAU3E AND PREVENTION (TUE)\n\u00a9 NEW YOU (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR      DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON   CONTINUES\n(MON)\n\u00a9 TAPE TAMBOUR\n11:16\n\u00a9 LES AVENTURES DE\nL'OURS COLARGOL (THU)\n\u00a9 TEDDY (FRI)\n\u00a9   LES   FABLES   D'EU-\nROPE (MON)\na GRISU, LE PETIT DRAGON (TUE)\n\u00a9 CALIMERO (WED)\n11:30\n\u00a9 LOVING\n8 SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL (TUE-FRI)\n8 U.8. OPEN TENNIS\n(MON)\nO DEFINITION (R)\n\u00a9  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS\n\u00a9 JAPANESE ECONOMY\n(THU)\n\u00a9 MEIOSIS \/ CLONE OF\nFROGS (FRI)\n\u00a9 EARTH SCIENCE \/ ICE\nGEOLOGY (TUE)\n\u00a9NEWS (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 LES GAMINS DE BUL-\nGARIECTHU)\n\u00a9 CAPITAME CAVERNS\n(FRO\na WOODY LE PIC (MON)\na    LES   NOUVELLES\nAVENTURES DE POPEYE\n(TUE)\na   MONSIEUR   ROSEE\n(WED)\n11:60\n8    EVENING   EDITION\n(FRI)\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\n8 \u00a9ALL MY CHILDREN\n8  \u00a9  DAYS OF OUR\nLIVES (TUE-FRI)\n8 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON (MON)\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 LIFETIME (MON)\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9PLANET FOR THE TAKING OHU)\n\u00a9   FOR   AUCTION:   AN\nAMERICAN HERO (FRI)\n8 COMRADES (MON)\n8 MOVIE (TUE)\n\u00a9NOVA (WED)\n\u00a9PERRY MASON\n\u00a9    CALLER'8   CHOICE\n(THU)\n\u00a9 MEIOSIS \/ CLONE OF\nFROGS (MON)\n\u00a9 COMPUTER APPLICATIONS: SCIENCE (WED)\n\u00a9    FARIBOLES   (MON,\nTHU.FRI)\n8    PREMIERE   EDITION\n(TUE, WED)\n12:16\n\u00a9    FARIBOLES   (TUE,\nWED)\n12:30\n\u00a9 ENGLAND IN THE MIDDLE AGES (THU)\n\u00a9  AMERICAN FOREIQN\nPOLICY (FRI)\n\u00a9   IN  THE  HEART  OF\nCEDAR (TUE)\n\u00a9   FILM   PRODUCTION\nTECHNIQUES (WED)\n\u00a9 AVI8 DE RECHERCHE\n(TUE-FRI)\n8 LA CRINIERE AU VENT\n(MON)\n1:00\na MIDDAY\n\u00a9ONE LIFE TO LIVE\nO   \u00a9   \u00a9   ANOTHER\nWORLD (TUE-FRI)\nO   \u00a9   CFL  FOOTBALL\n(MON)\n\u00a9    AS   THE   WORLD\nTURNS (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9MARK RUSSELL (THU)\nQ BEYOND THE NORTH\nWIND (FRI)\n\u00a9COMRADES (MON)\n\u00a9    ALIENS,   DRAQONS,\nMONSTERS & ME (WED)\n\u00a9    DIVORCE   COURT\nCTHU, FRI)\n\u00a9QUINCY (MON-WED)\n\u00a9    MONARCHY:   THE\nBRITISH WAY (THU)\n\u00a9    CALLER'S   CHOICE\n(MON, FRI)\n\u00a9   PEOPLE   AND   PRODUCTIVITY (TUE)\n\u00a9   ONE  LIFE  TO  LIVE\n(TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 REFLETS D'UN PAYS\n1*30\n8   EMBARGO:   AN   ENTERPRISE SPECIAL OHU)\n8NEWSLEADERS(TUE)\n\u00a9   JEFFERSONS   (THU,\nFRI)\n\u00a9   WATER,   WIND   AND\nSTORMS (THU)\n\u00a9   ENERGY   EFFICIENT\nHOUSING (FRI)\n\u00a9    AFGHANISTAN:   MY\nCOUNTRY (MON)\n\u00a9    QREY   GHOST   OF\nSASKATCHEWAN (TUE)\n\u00a9 EARTH SCIENCE \/ ICE\nGEOLOGY (WED)\n2:00\n\u00a9TRAPPER JOHN, M.D.\n\u00a9GENERAL HOSPITAL\n\u00a9    SANTA   BARBARA\n(TUE-FRO\n\u00a9LIFETIME (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 GUIDING LIGHT (TUE-\nFRO\n\u00a9GENERAL HOSPITAL\n(TUE-FRI)\n8 MOVIE (THU)\n8 MATINEE AT THE BIJOU (FRO\n8   MASTERPIECE   THEATRE g (MON)\n8 AMERICAN MASTERS\n(TUE)\n8 MYSTERYI (WED)\n\u00a9 PRICE IS RIGHT (THU,\nFRI)\n\u00a9 I LOVE LUCY (MON-\nWED)\n\u00a9 CALLER'S CHOICE\n(FRI)\n\u00a9REALITIES (MON)\n\u00a9ENGLISH 120 OUE)\n\u00a9ON THE AIR (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON (MON)\naC'ETAITHIEROHU)\n8 TELE-FEUILLETON: LA\nCORDE AU COU (FRI)\n8 CINEMA (MON, TUE)\n8 LE TEMPS DE VIVRE\n(WED)\n1       '       2:30\n8   U.S.   OPEN   TENNIS\nCONTINUES (MON)\n\u00a9 ANDY GRIFFITH (MON-\nWED)\n\u00a9 CALLER'S CHOICE\n(THU)\n\u00a9 CHILD OF THE SOUTH\nPACIFIC(FRI)\n\u00a9REALITIES (MON)\n\u00a9PAINT (WED)\n3:00\n\u00a9   CANADIAN  REFLECTIONS (WED-FRI)\n'\u00a9CORONATION STREET\n(MON, TUE)\n\u00a9 NORTHWEST AFTERNOON (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 DAYTIME LOVERS: A\nSOAP   OPERA   SPECIAL\n(MON)\nS KNOTS LANDING (TUE-\nFRI)\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR' DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\n(MON)\n8 MIXED COMPANY\n(TUE-FRO\n8 MATT HOUSTON (TUE-\nFRI)\n8 LIFETIME (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 MAQIC OF OIL PAINTING (MON)\n8 WOODWRIQHT'S\nSHOP (TUE)\nQ JOY OF PAINTING\n(WED)\n\u00a9 CARTOONS (THU, FRI)\n\u00a9 SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF\nPOWER (MON-WED)\n\u00a9 ROCKCYCLE \/ FOSSILS \/ EARTHQUAKES\nCTHU)\n\u00a9 MUSEUM WITHOUT\nWALLS (FRI)\n\u00a9 POLKA DOT DOOR\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9 MAD DASH (TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9   PAR   LES   CHEMINS\nD'AMBROSE (THU)\n\u00a9   CONNAISSANCE   DU\nMILIEU (FRI)\n3*30\na   CANADIAN   REFLECTIONS (MON, TUE)\n8    VICTORY   GARDEN\n(THU)\n8 WE'RE COOKING NOW\n(FRI)\n8 MODERN MATURITY\n(MON)\n8 MOTORWEEK (TUE)\n8   WINE,  WHAT PLEA-\nSUREI (WED)\n\u00a9   HE-MAN  AND   MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE\n\u00a9 RAINBOW \/ THOMAS\nTHE TANK ENGINE (MON-\nWED)\n8 PRICE IS RIGHT\nLA TRILOQIE ALGON-\nQUINECTHU)\n8 HEIDI (FRI)\n8 REQARDS SUR LA NATURE (WED)\n3:60\n\u00a9 BUBBLIES \/ BARBAPAPA (MON-WED)\n.    4:00\n\u00a9  FACTS OF LIFE (R)\n(TUE-FRO\n\u00a9CFL FOOTBALL (MON)\n\u00a9 SALE OF THE CENTURY\n\u00a9DONAHUE\nI WALTONS (MON, THU)\ni NEWS (FRI)\n8 DAILY EDITION (TUE,\nWED)\n\u00a9 PEOPLE'S COURT\n(TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9 HART TO HART (THU)\n8  GENERAL HOSPITAL\n(MON)\nO   FAMILY  TIES   (TUE,\nWED)\n8 SESAME STREET (R)\n_ TRANSFORMERS\n\u00a9   POLKA  DOT DOOR\nOHU, FRI)\n\u00a9    TODAY'S   SPECIAL\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9FRAQQLEROCKg\n4:30\neSUPERQRAN(R)(THU)\n\u00a9 VIDEO HITS (FRI)\n8ZIQZAQ8(R)(TUE)\n8     WONDER3TRUCK\n(WED)\n8  $1,000,000 CHANCE\nOF A LIFETIME\n8  a   CFL FOOTBALL\n(FRI)\nONEWS (TUE-FRI)\nONEWS (TUE, WED)\n\u00a9FLINTSTONES\n\u00a9 RAINBOW \/ THOMAS\nTHE TANK ENGINE (THU,\nFRO\n\u00a9 ADVENTURES OF THE\nUTTLE PRINCE (MON)\n\u00a9   KIMBA   THE   WHITE\nLION OUE)\n\u00a9    FABLES   OF   THE\nGREEN F0RE8T (WED)\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9 AU COIN DE MA RUE\n(THU)\n\u00a9  FOOTBALL PROFES-\nSIONNELCANADIEN(FRI)\n\u00a9  LES SCHTROUMPFS\nD(MON)\n\u00a9 LA CLE DES BOIS g\n(TUE)\n8  QUATRE AMI8 FAN-\nTASTIQUES (WED)\n4:60\n\u00a9 BUBBLIES \/ BARBAPAPA (THU, FRI)\n6:00\n\u00a9VIDEO HITS (TUE-THU)\n\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\nOTIC TAC DOUGH (MON-\nTHU)\n\u00a9WHEEL OPPORTUNE\nCTHU)\nO LIFETIME (MON)\nO WEBSTER (TUE, WED)\n8 MISTER ROGERS (R)\n\u00a9 ANDY GRIFFITH CTHU,\nFRO\n\u00a9 DIFF'RENT STROKES\n(MON-WED)\n\u00a9 READ ALONG \/ READ\nALL ABOUT IT (THU)\n\u00a9 CHALLENGE OF THE\nUNKNOWN    \/    EUREKA\n(FRI)\n\u00a9 COMMUNITIES WEST\n(MON)\n\u00a9 MONEY AND BANKING\nIN CANADA \/ GIVE AND\nTAKE CTUE)\n\u00a9    SALUT   \/   EUREKA\n(WED)\n\u00a9  L'HISTOIRE DES INVENTIONS g (THU)\n\u00a9 LE VAGABOND (MON)\n\u00a9    LE   VAQABOND   g\nCTUE, WED)\n6:30\n8   THREE'S   COMPANY\n(R)g (TUE-FRI)\n8 NBC NEWS (FRO\n8 NEWS (MON-THU)\nO WKRP IN CINCINNATI\n(THU)\n8 BUSINESS REPORT\n\u00a9    TOO   CL08E   FOR\nCOMFORT\n\u00a9    CALLER'S   CHOICE\n(TUE-FRI)\n\u00a9BALLADE (MON)\n\u00a9  SPORTS PAQE SPECIAL (MON)\n\u00a9    CARTE   D'IDENTITE\n(MON-WED)\nvQ!!@\u00a7@ 3SJQ!lS@ri\nfor glory days\nCHUUWACK - Eraser Valley\nCollege Theatre will hold open\nauditions for its November production of Glory Days, Thursday and\nSunday, September 4 and 7 at 7\np.m. in the studio theatre on the\nChilliwack campus.\nGlory Days is an original FYaser\nValley College production showcasing the joys and sorrows of life\namon the independent loggers of\nthe Harrison Lake area during the\nlate 50's and early 60's.\nPlay was researched and written\nby Vancouver playwright John\nCarroll  who  also  directed   the\ntheatre department's hit production of Quiet In The Land.\nMale and female performers are\nrequired in the 10-70 year range.\nGlory Days will be the second\nproduction in the department's\n1986-87 season. The other two\nproductions are Quiet in the Land\nand Shakespeare's Romeo and\nJuliet.\nThe department also invites\nanyone interested in working with\nthe production team to attend\nauditions and indicate their\ninterest.\nFor further information call\n792-0025, local 431.\nr\nCOACHMEN RESTAURANT\nYou can now enjoy your early breakfast,\nlunch or late dinner at the Coachmen,\n7 days a week.\nNEW HOURS:\n6 am to 12 midnight, 7 days a week\nFully Licensed.\nTAKE-OUT ORDERS\/CATERING SERVICE\nCountryside Shopping Centre\n856-3333\nFISH & CHIPS\nEAT IN OR TAKE OUT\n\u25a0  856-2211 J\nOnly in Aldergrove at 27237 Fraser Hwy.  s \" '\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n13\nTHURSDAY EVENING\nAUGUST 28,1986\nDAYTIME SPECIALS\n1:00\n\u00a9 MARK RU88ELL Satirist Mark Russell spoofs\nWashington politics, religion and sex. Songs include\n\"Not   Everything   Goes,\"\n\"Sandinista       Chic,\"\n\"Gimme That Old-Time TV\nReligion\" and \"Centerfold\nMeese.\"\n1:30\n\u00a9   EMBARGO:  AN  ENTERPRISE      SPECIAL\nFilmed in Europe, the United States and Nicaragua,\na trade embargo's business and political repercussions are examined\nfocusing on the banana\nembargo, g\nDAYTIME CHILDREN'S\nSHOW\n10:00\n\u00a9 READING RAINBOW\nMollie Mandiin narrates\nMelvin Berger's \"Germs\nMake Me Sick!\" g\nDAYTIME MOVIES\n8:16\n\u00a9 \u2022\u2022!_ \"If You Knew\nSusie\" (1948, Musical) Eddie Cantor, Joan Davis. A\ngroup of vaudeville stars\nare ecstatic to learn that\nthere is a noted ancestor\namong their family trees,\nand that the U.S. government owes them a grand\ntotal of $7,000,000,000.\n10:00\n\u00a9 \u2022**}_ \"Key Largo\"\n(1948, Adventure) Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Ba-\ncall. A Florida resort hotel\nis taken over by a bunch of\nhoods.\n2:00\nQ ** \"One Rainy Afternoon\" (1936, Comedy)\nFrancis Lederer, Ida Lupine A man innocently sits in\nthe wrong seat in a movie\ntheater and causes a public scandal when he kisses\nthe woman next to him.\nEVENING\n8:00\n\u00a9 \u00a9 \u00a9 NEWS\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n\u00a9 NBC NEWS\n\u00a9 CBS NEWS\n\u00a9   MACNEIL   \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9 STAR TREK While on\nleave on the planet Ar-\ngeluis, Capt. Kirk and two\ncrew members become involved in murder.\n\u00a9JEAN LITTLE\n\u00a9  SCTV Sketches: the\nconclusion of \"Great White\nNorth Palace,\" the McKen-\nzie Brothers special. Guest\nstar: Tony Bennett.\n\u00a9NOUVELLES\n6*30\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\nQ TOP STORY\n\u00a9  ISLANDERS: A WAY\nOF LIFE\n\u00a9PROFILES OF NATURE\n\u00a9 A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\n1986.\n7:00\n8 FACTS OF LIFE Jo's\nnewly rich father tries to\nbuy her affection. In stereo. (R)g\n\u00a9WHEEL OF FORTUNE\nQ \u00a9 ENTERTAINMENT\nTONIGHT Interview with\nSally Struthers.\nO THRILL OF A LIFETIME\nA farm girl makes a splash\nat Marineland; a teen-age\nbodybuilder meets Mr. Universe; a dentist plays a\nHILL STREET BLUES\nOfficer Joe Coffey (Ed Marin-\naro) is shot in the \"Iced Coffee\" episode of NBC's \"Hill\nStreet Blues,\" airing THURSDAY, AUGUST 28.\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\n\u00a9 1986 Compulog\n\u00a9  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS Among the\nicy wastes there are only a\nfew true inhabitants such\nas the penguins.\n\u00a9$100,000 PYRAMID\n\u00a9 IS YOUR BRAIN REALLY NECESSARY?\n\u00a9 JACKPOT\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n7:20\na LE POINT\n7:30\n\u00a94 ON THE FLOOR (F5)\n8 \u00a9 JEOPARDY\n8 EVENING\na BENSON When an old\nfriend's   disability   payments are cut off, Benson\ngoes to bat for him. (R) Q\n8 PRICE IS RIGHT\n\u00a9 THRILL OF A LIFETIME\nA farm girl makes a splash\nat Marineland; a teen-age\nbodybuilder meets Mr. Universe; a dentist plays a\nmillion dollar organ. (R) g\n8 WORLD OF SURVIVAL\n\u00a9 NEWLYWED GAME\n7:36\n\u00a9 GENIES EN HERBE Ser-\nie internationale Canada-\nFrance.      8:00\n\u00a9 MOVIE ***\u2022 \"Gone\nWith The Wind\" (1939,\nDrama) (Part 2 of 2) Clark\nGable, Vivien Leigh. Based\non Margaret Mitchell's novel. A high-spirited Southern\nbelle struggles against the\ndevastation of the. Civil\nWar and Reconstruction to\nreturn her family's Georgia\nestate to its antebellum\nmagnificence.\n8 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT\nOR NOTI Celebrating the\nJapanese New Year; a\nlook at the inventing genius\nof Thomas Edison. (R) Q\n8 COSBY SHOW Cliff\nasks his stuffy former English professor to be his\npartner in a pinochle game.\nIn stereo. (R) Q\n\u00a9 LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS Featured: Victor Borge; Loretta Swit in Monte Carlo; producer Danny Arnold; Lisa\nWhelchel (\"Facts of\nLife\"); Hollywood photographer Dick Zimmerman.\n\u00a9 PRICE IS RIGHT\n\u00a9 COSBY SHOW Cliff\nasks his stuffy former English professor to be his\npartner in a pinochle game.\n(R)g\n8 CHINA: THE YEAR OF\nTHE COUNTING The United\nNation's film team explores\nChina's multiple dilemmas\nof land, food,  population\nmillion dollar organ. (R) Q\n\u00a9 MOVIE *** \"The\nDay Of The Jackal\" (1973,\nSuspense) Edward Fox,\nTerence Alexander. An international hit man and\nquick-change artist called\n\"The Jackal\" Is hired by\nthe OAS to assassinate\nCharles De Gaulle.\n\u00a9NATURAL WORLD\n\u00a9 NEW MUSIC MAGAZINE\n8:06\n\u00a9 CINEMA \u2022\u2022>_ \"Le\nsang des autres\" (1984,\nDrame) Jodie Foster, Michael Ontkean. Une passion devorante lie une\njeune femme belle et en-\ntetee a un organisateur\nsyndical qui se voue to-\ntalement a la cause de la\nResistance.\n8:30\n8 FAMILY TIES Alex\nfaces off against a Russian\nopponent in a college\nchess tournament. In stereo. (R) g\n8 FAMILY TIES Alex\nfaces off against a Russian\nopponent in a college\nchess tournament (R) Q\n9:00\n\u00a9 \u00a9 THE COLBYS Jeff's\ncleared   of   the   murder\ncharge;  Miles  may have\njumped bail. (R) g\nQ CHEERS Councilwoman\nJanet Eldridge convinces\nSam to fire Diane. (Part 2\nof 3) In stereo. (R)\nQ SPENSER: FOR HIRE\nCorruption In the construction industry leads to tragedy. (R)g\n@ CRAZY LIKE A FOX A\nbag lady (Dorothy Lamour)\nwho knew the details of a\nhigh-society scandal\nmeets a tragic end. (R)\n\u00a9 CHEERS Councilwoman\nJanet Eldridge convinces\nSam to fire Diane. (Part 2\nof3)(R)\n\u00a9 MYSTERYI \"Agatha\nChristie Mysteries II\" In\nthis story of obsessive\njealousy, a man learns the\nmeaning of a vision in\nwhich his wife is strangled.\n(R)g\n\u00a9 PORTRAITS OF POW-\nEH 9:30\n\u00a9 NIGHT COURT Florence challenges a law that\nsays she's too old to work\nas a bailiff. In stereo. (R)\n8 NIGHT COURT Florence challenges a law that\nsays she's too old to work\nas a bailiff. (R)\n\u00a9 PORTRAITS OF POWER ..._,.. _\n_^__y^_^y-*_v-^r!\n10:00\nI NATIONAL \/ JOURNAL\nI 20 \/ 20 Scheduled:\ninterview with Dr. Robert\nGale, who performed bone-\nmarrow transplants on victims of the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. _p\n\u00a9 \u00a9 HILL STREET\nBLUES Bates is uncertain\nwhether she can identify\nwho killed Coffey. (R)\n\u00a9 NIGHT HEAT Kirkwood\nassists the police in their\nattempt to track down a\ncop killer. (R)\nO TRAPPER JOHN, M.D.\nIn an attempt to smuggle\ndrugs, Jesus swallows\nseveral balloons filled with\ncocaine. \u25a0,...\n\u00a9 MASTERPIECE THEATRE \"Winston Churchill:\nThe Wilderness Years\" As\nthe General Election of\n1929 approaches, Winston\nChurchill (Robert Hardy) is\nat the height of his influence as Chancellor of the\nExchequer. (Part 1 of 8)\n(R)g\n\u00a9 PHOTOGRAPHIC VISION\n10:30\n\u00a9 CAMERA\n10:36\n\u00a9 A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\n1986.\n11:00\n\u00a9\u00a98ONEW8\n\u00a9   Q   CTV  NATIONAL\nNEWSg\n\u00a9 MOVIEMAKERS Directors King Vidor, Henry\nKing, Henry Hathaway,\nRouben Mamoulian and\nMervyn LeRoy discuss the\nHollywood of the '30s and\n'408.\n\u00a9BENNY HILL Benny vis-\nIts the cinema and gets\ncarried away by the actions of his heroes on the\nscreen. \u2022\n\u00a9 SPORTS PAGE\n11:06\n\u00a9 CINEMA \u2022\u2022\u2022_ \"Un\nconde\" (1970, Drame) Michel Bouquet, Gianni Gar-\nko. L'amitie pour un de ses\namis et sa soif de justice\ncondulsent un policier a la\nviolence et au meurtre.\n11:20\nQ \u00a9 NEWS\n11:30\n8    MAUDE   Maude's\nmoment of truth arrives on\nelection day in Tuckahoe.\n(Part 5 of 5) (R)\nONIGHTLINE\n(G5.V-.lOMS *>\n_l TONIGHT Host: Johnny\nCarson. Scheduled: comedian George Carlin, actress Helen Slater, musical\ngroup the Temptations. In\nstereo.\nO \u00a9 U.8. OPEN TENNIS\nHIGHLIGHTS Reports on\nearly round action from\nFlushing Meadows, N.Y.\n8 MACNEIL \/ LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9NEWS\n12:00\n8 MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Sven-\ngali\" (1931. Drama) John\nBarrymore, Marian Marsh.\nAn aging artist develops an\nobsessive interest in a\nwoman and, using his hypnotic powers, transforms\nher into a virtuoso singer.\n(R)\n\u00a9 THE AVENGERS While\ninvestigating a general's\ndeath, Emma encounters a\nbizarre club that craves\nmortal danger. Guest star:\nNigel Davenport.\n\u00a9 NIGHT HEAT O'Brien\nteams up with his former\npartner to solve a 7-year-\nold bank robbery case. (R)\n\u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022!. \"Night\nPassage\" (1957, Adventure) James Stewart, Audie\nMurphy. An outlaw deserts\nhis gang when they hold up\na train guarded by his\nbrother.\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From November 1984: actor Jack\nPalance, \"Late Night's\"\nChris Elliott, new products\ndemonstrator Bob McMath.\nIn atereo. (R)\n12:06\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Ada\"\n(1961, Drama) Susan Hayward, Dean Martin. A sheriff finds his political career\nthreatened by his involvement with a young girl.\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Home\nFrom The Hill\" (1960, Drama) Robert Mitchum,\nGeorge Peppard. A man's\nillegitimate son saves his\nlife.\n12:30\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From November 1984: actor Jack\nPalance, \"Late Night's\"\nChris Elliott, new products\ndemonstrator Bob McMath.\nIn atereo. (R)\n1:00\n\u00a9HEADLINE CHASERS\n\u00a9 ONE DAY AT A TIME\n. Julie's wedding plans are\ncomplicated by the best\nman. (Part 2 of 2)\n1:10\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Night\nMoves\" (1975, Mystery)\nGene Hackman, Jennifer\nWarren. A private eye\nhired to locate the daughter of a former movie actress finds himself involved\nin the girl's stepfather's\nsmuggling operations. (R)\n1:30\n\u00a9 LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\n\u00a9 MUSIC CITY U.3.A.\n2:00\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9 HOGAN'S HEROES\nLady Chitterly arrives at\nStalag 13 to tell everyone\nher husband is a traitor.\n(Part 2 of 2)\n2:20\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"Drums Of\nAfrica\" (1963, Adventure)\nFrankie Avalon, Lloyd\nBochner. A white hunter\naccompanied by a band of\nraiders attempts to stall\nthe construction of a railroad line through East Africa.\n2:30\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9CNN NEWS\n3:00\n\u00a9 NIGHTWATCH\nSELL IT FAST IN THE STAR\nCLASSIFIEDS - JUST CALL 856-5212\nB.C. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS\nALDERGROVE\n\"We also\ndo general repairs\"\n27515 FRASER HWY.\n856-5181\nLAND SURVEYOR\nG.C. Emerson \u2022 530-8733\n 5-13698-tl\n7A\n\\  IN ?\nABBOTSFORD\ny**^ BOW-WOW PARTS OF B.C. LTD..\n\"BEEf_lT^UGis\"^5?rwi\"\n4for$5\u00b0\u00b0\nRABBIT WATER PUMPS\n$2495 EA.\nRABBIT MUFFLERS $2995 EA.\nRABBIT ALTERNATOR $79M exchange\n\u2014RE-BUILT STARTER\nBEETLE 12 VOLT\n$59.00 EXCHANGE\nRABBIT\n$79.95 EXCHANGE\n SALE ENDS SEPT.6\/86\n119-8-95A Ava., Dolto, B.C. 588-6011\n4525 Main StrMt, Vancouver, B.C. 873-5216\n2941 Bridgo Stroet, Victoria, B.C.  381-4331\nAND NOW \"\u2014\u00ab___.\n#6 - 34200 S. FRASER WAY, ABBOTSFORD B.C.\n852-9024\n9\n\u2022Hi I\n 14\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nFRIDAY EVENING\nAUGUST 29,1986\nDAYTIME SPECIALS\n12:00\n\u00a9   FOR   AUCTION:   AN\nAMERICAN HERO The farm\ncrisis in America is seen\nthrough the eyes of an\nauctioneer who sells off\nthe possessions of bankrupt farmers. (R) Q\n1:00\nQ BEYOND THE NORTH\nWIND A physicist, artist\nand musician recall their\nexpedition together to the\nHigh Arctic.\nDAYTIME    CHILDREN'S\nSHOW\n10:00\n\u00a9    READING   RAINBOW\nFolk singer Pete Seeger\ntells  the  story  of  \"Abi-\nyoyo\" in words and song.\nDAYTIME SPORTS\n4:30\n\u00a9 \u00a9 CFL FOOTBALL Toronto Argonauts at Ottawa\nRough Riders (Live)\n\u00a9  FOOTBALL PflOFES-\nSIONNEL CANADIEN Les\nArgonauts de Toronto af-\nfrontent les Rough Riders\nd'Ottawa (En direct)\nDAYTIME MOVIES\n8:15\n\u00a9 \u2022\u2022* \"On The Avenue\". (1937, Musical) Dick\nPowell, Madeleine Carroll.\nA social deb becomes romantically and professionally involved with a stage\nstar.\n10:00\n\u00a9 **tt \"The Gypsy\nMoths\" (1969, Adventure)\nBurt Lancaster, Deborah\nKerr. The lives of three\nbarnstorming skydivers are\njeopardized when they perform over a small Kansas\ntown.\nEVENING\n6:00\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n\u00a9    NFL   PRE-SEASON\nFOOTBALL        Seattle\nSeahawks at San Francisco 49ers\n\u00a9CBSNEWS\nQ  MACNEIL  \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9 STAR TREK The Enterprise is almost destroyed by a strange object which calls itself\nNomad.\n\u00a9 WAY OF A RIVER\n\u00a9 SCTV Sketches: Tip\nO'Neill (Candy) stars in \"3-\nD House Of Representatives\"; Brock Linehan\n(Short) brings his talk\nshow to his hometown.\n6:30\n_ \u00a9 NEWS\n\u00a9 PROFILES OF NATURE\n7:00\nQ THIS WEEK IN B.C.\n\u00a9 WHEEL OF FORTUNE\n\u00a9 NEWLYWED GAME\n\u00a9  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS The intricate\nnature of the bees' society\nis explored.\n\u00a9 $100,000 PYRAMID\n\u00a9 KIDNAPPED\n\u00a9 JACKPOT\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n7:20\n\u00a9 LE POINT\n7:30\n\u00a9 GOLDEN GIRLS Rose's\nattempt to keep her roommates in the dark about\nher   new   boyfriend   fails\nwhen tragedy strikes. (R)\n\u00a9 \u00a9 JEOPARDY\n\u00a9 MR. SUNSHINE June\nmistakenly    thinks    that\nPaul's in love with her. (R)\n,9\nGETTING PHYSICAL\n_L\n\u00a9W  4Vll      D]\nIk-  A      ^\n_\\       ;%)fM_i\n%   _ ________i_J__H_\n><_^___fZ-__\u00a3__\n\u25a0  *R\u00a3 ms?-\n___\u00bb\n__m: *ml-\n_____      **____.\n___\u00a9-\u00a3__\u00bb\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \"\u00ab\u2122WhS _________\n\u2122'*u4_#':,-. \u25a0%-..:\n__m\\\nWorld-famous body builder\nand title holder Franco Co-\nlumbu (1.) makes a cameo appearance, and John Aprea\nand Sandahl Bergman star, in\n\"Getting Physical,\" which explores the world of female\nbody building. It airs FRIDAY,\nAUG. 29 on CBS.\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\n\\__t_\\     _______ ^ -\n______ %_,Xbi '__\\n 'S__S>;\n\u00a9 1986 Compulog\n\u00a9PRICE IS RIGHT\n\u00a9 BIZARRE Sketches include the Super Dave (Bob\nEinstein) Book on Dad; a\nVisit to the Nixon Hilton;\nJokeville. (R)\n\u00a9WORLD OF SURVIVAL\n\u00a9NEWLYWEDGAME\n\u00a9MOTORWEEK\n7:35\n\u00a9L'ESCAPADE\n8:00\n\u00a9 MURDER, SHE WROTE\nJessica investigates the\nmurder of a wuaiihy widow\nwho bequeathed all of her\nfortune to a charismatic\nevangelist. Guest stars include Mildred Natwick and\nSteve Forrest. (R)\n\u00a9 WEBSTER Webster\nfouls up a chance to invite\na new girl in his class to\nthe Valentine's Day party.\n(R)g\nQ \u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE\nTwo stories: a clerk tries\non a pair of shoes once\nowned by a murder victim;\na young man stumbles into\nthe ultimate lost and found\ndepartment. In stereo. (R)\nQ KNIGHT RIDER A down-\nand-out prizefighter, tormented by guilt from the\npast, Is training for the\nbout which may end his\nown life. (R)\n\u00a9   WASHINGTON WEEK\nIN REVIEW g\n\u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022 \"The\nQuest\" (1976, Western)\nTim Matheson, Kurt Russell. Two brothers search\nthe Old West for their sister, captured years earlier\nby Indians.\n\u00a9 LIVING BODY\n\u00a9 IRISH ROVERS\n8:06\n\u00a9 LE MONDE MERVEIL-\nLEUX DE DISNEY L'institu-\ntrice semble enfin heu-\nreuse depuis qu'elle s'est\nliee d'amitie avec un\nhomme.\n\u00a9 \u00a9 MR.- BELVEDERE\nWesley is removed from\nhis starring role in a high-\nschool version of \"H.M.S.\nPinafore.\" (R) g\nQ WALL STREET WEEK\n\"Are Insurance Stocks a\nLiability?\" Guest: Salomon\nBrothers Inc. Managing Director A. Michael Frinquel-\nli.\n\u00a9WHERE THERE'S LIFE\n9:00\n\u00a9 RETURN TO EDEN A\ndisguised   Stephanie   attends   Angelo   (Angelo\nD'Angelo)   and   Sarah's\n(Nicky Paull) wedding with\nplans to meet Prince Amahl\n(Robin Ramsay) in Arabia\nafter the festivities, g\n\u00a9LOVE BOAT A toreador\nand his grandson are at\nodds over the young man's\ncareer choice; Stubing\nreunites an ex-con and her\ndaughter; Isaac gets involved with a stowaway; a\nman romances Judy and\nVicki. (R)g\n\u00a9 SEAHAWKS POST-\nGAME\nQ CHEERS Councilwoman\nJanet Eldridge convinces\nSam to fire Diane. (Part 2\no\u00bb3)(R)\n\u00a9 \u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"Getting Physical\" (1984, Drama) Sandahl Bergman,\nAlexandra Paul. A contender in the Miss Physique\nUSA contest is confronted\nwith personal problems\nwhile preparing for the\ncompetition. (R) g\n\u00a9 MIAMI VICE Crockett\nand Tubbs reluctantly turn\nto a burned-out ex-cop for\ninformation regarding the\nwhereabouts of a missing\nmobster. (R)\n8 SOLDIERS: A HISTORY\nOF MEN IN BATTLE The\nrole of artillery. Narrator:\nFrederick Forsyth.\n\u00a9 PHOTOGRAPHIC VISION\n9:06\n\u00a9 A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\n1986.\n9:30\nQ EVENING\n\u00a9   NIGHT  COURT  Florence challenges a law that\nsays she's too old to work\nas a bailiff. (R)\n\u00a9 PERSPECTIVE\n9:35\n\u00a9   VOYAGE GRANDEUR\nNATURE Emission consa-\ncree a la flore et la faune\nde I'est du Quebec.\n10:00\nQ NATIONAL \/ JOURNAL\n8 GRIDLOCK\nQ HUNTER A hired killer\nstalks gem thieves for an\nunderworld jeweler. In stereo. (R)\n8 SCARECROW AND\nMRS. KING A minor auto\naccident puts Amanda\nface to face with an international terrorist. (R)\n8 MOVIE ***'\/.\n\"Woodstock\" (1970, Musical) Documentary. Many of\nthe top musical groups of\nthe late '60s perform at the\nfamous rock concert held\nin Bethel, N.Y. in 1969.\n\u00a9 QUINCY Quincy fills in\nfor a vacationing general\npractitioner and becomes\ninvolved in a patient's\nproblems.\n\u00a9REALITIES\n10:06\n\u00a9 A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\n1986.\n10:30\n\u00a9 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Interview with Brian\nKeith.\n\u00a9 REALITIES\n11:00\n\u00a9OQONEWS\n\u00a9   8   CTV   NATIONAL\nNEWSg\n\u00a9 CARSON'S COMEDY\nCLASSICS Ed interviews\nJohnny, the Hong Kong flu\nbug. Guest: animal expert\nJim Fowler.\n\u00a9 SPORTS PAGE\n11:20\n\u00a9 \u00a9 NEWS\n11:30\nW GOOD ROCKIN' TON-\nITE\n\u00a9NIGHTLINE\n0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny\nCarson. Scheduled: actress Victoria Jackson,\nclarinetist Pete Fountain. In\nstsrso\n\u00a9 \u00a9 U.S. OPEN TENNIS\nHIGHLIGHTS   Reports   on\nearly  round   action   from\nFlushing Meadows, N.Y.\n\u00a9NEWS\n11:36\n\u00a9 CINEMA ** \"Un petit\nmelo dans la tete\" (1977,\nDrame) Didi Conn, Joe Silver. Une jeune femme am-\nbitionnee, reve de devenir\nchanteuse et ecrit elle-\nmeme des chansons, fait\nla rencontre d'un realisa-\nteur qui lui donne de\nnouveaux espoirs.\n12:00\n\u00a9 THE AVENGERS Emma\nand Steed put an end to\nthe murderous hoaxes\nbeing perpetrated on government officials.\n\u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022 \"White\nWater Rebels\" (1983, Adventure) Catherine Bach,\nJames Brolin. A down-on-\nher-luck photojour nalist encounters a rugged white\nwater kayaker trying to\nstop the commercialization\nof a wild mountain river by\nunscrupulous developers.\n(R)\n\u00a9 WRESTLING\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022_ \"Hard\nCountry\" (1981, Drama)\nJan-Michael Vincent, Kim\nBasinger. A Texas factory\nworker is torn between his\ndesire to continue in the\n\"good old boy\" lifestyle\nand his fiancee's show\nbusiness ambitions.\n12:05\n0 MOVIE **_ \"Follow\nThe Boys\" (1963,* Comedy) Connie Francis, Paula\nPrentiss. Four young girls\nstop at nothing to remain\nclose to their boyfriends.\n8 MOVIE \u2022\u2022_ \"Because You're Mine\" (1952,\nMusical) Mario Lanza,\nJames Whitmore. Although\nhe is in the Army, an opera\nsinger manages to continue his career.\n12:30\n8 FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS\nIn stereo.\n1:00\n\u00a9HEADLINE CHASERS\n\u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022\u2022 \"Quarantined\" (1970, Drama) John\nDehner, Gary Collins. The\nstaff of a private hoapital\nmust find a kidney donor\nfrom those quarantined\nwithin the facility.\n1:30\n\u00a9 LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\n2:00\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n2:06\nQ MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"The Unseen\" (1981, Horror) Barbara Bach, Sidney Las-\nsick. A TV newswoman and\nher two assistants find\nlodgings at a boarding\nhouse inhabited by a disturbed brother and sister\nand their monstrous offspring.\n\u00a9 MOVIE **_ \"It Happened   At   The   World's\nFair\" (1963, Musical) Elvis\nPresley, Joan O'Brien.\nWhile taking care of a Chinese moppet, a pair of\nbush pilots find romance at\nthe Seattle World's Fair.\n2:10 ,\n\u00a9NEWS\n2:30\n8 MOVIE \u2022*!_ \"Inside\nOut\" (1975, Adventure)\nTelly Savalas, Robert Culp.\nThree men plot to kidnap a\nformer German officer who\nknows the location of a fortune in gold stolen during\nWorld War II.\n\u00a9 HOGAN'S HEROE8 Hogan needs to smuggle\nmaps to the underground,\nand needs Klink's help.\n3:00\n\u00a9 CNN NEWS\n4:30\nQ   HERE'S  LUCY  Lucy\nmoonlights as a Chinese\nlaundress.\nWhodunnit pokes\nfun at Christie style\nBROOKSWOOD - Brian Leonard,\nwell-known actor and director, has\nbeen chosen by Langley Players to\ndirect their fall production of the\ncomedy-thriller \"Whodunnit\".\nLeonard, a graduate of Langley\nSecondary School, has worked with\na number of theatre groups in the\nlower mainland as an actor and\ndirector. Most recently, he directed New Westminster's\nVagabond Players production of\n\"You can't take it with you\".\n\"Whodunnit\" is a three-act play\nthat pokes fun at all the Agatha\nChristie mysteries ever written.\nAuditions   will   be   held   on\nSeptember 4 and 7 beginning at\n7:30 p.m. at Brookswood hall.\nProduction   is    scheduled   to\nrehearse for seven weeks and run\nthrough the month of November.\nLop! Hearth Stove, reg. $800. Now 5243.\nFisher Catalytic Stove, reg. $1200. $659.\nFaber Stove,reg. $1195. $395.\nNapoleon 1200 $475.\nFisher Insert (used) $450.\nTriumph Moblla Home Stove,\napproved (used), reg. $750. $350.\nBlaze Insert (used) $150.\nCelling fans from $49.95\n~-\u2014, Stoves & Stones\n.!_*_:       3711-248th Streets\nFraser Hwy..\nAldergrove   856-1551\ntffaHomeflanie\nGAS FIREPLACES\nHigh-EflickncY Gas\n{ ii  i .ft A      .       .    . .     yJ 1     '\ns.*si fwi    !.' *     <      >    < ->      met\n1I\u00abd::i1II\ni'.'H'   >1      M     <(\n\/ The Valley's most trusted Woodstove Dealer. '-\n88\nMjieMii\nStoves & Stones\n3711-248th Street & Fraser HWV Aldergrove 856-1551\nMMMWtMaNMttitoMMJWMM-iW\n\u00abMMfl-bM*M__WMMNtWWH*NlNMni)^^\ntm9\u00bbWmWmWmimnt^fm^~\n \"\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n15\nSATURDAY MORNING & AFTERNOON\nAUGUST 30,1886\nMORNINQ\n5:00\n0 MORE REAL PEOPLE\n6:30\n_S CELEBRATE THE DIFFERENCES\n6:46\nO   NOTE  OF  FAITH   \/\nNEWS HEADLINES\n(0 WITH THIS RING\n6:00\nO RAINBOW EXPRESS\n0 GARDENING WITH ED\nHUME\nQ UP HOME TONIGHT\nO    WEEKEND   NORTHWEST\n0 WALTERS FAMILY\n0 AGRICULTURE U.S.A.\n0 SIZE SMALL\n6*30\nO BOOMERANG\n0 PUNKY BREWSTER\n0 SWING SENSATION\nOHOT FUDGE\n0 CREATIVE HANDS\n0 SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF\nPOWER\n0 CIRCLE SQUARE\n7:00\nO  PINK PANTHER AND\nsons g\n0 SNORKS\n0 FILM FEATURE\nOWUZZLESg\n0 READY, SET, GROW\n0 SESAME STREET (R)\n__ CARTOONS\n0 FRIGHTENSTEIN\n7:30\n0 LITTLES g\n0 ADVENTURES OF THE\nGUMMI BEARS g\n0 WORLD TOMORROW\n0  BERENSTAIN BEARS\nm\nME AND MAX\n8:00\n0 MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022\"Titanic\"\n(1953,   Drama)   Clifton\nWebb, Barbara Stanwyck.\nThe lives of passengers\naboard the doomed vessel\nare seen both before and\nduring the tragic sinking.\nOBUQS BUNNY LOONEY\nTUNES COMEDY HOUR\n0 0 SMURFS\n0 WALTERS FAMILY\nO   0   JIM   HENSON'S\nMUPPETS,   BABIES   &\nMONSTERS\n0ROBOTECH\n0 MYSTERIES OF PERU\n\"Canals\" The vast network\nof canals used to bring water to the arid land is the\nfocus of the concluding episode of this special.\n8*30\n0 JERRY FALWELL\n0 ROBOTECH\n0 WOODY LE PIC\n9:00\nOLAFF-A-LYMPICSg\nO HULK HOGAN'S ROCK\n'N' WRESTLING\n0 M.A.S.K. g\n0 DRUM CORPS INTERNATIONAL   CHAMPIONSHIPS  Coverage  of  ths\n1985 competition at Camp\nRandall Stadium in Madison,  Wis.  featuring  performances by finalists chosen from approximately 80\nU.S. and Canadian drum\nand bugle corps.\n0   BUGS   BUNNY   AND\nFRIENDS\n0   FABLES  OF  GREEN\nFOREST\n0 TAOTAO\n9:20\n0 JEREMY\n9:30\n0 EWOKS AND DROIDS\nADVENTURE HOUR\n0 FLASHI A MAGAZINE\nFOR KIDS\n\u00a9IT IS WRITTEN\n0 YOU CAN'T DO THAT\nON TELEVISION \"Fairy\nTales, Myths and Legends\" (R)\n0 INSPECTOR GADGET\n0NIL8HOLQERSSON\n9*36\n0 TOTTIE: STORY OF A\nDOLLHOUSE\n10:00\nO WESTERN GARDENER\n0 ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS\n00 ZIGZAG\nO RICHIE RICH\n0 SUPER SATURDAY\n0   DON'T  FORGET TO\nSMILE\n0 HERCULES\n0 ALICE AU PAYS DES\nMERVEILLES\n10:30\n0 PAR 27\n0 SUPER POWERS\nTEAM: GALACTIC GUARDIANS g\n0KIDD VIDEO\n0 POLKA TIME\nO   DUNGEONS  &  DRAGONS\n0 PAUL HANN &\nFRIENDS Guest: singer\nand clown Norm Foote. (R)\n0 SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF\nPOWER\n0 ROBERT DAVIDSON\n0 SIZE SMALL\n0 CANDY\n11:00\nO INDIAN LEGENDS (R)\n0 WEEKEND SPECIAL\n\"The Haunted Trailer\" A\ncollege coed (Lauren\nTewes) learns that her living quarters are haunted.\n(R)g\n0   BASEBALL   Regional\ncoverage of Los Angeles\nDodgers at New York Mets\nor Chicago Cubs at Atlanta _\nBraves. (Live)\n0 SHAKE IT UP\nO POLE POSITION\n0 LET'S QO Topic: medicine. Host: Janis Dunning.\n(R)\n0 QUEST FOR THE\nKILLERS\n0 CHALLENGE OF THE\nGOBOTS\n0 REALITIES\n0 NEWS FROM ZOOS\n0    LES   HEROS    DU\nSAMEDI\n11:30\nOWONDERSTRUCK(R)\nO    AMERICAN   BANDSTAND\n0 U.S. OPEN TENNIS Early roundsl from USTA National Tennis Center In\nFlushing Meadows, N.Y.\n(Taped)\n0 UP HOME TONIGHT\n0 ROBOTECH\n0 ALPHABET SOUP\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\n0 SPORTSWEEKEND\nScheduled: Toronto Super-\ncross (taped) from Exhibition Stadium; World Rowing Championships (taped)\nfrom Nottingham, England;\nCanadian Derby horse\nrace (live) from Northlands\nRace Track in Edmonton,\nAlta.\n0 WRESTLING\n0    FAMILY    BROWN\nCOUNTRY\n0 TONY BROWN'S\nJOURNAL U.S. Civil Rights\nCommission Chairman\nClarence Pendleion\ndiscusses his unpopular\nstance on government subsidies of minority businesses. (R)\n0 HULK HOGAN'S ROCK\n'N' WRESTLING\n0 PLATO'S APOLOGY\n0100 HUNTLEY STREET\n0 UNIVERS DES SPORTS\nChampionnat mondial de\ncanot-kayac, au Bassin\nOlympique de Montreal.\n12:30\nO   MOVIE   \u2022\u2022_   \"It's\nGood To Be Alive\" (1974,\nBiography) Paul Winfield,\nRuby Dee. Roy Campanel-\nla's   successful   baseball\ncareer Is brought to a halt\nby a paralyzing automobile\naccident.\n0 POLKA TIME\n0PRE8ENTE\n0  CHILDREN OF THAILAND\n1:00\n0    ISLAND   COUNTRY\nGARDEN\n0 SWING SENSATION\n0 BRADSHAW ON: THE\nFAMILY   Compulsive   behavior.\n0 TO AFRICA WITH LOVE\n0 ENVIRONMENT GAME\n0 WRESTLING\n1:16\n0 LA CAGE DOREE La\nTournure de I'existence de\ndeux femmes d'un certain\nage les desempare.\n1:30\n0     FAMILY    BROWN\nCOUNTRY\n0 RED FISHER\n0 KITES\n1:46\n0 TERRA UTOPIA Le re-\ntour  d'un  jeune  diploma\ndans sa ville natale.\n2:00\n0   GREATEST   SPORTS\nLEGENDS\n0 CREATIVE HANDS\n0 SYBERViSiON: JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY\n0 WHITE HOUSE PERFORMANCE   WITH   DISABLED  ARTISTS  A  performance celebrating the\nNational   Decade  of  the\nDisabled with the Gatlin\nBrothers, Jermaine Jackson,   comedienne   Gerl\nJewell and young disabled\nartists.   Host:    Nancy\nReagan. Master of Ceremonies: Cliff Robertson.\n0 THE AVENGERS Black\nmagic and tsetse flies are\nused in a unique plot to\ntake over a country.\n0 BLACK TO GREEN\n0 WORLD'S GREAT ATHLETES\n0 BAGATELLE\n2:30\nO THE SAINT Simon tries\nto corner an international\nJewel thief.\n0 SUPER BEARS\nHighlights of Super Bowl\nXX in which the Chicago\nBears dominated the New\nEngland Patriots, 46-10.\n0 SWING SENSATION\n0 U.S. OPEN TENNIS\nCONTINUES\n0 AWESOME SUNDAY\nHighlights of the first U.S.\nNational Road Racing\nChampionship for professional cyclists, a 156-mile\ntest held in Philadelphia,\nPa. (Taped)\n0 MILD MAN CHARACTER OF CAESAR\n0   LES SCHTROUMPFS\nQ\n3:00\n0 CBC NEWS\n0   NFL'S  MOST VALUABLE PLAYER Profiles of\nthe six finalists selected\nfor the annual NFL Most\nValuable Player award.\n0 NEWSCIENCE\n0 WRESTLING\nQ    HISTORY   RECOVERED: THE CUSTER BATTLEFIELD ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF 1984 A\nlook at the 1876 Battle of\nthe Little Bighorn In which\nCol. George Custer and\nmost  of his  force were\nkilled by Cheyenne  and\nSioux Indians. Host: Dick\nCavett.\n0JEM\n0 ASTROBOY\n0  UNIVERS INCONNUS\n\"Le choc des energies\"\nL'augmentation spectacu-\nlaire des prix du petrole\nest deploree en particulier\npar la France et le Japon.\n3:30\nO HERITAGE THEATRE\nMade a slave by the Noot-\nka Indians who massacred\nthe trading vessel's crew,\nJohn Jewett (Paul\nBoretski) uses cunning to\neventually win his freedom.\nO POLICE STORY After\nan officer (David Birney)\nloses his hand in a bomb\nexplosion, he struggles to\nprove his competence for\nactive police work.\nO   DAYTON   INTERNATIONAL AIRSHOW A Kaleidoscope of aerospace vehicles   old   and   new,\nincluding the U.S. Air Force\nThunderbirds,   the   Wing\nWalkers-  Balloon   Rallys\nand the Mini-Jets.\n0 WEEKEND REPORT\n0 CARTOONS\n0   AMERICAN FOREIGN\nPOLICY\n0 ASTROBOY\n4:00\nO WINNERS\n0 0 WIDE WORLD OF\nSPORTS\nO FRUGAL GOURMET\nJeff Smith prepares port\npicatta, peas and pasta,\nand a spaghetti frittata. (R)\n0 MOVIE \u2022 \"King Kong\nEscapes\" (1968, Science-\nFiction)  Rhodes Reason,\nLinda Miller. The giant ape\nfalls under a beautiful woman's spell and battles a\nwould-be   world   conqueror's robot monsters.\n0 RAINBOW \/NODDY\n0 ASTROBOY    .\n0TELECLIP\n4:30\nO BASEBALL San Diego\nPadres at Montreal Expos\n(Live)\nO WIDE WORLD OF\nSPORTS Scheduled: World\nCup Gymnastics Championships (same day tape),\nfrom Beijing, China; World\nWeightlifting Championships (taped) from Soeder-\ntaelje, Sweden.\n0 MAD MOVIES WITH\nTHE L.A. CONNECTION\n0 SNEAK PREVIEWS\n\"Hollywood's Cold War\"\nexamines how communism\nis portrayed in the movies,\nstereo. (R)\n0    KIMBA   THE   WHITE\nLION\/DANGER MOUSE\n\u00a9NEWSWEEK\n0 BASEBALL Lea Padres\nde San Diego affrontent lea\nExpos de Montreal\n6:00\nOONEWS\nQ THIS OLD HOUSE Installing plumbing and wir-\ning.g\n0 CHILDREN'S FILM\nFOUNDATION \"Davy\nJones' Locker\"\n6:30\n0 NBC NEWS\nO CBS NEWS\n0    QREAT   OUTDOORS\nJim Tabor looks at the\nScandinavian sport of\norienteering and paddles a\ncanoe with guide' Kerry\nLeeds in Minnesota's\nBoundary Waters. (R) g\n0 LAURIER'S PEOPLE\nGuest: Laura Hodge.\nCOMICS PRESENTED BY'\nR&M TIRE \u00abn_ ALIGNMENT\nNEW AND USED TIRES B.F.GOODRICH\n26827 Fraser Highway RayiM.,\u2122.\u2122...,*..* 856-5011\nPROFESSOR WHATSIT\nI CMtfv\/W<\\t MAN CAN Tfyfyeu\nprom PLANfcr 10 planet*\nWITH EASE\nI FEEL 0LUE. t WoNPEP\nWMYTMATIS?\n*JPElZj\nIVEHEAPPPEPIZESSION\nIS OFTEN PIETW2ELATEP\nfl THlNK YOU'PE\nPl&HT-LET\u00a3\nSET A PIZZA\nNOW THAT5 DIFFERENT ! INSTEAD OF KILLING^\nYOUR KIUJR .SOU CAPTURE AND USE ITS ffl\nENERGY. TOO BAD WE HUMANS DIDNT THINK,\nTHAT THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO.\nSOME GREAT LEADERS DIP... 8UT\nTHATS' BESIDE T\u00abE POINT... RICH\"\nNOW ITS TIME TO HI-JACK A REAL\nNASTY KIUER\n_j__E\n 16\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nSpecial Dutch\nservice open to all\nBy GEORGELOS\nMATSQUI - Trinity Christian Reformed Church is again organizing\nwhat has become an annual church\nservice event for the older generation.\nRev. H. Numan, the new pastor\nof Trinity will conduct the service\nand preach the sermon from Revelation 3 7-13 with. the theme: \"A\npillar in the temple of my God\".\nThe organ is played by the well-\nknown organist A.C. Bestebroer of\nChilliwack.\nThis afternoon service is a\nhighlight for many Dutch immigrants as well as their visitors.\nSpecial emphasis is on old favorites, songs and psalms.\nSome 36 churches have invitations for this service and the public\nis invited to attend.\nChurch is located on the comer\nof Trethewey and Madure Avenue\nin Matsqui.\nService starts at 4 p.m., August\n31st.\nWORSHIP IN CHURCH\nANGLICAN CHURCH\nSt. Alban's Otter\nMorning Prayer, Holy-Eucharist\nChurch School 9:30 a.m.\nEvening Prayer, 1st Sunday, 7:30 p.m.\nSt. Dunstan's Aldergrove\nMorning Prayer, Holy Eucharist 8 & 11 a.m.\nChurch School 11 a.m.\n271 St. & Fraser Hwy. Rev. David Reuss\nChristian Science Society\n7221 - 198B St., Langley\n11:00 Sunday Service  .\n11:00 Sunday School\n8 p.m. Wednesday Evening Meeting\nALL ARE WELCOME\nTapioca ring is a delicious\nsummertime treat\n(NC) \u2014 A mouth watering combination of fruit cocktail, pure thick\ncream and Nestle Tapioca Pudding\nmade with fresh, whole milk. This\nrecipe provides an easy-to-prepare,\ndelicious, summer dessert and it's\nideal for those special celebrations.\nIndulge yourself!\n14 oz- (398 mL) Canned apricots\n2 envelopes Gelatin\nlc. (250 mL) Sugar\n1 tsp. (5 mL) Orange extract\n14 oz. (398 mL) Canned fruit\ncocktail, drained\n1 Red apple, chopped\n15 oz. (425 g) Nestle Ready to Serve\nTapioca Pudding\n6 oz. (170 mL) Nestle Pure Thick\nCream, we!! shaken\nDrain apricots, reserving liquid.\nPuree apricots. Soften gelatin in 1\/2\ncup (125 mL) apricot syrup. Heat\nuntil melted, cool. Blend together\napricots, gelatin, orange extract,\nfruit cocktail, apple, Tapioca Pudding and Nestle Pure Thick Cream.\nPour into a 6 cup ring mold.\nChill 4 to 6 hours.\nStiller to speak at\nTWU convocation\nPORT LANGLEY - Convocation\nspeaker at Trinity Western\nUniversity next week will be Brian\nC. Stiller, executive director of the\nEvangelical Fellowship of Canada\nand editor-in-chief of 'Faith\nToday'.\nStiller is the author of 'Generation under Siege', a member of the\nLausanne Committee for World\nEvangelism, and chairman of\n\"Singapore '87\", a conference for\nemerging Christian leaders.\nHe has written and directed\nseven films. He worked 16 years\nwith Youth for Christ in Toronto\nand Montreal, and: was president\nof YPC Canada from 1975-83,\nwhen he took up his present\nduties.\nBradner Presbyterian Church\n527S Bradner Road\nMorning Worship 10:30\nSunday School 10:30\nYouth Group: Wed. eves. 7-9 p.m.\nPastor David Webber\n856-3166       Res. 852-3384\nCALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH\n2840 - 272 St., Aldergrove\n(across from Post Office)\n9:45 Bible School 11:00 Morning Worship\n6:30 Evening Family Service\nWednesday Bible Study 7:00 p.m.\nPastor William E.Brown\n8564117 Res. 533-5389\nHelping you with Christ's message.\n\u25a0 '\u25a0__    7-21315-tf\nEvangelical Free Church\n26982 Fraser Hwy.\n(Upper Floor)\nCorner ol 270 St. & Fraser Hwy.\n(Just west of Smitty's)\nWorship & Children's Church 10:30\nRev. Ingmar Jacobsen Pastor\n856-1985 or 574-0811\nALDERGROVE\nUNITED CHURCH\n2623 \u2022 272 St.\nWORSHIP 10:30\nSUNDAY SCHOOL\n856-8675\nAldergrove\nFull Gospel Church\n264 St. & 60 Ave.\n10:30 Family Worship\nPastor John P. Wassell\n.       Church 856-3848\nADERGRCM MPTISTCHURCH\nWf'tto\n28163 Swensson Ave., Aldergrove\n856-1413       Rev. Samuel McCallum\nSUNDAY SERVICES\nBus transportation provided. Nursery facilities available.\n9:45 a.m. - Bible School (nursery to senior classes)\n11:00 a.m.-Worship Service 6:30 p.m. - Evening Service\nListen to Bible Reflections 8:30 p.m. Sunday on CFVR Radio\nA FAMILY OF FAMILIES. COME GROW WITH US.\nAM 1550    TOTAL MINISTRY RADIO\n'Hear Your Favorite Programs...\n\u25a0THE SOUTHERN GOSPEL SHOW-\n-FOCUS ON THE FAMILY-\n-KENNETH COPELAND-\n\u25a0POINT OF VIEW-\n\u25a0700 CLUB & PTL-\n\u25a0PEOPLE IN TOUCH-\n*And Many, Many More....\nReaching Into YOUR World With\nGet HELP FOR LIFE at 8:45 am Monday thru\nFriday with Richard & Leona Ellison.,, Become\nacquainted with a ministry team that cares!\nKNTR - TOTAL MINISTRY RADIO\nP.O. Box 308 - Ferndale, Wa.98248\n(206)384-5117    (206)734-1550\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n17\n.\n>\n\u00abl'-':|l||iil^i_^__iai\nUnder   the    sign   of    the\nSWATCH: The monorail glides\n-^____S\u00bb__<^______\u00ab\u00ab__f-_S?S\nii^ii-il-iiliiiiiiiii^p\npast the Switzerland Pavilion's\ngiant SWATCH watch, one of\nthe more than 80 EXPO\npavilions and exhibits.\n86\nNegotiate\nthe \"extras\"\n(NC) \u2014 In today's market where\nhouses are selling close to the asking\nprice, many buyers feel there is little\nto negotiate about. How wrong they\nare!\nIn negotiating a purchase, a\nbuyer should also concentrate on\nthe less obvious issues, such as the\nclosing date and terms of financing.\nThese factors can result in dollar\nsavings. The same result as an actual price reduction.\nBut let's look at negotiating the\n\"extras\": those items sold along\nwith the house. The most obvious of\nwhich are carpets, drapes and some\nappliances.\nRemember by legal definition the\nselling of real estate includes anything permanently attached to the\nproperty. For example, broadloom\nis part of the house, area rugs are\nnot. Light fixtures and drapery\ntracks, not the drapes, are part of\nthe house.\nIf you are unclear, include any\nextra items in your offer. Just because the items are not permanently\n5.-122\nI<\nREAL ESTATE\ngs^    AND YOU\nmmm   Jamie Johnston'\nattached to the house does not mean\nthey cannot become part of your offer!\nAgain an example. There may be\nan appliance such as a stove or a\nfreezer that you would like, but are\nnot planning to buy. If you are successful in including these in your offer, the net effect is that you have\nsaved money, even though the seller\nhas not reduced the actual price.\nFinally, don't forget about the\nsize of the deposit. You can sometimes close a sale by increasing the\nsize of the deposit, say from $2,000\nto $10,000 without altering your offer price. By increasing your deposit\nyou demonstrate your intentions to\ncomplete the sale, which to some\nsellers means as much as an extra\n$1,000 on the purchase price.\nFor more Information, write to\nCanada Trust Realtor, 320 Bay\nStreet, Toronto, Ontario MSH\n2P6. Toll free 1-800-268-9599.\nHIGHLAND VILLAGE DRUGS ~\nin  HIGHLAND  VILLAGE  SHOPPING   CENTER,   has  completed   the  purchase  of   the  assets  of\nSave-More-Drugs Ltd.\n%   \u25a0\nHIGHLAND VILLAGE DRUGS\nunder its NEW MANAGEMENT and the active participation of its VETERAN PHARMACISTS, has set itself\na new\nr.^eatrue COMMUNITY DRUGSTORE\noffering:\nt. The best customer service possible\n2. A good variety of merchandise;\n3. Good prices\nTo that end,\nHIGHLAND VILLAGE DRUGS\nundertakes the following:\n- We offer you FREE DELIVERY of PRESCRIPTIONS\nand other medicinal needs, if you cannot shop in person.\n- We will do our best to get you what you need if we\ndon't have it in stock.\n- We will listen to you! Help us to serve you better! Tell\nus what you think, like or dislike about us. Feel free to\nsoeak to the manager or pharmacists or !et us know in\nwriting via the suggestion box. IF IT'S WRONG, WE\nWILL DO OUR BEST TO MAKE IT RIGHT.\n- We will make every effort to bring you good prices.\nHIGHLAND VILLAGE DRUGS is not one of the giants;\nbut we will do what we can to compete with them.\nYOU CAN HELP US HELP YOU! BRINjS IN THE\nCOMPETITIONS' CURRENT FLYERS AND WE WILL\nGLADLY HONOR THEIR DISCOUNTS ON THE SAME\nMERCHANDISE WE CARRY.\n- We will cheerfully refund or exchange any item you\nhave purchased and are dissatisfied with. Just bring in\nthe merchandise and your sales slip.\n- SENIORS: EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK IS A 10%\nDISCOUNT DAY FOR YOU ON ALL REGULAR\nPRICED MERCHANDISE AND PRESCRIPTIONS.\nJust bring in your Pharmacare Card.\n20555 - 56th AVENUE, LANGLEY   Prescriptions: 533-1661   Store: 530-3464 Emile Nukho, Manager\n c*\n18\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nSATURDAY EVENING\nSUNDAY\n6:00\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n8 ENTERTAINMENT THIS\nWEEK Interview with Walter Cronkite.\nOONEWS\nO    NFL   PRE-SEASON\nFOOTBALL Houston Oilers\nat Dallas Cowboys (Live)\nO AUSTIN CITY LIMITS\nGeorge Strait sings \"Does\nFort   Worth   Ever   Cross\nYour Mind?\" and \"Marina\nDel      Rey\";      singer-\nsongwriter Dwight Yoakam\nperforms songs influenced\nby pure mountain music.\n\u00a9 HOGAN'S HEROES The\nNazis  plan  to  flood  the\nworld  market  with  counterfeit Allied money.\n(B ENTERPRISE\n05   NEW  MUSIC  MAGAZINE\n6:30\nONEWS\n(B M'A'S'H While a\nsearch goes on for a dog\nthat bit Radar, Hawkeye\ndefies Frank to take care\nof a case of hysterical paralysis.\nm MOTORWEEK\n7:00\nO    FRONT   RUNNERS\nBACK-TO-SCHOOL    SPECIAL\nO O LIFESTYLES OF\nTHE RICH AND FAMOUS\nRene Enrlquez (\"Hill Street\nBlues\"); Charo; actress\nRuby Keeler; skater Scott\nHamilton; an island retreat\nvisited by royalty. (R)\nQ LOTTO NIGHT IN B.C.\nQ BEYOND THE NORTH\nWIND A physicist, artist\nand musician recall their\nexpedition together to the\nHigh Arctic.\nO MTV TOP 20 VIDEO\nCOUNTDOWN\n\u00a9 DOCTOR, DOCTOR\nm    STAMPEDE   WRESTLING\nO D'HIER A DEMAIN \"Tre-\nsors de cinematheques: Du\ncote de Memphis\" Les collections dos archives de\nMemphis sont jeunes mais\nriches et conservees au\n\"Center for Southern Folklore.\" p\n7:30\n@ MOViE *\u2022\u2022!_ \"The\nGhost   And   Mrs.   Muir\"\n(1947, Fantasy) Gene Tier-\nney, Rex Harrison. A lonely\nwidow writes a book about\nher love for the ghost of an\nold sea captain.\nO  CHECK IT OUTI The\nthug   Marlene   hires   to\ndiscourage   Jack   Christian's advances inadvertently mistakes Howard for\nhis target. (R) Q\n\u00a9 MATTER OF TASTE\n8:00\nO DIFF'RENT STROKES\nDrummond goes on TV to\nplead for Sam's release.\n(Part 2 of 2) (R) g\nO FACTS OF LIFE Jo's\nnewly rich father tries to\nbuy her affection. In stereo. (R) g\nQ BIZARRE Sketches include the Super Dave (Bob\nEinstein) Book on Dad; a\nvisit to the Nixon Hilton;\nJokeville. (R)\n\u00a9 CRAZY LIKE A FOX\nHarry investigates the murder of a dog in Harrison's\nneighborhood. (R)\nQ WILD AMERICA After\nstudying the grizzly, naturalist Marty Stouffer adopts\na cub from a zoo. (Part 1 of\n2)\nIB Star Games Sports\ncompetition featuring cast\nmembers   from   \"Dallas,\"\n\"Charlie & Company,\"\n\"Love Boat\" and \"Capitol.\" Semifinal round. (R)\n\u00a9 NOVA A profile of Dr.\nEdward Teller, the \"Father\nof the Hydrogen Bomb,\"\nacclaimed as a scientific\ngenius and also called one\nof the most dangerous scientists in the country. (R)\nii\n20 \/ 20 Scheduled: interview with Dr. Robert\nGale, who performed bone-\nmarrow transplants on victims of the Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. Q\n03 LE PETIT MONDE DE\nFERNAND CONTANDIN DIT\nFERNANDEL Documentaire\nsur la carriere de Fernan-\ndel au music-hall et au\ncinema.\n8:30\nO BENSON When an old\nfriend's disability payments are cut off, Benson\ngoes to bat for him. (R) p\nO 227 Lester's convinced\nthat his former boss is now\na wealthy man. In stereo.\n(R)\nO CHECK IT OUTI The\nthug Marlene hires to\ndiscourage Jack Christian's advances inadvertently mistakes Howard for\nhis target. (R) Q\nO PROFILES OF NATURE\n9:00\nO  MOVIE  **  \"Deadly\nLessons\" (1983,\nSuspense) Donna Reed,\nLarry Wilcox. The young\nstudents at an exclusive\ngirls school are terrorized\nby a crazed killer who\nknows their most intimate\nsecrets. (R) Q\nO GOLDEN GIRLS Rose's\nattempt to keep her roommates in the dark about\nher new boyfriend fails\nwhen tragedy strikes. In\nstereo. (R)\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"Beverly\nHills Madam\" (1986, Drama) Faye Dunaway, Louis\nJourdan. The head of a\nprostitution house that\ncaters to the world's most\npowerful men finds her lucrative empire jeopardized\nby her girls' personal crises.\nO POWERS PLAY Sheree\nJ. Wilson stars as a\nstrong-willed young woman\nwho inherits a multimillion-\ndollar empire and comes\ninto conflict with the man\nwho built the company (David Birney).\nO MAGNUM, P.I. Magnum\nencounters murder and\nmayhem when he travels to\nEngland to oversee security operations at Robin\nMasters' estate. (R)\nO EVEREST: THE LAST\nUNCLIMBED MOUNTAIN\nSpectacular footage\nfeaturing the expedition of\na team of British mountain\nclimbers that ascended\nMount Everest in 1982.\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkv, \"The\nDarker Side Of Terror\"\n(1979, Science-Fiction)\nRobert Forster, Adrienne\nBarbeau. A doctor's reluctance to take part in a\ncloning experiment becomes even stronger when\nhe learns his own clone\nhas fallen in love with his\nwife.\n\u00a9 QUESTORS\n_} MOVIE \u2022 \"The Pit\"\n(1980, Suspense) Sammy\nSnyders, Jeannie Elias. A\nui_iuiu_u young man gets\nhis entire town involved in\nhis violent fantasies.\n93 USA \"La revolution de\nI'Apple\"\n9:30\nO   CONCERTS   IN   THE\nPARK\nO SPITTING IMAGE British satire of American political figures and celebrities, including Sylvester\nStallone, George Bush,\nDustin Hoffman and Richard Nixon.\n\u00a9LANDSCAPES\n@_ A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\nMontreal 1986.\n10:00\nO WAYNE AND SHUSTER\n\"The Unholy Goalie\" (Part\n2of2)(R)g\nO HUNTER Hunter's\nrobbed of the only proof\nlinking Zukoff to the murder\nof the blond woman. (Part\n2 of 2) In stereo. (R)\nO DEMPSEY &\nMAKEPEACE When Dempsey (Michael Brandon) and\nMakepeace (Glynis\nBarber) investigate a typical warehouse robbery,\nthey uncover a multimillion\ndollar drug scheme.\nQ DAVE ALLEN AT\nLARGE\n\u00a9 HUMAN RACE\nffl LETELEJOURNALg\n10:20\nO EVENING EDITION\nffl LES NOUVELLES DU\nSPORT\n10:30\n@  FRONT PAGE CHALLENGE <R)g\nQ THE BOUNDER Trevor\nand Howard confront the\ninsurance man who ran\naway with Mary.\n10:36\nffl A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde\nMontreal 1986.\n11:00\nO NATIONAL g\nOOONEWS\nO   O   CTV  NATIONAL\nNEWS\nO ALIVE FROM OFF CENTER Two autobiographical\ndance duets by choreographer David Gordon -- \"Dorothy and Eileen\" and\n\"Close-Up.\" in stereo, g\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE The\nsole survivors of a terrible\nwar meet in the shambles\nof a city destroyed six\nyears prior. '\nO SCTV Sketches: Lola\nHeatherton (O'Hara) and\nLiberace (Thomas) star in\ntheir own Christmas specials; an excited Ed Grim-\nley (Short) can't wait for\nChristmas.\nffl CINEMA \u2022\u2022\u2022\"Tufais\npas le poids sherif\" (1977,\nComedie) Burt Reynolds,\nSally Field. Devenu cele-\nbre en passant une cargai-\nson de biere en contre-\nbande, un camionneur doit\ntranspose un elephant de\nMiami ag Dallas.\nONEWS 11!18\nO ABCNEWSg\n11:20\nO O NEWS\n11:30\nO SPORTSLINE\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"The Island Of Dr. Moreau\" (1977,\nScience-Fiction) Burt Lancaster,    Michael   York.\nBased on a story by H.G.\nWells. A demented scientist perfects a method to\nconvert jungle animals into\nhuman savages.\nO 8) SATURDAY NIGHT\nLIVE  Joe  Jackson  joins\nhost   Oprah  Winfrey  and\nPOWERS PLAY\nDavid Birney stars as Lucas\nCord, a man who finds himself In constant conflict with\nthe young woman who inhere\nits the multi-million-dollar\nempire he runs, in \"Powers\nPlay.\" It will air SATURDAY,\nAUG. 30 on CBS.\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\n\u00a9  1988 Compulog\nperforms songs from the\nalbum \"Big World.\" In stereo. (R)\nO  MTV TOP 20 VIDEO\nCOUNTDOWN\nO COMEDY TONIGHT\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE Flight\n107 arrives on schedule,\nbut empty.\n12:00\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022_ \"Valley\nOf The Dolls\" (1987, Drama) Barbara Parkins, Patty\nDuke. Three aspiring actresses struggle to make it\nin the glamor-filled capital\nof the movie industry, Hollywood.\nm SOUNDSTAGE The performance by the V.S.O.P. II\njazz quintet includes \"Well,\nYou Needn't\" and \"Hesitation.\"\n\u00a9DOCTOR WHO\n12:05\nO MOVIE **J_ \"Atlantis,\nThe Lost Continent\" (1961,\nFantasy) Anthony Hall,\nJoyce Taylor. A young\nGreek fisherman rescues\nthe daughter of the King of\nAtlantis from the sea and\naccompanies her to the\nlost city.\nO MOVIE \u2022*\u2022 \"Bells\nAre Ringing\" (1960, Musical) Judy Holliday, Dean\nMartin. A shy and impressionable young answering-\nservice operator becomes\ninfatuated with a charming\nscriptwriter.\n12:30\nO    PAC    10   COLLEGE\nFOOTBALL PREVIEW\n1:00\nO ALMOST LIVE\n\u00a9PUTTIN'ONTHEHITS\n1:30\nONEWS\nO AMERICA'S TOP TEN\n2:00\nO MOVIE *\u2022\u2022!_\n\"Romeo And Juliet\" (1968,\nDrama) Leonard Whiting,\nOlivia Hussey. Based on\nShakespeare's play. Two\nstar-crossed lovers meet\nwith tragedy because of a\nfeud between their families.\nONEWS\n2:06\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Gaby\"\n(1956, Romance) Leslie\nCaron, John Kerr. In London just before D-Day, a\nFrench ballerina and an\nAmerican soldier fall in\nlove.\n2:35\nQ MOVIE **!_ \"It's A\nDog's Life\" (1965, Comedy) Edmund Gwenn, Jeff\nRichards. A bull terrier tells\nthe story of his rise to\nfame as a dogfighter.\n4:30\n\u00a9 MOVIE **J4 \"The\nDevil's Daughter\" (1972,\nHorror) Shelley Winters,\nBelinda Montgomery. After\nher mother makes a pact\nwith Satan, a young woman\nstruggles to escape her\nobligation to wed a demon.\nPROGLiMS\nHCARING?\n\u2022 Repairs to all makes\n\u2022 30-day trial period\n\u2022 Written warranty\n\u2022 Phone for\nhome consultation\nROBERTSON HEARING AID CONSULTANTS\n(Licenced Hearing Aid Dealer and Consultants)\nONE LOCATION ONLY:\nSemiahmoo Professional Building\n#205 -1656 Martin Dr., White Rock\nHours: Monday - Friday 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.\n:_J_J%J      \\J <\/ JL\\J\nReflections of You\nSIX-WEEK COURSE\nMon., Sept. 22 - Oct. 24 -- 7 to 10 p.m.\nMon., Jan. 17 - Feb. 20, 1987\n$100 [Deposit $15] Visa accepted.\nACCESSORY WORKSHOP\nThurs., Sept. 24 -- 7 to 10 p.m\n- [Min. 6 people]\nFaye Filiatrault\nAROMATHERAPY      Fashion and Color\nMASSAGE \u25a0 $35.00     Consultant, Esthetlcian\n.-O\n(\nA $&T\n856-7533\nAUGUST 31,1986\nMORNING\n6:00\nO HERE'S LUCY\n6:30\nO MORE REAL PEOPLE\n6:46\nO   NOTE   OF   FAITH   \/\nNEWS HEADLINES\n8:00\nO town Meeting Topic:\ndaycare dollars and cents.\nO SACRED HEART\nO ME AND MAX\nO    WEEKEND   NORTHWEST\nO FILM FEATURE\nSB SUNDAY MORNING\nED SIZE SMALL\n8:16\nQ WITH THIS RING\n6:30\nQ FAITH FOR TODAY\nO FILM FEATURE\nO CASEY TREAT\nO  JOHN BURNS MINISTRIES\nGD CIRCLE SQUARE\n7:00\nO THIS IS THE LIFE\nQ EUCHARIST\nOO JIMMY SWAGGART\nO WORLD TOMORROW\nCD FRIGHTENSTEIN\n7:30\nO REAL TO REEL\nO    NORTHWEST   ENCOUNTER\n@ MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN WORD\nm PACIFIC ISSUES\n8:00\nO O SESAME STREET\n<R)g\nO BOOMERANG\nO MUSIC MAGIC\nO ROBERT SCHULLER g\nO SUNDAY MORNING\nQ WORLD TOMORROW\nCB JIMMY SWAGGART\nCD EWOKS AND DROIDS\nADVENTURE HOUR\n.8:30\nO YOUNG UNIVERSE\nO    FLASH:   MAGAZINE\nSHOW FOR KIDS\nO ORAL ROBERTS\nffl    ROQUET   BELLES\nOREILLES\n9:00\nO DOCTOR, DOCTOR\nO MUPPETS\nO GARDENING WITH ED\nHUME\nOLARRY JONES\nO SEARCH\nO MISTER ROGERS (R)\n09 DAY OF DISCOVERY\n03    FABLES   OF   THE\nGREEN FOREST \/ JEREMY\nO INSPECTOR GADGET\nffl   LE  JOUR  DU  SEIGNEUR Masse celebree a\nSaint-Joseph   de   Cap-\nd'Espoir, Gaspesie.\n9:30\nO ADVENTURE B.C.\nO MUPPETS\n0 MEET THE PRESS\nO TERRY WINTER\nO U.S. OPEN TENNIS Early rounds, from USTA National   Tennis   Center   in\nFlushing   Meadows,   N.Y.\n(Live)\nO PETER POPOFF\nO BOOMERANG\n\u00a9ROBERT SCHULLER g\nmHERCULES\n9:36\n03 TOTTIE: STORY OF A\nDOLL'S HOUSE\n10:00\nO WESTERN GARDENER\nO    LORNE   GREENE'S\nNEW WILDERNESS\nQ    NFL   PRE-SEASON\nFOOTBALL        Seattle\nSeahawks at San Francisco 49ers\nQ ORAL ROBERTS\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n19\nSUNDAY MORNING & AFTERNOON\nO ROBERT SCHULLER g\nO CATS AND DOGS\n\u00a9    CHILDREN'S   FILM\nFOUNDATION\nCD LAUREL AND HARDY\nffl RENCONTRES Inv: Armand    Le    Bourgeois,\neveque d'Autun, France.\n10:30\nO BODYTALK\nO RAINBOW EXPRESS\nO KENNETH COPELAND\nO READY, SET, GROW\nOROCKSCHOOL\nO WORLD TOMORROW\n\u00a9 SIZE SMALL\nffl  PROPOS ET CONFIDENCES Robert Cliche se\nraconte. (4e de 6)\n11:00\nO WORLD STAGE '88\nO   VIEWPOINT ON THE\nNEWS\nO PETER POPOFF\nO IT IS WRITTEN\nO INNOVATION\nO ERNEST ANGLEY\n\u00a9 THE SEA\nONEWS FROM ZOOS\nffl CINEMA \"Le chateau\nde cartes\" (Pas de date,\nDrame) Kim Yaroshevska-\nva, Denis Bouchard. L'en-\nquete  d'une  sorciere   la\nmene dans un etrange chateau dans le bois, a la recherche d'un jeune Inven-\nteur. 11:30\nO MEETING PLACE Rev.\nDavid Monroe officiates at\nservices from Holy Rosary\nCathedral in Vancouver.\n(R)\nO THIS WEEK WITH DAVID BRINKLEYg\nO FOR THE RECORD\nO CREATIVE HANDS\nO JAPAN: THE CHANGING TRADITION\nO CALLER'S CHOICE\nffl LAUREL AND HARDY\nAFTERNOON\n12:00\nO CANADA IN VIEW\nO WALTERS FAMILY\nO MCLAUGHLIN GROUP\nO LEN ERICKSEN\nO JOHN KEATS \/DEGAS\nffl 100 HUNTLEY STREET\n12:30\nO CFL FOOTBALL Winnipeg   Blue   Bombers   at\nSaskatchewan   Roughrid-\ners (Live)\nQ MOVIE kkk \"Murder\nOnce Removed\" (1971,\nMystery) John Forsythe,\nBarbara Bain. A \"perfect\ncrime\" goes awry when a\nscheming doctor murders\nonce for love and then has\nto kill again.\nO     FAMILY    BROWN\nCOUNTRY\nO   U.S.   OPEN   TENNIS\nCONTINUES\nO POLKA TIME\nO CAPITOL JOURNAL\nO KENNETH COPELAND\n1:00\nO COLLEGE FOOTBALL\nPREVIEW: TOP TEN A look\nat the top ten collegiate\nteams as selected by the\nFootball Writers Association.\nO RICOCHET\nO TERRY WINTER\nO  WASHINGTON WEEK\nIN REVIEW g\n\u00a9 BEYOND THE SPEED\nOF SOUND\nfflFISHIN' STARS\nffl LES GRANDES VILLES\nDU MONDE San Francisco,\nson histoire et ses traits\ncaracteristiques.\n1:30\nO SPORTSWORLD\nScheduled: The Budweiser\nArlington Million Horse\nRace, from Arlington Park,\nIII. (Live)\nO HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN\nO AIRWOLF\nO WALL STREET WEEK\n\"Are Insurance Stocks a\nLiability?\" Guest: Salomon\nBrothers Inc. Managing Director A. Michael Frinquel-\nli.\nO SUNDAY LINE\n\u00a9 FREE PRESS VS. FAIR\nTRIAL\nffl EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS\n2:00\nO THE SAINT Simon carries out a plot to free a\nRussian spy.\nQ GREAT PERFORMANCES \"Bernstein Conducts 'West Side Story' \"\nKiri Te Kanawa, Tatiana\nTroyanos and Jose Carer-\nras are featured among the\ninternational opera stars\nchosen by Leonard Bernstein to record the definitive version of his work. In\nstereo. (R) g\nO CALLER'S CHOICE\nO BONAVENTURE TRAVEL\nffl ASTRO, LE PETIT ROBOT\nSUNDAY EVENING\n6:00\n@ DISNEY SUNDAY MOVIE \"My Town\" An imaginative young girl is awestruck\nby the exciting happenings\nin her sleepy hometown.\n(R)\nO TOWN MEETING Topic:\nkids in crisis.\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe Muscular Dystrophy\nAssociation's annual fundraiser features national\nhost Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\nQ Q NEWS\nO CBS NEWS\nQ NOVA The carpenters,\nmasons, weavers and engineers of the animal world\nare observed at work. (R)\n\u00a9 HOGAN'S HEROES Hogan tries to enlist the aid of\na Swedish scientist for the\n\u00a9 MUSEUM WITHOUT\nWALLS\n_. EWOKS AND DROIDS\nADVENTURE HOUR\nffl DOCUMENTAIRES\nCANADIENS \"Le semeur et\nla femme au seau\" Documentaire sur I'operation de\ncoulage en bronze de deux\nstatues d'Alfred Laliberte\npar les speoialiates des\nateliers Opera d'Arte de\nVerone.\n6:30\nO  O   EXPO '66 WELCOMES THE WORLD\nONEWS\n\u00a9 M'A'S'H Frank demands that Hawkeye be\ncourt-martialed for hitting\nhim in the O.R.\nffl A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde-\nMontreal 1986.\n7:00\nQ FRAGGLE ROCK After\nRed happens upon a magnificent fairy-tale world,\nshe brings a dragon back\nhome as a souvenir. (R) g\nO DISNEY SUNDAY MOVIE Two stories: In \"Case-\nbusters,\" two children foil\na neighborhood crime; in\n\"My Town,\" an imaginative\n2:30\nQ FAME Jesse tries to\nsave a caller from suicide\nafter he becomes a disc\njockey at the school's radio station. In stereo. (R)\nO A TEAM\n\u00a9PACIFIC ISSUES\n\u00a9HUCKLEBERRY FINN\n\u00a9   VIETNAM:  THE TEN\nTHOUSAND DAY WAR\nfflCAPITAINECAVERNE\n3:00\nO SUPER CHARGERS\nFormula One Powerboats.\nTop international atars\ncompete on the waterways\nof America.\nO CANNED FILM FESTIVAL Spoofs are interspersed with edited versions of Hollywood's worst\nmovies. Featured: \"Project\nMoonbase\"(1963).\nO THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL Highlights of Major\nLeague action are shown.\nHost: Mel Allen.\n\u00a9SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF\nPOWER\n\u00a9GREECE 478 -338 B.C.\n\u00a9FOOD FOR LIFE\nffl FILMS D'ART \"Nicolas\ndeStael (1914-1966)\"\n3:30\nO THIS WEEK IN B.C.\nO  GOLF U.S. Amateur\nChampionships,    final\nround, from Shoal Creek\nGolf Course in Birmingham,\nAla. (Same-day tape)\nO FAME Leroy suffers a\nserious knee injury during a\ndance   demonstration.   In\nstereo. (R)\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022 \"Young\nAt Heart\" (1964, Musical)\nFrank Sinatra, Doris Day.\nProblems beset a young\ncouple after the man steals\nhis partner's fiancee.\nO SCARECROW AND\nMRS. KING\nO ADAM SMITH'S MONEY WORLD\n\u00a9   HE-MAN  AND  MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE\n\u00a9 ARTHUR ERICKSON\n\u00a9HERCULES\n4:00\nO MUSIC OF MAN Yehudi\nMenuhin looks at newer\nmusical forms, including\nthe development of barber\nshop quartets, ragtime and\nthe technology necessary\nfor making audio recordings. (R)\nyoung girl is awestruck by\nthe exciting happenings in\nher sleepy hometown. (R)\nO   COSBY   SHOW   Cliff\nasks his stuffy former English professor to be his\npartner in a pinochle game.\nOO 60 MINUTES\nO   CAGNEY   &   LACEY\nCagney's efforts to arrest\nan elusive drug dealer result in tragedy. (R) \u25a1\nQ NANNY Barbara's seaside weekend with her father and the Rudd children\nends on a sad note.\n\u00a9 ANIMAL EXPRESS\n\u00a9NATURAL WORLD\nffl PAUL, MARIE ET LES\nENFANTS    \"L'Amerique\"\nBenoit et Thomas ont etes\ngates par leur pere lors de\nleur visite aux Etat-Unis. g\n7:30\nO BEACHCOMBERS A\nmysterious man threatens\nNick and Relic when they\nrespond to a distress call\nfrom Shaman Island. (R) g\nO FAMILY TIES Alex\nfaces off against a Russian\nopponent in a college\nchess tournament. (R) g\n0 WILD AMERICA After\nstudying the grizzly, naturalist Marty Stouffer adopts\na cub from a zoo. (Part 1 of\n2)\n\u00a9G.I.JOE\n\u00a9 RAINBOW \/ NODDY\n\u00a9 ASTROBOY\nffl LA SEMAINE VERTE\n4:30\nO CELEBRATE THE DIFFERENCES\nOO QUESTION PERIOD\nO PROFILES OF NATURE\n\u00a9 I DREAM OF JEANNIE\n\u00a9    KIMBA   THE   WHITE\nLION\n\u00a9INSPECTOR GADGET\n6:00\nO HYMN SING Selections\ninclude \"Work for the Night\nis Coming,\" \"Have You\nSeen the Sunrise?\" and\n\"The Lord's Prayer.\" (R)\nOONEWS\nO \u00a9 LITTLEST HOBO\nHobo helps police dogs\ntrack down a young runaway who fled to avoid an\nupcoming operation. (R) g\nO PLANET FOR THE TAKING Is man willingly becoming domesticated by his\ntechnology in much the\nsame way as technology\nadvanced the breeding of\nanimals for specific traits\ndesirable to humankind?\n\u00a9 BUCK ROGER8 A\nvengeful assassin marks\nDr. Huer as his next target\nwhile plans are made for\nBuck's 634th birthday party.\n\u00a9 COMMUNITIES WE8T\n\u00a9 ASTROBOY\nffl SECOND REGARD\nfi'SO\n_ EDISON TWINS (R)g\nO ABCNEWSg\nO NBC NEWS\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9BEST OF WEBSTER   ,\n\u00a9TO BE ANNOUNCED .\nI\nSUMMER GiRL\nBarry Bostwlck (I.) and Kim\nDarby are Gavin and Mary\nShelburne, a happily married\ncouple with two children.\nTheir lives change drastically\nwhen they hire a live-in baby\nsitter for the summer. \"Summer Girl\" airs SUNDAY,\nAUG. 31 on CBS.\n\u00a9 TED KNIGHT SHOW\nMonroe and Henry discover a cover-up in the death\nof Mrs. Stinson's friend.\nffl LES BEAUX Dl-\nMANCHES \"10o anniver-\nsaire du Festival des Films\ndu monde\"\n8:00\nO SEEING THINGS\nLouie's exclusive articles\nchronicling a prankster's\nexploits are abruptly cut\nshort when one of the\nstunts appears to cause a\nbystander's death. (R) g\nO O W6 Scheduled: divorce mediation; an update\non the story of Cameron\nKerley, an Indian serving\n15-years for killing his\nadoptive father; the fight\nby residents of Flambor-\nough, Ont., to prevent a\npropane gas pipe's installation within the town.\nO \u00a9 MURDER, SHE\nWROTE Jessica investigates the murder of a\nwealthy widow who bequeathed all of her fortune\nto a charismatic evangelist. (R) g\nO   EVENING   AT   POPS\nFrom Rossini to Ellington,\nblues singer Joe Williams\n(\"The Cosby Show\") and\nclarinetist Richard Stoltz-\nman join John Williams and\nthe Boston Pops orchestra. In stereo.\n\u00a9 IS YOUR BRAIN REALLY NECESSARY?\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe Muscular Dystrophy\nAssociation's annual fundraiser features nstional\nhost Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\n8:36\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n9:00\nO ADVENTURES OF\nSHERLOCK HOLMES A\nyoung solicitor, heir to a\nmurdered builder, admits\nto being in the victim's\nhouse on the night of the\ncrime and asks Holmes to\nclear him. (R) g ;\nO MOVIE *\u2022\u2022 \"The\nCheap Detective\" (1978,\nComedy) Peter Falk, Ann-\nMargret. False identities,\nmurders, old flames and\nunscrupulous villains\nhamper a detective's daily\nroutine in this parody of\n1930s mystery movies. (R)\n_ JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DY3TROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\nO O LOUISIANA Based\non Maurice Denuziere's trilogy of novels chronicling\nlife in pre-Civil War Louisiana. An impoverished gentlewoman, scheming to regain status and fortune,\nplan8 a campaign of conquest that includes marrying the owner of Louisiana's largest plantation.\nStars Margot Kidder, Ian\nChorleson and Lloyd\nBochner. (Part 1 of 3)\nO MOVIE *\u2022 \"Summer\nGirl\" (1983, Suspense)\nBarry Bostwlck, Kim Darby.\nA happily married couple\nslowly discover that their\nlive-in baby sitter Is taking\nover their lives and their\ntwo young children. (R) g\nO MASTERPIECE THEATRE \"Winston Churchill:\nThe Wilderness Years\"\nHaving lost a fortune in the\nWall Street crash, Churchill finds himself pitched into\n' a \"conflict with the leaders\nof his own party. (Part 2 of\n8)(R)Q\n\u00a9SOLDIERS: A HISTORY\nOF MEN IN BATTLE The responsibilities of infantrymen. . Narrator: Frederick\nForsyth.\n\u00a9 THE BRAIN An examination of schizophrenics\nand their families reveals\nthe findings of brain researchers and identifies\nthe need for further study.\nCINEMA *** \"Mario\" (1984, Comedie) Xa-\nvier Norman Petermann,\nFrancis Reddy. Pour dis-\ntraire son petit frere, un enfant muet au comportement\nparfois etrange, invente\ndes jeux de guerre.\n10:00\nOCBCNEWSg\nO GREAT PERFORMANCES \"The Queen of\nSpades\" Tchaikovsky's\nstory of obsession and intrigue features Cleopatra\nCiurca, Reglne Crespin,\nStefka Evstatieva, Allan\nMonk, Lajos Miller and Vladimir Popov with Russian\nconductor Woldemer Nate-\nson leading the Opera\nCompany of Philadelphia.\n(English subtitles) In stereo. (R)\n\u00a960 MINUTES\n\u00a9 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC The San Andreas\nFault is one of the sites\nvisited in this examination\nof plate tectonics, the science that explains how the\nearth's crust has cracked\nand continues to shift and\nseparate, g\n10:30\nO VENTURE\nffl LES NOUVELLES DU\nSPORT\nffl A PREMIERE VUE Festival des films du monde-\nMontreal 1966.\n11:00\nOOOONEWS\nO   O   CTV   NATIONAL\nNEWS\n\u00a9 CBS NEWS\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR      DYSTROPHY\n11:16\n\u00a9ABC NEWS g\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE A\nbirthday party is interrupted by reporjp of an imminent enemy missile attack.\n\u00a9 CINEMA \u2022*\u2022* \"Les\nfraises sauvages\" (1967,\nDrame) Victor Sjostrom, In-\ngrid Thulin. Les grands\nmomenta de I'existence\nd'un vleux docteur sont ev-\noques avec nostalgie.\n11:20\nOONEWS\n0SPORTSLINE\nO MOVIE \u2022*\u2022 \"California Split\" (1974, Comedy)\nGeorge   Segal,   Elliott\nGould. A gambler and a\nmagazine writer set out together   on   a   gambling\nspree.\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\nO    WAYNE    CODY'S\nLOCKER ROOM\n11:46\n\u00a9CBSNEWS\n\u00a9TWILIGHT ZONE A crippled soldier drops out of a\nmarching   column   and\nmeets a woman.\n12:00\nO MOVIE \u2022\u2022%\n\"Bedlam\" (1946,. Drama)\nBoris Karloff, Anna Lee. A\ngirl crusades to improve\nthe horrid conditions in\nLondon's Infamous Insane\nasylum.\n\u00a9FACEJHE NATION\n12:06\nO MOVIE *\u2022* \"The\nGrest Caruso\" (1950, Musical) Mario Lanza, Ann\nBlyth. Enrico Caruso rises\nfrom obscurity aa a cafe\nentertainer to become a\nlead tenor at the Metropolitan Opera.\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkk* \"Brlga-\ndoon\" (1954, Musical)\nGene Kelly, Cyd Charisse.\nTwo friends stumble upon\nBrigadoon, a village in the\nScottish highlands, which\ncomes to life for a single\nday every 100 years.\n12:16\n\u00a9 CHIPS Ponch, Jon and\nSgt. Getraer head an investigation to determine\nwhy a young woman's car\nacted so erratically in a\nmultiple highway accident.\n12:30\n& MOVIE **_ \"Diary Of\nA Chambermaid\" (1946,\nDrama) Paulette Goddard,\nBurgess Meredith. In the\n18008, a French mother attempts to maintain a stranglehold on her son by encouraging his liaison with\nthe family maid.\n1:30\nONEWS\n2:00\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR      DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\n2:06\nQ MOVIE *\u2022)_ \"It Started With A Kiss\" (1959,\nComedy) Glenn Ford, Debbie Reynolds. A new bride\ncreates problems with her\nAir Force husband's career and his sanity.\n2:20\nO MOVIE *\u2022\u2022!_ \"Bad\nDay At Black Rock\" (1955,\nSuspense) Spencer Tracy,\nRobert Ryan. The people\nof a corrupt Western town\nare terror-stricken by the\narrival of a one-armed man.\n2:30\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR      DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON CONTINUES\nONEWS\n3:00\n\u00a9NIGHTWATCH\n 1 -_-r*__.\n20\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nMONDAY EVENING\ni \u2014-\u2022\nSEPTEMBER 1,1986\nDAYTIME SPECIALS\n5:00\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR     DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe   Muscular   Dystrophy\nAssociation's annual fundraiser   features   national\nhost Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\n6:30\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe Muscular Dyatrophy\nAssociation'3 annual fundraiser features national\nhoat Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\n12:00\nO JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe Muscular Dystrophy\nAssociation's annual fundraiser features national\nhost Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\n2:00\n\u00a9 JERRY LEWIS' MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY\nTELETHON From Caesars\nPalace in Las Vegas and\ncities around the country,\nthe Muscular Dystrophy\nAssociation's annual fundraiser features national\nhost Jerry Lewis with co-\nhosts Ed McMahon, Sammy Davis Jr. and Casey\nKasem.\n3:00\n\u00a9 DAYTIME LOVERS: A\nSOAP OPERA SPECIAL Interviews with popular couples from daytime dramas\nincluding \"All My Children,\" \"Another World,\"\n\"As the World Turns,\"\n\"Days of Our Lives,\"\n\"General Hospital,\" \"One\nLife to Live\" and \"Santa\nBarbara.\" Host: Kim\nZimmer (\"The Guiding\nLight\").\nDAYTIME   CHILDREN'S\nSHOW\n10:00\n\u00a9 READING RAINBOW\nHost LeVar Burton introduces the book \"Tight\nTimes\" and checks out the\npublic library. (R) g\nDAYTIME SPORTS\n11:30\n\u00a9 U.S. OPEN TENNIS Early rounds, from USTA National Tennis Center in\nFlushing Meadows, N.Y.\n(Taped)\n1:00\nQ\u00a9 CFL FOOTBALL Edmonton Eskimos at Calgary\nStampeders (Live)\n4:00\n0 CFL FOOTBALL Montreal AioueiieS at Hamilton\nTiger-Cats (Live)\n5*30\n\u00a9  SPORTS PAGE SPECIAL\nDAYTIME MOVIES\n10:00\n\u00a9 \u2022*\u2022 \"Games\"\n(1967, Suspense) Simone\nSignoret, James Caan. An\naffluent young 'couple's bizarre diversions lead to\nmurder when a mysterious\nmiddle-aged woman enters\ntheir lives.\n2:00\nffl kVi \"Capitaine Malabar dit la Bombe\" (1982,\nComedie) Bud Spencer,\nJerry Calla. Un capitaine\nsans emploi entreprend\nd'enaeigner la boxe a un\njeune homme, etant lui-\nmeme un ancien champion.\nEVENING\n6:00\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n\u00a9NBCNEWS\nO O NEWS\nOCBSNEWS\nO   MACNEIL  \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9    M'A'S'H   Colonel\nFlagg   turns   up   at   the\n4077th wanting penicillin to\nbarter for information.\n\u00a9 ALVIN TOFFLER'S THE\nTHIRD WAVE The author\nand futurist traces the decline of the Industrial Revolution's   \"second   wave\"\nculture and discusses the\nrise of \"third wave\" technology.\n\u00a9SCTV\nffl UN PARC, UNE VILLE\n6:30\n\u00a9ONEWS\n\u00a9TOP STORY\n\u00a9TAXI\n\u00a9PROFILES OF NATURE\nffl A PREMIERE VUE Cloture du Festival des films\ndu monde-Montreal 1986.\n7:00\nONEWS\nO WHEEL OF FORTUNE\n8  \u00a9  ENTERTAINMENT\nTONIGHT   Interview   with\nJerry Mathers, Tony Dow,\nBarbara   Billingsley   and\nKen Osmond of \"The New\nLeave It to Beaver.\"\nO LIVE IT UP Bugs get\nswatted; the difference between expensive designer\nperfumes and the cheaper\ncopies; tips on how flattering clothes may transform\none's body. (R) g\n\u00a9NEWLYWEDGAME\nO  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS Indian wildlife\nis virtually unknown to us\nbut it includes some of the\nmost beautiful and spectacular animals on Earth.\n\u00a9 STAR TREK A primitive\nsociety  dominated  by  a\npowerful  machine threatens the  security of the\ncrew of the Enterprise.\n\u00a9 JACKPOT\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n7:20\nffl LE POINT\n7:30\n\u00a9WORLD STAGE'86\n\u00a9 \u00a9 JEOPARDY\n\u00a9EVENING\n\u00a9227\n\u00a9 PRICE IS RIGHT\nO LIVE IT UP Bugs get\nswatted; the difference between expensive designer\nperfumes and the cheaper\ncopies; tips on how flattering clothes may transform\none's body. (R) g\nO WORLD OF. SURVIVAL\n\u00a9 WESTLAND\n7:36\nffl POIVRE ET SEL Hector\net Marie-Rose reviennent\nd'un voyage au soleil. g\n8:00\nQ MOVIE *** \"Time\nbandits\" (1981, Comedy)\nCraig Warnock, John\nCleese. A young boy is\ntaken on a trip through\ntime by a band of diminutive would-be outlaws who\nhave stolen a time-warp\nmap from the Supreme\nBeing,\n_____'\u25a0\nIjHfiB&K     K   M,   #V^^^____Si_____         _______Me^^\n~\u00ab___B__\u00a3       ______ .mfty^mrfr.____                       __\\\nCAGNEY & LACEY\n______!                     mEr'^-L'                                             _______*\"\nA notorious drug dealer has\nmanaged to evade all efforts\n5f    *fl             h\nto put him out of business,\nm\\W<mmm\\W    V   mW      '\u25a0  >.3_^^_____\nand the determined attempts\nof Cagney (Sharon Gless) to\nrectify  this   situation   have\nry_\\       _M                  _\\\ntragic consequences. \"Cag\n______      K                M\n_____$_____                    ~\\                   \u00a3.-\nney & Lacey\" will air MON\nDAY, SEPT. 1 on CBS.\nm-\u2014> _\"\" __4i\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\nmm_mm\n@ 1966 Compulog\n\u00a9 MOVIE kk\\b \"Death\nOn The Nile\" (1978, Mystery) Peter Ustinov, Bette\nDavis.Based on the novel\nby Agatha Christie. Belgian detective Hercule\nPoirot investigates a murder among a party of eccentrics aboard a cruise\nship. (R)g\n\u00a9 \u00a9 VALERIE Despite\nwarnings from his mother,\nDavid dates an older woman. In stereo. (R)\nO HARDCASTLE AND\nMCCORMICK\n\u00a9 0 SCARECROW AND\nMRS. KING Despite being\nseriously injured, Lee sets\nout to recover top-secret\ninformation that could save\nthe lives of his fellow\nagents. (R)\nO ALIENS, DRAGONS,\nMONSTERS & ME A profile\nof Ray Harryhauaen includes interviews with the\nspecial-effects wizard of\nfantasy films and some of\nhis associates, along with\nclips from several films including \"Clash of the Titans.\"\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022\u2022J4 \"Helter\nSkelter\" (1976, Drama)\n(Part 1 of 2) Steve Rails-\nback, George DiCenzo. A\nsmall band of drug-crazed\nhippies led by Charles\nManson commits a series\nof bizarre thrill-killings in\nthe Hollywood hills.\n\u00a9 NORTH OF 60 DEGREES: DESTINY UNCERTAIN\n8:06\nffl HOWARD HUGHES A\nCage de   I8ans, Howard\nHughes decide d'etre premier dans I'industrie automobile,   aeronautique   et\ncinematographique. Avec:\nTommy  Lee  Jones,  Lee\nPurcell. (lede 2)\n8*30\n\u00a9 AMAZING STORIES A\nlowly   janitor   becomes\nfluent in French and proficient  in  mathematics.. In\nstereo. (R) g\n\u00a9 PERSPECTIVE\n\u00a9 IRISH ROVERS\n9:00\n\u00a9 MOVIE **',. \"Serial\"\n(1980, Comedy) Martin\nMull, Tuesday Weld. A happily married Marin County\ncouple are spurred by their\ntrendy neighbors into exploring alternative lifestyles, g\nO Q LOUISIANA Based\non Maurice Denuziere's trilogy of novels chronicling\nlE^fvE^\nlife in pre-Civil War Louisiana. An impoverished gentlewoman, scheming to regain 8tatu8 and fortune,\nplans a campaign of conquest that includes marrying the owner of Louisiana's largest plantation.\nStars Margot Kidder, Ian\nCharleson and Lloyd\nBochner. (Part 2 of 3)\n\u00a9 KATE & ALLIE Kate and\nAllle wind up fighting over\nthe same man. (R)\nO AMERICAN MASTERS\n\"Georgia O'Keeffe\" This\naward-winning portrait of\npainter Georgia O'Keeffe\nincludes commentary by\nthe artist on the origins of\nher work,, footage from\nhome moeies and photographs taken by Alfred\nStieglitz during their marriage. (R) g\n\u00a9     NATIONAL    FILM\nBOARD THEATER\n\u00a9 MOVIE \"444 Days To\nFreedom\" (No Date)\n9:30\n\u00a9 TO BE ANNOUNCED\n\u00a9    NEWHART   Larry's\nshocked when Dick won't\nendorse him aa a candidate for mayor. (R) g\n10:00\nO NATIONAL \/ JOURNAL\n0 \u00a9 CAGNEY & LACEY\nCagney's efforts to arrest\nan elusive drug dealer result in tragedy. (R) g\n\u00a9PALACE OF DREAMS\n\u00a9LIVING BODY\n10:06\nffl A PREMIERE VUE Cloture du Festival des films\ndu monde-Montreal 1966.\n10:30\n\u00a9WHERE THERE'S LIFE\n10:36\nffl CINEMA ** \"Le Roi\ndes Alpes\" (1976, Drame)\nRobert Hoffman, Adrian\nHoven. Apprenant le suicide de sa soeur, un\nhomme s'en prend a\nI'amant de celle-ci.\n10:60\n\u00a9EVENINGEDITION\n11:00\n0OOQNEWS\nO   O   CTV   NATIONAL\nNEWS O\n0 MOVIEMAKERS A profile of Darryl F. Zanuck, formerly of 20th Century Fox.\nGuests: Dana Andrews, director Henry King and writer Philip Dunne.\n\u00a9 BENNY HILL Benny has\na rival in Henry McGee for\nthe hand of a charming\nwidow..\n\u00a9SPORTS PAGE\n11:20\nQ0NEWS\n11:30\nO MAUDE Walter loses a\nbundle on a bad investment\ntip given to him by Arthur.\n(R)\nONIGHTLINE\nO BEST OF CAR80N\nFrom June 1965: actor Burt\nReynolds, singer Laura\nBranigan and hollerer Jim\nGrastie joiq host Johnny\nCarson. In stereo. (R)\nO\u00a9 U.S. OPEN TENNIS\nHIGHLIGHTS\nO   MACNEIL   \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9NEWS\n12:00\n\u00a9   MINDER   Arthur   becomes   involved  in  local\npolitics when his car lot is\nthreatened.\n\u00a9THE AVENGERS\nO MAGNUM, P.I. Higgina\nasks St!  Louis gumshoe\nLuther Gillis to tackle a\nblackmail Case. (R)\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE Jesse\nCardiff's ambition is to be\nthe best pool shark on Chicago's Randolph Street.\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nJune 1985: actors Lily\nTomlin and Brian Dennehy\nmake appearances. In\nstereo. (R)\n12:06\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkkY, \"Green\nMansions\" (1969, Romance) Audrey Hepburn,\nAnthony Perkins. A young\npolitical refugee hiding in\nthe Venezuelan jungle falls\nIn love with a native girl.\nO MOVIE **J4 \"A Man,\nA Woman And A Bank\"\n(1979, Adventure) Donald\nSutherland, Brooke\nAdams. Two clever con artists join forces and wits to\nmastermind the robbery of\na bank by using a sophisticated computer.\n12:30\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nJune 1986: actors Lily\nTomlin and Brian Dennehy\nmake appearances. In\nstereo. (R)\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022*'\/_ \"James\nDean, The First American\nTeenager\" (1978, Documentary) Narrated by Stacy Keach. The influential\nactor, wh08e life and career were cut short by an\nautomobile accident in\n1955, is remembered in\nfilm clips and in reminiscences by his friends and\nco-stars.\n1:00\n\u00a9HEADLINE CHASERS\n\u00a9ONE DAY AT A TIME\n1:10\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkV, \"The\nWild, Wild West Revisited\"\n(1979, Adventure) Robert\nConrad, Ross Martin. Two\n19th-century government\nagents come out of retirement to see whether clonelike pretenders have been\nsubstituted for some world\nleaders. (R)\n_____:\t\n1:30\nO  LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\n\u00a9NEWS\n2:00\n\u00a9NEWS\n2:06\nQ MOVIE kkV> \"The\nAmazing Dobermana\"\n(1976, Comedy) James\nFranciscus, Fred Astaire.\nTo bait his trap for an elusive gangster, an undercover policeman teams up\nwith a dog trainer and his\nvery special canines.\n\u00a9LOU GRANT\n2:30\n\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9 BIG VALLEY Victoria\nseeks the details of her\nhusband's past.\n3:00\n\u00a9 NIGHTWATCH\n3:06\n\u00a9MATT HOUSTON\n3:30\n\u00a9 CNN NEWS\n_W\nCLEANING\nSERVICE\nWho You Gonna Call?\n856-7739\nCome discover for\nyourself Canada's most\nunique brewery.\nIntroducing the House Special   $Q 75\n%$ dozen\nIn only S minutes you'll\nteam how you can make\nand enjoy professionally\nbrewed beer.\nmln. 10 cases\norders of\n50 cases\n\u2022 while\nquantities last\n\u2022 100% money\nback\n\u2022 100% natural\n\u2022 shelf life of\n4   If A<\n\u2022    |V1\nOPEN\nTUES.-FRI.\n10-8:30 p.m.\nSATURDAY\n9-6 p.m.\nWE TAKE:\nVisa, M.C.\n&Am.X.\nCanadian Select Ale & Lager Ltd.\n12049-MlhAVE., NO. 110.20551 LANQLEY BYPASS,\nSURREY \u2022 9(0-2931 Of 3DO-1455 LANGIEY \u2022 S34-85S-\nHOURS: TUES.-F \u00bb.. 10-8:30; SAT 9 6;00\nNO. 104-9990 MINOF1U BLVD.,\nRICHMOND \u2022 270-3943\n.. _-\nin. ei!_ englG fntnl av\n3H50H3VA 3HT 88    Bi'iiio_ioirt- slevon\n_H_H-!V3 \u00a3*\nT\\\u00bb-\n \u2014 \u2014\n____________\n TUESDAY EVENING\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n21\nSEPTEMBER 2,1986\nDAYTIME   CHILDREN'S\nSHOW\n10:00\n\u00a9   READING   RAINBOW\nRuth Buzzi narrates \"Miss\nNelson Is Back\"; LeVar\nBurton embarks on a birthday treasure hunt.(R) g\nDAYTIME MOVIES\n10:00\n\u00a9 ** \"Navajo Joe\"\n(1986, Western) Burt Reynolds, Aldo San Brell. A\nman vows to get revenge\nafter surviving a massacre.\n12:00\n0 kkkn \"Made For\nEach Other\" (1939, Drama) Carole Lombard,\nJames Stewart. A young\nnewlywed couple try to\ncope with the ageless\nproblem of interfering inlaws.\n2:00\n\u00a9 \"Les enfants de Dieu\"\n(1980, Drame) Richard\nWidmark, Ned Beatty.Un\nautobus scolaire est vole\nle jour de la rentree et les\nparents de deux adolescents constatent la dispar-\nition de leurs enfants.\nEVENING\n6:00\n\u00a9 \u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n\u00a9NBCNEWS\n\u00a9CBSNEWS\nQ  MACNEIL \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9 M'A'S'H Frank is driven by his jealousy of\nTrapper into proposing to\nHot Lips.\n\u00a9   HOW  AN  AIRPLANE\nFLIES\n\u00a9 SCTV\n\u00a9 LA CLE DES CHAMPS\nLe romah publie par Jean-\nLouis sous un nom de\nplume se fait sauvagement\ndescendre par la critique.\n6:30\nOONEWS\nO TOP STORY\n\u00a9TAXI\n\u00a9PROFILES OF NATURE\n\u00a9 L'AGENT FAIT LE\nBONHEUR \"Une gros-\nS333G explosive\" La gros-\nsesse de Mireille provoque\ndes remous au poste. g\n7:00\n\u00a9    GZOWSKI   &   CO.\nGuests: Vancouver lawyers\nJay Clark, John Banks and\nRichard Covell, co-authors\nof \"Headhunter.\" (R)\n\u00a9WHEEL OF FORTUNE\n\u00a9  \u00a9  ENTERTAINMENT\nTONIGHT Lucille Ball talks\nabout her new TV series.\n\u00a9    LORNE   GREENE'S\nNEW   WILDERNESS   The\nprimitive   life-forms   that\nhave evolved to live in one\nof Africa's most forbidding\nhabitats, the sand dunes of\nNamibia, are studied. (R)\n\u00a9 NEWLYWED GAME\nQ  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS The cobra is\nonly one of a wide range of\nexotic snakes that inhabit\nthe Indian subcontinent.\n\u00a9 STAR TREK Capt. Kirk\nand three crew members\nare   beamed   to   another\nstarship   in   another  universe while their counterparts board the Enterprise.\n\u00a9KREIGHOFF\n\u00a9JACKPOT\n\u00a9NOUVELLES\n7:30\n\u00a9   TED KNIGHT SHOW\n. Mrs. Stinson announces retirement plans.\nO\u00a9 JEOPARDY\n\u00a9EVENING\n\u00a9 WEBSTER Katherine\ncatches George peeking at\none of his birthday gifts.\n(R)g\n\u00a9PRICE IS RIGHT\n\u00a9 LORNE GREENE'S\nNEW WILDERNESS The\nprimitive life-forms that\nhave evolved to live in one\nof Africa's most forbidding\nhabitats, the sand dunes of\nNamibia, are studied. (R)\n_\nWORLD OF SURVIVAL\n7:36\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n6:00\n\u00a9 THIS LAND A photographic journey beneath\nthe waters of Placentia\nBay, exploring Its aquatic\nplant and animal life, and\nthe shipwrecked remains\nof the largest schooner\never built in Newfoundland.\n. WHO'S THE BOSS?\nAngela fears her home-\ncooked meal may have\npoisoned Tony. (R) g\n\u00a9MOVIE \u2022\u2022\"My Secret\nAngel\" (1983, Comedy)\nDick Van Dyke, Sid Caesar. A bank executive and\na former bank guard hatch\na scheme to reward do-\ngooders with funds lifted\nfrom Inactive accounts.\nOriginally aired as \"Found\nMoney.\" (R) g\n\u00a9 RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT\nOR NOTI A French festival\nwhere villagers dress up\nas bears; an unusual\nNepalese wedding ceremony; a deaf and blind\nwoman who's also a classical pianist. (R) \u25a1\n\u00a9SIMON ft 8IMON Downtown Brown's cousin helps\nthe Simons turn the tables\non an unethical wealthy client. (R)\n\u00a9 BILLY GRAHAM\nCRUSADEg\n\u00a9 NOVA An examination\nof the contributions of Drs.\nHoward Florey and Ernest\nChain in penicillin's development as a wonder drug.\nw>g\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkk% \"Heller\nSkelter\" (1975, Drama)\n(Part 2 of 2) Steve Rails-\nback, George DiCenzo. A\nsmall band of drug-crazed\nhippies led by Charles\nManson commits a series\nof bizarre thrill-killings In\nthe Hollywood hills.\n\u00a9 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC James Whitmore\nnarrates this profile of the\npeople who make their\nlivelihood from the waters\nof Chesapeake Bay. In\natereo. (R) g\n\u00a9 HOWARD HUGHES A\nCage de 18ans, Howard\nHughes decide d'etre premier dans I'industrie automobile, seronautique et\ncinematographique. Avec:\nTommy Lee Jones, Lee\nPurcell. (2e de 2)\n_ 6:30\nO W GROWING PAINS\nWhile the rest of the family\nis visiting grandpa, Mike's\nleft in charge of the house.\n(R)g\n9:00\n8  REMINGTON STEELE\nRemington is opposed to\nproviding  security  for a\npriceless painting because\nof the curse ii carries. (R)\nO \u00a9 MOONLIGHTING A\ncon artist, trying to evade\na bunco Investigator, inadvertently saves the life of a\npolitician. (R) g\n\u00a9 \u00a9 LOUISIANA Based\non Maurice Denuziera's trilogy of novels chronicling\nlife in pre-Civll War Louisiana. An impoverished gentlewoman, scheming to regain statue and fortune,\nplans a campaign of conquest that includes marrying the owner of Louisiana's largest plantation.\nStars Margot Kidder, Ian\nCharleson and Lloyd\nBochner. (Part 3 of 3)\n\u00a9 CBS NEW3 SPECIAL\nAn in-depth look at the\ndrug crisis in America includes visits to drug-treatment centers, conversations with parents of\nchildren who have become'\naddicts, and reports on\ndrugs in sports. Dan\nRather narrates.\n\u00a9 COMRADES Life on a\nSoviet collective farm is\nobserved in this profile of\nthe Kulinlch family, g\n\u00a9ANCIENT LIVES\n10:00\nI NATIONAL \/ JOURNAL\nm\nSPENSER: FOR HIRE A\nrelationship develops between Spenser and a former Bolshoi Ballet dancer.\n(R)g\n\u00a91988\n\u00a9 AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE MOVIE FESTIVAL\n\"The Ballad of Gregorio\nCortez\" Baood on historian\nAmerico Parades' book,\n\"With His Pistol in His\nHand: A Border Ballad and\niis Hero.\" Edward James\nOlmos stars in this 1982\ndrama about a Mexican-\nAmerican cowhand whose\nmurder of a Texas sheriff in\nself-defense precipitates a\nwidely publicized manhunt.\n(R>g\n\u00a9 HONEYMOONERS The\nKramdens and the Notions\ndiscover that television, instead of killing conversation, stimulates it.\n\u00a9 LANDSCAPES\n\u00a9EQUALIZER\n\u00a9LE POINT\n10:30\n\u00a9FAWLTY TOWERS\n\u00a9    ENERGY:   SEARCH\nFOR AN ANSWER\n10:35\n\u00a9 CINEMA kk\\b \"L'Am-\nericain\" (1969, Drame)\nJean-Louis Trintignant,\nFrancoise Fabian. Apres\navoir passe 15 ans en Am-\nerique, un homme retourne\nchez lui et recherche ses\ncompagnons d'adoles-\ncence.\n11:00\n0\u00a9@\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9   Q   CTV  NATIONAL\nNEWSg\n\u00a9   BENNY  HILL   Benny\ndoes a comedie take-off\non \"Bonnie and Clyde.\"\n\u00a9SPORTS PAGE\n11:20\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n11:30\nQ    MAUDE   A   chance\nmeeting with her ex-husband sparks an old flame\nfor Vivian. (R)\n\u00a9NIGHTLINE\n\u00a9 TONIGHT Host: Johnny\nCarson. Scheduled: singer\nTony Bennett. In stereo.\nO \u00a9 U.S. OPEN TENNIS\nKiuHLiGHTS\n\u00a9NEWS\n12:00\nS MOVIE \u2022\u2022* \"The Adventures Of Mark Twain\"\n(1944, Biography) Fredric\nMarch, Alexis Smith. A biographical sketch reveals\nthe genius of America's\nfamed author and humorist.\n(R)\n\u00a9THE AVENGERS\n\u00a9 SIMON ft SIMON The\nSimons comb the streets\nof Paris In search of their\nmother and her fiance\n(Jean-Pierre Aumont). (R)\nO MACNEIL \/ LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE A\nguerilla leader succeeds In\noverthrowing the regime of\nthe corrupt government of\nhis country.\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nSeptember 1985: comedian Richard Lewis, Jack\nHanna of the Columbus\n(Ohio) Zoo and \"Late\nNight's\" Chris Elliott make\nappearances. In atereo.\n(R)\n12:06\n\u00a9 MOVIE kkM \"The\nBarretts Of Wimpole\nStreet\" (1956, Drama)\nJennifer Jones, John Giel-\ngud. The love of Elizabeth\nBarrett and Robert Browning transcends ill health\nand her tyrannical father.\n0 MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"Night Of\nThe Juggler\" (1980,\nSuspense) James Brolin,\nCliff Gorman. A former police officer launches a desperate search through the\nstreets of New York City\nfor his daughter, who was\nkidnapped by a psychopathic criminal.\n12:30\nQ LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nSeptember 1985: comedian Richard Lewis, Jack\nHanna of the Columbus\n(Ohio) Zoo and \"Late\nNight's\" Chris Elliott make\nappearances. In atereo.\n(R)\n\u00a9 MOVIE *** \"Beneath The Planet Of The\nApes\" (1970, Science-Fiction) James Franciacus,\nKim Hunter. While searching for a fellow astronaut, a\nman discovers a mutant underground society which\nworships the atomic bomb.\n1:00\n\u00a9HEADLINE CHASERS\n\u00a9ONE DAY AT A TIME\n1:30\nO LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\n\u00a9NEWS\n2:00\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n8 ANIMAL EXPRESS\n2:05\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"Gun-\nfighters Of Case Grande\"\n(1965, Western) Alex Nicol, Dick Bentley. A big-\ntime cattle rustler is\nthwarted in his crooked\nschemes by fellow ranch-\n\u00a9rs\n\u00a9LOU GRANT\n2:30\n\u00a9MORE REAL PEOPLE\n\u00a9 NIGHTWATCH\n\u00a9 BIG VALLEY A group of\nIrish  immigrants  tries  to\nseiiia on Berkley land not\nknowing that it was sold to\nthem Illegally.\n3:06\n\u00a9MATT HOUSTON\n3:30\n___ mtn mbwr\n1986\nRoger Mudd and Connie\nChung are the co-anchors of\nNBC's \"1986,\" airing TUESDAY, SEPT. 2.\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\n\u00a9 igse Compulog\nunited optical\nCOMPARE OUR PRICES\nSOCIALS\n_     CHILOfiSfl'S\nm        CLASSES   from \u00a94M\nALL OTHCfi FSAMCS 25% OFF\nLab on Premises\nMMtfMrMr Shopping Cents.\nNo. 16-319.0 South Fraser Way\n859-3993\n-rr\n%   FRIDAY &\n__ A; *\u2022\n^SATURDAY\nNITE OWL BINGO\nALL OUR REGULAR\nGAMES PLUS SPECIALS.\nDoors open al. 10 00\nGames start .it 1.1:00\nSUNDAY\nAFTERNOON\nREGULAR GAMES\nPLUS SPECIALS\nDoors open at 12:00\nBonanza at 12:45\n\u00bb?'\nHAPPY SOTH BIRTHDAY\nCAM & JEAN ROSS\nLove from Diane, Shannon, Sheryl. 34-1\nthe _______________ mWvmt fceea ggsateri    5\n34252 MARSHALL\n852-6660\nNext to the\nRCMP Building\nUMt\/Non-imoklng (tetlon\n\\\/\n i\n22\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n*\n\u25a0\n_\nu\nWEDNESDAY  EVENING\nSEPTEMBER 3.1888\ncopyright * teas T.V: Dot., he.\nDAYTIME SPECIAL\n1:00\n\u00a9 ALIENS, DRAGONS,\nMONSTERS & ME A profile\nof Ray Harryhausen includes interviews with the\nspecial-effects wizard of\nfantasy films and some of\nhis associates, along with\nclips from several films including \"Clash of the Titans.\"\nDAYTIME   CHILDREN'S\nSHOW\n10:00\n\u00a9   READING   RAINBOW\nLeVar Burton reads about\na kindergartner and her father who trade places in\n\"Bea and Mr. Jones.\" (R)\n9\nDAYTIME MOVIE\n10:00\n\u00a9 **',. \"My Man Godfrey\" (1957, Comedy) June\nAllyson, David Niven. A\nbum who is given a job as\na butler in a society woman's house turns out to be\n' a member of Austrian royalty.\nEVENING\n6:00\nQ \u00a9 Q NEWS\n\u00a9ABCNEWSg\n. \u00a9NBCNEWS\n\u00a9 CBS NEWS\n\u00a9  MACNEIL  \/  LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n:\u00a9 M'A'S'H Hawkeye\nand Trapper help one soldier to join his pregnant\nwife and try to stop another from marrying a business girl.\n\u00a9 THE NOVEL \/ MEDIEVAL THEATRE\n\u00a9SCTV\n\u00a9 UNEHISTOIRE DE LA\nMEDECINE\n6:30\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n\u00a9TOP STORY\n\u00a9TAXI\n\u00a9PROFILES OF NATURE\n7:00\nQ BASEBALL Los Angeles Dodgers at Montreal\nExpos(Taped)\n\u00a9WHEEL OF FORTUNE\n\u00a9 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Interview with child\nactress Drew Barrymore.\n\u00a9 GIMME A BREAKI Nell\nand Addy suspect that a\nlocal employer is a racist.\n(R)\n\u00a9 NEWLYWED GAME\n\u00a9 BASEBALL Cleveland\nIndians   at  Toronto  Blue\nJays(Taped)\nQ  WILD, WILD WORLD\nOF ANIMALS\n\u00a9 STAR TREK The landing party of the Enterprise\nis exposed to a atrange\ndisease that ages people\nat an incredible rate.\n\u00a9 CORDILLERA EXPEDITION\n\u00a9JACKPOT\n\u00a9     BASEBALL     Les\nDodgers de Los Angeles\naffrontent  les  Expos  de\nMontreal (En direct)\n7:30\n\u00a9\u00a9JEOPARDY\n\u00a9EVENING\n\u00a9DIFF'RENT STROKES\n\u00a9 HUSKY PRE-SEASON\n\u00a9WORLD OF SURVIVAL\n8:00\n\u00a9FAST TRACK KIDS\n\u00a9 HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN\nThe father of a deceased\nVietnam MIA tries to got\nBARBARA\nWALTERS SPECIAL\nEmmy nominee Cybill Shepherd is one of three personalities (Barbara Streisand and\nCher are the others) Interviewed by Barbara Walters\non \"The Barbara Walters\nSummer Special,\" to air\nWEDNESDAY, SEPT. 3 on\nABC, v\nCHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME\n\u00a9 1988 Compulog\neo.(R)g\n\u00a9HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN\n\u00a9 CBS NEWS SPECIAL\n\"One River, One Country:\nThe U.S.-Mexico Border\"\nBill Moyers examines the\nissues of immigration and\nthe economy by talking\nwith people who live and\nwork along the U.S.-Mexico border.\nQ EXPO EXPERIENCE\nMajor pavilions and\nhighlights of the Vanvouver\nWorld's Fair are featured\nalong with viewers tips on\nhow to make the most of\ntheir visit.\n\u00a9 MOVIE *** \"Hstaril\"\n(1962, Adventure) John\nWayne, Hardy Kruger. Professional hunters In East\nAfrica capture wild animals\nto be transported to zoos.\n\u00a9 THE BRAIN A look at\nresearch on dreaming, multiple personalities, Alzheimer's disease, artificial intelligence and the\neffects of hallucinogens on\nthe brain, p\n\u00a9 BARBARA WALTERS\nSPECIAL Rebroadca8ts of\ninterviews with Cher, Cybill\nShepherd and. Barbra\nStreisand. (R) g\n9:00\n\u00a9 BARBARA WALTERS\nSPECIAL Rebroadcasts of\ninterviews with Cher, Cybill\nShepherd and Barbra\nStreisand. (R) g\n8 GIMME A BREAKI.Nell\nand Addy suspect that a\nlocal employer is a racist.\nIn stereo. (R)\nQ MOVIE \u2022\u2022 \"The Demon Murder Case\" (1983,\nHorror) Kevin Bacon, Eddie\nAlbert. A young boy exhibits signs of demonic possession despite the aid of\na demonologist, a psychic\nand a Catholic priest.\n\u00a9 \u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022_\n\"Nothing Personal\" (1980,\nComedy) Donald Sutherland, Suzanne Somers. A\npretty lawyer helps a dedicated conservationist in\nhis \"Save the Seals\" campaign.      \/\n\u00a9 CANYON CONSORT A\nfilmed record of thp Paul\nWinter Consort's three\nColorado River rafting expeditions undertaken as a\nmeans of musically interpreting the Grand Canyon.\nAdditional footage filmed in\nNew York City's Cathedral\nof St. John the Divine. In\nstereo.\n\u00a9REALITIES\n8:30\n\u00a9 YOU AGAIN? Henry's\nneighbor suspects Matt'*\ninvolved in a rash of thefts.\n\u00a9 FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DE JAZZ DE MONTREAL\n10:00\nQ NATIONAL \/ JOURNAL\nABC NEWS CLOSEUP\n\"At a Loss for Words: Illiterate in America\" An examination of illiteracy in\nthe workplace and its effect on America's ability to\ncompete in world markets.\nPeter Jennings reports, g\n8 ST. ELSEWHERE A\ntenement house turned\nover to St: Eligius Hospital\nis a center for drug-selling\nactivity. (R)\n\u00a9HOTEL\nQ WOMEN OF SUMMER\nThe influence and achievements of Bryn Mawr College's Summer School for\nWomen Workers, an experimental educational program that made classroom\nuse of blue-collar workers'\npersonal experiences, Is\nrecoiled through archival\nfilm footage, photographs\nand interviews with participants in a 50-year reunion.\na\n\u00a9 HUMAN RACE\n\u00a9LETELEJOURNALg\n.10:20\n\u00a9 LE POINT\n11:00\n\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\nQ   \u00a9   CTV  NATIONAL\nNEWSg\n\u00a9 MOVIEMAKERS An interview with Ring Lardner\nJr. who was one of the Hollywood Ten, a group of Hollywood writers and directors blacklisted in the\nMcCarthy era.\n\u00ae BENNY HILL Benny is a\nhenpecked husband with\nan eye for a pretty girl.\n\u00a9SPORTS PAGE\n\u00a9 CINEMA \"Circuito\nChiuso\" (1978, Drame)\nFlavio Bucci, Aurore\nClement.Pendant la projection d'un western italien,\ndeux crimes sont commis.\n11:20\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n11:30\n\u00a9 MAUDE Maude discovers that Mra. Naugatuck\nhas taken everyone for a\nride. (R)\n\u00a9MGHTLINE\n\u00a9 TONIGHT Host: Johnny\nCarson. Scheduled: singer-\nguitarist George Benson. In\nstereo.\n\u00a9 \u00a9 U.S. OPEN TENNIS\nHIGHLIGHTS\n\u00a9  MACNEIL \/ LEHRER\nNEWSHOUR\n\u00a9NEWS\n12:00\nMOVIE k kk \"Virginia\n2:30\n\u00a9 NIGHTWATCH\n\u00a9 BIG VALLEY Nick accuses Heath of making advances   toward   hia   new\nfiancee.\nS'OS\n\u00a9MATT HOUSTON\n3:30\n\u00a9 CNN NEWS\nMovie Ratings\nOutstanding. . .  kkkk\nExcellent \u2022*\u2022).\nVery Good ....   kkk\nGood \u2022\u2022!_\nNotBad \u2022\u2022\nFair *tt\nPoor k\nroi Flynn, Miriam Hopkins.\nSpies from the North and\nthe South attempt to outwit\neach other and obtain a\nquantity of gold being held\nin Virginia City. (R)\n\u00a9 THE AVENGERS\n\u00a9 MOVIE \u2022* \"Miss All-\nAmerican Beauty\" (1982,\nDrama) Diane Lane, Cloris\nLeschman. A beauty contest winner finds personal\nrelationships strained and\ncareer plans threatened by\nthe demands of living up to\nthe ideals of her title. (R)\n\u00a9 TWILIGHT ZONE Jesse\nCardiff's ambition is to be\nthe best pool shark on Chicago's Randolph Street.\n\u00a9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nAugust 1985: singer James\nBrown and Don (Father\nGuido Sarducci) Novello\nmake., appearances. In\nstereo. (R)\n12:06\n\u00a9 MOVIE kk% \"Ask Any\nGirl\" (1959, Comedy) Shirley MacLaine, David Niven.\nJob and husband-hunting\noccupy the time of a girl\nnewly arrived in New York\nCity.\n__ MOVIE kkVi \"The Octagon\" (1980, Adventure)\nChuck Norris, Lee Van\nCleef. A wealthy young\nwoman hires a retired martial arts champion to protect her from terrorists\ntrained by the mysterious\nNinja cult.\n12:30\nQ LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN From\nAugust 1985: singer James\nBrown and Don (Father\nGuido Sarducci) Novello\nmake appearances. In\nstereo. (R)\n\u00a9 MOVIE *\u2022\u2022 \"Pendulum\" (1969, Drama)\nGeorge Peppard, Jean\nSeberg. A police captain\ndecides to defend himself\nafter his lawyer is unable\nto prove he didn't kill his\nwife and her lover.\n1:00\n\u00a9 HEADLINE CHASERS\n\u00a9ONE DAY AT A TIME\n1:30\n\u00a9 LIFESTYLES OF THE\nRICH AND FAMOUS (R)\nONEWS\n2:00\n\u00a9\u00a9NEWS\n2*06\n\u00a9 MOVIE k-kkVi \"High\nSociety\" 0856, Musicsl)\nBing Crosby, Grace Kelly.\nThe arrival of a photographer and a reporter gives a\nbride-to-be second\nthoughts about her upcoming society niarriaq\u00abi4H%t_\nCanada hits\nbig in Japan\nliquor market\n1 LANGLEY - Most Canadians un-\ndoubtably have never heard of, let\nalone tasted, Shochu: one of\nJapan's most popular alcoholic\nbeverages. Yet, 600,000 bottles of\nthis drink - distilled from rice,\npotatoes or grain - were sold to\nJapan in 1985 by Potter Distillers\nof Langley and McGuinness of\nToronto.\nEXCELLENT^EtfT^\nSTILL AVAILABLE\n\u2022CANADIAN PREMIERE\n\u2022ORIGINAL BROADWAY\nCAST\n\u20221985's HOTTEST       d\u00a3&i\nTICKET\n\u202210 SELLOUT\nWEEKS\nIN L.A.\n>nS&\u00bbo9\u00b0Ft*rr_'\n& DIRECTED\nBY CLAUDIO SEGOVIA\nAND HECTOR OREZZOLI\n8 PERFORMANCES\nONLY\nSEPT. 9 thru 14\nQUEEN ELIZABETH\nTHEATRE\n8 P.M. $35.00 $29.00 $22.00\nMATINEE PERFORMANCES\n2 P.M. $27.50 $22.50 $17.50\nTICKETS AT V.T.C\/C.B.O. AND\nALL USUAL OUTLETS. CHARGE BY\nPHONE m INFO - 2804444.\nTELEPHONE CHARGE EXTRA\nIntroducing\n\"JASON\"\nA  \"picture\nperfect\" baby |L\u2122\nboy so Wi\nexquisitely lifelike\nyou can almost\nsee the twinkle     ^\nin his blue eyes.\nIf\n\u2022 Meticulously sculptural porcelain head, arms,\nand legs\u2014\"Jason\" sets'a new standard in the\nart of doll making\n\u25a0 Tlte first issue in a collection of \"picture-\nperfect\" babies\n\u25a0 Hand-finished to a velvet-smooth bisque finish\n\u25a0 HtUtd-fXiititcd with high-quality pigments in\nsoft, realistic fleshtones\n*f land-tailored, single-stitched costume\n\u25a0 .Nif.tiu.iM.fi\/ HH..ifm.f with matching certificate\nof authenticity\n\u25a0 Edition strictly limited to year of issue\n\u25a0 \"lawn\" is It inches Iu$lt\n\"fason\" is only $72.00\nAvailable now.\nIS\n\/*I8M <.\nf*-E_...M( ',\nNnowlcs\n(lEE'SJADE andopals.\n3563-232nd Street, Langley\nVISA\n534-2736\n^_U!4-ii^_^^]&,U_U4^\u00ab?\n&\n\u00bbi,\n . :\t\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1966\n\"Our Name Is Our Promise To You\"\nSyperValy\nregular\nground beef\n\u202210 lb. pkg. or more\nkg 1.96\nB.C. Grown. \u2022Canada no. 1 gracie.\nhead lettuce\neach\n3____\nc\nB.C. grown \u2022 Canada no. 1 grade\nhot house tomatoes\n$X&       kg 1.30\ntb.\n5A\n9\nMJB \u2022regular or drip\nground\ncoffee\n369g\/13 oz. tin\n0\n3.49\nKraft\nmacaroni &\ncheese dinner\n225g pkg\n1\nDelsey ^assorted colours\nB _ _\nbath room\ntissue\n\u20222 ply 4 roll pkg\n99\nHi Dri *assorted colours\npaper towels\n2 roll pkg.\n99\nSuper Valu\nhamburger or\nhot dog buns     m w^\ni2spkq. km   WW\nno name \u2022 all flavours\nice cream\n4 l.tub\n3.99\nsFSuoerValu\n\"Our Name Is Our Promise\"\nWe reserve the right\nto limit sales to.\nretail quantities.\nPrices effective\ntill Sunday,\nAug. 31\/86.\nALDERGROVE CENTRE\nMALL ONLY\nOPEN SUNDAY^1\u2122\n10     5\n\u25a0  W a.m.to %_r p.m.\n 24\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nPNE enjoyed by 4-H club\n\u25a0\\<^\n'\u25a0\u00a5\nby SHANNON TRACY\nALDERGROVE- Otter's 4-H team\nleft on Thursday morning, August\n20, heading for the PNE. Not one\nof us knew what we were heading\nfor, but aU were glad we could go.\nThe team consisting of seven\nmembers and their horses were,\nDenise Allen and her horse\nYanco's Misty, Sonya Evans with\nStrawberry Hill (Alice), Lori Rip-\npen with Joker, Kimberly Sauder\nwith Ride of Promise (Duke),\nCindy Mortimer with Reed's Gallant Al (Calypso), and Shannon\nTracy with Jim Dandy (Jimmy).\nWe arrived at 9:20 a.m. and put\nup decorations over our stall doors\nand tack rooms. When we\nfinished we got out T-shirts for\nCalley Blamire. They were beautiful, with our horses painted on the\nfront and Otter 4-H Horse Club on\nthe back. We thank her a lot for\ndoing these for us. We then went\nto our dorms to get our bed\nnumbers and then the rest of the\nafternoon was ours.\nFYiday getting up at 5 a.m. was\nnot quite our idea of fun, but we\nhad to have our stalls done by at\nleast 6 to get good riding time in\nbecause we were only allowed\nuntil 8 a.m. to ride. Western\nclasses were today at 3 p.m. and\nthe fun parade was at 1. This was\njust the eliminations. For the\nparade the clubs had to make up to\nfall in, with the theme of Flashback 86. We flashbacked to the\ncavemen and did the Hintstones.\nWe made it to the finals which\nwere on Saturday night. Only\nthree people rode western from\nour club, they were Cindy Mortimer, Glynis Heather and Shannon\nTYacy. Ihey placed as follows:\nMortimer, stock seat, third row,\nHeather third row, and Tracy,\nthird row. They did not place in\nwestern pleasure.\nSaturday we had no showing, so\nthis gave us a chance to either\nbathe our horses for the next day,\ngo on the rides at the midway, or\ncatch up on some sleep. Kim\nSauder and Glynis Heather did\nhave one class which was horse\nfitting and they placed third out of\nsixteen other riders. At 8 p.m. we\nhad the Flintstones ready again for\nthe fun parade. We placed eight\nout of 12 other clubs. Then we\nhad a 4-H dance from 10:30 to\n12:30 p.m., and this was one of the\nbest dances.\nSunday was the English showing\nat 3 p.m. and showmanship at 9\na.m. Showmanship class positions\ntaken were; Cindy Mortimer, second in the first row and on to the\nchampionships, Glynis Heather,\nsecond row, Kim Sauder, second\nrow, Lori Rippen, second row,\nSonya Evans, second row, Denise\nAllen, first row, and Shannon\nTracy who tied second in row and\non to the championships.\nMortimer and Tracy made it to\nthe championship class but did not\nplace. The afternoon came along\nquickly and in no time at all it was\n3oclock. The English started with\nequitation. Cindy Mortimer\nplaced second in first row, mto\nthe     championships^'   Glynis\nHeather, first row, Lori Rippen,\nfirst row, Kim Sauder, third row,\nDenise Allen, second row, Shannon Tracy, third row. English\npleasure placings were Cindy Mortimer, sixth, Glynis Heather,\nfourth, Lori Rippin, nothing, Kim\nSauder, nothing, Denise Allen,\nnothing, Sonya Evans, nothing and\nShannon Tracy, ninth.\nOur club got second in hus\nbandry. The championship English equitation class had Cindy\nMortimer and Denise Allen in it\nand they both showed well, but\nneither got champion or reserve\nchampion.\nAfter the four days of excitement it was time to go home.\nEveryone will remember this PNE\nand can hardly wait until next\nyear.\nWatch the details when\ndoing home canning\nIf you've got the idea that home\ncanning is a simple procedure involving a number of routine steps,\nthink again.\nR's the little details one easily\nforgets that are the key to success,\nsays Suzanne Gilbert, a laboratory\ntechnician in Agriculture Canada's\nfood advisory division in Ottawa.\n\"At every stage in the canning\nprocess, whether in the selection of\nequipment, food preparation,\nprocessing and cooling, you must\ntake numerous precautions if you\nare to be successful,\" Gilbert says.\n\"And the equipment and\ntechniques you use depend on the\nfood you want to can.\"\nThe boiling water bath and\npressure canner are the two basic\ntools of canning, she says, '\"hie\npressure canner is used for low-acid\nfoods, such as vegetables, and the\nboiling water bath for fruit and\ntomatoes.\"\nFollow the manufacturer's instructions to the letter when using\nthe pressure canner, she adds.\n\"When using the boiling water\nbath, the main thing to remember is\nthat the water should always cover\nthe jars. This will ensure uniform\nprocessing of food in jars and\nmaintain proper sealing. If there is\ninsufficient pressure on the lids,\nliquid may leak out.\"\nGilbert says that jar handling is\nespecially important. The jars must\nbe clean, and new rubber rings or\nsnap lids must be used each time.\nCHANGE BANDS\nChange screw bands occasionally,\nsince they stretch, preventing\nsealing. Also, heat jars before you\nfill them so excessive temperature\ncontrasts do not occur when the hot\nfood contacts them, she says.\nPacking the product in jars is also\nan important step.\nWhen packing, you must -completely cover the food with liquid and\nremove all air bubbles by running a\nclean spatula round the inside and\ndown the centre of the jar.\nTo measure headspace in each\njar, Gilbert suggests the following\ntrick:\n\"Each food requires a specific\nheadspace. In the case of peaches,\nfor example, it is two centimetres.\nTo fill a jar to the proper level, use a\ntoothpick on which you have marked\nthe measurement you need. This will\n1st you go faster.\"\nTo ensure proper sealing, Gilbert\nrecommends you carefully wipe the\nrim with a clean cloth. Then wash\nthe lid well and place it on the jar.\n\"When using metal lids edged with\nsealing compound, place the lid on\nthe jar rim,\" she says. \"Put your\nfinger in the centre of the lid. If you\nare able to move the lid, it is a sure\nsign that the jar will not seal. The\nreason is probably because there are\nfood particles on the rim. If the lid\ndoes not move, then you can screw\non the band.\"\nGilbert says there are a host of\nother details to observe in home\ncanning.\nFor complete details on home\npreserving, write for the free\nbooklet Canning Canadian Fruits\nand Vegetables\u2014Publication 15B0E\n\u2014 to Food Advisory Division,\nAgriculture Canada, Ottawa K1A\n0C5.\t\nNEW FALL HOURS\nmmn\\ mmm\nChews\n&\nChunks t\n20 kg. reg. 30\" *25\nI\n97&$i\u00b0\u00b0o_f\ncoupon\nHowerann Fertilizer\nVe9e,ab,e   mm iwm\n$747 $-|247\n10 kg.\nI\n(.urragaieu nasuu\nLawn Edging $4 97\n4\" x 20 ft. reg. 2* |\n\" ''-s|ilBS___PHR\nParmak Battery Operated \"flMM&l\nFencer\nreg. 89*\nClearance at\n55\n97\nw _.___ :\n3111 272nd St., Aldergrove\n856-2811\nBuckerfields\nthe growing people\nm\nCome on down...\nCALENDAR OF EVENTS\nSENIORS   NIGHT  IN   THE MALL\nTHURS. AUG. 28th, 6 - 9 p.m.\nSeniors night Is a new promotion In the Aldergrove\nMall and will be held on the LAST THURSDAY OF\nEACH MONTH. The Mall stores will have specials for\nall of our valued Senior Shoppers.\nTHE HAT RACK & WESTERN STUFF\nSEPT. 2 - 6th, MALL HOURS\nJust In time for Western Days Dinner and dance and\nthe Fall Fair you can find the decorated Hats, Arm\nBands and other novelties In the kiosk across from the\nSaan store.\nSKATEBOARD DEMO\nWatch for a notice In C.J. Sports In the Mall (across\nfrom Jay's Burgers; for Date and Time.\nRABBIT SHOW\nSAT. SEPT. 6th, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.\"\nThe Adanac Rabbit Club Is holding a Judged Rabbit\nShow In the Mall. There will be rabbits from the\nUnited States and Canada entered In this show. Bring\nall of the family down to see these unusual RABBITS.\nWESTERN DAYS DINNER AND DANCE\nSAT. SEPT. 6th, 8 P.M. - 2 A.M.\nRight here In the Mall HOME BREW will help us wind\nup the week with the Malls Annual Dinner and Dance.\nBar opens at 8 p.m., Dancing 9 p.m.-2 a.m. and a\nHOT MEAL at 11 p.m., just in time for all those tired,\nhungry folks from the FALL FAIR to join us.\nGET-YOUR  TICKETS  IN   ANY  OF  THE  MALL   STORES. $10:00 PER PERSON\nir.isiT nui|. .urcripw\nm\n-Witt\n856-3375\nn\n n-ft^.w^^-wraj\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n25\nClassifieds 856-8303\/5212\n1. Announcements\n1. Announcements\n1. Announcements\n2. Personals\n10. Bus. Serv. Misc.\n9\nBUSINESS\nINFORMATION\nCENTRE\nNEED BUSINESS INFORMATION?\nCall the CHAMBER OF COMMERCE\nBusiness  Information  Office.   We\nhave information, booklets and brochures on most aspects of business\nfrom Small Business Loans to\nManufacturing Opportunities.\nCall 856-8383 or drop in at\n3089 - 272 Street, Aldergrove\n(Aldergrove Star Office)\n15-95844-tf\nThe Valley Therapeutic Equestrian Assoc,\nneeds VOLUNTEERS. If you can give 1 hr. a\nday or week or even a month, It would be\ngreatly appreciated. There are various areas\nfrom office work to working directly with\nhorses & riders. The choice Is yours. For\ninfo, call 888-1262.  30-tf.\nNew to the area or know anyone that Is?\nPlease phone Royal Welcome, Cully Penzer,\n856-2620. 21-tf\nOld Time dances, Aldergrove OAP hall,\n273rd St., every Saturday, 8 p.m. 37-tf\nMontessori Preschool opening In Aldergrove\narea. A.M.I, qualified teacher. Now accep-\ning registration for 3, 4 & 5 year olds.\nLimited enrollment. Call 531-2935.        25-tf\nTroubled? For counselling services call\n534-7921. Langley Family Services, 5339 -\n207 St., Langley, B.C.  6-4868-tf\nLions Bingo, every Monday at Elks, hall,\nAldergrove. Early birds 7:00, regular bingo\n8:00. Cash prizes & door prizes. 44-tf\nLaLeche League of Aldergrove. Mothers who\nwish to breast feed their babies will find\nencouragement & Info, at the Aldergrove\nLaLeche League. The next meeting is\nTuesday, August 12 at 7:30 p.m., 1263 - 244\nSt. Nursing babies welcome. Info, call\nJennifer B56-9250, or Colleen 534J496. 33-4\nAnyone wishing to visit Anna Foreman, she\nis living at Fellbum Hospital, 6050 East\nHastings, Burnaby. 33-4\nScience ot Mind, Sundays, 7:30 p.m.,\nMasonic Hall, 33860 Pine St., Abbotsford.\n\"Open your mind lo the truth wihln.\"\n853-2353, 534-2470,888-5667. 18-tf\nHall for rent: Suitable for Ige. or small\nmeetings, weddings, socials or banquet\nfacilities. Catering & refreshment service\navail. Phone hall manager, Aldergrove Elks\nHall, 856-3566,856-8948. 28-tf\nLangley Faith Fellowship. Are you considering a Christian education for your child?\nFaith Fellowship, commencing our 6th year\nof operation, emphasizes Bible principles\nand Individual attention to each student. For '\nmore info, please call Mrs. McLeod,\n888-1479.  344\nSept. 2. Bingo, 7:00 p.m. at Legion hall.\nMore Info. 8564057. 34-tf\nPeter Rabbit Preschool. Open house, Sat.\nAugust 30, 10-1. 26531-28 Ave., Aid.\n856-9014. 35-1\nALDERGROVE FOOD BANK\nPlease send donations to:\n2623-272 St., Box 428,\nAldergrove, B.C. V0X1A0\n  51-tf\nClassified Directory\n21. Accounting-Bookkeeping\n11. Lessons\n1. Announcements\n41. Livestock\n34. Appliances\n7. Lost & Found\n14. Asphalt\/Concrete\n52. Machinery-Equipment\n22. Auction\n42. Meat-Produce\n53. Auto. Supplies\n32. Miscellaneous for Saie\n6. Births\n38. Miscellaneous Wanted\n51. Boats\n49. Mobile Homes\n15. Brickwork\n54. Motorcycles\n18. Building-Construction\n36. Music                                            !\n26. Building Supplies\n18B. Painting\n47. Business Opportunities\n2. Personals\n10. Business Services Misc.\n39. Pets\n5. Cards of Thanks\n17, Plumbing\n55. Cars\n40. Poultry\n46. Condos-Apartments\n20. Professional Services Misc.\n19. Electrical\n44. Property for Sale\n4. Engagements-Weddings\n48. Property Wanted\n25. Fuel\n29. Rentals\n33. Furniture\n30. Shared Accommodation\n43. Garage Sales\n27. Situations Wanted\n16. Gravel Sales\n18A. Stucco\/Drywall\n24. Hay Sales\n37. Swap\n23. Topsoil-Manure\n13. TractorWork\n35. Home Entertainment\n45. Homes for Sale\n3. In Memorium\n50. Trailers-R.V.s\n28. Jobs Available\n12. Landscaping-Nursery\n56. Trucks\n8. Legals\n31. Wanted to Rent\nAdvertiser\nPhone  your  ad   to:   856-8303   or\n856-5212.\nAgreement\nCentral Fraser Valley Star, Box 220,\nAldergrove, B.C. VOX 1A0.\nIt is aqreed by any advertiser reques\nting space Ihat liability of the Central\nClassified Advertising Rates\nFraser Valley Star in event of failure\nper August 1, 1982\nto publish an advertisement or  in\nWeekly rate: first 20 words - $2.95\nevent that errors occur in publishing\nminimum charge; 12 cents per word\nol an advertisement, shall be limited\nlor each additional word. Box Num-\nto the amount paid by the advertiser\n'   bers - $2.25 extra.\nfor that   portion  of  the  advertising\nDeadlines  for  classified  ads  are\nspace occupied  by  incorrect space\n2:00 p.m. Monday and for Too Late\noccupied by incorrect item only, and\nto Classify 12:00'noon Tuesday.\nthat there shall be no liability in any\nThe classified telephone numbers\nevent beyond amound paid for such\nare 856-8303 or 856-5212.\nadvertisement.  No responsibility  is\naccepted   by   the   newspaper  when\nOFFICE HOURS\ncopy is not submitted or verified in\nOffice hours for The Star are 9 a.m.\nwriting.\nto 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.\n2. Personals\nDo you have a drinking problem? If so, and\nyou wish to stop, Alcoholics Anonymous can\nassist you. Write to Box 782, Aldergrove or\nphone 856-8580.  14-802545-tf\nSUCCESS TUTORING\nACADEMIC SUBJECTS GRADES 1-12\nALSO TUTORING FOR DISABLED\nIndividualized Instruction\nfor children or adults.\n856-5529\nor 856-7273\n35-tf\nPlanned Parenthood (Langley Branch). Confidential birth control & family planning\nclinic. Information _ counselling available\nfor birth control & pregnancy clinic. Located\nin Langley Family Services building, 5339 -\n207 St., Langley. Clinic hours: Thurs. eves.\n7:30-9:30 p.m. No appt. required. 24-tf\nLOSE INCHES\nTHE EASY WAY\nMuscles are toned while you relax.\nInfo: Call Krlsten\n852-4533\nI   i   r    --------- \u25a0   - j  '   -\n_33\u00a3j\nWould the lady who owns very old VW\nBeetle with sliding roof please phone Mark if\nInterested In selling. 856-7688. 34-3\nHYPNOTHERAPY\n\u2022Weight 'Smoking\n\u2022Confidence 'Phobias\nLangley Hypnosis Contra\n534-7591    26-1521 e-tf\nProblems? Personal, family, marriage. For\nconfidential counselling call Valley Counselling Services, 853-9476. 48-tf\n4. Engage.-Weddings\nDRESSMAKING\nWEDDING GOWNS\nBRIDESMAID DRESSES\nYour design or mine. No alterations please.\nCall 8564303 days, 856-8217 eves. 4-tf\n7. Lost & Found\nFound. Cockatlel. 856-2898.\n34-2\nLost. Sand colored Sheltie cross. Fri., Aug.\n15, Aldergrove. Answers to Sandy. 856-5715\nleave message. 34-4\nLost. Cat, calico color. Vic. Aldergrove Vet.\nClinic, 530-8493.         32-4\nLost little red and white tricycle, with Orange\nflag and bell. Vic. 264 A St. If you know any\nInfo, please contact 856-5092 & make a little\nboy happy. 35-1\n8. Legals\nNEED LEGAL AID?\nInformation & Referral\n530-5811\n33-tf\n9. Travel\nIn Al-Anon people who know what it's like to\nlive with an alcoholic share their experience,\nstrength   and   hope.   856-3442,   856-2892.\nMeeting held Tues., 8 p.m. In Aldergrove.\n 9-799549-tf\nOvereaters Anonymous meets Langley Family Services building, 207 St., Langley,\nMondays 7:30.856-4817, 534-5030.        51-tf\nPREGNANT?\nA free pregnancy test. Results In 30 mln. No\nappointment needed. Wed. 7-9 p.m.; Fri.\n10-4 p.m. & 7-9 p.m.; Sat. 10-3 p.m.\n20512A Fraser Hwy., Langley (McBurney\nLane). 533-3736. 27-799420-tf\nDRESSMAKING\nWEDDING GOWNS,\nBRIDESMAID DRESSES\nYour design or mine.\nNo alterations please.\nCall 856-8303 days, 856-8217 eves.\n4-tf\nRENO - CIRCUS CIRCUS\nSeptember 14 - 7 days\nNon-smoking, luxury coaches\nONLY A FEW MORE\nSEATS AVAILABLE.\nCall or drop in now:\nSunset Travel\n20440 Douglas Cres.,\nLangley\n533-2714 34-1\nOkanagan tall colours, October 7 for four\ndays, $175. double. Edmonton Mall, October\n11, 7 days. $295. double. Arizona, Sept. 20,\n17 days. Reno, eight days. Now booking for\nfall. Call for information. Dogwood tours\n530-6337. 35-2\n10: BusrServ \u25a0 Misc.\nConcrete finishing - small  or large jobs\naround your home. 856-1603. 34-2\nVALLEY POWER WASHING\nResidential, commercial   &   farm  was! ing\nservice. Free estimates. Phone 534-0651.\n31-tf\nSELL IT\nFAST\nIN THE STAR\nCLASSIFIEDS\n856-5212\n__\u00ab_-__ ml\u2014I -.-_-_.* ml m   H _.   m.  r  .\nROOFING\nJerry The Rooier\nfor all your roofing needs.\n534-8999\nanytime day or night.        28-8\nSUMMER SPECIAL\nBLACK TOP SEALER\nMAKE YOUR DRIVEWAY &\nSIDEWALK LOOK LIKE NEW\nReas. Rates - Free Estimates\nCall Anytime-888-1070\n33-4\nT-\nCrystal Water Services\nWATER HAULING\n533-4196   mt\nVACUUM SALES &\nSERVICE\nREPAIRS TO ALL MAKES\n27239 Fraser Hwy.\n856-6776\t\nPROMOTIONAL OFFER\nAllitrong Carpet and Upholstery\nCleaning.  -\nHigh pressure steam cleaning.\nLiving room, dining room and hallway\n*52.85.\nIncludes pre vac, deodorant, stain removal\nand pile lilting.\n852-2633\nCUSTOM DRAPERY\nFULL ESTIMATE - IN-HOME\n27243 Fraser Hwy.\n856-4088\nWATER\nDRILLING \u2022 FILTERS \u2022 PUMPS\nSALES & SERVICE\nVALLEY WATER SERVICES\n356-6657\n  45-20363-tf\nMechanical work on any vehicle, makes or\nmodels. $10. per hr. or flat rate. Phone\nCharlie after 6 p.m. 856-4847. 35-4\nrT\nJake Reimer investor. 856-5079.\n35-4\nMan with van and trailer avail, for moving.\nParking and storage space avail. Free est.\n856-5245. 35.4\nWe Install your carpet and lino.\n856-6362 after 6 p.m. David.\nContact\n35-4\n10 A.   Locksmith\n\u00a3o-hH!titibtng Cto.\n32624 South FrasfM Wily.\nClna.brook, B C\ntelephone\n^- tf\u00a3\u00a3 _____... __._\nAUTO 853 79'3        RESIDENTIAL\n\u00a3-____&&\n11. Lessons\nt*t-. - . 1 ,.'. _.\nPiano   a   theory   lessons.    Enroll   now.\n856-1930. 33-3\n w.\n26\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n11. Lessons\nl\nMUSIC LESSONS\nEnroll Now\n* Piano\n*Organ\n* Accordion\n\u2022Guitar\nIndividual Lessons\nClassical or Pop\nLangley   Music   Studio   Ltd.\n27441 - 16th Ave., Aldergrove\nPHONE 856-2941\n12. Landscape-Nursery\n\u2022n>__.\n4\nI\nm\nfl\nFOR ALL YOUR LAWN & GARDEN\nNEEDS, LARGE OR SMALL,\nCALL JEFF AT\nJEFF'S ESTATE\nGARDENING SERVICES\n856-4609 or 530-1592\n 26-tf\n\u2022 BARK MULCH\n\u2022 MANURE\n\u2022 TOPSOIL\n\u2022 SAND & GRAVEL\nDELIVERED\n581-5457\n11-21216-tf\n13 unit townhouse complex looking for\nlandscaper, gardener to start Sept. 1st. Call\nJohn 856-0556 after 6 p.m. 35-2\n\"GARDEN TIME PLANTS\"\n* Hedging Shrubs * Bedding Plants\n\u2022 Hanging Baskets        ' Potting Soil\n27441 -16 Ave., Aldergrove\n   856-2941    13-21430-n\nAttn landscaping, turfing, seeding specialists. Plus all your gardening needs. Free est.\non all work. Ph. today 856-2248. 33-4\n13. Tractor Work\nM & T TRACTOR WORK\nCUSTOM HAYING\nCut, rake & bale\nROTOVATING, PLOWING,\nPOST POUNDING\n       856-2218 34-7\nBEDARD EXCAVATING\n\u2022 loading & levelling       \u2022 light excavaiion\n\u2022 J.D. 350 track loader    \u2022 b_cKh_\" servi\u2014\n 856-7116       45-80840-1 f\nPOST HOLE AUGER\nPOST POUNDING \u2022 FENCING\nPhone 856-7614\n28-tf\nr\nKARL DEGLAN\nBulldozing \u2022 Excavating \u2022 Clearing\nBurning \u2022 Demolition \u2022 Loading\nCat  08 &  D6 dozers. 955 & 931  LGP\nloaders. Excavator clearing grapple.\nKarl Moody\n856-5032 534-4674\n  11-95517-tf\nBobcat   services.   Backfill   &   excavation.\n856-8181. 21-799596-tf\n16^Gravel Sales\nGODDARD TRUCKING\n& EXCAVATING\nTruck & Transfer & Tandem Dump Hire.\nGravel Sales. Excavations.\nHitachi UH045 Excavator\nJD. 350 Wide Track with hydraulic blade\nGeorge or Terry - 534-3863\n9-21343-tf\nCRUSHER CHIPS\nCRUSHED ROCK\nDrain   rock,   sand   &   mulch   delivered.\nDriveway ruts & holes filled.  310 track\nloader\/back fill, etc.\n534-1248\n, . 51-801223-tf\n17. Plumbing\nFrustrated with your plumbing?\nLet me make your days worry freel\nDon't Plumbing & Repairs\n856-1452\n30-tf\n\u2022 We Fiberglass Sundecks\n\u2022 We Build Sundeck Roofs\n\u2022 We Fiberglass Trailer Roots\n\u2022 100% Waterproof -10 Year Guarantee\nAll necessary repairs included. For fast\nefficient service in the Fraser Valley call:\nH.B. INSTALLATIONS - 826-1401\n33-3\nALTRAC\nCONTRACTING LTD..\n\u2022 Building \u2022 Grading\n\u2022 Fencing ' \u2022 Bulldozing\n\u2022 Clearing \u2022 Riding Arenas\n\u2022 Ditching \u2022 General Maintenance\nOne of the Lowest Machinery Rates in\nthe Lower Mainland.\nGIVE US A CALL - WE DO IT ALL!\nWARREN ANDERTON - 856-8676\n17-11133-tf\nFree Estimates\nG.A. GARRETT CARPENTRY\n\u2022 renovating & remodelling\n\u2022 contract or hourly\n\u25a0 By Journeyman Carpenter - 856-4991\n24-19764-tf\nAdditions, renovations, ail concreie work.\n25 yrs. exp. Don 596-0652. 45-801139-tf\n18 B. Painting\nDO YOUR TEXTURED CEILINGS\nLOOK TIRED AND YELLOW?\nStains or water marks can be professionally\npainted, giving you a bright, roomy, white\nhome. Call Dave for a free estimate. Phone\n534-9996. 25-tf\n19. Electrical\nTOM'S ELECTRIC\nAll lypesof electrical installations & repairs.\nFreees'.imaies.\n856-1852 or 856-2694. 31-tf\nDINGWALL ELECTRIC\n<__..-\u00bb.;_._i __ XAIirinri\n-\u00bb_, Vive w_   .. ii,.,_\n18 yrs. exp. - 7 yrs. Elec. Insp.\nResidential \u2022 Commerical \u2022 Industrial\nFor service or free estimate\nPhone 530-9285\n7-210O6-tt\n21. Accounting\nBookkeeping & Typing service, billing,\ncontracts, new business set-up, dicta-typing,\netc. 856-1779. 27-tf\nACCU-KEEP DATA SERVICE\n\u2022 Bookkeeping \u2022 Payroll\n\u2022 Word Processing Service\nCALL BIP-THE - 856-1052\nNO JOB TOO SMALL\n37-0106-lf\n23. Topsoil-Manure\nWeed tree mushroom manure, $55. for load\nof 13 yds. Free delivery within 10 miles.\n8564877. 32-4\n24. Hay Sales\nHay lor sale. Exc. 2nd crop local hay. $3. pr.\nbale del. 886-8143. 34.2\nGood high land hay for sale, no rain. In\nbarn, S3, per bale. 856-2668,856-4888.  35-4\n18. Bldg.-Construction\nComp. contract or hourly, custom additions\nor renovations. All carpentry, masonry &\nconcrete work. 25 yrs. exp. Licensed. Ask for\nJack or Doug 856-0266,856-4418.\n25-800458-tf\nPeterson Construction. 25 yrs. exp. Specializing in additions, alterations, new homes,\nbarns & sundecks, etc. 856-7964.\n11-798328-tf\nTIROL ALFALFA CUBES\nAlfalfa cubes are an excellent source ol\nprotein & fibre for horses. You can\neliminate waste and maximize your feed\ndollar,, with cubes.\nAsk for Tirol alfalfa cubes at your local\nfee. store or call 792-1768 for further\ninformation. 5-21025-tf\nLocal hay, no rain. $2.888-5402.\n34-3\nFeeder hay, no rain, $1.50. 2nd cut $3.\n530-5788. 34-2\nLge. bales hay, $2.50 pr. bale. 534-6440.34-4\n25. Fuel\nFIREWOOD. Heat all winter for $175.1 Stock\nup now on heavy kiln dried mill ends. All\nhemlock, clean & dry. Exc. for alrtlghts.\nApprox. 5 cords. Smaller loads avail. Call\n533-1758 or 534-5694. 20-802665-tf\nSeasoned firewood. Birch, maple or alder.\nCut & split. 3Vi ton load from $60. 856-8453.\n 32-4\nSplit, clean, well seasoned mixed loads. $95.\npr. cord, $60. pickup load. You pickup $50.\n856-6744.    33-4\nFirewood. Alder mix. Cut & split. Stacked\n% cord, delivered Aldergrove $70., Surrey\n$75.; Richmond $95. 574-5339. 34-2:\nDry alder for sale. $70. pr. cord picked up,\n$85. delivered. 85.-2-4.. 34-4\nCedar firewood. Lge. P.U. load, better than\n'\/-cord, delivered$30.856-8574. 34-4\nWanted to buy standing timber, cottonwood\n& firewood. 856-6456. 34-4\n27. Sits. Wanted\nTruck for hire, garages cleaned, garbage\nremoved, short moving jobs, anything.\nPhone 856-7562. 35-4\nWanted semi-retired carpenter to cpmplete\nrenovation of small house in Aldergrove.\nSam Dragon. Ph. 522-1804. 35-2\nCook, sew, housecare, babysit, weekly,\nmonthly. Experienced bonded grandmother.\nValid drivers licence. Refs. avail. Write,\ngeneral Delivery, #211-27464 - 30 Ave.,\nAldergrove, Dolores Davis.\nCustom carpentry. Kitchen cabinets, desks,\nbookcases, all types of finishing carpentry.\nFree est. 859-5068, 854-3786. 33-4\nDRESSMAKING\nWEDDING GOWNS\nBRIDESMAID DRESSES\nYour design or mine. No alterations please.\nCall 856-8303 days, 856-8217 eves. 4-tf\nPainting. Quality work, Int. 81 ext. Reas.\n853-5287,530-8962. 33-4\nWill babysit, my home. Ages 4 & up. Vic. 34\nAve. & 272 St. 856-8637. 33-4\nHandyman special. Cement work, carpentry,\nrenovations, roofing, siding, fencing, painting. Quality work, guaranteed. 856-6437.\n 34-4\nWill babysit, newborn to 2 yrs. Sunnyside\narea, Clearbrook. Exp., refs. 859-4192.   34-2\nMother of 2 will babysit, ages 6 mths. to 4\nyrs. Days only, Mon. - Fri. 3 blks. from Aid.\nCall after 5 p.m. 856-9664. 33-6\nReliable young woman will babysit full time.\nYour home. Have refs. 856-5643. 32-4\nTree topping. Free estimates Ask for Stan,\n856-1041.    26-tf\nNeed a spur of the moment babysitter? Call\nMaureen 856-2863. 32-4\nHave your asphalt driveway sealed. Reas.\n. rates. Call Greg 856-0645. 33-4\n27. Sits. Wanted\n$6.95 HR. SPECIAL!!\n$6.95 hr. Experienced, professional painting,\ninterior, exterior. Call Dave for free estimate.\nPhone 534-9996. 2!Mf\nMoving & hauling. Res., apt. 5 ton truck\nwith 2 men. Reas. rates. 531-8494, 526-0819,\npager 735-4959.         34-4\nBuilder avail. Will build to suit. 888-1268\nJohn. 34-4\nWill babysit In my home. Brookswood area,\nLangley. Beginning Sept., Mon. - Fri.\ndaytime only. 534-9488. -     34-4\nProposed licensed family daycare. Behind\nSafeway. Caring, stimulating environment.\nExp. pre-school teacher. $15. pr. day.\n856-9347. 34-2\nConscientious, reliable, self-motivated lady\nwith 10 yrs. office exp., for Langley\nmanufacturer recently closed, seeks employment. Exp. Includes reception, typing, A\/R,\ncredit & collections, banking, cash reconciliation, computer & more. Ph. 856-6229 to\narrange Interview. 34-4\n28. Jobs Available\nSCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 35 [LANGLEY]\nPart time Crosswalk Guards are\nrequired to work at the following\nlocations:\n271st Street and Fraser Highway\n(Aldergrove Elementary)\n200th Street and 44th Avenue\n(Alice Brown Elementary)\nThe rate of pay is $5.75 per hour.\nWe are also accepting applications for\nthis position at any other school although\nvacancies may not currently exist.\nIf you are Interested, please complete\nan application form, stating the location-\n(school) where you would prefer to work,\nat the Administration Office, 22259 -\n48th Avenue, Langley. 33-89341-3\nNOON HOUR SUPERVISORS\nSchool   District   No.   35   (Langley)\nrequires mature  individuals  to  assist\nwith  student   supervision   during   the\nlunch break at the following schools:\nAldergrove Elementary School\nAldergrove Secondary School\n' County Line Elementary School\nTopham Elementary School\nWest Langley Elementary School\nThe rate of pay is $7.20 per hour.\nWe are also accepting applications for\nthis position at any other school although\nvacancies may not currently exist.\nIf you are interested, please complete\nan application form, stating the school\nwhere you would prefer to work, at the\nAdministration Office, 22259 - 48lh\nAvenue, Langley. 33-89342-3\n28. Jobs Available\nDrapery work-room lady required. Must be\nable to take full charge in drapery workshop.\nState salary & experience. P.O. Box 828,\nAldergrove, VOX 1A0.  26-tf\nUrgently needed. Exp. canvasser managers.\nVery good earnings. Call Bill 856-9798. 34-tf\nCarpenter with own transportation needed\nimmed. Able to work without supervision.\nGood money for right person. 856-6437. 34-4\nExp. mushroom pickers needed. Please call\n856-3330. 34-4\nWanted general handyman, full time. Exp.\nwith horses 81 small garden equipment.\n533-3523. 34-4\nCeshler wanted for full time position,\nafternoon shift. Call Heather 856-7182.   34-2\nLighting store requires full time assistant\nmanager. Duties to Include floor displays &\nsales. Exp. in lighting preferred, not\nessential. Must have minimum 2 yrs.\nlighting sales exp. Salary $1200 - $1600 pr.\nmth. depending on exp. Ph. for Interview\n534-2844,856-1322. 34-2\n29. Rentals\nALDERHILL TOWNHOMES\n3 bdrm. townhomes, $425. Incl. washer,\ndryer, fridge, stove, 1V_ baths, drapes,\nba'\"ony, carport, plenty of storage, tennis\ncourt, playground. Children welcome, no\npets please. See manager at 114 - 2844 - 273\nSt., Aldergrove or phone 856-9085, 856-4528,\n856-6989. 10-801480-tf\nABBOTSFORD\nCOURT\n2830 Bourquln Cres. W., Abbotsford\nLo-cost 2 & 3 bdrm. 1400 sq. ft. town-\nhouses with full basements. 2 blocks\nfrom Sevenoaks shopping. Good refs.\nrequired.\n853-9678\nExperienced sales ladies-* gents. Earn $660\npr. wk. in commissions or contract sales\nselling over $700. worth of classified ads &\nnewspapers subscriptions for only $24.\nGuaranteed success for top salespeople. Call\nBill 856-8303, 856-5212. 28^\n&100. PLUS PER DAY\nExperienced security systems salesperson to\nmarket Ihe most advanced & best priced\nalarm system available. For appointment call\nLuis from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at 534-5755,\n534-5757       28-tf\nExp. telephone sales people. Earn $5. - $7.\npr. hr. plus comm. 4-6 hrs. pr. day, 4 days\npr. wk. Call Bill 856-9798. 34-tf\nLicensed hair stylist required. Full time.\nGood working conditions & benefits. Aldergrove area. Ph. 534-1777. 27-tf\nWanted part time help, afternoon shift, 11-6\np.m. 856-7510. 35-1\nSitter needed for 2 school age children\nbefore and after school in the Countyline\nschool area. Phone 856-9839. 35-4\nSitter- for 2 children, 1 and 4 yrs. old. In our\nhome. Must have drivers licence. 656-1314.\n 35-1\nDrapery salesperson. Must be capable of\ngiving estimates in shop. Some sewing\nexperience helpful. Reply P.O. Box 826,\nAldergrove, VOX 1A0. 26-tf\nSenior citizens. Earn $200. pr. wk. 4 hrs. pr.\n-day, 4 days pr. wk. Call Bill 856-9798.    34-tf\nResponsible family seeking 3-4 bdrm. house\nwith lage. yard. Aldergrove area. NS\/ND.\nrefs. avail. 854-8067.      35-3'\nLge. clean 2 bdrm. ground level ste. In\nprivate home. Avail Sept. 2, close to\nfreeway, prefer working couple. No pets.\n$525 incl. utilities. 888-1493after 5p.m.35-1\nPonies lor rent. Back yard garden parties,\nhourly, delivered and handled. 853-6718.\n35-4\n1 bdrm. suite for rent downtown Aldergrove.\n$300 plus damage deposit. No pets. Avail,\nimmed! 536-9022. 35-4\n3 bdrm. twnhse. 1V_ baths, fully carpeted,\nfreshly painted. Near schools, park & shopping. $450. pr. mth. Avail, immed. Refs.\nrequired. 856-9502 for viewing. 34-tf\n2 bdrm. up, 2 bdrm. down. 2 washrooms,\nF.P., 2 appl., garage, fenced yard. $550.\nAvail, immed. Call collect 581-5228 after\n5:30 p.m. 32-4\n1974 3 bdrm. mobile home. Sell, rent or\ntrade. 853-8515. 33-4\nFor rent. 1 bdrm., clean, in central Aid.\nWith small sundeck. Utilities Incl. $350.\n941-7274. 33-3\nPasture land for rent. 4 acres, well fenced,\nIdeal for cattle. Reas. rate. 856-6096.      33-4\nAldergrove. 3 bdrm. twnhse. F.P., 1V_\nbaths, 5 appl. $440. pr. mth. Ph. Barry\nHowes 856-8952. 33-3\nPartly furnished bsmt. ste. Avail. Sept. 1.\n$350. incl. hydro. 856-3977 days. 856-0612\neves. 34-2\n5 full fenced acres of grazing land for rent\nwith good 2-stall barn. Avail. Immed.\nSuitable for horses only. 856-4605. 34-4\nLooking for working person to rent room in 3\nbdrm. home on horse farm. $250. plus Vi\nutilities. 856-7352. 31-tf\n\u25a0     .' \u25a0\n  :_.._.__-\n j\t\n Z\t\n__________________________\n THE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n27\n29 Rentals\nBlue Star motel. 1 & 2 bdrm. furnished\nhousekeeping units. All utilities Incl. Special\nweekly & monthly rates. 856-8125.\n 26-796501 -tf\n3 bdrm. up, 1 down, 2 baths, F.P., rec. rm.,\ngarage, fenced yard. Some appl. $625.\n538-2177. 34-4\n2 bdrm. bsmt. ste. Stove, fridge, separate\nentrance. 856-3992.  34-3\nSmall 1 bdrm. cottage in country setting.\nStove, fridge, washer & dryer. Prefer mature\nperson interested In doing light gardening &\noccasional chores for reas. rent. 856-5191.\n 34-2\nQuiet, clean, Ige. 1 bdrm. country ste.\nWant 1 mature person. $325. pr. mth.\n856-0323. 34-2\nFar rent. 1 bdrm. suite. Central Aldergrove.\nBright & clean. $350. pr. mth., utilities incl.\n941-7274. 34-2\nBed\/breakfast, trailer park or room & board\navail. 856-4873, 33-4\n1 bdrm. bsmt. ste. with F.P., $350. Incl.\nutilities. Prefer single working person or\ncouple. Avail, anytime. 856-6410. 32-4\nAvail. Aug. 1. on Fraser Hwy. 1200 sq. ft.\ncommercial retail space. Call Fraser Valley\nProperty Maintenance Ltd., 533-3511,9-5.\n 32-tf\nAloha R.V. Park has spaces avail, for hookup\n&. cable and phone. Attractive monthly rates.\n856-2366.         32-6\nRoom for rent to working M\/F - over 30.\n858-7614. 32-4\nPad for rent. Suitable for travel trailer. All\nhook-ups ready. Avail, immed. 856-8125.\n4-803353-tf\n30. Shared Accomms.\nChristian working girl looking for shared\naccomodation for Sept. 1. Ph. 858-4734. 34-3\n^..-Wanted to Rent\nWanted for Sept. 1, pref. Aldergrove\/\nClearbrook area. Sm. house w\/yard, reas.\nrent. Ph. weekdays 856-4116. 8:30 to 4:30.\n 35-1\nAldergrove area, small house or suite, quiet\nreliable couple, will do work for part or full\nrent, arm experience. Barry or Cindy.\nMessage: 530-6337, 856-3314. 35-2\n32. Misc. for Sale:\nInglls F.F. fridge, $300.; self clean stove,\n$400. Almond. 856.9568.  34-2\nFIREWOOD\nFinest quality mill ends. All clean & bone\ndry. Excellent for airtight stoves & Inserts.\nSmall dumptruck delivered, price only $50.\n533-1758, 534-5694. 37-803080-tf\nBaby carriage, converts to stroller, $75.;\nmusical swingomatic, $10. 856-1098.      33-3\nWhy convert to propane or natural gas when\nfor a small fraction of the conversion cost,\nyou can get the same savings? Come see us\nat 20362 Fraser Hwy. or call 534-5757.   28-tf\nPrlscllla sheers, Austrian sheers, kitchen\ncurtains, new traverse rods, Kenmore\nvacuum, velvet cushions, lamps. Cash only.\n656-2832. 33-4\n32. Misc. for Sale\n38 yr. old walnut bed headboard & footboard, $48.; new small TV or VCR cabinet,\nglass doors, $48. Cash only. 856-28-2.    334\nYou have heard about it, You have read\nabout It. It was featured at the National\nHome Show. Now it Is here! The Amgard\nHome Control System. Phone Mary 858-4316\n33-4\nFRED'S\nCUSTOM SCREENS\n365 - 264 Street, Aldergrove\nWINDOW SCREENS AND\nSTORM WINDOWS\nAll Types & Sizes\nat the Best Affordable\nPrice in the Valley\nFred Pfander    Ph. 856-2401\nFour 3-day Expo passes, $40. ea. 856-1560.\n 34-3\nI do woodworking, sharpening, repairing.\nRebuilt lawnmowers for sale. Will buy your\nold mower. 856-3153.  27-tf\nMoving. For sale: Various sets of books.\nEncyclopedia Brltannlca, the Canadlana\nedition, with bookcase & yearbooks; Walt\nDisney Books of Knowledge; Animal Kingdom; Nature; I Want to Know; etc. & other\nhousehold articles. 858-2290. 34-3\n8x16 concession wagon, all new equip.\nGrills, fryers, fridges & freezers. Must sell\ndue lo car accident. Reas. 888-1750.      34-3\nSatellite TV system includes 10 fl. dish,\nstereo receiver with remote, 75K polar amp\n& power tracker. $1650. 858-4574. 33-3\nSuper Hornet elec. fencer, 120 Volt solid\nstate. Near new. $80.; boys skates, size 6,\n$15.856-4762. 33-4\nAirplane. Ultralight, like new. Complete\nwith trailer. $6500. 853-8308,856-8791.  33-4\n32. Misc. for Sale\n32. Misc. for Sale\n36. Music\nIVER'S BOAT TOPS\nAcrylic Tops - Any color or\nstandard white marine vinyl.\nLefeuvre Road, Aldergrove\nIVER'S BOAT TOPS - 856-2455\nDAYS OR EVENINGS 10-21198-tf\nBrand new airtight woodstove. 856-7657.\n33-3\n85 quality Kenwood direct drive turntable\nmodel no. K.D.42RB. $200. Under warranty.\n856-5608, 856-9389, 856-8938. 34-4\nAuto. Hitachi washer, apt. size, $150.; Sears\nhumldlfer, $75. 856-7159. 34-4\nPetite girls clothes for sale. Size 8-10. Fancy\ndresses, blouses, sweaters, etc. 856-8614.\n,!:'f-  V:;.\"!-J-W:;\nOlder upright piano, $500.856-5233.      33-3\nAnyone wishing to buy Fuller Brush\nproducts, vacu-scent, dust cleaners, waxes\n(DCWE), stain sprays, de-greaser (Fulsol),\nplease call 656-4849. Cleaning products\navail. 33-8\nDector mannequin for sale. Standing male.\n$75. 856-7252. 33-3\nUiiiiiy trailer, complete with lights. 15\"\nwheel. $100. 856-2850. 33-3\nFisher fireplace insert with screen & facing.\n$500. obo. 533-3787. 33-3\nBrother sewing machine, deluxe model.\nHardly used, with cabinet. $200.; Corduroy\nsnugglie, $20.856-0645. 33-3\nLoad leveller hitch, $125. firm; elec. Hag-\nsirom guitar with case, $400. obo. 6S24690.\n 33-4\nQueenslze waterbed complete with bookcase headboard, matching chest of drawers,\n$300.; Gendron 3 in 1 baby carriage, $90.\nobo. Exc. cond. 856-1928. 33-4\n2 boys 5 spd. bikes, very good cond., $50.\nea. obo; Sundance trampoline, 10'x12', exc.\ncond., $750. obo. 856-2352 after 5 p.m.   34-4\nAcorn F.P. with pipe, 16' Insulated, good\ncond. Good for cabin. 856-4986. 34-4\nAs new 35\"x76\" sleeping bag, $25. firm.\n856-2198.       32-4\nWalnut dining rm. suite, 6 chairs & buffet,\n$550. Good cond., must see. 356-3310.   34-2\n5 HP Briggs & Stratton yardman riding\nlawnmower; 8 HP Tecumseh shredder,;\n300 CP. Coleman gas lantern; Briggs &\nStratton lawnmower. 856-4850. 33-4\n4 good used doors, 1.4x34 with hinges,\nwalnut, new $300., sell $40. ea.; trailer hitch\n6 touger for 8' or 10' trailer, $75.; 1976\nDatsun 4 D, radials, $650. or trade for\nlumber, plywood or ?. Ph. collect 823-4661.\ni.,i        <-\u00ab,     ftH\u00bbw*oca ii_i ii_d    *\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'?*&_,\u25a0*\n2 pair boys hockey skates, fit approx. 6-9\nyrs. old, $15.0-0.656-7307. $4-3\nSize 4 Double A Wlffa deluxe padded skates,\nprofessional Wade, like new. $150. 5304845\nafter 6 p.m.     34-2\n40 HP Johnson outboard, $400. obo;\nlawnmower, 3.5 B8_5, $65.; sewing machine,\n$65.; organ, $400.856-5430. 34-2\nMedium family-size Kenmore white fridge.\nUsed very little, Just as new. Paid $650.,\nselling $450.856-7441. 34-4\n26\" Electrohome console color TV. Not\nperfect but works good. $200. firm. 656-7728\n- 344\nPicnic tables, sturdy adult size $30.,\nchildren's $20.; wooden lawn chairs. Home\nconstructed. 856-6272. 34-2\nBoat rack, easy loader with elec. winch,\n$180. Without winch $80.856-1493.       34-4\nOld comfortable armchair. Wide flat arms,\nwine color. More faded than worn. $20. firm.\n856-8451. 34-2\nPlaypen, $25.; cuddle seats, $5. & $15.;\nstereo, $25.; record player, $15.; mens\nskates, $50.856-6115. 34-4\nFloral hostess chair, $20.; twin size elec.\nblanket, $10.; Hlbachl, $4.; F.P. airport,\n$10.; meat carving board, $5.856-6640. 34-3\nWood burning cast Iron boiler, Warner\nKing. Heated a 4 room school. $200.\n856-3260. 34-2\n8 cu. ft. freezer, exc. cond. Asking $225.\n853-1658. 33-3\n3 Expo 3-day passes, 2 adult & 1 child's,\n$40. & $20. ea. 856-3259. 34-2\nNew wedding dress, size 9, with train, $250.;\nhat with veil, $70.; dusty rose gown, size\n11-12, $70.856-6708. 34-2\nGas lawnmower with rear bag, good cond.,\n$85. 856-2650.  34-2\n10 V. qt. sealers at $4. a doz.; 6 V_ pint\nsealers at $2.50 a doz. 859-5996. 34-4\n10 HP riding mower, $250.; complete weight\nset, $130.; 300egg Incubator, $125. 656-2889\n 33-4\nGirls roller skates, size 5, $20.; Holly Hobby\nstove, fridge, sink, cupboard & dishes, $50.;\nnew picnic umbrella, $75. 856-4964.       33-4\nFor sale. Contemporary style coffee & 2 end\ntables. Wooden veneer finish. Very good\ncond. $250. 656-6741 eves. 33-3\nSmall chainsaw with carry case. Good cond.\n$100.856-2850. 34-2\nFor sale. Used canopy for 1977 Datsun long\nbox; gas barbecue with tank. Best offers.\n853-3474. 34-2\nSears 1\/2 HP pump & filter for pool with 3\ncartridges. $100.856-7682. 34-3\n24 ft. near new above ground pool, filter,\npump, access. 534-3886. 34-3\nMust sell. Piano, needs tuning, $450. obo.\n856-9534. .      34-2\nInglls Liberated 2 fridge. Avocado. W 3Vi\",\nh 65\", $300. OBO. Very good cond.\n856-2627. 35-4\nBlack and White cow hide, tanned. 6' x 7'.\nAsking $300. OBO. 856-9395 354\n16 Speed Kawahara Mountain bike, 1 yr.\n$400; Lite Brile, $10. F. P garage, $12;\nPlayschool ranger camping set; Shaklee\nalfalfa tablets $6.00 per bottle. 856-7107.35-4\n3x6 deepfreeze, 2 wine barrels, 40 ga!. and\n15 gal., glass wine jug, wine press; Gas\nfurnace, 9000 capacity. 856-5152. 35-3\nFor sale baby highchair, umbrella stroller,\nbaby walker. 856-2744. 35-3\nCompl. Surge milking machine. 5304986.\n 32-2\nFor your children's summer vacation phone\nWebb's Holiday Acres Guest Ranch. 538-\n^896,533-1712. -- -\"      19-tf\n2,-fgns, 1 - 2'xi8\" Facia, 1 - 4'x4tt' rooftop;\nF.P. chimney bricks; utility Trailer, approx.\n12' long, $250.; complete studio equip.\n856-5715 leave message.  34-4\nP185-80R13 steel belted tire - wheel. 90%\ntread. $55. Ph. 856-2021 334\n20 different varieties of bulbs for sale, bloom\nnext spring. 856-24-7. 34-2\nSleeping bag, 35x76, hardly used, $25.\n856-2198. 34-4\nLarge 7' wide wall unit, pecan finish, brass\ntrim. Exc. cond. $1000.888-0862. 35-3\nEagle flying model, 63\" wing span, w\/a .40\neng. never assembled. $295. OBO. 856-8483.\n 354\nElec. lawnmower. Gd. working cond. $45.\n856-2850.  35-2\nGirls 5 sp. Norco, gd. cond. 530-2013. 35-3\nHanging chair; canning supplies; wine jugs;\nchicken water cans. 856-3777. 35-2\nWestern saddles $250. Reins, bit and bridle\n$25. Saddle pads $30, $15, $10. Soft Grlth\nStraps, $15.856-7539, 530-3729. 354\nBlack upholstered couch, chair, swivel\nrocker, ottoman, slightly torn seat of couch,\n$100. Dining table, 4 chairs, $50. 4 drawer\ndresser, 6 drawer white dresser, 2 chest\nfreezers, working. - $60, $125. Heavy wood\ntable and chair. Medieval style. $50.\n856.9400. 354\n3 day adult Expo pass, $35.856-1484.    35-1\nChain saw with extras, $300; H.D. cherry\npicker, $400; Ige. tent $80; 2 tvs, $25 and\n$50; stereo, $75; leather seat covers, med.\nH.B., $40; truck mirrors, $25.; H.D. elec.\nmotor, $40. All exc. cond. 856-3180.       35-2\n2 single bed spreads $6 ea. (red, white, blur\nplaid and white, blue frilly); office chair $40;\ndial style tv antennae, 6 mths.; Pulse meter\n(tells your pulse) floor lamp, $40; 2 chairs,\nsm brlc a brac.856-7533. 35-2\n2 pr. sm. shin pads, $3. pr.; soccer shoes,\nsize 1 $5; boys skates size 1 and 2, $5 pr.\n856-5021. 35-2\nMoving must sell, Citizen 40 channel base\nmobile power mike. 3 mths. old. $150 OBO.\n856-2274. 35-2\nFilter Queen vacuum cleaner c\/w power\nhead and other attach. $200 OBO. after 6\np.m. 856-5586. 35-4\nAtco ptble. building, fully Insulated, $4000.\nCall after 6 p.m. 856-5586. 35-4\nMatching green plaid chesterfield and chair,\n$40.530-0219. 35-2\nPin ball machine $75; 4 bikes, $25 to $80;\nPing Pong table $40; toy box $15; console\nstereo, $150. 856-4524. 35-2\n2 pairs soccer boots, size 5V., size 7. Exc.\ncond. $10 ea. firm. 856-3713. 35-4\nGood 21\" color TV, $150; 6 h.p. rototiller,\n$160; Oxford Dictionary, $20; Radiant\nheater, $25; clock radio, $15; toaster, $5; 14'\ncurtain rods, $10. 856-1838. 35-4\nGoats milk for sale. $3.50 per ice cream\nbucket; Buck service La Manche. 8564466.\n35-3\n33. Furniture\nMUSICAL ACCESSORIES\n* STRINGS      ' INSTRUCTION BOOKS\n\u2022CORDS        'MUSIC STANDS\nGUITARS - AMPS - ACCORDIONS\nLESSONS\n27441 -16 Ave., Aldergrove\n856-2941 17-tf\nPiano & music theory lessons (3 yrs. to\nadults). Conservatory & modern methods.\n534-1103.          34-4\nE flat Alto Sax, like new, hardly used. Incl.\ncarrying case, leather neck strap and music\nstand. $450. firm. 856-4477. 35-4\nPrivate piano lessons, North Otter area.\nTaking new students now, $6. a lesson.\nPhone 856-2179. 35-4\nRegister now for organ lessons for Sept.\nBeginners welcome. 856-1645. 34-4\nComplete hospital bed set. Very reas.\nIncludes adjustable bed, adj. table & side\ncabinet. $650. obo. 534-4398. 344\nWant to sell your whole household? Call us.\nWe'll buy on the spot & pay cash for it or\nwe'll bring it to our showroom on conslgn-\nmeni. Brassy Jacks, 20382 Fraser Hwy.\n534-5757,534-5755. 31-tf\n38. Misc. Wanted\nBurls for making tables and clocks.856-5245.\n35-4\nWanted to buy 22 Calibre rifle. 856-6165.\nRepairs to  all major appliances,\nguaranteed. 856-7514.\t\n34. Appliances\n35-3\nWanted good quality girls figure skates, size\n4, gd. blade. Reas. price 856-8661. 35-2\nWanted 3 loads topsoil, will pay $20 a load.\n856-6689.  35-5\nMilk bottles, old bottles, postcards, old toys\nwanted. Ph. after 5 p.m. 856-5378. 33-4\nWanted. Hamster cage with wheel & water\nbottle. To buy with my allowance. 8584432.\n34-2\n39. Pets\n10 mth. cockapoo pup, female, spayed, all\nshots. $99. To good home only, preferably\nwith children. 8564259. 34-2\nP.B. border collie pups, male & female. No\npapers. Exc. temperament. Dew claws\nremoved. 856-8338. 34-2\nWanted. P.B. male sheepdog for stud\nservice of our P.B. female. Terms negotiable\n8564987. 34-2\nFree to good home. Female border collie\ncross. Spayed, good with children. 856-2341.\n 34-2\nTo give away free. 3 small kittens, 2 tabby\ncalico & 1 white. Long hair. 656-6696.     34-4\nUnreg. black & tan P.B. German Shepherd.\nExc. health, clean hips, good temperament.\nExc. guard dog stock. $100. stud fee. Janice\n530-2692. 33-4\nM fotfi*-rs\n\\\u00a7J      DOGGY SALON\n\u2022 Professional all-breed grooming\n\u2022 Flea baths \u2022 Medicated baths\n\u2022 Plain or fancy clips \u2022 No tranquilizers\n2905A - 272 Street [across from Post Olflee]\nOPEN MON. TO SAT.\nFor appointments call  855-3385\nFraser Valley Dog Fanciers classes starting\nSept. 8. At Ag.- Rec. Centre, Central Fraser\nValley Exhibition grounds. Boginnsrs obedience, 7:00 p.m. Intermediate obedience 8:00\np.m. Confirmation handling 8:00 p.m.\n856-5065, 8594893, 826-5340. 35-2\n5 free kittens. 856-9221.\n35-1\nAll work\n35-4\nAdmiral range. Harvest gold, good cond.\n$125. obo. 858-3204. 33-4\nP.B. English springer spaniel pups. Reg.\nlatooed. 1st shots. 794-3295. 35-2\nDog obedience. Valley Dog Training Club.\nClasses begin September 18. Beginners and\nadvanced. For registration and Information\nplease cal I 5344593 or 530-7279. 35-3\nVery small black Schlpperkee. Needs good\nhome. Spayed, exc. watchdog. 8564210.\n.__...__-.. ~ 33-4\n%\n B6\nlUI\nrtk*\n28\n39. Pets\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\ni kitten, white male. Grandma was a\ndouble champion. $100.856-2252. 334\nHave very Intelligent pure white male\nShepherd. Would like to mate with same tor\noffspring. Please call 866-2646. ____*\nEnglish springer spaniel. 8 mths. old. Has\nall shots, good family dog. $100.856-1478.\n 34-2\nExtra love? Check for dogs & cats for pets at\nthe F.V.S.P.C.A., 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Mon. -\nSun., closed holidays. 20302 - 98 Ave.\n\u2022884626 or 8564600. 17401496-tf\nFree puppies, Sheltle Lab cross. 856-9809.\n32-4\n40. Poultry\nYoung brown laying pullets. Also white\nroosters. 859-9493.  32-4\nVariety of chickens, ducks, turkeys, geese,\nrabbits. Various sizes and prices. 856-0473.\n _ 35-2\n40 Exc. 6 mth. old brown laying hens, $4.\neach or less. 26218 - 62 Ave., 856-9004.\n 35-4\n3 yr. old Indian black peacock hen for sale.\n856-2741. 35-3\nBrown and white laying hens. Have been\nexc. laying for 3 mths. now. $3.80\neach.856-5342. 354\n41. Livestock\n17 yrs. old Q.H. mare, 15V4 h.h., very\ngentle, western. $500 OBO. 658-5163 after 6\np.m.     .   35-4\nBeautiful heaiihy 8 wk. oid weaner pigs. $50\n35-2\nThree nublan bucks for sale. Fez bloodlines.\nGrand sire National Champion of Canada.\nNo Sunday calls. 8234160. 4222 Yale Rd.\nWest. RR1, Sardis, B.C. 35-1\nCustom built 2 horse trailer, dutch doors,\nsurge brakes. Exc. cond. $2500. 8564137.\n35-2\nMoving must sell family cow. 856-5233.\n35-3\nHorse boarding available. Seperate stalls.\nExc. care. Reas. rates. 8564385. 35-4\nLambs for sale. 8564167.\n35-2\nArabian Elite blood, exquisite type, size,\nsuperb   action,   confirmation.   \"Silver\nPharaoh\" fillies & colts. Reas. 856-1658.\n 35-4\nHorses, boarding, training, conditioning.\nSuperb facilities, indoor, outdoor arenas. For\nsale horses. Also 2 cut back saddles.\n8564900.      35-4\nWanted started holstein calves. Also wanted\nmale singing canary. 856-5787. 35-3\nSfcssp & iambs for sale. Good fertilized hay,\n$3. pr. bale. 856-5217. 33-3\nBeautiful tan colored V. Arab mare. Almost\n4 yrs., trailers & loads well. Rides Eng.,\nstarted jumping. Very friendly. $450. obo.\n856-3076.       33.4\nYearling Nubian doe, P.B., reg. 856-1803.\n33-3\n41. Livestock\nHORSE & TACK\nAUCTION\nat McClary Stockyards Ltd.\nSumas Way, Abbotsford\nFRI., SEPT. 5, 7:00 PM.\nNO. 1 & GROWING!\nMcClary Stockyards has spent a lifetime\nbeing a leader in the cattle & auction\nIndustry, offering the dairy, commercial\n& ranch businesses the best possible\nservice. In recent years the horsemen's\nneeds have been sadly lacking. We plan\nto bring our expertise & experience to\nprovide the horse Industry a professional\nmonthly auction.\nWE OFFER THE FOLLOWING:\nHORSES: The largest consignment of\nhorses, ponies, donkeys & mules In the\nvalley.\nTACK: The largest consignment of tack,\nsaddles & accessories in the valley.\nARENA: A large well-lit selling area, full\nview from every seat.\nBARNS: Huge covered pens & alleys,\nlots of open preview space.\nSTAFF: Our professional staff has been\nwith us for years. To accent our business\nwe are pleased to adopt the services of\nAuctioneer, Michael J. Burnett.\nCOMMISSIONS: Very competitive rates.\nMISC.: We can arrange pickups, delivery, holding pens, feeding & riders.\nWE ARE ALL SET, LET'S DO ITI\nat\nMcClary Stockyards Ltd.\nAbbotsford\nFRI., SEPT. 5, 7:00 P.M.\nPhone now for early lot numbers:\n854-1059 or 859-2381\n34-3\nEye catching 4-H veteran looking for\napproved home. Dble. reg. palomino Q.H.\ngeld. 15 H.H. Trained west. & Eng. Good in\ntraffic, loads well. Offers to $1500. 856-1697.\n32-4\nWESTLfIND\nFEEDS\nm\n656-9011\n2212-272nd!\nAldergrove\nHORSE, FARM & PET \u25a0\n\"Feed & Supplies\"\nOPEN EVERY DAY\nWeekdays 94; Sundays 10-4\nFEATURING: Master Feeds\nOtter Co-op\n25-tf\nw\nNew Zealand fryers & bunnies. $3 ea\n534-1613.     33_l\nV. Arab gelding. Good disposition. Exc. for\nbeginner & exp. riders. $450. obo. 856-5934.\n  33-4\nHave room for 1 horse. Quality care. Near\nCampbell River park. Wood fencing.\n5344507.        34-4\nWeaner pigs for sale. $55. 8564037.      33-3\nWanted to buy. All types of horses & ponies.\nAlso frozen horse meat for pet food avail.\n8564596 or message al 8684648. 33-tf\nAttention Best Contacts. CUSTOM BUYER.\nBonded  livestock  dealer.   LIVESTOCK\n\u00bbj HAULING. Cliff Davidson 856-28011.. ,\nWell started calves for sale. Holstein &\nwhite faces. 8564588. 34-3\nBrand new western tack set, $600.8564216.\n 34-4\n5 yr. old reg. T.B. mare. 16 h.h. Sire\nCommand Module. Ve\/y gentle. $1800. For\nmore info. 8564786. 34-4\nT.B.,15.2, good pleasure horse or broodmare, $500.; Pinto pony, 11.2, good disposition, bridle & riding pad, $300.856-4832.\n 34-2\nHereford Angus cross cow. Bred to reg.\nherelord bull and due to calf Feb.\/87. $700.\n8564533.. 35-2\nECONOMY SHAVINGS\n\u2022 Hemlock Sawdust      '\u25a0 Hog Fuel\n\u2022 Kiln Dry Shavings     \" Cedar Shavings\n576-8177   \"26-,._i4-tf\n41. Livestock\n1 yr. old Simmental bull for sale. 858-1074.\n344\nArabian geld., 12 yrs. old, $750.8684457.\n34-2\nUltra-Kelp. 100% natural organic minerals,\nvitamins & amino acids. Excellent health for\nanimals - totally safe - non-toxic. Produces\nresults others dream about at an affordable\ncost. Now available (under separate label)\nfor goats, sheep, beef, dairy, poultry, and\nmink. Kelp has been tested & researched in\nexperimental stations and university studies\nhave been done throughout this country and\naround the world. Ask for \"Kelp\" at your\nfavourite feed or pet store. For more info.\n856-7465. 25-tf\nSONNY'S\nHorseshoeing Service\n\"The dependable farrier\"\nTeeth floating, trimming, corrective and\nnormal shoeing. Hot and cold.\nQuality Workmanship\nGuaranteed\nI       8560504\n32-tf\nVALLEY FARM SPRAYERS\n* White Washing * Painting\n* Pressure Cleaning       * Dust Removal\n* Chemical Spraying\nFree Estimates \u2022 Call Collect\n 534-3261 ^tf\n42. Meat-Produce\nHot house tomatoes, no sprays. Phone\n856-3556. 35-2\nProduce: Farm-fresh vegetables. No sprays!\nCukes, beets, carrots, zuchlnnl, etc. Phone\n856-5724.  35-4\nFresh corn at McMann's, 988 - 224 St.,\nLangley. Bulk orders taken. Also veal &. beef\nfreezer packs. 344\nEdenvale farm fresh organic pickling cucumbers. 40 cents you.plck, 55 cents pre-picked.\n4460 Bradner Rd. Open 9-5. For other times\ncall ahead 856-3388. 33-3\nFresh free range eggs, $3.00 per flat. Phone\nafter 6 p.m. 8564695. 35-2\nYou pick organic cucumbers. Special, small\n30 cents pr. lb., large 20 cents pr. lb. No\nsprays. 8564065.  34-2\n43. Garage Sales\n44. Prop, for Sale\nRecreation properties. Assessed over\n$25,000 ea. Pay only $12,000. ea. Will accept\ntruck, car or trailer as down payment.\nBalance financed. Call Bill 8664796 anytime\n ___1\nWill trade recreation property, valued\n$12,000, assessed over $25,000., as down\npayment for house, valued at $50460,000.\n856-9798. 33-tf\n45. Homes for Sale\nBy Owner, 5 bdrm., 2 bath home w 5 appl. 2\nF.P.'s, finished bsmt. New roof and\nsundeck. $79,900.6564424. 324\n5V_ yr. 5 bdrm., finished bsmt. home, near\nSevenoaks\/schools. 2'\/. baths, 2 F.P.'s,\ncorner lot, enclosed garage. $8000. down.\nOwner may carry to qualified purchasers.\nFull price $72,900.853-1162. 334\nHuge garage sale Aug. 23, 24, 30, 31. 2897 -\n267A St. off 29 Ave. 9-4 p.m. 34-2\nHuge country garage sale - moving furniture\ntable and chairs, clothes, toys, household\nitems, much more. 2626042 Ave. Near\nCountyline school. Sat Aug. 30 only.      35-1\nGarage Sale Sat. Aug. 30, hockey equip.,\nbooks, lamps, misc. Items. 178 Springfield\nDrive. 9-5 p.m. 35-1\n44. Prop, for Sale\n5 acres, attractive home, 1600 sq. ft., Ige.\nstall barn. Fenced, deep well, lots of water,\nveg.    garden,    greenhouse.    By    owner.\n534-8361.\n534-8361. 35-2\nApprox. 1200 sq. ft. commercial space, avail,\nimmed.   27265   Fraser   Hwy.   Aldergrove\n536-9022.\n35-4\n12.97 acres some wooded, some cleared,\nmunicipal water, natural gas. 8564219.\n35-4.\nBy owner. 5 acres corner property with older\nclean home on 256 St., south Aldergrove.\nAsking $117,000. Ph. 8564618 afternoon or\neves, please. <   33^\nCultivated 5 acres for pasture. Drilled well,\nIge. septic system. 1977 Bendix Leader,\n14'x70' 3 bdrm. Gov't approved F.P., V.G.\nTake reservations now, for well mannered\nhorses for Oct. $50. pr. mth. Incl. hay. No\nriding activities. Special care a! additional    _\u201e_ 0n g||   sk|rted . $109,000. No\nnhnrno    HCfiJlC'ID. .. \u25a0  - - m.__.- \u2022-\u00bb\"\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0^.\u2022m.^ mt \u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\\_\\t\\^t\\ \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022*   *\"\u00bb*   **l*   ' n *_i_\u00bb \u2666*'_\u00bb       t\nW-W-fMS-WkWSISrWiWrmWm\n45. Homes for Sale\nBy owner. 2000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm. rancher on\n4.67 ac. 20x28 shop, storage shed. $134,500.\nAldergrove area. 856-7335. 32-4\nBy owner. Immac. well kept 4 bdrm. 1900\nsq. ft. split level. Nicely treed 1 acre lot,\nquiet setting. 5341 - 249B St. $114,900.\n8684478. 334\n3 bdrm. split level In Aldergrove on quiet\ncul-de-sac. $82,900.5344613. 33-2\nCosy 2 bdrm. bsmt. home on extra Ige. lot.\nWalk to Sevenoaks. Owner moving. Try\n$5000. down. Owner may carry to qualified\npurchasers. $49,900. full price. 856.1162 or\n853-1163. 334\nBy owner. 3 bdrm. 8 yr. young house In\nAldergrove. 1V_ baths, fully finished rec rm.\nwith bar. Nicely decorated & landscaped.\nNothing to do but move In. $59,900. No\nagent please. 8564936. 33-4\nMORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE\nWE BUY EXISTING MORTGAGES & AGREEMENTS\n\/?\nANTRIM INVESTMENTS LTD.\n20424 Douglas Crescent, Langley, B.C. V3A 4B4\noiiice 530-2301 856-7639 Eves\nGtr\/t-%\n_^_w\"rfi tni   ^7233 Frq.er Hwy., Aldergrove\n856-4106-856-2525\n\u2014530-0018\nPA B IS RE A LXYLLXD,_\u201e ;_\nCOMMERCIAL LOTS\nNeed a commercial lot.  Check these out,\none on 271st St., zoned C2, one on 276th\nSt.,   zoned   CS1.   Call   Ken   for   more\ninformation, eves. 856-1600.\nBUILDING LOT\n62.5 x 87 ft., lot close to everything, the\nright place to build your dream house.\nCall Ken for details, eves. 856-1600.\nVIEW OF MT. BAKER\nLandscaped one acre lot. Walking distance\nto schools, churches and shopping.  Home\nhas five bedrooms. Phone Bill Homewood,\nfor more Info., eves. 856-8562.\nPRIVACY-PRIVACY-DEAD END AVE.\n5 ac. full bsmt. home. Plenty of\noutbuildings, inc. hot tub, barn, etc. Has\nto be sold to settle estate. Asking\n$140,000. Call Kathy, for viewing,\n8594542, eves.\nTWO ROAD FRONTAGES\n40 rolling acres on municipal water. 36' x\n60' hip roof barn, O.T. farm house, good\ncondition. $189,500. Phone Elaine for\nmore Info. eves. 856-7351.\nNICELY DECORATED,\nNICELY LANDSCAPED\nThis 3 bdrm., basement home Is Just right\nfor you! $75,500. Phone Elaine for more\ninfo'., eves. 856-7351.\nABBOTSFORD - .37 ACRE\nPrivacy & seclusion. Located at end of\nquiet street. 3 bedroom older rancher.\nTotals 1660 sq.ft. Yard has year round\ncreek, lots of potential In this complete\npackage. Call Kathy, eves. 8594542 or\nSherry, eves. 8544064.\nV. ACRE BUILDING LOT\nCorner of Bablch & Nelson. Munlc. zoning\nwill allow Duplex.  All offers to $39,500.\nCall Kathy, eves. 8594542.\nPRICED TO SELL-DON'T HESITATE\nSpotless 1225 sq. ft., 3 bdrm. rancher on\n77 x 123 fenced & landscaped lot. Easy\nwalk to all amenities. Drapes and blinds\nincluded. MLS Listing. $68,500. Call bill\npound, eves. 856-9083 or Ken, eves.\n856-1600.\n2211 CLEARBROOK RD.\nCLEARBROOK\nGreat retirement apt. Fridge, stove,\nbuilt-in vaccum, 2 large bedrooms, close to\neverything. Must be sold. Call Janet\nPeters, eves. 856-2480.\n5 ACRE DREAM\nOne look at this 5 acre parcel and you will\nbe sold. 327 frontage, mun. water, natural\ngas, 3 acres cleared and tile drained, 2\nacres In light alder, mins. from town,\npaved road. $68,500. Call Ed Snow, eves.\n856-0483 or Pager #208, 853-0050 or\n530-0144.\nLOTS OF FIREWOOD\nBuild your new home and heat It with all\nthe wood you will need, 6 acres, mun.\nwater, power, gas, etc. Call Ed Snow,\neves. 8564483, or Pager #208, 8534050 or\n5304144.\nNEED 4 BEDROOMS??\n8 yr. old, 1070 sq. ft. family home with\nfamily room, 2 pc. bath &. 4th bedroom\ndown. Garage with workshop. Vendor\nrelocating and wants this sold. $73,900.\nMLS Call Bill Pound, eves. 856-9083.\nNEW 3 BEDROOM BASEMENT\nThis heritage style home Is located In\nbeautiful Walnut Grove. Features include,\ntwo bay windows, sliding glass doors to\nsundeck, 3 pc. ensulte, F.P., pool size lot,\nroom for R.V. and lots more. $85,900.\nCall Pam, eves. 856-1871.\nI\u2014EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED ANDORERATED-J\n *~~m\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n29\n45. Homes for Sale\nOldie but goodie. 4 bdrm. 1V_ storey home\nin Langley city, close to Zellers mall. New\nroof, 20x23 garage, Ige. 60x170 lot, good\npotential. Must sell, already bought. Offers\nto $62,900. No agents. 5344627. 334\n50. Trailers-R.V.s\n1985 26 ft. Triple E motorhome. Like new.\nOnly 1600 kms. Dash air, auto, cruise,\nAM\/FM stereo\/tapedeck. Sleeps 6. Must\nsell. 8594152. 32-4\nLakeview\nRealty Ltd,\n533-4161\nServing the Fraser Valley\nin Residential Real Estate.\nWALLY MARTIN\nRES: 533-3533\n47. Bus. Opportunities\nSUCCESS STORY\nYOU AND MACLEODS\nIf the Idea ol running a successful\nretail franchise In the pleasant environment of Small Town, Western\nCanada appeals to you, Then we'd\nlike to talk to you.\nWe have business available In your\narea now. We're Madeods, an\nestablished retail hardware chain with\n70 years of experience In Western\nCanada, and over 30 years In\nfranchising.\nFinancing Is available to approved\napplicants with unencumbered Investment capabilities.\nWe offer training programs, support\nservices and financing to get you off\non the right foot - end there are no\nJoining fees or royalties to pay.\nLet's talk about your franchise today.\nWrite:\nMadeods Franchise Dept., CLI\nBox 6800, Wpg, Manitoba\nR3C3Z9\nAttention: T. Patrick\nMACLEODS THE\nAFFORDABLE FRANCHISE\nFRASER VALLEY\nCOLLEGE\nWORD PROCESSING COURSES\n- on AES, Micom or microcomputers\nusing Wordstar.\n- in two week modules\n- at the Abbotsford Campus\nGood typing skills required.\nFor Information:\nBarbara Whiteside\n853-7441, local 228\n2505-05\nWork from your own home & enjoy your\nfamily. New expanding ladles business with\ngood potential, showing good returns. $2000.\n853-1162. 334\n49. Mobile Homes\n2 bdrm. 12x60. Lge. lot, great park, reas.\npad rent. Workshop, 6 appl., new furnace.\n$22,900. 856-5457. 32-4\n1974 Olympian 12'x58'. To be moved,\n$12,000.; 9V. ft. Weekender camper, fully\n\u00abaa-.,-$2306.'534;iO88. -'- \u2022\" '- -'    \u25a0 3*4 \"\nWE WANT YOUR\nBUSINESS...\nAND WE'RE\nDEALING TO PROVE IT!\nCOME IN TODAY\nAND SEE FOR YOURSELF\nTRAILERS\nKustom koaCH\n___    _ ^'\"fl you for 25 .ears\n5TH WHEELERS\nCimcirron\nBY FLEETWOOD\u00ae\nVISIT OUR NEW\nR.V. PARTS,\nSERVICES,\nREPAIR\nCENTRE\nKUSTOM KOACH\nLEISURE SALES\n(A Div. of Carstensen Enterprises Ltd.)\n26875 Fraser Hwy., Box 39,\n.'.-J _^\u00bb\u00ab*.-P%\u00a3-WX_t*Q! _. .\n[604] 5344820 or 856-5722\n50. Traiiers-R.V.s\n16 ft. trailer. Fully self contained. Fridge,\nstove, furnace, toilet. Sleeps 6. Immac.\n$2200.8564535.  334\nGooseneck equip, trailer, $450. obo. 856-\n8127.  344\n51. Boats\n51. Boats\nCANOE RANCH\nRentals, Sales, Trades, Repairs\nFarwest Gortex rainwear.\n27728 Fraser Hwy., Aldergrove, B.C.\nPhone 8564202\n14403396-tf\n52. Machinery-Equip.\n52. Machinery-Equip.\n1982 Shatter post pounder like new $1000.\n856-7142. 35-2\nA* new. Crone rotovator Res. 125, 50\".\n$2100.8564680. 34-2\nCamperette. Icebox, sink, stove, boat racks,\njacks, lots of cupboards. $500.856-7108.\n 344\nCamper fastened to 1968 Ford P.U. 87,000\norig. miles. No rust, good running cond.\nCassette, fridge, etc. $1875.6564486.   344\n8 ft. long x 32\" high Wlnnlbago canopy. Like\nnew. Insulated. 856-2288. 34-4\n1974 Aristocrat 28 ft. trailer. Dble. sink,\noven top cook stove, fridge, shower, toilet,\nelec. or propane w\/2 side bunk, 2 table\nunits. Will sleep 6. Ph. after 6 p.m. $5500.\nobo. 533-2720, 530-2790. 32-4\n1979 Ford Okanagan motorhome. 23 ft. Exc.\ncond. All access. Sleeps 6. 23,000 miles.\n856-9469. 334\n1978 20 ft. Prowler trailer. Tandem axle,\nawning, rear bathroom with tub. Exc. cond.\n8564760. 334\n1975 22' trailer. Exc. cond. Reese hitch,\nswaybar, TV aerial. Many extras free, $4700\nOBO. 853-2252. 35-4\n1985 Vanguard Motorhome. Paid $32,500.\nHas 10,000 km. $28,000 OBO. 8564374.35-4\nV.W. Camper 1970. Runs well. Body rough.\n$600. Westphalia model. 856-2896.        35-2\n1972 Siesta 14 ft. trailer. 3 burner stove and\nfridge. Sleeps 6. Asking $800. Phone\n796-2640. 35-4\nWanted. 40-50 HP outboard motor with\ncontrols. Will pay up to $600.8564476. 344\n16 HP O.B., tank, control, $150. or swap for\nsmaller O.B. Wanted oars. 8564633.     32-4\nCLIPPER CANOES\nBuy factory direc: from western Canada's\nlarges: manufacturer of canoes. Complete\nselection of accessories at our large showroom. (Rentals). Box 115, 2142 West River-\nside, Abbotsford. 853-9320.        17403472-tl\n13 ft. Glasscraft, 35 HP Merc O.B., spare\nprop, 2 daytanks & trailer. All very good\nrunning order. $1450. obo. 856-5476.      33-4\nUniversal Tractors\nParts\/Sales.Sefvlee\nat\nBypass\nEquipment Ltd.\n19575 Langley Bypass,\nBox 3265, Langley, B.C.\n533-3271\n28-tf(T)\nPull type side delivery rake, $225.\n334\nManure spreader, 130 bushel, Massey. $400.\n856-7818. 334\nSUNRISE AUTO & MARINE SERVICE\n- General Auto & Marine Repairs -\n- Engine Rebuilding - Auto & M arine -\n- Major Repairs- Inboard & Sterndrive -\nLARRY R. HARGROVE\nBus. 8564377   Res. 856-7269\nService: Mon. - Fri. 8-5\n26891 Fraser Hwy.\nAldergrove, B.C.\nLANGLEY FARM\nIMPLEMENTS\nIS HAVING A SALE\nNew Equipment\n26 P.T.O. H.P. FWD\nwith loader     $13,995.\n42 P.T.O. H.P. $12,995.\n42P.T.O: H.P. FWD  $15,500.\n84 P.T.O. H.P $22,900.\n10.6 Disc  $3,950.\nTedder Rake Combination  $1,500.\n10.6 Mower Conditioner  $12,900.\n17.6 Tedder $3,295.\nUsed Equipment\n17'Tedder PZ $1,250.\n65 H.P. Tractor $3,250.\n52 H.P. Gas $3,250.\nUSED LAWN & GARDEN\nEQUIPMENT ON SALE\nLangley Farm Implements\n23160 -72 Ave., Langley\n(At 401 & No. 10 Hwy.)\n888-6228\nREUTZ\nALUS\nFORMERLY ALUS-CHALMERS BRAND\nLAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT\nSubscribers to The\nAldergrove Star get value ...\nMonday - Friday: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.\nNO CHARGE\nPERSONAL CLASSIFIEDS\n856-5212\nDEADLINE: For Wednesday edition ... Classified: Monday, 2 p.m.\nToo Late to Classify: Tuesday, noon\n\u2022 Limit of one free 15-word ad per issue - you must be a subscriber.\n(Private businesses are not included in this offer.)\n\u2022 Any additional words should be on an additional sheet of paper.\nThere is a 12c charge per extra word. (Pre-payment required)\n\u2022 Your ad is most effective when you include a price.\nSUBSCRIBERS: Use this form to plan your ad before you call ... or clip and mail.\nThe Aldergrove Star, P.O. Box 220, Aldergrove VOX 1A0\nClassified Section      \t\nNo. of weeks.\nYour Name\n|__Address\t\nPhone.\nNON-SUBSCRIBERS: To receive the Aldergrove Star every week, fill out the form\nbelow - and if you wish, attach your first free classified ad.\nUnder 65 yrs.: 65 & Over:\n\u25a1 1 Year - s12\u00b0\u00b0 LJ 2 Years - s1500 U l Year \u25a0 56\u00b0\u00b0 U 2 Years - s900\nU 1 Year s2400 for Overseas & U.S.A.\n\\J VISA Card\nj \u25a1 Cheque\n| \u25a1 Money Order     VISA No.:\t\n.Expiry Date:\n w\n30\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n,m\n52. Machinery-Equip.    jl 55. Cars\nInternational cub tractor, good running cond.\nImplements, plus trailer, eady to work.\n$1200.656-6053.        ____*\n1973 GMC V. ton p.v. $250; Mlkese\nWisconsin eng., vibrator compactor, exc.\nshape. $150. 100 gal. pressure tank, $35.\n856-3836. .         35-2\nMassey baler needles, $75.; concave rub\nbars, $75.; combine feed chain, $75.; post\npounder, $35.856-2489. 34-2\n53. Auto. Supplies\nTo Trade - V.W. off road exhaust system for\nstock system 1300 cc through 1600 cc.\n856-9419.  35-2\n88 Beetle 1600 cc' engine, Just tuned up\nbody In fair cond. Needs minor floor repairs\nand trans. Will sell for $350. OBO. Phone\n856,118. 35-4\n3 mobile home axles compl. \/w. brakes,\nwheels and tires. 856-7785. 35-2\n1972 Bulck Electra, (...., p.b., p.w., VS, 455\n4 barrel. $500. obo. 388-1031. 34-3\n1988 Mercury Lynk L. 6 mths. old, 5 spd.,\n44 mpg. Mint cond. Lease at $205. pr. mth.\nWill take car valued at $1200. as down payment. You take over lease. Call Bill\n856-9798. | 34-tf\n\u2014 1\t\n1973 VW. New paint, runs well. Good cond.\nMust be seen. Asking $3500. 856-8852.  34-2\n1973 Pinto. No rust, very reliable. First $450.\ntakes. Greg 856-7336. 33-3\nCAPT'N\nCRUNCH\nSCRAP CAR REMOVAL\nYARD CLEAN-UP\nDead Cars Wanted\nFor Demolition Derby\n853-3074   8-95292-tf\nNEW & RECONDITIONED BATTERIES\nSPECIAL\nTorque Starter Battery - $40.\nBATTERY EXCHANGE\n#12 - 31088 Peardonville Rd., Abbotsford\n852-2772   i3-2i248-tf\n4 new 14\" VW rims, $20. ea. 856-3579. 34-2\nTires: 2 used 950x16.5 8-ply summers, $10.\nea.; 2 used winter tires & rims, Ford\n1200x16.5, $40. ea. 856-6529. 34-4\nFor sale. Lots of parts for 1970 Corona Mark\nII. 5354)849. 17-tf\nCheck Radiators Ltd.\n... n,-.\u2014\u2014v\n,,,lvy       V27539-31st Ave.\n'\u25a0m\u00ab|v. i      Aldergrove\n856-9333\n54^Motorcycles\n1977 Honda goldwing. Gd. cond. $1200 firm.\n656-2850. 35-2\n1985 Nlnja 600 R 7000 Hwy. miles, exc.\ncond. plus extras. $3995. Eves 856-5802,\nweekdays 584-2344.        35-2\n1983 Yamaha 650 Heritage Special. Black,\nlike new. 7000 kms. Recent major tuneup.\nWith windshield. $1500. firm. 852-2929 after\n6 p.m. 33-4\n1972 Chevy Nova 250, 6 cyl. auto. Runs but\nneeds body work. 856-4477.      35-2\n1973 V.W. Beetle. Rebuilt 1200 cc engine.\n1973V.W. Beetle. Rebuilt 1200 cc engine.\nGood cond. Asking $1500. 534-6003,      35-4\n1982 Lada 4 dr. 4 spd. am\/fm, snow tires. 1\nowner: exc. cond. $2150 OBO. 856-2224.35-4\n1971 Toyota Corolla parts., motor, Irans, etc.\nPhone856-6773.      35-4\n56 trucks \u25a0\nI am a 1936 metallic blue Chev. p.u. seeking\nanew home. Once driven you'll adopt me.\nAfter 6 p.m. 856-4907.   35-4\n1970 %ton GMC p.u. w\/canopy, needs\nstarter. $600; 1976 Dodge Royal Monaco,\n$600 OBO. 16' cande..\n ffi-4\n1978 Deluxe F 250 Ranger Lariat camper\nspecial, with heavy duty hitch and new\naluminum canopy plus 1979 Okanagan 11 ft.\ncamper. All excellent sonditlon. Asking\n$12,000. 856-2649.     354\n1975 Pontlac Paripsiane Brougham - air\ncond. cruise, tilt, p.s., p.b. am\/fm cassette.\n$1500 OBO.856-9507 eves, only. 35-4\n1975 Dodge dart sport, runs. $400,866-4103.\n35-3\ni977 Gran Prix. Gd. cond. just spent $600 on\nmotor, new brake and boosters. Master cyl.\n$995. 856-4521. 35-2\n1969 Mercury 4 dr. .90 motor $300 OBO. Ph.\nearly morning or after 7 p.m. 859-2944.\n35-tf\n1985 KX80, exc. cond., $550. obo; 2 Texas   1976 mid-size Ford Torino, 2 dr. H.T. Very\nInstruments, speak & spell and speak &   gd. cond. throughout. $700. 852-2155.\nmath. $40.856-5567. 33-4 I 35-1\nSllverwing cover, $40. 856-7159.\n34-4\n1978 750 Super Sport Honda. Windjammer\nfairing. 35,000 kms. $550. 856-8469.       32-4\n1984 Honda 500cc VSO Magna, 5900 kms.\n$1900. obo. Like new. 856-5616. 34-4\n1982 XR200 & access. Good cond. $900.\ncash. Open to offers. 856-4793, 856-1957.\n  34-3\n1981 650cc Maxum 4 cyl. shaft. Only 5000\nkms. This bike is brand new. $1500\n856-1603. 34-2\nWrecking 1966 Plymouth Satellite, has good\n318; 1975 Ford Granada, $850 OBO.\n856-9355. 35-1\n1975 Dodge station wagon. Good running\norder. Any reas. offer. Phone 856-6609. 35-1\n1981 Datsun 210, 2 door sedan, 4 spd. stand,\nlight blue, black Interior. Stereo, tape deck,\n$2000. Good throughout. 852-3618. 35-1\nReliable family wagon, 9 pass A\/C, clean. 75\nDodge, Auto, p.s, p.b. $1250. 856-1574.\n35-4\n1977 Yamaha 650 twin. Immac. cond. Low   ScraP   ca,s   wan,ed-    Bradner-,SnaJ\"a\u201e!;\n856-8378. 9-793059-tl\nmiles. $900. 856-3076, 856-5181.\n31-tf\n1981 Honda CM400T. Exc. cond. With plexi\nfairing, new Spitfire tire. Must be seen.\n$950.856-4456. 32-4\n55. Cars\n1979 Plymouth Sapporo 2.6 auto., p.s., p.b.,\np.w., power remote side mirrors, 4 wheel\ndisk. Looks & runs great. $3500. 856-6936.\n 33-4\n1971 VW floor, $75. obo; VW muffler &\ntailpipe, complete; Honda motorcycle, 125cc,\n1972, needs work, $125. 856-4479. 33-3\n55. Cars\nobo. 656-5669.\n33-3\n1967 Impala 400. Small block, runs good.\n$750. 856-4103. 33-4\n1973 Olds Tornado. Propane powered, air\ncond., p.w.\/door locks, good cond. $2200.\nobo. 856-9811. 34-2\n240Z, good cond., flared fenders, new tires\nall around, 2 new snow tires, 4 spd. $1800.\nobo. 534-4383.         34-4\n1979 Dodge Omni 5 dr. 140,000 kms. Good\ntires, good cond. $1875. 856-7843. 34-2\n1979 Mustang Indy pace car. Lots of extras.\nExc. shape. $6300. obo. 856-5352. 34-3\n1975 Honda Civic. New battery, sunroof,\ngood motor, trans., rearend. Needs some\nwork on front end. $400.856-3847. 34-3\n1966 Ford Falrlane 500. Orig. 289, V8 auto.,\np.s., 4 dr. Orlg. owner. $1100.. 856-8705.\n 34-4\n1975 apple red MG Midget convertible. Exc.\ncond. $2700. 856-6175. 15-t f\nBRADNER\nSALVAGE\nSCRAP CAR REMOVAL\nYARD CLEAN UP\nWe Buy, Sell, Trade\n856-8378\n33-96700-tf\nThe Township of Langley\nFIRE DEPARTMENT\nis in need of old cars or pickups for auto\nextrication training. We would appreciate\nthe donation of these vehicles to further\nthe training and skills of our fire\nfighters. If you have a vehicle complete\nwith glass, most wheels, doors, front\nend, etc., please contact Deputy Chief\nWayne Markel at 534-3211. The Fire\nDepartment will arrange to remove the\nvehicle. 35-2\n56. Trucks\n56. Trucks\n1972 MG. Immac. cond. $700. H.T., new rag\ntop. Leather int., stereo, etc. Must be seen.\nCall Kerry after 5 p.m. 859-902. 34-3\n1969 SST Javelin with orlg. 343 motor, stock\nparts & pieces waiting to be reassembled.\nWoman owned. 856-1146. 34-2\n1975 Chev Impala 2 dr. H.T. 350, 69,000\nmiles, eng. 81 power train good running\norder. Body fair cond. $400. obo. Dwight\n856-2192 after 6 p.m. 34-2\n1972 Ventura 250, 6 cycle, 3 spd. Rebuilt\nfront end, new shocks 81 brakes. Custom\ninterior. $600. obo. 856-2352after 5 p.m.\n 34-4\nMust sell. 1974 Duster. Runs well. Good\ncheap transportation. $900. obo. 856-1346.\n 33-tf\n1967 Chevy II, 2 dr. post. 78,000 orig. miles,\nrust. $200. 856-4586. . 33-3\n1973 Vega station wagon. 350 4 spd. $500\nnhn   fl .fi-RfifiQ -i 1-\n1977 , F250 Ford 4x4. One owner, low\nmileage. 351 motor, Tulsa winch, P.T.O.\nLoaded with extras. Hunter's special. $4900.\n534-2736. 34-4\n1967 Ford V* ton. 6 cyl. stand. Some rust.\n530-8266. 34-4\n1978 Ford F250 camper special. One owner.\n55,000 miles. With canopy. 856-5522, after 6\np.m. 853-8778.  34-2\n1972 Dodge V. ton. Slant 6, 225, with 3 spd.,\nshort box, canopy & more. Eves. 856-5285.\n34-4\n1951 Chev panel orlg. eng. $700. 856-8264.\n 35-2\n1979 Diesel GMC Sierra, 16' box, and low\ntemperature reefer unit. New brakes, tires,\nrebuilt trans. $16,000.6.6-6720. 35-4\n1974 Ford 1_ ton p.u. Needs work. Exc. for\nparts, 302 motor, 4 spd. trans, rear split\nwindow. $500 OBO. Ed. 856-9592. 35-4\n1971 GMC % ton low rider, TA. Radials,\nalum. mags. Compl. rebuilt 350 eng. &\nclutch. Brand new mufflers & brakes. Orlg.\npaint. Exc. cond. $1900.856-8446. 33-4\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLost bull calf, br. w\/wh. face. Has ear tag on\near. Vic. 70 and 204 St., 4 yr. old boys pet.\n856-6247. 35-2\nStudents desk $40.; swivel office chair, $75.;\nalmost new rowing machine, $70.; Queen\nsize waterbed, padded red velvet, h.b. c\/w\nheater (no sheets) $150. days 530-5403, after\n5 p.m. 530-9309. 35-2\nHealth reasons. 1980 Dodge maxi van. Fully\nself-contd. 1 owner. 37,000 miles. $8500\nfirm. 856-1648. 35-2\nWanted - men's ball hockey teams by Sept.\n30. Inquire to John 856-5767. 35-3\nPlatform rocker, like new, $45.; couch makes\ninto bed, newly uph. $75.; antique drop leaf\nwalnut table, $125.; 2 antique mahogany\nvelvet chairs, $35.; chllds cupboard, cabbage\npatch doll bed, high chair. 853-3886.\n 35-2\nDble. bed, mattress anf box spring, exc.\ncond. $100. OBO. 656-61680. 35-3\nWanted -leather recllner chair, gd. cond.\nReas. Used Kitchen cupboard, days 530-5403\nafter 5 p.m.530-9309.  35-2\nChickens lor sale. Various breeds, ready to\nlay. $5 ea. Also leghorns, $1. ea. 856-4232.\n 35-2\nRequired exp. part time babysitter. Wanted\nin my home to look after two small children.\nMust have own transportation. 856-5802.\n 35-4\nFurnished 12 x 48 mobile home, ready to\nmove on wheels, $9000. 530-0597. 35-1\n\u2014pjiOBeopic^\u2014\n1*          \"_.\"\nf each\n6-1\/2x11\n556\nSPECIAL.\n27109 Fraser Hwy\nor 8-172 x 14\n-M02\nY PRINTING\n. Aldergrove        32-tf\nWhy convert to propane or natural gas when     1976 Toyota Corolla  station   wagon.  One\nat 20382 Fraser Hwy. or call 534-5757.   28-tf     856-1377.\t\nLost Hlmalyan cross long haired cat, brown\npoints, blue eyes. Tagged, Fluffy, w\/\nEdmonton #. Reward. 856.7238. 35-3\nSnow tjres, 175 SR 14\", $40 pair; mirror 40\"\nx 30\" $30.; blond coffee, end table, $12.;\nPhilips toaster oven $25.856-8849.        35-2\nWhite-Westinghouse fridge and stove, both\nas new. $950. OBO 656-2292. 35-1\nDegree candidate accepting students in\npiano. Beginners or advanced $6 per V_ hr.\n856-1765.  35.2\n1973 Astre stand, new paint, rally wheels,\ngd. Int. Exc. mach. $900. Exc. cond.\n656-3024. 35-1\nStehl 08 2 man. earth auger with convertible\npower head, 8\" bit and extension. Exc.\ncond. $780. Ph. Grant 8564174 or 856-3388.\n 35-1\nPortable satellite system, complete with\ntrailer, 60 channels,, anywhere In % hour,\nV_ price at $1200, less without trailer. Ph.\nGrant.856-6174 or 856-3388. 35-1\nReconditioned Toshiba photocopier, reg..\n$300, $175.; six only console color TVs, reg.\n$249 - $299. Now $125.; Hoover washer, spin\ndryer, reg. $279. now $125.; teak chesterfield coffee tables, like new; kitchen table\nw\/2 leaves, $20.; dinette table, $25.; new\ncitizen stereo music system, am\/fm cassette,\nrecord player, reg. $375, now $175.; am\/fm\nconsole stereo, reg. $149, now $59.; 2\nmatching single chair beds, like new, $349.\nea.; refinlshed oak antique dresser w\/mlrror\n$129.; Have your furniture refinlshed or\nrepaired. $15 pick up charge. Brassy Jacks.\n20382 Fraser Hwy. 9 - 5. 534-5757. 24 hour\npager 667-1606. 35-1\nWasp nest special, $30. Anto Eater Pest\nControl. 856-4027. 35-2\nA bargain - half-round arborlte store counter\nwith cash register recess and adjustable\nshelves and brackets. $75. OBO. 856-5724.\n KM\n5 white rod pocket shears, 64\" x 63\", $5.\nea.; 1 childs folding desk, $10.; girls 2 wheel\nbike. 856-9410 after 5 p.m. 35-1\nFree exc. cond. ladles dresses, size 12 to\nneedy women. 856-1096. 35-1\nLge. duplex In Langley, 2 bdrm. up, 2 bdrm.\ndown. Walking distance to school and\nshopping. Avail Sept. 15. $650. pr. mth.\n856-6855. 35-2\nOne-way ticket from Vancouver to Kelowna,\nfemale. $20. 856-1047.  35-2\nUtility trailer in gd, cond. $225. 856-2416\nor 856-4370. 35-2\nClose to everything. Ground level 2 bdrm.\nste. Hydro, cable incl. Private home. No\npets. Long distance trucker pref. $400.\nBetween 6-7 p.m. 856-4072. 35-4\nSmall neutered male dog. Free to good\nhome. 856-2756 or 856-6980. 35-3\nQuality Wash, grass hay. Ige. bales. $3.50 pr\nbale. Del. free over 50 bales. 856-0272.   35-4\nBeer fridge, gd. working order, $60 OBO.\n856-0272.      35-4\nNear Guildford like new ''500 sq. ft. full\nbsmt. 4 bdrm. house, 2V_ baths, w\/w,\ndrapes,, 3 a^ply 2 F.P.s. possible inlaw or\nbsmr. .te.WS.'p'.\u25a0 nith. 9.4^7164.''\"   '35^4 <\n.\n. ^^\n *l\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\n31\nThe Highway 86 theme sculpture is a walkthrough,\nundulating four-lane boulevard\nwith over 200 present-day\ntransportation items in a surreal   setting.   Created   by\nS.I.T.E. Projects Inc. of New\nYork, Highway 86 rises out of\nthe water and soars into the\nhorizon, allowing visitors a\nhands-on experience of the\nworld of transportation.\n23445\nLETS FACE IT!\nJob interviews:\nGrooming and the\ncompetitive edge\n(NC) \u2014 Searching for that perfect\njob can seem a little frightening, especially if you're not certain where\nto start or what to do.\nThe job market is competitive\nand there are few situations that\nevoke as many feelings of competition and anxiety as job interviews.\nBut by following some common\nsense guidelines, you can maximize\nyour confidence, enhance your effectiveness and give yourself the\ncompetitive edge that will make a\npositive impression on potential\nemployers.\nAccording to research conducted\nin the U.S. by The Cosmetic Toiletry and Fragrance Association, the\ncharacteristic that impresses people\nmost, when meeting anyone for the\nfirst time is appearance. This suggests that good grooming and attention to one's appearance play a particularly important role in a job interview situation.\nDress for success\nDuring job interviews, you want\nto make certain that the clothes you\nwear present an image of competence and professionalism to the interviewer.\nSuitable attire is not always a suit\nand tie. In general, clothing* that\n\"fits in\" to the job or type of business environment is a better choice\nthan clothing that \"stands out\" or\nsets you apart.\nFor women in business, attention\nto the messages conveyed by clothing yean be crucial to. landing-the\nright job. For example, in a corporate setting, ruffled blouses and\ndangling jewellery might be interpreted as inappropriate.\nGrooming Techniques\nThe Association's survey of successful business women concluded\nthat those who present a polished,\nwell-groomed appearance were\nrated as more secure, sociable, interesting, poised, confident and organized. The most striking effect is\noften not in an outward appearance\n\u2014 but rather how the individuals\nperceive themselves after using a\nvariety of grooming products to improve their appearance. These participants saw themselves as more physically attractive and more socially\nconfident. They also had a better\nself image and a more positive outlook on life.\nThe Canadian Cosmetic, Toiletry\nand Fragrance Association has\nsome suggestions to give yourself\nthe \"competitive edge\" and improve your chances of getting the\njob you want:\n\u2022 make certain your hair is clean\nand neatly cut or trimmed\n\u2022 the clothes you choose to wear to\nthe interview should be appropriate\nfor the setting, clean and neatly\npressed\n\u2022 the proper and effective use of\ncosmetics and grooming products\ncan enhance your natural looks to\nmake you look and feel more attractive and confident.\nTOO LATE\nTO CLASSIFY\nIndustrial electric fan, 38x30 $250. Smaller\nfan $200.125 and 150 gal. oil tanks.856-3260\n_^_i__  35-2\n1979 Honda XRB0. Exc. cond. Recent\ntune-up. New back tires. $300 firm. 534-2705\n 35-4\nApollo 5 speed, great cond. new tires and\nchain. 19\" frame. $80. Phone eves.858-8448.\n 35-3\nAldergrove Art Club 1st meeting, Sept. 3.\n1:00 p.m. O.A.P. Hall. New members\nwelcome. 35-1\nAll new, $25. ea.; white figure skates, sizes\n12 and 2; hiking boots, size 6.8560476. 35-1\n3 lab cross puppies, 8 wks. old. Free to good\nhome. 856-0504. 35-1\nPortable dishwasher, $100 OBO, elec stove,\n$125 OBO, fridge, $200. 5-6 p.m. only.\n534-8489.  35-4\n73 Honda, 175 cc. $175. 28 hp Johnson\noutboard, with tank and controls (good\nrunning cond.) $250.856-6581. 35-1\nBabysitter needed for 2 children ages 2 and\n7, near parkside. 856-5277.  35-2\nFreezer upright commercial size, 25 cu. ft.\nquick freeze shelves plus fast defrost unit.\nOrlg $1100. sacrifice $350.858-6743.      35-2\n1978 Lionel H.T. tent trailer, fridge,\nfurnace, stove, etc. Sleeps 6-8. Gd. cond.\n$2800.856096. \\ 35-3\n1974 GMC 3%4 ton, $800 OBO. 8-6-3920.\n 35-4\nRotwsiler. German Shop. 5 mths. old. Male.\n$30.856-4967. 35-1\n30 year old children's china tea sets. 1 set\nfor 2,1 set for 5. Make an offer. 856-2198.\n\u25a0 , __>A\nHunters special. 1975 GNC 1 ton, camperized, jacks incl. 66,558 orlg. miles. Asling\n$2000. 853-8513. 35-2\n11' Sailboat, plywood and f.g. const. Incl. 3\nsails and trailer. In exc. cond. Asking $695.\n856-0445.  35-4\nWanted - folding picnic table, must be In gd.\ncond.856-.610. 35-2\nLambs, your pick, $100. each. 856-2889. 35-4\nInsuring house\nimprovements\n(NC) \u2014 Many homeowners take\ngreat delight in purchasing older\ndwellings, then completely renovating them. These renovations can\nbe of a functional nature, such as\nnew kitchen cupboards, new floors,\nor new plumbing and electrical systems. They can also be exotic, such\nas hot tubs, skylights, or even indoor atriums. They can also be expensive.\nPrudent homeowners insure their\nbuilding and its contents for replacement cost. This means, that in\nthe event of a claim, a damaged article would be replaced with a brand\nnew article, and the owner would\nnot be charged any depreciation.\nBut care must be taken to ensure\nthat the amount of insurance which\nyou carry on your building and contents is truly representative of their\nactual replacement \u2022 cost. Sometimes, when extensive renovations\nare .conducted! the value of the\nhouse increases dramatically, without the homeowner making similar\nadjustments to the amount of house\ninsurance that is carried.\nThis neglect leads to underinsurance, and could cause severe financial loss in the event of a serious\nclaim., {j* .   i     -        ,....,\nEASY TO OWN\nAttractive Condo complex In central locale, fireplace. Low monthly strata fee $32.65. 8\nClose to school, park, shopping and transit! units to choose from... Call anyone of the\nNeat and tidy, 3 bdrm. units, comes with 5 office staff to assist you. 856-2525 or\nappliances and window coverings, 1V_ bath,  5304018. Priced to $55,900.\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE TOWNSHIP OF\nLANGLEY\nINVITATION TO TENDER\nWALNUT GROVE 1986 URBAN ROAD WIDENING\nCONTRACT No. 402-00156\nThe Corporation of the Township of Langley invites tenders\nfor road widening, curb and gutter, sidewalks, street lights\nand related works at:\n(a) 204th Street between 88th  Avenue and 91A\nAvenue.\n(b) 93rd Avenue between 209th Street and 210th\nStreet.\n(c) 210th Street between 92nd Avenue and 96th\nAvenue.\nSealed tenders marked \"Tenders for Walnut Grove 1986\nUrban Road Widening\" will be received by the Purchasing\nAgent, Township of Langley, Langley, B.C. up to 10 a.m.\nlocal time, 4th September 1986, and will be opened in public\nimmediately thereafter.\nCopies of drawings,' documents and tender forms may be\nobtained on or after 25th August 1986 from McEllhanney\nEngineering Services Ltd., 13160 - 88th Avenue, Surrey,\nB.C. on payment of the sum of thirty dollars ($30.00), which\nsum will be nonrefundable.\nThe contract documents may also be viewed at Amalgamated Construction Association of B.C., 2675 Oak Street,\nVancouver, B.C.\nTenders must be accompanied by the specified bid bond,\npayable to the Corporation of the Township of Langley.\nAll tender enquiries shall be directed to:\nMr. Ed Ho, P. Eng.\nMcElhanney Engineering Services Ltd.\n13160 - 88th Avenue\nSurrey, British Columbia V3W 3K3\n596-0391\nThe Corporation of the Township of 'Langley reserves the\nright to reject any or all tenders, and the lowest tender will\nnot necessarily be accepted.\nKeith Fletcher\nPurchasing Agent\nThe Corporation of the Township of Langley\nMunicipal Hall\n4914 - 221st Street\nLangley, B.C. V3A 3Z8\n\u00abrt\n _!_-__-i_!_(_t_J_-_\n32\nTHE ALDERGROVE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27,1986\nr\nProvince\ntoo much\nVICTORIA - The British Columbia\ngovernment is spending too much\non transportation, with a government car for every six employees,\nauditor general Erma Morrison\n.v-**-     said in her annual report.\nThe total of 6,000 vehicles is 25\npercent smaller than three years\nago but the number of civil\nservants has dropped by the same\nproportion, said the report to the\nlegislature.\n\"It is our assessment that the\nprovince could have reduced further the number of vehicles in\nvirtually all categories of its fleet,\nparticularly the cars.\"\nEighty percent of the 150 million\nkilometres of travel by provincial\nemployees was by government\nc_rs in the year ended March 31,\n1985.\nOnly one percent of travel was\nby public transportation, while\nprivate -vehicles account for 17\npercent and rented vehicles two\npercent.\nNow is a good time to shift away\nfrom heavy reliance on govern-\ninenl cars which \"may not represent ihe most economic means of\ntransportating provincial employees\", the report states.\nGovernment records are incomplete, but the auditor general said\nthe operating cost in fuel and\nmaintenance for 3,308 of the\nvehicles was $8.3 million during\nthe year.\n\"A comparable fleet in industry\ndriving the same distance in\nBritish Columbia would have incurred only about $3.4 million in\noperating cost.\" The government\nfleet is aging and less fuel-\nefficient, the report said.\nIt would have been cheaper to\npay employees to use their own\nvehicles, \"as is the current trend\nin the private sector.\"\nThe auditor general's report also\nsays the government has been too\ngenerous with employees who do\n*-,\u00bb use their cars on business, paying\nthem one-third more than the estimated actual cost of operating the\nvehicles.\nThese rates are set in the\ngovernment employees' union contract, but the report suggests that\nthey should be flexible to respond\nto changing fuel and other costs.\nThe report is critical of personal\nuse  of  government  vehicles   -\nwhich is officially prohibited.\nEmployees on call or working at\n*tf-    locations where there is no safe\novernight parking are sometimes\nallowed to take government cars\nhome.\nThe report says nine  million\n.  kilometres are travelled annually\n\"by employees driving to and from\nwork   in.  government   vehicles,\nthree-quarters   of   which   is   in\ngovernment vehicles which have\nbeen, assigned to specific individuals for their exclusive use.\"       <\nAirshow souvenir coins prove popular and Fowler\nchosen\nABBOTSFORD - What better\nsouvenir to take\/home from the\nairshow than a coin commemorating the 25th anniversary .of the\nAbbotsford International Airshow?\nIn fact, approximately 6,000 of\nthese community coins were sold\nduring the three-day, air-speed\nextravaganza.\nAdding this to existing distribution figures of more than\n15,000, the Abbotsford-Clearbrook\nChamber of Commerce has circulated more than 21,000 of the\n25,000 minted trade dollars since\nthe program began in late June.\n\"With the assistance of about\n200 merchants and banks in. Abbotsford and Matsqui, we have\nalready been able to circulate most\nof our coins,\" says project manager Roxanne Hooper.\n\"We only have a limited quantity left of the coins, and the\nprogram is over at the end of\nSeptember. People who want a\nsouvenir dollar have to get one\nsoon.\"\nIn addition to sales of the\nsouvenir-trade dollars, the\nchamber has taken orders for 40\nsilver copies of the coin, valued at\n$25 each. The coins are also\navialable at the Aldergrove\nChamber office.\nA soldier's pay\nOTTAWA - As of October 1, a\nrecruit joining i the Canadian\nArmed Forces reserves will earn\n$33.60 daily while the basic salary\nfor a non-commissioned member\nin the rank'of corporal will be\n$43.90. The basic daily salary for\na captain, non-specialist, will be\n$70.40.\nMlTRRAYvTLLE - Two aldermen\nwho were absent from this week's\nmeeting of council will find, when\nthey return, that they have been\nboth elected and selected to serve,\nalong with the mayor, on the\ntownship's court of revision.\nAldermen Aubrey Searle and\nLen Fowler were nominated by a\nsnickering colleague Monday night\nas their seats stood empty. Other\naldermen giggled and confirmed\nthe appointment.\nMaybe that'll teach them.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Aldergrove (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Aldergrove_Star_1986_08_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0421751","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.0851","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-122.4707","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Title changes in chronological order: Aldergrove Herald (1957-10-16 to 1958-02-20), Aldergrove News (1958-02-27 to 1964-04-30), Central Fraser Valley Echo (1964-05-06 to 1964-12-23), Central Fraser Valley Star (1967-01-17 to 1969-02-05), and Aldergrove Star (1969-02-12 to 1991-12-31). <br> Presented to the Alder Grove Heritage Society by Kurt Langmann and Family, July 1, 2021.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"[place of publication unknown] : [publisher not identified]","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1986-08-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1986-08-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Alder Grove Heritage Society","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Aldergrove Star","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0421751"}