20 - Wednesday, August 5, 1892 - North Shore News firm or extra firm coils re ‘ ++4-6849.99 to your body form. Box spr f; 2199.98. Set......999.99 heavy-gauge coils. #73800 ses Reg. 2799.98. Set 1299.99 Reg. prices shown are Sears prices NO PAYMENTS NO PROBLEM!” NO PAYMENTS OR CREDIT CHARGES UNTIL DECEMBER, 1992 ON APPROVED CREDIT Some restrictions apply. Detaiis in store. AND, REMEMBER AT SEARS ‘No payments’ offer applies to any single item of $206 THERE’S NO DOWN PAYMENT or more in our Furniture, Major Appliances, Home Electronics, ON APPROVED CREDIT Floor Fashions and Custom Window Coverings Departments. THIS OFFER DOES NOT INCLUDE LIQUIDATION ITEMS AT CLEARANCE CENTRES SALE PRICES END SUN., AUG. 9, 1992 while quantities last SEARS your money's worth...and more Sears Canada Inc. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. “Reg” ‘and "Was" refer to Sears Canada tnc. prices. There's a Sears store near you...shop today at: Bumaby 433-3211, Surrey 588-0811; Mon., Tues. and Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.: Wed., Thurs. and Fri. ‘til 9:00 p.m.: shop Sunday from 12 noon to 5:00 p.m. Richmond 278-5542 Mon. and Tues. 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.; Wed., Thurs. and Fri. 'til 9:00 p.m.; Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; shop Sunday from 12:00 noon to 5:00 p.m. Capilano Malt 985-7722 Shop Mon., Tues., Wed. and Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Thurs. and Fri. ‘til 9:00 p.m.; shop Sunday from 12 noon to 5:00 p.m. Langley 533-4093 Mon., Tues., and Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.: Wed., Thurs. and Fri. ‘ti! 9:00 p.m.; shop Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Art for All to explore artistic process PRESENTATION HOUSE will begin offering a new community outreach pro- ram this fall after receiving unding from the Young Ar- tists and Audience Fund. Art For All will be a series of educational programs and tours designed to help children, schools and the public explore the photographic and performing arts. Beginning in the fall, a series of workshops — in which children will learn how to make and use a pinhole camera and their own flip book using photographs — will be held in conjunction with gallery exhibits. As part of the program,: an education officer and volunteers will visit schools to discuss photography in general terms. The program kicks off with Presentation House Gallery's fall exhibit Motion and Document ~ Sequence and Time. Eadweard Muybridge and Contemporary American Photography — a perfect opportunity for the public to learn about the history of photography. Students taking part in Art For All will also see a fully professional theatre productions followed by a discussion with the actors, direc- tor, set designer and playwright. GRAVES-BARON PHILIPPE 1990. $16.20 (France) THE LATE baron must be spinning in his mausoleum to see vintages on wines that made his personal fortune as non-vintage quality- controlled blends, but this more refined step-sister of Mouton Cadet is what any well-made white Bordeaux ought to taste like: an agile balance of fruit and crispness, a bit restrained but not unfriendly, like that person you’ve been trying to meet for years. You're paying through ‘‘le nez”’ for the Graves appellation, but it beats blowing only a few bucks less on a bottle of blanc whose bouquet and taste is sug- gestive of well-tised kitty litter. BROWN BROTHERS MERLOT. 1988. $13.90 (Australia) In response to the demand for easy-drinking forward wines, even the French have boarded the bandwagon by exporting buckets of fruity bulk Merlots that are mostly heartburn-in-a-jug. The Californians are more com- plex and stable because they sneak in up to 17% cabernet sauvignon to tame the more gamey grape to a semblance of ci- vility. Without obvious cabernet stiff- ening, this four-year-old (long in the tooth for a Jess tannic grape) from one of Australia’s most repu- table houses is dense, complex, elegant wine you'll feel comforta- ble serving or cellaring for a few more years. Like shaving blind in the shower with her leg-razor, it shouldn't work, but it does. — by John Moore