Government is tottering - West Beyond the West Hosting

$
COMP, 77178
LEGI3LATIVE L I ~ A f f f ,
PARLIA~E[IT BUILDINGS,
~ICT$~I~,
H61
8.C.,
,
~....
I
I
TERRACE-KITIMAT
I i
RUPERTSTEEL& SALVAGELTID,
we buy
COPPER
ALL METALS
BRASS
& BATTERIES
MON.- SAT.
, OPEN TIL 6 p.m.
Looation Seal Oove
Phone624-B39
Volume 72 No. 234
20C
Tuesda~b December 5, 1978
CUPE
slams
bill
Government
is tottering
(YrTAWA (CP) - - The
Canadian Union of Public
Employees (CUPE) predicts
"ihtemlfled confrontation
and conflict" next year if
Parliament passes a bill to
link public service pay to increases in the private sector.
,i
Bill C22, the bill to amend
the Public Service Staff
Relations Act,
is a
dselaratlon ot war against
the country's public sector
w o r k e r s , " the executive
board of CUPE, the eoantry'a largest unlod ~Ith
950,000
members, :said
Monday after a wedt~md
TEHRAN
(AP)
-Thousands of oil workers
launched a new round of job
slowdowns Monday hoping to
topple Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahinvi by drying up
the country's all-important
oil revenues,
reliable
sources reported.
In Tehran, three days of
bloody anti-government
protests appeared to be
winding down Monday. But
in a new twist to what has
been a one-sided struggle by
unarmed dissidents ngaimt
the military's guns, a
guerrilla band attacked a
police station, killing one
officer and
wounding
another.
Youthful protesters also
set fire to a bank in the heart
of the capital, causing
considerable damage. But
otherwise the armored
inilitary patrols stationed at
key points in the city seamed
generally in control.
The government reported
its troops killed 17 persons
m~l~eingbill would imttuct
a r b l t r a t i o n boards and
advise conciliation boards to
compare the total value M
pay and benefits with a
representative selection
organizations
outside
the
Ublic
service
when
t~miniag public service
increases.
"The argument that
publiusnctor workers spark
inflation is a b i g lie
fubadcated by Liberal party
propagandists and their
statisticians in yet . o t h e r
attempt to prove that the
Liberal party is the only
political party worthy and
capable ~ governing the
national affairs of the
country," CUPE executives
These
actors
are
preparing for the Terrace
Little Theatre production ot
Ben and the Boxes, written
b y two Terrace residents,
Cberie Thibesen~and Dave
D~.
The play will be
tx~t ~ r/ *. 4"znz# r ' ~ '
oroaucnon
J L
planned
seen at the Kalum Playhouse plans to attend should get
at 7;30 p.m. on Dee. 7 and their tickets early as there
Dec. 9 and at 8 p.m. on Dee. are only about 75 seats per
performance.
8.
Advance tickets are on
Two matinees will be held
at 2 p.m. on Saturday and sale at' McColl Realty and
Sunday. Everyone who sell for $1.50 for adults and
children.
and wounded 50 in Tehran
and the southern city of
Isfahan since the latest
violence exploded Friday
night. Diplomatic sources
said.
'
put the death toll at more
"Publle employee unions
than 30 here and in
provincial cities and some of
Minlsterh°pymen by and his
PrhnehaVebsensetupnanatimmlTrudeau
the shah's opponents claim
as many as 3,000 persons
party as part of their
have been killed, a figure
campaign philosophy of
fabricating false crises that
VICTORIA (CP)
-McGeer assumes a d- changes constitute an en- structure in many minis- most observers believe to be
wildly exaggerated.
only the Liberals are eapabie Premier Bill Bennetttoday dttl0nel responsibilities for tirely new look to thd tries."
mough and decisive enough m m ~ ~ : e l m a g e s , i n
-science :.and- technology..... '
,, ,
"We ~ fighting t o the
to solve,"
cabinet reapoaslbllltiesand" "under
an
aspanded
' death now; we have shed too
SHELFORDAGRICULTURE
. cabinet" s h u f f l e d
....................................
Arson
_,v.
changes wltidn minlstrle, of
his three-year-old Social
Credit government.
...
added 'two new
• ministers to his cabinet and
announced the creation of a
" I M
,
new ministry to reduce or
l:hree
' " "
red tape.
Three ministries disapTORONTO (CP) -- Arson peared in the shuffie and two
is suspected as the cause of others were absorbed by
the pre-dawn blaze that other ministries,
raged through a paper
New cabinet ministers are
Elwood
Vellch
(SC-warehouse Monday, leaving Bureaby-Wlliingdon),
three flrsllghtm
and chairman of the committee
causing
$/50,-000 dead
damage.
on Crown corporations, who
Fire offleinis said it is the becomes' the minister of
third time in two years that tourism and small business
arson has bse~ suspected in development, and Cyril
fires at the giant Kimherly.
Clark of Canada Ltd. Sheiford (SC--~keana) who
warehouse in northwest b e c o m e s
agricluture
minister,
Toronto.
Veitch also becomes the
far,it.officials have minister responsible for the
yetBut
to so
prove
Firefightars dug fran- B.C. Steamship Corp. and a
director of the B.C.
tinnily through mounds of Development Corp.. .
paper for about two hours
Sheifo'rdwas agriculture
ofM°ndaYthe
menbef°rewereb°dieSuncovered°f
two minister from 1968 to 1972
by werkere using front.end under the previous Social
Credit administration,
loaders.
Bennett said that' Grace_
The dead were identified McCarthy will m o v e from •
a s District Chief Lloyd provincial secretary to
Janea, 54, Capt. Donald
Kerr, 46, and flreflghter human, rasourcea minister,
but will r e m a i n deputy
John Clark, 44, all otTo- premier,
.
rotate, Juries,senior member
the department, had 28
She also becomes the
years service, Kerr 23 years ministor responsible for the
Insurance Corp. of B.C.
and Clark 14 years.
(ICBC), a post prevlonaly
Fire offic/als said the m e n held by Education Minister
were killed when 4½.metrs- Pat McGeer.
stacks of paper" rolls,
Hugh Curtis, minister of
wet and weakened'In t h e
flrefightingeffort~collal~ed, municipal affairs and
housing, has been assigned
the expanded provincial
kills
S t u d e n t
nL
u
u n- -u- - r e Z
VANCOUVER (CP) - - A
University Of British
Columbia student has
become the first woman in
ll~ irovince to wIn a Rhodes
scholarship.
. . of
Catherine Mtkum, m,
• Vancouver was chosen for
rite 1979 scholarship from
among 13 applicants, a
university spokesman Rid_
Monday. She was amo me
only wonmn among the 13.
Mlisem,
wm
graduate In honors English
next year. S h e then will
leave for Oxford University
for two years ¢4 study with
an optimml third year.
She said she intends to
pursue an academic career,
la'ohebly teaching at the
university level,
n
elegy
mildniry. He alse becomes a director of B,C.
Hydro.
Bennett said that Jim
Chebot,
" m o v e s from
minister, of mines and
petroleum resources to become" minister of the new
lands, parks and housing
ministry with a mandate to
make Crown land available
to the ettizenn of B.C.
Jim
Hewitt,
former
agriculture minister, now'is
energy,
mines
and
petroleum
resources
minister and a director of
B.C. Hydro.
Highways Minister Alex
Fraser becomes minister of
an expanded transpo/~tion,
communications and highways ministry with a
mandate to develop a
transportation policy for
B.C.
.
The i n m i e r said Fraser
also will he responsible for
the B.C. Ferries Corp. and
B.C. Air Services including
assistance programs for
local airports,
Heading
the
new
deregulation ministryis Sam
Buwif, the former rocreation
and conservation minister,
Bennett said the ministry
hasascif-destmctingclause,
and has a two-year mandate ,
to cut red tope in governmeat.
Finance Minister Evan
Wolfe has his ministry expanded to take in the
research and analysis
division of the economic
development ministry. He
continues as minister re-
B.C.B
c .and
fo,,caareAtto . .rai
G o r d o m , Eemomlc
Development Minister Don
Phillips, Forests Mlniser
Tom Waterland, Health
Minister Bob MeClelland
and Labor Minisler Allan
wimums.
In what the premier described as significant
changes, the agriculture
ministry was given an expunded mandate to promote
the processing of homegrown food; the attorneygeneral's ministry takes
over the film elauiflcation
division from consumer and
cerporateaffsirs;andlaber
was given the sole respen.
sibllity for the safety
engineering division of the
former highways and public
works ministry.
Bennett
said
the
"sweeping administrative
Gurde
....
"
.."
..
,,,~ .
,.
.
Bail refused
After being charged with
three counts o f fraud, three
counts of false pretenses,
two counts of possession of a
restrictedfirearm without a
permit and one count of
possession of marijuana, a
man calling himself Kenneth
William Bowers did not
convince Judge Darrell
ColllasinTerracoprovincial
court on Monday that be
should be allowed out of jail
until his next court appearance on Dec. II.
Bowers, age 31, was
chargedon Friday but he did
not make a plea on Monday
lacourt,
The man's true identity
has not been established,
Tom Bishop, crown counsel,
told the court,
The charges were laid
after a man established
seven hank accounts in the
Terrace-Kitimat area and
wrote cheques amounting to
an estimated total of
$317,000,said Bishop.
The cheques were written
on personalized cheques
from one bank to acconnts at
other banks, said Bishop,
The man apparently ubseined a truck from a
Terrace car dealer. The
"truck was worth $12,000,
Bishop asld.
--l.aecreinrY
governmentHewillberespomibleformlnlstry.
nnd
SystemsSp°nsiretainingC°rp'
bleAlso f°rtheirthep o r t - ~ * A
the Government Employee
Relations Bureau.
Bill Vender. Zaim moves
from minister of human
resources minister to
municipal affairs minister
with responsibility for the
Urban Trmmlt Authority.
Rare Muir, former con.
sumer and corporate affairs
minister, becomes anviromnent minister and a
director of ICBC.
Bennett told a news annfereuce that he will continue
as chairman of the cabinet
c~mmitteu on confederation
and will beoome ebairman of
the environment and land
use committee,
In a switch, former anvironment minister Jim
Nielsen becomes consumer
and corporate affairs
minister.
,:,;
much blood to stop," one
militant who identified
himself only as Hassan told a
reporter at the burial of a
half.dozen slain protesters in
a Tehran cemetery.
The opposition is both religious
and
political-orthodox Moslems who want
to reverse the shah's
Westernization of
the
traditional Islamic society
and political dissidents who
want to end his authoritarian
rule.
Sources who asked not to
be identified said the new
slowdown by many of the
37,00u-man work force in
Iran's
southwestern
Khuzestan oil fields immediatelycut iran's daily oil
MESSAGE MAY
START TALKS
JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin sent a
message
Monday
to
President Anwar Sadst of
Egypt that might get the derailed peace talks back on
track.
Although official Israeli
sources refused to disclose
the contents
of
the
message--Begin's reply to
one from Sadat last week-they said it makes clear that
Israel expects Egypt to drop
its demand for linking the
peace treaty to a timetable
for Palestinisn autonomy in
the Israeli-occupied West
Bank of the Jordan River
and the Gaza Strip.
Israeli Radio described the
note as "polite but
aggressive."
Egypt wants Israel to
agree to a timetable, or at
least a target .date, for
electing a' P a l e s t i n i a n
governing council, but Israel
has rejected the idea. The
Egyptians have agreed to a
U.S.-proposed target date of
the end of 1979'and are
reported to he willing to
incorporate this idea in a
letter appended to the main
body of the treaty.
In the West Bank, Israeli
army bulldozers demolished
the
homes
of
two
Palestinians convicted of
political murders and
terrorist operations, in what
appeared to be a renewal of a
policy of retribution.
The Israeli Supreme Court
issued injunctions against
the demolitions late Sunday,
but a court official said the
orders had not been
delivered to the military
government until Monday,
after the bulldozers had gone
into action.
Israel abandoned its policy
of razing houses of guerrilla
suspects, which were often
described as terrorist
hideouts, following international criticism that the
action violated the Geneva
• conventions.
l
Alleged jew-killer's
conviction quashed
THE HAGUE (AP) -- A 79year-old Dutch millionaire
art collector, one~.convicted
The man convinced one
of killing Jews while serving
hank to give him $2,000 in
with the Nazi $S (elite
Wavellcrs cheques, he said,
guard) in Poland in the
When police arrested the
Second World War, was
man he had two ,denfreed Monday after a Dutch
tiflcation cards on him under
court reversed his conthe names of Bowers and
viction.
Green. A third identification
The district court said
card wasn't complete, said
Pieter Meatus had claimed
Bishop. The man has also
that a former justice
been known as Vuffy, he
minister promised him
said.
immunity from war crimes
Police, according to
prosecution after he was
Bishop, founds Insdedpistol
convicted
of
Nazi
in the man's motel room at
collaboration 26 years ago,
the time nf his arrest. They
and his claim "must be
also found a small quantity
accepted as a possibility."
of a substance alleged to be
After the ruling, the
marijuana, saidBishep.
production by two million diabetic Menten, who also
The man appeared to be
claims to have a heart
preparing to leave the area barrels, one-third of the condition, slipped out the
when police arrested him, normal level.
"We expect the slowdowas back door of Soheveningen
said Bishop.
to
get worse tomorrow and prison near The Hague
Bishop said police are still
production
to drop even without comment. He had
investigating and there may
further,"
one
well.placed been in jail since his conbe further charges against
viction last Dec. 14.
source said.
the man,
The ruling came after a 34.
Iran, the world's No. 2
minute court hearing heard
Judge Collins said that he petroleum exporter, depends charges that Menten particiwas not satisfied that the heavily on its oil revenues.
pated in the summer 1941
man calling himself Bowers
Leaders of the opposition, massacre of 20 to 30 Polish
should be released. "If
" I f particularly the Paris-based
Jews at the village of
someone can devise a Ayatuliah Khomaini, exiled Podhoroce, now in the Soviet
scheme to get money in this head of Iran's dominant Ukraine.
way, he conld find a way to Shiite Moslem sect, had
Menten had been conleave town if he wanted to," called for stepped-up street victed of the charges after a
he said.
protests and a general strike seven-month trial in AmThe man was remanded beginning during
the sterdam, but the Dutch
weekend,
Supreme Court threw out the
until Dee. t l at 9 a.m.
conviction in May, saying it
found procedural errors in
the Amsterdam trial. The
high court said imufflcient
attention was given to
Menlen's immunity 'claim.
A successful tea dealer in
pre-war Poland, MenSes"
served an eight-month jail
term in the Netherlands in
1949 for collaborating with
the Nazis in Poland, but he
was acquitted on charges of
serving with enemy forces.
He fled the Netherlands in
1976 when the justice
ministry moved against him
on war crimes charges, but
he was picked up in Switzerlaod and returned to the
Netherlands to stand trial.
Correction
In the Dee. I edition of the
Daily Herald we repor.ed
that the Thornhili w a t e r
supply referendum will be
held on Jan. 6. Later we
pointed out that a regional
district
newsletter
erroneously reported a
referendum date of Dec. 7.
We meant to report that the
wrong date was Jan. 7 and
the correct date was Jan. 6.
We apologize to anyone who
was inconvenienced,
big one but no t for s
OTTAWA (CP) - - Blair
Claw, a Prince Edward
Island fisherman, knew he
had a blg one when he saw
the turtle caught .in his net.
And scientists at the
National Museum d Natural
Science proudly introduced
Monday s rare 1,000-peand
Icatherback turtle named
Sweetums, after the Muppets (of television fame)
monster.
The six-foot, 10-inch male,
which drowned in Clow's net
in September, had just been
shipped frozen from the East
Coast in a fish truck after
being identified by Nova
Scotia museum experts.
Francis Cook, museum
'berpetnlogist--an expert in
reptiles and amphibians-said there was probably a
little
dickering
with
restaurants first.
But scientists here have
been waiting for the likes of
Sweetums for a long time,
said Cook as he showed u
giant turtle tank built nearly
14 years ago.
A check with major
science museums in the
United States and on beth
Canadian coasts showed
Sweetums may be the only
leatherback left intact, he
added.
"One estimate says there
are only about 1,000 female
leatherbacks in the world,"
he said. "And estimates are
based On all known nesting
beaches where the females
have to come ashore to lay
eggs."
Moreover, scientists have
no idea how old Swectums is.
"The baby turtles are herd
to keep in captivity and die
soon after. We have no idea
haw long it takes to grow a
turtle of this size."
Despite Sweetums' size,
females grow much larger,
Cook said.
"It is thought that marine
turtles in northern waters is
an accident," said Cook
although reports have
documented sightings off the
East Coast since 1889.
Some of the five types of
marine turtles will haul
themselves out of the ocean
to bask in the sun "but as far
as we know leatherbacks
never do."
Most marine turtles
become sluggish when they
leave the warm Gull"Stream
waters and head into colder
parts of the ocean because
their blood temperature
drops to match surrounding
water temperatures, Cook
said,
"However, lestherbaeks
found in cold water are very
active and have food in their
stomachs, it's almost warm
blooded because the blood
temperature is about 18
degrees Celsius above the
water temperature."
Because Sweetums has ai.
ready thawed, scientists
must work quickly to
reproduce the specimen in a
plaster cast for later
exhibitions before the real
animal is preserved in
formaline, Cook said,
c
u
p
"These things are rare and
endangered and this is a
good opportunity for us to
examine him."
All marine turtles have become endangered species as
men collect eggs from the
warm sandy nests for food,
he said.
"The leatherback flesh is
not regarded as a delicacy as
it is the green turtle, it can
even become a deadly meal
at times."
Cook said not enough is
known about the leatherback
to explain why the meat can
be toxic.
He said the main diet of the
leatherback is jellyfish and
some of the largest concentrations of the giant
turtles are found near
schools of jellyfish.
r
)
/.
&
Page 2, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978
shape
Now's a good t i m e to get in
_ Christmas is coming . p
faster titan expecteo so wny
wait until you've feasted
yourself past your weight
limit, get in shape now. The
Terrace recreation department offers a wide variety of
free fwograms designco to
help you keep fit, and enjoy
doing it.
Jog with John is a fitness
program for people of all
ages. Enjoy 15 minutes of
structed exercise, then play
_a quick game of s~,:er, or
floor hockey. It's held
bIonday and Wednesday
from 5 to 5:45 p.m. at
Parkside School Gym.
Family Gym Time is the
perfect opportunity to bring
the whole family out for an
evening of lamlly fun and
exercise. Its held every
Thursday from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m, at E,T. Kenny School,
Recreation Sports for
Adults, is a program that
lets you do what you want,
Bring some friends to
Uplands School Gym.
Mondays evenings from 7 t o
9 p.m." for an evening of
invigorating fun.
Mess Indoor Soccer, take
this chance to practice your
skills, and get into shape for
the seccerseason, Everyone
is welcome at the Thornhill
Jr. Secondary School Gym
from 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays.
All these programs are
free, so don't delay' get into
shape now.
On December 12, 1978,
from 6:30 to t0 p.m. the
recreation department will
sponsor a candle making
workshop. A professional
candle maker will show you
how to make unique and
traditional candles in a
variety of styles. You'll be
able to take home your
creations which will include
a dipped t a w e d candle,
molded candle and a rolled
candle, to name just a few,
and all materials will be
supplied by the. Recreation
Department.
So if yon are interested in
this exciting workshop
please contact the arena
office at 638-1174.
BUSI HESS-DIREOTORY
TOOVEY
SERVICE
OANAVENTURE
t.ats,
YAMJUIA
NEROURY
(outboard
SKEENA VALLEY
RENTALS,,,.
Most Anything. Most Anytime For
CONTRACTORS.INDUSTRY.INDIVIDUALS
'
WINNIPEG
(CP)
-Former Manitoba Hydro
A ridge of high pressure • chairman David Cass-Begge
building in from the nor- defended himself Monday
thwest is bringing colder, against suggestions that he
drier air with it. As a result, had acted in haste as an
one can look for .sunny skies adviser to t h e provincial
and cool temperatures.
government.
He told an inquiry into the
This type of weather affairs of the Crown cor• should continue until the end poration that he made
of the week. High tem- recommendations on power
peratures this afternoor. development in northern
should be around 0 degrees Manitoba in 1969after only a
Ceblas, while tonight the few days of study.
But he said his quick
mercury will probably dip to
review of the situation was
about -7 degrees Celsius.
justified by a general fecllag
of "desperate urgency" to
If this type of weather lasts get new power projects
more than a couple of days,-. under w a y as soon as
the wind will probably begin possible.
to increase, and it will be • Inquiry lawyer Richard
cold, cold, cold once again. Scott asked Cass.Beggs if he
had misgivings about adJudging from the forecast; vising the government
it quite possibly may be time without the chance for more
to once again dig out that elaborate studleaofpotontial
heavy winter parka.
problems,
i
DOLMAR
(ohain saws)
motorsl
Hours: Mon.. Sat. 1-6
635-7417
]WEATHER
i -Beggsdefends self
HYDRO I N Q ~
Hours: Mon.. Sat. 0-¢
Dealer Licence
4946Graig Avenue
Phone635.7417
4946 Greig N.mb~
O=0~SA
I
'~ '
,~.
,
'
m-Non
.,~,.~/
~ ; ~
.Y_
The former chairman
replied: "1 certainly felt it
was a great pity that
Manitoba Hydr.~ and its
advisers had not !:,oked at
these problems fr¢~:: 196~
on."
The Progressive: C ,~."
servative government ~,; ~:..'~e
day decided i~ the late 1960s
to proceed with diverting
some of the water of the
Churchill River to generating plants planned along
the lower Nelson River.
The diversion plans were
held up after the New
Democratic Party won the
1969 provincial election, The
alternative that finally
emerged included a smaller
diversion of water from the
Churchill River and use of
Lake Winnipeg as a hack-up
supply of water for Nelson
River generating plants.
The inquiry is attempting
to determine whether the
utility acted wisely on the
- basis of the best information
available at the time important decisions were
made.
During Monday's hearing,
Cass.Beggs was critical of
the
original plans for
diverting the Churchill. He
said the project was
beautiful in pure engineering
terms, but would have re.
'salted in widespread en. vironmental damage in the
North.
' ~ '
Casa.Beggs was named a s .
an adviser to the NDP
government in the summer
of 1~9 to explm'e alter.
natives to the plans proposed
by the Conservatives. He
was appointed chairman of
Manitoba Hydro in January,
1970.
Monday's
testimony
showed that Cass-Beggs
exerted a strong iMluence on
major decisions in at least
three instances:
.
--In the fall of 1969, tl'ydro
officials were intent on
proceeding with plans for a
new thermal generating
plant near Selkirk to make
sure Manitoba would avoid
"brown-outs."
Cass-Bnggs said his own
studies revealed that enough
extra power could be
,'squeezed out" of existing
sources to cover the utility's
needs for an additimml year
or two. The Selkirk plant was
never built.
--Early in 1970, the
Manitoba Public Utilities
Board urged Manitoba
Hydro to increase its rates,
but the Hydro board rejected
the advice. Cass.Beggs said
the consultants used by the
Pubic Utilities Board really
didnt understand the tlff.
foresee between publle and
private utilities and their
recommendations weren't
really worth following.
The inquiry is to continue
today.
TERRACE ANSWERING BUREAU
636-8195
KITCHEN CABINETS •
.VANITIES, • r I N S T A L L A T I O N
•
MOULDED COUNTERTOPS •
cOD
,AO,.O. '
EN
BRAD RE[SE
BINETS
AREA MANAGER
3 6 9 . 5TH AVENUE
PRINCE GEORGE. B.C. V21.. 3 K 5
BUS. B 6 4 . | 4 8 8
RrS. B O Z . 2 2 8 1
' : ~ - If
MONITORINg OR
PHOTOCOPYING
s.vic.
24HOURSERVICE
(NORTHERN)LTD.
FREE ESTIMATES
L o o k i n g For A N e w
Place To Try?
4603-0 Park Avenue, Terrace, B.C. VIIG lV5
,1/
i~r
WHY NOT HECTOR'S AT THE LAKELSE.
TRULY A QUIET RELAXED ATMOSPHERE WITH A VERY SPECIAL/~
MENU TO GET THE TASTE BUD.S~EK-'
CITED. FOR EXAMPLE WHY NOT *TRY
THE TURNEDOS ROSSINI FOR THE
FLORENTINE FOR THOSE WHO LIKE
SEAFOOD.
NOOK"
Terraoe Elootronio Repairs Ud.
BUUK
SERVING TERRAOEl KITIMAT
SERVICE ON ALL
MAKES OF T.V.'s
Warrenly Depot for
Zenith, Phillips, Hitachi,
Sylvania
MON. • SAT. e a.m. • 5 p.m.
•
WHATEVER YOUR LIKES IN GOOD FOOD
ARE YOU WILL FIND THEM AT HECTOR'S.
For Reservations Please Call.....63&8141
~ O
4~S Lakehe
i
Buy, Sell & Trade Used Pocket Books 3 for I
WehaveagoedseloctimofltardCoveredBock&
Open New Location
so~Tue.:Whu'..Sat.
O3S.4,54S
3211Kalum
10-9Friday
-"
':P" " ~ l ~ ~'
'
..,
!14.',
PHONE O 3 S . 3 0 9 2
GLACIER
L
-
BARNEY'S SHOES & REPAIR
I
.
,~,~ 4411 togiom Avenue
.~'
Torraoe, 1.0.
632-420|
HARNESS AND SHOES REPAIR
SHOE SALE8;. WORK BOOTS AND LOGGER BOOT REPAIRS
A C o m p l e t e G l a s s and
Aluminum Service
Skate Sharixmlng
2 9 0 7 CLARK ST.
TERRACE. B.C.
JON'S HAIRST YLING
..... formerly Jon &Jan's Hairstyli"
RadioPhone
This Spaoe Is Resened
Copper
IR032
Phone
6354948
,
;We've •Moved:
MR, BUSINESSMAN!
"DINELE DAN'S TOWING"
For Your Jid.
3923 Simpson Cresont
s
I
•
0
00"
eo-o
0
\
f~
r/v
ICBC AUTO
FRIVAI! iNVI %IIGAI(}R
Insurance
4617 Greig
, Yel~,,
r i ~ Pro~¢wm m d
YeUowhmi S~cm,mu ~
4635 LAZELLE.AVI NUE
tERRACE, O C
VSG 3N5
635-5232
PHONE (604)635 3863
OR (604) 635 3861
I
Hair We Are 4609 Lakelse Ave.
I
I
I
II
R,R. 3 Johns Road
Phone 635.4348
HALLIwELL
I
I
Gall us at 63§-63§T 9 to §
III
I
THIS
WEDNESDAY
for opening
special we* Profe.~ionsl
B!ow
D r y s - * . 129.95
___.s* *. . . .
**
* •
. . . . . .
s r : J - I L,. . . . .
¢,1~. . . . .
--.
The ilerald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978, Page 3
Fulton critical I COURT NEWS I, Barrett
of transport deal :
:
'
speaking
•
The
federal
New reszdents as pos=dble."
Democratic Party candidate stressed Fulton, This would
for the Skecna riding, Jim mean a direct subsidy for
Fulton, slammed in a recent such commodities as food,
press release, the Liberal drygoods, hardware and so
government's handling of on, The subsidy could be on a
sliding scale for different
coastal transportation.
•'The federal government types of freight,
"For example," continued
bungled
coastal
transportation on the northern Fulton, "a ceiling freight
B.C. coast and is now looking cost would he placed on such
for a scapegoat rather than a commodities as milk, fresh
fruit and vegetables," Any
solution," said Fulton.
"'The controversy over the transportation cost above
replacement of services for this ceiling would be paid by
'Northland' has been sim- subsidy rather than by the
mering on the B.C. coast for consumer. The subsidy
two years now. The lack of would in this way be
planning by the federal reflected in an increase in
government has resulted in the purchasing power of t,he
high costs,
inadequate family income.
"Coastal residents are at
service delivery, and indiscriminated
convenience to coastal present
communities,"
stressed against economically," said
Fulton.
The
federal
Fulton.
Mast residents agree that government last year suba service is required that sidized the east coast freight
regularly delivers freight at and passenger service to the
reasonable rates and at the tune of 128 million dollars
same time offers safe, and B.C. received 8 million.
"If some principles of
reliable passenger tranrealistic freight costing were"
sport.
incorporated
with
a
"The Queen Charlottes are passenger service, most B.C.
receiving better service than coastal residents would be
many smaller coastal ~tisfied," said Fulton.
communities,, however, the
"Two initiatives are
subsidy structure requires
change," said Fulton. At required to achieve progress
present, vehicles can be m this situation," stressed
shipped between Masset and Fulton. Firstly, obtain a
Prince Rupert at a sub- transport committee inquiry
sidized rate, but only without and subpeona witnesses.
This is necessary in light of
p a s s e n g e r s . . "The
passengers can then receive the unusual circumstances
a s u b s i d y o n their air surrounding this issue,
transport," noted Fulton, Secondly, renegotinte t h e
' but only ff they.travel with 1977 subsidy agreement,
certain airlines and are either by amendment ~under
residents of .the Queen section 8~ or by termination
cunder section 9L
charlotte Islands,"
"In concluding," said
'.:if tax dollars are to be Fulton,
"the
federal
expended for a subsidy, they government has hidden long
should be for the benefit of as enough, and we need acmany island and coastal tion."
Howard suggesting
new plant for here
se~lte~;~d~t~'~nu~g~'~;rrall
Collins on Monday to a total
af 1~ months in przson when
he appearco m Terrace
prnvineial court fnr sentenclng lie had pleaded not
guilty to charges of breaking
and entering and theft of a
truck earlier this year.
Clayton ~as first charged
after the Terrace .Medical
Centre was broken into on
March 20. a sale wa~
removed from the building
and a 1973 pickup truck was
stolen.
Judge Collins said that
$l,500 damage was done to
the medical centre building
and $500 damage was done to
the truck. Clayton was given
nine months in prison for
breaking and entering and
six months in prison 10r
theft. A juvenile was also
involved in the March 20
incident.
After pleading guilty to
five counts of breaking and
entering and one count of
possession of stolen property
Glen St. Goddard was sentenced to spend 90 days at
the Terrace Correctional
Centre on weekends and
placed on two years
probation.
Judge .Collins said the
weekend stays at the
correctional centre will
begin at 8 a.m. on each
Saturday and end at 8 p,m.
on each Sunday until the 90
days are completed.
St. Geddard" was charged
alter the La~eine ~.sso and
four residence,,,were brnken
intoonAug.5Co]liussaidthe
sentence would have been
harsher but St. Gnddard has
not reached the point where
he cannot be rehabilitated,
James Boake, age 17, was
sentenced to pay a .fine el
$150 or spend 1o days in jail
in default after he pleaded
guilty to a charge of
possession of marijuana.
Boake was charged on
Nov.
3
when
police
discovered l ~ ounces of
marijuana on him, said Tom
Bishop, crown council.
Kelly
Backman
was
sentencedto pay a fine of $50
or five days after he pleaded
guilty to a charge of
possession of marijuana. He
was also placed on nine
months probation.
Backman was discovered
by Skesna Mall employees in
the washroom d the mall on
Nov. 10 at 6 p.m. with the
marijuana, said Bishop.
George William Henry was
sentenced to pay a fine of
$200 or 14 days after he
pleaded guilty to a charge of
impaired driving,
His
drivers
license
was
automaticallysuspended, He
• was charged on Nov. 19 after
he hit a department of highways fence.
Dave Barrett, former
premier of B.C,, will be the
guest speaker at the New
Democratic
Party
nomination convention on
Saturday Dec. 9 at I p.m, at
the Thornhill Community
(;entre. The general public is
inwted to hear Barrett
speak.
After Ihlrrett's speech,
NDP memhers from the
area will vote on who will
represent them m the next
provincial eleHioa. Francis
Sabine ,I Terrace a.d Frank
Howard, former .'.;keena MP,
have declared their intention
to seek the nomination.
Graham Lea. MLA' for
Prince Rupert, and J i m
Fulton. federal NDP candidate, will be guest
speakers at a dinner to be
held in the community
centre beginning at 8 p.m. on
Saturday A (lance ~iil be
held starting at 9 p,m. after
the dinner
WORK SHOE
H.Q.'s
We carry,'WorK, blX)rh .'-,at(~y
Leisure Boot~ and 5ho (.~
Weare Factory trair~J
fittirfl Six.lariats.
W~ can Ill anytmdy.
In Stock No Waitinq
Sizes516 •
Widths AAA.EEEE
Quality -~ Pr0po" Fit
ecpJals Comfort
Just one example
Woods~,n's Favourite
5
~,EFE
dth',
B699 ~18
,~1f el y toe
4789 Kinq~wny, Borr~lby B.C
4.'170 o r
(Across from S i ~
Scars}
Bank r~r(~ WPIoorn~
PIoa~ va'ite fo- Iree
bro~ure and pri¢o list
2
i
?
!Frank Howard, candidate
for, the NDP nomination in
the Provincial Riding of
Skeena, today released a
letter he wrote to General
Motors urging that company
to establish an aluminum
die-castlng plant in the
Kltimat-Terrace area.
Howard's letter was
p i ~ p t e ~ by news reports
that G.M. was considering
such a plant somewhere in
Canada. The letter sets out
five major reasons why such
a plant would be appropriate
for the area. Those reasons
include the fact that
aluminum, a prime raw
material, is produced in this
area. Electrical energy is
readily available there.
Transporation
facilities
would make the plant's
production available to
world markets. There is also
adequate land and space
available.
P
t
lloward said employment
and economic stability would
result from such a plant.
"When news of G.M.'s
thoughts became public,"
said Howard, "I was ap'palled to hear that the
Provincial Government was'.
not interested in pursuing.:;
the possibility.of seeing sdclz~.:
a plant established here. In
fact, former Snored M.L.A.
Newell Morrison who is on
the Board of Directors d the
B.C. Development Corporation is quoted as saying
that B.C.D.C. would make no
moves whatever and would
wait for an offer from G.M."
Iloward said also that he
had received a ,quarded
reply from G,M, saying that
no immediate plans existed
for such an expansion, but
that his letter would be kept
on file.
- .,,~ G K
1
"Greatest Hits"
Vol. II
BARBRA STREISAND
l
,,inrtt~z ,-'~- SAHTANA
flbBUM
41 ."°
,under
new
management
EASTSIDE
~e
8YR.CqPIS
.99
"Greatest Hits
Vol. Iir'
J O H N N Y CASH
Grocery
&
Laundromat
Proprietor.
STU OOTTERILL
"Bat Out of Hell"
MEATLOAF
Greatest Hits
SONNY JAMES
"Greatest Hits
Vol IV"
M A R T Y ROBBIMS
"Nightwatch"
KENNY LOGGINS
"Greatest Hits
Vol IV"
TAMMY WYNETTE
"Greatest Hits"
MURRAY
McLAUGHLIN
636,2104
4438 Lakelse, Terrace.
"This Years Model"
ELVIS COSTELLO
"Greatest Hits"
JOE S T A M P L E Y
"Greatest Hits Vol Ir'
JOHNNY PAYCHECK
SKEENAI.TAI P .i L L
0 PEN"
•
TERRACE
SATUROAY9AMTOSPM ,,
,
Page 4, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978
daily herald
Gene,'~l Office- 53,5.63S7
Published by
¢ircolstio,'. - 635.6357
Sterling Poblishers
PUBLISHER- laurie Mallett
GEN. MANAGER - Knox Coupland
EOITOR • Grog Mlddleton
CIRCULATION. TERRACE • Andy Wlghtman 635.6357
KITIMAT. Pat Zellnski
632.2747."
KITIMATOFFICE -632.2747
Publlshea cvery weekday et 3212 K a l u m Street,
Terrace, B.C. A member of Varified Circulation. •
Authorized as secood class mall. Registration number
1201. Postage paid In cash, return postage guaranteed.
.
.
F A, Po r
I
ecuR tTY' [
.
NOTE OF COPYRIGHT
The Herald retains full, complete and sole copyright In
any advertisement produced and.or any editorial or,.
photographic content published In the Herald.
Reproduction is not permitted without the written,.
permission of the Publisher.
. . . .
|
I
II
I I
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
"II
CP Air
Attention: Mr. fan Gray,.
president
Dear Mr. Gray:
As MLA for the ~rea, I
am extremely disturbed
by the service of CP Air to
.the T e r r a c e - K i t i m a t
area.
The
~service
was
satisfactory when there
we~;d~hree flights a day. I
realizethat there are less
peoplei.travelling in the
winter
months
and
,~~herefore three flights a
"day •aren't warranted.
However, the beat flight,
which was the afternoon
flight, was cut off - • rather than one of the
poorer ones. The afternoon flight was particularly good for older
people, women travelling
with small children, and
the sick or disabled. The
morning
flight,
especially, is seldom able
to land at this time of the
year.
If these people come on
the night flight, it is often
very late when they get
into Terrace-Kitimat.
Last Friday, Nov. 17, we
got to Terrace via Prince
Rupert at 3:30 a.m. - - this
was the flight which was
due in Terrace at 8:10
p.m. Nov.~i6. Those going.
on to K~{ii~<t ~ ' d l d ~ t ~
I
reach their destination
until 4:30 a.m. People
who aren't sick before are
often ill by then.
The wait in Prince
Rupert for the bus is often
over an hour with no
coffee shop open or any
,place for people with
babies or small children
to warm a bottle.
One other complaint I
often hear is that after
paying for the flight to
Vancouver, a n d being
bussed to Prince Rupert,
people have to pay three
dollars to cyoss the
harbour.
In my experience with
overseas flights and
Tram-Canada flights, CP
Air service is normally
satisfactory and-- for the
good of the company
name-- I urge you to take
a hard look at improving
your service to this area.
I especially urge you to
bring back the afternoon
flight because, if it has to
be rerouted to Prince
Rupert, the passengers
can still get home at a
reasonable hour.
Trusting you will give
this recommendation
your
sincere
consideration.
Yours very truly,
~Cyril M, Shalford,
".~ ::~ ~"" M.L.A'. Skeone
EDITOR'S JOURNAL
INTELLIGENCE SAYS
Iranian gov't may fall
. WASHINGTON (CP) - - ~esaMidcastally, hesidesits
.President Carter has been" economic importance as key
advised by intelligence ell supplier and sometimes
sources
the
Iranian moderating influence 'in oil
government has no better pricing.
than
. . . . . . . .me
.
. .a 5o-50
. . chance
. . ot. s u r - . .! So mr,
u.b. inrig.ms neyona uecem,0er./~elligence
service ap.
ann
mass
evacuauon
::/intent'. . . .conunues
......
. . . . ~__.__ty
m see
procedures
are
bemg~'~lraninn unrest in the eantext
practised for U.S. residental ~of ~ s c a l
American" can~
there.
'
. . . ....s 'e n over
spreading Soviet
Following the moouy -"|nfhmno~
events
. of. the. past
. weekend,,~:
.
:':'-W~e'k-e'nd reporta say
u .S. intelligence offlc|ala
. ~ . _ ~ a r t e r has been advised the
reported
•
. . to. believe
. . . ne lI_ ~ v..~"
] e t • Umon
is financing
monms.u'u.ggleDy..° _!~. s.u.°n~"conservatlve Moslem opgroups to topple m e s n a n o t , r m r w n t ~ n f t h ~ © b a h ¢ , , .
Iran and . his
•
. . mditary
.
~telhng
money through
government are m a crucm| ~ r e n c h and Italian Com.
phase,
munist parties.
In three straight days of ~ B . . . . . . .
..........
Frideut mm ana,yms ,snores
clashes tnat smr~u
Y' the reli'i . . . . . . .
• t ,t.~
observers estimate more . . . . . . s ~
-o~,~-, • ,,,~
.
.
.
.
.
rs
died
ngnt
the
opposition
parties
man
~o eemuns~m
r w
: .:_,:_. r,m~.~ " o v e n
a e aging, and the religious
ul - - ~ s . , . , - - . - - e,,
" fervnr tkot m~t.~ n ~ o - - ~ .
. . . . . . .cmuneu
..
onlyy 12 such. .o. . t,o
. . ........... ,k ~"~""~"
mentreporm
died, but correspondents
" " ~ ; ........
discovered the hiEher totals
This is the Moslem month
by checking burial figures. of mourning, a religious
New slowdowas started ritual culmi|mtiug in street
Monay in Iran's vital processions Dec. 11 to mark
oiifielda and there were the death of Imam Husain,
atlas.ks ~ police stations in Mohammed's grandson, wl~
is revered by Iran's ShiRe
Tehran.
One of flit lntrllPt~ quss- Muslems. More than 90 per
lions is wimt the United cent of Iran's 25 million
Slates, Iran's strongest inhabitants belong to the
foreign ~cker, will choose Shiite sect.
to do as pressure grows
In an ominous note, the
against the shah.
"Parisbeaed leaders of the
Iran has stragegie signiIi- Shiite Moslems called for
canoe for the United States "torrents of blood" to flow
Dec. It. Militants in Iran
have said on that day "either
the shah will go or one
million people will die."
The Shiite Moslems oppose
the shah's liberalizing
reforms of Iranian society
and have publicly vowed
defiance of a government
ban on customary religious
processions.
Since he took power in
1941', the shah has received
heavy U.S. aid and support.
U.S. military advisers
formed the 240,000 man
military machine that keeps
the shah in power.
But recently the U.S.
embassy in Tehran has
started weekly briefings for
staff and members of the
U.S. companies in 'Iran,
telling them how to get out.
Leaders are in place to a l ~ t
groups of companies within
two hours of procedures to
follow in the event of a
decision for total evacuation.
There are about 300 U.S.,
200Brilish, 350 West German
and
scores
of other
Ruropean and Japanese
companies in lran. In the
past few months, opposition
'mobs have attacked the
tehran offices of Pan
American Airways, International
Business
Machines Corp., as well as
the British embassy, British
Airways and British banks.
Some observers
now
question how long the shah
can count m united military
suppe~ The army is made
up largely ,2 draftees, who
spend two years in military
service, usually near their
homes where they are
subject to spreading oppoulliou pressure.
In apparent reongultiom,
the shah has given the forces
a 23-per-cent pay raise and
promised another t2.S par
c e n t for the spring. The
officer corps also gets free
medical services, food at
half cost and rents at 10 per
cent a day, compared with as
mucb as 70 per cent paid by
civilians.
,"
The test of ~ , g n a r d ' s
loyalty, with its-~toeks of
U.S.mede armor, arUllery
and aircraft, could come as
early ns next week.
Meantime, as communications fail and the United
States prepares to protect its
citizens, unease is growing in
the Iranian middle classes
that have" benefitted under
the shah's rule.
U.S, embassy sources here
say the rate of visa applications to its embassy in
Tehran has quadrupled this
week to between 700 and 800
a day from Iranians anxious
to get out before the feared
collapse of the government.
BY GREG MIDDLETON
FOR LIBERATION
It's time. I've gotta confess. I'm addicted.
That's right, I have a habit I can't kick. I ' m a
It's the man's turn now
popcorn head.
I suppose it all started when I first went to
college. All the other kids were experimenting
with illicit substances which altered your state of
consciousness. They were using things like
potato chips and pizza.
We would sit around in smokey, dimly lit
rooms listening to old blues musicians and
drinking beer. In order to continue the imbibing
of the golden brew we started on salted nuts.
From there it was into the more exotic things
like ripple chips and garlic dip. But it wasn't
until the night we went to the restricted movie
that I discovered that I had hidden desires.
I don't remember the movie. I'm not even sure
I saw the film. I had my nose buried in a box of
double buttered. Now I know that the propopped, cardboard-Hke stuff they pass off at the
theatres was junk compared to the real thing.
I can still recall the first night we tried it.
Someone brought a bag of the stuff over to my
apartment. We got out a pot to cook it up in. All
those golden kernels held a fatal fascination for
me. The first time we tried to make it I went out
of control. They couldn't make me put the lid on
the gallon pan until I had watched three batches
explode into the air and cover the floor threeinches deep.
After going through a pound of popping corn
and half a pound of butter, with enough sprinkles
of salt to make a camel drink we lay around on
the living room rug so parched we could have
been on a desert.
1'he very next day one of my compatriots used
'part of his scholarship money and bought a
gallon of extra large white kernels and an
electric corn popper. I was working my way
through school and had to make do with a big
aluminum pot and a pound of yellow popping
corn and butter at a time.
I didn't know I had a habit until I went on a trip
and stocked up on those individual, foil wrapped,
already buttered outfits.
It was terrible. Now I can afford the exotic
imported stuff. The gourmet popping cova.
There is no more slinking down to the corner
store in the dead of night. It still preys on my
mind though. I wonder how long it will be until
I'm found out. Until someone s e e s the telltale
husks between my teeth, smells butter on my
breath or notices my cracked lips.
Now that I've confessed I do feel better though,
but pass the salt.
'T O R O I ~ O
(CP)
-- competitive, locker-room
Women started It. They held way. Men compete over jobs,
up mirrors to themselves salaries,
sports
and
and their place in society and women."
called it consciousness. • An ordained hut non-pracraising.
tising
United
Church
Men laughed or felt threat- minister, a drug counsellor,
ened by the sisterhood former student radical and
sessions of a few years ago. now a husband and father,
Some still laugh or feel in- Alexander said be never had
secure. But some, like Bob trouble being gentle.
Alexander, have decided
His group best can be
that if yon can't beat them,
labelled
sensitivity
join them.
Alexander, 38, founded in expanding. Its goal is to help
September
a
meri's members express their
liberation group which ambivalent feelings toward
allows men to meet and talk women--their anger, resent.
about themselves in a non. ment, gentleness and tender.
neSS.
competitive way.
"The conventional male
Alexander, two separated
world doesn't encourage the men and an unmarried man
expression of feelings, ex- are the core members of the
cept
maybe
anger," group, which meets weekly
Alexander said in an in- at members' homes. Other
terview.
men have drifted in and out,
"It allows men to come to- but these four remain.
gether in groups but only In a
When the men meet, they
usually talk about what is
happening to them that week
and how they feel about it.
Anderson said a recently.
separated man felt bitter
toward his wife and the
group helped him examine
whether bis resentment truly
was directed at his wife or
perhaps at his mother,
father or life in general.
Alexander
said
the
members
appreciate
feminism intellectually but
resent it if it has made an
intrusion in their personal
lives.
The four all have had rela.
tionships with feminist.
women,
graduates
of
sisterhood sessions who
forced them to examine
themselves as males.
"That was tough for us at
first," Alexander said. "We
didn't know if we'd formed
the group because we'd been
told to or whether we really
wanted to do it for ourselves."
"I think now we know it's
good for us to have close
friends of the same sex."
Alexander admits there is
a tendency in the group to
liheratlou one-upmanship.
They sometimes try to he
more liberated, more gentle
and more tolerant than each
other.
"With men like us, the
competition is seeing how
u/i-macho we can he."
Alexander says he knows
his philosophy is unpopular
with most men but is con.
fldant this will change.
When men no longer have
to relaliste against women,
there can boa return to good
manners, he said, meaning
whoever gets to the door first
opens it.
"It's better to charm than
to bully."
QUEBEC MNA
Salary dq al sought
A bill that has passed first
reading in the Quebec
national assembly would
raise members' salaries by
six par cent and freeze
Premier Rene Levesque's
annual income $4300 above
Prime Minister Pierre
Trudeau's.
A survey by The Canadian
Press shows that incomes
and benefits for political
leaders and legislative
members across the country
vary widely.
Under a complicated new
pay formula in Quebec,
Levesque, Speaker Clement
Richard, Liberal caucus
leader Gerard Levesque and
Parti Quebeeois cabinet
ministers would face a pay
out. But the bill includes a
provision to freeze their
salaries at the 1978 level.
Levesque will earn t76,500
before taxes in 1979, as he did
in 1978-compared with
Trudeau's $72,200.
However, federal cabinet
Salary
scales
for
ministers and the prime provincial
government
minister enjoy a number of members follow roughly the
prequisites not available to same pattern as shown by
all provincial represen- the provincial premiers with
tatives.
quebec again topping the list
Trudeau gets his official at $27,800 this year plus a
residence in Ottawa, 24 $7,000 tax-free allowance.
Sussex Drive, and MPs get
The increase now before
laxpayersubsidized food in the assembly would raise
their restaunrants, $1-a-clip that to $29,468 in 1979, plus
h a i r c u t s , u n l i m i t e d - u s e $7,500 taxfree allowance.
railway passes and free
Federal MPs make $2009e0
airline travel between Ot- a year plus tax.free expense
tawa
and
their
con- allowances
of $12,000.
stltuencies.
Senators make the same
Salaries plus expenses of basle salary but receive no
provincial premiers range allowance.
from Levesque's $76,500 and
The lowest rate of pay for
Ontario Premier William p r o v i n c i a l g o v e r n m e n t
Davis's $64,732 down through members who are not in the
the premiers of Alberta, cabinet is in Nova Scotia,
British Columbia, Sas. where the basic salary is
katcbewan, Newfoundland, $9,600 plus $4,800 tax-free
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia • expenses, making a total of
and Prince Edward Island to $14,400 a year.
Manitoba, where Premier
Income for members in the
Sterling Lyon makes $35,800 Prairie provinces and
a year.
Eastern Canada is between
$15,0C0 and $19,000 including
tax-fres expense accounts,
while that o f Ontario
members is ~6,742 and for
British Columbians ~A,000.
Travel allowances in New.
found,and vary between
$ 6 , ~ and 110,225 according
to how far a member's
constltueney is from St,
John's.
Ontario has introduced a
bill to give MPPs a four-percent Increase,
Earlier this year the
federal government boosted
salaries by five per cent and
Prince Edward Island
members had an increase in
July.
One pay difference does
remain fairly constant
across the onuntry--eahinet
ministers and leaders of
official opposition parties
generally make at least
double the salaries of or.
dinsry members.
OTTAWA - Old politicians
never die -- they just move
to other eenstitueeeles.
Like John Didanbaker, 83.
And Pierre Trudean, now
59 (or 60, depending on which
set of his vital statistics you
• accept.)
" the
It was the other day m
Commor~, and Dief, who
since has declined a
p,trevlously accepted intatlun for an official visit to
China, was complaining how
the prime minister had been
out of touch for so Ioug
during Ida recent jaunt to
Bonn and then Morocco.
It bad seemed longer than
20 days to Diof who was
tofind out whether the
prime minister was putting.
' on or calling off a late fall
elacllen.
Nateh, the 01d Warrior
~vanted to he around if the
hal,ion was going to the polls
... if not, then he would be
free to travel to Peking.
So after what seemed an
interminable wait, he ran
into the PM - - or the PM
bumped into him - - at a
government function, and
the long-delayed question
was asked.
Hananrd, the word by word
record of Parliament, takes
up the story:
Dief: "I said to him that I
had wanted to find out, Just
between us Privy Counel,lore, if he would tell me
whether, if I went to China,
there might be an election at
home.
"And do you know what he
said to me?
"He replied that 'as far as
I am eunesned, you can go
to Peking and go to hell.'
"That was the ciesr~t
answer that I have ever had
from him.
"And for his edification I
had to point out to him that in
the Hereafter I expect to be
Up There, so that we would
not be in the same constituency."
some ~udibillty of muscle-but gently, more in sorrow
tlum in anger.
Because the last thing - the very last desperate
e x t r e m i t y - that the inc r e a s i n g l y confident uonnervativas want, is to make a
•martyr of the Prime
Minister.
To stir the last vestige of
public sympathy for him
would be disaster.
There's something exiremely w.ry in .file sudden
tureareuno sitoauon.
0nly days ago the
Liberals, who for years - no, decades - - have taken
power as their right,
i.egarded "poor Joe", as
they called Conservative
Leader Clark, as their
greatest asset.
Former long-time Tory
and new-come Liberal Trade
Minister Jack Honer was
thelast to take a shot at him,
sneering that "poor J o e "
was a law.school dropsut
who had never earned a
dime in his life.
Then came the campaign
for tha~ 15 byelocticus and
the horrified Liberals
learned from knocking on
doors that while they wece
thinking all along that "poor
Joe" was their best asset,
their own Pierre Trudeau
was their worst liability. '
The Conservatives found
out the same thing.
And the byelections
eanflrmed it like neither
pert,/ ever believed they
would, with stunning impact.
Then, came the public
opinion palls that 54 percent
of Canadians believe the
Liberals should "re-ussess"
Pierre Trudesu as leader.
So now the once-potent,
super-charismatic PET is
the Great Tory Asset, and
they don't want to lose him.
For to lose him would be to
win John Turner for the
Liberals. And with 01'
Blazin' Blue Eyes as Liberal
Suddenly basle Con- • leader ... welll
So the word is be nice to
servative strategy has
Pierre.
changed.
Even stiffen P i e r r e ' s
Prime Mintater
resolve to hang on as Liberal
if not to be pralasd, m i ~
leader by putting it around
is to be eoudemned.
Criticized, mind you, lalt that if he quit, he would:
- - Show he was afraid of
pollteb,.
qunstlonod, of e o u r ~ but being beaten by Joe Clark.
with decent d d e r ¢ ~ e to bla
-Give
the
party
position as prime minister, leadership to his old and
Attacked, .certainly.-- an .heartily disliked rival, John
Opposition has to nmintsin,,: Turner..,,
For years the voters of average of $1700 from every
British Columbia have been man, woman and child in
sold a bill of goods that our British Columbia. This
only choice on election day is compares with an average of
between a so-called free only $500 per capita in the
enterprise party and a so- State of California where
called socialistic one. And voters have finally rebelled .
while this worn out, tired old against high taxation.
theme is stuffed down our
Working men and women
throats we have been of British Columbia, small
distracted from the true business owners, home
problem....big government. owners and especially our
We have seen every citizem on fixed and low
political party in this country i~comes can
a no longer afford
run wild with dollars
carry
huge and inefstripped from taxpayers f i c i e n t
government
against their will and used bureaucracy. The nonfor purposes entirely un. productive sngment uf our
justified by any social need. society has overburdened
In British Columbia both our productive sector. The
the former N.D.P, govern- results can readily be seen in
meat and the present Scored lagging productivity, high
administration have in- unemployment and inflation.
dulged in such an un- Government is not a victim
controlled spending spree of inflation but the prime
that taxation is literally cause.
strangling our economy. The
The (~onservative party
present government's heavy b e l l i e s [hat to begin to tap
tax hand may permit it to the vast potential of this
balance its budget but it is, great province we must
most surely, preventing you leave substantially more
and me from balancing ours. money in the hands of those
The present government, who earn it. We believe that
in just two years and four the person who works for his
months after coming into pay is a better judge of how
office, brought down a to spend, save or invest it
budget calling for ex- than the politician who taxes
penditure of over four billion it away. We believe that to
dollars. This is one billion require a man to go to his
dollars higher than the last government, with hat in
budget of the previous hand, and ask for a grant or
government.
other handout of the very
To meet this kind of money that has been taken
spending it is necessary for from him is destructive to
the government to extract an human dignity.
I 'lPl"mt.-D*~ou w a n n a b o y .
bwglar-prooV~:~-'~*,
The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978, 'Page |
~
:i 7
;f
Prince Rupert 9
6
0
Houston
78
Kifimat
Terrace
. 3
8~
9
,9 '~18
,°O 10o"
'~
40
92
6
Frader Lake
13
0
2
99
TERRACE.KITIMAT
39
56
dally hzraid $ P0 RTS
18
141
w ith Ch r is Po r t e r
I•
'
Blade
GAMES LAST WEEK
GAMES THIS WEEK
Nov. 28- Prince Rupert 10 Dec. 6 - Kitimat at Terrace
Terrace 2, Smithers 8 Dec. 7 - Smithers at Burns
Houston 7
Lake, Houston at Fraser
Nov. 30 . Burns Lake 9 Lake
Fraser Lake 2
Dec. 9 - Houston at Kitirnat,.
.Burns Lake at Prince
Dec.2-Smithers8Kitlmat5, Rupert, F r a s e r Lake at
Vanderhoof 5 Terrace 3, Terrace, Vanderhoof at
Prince Rupert 9 Fraser Lake Smithers.
2, Houston 4 Burns Lake 0
Dec. 10- Houston at Terrace,
Dec.3-Terrace3Smithers 1, Burns Lake at Prince
Kltimat 6 Vanderhoof 3, Rupert, F r a s e r Lake at
Prince Rupert l0 Burns Lake Kltimat, Vanderhoof at
Title
fight
....... "
..
~/. ;=
~i::
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Mike Rossmnn defends the
World Boxing Association
light heavyweight championship
against A i d e
Traversaro of Italy tonight
in the first step on the road
that could lead to an allAmerica showdown for the
tmdisputed light heavy title.
Rossman gained the WBA
versmn ot the champiopship
last Sept. 15 by stopping
Victor Galindez of Argentina
in the 13th round, and
Marvin Johnson brought the
World Boxing Council title
back tothe United States last
Saturday by stopping Mate
Parley m the llth round at
Marsala. Sicily.
Bob Arum. who will co-
promote the KossmanTraversaro fight at the
Spectrum, said Monday he
has an option to promote
three Rossman bouts, including tonight's, and is
about to sign an agreement
for three more• Arum said he
also has the option to
promote Johnson's next
three fights.
Beef Ohuok.
Full Out.
Bone In.
Grade
A..99
Blade Steak
AJ1.69
Beef Chuck. Boneless. Grade
. . . . . . . . . . .
,,
i,
•
Oross Rib
i!iii
A J1.79
R o a s t . Beef. B o n e In. G r a d e
Boneless
, •
Boston
Toronto .
Buffalo
Minnesota
Wales Conference
Norris Division
W LT F A P
17 6 2 10566 36
II 9 2 87 73 .24
8 13 3 84 92 19
6 12 6 74 86 18
5 16 4 70 112 14
Adams Division
' .
.,
15 4 5 103 7,3 35
. . . .
1394
88 78 30
8 10 .:6 6~ 71 22
7 14 2 65 89 16
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
Islanders
15 3 4 103 67
Atlanta
t5 9 2 llO 84
Rangers
13 6 4 91 61
Phila,
13 9 4 83 73
Smylhe Division
Chicago
9 9 5 73 83
Vancouver
t0 13 2 8 2 9 1
St.Louls
6 16~ 4 82 121
Colorado
4 17 5'72 120
~,
;'k •
Margarine
D-Stock up for
baking!
34
32
30
30
23 40
23 39
19 38
25 38
24 38
20 34
14 33
16 38
17 30
i7 ,.~0'_i,j
18 "30.'~,.
POtvin, NYI
20 38
i
49
'
Mushrooms
TOBUCKLE
, p
lb.
Package
Tomato Juioe
23
23
16
13
"
Lafleur, Mti
17
Cloninard, Atl 16
Dionne, LA
19
MacMillan, Atl 13
Federko, STL It
McDonald, Tor 14
Sittler, Tor
14
McNab, Bos
14
Taylor, LA
13
Babych, S~,.. :. 13T,
Lysiak, Atl
12
10
Ground Beef
Regularlb. =1.06 ~,..,.~°
J1.79
Quality.
N0W'S.... ,
mE
TIME? " . . . . . . .
SCORING
LEADERS
A ]b.S2.0~
Grade
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Montreal
LasAngeles
Pittsburgh
Detroit
Washington
I
Roast
4
nnwm
w.,.ww...
Stems and Pieces.
10 oz. Tin
:~!i'~i:!:/>! *?
~,
*::"~: :i~~/,
:,:,:,"o~::~ ~::,:
....
...lee Oream
Lucerne. Assorted "
Including
Peppermint.
Holiday
-Fruit. Eggnog.
2 169
•
Peas & Garrets
Vegetables.
Bel.nir. Frozen.
Panasonic Microwave Ovens
.
iV,eheat, Leftovers. FrankfiJ.lers, Canned fOOdS.
Noodles. Spaghetti
m..,~2; *.t
L~Y~ ~
~
. .
~
NE-T910G ,~"
Oook-A-Round Turntable
Another Panasonio
Exclusive
The PanasonicCook-A-Roundmagneticturntable
slowlyrotatesyourfoodas it cooks.Thatmeansno
more periodicmanualturningof food
during microwaveo:~oktng.An ovenoverall
cookingresult is provided Becauseour turntable
operatesmagnetically,thereareno exposedmotors
or gearsto worryabout,Bestot all, the Cook-ARoundglasstray and turntableare easyto remove
and can be cleanedwith soapand water. ~ I ~
o x,,,.,==.~
@
1. AutoSensorcooking--justtoucha singlecontrol
and The GeniusfiguresOUtthe rest!
2, Cook-A-Roundmagneticturntablefor overall
evencookingand defrosting, Easy'to clean,
3. Two-phasepowerprogramming,for delaystart,
keepwarm,or multiplepowercooking.
•
~
.
~
~
Emperor. Oalifornia
Grown. I nutritions
snuok, lb.
llaai[~ml
Auto
3...three taps
Beef-Medium, LambMedium. Bacon, Ham.
Brownies, Rtce
Avooados
Auto 4...f0ur taps
Size 48's.
Auto 5...l~ive taps
Green. California. lb.
85 c
3 ,or99'
k Beef-Rare, Fish-Whole,
Casseroles, Poultry
See the Genius and other
Panasonic Ovens
Demonstrated Every
Friday Evening and
Saturdays
~
Peppers
•
Nuts in the Shell
,~~~
$
Auto 6...sixtaps
•
Frozen Vegetables,
~"
Broccoli. Cabbage,
' m z ~ j~, .~r B,,..qub Spinach• Shdmp, Pork
Chops, Hamb4Jrgers,
Muffins, Cupcakes
Furniture & Appliances
638-1168
79'
V "q Potatoes, Beans, Carrots,
Cauhflower.Peas
at
TfiTEM
6rapes
Auto 2...two taps
Beef-Well, Meat Loaf.
Stews, Pol Roast, Pork
Roast. Sausage. LambWell
Features
F l o u r
10 s269
-'.Auto 1...one tap
"~*
~ p ~ " "
O
All Purpose
Mrs. Wright's.
Enriched.
Jumbo Walnuts. C a l i f o r n i a , ~
K
Q
[Romaine.,utter.Endive.Red.Gleen Leaf.lb.a ~
|
sales in R e t a i l Quantities
only.
e
Page S, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978
IN MENS BASKETBALL
Houston sweeps weekend
In
Terrace
Mens
Basketball action Thursday
night at Skesna Jr. Secon.
dary School, All Seasons
Sporting Goods nosed out
Skeens Hotel 84.83in the first
game, and in the nightcap
contest, Kluss & Sons
downed the Ev's Clippers by
a 96-76count. Also in Mens
Basketball, the Houston AllStars made the trip to
Terrace to play exhibition
games Saturday and Sunday
against the Terrace All;tars.
The
opening
game
Thursday was a close one all
the way, as Skeena Hotel had
built up a slim 39-37 lead at
halflime. It.didn't hold up
though, as All Seasons put on
a bit of a second half spurt to
take the game 84.83. Mike
Ireland spearheaded the All
Seasons attack with a
"tremendous 42 point effort,
while Tom Marvin scored 23.
.JonGurbanledSkeena Hotel
with 38 points, while Joe
Procopchuk bad 20.
The second game Thnr-
'NEATHERLAND OVERSEAS
Requires a senior.For~t Tecl.mi.elan with a m .i,nim.um
two (2) years myout experience pros some x ~
supervision experience. Candidates must be prepared
to work out of an isolated camp one hundred and fifty
(150) miles northwest of Prince George. Salary will be
eompenserate with experience. Contact:
D.Dow
N.O.M. Boa789
Prince George, B.C.
V2L4T3
(563-7761)
sday saw Kluss & Sons play
to a relatively easy win over
Ev'a Clippers. K&S were the
superior team ,from the
'start, and b e l d e a 40-31
baLftime led~. They continued to c~tplay the Clippens in the second half, and
ended up on the top end of a
98-76 final tally. Willie
Chemko paced Kluss & Sons
with a 19 point game, while
Fred Lindsay was close
behind with 18. Dave
Crawley topped the Ev's
Clippers players with 19
points.
The
two
weekend
exhibition games between
the Houston All-Stare and
two.Terrace All.Star teams
saw Houston win both
Saturday and Sunday.
Saturday they played
against the Terrace Light
Blues, an All-Star team
consisting of players from
Ev'a Clippers and Kluss &
Sons, while Sunday the
Houston visitors found
themselves up against the
Terrace Dark Blues, a team
i ' BUFFALOtCP) ~- The
• slumping Buffalo Sabres
fired general manager
George (Punch) lmlach
and
coach
Marcel
The Terrace team started
~onovost Monday in a
Saturday's game well, and
move which the front
by helflime they enjoyed a
office of the National
slim 35.34 advantage. The
Hockey League club said
Houstonsquad got untracked
was in the best interests
in the second half, however,
of the team and its fans.
and by the time the final
No replacementa were
buzzer sounded it was
Houston on top by a 91-83 named immediately. The
Sabres' next scheduled
margin, John Brown led
game is in Buffalo
Houstonwith 31 points, while
Thursday gainst Los
former Terrace player Rod
Angeles Kings,
Klusa followed closely with
Imlach, 60, has been
25. Terrace's top scorer was
general manager of the
Dave Crawley, who had 23
club since it joined the
points•
NHL in 1970 and also
coached the Sabres for
In Sunday's action as well,
the first two years•
it was the Terrace Dark
Pronovost,~, was named
Blues who got off to a fast
conch in the summer of
start, and at one point early
1977.
in the contest led 10-4.
The Sabres have eight
Houston gradually came on
after that, and held a slim 31- victories, 101ossesand six
ties this season after a
30leadat balftime. They just
pair of weekend Icmes to
got stronger in the final half,
Montreal Canadiem, 8-1
outecerlng Terrace 48.38, to
in Montreal Saturday and
win the match handily, 78-7L. 4-1 in Montreal Sunday.
The duo of Rod Kiuss and They have won only one of
John Brown again paced the
their last six starts,
Houston All-Stars, Kluss
He won four Stanley
leading with 32 points, and
Cups in 12 seasons as
Brown contributing 18. in a
coach
and
general
losing cause for the Terrace
manager of the Maple
Dark Blues, it was Mike Leafs
before being fired
Ireland with 23 points, and
in May, 190.
DOUAMcKav with 17,
'
a
i
d
made up of players from All
Seasons and Skeena Hotel.
TEBNINAL
EXPRESS
m.
(636-3680)
/
Parcel Piokup & Deliver/
L
l i | | | | | g | | g | | g | | | | | g | O
Light Packages & Parcels
Chairs-- Recliners - - End Tables-Portable T.V.
Suites (Kitchen & Living Room)
Beds & 6ox Springs
MASTER BEDROOM ORESSERSOR CHESTS
FR IG'S, STOVES, WASHER OR DRYERS
e ~m
m
mm
m
mmmm~
emmm
(m
~m
m m m
i
m
mm
m m ~ m m l l m
District of Terrace Only
,N . ocKE,
easons
Terrace :teams came
'through with three wins, two
losses and two ties in
~veekend Minor Hockey
Inter.City Bop Team league
action.
The All Seasons Midgets•
~kepttheir hotstreak going as
'they scored two more wins
over their arch rivals from
Kitimat. in Saturday's 10-3
victory, DRug Richey and
Simon Dodd each contributnd hat tricks. Singles
were scored
by Jim
Palahieky, Danny Fagan,
Bruno Hidber and Ken
Wideman. Greg Paulson
scored twice in Sunday's 5.3
win, Rlehey, Hidber and
.LarrySwanson also scored.
~heae wins by the Midgets
put them on top of their
division,and they have two
games in hand., both against
the
winleas Smithera
Midgets.
The Inland Kenworih
Bantams continued to
disappoint their fans who
feel these boys have the ben(
team in the bantam circuit.
The Bantams dropped a 9-6
contest to Prince Prince
Rupert F r i d a y night.
Warren Biding and Mel
Reimer each scored twice
while Jeff Parr and Greg
Robsonhad singles. In the
Saturday game, Terrace
blewa 5-0lead and lust 6-5 to
Rupert. Riding again scored
twice. Glen Palahieky,
Roger Teems. and Robson
rounded' out their scoring.
These two lossesdropped the
Bantams into the cellar of
their division.
Terrace Pups continued to
improve as they counted a
pair of ties against Prince
Rupert• Brent Peteh and
Chris Culp scored in
Friday's 2-2 draw while
Perch, Culp and byle Kennedy got the goals in
Saturday's 3-3 tie.
The Twin River Timber
i'eewees played only one
game against Kitimat on the
weekend. A lack of i c e t i m e
in Kitimat prevente0 the
second game from being
played. The Peewees continued their domination of
their division by whipping
K~timat t I-2Saturday, Gerry
Lambert and Trevor Hendry
came up with three.goal
performances. Terry
Zaporzan had a pair while
sir,gins went to Dan McGhee,
Troy Kaye and Jeff Sharpies•
Meanwhile at Smithers,
Kitimat's Pups won both
games against Smithers
Pups• Scores were 5.6 and 31. Smithers and Kitimat
Bantams split. Smithers won
16-5 before Kitimat came
back with a 12-6win.
At Prince Rupert, the
Smithers and
Rupert
Midgets played only one
game. Rupert won it 2-6. The
second game was defaulted
to Rupert when Smithers
refused to play because of
what they felt was "violent
play" by their opponents.
~mitbers Peewees won both
games against Rupert's
Peeweesby scores of T-l and
6-5.
The first half of the
schedule winds up next
weekend when Smithers
Peewees and Midgets .~?it
Terrace for games le'rtoay
night starting at 8 and
Saturday morning starting
at 10. Terrace peewees will
also play at Kitimat in that
game to be picked up from
this weekend. Time of the
game will be announced
later.
dl tan-'ngs
***~k~
MINOR HOCKEY REP
TEAM LEAGUE STANDINGS- DEC. 4
TEAM
PUPS
Kitimat
Smitbars
Prince Rupert
Terrace
Peewees
Terrace
Kitimat
Smithers
Prince Rupert
BANTAMS
Prince Rupert
Kitimat
Smithers
Terrace
MIDGETS
Terrace
Kitimat
Prince Rupert
Smithers
WON LOST TIED
O F O A POINTS
11
5
1
1
0
5
6
7
1
2
5
4
73
M
40
39
37
42
50
57
7
6
5
3
2
5
5
9
0
0
6
0
67
47
40
46
30
M
39
73
9
5
5
4
3
6
7
7
O
1
0
1
86
87
66
78
66
88
88
75
11
10
9
8
7
7
0
2
5
5
10
0
0
0
0
78
77
59
31
40
59
$9
7S
16
14
14
0
23
12
7
6
14
13
1O
6
19
MINOR IIOCKEY INTER- Kitimat Dantean 5
CITYREP TEAM LEAGUE Kitimat Bantams 12
SCORES FOR WEEKEND Smllbars Bantams ~rerrace
t)F DEC. I-3
Pups 2 Prince Rupert Pups 2
Prince Rupert Pups 3
Prince Rupert Midgets 2 Terrace Pup6 3
Smithers Midgets 0
Prince Rupert Bantams 9
Smithers Peewees 7 Prince Terrace Bantams 6
Rupert Peewees t
Prince Rupert Bantams 6
Smithers Peewees 6 Prince Terrace Bantams 5
Rupert Peewees 5
Terrace Midgets to Kitimat
Kitimat PUps 5 Smithers Midgets 3
Pups 0
Terrace Midgets 5 KiUmat
Kitimat Pups 3 Smithers Midgets3
Pups t
Terrace Peewees II Kitinmt
Smithers
Bantams 16 Peewees2
•.
_ G r.
oO
is hot
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
t
REGULAR s609"
SALE PRICE *629 °s
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ONLY
FRIDAY . . , ,
StD VUtStlUIt
.
L,.,
t~,~
8.
•
7 p.m. to ?
woo=s , m - " ° m
-.isis
ttt ls""
iltllil8
D e c e m b e r 7 - 8 - 9, 1 9 7 8
tinES
kt|pLlklOtS
IN
snovmOmU'ueroL
TIME
DISTRESS M[RONINDISt
FOR
DONE AND JOIN TNE EXOITEMENTFRIDAYAT I p.m,
XNA|
$$~ t~"
BI Using Your
Totem T.V,
Oknr|e Oerd •
Openlnl a
Sharp
|reeler Ton
Will Receive o
Free Ski
Teuquo
JUST
Limited
Stoeke
YOU MAY |ONSION YOUR|ODDS FOR AUOTION
OR VIEW MERONANDI8|ON NAND
EVERYDAY |:00 e.m. te O-'O0p.m.
FRIDAYS 0-'00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.
OONVERTNO LONGERWANTED ITEMS TO OASN
II
'Z'orrao=
] ',uoti°a
, , ,Mart i
APS
E
LT
ST. TERR E
ABOVEFREBSFURNITURE
MODELFO 4
TOTEN T.V. 0ENTRETerrnee,
LTD.D.O.
41107Lnkelee |venue
086-6010
Your Radio Shack Authorized Sales Centre
~ | 4 Lakeloo Avenue
636-3936
636-3936
OPENTNURSDAVlIND FRnuAvNIDNTS FDR veda SNDPPINRODNYENIENOE
The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978, Page.~r
Kids
Letters
y
/
i
t'o
8)
SANT'A
Closing Date for Letters is
•6 p.m, December 16th, 1978
Check these facts
before you buy
any other stove!
,¢:
:
• .'~
,
• The Earth Stove burns 1/3 the fuel
of manystovesbecause pre.heating draft mani.
,
,~
. '
i lsan taTO
,,
.~,'?AC "
fold promotes efficient and complete combustion like
solid fuel power plants. Super.heated air prevents
"cooling" of fire unlikemanual "hole" drafts do. Even
large chunks burn slowly and completely-eliminates I
frequent ash removal.. .... : ~: ..
"
c/o Terraoe/lifimat
,Daily, Herald
en.temper,atures thermb}.tat c:diJift auto:/
matically maintaths temperature you se|ect;,[e .v~;~,.,
unevencycleof wood combustion (Manual drMt~,~ia~n~t
do this). Home temperatures more even th'd~l furnace~
heat,
q
~i;~
'
• Burns 14 hours on one wood load .~
• ConvertstooPen fire instantly
•
3212 Kalum S t . ,
Terraee, B.O,
Cook topJust setthermostatto cookingheatdesired
• ;jdeal~or",Crock.rot'?.s~e cooker/,,, )
.,. ,,, ~,.:
introduceoxygenabove primary fire zone to burn volatile |J
gasessuch as methanol, pyrolign~us acid, etc,
• Air tight Preventsheatlossupchimney.
• Constructed of heavy steel
• Fire brick lined re,yearsofserv,ce
That's why people love
The Earth Stovel
s. All lettm will be pubilahed in the Christmere letter supplement with the Chrktmas
Carob.
4. Prizes awarded by draw.
5. Supplement to be pub~hed 21 December,
1978.
OI
'
S. Only one letter per'eblkL
4
another reason why is because The Earth
Stoves' space age Engineering doesn'.t
show. It's decorative charm contributes ©
to any decor. Yes and it's a nice feeling
knowing your getting back to basics!
TH
~
1. Letters must be written by the child in his
or her own words with the e~eptim of Pie.
Scbeolers.
,".
6. Contest clmen December lS at 5 p,m,
(Letters arriving late do not qualify).
.4J
W
7. letters must contain Name, Address, and
Phone Number, Age.
IE.HEATED
:CONDARY
PRE.HEATING DRAFTS•
MANIFOLD
PATENTSP E N D I N G
8. Pre-Schoolers, Primary & Elementary
ONLY Qualify.
9. All letters will be forwarded on to the North
Pole after the Draw.
EASYTERMSAVAILABLEon APPROVEDCREDIT
NO DOWNPAYMENTREQUIRED
Ha~e'e why the fobulouo
Fisher • Is one of the m o l t
efficient heating [or supplemental heating] units that
you can put In your borne.
It can save you up to 80% In
the cost of heating your home,
vacation home or buelnegm,
Wood le our one renewable
resource, with elmoot
unlimited potential ea an
alternative fuel source.
.
Because of this, Bob Fisher
wanted to build e stove that
would really harness the
burning power of w o o d .
Instead of having it just look ,
pretty In a fireplace while the
hear goes up the chimney.
Fisher wanted • stow that
would continuously heat large
areas end serve as •
cookstove too. A stove that
didn't hove to be restarted
every morning end wouldn't
smoke when the door wee
opened; o stove that would be
rugged enough to
last • lifetime.
The result is the now famous
Fisher • Stove, manufactured
end distributed Icross the
United States end In Canada one of the largest sailing
stoves of Its kind In
the world.
..I R L Y B I
ALBERT & McCAFFERY
.wl. miamwuIo w. 'rzawe
6,1HI.T3M
/
.p~/"•av,
~ ~
,
Page 8, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978
|
iChrlsImiI
!$uirprlK'~
CB NEWS
with D/NO
HARDWARE
T,V,
Gu id_A
STORES
All listings subjectto
change without notice.
KING
(NBC)
!)
C)
,
(IS)
I ,
ii
HUB
3
BCTV
CFTK
(CBr.)
(CTV)
9
Another howdy to all you
fine folks out there in C.B.
land, it's that time again
where we have to set aside
the comic books and put on
the old thinking cap, hoping
against hope that we can
come up with enough goodies
.to make this a column. I
don't know rightly what to
blame it on, but it seems
each week the thinking part
gets harder and harder, and
yes, even I can think when I
absolutely have to, or at
least make a stab at it.
Sunday's coffee break
brought out a nice little
group and WILD CAT from
the Rupert town came down
to take it in along with the
famous SWINGER with the
noticeable high collar.
SPOOK set aside all his little
I~ New Hard Cover Books for
Kiddies books - N e w low
prices on China & Giftware
5 p.m. to midnight
TUESDAY
SAVEMONEYON
OHRISTMAS
KCTS
(PB$)
Mister
Mary Tyler
Moore
Hourglass
Cost'd.
Six
Million
145
Burnett
News
Cont'd,
145
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Outdoor
Education
News
Hour
Con.t'd.
Cont'd.
Tonight
Name that
Tune
Paper
Chase
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Headline
Hunters.
What's My
Line
:O0
: 15
.30
: 45
Grandpa
Goes to
Washington
Cont'd.
Cosmic
Christmas
Happy
Days.
:00'
:!s
: 30
: 45
The Big
Event
,My Husband
Is Missing'
:oc
: 15
: 30
:45
:O0
:I5
30
'~45
at the
Rogers
Electric
Company
Dollar
Man
CavettDiBlue
ckMarbleBig
H I L L
LeWer
GlUEVOU
(~dpa. Goes
To Wash.
Mother, Jugs
& Speed
Evening at
Symphony
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
II snouJ lois...
Three's
Company
The Fifth
Estate
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Taxi
Cont'd.
Sneak
Preview
Ripping
Yarns
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Beyond
Reason
Quincy
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Char~s at
Montreux
Cont'd.
Con~d.
News
The
National
i Night
Final
CTV
News
News Hour
Final
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Kojak
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Late
Show
'Drive Hard,
Drive Fast'
Jones
Cont'd.
Late Movie
MacNeiI
Newsmakers
Cont'd.
U I E
I
II
i
I
I
I
I
45
', 2~oi
/
Cont'd.
'Tonight
Show
C°"t'd
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
4s
Cont'd.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
|
I I
S
Canadian
Schools
Mister
Dressup
Webster
Cont'd.
What's
Conking
Electric
Company
M for Music
Word Shop
America
45
Alive
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Sesame
Street
Cont'd.
Cont'd,
Mad
Dash
Definition
Cont'd.
Nat. Science
2 Cents Worth
Write On
Cover.Cover
News-Bob Switser
Search for
Tomorrow
Noon
Specials
45
Hollywood
Squares
Days of
Our Lives
News
Movie
Matinee
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
1977 ISTHG
oo
15
30
45
Cont'd.
Cost'd.
The
Doctors
Bob
McLean
Show
Cont'd.
'Banscek'
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Art Starts
Inside Out
Spinning Stories
Making Music
1977
BRONCO
Explorer 4x4 V-8 auto.
Another
World
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Edge of
Night
Canadian
Authors
Another
World
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Stories of Amer.
Music Place
Book Look
Survival. Econ.
Movie
'Young
Dillinger'
Cont'd.
Take
Thirty
Celebrity
Cooks
Alan
Hamel
Show
Cont'd.
Over
Easy
Book
Beat
Cont'd,
!Cont'd,
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
Flintstones
Cont'd,
Carol
Burnett
That's
Hollywood
NHL
Hockey
Sesame
Street
Cont'd.
Cont'd.
:45
I
I I
I
i I
i
I I
00
15
30
I
You bet we will! When it oomes to getting around in
the snow, just take a look at these beauties. They've
got the get up and go you needl
The New
High Hollers
Wheel of
Fortune
( R ) 00
:15
•30
M
Bernaby
i
2
145
1978 FORDTHUNDERBIRD
V-8, Automatic,Till Wheel, Cruise Control
$7895
[
pranks and joined us too, and
was
there
when
GRASSHOPPER let it be
knownthat she is seriously
thinking of changing her
handle to *'HIS EXTENSION". Now she has
just got to be SNAP-ON's
hatter haft with a handle like
that.
A welcome to town goes
out to the one LOBe who
hails from that good old
Saskatchewan. I hear he and
his family are visiting none
ether than the quiet gent that
is known as SADDLE .
TRAMP, going to have to
give them a double L, seeing
that we can't tall on skip.
I hear one of our 18
wheelers had an accident
earlier last week and we got
to see the truck the day after
or what was left of it, but we
are happy to report that
other than his pride being
hurt, EASY MONEY came
out of it without any serious
injuries. Hopefully,we'll see
him back on the road before
too long,
Please note that in last
week's column there was an
error in the date of the active
members of the BBC's Xmas
party. The date should have
read the 10th, that being this
coming Sunday. Please note
that the regular coffee break
will be cancelled for this
week only. All active
members of the BBC and
their families are invited to
attend the party, only you
are reminded to bring along
an adult gift for each attending adult and not to
worry about the children's
gifts, as Santa will be there
doinghis thing whatever that
may bel
We would also remind you
that an executive meeting is
slated for Tuesday, Dec. 5th
at SUPER THIEF's 20, with
the monthly meeting of the
BBC GRS on Thursday, Dee.
7, downstairs at the Sandman. Any new CB'ers out
there that would like to attend are welcome to do so, as
we are open for new members. The time is for 7:30
p.m. and we hope to see you
there.
O.K. folks, seeing as the
mind has gone blank again,
it's that time where we must
back out of here for another
week, so until then you all
have yourselves a mighty
fine week," take care and
keep smilin' and we'll catch
you on the return...3's for
nOW.
1977 OHEVBELAIRE
$4995
USE
$6696 CHRISTMAS.
$6896
SEALS
4 Door Sedan V8 auto, P.S., P.B.
3 door V.8, 4 speed,T roof, stereo
It's a matterof life andbreath.
1976 F260 SUPER@AB
V-8 Auto Tran. Canopy.
1974 FORDFIO0 PIOKOP
302 V-8, Auto Trans.
1972 DODIE VAIl
Va, Auto
$6495
$3496
$2395
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIllIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIilI.I!.IIllllI!I
a
daniadown quilts
.our
s6195
$4"/96
$2695
1."/6UtoGRANAIAB.
4 ' 0 On
Filled with soft grey Goose Down
1973 TORINO
t,ne Dan,sh Ticking. These quilts
2 Door Sport Coupe, V8 auto, Radio
comparable to the finest quilts av
1972 VOLKSWAIOIIOAMPERVAN
in Europe.
4 Speed, Raised Roof.
1972 FORDF2§OPIOKUP
daniad~wn quilts
V8 auto tram.
1911 18' SANISTER
lllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIJllllllIllIlllllllllllllll
6ordon and
Anderson
Lid,
,0,.,..Depth Sounder. Oae-benhdio.
IUNI(I
Ph, 635-6576.
t
......,o..
I Store Hours. Tues.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6.30 p.m.
~
M
~
F
Friday I a.m.-I P.m.
The sardonvx is a ehd.
cedony stone" also called
agate. When bands of light
alternate with red or
brown the stone is called
sardonya, when dark
bands are black it is called
onyx.
We are experts in the
care and selection of gems.
See us. f(r all your needs!
S3695
$2395
$10,500
1in N.P. Mercury Inboard outboard. En,l load trailer.
4606 LazolleAve., Terraoe
~
carvings.
,/64
~
~
~'~~@~f~
/~1~'~ i~p/~ ~
Like new oonditlon
Terraoe Totem Ford
Sales Ltda
4031 geith
636-4984
, ~ ~ t
I
JEWELLERS
LTD.i
i
2~6ci~2
~ *~dms[
1711I
i i~2
f,
I,,i
ERRACE-KITIMAT
The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978, Page II
Inui[ to--brief Clar
SECO N D
-
'OT1'AWA (CP)--Inuit
leaders
will
meet
Frogressive Conservative
leader Joe Clark Dec. 13 "to
educate him about issues in
the North," the Inuit
Ta,pirisat said Monday.
'Clark favors big business
and northern development
because that's where the
votes are,"
Tapirisat
president Eric Tagoana said
in an interview. "We'll have
to educate him."
The Tapirisat, which
represents the country's
22,000 lnuit (Eskimos),
wants Clark to understand
its position on constitutional
reform,
northern
deafter the United States.
velopment and proposed
The proposed directives, to
be followed by obligatory muummmm
legislation in the nine
countries, will ban use of
asbestos in some products,
such as sprayed insulation.
As substitutes become
available, the use of asbestos
should gradually be phased
out. Where safe substitutes
already exist, the use of ii~/~i~:!ii:ii~:i
asbestos should be for - ~..........................
bidden.
~ i ~
The issue is important to
European industry since an ~ / i i ~
estimated 100,000 workers in ::~:i~:i~i::::~ii! i :
Industry worried
i
r
B R U S S E L S (CP) - - Concerned
by
European
Economic
Community
(EEC) plans to limit the use
of asbestos
products,
Canadian officials and asbestos industry representatives opened exploratory
talks with European officials
Monday on the qussflen of
how Canadian experts would
be affected.
The 17-member Canadian
delegation,
ineludin8
representatives of thefederal, Quebec and British
Columbia goverument~ met
with EEC eummksien officials and asbestos users in
the nine-member community at commission
headquarters here.
Of concern
to
the
Canadians is a plan by the
E E C to limit use o/the fibre
because of medical links
with asbestosis, a lung
ailment, and claims it causes
cancer.
Daniel Perlatein, president
of Quehec's
National
Asbestos Corp., which is to
buy out U.S.controlled
Asbestos Corp., estimated
one-half of that firm's
production is sold in Europe.
About 70 per cent of
Canadian asbestos
production is concentr,~ted in
Quebec. British Colmnbla
and N e w f o u n d l a n d a l s o
produce the mineral fibre.
Lance Howey of the B.C.
economic development offlee in London said exports
may decline ff regulations
are too tight.
"The object of this whole
exercise is that we clearly
understand the problem and
see that any regulations are
realistic," he said.
The nine EEC countries
imported $155 million worth
asbestos from Canada in
1977, making the community the community are involved
the second largest customer i n manufacturing asbestos-
amendments to the Northwest Territories Act that
will increase regional
government seats.
They (Conservatives)
haven't dealt with natives
for 15 years and don't really
understand the politics involved," Tagoona said.
The Tapirlaat was formed
in 1973 and began preparing
an Inult hod claim for
roughly 1.5 miUlen square
miles of Canada above the
trealine, an area in which
17,000 non-Iouit also live.
Negotiations with the
federal government have
bogged down over Inuit
demands for their own
government in the central
and
eastern
Arctic,
responsible to the federal
government.
The federal government,
embroiled in land claim
negotiations with other
groups in the Yukon and
Mackenzie River Valley,
seems reluctant to set a
precndent in the Arctic.
The Conservatives support
expansion of the N.W.T.
government, expected to be
approved by Parliament
before the Christmas break.
The
Inuit
have
not
recognized the territorial
government.
"The Conservatives have
said they would grant the
N.W.T. provincehond within
four ye~s," Tngoons said.
"We don't think they should
hurry if they form the next
government."
The lnuit want their land
claim settled by Ottawa because it would be difficult to
wrestle puliUeal concessions
from a new provincial
government intent dn
building its own power base, _
Tagoena said.
The lnult also want their
rights entrenched in the constitution. They have not
signed treaties with the
federal government and are
not protected as Indians are
by federal legislation.
n
OHRISTMAS SALE
VV
SALEEND
DEOEMDER
OFF
.Lamps - Accessories
IU
DISHWASHERS
20~-'~L~ 9th
Moffat Portable
GE Built.In
Clear out of Mayta8 Old Models
~1~.00
OFF
Bailey Schmltz
Hide-A.Beds
"~
I
I
Vtlae 2 pc.
CbentorfleM
Kroehler
Sofa - Lovceeat
Reg. 1;1199 now
~.00
Reg. Snso
NOW ;9S0.00
GE
i
Self
Clean
Top of the
Muytag
Auto Washer
t549.oe with trade
i
Pielcraft M.ed.
Bedreoln
Reg. $4695
Sale ~z85
!~!:iiii~i~!:iii:~i~.!:i~: ~,~!~i~.~i:~i~i~,.~.~:,~!:il
iTN.oe with trade
ii::!ii:
Now $99s.0~
SAVE
$1410.00
Line Range
•!:i::~:'~. L ": .: .i:~:./?: :.:: .~:
HPL Modem 9 pc.
Dining Room
Reg. $1473 '
FREEDELIVERYTO TERRAOE-KITIHqTAREA
WALL'S HomeFurnishings
Smithere
;w Business
Not listed in our
B,¢, Tel Direotor/,
q•
AURORAANIMAL HOSPITAL - 435-2040
101AL.AN.ORDER L12-$4~1
We're
Listed
Here!
i.
*""*'
.,...,.,
~LI'S PLACE- v7Ml-~el
CENTRE ~LS-~
A DreamComeTrue...
Free - for ONE month courtesy of T H E
DALLY HERALD
If youwishyourBusiness Phone
listed for your customers please call
63§ G3§
up
If you'veever dreamedof owning a grandfatherclock
without havinll to pay $500 or more, this is ]four chancel
Yes, for only a few days, you can order this G-foot tall Grandfather clock direct from
our B.C. fa,:tory! Traditional cabinetry in a dark walnut finish, with a graceful
~ swinging chtme that chimes reliably on the half hour, and counts the full hours,
ornamental ~eights, and the soothing rhythm of the old.fashioned TICK.TOCK you've
loved since you were a child.
• EXACTLYAS
• HOT A KIT! THIS IS A FULLY
~ ILLUSTRATED
COMPLETEDCLOCK
i II
I
althoughH doescome in 3 pads hut shippingand
I
"THIS 6-FT.-TALL"
GRANDFATHER
CLOCKNOWONLY
O
O
O
Without your D a i l y H e r a l d
your day, your life, would be dull.
Brighten every day with the exciting happenings of your com.
munity, your nation and the
world. Read speeiul features and
shop the money-saving advertisements and you are guaranteed
a lively day. Call 6 3 5 - 6 3 5 7
daily herald
s179's
handling purposes. Settinl-up t i m is 15.29 minutes.
• The weightsare ornamentalbecausethe preciselytimed
spring.driven movementis automaticallywound by two
O.cell batteriesevery eight minutes to give you yearsof
worry.freeservice,whileyou listento the tick-tockSOUND
of a pendulum clock.
• The nashhsht batterees,which also drive the chime,will
fast a year to ]8 months.
• The movementcarries a or~e.yearguarantee.
Details enclosedwith every clock.
Tot Bm
Furniture &
Applianoes
4664 Lakelse Avenue
638-1168
Page 16, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, .1978
• , ~ . ,,
• ,..~.
. ,~. . . . ',',..:,, ,,.',:< •.,..................................................
.....
~:..,z,' .. . . . . ................. .,..,,. .,.... :. . . . . . . . • .. . . . . . . '. . . . . . • . . ... . . . .~,.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.
. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . ... . . ... . . ... .,..2~.~'~.~,4~
..'~.'.,':~'.'.~.OI~':":['I~:~:C,"II":'!:!;~.
...
~::~tl;;:.:(,~l..~.:...~.ll;:~.~,41K
•~41~:....~41',~ i(,glK,.!,'41~'~~41~:/,~1.~.~,'41L [,1~.',. ~(4~.',~..~,'41;...:,:41~'......l~,.,.,,,;ll~,...:.11;~..,.~;....~...,~/~,
~ . ~ ~'~4~:'.,';'.~,'~(~
....
IlOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOJI
by
'I;. P i~l l :L-\ #~~. DOUGLAS
,~a-.w
.......u. .m
. . . .a . .~
"'-~-l"W/"e[
. .i ir~ , - ~, ..~.,,..~,...
• ~ ~ ]~"~ REALTY
:
_
•
•
:
•
•
i
0
•
•
TYNAN
1 ~ ' DESIGN
~1~ •~'~"LiD.
'
te,,
•~
o '
:,~.
' ~"L'~ff.
632-4721
,.v~..~
w:! OFFICIAL BLOCK eROS.ASSOCIATE
DEALERBKITIMAT
2
FEATURE HOME OF THE WEEK
.!:i~
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
--'~'--
~
.
"
~
cO
i
36 Eagle St. 1½ storey-
;
! i//
119 Carswell Street,
Full basement, Single 852,900
30 Gander - $30,000
3½ Acres on.Lakelse Lake
190 Kon]gus St.
(new construction)
G4-Vista' Vill.ag.e
(excellent condition)
Why not call us today
for your h'ee apprmsei
•
~
g
-
~ ' ~ ~ ~ , g
I
"
'''''':~:'
,.
ORDER COUPON
;: P L A N NO. U-295
TO: TYN.ANDESIGN LTD.
• 13669-108th AVE., SURREY, B.C. V3T 2K4
PHONE ORDERS: (604)681.6722
1488 total square fe~i~ot Cape Cod charm for the discriminating
home buyer that requlrcs an attractive home at modest prices.
.
A 53-ft. wide lot In m0s$ areas is adequate so money can be saved
on the lot price a s C I I . ,/~.
HOUSE PLANS UNDER 1800 SO. FT.
Please send one set of Plan No . . . . . . . .
@ $65.00
Additional sets~to original @ $10.00 each
5 set ECONOMY' PACKAGE (includes first set) $95,00
This plan is also avai|~ble W l t l a full basement (PLAN NO. U-294).
g
:
I
5% sales tax (B.C. only)
Postage and handling
'~.,~'
UTILITY
:
$
(If C.O,D. desired add $1.30)
Total amount of cheque or money order and'coupon
enclosed
•
DouglasOhaanel"Performs" :
•
We Offer Servioes m
g
: APPRAISALS-PROPERTY
MANAGEIIENT•
•
LOT SALES- DEVELOPMENT g
OANADAWIDE REFERRALSERVlOE •
•
, MORTGAGESI RENTALS
•
I
.
IMlilNI
a
I
PI~
.to
NAME
M~ON~ P ~ N
e22 S~.rr.
"i
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
CITY............... ~., ,
• ,
. . . .
Watch
for
!
•
• CMHC approved
• Financing available
• Heatilater Type Fireplaces
• Quality Construction By Builders Who Care
. Beautiful Valley And Mountain View
. Saturday Afternoon (Dee. 2) ]p.m. to 5p.m.
I:
Pruden & Currie (1976) Ltd.
41148 takehe Ave
636-6142
H'WA¥16 TO PRINOERUPERT
I
.
.
.
.
.
r~
!
If your plant's stems
stretch toward the light and
are growing very long, it
may be receiving too little
light. Pale-colored, s m a l l
leaves on new stems are also
a symptom of this same
problem. The remedy is to
move the plant to a brighter
exposure, or closer to a win.
'dew. if you are using artifi.
cial light, you may have to
increase the wattage or the
number of bulbs used.
Browning leaf edges, with
leaves ultimately dying, in.
dicate that a plant is not re.
ceiving enough humidity.
Mist the plant regularly, and
place its pot o n a bed of
moist pebbles in a tray.
MOUNTAINVISTABLVL
SHOWHOMES
i
I
.
Here's Help for
Ailing
Housepiants:
To View 12 New Homes Now Oompleted.
MI
/
.
The high speed and low
temperatures use less energy
than with ordinary cooking,
so less electricity is consumed. In addition, the natNow's the time to be alert
ural meat juices ,tay inside.
To make the beat of this for signs of problems in your
thermal theory, a new port- greenery. The right steps,
able, continuous clean oven taken promptly, can save a
has been cooked up by favorite plant.
Farberware. Called TurboOven it runs on regular
For instance, if you note
household current, can travel anywhere there's electric- that your plant's lower
ity and has an automatic leaves are turning yellow or "
timer to turn itself off.
that its stems are becoming '
In fact, using this oven soft and dark in color, the
may be your only chance • plant may be getting too
to have a lot of hot air
much water. Check to make
working for you.
sure that the drainage hole is
not clogged; if the soil has
become compacted, repot
the plant. Water only when
necessary; if in doubt, ask
your local nursery cxpert's
advice.
VOOATIONALSOHOOL
t
=
.
PROM.......................... CODE .............. ..~....
'You are invited
IB
m
--J
.
ii ....
What's cooking? A new
idea that could change the
way you cook!
Roasts can now be finished one-third faster than
before. Frozen meat roasts
in the time it used to take
for thawing, baking can be
done at lower temperatures,
a,d broiling usually requires
less electricity.
This method consists of
constantly circulating, ~nd
recycling, heated air at high
speeds so it strikes all sides
of the food, blowing away
the cold, until the food
is cooked all •over at the
same time and teinperature.
There's no need for turning.
and
Friday
.
L•
......................................................................................................
NEW IDEA IN KITCHENS
I
m
uJ•
hd
,,.•,,
ADDRESS .............................:................................................................
lltl~
N
A
..............
....................
lI;IIIIIT',OI
the
Real
Estate
pages
Tuesday
. . . . . . ~ , . Q .0. . . . . . . .
HOUSE PI~AN,'BOQKS AVAILABLE, EDITIONS 14 & 15
Please send one of the above books @ $2,00
(circle choice) or send both books @ $3.50 per set .....................
Add 50c postage per book
Cheque or money order and coupon enclosed.
$ ...................
LIVlIm
e w e re Number 3, we try harder
|doooooooooool~ooel
/i#i!i
~
g
g
:,' ',-~
if your plant seems to
grow rapidly, but later wilts
and develops a white crust of '~
built-up salts, you're giving
it too much fertilizer. Water
the plant thoroughly to dissolve built,up salts, re.
watering within halfan hour
to wash out the salts through ,i;i
pot's drainage hole.
On the other hand, plants
that fade to a pale green, /
with lower leaves t u r n i n g '
yellow, may be getting too
little fertilizer. Small, new
leaves or no growth at all
are other indications of this
condition.
0.%_%~~ L**~.o:*:,:*.TM,~*.' . % % 0,e . *,% %%%%%%?,%%g,~ ,~ ,~ o_*,~.e.%.%.%.**~,~**-L%° , ~!.%%%~*%%%%% • *%% % **%%%•o• , % % *,%%• ,%? ,%%~ *~*'-*%%'-*~.*.**?*."*:• ."• : , : •."~*,~•. • . % % %• . % , °,%.%:,.*: • =%%•, l . • . ,° ,o-,%., • ~•~o°•?• "e "*'*'* 011olq
i
The Herald, Tuesday, December 5. 1978, Page I!
Iw
IngenuityIn -Home Deco
i
s.,.,
H e l p f u l Tips On L o w - C o s t D e c o r a t i n g Ideas
REMODELING
THE
OLDER
/
HOME
'
~
'
I!
i
To add a double quantity
of salt.
And, lastly o'er the
flavored compound toss
A magic soup-spoon of
anchovy sauce.
Oh, green and glorious!
Oh, herbaceous treat!
To make this condiment,
your p0et begs
The poundedyellowsof
two hard-boiled eggs;
Two boiled potatoes,
passed through the
, kitchen sieve,
Smoothness and softness
to salad give;
Let onion atoms lurk
within the bowl,
And, half-suspected,
animate the whole.
Of mordant mustard add
a single spoon, ,
Distrust the condiment
that bites so soon;
But deem it not, thou
man of herbs, a fault
'Twould tempt the dying
anchorite to eat;
Back to the world he'd
turn his fleeting soul,
And plunge his fingers
in the salad bowl!
Serenely full, the
epicure would say,
Fate can not harm me,
! have dined today!
- - Sidney Smith
(1771-1845)
AN IMMAOULATE,WELL BUILT, 6 YEAR OLD HOME!
A CHARMING BYGONE ERA comes to life when original fixtures and
cabinets contrast with greenery, fresh walleoverings and appropriate
furniture, A new booklet, the "Kitchen and Bath Idea Book," tells you
what and how to get what you need to improve an older home,
Most Americans now live
in houses at least 15 years
old that challenge both their
ingenuity and their bank
accounts.
In the kitchen and bath,
where fixtures are already
fixed, the challenge grows,
forcing the homeowner to
work around what's already
there. You can make even
these rooms attractive if
you keep these suggestions
in mind:
1. Choose furnishings in
scale with your rooms. Your
breakfast nook will seem
larger when you use a lightweight Parsons table with
bamboo, bentwood or rushbottomed chairs. Avoid
placing large, heavy pieces
in small rooms where people
will have to squeeze by
them.
2. Make a floor plan and
arrange furniture in convenient groupings. If the
area is large, divide it
visually into sections and
place furniture logically.
In a living room, for
example, a carved mantlepiece should be the focal
point and the right spot for appropriate in bathrooms
a conversation area that you and kitchens where heat
can make with matching and moisture soon ruin
sofas opposite each other, wallpaper.
or large easy chairs on either A 28 -page, full-color
"Kitchen and Bath Idea
side of a table.
Traffic lanes leading to Book," that contains other
suggestions,
along with
French doors that open
onto a porch or patio numerous remodeled room
should be free of clutter, scenes and "case histories,"
but a bookshelf corner can can be yours for 50g when
be a study area if you fill it you write: GTR Wallcovering
with a desk, chair and lamp. Co., C.N. 01550-PR,Trenton,
A vacant wall might accom- N.J. 08650.
4. Make liberal use of
modate a piano, music
as accessories.
cabinet 'and music stand, or plants
Nothing freshens up an old
your stereo components.
3. Wailcoverings afford house like a toueh of greenone of the least expensive ery. Try conceuling oldways to make a dramatic fashioned plumbing in the
change in a room. They also bathroom with a lavish
lend personality that dull, potted plant sitting on the
painted walls do not. floor, a n d fill empty spaces
Fabric-backed vinyl wall- on tops of radiators and
coverings like those from. windowsills with leafy ferns.
General Tire and Rubber ' A tall plant can do wonders
Company are the most prae. for a tight but otherwise
tical. They wipe clean with- empty iitq_ corner.
None of these changes
out rubbing, resist stains
and moisture, retain their need be expensive when you
original colors indefinitely cover old walls and re.cover
and strip off easily when old furniture with matching
you want to change or or compatible fabrics and
move. Vinyl is especially materials.
Dollar.Wise
DECORATING
A C H I L D ' S ROOM
By Joy Miller
A parent who" surprises a with an inexpensive plychild with a new room robs wood top and covered with
the youngster of half the smooth vinyl resilient floorfun Of decorating. A child ing.
denied the anticipation...
Shelves mounted over a
Ianning... and part of the bed, desk, or on a wait can
o - i t - y o u r s e l f execution hold books, clock, radio,
loses a good opportunity for
self-expression.
You can't blame a child
for wanting to be in on such
a personal project. It's un.
fair when the children conearned are neglected and
adults completely "take
over."
~
and e~;en plants.., and are
functional as well as decorative.
At best, the room should
reflect a child's personality
and should be comfortable
and inviting.
The simplest materials
can make deeoruting a
child's room a delightful experience and ihspire environment-control creativity
throughout life.
Reoentl/listed and oonvenientl! legated in town, this 1,000
sg. ft. home is situated on a larp treed lot, whioh inoludes
a/enoed baokyard and patio. The home has 4 bedrooms, II/,
IJathrooms, e finished basement with separate laundr/room.
The modest prioe ef $01,000 includes a oarport and storage
shed. Immediate possession oan be arranged. Make an
ointment by pkoninB PARK AVENUE REALTY to view this
PRUDEN& OURRIE.m)LTD.
TERRAOE! S i]OMPLETEREALESTATESERVlOE
4648 Lakeke Avenue
Large family home on
extra large lot in very
desirable location. Living
rm. 24 x 25 with sliding
doors to patio & fireplace.
tLarge dining room with
fireplace. Kitchen with
eating area and built in
china cabinet. 3 bedrms.
and 4 piece bath on main.
4th bedroom, 3 piece bath
and recreation area down.
Good sized hack entrance
and boot room. Listed
exclusively at $60,000,00.
Excellent Inventment
Opportunity. 3 -- S ixin~~
up & down duplexes in good
condition. All units c0mpleta with fridge and stove.
Duplexes in very desirable
location and set up on 3
separate side by side lots.
have good storage sheds at
rear eL lots. Lois are 60 x
132. For viewing and
perusal of recent appraisal
call Bonnie or Bud at
MeColl's.
Listed
at
$105,000.00. MLS.
An easy desk to put together could be two painted
file drawer cabinets topped
Price reduced to $S4,000.00.
Situated on 1 acre of hand
Just north of town. New
1296 sq. ft. split level needs
some exterior finishing.
Home
has
fireplace,
sunken living room, and 3
large bedrooms. Phone
Muriei for more in.
formation. M.L.S.
sundeck attached,
Property is partially
landscaped, the water is
supplied by a private water
system and there is a large
concrete septic tank and
field. For viewing contact
Rusty LJunah.
no e a s e m e n t ome
m
wall to wall carpeting,
laundry area and storage,
Alcan siding, natural gas
heat and hot water, carport
and it is located on a fully
landscaped lot with rear
fencing and a storage shed
included in the price. Full
wtce $32,500.00. To view
phone Rusty LJ~gh.
REVENUE HOME:
Approximately. 1400 sq. ft.
of living area in this
modern home just under 5
years old with fireplaces, 3
bedrooms, emuite
plumbing, carpeting and a
two bedroom suite in the
basement. There is a
rumpus room, and extra
bedroom for the owner as
well in the lower area. The
suite has a separate en.
trance, and electrical
meter and there is an attached
garage.
For
viewing phone R u s t y
LJtmgh.
Whether you're deeorat-
ing with a tot or a teenager,'
let the youngster pick the
predominant color.
It would be a good idea
to start with the floor.
Color could begin there.
Some of the new selfstick carpet tiles from Armstrong have rugged enough
textures to withstand roughand-tumble activity from
two rugged boys in a room
and are do-it.yourself easy
as well as durable. Installing
carpet squares is such a
cinch that (with only a little
help at room perimeters) it's
an excellent D-I-Y project
for an older child!
A special sport, hobby,
or collection can provide a
theme and allow a favorite
color to run'rlot in aeceaso'ties that depict the interest.
A s for furniture, if your
daughter is wild-for-wicker,
for instance, you don't have
to buy lots of new pieces;
one wicker chair (from a
second-hand store) spraypainted will make a good
start.
A bedroom is more than
a place to sleep...so don't
forget storage. Trundle beds
available from Thomesville
ara not only space.savers
but have extra storage drawors aa well.
636-614|-
KNIGHT TRAILER ON
~ ; ~ . , / ~ .......
LOT
Excellent quality trailer, 12
x 56, with two bedrooms,
..
'
wall to wall earpatl0g,
I: ~
Aluminum exterior, fur.
nishinga included except
"
"
personalbeanS~ga. Setup
. . . . .
- ~
on ~ t e , ,
~ o ~ _ a ~ ..... .A~mA.C~..VE H e M p
Over 1100 sq, ft,, 2 bedroom
home. Extra bedroom,
bath and ree room in
basement. Some finishing
needs to be done. Located
on Davis Avenue, Ashfug
LhZ,000.00. Call Horst or
Christel.
6 year old three bedroom
The Price is Right. Three
home on large lot in Copbedroom
home.
full
perelde. Very clean and
basement, 1020 sq. ft.
comfortable. Built to
situated on ½ acre, clme to
National Building Code
stores and schools. Asking
requirements. Asking only , only $34,000.00. Call Horst
gi8,000.00. Call Horat or
or Chrlatel for more
Chrlatci for more detail,,
details.
Four bedroom, split level,
rock faced fireplace,
family room and fifth
bedroom on lower level.
Atteehed garage. Asking
~S,800.00. C,~ll Kelly.
Neat & cute. 3 bedroom
bungalow on Weber Street.
Fenced and landseaped.
Him fireplace and carport.
Phone Frank.
Oall & Inquire at our Oflioe about Florida Proportion
LARGE HOME WITH
RENTAL SUITE
Located in a quiet area on
the bench with
approximately 1300 sq. ft. of
living area featuring 3
bedrooms,
fireplace,
carpeting, largo family
kitchen, attached carport
and a full basement with a
two
bedroom
suite,
fireplace and outside an.
trance. To view interior
phone Rusty LJungh.
PRIVACY AND VIEW
Medern near new split
level home with 1306 sq. ft.
o~ living area and 3
bedrooms, emuite
plumb.in& two fireplaces,
carpeung, large kitchen
with eating area and
pantry cupboards, patio
doors to concrete sundeek,
attached heated garage,
and lower level with
bedroom, rumpus room,
laundry area and storage.
Property is approximately
an acre, lightly treed,
landscaped and has a view
o( the river and Sleeping
Beauty range of moontales. For viewing phone
CIGHT INDUSTRIAL LOT
WITH HOUSE
located on Keith Avenue
this 3 bedroom home has
hardwood floors, oil furnace heat, laundry area
and mud room. The lot is 60
x 390, has access from
Pohle Street in the rear, a
garden area and some
outbuildings. For viewing
rhone Rusty Ljungh.
i
SUPER STARTER HOME
DELUXE HOME
Offering so much enjoyment for the family.
1585 sq. ft., 3 bdrm. with
optional 4lb. Delightful
living room,
corner
fireplace, large built-in
nook in kitchen, ~0'd4'
carpeted rec room. 34'
kidney shaped swimming
pool fully equipped, heated
filtration system, all
automatic, also sauna. 4807
Davis St. Reasonably
priced. Give Bob Sheridan
a call to tell you more.
Neat as a pin this 2
bedroom home is located
across from Caasie Hall
School~ has been completely renovated inside
with carpeting, painting,
etc. and has a ~/4 basement
with nearly completed
rumpus room, and outside
basement
entrance.
Property is fenced, land.
soaped and there is a
covered rear veranda
across the length of the
house. To view phone
Rusty Ljungh,
CATHEDRAL ENTRANCE - - NEW CON-
STRUCTION
located in a controlled
subdivision this 3 bedroom
home has 1176 sq.. ft. of
living area, wall to wall
carpeting, easuite plumbing, fireplace, eating area
in the kitchen plus a dining
room, gas heat and hot
water, a % basement and a
cedar siding exterior.
Phone Bert Ljungh to view.
AFTEROFFIOEHOURS
HORST 60DLINSKI. 036-UMI7
KELLY SQUIRES - 036-1010
MURIEL NEALE- 636-3944
OHRIsTEL GODLIIISKI. 636-6307
JUDITH JEPHSON -638-1662
ZERA FRJiNOlS 036-3913
FRANK SKIDMORE2 036-6.601
Preferred Realty World Orients May Rseeivo a 10% Dieoount
on a Budget Truok Renhil
II
III I
3 BRAND NEW HOMES IN CALEDONIA SUBDIVISION
Nearing completion -- quality construction. AH the extras, NHA mortgages, natural
gas heating. 3 bch'm, and 4 bdrm. plans, see them with our sales staff.
EVENING
.PHONES
J O H N C U R R I E . 635-$1i6S
BOB SHERIDAN - 6~-2M4
OWAIN
McCOLL
B E R T L J U N G H - 035.S754
R U S T Y L J U N G H - 635.S;S4
• i53S.2971
l i t ¢ 12, ~
Herldd, ']~edl~, December 5, 1978
•
li _
• .-:..:
I
i BtRIOE DnUliS Lll.i
|30TEalnn
• .,,,,o
..,o-o
Mili-lr/4
Vitamins
&
Toys, Toys, Toys
:
•
,'~;
:
.~.~
2"'.
o , .
• : ::'
[..,
I
The Terrace Day' Care
Skesna Health Unit
Auxiliary will be holding a
3215.2Eby Street
BAKE & CRAFTS SALE at
Terrace, B.C.
the '
Terrace
Coop, '
635.63O7
1970 Chev % Ton 4 wheel Will do fruit tree pruning. Three bedroom basement
ABLEELECTRIC LTD.
LOCAL ONLY:
The following are a few of December 22 from S p.m, s
drive.
~
Phone 635-7685after 5 p.m. suite. Carpeted, fridge &
the oorvlces offered locally P.M. All of our friends who Electrical and RefriKeration Bolen Tractor G14 with (neh-TDsff)
stove, close to town. (Davis
wish
to
donate
any
crafts
or
contract,
20 words or less 82.00 Par • ngle Copy
Ik
by your Health Unit Staff:
Street, 4733). Available
snow-thrower -- rata -House wiring.
insartkm. Over 20 words S ByCarrler
baked
goods
can
drop
them
mUk3.05 CHILD HEALTH CON.
~35.58~B
spader. 635-3567. (p4-8D)
CARPENTRY-HANDYMA~ immediately. No pets, Phone
cents per word.
elf
at
the
Day
Care
Centre,
yeer~l.MI FERENCES.
(ctf)
available. Small jobs 635-236O. (pl-hD)
3 or more consecutive In- By Carrier
3 mth IS.M' Held weekly at the Health 3425 Kalum o n or. before
One t2' aluminum b o a t desired.
Remodelling,'
ssrtlons $1.50 per insertion.~ By Msll
December
22
4
p.m.
(nc30S mth|S.M Linlt every Tuesday from
By Marl
$250. I clarinet - like new - cement work, fix.up. For For Rent: One bedroom
RUPERTSTEEL
~.d)
yeer45•05
i:30
•
3:50
p.m.
Please
phons
By Mefl
$125. 1 pr. 7'/: Munari Ski lnfol'maflon phone 635-3261, apartment. Approx. 3 miles
REFUNDS:
&8ALVAGE LTD.
year 28.tl4 for an appointment.
~nlor
Citben
boots - $40. I pr. 7 ski boots - Richard Wllderson. (c5-6) from downtownTerraee. No
First Insertlnn charged for
Held
at
Thornhlll MANAGER& SECRETARY We buy ~ppur, g~m,
pets. 638-9258. (ffn-sttSl))
$15,
Very old Stroneber~
whether rim or not.
CHRISTMAS metals and batteries.
Rocrestlon Centre on the ANNUAL
British
Commonwealth
and
radio-recordplayer
cabinet
Abzelutely no.refunds after
Location - - Seal Cove
UnitedStates of America one fourth Friday of every PARTY
Od has been set.
Once asian, the Terrace 0pen till S p.m. Mon. te Sat. $I00. Phone 635-5294 after
month from 1:30.3:30 p.m.
year 55.05.
4:30 p.m. (pl0-18D)
"
PleaSe pho~e for an ap. Hotel will hold their annual Phone ~A.H39
CORRECTIONS:
Manager
and
Secretary
pointment."
One Polaroid 440 camera UegenlJy required, ride to
Must be made before 2nd
'MUBTBELL' , '
Box 399,Terrace, B.C.
GEMINIEXCAVATING
Babysitters who bring Christmas Party. Thla gives
,complete with ease, flash & endfrom Eurocan. 'D' Shift. By Builder, one house, new.
Insertion.
the
managers
the
•opV0G 2M~
LTD.
children
must
have
parents
cberaer. Hlttacbl 8 .track ,Willshare gas. Phone 638- 1040 sq.
Nlowance can be mede for
ft.
Carpet
(WesAndrews)
written consent for i s . portunity to show their
record player,1975 Nova LN. 1o95. (c5-8D)
only one Incorrect ad.
throughout, f i r e p l a c e
appreciation to
their
HOME DELIVERY
~ackhoeWork '
munlzefion.
All in good ceaditlm and
carport. 5 year new home
secretaries for the fine work
Terrace & District
Hourly &Contract
ADOLT CLiNiCS
ressonubly priced. ~o979.
Used Pickup, M~t be in warranty. CMHC approved
BOX NUMBERS:
and
dedicated
loyalty
Thornhlll & Dlsh'lct
~
g
a
,
~
J
m
a
These
a
r
e
held
at
the
(cS-6D)
good mechanical shape. No &inspected. For a place ~ea
75 cents pick up.
Phone63S.~lS7
Health Unit on Monday, throughout the year; It is
rust. Mazimum of 11,~00. can afford, under ~0,005.
$1.25 mailed.
Wednesday and Friday from also a fine opportunity f o r
Firewood for Sale. Phone Phone 635-M76. (cS-SD)
" For a ppoInimmt ta view
some firms to have a
3
4:10
p.m.
by
sppelntment
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY:
635-2896. (p20~d)
. . . .
~
..... ~,phone Ben Faber Con-'
Christmas Staff Party at a
The Herald reserves th~ enly.
Rates
available
upon right to clesslfy 8de under
Wanted to rent: garage for slrucilon.
ilE c ~ t.
PRENATAL CLASSES
request.
For Sale: One pair size 9½ winter months t o , s t o r e ' .....
633-~818
DAT~: Wednesday,
appropriate headings and to
Cleases
are
held
Kestin~er Leather Ski Boots vehicle. Phone635.21548fter -'(c28.28D)
set rates therefore end to throughout the year at In. Dec. 13, 19711
NATIONAL
CLASSIFIED determine page Iocatlm.
- S20.Oilheater, 35,000BTU's S p.m. (tfn-sff)
. tervals for
expectant The Time: 12 Hoan to 4 p.m.
RATE:
- ;15. 500 p i t o n oil tank &
The Herald reserves the parents. Phone the Health The Place: Terrace Hotel,
5 ACRES with small house
22 cents per agate line.
stand - S200. Artificial Scotch
rlgM to revise, edit, classify U n i t , fer details and Skeena River Room,
tar information leading te
WANT E D
on the bench. Price $45,000.
, Minimum charge 15.00 per or reject any adver~lwment
A
beautiful
and
delkioul
Pine
6'
Christmas
tree
with
the
return
of
2
female
black
Copiesof September12, 1976, Phone ~,.4453. (eff-m,f)
reWstratlon.
Insertlen~
buffet dinner will be zerved.
stand.
Xmas
lights
&
end to retain any answers HOME NURSING CARE
Labrador R e t r i e v e r s
Dally Herald.
decorations. Phone e S S - ~ .
directed to the Herald Box
If brought to office we'll 'Must Sell' -- leaving
Nursing care In the home. in the usual Terrace Hotel Susie, aged 4 years.
i L E O A L - POLITICAL and Reply Service, and to repay'
tradition
and
featuring
(ffn-sff)
Klflmat. 4 bedroom home on
Missing Nov. ~, ~TS. Lily,
pay you S2.00. (nclfn)
for thcoe Who need It on'
TRANSIENT
AD"
A
u
g
i
e
'
a
S
p
e
c
i
a
l
"
.
.
the customer the eum paid roferrel from their famllyl
Brant Street. Open to offers.
eked 6 months. Missing
VERTISING:
JUST
ARRIVED
AT
R
e
m
e
m
b
e
r
our
famous
for the advertisement andi doctor. Terrace area only.:
Dec. 2, 1978. Telephone
635-4308. (clb-16d)
Wanted
to
Buy:
a
secon• S3.~) per column Inch.
'~'~luh~ein"
(Hot
Wine)?
QUEENSWAY
TRADING
box rental.
HEALTH PARADE
dhand jackall. Phone Grog 635.s4ss
3Z15 Kslum
Box replies on "Hold",
NOWUNDER
For 4.year aM chlldrenJ Y~s, there will be plenty d
635-6357. (sff3-7D)
i BUSINESS PERSONALS- Instructions not picked up
CONSTRUCTION
HMd s o third Monday of~ that.
' Id.05 per line per month.
within lOdays of expiry of an' every month. Develop. E~hTertainer: Beautiful (p4-SD)
large Assortment of]
Wanted to Buy:
one
: On a 4 month besls only.
advertisement will
I)e mental, vision, 'hearing "AnJeil" from Edmonton
,rest Gift Ideas for
3 bedroom, 1340sq. ft., L
purebred German Shepherd
wil~
dol~ht
you
with
I~r
destroyed
unless
mailing'
Everyone
•
OEADI'INE
shaped home with fulll
screening done. Please
p
u
p
female
preferranly.
Instructlous are received. phone for appointment.
• Dolls- Musical
basement and fireplace.,
Phone 635-5363before 5 p,m.,
~a.~0 per person, end
Those answering
Box PRENATAL BREATHING sonS,.Priee~
Wlekerware '
Will finish to your
DISPLAY:
ask for Ed and 63~9636 after
Numbers are requested not • RELAXING EXERCISES' tickets are available now at
Rattan Sets
choice. Phone
4:00 p.m. 2 days prior to to send originals of
5~p.m. (c3.7D)
the
Terrace
Hotel
or
phone
Planters,~
~
WANTED: Band to play for
635-4011
Neld'~every Monday at.
publication day.
63S-2231 for reservationn New Year's Eve Dance in
documents to avoid loss. , terncon at 1 - 2 p.m.
Brass &Copper '
635-4094
seeD.
CI.AB~FIED:
Jewel Boxes
Kitwan~a. Accommodations
(a1~1-026)
All
claims
of
e r r o r s In V.D. CLINIC
P.S.:
Wives
are
welcome
2:05 p.m. on day previous to
Remote Control Cars
provided. Phone 849-5417 ox
Held every Monday at 3:30
tool I ! t (ne15-131))
doy d pubileation Monday to advertisements must be w by eppolntment.
Battery Train Sets
159-5449. (cl0-8D) " .
received by the publisher
' Dart Beards
Friday.
One or two bedrooms for
within 30 days after the first SANITATION
cups & Saucers
The T e r r a c e - K i t i m a t
rent. Furnished. Kitchen
The
public
health
Inspectors
publication.
Dental
recepti~ist
wanted.
ALL CLASSIFIED CASH
Forest Public Advisory
Clocks
facilities. Close to schools,
~ro
now
situated
In
Eby"
It
Is
agreed
by
the
8d
~Phone
635-2552.
(c4~D)
WITH O R D E R other than
7' New homes in downtown
Rocking Choirs
For working ladies. Phone
They will be pleased' Committee will be preachB U S I N E S S E S W I T H AN vertlser requesting spece~ Street.
area for sale by HECATE
CoffneSets
to m i s t with any sanitation ~ a lecture and discussion
635-3368.
(p2-6D)
ESTABLISHED ACCQUNT. thbt the 11ability of the: problems,
DEVELOPMENT. Quality
• Fancy LampShodes
on loising in the Kitlmat Paper Carrier for Terrace
Hereld In the event of failure SPEECH AND HEARING Valley, December 12, at 1:~1 Herald needed for the Mchomes built by local
Bar Mirrors
Service charge of aS.00on all to publish an advertisement C---dIC
~
p.m, p.~.theRanger Station in, Coancll area on the bench.
• WoodenKitchenware
builder. F o r more inN.S.F. cheques,
or In the event of an error.
_
Radios
. ....... . ,.,,.Terrace~
All., mteres
ed
Phone
formation call
H
e
l
d
,
a
1
.
~
1
2
G
r
o
l
g
.
.
.
.
.......
-,
...........
.
.
.
.
~
.=
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.... ~i.".":/:.":'..~Y .; /. apj~arlng .:. In:, the ... ad.'~
IIECATE
Stereo.8 track &
I.l~mnM t.,t~--~lll be dohe bv ' pecpl~ are nnvit~t o t ~ .
,.
.~ 6 3 5 ~ T
WEDDING
DESCRIP- Vertlsement as published r~errJl'~ fr--om'famlly docto;
cassette combinations
DEVELOPMENT
For
Rent
in
Thornhill:
One
A
forum
on
the
Xitinutt
(ne-cffn)
TIONS:
shall be limited to the;
Valley, discussing the pros
Angelus Bells
bedroom furnished apartNo charge provided news amount paid by the ad- 'or community health nurse. and cons of use for forestry,
•
WindChimes
6~.r~o
ment. $150 per month,
NORTHWEST
submitted within one month. vertlser for only one In.; IM.1155.
industrial development,
2 Way Radios
Singles only please• Phone !(alO-18D)
COMMUNITY
15.00 production charge for correct insertion for the LONG T E R M CARE
fisheries, recreation o r
Lamps
635-2065. (p2-6Di
COLLEGE
wadding and.or engagement portion of the advertising Oiflce at No. 205.4721 Lazelle agriculture will be hem on
•--We Gift Wrap-Terrace Centre
Ave.
Tel
635.9196.
space
occupied
by
the
in,
pictures. News of weddings
December 16. If you are
7~me In and Browse At
(write.ups) recelvad one correct or omitted Item only, Assessmlmt and planning for interested in the fate of the
Your Leisure
TEMPORARY
and"
that
there
shall
be
no
those
eligible
for
Long
Term
month or more after event
valley, please attend. (nc7)pen S Days a Week 9:304
CLERICAL '
liability
to
any
event
greater
Care.
i010.00 charge, with or
Friday tW S
121))
ASSISTANTS
without picture. Sublets to than the amount Paid for AID TO HANDICAPPED
OPEN TILL 9
• Experienoed Dinin| Reon Waitress
The
College
has
two
Office at No. 205.4721
condensation. Payable In such advertising.
ALLXMASWEEK
TERRACE
temporary clerical positions
Advertisements
must Lazelle. Tel. 635.9196.
advance.
LITTLE
open immediately for a
comply with the British Assessment and guidance
Desk Olerk with same |eokkeepin|
I
I
TIIEATRE
special project in its main
Columbia Human Rights Act' for vocational and social
CLASSIFIED
ANGet
your
tickets
early
for
library.
Term
of
emDouble Beds -- ;49 each
which prohibits any ad. rehabilitation done by
howled|o,
NQUNCEMENTS:
the Terrace Little .Theatre ~couioymentwill be two weeks
Color T.V. (20" RCA)
Births
5.$0 vertlslng that discriminates consultant.
Christmas
production
of
Ben
mencin~
December
el,
;340. Chrome chairs (newi
Union wa|ee
Engegements
5.50 against any person becauze
and the Boxes. Tieltets are Ira. Rate of pay will he ~.44
•~acach. DlahWesber,like
Marriages
$.50 of his race, religion, sex, The Salvation Army wilt be $1,5o for adults and children per
Hours of w d :
new. $390.Addin~ machine
'~esths
5,50 color, nailonsllty, ancestry sponsoring e Christmas Tea and will be sold at Mccall 6:30 hour.
Apply in parson - Lakelse Uete~
A.M.'to 4:30 P.M.
;40. Ping Pen8 table- $60.
Funerals
5,50 or place of origin, or because. and Sale on December 9 Realty or the door, Only 7S Monday
thru
Friday.
his
age
Is
belween
44
and
4,$"
'hone
Cards of Thanks
5,50
between 1 and 5 p.m. Ad- seats per night. Per- DUTIES: P r e l i m i n a r y
i
i
I
63s-7~
M~orlal. Notices
5.50 years, unless the condition Is mission $1.00 - 4637Welsh formances are at 7:30 p.m. preparation of library
~HD)
lustifled by a bees lids' Ave.
on I)ec. ~ and I)nc. 9, at 8 catsiogna infonmltion for
requirement for the work
PHONE 635.6357
Everyone Welcome
p.m. at Dec. 8 and two entry into a computerized.
Q i s l l f l l d Advertising Dept. involved.
matinees at 2 p.m. o n data base.
'PREGNAWF?'
Naturday, and ~unday.
EXPERIENCE
&
N E E D HELP?
(Nc4-81))
QUALIFJCATIONa:
Call Birthright for an
Previous library experience
Do You Feel You Have
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
desirable but net mandatory.
A Drinking Problem? There alternative to abortion.
ATTENTION
TO Y O U R L O C A T I O N
Phone i;32.48z anytime.
Applicants should be able to
Is help
CONTRACTORS
Room 283, Nechako Centre.
work quickly and procisely Industrial office trailer for
AvailableI
with a high level of detail and rent. 10x40 Travco. Two
INCH E l AWAY CLUE
Phone635.~t3~
a r e now a v a i l a b l e on o u r lovely 14 w i d e and
IneLfo-28nl
Thank you to Doctors be able to write legibly.
Meet every Tuesday night at
ALCOHOLICS
d o u b l e w i d e m o b i l e homes• You choose y o u r ,
room Sol,Lie office trailer
Sherstan, . Horner and . Applications may be made Chinook Trailer Soles
Oin the Skeins Health Unit.
ANONYMOUS
mPmALGENERAL
decor, and w e custom build to suit.
Bomphray and all the nurses at the College, 5331 Me- M06 Hwy. 16 West,
For more Information phone Meetings:
MEETING
' G o v e r n m e n t g r a n t of S3500 a p p l i c a b l e .
635.3747or 635.;3023.
Man.: 8:30 p.m. United Skcenn Valley golf & at the Kitimat Hospital for Connell or at Canada aS-~0S3
Expense p a i d f a r e V a n c o u v e r . return. For
me pull through my Manpower. ia3-4,5,eD)
Church
Country Club Society Wed. helping
Dealer no. D01113A
recent illness and nmjor
f r e e c r e d i t check and a p p r o v a l please phone
Rape Relief
• Thurs. or Sat. 8':30 p.m.
Dec. 0, S p.m.. nkocu Room
(affa-17n)
Abe~les Counoolling
collect.
Mrs.--01mrkaPART TIME help required
Milts Memorial Hospital.
no. Z at Terrace Hotel. surgery.
• Crisis Line for
.
-- Reitmans, Skeenu Mall,
Sun. Breakfast Meeting. 10 MeatiM to d i m
funding
HERALD
P a r k e r Homes of Canada Ltd.
Women
:
Ask for Mrs. Derrett. 639to noon. Lekelse Hotel.
results and purolme ~ Golf (c2-5D)
935.5447
6M4811
1375.
(c5-8D)
L
Club Property by the Club.
olosoiliodo
Learn 'to Fly. Join Air Weight Watchers meeting (m~-SD)
~,4datl, Terrace Squadron Is held every Tuesday Iit 7 p.m.
accepting applications for at the Knox United Church Terrace Art Association
DUFFS BICYCLESHOP
September. if you enjoy o~ Hall, 4907 Lazelle Avenu4, Picture l,cen will not be hold
due to Library enpenalon. Reconditioned bikes and
FOR SALE
think you would onloy flying,
SKEENACENTRE
Anyone wbddng to return or repairs, Reasonable rates. PuJica 70S camera with 28
rifle range, outdoor oc.
i~31Queensway Dr.
mm wide angle lens end
flvltlse end ere betwcon 13.1Q Skonns Centre offers to the I~msw pictures may bring
to the Library
Senior Citizens of the
case. Only one year old.
yoatl of age, pleaze call:
Terrace and Thornhlll arm busenamt Wednmday, Dec. B
Phone
Mike Smith at 63S.S034or
GOLDEN RULE
the following services:
from 7-9 p.m. (oc4-tD)
635-~M~
IMV TIM at 6~q.7390
Odd Jobs for the Jobless,
Activity Centre for hen.
1976
1971
1977 Panties
lilt
Phone 635-4555.3238 Kalum. after 5 p.m. tsff.tfn)
KIMnsatCentenalal Museum
Pregnant and In hood of dlcrafts
Datsun
FlU
Volkswagen
Lo
Hans
Day care for working
~03City Centre, Kitimat
2 Belted Snow ' r i m With
support?
Front end drive
SPORTSMEN'8
On Frkiey, December I,~the
Dodge rims. Size ET8xl4 Call for help from Right.to. people
Hatchback,
S Westtallat:amper
4dr. sedan.
Berber
8hop
. Drop in for companionship local Annual Adult Art Show
each.
2
snow
tires
with
Cbev
Life promotorl:
Speed, 8 Track,
Nice Shape.
Now Open Fridays UI eiahi. rims. Size735x15 - ~25each. 1
&
coffee
will
open
at
4
p.m.
at
the
LIM at 635-3164
Aerie8 from Post Office.
Monday
Ihru
Friday
0.4.
Kitlmat
Museum.
The
Snow
tire
for
Mwtang
with
radials.
$S,6OO
Carol at 635.5134
3223Fmereon
Transportation
available. ~ m n ~ will be on display
i i
rim. Size E78 x 14 - $35. I
Jenml m 635,~1S03
Contact Skeonaview Ladle,
ember I to January (8-06)
Bathroom vanity with green
IS. You are cordially invited
slnk. tsingle door). Size
1974
Ladles Slim Llne Club meets 635.2~65.
q
.
CONCRETE ~EWFIC
is view the exhibit and 20x16 and 34" high - ~60.
Monday evening -- 6:30 p,m.
TANKS
PRE-KAST
Phone 638-8483. (p3-SD)
Toyota
MILLS MEMORIAL
Cn~ydsUmsho--chose that special
--- United Church basement,
For immediate delivery
gift.
THRIFT SHOP
. 3oma!,
__
Septic System
1971 Kawaeakl. 90 co, !10 Ib,
Mills M,~morlal Hospital Museum Hrs.: 18.5. Fridays
Speclallata
weight lifting set - $1~.
At;xlllary wntdd appr~:lale I~0, closed Sun. & Men.
WANTE D DONATIONS
"insist on the DeW'
Phone 635-5970. seT-liD)
The Three Rivers Workshop nny donntlon5of qm)~ clean tne64Dl
PHONE ~W-3t~t
for the HelxIIcapped are clothlnq, nny ho,,~nhold
looking for donations of any llems, loy~ elc. for lhelr The Terrace Child Minding ~:|iMITTYS EXCAVATING Girl Guide cockle for sale.
1976 Ford
Will deliver., ~&SSSS. 635Amoc~
will be holding
oN, Woken or used pieces of THRIFT SHOP.
~eo.
635-3294.
tne-tfn)
SKEENA COLOR~
. furnltwe, also any discarded For pickup service phone
V8 P.U.
VolkmaHem
MONTHLYMEETING
wood products we could sis 635 5370or 635 5733,nr leave
Car warmer, World
W ~ i ~ a y . Ih,c. 6, 11118-8
BesJdenttaJ
for recycling or renovating. donations nl the Thrill ~hop
20coy
&
Oouopy
4 Dr. H.T.'
encyclopedia,
recllner,
Commercial Painting
Call Us at 63S.~338between on Le/oll~ Avenu,? on p,m.
Auto, PS. PB
bathroom light fixtures,
Oi.m. end 3 p.m., we will try ~lturdey~ h~tw~n 11 R.m. st the Centre, 454~Park Ave.
k l t c h e n t a b l e & chairs.
Phone n.la.la3S
1o m i k l i r r i ~ o m l n t e for nnd 3 p.m. Thank you. All interested persons
Phone & ~ - ~ . (p54D}
'
wekome toettend. (nc~l.ebi iaJ4
(nctfn)
pickup.
"CLASSIFIED
:
RATES
8UBSCI~PTION
RATES
Effective
October l, 1978
-.:'.:
....
!ii~".:
":~:,
, ? -
:-~:
i]:
:: :
.
.... :.
:
"
,--~
:::
:; :
~ i i.
"REWARD"
"
."
"
"
~
"
t
. .:
'. :
•
..o
-?*/
,
o
•
o
,
HELPWANTED
MOBILE HOME
FORD P.U,
$3,2eli
$4,800
$1,000
SW
$1,,;oo
1914 Ood|o
ihnooo
i171
1179 0omot
0onpo
Orow Oak P.U.
$3,800
''i
,
NEW HONES
~ ° ' ~
J
7
:
I,
The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978, Page 13
1~
Dodge~ Too ~ck. ,
Close to high school and Good condition. M~0. Phone
downtown Terrace. 6354458. 635-2~13. (p3-SD)
(pS-SD)
I ,,~
1~.~
I NEW IN BRIEFIChina, France agree
,,,~."
- - ~
,~-o,
~=='=
•
'
TOKYO(AP) - - China and French and Chinese trade is llkely to supply fuel for the
France signed a seven-year ministers and witnessed by reactors.
economic co.operatio~ Tang.
Le Monde's reporter in Peagreement ' Monday and
Chinese Vice.Premier Teng
Hsinhun gave no details of king' said an annex to the
t'~_..!
i'lalao-ping said his country Teng's comment on the agreement specifies that
w ~ buy French equipment power plant purchase.
France grant China export
JF a U . E .:.,~ , , , ~ r ~ - u r e s ~,.,Tet
credits totalling about 16.8
for two nuclear poweF
The Paris newspaper Le million over 10 years. The
OTTAWA (CP) -- Inac- in foreign currency markets, pl4mia, the llainlma news Monde said the sale of two credit agreement bears an
curate monthly trade figures were seizing on any piece of
have been helping drive bad news to sell Canadian agoncy reported.
Frenehnuelearpowerplants onnualinterestrate"clceeto
, The Chinese agency said testing about $4.5 billion is
downpromptingtvaluestatisticsOf
he
thecanadadollar, dollars,value,
driving down their total trade between the two not mentioned in the ~.~.the
6.5 toperChina,"cent
accordedLe
MondebY
countries over the seven- agreement, but was con- ~ i ~ .
to consider delaying their
'
year period would be about firmed by Li Chiang, China's
'
release until they are more
Two monthly reports - $13.Sbillion. The agreement external trade minister. The
China and Japan signed a
up to date.
er 1 showed incorrectly that was signed in Peking by the newspaper said France a b o treaty of peace.
Officials at the fed a
there hadbeentradedeflcits
agency blame slow reporting in June and July when there
of expert figures for the wide had actually been a surplus.
differences between the
The dollar plunged nearly
p r e l i m i n a r y f i g u r e s - - a full cent in July--to less
UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH OOLUMBIA
released about four weeks than 88 cents U.S.--when
after the end of the month-- preliminary trade figures
and revised figures released showed a $93-million trade
several Weeks later.
deficit for June. Revised
The situation was par- figures later showed there
The University of British Columbia is able to offer the following courses in the
ticularly bad during the had been a trade surplus of
summer of 1979 in Whitehorse.
summer wb,,n +,day traders I95 million.
However in order to secure the services of the relevant instructors the University
requires preliminaryestimates of enrollment by the end of 1978.
~ C - ~ c
i
TIMBER SALE
GMC pickup. 454 e ~ ,
tilt
LICENCE A.10?~0
steering wheel, cruise
THI~RE..w.lllbe ..~fe.redfor
control. Asking t5,500 Phone sale at puenc aucuon W me
847~ee67after 5 p m ict4D) Rngionsl Manager at Prince
Wanted to Rent: Young
' '
'Rupert, B.C., at 10:30 a.m.
business
man requires
'
on December IS, 1978, the
furnished apartment, room For Sale: 19'/8Tram Am TA LleeooeA-19750,tocut 10,961
and board or shared ac- 9.8 Special Edition. Auto, cunita o~ spruce, balsam,
commodation. Phone 635- P.S., P.B., black with gold hemlock and trees of other
9226, ask for Jan. (c55-11D) pinairlppin¢ T top and species located Bell Irving
many other extra& 635-34¢/ Crossing No. I Casaiar Land
after 6 p.m. (CHD)
District.
Two (2) y e a s will be
allowed for removal of
.timber.
Retallor
Provided anyone who is
Office Space
unable to attend the auction
in person may submit a
I
2 steres total of 2800 ft. Can
sealed tender, to be opened
be separated to 1400 ft.areas
MOBILE HOMES
at the hour of auction and
in choice locationon Lazelle
as one bid.
B.~.plng Centre, Terrace, New m o b i l e homes treated
Particulars may be obv
635-3576 or 255-1939
Vancouver. Available Sept. f r o m as low as $100.(X
Particulars may be obdown. O.A.C.
I, 1978, (elf
tained from the Regional
Manager, Market Place,
Set up and delivered
Prince Rupert, B.C., veJ IB9
trades welcome.
or the Forest Ranger, Box
ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. ~CP) -- from grade 11 by September.
67, Stewart, B.C., V0T Iwg.
Labrador
development, 1980.
(a4-14,21
,~8,d5)
P h o n e c o l l e c t 591
Premier Frank Mooros, ill
more
emphasis
on
5105.
Large lots on ~Soucte and
agriculture
.and
with pneumonia, missed the
. : Mtmme" Phone!'i964~.-4424.
reforestation were promised opening of the fourth session
CALLTO
Monday in the speech from of the 37th general assembly.
(ct~n-~N)
(cff)
TENDER
II
The throne speech lacked.
THE DISTRICT OF the throne opening a new
TERRACE would like to call session of the Newfoundland details of how government
plans were to be imtenders
for
SNOW legislature.
The speech, read by Lt.- plemented. Traditionally,
REMOVAL from the Arena
Gov. Gordon A. Winter, also c~etaiis come later as
and Pool Parking Lots.
TENDERS should be mentioned plans for a legislation covering barious
i
DEALERS WANTED
provincial
r e s o u r c e programs is indtorucod.
CBS JALCO INDUSTRIAL
1@
to: & Recreation development bank and exTIRE FLUIDS LTD.
The house is to sit until
,,m.,
,,~a~ I f°rwardedParks
This all new tire balancing
m~--~
Department tensioll of the high school Dec. 12 and then adjourn
fluid and tire sealant now
No. S- 3215Eby Street education system to grade 12 until the new year.
ready for distribution in
TIMBER SALE
Terrace, B.C.
Western Canada, Interested
LICENCE A 10732
VeG 2X6
parties- Terrace ~ KltimatA PUBLIC AUCTION will
Attention: Snow Removal
Box 1188, this paper. (p5-7) be held by the Regional and should be received no
Manager at Prince Rupert, tater than 4:30 p.m..on
KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) -- radiologists on staff showed
B.C,, at li:00 a.m., or as Friday, December 8, 1976.
PICTURE THIS
Radiologists
at Royal Inland up for work Monday to
soon
as
possible
thereafter,
Become a Wholesaler of
(aS-PO)
Hospital
withdrew
their handle emergency cases.
on
February
2,
1979,
for
the
Kodak Film, Eveready,
The radiologists, who are
services
Monday
in
a
dispute
purchase
of
Licorice
A
10732,
Polaroid, Westinghouse;
paid
$51,500 a year for
over
professional
fees,
Keystone Photo Products to authorize the harvceth~_
hospital a d m i n i s t r a t o r working halftime, are
m3
and Developing. Minimum of not more than 10~,600m
seeking a 10-per-cent wage
Norman Barr said.
Purchase of Product only of timbre'each year fora one.
Barr said one of the six increase.
Vanguard Camper. 8'6"
15305.Call Mr. Collins, Dept. (!) year period.
Cutting permits =to. be I deluxe, Completely loaded.
R 112 tail-free at 800-621-7725.
issued under authority of this Prlce~. to~sell! .J~hone 635(a4,4,S,lS,19D)
licorice will authorize cutting 4094. (atfn-026)
on an area situated In the
VANCOf'VER (CPJ -- cover the offence Meier has
vicinity of Dyne Lake, TWOski~oou.Echontraller
Casstar Land District, within for sale. For' more in- County court Judge Ray been charged with- obthe Skeena PSYU in oc- formafionphone624-5607.(2- Paris has dismissed a struction of ju.,,tice through
motion by John Meier, a the use of forged documents.
(:HINOOK
cur'dance with a develop 5D)
However, Judge Paris said
former aide to the late billoment plan t~be submitted b y .
TRAILER
naire recluse Howard the extradition treaty must
the successful tenderer.
SALES LTD.
Hughes, that would have be applied liberally, and
To be eligible to submit
NEW--We Invite you to stop
halted a hearing into lug" allowed the hearing t o
and see our new line of. bids and have those bids
.extradition to the United proceed.
custom vans from Sundlel considered a tenderer must
"' •
Camper of Caheda. ++These, have a ~ ! , a ~ , ted:;~mmal/~H0ree for Sale: 4 year ,old States.
Meier's lawyer,. J.ohn
vans fe~itere custom e'xterlgP :"~,b~u~_.efl~~lf~t~n~.~p~..YIJ.~ ' ~ t i ~ half Arab.ion~ l~.are.
Imlnt with extremely' wbll avallable'f0r apptteatlon to For more information phono Taylor. claimed that' the
extradition treaty between
finished Interiors and. this llcenco of not lea8 than 635-4048. (pl.5D)
Canada and the U.S. does not
represent the best of the the annual harvest volume
authorized by this llcence.
personal vehicle market.
Furthermore, an eligible
' U S E D - 19Y5 Ford F25~ tenderer must be the
Crew Cab -- low mileage. 7 ~ . r a t e r
of a woodft. box. Excellent buy for processing plant with
large family or contractor.
harking and chipping
facilitiesutilizing logs to a 4~
SS~0¢
inch top diameter. Each
1977 International Terra eligible tenderer will be
Scout 4x4 pickup. Automatic required to submit proof that
'trans. Locking hub, Diesel the timber to be authorized
for cutting is required as a
'power. $7000.
supply to keep his wood1975 Oldsmobile Deluxe processing plant operating
Cutless St,~),n Wagon. to the capacity approved by
Slightly ~ S v e average the Licensor.
Anyone who is unable to
mileage..8elow average
attend the auction in person
.price. 63500.
may submit a sealed tonder,
1973International Travelall. to be opened at the hour of
Low , mileage,
power auctlm and treated as one
steering, power brakes. bid.
Particulars may be obTrailer towing equipment.
Excellent buy for large tained from the Forest
passenger and
cargo Ranger, Box 215, Hexelton,
B.C. V0J IY0; the Regional
capacity. S2UO.
Manager, Market Place,
1974Oldsmoblla Regency96. P r ~ Ra.pm.-t.,p.o. vsJ mgt
Four door, fully equipped, or me unte! e'orenter,
Legislative
Buildings,
new radial tires. 13000.
Victoria. (a1975 GMC ~A Ton Camper DS,I2,19,2'/,J2,9,16,Z3) I I I
Special Pick.up Truck. 8200
G.V.W. 454 engine, dual
B BfltlshColumbia
exhaust, camper package,
Building,,Corporation
Excellent condition, aSS00.
Dealer no. D1113A. (actf-n11
For Sale by Tender
~16-~633
Terrace/Kitimat Daily Herald.
Location: Good Hope
5506Hwy. 16W.
Lake, D. O. H. Yard,
We will pay $2.00 per copy.
Former Road Fore1973 Mercury Meteor. P.S.,
man's ResidenceOnly.
P.B., electric windows &
Must be complete issues.
(A) Log Houseconstructfront seat electric rear
ed of squared timbers window defogger, Summer'
Bring to the Terrace/Kitimat
sawed on three sides.20'
radials all around~ 11800.
firm, Phone 638-1456and ask
x45' Metal Roof.
Daily Herald Office.
for ROll. (c5-11D)
(B) Frame Constructed
I I.
addition 20' x 20' Metal
For Sale: 1868 Chrysler
Roof.
Newport. Bucket seats,
Tender froms must be
console, 383, P.S., P.B., four
obtained from the Buildwinters on, four like new
ing Manager'soffice. Sesummers. With no rust thru.
aled tender forms will be
Rebuilt transmission and
received up to 2:00 p.m.
starter. Very good running
December28,1978at the
order. 20 Nsas Street to view
or phone 632.3413. $750 or
office of the Building
best offer. (eI0-18D)
Meaager, BdUeh Columbia Buildings CorporaNorthwest Community .College has an immediate
tion, 4827 KeithAvenue,
1972Datsun Pickup. In good
opening for the position of Payroll Clerk at the College.
Terrace, B.C. VOO 1K7,
mechanical order. Phone
Experience in the preparation and processing of
66a.6463. (p3-SD)
Phone638-119t.
payroll data is essential and experience of computer
Inquires may be directed
processing of payrolls is desirable.
to
the
Property
TransacSalary range $1109.00 to $1209.00 per month with a
1976 Dodge Station Wagon.
tion Co-ordinator at 387360 V-8, auto, P.B. Excellent
full range of fringe benefits.
3516 Victoria. B.C.L.J.
condition. Must sell -- $3,500.
Applications should be directed to:
McKInney, Vice Precld'635-=9~. ( ~ D )
The Burser
ent, Planning & Client
Northwest Community College
Services Group.
For Salei 1973 Nova llab
B~7=e
chbach. 1974 Bobcat. Any
The highest or any offer
Terrace, B.C.
reammuble offer accepted.
will not necessarily be
or handed In at reception desk at Northwest Com.
View at 5003 Agar or phone
accepted.
munity College. (a3-5,63)
eBB-leTSafter 6:~0 p.m. (!~7)
blame
Development the keynote
~OmSFORS+m
I
++
!"~'+i,;~.
".
Radiologists walk out
Hughes aid loses appeal
SUMMERSESSIONOOURSES1979
Department
EngllshEduc.
Course No.
Ed 478
EnglkhEduc.
Ed 489
Undeqp'aduate
Ed 487
Description
Introduction to Teaching
English as a Second
Language (3)
Studies
undmzradmto
Studies
Read~
Applied Linguistics for
Teachers (3)
Recent Developments in
Elementary Education (3)
Qroas-Culturel Education
(Native Indians) (3)
Curriculum and Instruction
in Developmental Reading
in the Elementary School (3)
Geography (3)
General Science (3)
Diagnosis and Remediation
in Elementary Reading (3)
Ed 479
Ed 305
c,e~a~v
Gec. 10t
Ed 309
Ed 479.4Tt
+Science Educ.
Reading
University Study Skills-- John Welob
- j ~:
i :~Informatiooregarding dates can be obtained from:
,~lVl~s.Celia Dawdle, 4 Nisutlin Drive, Whitchorsa, Y.T., 667-5187
•ted"~ l l i l
s~ff
mll Im
iim ~
mm nmm
mm ~
~1~11
mm~ll
~ m i
mm i m m
ms mm mm i
~
nl~ Iml ilmm
Im mm mmml
:l/~.'
• Please return the following form as soon as possible to Mrs. Celia Dowdlng, 4 Nisutlk
a~rive, Whitehursa, Y.T., YIA 3S5.
Name.
,
Address~ ,
Phone Number
Postal Code
I am interested in attending the following summer school courses to be held in
Whitehorse during 1979:
j
Ill
WANTED
CARRIERS
WANTED
eotember 12, 19.78
Issues of the
for the
2800 Block Hall, Evergreen,
Kalum, Keefer & Cramer
Also
Ko f o ed Drive
,,grow,mr
COMMUNITY
com-tnonn
Hemlock and Dogwood
in Thornhill
636-6361
Page 14, The Herald, Tuesday, December 5, 1978
I Dear Abby
I may be crazy, bat I ,~t/lllove him.
PRISONER OF LOVE
Crossword
DEAR PRISONER: Lkteo to the haUwlth the brains
in it and don't take him back until he gets into therapy.
H you resume your marriage in hi= p m e n t state,
preplre to live indefinitely with s weak man wba has a
weakness for young girls.
DEAR ABBY: Where is it written that it is bad
manners to tip the owner? I mean the owner of a
redoes, a restaurant, a beauty parlor or a barber shop.
When the owner is right there serving the public I
think he (or she) is every bit as entitled to a tip as an
employee.
If there is such a rule d etiquette,I think it is dumb
and should be done away with.
What do you think?
A ~UESTION OF TIPPING.
By Abigail Van Buren
DEAR QUESTION: Some di~hurd U.aditloualisis
insist that "owners ~ the entablishmout should not be
tipped." However, I believe good service shonld be
appropristcly rewarded regurdkee of who provides iL
g 1978 ~ O h i c ~ o Tr, bune,N Y News 5yn0. I ~
DEAR ABBY: My head is spinning with indecision.
I'm in the process of getting a dtvorce,.and my htmband
is begging me to give him another chance.
Theprchlem has always beenthat .Harry can't re•.~.t
young gf~kl I was 16 and ha was 27 wnen we mamee,
and daring our six-ycar-marriuge Harry got five ~r.ls
p~gna~l One was barely 15, and he'd have gone to ~all
for sure if his bess hadn't retained a really good
lawyer. After that Harry had a vasectomy and nowwe
can't have any more children. We have one little oey
and l've had four mlscarrisps, and l've always
wanted another child.
I decided to divorce him after I caught him in the
bushes in broad daylight with his 18-year-old niece at •
famJl.v.4th of July picnic.
kbby, Harry is really a sweet guy ann a wonderful
provider. (He's a top salesman.) Half of me says,
"Take him hack," and the other half says, "Go through
with the divorce."
DEAR ABBY: Please .tell SICK OF THE SAME
DRESS wh~e to.worker wears the same dress for two
weeks etral~t that's she's lucky she doesn't work with
my hmband.
He wears the same pair of trousers every day until
they wear out.
Heonys it's too much trouble to take the tbin~ out of
his pockets every nlshtl
GIVEN UP ON HIM
DEAR GIVEN UP: Your husband Is slackadaklcal.
ACROSS
1 Tough fiber
5 Seize
9 Joint
12 Biblical
character
13 Argyll island
14 Dutch
commune
15 Also called
"Papa"
17 Witty saying
18 Bryophyte
19 Gem stones
21 Pained
24 Judah's
son
25 Female
antelopes
26 European
mint
.35 Limb
31 Custom
32 Hasten
33 Subdued
35 Swift rodent
40 Arabian
chieftain
4ZConsume
43 Half inverted
48 Circle part
49 Wicked
50 Chief
Norse god
51 Stadium
cheer
52 Assess
53 Stony ridge
DOWN
I Exclamation
Z Summer,
in Rouen
3 Hebrew
letter
4 Prepares
for firing
5 Fish spears
6 Tiers
7 Miscellany
8 Rifle
appendage
9 Exhibit
indecision
10 False god
II Darlings
16 Coin's land
28 Kitchen
utensil
21 Furniture
designer
22 Girl's name
23 Ornamental
needlework
24 Roman poet
26 Stuff with
pork
27 Burrows or
Fortes
28 Ireland
29 Bambeolike
grass
31Erica
34 Heavy .
weight
Abby's new booklet, "How to Hive a lovely Wedding."
Send $1 and a lee& stamped (28 cents) neff.addressed
envelope to Abby: 13= Lasky Ddvc, Beverly Hills,
CaW. 90ZI=,
amphibian
3"/Made
obelsanee
38 Lithograph
Horoscope
What kind o f day will
tomorrow be? To find out what
the stars say, read the
forecast given for your birth
Sign.
~MERmBIE~MEIOPEI
IC~NI I I F I E I R ~ O I L I E I N
DM~O~EILIR~PI
~ IEIPl
I INIEIDIS~R~
IEITIALMBCIOINIEIPlAITIEI
ISIOILIEBBTIP-.W BMEILIAINI
11-14
Answer to yesterday's puzzle.
(Aug. m to Sept. m)
You may feel you have too
much responsibilityalready to
tackle something new, yet the
opportunity arises. Perhaps,
you're underestimating
yourself.
(Mar. 21 to Apr. 19)
Don't expect old problems
simply to go away now, but at
least, you'll gain an imdght
today on how to handle them
in the future.
(Feb. 19 to Mar. 20)
It will be difficult to receive
cooperation from others re
career interests, but you still
can put in a good day's work
yourself.
(Sept mta Oct. 22)
,suR.s
(Apr. 20 to May 20)
The concerns of children or
dependents require your at.
tention now. Protect assets in
Joint financial dealings. Ac.
cent practicality.
GEMINI
! I ~
(May 21 to June 20)
There are some domestic
duties which need to be
handled now. Talk things over
with a mate or one who is dose
to insure needed cooperation,
CANCER
(June 21 to July 22)
You needn't worry yourself
sick. Mental work or problems
seem difficult, yet progress
still can be made. Find one
quiet mmnent for yourself in
the p.n~
IJ~ly 23 to AN. 22)
Instead of w m ' ~ g about a
shortage of funds, use today to
balance the books - - at least
X'VE
~
A day to avoid negative
thinking. Relatives may have
problems now that make you
feel inadequate. Qu'e needed
travel.
SCORPIO
~
(Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)
"A friend in need is a friend
indeed" in most cases, but not
today, when you'll have to be
wary of financial dealings
with others.
SAGITYARIUS
3 ~
(Nov. 22 to Dec. 21)
Career progress may seem
slow, but attend to duty.
What's more, ldgber-upa seem
preoccupied and may not be
receptive to your ideas.
CAPRICORN
~
(Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) "
Not a good time to receive a
favorable response from
publishers, and teachers or
advisers seem inaccessible.
Practice self.analysis.
YOU BORN TODAY won't
find contentment in a routine
Job, as your love of freedom
and novelty thrives .on c ~ .
st•at change. You'd do well in
an occupation that brings you
in contact with a rapid turnover of clients. You can run a
restaurant, rent apartments,
manage hotels, and are a born
salesman. H your curiosity
extends to m~ntal planes, thep
you'd make a good lawyer,
writer, speaker, doctor,
engineer or politidan. Your
sense of the dramatic finds a
ready outlet in the entortainment world. For your
best success aim for the top;
otherwise you may not make
the most of your talents.
Birthdato of: Walt Disney,
filmnmker; Strom Thurmo~d,
politician; and Christina
Rossetti, poet.
~13
25
~26
___
I0
11
.1~._~4
27
---
==
=
41
I
m=l,,
~
4S 46 47
......
50
m=l
aversion
CRYPTOQUIP
! I- 14
37 Bridle part
28Succulent U M E U P W T G P W K
WJJFLRW
YWMEOLfruit
39--avts
RTRK
YMYLG
ORTF
40 Give forth
Yestendky's C r ~ u t p - OLD COLLEGE GRADS CHEER
41 Distance HOME GAMES.
measure
Today's CrYlPtequlpclue P equals A
44 Miss Gahar 1ire Ca31Mequlpk a simple aubatituUon dphor in wld~_ ~
45 Harem
letter used stands for another. If you think that X equ~s u . ~
room
will equal 0 throeghaut the p ~ e . Sl ~ l e l e ~ , al~on wor~_,
cotter
47 Omega
vowels. Solution is accomplished by u ' ~ anu
© 1978Kin•FeattwesSyndk~te.Inc.
~=
IBARE AS A NUdiST ~ i
--
CATFISH
.
By Stan Lee and John Romita
~'V~ FINISHED
AQUARIUS
. ~
(Jan. 20 to Feb. 18)
You can make new friends
today, but don't involve them
with your problems. You may
be unable to attend a social
function.
on paper. Don't let financial
worries affect self.esteem.
12
9
U 'l
the AMAZING SPIDERMAN
TNAT
~
s7,
Average solutionUmc: 24 rain. 35 Great
35Leap~
Getth~ married? Whether you want a formal church
wedding ~ a simple do.your.own-thing ceremouy, get
, , , 14
BUT "r WON'T
~ ~|~-~
, <,
~K~."
~w .~'LL MAKE
~....~,,,,;r,~,~/.
~.
,
~
5"
/,
,q
,
By Roger Bollen and Gary Peterrnan
the WIZARD OF ID
By Brant Parker and Johnny Hart
-
flCQft^ff
By Johnny Hart
B.C.
l
~D
dAJ¢~ N ~ A ~ R ~ O ~ 4 C )
i3ALLF_..RII
Wt~OI~, L l £ ~ " O/~ t~EI;~ FE.~-T'.,.
~
O
l'UU~ 4 o W Y'OUA TUI"U ~,uu~p
I'Z~ ,
By Gary Trudeau
DOONESBURY
4,.-
~, sa. rM
~ar~w/m
IZ'f
~197B UnNtI~,OlP ~ ~
"He
*
#1
gets me out for a little exercisel
=~ ~ _ _ y , /
i
~,,
usmv, z ~4~
~am-T~.~.
~¢r_
ooop~mc~.mRI
I ~wrm~s/
sl~m
I
AM/lYON 8ETVO~. I
~.
I