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Q• IROTIH¢-rAL LI2RARY P~RLIA~E~T BLDg. vxcro.~£A B.C. COup. Hospital Tax!.Comedy of Maronevstudies confus,on continues ' civic leadership in dmasters With the MuniciPal Tax Also included in the•request Harvey, in which it was held with over 2,300 elected Sale only a matter of hours was that the: District of stated:- Problems and respon- Please be advised that the sibilities in planning for officials participating. away, the "circus" Terrace designate hospital local government response Following• descriptive surrounding the tax lands as non-taxable to be Board's application to presentations and analyses Council for a grant in lieu of to disasters were studied payments by' the hospital included in the Tax and discussed by about 40 of disaster threats, with 'continues. Another letter to Exemption By-Law up for taxes respecting Hospital which elected officials of all lands taxed in 1975 has been mayors, reeves, aldermen council from the Mills revision at that time. and other elected officials levels of government might Memorial Hospital Board The hospital has not given the consideration of be faced, conference studies Council of the District of 'during a recent four-day Chairman of the Finance received a reply to this conference on civil 'were largely devoted to Committee was read at letterupto the present time. Terrace. problems of pre-emergency May we at time time, May I further advise that emergency planning at the Monday night's council Federal Study Centre, planning, immediate meeting and it resulted in request a reply and again the request has been denied disaster response, and request that you include with the recommendation Arnprior, Ontario. another victory for City hospital lands in the 1976 The Conference of Mayors recovery actions by local or Hall, that "your organization municipal leaders. By approach, the Regional and Elected Officials .in- The letter addressed to amendment to your Tax volving representatives means of lectures, the mayor and council is as Exemption By-Law. District for assistance, in demonstrations and follows:- After the above letter was view of the fact that the from all provinces and 'the Northwest Territories was discussion groups the civic read, Mayor Gordon Hospital is a regional officials dealt with unusual On September 30, 1975, the Rowland made it quite clear facility. held September 20 to 23, 1976 under the auspices of responsibilities which they Mills Memorial Hospital that the statement made by I trust you will find the and their administrations wrote to Municipal Council the Finance Committee above self-explanatory; Emergency Planning Canada. would have to- bear to asking for consideration in Chairman was not factual. however should you have coordinate and" deal ef- the form of a grant in lieu of He, in fact, read into the any questions or require any fectively with~ disasters taxes to cover the tax bill meeting a letter dated further explanation con- Since the program of From left to right are: J.G. McMynn, Mayor, Midway, B.C.; D.C. specialized conferences was rat~ging from floods, presented, by the December 4, 1975sent to the cerning this matter, please started in 1957, a total of 28 hurricanes, snow' storms, Municipality. for 1974-75. Board Chairman, then Bill do not hesitate to contact me Maroney, Alderman, Terrace, B.C.; D.A. Carmichael, Alderman, Granisle, B.C.; S.K. Metcalfe, Alderman, Gibsons, B.C. English and~17 French earthquakes, etc. to nuclear at your convenience. language studies have been attack. Hospital Board 70,0. s9 PRIOIi lO" makes futile gesture The Herald has learned, It would appear that the despite the Mills Memorial hospital grounds and a Hospital Board's in camera chunk of the new con- meetings, that after four struction will be sold years of haggling and tomorrow morning at bravado, the members of auction. There is a reserve the Board voted to pay the bid to cover the taxes so " " " ' ~ • the herald $7,o00 in taxes owing the someone can pick up this District of Terrace in back ehoice property and a piece taxes, of a hospital for the $7,OO0 WEDNESDAy, SEPTEMBER 29, 1976 TERRUE, B.0,' However the gesture is a owing. sourcefutile oneasthereisno of revenue from pllcatlonshowever.There aresome corn-The redicts Kalum Hill disaster which the money can be Hospital Board can still pay Jolliffe p obtained. The i~rovincial back taxes for a year before hospital authorflies have the sale becomes final. It already indicated that there will have to pay interest and " , " is no known way that they costs to ..the successful There i was rnuc~ ' ln fact Mr. Jolliffe warned the recently announced 2) Bring the houses that and tax pay.er of .Terrace,. I" only turned on following his can authorize this payment, nlnaer nowever...... s,~eculation around City Hall Council that its Horseshoe Horseshoe Drainage Ditch sit on top of the hill mielng .~ee!.mat.m~s matter.snoum presentation. . There is still hope that Chairman Jo~,~li~e a~i day Monday as to what Drainage Ditch diversion diversion. I would draw to down...... ~reug.mtoy°_ura_.ttent~°n .A. CFTK.spoKesman e.x- City Hall will relent in- speaking to ~vr~ s .~l Vic J~lliffe would be savine project.: would result in a your attention what appears If you were to waiz up me vewre wur~ cumm¢.cc~, piamca mat wnen tne dicatcd by Board Chairman Parfitt. menuoneu ~ me. at.Monda ~ night's Council • landslide which would in his to ben design-error -- and sidewalk on this hill you .Previ°us..eng!neeri.ng camera equipment was set Vic Jolllffe" on a CFTK open ' pessibiliw, oi.'mpreme t;our~, "meeting ~Jolli~fe had ad- Own words (1) Bury the ask that you have the would see that in the last stuams.carrtea out ny,wuns up.somehow or other the line show in which he action wnicn again woum vised theCity Clerk that he houses that were built below following facts checked out. year it has .dropped two to & Cunliffe, 1965, declared plug into the electric power suggested that the two sides cost the taxpayer a pue m would be" makin~ a the Skeenaview Hilland (2) The area of concern is the three feetat this point, right this part of the h!ll unstable, supply had come out and could solve the problem, money... - ": ...... resentation durin ~" the Bring the houses that sit on plan to dig a large ditch and above where the Dis~ict ana.recommenaeo, certain ~!s was not not!cea un.tiI However Council, which Chairman. ~ol!i~e s.tm ~ .... t ~,a Dele'~'ation top of the hill sliding oown. place an :eighty (80") inch Engineers have surveyeo to wor.z.-to..oe earrma "out. rater mr. ananias stm~ ha-~ already paid half this seems to reel mat tins is a ~e;.'ment ~'of- the ,,,~oii,, Mr. Jolliffe had two maps culvert in this ditch along dig..., t'ernaps mat stuay could be before council. He assurea amount to the School Board proolem . .netween" .the H~wnevei;.he co mp'le~e~'y ~ to demo~trate his concern the base of the Skeenavie~ Mr. Chairmp.a, Members ' reviewed," - " that the mishap was not and "the: Kitimat-Stikine municlpadty L ann me refused 10.'d~vtil,~e ::the: andmadeit:clearthatareal: Hill By digging along this of Council'--: I am not an .~ i J olliffe said that he had intentional. Regional District; has no H.nsp~ta.~p~rawnereas me nature of i~s busin~s danger exists asking that all base and dist~blng the engineer, but 'l do not tried :to Speak to the City ' All council and Regional intention of relenting even if . c[ectsion ~ tax, came ir0m:, .~ta~ n,,n,l,~,m~lat~d :~workl~i~usL~.nded undo.an ;, natural: foundati~lt. ,in- believe: you ,have.. to be to, .Engineer. on six occasions .. District . meetings are ...... it.-had theLpewer :ta.r-~scind~:~t h ~;~.~:~.~:~ ~,~. ~ ~}~;' :~.~~.~ ~i~g:~Slt~dy ~:;-!~l~aclyi~i.~'~~a~t~g.::a, large pip~:~Which":~: underst/Ind~dlb'log ~t''': buLat"~il'times:the!Engined~., televised ~;live--by 'Skeena an account payable; Council Aumoriw.an.aWa.s sunject..~ !.~ ~,~,,~:.'~, ~mor~ :i in exiStancei:ib~b.;~thbi:odglily.' is intended .in carry .:fld0d .'...I;,am:saying, ,~: , was,either in conference o r Broadcasters on Cable .. has time"aild tlm{~'-al[ain"~woa~aisDy.'me..tiosplta, l ':!H'~sDit'/ll t:~'~.ddl['na'u'~nc~'i; stud[edi;~:::: " ~"::' ;:"~::~"<~:" ~aler~ the"Mi~niei~lility ,~Irurge<.yoti all to take a onholidays". . Channell0. Howe~/er, tothis suggested thai:thehospltdl" :BOa.~d,'one~'. lOCal y. ' • :fias[:o " However : Mr • In a:written nresentatlon could cause a' landslide on walk and see the area of Following the meeting point the audio has been so board - request the funds anomer .at me prowncmi Jollfff'e l~ad somet~"nuite Mr Jolliffe saia.: . this hill, iwhichwould concern for yourselves. . Jolliffe observed that he had poor'that the audience has from the Kitimat-Stikine levee. " . different to tell the° c~oun- ';I wish to s~ak to you 1) Bury the houses that My home is not affected been eut off from television little or no chance to follow Regional District Board in I ~ ' v'o one bids on the eilmen • this eveniw, in regards to are buiR below it, and, by this plan, but as a citizen coverage as the camera was these meetings. view of the fact that the -rooe'rt,, tomorrow mornin- '' ' ' ~ ° ' hospital• serves the c0m-, it.~ v~.will :. revert to the~ " . • 1i • • II • ~or~ietrYs• beyond Terraces Mumcit,aht,.....;. : --(=ablnet -- " working" session old to in Terrece I-initnl..OS,..--, t Premier Bill Bennett and For example during the dustry and education and members of his cabinet met trip to northwestern B.C. community organizations. cut costs ... or else in Terrace" last week in the cabinet ministers visited Some of the groups first of a series of Hazelton, Smithers, Prince presented their briefs to the Rumblings coming out of indeed closed for a short "working" cabinet Rupert and Kitimat either cabinet and then met the Mills Memorial Hospital time but had to be reopened meetings to be held in dif- before or after the cabinet privately with the ministers Board of Trustee secret by a rash of new patients_ ferent eentres in the meeting: concerned to further explain meetings indicate that the "£here also is discussion of province. Prior to the cabinet their cnncerns. hospital is .in such dire• reseheduling surgical.cases ' The cabinet will meet in meeting in Terrace the financial straits that a'task and indeed consideration is. Kelowna September 29, premier announced, that At the cdnclusion of the ~: ~" force had to come in from taking place which would folio~ved by Prince George Prince Rupert will become a: c~binbt,mebtingthe premier Victoria to put the brakes on see many surgical cases October 7 and Kamleops major coal port as the basis said the visit was "very spending, being sent to Vaneouver. October 13. Dates of of long-range economic rewarding and educational It would appear that the hospitals in an effort to meetings in other centres in expansion in northeastern for all of us. We came here Board is presently looking reduce the number of highly, the province will be an- B.C. ' ' ' ~. to listen and 1 know that all at a $235,000 operating skilled personnel on staff nounced later. ' The premier said of the ministers will return deficit which is still clim- now.. Lay-offs in the less Premier Bennett said the developmept of port and rail to Victoria ~ith a much bing with three months still skilled areas are also being meetings away from Vic- lines are expected to eost gthreater understanding of to go in this fiscal year. considered, toria are designed to between $50 and $70 million. e problems of your area." The task force .of three Whatever measures are. acquaint cabinet ministers ?This will be the economic The premier said he is spent several'days • at the taken with regional problems, anchor beyond the forestry looking forward to doing the hospital showing where and Hospital Insurance Services '"Before and after the industry, in .this area.' actual cabinet session, . -' . same thing in other regions hew eosta could be eat. has warned the local " " " rs visit ad-'oinin- ~r. eennett stud Terrace of the province; "I must These involvedcuttingback trtmtees that •.it will not mlnlste J ' " emphasize that these services, cutting staff and consider any overspending communities to meet with ~V;;aldcbec°m~reth~om~e cabinet meetings are not closing a ward. '~ this year as had been the ~°C~lltiegsr°TPS~r~inda:°ur railroad which will carry public relations exercises. In an effort to scale back, ease over the past few "' P - • " not only coal from BC s '. rarest to their ~oruodos .. • .o "" They are working meetings This ,~ives all m|nisters a normeastern coauields but where, in addition to a ward it would appear, was years. ' . PREMIER BILL BENNETT'S announcement of his economic plans for • ~ ...... o also sulphur, potash and transacting regular cabinet I NOTICE file northwest last week have not raised the hopes of residents in the .chance to lone ann listens .. . business, we get an up-. Terrace Herald ,=lead "of the' usual 80.1. Ter,acearea. Residents say Terrace, which suffers from more ,ban 20 that we can develop pullcles c°a':°m"br: rnA eet t " portunity to learn firsthand customers are advised that' cents because of the [ percent unemployment, needs lobs now,• not in 1980. One residentsaid the ' • insome the offuture the problemsthat will solve that heardTh briefs from 15 groupsg about problems facing . our paper boys will be. EXTRA edition delivered I cabinet should havestayed homeand sentthe community the cost of the are occuring in the par- representing the Indian residents in different parts c of our province." eollecting, $1 this week. to your homes this week. [ trip instead, . .. ticular area. " .. commumty,". labor and "in " B.C. Hydro starts

Mayor saves Lions children '- S par. construction :: hioThe cT;;~i~l~_?ow~w~ r~)i;;: co?pl:~;n~Rfrvo~ ~o; ~!! r°°emtfree of charg e breOkeetbYeVO~g against th~ shouldthingsnotaS needCircuSeSanyhelpand rOOmsaidthatdUringit wouldthe partieS.take sixHe ;-.; .a grant in lieu of rental of C.ana.~..a.nMounted Police Who. the request was ..Alderman Giesbrec.h from the city. people all morning to clean B.C. Hydro has obtained Ltd. of Prince George for:: the arena banquet room annul mis event, throe read to council Aldermen then made a motion that a :Duffus supported Mrs. The vote was caned for an initial building permit the foundation. • :- ..because. ,of an. affirmative Weareplanning. ". !vent Gerry Duffus and Mary grant in lieu of rental be Little, although with less ~with" 'Little and .Duffus from the District of Terrace The architects are :: tie oreamng vote Dy tiorunn again misyear, to n~nb~ra~n Little indicated relhetance made to the Downtown vigour. He took the .stand voting against paying the and is presently excavating working' on the working : Rowland.. The Lions~iliubmit~d .i : , ...... the., ' ' Sunday1976. Althoughittih~Sa~Venvt~S evening, 0c 1, publicof discussing and asked the matterihat the in AldermanLions. This Sharronwas seconded Biggs, by that council had refused the grant while Biggs and in preparation for con- drawings for the remainder ;: following 'request "to ver.y.PO~oUlar ' ~hib as rYo matter be dealt with behind Alderman Mary Little oceasi0nsKinsmen andon.' sinceat least this' hadtwo MayorGiesbrecht Rowland voted inwas favour, then structionPark site on purchased the Industrial last shouldof the gobuilding to tender and toward~ this 2:.~: Council:- ' . . cosuy u ur; closed'do0rsina Committee immediately' : debated been done all requests called upon to break the tie 'year. the,end of the year; ltr iS ": luthepastlthreeyears, we ~ admission is charged and all of the Whole meeting. " against this proposition. She should be refused. " and he voted in favour A contract valued at anticipated that the corn- have hosted an" annual rewesnmenus, ete.,arelree. Aldermen 'Heltnut said that service clubs Alderman Biggs said that without a moments $172,000 has been awarded plated building will cost Halloween party which was' ~ this project is of great Giesbrecht and Sharron should undertake as their this'effort by the Lions to .hesitation . to F. Hedges Construction between $3.5 and $4 million. ".., held in two sections: I~nefitto me community in Bi--s immediatel,, in dut~ ~e organization of keep the. children off the 7, " ' 'i 6 .m,'- 8 p.m.: party for ke.e~ihg!~ersons.a.m.usedon dic~a~d their 0nnogi~on to the|rcharitableprojecis, as streets reducing vandalism • II'~,,.'A Dm,,,,ffi&& ..... & .... L--- chPldren ...... ! H~iuowe en night ann ,~.~ ..~ ~-~St~'¢~ that th~ wellas financing them. is the only reason that she [JgVV DU[|~|| ~Ikllqg~| ~l~UU[/l[,i~r 9p.m..ll:30p.m.:partyfor, minimizing. i • prop e.rty• 'matterI.Illi~ illli~l beillli dealt withifft ~ She sug[~ested that t.eh would vote in support of any ' " • : .' teenagers., vanoalmm, we request mat ~ublic ' free drinks etc,, woulu such request. , Dave Barrett, leader of Terrace New Democratson at 6:30 p.m. with the This annual, event has cons!dera.!ion be given .to e.__ . t to i~e probably be dona!ed to the Alderinan Duffus said the Official Opposition in Saturday, October 9 in the banquet starting at 7:30 been very successfuldue to waiving me normal.rema! Tne matter.wen. .. Lionsatnocosttomem.~ne that the city would have to ' BC. will be the guest Thornhill Community . . : ' the large number of .par-. fee for the arena nanquet vote. anuoresmma~n a ue said these groups made pay a rather large' bill for sveaker at a banquet and Ce_n.ter: ...... p;m, ~r_Barrett willspeaz ticipants and we have roamann permitting us to wmcn mayor ttowmna, plehty'of money from such cleaalngupa~dstaffing the cfance sponsored by the Tnere wi|lneasoc|a|nour at o:~u p.m. PAGE A2, THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976 New Alcan cable mill

Alcan Wire and Cable, a the earliest opportunity. The Division of Alcan Canada capital cost of the project Products Limited, 'an- will be approximately 5 nounces their intention to million dollars and is ex- construct a project cable pected to be operating in the mill in the province of. second half of 1977. It is quebec for the purpose of anticipated that the era. being able to meet the an- - ployment will reach 40 to 50 ticipated cable people. ~.*' requirements for the James In addition to the proposed Bay project, facility, the division has a The necessary land has diversified wife and Cable been assembled in the mill in Shawniganand two Quebec urban community rod mills in Jonquiere and industrial park located at the new facility i~ expected St. Augustin. to permit the optimum use Construction will start at , of all of these facilities.

One inch of rain contains the same amount of water as a 10-inch snowstorm. URGENTLY REQUIRED In sunny 0kanagan Valley. Fully experienced auto body man. Top wages. Regular company wages. Apply EIIwood Batke,. Valley Ford Sales Ltd. BETTY PIPER presents the kitchen staff of Skeenaview with the trophy from the Bedathon race held early in the summer. The staff, which took 1031 Eckhardt Ave. first place, are left to right Keven Francis, Roberta Preece, Ardith West Penticton, B.C. Burton, Gordon Sheridan and Terry Sheasby. Phone 492-3800

NANCY CLAY (left) of theTerraee Child Development Centre receives a cheque for $1,309 from Lynn Price, a nurse at Mills Memorial Hospital. The money was raised in the Bedathon held ear!y in the summer. Alcan emmissions do not kill trees Reid, Collins and experts have agreed, based volume of 3.2 miilion,cunits. Associates, Vancouver on many years of Wallace said that Alcan .. • forestry consultants, has examination, that the dead chose Reid, Collins and concluded that fluoride trees are the result of insect Associates because of its emmissions from the Alcan infestation between 1960 and reputation, the fact that it's. , smelter in Kitimat have not 1969, we wanted the based in British Columbia been responsible for the situation studied with and , has extensive ~ 1 death of trees around the particular emphasis on the knowledge of forest con- smelter and in the Kitimat effect of fluoride," he said, • ditions in the province. Valley, but have had some "as well, we're continually Reid, Collins' chief in- .. effect on growth rate. The updating our knowledge of vestigator for the study was conclusions are the result of the environment and this Dr. Hubert Bunco, a an exhaustive three and a study is one of many that registered professional half year study, corn- helps us do that. It's an forester, formerly with . missioned by Alcan to ongoi,g program," he said. Columbia Cellulose Corn- ; : : ~ .. specifically d ete.rmine the While,the .~tudy. ,pointed..~ p~ ,ny...~i.q~T~rac~...... ~...,.~, ,~.~ ,, ?~ ~7~,:~;~.~./4,L. •-effect~ of..:the-.smelter on out,that the-gi'0~4h!'~ate :of::-~6i~ihlg.:tb~r~liai~e;:[he=~'*'~ :~,', '::,! 3÷; ~ri~"~."~HI~'l'"~l'~ l/" . surrounding forests~. * " tXee~ had beeff"r~titl'cedby:'~sttitl9' is~:'iifli~l'q~.".,It"iS'.'~f'*;':%!~i~?~: ::;!/,i;':'~/::;~,~,',l:~/l/ lAW IIll - Bill Wallace, ~,lcan's some 2ofo' 30'!pe~ce'nt the : ,s,uch'i:'S[anda/'d[/'" he"*.~id," '::"'~'~*~"!:/ ~'i!'~ r'~!~::~i'~)~:':~:;l / ~1~ ' I---- Regional Environ/nental' trees.affected • were in a that it can be published in ' ~ :,/:,::;i::' :::,l I~l l/ Control Officer, said the relatively small area. The technical or scientific , INliL study was initiated, in part, reduction in growth rate in journals," We're pleased, of ! :: because of speculation that the affected area amounts to course, that our emmissions IArllllllN the dead trees on the west about 950, cunits annually, are not responsible for the side of the valley were killed (A cunit is one hundred dead trees. I hope the study by fluoride emmissions. cubic feet of Wood.) The has served to resolve the "While both provincial and total area of forest involved question once and for all," federal government forestry contains a gross ti.mber he said. SOUTH... Happy Birthday Golden Rule EVEN IF IT MAY BE TIlE being instituted by Victoria that she was self-employed. LAST ONE will, by the Minister's own Keep The Golden Rule ' By Juanlta llatton admission, cost more than alive! Give a little money to AND SAW WITH twice as much as The keep it going! Good wishes Five years ago on tl~e fifth Golden Rule and will only and prayers are appreciated day of October The Golden handle Welfare recipients, but they won't pay the rent Rule was started with the not people on Unem- or feed the coordinator, : firm belief . that most ployment Insurance who Please come for coffee :. unemployed people would cost each working person and birthday cake on the rather work than be Welfare much more. This does not •OFF.SEASON RATES.: afternoon of October 5. , recipients or on Unem- even take into account the (donated by the Blue Ribbon ployment Insurance. The emporary and part time Bakery) Make it many Golden Rule has proved this obs which help to make it happy returns of the day for • The Queen of Prince Rupert is a great way to go south every working day for five bossible for the unemployed The Golden Rule at no. 2 - whether your destination is Vancouver, the Island, or points yea rs ! to keep a little hope• alive 3238 Kalum Street, Phon~ What is the difference and keeps them in shape so 635-4535. beyond. between The Golden Rule that when a job is available • A job is a priority at least From October I off-season fares are in effect and you'll be and Manpower? These they are able to work. people mustgo to Manpower as much as sports events. If pleasantly surprised at how little this vow,age will cost. The coordinator has been no one has a job who will if they are to receive their added to the list of jobless Welfare or U.I. CHEQUES. attend the sports or be able Consider the convenience. You can count on your ship and has no unemployment to take part in them? departing from Prince Rupert at 12:30 pm every Wednesday They come to the Rule by insurance since she has Please do as you have choice, Not every person been told for over a year been done by. and Saturday. Make your reservation and drive on board. gets a job but if they really You can relax and enjoy fine meals, comfortable lounges. wa.nt to work and have any training and experience that . spotless Staterooms. can be utilized in this area a An added bonus is the magnificent scenery and calm waters real effort is made to place BE YHR them. of the ,lovely Inside Passage. The Government Grant, • : Twenty hours later you'll drive off refreshed. ~ from B.C. was discontinued OWN BOSS at the end of April. Since Treat yourself and save. that time (4 months ending • Driving? We'll save you hundreds of miles of driving to your August 31) 778 people have If you possess mechanical knowledge or inquired about work and 195 managerial experience, then you could become a destination. Busing? Your nearest terminal Can provide jobs have been obtained, successful retailer in Petroleum marketing. • ' information on services at both ends. Moving? Yourvan Forty-nine of these jobs : operator' knows this is the way. Arrive when he does. were permanent. If all these ' ,. : people were single and on All it takes is a desire to own your own business • The Queen of Prince Rupert is still one Of North America's • Welfare they would have and a modest investment. For full information g'reat travel buys. cost $7808 in actual money CALL: • /i and much more if you in- cluded the cost of clerical

work etc. involved. d •iL," , .n,,a."'rs'a" ma ' .... • ': e If The Golden Rule were Union 76 Thornhill Service still being sponsored, it ' :" " ' : i " .! . . , " ~" : " would have cost $3976 total /1052 Hwy. 16 E. • or a saving of $3832 not ,/'Terrace, B.C. .:counting the aforemen- " QUeeNOFm e net ',: tioned clerical costs. (Since 635-3717 ' ~i' ¸ ., :: the Rule was not sponsored : For more information about sailing between Prince Rupert : the whole amount could be considered saved!) That is ' • and Kelsey Bay on , call 024-9027 in Prince , very goodbusiness. If any \ . i Rupertor seeyour travel agent.. '. i: were to receive percentage, .Unl(pn ; 96,2 percent profit, they F ', would not consider , , .... , . ,.. . , . ' discontinuing the operation. The new Rehabilitation and ~ Union Oil Company of' , i[ ,. "*"~/ : Employment Program • Canada Limited -, ' ' . . , THE HERALD, Wednesday; September 29, 1976, PAGE A3 New Democrats North + to meet in Terrace The" fall meeting of New the past. The meeting will People intending to make Democrats North will be be called to order at 1:30 use of day care or who held at the Thornhill p.m, on the 9tli. This will require billets are asked to Community Center in give people coming from a notify the Terrace NDP Terrace on October 9 and t0. distance a bit more time to Club at Box 321, Terrace Dave Barrett will .be the drive. The Sunday session (636-7763) on or before speaker at a dinner and will run to 6 p.m. leaving Thursday, October 7. dance to be held Saturday that evening and all day We have many new night. Several other MLA's Monday for delegates to members in the north. You will be in attendance drive home. may be wondering by now throughout the meeting. just what New Democrats John Rodrigues, NDP MP This change l~as been North is. An explanation is for Nickle Belt, will report made to allow time for the in order. Each riding in the from our federal caucus. members from the new north -- Cariboo, Fort CP AIR PASSENGERS arrived in Terrace Friday in the largest jet to John's "riding is in the Skeena Federal Riding to George, North and South 'Peace, Omineca, Skeena, land at the airport. The plane holds 30 more seats, it is 21 feet longer and Sadbury basin in northern hold their founding meeting Ontario and faces many Saturday morning in the Atlin and Prince Rupert -- 30,000 Ibs. heavier than the usual jets that land at the airport. The plane issues common to all nor- same hall. All meh~bers who is entitled to elect ten voting will be used occasionally between Terrace an d Vancouver during the next thern areas. ., live in Srnitbers or to the delegates and ten alternates HARTLEY DENT, former Sk'eena M.L.A. has been year. All flights'to the north by C.P. Air will land at Terrace first. There west should be sure to arrive to the meetings which are A full agenda has been set. appointed by the Caledonia Diocese Bishop to the are two daily flights including Sunday with non-stop flights to Vancouver in time for this. Saturday held twice each year. In demanding task of starting up a new parish in Prince Items include eiscussion of morning meeting... addition, all members are on Thursday, Friday and Sundays. party policy committees, welcome to attend as non- George. Reverend Dent has recently completed a the Women's Rights An information kit is in voting participants• The task in Burns Lake and will be moving on to Prince Committee in the north, a preparation and will be meetings give members a George in the very near future although he and Pat panel discussion for caucus - mailed to constituency and chance to rub shoulders with will be maintaining their home in Terrace. Reverend City Hall happenings ... constituency com- people from across the municati'ons and club secretaries. Contact Dent will be resigning as President of the Terrace your local secretary or north. It is an opportunity to ' N.D.P. Club. A special meeting of virtue ofa receipted utility Mr. F,R. Skidmore, ol resolutions. Donna Sacuta, 45 Princess share experiences and work Council took place on bill for gurbage collection Park Avenue Realty, 'ad- The times of the sessions crescent, Fort St. John (785- on solutions to common Monday, September 27 with services; and that the dressed the bearing, ex- are a little different than in' 6320) for more details, problems. Mayor Gordon Rowland in necessary by-law amend- pressing opposition to the o Brownies Recipe Fried Ohicken the chair. Alderman Dave rnents be presented to application, citing the Maroney .was absent ou council for consideration at shortage of industrial On the municipal municipal business in On- the earlicstconvenientdate, provalproperty, of andthe thatapplication the up- tui'lo and Alderman Jack Talstra was also absent, AI' PIolCATION FOIl would be a regressive step. NEARING COMPLETION IN IIEZONING .... Mr. Bill Hibbard, - election front Council "approved a Mr. C.M. Gale, Municipal Solicitor, representing CAE ~ S~veral Terrace residents enough support from peopl~ he will not be running in the recommendation from the Engineer, presented to the Morse Ltd., Skoglund are seriously considering inthecommunityhewillput municipal electioh. Committee of the Whole that hearinga brief outlining the Logging and Ed Boomers, running in the municipal his narnc forward. , The closing date for the Clerk-Administrator be 'purpose of the application, addressed the hearing, election on November 20. R!chard Green, t'ormer nominations in the election, appointed as a represen- and technical information reiterating the position Positions will be left vacant alderman in Terrace, says is 12 noon on October 25. TERRACE tative of the Municipality to thereon, taken by Mr. McKinnon and by Alderman Sharon Biggs, . bid on certain parcels of Mr. George McCullough, Mr. Skidrnore, stressing AldermanGcrryDut'fusand ~ m [[~ r~,C~an~m=~ =~|lx&== ! ==~|~x 30 STORES THROUGHOUT B.C. property at the1976 tax sale. representing the property that thecommunitybenefit Alder•aft Mary Little. nemetaa m~luaU~ ~llt, l|~ I1kl|~ Mayor Gordon l~owland owner, Albert and Mr- should prevail, not solely . . EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR OWNER.OPENATOR indieated underquestioning CafferyLimited, readtothe that of the individual U°SwSi?l~#ai~d~at3sar~l~n, The Anti-Inflation Board ,'l;he agreement !'or.Air SUBSTANTIAL CASH DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED that the Mills ~lemorial hearing' a petition property owner, and stating n,,m0'~" has approved increases for Canada pilots provnae.a.an Hospital land would not be previously submitted with that the community benefit =~:...... " ..... ahotd 2 nml nilnl¢ omnlnvorl increase of 9.01 percent out For more information contact ran G we says his JOD . , . . , among the lots being sought the rezoning application, would be best served by the with B C tl- dro sometimes by Air Canada and C PAw the AIB a PP roved 749• by the municipality, supporting the application, rejection of this application. . . Y ' • " " " percent takes. , him. out el. town durnng• ....However, the Increases ' • and indicated the general There .being no further ...... tar both ~roHn~ "~ro holnw the agreement between the week ana ne may ne too .. ~,- .-r- --r ...... ~, ,, ~:_ .._.+ :,_ _.,_, Brownies Franchises Ltd. City Superintendant of intent and viability of the submissions, it was busy to become revolved" as me proposans in" the one- ~'or'" a,r a.u •'t~ pn,uts. Parks and Recreation, W.E. application, recommended that the .... . y.ear agreements between pr ended for an mcrease oi Casey, was given full credit Mr. Hugh McKinnon, hearing adjourn and be an alderman. He added he ns ....th, ' • 10.95 percent. The AIB 1425 Odium Drive, Vancouver, B.C. still• • consldernng, • • the e anrhnes and the . . . for the planning and plan- representing Terrace In- reconvened at a later date. ,~==;hm,,== h ...... ,: Canadian Airline Pilots decnsmn reduces the m- Weldon A. Noren Bus. 255-6296 Res. 298.8769 ting of the forest which was ternational Truck and ~ --- __- =,~+,,,,,,.~o,. "~"~'~'" . Association•.• .. " crease" to 7.13' percent. plantedin front of the large Equipment Limited, and ~ -- ~ I,,-~ Davnd Pease says he ns ' looking at his other corn- windows in the l~lanicipal other industrial companies ~ ([j ~---'-~=t rnitments before he decides Banquet Room facility. She located within the same ,it t f whether or not he will disclaimed any part of the industrial zone as the land I"[=1 g [I /: •A :] ~ participate in the' election. project saying that this was for which the application ~.~..~ --'~" -" Vie Jolliffe says one not a Parks and Recreation was made, opposed the ~ ~----" should always leave him on Commission decision. In application,on the grounds any case, Mr. Casey has that it was being made Tea was introduced to Amer- the list of possible can- been sent by Council to solely for the benefit of the ira by the Dutch. didates. He said if he gets attend a Park Planing and property owner They feel it : • Des,gn semmar whlch~+lll r k+IS disregarding-commumt~ i ~ ;:+:.: +"Y,? + +, : ' +:i: *:'.r:+ .++T!~ +:i:}~+: be held...... in Parksville. B.C. considerations;' + ...... + ...... SUCh .as~" + • ' "~ ~ .... ' : BILLoe .... + .... andVernononOctober6and, Iong,rangeplanning+:existing, zoning of WlHDOWCLEANER 9. ~ surrounding properties and Council wiii'promote and their present and future The new models will be on display in our main Service Area advertise a public meeting "need. He stated 'that the at which it will receive all need at this time in Terrace on Greig Avenue, Terrace all day Saturday, October 2rid and applications for grants, was forindustrialland, with grants in lieu of taxes, and an adeqiiate supply of JANITORIAL SERVICES tax exemptions. This residential land presently Sunday, October 3rd. meeting will be held on available in more desirable Wednesday, October, 13. locations. Also that his, and i)emmeroial & Residential From the subrpissions made other companies, have Join us for the unveiling of our brand new at that time council is ex- invested in their properties ported to make decisions on and facilities with the belief • 1977 CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE all such mat!ers for the 1977 that the area was and would Oarpet Oleaning budget year. continue to be an industrial PONTIAC BUICK .... area, where industrial Provincial Minister of operations could take place, Housing hugh Curtis has with the least disturbance to 635-6772 GMC TRUCKS invited the city to make residential areas. application fpr loans under collection It's a travelling show . the Conversion Loans under we know you'll appreciate. the Leasehold and Con- version Mortgage Loan Act. Council resolved to request designation and agreeing to have the city building in- spector for loans. ~'his means that,the provi~cial Building Superintendent will visit to' provide a thorough briefing on the procedures.. .. • ~ " ' ~++~+,+++...... ':: " " • + l a re-zoning by-law allowing i$=+~i.m . I I ...... the construction of a ~ .... --, .:,~, n~',~,,,~:~= medical building at 4714 :~~ ~~: Park Avenue. An ap- plication fora I)uilding •lt~l~~ • ~ ...... ~=~ permit has, been received, i - ~' +~:~"++~; : _m Construction isexpected to l I'NVEST~ENT PACKAGE WHILE YOU DOUBLE LOT I get underway this year. • occuPY . • Adds value to this 3 bdrm. w•en suite • 14 : GAItBAGE RATES • Includes - well built 2 bdrm. home fireplace, month young home, attractively decorated, m A genei'al discussion was • 2 bdrm. suite in basement, attachecl foolshed, n'atura rock f replace, dbl. paved drivew,~y, i held concerning the method Two large bldgs. for carpentry, etc. Bldg. for single carport, landscaped, I bdrm. finished • of establishing garbage • well & extra storage. The land Is over 7 acres in basement, bathroom• FOR'MORE • • cleared and landscaped around house, faces DETAILS cull'anytime. PRICE $5S,000.00.n rates, during which a letter m received from Mr. John Clift • McConnell Ave., with future subd. I~tentlal. was given formal con- I ALL FOR $8S,000.00; Open to offers. sideration by :the Com- mittee. ,¶It|" ':-. ;, '4 STU CROUSE HERB GRINDLER LARRYSHERMAN LEO de JONG JIM McEWAN It was recommended that Sales Manager Sales Sales Sales President Mr. Cliff be advised in writing of the Committee's P' '~~i~ • review, indicating that the method utilized to establish the rates cannot be altered at this time, and further, that a copy of the various alternatives for garbage WILL TRADE EQUITY FOR HOME IN • collection service available TOWN [] Jim McEwan For this one on KLEANZA DRIVE. 2 bdrm. • be provided to Mr. Cliff for m are large, 2 bathrooms, 1800 sq. ft. In total. his information. ' full basement . well. built and maintained I!E Motors errace) Ltd. Front yard Is landscaped, maple trees, berry h_ome: on.just^under 2 acres. Horse barn in. It was further recornL hl,c=h~cL err_ s49•efla.ea. TRY YOUR OFFER! mended that residential and. commercial garbage Dealer Licence No. 1492A subscribers 'be provided with free access to 'the Municipal dump facility on a once permnonth (one ton' load maximum) basis, by PAGE A4, THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976 [ ...... !

' the herald ...... @ • • ,. , lette the ed or The.Four-Way Crippled Children " Reforms 635-6357 Test An Award Winning Weekly Of the things we The Editor, editorial support that 'you To the Editor: requiring thedissati~faction Dear sir: gave us during the Easter I hereby notify you that I of only one spouse. ' , Published by Sterling Publishers Ltd. think, Say or do. Because of your help the Seal C~mpaign. Without have registered the Further erosion bf. the ! British Columbia Lions your help, we may not have following protest to hr. moralprinciples upon which PubllshedeveryWednesdayat3ll~galumSt.,Terrace,B.¢. Is it the TRUTH;' Society for Crippled reachedour target. We PierreElliott Trudeau: our country has stood will Amember of Varifiedclrculation.Authorized as secondclass Children, The Easter Seal humbly thank you on belmlf "Dear Sir: Re'ports in- surely assure the mail. Registrationnumber In01. Postagepaid in cash,return Is it fair to all , People, more than met the of the crippled children in dicate that the Law Reform destruction of those good postage guaranteed, concerned? goalof $500,000. British Columbia. :Commission of Canada things it has so far afforded ADVERTISING Our Lions Club would like Yours sincerely, wants Parliament to con- us. EDITOR PUBLISHER MANAGER Will it build GOOD. to thank you for all the" James Mason, President sider, whether abortion, I therefore wish to " incest, obscenity, indencey, register my protest and PAT O'DONAGHY GORDON W. HAMILTON RALPH KERMAN WILL and BETTER bigamy and gambling advise you that I cannot in F R I E N DS H I PS? should be dropped from the goodconscience support any R I pl dg list of offenses under the. person or government The Herald retains full, completeandsolecopyright.OTEOCO.,..G. in any advertisement produc,dandor Will it be oya Pur e Lo e Criminal Code -- and to presuming to take .such editorial or photographic content published in the i~er~.d. Reproduchon ~s not - rn :~. B E N EF I CIAL ' grant no-fault divorce based action." without the written permission of the Publisher. to a II concerned? only on the failure of per- Sincerely ...... ~ 2 . 16 serial relationship and Bob Shatford The Editor, receiving treatment. CARS IP Dear Sir: supplies three occupational -' The Order of the Royal vans travelling to remote Th e big spen d ors Purple extends corners of B.C.,one of which Wage controls congratulations and a comes to Terrace twice a sincere thank you to the year. From a leader in the First wholesome growth in public Governments at all levels in this country last year took One CEPC member suggested that most social welfare residents of Terrace who World War when people life. A positive affair headed nearly half of the national income (including yours and needs could be met adequately without spending more donated to the Canadian CARSoperates the Rufus were fighting for their lives, towards a solution. mine). The actual figure is 43 percent of the gross national money if what he termed "the principle of universality" Arthritic and Rheumatism Gibbs Lodge in Vancouver • produet(GNP)whichisthevalueofeverythingthiscountry were abandoned. Society (CARS) in our where patients from all I would like to see the A successful expression produces. What he meant was that the available money could be recent can£ass. Campaign parts of B.C. enjoy home protest to wage and price from industrial r~presen. That's up 75 percent over a mere 30 years ago. But even better spent giving it to those who really need it and not organizers, Mrs. Joyce atmosphere while un- controls become a real ration could mean industry, then governments (local, provincial and federal) spent 23 because of automatic entitlement when certain conditions Martel and Mrs. Mary dergoing treatment and movement, not only for particularly trades and percent of the GNP. (suchasage) aremet. He suggests that this would improve McGowan, report that we may spend time here before trades and labor, but also occupations, would likely If the trend continues, Canada will soon have to spend the quality of help in addition to promoting a more realistic have reached our objective andafter surgery, for the professions, corn- become represented in more than half its earnings just keeping the government! redistribution of income, of $2300. Thanks to the The work of CARS has marco, management a~d parliament. All of which raises some important questions. For in- Of course, said another member, there are certain, un- Terrace Herald, the News gained international other industrial people~ ;'m stance, howcanweputanendtosuchrapidandfrightening pleasant but automatic, checks which eventually limit Advertiser and the won- reputation and doctors from sure many others w ~Jlike r~nd~tstryas representing growth and how did it all come about? government spending, as the U.K. clearly demonstrates. .derful coverag.e on CFTK, other countries are in it too. A real alternative to more commercial, in- Someof the answers recently came from membersof the "When these limits are reached." he.said. "there is no many residents were Vancouver studying the price and wage cun~rols. 'duslrial, management, and Canadian Economic Policy Committee (CEPC). The rapid sector of society which escapes the economic penalty." waiting for our call and work and doing -clinical professional poop!e, would growth of government is said to have resulted from the In other words, everyone pays the piper, were generous in their research. CARS conducts A strong expression soon become real about determination of successive administrations at all levels to One sure sign of the approach of that limit is the faltering donations. A special thank research, both basic and against wages and price r e p r e s e n t a t i o n i n fulfill their presumed commitments to the electors, confidence of the private entrepreneurial sector, you goes to our canvassers clinical, inthe hope that the controls means, of course, parliament. , Of course, quite reasonable arguments can be made for "Without continuing confidence," the CEPC member who made their calls on cause of rheumatoid ar-" that there is a lot of - specific programs. But it is their combined weight, and the said, "the sector's willingness to risk capital to expand such a terribly cold, wet thritis will soon be found, position to them. But ~hPe Labor and trades are, by a increased influence they give governments over our per- production and productivity would be sharply reduced and, evening. Funds also go to education problem is still there. The stand, more or less in a serial and business lives, that makes them dangerous, in turn, the foundation of government viability itself would Last year your gift to and bursaries have been set aexpression solution, does not indicate forposition industrial to get things represen- going This growth, says the CEPC, has been a creeping, be impaired." CARS provided patient care up for students going into unobtrusive'thing,carefully camoflaged. For instance, you In other words, without investment there would be fewer and treatment to 67,021 the study of physiotherapy, ration. don't really notice the big bite the government takes out of jobs and less income, for everyone including government, patients throughout B.C. A~:~yonewishing further If the proposed strike your cheque every payday for income taxes because you Ifwe fail to stop government growth, everyone will suffer Treatment is provided to information on the help against wage and price Itmaybelaborandtrades never really see the money, a great deal. We hope that you, as every other thinking out-patients, with funds available to them may write controls became a strong turn now, but if a proper But if they hit you with a bill for $3,000 or $4,000 at the end Canadian should, will take the time to let your Member of going to local hospitals on a to CARS, 895 West 10th, stand for trades and labor :course is taken by them, of the year instead, the protest would be spectacular indeed. Parliament know how you see it. shared basis for. Vancouver, B.C. r e p r e s e n t a t i o n i n commerce, professions, - physiotherapists, so Yours truly parliament, for industrial 'industrial management's ¢ patients may enjoy the Shirley Kormendy representation in turn comes next. comforts of home Secretary parliament, it becomes a W.J. Murray Excessivegovernment domination surroundings while Order of the Eoyal Purple , .

Exeessive government domination of the economy is the Goternment borrowing is crowding the pl-ivatesei:tor out p '.... " OTTAWA," major cause of Canada's economic troubles, Gerald E. of the capital markets, causing business to postpone in- .... . rein!ors VISIt " ; * i Pearson, FCA told'members of the Canadian Institute ~of 1 • 'poorVeStmentincxpansi°n°fpredi~ctivecapacity'T~ati°n~andmarketeonditions have hurt the investor...... f--...-.-_.. ' Chartered Accoun~nts (CICA). private Letter to the Editor: Terrace for CN Rail, we r.~ '~ - Addressing the Annual Conference of the CICA in Van- According to the Staiscan investors index of 114 stocks, Mr.Bennett svisit te town read in the paper that a ~B us|~ess "~,~'~'~I~~ ~ couver, Pearson, a chartered accountant who is president from 1961 to 1974 the average annual real rate of return on lastweekwas a masterpiece cedar furniture plant that of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, accused govern- investment was only 6.2 percent. ment of refusing to face "the brute fact that excessive Pearson warns that the necessary investment capital in political propaganda, was looking into locating in Anyone who is impressed by this area has decided not to government spending and the methods used to finance that may not be available at all unless adequate after-tax profits the Premier's "Major an- because of lack of govern- pin spending are the principal cause of in'flatten". . are restoredtobusiness so that Canadian equity investment A n to curb conflicts Pearson said that levels of government now consume becomes attractive. He also advised that responsible nouncements" and his merit cooperation. Ob- almost 43 percent of GNP. Although much is redistributed foreign investors should be welcomed, highly heralded cabinet viously Mr. Bennett has no n~ KE'~E'rn ~tc.IN)~,.u.i~ CLC, for example, cannot in the form of transfer payments, it is still money which is "The problem of capital investment in Canadianbusiness .meeting should be given an interest in this area, or he taken away from the producers in society, was already acute before theAIB got into the act," Pearson award for political naivete, would be encouraging The Canadian Labour bind its affiliates. To finance its massive spending programs government said. "Now the problem is greatly aggravated." We are right back to secondary industry, which • • • resorts to high levels of taxation, unwarranted expansion of "From the very beginning, that anti-inflation program where we were under the is so desper~itely needed. Congress'I CLO planned Bargainingin Germany the money supply and deficit budgets -- all contributing to discriminated against business," Pearson said. Dividends former Social Credit No, Mr. Premier, ~,ou can day of protest Oct. 14 is a is industry.wide, with only the inflationary spiral. Government borrowing at high rates are held below the inflation rate, and profits, ,already governmeut, fn the position foolsome of the people some sham! It any group has one bargaining unit for of interest makes borrowing more expensive for the private trailing inflation, have been cut drastically. In contrast, of being thrown a few of the time, but not everyone sufferedduring the first labour and management in sector. "Ottawa now pays out about $4 billion per year just wage settlements have exceeded the guidelines in 40 per- crumbs here and there in in the north is as stupid or as year of wage and price each industry. Normally, for interest on the national debt," Pearson said. cent of the cases-- with the public sector leading the way -- order to keep us quiet.-There naive as you may think. We controls it isn't organized one industry sets the wage ' The damaging effect on capital investment is the most andgovernment spending has been running 30 to 50 percent isno hope at all for this town are not about to swallow labour. serious of all the consequences of governments' fiscal and higherthan theexpectedrateofinflationfor1976, if we are going to be your sugar sweetened pill pattern for all industries monetary sins, Pearson said. In the next ten years Canada The most important long-term effect of the anti-inflation satisfied by such obvious . and be happy with your • • • in the country. In 1975, will need $800 to $8~0 billion in capital investment mostly program "may be the massive increase in government political engineering. Mr. efforts at "helping" the the construction industry for new plants and equipment, energy products and involvement in, and regulation of, the economy, and the Bennett must think that we economy of this region. We Since the Anti-Inflation there set the pattern with housing. This money cannot possibly be generated in- apparent willingness of people to accept this intrnsi0n are grossly ignorant are still familiar with the .Boardwas formed, the real 6.6 per cent. Canada's ternally. ~ ' without too much fuss," Pearson said. The Anti-Inflation politically and he has. Seereds of the past, and income of workers (the average for all industries Inflation and taxation on profits reported in inflated Act and Regulations are a prime example of government illustrated that by his ac- although the outward up- percentage increases in was 13.1 per cent. ' dollars mean that business cannot retain sufficient after- interference and "legislative over-kill". In drafting the new tions this past week. In the pearance may have wages over the previous ' • • n , tax profits for expansion. In 1974and 1975, $2.4 billion, or 24 restrictive legislation, the trend is towards broad and same week that the premier changed it is still the same ' year,adjusted fur changes ~Canada'sBig Business percent of the taxes paid by Canadian industry, was the sweeping language, arbitrary powers of government made his announcement old party. -- Jn the Consumer Price tribunalsandofficials,presumptionsthatcitizensaregullty about the development of Index) has improved from community is also an Pearsondirectresultsaid.of inflation and not based on real profits, until proven innocent, and heavy penalties, including jail maintenance yards in K..Clark 2.~ percent October, 1975 unlikely partner in any Pearson said that l~art of the problem is that business terms, to 3.8 percent in June, Withform of60 tripartiteper cent planning.of rna'du- itself has been publishing misleading rose:coloured Ifgovernmentcontrolsmostoffllecountry'smoney,"you 1976. financialstatements,whichemphasizethegrowthofproflts are well on your way to servitude to the government," R gi I ~rict facturing foreign.owned, and low-key the investment required to generate them. Pearson warns. "Decentralizing economic power by dif- e on~ Dis • • • strategic decisions on ' What good is a profit increase of $50,000 if it took a million- fusing it throughout the private sector is one of the best guarantees of retaining our political and civil liberties." The CLC's real objective investment and repatria- dollar investment to earn it?" b ~ C Qcies tionnfearnings are made ure u r is to claim equal partner- outside the country. This • "ship with government and severely limits the kind of • Tr ~ dic fl h s g ~h ig I NEWS ITEM: "Regional half v~ars ago. " .business in tripartite plan- agreements business can ,, n otor os e row worning S r~(~ District Bureaucracies Ask In [t,e spring cf1972, Iand ning of the Canadian enterinto. •:" ~ ~,, FTeO!~eHmS~ebe~;~!~,Te%D~;: ~a~%!~ndhso~ :~ii 'uln~a! onlyeconomy. one-fifth Representing of the work • • • '~ 'Trendieator, the Royal Bank of Canada's composite whose turning points have historically tended to precede ,, p '1 . p ' force, the Congress 'also The CanadianFederation index of leading indicatoi's, has flashed a warning that the thoseof the economy. It is designed to signal in advance ...widespread antipathy of abolishing regional claims to champion the of Independent Business Canadian economy may fail to achieve the five percent changes in the direction of real economic activity in residents (re) regional districts, particularly the unorganized two-thirds has proposed the Creation ~. economic growth rate that most forecasts have predicted Canada. , districts." "... huge staffs in Regional= District of :4 for 1976. The performance of 'Trendicator' has been measureo this fourth level of govern- Bulkley-NecnaKo, lor a and thi~ pensioners who of a Prime Minister's The rise in 'Trendicator' during the first half of this year against the performance of the Canadian economy for the mont." variety of reasons. At least suffer from iabour's collec- Council.With equal rcpre- ~: has been much smaller than the rise that occurred past two decades. On average, the index has anUcipated The Editor: . nine hundred signatures tire blackmail. . sentation (three each) throughout 1975, the report for the second quarter, released upturns by nine months and downturna by six months. Dear Sir: were obtained, representing from big business, unions,. ~,~! recently Showed. A ten-fold increase, from the $100 million range to nearly I was most amused and well over ninety percent of • • • owner-managed, business, ...... $1billion, in first quarter value of liabillties, eausedashal'p gratified by the above those approached. consumer 'groups, the ~i .~"~ ~ a sJg.na~, samur: r~ooert uagmey, a r[oyal uank downward revision in the value of 'Trendicator' for the mentioned news item, The subsequent Socred Germany, Japan and federal Cabinet, and the semor economist and co-noel nor of 'Trenthcator' " Sweden are often proposed . g " , that the varied. This increase was almost entirely due to the reminiscent as it is, of defeat ma~/ have been as models of tripartite federal civil service,, the .~ pace ot economic recovery -- already slow -- will likely bankruptcy of a single large manufacturing concern Danny Kaye's predicament partially a result of their .~ continue to be slow in the second half of the year. located in the Atlantic provinces. ' in the movie, 'Inspector indifference to those planning. But these Council would provide' a ~i "The Canadian economy may, in fact, fail to achieve the If this were to be ignored, Dr. Baguley said, then General'. Believe it or not, petitions, nati0as are unitary siates means of reducing, the five percent• economic. growth rate that most forecasts have 'Trendieator' increased at an annual rate of 1. 2 p ercent in Danny had a hitch govern- No action was taken by • and more suited to central confrontations in Canadian ~,:¢ predicted for 1976, he added, thefirstquarteranddecreasedslightlyby0.2percentinthe merit position without any the socialists for obvious planning than Canada, a society. ' ~i The 'Trendicator' Report showed the index increased at second quarter. This is probably a better measure of the known duties!! He pen- reasons. federal slate. "Labour • • • an annual rate of 1.8 percent from its downwurd-revised true,,underlying behaviour, of 'Trendicator" he maintained, dared, "What does an In- But now ,.. dare we hope movements in these eoun- Though final decisio.as level in the first quarter of the Year • The first quart er value The ....message is that our leading indicators -of future. specter General do? I have ... perhaps ... or am I tries are centralized and would still rest with the was revised downwards by the incorporation of Statistical economic achwty have slowed sharply m the •first six no idea. Nobody told me. misreading the signs~ the can speak with a united government, all groups information that has only recently become available months of 1976 --compared to the strong increases ob- Does he inspect generals or 'born-agaln' Socreds are voice, would have full Opportu- Dr. Baguley pointed out that 'because of the tmnsuaily served throughout 1975,Although 1976 is a year of economic .generally inspect.?" , beginning to tune in to the depressed, .the increase in the index between the two recovery, the recoveryis slow and will mostlikelyeontinue whi~e 1 ~eel me utmost wishes of the people of this • • o' nity to present their views •; quarters is abnormally high . to be slow, Dr. Baguley stated, sympathy for those un- provincel! on major policy issues. He termed the rise "spurious -- and due to a non. Of the 11 indicators, five showed declines in the second fortunate members of Let us hope that we are Canada's labour move- Sectional interests would ~," recurring event", which he identified as a major quarter andsixshowedincreases.Fouroftheincreases, the regional district boards, indeed, witnessing the ment is a more loosely- no longer feel impelled to ;~: bankruptcy occuring during the first quarter, but not investors index of 134common stocks, the money supply, who feel as though the rug beginning-of-the-end of knit alliance of provincial "go public", as with full- ,,- reported until now. This affected the doll~ar value of the price-earnings raUo and, of course, the liabilities of were being graduallypuiled regional districts in British federations of labour aud page advertisements by .,.'°' liabilities of business failures, one of'Trendicator's' leading business failures were above average, Of the deelirieS, two, from under them, I am ~Columbia. representatives of indivi- corporations, or days of 2: indicators, the ratio of price to unit labour costs and average hours of gratified because that is just, Yours truly, dual. trade unions. The protest by the CLC...... Trendicator' is a composite index of 11 leading indicators ma.nufaeturmg, were above average. ' what I advocated four and a Thomas Atrlll I / THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976, PAGE AS Pre-apprenticeship training criticized By L&URIE JONES" trades training, but are or no interest, or leave ~-.hool " Meanwhile, Waldemann "was berg handed ouL a logger, -in which a man can ue "~od more practical methods L ~ The provin~,tal restricted by their age and. and try to find work despite Penner, business agent for "Training should take place He sbld many of the young, trainined," of delivering training and department of labor's pre. Manpower regulations stating their lack of eklils, be said. International Woodworkars of the same way you train a people going out to logging! He said the logging industry emphasized more flexible in- upprentice~hip Is not serving participants have to be out of The sal~)! boapd outlined a America, Local 171, called for mechanic -- in the bush, where camps had/aver been in the could provide equipment and stltutiona," the building trades needs, ac- school at least one year before vocational program which practical training in the logging there is stump slash all arotmd bush ann didn't know what they timber stands, and well- Don Adams, Alcan supervisor cording to John Jenaan, Labor they can enter training, would use high school facilities • industry. . and a logger can get hung up were getting in for. qualified loggers could be of training, said programs Co.ordinator for Northwest Students Who want to get into at night as well as during the In an informal speech to the and fall fiat on his nose," he "If you want to be a hook persuaded to teach logging should he designed to In- Commun~y College. the working force either con- day, estimating enrolmant at commission, Mr. Pmrmer said .said, adding the fiat, barren tender, only experience will shills, particularly safety. corporate any improvements In a brief to the Commlselou tim~ their schooling with little approximately 40 students a 'the logger' had been ignored college campus certainly make you a hook tender," he The Aluminum Company of and methods developed in the " on Technical and Vocational your. • when all the money for training wasn't good trainii|g ~'ound for said. "But there are other skills Canada in Kitimat also sup- foreseeable future. Training meeting here on Prompt~l by constant Mr. Holman said that con. Friday, Mr. Jenscn said his long technical improvements and siderlng individuals were ex- involvement as a union modifications, building and pected to change jobs quite repressutative with the building industdal trades have had to re- frequently during a lifetime, it tradesin northwe~,tern B.C. has examine thdr programs to keep was not necessary students convinced him the training'. workers well-informed. enter theprogram with specific,. program is not .meeting its life-long goals in mind. origin,il goul, .whichis to prepare Mr. Jonson recommended a The Kltimat high school students for apprenticeehip four year apprentice training currently has a kuccessful Realty World training, and ultimately, la'ogram, with the first three careers prngrem which allows Journeyman status. years used for •acquiring students to examine v~floun MMINnMll He said selection of pre- general trade knowledge and opportunities open to them Member Brokers apprentices was haphazard, the fourth year devoted to an primarily in the clerical and llllil stating it was done by people individual's specialty, child care fields: with no knowledge of the trades I~eauze mechanical trade~" bring you their best and that unions has not been However, pro-apprenticeship and heavy industry require allowed to participate. training could be on its way out. specialized training, courzes Mr. Jonssn, currently" first According to the commission, such as industrial welding could vice-president of the Provincial some high schools in the not he offered on the same n Council of Carpenters, said the province -- particularly basis. ' I ' ...... ' maJority of students in the iocal Aidergrove and Port Alberoi Quite an exteuslve vocational m. ". " carpentry pre-apla-entlceship -- already have advanced In- and trades training program is I1~~~,~ :~ course admitted they were dustrial Arts' programs which delivered through Northwest ~~~ there to do something other overlap skills taught in pro- Community College centred in ~!MPJ~II~I~I~ Owner has moved away and than collect welfare, or else to apprenticeship courses. Terrace, but insufficient funds ' n must sell a very nice 7 learn Just enough to he able to have prohibited development in bedroom home with a t build their own houses. Ron Hoffman from the the outlying communities. Large ; ..... ] house. Quiet A place out of town. 2 bedroom ~ bedroom suite. Attractive "Only two or three per cent of Terrace department of labor, Most communities have l Well kept home for sale on Relaxed country living on 13/'4 "streel o~ ,.., homes on the kitchen with nearly new those taking the pre- said introducing the course reasonable access to theory. large nicely landscaped lot, acres of land. Modern home full basement home, garage, bench. P,,, o.~s -. other trees. sundeck, lois of extras. Needs cupboards and built in range upprentice~hip course end up as through high schools would oriented courses, but are central area of town. Has with spacious kitchen and Rear yard II fenced. Asking journeymen," he said. alleviate pressure prsaenily ~ severely limited in the areas of double carport, full' basement living room, 3 bedrooms. Self- some finishing work but S53,000 ;..~ms available. nothing you couldn't handle Mr. Jansen also said the six vocational schools, although skills and Upgrading programs. and fireplace. Viewing by contained suite in basement. A Hans ¢,mt.'n, 635-3708. yourself. Big garden. Chicken arrange good financing if you month course was far too long lack of qualified teachers made Two of the college's major appointment only. Call Frank good huy at S42,000. For mare can handle a low down Skidmore, 635.5691. information call H. Gedlinski, house: All fenced. A good buy and covered too many general it impossible to 'implement recommendations included at $37,5e0 and you might gel it payment, Full price of $37,$00. topics. He suggested a short, without some major changes, increased flexibility in 635-5397. Hans Caulien, 635.3708... introductory course would he Dennis Holman, KItimat vocalional course delivery by for less. Phone Hans Caulien. 635.37oe. lxefersbie, adding that those college coordinator, ~id the using mobile classrooms, ann Investment property. 3 wishing to continue in the trade Kitimat school distrmt was joint use of work facilities. bedroom house with basement could hire on as apprentices. |mhappywiththelimitsdaecese Dr. Val George, principal, suite, older rental house, Apprentices, on the other to vocational training, and • states in his brief to the corn- subdivision properly, garage. hand, appear to want more propos.ed develop.meat of.re.ore mission that the college is shop. All right in town in one Modern 4 bdrm. home, 3 yrs. extensive training and have extenswe traaes .training committed to ueeentralizing its package. Asking S69,000. For old, w-w throughout, char. called for a program that would cou_rsosin high .s~OOlS...... operations., both academic and further into, call Hans ming living room. Relaxed An almost new ) Dedrooml last a minimum of sixweaks FreeentingaorLexonl0enano~ vocational Caulien, 635-3708. country living on 2 acres of home on a big lot rn Cop. Discriminating? Over t300 sq. each year. Present training is the school board,. Mr. Hol.man "People should not be land. Inquire about renlal perside for only 037.000• You ft. of solid construction, expert four weeks a year over a 4 year .said many grane 10 stu~ms .penalized, (neither) rmancially p rchaseon this property. For ben And lhe owners .,r, read,/ finishing, and tasteful ap. indenture prbgram, nave expressen interest in mrough having to go long more information call Horst for all offers on pr0c~, and pointments, A kitchen that ~.~.~.v.~-...... `..~.~.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:..:.:.:.:..~:.~...... ~.~.....v...... ~...... :....~...... ,.,...... ,,...... n .....,...... ,...... ,...... ,.,...... -....,.:... distances . for. their education, • Godlinski, 635.5397. terms. Phone Frank Sk0dmore ' alp l_ m • _ • :::: (nor) educationally because of will delight you. Elegant right away, 635.56v1 .n e n n n. in n lack ef reasonable access to dining room. White stone ::;j "" sn • v ~ ~" " --" • " ~ - q~ "i~: educational facilities, because fireplace in a comfortable i ~, / a • _ _" _ _~ '~ :~ they live in areas that are m A very el~/cl.mt ~md unusual living room. The sharpest ~!~ a~lll~PdPIlflflfl ~i[~eJr]~ i:i- isolated from the large home Over 1~oo ~.q It on the 'recreation room with bar and !~ ~k~q~aavas ,~ ~ ~:. population areas," he says in main floor ~:eatures 3 ... another fireplace. All this ~-~:...:::::::::.:::::::::::::.:::.:.:.:.z::.:::..:::::::::..:::::::::.:::::::::::::::.:.:::::.::....::::::::..-.:::::::::.:.:::~:.:.:::.z-.~.::..::::::.::~;his report. bedrooms, ensuile bath, high on 2 acres of beautiful " " try lluffh Potver situations through the use o He said major industry in the quality carpeting, fireplace. property. Listed at $65,000. • I~EG-I-S'~RA'I'II)N drama skills. We will be region is varied, including The interior layout is very Financing no problem at an Registration for courses is exploring movement and agriculture, fishing and attractive interest rate, with Beautifully well kept ) still possible in most courses vmce as well as engaging in forestW development as well as 'be judged by its e.terior. reasonable c'redil. Call Hans bedroom home in prime role-playing, group, trust heavy industries such as pulp 3 bedroom home on Davis Asking a very .reasonable ...... , , Caulien, 635.3708. location of Terrace No • as long as there is still space through, paved Street ( lose to . available. If you still wish to situattpns;:and ~aeting:. The mills and~the Kitimat smelter~. Avenueclo~,eto Jr. ~ Sr. High '" price of'$49,500 'Good 't(~rms, - . -- ~, ~~,~.~ ...... codr~ m "~si~l to im- Dr. Gcoi'ge•'and'FredWil~on; ~ SCilOOiS. FiPeplace. Very nice "' ~l'e 'available. Hafts ( al~ ion"~ schools. Landscaped, fenced• • register for a course contact recreation room with bar. " 635.3708'. : • • ,~;'~~i;?/~i~;::U;~! ~~!~!;;~'~;~,~r,~ :~/~i:~ Basement with great big Hugh Power at 635-4931 or prove upon self-confidence head of Yocational' and and to learn the art of acting Technical Training in the windows. Owner listed at 635-3833. Brochures were Frank Skidmore, 63S-5691 for ,,~'~; s42,0eo but now reduced to mailed to all householders in naturally on stage as well as ' college, concluded it would be in group experiences, feasible to deliver short courses more.information. ~ ~* ' ~'' ~ " s4o,se0. It's your move next. theTerrace area/If you did seminars on specific in- This is a great buy. Horst not receive your brochure "TROUBLE SIIOOTING Buy the best and save in the Godlinski, 635-5397 YOUR CALF' dustHal requirements by using contact Hugh Power for a local j ob sites. long run. Quality always pays copy., This is a basic course .m Liketo have company in? This off. 3 bedroom home with car mechanics. The course According to Dr. George, INDUSTltiAI, FIRST several companies already • 3 bedroom has a rec room lust family room, rumpus room, 2 AID COUIRSES will stress how to trouble have a sufficient number of 1240 sq. ft. of home with a built for it; really impressive fireplaces, rosewood feature •The Northwest .Com- shoot your ear. It will enable employees who would benefit basement revenue suiteand a •with mirrors, lighting, and wall, and many other fine munity College is offering people to make simple from upgrading courses, which wet bar. There's also a spare features. Landscaped yard repairs when possible. Move to lhe bench and get beautiful yard• Family room, bedroom for overnighters. All with birches, A great place to industrial first aid courses. would in turn enhance their away from .the hustle and fireplace, carpeting. You Anyone interested in taking fenced and landscaped and raise a family• Just move in The College will attempt to work performance. bustle of downtownf Try; this really must see this place to located in the Horseshoe area., and live, no cleaning and offer as many courses as this course should contact However, to provide courses home on Munthe Avenue; 3 appreciate it. Price has been Located only minutes from all Make an appointment or see it touching up to do. Listed at necessary to meet the Hugh Power as soon as in some communities mobile bedrooms, large family type reduced to $36,500. Call Horst schools• This 3 bedroom, full on "Realscope" in our office. $59,700, Phone Hans (aulien demands of the community. possible. units are more practical, he kitchen, fenced in rear yard, Godlinski and ask him how' basement new home features Frank Skidmore 635-5691. for appointment, or see it on Registration is on a, first ACCESSIBILITY said. carport with concrete pad. you can make an offer in- sundeck, full basemenl, large "Realscope" at our office• coi~e first served basis with COMMISSION The college already conducts Immaculately kept. Large eluding the B•C. Govt. mor- Two houses for the price of garden area, carport, and preference given to people • The Universities Council Air Brakes and Industrial First corner lot on pavement. An tgage. 635-5397 or see it one. Located close to Th0rnhill landscaped yard. Make your who require their firet aid of B.C. is sending a com- Aid courses in this way, and ideal place to raise your displayed on "Realscope" in schools. Large co'x200' lot. appointment now to view ticket as a requirement of mittee to the Terrace- has considered developing a family. Phone Frank Skid. our office. Low down payment. Phone Phone Barb f•arfitt at 635.6768 their employment. To Kitimat area to investigate mobile course for basic welding more for price and financing, Barb Parfitt, '635-6768 for or see it on "Realscope" at our register for* these courses the accessibility of post- skills. 63S-S691. viewing. office. contact the Northwest secondary education in the Using high school shops would Community College at 635- area. An open meeting will be ideal for such courees as 6511 and ask for Bey. be held at Northwest College ~ntry and Jolntery, but Dr. GROUP DYNAMICS at 1:30 p.m. on Thursday; George said renovations would AND DRAMA SKILLS September 30 in Terrace usually have to be made to Parklike setting, view of and on the same day there bring facilities up to vonatloual Skeena River plus beautiful 3 This course is designed to scbsel ntandard and in some have the student become will be a public meeting in 3 bedroom Condominium close bedroom, full basement home. Kitimat at the Kiiimat cases, would not " be Attractive3 bedroom home on to downtown area, ~chools, A very spacious deluxe home Located on Churchill Drive aware of themselves and economically feasible. their reactions to grou~ Museum at 7 p.m. rural Churchill Drive. Enjoy and recreation facilities. located very close to down. this executive type home all the best features normally Panelled feature wall. Land- town. Features 2 basement teatures 2 fireplaces, rec found in a good homeand low soaped yard wilh patio. In suites with separate entrance room, storage room, DISTRIOT OF TERRAOE taxes as well. You'll ap- excellent condition. Small and electrical meters. A good workshop, full length balcony preciate seeing this properly, down payment will handle. buy at $59,500. Try your offer plus beautifully landscaped and down NOTIOE OF O011RT OF ~o:.:=:~,:,~e.;,,.,, fCo~llmForra:iknLk~dmU~tOiro~.635-5691Diessner, 631 • REVNSU0N Realty World 1976 MUNIOIPAL ELEOTION • Members offer a VOTERS LIST •., . better way to The Court of Revision to hear complaints and to correct or revise the 1976 List of Electors, will sit in the Council Chambers of the Terrace Municipal Building at 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon on Friday, October !, • ~ 1976 ..... home hunt. A copy of the 1976 List of Electors is posted and is available for viewing at the Municipal Office, 3215 Eby Streeh Terrace, B.C., during regular This RealScope display in our offices shows everY, property in Ik office hours (8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday). full detail and colour. Save the time-wasting bother of driving from house to house. Find your new home quickly with All persons entitled to have their name entered on the list should check RealScope. foldetermine whether or not they have omitted or incorrectly.recorded. P All complaints should be addressed to the* Municipal Clerk, 3215 Eby Street, Terrace, B.C., and be in Ills hands prior lethe first sitting of the . Court. Further Information •may be obtain~ by telephoningthe Municipal Office -- 635-6311. ' iParki,Avenue Realty Ltd. 'G.W. Buchanan CLERK-ADMIHISTRATOR 4615 Park AVenUe• •:~.:.; ,. 635'4971 PAGE A6, THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976

i / Vocational School Graduates

JONN ALDEN presents May Cunningham with flowers from the graduating class as a token of its appreciation. |• ~" ~ I I ,', ~'1 ~ ~.~i~i':~~'~...~ . . ~~. STUDENTS AND INSTRUCTORS from the graduating class in heavy duty at Northwest Community College are (back row left to right) Bill STEVE MITZIMBERG (right) was named top Crunch, Steve Mitzimberg, Dave Beck, Pete stacey, Cavin CraWford, Jim student in heavy duty. Bill Crunch (left) and Tom Ainsley, Don Russell, Reg Hiderman and Tom Kenna; (front row left to Kenna, the two instructors, look on. right) Wayne Sullivan, Jonn Alden, Reg Anderson, Don Wilson and lan "Dowling.

i1 o:,, ;

GEORGE KONING (left), best all-round student, recewes his award from instructor Bill Todd while Tony Kerr, student with the highest marks, receives his award from instructor John Peters (right).

Questions and Answers Old Age Security STUDENTS AND INSTRUCTORS from the graduating class in car- STEVE HAMPTON receives the Mm:phy Memorial pentry at Northwest Community College.are (back row left to right) Bill " Prograin ...... trophy to the most deserving student from Jerome Todd, John Phillips, Brian Mutch, Doug Foster, Don Jensen, Ray Ron. Auriat, of the:United Brotherhood of Carpenters and deau, Red Taylor, Tony Kerr and John Peters; (front rowleft to right)",' Q. Is it compulsory l~or m~ Joiners. Larry Lucas, Randy Johnson, Steve Hampton, George Koning, Richard to accept an Old Age Wynnyk and Ken Frederiksen. Security Pension? d e Canada Postes A. No. If you do not want Post Canada i: to receive the pension,don't Smile Tells ltAll l apply• "Let me off at. Broad- way," the burdensome lady • . instructed the bus driver. "Certainly.". he replied ,: : :i Q. Are Old Age Security Pen- patiently• Every block or sion payments taxable? two thereafter, the~wdman A. Yes. Benefits must be loudly reminded the driver shown as income when not to forget tolet her off at filing your income tax re- Broadway. She finally turns. demanded. "How will I Remember... know when we get to Broad- way?" "By the smile on my Q. Do I have to.report the CAVIN CRAWFORD (left), who was named second face, lady, ''• sighed the driver. death of a pensioner? top student, is congratulated by Bill Crunch. , :;i~ Canadian Postal .. f A. Yes. When a pensioner dies the next-of-kin or per- son responsible for the final affairs of the pensioner should report the death• ~t • , Rates Q.When i become a pen- .~ sioner will I receive an ~ identification card? A. Yes. When a pension Have '~ application has been ap- proved for payment the l pensioner will receive an Old Age Security identifica- tion card showing the name Change, and pension number.

On Sept(~mber 1.:1976, :I'-I Gre majorpostal rate changes ;' 2 oi came into effect; But: when , Can you consider all the fa(~ts, we , fror think you'll agree that the new s¢i rates are still a first-class Sep bargain. ; ber For one thing, these rates 1976; and to 10¢ as of 66 Ibs.) receive our best .~i have not been increased in ' March 1, 1977. Allgreet- service. ' . .' :, ~" Traditional in appearance over four years. For another, ing cards should be sealed, [] More than ever, "Parcel '...... but functions like a modern current postal rates in most [] Rates for special services Post" is thelow-cost way:;. ""~ ' fireplace. The Blaze Frank- Western countries exceed such as Registered Mail, .to reach any address in . := ,:~. lin Stove blends beautifully Canada's new postal rates. C.O.D. and Special Deliv- with a period decor or ac- Canada...... =,.,; .:i,. , cents the modern. A Wood AnyoneusingtheCanadian " ery, Postal Insurance and The newCanad an Postal: .... burning stove for'a warm, postal service will find many ' Money Orders have also ' Rates deserve your attention. :i :,~.: comfortable atmosphere. changes in rates. ' " .... changed, . When you post both letti~rs i .: :' .:-!i [] Letters or postcards up to Major adjustments have and parcelsl check with ~/our: .' 'ii,/,. BL ZS 1 oz., for delivery in Can- been made in p~rcel rates to . Postmaster and be sure of the..~ ::: !. ada, change from8¢ to 10¢ create a more equitable rate. proper rates; ...... :, : ,.:.'~i.,"..... Industries as of September 1, 1976,, structure by re at ng the rates Correct postage plus the ': " "'~ of Canada, Ltd. and to 12¢ as of March.If. more closely to the distance 50 Electronic Avenue. . Postal Codewill giveyou i : .,. Port Moody. B.C. 1977. ~ : travelled and the weight of ' better service.. .:~ '. ,~,. +., .... ' ' : ' • theDarcel.

4 J THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976,PAGE A7 $2,500 reward Operation Service "Operation Service" During October members involves much unselfish, of the Royal Canadian and voluntary work -- door-to- for ,nformation its Ladies Auxiliaries are door calls and the filling oat B.C. Hydro is offering up !year was near Box Lake carrying out an ambitious of questionnaire forms. The to $2,500 reward for in- attempt to contact people in questionnaires are designed between Nakusp and New their communities who have so that problems and formation leading to Denver. positive identification of Twenty-eight insulators served in Canada's armed enquiries may be referred to persons wilfully damaging on a 60,000volt transmission forces, in the forces of .the appropriate Legion insulators, power lines and line were destroyed and had Canada's allies and with service officers and auxiliary services. . government agencies for equipment. to be replaced at a cost of Purpose of this campaign, action. Hugh Williamson, B.C. about $5,700. called "Operation Service", Members of the Legion Hydro's chief security of- In another case of van- is to make sure all those who ricer, said thoughtless dalism a transformer was and the ladies' auxiliaries qualify for benefits under have earned a fine persons with guns are twice blasted by rifle fire on The Veterans Charter are. costing Hydro money by Malcolm Island near the reputation for improving the fully aware of their rights lot of their former using pole insulators and northern tip of Vancouver and privileges. transformers .for target comrades-in-arms, widows Island. Changes in legislation and dependants. This •practice. Some of Hydro's have endeavoured to keep "This form of vandalism customers were. without current effort to help those pace with the changing in need or distress merits through Hydro's province. wer for mere than four economic and social cir- wide electrical system ~ urs including a Depart- our support, encouragement cumstances of veterans, and appreciation.. during the past year is ment of Transport radio particularly in pensions and estimated to cost about facility. In this instance cost • allowances. So too have the $150,000 in repairs," he said. of repairs was estimated at programs handled by the SECONDMORTGAGES It usually increases about $700. Department of Veterans • No bonuses, during the hunting season Williamson asked any Affairs ' which include each autumn, person with information on brokerage or finder's medical treatment, housing, fees Williamson said that vandalism to report educational assistance, damage to power lines and promptly to the nearest counselling and other • Borrow upto$15,000 . insulators each year causes police of Hydro office or British Columbia's government agents were ad. meeting are, left to right, Premier Bennett, K. Booth, services. • 14.9% onarnounts hardship for a large number phunecollect to thesecurity dressed by Premier Bill Bennett and Finance Terrace; Howard Harding, Prince Rupert and Among the problems the over $8,000 of innocent people. mvesti[~ation section of B.C. Minister Evan Wolfe during their recent annual Finance Minister Wolfe. Legion seeks to solve is the • 15 year amortization One area heavily hit by Hydro in Vancouver at 685- meeting in Victoria. Pictured above, prior to the fact that many who applied rifle fire during the past 9731, HOUSEHOLD REALTY for assistance in the past, CORPORATIONLIMITED but were refused, do not I realize that circumstances TERRACE have changed and that 4608 Lakelse Avenu( ! Seven Sisters logging decision postponed pension, medical and other forms of benefits have been 635-7207 vastly improved. Decisions to log or not to within the immediate The struggle of our time Rupert and Burns Lake, and will reflect the needs of the channels of public par- log the Seven Sisters vicinity were unanimous in seems to b~ maintaining non directly adjacent along public whom they were ticipation. Only in this way their opposition to this abundance and production the entire extent of Highway intended to serve. Indeed can our people be insured of Mountain have been post- having an influential hand in Tunnel & Rookworkers poned until a committee is proposal. This opposition while still keeping man's 16 West of Mr. Robson. any branch of the govern- formed to examine other has sinc~ . become inner spirit intact. There are " According to the 1961 ment . overseeing public determining the quality,~nf logging areas in the Skeena widespread and continues to areas tha[ should be ex- Forest Inventory, on which resources must be aware of our environment and Local 168 mount.. cluded from logging in current logging is based, changing public needs and caretaking its future. By PSYU. attitudes. For it is popular this,• we do not mean to Such a committee is ex- One may ask the question: perpetuity. Areas that there are just under two •"Why should any one of us should not be "managed" by million acres of harvestable attitude which will even- devaluate all of the existing pocted to be formed about tually motivate policies. The policies of the Forest Ser- October 14 and will include a oppose a logging operation man. The virgin forest, or timber in the Skeena Public when so many of us in this an unspoiled view of Sustained Yield Unit. Of Regional District Forester vice. It is especially'ap- representative of the has stated that the Forestry parent that their latest GENERALMEETING Cedarvale Seven Sisters region depend, either awesome .mountains stirs this, 10,000 acres has been directly or indirectly, on the the deepest chords in the allotted for potential "has grown up beyond ecological guidelines reflect Committee. logging industry for our human spirit. It is a thread parklands, of •which to our residents' eoncerns" over a much more sympathetic The following presen- management practices. approach to the en- tation was made to livelihood? Surely it is the drawing man back to a time knowledge, none have been backbone of our northern of primitive simplicity. It is implemented. The proposed Does not the concept of a vironment. This is to be representatives of MacGillis public trustee verge sincerely commended. Green Room and Gibbs (the Terrace One may ask the question: an assurance that cutting area on the Seven • "Why should any one of us civilization need not Sisters represents an in- recariously towards one of But let us not take company which wants to log ~ictatorship when there is premature comfort from below the Seven Sisters), oppose a logging operation strangle and twist finitesimaI percent of the TERRACE HOTEL when so many of us in this everything into something total harvestable timber in such a blatant neglect of promises of rose-coloured CanCel and the Forest popular concern? and well-intended Service at a public meeting region depend, either "useful". For in this forest, the P.S.Y.U. Our economic directly or indirectly, on th~ in this scheme of things, wellbeing surely cannot Other government gui_delines. in the Kitwanga Community branches have recently Hall September 23. The logging industry for our there are lessons to be hang in the balance over Ski Patrol livelihood? Surely it is the learned and eternal beauty such a trivial cutting block. revised their research and presentation.was written by study methods by including All those interested in Thursday, September 30th tlieCedarvale Seven Sisters backbone of our northern which may be passed on to Since there is an allowance economy.. all our children's children, made for Environmental public input as an integral joining the Kitsumkalum Committee. part of policy-making. We Ski Patrol please turn out "For tliose who have not There are technical as The value of this unspoiled Protection Areas, why not well as aesthetic grounds on wilderness is not tangible or designate the entire Seven strongly advocate that this for a general meeting on witnessed the grandeur of easily dealt with. These Sisters block? The Seven approach be implemented Monday, October 4, 1976 at the Seven Sisters, even the which to contest logging 7:30 P,M, methods as currently terms cannot be measured Sisters have a central by the Forest Service as Caledonia High School most ~eloquent of descrip- well, so as to provide [or beginning at 7 p.m. tions would be inadequate to practised in'B.C. Both sides ,with the.clarity and ease location, and are easily involved hel'e could•'debate ~that * We: -.can-'use in accessible :from the ex:'. recall their ~rugged ~ splen- describing net or gross panding commur~ities Of dor. indefinitely the finer, technical aspects con- dollars, Specific volumes or Smithers, the Hazeltons, Their beauty has been acreages, boundaries or Kispiox Valley, Terrace, publicized as far back as cerning the possible en- vironmental effects of clear harvestable limits. There is Kitimat and Prince Rupert. 1914, when the Grand Trunk not the in'flu•ace of money, Companies wish to'log this Pacific Railway was issuing cut logging, factors and a brochure extolling tl~e effects of soil erosion, water not the pressure of con- area . because it ih scenery between Prince runoff and blow down, the tracted licenses to be felt in economically attractive. It George and Prince Rupert. nature of sustained yield, a full moon rising over 9,000 provides easy access and is Among its illustrations was the productivity of second or foot peaks, or a mysterious nearby a short, expedient one of a striking range of third growth forests, and the shroud of fog at sunrise, route along paved highways mountains called the Seven effects on fish and wildlife. As our population grows, to waiting millsites. Sisters. National But for certain -- as and development increases, Is it •wise or necessary to Geographic magazine laymen -- we lack the the need to escape to exhaust all of our easily publfshed an article specialized knowledge to wilderness areas will. be accessible timber for the 4 competently discuss such much greater. It is our sake of short-term gains? • describing the first ascent of immediate respodslhility to Eventually companies will the highest summit by Dr, matters: we cannot hope to present a r technical; case recognize the full scope of have to travel further for l Neff M. Carter in 1941. In the human, needs, now and in logs. In some cases it has words of one of his fellow against a host Of foresters and engineers., .. the future, inwardly as well ;already become more alpinists the range was: "So as economically. And [f we economical to move set- shared and situated as to be Our case is primarily one of aesthetics. To our parents do choose to set aside tlements to timber rather easdy the outstanding site special areas let us consider than transport logs to west of Mt. Robson". This and grandparents, the preserving of mountains which are worthy and of: existing communities. challenge.i sparked interest exceptional value. .TO QUOTE FROM A in othe/" " professional and rivers in their natural '1,000 °° The Seven Sisters stand as SUBMISSION TO THE mountainclimbers, and by state was rarely a priority. With only a few individuals a unique and exceptional PEARSE ROYAL COM- 1962 all seven d{ the peaks monument along the MISSION ON FOREST had been::cunquered. The carving their livelihood out Cash Prizes mountains still attract of a seemingly unending Yellowhead route. Visually RESOURCES: wilderness, just surviving they rank in magnitude With~ :"We should not regard our skilled adventurous clim- the most awesome and resources as strictly our bers. was a full time struggle, and often the wilderness was an inspiring of any great,, own but as belonging to These mountains are the mountain range found in all future generations as well. subject matter of numerous adversary rather than an • . • I ally. of B.C., if not indeed any It is' our responsibility to postcards eir'culated found in North America. pass them on to our children throughout the province. Today, however, because The~/:are a continuing at- we are riding on the crest of Aside from isolated in such condition that, they Thursday, September 30th t¢action to photographer's • a tidal wave Of modern provincial.campsites, to the may also reap the benefits and tourists, looming as one technology, our life style is best of our knowledge there which would allow them and of : the outstanding visual vastly different from that of is not to be found a single their descendants, in turn, atti'actions throughout the our forefathers. Physically, major provincialpark or to enioy a high quality of life is much easier; we now wilderness area throughout life.'" no/'thwest, ~ and .along the the entire Skeena Public If the Forest Service is Yellowhead route. have the time and money to ..The CBC, 'which serves look to activities not related Sustained Yield Unit. There intended to serve as trustee 1o the actual struggle for are no major areas set aside of our public resources, we communities situated along for parks between Prince must all expect that they tlie .Yellowbead Highway survival. If this trend is to Arena BanqUetHaft (between Prince Rupert and continue, our children and Vanderhoof) 'refers to itself theirs will have even more as the "Seven Sisters time and money for such TERRACE & SURROUNDING AREAS 8 p.mo Network", The Kitwanga diversions. Unfortunately,' however, directly propor- I Band Council features these HURRY! 3 MOHTHS LEFT HURRY' mountains on their let- tionate to the high wages terhead. The mountaius are and 'decrease in work hours is the increase in the general s TO Ili¢OME TAXI s even depicted on record ,.., albums and placemats. pace of life.Even as droves The B.C, Government of people are moving out.of PERSONALIZED & QUICK SERVICE • SPECIAL nOOn pmzB Lands Bulletin credits the the cities, away, from the WHY GET CAUGHT IN THE LAST MINUTE RUSHI , peaks as being the highest in noise and pollution, into the a 400 mile radius, rising to more peaceful countryside, SAVE MONEY! an elevation of over 9,000 so more and more will our feet; as such, they serve as children seek the solitude • PROCEED| TO TERRACE CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTRE that our m~untains, lakes See us and get in on a reduced rate for early birds. For get. a navigational landmark to ring records up to date. .aircraft pilots, who can -and rivers have to offer. Can, Personal • Self.Employed - Private Companies. Free - In- easily identify the peaks, we comprehend the swift- formation on; Incorporating, Records, etc. which often loom high above ness with which our North the cloud cover. American wilderness has These same mountain~ been transformed 'into are currently the subject of populated, productive "MARR'S" acontroversy which centres settlement? And how much \ slighter has the impact been Bookkeeping & Acc~)unling around Opposition to a 4419. Legion, Terrace, B.C. logg, ing r proposal here in the province of B.C. When compared to Ph. 638.1761. 'threatening the forested Man. - Mary Stevens foothills of the Seven developed areas elsewhere? Do we ever stop to question Res.. 635.3105 Sisters. ' Ass. Anita Page Ass. • Norm Butterfleld . Upon disclosure of the whether our children will planned logging, residents have unspoiled areas to Res. • 635.6451 Res. • 638-1051 enjoy? * : I .... , @ ...... Q ..... *

PAGE AB, THE HERALD, Wednesday,September 29, 1976 IN HOUSTON Labour - managemenr t`" rurocan - Weldwood government meet to build sawmill in Terrace A special meeting of Service Program, as a Euroean Pulp & Paper Co, the spring of 1977, with rep.resentatives of labour vehicle to facilitate this Ltd. and Weldwood of commercial production unions, employers and cooperative effort. Canada Limited have starting in the spring of 1978. government met in Terrace The meeting was hosted reached tentative Houston, with a on September 16 to discuss by Northwest Community agreement to jointly population of 2,600, is 170 the possibility of a unified College, and during the develop a sawmill with an miles northwest of Prince effort at resolving era- daylong session, delegates annualrated capacity of 12o George. The only other ployment related problems studied possibilities and million board feet of major industry in the area is common throughout the questions that would be key finished lumber at Houston, the Bulkley Valley sawmill Skeena labour market area. factors in such a vast in northwestern B.C. owned by Northwood Pulp cooperative venture. At the In making the an- Ltd. The meeting, called by conclusion of the session the nouncement, Erik V. Weldwood is a widely Canad~ Manpower, brought delegates agreed to review Olander, chairman of the diversified forest products together a large contingent the day's deliberations, and board of Eurocan and company with sawmills and of concerned people who mcet again within the next Thomas A. Buell, president plywood plants in British representa ma.ior portionof four weeks to express and chief executive officer Columbia and Ontario as the work Ioree and era- further views on theprojecl, of Weldwood, said the cost of well as distribution eentres ployers of this area, to study and to decide if and how the project is expected to across Canada. It is also a 50 the possible use of the such :l cooperative effort exceed $15 million. percent owner of the Manpowe=" ('onsultative wonhl be effective. Weldwood will manage Caribou Pulp & Paper the operations and also company bleached-kraft I ~',J.-.-f~-~;A~ -) .~- "~~ market the lumber while the pulp mill at Quesnel, B.C. timber supply for the People once thought that the herb thyme was harmful to Eurocan owns an un- fleas. sawmill will come from bleached paper, pulp and Eurocan-held " harvesting linerboard mill with a licences in the Ootsa Public supporting wood mill at Sustained Yield Unit. Kitimat, B.C. Both com- Subject to final agreement panies are shareholders in between the provincial the Babine Forest Products Skeena Liberal Minister of Fitness and Sports, Iona Trudeau during the recent trip by Prime Minister and government and the com- Limited sawmill at Burns Campagnolo and Janet Sinclair of Terrace, a Vice- Mrs. Trudeau to the Queen Charlotte Islands. panies, constt'uction is Lake, 45 miles southeast of President of the B.C. Liberal Party, greet Margaret expected to get underway in , Houston. Committee for Continuing t I!t By Maryann Burdett and Community Educahon Royal Canadian Legion Prince Rupert has been tinning and community programs, finance and (Pacific) Branch No. 13 selectedas oneoflhe 15 sites education. administration. for public meetings to be The committee's Terrace held by the Department of "Our committee hopes. recommendations, along that those concerned with with the recommendations Education's Committee on adult education in British Continuing and Community from the Commission on Branch 13 has had a busy President - Bob Bennet, Legion. Fees are reasonable Education. The Prince Columbia will take the University Programs in week climaxing with Vice-President Ray and seasoned curlers as well Rupert meeting will be held opportunity to comment on Non-Metropolitan Areas and yne Braid another extremely suc- Johnson, • Secretary- as beginners are looking in the Northwest Com- this important aspect of our the Commission on cessful smorgasborg Treasurer - Laveta Mills forward to good times and munity College, October 22 educational system." Vocational, Technical and sponsored by the Ladies and Directors - Wayne healthy exercise with their beginning at 2 p.m. The committee was Trades Training will family and comrades. The Auxiliary. President Jeanne Larson and Lloyd Scott. A background paper, to be created by the department provide guidelines for new Lookfor there'snowor- Dixon estimates/that over September 29 will be a list is on the bulletin board the basis of discussion at the in June to make recom- post-secondary legislation business in- I~P ry. Because it 400.people were served. As practice night and the at the Branch so enter your meetings, has now been mendations to Education to be introduced to the surance that'll wi II guarantee always the quantity and regular season games will name or your rink. prepared by the committee Minister Pat McGeer on legislature. keep income #~ income every quality of the repast was get underway Wednesday,. Many comrades and co- and is now being distributed possible continuing and Dr. Farts said the com- coming in. llt..~F day you're closed truly commendable. Now October 6 at 8 p.m, The club workers of Comrade and to those involved in con- community education mittee hopes to present its Mrs. Ray Atwood g_athered Most insurance ~ byadisaster.The these ladies are immersed is looking for new members, tinuing and community policy, especially those report to the minister in late companies can ~ policy insures in preparations for their the season fee is $5 and at the Legion last Friday education and to others who aspects relating to November. sell fire and lia- ~ you for the full Golden Anniversary Ball to plans are underway for evening to wish the Atwoods may he interested in sub- hility coverage, amount you de- be held in the Thornhill interbraneh tournaments, 'Ben Voyage' and the best mitting briefs. But you should termine you need Community Centre this particularly with Kitimat for everything in their new Chairman of the com- Lottery draw in Terrace a I s o p r o t e c t to continue your coming Saturday evening, and Prince Rupert. Darts home. Ray and Evelyn have mittee which is probing all . October 2. The tickets are are available for rent at the been in Terrace for many yourselfagainst businesswhenyou aspects of continuing and If you are wondering what the draw Ior 61 prizes but financial losses purchase your available from L.A. branch and a miniature years and will be missed by community education, Dr. Montreal, and pictures el the new Camp ifyou were forced to tern- polio..No questions asked. members and at $15 per trophy will be presented to all. Ran Farts, said .the paper Terrace have in common is Squamish, the year round porarily close down. With And that's another good couple are going fast. anyone achieving a perfect On the home front, we are "is intended to stimulate : the Lueky'Leo,Lottery..~The camp tar handicapped a SAFECO ~'alUed Bust. re,'tsonwhy you can almost Dancing to the music of the score. It sounds like a good going to miss L0'uise' as an thinking not to limit it'.',!~,-. ~third'Earl~,' Bird' Draw "for children:and some lamiliar hess Interruption plan, ~d~ys save x~ithSAFF~O. Night Hawks and supper at year for the Darts Club so employee of the Branchbut : "The paper attempts ~'tO Lucky Leo Lottery 31 will faces tram across, the midnight prepared by our come along, dart players, we wish her all good luck in describe the current scene, follow the Montreal Expo- province. L.A. members -- better get that's every Wednesday her new ventures to identify areas which may New York Mets game at Lucky Leo Lotter.~ Braid Insurance . your tickets quick for they evening in the Legion. Just a reminder that need strengthening and to approximately 7 p.m. chairman. Ralph 'ti: Long, won't last long. Plans are also underway Comrade Gardiner, your raise questions about future Wednesday, September 29 in will be on hand along wilh encies Ltd. Wednesday, September 22 for a Sunday curling league. Branch Secretary is policy," commented Farts, the studios of CFTK-TV,. District Governor Murray was the inaugural meeting This is another happening available for comments and the department of Terrace. Skaar and (;eneral Manager FOR ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE INCLUDING AUTOPLAN of the Dart~ Club. The new for the family to get queries from 2:30 to 5:30 education's superintendent The half I(our program of cftk, Al l'arfitt. Tune in executive for the 1976-77 together and enjoy under Tuesdays through Satur- of communications, who is devoted to the Lions and the CFTK-TV alter the game 4646 Lakelse Avenue Bus: 635.6142 season was elected: the sponsorship of th~ days at the Legion. also responsible for con-" Society will feature not only Wednesday. Terrace. Be VSG 1R2 Res' 635.2015 l

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33 23MgG . " 28MPGHighway 20MPGCity 27 MPGHighway 19 MPGCity These figures are estimates based on Transport " These figures are estimates based on Transport Canada Canada approved test methods for a 305 cu. in., 2.bbl, approved test methodsfor a 305 cu. in., 2-bbl.. V8 wdh a 2,56 axle ratio and automatic transmission =:t V8 with a 2.56 axle ratio and automatic transmission. 4517 Lakelse Avenue .Jim M©:Ewan Motors '(Terrace) Ud. 635-4941

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• the . " ..... = home and family living ''1 ' ..na.n wd d :"Se'ptemb,r , PAGE A9 ' " ;" . /:':. : ' herald THE ,,~.~--, _e.nes_ay. 29, 197, . :, • " ~ ,,:..,, : .. :. .... " ' ~ '..~ r '~ • ~ ~.~,~%:.~'~ ~:~-~" .,~ " ,, ' " " Obituary Rick's a travelling man o, Ralph Rindahl and family of Terrace passed away Stewart Valley, Saskat- chewan; as well as many The Canadian Red Cross .reasons and now "lives in $50,000 more in nort[lern ~ ~ptem. ber 2 after •a very B C and the Yukon than it :snort nmess, tie was oorn other relatives and hun- Society has a new reg!onal Victoria. . dreds of sincere friends. coordinator for northern Mr. O'Brien has an office* brought in. It's . un- near Swift Current, His Funeral was held in British Columbia and the in his home at 113 - 4288 - derstandable that the Saskatchewan. lie served in the Alliance Chut'ch on Yukon, which of course 15th Ai~enue • in Prince Society would like to see theSecond WorldWar in the September 7 at 2:.30 p.m. includes this area, George but mostly he will" more funds raised. Medical Corps. Be spent McKay's Funeral Home was Rick O~Brien is an workoutof his briefcase. "l Working with volunteers, three of his six years in charge with Internment athletically handsome 28- realize, that the job cannot somewhat independent of overseas. He had been in the District of Terrace year.old with a degree in be done by someone sitting Vancouver headquarters, employed by Twin River cemetary. marketing from the behind a desk in Prince this appeals to Mr.O'Brien. Timber as a scaler for The pallbearers were University of British George," hesaid. "I'il be in close contact with almost It years since he Gordon Watmough; Ron Columbia and a keen in- "So I have [o be prepared the Assistant Corn- settled in Terrace. lie will Snider, Les Watmough, Don terest in outdoor sports -- to do a lot of travelling. Of missioner, David Jenkins, be sadly missed by his dear Cooper, Frank Pawick and hockey, cross-country course, it helps Ihat I am when he returns from his' wife, Elsie', daughter, Tracy Skead. Honorary skiing and golf included. single." Red Cross work in Martha and family of Pallbearers were Jim But his main enthusiasm Mr. O'Brien articled as a Bangladesh, and also with Surrey, B.C.; hissons, Louie Morton, Jake Peters, Vie these days is building up the chartered accountaht for Gary Osborne, the regional ofKitimat, Pauland Lyle of Froese and Ed DeVries. north within the B.C.-Yukon two years before deciding vice-president in Prince Terrace; his only brother, that volunteers were. more George• Division of the Canadian ,,A poet' can' sum~,ve...... anythm9 but a m,sprmnt. OzcarWilde Red Cross Society. If you interesting to ,,york with How doesRick O'Brien sum up the job? "Fund- spot a white station wagon than financial statements -- i bearing the familiar red not surprising for someone raising, image im- symbol on iL~ door heading so personable. provemefit, volunteer im- into town for a meeting with Still,• the businessman provement and good branch the local Red Cross branch, surfaces when he says: "I communications :-- these BUSINESSPEOPLE that's probably Rick was doing some quick are my main priorities," O'Brien at the wheel. calculation and it appears concluded the new Red t THE DEPARTMENT OF that the Red Cross spent •Cross regional coordinator. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FRED KOALENZ, district administrator for CNIB, (left) recently "I am really a servant of each branch and I'm here to recommends business management visited Betty and Donald Hang attheir home in Terrace. Betty Hang, who solve new problems they courses as a means of improving went blind at the age of 16, said'she really learned how to become self- may have and to help them management skills and capabilities. sufficient after that date. Her husband says she is more adept at in, any way I" can," Mr, i i navigating around their apartment than he is. When Beffy is not making O Brien said recently. I preserves and skilfully kniffing sweaters she babysits for the neighbours' give suggestions and try to The following courses are being children, Her philosophy is a blind person never gets anywhere sitting in promote new members. "But I'm a rooky here and offered a corner doing nothing. l'll have to rely heavily on local people. in Terrace Mr. O'Brien allowed that by Northwest Community College C.N.I.B. launches campaign many Red Cross branches in and Terrace Adult Education the north have a long way to at Caledonia Senior Secondary go. "We have to bring in Terrace Lions Club will be dustry on eye safety. The characteristics of the more volunteers and update the image. We have to make Beginning Bookkeeping conducting the annual indust/'ial education mentally retarded. Computers for Small Business (1 campaign for the Canadian program includes the Wise Koalenz said the morley the public more aware of National Institute for the Owl Program. CNIB also also goes toward educating what services the Red Cross day seminar) Blind Monday, October 4 works with the Eye Bank of the public on what blindness has to offer. from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. CNIB Canada to conduct eye is. Re said because blind "People tend to think of at Northwest Community College appeals to the public to be transplants. people are often treated like Red Cross mostly in terms of blood transfusions and generous .with its donations. The money also goes helpless invalids problems Personnel Management The campaign week in the towards adjustment are created for them by water safety programs. But northwest is'from October 4 training of blind children sighted people. The there's so much more, like to 9 and will be conducted and blind adults. Koalenz education program Also the outpost hospital at Atlin For course starting dates and fur- from Queen Charlotte said children born blind goes into publicity to help Lake, emergency services, ther information, please call Hugh Islands to Burns Lake. must learn to navigate by make the public aware of disaster relief, sickroom Power at 635.5931. Fred Koalenz, district themselves through ac- blindness. equipment loan service, Red administrator for CNIB, cidents: 'If a child has to fall Statistics show that blind Cross Youth programs and ,said businesses: will .be down the stairs tol6arn how •pebple who are working: are ~e ,tracing ~ja/(d reunion canvassi~d during the :week. to use them properly then he making wages on par with service. He said the money goes should not be stopped,•said the Economic Council .of "Of course, not every toward blindness education, Koalenz, Canada poverty line. branch is involved in all ~ DEPARTMENTOF rehabilitation and ad- He said blind people are During last • year's these things -- and that's ECONOMIC why we need to build," Mr. DEVELOPMENT justment training and public treated like helpless in- campaign $4,000 *was raised Govemme~ (~ E~l~h C0kJe¢~ education. valids and children who fall for CNIB in.Skeena. O'Brien went on. BOX I0111, 700 West Georgia Street, He said blindness victim to this kind of As regional coordinator he Vancouver, B.C. V7Y 1C6 education includes ad- treatment by sighted people "We lie loudest when we lie replaces Derek Bamford, dressing schools and in- 5egin to develop the to ourselves." 'who' left Red Cross a few Eric Heifer months back for versonal .Rick O"Brien is a young man on the go, go, go.

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28 MPGHighway 21 Mgp 30 My,G .22 Mpp 30.MZ ' . These hgures are eshmales based on Transparl These hgur,.+s are estimates based on Transport . These figures '~re estimates based on Transport Canada approved test methods for e 250 cu m. l•bbl, Canada approved lest methods for e 250 eu in,. I-bbl.. Canada approved test methods for a 250 cu in.. 1-bbl,, 6.cyl engtne with a 2 73 axle ratio and eutomahc 6.cyl engine with a 3 40 axle ral~o and 3.speed manual ' 6,cyl. engine,with a 340 axle ratio and 3-speed manual transmlsstoa transmisslorr transmission" I

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Some of the equipment i;lusbated il avoltobfe at eJtro cost, !: PAGE At0, THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976 Cross,.CoUinsonwedding Sproule-Jefferson Skidegl:te United Church ;' was the scene of the lovely summer wedding which wedding • took place on Friday, Immediately after the .* August 20 ~,hen Jennifer' Lorna Margaret Sproule, wedding the bridal party~ Ella, only daughter of Mr. daughter of Edward and with the bride's mother, left and Mrs. Clarence Collinson Susena Sproule and for the Kitimat Hospital and Robert Wayne Cross, Hayward Murray Jefferson, where they held toast to the youngest son of Mr. and' son of Harry and Helen bride's father, Ed. Sproule, Mrs. Gordon Cross ex- Jefferson were united in who is a patient there. changed their marriage marriage at Knox United The reception was held at vows before the Roy. Church June 12 at 4 p.m. the Ukrainian Hall. Ronald Norman Pick. Reverend Lewis officiated. Jefferson, cousin of the The bride's dress, from groom was master of Friends a'nd relatives Silhouette Fashions, was of ceremonies. filled the church to over- organza with Venise and re- Out-of-town guests were flowing when the bride embroidered elenzon lace Mr. and Mrs. Joe Chrobak approached the altar on the and chapel train.She wore a and daughters, Patsy-Ann arm of her father who is the spray of yellow roses with and Tara of Prince George; ~, Hereditary Chief of fern and baby breath. The Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sproule Skidegate. She was radiant bride was given in marriage of Bashaw, Alta.; Jack in a full length gown of by her uncle, Glen Sproule. Wood of Clearbrook; Mr. heavy white satin which Bridesmaids were Carule and Mrs. Glen Sproule of featured a full train. The Julseth, of Terrace, Ann . ~ empire bodice was Chrobak of Prince George Telegrams were received enhanced with angel wing and Shirley Sproule of from Nova Scotia, Van- sleeves and dainty ap- Terrace. Flower girls were couver and New Brunswick. .~ pliques of daisies and seed bride's nieces. Patsy-Ann pearls trimmed the bodice and Tara Chrobak of Prince Master of ceremonies .~ and the full skirt. Her chapel George. asked Jack Wood to give the (Ken's Photo Studio) veil misted from a brocaded , The bride's mother wore a opening toast to all present cap which in turn featured and introduced Bernard THE NEWLYWEDS cut the beautiful cake made for the occasion by the floor length cream colored "Scenery is fine, but human tiny daisies and seed pearls. polyester dress. The waist Dakin, a friend of the bride's Later, Maybe nature Is finer." Keats She carried a bouquet of lily bride's uncle Earl "Ginger" Moody of Terrace. was embroidered with pearl family who gave the toast to When two cars collided at [, of the valley and red roses. trim. Her corsage was of red the bride. Jack Julseth, best a lonely crossroads, both man, gave the toast to the drivers were shaken up. At. '.: Her attendants' gowns all roses with silver ribbon. Jack Julseth, the bride's .bridesmaids. ter a while, one said. "It so $ featured the empire happens I have a bottle of MORTGAGE * waistline and full floor brother-in-law was best- The bride and groom took wine in my truck. Would you ,~ length skirt. Maid of Honour man. Ushers were John Jenny, a friend of the groom a camping trip southward to like a little to help calm your MONEY! Jeanne Yovanovich wore a Vancouver during their nerves. The other said it was pale lemon nylon sheer with and Dale Sproule, brother of a good idea and took a FOR the bride. hopeymBon. "Home Purchases ',; full lace sleeves that ended healthy swig. The first Renovation ° with wide cuffs at the wrist driver then corked the bottle Any other worthwhile pur, and a panel of lace and started back to his car. poses, ,~ highlighted the bodice as did "Aren't you going to have a Rotes from the small standup collar. Scott-Merritt united little wine. too?" asked the 123/4 percent Weiler wore pale ye,mw. other. "Not until after the * Her skirt ended in a wide Sharon Louise Scott, : flounce inserted with Matron of honour, Sandra police come." he replied daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Koopmans, wore white while shaking his head. ~, daisies. Jeanne's wide Lloyd Scott and Gregory brimmed hat was trimmed while Tracy Scott, junior /PEACE RIVER Boyd Merritt, son of Mr. and bridesmaid, wore white with with pale yellow ribbon. The Mrs. Nelson Merritt were TurnsDirty bridesmaids, Jennifer small pink flowers. The One third grader's def- MORTGAGES united in marriage at Knox bridesmaid dresses all had inition of water: *'See. 2.4619 Lekelse Ave. 'I Brooks, Elaine Moody and United Church, July 3 at 7 Tami I,aFortune were small pink flowers on them. through liquid stuff that Terrace t~.m. Captain Bill Young was The bride's mother wore" a turns diry when you wash 636-1516 gowneo ,dike in peach crepe e officiating clergyman. (Cff) full length turquoise dress your hands in it." ill :,* backed satin and the bodices The bride was given in I featured short cuffed with lace overblouse. marriage by her father. Her • All girls' bouquets ~...... '* sleeves. Their white, wide- wedding dress, made by her brimmed mohair hats were daisies with matchinl mother, was white satin Randy Scott was trimmed with ribbons to with overlay of nylon polka match their frocks and all man; Brad Scott, dot. The head piece was Winchester and attendants carried bouquets made by Mrs. Ursula Earl. $,of white carnations and Lombard were the i She carried a bouquet of Music was by l~ yellow rosebuds centred carnations and baby breath. with a single yellow orchid. Brodie and ] AMONG THE MANY GUESTS were famed Haida sculptor Rufus Moody The flowers were done by Berghauser gave a s of Skidegate (left), Flossie Lambly of Terrace (center) and the new Chief Sheila Jackson. The reception was '" The best man was Lloyd All bridesmaids, the Collinson and ushering of the Weah House Eagle Clan, Oliver Adams (right). Thornhill Communit: matron of honour and the Rudy Koopman was guests to their pews were junior bridesmaid were Vincent and Shayne Berta Brown and Marg matching golden pendanL played and sang during the of ceremonies. Out:4 dinner and the Skunk ROck dresses of matching guests were Mrs. B Pearson, Rocky Beyko and Husband., The delicious which he had carved for her. material. All dresses, •ex- Mitchell Richardson. buffet supper waspi'epared The ROy. John E. Williams ' b~/ld with~Martin Flaxman from Nanoese Bay pla~.ed for the dance. cept the junior bridesmaid's and Joan Healey an by the Homemakers of flew here from Kitimaat dress, were of the same The bride's mother chose Skidegate. Two suckling Village to attend the wed- ('From the Queen son Chris from' Vi Charlotte Observer.) style as the bride's dress. Gaff Thomas from pale green polyester styled pigs donated by Billy ding, and he spoke grace Bridesmaid Debbie on simple empire lines, and Yovanovich and cooked by :before the dinner. Jamie George and Hart an( "If you want to test your Lamming wore light Dowd of Kamloops. , the groom's mother wore a John Chung of Apollo Hall, Sterritt" did the honours as memory, try toremember orange, bridesmaid Mary NCW WRUI: fuU skirted gown, pleated were the highlights of the The bride and groom M.C. • what you were worrying Lou Seaton wore mint •green honeymooned in Nova from bodice to hem as were refreshments. Guests from out of town about one year ago today.'" and bridesmaid Lenora i . ii. • Scotia. the wrist length sleeves, in Seated at the head table included Mr. and Mrs. Gene Leonard Thomas RATES lime green polyester. with the bridal party were Simpson Mr. and Mrs. Fred Solomon Wilson, Mr. and Jenkins, aunt and uncle el Guests nuhab;ering close to Mrs. Rufus Moody, the the bride; Mrs. Nellie 500 were welcomed at the bride's parents, Mr. and Yeoman, aunt of the bride; reception which was held in Mrs. Clarence Collinson, the Mr. and Mrs. Willis Crosby A GREATWAY TO SAVE! Mechanics the Recreation Centre in Rev. and Mrs. Pick, and Val; Robert Bell; Oliver Skidegate. The hall was Adolphus Collinson, the Adams; Mr. and Mrs. Reg $9.22-hour tastefully decorated in pink groom's parents, Mr. and Young; Mr. and Mrs. James and white and the guest Mrs. Gordon Cross, l~Irs. Young Jr.; Jack Rowbottom "tables were centred with May Moody, Mrs. Becky and Babs Wilson, all from • stay with us_ Ulectriclans dainty floral nosegays, Pearson, accompanied by Prince Rupert; Mrs. Flossie $9.22.hour • these and other flowers her tavourite nurse, Buffy Lambly, aunt of the bride, were given by Luu Tolman, Watson, and Oliver Adams, and her daughter Bobble Hereditary Chief of the Perry from Terrace; Haida. Laverne Collinson from nn the heart of Sheetmetal Workers Vancouver; Sharon Dick o! The table was centred by 1 $9.07-hour , Threepoints you a four tiered, beautifully Campbell River; Ginger decorated cake made and and Gerri Moody of shouldknow in decorated by the bride's Terrace; Stu Shelley, B.C. Millwrights uncle, 'Earl (Ginger) Packers, Vancouver; Chuck rentinga car Moody, , which was and Pare Clapp with Kim, $9.07.hour highlighted by a waterfall. from Seattle, Wash.; and Mr. Gordon Cross terry "Jacks, wellpknown presented the bride with a singer. Welders wide, golden bracelet and Maureen and Gary Ash $8.95-hour Deal with a Ford Dealer. He knowsautomobiles, and Rotary Drillers he's a rental specialist. $8.63.hour C ommonwelth ,. %,41 6~4 ~[,.~'%,4m s! • |vl it vnvuvv, Equipment Operators Used, $8,49-hour Lookfor low rentalrates 1969 i0 x 42 Atco and goodavailability. P A Ford Dealeroffers both. I 1972 Dodge Vani Truck Drivers '1971 10 x 60Van Dyke Expando $8.49.hour :1970 12 x 60 Safeway 1965 8 x 32 Marlette Mold Iiervlcemon P 1974 12 x 68 VistaVilla $8.34.hour Look foi a wide rangeof model,, 1966 10 x 41 20th Century; for your rental needs.A Ford Further increases'subject to AIB Approval. B.C. or inter. Denier'offers several models~ on location. Joey Shack, provincial tradesmen will receive S0.2; per hour above t iourneyman rate. We're conveniently located• 1971 12x 52 Paramount. ' Our representative will be In your area in September re ,n. Stop by or give us a call tervlew applicants for the above positions. for full details on our rental arrangementsl .,. RESERVE DID Casslar Is a rapidly expanding community of 1,$00 19cated in Offers Offers Offers North Central British Columbia with beautiful surroundings and excellent year round recreational facilities including :TERRACETOTEM Great Buys Right Now hunting and fishing. M0n..Thurs. 8:30 e.m..|:00 p.m. Frl. & Sat. 8:30 o.m.-S:00 Please send your detailed resume and FORD ,p.m. Sun. I p.m.-S:00 p.m. After Hour.I by APpointment Only. phone number to: SALES Ltd. Quality Homesat Affordable Prices i 'Personnel DepartmentAL , • • Cassiar Asbestor dBq~' • ~4631 Keith COMMONWEALTH ~(~~~ ~ R IcorporatlOn Limited i/~% ' 635.~984', DL 1255' • ~~ tCasslar ' B ' c ' J/~N~,% Mobile Homes Ltd. For RESERVATIONScall your m n A Division of Homco Industries nearest Holiday Inn,or RENT-A-CAR dial direct (604) 684-2151, 1055 Hiway 16 East 635-6251 Telex O4-53326. OWNED)OPERATED BYATLIFICINMS INC. DL.D2511.9

~) /', ~ Pi i ~ , I

THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976, PAGE All Terrace Blue Backs schedule P.N.W.H.L. The Terrace Blue Back days and lasts until 8 a.m. Thursdays from 5:30 p.m On Fridays they swim from until 6:30 p.m. I{I,;~U I,TS UI'Cq)MING GAMi,:S Swimming Club with some swimmers registered is 7 a.m. until 8 a.m, The club is still accepting Satnrday, September 25 Wednesday, September 29 There are also evening registrations from any Prince George 3. Terrace 1 Kitimat vs Prince Rupert swimming regularly these" days:. Their morning sessions on Monday, swimmer able to swim the Quesnel 7, Kitimat "/ Thnrsday, September :lO Wednesday and Friday length ol the pool. For Smithers l, Prince Rupert 4 Terrace vs Smithers schedule sees the members, aged between six and six- from 5:30 in the evening detaiispleasetelephonef:tx. PORTS Satarday. October 2 lasting until 7 p.m. and on 1174. Terrace vs Prince Rupert teen, hittihg the water S,nday, September 26 Snntlay, October :1 rather early in the morning Prince George 12, Kitimat 2 Prihce Rupert vs Terrace on Tuesday, Wednesday and "Language is part of a man's character." Francis Bacon Quesnel 3, Terrace 6 ~Aednesday, Octoher 6 Thursday as the session Smithers 2, Prince Rupert 14 Terrace vs Kitimat starts at 6:30 a.m. on these

DO YOU WANT Spruce Kings down Terrace. whips Quesnel 6-3 "To Stad Your Own Business?" OR fired his third of the af- Centennials in ternoon at 5:52, giving "Expand Your Present Business?"" Terrace a one goal lead, with the ever present Kelly MeCabe and Bud There are presently some inleresting opportunities in several rOugh encounter Langstrom getting the western locations in 8.('.. Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Maniloba 1o markel our exclusive lines of business products assists. as our agent or dealer. Centennial captain, Vern penalty minutes with the Bud Langstrom" gave the Sketchley, picked up four Kings collecting eleven. Cents a two goal lead at 8:09 Our distribution includes 3 meier names - I. S M TOSHIBA goals'on the weekend as the The third Prince George on a low shot from the point, CI'.T. Cents ran their exhibition goal came at 5:16 with lan Randy Hodgins picking up - I.B.M. Factory Reeds. Typewriters record to lotn" wins laid one Tennant of the Cents serving an assist on the play. Toshiba Calculators Toshiba Photocopiers loss. a delay of game penalty. Pat Babbitt got the final " C.P.T. Word Processing Cassette Power Typewriter Saturday he scored The Spruce Kings broke out goal el the game, taking a Steve Radford ... out for 'rerrace's lone goal in a :l to of their own end quickly nnd pass from Kelly l~leCabe to Also Dictating Equipment and Paper Shredders I loss to tile l'rincc (;eorge set up a tweet one situation. some time due to in- make the score six to three dustrial accident in the Plus exciting new products to be announced over the next t? Spruce Kings. Sunday, Kreiger waited for the for Terrace. Skelchley scored tllt't,e dcfenseman to make a' forest. months limcs, earning the hal trick. move, then slid the puck to as the Cet~ts clowned the Sande. This gave the King These products will be on display for the Business Show at Quesuel Millionaires (; to 3. forward a clear breakaway How the coach the Edmonton Plaza Hotel in Edmonton on October 51h, 6tb End Io end play 'and he beat Prive high over KellY, McCabe .., a Tiger and 7th, 1976 and at the Vancouver Hotel'in Vancouver on October 19th, 20th and 21st, 1976. If you require further in. highliglzled ,nest of the glove shoulder to round Terrace Centennials and sees it formation, please call this number collect, i604) 253.4231 and Sahn'day night's game as out the scoring. ask for one 0f our product managers, Mr. John Collins or Mr. The game came to an end the quesnel Millionaires the Cents-and Kings did Terrace Cefitenniai coach players like Vern Sketchley Jean f. Gcay, or writ~: battle at the Terrace Arena. with roughing and tripping, played the best game seen and Randy Hodgins who art, finally erupting into a fight. at the local arena for quite Wes Phillips in a CFTK Both tennis canto out interview indicated that he playing very well. tte also skating hard and i)laycd Coach Wes Phillips was some time on Suhday af- noted that some of the local pleased with the play of his ternoon. was pleased with the 1976-77 Superior Business Maohines rough but clean for two version of the Pacific North- players are really coming periods. There was heavy boys and noted that, with a Centemlials, led by along well and should prove west League entry, " hilling hut only thirty little puck-luck the Cents sharpshooter, Vern Sket- to be an important factor tn (BaO,).Ltd., could have been winners. chily, who scored three Speaking With TK's Brian ntinutes of penalties' i,1 the Carmen Brown ... a local Edwards; Phillips said that this year's record. Ih. 837 Ea,,l Ha~ting~ Street, l irst:tw0 frantes. The. Cents outshot the goals and drew one assist, singled out 'l'erracttt,s Van¢oover, n t hope Kings by a 53 to 35 margin, were full value for their 6 to he is pleased with the erformance of his team. He Carmen Brown and Kelly 'V6A I R8 With just over five missing many good scoring 3 victory over the quesnel ~ •McCabe who had verb' good opportunities right in front Millionaires. " escribed them as 'a dif- OR • minutes remaining in period ferent team from that which games over the pasl one the Spruce Kings picked of the Spruce King net. Sketchley scored the first weekend, He called them "it two goals for Terrace, one at played here last season. for vour convenience you could conlacl our branches lit any up their second goal on a "They're a muell quieter pair of tigers who like to go disputed play. As the Kings 13:13, taking a pass from full out all the time." time • Randy Hodgius, who was hunch of lads than we had VITTORIA were bringing the puck up last year" Phillips said. He summed up the pro- .. - Harry Bradley. 164', ;orl Street, Victoria, B.(-. V6R IHI, the ice, defenseman Larry left uncovered behind the season games to date as quesnel net and led Vern a "Whenever they are out (604) 598.5154 Woods of the Cents was there they give it everyAhing being satisfactory and said CALGARY dipped above the lip with a perfect pass. He scored that he was generally again at 18:36 on a three- they've.got, they just don't ..- Graham Lavery 370 tTth Avenue, S.W., (algary, high stick. However, this quit like some other teams pleased with'his crew. lie Alberta TTS 0A8. (403) 26~.~s62 went undetected and the way pahsing play With said it was just a matter of ltodgins and Tangstrom. I've seen", he continued.- F. OMONTON ~rince George club scored Phillips had some en- time for the boys to put it all .-Gordie t'lrtP., 16409 - |l,lh Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta ¢¢itbW0bdgstill on his knees quesnel had scored their together .and really get first goal at the 15 minute couraging statements to TSM 7S2, (403) 484.3326 at centre ice. King forward, make about some of the going. Pennington,threw the puck mark• Wes Pederson was back to the point and left all alone in front of the :~.~.c. Hodgson was free to drive a Terrace net and gave . low har~s!~0t into the net. Marleau no chance as he rifled a shot to the upper • " ~;'.':~;'~ ! i The ~)~[ period start@i ~.,£ ~'~~j,~low-.. ~;the play w~8. right hand conner. " :':F~I ~'~'~i~::~i~:J~,~ragged:~hhd rough. • The. ' quegnel"fie'd thG'sdi~fe 'fit two each before the fi'ame '9 " ~'~a~"f~:~((i:!:!~!i~:,, iCentqnnials picked up their ended on a tip-in from the :., i LUIJ~ ::~<~!]1/one.goal in the frame. At point by Doug Festerling. I.ii:~[~ !i::::~ ll:0l, with Spruce • King ~ ~ Millin" in the penalty box, Terrace went ahead 3 t02 Ray D,.'~,...... : ttodgins picked up a loose on a goal by Kelly MeCabe ...... puck in front of the Kings shortly after the second The Spruce Kings opened net. He fed the disc over to period started, but Quesael the scoring at the halfway Sketchley who made no came back to tie the game point in the first • period, mistake heating Fowlie. The once more, Don Daehyshy, Prince George cleared the Spruce Kings successfully with the assist •going to Ron : puck intothe C.ents zone and killed nine shorthanded ltalverson. behind the net McGee dug minutes, once for five Thg third period belonged ,: thepuckout and passed it to straight minutes, as the to the Cents, as they Scored i, Hey in the 'slot. Terrace Centennials had many three times to win the game ~i goaltendcr, Ray Prive made chances huteould not run up handily. Vern Sketehley ' the origimd .save on Roy's the score. shot but Jones picked up the The third period was the rebound and slipped it by slowest and the roughest. Vern Sketchley ,.. a: hal Prive on a low shot: Terrace nicked uo fifteen ~trick . ,,) btlJ~JhBH :k

@PKJ

iO IJ~rl~eComparc the new low price* for the Mazda Mizer 1300 cc coupe with • .. ~ " Honda Civic, Datsun B210, Toyota Corolla, VW Rabbit and Chevett¢. You'll agree, : " ~")i::: .the Mazda Mizer is the Bdst Buy. :!u lVlLIL6'aLe,o'rhe MazdaMizer was the firstcar tog= over5O highway * "~ (38 mpg "~city~in-- the 76 EPA tests.}

• :, ~'-~O ~ Every Mazda Mizer comes fullyequipped with featureslike ' .~power assisted front disc brakes, electric rear window defroster, high-back front "~ bucket seats'and 60 amp/hr heavy duty battery. Now's the time to seal a dealv. *Price based on Manufacturer'ssuggested retail price p,o.e. Halifax, IMontreal,Toronto. Vancouver, not includinghandlifig charges, license,gas. provincial salestax or local freight where applicable. Any individual dealer is Maz0aMotors of CanadaLid. free to sell at a lesserprice. Comparisonsbased on manufacturer'ssuggested retail pricesat time of publication.'t'Mileagnbased on U,S. EnvironmentalProtection Agency test results.The mileagefigures arc ektimates(U.S. gallonsconverted to Iml~rialgallods.) The actual mileageyou get willvary depending on the type of drivingyou do, you/drivinghabits, yo,',rear's conditionand optional equipment. Skeena Auto Metal Shop Ltd. 4842 Highway 16 West."635-6571 PAGE A12, THE HERALD, Wednesday, Sel~tember 29, 1976 <' Commercial_,_draftLeague Golt ,.,_L,_Th°rnl].ill _ I llllll&llll

p,ayer ..amp,onsn,pS x.:,.," onsports , Overall winner for low net " Terrace Commercial from tonight. T.he schedule The weatherman gave full in the tournament went to JIMMY MeLARNIN Another major boost to his His first title bout came/is He held it for a year only Hockey League will hold its is being drawn up now and cooperation to local golfers t'ANAI)A'S TOP BOXER career was a part time a lightweight against to lose it to Bfirney Ross at annual player at the will be available soon. this past week as the three Maria Knnarakis with a low the Gardens in May, 1934 on Sandman Inn, at 8 p.m. Jim McEwan Motors is Thornhill Clubs played off net of 135. OF 'File FIiIST Vancouver dock worker Sammy Mandell in Ma$' a split decision after 15 tonight, for coaches and. the new sponsor this year for theClubChampionships. Other winners in the IIALF CENTURY with an uncanny eye for 1928. But the titleholder rounds o!' gruelling pun- managers only. and will be taking over the Monday .and Tuesday championship [light were "I never had to be told boxing talent -- Pop Foster. completely outclassed ching. League president, Ray former Mantique Blazer afternoons saw eighteen Leona Wilcox, 1st low net, that wine, women and song . When Foster first saw Jimmy, whose first taste of A rematch was staged Trembley, informs us that franchise Other sponsors junior golfers playing nine Carol Cederberg, 2nd low could ruin a boxer, because MeLarnin in the ring as a 13 title fighting turned sour. that September and in what "( there is still room for more are Gordon and Anderson,' holes each for the Junior net and Norah Jacques, 3rd womenlalready believedsong could that ruin rawYear°id'hesawtalentinwhichcould be shapedthe of Inarematch1929, MeLarnin in November took was described as "a close. playersandthatanyonewho Pohle Lumber and Terrace Club Championships. low net. anyone." into championship material. careful measure of his desperate and punishing ;'.'.:, wants to play and has not Totem Ford. Winner and this years club First flight winners were -- Jimmy McLarnin The two paths crossed and opponent. 'He slowed him fight", MeLarnin regained been out to practice can The Commercial All Stars champion was Murray Hill Paulette Patterson, 1st low tie was affectionately young Jimmy began his long down by working on the his title. phone him at 635-3589. will be operated by the with runner-up Bob Park. gross, Emma Taft, 2nd low kno.wn as the baby-faced trek to the top. Foster body and then went to work MeLarnin defended his 'i'Ti Team practices will start league itself this year, Otherjnniors winning prizes gross, Judy Jephson, 3rd worked him hard and on the head and took the titie oncemoreagainst lies.,, :~:; next Monday evening with which is a switch from local in the two flights were low gross, Shirley Kor- Irish boy from Vancouver, Wayne Waiters, Vernon mendy, 1st low net, Sharon but any boxer in the late schooled him in the basics of decision in 10 rounds, in May, 1935 and Iosl. "~' all teams having one hour business sponsorship in the Carruthers, Gary. Main, Brewerton, 2nd low net and 192(1"sand early 1930's who boxing. He stressed basics Uufortunately by this time Wisely, lie retired a year '~7' each, two teams will have past. McLarnin had outgrown later and still lives very ';"' another practice on Thur- The four team di~'ision Morris Shaw, Mike Johnson Donna Harvey, 3rd low net. thefaced ring Jimmy would MeLarnintell you that in time"McLarnin and again. was taught lightweight and the title was comfortably today in ~.<.. sday, with all teams going looks stronger than in the and Doug Morrison. Winners in the second • Calilorllia. again the following Monday past and should provide Organizers of thejunior club flight were Maria his stinging left was that the best defence'was, null and void.' ills 13 years in the ring :¢i;.r;.; and two more on Thursday. some exciting hoekey in the were disappointed with the Konarakis, 1st low gross, anything but soft and speed t"lfthey can't hit you "You licked the right brnught Mcl,arnin fame and ' First game of the season coming season, according to turnout andare considering. Greta Patterson, 2nd low euddley, they can't hurt you."l fighter at the wrong lime.'" Inrlune. lie boxed in "/7 pro "~ will be played two weeks teaguepresident Ray. holding the junior chain- gross, GailSharples,3rdiow. McLarnin jabbed, poked Foster taught him basie ring said Foster. pionship earlier in the year gross, Bonnie Shaw, 1st low and pounded out a living in strategy I"box a fighter aud MeLarnia went lUl to wm lights and woil 63 lit theni. And, in ni;in)' Mcl,tu'nin is .... show in thecomingyear, net, MarilynPatterson, 2nd the ring for 13 years and fight a boxer.")and lie severalnlorelightsthalnlet ;" NO r-'menm The Men's and Ladies' low net and Dian Verwey, during that span heLook the taught Jimmy to usehisleft Ynung t'orbett III Ior Ihe .~lill hliXillg h)il:iy .;- at lilt" -..~, Clubs came out together on 3rd low net. world welterweight tit']e to such an extent that 14 world welterweight title at B,I'. ~pui'ls ilall ill i,'anie. :: ,-a"ns" Saturday and Sunday for Novelty prizes went to twlee and probably faced years later Mcl.arnln took Ihe Gardcnin 19',,:1. Cerhcll. lit,'.,, Olll, ill lilt' Inllsl < power a thief 36 hole tournament. DebhieCarrutbers, Paulette more opponents than any the welterweighl title in thc a big loll hanller, t'iinil, out dlslingllisht,d inenlbers ill .,,' Number of entries were Patterson and Maria other fighter in history., right roundand didn't throw ill lilt', openilig round. Iht, Ihill and ii specilil plnnldiug Ml'l.;li'llin's i'ill,~ ,~ecllUlilia,~ bl'en di,voleil to : Prince ~,~P-eor-e average for this tournament ,onarakis for best nines on Ilewasthe"darlin"ufthe a single punch with his ., and the lovely weather Saturday's play. Norah huge Irish community in right, lind head itiili his loll. Ihll Ililn. 11 cllnlains Inlill) produced some fine golf. ,Jacques, Donna Harvey and as he fought McLarnin believed in Mt'l,al'nin had .~couled his Ilil'lllt'llhl¢i~ Ill Me.l.ilrnin'.,, Danny Rosingren was Dian Verwey were winners before capacity crowds at Foster. They co-owned Ihe Ullpuuenl zind llolit'l.d Ih,iI gl'l'~lt %I'~il'.~, I qlohis. Madison Square Garden and same iihihisophy which when corbel l Ilii',.~ ,llt.ll lie Ilt'0. ,~llillll'l" i'liliping.~, Iiglii ~'" 'l'EllllAUI.; NilllTli.%ll';N 2l. Terrace got together and named Men's Club of low putts prizes on during his career the son of Jimmy recounted years '.' I'IIlNt'I.; (;El)lt(;l': 8 Peter Petersonseored a try Champion with a 36 hole Sunday's play. droppcd Ills righl .t litlh.. cilrll.~, glll~.l'.~ ,illil liis pel' .'.' In weekend rugby action early which was con~,erted gross score of 147 and Bob Special prizes for the 1976 an h'ish immigrant family later as: "'A boxer must be Mt'l.arnln c,,ntt.lrd ~tllh, Sltll,il hislory, "" Terrace journeyed to by Ray ltomeniuk. Prince Middleton was runnerup season were awarded to earned approximately made. lie cannot he born. It'll In Iht, dim .,id I iwbetl Ills t'hl.~sic lill~t'll '~" Smithers to Ineet Prince George came back with with a 151. Laurie Thain, match play. $500,00U. Evenif he is born as strong dropprd. Ih" dl'l)|qlt'd him llll,.:ogrliph In lllo II;ill dlil,s George for their first rugby another try by Casper Low nets for the Chain- runnerup, Leona Wilcox, tlowever, the most as an elephanl and as swill IV,lt'e nlure,lnd ;d .'..;7 ,d Ihe Illth ,,d ,~llli',l a llab3' hlc('il encounter. :: " Wallraven to take an 8 to 6 pionship Flight went to Jean Sandoversly, C.G.L.A. amazing part of the Jimmy as a gazelle - and I wasn'l lh's| rotuld ,lilnln~ had his Iigh,rr. hill h,illy .- wh,il ;i In the first half:~Terrace lead. From then on it was a ~ Clayton .Lloyd-Jones and pin round, runnerup Debbie McLarnin story is that - someone has toteach him lirsl world litle. Iighil,r', played totally disorganized Terrace ball game all the Buster Patterson respec- Carruthers, chip-in board, unlike most fighters of his Io be a boxer. The learning ball andas ~ result Prince way with tries scored by lively. CarolCederbcrg, and ringer day, ,Jimmy was able to has to come slow and hard '~HE A4aN WHO/S ~ George led.4 to 0 on h try JohnDodds, Ray Homeniuk Winners in first flight board Laurie Thain, keep Ills money. He retired and it's never finished." LF_.,~OIAIG"~/E A.L. ~ H~5G£ORGE -[lie scored by Dan Ryan. and Bob Shewchuk. All the were Ray Taft, 1st low Paulette Patterson and at the ripe old age of 29 and Following three years of I1~ HITTING,,AS .:. yOUNG~T In the second halt' afte'r a tries were converted by Hay gross, Ed Kormendy, 2nd Sharon Brewerton. lie retired a very rich man. hard training in Vancouver, The reason McLarnin was Foster and the 16 year old "7141S IS BEING tOO 7O few stern.words by team Homeniuk for a final score low gross, Murray Sharon B,rewerton able to aeeomplish these two Jimmy set out on tbe road to IIV/~E~/~ /~IiV~--~S PlAy FOR captain, Nell Flieshman. of 24 to 8. Morrison, 1st low net and received a prize for the amazing feats is very San Francisco for ~;£ORGE ~.,, He Brock Elliot, 2nd low net. greatest reduction of simple. In the days of eigar MeLarnin's first lest. BgO/~ /N Second flight winners handicap through the year. smoking and unethieal Schooling in San Fran- AT" 20 were Gordon Clarkson, 1st going from a handicap of 45 boxing promoters and hard- cisco consisted of $50 bouts O,VLY23, HE BP.ETr.,~,~45HE$ lowgross, Ray Johnson, 2nd lasl September to 36 this drinking fighters, James for the steadily improving U~VF_.~STO low gross, Dave Sparrow, September. MeLarnin was Simon pure. MeLarnin. In 1924. they ALL F/£LDS. tst low net and Hans Ver- "rheseelubchampionships The McLarnin family moved to Los Angeles where IIV 175 HE wey, 2nd Iow net. wind up a successful year came to Canada when Jimmy began to get main HAD "lT-/E Several novelty prizes for the Tharnhill golfers. Jimmy was three and events and then, in192~,Pop /VlOhTttl7S wereawardod to those less Despite the miserable moved to 'Vancouver six Foster decided that •successful golfers who had summer weather members WITI4 19.~, their problemson the course madegood use of thegolfing years later. There were 12 McLarnin was ready for the HE ~VE" ~ children in the family and big time-- New York City. IN89RUNS ~ i --now names mentioned, facilities and were very. while they weren't poor On February 24, 1928, AN~ SOC/~D fortunate in the break in the there wasn't much to spare. McLarnin faced Sid Torts in 5 HO/HE~, Ladies Club Champion clouds for the tournaments Years later MeLarnin Madison Square Garden ~yas Jean Sandoversly with this year. The men's and would recall that hismother beforeaeapacity crowd. He a gross score of 190. Debbie ladieS' clubs will finish off gave the children a strict decked him in the first Carruthers and Moo Neale their competitive play with Methodist upbringing and round. were close on her heels with a Tombstone Tournament to It's back! ... Wednesday Bernie's most recent un- scores of 191 and 192 be held ~unday, October 3 - he credits that more than Suddenly, Jimmy was an Night tlockey on BCTVt dertaking was a seat behind respectively. 'rec.off time: 9 a:m. anything asa big help to his • .Irish hero to. New ¥orkers ..... Last fall, BCTV received the play-by-play mie for .... career .... :: and he ~as alsoon his.way. ,., • letters, calls and cables CTV's Canada Cup Series. ~=:~((~ ..~-~~[~,~jT~. .=~,~._..~J from viewers because it was One of the best-known men • _ --" announced that there would in NHL Hockey, Lloyd The healiest dog on record was a Saint Bernard inWis¢on- be no more weekly hockey Giimour, has joined the sin who at age5 weighed 295 pounds. telecasts. They've been Wednesday Night Hockey answered. Starting this fall, crew as 'Colour- Wednesday Night Hockey Commentator'. Lloyd returns to BCTV. served twenty years as Wednesday, October 6, professional referee in the will be 'face-off' night for NHL. ' sixteen Vancouver Canueks ,..,...,.....,..,. BINGO TONIGHT games. For the first time, Can't Win SEALED TENDERS for the projects or services western Canadians will be Hear about the employee listed below, addressed to the Head, Tenders and able to follow the home team who prayed for a raise? The ' exclusively. boils heard about it and fired Contracts, Pacific Region, Department of Public .%~ AY (;AMES the poor guy for going over Works, Canada, 1444 Alberni Street, Vancouver, Wed. Pet. 6 Pitts. Penguins his head.. B.C. VGG .1A2 and endorsed with the Protect Wed. Pet. 20 Buffalo Sabres Name, will be received Until the specified closing Wed. Nov, 24 Buffalo Sabres Varied Professions time and date. Tender documents can be ob- Wednesday, September 29th Wed. Dec. 8 Tor. Maple Leafs A woman marrying her tained through the above noted Department of Wed. Dec. 22 L.A. Kings fourth husbandwas greeted Public Works, Vancouver office and DPW, P.O. by an old friendwho remem- Box 305, Smithers, B.C. Wed. Jan. 5 At'. Flames bered the first three:. "The Wed. Feb. 9 Men. Can. first was a banker, the PROJECT Wed. Mar. 2 At. Flames second an actor, the third a PR 010151 - Fire Alarm System -RCMP Detach- (Doors open at 7 pare. - Bingo at 8 p.m.) II()M I'; (;AM I,'S minister--and now you've ment Building, Smithers, B.C. Wed. Nov.3 N.Y. Rangers married an undertaker.How Wed. Nov. 17 Buff. Sabres is it that you'vepicked men Wed. Dec. t Det. R. Wings in such varied professions?" Closing Date: 11:00 AM PDST. october 18; 1976 Wed. Dee. 29 Bos. Bruins "One for the money,two for the show," repliedthe bride, Wed. Jan. 12 Minn. N. Stars INSTRUCTIONS i Wed. Jan. 19 Pitts. Penguins "three to gel ready...... '. Wed. Feb. 16 Bos. Bruins Brown Nose Tobe considered each tender must be submitted , Wed. Mar. 9 Wash. Caps Then there was the can- on the forms supplied by the Department and BCTV's Sports Director, nibal Who was expelled from '; Bernie Pascall, will handle must be accompanied by the security specified $1,000 in Oash school when they caught him the play-by-play action. buttering up the teacher. on the tender documents. ,:Have' you seen some of those silly ads lately The lowest or any tender not necessarily, ac- Shish Kebab cepted. suggesting that you Ancient Norsemen de- should pay more than scribed the meat they H.D. Ladeu¢ier ADMISSION: $10.66 for a gallon of Top, cooked on a stick as . Head, Tenders and.Contracts of the Line paint. At AI & " "steik" -- today we call it Shishkebab. Pacific Region Mac they say there is .. 10ard & Admission $5 something wrong with, ~ those prices. AI & Mac REGIONALDISTRICT OF KITIMAT-STIKINE your IRLY store won't! Additional Cards '1 charge you a dime more than $10.66 per gallon VOTERS' LIST until further notice and that Is for Interior or' exterior Latex or Alkyd. You could be stuck for a OOURT OF REVISION couple of dollars extra if, Arena Banquet Room you go to an Ultra Deep TAKE NOTICE that any person entitled to be registered as an elector in Base at AI & Mac but then the Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine may make objection to the that's because 'Ultra retention of any name appepring on the list of electors for the Regional Deep costs more. Get District, and the objectionmay be made on any ground that would down io AI & Mac your disqualify the elector or applicant from having his name retained or DOOR PRIZES ;IRLY Bird Store and registered as an elector on the list of electors. This objection must be filed ; check out the hundreds of at the Regional District Office, October 1, 1976~ ; colors available -. open.a !charge account while yoff A COURT OF REVISION hasbeen appointed and willsil at the Regional ~,are there; tllat's if youl District Office, No. 9.4644 Lazelle Avenue, Terrace, B.C., on October 1, Sponsored by Terrace Ohild DevelopmentCentre :;happen to have an ac- 1976 between the' hours of 9:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon, and will continue to sit '.count there, already! if required, from time to time thereafter until all appeals have been : (fin) :~}. heard.

,.

,t THE .HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976, PAGE A:3

The big bad. biologist: . , .,::Letter from Masset, and the wolf !Queen Ch arlott-ds; "By Elvira Bryant By Dave Hatter, Biologist time, but to provide for the "control" efforts at least in . -" • " .= ".- Smithers Fish & Wildlife desires of 7 and 8 requires response to complaints of What a cnange mis '"~ot~'~ line and'fish got land decided to'go to a Steak during" the Christmas 'That the .wolf is a withdrawing opportunities livestock damage and three evening, such a calm con- tangled in and around a' Bingo, I allowed" myself to holidays, we will accept the beautiful, interesting and for numbers 5 and 6, are controlling wolves to trast toour violent storm submerged log. It was ' be talked into going as well. fact that the September one: • ecologically important re.~pectfully, and vice versa, protect wild ungulates ini yesterday. • I am told the tempting to take a swim for 'Of course I happened to win worked out well despite its animal is. something that How does one chodse? The.. some locations, Hunters' winds reached eighty miles the fish, but the previous twice, at times when one or being in what was still a biologists (including first six are direct positives anxious to reduce corn- an hour. It was certainly one night just wading barefoot two other people also had holiday time. i mushroom, neverseems to myself) have been working in that the user receives petition between wolves and way to get the swimming into the lower part of the Bingo. The policy then was - , hard to sell over the past: something directly from themselves and trappers pool taken down in a nurry: river had been cold enough, for all winners to stand up Learning Assistance matter. decade. I therefore take the wolves. The last two are, at anxious to pocket the more 'Sinceit had been emptied or The wind has played with one card and the first Teachers are on the staff Kerry spent almost four concern which has been 'best, indirect positives in than $100 they can get for .water sometime previous, havoc with the tall broad with the number called won this year and for awhile I weeks here and made expressed about furbearer that the "user" is satisfied each wolf pelt are probably the pool was on its way bean plants and even some the meat. The rest were was listed for two such several trips out on the B.C. status for the wolf only by the denial of another exerting as much pressure elsewhere when the owners of the tied up gladioli have given a dollar each. That classes. Some changing had Canuck with grandpa. It generally, and criticism user. It is important to on wolves as they can in all, stopped the Mah Jong game fallen over. Thelatter plants night I won two one dollar to be done this week, so now seems heis a good cook and which has been leveled at consider the reasons for this of these areas, but nowhere in order to rescue the have been somewhat bills. Of course since then I I will have an Art course for also did very well with the me specifically, as a attitude. These appedr to is there evidence of a various sections, disappointing since the have been going to Bingo each Semester. I am sure 'o.~er fi~in_g..ins.ks.' Both positive sign. I am delighted fall into two main classes: pepnlation decline. Ontario One of the new teachers leaves turned a rusty.eolour games fairly regularly with many students are going to will be anticzpa!ing next that Red Riding Hood and 1) Biological - fear that reports populations which had gone to Langara in'the -- no doubt it is some Tanis- -- a different benefit from the L A T summer wnen [ne scnooi the three little pigs are the activities of the other are "stable, moderate .... Peggy Sue" on Friday disease that the young togetherness. She is usually though, as in lm'ger classes holidays again be~in, so that eh~,.~ ;a i|tfl~, ,~h~,,- e of me fismng togemer can De losing their influence on the users might lead to severe while all other areas report evening so I was a little pli~nts should have been the lucky one but the night ...... - public mind. However, I feel population reductions or "stable, high", or in-" worried as to how she and dusted for early in their : three of us travelled down to 'whogiving needs help itto tho individunl nappierconh.nued_fIwasa~omuch to gnow that vie that much of the public extinction, creasing populations, the skipper made out in the, .growth. Next year we will the Skidegate Hall and had h mushrooms are •was not out thet'e alone ) concern on this "issue" has 2) Philosophical- personal Biologically, classifying the storm. According to Peggy , have to wage some sort of arranged to share any T e ' . - been generated by opinion that other uses are wolf as a furbearer in B.C. Magnone, it was so rough war against the snails also, v~innlngs I actually won growing in the manure Marm Gonazlez has left misapprehension, and I inappropriate, was a "no risk" decision as tha[ she was too scared to" as we seem to have had an twenty-five dollars. Ap- again! Several carloads of a!.read.y for. VancOuver and wouldlike to take this op The biological fears could far as the viability of wolf think of getting sick. Also it excellent year for the patently my cheeks became pickers have been taken wc.t0rm..~e ann ..ms. hog portunity to recount some ~)f be allayed soi~ewhat if the populations is "concerned. was the worst wind that this propogation of- the snail quite flushed etc. No doubt it away to the police station zoroa win no ~oul)t ve on the considerations involved user accepts that our prime Even with the wolf on the 31 foot pleasure craft had species, was more fun to watch recently. When the family the!r way a.crossCana.d?, by in our decision. objective is to maintain furbearer list, our bag limit ever been in. . Yesterday we enjoyed mother win than it would took Kerry Laverty to earzy ucto~er: L¢ cored ne Our central and basic viable populations, that I of three per hunted, closed Friday and Saturday were fresh peas with mint, fresh have been to win one's self. Sandspit there were people that Marie and Mary will objective (for all species, (and most other biologists) season during whelping,~ lovely days and even I threw from the garden. For a few It seems not only was I picking mushrooms while, find their way back to this but I will here deal only with got into this profession prohibition of the leg hold a line rite the Sangan for a. weeks we had had some in • flushed, but I was also drinking beer. It is too bad coast later though -- the wolf) is to maintain because of a special feeling trap, and minimal control change- withou[ success salad, and a few people somewhat flustered when morals don'tseemtomatter especially since Marie has healthy, viable populations. for wild places and wild efforts give us the distine- however, save for much consumed a lot of raw ones. told I was close to having a when there is money to he had several drinks of water This is in recognition that things, and that 1 would be tion of being the most floating seaweed and get- in the beginning it looked as Bingo. That same night the made. The fact th'at people from St. Mary's Spring. the "ecosystem" (referred reluctant, as a professional, conservative (and humane) ring hooked onto a log or though there might never be other member of the party can become mentally Anyone who drinks that to by some as "nature") is to make a casual or im- wolf managers in northern two. We were fishing when enough to cook hut no doubt won $50 and as it turned out deranged as a result of water, so it is said, always composed of many, in- "proper diagnosis before North America. the tide was ebbing, so as. appetites are eventually we were $2.50 ahead by the eventually consuming the has to return! terrelated parts, all of which recommending action. I'm The philosophical time went along it became satiated. The red potatoes end of that evening. Oneday are essential. This ap- not suggesting either that I. questions are'more difficult much easier to hook onto are now getting quite largei perhaps I will be a lone ~EASO~ ~n" 7u~ proaches .'*preservati°n for am infallible or that you te deal with. An individual's anydebris. -- I think they tasted better winner-- and it is this idea N.V. Y4~ES~/Av~ preservation's sake", and I (the public) should be view of "truth'~ is just that Early Saturday morning when they were new and that no doubt keeps all the E~/JO¥~OA F/~/£ make no apology for that• complacent. By all means, -- his view -- and is net the new Elementary School small though, people going each week to SEASOn, ~/Or ~,.'; An important point here is question programs and necessarily truth. The principal caught a 12 pound This Wednesday the new sucn a game. ZEST OF H/M~O-I, that the essential "parts" provideany information you question of whether it is cohoe in the same stream Community Hall will be The new princ.ipal of /s-rH~ PLA~'O~ are populations, not in- think might be useful. "right".or "wrong" to kill and later in the day someone used for the first time for GeorgeM. Dawson wrote to ~/C~' dividuals. All individuals However, you need not wildlife is akin more to else caught a nice fish up. Bingo. No doubt l would he all teachers individually in " ~IVLE'~=~' (including you and me) can question my motives. The religion than to resource further in the pools. Tanis. talked into going there if the August to inform them of an who ~su~,q ,4zL ultimately be replaced animals come first, management. Nevertheless, and Ed Woode decided to try Q.C.D.T.A. Executive early September meeting OVE~ c~N'rL~F/~L~ provided that there are Still in the dontext of it seems necessary to here their luck there early meeting wasn't on in. the and to tell them which 7"0 6RAB tilTS resources (habitat) biological considerations, state my own beliefs. I see Sunday,,-- before the,,.~vind. afternoon. These meetings" courses they would have for AWAY fRO,~ OPPOSI~

available to allow. many of the supposedly nothing "wrong" with the got all worked up m ltS at Port Clements are each of the Semesters. The ' 8ArtERY. R/VE~S, A secondary objective is " searching' biological consumptive use of wildlife destructive campmgn! The stopped for a supper break meeting on September 2 YANKSWHO CA~E FROM 7"0 "17-1E 7WE to provide for public uses questions" which have been , provided that such use does tracks of a big and a small and then may go .qn for a didn't seem quite right but CALIK AN~EL~ IN 7~ which are consistent with posed by some not significantly reduce bear gave some cause for hour or two after that. most people did manage to BOBBY BON~ 7~a, the first objective (long- correspondents are inap- numbers and does not worry up until 'ranis hooked I had always been attendand we actually got a : /./AS ~IT"TKDOVER. term preservation of the propriate, naive, or beth; I completely prejudice the a large cohoe; then all adamant about not liking lot accomplished. The new AND IS -mE B~57" species). Public input am willing todeal with these opportunities for other thoughts of .a bear were Bingo and kept refusing to teachers also met the day BASE STEALER IN provides the direction for privately or at some future users. " forgotten entirely. We never go. Then when Eleanor and previous. As long as a .~PILFERED LF_.A~JE. TO LAST BASE Y~ this, and I have considered public meeting if there is 'did get to see the fish Wally Laverty were here meeting isn't scheduled views both for and against sufficient demand. The Indeed, one can make a the wolf-furbearer proposal. conclusion of my biological strong case for the man who J . . -" ' : The sum of public benefits assessment of the wolf pulis the trigger or sets the which ,might accrue from situation is that adding the snare (and leaves the wolves are as follows: wolf to the furhearer list will habitat intact) as being less I t) Indirect benefits from not result in population "wrong" than the man who whatever contribution decline. The best supporting flicks the light switch and, thank applesfor goodness wolves make to the health evidence for this prediction. :thereby'contributes to,the and completeness of: the. can be obtained through:~a : ~demand:for.projectssuchas ; environment~ ..... • Comparison of the Current the Peace River Dam. We 2) Satisfaction in knowin~ statm of wolves elsewhere 10stseveral thou~nd moose that the wolf is "alive and in northern North America. in that one. They, and the well" in the north. We questioned wildlife several packs of wolves 3) Opportunity for ob- agency representatives in which depended upon them servation. Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, • -- and. countless other 4) O~portunity for Saskatchewan, Alberta, creatures --" are gone :photograp y, ' Northwest Territories, forever. It is perhaps one e[ 5) .Opportunity. for Yukon Territory and Alaska our greatest ironies that recreational hunting. and found the following: the however "humane" and 6) Opportunity for com- wolf has long been both "moral" it may be, it is mercial hunting (trapping). hunted and trapped in all civilization that will 7) Satisfaction that eight areas. There are no ultimately extinguish our hunting of wolves is for- bag limits for either hunters Wil~l things. Provide big bidden. or trappers in seven of these wilderness and; trappers or 8) Satisfaction that (in Alaska, hunters but not no, the wolf knows how to trapping of wolves is for- trappers, have limits in live in it. In this context, it bidden. some management areas),' will be the. necessity for Clearly it is impossible to and in five of the eight the removing the wolf from the do what everyone wants. It open season is year-round. fur list, hot the act of placing is possible to provide for All except .the Northwest it there, which will signal items 1 .to 6 at the same T_erritories .are exerting ~e beginning of the end, i - • i

Good banking for good living-after sixty. If you're sixty years old or better, you should look into Sixty-Plus, The Royal Bank's new bundle of special banking privileges. Free. Some of these privileges are: -Ha service charge for chequing: hill payment services, or traveller's cheques. -A specially designed cheque book that gives you a .permanent copy. -A $5 annual discount o~ a Safe Deposit Box or Safekeeping MClNTOSH Service. -A special Bonus Savings Deposit Service with interest linked to the Consumer Price Index. It's Mac munchin' time againJ New crop B.C: Macs are back.., harvest-fresh -Special term deposit that pays high interest monthly with and just as crackling crisp and juicy as yo u expect them to be. flexible redemption privileges. B.C. Mclntosh Reds--so good they're the most popular apple So come'on in and see me or one of my staff today for all the details. Or, if you'd prefer, give me a call. in,the West... : I , ]

• . ..,' • IZl 6s an instant family snack anytime, anylblace . .~.~_.-~.. ~.'~~ Peter,Munro o a wholesome and cheery as alunchbox fruit ~ ~:~ A||istant Hana@r~ • m tempting and ~olourful in salads ~, ~ ]~":~ 636-7117 Mll full-flavoured and zesty in all your family's ~- - :_-. ~__].~.._--~ .~ ROYAL BANK ..- favouriteapple desserts • " ~- -~-- ~ -- --=~~ serving

British Columbia ' • ...... look to for goodness

. '::.,'~ Write for.our ¢olourfu 16'page apple recipe booklel~ Send 25¢ in coin with your name and address to: B.C. Tree Fruits Ltd., Dept. 'N', Kelowno, B.C, =..PAGE A14,, THE HERALD, WednesdaY,, Se~;e,-,~ber,29, ,1976. , II ~;...... 635- i 6357 19. Help Wanted : ~19. Help Wdnt.ed ~.33. For Sale. Misc ...... ,.39. Boats & Engines 1. Coming Events 14. Business Personal t4. BUSINESS PERSONAL NATIVE COURTWORKER, & FARMERS Terrace Day Care Center now Work Wanted: Bullduzlng, lOt EMPLOYMENT O~- COUNSELLING RANCHERS , For Sale: Hunter's Special. 24' i The Herald, 3212 Kalum Street. has a few openings for children Mobile Home Furnace Reduce production costs by 'riverb°at' 2 sets trailer axles, clearing, basement digging,. PORTUNITY ASSOCIATION OF B.C. is ..P.O. Box 399. Terrace, B.C. 3 to 5 years of age In a learning Repair and Service. Alcohol Abuse Control Program supplementing low quality Toro riding lawn mower and Phone 635.6357 etc, Bsckhoa work, roto.tlltlng,' accepting applications for the environment. Center Is open post hole dlgglng. Phone 635- Director forages and-or straw 'with 1975 Camero. Only 6000 miles. '"Subscription rates: 51ngle"c'op~ ,'•' from/:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. For and position of: SUPERVISOR dehydrated alfalfa pellets, Phone63S-3265. (p.37) 6782. (Ctf) 11~6-§RI1 Job Location: 20 cents. Monthly by carr.ler 80 further information call 635-3424 Alcohol Abuse Control Program cents. After S p.m. (c.41) Terrace, B.C~ Pellets feature ease of handling, or 635•7642. (c-39) CUSTOM Assistant no waste feeding and bottei" Yearly by mall In~,Canada The G(tsan.Carrler District Duties: MEAT CUTTING To Supervise and evaluate the growth and production for your TNE SUZUKI $12.00. Six months In Canada SALE SALE SALE Tribal Counc|l invites ap- $7.00. Senior Citizens $7.50 per 15c Per lb. work of the Native Court. livestock. --or further in- Thrift Shop on Lazelle Ave. plications for the two captioned formation phone or write: year. (next to Spee Dee Printers) Phone positions to be employed In the workers in the Terrace reglon. To develop tralning programs Paddle Valley Products Ltd., Yearly by mall outside Canada Mills Memorial Hospital 635-3830 Hazelton area. $18.00. Six months $10.00. and workshops for the Court- Box SOB, Mayerthorpe, Alberta, SELLOUT Auxiliary Thrift Shop Sale. (p-41) The two Alcohol Abuse Phone (403) 786.2702. (c.39) Authorized as second class mall Saturday, October 2. 10a.m. to 2 Control Program Workers will workers in the region. To be Involved in the recruiting and by the Post Office Department, p.m. Everything In our shop will NEW IN TERRACE. Pro.tech perform their functional duties continued at Ottawa and for payment of & A Service Co. hiring of new Courtworkers as Oat, Hays Bundles 50c or be included in this sale. As Electronic Engineering. We under the direction of the Tribal consider trade? Excellent horse postage In cash. many items as you can get into specialize in repelr of all home the need arises. To .establish TERRACE • For Contract Cleaning Council's Advisory Committee good working relations between feed. 14 miles E. of New Classifieds due by 12:00 noon the largest paper bags we can and commercla| electronic on Community Programs. They EQUIPMENT Competitive Efficient the native Indian community Hazelton Post Office on Hwy. 16 Monday. $2.00 for first 20 words, find is yours for only Sl. No limit systems. We will also engineer' will be responsible for the 10 cents each word thereafter. -Call Harvey and the justice system. at large "Hay for Sale" sign• SALES LTD. to the number of bags you fill. to your requirement. No.7 4621 implementation and super- No refunds on classified ads. Qualifications: (c-41) 4539 :~relg 63S-6384 • There is a good selection of Lokelse 638-8215 vision of the following clothing, shoes, boots, sewing The person selected should Rear bumper for Chev pickup • Cff programs: have an extensive background 1. Coming Events patterns, purses, skates and ave your trailer skirted befo~:e 1) Alcohol abuse public S25, 20 gal. hot water tank • $35, ...... ~ books. Many items are suitable winter. For a neat and tn working with native Indian 1 set low mount mirrors • $15. 43. Rooms for Rent awareness program. people. They should have a first i Weight Watcher~ for costumes (Hallowe'en is • Webb Refrigeration professional job at reasBnable 2) Community alternative Phone 635.2348. (p.40) .... coming up, children's "dress- 4523 SOUCIE 635.2108 cost phone: Bakker's Modular hand knowledge of the values meeting held ,every alcohol abuse control and life styles of native Indians. Semi.Automatic wringer "51nglo& double sleeping rooms '~" Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the" up" or lust to take apart for Structures at 636.1760. (p.40) programs. buttons, zippers etc. Our stock They should be completely washing machine. 2 speed wlthcooklngfacllltleeanddslly ~'~ Knox United Church 16, Lost 3) Alcohol abuse rescue familiar with the structure of agitator. Zenith square model. -nnaldservice. Alto apartments needs to be reduced so come out program, referrals and follow. Hall, 4907 Lazell,e the justice system and be aware Very good condition. S70or best & houses. Phone635.6658. Saturday morning and support One Mossburg 12 gauge shotgun up services. (CTF) .Avenue. the Hospital Auxiliary and get a Authorized in blue case• 51 miles east of of the role of Courtworkers in offer. Phone 635.7308. (c.39) 4) Counselling services. that system. They must be able bargain for yourself• Service Depot Prince Rupert. Reward. Phone i 5) Para.prof essional to articulate the position of For Rent: a bedroom for Native Resource Center will Remember, each bag you fill Repairs to Refrigerators 627.1565 (Prince Rupert) after development services. only costs you $1. Freezers, Washers, Dryers, S:30 or local RCMP. (c.40) native people coming into working girl. Shared kitchen. hold a BINGO every Tuesday Preference will be given to conflict with the law. Close to town. Sl00 per month. night. And Ranges those applicants with extensive PARENTS (Ctf} 19. Help Wanted Demonstrated ability In FOR BENT Available October 7. Phone 635. 4451 Greig years of experience directly reporting writing would be an IN CRISIS related to the development, 6941. (c.40) $1.50 for first card, $1.00 for 'GRANDUC asset. each additional card or 6 cards• Are you making your own life supervision and operation of an OPERATING CO. Salary: For Rent: furnished room, for $4.00 (Ctf) • and your childrens' miserable? Arborite Work Cabinets alcohol abuse control program, 0hain Saws P.I.C.'s goal is to help you Power Plant $14,000.00 per annum. cooking facilities. 635.4630. (p- Alterations Finish and shaw effectiveness in Applications will be accepted become the loving constructive Supervisors working with native people. 39) Terrace Duplicate Bridge Club parent you really want to be. Carpentry Work until October 1, 1976. Mail to: will commence play each Salary will be commensurate By the day All enquiries absolutely To supervise crew and shift • 319. 193 East Hastings St. For Rent: private entrance Tuesday night at 7:30. Play will Contract or Hourly with experience and Vancouver, B.C. V6A 1N7 (c- confidential. operations in an automated qualifications. This position is near town. Sleeping room with ~ be in Room 4, Caledonia High Phone Mary or John steam.electric power plant. 39) TERRACE • =r School. All bridge players are Phone Don open to both men and women• cooking facilities for Working 635-4419 Applicants must have a valid Abstention of alcohol Is .-E.-~U'J. j>.M E NT gentlemen. Own bathroom for " Invited to attend. For part- or Jane B.C. Second Class Stationary ' Taxi Drivers nershlp or Information. Phone 635-5708 desirable. Automobile essential SALES LTD. your convenience. Everything. 635-4607 Engineer's ticket. Experience for position. Starting date: mid- Full time, part time, Class 4 453'9 ~;reig 635.6384 supplied. Reasonable. 2703 S. ~ :635.7356. (CTF) Ilcence and police permlt (p-40) with turbine and electrical October. Eby. (cff) switch gear desirable. Salary- Negotiable. required. Contact manager, ~-oyaJ~ order-~ "M-~se ~oclge: ~. Engagements TERRACE' Major equipment in plant -- Terrace Taxl - 635.2242 (CTF), For ,~ale: Boy's 10.speed bike. ' No. 1820, Terrace, B.C. Meeting~ Submit applications and 47. Homes for Rent I held every 2nd and 4th Thor- Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Presser APPLIANGE REPAIR two 260,000 pph Fester wheeler resumes in writing to: TYPIST-REC'EPTIONIST $50. Phone 635-3148. (C-40) power boilers. Two 18,000 sday evern month at 8 p.m. I are pleased to announce the 4621 Park Avenue Chairman KVACGE turbines condensing For permanent employment in For Sale: Cream separator, 3 bedroom house for rent• Semi- Phone 635.6641. CTF i engagement of their daughter, F ~', efficient service to GItsan.Carrier Chartered Accountants'. office. * , Cindy Lou, to Mr. Gordon Hull, and extracting. District Tribal Council milking machine, Jersey cow, furnished. Close to Thornhill a makes of major Pay scale depends on Financial statement typing veal & baby beef calves, 2 goats, School. 24'x30' workshop• For Thornhlll Calorie Counters~ son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald P.O. Box 322. experience would be an asset. meet every Tuesday, Thornhlll Hull, Terrace, B.C. Wedding to appliances. engineer's ticket in possession: laying pullets, ~;, bred quarter more information 635.5692. (c- Hazelton, B.C. Apply to: horsemare. Phone635.7563. (p. 40) ~..•Elementary School, 7:15 p.m. take place October 30, 1976, 2A - $1050.00 per month. V0J I Y0. 2A & B - $1900 per month. Howard Pruner, C.A. 40)' New members welcome from Knox United Church, Terrace, Westinghouse 0 Care should be taken to relate McAIpine & Co. • ,.~iTerrace and Thornhlll. B.C. (p-39) 1A - $1950.00 per month. experience and training to the ...... For Rent: I bedroom furnished Service Depot The above is based on a 6 and 4644 Lazelle Ave. For Sale: I year old layers, house in Thornhill. Jahone 635- adverti sed duties and Terrace, B.C. Good for laying or boiling fowl. ~"Rebekah~" "Lodge Bazaar and" 8. Card of Thanks 2 schedule. Overtime is com- qualifications. Please specify 5775. (ctf) mon and an educational benefit 635.4925 (c-39) Sl.50 each• I year old Holstein Tea. Oddfellows Hall. we ~ould like to ]hank aH our which position you are .com- cash bonus of $2,000.00 to steer. Phone 635-5779. (c-40) For Rent: large furnl~td unit '.~ November 6. 2 - 4:30 p.m. (P- family and friends for the lovely .32. Bicycles, Motorcycles S3,000.00'per year,:is',avallabl~. --for rent at 3707 Kalum Court. ~ 13) gilt and partythey puton for uS' ~ --m--~ Liberal staff benefitq~lan withr 4 For Sale: 1975 175 Can.Am TNT. '~or'~af~: "1 deel> freeze, 15 cu. Phone 635-2577. (Cff) Terrace Women's Waterpglo, before leaving Terrace. ~- weeks vacation time per year. "~ !':' :PI REFIGHTER Good condition. ' Phone 635-3801. It. 2 child's safety carseat. ~, starts on Tuesday, October 5 at We will miss you all and if you General Carpentr~ Apply in person or in writing District of Terrace Phone 635.4580. (p.39) Swimming Pool at 7:30 p.m. should come to Salmon Arm be ~pplications are invited for the 33. For Sale, Misc. 2 bedroom house for rent. Low Rates to: ' " Fridge & stove. $135 per month. Should bring own suit. For more sure to come visit us. W.F. Peregoodoff position of =ireflghter by the For Sale: Warn wiFIch 8000 . No lob too big or small, Free For Sale: One 1974 Kawasaki Westerhoff .Apartments. Phone information call Cathy Letham, Our new address will be: Box Industrial Relations Super- undersl(gned prior to Oct. 15, used twice• Set of Unused estimates on remodelling, 175 cc motorcycle. 1300 miles. 635.6904. (c-39) v 635.4021. 1007, 15th Ave. N.E., Woodland ,visor 1976. Salary and benefits per locking hubs. Phone 635.3348. roofing, porches, siding, Excellent condition. Also 1974 i Drive. Granduc Operating Co. bnion Contract. Additional Electrohome 26" color TV and p.39 ) Thanks again to you all. pelnflng~ spraytex Belling. 3 Bedroom Row Housing Suites. All interested contract bridge Box 69 information and Application 1974 Brentwood stereo console Syd and Emmy Munson. (p- Phone 63S.4094 Full basement, l~h baths, half players contact Bonnie Shaw at Ask for John after 6 P.M. Stewart, B.C. ' forms may be obtained from the .with 8 track, AM-FM radio. $650 37. Pets ~, 635.6970 or 635.6131 on or before 39) V0T iW0 :Ire Chief, C.C. Best, 3215.3 Eby . block from schools, S minute (Tfn) . for pair. Best offer on motor- walk from town. Suitable for ~ October 9 if they wish to par- Phone 636.2217 (c-39) St•, Terrace, B.C. {c.41) cycle. Phone 635.6108 before 5 or. -'or %le: one major size saddle ticipate in this years bridge A very sincere thank you fo ~.-.~;...-~...~.~: .~=." .:. .= ,;~ ~..:,=...~-= -..:.,~=..,....~.,:.~...~;..:=~.:~ .:~.-<.~¢.; = ....:.;.. =-~-. ....-::::; ,;. .... ~j,:~ families. $250 per month. 6 I club. Dr. Lee and Dr. Page, all view at 4524A Greig. (c.40) pony. $100. Contact Ponderosa month lease. Apply Suite 108 - nursing, O.R., kitchen & :arm, Prince Rupert or phone 4530 Scott. " (Cff) I For Sale: one largegun furance 624.4172. (c.39) , Terrace Community housekeeping staff and anyone else of Mills Memorial Hospital • suitable for shop. S250. 'Two Nice little cabin for rent for a ~ Resource Board/ 4603D Park ' propane stoves. 560 each. 110 Boxer: 3 months old, shots, who worked so hard and showed .t.. • • ..... bachelor or a couple without ~' Avenue, Terrace. : Come to Church gal. oil barrel & stand. $60. 220 sired Canadian American ~, The District Debt Coun- so much kindness,during the champion. Mephisto's Ven. children. It isall furnished: The short but fatal illness of a ; V. baseboard electric heaters• rent is $150 a month. You have t. sellor's office will be open from " Phone 635.2482. (p-39) defta. $150. Phone 635.3242. (p- October 4, 1976 at the following beloved husband and father. '-"SALVATION I~RMY '" ~'KNOX UNITED :ZION,BAPTiST" 39) to pay your own electricity. If ~- times daily: Monday/to Friday, A very special thank you goes interested please phone 635•6748 out to Shirley and Bob " "4637 Wa~sh: ;" ' ' 'CHURCH . Complete old farm wagonfrom or 635.3666 for more `• in- 3 p,m. to 4:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. to . Captain: Bill Young ' " Car. Sparks & Kelth ' Sesk. Best offer. Also winter Must Sell: goats for meat or 7 p.m. Telephone for ap- Sutherland and all other :CHURCH, milk. Also sheep. 846•5372. (p. formation• The address Isi1419 pointment • 630.1256. members and friends of the 9:45 Sunday School " 4907 Lozelle Ave. Pastor: Clyde Zlmbelman maternity clothes and Elec- 39) Bobseln Rd. Terrace. (c.40) Alliance Church who were so 11:00 Morning Worship Mlnlste.r Rev. D.S. Lewis • • ' trolux floor polisher. 63S-5623. Sunday School . 'Sunday School 9:45 a.m. (p.39) For Rent: 3 bedroom house. W- ~ Cross Country Meet will be • kind and thoughtful in so many 7:30 Evening Services Nk)rnlng Worship lh00 a.m. Two red Cocker Spaniel pup- ways. Also, Pastor Hale and W carpet, garage, on private held at Parkside School on Mon~ "cottage meeting'" 7 30: Senior 12 & up 10:00 a.rn. ; ...... For Sale: a black and white pies• Phone 849~5693. (c.39) Tuesday, October 5 at 3:30. This members of Twin River Timber Wed. ~Home league ' 7:30 Under 12 11:00'a.m. ' Evening Service 7:15 p.m. lot. Phone 635-3864. (p-39) ~ who expressed so much concern console TV in good working• meet is sponsored by Sat." Youth group' ." 7:30 . ..W.o.rs.hlp Servi.'~'e. 11:~ a_m...... :~., condition. For information and kindness.. For Sale: One 5 ~;ear old 2 bedroom. CIo.se 1o school. i T.E.S.S.A., Terrace Elemen- .' phone . , phone 635-5262. (p.39) registered Palamino ~,7 Fireplace. S250 per month. 635- tary Schools Sports Association. To so many who sent flowers Captain or Mrs. Bill Young.. and gifts and countless kind* MENNONITE ....- registered Morgan Mare. Phone 6310, 9 1o 5. (c-39) Organized by Clarence Mlchiel For Sale: washer spin dryer. nesses. Leonard will be greatly 635.7684. (p.40) • ~ School. Participation is open to ST. MATTHEW'S BRETHREN !CHRISTIAN ; $60. Zenith dryer-100. Frldge 1 missed by all. boys and girls in Terrace , $60. Danby freezer .100. Ken- 48. Suites for Rent : ~elementary schools In the Forever Loved, Elsie RIn- :CHURCH. ' :CHURCH' 'REFORMED 38 Wanted -Misc. dahh Martha and family, sons, AJigllcan church oi Canada : .... CHbRi:H .... more 30" range S200. Phone 635- f014owing categories: under 11; . 4087. (c.39) I"" "HILLSI'bE LODGE , under 12 and open. Ages are as Louie, Paul and Lyle. A'anted: -~ canopy 8' long, wide 4726 Lazelle Avenue, Terrace. 3406 Eby Street , ; 4450 Little Ave., . • 'of January 1, 1977. box pickup. Phone 638.1931 after 13. Personal Rev. Lance Stephens - 635.5055 Phone 635.3015 "Rev.ArthurHelleman635-~2621'. Hay and Straw Sleeping rooms, houseken~pihg ~ Pastor Dwayne Barkman 6. (c.40) GARAGE & 'Would Mrs. Fanny Dudoward Church: 635.9019 "Sunday School . Terrace 10' for Sale. .units, centrally Iocatedr .fully, rkStSuAi v L furnished. Reasanable rates by. '~11 types horses wanted. 635- HANDICRAFT SALE please contact the Dept. of Sunday Services 10 a.m. 10:00 A.M. Suhday School Human Resources, concerning '~'umnclay School Remo- 1 p.m: Phone day er week. Nob-drinkers only~ Saturday, October 2, 1976 • Sunday School 10 a.m. 11:00 A.M. Sunday Worship. 5617. (ctf) '' 12 noon to 4 o'clock Protection of Children Hearing ~:phone6~.~1!. (CTF) ' Service (Babysitting 1,1:00 a.m. Worsh pServlce ' K~.EK17 4009 Benner Street to be held October 13 at 11 a.m., ,. available) Wanted to Buy: good used V-8 (off Halliwell) regarding your son, Kelly 5;00 p.m. Worshlp Service . Cat. Complete with winch and One bedroom furnished duplex. Interested in a home Bible Spot Cash for Used Furnlture, Garane sale offers something Myron Dudoward. ,o hydraulic bin.de. Phone 847-3467. 968 Mountalnvlew Boulevard. Study? Call 635-3015 or 635- , Antiques, a11 useable Items. •~ for every member of the family Dept. of Human Resources ~3~, (C.41) 635.2577. (ctt) .... -- lamps, quality clothing, (c.40) SACRED HEART : ' " ~ The Furnlture Stall ,. hooks, small appliances, drapes "TERRACE' ,_ 6~s.3=02 -'or Rent: 2 suites In a duplex. 14. 8usiness Personal PARISH ~oats & Engines ~, and curtains, plus much more. '.UPLANDS ~ 'ALLIANCE" For Sale: 1975 Sears washer,' ,Stove 8, frldg'e. -'or small Crafts include ceram cs, 4830 Striume Ave, Terrace ~ " 1973 Whirlpool dryer. Both good Golden Rule: Odd lobs for tho~ 1970 Chry-iler75 H-P o-~t~ar;'on family No pets. In Thornhlll ~ macr'ame, crocheting,' .jobless. Phone 635.4535. 3238 "8:15 a.m.. " 110:15 ~,~'.J" BAPTIST .'CHURCH: condition. $300. Phone 635-5469. area. Available now and Oct. 1. ~' magnetic frldge novelties and 15' runabout c-w good trailer.- .~, Kalum. (CTF) ' " 11:30 a.m. 7:30 p.m. ,CHURCHI " Pastor Munro '" (ctf) c.39) many other miscellaneous $2400. Chinook Trailer Sales ~Ltd. 635-2033. D12-847. (Cff) items. (p•39) Pastor D.K, Hale 635.9398 ...... 4~3 ANat. Ave. 6~.3470.. i For Sale: constant supply of •~ t • t * ¢ " PARTICIPACTION ' ' EVANGELICAL~ Corner of Halllwell and N.' sunday 9:45 * I~tble School frgsh fruit. Phone 635-2603. , Smtes foriRent:. Terrace Chess Club beginning- 11 a.m. -Worship S (ctf) of.year meeting, October 1, withFor .... i ;FREE CHURCH' " 1976, 7 p.m. at Terrace Arena ACTION 'cur, Park Ave. altd Spirits St,' 10:00 a.m. Bible Teaching 11 a.m. - Morning Wershlp *.. Child's car seats, crib, playpen, 1976 JOHNSONS Apartments. Office No, Senior Citizens Room. Anyone Jo~n .. Rev, W,H, Tetum ~. Sunday School 7:1S p.m. E~,ening Service . : walker, back packer, lounge 11:00 a.m. A~o.rnlng Worship ~ 'Wed. 7 p.m.. Bible Study 8, " seat. Phone Pet at 635-6449. 12.'.4611 Scott. 1 & 2 & 3 interested is welcome. Terrace :' . 3303 Sparks .Street.635.S!!§, Service still ~dr~m aPartmBnts. '9:45 Sunday School .... 7:30 p.m. Singing and Blbie ...... 'Prayer :or Sale: One ~ll wood child's. ~' INCHESAWAY " 15,5224t. ~ CLUB Fitness i 11:00 Morning Worship Study ' - , ...... : "': : desk. :our foot wide with 10"/. Off 7:30 Evening Services ' . ! Weds... , .... . ' '. storage cupboard on once side. Meet every Tuesday night at Centri 8:00 In the Skeena Health Unit. Wednesday 7:30 pm :" !"'o:00pm Home BIba St~. , ~PENTECOSTA'L •,.: Good condition. $50. Telephone at =or Rent: near new 2 bdrm. 635.927t after slx. (sff.ctf) For more information phone' Swimming (Fl~atld Pr~ye.r and Bible Study ~•. ; " ~. i.YouoreWel~meat" .' "' '~TABERNACLE'"' ** i: TERRACE apt. In 6.plex. Close to hospffal,. 635.2847 or 635.3023...... ; ' - ~ ' Up.lands. " ' } ..... '" EQUIPMENT Sully carpefted, lt/2 bath, sto~,e Pool) - Sauna. :' CHRIST LUTHERA~' ...... " , "; 4~y ~.,,A.. ~ '~ 3 passenger seat for Dedge Van. and frldge. AVail. Oct, 15. 635. Kermode Four Wheelers " s~'. Never used. $100. 8 It. usedt SALES LTD. vised Gym .' . " ~ ." ' .... ' ,' .... ' Pastor m. Kennedy I' 5213: (ctf) ~ Meaflngs 1st Wednesday of each~ ,CHURCH • CHURCH OF_GOD ..... ~ ...... alumlnum sheetlng. $9 per s .. . ~ 7 DBys C0r S-arksSt &ParkA~to ~ ' -~ ...... "-~''-~-r :; uttjce~as.~e~m.m.e.oa=-~a~ 4539 Grelb . 635-63~4 month at 8 p.m. In the meeting 4 ..:..," ...... ' .... ".tit ..... 01~ RiVkr Orlve .... -" ...... --'-'; sheet. Phone 635.2603. (clf) • For•Rent; 2 becJroom basement room at the Sandman Inn. For~ A Waek ,' ,~ev. Rolf Hoifl.i'qd~l.~U3~:,l: ' Terrace, B.C. . |I I'~U~d~y"Sch~01 10i00"b;tn...... ), 'sull~. No pets. Phons 635.2182. ~ urther Information phone 635.. 'Prlce Skeena Forest Products /Monthly or yearly',, ,MornlngServ!ceat,l:00a,.rn.i:/Rev R L..Whl.t%go ...... L IsuN~rn~alogEW°~?h~l~.~0~m' New Sangster boats are now (p-39) r 3442. ~ip ' I Sunday Sch®i, AdU t" Cla'ss'& ".t'" Sunday Scnool : a.m. I.~' J Y g : ,., [ Ltd. will have a sale of low ovallable at Chinook Trailer ~Conflrmatlon Class gt 9.45 ~ Mornlng'Worshlp 11:00 a.m, I J.Blble Study Wed, 7:3Up.re.' • j grade lumber Monday. through. Sales Lid, ~Presently we hav~ I~ For Rent: one furnished small ~-~'" ~,|'¢OHOLI'CS": .-']: "'! l' 3313 'JoinKalum Alty~llnle . J *-;; Your...... Friendly Family~ ...... ~ Evening Worship 7:30' a.m. |~ Youth...... Night Thura ,.'._7'30 pm,'"..'~ ~ Friday 7 o.m. to 3. p.m.X. stock, three new Inboard- apartment. Includeslights, heat marked -- $20 per 1000 bd. ft. ~.~:: ,."' •ANONYMOUS ...... _J..~ ,' outboard boats and some used & eablevlslon. Two blocks from (Acro~ from arena) l; ',~Church" .~, : Prayer Service Wed, 7:30 p,m, ~ ~ ...... ,: ' :"" ' ...... ~1 Economy -- $40 per 1000 be. ft. , Men., Thurs., Sat. ] ' ~ I "'" "-'! : outboard units, Phone 635.2033. the center of town. Phone 635. ~.~ ': ...... Phone 635.5520, 635-5636J.' , "1,,, I I~'~., J (Ctf) Dealer~ No. D12.847. (Ctf) 6672, (p.4O) • . .-.%. .... , ...... '..,.. p

• .i, H ) THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 22, 1976 PAGE AIS, ° I 48. Suites for Ren't 49. Homes for Sale " ~ ; ,, • , , from I t 49. Homes for. Sale •. 57. Automobiles SB. Mobile Homes ,~ 68. Legal : For Rent: one bedroom • ~F6i-"Sale: elghT'i'~om h~'Uk~-~n. , New 3 bedroom home In th~ 400~ Acreage for Sale basement suite. Must be a QueenCharlotte City on 3 lots.. Block Wellh. Full price 139,000.. 1973 International ~ toh. V-~; e)~32trailer frame wi~ tandem" LAND reliable working person. Closeto school, good water.& Madlg Construcllon Ltd. (C~f) auto. Excellent omdltlon, Low exles. S350. Phone 635.2348. (p, REGISTRY ACT References required. Available septic systems. Asking $,,~,500.. mileage. Phone 63S.S000. (Ctf) 40) Re: Certificate of Title 65324.1, 10 Acre • Parcels " ~c~. 1, Phone638-1937. (p-39) House for Sale: I,'= acre lot, Lot IS of Block 1 of District Lot Write Box 63. Phone 559-4749. J1962 Cllev Wagon. V.g, auto." .28 Miles North of Terrace (c-39) bedrooms up, I down, rec room, For Sale: furnished mobile $72, Range S, Coast l)isfrlct, ' also ": Cedar Place - partially furnished, full LOW Price. Phene 635.S000. FOR SALE home on large landscaped lot Plan 3218. Apartments basement, hardwood floors. (eft) A log House • BY BUILDER with 6 ft. cedar fence. Also Rabbit Den on lot. 4726 Park Insulated ioey shack and large WH ER EAS satisfactory proof Low Down Payments 4931 Walsh Avenue Two brand new homes lust 1974 Chevy 1/= ton. Excellent Ave. Phone 63S-2461, (ctf) verandah with extra building of loss of the 'above Certificate Terms Available Suite 115 completed at 4901 and 4903 condition. Low mileage. V.S, for storage. On paved road close of Title issued In the name of Terrace, B.C. Lambley. One home under auto. Phone 63S.S000. (Cff) Sl. Business Locations to Terrace. Phone after 6 p.m. John Relbln has been tiled in 635-7056 construction at 4020 Benner on my office, I hereby give notice "700 or 1100 sq. ft. ~1 Lal(el~e" For Sale: 1973 Ford Creweab. or weekends 635-5714. (I)-42) 635-6941 the Bench. that at the expiration of one New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom suites Ave. soon to be avoilable. 635. Used for camper .only. P.S. & For these or custom built For Sale: 1968 Mercury pickup. week from date of publication for rent: Frldge & "stove, '3042. Suitoble for retail or I r - home phone: P.B. New 390 "motor. 26,0Q0 638-0276. (p.40) drapes, carpet, rec. area repair shop.: (cff) miles. Phone 635-6636. (ctf) thereof I shall Issue a sauna and pool table. Only Dave Mc Keewn Provisional Certificate of Title 625-74S9 apartment In town with FOR RENT For Sale: 1969 Rambler Am. 1965 Chev Belalre for sale. 4 to the above named in lieu of JIM'S TACKLE SIHIOIP security enterphone and Bob Odlurne door sedan, Good condition. said Lost Certificate unless in (¢ttP 63S.2017 OFFICE SPACE hessador SST, 343 motor, alr elevator. Absolutely no pete. Offers to S700. Phone 635.2717. the meantime valid objection is 1020 sq. ft., 2rid floor, modern conditioning, automatic. Needs I (Cff) For Sale by Owner: Tudor style building, centrally situated. some work but runs well. Phemi made In writing to the un- dersigned. For Rent: 2 bedroom besemen'~ .home. 1250 sq. ft. 3 bedroom, WAREHOUSE SPACE 635-3248 after S p.m. (stf) Rod & Reel Repairs- Custom Rods -- Fresh 1969• Glendale DATED at the Land Registry suite. Some furniture, Hea ensulte, 2 fireplaces, sundeck. Ranging up to 10,000 sq. ft. on and Salt Water Fishing Tackle -- Fishing 1975 TR6. White, chrome Office, Prince Rupert, British paid. $175 per month. Close to Large lot on qutet street. Owner rail trackage. Contact Mr. rollbar. A.M. f.m. radio Trailer for Sale Columbia, this 14th day of Licences. town. Phone 635.4448. (p-39) being transferred. For up. Parker at: polntmenf to view phone 6351 Wightmon & Smith cassette, 15,000miles. Must see, September, 1976. 635-2589. (p.39) M ust be seen to R.E. Hooper, For Rent: 2 suites in a duplex. 9272, (Ctf) Realty Ltd. 635-63~1 be appreciated. REGISTRAR (c-39) 16B Hwy. 16 East Terraoe, B.C. Stove & frldge. For small Large double lot In R.I ...... • n For Sale: t967 Volkswagen Bug. family. No pets. In Thornhlll~ Residential area with newly 55. Property for Sale 5,000 on new motor. Closest- area. Available now and Oct, 1. decorated 2 bedroom home. offer to $800. Phone 635.3148. (c." Excelleilt Condition, Province of ' Phone 635.6668. (c.39) "'S acres-With 2 bdrm. Rouse :n" 48) Includes frldge, stove, washer, town. Will help finance. Phone, British Columbia 635-9471 dryer, dishwasher & deep 63S-4453. (Ctt) Phone 635-3202 Department of Forests For Rent: 3 bedroom suite. Big freeze. $37,000. 635.2400. (p.40) For Sale: Wlllys Jeep. 1963, 68 Reforestation Division Jiving "room, kitchen and 327 G.M. motor, 4 wheel drive. 4 RECREATIONAL PROPERT~ or ~I~.~R NOTICE OF TREE AI~SO now selling Local Handicrafts- All bathroom. Downtown. For By Owner: near new home on barrel. Canopy 8, winch. Good VVV ~VVV PLANTING CONTRACT(S) more.Information 4724 Lozello ORtttl' condition. Phone 635-3181. (p- inquiries Welcome. bench with 2 bedrooms, w-w Two parcels of property north ~x, lgn your car, truck ol Ave., Terrace. Phono 63S-6639. carpeting, dble. central 39) .trailer. Lotaprofesalonal sell It "Sealed tenders for the (p.39) end of Kalum Lake. Ap. for you. following tree. planting con., flreplaco, finished bthrm, and proximately 25 miles from 1973 Chev ~ ton pickup. 4 wheel Copper Mountain Enterprlse'~ tract(s) will be received by the rumpus rm. in full bolt., at. Terrace. 1 to 2 acres each. For Rent: 3 bedroom W.W drive. Power brakes and Ltd. 635-4873. DL;I144 (Cff) ; Chief Forester, British tached carport and many ex. Creek running through. carpet, frldge & stove, dining steering. Phone 635.3062 after 6 •- , Columbia Forest Service, tras. Priced to sell at $30,000 property. Phone 63.5.9471 for room table, chesterfield. 3407 p.m. ip-41) FOR SALE victoria, B.C., on the dates RENTAL APARTMENTS. firm. For appointment to view further Information. (CTF) Sparks. By Clarence MIchlel call 635.6905, (p.40) shown below. Scheol. Phone 635.7939. (p.39) For Sale: 1969 Landrover. Long Corner lot for sale in town. A.I Beautiful con'~ltlon., 1973 1. Contract 93L3-37 Located New 3 bedroom house for rent. Krumm Rd. Private "Sale. Corner of Welsh and Sparks. wheel base, 6 cyl. S2,000 or best Glendale Mobile Home 12'x5# ..collins Lake Shag carpet with ensuite Large serviced lot with par. Phone weekdays '395.3515 or offer. Phone 638-1242 after 4 and Joey Shack 12'x20' with ;Ranger District Houston p.m. (p-39) OLINTON MANOR plumbing. 4716 Gair Ave., tlally erected leg house. Sl0,000 write to Pest Office Box 689, 100 porch 15'x6'. Finished on the Number of Trees 125,000 Terrace. Interested parties firm. Phone 63S-3830. (p-39) Mile House, B..C. (C.S21 Instde with two extra rooms: Viewing Date: October 4,/976, For Sale: 1974 Fiat 128. Front should write to: Dairy Queen- Sold together or separately.' leaving Ranger Station at 8:30 wheel drive. Low mileage e.m. Brazier, 4532 Lakelse Ave. COUNTRY LIVING IN TOWN Phone WILL FURNISH Beautiful 5. acres with .2.' ,17,000, only 5000 miles on rebuilt Please wrltl telephone See our Real Estate NOTE: Viewing of the number so owner may contact bedroom house on bench: Good engine. Many extras. Asking 6364094 planting sit e prior to submitting Interested parties on Sep- Advertisement on the' Investment potential; Phone $2600. Phone 635.9442. (p.42) a tender for this contract is back page of this week's 635.4453. (Ctf) mandatory. . tember ' 18. References After 6; Have your own new, cozy private studio apart. 1970 Ford Econo. V-8 auto, self Deadline for receipt of ten- required. Entertainment Guide For Sale: 30x164 ft. framed sent, also 1 bedroom. Security enterpheee, contained, Cible lights and :or Sale: 12x60 2 bedroom ders is 3:30 p..m. March 10, 1977. I-or Renh Available from Oct. building on property 248'x600' radial tires. Good shape. S197S. located on Pine St., Thornhlll.. mobile home with partially Tenders must be submitted on sauna, game room, wall to wall carpet, drapes, I ~ bedroom basement suite 635-3975. (c-401 finished bedroom and joey the form *and In the envelopes stove and fridge, laundromat, pressurized near schools and downtown. Pruden & Gurrie Phone 635-7079. {p-41) =or sale: 1973 Datsun 610. 4 shack on serviced lot. supplied which, with par. hallways, parking. Close to swimming pool and Separate entrance..'dove and Unspo.ltt Crown Lease oh' •Reasonably priced. Phone 635. ticulars, may be obtained from fridge. For information phone door, 4 spd., 33,000 miles. S1900 arena. (1916) Ltd. Lakelse Lake waterfront, or best offer. Phone 638-1931 ~684. (c-41) the Forest Ranger(s) Indicated, 635-5262. [p-39) or from the Dlstrlct Fore~ter, (Block F, Lot 6256, Range S, after 6. (c.40) Coast District). Good beach, 66. Rec. Vehicles. Prince Rupert, B.C., or from For Rent in Thornhilh one road access, undamaged 1967 Cortlnn. Mechanics the Forester l-c, Reforestation bedroom furnished apartmenls. Near new townhouse for sale. timber; Located on west shore, spoclal. Fhone 635-5000. (Cff) FOR SALE OR TRADE Division, B.C. Forest Service, $140 per month• Singles only. With appliances. 2 blocks from opposite Hot Springs. Enquiries Individually or as a set~. One 2 .Victoria, B.C. Phone 635.2065. (p.39) downtown. 3 bedroom, 2 or offers to J. Cochrane, Alka I I, FOR SALE man camper with propane steve The lowest or any tender Will and ice box. One 1975 Ford % Phone 636. 21 or 6N-1U2 bathroom, 1100 sq. ft. Fenced In Lake, B.C. ~. (C.40) 1975 Cougar XR-7. 400 CID. not necessarily he accepted. (c- Small 2 bedroom basement back yard. Phone 635-30|0. ,- - Deluxe trim -electric windows ton pickup with low mlleaue. 39) P.S., P.B., automatic trans. suite for rent. With frldge & (Cff) Good building Iot.withtrees on . low mileage. Includes spare fire mount, . stove. Phone 635.2153. (c.39) ------" Agar Ave. Phone 635-2342 or CHINOOK TRAILER For Sale: family home on SALES LTD. • campe;" mirrors and tape deck. CANADA Claude Gagnon at 559-423S," DEPARTMENT OF OANABA 3 bedroom duplex with bench. Approx. 2000 sq. ft. of • Phone 635-5459. (p-48) Charlotte City. (o39) 635-3032 basement. In Thornhill off living space up and down. In. D12-847 (cff) • TRANSPORT Krumm Rd. Fridge & Stove. dudes 3 bedrooms, den, re¢ ,1973 Aquarius"20 ft. motor PACIFtCAIR :;Phone 635.4389, (p.39) :* ~ room, fireplace, 2 full -Eo~ sale '.W~' o wner~:, ~ prime home: 29,000. ml los. Priced to' : .... SERVICES REGION . i mOVINOE OF BRITISH OOLUMBIA •commerclol- • lots - on.. Lokelsa ...... bathrooms and large workshop -.sell at,oS~95:-.Chlnook .Trailer * SEALED TENDERS, ad: A~;e. I~ Ter'race (~ corne~sj. 49, Homes for Sale ,~:• On one acre landscaped lot. ,TIRES: Sales Ltd.- - dressed to the Department of ES tZABETH the SECOND, by the Grace of God,, of the Also 1 bulldln~ d onScoff Ave.: :m~ Phone 638-1790. (Cff) United Ktngdom, Canada, and Her Other Realms and Phone days 635.3630, evenings Transport, Reglonal ~nager, 'For Sale: 2 hon~'s'-on ~A 0crelot: ForSale:One10'fullyequlpped Construction Sarvlces, 739 West Territories, Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender ef 635-4238. (Cff) ...... 1973 Chev, 350, P.S., P.B. Ex. lust outside Terrace.. House for sale to the best offer. • Vanguard Camper. Phone 635. Hastings Street, Vancouver, the Faith. Reasonably priced. Phon~ 6.~5- View at 2710 S, Sparks. (ctf) collent condition. Askleg best 56. Business Opportunity 3463. (p-40) E.C., V6C 1A2, and marked To all,'of whom these, presents shall came 6884 after 5 p.m. (CTF) • : offer over SlS00. Phone 635.4689. "Tender for Site Development GREETING. WHEREAS by sedion 7¢i(!) Reduced to Sell: 4.Alex . $110~~ (p-39) Fo~ Sale: 2 bedroom house, 1' House for Sale: 4914 Agar. 3 68. Legal and related work for R.V.R. of the Municipal Act it is monthly Income. All suttee' bedroom basement suite. Close bedroom upstairs, 3 down., :Fbr Sole: 1974,Chevy.,.% 1on •Equipment at Sandsplt Airport, h;.A~ CURTIS provided, inter alia, that in Legal suite. 4 years qld. Extra Include frldge, stove, living; pickup. Phone 635.5000. (Q-f) TO:• S.o,e ~;ar~ •~AR: E.C.", will be received up to to downtown & schools. Nicely lot for house. Price $51,000. Minister.of addition to the functions room drapes. Full occupancy. TIN 3:00 PM, PDST, October 21, treed lot. Phone63S.4761. (p-42) Phone 635-7330. (p.48) Munlcipa I Affairs. conferred by that .Act, a Phone 635.9471 for further For Sale: 1973 Toyota HIlum( TAKE NOTICE that an action 1976. I I • ~ " details. (Sff) regional district has such pickup. Phone 635.5000. (Cff) has been commenced against Plans, specifications and functions as are proyided by you In the Terrace Registry of Low Overhead Business. Ex. other tender documents may he the County Court of Prince I McC0LL ] RealEstate Services Ltd': I collent potential. $3,500 down. For Sole: 1971 Ford aA ton V-8. examined at the office of the Phone 635.5000. (eft) Rupert, No. S7.1976, by the undersl0ned, 7th Floor, S49 Letters Patent or supplemehtary Letters Parent and for this Apply Box 1134, The Herald. (c. purposes, the Lieuteeant.Governor In Council may, on the I (A.J. McCOLL NOTARY PUBLIC~ . I 41) Terrace & Dlstrlct Credit Howe Street, Vancouver, B.C. For Sale: 1972 Cheyelie. Fhone Union, in which the Plaintiff's "end coples obtained on deposit recommendation or the.Minister, provide in the Letters 4609-A LAK E LS E AVE~ BURNS• LAKE 63s.s00o. (Ctf) claim Is for the monies owing of a certified cheque for $25.00 • Patent or •supplementary. I:efters Patent • such further ob- under a Promlssery Note made made payable to the-Receiver jects, powers, obliga!ions, duties, limitations and conditions TAXIDERiq. "58. Mobile Homes on or about .the 23rd day of Oeneral'of Canada. in respect to any orl.all functions requested pursuant to this -- December, 1975. Plans and specifications will .section: Trailer spaces for rent.! AND THAT. it has been or- AND WHEREAS by supplemeMary Letters Patent issued IN TERRAOE Woodland Heights Trailer also be on display at the dered that service of the Writ In Amalgamated Construction on the 27th day of February, 1975, the Rngionat District of Court. 635r9605. (Cff) • Kltimat-Stikine was empowered to undertake the function of CONTACT the said action on you be ef- Assoclatlon of B.C., 2675 Oak fected by this advertisement, if Street, Vancouver; Con: ski hill With the member municipalities of the District of Well built home on large Price reduced to a low $15,000• N EVlLLE RIORDAN •CHEAP TRAILER you desire to defend the said struction Plan Sarvlces, 3785 Terrace, the 01strict of Kitimat and defined portion of 75x300~ lot at 4707 Welsh. Lot for this 1000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm. 3828 Westvlew Drive action, you must within 14 days Myrtle Street, Burnaby, B.C.; Electoral Area C: • backs onto future extension of Sl000.00 plus home on concrete foundation. Telephone 635.2320 of the last publication date of Terrace Construction AND WHEREAS the Regional' Board of the Regional Davis Ave. glving subdivision 80x200' approx, serviced lot, District of Kitimat-Stikine has requested that the borrowing (ufn) ~ , ~' • (~'HEAP JOEY SHACK ~thls advertisement, enter an Association, ;4931 Kelth Avenue, possibilities with town ap- w.w carpet & only a few miles Appearance at the Court' Terrace, B.C.; and Prince pewer in respect of the stated function be increased from proval. 3 bdrms, up, suite rn 10 x 45 from town via paved rd. If Registry, 4506 Lakelse Avenue, Rupert Construction Four .Hundred Thousand Dollars (S40G,000) to Six Hundred Ioasement, lovely garden with you're looking for a good buy 57. Automobiles ' .Needs Repairs 1 Terrace, British Cdumbla. In Association, s3s - 3rd Avenue and Seventy.five Thousand Dotlars (S47S,000): manyfrult trees. Stove, frldge inquire about this onel default of such Appearanco, W~, Prlnce Rupert, B.C. AND WHEREAS the provisions of section 766 of the & drapes included. Phone for 1972 International Crewcab. • P~- ,635-4286.~a . Judgment may be entered Municipal Act have bee., duly complied with: Two 40 ac. prime agricultural H.A. Stevenson, more into & appointment to Model 1210. Automatic, power against you. Reglonal Manager, .. NOW KNOW Y E THAT by these presents We do order and" view. parcels at New Remo. steering, power brakes, radio, proclaim that on, from, and after the date hereof the' Basically cleared & plied for "For Sale: e'x48' troiier. Used GRANT, CRAMPTON & Construction Services, 69/~ acres at Usk bordering on dual tanks, 36,0~0 miles, Good fallowing be added to the objects, powers, obligations, duties, burning. Excellent road ac~ for construction or otherwise. GROWN Canadian Air 4 Skeena River. Power, water & condition. S2,~00or best offer. Transportation Ad- limitations and conditions of the Rnglonal District of Kitimat. cess. Phone for further detells 635-7035 at Aloha Trailer Park. Plaintlff~s Solicitors' (c.39) phone available with access Phone 635-2065 or view at 891 (cff) • ministration (c-39) Sflkine: via ferry. Price reduced to & arrange to view. River Drive. (p42) I. Paragraph 4 of'the function of "Ski Hill" authorized b~' $50,000. Vendor offering For Sale: 12xd8' 1970 'Bread. supplementary Letters Patent issued on the 27th day of terms. Call for further details. 1973 RancheroGT..351c. 4 bbl. 6 more rnoblle home. 2 bedroom, February, 1975, shall be deemed to be amended by striking radials, 2 - 14x6, 2 - 14x7, ET portlally furnished, low shack. Terraoe Pie,A-Pop out theflgures $400,000 on the third line and substituting the lags- 6 -14x6 regular rims.. ,Set up and skirted In Terrace figures ~TS,000 therefore, so that .the paragraph reads as Asking $3,500. Phone 635.2791. 'Trailer Court. Asklng $n,0o0, felloWS:" (p-39) '- Phone 638-1204 after 5:30. (p.~ "4. The debt incurred by the regional district for the NO. 4:4717 LAKELSE AVE. purposes of this Division shall not exceed in the aggregate 1970 Ford Cobra, excellentl FOR SALE S475,O00.00." One 8'x~8' semi. • AND THAT• theLetter's Patent of the Regional District of Centrally located starter condition. 429 C.I.D. 425 HP, 4 Remember, we buy or trade used books, 1000 sq. ft. 2 bdrms, up plus 1 s~. Hurst etc. StB00. Phone furnished 2 bedroom Kltimat-Stiklne be deemed to be amended so as to conform to which has been completely magazines, comics, 8.track tapes. down & very attractively redecorated. Nice yard with Dave after S:20 p.m. 63g.1235. trailer~ set up in the premises as and from the date of these supplementary We haye the largest selection and the best price Letters Patent: finished Inside & out. Paved' lawn & fruit trees. Also 12x20 (p-39) downtown trailer court. driveway, carport, fenced 8, workshop. Asking $29,500 with on pop in town, landscaped yard. Nice existing assumable nnanclng 197S Chev 4x4 Che,/enne Bl'~izer. Ready to move into. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I()catlon at 3317 Thomas St. & a Excellent condition. Asking" Phone 635.-4454 after 6. we have caused these Our of approx. $25,000. Arrange to TRY US. SPECIAL PRICES TO SERVICE CLUBS AND reasonable asking price of s6800; Phone 635.4305. (p-~):, Letters to be made Patent and vlew 4637 Straume. WEDDIMGS OR BANQUETS. $34,900. Qualifies for C.M.H.C. . Must Sell: 12x6B three bdrm. the Great Seal of Our said ~'ouP Inquiries are welcome. 1972 h~azda 616. Good condition. mobile home tn top condition. Province to be hereunto at. Call 635.3569 after 6. (p41) Set up on beautifully land. fixed. scaped 80x120' lot. Any WITNESS, :or Sale:' 1973 Toyota• Land. reasonable of.for considered. Ph, 636-9390 the Honourable John L. 'cruiser 4 wheal drive. 30,000 Phone 635-.4461. ' (c-42) Farrls, of Our sai miles. Goodcondltlon. 635.3049 after 5. (cff) For Rent: fully furnished 2 WITNESS; "• THE Honourabte John L. ~For Saie: 1963 Ford Statloni bedroom'trailer, located at 944 3 bdrm. 1200 sq. if. home on Kofoed St. $163 pur month. No Farris, Administrator of Our Beautlfui rural setting on Wagon. Phone 635-3420. (p.39). al~prox. 5V= acres lust S milesl animals. Phone 635.2482. (p.39)' • uald Province of British from town. Some Interior & paved rd. with 75x350' lot with .'. Columbia, in .~ur CitlPeof DiS of lawn & trees & garden For Sale: 1964. Ford 100 Auto. exterior finishing required. If For Sale: 12k68' top line mobile' • - .... Victoria in Our said Province . area. Home Is 3 bdrms, with ,635.2890. (p;39) " i" you want to move In & finish hameon 7S'xl00' landscaped lot. .this 9th day of September in your home to suit your ne~ds partial basement, w-w carpets • the year of Our Lord one 8, carport. Drive by 1075 Old 1967 Rambler Rebel. Good' Fully furnished. Garage &' here's your chance. Asklng runnlng c:ondltlon; 2.door ' .utlllty! shed. Thornhlll. Phane ..... thousand nine hundred and Lakelse Lk. Rd. Then phone to seventy.six and In the twenty. s33,700: Phone for details & hardtop., P.O., P.B., winter tires 6~Jt481. (p.41) • view. fifth year of OUr. Reign. , appointment, to view. around. Asking $550. Phone "Bob HalIW "' ight,! ' 63~'-~Y~~' , r By Command. ~N 635-6970, . ', " :, ',lKlulpgedwilhequallz~', hitl~.~ ,B~nniG. Shaw~ lP7S Volvo Station Wagon 19,000 iphone,~l days e'nd, klan;e! • Grace McCarthy d~ McC6JI..~. miles, Phone 63~2348..'" (p.42), *name'anil numbw', .(C-TF)* '- Provincial Secretary.' • ", L ' L] _ ';j L ? ? " PAGE A16, THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 29, 1976

, . j'+',+,!+!Savzngs J vent CO-OP BUILDING SUPPLIES ~ Stads Sept. 30, 1976 Runs 1o Ootober 0, 1976 , ~,//~~ ;O1 s Your Hoe,, FueiRakein ++i,I ts~-fuel ts~ J ++ lea¢ :r :oI r l,n':or • ' +

• ore..dv.taR, o, our ..+,+, ,a,, erie. +++~ -++=+-.COMBINATION ~:Pmi]~ye ~]1:;l~xt°T~ ~tl~ W°et°dhaksFn~; &H;w: +P ~le ces

:<',..+~+!';!~,+~.+' , 1! ', , Your Co-up Lum~r ' / "qIgr'~;~4},L Bulldog ~{~+i,~': ,G X68 *srd e~. ,.pp]y you SET 1,77

4 SEASONS 0AULKINGSUN ~ '"°'Ixo'8'! ~i8~ th:~;de: m.te- CELUFIBh"E' !i'i,li!il;i: : ' 3'O'lO'O" pounds, weather et~p-' MR Wi~Iil|SlllIP CAULKING ping, putty, storm Hardware and and windows-- Metal & Vinyl Eaoh DOe Tube Caulking doors Grey or White ii i' !; in fact the supplies you need to give your - Pour Over Existing Insulation winterized pro- - Use it in your new home ~';+:..:.,:~+.-.~:+ ~_~ home 1.set.o,oo,o,,o,,o has 1.3' & 2 ' 7' pieces tection. Stop in and see 3.29 - Spreads Easily 1 set 12 cubic foot Bag ,u,. ,6c, i iIiI| + 16 them now! + 5. Ic,; CLEAR STORM 2 NIL VAPOUR JOHNS MANVILLEFIBER GLASS JOHNS MANVILLEFIBER GLASS IKO INSUL BOARDSHEATHING WINDOW PLASTIO BARRIER HOME INSULATION •NONE INSULATION 270 sq. It. per Bundle 150 sq. feet per bundle 4 X 8 X 7-16" 4 x 9 X 7-16" Per 500 sq. ft. Roll R-7 15"x48'" 36" Wide 15"x48" each each Per Foot • 21 Friction Fit Friction Fit Balls Balls 54" Wide Approx, 7~/2c square foot Approx. 13c square foot 3.79 3.99 + Per Foot • 3.69 Per Bundle 2( .Z 6 Per Bundle ct. 6 Prehung Doors SHOOK SHHTHIHG PLYWOOD SOLID ASPENITESHEATHING ~/~ x8 CEDAR SIDING Standard Grade Mahopny I•terior Doors Oomplntn with lntohin| Frame. HIn|e|lre I UTILITYBADE 4xGxG/16" LIBL II Attaohod and Door is Prodriliod for ,.,.,,,0 Rlil Lookout. Swine is Reverniblo Horizontal Lap Siding + ...... ,,oh., ...... ] ...... Vii V : Loft or Rllht. *.,~~s 2/0x6/8 RouGh Sawn Face ~. ~,. to~ 214x6/,8 OEDAR ,2 x 4 s CHALET RUSTI0 SlUnG PANELS s~s~%s~~ , 2/6x6/8 1o~~ ~" 218x6/8 One Low a |1 !I d pr | i41;O:!'2+ 1 Ct ~'o"o?L...... ~...... l i ,.,x,,,,, ~m: 4q Pries d :t,Pi~ P{ r nnoh Rod or Gree• onoh , 11

'101' WEISER '301' WELSH PRO-JET INSULATED BARB WIRE ' HITE OOHON PASSAGE " PRIVAOY K.RIBALI;INiMEIIoOFING GALVANIZED0HIHNETS ~,,o~.Ro,, NAILS LATOH S£T LOOKSET 7" Flue x24" Sections • 21/4 `` or 31/4 '` each each A~/AILABLE IN Roll Per 50 Ib, Box or 36" Sections 8', 10', 12' & 14' SHEETS 7 69 Per foot i WIDTH COVERS 31" Accessories a~e Extra 26.76 14,25 ++++ ~l.l~l 6.~ 4 PER LINEAL FOOT w • v V : V SOLVE YOUR BACK YARD STORAGE PROBLEMS WITH A 210 LB. + i GARDEN OENTRESPEOIALS METAL STORAGE BUILDING ASPHALT SHINGLES ! FEnTUUZEn ROeENT a sea COmOL • i ' 40+Valganlc...... e.. 5,79 ,o+. ,o. Ant Traps

++o++,+ EACH FIVE COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM Mllogranite 6.99 3 fo rl,49 + • 77 Card ' 1iS9. : ( SO Ib ...... each AQOARIHMS FLn OONTROL 3"M00MTAOT APPLIOATION00LO t 9 c, OEMENT OEMENT "°"~'°'"+ 37A9 ~o ,,. ~, ..k ,. Iimi each • . each.....,, ...... p~

quart g lion "°"each ~' °'0" ... Sl~m Dog Flea Tag 1 69 id " each ...... ,.. g K , Aquamans ' 9 88 {O+op Leus~ Power .... Aquarium gal ...... • ...... each + 39 2,~, ° ° Approx. 9.5 i 2 lb. each...... • •

, 44r. ~ 4el7 BREWS ' {our o.op has mori offer, PHONE 63S.634'/~/ ...... ~.~:~.:`:~./~:~:....~..~.~...`~.....~...::`:~:~.:.~:.`.~`.....~...... `.~.`....`~:~:.::.:~:.~..~.~.~`..~.`...... ~. [ ...... ! ...... -.-.-.-.-.-,-.-.-.-.-., ..:.:::..'...... ~...... -...~ .;.'.;.;,;~;.;.',;.;...'.'.'.:- .:.'.:.:.'..-...... -.:::.:• .;.:..'.:... • ..'.'.:.'. ~.~.~.~.~.~.~.~..`~..~.:~:~..~..~.`:.~...... ~:~.~.~..:~:..~:...~..~.~...~.:~;:;~ • .:.:.:,;,:.:..... ,...... '.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. .:-:°:.:.:..,...... • ..s'..:..:...... '~.": C •..:;~.:.:.:.:.:.: ~.,...../.,...... " ".'. '.'.:.:.:.:.~...... " ".".'.:.:.'..:.:::<.:.:.:....-...w.. ".' ".".'~111~:'.'/.'.' ." .'.'" ".".'.:.:.:':.:':':'.'.'.~ "' ,'.:.:.:.:':':' .'.~'.'.',"" '.'.:.:.:~':'."~'.','." ".'.%',~:':'.'.%'.'.':~.:.:.:.":','.'.'~:,~ •:..'.:.:~... :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :.:.:.:: ::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::: :.:.:..:::::::::::::::::...... :. <::::.:.:.:.:-....:...... :: :..:...... :.:.:.:.:.: :::::::.;::...-...:. :.:.:. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: . .;::. • ..:.:.:.:.. • . .. :.:.:.:.:....:.:.:.:.:.,...:. • .:...:.:.. ...:.:.; . :... :.:.:.. :.:o:.:.- .:.:::;...:.;::.:.:.:.:.:.'.:.::::::..:::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::: $!: :::::::::::::::::::::: !$!' ::i:~ $. :::::i: :i:!$ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::: :::::::: : :: .:::::::'.:: ::::: ::: ::: :: • :::: ...:::::' :':i:: '::.<: ::::::::::: ::::: ::i$::::~':~:i~ ":':':':;:;:;:~:'~:.:i':':':"":';":':': : :':" "" ":':':':':':':':':':':':': ':';" ":':" ':':':':" "" "~':':" ":':':':':':':':'::':':" ":':':':"%" i/i~i:.:..'.:~:`:.:.....,~tiiil!liiii/ii~ ~...:.:.:,:.:.:.:.:.:.:.1. • ..1." ".:.'.~{ ~...:.:.:.:.',;.1.:.1.:.:."iii iilli~ :.1.:.. i~i~.:.-.: °...... ~1.1..~it!.ti::~I .,'...:.1..~1.'.::.-,...... N.'.:.:. . i ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ....:....~'.'.'-~.: ...... • ...... f~ Wednesday, September 29, 1976 - • " 'r-•* •. - I I

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' .T:', , • • • • , ~.. . .. , ~" : 'ill' N "ONE SPRING MORNING"• Lyle Petch was sitting female• relationships.'The play is one ef three plays tO " i at the bus stop when a girl sat dew. to bother him. be seen at the Terrace Little Theatre on North Kalum . There were other, females before Elsie, •played by from September30 toOctober 2. For more details see : Jennifer Langley, in cherie Stewart's satire on male pages 6 and 7. . ..

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• .ii • ~:" ** , For the;week September 29th thru Oct )ber 5th, 1976

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i 2, ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, IWed. Sept. 29, 1976 AT THE R.E.M. LEE THEATRE , i i:): : . • The Huggett Family

The Huggett ~amuy, are a family of six musicians from Ottawa, with an ex- traordinarily wide reper- toire featuring as many as forty instruments. They play early Renaissance to contemporary folk songs. The Terrace Concert .... Association is pleased to : announce the appearance of ~ .... (i, the Huggett Family in ..... concert at the R.E.M. Lee Theatre October 9 at 8:15 p.m. Single tickets for this -ii ,).: DBSCOTHEQUI performance will *be i available at the door. • i *II}: )/ iii!: " -Col ebrta ing'iTherl HnggettmusicalLeslieHuggett,andFamily,directOris fathera Offormerthe ~ French . •horn player, ~'~'"~d Q' ""~' d~ ~'~ ~'~('' PLj ' ' ~ J OPENI originallyLondon.Margaret from Huggett,

' Music in London. Her musical talents range from Renaissance and the ' Ii'!" :i i. i. ..: ! keyboardnumerous instrumentsancient winds of theto DO0" PR~Zli:~u:g~:r:~~~o" .-ioro the folk idioms of various " countries. .' Andrew is twenty-one. He1, • has a wide range of. talents,

I ! NOW' OPiN ri ' I ' ~ rm ~ ''" i 1 ~1~1~ne'st n DIB~o tl d I b°thf°lkp°ser'arrangers°ngsclassical.... ofandmodernC°m" " I Oliln Jennifer is :eighteen and began her musical career at the age of fi~,.e. Her main ~} i 9800 P oMo, J "L ~ ~" ~ : :' ~" ~. P " , h "~ I ~ " GRAFFITI . ~ instrument, is the cello and d n * " * dL ' ' h n' P' ~' 'P' '* ~n' ~' ' ' n ~' n'', hL ROCK N .ROLL she's also an accomplished [ to 2|00 A oH. " "I '"• 'l "" I wind player'~' ' " "i R Ian is Sixteen.: His facility _~ : I Tues day . ' "~' "* ICORD GBVUAWAY$ ~ on the treble v~ola and t I tO IlaturdaY " ":" " [ NIOHTLYI ' ' ~ general musicality .on the ,.. VARBAN i i: . I numer°uswind instruments . .. Fiona is fifteen. Her af- finity for the violin, Viola de I gamba, re'corder ,*and percussion as well as ~f0r: 4382 Lakohlo Ave. ' ". " ' ~- i :"":i...... ",:": :635 • 9 1:61 madrigal singing, are -all. !. . ... , ...... :.?...L. .... ~ taken in stride by thisvery ~~.~q~T~~...~g.~4o~'~ae~,'~b4~,'~'~9~'~e'~~,~'~~e'~'~~~ musical andtalentedchild. ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976, 3 Pacific Northwest Music Festival - . t FESTIVAL NOTES ~ The membership ~iecided chasing risers and an-~national competitions this - New members are always Festival"77 is underway, to continue selling Lottery acoustical shell for the year. Sandra Pumfrey of welcome andneeded by the Joyce Knight of Kitimat tickets for the provincially R.E.M- Lee Theatre and. Victoria placed third in the FestivalCommittee. Youdo reported the Syllabus was sponsored lotteries. This is Grove's Dictionary of Music Woodwind competition: The nothave to be musical to ready for printing. When in the capable hands of and Musicians. The Festival Academy B~ass from become a member. printing is completed, Marg Gray this year. When will donate both of these Vaneouver'placed second in Meetings are every copies of the Syllabus and tickets arrive for these new items to School District 88, the Instrumental Ensemble. second Tuesday of the Entry Forms will be lotteries, The Express and its Honourary Patron, On St. John's Anglican Church month, ~ Forfurther in- available at the following The Provincial, watch for their arrival, from-Victoriawon the City formation contact Marilyn locations: • our ticket sellers at the Co- British Columbian of. Lincoln trophy in the Kerr at.635-3768 or Larry Terrace Sight & Sound op. Sight & Sound and musicians did very well in senior choral Competition.. Talarico at 635-7873, " By Mail: Terrace Interiors also sell- , Ms. Marilyn Kerr tickets on our behalf. The BANACEK: PROJECT ROGUES OF SHERWOOD R|DETHEW|LDSURF Express Tickets will be $1 PHOEMIX FOREST 196.4 Stars Fabian, Shelley Corresponding Secretary and a draw. wfl] be held~A railroad car carrying an 1950 Stars John Derek, Diana Fabares, Peter Brown, Barbara Box 456 Terrace, B.C. every two~eeks. Provincial experimental automobile Lynn. Robin, son of Robin Hood Eden. Four boys, intent on While the Festival dates tiebets areS5 each andthe prototype, 'enroute non-stop to and Lady Marianne succeeds in making records In big surf have been set f.or April 18 to -draw will be held eyery two .Boston, vanishes and Banacek rounding up his father's band to competition., meet four girls April 30, 1977, those who are months, is asked to find out how it oppose the oppression of Prince. Intent on marriage. entering are urged to order Last year several money happened..Guest Stars: Bert John in 1214. their music early. Any raising projects that started Convv and Percy RoVrLquez." difl'iculties, in purchasing Jin earlier festival years all FOS'/'ER AND LAURIE' DR. MOT'S LAST WARNING FADE IN the music for set pieces proved tobesuccessful. The ~975 Stars Perry King, Dorian 1939 Peter Lorre, George 1968 Stars Burt Reynolds, should be reported to Music Festival is .a non- Harewood. The real and tragic Sanders, Ricardo Cortez. Barbara Loden. Local lover, Marilyn Kerr at the above profit organization under story of two New Yo rk Conspirators, plofling to bl0w who never lost the game (;f love address as soon as possible .... the Society's Act, so any policemen, d~icated to helping up the Suez Canal are under the nor learned the true meaning of Copies of all set pieees in the , extra'money has to be spent, some of the city's most impcesslon they have that emotion, meets a woman Speech Arts competitions One thousand dollars went desperate people, who lost their eliminated Mr. Mot in a diving whom he falls for this time. can be obtained directly into Music Scholarships for rives inn vicious and brutal bell. from Marilyn Kerr. Entry students in the Pacific ambush. closing date is February 28. northwest. The remaining DAY OF THE OUTLAW SUSANNAH OF THE S~I"RANGER WORE A GUN 1!177. money was spent pur- ]959 Stars Robert Ryan, Burl MOUNTIES 1953 Stars Randolph Scott, • Ives, Tlna. Louise. Ruthless 1939 Shirley Temple, Randolph . Claire Trevor, Joan Weldon...... Scoff Or"han "-irl is raised b" a Man, whose life is saved by a • Dune or ounaws escape worn .. t, ~ .r ~ bandit', reluctantly loins in' el I&l &llli'tlrt I" , finn_ . ,_nUrsui,r,o U.S. Cavalry, which. Mountie. She helps NS)unhes ...... FUPlRIblUE • (~"~, . . - latertracksthem.downduringa when they are attacked by, conspiracy 1o lOOT me stage "' "1 "" '~.': i* ~:i'i'~~ : "!i i blizzard. - Indians. ' !ines.. ' .__

Q I

.:i I .\ )/ ;m i: I:, { ,i ; ':.i) Rudimentst Theory Illassei IIIII 1111

Ii -: ...... III!i lit

- "- ~'~'-~ -'~ -- -- " ' ~'" ' " "" • " " " • ' , " I - = -- - :,.ii, .. .: : .: ' Warehouse. Studio -" ..- . ' _ "MY! THE GUN LOBBYIS BEGINNING TO LOSE INFLUENCE,' • . ," .:

3&6 -'- 4 9 , 3&6 -. , 4 91 : . GOOD MORNING B.C. ., 9:00 .. " 3ODDMORNING B.C. B.C. SCHOOLS ' " " KAREEN'S YOGA . 9:30 MR. PIPER KARIEEN'S YOGA.... '- ' ' ..

FRIENDLY GIANT JEAN CANNEM 10: 00 ," FRIENDLY GIANT ~JEAN ' II I CANNEM ' L I " ~ : I "

MR. DRESSUP IT'S YOUR MOVE 10:30 MR. DRESSUP IT'S YOUR MOVE • " . i SESAME STREET DEFINITION " "" . 11 : 00 SESAMESTREET DEFINITION ....

• " HOT HANDS . " ' ' 11: 30 ,OT HANDS " BOB Nk:LEAN SHOW NOON NEWS 12=00 BOB Nk:LEAM S~ NOON NEWS . c~ NEWS AD~U~U 12:30 .CBC NE~' NIOVlE MATINE E "RKle .. CHECKMATE M O~/I E " M A T I N S E .. ! : 00. RUN FOR YOUR LIFE .the Wild Surf" "Banacek"

• " 1:30 , • . - , i | . ,, ALE IN THE FAMILY .... ~:00' : ALL IN THE FAMILY EDGE OF NIGHT " ALLAN HANtEL .... ". " " 2: 30 'EOGE OF NIGHT ALLAN ~L. ,: " " TAKE,30 WHAT'S THEGOOD WORD? ' 3:00 TAKE 30 ' WHAT'S THE GOOD WORD? . " ..

CELEBRITY ~:OOKS ANOTHER WORLD . ' 3: 30 r 4 CELEBRITY COOKS ANOTHER.WORLD ...... IT'S YOUR CHOICE ."MISTER ROGERS, "' 4:00 IT/S YOUR CHOICE .... MISTER ROGERS. , " " i '.

JUST FOR FUN THE BRADY BUNCH 'SESAME.STREET ' 4:30 VISION .ON THE BRADY BUNCH S~ STREET , EXPO BASEBALL EMERGENCY' ' '~ ...... ' " ~5 :'00 GUNSMOKE EMERGENCY' , ' : ""N~treal at New York"I " ELECTRIC COMPANY 5:30 NEW APPROACHES TO" .. . ' = HIGH. SCHOOL LEAR- " NEWS HOUR ' ZOOM " • '. 6: 00 HOURGLASS NEWS HOUR ~ . NING ' " - • "~ ~* . ' HUMAN SEXUALITY " ' ' 6:30 ~ COSMOLOGY : " fN CONCERT " " ' '' , . . ' , " ." 7: 00 " OUTDOOR EDUCATION .SANFORD& SON ASCENT OF ~ _,~ . CAN; SPORTS REPORT LILIAS, YOGA & YOU., 7 :'30. KOTTER < EXCUSE MY' FRENCH , ' . HOURGLASS ' • BIONIC WOMA N THE TRIBAL EYE ' . 8:00 CAROL BURNETT " ROMANTIC REBELLION' I BARETTA ' ' . ' 8:30 CLASSIC :.THEATRE" ...., PREVIEW .11 ': " BCTV SPECIAL "WaNed: . JENNIE "LADY RAN. ' 9~00 " RICHMAN, POORMAN(2 NANCy. CLASSICTHEAlrl~ ..... " " BOB NEWHART. " 'The,Sundar~e Woman" DOLPH" . "' 9:30 Hr. P~remlere] ' ' MACLEAR ' ' BOLD ONES . " ' SAY BROTHER .10: 0O DELVECCHIO. • [ " PERFORMANcE."JAZZ: ' 10:30 . ' , " .1,. " ,': " .NATIONAL NEWSHOUR FINAL ' " ' ../: C -." 11:00 THEIt&TIONAL ' * .NEWSHOUIt. FINAL~.'

NIGHT FINAL ' LATE SHOW I "Foster. & , : - 11:30 NIGHT FINAL 1 ' " " ' 4 ' .... d ' % ' Laurie" ...... RUN FOR YOUR LIFE LATE SHOWII "Dayofthe. . 12:OO FOTOPLAY "susamah of LATE sHOW I "'Fade In'* .' "

. FOTOPLAY "Mr. Mot's._, Outlaw" ...... the /;,',~;;ains". , "LATIE SHO~_, II "$trangeir" • •

L'LATESHOWIII'Roguesof_ " 'r." '*' + '~+' 12:30 . WoreaG~n. ' '.'...-', ... -. : .: .,' ", ! Last Wamimj ~ Forest . .,. " ..... 4, ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976 Starting this tall, BCTV will phenomenon with Freda a general knowledge of what turn that progressive• Fell;" solutions to money is going on ,in the world. outlook into the reality of problems- with David Weekdays, "Good Morning two new weekday news Ingrain; a segment • con- News Hour" and "Noon News Hour" will provide i programs. cerned with gossip on B.C. BCTV's newsman Jim celebrities ... and the list British Columbia Television Hart will host "Good goes on. viewers with a fresh ap- Morning News Hour" at 9 Each show will be a proach to news program: a.m. and return with kaleidoscope of information. ruing, part of the reason why another half-hour news- Information that will leave this fall, there s no place update, "Noon News Hour" viewers with more than just like BCTV. running from 12 to 12:30 ? p.m. ProdUced by Susanne Boyce; the two new shows going to air Tuesday, September 7, will no doubt BCTV's News ratings the country, wnen you're provide viewers with a consistently rank among the •running with a young and pleasant surprise. The :highest in the nation. When aggressive staff over fifty 'hard-news' headlines will asked to comment, News members strong, a •large assume their usual priority; Director Cameron Bell said: film budget, and the per: followhg that, these news "Our ratings directly reflect sonality of Tony Parsons, shows will be.anything but the combined efforts of the that's the kind of results you 'usual'. Each half-hour show largest News Department in achieve; The target is will be split up into ...... volume with quality, and segments. They will be short m i i I Jl II • that's what we try to and to the point. Meaty and deliver. We're constantly innovative. There will be MADIGAN: THE LISBON SHANE topical interviews; book BEAT 1953 Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, looking ahead for ways to Van Heflin, Jack P alance, present the news as reviews and entertainment; Madigan loses a prisoner he is taking back to New York when Brandon De Wilde. Wyoming: authoritatively and" ef- a look behind doors marked Former gunfighter, determined ficiently as possible." "No Admittance"; Psychic- his plane is delayed in Lis,bon. Guest Stars: Marcia Fox, to establish peaceful life, must Weston Gavin. strap on his gun again In defense of homesteaders when NIGHT OF THE GRIZZLY SLATTE RY'S HURRICANE FBI~STORY: THE FBI VER. ooen warfare threatens. 1966 Clint Walker, Martha Hyer, 1949 Richard Widmark, SUS ALVIN KARPAS ,~LL ABOUT EVE Keenan Wynn, Nancy Kulp. An Veronica Lake, Linda Darnell, / 1974, Stars Robert Foxworth, exlawman in Wyoming in 1880 John Russell, Gary Merill. 1950 Befle Davis, Anne Baxter, Eileen Heckart, Kay Lenz, tries his hand at ranching to While bucking his plane through Gary Merrill, Celeste Holm, David Wayne. Alvin Karpas make a better life for his family a hurricane, .pilot reflects in George Sanders, Marilyn was one of the nation's most and finds his greatest enemy to flashback upon the bitter Munroe, Hugh Marlowe. Inside wanted notorious criminals be a hugegrizzly bear. aimlessness of his life. story of an ambitious actress' . . °, .'" during the early 1930's. His rise from glamour struck girl In NEW iN TOWN? apprehension marked the first Theatre Alley to Award Winner. "ON HIGHWAY 16" 1737-2Oth AVEN.UE time in a long career that J. LET US PUT Edgar Hoover, personally ef- THE WAY WE WERE fected the capture of a wanted Star.ring and FBI criminal. Barbara Streisand in the block- OUT THE MAT buster'musical that's showing SECRET OF THE PURPLE for the first time On television. FOR YOU!. REEF I FULLY MODERN THEY SHOOT HORSES DON'T I ELECTRIC HEATING 1960 Stars Jeff Richards, I KITCHEN #AClLITIES Margie Dean, Peter Folk. THEY P.G,HIWR m[}I L ! I COLOUR TELEVISION Mysterious sinking of their 1969 Jane Fonda, Michael I GOV'r APPROVED father'sship in Caribbean sends Sarrazin, Susannah York, Gig MASTER CHARGE CHARGEX two brothers from island to Young. Victims of the FOR RESERVATIONS TELEPHONE 564-6869 island running down clues. Depression of the 30'S set outto win the prize money in a dance 1737 TWENTIETH .~VENIJE ' DESERT RATS marathon. MARG AND JOHN RAHIER PRINCE GEORGE. D.C. 1953 Stars • Richard Burton, James Mason, Robert Newton. /12 ANGRY MEN" Hard.driving English captain in 1957 Stars Henry Fonda, Lee J. Cobb, Ed Begley. Jury Room: Ihe M0sl Famous Basket *n the WOIH •' The place to stay while shopping, golfing, command of an Australian division, • forces the desperate 1st degree murder case up for holidaying, travelling • through or lust visiting men to hold a key outpost verdict...one tutor makes other PhonelS35"SS'/1 friends, close to major shopping centres, etc. against the North African 11 realize that their snap decision of 'guilty' is wrong. 63§-7912 • r Blitzkrieg in W.W.II.

I

4 l 9 3&6 . 4

GOOD MORNING B.C. 9:00 t' KIDDIES ON KA~RA Lc scHoo~ KAREEN'S YOGA 9:30, PEANUTS & POPCORN KIDSTUFF FRI ENDI~Y GIANT JEAN CANNEM ':. 10:00 f MR. DRESSUP IT'S YOUR MOVE 10:30 LET'S GO i SESAME STREET DEFINITION 11:00 BASEBALL GAME OF " DALE HARNEY i HOT HANDS .,.11:30 i BOB MCLEAN SHOW NOON NEWS -'• 12:00 JOYS OF COLLECTING ca(: News 12~30 FRASER KELLY OWEN MARSHALL ADAM 12 I 1:00 RED FISHER SHOW . ' B MOVIE MATINEE o1:30 SPORTSWEEK BREEDERS STAKES "Madigan" I AI~L IN THE FAMILY 2:00. FLAXTON BOYS ~OGWA. & CO. EDGE OF NIGHT' ALLAN HAMEL 2:30 KLAHANI E KE.ITH/V£COLL

k TAKE 30 WHAT'STHEOOODW0rtI~ 3:00 ~ ALt" STAR WRESTLING i CELEBRITY COOKS ANOTHER WORLO' 3:30 NFB FILMS IT'S YOUR CHOICE MISTER ROGERS- • 4:00 ~ COUNTRY WAY MISTER ROGERS i i PENCIL BOX -THE BRAOY BUNCH SESAME STREET 4:30 WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS SESANE STREET THE FBI SPACE 1999 • GUNSMOKE 5:00 I I ELECTRIC. COMPANY 5:30 ELECTRIC COMPANY " HOURGLASS NEWS HOUR ZOOM 6:00 . TCBC NEWS KRESKIN , REALIDADES PEACEMAKERS , 6:30 BOB MCLEAN FUNNY FARM SCENE OI~E, TAKE ()HE i LOCAL - TEA HOLMES & YOYO FIRING LINE 7:00 ' LOVE AMER. STYLE EMERGENCY WASHINGTON WIT. DAVID STEINBERG 7:30 ANDY WALL ST. WEEK i I MARY TYLER MOORE DONMY & MARIE WASHINGTON WK. 8:00 MOVIE "Love Among the BCTV SPECIAL "The Wa~, Ruins" - We V~re" CHICO & THE MAN WALL ST. WEL~K 8:30 RIVALS' OF SHERLOCK. f HOt,',=: TOMMY HUNTER ROCKFORD FILES MASTERPIECE 9:00 THEATRE • 9:30 THE SILENT YEARS POLICE STORY SERPICO SPAIN 10:00 .

10:30 "'•" OOC • P THE NATIONAL NEWS HOUR FII~L~I. 11:00 THE NATIONAL' . NEWS HOUR F INAL I • NIGHT FINAL NIGHT FINAL LATE.SHOW I "FBI Story: ] 11:30 Nvin Kai-va~" I ' ~ll LATE SHOW "Night of the . LATE SHOW II "Secret of,.. 12:00 LATE SHOW "Sham" -LATE SHOW I "They • Grizzly" FOTOPLAY "All About' "HorsesOon't They" 5~oot,, the Purple Reef" 12:30 ~W,,, ...... LA_TE SHOW II "12 Angry FOTOPLAY ,Slaffery's._ ,.~,LATE .SHOW ill" "Desert-,, i • Htwricane" Rats" ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERAI.D, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976, $ shipped, disassembledi. by JITTERBUGS ]943 Laurel and Hardy, Vivlan railand,trtlck to the 5ridge Blaine~ •Original •gut-bucker site. There it was slung boys this time make up a two. across the river between man zoot.suit band: Get in. two: concrete abutments ROAM AT HOME volved with con man. built on rock formations On • BENEATH THE TWELVE either side of the ~0-fo0t- I MILE REEF -deep-gorge...... +*'. Stars Terry Moore, .A TRAVEL BRITISH • COLUMBIA FEATURE • Once' the: project was Robert Wagner, Gilbert Roland. completed, the logging Murderous competition for rich companies realized that it sponge beds between divers of wo~ld save them a lot of Tarpon Sp~.ingsandthe English ¢ travelling, Now +they use the 'Conchs'. bridge, but a:toll+is:~o]]eeted " WILSON RUDY JOHNSON'S when Cariboo rancher has the last laugh as he for .each load of timber that : 1944 Alexander, Knox, Charles ,~ -'/BRIDGE Johnson announced he was surveys what is probably cro~ses the rivei;~;• ethel" Coburn, Geraldine :Fitzgerald, traffic travels free. Thomas. Mitchell, Vincent /+ going to build his own bridge the only privately owned toll "Theysaid it couldn't be across the Fraser• River bridge across a majorriver Construction of the bridge , Price,' sir-/Cedric Hardwicke. done..." might well be Rudy• north of Williams Lake. in western Canada. has made Johnson famous Stirring story Of the life of the Johnson's theme song. But those who scoffed are Johnson decided to build in the Cariboo, and its story 28th President of the: United That's what everyone said now believers and Johnson his bridge to provide a has been picked up by States; the tremendous account better way of getting to his magazines and newspapers o{ Woodrow Wilson's successes, ~.ranch on the west side of the across the province and " rf.a.iI.ures and great ideals.. Fraser. The two available Canada. And it's prov.ed to WEST. SIDE STORY k alternatives didn't appeal to many an unbeliever that "it 1961 Stars Natalie . Wood, , r• "• . him much. He could drive 20 can't be done" ]s not Richard Beymer, Russ Tam- • ~ miles on a gravel road from something you say lightly in blyn, . Modern day Romeo and Juliet theme set to Williams Lake to the the Cariboo. (This Roam at Home music as.a gang of West Side Department of High'~ays boys in New York do baffle bridge across the river, then article is one of a series • against the new Puerto Rican 35 miles north on narrow provided by the Department neighbors. Then a West Side boy dirt roads to the ranch. Or, of Recreation and Travel falls in love with a Puerto Rican he could take the two-ear Industry.) girl. Winner of 10 Academy ++~-i reaction ferry that crossed AwardS. the river at Soda Creek. BLACK ROSE BROKEN ARROW He decided that the bridge 1950 Stars Tyrone Power,Orson 19,~0 Stars James Stewart, Jeff would be a boon to the Welles, Cecile Aubry. Based on Chandler, Debra Paget. Based. logging companies that Thomas Costain's novel about a on actual historical incident worked the area on the west• 13th Century English Saxon about how one man's• courage side •of the Fraser and tried search for trade secrets along helped bring peace between the r• r.+, to convince them to be caravan routes. Apaches and the Arizona set. partners, in the bridge HOW.TO BREAK A HAPPY tiers in the 1870's. building project. : They DIVORCE DESERT • FOX I J ]976 Barbara Eden stars in a 1951 Stars James Mason; Sir :+• • • refused. comedy about a divorcee who Cedric Hardwicke. Personal Johnsowand a few friends tries to "~in. back her ex. formed a company and went and political sides of Field husband by. making him Marshal Rommel and hisLdefeat ahead on their own. A bridge jealous. Hal 'Linden and Peter during W.W. It's African was located, in Alaska/ and Bonerz co,star. .Campaign; ~ . - . -o~j - + + f ,! , ++ii!iliil!

Soda Creek Ferry L

• ~. .

3&6 .9 • 3&6 - .... 4 9 IT iS wRrn'EN SEARCH • • 9:00 . : GOODMORNING B.C. i I

WILDKiNGDOM ERNEST ANGLEY :, ;,, 9: 30 s.c SCHOOLS : KAREEllfS YOGA " "

k Me~i~ P~CE ORAL ROBERTS ' , [] 10"00 i FRIENDLY GIANT. JEAN C.N~NF..M I i COUNTRY WAY". " • . [] ".10:30 MR. ORESSUP "IT'S YOUR MOVE ' " I CFL FOOTBALL IT I$ WRITrEN + [] 11: 00 s~ STREET DEFINITION • : .i i ~ [] i GARNER A~ ' 11:30 " + HOT HANDS + • I 6OOO NEWS - 12:00 EDit.McLEAN SHOW. NOON NEWS " i AGAPE 12:30 cac NmVS MOVl E. MATINEE:"West " Slde S~-'~.~ Pt. I" TERRY WINTERS 1: 00 ,THE BOLDONES S,~TSW~EK STAR TREK. • 1:30 " . • ' * 2:00.. ALL IN THE FAMILY SUNDAY THEATRE- +'How 2:30 EDGE OF NIGHT + %: j' __ NETWORK - TEA +" ALLAN HAMEL SHOW to 6~k a I~m,~ I);+,~-+~'" B -+ : uvING TOMORROW ': 3:O0 ~ TAKE~, WHAT'S THEGOODWORI)? MONEY MAKERS - 3: 30 CELEBRITY.COOKS ANOTHER WORLD

,, ' ,~: • RECITAL ' HORST KOEHLER MISTER ROGERS + "" 4:'00 r ~S YOURCHOICE ' ' .. '. MISTER ROGERS , " " • i ;COUNTRY CANADA i " QUESTION PERIOD .SESAME STREET , 4:30 COMING UP ROSIE + THE BRADY BUNCH SF.SAME STREET " H~r,~ SING LAST OF THEWILD • S:O0 ' GUNSMOKE , ' ,. EMERGENC + REACH FOR THE TOP CAPITOL ~NT ELECTRIC ~ COMPANY .... ~:5:30 ,ELSCmIC C0~JU~, -. I .WORLD OF DISNEY , NEWS HOUR THE TRIBAL EYE.; • 6:00 HOURGLASS • NEWS 'HOUR I +' +i i .' 6:30 + .... Hu,w~ SF.XUAUW ' BEACHCOMBERS .• 6 MILLION DOLLAR MAit. WORLD PRESS • : 7: 00 BARNABY JONES +~ WHAT IS TRUTH? .THEATRE PREVIEW, t

~. ,' . SUPER SPECIAL, " • LOWELL. +.THOMAS ~. 7:30 : HEADLINE HUNTERS WORLD PRESS • i | SONNY & CHER EVENING AT SYM- 8:00 R.ODA . + THE WALTONS • IN PERFORMANCE AT, I r pHONY .P~___--T-B#,p_~+ ~ONY+~ANDALL 8:30' p.~us " - • siDE STREET KOJAK MASTERPIECE 9: 00" FRT. PAGE CHALLENGE PiG & WHISTLE BEHAVIOR ' ~ ' II ,I i THEATRE • 9:30 All. IN THE FAMILY oNE DAY AT A TIME ' ALIVE. ' " ;. ' j" PASSIONATE AFFAIR ,; W-5 10:00 NEWS MemAZINE STREETS OF SAN ELECTION ALERT ! FRANCl __l"~'~_ ' 10:30 mAN ALIVE . "+

THE • N;TIONAL NEWS HOUR FIN~ ' 11: 00 THE NA~IORAL NEWS HOUR 'IgiNAL NATION'S BUSI Ni:~;g 11:30 NIOHT FINAL

, " ', THE BOLD ONES': i • :" LATE SHOW I +'Black: +12:00 ' I.T TAKES A THIEF ~ SHOW l ' I "Broken I Rose" k I L: ' & ~J'l'OW I,.' , " ... ' , ..... , ~•i:.¸ .., ~:•:,! ,; :,: + FOTOPLAY "jifferl~,~- LATE SHOW II ',Beneafll," FOTOPLAY "IMISlMt" LATE SHOW.• II "N ' .m 12 t~te ;++;",+ ' . rvA .... • r . + . • ,L .

"• " t 6, ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976 ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976, 7 ,o o, Terrace Little Theatre

: "O O: " -O ~i: , W: • "'%

•B.y .Brian (~regg "Skeenalseems to be a fairly active zone," he said, lmag~-r~e beginning an ."There is a good variety of 4 evening of Little Theatre plays for the "evening of (September 30 to October 2) Little Theatre." This was with a melodrama farce for Paisley's first trip to Skeena six actors which stars Dave since taking the job over Phillips; Don McLeod and from Ray Logie. Ken Morton. Dave Phillips He said it was a good idea_ "alsowrbte the play. for the club to go in this i~...... ,'Walking Back" is ~the direction because it gives second play, directed by the groups a chance to- -Doug Xemis and stars explore some Of the Robert Johnson and Jane elements of theatre. , Petch. This performance He said of "Relatively has a war theme. • Speaking", a play which is For those who saw Cherie enjoying much success on BRIAN PAISLEY, provincial drama consultant (in photo top left gives Stewart's 'TaU of Man" the stages in London and New direction during rehearsal of "One Spring Morning". Other photos show. performance of her play York and is being directed sequence of the fall of one man waiting for a bus. "One Spring Morning:' is in Terrace by Robin McColl, even more absurd, as it is is also being performed by o J~ ,..~ ...... - . - ...... •"" --- " ",s'K" " ". intended to be. Fo.r those two other groups in the who did not see the first play province. This play will he THEATRE i : this production is probably performed in the R.E.M. the best introduction of one Lee Theatre from "'%ES: :: of our province's best November 3 to 6. playwrights. RENTAl, • It stars Lyle Petch. as the Anyone interested in -.'.-'. , heieagured man waiting at renting the Little Theatre the bus stop; Lorna Morton. should note the following. as .the huffy old lady" The Green Room is upstairs Hidden somewhere in the ads Coreme Piuner, as the little and has a lounge style at- girl who buzzes around the mosphere with kitchen in the entertainment section man like a mosquito and facilities. It seats • ap- Jennifer Langley, as Elsie proximately 40 people. are two Terrace phone numbers. who finally stings him. The The main theatre i ¸• !: :•: :: play is directed, by ~Iolly downstairs has moveable ~k Find them, and if one is yours you've won. Nattress and co-directed by seats.. It will accommodate Sharon Lynch. approximately 120 people. It Brian Paisley, theatre !s -useful for lectures, consultant .for the B.~. meetings, social gatherings, Drama Association, was in etc. Terrace September 23 to For further information ) make himself available to regarding bookings contact Tillicum Twin the Little Theatre group., -Molly Nattress at" 635-2048. ) ° 4720 £akelse 638-8111 One showlnq nlqc~ly at 8,.00 p.m, In~dlnq S~ndays | SE PTEMBER ..... ::~..', Back by Popular Demand • ~:~. / i :- . . ~,f- " "'~'! ...... -" ":" ...... ~---: ...... T'-'- 29 ;::-; '.•:" " , """ .... .

* :r,, 30 Oct.

..

: The big wirmer at .3 this year's Academy Awards. this tale of Academy Award winner with life in a I9~Os mental institution collected Jack Mcholson 4 Best Picture. Actor. Actress and Direc- Wvnmg: v~ence Ind ¢OlUll kin. gu=ge could be fdgMen~ng f0¢ chil- tion Oscars. Restricted. dren R. W. McDofildd B.C. Oifeftof

S . . . •

11 S~wt~me 7.00 &9:O0 ~ M. Sunday. 9:00 P.~. Only

SEPTEMBER

29 11~ cast ~ the d~.ade. ~,,-t~,~-m,.f,.f.~.. The Shootist:/.John: ~ayne i. .30 JOHN WAYNE" stars as a legendary'gunfishter,.. " LAUPJEN BACALL .who i.arfives.q uietly::.m Carson ~ : Oct. City in ]901 and learns from his . =e= x~,a~see,v~ doctor and o d. friend (James '~ " . t ..... 1 '=THE, ;~rlluKJpll~l, Stewart) that he has onlva. : ~:i~ ---: short time to !live.~ ";:~,~.:: 2 '~ - ,,3'. :STARDUST: - 4,L Mpsical - Starring David Essex :: :,, •.

For two weeks only :,i: ,:: Sel¢ 26 - 0d. 2 ;i,::~ Saturday Matcnu* at 2..00 P,~. only ::J • , :;,i:. .! " .,..

, [0;::t. Appearing at.. the L. i:.~ 2 WHO ISMINDING THE MjN_T_ Ilted D'Or :Caba = r I I re ~ ?* ~':: ::: "* ..... "'' ':'"

". , '..

' ' '• r'/ •,~'' ." . . ': 'r • .'...... : ...... : :.:.: ..... :~..: , ... ~ :..:: ...... :•o (

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8, ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29, 1976

Sund~ince Kid", Saturday, •Molly Bt'own'~, just to name picture viewing, Bill name I September':25, 9 p.m.,, and a few, round out the bill., features' with wel]-kno~n "Most Wanted Woman", the Dates and times4o be an-artists.~ This • is fine en -~ sequel to "Butcl~ Cassidy nounced. Shown as Movie tet~tainment ' that will • be and the SundanceKid", on Matinees in two parts on enjoyed by viewers Satm~day, October'2, 9 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays this throughout, the province. : "Gone With the Wind" fall. will be seen as a-tw0-part Once again, BcTv This fall, there's no:place world television • premiere provides the best in motion like BCTV!" on BCTV November 7 at 9 p.m. Part two of this fine film, hailed by motion critics as one of the greatest features ever produced, will be seen the following night at the same time. I~~ ~x~ ,~ SO~E~ ~O~H The list of features con- tinues with a number of I~i~~~~ NORTH AFRICA ANP "This season's list of From record album to musicals, providing won- L~~P" AUST~L,A.~ F~,~ special movie presentations Broadway show to motion derful entertainment for the SQUIRREL CAN GLIDE is probably the •best we've picture, "Jesus Christ- entire family. Life on the ~'=~:' ::~-TO 60 F'T: "n-IEY'I~E ACTIVE ever •offered our viewers." Superstar" with its unusual Mississippi in George '-.... - - _~ AT NIGHT. RED ..~UIRREL~ Those .are the words of visual trappings and unique Sidney's production of ~ICAN PV~/HV" EAT PINE CONES ANDCAN Lloyd Colthorp, BCTV's set design will .appear "Showboat", "Hello Dolly", S~U/P..R~LS ARE 3" CUT AROUND 1(30 CONES Vice-President in Charge of Saturday, October 9 at 9 "Funny Girl", "Paint Your _ Lo~, WE/C~/~/:¢ OZ. FROM A TREE IN AN HOUR.- Programming. Indeed it is a p.m. Wagon", "Zorba the very impressive list. "Butch Cassidy and the Greek", and "Unsinkable

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ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD,.Wed. Sept. 29, 1976, 9

::Travel: :spot I. L ' : "'1""E~ ' d" , -officeco,reFlex,the addibon Of rlight'weight'aswell as ...... "' " ' electronic "instaht News" camera. i|y-Yes' Q,adra Travel held by floodlight at the ' In the entertainment field, ~,rviee grotto. " L BCTV is creating Canada's I ! first daytime talk-variety C0ntinuirig the series of • One of the other sur- articles on the Hawaiian prising things to see is a I series, ,The .Alan Hamel Islands, this week. I would Russian fort- that's right! Show". Produced in BCTV's like to describe Kauai. Hoping to seize Kauai for • Vancouver studios, it will be The island of Kauai is the the Czar, an employee of the seen coast-to-coast on the fourth largest of the •group, Russian Fur Company built ~) CTV Network, .. Monday being 32 miles in diameter. the fort in 1817. The ruins through Friday. And is approximately 25 are all that remain of his Seven new rebroadcasting minutes flying time from dream. transmitters are currently Hon01ulu. Now that we have Unlike the big island the under construction to carry those facts out of the Way, beaches on Kauai are un- the BCTV signal into let's get down to the more surpassed. In p~rticular, Britfsh Columbia ."Good Morning News southeastern :British interesting details of this Poipu Beach, an area where Television is pleased to Hour". . Columbia. When the very beautiful holiday many of the hotels are announce that its new The Noon News has been projects are completed, the destination. located. The ocean around season beginning in Sep- expanded from fifteen to communities of Osoyoos, If you saw the movie. the island'is also ideal for tember 1976 marks an ex- thirty minutes. The entire Keremeos, Grand Forks, "South Pacific" then you water sports, surfing and pansion of services to the BCTV News service will-Trail, Rossland,, Cast!egar, have already seen the lush fishing. If you would like to people of B.C. This ex- benefit from an expansion Kinnaird, andNelsonwillbe' scenery that abounds in try deep sea fishing this can panded service is reflected w0ject which includes the served by British Columbia Kauai. It was here that the easily be arranged through in several areas. " construction of a new studio- Television. location shots were taken. your hotel. And if you take BCTV will increase and ' .... There is without a doubt "Participaction" seriously improve its news broad- more vegetation herethan there are some beautiful casts. The morning news anywhere else in Hawaii. hiking trails all over the show "B.C.A.M." is moving One of the most enjoyable island, but particularly from its 6:30 a.m. time excursions,one can t~ke is a along the cliffs that skirt period into the 9 a.m. slot. It beatup the Waimea Canyon. much of the;coastline. will have a completely new This is a three mile trip As with many of the format and will be called along theWfiilua River. At islandsit is advisable to hire the, end passenger8 a car for at least part of your disembark to visit haun- Stay. There are manyscenic FALLEN ANGEL tingly beautiful Fern Grotto, drives one can take. This is 1945 Oana Andrews, Alice Faye, an enormous cave a particularly,niceway to Linda .Darnel,. Charles Bick- luxuriantly festooned with see, t~opical flowers "and ford. Young man marries growing ferns.• On many plants that abound here. wealthy girl for her. money.• He- 125Air Conditioned Suite & Rooms With View evenings, performances :of Kauai is not known as the plans to run, .away, with a Color TV, Telephone, Tub & Shower; Ell- • " traditional Hawaiian are Garden Isle for nothing.' waitress but instead:finds he is vators, Coffee Shop, Dining Room, Nightly .... suspected .of he r murder. Entertainment, Blnquat i Milling Rooms RHINO! For UpT0 125 Kitchenettes Avlillfl)la 1964 Stars . Harry Guardino, Robert .Culp, Shirley Eaton. A 682-1831 FREE PARKING Peanuts and zoologist seeking a male and female rhinoceros unknowingly :REE Reilwitions- hire a hunter.turned-poacher as 300-261,3330, , • Popcorn their quide. R EO'RIVER " Ownld~a~O ~!llf! lid I ' ~ "

I,ike the~ old Saturday 1948 Stars John Wayne, Mon- ' " * "1 etc.:, who approve •,the tgomerY Cliff, Walter Brennan. "O PRYSTAY morning at the movie house, scientific "content of the Post. Civil War: Texas cat- ~ie-/ .... _ ...... the CBC-TV series "Peanuts" shows. " " ' :and.Popcorn" brings kids tleman and foster son quarrel Englidl Bay at $1mnley Pwk Bus stop .... • • Many of the feature films over cattledrive, fir.st 9ver the - • ~ . . the exciting world of that begin each Peanuts and Chisholm .Trail into MissoUri. atOur Door !nd Take You Anywhere In * serialized •adventure, Popcorn .program are Son leaves father and takes the The CitY: For The Price Of A BUs Ticket, . cartoons and feature films. Amer~ean,made-, such as hel;d to Abile.ne instead, where : :i. : ' " " ' ;" "~* ":L T " if- Each Saturday at 10:30 Rookie of~the Year, which he then waits for angered, : . . 1 ...... " a.m., beginning October 2, a will lead ,off the series.• • , ..L ..... different feature will be Child-actor Jodie Foster shown followed by the all- plays "the rookie", who Canadian animated cartoon turns out to be a girl,playii~g sei'ial, "The Undersea on an all-boy baseball team. Adventures of Captain • The following Saturday's Nemo", followed by the feature is The Bridge of continuing Swedish- Adam Rush, about a change 3&6 4 9: produced Serial "The White in family fortune • that at' ' " 9:00 oooo MORmNG, B.C. ' : . * ... . Stone". fects 12-year-old Adam, • 9:30., • MR; PIPER KAREEN'S YOGA - .. • ~" The White Stone, set in an growing up in .Philadelphia ethereal Nordic sum- at the turn of the century. 10:00 " FRIENDLY GIANT , JEAN "CANNEM SHOW . .', ...... ' mertirne, is-about Fin, Sbusequent features include 10:30 MR. aRESSUP IT'S Y~JR MOVE ,. I ,, ' : u I daughter of a piano teacher the English-made film The 1 ! : 00 SESAme STREET DEFINITION • --Thomas, a young boy Camerons, about children 11 : 30 : Ho~" HAKOS " who's always getting into who stumble into a cave in a. trouble for his pranks, government-res~icted area 12:00 BOB McLEAN SHOW NOON NEWS , ./,.

Fideli and the King of and become privy to a 12i30 c~c NEWS ., MOVIE MATINEE '~West. .. : h: ' W L . :h W ' ' ; " ,Dangel's, and (most. im-.. sinister plot; It Must Be 1:00 IT TAKES A THIEF. ,i ,Side St0ry Pt. II .... q portant) awhite stone, a i , 1 Love, starring Alfred 1:30 : ...... • perfectly .smooth. white Lutter; TI~e Secret Life of stone that can be held in the T.K. Dearing; The Boy With 2: 00 " ALL IN THE FAMILY " .... hand 'and rubbed against the Glasses; Mauro the Gyp.sy 2: 30 EOGE OF •NIGHT ALLAN ~ L" SHOW 1 I " " cheek when one is sad. and many more. The ser~es 3:00 * TAKE 30 . WHAT'S'THEGOOD WORD?' ~The animated cartoon is coordinated by Nada 3: 30 :CELEBRITY COOKS ANOTHER WORLD ' serial Captain Nemo isthe Harcourt. first-eve~, all-Canadian- 4:00 "', iT'S YQOR CHOICE .... " ," , " , MISTER ROGERS ..... Beginning -Saturday- i , produced. Each five-minute programming on CBC-TV at ' 4" 30 ELECTRICCO~ANY' THE BRAbY BUNCH " ' "SESAME/.STREET' progfa~m is an exciting, 9:30 a.m. is Parade, 5:00 GUNSNV)KE EMERGENCY :."- . . , " " cruetS'on-packed, sc'ien- designed for younger 5:30 ' .- . , . ," .ELECTR!C.',.~/IIPANY . I tifically authentic ad- children. In this hour, CBC- I 6:00 HOURGLASS NEI~ HOUR : ' . ::BIG BLUE MARBLE: , ': venture tale involving produced episodes of I animals of the sea and new Friendly Giantl Men Ami :~ '6:30 ~technological developments and. Mr. Dressup will ,be?.: : I 7:00:. LITTLE " .o.-SEOH' BOBBYVINTON LIIJA$, YOGA &YOU..... i- " 4"~ w •utilized by capt., Mark showri. -* 7:30 PRAIRIE '" ' "." .:.: i STARS ON I'CE ; ' UNIVERSITY. ' I~ICE ;'i{ Nemo and his" two 8:00 HAPPY.DAYS . HAWAII FIVE O ;' OUR'STORY " " '.~; ..... i assistants, Christine, 12 and I Robbie, 10, in their nuclear '8:30 KING OF KENSINGTON " ."' '" •' ' ',, "" RIVALS OF SHERI.~CIC ';~ HOLMES powered submarine 9:00 Nautilus. 9:30 FIFTH ESTATE JULIE ' MONTY PYTHON All stories in the Capt. i ,10:00 ,SWITCH , SOUNDSTAOE Nemo series; produced by I Rainbow Animation Ltd., 10:30 BARNEY/VU.LLAR * :: .1 T~ront0, are submitted to an 11:00 THE NATIONAL NSWS HOUR ~INAL i international 'panel of ' 1,1:30 NIGHT FINAL • .- , , • . • , :7 ,:' oceanographic experts, ~.': 12~00 CHECKMATE .... - LATE_S~mV i. ,".RNm" leaders in the fields of LATE SHOW il "Red 12:30 .nlhrinel. biology, ~: en: FOTOPLAY iiFallen I . -~Kiver", . ..___ m Angel,/ • . .' . vir0nment, • chemiStr.y;: law,,. Ik, • . I~), ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed. Sept. 29,, 1976

reduced so Come out Kiddie's Kornei', Saturday, Concert - 2 p.m. -R.E.M. .Saturday morning and •.October 23 in the Arena Lee Theatre.. support .,the Hospital Banquet Room from 2 to. Tuesday, November 2 Auxiliary and get a. bargain 4:30 p.m. - School Concert for Terrace for yourself. Remember, Schools. Clive Lythgoe, each bag you fill only costs Sunday, ()ctober 24 concert pianist, 1:30 p.m. - October 2 you $1. Jehovah's Witness Con- R.E.M. Lee Theatre I Dec. 8 - Dec. I1 - Thrift Shop on Lazelle October 2,.3 ference - all day ~Vednesday, November 3 Ave. (next to Spee Doe -Terrace Little Theatre's Caledonia Sr. Secondary - TK TV Talent Showcase, Friday. October 29 fall production "Relatively School Drama Class Printers) Mills Memorial R.E.M. Lee Theatre - Terrace District Teachers Hospital Auxiliary Thrift SPneak~;gby an English Production. R.E.M. Lee October 9 Association Professional •Theatre Shop Sale. Saturday, Oc- - Terrace Concert • Ahin Ayck- Development Conference - bourne - 8 p.m. - R.E.M. Lee 'l'ues.: December 14 tober 2, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Association presentation of all day - R.E.M. Lee Theatre Everything in our shop will The Huggett Family,- Theatre Kiti K-Shan Primary be included in this sale. As R.E.M. Lee Theatre Saturday. October 30 Nov. 4 to Nov. l; School Christmas •Concert, many items as you can get - Terrace District Teachers -Terrace Little Theatre's R.E.M. Lee Theatre into the largest paper bags "Wetlnesday, october 13 Association Pro[essional Fall Production "Relatively - Terrace Concert we can find is yours for only- - School Concert for Terrace Development Conference Speaking" an English Association presents "La $1. No limit to the number of Schools. "The" Huggot morning- 'R.E.M. Lee Comedy by Alan Ayck- Traviata" by the Canadian • bags you fill. There is a good Family". 1:30 p.m.R.E.M. Theatre bourne - 8 p.m.R.E.M. Lee Opera Company. R.E.M. selection of .clothing, shoes, Lee Theatre Terrace Concert Theatre Lee Theatre boots, sewmg patterns, Saturday, October 23 Association present Clive ~u nda)', ' December "5 December 4 purses, skates and books. - Jehovah's witness Cow Lythgoe, concert pianist -Joan Spencer's Singing Terrace Concert Many items are suitable for ference - all day - R.E.M. 8:15 p.m. R.E.M. Lee Class - Student Recital 8 Association presents Guitar costumes (Hallowe'en is L e e. T'h e a t r e Theatre p.m., R.E.M. Lee.Theatre Trio. R.E.M. Lee Theatre coming up), Children's October 23 Sunday, October 31 Tues.; i)ecember 7 December 16-18 •,'Dress,Up,or just to take -.MillsMemorial-Hospital - Tri-City (Pr. Rupert, - Uplands Elementary - Terrace Little Theatre's apart for buttons, zippers,. Auxiliary Annual Tea and Kitimat, Terrace) Senior School Christmas Concert - Christmas Pantomine. etc, Our Stock needs to be Secondary School Band R.E.M. Lee Theatre R.E.M. Lee Theatre 1 Bazaar, introducing a

u. Barbara Streisand is "Funny Lady" .1 CBC-TVhas ablockbuster Onlya Paper Moon, I Found Aquacade water, show. For three decades, Fanny such superstars as Will movie. 4n, its: early- fall, aMillion Dollar.Baby In'the Fanny went to Hollywood. Brice was known to the. Rogers and.W.C. Fields. ' schedule, and it stars that-Five and Ten Cent Store, " In the mid.thirties, her Baby entertainment world as the' Funny Lady is sponsored blockbuster musical talent, Great Day, Me and My Snooks characterization on funniest woman in show-on CBC-TV (Saturday,. Barbara- Streisand. The .Shadow -- Billy Rose a network radio comedy; business. At the height of. October2, 8-11p.m.)by the movie is the 1975 sequel to collaborations. The five hour catapulted Fanny into - her fame, Florenz Ziegfeld Ford Motor Company :of Funny Girl, extending her Kander-Ebb originals are a 14-year radio career, gave her top billing" over Canada. vivid portrayal of Fanny Blind Date, So Long Honey Brice. Fanny, the funny-sad' Lamb, How Lucky,Can You Broadway star of the Get,"Let's Hear It. For Me,. twenties and thirties, was and Isn't This Better? Arts - Recreation the role which won Barbara Music arranged and ,her Broadway stardom and conducted by Peter Matz; ,later an Academy Award in screenplay by Jay Presson meeting .tonight,. the movie version of Funny Allen and Arnold Schulman; Girl. roduced by Ray Stark; The Terrace and District Representatives are urged to individuals, grou[)s and Funny Lady, for telecast rected .by Herbert Ross. Arts Council and the to bring with them a com~. the community: in general.. on CBC-TV Saturday,. Oc-. Funny Lady picks up the Terrace District Recreation • plete • and up,to-date • Copies will.. be made tober 2, 8 - 11 p.m., teamsl Fanny Brice story where DelSartment are coor- schedule of their groups' available to the Community Streisand with two leading Funny Girl left off. Though dinating a public meeting to events and a list of their Resources Board, .• the male stars -- James Ca an. divorced from Nick and a be .held on Wednesday groups' executive com- Terrace Herald,• the local .and Omar Sharif. Caan famous star of the Ziegfeld September 29 at 7:30 p.m. in mittees. Library, theRecreation plays the brash and talented Follies, Fanny still clings to Caledonia Lecture Theatre, ;The calendar, when Commission and the local super-showman Billy Rose, her illusions about' her 3605' Munroe Street, completed, will be of benefit Radio and TV stations. with whom ,Fanny Brice dapper former husband. Terrace, to organize and ~became professionally and Enter Billy Rose --and the prepare a. Calendar of !romantically involved sparks fly. The unlikely Community Events for 1976- _ff , ' "following her breakup with combination of Fanny and 77. Instant her " first husband, Billy .starts as a The object of the meeting sophisticated gambler Nick showbusiness alliance, is to ensure that dates for Arnstein (Sharif). which flowers into major community events do Co-starring -in Funny marriage. The marriage not clash and to improve s Lady are Roddy McDowalL lasted eight years., and and increase public .Ben Vereen and Carole Fanny confessed that she knowledge of local Wells. Original songs by "never loved the man I organizations and their John Kander and Fred Ebb liked, and never liked the activities. •are complemented by well- man I loved". Rose married All organizations are loved "oldies" -- including Eleanor Holm, swimming urged to send represen- _.More Than You Know. It's star of his fabulous • tatives to this meeting.

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I . • . . , ENTERTAINMENT, THE HERALD, Wed..Sept. 29, 1976, I1 :Schlatte gives Redd Foxx .... " - " That's day : ..... bigger image :youwere gomgto startS:: '; i:i:George Schlatter, whose , • ...... _...... ,.k...= • ti~levision produchons ..... exercising, • :lauhched the careers of such stars as Lily Tomlin,.Goldie H~wn andHenry Gibson, is now providing an additional ( . " i ": boost to the stature of a TV comedy star whose video career he-launched nine • years ago. " • • The comedian happens to be TV's celebrated number one star, Redd Foxx; and the "boost" is happening on the big screens of movie theatres when Foxx makes his film starring, debut in Schlatter's comedy for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, "Norman ... Is That You?" It. was in 1967 that Schlatter arranged for Foxx to •. make his network television debut in a musical • .called "Soul," several years before Redd starred on TV in "Sanford and Son" and became the celebrated RESTAURANT ~ comedy king of the home screens. ¢BII~E~E & CANADIAN FOOD "Soul was an early all- •Block variety show," Business Hours .... Schlatter explains, "and 1O.am to 1 am Monday -Saturday 11 amto 10 pm Sunday" Redd did-one of his great night Club routines -- but slightly 'laundered' for TV's family audience." •PHONE 613 5-,6111 Except for a brief walk-on role in "Cotton.. Comes to 4842. Lazelle West of CFTK " Terrace Harlem,". filmed in. New York,-Foxx had never been .Geor.cle Schlatter and Redd Foxx in:a theatrical film during his 25-year career in 3Z~ff~. ~J~JJ,~J' Hollywood:•` Then Schlatter l and "Nm:man ... Is That ° . - ., . - You?" came along to change what any Foxx fan E EICE THINK will insist should have _1 HE CAN happened many years ago. A I~ETTER In addition to luring Redd from his busy TV schedules to star in '•'Norman ... Is That You?', Schlatter also enticed Pearl Bailey from her xetirement to co-star With Foxx. Miss Bailey had retired from show business to devote'all of her time to 7 the great humanitarian work she is accomplishing in association with the United Nations. "I simply wouldn't takeno for an answer,", says Schlatter,. e'xpla ining Pearl's show business return..."I just kept calling YH E'Y, JUSHEADf~l %wAs---ER ~.~-b her and:calling her -- and 7WHAT'S THE , I one day she said yes." GU~HEAD TO 1 FANTASTIC NEW ~AEMORY NAME OF THAT = ,Norman ...Is That I COURSE AND NOW HE HAS]~ You?" will •be .released in I A PHOTOS RAPH I~ the U.S. and Canada by United Artists in late .Sep- temberand 'Cinema In- ternational Corporation will: handle its release throughout the: rest of the world. o. CourthouseSquares

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MOUNTAIN. VISTA DRIVE -- NBN SOMETHING DIFFERENT LOG EXTERIOR TWO STOREY COMMERCIAL ENTERPRISE1 OF CLOSE TO SCHOOLS HOME A very attractive home with 1008 sq. ft. Out in the country this 3 IxJrm. home is 3 YOUR OWN A-frame front on this opert lOSt & ~ct bungalow style.house with 3" on main floor with I IxIrm., bthrm. & stereys with an unfinished loft on the tOp Come in & discuss the potential of this home with 3 bdrms., op~ kitchen, living very large kitchen, dining & living area. bdrrns., fireplace up & clown, w.w floor, 1~ 2 Uaths, utility rm., vinyl floors, resort at Tafogga Lake in Stewart. rm., dining area, w.w carpeting, carpeting, gas heat & hot water & at. Lower. level has 2 IxIrms., laundry & storage & there is an attached carport shake roof & a unique design & land. Cassiar area featuring gas station, cathedral entrance & attached carport. tached carport. Subdivision has paved with sundeck over. Lot is nicely land- scaPinq. A pleasure to view. coffee bar, laundromat, rental cabins &. The lot is fully landscaped & partially roads, underground services & rear of scaped & has a hand built stone wall to large family home. Excellent'patential .fenced. For viewing iohor~ Bert Liungh. houses face a small park. B.C. 2rid. add to the decor. Full Price S37,500. for growth in this beautiful northern mort. would be available on this new out~est. Irx~uire .. house to help complete your finar¢ing. II i I ,I

VERY DIFFERENT AND QUALITY LOW ~ LOW ~ DOWN PAYMENT EXCELLENT FAMILY HOME EASY TO OWN • A NEW HOME• OF SO CUMFY - COZY 1300 sq. ft. & full bsrnt. 4 IxIrms. en M.F. TO a qualifying purchaser the down This 210drm. home Is located in excellent Full bthrm &a ~/~ bthrm, another bdrrn. Located on Skoglund Dr. on bench this YOUR OWN payment on this brand new home can be Have a look at this brand new 3 bclrm. area close to schools & shaping. Lot is in bsmt. for total of 5. Very large sun. S3,200 plUS applying for a partial B.C. lovely 5level home features shake roof, 2 separate lava faced fireplaces, sundeck 1246 sq. ff. home, built under CAN4C & ~ell treed & has good gardon area. deck, central fireplace in living rm., ~cl Morl. or $1,000grant. Financing can Separat~ garage. House is on concrete affachecl carport. Main floor is all nicely over side carport, dbl. garage, 3 bdrms. carries a 5 yr; warranty. It has an be to 95'percent to qualified purchaser. existing 95 percent CA~C/Vort. Home foundation & should qualify, for carpeted with exception of vinyl flooring House has 3 bdrrns., w.w carpeting, elec. IOlUSden, w.w carpeting, 3 bthrms., brick & aluminum siding exterior, paved features w.w & vinyl throughout. The lot financing which could make thls an eaSy in kitchen & bthrms. This home is new & heat, attached carport & is close to town. toown first home. Dw0in NV:Coll ~Duld unique. driveways, fenced yard with.full land. is landscaped, lawn is coming up &trees RUSty Liungh would be pleased to show & shrubs are planted. Ask us to see 4822 be hapw to tell you more or show you you. Full price $40,(~0. sc~ping. For further information phone Rusty Liungh. Tuck Ave. Priced at S39,500. this home. I| FARM- 10 MINUTES FRONt TOWN Feature o[ the Week HOUSE WITH BACHELOR SUITE Close to 40 acres of land with over ~/~ Very attractive exterior finish to this deared &fenced, lovely 3 bdrm. home large 3 bdrm. home with patio doors to with fireplace, w.w carpeting & other sundock in rear, w.w carpeting; elsuite exl~..as, a large hip-roofed barn, lawn, plbg., cathedral entrance, dbl. windows, garden area, seclusion, wildlife', trout gas heat & hot water & bachelor suite stream...everything to cater'to ,/our / with kitchen, 3 pce. bath & bed.sifting comforts. Make an appointment to view. rm. Centacl Bert Liunqh to view.

' ~:i ~ .,..=,~i:='. i~::/!i • QUIET' STREET ~- NO THROUGH WARM WINTER ACCOMMODATION ! ~""': Compact 3 bdrm. bungalow with w.w, I lIBit TRAFFIC elec. beat and affached porch . •utility ll ~m l[ ' | .Only I' ~yrs.oldthis3 bdrm. homehasa rrn., located on a 75x200 ft. lot or~ King IBUlig~lll~l~l cathedral entrance, w.w, ensuite plbg., Rd. in Thornhill. Full price $32,000. I ~ ;/-- :~ - ~. ~ elec. heat & carlxrt, is located on a lot I,~ ...... ~ ...~- " "" ' 90X204wdh somerear fencing & a dog i ~~'" " '> • run. A nice auiet area to live. "~i~:i~ ~ . . . HL i ' ' -- ' ]. 3 Iodrm. 12'x68' mobile home with 10'x50' "{ side bldg. centaining 41h lxlrm. &family rm. Back entrance into utility. muclroom. Asking price of $22500.00 includes furnishings e~celot personal effects..Call Dwain NCColl for more details.

NEW LISTING ON HAMER• STREET i Over 1200 sq. ff~; Of finished living area in this three APPEALING HOME IN EXCELLENT, CLOSE .TOTOWN ' AND SCHOOLS. bedroom home with a fourth bedroom in the basement; QUIET AREA Three bedroom home in good condition - ~,~i ...... =!~"~-- This 3 Iodrm. 1265SCl. ft. split.level home with a full basement, attached sundeck, two brick fireplaces, wall to wall carpeting, large has fireplace, ensuite plumbing, w.w, ~carport, wall to wall carpeting, large sundeck in the rear, eating area in the kitchen, finished nook & dining rm. This.w~ell built home is master bedroom and it is situated on a 70 family room and runlpus room andan attached car- 2= ~ yrs. old & is in quiet R.1 area oct x 120 ft. lot. Full price $42,0(]0.00. bench on a 80x136' lot. Drive by 4716 Gair port. The property is fully landscaped, fenced and the Ave. & call Dwain N'¢Coll to view. ,:,." "1 driveway is paved. Phone for particulars on this qualify listing. ~030 AGAR AVENUE 31xIrrn. 1100sq. ft. V:bsmt., half acre of land. Large utility rm., new nalural gas heating & hot water. Large kitchen with :of cupboards. This home should q,Jalily for high ratio mortgage. Asking $32,0(]0. Owner very anxious to sell. Thinking of selling?

ASK ABOUT •OUR EXTRA REVENUE AND LARGE LOT HANDYMAN SPECIAL This 2 storey home is neat & dean. Main Lobated lust Ou)side rnonicipati~ thls 3. floor has 2 boYrns., large kitchen, D.R., bdrm. home has the basics but needs CATALOGUE OF HOMES LR., study &bthrrn. Upper floor isSrm. inferior and exterior finishing. "There is a suite with porch & separate o0tside Franklin fireplace & a deck off of rear enhance, 3 bdrms., L.R., kitchen & antronc.e.. Full prica $32,000. IT WORKS bthrm. All newly carpeted. Lot is' presently mostly gardoted. Grow all Mayhe ours should be i., it your .yearly vegumules. . "° '1

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4825 LOEN AVENUE o r f OVERLOOKING TERRACE " • NG FOR YOUR FI RST HOME? -'4" Wlh this .new 1300sq. ft. 3 bdrm. vieW • TOp quality 2 storey home With full 5038/VcDeek Ave. This 3 bdrr~ home- bsmt., 3 large Ixlrms, master will ac Home completely furnished'excepti home. Features Include vlewof Terrace (separate titles)which are close to features ~/2 a~e Of land with large commoclate largest of Iodrm. suites dbl. ' garden, free standing fireplace, bright personal effects. 3 bdrm., oil F.A heat &J &valley, 2 custom firepla~s, large D.R. schools in Thornhill. House is 1060sq. ft., closets, L.R. has natural rock floor to brick fireplace in L.R. Large 99'x122'1 3 bdrms, up with additional bdrm. & cheery kitch~ with lots of cabinets & wllh I~-tlo doors to Ionge sundeck. I-Ionle ceiling fireplace with heatelator, l anclscaped.tot. Existing ~C mort,'i ,/ rumpus rm. finished in bsmt. On good dinette area. Attractive carpeting t' has 2 full baths on main floor plus rough. • spacious D.R., large Dright kitchen tor approx;~ ~4,000 which.can bel in in I~rt~. I~'d'. COUldbe finished very _.~1 & selotic systenn. Hour_ has vinyl ,= cabinets galore & dinette area. V J makes this a very appealing reasonably sluing & stucco exterior, urive oy /4Z 10rio~ home. Call Bob 5heridml for all assurrled. Use new Y~50~) B.C. 2rid. Cat '1 easily as it is wired, I:~aln Nk:Coll can • bthrms., tully insulated attached , Dwaln McColl to viewanytime. Asking I show you this quality home anytime. It's Pine St. &call Dwain Nk:Cotl to view, .garage, large lot, fruit trees, gardens & details. good value at ~b"7,000. -lawns. Call Bob Sheridan to view this ' • {,!i,• ' ,00o. : • beauty. NLS.~.,.. , ,, . , ...... ' I'i ' I - E FENING PHONES - RUSTY LJUNGH 635,.57.54 JOHN CURRIE 635-5:865. -BERT LJUNG H .635,5754.

(P • o DWAIN McCOLL 635.2976 BOB• sHiERI ,,. AN '.:6 -35.2664• ' I ~1 I I I I I ' I "[I I

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