Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels...

10
r.I~i .... ..... . VIC'L;;I:.L;, i' .C., CC.~, ~. 7 7 / 7 8 ~bl I r ~ m i lm TERRACE-KITIMAT Volume 72 No. 241 20c '? Thursday, December 14, 1978 RUPERT STEEL & SALVAGE LTD. we buy- CO PPE R B RASS ALL METALS & BATTERIES MOil.- SH. OPENTIL 6 p.m. Looation Seal Cove Phone 624-6639 ISFAHAN (AP) -- Iranian troops firing automatic weapons killed three more anti-government demon- strators Wednesday, bring the unofficial death toll in the last three days to 44, well- placed sources said. Sources said the soldiers fired volleys in the streets and military-led mobs of loyalists roamed this central Iranian city in search of opponents of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who were beaten with clubs and wooden staves. IN IRANIAN, CAPITAL Troops kill three more demonstrators Isfahan hospitals, Moments after he spoke, a w.oundedsinceMondnynight historic city of domes, ,come to power and would million barrels a day, was Western correspondents saw crammed with 700 gunshot man reported to have been when anti-shah protesters mosques and tree-lined casualties and victims of shot Tuesday as he waited in used satchel bombs in an boulevards 400 kilometres savage street beatings, the line outside Askarieh attack against the Isfahan south of Tehran, is among reported 44 dead since ri- Hospital to give blood, died headquarters of SAVAK, the the worst that has torn oil- oting began Monday night in in Soraya's operati'ng shah's secret police, and rich Iran since opposition to connection with the ShiRe theatre, other government buildings, the shah erupted in January. Moslem holy period of A large force of soldiers, At Askarieh Hospital, a Ayatuliah Khomaini, the gynecological centre selfexlled leader of the Shiite Ashura. "This is unbelievable," with armored vehicles transformed into an Moslem sect, has been en- plastered with portraits of couraging his followers to emergency aid station for said Dr. Fiarwoosh Shhat, a the 59.year-old shah, eon- the casualties, doctors re- rebel against the shah's U.S.trained surgeon, at trolled the streets while ported troopswere dragging Westernization campaign. Isfahan's Soraya Hospital. helicopters patrolled above "The soldiers have been the city of one million, bodies away in an apparent HesaidWednesday thatoil shooting at people who came effort to hide the size of the supplies to countries sup- to donate blood for the Officials have so far con- death toll. portingtheshahwouldbecut wounded." firmed nine dead and 65 The violence in Isfahan. a off if his religious forces. Turkey still the favorite which represents Canadian turkey farmers, is ap- prehensive about what the higher prices might do to consumption this Christmas. But because turkey prices also are high in the U.S. and the Canadian dollar buys less, there is little incentive for importers to bring turkeys in, Wyne said.' Lottery head fired TORONTO tCP) -- For a time it seemed the jump of 27 cents a pound in turkey prices in November was going to turn consumers to duck, goose and pork for Christmas dinner. Prices went to $1.28 a pound for unbasted and $1.38 to $1.45 a pound for basted turkey in midNovember, causing a lot of ruffled feathers among consumers and farmers. But now, as they do traditionally before every Christmas, retailers are f ,selling turkeys at cost or even slightly less, to bring customers into their stores. Unbasted turkeys are selling for as little as 98 cents a pound and bested ones at $t.18. Hens ranging in size from I0 to 16 pounds appear to be the best sellers. Last December, Canadians consumed almost 62 million pounds of turkey, including processed products such as turkey rolls. By far the biggest part of that volume was table turkeys for Christmas, which then were selling on special for 87 cents a pound unbasted and 97 cents a pound basted. John Wyne, secretary- manager of the National Turkey Marketing Agency., VICTORIA (CP) -- The provincial government has~ fired the bead of the British Columbia lotteries branch, the provincial ~'secretary's ministry said Wednesday. The dismissal of Jack Stewart came at the recommendation of the Western Canada Lottery Foundation. A statement from the provincial secretary's ministry said Stewart cashed seven unsold lottery tickets--each valued at $25-- in order to finance a re- tirement party and gift for an employee. Stewart was suspended late in October, He has reimbursed the foundation for the $175. Idea is absurd that he would step down as prime minister. When he was told of the ru- mors, carried Tuesday on the CBC radio program As It Happens, Trudeau shook his head and laughed. Later, when asked by a re- porter to comment, Trudeau simply shrugged, reminding OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Trudeau has dismissed as absurd reports that he plans to quit poliUcs and return to private life, possibly with his estranged wife Margaret. "It's absurd," he told his staff Wednesday after returning from Paris to remain in force "as long as these heads of state stay in power." Khomaimi, 78, singled out the United states, saying Congress "must take issue" with President Carter to stop hacking the shah. The Iranian unrest, in- eluding a 10-day oil industry strike, has forced the government to begin im- porting kerosene to meet im- mediate needs for heating and lighting. Iran's crude oil production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting "javid shah"--long live the shah-- toured the city, honking horns. Many ap- peared to be peasants trucked in from the coun- tryside. Soldiers handed out por- traits of the shah to motorists an{J any vehicle that did not have one on its windshield was stopped. several drivers, suspected shah opponents, dragged from their autos by troops and beaten by squads of burly men, some of them wearing pistols under their jackets. Western diplomats said the army had used tear gas and opened fire Monday night after demonstrators began their rampage, hut denied reports that the army used helicopter gunships to attack anti-shah forces in the street battles. VANCE QUITS Peace talk hits snag JERUSALEM (AP) -- New snags clouded the future of an Egyptian-Israeli ROAD DEATHS peace treaty Wednesday. U.S. State Secretary Cyrus Vance, citing urgent ON DECREASE business, said he would finish his shuttle talks with Fewer Canadians have caused by the drinking Prime Minister Menachem been killed on the reads driver," Cederberg said. Begin and return home this year than last year, "The cold, sober person earlier than scheduled, figures from safety causes 90 to 94 per cent of Israeli state radio said councils and tram- accidents." proposals from Egyptian portation ministries Headded that only one President Anwar Sadat show. per cent of accidents carried by Vance to Begin While officials couldn't result from mechanical were found to be unae- say why deaths failure. eeptable, decreased, one offieeial in The transportation The secretary's change of British Colombia gave safety branch of the plans was announced by a ereditto increased.use of Alberta government spokesman after Vance held seatbolts, a crackdown on reported 369 deaths two meetings with Israeli drinking drivers and during the first nine officials and talked with lower speed limits, monthaof 1978 compared President Carter in Whatever the reasons, with 415 to Sept, 30, 1977. Washington by telephone. 0nly three provinces-- Quebec had 107 by Oct. The U.S. spokesman, Nova Scotia, Manitoba 31 and 115 at the same George Sherman, said Vance and Saskatchewan-- time last year. would fly to Egypt today and recorded increased death then to the United Sthtes on toils, latest available Of those provinces that showed increases in Friday after a last talk with figures show. fatalities, Saskatchewan Sadat. He had planned to B.C. had the largest. stay in Israel at least until drop in traffic fatalities, had 238 by the end of ,Friday morning, with 465 persons killed by October and 236 by last Earlier, Vance indicated the end of September this October 31; Manitoba had he had some hopes for his year compared with 526 in 122 to the end of August and 107 in the same period session in Israel. He told the first nine months of last year; Nova Scotia 210 reporters on arri~l from 1977. in the period Jan. t to Cairo he believed-lle was in To the end of SOp- the final sta~es of his tember, Ontario counted Dec. I0, up from from 172 ~lideast shuttle. 701deaths, down from 713 in the same time last Sadat had also expressed in the same period last year. ptimism, saying in Cairo he year. Newfoundland reported Fred Cederberg, a the same number of ,as quite ready to sign a .. . : . . .. ........... peace pact with Is.re.el. " safety itff0rmp.tioff of- , fats.liLies to'da'tethisyear . : ' ' ' .... • Dale. Bro~vn, at Three . handicraft • items, knife' "Vance . 'shuttled .to ricer, attack~l" what he as las't year--94. And New Rivers Workshop, completes racks, cutting boards, door Jerusalem "from Cairo called the pepuhr myth Brunswick reported 208 that drunk drivers cause carrying Egypt's acceptance persons killed by the end .. ... - vWorZ'sho" one of the many pen holders swags and wreaths thatare of a peace treaty-- whieh the most traffic accidents, of November this year that will he on sale today in made at the workshop. U.S. envoy and Sadat had "Actually only 2,7 per compared with 212 by the. the Skeena Mail. They are shaped as birds, whales, Brown is one of 14 people worked out in several sea- cent of accidents are end of November, 1977. has gifts moose, porcupines, wolves who work year around at the sions in Cairo--conditional and elephants. There will workshop making items for on the treaty being linked to learn that there was yet his questioner that he has a also be children's toys, sale. amo~ M erry Chris tmas another round of speculation news conference scheduled the Israeli-occupied Gaza for today. ~:][bA Strip. but hold n o s e Trudeau, prime minister Crash blain COSSETTES since 1968, has said Apparently with U.S. repeatedly he wants to fight endorsement, Egypt i ARRESTED ond win one more electlon as ~Ik,~ pi~L~esed the treaty include Liberal party leader so he . ~ "interpretive letters SOMERVILLE,'N.J. tAP) our trees to end up in MONTREAL (CP) -- will be in power when linking it to elections among -- Park officials have a someone's living room." Ending eight years and 10~ citizens in the pred°minsntly the pilots surprise for poachers who The commission spent days of exile, Jacques and French-speaking province of O n Gaze. Israel has refused to cut down evergreen trees more than $500 this year Louise CossetteTrudel Quebec vote on the question tie the peace treaty to steps and put them up In their spraying 200 to 300 of its returned to Quebec on of separatton from the rest of toward self-government for homes this Christmas. ornamental pine and spruce trees in the Colonial Park in Wednesday to face charges Canada. chemical that, once indoors, East Millstone with a deer arising from the1970 kidnaP- Trudeau does not allow his VANCOUVER (CP) --The Western Airlines Beeing 737 and had not made an im- the Palestiulaas. They'vesprayedtbemwitha ping of a British diplomat, staff to comment on his per- Boeing Co. has filed in Cranbrook, B.C. proper left-rudder input, the The new proposals Vance gives off an odor repellent. The couple smiled broadly sonal life, but informants documents in California Charles H. Davies, a plane would not have and Sadat worked out also "somewhere between rotten The mixture is disgusting as they and their two said there is nothing new in Superior Court which place Boeing project engineer, crashed. Forty-three per- recognized Egypt's right to eggs and a skunk." to deer at any temperature, children, Alexis and Marie- the prime minister's the blame on the flight crew, filed an affidavit stating that sons were killed, defend itself and act in "Anti-Christmas? Good but humans begin to notice it Ange, arrived at nearby relationship with Margaret. not the thrust reverser, for if the pilot had followed The plane crashed after defence of other Arab heavens, no," said Jack when it is exposed to room Mirabel International The two were separated in theFeb, ll crash of a Pacific normalgo.roundprooedures the flight crew tried te abort countries if they came under Moody, secretary-dire~:torof temperature, says Rudolph Airport aboard an Air the spring of 1977 after six a landing at the Cranbrook attack, the Somerset County Parks van der Geot, senior hor- Canada Boeing 747 from years of marriage, airport when it spotted a Evidently, these two Commission, of the spraying ticulturist for the parks, Paris. Marjorie Feds snewclearing machine on the propesals nettled Begin and project. runway, other Israeli officials. Begin "We are in the business of "When the tree gets in the They were immediately Allan Fotheringham, arrested by two Montreal columnists for the Van- A coroner's inquest earlier contends Palestlnian motherhood andnature and home, it stinks," van der police detectives as prime couver Sun, said on the CBC this year was told that a autonomy is to be negotiated preserving all God's Gnet said. "The odor is suspectsnapping ofintheformer59"daYBritishkid" hlsPr°gramwife thatwould be "reof-Trudeau and o f f i c e s h i f t s open,thrust r e v e r s e r r e m a i n e d separately, ereati°ns' Wejmt don'twant pretty sickening]' trade commissioner James firming their vows" in Pension benefits u p , Cross that sparked the 1970 Vancouver during the October Crisis. Christmas season. OTTAWA (CP)- Air Can- latest in a series called Un. Police led the couple into a Trudeau is expected to go ads, Via Rail, Canadian Na- derstanding Canada. waiting car, then whisked to Vancouver during the tional Railways and many Lalonde said it would not them to a downtown police Christmas holidays to let his other major transportation be in the interests of Quebec OTTAWA (CP) -- In- through the consumer price under age 65 and iA~.~ for aioner or receiving a station where they were three sons, visit their companies probably would or the rest of Canada to creases in the Canada index, spouses65 and older, spouse's allowance. detained for questioning, grandparents- Margaret's move their head offices out throw up rail and read Pension Plan and other old- The maximum retirement The basic old age security The maximum guaranteed The Cnssette-Trudels, both parents, the Slnclairs.. of Quebec if the province blockades in the event age social security benefits pemion will be $218.06 a pension will rise to $167.21 income supplement for a Trudeau returned to or- sepa/'ates from the rest of Quebecers vote to separate, effective in January were month. The maximum monthly from the current married couple, both pen- announced Wednesday by disability pension will be $164.74. sioners, will rise to $114.15 31, were to be held overnight taws Wednesday following a Canada, Justice Minister But, he asked, would com- Welfare Minister Monique The maximum guaranteed from $102.61 each. in separate cells and weeklong visit to London and Mare Lalonde said Wed- ponies with major Begin. $216.06 a month. The arraigned in sessions court Paris. During the tour, he nesday, maximum benefits for chil- income supplement, paid to And the spouse's today on charges of kid- discussed the appointment of "Quebec would be the operations and markets Canada Pension Plan dren and orphans of disabled poor pensioners on an in- allowance will rise to $281.36 napping, conspiracy, for- a new Governor'-General losing partner," said outside the province keep benefits will rise by nine per contributors will be $52.51. come.tested scale, will rise from $267.35. The allowance their head offices "in a cent as a result of increased to $137.28 from $115.55 for is paid to spouses, mostly cible detention, . and, ex- with the Queen. And he Lalonde, as he t'eleased a foreign country?" tortion, police stud. visited with his old friend federal study on the effect contributions and to com- The maximum monthly single persons and for women, between age 60 and The Cossettc.Trudels were Gerard Pelleher in Paris, Quebec independence would "Just raising the question peraate for increases in the surviving spouse's pension married persons whose bus- 65 who are married to old flown to'Cuba l)ec. 3, i970, ambassador to France. have on transportation, the is answering it." cost of living measured will be $134.28 for persons band or wife is not a pen- age security pensioners.

Transcript of Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels...

Page 1: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

r.I~i . . . . • . . . . . . VIC'L;;I:.L;, i' . C . ,

CC.~, ~. 7 7 / 7 8

~bl

I

r ~ m i lm

TERRACE-KITIMAT

Volume 72 No. 241 20c

'?

Thursday, December 14, 1978

RUPERT STEEL & SALVAGE LTD. we buy-

CO PPE R B RASS ALL METALS & BATTERIES

MOil.- SH. OPEN TIL 6 p.m.

Looation Seal Cove Phone 624-6639

ISFAHAN (AP) -- Iranian troops firing automatic weapons killed three more anti-government demon- strators Wednesday, bring the unofficial death toll in the last three days to 44, well- placed sources said.

Sources said the soldiers fired volleys in the streets and military-led mobs of loyalists roamed this central Iranian city in search of opponents of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who were beaten with clubs and wooden staves.

IN IRANIAN, CAPITAL

Troops kill three more demonstrators I s f a h a n h o s p i t a l s , Moments after he spoke, a w.oundedsinceMondnynight historic city of domes, ,come to power and would million barrels a day, was Western correspondents saw

crammed with 700 gunshot man reported to have been when anti-shah protesters mosques and tree-lined casualties and victims of shot Tuesday as he waited in used satchel bombs in an boulevards 400 kilometres savage street beatings, the line outside Askarieh attack against the Isfahan south of Tehran, is among reported 44 dead since ri- Hospital to give blood, died headquarters of SAVAK, the the worst that has torn oil- oting began Monday night in in Soraya 's operati'ng shah's secret police, and rich Iran since opposition to connection with the ShiRe theatre, other government buildings, the shah erupted in January. Moslem holy period of A large force of soldiers, At Askarieh Hospital, a Ayatuliah Khomaini, the

g y n e c o l o g i c a l c e n t r e selfexlled leader of the Shiite Ashura. "This is unbelievable," with armored vehicles transformed into an Moslem sect, has been en- plastered with portraits of couraging his followers to emergency aid station for

said Dr. Fiarwoosh Shhat, a the 59.year-old shah, eon- the casualties, doctors re- rebel against the shah's U.S.trained surgeon, at trolled the streets while ported troopswere dragging Westernization campaign. Isfahan's Soraya Hospital. helicopters patrolled above "The soldiers have been the city of one million, bodies away in an apparent HesaidWednesday thatoil shooting at people who came effort to hide the size of the supplies to countries sup- to donate blood for the Officials have so far con- death toll. portingtheshahwouldbecut wounded." firmed nine dead and 65 The violence in Isfahan. a off if his religious forces.

Turkey still the favorite

which represents Canadian turkey farmers, is ap- prehensive about what the higher prices might do to consumption this Christmas.

But because turkey prices also are high in the U.S. and the Canadian dollar buys less, there is little incentive for importers to bring turkeys in, Wyne said. '

Lottery head fired

TORONTO tCP) -- For a time it seemed the jump of 27 cents a pound in turkey prices in November was going to turn consumers to duck, goose and pork for Christmas dinner.

Prices went to $1.28 a pound for unbasted and $1.38 to $1.45 a pound for basted turkey in midNovember, causing a lot of ruffled feathers among consumers and farmers.

But now, as they do traditionally before every Christmas, retai lers are f ,selling turkeys at cost or even slightly less, to bring customers into their stores.

Unbas ted turkeys are selling for as little as 98 cents a pound and bested ones at $t.18.

Hens ranging in size from I0 to 16 pounds appear to be the best sellers.

Last December, Canadians consumed almost 62 million pounds of turkey, i n c l u d i n g p r o c e s s e d products such as turkey rolls.

By far the biggest part of that volume was table turkeys for Christmas, which then were selling on special for 87 cents a pound unbasted and 97 cents a pound basted.

John Wyne, secretary- manager of the National Turkey Marketing Agency.,

VICTORIA (CP) - - The provincial government has~ fired the bead of the British Columbia lotteries branch, the provincial ~'secretary's ministry said Wednesday.

The dismissal of Jack Stewart came at the recommendation of the Western Canada Lottery Foundation.

A statement from the p rov inc ia l s e c r e t a r y ' s ministry said Stewart cashed seven unsold lottery tickets--each valued at $25-- in order to finance a re- tirement party and gift for an employee.

Stewart was suspended late in October,

He has reimbursed the foundation for the $175.

Idea is absurd that he would step down as prime minister.

When he was told of the ru- mors, carried Tuesday on the CBC radio program As It Happens, Trudeau shook his head and laughed.

Later, when asked by a re- porter to comment, Trudeau simply shrugged, reminding

OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Minister Trudeau has dismissed as absurd reports that he plans to quit poliUcs and return to private life, possibly with his estranged wife Margaret.

"It 's absurd," he told his staff Wednesday after returning from Par is to

remain in force "as long as these heads of state stay in power."

Khomaimi, 78, singled out the United states, saying Congress "must take issue" with President Carter to stop hacking the shah.

The Iranian unrest, in- eluding a 10-day oil industry strike, has forced the government to begin im- porting kerosene to meet im- mediate needs for heating and lighting. Iran's crude oil production, normally six

reported a t 1.7 million barrels Wednesday,

In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting "javid shah"--long live the shah-- toured the city, honking horns. Many ap- peared to be peasants trucked in from the coun- tryside.

Soldiers handed out por- traits of the shah to motorists an{J any vehicle that did not have one on its windshield was stopped.

several drivers, suspected shah opponents, dragged from their autos by troops and beaten by squads of burly men, some of them wearing pistols under their jackets.

Western diplomats said the army had used tear gas and opened fire Monday night after demonstrators began their rampage, hut denied reports that the army used helicopter gunships to attack anti-shah forces in the street battles.

VANCE QUITS

Peace talk hits snag

JERUSALEM (AP) -- New snags clouded the future of an Egyptian-Israeli ROAD DEATHS peace treaty Wednesday.

U.S. State Secretary Cyrus Vance, citing urgent ON DECREASE business, said he would finish his shuttle talks with Fewer Canadians have caused by the drinking Prime Minister Menachem been killed on the reads driver," Cederberg said. Begin and return home this year than last year, "The cold, sober person earlier than scheduled, figures from safety causes 90 to 94 per cent of

Israeli state radio said councils and tram- accidents." proposals from Egyptian por ta t ion min is t r i es Headded that only one President Anwar Sadat show. per cent of accidents carried by Vance to Begin While officials couldn't result from mechanical were found to be unae- say why deaths failure. eeptable, decreased, one offieeial in The transportation T h e secretary's change of British Colombia gave safety branch of the

plans was announced by a ereditto increased.use of Albe r t a government spokesman after Vance held seatbolts, a crackdown on reported 369 deaths two meetings with Israeli drinking drivers and during the first nine officials and talked with lower speed limits, monthaof 1978 compared President Carter in Whatever the reasons, with 415 to Sept, 30, 1977. Washington by telephone. 0nly three provinces-- Quebec had 107 by Oct.

The U.S. spokesman, Nova Scotia, Manitoba 31 and 115 at the same George Sherman, said Vance and Saskatchewan-- time last year. would fly to Egypt today and recorded increased death then to the United Sthtes on toils, la test available Of those provinces that showed increases in Friday after a last talk with figures show. fatalities, Saskatchewan Sadat. He had planned to B.C. had the largest. stay in Israel at least until drop in traffic fatalities, had 238 by the end of ,Friday morning, with 465 persons killed by October and 236 by last

Earlier, Vance indicated the end of September this October 31; Manitoba had he had some hopes for his year compared with 526 in 122 to the end of August and 107 in the same period session in Israel. He told the first nine months of last year; Nova Scotia 210 reporters on a r r i~ l from 1977. in the period Jan. t to Cairo he believed-lle was in To the end of SOp- the final sta~es of his tember, Ontario counted Dec. I0, up from from 172 ~lideast shuttle. 701deaths, down from 713 in the same time last

Sadat had also expressed in the same period last year. ptimism, saying in Cairo he year. Newfoundland reported

Fred Cederberg, a the same number of ,as quite ready to sign a . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . peace pact with Is.re.el. " safety itff0rmp.tioff of- , fats.liLies to'da'tethisyear

. : ' ' ' • .... • Dale. Bro~vn, at Three . handicraft • items, knife' "Vance . 'shuttled .to ricer, attack~l" what he as las't year--94. And New Rivers Workshop, completes racks, cutting boards, door Jerusalem "from Cairo called the pepuhr myth Brunswick reported 208 that drunk drivers cause carrying Egypt's acceptance persons killed by the end

. . . . . - vWorZ'sho" one of the many pen holders swags and wreaths thatare of a peace treaty-- whieh the most traffic accidents, of November this year that will he on sale today in made at the workshop. U.S. envoy and Sadat had "Actually only 2,7 per compared with 212 by the. the Skeena Mail. They are shaped as birds, whales, Brown is one of 14 people worked out in several sea- cent of accidents are end of November, 1977. has gifts moose, porcupines, wolves who work year around at the sions in Cairo--conditional and elephants. There will workshop making items for on the treaty being linked to

learn that there was yet his questioner that he has a also be children 's toys, sale. amo~ M erry Chris tmas another round of speculation news conference scheduled the Israeli-occupied Gaza

for today. ~ : ] [ b A Strip. but hold n o s e Trudeau, prime minister Crash blain COSSETTES since 1968, has said Apparently with U.S.

repeatedly he wants to fight e n d o r s e m e n t , E g y p t i ARRESTED ond win one more electlon as ~ I k , ~ pi~L~esed the treaty include Liberal party leader so he . ~ " i n t e r p r e t i v e l e t t e r s SOMERVILLE,'N.J. tAP) our trees to end up in

MONTREAL (CP) - - will be in power when linking it to elections among -- Park officials have a someone's living room." Ending eight years and 10~ citizens in the pred°minsntly the pilots surprise for poachers who The commission spent days of exile, Jacques and French-speaking province of O n Gaze. Israel has refused to cut down evergreen trees more than $500 this year Louise Cosse t teTrudel Quebec vote on the question tie the peace treaty to steps and put them up In their spraying 200 to 300 of its returned to Quebec on of separatton from the rest of toward self-government for homes this Christmas. ornamental pine and spruce trees in the Colonial Park in Wednesday to face charges Canada. chemical that, once indoors, East Millstone with a deer arising from the1970 kidnaP- Trudeau does not allow his VANCOUVER (CP) --The Western Airlines Beeing 737 and had not made an im- the Palestiulaas. They'vesprayedtbemwitha ping of a British diplomat, staff to comment on his per- Boeing Co. has filed in Cranbrook, B.C. proper left-rudder input, the The new proposals Vance gives off an odor repellent.

The couple smiled broadly sonal life, but informants documents in California Charles H. Davies, a plane would not have and Sadat worked out also "somewhere between rotten The mixture is disgusting as they and their two said there is nothing new in Superior Court which place Boeing project engineer, crashed. Forty-three per- recognized Egypt's right to eggs and a skunk." to deer at any temperature, children, Alexis and Marie- the prime minister 's the blame on the flight crew, filed an affidavit stating that sons were killed, defend itself and act in "Anti-Christmas? Good but humans begin to notice it Ange, arrived at nearby relationship with Margaret. not the thrust reverser, for if the pilot had followed The plane crashed after defence of other Arab heavens, no," said Jack when it is exposed to room M i r a b e l I n t e r n a t i o n a l The two were separated in theFeb, l l crash of a Pacific normalgo.roundprooedures the flight crew tried te abort countries if they came under Moody, secretary-dire~:torof temperature, says Rudolph Airport aboard an Air the spring of 1977 after six a landing at the Cranbrook attack, the Somerset County Parks van der Geot, senior hor- Canada Boeing 747 from years of marriage, airport when it spotted a Evidently, these two Commission, of the spraying ticulturist for the parks, Paris. Marjorie Feds snewclearing machine on the propesals nettled Begin and project.

runway, other Israeli officials. Begin "We are in the business of "When the tree gets in the They were immediately A l l an F o t h e r i n g h a m , arrested by two Montreal columnists for the Van- A coroner's inquest earlier c o n t e n d s P a l e s t l n i a n motherhood andnature and home, it stinks," van der

police detectives as prime couver Sun, said on the CBC this year was told that a autonomy is to be negotiated preserving all God's Gnet said. "The odor is

suspectsnapping ofintheformer59"daYBritishkid" hlsPr°gramwife thatwould be "reof-Trudeau and o f f i c e s h i f t s open,thrust reverser remained separately, ereati°ns' Wejmt don'twant p r e t t y s i cken ing ] '

trade commissioner James firming their vows" in Pension benefits u p , Cross that sparked the 1970 Vancouver during the October Crisis. Christmas season. OTTAWA ( C P ) - Air Can- latest in a series called Un.

Police led the couple into a Trudeau is expected to go ads, Via Rail, Canadian Na- derstanding Canada. waiting car, then whisked to Vancouver during the tional Railways and many Lalonde said it would not them to a downtown police Christmas holidays to let his other major transportation be in the interests of Quebec OTTAWA (CP) -- In- through the consumer price under age 65 and iA~.~ for aioner or receiving a station where they were three sons , visit their companies probably would or the rest of Canada to creases in the Canada index, spouses65 and older, spouse's allowance. detained for questioning, grandparents- Margaret's move their head offices out throw up rail and read Pension Plan and other old- The maximum retirement The basic old age security The maximum guaranteed

The Cnssette-Trudels, both parents, the Slnclairs.. of Quebec if the province blockades in the event age social security benefits pemion will be $218.06 a pension will rise to $167.21 income supplement for a Trudeau returned to or- sepa/'ates from the rest of Quebecers vote to separate, effective in January were month. The maximum monthly from the current married couple, both pen-

announced Wednesday by disability pension will be $164.74. sioners, will rise to $114.15 31, were to be held overnight taws Wednesday following a Canada, Just ice Minister But, he asked, would com- Welfare Minister Monique The maximum guaranteed from $102.61 each. in separate cells and weeklong visit to London and Mare Lalonde said Wed- ponies with major Begin. $216.06 a month. The arraigned in sessions court Paris. During the tour, he nesday, maximum benefits for chil- income supplement, paid to And the spouse's today on charges of kid- discussed the appointment of "Quebec would be the operations and markets Canada Pension Plan dren and orphans of disabled poor pensioners on an in- allowance will rise to $281.36 napping, conspiracy, for- a new Governor'-General losing par tner ," said outside the province keep benefits will rise by nine per contributors will be $52.51. come.tested scale, will rise from $267.35. The allowance

their head offices "in a cent as a result of increased to $137.28 from $115.55 for is paid to spouses, mostly cible detention, . and, ex- with the Queen. And he Lalonde, as he t'eleased a foreign country?" tortion, police stud. visited with his old friend federal study on the effect contributions and to com- The maximum monthly single persons and for women, between age 60 and

The Cossettc.Trudels were Gerard Pelleher in Paris, Quebec independence would "Just raising the question peraate for increases in the surviving spouse's pension married persons whose bus- 65 who are married to old flown to'Cuba l)ec. 3, i970, ambassador to France. have on transportation, the is answering it." cost of living measured will be $134.28 for persons band or wife is not a pen- age security pensioners.

Page 2: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

Page 2, The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978

IVMIRDW,4R~

THURSDAY

I

I

I

STORES

KING 3 CFTK (NBC) ICBr.)

Ca,, Burner Moore News Hourglass

145 Cont'd. Cont'd. i

I~ :00 Cont'd. Cont'd. i ) :|~ Cont'd. Cont'd.

: 30 Cont'd. Muppet : 45 Cont'd. i Show

7 a,.o .ve Tonight Boat Match Cont'd.

i ~$ Game PM Cont'd,

I~ ) :00 Special Doug : 15 'Doug Henning

[ : 30 Henning Special | : ~ Cont'd. Cont'd.

: 00 ' Special f Thurs, • : 15 'Rock ette '-~ . Night : 30 " Holiday . ' : ' Movie : 45. Tribute ,l,'L°°se

: 00 To Radio City I Change -- : 15 Music School : 30 Hall' Days' : ~S Cont'd. Cont'd.

. ,

T.V.

i:t I

Guide All listings subject to change without notice.

§ p.m. to midnight

BCTV 9 KCTS (CTV) (PB$)

Six Mister Million Rogers Dollar Electric Man Company

News Big Blue Hour Marble Cont'd. Dick Cont'd. Cavett

i Stars MacNeil On Ice Lehrer Patsy Stepping Gallant Out

Wonder Nova Woman 'The Ceat'd. Tsetse Cnnt'd, Trap'

i

Live. Rush It Up . .. Cont'd. Soap ~ i '-, Cont'd. Cont'd. Cont'd.

Family ~'~' Visions Cont'd. ,~ Cont'd. Cont'd. Cont'd. Cont'd. Cont'd.

: ~ News The CTV Cont'd. : 15 Cont'd. National News ~i~ Cont'd. 30 Tonight Night News Hour M.A.S.H.

Thorpe will stand trial MINEHEAD, England

(Reuter) - - Politician Jeremy Thorpe was ordered Wednesday to stand trial at the Old Bailey, Britain's famous criminal court, on charges of plotting the death of a man who claims they were once homosexual lovers.

After listening to evidence for 3V~ weeks, three magistrates here decided the case against the 49-year-old former Liberal party leader was strong enough to be referred to a judge and jury in London.

"I plead not guilty and will vigorously defend this matter," Thorpe told the magistrates.

Their decision has grave implications for the Liberals, a small party that the charismatic Thorpe strove to build into a genuine pelitical force.

With a general election next year, it will further damage the hopes of the Liberals. Recently, Liberal members of Par l iament haveoften held a crucial bal- ance of power between the ruling Labor par ty and opposition Conservatives,

Thorpe and three other men are accused of plotting

/ Thorpe denies there was an affair and his "lawyers branded Scott a liar and a menial case.

Thorpe also is accused of incitement to murder Scott. Both' charges carry maximum 10-year jail sentences and are the most serious to be brought against a British politician in modern times.

He was freed on $I0,000 bail until the trial, expected to start next April.

Throughout the hearing, Thorpe showed barely a flicker of concern. With his wife Marion watching, he locked totally relaxed as prosecution witnesses spoke of his alleged homosexual lust and purported role in a nine-year conspiracy to silence Scott,

Other defendants are nightclub owner George Deakin, a.~leged to have recruited a gunman to murder the 38-year-old Scott; carpet dealer John le Mesurier, accused of.~heving paid the gunman $10,000 after he bungled the murder attempt; and merchant banker David Holmes, a friend of Thorpe's from university days and onetime deputy treasurer of the

to kill former model Norman , Liberal party. Scott, who gave the . Holmes is alleged to have Minehead magistrates--in briefed the bungling hit- sometimes unpublishable man, Andrew Newton, and to and obscene detai l--an have at one stage handled account of their alleged the payoff money. Thorpe is homosexual affair in the also accused of inciting early 19~0s. Holmes to murder.

B e n n e t t d e n i e s delay

TEN FACE DR UG

NEWS IN BRIEF OTTAWA (CP) - - Lily

Schreyer, wife of the next GovernorGeneral of Canada, said Wednesday she felt a bit like Cinderella dur;t~g a tour of her future home--[~deau Hall.

"We' l l have to redec , , :~e some of the bedrooms," ~;[s. Seh reye r t o l d r e p o r t e r s before re turn ing to Winnipeg af ter a two-day stay in Ot- tawa.

The Governor-General's private apartment within the rambling Rideau Hall contains only a bedroom and sitting room and won't ac-

commodate the Schreyers' four children.

The Schreyers were the guests of Gov.-Gen. Jules Leger and his wife, Gaby, Tuesday night and received their first tour df the official residence of the Queen's representative.

"Lily and 1 were over- whelmed by the gracious hospitality of the Governsr- General and Mrs..Leger," Mr. Schreyer told reporters during a photo session at the mansion.

A pair of blazes BALTIMORE (AP) - -

Carol Channing and 200 other guests had fled the Lord Baltimore Hotel once early Wednesday because of a fire. Wheh a second blaze erupted seven hours later and trapped her in her room, the actress said, she began to worry about dying.

"My husband and I were in the room because we couldn't get down,, the hallway for the smoke, said Miss Channing, best known

foi" her role as the .irrepressible matchmaker Dolly Levi in Hello, Dollyl

"I thought, 'It is a slow death,' and then that we'll have to hold hands and jump 'out the window. Things like that go through your mind."

Only two miner injuries-- both smoke inhalation casos--were reported from the tree in the 17-storey Lord Baltimore, which is across

' the street from the Morris Mechanic Theatre where Hello, Dollyl is playing.

Influenza attack VERNON, B.C. (CP) - - An

outbreak of influenza in the North Okanagan area this week has resulted in an absentee rate of up to 35 per cent in some schools.

Dr. N. R. Smart, North Okanagan public health officer, said Wednesday that blood samples and throat

swabs were being taken from victims of the influenza and analysis would be made at a laboratory in V a n - couver.

Smart said that the flu ap- peared to be of an "Influenza A-USSR" variety and h e asked schools to keep large : gatherings and concerts to a !. minimum.

She's back inside BURNABY, B.C. (CP) - - "We hope to keep her for a

Teresa Brewer, the artful while," a prison spokesman I | i ~* aS Show Final I~ Final Cont'd.

tactic Cont'd. Cont'd. Show Movie Cont'd. Cont'd. 'Summer 'Columbo' VICTORIA (CP]t - -

i * i~s Cont'd. Cont'd. Of '42' Cont'd. Premier Bill Bennett has

10 a,m, to 5 p.m, FRIDAY Canadian Sche~ls ~!i!~ Mister ,L:', i DresS'up '';~'~ ~ "'" ....

Sesame Street Cont'd. Cont'd.

Webster LCun~d. ,i ,~ .... , . . . . 'What's ' Cool~lng.~.. . . . . . . .

Electric • Company. i 'i, Brea~l & B'flies Spinrdng "Stories

Mad Truly Amer. Dash Write On Definition Cover-Cover Cont'd. Environments

i ! "': 00 ThewheelNeW'of ~, ~:~Is High rollers , , °

Fortune

a s : O0 Amer ica : I S Al ive

' : 30 Cont'd. /

i I i i :45 Cont'd.

Noon Freesty le News Cont'd. Mov ie Ar t Starts Mat inee Stories of Amer .

a Z iidlns Hollywood News-- Squares Bob Switzer Days of Search for

I I ': ~5 Our Lives Tomorrow

a :00 Cont'd. Bob 'Columbo: Write On : ~$ Cont'd. McLean Double Art Cart : 30 The Show Exposure' Nat. Science

I I : 45 Doctors Cont'd. Cont'd. Roomnasttcs

Edge of Another Book Look Night World Music Place Canadian Cont'd. Self Incorp. Stars ! Cont'd. Measuremetrics

Take • ', Thirty

Celebrity Cooks

Alan " Over Hamel Easy

I Show Speakout Cont'd. Cont'd.

Flinistones The Price i Sesame Cont'd. Is Right Street Carol Cont'd, Cont'd. Barnett Cont'd. ' Cont'd.

, = Another World Cont'd.

: 45 Cont'd.

"""" Movie • ' i : : " 11 'The

• [ :~0 Stalking m~ qk : 45 Moon'

.:00 Cont'd. !" "' ~ : l $ Cont'd.

I " :30 Cont'd. • ' : 45 ! Cont'd.

l•lllllllllllI!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

denied that the Britisl~ Columbia government is delaying negotiations with Ottawa on comPensation to the province for construction of the Alaska Highway 'naturargas pipeline: ~/,' :~-~ . B,C' i~ seekl~Aben~fits:;in~ ,return :~for tthe ~ t / t f e t t O l i ~ rightof-way through • the northeast section of the province and for protection of the environment.

"We were the" first province to support the pipeline and the first government to propose a natural resources, trans- portation and com- municallons corridor from north to south," Bennett said. "We still fully support the project." However, he said the

federal government seems to he taking a long time to settle some matters which must be settled before the project can go ahead. The premier said Ottawa

,had no difficulty offering the .Yukon. the protection it demanded.

KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) - - T e n residents of this central British Columbia community have been charged with drug of* lenses following a four* month RCMP in-

'dodger of the Lower Mainland Regional Correctional Centre, was hack in custody Wednesday after being picked up in a drug raid at a house in Vancouver.

Brewer, 21, had been at large since Nov. 4 when she escaped from the prison for the ninth time.

said. "But it's pretty hard when you can saw through the windows with a kitchen

' k n i f e . "

Brewer was or ig ina l ly sen- tenced to two years for robbery, but her stay has been extended because of her repeated tendency to escape.

vestigation of a morphine

s ~ ~i,: ~ ~,~.t~:

India. An RCMP spokesman

said $100,000 of the drug was .bent through first class mail over a six- month period from an undisclosed source in India. A total of $50,000 worth of the drug was seized by police.

Charged with con- spiracy to traffic in narcotics are: Nuginder Singh Sidhu, 32, and Harinder Singh Gill, 29,

rwest . . . . " . . . . . " = ° . . . . . . not:for,,sale VANCOUVER (CP) - -

AirWest Airlines Ltd., which operates a commuter shuttle between Vancouver and Victoria, is not for sale, company president Norm Gold said Wednesday.

A bid was made in Sep- tember by an unnamed group of British Columbia and Alberta businessmen to purchase the airline. Gold

refused to say if the offer had been withdrawn.

"Let's just say the airline is not under consideration for sale at this time."

I n 1977, AirWest flew 100,000 people on its float plane service between the two cities, but now is facing competition on the run from West Coast Air Services Lid.

Exports exploited Robert Scott Berry, 25, Linda Jane Walkley, 20, Jaswant Kaur Gill, 30, Jasvir Kaur Sidhu, 24, Leon Patrick Prine, 21, Jocelyn Ann Moyan, 25, Gloria Lila Bailey, 20, and Thomas Parfentuk, 24.

OTTAWA (CP) -- The Export Development Corp. announced Wednesday its approval of a $2.573.blllion export promotion program affecting 10 countries.

The money would provide loans, export credits and insurance on an expected

$4.248-billion wor th of sales to" Argentina, Hung Kong, Iran, Ivory Coast, Panama, Poland, Romania, Senegal, Spain and Yugoslav.!a.

The corporation said in a statement the program will, .~- ..:.i. involve 219 Canadian ' companies, but it would not name them or release details of their transactions because of commercial con- fidentiality.

A spokesman for the' Crown corporation said some commercial contracts under the program have not. yet been signed, although the corporation has approved all lending and insurance arrangements.

The corporation said 73,755 man-years of employment will be created or main- tained.

The jobs would be in mining projects, electrical generating projects, the building of railway cars, aircraft, power lines, lo- comotives and hospitals.

. . . . , Walker's Special Old daniadown quilts [ Filled with soft grey Goose Down fine Danish Ticking. These quilts comparable to the finest quilts av

in Europe.

daniadown quilts

I ....... . . . . . . Unique blending. !iiiiili]:

smoomtaste.

7

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6ordon and Anderson Ltd. 4606 Lazelle Ave., Terrace

P.h. 635-6576 ~ Store Hours. Tues.- Sat. 9 a.m.-§.30 p.m.

Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m. lhars what makes |t Speclal Old.

Alberta to, buckle u p CALGARY (CP) - - Trans.

portation Minister Hugh Horner says Alberta may have a compulsory seat-belt law approved by {he Alberta legislature next spring.

Homer said .in an in- terview Tuesday he will recommend such a law tO the cabinet early in 1979.

Meanwhile, he is awaiting the report of a special ac- cident investigation team which is looking at the ef- fectiveness of seat belts.

Homer said statistics show compulsory seat.belt laws have reduced traffic deaths in other provinces, but "we have to have our own statistics."

Ontario, Saskatchewan, Quebec, British Columbia and Nova Scotia have seat- belt laws.

. . . . . • o • .

Page 3: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

. t I

SPOKE M SA [W Mining hurting sAmE POLICE NEWS

The 'Canadian mining keep the operation going, talking about investing in a industry is in peril of dying out because government taxation is too high, Ralph Matson, vice-president and general manager of Newmont Mines Ltd. said at a Terrace Chamber of Commerce meeting in the Lakelse Hotel on Tuesday.

He said the industry has no incentive because the government is taxing each company as much as 57 percent of the profits.

Matson said that a few years ago when profits were high the government saw mining taxation as a way out of its problem of raising money for its many programs but there has been a steady decline since 1975 and now there are more mining operations closing down than there are

,operations being opened up. Newmont Mines Ltd. is the

company responsible for the Granduc Mine in Stewart which has shut down because copper prices are too low to

said Matson. There is an oversupply of

copper on the world market and the price has dropped to 70 cents. Coupled with the low prices are the high fuel costs. Fuel costs make up one-third of a mine's operation cost, he said.

He said the mining in- dustry recently held a meeting on the theme of Canada's future as a major metal producer in the 1980s. The main question raised was, do people really care or want a mining industry in Canada, he said.

He said mining makes up 8.3 percent of the gross national product, nine percent of the workforee and six percent of the gross provincial product. One- quarter of Canada's export dollars are made through mining, he said.

Matson said the industry becomes upset with the federal government when it hears that the feds are

Ralph Matson

Food co-operative seeking members Northern Neighboorsl 'a"

pro-order food co-op, is looking for members a n d anyone interested should contaee Sheila or Tom Knox at 638.1091; Lorraine Brash at 635-4721 or lsohel Brophy at 635-9359.

When the members get together they comple an order of the food they would like to buy, pay for the food and then send an order to the central warehouse in Van- couver. Approximately two weeks later the food arrives in Terrace and is divided by

the members 'according to their orders.

With a stock of food building up because Nor- thorn Neighbours often buys the remainder of a case when there is not enough demand in a particular order, it was decided to open a store front operation called Northern deLights so that it will cut down on the quan- tities members had to buy for the two-month period between orders. The items in the store will be available to members.

Pearson named Tories leader

WHITEHORSE, Yukon (CP) - - The new Progressive Conservative terr i tor ia l government Wednesday named interim party leader Chris Pearson, two other newly-elected members, and a former education minister to serve on the territorial government's executive committee.

The selections were an- nounced during the opening of the Yukon's legislative assembly following elections Nov. 20 in which the Con- servative won 11 of 16 seats on the territorial council.

Grafton Mjootli (PC-Old Crow) will be the first native to sit on the Yukon's

Textbook to be looked at

VICTORIA (CP) - - Special committees will be established next September to deal with complaints about textbooks used in British Columbia schools, a spokesman for the education ministry 's depar tment of curriculum development said Tuesday,

The committees will comprise ministry staff, teachers and ad- minlstrators, who will act as sounding boards for teachers, parents and students who have com- plaints about instructional materials, said lan Parker.

At present there is no per- manent mechanism for dealing with such complaints from teachers and the public, Parker said.

e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e , similar in function to a provincial cabinet. Also se- lected were Howard Tracy (PCPatehun) and Dan Lang (PC-- Porter Creek East), a former education mirdster in the territorial government. Don Taylor (PC-Watson Lake) was renamed House Speaker.

Frank Hibberd, a former e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e member, was not renamed to the committee. Hibberd, who held the portfolios responsible for renewable resources, native affairs and consumer and corporate af- fairs, declined to comment on the action.

Pearson was appointed in- terim house leader by the party caucus after former party leader Hilda Watson lost her.seat In the elections, the first in which political parties participated.

Watson resigned as party leader last week, but the party's constition required a leadership convention to replace her.

In a throne speech, Frank Fingland, Yukon's tem- porary commissioner, said Hugh Faulkner, federal minister of indian and northern affairs, will select a new commissioner after consulting with the executive committee. He is scheduled to arrive here next Tuesday.

Art Pearson, former commissioner, stepped down from the post Oct. 18 prior to facing four criminal charges involving the transfer of mining claims. He is scheduled to appear in provincial court Feb. 12 for a preliminary hearing.

aopper development in Panama. "That sort of thing .is not good for the local in- dustry," he said.

Matson says that by the year 2050 most of Canada will have nuclear energy, and this province can provide much the uranium Supply for neclear energy.

He said one of the largest coal deposits in the world is in northwest B.C. There will he an $80 million investment in Houston for a placer silver, lead and zinc development and there is a planned development of K i t s au l t ' s molybdenum mine, he saidd.

A cool onshore flow is giving us cloudy skies and a few snowflurries. The weather is not expected to change much in the next couple of days, but in general will become a little colder by the weekend.

Temperatures are ex- pected to vary between an afternoon high of 1 degree CelsiUs today, and an overnight low tonight of -1 degree Celsius.

No further major storm systems should be seen in the area for at least the next few days.

, , ~ -"

/ t ~ " . I L ,

.~!.~..

Looking For A New Place To Try?

WHY NOT HECTOR'S AT THE LAKELSE. TRULY A QUIET RELAXED AT- MOSPHERE WITH A VERY SPECIAL MENU TO GET THE TASTE BUDS EX- CITED. FOR EXAMPLE WHY' NOT TRY THE TURNEDOS ROSSINI FOR THE LOVERS OF FINE BEEF OR SCALLOPS FLORENTINE FOR THOSE WHO LIKE SEAFOOD.

WHATEVER YOUR LIKES IN GOOD FOOD ARE YOU WILL FIND THEM AT HEC- TOR'S.. For Reservations Please Call ..... 638.8141

WEDDING RECEPTIONS .PRIVATE PARTIES BANQU ETS CATERING DANCING SPACE AVAILABLE

A car owned by Holger Sorensen, of Terrace, was struck by a car operated by John Dewey, of Burnaby, in the Aluminum City Lodge Motel parking lot at about 12:30 a.m. on Dec. 12. Sorensen's car was parked. Estimated damage is $400

and no charges have been laid.

Judy Whittleton, of Kitimat, reported her wallet was lost between the Post Office and the skating rink in the City Centre about 9:40 p.m. on Dec. 12.

under

new

management

EAST SIDE Grocery

& Laundromat

! Proprietor

STU COTTERILL

635-2104 4438 Lakelse, Terrace

because everything you've heard about BRADORis true.

BRADOR is our brcvcmastm"s finest achievement. BRADOR from MOLSON.

The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978, Page 3

Overwa=tea F O O D C E N T E R S

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December 11-16

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TURTLES LIGHT or DARK CHOCOLATE

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Page 4: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

: . - . _ . ; . . . . .

Page 4. The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978

____~ TERRACE/KITIMAT ~_~ daily herald

General Office. 635-6357 Published f)y Circulation - 6~-~357 Ste.rlir~g Publishers

PUBLISHER - Laurie Mallett GEN. MANAGER. Knox Coupland

EDITOR - Grog Mlddleton CIRCULATION - TERRACE. Andy Wlghtman 635-6357

KITIMAT- Pat Zellnskl 632-2747 KITIMAT OF FICE - 632-2747

Published every weekday at 32t2 Kalum Street, Terrace, B.C. A member of Varified Circulation. Authorized as second class mull. Registration number 1201. Postage poid in cash, return postage guaranteed.

NOTE OF COPYRIGHT

The Herald retains full, complete and sole copyright In any advertisement produced and.or any editorial or photographic content published In the Herald. Reproduction Is not permitted "without the written permission of the Publlsher.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Dear Editor, I fully agree with "Rock

music doesn't soothe" by Thomas Atriil in today's Herald. I too am sick of the tapes that CFTK plays over and over. Somebody in that

v

to the children of the Uplands School, who gave such a fine performance in the R.E.M. Lee Theatre, all about the real Christmas. Also the singing of carols in the Skeena Mall, by the choir

office is getting his wages of the Thornhill Elementary 'easy. Every nut can play School, was superb. I just tapes in a studio. What we had been reading some need there is a man or lady books about Russia, where who has some knowledge of thechildren are being taught music, somebody with an by the state (that there is no intelligent mind and a God) and where it is a crime degree in music. The to educate your own children selection of tapes and aecerding to the will.of GOd. records for the air waves is a Thank GOd for true religious responsible job that only an liberty in Canada, where artistic person, who loves kids can sing religious songs music ean do. For sure not a in a shopping mull. kid, just out of school, who Are we on the alert to heard nothing but rock defend this liberty? It is during his short lifetime, being attacked through the Now that the Christmas media, and communism is season is here I like to hear being taught in schools and music duulin~ with the birth colleges, right here in of Christandnotjastfolklore Terrace. We need more like Jingle Bells, The Twelve Christian teachers to Days of Christmas and other counteract this trend. Have a smh stuff. ' blessed Christmas folks.

I tu I ggt .g

SELF 8ER VESTA TIONS

re they worth the risks Is a savings of $20 a year

worth the risk of battery failure, cable problems, tire wear, hose problems, engine wear due to lack of oil and perhaps a costly service

leaU? The British Columbia

Automobile As.~ociation doesn't think so. If average motorists use about 500 gallons of gas a year, $20 would be the approximate savings. The auto club is all for saving the consumer money, but not if it's going to cost more in the long run.

That's exactly what recent studies by the BCAA's af- ffllated club club in Ontario have revealed.

In a one year study on the effects of self-serve stations, an amazing 45 percent in- crease in battery and cable problems on vehicles using self-serve stations was

, turned up. Many dry or Kear dry batteries were found and a large number of batteries

h a d cables were extremely

items alone could lead to roadside failures and costly service calls combined with expensive battery replacements.

Tire pressure problems, too, increased by 43 percent for vehicles frequenting self- serves. Low tire pressure for prolonged periods of driving at high speeds can damage a tire beyond repair, resulting in premature wear and in some cases violent blow. outs. The premature failure of a radial tire can be not only expensive but also dangerous.

This same upward trend was also noted in the 41 percent increase in oil level problems and the marked increase in belt and hose defects. Low oil levels in engines, ~wer steering and

.. automatic transmissions can

. ) ~ u s e premature wear. The failure of a fan belt or cooling hose can leave yon stranded. All of these checks can be performed very

111 W0 KtHel 11 ,

\N full service gas station if you ignored. But there are steps ask. that average motorists can

The most basic problem take to live with them more noticed by,the Ontario club, comfor tably, w i thout which initially led to the neglecting their vehicles. study was the increase in the All motorists must learn to number of vehicles perform basic under-the- presented at their inspection hood checks on their own or station with hoods that were arrange to heve them per- difficult to open - - for the formed regularly. °:It only very simple reason that the takes one or two minutes to

OTTAWA OFFBEAT

OTTAWA - It happens to them all when they resent- fully face the fact that they have fallen from public

favor. No prime minister can

accept it gracefully. Not after experiencing the

delights that supreme power bestows.

It's never their fault when it starts coming to an end.

And it's all so sudden.

They can go on for years • with their ups and downs,

plus here and minus there, their highs and lows, but never anything terminal.

Then overnight, it seems, it falls apart.

Never are they at fault. Never can they accept

respeasibility. Always someone else must

be blamed.

Perhaps It's only human that after reaching the planaele of success - - what higher office and honor in the land is there than prime m i n i s t e r - failure is im- possible to accept.

To salvage any shred of self-esteem from an ego shattered by threatened public rejection, the falling political idol must point the accusing finger of. blame.

Invariably, as with all prime ministers from Mackenzie King until today with Pierre Trudeau, it's the press.

Governments slip and ~gin falling, and the always useful and regularly used phrase in official circles is:

There goes the rotten press again.

BY RICHARD JACKSON

left willingly with a full and happy heart or was hurried along by Pierre Trudeau.

For Trudeau, 'after win- ning the Liberal leadership, took over just two days before Pearson had planned - - and was anticipating - - celebration of his fifth an . niversary in power.

And John Diefenbaker shid it, with reason, too, for as he

was slipping and sliding from power, the majority of the Parl iamentary Press Gallery Openly contrived to grease the skids.

"To work men", shouted a Toronto news correspondent, rallying the largely anti-Diet Press Gallery, "we have a government to destroy."

The press and "they" were to blame, charged Diet, " they" being all those "enemies" at work "out there".

And now comes Pierre Tradeau with the same cry against the press, and oddly enough, those same "enemies".

Only this time, incredibly, Trudeau identifies those "enemies" as, pointing an accusing finger,, " the public." - ,

Imagine, blaming the very people on whom he will be counting for votes next election.

That's a prime minister'! n extremts.

This time, though, he's figured a way to beat the "rotten press."

He switched his sup- posedly regular weekly but now decidedly unregular I like to say "Thank you" BillHomburg corroded. These two simple quickly by attendants at a opening mechanisms had check fluid levels, belts, Mackenzie King said it, press conference from the

boeome corroded and stiff hoses, battery and tire but had the good sense to National Press Building to from lock of use. These leave voluntarily, retiring, pressures.

• qt vehicles, too, habituated Motorists who take the netore . . . . . . . . . . me ,.toeram pushes co.,N.the Federal Conference J ~ " ~ " ~ | ( ~ | | A A $ ~ | ~ J ~ Self-serve stations, not full care of their automobiles ldm out of power's door. "~"""" I ~ U I NI ~ U I V t I - - I X I 1L ~ service, seriously should ob~in a tire . , T]hat way. one of his I . . . . . . . . . . . . I | , ~ t , ~ ' ~ Obviously, says the BCAA, 8auge and not reJy on service oButhed, tdn:Lw.an!~g ~ stooges can control the J ~ ~ • • • • IS" • a =v, J • ~ /r-,"- ~Q¢~, self.serve gas stations are station gauges for accuracy. ? " . ' ~ " . " ' " " . . . " J .~ ' , ° conference, blocking hostile J [ [ ] ~ ~ ~ [[~J[ J J • ~ ~ ~ V J hero to stay. In recent years The tire gauge and a clean .~n~Y e ~n~a~im:ntehr~ ~ ~an questions and allowiiig' j ~,~ v • w • • • n L_ a • a j I ~ . f , ~ ~ oil companies have been rag is all that is required to " : . . . . "~.~ "sweetheart" queries. .

ordinary white frame hu,~c , .. .... • l L / k _ P " ~ . systematically increasing carry out the checks. Per- a L ' K i n g s m e r e in the Nottoc0mpletecontr'p]~,~e

~'DJ~...f . . . . . . . . ~ n.,f . . . . . . hI,-o = m,,,.o,. ' ' , | \ - ] ~ _ ~ ' the number of them.and4hus :,forming ~. these checks .~ ' .~ '~"~ ;~ ~ . . " , ~ ' ~ " "~ ~,'k " .~k".. ~ " ~ . ' . " ~ . ' , ~ ' . . . . . . " ' I ~ ~ I /~ ] l~ t :' reducing the number Of regularly and adhering to' 'GdtincaU'Hllis,, " is'invi(ingi~ais'c'ef~vcdfi~siin ~,=~.,. , , ,~ .c~,..o.,u~,. w , . . . , , = ,,,.ca.c~. ~ c , , c . ~} ' ~ i ~ J ~ outlets offering service and t h e m a n u f a c t u r e r ' s LOU,~'- o,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.=u~-c.~ ~u,u ,,, ,..thepresst°c°zylittletete'a'..,~^ . , , , __.__~ uusiness uureau, or fmd out i f he s a member of g , ~ , ~ 1 ~ repairs, recommended maintenance but following the lead of his ,=,es.w,,:re -.~ m sw~,,c~s the Professional Movers division of the ' ~J~) ~lrtfflllllr~. The oil companles tellus schedule will minimize mentor Mackenzie King, an dligh!. -_= A u t o m o t i v e T r a n s p o r t Assoc ia t i on f A T A l ~ /~O( /]lfill]llllll[~ that these changes are overalloperating costs and jumped before he was uut me recoru stands, . . . . • "- . . . . . - , -2 -"._'.," L' _" _'.; L 4 ~ ]~r L,dl{/Ull l l II I l l l l t necessary to operate extend the life of the vehicle pushed, between his own quotes, the N~emoers must meet esTaollsneo srano~,ru~ a,,u xB,~-~__., w ~.dkfll~= Ira '1 II III economicail-- The ultimate . . . . . -~ . . . . " - " . . . . '----' a • ' • " , , . . ~ k ~ ~ q ; p r . y . W A U t U r ~ t I ~ . ~ W I ] ~ U U I l U t K [ I U W

bid by a code of ethics. You can get a list of ~ ~ , ~ ~ ' gout of m0et of them is to the proper way to check the i LesterPearson said it, and _public is the "enemy"_ and members from the ATA off ice at 4090 Graveley r _ ~ ~ ~ , - . ~ ~ convert one-third to one-half basic components and wish t was a tossup whether he the press the villain.

Street, Burnabv, B.C. V 5 C 3 T 6 The te lenhone - , ~ ~ ~ . . . . . ~ I [ ~ " of their fuel outiets to self- to learn, shouldconsui t [ T H I N K S M A L L ] , . ooo " " s a , v e , either their owners' manual, ' ' '

' ' C ' h a r ' - e s ~or"['ocal mov-s are based - n t " - ~ . ¢ ~ , f ~ 4. .~.0~,~1~. . ~ Thus there is no way that the BCAA or a good c u , c ~ ~ , , ~ ~ , ~ f e . . . . ~' self.serve stations can be mechanic.

length of t ime the moving van is in use. The ~ " charge begins when the van leaves the moving " ~ ~ ~ m q . . . . . . ' BY JIM SMITH company and continues until i t returns. This also IN CHINE,qR F. YF.S J J applies to long distance moves. The weight of ---~T~- - - ~ ~- l I your goods and the distance they are to be - - • - = • • ~1~ | | 1 transported from the basis on which your i l l r l l I~PIP9111 te nennet r nn ] e m t n ~ e e Losing Be,..ays moving charge is ca lcu la te& The moving van is , =~ --=. ~ L . ~ , ~ . ~ . ~ = . s,a. , M ~ - - a . , , . ~ j ~ v a . ~ s , J . V ~ , , . , s.~ - - ~ , , , , , . , ~,

weighed before anda f t e r your goods are loaded. TOKYO ( A P ) - Decayed "A vicious circle has or a number of trips on frequent, with good and widespread connections, Li Several decades ago, a mar. The difference between the two f igures is the

weight of your goods. Before you call the movers to get est imates

(you should get several) , go through your pessessions and do some judicious cul l ing. There's.no point in paying to have useless odds and ends transported somewhere else to be thrown out.

Make a list of the i tems to be moved and be sure the est imator sees them all. A good est imator should be able to come wi th in 10 percent of the actual weight of your goods, but remember his f igure is only an estimate. The actual f igure wi l l not be established until the truck is weighed af ter loading.

Proceed cautiously i f one est imate is con- considerably lower than the others. Some companies wil l de l ibera te ly underest imate the weight just to get your bsuiness. Once the goods are loaded and weighed you' l l f ind the weight -- and therefore the cost -- much greater than you were led to expect.

Be sure ';,ou understand the compensation av¢i lable in case of damage. Unless you ar range for special coverage, Insurance on your goods is usual ly l imited to 60 cents per pound (30 cents on local moves). Thus a c la im on a lost $22 suit, assuming it weighed three pounds, could be l imited to 90 cents i f the move was local, $1.80 if it was a long.distance move. Unless the mover did the packing, you may not even be able to c la im that amount.

If possible, go with the d r i ve r to the weighing scale to ver i fy the weight of your goods. If you can' t gow i th him, call the company a few hours af ter the t ruck leaves and get the weight f r o m them.

It's Important to know the exact f igure because the dr iver wi l l not unload the truck unti l paymen; in cash, money-order or cert i f ied cheque Is received. If you don' t have the r ight amount on hand when the t ruck arr ives, your goods wi l l be placed in storage and the cost added to your bi l l .

Be there yourself, or have a rel iable person present when your goods are unloaded and note any damaged or missing i tems on the bil l of lading.

railways~ costly air travel, too few buses and too many automobiles--that's the U.S. transportation system in the eyes of one Chinese jour- nalist who visited America.

Class differences in America "apparently are not reflected primarily by whether one has a car or not, but by whether one has a good car or a bad car, or one car or many cars," journal- ist Li Yen-ning told newspaper readers in China, a country where personal use of autos is virtually non- existent.

Li, a member of a Chinese journalists' delegation that toured the United States for three weeks, wrote a series on American transport in Peking's official newspaper, People's Daily.

lie said he was told thut having a car was an unavoidable burden in the United States.

formed," he wrote. "The more public transportation remains undeveloped, the more private cars there are, and the more development of public transportation can't advance."

Li said that his only American train trip, from Washington, D.C., to Philadelphia, was un- forgettable. At the entrance to the Washlnston station, "you simply couldn't tell it was a railroad station; because yon couldn't see any travellers going in or out," he wroto.

He enjoyed the train's air conditioning and found the seats comfortable, but riders were so few that "you could imagine it was running at a big loss."

"The train's speed was faster than our country's railroads, but the strong shaking was something we had not experienced in China

European trains. Coffee spilled out of the cups. The roadbed certainly was in rather a mess," Li wrote.

" S u r p r i s i n g l y , the American friends ac- companying us said this Washington-New York sec- tion of rai l road was America's best."

He said that in Europe and America, because of com- petition from cars and lanea, rai lways are caying. "This wasn't news to us.

But that they had decayed to such a degree in America, this was somehwat unex- pected."

He said the "capitalists who grew immensely rich" from railways in the past don't see any profit in renovating them now, and the government is more interested in spending money on highways.

Air transportation is

wrote, but flights are ex. pensive.

In nine cities the Chinese visited, trolleys and buses were few, and it wasn't unusual to wait more than 10 minutes for a bus, he said, adding that only a few cities had subways.

The area in which China has the most to learn from America is water transport, especially through the Mississippi and the Great Lake systems, Li wrote.

Mississippi barge tran- sport can move freight ut one-fifth to one.half of the cost by train, and one-eighth to one-twentieth the cost by truck.

"For our country, with its vast r iver network and serious insufficiency of railroads and highways, the Mississippi River system's transport is a rich in- spiratlon," Li said.

BUT NOT STARS THOUQfl

Your birth date has an effect MANCHESTER, England

(CP) - - The date of your birth has a strong effect on

,your personality, but it has nothing to do with the stars, says POt. Alan Smithers, a psychologist at Manchester University.

"My guess is that the ex- planation lies in some com- bination of hereditary and climatic causes," he told a recent conference on astrology.

"It depends on where and when you were born and the kind of weather prevailing at the time."

Smithers, 40, says his findings were based on a survey among 600 teen

agers. He says persons born in May (Taurus or Gemini) are likely to be quiet and bookish. Persons born in De. camber (Sagittarius or Capricorn) probably are sociable and impulsive.

"in general," he says, "1 found that the later in the year your birthday is, the more extrovert you are ikely to be."

Summer and his research ssociate, Prml Joseph.

Cooper of Bradford College, Yorkshire, found that stable, dependable people were likely to be born between May and July. Those with birthdays in March or April

tend to be "anxious, wor- rying types."

People born between December and March are the most likely to suffer from skin diseases while those born in June or July are the least likely to have them, they found. Those with birth-

time a parson is bern. He himself was born under

Taurus (April 21May 20)and is therefore "introverted, quiet and bookish."

"Most professors are," he says, "and my wife certainly thinks I am."

Lilian Bertrand of Roch- days in January or February dale, Lancashire, a student are more likely to suffer of astrology, says Smithers from schizophrenia (split is quibbling when he says his personality) then those born findings had nothing to do between June and August. with the stars.

Smithers says his in- "History shows that wise vestigation revealed that men have always learned physique, intel l igence, from the stars, and the proneness io illness, success professor's findings in his at school or college and study of 600 teenagers are choice of occupation are ull, related in many instances to resume extent, related to the the findings of astrologers."

vellous new chemical was in. troduced to destroy plunt- catiog Insects, a scourge of ha. lure. Unfortunuteb', however, it turned out to have a couple of unexpected flaws. For one, the insects built up resistance to the chemical. For another, the chemical killed animals as well as insects. So we no longer use DDT.

Dudng World War II, an incredible new vaccine was dis- .covered to cure everything from the common cold to V.D.

Unfortunately, the ultimate 'result was a new strain of pent. cillln.resistunt germs.

Once upon a time, we used lead as a base in paints, ulumi- hum wiring and a drag called Thalidomide. Now we don't.

The point? Sometimes set. ence really doesn't have much freedom in devising cures. The cost of one cure may be a brand new disease.

The some restdefloas apply to government economic poll- des. One useful case In polut: the Bank of Canada's insis- tence on raising It, rarest rates to protecl the Canadian dol. lar and maintain s semblance of health in our international capital balances.

Ratsing the Bank Rate - which restdls in correspond. ingly higher rates within Ihe eommercisl banking syslem - lures foreign investmenl funds into the counlry, laking some of the downward pressure off Ihe dollar and compensating, in part, for the billions of dol- lars which leave this country every year.

But saving the dollar and improving the international capital balance through ad- justments in interest rotes are unly accomplished at disturb. ingJy high cost in another are a. Business expunston is slowed end unemployment rises.

The pressure on business is a two.pronged attack. First, business finds that Investment in new capital equipment or factories costs more, so invest- ment plans ure shelved. Then customers discover that their own finance costs are higher, so they cut back on purchases; faced with declining demand, businesses that can afford to expand decide that they no longer have a market gap to fill.

17 : :i

Many industdes - such as construction end heavy equip- ment - depend on constant business expansion. Postpone- ment of business expansion (because of the Impact of higher interest rates) creates unem. ploymenl in these Industries. And thai, in turn, will cause unemployment in other Indus- Iries. Full recovery can re- quire )'cars of corrective e¢o. nomic measures,

We've been caught in this sort of bind before. Remem. bar the mixed blessing of In. sectlcides. The Bank of Ca.

DDTnUda's economic policy is the i:: .... ' i .: '! of modern economies,. "i~'.i

We could be paying rot the .::i/;' . "'[ .,.~'s aedo.. ~.g, ~,g u~ , i !;i!~ii,:::

"Think small" is an editorial message frcm the Canadian Federation of independent

Business ~ '

Page 5: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

W R I T I N G B O O K

Leger says there was a light side

OTTAWA (CP) -- Gov,- Gen. Jules Leger hopes to

wr i t e a book in his for- thcoming retirement to toll Canadians that life at Ridcau Hall is not always a dull, stuffy affair.

But the former journalist and diplomat, who brought his special sense of humor to the official residence of the

. Queen's representative, is mee t i ng some resistance • from his wife, Gaby.

"I want to convince her to ' write a book with me on the • lighter side of life at Rideau Hall, but she is not yet con- vinced," the Governor- General said in a farewell interview. "But I am very stubborn."

_ Quips and one-liners were the trademark of Gov.-Gen. Leger during his five-year .stay at Rideau Hall. He was

. known to break up more than one official state dinner with

• his candid remarks. And true to his non-

political role, each remark about "my .boss," Prime Minister Trudeau, was followed by one aimed at

:Progressive Conservative L~ader Joe Clark.

The book,, however, will not be his first project next

:month when Ed Schreyer assumes the highest post in the country and Gov..Gen. Leger begins what he terms

. a period of unemployment. ".'.Pirst, there will be a i period of rest in the Leger's 'Ottawa condominium from the rigors of travelling, .speech.making and en- tertaining royalty.

"I am behind in my 'dialogue with God," the 65- year-old Governor-General says. "I hope he will reply to

• me from time to time." Gov.-Gen. Leger has five

words of advice for his successor, the former New Democratic Party premier • of Manitoba :"Do your thing with prudence."

It is a motto he has practised since leaving the

foreign service and ira- por tant a m b a s s a d o r i a l

:appointments to France and Italy to become Governor- General in January, 1974.

:' : ' r he nati('e '~ 6 f the"'~iny 'Quebec village of St. Anicet did the job the way he saw fit but never rocked the boat.

"I opened the doors to Rideau Hall to Canadian artists, for chamber music," he nays, alternating between French and English.

"I forced the government to buy Canadian paintings. I think the house is more human ~ before and more open than before, more

Canadian." The works of Canadian

~artisis line the walls of the rooms that before reflected more of the European heritage that first shaped Canada.

One such painting is a por- trait by the famous Quebec artist Jesn.Paul Lemieux of the Governor-General 's brother, Paul-Emile Car- dinal Leger, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Montreal who went to work with the poor and lepers in Africa.

In the classical sense, there is no Canadian culture, Gov..Gen. Leger nays.

"But in the contemporary sense, yes, in that we have an expression which is Canadian, French, English, American and this impact on thecountry is so great, it is a culture.

"For example, I pray in French; I work in English part of the time and I dream about things American. This is our culture today and

• more so in the future." The current crisis between

E n g l i s h - a n d F r e n c h - Canadians "could be a long one" but may lead to a better understanding between the two founding ethnic groups, he says.

Unguistle tensions are not the'only problems facing the country.

"In Canada we have at the moment a political crisis, an economic crisis, and a social crisis,

"I think Canada is going through a social revolution but time is with us and we can meet the crisis."

Gov.-Gen. Leger sees the

role of the Queen can he complementary for many years to come, maybe for a generation. After that, I cannot say."

The real powers of the g o v e r n o r - g e n e r a l a r e exercised only in times of emergency, such as when a m i n o r i t y g o v e r n m e n t collapses. ' The governor- general may then appoint a prime minister.

Usually, the governor- general maintains a largely ceremonial role. Former governor.general Roland Michener noted recently that he was described as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces "but they never took any of my or- ders."

The influence a governer- general has upon the country is heavily determined by the temperament of theperson holding that office., Gov.- Gen. Leger illustrates his point by comparing Schreyer, 42, with himself.

Sehreyer, who received his first official tour of Ridsau Hall this week, is younger, a political idealist ~and a socialist, Leger notes.

'Tin old, not socialist, well, •maybe a bit, and, therefore, you realize the contrast between the two .men is great and, therefore, you have to conclude the role of the governor.general is changing today in this house."

Gov.-Gen. Leger says he believes part of his job is to speak on important social and cultural issues with which he is familiar. But prudence again is the key.

"For example~, my suc- cessor can speak of the West with great authority. This is good for the country."

Being a former journalist at the Ottawa French- language daily newspaper, Le Droll, Gov.-Gen. Leger occasionally challenged reporters to ponder the impact of their work.

News organizations should take part in a search for ,the path oLlight and help:others to find it," he told the annual dinner of The Canadian Press in Toronto in May, 1974.

A month later, Gov..Gen. Leger met the toughest challenge of his life when he suffered a serious stroke at Sherbrooke, Que.

FORM

The illness damaged his speech and resulted in a paralysis of one arm.

Six months later, after a holiday at Palm Beach, Fla., he was back at work.

His traditonal New Year message for 1975 bad a special poignancy.

"These long months have brought me close to these who suffer. I wish them well on the way to recovery. They should not despair."

The resulting speech handicap meant his wife, the daughter of a Montreal motor executive whom he met while attending the Sorbonne in Paris, frequently became his public mouthpiece.

"Mme. Leger met with gusto the challenge at Rideau Hall and she helped me greatly in my difficulty after my attack," Gov.-Gen. Leger reminisces. "And 1 am very fond of her."

"The job of the wife of the governor-general is very important but oddly enough the studies that Mme. Leger went through, mostly in Paris, helped her a great deaf at Rideau Hall.

"Such studies, three years of cooking lessons and three

TRAINS MUST ROLL

OTTAWA (CP) -- Tne Canadian t r a n s p o r t commission has ordered Canadian National Railways to continue for the time being its passenger train services between Regina, Sas- katoon and Prince Albert in Saskatchewan and also its train service between Saskateon and The Pas in Manitoba.

In its decision made public Wednesday, the commission said the services are .unecono- mical and are likely to continue to he uneconomical. However, it would not be in the best public interest to discontinue them.

Under the National Transportation Act, ,Jm CNR can recover 80 per cent of its losses for operating the services.

The commission noted however that Transport Minister Otto tang or- dered the commission in 1976 to review all pas- senger-train services. Until the investigation is completed of the two services ordered Wed- nssday to be continued, the CNR must not discontinue them.

The commission said the number of revenue passengers on the

The Ileraid, Thursday, December 14, 1978, Page 5

Cabinet to decide WINNIPEG (CP) -- The

Hudson's Bay Co. has put its hopes for a larger presence in Eastern Canada in the hands of the federal cabinet.

Donald S. McGiverin, company president and chief executive officer, said Wednesday that Ottawa will decide whether its plans to take over Simpsoos Ltd. will be allowed to pi'oceed.

Hudson's Bay made an offer to Simpsons shareholders last month to take over the company for .$388 million in eash and shares.

The offer represents a bid by The Bay, most of whose stores are in Western Canada and Ontario, to enhance its position in eastern markets now served by Simpsons.

In an effort to ward off the takeover, Simpsons moved Tuesday to sweeten a proposed merger with Simpsons-Sears Ltd., the department store chain half- owned by Sears, Roebuck and Co. of Chicago.

McGiverin told reporters The Bay's offer would retain Canadian control of Simp- sons, and he said he doesn't see how Ottawa could ap- prove the merger plans of the company's rivals.

"I would find it incredible tf the federal cabinet came to th~ conclusion that made a merger of Simp~ons and

SimpsonsSears possible." However, he added: "If

the federal cabinet is sold on the Simpsuns and Simpsons- Sears merger, that blows us out of the water.'4

Simpsons and Simpsons- Sears have asked the federal government to decide by Friday whether their latest merger proposal is per- missible under the Foreign Investment Review Act.

McGiverin said that ff the merger is approved, The Bay would be forced to with- draw its offer and Simpsuns shareholders would be left with no other choice in the matter.

The Bay has offered Simpsons shareholders the equivalent of $8.30 a share based on latest market prices. McGiverin said a preliminary analysis of the latest merger proposal would give Simpsons shareholders only $7.60 a share.

Principals in the merger say their latest proposal betters The Bay's offer.

McGiverin also said The Bay's offer is superior in terms of future dividends to shareholders and proposed new investment, jobs and merchandise purchases in Canada,

The Bay proposes to operate Simpsons as an independent division under the Simpsons name.

PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL WORKER II or I I I

(Temporary - 12 months)

Under the direction of the Director of the Terrace Mental Health Centre to provide a full range of clinical psychiatric social work duties including assessment, individual, group and family therapy in a multi.disciplinary treatment setting. To llase with and provide consultative services to com- munity groups and agencies. QUALIFICATIONS: A Master's degree in Social Worker and three years related experience; a sound theoretical knowledge of case work and demonstrated skills of originality and resourcefulness. Car and valid drivers license required. Canadian citizens given preference. CLOSING DATE: December 20, 1978. MONTHLY SALARY: SS,SS7.Ss,888.

Reply to:

Director T E R R A C E M E N T A L H E A L T H C E N T R E

N o . 4 - 4554 Lazelle Ave. Terrace. B.C.

VSG IS2

Proviso: Less qualified applicants may be appointed at a lower level.

! I I

#

years of arts lectures, helped Begina-Saskatoon.Prince ~ .........................................

her acquire a, knowledge Albert run has b e e n , Quick Silver Delivery ' essential to the job." declining. , ..... , m )

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Have The Paper Delivered To Your Door Daily

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"The role of the governor- general is changing all the ::iii M ~ r ~ I F r e e . for ONE month courtesy Of THE time and the changes can be mere rapid depending on the i:!: I I ~ / ~ ~ DALLY HERALD changes the qovernment wishes to make to the ilii If youw ishyou r Business Phone ~ ~ ~ 1 ~ 1 1 1 Canadian constitution, • I I "For me, the role of the ii!: ,stea for yo.r c .stomers p 0 . s e c . . M O O q l ; O f d l l governor-general and the

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Page 6: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

Page 6, The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978

II

A l l S e a s o n s d o w n s K&Stl) fTERRACE.KITIMAT Spo R+TS Skeena Hotel defeats Ev's [dally herald rIs In Terrace Mens.League ~eaS~cfO~ndth~,irhfo~or~vi~ ~nint~uW#~0~heoanse. t~]lYr~oo~e~l~lafte~l,a~t ' with Ch P o r t e r Basketball action Tuesday

night at Skeena Secondary and wasted little time in Willie Chemko netted 28 When the smoke finally School, All Seasons Sporting gaining the lead. The two points for Klnss & Sons, cleared, Skeena Hotel had Goods defeated Kluss & Sons teams were tied at 40 points while Bob Sheridan had 18. played to an 87-75 win. Jon 83-70 in the opening game, apiece at one point, then All Skeena Hotel and Ev's Gurban was the. leading and Skeana Hotel overcame a 6 point halftime deficit to cop an 87.75 win over Ev's Clippers.

Kluzs & Sons enjoyed an excellent first half over All

Seasons began to dominate. Clippers were fairly dose By the time the final buzzer, throughout most of the first sounded, All Seasons was in haft in the second game, but front by a comfortable 83-70 Ev's put on a bit of a spurt marstn, giving them the towards the e~d, and held a victory. 39-33 halflJme lead, Skcen~a

scorer for Skee=a Hotel with 36 pointe, while Willie Harvey petted 17. In a cause for E v ' s Cliilpe~, it was Dale P r i n t with 3t

IN COMMERCIAL HOC~KE Y

Seasons, and enjoyed a 38-33 Doug MeKay led the All Hotel came on strong in the points, and Margin Klein lend at the end of it. All Seasons attack with 29 second half, thmgh, even- scori~ 21. The top two Commercial

: " Hockey League teams c l a s h e d a t the Arena Tuesdey night, and league RECTORY _ + Skeena Hotel once BUSINESS DI " + ' - '+'* superiority, as they downed necond place Totem Ford 8-3.

Skeena Hotel got off to a quick start, as Henry- Davi.~,son opened the scoring at 2:;~ of the first period.

K I T C H E N C A B I N ETa; I N S T A L L A T I O N

• M O U L D E D C O U N T E R T O P S • ' =':;:: I" K A L W O O D

i ~ T C HEN

K ABINET$ (NORTHERN) LTD.

FREE ESTIMATES

B R A D REESE A R E A M A N A G E R

3 6 9 • 5TH A V E N U E P R I N C E G E O R G E , B.C, V2L , 3 K 5 BUS. 5 6 4 - 1 4 8 0 R E 5 , 5 6 2 - 2 2 8 t

I

Terrace Eleelronie Repairs Ud.

I ,

TERRAOE Doe GI IOi l I I+ Professional Dog Greeming

Indivimal Styling=-All Breeds

"NO TRIIIIQUIL.IZERS USED" • ' • REASONADLE~:PRIOlr,~I : .i~ii.+.:...".:+...

YOU,V~ ~ m D T ~ R~T--NOW'~+ Tim . m ' r

JUNE KOZLOWSKi d l ~ dllli Appointments Only -- Thank You' 111-1130 . - - 20 Years Experience - -

i i I iiii

T E R R A C E A N S W E R I N G BUREAU 638-8195.

ANSWERING, PAGING,

MONITORIN@ OR PHOTOCOPYING

SERVICES 24 HOUR SERVICE

++.4603.D Park Avenue, Terrace, B.C. V0G lV$ i

I I I I I

"BOOK HOg"

w B • e h a , Sell & Trade Used Pocket l[~Mm | for 1 ve a goed seluction of Hurd Covered Berlin.

Open New Location

I I I

Skeena Hotel still tops

Tofom Ford didn't waste much time replying, as jnst 38 seconds afterward, Joe

Roblchaud connected TO tie thegame at one goal apiece.

3211Kalum ~ o 4 ~ , D . . ~ . s , t

104Prklsy

GLACIER

Skeens Hotel went In front to stay when Joe Smoley's shot found the target at 7:04 of the period, and Dave Sharps potted one at 14:05 to make it3-1 going into the second period.

The only goal of the middle frame came at ?:43 when Ed McEwan notched one to increase Skeena Hotel's lead to a healthy 4-1 going Into the th~ period.

Totem Ford got a bit of a lift at 3:09 of the final period as Ken 01son's goat narrowed the gap to 4-2, and

SERVING TERRIOE l KITIMH SERVICE ON ALL MAKES OF T.V.'s Warrenty Depot ~ r ZqmHh, Phililps,: Hlla~hi,

• - ~ + ~ + ' " Sylvania . . . . 1 " ~ ` + ~ ' ' • ~

MON.. SAT. I s.m. - $ p.m.

4823 Lakeke 636-4043 ii

i

P H O N E O 3 5 , 3 0 9 2

I

+

,, / " ~ ;"/"

f /

soddenly they were hack In the game. Joe Smoley took a double minor at 10:33, giving Totem Ford an excellent opportunity to get back on even terms.Dave Sharpe put a bit of a damper on the comeback attempt, . however, as he scoreo a shorthanded goal at 12:48, to restore Skeena Hotel's three ipml lead. Sev Piatoni iced the cake with his marker at 14:28, making it 6-2. Sean James got one back for Totem Ford at lS:42 of the

frame, but that was all

• she wrote, as time ran out, Skcena Hotel winning &3.

The game featui'ed 36 minutes in penalties, 24 of

• these going to Totem Ford, Skcena Hotel dominated the shots on goal department as well, outshooting Totem Ford 46-23.

The next scheduled action in the Terrace Commercial Hockey League is tonight, 8:45 at the Terrace Arena, when Gordon & Anderson will take on the Terrae.e Chrysler Juveniles.

r

F

i+++~':, I~ +/,.L~ ++it+ t,'.,,,',

Snowmobi le fatalities down Since 197S, participation in

h ~ aport of snowmobiling increased by 25 percent

in Canada and the United

L .+ . , , , , , . . , , . - .l= htthe BARNEY'S SHOES & REPAIR A O~ 0~" Terrlee, N,O.

- - - - . , .O.HO.. - - , S , . + w . i ,aJ . ,____ S.OES^LES. WORs~k~teoo~a~oE, eOO, REPA.Rs S ~ A C o m p l e t e G l a s s a n d . . url3fx s

=.o, ¢~,.K,,. ,ERR,CE. e.+. A l u m i n u m Service + ~e~rO(++I/?ot~s+

. . . . . . . + ' ' ' Chrislmas -p" MR. US seals I e ,msmm

This Space"ls Reserved

• For Your Ad' I . ' J

" O | e " , g Oo-o:,::, ICBC AUTO

• . . i .. I I II I I

Insurance 4617 Greig

find abetter U.beer

635-5232

LUNCHEON SPECIAI~

O P E N 6 A.M. - 9 P.M. Mon..Thur. S A.M.. 3 A.M. Fridsy& 8at. Sun. 10 A.M. - 9 P.M.

Take Out 0rden 4642 Lazelle

o •

Boattopplng & Hardware • Viny l Car Tops • Headliners. Tonneao Covers -Auto Carpet. V.W. Seats recovered In original color and material, front & back $225 - Upholstery Fabrics, Vinyl & leather - Complete Corvetter supplies. Antique Auto Restoration R,R. 3 Johns Road Phone 635.43+18

Call us at 635-63§7 9 to §

States. Yet, at the same time, snowmobile related fatalities have decreased by

percent. The reduction in accidents and slgnifleantly improved safety record are due to better educated riders, improved and more plentiful trails and technological advancements in increasing the safety of the machines.

In the most recent con- sumer product hazard listing produced by the U.S. Con- sumer Product Safety Commission, snowmobiling hazard has dropped from a low ranking number St in a previous report to an even lower number86. Biking (the

peddled variety) ranked number 1; baseball number 4; basketball number twelve; snow.skiing number 4t; ice skating number 51; tennis and badminton number 61, and golf number 221

Provinces now offering snowmobile operator safety training programs are Ontario and Quebec with numerous programs available in the United States. Provincial and state safety education programs

• usually include both classroom and field in- strueUon. In most cases, enswmobile imtmction is provided by volunteers

muaily from the ranks of snowmobile associations and clubs. In addition to covering such topics as maintenance and machine operation, proper riding positions, proper clothing, terrain, we~tther and wind con. ditious, the programs stress ea~h'onmental awarenese , skill, courtesy, Judgement and common sense.

Trails are the key to in- creased safety in the sport as inadequate trail facilities increase the risk of accidents with hazards such as; cables and guy wires, fences, barbed wire, unsafe ice, hid~fen rocks, tree stumps, low hanging branches.

O

it b bat t w yoCve m r tut

Page 7: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

" ' ' ' L "

4 .) •

"Holmgren,,: suspended

NY shootout NEW YORK (AP) - - Steve scoring with a power.play assessed after an altercation

Vickers, Ron Gresclmer and goal at 3:09 of the first between Rowe and defen- nection with the incident. Dif Nilsson scored third- . period. Pierre Plante tied it • period goals 4:07 apart for New York just 42 seconds Wednesday night, giving later. In the second period. New York Rangers an 8.7 Jensen and Murphy 'scored National Hockey League triumph in a see.saw shootout with Los Angeles Kings.

Mike Murphy had scored twice to help Los Angele~ carry a 6-5 lead into the third period of a game that saw six ties and seven lead changes. • But Vickers and Nilsson sandwiched power-p lay goals around Gresehner's jsecond goal of the game, in "the first 7:23, giving New York an 8.6 lead.

Steve Jensen's second goal of the game, just 25 seconds after Nilsson's tally, brought the Kings within one, but the Rangers managed to survive the remainder of the contest and win for only the third time in their past seven gaGmes.

reschner had two assists to go with his pair of goals, Vickers had two goals and an assist and Phil Esposito finished with a goal and two ,assists, Marcel l)ionne had a goal

and three a~sists for the "': Kings. who lost for only the

".tburth time in 17 games. ".Rick llampton and Danny .i Gi'ant had tw6 assists apIece

: ..for Los Angeles. , The teams scored goals in

• bunches, starting after ..Butch Goring opened .the

': Penguins shut out St. Louis

• PITTSBURGIt tAP) -- Rookie goalie Greg Millen, playing in his seventh National Hockey League game, stopped 33 shots Wednesday night when Pittsburgh Penguins shut out St. Louis Blues 3-0.

The shutout was the first of the season for Pittsburgh, which stretched an unbeaten streak to eight games with five wins and three ties. It was fifth consecutive less for the Blues.

Millen, 21, made several outstanding saves, including two from the edge of the crease on Bernie Federko, the league leader in assists.

Ed Staniowski, the 22- year -o ld St. Louis goalie stopped 32 shots.

, i,. i/George Ferguson opened ~i::.:,the scoring in the second /." i:poried with an assist going to .."~ Pete Mahovlieh. Ferguson .~ tried to lift the shot into the u p p e r left corner, hut it

'. bounced Off the crossbar and fell into the net after striking

.: Blues' defenceman Bob Hess On the shoulder.

Orest Kindrachuck put the Penguins ahead 2-0 with his eighth goal of the season et 3:01 of the third period. He drove a rebound shot past Staniowski.

Greg Malone scored the final goal with less than two minutes to play.

41 seconds apart, giving Los Angeles a 5-4 lead. And in the Rangers' three-goal third- period flurry, the goals by Greschner and Nil*son'came just 42 seconds al~art.

Referee Ron Wicks called only eight penalties, but five were converted into power- play goals-three by New York.

H e l p c r e a t e student jobs.

, A n d • w e ' l ! help you.

Young Canada Works is a federal government job cr.eatiqn program designed to fund projects which improve the skills andfuture job prospects of students.

Get you[ group or organization to think of an idea. If it will create at least 3 student jobs lasting from 6 to 18 weeks each between the months of May and September; thor.,

' Young Canada Works.may be able to help you turn your idea into reality.

Your project should benefit the community and must meet all the program requirements.

Apply today. Application forms and guides are ready now at your nearest Canada Employment Centre/Canada Manpower Centre or Job Creation Branch office. Application Deadline February 2,1W9.

l ~ Employment and Emploiet Immigration Canada Immigration Canada

BudCullen, Minister BudCullen, Ministre

It's been a while

When the Edmonton .-. Eskimos defeated Montreal i iAIouettes 20-13 recently in

".. the 1978 Grey Cup game in • :: :.Toronto, it marked the first • i : ;time since 1964 that western

.: '~.toam has won Earl Grey's mug in the east. Of course

.1964 was also the last time • ,B,C, Lions won the Cup,

:.Aaking a 34-24 victory over ",..;)Hamilton in Toronto. The , .~: British Columbia Sports Hall .'.bf."Fame has two members

.' '..from that 1964 team - Norm ;/ .Fieldgate and By Bailey -

::ip|ij.~ a marvelous display of ' ~emorabilia from the game

, ak.' well as the history of • football in our province.

JOB OREATION BRANCH 4663 Lazelle Terrace OANA|A EMPLOTMENT CENTRE 4630 Lazelle 635.7134

Th, lh'~,do, flmr.~tla.v. December 14, 1978, Page 7

Kids Let ters

to SANTA

Closing Date for Letters is 5 p.m. December 16th, 1978

"Mail To" Santa

Terrace/litimat Daily Herald 3212 Kalum St., Terrace, B.C.

~*~* d tv ~*:

RULES t. Letters must be written by the child in his or her own words with the exception of Pre- Schoolers.

2. Only one letter per child.

3. All letters will be published in the Christ- mas letter supplement with ~h e Christmas Carols.

4. Prizes awarded by draw.

.5. Supplement to be published 2t December, 1978.

6. Contest closes December 15 "at 5 p.m. (Letters arriving late do not qualify).

7. Letters must contain Name, Address, and Phone Number, Age.

8. Pre-Schoolers, Primary & Elementary ONLY Qualify.

9. All letters will be forwarded on to the North Pole after the Draw.

/ >..

Page 8: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

Page 8, The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978

: : 7 ,.~',y].

~'i+ 5,++; .

+ ,+.. ;

• . : . . ; ' , . + .

. " i . • . • ~?+ .:T:! .+

. +

_ " o~

i +.

ii

Only 2 Da?s Left To PHONE

Terrace/Kitimat

DAI~Y HERALD

63 • • +ii ' . '+ + . : + + ' . + :

• " . . * : ' ~ + i ' '+,.." • . . , . .

• . , , . , . . . - , . ' "

. ' . . . ~ : . . " . .

• i " . . . ' v " ' : : / ! . .+...

". ' . ~ . , , " ~ . . ' . ' + . . t .~.+.

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6357 ..:+ "ii':? ~+i' ' : : ":, : : .~': i.':,', '., ~.~: : . ' U . . " ~" . : . ~+...~;+p.;:- . . : : : . ; . . . . . ~ . . .

: . :,~:,; . . . . . 1 . , . +

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. . . , .

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g . . . . . . . . + + + + + + + 1 . . . . of . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3 minute Shopping Sprees at your local

i I I ~ W + I +, . . . . Itw,Ar~t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . + . .

~:!".'~i:+,+",..+.i~ ~ -~ " ]

+++j++!!i+~ ,++++ ~ 1~I27,/,.IN

TERRACE SUBSCRIBERS

Overwaitea Food Centre

Skoona Mall

FOi)D KITIMAT SUBSCRIBERS

Overwaitoa Food Centre

e E l 4 I ~ R S City Oentre Mall

All Terrace and Kitimat subscribers are eligible. Contest closes midnight December 16, 1978. 18 YEARS AND OVER

THE DAILY HERALD NEW START ORDER

f~

. .

?

i . / +

+ . ' . .

O o m m e n o i n ~ f o r a period of 3 months and thereafter until ordered disoontinuod.

I will pay the regular subscription pride eaoh month.

PRINT NAME

SIGNATURE

ADDRESS

PHONE

CITY

SUBSCRIBER MUST SIGN ORDER

We are presently subsoribing to the Herald I'1

Please start my three month subscription to the Herald

APT.

r l

CARRIERS DRA W DRAW CLOSES MIDNIGHT DECEMBER 18, 1978

$ 1 0 0 . 0 0 Gift C e r t i f i c a t e I:OR EVERY 6 NEW SUBSCRIBERS YOUR NAME WILL BE EIITERED IN THE DRAW

i l l

• +

L

Page 9: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

I , ~

L • =, ,, m ,

.... TEIIIIAOE DRUGS LTn. K,,m . ,re.m4

:.i. N t a m m s !: & •

Toys, Toys, Toys m

CLASSIFIED RATES

LOCAL ONLY:

,~ 20 words or less $2.00 per insertion. Over 20 words 5 cents per word. 3 or more consecutive in-

'; sertions $1.50 per insertion.

i.i REFUNDS: First insertion charged for

' whether run or not. Absolutely no refunds after

~ ad has been set.

i:'! CORRECTIONS: i M,mt be made before 2rid

ifisertion. Allowance can be made for

?,. only one incorrect ad. r ,

. ' BOX N U M B E R S : : 75 cents pick up.

$1.25 mailed.

,3 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: ~ Rates avai lable upon i~ request,

i NATIONAL CLASSIFIED ~, RATE:

22 cents per agate line. : Minimum charge $5.00 per :: insertion.

i . LEGAL- POLITICAL n d >~ TRANSIENT AD. ~! VERTiSlNG: i: ~.65 per column inck h

': BUSINESS PERSONALS: $4.00 per line per month. On a 4 month basisonly.

. DEADLINE

i DIsPLAY: 4:00 p.m. 2 days prior to

i..publication day.

# . .

SUB SCHbnON • RATIOS

Effective October 1'; 1978

SingleCopy 2 0 c By Carrier - ruth 3.oo Bycarrier year33.oo By Mail 3 ruth 15.go ByMail 6mth25.oo By Mail year 45.oo. Senior Citizen year 20.00

British Commonwealth and United States of America one year 55.OO

Box 399, Terrace, B.C. VSG 2M9

HOME DELIVERY Terrace & District

Thornhill & District Phone ~ 1 ;

i,

The Herald reserves the right to classify ads under appropriate headings and to set rates therefore and to~ determine page location.

The Herald reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the Herald Box

• Reply Service, and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

Box replies on "Hold" lnstruellmm nat picked up within 10 days of expiry of an advertisement will be destroyed unless mailing imtructinm are. received. Those answering Box Numbers are requested not to send , originala::,/~of~ documents to avoid los . ,:

~ CLASSIFIED: All claims o~ •errors in :i; 2:00 p.m. on day previous to advertlsements must be i! day of puhllcation Monday to received by the publisher

Friday. within 30 days after the first publication.

'!~ ALL CLASSIFIED CASH ~ WDPH ORDER other than

BUSINESSES WiTH AN :~ EffrABLISHED ACCOUNT. i i: Service charge of $5.00 on aH :~ N.S.F. cheques.

~! WEDDING DESCRIP- TIONS:

i'~ No charge provided news ~ submitted within one mouth. ~. ~.00 production charge for ' wedding and-or engagement pictures. News of weddings

~ii (write-ups) received one ? month or more after event ~: $10.00 charge, with or wi thout picture, Subject to condensa t ion . Payable in 'ii advance.

, CLASSIFIED AN- NOUNCEMENTS:

i Births 5.50 Engagements 5.50 Marriages 5.50

~. Deaths 5.50 • Funerals 5 . 5 0

It is agreed by the ad- vert iser requesting space llmt the lisbllity of the Herald in the event of failure to publish an advertisement or in the event of an error appearing in the ad. vertisement as published shal l be l imited to the amount pald by the ad- vertissr for only one in- correct insertion for the portion ef the advertising space occupied by the in- correct or omitted item only, and that there shall be no liability to any event greater than the amount paid for such advertising.

Adver t i sements 'mus t comply with the Brit ish Columbia Human Rights Act which prohibits any ad-.

• Skeena Health Unit .'. 3215-2 Eby Street

.~, > Terrace, B.C. : 635-6307

The following are a few of the services offered locally by your Health Unit Staff: CHILD HEALTH CON- FERENCES: Held weekly at the Health Unit every Tuesday from 1:30-3:50 p.m. Please phone for an appointment. Held at the Thornhill Recreation Centre on the fourth Fr iday of every month from-l:30-3:30 p.m. Please phone for an a p - pointment. Babysitters who bring children must have parents written consent for im- mnnizatian. ADULT CLINICS Theseare held at the Health Unit oh Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 3-4:10 p.m. by appointment only. PRENATAL CLASSES Classes are held throughout the year at intervals for expectant parents. Phone the Health Unit for details and registration. HOME NURSING CARE Nursing care in the home for these who need it on referral from their family doctor, Terrace area only. HEALTH PARADE For 4 year old children. Held on third Monday O f every month. Developmenta l , vision, hearing screening done. Please phone for UP- pointment. PRENATAL BREATHING & RELAXING EXERCIsES Held every Monday af- ternnon a~l-2 p.m,. V.D..CI~K'~I C ::, Held ; ~ Monday at 3:30 or by '~l~0intment. ' SANITATION The public health inspectors are now situated in Eby Street, They will be pleased to assist with any sanitation problems. SPEECH AND HEARING CLINIC Held at 4612 Grieg Avenue. Hearing tests will be done by ~ferral frnm family doctor ~,~ comm~ft~/h!eh lth nurse. ~1150. ~ ............ LONG TERM CARE Office at No. 205-4621 Lazelie Ave. Tel 635-9196. Assessment and planning for those eligible for Long Term Care. AID TO HANDICAPPED Office at No. 206-4721 Lazelle. Tel 635-9196. Assessment and guidance for vooational and social rehabilitation done by consultant.

The Herald, Thursday, December 14, 1978, Page 9

~idge and stove in g(r~d

54. BUSINESS PROPERTY

A forum on the Kitimat Valley, discussing the pros and cons of use for forestry, industrial development, fisheries, r e c r e a t i o n or

condition. Rim and tires, and motor for 1967 Rambler. 638- 1491. after 6 p.m. (e3-18D)

Studio knitting machine and table. Lessons available. Call Linda at 635-6384 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. 635-3810 after 5 p.m. (c3-18D)

GEMINI EXCAVATING. LTD.

(WesAndrews) Backhoe Work

Hourly & Contract e35.347e anytime

For Sale: Water conditioner. 40,0go grain model. Phone 635-2937. (!~28D)

One 12' aluminum boat - $250. 1 clarinet - like new -

ABLE ELECTRIC LTD. Electrical and Refrigeration contract. House wiring.

(eft)

'MUSTSELL' 1971 Ford Custom• Phone By Builder, one house, new. 635.20~0. (p10-19D) 1040 sq. ft. Carpet throughout , f i r ep lace carport. 5 year new home I969 Volkswagen Camper warranty. CMHC approved Van with pop top, 17cc & inspected. For a place you motor. Phone 635-6730. (1)5- can afford, under $50,000. laD) For appointment to view

, phone Ben Faber Con. 1976 Dodge Dsrt. Slant six, struction, mint condition. 21,000

635-~8~8 original miles. $5,500. Phone (c20-29D) • 635-9390. (p5-14d)

3 bedroom condominium. Close to schools, downtown. Excellent condition. Low down payment. Phone 635- 9747 after 6 p.m. (c3-15D)

'Must Sell' -- leaving Kitimat. 4 bedroom home on Brant Street. Open to offers. 635-4308. (c15-16d)

GOLDEN RULE Odd jobs for the jobless. Phone 635-4535. 3238 Kalum.

$125. 1 Pr. 7½ Munari Ski DUFFS BICYC'LE SHOP hoots - $40. I pr. 7 ski boots.

Reconditioned 'bikes and $15. Very old Stroneberg repairs. Reasonable rates, radio-record player cabinet

1931~useuway Dr. $I00. Phone 635-5294 after 4:30 p.m. (pl0-18D)

RUPERT STEEL & SALVAGE LTD. Girl Guide cookies for sale. Modern 3 bedroom house for

We buy copper, glass, aH 'Will deriver. 635-3,5,53, 635- sale by owner. Copperside metals and batteries. 3260. 635-3204'. (nn.ifn) area . Must be seen to be Location - - Seal Cove appreciated. Asking ~.~8~0OO. Open till 5 p.m. Man. to,Sat, Double beds- $49 each. Color For viewing call 635-6642. Phone S~A-5~8 TY (28" RCA) $340. Chrome (135-141)).

chairs (new) ~8 ca. Dish- • SPORTSMEN'S Washer, like new ~90. Ad- 'TASTEFULLY FINISHED

BarberShop ding machine $46. Pingpong 5 BEDROOM HOME' in Now Open Fridays lil eight, table $60. Phone 635-7686. ~quiet corner of town. Across from Post Office. (pS,18D) ' :~ .... "5:~Finished basement with

3~3Emerson '~ ' !~ '~ibar , laundry room and (a-06) Skis for Sale. Atomic hathrcom. 2 brick fireplaces,

flbrnglans. 160 cm. Tyrolta carpeted throughout. At- SKEENACOLOR8 bindings. 635.9448. (p3-15D) la thed insulated garage.

_ . ,~enced and landscaped. Residential One 8 track with AM-FM and '~bhone 635-3.148. (pS-14D)

CommerclalPninttng ,~ 5 speakers, 8 track was ~ _ ' , new~ will sell with s p e a k e r ~ | . . . . .

Phone¢18-18~ for $I~. - ,~ ~ NEW HOMES (~4 Various GM parts, including ~ |

rebuilt 3 sp, s tandard '7' New homes in downtown transmission, 10volt rca~end area for sale by HECA*rE etc. DEVELOPMENT. Quality Various LP's of all kinds of homes built by local music. , builder. For more in-

LOST from 5200 R a n g l a n d . 1955 Chev hardtop. No engine formation call female Malamute. Im or trans. Asking $300. 635- HECATE formation 635-2283 or 5363 before 5 p.m. 635.9636 DEVELOPMENT evenings 638-1395. Reward weekends. (c3-15D) " offered. (c2-15D) 635.2330

JUST ARRIVED AT (aI0-18D)

NEEDED: Sales Person for dellcattesen. Must be experienced. Apply at Mountuinview Bakery & Dellcattesen, Skeena Mall. (aS-14D)

Do you want to be the Avon lady in your neighborhood?

Call Mary 635-~17. (cffn- 21n)

Paper Carrier for Terrace Herald needed for the Me-

. Coanall area on the bench. Phone ":

635.6357 (ne-ctfn)

QUEENSWAY TRADING 3215 Kalum

--NEW-- .--USED- A large Assortment of Great Gift Ideas for

Everyone Dolls - Musical Wickerware - RatlanSets Planters-

Brass & Copper Jewel Boxes

Remote Control Cars Battery Train Sets

Dart Boards Cups & Saucers

'Clocks Recking Choirs

Coffee Sets Fancy Lamp Shades

Bar Mirrors Wooden Kitchenware

Radios • Stereo- 8 track & cassette combluattons

Angelus Bells • . WindChimes

2Way Radies Lamps "-.

--We Gift Wrap-- ~ome In and Browse A1

Your Leisure Opeo 6 days a week 9 - 9

LATE SHOPPING

Will do fruit tree pruning. Phone 635-7685 after 5 p.m. (ncS-TDsff)

vertlslag that discrlminates against any parson because i of his race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or because agriculturo will be held on

! Car& of Thanks 5.~0 ~ age is between 44 and 65 December 19. CARETAKER for isolated ~MemorlalNotices 5.50 years, anlessthoconditionis p.m. at tho Ranger Stati0n in r~.~;,oCall ?sff2~ ~ for in-

, . . . . . . . • justified b y a. bona fide Terrace, . . . . . If yoo.are. ,?,~:~?-.v... ~ ..; . . . . . . . . • "/PHONEs,%~%7 : ; : : : : ' :~uiremt~t ' . . / fdr t he ~v0rk •: mter~..ted. i n : . ~ f a ~ of~tl~:.:ii:i;:'../: i/~ ...~; ~ : / ; / i . ' i ; .". ' . "Classified Advertising I~pt: ; biV01~ed:' ' :: ' : : ' ' " '" ' ~>alley, olease'att~d~"':tdeT~'-:' ...... "HELP WANTED' ' ' " "

A Manager is required for ii BAKE SALE Snow Valley ~vings Credit

MILLS MEMORIAL Sat. Dee.at 19,1978 . . Union.of. interestThls positiont0 a quallfiedwill be

II:OOA.M. persOn, with experience in Cred i t Unions o r other f i n a n c i a l i n s t i t u t i o n s Knnwl~lge in accounting, landing and supervlaiou are a pro-requisite.

The position offered is permanent and carries a generous fringe benefit package. Salary is negotiable.

Please send resume to R. Leibach, President, 40 Gannet Crescent, Kitimat, B.C. (a10-22D)

. . n ,

hcopy~ 15th Century Italian a r p s l c h o r d , beaut i fu l

yellow cedar ease, boxwood keyboard, turned beech stand, spruce soundboard. $1400. Phone 635-3996. (p3- HD)

Wanted to rent: garage for winter months to store vehicle. Phone 635-2154 after 5 p.m. (tfn.sff)

Wanted to Buy: Small wood- burning heater. Call after 6 p.m. 798-2563. (stl~-15D)

49, HOMES FOR SALE

FOR SALE! Snow plow with cylinder mount to fit any heavy duty truck. Can be seen at Arnlm Sander's Welding. ,Contact Dave Eberling for more information. (p5-15)

ATrRACTIVE A-FRAME on Penner Drive• Three levels, 3 bedrooms, free. standlr~ ~:repl~ce. Large vegetaule garden on a 90'xloo' partially treed lot with a large 16'x40'

One g u i t a r - like new condition. Asking $50. Phone ¢~5-2137 after 5 p.m. 635.4922 before 5 p.m. and ask for Helane. (c2.15D)

. THRIFT SHOP Mills Memorial Hospital Auxiliary would appreciate, any donations of good, c!ea.n. clothi0g, any Imusenom items, toys etc. for their ' THRIFT SHOP. For piolmp service phone 635-5328 or ~5-5238, or leave donations at the Thrift Shop, on Lazelle Avenue o n ' Saturdays between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Thank you.

Skeena Mall sponsored by the Rlght~ to Life promoters. (no3-15D)

FREE CHILDRENS

'PREGNANT?' NEED HELP?

Call Birthright for an al ternat ive to abortion: :Phone 632-4602 anytime. Room 233, Nechako Centre.

INCHES AWAY CLUB Meet every Tuesday night at 8 in the Skeenn Health Unit. For more information phone' g5-3747 or ~5-50~,

'GREAT CHRIsTMAS GIFT' Stereo system with 80 albums, excellent condition. Yamaha CA.460, Amp. BIC

.160 turntable with Shure cartr idges. Two JBL 26 speakers. Yahama HP-I headphones with ten ft. extension. $1400 OBO. Owner leaving town, must

XMAS SHOW There will be a free slhow at the Tlllicum Theatre, Tuesday, Dec. 19 at 2 p.m. for children 12 years and under.

No admission charge, but an article of food or oleihing, which will be donated to the Salvation Army, for distribution to the needy, would be gratefully ap- preclated.

Free show for children 12 and under at Tlllinum Theatre, Tuesday, Dec. 19 at 2 p.m. Spunaored by Terrace Co-op. (ncS-19D)

The Terrace Day Care Auxiliary will be holding a BAKE & CRAFTS SALE at the Terrace Co-op,

WANTED DONATIONS . December 22 from S p .m. .S The Three Rivers Workshop P.M. All of our friends who for the Handicapped are wish to donate any crafts or I o o ~ for donations of any baked goods can drop them old, broken or used pl~ces at off at the Day Care Centre, f~'nllure, also any discarded 3425 Kalum on or before wood products we could .use' December 22 - 4 p.m, (ne30- for recycling or renovating. 22d)

Call us at 635-2238 between 8a.m, andSp.m,,wewil l t ry Terrace Downtown Lions

and Br. 73 B . C . . O l d Age Pensioners Organizatioa CHRISTMAS PARTY on Sunday, December 17th in Terrace Arena Banquet Room at 5 p.m. All Senior Citizens welcome, Tran- sportation will be provided. Phone 635-2794 or 635.4075 days or evenings, or 63~7202 days if planning to attend. (nc6-1SD)

ii Weight Watchers meeting " held every Tuesday at 7 p .m. : at the Knox United Church. i Ha]], 4907 Lazelle Avenue.

! Do You Feel You Have A • i: Drinking Problem? There is

help Avallnblel

:, Phone ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS

~! Meetings: , Men. 8:30 p.m. United -.. Church,

Thurs. or Sat. 8:30 p,m, Mills Memorial Hospital. Sun, Breakfast Meeting, 10 to noon, Lakelse Hotel,

i'. ' SKEENA CENTRE !: Skeena Centre offers to the

Senior Citizens of the Terrace and Thorehill area the foHowlng services: . Activlty Centre for hun- dlcrafis

' ,- Day care for worklnSi people. . . • Drop-in for compenlo~mp and coffee. Monday thru Friday 8..-4.. Transportation avaual~e. Contact Skeenaview Lodge. 635-2265.

• Ladies Slim Une Club meets ' Monday evening--6:30 ' p . m . - - U n i t e d Church , basement, Kitimat.

Rape Relief . Abortion Counsalllng

& Crisis Line for Women 638.8388

to make arrangements for pickup.

For Rent: The former Jan & Jan suite. 1000 sq. ft. 4623 Lakeise Ave. Phone 635-2552. (ctfn.DT)

Retail or Office Space

2 stores total of 2800 ft. Can be separated to 1400 ft. areas in choice location on Lazelle Shopping Centre, Terrace,. B.C. 635-3576 or 255-1939 Vancouver. Available Sept. 1, 1978. (eft

LOTS FOR SALE Large lots on Soucie and Munroe. Phone 964.4424. (cffn-27N)

1972 Mercedes Benz 220 Diesel, in good running condition. New paint joh, radial tires and tape deck. Asking $ 6,000 firm. Phone 635.6442. (c5-15D)

F o r Sale: 1968 Chrysler Newport. Bucket seats, console, 383, P.S., P.B., four winters on, four like new summers. With no rust thru. Rebuilt transmission and starter. Very good running order. 20 Nass Street to view or phone 632-3413. $750 o r best offer. (ci0-18D)

1974 FORD ½ ton pickup. 360 motor, auto, radial tires, electronic" ignition. Phone 635.9500 after 4. (c-th,F)

196,5 Chevrolet Impala 283 automatic. Excellent. run- ning condition. Must be sold this week. $550 OBO. 638- 83~, leave me, sage. (p3- 14D)

1969 V.W. van. Semi- camperized. Second engine. $ .500 OBO..Phone 638.8387. (C3-I2,14,!5D)

1973 Mazda Pickup. $1,1OO. Phone 635-7607 after 5 p.m. (c5-19D)

1978 Subaru Brat 4x4. Standard 4 sp. trans. Air conditioning, radio. 18,000 kl. Silver metallic paint. $5,800. Phone 635.2048. (c8- 12,13,14,15,19,20,21,22)

MUST SELL 1974 Mazda Pickup in good condition. Will take trades or open to offers. 635-2609. (pS- IgD)

1970 Toyota Corona Deluxe 4 dr . sedan. One owner, good condition, good tires. 635- 9210. (p3.14D)

Pregnant and in need of support? Call for help from Right-to- Life promoters: Lbm at 635-3164 Carol at G~-5138 Janna at ~184503

sell. Phone 638-8363 after 5. workshop. Asking $43,500. p.m. (pG-14D) Phone635-2488. (pS-19D)

UNDER THE WAREHOUSEMANS

LIEN ACT A 1971 Ford, serial number

EI4AHN66149will be sold for the amount owing of $1,916.25 unless claimed by registered owner and account settled by Dee. 28, 1978.

Hillside Lodge Terrace, B.C.

(pl-14D).

By Jack House. The O,rector Tcache,'s Scotch Info,mat,on Cent,e

Where The Romans Stopped The Roman conquests are

famous in history, but one country that the Roman legions did not conquer was

• Scotland. Early in the Chris-

Mobile Home for Sale. 1974 12x50', 3 bedrooms, laundry room, and storage shed. Phone 638-8202 after 4:30 p.m. (p4-15D)

M O B I L E HOMES

New mobi le home,' f rom as low as $100.0( down. O.A.C.

Set up and del ivered t r ades welcome.

Phone co l l ec t 591 i105. .

c t f ) I

I "" / Invitation toTender Sealed Tenders, marked

Replace Entrance Doors for Nor thwes t Communi ty College, Terrace, B.C. will be received up to 3:00 p.m. local time the 16th day of January 1979, and those available at that time will be opened in public at

British Columbia Buildings Corporation,

4827 Keith Avenue, Terrace, B.C. VSG 1K7

Tendering documents may be obtained at the above address after 9:00 a.m. on the I4th day of December 1978.

Tenders must be f led on the forms provided, In sealed, c lear ly marked envelopes. •

The lowest or any Tender will not necessarily be ac- cepted. (a2-15D)

8' Truck camper. Stove, heater, sink & cooler. Sleeps 4. $,500. 63,5-4561. (c2-15D)

Divorcel $100 plus filing fees. Obtain your lawyer supervised divorce over the phone - - fustl Call Self- Counsel Services toll free 112-800-663-3007. Chargex and Mastercharge accepted. (cff-Th)

Hermld olamsifleds

get results! I I

tian era they defeated Eng- land. Then in 80 A.D. Julius Agricola marched his army into southern Scotland, hut the Romans found the High- lands too much for them.

, ~ r~

I . ' .~--,- '~ '~"~-

Eventual ly t h e y bui l t a line o f forts between the Rivers Clyde and Forth and slient much of their time repelling the constant attacks of the Caledonians, a very warlike race.

In A.D. 140 the Emperor Antoninus Pius sent new legions to Scotland and the new commander joined the line of forts with a wall 10 feet high, named the An- tonine Wall in honor of the Emperor.

But, Teacher's Scotch In- formation Centre explv~ns, the Caledonians found ~ y s of getting over the wall. They inflicted such trouble that the .Romans eventually gave up the campaign and went home. You can still see small bits of the Antonine Wall, the only remains of the Roman "occupation."

THZNondNON THEN: The first home

television set was demon- strafed in 1928, in Schenec- tady, New York, by Dr. E.F.W. Alexanderson. By August 1931, there were an estimated 9,000 sets in New York City and '30,000 more in the rest of the country. Semen sizes were miniscule. A "large screen" set of 11.3 square inches wasn't intro- duced until 1931.

NOW: There's a new set with a 1,0004quare-inch pic- ture that's three times the size of the popular 25-inch diagonal screen. Created by General Electric, the Wide- semen 1000 Home Television Theatre almost turns your living room into a movie thea t re . Featuring VIR Broadcast Controlled Color, remote-control tuning and dual speakem with improved sound, GE's giant screen set is a one.piece unit in a wood cabinet 50 inches high, 70 inches long and 24 ;aches deep, or no de,per tt.q'. GE 25-1nch "IV sets

MOBILE I M M E D I A T E D E L I V E R ' ,

TO YOUR LOCATION

are now ava i lab leon our lovely 14 ~vide and doublewide mobi le homes. You choose your decor, and we custom bui ld to suit Government grant of $2500 app;,cable. Expense paid fare Vancouver . re turn. For free credi t check and approval please phone collect.

P a r k e r Homes of Canada Ltd. 935-5447 . . . .

Page 10: Peace talk - COnnecting REpositories · production, normally six reported at 1.7 million barrels Wednesday, In lsfahan, processions of thousands of pro.shah demonstrators, chanting

Page 10. The ilerald, Thursday, December 14, 1978

! Dear Abby

By A b i g a i l V a n B u r e n .~ 1978 by ChicliOo Trlbune.N Y Newe Syno. In,:

DEAR ABBY: Most husbands carry pictures of their wives and children in their wallets. Not my Ralph, He carries pictures of himself with the blue marlin he caught. He had this 865-opund p~_ nstrosity mounted, expecting to hang it over the "~ndntle in our living room, but I put my foot down and told him he could hang it in the amusement room in our basement, but no way was I going to hasve the ugly thing in our living room. He sulked for about a week, but I refused to give in, so now it's hanging in our basement.

Ralph still nags me about how unfair I am. Finally, he said: "Write to Dear Abby and let her settle itI" So I'm asking you. •

Where does that blue marlin belong? RALPH'S WIFE IN FLORIDA

DEAR Wife: Now that you ask, I find mounted specimens of ANY of God's creatures, outside of museums, disheartening. Kilting for food is one thlng. KIIHng for show--sorry, I pass.

DEAR ABBY: Our 20-year-old son has just told us that hemust quickly marry the little girl with whom he has gone steady since junior high school. She is 19. Both are in college and hope to graduate.

Abby, the girl is really a sweet child, and she has adored out son for years. He was her first (and 0nly) love, and she was his.

Since the wedding plans have come up so suddenly, everyone suspects it is a "have-to" marriage. I am not going to deny it and look foolish three months from now.

What do I say when pimple "congratulate" me, and kiddingly call me 'Grandma"? Some have even tried to "com!ort" me with the stories of how they've had "have-to marriages in their families and things have worked out well.

Please help me. NEARLY A GRANDMA

DEAR NEARLY: To all eo~gratollUou, say "Thank you." There Is no such tMng as a "have-to" marriage. Every duy, pregannt [0rb are being deserted by bums who refuse to accept the m p ~ . sibllitles of marriage and a baby. No law in the laud can force a man to marry it girL If he marries her. it's because he WANTS to, not beesule he HAS to, so hold your head up, Grandma.

DEAR ABBY: Although I don't attend church regularly, I believe in my rel/glon and l~m satisfied with it. inWimt shuuld. I tell st mngem who l~me to my door,

vite thenmeNes in aM sit down to discuse religion with me? I don't know the Bthleas well as they do and rm not able to defend myself ;,gainst thnir arguments when they start comparing their rol~lon to mine, and ,insisting that theirs is the osiy t r i l l retiglon. They go on and on. I don't want to be rude, so I buy their magazine just to get rid of them.

These missionaries keep eomtng back. How can I discourage their vinlte? I am sure others wonM a p preeinte knowing how to handle this problem.

"I ALREADY BELIEVE"

DEAR ALREADY: After Ihey have introduced " themselves and stated their mtsdm, tall tbem politely , but firmly that you are satilfied with your reUgion and • don't want to hike up their valuabie time, Then send them on their wsy with a "God bleu you, and have a nice day."

I

Crossword

ACROSS I P r o - - 5 Black gold

8 A t a distance

I I Moslem chief

43 Marriageable 3 source 20 Seines Japanese of pal 22 Ardor seaport 4 Flower 13 Narrow

59 Minute clusters gradually particle 5 Edibl e tuber25 Slight taste

51Brow g Hawaiian 26 Kimono 54 Commanded hawks sash

.13 BliPs partner 55 Attempt ? French 27 Portend 14 Tree trunk 511Sea bird author ~ Antitoxins 15 Prsdict 5'/Molt 8 Cast down 31 Arab 17 Macaws 58 Bishopric 9 Linchpin name 18 Urao 59 Drunkards 10 Wlnglike 3Z Edge 19 Put in DOWN 11 Take a 34 Implement 21 Allowance 1 A fissure break 38 Belts

for waste l Love Ill Elevator 40 Scheduled 24 Moray god cage 42 Man's 25Davenport Average soluUon time: 26 rain. nickname

I Nr'

.L!i....!!.._...l!.:' I: :' l l t l r l

: itll i

i: N . lllt

I {) III I

I I

I NII i Ol N 2 :

3b

: ' I : : t N ~ I ~ 1t@ ° I-

N"I

CRYPTOQUIP I 1-22

Final 43 Seizes 30 Paddle PE N roughly W E G M H B - G B G S K T V W M I W T H G S

NtgeHan CJ - 44 Beehive Negro State I T K M H S V T E S B K M E E

34 Records " 4,% Newts 35Roman 151 L Yesterday's Cryptoquip -- FASTIDIOUS SHOPPER 47 Air: CAREFULLY PURCHASED GAY GIFT.

36 Moslem comb. form saint 48 German Today's Cryptoquip clue: V equals M

3"/Unique philosopher The C r y p t ~ is a simple sab~titution cipher in which each person 49 Fruit drinks letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals u~ t

38 Glide 5Z Miner's will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short war , 38 WWII arena quest and words using an apostrol~he eun give you clues TO locating 41 Incarnation 11-22 53 Gypsy vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

oll Vishnu Answer TO yesterday's puzzle, gentleman ~1978 King Features Syndicate. Inc.

Horoscope FOR THURSDAY, ~rle~danc~d s Ina~al?logve~thon both. t?aUn.~l~Feb, t g ) l i l l i ~

DECEMBER 14,19'/8 Someone is putting on airs. Ties of friendship and love VIRGO ~ ) ~ are activated now, but It's best (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) ~ not TO mix business with

Family arguments or pleasure in the p.m. ARIF~ M~-~ '~ domestic problems may take Safeguard reputation. (Mar. 21 to Apr.' 19) - l l i l ~ - ~ the spotlight away from PISCES 116~>@

Others seem unreceptive to career concerns. In any case, (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) J ~ k ~

your ideas now, but you'll find hidden strength in someone close one. Stellar influences suggest compromise. TAURUS U ~ (Apr. 20 to M~y 20)

Don't let financial problems come between you and a loved one. Still, (h'ere are bills that must be paid now. Watch the budget. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) IN Neither you nor possibly

your mate wants to play follow the leader now. Avoid a clash of egos in the a.m., and forego dietary transgressions in the p.m. CANCER O i ~ (June 21 to July 22)

Problems linked with your private life or employment may come to a head today. Avoid a dispute with a loved one in the wee small hours.

(July 23 to Aug. 22) There is much social ac-

tivity right now, but tact is

-..

don't mix business with lunch today. LIBRA ~ ) . J l t . ~ i (Sept. 23 to Oct.

If travel is on the agenda, be careful, as mishaps and mixups could occur. Maintain strictly professional relations with advisers. " SCORFI~ n t . ~ (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)

Avoid confrontations over money and shared resources. Protect credit rating. Am biance need not lead to overboard spending. SAGITrARIUS X# # (Nov. 22 TO Dec. 21) You'll have to make con-

cessions now to get along with others, but in keeping the peace, don't neglect other responsibflilies, CAPRICORN ' ~ (Dec. 2~- to Jan. 19)

The day's chores pile up like

Avoid a lackadaisical at- titude when laced with family or business problems that demand your attention. Pitch in and help out.

YOU BORN TODAY are adventuresome, sometimes reddees, and often careless of the consequences of your actions. You ,'- n lle successful in stocks and bonds, acting, and as a trial lawyer. These occupations would satisfy the adventuresome side of your nature; yet often you settle foe a more routine Job than you'd like. If you carry your thirst for the unknown to intellectual planes, you can succeed as a writer or lecturer. Aim for the top and don't let the struggle for the bare necessities of life keep you from doing something your heart is set upon. Birthdate of: Lee

dirty dishes in the sink, and Remlck, actress; Gen. you may not accomplish as Jlmmyy Doollttle; and much'as you had planned in Margaret Chase Smith, U.S. the a.m. senator.

i i • : : ' "" ': "":": :"; ":: " ,~./' ::.ii', ' :4 • . , , . .

12 - / i ; elwe I~lvl~l ,,llll Slmtim

"You sure that's beef'/"

the AMAZING SPIDERMAN By Stan Lee and John Rornita

I To ~,~rH ~v~J~ i ~ o p ~ # ~ , j ~H~ , . I.,

CATFISH By. Roger Bollen and Gary Peterman

~"#-~iz~.---% ~ . , ~ I'~ ' I I I I I I I ~ _ , ,~ l i l i l l l l l lUl l~- i - ~ - , . , ~

I

the WIZARD OF ID

'lli!',l 7 ..~lg~..,~:,..ai~ v~ i

~ t t : ~ , . l ~ l l I I "

"~By Brant Parker and Johnny Hart

i i ' I

t l - e ' A ~ n ~ T r j ~ " " - - - - " '

'E--~l~i" L.. .=--II]L 7l' 7 L,

B.C. By Johnny Hart

A44~I~t~N

TI~T

DOONESBURY By Gary Trudeau

--' lrl l,t,l.,n In, ' . /I~E ~il # ::1Ii~ M4oJAo~=r ¢,,~='~%:

!11 ONE ~ A Dl.~OOUllf~, I 1 / s ~ m ~ , I L

i