AUTOMOBILES 1977 MAZDA GLC § speed. tn good condition. For More Information phone $35-3697. (¢5-20)) TWO Triumph TRs ‘75 - 30,000 miles. Good can- dition. Interior work in. complete. '76 - 43,000 miles, front: end damage.. Ex- cellent parts car, Both lor $4,000 firm. 798-2205. (ps-20)) 1974 MERCURY Bobcat. - 38,000 miles. Muncie 22 and 2-650 Holleys. 798-2513 or 635-7879 between 12.6. (p5-20)) 1975 DODGE Monaco. P-S., P.B., rebuilt trans., automatic 3460 engine. * Phone 635-9323. (p20-9f} 1962 BISCAYNE Chevrolet. Good running condition. Firm $500. Call between’ 6 p.m. and 6 “p.m. 632-5913. {stfn-8-2-61) TRUCKS: 1974 DODGE Van. Par- tially camperized. 1 speed. 118. Asking $3,000 OBO. Phone after 5 p.rn. 638-1052. . (c14-24)} . 1966 TOYOTA 4X4 Long box pickup. 9,000 km. New truck warranty. Many options. New condition. Days 635-9471 after 6 p.m, 635-2540. ‘ (¢3-14]) FOR SALE - 1973 GMC heavy duty 1 ton 4x4 auto. Turn out hubs. New box, tailgate and paint. Front end brakes and tran- smission recently redone. Mechanically sound. In- sulated canopy and 2 sets | of mounted tlres. $4,000. Phone 635.4426. 7 (c5-16J) 1978 FORD Bronco. 45,000 kim. PS, PB. Auto. Asking $9.000 or best offer. Phone _ 635-2506. . {e5-16J) _ 1978 GMC Suburban. 34 ton “axd. Asking $5,000. Phone ‘635-3454, (c10-23.1) 1980 ¥. TON GMC Camper . Speclal High Sierra. Phone 632.3805. (Cettn-15- 12-80) 77? DODGE 3, fon P.S., P.B.,-canopy. Phone 635- 4797. (p4-18j) 59. -MOBILE HOMES 14x70’ WITH A FACTORY built 7x12" Expando trailer. Situated on private lo! in Woodland Heights. Priced for quick sale. All major appliances included. Phone 638-1952 before Fri. AM, . (p1-154) 12x52 MOBILE home. Ex cellent condition. Fridga and stove included. Phone . 635-283] or evenings 638- . 1052: : Cotin-2°17-80} 66. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES FOR SALE - Light weight tandem axle Sth wheel trailer. 7x12 ft. bed. J ton capacity, built for foreign pickup truck. Pictyre of unit on request, Write to R.G. Green. 4asA Sherbrooke “Avenue. Prince Rupert, B.C, VIG IVR. r (p)-16J5) 67. SERVICES NEED A NEW hobby this winter, Try ‘‘Tri-Chem’ ” Liquid Embroidery. Fun for all ages. for more ‘information phone 625- 7594. (p3- 154) 50 MILES ‘TO THE ‘QUART? & TIME FOR A CHECKUP. . EDMONTON (CP) — Gerontologists are hoping some of the. false notions and myths associated with — seniors and sex can finally be correcied in the In- ternational Year of the El- derly in 1582, , “Society tends lo regard seniors’ need for sex as a non-problem,'’ says Dr. David Skelton, head of the University of' Alberta's gerontology department. “Staff of nursing homes and auxiliary hospitals are becoming more aware of the sexual needs of older people. There is a healthy attitude, but there is room for improvement. “We should look at bending rules to make it more possible for spouses to be kept together in nursing homes. Sex goes beyond just rolling around in the sack." . - Skelton said there isn't enough privacy for people in homes and institutions. “Staff enter the person's room without knocking. You never see the Do Not Disturb sign on a door. One wants to make sure the people are safe, but they are, many of them, capable of making decisions. Life without risk is no life at all.” : A report by Louise Dulude, published. in 1978 by the Canadian Advisory Council on the Status of Women, said people don't change overnight when they become old, The report said old — particularly | People, Women, are “not supposed to be interested in sexual matiers ... relatives cannot com- Pensate for the loss of a husband.” Three years ago it was estimated there were 10 unmarried women lo every four unmarried men over the age of 65. But, the Teport said, it is considered a social sin for a woman to have a relationship with a Younger man. ' The taboo on relations with younger men is a result of society’s double © Standard of beauly and - aging. The report said if and when an old woman succeeds in breaking the ’ js no big fuss. . the biggest — but friends and | ~ MANY FALSENOTIONS The seniors and sex. age barrier - she and her partner’ fee] isolated. But when an older man marries _ @ woman many years his junior, Skelton said, there One of problems ‘seniors en- counter when thinking of remarriage, he said, is re- lated to their children. “Fhey adopt a. parental role. They are concerned about the parents’ “hap- piness while misun- derstanding their needs.’ | “We spend more time counselling the children than the parents.” The Dulude report listed . the reasons children object to. a -parent remarrying. They include: children want to believe their parents-are not interested in sex; they believe marriage Is disloyal to a , deceased father or mother; ’ -they feel deceived when parents want to lead their . own lives; if a widowed mother has money children are afraid they might lose the inheritance. — The report suggests the eventual solution to the problem of loneliness in old age might be in communat living, where several women would live with one 7 or two men, One of the advantages of polygamy, the report said, is thal it would solve the - problem of the ‘grealer - numbers of older women than older men. Other benefits would be better ~ housing as a result of pooled incomes, improved diet, group members would not feel as lonely or bored and would have opportun- ities to accompany each ather {o activities outside the home, and members would give each mutual Support in dealing with illnesses. Seniors are beginning to, recognize the power they have, Skelton said. “The World Health Organization has designated 1982 as IJn- ternational Year of the El- . derly and all sorts of things ° ’ will be happening. We are going to see dramatic changes in the next 10 | years,” Vancouver is. most expensive TORONTO (CP) —A new study of living costs confirms Vancouver is the ‘most expensive place to live in Canada, . The Conference Board of -Canada made ‘public today information it developed with a number of other Canadian organizations aimed at finding out how much it costs two typical Canadian families to maaintain a given lifestyle in different cities, The findings were presented at a conference on compensation by James Frank, vice-president of the board, a private, non- Ministry of Transportation and Highways PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA MINISTRY OF - TRANSPORTATION AND HIGHWAYS TERRACE HIGHWAY DISTRICT PRINCE RUPERT HIGHWAY DISTRICT PUBLIC NOTICE REMOVAL OF LOAD RESTRICTIONS ’ Effective 12:07 A.M. Saturday, January 18, 1981, overloads under permit will be allowed on thal portion ct Yellowhead Highway 16 from Terrace, west to the avalanche gafes near Andesite Creek, approximalaly 42 kim west of Terrace. Effective the same time, overloads under permit allowed on Highway 16 fram Tyee west fo Prince Rupert and to Port Ed. ward. , The portion of Highway 1é fram the Andesite Creek avalanche gates through to Tyee will remain restricted to 100 ger cent of legal axle weights only. District Managers. Terrace Prince Rupert. Highway Ministry of Tran. $portation and Highways. ‘ (a2-16)) NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR CHANGE OF NAME NOTICE is hereby given Inat an application will be made fo‘the Directar of ‘Vital Statistics for a change of name. pursuant to the preavisions of tre "Change of Name Act,” by me:— George Da. Sousa of 4735 Park Avenue in Terrace. in the Province of British Columbia. a4 follaws:— To change my name fram George Da Sousa to George Souls. . Dated this !3 dayof Jan. A.D. = 1961. George Da Sousa (p1.15)) wilt be , profit organization spon sored by business, labor . and government. The study used as its first family a young couple with a small child, earning $20,000 a year and living in a two-bedroom apartment in a middleclass area of each city. The income earner took public trans- portation to work, but had a car for pleasure. | The second family was in their late 30s, with two children, earned $30,000 and ‘lived in a three. bedroom bungalow in a middle-class area: “the findings showed tHat in 1979 the second family, if moved to Vancouver from Regina, would need an additional $1,360 a year after taxes to keep the . " lifestyle it had followed on the Prairies. The apartment dweller, however, would require only $430 more after taxes. For the $30,000-a-year family. Toronto was the second-most expensive city, followed by Calgary, St. John's, Nfld, Winnipeg, Regina, Halifax, Montreal, Charlottetown and Saint . John, N.B. Vancauver is also the most expensive place for the apartment dveller, followed by Calgary, Toronto, Halifax, Regina, St. John’s, Xfld., Saint John, N.B., Charlottetown, Montreal and Winnipeg. The study used 187 items in working up its lifestyle. It emphasizes all com- ponents must be con- sidered together, since costs differ in various parts of the country and so the apparent living costs could be distorted by looking at only a few, “The differences ob- served on one component of lotal expenditure — say, lax or housing — can be offset by differences on other items so that over-all cost differences may not be as large as those on in- dividual components."’ The study notes there have been significant shifts in relative living costs in thesamecity during recent years, it found. for example. it “ould have cost the home- ‘owning family slightly less to live in Halifax than Toronto in 1872. By 1978, however. the Halifax cost scale had dropped to 93 if Toronto were rated at 100. By 1979. the Halifax. scale was back to 97.” « On that same seale of Toronto representing 140, Montreal's living cost for the hote owners ‘was only 89 in 1972 and 91 in 1979. Vancouver shoved at 49 on the scale in 1972. but 104 in 1979. Among apartment dwellers, cities in the. Atlantic provinces were consistently more costly ihan Toronto in the early 1970s, although = that changed by the end of the decade, The study-says regional differences in living costs, due to provincial taxes, various social demands and inflation aré having significant impacts on salary and relocation policies of companies and employees. “A basic assumption is that these events are not going to be reversed and that organizations « will have to manage for the in- definite future within an environment of change and: sustained or increased differences across the country.” The study says it is clear that ‘Central Canada no longer. pays the _ highest rates for so-called bench- mark jobs, and that much of the change tock place in the last decade. . Growth prospects inboth - the West and East suggest - continued change in that direction, it says. : . 7 ‘ Ho A Keep Canada Beautiful Tal su Ze “~ British Columbia Buildings Corporation | Invitalion to Tender. Sealed tenders, marked, 11409, Exhaust System, Ministry of Transport & Highways, Stewart, 6.C.,” will be received up to 3:00 F.M., February ith, 1981 and those available at that time will be opened In public at 4827 Keith Avenue, Terrace, B.C, V8G 1K7. Tender Documents may be obtained at the above address. Tenders must be filed on the forms provided, in sealed, clearly marked envelopes. Enquiries may be directed fo the Building Manager, Mr. M, Setzer, 4827 Keith Avenue, Terrace, B.C. VaG KZ, telephone 638-1191 or Unit Techniclan, Mr. 0. Taylor, of the same address. ™ “Motor Vehicles a, Career Opportunities Sawmill | Supervision Northwood Pulp and Timber Limited is seeking experienced individuals to meet current requirements in our Wood Products Division, We require people witha good knowledge of sawmill and/or planer mill operations. In addition to general supervisory experience, specialized knowledgein the areas of quality control, kiln operation or shipping would be desireable. Northwood’s Wood Products Division is comprised of four sawmills located in Prince George, Shelley, Upper Fraser and Houstan, B.C. as well as waferboard and plywood operations, !n addition, the company uper- ates a pulp mill with a major expansion prog- ram currently underway and forestry and log- ging operationsin the central interior of B.C. We offer an attractive salary and benefits program, including relacetion assistance. If you have the Skills we are looking for and you wish to jain an expanding organiza- tion, please forward your resume, in confi- dence, to the Personnel Supervisor — Timber Division, at the address below. northwood pulp and timber limited PO Bak 9000 Pringe Gere BC V2L 4Ww2 Phone 962 9611 rapid . EGLACIER A Complete a yo: Glass and. ay? Aluminum Service 4418 Legion Avenue Tewace, 6.C; D.B.R. Contracting Generai Backhoe and Snow Removal Service Phone 635-3364 Dalton Reid Cecil Gordey NORTHWEST PIPE AND EQUIPMENT LTD. PIPE PLUMBING SUPPLIES PUMPS HOSES NUTS AND BOLTS FENCING WATER SOFTENERS AND MORE 5239 Keith Avenue 635-7158 CAAT Tc TOWING INSTALLATION * YOU SULT SINT INSTALL WADO-AYU YELLOWHEAD KARATE CLUB MONDAY&\THURSDA 635-5692 BLACK BELT INSTRUCTION Daily Herald Classifieds 635-4000