THE HERALD, Wednesday, September 13, 1978, PAGE 2, Starring For intg call gag Napa. Korthridge, jw Rewda & Roscoe CH tone calldiverter, just otug in Meave phone nLmber wheré you Lb diverter will auiomalicalty | == oy thert, almost new. cost il sacriigg $650. WS 7IO1, estan 1-061. Ind. to- ii ang wit. POOL TABLES telaineicde. PC ru ber CHMOD Bik 17? | EA 138 XL CHtin ALL AMERICAN WaDeeWaAg ihe Va Welcome ° nivorcee Few in mewn, oF no Credit 4 white a CUBp'S wheal balancer. Wha yet muse, Mary af $23 Couch 1007 ar G Stool. 135 Getrig char. 825 Ky pee ; Sub TWAS 5 : . Charon Bilas So Pon Your Gg “THE CROSS- Gailperween 10 dake: QED S TE vivania $100 AigAicotor | 971 Sherman not wir hing $25 .Dlac ihe, mates | te Slate Pool ARDS rc gM? ROSCOE. @ C. : ‘ a . eu age 3 | S100 GED ae Face wed Eri 100 Bed- thru. turniture: Good sie Cede. WN oor call 26] Ser Qe SALE Trurs 7-3. Stov@y “ afor boon beds, dea nae. LIT Aligrant. Syl. ae . Saw. aircondilioner «Feag par tomers. Pans trucus & mit ve ect ne stmuim ~ 2Tpor BYE 2.E. bg sining | b mo Fy x00. 7 diper. tur te ae ques "Y eulure bmi esl hak se Sal 3 oa Tce Wyctayagy ri | MOVIES, sinet ge ce = A hn EET ; a : TV.) FivGRCE Sap 129-20 0 es pee, © . sity Of Sar uy ia | MOVING SAL Austen, Couch, OV _ ther turnityreg2ON, i 4015. 29ers Hari Northland, bind Ls P ceccein ae rng. poles, IODRBots. car toprack px Hon bine, Ale All $195. or saMmate 70128 ce | Bit. hy with a CORRS: tie 19582 Eves, Hey, lie wt OF SET. 4 ch wert Peale THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS OF THE TERRAGE/KITIMAT DAILY HERALD There is no reason to keep things you don’t need or enjoy anymore just because they’re valuable. There are customers willing to pay good money for things you’ve tired of. Contact the ‘Recycler of Unwants,” the classified de- partment of the Daily Herald. You will be pleased with the fast, speedy results. As fast as a phone call, results happen! : READ FOR PROFIT @ USE FOR RESULTS CALL 635-6357 DAILY HERALD P] NESSES? # . ABOARD QUEEN ELIZA- ’ BETH 2 (AP) -- After @ 24- 7 hour battle with a stormy @ North Atlantic, the luxury 7 Iilner Queen Elizabeth 2 carererecen he ore Queen rocked in storm cruised under sunny skies Tuesday en route to a de- layed docking in New York. Her scheduled arrival there at 1 pan, EDT Thur- TICKETS $2.00 $10.00 $10.00 gets you 5 chances to win when you buy a book of Lucky Leo Lottery tickets, Or just buy one for $2. Either way you'll be a winner! You will help thousands of crippled children in British Columbia. And that’s an idea that’s hard to beat. NO LYIN! THE BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS SOCIETY FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN + 140 Easter SealSuses +3 Easter Seal Camps » Easter Seal House ~—« Patient Care To order your tickets, mail this coupen ta: > LUCKY LEO LOTTERY 3604 Eby Street, ae.) «= Terrace, B.C. V8G 2z3 ner Early Bird Draw: July 28, Sept. 1, Sept. 20, Oct. 27. Final Draw: Nov. 24, 1978. Tickets $2.00 Book $10.00 Amount Enclosed $.......0 0.0. ce eee eee eee eee . Na. of tickels 0 Cheque Required NAME. cee tee tere ete eee erat areca eae 2 eer PHONE eevee eee CIY/TOWN 60.0. ce ete renee Postal Cada ..........0- l WATCH BCTV FOR WINNERS WINNERS NOTIFIED BY MAIL I carerere' ee betmantat . ‘ gtarboaed side bf- "bring “tliser ‘tot - photographers— sday will be 28 hours late because of the’ 15-metre waves and 120-kilometrean- hour winds that buffeted the ship Monday, forcing it off course and slowing the journey. ° Passengers, it . convenienced by the delay, lined up’ to call shore and arrange for late arrivals. About 18 passengers were treated for scrapes, brulses and other injuries Incurred during the violent. storm. Qne ‘crew member was broken collarbone and another cut his leg severely when a refrigerator pulled loose from the wall in the galley. Two refrigerators and an elevator were damaged by the storm and there was minor damage to the bridge _ of the 66,-851-ton vessel. The crew estimated that $20,000 damage was done by the storm, much of that to the ship’s crockery andits stores of wine and liquor. But ship's officers said there was no danger that the Kner's 1,213 passengers— who paid between $800 and $3,175 each for the crossing and air fare back— will be eating on paper plates. “We carry two or three times as much as we need,” - one officer said of the crockery. . . The ship's kitchen was lit- tered with broken plates and VICTORIA (CP) — The master . of the holed Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Camsell said Tuesday an attempt will be made to hee] the vessel 30 degrees to make temporary repairs to its port side. Underwater welders should have the stricken vessel in shape for towing Wednesday, a coast guard spokesman said. Capt. Jack Lennie said fuel and water will be tran- sferred from the port to ie ship'to burfate the five-foot! gushes she received below the waterline from Arctic ice Sunday. The vessel, based in Esquimalt, B.C., was holed while escorting the supply ship Broderick and the tug Angus Sherweod on a sup- lies trip, about 195 lometres east of Cam- bridge Bay, off the southern end of Victoria Island, There were no injuries in the incident and all 50 per- sonnel] aboard the icebreaker were evacuated. Of these 29 were flown to Victoria Monday aboard a Canadian Forces Hercules where they were greeted by two news but no transportation. They had to walk three kilometres to a telephone. OTTAWA (CP) — Bryce Mackasey, former federal cabinet minister and former member of the Quebec legislature, announced Tuesday he will try to regain a seat in the Commons. Mackasey told a reporter he will seek the Liberal nomination for an Oct. 16 byelection in Ottawa Centre. Fourteen other byelections will be held across Canada the same day. The only other declared candidate for the Liberal nomination is David Kwavnick, 33, a political science professor without loot ee * EAM R ROAD esaaametertsasataaeetety “ece eter toate: SIC RAD Bs Sh * ce reetatetitace * ew Business tf a a : . : Not listed in our — ue « : B.C. Tel Directory. B AURORA ANIMAL HOSPITAL - 635-2040: & DIAL-AN-ORDER — 637-2683 # TERRACE. VETERINARY CENTRE ase F SKOGLUND = HOTSPRINGS wenn a! nas We're Listed Here! If you wish your Business Phone listed for your customers please call o.tstoruves*y'eta'e'aiucmatetatutatatetetecetetateleteteterere’ - atte SOTeTOLOLOLHIE Hy Mye Nace gS Les Peg Mee states cmae ts Ua ere Tera ne Aon ees eset ate har efatata! EM SEN TIS EW NMI RAR ERICK RRR A RIOR RR a OLI'S PLACE - 798-2231 PON fate! be PETS BEAUTIFUL. 635-925)" esses mata! DAILY HERALD 7% Free - for ONE month courtesy of THE s . % Go : cae "e "arene Sees si a * SSSR eoecean ata. roceTavereeree: ‘ ataraceretes go china teapo reported to have-suffered a’ - other earthenware. In one’ firstclass tounge, only 26 of ot remained intact, : WATER BENT RAILINGS Captain Doug Ridley called it an exceptionally severe storm. Sea water broke over the bow of the ship every four or five minutes.” . “Some of my seniot of- ficers have never seen one this bad,” Ridley said. “I've only seen it two or three times in my life.” One of the senior officers said a wall of water bent the railings that run around the ship’s bow. The QE2, which normally makes 27 knots, could only manage six or seven knots against the storm. It made only % kilometres in’ 12 hours, ; But life went on aboard the vessel, Restaurants and bars were full, but clothing and souvenir shops were in such disarray that they had to close, ‘The bandstand was littered with fallen music stands and scattered drums and the ship’s 1,000 crew members scurried to deal with {he results of each pite! and roll. One elderly man was cata- pulted from his chair by a sudden tilt of the stip axd slammed head-first into a wali suffering a severe head bruise, A woman suffered a shoulder separation, Efforts made to repair ship _ The Camsel! normally has acrew of 42, but this was in- creased to 50 because of the Arctic run, said Larry Slaght, Transport Canada district manager. ASSESSING DAMAGE Marine surveyor Alec Greig and regional engineer Don Melntyre are on the scene to assess what repairs are needed before the Camsell can be towed back to Victoria. Still standing by is the Bro- derick which is being used to feed the 21 crew. members “Sell: work - and: Sleeping QB: by SMO #5 } phan gat etneer ENA Meanwhile the icebreake John A. Macdonald, on charter to Dome Petroleum, was en route to the Camsell, accompanied by a tug. Slaght said: the tug might have to take the Camel under tow because the icebreaker and supply ship might drift into water that is six metres deep while the John A. Macdonald draws nine metres.. we Slaght sald that, depen- ding on repairs needed, the plan is to tow the Camusell 1,600 kilometres west to Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T. where there is a floating dock. He said the ship has two weeks to reach Point Barrow under tow before the polar ice pack is expected to set in. Mackasey to try comeback any legislative experience. Lorry Greenberg, retiring Ottawa mayor, earlier ex- pressed interest in the Liberal nomination but has indicated he will not run. The person to carry the Liberal banner will be chosen at a meeting Tuesday and will facing Progressive Conservative candidate Robert de Cotret, former president of the Conference Board in Canada, and Steven Langdon, an economics professor running for the New Democratic Party, Ottawa Centre was vacated this summer when Liberal MP Hugh Poulin resigned to become a judge. Mackasey, 57, left the Trudeau government in 1976 to run in the Quebec provincial election. He captured the Montréal-area riding of NotreDame-de- Grace, and then resigned this spring, suggesting he would like to return to na- tional politics. Mackasey was an MP for the Montreal area riding of Verdun for 15 years and held the portfolios of labor, manpower and immigration and postmastergeneral. ACTOR DIES FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — James Hannah, who starred in the original Broadway version of The Front Page, died Monday at age 72. He appeared with the late Lee Tracy in the 1928 productlon of the comedy play about police reporters.