48. SUITES

FOR RENT

KEYSTONE COURT
APARTMENTS

Office No. 2 - 4603 Scot.
One, twa ard three
bedroom apartments.

Laundry & storage area.
Near schools and down-
town, Clean, quiet,
fspacious, security lackupy
land patrol.

635-5224
(cif)

CEDAR PLACE
APARTMENTS

4931 Walsh Avenue
Suite 133
Terrace, B.C.
635-7056
New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom)
sultes for rent. Fridge,
stave, drapes, carpet, rec
rea, sauna and pool tabie,
with security interphonel
land elevator. Absolutely
ino pets. (ctf)

49, HOMES ©
FOR SALE

HOUSE FOR, SALE: .3
bedroom on vd acre Bronse
Island. Reasonably priced
$21,500 Phone 635-3269 (p4-
HW)

HOUSE FOR SALE: 3
bedroom house, wat! to wall
carpet, full basement, gas
heat, close to school and

* fown. Drive by 4921 Park or

phene for appointment 635-
7382 or 635-7594 (029)

57.
AUTOMOBILES

FOR SALE: 73 Ferd pickup
250, 300 cu. in. engine,
canope, automatic. $1950,
Phone 635-6636 (¢3-10)

FOR SALE: 1963 Jeep.
Phone 635-7901 evenings. (c7-
13)

FOR SALE: 1973 Toyota
Cellea St. 43000 miles, 45p .
AM. FAM radio, tape deck,
asking $2700.00 Phone 638-
8244 after 6 p.m. (p3-12)

FOR SALE: 1972 Ford F100
4x4 low mileage, rebuilt
motor, 5 new radial tires.
Asking $3,500 Phone 635-4295
after 6 p.m. (p5-11}

1965 Kenworth Dump-truck
had a lot of wark done on it
and a lot of extra parts.
Rear ends and a box and lots
of extras. WIE except a fair
new pickup or van-as down
payment. Also = -9¥'
Vanguard Camper anda 1966
G.M.C. Needs paint job.
Only 57,000 mile on pickup.
Also cedar shakes and
blanks. Phone 635-9393 (p5-
WD

FOR SALE: 1966 Pontiac
S.W. Strato Chief -
Automatic. Good for parts -
open to offers. Phone 638-
8141 Room 354 (p3-11)

FOR SALE: 1972 Toyota
pickup with canopy and tape
deck, $1,500 or best offer.

Phone 635-3153 (p5-10)

FOR SALE: Ford F350
pickup 1 ton Super Camper
Special 460 cubic inch, P.S. &
P.B., air conditioning, dual
tanks and batteries, large
mags and tires, 14,000 high-

way miles. immaculate
condition. Asking $4,600 or
best offer. Phone 635-2589

(5-19)

58. MOBILE

HOMES |

FOR SALE: Must sell, 6x44
foot traller with joey shack.
Set up in Timberland Trailer
Park, $4,000. Phone John
635-5850 or 635-7324 (p10-10)

SALE MOBILE
1976 - 64’ mobile

FOR
HOME:

,bome, fenced with lawn,
vegetable and flower gar-
den, metal shed located on
fot No. 70 in Terrace Traller
Court. Phane 635-4639 after 5
pom, (6-13)

— FINANGIAL:

MORTGAGE MONEY
Morigage Money- Any
amount (25 years amor-
tlzatlan). 1s} mortgage from
10 percent, 2nd mortgage
from 12% percent.
Residential, Commercial
Builders Interim Business
Loans. J.0. Phillips Caplial
Corporation, 10673 King
George Highway, Surrey,
B.C, V3T 2X6. Phone 598-
0437 or evenings 585-1603.
(ctf Ist and 3rd w)

Dr. Martin Luther King was
the youngest man to win
the Nobel Peace Prize, He
was only 36 when he
was awarded it in 1964.

‘facilities

JTHROUGHOUT-WESTER

Does Canada have

Terrace Little Theatre 3625
Kalum St. will rent their
lounge for Adult or
Children’s Xmas Party's.
Good kitehen and bar
available.
Moderate Rates. | Phone
Molly Mattress 635-2048 (¢10-
14) .

MOVING 777

CHECK BUDGET'S LOW
ONE-WAY TRUCK RATES

CANADA.

CALL TOLL FREE
112-800-663-3478

BUDGET RENT ATRUCK

MILLS MEMORIAL
THRIFT SHOP:
Mills Memorlal Hospital

’ Auxillary would appreciate’

any donations of goad, clean
clothing, any household
Items, toys etc. far = thelr
THRIFT SHOP,

For pickup service phone
635-5320 or 635-5233, or leave
donations at the Thrift shop
on Lazelle Avenue on
Saturdays between 11:00
am. and 3:00 p.m. Thank
you. (ne)

The stalf at the Herald
Spologizes for any In-
convenience caused by our
changeover fram days to
afternoons (and the sub-
sequent fate press ilme).

CLASSIFIED RATES

LOCAL ONLY:
20 words or less §2.00 per
Insertion, over 20 words 5
cents per word.
3 or more consecutive in-
sertlons $1.50 per Insertion.

REFUNDS:

First insertion charged for
whether run or not.
Absolutely no refunds after
ad has been set.

CORRECTIONS:

Must be made before 2nd
Insertion. .
Allowance can be made for
only one incorrect ad.

BOX NUMBERS:
75 cents pick up. —

$1.25 malied.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY:
Rates available upon
request.

‘NATIONAL CLASSIFIED
RATE: a

22 cents per agate line.
Alnimum charge $5.00 per
insertion.

LEGAL - POLITICAL AND
TRANSIENT AD.
VERTISING:

$3.40 per column Inch. .

BUSINESS PERSONALS:
$4.00 per Hine par month.
On a 4 month basis only.

DEADLINE
DISPLAY:
4:00 p.m. 2 days priar to
publication day. "
CLASSIFIED:
100 p.m. day prior to
publication day.
Service charge of $5.000n all
N.S.F. cheques.
WEDDING DESCRIP.
TIONS:

No charge provided news
submitted within one month.
$5.00 praduction charge for
wedding and-or engagement
pictures. News of weddings
(write-ups) received one
month or more afier event
$10.00 charge, with or
without pleture. Subject 4o

condensetion. Payable In
advance,

CLASSIFIED AN-
NOUNCEMENTS:

Births §.50
Engagements 5.50
Marriages 5.50
Deaths 5,50
Funerals 5.50
Cards of Thanks §.50
Memor lal Noticas §.50

PHONE 635-6957
Classitied Advertising Dept.

eu 8

Coins from still another
country, the U.S.S.R., are
available here in proof-tike
sels. Each set includes an
official Leningrad Mint token
and nine coins representing
all the coins in circulation in
the Soviet Union. For further
details on how to order
these collector coins write
to: Paramount International
Coin Corp., Dept. 240, One
Paramount Plaza, Englewood,
Ohio 45322.

eee

The only two countries eur-
rently without coins are Laos
and Paraguay. They wae paper
money only,

1

industrial strategy?

TORONTO
Canada’s industria.
strategy is unclear
because of the nature of
the country’s political
,process, the federal
“government, and “‘our
‘ideology,” the president
of the nadian
Manufacturers’ Asso-
ciation said today.

J. Hugh Stevens told
the Canadian Club that
Canada's politic
process has been oriented

ward coping with
immediate problems
rather than long-term
ones. An example was
large layoffs, a reference
to plans by Inco Ltd.
eliminate 3,500 jobs in
Sudbury, Ont. and
Thompson, Man., by the
middle of next year.

The immediate
political problem may be
unemployment, Stevens
said, but the basic cause

(CP) —

was more likely to be a
worldwide surplus of
products or excessive
costs in Canada com-
pared with competitors
abroad.

He said that under the
federal form of govern:
ment, provinces pursue
strategies to broaden
their industrial bases for
taxation and to create

Jobs.
“This has led to what
some have ed
miniature replicas of a
national economy in each
province.”

Stevens said it has to be
recognized that Canada is
at a disadvantage in
relation to more cen-
tralized economies such
as France and Japan.

“In short, our economy
is much less ‘national’
than that of many of our
major competitors.”

e «said Canada’s

ideology makes many
Canadians, particularly
businessmen, wary of
national planning which
may cause governments
to further intervene in the
economy.

Plans and strategies
“smack of a grand design
in which few Canadians

accustomed to the
freedom of a market
economy, would he

anxious to participate.”
“So long as any in-
dustrial strategy is
promoted as a means to
manipulate socie
rather than provide a
focal point for agreement
on mutual objectives, it
will remain suspect and
unacceptable.’ ;

He added that an in-
dustrial strategy has not
been put forward Canada
has not developed ‘‘the
political maturity to deal
with the _ essential
problems."

National fat needs reducing

OTTAWA (CP) — A
federal advertisin
campaign this winter wil
urge that fat be reduced
in the national diet.

Keith Murray, who
heads the campaign, said
only. Sweden and the
Netherlands have ©
launched such com-
prehensive programs.

Murray, director of
nutritional services for
the health and welfare
department, said the
budget and details of the
campaign have not yet
been completed.

The campaign links fat
and arteriosclerosis—
hardening of the’ ar-
teries—a fatal '

People will be urged to
take less than 35 per cent
of their dally calories
from fat, altho that
doesn’t mean cutting out
vegetable oils since they
contain a vital element
called linoleic acid.

“Your body has to have
it, or jt can’t make it,”
Murray said. The acid
cuts the level of blood-
cholesterol in the body,
decreasing the risk of

B.C.’s forest industry

VICTORIA (CP) —
Longpromised changes to
legislation affecting
British Columbia’s forest
industry will likely
become law by June,
1978, a ministry of forests
spokesman said today.

The spokesman said
Forests Minister Tom
Waterland plans three
ieces of legislation

sed ont the
recommendations of the
Royal Commission on
Forest Resources in
British Columbia, which
was submitted in late
1976, and on the work of
the minister’s Forest
Policy Advisory Com-
mittee which was set up
to review the report.

A new forest act, a
ministry of forests act
and a range act will be
introduced early in the
spring session of the

legislature, the
spokesman said in an
interview.

He added that debate
will be delayed for two or
three months so the forest
industry; -unions, en-
vironmentalists and any
other parties can make
final representations,

The royal commission,
headed by Dr.
Pearse of the University
of B.C., contained hun-
dreds of recommen-
dations calling for broad
changes to forest policy
in B.C., including a
sweeping revision of the
forest tenure and tree
farm licence statutes.

Waterland has given no
indication whic
recommendations will be
adopted, but said in a
recent speech new
legislation would not
please everyone.

Canadian arrested
—in Australia

VANCOUVER (CP) —
A’ Sydney, Australia
police spokesman sai

onday that Jon Donald
MeDermoitt, 31, who es-
eaped more than three

ears ago from William
ead medium security
prison near Victoria, was
arrested Sunday in
Sydney.

McDermott, who was
jailed after his conviction
on seven counts of armed
robbery, had married in

Australia shortly after pai

his escape in May, 1974,
and was teaching in a
private school in Sydney.

The police spokesman
said McDermott ap-
parently gained a
teaching job with forged
qualification papers and
was using the name
James Arthur Crown.

McDermott appeared
Monday _ in dney
Federal Court and. was
remanded in custody’ to
Nov, 28.

McDermott was sen-
tenced in April, 1970, to 12
years in jail for six armed
robbery charges stem-
ming from holdups in
British Columbia and

Alberta.

The former
“nhewspaperman and
television roducer

gained national attention
when he wrote two
magazine articles on his
crimes and on prison life.
In .August, 1973, Mc-

Dermott was sentenced
to eight years for an
additional armed robbery
charge, to run con-
currently with the earlier
sentence,
PASSES GIVEN
McDermott was con-
sidered a model prisoner
and was granted several
weekend passes, but. he.
was denied parole in
April, 1974. The following
month he was let out on a

three-day pass to visit his

rents in Nanaimo, B.C.

Police said his 23-year-
old girlfiend picked him
up at the gates and drove

im to the bus depot. He
never went to Nanaimo,
but sent his parents a
note telling them he was
going to
Australia, to ‘start a new
life,”’ ;

The RCMP was told by
an airline agent in Seattle
that a man with the same
name as McDermott’s
had boarded a plane for
Sydney on May 29, 1974. A
woman with the same
name as the girlfriend
flew from here to Sydney
June 7, 1974.

The Sydney s kesman
said police caught up with
McDermott a few weeks
ago and Canadian
authorities requested an
extradition permit.
Police arrested Mc-
Dermott after the permit
was granted late last
week.

disease. .

Peter:

is birthplace, -

heart attacks. .

Murray advised con-
sumers to put the im-
rtant acid into their
et. by using one of the
oils on salad.
AVOID SALT ,
Those who take fat out
of their diet should not try

and make their food
tastier with salt. Too
much salt has been
statistically linked with
high blood pressure. |

"The following guides
will help consumers steer

a middle course

Legislation to affect .

through

the hazards of modern
food-eating,

—Choose lean cuts of

meat, trim off visible fat,

discard fat that cooks out

-of meat, and avoid gravy.

~—Replace meat with
fish or poultry several
times a week.

—Bake, broil or boil
food instead of irying or
deep-frying.

—Limit " the use of
animal fats, lard or
shortening.

—Use skim or two-per
cent milk, cottage cheese
and yogurt, while
avoiding cream, cream
cheese or ice cream.

Murray has made an
initial approach to the
Canadian Restaurant
Association hoping to get
all restaurants to offer a
low-fat alternative.

The government

launched the campaign ’

on the recommendation
of a.committee of outside
experts, whose findings
already are under attack.

The Beef Information
Centre, operated by beef
producers, says beef and
ta saturated fatty acid

content do not contribute.

to heart disease.

The centre cites a study
at the University of
Manitoba which: shows
that blood-cholesterol
levels declined when beef
was ihe primary source
of fat..

‘eee

“PE: x”
Piggy-back
heart patient

— dies —

’ CAPE TOWN (AP) —
South Africa’s 38th heart
transplant pitient ’ was
killed ‘Sunday night in a
fall from a window at
Groote Schuur Hospital, a
hospital official an-
nounced today

Elizabeth Nel, 34, was
recoverin from the
“wiggy-back” graft of a
hear onto her own
weakened heart Oct. 22,
Dr. Reeve Sanders said.

“I cannot give an
details at this stage,”

said Dr. Sanders,
refusing to say whether
Mrs. Net might have
jumped from the window.

Dr. Sanders also

refused to say what floor

the woman fell from.
The woman was the

18th patient to receive a

piggy back transplant at -
e

toe the a tts
operation, the patient's
veakened heart’ is not
replaced but a second
heart is implanted to
assist it.

VANCOUVER (CP) —
A former chairman of
British Columbia Legal
Services Commission
says the rovincial
government is forcin,
curtailment of lega
services for those who
need them most.

In an article published
in the commission’s
newsletter, lawyer Don
Jabour, whose twoyear
term as the commission's
first chairman ended in
August, says financial
restraints have
prevented the com-
mission from doing the
fob it was set up to do in

Jabour, now working as

a consultant to the
commission said. ‘'the
government has not
ized the  im-
portance of legal services

i

THE HERALD, Tuesday, November 15, 1977, PAGE 7 .

to the public,

the
the magnitude of the public’s

need, nor the financial
commitment that must
be made to fulfil it.”

“There are over 300,000
eople in B.C. livin
low the poverty line,
said Jabour. ‘“‘These
le are beset by legal
problems more than the
average citizen because
of the mass of laws and
rules that regulate their
lives: rental controls,
welfare schemes, unem-
ployment inaurance,
pension plans, workers
com tion and
housing controls, to say
nothing: of criminal and
matrimonial - problems.

“To help these people

with legal services I part

of the war against
erty,” j ;
Jabour said that in 1976

| Legal cuts for needy.

“we asked for $11.3
million from
ovincial
ut received only $7
million; in 1977 we asked

for $9.2 million, aid ©

received only $7.3
million.” :

He said the commission
was created to plan the
development of new

services, to provide funds —

for such programs as le-

gal aid, a

over the creation of new

offices and Prosrams
out B. i

eee he said; “the
exact opposite is. hap-

“Because of budget
limitations,
mission has ma)
reside over the cur-
iment of services ‘and
thus has ‘become
everybody's whipping
y. Pee

American-Canadian carnies
provide legal hassles _

EDMONTON (CP) —A
lawyer at the Laycraft
inquiry charged Monday

that a 1975 police in-

vestigation of Royal
American Shows ( )
was based on a con-
spiracy to drive the

American camival out of

western Canada. ;

Arthur Vertlich said
the p e of the in-
vestiga on was to expel
Royal American Shows
and replace it
Conklin Shows of
Toronto, a, Canadian
company.

RCMP Insp. Graham
George, being cross-
examined by Vertlieb
when he made
charges, described them
as “absolute hogwash.”

Conklin Shows took
over the western
Canadian carnival circuit
in 1976 after RAS officials .
were charged with fraud-
related offences and the
midway refused to post a
bond asked by several
exhibition boards.

, which
y

The ingui

resumed Monde after a
one-month recess, was
called by Alberta At-
torney-General Jin
Foster last April to
examine the handling of
the 1975 investigation into
the Florida-based
company which operated
in prairie cities.

ertlieb said a “family
member" of Conklin
Shows was involved with
the RCMP “and it’s
through this connection

7 Yukon

VANCOUVER (CP) —
Dogteam Bill Smith, the
rapper whose argument
that the Yukon isn't part
of Canada was tumed

down last week by the
Federal Court of Canada,
said Monday he plans to
“appeal the decision.

ith, 56, was working
his trap! 235 miles up
the Porcupine River from
this community, north of
the Arctic Circle when he
learned that Mr. Justice
Patrick Mahoney had
ruled against his bid for a
declaratory ‘judgment
that the Yukon is owned
directly by the British
monarch. -

THe judge handed
down his ruling in Ottawa

‘last week after trying the

We're
Listed
Here!

If you wish your Business
Phone listed for your customers

that the investigation had
its root.” _

The Vancouver lawyer
is representing Specialty
Manufacturing Ltd., and
three men—including
principals of the com-
pany—who have been
referred to in RCMP
documents as. ‘“‘bagmen”
for carnivals. ;
SAYSSOURCE
RELIABLE

Vertliecb said outside
the in he had no
proof to back up- his
charges but that they
came from “a reliable

In —_ Toronto, a
representative of Conklin
Shows said he preferred
not to comment on the
charges until he had seen
them in writing.

Alf Phillips, vice-

esident of Conklin, said

he. western . carnival
circuit route was put up
for tender and there were
11 or 12 bids, including
two Canadian bidders.
Conklin won the tender.

“We were not involved
in any kind of move to
oust Royal American
Shows,” he said.

Vertlieb also charged

that a Conklin employee
assisted RCMP in their
review of documents
seized from Specialty
Manufacturin in Oc.
ober, . Speciality
supplied Rag with
midway prizes. <« -
Philips said he was not
aware of any such
assistance and the he was

not aware of any ho
ranking Conlin efficiels

connected with the

RCMP. Ce
Insp. George testified
he d no personal —

knowledge of charges or’
Sytay Haat
nufac

or Vertlieb’s three
clients. on :

The lawyer contended
the transportation of
large amounts of money

by his clients. was |.

payment -for -midway
Prizes bought by. car.
nivals. of
‘George testified that
when the RAS _in-
vestigation began in 1975

ice were interested in
‘any criminal activity in

the carnival industrv."’-
By the

y time the in-
vestigation ended in 1976,
it had cost about-$450,00
and resulted in about 100

Bunnell, a lawyer for Al
Anderson, former
general manager of the
dmonton - Exhibition
Association, “guid” a
motion is being filed’ in
Alberta Supreme Court to
question the legality or.
jurisidicion of a subpoena.

government, .

‘to preside ..”

the com:

uiring his client to’

testify at the inquiry.

result of the police’s RAS
investigation.

trapper appeals

case here in late October.
Smith, who lives as a
nomadic hunter ae
apper, mn waging
a lengthy one-man battle
in the courts, see to
establish aboriginal tide
to the northern Yukon for
the Vuntut Kutchin
(Loucheaux) — Indians
living at Old Crow. He
still has about 20 actions
pending in various courts
n Vancouver, Ottawa
~and Whitehorse. .
His most recent case
involved efforts to stop
Dempster High of até
ps way from
Dawson City, Yukon, to
Fort MePhereon, Nw A
on grounds tha een
Elizabeth's personal
permission was required

Free - for ONE month courtesy of THE
DAILY HERALD

New Business’s
Not listed in our
B.C. Tel Directory.

E. MARR DISTRIBUTORS LTD. - 638-1761

MARR’S BOOKKEEPING &
ACCOUNTING - 638-1761

K & J AUTOMOTIVES - 638-8484

VILLAGE MEATS - 638-1765

TERRACE OIL BURNER SERVICES - 635-4227
BOOK NOOK - 635-3081
ALL-WEST GLASS - 638-1166

Please Call 635-6357

for such a project.
JusticeMahoney
refused to grant an order,

ruling that the Yukon had.

been properly ceded to
Canada by Britain in a

British gover nmeni

order-in-council dated

July 31, 1630, and by othér
statutes.

Smith said in a

telephone interview he — |

intends

a
Mahoney's decision on

grounds that the federal

court judge erred in’

holding tha King George
HI's Royal Prociamation
of 1783, giving hunting
and trapping rights to
Indians in perpetuity, had
no force of law in the
Yukon. :