JERALD, aERRACE Bd. SUNDAY . 8:00 News, Sports & Weather 5 68:25 Voice of Prophecy - 9:45 Gospel Lite Hour 9:15 Back To God Hour 9:45 Home & Hiway 10:00 Sunday Morning Magazine 10:30 Carl Tapscott Singers _ 11:00 Knox United Church ° Service 4 22:00 Home & Hiway 12:15 News 12:25 Sports Qc $ 12:30 Home & Hiway . 12:55 Provincial Affairs/- Nations Business| 1:00 CBC News st 1,03 Capitol Report _ 1:30 Hockey 2:00 Home & Hiway 3:00 CBC News Chicago 7:00 CBC News 8:00 News "*” 8:03 CEC Showease .. 9:00 CBC. News. Os . 9:03 Toronte/Montreal Symphonies 10:00 CBC News. 10:15 Hour of Decision | . 10:45 Home & Hiway. - 11:00 CBC News — 11:03 Project "67 FRIDAY NIGHT 8:03 French Musie Progr 8:30 Dial-A-Disc 9:00 1987 And All That 10:00 CBC News 10:30 Dial-A-Dise - 11:00 News 11:05 Sports 11:10 Heartheat in Sports 11:15 Dial A-Dise. ; MONDAY - FRIDAY. 6:00 CBC News . 6:10 Breakfast Club 7:10 News 7:05 Breakfast Club * 7:30 News. . 8:05 Sports. : §&:10 Regional and Local 8:15 Thought for the Day 8:20 Breakfast Club - y 8:30 Preview Commentary 8:35 Breakfast Club 8:55 Personal Shopper . 9:00 CBC News . 8:10 Message time 8:15 Nine till Noon 10:00 News. 10:05 Nine Tili Noon | 10:30 Women’s: World» -10:35 Bulletin Board -: 10:55 Assignment’ . 11:00 News — ; “11:08 Nine TUL Noon . ‘1145 Pet Parade ' 2 11:20 ‘Nine Till ‘Noon’ 11:30 Stork Club’ ‘Muesday Thursday) ; 11:35 Assignment 11:65 Assignment 12:05 Luncheon Date: . 12:15 News : (12:26. Spo rts * i 2:35 Stock Quotes — 12:40 Heartbeat in Sport 12:45 Luncheon Date 1:00 Home: &. Hiway 1.40, Assignment’ 1:45.Home & Hiway . 2:00 CBC. News... aol 2:03 Schools - “Broadcast « 2:30 Matinee with: * Pat’ Patterson :'- 2 3: 00 Newa 3:05: Message time’ 9:30’ Radio. Marka lags os : $185 ‘Home. & Hiway, 8:66 ‘Assignment ; 4:08 Cenadlan’ Roundup’ _ 410 Home & Hlway 4:55 Aséigument: | CETK Radio Schedule 3:05 Cross Country Check-up- 5:30 NHL Hockey, Toronto: at 7:30 Master Control a. 12:00 Radio Market Place 14:05. Sports ./11:20 Heartbeat in Sport aeae FLL} am News and [12:15 News... -]12:25 Sport — ee 12:30 Regional and Local: Nows | 3:00 CBC News | 10:30 Best of Ideas =, "[11:0 Heartbeat in Sport “10:16 Dial-A-Disc . , -| 10:30 Dial-A-Dise }100 Heartbeat In’ Sport ‘11:15 Dial-A-Dise | B15 Thought for the Day . | f-9:10 Message Time “9:15 Bome &. Hiway | 200 News « ‘| 2:10 -Home & Hiway. 2:30 Beeleeal and Local News ; 4:08: Message thie 4:15 Sound of Skeena “|-'8:10 Spo: 6:15 Radio ‘Market | Ble, “100, News ©. 708", 8:00" : 8:03 Home’ & Bliviay oat 9.00 BNW: ee Hiaretton, at January 15 To 21 ART BATES’ TK RADIO’ S national cales manager, sports a sprouting centennial beard in aid of one of the “hairiest” contests ever, in the tall totem country, A has originated a giant “panceke breakfast” wit and pational advertisers to be held this Saturday at Eating starts at 8 a.m. and continues until | ceeds will go to the Terrace Air Cadet squadron. A beard, or portion thereof, will be entitled to extra h h the. 0 a.m, §:05 Around Town 5:20 Home & Hiway 6:00 News : €:10 Stock - Quotes 6:15 Sports 6:20 Radio Market Place 6:25 Home & Hiway 7:00 News | : 7:05 Dial-A-Dise MONDAY NIGHT 8:08 Old Songs Old Melodies 8:33 Dial-A-Dise 8:45 Checkpoint 9:00 Country Magazine 10:00 CBC News. 11:00 News 11:15 Dial-A-Dise '. TUESDAY NIGHT 7:30 ‘Christian Frontiers 8:00 CBC News . "8:03 ‘Dial-A-Dise’ -9:33 Music, Diary,, 10:00 CBC News 10:30 -Dlal-A-Disc 11:00 News ‘/11:05 Sports | _WEDNESDAY. NIGHT -B:08 Songs from Portugal © 8:30 Dial-ADise — 9:00:Midweek Theatre 10:00 CBC News ‘11:00 News, Sports 11:10 Heartbeat in Sport 11:15. Diel-A-Disc '. ‘JHURSDAY NIGHT *$:03 Dial-A-Dise 8:30 Concerts from Two Worlds - ; 10:60 CBC News 10:15 ‘Home & Hiway 10:30 Dial-A-Dise.. . 11:00 News 11:05 Sports - t SATURDAY 6:00 CEC News 6:10 Home & Hiway 7:00 News . . 7:05 Home & Hiway. 3:00 News 8:05 Sports ~-- “8:10 Regional and Local News ‘8:20. Home & Hiway 8:00 CBC: News « - - 9:55 News 10:00 Radio Rascals” 11:00 News" ~ 11:05 Home & Hiway 12:00 Radio Market Place - 12:05 Home & Hiway ' oa 12:36 Home: &: ‘Hiway 2:05 UBC Digest :$:00:Swing Dig 4:00 News ~ 4:10 Radio: Market Place 4:45 Home: &: Hiway 5:00'News =... - $:08 UBC: Digest - 8:10. ‘Homa. & ‘Hiway: 6:00 News | ine | of Ian Fleming. ; of the villagers are speken by ._{ her return. They present the | ‘Terrace -Co-op labels ‘instead of | day morning by 9:45 with their 700 pm. and midnite, You're |ing: evening ‘between 7:00 and he midnite, Hazelton’. Clippers” - visit. the + | Ritlmat’ Merchants; Cam‘Lane {will call, the. play-by-play. Sat- “oe farday “at 9:00"p.m,. and Sunday Bote at 2:00 p.m. ‘Live’: hockey: ac- ton. ‘from the. Kitimat arena on Le TK K Radio. an 590 on your Dial in Terrace rt co-operation of local spensors Terrace Community Centre, Everyone is invited’ and pro- nyone sporting q centennial ot, cokes. ieecenay aes SS TK Radio Hilites . PROJECT °67 On January 17, 1965, a U.S. Air Force B-52 carrying four ‘hydrogen: bombs, each capable of destroying a city, collided with a refuelling tanker over the Mediterranean coast of Spain near Almeria. Three. of the bombs landed on Spanish soil, ‘scattering their debris over lush tomato fields: th fourth fell into the sea mnear Palomares., The {peident, and its effect upon the Spanish people, read like something out safatarate aetna pac On the second anniversary of this dramatic event, Project '67 recalls the Silent. Spring. in ‘Palomares, to..be broadcast on | TK - Radio :at 11:03 this, ‘Sunday. ‘Canadian freelance broad-| caster Barbara-Greene visited the area soon after the incident and, with the ald of a, trans. lator, interviewed some: of the people of Palomares where the search for the missing bomb was concentrated. The words country people. whom Miss Greene found in England upon reactions of the Spanish in. habitants with the same. sim- plicity and sense. of hbewilder. iment RADIO RASCALS» . . A new feature has been ad- ded to ‘TK’s Radio Rascals Program ‘heard: each. Saturday morning at 10:00 am. The Rascals attending the ‘show at \|the Community Centre bid for|| articles being auctioned, using ‘money, high bidders can find themselves in possession of everything from dolls to bikes, Rascals are invited to be at the Community ‘Centre each Satur- labels, worth twa points each, and bid on the articles of their choice. * oe DIAL-A-DISC . _This popular program ‘ton- tinues to gain ‘interest. with Bryan Evans hosting. each week night session --between asked to phone in ‘your ‘re- rquests Monday thru Friday at either 8:00 a.m., 2:00 p.m., 4:00 p.m.,,- 9:00: pm. or 10:00 p.m. At each time the phone lines are open for five minutes, When you — call, . identify’ yourself, name the musical selection you would: like to hear and then give the name ‘of the artist who performs that ‘selection,. then listen for your dise the follow- “PACIFIC NORTHWEST - - HOCKEY © ” Januaty 21°: ang 22 the katlon, CENTENNIAL. MO for ‘21: pupils. but attended’ ‘by | 34,""'Dhe. colonial ‘government's eetinrates ” atut : year allowed ; a £5,000 {00-pupil cho “The: British Columbian urged, _|Ile Sainte-Helene from opening day on April. 28 -yntil closing {birlers since: 1955," have: signed: gnanarenraneioansnantis es may be abit rusty, birlers ‘aré|- & logrollers, choppers are “lum- . g| Other chopping through a log “ New ‘Westminster “achool. In| |3 1685. was a cabin: large. enough: oe Daily Timber ‘Shows - Planned For Expo ‘67 The sound of the woodman’ s axe will. be heard in La Ronde and birlers will trip the light: fantastic’ an sere Lake during Expo 67 fo be held’in Montreal in “Chips will fy and | will climb poles. during Timber: La Ronde amusement’ park on day on October 27. Jube and Ardy Wickheim of Sooke, B.C. : world. champion, a contract. with’ the. © Canadian, Corporation ‘for the 1967 World Exhibition Expo . 67), - under: part of Expa’s. free entertain | ment program -to be presented in La Ronde; - |: ol The shows will take place. in ‘| Pioneerland and within 2 -boom on adjoining Dolphin Lake, ‘and. will consist of four.-. events, each, five minutes long. ne The contract © defines. the Timber Show as one "consisting of a display of prowess in the|_ arts of logging and woodcraft including Choppers, Climbers and Birlers -to be presented four times each day of the week during the Exhibi- tlon with three shows during the daylight hours — show at night: in accordance with the program, other and special performances for the press or otherwise as may be mutually agreed upon.” For those whose wood lore atraes hermen or loggers displaying the art of felling or triniming trees by meats of an axe,” and buckers display . the art of saw- ing. Nine championship -ealibre loggers will be on’ hand for each show, with six actually Performing: two as choppers and buckers, two as birlers and two as climbers. The other three will serve as stand-bys. | The choppers will race each one foot in diameter. The birlers- will vie with each other in treading a 13-foot log with an 14-inch diameter within the boom. The aim will be fo remain on the log without ctossing a red line painted around its centre: The | first birler to fall twice into _ the water 4s.the. loser. | : «In--the -bucking ‘contest. ‘the two loggers saw a 2-inch disc from a log 20 inches thick, using a handsaw. The climbers will race to the top of 120-foot climbing poles, ring a cowbell hanging there and race earthwards again. But they may not make a shortcut free fall of more than 10 feet on the return trip. | As an added attraction, the contract provides for the Cor- poration to produce up ‘to 10 guest’ .loggers from foreign loggers] Shows to be. giver: “daily in the}: ‘| Corporation to provide: the pro- taking to produce the shows;as Hfree fun-filled: show: The Wick- » fof Buckers, | and one]: ’ plus’ such} ‘sides of the flue are rough, the to compete against ° the “show team. UA bilingual announcer will describe the: shows’ in French and English over a PA system. 7: The: contract. calla’ - for. the ‘ducers and: loggers’ with “suit- able facilitids - for. -waghing, changing : and: resting between shows.” These facilities will: of course include a ‘clothes - drying machine. for the. use: of unlucky fbirlers.: . ” Montrealers’ will have to go to the Exhibition to See this heim brothers have ‘agreed not to “present Timber. Shows with- {nthe City. and - District of Montreal: without the approval the Corporation” from “April 1 until October 28th, 1967 both inclusive,” ‘What's 5 ‘In A House _ CHIMNEYS {1) | The performance of the heat- ‘ing unit In any dwelling is governed largely by the ade- quacy of the chimney to provide draft and to carry off ‘smoke and gases. Of basit ‘importance is. the size of the flue which is the open shaft inside the chimney. The flue must be of sufficient size to meet the draft require- ment of the furnace. Flues should never be less than eight and q half Inches square or seven inches in diameter, Flues lined with glazed clay tile permit smoke to escape easily. H the lining is omitted and the ys flow of gas and smoke from the furnace will be impeded and this in tura could reduce the efficiency of the heating unit, “Care should be taken to break all horizontal joints be- tween the tile mortar beds and the mortar beds of the brick- work. Where a chimney has dwo flues nee must be 8 separat- extend ‘from. ‘the top, of. the chimney to the apex of the smoke chamber in a fireplace and to eight inches below the flue pipe connection of a fur: mace. In any house no ¢rame work should he within two inches of the. chimney and this space Should’ be fire stopped with metal: built into the brickwork by the mason. A well built and nicely proportioned chimney can give aesthetic value ta a viii the Kooctenays .and.later... was wife and two daughters to Van- couver and there .the Stikine Chief was launched, sternwheeler that required a tug to take it north to Wrang- Many a man followed the footprints of John Andrew Mara, but few made so many. When he came west, he walked most -of the way. He was born in Toronto in 1840. and, educated there and he was still a young man when he set out for the riches of the Cariboo with the famous Over- landers, the pioneers who trek- ked with oxen across the prai- rie, Mara always claimed he walked alongside the slow-mov- ing wagons, Mayhe it was to rest his poor feet that he went into steam- boating. when he reached Kam- loops. He then worked as a miner at French Creek in. the Big Bend rush but: couldn't have been too successful. It is recorded that when he gave it up and came to the coast, he hiked over “Seymour Mountain on snowshoes, ‘Hig experiences didn’t. sour him however. He loved the new land of the west. He was a fine speechmaker and .a hand- Some ‘tian with a black beard and so fanatical about confed- eration ‘that politics soon ap- peared to be his destiny. He was elected to, the provincial legislature in 1871 representing returned as member for Yale and he was speaker “between 1883 and 1885. Later he won a federal seat and held it until 1896. Defeated in. polities’ that year he resolved to build a ship to carry freight to the Klondike miners, In 1898 he. brought his ‘a river house, ell, But the tug parted and his JOHN ANDREW MARA ship sank and he returned to settle down in Victoria: There he was active in the Board’ of Trade, Royal Jubilee Hospital, _— the Anti-Tuberculosis Society and the Union Club until. Ais death in 1920. (B.C. Centennial. saa DINE “wthibaSonty 4642 Lozelle - Try Our Delicious: o CH NESE FOOD _ Phone VI3-6111 | RESTA URAN T. CANADIAN & CHINESE FOODS | a Mas ster Hentce fas Mas 75,000 to. cirou- * agin me eon ood dheat Ms tant, pending on thaw" any thing. 7 on eroseneMasier etek : come in vented, tinven and thermostat-equip models. Rent one... we'llcredit t your fee agains the price buy it, ‘ DARBY'S , \ equipment 4546 Lazelle Ave. Ph. Vi 35153 CGiassified Section. ~ . Terrace, B.C. : oa you dectle t to q The Herald. Way Is The- ~ Open Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to la. ma. . Sunday, 10 a.m, to 10 p.m. Phone VI 3-6111 countries participating in Expp just’a ph you by ma Savings from January to May . ' “More Canddians are enjoying the luxury of CN ‘stravelivinig a s,and for good redsons tao! "during the winter months . : The tamous CN Red, White and, Blue Travel Plan offers outstanding travel .in fact the lowest fares of the year. : Of seasontravellersareassured thefullest measuré of CN's service - and attention. From the moment you board, be prepared for “across: ‘Canada pampering, CN. style. Arrive at your destination: - |- rested and refreshed for a more ‘enjoyable visit. | FULL TRAVEL CONVENIENCE ne call-will have your tickets Speeded on to 1 Or, if you wish, drop in on your Authorized ; CN: ‘Travel Agent who displays this seal. He will take care of all your travel’ planning - for a trip to remember. os ample CN-one- way Red Bargain coach fares: am. Terrace to: Edmonton. $16.00, Winnipeg $28.00, ~ Toronto $47.00, Montreal $50.00, For further details on fares, schedules and tickets Please contact your Authorized CN Travel Agent or CN Passenger Sales Office: CN Station _ Railway Ave., Terrace Phone VI 3-2133 BiG TRAVEL SAVINGS BIG TRAVEL COMFORT .