t a TERRACE HERALD, TERRACE, B.C. . 7 Wednesoay,: October 18," i967: _ FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHY -& Industrial @ Candid Weddings @ Portraits ® lémm MOVIES TAKEN AND DEVELOPED « Phone For Appointment 635-5201 LIN LET DAILY SERVICE from VANCOUVER - PRINCE GEORGE - EDMONTON NORMAL SCHEDULE TIMES LEAVE PRINCE GEORGE 9:00 P.M. DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAY & SUNDAY ' TO ARRIVE BURNS LAKE, TOPLEY, HOUSTON SMITHERS, HAZELTON, TERRACE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY & MONDAY Agency and Terminal! Facilities at oll Points son SFTOCE: Call George Dyer, Phone 635-6857 | THE TERRACE PICTURE LOAN SPONSORS Saturday, October 21, Saturday, October 28, The Terrace Museum Library Annex An exhibition of prints from Alberta, _ Columbia, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, done, in Centennial Year, and organized and circulated by the Western Canada Art Circuit, with the assist- ance of the Centennial Commission, Ottawa, |” Mon, Tues. Thurs. and Fri, 2- 5 p.m, and 7 -9 pom, Admission: . Adults 50c Children 10¢ tata an a aan Cee Tete tata tata attetatetate Te tetra setae a! 1967 a| LIFE AT STAKE; a IN KITIMAT- October. 19, 20, a day have its lawns beautified planted by girl guides Saturday. Girls in- TERRACE CENTENNIAL LIBnARY will one by this shrub ie * .) ertor; 70 to 86 excellent; 60 to | Aa 70 good; 50 to 80 average; 40 |i volved were (left to right) Cathy McRae, Audrey Mercer and Michele Ford, OTTAWA OFFBEAT Lamoureux shows. greatness. __ as House of Commons Speaker OTTAWA, — Varliament has never had — certainly not in the last 27 years — a Commons Speaker quite so good, so in eool § control, so universally accepted and respected as Lucien Lamoureaux, And the competition in excel- -| lence, on two or three occasions, has been keen, There have been eight Speake ers ranging from the impossibly bad to the incredibly good, now a Serator, and Rene Beaue doin, now a university lecturer, each in his own very particularly, personal way, were sensationally ‘successful, True, Rene Beaudoin’s Parlias mentary career was blown to tragic pieces in the explosion of the Pipeline Debate — a poli. tical drama still unsurpassed in its fury = but until that detone ation, he had made his mark and more as a great speaker, But neither Macdonald nor Beaudoin, accomplished though they were, even at their best could hope towear Lamoureaux’'s s| robes, How good. really, is the man? Well, it just could be that when history looks back on the Great m| Confederation Debate, the small J) part played by speaker Lamour. eaux may tum out to” have been a crucial, said was'a "definite matter ot| urgent public importance,” Now under the rules of the Com» mons the day's business cannot be shelved, except for a real:and well-established emergency, to deal at onee with an issue of such public importance and urgency it simply: can't wait, What urgent matter did Real Caouette have in mind? . This, as he put it in these words: Should our country, Canada, remain a nation or should’ it be | partitioned to please ‘the destruc. tive elements that want to destroy the basis of national unity...” * @ - Now - Real Caouette may be a lot of things, a few of them quite extraordinary, but Separatist he. is not. Rather, his loyalty to his coun- try is of high emotional voltage, passionate, even for a French Canadian, Quietly, Mr, “Speaker Las moureux, just as 1f heheardsuch pleas for this kind of emergency debate on ati issue so stageering ‘every Parliamentary — day, asked - him why he considered it so urgent that the Commons should drop everything else, “Because,” Real Caouctte told him, ‘the very existence of our country is at stake,”’ and went Tt happened just recently onthe day when Creditiste Leader Real. ‘Caouette moved to adjoin the previously scheduled business of : Parliament to discuss what he LADIES—PLAN TO ~~ ATTEND THE - ‘DRAPERY and BEDDING: on to speak of the Soparatist outrages against the nation, Calmly, Mr. Speaker heard him out, then almost casually said, “I- would ask Honorable’ Members not to broach such a subject in the present circus stances, *’ and then ruled the Caouette emergency motion out of order. ; a es 8 oo, Onto his feet in shouting-pro- test exploded Gilles Gregoire, the only vowed Separatist in Pare liament, _What kind of a ruling was this? |f he demanded, Wasn’t Mr, Speaker required q by the rules to listen to the argue | §f ment of MPs on the question of urgency, and hadn’t he made his ruling without hearing: anyone, | | -True, conceded Mr, Speaker, unruffled, But that’s the way it-was, Al the arguments..in the world weren’t going to change his mind. he just wasn’t going toallow such ’ a debate, rule or no rule, he smiled, ’ Up, one after the ‘other, were Quebec MPs Raymond Langlois, a Creditiste, and Joseph Mone grain and Maurice Allard, both independents .,. none of them Separitist sympathizers, They; too, were convinced the matter was urgent and said so— but for an entirely different, even . opposite motive than Gregoire. Gently Mr, Speakor ruled them out of order and turned again to the much more formidable task of.dealing with angry Separatist who clamored— andkept clamor- ing —for the right to speak, and hopefully debate the life. orf death of: Canada, courtesy, stood by his. ruling — -.Mr, Speaker, with inexhaust. Yble: patience and Irreproachable Gilles Gregoire would’ not, be §|-heard, not onthat subject anyway, lows; 400 genlus; 80 to 90 sup- to 50 falr, FOR MEN: ager? Lo, Connie Francis, Elvis Pres- the greatest weight? - Oats, Malt, Peanuts, Onions. 3. John Paul Jones, American |§ naval hero, uttered the “words, ‘I have not yet be- gun to fight?’ - True or false, 4, Which harbor is in Com- mencement Bay? Savannah, Jacksonville, New Orleans, Tacoma. FOR WOMEN: What is the birthstone for . » pat Garnet, Diamond, Topaz, Sapphire, 6. The Tom Watson and the . Dixie Queen arevarietles of: Peach, Tomato, Apple, Wat- ermelon, %. Which President operated a tailor shop in Greeneville, Tennessee? Jackson, McKinley, Andrew Johnson, Grant, 8, Mistletoe, which is used for Christmas decoration, will take root in the ground,- True or false, FOR YOUNG PEOPLE; %. How many days did Jesus . spend on the earth fattawing the resurrection? . 20, 30, 40, 50. 10. ‘Which one invented - the Steam engine? Robert Fulton, George Steph enson, James Watt, J,P, Blanchard. "AEM souley “Ol ‘op ‘6 ‘asqea "g ‘osuyor marpuy t ‘UOTAULIGEM = *g ‘puouleygy *¢ ‘emosey, *} fanry *¢ |h ‘suo 'g ‘Me[salg SIATH *F *SHAMSNY Ads flushed out carpet swindlers ' Carpet dealers in Victoria, B. C., aren't worried by fly-by-|R? night salesmen who offer three |b f rooms of carpeting at ridicul- ously low prices, reports Home Goods Retailing, There are no wall-to-wall boiler-room opera-. tions in Victoria now.. . When some operators appeared ;, there some time ago local re- tailers and the Better Business ‘Bur eau-published large ads.inthe |i ‘ress warning’ ahout: tactics, of such outfits, In a short time, ac- |B cording to HGR, no more was heard of these fast-talking sales- 4 USED CAR SELL-OUT men. 2-Dr. H.T. 2-Dr. H.T. Priced at ‘Each correct answer counts 10 a :{ points; Score. yourself as fol-| 4 1. Of which “ed fs: Coi- . onel Tom Parker the man-|f — we Set includes 1, 2" and ; ley, Nancy. Sinatra, Dean |g bed Martin, : "2, A bushel of which one has ale! wi COFFEE MUGS 1966 PONTIAC. PARISIENNE Full- power, V3, Al, radio. Priced for Quick Sale $2995.00 _ 1965 PONTIAC. PARISIENNE P.S., P.B. radio, auto. $2495.00 1964 RAMBLER SEDAN _ Only $1095. wan, “MORE” DEPENDABLE -USED CARS. 1967's OCTOBER 19- 28° | m “SET OF3 :. PAINT BRUSHES | BUDGET LAMPS. In 40, 60 and 100 watt Regular | gizes,: 25¢ ee, : “AA ‘4 2 COLEMAN HEATER 35,000 BTU of warmth, Heats 3 to 4 rooms comfortably. Regutor 84.95 HI. INTENSITY b. SEWING LAMP # ’ included with this B ZENITH = hea SEWING MACHINE # Fully Automatic be | 16 Sewing Patterns [iam get 18875 a : CURLING BROOM ©’ a Regular 39¢ | 2Te¢| Regular 5.25 4,88 Foam Floor Mat. .| Cobinet Turn Table ] Regulcr 2.85. 2, 29 | Regutar 2.98 1.98 “ Christmas Cards / Magnesium Snow Reguler 21 for 1.00 77 Renee 4.29, OCTOBER 19 - 28. eet 1966 MERCURY PARKLANE - B Full power — windows, steering — Act. Breazeway window rear. Priced at Only —. _ $3495.00 1965 FURY II WAGON V8, auto, P.S., P.B., radio. Only __ $2795.00 1964: CHEV. 2 Dr. ont $1495. am: - .TO ‘CHOOSE FROM TO CLEAR . - mered a by ‘Thortgages, ls B; -Sut the bitter little Separatist persisted, obviously hoping to push, Mr, Speaker to the paint of ‘ordering hia expulsion from the B).Chamber ~ and what a triumph that. would have been for this waspish trouble maker to -be- come a “martyr.” ’ _The House’ was 60 tense you There was no debate, anid Vatite a) ly disappointed, Gilles Gregoire was not martyred, wot “This isa Speaker, 2s: “Looking "back . Many. ‘of. Wy: "Bore ‘only Wish we .were young enough to repeat 2 jj some of our mistakes, | -- Coverage - 1 Moat of the world is- ‘covered, by. water, and’ the rest is cor. + cles 1 EXAMPLE ! - 1967. -MONACO 2-DR, H.T. , Full power, radio; Ect.. Was $4618.00 ahs EF aan Foe “MANY. MORE AT NO TRADE REDUCED. PRICES ~ 68's ON DISPLAY © _ ONSTEIN'S DODGE. city” ~ CORNER OF KALUM & CAKELSE Manat Max. “xeatadhor om eS “+ a * CB6-6ON6