58, MOBILE "HOMES: 7 FOR SALE: 12x62 Frontler mobile home. With 2 ad- ditions. Raised living room, shag carpet, built in fireplace and other features. Will move and set up in Terrace area. 635-4492 (5-3) 60. Tewoens Sealed fenders for the fallowing tree planting contract(s) will be received ’ by the District Forester, Ministry of Forests, At- tention Frince Rupert, B.C. on the dates shown below. 1. Contract 103110-24 Located Camp Creek Ranger District Terrace Number of Trees 42,0 thousand Viewing Date March 31 Ranger Station at 9:00 a.m. NOTE: Viewing of the planting site prior to sub- mitting a fender for this contract is mandatory. Deadline for receipt of tenders [s 3:30 p.m. April 17, 1976, 2. Contract 93L15-31 Located Cronin Mt. Ranger Olstrict Smithers Number of Trees 43.5 thousand Viewing Date —, leaving Ranger Station at —a.m. NOTE: Viewing of the planting site prior to sub- mitting a tender for this contract is not mandatory. Deadline for receipt of tenders is 3:30 p.m. April 20, 1978. 3. Contract 10317-29 Located Onion Lake Ranger District Kitimat Number of Trees 90.0 thousand Viewing Date —, leaving Ranger Station at —a.m. NOTE: Viewing of the planting site prior to sub- mitting a tender for this contract Is-is not mandatary. Deadline for recelpt of tenders is 3:30 p.m. April 11, 1978, . ' Tenders must be sub- mitied on the form and In the envelopes suppiled which, with particulars, may be obtained from the Forest Ranger(s) indicated, or _ from the District Forester, ° Ministry of Forests Prince Rupert - Attention Reforestation B.C. : The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be ac- cepted. - (c5-2) ~ ‘ FINANCIAL MORTGAGE LOANS: MORTGAGE MONEY. Any amount (25 years amor- tizatlon). 1s? mortgage from 10 percent, 2nd mortgage from 122 = percent. Residential, Commercial, Bulldings. J.D. Phillips Capital Corporation, 10672 King George Highway, Surrey, B.C. V3T 2X6. Phone 568-0471 or evenings 585-1403, (ctf - T) I 66. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES 70 - 22’ Travelaire 3 way fridge, stave, oven, sleeps 6 635-2972 (p3-1) For Sale, 17° Skylark Travel Trailer. Pressurized water, bathroom, etc. Sleeps 6, Like new condiilon $3900 firm. Can be viewed at No. 67-Pine Traller Park, or phone 635- 9976, (P3-2) ‘BT SERVICES ~ MOVING??? CHECK BUDGET’S LOW ONE-WAY TRUCK RATES THROUGHOUT WESTERN CANADA. CALL TOLL FREE 112.800-663-2478 BUDGET RENTA TRUCK GENERAL CARPENTRY NO JOB TO BIG OR: SMALL ADDITIONS, SIDING RENOVATIONS CEMENT WORK, PAINTING Phone after 6: 635-4094 TAX Bill’$ Tax Service 4520 Halliwell Phone 635-3971 10:00a.m.-11:00p.m. (ctf) 1978, teaving: Bakkers Modular Structures for sale: Very reasonably priced, attractive looking pre-fab, Greenhouses. 4 mil poly or fibreglass covering. Phone 638:1768 or view at 396? Dobble St. (pld-1) BCY.CNA © HELP WANTED: Earn $200.00 monthly part-time; $1,000 full time. Easy to succeed with our tralning. Write Fuller Brush Com- pany, C-O Box 108, 308, 207 West Hastings St., Van- couver, B.C. Y6B 1H7, or Mr. T. Diamond, R.R. 3, Kamloops, B.C. V2C SK. {ctf} PERSONAL: Discerning Adults. Shop discreetly by mall, Send $1.00 for our latest fully Ulustrated catelogue of marital aids for both ladles and gentlemen. Direct Action Marketing Inc. Dept. U.K.,' P.O. Box 3268, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3X9. {ctf} ‘ Danny Kaye humanitarian WASHINGTON (AP) — The AFL-CIO named en- tertainer Danny Kaye on Tuesday as the 1973 recipient of its Phillip Murray-W! Green humanitarian award, AFL-CIO President George Meany announced. The labor federation said cultural and phitanthropic endeavors have enriched the lives of his fellow men.’” Last year’s recipient of the award was Vice-President Walter Mondale. Jews call Gairo out NEW YORK (AP) — A militant Jewish gro Monday it wants to pt relations between Washington and Cairo and will try to make life miser- able for Egyptian diplomats here by following and harassing therm. “Arab hands off Israel,” shouted the group's leader in Arabic outside the Egyptian mission. to the UN 98 an official refused to let him in or accept a statement from Victor Vancier, executive directornof the two-month- ald Jewish Committee of Concern, said teams from ‘mis organization would harass Egyptian diplomats by trailing them. “And we will explain to them our position on the Middle East,”’ he added. He denled the group was responsible for placcng a firebomb under the car of an Egyptian official of tha UN Monday. "But, we strongly applaud these actions,” he The bomb, planted outalde the diplomat’s residence in Pelham, north of thecity, did not go off, _ Vancier: said he belleves the Carter administration is pressuring Israel into c a “nm suicide” in the current ef- forts to achieve peace in the Middle East. Travolta and.Bee Gees top record market By PETER BOYER LOS ANGELES, Calif. (AP) — John Travolta has been packing them in as a duke of disco in Saturda Night Fever, but even Travolta hadn't drawn a soul to the theatres nF'ever would have done its makers well, Its songs have dominated _ pop music. The Bee Gees’ Saturday Night Fever album is No. 1 in the charis and no less than seven tunes from the movie, verformed by ‘varlous. ar- tists, hava become hits, Among those mining the soundtrack for vinyl gold is Yvonne Elliman, whose It I Can't Have You Js the latest Fever tune to hit big. Like the Bee Gees, who are managed by Robert Stlgwood (of the Robert Stidweod nia gro: whicm made the movie and owns the soundtrack), Misa Elliman has benefited from her connection with RSO., The sultry Hawaiian, who broke into the bigtime as said" Princess Margaret first guest — LONDON (CP) — Princeas Margaret was the principal guest at the international fashion spectacular of men's wear staged in Venice last fall to launch what is already generally acknowledged as one of the finest woollen cloths in existence—Golden Bale from Reid and Taylor of Scotland, Leading Importers and wholesalers were in Venice for the presentation of latest fashions from in- ternaiionally known. houses using a full range of Reid and Taylor cloth. ‘ Tetsuro Kimura, vice- president of Stock and Zenock, one of Japan's leading woollen merchants, ‘was one of two persons for whom the event was par- ticularly memorable. The other was’ H. C. . president of British Textile Co. of Hong Kong. At a banquet, Princess Margaret presented each of them with a medal specially struck by Britain’s Royal Mint for their support of the Golden Bale cloth. Only 12 pieces (a plece is about 40 metres of 68 yards long) of the precious new cloth have been made, and their firms are the only two sompanies in the world that nave a supply of it. Each has received about 100. suit lengths. A madeto-measure sult will probably cost around &700 ($1,400)—mak- ing it one of the most ex- pensive in the world. CLOTH [S SUPERB The lustrous clothe from the Golden Bale wool are even above superfine 100s— aan aocepted as the est ity of wool u: for men's sults, Reld and Taylor hos woven it into 14- toiSounce cloth in tradi- tlonal and classic ‘veaves, fine stripes and neat plnheads In subdued shaves. Made from the finest bale produced in Australia from the 1976 wool elip, the yarn was spun by Joseph Lumb © and Son Ltd. in Yorkshire. For their part in producing the wool, Mr. and Mrs, G. R. Gill—on whose sheep station at Emu Creek, New Scuth Wales, the award-winning wool was grown--also Females reach acting equality By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Film actresses no longer have to face the dreary interview question: “Why are there so few good parts for women?” The 50% Academy Award nominations signalled an end to male dominance in the awards and in film subject matter. The race for beat actress is the most exciting innyears, while the beat actor category seems _ pallidnby comparison.n Four of the five nominees for beat picture lean toward women in thelr themes: Julia, The Turning Point, Annie Hall, The Goodbye The new year promises more such films, the first important one being An Unmarried Woman, written and directed by Paul Mazursky. Jill Clayburgh plays a New York wife and mother who is abandoned bx her ‘husband, Michael Murphy, and-encounters an eccentric English pain- ter,nAlan Bates. The film explores both the humor and the bitterness of a woman seeking a new life after 16 married yearf. Cla and Mazursky both ole in the revival of _ By JOHN PIATERO MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A little old lady. and an even older man work a few hours each night to delay just a little Jonger the final curtain on an historic era of show. business— burlesque, . At 63, Pearl Williams is a master comic ‘whose repertoire consists of a tter of vulgarities, four- . letter words andnexpletives that could make a hooker blush. n- The man is Harry Rich, at 68 Jooking the grocer he once was instead of the owner of Place Pigalle, Miami Beeach’s burlesque house.n Burlesque isn’t what it was in its prime in the 19208 and 18808, but Rich strives to provide the same kind of- nentertainment that has made his club asurress since he opened it 22 years ago. But the big-name atrip- pers, the baggy-pants comics, the colorful costumes adorned with feathers and flowing folds of satinnand lace are gone. ~ HAVE OTHER INTERESTS “They’re not reliable,” Riecm says of the strippers who dance at Place Pigalle, “They show up, work a few days and you never see them again.” Strippers earn $175 Mary Magdalene — in Broadway’s Jesua Christ Fuperstar, records on the RSO label and her husband, Bill Oakes, heads the company'f Hlm division. She'd been without a hit for a while, and the Fever band- ‘wagon was about as sure a thing as was likely to come along. : . hit ely ena refers to her t only casually as “that current thing from Saturday Night Fever." Despite the coattail suc- cess she’s had with If I Can't Have You, it’s a disco song, and she knows her broad, husky vocals are better, suited elsewhere, But she’s not quite sure where. She has tried almost . every style in pop music, from sweet little ballads on Broadway to disco to country rock, but never found a niche that suited her. .She migrated to London ° from Hawaii at the age of 17, kicked round from manager to\manager untll films about women.n WILL IT CONTINUE? “But ‘will it - continue?” asks. ‘That will depend entirely on tte success of the movies. Ifn- there are five bombs in a row, the man’s picture will again dominate.” “But things are looking good,” said Ms, Clayburgh. “Remember a few years ago when people were surprised that All McGraw was cast in Goodbye Columbus at the age of 30? Sme seemed so "Now look at the Oscar nominees—Amne Bancroft, Shirley MacLaine, Jane ‘Fonda; they are mature women. It used to be that when an actress got a line in her face, they sald, ‘Get her off the screen,’’” The 10305 and 1940s were the heyday of women on the ill said. Although Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis and Joan Crawford meeded men, they weren't subservient. “But there was practically , nothing for women to do on the screen n the.1950s and sided characier, a vulnerable sex object. It was to $350 a week; he said some earn a. lot. more ‘tiny Ra : “We oat have a dirty show,” said Rich, ‘The jokes are dirty, but in comparison to today's movces and what you'll see in other places, it’s nat . ; _ “Most of our customers ’ are between 60 and 70 years old. We get our business from the retirement villages, the condominiums and the high-rises. We don't want to offend the ladies.” Rech, who emigrated from the Ukraine in 1925, went into the whiskey business in owning on Long Island. He o ned his Miami Beach club in 1958, ; The audience appears dis- interested: in the strippers, and while they undulate and disrobe, customers chat among themselves, com- paring notes on grend- children and group ex- ckrelons. " ; jut the people are quiet when Vie Spaddy ae ballads a la Vic Damone.. He's been a mainstay at Place Pigalle for a yeara. CROWD LIKES SINGER. The male star is Lee Sohn, an implsh Korean singer who has been with Rich 17 yeacs. His soft volee and ahe was discovered by Jesus Christ Superstar creator Tim Rice, When Rice heard. her voice he knew he had his Mary Magdalene, =~ COLLEAGUES UPSET But Elliman was lees com- fortable on Broadway thannin the back streets of London.n‘‘A lot of people in theatre in New York were upset when they heard: this oung upstart was coming They'd spent years and years in the theatre and I had no dence, I wasn’t very i. “My understudy was very snooty to me until I started laying. hooky, then she ved me. I.started playing hooky after two months, I couldn't stand the repitition: : I couldn't do anything dif- ferent with the songs. I felt restricted." So she ditchednthe play and joined Eric Clapton's travelling band as a backup singer, getting some hard rock experience along the way. Fhe tried a few albums zen teal fantasy.” SELLS THE PRODUCT An Unmarried Woman sprang from the fertile. tion of Mazuraky, a fll maker who. follows through the entire process from origin of the idea to selling of the product. Among his felms: Alex in Wonderland, Blume in Love, Harry nto, Next Stop, Greenwich Village. Mazurskx said the story of An Unmarried Woman originated from his ob- servations of his: wife’s friends whose husbands abandoned them, “They feel lonely and exploited; yet everything is new again for them.” Mazursky sald he had qualms about asking Jill to perform in some sex scenes ‘that are fairly explicit. “Everyone says how brave I waa to do them,”’ sald the actress. “It's no big deal. The scenes were necessary toshow what the woman was going through. She wasn’t a sex ideot;: this is no Under the Green Carpet. “T'ye been through it. I did an off-Broadway play called The Negt in which I was sovered only with whipped stream, Fortunately my garents were in at he time and the play astednonly one night.” Burlesque will never die pleasantries entertain the crowd. Then, when it nears midnight, the ‘‘queen of burlesque’? has her turn. She's the one the crowd has come to see. Short and with a roly-poly figure, Fearl walks into the gpotlight, her blond hair - pulled back, bright red lipatick alightly — exaggerating her mouth. Her pretty oval face belies 40 yeara in show business. - P a. radox audience that would reject a bottomless dancer—none of. those .at Place Pigalle— Pearl 3 dotes hardly quotable in pint. _ Pearl, a New York City na- tive, began her career as a singer, but saya she switched to comedy “because it paid better.'’ She's played at the Place Pigalle for 12 years, but sometimes travels the - burlesque and night club circuits she has been hitting for years. : Offstage, she is a perfect ‘Iady—no comedy, no dirty’ words, So where does she get her material? “From the customers. You don’t think “.T'd buy this stuff, do you?” she laughs, ; _ After experimenting with a variety of styles, she thinks ghe’s finally found one that fits—a sort ofmrock variation of the old smoky-volced jazz format. ‘ “Pm not 650 sweet- sounding anymore,” she says. “It's very different, it’s more me. I’m starting to groan a lot and stuff like that, there's more aggres- sionnin my volee." Her new album is a mixed batch of the usual lady- singer stuff plus a refreshing psa of the new Elliman—the torch. singer. ‘ “This album carries more of a personal musical statement than any I've put out,’ she says, “Tt’s the firat album Y’ve ever bragged about, It makes mehappz, mascally? I’ve never had tat felng before, . 1833—Surgeons performed | the first successful lung & removal, ‘tent’ with” a her own, but norie clicked. received a medal. From now on the Lnmb Golden Pet> Award will be an annual prize for the grower who pro- duces the raw. material for the new cloth, . The Reid and Taylor fashion presentation in Venice included men’s wear from Britain's best bespoke tailors and ready-towear firms as well as from clothing firms in Italy, Aueteia France and West Germany. In the bespoke clothes from London there was evidence cf the continuing trend to neat and discreet . checks, not only in the double-breasted Ula topecat ana specialist sportswear suth as. the Norfolk jacket and‘ knick-° erbockers, but ‘2 lounge suits as well, Stratford revival STRATFORD, Ont. (CP) — The Stratford Festival, with 18 productions on three stages for its 26th season starting Jkne 5, is lookeng forward to new quarters and perhaps a new concept of theatrical entertainment. Robin Phillips, the artistic director who introduced new concepts on arrival from England amidst a storm of protest four yearf ago, says he is ready to start a three- year cycle ofncompany building. Plans are being drawn for a Stage I addition to the ,J00-seat Avon Theatre. If all goes well, it will be ready for the fall of 1970 and the 1680 summer season. It will contain a‘ studio theatre, additlonal practice and rehearsal space and radio and television production facilities. Phillips, also is musing about sorhething which he has not yet been able to define himself,n“a totally new form ofntheatre.”’ He is interested in- new electronic effects, such as the use of lasers, but says his ideas are ranging farther. “It's time for theatre to make another major’ step forward,” he said in an in- terview. “This festival did it, you know, when it firat = opened. because. of the. ex- traordinary theatre it has.” Stratford began in 1953 ina designednby Tanya Moisievitch and Iate British director Tyrone Guthrie. Patterned ter, theatre,nit had a platform stage that thrust into the au- dience. . IDEA COPIEDo. That stage has since been copied in the U:S. and Britain. It used much less scenery and required actors to play to an audience on three sides. The 2;200-seat Festival Theatre, built to replace the tent in 1957, this year will present six Smakespeare plays— The Merry Wives of Windsor, Winter’s Tale, As You Like It. There also is a new version of the Greek tragedy Medea. Two Internationally-known British stars have been engaged so far, both returning from last year— Brian Bedford and Maggie imith. n . Letters frmm the Middle Ages, from poems by Ronald Duncan; Neel Coward's . Private Lives; Larry Fine- berg's: Devotion; and Haworth— a portrait of the Brontes by Beverley Cross. stage ¢ Macbeth, The — “The. Chamber of Mines 3r4 Annual Placer Minixa *: oe will lead the coneluding former Chief Stokes, f Gold Trip - Classes will be held at Point Grey Secondary School in Varicouver on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7:30- 8:00 p.m. on April 11, 13, 18, 20 and 25, The Field Trip will be held on Sat , April 25. Students will receive practical instruction in the use of the pan, rocker and sluice box. the enrollment fee is $25 per person and includes the cost of classes, notes, field trip and placer gold sample. Advance enrollment at the Chamber of Mines will be ap- preciated. For Further Details - Chamber of Mines, 840 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, B.C. V6C 103, 681-5928, rom . fat ts mde} at wEAP HISTORY'S SCRAPBOOK © ROM TE STERYEARS — July 8, 195t-The City of Paris celebrates the 2,000th an- niversary of its founding. - July 9, 1960-Premtfer Nikita Krushchev threatens the United States with Soviet rockets if Washington attempts to oust the. Castro regime in Cuba. July 10, 1890, Wyoming is admitted into the Union as HPNA XKTUXK YWXTNS XKEUHN XKEWULHMSAU LHOA LALPAUM .LHMSAU OWY-: Yesterday's Cryptequip—TWO BLIND MICE) WILL MISS CAREFREE MEMBER OF A FOND TRIC, VTE King Features Syndicate, Iie, : | ‘Today's Cryptoquip clue: OequalsD The Cryptoquip is a simple substltutlon cipher in which each. letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, It - will equal O throughout the puzzle, Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating - vowels, Solution is accomplished by trial and error. the 44th state, July 11, 1955The new U.S. Air Force Academy is dedicated in Colorado. Crossword By Eugene Sheffer ACROSS 40 Bluegrass 58Christmas 10 Tibetan ox l—of Avon 44 Blessing carol 1A binder ‘6 Smug person 44 Uganda's DOWN 20 Detraction 9 Scientific . Amin« 1Servile 22 Islands S.E. research 46 Zigzag 2 Askew of Malaya buildi course 3Debauchee = (abbr.) (fam.) 50 Tatter 4Adeputa- 24 Pronoun ; 12 Lilylike plant 51 Winglike tion 25—and gown 13 Othello's 52 Arrow 5Sprites 2 Arab garment perfidious poison §Beams 27 Permit. friend 53 Chemical TEskimo 2 Humming- 14 Miscellany suffix dwellings bird. AS Spiritualforce 54Balsam . 8Anything 38 Wooden 16 Wood: 55 Wave {Fr.) sticky nail comb. form 58 Summer 9 This 31 Prior 17 Put on in Bordeaux precede’ 35 Endorsement 18 Fencing 57 Baseball's bug eri «634 Seaman sword ~ Speaker finger 37 Country in 19 Equal ‘ Avg. solution tire: 22 min. ancient comb, form ” reece 20 Pair SNES CMe ICT] ti Negative — \ 21 Exclamation L = oe = ! 41 Scottish 23 Be obligated |S LTT BERS hillside e obliga LIEGAITERLIAY® 25 City in RIEDRARILI 42 Tobacco France memes AISKR kiln 28 Mexican AIGEISEP UT RITA 43 Type of garment WIEINEE YAK EGA) Ald Sanaa RAME 45 Spanish 33 Finished ANT MAIR 1] painter courtyards - AILICY AISIE as vedi = WETSMESEE REEL] coal 39 River to +1 barge __, the Volga Answer to yesterday's puzzle. 51 Thal coin . rfp pf a (io hc a 2 a on ee ee ee voefie cba weepe bt @ dnote 12 3 7 14 ee is 16 17 1B ir] 2a 21 22 25 24 $ 25 |26 [27 23 zo 78> [a oT. 37 33 34 35 }36 37 138 = a0 j Ja! 42 143° 44 9 J47T [4a [49 [50 st 52 53 54 oS 56 37 5B ' CRYPTOQUP . - 3-1k- .