Page 2, The Herald, Friday: ig a8)190 | Logging: taxes ~written, off * . VICTORIA (CP) — The BC. cabinet approved on Be, Thursday a write-off of °° "$279,224. in uncollectible logging taxes — nearly’ two-. thirds of it owed by one U.S.- - . opératio. <==: based logging Finance Minister: Hugh Curtis. aald the amount represents slightly more fi. than one half of one per cent of the total logging taxes , collected for the 1978-79 “He said: out-o: f-province logging operators: who harvest timber from private lands have occasionally posed a problem in the past for the taxation branch of the finance ministry. Tn tn Se Soca It’s time to call your’ Welcome Wagon hosteas. [even Anweller . 635-5571 J Lois Mohnitiger - 635-5909". NOTICE OF INTENTION _On.one of Kitimat’s — -sunny..days it was - too hot to do much of anything... Joe Silva” . (eft), ' Gonzales and Patrick Caesar | Chrissy Hill relax on a bench ovtside the City Centre Mall. - Phofo by Carla Wiltan - TO PROCEED WITH A | LOCAL IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM) IE. Notice Is hereby © give bow t Sursuant to. ' Section 589 of ‘the ‘Municipal ‘Act that. Councll of the District of Terrace intends to preceed with the: constr ot certalneworks Locatsimprovelil Plan. — oy o "Paving of Cremer Feeney and Haugland: B. The Programme is estimated to cost $22,321.00, Including provision for interim finance charges, advertising costs, engineering costs, expenses relating to security issuing. by-laws and -gon- tingencles. . The share or proportion ‘of. “the: estimated cost of ‘the Programme to be: borne by the District of Terrace relative to Intersections and frontage reductions - Is: $11,976.00. D.. The. "share or proportion of the estimated cost of the Programme to. be borne by the taxable land abutting on sald works Is $10,345.00. -. E. The totat frontage deemed taxable for. the purposes of this Programme is 1,186.74, feet. F. The share or proportion of the Programme to be borne by the Barcels of land benfiting from or abutting on the © work Is estimated to cost’ $18.81 per - taxable front foot at completion. " G. Debt retirement including Interest will be In twenty (20) annual. ;instalments, - calculated on the taxable front footage at $3.00 per foot per year. Further notice is hereby. given that a - copy of this notice has been mailéd to the owner(s) of the parcels of land liable to be specially charged for the cost of said works, and uniess within ane (1) month of the date of the publication of this notice, a majority of the owners representing at least one half of the.valve of ihe parcets which are liable to be specially charged, petition the Council of ia Obstrict of Terrace not to proceed with it, the work may be undertaken as a: local Im. - provement. ’ Petitions shall be lodged with the Clerk, and shall be deemed to be presented to the Councif when so ladged, of which every owner of a parcel of land liable to be specially charged under this programme Is liable to take notice and be governed accordingly. : 2E, R. Hallsor. Clerk: Administrator District of Terrace ; - Federal. Ay a said in Atlanta. ; NOTICE | Notice is: hereby given that a Public -will be held on proposed aKitimatstikine Regional District By: ~ . law No. 37, .1976 Electoral Area C ' Zoning: Bye ‘Amendment By-law : TORONTO (CP) — Toronto marine scientist . Joseph MacInnis and a small party of researchers have -located the wreckage of the: - HMS_ Breadalbane, : “which sank off Beechy Island about 145 kilometres south of: the mingnatic ‘North. "Pole 12? “ years 8 Macinnla said it. Is the most northerly - ‘shipwreck ever found. - Sonar’ -pictired,” ‘taken “Wednesday indicated | the vessel's ‘sails ‘and: rigging may have been preserved ‘‘ihtact by the icy waters, but an. underwater television -- system | is-being flown there . today to gain: a closer took. he Bre adalbane was. one reg te. + he Tea fils eitieeeSiF Tobit Er abklin; who vanished in 1845 after. setting out to find the Nor- ~|Hijac vit MIAMI, Fla. (AP) ~ Only “, hours after federa]' officials and aitliné chiefs - met. to disctss. how to ‘cut down on hijackings, twa: Spanish: - com--.. speaking. men ... mandeered a- ‘National Airlines DC-10 for-the third @ unscheduled’ fight, to. Cuba : this week.- BL Tdon't know it it’s a new wave,” Jack’ Barkér, a spokesman for the Us. Aviation Ad- Hearing No.146, 1988. The Pro Density hours ‘at the Reg * Hearing - terest In-the only be accepted Hearing. | Administration . Regional District. _of Kitimat-Stikine thwest Passage. The “ first traces of Franklin were found in 1854 at. his winter quarters ot ‘Beechy Istand, but it wasn't. until 1859 ‘that Franklin’s ’ skeleton. was. ‘discovered. m: King ‘William's -Island. ‘He . -had abandoned his ice- . locked ships just a short ° . distance. from. the end of the passage, The Breadaibarie sank on . Aug.- 21;- 1883, ‘when’ its ‘wooden hull-was crushed ‘by’ ice. All crew member? : “escaped alive to an‘ [rot hulled. companion: ship: and ‘preserved detailed maps and _ te. Baie te man to a aac a rt Atala we ‘previous: vttennts, his” secretary Sharon Bacon sald “Bat -certainiy,. ‘three in. ae “week is way.too many.” Officials bere said it ape. peared that homesick Cuban. . refugees * were - ‘responsible. ‘for chijackings. Sunday and Wednesday, both diversions ‘to. Cuba. of Air. Florida sed Zoning Bylaw Is. con- "cerning he following Property: Remainder” Lot A D.L. 1909 Plan 4164 . Range 5 Coast. District, = _ The: general: Intent of -the proposed Zoning By-law !s to change the zoning _ designation from Agricultural to High Rural to accommodate a - propgsed five 2. acre. tat ‘subdivision. - The proposed Zoning Amendment may 7 -be. viewed. during regular. business . Kitimat Stikine’s otiice. shall be held In the Regional District of Kitimat-Stikine’s office on. Wednesday August 20, 1980 at 7:30 p.m. Ary. ‘and: all persons having any | ‘Ih. proposed Zoning Arnend- ment shall take notice and be governed | acoordingly.. :Written submission will by the Public Hearing , Committee upto inet ime ot the ® Pubile, ” No.9-4644 Lazelle Avene TERRACE, BC. flights, - On: ‘Thursday, National . Airlinés flight 872, carrying, 211 passengers and 12 crew. - members from Miami to San’ Juan, Puerto Rico, was: bijecked to Cuba "y two sional District. .of The Public National: xeiety, principal sponsor. Already beg cuca nr - two, * Jinn ‘Ashlock, _ Mother appeals to public in an interview. ot She said Mactnnis, a medical doctor with «a specialty in deepdiving. - medicine, decided to search — for the Breadalbane: wher he attended ...the . Scott “Polar ” Research Institute in Caim- ‘bridge, England,” several . years ago.) 4: : Now that the thiee: ‘masted ° vessel. has’ been discovered, Miss. ‘Bacon’: ‘said; the’. aclentists are eager to. begin - surveying. the remains next Spring. 4. spokesman. for: “tbe ‘Geographic iv: the expedition, 8 said work will have to wait: ‘until hen Because the. ice. ,.feegon is when --- they. ‘return, _profesaonl: divers: in hat ‘a passengers cartyitg a “jac” '. apparently - ~ filled with gasoline; said FBI agent Wil- lia Nettles. The: two men - ‘were detained by: Cuban. ‘officials. - . Barker. ‘sald It. was “not. immediately | determined ROMER SE And he sald if recent |. ‘veterans of. the Freedom - brought more than 118,000 - Cubans to Florida since . April — want to return -to their homeland, ‘‘we want to be sure they goback by some legitimate means .— not. hijacking an aircraft to do it. i) No injuries were ‘repacted in ‘any of this week's sky piracles, “The latest Incident ended when the National DC-10-was allowed to resume its flight to’ Puerto Rico after. four hours :in Havana. But airline ; officials In the Untied States are worried. . ~ . Eastern Airlines delayed an Miamt-to-San Juan flight for. hours for “precautionary | check’’ against a possible hijacking Thursday. “With all the . things that have happened in the past week, there comes 8 time to exercise more. caution," said. spokesman. North shipwreck found - pressure. ‘suits and ‘thing ‘bells will begin examining - a the wreck. - He gald there are no plana to: salvage the ship: though, as the site is far too isolated — to make It feasible. ‘Other members of the : crew on board.the Canadian . ‘Coast Guard ship Sir John A. ; _Macdonald-are Chris Mat- thews, 16,-an Upper Canada ‘College student from Toronto; ‘Maurice: Haycock, n retired artist from Ottawa Gary Koxak, ‘a: sbnay” op- erator. ‘trom: Salem. "NH, ‘and Emery Kristoff. ‘and.Al Chandler, - two: ‘Natlonal “Geographic photographers. ~Nordair,: Tau Canada Dome. Petroleum Ltd. : “any airline would be con _cerned,” John Fasolino, an Air Florida vice-president, “said Thursday at a meeting ‘of federal.agents and- -airline ” officials to discuss ways, ‘of foiling hijackers who. are : ‘slipping past metal detectors - and : other’ pecurity- check: pointe. a ‘There were ‘eT hijackings on U. ‘S: airlines between 1961 Cuba ‘signed an anti-hijack ‘treaty and airports intalling. such security devices as metal detectors, Cuba terminated -the agreement -in- 1978 and ‘bas returned planes but refused to return hijackers. Since June, 1070; there have heen seven successful bijackings. ‘Gificials say mir pirates: are-learning to circumvent . airport security, . using devices the metal detectors don't detect. And, they seid they may bring in-an old - fashioned method - back up mechariical devices. . We ‘retalking aboot wing the. behavior profile,’’ Barker said. “We try to keep . itsecret, but it's «pattern of behavior for. potential hijackers” .that. airport . persons are advlved of, “parth t@ an eight began LeFiore, the. ieapos’ baséstealing ace . who “Jeads the league with 74 80 a far this season, became 3 at father Thuraday when his companion, Sara - gave ‘omeounce bo: . anager Dick Wiliams | “| ipa ‘given -LeFiore per of the. mission to return %0 - Montreal | ‘because of possible complications in oe ‘eegnane- ‘ North Cardlina. -. Five. children - “and t later, the ‘WS, | ev evangelist and his “wife: celebrated their . _ anniversary over Chinese food tent by. friends to an Ed- 2ecarat carat gold. “The rhe King and queen of -Swedén, were among the ‘spectators’ watching - America’s Cup “sailing rials Thursday in R1, ss they” cheered on tee. 'g entry, Sverige.” log Carl XVI Gustaf, wearing a blazer bearing “the golden emblem of. a - Swedish yacht club, and . Queen Sylvia. arrived in . Newport on- ‘Wednesday and ‘were: by a amal) crowd of well- The +5 complied with ‘the roysl couple's request to keep pomp and to a minimum, “since ; ial to the United k Gainesville, Fia., couple. would like to call their zon . Austin Joho Rice or Austin John Rice- ° Stitt, but the state says be must. be: Heted on. birth ' pacorda as Austin John _ Stitt, using his father's last name. . ; r Judge Anne Cawihon . . Booth: "af the ist District ‘Court of Appeal: says the state's ban on using a ‘mother's last name or & both its’ surnames | may bea firet step toward ‘substituting numbers for names as forecast. by George Orwell in his A "Los Angeles smewepaper can reprint an article: about, baseball ' player’ Steve Garvey and his wife Cyndy despite the couple's claim it could cause. harassment, a federal court has ruled, The oth U.S. Couwt of _ court order which had | blocked . ee = _ originally. Lee sa By. a} Ey | patted meentive whe | be rejoing the ‘National League. elub in Pittsburgh vf 8 ‘fours ¢ game series against i Pirates are on ap. in-*" 7 hyphenated version of: novel 1984, but she was in . them public’ Appeals threw out.a lower - from p publ he» story alle ge te and hid quotes out of context, if - = —_—_ iti oe uty Prime Iainister Rat Y Bache’ ‘donned his clan kilt in. Pat Hawkesbury, Sp "Wednesday, _ ta, — . i ° ‘Lots of actresses hin of shedding their | clothes onscreen .tiyese. days. But not: Susyian - Anton, stax of Golden ir] . and cigar commerti.til me who has rejected several offers . “y just couldn't do iat to the people I love,” sie “T wouldn't want hy folks to have to go to sand ¢ theatre and be pubjectshd to that. ' ° President Carter has a Jot on his mind thes) - including the g et 2 x 3 Ps hl ’ today, president called her at . her hotel room at 6 am. |- Wednesday to wish her . many ‘happy returns. SiR guaes evuryene ile him about this party and he forgot when it (her birthday) was, ” she said, - Brigitte Bardot, the a7 yearold actress, says her | public daysare coming to an end and she's going to J 5 “drop out of life Insucha : way as to'make (Greta) Garbo look like a piker.”” . But how will ahe spend her time? - : “with my dogs, cats, goats and canaries — and _ [hope eventually not with a man. Men betray. your. secrets, your love, your | trust and friendship, but my animal friends will never deceive me” | No matter. who you beileve, Willie Mae Small has been around a long © She’s either 111 years - old, as an official record claims, of 133, as her. cousin Autetha says,.or 135, as she claims, | ~ _ If you doubt her ver-_. sion, Mrs, Small lays it qo the line. “don’t . Ike lars," she says. “Don't like to lie or ateal.’”” -. : Willle Mae, who describes herself as ‘a missionary, had fiye husbands, but her memo- ries af them are hardly sentimental. va “| don't. know. why I wanted . all those husbands," ‘she says. “They'd fight me and I'd fight 'eni back ... but after i ent religion, I 1 ae all t" ; : i a 5 i _in hunt for missing kids’ NONTREAL (cP) —-A year and half | ago, Marguerite Gagnon’s three children went to visit her om: . husband ‘and never! came home. She notified the pollee, but ‘the ex-husband had also dis- appeared without a ‘wrace. Police issued & warrant for the man's. arrest | on suspicion of kidnapping, ‘and she began her own In- vestigation, travelling to Europe, the US. and other parts of Canada hoping to find a trace of her family. She found nothing. “| live & perpetual night- mare,’ Ms, Gagnon wrote in a a. desberaie letter to the | Montrea! ‘daily La Presse ' this week, taking her case to the Publ ee chance that someoné: ‘gow the chil ‘whereabouts. rans _, "When 1 hear shout a { catastrophe somewhere in the world, an accident or any misfortune; I worry that one of my children. might be eat of al thinking " is about them every s¢cond, not. knowing what: has happened to them, and weeping in silence, hoping.” The Montreal woman was married to Yugoslavian: born Vinko Dugandsic for ti _ years watil thelr divores in nine at —e custody’ of their eldest’ son, Dominik, to the father, ‘while awarding custody of ;. daughter Jadranka and son Bernard to, Ms. Gagnon, The children, ajl born in Canada, now are 12, eight and seven years old. Limited visiting privileges were also! granted and Dugandzic was with all three chikiren New Year’ 5 Day, wm. - ‘