Raincoast Puppet Theatre _ at Lee Theatre Thursday > The Raineoast Puppet Theatre will present 4 public performance for children of all ages (especially the very young) at the R.E.M. Lee Theatre on Thursday, June first, starting at 7:20 p.m. Tickets will be available at the door- $2 for Adults and $1 ‘for children, The Raincoast Puppet Theatre performed, very successfully in Terrace last year, The performance is about an hour long followed by a very entertaining and interesting demonstration of the puppets. Children are invited on to the stage and get the chance to work the “puppets and improvise their own dialogue. The public performance is particularly suitable for the- very young: $ years and up. . several primary and in- termediate. schools have — invited the Raincoast Puppet Theatre to perform in their schools: Tuesday, May 30th, 9:15 am., Uplands Elementary ‘Rotarians elect officers ‘The Terrace Rotary Club installed a new slate of of- ficers for the 78-79 year at its annual banquet Saturday, May 27, in Terrace. The following were in- stalled -by Mr. Glen Reid, representative for the district 604 Governor; Pfesident- George Mostad, Vice-pres.- Keith Tucker Secretary- Michael Tindall Treasurer- Keith Welton Direetars- Willie Sehnieder, Al, Macalpine, Bill Kirby, Fred Hogg. Approximately 150 persons attended the dinner and dance that followed, Found body a mystery TEMPLE HILLS, Md. (AP) -~. Maryland State ‘ooper Herman Bethel got 1 skeptical response at first when he reported finding a body on the Washington Beltway early Friday. It was a ° 2.5-metre alligator, a victim of close encounters with several vehicles. Bethel says the dispatcher . didn’t belleve him at first when he called in to. report his discovery. Police were trying to find out where the alligator came from,' Calls to the National Zoo _and the Ringling Bros. and — Barnum and Bailey Circus, now appearing in the Washington ares, came up negalive, and police said nobody had called in to re- port a missing.alligator. HUNTINGTON, (AP) — The last surviving . child of Devil Anse Hatfield, patriarch of one of the combatant familles in the blondy feuds between the Hatfields and the McCoys, has joined his parents after.a 00-year life of fightin’ and J fun. E. Willis Wilson Hatfield died ina Huntington hospital Thureday night. His death followed a brief illness. Hatfield was the 12th of 13 children born to the in- famous clan chieftain and his wife, Levicy Chafin ‘Hatfield. He grew up in a log house on Main Island Creek in Logan County in southern | West Virginia, and until his death could recite tales of the 25-year feud between the two clans that claimed more - than 100 lives before the turn of the century, Two years ago, the Hat-. fields and McCoys officially buried the hatchet with a ceremonial picnic in Williamson. Joseph McCoy. attended and chatted with Willis Hatfield, who, as the only. son and oldest Hatfield present, acted as the titular head. of his clan, “] did some drinking with a couple of those McCoy boys ° one time,” Hatfield admitted once, “And you know what? - They were real good. fellers,” . His funeral will be Sunday afternoon at Logan, Burial will follow at the Hatfield Family Cemetery, near Sarah Ann. A life-aize statue -of Devil Anse overlooks the cemetery, The figure's back . is forever turned on the Kentucky side of the Tug Valley, home of the McCoys. . LONDON, (Reuter) — A London wine. bar which W.Va, - Patriarch refuses to serve women at the counter is not breaking Britain's sex discrimination law, a “Tuled Friday. The" ino Bar. in the heart of the British Capital's newspaper district, Fleet Street, serves women only if they sit at one of the tables at the back of the room. Journalist Sheila Gray spearheaded. an assault on what women’s liverationists see as an insulting bastion of male privilege by suing the “. bar for discrimination. But the fortress survived her onslaught when Judge Henry Ruttle said the rule gavel women from being ' - jostled and pushed ans was not against the 1975 sex law. BRISTOL, Pa, (AP) — Local police are on the trail . of & missing bridge last seen about one week. ago. So far investigators know little about the 1,500 pound, 09 2.5 metre bridge, that spanned a Delaware Canal sluice in this Bucks County 2. ERAS. mmunity ~ = 3 Cainty Parks Supervisor . Eugene Giza told police the discovered the structure missing during a routine inspection of Bristol's Grudny park on Tuesday. Police said the bridge was :- constructed from 19 beams Of lumber, They - .culated the thieves unbulted the structure and carried it away piece by piece. The bridge is worth about - $500 —- valuable information for anyone being offered a quaint, rustic bridge “wholesale. - _—_— God has created, only. one impossibility in His entire creation, possibility is that one cannot hate mankind if one really loves God. and that’ im- “11:00 a.m. Copper Mountain Elem. . 1:00 p.m. Parkside Elementary Wednesday, May 31, 9:15 am. Kiti K'Shan Primary 11:00 a.m. E.T, Kennev Prima ry 12:45 p.m.- Thornhill Primary 1:40 p.m.- Thornhill Elementary. ‘ e Suits out Oo an VANCOUVER (CP) — The ministry of consumer and corporate affairs has asked the British. . Columbia Supreme Court to stop a Vancouver woman from launching lawsuits. Valerie Doreen Morrow has started 11 separate court proceedings most for $1. million, against General Motors of Canada, the B.C. _Rentalsman and the Bank of -Montreal-atnong others. <7) The ministry asked the court Friday for a declaration thal Merrow has persistently startec “vexatious legal proceedings in the courts of British Columbia.” . It also asked for an order - to stop her from starting any further legal actions in a B.C. court without leave of the court. One of her claims, for $1 million against the Ren- talsman, was dismissed ‘Thursday in B.C. Supreme Court, She had claimed damages as the result of rent controls and inability to evict undesirable tenants, Other actions filed by Morrow included a4 $1 million claim against General Motors of Canada involying — a 18976 Cadillac Eldorade, © di rs ‘ee 1 . i ae . Teams . Musical Hand-saw - Musical Sheep Bells - Organ Music \ _ Quality Thursday - Friday - Saturday - q a THE MUSICAL SUDDARDS - One of Americas Finest Musical - Classical & Gospel Music - Appealing Music- ‘Unforgettable Sunday 11th Christ. 1832 N. Lahakas Blvd. KITIMAT, B.C. JUNE 8 8, 1978 to JUNE 11, 1978 STARTS STARTS DR. RICHARD HARVEY FT. MYERS, FLORIDA - Author of ''70 years of Miracles? - 2% years as Pastor ,* 12 years as District Superintandent - 5 years as Evangellst .« 1 year Acting Presiden’ Letour- neau Callege - Gne of ‘5 Founders of Youth for 11:00 am, EVANGELIST © 7:00 pm. COME EARLY - WE EXPECT A CROWD i WASHINGTON (AP) - Gerald Ford had come folks ‘in for coffee the other morning. There were about. 60 reporters, cameras and erews from the television networks and assorted members of the cabinet and staff that served him in the White House, And if he is not gearing up torun for president agaimin _ 1980, he gives a good imitation. The affair was billed as a press coffee at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, the foundation that is Ford's current Washington base, There was a lot more press than coffee. “ The former president did not have a sip. He was too busy answering questions. Polictics, foreign policy, inflation, more politics. Coincidentally, this was one day after the pulication of a Louis Harris pol] that showed Ford leading President Carter, 43 percent to 43 percent, if the 1930 presidential election were fo be held now. Would that: impel him to run again? “Thaven't really though of that poll in that context,” Ford said, “...’ve never thought polls were that critical. “So we'll just wait and see," Besides, as Ford used to say when Carter was out- distancing him in the 1976 public opinion polls, the only one that counts is the one on election day. In that ane, Democrat Carter percentage points, . There is a school of thought that holds Ford, might not be inclined to give up the good life of Palm Springs, the celebrity golf circuit, part-time politic: and lecturing to return to the rigors of running-unless Ronald Reagan is a 180 candidate for the Republican nomination. Reagan is not saying, either. The same Harris poll showed Reagan and Carter about even in a hypothetical 1980 contest. beat: Republican Ford by three | Ford said he will make his decision about 1980 in a year, . perhaps a year and a half. Whenever _ Reagan = Is asked, he says pretty much the same thing. But a good many people are, and it is hard to believe that Ford and Reagan are not among them. Ford, now 64, and Reagan, at 67, will havea best one more chance to rin, and even now they may have trouble with the political generation gap. A younger crop of Republicans THE HERALD, Tuesday, May 30, 1978, PAGE 9 Gerry looks like he’s runzing already is suggesting that both of them should stand aside for a new generation of prospects, Beyond that, there is the fact that a rematch between them would ignite again the GOP ideological strife that has been characteristic of the party for years. John Deardourff, a eampaign consultant who worked for Ford in 1976, suggests in the new magazine Public Opinion that the Republican Party machinery is in such con- servative hands that there is only a remote possibility a. moderate candidate cdn be nominated in 1990. « BRAZIL - IS BROTHER Nearly half of South America is covered by Brazil, which borders every South American state except Chile and Equador. Kingfisher North Development " KINGFISHER AVENUE" 17 Lots only, located at Margetts Street. A prestigious Development with full. underground services and its own Parkland, in a quiet secluded area near the Golf Course. Alexander Elementary School is just across the street. Various size lots, very reasonable priced. Bank financing available. FOR INFORMATION PLEASE GALL ANGLO VEN ENTERPRISES LTD. after hours 632-7566 632-4334 1977 GMC VAN % Tps.. pb. . auto, radio, super clean $5800 1976 CHEVY TRUCK % T PU, p.s., p.b., 2-tone groen H.B., 2 tanks 1975 FORD P.U; % T Ranger XLT, p.s., p.b., 2-ione, radio on $4950 : va FORD P.U. ¥a T Camper Sp., autd, p.., pb. radio $4650 1977 ASTRE Low mileage, auto, 4 cyl, radio, super clean $3650 1975 OLDS CUTLASS 2dr, HoT. ps8 peb, radio $3950 1974 MERC BOBCAT 3 dr. Runabout, auto, radio, ‘clean $3150 (Ideal second vehicle) 1974 SCAMP. 2 dr. H.T., 6 cyl, ps. pds, radio $3195 CHEVROLET co PONTIAG BUICK — Terrace, B.C. Jim N McEwan | BIG: