Cana de, 44 x 10 PARKWOOD — 2 bedroom = — jo Completely furnished | _ Meade fe : West of Skeena Forest Products, Hwy 16 Phone 685-6504 - ~ Terrace, BO. - Western Trailer Sales | se ERRACE HERALD Sem Tras th ya te Mh She Valo in Nerthennern Sciieh Coheut i” : » Page 7 ' Hitle Light Tuesday night, The Light will be shed on Knox & United Church following a request } by Rev, G.W, Reenleyalde, uo B Council asks = grant to heat , on the Provincial i trade school y Somebody has to heat the Voca- & tional School water tank and Mune icipal Counell will the heat vermment, Original plans for the tank fe were approved by Provincial pub= mee lic works department engineers without heating modifications. Past incidence of severe cold a Spells in the Terrace area, often as early in the yearas November m™ has now indicated aneedformod. } ifieations to the tank, s10 ne ‘job could cost a8 much as Municipal Council Tuesday dee cided to approach the Provincial Government for either all of the f costs involved, or at least pare : a tial participation, . The alternative to the modifi- cation job would be to drain the tank at the end of October and leave it empty throughout the winter. Councillor Jolliffe suggested Tuesday. that draining the tank ai night prove to be the most ace m ceptable answer to the problem, Main argument against drain- ing is the danger of fire occur ing at the site of the Vocational School during the winter. Without pressure from thetank, firefight- ing might prove difficult, - It wad pointed out however, that ‘a water outlet at the school would be continued, and the site would not be completely dry in the event instructed Clerke Administrator John Pousette to write to the Provincial Depart- 7 ‘To wn 1 sheds light Bon United Church — Terrace Municipal Councillors were, able: to shed & He recelved a . commitment from Municipal Council Tuesday | . fae night, despite the fact that such an “instalation was not included in this year's street lighting program, The -requést, via letter, was| i elven careful consideration when it was learnedthatapproximately 300 young people use United Church meeting hall facilities ‘| duxing the evening hours of each weak, Mr, Keonloyatde's letter point. ed out that lack of proper light- ing on Lazelle Avenue, west of Munro, ‘constitutes a threat to. thetr well-being.” Following a move to have more street lighting installed near the church, Council also decided to approach B,C, Hydro for a check | | of new streets in the community; watch as yet. are without mit. ation, ; B.C, Hydro will also be remind. ed of the need to check all orna= mental Ratisimas lights in the community in preparation for turneon during the second week in December, — People healthy, hospital sick BRALCRNE, B.C, (CP) —A modern 25-bed hospital in this small .community 110 miles northeast of Vancouver has clos | teri ed because there just aren't enough sick people to keep it in business, . The hospital had served about 1,000 people in this mining town and. the nearby ‘community of Goldbridge, but everybody is too healthy, The hospital lost $17, 000 last your and efforts to find | : a doctor willing to rick sett. ing up a ‘Dermanent practice! have ment of Publie Works andinform | failed, them regarding the situation, His letter will also request finanelal “coverage or assistance DINE, withthe 4642 Lazelle . : or . | Plan a a Party - CHINESE “FOOD T0.GO. RESTA RANT - Open Monday through Saturday, 10 am, to Tam Sunday, 1]Oam.toldpm - - Phone 635-6111 - Sick people —if there are any — will: now. travel 75 miles east to Lillooet, ; REN ts sseaneet ‘ara ah Phone 635-61 1 1 Terra A multt-milliondollar micro- wave radio transmission system has improved and expanded long distance telephone service the north coast and west-central ine or, Stan. Patterson, manager of B,C, Telephone Company's Tere race District, said the first com. mercial telephone traffic began moving October 25 across the microwave link from Terrace east to Houston, a distance of about 90 miles. -This . section, which. crosses the rugged Coast Mountain Range to be closed in the company’s $7 miilion microwave tranemis. sion system crossing. the 500- mile distance from Prince Hup. nan | ort to Prince George. Its completion brings agreatly increased” traffic capacity for present and future long distance telephone Hnks leading into and out from the region in which :| Prince Rupert, Terrace and Kit imat are the major centres., Patterson sald. the bulk of tele | ephone traffic into and out from this region and the Stewart area farther north now will be routed into’ provincial, national and ins ternational telephone networks throught this system which at Prince George connects with a tem: south to Kamloops, Hope and Vancouver. . ’ This traffic provigusly moyed over & coastal radio system from Prince Rupert through repeater stations in the Queen Charlotte, Trutch, Swindle, Calvert, Vans couver and Saltspring Islands to .| the Lower Mainland. The coastal system now will serve ad an alternate route for ip ‘| | Prince Rupertarea traffic, Patterson . said the Terrace. to-Houston leg of the new system was scheduled to be in service earlier. But complications inthe .{ erection of microwave towers at sites along the route, unfavorable weather conditions which delayed construction, and equipment de. livery difficulles set - back the program, @ce 8 . Construction of this section .of the system was one of the most difficultin B.C, Telephone’s microwave network, which now CASINGS, ETC. KALUM AND KEITH STREET - Northern Culverts a Metal Products Annoance THEIR NEW? PLANT OPEN IN TERRACE FOR THE. MANUFACTURE ¢ OF CORRUGATED, STEEL CULVERTS: oF. E ANY SIZE ALSO”. WATER, WELL... * : riextends over more than . 5,000 Phone 635. 6581 MICROWAVE RADIO REPEATER STATION atop Copper Mountaln: outside Terrace is 4 link in a new transmission system for long via tho’ Télkwa pags, was the last |- heay-route microwave radio sys«.- ‘on & yellow and black flatfish Wednesday, November 1, 1967 ~ Microwave link completed, will j improve distance calls route miles in British Columbia. Men, equipment and materials sites by helicopter since there was no other access, On Copper -|Mountain outside Terrace, the huge antennas for the tower were set in place by helicopter, ee @ At Zymoetz, the first repeater. station east of Copper Mountain, of the eompany’s$140,000 access road id fteaoc waters kn ed out a $20,000 bridge, leaving distance phone calls between Prinee Rupert, and vince < George. had to be carried to some of the. slide washed out several sections’ helicopter as the only means hy which workmen could get to the site to complete final installa- tons and carry out tests, Low-hanging made it impossible for the heli- copiers to get in, The link from Terrace to Houston goes through radio ree lay sites at Copper Zymootz and Telkwa, In the system from Prince Rupert to Prince ‘George there are 11 mae =|jor radio relay stations, most of them on mountain toes. , Kelly, the 20-year-old Vancouver girl who says winning the Miss ‘Canada beauty contest is *‘like getting hit in the head with a 100-pound bag of cement,’? has come home withsometalestotell after 75,000 miles of travel around the world. Miss Kelly, who won the title last November over 26 other regional beauty queens, will sur- render her crown in November of this year at the national pageant in Toronto, In the Interim, she'll do some more travelling —a pastime she has grown used to during the Cen- tennial Year. Miss Kelly was here for several days for the. will return permanently following the 1968 pageant, — Show tours with the. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation took her to one of the most north- id outposts inthe country, Alert ay north of the Arctic Circle, “It was cold, but before I lett Edmonton I was given a beautiful West coast salmon caught in Ontario WINDSOR, Ont. (OP) — A 7 coho salmon, the first reported caught outside lakes Michigan and Superior, was taken from Lake St, Clair In October. The coho salmon, brought from the Pacific coast, ‘were planted in Lake Michigan by the Michigan wildlife department in an attempt to restock the Great Lakea with salmon as a game fish, The echo was taken by Armand Letourneau while he was. trolling | for musk- ollunge, : . : . Beauty queen’ ‘5 life just a’ bag of cement © VANCOUVER (CP) Barbara’ | other girls entertained troops at Pasific National Exhibition and |. red lynx coat andhood,’’ she said, “The Eskimos were wonderiul — they gave us so many beautiful mementos, One gift, a carving, weighed 100 pounds and I don’t know if Pll ever get it back home,” Miss Kelly a sald she and four a base in the Alert Bay area, In direct contrast was another trip to New Delhi, India, where she saw Bengal tigers and spent | Hospital bazaar clears $1,000 The annual Hospital. Auxiliary Tea and Bazaar in September netied over $1000 for the. Ladies Auxiliary to Mills Memortal Hos- pital, = - The money is earmarked for hospital equipment ag in former years. “At the Auxiliary regular meet itig on October 16, total proceeds cessful," vice); (blender); Mrs, A.F, Olson, (enshton). and Mrs. RF, Ander. s0n (doll). support to: the event, ext meeting 7:p,m, in. Glm’s Restaurant. It will be the last meoting for 1967, ‘Anyone wishing to attend the meeting. is asked to contact Mrs, Andy Gwens at 685-5271, -no later than November Liye You'll Smile Tool | GROCERY © i) featuring « complete elation of ye MEATS ge GROCERIES te PRODUCE | a Thornhill When You Shop at). | HULL'S - THORNHILL * CONFECTIONS : a “Acton, Sra the The hill School. tae ve i Phone 635- 6624. : Grocery Ad, cloud frequently | days under the sweltering sun, were reported as $1,100 and the |i bazaar was termed “‘most suc= : Winners of bazaar rafiles were . Miss Alice Skoglund (tea ser. Mrs, RF, Robortson,|§ ‘The Auxillary has issueda vote | of thanks to the members of the community who gave such great |B of the Auxiliary |[ ‘ig’ scheduled for November 20 at a OTTAWA. OFFBEAT Conservative camp ike ; ‘Moscow when Stalin died’ - another young fellow worked ona” OTTAWA —What was it that made yesterday’s Conservative Opposition in the Commons under John Diefenbaker’s leadership so drastically different than today’s Tories under leader Robert. Stanfield? In his last two years or 50 as Opposition leader, even more han whenhe was Prime Minister, to be that in Com ong eferbaker . WAS inser vative party. He ruled with a rod of iron, The ultimate autocrat, he made all the decisions, Called all the Parliamentary shots, Asked all the key questions in the House, e @ «@ Now, overnight, the Conserva- tive party, at least in its Commons operations, belong to ALL the Tory MPs,-as much the property of the youngest back. bencher as of any of Stanfield’s designated lieutenants, . _ And, the Tories will tell you, it will be the same when Stan- field comes down out. of the Commons Galleries and onto the floor of the House to take charge of things, * - Just how startling has the change been? - *I¢ must have been something like this. in Moscow when Stalin died,’ cracked a veteran Con- servative MP the other day, - But. he didn’t say it maliciously, a certain degree of affection for the Old Chief as dictator often benevolent, sometimes male- volent, ; It was just that the Chief seem- ed to regard everybody else as |f & boy, he explained, ee ‘To Dief, even the late Presi- dent John’ Kennedy was a boy, And JGD in his mid-sixties: is generally assumed so to have treated JFK, then in his forties, ’ They had a wild clash on the issue of Canadian wheat sales to Red China, ‘The President; as thé tociner Prime Minister has told it, was ant that ““Canerder*’ for he still admires, even holds | I highly indignant would “dare’ to do business with “enamies’ of tha great U.S, And when the Prime Minister said he didn’t see it that way, the President toldhim he couldn’t| § - have the grain-loaders to put the Richmond man» to head CARS RICHMOND,’ B,C, (CP) — Douglas A, Kitson of Richmond has been appointed British Col- umbia co-ordinator for the Can- adian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, gripping action in slush and snow es DELIVERS DEPENDASLE TRACTION ALL SEASON . o Rusged closia end sharp biting elgee—for positive . ( ‘Dufsyn tread rubber—for extra mieage season after senson . o Tipe pl tegered rly nylon ard body fox extra etrength « Bult to tcrmmrate Goorea Toga Sty Spi a COODTLAR'S 0 LNT GUARANTEE On EVERY Tt YOU BY wheat * aboard the China-bound ships.. Who did ‘the hoy’ was, cried the Old Chief in utter disbelief, that he should dream he could get away with playing in|: ternational dog-In4he-inanger by denying Canada the use of the American-controlled mochanical loaders? Public — opinion — Canadian, world and even American — wouldn’t stand for.it, the Prime Minister told -off the President, and “‘the boy’ kunckled under, There was an aftermath tothat | taking historic: clash of course, with “the boy,” unforgiving of the “old man,”’ exacting subsequent retribution, To the Chief, with his 27years in federal and another 20 in pro- vinelal politics, almost every- body, Including most of the Con- servative MPs, was a “boy”, too The Chief, like Father, always knew best, _ And it: was ever that way, relates a Diefendichard who, at one time, worked with and for him in the defence in murder cases. ee @ *? was a young lawyer at the time,”? relates the MP, ‘and with LEATHER “COLORS — = -ALSo. a“. 4600 Larelle * think he | INTERIOR STATIONERY | IS FEATURING | SUCH AS MEN’S BUXTON WALLETS AND BILLFOLDS _ LADIES’ CLUTCH AND FRENCH PURSES — INA LARGE VARISTY OF STYLES AND - WRITING CASES AND SHOESHINE Kits. _. COME IN AND VIEW THE ABOVE ITEMS PLUS . OUR. LARGE SELECTION OF GIFTWARE. INTERIOR STATIONERY ease for Dief, 6 “He let us share in the direct _ cross-examination, even consul. ted us as to how to'plead the client, : “There was the opportunity to plead him guilty to manslaughter: on the evidences that he wasdrunk at the time of the killing, : ‘But .Dief said no, inferring we were only ‘boys? and didn’t know the legal odds in gambling before the bar. He.said he’d go for broke, pleading not guiltyand . thé . chance of Josing the, client to the hangman. . “tt was only the poor guy's neck he was betting, but as he sald, he knew the odds, and of course he won,” : . It was just that ‘the boys"? couldn't possibly know’ as much as the old man — andl they ‘didn't. So ‘tt was when te became the Chief.” The Tory “boys” couldn't know, and so he had to do almost everything himself, Or ‘80 he at believed, : - With his towering talent, it made for a great political show— but tremendous as it was, it was still a one-man act. And that’s the Tory difference, then and now, GOODS NEW SHIPMERIT OF - Phone 635-son