Was teil gba asketiblen an alliance’ to sei Clark, a consiared the leader, in the’ race for the patty’s. top ‘spot. - “The report L sugdested | Mulroney js attempting to act lp an. * aurangemerit among: some anti-Clark candidates’ to unite on ie ez Hloor behind the man with the best hance of ; :-‘Mulrone ‘vom: . 0 beginning "Pocklington seta to ay “aie sapiens 3 eats ° havebeen made or Which tandidates have Boon involved or. ited in discussions, os of SShall we Bay that we've all talked: to ¢cnother ‘hat _ "goes on in every campaign; but 1 don’t’ congrete _ Healhesbeen mide” he anid ina sein . Edmonton: galled: the: story “a totel, abricatiod ~ Mulroney would give no further. détails. ' declined iinet t one + Wilson by phos _ “Veleviditia report that- Montreal candidate'} Briel Maloney. ve "BRANDON; Man. . cee the popularity of the’. Clit awepiboth urban and rural polls: about elght Progressive Conservative party in southwestern. Manitoba. soupt 200 to Moore. Mullally, second in 1960, Say Hed'one + is: hardito question: ‘after the landslide: win of history Prof.’ ‘pal with Ciark, es ‘ps 4 ee inthe Brandon-Souris federal byelection Tuesday. t. ae aa Betis 2 bee Uae aie aan) 2 Soon after the Pelle closed, it wasiclear Clark WAS headed ae Tes ‘Clark ae 19;299 voted, to Moore’s 6,61.) The ri race also was, Py ‘personel victaty. tor ¢ Clark, a soft-’ ~“wvith 5,405. In 1960,: Dinsdale had 16; . Spoken:Brandon: University academic and farmer, whose; : Ss about 4,400 behind and the NDE: > @tey bait makes him Jook older.than his 46 years. He proved’ 5 8,600. ~- doubters inside and outside his party wrong by taking over’, Clark battled widow Letiore’ ‘pinnae for the virtual fiefdom held by Walter Dinwiale for'SL years. " pordnation and in many waa that race was more’ until his death last{fall. - - -thatn the byelection, withroughly 3,000 party members and | “] think’ tonight's. victory was-b better than. ‘most of us onlookers. turning out: for @ massive nomination mee expected,” Clark naid.as he anderstated tlie devastation he; md ng ‘inflicted on his opposition in the three-party race. Second-place New Democrat Bill Moore, 42, edged ou Liberal lawyer Jon , lla, who was making hls. second | run at. the. sent 7 tandon when'‘he goes to Ola, at Teast until. the next eneral’ electlon. , 9 end” and promised to take “ approprite legal “action” against the network and ‘reporter ‘Mike Duff ye But _y Meanwhile, an organizer for Toronto MP. Michael Wilson : 2 confirmed that ‘Mulroyey tried. unsuccessfully: to: contact: a succeasiul; ‘The call ¥ oe h . . a ehtry into ‘Cénadian polities. He became: a | Cantidian citizen” " Pocklington si say: “whether Mulroney ‘nh con- oe fected him about an alllance but said he hams spoken to to. ; “the Montreal husinessman lately. | Mulroney attempted to ; Milton’ cy wife Margaret in: ‘Ottawa.’ See oes : thefore the election got under. ‘way, although he has lived : ft the area, for several years, =: is in the byelection, which ives th the Tories: 102 seats in ligment. The Liberals hold 47, there is one independent ; done seat remains-vacant.. : PMP Lorne Nystrom from the Saskatchewan riding % Yorkton-Melville. sald the results prove once again the ‘Peter ‘Smith, p° senior” adviser ‘to. Employment and I imigration Minister Lloyd Axworthy, said the results of ye byelection were disappointing and clearly. 2 protest vate. Lia “axworthy, an. ‘MP from. Winnipeg; is ‘the: only. western _ Canadian in the Liberal cabinet ant one.of two Liberal MPs * Fen of Ontario. : ‘The ther, Bol. Bocksteel,; ‘alto is from “smith th admitted the dismal Liberal vote ralses some ‘voters, including the 78 seats in‘Quebec. . . ae “Unless we address this fundamental political problem oe ae ef e OpE ee, ee peas gO iis told repstiers in Toronto that he got sone new support in his bid for the federal Progressive cma bani . . leadership among the Ontario Tory caucus, : Michael - Perik,: campaign manager for. Wilson, said © to\reach Wilson. Sunday. but was .un- was made by a. Mulroney’ sialfer fe “TY don't discuss what happens in caucus meetings,’ Clark sald! he following a onediour meeting with about Soo te 70 0" \ provinctal caucus members, “But I vould think I changed. _ some, minds and got. some ‘SUP : ty .,. =A Tory victory inthe next federal election should itot be: ed: taken for granted despite all the optimistic. predictions,— Mulroney: sald on a campaign stop.in North ‘Bay, Ont !The greatest myth go far in this leadership campaign Is.” that’ the PCs will form the ‘next: government," ‘There is no guatantee,”” ” “But earlier; he told party: ‘members there: ‘is no rea “Inystery toa Tory win. ‘The party needs to win a large chunk ‘of ‘thé 102 ridings with at least 10 per ‘cesit francophons ‘we will be the perpetual opposition: inne "=" Croshie renewed his promise to Jay ‘out a “national a economic plan of action 60 days after being elected prime’ i “minister that would include no reat increase ln government : ‘pending for the next four years. - , t r ait ee! . “KELOWNA, B: C. (CP) — A woman charged. “with: negligence in connection with dog attacks ~ onthrea people last. year wept in county,¢ourt . Tuesday as an-RCMP constable described how. - two of the woman's Rottweiler dogs lay _ obediently * in the: back “of a van while a ¢ veterinarian pave them: a lethal Injection. boa lee, . ein Cain ? ence Yollowing the incidents on April 19, Pr corre - and muchofhis scalp and Susan Tolnal andher — rad cold. oA ' young. son Paul, suffered severe bite wounds in attacks by the ge. EET gE oe The Mayerhofers are charged with ‘tes : vicious dogs to run.at large." °°" am PSN? QUR? : ae PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) — The fine is Lit andthe men working on the Table Tunnel. © ‘atride quickly to a small train to take them to asaoit safety. A few minutes later, a blast triggered - by 400 kilograms of dynamite sends a rush of “alr through the tunnel, ~The explosion knocks ‘out another 42 metres they" ve blasted thelr way through about:3,990 metres of the west aide of TableMountain since. they itarted last’ March and have ‘aboltt, 900" metres to Go. Four contractors: are currently working from, . _ opposite ends on two major: tunnels: for B.C. B,C. to the coast, Like. the ; other.” contractore, , Scarmar’ 's schedule, is tight. “We're supposed to he" done. “by: Aaly, 30. Look om. sure we'll meet ithe: _ Barbie and Igor | — were esiroyeitb by. the oe, 7 veterinarian, after the incidents, .” 7 Five other . Rottweilers. owned” by. ‘te Mayerhofers, were also destroyed: : ‘Grouetts. was - called: by defence lawyer . -Griffini Layne, who stressed in his questioning — | that the dogs were docile and obedient as they." went to thelr: deaths. _ : 3 Mayertoler, with her husband Man- . C ad with three counté of criminal _. ~ Barller: ATueainy,; veteran: dog-hander Tan” Hall of Surrey, B.C., described Rottweilers as a : “loving, affectlonate people dog; the: most People dog of any abreed Ihave worked with or” owned.” ys _ Hall, ‘a former RCMP sealor dog master snd a ‘acknowledged bythe Canadian Kennel Club as * @ Rottweiler expert, saida vicious Rottweiler.is-: wiped her eyes. ae°Const.-._” generally..one -that- has: been: made 60 by Vera Mayerhofer: ped bid . trainingio! dost. WO Ol qi. TheU RS Fayy at OW! ons faite triad continue wai 4 seat Pre “daar met Anhed algang an? Io jaom Bien oH “fae mon mune * Explosives experts move quickly. deadline, said Al Marr, who is in charge of the project ‘add has 1 years’ experience in the Dinkiess, _ , Most of Scarmar's employees have about 20 years’. ‘experience. in- tunnel building, said - project manager Bob Laakso, noting there is no ws ime for. training. ; a “of ‘Tobk, putting: tie employees ‘of ‘Searmar.:. ~ : -- Construction Ltd, a little closer to their goal... ‘They're also the best-paid. tunnellers in the coitntry; sald Ed Tremblay, head job steward - for Local 168 of the Rock and Tunnel Workers Union. Wages vary “somewhat, _ Whether employers, work during the day or “a $300 to #400 bonus for staff as long as they ‘perfect safety record in an eight-day period. . _ | Table Tunnel is the beat one he's ever: worked. Years. of. -ecipenlenee result in an efficient ’ operation. Scarmar set a new record earlier this month — 109.1 mietes in one week — topping -@ previdus mark of 107.6 set by another con: — ‘tractor. Another result is a low accident rate, _ hesald. So-far the most serious injury has been ‘a broken arm, . Railway's new Tumbler Ridge ‘Branch line, ~ -which will transport coal from. northeastern . _ and shoterete —-.a form of concrete on the _ ceiling — preventa rocks from falling on‘em- MA lot ‘of our. miner are looking forward to depending . on ’ ‘the Mayerhofers several ; years ago when they lived near: Mission,B AC, ..Hé'sald Manfred Mayerhofer described ‘how one of his dogs had jumped a fence and killed a - . _smeighbor’s cow, - -, Something, a Rottweller killing a cow”. “like | that. was really Under questioning from Crown. prosecutor “Jim. McClellan: and. defence lawyer Griffin - Layne, Hall said apart from being trained to do - ‘go, 8 Rottweiler. .might “attack if it. was unusually: ‘agaresaive, if -d fear’ " seent,”. believed to be given off by humans, ' was par- ticularly strong, or if another dog had incited -an-attack in which the Rottweller joined. He:eald more commonly, the dogs “Swill not “at aggressively or fiercely unless signalled or - ordered to, Anyone who walks on. ‘to the . ‘a property’ are: friends ‘as far a 85 the dogs) are _egncerned,?".: “a3, night, ‘but workers can earn $7,000. to $8,000 a . month groas. . ‘Scarmar,, which has 135 employees, also has reach a certain level of production and have a. Jim Shanahan, a 90-year veteran, says the in. The ventilation system. is excellent, he says, ployees. “When the blasting is completed, the tunnelers will remove all th equipmient and provide ballast, fo.ralla can be Installed. - changes in the Crow Rate so they can work on timnels for CN and CP. Rail," Laakso said. “There are a lot of good people here and val like ; "to gee them on aothes $902" ‘ " ‘ ’ ‘cepeern about H Axworthy's securlly. Sly ra aenae Rad anole BRIM tants ana enne natihe ral | When boating; learn about local - . tides and currents. The Canackin Red Cross Society follow the rules and * hazards.such as. in af ) PPA AMET segrenennan oe a Ba, — Police News " ‘Herald StatiWeiter = TERRACE— A Terrace resident is dead as a result ofa single vehicle accident May 21. Thomas Heintzman, age 36, dled in the accident that, _ occurred 16 kilometers west of Terrace on Highway 16. _ Two other people- were injured a and police a are still in- vestigating, . . _ DANCE F REVUE 3 “by the = — + Vick Pérvioinen “Dance Students FRIDAY, MAY 7- tome R E. M. ue THEATRE ‘Tickets available from. Students, Sight & Sound, call 635-2142, 635-2575 or at the door, . , "Adults °° aE Students: 2 0 Children & sr. i ; ie BRE aA Prison guards’ wives. seek security MONTREAL . ACP). Haunted by. the murder ot _ four prigon guards in a year, : wives , of federal: prison ~ guards in; Quebec - are _ banding together tofight for. “When the phone rings, -. more security for thelx men. we're afraid,” says Elizabeth Charbonneau, ~ president of | Penitentiary Spotises “When we hear’ on the - padio"or’ televidloa that:a- he. new - : ‘ Flot “mma ae Secay tad ib ay crowded, barely containing : ‘Asoctabing,” ra es fhe group was formed fast month after 28-year-old Serge Delorme was stabbed . - todeath by a chisel-wielding convict in the workshop of the: Archambault Institute, maximum-security - prison -just- north. of ‘Mon- treal where. three guards | ware alain in a riot last July %%, . f chapters _ for . | family Miembers: Gf guardi at 10 -guatd-has béen: killed and” , federal penal institutions fn 8! dot’t- new” who “tt 18,0 the pepvinge, es , knowing that our husbands - "The “re a eorie Wetee pitald.” ey wot fend yen neta | Tee sine sation Wii. wives”: want | “the ce. of” Canada to hire mare guards . ae and increase security measures inelde. prisons, ‘and they polnt to some grim: _ Statistica to back up their . fears, past five yearg -- to 114 last year from 33'Ih 1978; they say. And the. country’s 59 federal jails’ are over- the, prison, . population of 11,000" {omates, ' “The correctional staff of | ~ 10,000 has been cut by: 100, “while the ~ "number of © per. cent in five. years... The number of violent | . assaults against prison staff has more than tripled in the prisoners has increased 10 ‘Francine Nadead knows: the statistics and the: pain. aville prison’s paint shop, was bludgeoned to death by.. _@ convict eight years ago. ““'T would not like to be the wife ofa guard today,” she says. “Each time it hap- - pens, it burns me. “Why does it have to ~ RAppes. Again?” “The ‘women: cal the - “Saggin ng peso brings. bargains SEAM We rach load ainsi m Lage naa forarsees 65 MEXICO CITY. Ph The endigittg’ *Mealiden peso tias ‘heen good news for: Canadien touriats’ looldag: for' bargaln |: _ holidays ‘but bad} news: ‘tor Canadas ‘exporters walting for” *. paymenth:, a HAs With the dollar much more ‘expensive here, after three - devalgations of the-peso to-reduce It to one-sixth of its fornier value; and with a-foreign exchange scarelly wor- _ sened by falling.world off prices; total imports plummetted ‘and thode from. Canada fell to $448.8 million in 1962 tom- ‘pared:to a record high of $715.3 million Ini 1981, | ’ A further decline is expected this year. - -Hightechnology goods proved especially vulnerable,’ but ; ~ tendltional Items such as: milk powder, steel ‘Products and. __pewpprint wore alse bit. Meanwhile, Canadian imports from: Meco with oil - Hiv ant te meavsd Das a Pe 4 4 “collect from ‘customers who cannot, even offer: -penos, accounting for three-quarters of. total value, actually - -hni- ‘cheasediiast “year bo:$008:6 million, up trom 9974.4 million In * fom | eh na i ia . . : Canadian officials here stress that Mexico continues to provide a broad market for Canadian goods, but the protien lies tn obtaining payment, «Mea | bot A sytter iias not ‘heen’ devised for Canadians tovsell and get pald, ‘one. me sald. The market exlate but not the mechanism. : - Some Caadian | fins a are reluctait to accept t payment in pesos because of delays and losses in currency conversion, ‘while others face the more daunting problem of trying to Her’ husband, . Georges, - maffen trom “father of three ‘anda well- ‘liked: ‘Instructor. in the « medium-security “Cowan: - ’ stereatype ‘of the prison * guard as. ignorant,. brutal |. enforcers ‘and worry. about a the, stress. thelr ‘ husbands n the pressures of ; the job. -- fou have. to love. your - hus id a-lot,’’ says Nicole .- St. "Pierre, whose husband works at Cowansville. ‘‘If there isn’t enough love, you - the | can't ‘get. problema.” | The St. Pierre couple have switched to an unlisted over - telephione number because of. the constant threats [Nicole has received, and her husband has taught her how to use & gun. ” Dr, Jean-Paul Bedard, a - ‘Cowansville physician who has about 100 guards as __ patients, says the stress is manifested most commonly in brooding, depressions and - alcoholism. “About 00 per cent of the cases’ —'and I'm belng- conservative — are. stress problems,” says Bedard. ' “The guards are sickened, comipletely fed up, ready to ‘gay to hell with the job. “T advise them to look for . ” another job,” says Bedard. | “But because of thelr age, . thelr senlority, the social . security benefits, and the _, unemployment, they don’t,” a oat Our Bonus Plush Toy is a high quality soft:stuffed animal made of the finest plush fiber - just the right size for your jittleone. — COLOUR PORTRAIT | Woolworth - ONLY ss sc. “No additional charge for roups. Additional portraits, ands special ef effect portraiturs, if available, may be purchased at reasona alee Poses our selection. Satisfaction guaranteed or deposit cheerfully return . Plush animal available in various designs of our choice. | LIM aT - ONE. PER CUSTOMER - "shay 25th, “26th,, 27th & 22th = ~~. 4 ' 10am-5pm'- Wed. & Sat. . a - 10am-épm - Thurs. & Fri. 4647 Lokelee Ave., . Terrace, B.C.” _.. Terrace Mall,. ‘VEG 1R3 . oe oe ee a ‘