AUTOMOBILES: For Sale: 1970 Monte Carlo V-5, auto, P.S., P.B., radio. Phone after 6 p.m. at 635- 5508. (p5-22) WIA GMC % ton 4x4. 636-1098 after 6 p.m. For Sala: 1973 Road Runner Codge, Excellent conditlon. Phone 635-3432, For Sale: 1968 Vauxhall. $300 firm, Phone 635-2080. (pld- Fs) For Sale: Exceptionally clean 1977 Plymouth Volare Station Wagon. 38,000 miles. Al condiflon in and ovt. Power brakes, steering. Vé ‘gutoematic, radio, two ‘ speakers. Diego Alcaraset, ‘Room 272, Lakelse Motor - fon Pins 638-814). (c14-21) MUST SELL - LEAVING TOWN 979 Ford Courier P.U. Any reatonable offer accepted. _ Phone 635-5639 eves. (p5-21) 1959 GMC Panel. 1972 motor * 990.. 4 spd. trans, 1 fon qearend, 635-4332. (p3-19) Must sell, owner = iran- tferred. One 1976 Camero Rally Sport LT. Loaded. One hundred gallon Tidy Tank. Phone 635-4297. (p3-19} Car for Sale. Musi sell. 1973 Caltea. Low mileage in exceltent condition. 638-1267. For Sate: 1972 Ford Ran- chwagon, PS, PB, V4, auto. Good comiition: 36,000 miles. Asking $1,600.00 Phone 636- 1455 1976 Dodge Tradesman Van 700. P.B.. °.5.. Insulated panel, chrome sidepipes, 318 ec, $4000 firm. Tel. 635-7025. 1970 Pontlac 4 dr. 350 cu, In. P.S., P.B.. - $975. 1974 Mercury Bobcat - $1195. 1972 Toyota Corolla - $975. Rosh Enterprises Auto Sales. DL No. 021934. AAT Trackers on 15x10 CON rims, GM-Chev, Phone 635- * ona (ctf) 58. MOBILE . HOMES. For. Sale: 3 Sth wheel tyaller, presently sel up and akirted. Has lots of extras. Phone 635-2652. (p5-21) Fer Rent: 3 bedroom 12x68 traller on private lot. Inquire ‘Gon 205, New Hazelton, B.C. €;2-20) For Sate by Owner: 2 berm. mobile home with 845 ad- dition with 1 bdrm. & Ashley wood heater. New oil fur- nace, drilled well, fruit trees & Jawns. Lot 60x200. Phone 435-5458, (10-22) For Sale: 1973 two hdrm. Embassy trailer. Fully furnished, washer & dryer, joey shack. Call after 6 p.m. * 635-6750. (p10-27) For Sale: 12x56 two bdrm. Knight trailer. Lecaied on 1158150 ft. lot. Fully fenced and landscaped, has garden, greenhouse and garage. Phone 635-5595. (pt0-21) For Sale: 1971 Glendale tratler. Fulty furnished, in @icallent shape, on 2 acre fread & landscaped lot, with work shop, joey shack & wood shed. Must be seen to be appreciated. Must sell. _e. Phone 638-8224, (p5- Fer Sale - 1972 3-2 bedroom traller. depending. Franklin fire place, unfurnished, Completed 4’ x 18’ carpeted addition. Located in Thor- mbit. Price $6,500. Call 635- 50%, or 633-2455. Rent or Purchase 1972 12x69 Paramont house trailer wiih fireplace near stores and sthoots, on- private lot. Rent $255. per month with option 4e buy or purchase $9,500 apen to offers. Will carry second morgage if nec. Phone 112-762-4472. 9 Write doe Rorke, Gen Del, Win- id, B.C. fet) MOBILE HOMES New mobile homes from as low as $100.00 down. A.C, Phone collect 591-5105: (ctf Frontler motorhome. Full bathroom with tuk. TV hookup, winter windows. New tires, C.B., radio. Excellent condition. wo 27’ Phone 635-6011. 66. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES - 1974 Vanguard 17’ trailer. Sleeps | slx, fridge, stove. lollet, Very goad condiilon. $3,500 or nearest offer. 632- 7719, (c5-27) For Sale: Fully camperized GMC walk-in van. Includes stereo, stove, J-way fridge. furnace, tollei, shower, hot water healer-pump. New motor & irans, Must be seen. 109-3530 Kalum St. Phone 695.4032 after 6 p.m. (c3-19) For Sale: 8° camper with icebox, 3 burner stove, furnace, jacks. Phone 635- 5826 afler 5 p.m. (p13-19) 1978 Vanguard 27 ft. trailer. Features separate bedroom. Reduced to clear at Cam- perland. Phone 635-6174. Dealer Licence DOO6TIA. (c5- 20) - For Sale or Trade: 1975 Security, G.M.C, chassis, 18 ft. Motor Home priced ta sell, Offers considered or . will trade motor home on house to purchase. Please phone 635-3211. 6 1 SERVICES — Knee deep In figures? Let me help you. No set of baoks #00 small. Bookkeeping to trial balance. 635-3166 or 635-7002. (c5-22) “<2 TENDERS Invitation to Tender Sealed Tenders, marked Re-roofing and Flashing, Terrace, B.C. No. 94-13 for Minisiry of Highways Garage will be recelvedup io 3:00 p.m. local time the 2nd day of October 1978, and those available ai thal lime will be opened in public at British Columbia Bulldings Corporation, 4827 Keith Ave. Terrace, B.C. VaG 1K7, Tendering documents may be obtained at the above address after 9:00 a.m. on ihe 15th day of September 976, Tenders must be filed on the forms provided, in sealed, clearly’ marked envelopes. The lowest or any Tender will nai necessarily be ac- cepled, {A2-20} Recreation Leader - Part time, $5.00 per hr. Pre School Teachers - Must be qualified with certificate Substituie Teacher - Stewart area. Handicrafts instructors - 3 Positions. To teach mentally handicapped adults. $138 per wk. Mobile Ilydraulic Instructor -6 yrs. experience in mobile and industrial hydraulics. 4 Registered Nurses - for hospital, shift work involved. Various slations available Including ICU, medical- surgical and general duties. Secretary-Sterographer - ci] wpm, must have 2-3 yrs. experience. 50 wpm Lyping, diclaphone and shorthand. $764 per mu. Luans Clerk - 45 wpm typing. $675 per mo. Desk Clerk - Reception, switehboard, front desk duties. $4.15 per hr. Insurance Clerk - Must be able to deal with the public. $600 - $650 per mo. ' Salesman Experience preferred. Must be familiar with building trade, have vwn transportation. Cook - Chinese. $1000 per mo. Cook - Must be mature and reliable with sume related experience, Wages negotiable. Pizza Cook - Mature, clean cut persun. Experience not necessary. $3.75 per hr. DOE. Neg. Two positions. Head Cook ~ Must be well experienced and able to y Supervise. $4100 - $1300 per | mu. Required Several Walters & Waitresses - ln Terrace. Full and part dime jobs. Required Several Babysituers & Housckeepers - In Terrace. Full and part lime jul. Kitchen helper - $3.25 - $4 per r. Shudder Operator - Must have at least 2 yrs. exp. $9.01 - $4.51 per hr, Shingle Sawyer - Fully ex- perienced only. $5 per sq. Sheet Metal Warker - Musi be experienced. Apprentice wilh 2 or hiure yrs. ex. perience would he ae- ceptable. Uniad wage. 2 posiliuns. The run ir One of nature's great mysteries delectable sockeye. And the most is beginning to unfold in B.C. It’s famous of the river’s many soc- one that becomes highly visible in keye races is the Adams River run. ; . its last dramatic stages. The salmon are running. eo n - . om birth to de Beginning about Oct. 7, the And in their relentless drive ta salmon will arrive in the Adams reach their home spawning River, TOURISTALK FROM TOURISM BRITISH COLUMBIA east of Kamloops, after grounds, they just may push their their 480-kitometre journey from way a few—and sometimes dif- the ocean up the Fraser and ficult-—kilometres upa river from Thompson rivers to the Shuswap. the sea, or, if they are sockeye or On their way, they will leap chinooks, battle incredible dis- rapids, get help from fish ladders tances up (hrough watersheds, as that parallel canyons, and battle far as 1,600 kilometres inland. -currents fo relurn to the place Salmon, B.C.'s most fas-°where they were bom. . cinating natural resource, has at+ To mark the event, the Interna- short life but great strength. It is tional Salmon Commission will mysterious in its ways and hides set upa display along the banks of from us most of its life-—until, in the Adams River from Oct. 7 to the last phase of its life cyels,.it Oct. 22, to show the salmon life migrates from the sea's deep cycle to the anticipaled 100,000 reaches to powerits way up rapids and over falls to the freshwater shallows of its birth. Here il will spawn and then die. You can witness this ever-fas- cinating spectacle. During late summer and right up into De- cember spawning salmon can be viewed in a number of rivets and streams accessible by road. This year it so happens that the famous Adams River sockeye run will be a major one, because it has a cycle of peaking every four years. The Fraser River is the greatest salmon rives of North America. It boasts all of B.C.‘s five salmon species—sockeye, pink, chi- nook, coho and chum. The most renowned Fraser Salmon is the people who will visit the spawn- ing grounds during this time. The display includes film shows, illustrated panels and live-fish tanks. A monument to Roderick Haig-Brown, noted B.C. conservationist and writer, will be unveiled on the site during the display. If you witness this spawning, note that the males develop a humped back and a -sharply- hooked nose, while the females retain their natural shape. Both sexes tum from a normal blue- tinged silver color to brilliant crimson. Some spawning grounds are easy to reach: the coho and chum on Goldstream River, just outside Greater Victoria and off Highway 1 on Vancouver Island. The sal- mon usually arrive about mid- October and may be seen about seven weeks. During that tinue, it seems, half of Victoria's population is at Goldstream Park on some days, fining the river banks in an in- tently-hushed watch. To avoid scaring the salmon, everyone re- mains silent when the urge is to yell out encouragement as the bruised fish struggle up the last stretches and balile each other for choice places on the spawning gravel. ‘ Goldstream is just one of many smaller spawning grounds. Its most numerous species is the chum, with more than 7,000 during a normal run. They are the last of the five salmon species to enter freshwater, and, except for some summer runs in northem B.C, streams, they . generally spawn in late fall. Spawning grounds are only in the lower tributaries along the coast, rarely more than 150 kitometres inland, Chum fey, like those of pink salmon, go directly to sea afler they emerge from the incubation period in gravel beds. Chums are easily distinguished on spawning grounds from other Chamber criticizes labour HALIFAX (CP) -- Harold Crosby, retiring president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, criticized labor ‘tuday, saying unawareness, selfishness and opportunism were behind their demands for excessive wages in recent years. The Halifax accountant, in his wind-up speech to the annual convention after a year as president, also blamed high civil service salaries and public demands for government services for adding to he tax burden and aggravating inflation. He will be succeeded as president by David Braide of Toronto, a vice-president of Canadian Industries Lid. - Crosby alsy said he per- ceives a new willingness by + 10 die in crash | CAIRO (AFP) Ten persons were burned iu death on the Cairo- Alexandria Highway on Saturday when a tanker ‘Manpower Job Opportunities Refrigeration Mechanic - Experienced. Union wage. Cabinet Refinisher —- Refinishing TY & home entertainment system cabinets. $5.50 - $6.50 per br. Shue Repairman - Must be fully qualified. $800 per mu. DOE. Heavy Dary ‘Truck Mechanic - Must have diesel ex- perience, $9.81 per hr, Body Kepairman qualified with Td. Construction Efectrician Terrace, Musi be fully qualified. Union rate. Maintenance Warkers - Previous experience preferred. §6 per hr. Composing Room Foreman - Must be j uurneyman or have 4 yrs. experience. TBAA. Typeseuer - Must have keyboarding or pasic-up experience. Min, 44 WPM lyping. $4 per hr. Pressman - Must have 4 yrs, plus experience. $6 per hr. Fully Canadians tu “live within cur means, to pruduce more before we demand more, to keep our expectations within rational limits.” But much of his speech was a tough criticism of labur which he said created a high-wage structure -thal was nol matched by higher productivity and hurt the competitiveness of industry. He said the worker may be unaware of the connection between his wage increase and the economic cun- sequences thal fullow. “Often the workers know only too well thal they havea , strong position, andthal they can pel a wage increase at the expense of sume weaker gruup in sociely.” truck luaded with aviation fuel swerved lo aveid a guat, bounced ulf a lamp pust and cullided with a taxi. All the occupants of the taxi died in the ensuing explosion and fire. The truck driver, who jumped to safely, was arrested. 65 KILLED MAPUTO, Mozambique (AP) — A truck carrying dozens of farm workers overturned and plunged into an irrigation canal, killing 65 of them and injuring 11 others. Crusby said (he problem was worse in the public service ‘where workers see a bottomless well uf money in the form uf taxpayers’ dollars, and where they often have a very strong pusitiun in an essential service.” - He said the answer to the problem uf excessive wage demands is a. change of - altitude, “We need to learn tu live within auf means, both in our direct expenditures and in the ones we cause indirectly through our demands on our employers. and uur govern- mens.” Canadians must abandon the philosophy of sumething- fornothing and realize thal a goud standard of living has tv be earned, sol demanded, Crosby said. : Tex( uf his speech was re- ’ leased in advance: ~~ NEED A NEW HOME NOW? MUNDAY HOMES didn't ge! io be No, 1 by being second bes! See our money Saving ad on page 2. decor, collect. MOBILE HOME IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TO YOUR LOCATION are now available on our lovely 14 wide and dovbtewide mobile homes. You choose your and we custom build to suit. Government grant of $2500 applicable. Expense paid fare Vancouver - return, For free credit check and approval! please phone Parker Homes of Canada Ltd. 935-5447 Terrace/Kitimat Daily Herald KITIMAT Carriers Needed | ON THESE ROUTES Lahakas Swallow Cable Car Quail Saquenay Swan Starling EARN EXTRA MONEY WIN SUPER PRIZES Phone 632-2747 or 635 -6357 salmon by the distinct dark verti- cal bars along their sides. Colors range from blacks and grays to a teddish hue in the advanced stages of spawning. Males de- velop a sharply-hooked nose thal - exposes their large dog-like teeth that are used to tear chunks out of other males invading their spawning territory. In Goldstream, coho are not as numerous aschum, reaching upto 1,000 during a goad year. And they are not as obvious. Being shy and secretive, they hide beneath logs and overhanging banks.. Their colors, however, are more distinctive than the chum. The males turn cherry red, more so than the females. _ In contrast to other salmon fry, which either go straight back to the sea or linger for one to three years in lakes and other rivers, young coho remain in their spawning stream for a full year after emerging from the gravel. Watch for little fish with bright orange tails swimming around Terrace/Kitimat quiet pools. These are the shit’. vivors from last year’s spawn. Not easily seen in B.C. are chinooks, the largest and longest living of the salmon, and the most unpredictable in their patterns. When they begin their spawning runs—duting almost any month, though they usually prefer the spring and fall—they choose wide, deep rivers. Chinooks may spawn only a few kilometres inland, or they may travel as far as 1,600 kilometres, right back into the Rockies. Mature chincoks can range in age from three toseven years. The majority are four to five years old when they retum to spawn, and range in weight from 5 to 23 kilograms. At Goldstream, smaller chinooks :weighing no more than 10 kilograms can actu- ally be seen spawning. Watch for large, dark fish with black spots on their body. « Pink saliton, which live only two years and have a relatively simple life cycle, leave the ocean in the late summer and fal] and usually spawn in streams not fed by lakes, a short distance from the sea. Their ocean growth is re- markably rapid, with average weights ranging from 1.3 to 2.6 kilograms at maturity. - DAILY HERALD ath B2ise On the spawning grounds the males develop an extremely humped back. Both sexes change color from bright ocean-silver to: pale gray on the back with a yellowish white belly, In contrast. to the seckeyes’ vivid red, the sombre gray of the pinks’ on the spawning grounds are difficult to see, as they blend with the stream colors. . Following are spawning suns on rivers easily ‘accessible by road, with dates béing approxi- mate peaks of the spawning period: now to Sept. 30, sockeye, Fulton River, Bums Lakes area; now to Sept. 30, sockeye, - Lakelse River, Terrace; Sept. 15 to Oct. 1, sockeye, Stellake . River, Francois Lake area; Oct. 15 to Oct. 25, sockeye, Weaver Creek, Harrison; Oct. 15 to Oct.. 31, sockeye, Adams River, South: Thompson; Nov. 10 to Dec. 10, chums, ‘Cheakamus River,” Squamish; and Nov. 20 to Dec# icum Beach. For further information’ ‘on’ these and other runs, check with | your local Fish and Wildlife branches or with the federal gov- emment’s Fisheries Service, 1090 West Pender Street, Van- couver, (112) 666-1384. CUT OUT & MAIL iW Have The Paper Delivered To Your Door Daily aR aaleeetes ene ix wef on e 7 cr ae es 0.0.00 sh Satetas eeeeleleneteeiears | DIAL-AN-ORDER 632-3483 & BS TERRACE: VETERINARY CENTRE = 635-3300 | # SKOGLUND met We’r rant anata eta ate! acerecere Loree ee, scans sie setae PaPat a aman ataratataratat tata a" Here! euteTeteroratevatatas's"AZS7E74! SCE MSIE i# you wish your Business Phone listed for your customers please call SHH RN Se CNew..Bus Tilaakad ww ava s "a "ot listed B.C. Tel Directory. AURORA ANIMAL HOSPITAL - 635-2040 OLI'S PLACE - 798-2231 L is te d PETS BEAUTIFUL. 635-9251 Free - for ONE month courtesy of THE DAILY HERALD — se ceCAcHe anata A recatetetec ores Two Evenings HOTSPRINGS - waleteTstererete’ ones alea! —_— EB in our SSO a sO ‘AUCTION SALE Wednesday and Thursday . Sept. 20 and 21, at 7:30 p.m. Thornhill Community Centre Wide selection of household furnishings, 14” drill press, bench grinder, dresser, chest of drawers, box springs and mattresses, TV’s and stereos, pots and pans, a grandfather clock, fridge and stove, lamps, dishes, clocks, armchairs, pottery, a wardrobe, jug and bowl sets, china cabinets, piano, piano stools, pinball machine, wingback chairs, 2 ald chesterfields, and A SMALL COIN COLLECTION WITH 100 DOLLAR GOLD PIECE. A large selection of new tools and many more too numerous to mention. Consignments welcomed day of sale. Sale is subject to additions and deletions. 10, chums, Big Qualicum, Qua’ a te es ae Tal ar m