Seba te | eE accommodation ‘grade 12 or related ex- perience... gay Senurity 1; manent parttime. Accurate -. Job opportunities .. Further defaifs on the Cook - $3.00 hour. Terrace. following jobs are tor be Cooking and some clean-up. obtained by calling the Shift work. . Terrace office of the Canada Employn.ant Centre at 635- Baker - $7.00 per hour to 4, start. Terrace. Permanent Millwright - TWA ‘rate. © full time. Must have ex- Terrace, Permanent full perience. . time. General duties in local, . mill -'‘shift work involved. Heavy Duty Mechanic - $10.51 hour. — Terrace, General Office Clerk - DOE Temporary full time (2 $3.50 hour. Terrace, Per- months). Certified HD manent full time. Invoicing Mechanic Heavy Equipmegt a cardex inventory repair. ‘ system. Accurate typing. - : . Radiator Repairman - ist Aid Attendent - $4.35 hr. Negotlable salary DOE. Terrace. Must haveB ticket. Terrace. Permanent - full Auto Body Repairman - $4.00 time. Must have experience ‘ or related radiator ex- hevman Experience in Perience. |. Some light metal and light collision Mechanic work. repairs Registered Nurse - Cline - Waiter-Waltress - $3.00 hr. %5.50hour. Terrace, On call Terrace. Must be mature only - for relief and for and responsible, emergencies, To assist in - 7 : a Manager-Suprv. - Stereo Dept. DOE. Permanent full Computer Operator - $850 - time, Must have retail sales $1200 mo. DOE. Terrace. experience knowledgable Permanent fulltime. Must about stereo equipment, . be experienced on IBM Musthavegood - System 32 - Must be IBM ‘management skills, trained. Operate 3741 . Keypunch. Clerical Assistant - $5.23 hr. ; Terrace. 50 wpm typing, Advertising Salesperson - filing, photocopying, minute- Negotlable. Terrace. Must taking, mail, shorthand dicta be fully experienced. Must preferred, Typing teat tobe have own transportation. given, Must be able to work in- dependently. Composing Room Foreman - Negotiable. Terrace. Must Cocktall Waltress - $4.25 hr. be journeyman of 4 years DOE, Must be 19, mature experience.: Must have and reliable, thorough: knowledge of all equipment. Must be able to Construction Labour - $4.00 do minor maintenance and hr. Terrace. Gwn transport some repair." - and asse. Some building Carpenters - DOE union experience preferred, wage. Dawson Creek. No Short Order Cook - DOE. supplied, Terrace. Permanent full- time job. Expelence Grader Operator - preferred but will train, Negotiable, Must -have Must have own tran- logging and road building sportatlon. construction experience. : Sales Clerk - $3.50 hr. DOE. Terrace. Permanent part- time. Must be mature. Handling cash sales. Ex- perience preferred. Plumber - Union wage. Kamloops. Must be jour- meyman or experience. Stenographer - $6.62 hr. . Terrace. Musthave50 wpm. General Office Clerk- Dictaphone, Must have - Bookkeeping - $410 - $450 month. Terrace. Per- clearance, regia » typing, .-.-Bookkeeping, + Widoatd wth coe TLE RE havald ereita payroll: filing, :reception.-: :, . Experience required. Shift work. Cook pizza's, meq steaks, ete. Associate Dental Surgeon - : Fee for Service. Must have Chambermaid - §3.75 hr. —s min. of 3 years experience as Terrace. jmust have some dental surgeon with 5.C. experience. Shift work. Licence, Executive Secretary - $1,000 Registered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace. Typing 60 month, Terrace, Care of wpm, filing, transcribing, patients in ICU maintenance shorthand month end o equipment. Responsible reports, exp with public. .to head nurse. Shift work 4 percent VP. Room and Apprentice Baker + $3.50 hr. . Port McNeil. 2 mo, {card Provided at cost. probation period. No €X- walter-Waltress - $3.50 hr, perience necessary, Terrace, Min, 19 years, Able to handle cash, Ex- Clerk-Typist - $9,400 year. perience not essential, Terrace, 4 W.p.M. preferred, ‘ Security Guard - $4.50 hr. Stenographer - $9,170 an- ‘Terrace, Must have D,L. rum, Terrace. Must have fixed shift, transportation dictaphone experience. available from town, Ex- Typing 40 wpm. Short hand perience preferred. not necessary, - Carpenter - TBA. Terrace. Stand Tenders - 100.00 acre. win. 1 year experience Must have 3-6 mo. eX- required. Must have own perience and have own tggls, medium chainsaw, Must . have own har 1 18 Plumber - $12.00 hr. padding, steel toe boots. errace. Must be fully Own transportatlon. Good experienced. Must have own stand tender should be able transportation. to clear 1 acre a day. Apprentice Baker - $4.00 hr. Housekeeper - $3.50 hr. tg start, Terrace, Need Terrace, .Housecleaning drivers licence, Hot work duties. Prepare supper. and heavy lifting involved. Babysitter - $6.00 day. TO myraftsperson - DOE. care for 1-4 year old child. - Terrace. Must have some Will involve feeding supper experience as a draftsperson and putting to bed. Tem- for a legal survey and porary position. engineering practice. Pizza Cook - $3.75 br. Babysitter and Light Terrace. Must have some Housekeeping Duties - Terrace Singles Club- | Having fun together by Olive Slacke, president Terrace Singles Club Terrace Singles Club (formerly the’ Minus One) will hold thelr monthly dance-soclal on July 22 at the Masonic Hall, 4917 Lazelle, atr 9 p.m. For those who are not familiar with these clubs, [ would like to explain their function. First, the name single parents, which is included in some clubs, does not imply that those who have never been married or have no children may not join. In small areas we may not have enough parents anyway. These people felt a com: mon bond with their problems of rearing children on thelr own and trying to get help where they could in the large cities. A widowed or divorced person usually felt out of place, so they decided to form their own clubs, There are large clubs of the two and three hundred members, such as Prince George, New Westminster and Van- couver, to mention a few. If you are shy and can't venture in on your own, call one of these members and we will see that you are met or picked up the firat time: Peggy at 638-1093, Olive at 635-4952, Margaret at 635- 9349, Bob at 635-9849, or Lowell at 635-2594, in Terrace, or Eric in Kitimat at 632-2594, Your membership card entitles you te attend func- tions in any city when you are travelling, at a mem- bership fee instead of the higher non-membership ce, This is a Canada-wide organization which has yearly conferences each year, If there is a sizeable group of young children family- 15 appear on grass charges | VICTORIA CP - Fifteen men were scheduled to appear in Victoria provincial court today on charges of con- spiracy to traffic in Tergect sets oon the est seizure of the drug in Canadian history. Meanwhile, RCMP were continuing to search the rugged shore along Shelter Infet, 32 kilometres nor- thwest of Tofino on the west coast of Vancouver Island, for more drugs. Police seized between 15 and 18 tons of marijuana, believed to be a high grade Colombian variety and estimated to be worth about $29 million, RCMP Superintendent Scotty Gardiner said that as- police converged on two ships being used in the operation, the men aboard dumped rifles overboard and may also have dumped additional drugs, “It is certainly possible that drugs were thrown overboard as our officers closed in,” he said, __“We know the rifles were ditched because some of them were in plastic bags and they floated to the tops. But almost anything could | havebeen thrown over at the last minute. “Anything isn't going to go very far, 80 we're concentrating our immediate search along the coastline."’ Police are still searching the two ships trapped in Saturday’s dawn raid con- ducted by 50 RCMP officers Ferry walkout halts sailing WEST VANCOUVER (CP) — Ferry passengers faced waits of up to 4 1-2 hours Monday after the crew of the Queen of Coquitlam. walked off the job before the 2:30 p.m. sailing. : The 32 workers com- plained that the ferries are understaffed and overloaded and that the British Columbia Fzrries Corp. is showing complete disregard for its employees. The ferry left for Nanaimo, B.C. following a meeting between the B.C. Labor Relations Board and the B.C, Ferry and Marine Workers Union. Traffic at Horseshoe Bay was backed up more than two kilometres. A hearing was scheduled for today in Vancouver to review the union’s com- plaints. SAYS DISPUTE MINOR E J. Bentley, a spokesman for the ferry corporation, said the dispute was minor and involved the corporation's critical ap- praisal of an employee's work, He refused to: elaborate. Union spokesman Bob Peacock accused the cor- poration of trying to diffuse the issue. “It’s not a small dispute,"’ he said. “It could domino into a full-scale strike.” He said the work stoppage was the culmination of months of frustration with management over staffing and safety issues and management's disregard for workers’ complaints. VANCOUVER CP - The following persons are urged to contact the Johann Frederick Bader of Berne, Switzerland, Donald Doving of Delta, Kay and Leo Finnigan of Surrey, B.C. John Miller of Waterbury, onn. John Lloyd Miller of Leth- bridge, Alta. Tourist Alert nearest detachment of the RCMP for an urgent personal message: ielen Ralph of Calgary, A. Keith and Mia Wyenberg of Calgary, Alta. Phil Vigil of San Diego, Calif, John and Muriel Willman of Missisauga, Ont, Bernie Zdrill of Winnipeg, ‘an. underwater ° types of activities are planned cccasionally. You must remember that most of us work full-time and have very little time to carry on the extra work Invalved with running of a club such as this. H you have never been on the executive you wouldn’t realize how -much work is involved, - = 3! It would be nice,’ for example, to havea live band, - but because of the high cost, we need good dance records. | If you have good variety of": records, bring them along to our dances. We have bar service, coffee and snacks, so donations of food or a cash contribution is requested. We also have a raffle for a bottle and a door prize. - It would be nice to have a barbeque picnic in the near future. How about sight- seeing tours, skiing, dinners and fishing? Any ideas? Hi you are between the ages of 25 and 75, come join us, We have well balanced crowds and lots of fun. We extend an invitation to « lively senior citizen couples to come out and shake a leg. 0908030086008 88800000008 « VERNON, B.C. CP - A demonstration by three envrionmental organizations on Kalamalka Lake at this okanagan city delayed ap- plication of the herbicide 2,4D into the lake by several hours Monday | But by noon the provincial water investigations branch successfully completed the application after giving environmentalists the slip RCMP were called out to clear the way for en- vironment ministry acquatic plant management staff to enter buildings where the 2,4 Dand application machinery were kept. At noon, three hours behind schedule, about 30 pounds of pellets containing 20 per cent 2,4 D were dropped in about two metres of water at the north end of Kalamalka Lake, into spots totalling just under a quarter acre. The herbicide is being used to fight spreading Eurasian milfoil weed. Police had escorted a truck carrying the boat used for applicaticn from the city sewage treatment plant and protesters tried to follow it but failed. By the time the en- vironmentalists got to the boat launching area, it was THE HERALD, Wednasday, July 19, !978, PAGE 3 2,4,D goes into lake in the water and heading to the spot where the 2,4 D was to be applied. PROTESTING USE The environmentalists regrouped and headed for the site where they launched their canoes but arrived just after -the nerbicide was applied and the boat headed back to nearby Oyama, where it is kept. Members of the South Okanagan Environmental Coalition, Okanagan chapter THURSDAY you only 70¢ duly? ) Come on in and Catch the Specials D&S SPECIAL BURGER $1.18 CONEY BURGER FISH DINKER TEXASBURGER CHEESEBURGER DELUXEBURGER MUSHROOMBURGER Between 2 & 4 every afternoon throughout the week you can buy ‘a 10* Coke and keep the Tiffany Glass. This offer is with food orders only & while glass stock lasts. Friday, Saturday and Sunday your regular Root Beer costs MONDAY 17th TUESDAY 18th WEDNESDAY 19th FRIDAY 21st SATURDAY 22nd SUNDAY 23rd Lasts A Whole Week From ts rare i M 7 i Tare |: ath to 2ard: Baie, Ef hee 20th TICKETS $2.00 ut gel a aris Sa epee ney ALSO: Each time you visit the Dog 'N Suds during the entire week you have a chance to win a trip for two to Vancouver, plus two nights hotel accommodation, plus $100.00 spending money. 4342 LAKELSE OS 0000090 O08 0000 SE OOOSOS0O0CCHOOCOEOS Lazelie Medical Center is pleased to announce Dr. Lennox Brown has rejoined Dr. Ron Brooks, Dr. Catherine Reilkoff and Dr. John Birbeck. of the Scientific Pollution and Envrionmental Control Society and Greenpeace organizations were protesting use of what they termed a dangerous her- bicide in a public water supply. : One protester, Farlie Paynter, of the Okanagan community of Westbank, said he was swimming t's metres from the government boat when the 2,4 D was put into the water. 98 $1.98 $1.98 $7.08 88 $1.18 635-7100 § work experience. Prepare Terrace, Ages 1and4. Must OH, NO! NOT JUST Book $10.00 pizzas, pasta, baked have own transportation, BOOK $10.00 : a spareribs. Uniforms sup- RE rot . . a a plied. Filers - LW.A. rate. cs ‘ : 8 £ Terrace. Permanent full Z > :36 + 8 y Mortgage Clerk - $4.30 hr, time. General duties in locai ~ 6 O go { Terrace. Processing Tall | Must have saw fil or With Lucky Leo 5, everybody wins ‘ l & ate £ : 1 mortgage payments, saw tter experience. proceeds help crippled children c Bo : : Sales Person - $3.50 hr. Streetworker - $136.00 week. me and YOU get a chance to win . ge. | Terrace. Permanent part- Terrace. Hrs, flexible, must 20 ee: _ time. Mature person, neat be able to work ind. and be 5 al 3 oy appearance. Experienced able to commun, 5 Pa gc :§ . preferred. 3 A oo a) a Researcher - $138 week. £ = 9 3 0 Chainsaw Operator - $5.60 Terrace. Must have drivers = SG: oy hr. Terrace. Must have own licence, to work. towards ny em go AS: 7 & = y = 1 ey : , cal rary only. eatiacts and hrotreation of, Lucky Leo Lotteries provide nothing But winners. l g Lor 3. ea! z [ , barenonarsaits @ Hundreds of people win prizes and thousands of 3 — i 8 uy R ty Dot 3 5 crippled children all over B.C. receive help. 5 Ia a5 8 | re at : a ok = THE BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS SOCIETY FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN e¢ bes | igé 5 { « 110 Easter Seal Buses + 3Easter Seal Camps « Easter SealHouse « PatiantCare - 2. SE & g 3 = $ re z o Robart Peary is credited with baing the first person to reach the North Pole, arriving there in April, 1909, ALL WINNERS NOTIFIED BY MAIL L_