#58. MOBILE “HOMES. 12 x 68 three bdrm. irailer. _ Fully furnished. Joey shack, ‘laundry rm. Good condiilon. ‘Set up and skirted In Terrace Trailer Court - no. 27. Phone . 633-1244, (p20-n22) For Sale by Owner: Oouble wide with garage and tool shed, Close to school. Phane 635.9785. (p10-13)} 60 " TENDERS) “OFFERS will be received: by The Royal Canadian Legion at 4425 Legion Ave., Terrace, 8.C, untill 19:00 hours Tuesday, November 14, 1978 for the purchase of ‘the house situated at 4718 ‘Park. Ave., Terrace. , This house must be removed from the property by Nov. 30, 1976. All fees, permits and incidental costs to be born by the successful buyer. . O.A. Kalbeck. Chairman’ Development Commitiee (04.8) . 66. RECREATIONAL , VEHICLES 1974 Ski-doo. Motor is good. Phone 635-9504. 4623 Straume. (p3-10) 90 Hough Loader. 1976 - 2600 #66. RECREATIONAL VEHICLES - Manguard’ Camper. 9/6" | deluxe. Completely loaded. Priced jo sell! Phone 635- 4094, (at{n-026) NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of the deceased: GOLISCH, Lean Cllfford o.k.a. GOLISCH, Leo C. late of 4011 Sparks Si., Terrace, B.C, Creditors and others having claims against the said esiate(s), are hereby required to send them duly verified to the PUBLIC TRUSTEE, 800 Hornby Street, Vancouver, B.C., V6Z 2C5, before December 13, 1978, after which date ihe assets af the sald estate(s) will be distributed, having - regard only to clalms that have been recelved. CLINTON W. FOOTE PUBLIC TRUSTEE (aa-3,8,15,22) 11. INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT. hours. 1976 four wheel drive. For the lwo - $85,000. Phone 635-2033, (pl0-21) MANPOWER OPPORTUNITIES For further information on these and other job op- portunities, please contact your local Canada Em- ployment Centre at 4630 Lazelle Ave., Terrace, PROJECT MANAGER - Publie education services. (Two required). PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL WORKER - Should have Masters in §.W. $1533 per month. PRE-SCHOOL TEACHERS - Must be qualified with certificate, GROUP HOME RELIEF PARENTS - Must be couple to relieve regular house parents 8 days per month.. tan = AAO DEN COUPIER.., sens ; ~WOODWORK. JIN- STRUCTOR - Must be able to work with handicapped. $138 per week. INSTRUCTOR for RECREATION PROGRAMS - For Spring term. $5.00 to $6.00 per hour. . HANDICRAFTS IN- STRUCTOR - Must be able to work with handicapped. $138 per week, PHYSICIAN - Gen. Prac. 18- 12-—15-1-79. Ped., Gynecology and Obsiteric. OFFICE ASSISTANT II - 50 wpm typing, 100 wpm shorthand. $1006 per month. LOANS CLERK - 45 wpm typing. $675 per month, COPY TYPIST - 55 wpm typing. Casual, $4.004+ per ur, SALES CLERK - Footwear. Must have experience, $4.30 per hour. : PROJECT MANAGER - For storefront food outlet. $180 per week, ‘ /liats For Ho owners; PARTSMAN - Purchasing plumbing materials, Ex- perience preferred. DOE. PARTS SALESMAN - Must have experience in auto wrecking. $600 per month. CHINESE: FOOD COOK - Must be experienced. $1000 per month. WAITERS & WAITRESSES - Several required. Full time and part time. BABYSITTERS - Several required in Terrace. Full time and part time jobs. HOUSEKEEPER - One day per week, $3.50 per hour. (Two positions). LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER - Must be mature. Room and board. “MAINTENANCE PERSON - Janitorial and renovations. $138 per week. TURF CARE SPECIALIST - Must be experienced. Negotiable wages DOE, SHOE REPAIRMAN - Must be Fully qualified. $600 per month, . BODY REPAIRMAN - Fully qualified with TQ. Two positions (one in Terrace and one in Port Clements). CARPENTER - Temporary job. Must be able to plan and implement plans. $13.00 per hour. . PROJECT SUPERVISOR - Must beexperienced in chain link fencing. $13,000-14,900 per year. TOW TRUCK DRIVER - Must be experienced and have air ticket. Commission or wages. $3.00 - 9.00 per hour. COMPOSING ROOM FOREMAN - Must be journeyman or have four years experience. Summer may seem a strange time to think about home insulation, but it is a wise time. While last winter's cold drafts and shivers are fresh in mind, and knowing they can be back in just a few short months, a work plan now to insure against their return makes gocd sense. In a handful of hours spread over this watm season, you can make preparations for January's chill, greater in- home comfort, and lower fuel bills. In case the incoming cold ‘and heal loss spots have escaped your memory, it’s best to begin with a general inspection tour. Here are some areas to check and, while at it, to measure for needed insulating materials. Lufkin niakes a handy case tape that clips to the belt to free your hands for note- making, and it even reads left-to-right and right-to-left so that numbers are never upside down or backwards. Start with doors and win- dows. Where frames ate loose-fitting, seal then with an adhesive-backed foam weather stripping. Eliminate under-door drafts by closing any gap with a rubber, multi-blade door sweep. Don’t overlook doors to un- Home Improvement, Safety A THINK INSULATION NOW a, weer nd Economy heated attics or basements. Double check the fit of atorm windows and doors and make them airtight by caulking all edges with a long-lasting butyl or latex compound. Is there am adequate thickness of insulation in the attic floor? Last year's scarcity of batt and blanket insulation has eased, so now's the time to discuss what's needed with a build- ing supplies dealer. On the outside, caulk up the cracks where masonry and wood join, around win- ‘dow and door frames, at corner seams where siding and trim meet -- wherever two different parts come: together. These “Hints” certainly don't cover all possible pro- tective measures, and every hame’s needs will be differ-, ent. The hint is to “think Insulation now” while it’s warm—and be warm Iater. _ NEWS | N BRIEF SAN DIEGO (AP) — A freelance photographer was arrested Tuesday on a charge of harboring, con- cealing and trying to prevent the capture of Stanley Rifkin, who is accused in the theft-by-wire of $10.2 miliion in bank funds, the FBI said. Dan Wolfson, a 33-year-old former computer consultant, was taken into custody at his Oceanside office and driven to San Diego to appear later before a U.S. magistrate. When Rifkin was arrested earlier, he was with Wolfson in Wolfson's apartment in nearby Carlsbad, Calif., the FBI said. Rifkin, 32, was arraigned Monday before US. Magistrate Harry McCue on a charge of interstate transportation of stolen priperty in what has been de- Scribed as one of the largest theft-by-wire schemes ever, Rifkin is alleged to have worked alone on the sophis- tleated scheme In which $10.2 million in bank funds were diverted to buy Soviet diamonds. Rifkin was or- dered held in lieu of $6 million bail, The charge carries a max- imum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Munro escapes charges TORONTO (CP)° ~ Criminal charges will not be laid against former federal labor minister John Munro because of a controversial phone call Munro made toa Hamilton judge, a spokesman for Ontario Attorney-General Roy McMurtry said Tuesday, Munro resigned __ the cabinet in September after it was revealed that he made a phone call to Judge Albert Marks on behalf of a Hamilton developer facing sentence on an assault charge. The developer, Julius Butty, had been convicted of assaulting a tenant with a hammer. Butty was fined $500 after court proceedings were interrupted by Munro's phone call.in which Munro gave character evidence on behalf of the accused. The spokesman for the attorney-general said the decision not to charge Munro was made after a six-week investigation by the Ontario Provincial Police, A report went to John Ta- kach, director of Crown attorneys for Ontario and he decided the laying of charges was unwarranted. “Mr. Takach decided there were no grounds for charging Mr. Munro with obstructing justice or at- tempting to obstruct justice because the phone call did not constitute obstruction as defined by the Criminal Code of Canada," the spokesman said. Development plan shown | NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. (CP) — Municipal Affairs Minister Hugh Curtis unveiled Tuesday a $4- million development plan to rejuvenate this city's waterfront. Curtis said the first phase of the British Columbia evelopment Corp. project will be the construction af a marine training institute and a 12-to 14-storey office tower for B.C. Rail. Retail and hotel space is also planned. _The province will give the city $4.5 million towards developing a three-acre waterfront. park, which Curtis called the focus of the project. The minister said the project will be built on provinciallyowned land in the city's lower Lonsdale area near the commuter seabus terminal, He said the project has cabinet approval and he hopes for early approval from North Vancouver city council, Curtis also said the seabus fleet, which ferries com- muters bewteen Vancouver and here, should be ex- panded. The seabus has carried about five million passenger since its began operations in June, 1977. Pop declared hot PRINCE GEORGE, B.C, — The British Columbia Federation of Labor has placed a “‘hot edict” on all products of Goodwill Bot- tling Ltd. in Prince George and Victoria, a federation spokesman said Tuesday. Ron Johnson said the edict means union members, regardless of affiliation, are being asked not to buy, handle or consume Goodwill products. Goodwill Bottling manufactures Coca-Cola and Canada Dry products and has been involved in a labor dispute with the Retail, Wholesale and Department Stores Union since June 20, The franchise of the operation here extends from Williams Lake north to the Yukon and from the Alberta border to the coast. The Victoria plant supplies Vancouver Island, On June 20, about 18 bottling line employees walked off their jobs to back up demands for a first contract. The union’s de- mands centred on wages and job security. Company officials said the plant is still operating although production and sales have declined since the strike began. Picket lines set up PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) — Striking workers from the Gibraltar mine at Williams Lake, B.C., setupa picket line Tuesday at Union Tractor Lid. Six members of the Canadian Association of Industrial, Mechanical and Allied Workers (CAIMAW) union began picketing when a caterpillar tractor was delivered to Union Tractor _ from the Gibraltar mine site. A union spokesman said the pickets are legal under section 95 of the labor code which allows secondary picketing, The picket line will remain until the tractor is moved or until Union Tractor runs out of parts, he said. Although Union Tractor is a non-union shop, union truckers were refusing to cross the picket line. CAIMAW has been on ’ strike at the Gibraltar mine since Oct. 4 after being locked out Oaz 26. Budget date set OTTAWA(CP) — finance MinisterJean Chretien said Wednesday he will announce a date today for the next federal budget. in reply to heated Com- mons questions from Op- positidn Leader Joe Clark, Chretien said he had ancther 24 hours before he would be forced to go through with a promise toset a budget date. Clark, Chretien said, was getting excited, and should be patient, The finance minister, who bought down his last budget April 10, tas said he will in- troduce a budget in mid- November. ; Elton John hospitalized LONDON (Reuter)— Singer Elton John was rushed by ambulance to the heart unit of a private clinic in London on Tuesday after collapsing at his home. A clinic official said John was exhausted and over- worked but “has definitely not had a heart attack.” He said Jolin, 31, was con- scious when admitted and was resting comfortably after collapsing at his home in Old Windsor, about 50 kilometres west of London. The singer had been due to travel to Paris today for a checkup following a recent hair transplant operation. John ended a self-imposed, two-year exile from live rock shows last week to appear at aconcert near London and at a business-charity show at a London hotel. The Herald, Wednesday, November 8, 1978, Page 7 Financial fast footwork suggestion claimed made MONTREAL (CP) — An Olympic contractor who built the cycling velodrome for the 1876 Games says the City of Montreal suggested paying velodrome bills with money allotted for the main ‘stadium. Charles Duranceau, head ‘of Charles Duranceau Ltee,, told a provincial inquiry into the $1.27-billion cost of the Games Tuesday that the suggestion came from Claude Phaneuf, an engineer with the city who was re- sponsible for the con- struction of the main Games facilities. But when Duranceau was questioned about - his Statement, he had trouble remembering when Phaneuf had suggested the idea or whether any action was taken on the suggestion. Duranceau made the com- ment during questioning about the renegotiation of the velodrome contract with his firm in February, 1975. The contract was changed to a cost-plus basis from the original terms which set a fixed fee for the work. He echoed earlier testimony from Paul Brazeau, the velodrome project director for the firm, who described how the many changes in the plans resulted in increased costs which made the fixed-rate contract unprofitable. Duranceau said Mayor Jean Drapeau told him in November, 1973, that it was not the policy of the city to hurt contractors it dealt with. But the contractor said there was no formal assur- ance from the city that the contract would be put on a ‘costplus basis, Quebec Superior Court Justice Albert Maiouf, the head of the inquiry, said he could not believe that a businessman of Duranceau's experience would continue with millions of dollars 3 - work without having assur- ~- ances that the fixed-rate contract would be changed. Duranceau said he relied on Drapeau’s assurance, although he continued to ask the city frequently when the contract would be changed. Duranceau said the city was slow with its payments, PRICE SWITCH SAID VICTORIA (CP) — Former attorney-general_ Alex Macdonald accused the British Columbia government Tuesday of changing price labels on old stock to match new price increases. Macdonald asked Consumer and Corporate Affairs Minister Rafe Mair, the minister responsible for the Liquor Distribution Branch, to put a stop to what he said was an unethical prac- tice, Mair, however, said the prices are increased long after the costs have been incurred. “tn other words we've already pald the in- creased prices for the product abroad three or four weeks before the price is effective at the liquor store,” the minister said. “It is not a question of old stock having been bought at the cheaper | price then having been inflated unfairly. It is in fact a true and proper refiection of the increased price cost.” Macdonald (NDP— Vancouver East) said a weekly bulletin from the ministry to the vendors has ona number of occa- sions ordered them to remove the old lower- price labels from existing stock and to attach new higher-priced labels. He said the ministry has authorized overtime to make the price changes. Macdonald said if the markup is necessary, the branch should at least leave the old price tag on underneath the new one so the customer will know what is happening. He predicted Iquor profits will reach $200 Million this year, and said Mair should be con- sidering price cuts in- stead of increases. Mair said Macdonald was reluctant to reduce prices when he was at- terney general and re- sponsible for the liquor distribution branch. leading to problems with subcontractors who threatened to quit if they were not paid. Earlier testi- mony from Brazeau in- dicated that the firm was on the verge of insolvency at one point, because it had overextended its line of credit while waiting for city payments for velodrome work. “Payments from the city were spasmodic,” Duran- ceau said. He added that there were so many problems with the velodrome contract that his firm was reluctant to become involved as con- tractors for the adjacent main stadium. Mr. Justice Malouf said he was not in- terested in testimony in detail on*the stadium con- tract, because the inquiry _ will examine the stadium at a later time. Desourdy Construction and Charles Duranceau Ltee, were awarded a joint contract for construction of the 70,000-seat stadium, The velodrome, mean- while, ended up costing $74.5 million, compared with an original cost estimate of $16.8 million. Comptroller warns that cost cutting takes time OTTAWA (CP) — Harry Rogers, the newly appointed federal spending watchdog, told MPs Tuesday he is afraid they may be ex- pecting too much too fast from him. The comptroller-general, at work just six months, told Commons public accounts committee members he does not foresee a substantial reduction in instances of government waste from his first-year efforts. “I have responsibility to oversee the operations of the equivalent of 35 CPRs (Canadian Pacific Railways),”’ he said. And he added: "I would not want to leave the im- pression we won't make significant progress in a small number of years.” He said he and his staff of 124 are already three months into a detailed investigation ofthe 20 largest government departments. The survey was designed to isolate areas in which improvement was most urgently needed, Rogers hoped to make results public by mid-1979. te He said he will use his find-" ings as a basis for action plans for each department. The plans would improve that department's operation without increasing its costs. “T am heartened by my re- ception and I believe my task gan be accomplished.”' The position of comp- trollergeneral came about last spring as the result of two years’ pleading by Auditor-General J.J. Macdonell that the govern- ment appoint someone to fight waste from inside the government. The auditor- general, by contrast, can only bring to light examples of waste and inefficiency once they have already happened and been recor- ded. Macdonell told committee members he is delighted with Rogers’s progress so far. Bill Clarke (PC-- Vancouver Quadra) asked Rogers whether his initial investigations have shown “things to be as bad as we’ve been making out all these years.” Rogers said he has been generally impressed with the calibre and dedication of some public servants and the management of certain departments, but his examination has been cursary, . Lincoln Alexander (PC— Hamilton West) demanded assurance that Rogers's findings of waste and inef- ficiency in various govern- ment departments will be available to MPs, but the comptroller-general was 638-1613 (atf) WANTED September 12, 1978 issues of the Terrace /Kitimat Daily Herald. We will pay $2.00 per copy. Must be complete issues. Bring to the Terrace/Kitimat Daily Herald Office. Large Reward: Lost from 3300 Thomas. Doberman Pincher. One year old, wearing choker chain. Ears not cut. Answers to the name of Dillinger. Reward offered. Phone 635-5937 or unable to provide such a guarantee. ‘ He said his mandate is to provide Treasury Board President Robert Andras with reports, but it is up to Andras to decide whether they will be released. He gave the commiltee his promise he will recommend disclosure to the minister. He also gave his word that the comptroller-general’s olfice will not develop into its own empire within the bureaucracy. He said the maximum number of em- ployees he could ever foresee the office having is 300 NOTICE OF POLL SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 88 (TERRACE) PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given to the electors of the School District aforesaid that a poll has become necessary at the election now pending, and that [ have granted such poll; and further, that the persons duly nominated as candidates at the said election, for whom only votes will be received, are:- The HAZELTONS Surname Other Names Position Office Term of Address Residential Occupation McDONALD Linda N. MASON ROISUM Allan D. Helen L. Trustee 2 years Box 203 New Hazelton, B.C. Trustee 2 years Trustee 2 years Hazelton, B.C. Kiapiox Valley Social Develop- ment Advisor Housewife R.R. No. 1 Hazelton, B.C. Such poll will be apened at:- Hazelton Secondary School New Hazelton Elementary School South Hazelton Elementary School Two Mile Elementary School * Upper Kispiox for electors in the Village of Hazelton and Hazelton Rural Voting area, and at; - STEWART Sumame Other Names Position Term Of Residential Address Occupation ce Berry D. CORNELL Darlene E. year Trustee i year ewart, B.C. 7th & Railway Stewart, B.C. Such poll will be opened at:- The Council Chambers of the District of Stewart for electors of the District of Stewart and environs, on the 18th day of November 1978, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., of which every person is hereby required to take notice and govern himself accordingly. GIVEN UNDER MY HAND AT TERRACE, B.C. THIS 6TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1978, AJ. McColl, Returning Officer.