PeaATTOTIVe LINEAR, POPE TAMED YT | ULE be Oe _ _ Local fishing regulation violators fined — act when they appeared before Judge Ken Shirling in ‘Terrace provincial court Monday. . Dennis: Harvey pleaded guilty to a charge of using “. fish roe for bait in the Lakelse River. Crown counsel FOL deff Arndt told the court a report made my the- fisheries officer stated that Davies, when stopped by ‘the officer, said he was unaware of the fisheries regulations in force on the Lakelse. Shirling ordered Harvey to pay a $25 fine and also ordered hig rod and reel returned after they had been confiscated by the fisheries officer. ; ordered his fishing equipment returned, but the catcw® forfeited., : Ina third case, Donald Furnseth pleaded guilty to a charge of catching crabs under the legal size. Arndt stated the charges were laid after an incident in Kitimat June 24, sos : Furnseth was fined $25, . co a -. Ted Cheynycz pleaded guilty to a charge of catching and possessing sockeye salmon, Arndt stated the fisheries report sald the Cheynycz told the fisheries officer that he thought the four sockeye he had in his possession were jacks. - “Out of fairness, it would probably take some training to discern the difference," Arndt added, Cheynyez was ordered to pay a $25 fine and Shirling . _ (1978 LTD.) 7 : SALVAGE LTD. 4 a 20 HOUR SERVICE ; © | Seal Cove Ad., Pr. Rupert 4 ) | |. 635-5555, 635-2525 || ' | 624-5639 a ; Freedom | 2 rom ol ) ri ! REAP BENEFIT i | producers | woos — user tut te oa | | - a energy pollcy meansa big fantastlcally-rich iy boost for British potential source of wealth : the goals Coltumbia the novines for the province, not ! KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) | ashes in on ita c urolng it up (in : — President’ Carter, reserves, industry and energy-producing plants) declaring “there can be no government spokesmen but in converting it to : make an unparallelled President Jimmy oil” i peacetime investment of | Carter announced Sunday We are not looking at re $140 billion in the next 10 that he will request a- the coal for power or for Es years to free the United | massive commitment of exporting thermal coal Ad States from its dependence funds to develop energy it for using the coal for AS on foreign oll. from coal and other making a wide variety of wy materials. products that are made ty "pit his second energy ad: B.C, ha dy today with oil, That 4 dress in two days, Carter | ouched a development creme jobs and industry 3 paid the huge investment unched a development frente | and Industry 4 = must be made "so that never program into oF © provitie. has ny : es i: : Pane | again will our nation’s in- research, Pat McGeer, However, McGeer ¥ ; ; es Gepamience be hostage to | Provincial minister of sald previously that more in Kemi . a eae) one leas wii, Pang. dhelow) as Kemano Rod: and ‘Gon Club... | tore olbtte sco sna nofe AeA ard _techndlogy research le needed ate | aif —~— Ft PLCMANO > cuts the-ribtee ve} onthe plaquecwhich. = “members téichy O-6" taniién constructed by “| “The preaidént also vowed — gs oe coal as Bn fen . me sg: _ marks the 25th anniversary celebrations of the —§ Kemano residents. Herald Editor Greg “Mid- that the country would cut its Itdoesn’t matter what to make It environmen- [. on l ine day the power began to flow from this isolated = dieton attended the celebrations and will _ oll Imports even more than carter devel we are ay safe. : iY Slat electrical power generating station on Douglas = examine Kemano’s past and future as well as life’ he promised during last coal our eveloping our plant. pt sponed at Hat | Channel to Kitimat. Kemano residents started in the village as it is today in a series of articles. month's energy summit in are far more than we Creek BC Hydro has (la olf the celebrations over the weekend with a . ; Tokyo, He said the U.S. will couldeoncelve of using’If raised the . poasibllity a at if 5555 TAXI 635-5050 | ( LIGHT DELIVERY SERVICE. af _f | Volume 73 No. 197 TERRACE-KITIMAT © ~ Tuesday, July 17, 1979 , : WE BUY copper, brass, all metals, batteries, etc, Callus - We are f RUPERT STEEL & =} 25 years A breakthrough in refugee plan _ OTTAWA (CP) — Im- migration Minister Ron Atkey announced a major ‘breakthrough Monday In transportation, processing and private sponsorship arrangements for In- refugees. He said arrangements have been made to we military and commercial aircraft ard, that the government is considering a ship. Atkey made no mention in his written statement of increasing the government- sponsored Indochinese refuges quota of 8,000. Hesaid only that the trans- portation will cover the current refugee movement plus ‘“‘a substantial con- tingency reserve.” Atkey also announced that immigration officers hava _ issued immigrant visas to 25 residents in Vietnam, per- mitting them to' join relatives in Canada soon. And two Canadian visa of- ficers arrived in Vietnam last week to begin in- terviewing others who want tocome here The announcements said 4,319 refgeés from Vietnam, Kampuchea (Cambodia), Laos and other Southaast Aslan countries have settled in Canada since the begin- ning of the year, TORONTO (CP) — “I was dumb, a fool and I’m not buying another lott: ticket in my life,” Ed- ward Palait sald after ha was fined $100 in provincial court Monday tickets, Palalt, 70, pleading gullty of forging the lottery tickets after spending $22,000 — his life savings — during the last three years on losing lottery tickets. He was give three months to pay hia fine, “T had 2,000 tickets last July and not one of the damn things was a winner,” Palatt said in an for forging Loto Canada A LOSER IN THE LOTTERY interview outside the courtroom. “After I got caught, | I stopped Palait’s lawyer, Arnold Schwartz, said the retired carpenter ‘‘actually helped Canada improve its security system,’’ Schwartz told the court that since the April 19 discovery of three forged tickets by Loto security officials, Loto Canada haa Ughtened the screetiing of winners under $1,000, Palait had forged two $100 and one $1,000 Ucket by (cutting numbers from oBlng stubs a sti them on others panne Lenport 300,000 barrels of oil a day less this year than the celling of 8.5 milllon he promiaed in the Japanese capital. - N i water to form ‘sulphuric Carter’s newest energy man of the Gish, Enon acid that cad spread proposals were unveiled ina |- Commission, said - the ops speech to the National _ Association of Counties, It was his second broadcast address in 13 houra and of- ‘CARTER Oo Investment is pledged _ [open Mon. through Sai., 8 a.m.-6 p.m. there is one resource we cao consider exporting, it’s coal.” concerted effort by the U.S. will mean a spinoff effect for B.C. “Our very large coal acid rains as ‘sulphur dioxide spewed out by the plant combined with rain to the North Oakanagan, [f° The proposed 2,000- megawatt thermal plant has been studied alnce fered details to the broad 1974 and early projections . cling of energy pally be] an for the future,” he