PAGE 4, THE HERALD, Wednesday, July 5, 1978 Job opportunities ..Purther details on ‘the following jobs are ta be abtained by calling the Terrace office of the Canada Employment Centre at 635- TV34, Hook Tender - IWA rate. Kleanza. Permanent full time. Must be experienced, Transport from town pro, Baker - $7.00 per hour to start. Terrace. Permanent full lime. Must have ex- perience. ; Dining Room Waitress - $3.75 per hour. Terrace. FPer- manent full time, Ex- perience preferred. Millwright - [WA rate, Terrace. Permanent full time. Genera] duties in local mill - shift work involved. HD. Mechanic - I.W.A. rates. Juskatla. Permanent fulltime. TQ or fully ex- perienced. . Walter-Waitress - $3.25 per hour. Terrace. Permanent full-time. Over 19 years of age, Stock work, cash register and balancing ordering. Childcare Worker - 140 week. Terrace, Permanent full time. Experience working with children and ability to deal with public. Stenographer - 8-9,000 year. Terrace. Permanent full time. Typing, dictaphone. Be able to deal with public. General Office Clerk - DOE $3.50 hour. Terrace. Per- manent full time. Invoicing through a cardex inventory system, Accurate typing. Stand Tenders- DOE. Usk. Temporary full time. 2 6 months experience in saw work. Must have own chain saw. Hard hat, boots etc required. Child Care Supervisor - $180 week; Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Must be registered nurse or have successfully completed to early childhood education cou. Filers - LW.A, rate. Terrace. Permanent full *time. General duties in local imoill... Must, have saw, fil or saw fitter experience. Yarding Engineer. - I.W.A., rate. Kleanza. Permanent fulltime. Must be ex- perienced. Transport from town prov. Legal Stenographer - $750 - $3 mo DOE. Terrace. Permanent fulltime. Typing 45 wpm. Legal experience required, e, Registered Nurse - $1124 month. Terrace. Care of patients in ICU maintenance of equpment. Responsible te head nurse. Shift work 8 percent VP. Room and Roard provided at cost. Executive Secretary - $1,000 month. Terrace. Typing 60 wpm, filing, transcribing, shorthand month end reports, exp with public. Cook - $3.00 hour, Terrace. Cooking and some clean-up. Shift work. Heavy Duty Mechanic - $10.51 hover, Terrace. Temporary full time (2 months). Certified HD Mechanic ‘Heavy Equipment Tepair. Live in Housekeeper - $350 per month + R&B. Poxt Edward, To care for 2 children age 7 and 2 - some housekeeping, cooking childcare. Fallers - 1.W.A.. Queen Charlotte. Permanent full time. Coast experience. Camp job, Clerk Typist - $899.00 per month. Terrace. Per: manent full time, Must have 40 wpm typing. Must have office experience, Radiator Repairman - Negotiable salary DOE. Terrace. Permanent - full time. Must have experience or related radiator ex- perience, Some light mechanic work. : TV & Radio Repairperson - $200 per month to start, Prince Rupert. Permenant fulitime. Good knowledge of repairs especially radio. Drivers licence preferred. Manager-Suprv. - Slereo Dept. DOE, Permanent full time, Must have retail sales experience knowledgable about stereo equipment. Musthavegood Management skills. Registered Nurse - Cilnic - $5.50hour. Terrace. On call only - for relief and for emergencies. To agaist in ¢linic. Computer Operator - $950 - $1200 mo. DOE. Terrace,’ Permanent fulltime. Must be experienced on IBM System 32 - Must be IBM trained. Operate 3741 Keypunch. Apprentice Baker - §4.00 hour, Terrace. Permanent full time, To start on 3 year apprentice positiion. Fast worker with keen interest. Drivers licence 3 a.m, - 12, pm. Woman mauled by | bear in heat TORONTO (CP) — A trained bear that mauled its owner’s girl-friend to death was in heat at the time of the attack, says cwner David McKigney. McKigney said on Monday he cannot understand why the seven-foot, 443-pound black bear named Smokey attacked Lynn Orser, 30, on Sunday in the Aurora, Ont., home she shared with McKigney,. “The only possible ex- planation [ have is that when bears are in their rutting season they become tun- predictable and sometimes go wild,” he said in an in- terview. Pollce confirmed the bear was in heat. The bear, trained for wres- tling humans, is being held in quarantine for 14 days at the African Lion Safari and Game Farm at Rockton, Ont., while officials decide its fate. Don Dailley, general manager of the game farm, said Smokey will be keptina large cage away from the rest of the animals. future uncertain McKigney, who uses the name The Wildman when he wrestles, sald he does not know if he will wrestle bears again, “At this point J don’t know much of anything. I really don'tknow what I’m going to McKigney, who had used Smokey In sports promotions In Canada and the Urited States, sald he has not been able to sleep since the in- cident. When McKigney was cleaning Smokey's cage on Sunday, the bear entered the house, ellmbed the stairs and attacked Mrs. Orser in a bedroom of the home. She died in hospital four hours later, Her 10-year-old daughter, reported in shock from her mother’s death, will stay with grandparents in Toronto. ; Mrs. Orser's sister, Beverly Jones, said in an interview Sunday that the family feels no hostility towards McKigney over the incidént, “My sister liked the bear, but there was no way she'd go near it unless it was in ita cage,”’ Miss Jones said, 8 di e 6 a in fire L'ANSE AU PORTAGE, Que’ (CP) — Police released today the names of the woman, six children and a baby who died in a fire Monday in a fishing cabin on this island north of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, near the Labrador border. They are: Mrs. Mabel Belyin, 50, her five daughtera—Elizabeth, 16, Colinda, 13, Roselin, 12, Rosita, 10, Francine, §--and her eight-year-old son, Glenn. The three-monthold baby was Lisa Anderson, The parents of the baby both in their 20s, suffer: undetermined Injuries and were flown to hoapital in Quebec City, 1,200 Kilometres southeast of here. Officer Jan Turnbull of provinelal police at Blane Sablon said the father of the six children was away fishing when the fire broke out in the cabin.’ Quebec provincial police are at the island, 20 Kilometres northeast of St. Augustin where both families Hved, investigating the cause of the fire. o On his way (o visit the tall ships Nippon Maru and Kaiwo Maru is Captain Cook. The ambassador of the British Columbia Captain Cook Bi-Centennial, Kelvin Andrew, was escorted to the tall ships by a whaler handled by cadets of the HMCS Malahat. Captain Cook was recelved by the captains of the four-masted ships during their recent visit to Victoria, Work accidents increase, result in 8 million injuries, 10,000 deaths OTTAWA (CP) - Recent figures on work accidents show one Canadian worker suffers a sidabling injury every 16 seconds, - Dr, Paul Rohan, a McGill University specialist on occupational health and safety, says in a 10-year- study on work accidents that 222 workers suffered such injuries every hour and 1,766 every day in 1976. “Disabling work injuries have increased in Canada since 1968, with a peak in 1974 and moderate drops in 1975-76," he says. ‘The moderate drop since 1974 Is most likely the result of job losses by employees with the least experience and thus a high work injury frequency who are the first to be laid A total of 8.85 million in- ‘juries and 10,353 deaths resulted from work ac- cidents during that period, his study shows, “About one-third of fatalities from occupational diseases in 1975-76 were in manufacturing, while over haif of the deaths occurred in the mining industry,’’ Dr. Rohan says. Ontario accounted for nearly one-third of oc- cupational deaths, Quebec 25 percent, the Prairies and’ Maritimes 30 percent and British Columbia 17 percent, the report says. “Indeed, accidents are the third leading cause of death in the world population asa whole, preceded only by cardio-vascular heart disease and cancer.” Industries where injury rates were the highest in- Marion kidnapping trial postponed SHERBROOKE, Que., (CP) - A preliminary hearing for Michel Devarenne, 38, and Rene Chalifoux, 57, charged with conspiracy, kidnapping and sequestration of credit union employee Charles Marion was postponed today until . July 11. Sessions Court Judge Jacques Page refused bail for Chalifoux, saying he was doing so “in the public in- terest and for the protection of society.” Reynald Frechette, counsel for Chalifoux, said he would consult with his client before deciding whether to appeal the decision. Devarenne was refused bail earlier because he was wanted for excaping prison in 1975. ‘ Three others accused in the case - Claude Valence, 42, his wife Jeanne, 42, and Loulse Beaubien, 26, all of Sherbrooke, have also been refused bail, No date has been set for their preliminary hearing. The five pleaded not guilty at their arraignment last week and requested trial by judge and jury. Marion, 58, credit manager at the Caisse Populaire de Sherbrooke Est, was abducted from his cottage in nearby Stoke last Aug. 6 and held for 92 days, in the Longest kidnapping for ransom in Canadian history. His kidnappers originally asked for a ransom of $1 million from his employers but eventually settied for $50,000 raised by Marion’s family, MP charged with arson, conspiracy COWANSVILLE, Que. (CP) -- The trial of MP Gilbert Rondeau on arson and conspiracy charges was postponed today until Aug. 1. Prosecutor Claude Noiseux asked for the postponement because he said the trial will take about four days and he wanted it to be held without interruption, Sessions Judge Louls Bow chard and defence lawyer Michel Robert had no ob- jection, although some of the witnesses grumbled. The Cowanaville court will not be available for several consecutlye days and the praceedings will take place in nearby Granby. Rondeau, 50, an in: Solar dependent MP for the riding of Shefford since he resigned from the Social Credit party, faces trial by judge in connection with a fire Dec. 20, 1975, which partially destroyed a bullding he owns in nearby Bromont. The fire occurred while Rondeau was attending the funeral of former Social Credit leader Real Caouette. Co-accused Jacques Harbec, 22, of Granby, is to stand trial on similar charges July 11. Jean Bernier, 18, also of Granby, who is charged with a single count of arson in connection with the fire, will have his trial date fixed at a later date. energy encouraged TORONTO (CP) — Domestic manufacturers of solar heating equipment will be encouraged to expand their af ouction by In creased federal purchases, Energy Minister Alastalr Gillespie announced today. Gilleapie said that by 1984, Ottawa will buy #0 million worth of solar equipment for new buildings. The program will help create a market for Canadian companies and help them bear the risks of technological innovatton. "Our objective is to create an wnsubsidized Canadian solar indgstry, and it must be done Within the next five years or we've lost our chance,” = Gillespie sald the govern- ment also plans to help the forest industry increase its use of wood wastes for fuel. It will pay 20 per cent o the cost of equipment needed to Increase the use of wastes and will start joint programs with provinces to expand the uge of forest or urban wastes in fuel production. cluded construction, wooe and forestry, metallurgy, mining, chemical industry and trucking, the study says. No statistics wereprovided in the study. ’ Most frequently seen accidents resulted from handling heavy objects, falls, impact or collision, mishandling machinery or hand tools, burns, electrical hazards and poisoning. Back and spine injuries topped the list for several provinces, Dr. Rohan says. Moreover, the average total cost of work injuries antounts to more than $1.5 billion a year. Although a Canadian centre for occupational health and safety was established by Parliament in late April, it is neither a government department nor a Crown corporation and wiil have no regulatory powers. Labor Minister John Munro, responsible for the centre, says itis designed to .. promote health, and.safety in _ . the‘Cansdilin work plice. Be EB te See Ue ers ie Get the The Science Council af Canada last year recom-. mended that a national advisory council on oc- cupational and en- vironmental health be responsible for publishing standards of maximum permissible exposure levels on such hazards as radiation, lead, and mercury. ‘The mandate of the centre as currently proposed is too narrow, and its task seems too limited for what is now required in the Canadian context,” it said. Another science council report, released last year, says governments should co- operate to deal with hazardous substances. Jurisdictional problems have made mercury pollution in the North dif- ficult to deal with, it said. Quebec, for example, with its many regulations on such toxic elements as asbestos and excessive number of administrators make thoge regulations difficult to apply, _ yet another report sald. ~ Strike over at Le QUEBEC (CP) — The strike which has paralysed the daily Le Soleil for 10 months ended Monday night after journalists and editorial support staff voted to return to work today. — Company spokesmen said the newspaper will publish Saturday for the first time since the strike began Aug. 29, 1977. Union negotlators obtained a written promise from publisher Claude Beauchamp that man- agement would not publish an editorial giving its view of the labor conflict. | They feared a gesture similar to that ef La Presse publisher Roger Lemelin who ran a_ frontpage denunciation of the jour- nalists' union when the Mon- treal daily resumed publication earlier this year after a long strike, GAIN BENEFITS Under the back-to-work agreement Le Soleil workers, affiliated with the, Timesfiles defense VICTORIA (CP) — A spokesman for the Victoria Times said today the newspaper will file a writ of defence in response to Human Resources Minister Bill Vander Zalm's libel action initiated June 30. Times lawyer Don Farquhar said he is preparing the defence on behalf of the Times, pub- lisher Stuart Underhill, editor Barbara McLintock and cartoonist Bob Bierman. Vander Zalm filed a writ in the Supreme Court of British Columbia registry office here alleging the evening newspaper libelled him in a cartoon published June 22, The statement of claim said the cartoon depicts Vander Zalm as a cruel and sadistle person who likes to inflict suffering on the helpless. Vander Zalm’s statement says the cartoon implies he is not fit to run the ministry of human resources and seriously injures his character «. arid “reputation. ~ ’m Pat your local distributor for Kitimat. paper delivered for only $3.00 a month (% price for pensioners) to your door early every morning. Read the local news with your morning coffee! For your classified ads, coming events, notices or local news just} call me... 7 | Pat Zelinski at _ 632-4 HOURS 7-9 a.tn. J-5 p.m. MONDAY- FRI 2147 DAY Soleil Confederation of National Trade Unions, will be en- titled to most of ther va- cations for 1877 and 1978, credit for sick days and salaries for maternity leave. The 108-member jour- nalists’ union had given lukewarm support to a new contract early in June, while editorial support workers finally approved theirs 10 days aga. Moat of the employees will get a four-day work week under the new contract. The main stumbling blocks in- the dispute centred on working conditions, union participation in editorial decisions and union claims that Le Soleit was at- tempting to take avay righta acquired in previous con- tracts. Production employees-— the typographers, pressmen and photo-engravers—had signed their new labor contracts last fall and a few days ago accepted return-to- work protocol, « UP TO 23% (per annum return) Real Estate Investment secured by residential income property $5,000 minimum investment. We will be visiting your city to arrange an ap- pointment. Call: Sam Allman - 112-872-8586. GREEN ACRES REALTY LTD. Household Realty” SECOND MORTGAGES . No bonuses No brokerage fees No finder’s fees FAST SERVICE Come on in or call the nearest aflice of Household Finance Ask for Mortgage Services 4609 Lakelse Avenue TERRACE bree BIE IDOF: 1