ke For Rent © Misc. 7 FOR. RENT— .Cement forms. Call 638: 1396, ya -, fatin) a a, Suites .. for: Rent: ® LARGE 1 BEDROOM apartrient situated In Thornhill, $250. per- fm month plus utilities. Aise . need roommate — for shared house. Phone 635- 2315. “(p5-amay) ee, ONE BEDROOM & bachelor sultes Available Immediately. Fridge & stove Included. Sauna &* recreation room. 635-9023 or 635- 5189 to view. ~ (p20-23may0] ONE & Two. BEDROOM m Apts.. Good rates. Call _ manager any time for appoiniment to view, Phone 635-4547. . lacetidec-tin) KEYSTONE _APARTMENTS UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 1. 2 and 3 bedroom suites available. Spacious & clean. Extras include: Heat, hot water, laundry facilities, storage locker. & parking. ‘Reterences required as of Feb. 1-4. Please phone 635-5224. of (acc25[an-tn) TETRAULT PLACE APARTMENTS Fridge, stove, drapes, carpeting off stree! parking, security | Rents stert at . $295 | Phone. manager : enytine.: » 638. 8245. . le A washer vy dryer, fridge and stove. . |, $395:per“month. Available ‘May Ist. No pets please. Phone 635-9378. (ps Bmay) . a SMALL? BEDROOM apt. { in Thornhill. Self- # contained. Fridge and stove, ideal for single or couple. Phone 635-3166, View at 3727 River Orive. . (p34may} ‘ONE BEDROOM suites Low rents. Close io town and shopping. Phone 635- 6155 days, 638-1533 to 635- 908 evenings. face: sept2-tin) WOODGREEN APARTMENTS— 1, 2 and 3 1 bedroom apartments. Dewntown = locality. Complete with dishwasher, flreplace, fridge, stove and drapes. Undercover parking. Security entrance. Phone 635-9317, porey S ‘(acesepti2tin) 2 BEDROOM basement | sulte with fridge and stove. (Close to school and town. a Call atter 4pm. 695.5963. (p4-dmay} 48. Homes for Rent FOR RENT— Old, small house $275 per month. Phone, 638-1986. . . _ face-ttn) Ve DUPLEX in town, gas heat and ‘hot water. Fireplace, 2 bedrooms up , i down. Carpets, new range and-fridge. No pats. $450 ‘moni. For appolniment to view call 635-2541 evenings only. | - (pid-l4may) THREE BEDROOM ‘town: houses close to shopping centres and _ schools, Phona: Terrace _ Manor’ 638-8417. wo amy | 50 Homes for Sale 2 BEDROOM log house, 1200 09. ft. an main, 1000 upstairs in loft, One-third Sere ascente river view lot. $69,000 635-4868 or 639-0478 Phone after Ipm to view. (pi-1smay) ' §0- Homes for Sale aa Seat ‘FFOR SALE BUILDER 3 ‘pedlgo mn .600D HOME 2 years old. Partially finished on % acre. J large bedrooms on 1750 sq. ft. main floor. Natural’ gas. fired. hot water, heating system. Reom for two bedrooms upstairs. Can be viewed at 3882 Mountview or phone 635-5172. (p20-9may)} $500. We planned It, we bullt It, wa love it... so could you. 3 year old 3344 sq. ft. home on 4.6 treed acres. Beautiful view. Only 1.5 km from city. Many special features Include pine ceiling, tireplace, large masier bedroom with 3 pce. ensulte; 638-1321. ; (p6-10may) 52 Property for Sale FOR SALE—Six acres of land. Creek running through the middle. The frontage is cleared. Asking $40,000. Call 635- 7585,: ; (p10-9may} eres 54 Business ° | ‘Property FOR RENT— 5,000 sq. “Itt. retail store, Located foorner of ‘Lakelse & ‘[Emerson - best show. windows: In town =" for further © Information phone 635-5333 during business hours: . we 2 (goeatapell tin) » fixtures optional - toading area and alley access. Phone 627-6444 or 624-4746, . (pl0-lmay) EEE 55 Business Opportunity DEALERSHIP OPPORTUNITY A Distributor of . finak quality gift-sovvenir towels Is Interested In establishing a dealer- ship in your area. This Is an excallant Smalt Ir required. Write: First B.C. Stn. B.C. (aceS-dmay) INCOME , —Excellent earnings, servicing an restocking retail stor accounts. | —Exciting produc lines. —Training | —Investment required, $9995 secured. —Male or female. 112-885-3727. a __ {p43may) BUSINESS FOR SALE—. Established janitorial business presently grossing }$100,000 - annually, Financlal statemants avaliable. Operations Include vending machines. Reply to Box 1485 ~c-o Terrace- Kitimat Dally Herald, -§ Box 399, Terrace, B.C, STARTER. P1974 « “nor hatlahial provided] ames - 6ORecreational a pomp a ‘ : me Wie SUZUKI 400 ‘GS, “equ km Excellent. condition. $1100, Phone 635-6445 affer (pa-amay)} pa Automobiles 1975 -V.W ...RABBIT, 4 speed, radio, good con- dition. No rust. 68,000 miles, $2200 OBO. Phone 638-6251. cote ‘The B.C. government ‘is = (ric5-8may) REPOSSESSIONS 1978 Chrysler Cordova, auto, PS, PB, AM-FM stereo, Good condition. Phone Terry at 632-6191 between 9am & 4pm.. (accl0-11may) REPOSSESSION For sale 1981 Toyota PU View at S.K.B, Auto Salvage, 3690 Duhan Rd., Terrace. Please forward bids to C.C.A4., Box 1065, Terrace, ‘B.C. Atin: M. Laing. Further détalls call 635- . 7649. (acc3-Amayne2- fmay) 1979 CHEV IMPALA 2 door. hard-top, PS, PB, 350 cu. In. 4bbI, auto., 8 track tape, no rust, new engine and paint job. $1400 OBO. Call: 635-3216. (p5- 7may) 1971 TOYOTA, 4 wheel drive, Land Cruiser, with hydraulic snow plow $1400. In godd running ‘condition. Phone 635-6834 or 635-9415. {p4-8may) ‘ 58 Trucks & Vans 1 MUST SELL— 1980Ford F150 4x4, 6 cyl, short . box, new tires, canopy, roof rack, _ excellent condition, 28,000: mi, Asking $7,200. Phone 636- * (pt0-9may) . 1919, "REPOSSESSION | FOR . AL a ¥ 5 coeee Ye ty t oe Dump Truck Contact C.1.B.C, in Kitimat, 632. -2148. Highest or any bid not necessarily ‘ac- cepted. - _(accl0-1é6may) 1974 FORD: Fis0 Ranger ‘ALT. Canopy and boat rack. Dual tanks - Norust: Excellent condition. Low mileage $3,000. Phone 635-7354. tas Ap5-dnay) OBO. 59 Mobile Homes nel KNIGHT MOBILE HOME. Large 1 bedroom, skirted, with foey shack, furnished. $10,500. Phone 635-3239. (pl0-14may) 1976 12'x88" 3 bedroom mobile home. Set up In ‘Terrace Trailer Court. a’x10" addition, §. ap- pllances, good condition. ° Asking $17,000. Phone 638-1307 after 5pm. - (pld-4may) . FOR SALE— 12x68 Villa Vista. ‘3 bedroom with joey shack, Washer, dryer, fridge, ‘stove, dishwasher and miero- wave bullt-in, Phone 638- 8364 asking $19,000.- . {p20-15may} a’x12' JOEY SHACK, insulated,’ wired, eavestrough, two doors, windows. . Asking: $700. “Phone 635-2691. - ' , dp10-T1may) Vehicles 198) - oV28 ft. SKYLARK Holiday trailer. with or without &x24 loey shack (Hke new). "7 Skylark Hollday traller comes with toilet ete. Phone 635-3993 atter Spm. (p§-7may) BE WATER Wisa! Never : swim | alone. The Canadian fed Grose Society The Herald, Thursday, May 3, 1984, Page # B. C.. makes it tough on the. east: MONTREAL - (CP) . Columbia labor scene are casting a long shadow over - labor’; negotiations . “for _ $5,000 ‘ forest.-workers in Eastern Canada: whose contracts ‘expired ,. this week,” threatening’ te impose a’ contract'on 12,500 pulp and ‘paper workers who« were ordered back to: _ work " reeeritly. . "Speculation isthe. terms could include a. wage freeze in the first year and Jncreases totalling 8.5:per . cent over the next two, which was the wage deal in a contract accepted: last January by the. 38,000 member | ‘International Woodworkers af America. ‘The Canadian Paper- workers’ Union represents 7,500 of the B.C, paper- workers. and most, of the workers in the East. It . would like to ignore. the West Coast. ‘situation during bargaining | with eastern produeera: which _ the ; expired —* gre startin to benefit from “Svents: on the ‘British B the stronger economy. «Many of its:.members were laid off during the recession, so the union is aiming for better job ‘security through a / com: | . bination = of - pensions . and a: shorter ‘work week — 371-3 hours ’ instead of 40. For openers, it asked for an wage in- crease of $1.25 an hour. improved. WANT WAGE FREEZE “But many analysts say producers want to follow B.C. woodworkers’ example of a wage freeze in the first: year, plus anual increases of four . and 4.5 per cent after that. The eastern contracts at «midnight ‘Monday, but negotiations are just picking up steam. “The logical pattern (for the East) is the IWA (wage) settlement on the West Coast”? with no, cost- of-living adjustments, says Murray Savage, a forest- _products analyst with Malsons . Placements Ganada Inc. of Montreal. On the West Coast, the hourly base rate is $12.06, In the East, itis $12.52. Trying to pull even with -the. West is a ritual for eastern locals. ‘There has been a resurgence in demand for pulp and newsprint during ‘the last year, abetted by strikes during the spring in British Columbia. Prices for bleached kraft ‘ 3} ¢ sofitwocd pulp rose April 1. fie $ Consolidated-Bathurst Inc. of Mantreal, which Increase in weapons recorded 8 600 on OTTAWA (CP) — The RCMP says 51,461 almmont double ite 1983 first. restricted weapons, mostly handguns and - warter income —. is | Automatic weapons, were registered in Canada last wisin Zits domestic | Yeah bringing the total number registered to newsprint price by $45 a tonne to $585, effective July .1. Other producers are following sult, and export prices are rising as i . well. ; MADE SOME GAINS Abitibi-Price Inc., the world’s largest newsprint ‘producer, saw earnings in the first three months rise fivefold over the first that wasn’t enough. to. make up for ground lost .: during the recession, says _ chairman Robert Gimlin. The union prefers to see the bright side. Demand is growing steadily and the price increases are holding, “so recovery is on Its way and we believe the companies are in good shape,” _ says Donald Holder, the union's Ontario vice-president. 795,069. Wednesday. in 1980. Across Canada No applications for registration were refused nor were any registration certificates revoked, the RCMP said in its annual direarms report released The figures represent a steady increase over the last few years. There were 32,123 restricted weapons registered in 1962, 14,479 in 1981 and 7,722 _ Owners must give police a valld reason for wanting to register a weapon. Reasons include target shoating, forming part of a collection, protection of life and occupational use by a police ‘quarter of last year, but ~ Rejects blind cutting to'reduce federal deficit planning must be done to eliminate itina - Liberal .leadership' candidate John Turner said Wednesday. he rejects “blindly cutting” government programs to reduce the $20-billion federal deficit. But a Turner government would set a . timetable for action to ‘convince money markets it was serious about reducing the annual deficit, he told a Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Quebec City. “A limited period of years must be set as a target for which to find a better equilibrium: between ‘the revenues and expenses of our federal government," he sal That period could run from three to seven years to cut the deficit in half, he told a latex news conference. Turner said he would place certain limits on-government spending, find ways ‘of, streamlinitig bureaucracy and social services and limit federal-provincial duplication of:services. “I agree with (Finance Minister Mare) ‘Lalonde that we can’t substantially cut the deficit -in a period of. T-unemployment, but fixed time.” Meanwhile, conflicting claims of the five candidates acknowledged to be trailing in the race to succeed Prime Minister Trudeauat the June leadership convention are beginning to sound like a variation on the classic Abbott and Costello comedy routine: Who's on First? Only in this case it's: Who's in Third? 4 Indian Affairs Minister John Munro and © Justice Minister Mark MacGuigan added their claims to the debate Wednesday. Munro told an Ottawa news conference he has a “hardcore 140" delegates, but he then saidit includes the solid support of 106 and the backing of 34 others he expects to be selected in the next 10 days. Justice. Minister Mark MacGuigan’s campaign office then insisted its candidate has the support of 173 delegates, Economic Development Minister Don Johnston said last week he, too, has more than 100 committed voters for the June 14-16 convention. No Quebec concessions OER ity Fant Hea . OTPAWA: (GP): ut Employment John Roberts says ‘if-he becom: minister he will make no concessions to Quebec to get it to sign the Conatitutlon. “] would make no concessions to obtain the agreement of Quebec any more than 1 would with Manitoba,” the Liberal leadership candidate-sald Wednesday in an interview. The Quebec government refused to join the other nine provinces in endorsing the two-year-old Constitution for three main reasons. One reason was the lack of a guarantee that provinces would receive fiscal compensation for national p programe in which they do not wish to participate but must still help fund. Roberts said he would be willing to negotiate compensation on a case by case basis but he is opposed to enshrining such a principle in the Constitution. He showed less sympathy for Quebec’s objection to constitutional provisions allowing. people to cross provincial boundaries and work. The Canadian common market must be strengthened; not. weakened, Roberts said. - - Quebec's third main objection hinged on minority language rights. The Quebec government maintalned that a national Constitution should not impose obligations on a province to provide services for minority language groups. 7 Tenders ee Ministry of Human Resources « Submissions Invited The Ministry of, Human Resources Invites ‘sub- Ainister prime Hockey violence worries ‘Roberts saidhe sees no reason te amend ‘the’ language’ provisions of the Con- atitution, He said he is against the principle of a provincial Jaw that makes-French the only official language in Quebec. He expressed hope that a provincial government, headed by a party other than the Parti Quebecois, will change the law. Quebec's traditional negotiating position at constitutional conferences is that it ‘should have more power over areas currently under federal jurisdiction. “Tam not at all tempted by a transfer from the federal government towards the provinces,” Roberts said. “I believe that there has been too much growth'in the powers of the provinces in the last few years so I am not tempted to go in this direction.” Instead; Roberts would like to see the federal government assume greater responsibility over higher education. Conditions have greatly changed since the fathers of Confederation gave the provinces exclusive jurisdiction over education, he said. . “Life has changed since we thought education was only for the young, that after 21 or 22 years of age one was in the work force for all one's life. But because of the impact of new technologies, education and training i is no longer only for the young. HW WOE... Now at affordable Rates officer or security guard. ; The RCMP said owners have reported the loss or ' theft of 36,966 firearms since 1974, mostly handguns and rifles. The annual report also shows that 192,444 firearms acquisition certificates were jasued in .1983. The certificates -are required for anyone wishing to buy, borrow or trade a gun. Shrinking budgets OTTAWA (CP) — Legislative reform is required urgently to help federal public seryaints respond to shrinking budgets and increasing demands, the Public Service Commission said Wednesday in its annual report, “Tt is now tlme for Parliament to consider ef- fective legislative reforms to enhance the ability to provide the effective and efficient public service which Canadians expect and deserve,” sald com- mission chairman Edgar Gallant. The commission urged the government to maintain the merit principle. The report was criticized by the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada for not recommending that all matters relating to public service staff be opened to collective bargaining. Help for tourism OTTAWA (CP) — The government's $100,008) tourism conference this week generated a lot of business for international tourist . industry representatives, federal Tourism Minister David Smith said Wednesday. Smith said exact figures on the number of travel packages sold will not be available for a few weeks but he is confident it will pass the $70-mnillion mark of last. ‘year’s convention. | Absit 800 industry reptesentativéd. ‘aha tiavél™ wrilers attended Rendez-Vous Canada, an annual tourism conference held by the government. It was designed to help reduce Canada’s $2-billion international tourism deficit, sald Gerard Garneau, manager of marketing and communications for Tourism Canada, The three-day convention cost $2.5 million but most expenses were covered by airlines, railways, hotels and the Quebec and Ontario governments, Smith said. Coachman Apartments Delarse apartment dwelling, fridge, stove, carpeling, drapes, undercover parking, | elvater, securily system, rasident manager. ny 4 Plone manager anylime 638-8245 | _ TERRACE’S NEWEST & BEST TOO ‘missions from -socletles, companies or Individuals to provide residential and day programs for mentally relarded persona in the Terrace ares. The Ministry seeks Proposals for the following Programa: ' . ' —# residential resource : for three adults, -~—a day programme to “meet specific needs of the three adults. Submissions may he. for résidentlal and-or day programs. For further Information contact Alf Brady, Ministry (of Human Resources at Box 360, Hazelton, B.C. VOJ 1V0, * Phone 642-5201. . Submisstone. recelved af Ministry of Human Resources, 34-3412 Kalum St. Terrace; B.C. until 4:30 p.m, ‘May 3st, "4904. V8G 472, The lowest or any tender will not necessarily. be. accepted, (sees ity will be. ‘parent TORONTO (CP) — A teacher told a hockey violence inquiry Wed- nesday that she fears her 14-year-cld. son will one ff day be hurt by another player’ “mimicking the fighters of the Natlonal . Hockey League. “Tam sénding my- boy to: Play, not to get hurt,” Pat . ‘Bulut told the Ontario New Democratic "Party’s task -forea on. minor. hockey‘ violence. “But we have a spillover of vislence seen on television at the professional (hockey) level,” she sald. Bulut, an elementary achool. “ teacher from Hanover, Ont., about 180 kilometres northwest of Toronto, criticized the amount of pressure put on young players, “Tt Is an indication of the way hockey is being bred. here,” he sald, One bedroom at $325" mo. SEE oe een ste] [GON ARE —Attractive, Spacious, extra storage room — Beautiful appliances, tiled showers —Lovely cupboards, double 5.5. sinks —Large balconies with screened patio doors —Lots of parking -recreationcourt —Security, enter phones and deadbolts . —Drapery co-ordinated tow—w carpets —Walking distance to down town —Family oriented - close to schools —Haspital, convenience store,.parks, car wash, all in area - $200.00 move in allowance for Aprit 1-30 Professionally Managed _ by trained staff who respect and care for our tenants Telephone: 635-5968 Property Stewards Western Ltd.