proposed a program to hold B reaker... : breaker... Well, only a few more days to go and then the annual ‘CB campout.at “‘Hole-in-the-wall”. This much talked of event is not a formal one in any sense of the world. Neither is it closed, or for the benefit of any one group. Actually, it is.an annual “happening” of the northwest area where everyone just gets it together. Pack your tent, camper, trailer or whatever and head for the Exchamsics River this Friday evening. There is no charge, no plans, no organization; but there is lots of friendship, visiting, QSL swapping and even a few skeeters. Come on out and have a good time. | While on the subject, flyers and brochures are arriving in my mail almost every day advertising the various campouts and jamborees. that’ are taking place all aver the continent this sammer and fall. You can head in any direction ‘and there is something going on. If you might be interested in taking part in any while you are on your holidays, get in touch with me and I’ll advise you of the ones that might be along your route. ok Last week saw the change of the Kitimat Kilos from their Sunday afternoon breaks to ones.that will be held every alternate Wednesday evening at the Tastee Freeze. . W.S.I. 688 advises that the W.S.I. address is no longer Eugene, Oregon. Many other changes have taken place. Should you have any enquiries, or wish to write, first contact W.S.I. 688, Don, on lower 16. He is the controller for this area. oo Last week I received a complimentary copy of a new CB magazine that is being published in Win- nipeg. Although it is primarily for the Manitoba CBers, it is a truly Canadian magazine and has many informative articles written on a Canadian basis, rather than the F.C.C. It is printed on a fine quality book paper, is full color and truly a professional job. The price is $1 per issue, or $8 yearly (limited offer). You may see the sample | copy I have, or write: Breaker Broke, 1328 Clifton St., Winnipeg, Man. R3E 2V2. Most of you are well aware by now that the “long stuff?’ has been hot and heavy the last two weeks. The Post Office surely must be well aware of it by now by the number of QSL cards they have han- dled. It makes very interesting reading, these cards. Joining a QSL swap club can also be. very interesting, from a collectors point of view. There are a good many of them, some very large. Ap- plication forms for the Canadian Thunderbird AM- SSB Club of alert Bay, B.C., B.C. Dogwood QSL Swap CB Club of Vedder Crossing, B.C., Canadian Goose QSL Swap Club of Winnipeg, The QSL Swap Club of Manitoba, The Lone Star Swap Club of Texas, F.N.A. International of St. Norbert, Manitoba, Top Dog QSL Club of Winnipeg and others are-available.simply by contacting me on lower’ 16 (Zodid¢717) ‘or on Channel 19 days. Alos, while on the long stuff, it should be remembered that if you wind up your power mike - to the point that you are over-modulating, you are NOT getting out a stronger signal. Once your mic input reaches 100 percent, your radio will start to. “clip” the peaks. If you are way over, a large percentage of your signal has been clipped out. The effect of this is two-fold. Your distorted signal CANNOT BE CLARIFIED, resulting in’ hard listening. Secondly, this “clipping”? ends up as spurious harmonic transmissions which know no bounds. When a station is badly over-modulating, they will wipe out two to three channels either side of the one they are using. An adjacent station in the ‘immediate vicinity will be wiped out entirely, regardless of how good their adjacent channel rejection is. Use your power mikes wisely, you'll do tter., . Must back on out for now, see you at the campout this weekend. XM 14-982, Toolie, QRT- NEW LAW : Juveniles off | to detention? VANCOUVER (CP) — British Columbia's proposed venile lock-up laws are a egislative smokescreen and threaten to turn back the clock on children’s rights, says a provincial court judge. . frightening paralle amilies Hepworth said. Judge Ross Colliver told a weekend meeting of the B.C, Association of Social’ Workers that Attorney General Garde Gardom’s juvenile containment program is “a legislative smokescreen, . . which may eliminate some of the pressure on ‘the juvenile justice system whenever there is public clamor for lock and key." Last fall Gardom Tuvenile offenders in prisons, forest camps and | community minimum- security centres. Judge Collver advocated alter- natives such as social work’ intervention that he has ised in his town of Penticton to avaid locking up youths. Philip Hepworth, prograin director of social services for the Canadian Council on . Social . De- velopment in Ottawa, said Gardom’s proposal would turn back the clock on children’s rights. He told delegates that many juvenile offenders come from deprived backgrounds. “There is in my view a between mnitive behavior in abusive and punitive behavior by the state toward problem families or families with difficult children,” Kenshin — Bunpine Pune ape an “* , .- TERRACE CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTRE - Manual Da Silya and John McMynn of the Cerebral Palsy Society are presented with the second cheque for $10,000 by Knsmen representative Vic Hawes. The Kinsmen have raised the full $30,000 they committed - Taxpay OTTAWA (CP) — Transport Minister Otto Lang says new proposals to maintain low-cost’ grain- shipping rates in the West were made with no con- sideration of the cost to taxpayers. In a sharp Commons ex- - change Tuesday on the Hall commission report, Lang said the government woul! consider recommendations to maintain heavily sub- sidized grain-shipping rates and other proposals before - taking action. “The government would move before the end ofn- June on some of the proposals, published Mon- y, by retired Supreme Court Justice Emmett Hall. But Lang refused to be specific, and said one suggestion to maintain an 80-year-old grainshipping tate on the Prairies coul cost taxpayers ‘‘hundreds of . millions of dollars.” Prime Minister Trudeau commended Hall's effort, but said it is too early to decide whether its proposals should be supported. “Only members of. the Tory party would want to support something before they read it,’ Trudeau said. In his report on the grain handling and transportation system, Hall called for the abandonment of more than 2,000 miles of Prairie rail lines, establishment of a Prairie rail authority and continuation of the sub- sidized Crowsnest Pass rates. . Under them, Prairje farmers are paid the ditf- ference between the actual cost of shipping grain and a lower, government-set shipping rate. Hall urged the govern- ment to maintain the sub- sidy, byt said it should be paid to railways rather than NOTICE. ‘GARBAGE CLEAN-UP during Spring Clean-up Woek Designated May 16th to May 20th, 1977 Veseati ie UB f pene. Go ae Pepe et . oy Pe a . . ~ a i -. themselves to the centre for last September. Another bingo will be held June 11 and the Heidleburg Beer Gardens will be held July t. Proceeds go to the next _ $10,000 presentation and other Kinsmen charities. HALL COMMISSION REPORT farmers, an idea endorsed y opposition ies. Aten Hamilton, former Progressive Conservative agriculture minister, described the report as ‘‘the economic Magna Carta of Western Canada’' and called for its im- plementation before the next general election. It was. particularly im- portant to move ahead with proposals to scrap some railway lines and improve | others, he said. Lang said the government would introduce measures todeal with some of the Hall commission proposals ‘‘at a very early date.” But he said it would take no action on shipping-rate recommendations before it knows how much they would cost. Lang suggested that ‘‘tre- mendous additional ex- penditures” would be in- volved should the govern- ment decide to accept Hall’s call to maintain. the traditional shipping sub- sidies. The subsidies tended to encourage farmers to ship grain from the Prairies, rather than mill it at home. Lang said the government was determined to help the West develop manufac- turing industries—oil-seed erushing plants, livestock processing and _ flour moilli He had been “very con- scious’’ of the need to under- mine such industry with a freight-rate structure that encouraged Prairie farmers to. ship their goods elsewhere for processing. Les Benjamin (NDP— Regina Lake Centre) urged Lang to adopt the entire report instead of picking out recommendations . which were politically advan- tageous to the government. District of Terrace, Public Works Department, will pick up extra gar- bage and refuse:free of change, from Monday, May 16th to Friday, May 20th, 1977. (Spring Clean-up Week) This service does not include car bodies or stumps, Kindly arrange to have this extra ‘garbage and waste materials set out on your regular pickup day between 6:00 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. If possible, have garbage and waste materials in plastic bags or cartons to assist in the picking up. No industrial waste. , DISTRICT OF TERRACE The MP from Regina said the report posed “‘an ob- vious problem for the government” and urged House leader MacEachen to have the document referred to the Commons transport com- mittee for allparty study. Lang said Monday the Allan . er's burden ignored © government would move first on the recommendation for abandonment of Prairie branch lines. Lang told other Con- servative questioners that ' he would require more time to study in detail certain | proposals before stating the government’s position. _ EVERETT CLIPPER HEAD MANUFACTURED BY BRODY MACHINERY, Fa THE HERALD, Wednesday, May 18 1977, PAGE AS | MPS ATTACK Little spending on small ports OTTAWA (CP) — East and West Coast MPs unleashed their annual litan of complaints Tuesday about inadequate spending on small harbors ’ in thelr ridings. But some of the stilfest charges came _ fron Ontario MPs. n It was the annual ap- earance of the small iarbors branch of the fisheries department before the Commons environment committee. Conservative fisheries ' eritie Lloyd Crouse listed small harbors in his Nova Scotia riding of South Shore that need wharves, skid- ways and other facilities ‘‘to help fishermen who want to work,”’ Liberal Hugh Anderson, from the British Columbia - riding of Comox-Alberni, urged better methods to ensure berthage fees are collected from pleasure boat users at all the West Coast facilities. Many lack fee collectors and the money is needed to help defray the rising costs facing small harbors, he said, New Democrat Andy Hogan said there “never seems to be enough money for small harbors” in_his riding of Cape Breton-East Richmond or other. high unemployment areas. Newfoundland Con- servative Jack Marshall (Humber-St. Georges-St. Barbe) said the branch should make sure it gets all it can for small harbors projects from federal make- work projects. But Ontario MPs Stan Darling (PC—Parry Sound- Muskoka) and Roger Young (L—Niagara Falls) agr that Ontario was getting screwed" by the allocation of funds. Darling said Ontario gets only 10 per cent of the branch's budget of $30 million yet its 427 harbors - have to handle half the registered pleasure boats in Canada and a massive in- flux from U.S. states along the Great Lakes. Young said the Ontario allocation doesn't even provide sufficient money to maintain existing facilities let alone increase the ser- vices. Yet reports indicate the ‘quadrupling in demand for pleasure craft harbors in Ontario by 1982, he said. MPs have also com- plained of an increase in pleasure boat dockage fees to 10 cents a foot a day from two cents. But William Reid, branch director, said the increased rates will be used to help defray increases his agency faces, appearing Lakelse Hotel DIEGO ALCAREZ MAY 16 thru MAY 28 Spanish Lounge Terrace 638-8141 “Introducing _V SHEAR Cuts up to 196 trees per hour. | 24” capacity the new This Feller buncher leaves @ no shatter in g the butt IT leaves afl the shatter in: the Less moving parts than most other machines. es Breakdowns reduced dueto 3". lower operating pressures... cau EVERETT GIESE ce : 952-1274 | OR BRODY MACHINERY ==> 07-0891 et stump. hal *%' Aa