TERRACE HERALD, TERRACE, B.C. a. si GOING FOR A RIDE, this large B.C. Hydro transformer was moved by Terrace Transfer Monday from the Canadian ~~ aT. National Railway tracks to the substation at the end of Park Avenue...Staff Photo, ferrace sports festival | Con'd from Page 1 In the Terrace Community Center, May 22 and 23, the Northwest Championship judo contest will be held, along with the local tournament. Track and field events are set for June & on the grounds of Skeena Junior Secondary School. ; And what sports festival would be a festival without the novelty wheelbarrow race. At the present time, the Loyal Order of the Moose are in- vesligating hold finals during intermission at the Terrace Speedway June 6. Bowlers will take to the alleys at Barney's Bowl May 30. Still up in the air is amateur night, but lining up contestants is underway. - Elk's May Day will be 7 125,000 asthletes from many | paris of the globe. They competed in 47 in- dividual sports in 64 B.C. centers, ineluding Terrace. cpeapies Already, according to. Festiva! officials in Victoria, 123 communities have signified intentions of staging events this year. Quality Printing fast service, see Joe's! BOOKLETS @ SIGNS @ TICKETS @ LETTERHEADS @ ENVELOPES of MENUS @ SNAPOUTS /@ POSTERS STATEMENTS @ BU; with NESS FOR & Mom keeps Joey home |" Con’d from Page t She said the boy had to walk: three miles in deep snow '‘and,”’ ‘she added, ‘‘someétimes he misses it (the bus) Locke disagrees. ; He said district employees ecked out the distance Joey d to cover to get to bus pickup shed and found it-to be 1.6 miles. Loan would create jobs Con'd from Page 1 system for central Terrace, a continuation of the street- paving program and a new water intake at Deep Creek. Johnstone, speaking for himself, said he favored work on the drainage system to take top priority. oo ’ “The town should put this shove naving,” he said. Johnstone said, by putting asphalt down first, there. would be less absorption ... “the water has to go somewhere.” He suggested a main trunk drainage Ene ruming from development area “D”, above Lakelse and west of Kalum,’ to run just past the Co-op and from there into the Skeena River. ' Once the drainage problem is successfully tackled, he said, then the town can get on with paving. Johnstone said council probably couldn’t roll up its sleeves and talk works planning |. until April. . ; Jolliffe, at the meeting reminded aldermen that the municipalities request had to be in by March 31. Roadrunners Con'd from Page 1 According to the proposed schedule, the Terrace rumers . Will leave noon Sunday, April 11 ‘and arrive in Vancouver, their -point of destination, at 8 p.m. Friday, April 16, . Cameron said in most stops the way the runners and adult | companions would sleep in school gyms and food would be provided for by local centennial committees or similar groups. It will put Terrace .on the map,” Cameron said.. _ He added -.,that Recreation Director Pete Fanning has already traveled the route and set up mest of the ac- Mrs. Keeler, in an -earme Herald story, said it was a long, dangerous and lonely trek for her son: She added there was no way she could drive him to the stop and requested the school bus drive in and pick her son up. - This was turned down by the school district. - Charles Ostertag, who operates school buses for the district, said it's tough enough ‘just getting to the pickup shed in this weather. ’ Sometimes, he added, the bus is late because of weather. " CAUSE HARDSHIP - He gaid driving in to pick up Joey would throw his schedule .off completely and cause more hardship for the students already served. . Ostertag added that the -Rosswood run is also an un- profitable one. Rosswood is located about 35 miles northwest of Terrace and the bus can only get in there by a logging road that’s not kep clear like provincial and municipal roads. . Mrs. Keeler said she and her family moved ta Rosswood after fire destroyed their trailer in Thornhill in early December. “It was all we could find at the time,’’ she told The Herald. In the meantime, Locke said he is waiting to hear from Mrs. -Keeler, = * When pressed, he refused to comment on any court action which may be contemplated if the Keeler's make no attempt to get their son into school or an a correspondence course. NEWEST IDEA IN HOME DECOR! Scented (# DECORATOR | . FLORAL BOWL AIR REFRESHER — ROOM SCENTER Exciting new decorator floral bowl, Different. Ex- quisite beauty. Glass decanter jar holds floral arrangement of Empress Rose amazingly irue to lita, ... Bntificial, but Remove lid... delicately scented rose aroma rafreshes alr, helps banish stale odors, - Use in living room, bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, den, or office. Wonderful gift. [deal for patients or shut-ins, “6 DECORATOR-APPROVED: Ct Rose: Pink, Cy 80 Rod: Gale Orange: Violet Flue Gay: Paac any decor. | Computer Services, Enclosed please find ‘Please mail 181 Pioneer — Winnipeg 1, Man. oe ee ee THURSDAY, MARCH 11,.1971 | Bo Hospitai to: Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Olynyk, a boy, on March 4. ; Mr. and Mrs. Neil Lindseth; boy, March 5, ° us Mr. and Mrs, Larry Renshaw, a girl, on March 5. 7 Mr. and Mrs. James Pettis, a girl, of March 5. a! Mr. and Mrs. — Helmut Giesbrecht, a girl, on March 7. Mr, and Mrs. William Hill, a girl, on March 8. mo , Mr. and Mrs. Albert Scott, boy, on Marchs. — -- . BOSSES. DAUGHTER Dr. J.5. Helmcken joined the ‘Hudson’s Bay Company in 1849 at the age of 25, He married a ‘daughter of James Douglas. 1971's HOTTEST SELLER! Good for many Months. Easliy re- newed with inex: pensive refill. . . ($2.99 each}. . Floral Bowls. Note — Where Sales Tax applies add same to cheque — cash or money order. DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED eC cae Le promises to be swingér commodation. rah: Because nothing less will serve British Columbia os presen arg 0a = aera OD Tans Dal BUSINESS CARDS @ FLYERS RUBBER STAMPA MADE TO ORD, JOE'S PRINTERS 2-461! LAZELLE, TERRACE, B.c.’ PHONE 635.3024 me 6WE CAN CALL AT YOUR OFFICE OR SHOPS TO DISCUSS ALL YOUR Printing Necos i held May 24 while the logger’s Ball is set for May 29 at. the Terrace Community Center. munity Center, Stewart school Con'd from Page 1 result in the present buildings. Wells said he expects the total school population to reach 550 by September. | =BCTelhasa school would also have a library and an activity room. . Bul the school district faces one problem. A name for the school. With the new intermediate school there will also be Stewart primary school ta grade three and Stewart secondary schoal ta house grades nine to 12. At a recent school board meeting, one trustee suggested ealling the school after a mine in the region. He ‘suggested “Premier.” However, trustee, R.M. Conway thought of another mine. . “How about calling it Big Missouri?” he said, jokingly. Last year, in its initial |- staging, the B,C.-wide Festival - of Sports brought together |: By 1980, nearly three million British Columbians with almost two million tele- phones will be making twelve million phone calls a day. A projection — which, in view of British Columbia's great potential, may well require frequent upward revision, — 7 The figures today are nearer two million population, one million phones and six million - daily calls through a telephone network which has cost about $750 million to create. © 7 ~ During the current decade, that cost figure...” must be more than doubled if eustomerdemands ©. for increasingly sophisticated and expanded® |: phone services are to be met. The B.C. Telé- phone Company is obliged to meet these: cust- omerdemands. ee That's why, for the 1970s, our expansion - program is a Billion-Dollar Plan — a plan to: build new and improved switching, transmission and distribution facilities costing _an average of more than $100 million in each year of the decade. ~ Nothing less will serve the phone service’ demands of British Columbians! ' Our plan is expressed here in dollars — but it’s really - ae "a people plan; a program evolved by the people of B.C. Tel to meet the demands of the people of British Col- “~ wmbia for.communications services. . _ a, oc," It-ineludes development of new skills and: talents “among the growing number of B.C. Tel men and women; _* the training and retraining of telephone people to assure. : they're able to design, build and’ maintain communica- «tions installations incorporating the newest technology.’ , “And it’s a plan which includes provision.of this new . technology — and. the ‘customer services that go with it. - ai se — ‘not just to ‘the metropolitan areas, but to the whole. . _ : 99 ov." of this. vast and rugged ‘province, © 0 0 P. map oe EL ae “coy It's: a Billion-Dollar Plan demanded by the people ..... GAL ee we serve — the people-of British Coluinbial:! "2 SAVE 37% From March 1ith to 17th | - When you don’t know who fo turn to... |. TURN 10.US WITH CONFIDENCE |} } MacKAYS: - FUNERAL ~~ HOME |. Phone 638:244¢ " - Terrace; B.C. INTERIOR .. 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