CONTINUED 32 Mobile Homes. Must sell, 1977 Manco mobile home, 3 bdrms., washer, dryar, fridge and stove. All drapes with new living rm. drapes and a storage shed, Asking $20,000 but'opan to” offers. E.G. No. 4 Pine Park, Thor- nhill. Ph. 635-4532. 4730p 33 Real Estate. 3 bdrm. house, no bsmt., on 2.28 acras, Kalum ‘Lake Drive, 10 mins. to downtown. on paved road. Asking $48,500. Negotiable. To view ph. 695-5438, 4/30p For sale, log home, 10 acres, § bdrms. upstairs, 2 bathrms. Wood furnace, gas furnace and elac. Many extras, Ask- ing $210,000. Ph. 635-3620 to May 20. 4/9 Terrace Review Classifieds work 35 Legal Province of Briileh Columbia Ministry of Trans ye rtation and Highwaya TENDER Electoral District: Atiin Highway District: Dease Lake Projecti{ob No,: J0002 A - 63/86 Projectiiob description: Grader Service Contract for Highway Malntenance and Construction on Highway 37 and Felegraph Creek Road within the Lake Highways District. The tender sum for this project Is to include applicable Federal and Provinclal Sales Tax. : Tender Opaning Date: April 15 1086 Tander Opening Time: 2:00 P.M. Tender documents with envelope, plans. specitications and conditions of tender are avallabla free of charge ‘ONLY from Minlatry of Transportation and Hi hways Olstrict Offices within Highways Region No. 5 between the hours of 830 am. and 4:30 p.m. Manday to Friday, except Holidays. Phone number of originating Office: (BOA) 771-4511 Pre-tander meating will be held at: Ministry of Transporation and Highways ODlatelc Office, Stikina and Commercial Ave., Aprit 14, 1986 at 2:00 P.M. Tenders will be openad at Minlatry of Transportation and Highways District Office, Stikina and Commercial Ave., Deage Lake, B.C, an tlons to bidders. INVITATION TO TENDER Sealed tenders will be received by the undersigned for the construction of the project entitled: St. Anthony’s School, 1750 Nalabila Street, Kitimat, 8.C. Root Retrofit. (Approximate Area 185 Squares) interested Contractors are requested to contact Inter- Provincial Inspectors (1982) Ltd., 13696 104th Avenue, Surrey, B.C. V3T 1W4. Phone 588-4443 for information regarding specifications, bid forms and detailed Instruc- Closing Date: 2:00 P.M. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. PST — May ist, 1986. 4/23p “The thread to match this costs $1.75. Postage from Korea is $8.85." > [E5 MARINR**’* ZOUTBOARDS “SALES KEN’S MARINE RESEESEESSEASSSES SERVICE PARTS 4946 Greig Ave. Phone: 635-2909 TERRACE — Susie Francis and the Gaslight Follies are expected to be a big drawing card for audiences at the Terrace and District Jaycees tSth Annual Trades Fair to be held this month. Rick Jacura, chairman of the Terrace and District Jaycees, said 80 percent of the booths have been sold for the event and he expects all exhibitor space to be booked by the end of the month, The Trades Fair will be held at the Terrace Arena and begins Fri- day, April 25 to Sunday, April 27, This is the first year entertainment has been included in the Trades Fair. package and Jacura said the concept appears to have created more in- terest than ever. Susie Francis and the Gaslight Follies will entertain au- diences with songs and a variety of stage skits. Merchants from Ter- race, Kitimat, Smithers and some from as far away as Vancouver will be exhibiting at the Fair. Admission to the event is $2 for adults with chil- dren under six years old, senior citizens and the handicapped admitted free of charge. Visitors to the Trades Fair will have a chance to win a trip for two on Pacific Western Airlines if they fill out their name and address on an entry form at the admission gate. Many of the ex- hibitors will be giving away door prizes to visitors at the Fair. Doors at the arena open at 6 p.m. until 10 p.m, on Friday, April 25, The Trades Fair con- tinues Saturday, April 26 from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and on Sunday, April 27 from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Susie Francis and the Gaslight Follies will be giving a performance Friday night, with three shows scheduled on Saturday and two shows Sunday. Jacura said approx- imately 4000 people at- tended the Fair last year and organizers are shooting for an even higher attendance record this year. ‘SI think we will do betier,’’ consider- ing the entertainment provided, Jacura said. He has been told that Susie Francis and her group are “‘well worth’’ the promotional price. Skeena Forests, West _ Fraser Mills donated two lifts of random lenghth 2 by 4’s so the Jaycees could erect new trades booths for exhibitors at the Fair. Andy Lee, president of the Terrace and Terrace Review — Wednesday, April 9, 1986 23 ~— «6 GLASSIFIEDS Trades Fair expected to— be a great success District Jaycees, pointed out that the Fair is the first in the northwest for 1986. Trades Fairs are scheduled at later dates in Kitimat and Prince Rupert. Lee said rental of booths are approximate- ly $175 for an 8 foot by 8 foot space. Money from the gate will be used to pay for the entertain- ment, advertising costs, trophies for exhibitors and to purchase plywood and materials for new forms next year, Scenes from the 1985 Trades Fair Legislature rePOrt cones tomo 4 and preserving jobs. We also wanted to maintain essential social services, as well as provide new health and education programs. And we were determined to maintain our low tax burden — in- cluding the second- lowest personal income taxes in Canada — and at the same time, con- tinue to reduce the pro- vincial deficit. The budget introduced by the Finance Minister March 20 came through on all counts. Besides reducing the deficit for the third consecutive year, it makes a substan- tive commitment to enhancement of the quality of health and education services for British Columbians. Over a_ three-year period, we'll invest an additional $720 million in further improving our health system and add another $600 million to our spending on educa- tion. That program is working and it’s doing what it was designed to do. Proof lies in the kind of job statistics that we saw in February, when there were 50,000 more British Columbians working than in the same month in 1985. The budget is another impor- tant building block in our long-range program — but we still have much to do, particularly in the area of our first priority — job creation. However, we can be optimistic about our pro- spects because we have yet to feel the impact of Expo 86, with its tremen- dous, long-term poten- tial to bring new invest- ment and new economic activity to our Province. At a time when other governments face the unenviable task of in- creasing taxes, cutting programs and mounting deficits, we’re moving to build a solid foundation for a stronger British Columbia and a more secure future for our people and their families — always mindful that a strong economic policy is the most secure social policy.