Terrace RCMP dealt with a wave of broken windows during the weekend when culprits damaged a total of six cars with rocks and other heavy objects. Three cars parked in front of residences on Davis and Loen Streets were damaged during the night. Police suspect the same persons may be responsible for all of the incidents because the damages were similar. Three new cars were also damaged at Terrace Chrysler on Saturday resulting in cracked win- dows and other outside damages. Police are asking that anyone seeing any suspicious activity of this type should contact the errace RCMP. Lakelse Hotel suffered damages when someone kickec the glass out of the front window on Saturday evening. caating are cestigating. Aperson suspected of auto .jtheft was apprehended and charged after taking a 1968 Dodge Van that was parked in front of a residence on Sunday at 3am. . Gordon Reynolds Clayton, 18, was caught at WILLAIMS Creek bridge on Highway 2. He was arrested and charged with still in- Police beat = Vandals hit car windows taking an autonobile without the owner’s consent. Lengths of cedar valued at $450 are missing from McDeek Avenue, on the site of a church under con- struction. Police were informed Saturday the 500 feet of unmarked cedar was missing from the site: The Seven Seas restaurant reported the up theft of $700 contained ina deposit bag inside the restaurant on Saturday. The money, in small bills and change, was taken between 12:30 and 4a.m. .B.C.Hydro equipment was stolen last Thursday from a remate site off Copper River Three air impact guns, 250 feet of hose and a four-foot jack-all were taken, ap- parently by someone who drove a four-wheel drive vehicle to the nearly inaccessible location. A 224nch portable colour television set was taken from a home in the 3900 bleck Marchall sometime during the weekend. The occupants were away for the weekend and discovered the theft when the jreturned home Sunday night. The television is valued at $350. So Police were called to a home on Scott Street shortly after midnight on Saturday to investigate a complaint of @ break-in. Residents of the house had been asleep when they heard the unlocked door epen and their dog begin to rk. Thinking it-was a member of the family, one person got | Up and iscovered | Gn in: er who a 0 intoxicated. Ppear Police were called and arrived to take custody of the man. His name has not been released. No one was injured in a single vehicle accident on Sunday when a can plunged to the bottom of a 40-feot embankment on Kalum Drive near Halliwell. The vehicle suffered $3,000 in damage. Police were called to the seene, but could not find anyone around until Harley Wilson, owner of the vehicle, arrived driving a motor- cycle, . Wilson said an ac- puaintance had been driving the Dodge ' Van with six passengers who had all left the scene, apparently uninjured. No reason was given for the accident not haveing been reported and police are still investigating. New mail times Last Sunday the Terrace Post Office closed off time for airmail due to revised plane schedules. On Mondays and Friday the mail closes at 3p.m. wit the final clearance of street letter boxes at 2pm. On Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday the mail closing time is 1:15p.m. and the final clearance of letter boxes at 12 Noon. Ost Registration. closes , 30 minutes before regular mail closing times. Contract settled {CP)—The SBritish Columbia Interior Fruit and Vegetable Workers’ Union an the Okanagan Federated Shippers have reed upon a new contract after seven months of negotiations. bout 1,600 union mem- bers voted 90 per cent in favor of a two-year contract on the weekend, retroactive to Sept. 1. 7 Wage increases are 55 cents an hour in the first of the pipeline, based his year and 5) s rane. No base testimony on & study of the rate was available. Alyeska oil pipeline through Alma Brown union : business agent, said COST MUCH MORE f members.were pleased with That pipeline, which the agreement. began operations this f ‘\ Alaska Highway line Iwas Local family adopts shot, says oe P picketer MONTREAL (CP) Richard Pitre, 26, testified today in sessions court that he was wounded in the chest shortly after entering the Robin Hood Multifoods Ltd. flour mill Plant grounds with a group of about 10 workers, The testimony opened preliminary hearings into three private security guards accused of firing upon pickets mill last July The three guards sat in the front row of the court while a group of flour workers, some of them on crutches, sat in the rear until the defence lawyer requested that only one witness ata time be present -in the courtroom. Marc Levesque, 22, An- tonio Rolland, 42, and Roger charged with eight counts of ¢ WI counts 0: criminal negligence causing bodily harm, which carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence. — They were originally accused of discharging a firearm with intent to maim or wound but the charges were subsequently reduced, Eight persons were wounded in the shooting incident. ; Pitre said the workers went through a factory gate and moved toward a fire drant and hese, with the idea of spraying the guards. - Pipe costs exceed estimates WASHINGTON (CP) — The final costs of the Alaska | Highway natural gas pipeline through Canada exceed the U.S. ad- ministration’s top estimate of $13.7 billion, a govern- ment financial expert told a U.S. Senate hearing Mon- day. th an interview, Monte Canfield, director of the qerey division fing Gitice, eneral ACCOUnUN, 5 /IKICE, . said ‘he Gould note e” sur-. rised if the final cost. of, the - cothills Pipe Lines Ltd. project reached $25 billion or $30 billion. He told the Senate energy committee that inflation, “minimal site-specific data and several important technical uncertainties” will help raise the cost of the project above the current estimate of about $10 billion. The committee began hearings Monday on President Carter’s recommendation that the Foothills project to move Alaskan natural gas south by pipeline through the Yukon be approved. — Canfield, who said his office did not have enough information to draw up a prediction of the final costs TO BCAA MEMBERS POINT. - . AUTO CHECK PHONE OR CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO — Totem Ford | 4631 Kelth Totem Gulf 4711 Lakelse y, THIS FREE OFFER TO BCAA MEMBERS ONLY GOOD FROM SEPT, 12- oct 31 sR summer, has cost about $7.8 billion, up from the original estiate 0! a million. ‘If project engineering and system design are based on more complete data, both become Iss subject tochange,” Canfield told the hearing. ‘‘We should insist on site-specific data and on thorough investiga- tion of the technical and geological uncertainties.” The government also should insist on a continuing audit of the pipeline project to keep track of costs. - “Qur agreement with the Canadian government should be amended to stipulate that an on-goin audit and other U.S. requirements affecting the ‘gas pipeline construction will be implemented during construction with Canada,” he added, . Earlier in the hearing, US. Energy Secretary James Schlesinger said Canada is working on details for a strict monitoring mechanism for the section of the pipeline through Canada. KEEP COSTS DOWN He also said that certain clauses of the pipeline agreement signed recentl by the two countries—suc GUARANTEED 90 DAYS OR 4000 MILES ned | | (WeHonour— ~ as decreased rates of return for the companies building the lines if there are major cost over-runs—will keep construction costs down. Companies building the portion of the line in Canada will have an extra incentive, he noted. The agreement | says tha5 if these companies keep costs of the main line down, U.S. companies will” pay 100 per cent of the costs of a spur line to carry Mackenzie Delta gas. That US. payment for the s will decrease if costs on the main line run heavily over estimates. . In response to questions from Senator Ted Stevens (Rep. Alaska), Schlesinger said while Canada has made no commitments, the U.S. has had indications that Canada would increase exports of natural gas if the pipeline is built and that there would be ‘possible further reductions in gas shipments” if the project is turned down. A very special commitment has been made by members of our community; Mr. &Mrs. James J.MacDougall of Terrace, have joined Foster Parents Plan of Canada, They have adopted little Segundo Segura aged Nine years of Peru. Mr. & Mrs. MacDougall’s monthly contribution of $19.00 brings help not only to the Foster id, but every member of the family. _ The $19.00 a month provides the family with a monthly cash grant or material benefits; free medical and dental care, free prescriptions the sustained guidance and counselling of social workers and the benefits of many special cash grant or material benefits; free medical and dental care, free prescriptions, the sustained guidance and counselling of social workers and the benefits of many special programs. All Foster Children and their brothers and siters, age permitting. are en- couraged to attend school. Where suitable, vocational training courses are made available, free of charge, for Foster Children, their brothers and sisters, where practical, their parents. 2 objective is to provide is te provide the family with the tools to help them become independent and self-supporting. All programs,are adapted to hild whole community can benefit, particulary through the mass inoculations and other means. Foster Parents and Foster Children correspond monthly (letters are transulted) and oftern develop warm and af- fectionate relationshi| which mean as muct to the child as the material and financial aid. Foster Parents Plan is currently working in thir- teen countries in South Amercia, Central America, Asia and Africa. Over 70,000 children are currently being aided by individuals groups asn families in Canada, Austrelia, the Netherlands and U.S.A. For more in- formation on this non-profit THE HERALD, Tuesday, Sepiember 27, 1977, PAGE 3 Segundo Segura, nine, has four brothers and one sister all ranging in ages from four to 15, of them in school in Chimbote, Peru. His father has died, leaving the family under tha care of thelr ‘mother, Margarita. Too fat? Too thin? Too tired? Too often? Da something for somebody... Your body! programs. . The $19.00 a month provides the family with a monthly the n of each country and tend to be concentrated in rural areas, where the non-sectarian, non-political independent organization, write to Foster . Parents Plan, Of Canada, 183 St. Clair Avenue West, Toronto, Ontario M4V 1P8. JOIN THE PAYROLL SAVINGS PLAN NOW | It's time again! And this time, it's even better. Because starting this year, you can buy the new Compound . ; Interest Bond on the Payroll Savings Plan. After the first year, you will eam interest on your interest. Millions of Canadians have discovered that the Payroll Savings Plan is a great way to save systematically. It’s easy. It's convenient. And now, with the new Compound Interest Bond, your savings will continue to grow automatically, year after year. ‘THE NEW COMPOUND INTEREST BOND The Compound Interest Bond on the Payroll Savings Plan is specifically designed to meet your savings goals. This new bond re-invests your interest automatically at che guaranteed annual rate of 8.06%. Here's how the value of a $100 Compound Interest Bond grows: Nov. L Value Nov. 1 Value 1978 $107.00 1983 $158.78 1979 $115.81 1984 $171.77 1980 $125.34 1985 - $185.81° 1981 $135.63 1986 $200.97 1982 $146.76 MOST MAKES AND MODELS SERVICE SPECIAL _ EXPIRES SEPT. 30 i Rapack: Inspact Most Passenger Cars Any additionatoans or labour wil! be quoted bolore work 1s startad Compound Interest Bonds are available in denominations of $100, $300, $500, $1,000 and $5,000. Once fully paid for, Compound Interest Bonds may be exchanged for Regular Interest Bonds (starting at _ $300) which pay annual interest on Nov. 1 by cheque ordirect deposit into your savings or chequing account. This can be arranged wherever you bank or invest. Compound Interest Bonds are instant cash at any time. Upon redemption, you will receive all regular annual interest plus all compound interest earned. A GOOD RETURN New Canada Savings Bonds are dated Nov. 1, 1977 and yield an average annual interest of 8.06% when . held to maturity. Each new bond begins with 7% interest che first year and earns 8.25% interest for each of the remaining 8 years. SIGN UPTODAY! ... . Don’t miss put. Take this’. opportunity to buy the new- Compound Interest Bond on the Payroll Savings Plan. Sign up today and watch your savings grow. wo _NEWCANADA SAVINGS BONDS 06% Avera, Annual Interest to Maturity BRAKE SPECIAL 69.95 w Replace. New Front Oise pads New Rear Linings Front Wheal bearings Drums & Rotars Brake Hoses Frant Grease Seats Rear Wheals Cylinders Front Calipers SEE OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT TERRACE TOTEM FORD SALES LTD. THEY'LL KEEP YOU GOING 4631 KEITH TERRACE, 8.0.