55. PROPERTY FOR SALE TRUCKS | 1.74 acres lake area proparty. Trailer and large shop for sale. Phone 790-2542 after 5 pm. (p5-230) 56. BUSINESS. Fuly equipped For gale: convenience store, With— living accommodation, Store does & good year round “furpover. For further In- - formation please write Box 11214 or call 635-3971. (cifn-2- "W79) PARTTIME OUTSTANDING BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MOVIE HUT Coin operated childrens cartoon Movie Huts In sound . and color. When placed in _ shopping malls and large . tetall stores they are proven money, makers, traffic bulldera and entertaining. Sub Distribulorahips are now avaliable in folowing areas. (1) East & West Kootenays. (2) Prince George and areas fo the north and west, (3) Prince Rupert ‘Smithers areas. ‘Do you have a few hours per week to spare and ap- prox, $20,000 for Invesiment In four units? Exclusive territery and training in service of units provided. A taw concept of childrens entertainment fast growing across Canada. For more details contact the distributor of MOVIE HUT In B.C, & Stellar Pacifle Olsiributors Ltd. 690 Kingston Ave. Kamloops, 8.C, V2B 2Ca (c3-190) FOR SALE Small business. Can be operated parttime or In conjunction with another. Ine. Easy terms: tor right party. Phonane 693-4568: evenings.- {p8-2d0} ~~ 57, ; >" AUTOMOBILES 1972 Firebird for sale. Phone 635-4246, (c5-190) Ph. 376-6255 ° For Sale: 1978 Ford Granada | E.S.S. PS, PB, radio, bucket seats, radials. Low miles, Would Ike older car In trade, eo pm: : (p3-190) hoe Priced for quick sale — ‘74 Mazda RX3 Rotary. Has summer radiais and winter bias ply tires. Stereo japadeck & radio. New brakes, but needs muffler . replacement. Asking $700 pa Phone 639-6430. (p5- 974 VW Beetle:-in-- good condition, 635-5145-‘betwéen © on onday thru Friday, (p3- 196? Dodge for sale. Auto. 6 cylinder. Phone 636-1390. (p4-220) 1974 Corvette High Per- formance 350. T roof. Tilt wheel. New paint and tires, Phone 635-3153. (p5-190) 1964 Pontiac Parlaslenne 327 V-8 Automatic transmission. Needs some repairs. 150.00 FIRAA. Ph 635-4219 after 12 Noon. (TFN) 70 Mazda 1000 4 door avtomatic Exc, body. AM- FM radio and cassette deck, Exe speakers. P.B. good motor after 5 phone 635-5187. (P2-19.23 Oct) 58. TRUCKS Truck for sale: 1978 Bronco. PS, PB, positraction, 351 with 4 speed, Excallent tapedeck and radio. 635-5416. (¢16-220) 77 Chev 4x4. 30,000 mites, Exeallent condition. Asking $6,400. Also one large oak coffee table only six weeks old, Phone 635-9436, (c3-180) ‘72 Chev SWB: Van. New radial tires, paint, Insulated Inferior. Phone 638-1037. (p4- OF. Leaving in 3 weeks. Must Salt— 1978 Ford Van Fi50 c- Ww awivel captain chairs. AC, headers, summer & winter ‘fires. Some customizing. Stereo ete, Ph. 635-2803 rm. 2 = (pls-240) 1968 Ford Modal 850. Cab- over fuel truck. 4 com- Mone crew cab Brand New we ‘camper valued at $19,000. Bast offer takes. Call after 6 pm. W12-624-6874 For Sate: 7 Norwestern 12x56 mobile home with 10x12 finished addition, unfurnished and In good condition. Reasonably ore Phone 635-5529. (p7-_ For Sale: 1972 12x68 foot trailer set up la trailer park. For app. fo view call 435- 2506. (c20-8N} ‘74 Monarch mobile home. Unfurnished, with fridge and stove. 12x63 with 2 joey. shacks 10x12, fully finished with electric heat. 3 bdrm., very good condition. Situated at 47 Woodland Heights | Tratler Court with fenced-in lot. Must be sean to be ap- preclatad. Asking price “enon. Phone 635--5829, (c- For Sania: 1976 24x60 Homeo mabile home In Pine Mobile . Home Park, For more in- formation please cali 635-" 2261 and ask for Tom. {c7- 190) Must Sell — 1975 Diplomat mobile home. Furnished or unfurnished: Extras in- cluded. Can be sen by ap- wore Ph, 632-2585, tc? Pm | For Sale: 1976 14x70 Manco mobile home. Unfurnished. Set up and skirted In focal fralier park. Phone 635-9734. {clfn-2-10-79) 66. RECREATIONAL © VEHICLES MOTORHOMES FOR RENT: 20° to 28’. Luxurlously equipped. Fully insured, Available for Nov., Coe., Jan. Phone 632-2420, (¢20-16N) MUST SELL «| IM- MEDIATELY: 1977 31 foot Wilderness travel trailer. Asking $6,500: View at Reel (nn Motel. Highway 16 West. . Last trailer on left. (ctfn.2- 70-79) Bl SERVICES Gold and Diamond Giit Show , + THura., Oct. 18th 12.10 pm. Terrace Hotel Green Room. Decor prize and retreash- ments. (¢3-180) TIRED OR RUSHING AROUND AT THE LAST MINUTE? Get your Christmas shop- ping done now In the privacy and. comfort of your :own.. home. REGAL carries a plete line of Christmas cardi?” wre pp lige, decorations and Inexpensive gifts for everyone on your list. Call Carole, your Regal representative, now for your copy of our Christmas catalogue, at 635-5693. (C2-19, 23 October) . DIVORCE $100 + filing fees We prepare your divorce papers over the phone — fast. For more Information call THE LAW SHOPPE of JACK D. JAMES, M.B.A., LLB TOLL FREE 112-800- 663-3035 (in Vancouver area \. call 657-2442), Chargex and Mastercharge welcomed. (atfn-th-20-9-79) Herald . paper carrier 635-6357 partment Willock tank - 2850 gal. cap. Complete with meter, "Ive reel and hose. New palnt, Vancouver city tested untit AMay .60. Phone 435-6375, Room 107. (c3-1BO} . called Wedn By JULIET O'NEILL QUEBEC (CP) — The, country's largest union’ for the resignation of Dennis Mc- Dermott, head of the Canadian Labor Congress, on grounds he has tumed his back on the trouble-plagued postal workers. But the most powerful labor leader in the country sald through an assistant that he has no Intention of bowing to the demand of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE). “We have lost faith in brother McDermott," said the resignation policy adopted by the rankand-file members of CUPE, in a vote LADY DOUBTS MALE MEMBERS STAND ON WOMEN — OTTAWA (CP) — Democrat Margaret Mitehell says she won- dera whether the male- dominated Parliament Is ‘a8 convinced as her voters that a woman's place is in the house — flowse of Commons that The freshman MP said her comment ins week was prom y a recen orientation workshop for new MPs where the all- male panel kept referring to members as “he” and spouses as “she.” Aas a_resnuit, her husband Is demanding access to the parlia- mentary lounge reserved for women MPs, Mrs Mitchel] joked. In her maiden apeech to the Commons on Tuesday, Mrs. Mitchell added her voice to several other women, MPs in commemorating the 50th annivergary today of women being recognized legaily as persons. They were referring to ‘a 1929 decision by the Privy Council] in West- Canadian’ courts definition of persons as men only, That landmark decision opened the doors for women to seek public office. The day was to be marked by statements in the Commons by Prime Minister Joe Clark and others, Progressive: Con- servative'MP" Diane Stratas could not, bow- ever, find much to be ecstatic about in the half century since the Weatminster decision. The member for the Toronto riding of Scar- borough fone sald during the throne 5 debate in the Commons that 16 per cent of adult women live in poverty and 38 per cent of single mothers under 35 have incomes below the poverty line, . . Women account for about 5] per cent of the population, but the nine women MPa account for only 2.8 per cent of the population in the Com- mons, Mrs. Stratas said. “As I look around the “prospectors have ‘“erowding into a high school . cafeteria this month to take mingter which. over-ruled |. of more than 1,000 to 1, at their national policy con- vention. The policy was adopted after an emotionally- charged debate in which McDermott was accused of betraying the . labor movement by not. rising to the defence of the 23,000- member Canadian Union of Postal Workers and its leader, Jean-Claude Parrot. CUPE is the largest ai- filiate in the 2.3-million- member Canadian Labor Congress, an. umbrella organisation uniting most unions in the country. ° e more than 257,000 members of CUPE include hydro workera, farbage collectors, university professors and nursing aides as well as a wide range of other employees under federal, provincial and municipal governments. Altogether, CUPE adopted three policy resolutions, each one more critical of McDermott. Delegates rejected informal calls to disaftiliate from the CLC to prove they mean business. The vote was a dramatic climax to three, days of behindthe-scenes grumbling about McDermott. It marked a turning point in CUPE-CLC relatlons which soured a year ago when the postal workers began a legal strike. CUPE resolutions and spokesmen said McDermott refused to back the postal workers when the strike began, told them to obey Parliament's back-to-work law later and never showed support for thelr leader Parrot. Parrot was sentenced to three months in jail and 138 months probation for defying the backto-work law. His appeal ‘hearing began this week. McDermott's aasistant in | Ottawa said in a telephone interview that the labor leader will ignore the demand to step down. The assistant also con-. firmed that McDermott changed his mind about The Herald, Thursday, October 16, 1979 Page ¢ (CUTE call for McDermott’s head addressing the CUPE convention taday as scheduled for fear of cen- sure, “He had found cut that some of the delegates were planning demonstrations when he was golng to speak, McDermott made hia decision not to show up at the convention before the resignation policy was even debated. When CUPE President Grace Hartman announced he wasn't com- ing, the packed union hall ee in cheers and ap- Hse, Mrs, Hartman, reelected for a third term as CUPE president, did not perso: call for McDermott’s Quebec takes up loan By MARK LISAC EDMONTON (CP) — Less than five weeks after Premier Peter Lougheed announced the end of a three- year ban on loans tp Quebec, the Alberta government has agreed in principle to Ipnd $200 million over 25 years to Quebec Hydro. Provincial Treasurer Lou Hyndman said Wednesday the loan reflects Alberta's longterm faith in the Canadian economy and in Canada's existence as a country. The loan, the largest ever from the -Canada_ In- vestments division of the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund, will help the Quebec Crown corporation finance «a construction ogram and its James Bay droelectric project, Hyndman said the Joan wili be backed by a Quebec government guarantee, The utility approached Alberta for the loan last week, The announcement followed a_ series of initiatives in Alberta policy and an unsuccessful attempt by Quebec Hydro to sell a $300-million bond issue last week in New York. Hyndman said Lougheed told Quebec Premier Rene Levesque late this summer More look for VANCOUVER (CP) — Enrolment at the B.C, and Yukon Chamber cf Mines Prospecting and Mining School, which seems to be tied to the rise and fall of the market, is on the upswing again. In the middle 1950s, when ‘uranium made the pulae of prospectors quicken, the school attracted ahout 400 students, Enrolment later fell off, ‘but now with the price of gold passing the §400 mark, and prices of silver, copper and molybdenum also on the increase, the school is en- Joying a boom as big as the metals. About 20) prospective bean. in classes. Taught by a series of guest lecturers and assisted by University of B.C. geology students, the group is given a primer in everything from how ta Doctor doubting medicine TORONTO. AGP}. — While + most pebple stand:in awe of!" medical expertise and Burrender meekly to advice about their health, at least one doctor says he no longer believes in modern medicine. Dr. Robert S. Mendelsohn, a Chicago pediatrician, says doctors are dangerous, hospitals can kill and baby formula is the grandfather of junk food. And he says modern medicine is based on faith, not scientific fact. In his , Confessions of a Medical Heretic, Men- delsohn likens modern medicine to a church, complete with its priests and acolytes, rituals, liturgies and sacrifices; a church whose god is death and whose religion, Ilke all | religions, -is bazed on: faith. He says that if a patient “medicine’s cures stake a claim to bush sur- vival, “This is the bi we've had in the years,’ sald Sanford Woodside, assistant manager to the chamber of est class t three mines. “The rise in goldhas are made ae difference, though this is a prospector’s course, not a course in placer mining.” Placer mining — panning for gold in rivers — is also taught by. the chamber in classes beginning in April. eeu in 1918, the course has "produced prospectors ve actually placed stakes that have paid off. Graduates have found, among others, the Eldorado . Uranium:-mine in Saskat- chewan, the Northalr gold andasilver mine at Alta Lake, north of Squamish, B.C., and the Cassiar asbestos mine in northeastern B.C. “The price of gold has something to do with it, but most of the people who take -heretics .and radicals. He tells citizens to be unco- operative when they go to the hospital. Mendelschn says modern have become more dangerous than the ailments they treat. For example, he says, peneillin was miraculous when. firat used fur critleal illnesses. But the drug has been groasly overprescribed, often in situations where it is useless anyway, 60 that now people can die from reaction to the drug. He says thyroid cancers are turning up in people exposed to radiation on the head and neck 20 to 30 years ago when it was prescribed fig treatment for acne or to reduce the thymus gland. Mendelachn fears en- thusiastic use of new methods, such as ultra-sound , courtesy of a possible up in Alberta’s lean policy regarding Quebec. Levesque’s public reply was that money was an in- ternational commodity and any loans offered by Alberta would have to meet com- petition In the marketplace, Lougheed said during the of the provincial legislature last week that Western Canada. cannot accept separation followed -by negotiation of a special deal for Quebec. But the West must accept the challenge of making that clear to Quebecers with and without threats, be said, pot of this course spend quite a bit of time in the outdoors ... (they see something and want to know what it is,'’ said Woodside. “Some take it to actually get into prospecting, some prospectors taking a refresher course, but most Just do it for curioslty’s sake,’ “| hike and ski a lot and T'm curious about what I see out there,’’ said student Mary Roberts. “I’m not looking for the world's biggest gold nugget.” Dan Darrach is one of few taking the course because he actually wants to take up prospecting as a full-time occupation. ath “TL. want.-to. get ‘into~- this: thing as a professional job,” he said, “It’s all new tome so I’m taking this aa a warm-up course to see if I like It. "B.C. Institute of Technology offers a 2% “Year program in prospecting anc 1 think I'd eventually like to cated birtha at home. He. says only 20 Poca have to take place in He wants to build what he calls the new medicine, to be concerned with proper nutrition, clean air and water, good communication between doctors and patients and the individual's ac- ceptance of responslbillty for his own health. The new medicine will strengthen the family, which modern medicine does all it ll, the medical heretic says, the new medicine will rest upon “faith in life,”’ rather than medical care, and its motto will be: “Do no harm.” However, he adds; “People are plenty smart, they shouldn't trust any doctors, including me.” per cent~ ofr The federal government's failure to recognize provincial rights and Jurisdictions would aid separatists, the ta pre- mer said, About the time of Lougheed's speech, Quebec Hydro was withdrawing a $800-million bond Lasue from a New York market troubled by a sudden increase in U.S. interest rates. The U.S. federal reserve board raised its interest rate last week to 12 per cent, causing even the U.S. government to postpone projected bond issues. The rise and changes in Eurodollar deposit cold S' Into that." Jim Adams, a part-time carpenter, enrolled in the course with an eye to the future. “There's my, économie future involved in this. Prospecting is one oc- cupation you can take with -you around’ the world through good times or bad times, and it's looking like we're headed for some bad The price of gold has something to do with it, and if I happen to strike it "rich, well I wouldn't mind one it.’? resignation, but made a point of saying CUPE is dissatistied with him. The dump-McDermott policy states that he violated the basle principles of his labor ee A second pa pledges CUPE to pices Me- Dermott at the 1960 CLC convention, saying there Is concern he ‘will adopt similar positions when CUPE or any other union is faced with severe antl-union repression in the future.’* A third policy says the fed- eral government will be asked to drop all outstanding charges against postal union leaders, ofter regulations made it difficult to set a price in the Quebec Hydro isaue. Hyndman said the loan will be made at what he termed the going com- mercial rate of W P cent and be secured by deben- tures baught at $94.75, giving the fund an effective yield of 11.65 per cent. The largest previous Alberta loan to a province or Crown corporation was $75 million to Manitoba. Com- pletion of arrangements with Quebec Hydro will bring the total of such foans to $460 million, nearly 10 per cent of the $5 billlon In the fund. Earlier loans made at 10 per cent during a period of easier interest rates were to Manitoba, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Nova Scotia Power Corp, Hyndman told reporters after his announcement in the legislature Alberta would welcome inquiries about more loans from Quebec. Several days ago New- -foundland Premier Brian Peckford was in Edmonton seeking a loan of at least $50 million to help finance his province's Lower Churchill] power project. Lougheed also has an- nounced that the fund will be @ source of capital for private firms in amounts of $1 million or more. fab ae wey 2 WANTED: Bune bree Retired people or people with cars to deliver papers to drops in. Terrace & Thornhill. Please. apply at the Daily ‘Werald ott office. 4TH CLASS ENGINEER BENCHMAN (M/F) Takia Forest Products Limited has Immediate & openings in the above trade categories. Current 1.W.A, wage rate apply along with an excellent health, welfare, pension and dental plan. For further information and to make appileation please call: D.R. Wilson Personnel Supervisor Takia Forest Products Box 254 Fort $1. Jamas, B.C. V0.1 1P0 ena asks “why?” often enough during pregnancy, may one Hae, it that to me to why this operation? why this day prove to have been an 4 ” polnt a t at drug? — he will witimately error. , . | present rate of Increase} reach the “chasm of felth” — tyit06 ound waves We're on display Sat. Oct. 20 He gtouse half) and the doctor’a final , Ultre-gound | preduee with women In B42] req wil be “trust me.” tllns pit a fe ae which at the years. Mendelsohn, 53, Is can tell on heerlen i “Tt fs like a marriage | associate professor of much as an x-ray without the S I< E E N A M A L L — the first 100 years are) preventive medicine and | danger of radiation. the hardest.” community mete att in vteathe im ver O18 fart 5 e cites recision of . She rejected criticlam | teen chairman af the Illinois all kinds of teats including Come and see how we work and pick up your DISCOUNT COUPON that women MPs tend to} medical licensing com- electrocardiograms, which | af the same time. concentrate only oe “soft | mittee. he says can show disease In issues” such as health, He urges patients to stop the healthy and miss disease SUPERSONIC CLEANING — social welfare, culture trusting and start asking in the sick. 20 times more and the family. questions, to become He wants to see uncompll- 2M CONCORD | powerful than ordinary “It is my bellef that carer EE eARE aoe are ihe, vay soit Inaues The Canadian Terrace, Kitimat, grmlthers, Houston og ; TIM TCl Bl eridentral aad society.” Red Cross Societ . obsoletes ait Meanwhile, Liberal other methods Celine Hervieux-Payette told the Commons she will WE BRING OUR PLANT ‘To YOU — Exclusive curpel leaning introduce bill private dlewmie Tieht hs tomedriveway Huts Beings: fedae’s superna alimony and maintenance SUPERIOR CLEANING =- Our totale ne ant generates ten te payment compulaory in el one ma wetrction je cout cordinaey stead oustgds: divorce Cases. pniEs MUCH FASTER me Ie led is tert atuch drier sind The member tor ‘the STAYS CLEANER LONGER — Carpet is sealed: with Montreal Stain figrd afl lean ee keep if cleat Longe Mercier said riding wee e FREE ESTIVATES — Thane tur re written estimite want to stay home with e TW Seme tiereie ap abies. wath nea “ : + ee thelr children should not friends for life ieeeintel tel hanertoia te lite or eat crete ne be Punished by having to CONCORD CARPET CARE aoa ‘do tonaye as many Phone — 635-4612 y: q y