3° “BEDROOM ‘house, on . . landatsiped - Ta - acres - ‘of: land,’ ‘Behind ‘vécational. 7858, Cal “ ig wai, 798-2548. Prati - 389 ACRES two parcels, 140 acres standing timber with good | local market. Nead 300 ‘acres’ < cleared, = then purchase. for: $19,000, Hazelton. B26, : (p6-2,9,16,29,30)7[u) 34 ACRE, 109! beach. Two bedroom Steatler, Completely. serviced. Great fishing -and ° boating. Some, repairs: hecessary. ‘Sacrifice | sale,” "$16,000. - ‘Phone 49. $424 wee TWEN ACRES - farmland: with. renovated house “and: new, ‘drilted: veal ftazalton area. ip aes Phone 635- “ot Spit. . (P20-18June) . FOR RENT 2,000 sy. ft. Ave. Phone, 635-9552, aa ae tacc-soc-tin) SMALL. LOCAL: sweeping - business for sale. Couple’. could -run. Includes 2 machines; one completely renovated (like new) and Sth: wheal traiter, For more information call 635-6772 ; after. . ‘épm. ; (p20-7[u) 1976 MERCURY BOBCAT Very good conditién. Phone he. _{pid-9)), war 1 DODGE. MONACO 7 Two. door, hard top, bucket - seats, no. rust, Asking $309. 00... Phone - 638-0763: anytime. : : ee (ne-sit-tin) 1978: FORD 34° ton bua pickup, with canopy. | good shape, Phone bial Keren ar Rick at 635-7117. * lace?- 17) oi WHITE: DUMP truck. yard light stee] box. Traller | package... - - Excellent condition. 635-9676. , + (eecs-10)) FOR. RENT ‘OR FOR m SALE im 12x68,' 2 bedroom mobite. ‘honie, 0x4 [oey shack 4 appliances. Fanced yard In Traifer Park, atone 630-. 1328 for’ more {nformation. : ep vey opis “ytse * ip FOR RENT OR ‘a ALE 12x48, .3 . bedroom “mobile home.'10xé joey.shack, No children,. no .pats.,.4 _Oppiiances. Fenced yard in Traller ‘Park. 63¢-1328 for more Information. . _ tpro-te)) office Space. 4623 Lakelse feu: - [Prince Terrace. : For: further ‘information ; Mulroney d John ae Gould ::come |. tantalizingly: . ; -close to winning, only to:be... “stopped short-by a coalition of ABC. forces . who- want 7 _ Anybody. But Clark. - It shows: Mulroney with a. The « po ee on poll: Y CONSIDERED A. THREA : oe goad noburtaes for we And. ‘asked | | on later alata, “name by 20'per cent-fa Workey | ey. strong hold on second place | . vs and suggests Crosbie will be- hard-pressed. ‘to: repeat Clark's 1976 feat of vaulting - * to vietory from: third, place be on the. first ballot. 0s. , But. above all, the. poll suggests. the’. leadership contest Is still a horsé race ‘and the outcome. hinges: on what happeng: ‘between. ‘the . . convention opening . today and the Saturday vote. - As more: than: “3,000 . Conservatives converge on. ‘the capital to plek, a. winner,” the Carleton ‘poll. shows. ‘37: “per .cent, of delegates. sup- : port Clark on the first ballot - compared ‘with .. ry for Mulroney. . and 16 for . Crosbie. cae tee ~ “But there is also bad. news : for: ‘Clark: ‘The pall. shows, “ that. of the: Tending : trio ‘he’: ‘had > the’ ‘smalt . ‘197% 250 CAMPER: - §PECIAL with 10° camper, : lots: Of extras. Call 635-2986, a (patm3.7.9,10)) Province >: ‘of oMinisiryaf Transportation To’: mix 2000 tonnes Medium. Mix (16 mm) Blidminous.. (MC250). and stockpile 1000 «. tonnes In the Ministry. of : Transportation and: ’ Highways Yard. located in. © PortClaments and stockpile: . ' 1000 tonnes In. the Ministry of Transportation - and Highways . Pit located: approximately 7 kilometers - from Alliford Bay. Mixing. ‘shall ‘conform to Sections; 223 and 311 of the General Specification for. Highway: Construction. -.~ viewing “at the address. listed below, —;. Tender’ ‘documents. with - envelope, | ‘plans, - ‘ specifications. and: conditions . of “tender are . Avallable free ‘of * charge - ‘ONLY from Sulte 204, @15 © * First'Avenue West, Prince + Beltlsh Columbia eae ot. get people ; ito; accept that : chariges - are necessary ;’ that. ‘Highw HIGHWATSTENDERS' i of: Cold - Mix - These - Sections are ‘avallable ‘for . “woncroN.. NB. CP) _ . Spokesnén for the é federal and * Saskatchewan governments agreed Wednesday on only one “aspect of new. legislation governing. the transport of “Western grain — finding a consensus on the controversial ‘issue is an impossible task, - . Meanwhile, | a tnion official told” the’ Federation of "Canadian | ‘Municipalities government : incentives. ‘to’ the _ private sector won't help lead Canada out of the recession,. “and municipal leaders asked the “federal ‘government | for: legislation te to help crack down on -prostitutes arid Bor -nography,. | “SASKATOON (CP) — Asa boy, Jack Horner ‘drove teams ‘of horses to deliver grain to a rail ‘aiding. Today, the - chairman of ‘Canadian National. Railways knows the funire, ; _ means change. oe “Horner told/a ‘seminar. at Futuresean: ‘o on Wedriesday . With new: technology: AL als ‘ titudes. 0S : “s Horner “told: ‘600° " bisinessinen; civil, servants, 7 _ technologists, students. ond . the «curious : that ‘chang ia frightening, but must be. ‘accepted. whe - The conference; ‘sponsored ‘by the city, the’ provin government and the University of Saskatchewan, hopes offer’ some insights into the future; .. So: means. aceepting new t- ‘a tomorrow of fancy new gadgets than one of abadonlig _ old traditions to their Fate, Horner sald. “Railways were oiice the arteries of commerce. Today. their business has been bled off by.private cars and airlines, for the: locomotive and the freight car; he. said, : - “Tt hos a strani role in the trandportation industry a8 the: - 7 carrier. and:.the . most ‘ ‘efficient: jmode | rol ‘His main probleni in camming to: rips with the tuiure et to’ passenger, trains are obsclete, ‘that the main line from’ ~ Edmonton through the Pacific needs to be double-tracked, \ “and that the old Crowsnest Pass freight rates for Brain have . ‘tego. Ye a ’ Horner ° ‘said the, raltwaya: ‘have little. to fear ‘from technology. Innovations such. as ‘slurry, pipelines, which carry solids s such as: a ina sort of vel mixture, are ino Margaret ‘Thatcher is seeking a landslide victory in today’s ; general election'aa she’ attempts to-‘‘banish forever” ex-- ‘treme Jeft-wing Socialism from British polities. | “Thatcher ran on Tight-wing policies pf strong defence and ght? fiscal’ control, while the opposition. Labor party . fumbled” attempts. to. forge a” “unified . policy on nuclear . disarmament. For the first time in 60 years, there was a. Strong challenge from a third political force — the alliance of the: ‘néwly-formed S Social Democratic party, and the small . q hing fe, ee at rere : By. election € eve, ‘Wookmakers’ were ¢ taking bets 0 on who | . | would Feplace Foot once ‘Labor Jost the election: , Liberal party. ‘A final flurry: of pinion, “pola. gave. Thatcher’ = “Con-” ‘servatives a: commanding lead of 16 to 21 points over the opposition, with Labor and the alllance jostling for second, Place; '. phe Prone: ES: between B Some forecasts anid this could ive her more than 400 hours of 8:90, my and 4:30 ; Seats. inthe. :650:eat House’ of: ‘Commens, the biggest -p.m:. “Monitay fo "Friday. " majority in 80 years. re R : “ancept Holidays:;; «fT want’ aa: big ‘ a vote-ad possible,” bald: ‘the prime ‘Tenders. willbe opened at ! -minister, whio’ urged ‘votera‘ "to banish forever the. dark, * Sulte 204, 818. First, Avenve clouds of extreme Jeft-wing socialism.” * West, Prince: Rupert, B.C, ‘THE TENDER SUM FOR. THIS PROJECT ISNOT: TO: ANGLUDE FEDERAL, “SALES | TAX - Terider ‘opening. date: PA June 21,1983” J.N. ° Ryan - District Highways Manager, FOR: Lo R.G.Harvey, Deputy. Minister *- hs 5 . (2ced67.9)) 2:00 Cagsiar, . ‘Terider-. documents . may. te Obtained from 4825 Keith Avehye, Terrace, B.C. VaG 1K7 frbit June’é, 1984. Sealed Tenders will be recélved at the above address unill 3:00 P.M, June [2 1983 and will be opened iy public at that time. | i Tender documents may]. be viewed at the Construction Association {Offices : at © Vancouver, | George, Prince Rupert, ‘Smithers | * and! éall D. Hansen In Terrace, at © (ace 9;t0}) * divisive: vA tinout of ito 20 per cent! of the 42, # million electorate ‘was expected, with the final uteomé expected to be known, , by: Vari. Friday” @ Bin. EDT today). : _A total of 2,579 ‘candidates were contesting ‘650 seats, ~ expanded from. 635 in the last. Parllament due, bo boundary "changes, oe Labor, sturbed by leftcright feuding since it lost power to the Tories'in 1979, needed. to convince 5.4 per cent of the. - electorate to change their votes to Labor. There hasn't been : aswing’ that. large. since 1645 when Labor wider Clement Attles defeated Winston Churchill, The ceatrist alliance, with only a handful of strongholds, faced the prospect of winning a quarter of the popular vote but ending up with only about 20 seats. The, acrimontoug four-week campaign, focused on the domineering personality of the’ 57- “year-old Thatcher. . and won support from Tories not counted among her fans. “Pm pro-Tory and anti-Thatcher,” said Ron Fisher, a jeweler in Banbury, Oxfordshire.,““I just don't like her, but what she’s doing is necessary,” Labor scored several “own goals," the soccer term for scoring at the, wrong end of the field. The party’ ‘6 . beleaguered leader, Michael Foot, 69,, disagreed with his deputy over whether Labor would scrap Britain's Polaris nuclear missiles on its own or wait for the Soviet Union ‘to * make concessions. : - Deputy leader Denis Healey also lost points by accusing Thatcher of “glorying in, slaughter". during last year's 3 Falklands War, later softening the allegation to “glorying in conflict:”” ‘ * Labor’s'strongest isse wae the post-19306 unemployment J peak of 8.2 million 6r 13.8 per cent redched this year —. ; almost treble. the 1.2 million or 5.2 per, cent when Thatcher } tidk office f, : Saskatchewan Aaicolturs Minister Bile Bernt sila. - ie Technology changes attitudes ‘that dealing with the future- njeans, more than ‘grappling: . by.trucking routes and highways.’ But there is still a place i Tr Jong bails are: involved fhe. ‘ - dustry. ; conceded’ to Thatcher a: day early. She got rapturvias receptions at presidentlal-style’ rallies a “introduction of the new Wi fbtant rate will I strangle \ western farmers’ grain production and have a negative effect on the rest of Canada, 0 *2.; The Crowsnest-Pass- freight rate- was: set in: 1807: tor help pay the cost of shipping Prairie wheat to West: Coast ‘and Great Lakes ports’ and hasn't been, changed since. - Transport Minister Jean-Luc: Pepin said the rate has. shifted most ‘of. the: cast: of -shipping ‘wheat from the ~ Will producers to the railways. The rate now Fepresents only 18 per cent of the cost of thoving grain in the West, he: said. ’ Pepin ‘said Brain shipments represent a per. cent of railway traffic in ‘Canada, but only 3.5. per: cent. of the threat to solid, stolid diesel locomotives and steel wheels on steel rails, . . . “We think that rail can move it cheaper, 1 tie said: Horner's concerns about the future deal with the abllity, to “get away’ ‘from the past... a ‘ : - Technology wil] ‘help; ‘and, computers, “aiid ‘Alitomatic signal equipment t can increase efflelency,. but leadership is '- the key, he said. ot The federal government's proposed changes i in ‘the ‘Crow. ; - Fates — which he says may have. only a 20-per-cent, chance of being passed in the. Commons - —are vital. ‘Without them, ’ the railways will not be: able. to‘afford:to- modernize and . expeind}" leaving a.;bottleneck’ on ‘rail lines’ through: the .Rockieg/and: ‘squeezing the country’s, exports. - . For the giant Crown corporation he runs, the fiture is less: The keynote address ‘at the: three-day: conference, which ‘ends, Fri was delivered by. Alvin‘ Toffler, - a“self- deseribed | cial critic-and kind ‘of. pop’ “ woctologlst whose books; : Future. Shock and, ‘The, ‘Third, - Wave, have: ‘sold * millionsioh copies. -: . Toffler, outlining hig theory that: mavikind is on the brink: - of anew historic surge, said humanity’ a First Surge came at. the dawn: of: history, with. agriculture, which brought man. ‘Into. ‘Settlements,-’ cultures - and, ‘over. 100" _Senituries, - elv viliggtion fron a ‘qomadic, shunting’ life.” _ designed to produce a huge work force for factories and a consumer market to absorb the factory output,. . Now, Toffler said, man stands on the edgeofa third wave. - Fuelled: by computers, telecommunications, micro-chip- technology: and the like, humanity is moving to a .decen- tralized world. He. said. people will work at.home, produc- tion techniques: will aim at customizing and marketing will- turn to smaller, more personalized outlets from plant retail ° chains. So 5 Thatcher § seeks a lendside But pols showed voters were skeptical ‘about Labor's. plans to borrow heavily for a $17-billion reflation: program — bo ‘create two million: jobs in five years. fe . When Labor pledged | to’ ‘pull Britain out of tie European, , Economic: Community, ‘Thatcher claimed that would wipe” out 2 5 million n Soba “ Thatetier; ‘meanwhile, defendedgher. record. of. cutting inflation to a-15-year low of four percent ‘and: tackling Britain's ‘outmoded, overmaned and.tnlon-dominated | in. “The. alliance i had hoped its ‘moderate peal to Britain’s growing middie'class anid transcend; Tory- Labor class voting. Bit Liberal’ Header David See. 48, 5 ‘The question now is how substantial th ctory will be have,” he sald. i (When the “last Parliament wa aiseatved, “the Cini: set'vatives haul 334 seats anda majority of 35; Labor held 239 . and the allianee 42, with the rest held | by smal or regional parties. . - : ; we ‘ | Make yoursell at home Ina Moduline’ NEW MODULINE HOMES FOR SALE Display: model- No.4 Pine Park 3989 Muller Ave. aa Featuring —cathedral calling. —bay window "* —dishwasher _ spacious kitchens ' =edining room hutch ~fibregiass tub enclosure _. Choose from 203 bedroom models completly set up ready for occupancy or special _ froma wlection of floor plana at t prices you can Cantact Pine Park office fer inere Information’ Mallee avrg en fo view or phone 435-418 ld " Maller Ave.) - ws in ballot, ‘the | trick.’ Crosbie, a votes) went to front: TUNNETS ween 80, and. 65° per. cat - ; ” deaving:.. : next ‘pulse. was the industrial revolutién. with, ifs” TT: - growing. technology, mass production: and social changes pallctes ‘Would ap and’ What controlling influence, the altace is going to. ‘hopes: to, Fepeat. Bul Jast . Clark NB oS 20. 'time, only-37 percent of .: But’ ‘Croshie's:” "argues that” (Plark’s first- 7 batlot support wil all. se 2 féwer. -potential- - votes: for. Crosbie te ‘pick: up from: the vother five’ can: : MQ ae “didates: er - delegates. who. Sported' ber. ‘And: ‘the. poll ‘appears. to - bultong,’.as they entered. _ five Mulroney the. edge a as. _ Polting booths. Tee ‘railway revenues. The o railways a are losing etwas $300. million and $350 million.on shipments-each-year. |-~! ‘> Berntson said western grain. ‘exports contribute $6 billion --yearly to the economy and the figure could balloon:to nearly $10 billion if the government treated western producers, the: same way it does eastern, natural-gas users. He said the federal govérnment decided each ‘customer. ; pay. the-same rate to pay.for the natural-gas pipeline . through Quebec and the Atlantic provitices. But under’ the new grain transport rate, the coat. to farmers will rise in- crementally, . ~ Berntson said the rate will jump from about elght cents a .. ton per mile in other provinces to about » cents a ton per “mile in Saskatchewan, =. «- David White, Canadian director of the: ‘United Auto ‘Workers of America, sald, . the: federal and _provineial. goverments are mistaken in theli view that providing in- centives to the private sector. will help ead the country out. - of the:recession. : “The theory is that higher profits will eventually mean . oo . more jobs, ” said White. ;'But this favorable climate. for - corporations doesn’t necessarily mean return to work for. the jobless." "Canadian. workers: will not stend for. “unlléteriat car: ‘porate decision-making” 2 ag ‘the major: thrust. of Canada’s’, sHorts at recovery... *. He said Canada should process more. of ‘its. resources . instead of ‘exporting raw materials to other countries with, a, “subsequent: ‘Joss of jobs at home::: : “White called for a massive stimulation of: the sensity’ - through pablic works and creation of a Crown corporation a) mariifacture heavy machinery for’ the forestry’ and taining’ ‘mdustries. |: . “He algo criticized: wage controls imposed by Ottawa’ ‘and - many of the provinces. ‘We've got to recognize the fallacy ~ of the argument that employees should give-up’ wages: a8 _ worker but, revive the economy as’ “consumers.” = ce ” Includes fridge, stove, drapes, wall. fo: > wail’ carpet. close to schools and bus. ca - Now, taking applications. Phone Manager anytime. - Lal 635- 3525 ~ Coachman = 5 | pine. | Deluce spertment duelling, pidge, slave,” a carpating, drapes, undercover parking, cee * “ "healer, security igitem, vatidanl manager. by. Phone ‘nanager anytime 7 698-1268 UMA SQUARE APARTMENTS, TERRACE "One & Two bedrooms featuring: : eF ridge,” stove & drapes es aWall to wall carpeting. eRAQUETBALL COURTS © - @Gymnasium facilities | . eOnsite management ~ fe 7 : ; For your personal viewing visit : our apartments daily ati 2607 PEAR ST. areal 635-5968 - MANOR VILLA APARTMENTS Fridge, stove, drapes, carpeting. Phone Manager anytime at 638-1 268 “Plans oriquire about our : new reduced rents,