Business BEST m HUE The Prince George Citizen — Thursday, August 11,1988 — 33 Mutual funds . CANARIM FINANCIAL SERVICES 562-7255 TORONTO (CP) — Recent prires of investment funds supplied by The Investment Funds Institute of Canada. They are the net asset value per share or unit (NAVPS) last circulated by the fund, in accordance with its pricing practice as contained in the prospectus of the fund. Symbols: n-no sales charge; y-delayed NAVPS; xd-ex-dividend. ★ ★ ★ MEMBERS AGF Group Amtr Grth 7.30 Cdn Gi Enr 7.79 Cdn StcGlh 8.96 Cdn Trudd 4.33 yConv Inc 9.50 Corp Inv 11.97 Cip Im M 6.53 gbctl Am E 4.37 gbctl Cd Bd 5.1 j gExctl Cd gbctl M Global Grth Eqty HiTtch 8?" Inc^ Special AlC Advantage Bd bi 4.72 7.53-5.00 9.16 9.38 12.44 6.07 8.49-10.00 3.70 9.85 4.73 All-Canadian Compound Dtviomd Natural Rn Rtvtnut Gth Unlvtjt Allied Captl nConodion nOlvldtnd 9.97 nukittrnfl Cdn U. 15.18 10.71 5.22 3.40 5.67 Mgmt 4.28 4.67 5.40 4.73 385 8.74-5.00 Altamlra ynCdn. Bal ynCdn. Bond ynCdn. Equ ynDtvtnifd A.M.D. Chip 9.17 Chip 9.96 9.32 9.55 8.35-10.00 6.06-10.00 11.23 8.41-10.00 Inv 11.21 10.36 10.42 10.30 I.O. Am Bl Cd 81 Dividend Fix Inc MMF uMMF Rttc Can T-8III Associate nAuoc Inv 6.92 Bolton Tremblay Bond Mtg 4.90 Cdo Cum 14.14 Cdn Bal 4.92 Oltcmry 5.21 10.48 6.73 8.66-10.00 6.56 Centurr DJ uOJ-U-S. CGF Group yfund 4000 ylnttmatnl Wtnlurt Fnd thou Assoc Mgt yAuociotM 22.28 yRRSP 11.18 Church Street ynBaianctd 10.17 ynEquity 10.41 ynlncom* 9.95 ynMMf 8.29-10.00 CIBC Funds nBalonctd 10.62 nfix Inc 9.74 nGlobal 9.74 ynMortgogt 10.70 Confea Group Oolph Eqty 8.02 yOolph Mtot 5.05 CT Inv Counsel nl-S Tt Ev Bal yEv Intl Ev Sptc Eq tvtrtst Bn Cundill Group StcurHy Valut Desiardlns ynActioni ynEquillbrt ynHypo ynlnttmH ynOblig bynamlc yAll Oyn yAll Dyn yAll Dyn yAll Dyn D Uncomt D.Div yOy Global uDyAm US DynAmCn DynCdn Fd yOynGBF DynPrtcMtt MMF Mgd Pfolio IrrttmH Mny Fd Optiml Cdn Md. Rkm Tourui BPI Capital yCdn 10.42 4.46 Equity Fd Gwt fc TMd yCdn. ytAFE yEmtra. yGlobal IS*01 yOpMon Bunn Fry ynBF Bond ynBf Cdn ynBf fund Calvin Bullock 9.98 9.36 7.66 9.91 10.04 9.67 10.23 8.36-10.00 Eq. 9.31 xcr Dividtnd Growth MMF 10.14 11.39 10.96 6.77 10.14 7.49 6.37 9.64 2.03 8.48-10.00 Trust ynCTNAf 25.53 ynEquity 51.97 ynlncomt 9J2 Central Guaranty ynful Cd. Gt 10.28 ynfut Gov. 10.15 ynfut Incom 10.27 ynfut Stltd 10.26 Central Guaranty Equity 5.80 Incom 4.49 10.37 Fund 96.23 s«r< Growth Ind. Ponds MFQ yAdwm ' jllibrt yEquilibrtt yOutbtcoiit yRtvtnu Future Fund nFood Fund nGoldtn Fund nlHt Fund nSilvtr Fund nTtchno Fun nVolut Fund GT Mgmt GT Global Galcor Group ynlnv yProp For yGlobal East F S 10.45 Cp 16.08 Global S Fd 13.16 RRSP 9.10 gRRSP Acc 9.93 nuUS Mf 6.68-1.00 Bd 9.63 Mny 9.75 Group E World Guardian fq Eq ’cm6*d OPfB7 Conodion Enttrpriit Global IH. Incomt North Amtr Poc. Rim. Pfd.Div nS Mny Shat Inc uUS MM Gdn Mori G Mort Heartland yftond yfauity 9 53-9.99 10.44 9.93 10.43 9.98 14.46 12.57 Group 16.69 9.67 4.38 13.50 4.48 Group IV 1.85 17.66 10.50 9.65 10.08 5.16 1001 380 8.74 4.67 17.65 7.76-9.17 8.77-10.00 9.92 7.24-9.68 Shul Shul 8.90 Group 10.40 9.18 vGinrth 8.17 Integra Cap Balonctd 10.37 Investors Group 4.21 9.00 5.01 7.72 9.62 15.19 8.33-1.00 yMtgt 4.93 yMutual 8.08 yfrov Stk 9.70 yRtal Prop 5.31 yRttirtmnt 25.03 ySumma 4.83 J. Heward Group JH Amtr Cd 6.51 uJH Amtr Ui 5.31 JH FdUd 7.94 Laurentlan V MMF Viking Cdn Com Dtv Gth Inc Int Fund Fun Group 3.61 4.80 5.03 5.28 5.17 4.93 6.10 7.48 12.68 4.96 1.20 8.16-10.00 Viking Viking Viking Viking Viking Lotus ynlotui MER ytjuity yGrowth ynMMf Metropolitan yCdn Mutl yColltdivt yGrowth 8.75-10.00 15.54 13.73 7.36 16.74 4.02 18.34 10.91 13.51 7.89 3.26-10.00 Gr. 2.72 5.56 14.26 5.96 10.08 6.12 8.36 2.33 5.72 yfrvti 10.07 Elliott Page E-P Bal. 24.32 E-P Bond 25.10 E-P Eq. 23.57 nE-P Mo 8.85-1.00 Ethical Gwth yfthicol Gwt Fidelity Int-I yCop Bal yCop Buildr Conitr ySptci yVtnturt MOF Group yMult. Opp. ySptc. Opp. F 1.40 Montreal Trust Gr ynDlvldtnd ynEquity ynlncomt ynlnttmoti ynMMf Sf ynRSP ynRSP 5.72 10.76 11.06 yCap Conitr 10.48 ytntMolio 9.42 First Cdn Funds nBalonctd 9.90 nBond 9.81 9.82 7.80-1.00 11.19 City Funds 4.53 ynRSP Mtg* Mony Funds Mony Gold Morgan Funds Dividtnd Growth Incomt Rttourct Worldwldt Mutual Group Amtrlfund CIF Divtnifd 25 Divtnitd 40 Divtnifd 55 Dividtnd uifund 9.29 24.72 8.26 22.42 8.20-10.00 9.95 20.63 17.77 8.10-10.00 9.97 9.19 5.41 11.41 11.38 7.47 12.57 4.58 6.22 9.44 9.04 9.69 9.06 7.60 9.94 Shar 6.16 7.28 5.42 4.56 4.02 5.31 5.33 9.87 yRtolty * Gwt 11.11 Global Strategy Amtrtot Fd 8.71 nC$Mny 8.37-1.00 Europt fd 7.85 10.96 8.27 11.94 12.57 12.60 9.92 Equifund 12.90 nMMf 7.99-1.00 MYW Inv Funds nCdn Bolonc 8.93 nCdn Growth 8.66 nDIF 8.37-9.97 nN Am Grth 7.20 Natrusco nNatruico 7.04 Noram yCdn Conv S 10.24 vConv Stc 12.68 Northern Group Cdn Int US One Ont Ont. Currencies TORONTO (CP) — Foreign exchange rates at 9:30 a.m. PDT Wednesday, supplied by the Bank of Montreal. These rates are the mid-point between the buying and selling rates. They fluctuate during the day and vary at each bank. Quotations in Canadian funds. Germany mark .6406 Greece drachma .007971 Hong Kong dollar .1572 Hungary forint .022334 India rupee .085541 Indonesia rupiah .000714 Iraq dinar 3.8945 Ireland pound 1.7176 Israel new shekel .735358 Italy lira .000865 Jamaica dollar .224148 Japan yen .009118 Kenya shilling .055154 Mexico peso .000533 Netherlands guilder .5665 N.Z. dollar .8241 Norway krone .1761 U.A.E. dirham .329585 U.K. pound 2.0738 U.S. dollar 1.2264 M&U Equ Decisnfd Dec i in Teachers ynAgartttiv ynBaianctd ynDivwtifd ynFixVa CT Group ynBond ynCanodion ynOlv Inc ynMMf ynRRSP*^ ynU.S. ft 5.00 4.96 5.26 10.13 Gr. 10.91 10.68 10.44 8.15-10.00 11.47 Prudential Divtnifd Dividtnd Growth Incomt nMMf Natural 8.64 18.13 13.79 8.50-10.00 36.17 53.06 fund 2157 fd 11.41 Group 5.18 5.23 6.97 5.13 8.44-10.00 Rn. 5.41 Pme. Mttali 4.99 Ptnm Hlth Sd Ptnm HUh S 12.50 Rabin Budden Gr. ynCopitol Fd 6.75 ynlncomt Fd 5.89 Realgrowth Fds yuA.Trtnd (U 5.47 yActivt Inc. 9.56 yCdn Equity 14.49 yMMf 8.24-10.07 Ren Can B yfitn Con B 4.55 Royal Trust Gr. ynAdv. Bal. ynAdv. Gwth. ynAdv. Inc. ynAmtricon ynBond ynCanodion ynEntrgy yndobal Inv. yGovt Bond 9.69 9.74 9.39 19.64 8.90 31.74 7.36 8.01 8.66 ynJapanttt 18.86 ynMMf 8.30-10.00 10.40 9.49 Group Rf 10.31 ySqvmot TD 10.28 RovFund Group 5.08 4.96 19.67 8.05-10.00 Saxon- Group nBalonctd nSmall Cap nStock nWorld Gwth Sceptre Funds ynBaianctd ynBond yn Equity VTir ivi*ti*G Roycom ySummit RoyFund nBol nBond Fnd 8.73 9.62 8.33 10.55 11.58 10.64 11.69 ynlnTI 10.55 nMMf 8.30-10.00 Scotia Funds 9.57 9.46 vStock Sentine Cdn 8.52 US 7.01 9.30 9.48 8.24 8.37-10.00 7.20 8.97 9.77 Bond ntinel yAm Eq yuAm Eq yCda Band yCda Equity yGlobol nMMf Soficorp yCroitsonct yEquilibrt yRtvtnu Spectrum gCaih 8.31-1.00 gCdn Equity 9.33 gDivtnifitd 9.58 gDtvidtnd 9.69 glnttml h 9.67 glntl Equity 7.91 nSaving 8.58-1.00 Sterling Mtge imSltrlina Ml 5.06 TD Green Une nCDN Bolonc 9.94 Bond 9.99 Equity 9.75 Indtx 5.68 M 8.50-10.00 Mortg 10.39 Indtx 5.14 M 6.57-10.00 Grp 8.28-1.00 nCDN nCDN nCDN nCDN ynTD nuUS nuUS Templeton nT-Bill Ttmp Cdn Ttmp Gr Cd - u uTtmp Gr T radix ynTi Tri 5.59 17.21 14.04 nTrodtx •I mark Incomt Trimarii Trimork Trust General ynAction Am ynAction Ca ynEquilibrt ynHypo ynMor Mon Trust La Laur. ynAction ynOblig. M-M Group Fin SS World 9.62 Sunitt Sunitt Dtb. Sunitt Pfd. United Group yAccum R. yAccum yAmtricon yMMf yuMMf yStcurity yVtnturt yVtnturt UnivAve Gth nUnivAvt Gt Rt Funds mCdn Coura ynRtol C-Anaes ynC-Anon Can Nat Res yCon Not Rn Canwst RSP ynConwnt r Capital Gwth yCopital Gwt Capstone Group nCS Mgt 9.71-10.00 nlnttmtl Cl 4.40 nulnttrnfl U nlnvntmtnt Co-op Trust ynGiowth Fsa Goldfund Goldtrait Dixon, Krog Gr. nDK All Stoi 3.21 nDK Amn nDK Ent. Domequity ynDomtquity Gyro Eq Byro Equity ynGyro Equl Hall Bond yHall Bond Harvard Horvord Industrial Gr. CS Mat 8.62-10.00 ylnd ruturt 5.25 ylnduit Am ylnduit Div ylnduit Eq ylnduit Globa ylnduit Gwt fi? “ ynMor Marl I) yMorlboro Md Ml Equity Equity ynRitraHt Principal- US Gr. yuWorid Inc Sagit Group Bal. Gth Rn. Can. B C Synchrovest ySynchiovnt Talvest Funds Amtrican Bond Divtnfd Growth Incomt MMf Universal Amtrican Cam. Com. Cam. Tm. Trani Troni tel PocKlc Rnourct Std Aim Std Cdn Std Cur Std do Std Poc Std Rn Westm Grth yWntm Grth HEATHER SADLER JENKINS * BARRISTERS AND SOLICITORS * 700-550 Victoria Street, P.O. Bag 4500, Prince George, B.C. V2L 4Z6 564-5144 The partners of HEATHER SADLER JENKINS are pleased to announce that: JOEL A. WISEMAN OLIVER HUI have recently joined the firm as associates. Mr. Wiseman, who has practised corporate and commercial real estate law in Vancouver since 1984, will be practising primarily in the fields of residential conveyances, mortgages, commercial real estate and wills and estates. Mr. Hui will be practising in the fields of civil litigation, collections, motor vehicle and criminal defence law. GOOD NATIONALIST NEWS 7.39 Group Gth 5.20 8.64-10.00 10.97 Cd 10.60 13.62 24.20 9.23 10.57 10.17 9.47 9.69 9.91 11.80 8.74 9.10 10.09 11.25 5.56 10.16-10.00 7.52-5.00 5.12 4.31 8.10 11.85 9.87 ynUnivAvt Waltaine ynBaianctd 10.12 nDiv. Growth 8.88 nlncomt 9.06 nlnitont 8.00-10.02 NON MEMBERS Altamlra Incom Counsel Trust nRtal Eitat 6.27 20.37 6.11 4.53 6.25 6.76 2.74 Eq 7.29 75.65 12.51 6.86 4.85 9.95 561 8.92 10.43 8.37-10.00 Group 9.41 11.39 5.05 5.13 842 683 5.45 5.72 5.13 5.07 5.29 5.32 4.55 Texaco Canada selloff hailed 17.21 9.99 85.69 7.93 3.58 5.67 Group 13.16 9.42 Mgmt Gr. 5.19 5.71 17.48 10.43 8.38 1146 10.39 5.14 7.46 11.16 20.79 6.00 15.11 1.19 5.29 7.75 29.90 17.27 1.67 4.31 9.33 7.73 9.68 Mgmt Fd ynCMAIF ynMD Grth ynPtrp G. ynPtrp G. II ynPtrp G. Ill NW Group yCanodian Trvst Eq ynNW Truit Pacific Group Growth Rtt Bal. US Growth PMF Mgt. Ltd. nPtntian 4.11 nXanadu Fd 3.24 Pret et Revenu G ynAmtricon 23.86 ynCanodion 8.86 ynFondi H 5.15 19.73 5.94 4.41 3.99 by ALAN TOULIN Ottawa Citizen OTTAWA — In 1938, the men from Texaco Inc. surreptitiously showed up at the annual meeting of the McColl-Frontenac Oil Co. in Montreal and announced that for two years they had been secretly picking up the Canadian company’s shares. They ousted the McColl-Fronte-nac board of directors and installed their own slate of officers in a lightning takeover of the venerable Canadian-owned refining company. That blitzkrieg raid — typical of the buccaneering corporate style of the Texas Oil Co. — was the beginning of Texaco Canada Inc. Now, 50 years later, Texaco Inc. of White Plains, N.Y. wants to dispose of its subsidiary and some Canadian oil companies are believed to have a good chance at taking over Texaco Canada, the country’s fourth-largest petroleum company in terms of revenue. Ironically, Texaco Inc., which has been battered by a lawsuit, a bankruptcy declaration and a hostile takeover bid, is a victim of its swashbuckling style. The troubles of Texaco Inc. of the past few years are directly related to its decision to sell Texaco Canada Inc., a company that earned $320 million in profit on $2.8 billion in revenue last year. Texaco Inc. owns 78 per cent of Texaco Canada Inc. Rumors about the Canadian assets of Texaco being up for sale have flickered across stock exchanges, boardrooms and financial pages for several months. In fact, trading in Texaco shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange was halted for one day in March when it became public that Alberta-based Husky Oil was negotiating an alliance with the American corporate raider Carl Icahn who was in the middle of a takeover attempt of Texaco Inc. Icahn acknowledged that the Canadian assets of Texaco would be sold in return for help in his audacious $14-billion US bid for Texaco Inc. Although Icahn’s bid was turned aside by Texaco Inc. management in June, Husky Oil Co., a subsidiary of Nova Corp., is still interested in acquiring Texaco Canada. “I think there will be a lot of bidders. I certainly think Husky will be one of them,” Bob Blair, the chairman of Nova Corp. said when the sale-wws officially announced by Texaco Inc. Speculation about other potential bidders centres on Canadian Occidental Petroleum Co., Petro-Canada, Gulf Canada Resources Ltd., Imperial Oil Ltd., and Shell Canada Ltd. Texaco Canada could go for between $4 and $6 billion, say oil industry analysts. The strong prospect of Texaco Canada being owned by Canadian shareholders should cheer economic nationalists. The oil industry and its domination by foreigners has been the flashpoint of nationalist politics in Canada throughout the 1960s and 1970s. The Liberal government of then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau attempted a forced-march Cana-dianization of the oil and gas business under the much-attacked National Energy Program (NEP). Five years later, as one of its first major decisions, the Mulroney government dismantled the NEP, to loud applause from the Western Oil Patch. Nevertheless, and for a variety of reasons, the oil and gas business has gradually become more Cana- The strong prospect of Texaco Canada being owned by Canadian shareholders should cheer economic nationalists. The oil Industry and Its domination by foreigners has been the flashpoint of nationalist politics in Canada throughout the 1960s and 1970s. On the block are Texaco's 1,800 gas stations, two refineries and substantial oil and gas properties dian. The Petroleum Monitoring Agency reports Canadian ownership has increased from 26 per cent in 1980 to 45 per cent in 1986. Texaco, if it does end up in Canadian hands, could represent as much as a 10-per-cent increase in the agency’s measure of Canadian ownership. On the block are Texaco’s 1,800 gas stations, two refineries and substantial oil and gas properties. The Canadian company has invested substantial sums in the past couple of years to upgrade and improve its gasoline distribution network. Texaco Canada’s Nanticoke refinery, on the shores of Lake Erie near Hamilton, is considered to be the most modern,nanility in North America and is estimated to be worth about $500 million. It produces unleaded gasoline. And the company’s oil and gas properties are considered to be. the lowest cost fields in the industry. Texaco’s daily production of more than 100,000 barrels of oil are estimated to cost $4.45 a barrel to recover, compared with $6 a barrel at Imperial Oil, says analyst Doug Weber of Davidson Partners. But analysts also say Texaco hasn’t done enough to develop new properties and replenish its cost reserves. As it quits Canada, however, Texaco Inc.’s disposal of its assets won’t be carried out in a hasty, scrambling fashion. Instead, the American oil company plans a stately and dignified exit. The sale will be conducted through the gentlemanly art of backroom negotiating rather than a hotly contested bidding battle. In a press release, the company said it plans to “seek expressions of interest from qualified prospective purchasers.” The fate of minority shareholders in Texaco Canada, however, remains an open question. Under Canadian securities law, the buyer of a controlling block of shares only has to make a similar offer to minority shareholders if the purchase price per share is 15 per cent higher than the stock market price. The forced sale of its Canadian assets — considered to be among the most valuable of Texaco Inc.’s holdings — is a humbling turn of events for a company that is part of the oil industry elite, one of the so-called “Seven Sisters.” Texaco Inc. was born with the century’s first oil rush in the Spindletop gusher in Texas in 1901. Along with Standard Oil of New Jersey (later renamed Exxon), Mobil, Standard Oil of California, BE ONE IN A MILLION BLOCK PARENT Supported by The Prince George Citizen REGIONAL DISTRICT OF FRASER-FORT GEORGE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BYLAW NO. 951 Notice is hereby given that a public hearing with regard to Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 951 will be held at 3:00 p.m., Thursday, August 18, 1988 in the Board room of the Regional District offices at 987 Fourth Avenue, Prince George, B.C. The purpose ot Bylaw No. 951 is to rezone the NW 1/4 of DL 4894, C D. from Rural 3 (Ru3) to Rural 2 (Ru2) to allow the property to be subdivided into two parcels. The property is located on Femdale Road. The applicants are Mr. and Mrs. Zenzen. At the public hearing, all those who deem their interest in land to be affected by proposed Bylaw No. 951 shall be afforded an opportunity to be heard or to present written submissions. Copies of the proposed bylaw may be examined at the office of the Regional District of Fraser-Fort George between the hours of 8:45 a.m. and 12.00 noon and 1:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Derek Trimmer August, 1988 Director of Planning Prince George, B.C. Gulf, Royal Dutch Shell and British Petroleum, it helped to usher in the petroleum age. This handful of powerful corporations ranged the globe in the search for oil, building giant networks to control the production, transportation, refining, distribution and pricing of petroleum. Ultimately, their power over production and pricing was broken in 1973 by the cartel formed by the oil-producing countries, OPEC (the Organization of Oil Exporting Countries). Founded by Texas wildcatters, Texaco has been called the “ugly sister” for its hard-nosed, often high-handed approach to the petroleum business. In fact, for years its first chairman flew a skull and crossbones flag on top of the corporate headquarters in Houston. Before the United States entered the Second World War, the president of Texaco, Torkild Reiber, used the company’s fleet to run the British blockade and supply oil to the Nazis. Reiber also gained notoriety and was forced to resign after it came to light that a Nazi operative, Dr. Gerhard Westrick, was paid a salary, given an office and provided with a home by Texaco while he carried out a campaign to undermine U.S. support for Britain before the U.S. entered the war. That same approach landed Texaco in hot water with a Texas jury and started the chain of events that led to the decision to sell Texaco Canada. Four years ago, Texaco acquired Getty Oil Co. and was sued by Pennzoil Co. which said it had struck a takeover deal, sealed with a handshake, with Getty Oil. Texaco maintained that there was no contract because not all of the legal documentation was completed. But a Texas jury decided a hand- shake is still a bond in Texas and awarded Pennzoil $10.5 billion US in damages. Several attempts to appeal the decision proved futile and Texaco was forced into temporary bankruptcy to avoid posting a multi-bil-lion-dollar bond while it was appealing the jake. Finally, Texaco reached an out-of-court settlement in April for $3 billion with Pennzoil. At the same time, Texaco was able to get out of bankruptcy by having a reorganization plan accepted by a U.S. bankruptcy court. The reorganization plan, which included the payment to Pennzoil and the settlement of $2.6 billion to other creditors, called for the Texaco to divest itself of some of its szets, such as its lucrative Canadian subsidiary. In Montreal, there were reports of cheering around the old office of the McColl-Frontenac Oil Co. (Distributed by Southam News.) CN APPOINTMENT BRADLEY N. BODNER, M.Eng. The appointment of Brad Bodner as Industrial Development Officer is announced by John F. Chalmers, Manager, Industrial Development, Vancouver, B.C. Prior to his appointment, Mr. Bodner was Transportation Engineer, Edmonton, Alberta. Mr. Bodner is located in Vancouver. CN’s Industrial Development group provides various location and planning services to industries wishing to utilize CN’s Rail and Intermodal transportation services. NR MOTORS SUMMER SPECIALS 25 % OFF Water skis, hydro slides, down riggers, fishing rod holders, happy trollers. This Fri. & Sat. Only 15 % OFF ALL MARINE ACCESSORIES FOR YOUR RV AIR CONDITIONERS Coleman 7,000-13,500 BTU w/heat strip Duo-Ttiemi Penguin Royal - 13,500 BTU w/heat strip. AQUA KEM TOILET CHEMICAL Reg?$5.95. Sale................*4.95 0NAN POWER PUNT HYDRAULIC JACKS NAMECO/HIJACKER (set of 4) Reg. $395. Sale...................*355 12 VOLT FAN 40 KW Reg. $4,019. Sale ..*3,199.95 Reg. $23.95. Sale.... .........*19.95 NORSEMAN AUTOMATIC ROLL-UP AWNINGS Sizes 10’ - 18”. Assorted colours 15% OFF Prices effective on ln-8tock Items only ■ n a 805 * 1st. Ave. MOTORS 563*8891 D7970