williams lake tribune, june 13, 2013

24
Breaking news, video, photo galleries, and more always online at www.wltribune.com THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 Proudly serving Williams Lake and the Cariboo-Chilcotin since 1930 VOL. 83. No. 48 $1.30 inc. Tax NEWS A2 Last of puppies finds a home. SPORTS A10 Thunder Mountain hosts races. COMMUNITY A15 Milestone grad this weekend. Weather outlook: Cloudy to- day, high of 14 C. Cloudy Friday, high of 16 C. AND THE BEAT GOES ON Greg Sabatino photo Team members of The Beat Goes On cheer enthusiastically as they ride the Heart and Stroke Foundation Big Bike through the streets of downtown Williams Lake Tuesday. In total, a combined seven lakecity teams rode the bike throughout the day — some braving Tuesday afternoon’s wind and rain storm — to help the Heart and Stroke Foundation raise upwards of its goal of $20,000 locally. Tara Sprickerhoff Tribune Staff Writer New junior secondary to cocoon Grade 7s Grade 6 students and parents filled the bleachers in the Colum- neetza gymnasium Monday, June 3, where the first-ever Grade 7 orientation was held. As part of the evening, admin- istrators, councillors and teach- ers helped explain what would happen with next year’s Grade 7 classrooms. As part of the move to change the two Williams Lake high schools into the one school, two campus model, next Septem- ber will be the first time that all Grade 7s will be attending sec- ondary school together. “It’s not business as usual for any of these people,” said Gregg Gaylord, principal of the new Lake City Secondary School, who led the presentation. The students will be attending the Western (old Columneetza) campus alongside students in Grade 8 and Grade 9, while the senior grades will be at the Car- son (old Williams Lake Second- ary) campus. The Western campus will be “closed,” wherein students will not be allowed to leave the facili- ties during the day. The program will work simi- larly to elementary school class- rooms. Grade 7 students will stay in one main classroom, with pri- marily one teacher for the major- ity of their subjects. Specialty courses, such as mu- sic or languages, may be taught by a different teacher dependent on each teacher’s specialty. Mike Grace and Grant Gus- tafson, the two vice-principals of the Western campus next year, separated students into class- rooms, trying to create a balance with regards to academics, gen- der and personality. “There’s lots of great things that can happen with the eight classrooms together,” said Grace. He suggested that teachers and students can collaborate on dif- ferent projects because all the classrooms will be near each other. All the Grade 7 classrooms will be located in Columneetza’s base- ment hallway. “We wanted to pick a spot where we could keep [students] in a general area for kids and teach- ers to move back and forth,” Gay- lord said. Although some of the class- rooms don’t have windows it was the only area in the building to keep all the Grade 7 students to- gether, he said. “You can’t put them in the shop wing or where the food rooms are and you don’t want to take up the science labs,” Gaylord said. “It was a logical spot.” Unlike the older students, the Grade 7s will have a year long schedule, rather than having classes that change each semester. Teachers will have the freedom to arrange subjects within the block schedule. The benefit of having the Grade 7s in the bigger high school is that they have access to better resourc- es, said Sandy Davis, a counsellor at the Western campus next year. “We’re looking to give students more opportunities,” Davis said. Gaylord, formally the principal of Columneetza, has been work- ing outside of the school help- ing to arrange next year’s school change. There’s been a lot of conversa- tions between administration at the school, as well as the district implementation committee and different stakeholders such as parents and teachers, he said. “That has helped guide us,” Gaylord said. “It’s exciting, but even teachers are a little uneasy about the whole situation. “It’s forcing people to be flex- ible and change and that’s not a bad thing.” Theresa Rud, a parent whose daughter will be going into Grade 7 next year, was initially nervous about the change. Now, she said, she is feeling a lot better. “I’m looking forward to the change and to see how it all un- folds,” Rud said. Gaylord invited anyone who had questions or concerns re- garding the change to come talk to him or any of the vice-prin- cipals or councillors personally within the upcoming months. “We will take care of your chil- dren,” he assured parents. Inside the Tribune PM 0040785583 Gentles requests Supreme Court trial Martin William Michael Gen- tles has requested the charges against him be tried in Supreme Court without a jury. Gentles appeared in Williams Lake provincial court Wednesday morning and heard his case will go to a preliminary hearing first. A fixed date appearance before a Justice of the Peace is set for June 19 to determine the hearing dates. On April 29 the Crown ap- proved seven charges against Gen- tles, including dangerous driving causing death, dangerous driving causing bodily harm, impaired driving causing death, driving with a blood alcohol content over 80 milligrams and causing an acci- dent that resulted in death.

Upload: black-press

Post on 27-Mar-2016

233 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

June 13, 2013 edition of the Williams Lake Tribune

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Breaking news, video, photo galleries, and more always online at www.wltribune.com

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 Proudly serving Williams Lake and the Cariboo-Chilcotin since 1930 VOL. 83. No. 48 $1.30 inc. Tax

NEWS A2Last of puppies finds a home.

SPORTS A10Thunder Mountain hosts races.

COMMUNITY A15Milestone grad this weekend.

Weather outlook: Cloudy to-day, high of 14 C. Cloudy Friday, high of 16 C.

ANd ThE bEAT gOES ONGreg Sabatino photo

Team members of The Beat Goes On cheer enthusiastically as they ride the Heart and Stroke Foundation Big Bike through the streets of downtown Williams Lake Tuesday.In total, a combined seven lakecity teams rode the bike throughout the day — some braving Tuesday afternoon’s wind and rain storm — to help the Heart and Stroke Foundation raise upwards of its goal of $20,000 locally.

Tara SprickerhoffTribune Staff Writer

New junior secondary to cocoon grade 7s

Grade 6 students and parents filled the bleachers in the Colum-neetza gymnasium Monday, June 3, where the first-ever Grade 7 orientation was held.

As part of the evening, admin-istrators, councillors and teach-ers helped explain what would happen with next year’s Grade 7 classrooms.

As part of the move to change the two Williams Lake high schools into the one school, two campus model, next Septem-ber will be the first time that all Grade 7s will be attending sec-ondary school together.

“It’s not business as usual for any of these people,” said Gregg Gaylord, principal of the new Lake City Secondary School, who led the presentation.

The students will be attending the Western (old Columneetza) campus alongside students in Grade 8 and Grade 9, while the senior grades will be at the Car-son (old Williams Lake Second-ary) campus.

The Western campus will be “closed,” wherein students will not be allowed to leave the facili-ties during the day.

The program will work simi-larly to elementary school class-rooms.

Grade 7 students will stay in one main classroom, with pri-marily one teacher for the major-ity of their subjects.

Specialty courses, such as mu-sic or languages, may be taught by a different teacher dependent on each teacher’s specialty.

Mike Grace and Grant Gus-tafson, the two vice-principals of the Western campus next year, separated students into class-rooms, trying to create a balance with regards to academics, gen-der and personality.

“There’s lots of great things that can happen with the eight classrooms together,” said Grace. He suggested that teachers and students can collaborate on dif-ferent projects because all the classrooms will be near each other.

All the Grade 7 classrooms will be located in Columneetza’s base-

ment hallway. “We wanted to pick a spot

where we could keep [students] in a general area for kids and teach-ers to move back and forth,” Gay-lord said.

Although some of the class-rooms don’t have windows it was the only area in the building to keep all the Grade 7 students to-gether, he said.

“You can’t put them in the shop wing or where the food rooms are and you don’t want to take up the science labs,” Gaylord said. “It was a logical spot.”

Unlike the older students, the Grade 7s will have a year long schedule, rather than having classes that change each semester. Teachers will have the freedom to arrange subjects within the block schedule.

The benefit of having the Grade 7s in the bigger high school is that they have access to better resourc-es, said Sandy Davis, a counsellor at the Western campus next year.

“We’re looking to give students more opportunities,” Davis said.

Gaylord, formally the principal of Columneetza, has been work-

ing outside of the school help-ing to arrange next year’s school change.

There’s been a lot of conversa-tions between administration at the school, as well as the district implementation committee and different stakeholders such as parents and teachers, he said.

“That has helped guide us,” Gaylord said. “It’s exciting, but even teachers are a little uneasy about the whole situation.

“It’s forcing people to be flex-ible and change and that’s not a bad thing.”

Theresa Rud, a parent whose daughter will be going into Grade 7 next year, was initially nervous about the change. Now, she said, she is feeling a lot better.

“I’m looking forward to the change and to see how it all un-folds,” Rud said.

Gaylord invited anyone who had questions or concerns re-garding the change to come talk to him or any of the vice-prin-cipals or councillors personally within the upcoming months.

“We will take care of your chil-dren,” he assured parents.

Inside theTribune

PM 0040785583

gentles requests Supreme Court trial

Martin William Michael Gen-tles has requested the charges against him be tried in Supreme Court without a jury.

Gentles appeared in Williams Lake provincial court Wednesday morning and heard his case will go to a preliminary hearing first.

A fixed date appearance before a Justice of the Peace is set for June 19 to determine the hearing dates.

On April 29 the Crown ap-proved seven charges against Gen-tles, including dangerous driving causing death, dangerous driving causing bodily harm, impaired driving causing death, driving with a blood alcohol content over 80 milligrams and causing an acci-dent that resulted in death.

Page 2: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A photograph can go a long way in help-ing to find puppies new homes.

That’s what Const. Krista Mangan of the Alexis Creek RCMP Detachment learned last week when she put a photograph of seven puppies she planned to take into the BCSPCA on her Facebook wall.

“Several litters have gone from the Alexis Creek area to the SPCA in the past, but this time I decided to put the photo on my Face-book first to say, ‘look at the puppies, I’m go-ing to take them into the SPCA tomorrow,’” Mangan told the Tri-bune.

When people saw her

post they responded.“I got such a re-

sponse, just from my friends. They were say-ing ‘No don’t, I’ll take one,” and the effort to find homes for the dogs ‘grew legs’ from there.”

In the photograph seven puppies of vary-ing colours have their heads peeking over the tailgate of a police ve-hicle.

“The photograph went viral,” said Tracy Dale, a member of the BCSPCA community council in Williams Lake, while volunteer-ing at the BCSPCA garage sale held last Saturday.

“I got a text from one of my friends back east showing me the photo-graph.”

Three of the puppies have gone to homes

on the Coast, one was adopted by an RCMP member, one by a fam-ily in Redstone, one by someone in Williams Lake, and Mangan has kept one for herself.

“I named him Chilko because of his bright blue eyes,” she said, adding he’s the beige one second from the left in the photograph.

The photograph wasn’t staged in any way either.

She’d placed them in the truck and they all jumped up so she knew she “had” to take a pic-ture, she said.

Then she forwarded the photograph, along with some of her most recent D.A.R.E. grad photos, thinking they might end up as a cute picture on the RCMP website.

has been working at the Alexis Creek de-tachment since August 2012 and really enjoys it.

“I came from work-ing in the Lower Main-land for 10 years and was on a homicide team for five, and serious crime for more years on

top of that.”Being posted at Alex-

is Creek is the “true Mountie experience,” she wanted, she admit-ted.

“I’m back in uniform and back on the road and it’s a nice commu-nity because it’s very close knit.”

A2 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

Singing the long gone out weSt blueSMonica Lamb-Yorski

photoJason and Pharis Romero shared tracks from their latest CD, Long Gone out West Blues, during a CD release concert held June 7 at the Limelight. Brent Morton, along with his brothers-in-law Joshua and Michael Gutzer from Saskatoon, and Marin Patenaude, performed songs from Morton’s newest CD.

Monica lamb-YorskiTribune Staff Writer

NEWS

Infoline: 250.392.4722Infoline: 250.392.4722

CinemasSHOW DATES: Fri, June 14th to Thurs, June 20th

www.paradisecinemas.com

PG

Now You See Me

7:00 & 9:15PMNightly

Sat/SunMatinees

2pm

Man of Steel6:45 & 9:30PMFri & Sat (3D)

7:15PMSun to Thurs (3D)

Sat/SunMatinees2pm (2D)

PG18A

This Is The End

7:00 & 9:15PM Nightly

DigitalDigital3D The Internship

7:00 & 9:15PMNightly

Sat/SunMatinees

2pm

Coarse language, sexual contentViolence

$7 Matinees ($2 surcharge for 3D)

PG

Coarse language, violence Frequent coarse language, explicit violence

Some things are just better together.

#itsbettertogether

facebook.com/flyerland.ca

@flyerland

Some things are just better together.

#itsbettertogether

facebook.com/flyerland.ca

@flyerland

Some things are just better together.

#itsbettertogether

facebook.com/flyerland.ca

@flyerland

Some things are just better together.

#itsbettertogether

facebook.com/flyerland.ca

@flyerland~ tea house ~~ gift shoppe ~250-296-4235

Located at 150 Mile House (Next to the School)7 Days A Week 10am - 4pm

Horse Lake Garden Centre Is Now Open!✿ ✿

250-296-4235

One of our many unique

concrete pieces

that are made in B.C.

Open 10am - 4pm Everyday!

THETREEMAN

For more information and registrations

please contact Randy Kadonaga 250.392.2423 or [email protected]

� e Salvation Army Williams Lake Corps

is hosting two training sessions in Emergency Disaster Training

Emotional and Spiritual Care and Preparing your

Congregation.Saturday, June 15, 2013

Andrea Cass, AMPMortgage Broker

250-392-5005 / 877-715-5005565 A Oliver Street • [email protected]

• Professional Advice

• Customized Mortgages

• Proven Results

Contact The Tribune by the following Wednesday to claim your Panago gift certificate.

Subscribe to The Tribuneand have 52 chances a year to WIN A PIZZA

Check out The Tribune Classifieds every week for your name to win a gift certificate for a large pizza.

last of Alexis Creek puppies finds a home

RCMP report more car theftsOn Monday night

and in the early morn-ing hours, six more vehicles were bro-ken into in Williams Lake, the RCMP said Tuesday.

Police were called shortly after mid-night to a residence on Pigeon Ave. where

a witness observed two males breaking into a vehicle.

Both males fled the scene. A short while later, two sus-pects matching this description were ob-served breaking into vehicles at the Coast Hotel.

One adult male, 21 years of age, was ar-rested at the scene, while the second male suspect escaped.

The investigation is continuing and it is not yet known if the theft from autos the previous night is con-nected to this rash.

Page 3: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A3

NEWS

Monica Lamb-YorskiTribune Staff Writer

CARIBOO REGION WEATHER FORECAST

SaturdayMix of

sun and cloudHigh 210CLow 90C

MondayMix of

sun and cloudHigh 220CLow 100C

FridayCloudy/chance

of showersHigh 160CLow 90CPOP 40%

ThursdayMainly cloudy/chance of

showers/risk of thunderstormHigh 140CLow 50CPOP 40%

SundaySunny

High 230CLow 90C

Normals for the period:

High 210CLow 70C

Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri 10 am - 6 pm • Wed & Sat 10 am - 5 pm

RENTAL BIKES AVAILABLE

Scott Gordon

BARKING SPIDER MOUNTAIN BIKEBARKING SPIDER MOUNTAIN BIKESales • Service • Accessories

250.392.5177 or 250.305.5172 • www.barkingspidermountainbike.com19 North 1st Avenue, Williams Lake, BC V2G 4T6

NEW SundayFridayThursday Saturday Monday

118-year-old Sugar Cane church in line for renovations

A 118 year old mem-ber of the community is getting a face lift.

Last week the Wil-liams Lake Indian Band learned its application to the Heritage Legacy Fund to carry out res-toration of the Sugar Cane Church was suc-cessful.

“We learned we have been approved for $22,997,” WLIB coun-cillor Rick Gilbert said.

There was only $180,000 in the pot, and WLIB was one of three applications to be granted the full amount of its request.

The church, for-mally known as the The Church of the Im-maculate Conception, will receive a new roof, new paint, a new gate and fence, and perhaps a new cross atop its red steeple.

Gilbert will know about what’s needed once he and his crew climb up some scaffold-ing to examine things more closely.

“Heritage funding can only be used for work on the outside of the church,” he said.

Gilbert is a former chief.

Last year he and his wife, who is an Ameri-can, returned to live at Sugar Cane.

“I was gone about 14 years,” he said. “My wife is from Mississippi and we lived there for about four years.”

He was almost im-mediately elected on council and one of the things he did was see if the band could acquire some funding for restor-ing the church.

“The last time we had a major renovation was in 1982,” he recalled. “I was the chief back then. We re-roofed, painted all of the outside and firmed up anything that needed firming up.”

They also repainted the inside, but laughing he explained the priest serving the church at the time had suggested a blue ceiling and beige walls.

The opposite paint-ing was completed and when the priest returned to visit, he was shocked.

“He had a fit, but he got over it,” Gilbert chuckled.

Already some volun-teers have been working in anticipation of the upcoming work.

They’ve torn down an old fence, cleared some of the grounds around the church, pruned trees, cleaned up the in-side, and are planning to install some electric heaters that will aug-ment the only source of heat — one wood burn-ing stove inside.

“Have you ever been in here in the winter?” Gilbert asked. “It can be pretty cold.”

Kids are often clad in snowsuits, boots, hats and gloves to at-tend mass in the winter, and during one mass the priest was trying to thaw the water inside a bottle that he needed to use at the altar by plac-ing it close to his body.

“We’ve only used wood for 118 years now,” he said. “Electric will heat up the place faster though.”

There are also plans to update all the wiring and replace the flooring, paint the inside, and the big hope is that an ad-ditional small building could be erected outside with washrooms.

“They’ve gone with-out washrooms forever, but maybe it’s time to provide some ameni-ties,” he said. “We are hoping some generous benefactor will come forward to solve this problem for us.”

A few of the original

pews remain, but the majority are quite long so there are also plans to modify them to make an aisle more in the cen-tre.

To receive heritage funding, the band is required to provide at least the equivalent amount in cash or in-kind services.

Already volunteers have been working to prepare for the major work that will be done.

Gilbert said the church was built at the site 14 years after his people moved to live on the newly created Sugar Cane Reserve in 1881.

“The missionaries at St. Joseph Mission had invited our people to live at the mission and they kept pressuring the government to give us some land,” he said.

Eventually the gov-ernment purchased three ranches, one of them was called the

Sugar Cane Ranch, and added some Crown land to create a 4,000-acre parcel of land for the band.

“The church was built by the missionaries and our people,” Gil-bert said. “There’s ac-tually some real crafts-manship inside that’s still amazing after 118 years.”

He was born at Sugar Cane and lived in an old log house near the church that stands emp-ty today.

There are the remains of three buildings, where once there were about 50.

“They used to have

prayers here in the morning and the eve-ning every day, and mass was on Sunday,” he said. “Now mass is only once a month, and mostly outsiders come to church here.”

He said a lot of his people turned away be-cause of the residential school experience, but a few of the elders are “hanging in there” and trying to bring it back to the young people.

“We’re hoping to start having some cat-echism and religious teaching again.”

The church is too small for weddings or funerals, so those ser-

vices are usually held at the community gym, he added.

Gilbert hopes that ev-eryone in the region will see the church as one of its heritage sites.

“Last time we paint-ed it you could see the bright red steeple when you drove around the point from Williams Lake.

“The church has been in different magazines and newspapers over the years so people got to know it.”

Gilbert has developed a website for the church www.sugarcanechurch.ca that includes histori-cal photographs.

Williams Lake Indian Band councillor Rick Gilbert is heading up a restoration project of the 118-year-old Sugar Cane Church that will include some work on the exterior and the interior. A new roof and paint job will be provided thanks to funding through the Heritage Legacy Fund.

Page 4: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

This summer a few dozen ants will journey from Williams Lake to Harvard University.

For the last couple of years Thompson Rivers University Biology As-sistant Professor Rob Higgins has been re-searching the European Fire Ant.

In July he will take two dozen of his col-lection of ants to com-pare and add them to an existing collection at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology.

“Harvard has the largest collection of ants in the world in their insect collection so it’s an opportunity to look at how our species of ants fits in with the species that are found in other areas of North America and try to de-termine in fact if some of our species have been described as other species,” Higgins told the Tribune.

The European Fire Ant has been intro-duced into the Vancou-ver, Victoria area, com-ing in primarily through landscaping plants.

“It belongs to a par-ticular genus of ants known as Myrmica ants, which are very difficult to identify,” he explained.

Difficulties arise because the character-istics between the dif-ferent species are quite variable, and while a few people have worked on them a bit in the past, it has become apparent there’s a need to revise the entire ge-nus and look at them fresh.

“This has been on my mind for three or four years so I’ve decided to devote the summer to this project,” Higgins said.

In advance of his week-long visit to Har-vard, he will also work with ant collections at the University of Que-bec and the University of Maine.

Higgins has a collec-tion of Myrmica ants he has gathered from many areas in B.C. including around Wil-liams Lake, Becher’s Prairie, the Kootenays, the Okanagan, and the Bulkley Valley.

By visiting other

universities to examine their ant collections, he hopes to help decipher which ants are native and which ones have been introduced.

“I would like to de-velop a key that other researchers can use to really start to tell all these ants apart,” he said.

Undergraduate sci-ence student Mitchell Johnson who recently completed his first year of studies and is from Williams Lake is as-sisting Higgins with the project.

Johnson is preparing specimens of the Euro-pean fire ant and related species in B.C. that will be added to the Harvard collection.

The work — pinning and labelling ant speci-mens for the collection — is not normally of-fered to an undergradu-ate student, Higgins said.

When asked about the overall role of ants, Higgins said they are very important ecologi-cally and in most eco-systems, the biomass of ants exceeds that of other animals.

“If we were to com-pare moose in the Cari-boo Chilcotin to the weight of ants in the same habitat, a typical medium good habitat for moose would have about one kilogram

equivalent of moose per hectare of land.

“In that same area you would expect to have 40 kilograms of ants. So you’re deal-ing with a weight 40

times greater than you would expect to find for moose.”

Ants love heat and when forest cover is removed it creates the perfect habitat for ants.

It becomes even more ideal when things like paving stones are added, which heat up during the day, and hold the heat at night, which is ideal for ant growth and development.

“Ants are important predators of other pest insects, for example, they attack spruce budworm. A healthy ant population is good for managing spruce budworm populations as well as Douglas-Fir Tussock Moth and Spruce Weevil.”

They are also an im-portant food source lo-cally for wildlife such as Flicker Woodpeck-ers, Black Bears and Grizzlies.

“I was involved with a study up in the Prince George area several years ago and ants, af-ter vegetation, were what bears spent more time looking for than anything else,” Higgins said.

His passion for ants is about 15 years old, he added. Most of his ef-forts have been expend-ed in B.C., although he did some collecting in Borneo in 2010.

A4 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

NEWS

Monica Lamb-YorskiTribune Staff Writer

We’re no longergiving awaythe milkfor free.The Tribune is the proud recipient of

many prestigious awards from provincial and national competitions across Canada.

We employ a team of award winning writers, photographers, sales and design professionals.

Content worth paying for!• Full access to current and past e-editions. • Full page views of The Tribune on-line. (Includes all advertisments)

250-392-2331188 N. 1st Ave. Williams Lake

On-line subscription for as little as $3.94 a month.

Welcome Wagon!

Sandra Dahlman392-1050

Linda James392-5601

Treat Yourself to a Visit from

It’s FREE!!!We are a community service whose aim is to bring you

greetings, gifts & information regarding the area you live in.

ContactWelcome Wagontoday if you are

moving or getting married.

www.welcomewagon.ca or toll free

1-866-518-7287

Bringing local community information and gifts since 1930

2013 GownsAvailable!

Graduating?

Cla� Act Formals250-395-8825 • 262 Birch Ave., 100 Mile House

E-mail: [email protected]

Like us on and say the “Phrase that Saves”

• Personalized Service• Only one gown style

sold per school• No-interest lay-away

• Gowns from size 0 - 24

Don’t be disappointed... Still lots of gowns to

choose from at great prices

TRU research ants marching for Harvard University

Photo submittedWilliams Lake TRU student Mitchell Johnson is preparing specimen ants to be added to an existing collection at Harvard University.

Page 5: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A5

For ticket sales and information call

250-392-6585or Toll Free

1-800-71-RODEO (1-800-717-6336)

World FamousWorld Famous

www.williamslakestampede.com

87thAnnual

Monday to Friday ~ May 21 - May 31 • 10 am - 3 pmMonday to Friday ~ June 3 - June 27 • 10 am - 5 pmOpen Saturdays ~ June 8, 15 & 22 • 10 am - 2 pm

Come for the excitement,Stay for the weekend!

Stampede Ticket Of� ce located at the back of the Grandstand

June 28, 29, 30 & July 1, 2013

Order your FREE Travel & Touring Guide:www.landwithoutlimits.com or call 1.800.663.5885

Saturday, June 29th

@ 10:00 am“Fun n’ Games”

Daybreak Rotary’sStampede Parade

Stampede Ticket Of� ce located at the back of the GrandstandStampede Ticket Of� ce located at the back of the Grandstand

LAKE CITY CENTRAL EQUIPMENT Ltd.

GRASSLAND EQUIPMENT Ltd.

CKWL 570 AMCABLE 100.1 FM

PLUS:Ranch Challenge, Local Drill Teams,

Mountain Horse Race, Stampede Breakfast, Knights of Columbus Pancake Breakfast,

Royal Canadian Legion Branch 139 Pancake Breakfast & Steak Night Daily,

Rotary Pancake Breakfast and Rotary Club - Rotary Steakout

Daybreak Rotary’s

Mountain Horse Race, Stampede Breakfast, “NEW 2013”

5 Rodeo Performances!

1st Performance June 28th at noon

Daily: C.P.R.A.Professional Rodeo Events

Entertainment All Weekend Long In The Let ‘ Buck Saloon

Ken McCoy & Whiskey JaneR

Page 6: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

It is good to be back in the office after the hectic elec-tion period, and to contin-

ue my work as your representa-tive in the Legislature.

By working together, I know we will be able to accomplish a lot in the next four years, and I will continue to make sure that the voice of our rural regions is heard.

As the new Parliamentary Sec-retary to the Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource

O p e r a -tions for R u r a l D e v e l -opment, I will w o r k

to build the economy in rural British Columbia, something that has always been close to my heart.

I will also work to ensure that rural schools get the same op-portunities as those in big cities and that our farmers and ranch-ers are heard, and will continue to push for the Prosperity Mine project.

Our government will bring real benefits for rural areas, through policies like the tax ex-emption on purple gas for our farmers and by supporting the renewal of our forestry industry through more trade with Asia.

We will also continue to focus on fiscal responsibility and cre-ating the conditions for strong economic growth with initiatives like a 40 per cent reduction in the small business tax and the cutting of red tape.

These types of policies will bring many new economic op-portunities to the Cariboo and other rural regions of our prov-ince.

Now that we are back in the office, I look forward to continu-ing to write this weekly column to keep you up to date on what is happening in our region, in the capital, and around the prov-ince.

You can also call or drop by the office any time, as my door is always open; I’m always happy to hear your thoughts or help in any way I can. 

Donna Barnett is the Liberal MLA for Cariboo-Chilcotin.

Lisa BoweringPublisher/Sales Mgr.

Gaeil FarrarActing Editor

Gaylene DesautelsAd Control/Production

Sherry ParkerCirculation

Advertising Representatives: Brenda Webster, Lori Macala and Lauren Phillips.Ad Design: Leigh Logan, Sherri Jaeger, Mary Langstrom, Anne Blake.Staff Reporters: Gaeil Farrar (Community Editor), Greg Sabatino (Sports Editor) and Monica Lamb-Yorski.

Tribune Correspondents: Veera Bonner (Big Creek), June Bliss (Alexis Creek), Linda-Lou Howarth (Riske Creek), Rosi Hartmann (Rose Lake/Miocene), Rhonda Kolcun (McLeese Lake), Bruce MacLeod (Horsefl y).

Tribune Contributors: Diana French, Liz Twan.

A politically independent community newspaper published Tuesdays and Thursdays by: Black Press Group Ltd. 188 North 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C., Canada V2G 1Y8 • Phone (250) 392-2331 Fax (250) 392-7253, emails [email protected] or classifi [email protected], view our web page at www.wltribune.com.This Williams Lake Tribune is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby Street, Nanaimo, B.C., V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bc.presscouncil.orgAll material contained in this publication is protected by copyright. Reproduction is expressly prohibited by the rights holder. Publication Mail Registration No. 01990578. Annual Tribune Mail Subscription within Canada $78.75 includes tax.

Our Viewpoint

MLAMusingsDonna Barnett

More than fried bread, drumming and dancing

Working for the future

Don’t get me wrong, fried bread, drum-ming and pow-wow

dancing are all good things, but this Aboriginal Day (June 21) there are many other exciting events to celebrate.

In 1996, the first Aboriginal Day was established through the combined efforts of the sacred assembly and Elijah Harper, a respected elder and speaker who left for the spirit world May 17, 2013. Aboriginal Day is a time of celebration in many Aborigi-nal and Metis communities.

Many positive changes are ap-pearing in Aboriginal communi-ties as the people reclaim their pathways to health. Aboriginal health is seen as a combination of spiritual, emotional and phys-ical well-being which is different from western models. First Na-tion Healthy Authority was es-tablished and is poised to reflect the collective knowledge of First Nation people by embracing the traditional practices of the past and the medical technology of today.

Many Aboriginal and Metis communities are also stepping forward to help make their com-munities healthier. Communities are returning to past practices like hunting and fishing camps and teaching the next generation to gather and prepare tradition-al foods and medicines. It also brings communities and genera-tions together to practice healthy living.

Walking and hiking in the mountains and fields; whether to hunt, fish or gather food, teaches many valuable skills, including physical activity, mental wellbe-ing and respect for the land.

You do not get that pushing a grocery cart in the supermarket!

Aboriginal communities are successfully melding the past and the future in order to be-come healthy, strong people and communities.

So, when you join the Aborigi-nal Day festivities on June 21 and admire the drumming, danc-ing and bead work as well as the occasional treat of fried bread, remember there is so much more to celebrate.

Kym Howay is an Aboriginal tobacco reduction co-ordinator with Interior Health.

Congratulations graduatesCongratulations to all the graduates of 2013.

You’ve made it to the end of this journey.Of all the signposts signalling a new phase one

that reads “high school graduation” is one of the biggest.

You’ve achieved a great accomplishment and you should be proud. And as the final graduat-ing class from both high schools — Williams Lake secondary and Columneetza secondary — 2013 is a milestone year, and one to remember.

High school can be a rough time for many stu-dents when factoring in academics, the social at-mosphere and the pressure.

But, you did it, you persevered and it’s some-thing to be proud of forever.

The world is your oyster now. Open it up and grab that pearl — what you choose to do with it is up to you. Many will go on to complete a post-

secondary education, others will begin a job or ca-reer and some will travel, to name a few scenarios.

A high school diploma is a launching pad that opens so many doors — to university, to college or to a wider job market.

It’s a solid foundation that can be built upon in the future.

You need the skills you’ve developed meeting deadlines, working as a team and being respon-sible students and citizens.

For now, though, be very proud of this accom-plishment and, going forward, remember learning is a lifelong process and be proud you’ve built the foundation to make the most of it.

We hope the weekend brings many more lifelong memories for our graduates. Congratulations, again, and have a safe and fun grad weekend.

- Williams Lake Tribune

A6 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

VIEWPOINTS• Publisher/Sales Mgr. Lisa Bowering • Editor Erin Hitchcock 250-392-2331 ext 243 [email protected]

Free press can, of course, be good or bad, but, most certainly without freedom, the press will never be anything but bad. - Albert Camus

Page 7: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

The weather, and the rela-tion ship between the Canadian beef industry-producing sector and its American counterparts continues to be stuck on COOL as a May 23 deadline requiring that the U.S. reissue the COOL law in a format that will comply with world-trade regulations (World Trade Organization rul-ing) has yet to materialize.

That failure prompted a news release by the Canadian government (June 7) delivered by Ed Fast, Minister of Inter-national Trade/Asia-Pacific

Gateway and Gerry Ritz, Min-ister of Agriculture-Agri-Food/Canadian Wheat Board, stat-ing that Canada will release a list of U.S. commodities facing possible tariff-retaliation as a direct response to U.S. non-

compliance.Wow, tough talk, for us as a

nation — one that often seems to just lay down on the butch-er block and meekly accept all blows delivered by the (U.S.) meat-mallet.

So saying, I’ll bet the average Canadian beef-producer (par-ticularly those who care not a whit for political-correctness) cheered heartily, in total agree-ment that it was high time for retaliatory-beef-tariffs.

That may be viewed as a politically naive reaction, but

most feel strong action is key to highlight the discriminatory (steep) price-discounts tacked on Canadian beef-products (result of COOL) shipped/sold south of the 49th parallel.

A comment by an unknown site visitor to an online beef discussion forum (Piggy @ meatingplace.com) echoes the thoughts of many in the beef-sector, “COOL was just a ploy to try and increase the price of U.S. cattle by throwing road blocks in front of feeder cattle from Mexico and Canada as

well as choice finished cattle from Canadian feedlots.”

The proposed (Canada) retaliatory-tariff product list includes live bovine animals, meat of bovine animals (fresh/chilled/frozen), live swine, meat of swine (fresh/chilled/frozen) and cuts of offal (fresh/chilled) of spent fowl.

It was noted that we (Cana-da) would not act on these mea-sures without WTO approval, so the ball is in their court.

Liz Twan is a rancher and free-lance columnist for the Tribune.

More Viewpoints

The Tribune welcomes letters to the editor on local, relevant, and topical matters, up to 300 words. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, brevity, and legality. All letters and roses/raspberries must include the writer’s full name, daytime telephone number, and hometown for verification purposes. Anonymous letters or those signed with pen names will not be published. The Tribune will make every effort to print all letters and roses/raspberries that meet the above criteria, but can-not guarantee publication in any particular issue. Letters on a variety of topics by a variety of writers will be considered before multiple letters by the same author on the same topic. Letters will be published on the Tribune website at wltribune.com. E-mailed letters are preferred, and can be sent to [email protected]

LettersaLways

weLcome Mail 188 North 1st Avenue, Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8 • E-mail [email protected] • Fax 250-392-7253

Thursday, June 13, 2013 williams Lake tribune www.wltribune.com A7

?

Last week’s question: Do you like Williams Lake’s new high school name, Lake City Secondary School?

YES: 27 per cent NO: 73 per cent

This week’s online question: Do you agree with Lake City secondary’s Western campus being a closed campus?

Log onto the Opinion section at wltribune.com to vote

CattleFodder

Liz Twan

What are your plans after graduation?

Billy Hyde

Travelling. I’m going to the Philippines to visit my family.

Dayna Betsill

I’m going to be working full time and taking classes at TRU.

Shelby Doerkson

Taking Natural ResourceManagement.

Dani Peimer

I’m working making a docu-mentary at the Bowron Lakes.

Harman Sahota

I’m going to UBC and going into business.

Johnny VanCapelle

I’m taking the electrical pro-gram at TRU.

Question of the weekHeritage not preservedEditor: I would like to address the new

naming of our two high school campuses which have been oper-ating in Williams Lake for many years.

A lot of love and consideration were put in the original naming of these schools. 

Columneetza was chosen to honour our native residents in the area.

So I believe that removing both

of the original names shows dis-respect for the many pupils and teachers that attended. 

In some families this included three generations of the same family trees.

There is nothing to honour the heritage of the people that paved the way so others could receive a further education in the schools their parents and grandparents attended.

By removing both names, it is like neither of these campuses ex-

isted. I think both school names

should have been considered in the renaming.

My three children attended both Williams Lake Secondary and Columneetza Secondary School.

I would like to see how others feel about the decision that was made.

 Eva Gilchrist       

150 Mile House 

Gov’t doesn’t get food safetyEditor: Canadians count on the gov-

ernment to make sure the food we eat is safe, yet when it comes to the inspection system, MP Richard Harris and the Conser-vative government refuse to own up to their own mistakes.

An independent review of last year’s XL Foods E. coli out-break, which led to the largest beef recall in Canadian history, found that the outbreak was en-tirely preventable.

It found that there was not “a strong food safety culture” in the Canadian Food Inspection Agency at all levels. Staff were inadequately trained and in-spection practices weren’t good enough.

Our government failed.Many of these problems

would have been fixed if the Conservatives had followed through on their commitment

to implement the recommenda-tions of the Weatherill Report on the listeriosis contamination at Maple Leaf Foods in 2008, a serious shortcoming they refuse to admit.

The Conservatives claim they have been “bolstering” our food inspection system and that they have “added 20 per cent to the personnel.”

In fact, documents reveal they plan to cut hundreds of food safety and inspection staff at CFIA, which will reduce, not strengthen our food safety sys-tem.

They also failed to implement the final recommendation of the Weatherill Report, which called for an independent, comprehen-sive resource audit to ensure that the CFIA had the resources, hu-man and otherwise to carry out its mandate.

Even the former President of the CFIA, Carole Swan, said

that what they did do was not the audit the Weatherill report called for. That could have pre-vented many of the problems.

This slapdash approach al-lowed problems at XL Foods to go unchecked for years, allowing the E. coli contamination that caused 18 Canadians to get sick, cost $16-27 million to the beef industry and undermined con-sumer confidence in our food safety system.

Will Mr. Harris and the Con-servatives actually implement the recommended changes to food inspection to prevent a third major food crisis on their watch? 

Don’t hold your breath — when I asked in question period, they refused to commit to an implementation date.

 Frank Valeriote, MP

Liberal Party of Canada Agriculture Critic

It could be high time for retaliatory beef tariffs

Page 8: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A8 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

100 MILE, QUESNEL, NELSON, TERRACE, COWICHAN, KITIMAT, HOUSTON, SALMON ARM, SOOKE, SMITHERS, PRINCE RUPERT, WILLIAMS LAKE, TRAIL, CASTLEGAR, WEST KOOTENAY, WEEK 25 50884 _JUNE 14_FRI_08

Prices effective at all British Columbia Safeway stores Friday, June 14 through Sunday, June 16, 2013 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slig htly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc. and Canada Safeway Limited. Extreme Specials are prices that are so low they are limited to a one time purchase to Safeway Club Card Members within a household. Each household can purchase the limited items one time during the effective dates. A household is defi ned by all Safeway Club Cards that are linked by the same address

and phone number. Each household can purchase the EXTREME SPECIALS during the specifi ed advertisement dates. For purchases over the household limits, regular pricing applies to overlimit purchases. On BUY ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.

This Friday, June 14 to Sunday, June 16 Only!Spend $100, earn

®

Bakery Counter Angel Food CakeIn store made.340 g.

Huggies Hi Count Jr. DiapersSelect varieties and sizes.LIMIT FOUR - Combined varieties.

Deli SalamiOr Pepperoni. Sliced or shaved fresh.

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

$1 $6Piazza’s Fire Baked PizzaAssorted varieties.656 to 725 g.

From the Deli!

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

/100 g

Satsuma MandarinsProduct of Peru. 4 lb. Bag. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT TWO.

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

2for399 499

AIR MILES®reward miles*

®

SPEND $100, EARN

100 BONUS AIR MILES® reward miles*

*With coupon and a

minimum $100 grocery

purchase made in a

single transaction.

VALID JUNE 14 - JUNE 16, 2013

000

000

5113

39

Limit one Bonus Offer per transaction. Coupon must be presented

at time of purchase. Purchase must be made in a single transaction.

AIR MILES coupons cannot be combined with any other discount offer or

AIR MILES coupon offer including Customer Appreciation Day & Senior’s

Day. Not valid at Safeway Liquor Stores. Coupon excludes prescriptions,

diabetes merchandise, insulin pumps, insulin pump supplies, blood

pressure monitors, tobacco, transit passes, gift cards, enviro levies, bottle

deposits and sales tax. Other exclusions apply. See Customer Service for

complete list of exclusions. Cashiers: Scan the coupon only once to activate

the Bonus Offer. Do not scan more than once.

®TM Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. used under license by LoyaltyOne, Inc.

®

®

1514 16 JUNE

Prices in this ad good until June 16th.FRI SAT SUN

Fresh Whole Frying Chicken

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

$9

Wonder BreadAssorted varieties.570 g.

9

3 DAYS ONLY!CLUB PRICE

$4

Raw Whole CanadianLobsterFrozen.Minimum 425 g.While supplies last.

PLUS ... From June 14th to June 20th

1FREEBUY 1 GET

EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE

CLUB PRICE

Coca-Cola or Pepsi Soft DrinksAssorted varieties. 12 Pack. Plus deposit and/or enviro levy where applicable. HOUSEHOLD LIMIT SIX - Combined varieties.

$93 DAYS ONLY!

CLUB PRICE

3forBoneless New York Strip Loin SteakCut from 100% Canadian beef. Sold in a package of 4. Only $24 each

$63 DAYS ONLY!

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.3DAYSALE JUNE

FRIDAY

14JUNE

SATURDAY

15JUNE

SUNDAY

16

eachsteak

From the Meat Dept!

ea.

ea.

2for

EXTREMEPRICE

ea.

ea.

Buy 3 Earn 40BONUS AIR MILES® reward miles

2199

Page 9: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A9

123456789

101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172

73747576777879808182838485

8687888990919293949596979899

100101102

103104105106107108109110111112113114115

116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132

133134135136137138139140141142143144145

146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162

163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229

Eastman -1 161**Log Dog** 161Mouse 160Alex Swailes 159King Walt 158Lazy Boy 158Chilcotin Runner 158BZ.1 158Carmel Davill 157Whowzertwozit 157Walleye 157V. Kozuki 157Cecile 156

No Job 156BoMo 156The Dud’s 156Rickey Fowler 155No “P” IN MY OOL 155Ryan & Jen 155“Miss Bella” 155HARAY 155JSR 2013 155Prestly-25 154Metias-10 154Super Uke 154Pickeral 153Tani 153Kozuki’s Allstars 153Chappy’s Selects 153TURTEL 152

Rocketman 151Gonzoll 150BIG B 150Sal Manilla 149Hogan’s Horches 149Just Guessin’ 149BOOTS 149Wannabe 149YOLO 148Mo Money 147Kaydence 147Gharcore 28 147Bluebird 147

Geno-23 147“TYRECE” 146Sean C 146Porc du Vin 146Country Bumpkin 146Bobs Ugly Dogs 145Stray Dog 145Puss & Me *** 145GO LEAFS GO 144RDNKGRL-30 144D.D.T. 142Mr. Elbows 142Chilko Waves 142Big Joe 141Baby Rocks 140El Terrible 140MoJo 139

Square Head 139MAUI 138RAM 138Falcon 138Lisa B 138C Money $$$ 138PC 138Sons of Anaham 138JL Youngbloods 137BREWMASTER 136Haler 135Star Killer 134Harmony 134

Benchwarmer 133Timber 133MAN O WAR 132Penny Purple-56 132Storky 132Doobie Don 132Lord Gambler 128Cue Ball-7 128Diesel 128Kick Azzz 127Right On 127BenDover 126Super Samson 126R. Dan 125Mumma 125Robbins 16 123ALL IN 123

Gold Digger 122ALIJACZAC 122Double “K” 122Lady Luck 22 121Halo-17 119High Stakes 119Try Again 119Nemiah Boy 119Anaham 13 118NONUCKS 117Elaina Picks 115Janice Moore 114Icarus 114Aces High 113Bandit Z 112PIP’89 112Whozerwhatzit 111Hardware Man 110Hockey Star 109Ruthless McLouie 109Run with Scissors 108Thumbs Up 108BoTay 108DC06 108Serenna 108Jorga 2013 108Durango 108PEACHEY 107Chilcotin Trails 106HAYDEN 1 106Reido 106Shot Down in Flames 105Betty Booper 105Knock Out Rabbit 103SJD 103G Dog-19 102The Guard 101The Quest 100Happy Trails22 100Dawson 99Lee Bug 99TIGERKID 98B and B 98Shawnigains 97ACO 96Moose Nose 95Ma’s Boy’s 2 95Krazy Native-68 95Lionkid 94Dr. S’Dog 94Zulu 94Tenray 93ROSALINE 92Eagle Lake-29 91BIO 91Bus Riders 89Miles StAmand 88Tyee Terror 87Winner 83Kermit & McNardy 83Marlene’s Pick 81El Terrible-2 74Dan 19 67Razorio 67Tigger 65Wrangler-23 64Banjo 63

The Gongshow 203bbatw 196IT’S GO TIME 195MILLDONK 194Big D 192K TOWN 192TSNP 191YUK-TOM 189Be Right 188Weasel 187Dan and Me 187Rainmaker 187Chachi Church 186BOMBER 71 184KIDCOOL-17 183NUREYEV12 182Flair 180SNUFFY 11 180Rake Up Leafs 180Victorious 179Keeley 179The Best in the West 179CHUCKS 178The Pennys 178SUDSY 178HH 177RTDG 176Secretariat 176Hogans Heroes 175Honkytonk 175Norlafe 174Ma’s Boys 1 174Wild Bill 173Roco44 172CASPER DRY 172TSTORM 172Lucky Strike 171Jackson’s Team 171Ol’ Man River 171Zulu I 170Fonzie 170Ice Holes 169Let Down 168Donut’s 168Weasel 2 168Karts ** Rule 168Denis La Puck 168Spartans 16714 167Kasam 167L 166Harry Beaver 166Mad Fish 166Vampire Hunter 166STEPHEN 165Smartie 165Wolf Packs 7 165ROCKY POINT 163I am Mohawk 163CSKI 163STROM 163DUMP AND PUMP 163WONKY 163SHOOTER 163Twinkle Toes 163CK Canuck 162Red Snapper 162Bad Bob 162LKO 4OZ 162Chub Chub 162WallyWorld 162PUCKNUTSS 161

In support of the Community

Policing Access Centre!

2013 PLAYOFF POOLbrought to you by...NH

L

19 N 1st Ave. • 250-392-5923 • www.caribouski.com

This Week’s Hockey Pool Prize goes to #40Saxx 24-7 Boxers

must be picked up at Caribou Ski before following Thursday

For GRADS or DADS

†Free boxer only on regular priced items.

*Choose from

Purchase a Nixon Watch, Under Armour Polo Shirt or Sunglasses* and receive a free SAXX 24-7 Boxer†,

a valuea $24.99

Page 10: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

There were smiles from ear-to-ear Saturday night at Thunder Mountain as several youngsters got the chance to feel what it’s like to be strapped inside a race car.

As part of Thunder Mountain Speedway’s regular racing event Saturday — on top of drivers duking it out for trophies, sea-son points and cash — several youth, as part of Fan Appre-ciation Night, got to hop in the passenger seat, accompanied by series’ drivers, for a few laps of the track.

Once the racing commenced, however, it was all business as drivers put the pedal to the floor for an exciting night of racing.

In the bone stock class it was Sean Kelly motoring away with the big win.

Kelly, in his No. 66 car, won the B-dash, the heat and the main event. Other winners in the bone stock class were George Giesbrecht (fast qualifying time) and Quesnel’s Kyle Braman in the A-dash.

Tim Roberts, racing in the pro-mini class, had his car glued to the pavement throughout the evening winning the A-dash, the

heat and the main event. Also, to kick off the night of racing, TMS hosted the rained out May 25 pro-mini main event, which Roberts won, too.

The other winner in the pro-mini class was Allan Roberts, who roared away with the fast-est qualifying time of the night.

Finally, in the street stock

class, it was a tightly-contested night of racing as three differ-ent winners nabbed the coveted checkered flag.

Fast qualifying time in the street stock division went to Arnie Kunka, while Terry Judd picked up the win in the A-dash. In the B-dash it was John Haynes taking the win, while

Donny Kunka went on to win the main event of the evening.

Coming up next at Thun-der Mountain Speedway is the always-exciting Crash to Pass, Smoke Show and King of the hill June 28, followed by the All-Class Invitational June 29. Check www.thundermountain-speedway.ca for race times.

SPORTS NOTEBOOK

Greg SabatinoTribune Staff Writer

A10 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

SPORTSPhone 250-392-2331 ext 245 • E-mail [email protected] • Fax 250-392-7253 • Greg Sabatino Sports Editor

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A00

Greg Sabatino photoSean Kelly, in the No. 66 car, leads the field of racers during a bone stock heat last Saturday night during Thunder Mountain Speedway’s Fan Appreciation Night. Kelly went on to win the B-dash, the heat and the main event.

TMS hosts Fan Appreciation Night

Greg Sabatino photoThunder Mountain pro-mini driver Marius Dunford (left) looks to get his car back on the track after running into some trouble in the heat event.

Thursday, June 13 to Sunday, June 16

Youth Soccer Jamboree

The WIlliams Lake Youth Soccer Association is hosting its annual Jamboree for boys and girls under six to under 10 at TRU, the Esler Sports Complex, and various other fields around town. For up-to-date schedules in each division visit www.wlysa.com/schedules.

Sunday, June 23

Ride Don’t Hide

The Canadian Mental Health Association, the CMHA Cariboo Chilcotin Branch and Shoppers Drug Mart have teamed up to support women’s mental health. The event, Ride Don’t Hide, goes Saturday, June 23 at the bottom parking lot of the Williams Lake River Valley Trail. They invite everyone to come out for a bike ride of the trail and to help support a good cause. Registration is $35. Visit www.ridedonthide.com or facebook.com/RideDontHide to donate.

Sunday, June 23

KidSport Classic

The Annual KidSport Classic is coming up Sunday, June 23 beginning at Boitanio Park. Participants can choose to enter either the 10-kilometre walk/run or join in on the half marathon or relay. The event is used as a fundraiser for the Williams Lake chapter of KidSport, which helps give underprivileged children the opportunity to participate in sport.Route maps, registration information, parent information and school team information is available on the Active Williams Lake website at http://www.activewilliamslake.com/activeindex.asp?p=834.

Page 11: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

The Williams Lake Gymnastics Club bounced its way to Kelowna June 1-2 for the Ogopogo Invita-tional.

Eight members of the team made the trip — the club’s last meet of this year’s season — facing off against gymnastics clubs from throughout B.C. and Alberta at Kelowna’s

Okanagan Gymnastics Centre.

Jordana Wintjes, Al-yssia Suderman, Ashia Chutskoff, Thea Lut-ters, Gabrielle Gracia, Hunter Jariett, Andrew Bettles and Samantha McKee each competed in various events.

New WLGC coach-es Annie Glanville and Chelsea Bailey trav-elled with the gymnasts

to Kelowna for the meet.

“It was tough com-petition down there,” Glanville said, noting the club’s competitive team will now take a break from training until September.

In the P1 Tyro divi-sion Jordana, Alyssia and Ashia competed. Jordana’s best result came on floor in 10th,

while Alyssia and Ashia posted 11th- and 14th-place finishes, also on floor.

In the P1 Argo divi-sion Thea swung to a fourth-place finish on bars — up against 18 competitors in her divi-sion. Gabrielle, mean-while, finished 11th on floor.

In boy’s gymnastics Hunter’s best result in the Provincial 1 Nov-

ice division came in the form of a sixth-place finish in his floor rou-tine. He also tied for seventh on vault.

Level 3 gymnast An-drew Bettles was also solid — taking to sepa-rate fifth place finishes on horizontal bars and vault. McKee, in the P2 Novice division, posted a fourth-place finish on vault and a fifth-place finish on beam.

sportsWilliams Lake tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A11

To prevent gaps in the parade, a forward motion must be maintained at all times and no stopping to perform is permitted along the parade route. For safety and insurance reasons, NO throwing of candy, balloons, or other objects from your entry is permitted. If your entry interferes with the flow of the parade, the Parade Marshall reserves the right to remove your entry.DISCLAIMER: In consideration of acceptance of your entry by the Rotary Club of Williams Lake Daybreak, the applicant agrees, by signing this form, to save and hold harmless the Rotary Club of Williams Lake Daybreak.

DATE: SIGNED:

NAME: TITLE:

Williams Lake Daybreak Rotary’s Stampede Parade

THEME “Fun n’ Games”

WILLIAMS LAKE STAMPEDE PARADE COMMITTEEPO Box 4443, Williams Lake, BC V2G 2V5 • Phone 250-392-4489 Ext 2056 • Fax 250-392-3030

WWW.STAMPEDEPARADE.COM

TIME AND DATE 10:00 am Saturday, June 29, 2013

ENTRY DEADLINE Friday, June 21, 2013

LOCATION CHECK IN Corner of Comer Street and 2nd Avenue

REGISTRATION Assembly 7:00 am Judging 8:00 am PRECISELY Parade Start 10:00 am

CLASSIFICATIONS 1. EQUINE 5. AUTOMOTIVE 2. FLOATS 6. MASCOTS 3. BANDS 7. BEST DRESSED ANIMAL 4. YOUTH 8. DIGNITARY

ORGANIZATION

CONTACT PERSON

CONTACT PHONE#

MAILING ADDRESS EMAIL ADDRESS

DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY

SOUND OR MUSIC Yes No Type Live? YES / NO

DIMENSIONS Length (maximum 70 feet) Width

# OF PARTICIPANTS

REGISTRATION FEE $20.00 Decorated Entry Payable on registration $150.00 Undecorated EntryPlease return Registration to Papyrus Printing Ltd. 111 North Second Avenue, Williams Lake, BC V2G 1Z5. Out of town entrants please fax the form to 250-392-3030. All cheques should be made payable to the Williams Lake Daybreak Rotary Club.

FAX #

CLASSIFICATIONS

1. EQUINEA) Best Dressed CowboyB) Best Dressed CowgirlC) Horse GroupD) Buggy / Wagon2. FLOATSE) MunicipalF) Commercial G) YouthH) Community Group3. BANDS4. YOUTH I) Best Dressed Girl (14 & Under)J) Best Dressed Boy (14 & Under)

5. AUTOMOTIVEK) Antique Car/Truck (1900-1950)L) Classic Car/Truck (1950 -2006)M) Special Interest Car/TruckN) Best Decorated RigO) Best Stock Car6. MASCOTS7. BEST DRESSED ANIMAL (Non-equine, $250 Prize)

8. DIGNITARY Vehicle Needed

❑ Yes ❑ No

- Category & Sub-Category

Very Important: You MUST select:

(1) category AND (1) sub-category

For judging purposes and placement of entries

REGISTRATION FORM

All entries will be judged for best theme

automatically. ($500 First Prize)

13TH ANNUAL LAC LA HACHE FATHER’S DAY FISHING DERBY

Tickets Adult $10 - Kids $5available at

Kokanee Bay Resort, Lac La Hache Food Mart, Donex, Chilcotin Guns, The Hungry Bear (Lac La Hache)

Hamburger & Hot Dog Sales

Sunday 11:30 am to 1:30 pm

June 15th & 16th on Lac La HacheHosted by Kokanee Bay Resort

No Fishing Licence required (applies to BC residents)

Bonus Draws Silent Auction

Tickets Adult $10 - Kids $5

Sunday 11:30 am to 1:30 pm

No Fishing Licence required (applies to BC residents)

Bonus Draws Silent Auction

Cash Prizes

245 Hodgson Road [email protected]

We’re very proud to have you as

employeesfrom the

Management & Staff

on your Graduation

Goel Rauch Dennis Chamberlain

CONGRATULATIONS

250-392-3443 1-888-311-5511

Greg Sabatino photoThe Williams Lake Gymnastics Club competitive team of (back from left) Alyssia Suderman, Jordana Wintjes, Thea Lutters, Gabrielle Gracia, Ashia Chutskoff, (front from left) Andrew Bettles, coach Annie Glanville and Samantha McKee recently returned from its last meet of the year, the Ogopogo Invitational, in Kelowna.

Gymnasts finish season at invitational

Stampede Warm-Up June 22-23Around 100 barrel

racers will storm the Williams Lake Stam-pede Grounds for a two-day event on June 22-23, the Stampede Warm-Up.

“We’re hoping for 100 participants,” said Karen Yaworski, one of the event’s organiz-ers. “There’s definitely going to be a lot of out of town competitors.”

Yaworski said they decided to name the event Stampede

Warm-Up because for most of the com-petitors racing it will be precisely that, a chance to get a test-run at the Stampede Grounds.

The action gets un-der at 1 p.m. both days. The event will also feature $4,000 in added prize money split over both days, plus futurity and der-by incentive side pots.

Admission to the event is free with seat-

ing available at the in-field grandstand. The infield concession will also be open through-out the event.

Entry fees into the event are $50 per day/open, $30/junior, $30/senior and $20/pee-wee.

Entries must be phoned in to Lori Rankin at 250-392-2584 or at [email protected] by June 17 from 6 to 10 p.m.

Page 12: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A12 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

sporTs

Studio

Type Mgr.

Proofreader

Print Mgr.

Art Director

Copywriter

Creative Dir.

Acct. Mgmt.

Client

BY DATEAPPROVALS

CHRYSLER CANADAJUNE 2013 DAA ROC RETAIL NEWSPDAC_13_1112NONE100%1” = 1”5.81” X 14”NONE

5-24-2013 11:20 AMOPTIC PREPRESS

LASER%Typesetting: Optic Nerve

This advertisement prepared by PUBLICIS

Art Director:Copywriter:

Print Mgr:Client Serv:

Colour:Fonts:

H. DEFREITAS/S. TURNBULLNONEC. RUDY/J. HARKNESST. HURST/A. MCEACHERNBW + NAA 0AA0FRUTIGER LT STD, HELVETICA NEUE, ITC ZAPF DINGBATS, SENTICOSANSDT, SENTICOSANSDTCONDENSED

100%

Client:Project:Docket:

Client Code:Built At:

Scale:V.O.:

Safety:

Date:Artist:

Output At:

Trim:Bleed:

100%

5.81” X 14”NONE

MAGENTA, YELLOW, BLACK

#1SALES EVENT

YOY

UR #1 TIME TO BUY.YY

SALES EVENT

REGION: PACIFIC

PRODUCTION NOTES

FINALS TO PRODUCTION

REVs

0 2PDF

AD NUMBER:

DBC_131112_B2B_CARA

B.C’S #1-SELLING AUTOMAKER #1 SALES EVENTYOUR #1 TIME TO BUY.

Title:

DUE DATE: JUN 5

Less Fuel. More Power. Great Value is a comparison between the 2013 and the 2012 Chrysler Canada product lineups. 40 MPG or greater claim (7.0 L/100 km) based on 2013 EnerGuide highway fuel consumption estimates. Government of Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. See dealer for additional EnerGuide details. Wise customers read the fine print: •, *, », ‡, § The National Grand Caravan Sales Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after June 1, 2013. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. All pricing includes freight ($1,595–$1,695) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. •$19,998 Purchase Price applies to 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package (29E+CL9) only and includes $8,100 Consumer Cash Discount. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select new 2013 vehicles and are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. »Ultimate Family Package Discounts available at participating dealers on the purchase of a new 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT with Ultimate Family Package (RTKH5329G/JCDP4928K). Discount consists of: (i) $2,500 in Bonus Cash that will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes; and (ii) $775 in no-cost options that will be deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Some conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. ‡3.99% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Ultimate Family Package model to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Example: 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Ultimate Family Package with

a Purchase Price of $19,998 (including applicable Consumer Cash and Ultimate Bonus Cash Discounts) financed at 3.99% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $149 with a cost of borrowing of $4,474 and a total obligation of $30,972. §2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $29,495. ♦Based on R. L. Polk Canada Inc. sales data. Calendar year to date retail vehicle registrations. ¤Based on 2013 EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. Transport Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan – Hwy: 7.9 L/100 km (36 MPG) and City: 12.2 L/100 km (23 MPG). TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. The Best Buy Seal is a registered trademark of Consumers Digest Communications LLC, used under license. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of Chrysler Group LLC.

OHF 100 Mile House Free Press

ABN Abbotsford News

MTN Abbotsford Mission Times

CVR Commox Valley Record

FFP Fernie Free Press

KTW Kamloops This Week

KNA Kootenay West Advertiser

LNT Langley Times

MRN Maple Ridge News

NTC Northen Connector - Prince Rupert

PVQ Parksville Qualicum

PAN Peace Arch News

PWN Penticton News

PNV Prince Rupert N. View

QCO Quesnel Cariboo Observer

RMD Richmond News

LSN Salmon Arm Lakeshore News

SMI Smithers Interior News

SND Surrey Now

TRS Terrace Standard

TCN Tri-City News

MOS Vernon Morning Star

WLT Williams Lake Tribune

NAA 0AA0

LESS FUEL. MORE POWER. GREAT VALUE.10 VEHICLES WITH 40 MPG HWY OR BETTER. ULTIMATECARAVAN.CA

2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CANADA VALUE PACKAGE

PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $8,100 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.

$19,998•

• Hands-free® connectivity with UconnectTM Voice Command with Bluetooth®

• Media Centre 430 with 6.5-inch touch-screen display

• Air conditioning with Tri-zone Temperature Control with rear heat and air-conditioning

• 17-inch aluminum wheels

• SiriusXMTM Satellite Radio (includes one year of service)

FINANCE FOR

INCLUDES $3,275 IN PACKAGE SAVINGS»

THE ULTIMATE FAMILY PACKAGE

OR CHOOSE

@ $149 3.99%

BI-WEEKLY‡ FOR 96 MONTHSWITH $0 DOWN

MPG367.9 L/100 KM HWYHIGHWAY

¤

B.C.’s #1-SELLING MINIVAN FOR MORE THAN 29 YEARS

2013 Dodge Grand Caravan Crew shown.§

T:5.81”

T:14”

DBC_131112_B2B_CARA.indd 1 6/6/13 9:06 AM

1-888-378-3205106 N. Broadway, Williams Lake*On select models. See dealer for details DL# 30406

make things betterTOYOTAHEARTLAND www.heartlandtoyota.ca

JUST ARRIVED!All New Redesigned2013 Toyota Rav4Come drive one today

100 Mile House Outdoor 3D Shoot, Cariboo Archers results (June 1-2)

Brayden Feeley — First, Cub CompoundSharon Allan — Second, Women’s LongbowFred Streleoff — Second, Men’s RecurveDan Mobbs — First, Men’s RecurveLorne Barron — Third, Masters Men’s RecurveAl Campsall — First, Master’s Men’s Open

66th Annual Kispiox Valley Rodeo (June 1-2)

Tie-Down Roping2. Wade McNolty, 150 Mile House — 22 secondsSteer Wrestling2. Wade McNolty, 150 Mile House — 6.9 seconds, $648.18Junior Barrel Racing1. Callie Hume, Williams Lake — 16.302 seconds, $422.28Pee Wee Barrel Racing3. Brianna Billy, Williams Lake, 18.466, $70

Clinton May Ball Rodeo (May 25-26)

Breakaway Roping2. Denise Swampy, Williams Lake — 2.9 seconds, $521.16

Junior Steer Riding1. Wendel William, Williams Lake — 68 points, $247.52

Team Roping1. Ralph Myers, Williams Lake; Carey Isnardy, Cache Creek — 64 points, $1,080.68

Bull Riding2. Ryan Jasper, Riske Creek — 80 points, $418.79Pee Wee Barrel Racing3. Brianna Billy, Williams Lake — 19.982 seconds, $90

Ladies Golf Day Results (May 21)

First Flight1. Lisa Kerley (retro)2. Karyn Straza3. Hazel Jobbagy

Third Flight1. Stephanie Ferguson2. Linda Bond3. Trina Halfnights (retro)

Chip-In WinnersCompetition 9 - no winnerThe Other 9 - no winner

Business Hole WinnersFlight 1Longest Drive — Peggi Pukacz — sponsored by Woodland JewellersKP in 4 — Karyn Straza — sponsored by J & E Gifts and Treasures

Flight 2Longest Drive — Tammi Caferra — sponsored by the Cariboo Advi-sorKP in 4 — Julie Merrick — sponsored by Windsor Plywood

Flight 3Longest Drive — Trina Halfnights — sponsored by Croft’s BrewingKP in 3 — Linda Bond — sponsored by 150 M & S TireOpenKP in Sand — Sharon Cleveland — sponsored by Total Ice Training Centre

BC Rodeo Association (BCRA) Princeton Rodeo (May 11-12)

Breakaway Roping1. Katrina Ilnicki, Williams Lake — 2.9 seconds, $673.203. Allison Everett, 150 Mile House — 3.5 seconds, $356.40

Second Flight1. Gina Alexander2. Darcie Wright3. Mary Galloway (retro)

Page 13: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A13

Enter Your Dad to Win...An overnight stay for two.

HappyFather’s Day

250-392-3303 1050 S. Lakeside Dr.

FATHER’S DAY TOOL SALEon now!

Lake City FordSALES • PARTS • SERVICE • COLLISION CENTRE

Sales 250-392-4455 1-800-668-3994 Service 250-392-4499715 Oliver Street, Williams Lake • www.lakecityford.ca • DL#30505

2013 F150EcoBoost

Drive One Today!

All New

www.barkingspidermountainbike.com19 N 1st Ave • 250.392.5177

Shorts • T-Shirts • Jerseys Riding Gear & MoreCome check us out!

BARKING SPIDER MOUNTAIN BIKE

MEN’S APPAREL& ACCESSORIES

RENTAL BIKES AVAILABLENEW

250-398-7118910 E. Mackenzie Ave. S.

www.windsorplywood.com

ALL IN-STOCK AIR & POWER TOOLS

www.windsorplywood.com

Windsor Plywood

GIFTS FOR DAD

OFF15%15

& POWER TOOLS& POWER TOOLS

250-243-2433 • [email protected]

Father’s Day WeekenD special

Cabins & Resort Guest RoomsPrivate balcony & beautiful panaromic view of the lake

RV Sites available

Guestrooms or Rustic Cabins

Two Night Stay - Fri/Sat or Sat/Sun/night$89

1065 S. Lakeside Dr. 250-392-2300 www.williamslakehonda.ca

Survival Of The Fittest

TRX 420 FM+See in store for details

or follow your instincts to honda.ca

Unmatched Customer Service

WILLIAMS LAKEWILLIAMS LAKEWILLIAMS LAKE

Some restrictions apply. Winners certificates valid thru September 29, 2013, excluding long weekends and based on availability. Entrants must be 19 years or older to be eligible to win. Employees of Black Press and their families are not eligible to win. Employees

of participating merchants are not eligible to enter the draw at their place of business. Entry form reproduction will be disqualified.

Contest deadline 5:00 p.m., Father’s Day, June 16th

Enter at

these

participating

businesses

All Men’s

Apparel is on Sale

All Men’s

Apparel is on SaleApparel is on SaleBuy one item, receive

50% Off* the second!

* Of equal or lesser value. Instock only.

BOB’S SHOES& Workwear

248 Borland Street 250-392-7463

Limited Time Offer!!!

Page 14: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A14 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

NO COMPARISONNO COMPROMISENO COMPARISONNO COMPROMISE

THERE’S NO COMPARISON & NO COMPROMISE.ONLY AT YOUR BC FORD STORE. bcford.ca

2013 F-250 XLT SUPER CAB 4X42013 ESCAPE SE FWD 1.6L

NO COMPROMISENOTHING COMPARES TO GETTINGEVERYTHING YOU WANT

3.5L V6 ECOBOOST® ENGINE & MYFORD TOUCH®††† WITH 8" LCD TOUCH SCREEN & TONNEAU COVER & HILL DESCENT CONTROL ™ & BOX SIDE STEPS & POWER DEPLOYABLE RUNNING BOARDS & HILL START ASSIST & TRAILER SWAY CONTROL & TAILGATE STEP& MUCH MORE

WITH AN IMPRESSIVE LIST OF AVAILABLE FEATURES

Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month

pre-paid subscription

WISE BU

YERS RE

AD THE

LEGAL C

OPY: Ve

hicle(s)

may be

shown

with op

tional e

quipm

ent. De

aler ma

y sell o

r lease f

or less.

Limited

time of

fers. Of

fers ma

y be can

celled a

t any tim

e witho

ut notic

e. Deale

r order

or tran

sfer ma

y be req

uired as

invent

ory ma

y vary b

y dealer

. See yo

ur Ford

Dealer f

or com

plete d

etails o

r call th

e Ford C

ustome

r Relati

onship

Centre

at 1-80

0-565-

3673. F

or fact

ory ord

ers, a c

ustom

er may e

ither ta

ke adva

ntage o

f eligib

le Ford

retail c

ustom

er prom

otional

incent

ives/off

ers ava

ilable a

t the tim

e of veh

icle fac

tory ord

er or tim

e of veh

icle del

ivery, b

ut not b

oth or c

ombin

ations t

hereof

. †Until

July 2

2013, re

ceive 0%

APR p

urchase

financ

ing on

new 201

3 Ford [

C-MAX,

Edge

(exclud

ing SE)

] for up

to 48

month

s, [ Fus

ion, Es

cape (e

xcludin

g S)] fo

r up to

60 mo

nths, [

Focus (

excludi

ng BEV)

] for up

to 72 m

onths t

o qualif

ied reta

il custom

ers, on

approv

ed cred

it (OAC)

from F

ord Cre

dit. No

t all bu

yers wil

l qualif

y for th

e lowes

t intere

st rate.

Examp

le: $25,0

00 pur

chase f

inance

d at 0%

APR fo

r 48/60

/72 mo

nths, m

onthly

payme

nt is $5

20.83/ $

416.66

/ $347.2

2, cost o

f borrow

ing is $

0 or AP

R of 0%

and tot

al to be

repaid

is $25,0

00. Do

wn pay

ment o

n purch

ase fin

ancing

offers

may be

require

d base

d on app

roved c

redit fr

om For

d Credit

. Taxes

payabl

e on ful

l amoun

t of pu

rchase

price.

‡Until

July 2,

2013, re

ceive $5

00/ $75

0/$1,00

0 /$1,25

0/$1,50

0 /$2,00

0 /$2,50

0/ $3,5

00/ $3,

750 /$4

,500 /$

5,500 /$

6,000/

$7,750/

$8,000

/ $8,25

0/ $8,75

0/ $9,25

0 in Ma

nufact

urer Re

bates w

ith the

purcha

se or lea

se of a n

ew 201

3 Focus

BEV, Ed

ge SE, E

scape 1.6

L (exclu

ding S)

/ Focus

(exclud

ing S a

nd BEV

)/ Flex

SE, Exp

lorer (e

xcludin

g Base)

, /Esca

pe 2.0L

(exclud

ing S)/

Flex (e

xcludin

g SE)/ F

iesta S,

F-350 t

o F-550

Chassis

Cabs/M

ustang

V6 Cou

pe (Val

ue Lead

er), Tau

rus SE,

Edge AW

D (exclu

ding SE

), F-150

Regula

r Cab 4x

2 XL (Va

lue Lea

der)/F

iesta (e

xcludin

g S)/Ed

ge FWD

(exclud

ing SE)

/ Must

ang V6

Premiu

m, Expe

dition /

Mustan

g GT, Ta

urus (e

xcludin

g SE)/ F

-250 to F

-450 G

as (exc

luding

Chassis

Cab) / F

-150 Reg

ular Ca

b non-

5.0L 4x2

(exclud

ing XL)

and 4x4

/ F-250

to F-45

0 Die

sel (exc

luding

Chassis

Cab) /

F-150 R

egular

Cab 5.0

L 4x2 (e

xcludin

g XL) an

d 4x4 /

F-150 S

uper Ca

b and Su

per Cre

w non-

5.0L/ F

-150 Sup

er Cab a

nd Sup

er Crew

5.0L - a

ll Rapt

or, GT50

0, BOSS

302, an

d Mediu

m Truck

model

s exclud

ed. Man

ufactu

rer Reb

ates ar

e not co

mbina

ble wit

h any fl

eet con

sumer in

centive

s. ±Unt

il July 2

, 2013, l

ease a

new 201

3 F-150

Super C

ab XLT 4

x4 with

5.0L eng

ine/201

3 F-150

Super C

rew XLT

4x4 wit

h 5.0L e

ngine a

nd get

3.99%

annual

percen

tage ra

te (APR

) financ

ing for

up to

48 mo

nths on

approv

ed cred

it (OAC)

from F

ord Cre

dit. No

t all bu

yers wil

l qualif

y for th

e lowes

t APR p

ayment

. Lease

a vehic

le with

a value

of $28

,999/$

30,999

at 3.99

% APR

for up

to 48

month

s with

$0 down

or equi

valent t

rade in

, month

ly paym

ent is $

386/$4

02, tota

l lease o

bligatio

n is $18

,528/$1

9,296 an

d option

al buyo

ut is $1

3,906/$

15,408.

Offer in

cludes M

anufact

urer Re

bate of

$9,250

. Taxes

payabl

e on ful

l amoun

t of lea

se fina

ncing pr

ice afte

r Manuf

acturer

Rebate

is dedu

cted. Of

fers inc

lude fr

eight an

d air ta

x of $1,7

00 but

exclud

e variab

le char

ges of l

icense,

fuel fil

l charg

e, insura

nce, de

aler PD

I (if app

licable

), regist

ration,

PPSA, a

dminis

tration

fees an

d charg

es, any

environ

menta

l charg

es or fe

es, and

all app

licable

taxes.

Additi

onal pa

yment

s requi

red for

PPSA, r

egistrat

ion, se

curity d

eposit,

NSF fee

s (wher

e applic

able),

excess w

ear and

tear, an

d late f

ees. So

mecon

ditions

and mi

leage re

strictio

ns of 80

,000 km

over 48

month

s apply.

A char

ge of 16

cents p

er km o

ver mil

eage re

strictio

ns appl

ies, plu

s applic

able ta

xes. Ma

nufactu

rer Reb

ates ca

n be us

ed in co

njunct

ion wit

h most

retail c

onsum

er offer

s made

availab

le by Fo

rd of Ca

nada at

either

the tim

e of fac

tory ord

er or de

livery, b

ut not b

oth. Ma

nufact

urer Re

bates a

re not c

ombin

able w

ith any

fleet c

onsum

er incen

tives. †

†Until J

uly 2, 2

013, rec

eive 1.49

%/2.49

%/5.89

% annu

al perce

ntage r

ate (AP

R) purch

ase fin

ancing

on a ne

w 2013

Fusion

S/2013

Escape

SE FWD

with 1.

6L EcoB

oost en

gine/2

013 F-2

50 XLT S

uper Ca

b 4x4 S

uper Du

ty Weste

rn Editi

on pac

kage w

ith pow

er seat

s for a m

aximum

of72/

84/72 m

onths t

o qualif

ied reta

il custom

ers, on

approv

ed cred

it (OAC)

from F

ord Cre

dit. No

t all bu

yers wil

l qualif

y for th

e lowes

t APR p

ayment

. Purch

ase fin

ancing

month

ly paym

ent is $

349/$3

57/$686

(the su

m of tw

elve (12

) mont

hly pay

ments

divided

by 26 p

eriods g

ives pay

ee a bi-

weekly

payme

nt of $1

61/$16

5/$316

with a

down p

ayment

of $0 o

r equiva

lent tra

de-in. C

ost of b

orrowin

g is $1,1

03.62/$

2,494.57

/$7,864

.60 or A

PR of 1

.49%/2.4

9%/5.8

9% and

total t

o be rep

aid is $

25,102.6

2/$29,9

93.57/$

49,363

.60. Of

fers inc

lude a

Manufa

cturer

Rebate

of $0/$

500/$6

,000 an

d freigh

t and ai

r tax of

$1,650/

$1,700/

$1,700

but exc

lude op

tional f

eature

s, adm

inistrat

ion and

registr

ation fe

es (ad

ministr

ation fe

es may v

ary by

dealer)

, fuel f

ill char

ge and

all app

licable

taxes.

Taxes p

ayable

on full

amoun

t of pur

chase p

rice aft

er Manu

facture

r Rebat

e deduc

ted. Bi-

Weekly

payme

nts are

only av

ailable

using a

custom

er initia

ted PC

(Intern

et Bank

ing) or

Phone

Pay sys

tem thr

ough th

e custom

er’s ow

n bank

(if offe

red by

that fin

ancial i

nstitut

ion). T

he cust

omer is

require

d to sig

n a mo

nthly p

ayment

contrac

t with a

first pa

yment

date on

e mont

h from

the con

tract da

te and

to ensu

re that

the tot

al mont

hly pay

ment o

ccurs b

y the pa

yment

due dat

e. Bi-w

eekly p

ayment

s can b

e made

by ma

king pa

yment

s equiva

lent to

the sum

of 12 m

onthly

payme

nts div

ided by

26 bi-w

eekly p

eriods

every t

wo wee

ks com

mencin

g on the

contrac

t date. D

ealer m

ay sell f

or less.

Offers

vary by

model

and not

all com

binatio

ns will a

pply. *

Purcha

se a new

2013 Fu

sion S/2

013 Esc

ape SE

FWD wit

h 1.6L E

coBoos

t engin

e /2013

F-150 S

uper Ca

b XLT 4

x4 with

5.0L eng

ine/201

3 F-150

Super C

rew XLT

4x4 wit

h 5.0L e

ngine/

2013 F-

250 XLT

Super C

ab 4x4 S

uper Du

ty Weste

rn Editi

on pack

age wit

h powe

r seats

for $23

,999/$

27,499/

$28,99

9/$30,9

99/$41

,499. Ta

xes pay

able on

full am

ount of

purch

ase pri

ce after

Manuf

acturer

Rebate

of $0/$

500/$9

,250/$9

,250/$6

,000 h

as been

deduct

ed. Off

ers incl

ude fre

ight an

d air ta

x of $1

,650/$1

,700/$1

,700/$1

,700/$1

,700 bu

t exclud

e variab

le char

ges of l

icense,

fuel

fill cha

rge, ins

urance

, dealer

PDI (if

applica

ble), reg

istratio

n, PPSA

, admin

istratio

n fees a

nd cha

rges, a

ny envir

onment

al char

ges or f

ees, an

d all ap

plicabl

e taxes

. All pr

ices are

based o

n Manu

facture

r’s Sugg

ested Re

tail Pri

ce. Manu

facture

r Rebat

es are n

ot com

binabl

e with

any fle

et cons

umer in

centive

s. ***E

stimated

fuel co

nsump

tion rat

ings fo

r 2013 F

-150 4X4

5.0L V8

6-spee

d autom

atic tra

nsmissi

on: [15

.0L/100

km (19

MPG) Ci

ty, 10.6

L/100k

m (27M

PG) Hw

y] / 201

3 Fusion

FWD 2.

5L I4 6-

speed S

ST tran

smissio

n: [9.2L

/100km

(31MPG

) City, 5

.8L/100

km (49

MPG) Hw

y] / 201

3 Escap

e FWD 1.

6L EcoB

oost 6-

speed a

utoma

tic tran

smissio

n: [9.1L

/100km

(31MPG

) City, 6

.0L/100

km (47

MPG) Hw

y] /.

Fuel co

nsump

tion rat

ings ba

sed on

Transp

ort Can

ada app

roved t

est me

thods.

Actual

fuel co

nsump

tion wil

l vary b

ased o

n road c

onditio

ns, veh

icle loa

ding, v

ehicle e

quipm

ent, ve

hicle co

ndition

, and d

riving

habits.

‡‡F-Ser

ies is th

e best-s

elling

pickup

truck in

Canada

for 47

years in

a row b

ased o

n Canad

ian Veh

icle Ma

nufactu

rers’ As

sociati

on sta

tistical

sales r

eport, D

ecemb

er 2012

. †††So

me mo

bile ph

ones an

d some

digital

media

players

may no

t be ful

ly com

patible

with SY

NC® – c

heck w

ww.syn

cmyride

.com for

a listin

g of mo

bile ph

ones, m

edia pla

yers, an

d featu

res sup

ported

. Drivin

g while

distrac

ted can

result

in loss

of veh

icle con

trol, ac

cident a

nd inju

ry. Certa

in MyFo

rd Touc

h™

functio

ns requ

ire com

patible

mobile

devices

. Some

functio

ns are n

ot avail

able w

hile dri

ving. Fo

rd reco

mmend

s that d

rivers u

se caut

ion wh

en using

mobile

phone

s, even

with vo

ice com

mands

. Only u

se mobi

le phon

es and

other d

evices,

even w

ith voic

e comm

ands, n

ot essen

tial to

driving

when i

t is safe

to do s

o and in

complia

nce wit

h applic

able la

ws. SYN

C is opt

ional o

n most

new For

d vehicl

es. ©2

013 Siri

us Cana

da Inc.

“SiriusX

M”, the

SiriusX

M logo,

channe

l name

s and lo

gos are

tradem

arks of

SiriusX

M Radi

o Inc. an

d are us

ed unde

r licenc

e. ©20

13 Ford

Motor

Compan

y of Can

ada, Lim

ited. Al

l rights

reserve

d.

NO COMPARISONNO COMPROMISE

F-150

2013 FUSION ST H E A L L- N E W

W I T H W E S T E R N E D I T I O N PA C K A G EE C O B O O S T ®

Built aft er December 2012

OR PURCHASE FOR

$23,999*

OWN FOR ONLY

$161††

@ 1.49%APR

Financed bi-weekly for 72 months with $0 down.

Offers include $1,650 freight and air tax.

5.8L/100KM 49 MPG HWY***

9.2L/100KM 31 MPG CITY***

OR PURCHASE FOR

$27,499*

OWN FOR ONLY

$165††

@ 2.49%APR

Financed bi-weekly for 84 months with $0 down.

Offers include $500 manufacturerrebate and $1,700 freight and air tax.

6.0L/100KM 47 MPG HWY***

9.1L/100KM 31 MPG CITY***

OR PURCHASE FOR ONLY

$41,499*

OWN FOR ONLY

$316††

@ 5.89%APR

Financed bi-weekly for 72 months with $0 down.

Offers include $6,000 manufacturer rebate and $1,700 freight and air tax.

T H E 2013 F-150 XLT SUPER CAB 4X4 5.0L

per month for 48 months with $0 down.Offers include $9,250 manufacturer rebate and $1,700 freight and air tax.

WELL-EQUIPPED LEASE FOR ONLY

$386±@

3.99%APR

OR

ST E P U P T O A F -1 5 0 X LT S U P E R C R E W 4 X 4 5.0 L

$16± MORE A MONTH10.6L/100KM 27 MPG HWY***

15.0L/100KM 19 MPG CITY***

N E D I T I O N PA C K A G EK AO N PA C KN AW E S T E RWT H W I TWW I

IN MANUFACTURER REBATESON SELECT NEW 2013 MODELS

U P T O

9,250‡$

‡‡

er DBuilt aft eui a

OWN FOR ONLY

DOCKET # FNB-ALI-A-38934-3-Rev1

REGION BC

LIVE: NoneCOLOURS: BW

BLACK

PRODUCTION:Mario Pariselli

CREATIVE: Aaron Doyle

ACCOUNT EXEC: Doug Ramsey

STUDIO: Mathur, Anant

PREV. USER:Lalousis, John

DATE INITIAL

TRIM: 10.312” x 11.786”CLIENT

BLEED: NoneCLIENT: Ford

JOB DESC.: No Comparison No Compromise

FILE NAME: FNB-ALI-A-38934-3_Rev1.indd

START DATE:

MOD. DATE: June 6, 2013

MEDIA TYPE: Template

INSERTION DATE:

REVISION NUMBER: 0

STUDIO

TO PRE-PRESS:

TO PUB:

PRODUCTION

CREATIVE DIR.

ART DIRECTOR

COPYWRITER

ACCOUNT

FONT DISCLAIMER: The fonts and related font software included with the attached electronic mechanical are owned (“Y&R Proprietary Fonts”) and/or licensed (“Y&R Licensed Fonts”) by The Young & Rubicam Group of Companies ULC. They are provided to you as part of our job order for your services, and are to be used only for the execution and the completion of this job order. You are authorized to use the Y&R Proprietary Fonts in the execution of the job order provided that any and all copies of the Y&R Proprietary Fonts shall be deleted from your systems and destroyed upon completion of this job order. You warrant and represent that you have secured the necessary licenses for the use of Y&R Licensed Fonts in order to execute our job order and will abide by the terms thereof.

BEST NEW SUV/CUV(UNDER $35,000)

www.wltribune.com

HOW TO REACH US... • Reception • Classifieds • Circulation 250-392-2331 250-392-2331 250-392-2331 [email protected] [email protected]

188 North 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8 Mon. Fri. 8:30 - 5:00

Page 15: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

COMMUNITY NOTEBOOK

Saturday, June 152013 Grad ParadeThe community is invited to come out and watch the 2013 Grad Parade Saturday starting at 6 p.m. The parade features all sorts of unusual vehicles from boats to bicycles as grads make their way to the dry grad party at the Cariboo Memorial Complex. The route runs along down Second Avenue, left on Borland Street, left on Third Avenue and right on Proctor Street to the complex.

Saturday, June 15Sunday, June 16Lac La Hache fish derby

The 13th annual Lac La Hache Father’s Day Fishing Derby hosted by Kokanee Bay Resort is coming up June 15 and 16 on Lac Hache. No fishing licence is required for B.C. residents. There will be cash prizes, bonus draws, silent auction, and hamburger and hotdog sales on Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tickets are available at Kokanee Bay Resort, Lac La Hache Food Mart, Donex, Chilcotin Guns, and The Hungry Bear.

Friday, June 21Strong Start event

Preschoolers and their families are invited to come to Scout Island on Friday, June 21 from 10 a.m. to noon for a StrongStart is celebrating the year-end with lots of outdoor activities. For more information call 398-3839.

Thursday, June 13Stampede office open

The 87th annual Williams Lake Stampede is coming up June 28, 29, 30 and July 1. The Williams Lake Stampede office will e open June 3 to June 27 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will e open Saturdays June 8, 15, and 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The office is behind the grandstand.

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A15

COMMUNITYPhone 250-392-2331 ext 244 • E-mail [email protected] • Fax 250-392-7253 • Gaeil Farrar Community Editor

Tara SprickerhoffTribune Staff Writer

Milestone final grad for Columneetza/WLSS

The last graduating classes from Columneetza and Williams Lake secondary school will be cel-ebrating their graduation and dry grad this weekend.

This year approximately $190,000 will be given to 116 grads from both of the high schools in the form of scholarships and/or bursaries, said scholarship co-ordinator Jeanette Gobolos.

For the first time, Thompson Rivers University has donated $50,000 for graduates planning on attending post-secondary at the Williams Lake campus next year.

“We have 125 unique donors,” said Gobolos. “The community is incredible.”

The scholarships and bursaries will be awarded at each individual school’s graduation ceremony this Saturday at the Cariboo Memo-rial Complex.

Williams Lake Secondary School’s ceremony will be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday morning, while Columneetza’s ceremony will take place at 1 p.m.

Following the ceremonies, dry grad festivities, which welcome all graduating students from town including students from Mara-natha, Skyline and the Cariboo Adventist Academy, will begin.

This year marks the 25th offi-cial dry grad.

Saturday evening, the commu-nity is invited to watch the 2013 Dry Grad Parade where graduat-ing students and their dates will parade through downtown.

Grads are asked to muster by entering Second Avenue via Rose Street at 5 p.m.

The parade itself will start at 6 p.m. and students will travel down Second Avenue, turn left on Borland Street and left again on Third Avenue, turning right on Proctor street, and continuing on to the Cariboo Memorial Com-plex.

“We would like the community to come out and watch the parade and see the gorgeous dresses and students that are celebrating one of their landmarks in their life,” says dry grad chair Betty Tura-tus. She says they are still seeking volunteers to help with the parade itself.

Following the parade, grads will be given two prom passes to allow parents, friends and rela-tives inside the building to tour the Dry Grad site and take pic-tures of their graduates inside the complex with the decorations.

Prom passes will also be recy-cled at the door for others looking to see the decorations.

At 10 p.m. everyone except the grads and their escorts will be asked to leave the building and the all-night fun for the graduat-ing students will begin.

This year’s dry grad theme is City Nights Bright Lights which decorating chair Sheryl-Lynn Lewis and a crew of parents and community members have been hard at work creating since the beginning of March.

Volunteers have made every-thing from Big Ben to more than 1,000 homemade flowers during the past few months.

“There should be lots of details and things for [grads] to wander around and look at,” Lewis says. “We want to celebrate our grads, so we’ve put a lot of effort into making the night look good.”

Anyone wishing to volunteer is welcome to help set up at the arena both Thursday and Friday from 8 a.m. until 9 p.m., Lewis says.

As well, the public is invited to come to an open house and look

at the decorations Friday from 12 to 3:30 p.m. at the complex. How-ever, no grads are allowed until Saturday night, she says.

Nine cities including Moscow, Casablanca and New York will be featured in the arena, but Lewis isn’t telling about the details.

“I don’t want to give too much away,” she says.

The activities for the grads hap-pening throughout the night are also a secret, says Turatus.

However, she would say one thing: “These kids this year are not going to be bored! There isn’t an inch inside the arena that doesn’t have stuff for them to do.”

Parents are reminded that they must come pick their students from the dry grad events if they wish to leave throughout the night, or at 5 a.m. when the dry grad ends.

This is to ensure that everyone gets home safely, Turatus says.

“We know grad is a success when the kids all have fun and they are safe in the morning.”

Tara Sprickerhoff photosSheryl-Lynn Lewis works on painting a decoration.

Sharon Haynes (left) and Bonnie Tio put the finishing touches on a monster. The final dry grad party for the separate Columneetza and Williams Lake secondary schools, GROW/Skyline, and participating private schools in Williams Lake is coming up Saturday evening at the Cariboo Memorial Complex.

“Now what are these for again?” dry grad decoration helper Andrew Rook seems to be saying at a work party.

Curt Sprickerhoff puts together some columns.

Page 16: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A16 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

communiTy

LeRae HaynesSpecial to The Tribune

public hearing

big laKe – area F

Public hearings are for all persons who believe their interest in property is affected by the proposed bylaws. The public hearings are to be held by a delegate of the Cariboo Regional District Board. A copy of the CRD resolution is available for public inspection.

Written submissions regarding the proposed bylaw will also be received. These submissions may be submitted at the public hearing or should be received in the Cariboo Regional District office at 180 D North 3rd Avenue, Williams Lake, BC, V2G 2A4, (fax number 392-2812) forty-eight hours prior to the hearing. No further information or representations can be considered by the CRD Board after the public hearing.

The bylaw and an information package may be inspected at the Cariboo Regional District office at 180 D North 3rd Avenue, Williams Lake, BC, between 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday, from June 11, 2013 to June 17, 2013 inclusive (excepting public holidays). Telephone inquiries should be directed to the Planning Department of the CRD at 1-800-665-1636.

Karen Moores, B.Sc., P.Ag.Manager of Development Services

rezoning amendment– 4081 lakeview road7:00 pm, June 17th, 2013 at big lake hallThe Cariboo Regional District (CRD) has received an application to amend Cariboo Regional District Central Cariboo Area Rural Land Use Bylaw No. 3503, 1999 by rezoning the property described below:

Bylaw No. 4803Part of District Lot 9553, Cariboo District, Except Plan 26957, from Resource/Agricultural (R/A) zone to Rural 1 (RR 1) zone (minimum lot size – 4 ha. in RR 1; 32 ha in R/A))(maximum density – 1 lot in RR 1 and 1 lot in R/A)

Purpose for Rezoning: To subdivide the ± 5.42 ha eastern portion of the property separated by Likely Road, leaving a ± 58 ha Resource/Agricultural remainder west of Likely Road.

The subject property is located at 4081 Lakeview Road, as shown on the sketch plan below, and is owned by William and Elaine Dawydiuk.

www.cariboord.bc.cabuilding communities together

Brad Huston

250-392-7567 Williams Lake

250-982-2611 Bella Coola

Fax 250-392-5440 • www.beelinecourier.ca

405 Mackenzie Avenue South, Williams Lake

Daily service to 100 MileWednesday & Friday to Bella Coola

In-Town Deliveries

• Small Appliance Recycling Depot• E-Waste Electronic Recycling Center• Federal Express Depot

550 North 11th AveDL#30676

Ü Betcha! 250-398-8279Open Mon-Fri: 8am to 5pm

Sat: 9am-5pm

✔ Oil Change (up to 5 L of oil, synthetic extra)

✔ Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection✔ Brake Inspection

Grant’s Summer Road Trip Special!

$4888 Grant AbelLicensed Mechanic

Storm drains are marked to celebrateRivers to Oceans Week

In honour of World Environment Day June 5 and Rivers to Oceans Week this week the Cariboo Chilcotin Conserva-tion Society has been working with elemen-tary students to raise awareness about keep-ing our storm drains free from toxins and other pollutants.

During June stu-

dents have been paint-ing yellow salmon em-blems on storm drains to remind people to only flush down the storm drain what they would be willing to swim in (no garbage or toxins), says Marg Ev-ans, the society’s edu-cation co-ordinator.

The students have also been creating storm drain art sand-

wich boards.This artful educa-

tion tools have mes-sages on two sides re-minding people that there are fish and wild-life using the streams at the other end of our storm drains, and what goes down does not get treated.

Look for the sand-wich boards in loca-tions around the city.

Photo submitted Ms. Swift’s 150 Mile House class paint yellow salmon pictures on storm drains to remind people not to put garbage or toxic liquids down our storm drains.

Parenting collection expands at library

The Cariboo Region-al Library has expand-ed its parenting section with two new books and DVDs called It Takes Two to Talk and More Than Words.

The first is a guide to promoting communi-cation development of children with language delays and the second promotes the commu-nication development of children with autism spectrum disorder and other social communi-cation challenges.

Interior Health speech and language pathologist Alys Ward-

law presented the books and DVDs to library branch assistant Tracy Dunlop, on behalf of all speech and language pathologists and au-diologists in Williams Lake.

Wardlaw said that the books and DVDs were donated to celebrate Speech and Hearing month, and Dunlop said she was delighted with the new items, adding that they will expand the already di-verse parenting section.

“Parents love to see books like this in our collection,” she said. “I’ll be happy to show them these great new materials.”

Interior Health speech and language pathologist Alys Wardlaw (left) presents books and DVDs to library branch assistant Tracy Dunlop.

Hough hostsraffle barbecue

Hough Memorial Cancer Society will host a barbecue and raffle draw at M & M Meats on Saturday, June 29.

All proceeds will go towards purchasing a cystoscope for the hos-pital.

“We’re hoping to raise $6,000,” said so-ciety member Audrey Hyde.

Raffle items are an acrylic painting of an eagle donated by Bob-bie Crane, a Lac La Hace artist and art teacher. The frame was donated by Lesa Malo-ney of Memory Lane Framing.

Another item is a friendship quilt made by Elaine Watt of Wil-liams Lake, who made it from strips of fabric traded between differ-

ent quilters. The winning ticket

will be drawn at the barbecue on June 29 at 1 p.m. The barbecue will run from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. that day.

Raffle tickets will be available leading up to the barbecue at M&M Meats, or at the barbe-cue itself.

The Hough Memo-rial Cancer Society has been fundraising since 1972 in order to donate cancer detecting equip-ment to the local hos-pital.

“We’re a local outfit and the money stays lo-cal,” said Hyde.

Hyde would like to thank the society’s bar-becue sponsors, M&M meats, Taylor Made cakes and Ron Ridley Rentals.

Page 17: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

The Cariboo Art Society kicked off its 69th show at the Sta-tion House Gallery last week in which artists explored the theme Facescapes.

The beautiful and sometimes eclectic pieces were displayed around the art gallery, featuring faces of all shapes and types, sometimes found in a frozen creek bed, sometimes through the wrinkly head of a basset hound and other times in the simplicity of a sun-flower.

The society chose the theme ‘Faces-capes’ in September and experimented with it in different mediums throughout the year.

“We discovered the idea of pareidolia, the hard-wiring of the human brain to want to make order out of chaos, especially see-ing faces where they were unintended,” said Cat Prevette, the president of the Cari-boo Art Society.

“We explored the idea of faces in land-scapes, clouds and machines.”

The society has 32 members in total, of which 16 showed their work at the gal-lery.

“I’m in it just to have fun and meet people and learn new techniques,” said Yvette Rogers, the treasurer of the soci-ety and an artist who showed her work at the event.

The art society produced 131 pieces for the yearly show, which Prevette said was “record setting.”

Of that number, 74 pieces are on display at the gallery.

During the official

opening, artists min-gled with spectators looking at the dif-ferent works, which ranged from detailed photographs to intri-cate portraits to wa-tercolours and bright acrylics while Angie

Holdal, 15, set the at-mosphere by played the ghuzheng, a Chi-nese stringed instru-ment.

At one point Pre-vette even knelt down on one knee to give her husband Gordon

his first wedding ring. It was their anniver-sary.

“Lots of our mem-bers were new and had never been to an art show before,” said Prevette. “We were thrilled.”

communityWilliams Lake tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A17

Tara SprickerhoffTribune Staff Writer

“They call the Cariboo home”

Everyone has a story. What is yours?The Tribune is accepting submissions and suggestions for a series in our paper called “They Call the Cariboo Home.”

One article (with photos) on one person or family will appear in our paper once a week for a year.

Perhaps you are a long-time resident who has had led an interesting life in the lakecity and would like to share your story with thecommunity, or maybe something out of the ordinary drew you

to Williams Lake.If you think you or someone you know would make a good candidate for a profile/feature article in They Call the Cariboo Home, we would

love to hear from you.Stories may be written by you or one of our reporters.

Submissions and suggestionscan be dropped off in person or sent to:

e-mail: [email protected]: 250-392-7253

mail: 188 North 1st Ave. Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8

250-398-7161

CARIBOO DENTAL CLINIC FOR ALL YOUR FAMILY’S DENTAL NEEDS

121 North First Avenue, Williams Lakewww.cariboodentalclinic.com

Retirement Announcement

It is with a heavy heart that I retire from the Cariboo Dental Clinic as of June 27, 2013. Over the last 30 years many of you have become good friends and it has been an honour to have you as dental patients.

My husband Bill and I will continue to enjoy Williams Lake, carrying on with many volunteer activites such as Girl Guides, church choir and music playing.

I’m planning to expand my horizon a little by considering volunteer work overseas and our great Canadian North.

Christine Constabel

free ideas • free est imates • frame creations

Tues-Fri 9:30 am to 5:30 pmSat 10:00 am to 4:00 pm

35 1st Ave S • 250-392-3996Certi� ed Picture Framer

Liz Twan’sWork on Display

• In our Gallery• On our Website

www.frame-creations.ca

Tara Sprickerhoff photosAngie Holdal created artistic atmosphere playing the ghuzheng during the opening of the Station House Gallery’s June show last Thursday evening, June 6. The ghuzheng is a stringed Chinese instrument.

Cariboo Art Society president Cat Prevette with one of her abstract paintings on display this month at the gallery along with the work of other art society members.

Facescapes: June gallery show theme

Yvette Rogers with her face of a sunflower painting.

Page 18: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A18 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

“They call the Cariboo home”Turatus family busy on dry grad front line

778-412-2223 [email protected]

#77B 2nd Avenue N.

WANTED 30 PEOPLE WITH HEARING LOSSWE WANT 30 people who have dif� culty hearing, especially in noisy situations, to evaluate new digital, noise reduction hearing aids, risk-free.We will perform comprehensive hearing evaluations at NO CHARGE for the � rst 30 quali� ed callers to determine if you are a candidate for the program.All DVA & DIA clients are eligible for this offer.Applicants that are selected will be asked to evaluate the latest hearing aid technology for 45 days.Participants will receive tremendous savings due to their participation.

Fawn Povelofskie IAT, RHIPRegistered Hearing

Instrument Practitioner

Don’t MissThisOpportunity!

moxi kiss

Betty, Crystal and Ashlee Tu-ratus are volunteers by nature.

If you find one of them out and about volunteering, the others are sure to be not far behind.

This time of year, you’re most likely to find them behind the Williams Lake Dry Grad festivities, where mother, Betty is chair, and daughters Crystal and Ashlee are, respectively, co-activity chair and running bag-gage check.

This is, of course, on top of the Women’s Contact So-ciety’s Handbags for Hope auction and fundraiser which took place yesterday, of which Ashlee is event co-ordinator with her mother and sister vol-unteering for her.

“We’re kind of a volunteer family,” Betty says. “If you have one of us you have all of us.”

It’s not just the women of the family either. Husband and father, Peter gets “voluntold” according to Betty, and son, Matt, takes time off of his job in Kamloops just to come back to the lakecity and help volun-teer. The girls’ boyfriends also do their share of the work.

“[Peter] says this morning ‘I was thinking of going fish-ing on Sunday morning. What time do I have to be back? And what do you have me doing this weekend,’” laughs Betty.

Betty works as a grants oper-ation co-ordinator at the local Thompson River University, while Crystal works at Home Hardware, but also teaches WHIMIS from time to time at the university.

Ashlee is the event co-ordi-nator and office assistant at the Women’s Contact Society.

But these are just the wom-en’s paying jobs.

Betty is a member of the Wil-liams Lake Rotary Club, and she and her family volunteer at events including (but especially

not limited to) the Children’s Festival, the Street Party, the TRU Gala, other TRU events, and Women’s Contact Society events. The sisters are both on the executive of the Williams Lake Ladies Soccer Associa-tion, which even Betty makes phone calls for when the sisters are unavailable or working.

It’s just a “given” that if one of the women are there, the others are there too, says Betty.

Betty was born in Saskatch-ewan and came to Williams Lake in the 1970s where she later graduated. “In Saskatche-wan you were neighbourly and you helped your neighbours. People nowadays call that vol-

unteering, so I guess that’s what we’ve always done and we’ve raised our kids the same way,” Betty says.

“If you don’t give back then why do you expect people to give to you,” says Crystal.

An event close to Betty’s heart is dry grad. She has been involved in organizing the event since 2002, when parents first took it over.

“A couple years before I graduated, five kids died on grad night and they weren’t the ones that were drinking,” she says. “That affects the commu-nity, it affects the kids. It’s hard to do your final exams when you are grieving about your classmates … I just want to help prevent that.”

Betty considers a dry grad successful when the students “are happy, they’re healthy and they’re safe.”

While her children have long since graduated Betty has stayed to help organize the event.

“None of our family got to see Ashlee graduate because there were very little volun-teers that year,” she says. Now the entire family stays to help in order to allow other parents to celebrate their children. “We want the parents to enjoy their kids’s grad,” she says.

“Now the thing is going ‘Okay, I will set everything up while the parade is going so that you can watch the parade. I will do all the background stuff while it’s grad time … I will do this. Go enjoy your time,’” says Crystal.

The community, they say, is amazing. “It’s a very good community to live in because they do give to you. They give to youth, they give to old, they give and they give time,” says Crystal.

But, the family says, “it’s not about us.” They don’t seek rec-ognition for their work, “If you give a volunteer something, than they’re not a good volun-teer,” says Crystal.

Tara Sprickerhoff photosBetty (left), Ashley and Crystal Turatus haul some secret sets into the arena this week for the dry grad party Saturday.

Betty, Crystal, and Ashlee Turatus have a few surprises planned for this year’s dry grad party.

Tara SprickerhoffTribune Staff Writer

Page 19: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune, Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A19The Willams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A19

For your convenience Tribune obituaries can be viewed on our website;www.wltribune.com

Remember Your Loved Ones250-392-2331

INDEX IN BRIEFFamily Announcements............001-007CommunityAnnouncements............008-076Children........................080-098Employment..................102-165Services........................170-387Pets/Livestock...............453-483Items For Sale/Wanted..503-595Real Estate....................603-696Rentals..........................700-757Transportation...............804-860Marine...........................903-920Legals................................Legal

AGREEMENTIt is agreed by the advertiserrequesting space that the liabil-ity of the Tribune (Black PressGroup Limited) in the event offailure to publish an advertise-ment in or the event of an error appearing in the advertisementas published shall be limited to the amount paid by the ad-vertiser for only one incorrectinsertion or the portion of the advertising space occupied bythe incorrect or omitted item only, and that there shall be noliability in any event greater thanthe amount paid for such adver-tising.All claims of errors in advertis-ing must be received by thepublisher within 2 days after the first publication.All advertising is subject to the approval of the publisher.The Tribune reminds advertisers that under Provincial legislation,no person shall use or circulate any form of application for em-ployment, publish or cause to be published an advertisementin connection with employmentor prospective employment, ormake any written or oral inquiry of an applicant that (a) express-es, either directly or indirectlyany limitation, specification orpreference as to race, religion, color, sex, marital status, age, ancestry, or place of origin ora person; or (b) requires an ap-plicant to furnish any informa-tion concerning race, religion,color, ancestry, place of originor political belief. In order to becredited for any mistakes theTribune is responsible for, cor-rections must be made before the second insertion.

AD RATESOne issue3 lines $11.00 + HSTThree issues:3 lines $20.99 + HSTVehicle promo: includes photomaximum 4 lines3 times a week for3 months $44.95 + HST

188 N. 1st Ave.,Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8

250-392-2331Fax 250-392-7253

[email protected]

All Tribune and Weekendclassified ads are on the

Internet at bcclassified.com ... also with a link through

wltribune.com

1 month $44.95 + HST

TAX

TAX

TAX

Maintenance Supervisor

Apply today at www.tolko.com

Do you thrive in a dynamic and challenging environment with opportuni es or con nuous growth and development?

TOOSEY INDIAN BAND

Toosey Band, the Tlesq’ox of the Tsilhqotin need a qualified Manager.

Toosey is located in the beautiful central interior of BC - 45 km west of Williams Lake. Responsibilities include

administration, business management and planning.For more information or to apply,

email [email protected] or phone 250-659-5655 by June 14, 2013.

Planer Technician #1

Apply today at www.tolko.com

Do you thrive in a dynamic and challenging environment with opportuni e or con nuou growth and development?

For further information, please visit:

www.tru.ca/careers or email [email protected] We wish to thank all applicants; however, only those under consideration will be contacted.

TRU invites applications for the following positions:

FACULTYHorticulture Certificate ProgramLillooet Regional Centre

SUPPORTStudent Services ClerkWilliams Lake Campus

Announcements

Obituaries

It is with great sadness that the family announces the

sudden passing of Daniel John MacFarlane,

of Williams Lake, on June 9, 2013 at the age of 71.

Dan will be laid to rest in the Pine Ridge

Cemetery in Merritt, BC on

Friday, June 14, 2013. A Celebration of Life

will be announced at a later date.

Donations can be made to Canadian Cancer

Society or the Williams Lake S.P.C.A.

LaPrairie’s Funeral Services entrusted

with arrangements. 250-398-9100

MacFarlane

General Advantages*

• Annual events, one in the spring (Chamber of Commerce week), and one in the fall (Small Business week); we host tours of different business around the community, special workshops to help you in your business

Williams Lake & DistrictCHAMBER OF COMMERCE

“THE VOICE OF BUSINESS”

Phone: 250-392-5025Toll Free: 1-877-967-5253

1660 South Broadway

*See Chamber for details

Information

Announcements

In Memoriam

Call (250) 392-2331188 North 1st Ave. Williams Lake

Word Classifieds

Tuesday Issue 3:00 p.m. thepreceding Friday

Thursday Issue 3:00 p.m. thepreceding Tuesday

Friday Issue 3:00 p.m. the precedingWednesday

Display Advertising

Tuesday Issue 5:00 p.m. thepreceding Friday

Thursday Issue 5:00 p.m. thepreceding Tuesday

Friday Issue 12 noon the precedingWednesday

Flyer Booking

Tuesday Issue 5:00 p.m. thepreceding Friday

Thursday Issue 5:00 p.m.the preceding Tuesday

Friday Issue 5:00 p.m. thepreceding Tuesday

AdvertisingDeadlines

Lost & FoundMISSING 10 Month old Orange Neutered Male Cat from the Mid-night Drive/Dairy Fields area. White paws and a ring design around his tail. Answers to Milo. Missed very much. Please call 250-398-7958 or 250-305-7136

MISSING 10 Month old Orange Neutered Male Cat from the Mid-night Drive/Dairy Fields area. White paws and a ring design around his tail. Answers to Milo. Missed very much. Please call 250-398-7958 or 250-305-7136

Missing orange cat with white paws, 10 months old, last seen Midnight Dr./Dairy Fields, answers to “Milo” Ph. Marilee (250)398-7958

Information

Employment

Haircare Professionals

HAIRDRESSER Needed - to work 3 to 6 months in Williams Lake Sen-iors Care home, up to 3 weekdays per week. Ph.(604)420-9339

Help Wanted

FULL TIME CASEWORKER

Job Qualifications:Minimum 2 year Diplomain Human Service or related field.

Closing Date: June 21, 2013

Please forward Resume to:Lorraine Levitt –Executive DirectorBig Brothers & Big Sisters,#200-369 Oliver Street,Williams Lake, BC V2G 1M4Email: [email protected]

Administration

Career Opportunities

Employment

Help WantedAn Alberta Oilfi eld Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing re-quired. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta.

Caretaker required, reply with resume to c/o Box 712 Wil-liams Lake Tribune 188 N 1st Ave. V2G-1Y8

Dog & Suds experienced ma-ture Waitress wanted, apply in person only, resume needed for evening and weekends.

P/T waitress required imme-diately, must be able to work day or evening shift. Apply in person to Sir Bob’s Fish & Chips @ Green Acres Mall.

Administration

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Your community. Your classifi eds.

250.392.2331

fax 250.392.7253 email classifi [email protected]

SNIFFout a newCAREER

Page 20: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A20 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake TribuneA20 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 The Willams Lake Tribune

Here’s myCard! Despite every technological

advance, business cards remain an essential business tool.

Reserve your space!Call a Tribune advertising consultant today!

250-392-2331

MIND PATH HYPNOTHERAPY

Believe in the Power of your own mind!778-412-9199 Williams Lake

Weight Loss • Reduce AnxietyReduce Depression

Increase Self Confi denceIncrease Self Esteem

WHO WOULD YOU BE IF YOU COULD ONLY CHANGE YOUR MIND?

Vicky Ortiz - RDH, M.H., C.ChtCertifi ed Clinical Hypnotherapist

550 North 11th AveDL#30676

Ü Betcha! 250-398-8279Open Mon-Fri: 8am to 5pm

Sat: 9am-5pm

✔ Oil Change (up to 5 L of oil, synthetic extra)

✔ Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection✔ Brake Inspection

Grant’s Summer Road Trip Special!

$4888 Grant AbelLicensed Mechanic

250-392-7455 234 Borland St.

Rent aHigh Definition

Projector and

100” Screenfor only

$199/night or $249/weekend

Irrigating BC and the Yukon since 1974

Williams Lake250.392.23211.800.665.5909www.thewaterpeople.com

Highlands Irrigation Ltd.

service designsales

CUSTOMER SERVICE FIRST FOREMOST!&Agencies Group

250-398-9033 •1-888-696-1855 280D 3rd Ave. North • [email protected]

We’ve Moved!280D 3rd Avenue N.

next to Sears & Fabricland

Brenda WebsterAdvertising Consultant

call me!

250-392-2331188 N. 1st Ave.

Advertisingis an investment that canhelp a store’s turnover and net profi t

Health Care Assistant

HCA

More information: Debra Clare at [email protected] or 250.377.6169

healthcareassistant.tru.ca

Fully certified in 6 months

Information Sessions

For Application Package: Evelyn Senger at [email protected] or 250.852.7636

Tuesday, June 18, 4 - 5:30pm, Old Main 2202Thursday, June 20, 10 - 11:30am, Old Main 2202

Full Time Permanent Position

Family Service Worker35 hrs/week at $11.25/hr, full benefi t package available

Duties: receiving, sorting and organizing incoming donations, processing client intake assessments, distribution of food hampers, maintenance of client fi les and statistical records.

Qualifi cations: must possess ability to exercise confi dentiality and discretions, demonstrate empathy, be willing to enforce Food Bank policies, have a Safe Food Handling Certifi cate, and possess the ability to lift over 25lbs.

Applications will be accepted to Saturday, June 22nd.

Drop off in person at 267 Borland Avenue - Administrative offi ce; fax: 250-392-6467 oremail: [email protected]

We thank all applicants, however, only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

Posting #: S-2013-064 TEMPORARY Position: ASSISTANT ACCOUNTANT

Location: Administration Building 12 mos., 17.50 hours/week.

Duration: effective July 1, 2013 – June 30, 2014

Rate of Pay: Level 1: 27.64 Level 2: 30.14

Please complete an application form for “External Applicants” (available on the School District website under Staff – Support Staff ), and return it along with a resume, to the Human Resources Department by 1:00 p.m., 20-Jun-2013.

PLEASE NOTE: You may also obtain copies of the posting, and application form from the District Website: www.sd27.bc.ca. If you choose, you may complete the application form on line and e-mail as an attachment to [email protected]

All External job opportunities are posted on our website www.sd27.bc.ca as well as www.makeafuture.com

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 27(CARIBOO-CHILCOTIN)

Now Hiring at CPMFull-time positions available in

Production, Packaging, Sanitation& Maintenance to help make quality,

federally-inspected Pepperoni.Fax or email resumes to:

[email protected]

Temporary Support Staff Position

Union requires tempo-rary/on-call support staff with reception and secre-tarial experience to work at the Cariboo Area Of-fi ce. This is an on-call position for relief cover-age. Applicants must have secretarial/recep-tion experience; high school graduation sup-plemented by secretarial training; typing speed and accuracy; profi cien-cy in Word; an excellent command of English grammar; database ex-perience an asset. An aptitude for organization,detail and the ability to set priorities and work within time limits is re-quired. Knowledge of the trade union movement is an asset. Excellent sala-ry package is provided under a collective agree-ment. Aptitude, word pro-cessing and typing tests will be administered to all qualifi ed applicants. Based on the results of the tests, only successful candidates will be inter-viewed.Apply with cover letter and resume by June 14, 2013 to B.C. Govern-ment and Service Employees’ Union 107A First Avenue North, Wil-liams Lake, BC. V2G 1Y7 or e-mail: [email protected]

Advertising SalesRepresentativeThe award-winning Williams Lake Tribune has an outstanding opportunity for an Advertising Sales Consultant.The candidate must have the ability to build relationships with clients and offer superior customer service. The ability to work independently in an extremely fast paced environment while adhering to deadlines is a must. Candidates considered for the position will be results-oriented, strong in communications, very organized, and willing to learn and adapt in an ever changing business environment. A vehicle and a valid driver’s license is required.The successful candidate will have sales experience - preferably in the advertising or retail industry and be a team player.The position offers a great work environment with a base salary, commission plan and strong benefits package.Black Press Community News Media is an independent and international media group with more than 190 community, daily and urban publications, 14 press facilities and over 160 websites in B.C., Alberta, Washington, Hawaii and Ohio.Please submit your resume with cover letter to:

Publisher,Williams Lake [email protected] 250-392-7253188 N. 1st AvenueWilliams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8

Employment

Help WantedSecure Vernon company look-ing for Marine Mechanic, with good customer service, atten-tion to detail, must have valid boat license, drivers license an asset. Fast paced environ-ment. [email protected]

Wanted: Helper for general construction/concrete/masonry work. To start

immediately. Wage depends on experience. Physically

demanding. Drivers license a must. Email resume to [email protected]

WEEKENDER ROUTES AVAILABLE

*110-114 Cygnet St.104-134 Mayfi eld Ave.907-1068 Proctor St.*

*1123-1298 Lakeview Cres.*

*318-696 Sunset Dr.902-1012 Toop Rd.*

Please call Sherry Parkerat (250)392-2331

Ofce Support

Career Opportunities

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

Have something to sell?Sell it in The Tribune Classifi eds

All Tribune & Weekend Classifi ed Ads are on the Internetat bcclassifi ed.com ... also with a link through wltribune.com

CALL TODAY!250-392-2331 • FAX 250-392-7253

classifi [email protected]

(maximum 3 lines)

One item valued under $400 - $4.00 per issue under $300 - $3.00 per issue under $200 - $2.00 per issue under $100 - $1.00 per issue

DOLLAR DEALS!

Invite the whole community to your next brownie meeting, hockey game or galaevening with a couple of clicks.Add your event today.

there’s more online »events

v

www.wltribune.com

Page 21: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A21The Willams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A21

FOR ALL YOUR AUTO REPAIRS

STAN POGUELicensed Technician

Serving the Cariboo since 1981

A.R.S. Enterprises Ltd1075 N. Mackenzie Ave. Phone 250-392-3522 • Fax 250-392-3548

Government InspectionsShuttle Service

Tuesday to Friday 7:30 am to 5:00 pmSaturday 7:30 am to 4:00 pm

Brad Huston

250-392-7567 Williams Lake

250-982-2611 Bella Coola

Fax 250-392-5440 • www.beelinecourier.ca

405 Mackenzie Avenue South, Williams Lake

Daily service to QuesnelWednesday & Friday to Bella Coola

In-Town Deliveries

• Small Appliance Recycling Depot• E-Waste Electronic Recycling Center

LAVTAPMobile Audio Service

Industrial Audiometric TechnicianIndustrial / Commercial / Logging / Construction

250-392-2922 • 1-866-327-8678 Fax: 250-392-2947

Dwight SatchellBox 4105, Williams Lake, BC V2G 2V2

Here’s myCard! Despite every technological

advance, business cards remain an essential business tool.

Reserve your space!Call a Tribune advertising consultant today!

250-392-2331

Country CottageHairstyling

250-398-STYL • 250-398-7895 • 250 Barnard St.

Open Monday - Saturday

Donna Bergen Unsure of colour?

Let me introduce you to a few foils! Call and book your appointment today!

Country Cottage Welcomes Donna

Evening appointments available!

Dr. J.D. Neufeld • 250-392-7227 • 402 Borland [email protected]

• Soften lines around the mouth• Volume lift and cheek enhancement

• Botox Cosmetic and Juvéderm ~ Terrific Alone. Better Together

CARIBOO AESTHETICLASER CLINIC

For a new younger you

250.392.7629Email: [email protected]

COMPUTERSERVICES

Gilles Mailhiot

• Software & HardwareInstallation

• Computer & Router Set Up

• General Computer Help

Employment

Home Care/Support

24 hr. Live-InSupport Required(Kamloops, B.C.)

Dengarry Professional Ser-vices Ltd. is seeking experi-enced individuals or couples for contract to provide live in 24 hr. support for short term stabilization to adults with mental & physical disabilities in Kamloops. Applicant must have education and exp. either in behavioral and/or medical supports. Applicant will undergo a screening process including reference checks, Crim Check and drivers abstract.

Housing & Utilities Incls. w/ A Remarkable

Compensation Package.

Please forward resume to Kristine Toebosch at

[email protected]

or fax to 1-250-377-4581or mail Attn: Kristine

PO Box 892 Kamloops BC V2C-5M8

Trades, TechnicalWKM, a mechanical contractor located in Trail, BC, is looking for a Controller. Responsibilities include but are not limited to managing the day to day ac-counting operations, accounts receivable, accounts payable, payroll, and ccra remittances. Must have a minimum of three years’ experience and have or be pursuing an accounting designation (minimum 4th level). Please email resume to:[email protected].

Services

Financial ServicesGET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.

www.pioneerwest.com

Need CA$H Today?

Own A Vehicle?Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks!Cash same day, local offi ce.www.PitStopLoans.com

1-800-514-9399

Legal Services

CRIMINAL RECORD?Guaranteed Record Removal

since 1989. Confi dential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating

assures EMPLOYMENT &TRAVEL FREEDOM.

Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET1-8-NOW-PARDON(1-866-972-7366)

RemoveYourRecord.com

Recycling

RECYCLINGDepot for batteries, rads,

copper, aluminum, catalytic converters,

alts. and starts. Will p/u, will pay cash! Phone 250-398-0672

Pets & Livestock

LivestockFor Sale, 2 minature fi llies, year old, breeding sow, meat goats, (250)392-3649 [email protected]

PetsCKC Registered German Wirehair Pointer pups. Ready Mar 30th, 1st shots, blk/white & liver/white. $850 Will deliver to WL. (250)371-1218

Merchandise for Sale

AppliancesCoin laundry, May Tag wash-ers & dryers, 6 months old.. $3500/pair (250)296-4515

Merchandise for Sale

Auctions

Giant Auto Auction. Need a vehicle? Buy direct and save thousands on your next vehicle purchase, over 150 cars, trucks, suv’s, 4x4’s and vans. Selling on behalf of bankruptcies, repo’s, leasebacks and police recoveries. Don’t miss the huge savings. Sat, June 15th @ 11:00 am. Call Auction World 2 5 0 - 7 6 5 - 5 2 8 2 Kelowna, BC.

Drive a littleSave a lot

AuctionFriday, June 14

7:00 PM4 Wagon Wheels,

Old Hay Trip & Trolley, Various Old

Saws, Peevies, Logging Tongs, Garden Tools,

Power Tools, 8 Filing Cabinets, Fishing

Rods & Reels, Fishing Weight

Moulds, Tackle Boxes & Tackle, Bradley

Smoker, Snowshoes, Exercise Equipment,

Massage Table, Quanity of 12” x 12” Marble, 225 sq.ft. Carpet Tiles, 5th

Wheel Hitch, Violin, Clarinet, Guitar,

Paintings, Original Art by Randy Moe; Steve Harkies & European Artists, Mahogany Grandfather Clock,

Oak Secretary Bookcase,

Leather Sofa Set, Antique Furniture & Rugs, Coins,

Stamps & General Merchandise.

www.hubcityauctions.comHub-City Auctions Ltd.1122 South Lakeside Drive

Williams Lake 250-398-8845

$100 & UnderClassic Finder Guitar with core, good condition. $65 Ph. (250)392-6801Float Tube with fl ippers, bag, caddis brand. $35 Ph.(250)398-7972

$500 & Under2HP - 4 stroke Honda out-board $450. Also, 14’ Cedar Strip Rowboat, needs work $150. (250)392-317945” Octagonal Poker Table. $450.00 (250)392-3179

FirearmsWANTED: Old lever action Winchester rifl es and carbines. Call (250)791-6369

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRYSTORAGE CONTAINERS

Used 20’40’45’53 in stock.SPECIAL

44’ x 40’ Container Shopw/steel trusses $13,800!

Sets up in one day!40’ Containers under $2500!

Call Toll Free AlsoJD 544 & 644 wheel loaders

JD 892D LC ExcavatorPh. 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB

www.rtccontainer.com

Misc. for Sale2010 10X4 Shed for sale $800/ Truck Canopy, long box $500 Ph. (250)398-9396

Merchandise for Sale

Misc. for Sale

Giant Auto Auction. Need a vehicle? Buy direct and save thousands on your next vehicle purchase, over 150 cars, trucks, suv’s, 4x4’s and vans. Selling on behalf of bankruptcies, repo’s, leasebacks and police recoveries. Don’t miss the huge savings. Sat, June 15th @ 11:00 am. Call Auction World 2 5 0 - 7 6 5 - 5 2 8 2 Kelowna, BC.

Drive a littleSave a lot

For Sale, White Scooter elec-tric ECO bike good shape, $600 fi rm Dutchie (250)392-2489 or (250)302-1489

Lead fi shing weights, down-rigger balls, fi sh shape, can-non balls, pyramid weights. (250)296-4350

Misc. WantedTrue Coin Collector Looking to Purchase Collections, Accu- mulations, Olympic Gold and Silver coins, Bills + Not melting down, Serious Collector. Call: Coin Couple 1-778-281-0030

WANTED: Old lever action Winchester rifl es and carbines. Call (250)791-6369

Musical InstrumentsALEXANDER Hermann piano in like-new condition. No chips or cracks on ivory or cabinet. Made in East Germany. From smoke-free home. Bought 12 years ago, tuned every year until 2011. Moving, must sell. Asking $2,900 OBO. 250-296-3414 days/eves. Leave msg. Email: [email protected].

Real Estate

Acreage for Sale

10 Acres overlooking Felker Lake

This stunning southern exposure property has a

magnifi cent view of Felker Lake and is only steps to

the boat launch and beach access.

This property is well treed and gently sloped.

Recreational property at its best and is only 20 min-

utes to Williams Lake.

Asking $120,000.(250)392-3074

PANORAMIC 58 Acres along West Fraser Road. 35 acres in hay. $129,900. 780-394-7088

For Sale By Owner

1/2 acre lot with40x50 Quonset

truck shopand 2 bedroom

mobile.Both currently rented out for $1400./month.

Asking $142,500.(250)392-6540

Real Estate

For Sale By Owner

1516 Gannet Road

3 bedroom, 3 bathrooms,

Open fl oor plan,on 3.2 acres backs onto Crown Land.Fully fenced yardReady for horses.

$267,000.Call Lacy

(250)267-8503

#66 500 Wotzke Dr. (Terra Ridge complex)

Williams Lake 1238 sq ft,

double garage, fi nished basement, 3 bath,

fi replace, central air, 3 patios, built in vac, Ph. (250)392-7697 or

(250)267-1948

Beautiful Lake View!198 Orgnacco Road

approx. 3500 sq ft home on fully fenced 2.5 acres with 2 covered decks,4 bdrms, 2.5 baths, hot tub room,

2 bay garage/shop, covered area for RV/boat,

tool shed, new roof,near elementary school & on quiet, dead end road.

$380,000 (250)392-6953 or

(250)305-5019

Chimney Lake Waterfront2674 Blackwell Road

1/2 acre with 3 bdrm house

Geothermal heatingRental Cabin

$499,000Call to view

(250)305-6627www.propertyguys.com

#702896

Real Estate

For Sale By Owner

CARIBOO PROPERTY

40 Acre Hobby Farm with log home and second residence.

B & B Potential

www.welist.com #48758

Phone: 1 (250) 620-0006

“Dream Farm come true”. Building - 6 years old or

newer. 146.6 acres Alfalfa hay fi elds, year round creek through property. Hay barn, horse tack room, chicken house. 30x70 shop with 3 bdrm, 2 bath house

on left side. 15 min. north of Williams Lake.

Appraised at approx. $900,000

Selling for quick sale $749,000

250-989-0361cell: 250-305-7082

Executive Style HomeShort walk to Golf course club house, Approx. 4400

sq. ft., includes 3 car garage & partially fi nished bsmnt. Corner lot, access to back, property approx. 1/2 acre. 3bdrm, 3bthrm, 3 fi replaces. Large kitchen,

family room Central Vacuumn, new roof,

furnace,fl ooring, appliances. Large deck of

kitchen area. Asking $450,000

Ph. (250)305-6886

Garage Sales Garage Sales

Leftovers from your Garage Sale?

Please consider donating your soft goods to

Big Brothers & Big Sisters Recycling Program

Purple bins are located at: Share Shed •Surplus Herby’s

Canadian Tire • Safeway

Thank you for your supportFor further information

250-398-8391

Garage Sale3145 Pine Valley Rd.

Thursday June 13 Friday June 14

Saturday June 15 All Days 9 am-6 pm

Jewelry, fi shing rods reels, tackle, 2 generators, tools.

Lots of great things Early Birds Welcome!!

(250)989-1133

Garage Sale #9-1322 DogCreek Rd.Saturday June 15 9-2

Household items, furniture, & misc.

items.

Garage SaleJune 16 9-4

3803 Lac La HacheTwo Generations of

Treasures!No Early Birds

YARD Sale Sun Jun 16, 9am-2pm, 1495 11th Ave Lane. Household, sporting, books, tools, ALS FUND-RAISER.

YARD Sale Sun Jun 16, 9am-2pm, 1495 11th Ave Lane. Household, sporting, books, tools, ALS FUND-RAISER.

Our classifi ed ads are on the net! Check it out atwww.bcclassified.com

Page 22: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A22 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake TribuneA22 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 The Willams Lake Tribune

188 North 1st Ave.250-392-2331 Fax 250-392-7253

ass e s tr e. o

REAL ESTATE

• 1x2 Bordered Ad e ed

• or o o o• 3 times a week

or weeks(NO AGENTS)

SOLD SOLD SOLDSOLD SOLD SOLDSOLD SOLD SOLDSOLD SOLD SOLDSOLD SOLD SOLD

$9900+TAX

Real Estate

For Sale By OwnerHOME FOR SALE by Owner under recent appraisal at $209,900 520 Pinchbeck St, Quesnel, B.C. 250-992-2335 or 250-255-2336. Great Loca-tion, quiet, neighbourhood & private! Low Maintenance. To-tally refurbished upper level, including new insulation in walls, ceiling, new wiring & electrical throughout. New Laminate fl ooring throughout main level & tile in bath. New tinted low E windows, siding, 30 year roof, Open island kitchen features custom wood cabinets, beautiful custom halogen pot lights & hanging lights on dimmers. Over sized garage insulated & wired 220v, dry-walled and painted with workshop at back. Has auto door opener. Hard wired for alarm system and hard wired surround sound in living room. 5 Stainless steel appli-ances with ice maker and in-frared range. New concrete rear patio with refurbished hot-tub included. Large detached garden shed RV parking Base-ment has custom fi nished ex-cerise room. Action priced to sell quick!

One Of A KindProperty in

Borland ValleyPioneer Log Home

with 3 fl oors of privacy. Log shop with loft, 11’x12’ overhead

door, heated, 220 wiring, 26’ lean to. Log yard shop for tools, etc. Log dog house, red metal

roofi ng on all buildings, nature

pond at back fence. 167 Borland Drive.

(250)296-0139

Quiet Westridge Executive View Home

324 Mandarino PlaceOn cul de sac with

amazing city and lake views. 4 years old, 4 bdrms, 3 bath, open design, with hardwood

and stone fl ooring. 2 gas fi replaces, fi nished

basement, heat pump, and inground sprinklers. Beautiful home!

$435,000.(250)305-0030

Houses For SaleHome on 6 acres in

Mcleese Lake, 3 bdrm, 1 bth with jetted tub, open fl oor plan with laminate fl ooring. Heated workshop, Garage, boat

storage, green house, gar-den, numerous storage

buildings. Treed and open areas back onto crown

land. Crown land all around. Amazing price $189,000 Ph. (250)392-

1843

Lakeshore

Recreational Cottage on Beautiful Big Lake, located 50kms NE of

Williams Lake on the Likely Rd. 0.68 acres with 100 feet of shore land, 950 sqft cabin

plus 160 sqft loft. Screened in front porch,

12x16 deck at back, 16x24 ft garage and wharf.

$209,000 Call 1(250)243-2156 or

1(250)499-7168

Real Estate

Lakeshore

Beautiful Lake Frontage House

Dock 35’ from house, New roof & carpeting, power plant 4000 watt

solar 8 new battery, new fridge, wood splitter, snow

blower, boat & motor.94 GMC Truck 4x4,

lawn mower, furniture included.

$190,000 OBO Ph. (250)296-4766

Mobile Homes & Parks

RETIRE IN Beautiful Southern BC, Brand New Park. Af-fordable Housing. COPPER RIDGE. Manufactured Home Park, New Home Sales. Kere-meos, BC. Spec home on site to view. Please call 250-462-7055. www.copperridge.ca

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent

1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Lovely units, new paint

and floors, no pets, laundry facilities available.250-392-2997

1 AND 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS

Available immediately. Renovated and in a

secure building. 250-392-9171

BOITANIO PLACE APARTMENTS1 & 2 bedroom suites.

Most desirable apartments for seniors. Clean and quiet. Next to Boitanio Park behind Boitanio Mall. Suite comes

with heat, hot water, elevator, patio or balcony, fridge, stove

and dishwasher. Laundry facility on site, no pets.

250-392-6450

THIS IS MORE LIKE IT!1 - 2 bdrm apt F/S

Dishwasher and A/Cin most units. Quiet -

Good references only. Ask about our incentives.

Call Bernice250-305-1155

pics at

2 bdrm apartment, South Lakeside area, no pets. (250)392-5074.

Apartment Furnished

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY

Fully furnished suites in different locations. These are hotel ready

and in lovely condition.250-302-9108

Duplex / 4 Plex2-bdrm suite in 4-plex, freshly painted, downtown, heat incl., coin w/d, storage, pets ok Avail June 15th $724/mo. (250)296-4429

Rentals

Misc for Rent

HANDICAPPED UNITS One of a kind in an excellent neighbourhood. Completely

handicap accessible, no pets.Low income available,must have

references.250-302-9934

2 BEDROOM DOWNTOWN

In quiet clean building, heat and cable included.

250-302-9108

Mobile Homes & Pads

3 bdrm. mobile at 150 Mile. Close to shopping center and school. n/p (250)392-76173bdrm mobile w/d, f/s in trailer park, 3 miles from city non-partying, r/r, n/s $650 (250)392-5667McLEESE LAKE, 2 bdrm mo-bile home in park. 1.5 baths, W/D. Partially furnished. Pets ok, $1150./mo inclds pad rent, hydro & oil. 778-476-0984.

Homes for Rent1bdr Small house South Lake-side f/s, n/s on city bus route. Call (250)392-3037 after 5pm2 bdrm 2 bath private attch home on beautiful Horse Lk waterfront F/S/W/D encl garage 10 min fm 100 Mile N/S N/P Ref req $750/mo incl utilities Access to internet extra ($100 off for Jul) Avail Jul 1 Ph 778-835-1852

2 and 3 bdrm. houses. 2 full bathrooms, n/p F/S Please call (250)392-7617.3bdrm house F/S Top fl oor. Quiet area, South Lakeside. Call (250)392-3037 after 5pm.

Shared Accommodation

Roommate needed to share small 3bdrm house. $450/mo incl util. $150 S/D (778)412-0040 after 6:30pm weekdays, anytime on weekends.

Suites, Lower1bdr. furnished suite, suitable for quiet person, n/s, n/p,5 appliances ult. includ. r/r. $700 (250)296-36672bdr. near TRU, safe neigh-borhood working person pre-ferred n/s, n/p, $700/mo. Avail. Immed.(250)305-4900Large 2bdrm newly renovat-ed, great view, avail. immed. (Winger Rd.) $900 incl. util. (250)398-5335

Rentals

Townhouses

3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE “Perfect Condition” Excellent

location and close to all schools. Parking garage, W/D included.

References Required. 250-305-4970 or

email to [email protected]

Adult oriented town house, quiet neighborhood, 1008 Hubble Rd 2bdrm full bsmt., n/p, r/r. Seeking compatible tenants Available July 1st 1(250)396-4096

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

Giant Auto Auction. Need a vehicle? Buy direct and save thousands on your next vehicle purchase, over 150 cars, trucks, suv’s, 4x4’s and vans. Selling on behalf of bankruptcies, repo’s, leasebacks and police recoveries. Don’t miss the huge savings. Sat, June 15th @ 11:00 am. Call Auction World 2 5 0 - 7 6 5 - 5 2 8 2 Kelowna, BC.

Drive a littleSave a lot

1994 GT Ford Mustang, New tires,

347 Stroker engine (15,000kms on engine),

New exhaust, front to back. 129,000 kms. $7000. obo

(250)267-5855

1994 Mercury Sable, 150,000kms. Less than 60K km on factory re-built motor. Clean, no rust, good tires. $1200 obo Ph. (250)305-6350

Page 23: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

Williams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A23The Willams Lake Tribune Thursday, June 13, 2013 www.wltribune.com A23

Sell yourvehicle

in4 Papers

OnePrice

$5995

Bring in or e-mail your pictureCars, Trucks, Vans, SUVs, Motorcycles, Recreation

Vehicles, Boats, 4 Wheelers, Snowmobiles, etc.

1 column x 2” ad

250-392-2331 Fax 250-392-7253ass e s tr e. o

Sweet Deal!Like New

4 wheel drive, low kms. Great Price

Call 555-555-1515after 4 p.m.

plus tax

• 2 times a week for 4 weeks.

• Every other week for 4 weeks.

• Once a week for 4 weeks.

the

cariboo advisornewspaper

COAST MOUNTAIN NEWS

• Once a week for 4 weeks.

TribuneWEEKEND

www.wltribune.com

HOW TO REACH US...

250-392-2331 250-392-2331 250-392-2331250-392-2331

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

2001 White Ford Taurus4 DSDN Automatic

Overdrive, Air condition, Power Windows, Power

Seats, Power Pedals, V6 3 Litre,

Mileage: 173,266Excellent condition.Asking $2900. OBO(250)305-3803 (cell)

(250)392-4693 (home)

2010 Acura MDX Elite (Grey Color) Comes with warranty, 6 yrs remaining

up to 130 kms. A/C. heated seats, cooled seats, navi-

gation, blue tooth, back up camera, sun roof, remote hatch, 7 passenger + so

much more! Asking $42,900

Ph. (250)392-7627

Cars - Sports & Imports

1993 Chevy Tracker Convertible 2 wheel

drive, new top & tires, low mileage, power train, Automatic trans, rust free

body and frame. Trailer tow package, good ground clearance,

perfect body. $2000

(250)303-0941

Motorcycles

DR 125 Baja sports (Can-Tire)

Great off road starter bike,

Like new, Driven under 10 hrs.

$800 (250)392-6750

Recreational/Sale

1981 Vanguard 8’ 6” Camper Stove, oven, fridge/freezer, bthrm, shower, great shape,

clean, no leaks, tailgate width must be 63 1/2” or wider. Will not fi t newer box size but camper can

be modifi ed to do so. $2,800 OBO

Ph. (250)392-4119

1982 Chev 20 ft Motor home. Sleeps 6, well kept, shower & toilet.

$6,000 (250)392-2578 or

(250)392-7250 evenings

Transportation

Recreational/Sale

1987 28’ CitationMotorhome 70,000 kms,

Sleeps 6, Runs good, needs

some external work. $6000. obo

(250)305-6123 or (250)305-6080

1994 Mobile 14X70, three bdrm, one bthrm, in great shape, in beautiful park. Ask-ing $76,000 OBO (250)392-9384

1995-30ft Rustler Travel Trail-er, two entrances, air condi-tioner, queen size bed, 3 brnr stove, oven, fridge, freezer,ex-cellent cond. $8,000 Ph.(250)296-4211

1998 Dutchman Le24 Ft $7,900

Call (250)398-5349

2005 Corsair Motorhome

E 450 Ford, 43,000 Km. 35’ from bumper to bumper, two slides,

Winter package. Many Extra’s.

$47,500 (250)392-4260

2008 Big Foot Camper -1500 series-9.5ft.

Used only 3 times & is immaculate.

Washroom, QS bed, propane stove, oven,

fridge, furnace, 110 watt solar panel, mounting

hardware, electric jacks, aluminum steps. Asking $16,000

Ph (250)296-3135

2010 Komfort Travel Trailer

28ft, Model 281TS, 2 slides, 1 bdrm,

open layout, big bright bathroom, thermal max

weather pack - shows like brand new.

Come see all the extras. Call before 9pm (250)398-7802

Transportation

Recreational/Sale

Older 8’ Camper3 way fridge, stove

(3 burner), water tank. In Good Condition.

$1200. OBO(250)305-2246

Phone between 11am - 4pm Please!

Pleasure way Dodge Ram 1990 Rm 164675, toilet,

fridge, stove, microwave. New beautiful.

PH.(250)392-1449 Must be seen!

Springdale Travel trailer

1 bdrm + living/kitchen/dining. bright large windows. (offers considered), pulled easily with

small Mazda truck. (250)305-6045

Sport Utility Vehicle2003 Toyota 4 Runner 4x4 V8 excellent condition 212,000 km towing package roof rack in-cludes additional 4 winter tires $8750. (250)398-7507 after pm.

Trucks & Vans

2001 Chev 15004.8L, V-8

Two wheel drive, 151,244kms, New battery, New shocks, Tow package,

Good condition. $8500.

(250)392-79492003 Toyota Tundra, 167 km. Reg cab, canopy, V8, Auto. 4X4 $9500 (250)398-7136

Transportation

Trucks & Vans

Giant Auto Auction. Need a vehicle? Buy direct and save thousands on your next vehicle purchase, over 150 cars, trucks, suv’s, 4x4’s and vans. Selling on behalf of bankruptcies, repo’s, leasebacks and police recoveries. Don’t miss the huge savings. Sat, June 15th @ 11:00 am. Call Auction World 2 5 0 - 7 6 5 - 5 2 8 2 Kelowna, BC.

Drive a littleSave a lot

1998 GMC Safari AWD 8 pas-senger Van. 329,600 kms. Very little rust, same owner for last 8 yrs., very reliable, driven daily til May 2013. Good con-dition BF Goodrich all terrain tires, recently replaced fuel pump, has the 4.3 Vortec en-gine, Air/Tilt/Cruise Control. Was asking $2500 but needs immediate brake/ABS repair so now asking $1500. obo Call (250)392-3126 ask for Bernie.

2003 Ford F150 for sale or trade. Very well

maintained, with lots of new parts. New wheel

bearings, fuel pump, re-build diff, etc asking $4800 or trade for a TDI Jetta or something similar. Call

(250)305-5055

2011 Black Ranger FX4, 4X4 Auto, 4L, V6, CR cab, over-drive, anti-slip 17,000 kms, un-der warranty, a/c, tow pkg. Senior driven. $21,000. (250)392-6801

Utility Trailers2010 Flat deck heavy duty trailer, 14,000 lb. axles. $2200. (250)392-1947

20ft Beaver Tailed Trailer, 12,000 lbs, double axle, with ramps. Good condition. $4000 OBO Ph. (250)398-7717

Boats1 51/2 Fibre Glass Boat. Good shape 25 horse, every ride very little use.(250)296-4766

Don’t take your muscles for granted. Over 50,000 Canadians with muscular dystrophy take them very seriously.

Learn more at muscle.ca

It takes 11 muscles to read this ad.

OMG! It’s your BFF! And FYI: he’s such a QT!

Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today!

spca.bc.ca

Page 24: Williams Lake Tribune, June 13, 2013

A24 www.wltribune.com Thursday, June 13, 2013 Williams Lake Tribune

[ JOB INFO ] [ MECHANICAL SPECS ] [ APPROVALS ] [ ACTION ]

[ PUBLICATION INFO ] [ FONTS ] [ PRINTED AT ]

ROUND

LiveTrimBleedInks

_____ Art Dir.

_____ Copywriter

_____ Production

_____ Producer

_____ Account MGR

_____ Proofreader

_____ PDFX1A to Publication

_____ Collect to Ad Planner

_____ Low-res PDF

_____ Revision & new laser

_____ Other _____________________________

None10” x 12.5”None

K13_Q1_PR_AL_1005KiaJune Retail Newspaper R1NewspaperDAA

Chris Rezner

None

Vasilios Karteros

Cindy Valianes

Denis Spellen

Nicole Deveau

DesignKOTF (Medium, Bold, Light), Gotham Condensed

(Medium, Book, Book Italic), Gotham (Bold, Book),

Wingdings 3 (Regular), Wingdings 2 (Regular), TT Slug

OTF (Regular)

Williams Lake Tribune - June 11 (Ins June 13) None

KCI_JUN13_1_W_10X12_S_WLT

STUDIO KIA:Volumes:STUDIO KIA:...ern:KCI_JUN13_1_W_10X12_S_WLT.indd

Revision date :6-11-2013 9:03 AM Please contact Delia Zaharelos e: [email protected] t: (647) 925.1382 INNOCEAN WORLDWIDE CANADA, INC 662 King St West. Unit 101. Toronto ON M5V 1M7

1

Job #ClientProject MediaAd TypeRegionDocument Location:

West Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

T:10”

T:12.5”

+60PAY DAYS

**%

FINANCING MONTHS

84UP TO

OFFER

ENDS

JULY

2ND

kia.ca

THE NEW 2014s ARE HERE

O� er(s) available on select new 2014 models through participating dealers to qualifi ed customers who take delivery by July 2, 2013. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. All o� ers are subject to change without notice. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All pricing includes delivery and destination fees up to $1,665, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and $100 A/C charge (where applicable) and excludes licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and fi nancing options also available. ∞“Don’t Pay For 60 Days” o� er is a 60-day payment deferral and applies to purchase fi nancing o� ers on all 2014 models. No interest will accrue during the fi rst 30 days of the fi nance contract. After this period interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest monthly over the term of the contract. See your Kia dealer for full details. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. **0% purchase fi nancing is available on select new 2014 Kia models O.A.C. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. Purchase fi nancing example based on new 2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) with a selling price of $23,482, fi nanced at 0% APR corresponds to a bi-weekly payment of $129 for 60 months, amortized over 84 months with a down payment/equivalent trade of $0. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. ≠Bi-weekly fi nance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE)/2014 Forte Sedan LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) based on a selling price of $28,482/$17,502/$23,482 is $156/$96/$129 with an APR of 0% for 60/84/84 months, amortized over 84 months. Estimated remaining principal balance of $8,138/$0/$0 plus applicable taxes due at end of 60-month period. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. Model shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2014 Sorento EX V6 AWD (SR75HE)/2014 Forte SX (FO748E)/2014 Rondo EX Luxury (RN756E) is $34,195/$26,195/$32,195 and includes delivery and destination fees of $1,665/$1,485/$1,665, and A/C charge ($100, where applicable). Licence, insurance, applicable taxes, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies), variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. Available at participating dealers. See dealer for full details. Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2014 Sorento LX 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2014 Forte 1.8L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2014 Rondo 2.0L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. °The Bluetooth® wordmark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.

WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED*5-year/100,000 km worry-free comprehensive warranty.

HWY (M/T): 5.3L/100KMCITY (M/T): 8.0L/100KM

THE ALL-NEW 2014

BI-WEEKLY

$96≠OWN IT FROM

DOWN

$0WITH

0%AT

APR

bi-weekly for 84 months with $0 DOWN PAYMENT. Offer includes delivery, destination and fees. Offer based on 2014 Forte LX MT with a purchase price of $17,502.

15" Steel Wheels • 6 Airbags • Anti-lock Brakes (ABS)

Electronic Stability Control

Steering Wheel Mounted Audio Controls

Forte SX shown

HWY (A/T): 7.1L/100KMCITY (A/T): 10.4L/100KM

AVAILABLE ALL-WHEEL DRIVE

Sorento EX shown

THE NEW 2014

bi-weekly for 60 months, amortized over 84 months with $0 DOWN PAYMENT. Offer includes delivery, destination and fees. Offer based on 2014 Sorento2.4L LX AT FWD with a purchase price of $28,482.

DOWN

$0WITH

BI-WEEKLY

$156≠OWN IT FROM

0%AT

APR

6-Speed Automatic Transmission

Heated Front Seats • Keyless Entry

Air Conditioning • Bluetooth° • Rear Parking Sonar

STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE:

HWY (M/T): 6.2L/100KMCITY (M/T): 9.4L/100KM

THE ALL-NEW 2014

Rondo EX Luxury shown

DOWN

$0WITH

0%AT

APRBI-WEEKLY

$129≠OWN IT FROM

bi-weekly for 84 months with $0 DOWN PAYMENT. Offer includes delivery, destination and fees. Offer based on 2014 Rondo LX MT with a purchase price of $23,482.

16" Steel Wheels • Air Conditioning

Heated Front Seats • Keyless Entry • Bluetooth°

Flex Steering • Steering Wheel Mounted Audio Controls

INCLUDED FEATURES:

INCLUDED FEATURES: INCLUDED FEATURES:

Spot Red, Black

Gustafson’s Kia 112 North Broadway, Williams Lake, BC

(250) 392-3035

KCI_JUN13_1_W_10X12_S_WLT.indd 1 13-06-11 4:33 PM

NEWS